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Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project...

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_____ so mlow~o w Space Firs,! MIT l~Des ijned Dipoles In Experimental Orbit Established Af MIT In 188i Vol. 81, No. 20 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, October 25, 1961 $ Cents WGBH Staggered Structure is Station's Major Loss $1. Needed For New Building Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices' ---- --- INDEX Befas Win IM Football Championship .. 15 MIT, Harvard Sfudents Win $ 1 000 Award IO Calendar of Events ..... 3 College World ........ 2 Editorial .... ... 4 Enfertainmenf ......... 8- 9 Kiblfzer ............. . 4 Placement !nterviews .. 3 Sports 11.......II-1i6 I I IllsIs r II s r I I I i I The Awi Force la .unched its · controvensial . project -WEt/ST .FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M. .Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter 350,000,000 colp- per wires in a belt aromun the earth to test the possibility of using such a band for cornmun- cation ptirposes. The basic concept of orbital scatter on which this project · depends was first proposed .three years ago by Mlrl. Walter EM Morrow of M:IT's Linoln 'Laboratory in col. boration with Mr.- Harold MNleyer, fommer- ly of Thonvson Rama Wool- dridge, Inc. ~I[T Plans Project Technical plann~ng and sup- port of -the project is being oar- ried on at MMr s Lincoln Ib- oratory, Lexington. Mass, fmo the Air .Force Systans Com- mand. iincoln Lcaborator3y has built two trartsmitting aal receiving stations three thousand miles apart-at Parks AFB near San Francisco and on MVlillstone Hill in Westford, Mass. These sta- tiUns will be equipped to make radar measurements of the band and to transmit and re- ceive conaunications s. gnas. They will attempt s'm;ultaneous two-way transmissions. ]Darth Girdled BY Copper The copper di-poles whri-cd form this belt are about seven- Astr0dy amics Pr aeer Dr. Samuel 'Herick . k Hunsaker Professor Dr. Samuel Herrick, one of the world's leading space sci- entists, has been appointed Jer- ome Clarke Hunsaker Visiting Professor of Aeron. auPtical Engi- neering for the academic year 1941-62., Dr. Herrick wil'l hold, the Hunsaker' professorship While orn leave of absence from his position as Professor of Astron- omy at the University of Caii- fornia at Los Angeles. Dr. Herrick has been a pioneer in ast.rodynasrms, a field in wtich techmiques used in studying lthe influence of graV- ity on cele;§tial bodies are ap- plied to engineering prob!ems associated with man-made mls- siles, satellites and space ve- hicles. Dr. Herrick gave astro- dynamircs its name. Dr. Herrick founded tnhe In- stitute of Navigation and hmas served as its executive secretary and president. He is a men/Der of the Boaid of Directors of !the American- Roket' 'ociety. During -the Fal,1 semester, Dr. Herrick wl,1 -teach a graduate course in "Advarwed Astro- dynanmies and R~cket Nlaviga- tion" ea' present numerous seminar lectias on as trody- nan-ics, -tenths of an inch long and one- thousandth of an i'nh thick. The 350,000,000 dipoles will be scattered quite widely in a belt five .miles wide and twventy-five miles thick thnt will eventually surround ;the earth. This ,belt is expected to grow to completion in albout thirty days and wi~l orbit the earth at a iheight of 2,100 miles. If the WEST FORD-experi- ment is successful, scientists theorize that two such belts, one in orbit about tthe poles and one in orbit about the equator, could be used to provide com- munication between any two poi.nts on earth. This system would be very reliable, since :all the active rsa- dio equipment is located on the ground and is therefore easily accessible for maintenance. The belts themselves are quite, in- vulnerable to physical daznage during heiir useful lfetime, TDhey would huave to be replaced, (Please turn to page 1t) Thfe fire thait truck the of- times of W BH Oot. 14 browuh¢ sbaggeriag lesses to thbe statio mn. Al.thoul h %e equiptrenic was insured and negotiations fer paonnent are now in progress, thbe .inmmsia e vwil. not ooAreT the Teaplaoenum oost of muc~hi underkisured equipment, nwa the Mame inmstaifdion oosts otf' anyof th eq i~pment. T he major loft to WGRBH was tlhe burilding, in whiet the sba- tion had ifrested more thban $250,000 to adaipt the sbructure to its special~zed pu. poses, Faced wibh tjhe neoessioy of finding new quarter s within a year, station official4s ecstimate te mtnIi'maum o00t of a new butdkikg is between $1.2 mill·ion and $1.5 million. About $i00,000 of this hats been raised. Current operations are very oostl~y -to ,lhe staution. Operating f om four locations in ohe city, WGBH must pay video line char.ges from each location. Only -the umusuail oooapration of oonmnercial sttitton s is help- :irg W1¥~tG to broathcast "21 IlnOh 01.asromor" wlich is .p~laed from video tape. The brig~,te t parts ofth WVI7G-H outdtok aceordinng to a station spoikesmanra re t/he w'irl- ,In.,lneas of other stations tW aid .WGBH, and th.at the video tape mobile ,unit was n~ot daraiged., althoug.h much equipmen~t beinrg readied for the unit was dt-, strayed. Buhml fir Ch16osen Frosh 'Hiecid: ran For Jr' Weekend Freshman counc.iel met on Monday, Get. 16, and elected officers to serve un.til sprin-g elections. Art~hui Bushkin, AE P, was elected presiden~t on the thi.rd ballot, Mark, Stein, Bur- ton, vice-presiden~t on t~he sec- ord ballot, and Warren Ander- son-_ SAE, see:retary-t. reasurer, on the first ballot. ' The newly-elected president called a meeting for Wdnesday, October 18 to organize Field Day · activities. Committees were named and their functions described. Chariot Race, Carl IKing, E:xt. 3782 and 'Section leaders from sections 21, 18,.23, and 6; Build- ing, Barry Wessler, Ext. 3205 and sections 16, 19, arnd 34; Sup- plies, Marshall Fisher, Ext. 31,61 and sections 30, 14, and 12; Race, Pradip Burman, Ext. 3285 and sections 3 and 24. Also, Tug of War, and Event X, Bruce Sea~ton, Ext. 3264 and sections 11, 28, and 29; Glove Fig~ht, Mark Hanson, Evt. a-t CI: 7-7650 and sections 35, 1-7, 20, and 8; Publicity, Ed Yourdon, Ext. 3273 and sections 25, 22, and 7. , Also, Questionnaire Commit- tee, Jack Hafstrom, Ext. 3216 and sections 36, 31, and 10; Quizbook Comm-ittee, Billy Co- hen, AL 4-9309 anad sections 1 and 5. An emphasis was placed on the nature of pranks to be pull- ed and'thm importance of keep- ing t0hem under control. A meeting was scheduled for Sunday, October 22. -- Photo by Allen Rosenberg '63 Ear Sfevenson '19. Mrs. AnoMJ, and Precddenf Juius Seraecon Isfien while Mr. Dwight C. Arnold '27 addresses the audienmce duri~n Alumni Night, October 19. Mr. Arnold was foasvmasfer for the everting. stitateZ iits makfw olmnaiatc~iter an~td son '29, Cha~irmrant of the Secacndt quailftt~y." Century Funda frmoon Californiai~ These were thne waor&l of via the moon. wrektlen~t Stratton aut the 'lhe adviee Of Dudley Clapp "Vices of Tedhnolo.yjr" pro- '10 given at last year's oom- gram, Oat. 19 ian Weaiker Me- maceamenr t l.undheoan was re- marviM. ~peal te d: Alumni of 40 Cities "Nw your presidet has Aluamnri fromn more tihan 40 -alsked Irte to give you adtvice": cities across the natimm wre-IreHalf a oenT~y's worth l11inked -by oksad cidouft tale- Tin a neat little slice; Phone ea :hosht Philip H. Petees Though I tetaur we odd fogie '37 presented voices from MIT's Don't out amy i-e. past. Follawing an Invoaabion by Our fond revrnimnsmcers mns. Karl Taylor Oor pton, Bore so. taped excerpts were played JTust allorw ae -to warn youa-- fr110a sVeehe es by Pwesldent . Your shaudles zar~ent through. Kenredy, Pr'ime Mi'nister Mac- Whk.at you've learned is not alq, mil-lan and Sir W tinMol Chum~- And won't alWays be true. dhM'~11. ,Keep alert -and receptirve Vanrnevar Dl h:' SamuelI C. TO nevew po'ints off view, PreaooAt, Jarnes R. IKitfften, Karla Fotr lfe '~s Mlke Tech.-- Taylor Oomptton, lfraed P. Ondl, more so! ' S~loan and others presented Immediate lPlaur, Outlined thoiq2tu s urom ,their dlese asso- PIestdent Strmtto0n presented estiaboa with MIT past -and ,an oublinle for oonstruction ,preeenrt. Prio/:essor Htan~s l[.u~I- -p, ans. Nomth cmputs wl erjoy ler, sdlected to a~eprcsent 'lIT's s a Center for MIateriaI,s Svienoe tra.d~i, tion of tearhers, was momog anrd Engineering to oost abouwt ,he menmbeirs of i01e fiaucuty wbhe $6 mi ian, a Center for Oam- spooke. . municatiocns Scienes, and a "Tech Is Hell": DAVO Clenter for Aeronauftics and As- DAVO, Dynamic Aacadog a of ;,troautis. In East eamrpuis wfi,1 -the Vocad Tracr~at, d~ive -the be a Center for Life Scieances, tq;~llmvo~inyg su' ratty of Riirs e- icloubling 0he spaoe avaiLa~uble fcr pe~~~ie~~oes ~mat n ofILT "lits exs perienc~n~oes at I': ,1is is ]sFood S~cience and Teo~m~logay; DAV~iO -a~t MIT~. Teh t~E heldl." oonstruotion on thke Ear, th Soli- Othe~r tedhdl·nlIo.iQgioai~ L siice-noes buiinl/mg will soon beg~in, light~tls werer~ a dig~g~ital coand the Cenoco biqdinlg wiill pronaimammed to -pla2y music with house psychology auborato~ies. the .anutomatc typewriter doing (Consrat~~tion of a vwoner-'s ,the percukssiio, anld trinsm's- dorrmitory wal,1 beg!~ early next sion of -the vokie bf Jcohn J. WUi- yeaw in 'tlhe West oamapus. "The r mrission of a- uni aitvity is to teamch and to coimnbribute a ,share to the enlargenent of 'knlowledge and understandigg. "Thle standard off exeellence ,that MIT has set feo .- the fitW1l.1- mellt oif -that mission, the ener- ,gy and imr'.agi ion ~thatthe facility b A appifying -W t6_ twr~lk ,01he way ,in wuhcldh we seek to irterweave teadhirg and re- gewch into tihe singile fabmic of educajtuawn-~ are the facts .t/mat ,today are giiving to thne In- .-. THE -CH ?1 JP Table Reservation Drawing Is Planned For Tuesday 5 P.M. Fbtak 1Lexy ~2 has am- nmour ed that sturients des-ir' ,table ra..erva~tioa' foer XP week- ensW'aiod rrmat~e orta-rn ,iatt they have a ,re-ienSetative .present at tbe drawrng for talbles. The drawing wi, be .at 5 p. m. Oct. 31/rn 10-275. Iani'ividmuajs representdmig oth- er stutents at ;tthe dearwing rinfst, bring all tailm which .are to be applied to their ta bles. Re- gacrless of his suocess in the draw, no one wlNl be amigned more seats tham the number of Oc1ebs he presents at ,tbe draw- in~ng. Chamberlain To Visii Middle East Eugene R. Clbamberlain, as- ::'-i -'soe. iabte advisor of foreign 'stu- :?~::.~,::::::: derts at MIT, will go to the ~.. . ~~Middle East tids fali on a six- week t'rip emade possi~ble by a .::: ::..: - .. jf grart from the "American ?:~~·:;:Q~~.:. .-- ;.~;.~ Friends in-lthe Mirddlt East, -:l::id:i~i~.:.. .... 71he objectives of the trip will :::::::::. . .. ::i -be to learn, first-hand how = :=.=========:=.====:; .====::=.::.... ::::, school officials interpret U. S. :-':::-:·:'::.: university aduissions proced- i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::~::::~:1:lr::::t:::': : : : : ====== ============================= ures, to clarify wh-ere necessary · i:·: :::.':j::::i ..................~:~:~ . .he extremely complex range of i: :·::·~·.~;:::::-:' ..... -" '"":i~f~f2; '"~~S ~:'' ':: U. S. admissions pracbices, to " study Middlie Eastern univers-iy '"'""'·-'-.':-..-::.- .- ;.: admissions programs, and ,to in- ~::::-::-:::::::::::::::::::: : ...... :: '.vestdigate operation s of agencies engaged in international educa- tional exdhanges. Mr. Chamberlain will ,ttavel with Professor Gord-on Erickson of NYU to universities in Ku- wait, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Eugene R. Chamberlain- Egypt, and Turkey.
Transcript
Page 1: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

_____so mlow~o w

Space Firs,!

MIT l~Des ijned DipolesIn Experimental Orbit

Established Af MIT In 188i

Vol. 81, No. 20 Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday, October 25, 1961 $ Cents

WGBH Staggered

Structure is Station's Major Loss$1. Needed For New Building

Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'

---- ---

INDEXBefas Win IM Football

Championship .. 15MIT, Harvard Sfudents

Win $ 1 000 Award IO Calendar of Events ..... 3College World ........ 2Editorial .... ... 4Enfertainmenf ......... 8- 9Kiblfzer ............. . 4Placement !nterviews .. 3Sports 11.......II-1i6

I I IllsIs r � II s r

I

II

i I

The Awi Force la .unched its·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Forcehopes to scatter 350,000,000 colp-per wires in a belt aromun theearth to test the possibility ofusing such a band for cornmun-cation ptirposes.

The basic concept of orbitalscatter on which this project

·depends was first proposed.three years ago by Mlrl. WalterEM Morrow of M:IT's Linoln

'Laboratory in col. borationwith Mr.- Harold MNleyer, fommer-ly of Thonvson Rama Wool-dridge, Inc.

~I[T Plans ProjectTechnical plann~ng and sup-

port of -the project is being oar-ried on at MMr s Lincoln Ib-oratory, Lexington. Mass, fmothe Air .Force Systans Com-mand.

iincoln Lcaborator3y has builttwo trartsmitting aal receivingstations three thousand milesapart-at Parks AFB near SanFrancisco and on MVlillstone Hillin Westford, Mass. These sta-tiUns will be equipped to makeradar measurements of theband and to transmit and re-ceive conaunications s. gnas.They will attempt s'm;ultaneoustwo-way transmissions.

]Darth Girdled BY CopperThe copper di-poles whri-cd

form this belt are about seven-

Astr0dy amics Pr aeerDr. Samuel 'Herick

. k Hunsaker ProfessorDr. Samuel Herrick, one of

the world's leading space sci-entists, has been appointed Jer-ome Clarke Hunsaker VisitingProfessor of Aeron. auPtical Engi-neering for the academic year1941-62.,

Dr. Herrick wil'l hold, theHunsaker' professorship Whileorn leave of absence from hisposition as Professor of Astron-omy at the University of Caii-fornia at Los Angeles.

Dr. Herrick has been apioneer in ast.rodynasrms, afield in wtich techmiques used instudying lthe influence of graV-ity on cele;§tial bodies are ap-plied to engineering prob!emsassociated with man-made mls-siles, satellites and space ve-hicles. Dr. Herrick gave astro-dynamircs its name.Dr. Herrick founded tnhe In-

stitute of Navigation and hmasserved as its executive secretaryand president. He is a men/Derof the Boaid of Directors of !theAmerican- Roket' 'ociety.

During -the Fal,1 semester, Dr.Herrick wl,1 -teach a graduatecourse in "Advarwed Astro-dynanmies and R~cket Nlaviga-tion" ea' present numerousseminar lectias on as trody-nan-ics,

-tenths of an inch long and one-thousandth of an i'nh thick.The 350,000,000 dipoles will bescattered quite widely in a beltfive .miles wide and twventy-fivemiles thick thnt will eventuallysurround ;the earth. This ,belt isexpected to grow to completionin albout thirty days and wi~lorbit the earth at a iheight of2,100 miles.

If the WEST FORD-experi-ment is successful, scientiststheorize that two such belts,one in orbit about tthe poles andone in orbit about the equator,could be used to provide com-munication between any twopoi.nts on earth.

This system would be veryreliable, since :all the active rsa-dio equipment is located on theground and is therefore easilyaccessible for maintenance. Thebelts themselves are quite, in-vulnerable to physical daznageduring heiir useful lfetime,TDhey would huave to be replaced,

(Please turn to page 1t)

Thfe fire thait truck the of-times of W BH Oot. 14 browuh¢sbaggeriag lesses to thbe statio mn.

Al.thoul h %e equiptrenic wasinsured and negotiations ferpaonnent are now in progress,thbe .inmmsia e vwil. not ooAreTthe Teaplaoenum oost of muc~hiunderkisured equipment, nwathe Mame inmstaifdion oosts otf'anyof th eq i~pment.

T he major loft to WGRBH wastlhe burilding, in whiet the sba-tion had ifrested more thban

$250,000 to adaipt the sbructureto its special~zed pu. poses,

Faced wibh tjhe neoessioy offinding new quarters within ayear, station official4s ecstimatete mtnIi'maum o00t of a new

butdkikg is between $1.2 mill·ionand $1.5 million. About $i00,000of this hats been raised.

Current operations are veryoostl~y -to ,lhe staution. Operatingf om four locations in ohe city,WGBH must pay video linechar.ges from each location.

Only -the umusuail oooaprationof oonmnercial sttittons is help-:irg W1¥~tG to broathcast "21IlnOh 01.asromor" wlich is.p~laed from video tape.

The brig~,te t parts ofthWVI7G-H outdtok aceordinng to astation spoikesmanra re t/he w'irl-,In.,lneas of other stations tW aid.WGBH, and th.at the video tapemobile ,unit was n~ot daraiged.,althoug.h much equipmen~t beinrgreadied for the unit was dt-,strayed.

Buhml fir Ch16osenFrosh 'Hiecid: ranFor Jr' Weekend

Freshman counc.iel met onMonday, Get. 16, and electedofficers to serve un.til sprin-gelections. Art~hui Bushkin, AE P,was elected presiden~t on thethi.rd ballot, Mark, Stein, Bur-ton, vice-presiden~t on t~he sec-ord ballot, and Warren Ander-son-_ SAE, see:retary-t. reasurer,on the first ballot. '

The newly-elected presidentcalled a meeting for Wdnesday,October 18 to organize FieldDay · activities. Committeeswere named and their functionsdescribed.

Chariot Race, Carl IKing, E:xt.3782 and 'Section leaders fromsections 21, 18,.23, and 6; Build-ing, Barry Wessler, Ext. 3205and sections 16, 19, arnd 34; Sup-plies, Marshall Fisher, Ext. 31,61and sections 30, 14, and 12;Race, Pradip Burman, Ext. 3285and sections 3 and 24.

Also, Tug of War, and EventX, Bruce Sea~ton, Ext. 3264 andsections 11, 28, and 29; GloveFig~ht, Mark Hanson, Evt. a-t CI:7-7650 and sections 35, 1-7, 20,and 8; Publicity, Ed Yourdon,Ext. 3273 and sections 25, 22,and 7. ,

Also, Questionnaire Commit-tee, Jack Hafstrom, Ext. 3216and sections 36, 31, and 10;Quizbook Comm-ittee, Billy Co-hen, AL 4-9309 anad sections 1and 5.

An emphasis was placed onthe nature of pranks to be pull-ed and'thm importance of keep-ing t0hem under control.

A meeting was scheduled forSunday, October 22.

-- Photo by Allen Rosenberg '63Ear Sfevenson '19. Mrs. AnoMJ, and Precddenf Juius Seraecon Isfien while Mr. Dwight C. Arnold '27

addresses the audienmce duri~n Alumni Night, October 19. Mr. Arnold was foasvmasfer for the everting.

stitateZ iits makfw olmnaiatc~iter an~td son '29, Cha~irmrant of the Secacndtquailftt~y." Century Funda frmoon Californiai~These were thne waor&l of via the moon.wrektlen~t Stratton aut the 'lhe adviee Of Dudley Clapp

"Vices of Tedhnolo.yjr" pro- '10 given at last year's oom-gram, Oat. 19 ian Weaiker Me- maceamenr t l.undheoan was re-marviM. ~peal t e d:

Alumni of 40 Cities "Nw your presidet hasAluamnri fromn more tihan 40 -alsked Irte to give you adtvice":

cities across the natimm wre-IreHalf a oenT~y's worthl11inked -by oksad cidouft tale- Tin a neat little slice;Phone ea :hosht Philip H. Petees Though I tetaur we odd fogie'37 presented voices from MIT's Don't out amy i-e.past. Follawing an Invoaabion by Our fond revrnimnsmcers

mns. Karl Taylor Oor pton, Bore so.taped excerpts were played JTust allorw ae -to warn youa--fr110a sVeehe es by Pwesldent .Your shaudles zar~ent through.Kenredy, Pr'ime Mi'nister Mac- Whk.at you've learned is not alq,mil-lan and Sir W tinMol Chum~- And won't alWays be true.dhM'~11. ,Keep alert -and receptirve

Vanrnevar Dl h:' SamuelI C. TO nevew po'ints off view,PreaooAt, Jarnes R. IKitfften, Karla Fotr lfe '~s Mlke Tech.--Taylor Oomptton, lfraed P. Ondl, more so! 'S~loan and others presented Immediate lPlaur, Outlinedthoiq2tu s urom ,their dlese asso- PIestdent Strmtto0n presentedestiaboa with MIT past -and ,an oublinle for oonstruction,preeenrt. Prio/:essor Htan~s l[.u~I- -p, ans. Nomth cmputs wl erjoyler, sdlected to a~eprcsent 'lIT's s a Center for MIateriaI,s Svienoetra.d~i, tion of tearhers, was momog anrd Engineering to oost abouwt,he menmbeirs of i01e fiaucuty wbhe $6 mi ian, a Center for Oam-spooke. . municatiocns Scienes, and a

"Tech Is Hell": DAVO Clenter for Aeronauftics and As-DAVO, Dynamic Aacadog a of ;,troautis. In East eamrpuis wfi,1

-the Vocad Tracr~at, d~ive -the be a Center for Life Scieances,tq;~llmvo~inyg su' ratty of Riirs e- icloubling 0he spaoe avaiLa~uble fcr

pe~~~ie~~oes ~mat n ofILT "lits exsperienc~n~oes at I': ,1is is ]sFood S~cience and Teo~m~logay;DAV~iO -a~t MIT~. Teh t~E heldl." oonstruotion on thke Ear, th Soli-

Othe~r tedhdl·nlIo.iQgioai~ L siice-noes buiinl/mg will soon beg~in,light~tls werer~ a dig~g~ital coand the Cenoco biqdinlg wiillpronaimammed to -pla2y music with house psychology auborato~ies.the .anutomatc typewriter doing (Consrat~~tion of a vwoner-'s,the percukssiio, anld trinsm's- dorrmitory wal,1 beg!~ early nextsion of -the vokie bf Jcohn J. WUi- yeaw in 'tlhe West oamapus.

"The r mrission of a- uni aitvityis to teamch and to coimnbribute a,share to the enlargenent of'knlowledge and understandigg.

"Thle standard off exeellence,that MIT has set feo .- the fitW1l.1-mellt oif -that mission, the ener-,gy and imr'.agi ion ~thatthefacility b A appifying -W t6_ twr~lk,01he way ,in wuhcldh we seek toirterweave teadhirg and re-gewch into tihe singile fabmic ofeducajtuawn-~ are the facts.t/mat ,today are giiving to thne In-

.-.

THE -CH?1

JP Table ReservationDrawing Is PlannedFor Tuesday 5 P.M.

Fbtak 1Lexy ~2 has am-nmour ed that sturients des-ir',table ra..erva~tioa' foer XP week-ensW'aiod rrmat~e orta-rn ,iattthey have a ,re-ienSetative.present at tbe drawrng fortalbles. The drawing wi, be .at5 p. m. Oct. 31/rn 10-275.

Iani'ividmuajs representdmig oth-er stutents at ;tthe dearwing rinfst,bring all tailm which .are tobe applied to their ta bles. Re-gacrless of his suocess in thedraw, no one wlNl be amignedmore seats tham the number ofOc1ebs he presents at ,tbe draw-in~ng.

Chamberlain To Visii Middle EastEugene R. Clbamberlain, as-

::'-i -'soe. iabte advisor of foreign 'stu-

:?~::.~,::::::: derts at MIT, will go to the~.. .~~Middle East tids fali on a six-

week t'rip emade possi~ble by a.::: ::..: - .. jf grart from the "American

?:~~·:;:Q~~.:. .--;.~;.~ Friends in-lthe Mirddlt East,-:l::id:i~i~.:.. ....

71he objectives of the trip will:::::::::. . ..::i -be to learn, first-hand how

= :=.=========:=.====:; .====::=.::.... ::::, school officials interpret U. S.:-':::-:·:'::.: university aduissions proced-

i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::~::::~:1:lr::::t:::': : : : :====== ============================= ures, to clarify wh-ere necessary·i:·: :::.':j::::i ..................~:~:~. .he extremely complex range ofi: :·::·~·.~;:::::-:' .....

-" '"":i~f~f2; '"~~S ~:'' ':: U. S. admissions pracbices, to" study Middlie Eastern univers-iy

'"'""'·-'-.':-..-::.- .- ;.: admissions programs, and ,to in-~::::-::-:::::::::::::::::::: : ...... :: '.vestdigate operation s of agencies

engaged in international educa-tional exdhanges.

Mr. Chamberlain will ,ttavelwith Professor Gord-on Ericksonof NYU to universities in Ku-wait, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria,

Eugene R. Chamberlain- Egypt, and Turkey.

Page 2: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

The Appalachian Mounfain Club presentsHANS GMOSER of Banff, Alberta

wifh his 1961 Sk;-Adventure Fin

"DEEP POWDER ANDO STEE'P ROCK'filmned in the deep, powder-snow,Paradise of the Canadian Rockies

John Hancock Hall. Nov. I & 2, 8:30 p.m.Unreserved tickets $1.65, tax incat Box Ogice or Mail Check to:

AMC Ski Movie, 5 Joy St., Boston 8

, _~dCgoey

I Sotv.@·

mmm~P~

a I st � I II -�- - -- 1

(Auaor of "' Was a Teen-e Dwarf ' "ThV ManyLoes of Dobie Gyp', ec;.j

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the week-enirs 1obia garme, the' canen. ationof al fraterity-sponored postme actvit te%and the total boycott of a Dave Brubec jaconcert, schedued for the weekend. The UCoMTeacher Federation tis thron its Fort be.hind the protests. In addition, tie student;have fiired a Hartford law firn as legal eomasel for the stutert body.

The Virginia Tech (VPI) has Banouoedthat with an engineering enrollment of about3700, VPI now has the seventh largest engiin.eering school in the United States. Amonrg thecourses given at VPI are .mechanical, marine,and electrical engineering, and naval arehitec.ture.

No More Course XH?About naval architecture, the Virginia Tech

reports, "A lack, of students interested in en.rolmeinnt in the naval architecture program hasfound the discontinuance of the currioultum atMIT." A check with the Course XEIil office re.veals tibat tEs is not true, and a letter maybe sent to the editor-of The Virginia Tech toinformn himn ofthis.

DisMrimination at Rad ....Did you know that Tech students are mot

allowed to take Rad - - - - fresihnie to damceson the Teoh oampus for the first quarter of thesool year--even if the dance is a big formal?What makes the situation worse is thatPrad - - - - gils are allowed to go to dances atasy other school in the am. Tlds is out-anO,out discrimination.

Of course "Tech" is not MIT. It is VdrginiaPolyTECH. An Rad - - - - is not Radcliffe; itis Readord, an extension of VPL; What reallyhurts is that 'Fordies are allowed to go to dan.ces held by VPI's biggest rival schools, and UVa. The Virginia Tech has called on theadmnisntr of Radford to jstify As posi.tion or modify its policies so the VlI men havethe same privildges with the Pjaford frosh that

men have.If MAe No Stng!'

An amazing new scientific discovery cannOw bring you direct relief. Never again willyour eyes have to feel the stinging effect otchlorine-not if you go to Brookdlyn Polytedh,Chlorine will no longer be put into the swim-nwW pools. It h been replaced by "HO.dine," a mixture of postezsium iodide with anorganic reducing agent. "IKO-dne" has beeotested in the pool over the sumnmer, and is saidto have elininated the stingin side-effects ofchlorine. Also it is suMposed to have lastinggermicidai action. The chernical is a varlutioaof the non-stinging iodine now being sold.

-F 1P1 - --· C as �, ,_ -r Ir�-- · · -·sa a r s - rr cl I rr · r

Get full information atPERSONAL ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

Monday & Tuesday, October 30 & 31We urge you to make an appointment to meet our representative through

your placement office. If you cannot do so, please write to- Si Amnestoy

Stag Assistant to VP Engineering

DOUGLAS AIRCRAFT COMIPANY, INC3000 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica, California

. : * i .- 'An equal opportunity employer

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"College Worrl on Septemnber 27 reportedthat University of Connecticut's Daily Campuswas running into its share of troubles. Mepaper was made independent of the StudeniSenate and reponsible to an atmirsttration-appointed advisory council. The paper's editorssaid that they belieyed tFis censorship-threat-ening move was made because the paper in thepast had often been critical of the Universityand of its akninistration.

This appears to have been only te startof troubles on the UConn caanpus. Early thismonth 2500 male students, later joined byhundreds of coeds, demonstrated in protest ofnew University policies. The new policies in-clude financial control, over all activities wbfhan annual budget of over $100, prohibition ofon-cnampus fraternity parties where liquorwould be served, and extension of "advisorycounmcils" to cover not only the newspaper, butalso the student radio station and the yearbook,

'qtit the Rdoad Jack"Students at the UConn-Yale football game

carried huge placards with the slogans: "UC-Slave State", "Rights, Not Writs", and '"TheBig 7hree--ShKruschev, Castro, and Dunlop".Dunlop is Assistant Dean of Men, Job P. ADun-lop, who was responsible for issuing the newstudent control ruligs. Afterwrds-, thundredsof students mnarhed on Dunlop's home. Fromloudspeakers in the widows of dotrs and fra-ternity houses across the canmps blared RayCharles' "Hit the Road, Jack."

Te Daily Cammm of October 2 ecitoriallycondoned the demonstrations and oantaixedseveral "Letters to the Editor" from facultymembers expressimg sympathy for the students'cause. The Daily Campus of October 6 washeadlined: "SIdnts United; Fightlt forRights."Under the headline wvs this story:

'"hs issue of the Daily Campus is beingpublished to damatially illustrate the serious-ness of the probtemr confronting the studentbody at Ws Uiversity.

'me issves are: first, Students have beendenied the rigit to alocate their funds, andsecond, The Associated Student Governenthas not been recognized as the representativebody for the students at the University of Co-necticut."

Eight AMte Pages· he remainder of e eight page paper was

left blank (except for column rules) as a ges-ture of protest. There were also several otheractions of protest. The UConn InterfraternityConference voted to boycott the affual Home-coming Weekend el s hcdKes a boycott of

. . .-.

2. A girl kes a good isner.Do not monopolize the conversation. Let her talk while you

listen attentively. Make sure, however, that she is not herselfa good listener. I recollect a date I had once with a coed namedGreensleeves Sigafoos, a lovely girl, but unfortunately a listener,not a talker. I too was a listener so we just sat all night long,each with his hand cupped over his ear, straining to catch aword, not talking hour after hour until finally a policeman cameby and arrested us both for vagrancy. I did a year and a day.She got by with a suspended sentence because she was the solesupport of her aged housemother.

S. A girl likes to be taken to nice plaes.By "nice" places I do not mean expensive places. A girl does

not demand luxury. All she asks is a place that is pleasant andgracious. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, for example. OrMount Rushmore. Or the Taj Mahal.'Or the Bureau of Weightsand Measures. Find places like these to take your girl. In noeircumstandes must you-take her to an -oil-cracking plant.

4. A girl likes a man7 to be wel-informed.Come prepared with a few interesting facts that you can drop;

casually into the conversation. Like this: "Did you know,.Snookiepuss, that when cattle, sheep, camels, goats, antelopes,and other members of the cud-chewing family get up, they al-ways get up hind legs first?" Or this: "Are you aware, Hotlips,that corn grows faster at night?" Or this: "By the way, Lover-head, Oslo did not become the capital of Norway till July 11,

1924."If you can slip enough of these nuggets into the conversation.

before dinner, your date will grow too torpid to eat. Some mensaee up to a half million dollars a'year this way. ,.

a 1901 Max fhelm"

Structures- relating to cyclicloads, temperature effects, and theinvestigation of new materials,methods, products, etc. Aerodynamics- relating to windtunnel, research, stability andcontrol .Solid State Physics -relating tometal surfaces and fatigueSpace vehicle and weaponsystem studies--of all types,involving a vast range of scientificand engineering skills

Heat Transfer-relating to mis-sile and space vehicle structuresServo-Mechanisms- relating toall types of control problems,Electronic Systems-relating toall types of guidance, detection,control and communicationsPropulsio n- relating to fluid-mechanics, thermodynamics,dynamics, internal aerodynamnicsEnvironmental- relating to airconditioning, pressurization andoxygen systems

I

To the list of things girls like, add the king-size, unflteredIPhilip.Morris Commander. Girgs, men-in fact everybody .

Bvith a taste bued in his head--ikes naild, natural Comnarnder, .co-sponsors with Marlboro Of this volum. ..

_b/~~~~~~~~~~~~4t W _.. ,--,-,,,,-- -- ,-,,~----------BProhibition Smashes Frea+ .t*fiesUConn Students Retain Lawyers

THE DATING SEASON

I have recently returned from a tour of 950,000 American col-leges where I made a survey of undergraduate dating customsand sold mechanical dogs, and I have tabulated-my findingsand I am now prepared to tell you the simple secret of successfuldating.

The simple secret issimply this: a date is successful when theman knows how to treat the girl.

And how does a girl like to be treated? If you want to know,read and remember these four cardinal roles of dating:

'A1. A girl likes to,be treated with respeetWhen you call for your girl, do not drive up in front of 'the

sorority house and yell, "Hey, fat lady I"' Get out of your car.Walk respectfully to the door. Knock rpectfully. When yourgirl comes out, tug your forelock and say respectfully, "Goodevening, your honor.ed Then offer her a Mrlboro, for whatgreater respect can you show your girl than to offer Marlborowith its fine flavor and exclusive seleetrate filter? It will in-dicate immediately that you respect her taste, respect her dis-cernment, respect her intelligene So, good buddies, beforegoing out on a date, always remember to buy some Marlboros,available in soft pack or fip-top box in all 50 of the UnitedStates and also Cleveland.

SPACE, MISSILE & JET PROJECTS-AT DOUGLAS

have created outstandingcareer opportunities for

SCIENTISTS and ENGIINEERSwith or working on advanced degrees

Assignments include the following areas:

Page 3: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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5, 6, 8, 10); Consolidated Edisonof New York (1, 2, 6, 10o); NorthAmerican Aviation: Atomics Inter-national (2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 19, 18, 22),Autonetics Division (2, 3, 5, 6, 8.18), Columbus Division (2, 6, 8,16, 18), Rocketdyne (1, 2, 3. 5, 6,(All E n g i n e e r i n g Disciplines),8, 10, 16, 18), Los Angeles DivisionSpace and Information Systems Di-vision (2, 6, 8, 16).

OCTOBER 27American Cyanamid ;5, 7, 8, 10);North American Aviation (See list-ing under October 26), E. 1. duPontde Nemours (2, 6): Ohio Oil (5,10); Timken Roller Bearing (2, 3,15): Youngston Sheet and Tube (2,3, 10, 15, 18).

OCTOBER 30Douglas Aircraft (2, 6, 8, 10, 18);Humble Oil (Z, 6, 10): Lord Manu-facturing (2, 5, 8); Standard Oil(2, 6, 10, 18).

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fures Above 2500 ° K." Jean Blan-chet.Room 4-160 at 3:00 p.m."Dynamic Behavior of Coupled

-Unif Operations." T. J. Boyle.Room 12-102 at 4:00 p.m.Department ofMechanical Engineering.Seminar: "lrreversibe . Thermody-namics of Non-Linear Systems." Dr.James C. M. Li, United StatesSteel Corp. Coffee in the MillerRoom at 3:00 p.m.Room 3-270, 3:30 p.m.Technology Catholic Club.*Philosophy Lecture Series: "Philoso-phy in an Age of Science." FatherWilliam Wallace, O.P.Room 3-133, 5:00 p.m.Leture Series Committee.Classic film series: "Order" (Dan-ish, 1954). Admission by subscrip-tion ticket only.Room 10-250, 6:30 & 9:00 p.m.

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Course numbecs eligible listed inparentheses. -

OCTOBER 25Digital Equipment (6); GeneralRadio (6, 8); B. F. Goodrich (2,8, 10, 18); Sprague Electric (2,5, 6, 8, 10); Sperry Rand (8, 10,12, 18): Boeing (1, 2, 6, 8, 16,18); General Motors (2, 3, 5, 6,8, 10, 16, 22); Central IntelligenceAgency (2, 3, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15,16, 18, 19, 21., 22).

OCTOBER 26Monsanto Chemical (2, 5, 10);American Cyanamid (5, 7, 8, 10);Battelle Memorial Institute (2, 3,

,open fo Ae publi,.WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25Opertieo.s ResemG Caern.*Seminar: Managerial DecaisoiMakiog - A New Theory." Pro-foessor E. H. Bowman, School of In-justrial Management, M.I.T.Room i-146, 2:00 p.m.peptortment ofNuclear Engineering. *Seminar lecture: "A Summaery oftbe Experimental and Numericalphysics Performed in Support ofIse Design of the High-Tempera-,wre Gas-Coole Reactor," Dr. N.F. Wikner, Research Staff Member,General Atomic.Building NW-I 2,138 Albany St., 4:00 p.m.epartmetit of Biology.*

Seminar: "Gene-Profein Relai+onR-ships in Human Hemoglobin." Dr.Corrado Baglioni. Tea in Room 16-711 at 4:00 p.m.Room 16-310, 4.30 p.m.Technology Catholic Club.*Meeting.Miller Room, 5:00 p.m.protestant Christian Assoeiation.*Study Group.317 Memorial Drive, 5:00 p.m.The Japcan Society of Boston.*Japanese film series: "Arakure"(Untamed). The first of a seriesof four modern Japanese films withEnglish subtitles.Roomrn i0-250, 7:00 & 9:15 p.m.Hillel Society.* Israeli Dancing,Walker Memorial Room 201, 8:30p.m.

THURSDAY, OCT. 26Noonday Organ Recital.*Winthrop Smith, M.I.T. GraduateStudent. Admission free.Kresge Auditorium, 12:15 p.m.Department ofNuclear Engineering.Seminar: "Fast Fission Measure-menfs in the M.I.T. D20 Lattice."J. R. Wolberg. "Non-DestructiveDeterminafion of Properties ofSpent Fuel by Gamma Ray Spec-troscopy." MA. D. Cohan. "Practli-cai Plasma Generation and Feas-ible Plasma Acceleration." L. Lid-ksy.Building NW-12, 138 Albany St.,3:00 p.m.Department of Physics.*Colloquium: "Optical Masers." Dr.Charles H. Townes, Provost ofMI.T. Tea in the John Picker Kol-ker Room 126-414) at 3:30 p.m.Room 26-100, 4:00 pm.Seminar Sponsored By TheProtestant Ministry.*Contemporary drama seminar. Mr,Bloy.317 Memorial Drive, 5:00 p.m,Water Polo Club.*Meefting.Alumni Pool, 6:30 p.m.Seminar Sponsored By TheProtestant Ministry.*Seminar on New Patterns in Fam-ily Life. Mr. Holtzapple.317 Memorial Drive, 7:30 p.m.

FRIDAY, OCT. 27Department of ChemicalEngineereing, 1Q0.991 Seminar."Chemical Reaction; at Tempera-

Room 6-120, 4:00 p.m,Departtent of Military Science.*Lecture and Demonstration: "TheBig Three - Analytical Design,High Speed Motion Picture Analy-sis, and Analog Computation." Dr.Alexander Hammer, Mr. R. F. Le-doux, and Mr. E. H. Jakubowski ofthe Springfield Armory.Room 4-231, 4:00 p.m.Department of Naval Architectsereand Marine Engineering.*Seminar: "Constraints on Ship Mo-tions Illustrated by the AircraftCarrier." Dr. Stephen Waldron, Ap-plied Science Division of the Op-erations Evaluation Group. Coffeein Room 5-311 at 3:30 p.m.Room 3-370, 4:00 pm.Hillel SocietyStudy Group.Morss Hall, Walker Memorial, 5:00p.m.Technology Catholic Club.*Theology Lecture Series: "WhereChrist Reigns." Father William Sul-/ivan, C.S.P. Discussion at 4:30 p.rm.Room 3-133, 5:00 p.m.Protestant Christian Association.*Study Groups.317 Memorial Drive, 5:00 & 7:30p.m.

Water Polo Club.*Meeting.Alaumnli Pool, 6:30 p.m.M.I.T. Faculty Pistoland Rifle Club.*Greater Boston Pistol League mafch,M.I.T. Team No. I and M,..T TeamNo. 2.Rifle Range, 8:00 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. iOperations Research Center.*Seminar: "Dynamic Inventory Sys-tems." Dr. Eliexzr Naddor, Johns

(Please turn to page 6)

SATURDAY, OCT. 28American Maothematical Society.*Eastern Sectional Meeting. Regis-tration, Building 2, first floor, 9:00a.m.-3:30 p.m.General Session: "Some Resultsand Problems in Differential Top-ology." Professor Michael Kervaire,New York University.Room 26-100, 2:00 p.m.Lecture Series Committee.*Entertainment film series: "Middleof the Night."Kresge Auditorium, 5:15, 7:30 &9:45 p.m.

OCTOBER 31Convair (2, 3, 6, 8, 16, 18); Doug-las Aircraft (2, 6, 8, 10, 18); Falk(2, 6, 15); General Electric (2, 3,5, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15, 18): StandardOil (2, 6, 10, 18); Texaco (1, 2,5, 6, 8, 10, 18).

SUNDAY, OCT. 29Protestant Christian Association.Breakfast for Protestant Students.West D i n i ng Room, GracduateHouse, 10:00 a.m.

MONDAY, OCT. 30Applied Mathematies andMechanics Colloquium.*"The Theory of Long Anfennas."Professor T. T. Wu, Harvard Uni-versity. Tea in Room 2-290 at 3:30p.m.Room 2-390, 4:00 p.m.Semind Sponsored By TheProtestant Ministry.*Inquirers Seminar. Mr. Ihde.Spoaford Room, 1-236, 5:00 p.m.Choral Society.Rehearsal.Kresge Audctorium, 7:30 pm.

TUESDAY, OCT. 3iComputation Center.*Seminar: "Musical S o u n ds fromDigital Computers." Dr. Max Ma-thews.Room I0-275, 3:00 p.m.Department of Aeronauticsand Astronautics.*Seminar: "Problems in Space Com-munications Re-Entry." Professor F.J. Tischer, Deparfmeni of ElectricalEngineertng, Ohio State University.Coffee in the duPont Room (33-307) at 3:30 p.m.Room 35-255, 4:00 p.m.Department of Metallurgy.*Colloquium: "Microtopology of Ox-idation Processes as a New Toolfor Studying Metal Structure." Dr.E. A. Gulbransen. WestinghouseResearch Laborafories.

~- write direct to Miss Anne

Hillman, Director of Student

Relations, The Waldorf--Astorian

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Calendar of Events Placement Interviews

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Page 4: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

.ssociate Managing Editor ............ Joseph Hanlon.'63Advertising Manager ... ............... Robert Powell.'62Circulation Manager .............. Howard Kirkendall.'63Treasurer ............... .......... Jobn Dobson.'62Controller .............. , Edward Schwartz.'tZ.Associate Photography Editors:

Boyd Estus '63, Conrad Grundleliner '64Features Editor ......................... Toby Zidle.'63Erltertainment. Editor .......... ,. Warren VJiscombe '64

Deadlines: Advertising, noon Thursday. Entertainment,Features, Letters to the Editor, Photography, Sports, noonSunday. News. 7 p. m. Monday.

Unsigned editorials appearing in THE TECH consttutethe opinion of the newspaper's Board of Direct*ors, andnot that of MIT. The newspaper welcomes letters fromits readers. Space permitting, such letters-will be printedin whole or in part, if deemed' by the editor to be ofsufficient interest or benefit to the community. Brevity In-creases the chance of publication. Anonymous letters wiltnot be printed. Names will be withheld upon request.

I '�-�,'� �PB�� s lflI�BI �e�--aaap I - �-- -- e�-- = - �L--·as�ea ;'eL��P �UPCI �-- Ill·lr �. 4"��

:'L~ettese:To the Editor:

he defense of Amnerica todincludes -not only a safeguard-ing of her material wealth andgeographical borders, but -alsothe protection of Amseioamsfrom powible Phsieal injm-y;whether this protection is at-a-distarnte' in: the form of anti-nmissi'le-misZfles, or at home, L'the form of fall-out shelters.Thi is not a strange or newconcept, for England, in addi-tion to fighterr planes and radarnets, was dotted with bombshelters during, World War XI.Today, the flying fragmentshave been replyed by drifalng&a-out, hence the type of s/ae-ter necessary ,r protection has.changed.

The conept that is n,haowever, is ftat the averageAf.erican citizen will be treatedas a soldier during all-out war

.in Se sense /that he w'fI beplaeed in survival conditions.No longer can he stave of thefear of enemy superiority andattack by conjuring up to tsof throwing an army together'o fight an occasional war."

In the face of great externaldanger, a realistic appraisalmust be made of the adut-merits and preparations neces-sary for adequate safety. NoGle can lead a relatively no laMige in face of great danger, un-less he refuses to acknowledgethe existedoe of suh danger.

The necessary prepaations inmy mind, includes constructionof a fall-out shelter it thhi winincrease the probity of sur-vival. The shelter is not a mil-itary establishmert, ,hence itsrational use will not turn Amer-ica into an-armed camp. Indeed,the present shelters have peace-timhe uses far removed fromneighborhood pillboxes and am-munition dumps.

I was -somewhat scked todiscover that the abcove weremy reasons for advoeatig sel-ters, whereas one of your rea-sons was "If- it. were not for thesheer power of the -Dgations behind the military . . .the situation. -would not be soalarming." Your considerationsare of internal, not external,.threats. In addition, after em-phasizir the milfitary aspect ofte cold war, y.ou only consid-ered that it was being foug0hton the ileologil, potal , economic levels. I think it isevident that it is also beingfough: on the military level, and

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'riskme. For a miversity in the midst of ameapolitan area of over a million people, MITis rathe badly isolated. The surrounding area isa rather depressing and uninviting place to live.

There is not much MIT can do about tHeheavilyindustrial neighborhood, but it can tryto make its own campus. a more complete unit.It is a fact that there is not on campus a decentrestaurant that would make week-end meals alittle easier to obtain. With the not-to-distantclosing of Howard Johnson and Smith House,those facilities currently in existence will com-pletely vanish. Everyone speaks of the MIT com-munity, but very little of it exists.

The prospective student union has often beenattached to commercial activity by plans allocatingspace for stores right in the proposed building.There is as yet no money available for the union,but the Institite architect is in the process ofdrawing up yet another proposal. We think care-fui consideration should be given to the questionof whether commercial activity might be moreuseful in a Iarge building by itself where busi-nesses could attain a use.-ul size. Whatever de-cision is made with regard to long range plansfor the union, MIT ought to encourage substan-tial private businesses to operate on campus toprovide a few more of the amenities of civiliza-tion, .

National Rewiew HThe National Review, a "Journal of Fact and

Opinion," as it calls itself, each week managesto put forth a conservative philosophy in a vari-ety of ways. It has taken the format of the liberalweeklies, mainly the New Republic, and putthem to its own uses. Where the New Republicbegins with a series of short editorials, the Na-tional Review does also. Where the New Re-public prints a cartoon, so does Mr. William F.Buckley's magazine. There is the same attemptat long, closely-reasoned articles, and of wittycolumnists. Where the former magazine has bookreviews, so does the National Review. One thingthat seems to be missing however, is the Review'slack of discourse on current theatre films, art,and other cultural pursuits. The magazine con-tains an occasional denunciation of modern art,but rarely ventures any further into aesthetic con-

. siderations. The NR seems to have placed itselffirmly out of the picture.

What the National Review does specialize inis the wisecrack, e.g. the following from a recentissue: "Quote Adlai Stevenson: 'We've madesome progress with respect to the problem of theSecretary-General.' Unavailable at press time: theSecretary General.` This is the entirety of thelead item in the issue. Or. this, also in its entirety:"In Washington, D. C., at a party for theGhanaian National Founder's Day, Soapy Wil-liams adorned himself with a black bow tie witha white gi.raffe on one side and a white rhino-ceros on-the other. His hosts were kind to allthree dumb animals." Doubtless this sort of thingis very pleasing to the magazine's readers, but itmakes one wonder at the level of their politicalthinking, if not at the level of their intelligence.

The editors seem to have the idea, and judg-ing from the Letters to the Editor, the. readersagree, that calling a public figure by his firstname is the ultimate in devastating criticism. Thestandards are "Adlai," "Eleanor," "Rocky,""Jack," and of course, "Harry." Either the editorsare aware that their readers respond in a glandu-lar sort of way to this sort of writing, and aredoing it intentionally, or else it is due io: a funda-mental infantility in the editors themselves.

Besides the wisecracks and the attempted col-loquialisms, the NR is full of all kinds of cliches.The death of two conservatives is announced inthe pages under the headline, "R.I.P." The head-line over a column by James Burnhanm is "Onthe Horns of Our Dilemma." They use phrasessuRch as: ". nothing succeeds like success,"" . . according to their lights, cry heresy or riseto applaud . ." or "we feature, od bless us, anew colmnist... or a -phrase hke, "One thingthe Liberal mind cannot stomach . ." And soforth and so on. Even when they do have some-thing to say, the NR writers destroy the effect bygumming up their prose with worn out, hack-neyed phrases.

What is it they are trying to say? They don'tlike Dag Hammarskjold, Nelson Rockefeller,John F. Kennedy, the United Nations, the Am-ericans for Democratic Action, John Dewey, ia-tegrationists, Social Security, income taxes, Com-munists, Earl Warren, Labor unions, and ofcourse, anything that might fall under the titleof "Liberal." They do like Barry Goldwater,General Walker, Joseph McCarthy, atom bombtests, Thomas Dodd, and apparently, WilliamMcKiney.

(To be continued)

that oA p ble; although ho.rie - ot is purely Ami t',T·m I agree that it definitely1li be a lss - -to. edilization if

thE. use of fall-out 'elters ev~rbecknrws necessary, bt *-~ute survival condtioht Dhim.mai t felow axre, as you stated;only a set-back and rot an anni1'aton Of civilztion.i Tlecapacity .to s've as humanbeings irnelude t he eatiy tosurvive in tihe physical enviroyment, hence before we doconcentrate our time, energy,and mone on higher needs, letus first assure physical survival.For "what, we have now" cam-not have meaning Abiout us,but we can exist without it; in-deed, civilization can regain'4what we new have," but i*cannot recreate civi.lzati,.

Ernest Rogers '61

To The Editor:The recent conflration at

WGBH will probably advanmthe-Sttudent Union budding twoyears. Thi~ raises an k ,rtantquestion: is Activities Council,under the new Constitution (un-approved by Intnnm), pre-pared to design, and alot soacein, the Student Union?

UInder this Constitution, in ef-fect, "Class A" members havetheir names changed to "Per-ma-nent Members" and "Class1B" activities are called "non-Permanent Members". This, ineffect, is a miniscule concession.Also miniscule is the fact thatCoass B activities will have fiveseats on the new Couneil. Themethod of appointing these five,however, is calculated to leadto faction and podities.

To correct this and stopCtass A members frn mdonimn-ating others with t generouwew powers they have given

themselves in the new Constits.tion, I propose: first, that Ins-Coam veto the new Constitu-tion; second, that ald activitiesbe given equal rights by havingal seats rotate in a specifidmamer or by having a type ofSenate and House modeled afterhat of the U. S.; tAird, that all

activities being discriminatedagainst organize to combat thenxoly of power in the andsof the Class A activities.

This well correct a stituationin which Class A met/erswould give themselves muchspace in the nion. whie CssB activities woek starve forlack of worlking room.

Fdward J. dewicz '63

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Chairman Charles Muntz.'jM2Banaging Editor ....... ... TDomas Brydges.'SZBusiness Manager ........ .. Peter Thurston. 'b ZElitor . Carl I. Wunseh.'6;News Edito ................. Roger Weissinger '62Sports Editor .... . Tho.ms Sheahen '62Photography Editor Cu............ Crtiss Wiler '63

Managing Board ....... Barry Blesser '64, Ann Sarney '64Candidates:

Tom Maugh '65, Dick Minnick '65, Linda Rollin '64News Board ; ...... ................... Jeffrey Levinger '6;3

Candidates: Robert P. Goldberg '65, Allen Hzberman '65,-it -o ~ ~Leon Harris '65, Andy Tannenbaum '65

Sports Boaxd ............ Jay Salhnon '63, John Golden '65,Bud Pratt '64, Charlie Smith '63, Bob Gray '64,

IT . ~NWarren McCandless '63, Jchn Butler '65,Dick Sidell '65. Dick Tsein '45-

Photography Staff: Allen Rosenberg '63, John Eulenberg '64LX Candidates: Scott Grahm '65. Sandlford Libman '65,

I-F~~~ 1Bob Spitz '65, Richard Long '65LL Plhotog.aphie Laboratory_ -Staff: ·Maximn G. Smith . 'Z,

at. ~Sup-rvisor, Harold Iuzzolino '64, Bob Sanders 'f4,Lou Taft '64. Armand Poirier '6:

Candidates: Fred P. Anderson '65. Alan Schwartz '63,Arthur R. Sindoris '(5

Features Staff: Thomas F. Arnold '64, Don Goldstein '65,David Trevvett 'ro

Iibitzer-~~ii . By Elwyn R. Berlekamp '2 A6 o:: < . ;2 :~

The aLmW Brnidge CHa ORTHteaam of four dcamnpiosip a . , A 2

I won this Ye by Prof. Wtte- IV A 9 7 6head, Prof. Peterson, MT. A0- ~ 3 2sher anid Mr. MacLairen. Th e 9 7 5 4 3mathematioi:ala finlshedl only a W VEST EAST'half rOint aherk of the seomd 4 K Q 8 7 6 4 J 1 4 3EpaCe team in a. Very cose 44 V J 5 I KID 8'board match. 4 9 6 16 5

Shown above is board number 4- A K 10 2 Q I 8 619; one of the mare inlteresLimg SOAE,hands romn the evening -,~ession 9 54f the toulnmamenlt. Inhe biddimng 4 3 2Denont pass withouit osmmenr,. A K Q J 8 7 4North could scactly help raas-'rag his Prf3eT to gamne aitwS Er t-West xvabixbe.Sou'th came in vWth a free bid Biddinw.

Sout West North1 1.* p3V P 415* P 5%Opening lea:- 4"K

at tthe 3 level, and then Ahe stmbegaln; The 4-V contract 'S un-maikeable, for reaos wficbwilld beome appaemt .qho rly-.Eas, boweet, had no way ofknowinag *i and me fOe brsacrifice of the auetio0n by bid-

bfd 4V, East Hwoud. hw beconrenit to sto at 34, but hefigured that North-Sout ooeogdnmake 4f, and 446 co ud piuably not be.set nmne theal ometrick if doubled. As *e eardslay, of oouse, thiags, cram gomuch woase. An opening 4 lead

f;rom Noth it l woun~d t Weso's44 conquet tree tricks, or 80

points worth, but Soutth had noidea tod such a pmfot wvvf pus-sfle. 'E-tms olp2netm hai con-,rCited fir a wkwrabte game-amd b'e bdd a hieby dfisdbu-Iinomhad h. I-e bid 5*, not.

2$6144~4

Ald Fn

reafly expeeting to mage it butffaii- --nt _v~a vm_ _ __h_

Ahold has 1,sms to a ompd-e oItriks m # and XP gS downorily me. This woted hame beena, dheap save indeel if F at-Wevt head been abae to mwake

44). Butt Siouth's caloulations/wee w1roag on anolther count.

Noth lheld the PA Hoead duseass 46 horas thalt Soulhmore or ]ews exPected amdthherefore 5* ouitd .have beymade. Nora, ehower, quite

mutsWfi y decided dtt 5W wasliker to be a bter sot (,par-

ticuJaraly in v uew of -e extxa(Please turn to page- 5)

The e TechVol. LXXI No. 20 Oc. 25, 1961

Charter Flights'The MIT Charter Flights are up for bidding.

Tge process of running the four flights to Europeevery summer for MIT people is a large andprofitable business. This business once moreraises the current conflict,over who should bepermitted to make money on services renderedto the students, staff and faculty at MIT.

Total possible profits on the four flights istwo thousand dollars, or five hundred dollars foreach eighty person trip. There is no guaranteethat the person or group running the flights isgoing to make any money; in fact, there is somecapital risk. The Office of the Dean of StudentAffairs is currently trying to choose some personor group to run the flights this year under theA.sponsorship" of MIT. What this means is thatthis authorized person will be permitted to usethe Institute mail system. and a request will bemade to the Institute Committee Secretariat torestrict bulletin board use to that one prson.

Last year, after the Dean had picked a stu-dlent, the Secretariat granted bulletin board useto another student as well, in the interests of free-enterprise. This second student bought out thefirst, and in the end there was one set of flightsat a higher price than either group had originallyintended.

This is an area in which too much competi-tion, or any competition at all, can be deleterious.If no group gets sufficient passengers, there couldbe no flights at all. There is also the question,again3 of whether or not this is a service whichshould be provided at minimum rates to the MITcommunity; the TCA is looking into the matter.If the charter flights are left in the realm of free-enterprise, and if the Dean's Office is going togrant official recognition to one person in the in-terests of reducing the cut-throat competition,what should be the basis' of the recognition?Need of profits for a worthwhile cause? Orshould it be on the basis of demonstrated abilityto get .the job done? Or on the basis of a mini-mum bid per person per trip? Whoever doesreceive recognition is in some sense being handedtwo thousand dollars.

This is one more indication for the need of apolicy to be formulated concerning campus enter-prises. We urge the Institute Committee to beginan immediate investigation of the entire problem,-

'ComerceThe fire at the WGBH studios across from

Building Seven hac .um ton eF ;t-¢ cd-,;,, ..quences for the educational television station,also brought into focus several problems directlyinvolving MIT itself. In the first place, the site ofthe fire was a building now occupying the spaceproposed for the much-discussed and long-de-layed student union. In the second place, thegroup of stores .occupying the building repre-sented practically the only commercial facilitieson or near the campus, besides the Coop.

The fire has taken out of business, at leasttemporarily, a large barber shop, and a not to beto- terribly lamented cafeteria and drug store.Inadequate as these- stores were, they representedat least some access to the needs of everyday

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CHIRC01of Boston

'Cnserna'ory Auditorium31 Hlemertway Street

DR. FREDERICK L. SCHUMANProf. of Govt., Williams College;

Author of "International Politics,""The Commonwealth of Man," and

"Soviet Russian-Since 1917.""The Neuroses of the Noltions"

Sunday. Oct. 2--10:30 A.M.

Nov. 5--Dr. Scottff NearkgNov. 12--im PeckNov. I9--John Ciardi

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cently by a Shop member forsale on the market), and per-haps other prizs. IThe numberof suca sbsidiary- awards ineach division will be determined,by the judges ater the contestcloses.

Although ttiis s nrot yet of-t. ial, the .Hobby Shop may ob-tain the use of the Library's Lstfloor corridor for dispaying thewiri.ng photographs.

Closes November 30All those interested in enter-

ing "Treoh Photo Fair," notethis important fact: the contestcloses on November 30, 1961.Additional information and en-try -blanks may be obtained atthe Hobby Shop, room 2-051, or-by calling MIT extension 143.

As a sidenote to the contest,shutterbugs who like to do theirown developing amd printingare-reminded that the Shop hasa very well-equipped darkroom.Facilities for doirg work incolor photography have justbeen added. But try to get therewell in advance of the contestdeadline, because fthe darkroomhas been very busy so far bhisyear.

The love of justice is simplyin the majority of men the fearof suffering injustice, - LaRochefoucauld.

--4Imoto -confesf

is th Shows first cotest at-'tempt with Institute-wide pub-Icity and cash prizes. WcCad-den is quite optkimistic aboutthe contest, altou, he is notsure how much interest there-wil be: in it. "I think weql getquite a .few enteries from theSSop itself-many of the mem-bers seemedl interested," he re-marked. In addition, 'TechPEhto Fair" has been plannedfor an optimal time of theschool year, when not manyother activities are going onaround t Instituate to distractpotential photo contestants.

S-ince publicity is krportant inthe success or failure of anycontest, the Hobby Shop has ar-ranged many means for inform-ing the Institute cormnunity of"Tech Photo Fair." Notices yvillbe posted on the bulletin boardsthis week, and the Hobby Shopwill maintain a bootih im Build-ing 10 for 2 weeks featuring aphotographic display. Radio sta-tion WTrBS has agreed to' dospot commercials on the contest.

Smaller Prizes AlsoFor high-quality photographs

twhich do not win one of thetop prizes, the Hobby Shop willaward free Shop meniberships,"'eather' wineskins (made re-

(Continued fram page 4) '"poin-ts earned for majar su:,t Ccoantracts shodd bath 5O and IE'5 be on) and therefore PtSout back in his seoogatrysut. TtLus oorcktuded an amtionwhich featured fOur crMeMu ve game bi -, a.1 of wtich were mi.nteded primarily as sacrifies! 7zTo make the situation even mmore ironical, the only game ooomtact that was makea'ble was >the ornly one t.hat waas vol- -<-

tariLy taken out. 0West opened he K arnd O

-South saw that he was in dee trouble. Dutmmy had five losers in , arnd there seemed to be -no way of retaininige con!tn"ca of-0he hard. Since Vhere wa;s no o-coneivauble disltri;btWticn ag.aitA-which the harld ooutld be mnadelegitimaately, South's only hopewas for poor defense. Play/ngthe hand wide open, at tvick two he led a -small V to Du mny's A 'and returned another snmar1l one Lrbowards his Q. East ducked,Soubh's Q dropped West's J, and.deol~arer's problems were ower.East stl li had the IK, but thiswas the ontly trick for the doe-fense.

Need'less to say, sh,oull Easthop up w'ith the V K at -bricktlhree and return a ,, it is cutr-tains for declarer. He might aswebl ru& with th.e VQ ad randiamorkls as far as they go. Bulf.East s9Lll has the contmudllingtrump aund gets iln in time tocash two tricks for .tie defemd-ers. Then South is d ntwht.tead of mabking an overtrk,

w~ .fbq .- g~rltZixi w Here's' big news for ofcs muttebug~s-(ired paten-

tial h-tterbt s)t- The HobbyShop is s.ponSrig "Tedfi PhotoFair," a 9hal-wide photogra-phy 0ontest-which starts thisweek. A raod prize of $35 wilbe awarded for he black-and-wtite or color, print selected asbest by a panel of tU'ee dis-tingui judges, -ed smtaliercash ~ze for Ue winning ei-tries in each of te three cotn-test divisions.

These 'tuee divisions areBlack -and - White Scenic (topprize, $15), Black -and - WitePortrait ($10), and Color ($5).

Itis -'ix'rmened '#at at -en-tries be mototed. Also, black-and- white prints shomd be en-larged to 5 by 7 iches, andcolor priats to 3 by 5 igc~. Anentry fee of 50ci for the first, andl0c for each additi l prnt ineach division wii be ctmrged to'help -;ay te pr -Money andto discourage contestants fmmentertig mere qWantkty insteadof quality.

Throe ExperieaoeLd jfgesConcernir. the panel -eof

judges, Bt0y S freshmanBob McCadden said, "BWe :havetaree good men to judge, andthey're all extremely interestedin the 'success oi the contaest."One of them is Professor HaroldE. Edgerton, famous for hisa m a z i n g stroboscopic .photo-graphs, who has-a broad generalI interest in photography as well.Henry B. "Ohick" Kane is direc-tor of bhe Aumnni Fundl, and hashad umch exlperienoe in wildlifephotogaphy. h third judge,Peter R. Scott, was formerly aprofessional photographer, -andis now head of the Library's Mi-croreproduction Lab.

Wide Publicity ArrangedSeveral years ago thfe Hobby

Shop ran a small photog -ah'ycontest, withhout prizes, but this

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$525 per person(3 to a room)$625 per person(2 to a room)

$800 singleAll Rooms Have TV-

For information or resesratonSaddress Mr. Ralph Schaffner,

The Biltmore, New York 17, N. T,Madison Avenue at 43rd Street

MUrray Hill 7-7000"WHER£ EVERYONE M£ETS

UNDER THE CLOCK'I

.-:-·' 4'vS35ebfpi~fy .

* _ . -S

through engneering asignments that give you aclear picture of various fields you might choose,

Or, if you'd like to continue your graeduate study... RCA will pay full cost--tuition, fees and ap-proved text-while you go to school or study twodays a week, and work at RCA three days.

These are only a few of the many reasons for gettingal thie facts about a career with RCA. :See yourplacement officer now about getting together withan RCA representative, for an interview on-

--- -Tira has broadened ma's slope of the heavensand earth. Fom an orbiting observation post highin the sky, it transmits a new weaith of meteorolog-ical information to earth-bound stations below.

Tir0m is only one of many RCA sueses in the..wide, wide world of electronics. And as the horizonof electronics steadily expand, the need for more·,.d monr competent and cesative engineers in-cremes in direct ratio. That's why RCA, now inthb forefront o eetronic progress, offers such_~-~~Ud,~~ ~--napmatim for Electrical EPgneerq.| Meehanical Engiaeer, and Physicists.

If yu already know what you wanf 'Io doe inooneigng . . . and re quaiified, RCA can offeru di18redf nip*en in your chasen field, and

back yeu up with traiahg and guidance by ex-pefien d e giq eers.3yov'M not quite sun which direton you.wahlto g ,, RC~A Design and Development Secia-ized Tra/inin will help to point the way. You'lreceive full engineering salary while you progress

li

-'O,,.send ym I risnm.e t:Collegse RelationsRadio Corpoeration f AmericaC4erry Hill, Co mden -8, N.J.

'X 'The Most Trusted Name in ElectronicsRAWO CORPORATIOM OF I4ElOICA

An Equat Opportunity Employer

HI I ' ; , I . .; -o .S rHY ' .ors h 4 Kibitzer

For a WEEKEND inNEW- YORK

it's

c BLTMORE Inaturally

SPECIAL COLLEGE RATES

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needs young engineers todayfor spetacular achievements to-morrow

~~~~"B g - - 7. .. __ .. . - .,Q -. -... --1-T v ---- 4.1--A. -!.- ..

COO-P.IPI PE

bANOTHERCOOP

VALUE

af $;269OUTSELLS ALLOTHER PIPES

COMBINED AT

TECHCOOP

Page 6: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

___ C _ _ __ ~~

Mel Dorfmanand

The azzVilage Band

Don Quixote's-Ypsies

Fri. and Saft., Qct. 13 & 14

at GypsylandInman Soial

ClubLechmere Sq., Cambridge

Every Mon.The Dick Wright Band

featuring"The Mlodernfones"

Every Tues. - Jam Session

Every WednesdayThe Dick Wright Band

featuring"The Moderntones"

Every Thurs. - Folk MusicEvery Fri. and Sat.Mel Dorfman and

IDon Quixofe :

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'lub Plannewell as from pract'icl experi-ence. Mrembers may invest aslittle as five dollars monthly, al-though it is hoped that somelarger sunas will be invested.The I.M.A. Executive Comnnit-tee does not expect any for-tunes to be made, but it doesexpect the membership to learna great deal about personal m-vestment.

Wrnile it is now --expected thatonly I.M.A. merrbers will be al-lowed to -in the InvestmentClub, all who are interested areinvited to attend the orga,~iza-tional meeting today at 5 p.m.in the Barnard Rem, first floorof buildirbg 52: I.M.A. member-shilp dues' are $1.50 per year,and: membership will be sold atthis meeting. If you are inter-ested, but--cannot attend the-meeting, contact Bill Pinkersonor Dan' Gross at AL 4-9309 any-timne after the meeting has beenheld.

_ " M S. .O .M-E

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imn 'Il *1 ~ _ .l _I ~ a~mn

Investment(The Executive Committee of

the Industrial Managemenrt As-sociation, the undergratuateprofessional society of CourseXV, has announced that it in-tends to- formn an investment

6 club. This orga. nization, to be•. namned the I.M.A. Investment

Club I, is being formed to pro-0 mote an increased knowledge

and interest in the Stock market> and in personal investment< policies.kn 3Beginning with about twenty

members, each of whom will-' contribute monthly, *e I.M.A.

Investment Club One will investthe joint funds Of its menders.The club membership will makeall decisions as to how to useits funds. It will decide whatand when to buy, and may even

Lu decide to end the club's activi-7 ties altogether.

w Ot~her Activities,I- Investment will not be- the

only activity of the Investment-Club. It is hoped that: membersw1il gain from discussions, re-search, and guest 'speakers, as

TCA 'Thanks-Giving'Charities Drive SetFor Mid-November

Vnw twtwor TVA Ch,&W6iiVe wWa on a new aPar-anee this fal. Wbh a- note bor-

wed from' t' e -:ThMwWiday, the TA -plin'' to r e -

Chriten -the ,,de ' "The' TCATfaw-Gbi.Ang," anmd will foouabti on the spkitt Of gr.~ti-tude and generosity eng*Tderedby bhd6, fevtive'seea-en.- Traktion ineludes CARiE aid

thae World University Serviceamn g the charities .sposoe:d,and word is o expeted asto w others wildl round outthe lat. Soe the "T-aks-Givig'" voil be, the efly recog-nded un<er~aduate chearitiesdrive at 1UT, a great deal ofatenetm wa ~ be given to jstwhih chaaities a,re dchose forreprwenttain. Amy sggestionssubmiFtted to Sheila at the TCAoffice in Wafl1ker Memorial w/itbe given dae conisideradun,

The "Thaik's-Giviing" is ten-tativel.y slated for the k OfNov. 13.

H o p kI i s -li'ver~ Bt -timOereMarytland.Room 1-146, 2:00 p.m.M.l.?. Chmid Sociek.Meeting.' "Bicheitsry.O" PrtofesorJohn lBuchana, M.IT.Spoffordl Room, 1-236, 5:00 p.m.Semimar Spaoesod By TheProtestat Minisy.*Seminar in New Toesamen' Greek.Dr. Gee, hhs, Episcopal Theologi-cal School. -317 Memorial Drive, -7:340 p.m.M.II.T. HUillel Society.,Mofris Brg Memorial Lectue.*."Challengeos fo he Scholar: A Ju-daic Wow." Dr. Nahum Glazer,Head of Juciac Studies, BrandeisUniverity.Kresge Auditorium, 8:00 p.m.M.I.T. Hillei Society.*israeli- Dancing. Admission 50c.Walker Memorial, Room 201,-8:30P.M.

uM..r. ON WCGB-w.CHANNEL 2M.I.T. Sciens Repo't."A Nobel Laureate Looks af Sc;-eee." Dr. Bert Lile- with .gues,.

EXHIBITS *Heyde. Gdalley.Art .Exhibit: A selectio of pl*.iegs from the Corcoren Art GallerBieorial. Displayed trough Oetfbar 29. atlery hours: Mondaythrough Friday, 10:00 e.m.-5:0p.m. Sat+urday a/ S$umnay, 2.!)5:00 p.m.

Phofo Serice Gle~(211 MOssachuseftl Avenue)Photographic' Salon printes by J,Ivan :.Sherry of Toledo, Ohio. Ex.hibit consiss of varied subjech,Displayed, through November 17.

FmWt Cleb.Work by -stuodents of Robe*r O,Preosser, Professor of Visual D.sign. Early New Englaid pofler/collected by Professor F. H; Nor.or.

serumeP to TWO teek,

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... then we probably have nothing to offer you now. We like to fill Our big-shoe jobs from within. So if you're looking for room to grow, try us. Oursenior engineers and executives .of the future must come up from the col-lege ranks of today. Many of our top men began their careers in ourengineering departments-and not so long ago. Time now for you to takethat first step: sign up for an interview with the men from GeneralDynamics; See your placement officer or write Mr. H. T. Brooks, Managerof Personnel Placement, General Dynamics, P.O. Box 2672, San Diego,12, Calif. An Equal Opportunity Employer

OENER2AL CDtYNAMCSZ CiOC3PPRRTICN lllll ..ASTRONAUTICS AND CONVAIR D(VISIONS, SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA

POMONA DIVISION, POMONA, ALIF,; FT. ,WORTH DIVLSiON, FT..WORTH, TEXAS .- '

Cheremz a Fae:NU, pU Saia Fvents

>W

e ,nixeer s.eason is bretits last for the fIl tern, go wehope you've fod the gir ofyom dreams by now. In caseyou have'r t, here. may:]~e ylorlast ~ottAmties via Uae mxr

Fall 'Frolics Northeastenn UimvexAty w0l1

..bethe site of tM "Fai. jFrolcs,"an acqaimintance danae spm-sored. by the Newman -Club'Federtioni. The -"FTlYcs" witlbe held in the girls-.gym be-gintaag at 8 p.m..Friday, Cct.27. Ad msmrowili be $1,

Open House-The Hariet E. R/ch Co-

op House of Boston Ut, vemuityis 'holidd an open house-stuwr-day, Oct. 28 from 8 to 12 p. m.AdA.imn iis fwee, -d the ad-

' f is !es , ay State Rd.

04

L Calendar 0f Events-(coothmod from PO - Dr. A10. Dob-el6ra. Peipt of, a,- - - . I -- -. . 1 968 -- NOe W Pnse * i PBhY cs , a"

Visiting Proef r o Bi' - ~M.I.T.W*d, Oaf. 24, 9:30 p.m. red S~od. 29, 4.:Q p.mP_

EN(GIN EE-I RSSCI ENTISTS

dom. Aff.

:1l

IF THE SIHOE FITS.,.

Page 7: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

CALIFRNIARoud Trip At "Fez ps Uc

I from $160, ore $20 * *6 *: w.paty more?

I'Drph.-Gorge, sidsnoft rep.LA 3-6100

Otkaer ligf: Chicago & Morhi'-

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108Q Boylston St., BostonCO 7-1102

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And her's Ametica's only thoroughbred sporse car, the "62 CORVME. We warn you: If you drive a Corvette afteryour first sampling of a Corvair, you may well end up a two-car man. And who could blame you?

See the '62 Corair Ad Corvette a at AtO hr 1Eal authoriZd- Chaurolet dealer'slb- _

ii

II

Lookin Back...75 Years Ago

.We are greatly pleased to see'that our suggestion of last yearregaring the fowudation of a'banjo club, has been so favor-ably received. Our barnjo clubwill be considerably larger thanthe Yale Club, and will containa greater variety of instruments,it being the intention .to haveseveral n dIins and a flute,besides the banjos and guitars.

No more imrportant announce-ment has come to us recently,than that which says it hasbeen decided to abondon thelower workings of some of thegreat Comstock mines, and al-low them to fill wibh water..

The foot baLl team, with'fourof the regular men's places fi'l-ed by substitutes, went out toCamrbridge on October 20 andwere beaten by Harvard, 59-0.It was found impossible to holdthe Harvard rushers with ourlight men, and they made aseries of touchdowns and goalswhich made the score 53-0 atthe end, of thle first half. In thesecond half, which was limitedto fifteen minutes on account ofthe darkness, Harvard only suc-ceeded in getting a touchdown

Knee-breecheslook too juven-ile for a place of such highstanding as the Institute-donlong tousers, men of '90.

%Mne '88 architects have chal-len.ged any of the other coursesfor a game of football, or forany other gane. Architects'a/renever lacking in nerve.

5 ° Years AgoTMe man who put the iron

washer in the pe.anut machinein Ulnion corridor must be ihe"meanest man in the Institute,

Last evening at the Union,Mhe Mechanical Engineering So.oiety held its first meeting ofthe year with an attendance ofover a hundred and twenty-five.After all the courses had beenserved and the cigars passedaround the president of he soeciety addressed the men. 'Thesecond speaker was the wittyProfessor Riley, who entertain-ed the men with an account ofhow an excursion upon an oil.carrying vessel, taken in orderto study marine engines for athesis, turned out to be an ex,citing and pleasant one-monthvacation. The well known Mr,Jack Armour of New York nextentertamed the men with an ex-cellent series of humorousstories whih caused a contnuallaugh for ahlnost half an hour.Finally Professor Miller, headof the department, took thefloor. He outlined the newchanges effected in the course,such as the increase in study ofthe German lguage and theincrease in the study of mathe-rmatcs as applied to practical-problens. These inoreases willbe accompanied -by a decrease inthe studies whidh Professor Mil.ler oonsiders less important,nie meeting then broke up witha rousing MIT yell fOr ProfessorMliller.

2 5 Years AgoVoo Doo takes a step forward

with its first issue of the yearby using a new and economical,method in the printing of itsmagazine. Let us hope that thisis just the first step in a cam-paign to put Voo Doo in itsproper class as a humorousmagazine. The large amount ofspace allotted in the last issueto the spining of silly yarns isdeplorable. Most of these appearto be m idnight attempts ofstaff memrbers to fill the issue,and'get it ready iln time -for themagazine to go to press. Espee.iallyr does this seem true of alittle thaing called "MEy Impres*sions of Carnada (Gained fromNever Having Been There)." Anappropriate addition to the cap-tion might be "Also Gainedfrom Never Before Attemptingto be Humorous." And of the·few jokes whikh are printed, as:usual the best'are ones reprint.:ed from sther magazines.I

A New World of /Wo

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AUTOMOUBIL ODY REPAWRK & R-EF"SHING

N-EW FACESAME SPRTING HEARTWe might as well tell you straight off: Corvairts the wr for the driving eathusiast. Thinkthat lets .you out? Maybe. M aybe anot.

Until you've driven one, you really can't say for sure, because Corvair's ldnd of driving islike no other in the land. The amazing air-cooled rear engine sees to that. You swing aroundcurves flat as you please, in complete control. You whip through the sticky spots other earsshould keep out of in the first place. (Especially this year, now that you can get Podsitractonas an extra-cst -option.) You stop smoothly, levelly with Corvair's beautifully balanced,bigger brakes.

And Corvair's found other new ways to please you this year. A forced-air heater anddefroster are standard equipment on al coupes, sedans and both Monza and. 700 StationWagons. So are dual sunshades and front-door armrests and some other goodies. You'll notesome new styling, inside and out. Nice. And safety-belt installation is easier, too, and cheaper.Another extra-cost option well worth eonsidering is the heavy-duty front and rear suspension;it turns a Corvair into a real tiger.

So you can see we haven't really done much to Corvair this year. Why on earth should we?If this car, just as she is, can't make a driving enthusiast out of ydi4 better take a cab.

Page 8: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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Sunday Evening OCTOBER 29 at 8 o'clock

. ~° DR. C. ERIC'LINCOLNARNOLD' FORSTER -- ·

"Political Extremes - The Black MuslimMovement'and The-John BKich Sociiefy

FORD HALL FORUMJORDAN HALL - Gainsboro St. cor. Huntington Ave. -BOSTONDOORS OPEN 7:45 P.M. EVERYBODY -WELCOME

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o- Whrile the MIT Community- Players' production of "Themg Wild Duck" did lack profession-

al finesse, it was amateur -the-- ater at its best.

The play itself, while not Ib-sen's best, is still an extraordi-

> narily complicated piece, one< which would challenge actors ofv the first magnitude. The poweru of the play builds up very slow-Z

Cf ly and even a slight misstep canuu break ifts spell for minutes af-

terwards. In others of Ibsen'splays the characters are walk-ing concepts and this is truehere; however, in this piece, this

'T -is not emphasized nearly asV much as elsewhere, and,' untilLU

the last act, iit is an intenselyLu human drama.I!- Right + Right = Wrong

The theme of the play is bheconflict between idealism andrealism. It shows the tragic con-sequences which can arise whenthe two are mixed in the wrongproportions. In the first act we.see the contrast between suc-cessful realism and unsuccessfulidealism personified in fatherand son. Art first we are sympa-thetic with the father, but grad-ually our allegiances aiv swayedun~til at the end we a-re im-mersed in comnmiseration widththe son, with Ms impotent ideal-ism.

This is a very difficult playto hold together effectively. TMePlayers must be commended onthe way they succeeded at thisin acts 3 and 4, butt in the otherthree, the performance just didnot hold together. In thesetree, there was at least oneweak performance each, andthese detracted from the whole.Since this drama is very subtleand slow building, and since theparts are so completely interde-pendent, these acts could notbe termed successes.

The star of the show, or atleast one of them, was evidentlysupposed to be Gabe-Shapiro asGregers. He showed himself tobe a very good actor, but ittook him some time before hestopped being the actor GabeShapiro and started being theman, Gregers Werle. Let us

hope - hat this was merely some-thing akin to opening nightstage fright.

Teoo Strong For PartGregers' father was played

by Theodore B. Jacobs. Whilethis was a minor part, Mr..Ja-cobs still managed to convey tothe audience an understandingof and sympathy for the oldgentleman. As long as he wason stage, we simply could notcondemn, or even see anythingamiss with his philosophy oflife. If anything, Mr. Jacobswas too effective in the sceneswith his son. We were prevent-ed from having our emotionstangled in the way Ibsen evi-dently meant because Mr. Sha-piro was completely oversha-dowed except in the last dia-logue between Mhe two.

Hjahnar was played well byJoseph Khoury. He made thefather a living being. 'TWe playis so constituted so that if Hial-ma.r is not well played, he caneasily degenerate into an iimag-inative fantasy, but tHis did nothappen and that is all to Mr.Khoury's credle. The only weak-ness in his part, and a slightone at that, was that his be-havior at the im mediate mo-ment of the revelation did notseem consistent with the char-acter as he played him.

Thief Who Stole The ShowIf one is to select a star of

the show, however, that honorwould have to go to SamuelMillman as the grandfather. Hemanaged to upstage everyone.Mr. Millman must be an acutestudent of life to act the partas he did. His every action wasconsistent with the part. Youknew him as the old man next'door.

Next we come to one of theweak links in my opinion, Pa-tricia O'Reilly as Gina Wivdal.At times she was the star ofthe show, but at other timesshe was definitely a discordant

note and the latter momentswere frequent enough to disturbthe pattern of the play as awhole. It seemed as thuglh abe,every once in a while, lost in-terest in the part and just saidher lines to get thern out. Again,On a couple of occasions whenshe was on the sidelines, shestopped being part of the playand started watching it.

Again! Too Much-Too LittleThe last of the major charac-

ters is Hed.ig Ekdal played byErin Oberly. She is young andshows promise, but she Wasguilty of that card'ral sin ofthe theater, overactinrg. Itwasn't too serious, but it was.noticeable. :I would be tenqted'to speculate that this arosefrom trying too hard to act thepart in a way wich she did nottrtly feel represented the Cha-acter she was portraying.

If the play were still around,I Woula reconunend it to every-,body interested in drama -withthe exception' of those con-noisseurs who like everyth.ingperfect, even hough in theirheart 'they know no play can14ve up to those standards. How-ever, if this is tykpical of thequality of the Commity Play-ers, their future productionsshould.be very worthwhile. ac-

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the Harvard Cooperative Society, 'mRi/chad N. Waterhose '65

"Sophia Loren is magnificent°Thtis one role is sufficient topeace her among the top act-resses of our day." -Herald

I Joseph E. Levine presents

Produced by Carlo PontiDirected by Vittorio DeSica

An Embassy Pictures Release

11

Sun, Oct. 298:30 P.M.

Tickets$4.0., 3.50, 2.75, 2.00

O TONIGHTAlso .Sunday

THRU SUNDAYMatinee 3-6:30

. We all make

Yes, a man age 3

$5,000: of Savings

:0 can getGreat Directors Film Festival |

. NOW! ]

Marcel Camus' Brilliant

`%BI ACK- OANEW' w#"Je= On A Summer's Day"

Friday, October 27Federico 'Fellimi's Great!

"NIGK of CABIRI A"The Bespoke Overcoat"

Daily ·from 5:30Saturday & Sunday, 2:30

1fine-- arts.-''-; No~.,¥rw 1- at;s. av e.L ci ,~~140 -. ;

5-Year Renewable Term Insur-ance for only $2.85 monthly. For age 20 it's

j III $2.25; 25, $2.50-; 35, $3.45; 40, $4.35. An-nual dividends reduce these costs even 11

rates at your II A Berkshire Typewriter Paper :I age.

I *EATON PAPER CORPORATION J,- F,:,,PVTTSFxEZLD, MAS-04.1.;

, ,. IRight in Central Sq.)....... , : :: : , ambndge,; Mass?_ .: 2

-Tosts Over 101 CoustsNOT lhas hosted over a hun- acement, · foreign ? .~amg

dred high school couselors and financial aid. A sinmarfreon secondary schools around gram, with special emphasis 0hlie country. hiffs sixth an-college admissions war eld_nual guidance conference ran Tresday.from Sunday, October the first, Bes.'s broadeng he know.-until Tuesday, the. third. The edge of the guidancecounselors,'closely-packea schedule of the thie Institute paid -a expensesconference included speeches over $50 for each attendant. Theand diseussions on the guidance party was lodged in the Hotelof high shool students conshi- Bellevue and transportation t0oering further education. and fron the school was pro.

The large group of counsel-viaed. a undergraduate stu.ors from ahnost every state in dent accompanied each personthe union first met together in to answer questions about thethe Little Theater, Kresge Au- sol. -ditorium, on Monday. morning. Counselors were deeply in:After a welcome by Roland B. pressed by fi's wide varietyGreeley, Director of Admissions, of courses and many types Ofthe group heard short addresses students. Most had pictured:by Albert Bush-Brown, Herbert MT as a co~lege offering littleH. Woodson, Ithiel de Sola Pool, besides science and engineeringHoulder Hudgins, and Irwin W. With over 1200 colleges in theSizer, representatives of the nation it is difficult to learnfive schools OftenT. This meet- much about anyone. The UITing was followed by a luncheon faculty hopes it has changed taeand discussion groups on vari- concept of many counselorous subjects including advanced. ac,-=t t--hni'cai s .hools;.

J tlheater..i.Intense Ibsen DramaCreditablyPerformed

-Annual IMeetingT6 - annual meeting of the membership of

cardance with Article XIV of the By-Laws,will be held in..

Harvard Hall 1Wednesday, Oct. 25, 1961

$ p.m.Members who have joineed since July -I, 1961are Participating Members and are cordiallyinvited fo attend.

SOPHIA LOREN in

"TWO WOMEN"

KENMORENear Kenmore Sq, KE 6-0777

"THE' WORLD'S GREATEST GOSPEL SINGER"

M' -al, alia Jac ;'enSymphony

Hall

HORACESILVERand His _Quinet

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Page 9: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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Limefight, Podu tt0ios presenatSafurday, Oafeber 28th

DICK GREGORYAt Donnelly Memorial Audiftoriumr

TICKETS NOW ON SALE at te 1 Tickef Agency, i 10 StewartSt. (corner Tremont) Boston F6, Box Office Prices $3.75, $3.25.$2.?5, $2.25. MAIL ORDER: Make checks payable to Hub TicketAgency, I10 Stewart St.. Boston 16. Please enclose self-address.ed stamped envelope. ALSO-. Out of Town Ticket Agency, Har-vaed Square, Cambridge.

w

"Fiorello" To Open At Shubert Nov. 6

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sompp-

Su bscribe To The Tech

"I donT know what the name- of ..thee course is, but I've repeated it iGAPjETTES

for three years !" -C. b - - _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f.~C'rbt''nT4~C O............. .. _,-:' .:' .._... _ .................

';--- '21' GREAT TOBACCOS -MAKE- .20 WONDERfUL' SM0 ES !-AGEDM1lENDED MILD= N~,fiLTqRED EH EY SATiSFY !i:

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IBy Warren Wiscombe '64

.e biggest newS 3n the e.-:tertaimnen sectou seems to bethe wpn~ of "fiFre],ro," whdch,aceordig to Time magane, isa '%rely and erybel minica"about ".a dymarAe humn beingin a =azzle-dae-e era." Bwoadway smash hit, wihdhopened to rane vdews awhvii is still playin to SaRoaie im New York, wilbegin a fr week erngagenxntat the Shubert Nov. 6. It is testory of the loves and d -tuaos C v Mamhtan's pepperyatle masw se9t 2 cnt a back-gMOtmd of tthe Roaafg Twenftes-an ~e whose ,nonofonty

m~d beau wwtt F-ir-eit/os.

A touring eTf Guid andAmerian Maeatter Society ooan-patay ,ar currently psensticngBaddy Chayevvky's '"he TenthManV" anid the cas ,nluemaj0~ meerS of the Broad-way prduction. TMds is a &ri-o draa of apsesd younw~nan wit ac&m cetnarmud a ynagkcgue.

* $ *

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Glatzer To Lecture Nov. 1:'Challanges To The Scholar'

lre 1l'th NmZ Buurg Me-mmiaLeetw* ' "Caffe}s tothe Sdhlaa: A Judac View,"wi~l be deldvered by Nathn N.

~latzer Wedmesday evening,Nov. 1. at 8 'dock dn Kresge

Der. Glmzer i s cdiaen a£&e Department of Newr E-

ern and Judaic Studis ait Ekrao-deis Ulivemrty. An auhoityon the d.-eveopmert of Judaismthxouh the ages, 'he was n thefacdlty of 'the Uxlivenity ofFramd. A nrnlber of theBr s futy since 1950, hewas made a Guggenhein Fel-low for 1959-60. eeides hvwritten nunerour 'books and es-says, Dr. Gatzer is a Univer-saty Associate at Columbia Un-versRy eand a FeUow of the In-teomatio.all lnstitute of AxUand Les.The lectm is uder tae aus-

,1Mfe of the B'n i B'rith ITllelFoudon. It is opena to the

Theatre ScheduleCHARIES---The Cvreat God Brown,"

by Eugene O'Neill. Tuesday-Friday8:30; Saturdaxy 5:30, 9:00; Sunday 3:00,7:340.

OOL][NIA'"The Complaisant Lov-er," the Graham Greene comedy aboutasdultery between a dull dentist, hiswife, and her lover, and featuringMichael Red grave. Nightly at 8:30 withMatinee on Thurrsday and Saturday at-2:30.

SHUBERT-"By-Bye Birdie," for twomore weeks, the "Toiy--award winningmqusical brings its New York cast fromBroadway, including Dick Gautier ntiKay Medford. Nightly at 8:30; Matineeon Wednesday and Saturday at 2:30.

WrLBUR-"The Tenth Man," by Paxd-dy Chayevsky, for two more weeks. NoTimes Available.

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Danne~y Mmorial qrhewterfoOe of hose wh/rlwind onenrght stans on Tuesday, Nov. 7.TICkets are avadialble at a va-rMety of pla, indudmg Thelace Rtdf (a bisto on Hunt-ingbn Ave.), TCA, Briggs and

gs iHarvad Sq. anid Fi-lene's.

A grup of unet ed per-eos are pr tiag a play caled'"he VWhite DE1l" at the LoebDrama C(ener in Camnbridge,Tqurs&y, Oct. 26 lthrough Sat-uwday, Nov. 4. The HarvardDranatfie Club is a'bslnible feortbds evet.

The Brae ater in I-vard Sq. is presentiag the movie"Amd Quietly Mows the Dom,"which is an adaptation of Mik-

vShol v's massive novelof Cossack Me w the Don Riv-er. The p]ot involves GrIggcy,a banymne y3uag Cssack, ina pen-od o lussia -hstory du-ng the FRrt World War and

shontly th ter. The twoherors are Grigory's wife andanother wom.n who is vewybeaiuti,fua and very dizstisfiedwith the husband she has, andwho would undoubtedgy like totrade him for Grigoy.

Anrother popuflar theater withMIT student s is tfhe Univeaf:tyin Harvard Square wdi is pssenting the double Mid of '¢Nv-er on Sunday' and "FrtfUc."

WVARNING to thse plia nxgto attend the C~harles My-house:

(1) Bostirn's only off-B~qad-way playhuse wbit~ on-B dway prices ,has added sonme newseats to its balem, andthaIv an obstructed view. emiythe fiamt row pmides, a clearview of the stagie. Beaw thui inmiind when bWimg tickets.

(2) Be sure to arnive swvhat ealy Jf picking up ,eoat the boxoffice you ame imstore for a joyous 15 mdnuetes ofwaiting. T~he find-ou-ownt-ssystem is a'so qunte roovel.Thbese l1itle inefficiencies sme-t'~nes delay the urta ri'ng:by as much as a half hour.

In adl fa.irness, however, wemust admit that '"The GavafGod Brown" is vealy good and idworth the iascmaeniences.

Movie ScheduleASTO] - ",Splendo' in The G;S{,'

1:O0, 3:05, 5:10, 7:10, 9:15.BEACON HHLL - "Rocco And

Brothers," 1:35, 4:05, 6:35, 9:10.BOISTON "Windjammer." ''Ty

Showings at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.BRATTLE - "And QWet Flows the

Don," 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.d~APRI - "Breakfast at Tffany's,"@

1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.OENTER - "Natuxe Girl and The

Slaver," No Time Available.EXhETE--"Purple Noon," 2:165, 4:2Y5,

6:40, 9:00. Shorts, 2:00, 4:10, 6:26,8:40.

FENWAY - "'L'Adventure,l" 2:10,4:30, 7:00, 9:30.

VINE ARTS - Through Thursday:"Jazz on A Summner's Day," 5:30, 8:45,"Black Orpheus," 7:00, 10:00. StartlngFriday: "Nights of tOe Cavirla," and"The Bespoke Overcocut," No TimesAvailable.

GARY -- "Guns of N.varone," 1:10,3:40, 6:20, 9:05.

KhEITH MEMORIAL- "Backstreet,"1:00, 4:00 7:¢6, 10:00. "Troubles in theSky," 2:45, 5:50, 8:55.

KENMORIE - "Two Women," 1:00,2:45, 4:3~, 6:25, 8:10, 10:00. "Mr.Ma.goo," 2:40, 4:25, 6:15, 8:00, 9:50.

LOEW'S ORPHEUM-"Tihe Devil atFour O'Clock," No Times Available.

MAYFLOWER - "Romanoff and Jlu-liett," and " Doet<r at Lexge," NoTimes Ava~ilable.

METROPOL1TAN - "T'he Hu.ter,"1:00, 3:40, 6:20, 9:065.

PlIA;I~IM -' "The Great War," and"Season of Passion," No Times Avctil-able.

SAXON - "Gc.od-Bye Again," 1:00,3:05, 5:10, 7:15, 9:20.

STATE - "Geistha Playmate," and"Young Love," No Times Available.

TELEPIX - "The Crime of M.Lange," 1:37, 3:39, $:41, 7:45, 9:49."Pa3isF Weekend," 1:00, 2:5'5. 4:57,7:01, 9:05.

UNIVERSITY - "Come September, '

and "Honeymoon Maclhine," No 'TlmesAvailable.

UPTOWYN - "Ad-a," and "TwoLoves,:" No Times Available.

' Ticeis: $4.25, $3.50, $3.25, $2.50, $1.75on sale a4 The Place Coffee House, 70-B HunfingtonFdiene's; Biggs and Briggs, hsrvard Square; alltlcket agencies.

Ave.:major

Mail orders to: The Place Coffee Hou ("close sfamped,self-addressed envelo -e}.

'Checks payable fo Kenmore Produtions, Inc.Phone reservations: CO 7-0432, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.· daily.

i z my Masthis wns be at the

B e A -'Kegular Reader

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Enclosed find

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Kenmore Productions, Inc.presents

JOHNNY MATHISat Donnelly Memorial Theatre

on Tuesday, Nov. 7 - 8:30 p.m.

Subscribe to The Tech

Please send THE TECH for ( ) one, (

SiC FLICS

Page 10: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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rnore mnan 4w swunstes w4T uee uL Wa 1_-w-o-,- _,.· met at MI.T. Novemrxb 14 Sa i give'- te *ekoiiiefor the First Intern ational'Con- ao the Air Force and ah;o pr-ference on h &i st a gative scl toFieh/s, sponsored by the Air Dr. -Kean in r toit ofForce Office of Scientiic Re- M.I.T.'s ouftazWing' achiWeseah (A-i)R). ments ki edgrtion, sience ad-

Nearly 100 technical papers technology an the oasion ofdel g with the generatio anld trnao£t f .-the centennia of its foundling.dealing~tal the generation and Dr. CharlesH. Townes, M.LT.experimental use of very hi

tenge magretic fiekds will e AProvost, who pioneered .lcropresented.' wave ampli~atin by stkmdat-

ed emission of radiation (mas-Alt~hopugh prinuxy emphasis ers), will, address the.confeernce

will' be placed on the use of in-..... Tt~~~~~u-irday, November '2.teme external magnetic fie The prceedings ot the corfor the....tudy of solids, biolo- ference are to be,, publis.a.! effects of magnetic fields bedharve. -only recently attractednmch attention and this con-ference wl provide the firstortumity for reseamh in TCC To St1mDicusonostis field to meet. Of '$&-m And RefiegieB'

Conference sessions, a! of'wtich are open, will be held -in A panel disussion of "Science-the Kresge Auditorium at and Religion" will be spomsored~/,I.T, ' Wednesday at 5:00 PM in the

The National Magnet Labora- Little Theater. of Kresge by thetory, whaich will host the con- Technology Catholic Chib. The4ferene, was started a year ago panel, Dr. Gerald Holton, Pro-unter a contract with the Air fessor of Physics at Harvarrd'sForce Office of Scientific Re- Lyman Iaoratory of Physics;search. When c0mpletedit will the-Rev...William Suffivan, frombe- apable of producting con- Metrlita S t a t e Hospital;tinuous external magnetic fiekis Mtooia optlof up to 250,000 gauss in and Mr. Peter Solomon, astrength, the wortd's -strongest, Harvard grdute student fromcontinuous magnetic fields.: The New Zealand; wilt' discuss ques-Laboratory fi/ties will be tions pertinent to the imterplaya- v a i t a b I e to researchers of science and religion.- 'tiwoughout -the nation. The floor will ·be open to

Dr. James R. Kill an, vW1t ad- group discussion following' thedrew the opening sesson on panel,

Ron Wi;fson (lef) and FraA Kocsdon '63 are' shown' weqgh;ng o2ifcomponenfs of Me solid propellant rocket fuel which they reported on'as being safe for armateur use.

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Agwvn & Peter D. Le-'Tareyto's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est{" -. -_ as asistnt oifeat odf

Slugging Jimius (Preu Boy) Cassims takes off the brass m -. 2ounmvby Pr

knucks to enjoy his favorite smoke;,::.,a:- ... , ~ ' ....~"~~ ~'Says Pre* Boy "Iece Tareyton, one filter cigaretle that : in:' B':. .r...:: Af*er

realy delivers de gustibus. Try Tareytons. Next time you . ~~.~~~~~ : : . ~~:~..:~.::::..:.:.::~:,.::. radluating from Quinc Hig~hbuy garettes, take a co of packs vobiscum.~ :::i _ :c l- h'e served f.. ..O ye..l:s

2 2 ~~~wf he U. S. Coart Guard. He

boua',bo e, Ky., reei vng a baghelar of ar.ts degree in 1960.

- S_<|b__} s w t9 . ~~~~Hie was a ma ktreseachassoaite for Iberty Mutual lIn-stumanae Co. and was a9&isbant

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Scientisfs Converge

first gt Cfeeov 1. MiT rjunior..Shares$1000 ARS Prize

lhe develkpment of a rocketprop6llaat which -is-afe foranmteur use has won two memw-

mers of the EIT Rocket' Re-search Society a $100 AmericanSociety award.

Franklin J. Kosdon, MIT '63and Ronald H. Winston, -_ard, received the prize for t/heirpaper entitled "ExperimentalDevelopment of an IsocyanateSolid Propellant."

Their paper described theempi'al evaluation of a pro_pellant mixture with improvedcasting properties. Their resultwas an organic compounnd thatpj.odkwes a rubbery solid pro-pelant wuhich burns stably whenignited.

The two man te&am carriedout 137 static tests in theMITRRS test oell, the last 40of which were successful..Dur-ing these tests they obtained ac-curate measurements of cham-ber 'pressure and thrust, two ofthe most important calculationsobtainable in a test cell.

The award, donated by Chrys-ler Corporation, was presentedat a luncheon. heid during theAmerican R o c k e t - Society'sweek-long "Space Flight Re-port To The Nation." SenatorJacob Javits, officials of the So-ciety and an estimated 500teachers and students werepresent.

The two scientists met in theMITRRS as freshmen and be-gan working nights in the smallbasement lab.. Kosdon provided much of thescientific data for the 33 pagereport, and Winston did a majorpart of the writing., The resultwas "the best paper written byany undergraauate concerning,the art of rocketry?.'

Debate Soiety BeginsSeason By EntemgTournament At Brown

The 1iT Debate Society be-gan its season by enteringstrong teams in two varsity de-bates.

_At Brown University, Oct. 20-21, the first big tournament ofthe season boasted thrity-fiveteams. The "A" team of JohnCagtle '63, and Steve Wanner'63, affirmative, with Glen Booksand John Morris '64, negative,was in strong contention all theway into the final round beforeyielding bhe first place trophyto Holy Cross. John Morris wasa&wad the second negativespeaker trophy for t tournaomet. Tlhe ''B" team of MikeAuerb~eh '%5, and Pete Whalen'65, affirmative, wilh RalphGrabowski '63, and Gene hinkin'62, negative, also placed well.

At 1X Greater 'Boston tourn-ament at Eastern Nazane, thepreviou weekend, the, negativeteam of Books and Morris fin-ished undefeated, tied for ttheposition of Erst negative team.

Leavitt Named ToAdmissions Offke

L

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Here's deodorant protection

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gH U LT O N

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tion ofe uy 4:00 Wedeay

Friday rdgh will provide thebulk of t wrestling, with pre-'ligY, first round, quarter-fnal, and se-i-final events -tatevening; the first consolationround will beon Friday as well.Saturday wil feature the re-maining consolation rounds andthe finals; action on Saturdaybegins at 2:00.

Wrestlers should rememberthat losing a match does noteliniate a man fron thetoUrnamernt. Wrestlers whohave o0st one match to -a manwho continuers wirinig -naywrestle in the consolationrounds.

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close thei season agaiSt AMmon SatuTdy, Nov. 4.

Frosh Lose, 4-1Last Wednesday the freah-

man soocer team bst a weilplayed game to Harda, 4-1.The game was at home, with astiff wimd frnom the weo ad.the setting sun both hamperingshots at the west goad. in slateof ths handicap, four of thie fivegoals were scored im thtir net.

The garne was mnrked by alot of yplay a-round both goals,altho more a¢t Haivards goalthan Tech's, and rrayr go0dsaves by the goalies. -iarvarddrew fiqst blood as ttew scoredafter orly two mintes O pZlary.Tech gained strength rapidlyand managed to control the bfor the rest of Oe fiorst quayte,.In the seooad quarter Hdmrdasored again, agai;rst the windbl* time, on a cross fmn ftheleft ,isie to the left wing whokUcked it i from he perntycircle.

About lalfway through tbhird qart6r Tech scored a aCrnbion of short pastwhich paced the bal in easysorg psition at tq. left endof the goal. irvenl did msoore agarn uitil the f tquartew when they got twomore goa, one spdimag of thehads of the goaie ald roengintt the goal and t;he other ahigh, fast shot imto te u rcomnr of .the goal.

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Ue annsal l nttammgtWestlig tournament wil be-gin at .7'.00 Friday, tober 28,in te Dupont Wrestling RoomaWeigh-ins wil be held fromRoom to 4:00 oi Friday. Tt isstill possible for addiialtearns to erter the tournamen;rosters and depoits will be ac-

eepted at the Athletic Associa-

By Mite '6BMu4irs po~prwevft so ceftr - tearm

releading --the~i race fotr *t.* New~PEkaW h pampih, reeived,is first setback -tOhe seasSaiturdagy at the'haradg of theAr Force, 5-1. lTs. aftebt? 3.00 on .Brig- Field the sc-ceanem take on Boston Urver-sty; Tech is expecte to withds one, butt -roat w ifut afaghK

A team of 1S men left fgrniLogan Im6l-ta.tionad Aix7p tTtmaxse aiftemroon for the AwForce Academy at Colorad oS - lk. 'Thy expected to fundthe A -Force socer teamn inelseentm condition, bet theyhopd to ouhanmesau thnwith the bail cmv they hadused ao well in the otftr fivegaws of the season.

D~rki practice FridaW moffn ..kW the team -found -. _- -.thehhgg afthtudde, over 7200 feet,had two effeots on its Oaydig.Bsecause of the thiraier atnmog-

* the b -traeled frttirand b ed hig; and be-cause of t searcity af .oxyrgethe team became tied morequwuEy than usual. Co Dalt-temian ped ttat his menwx"ld be used to the new Oli-mate before the game.

Ufrtna tea, this was niotto be. The gaae started wuihMIT in fuS cor/rol of the bafl,ald -the lime pressed jm for afbw shots, blocked easily by theAiT Forew goalk1r5peper. The fifitired qut'lY, howevevr, and theAi.: Fozre began to take teoffesive. , The NH dteense-could not haq up lon 1 amd be-fore the half .had' ended -tAbecadets had seared thme times.

Refresthe d afer the qhfmerest, MIT agin took cootrol ofthe 'bafq and quickly scored ksfjit gl weun Capt. Dirk Ber-gh.ager '62 sod on a dcrectkick ffrn oum tside the penaltoyzone. With -te oore 3-1, EVTIpressed had for another talyan it looked like -they wouadget it when, in the tdnid quar-,ter, -Bob Meharalbian '64 wasfouled in the penafty zone. Hisshot was hard to tthe ]eft sddeof the goal but tlhe Air Foregoal.tender, perhaps the best en-coutered this sea n ,, rmamoed

at 0 toe bloc k It but to[catdtl iL

is fadure to sore snappedthe MEr attack asd the rernan-detr of tie gae was played de-fenivei. in each of the lastquartets. the cadets scored onceand te tired MIT soc teamle. the field defeated for thefirst e -dt i year, tte finnal[ ce 5-1.

i ~ defert by *e Air Forcedoes not hwt I's ohances forlthe New Englan title becauseit ws not a teague gaane. The[~o9ej temn hopes to keep its]oea umnefeatd staltus by beat-iwg Boston Universifty today at3:00 on . B*gs eild; Ir 1,1games sibce M50, BU mas wononly ne to Tech's 10. However,with severe good forwads, BtUShltdd give me Engnee agood Itte tAis year.

Saltadk the..ta]es will be[wd as A tryels toSP1rgfield; Tech 'has managedo~ny Uare ties against 14 lossesin the series with Sp ]field.H e%, in 19t6 and 1959 t,tea-Is tied 1-1, and laEt yearSqrigfie won by the narrowrxniin of 2-1. Adso uaefeatedin New Englm-d dA year,Sp rield poses major ob-sta'q o NMs chamn mshipfAOtwWS. TecO's srtsandngpe~ronme' M fada ensurestht tih;s meetig will be thesoccr game of t week mn New

Next W e. te, w -men visdt Coast Gtuard, and

IM Hockey FormsTwo Divisions ToBetter Competition

We&sdy, No, . 1 is tle&%ea&,4e e for Teg:quau~ *,i'yea' s hI1n-al, hockey pao-.grawn. Rostersd deps ared i'j- ,Ow A-*fbtic Ass. officeat Ui~t tane.-

Hokey thks yev wft t* s tin!o twe grop: e A DiMi-sion wiactl cc t -'t year'sbetter teamz, thdie nevw teamsad last yeas urwerAags wui.leonmtrse th B Diviso. Tbigs4s-done so as -to invaove emn-petbt;o anang the -tp teamsamlto provide the oter teams·w-l~ a dhanoe to -skate andhwve s'- at heiro

however, as solar presure push.ed the needles into the earth'satmosphere where they wouldburn up. nhe experimentalbelt is expected to last two ortlree years.

Astronomers all over theworld have expressed strongcriticisn of the Unikted Statesfor this orbiting of many sm-lparticles.

Sr Bernard Lovell, directorof England's Jordell B ank ob-servatory, called tthe WESTFORD project a "stain" on thiscou.ntry's space researeh pro-gram. iHe said that this is nota scientific experiment, but i4is intended to provide theUnited States military with asecure means of communnaica-cation.

Sir Bernard also sid that tiheRussians raight use this "aot ofextra- tei'estia contanminationfor propaganda purposes."

On the other thand, Sir HarrieMassey, ohairnan of Britain'sSpace Ccnmittee, a nongovern-mental organization, said thatthe did not feel that this firstexperiment will cause trouble,'but he questioned the resultsof future developments of this'plan

The Automobile Legal Asso-ciation warns always followother cars at a safe distance--one car length for every 10

. mpb^,

IM Wrestling Starts Friday bOW T orc,1 Face Sh' S1ay

Soccermen Meet BU Todayr '--4

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IM Fa8 Sfal g $AHeld On Mer Today

Qua.W.ygw round s ad. .semi-finals in the fe Inir msm]w regatta w er eld Oct.17, 18 aaid 19. FkQIrs beganyesterday -and coatine today at4:30 oa tahe Cramles.

PhiA Gamfne D f'mthedfirt wvth -14 points in te earlyrounds, with GrCad Hoe.a bosesecond at 16. -Sigma Ailna -El-zilon took .thga wvi&h 31 po'ms;t¢e remamning fitnalt was Ie-ta Dedla Chi wiuth 45.

TOM astkigs '61& am! .BrmlStrong '62 took &uffor iabs, aseond and two foarthS in-t heprelmiyaf to- give Phi Gamthe top -spot. Bit MeCaresmand oI. GlakoiMe haed d theGrad'Hous boat, pladi fivecanes and howig twice. BZBadls '62 and Harley Jdlo , '63na!iled to fss, -a - d, two.

tfhs, an e}l'f~ and a 'rMafor SAE. -Two fowths, -'tosixtim, a seventh ad tionmbhk were turmnd im by CrmgSawyer and George Fedtz., Theta Delta Chi.

Radio AstronomersClaim Dipoles WillHamper Their Work

(Continued from Page 1 )

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Page 13: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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MIT Third In Sloop Race

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Liftschitz '63, Bob Gray '64,IKen Klare '63, and Warren

McCandless '62 (skipper), tak-g bthird.The wind blew at Bro,ln also

last Sunday where the 25t1;h an-nual sailing for bhe'Hoyt Trophywas scheduled. Ken glare andHarry Weil '64 of MIT weretied for first place when, aftertwo races, the regatta was can-celled due to high winds whichresulted in capsizes and break-downs.

On home waters, the fresh-man individual championshipswere held. Scott Hynek, withJohn Navis creaing, sailed to afirst in the eliminations Satur-day, but was only able to takesixth in the finals Sunday, afterfouling out in one race and cap- sizing in another.

Coming up next weekend atCoast Guard Academy is one ofthe most colorful events of theseason, the New England TeamChampionships. Four skipperswill represent MIT, as theyv sailin six match-races against otherschools in a round-robin.

In team racing, extra alert-ness is required, for you sailnot on'ly for vour own benefit,but also for that of your teinm-mates in a tactics duel withyour opponents. MIT is one ofthe dual defending champions,'having tied for first with CoastGuard last year.

Graduafe HouseWrnc OM T sm;s

Graduate House, led by itsace singles, had little difficultyin turning back surprise teamEast Carpus, five-zero, for theintramural tennis championship,Throughout the tournament,Graduate House showed corn-plete mastery of its opponentsin defeating Delta Psi, Phi DeltaTheta, Cluib Latino SeniorHouse, and East Campus bywide margins.

East Campus found the goingrough al the way, edging outPhi Signma Kappa, Phi BetaEpsilon, and Phi Ganwnl Deltaby identical three-to-two countsbefore reaching the finals.

Pli Gammra Delta and SeniorHouse "A" share third place byvirtue of victories over OhineseStudent Clu;b and Baker Housefifth place tie among Phi BetaEpsilon Chinese Student Club,Baker House "A", and ClubLatino.

IM Bowling New Ten-pins;

Ohl Walker Alleys CosedIntramulral bowli'g will be

played with ten-pins this year,but not in the convenient location of W'alker Memorial. Bowl-ing leagues will conpete from5:30 to 7:00 on Monday andTuesday evenings at SammyWhite's Brighton Bowl, locatedon Soldier's Field Road justpast the Boston Skating Clubrink.

Rosters a.nd fees are due byNovembler 1 at the Athletic As-sociation office in Dupont cen-ter; the schedule will beginNovember 13, running for eightweeks.

T-oub Picnic Saturday

At Riversie Beat ClubThe anul T-CAb fell] pien'e

wifl be held Oat. 28 art We Riv-emde Boat Clut. Thins ms 1Jo,ated atbout tmwo- miles upMemrial Drive fiom M4IT. Thepikm. stanrts at 6 p.m.; gamesaad daancig wil folqlow thefood. Tickets at $2.75 a coupleare on sale now Jn Buildniung 13lobby, at the Athgetlic Assn. or-

fioe, and frm alia teamf cap-(tiaeis.

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Sailing in rough winds, MITsailors tied for third in thefinals of the Fifth Annual SloopCha3nionships at Coast Guardlast weekend. Sailing four outof the seven races Saturday,Teoh was then tied for thirdplace with Coast Guard, thee1959 champions.

Near-gale winds of 40 to 50rknots on Sunday called a halt

to the regatta, securing firstplace for Harvard's CarterFord, the defending 1960 cham-pion. Second place went to BU,with the MIT teami of Mike

I

How They DidGOLF

lIT tWird in ECAC final fourna-mare?.SAILING;

WIT h i r d in NEISA SloopChampionship.

MIT (F) sixth in New Engla'ndIndividual Freshman Crew Champ-ionship.SOCCER

Air Force 5, hAIT 1.Harvard 4, MIT I (F).

CROSS COUNTRYNew Hampsh;re 20. MIT 41.

-... , :_ - i LA LT aR t a.lew ridmpnlire Ic ls Ii no I r- .

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Two years ago Jim Boardman was st-udying en-gineering principles in college. Today his judgmentplays a key part in the construction of microwavetower systems, which speed telephone conversationsover high, rugged terrain. He is responsible forfinding the right locations for essential repeaterstations that amplify and relay telephone conversa-tions through a microwave system.

·. ~·1,t5,j

Jim Boardman of Mountain States Telephone& Telegraph Company, and other young engineerslike him in Bell Telephone Companies throughoutthe country, help bring the finest communicationsservice in the world to the homes and businessesof a growing America.

BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES

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PAPERBACKSAS 7-0920Avenu'e

Everytirng for your Requiredand

Leisure Reading

Open Mon. thm Thurs til 10 p.M.

"Come nla and Browse Around"

THE BELL TELEPHONECOMPANIES SALUTE

JIM BOAR1DMAN

Page 14: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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-After finishing second in the Eastern CoIlleges Athletic tournamnent last weekend, Chuck

V is contemplating trying his luck at professionalgolf, He will not-decide for sure, however, un-til after graduation.

Durirng his three years of 'high -shool, Gamblespent most .of his time runrnilng fron one ath-leticLe field to another. He earned a letter in fivesports: football, basketball, golf, track, andcross count:ry. With Chuck leading the way, hishigh school, Littleton, advanced to the statechampionships in his senior year. As if thiswasn',t enough, Gamble was the quarterbackon a state championship football tearn, won thestate individual championship in cross country,and was rated highly in golf and as a highjurper on- the track team.

Course XVI Major.After turning down three athletic scholar-

shups, Chuck decided to come to MiIT. Majoringin aeronautical engineening, he has maintaineda creditable seholastic average. After gradua-tion, he plans to-work for the Martin Companyin Denver. While the extna work required bythe Institute is sometimes costly to his athleticperformance, he is certain that it will pay offt'in the end.

Poker seems to be the only hobby that ourgolf eaptain has time in whi, h to participate.He acmits that he is not very lucky at cardsbut the "thr}Ifl" of a game intrigues him. Otherthan this, Clhuek's time is pretty well tied upin athletics, shool, and his fraternity. Some-times Garnble feels that there are just notenough hours in a acy.

Team Doinlg WellOn the MIT golf squad, Gamble played first

man last spring and is continuing to do so thisfall. Last spring the team compiled a 12-7 rec-ord and this fall had a 3-0 mark.

To top off a very successful fall season, theteam placed third in the Eastern College Ath-letic Conference tournament. Gamble felt thatthe team played excellent golf all seesn andexceptionally so inn this event.

This touananent winds up this fall's golf-schedule but for GambIe this does not meana rest. -Although he is no longer captain, OhuckGamble Wil continue to participate in MEITathletics, on the basketball floor.

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*60Pont Adremdtk *4'SuPedrb Potent No. 2,611,900

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On top of these team. honors,Ganmible, this year's captainplaced second in the individualdivision of the tournament. On-ly a disastrous first hole, where

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he took a double bogey, keplGamble from winning the tournament.

With this fine performanceGamble is looking forward t¢higher - golfg achievementsGamble said, "For seven-teerholes, I played by far the bestgolf of my career. Take awaythat bad first hole and I w outhave had a real good day."

This wvas theklast match RaulKarman will play for MIT."Parki,mnon", as his teammateseail him, has turned in a finerecord on MIT golf squads. Hewill graduate in February.

tournrments.May Turn Pro

B a

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Meet The CaptainsGolfers Third in ECAC TournamentThe MIT golf sqad placed third in the Eastern Colleges

Athletic Conference tournament held at Farmindale, NewYork last weekend. 'Iis tournament was comprised of the topeight teams in the New England area.

Only Syracuse and Nlavy were able to post a better scorethan the MIIT foursome. MIT had a team soore of 319 as com-pared to the 317 of Syracuse and the 318 of Navy.

The Engineers pllayed brilliant golf throughoutt the tourna-ment arnd were still in contention on the eighteenth green.Syracuse and Navy nosed out the MIT squad by birdieing theeighteenth hole. Even so, the team ourtplayed such teams asArmy and Penn State.

MIT was led by Oh-uck Gamnble '62 iho fired a 7f. Theother finishers were Phil Rabinson '62 with an 80, Ratdl Iarnan'62 with an 81, anid Alden Foster with an 83.

'i CLnucK Uam01eBy halie Smith '62

Chuck Gamnble, the 1962, golf oaptain, hashad a lot of experience as a captain of a var-sity athletie team. In addition to being thisyear's golf leader, he was ccaptain of the19-61 Teh .basketball squad and led the golf,cross country, and basketball teams in his sen-ior year of high school. On top of these ath-letic honors, Chuck was elected president of thisfraternity, Phi Galam Delta.

Gamble comes orom Littleton, Colorado,near Denver, where his home, oddlyg enough,is, right in the riddle of a golf course. Nat-urally, in this atnxspere, he learned to playgolf. His time was not wasted. Besides play-ing on four varsity golf squads, Chuck has inodividually placed second in the New EnglandCollegiate tournament and has won many local

vutmrrs:.- Du'. :By Dick Adlsi '65

It is oten eaid tiat soccer is the "iztterna-tional game". I hMe varsity here at A is aease in point. The wlee forwards who firstbake the ball in play are Italian, Chinese, arndIraqi. Mpre than halt hme starting eleven areforeign students, althikgh there are severalAmerican standouts on the squad.

Of cose, winning is a eamn effort; buit ifone player were to be singled out for contrib-uting most to the team's success last seasonand this season, he would have to ,be DirkBerghager '62, oaptain of the teamn, and Ali-American last year.

Looks Don't CountBellhager does not look lcke the "AR1-

Amnerican" type, if there is one; he is about5'6", with a medium build. Actually, the char-aoteristic first noticed about him is his redhair, which seems to be in or near the actionin the game almost all the time. Pari of thereason for this is the nature of -the left-halfbackposition; the rest--ell, that's the way heplays.

Dirk is fairly international in .his own way.He is of German, English, and Portuguese ex-traction; he speaks all the languages fluently,as well as some French. At present, his homeis in Monte-Estoril, Portugal, near Lisbon,where his father is in the cork business.

Prep School in SwitzerlandHe attended secondary school in Switzer-

land, where he first began playing soccer inearnest, although, like most Europeans, heplayed in grade school just as we play footballherm. (This is the reason so many good soccerplayers are foreign students; it takes severalyears to develop a really good player, andAmericans don't generally have the opportuln-ity.

As for his personal plans, Dirk is studyingMecdhanical Engineering, and plans to work insonme underdeveloped country for a few yearsafter graduation. Otherwise he is undecidedas to which specific field he will go into.

Luck or Circumstance?WVhat does an All-American think about be-

ing an Al-American? Berghager expressed theopinion that much of the selection of the squaddepends on luck or circumstance, and not realmerit (he admits, of course, that it is certainlya wonderful honor-). For instance, if a team hastwo or three equally fine players, the chanceof any one of them being selected decreases.Also, it takes some maneuvering on the part ofthe coach to get votes for his players.

Played '"Field Leader"i).irk added that he was elected Iargely be-

cause of the role of "field leader' which CoachBatterman told himn to play last year . Other-wise, he would not have Scored as many pointsor played the- bail as often' as he did. He saysin all sincerity that it would mean more tolhin, as far as soo-er is concerned, to be on thechbamionsh!p team than to be elected A.I-American.

This year there's -a good 0hance of both.

SqaslhRaslyM ondayAt 5:00 In Dupont

abla Varswaty aid Fomsnamsquash gmys underway with avadly next Mlocnday, Oat. 30.Cowadh Ed Crookr hopes tormeet [ll 3nterrested fesrhmen, aswel'l as retumring varsity menand last year's freshmen. T herally wilh begin at 5 p. m. in theIupont Orenter squasw courts.

the SUPERBA tie of 100% DACRON*Po 0 L.Y IT Ks R

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Page 15: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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)ick Picket '62, Beka quarierback, reuhs a pass ;tercehfon as Do Aic '64 Woorw Deailey '64, Beta defemsve ek moves fo cur off DU hafback Tim Vogfhgs him. Paul Othrefd '62 and To" Weikel '63 (left) ¢[0ie m ein. '62 as he sweeps 1*e end. Pursuijng Vgt is Ckarlie Fitzgerald '59; DU's Robin Lyle '62 and

Jeff Peaa z '63 (rght) bbock. -- photos by Richard Loog %65

Houe an Sti NO Dik' ~ ~e3@ ~ He0 Br

tivel. sG 3.'~tas Seore Fsirst Pidret set up te dieve by a-

e gtDU-Beta ganme was a t a DIU pass oa his. mrovewn 30; tWo p1MJyts later be

ruagged, peaiat~y-mared oneam- foal BBranso al aX m -behindter wdh lh saw thre Betas draaw thle DU defense for the soere.tst obiaod e ir e seoAd e pit gk Aw ooan a pdt

Pdeao on a 50 ymwd lams :xm to Wamn Godo '59 b.;s.

Picke t t lwasen b ahy ee 1 eIe useIm the tl~-d perijod thre Betes-o the Begts main offensdv

tailed IYU On dons and took weapons, te Piet to Gobdnowaver on thehr own 21. Five plays pass combination aad Picket'sater Picket hit Braneson on a .rung on tjhe -trap behind ef-

four ywd pass for he s d feeotive blookinjg.toudidKv. Bad Centerin

:i-e added the poit o an Late in te third pered theoff-taede trap. Ih drive was Bts added thei:r last sore. On

a fowth and .40 situamn tihebad was sped over the head

oe..w i >.t¢.^:!.*. . iof Tmay Weiel '68, be DUp. nte, tofi dead on the DU

i i..4~.; : six. On t1he first .pay the Betlasgoi a bad snap as well an

.. . . were set bc to tihe 11, but onn. .e ixt laa¢ Picket hik Bran-son for a third TD. Tne poSntat4mapt to T n Grrity '63 fel

-s .... .- ..... sho, , ut the Be ~ had a com-I... -Ij. ... :ti rn~mamdig o20-0 lead.

DU did, however, trve thesatisfnactijon of being the only

.. ~~~~team to- e S an tonhe Betas tlhs.Seoa~[' a,' ka' ith elos'iag rndnL

t.t i, u4, Tim. Vog.t '62 interceptedaf Piket-Pass and returned i!t 60yardis for- thne scAtre. The pointwas no good and B -iung onfor The.20-6 wine.

'Be as, Pass Defense Bestlad the final amnlys~is, better

pass defense ard a more con-sistenrt offernse won for the Be-tas. DU was using a three orfoulr main lIne rnost of the aifter-n'oln whbich put a ha.rd rush onPicket and effei-vely containedthe end sweeps, but the Betas

~. :-:|repeatedly made good gains on,_w~~~~ - -:.::- trap plays and lhirt moqe, moax

sstently on their passes.the Betas' two man line

pretty wl:l halted the DU ru-_;·: e~·n:img g-rne and key inatercptions

. by Picket and Dave Koch '62kept the DU's from generatinga serious offensive thtreat.

B DivisionLn te B Diavision, East Cam-

pus roled over Student House5 bi~ ~ 13-0 as they advanoed to the

';-, -- f nals on two touchdown passesfo Tm Jom Costeillo '62 to BobPetri> '63. Theta Delta ah:i be-camne the other B DivJskion final-ist as trey made a first quarterB- |In Va '6n '64 to Tenry Ohat-

1 wi|n '63 TD pass stand utP f'or a6-2 victory ever Sigogma Nu.

. Next S tmy finds the B Di-v' i| o oampiontshikp, East Camn-

- purs vs. Theta I>elta Ohi att 3:30,

and the Cork9sltation game, Situ-Wlllnn -io denidt House vs. Sigmnla Nu at

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Page 16: Alumni In Over 40 Cities Hear 'Voices'tech.mit.edu/V81/PDF/V81-N20.pdf · ·controvensial . project -WEt/ST.FORD October 21 at 9:53 A.M..Boston time. The Air Force hopes to scatter

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BMW, Iseffa '59. 6000 miles, goodcondition, over 40 miles to the

gallon, original owner. $350 or bestoffer. Call YO 2-3657.

CORVETTE FOP. SALE at $1950.Hard to find 1957 classic wifh

3 speed stick shift, black and sil-ver, red ;n+. Excellent condition,never raced, low mi. RI 2-2887eve's.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS and PHYSICISTSB.S., M.S. and Ph.D. Candidates

. Members of our staff will conduct

; -CAMPUSI I NTERVIEWS

November 7-8, 1961,Find out more about the wide range ofactivities, educational programs, reloca-tion allowances and progressive benefitplans offered by Hughes. For interviewappointment or informational literatureconsult your College Placement Director,Or write: College Placement Office,Hughes, Culver City, California.

Typed, prepaid classified adsmay be submiteed to The Tech,Watker Memorial. Rate: -20 centsper 30 character line.

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VNH-hW reoe were: 1, Langio1is, UNE, 20:41; 2, G'knm.NH, 20:53; 3, Robson, MT,21:04; 4, Wolfe, UNI, 21:14;5, Goddaw, MwT, 21:34; 6, PCort, UTNH 21:40; 7, W-aasemtnrm, U'Ni, 21:48; 8, Mien.UNI, a21:48; 9, Lemaard, U21:59; 10, Hirmis, VWr. 22:03.

. ·, · 0 · o-

Fresh Also Lose'nw MU' rEshmr-m era%

oountry suad also lst to amuc stronger Univerity oflNew Hwusi tean 6-45,RRumvig. agadn wi.UxW taeservwms of Jthtn Goe, waflrtogh he is now out of teirramy w.l not b e bae IOrun for a few weeks, the sqoadxwas rnot at fuU stragh.

Coadh Farmham feels *t it' and Oliver, amoter manplagued wft intcl m , cn getbahk =o beto dupe fW /eEastns antd the Now Eng

land, th1M5:1 7 . a tamigt do soer in tyoheretdwo bdg mee 1I- A godke mwstvfikb Rfler, Rtk h w, a1hffihe was oeuerry. In the hentoh m& do wn fort aace

will a*s best sheofoaht asea-wn, 15 :17.

Two ethler MITI boys; ;n thle

tX 1 w ere D~ave Kupwt6ad ija Ptu~vs. - Ad rumning

gpod rws weire X1j&e H~ester,Dick M;1llai Bob ThnsMice - Efron, Frak Shaw an;Radfip He~geby. Tlhe fmahmewi31 aiso meet the Coast GuardAcaxemy next Saburday at NewLondonl

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Cross-Country Bows-to NHII The BUT Vamity- arom com-

trry teago wvs bmteben byi theh~Ut.rzl of New H anive~ last SatUwday at d Fdwddb),Pak oue, 20-41. it h warerof the race in ara e sent teof 20:4 WIvf Dkwe lims ofUlM.

Mike Rbhsomn 'Q ran very weifor -the Mtrr hariem, fm/~/-~kg

b.~ w/t a perso s beat of21:04. He was rurng a srmgsecad untAl seized witfh ranapsin the last he le and, as a.zesmt, lost om place to theseoond mnm of the U har-~Jas.

Tom Gdl '63 of Mll p-ipdohed hift, adso with hir'beattkne oE the yew, 21:34. rterace was lert w Uea N pU four minw in aead of N szmet far nrm R erHrrkbs, Capt. Steve Baaus, -Chkv*ivgwawt amd Job Dwese--

who wre mnw g toge mgstof .te raoe. -

Aflo r.ig nor MM Sattw-dway We Imy Feine, CaADaM and Srbew Witier. Thernex rrmeet for he vamty wbe aga/nst te Coat Guard)Akde at New IAo, Cbn.on Satraa, gOct. 28.

The £imt 10 fiirash in th

0By Bud Pratt '64lhe object of the game of

, golf is relatively straight-for-e~ ward; it is a completely indlivid-.: ualistic sport, with no call forO oureustlinag or outdistancing anO opponent. He performs exactly> the same ultinate tasks as< yourself; to win, you mnust simn-0 ply be a little more efficientW about it.Zp Physical conditioning is sel-U dom emphasized, the basic at-

tributes being supple ams and'wrists, some degree of direc-tional orientation and depthperception, andl (iportant) a

3 comrpatible set of nerves. It isOm a game at which nearly anyone

can c acquire some degree ofskill.

For each of the eighteenholes that 0onstitute a "round"of golf, one may expect to ex-ecute three fundamnetal typesof shots. The drive is bhe first,made with a biiick "wood" club;the ball is mounted on a "tee"an in-h or two above theground (hence the expression"tee off". When a golfer errsand drives the bal into the

woods he may beoomne "teedoff"). The chief ai of thedrive is d/stance.

he second type of shot ismade wfth a slanted, iron-facedbludgeon, designed to hit theball where it lies, be it in tallgrass, rocks, mud, -sand, orsmooth fairway. The dbject ofthis "iron" shot is-to land theball on the "green", tfhat desir-

able, carpetike, segment of ter-rain that contains the go]ler'suitimate goal, the 'tole".

Once on the green the golferuses a fiat iron called a "Putter"to gently stroke the ball intothe hole. He must be very care-ful .to gauge the dstaance of hisputts, paying special heed to ef-fects of surface curvature. thistype of s/tot is the simplest,hence the most frustrating. It isconsidered a cardinal sin to"three-putt" a green.

By far the most difficult ofthe three varieties of shots isthe iron. Unlike-the drive orIputt, the golfer does not hit theball squarely, but uses the ,slantof his iron to "chip" or out theball so as to ipart a backspinthat will enabPle hin to controlits distance. A good golfer takesall his iron shots with approxi-mately the same strength, vary-ing his distance according tohow mfnch of a "cipp" he takes.Phe ohiip and the ratio of heightto distance are inereased as thebah is positioned closer to therear foot

ON DECK.Today, October 25

Socoer with Bosto Univer-sity, Bligs Fiekld, 3:00.,Friday, October 27

Sooer (,F) wfth Br)un,-Bris Field, 3:00.Satulrday, October 28

Cress Countr (V & F.) atCoast Guaxd Aeany.

S-oe'r art Springfield.Wednesday, November 1

Sooer at Coast Guad Axed-err.

Soccer (F) wibh Exeber,Briggs Fied, 3:00.Saturday, November 4

Soccr with AnmV,. 1BkField, 2:00.

Cross C:ounbry (V & F) wifWesleyan.

BOZAK B-207A co-axial; fitted inc u s t o m - built, Bozak-designed

walnut enclosure. Adaptable forsecond B-207A and a mid-range.$125, Call Kirkland 7-9800, extf.315 during day and Wayleand, ELm-wood 8-2166 at night.

These are among the more than 500 outstanding.programs now in prog-ress at Hughes. These programs require the talents of E. E's and Physi-cists who desire to work with professional scientists- in research, de-velopment and manufacture.

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If addition, Hughes sponsors advanced degree programs for aca-demic growth. These pfograms provide for advanced degree studyat many leading universities,

ROOM FOR MALE sfiAent, meals,TV, radio, typewriter, private

study, sociable drinking permitted,Quiet location on. close line toMTA. Persons of excellent charac-ter onil naed a-pply. $25.Q00 perweek. May be seen at 26 ProspectS+., Charles+own near Bunker HillMonumenw or call Mr. Duffy day;a+ RI 2-1500. Visit after 6:00 p.m./

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