i I Will Johnson, On ouincl. mmee a Johnson's office picketed for...

12
was chosen to host the intercOllegiate Boston Coicil ,uring the duration of the 196667 academie year at the organiza- don's second meeting, which 'as held here Monday evening, k according to MIT Representatives IP Frank March '67 and Bob .o..tZ '68 i Tirteen schools were repre- sented at this meeting; at the ,anzation's only other gather- ng this term, Brandeis univer- ity was host to but four schools. planned as Forum tThe Boston Cotuncil has been established to represent all Bos- tonarea colleges to groups out- ide of the academic areas and to serve as a forum for discus- on of problems comman to nY schools. Six student body presidents were among the 21 delegates present from the following 13 Boston-area schools: Brandeis, Harvard, Jackson, Lesley, MIT, Newton College, Northeastern, Radcliffe, Regis, Simmons, Tufts, Wellesley, and Wheelock. Chared by March At the meeting, which was chaired by Frank March in the Inscomm Conference Room, a number of possible projects for the Council were mentioned. Each of these will be studied by one member school, which will present a report on it at the next meeting. The following are the topics considered: 1) Student Discounts (Tufts)- There are two possibilities in this area. First, merchants in the area might give a standard stu- dent discount to all those in col- lege. Second, schools might grant activity discount cards to stu- dents at other schools. This latter suggestion would promote rela- tions between students at differ- ent schools. Sales Tax 2) Massachusetts State Sales Tax (Radcliffe)-Is it unfair to the college student? If so, what can be done about it? 3) Intercollegiate Activities Listing (MIT)-Such a report would enable any activity head on one campus to locate and con- tact the president of the corres- ponding activity at any other Boston-area school. Preparations for this listing are currently -underway. 4) Conferences-There exist a wide range of possible topics for intercollegiate conferences. Those now being considered by the Council include: Student Body Presidents (Brandeis); Student Judicial Committees-Powers and (Please turn to Page 3) Will see Johnson, Killi, Johnson's office picketed for support against bel+ U SI Wt3 s S~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 Photo courtesy of Boston Record American A small group of mothers staged a sit-in outside the offices of the President and the Corporation to protest the Brookline- Elm route for the Inner Belt. They had planned-to stay all day, but left after 45 minutes when they were given an appointment for Monday. Vol. 86, No. 43 Cambridge, Massachusetfs, Friday, November 4, 1966 Five Cents Vice President t lig t , gm d 1@ 0dl 0 Is 0t Malcolm G. Kisperf, Vice President, Academic Adminis- tafion. (The following is the second of a series of six articles based on interviews with each of the Vice Presidents of MIT.) By John Malcolm G. Kispert, MIT Vice President, Academic Administra- tOn, compared some of the func- tOlns of his office to those of a lightning-rod, ready to help re- solve unexpected problems aris- ing in various areas of the Office of the President. The Institute Offices which ad- ministratively report to Mr. Kis- pert include those of Student Af- fairs, Admissions, Student Aid, the Registrar, the Medical De- partment, Placement, Public Re- lations, and the Office of Institu- tional Studies. He also partici- pates closely with the Comptroller and Treasurer in the manage- ment of the operating budget. Sectary of afon Mr. Kispt is Secretary of the Executive Cornmittee of the MIT Corporation, the top policy-mak- ing committee of this Corpora- tion, and works closely with the President in preparing for its meetings. The Executive Commit- tee approves all appointments and salaries at the Institute. Like all the Vice Presidents, Mr. Kispert is a member of the Academic Council, the Institute's top academic policy-riaking group. Academic policy covers . @cke? cost drops -l a i~verse, en,,,,, 'aestt d a -~~~~~~~~~~ I aSm JUtior Prom tickets cost $15. Stt Davis, Junior Class Presi- dent, announced that recent deci- sOs Concerning the weekend's budget have enabled the Junior Pn Commnittee to cut $1 off the 'igin ticket price. The Friday night formal dance ltes a "Campsight Disco- e" in all its psychedelic ledor. Saturday's program be- wlith th e New York cast pro- 20n of 'The Fantasticks,' held tl p.m t .2 p.m. as listed on tiekets, at the nearby Back Bay Theatre. At 4 p.m. James Brown and the Famous Flames, a 20-man show that appeared on the CBS-TV Ed Sullivan Show Sunday, will perform in the Du oPnt Athletic Center Gymnasium. Soft drinks will be available, and couples are encouraged to bring blankets. After dinner, the weekend will conclude with 'The Inferno,' a blast in the Gymnasium. Those who have purchased tickets for $16 will receive $1 re- funds after Junior Prom. such concerns as major promo- tions and appointmnents and de- cisions of priorities for new aca- demic buildings. He is also a member of the Personnel Policy Committee, which determines non- acadermic personnel policies, in- cluding those of the professional staff of the research laboratories. TIn the nffire nof the iP-idfnt he is concerned with the process- (Please turn to Page 3) By Jolhn Foran The signs read: "Save Our City By Beating the Belt" They were taped to the wall outside the o f f i c e of Institute President Howard W. Johnson by a small band of mothers who staged a forty-five minute sit-in there Wednesday morning. . The campaign was to last all day; the four women, who came at 9:15 am, brought children and enough food to last a few meals. Their objective was to have the Institute publicly denounce the proposed Inner Belt route. They planned to stay until they could meet with Johnson or Dr. James R. Iillian, Jr., chairman of the MIT Corporation. Met with assistant Instead they were met by Mr. Constantine Simonides, Johnson's assistant, who informed them that Killian was in New York City and that Johnson, who had just re- turned from California, was un- available. He made an appoint- ment for them to see both John- son and Killian at 9 am Monday. The.women, who represent the S a v e Our City Comnmittee, brought a letter addressed to the two men. They would not leave the letter, however. It read: "For centuries the rich and powerful have felt it is their right to survive and enjoy life at the expense of the weak. This must be questioned, not only by us, but by you and all other powerfui agencies. Must protect poor "It is the responsibility of these powerful agencies to pro- tect not only themselves, but the people of Cambridge and Somer- ville who are too weak and poor to protect themselves from the destruction of the Inner Belt. "We therefore are asking you to make a public announcement denouncing t h e Brookline-Elm route. We request you either put your efforts into blocking the road altogether and push for beter public t-artation, or to produce a humane route, prefer- ably a route along Memorial Drive on piles or underneath the present road." The group, which was led by Mrs. Ansti Benfield, is protesiiig a route that would take the homes of about 1500 families. MIT grad oF1 7 rwarded Nobel Prze }n hemstry The 1966 Nobel Prize in Chem- istry was awarded yesterday to University of Chicago Professos R6bert S. Mulliken. Prof. Mulli- ken graduated from MIT m 1917. The award was given for Mul- liken's original work in mole- cular theory. Prof. Mulliken's father was a graduate of the Class of 1887 and was a member of the Institute's Chemistry faculty for over 40 years. The next issue of The Tech will carry an account of Mulliken's career and will discuss the re- search which led to his Nobel Prize. Balot results announced _#<B ,=g!f ......... ,_ ........ , The five finalists in the Junior Prom Queen contest have been selected by the baloting of the student body. The voting took place over the last week in the lobby of Building 10. The finalists, in alphabetical order, are: Miss Sharon Boyle, date of Judd S artz of TEP . Miss Karen Huller, date of Mike Rodburg of AEPI. Miss Huller attends the University of Kentucky. Miss Colleen Molloy, date of Nicholas Covatta, Jr., of SAE. Miss Molloy attends Russell Sage College. Miss Janet Tande, date of Thomas Hood of SPE. Miss Tande attends the University of Illinois. Miss Maria Viteri, date of Phil Weidner of PGD. Miss Viteri attends Marquette University. The JP Queen will be chosen by members of the Jurnior Prom Com- mittee during the intermission of the formal dance Friday night. Miss Colleen Molloy -' 4 -. ,". .~~ ~ ~~ ~~ . ... . £ - · .-'., Miss Karen Huller , . . Miss Karen Hulier Miss Sharon Boyle Miss Maria Viteri i I i 0 IIi05 On ouincl. mmee a I i I i . I I d I I I i 1 7 1 . I I I I I I I I a 0 0 I ive ale'ehn ina is c osen

Transcript of i I Will Johnson, On ouincl. mmee a Johnson's office picketed for...

Page 1: i I Will Johnson, On ouincl. mmee a Johnson's office picketed for …tech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N43.pdf · 2008. 11. 22. · Listing (MIT)-Such a report would enable any activity head

was chosen to host theintercOllegiate Boston Coicil,uring the duration of the 196667

academie year at the organiza-don's second meeting, which'as held here Monday evening,

k according to MIT RepresentativesIP Frank March '67 and Bob.o..tZ '68

i Tirteen schools were repre-sented at this meeting; at the,anzation's only other gather-

ng this term, Brandeis univer-ity was host to but four schools.

planned as ForumtThe Boston Cotuncil has beenestablished to represent all Bos-tonarea colleges to groups out-

ide of the academic areas andto serve as a forum for discus-on of problems comman tonY schools.Six student body presidents

were among the 21 delegatespresent from the following 13

Boston-area schools: Brandeis,Harvard, Jackson, Lesley, MIT,Newton College, Northeastern,Radcliffe, Regis, Simmons, Tufts,Wellesley, and Wheelock.

Chared by MarchAt the meeting, which was

chaired by Frank March in theInscomm Conference Room, anumber of possible projects forthe Council were mentioned.Each of these will be studied byone member school, which willpresent a report on it at the nextmeeting.

The following are the topicsconsidered:

1) Student Discounts (Tufts)-There are two possibilities in thisarea. First, merchants in thearea might give a standard stu-dent discount to all those in col-lege. Second, schools might grantactivity discount cards to stu-dents at other schools. This latter

suggestion would promote rela-tions between students at differ-ent schools.

Sales Tax2) Massachusetts State Sales

Tax (Radcliffe)-Is it unfair tothe college student? If so, whatcan be done about it?

3) Intercollegiate ActivitiesListing (MIT)-Such a reportwould enable any activity headon one campus to locate and con-tact the president of the corres-ponding activity at any otherBoston-area school. Preparationsfor this listing are currently-underway.

4) Conferences-There exist awide range of possible topics forintercollegiate conferences. Thosenow being considered by theCouncil include: Student BodyPresidents (Brandeis); StudentJudicial Committees-Powers and

(Please turn to Page 3)

Will see Johnson, Killi,

Johnson's office picketedfor support against bel+

U SI Wt3 sS~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1

Photo courtesy of Boston Record AmericanA small group of mothers staged a sit-in outside the offices

of the President and the Corporation to protest the Brookline-Elm route for the Inner Belt. They had planned-to stay all day,but left after 45 minutes when they were given an appointmentfor Monday.

Vol. 86, No. 43 Cambridge, Massachusetfs, Friday, November 4, 1966 Five Cents

Vice President t lig t

, gm d 1@ 0dl 0 Is 0t

Malcolm G. Kisperf, VicePresident, Academic Adminis-tafion.

(The following is the secondof a series of six articles basedon interviews with each of theVice Presidents of MIT.)

By JohnMalcolm G. Kispert, MIT Vice

President, Academic Administra-tOn, compared some of the func-tOlns of his office to those of a

lightning-rod, ready to help re-solve unexpected problems aris-ing in various areas of the Officeof the President.

The Institute Offices which ad-ministratively report to Mr. Kis-pert include those of Student Af-fairs, Admissions, Student Aid,the Registrar, the Medical De-partment, Placement, Public Re-lations, and the Office of Institu-tional Studies. He also partici-pates closely with the Comptrollerand Treasurer in the manage-ment of the operating budget.

Sectary of afonMr. Kispt is Secretary of the

Executive Cornmittee of the MITCorporation, the top policy-mak-ing committee of this Corpora-tion, and works closely with thePresident in preparing for itsmeetings. The Executive Commit-tee approves all appointments andsalaries at the Institute.

Like all the Vice Presidents,Mr. Kispert is a member of theAcademic Council, the Institute'stop academic policy-riakinggroup. Academic policy covers

. @cke? cost drops -l a i~verse, en,,,,, 'ae stt

d a -~~~~~~~~~~I aSmJUtior Prom tickets cost $15.Stt Davis, Junior Class Presi-dent, announced that recent deci-sOs Concerning the weekend'sbudget have enabled the JuniorPn Commnittee to cut $1 off the'igin ticket price.

The Friday night formal danceltes a "Campsight Disco-e" in all its psychedelic

ledor. Saturday's program be-wlith th e New York cast pro-

20n of 'The Fantasticks,' heldtl p.m t .2 p.m. as listed on

tiekets, at the nearby Back

Bay Theatre. At 4 p.m. JamesBrown and the Famous Flames,a 20-man show that appeared onthe CBS-TV Ed Sullivan ShowSunday, will perform in the DuoPnt Athletic Center Gymnasium.Soft drinks will be available, andcouples are encouraged to bringblankets.

After dinner, the weekend willconclude with 'The Inferno,' ablast in the Gymnasium.

Those who have purchasedtickets for $16 will receive $1 re-funds after Junior Prom.

such concerns as major promo-tions and appointmnents and de-cisions of priorities for new aca-demic buildings. He is also amember of the Personnel PolicyCommittee, which determines non-acadermic personnel policies, in-cluding those of the professionalstaff of the research laboratories.TIn the nffire nof the iP-idfnthe is concerned with the process-

(Please turn to Page 3)

By Jolhn ForanThe signs read: "Save Our City

By Beating the Belt" They weretaped to the wall outside theo f f i c e of Institute PresidentHoward W. Johnson by a smallband of mothers who staged aforty-five minute sit-in thereWednesday morning. .

The campaign was to last allday; the four women, who cameat 9:15 am, brought children andenough food to last a few meals.Their objective was to have theInstitute publicly denounce theproposed Inner Belt route. Theyplanned to stay until they couldmeet with Johnson or Dr. JamesR. Iillian, Jr., chairman of theMIT Corporation.

Met with assistantInstead they were met by Mr.

Constantine Simonides, Johnson'sassistant, who informed them thatKillian was in New York City andthat Johnson, who had just re-turned from California, was un-available. He made an appoint-ment for them to see both John-son and Killian at 9 am Monday.

The.women, who represent theS a v e Our City Comnmittee,brought a letter addressed to thetwo men. They would not leavethe letter, however.

It read: "For centuries the richand powerful have felt it is theirright to survive and enjoy life atthe expense of the weak. Thismust be questioned, not only byus, but by you and all otherpowerfui agencies.

Must protect poor"It is the responsibility of

these powerful agencies to pro-tect not only themselves, but thepeople of Cambridge and Somer-ville who are too weak and poorto protect themselves from thedestruction of the Inner Belt.

"We therefore are asking youto make a public announcementdenouncing t h e Brookline-Elmroute. We request you either putyour efforts into blocking theroad altogether and push forbeter public t-artation, or toproduce a humane route, prefer-ably a route along MemorialDrive on piles or underneath thepresent road."

The group, which was led byMrs. Ansti Benfield, is protesiiiga route that would take thehomes of about 1500 families.

MIT grad oF1 7 rwardedNobel Prze }n hemstry

The 1966 Nobel Prize in Chem-istry was awarded yesterday toUniversity of Chicago ProfessosR6bert S. Mulliken. Prof. Mulli-ken graduated from MIT m 1917.

The award was given for Mul-liken's original work in mole-cular theory.

Prof. Mulliken's father was agraduate of the Class of 1887 andwas a member of the Institute'sChemistry faculty for over 40years.

The next issue of The Tech willcarry an account of Mulliken'scareer and will discuss the re-search which led to his NobelPrize.

Balot results announced_#<B ,=g!f ......... ,_ ........ ,

The five finalists in the Junior Prom Queen contest have been selectedby the baloting of the student body. The voting took place over the lastweek in the lobby of Building 10.

The finalists, in alphabetical order, are:Miss Sharon Boyle, date of Judd S artz of TEP .Miss Karen Huller, date of Mike Rodburg of AEPI. Miss Huller

attends the University of Kentucky.Miss Colleen Molloy, date of Nicholas Covatta, Jr., of SAE. Miss Molloy

attends Russell Sage College.Miss Janet Tande, date of Thomas Hood of SPE. Miss Tande attends

the University of Illinois.Miss Maria Viteri, date of Phil Weidner of PGD. Miss Viteri attends

Marquette University. The JP Queen will be chosen by members of the Jurnior Prom Com-

mittee during the intermission of the formal dance Friday night. Miss Colleen Molloy

-' 4-. ,".

.~~ ~ ~~ ~~ .... .£ -· .-'.,

Miss Karen Huller , . .

Miss Karen Hulier Miss Sharon Boyle Miss Maria Viteri

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(Continued from Page 1) of coordinating these changes withdig new appointments to the the Deans of the five schools and

faculty. with the Treasurer and Comp-Budget troller. The annual budget of MIT,

In cooperation with the Treas- excluding the Lincoln Laborator-rer and the Comptroller, Mr. ies and the Instrumentation Lab-

iSpert is concerned with the oratories, is about $45,000,000.iaragement of the budget. Each Provides support

February or March the Budget Generally speaking, Mr. Kispert-comnittee sets up a budget for is ready to provide any necessaryi comning fiscal year. During administrative support in estab-

-ijye year, inevitably, changes will lishing and implementing Insti-for unexpected reasons, and tute policy. To keep in touch withxjspert ~has the responsibility the heads of the departments re-

sponsible to him, Mr. -KispertA typically meets informally with

-msokI each several times monthly.

[Men leoking for extra money MTI graduatew1ho -ould beo willing to sell Mr-. Kispert received his edu-?:KELSIE'S SANDWICHES cation at MIT, earning the Bache--' Conc' Elsie's, 491-2842 .lor's Degree in 1944 and the Mas-

tater's Degree in 1946, both in Aero-

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NEXT TO CUSTOMER SERVICE IN BOOK DEPARTAENT.QualIty and Seri'c is Our Byword - Patronage RefundOphthalmologists prescriptions are filled promptly - accurately. *a- Excefllent sIetlon. of frames fr Men-WomenChildren.

THE- TECH COOP __ _

" . IN HE L. ST. T -

4?}'00@a0l 0*ty nd@erviceO yPeeRe* ..di ra

as good a spot an original contribu-asyou are today ? tion to your area ofrWegl-informed ? interest. In an

:ip on things? environment like4Iti'mately ']w . this, there's no

racquainted with the telling how farste of the art in your field you can go. But this much isstudy? certain. You'll not be over--

looked, and you can't bewill you (through no fault overtaken.

iyour own) be dangerouslyise to the brink of Salary ? Benefits ? They're

:olescence ?' . competitive, of course. More-over, we have an excellent

ould happen . Of~terndoes. Educatiohal Assistance andlch is one good reason to Staff Scholar Program.nsider'a career at MITRE. (Many MITRE employees

presently attend nearbytfRE is pioneering in the - educational institutions includ-

deign? and engineering of ing Harvard, Boston University,Boston College, Brandeis,'

rrmiand control and corm Northeastern, MIT, and Tufts.)Cimmand, control and corn-lic:ations systems for the Depending on your interests,

Ulnaited States Government. qualifications and currentS~urass~ignr?1ents include such openings, you may start in one

minent electronic systems of the following, or other,departments:'5the NORAD Combat

wOperations Center, the Back- System Planning andupinterceptor Command Engineering'System for SAGE, and the Air'and Missile

ational Military Command Defense Systemsstem (NMCS). System Design

Systems AnalysisThese projects represent the Air Traffic Systems

'2tst important systems Tactical SystemsIhallenges of our time, and Strategic Systems

Rquire the most advanced Range Instrumentatic.li!hkinkg on a broad range of Information Sciences

F'lentific problems and the Computer & Displayhnologies needed to Technology

olve them. Communications...... Electronic Warfare'

sa member of the MITRE Radar Design.you'll be working in an and Technology

~imrosphere of scientific Information ProcessingClky, alongside colleagues Surveillance and

fPOutstanding reputation, Warning Systemshtthe Opportunity to make Applied -Mathematics

THE ~-: .................echnical representa- Ets of The MITRE ' 7RE

r1porsation will be _ITREondctjng interviews An Equal Opportunity Employer (M&F)

[Oicampus November 1 0, 1966tire 'Jlfot a.M.S., or Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, Physics, or Mathematics and want1 2080r:iation regarding opportunities at MITRE, call collect, James L. Glinos (617)

[;B20r write in confidence to College Relations Coordinator, The MITRE Corporation,L C:edford, Massachusetts.

I

nautical Engineering. He was anAviation Engineering Officer inthe Pacific Ocean area for theNavy during World War II.

Served 4 presidentsPresident Karl Taylor Compton

of MIT appointed Mr. Kispert ashis personal assistant in 1946. Sixyears later he became ExecutiveAssistant to President James R.Killian, Jr. Since 1961 he hasserved as Vice President, Aca-demic Administration.

Between 1956 and .1961 Mr. Kis-pert served as Assistant Chan-cellor and then as Administra-tive Vice Chancellor. The Chan-cellor (the office no longer existsat MIT) was the senior academicofficer of the Institute. His func-tions have largely been takenover by the. Provost.

Affiliated with other schoolsMr. Kispert is a trustee of the

Hampton Institute, in Hampton,Virginia, one of the leading Negrocolleges in the US. He is plsoVice-Chairman of the Dana HallSchool, a private girls' secondaryschool in Wellesley, Mass., wherehe currently has two daughtersenrolled. He has a son, Robert,who is a junior at MIT. Mr. Kis-pert is Vice President and Direc-tor of the Harvard CooperativeSociety and a Director of theCambridge Trust Company.

I

* Open Every Night 'til Midnight -- Fse Parking* Ask about Student 1Discount Books

Would you lil

Impress these girls and learn to fly.ke to learn to fly.-. nated MIT's Ale Man of the Year.

an airplane? The three girls pic-tured ablove are part of a P.Ballantine & Sons sponsored con-test to find MIT's Ale Man of theYear.

These girls (in order, Ann Viot,Priscilla Clark, and JeanetteStrahl) will nominate three stu-dents whose names will be placedbefore the student body for ballot-ing. The man who receives themost votes will be officially desig-

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Along with this distinction, thecompany will pay for 10 hours offlying instruction at a school ofthe winner's choice.

Drinking is not a prerequisitefor consideration, the men will bechosen on the basis of intelli-gence, personality, athletic abili-ties, and appearance. In short, amale Miss Rheingold.

Structure to be outlinedby MIT Representatives

(Continued from Page 1)

Rights (Regis); The StudentVoice in Educational Policy Deci-sions (Wheelock); and The Ad-vantages and Disadvantages ofthe. National'Student Asvsciation(Northeastern).

Structure NeededIn addition to these March and

Horvitz agreed to plan a structurefor the organization as well asoutline a constitution for 'thegroup.

The next meeting of the BostonCouncil is planned for November14, and will be held here, as willall others. Future meetings willbe scheduled monthly.

Distribution starts todayfor Class of '68 rings

Rings for the Class of '68 areready for distribution today, ac-cording to Junior Class PresidentScott Davis. Juniors who signedup for their rings last spring willbe able to pick them up today,Al.bday, and mt1-C-lae ' Any vinct

with defects should be reportedimmediately so that a new onemay be ordered.

TICKET PRICE CUT TOland the weekend is

BETTER THAN EVERAll This:

Friday, 9:00-For.mal Dance-with DiscofhequeSaturday, i :0u---N!PT Cast production of

the FANT-ASTICKSSaturday, 4:00

JAMES BROWVNand his Famous Flames Show

Saturday, 9:00

'"The Inferno" BlastTickets on sale Bldg. 10

Who is the Ale Man?Popular ballof fo decide

-Photo courtesy of P. Ballantine & Sons

Enjoy the Finest Italian-American Foodand Delicious Pizza

ITALIAN-AMERICAN RESTAURANTChoice Liquors and Imported Beers

21 BROOKLINE STREET, CAMBRIDGE - Tel.' EL. 4.9569(at Central Square)

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THE TECH

World that one of the cities they vit will probably have a riot after.wards. However, this may bethe only way to determine thecauses of such disturbances.

The ca of the frogsThe Biology Department at the

University of Tennessee pacedan order with a Mchigan supplyhouse for a large number of frogsto be used in laboratories. Therewere many types of frogs, fromfrogs for freshmen to frogs forgraduate biologists. However theshipment arrived late on a F-day evening; and the well MreMing person who accepted the frtcut slits in the shippig cratiso that the amphibians wol'twtsuffocate over the weekend. Ap -patently the slits were laeenough so that the frogs woukbh't ihave to remain cooped up in theirshipping crates. When studentsarrived for the first biology labon Monday morning they fousda room full of leapfrogging fos

Marred Swing-OutsThe American Psychatric As

sociation was feted to a lectureby Dr. Alfred D. Messer of Em-ory University on 'the benefits ofmarital spats. Dr. Messer saidthat fights are a great way toiron out little differences betweenhusband and wife. However, hepointed out that marital b~utsometimes become overdoM .where each side tries to demolishthe opposition so badlY it Mnnever rise again.

When time came for the arain #

Bowling Green "Big sis-little ss'"picnic, ~k~ ~.~,em.d a to b e sOedifficulty. One of the big sisseshad a little sis who turned outto be a guy. Somehow the com. F

puter thought Jerry Alavrec Va girl.When Jerry's big s/s found out

the name of her little sis, shewrote him a letter welcomig himto the school. She recived aterse reply "I'm a guy!" &a..vek then salile note to inDean o Women, cluing heh~on the mistake. However, tbdidn't get shtaightened out befoEme pic.

By Mickey Wa

When the Unibersity of Mirme-sota Board of Regents goes aboutselecting a man to step into theshoes of retiring President 0.Meridith Wilson, they will havehelp from unusual quarters. Threestudents wilU sit on the aluniadvisory conmmttee, with-as muchsay on the committee as any ofthe alumni.

The initiative for the programcame from the head of the Min-nesota Student Assoiation. In aletter to the Chairman of theBoard of Regents, the MSA Presi-dent asked for a student role inchoosing the University's nextPresident. He orginmlly. wanteda purely student committee toparallel the existing faculty andalumni advisory groups, but wasmore than happy with the-. out-come.

The three students to be chosenwill only be senors. However,the addition o students to a groupmaking such a serious decisionreflects a greater role for thestudent at Minnesota. With thestudents on the committee, it iscertain that questions about acandidate's interest in having stu-dents play a role in =mangingthe University will be raised.

Riot Predictions at BrandeisBrandeis University's new Cen-

ter for the Study of Violence willstart to make predictions of prob-able riot areas in their long terngoal of riot prevention. The study

ill be based on four northernand four southern cities, allh v-ing racial problems. It will thy

to determine the real resonsthat riots begin, something thathas been much discussed of late.

IVFMFI 11

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industry exhibition will featureover 300 booths displaying AOlatest in the industry's advances,

Arthur N. Stowe, ReymondA. Wiesen, Douwe B. Yntema,and james W. Forgies, all ofMIT, will presen a paper on"The Lincoln Reckoner. An O0eration.Oriented, On-Line Fad.,,, w,,,, Distrubed Control,:A5so, Roy Kaplow, John Bracj.eft, and Stephen Strong wqilpresenf the paper Man M4.-chine Communication in On.Line Mathematical Analyis,"Oter Tech contributlons: Rid.ard -Mills will chair the session"Management of Mulfi.AccessSystems," and Defouzos andGraham will present "A Par.,metric Graphical Display Tech~.niques for On-Line Use."

1 14. Have you seen a Nor.wegian Elkhound around? Such,a dog, which resembles a Ger.man Shepherd Husky, was ad.vertised lost in the HaardaiCrimson. It answers (sometimes)fo Murray, or Hari Krishna,There is a large reward forteanimal, which apparenfiy -longs to a coed, since Ie adsaid to call her at MccCormiied1Hall. '

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Opponents fear that, the general levelof undergraduate scholarship would de-cline under a pass-fall system becausetoo many students would merely coastthrough any program which did -not re-ward thorough understanding with a dis-tinguishing grade.

We hope that the CEP will find thatthe advantages of at least a limited pass-fail system outweigh the disadvantages.In our view, a system similar to Prince-ton's, which would allow courses takenin excess of a normal term load to betaken on a pass-fail basis, is the mostattractive. Such a program would havethe obvious advantage of encouragingundergraduates to take difficult but re-warding courses outside their majorwithout endangering their precious cum.

In any event, a university with theacademic status of the Institute certain-ly can't afford to ignore the possible ben-efits of pass-fail programs in at leastsome undergraduate areas of study. Theserious attention of the CEP to be fo-cused oni this topic is long overdue.

During the next few weeks the Fac-, ulty Committee on Educational Policy

'o will be considering a number of propo-sals for establishing some sort of major

c pass-fail system at MIT.LUmJ Included in their discussions will bem various plans which would allow stu-O - dents to take all their nonrmajor- coursesz on a pass-fail basis, to have the senior>: or freshman year be graded on a pass-/ fail basis, to have all freshmen electivescd ungraded, or to have one course per termLL,

graded pass or fail:It would be highly unrealistic to ex-

- ct even one of the above proposals tobe immediately adopted and put into ef-

- fet. But it certainly isn't asking too- much to hope that the CEP will give- the whole question of grade deemphasis

a most serious and prolonged evaluation.The fact that-several of the nation's

most outstanding colleges have institutedprograms similar to those mentionedabove is recommendation enough fortheir serious consideration.

For example Princeton is now in itssecond year of a plan which allows astudent to take one out of his five coursesper year on a pass-fail basis. Accordingto recent reports this program will beretained and possibly expanded. Caltechabolished freshman grades two yearsago, its administration is still evaluatingthe resl__ff. in addition serious discs.onof proposals similar to the Caltech andPrinceton programs is being held on mostof the campuses of the major US uni-versities.

The Student Committee on Educa-tional Policy has long maintained thatthe Institute's present system places toomuch emphasis on the almighty cum.Last year's decision to stop compiling aDean's List was an indication of the con-cern for this problem. The popularity ofpresently established pass-fail coursessuch as 6.47, the undergraduate semi-nars, and the Undergraduate SystemsProgram further illustrate how success-.ful such programs can be.

Proponents of such pass-fail systemsfeel that they allow students to pursuetheir academic interests fully by remov-ing the necessity to study solely for agrade. Such a system would presumablythereby encourage a purer and more gen-uine fm of scholarship.

lmSm by.Mike Redburg

I I l. In Time magazine's ar-ficle they chose to name someof the big names at both Cal-tech and MIT. In naming Phy-sicists Richard Feynman a"Murray GeIl-Mann as outstand-ing represenMatives of Calfech,however, they neglected tomention one importan* fct:Both are course Vill graduates,

I~ynman in '390, Gel-M, ann ;,51, of Tech.-We would like to correct th

impression that Time gaveWhich says that one-fifh drop-out of Tech. Actually, less fhan5% over four years leave forreasons of grades. The remain-der do so for peoronal reasonsunrelated to cums.

1 12. Pershing Rifles, an ac-tivify- devoted to Army prac-tices, is being dissolved. Thegroup funcioned well for years,but fhe Army-ROTC GuerillaWarfare Society has taken somany members, fhaf the clubcan no'longer maintain ;self. Isthis another casuaffy of Viet-name guerilla warfare? It ap-pears so.

113. In San Francisco nextweek the Fall Joint ComputerConrerence opens. Thli leaudingnational technical meeting andBOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman ........................................... Dave Kress '67Editor .... Charles Kolb '67Managing Editors ........................ Robert Horvitz '68

~-'- Mark McNamee '68Business Manager .............................. Guile Cox '68News Editor .................................... Garry Banner '68Features Editor ............................ Mike Rodburg '68Sports Editor ...................................... Tom Themas '69Photography Editor .......................... Lew Golovin '67Erntertainment Editor ................ And¥ Saidenfold '68u>|""-'S R pr ' e ...........-...... S"TI- "%0 ~o

Editorial Associate .................. Jeff Stokes '68Associate News Editors Mark Bolotin '68

John Corwin '68Associate Sports Editor ............... Larry White '69

Tony Lima '69Intramural Sports Editor ............ Herb Finger '68Associate Photography Editor ....... Bill Ingram '68

Jeff Reynolds '69Copy Editor ........................ Brian Harvey '69Controller .......................... Dave Dewitte '69Treasurer .......................... Mike Ginsberg '69Ace'ts Receivable ...................... Dan Green '68Nat'l Adv. Mgr ..................... Jack Swaim '68Bookkeeper ........................... Ed Waibei '69

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachu-setts. The Tech is published every Tuesday and Fridayduring the college year, except during college vaca-tions, by The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT StudentCenter, $4 Massachuseffs Ave., Cambridge, Massa-chusells 02139. Telephones: Area Code 617, 876-5855, and 864-6900 extension 2731. United StatesMail subscription rates: $4.25 for one year, $8.00 fortwo years.

Front page photo of West Campus at nighttaken bv Chris Brooks.

each of the past three years, ou\rsmall psychology faculty hastaught more than a thousand stu-dents, graduate and undergradu-ate, in various psychology subj-ects.

We know we are Gulliver inBrobdigrag, but at least we aretalking to the natives!

Hans-Lukas TeuberChairmn, Course IX

ahE-ra Xmm

lb the Mditw:The editoal of Novembr 1

oneneing fooball at -MIT seersto confh'~t with, rather ha exoplatn, the lcsopy d sports atMU. At the Instute we do en-coureage sports fr partici ,and reeat/o rasher than bowl

game and glory, but this is Wlthe nmae reason for MlT to havean .inlemollegiate football team

Basketball has in recent yearbecome a "'big-4 ney" spor. YetMrI has a :baske team, anda suc one at that. Inter-Colegiate/fbc would only adto the wide variety of aftheticevents in whic a stientcpaicpate. Larg expendi.wrswould not be ne , as hasbeen ie case witi other spots.Te Athletic De ertnt couldpr}uced a qualied ac, andthee is an vbudnce of talentedplayers, as can readily be seenwy weekend in the intramprogram.

Here's one vte for o atM/.

To the Editor:In a recent ssue of The Tech,

you gave excerpts from the Reg-istrar's Repor showing quite cor-rectly t h a t t h e PsychologyDepartment is still the smallestat the Institute-at least in termsof faculty and senior staff. How-ever, the number of students thatyou cite may need some qualif-eelion: your ar"'cle staes thatthere are 21 graduate studentsand no undergraduates. This istrue enough-there are 24 gradu-ate students enrolled for theirdoctorates, and there is, as yet,no major in psychology for under-graduates, except through com-bined programs with such fieldsas biology or humanies. Yet, for Rich Rosn '70 The head of the study predicts

Making The- Grade0 0

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Vol. LXXXVI, No. 43 Nov. 4, 1966

Tle TacLoleers .,o

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Growing housing difficulties inCambridge caused in large partby the multitude of students liv-ing in the city have promptedCambridge Mayor Daniel J.Hayes, Jr., to meet today withPresident Nathan Pusey of Har-vard, MIT President HowardJohnson, and Chairman of the

Part time sales representativefor nationai advertising andmarketing company cleaingwith college market. Salaryand commission. Phone Mr.SMeld at 267-1607.

II

MIT Corporation James R. WKl-lian. This meeting is to be thefirst of a series of talks whichis aimed at ending the housingshortage which, according toMayor Hayes, causes 1,000 perm-anent Cambridge residents tomove each year.

Often students who live inCambridge can pay higher rentsthan the local residents. Thisfact, reports Mayor Hayes, hasforced housing costs beyond thereach of many residents. BothMIT and Harvard reportedlyhave specific proposals to in-

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The paway to a rea chaeeThe pathway to a real challenge.

Eli{i{ERlt{ iPil@TUlITIiifor Senior'and Graduate EngineersThe Missile Systems Division of the Avco Corporation has been a major developerof Re-entry Vehicles since 1955. Through the years, our organization has designedand developed re-entry vehicles for the Atlas, Titan and Minuteman Intercontinen-tal Ballistic Missiles. Today's projects include advanced penetration aids, advancedre-entry vehicles, vulnerability and hardening, tactical missile systems and othertechnical programs.

Opportunities for current and future graduatesexist in the following areas:

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Programinge Thermodynamis e Flight Test Datao Heat Transfer Reduction Programingo Structural Design e Systerms Programr &* Aerodynamics Analysis

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* Electronic Systems Aerophyscs* Telemetr &

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Other positions exist in Systems Engineering, Reliability-& Safety Engineering, Ad-vanced Systems & Penetration Aids and Flight Test & Evaluation.

;n addition to a liberal benefit program, our Educational Aid Po;icy is among thefinest in industry today. In this program, participants are permitted eight (8) hoursa week to attend school without a reduction in pay. The complete cost ofregistration, tuition, laboratory fees and one-half the cost of the text books areincluded.

The proximity of our facilities to the educational institutions in Boston and Cam-bridge makes this a highly attractive program to members of our technical staff.

201 LOWELL STREET, WILMINGTON, MASSACHUSETTs 01887

An equal opportunity employer.

crease available housing whichthey will present at the meeting.The universities are expected tomake some requests of the cityas well. In time, it ,is expectedthat some sort of solution will bereached which wil reduce thestudent pressure on the housingmarket which has, by MayorHayes' statistics, resulted in 15,-000 of Cambridge's 26,000 rentalunits being occupied by non-permanent residents.

Arab club to gbvekLeanon semina

"Lebanm: A Case Study ofDemocracy and Laissez Flaire" isthe provocative title of the two-day seminar which will be joint-ly sponsored by the MIT ArabClub and the International Stu-dents Council Saturday and Sun-day.

The basic program %wN 'consistof a series of papers presentedby students. The topics broughtout in the papers are expected tobe the 'basis of discussions amongpanels of Arab scholars. Form-ing the panels will be professorsfrom MIT, Harvard and George-town. Mr. Leonard Katz, a mem-.ber of tihe science advisoryboards of Presidents Kennedyand Johnson, will be among thepaneists.

The topics of the students pa-pers will deal with Lebanon'shistory and culture. Folloaingthese will be sessions on thecountry's free enterprise econ-omy and low-cost housing proj-ects. Also discussed will be den-ocracy in Lebanon, and the prob-lems of the vast number of Leb-anese immigrants, with specialmention to those in the UnitedStates.

In connection with the serrmnarthe Iobdell dining room, in theMIT Student Center, will proviidea complete Lebanese menu atlunch and dinner on Saturday.

Theta Dela Chi t hstannal IE conference

The a n u a 1 Inter - frateityCouncil Housing Corporation Re-presentatives meting will be heldMonday evening. The meeting,which will include a catered din-ner, will take place in the newTheta Delta Chi house at 372 Me-morial Drive.

The Representatives will beconcerned with lodging, and mat-ters pertaining to the physicalplants of the fraternities.

Dean Paul E. Grey, Chairmanof the Freshman Advisory Coun-cil, will speak on the currentf r e s h m a n situation. PresidentHoward Johnson is also expectedto speak after dinner.

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AMRECIs interested in people wlfh COMPUTERPROGRAMMING experience.We are on fhe move-upwards--so whynoI move with us?Call 864-3194, or MIT cxt. 2924, or visit our office in the

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ring Sylvie as Mmne. Berthe,Maka Ribovska as Rosalie, arndVictor Lanoux as Pierre; direc-ted by Rene Allio; based on astory by Bertolt Brecht.

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.,Hard rock Is eeide greatsyfrm the local mxmm it itin 14. A switch of the tasesof remd buyers away from rock-ing bft mucos sosmd such astmse of a Dve Clark' Fivetward mre musical and lyricalso¢ tcafo, to Motown'sl s. sound, or ,back to talads hasleft only five big natiia groupswho rely basieally on a hardrock sound. T"e five are PallRevere and the Raiders, he Out-siders, the Young Rascals, iheMcCoys, and 1VEtch Ryder andthe Detroit Wheels, Even among

este a recent decline in popu-larty can be noted, for it takesmore han a steady stream ofgood hard lck songs to main-tain popularity in today's market.Note, for em ple, the peaks; of'the last three young rascals,sies: "GCiW IrL rin" (1), "YouBetter Rum" (20), and "'Cone OnUp" (44).

Paul Rvere and the Raidem,cetanly e -top hard rock grouptxxiay, is even divenjfyir. TheUnknowns, who had a modest hitwith thfe ~baicay instnmmtal.,hallad "Melody fm an UI JGirl," are compsd o severlRaklers and Nino Tempo. Mesong was wnien by Revere and

Rades vc-i-st IMk Und-myand recred f by PR&R on

" ~l~a tgMRide."9 'E[EY JOEl'

Tr 'best bard rock songs arenot maznrig it at all. In my opin-ion the two best sgles of thisWm ftis summer were "HeyJoe" by t Leaves and "You'reG&can Miss Me" by the Thir-teenth nlo Elevators. They received enouh attentio to moveout of their Ihme ares of LsAngees and lArmi and hit of 31 and 5~, respecavely, butdid not attn t sales thy war-ranted. "Hey Joe" was wiittenby Dino Valenti, West Coast folksinger, and tells the tale of Joe,who ran to Mexico, "where aman canbe fx se," after shoo'nghis wife and her lover.

Ok~es Brought BacklfiStch Ryder and the Detroit

Wheels have their -fiid unorign-al bardrock top-twenty hit with"Devi With a Bwlue Dess On"and "Good GoUy 1Kiss Maly." Al-ready 18 natonally, this conbin-atien of former its by

ng and Little 'Mictmd shouldbecome Ryder's bigst tit yet.Thle.r first was "Jenny Take aRide,' a conbination of "See,

SeIie Rde"- and Little"Jeny JeWnn ,"a d t tetianaly. "See Se ,,,'ues -cssic, was writtea"Ma" Rainey, top blues ci te 20's, amE has sinreamveW by many bluesmost reoeny by tEric

adthe rrals, Whose vealso hit a national peak at.This maxks Btdon's ia swithI the old Arerals; hemlave a new .backLp grp infutue. Is next sinEase Eri Bmu~ wiS be "MaaMe Not to Come." I

Ryder's seeord shgle "ittle Latin Lupe Lu," wby ERghteous B'otir Bill and iamt oded by t uRba, whrn heyn did hard rodk, hit 17 nafioally.

Ryder and Wheels Start 3an Wismuller, a r

Burtxte who played bassRormny and the Daytonas in "'tie GTO," fum hed me bacgud infaimon on Rydand the Wheels. In early Detrc't's two top amateu rbands were' Billy Lee andRivieras, mow Ryder t tWes, and Bobby Dayton the Dytom, now Rotmy arlDeykfas. Both didBeatle mterial, a thMo; antl tshe.Ri> em' there so 5g

,'S Se Riden." ironLy ,See Rider," the song which eAbled them to reach mfme, cost them many a iin band ,battles with the tonas,. becaue e pseudoaBrmm mo ;ons with whih&

accmnared the song did mot over with the young audiaea.

1Ls Atbmpt at &oulThey c6ed teir name to

Caxthy IMitch Ryder and the troit Whtees when given thesibi'ity of ngg natonl had to chage becauseaihvieras had recorded "nia Sium"). Lee has alwayscied ~imse: as a great wsoia sinet; however, atenrpts at screming soul eslisted him in a hard rock iHe now hopes to use s hname to help spring a soul He had bet~ hurrzy, $krock bags don't last long amore.

If hard rock declines mmore (and chances are good it win), it will then be ,timethe kids to launch a new wto provids hem with dable music, a la Elvs orBeatles.

buys a car and lets her use it trher aairs. Just before she died,she buys a nerw shop for one of

her shady Caomimist Miends

al in all, te 'kigtio ofthe Children is undBestandble.One of fhem is am amker, barelykeeptg his businuess going, ]ivirgin cramped qarte with hisoversized farmly; has troublefihnig moey to give the oldldy. He resents her not nvit-

..ipnlc, ito live with her in herbig old house. He esents heruse of his mmiey. But he is ashnmook, and the viewers whosympathize will be rare.

Cnquers Her WorldInstead we aU eheer on .me.

Bert in her last camn pi to gether due from the world sheserved so long. As you watch herhaggling with a used-car dealer,her prostitute friend at her side,]Ue a trader with a horse breed-er, or simply rding up and downthe escalators of a departmentstore over and ove again for thefun of it, you can't help but beconvince-that no matter how tri-vial and short-4ived her victories,Mme. Bert finally succeeds inrising above the stpidity of thewhole workaday world.

No aone can doubt in the endftat he rires her battle. ad so,

by the way, does the viewe.

Johnmtson 1to be 11plcetsetdduri n Dem oraf f ral

Two hlmdred ivH stuents areexpected to be among severalthousaM picketers of PresidentLyndon B. Johnson in the BostbnCommon today.

The President will be speakingat a Democratic Party Rally be-ginning at rnoon.

The picketir which will beginat 10:30 a.m. is being organizedby the ad hoc Committee toPicket President Johnson.

movies, eating out, and frequent-ing a group of Social Demacrats,one o Whoma she mortgaged herhouse io. Atber enjoying herselffor a year and a half at .fie hr-ror and expense o the yomgergeneratona, she died, after hav-ing .inaly lived.

Revised VersionTh present versi -1on i Mcenc

details a r e oorrespondinglychanged. But the endeag sub-stance remains. The reaction ofthe children to her mnnie-going-israybe not qidte as untderstand-able, ,but their riFiteous indigna-tion at ihedr mother's light-heart-ed spending of their money is aslaughable as ever.

Her most notable extavagaicein the movie is the companion shemeets at the restaurant wheremeets as the restaurant whereshe eats. The postitute is alsofpart o the circle of Communistswhose meetings she sits ir on.Living on a monthly allowancefrmn be children, ihe young aoldlady takes the streetwalker with

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..

- T_ cTes go on se IMonay, , v 7 'i Buiding 10

MIT Gilbere & Sulivan Societyproduction of

THE GONDOLIERSNov. 7, 18, 19- -8:30 pm in

Kresge AuditoriumAll seats reserved, $1.75

orders may be phoned in to x2910

KING OF BEERS : AINEUSER-BUSCf.'·IC.ST. LOUIS a NEWARK · LOS ANGELES e TAMPA * HOUSTON

<ham0eless Ol °d Lady' lives wolfa h {l oh nless O1d Lady" is a TYHE S HAEL=SS OLO LQD¥; her eyre, ,bus her w By Do B,lrnrira mthe Kenmore Cinema star- clothes, shares her wine with her,

- ame Bert, the title haacter, isone of the most wonderful people

u to be porrayed on the screen inc a'kig time.> Payed by a young (at heart)

O lady, Mme. Bert ffi~lls every-Z body's dream of doig exactly>2 what she wants to do, abn to hell< with the eo equences. The stmr

is taken fro a piece by Bertoldu_ Brecht wrhich tells of a respet-

able German Hausfrau who, afterspending her life raising an en-

I Orous. fami.y, at .the. age. of 60,_) her 'hband dead anid her Cil-

Lu ..dren grown up, embarked on a

LU new life of fldom. She did suchi: nheard things as going to ithe

1o "The -Sa;,oOr tfhorvihlv d

FRiDA4Y,NOV. 4 "DEASTATSNG! BRILLIANT! STUNNING!S"

(CROTHrER, N.Y. {MES)Bl an ja LP o sr- 9 pn sp 1W a aea mas r CIrI cur. '

RalE DESMARAlS EURORlM , LTD. -ALTON COOK, N.Y. WORLD TELEGRAM

laves gjood-¢onversaliono

Atl he needsis an opener.SATURDAY, NOV. 5

TH I OSCARThe SUNDAY CLASSIC SERIES will show:

CA//N IVA [ of

FLOWEERNo MIT I.D. Required on Sundays

INOV. 6-8:00

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' Romeo and J-u~lef' Pe'rformed w'lf skill leaves meaning up f> viewerBy Ralph Eare

A critique of 'Romeo and Jul-iet' could be a very easy assign-ment. One need only repeat theextolling adjectives the RoyalBallet has already received. Buta critic owes his readers a de-lineation of his own perspectiveand, therefore, reasons for Misjudgments.

Sense of proportionDame Margot Fonteyn and Ru-

dolf Nureyev are superb techni-cians. What makes them consum-mate artists is their sense of pro-portion., With Nureyev, for exam-ple, extensions are higher, en-trechats cleaner; but he neverupstages his partners nor thecorps. He is always in character,even during curtain calls, andonly during a solo is one awareof Nureyev as well as Romeo.With Fonteyn, although her flu-idity is unsurpassed, her graceis only to serve the light youthof Juliet.

Romeo is playful, carefree.The surge of events sweep himto his death without fully know-ing why. Juliet is a child. Shehas to be told by her nurse that

S M T W T F S4 5

6 7 8 9 10 11 12i3 14 15 16 17

THIS WEEKB9ston Symphony Orchestra -

Erich- Leinsdorf conducting Bach'Suite No. 3 in D major,' Syd-emann 'in Memoriam John F.Kennedy,' E. G. Marshall, nar-rator, Schumann 'Symphony No.1 in B-flat major, Op. 38,' Nov.4, 2 pm, Nov.' 5, 8:30; SymphonyHall.

Boston Symphony OrchestraErich Leinsdorf conducts Beet-hoven's- overture to 'Coriolan,'Sydemrann 'In Memoriam John F.Kennedy,' E. G. Marshall, nar-rator, Beethoven 'Symphony No.7 in A Major, Op. 92,' Nov. 8,8:30, Symphony Hall.

Boston Symphony Orchestra -open rehearsal, Nov. 10, 7:30,Jordan Hall.

Gardner Museum - George Zazof-sky, violin, Newton Wayland,piano: Mozart's 'Sonata in EMinor,' Copland's 'Sonata for Vi-olin and Piano,' Brahms' 'Sonatain D Minor, Op. 108, Nov. 6, 3 pm.

Gardner Museum - Kaestner Rob-ertson, piano, performs Bach-Bu-soni 'Chaconne in D Minor,'Liszt 'Funerailles,' Rakhmaninov'Prelude in C Minor,' Bartok'sAllegro barbaro,' Nov. 8, 3 pm.

Gardner Museum - Barbara Win-chester, soprano, Allan Morgen,piano, Handel 'Oh, had I Jubal'slyre,' 'Care selve,' 'Bel piacere,'Wagner's 'Der Engel,' 'SteheStills,' 'Im Treibhaus,' 'Schmer-Major,' Debussy 'Nocturnes,' Nov.

New Engk,,,, Ccuiscaatw'y - on-servatory Symphony Orchestra,Frederik Prausnitz, conductingBruckner 'Symphony No. 6 in AMajor,' 'Debusy 'Nocturnes,' Nov:9, 8:30, Jordan Hall, free.

MIT - Concert Band, John Corleyconducting, Nov. 5, 8:30, LittleTheatre, free.

Pierlan Soclety - Harvard-Rad-cliffe Orchestra, Wagner 'Pre-lude' and 'Isolde's Love Death'from 'Tristan and Isolde,' Stra-vinsky 'Capriccio for Piano andOrchestra,' Bach 'BrandenburgConcerto No. 1,' Beethoven 'Sym-phony No. 5,' Nov. 4, 8:30, San-ders Theatre, $1, $1.50, $2, $3.

THEATREBoston University - 'Salad Days,'

contemporary satire on Englishtypes, Nov. 7-12, 8 prm, Little The-atre at School of Fine and Ap-plied Arts, $1.

MIT - Dramashop presents secondset of one act plays, 'Don Juanin Hell' from Shaw's 'Man andSuperman' and 'Servants of thePeople' by Ferlinghetti, Nov. 4,, 8:30, Little Theatre, free.

Wellesley - Machiavelli's Mandra-

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she is becoming a woman. Forthe first act Fonteyn is fourteenyears old. She is bewildered bythe attentions of Paris and awedby the ball. She fairly flies downthe steps - fromr her balcony tomeet Romeo, imnddly. For herthe tragedy brings maturity.When she conquers her terror oithe sleeping potion, she becomesthe woman who can commit sui-cide.

Controlled strengthAll this is to say that Fonteyn

and Nureyev are actors, but heyare also dancers. Every move isof controlled strength. To appre-.ciate why they are considered sohighly, just note how Nureyevholds position at the end of asolo; watch Fonteyn take foursimple steps in the bedroomscene with Paris. Then noticehow unaware you are of theirskill, so caught up are you bythe artistry that skill serves.

The scenes and costumes arelavish and, more important, ap-propriate. The corps of the Roy-al Ballet is, as always, excel-lent; close-ups catch no one loaf-ing. The six musicians of thewedding party are exceptionally

gola, Nov. 4, 5, 8 pm. JewettAuditorium, 75c.

MISCELLANEOUSBrandeis - Joseph Palmer Ili lec-

tures on 'The New Africa: Conti-nent of Change,' Nov. 15, 8:15,Shapiro Forum, $1.50.

Ford Hall Forum - James Wech-sler and Thomas Winship lectureon 'Political Realignments of theDay: The National Scene, the Lo-cal Scene,' Nov. 6, 7:45, JordanHall.

MIT - B. Z. Goldberg portrayshis father-in-law 'Sholom Aleich-ern,' Nov. 6,'8 pm; Kresge.

Wellesley - Professor John R.Martin discusses 'The Paintingsof Rubens,' Nov. 9, 8 pm, JewettArts Center.

agile and the three harlots, es-pecially Deanne Bergsma, givefine characterizations. DavidBlair's Mercutio complementsRomeo perfectly; Desmond Doy-le is a Tybalt sinister enoughto be hissed.

several lawsThere are a few flaws. Juliet's

gown in the ball scene is tmns-parent and belies the ingenue.The wide angle shots are out offocus and often the close-upssacrifice much of the action andreveal Fonteyn's true age. JohnLanchbery gives Prokdev's scorea declamatory reading, serviceable, if not exciting. And the firstoboe is a Montague, the second,a Capulet.

The most lasting impression,however, is of a beauifiu workof art joyously and fully realized.TIf you are a str'ager to ballet,go to the Paris Cnema sme eve-ning soon. But be forewarne, youwill emerge a confirmed ballet-mc.

Dramash0p 1-act playsfolowed by crifique

Draniwftp vill p'esest its sec-ond set of neact plays tonightand bmramw nit, at 8:30 inthe Little Theter min Kresge Au-ditoriun. The plays are "DonJuan in He," a scene from G. B.Shaw's "Man ard Superman,"and "Servants of the People," byFerliet e perfmancewill be foLowed by a critiqueand cooee hour.

TL~s for the -major produc-tion "Heaxtbreak t-s'- by G.B. Shaw will be held Monday andThesday at 8:30 p.m. in the LittleTheater.

By Paul linsay

What do Brillo cartons stamped'Andy Warhol' have to do withart? Is any artistic expressionnecessary to film eight hours of

.the gentle breathing of a sleep-ing man? Are. cows really col-ored canary yellow and crim-son? Did Marilyn Monroe-actu-ally have purple hair and a greencomplexion. These are a few ofthe questions that might be askedafter visiting the Andy Warholexhibitiorn t th,. Tn,,ftit £"Contemporary Art.

To most people on their firstexposure to the creations of AndyWarhol this just is not art. Theylook at the grotesquely coloredsillkscreen blow-ups of newspaperprints, old photographs and ordi-nary objects like soup cans andCoke bottles and wonder if thereis any meaning to it.

Up to viewerThere is meaning, but, unlike

any other artist, Warhol has leftthe meaning entirely up to theviewer. He has tried to produceworks that have no more emo-tional meaning for -the artist thanthey do for the gallery-goers. Asa result we get an art form thatattacks the senses rather than

tle inteUect, because tins is anlthat is left when the emotion isremoved.

Warhol has achieved this ab-sense of tra motion by thetechnique of mass production. Hechooses the photograph or sub-ject that is to be "pained" ahands it to an assistant. This as-sistant will then make a silk-screen, of the photograph andfrom the silkscreen, coloredI co-

(Please turn to Page 9)

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A AUdray Hepburno} ~ Peter O'Toole a

"HOW TO STEAL a -a A MILLION" o a a La~a 1:45, 5:40, 9:35 a (D

Plus Bette Davis as aa --,I"The Nanny" a4:00 and 8:00 a

Sun.-Mon.-Tues.:"Our Man Flint"

lus "Modesty Blaise" a

Oe!o oa0~~~ 02

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0 ~ Jeanne Moreau ca Jean-Paul Belmondo

in Peter Brook's a "Moderato Cantabile" c

Starting Sun.: Godard's co "ALPHAVILLE"* Shows daily 5:30, 7:30 3* and 9:30 o Sat. & Sun. matinees 3:30 mo* une ci0sssx0munuunaflouurn@U ifufluuuI

mor~tfon gould'S

"'WEST -iO N. $SYMP O YMIT Conce Bnd all concert

Kresge AuditoriumMfNOVEMBER 5, 1966 - 8:30 P.M.

$i.00 admission, 50c with student IDFree ticketls for the MIT community available in the lobby of

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RECORDED UVE AT THE CASTAUA FOUNDA°-.D LEA$ CENMr FOR ESEARCH ON CON.SC3OUSNES r$-EgPA OaU$.

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16E9 BOAD AY. 1001,- NEW YORL N.Y. 1019

THE FINE ARTSFiLM CLUB

presents at te

Fine Arts Theatre80 Norway Str,, Boston

Tel. 262-9876

In One PerformanceOnly

Saturday, Nov. 5+h at I P.MD. H. Lawrence's

"LADY CHATTERLEY'S LOVER'Sunday, Nov. 6th at I P.M.

Rene Clement's "FORBIDDENGAMES"' (JEUX INTERDITS)

COMING:Saturday, Nov. 12

Jules Dassin's "RIFIFI"Sunday, Nov. 13

Anatole Lifvak's "MAYERLING"ofta ~ . . . . . ~:~-_.~..

MONO- LONG PLAYING(33 1/3 rpm)

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Page 8: i I Will Johnson, On ouincl. mmee a Johnson's office picketed for …tech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N43.pdf · 2008. 11. 22. · Listing (MIT)-Such a report would enable any activity head

Friedman opposes raise01* .aR 0pO@ $

Samuelson backs fax iumpn recen infa l{iron debafe

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managing editor of and a colum-nist for the Day-Jewish Journalin New, York City and has beena foreign correspondent for theSt. Louis Post Dispatch, the NewRepublic, and Current History.

In his travels he has lecturedin the U.S. and in many foreigncountries, including the SovietUnion. His books include TheJewish Problem in the SovietUnion and The Sacred Fire: TheStory cf Sex in Religion.

Goldberg will be introduced byProfessor Leonard Fein of MIT'sPolitical Science Department.Fred Abramson, an MIT sopho-more, is the student chairman ar-ranging the Morris Burg Memor-ial Lecture.

~~~~~~a E0 pit!"

Forum on LDfo feature Leary

Dr. Timothy Leary and twoBoston-area professors will dis-cuss 'LSD: Methods of Control'at the Harvard Law School For-um tonight. The program, sched-uled for 8:30 pm, will be in Low-ell Lecture Hall at Kirkland andOxford Streets in Cambridge.Tickets will be available at theHarvard Coop or at the door, forone dollar.

Dr. Norman E. Zinberg, Assist-ant Clinical Professor of Psychia-try at the Harvard MedicalSchool, will also speak. He haswritten much about the use andcontrol of dangerous drugs.

The other speaker will be Mr.Neal Chayvet, Assistant Professorof Legal Medicine at Boston. Uni-versity.

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If you are handsome, suave, andsocially accepted, this article isnot for you. On the other hand,if you are ugly, grungy, and cool(a Techlan), this is the mostimportant article that you willever read in your entire life.

Ugiest man soughtThe Alpha Chi chapter of Al1-

pha Phi Omega Fraternity an-nounces that its "Ugliest Man onCampus" (UIMOC) Contest willrun from Dec, 6-9. As the name

suggests, its purpose is to find

the ugliest man at MIT, and toraise money for the AmericanCancer Society of Massachusetts.

The contest is open to any reg-istered, duly accredited male stu-dent at MrT. IThe candidates maybe sponsored by any registeredactivity or living group (if theywish to be associated with thepersorn). It is hoped that therewill be approximately 10 finalistsso that it will be certain thatthe ugliest man is elected. Thecandidates can use make-up ifthey so desire.

All expense paid daterThe wiqnnir of ath s ntest will

receive a truly unique prize: anall expense paid date. The detailsof this will be fully explainedlater, but for the present, sufficeit to say that the nature of thisdate shall be such that the win-ner will be the envy of everyman on campus.

If you are now intersted in be-coming a candidate for this highhonor, petitions can be pickedup after Wednesday froma RobertLoung in Baker 532, Neil Gold-stein in Wood 407, or Gerry Laddin Kappa Sigma.

From the numerous candidates,the 10 ugliest will be chosen as

finalists on the basis of "the num-ber of signatures on their peti-

tions, general ugliness, apparentvote getting strength, and theamount of publicizing done bythe candidate prior to Nov. 19."The petitions must be returnedby midnight. Saturday, Nov. 19,to the APO office in the StudentCenter (W20-475).

Buy Votes

The primary purpose of thiscontest is to raise money for theAmerican Cancer Society ofMassachusetts. Therefore, thewinner will be chosen by theamount of money donated in hisname during the actual runningof the contest. In-other words,you buy votes; but more detailswill be given later.

Now all you "typical Tech-men" who have been living inmediocrity, unrecognized, unre-warded, have the chance to ob-tain the honor that you so richlydeserve-"Ugliest Man on Cam.pus." Get your petitions Wednes-day from the three people listedabove. "The best is yet to come."

it ) O k a 0,, m 'Row 4 w a lb 91 a I

O-0 Professor Paul Samuelson held

,1 a standing-room-only crowd of 50a in rapt attention while he deL bated Milton Friedman, an eco-E nomics professor from the Uni-

>L versity of Chicago, on the infla.0 tion problem. The debate tookZ place at Lake Forest College in> Chicago three weeks ago.

Friedman's major contention isthat inflation can be reduced sole-

- ly by cutting back on the na-tion's supply of money. He saidthat the money supply, growingat the rate of 8 per cent an-

( nually until recently, has caused"' too great a demand for goodsu and services with a consequentI increase in prices. He believes

that the Federal Reserve Boardcould cut inflation by cutting backthe growth of the money supplyto about 5 per cent each yearfor the next five to ten years.(The Board does this by buyingfewer securities on the open mar-ket. The money it pays goes intothe checking accounts of the sell-ers, so the general money supplywould be decreases.)

Samuelson agreed with Fried-man's ideas on the national mol-ey supply but would also like tosee an immediate increase in theFederal Income Tax. This taxincrease would control the de-mand to spend money created byescalation of the Viet Nam warand the excessive capital-spendinmgboom of industry. However, wait-ing until January to raise theIncome Tax might cause a re-cession, necessitating another in-crease in the money supply bythe Federal Reserve Board.

Friedman, however, stated thatraising taxes would only increasegovernment spending, thereby increasing that money supply a-gain. He predicts a period of gen-ea! ;so:3on for the next ten totwelve years. This is because thegovernment, as a reaction to thepresent inflation trend, recentlylimited the growth of the moneysupply to an annual rate of aboutthree per cent. This will causea recession soon, he said, andthe government will react by get-ting things expanding too fast, apattern that will cause a con-tinuing period of inflation.

Friedan agreed with Profes-

sor Samuelson in that inflationin the years to come is not in-

evitable, although highly prob-a'oble. He pointed out that prices

today are higher than those in,1800 -only because of the infla-tion period right after World WarII. Eventually prices should godown.

B. Z. Goldberg, noted journal-ist, social analyst, and expert on

Jewish life in eastern Europe,will speak on "Sholem Alecheim- An Intimate Portrait" Sunday

at 8 p.m. in Kresge Auditorium.This will be the twenty-second

'Morris Burg Memorial lecture

sponsored by the B'nai B'rithHillel Foundation at MIT. Ad-

mission is free to the public.Goldberg, the son-in-law of the

late Sholem Alecheim, is well

versed in Yiddish, Hebrew, andAnglo-Jewish literature. Present-

ed on the fiftieth anniversary of

the death of his father-in-law,

Goldberg's talk will be con-cerned withi the significance ofAlcheim's portrayal of life inEastern Emrope and in the UnitedStates.

Born in Russia, Goldberg stud-ied. psychology at Harvard andColumbia Universities. He is

Lynch o speakat protest rufly

Lincoln Lynch, Associate Na-tional Director of the Congressof Racial Equality, will appearat an anti-war rally Sunday after-noon at 1:00 at the Sanders Tae-atre in Memorial Hall, HarvardUniversity.

The Rally To Bring Our MenHome From Viet Nam will fol-low a march from the main en-trance of MIT (77 MassachusettsAvenue) to Harvard. The marchwill begin at noon.

UNICORN COFFEE HOUSE presenfs .Friday Evening, Nov.-8 -l 8:30 P.M.

TWO GREAT CONCERTS

SlUDY-

i~~ (:LLm S.. ..:.. SYMPHONY- HALL

Fri. Eye., Rov. fs, 8:30 pkm.Tickets now on sale at boX office

.4.50, $4.00, $3.50, $3.00

Paris Comes To Boston

PAR5§ UrE Iee

BANK REVIEW i JORDBANI HiiALL

Tickets now on saleormo5, e3.50, o aye5r, C5.00

MAIL41 ORDERS: Enclose stamped self-addressed envelope, checkor money order payable to Unicorn Coffe~e House, Boston, Mnass.

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B. Z. Go berg e speA kean Bife of Shal!om A e--ich- m

An1 1'*

twenty shimneys

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By Richard Stern in the first Government-sponsored

what arrangement they should Red China's successfu new rocket research there.- ~~~~~~~Red China's suicresendu new. .

pies of the original photograph- be put in.

It is then up to the people who Form strengthened

buy these units to decide on how People seem to think that War-manY -of them they want and hol has destroyed form in at;

Seuba Divi D CaassesSeven Days a Week.

All Equipment Supplied.

AVenue 2.5818II

L&CKETS RESTRUNGOne-Day Service

Tennis & Squash Shop67A Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

(Opp. Lowell House)TR 6-5417

-uI ' _ - ...- _ _ _

yet, - once the initial shock is

gone, it is very evident that this

is not the case. In fact, form

has been preserved to the mostminute of details and evenstrengthened. The blow-ups ofnews photos retain every detaildown to the printing dots; theBrillo cartons are exact repro-ductions from life; the outlinesof everything are so sharp asto be unnatural; and the colorsin the paintings are unvaryingcombinations of red, yellow,green, and purple.

HEALTHY MALE COLLEGE STUDENTSWanted as paid participants ($20 each) in :research concerned with factors influencing '

onset of illness.To qualify, students must never have had any allergies, and .within the past year must have been free of any infections, ,colds, sore throats, etc,, which required medication.To volunteer or obtain furlher information,

i call Dr. Jacobsat the B.U. Medical Center, i262-1400, extension 692, weekdays, 9-5.

_ * * * * +*kW9~Jt~~ lad·gr6·--lIL·-L- -

atomic bomb was designed and Toward the close of World War

developed largely by a product of II Dr. Tsien was given the rankthis century's best technical of an Air Force Colonel andschools, MIT and Cal-Tech. Dr.

.:T.ien Hsue-sher was awarded amasters degree in mechanicalengineering at MIT while study-ing on a grant given by Chiao-tung University.

During his fifteen year stay inthe United States Dr. Tsien stu-died both at METII and Cal Techand later worked on governmentsponsored research grants forthe Navy and Air Force. In 1950the Government arrested him onthe charge of being an alienCommunist, tried to deport him,changed its mind and held himhere against his will, and thenfinally allowed him to leave min1955. Dr. Tsien consistently de-nied the charges all through theproceedings but joined the Com-munist Party upon his return toChina.

Dr. Tsien's first years in theUnited States were spent studyingat MIT. After receiving his mas-ters degree in 1936 he transferredto Cal Tech, where he was award-ed his doctorate three years later.He continued to teach and do re-search at Cal Tech, taking part

scouted German progress inmissilery. He also was a memberof a research group that predift-ed how the next war will befought in the air. Their report,called "Toward New Horizons,"was the basis of much of today'smilitary development and Dr.Tsien's contributions were major.The topics discussed includeatomic fuels for airplanes andsolid fuels in rockets.

Dr. Tsien became so trustedthat he was named director of

the rocket section of the UnitedStates National Defense ScientificAdvisory Board. However thehearings leading to his eventualdeportation began soon after.

After Dr. Tsien was sentencedto be deported, the deportationwas held up because the govern-ment believed that his knowledgeobtained here could be of greatvalue to a potential enemy. Thistheory appears justified, for onhis return to China Dr. Tsien wasnamed to the Academy of Sci-ences and immediately startedworking on weaponry. His know-ledge gained at MIT and Cal Techundoubtedly went a long way to-ward making Red China a mem-ber of the Nuclear community.

Public health expert

Harvard prof to lectureon new medical problems

Four special lectures will be

given this month at MIT by Dr.

David D. Rutstein, Ridley Watts

Professor of Preventive Medicine

and Head of the Preventive Medi-cal Department at the HarvardMedical School. He will discusssome of the "bough and contro-

I

I"AtTRiW, we are.young enoughnotto be afrad of change.George Harter, Manager, Space Vehicles Engineering Operations, TRW Systems

We encourage young engineers and scientists to go with us and to grow with us. There

is no end to the technical capabilities of the systems TRW is developing for NASA and

DOD. Our programs include manufacture of a global communications satellite system

for Comsat, building the LEM descent engine7 NASA's Interplanetary Pioneers, the AirForce's Nuclear Detection Satellite system, Gemini, Apollo, and post-Apollo programs.

Our biggest need is still for people who are able to think forthemselves and who want to get ahead.

Il. iGmT LETIER k'SHORE.StlP ' -. /

I ITRRW Systems is an operating group f TRW Inc., a diversified nranufacturer of aerospace,a and electronics systems and components. TRW is an equal opportunity employer.

versial" questions confrontingmodern medicine.

National Leader

Dr. Rutstein is a recotgizednational leader in medical educa-tion, public health, and preventivemedicine. Trained in bacteriologyand pediatrics, he has been a toppublic health official in New YorkCity, and made major contribu-tions to the study of arterial andcoronary disease.

He and Professor Duncan E.Reid, Chaimnan of the Depart-ment of Obstetrics at HarvardMedical School introduced therecently successful legislationthat permits the dissemination ofbirth control information and de-vices in Massachusetts.

Biomedical Engaeering

The Institute-sponsored lecturesreflect a growing interest'in whathas come to be called biomedicalengineering. AU lectures are to beheld in Room 10-250 at lNLTv at4:30 p.m. and are open to thepublic.

"The Paradox of Modern Medi-cine" will be the first lecture, onTuesday. Dr. Rutstein will reviewthe evolution of medical edtca-tion, care, and research and thereasons for society's failure toprovide the level of health itcould.

HealthIn "The Tangled Web of Medi-

ca! Care," on Tuesday November15, he will discuss how the seg-ments of the health industry havegrown up in separate and non-re-lated ways.

Dr. Rutstein's third lec1tre,"The Impact of ntemporaryAutomation," will be given onThursday, November 17. In thispresentation he will give ex-amples of what has already beendone in biomedical eeaand the biomedical application oflarge-scale digital computers andcontrast this beginning with whacould be accomplished in the fu-ture.

In the final lecture on Tuesday,November 22, Dr. Rutstein wilsummarize his ideas of "A Planfor the Future" in which wecould weave together fa tiestechnological devices, perskme,and knowledge to produce a rmreeffective pattern of medimca care.

~3*r

Christmas in Calornia 'a"** Spend your vacation in

Ct California this year..a'* orard. a Non-Stop Jet.

A ** 2 bags free plus carry on.'** Return any time*.** Save $89.00 over regular

airfare ($228.40+ tax 'Call

Parker Travel Bureau(opp. b.U.) 566-4087

CNOW-Reservations are liirtedso reserve your seat now.

**Min. stay 10 days.V V Vx Y V

(Continued from Page 7)

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CANDIDATES FOR: POSITIONS IN HOUSTON, REDONDO BEACH; AND. ' ' ,. , ' ' ~ ,, , , ,' ' ,, ,7 , ',' .".'R,

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-Speaking is Francis W. Sar-gent '39, the GOP candidatefor !ieutenant- governor, andguest of MIT's Y. R. Club.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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state gn merntwi will wrkclosely with local governent toco inate the effort .t preserveand restore -the state's nitumallresources.

Roe Approve·In his work with th.e Depart.

ment of Public Works, AMr Sa-gent also approved the Broolhine-Elm Street route for the ImerBt. He still favors this route,thugh he is wilg bot listen toany other worthwhile proposalsthat migt come forward. In anycase, Mr. Sargent feels verystrongly that tfis roadway is ab--solutely necessary ito handle thetraffic in the Boston42armbridgearea.

By Steve CarlartMiT's Young Republicans

played hist to YR's h-om Har-0 vard, Sinmons, and Northeasbtrn

at a joint mreebng Wednesday inthe IMeae Lounge of the Stu-dent Center. The principal

mU speaker of the evening was Fran-cis W. Sargent, '39, who returned

L to Tech as the Republican candi-O date for lieutenant govero ofZ Massachuts.>: In an intrview following his< ornal remarks, which were con-

ceed with the Massachusett s,, Republican Party, Mr. Sargent

spke on issues of particuar im-terest to MlT students. As for-rner head of the Massahusetts

I: Depa..~...., of Pub'lic Works, Air.Sargent has bern, actively con-cerned wit conservation proj-

I ects. As lieutenant governor, he- would continue i efforts in thi s

field.Cleam-up Oampaig

The state government is eur-rantly emlbaling onr a massiveeffort t clean up waterays, an-eluding the Chaoles. Both a fed-eral appropriatio and a $150 mil-lion bond issue apprved by thestate legislature wil be aplied totiffs drive. Faurdiemore, indus-try will be offered tax incan-

'What's Next in Viet Nam,' thefirst of a monthly series, will bediscussed by four VIT professorsin the Mezzanine lounge on thethird floor of the Student Center,at 4 pm Monday.

The speakers will be SalvadorLuria, Sedgwick Professor of Bi-I

I

physics; and Philip Morrison,Professor of Phyrsics.

A French- doumentary film,'Day of the Locust,' and tape.recorded excerpts of PresidentLyndon Johnason's speech aboutAsia, will also be featured.

' ' _

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Youl know it. After graduation you'll havemany paths to follow. And the path you takecould affect the rest of your entire life.

Right now you're probably looki g for all theinformation about these paths that you canfi9"4 So he-' some about TM an_ you.

The basic fact is simply this: Whatever yourarea of study, whatever your immediate com-mitments after graduation, chances are there's.a career for you with IBM.

That's it. Whether you're interested in Com-puter Applications, Programming, Financeand Administration, Research and Develop-ment, Manufacturing or Marketing,could be a career. for you with IBM.

there

Another important point to consider: IBM isTHE leader in THE major growth industry:information handling and control. The indus-try itself may not mean much to you, just yet.But let us tell you about it.

°nm un 'O Bclaln$ hear Sar eint Qu ; - I fI

tives to Bit pollution, and Idie KTeIBI WAWNQ-901---771a~QV:I ME a B IAM 1 lga Bm m

ology; Wfiliam Schriber, Profesg- sor of Eleetrical Engineering; Cy- MUALrus Levinthal, Professor of Bio- jjOFFE=RINGS

SUM SUQICE FRIDAY, NOV. 4 -8 P.M

VOlS4C9LVYO Dorothy Traub, Sopranorke S$p'sh Wonde CM Sonia Guterman, Flute

DA=E~~~~~E~ALL] alice Schwarh, Cello~8i ; 9w z a~r*jp §ftet

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for less than $30BI year

Thes re e avewerae annuap -paymern for fve years,

besed on cuOrSnt di&v&de'ra., if y ou buy h 'il undepage 350 Dividends are guaranfeed. We wiM gladyquotf p iremum ra 9for youreage, witouf obligation.

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Whatever your immediate ctlommitments:, whatever yOiur area Of studdy,sign up now for anon-campus iterview0 @with 1i M,{ Oct.10 11.

If, for some reason, you aren't able to arrange an interview, drop us a line. Write to: Manager of College Recruiting,IBIMd Corponration, 590 Madison Avenue, New York, NY. 10022. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

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Relax and Divert

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YELLOW- CAB SERICE ALL CABS RADIO EQUIPPED

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bert Hoffer, both of Harvard; 3:Dave Olson '68 and Ngok MingCheulg '68; 4: Arthur Lieber-man, grad, and Larry Hartbuck,grad.

Next week's game will be thefu master point game forNovember.

Enbtries for the intramuralteam-of-four bridge tournamentmust be received, along with the$5 entry fee, by November 5. En-tries should be sent to JeffPassel (room 252A of Burton) orJohn Hrones (room 402 of Atin-son).

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with Ross Snith, Director ofAthletics, and report back to thecouncil.

The constitution for the councilwas also approved at this meet-ing. This is the first constitutionthe council has had, which is alsoa sign of the new spirt of themanagers. Along with this, acoaches-managers dinner will beheld in January.

at MIT in several ways. His ideawas to increase the responsibili-ties of the managers by havingthe managers' council make upsuch items as team. budgets andgenerally handle the money forthe varsity teams at MIT. It waspointed out that there is a pre-cedent for this move, as themanagers formally 'handled thisfunction. Howard will discuss this

By Tony UmaAt the meeting of the varsity

managers' council held last week,several items with far-reachingimplication were discussed. Forthe first time in the history of thecouncil, a girl sat in on one ofthe meetings. She was Kim Win-ters '69, who is the co-eds' fenc-ing manager. She was present atthe meeting as an observer towatch the council in action.

Bob Howard, '67, chairman ofthe council, brought up a pro-posal which could affect athletics

last year, will be the man to

beat again this year.

Several players scored impress-

ive wins during their last match.

Among these were John Weare

'68, George Pantoulias '70, Allan

Greenfield '69, Stuart Schulman'68, and last year's runner-up,Ray Ferrara-'67. Perhaps themost exciting match went toTomme Ellis '67, wPho scoredthirty points- in two innings tocome from behind and win.

By Chip Schrioeder

mIIT's Pocket Billiards Tourna-ment is once again underway.After two mrunds of- natches, sixY-teen players remain.-No majorupsets have occurred, and it lookslike Doug Friedman '67, who won

the trophy were Jeln ri-d~:land Ken Lebensold '68, who play-

ed North-South.

Other North-South winners were

2-3 (tie); Paul Flashenberg '70

and Tim Lundeen '70; Dan Kot-

l1W, grad, and Dave Roy, grad;4: John Hrones '68 and Dave

Beer, grad.

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in Dublin's Fair City: Upper Left: Priest leading aged woman fromDublin's danger zone. Upper Right: Dublin's Liberty Hall, headquartersof the "irish Citizen Army", seized by authorities. Lower Left: NationalUniversity of Ireland students in Sinn Fein demonstration. Lower Right:

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W\ison sets GBC recordas harriers capture 2nd

Yale's Dibble wins

Cyclists defeated at New Havene, ̂ E, a '' o '1' >'e" ' ''

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Coach Art Famham's varsityharriers placed third in the Great-

o er Boston's cross country cham.pionship Tuesday. The thinclads

: were led by Stan Kozubek '69,ce who took third place in the meet.ca Harvard was the winning team,2 and Northeastern placed second.Lu> The scores were Harvard 28,O Northeastern 64, MiT 93, Tufts 95,

BU 120, and BC 139. Brandeis didnot field a full team.

62 Tufts was the only school whichi, the engineers had met in a dual

meet. MIT was narrowly defeatedby that team two weeks ago atWilliams. The team efort by theTechmen helped them to reversethat situation.

MIT's third place showed theLu team's improvement over recentI years. In 1963 MIT did niot com-

pete in the GBCAA, and in thelast two years they took fourthplace. The boost from last year'sfreshman teanm accounts for theimprovement.

Last year the MrT runners tookthird place in the frosh version ofthis meet. The improvement ofthe varsity should continue nextyear with the addition of thisyear's frosh harriers.

Kozubek avenges defeatKozubek's performance was not

Ashdown clinchesI I C a tni$s c rownA well-balanced Ashdown team

defeated Theta Delta Chi for theintramural termis championshipin the tournament held over thelast three weeks. Separate singlesand doubles divisions decided in-dividual champions. Theta DeltaCh dominated the singles withBob McKinley '70 winning thesingles tifle easily and MannyWeiss '70 taking fourth. However,Ashdown in turn dominated thedoubles and came up with valu-able singles points to win theteam title. Burton House, led byJohn Graves '68 with a second inthe singles, managed to taketird place. Joe Baron '70 (PGD)took third.

Finishing behind the three front-runners were AEPi, Bexley andStudent House. The top six groupswill receive 50, 40, 32, 26 and 20IM points, respectively.

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By Stan Kask

Mrr's freshmen placed a strongsecond behind Harvard in th,Greater Boston Cross Count*Championship at Franklin ParlTuesday. This was the best showing for the frosh in the GBCC iithe last four years. The reasonfor the high finish is a combina.t/on of fine running by Ben Wilson and the outstanding depth ofthe team.

Wison takes f sBen Wilson won the race easily

by covering the 3.1 mile coursein record time of 15: 30 This choplped two secnds off the previousrecord, and it's the tiird recordfor Ben in his last three races.Ben's closest competitor wasRoyce Shaw of Harvard, who fin-ished a full Mifty-five seconds lat-er. Harvard, however, exhibited ashow of depth of their own byplacing second, third, fourth,fifth and seventh. It is easy tosee that the Crimson will be chiefcontenders for honors at the NewEngland and IC4A championshipsin the next few weeks.

Engieers bunched wenThe Engineers took eighth,

ninth, tenth and eleventh places.John Owens finished in 17:26,Larry Petro in 17:40, Arthur La-Drew in 17:41, and 3im Leary in17:44. The two other MIT entrieswere Larry Ludewig and DaveSwope, who placed twenty - first

Photo by Owerc Franken

The 1966 cross country squad: standing left to right, coachArt Farnham, captain Henry Link '67, Tom White '69, Rick Wolf-son '69, Bill Donahue '68, and Tom Naiar ian '69; kneeling, lef toright-Dave Sitler '69, Pete Peckarsky '68, Jim Smith '69, JohnUsher '69, Stan Kozubek '69, and Geoff Hallock '69.unexpected. He was the Greater Rich Wolfson '69 and HelgeBoston freshman champion last Bjaaland '67 placed 24t1 and 28thyear and has been beaten only respectively. Rich recently re-

turned after an injury and hastwce this fall. Stan finished Tues-- beerunning very well. Helge,day 18 seconds ahead of BC's who is more widely known for hisNorris, who had beaten him pro- cross country skiing, has been aviousy in a dual meet. Next week consistent scorer. Geoff HaMockin the New Englands, he will have '69 was 30th in the meet. He dida chance to avenge his other de- not run last year but has beenfeat when he meets Amby Burfoot doing very well.of Wesleyan. 2 championships remain

Pete Peckarsky '68 placed 18th Two more championship racesand was Tech's second finisher. await the harriers. They will vieJohn Usher '69 was 20th and has for the New England's title atconsistently been third man for Franklin Park Monday. One weekthe engineers. He will be running later they will travel to New Yorkthe mile during the track season. to compete in the iC4A meet.

Freshman sensation Ben Wil-son funes up for the upcomingNew England cross countrymeet after winning the GreaterBostons Tuesday by 56 seconds.

and twenty- fitl respectively.Fial Standings

Harvard .................................... 21M IT ............................................ 39Northeastern ............................ 83Boston College ........................ 99Tufts ........................................ i19

The team will participate in theNew England Championships atFranklin Park Monday. This racewill be a stiff test for the frosh,since they will compete againstthe top teams in the area. 'Mefollowing week the team will tra-vel to New York to compete inthe IC4A championships.

Kickers drop ftPhillips Exeter defeated MIT's

freshman soccer team-Wednesdayby a score of 2-9. The gamewas played on sloppy, rain-soak-ed field, which hampered playconsiderably.

Exeter scored its goals in thefirst and second periods. The en-tire 'second half of the game wasa strng defensive battle. JohnGerth of MIT, playing his firstfull game since 'recovering froman injury suffered ~ree weeksago, guarded the goal with hislife. He had fourteen saves andallowed only two shots to sneah-through. Philips Exeter traditon-ally has a strong team, and tsyear is no exception.

The frosh will try to raise theirseason log of 2 - 5, tomorow, whenthkey take -the field against theUniversity of Connecticut at theUCons' home field.

9 How They DId M

MIT IV) took third in fhe GreaterBosfons

MIT (F) took second in the GreaterBcstons

SccerPhillips Exeter 2, MIT (F) 0

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The 1.966 Intramrural FootballAlU-Stars were announced today.The 16 men, offense and defense,were chosen on both their indivi-dual and team performance. Thecomm/ttee consisted- of IM man-ager Jack Swain '68, Sports Edi-tor Tom Thomas '69 and IMEditor Herb Finger, '68.The "dream-team" was domin-ated by the -four semi-finalteaxns: SAE and Beta headed thelist with five players each; DUwas next with three all-stars, theDelts getting two and Burton one.

OffenseCenter-Tom Solter '67 snapped

the DU offense into action andopened big holes in opposinglines.

Right Guard-Dave Schramm'67 is everybody's pick for All-Star right guard. Along withTom, Dave was one of the bigDU front wall who so ablychopped down defenders on DUscreen passes.

Left Guard-Wendell Iverson'69 was one of the strong men ofthe Beta line. Wendell gave Betabacks the time and the holes to

keep their attack moving.Split-end Don Rutherford '67

was one of the top receivers forSAE this fali. Don's big framemade him a primary target forSAEIor passes.

Tight End-Alex Wilson '67(Burton) is said to have the besthands in Intramural football.Wilson's excellent receptions, bothone and two handed, kept Burtonalive many a time.

Flanker - Jim Cornier '68(BTP) not only caught all thepasses thrown to him, but evensome that weren't. His speed

alorng -with t._ei .dous handsmake him our AU-Star choice.-

Blocking Back--Rick Young '68was more than the normal block-ing back to the Beta attack. Be-sides protection~ Rick offered afine running attack and a fourthBeta receiver.

Quarterback-Fred Souk '67 hasto be our choice for quarterback.Fred led the SAElors to thechampionship with his arn~irg

p'in-point passes and excellencalls.

The defensive alignment willbe announced in the next issue.

turday November 5Soccer (V), Connectieut, Home,

2 pmSoccer (F), Connecticut, Away,

10:30 amSailing (Y), Schell TrophySailing (F), Priddy Cup at Coast

GuardSuaday, November 6

Sailing (V), Schell TrophySailing (F),, Priddy Cup

Monday. Novemb 7Cross-country (V&F), New Englands

at Franklin Park

By Steve Wiener

Tecah's varsity golfrs,s omn-pleted theirfal season with a 4-2recxd in dual compePtion andfixst and second places m twotournmments tey entered.

Tech stxrted the season bytrouncing Vermont 5-2 and blaxk-ing ark 7-0 in a triangulameet at Oakley Country ClUb.Sopho res Greg Kast, TomTImms, and Mi'ke McAahan allwmit two natches to conplementthe play of returing letterme~Gerry Banner '68, captain TravisGamble '67, Jack Rector '68, andDave McMillan '67.

Banner Breaks RecordThe team headed nrth to Mon-

treal where they competed in theSir Ge ge Whiliams tournament.After disastus first runads, theeng.weers rebounded to plae sec-ond, eight shots back of the hostcollege. Leading the way wasGerry Banner, who fred a.70 toset a course record wad placescond in the tourney. Thms,Gable, Kast, and Rector fi1-lwaed suit as all broke 80.

Beavers Take ECAACTe glight of the season was

the ECAC roud at Burlington,Ve t, in which ART qw_-iledfor the first time in six years.In a field of 16 teams and 64

g , Gerry Banner capturedindividual hmors 'wih a me un-der par n, while fte Beaverscharged to a fom~ stroke victoryowr URI by gaining five strokes

Par in the last fc.~ _b~eMs.

Team Loses MrstTMe team suffered its first de-

feat of the year at the hnds ofte same URI squm. AnTb4-3 as the Quigley brothers over-came Batuer. and Ganble. J7-ckRecor bowed on the eig=tee..hgreen while Mike han -lost3 and 2. Thms, Kay,, and Me-Millan registered the engineerpoirt.

Tuning up fur the ECAC inals,the golfers split a triangularmeet, downing Babson 6-1 andli to mt E 4. In t'e C I AC

round4 BC had finishedfout to MIT by eleven shots.

Spring Looks StrongAfter a -disappointing eighth

place finish in te ECAC's atBetage, Long rsland, the teamrebunded in its fing match totrp Brandeis 5-2. The lowest av-erages for the fall were owned byBanner, Thomas, Gamrble, -and

East, who .ort 79, 81, 82, amn 82.Oamh Merriman can look for-ward to continued succes anda shot at the prestigious NewEnghtnd's title next spring.

23 r

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AMT's cycling team was downedby Yale and Cornell in Sunday's25 mile bike race at EdgewoodPark in New Haven. Tech's hopeswere dimmed at the outset whenMike Grano '68 crashed on thesecond lap and A1 Sawyer '68 hadto retire because of the coldweather.

The race winner, Terry Dibbleof Yale, covered the 18 laps in1:04:59, lapping the entire fieldin the process.

The final score was Yale 39,Comauell 36 and MIT 20. Repre.senting Tech were Dennis Noson'68, who finished eighth, MikeGram (ninth), Jim Lapis '67(eleventh), Sam, Guilbeau 67,Glen Ruedisueli '70, A1 Sawyer,and Jim Sweeney '70.

Photo by Stanley Schwartz

Cyclist Jim Lapis '67 chasesthe pack on his own after achain derailment. Hle rebound-ed to finish I i th in the race.

t ke third ; CBAA

I isk4 A>k-$i rs se ecte

Go"fers end fall seasonI'M 8%01 -w-aomMS MEKR