s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers'...

8
First' of itskn CEP-SCEP Uiio gru set o dicus aason group se+ +o discuss academics HEh@od s p ne; *e a s peas Wiliams Leetures SMDith give hree talks , A Rae Y CJ-·n-I- IIIDWI | E | E B | S | B i i i I I rI I I I I of Professor Robert S. Williams, first head of MIT's Department of Metallurgy. Other Williams lecturers have been world-famed physicist Sir Nevill -Mott (1960), Nobel Pfizer winner Williain Shockley (1950), Alan H. Cotrell of the British Ministry of Tech- nology (1953), and Frederick Seitz, President of the National Academy of Sciences (1947). Dr. Smith, who has the title of Institute Professor as well as be- ing a professor of metallurgy and of the history of technology and science, is especially concerned with the interplay of science and technology and its influence on the history of human thought. In 1946 he received the United States Medal of Merit for his metallurgical work on fissionable materials. For a book on the his- tory of Metallurgy which he wrote under the Guggenheim Founda- tion, he received the 1961. Pfizer Award from the History of Sci- ence Society. 7. Viewpoint a weeldy series of ot runs on international affairs, will begin Tuesday in the Student Center. Based on the highly suc- cessf ul Encounter format, View- point will exploit WHT's interna- tional character by featuring personalities and controversies of global interest. Professor Nathmn Cook, who |will preside at the first Viewpoint in the East Lounge of the Student Center, has recently returned from India. He served there as an engineering and educational consultant at the Birla Institute of Technology, near New Delhi. He proposes to discuss "status- minded bureaucracy in India." Sponsored by Indian Students, the Student Center Committee, the Office of the Dean of Student Affairs, and other groups, View- point is directed by Josef Shwartz G, Rananath Nayahk G, and Dave Peterson '68. avoided any mention of what would constitute a violation and only called on its signers to "sup- port the Constitution." Neverthe- less, every major college in Mass- achusetts fought the oath until its passage by the General Court. Others refuse to sign After its passage, all Massa- chusetts colleges sent the oath out to their teachers as a matter of course. ' MIT backs out As the case began to build up, MIT made it clear that it had no intention to prosecute Pedlosky (Please turn to Page 3) lawyer, Gerald Berlin. A decision is not expected soon. Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol- lowed World War I. Among the leading proponents of this and similar legislation were the Am- erican Legion, a small segment of the teaching profession which feared "the virus of Commun- ism," and many tabloid news- papers. - Although sixteen states passed such legislation betveen 1931 and 1937, the Massachusetts oath was relatively innocuous. This oath By Mark Boldtin The case of Joseph Pedlosky, Prof. of Mathematics, against the Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was argued in court yester- day. The case, which began last fall when Pedlosky refused to sign the oath, was presented be- fore the Supreme Judicial Court of 1Vasscahusetts by Pedlosky's By Scott Relead departmental reqtirements i s C' . . planned for future liaison com- The Committe on Fducatoic l rrdttee meetings. Policy and its student counterpart, SCEP, formed a liaison commit- Pass-Fail Diwssed tee last week to discuss major academic oiectivesvT h e discussion of pass-fall 'alca liobjecn tivomin i -. tgrading systems led to a talk on Consist of Firee members each from the CEP and from SCEP and will be under the direction of Profess~ Charles P. Kindle- berger, CEP Chairman, a n d Michael Telson '67, SCEP Chair- man. The group is to function both as a feedback organ, presenting student views and problems to the CEP, and as a source of new ideas and programs for SCElP. Many Discussions Held The fonmation of the group was the net result of a discussion on the possibility of student repre- sentation on the Faculty Com- mittee. The group is the first of its kind and is hoped to provide a major step in the improve- ment of student-faculty relation- ships. The other major topic of dis- cussion was the feasibility of a pass-fail grading system at MIT. Opinions among the CEP were generally conservative, favoring the letter grade. However, further discussion of pass-fail grades in courses outside of Institute and the general philosophy of grades. It was pointed out that the prob- lem concerns how the grade is given and interpreted rather than with the concept of grading. Students at MIT have a ten- dency to work for the grade for its own sake. rather than for the knowledge they receive. The en- tire desirability of a no-grade system was questioned. Students demand grades to let them know how they are doing in relation to their classmates. Also, it would be difficult for graduate schools to find a standard for admissions other than grades. Aft, MI Euflie snow regulcaions In anticipation of winter snow, both the Institute and the Cam- bridge Chamber of Commerce have issued snow regulations. Philip A. Stoddard, MIT Vice President in charge of Operations and Personnel, announced that the Institute will normally remain open during snow. It is requested that one refrain from telephoning and wait for an official announce- ment from radio stations WBZ (1030 kc) or WHDH (80 kc) or for a telephone notice from the per- sonel office. It is possible that one phase of MIT activities will be closed while others remain open. Special parking regulations are also in effect during periods of snow. Frank Townsend, Execu- tive Vice President of the Cam- bridge' Chamber of Commerce asks that cars and trucks be kept off the streets, if possible, until the streets are clear; that parking areas be cleared of snow imme- diately (it is illega! to pim-h it into the street); and the spaces to hydrant hose connections in front of private property be cleared by ula awniers. Cambridge, Massachuseffs, Friday, December 9, 1966 Five Cents Vol. 86, No. 5S ed to limit one's undergraduate experience. Finally, ary Blessner, an MIT Electrical Engineering instructor, spoke of his experience with clas- sified research. Though he ad- matted that one could gain much through such an experience, he also would have to give up much of his personal freedom to do classified work. He also found that students considering classification often avoided campus political ac- tivity fearing that they may not be permitted to do special re- search. Armand Siegal, Professor of physics at Boston University, spoke at the 8:00 meeting on his observations of scientists and en- gineers in French politics as part of a survey titled "Scientists and Engineers in the Political Arena Abroad." Siegal's talk, "An American in Paris," was based on his views of the French scientific commun- ity which he had been a part of during his recent sabbatical from BU. During that time he worked in the Center for Nuclear Studies just outside Paris. According to Siegal, French scientists identify themselves as intelleciuals, something their An- erican counterparts tend to shy away from. They are also gener- ally leftists and idealists, he said, and harbor a distrust of all gov- ernments and all politicians. Professor Warren Ambrose of the MIT Mathematics Department spoke of his experiences in Argen- tina this summer. Argentina uni- versities, he said, are run by a (Please turn to Page 3) The MIT Society for Social Re- sponsibiliq, in Science held two meetings Tuesday, the first of which was a panel dlfision deal- ing with "The Effects of Classi- fied Research on Student Life." the discussion was moderated by Professor Norman Dahl of the Mechanical Engineering depart- ment. The first panel member, Yao Li of Aeronautics and Astronautics, spoke in favor of classified work on campus. _Professor Li felt that those problems in his field that were of most interest to the stu- dent wvere unfortunately those clasied by the federal 'govern- ment. Professor David Frisch of the Physics Department felt that a student should not be faced with any classified work unti he is on the Ph.D. level. He found nothing wrong with the fiscal advantages, but felt that classified work tend- By Carson Agnew Hannah Arendt, noted expert. on revolutims, gave a lecture on "Revolutixn and Freedom" in Kresge Auditorium last Wednes-' day night. The talk, which was attended by about 600 people, was sponsored by the Humani- ties Department. Miss Arendt began by om- menting on the topics nature of her subject, pointing out that war between major pwers is impos- sible for the present because of technological adviances. There- fore, she observed, the country which understands the nature of revolution could well emerge the victor in the Cold War. 1Revolution and Public Freedom She ten traced the etymology of the word ",revolution." The first modem use of the word, she said, came with the glorious Revolution when revolution meant the restoration of the previous order. The next real chinge in the word came when it was con- nected with freedom, especially "public freedom." Public free- dom, or freedom to assemble, act on, and discuss in public the problems of the individual and soiety, was an idea which first crystallized i n t h e American Revolution. In America, the .tadi- tion of public meetings was so taken for granted that, according to John Adams, "the revolution was over before the war had begun " Frenc Revolution Miss Arendt then mentioned the Ftench Revolution and the revolu- tions of 184, when the idea that a; revolution was a mehod for changing governments shifted to mean a method for overthrowing a class. She ended her talk with some cornetnts on the reasons for the results of some of the revolutions of today. Dr. Cyri Stanley Smith, Pro- fessor of Metallurgy, probably the nation's ranking metallurigcal historian as well as one of it lead metallurgists, will give the 1966 Robert S. Williams Lectures next week at MIT. The subject of his three lec- tures, all to be given at 4 pm rm room 2-390 are: "The Struc- tural Complexity in Polycrystal- hite Matter and m Scientific rIhought" (Tuesday); "Archaeol- 0gY and Early History of Metal- lurgy". (Wednesday); and "The Metallurgical Profession, 1966, plus or minus 50 Years" (Thurs- day). The annual series of lectures was established in 1946 in honor The MIT Debate team took third place in the Seventh Annual Invitational Debate Tournament held at the Air Force Academy last Friday and Saturday. Repre- senting Tech were Eric Johnson '67 and Jim Foster '67. The Debate Topic was "Re- solved: That the United States should substantially reduce its foreign policy comnitments." Thirty-six colleges and univer- sities participated in the toura- ment. MIT -won all of its six rounds, defeating Wichita State University, University of Ken- tucly, Oklahoma State University, the Merchant Marine Academy, University of Michigan, and K&n- sas State University. In the quar- ter finals, Tech beat the Univer- sity of Oregon. Augustaria Col- lege (Rock Island, Mll.), which defeated Dartmouth in the finals for a first place, beat MIT in the semi-finals. 0 MIT decines ton asoycute Pedlosky, Oath on Itril - m .. A 0 a a near nannan ArenaT spea revolution, freedm Dec. 7 in nvitatfional Tournament MfIT- RVP Saturday Cage 8:I5 p.m . Faculfy-BMOC Game Followed by Soclk Hop

Transcript of s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers'...

Page 1: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

First' of itskn

CEP-SCEP Uiio gruset o dicus aason groupse+ +o discuss academics

HEh@od s p ne; *e a s peas

Wiliams Leetures

SMDith give hree talks

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of Professor Robert S. Williams,first head of MIT's Departmentof Metallurgy. Other Williamslecturers have been world-famedphysicist Sir Nevill -Mott (1960),Nobel Pfizer winner WilliainShockley (1950), Alan H. Cotrellof the British Ministry of Tech-nology (1953), and FrederickSeitz, President of the NationalAcademy of Sciences (1947).

Dr. Smith, who has the title ofInstitute Professor as well as be-ing a professor of metallurgy andof the history of technology andscience, is especially concernedwith the interplay of science andtechnology and its influence onthe history of human thought. In1946 he received the UnitedStates Medal of Merit for hismetallurgical work on fissionablematerials. For a book on the his-tory of Metallurgy which he wroteunder the Guggenheim Founda-tion, he received the 1961. PfizerAward from the History of Sci-ence Society.7.

Viewpoint a weeldy series ofot runs on international affairs,will begin Tuesday in the StudentCenter. Based on the highly suc-cessf ul Encounter format, View-point will exploit WHT's interna-tional character by featuringpersonalities and controversies ofglobal interest.

Professor Nathmn Cook, who|will preside at the first Viewpointin the East Lounge of the StudentCenter, has recently returned

from India. He served there asan engineering and educationalconsultant at the Birla Instituteof Technology, near New Delhi.He proposes to discuss "status-minded bureaucracy in India."

Sponsored by Indian Students,the Student Center Committee,the Office of the Dean of StudentAffairs, and other groups, View-point is directed by Josef ShwartzG, Rananath Nayahk G, andDave Peterson '68.

avoided any mention of whatwould constitute a violation andonly called on its signers to "sup-port the Constitution." Neverthe-less, every major college in Mass-achusetts fought the oath untilits passage by the General Court.

Others refuse to signAfter its passage, all Massa-

chusetts colleges sent the oath outto their teachers as a matter ofcourse. '

MIT backs outAs the case began to build up,

MIT made it clear that it had nointention to prosecute Pedlosky

(Please turn to Page 3)

lawyer, Gerald Berlin. A decisionis not expected soon.

Origin of oathThe Massachusetts Teachers'

Loyalty Oath was an outgrowthof the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I. Among theleading proponents of this andsimilar legislation were the Am-erican Legion, a small segmentof the teaching profession whichfeared "the virus of Commun-ism," and many tabloid news-papers. -

Although sixteen states passedsuch legislation betveen 1931 and1937, the Massachusetts oath wasrelatively innocuous. This oath

By Mark Boldtin

The case of Joseph Pedlosky,Prof. of Mathematics, against theMassachusetts Teachers' LoyaltyOath was argued in court yester-day. The case, which began lastfall when Pedlosky refused tosign the oath, was presented be-fore the Supreme Judicial Courtof 1Vasscahusetts by Pedlosky's

By Scott Relead departmental reqtirements i sC' . . planned for future liaison com-

The Committe on Fducatoic l rrdttee meetings.Policy and its student counterpart,SCEP, formed a liaison commit- Pass-Fail Diwssedtee last week to discuss major

academic oiectivesvT h e discussion of pass-fall'alca liobjecn tivomin i -. tgrading systems led to a talk on

Consist of Firee members eachfrom the CEP and from SCEPand will be under the directionof Profess~ Charles P. Kindle-berger, CEP Chairman, a n dMichael Telson '67, SCEP Chair-man.

The group is to function bothas a feedback organ, presentingstudent views and problems tothe CEP, and as a source of newideas and programs for SCElP.

Many Discussions HeldThe fonmation of the group was

the net result of a discussion onthe possibility of student repre-sentation on the Faculty Com-mittee. The group is the first ofits kind and is hoped to providea major step in the improve-ment of student-faculty relation-ships.

The other major topic of dis-cussion was the feasibility of apass-fail grading system at MIT.Opinions among the CEP weregenerally conservative, favoringthe letter grade. However, furtherdiscussion of pass-fail grades incourses outside of Institute and

the general philosophy of grades.It was pointed out that the prob-lem concerns how the grade isgiven and interpreted rather thanwith the concept of grading.

Students at MIT have a ten-dency to work for the grade forits own sake. rather than for theknowledge they receive. The en-tire desirability of a no-gradesystem was questioned. Studentsdemand grades to let them knowhow they are doing in relation totheir classmates. Also, it wouldbe difficult for graduate schoolsto find a standard for admissionsother than grades.

Aft, MI Eufliesnow regulcaions

In anticipation of winter snow,both the Institute and the Cam-bridge Chamber of Commercehave issued snow regulations.

Philip A. Stoddard, MIT VicePresident in charge of Operationsand Personnel, announced thatthe Institute will normally remainopen during snow. It is requestedthat one refrain from telephoningand wait for an official announce-ment from radio stations WBZ(1030 kc) or WHDH (80 kc) or fora telephone notice from the per-sonel office.

It is possible that one phase ofMIT activities will be closedwhile others remain open.

Special parking regulations arealso in effect during periods ofsnow. Frank Townsend, Execu-tive Vice President of the Cam-bridge' Chamber of Commerceasks that cars and trucks be keptoff the streets, if possible, untilthe streets are clear; that parkingareas be cleared of snow imme-diately (it is illega! to pim-h it intothe street); and the spaces tohydrant hose connections in frontof private property be cleared byula awniers.

Cambridge, Massachuseffs, Friday, December 9, 1966 Five CentsVol. 86, No. 5S

ed to limit one's undergraduateexperience.

Finally, ary Blessner, an MITElectrical Engineering instructor,spoke of his experience with clas-sified research. Though he ad-matted that one could gain muchthrough such an experience, healso would have to give up muchof his personal freedom to doclassified work. He also found thatstudents considering classificationoften avoided campus political ac-tivity fearing that they may notbe permitted to do special re-search.

Armand Siegal, Professor ofphysics at Boston University,spoke at the 8:00 meeting on hisobservations of scientists and en-gineers in French politics as partof a survey titled "Scientists andEngineers in the Political ArenaAbroad."

Siegal's talk, "An American inParis," was based on his viewsof the French scientific commun-ity which he had been a part of

during his recent sabbatical fromBU. During that time he workedin the Center for Nuclear Studiesjust outside Paris.

According to Siegal, Frenchscientists identify themselves asintelleciuals, something their An-erican counterparts tend to shyaway from. They are also gener-ally leftists and idealists, he said,and harbor a distrust of all gov-ernments and all politicians.

Professor Warren Ambrose ofthe MIT Mathematics Departmentspoke of his experiences in Argen-tina this summer. Argentina uni-versities, he said, are run by a

(Please turn to Page 3)

The MIT Society for Social Re-sponsibiliq, in Science held twomeetings Tuesday, the first ofwhich was a panel dlfision deal-ing with "The Effects of Classi-fied Research on Student Life."

the discussion was moderatedby Professor Norman Dahl of theMechanical Engineering depart-ment.

The first panel member, Yao Liof Aeronautics and Astronautics,spoke in favor of classified workon campus. _Professor Li felt thatthose problems in his field thatwere of most interest to the stu-dent wvere unfortunately thoseclasied by the federal 'govern-ment.

Professor David Frisch of thePhysics Department felt that astudent should not be faced withany classified work unti he is onthe Ph.D. level. He found nothingwrong with the fiscal advantages,but felt that classified work tend-

By Carson AgnewHannah Arendt, noted expert. on

revolutims, gave a lecture on"Revolutixn and Freedom" inKresge Auditorium last Wednes-'day night. The talk, which wasattended by about 600 people,was sponsored by the Humani-ties Department.

Miss Arendt began by om-menting on the topics nature ofher subject, pointing out that warbetween major pwers is impos-sible for the present because oftechnological adviances. There-fore, she observed, the countrywhich understands the nature ofrevolution could well emerge thevictor in the Cold War.1Revolution and Public Freedom

She ten traced the etymologyof the word ",revolution." Thefirst modem use of the word, shesaid, came with the gloriousRevolution when revolution meantthe restoration of the previousorder.

The next real chinge in theword came when it was con-nected with freedom, especially"public freedom." Public free-dom, or freedom to assemble, acton, and discuss in public theproblems of the individual andsoiety, was an idea which firstcrystallized i n t h e AmericanRevolution. In America, the .tadi-

tion of public meetings was sotaken for granted that, accordingto John Adams, "the revolutionwas over before the war hadbegun "

Frenc Revolution

Miss Arendt then mentioned theFtench Revolution and the revolu-tions of 184, when the idea thata; revolution was a mehod forchanging governments shifted tomean a method for overthrowinga class. She ended her talk withsome cornetnts on the reasonsfor the results of some of therevolutions of today.

Dr. Cyri Stanley Smith, Pro-fessor of Metallurgy, probablythe nation's ranking metallurigcalhistorian as well as one of itlead metallurgists, will give the1966 Robert S. Williams Lecturesnext week at MIT.

The subject of his three lec-tures, all to be given at 4 pmrm room 2-390 are: "The Struc-tural Complexity in Polycrystal-hite Matter and m ScientificrIhought" (Tuesday); "Archaeol-0gY and Early History of Metal-lurgy". (Wednesday); and "TheMetallurgical Profession, 1966,plus or minus 50 Years" (Thurs-day).

The annual series of lectureswas established in 1946 in honor

The MIT Debate team tookthird place in the Seventh AnnualInvitational Debate Tournamentheld at the Air Force Academylast Friday and Saturday. Repre-senting Tech were Eric Johnson'67 and Jim Foster '67.

The Debate Topic was "Re-solved: That the United Statesshould substantially reduce itsforeign policy comnitments."

Thirty-six colleges and univer-sities participated in the toura-

ment. MIT -won all of its sixrounds, defeating Wichita StateUniversity, University of Ken-tucly, Oklahoma State University,the Merchant Marine Academy,University of Michigan, and K&n-sas State University. In the quar-ter finals, Tech beat the Univer-sity of Oregon. Augustaria Col-lege (Rock Island, Mll.), whichdefeated Dartmouth in the finalsfor a first place, beat MIT in thesemi-finals.

0 MIT decines ton asoycute

Pedlosky, Oath on Itril- m .. A 0 a

a near nannan ArenaT spearevolution, freedm Dec. 7

in nvitatfional Tournament

MfIT- RVPSaturday Cage 8:I5 p.m .

Faculfy-BMOC GameFollowed by Soclk Hop

Page 2: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

begins.o By David Groszo-

David Epstein led an improvedM IT Symphony Orchestra in itsfirst concert of the season last

Wu Sunday evening. In it, he left noendoubt of his continuing passion

Lu for finding Boston premieres forLU his group.

The program opened with a>- segment of an orchestral suite by

John Helirnich Roman, a little-known Swedish baroque composer,

LL who, judging from this work,probably deserves to retain thatstatus. It is so completely deriva-tive that to enumerate its directinfluencers would be pointless.

. This fact of itself, however, wouldLU not necessarily be disparging in4 the context of the baroque, but

- the work does fail to develop in-terest. Mr. Epstein's interpreta-tion was consistent with contem-porary practice, and was, in gen-eral, tightly knit.

Large ensembleOne major exception to this

trend, though, was his use of aninordinately large ensemble: theentire string section of the orch-estra, along with the few requiredwinds. This had the effect of mak-ing several portions, especiallythose in slow tempi, seem heavy-handed and lacking in delicacy.Of course, he had also to con-tend with a goodly number of se-

vere problems in string intona-tion, but these were less signifi-cant than in previous concerts.

The second work was a ratherrarely heard sinfonietta of LeosJanacek. If viewed as primarilya study in timbres, it can berather interesting, and it was in-deed this aspect which Mr. Ep-stein emphasized, succeeding ineffectively playing off-tone colorvariations "between strings andbrass:- At 'ies, especially in thefirst and third movements of thefive-movement work, the conduc-tor was able to obtain some no-tion of majesty and sweep. Again,the technical difficulties were notoverly obtrusive.

Soloist SilversteinTo conclude, 'Mr. Epstein offer-

ed the Beethoven Violin Concerto,with Joseph Silverstein, concert-master of the Boston Symphony,as soloist. The orchestral vworkthroughout was of a fairly highcalibre, though the tone was attimes somewhat harsh. Mr. Sil-verstein's reading revealed littlenew about the work, but the over-

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Isthere a best glassfor beer?\l -With some beers maybe the

/ -- gla.ss doesn't matter. But when\1rK - the beer is Budweiser, our\It[/ rbrewmaster holds strong views.

"I like a glass with plentyof room," he says. "Size is more impor-tant than shape. A big glass, say onethat'll hold a full bottle, is best."

A big glass gives Budweiser a chanceto show off . .. lets you pour it straightdown the middle to get a full collar offoam. (Those tiny bubbles are the onlybeer bubbles in America that come fromthe natural carbonation of BeechwoodAgeing.) Another thing about a bigglass: it lets you quaff the beer. Andwho wants to sip, when the beer tastesas hearty as Budweiser?

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all interpretation was quite ade-quate. As usual, Mr. Silverstein'stechnical performance was flaw-less, but his tone often lackedrichness, and he left a generallysolid, but uninspiring impression.During most of the piece, Mr. Ep-stein demonstrated that he knewhow to establish a proper relation-ship with the soloist, but occa-sionally drifted way from thiscontact.

Thus the Orchestra has beenraised, hopefully permanently,from the depth of mediocrity hitlast year.-

Ornefte Cternn TrOto perform in Kresgei

WTBS will present Ornette Cole-man, "Downbeat" Best Record ofthe Year Winner, Friday evening,December 16, at 8:30 p.m. inKresge Auditorium. Tickets arepriced at $2, $2.50, and $3.

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NEXT TO CUSTOMER SERVICE IN BOOKR DEPARTMENT eQ~ualy and Service is Our Byword - Pafronage Refund

a Ophthaimologists prescriptions are filled promptly - accurately 0 Exceallet soelecton of frames for Men-Women-Chlldren. -0 Office Hours: Mosmday-Saturday, 8:50-5:30 - Lunch 2-3 (Closed) 0 Phone 491423, Ext. 5,, or from MIT dial 85 8

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Fly home on the biggestand best-United. It makessense to call United first,becal 1 sxrn 1a 1r +,1 S e V% ; A

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MIT Symphony Orchestra:David Epstein, conductor:Kresge Auditorium, December 4,1966,

J. H. Roman: Drottingholms-Musique

Leas Janacek: SinfoniettaL. van Beethoven:

Violin Concerto in D Op. 61,Joseph Silverstein, violin

NORWEGIAN TEACHERRates & times to be arranged

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Phone 868-1410 Ext. 73

ENJOY A FABULOUS EVENING-OF EXOTIC INDIAN MU/SIC

$ngam paresentsALI AKBAR KHAN ,

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Page 3: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

By 'Jon Steele

Goah Ben Martin's varsity

skaters dropped their secondgame Monday night, losing hereto Holy Css, 6-1. lMuch like theopener aturday against Uass,they were out-skated and out-hustied at bath ends of the ice.

Holy Cross :c-ed first m yin the . whle -To.Newkirk '6T was ad on a cscheckiLg penalty. Near the endof the period, Clay Satow '68 tooka rebound and hit the open netfrom the corner of the crease' totie up the scome.

Holy CTss came rignt back at

the opening of the second periodas Charles Butler took the puckjn unassisted. This play was typi-cal of the engineers' inexperienceand lack of hustle. The puck hadcossed MIT's goal line for icingand the defensea had a tenfoot lead on Butler chaing thepuck. Butler still got there firstand bounced a shot off goalieSteve Eriksen ' for the tally.

Fencers humbledby Crim n am:MM Wins twice

MIT's fencers were hopelesslyoutclassed as they fell to ar-yard 22-5 Wednesday night. Techfencers were down 2-7 at the endDf the first round and nevershowed any signs of closing themargin. Curt Marx '68 accountedfor the only two Tech wins insabre as he went 2-1. The firstround of epee looked good forMIT; Bob Markey '69 and TomnLamb '69 each won their firstround match. In the last round

of epee Markey won again, leav-

ing hin -2-1 in the meet. Foil

seemed to be a jinx to MIT, Har-

yard swept the event winning

every match. Tech fencers hope

to get their first win of the sea-

son tomorrow at Brandeis.

Fridoy, Deemaber 9

Squash (V)-Army, here, 7 pmRifle (Y)-Wentworth, away

Saturday, December 1O

Basketball (V)-RPil, here, 8:i5 pmBasketball (F)-RPI, here, 6:15 pmWrestling (V)-Williarns, here,

3:30 pmWrestling (F)-Williams, here,

2 pmWrestling (JV)-Cenfral

Connecticut, here, 2 pmSwimming (V)-RPI, away,

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I pmFencing (V)-Brandeis, away,

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awayRifle (V)-Coast Guard, here,

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The Crusaders added another

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ubtcme. S Lfklly, the Tech-.men were invariably beaten inthe -scrambles for a -loose puck;they had trouble passing, catch-ing, and playing the pck off theboards; the defensemen were un-able to block shots by going downor lying the stick along the ice;and most important, the pointmen on offense allowed the op-posing center to drift across theblue line and get free on the fastbreak.

The team wiU face Worcester

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Page 4: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

0q0(''0i

Most of the Institute's staff and stu-dent body seem to be unable to generate

. any enthusiasm over the Massachusettso Teachers' Loyalty Oath case which finally: got into court yesterday.

One reason for the lack of interest" might be traced to the innocuous nature

of the 30 year old oath which does littleLLJU more than call on its signers to 'supportLUa the Constitution'. Since its passage in>: 1935, even the most liberal-minded mem-c bers of the Massachusetts academic com-

Lost maGToday most major college newspapers

r will be running accounts of the nationallyO prominent conference on the draft heldLU' earlier this week at the University ofI Chicago. This conference, which featured

scores of the nation's most influential andimportant legislators and government of-ficials, was perhaps the most importantsingle input source to date for possiblerevision of the Selective Service.

Unfortunately The Tech will not beable to carry a first-hand account of theevents in Chicago, because no studentfrom MIT was able to attend. We wereinvited, we had a number of people whowould have made excellent delegates, weeven had the money to finance the trip.The sole reanson why von to three MTTstudents didn't take part in the Chicagoconference is the fact that necessaryregistration material mailed via air mailfrom Chicago on November 17 didn'treach UAP Frank March until December7, the last day of the conference.

It's possible that the Chicago confer-ence material was delayed by the USmails, but it's far more likely that thematerial was lost in MIT's own mail sys-temrn for most of the three weeks it took itto renoh the TTUndrgraduatei AeociationOffice.

Here at The Teech mail arrivingthrough the interdepartmental systemhas often taken from four days to threeweeks to make the trip across Mass. Ave.from the main Institute. By actual exper-iment, a letter mailed in the main build-ing takes an average of four days toreach Burton House.

The institute of technology which isdesigning the guidance system to takemen from the earth to the moon oughtto be able to design a system for movinga piece of paper from one building to an-other quickly and correctly..

m agazine raveawO.

'lnnisfree sfiHBy Thromas Nesbitt 'The Birth of Roc

If you purchase the December ketball Team in Iissue of innisfree, you will prob- ogue.' These areably do so in order to read one fairly interestingarticle: Lmnisfree's interview with they belong in aDr. Tinothy Leary about his reli- the publisher congious approach to LSD. The inter- us si~ in essenceview is long and well-done and There is oneundoubtedly is this issue's great- Innisftree whichest merit. spight - its

A Forum straight subjectThe best comment which can (and 'basically

be made about the article un- by a formal cfortunately cannot be made about must be determithe magazwz in general Innis- Innisfree, be i nfree defines itself as 'The MIT yOUng publicatMonthly Journal of Inqry' and rather than follothis interview is- indeed an in- It would be a tquiry. -Many of tis isstiue's articles of the derisiveare not. Witness, for example, London's attack

munity have tended to regard the law asa mere nuisance, not worthy of the effortthat it would take to challenge its va-lidity.

While it is true the state's teachers'oath hasn't r e a 11 y restricted anyone'sacademic freedom, we feel that JosephPedlosky '59 was right to challenge thelaw when he was appointed to the facultylast fall. We can see no reason why afaculty member of a private universitylike MIT or Harvard should1be forced tosign any statement of intellectual intentby the state of Massachusetts.

Even an innocuous oath like the pres-ent teachers' oath can set a dangerousprecedent for state control over what canor cannot be expounded by a universityprofessor.

We hope the state's Supreme JudicialCourt will give the case a quick and fairdecision. Since the present oath con-tributes no good to the state or the aca-demic community, we feel the wisest de-cision would be to remove it from thebooks.

- MT B m

Vo'I LXXXVI, No. 51 Dec. 9, 1966BOARD OF DIRECTORS

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

'Mark McNamee '68Business Manager .............................. Guille Cox '68News Editor .................................... Gerry Banner '68Features Editor ............................ Mike Rodburg '68Sports Editor ...................................... Tom Thomas '69Photography Ediftor ................... Lew Golovin '67Entertainment Editor ............... Andy Seidenfeid '68Business Representative .................. Nick Covafta '68

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

John Corwin '68Associate Features Editor ........ Mickey Warren '69Associate Sports Editors .............. Tony Lima '69

Stan Kask '70Intramural Sports Editor ............ Herb Finger '68Associate Entertainment Editor .... Jack Donahue '69Associate Photography Editor ....... Bill Ingram '68

~~- e~1 Jeff Reynolds '69Acc'ts Receivable .................... Dan Green '68Covpy Editor ................... 1Brian Harvey '69Treasurer .......................... Mike Ginsberg '69Nat'l Adv. Mgr ..................... Jack Swaim '68Controller .............................. Pat Green '69Circulation Managers .................. Ken Bracy '70

Regan Fay '70

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachu-sets. The Tech is published every Tuesday and Fridayduring the college year, except during college vaca-tions, by The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT StudentCenter, 84 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Massa-chusetts 02139. Telephones: Area Code 617, 876-5855, and 864-6900 extension 2731. United StatesMail subscripfion rates: $4.25 for one year, $8.00 fortwo years.

Front page photo of Building 13taken by John Roderick.

ck' and 'The Bas-Europe: a Travel-

well-written andarticles; but domagazine which

ntinually remindsa forum?

other aspect ofI would like to

tone. Whereasmatter can be

was) determinedDonstitution, tonened by tradition.a g a relativelyon, is forming'wing tradition.ragedy if articles

nature of Naton former MT

professor Walt Rostow were to be-come a part of Innisfree's tradi-tion. Disagreement should bevoiced, certainly-Innisfree wascreated, remember, to serve asa forum-but basic respect for aman simply because he is a mansaoud never be forgotten. Is iteven to the advantage of a pur-portedly serious writer to indulgein such name-calling as 'that doltin Political Science' or our intre-pid cub reporter?'-The January issue of innisfree

will include an analysis of thePlayboy Philosophy. It will beinteresting to see how solid ananalysis Innisfree can contributeon a subject which is bound tobe cntroversiaL

OwLm by Mike Rodburg128. The Cold War may have

taken a new turn now that com-puters are gelting into the act.In the brain race, a Stanfordcomputer is to take on a Sovietcomputer in the game of chess.Dr. John McCarthy, a Stanfordprofessor who also has studentsat MIT, is seeking to improveintelligent behavior by ma-chines. The chessplaying pro-gram has been developed since1957 by Tech and Stanfordstudents. The moves are re-ported by. telegram, and pro-grammed into the respectivemachines.

129. Jack Kri1z '41 has beengranted a patent for an over-head clearance device fortrucks which allows the driver to

People these days will do al-most anything to keep the kidsin college, but one group hasgone a step further than most.The student's representative coun-cil at Cambridge University inEngland has proposed that therebe built a rest home for studentswhere they could go "to get awayfrom the stresses of uiversitylife." This is part of a mentalhealth campaign launched aftertwo student suicides early in thefall term.

SUPPORTER RAIDS???With most colleges having

trouble with "pantie raids," boysraiding girls dorms, the Univer-sity of Calgary has a problemexactly opposite in nature. Six-&een girls were caught in a hal-loween raid on a men's residence.All girls received, as punishment,11 pm curfews for two weeks,and fifteen of them received finesof $15 each, while the sixteenthwas fined $25. Could this raid bethe start of a new trend?

Meter thievesPeople have always been trying

to outwit the parking meter; andwith sign stealing going out ofstyle, many are looking for a newhobby. Some people in Eugene,Oregon, can kill two birds withone stone - they eliminate thecoin hungry parking meter, andhave fun doing it. The latestsport? Stealing parking meters!This is frowned upon by authori-ties, however, and after a harshwarning by dormitory counselors,all five were returned to the side-

DoubleerossedTo the Editor:

I'm afraid the music depart-

ment is just too psychic for me.

After t having been to class

for a week, I was jolted by a

sneaky doublecross!

Somehow the instructor had

gotten hold o one of those 5-chk derinpc T hld d toThe Tech and he was delightfullycreating musical staffs w i t h

judge if his vehicle will fit un-der a viaduct. The device con.sisfs of two antennas, the firstsounds an alarm if the front ofthe truck will not fit, the secondautomatically hits the brakesshould the truck begin to hit thetop as it proceeds through.

130. During the current stringof Berkeley riots, the HarvardCrimson was not content todepend on AP or UPI or TheTimes for its information. Theyare now getting firsthand "spe.cial to the Crimson" stories bytheir managing editor. The edi.for, Linda McVeigh, was flownout there last week when thingsfirst began to happen, and sincethen has wired back a siring offront page developments.

walk in front of Straub Hall ofthe University of Oregon, fromwhere they were stolen. Trafficengineers said that if the practicecontinued, the entire area wouldbe made into a no.parking zone.

Stereo experts

The upperclassmen at the StateUniversity College at Oswego,New York, are taking no chanceswith the stereo. music system atHewitt Union. One's name mustbe on a certain list before he mayoperate the equipment. In orderto get on the list, one must takelessoins i Stere Equipment 0p-eration. It must be a really ex-clusive setup!

Stamp out exams?

The pressure of Exams causemany hard-working (and not sohard-working) students to dreamof what it would be like withoutthem. This is the case at GoddardCollege, a small, liberal arts col-lege in Plainfield, Vermont, wheregrading is done by "soul search-ing" evaluations made by thestudent and his teacher at the endof the semester. The gradesthemselves are merely "pass" or"fail," which, according to asenior counselor there, 'reducesthe motivation of fear and compe-tition and substitutes inner moti-vation and interest."

According to another source,"A Goddard student works for thethings that are important to himad not for a grade." It is re-ported that Goddard students alsodo quite well at graduate schools.

obvious joy. Problem solved!Don Berliner '67

PS-Another small gripe agairstthe music department is at hand,

however. Why do those gorgeousgrand pianos have to sit locked

up in 2-190, the Student Center

-und other pVlaces? I zsuw we have

piano rooms in the Student Cen-ter, but a 'grand vs. an upright is

just no contest.

Tree SceneTo the Editor:

Comgratulations on the cover

photo of last Friday's (Dec. 2)issue. Even a few bare rees aremore esthetically pleasing, and

certainly more a part of the MIT

scene than the usual concrete

superstructures used to typif'

Peter Ralph 'G

by Leland Shaffer

I

a 0

t ma t

't~~~~~~S~~~~)Z~~~~~~I~~~~

- -I --

ia

I pledgee allep'nce

ives f or conf rovers

Le-ttters to Te Tech~@

Page 5: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

West Point edged out MIT's pis-toimen 2218-2207 Saturday, Decem-ber 3, in the first match in whichthe Techmen have come within ahundred points of the Cadets. TheU.S. _Military Academy shares thenational pistol title with the AirForce Academy.

High scorer for MIT was Den-nis Swanson '68 with a 565 out of600. Making up the rest of thetotal were John Reykjalin '67 with555, Adam Reed '67 at 552, andMike DeManche with 535. Highscorer of the day was Merritt of

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Junior grapplersshuf out Emerson

In their openi meet of theseason, the MIT junior varsitywrestlers shut out Emerson Col-lege, 41-0.

At 123 pounds, Roger Clhang'69 came from behind to win bya fall over Emerson's Dick Leon-ard. Ed Tripp '67 also won by apin in 2:43. Senior John Rey-nolds' 137-pound match was de-cided by default, and Jack Wu'68, 145, piled up over 7 minutesof riding time to defeat Ed Con-ture, 6-0. At 152 lbs., Tom White'69 took 0:45 to pin Emerson'sGary Woods. Don Pryor '68 pinned160-pound Brian Bendiks. GeoffSmith '68 had no trouble withJim Poirot, pinning him late inthe second round of their match.At 177 pounds, Chris Davis '69overcame a size advantage to de-feat Paul Levine 4-0. The MITscore climbed to 41 when Emer-son forfeited the unlimited matchto Tom Garvey '68.

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Page 6: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

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resDundg 238 point margin onSatrday, December 3, to bringtheir seasmn record to 3-2. Theday before, Northeaster toppedthem, 12-Z6.

Karl Lamsoe '69 led the Teeh&sootess. to victoy with .a 266totaL, Charles 4 ale .=t 167 2 Z;5,..Drmnay 'Ab 68 at -2 .Dave.Htnt 'a at 250, and Chris Ryam'69 at 243 co'pleted the !87points.

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:. --each lmach, -4 d:vidu''i~ enima is trying for a Piossble300 points.

Indians top Tech;n vairfy squash

By Roger DearMIT's varsity squash team suf-

fered its initial defeat of the 1967 campaign Saturday, as the Bea.vers bowed to Darmmuth, 63.The team now has a 1-1 recd..The Beavers' top thee men, catain 'Chye' Tantivit, Eric Coe,and Ken Wong respectively, allwon their matches, but the In-dians had just too much depthand won all the other contests.

Chye's match was the closestof the afternoon, for it was theonly one to go to five games. Msopponent, Cafer Hall, took thefirst game, 9-15. The next twogat/es were squeakers whid.Chye managed to pull out, 17-14,ard 18-15. Hall won the next, :5,but in the final game COe con-quered, 15-10. Eric C~e beat hisopponent in four gamre, 15-7, 1513, 8-15, 15-8. Ken Wong had thegreatest steeess of the aftemoonby w his cotest in threestraight, 155, 15-7, 15-11.

The engineers will face Armytoright at 7 pzm on the DuPontAthletic Center cott.

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I3 skist bsted: Wedel King, Javelin, Snomi Prince 11 Fitsor~s| iseted. in ftQ U.S. and Europ- CnrdStaudinger te hfsIyou the garlands -How to buy boots so they fit -A ski touri n the East- Stein Erikson isnvctr Swecaters for ChristL

Page 7: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

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when Joe (Boxcar) Brkczpmluj was!

f ootball1 t eam j usta _because he f lunkedizsix out of four of his majors? What

And when the i___ _school newspaper 's WALLACE MIDDENDORP SAT HEREeditors resigned inprotest because The Chancellor woulldn' t allow thepublication Of certain salacious portions of

"Night In a Girl 's Dormitory"= ~~~~you just sat, didn't you?

g ffi ~~~You've made a mockery of your| g ~~~life, Wallace Miqtdendorp!| g ~~~You'gre a veget~able.

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| | | ~~~Take a stand. Make a noise!nr dri nk Sprier ,o the Phi cwcoe

| | ff sag dr ink .[ g Ski | ~Open a bottle of Sprite atg , X ~~~the next campus speak-out. Let| Z w \,, |it f izz and bubble to the

I S ^,, D a Nmasses.| g At g ~~Let its lusty carbonation

| g , r^,4 ,% |echo through the halls of ivy.1 S 9 _ W ~Let its tart, tinglingg P -D-| ig exuberance infect the crowd

1 g b @ by Z |with excitement.| Wa ^ ~~~Do these thingss Wallace

[SPRITE . SO TART and what big corporat ion isAND TINGLING, going to hire you?

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ployment a violation of the guaran-tees of the due process of law.'State bases case on vagueness

On the other hand, the Com-monwealthi of Masssachusetts arg-ules that the court is obliged tointerpret a vague statute in sucha way as to make it.constitutior^-al. Thle State is basing its brief

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(Continued f rom Parge 1 )council of professors and stu-dents, and thiis arrangemenlt|"gets in the government's hai."

When the mnil~itary took over in|June, Dr. Arorose was teacbhig

at the T~Iivest of Buenos Aires.IThe univo-mifts were pu nert*e cbnis6l of ;fiL Maimi of the-lIhterior;, 'a cuh~e in -autonomy |which, acmrdiigg to Ambrose,|could mean only destruction forthMe unversities.i (See The Tech,

September 20, 1966.)

Blesser speaks of Germeany

Bary Blesser then spoke of hisexerience inl Germany. He ob,served that the Germans seemed.almost authorftariarlzman thattheir social structure .appearedvery set.- > ..-The Germans' he sa~id, 'are

.friendly to Amnericans, because,as a result of their American con-tact, they are "happy and wellfed, so 'why not?''

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(Continued f roin Page 1)for his refua to sign the oath,so the Attorney General's 016eetook ofver and prepared a briefin defense of the oathi's constitu-tionality. F~urthers the Massachu-setts Civil Liberties Union, as afriend of the court, has contibu-ted its own brief -an attack onthe oath followin a differentviewpoint than that of Atty. Ber-lin.

Legally, the issue in question isas vague as the oath itself. Ped-losky's brief arges that theoath's "indefiniteness and thireatof crmial sancitions makes itsimposition as a condition of em-

v a og1ueon the supposition that the oathis so vague that it imposes norestrictions on signatories thatothier state and federal lawvs donot impose.

Should the Supreme JudicialCourt uphold the position of thestate, Pedlosky will probably dp-peal to the Supreme Cou~rt.

boaissue-M.Uv.t~g Dtra am a sho .>

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Page 8: s ne; *e - The Techtech.mit.edu/V86/PDF/V86-N51.pdf · Origin of oath The Massachusetts Teachers' Loyalty Oath was an outgrowth of the wave of reaction that fol-lowed World War I.

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Fiji center Steve Smith '7battles LXA's Chick Chotkowsl'68 for the opening tip-off ithe second half of Wednesdaynight's game. The Lambda Chi'were upset, 36-30.

By Joel HemmelsteinRockwell cage was the scen

of hot intramural action Wednesday night as the Fiji's bealLambda CMi Alpha, 36-30, antAlpha Epsilon Pi rallied for a45-30 victory over Sigma Phi Epsilon. Three of the four teams arecertain to see playoff action afterthe regular season ends.

AEPi extended its winning skeinto four games when they over-came a four point deficit at theend of the third period to notchthe win. Holding the oppositionscoreless throughout the finalquarter, the Pi's poured in nine-teen straight points. Gerry Ban-ner '68 led the onslaught, bom-barding the bucket for nineteencounters, Mike Gelberg'67 backedthe attack with twelve. Sig Ep'sbalanced attack kept their foesback until the last period charge.Ron Olsen '67 paced the squadwith nine, followed by three team-mates with six each.

SAE-AEPi game tonightThe most important game for

Phi Delts edge IBT,seize M swim crown

By Herb FIngerPhi Delta Theta captured their

second LM Swimming title in twoyears edging out Zeta Beta Tauby a 36-34 score. The Phi Delts'two firsts, three seconds, and athird gave them the two pointedge over ZBT's two firsts, twoseconds and- three thirds. SigmaAlpha Epsilon was third with 31points.

Pete Amstutz '67 from LambdaChi Alpha was the individual win-ner with first places in both 100yard Freestyle and the Divingcompetition. In the latter event,Amstutz's three dives totaled93.70 points, 29 points ahead ofBob Cole '69.

Three meet records were es-tablished Sunday. ZBT's 2:03.3underscored the previous time for200 yard Medley Relay. BillKampe '66 broke the 100 yardIndividual Medley Relay recordwith 1:08.9 time. DU bettered thestanding 200 Freestyle Relay mark coming in at 1:46.5.

Team totals:1. Phi Delta Theta ......... 362. Zeta Beta Tau .......... 343 Sigma Alpha Epsilon .. 314: Theta Chi .......... ...... 255. Delta Upsi!on.e 216 Sigma Aloha Mu ............ 207. Lambda Chi Alpha . ..... 178. Baker .................... 139. Burton ................... 12%10. Ashdown ....... 10

11. Sigma Phi Epsi!i 9... 612. Pi Lambda Phi ......... 613. Alpha Epsilon Pi ....... 214. Sigma Chi ............... . I

N How They Did MBsketbll4

MIT iV) 82, Brandeis 57 Swimming a

MIT (V) 59, Tufts 36 fHockey t

Holy Cross 6, MIT (V) IFeMncing

Harvard 22. MIT (¢) S

the AEPi five is tonight againstone to stay in competition asthey suffered a loss earlier toBurton A.

In the nightcap Phi GammaDelta edged defending championLambda Chi, 36-30, to keep theirown unbeaten slate intact. Men-aced by a prolonged cold spell,the Lambda Chi's could not over-come the four point lead Fiji heldat halftime. Even scoring by thevictors saw Walt Maling '69 taketeam honors with 11 points. Gameleader was Bruce Twickler '67who swished the nets for 14markers.

Fiji's break looseThe game remained close dur-

ing the early moments until theFiji's broke away by making goodon oie-and-one situations late inthe first half. Lambda Chicharged onto the court at thesecond half whistle and began tofight back. However, the Fiji'smaintained their four point ad-vantage entering the fourth quar-ter. The teams traded baskets un-til the final buzzer. ]

By Paul BakerCoach Arnie Sinsal's frnsh court-

men encountered some toughcompetition Tuesday evening asthey were jolted 8148 by Bran-deis.

The hoopsters had difficultypenetrating a stubborn Brandeisdefense, and were plagued byearly foul trouble; they rackedup fifteen personals in the firsthalf. Steve Chamberlain andBruce Wheeler topped the scoringcolumn with 13 points apiece.George Katsiaficas showed a lotof hustle as the third string hadits first taste of action.

We d n e s d a y, the engineersbounced back on to' the winningpath as they topped Exeter 69-57. Tech jumped out to an early11-4 advantage and never trailed.Wheeler was the sparkplug forthe early scoring; he popped fourfield goals and a foul shot in thefirst quarter. Exeter was persist-ent, however, and they returnedfrom halftime trailng by onlysix points, 33-27.

John Viet assumed scoring re-sponsibility in the second half,

By John Kopolow'The varsity cagers rolled to an

82-57 victory over the BrandeisJudges last Tuesday, chalking uptheir third win of the young sea-son in as many starts. Playing atotally outclassed opponent, theBeavers staged by far their mostimpressive performance of theyear.

From the opening tip MIT dom-inated play, frequently breakingdown Brandeis' zone defense. ARay FerTara '67 layup on the tailend of a successful fast break fol-lowed by a tap-in by senior co-captain Alex Wilson put theBeavers in front 12-5 after justsix minutes of play.

Tech defense effectiveMIT switched back and forth

between a zone and man-to-mandefense, baffling the host Judges.Barry Zimmerman, who was thebig gun for Brandeis last year,scoring 31 points in their 94-66loss to Tech, was held scorelessby the Beavers this time.

Coach Jack Berry got a big liftonce again from his bench. Whenstarting center Bob Hardt '67 ac-quired his third personal, he wasreplaced by junior Alec Bash whohit three quick field goals. Twoassists on sharp passes by BobFerrara, one to Bash and one to

tallying most of his 18 points,while John Light, in a relief per-formance, swished two foul shotsto quell a late Exeter rally. BobVegeler also s c o r e d crucialpoints and finished the night witha 13 point total.

_ Mermen Tie TuQftThe fleshmen swimmers were

not intimidated by statisticsTuesday night, as they splashedto a 4747 tie with mildly fa-vored Tufts.

The Tech mermen boasted onedouble winner in Jeff Ellison; hewon the 50 and 100 yard free-style events. Jim Bronfenbrennercaptured first place honors in the200 yard butterfly and finishedthird in the 500 freestyle.

Howard Hall and Don Rileyoutswam their competition in the500 freestyle and 200 backstrokerespectively. The diving eventwas a big booster for MIT., asTufts failed to enter a competi-tor and Tech swept all 8 points.Bob Rorschach finished first inthe event. He toaled 69.6 points

- an excellent perrmance de-spite the lack of competition.

, ¢rush BWilson, shortly before the end ofthe first half gave MIT a sub-stantial 46-32 lead at the inter-mission.

Score ten straightThe Beavers racked up ten

straight points at the outset of thesecond period.

With a 56-32 bulge the engineerscoasted the rest of the way. Bothcoaches unloaded their benchesfor the final four minutes of thegame which ended as an 82-57MIT triumph:.

By Jeff GoodmaA weak Tuifts team fell to the

Tech swimmers 56-39 Tuesday ina meet which saw two MIT rec-ords lowered.

Sophomore Luis Clare broke the200-yard individual medley stand-ard at 2:12.5, bettering the pre-vious mark by over two seconds.Clare then broke the 200-yardbackstroke r e c o r d in 2:12.7,smashing the 14-year-old time of2:15.5 set by Dirk Plurnmer onMarchli 2, 1952.

In the final race, the 400 yardfreestyle relay, both anchormenstarted even. Tech's Ellison hadpreviously outstroked Tufts' Suggin the 100 yard freestyle. Elli-son, however, apparently tiredfrom his previous events, couldnot keep pace with Suggs; Tuftstook the race.

Wilson's 25 points in the contestwere his high for the year. Iuadthit for 17 and Jansson, thoughhaving a cold shooting handplayed a fine floor gamne andscored 14.

Tomorrow night the Beaverscan expect to face tougher cag:petition when they go agairtRPI, starting at 8:15 in RockwellCage. During halftime a group ofBMOC's will take on a collecti(nof faculty All-Stars in what pronm.ises to be a rare display of basket.ball talent.

Tech opened the meet by Vwin.ning the 400-yard medley relay,

leaving Tufts over a lap behind.Steve Mullinax '69, Larry Preston'68, John McFarren '68, and TimMerrill '69 made up the relay.Bill Stage '69 and Mike Crane '67continued the string by .placingfirst in their respective events ofthe 200- and 50-yard freestyle intimes of 1:59.4 and 23.4 seconds.Clare and Rich Dorman '69 sweptthe I.M., with Clare breaking therecord.

Dan Gentry '68 took the divingfor his second win against nolosses this season. In the 200-yardbutterfly, Saclmknoff of Tufts brokea Tufts record at 2:16.1. JohnWrigley '67 got Tech back intothe winning column as he took the100-yard free in 55.7. Clare andBill Wagner '69 followed by sweep-ing the 200 backstroke as Clare.set the record.

Mike Perloff '68 won the 500freestyle, but the 400-yard frestyle relay of Bill Carson '69,Wrigley, Dave Lyon '69, and Ger-ry Venema '69 was edged out bya stroke, makdng the final score56-39.

Ferara faces Friedman

Billiards finas tonigtiBy Jack Rector

Ray Ferrara '67 will challengedefending champion Doug- Fried-man '67 in the final match of thesecond annual MIT Pocket Bil-liards Tournament Friday night,December 9, at 7:30 in the Salade Puerto Rico of the StudentCenter. Friedman defeated Fer-rara last year in the finals, butRay has steadily improved thisyear in the tournament and willbe out to avenge his loss of lastyear.

Gnmnasts Dart mouhLast Saturday, fifty spectators witnessed the first gymnastics meet at MIT in30 years. The MIT club, sparked by five freshmen, easily defeated the Dartmouthteam 67-21 with clean sweeps in the horizontal bar, parallel bars, and still rings.

z~ ~i:~' 'r- , ::; ~The gymnasts were led by Dick Hood'70 who took firsts in the parallel bars

G n C~c Hoo ~::~''and still rings and a second on the highbar. Pete Amstutz '67 captured the high

along - ~~~~bar and took second in the free exerciseand side horse.

Tech took firsts in every event exceptthe~. A free exercise, "'*'""' r~... .L'.L A J.L.L. ..Moskowitz took the event. Mike Devorkin

Ine Gymnasi'69 took the side horse with Arnstutz in

Phil Miller '70 joined with Amstutzand Hood to sweep the high bar. Miller

-also captured the long horse vault with a8.05 total, piling up a 1.85 margin overDartmouth's Cooper. John Schaefer '69and Tom Hafer '70 joined with Hood tosweep the parallel bars competition, whileHood, Hafer, and Miller took all threeplaces in the still rings.

Dartmouth managed only three placesGymnast Dick Hood '70 shows his form on in the meet, taking a second in the longfhe parallel bars. Hood captured this event horse vault, a third in the side horse, andalong with the still rings competition to lead first in the free exercise.hhe Gymnastics Club to a resounding 67-21 Tomorrow the MIT club will travel tothumping of Dar-mouth. Pete Amstutz '67 was New London to meet the Coast GuardMIT's other big scorer with a first place in high Academy team, where they anticipatebar and fwcn ,.rnnd- -....-. U ~ -.4-,M-

In Friedman's semifinal victoryover freshman George Pantoulias,both players started slowly, butDoug soon built up a lead as heconsistently ran 10 or 12 balls.Neither player was able to puttogether substantial run. Fried-man won the match 125-105 as hewithstood a late charge by Pan-toulias.

Finalist Ray Ferrara '67 easilysubdued Alan Greenfield '69 whohad not yet been released fromthe infirmary. Greenfield was welloff his game and was not able tosustain any long runs. Ferraralooked very strong as he put to-gether several complete racks.

There will be elevated seatingfor 400 people in the Sala for thefinals. The campus communityand the public are invited.

GOIMAM

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