~- i ,, a tw a a , ! -executive comzmittee i lightweights

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VOL. LXXIY. NO . 24 CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1954 5 CENTS L: st · ~- T -.- I ,, a Tw a A _ " , ! - -- ---- --------- Chance Dance, the final on-campus dance of the year. Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, with the cooperation of the Burton House Social Committee, the evening will include both square and ballroom dancing. Feature attraction of the affair will be the presentation of special certifi- cates to Robert Warshawer %54 and Major Franklin B. Moon, winners of the Ugly Man on Campus Contest, held earlier this year. Music will be supplied by Jerry Bernard's orches- tra, and square dance caller will be Hayden Swett, who is known to many through his local television program. The theme of the dance will be the modern version of the old gold miner, the uranium prospector. In the event of bad or cold weather, the dance will be held in the Burton House lounge. Refreshments Will be in the form of beer and soft drinks. Tickets are $1.25 per couple .and are available at the dormitory desks, or from members of either APO or the Burton Social Committee. unior Mug Lift O n Tap Friday; Open To Everyow The Junior Mug Lift will, be held' from 8':QO to 1.2:00 p.m. this Fridays, May '21, in Rockwell Cage. Sponsored by the Junior Class and open to all, the Mug Lift 'is an annual event in the Institute calendar of class' activi- i ties. Tickets to cover the expenses of the beer and soft drinks will be on sale-this week in Building 10 for $1.00. '3eer mnugs will-also be sold for $1.50. . *; .: , I 1 B B g Bid To Heniey Regalta imminlnente Institute Agrees To Finance Trip I I II I -I I I I -I I I I II .1 I I I I I I I I I I I I Ic I I I I I I I I I I. I I I I I I e I I I I I This Saturday, from 8-00 to 12:00 p.m., the tennis couIts behind Burton House Will be the scene of the Last .1 I -1 To Compete in England It has been the practice of the Henley Regatta to invite the winner of this race to compete in England later in the year. Even though this is the first time that a non-Ivy League school has copped the honors, there is no reason to believe that this prac- tice shall not be continued. Prof. Ivan J. Geiger, director of athletics, has been assured by the Institute that it will finance the trip. ~. ~Other Results Five other Tech crews also competed on Saturday. The other Lightweight boats were at Princeton and had vary- ing degrees of unsuccessfulness. The Fresh squad finished last in their qual- ifying test with a time of 7.:53.2. Har- vard won the main event. The Jay Vees fared better. They qualified for the race by finishing second to Cornell, the eventual win- ners. In the finale they trailed the rest of the four-shell field all the way. The Varsity race was an exciting one. Unbeaten Navy won it, but not withbut a surprising battle with a fighting Yale team. Tech actually failed to qualify by a margin of 1.3 seconds, but this offers little consola- tion. The Jay Vees came in third in their (Continued on page S) I I New Gym Floor To Be Installed In Rockwell Cage A large portable gym floor is to be installed at the Institute to enlarge and improve its indoor athletic facili- ties, President James R. Killian. Jr. announced last week. Speaking at the all-Institute convo- cation, Dr. Killian said that the new floor will covrer a total area of 131 ft. x 96 ft. and will be installed in 'the east, end of Rockwell Cage. Made of first-quality beech by the country's leading -gym floor manufacturer, it will ,provide for an intercollegiate bas- ketball court, two intramural cross courts, a 40' x 60' wrestling area, and a 40' x 40' gymnastic space. Beginning next season, all varsity and freshman home basketball games will be played on the new main court while the cross courts will be avail- able for intramural and recreational use. The main court will be provided with standard glass backboards, and portable bleachers with a seating ca- pacity of between five and six hun- dred will be erected at the south side of this- court during the basketball season. The gymnastic space at the north I 4 1 1 4 1 1 : ii i Ii , . . .. ,I-jirrz: 'r_L--".~:"""-l-`- .rl'. "'~''-'. ~.'-'*".""~"""""' · ' '' 'I-i:·i: ---. ·· · :i: r~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - L~~~~~~LO OF TECHNOLOGY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNDERGRADUATES OF . MASSACHUSETTS iNSTITUTE -Executive Comzmittee In a statement to The Tech, the Executive Committee of Inscomm af- filmed its genrelral agreement with the sentiments expressed in Friday's edi- torial regarding the proposed Discrim- ination Conference. The Committee, %which has already been formally em- powered by Inscomm to make arrange- mnlents for the conferepce, is unani- nmously in' favor ofrestricting the area under discussion solely to discrimina- tion. Letters were sent out yesterday to philanthropic organizations, re- questing $25,000 for financial assist- ance to defray the expenses of bring- ing two delegates from each of 120 schools to the conference. A motion will be made at tomor- row's meeting that sufficient funds be appropriated from the Undergraduate Parking Fund to finan;!e the printing of a calendar, listing scheduled events at the Institute, to be distributed free to all students. Short reports will be received from all 17 outstanding subcommittees of Inscomm, telling what the committees have accomplished since their chair- men took office, and what their pro- grams are for the next term. A committee is being set up to in- vestigate the handling by students of Athletic Association finances. The committee vill study whether the duties of the Equipment Manager and Treasurer of the A.A. should be sub- divided or perhaps taken over by em- ployees of the'Association rather than students, due to their great complex- ity and the large amount of work entailed. It will also study whether or not to separate the control of Athletic funds from the Undergraduate Asso- ciation and the Finance Board, since the complexity/of these finances Pres- ently allows Inscomm no opportunity to consider them in detail, but instead leads to the "rubber-stamping" of A. A. budget and financial programs. MIT's lightweight crew won the Joseph Wright Trophfiy, first place in the national standings, and a trip to England by putting six feet of well churned -water between themselves and a strong Frinceton crew on Lake Carnegie this Saturday. Seeded first. in the nine-team field,:they won the race in 7:10.1. The reason for the comparatively poor winning time can be attributed, in part, to a strong head-wind whicH slowed up all boats. In the face of these conditions Tech's qualifying time was 7:22.7. ' I Penn Takes Lead The first definite lead was taken by Penn at the mile-to-go- mark on the mile and five-stixteenth's r-~~~ ~ course. Princeton and Tech, both un- Pro[ Com ml ager, derstl;'oking the Quakers, were right behind. At the three-quarters mark Noted c 'Historian' Tech upped the stroke to thirty-five, caught Penn, and began to pull away. . Ec u H r The Tigers now made their bid. Over- To' Lect rec sre troking the Beavers the Nassaumen took a deck lead at the halfway mark. Tomorrow, · May 19, the Lecture Penn was fading fast. Series Committee will present Dr. The Engineers started their kick at Henry Steele Commager whlo will this point. Slowly raising the-'stroke speak pn "The Nature of Freedom." to forty-and-over they overtook the Dr. Commager, Professor of History Tigers and, with a quarter of a mile at Columbia University, is a nrted to go, had a six foot lead; This was historian and the author of such books the winning margin as the Pri'nceton as "Growth of the American Republic" shell, now overstroking MIT, couldn't and "America, the Story of a Free cut down the lead. Penn finished third V -__1, by Y ,, n TJ~ hn 'tin..zip q. .. ; .... and Cornell fourth. te'eopie. , tte a.-so nas ueenl vibiung jv.triv-v fessor of history at many colleges throughout the United States. The lecture will be given in 10-250 at 5:00 p.m. No admission will be charged. ! " ERRATUM It was incorrectly announced in last Tuesday's issue thatf completion date for construction of the new chapel'is February 1955, and final target date is November !955. The correct dates are November, 1954, and February, 1955o end of the new floor will include such basic equipment as the trampoline, horses, bars, and ropes, while the wrestling area wvill feature plastic covers in M.I.T. colors, cardinal on the main mats and grey on the protective side mats. The initial Compton Award, established by the Boston Stein Club, is presented by President James R. Killian,.Jr. to Charles J. Masison, Jr. '54, at.the Convocation- v- lirslmt .A- r nceton, Lightweights Agrees Conlferen SC.IV M"6 Cover Discrrimination Problem On ly Untidergraduates Win Prizes ForI Original Writing The winners of the Robert A. Boit and Ellen -King prizes have just been announced by the Humanities Depart- ment. A bequest of Robert A. Bolt pro- vides annual prizes for all undergrad- uates at the Institute "to stimulate the students' interest in the best use of the English language." There are two divisions of tihe Bolt prizes. The Boit Essay prize is offered for the best essays on subjects suitable for treatment in literary form; and the Bolt Prize for 'imaginative writing, offered for the best creative papers- short stories, part of novels, poems, dramas, etc. In each division there is a first prize of $75.00, a second prize of $40.00, and a third prize of $25.00. In the Essay division first prize was wen by Dqnald G. Brennan '55, writ- ing on the subject Alfred No'rth Whitehead: A Brief Critique. Second prize was won by John E. Broyles, Jr. '56 with his essay, Emerson's the Over-Soul in the Light of Modern Physical Approach, and Glenn W. Clark '56 received third prize for his essay, The American Civil War-A Race Confict. In the Imaginative Division, Richard A. Jacobs '56 won the first prize with This is Science Fiction. 'Second prize was taken by David Markowitz '56 for The Night of the Storm, while Philip M. Pearle '57 won third place for Three pieces of Dirt: A History. The Ellen King Prize which -pro- vides for $50 worth of books of the student's own choice for the best freshman essay was won by Edward G. Effros '57 for his essay, On the Nature of Beauty. I Kaszynski Givei A.S S. M. E. Award At Area Concave Edward Kaszynski '54, of Course II, took first place for his paper, "Ex- planation of Chip Curl and a New Look at Material Flow in Metal Cut;- ting" at the 21st annual A.S.M.E. Regional Student Conference held May 6 through 9 at Clarkson College, Potsdam, New York. The conference, attended by students and faculty from the New Engiand area, heard papers- delivered by students from Worcester Polytech, Rensselaer Polytech, North- eastern, Tufts, and ether schools. Among the listeners from M.I.T. were Professor Warren M. Rohsenow of the Mechanical Engineering Department and Daniel Kiser '54, retiring treas- urer of the student chapter of A.S.M.E. Kaszynski's paper, which won by an impressive marge, develops a new theory of strain in the "shear" zone during metal cutting, which promises to resolve many of the discrepancies between current theory and experi- mental results. APO And Burton To Present Dance On Teinis Corts Professor Tustinl, English Engineer, To Speak Today Professor' Arnold Tustin, visiting Webster Professor of Electrical En- gineering, will speak on "Feedback and Economies" at 5:00 p.m. today in Room 4-103, for the Student Branch of the A.I.E.E. and I.R.E. Prof. Tustin is on leave froom his position as head of the Department of Electrical Engineering at the Uni- versity of Birmingham, England, and is studying the American economic system here at the Institute. In his lecture Prof. Tustin will discuss the similarities between electrical feed- back theory and economic fluctuations, and will attempt to answer the ques- tion, "Can feedback theory contribute to economic stabilization?" ..e A SME AMemtbers Hold Last Meeting To Elect Officers Officers for the school year 1954-55 of the student chapter of the Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers were elected last Thursday at a final meeting and beer party in the 5:15 Club Room.'The following officers were elected: Chairman, John H. Sealrles '57; Vice-Chairman, Donald L. Bill- stone '55; Secretary, John A. Welsh '56; and Treasurer, Richard L. Peskin '56. Sergio Chavez '54, retiring Chair- man, introduced Prof. Warren M. Rohsenow of the Department of Me- chanical Engineering, who spoke on the functions and benefits of member- ship in the A.S.M.E.

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VOL. LXXIY. NO . 24 CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1954 5 CENTS

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Chance Dance, the final on-campusdance of the year. Sponsored by AlphaPhi Omega, with the cooperation ofthe Burton House Social Committee,the evening will include both squareand ballroom dancing.

Feature attraction of the affair willbe the presentation of special certifi-cates to Robert Warshawer %54 andMajor Franklin B. Moon, winners ofthe Ugly Man on Campus Contest,held earlier this year. Music will besupplied by Jerry Bernard's orches-tra, and square dance caller will beHayden Swett, who is known to manythrough his local television program.

The theme of the dance will be themodern version of the old gold miner,the uranium prospector. In the eventof bad or cold weather, the dance willbe held in the Burton House lounge.

Refreshments Will be in the formof beer and soft drinks. Tickets are$1.25 per couple .and are available atthe dormitory desks, or from membersof either APO or the Burton SocialCommittee.

unior Mug LiftO n Tap Friday;

Open To EveryowThe Junior Mug Lift will, be held'

from 8':QO to 1.2:00 p.m. this Fridays,May '21, in Rockwell Cage. Sponsoredby the Junior Class and open to all,the Mug Lift 'is an annual event inthe Institute calendar of class' activi-

i ties. Tickets to cover the expenses ofthe beer and soft drinks will be onsale-this week in Building 10 for $1.00.'3eer mnugs will-also be sold for $1.50.

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Bid To Heniey Regalta imminlnente

Institute Agrees To Finance Trip

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This Saturday, from 8-00 to 12:00p.m., the tennis couIts behind BurtonHouse Will be the scene of the Last

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-1To Compete in England

It has been the practice of theHenley Regatta to invite the winnerof this race to compete in Englandlater in the year. Even though this isthe first time that a non-Ivy Leagueschool has copped the honors, thereis no reason to believe that this prac-tice shall not be continued. Prof. IvanJ. Geiger, director of athletics, hasbeen assured by the Institute that itwill finance the trip.

~. ~Other Results

Five other Tech crews also competedon Saturday. The other Lightweightboats were at Princeton and had vary-ing degrees of unsuccessfulness. TheFresh squad finished last in their qual-ifying test with a time of 7.:53.2. Har-vard won the main event.

The Jay Vees fared better. Theyqualified for the race by finishingsecond to Cornell, the eventual win-ners. In the finale they trailed the restof the four-shell field all the way.

The Varsity race was an excitingone. Unbeaten Navy won it, but notwithbut a surprising battle with afighting Yale team. Tech actuallyfailed to qualify by a margin of 1.3seconds, but this offers little consola-tion.

The Jay Vees came in third in their

(Continued on page S)

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New Gym FloorTo Be InstalledIn Rockwell Cage

A large portable gym floor is to beinstalled at the Institute to enlargeand improve its indoor athletic facili-ties, President James R. Killian. Jr.announced last week.

Speaking at the all-Institute convo-cation, Dr. Killian said that the newfloor will covrer a total area of 131 ft.x 96 ft. and will be installed in 'theeast, end of Rockwell Cage. Made offirst-quality beech by the country'sleading -gym floor manufacturer, itwill ,provide for an intercollegiate bas-ketball court, two intramural crosscourts, a 40' x 60' wrestling area, anda 40' x 40' gymnastic space.

Beginning next season, all varsityand freshman home basketball gameswill be played on the new main courtwhile the cross courts will be avail-able for intramural and recreationaluse.

The main court will be providedwith standard glass backboards, andportable bleachers with a seating ca-pacity of between five and six hun-dred will be erected at the south sideof this- court during the basketballseason.

The gymnastic space at the north

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L~~~~~~LO

OF TECHNOLOGYOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNDERGRADUATES OF . MASSACHUSETTS iNSTITUTE

-Executive Comzmittee

In a statement to The Tech, theExecutive Committee of Inscomm af-filmed its genrelral agreement with thesentiments expressed in Friday's edi-torial regarding the proposed Discrim-ination Conference. The Committee,%which has already been formally em-powered by Inscomm to make arrange-mnlents for the conferepce, is unani-nmously in' favor ofrestricting the areaunder discussion solely to discrimina-tion. Letters were sent out yesterdayto philanthropic organizations, re-questing $25,000 for financial assist-ance to defray the expenses of bring-ing two delegates from each of 120schools to the conference.

A motion will be made at tomor-row's meeting that sufficient funds beappropriated from the UndergraduateParking Fund to finan;!e the printingof a calendar, listing scheduled eventsat the Institute, to be distributed freeto all students.

Short reports will be received fromall 17 outstanding subcommittees ofInscomm, telling what the committeeshave accomplished since their chair-men took office, and what their pro-grams are for the next term.

A committee is being set up to in-vestigate the handling by students ofAthletic Association finances. Thecommittee vill study whether theduties of the Equipment Manager andTreasurer of the A.A. should be sub-

divided or perhaps taken over by em-ployees of the'Association rather thanstudents, due to their great complex-ity and the large amount of workentailed. It will also study whether ornot to separate the control of Athleticfunds from the Undergraduate Asso-ciation and the Finance Board, sincethe complexity/of these finances Pres-ently allows Inscomm no opportunityto consider them in detail, but insteadleads to the "rubber-stamping" ofA. A. budget and financial programs.

MIT's lightweight crew won the Joseph Wright Trophfiy, firstplace in the national standings, and a trip to England by puttingsix feet of well churned -water between themselves and a strongFrinceton crew on Lake Carnegie this Saturday. Seeded first. inthe nine-team field,:they won the race in 7:10.1.

The reason for the comparatively poor winning time can beattributed, in part, to a strong head-wind whicH slowed up allboats. In the face of these conditions Tech's qualifying time was7:22.7. '

I Penn Takes LeadThe first definite lead was taken by Penn at the mile-to-go-

mark on the mile and five-stixteenth'sr-~~~ ~ course. Princeton and Tech, both un-

Pro[ Com ml ager, derstl;'oking the Quakers, were rightbehind. At the three-quarters mark

Noted c 'Historian' Tech upped the stroke to thirty-five,caught Penn, and began to pull away.

. Ec u H r The Tigers now made their bid. Over-To' Lect rec sre troking the Beavers the Nassaumen

took a deck lead at the halfway mark.

Tomorrow, · May 19, the Lecture Penn was fading fast.Series Committee will present Dr. The Engineers started their kick atHenry Steele Commager whlo will this point. Slowly raising the-'strokespeak pn "The Nature of Freedom." to forty-and-over they overtook the

Dr. Commager, Professor of History Tigers and, with a quarter of a mileat Columbia University, is a nrted to go, had a six foot lead; This washistorian and the author of such books the winning margin as the Pri'nceton

as "Growth of the American Republic" shell, now overstroking MIT, couldn'tand "America, the Story of a Free cut down the lead. Penn finished thirdV -__1, by Y ,, n TJ~ hn 'tin..zip q. ..; .... and Cornell fourth.te'eopie. , tte a.-so nas ueenl vibiung jv.triv-v

fessor of history at many collegesthroughout the United States.

The lecture will be given in 10-250at 5:00 p.m. No admission will becharged.

!

" ERRATUMIt was incorrectly announced in last

Tuesday's issue thatf completion datefor construction of the new chapel'isFebruary 1955, and final target dateis November !955. The correct datesare November, 1954, and February,1955o

end of the new floor will include suchbasic equipment as the trampoline,horses, bars, and ropes, while thewrestling area wvill feature plasticcovers in M.I.T. colors, cardinal on themain mats and grey on the protectiveside mats.

The initial Compton Award, established by the Boston Stein Club, is presented byPresident James R. Killian,.Jr. to Charles J. Masison, Jr. '54, at.the Convocation-

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lirslmt .A- r nceton,LightweightsAgrees

Conlferen SC.IV M"6 Cover

Discrrimination Problem On ly

UntidergraduatesWin Prizes ForIOriginal Writing

The winners of the Robert A. Boitand Ellen -King prizes have just beenannounced by the Humanities Depart-ment.

A bequest of Robert A. Bolt pro-vides annual prizes for all undergrad-uates at the Institute "to stimulatethe students' interest in the best useof the English language." There aretwo divisions of tihe Bolt prizes. TheBoit Essay prize is offered for thebest essays on subjects suitable fortreatment in literary form; and theBolt Prize for 'imaginative writing,offered for the best creative papers-short stories, part of novels, poems,dramas, etc. In each division there isa first prize of $75.00, a second prizeof $40.00, and a third prize of $25.00.

In the Essay division first prize waswen by Dqnald G. Brennan '55, writ-ing on the subject Alfred No'rthWhitehead: A Brief Critique. Secondprize was won by John E. Broyles,Jr. '56 with his essay, Emerson's theOver-Soul in the Light of ModernPhysical Approach, and Glenn W.Clark '56 received third prize for hisessay, The American Civil War-ARace Confict.

In the Imaginative Division, RichardA. Jacobs '56 won the first prize withThis is Science Fiction. 'Second prizewas taken by David Markowitz '56 forThe Night of the Storm, while PhilipM. Pearle '57 won third place forThree pieces of Dirt: A History.

The Ellen King Prize which -pro-vides for $50 worth of books of thestudent's own choice for the bestfreshman essay was won by EdwardG. Effros '57 for his essay, On theNature of Beauty.

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Kaszynski GiveiA.S S. M. E. AwardAt Area Concave

Edward Kaszynski '54, of Course II,took first place for his paper, "Ex-planation of Chip Curl and a NewLook at Material Flow in Metal Cut;-ting" at the 21st annual A.S.M.E.Regional Student Conference heldMay 6 through 9 at Clarkson College,Potsdam, New York. The conference,attended by students and faculty fromthe New Engiand area, heard papers-delivered by students from WorcesterPolytech, Rensselaer Polytech, North-eastern, Tufts, and ether schools.Among the listeners from M.I.T. wereProfessor Warren M. Rohsenow of theMechanical Engineering Departmentand Daniel Kiser '54, retiring treas-urer of the student chapter ofA.S.M.E.

Kaszynski's paper, which won by animpressive marge, develops a newtheory of strain in the "shear" zoneduring metal cutting, which promisesto resolve many of the discrepanciesbetween current theory and experi-mental results.

APO And BurtonTo Present DanceOn Teinis Corts

Professor Tustinl,English Engineer,To Speak Today

Professor' Arnold Tustin, visitingWebster Professor of Electrical En-gineering, will speak on "Feedbackand Economies" at 5:00 p.m. today inRoom 4-103, for the Student Branchof the A.I.E.E. and I.R.E.

Prof. Tustin is on leave froom hisposition as head of the Departmentof Electrical Engineering at the Uni-versity of Birmingham, England, andis studying the American economicsystem here at the Institute. In hislecture Prof. Tustin will discuss thesimilarities between electrical feed-back theory and economic fluctuations,and will attempt to answer the ques-tion, "Can feedback theory contributeto economic stabilization?"

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A SME AMemtbersHold Last MeetingTo Elect Officers

Officers for the school year 1954-55of the student chapter of the Ameri-can Society of Mechanical Engineerswere elected last Thursday at a finalmeeting and beer party in the 5:15Club Room.'The following officers wereelected: Chairman, John H. Sealrles'57; Vice-Chairman, Donald L. Bill-stone '55; Secretary, John A. Welsh'56; and Treasurer, Richard L. Peskin'56.

Sergio Chavez '54, retiring Chair-man, introduced Prof. Warren M.Rohsenow of the Department of Me-chanical Engineering, who spoke onthe functions and benefits of member-ship in the A.S.M.E.

Page Two - The TeC - . - T SDAY, MAY ¥1S,.1954 ,,~~~~ ~~~~~ _ . . ,

I+1~- - Due r eh0

VOL. LXXIV Tuesday, May 18, 1954 No. 24

· 4 tMANAGING BOARD

General Manager ............. ................................ : Norman G. Kulgein, '55Managing Editor .................................... .............................. I..........................Rodhiry W. Logan, '55·Editor PhiliS Jryden, :'5,dintor ................................................................................................................................... Alip htrden, '56Business Manager ................... ................................................................................ : .......... Allan Schell, '55

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Co-Sports ........................ David Apoling, '57-john -Friedman, '57

Copy ..... ......: ............ Robert Rosenbaumn, '57

EDITORMlake-Up ...........4 ......... Frank Berryman, '56News .................................. Stephen Cohen, '56Features ........................... Bjorn Rossing, '56

MANAGERSAdvertising . ............ ............................................................................... Ernest W'asserman, '57Office Manager ................................................................................................................ Jacob Gubbay, '6Treasurer ...... ............................................................................................................... Donald Koffnian. '56Circulation Manager ............................................................................................. hili B. Mitchell, '7Secretary ...................................................................................................................... Philip J. Philliou, '55

All photos by The Tech-Technique' Photo Staf, unless otherwise accredited.

~~- *-~ -OFFICES OF THE TECHNews, Editorial and IBusiness-Room 020, Walker Memorial, Cambridge 39,'Mass.Entered as second class matter at the post office, at Boston, Massachusetts.

t Calendar of Eventsad the MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

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from May 19 through JIune 14, 1954

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 (

School of Industrial Management. Production course lecture: "A General Dis-cussion of Decision Making in Production Management, Illustrated '

. ~by Operations Research Problemns." Dr. C. West Churchman, Pro- 1fessor of Operations Research, Case Institute. Room 52-155, 9:00 a.m.;Room 2-190, 11:00 a.m.

- Mathematics and Physics Departments. Operations Research Seminar: "Opera-tions Research in Planning." Dr. A. A. Brown, Arthur D. Little, Inc.Room. 6,219, 3:00,4:00 p.m.

Electrical Engineering -Department. Colloquiumr:` "The Analytical Apl'roachto -Heat Transfer Problems in Electrical Equipment." Mrs. Bruce O. 0Buckland, Heat Transfer Engineer, General Electric Company. Room'6-120, 4:30 p.m. Refreshments in Room 6-321 from a:o0-4:30 p.m. i

Catholic Club. Lecture: "Technology and Religion." Fr. Gerard Rooney. Room t2-190, 5:00 p.m.

- -Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. Fellowship meeting. Room 5-108, 5:00 p.m. Lecture Series Committee.-Lecture: "The Nature of Freedom." Dr. Henry

Steele Commager, Professor of History, Columbia University. Room10-250, 5:00-p.m.

Order of DeMolay-M.I.T. Chapter. Special Meeting, Second Degree. Tyler. ,Lounge, Walker Memorial, 8:00 p.m. - *

iTHURSDAY, MAY 20 Physics Department. Colloquium: "Coupling in the Oxygen Molecule: A

Study in Vertical Integration." Mr. Michael Tinkham. Room 6-i20,4:15 p.m.

Lecture Series Committee. Films: Walt Disney's "Alice in Wonderland" .and -"Nature's Half Acre," both in Technicolor. Room 10-250, 5:00, 7:30, iand 9:30 p.m. Admission: 30 cents.

Christian Science Organization. Spring reception. Speaker: Mr. Saville DavisAmerican News Editor, Christian Science Monitor../Hayden LibraryLounge, 7:30 p.m. Everyone welcome. -

School of Architecture and Planning. Lecture and slides' "The Rise of Corn-mercial Architecture, 1800-1900." Mr. Henry-Russell Hitchcock, Di-

"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rector, Smith College Museum of Art. Room 7-427; 8:00 p.m. FRIDAY, MAY 21 "

Catholic Club. Office hears. 1.2:00 noon-2:00 p.m. 309 Walker Memorial.SATURDAY, MAY 22

Modern -Languages Department. Graduate Language Examinations: German,- Room 3-440, 10:00 a.m.-12.00 noon; French and Russian, Room

3-440, 2:00-4:00 p.m.Order of DeMolay-M.I.T. Chapter. Award Banquet. Davis Square Masonic

Apartments, -5:45 p.m.,TUESDAY, MAY 25

Biology Department. Colloquium: "On the Temperature Dependence andMechanism of Alcohol and Lactic Acid Dehydrogenases." Dr. AlfredGierer. Room 16-310, 4:00 p.m. Tea will be served in Room 16-711at 3:30 p.m.

Christian Science Organization. Subject: "C.hurc." Tyler Lounge, WalkerMemorial, 5:15 p.m.WEDNESDAY, MAY 26'

School of Industrial Management. Informal talk -by Dr. Douglas McGregor,President, Antioch College, and Professor. of \Humrnan Behavior in theSchool of Industrial Management starting next fall. Room posted inLobby of Building 52. 4:00 p.m. All invited.

Order of DeMolay-M.I.T. Chapter. Meeting, elections, and Mother's Degree.Hayden Library Lounge, 8:00 p.m. --THURSDAY, MAY 27

Lecture Series Committee. Film: "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein."Room 10-250, 5:00, 7:30, and 9:30 p.m. (5:00 p.m. show will beover by 6:30). ADMISSION FREE.

- SENIOR WEEK

FRIDAY, JUNE 4: Senior Stag Banquet, Rockwell Cage,-6:30 p.m. SATURDAY, JUNE 5: Class Party and Carnival, Walker Memorial, 8:00 p.m.MONDAY, JUNE 7: Annual Senior Ball, Hotel Statler, 9:00 p.m. 'TUESDAY, JUNE 8: Senior Class Moonlight Cruise, 8:15 p.m.THURSDAY, JUNE 10: Joint Arminy and Air Force R.O.T.C. Commissioning

Exercises, Room 10-250, 10:30.a.m. Senior Class Picture, in front of Building -10, 2:15 p.m.Baccalaureate Service, Walker Memorial, 3:00 p.m. -

FRIDAY, JUNE 11: Commencement Day. SUNDAY, JUNE 13: President's Dinner for Honorary Secretariesi Educational

Counselors, and M.I.T. Club Officers, Faculty Club, 5:30 p.m.MONDAY, JUNE 14: Alumni Day.

EXHIBITIONS -

A one-nan show of upres, raphics, and furniture by HarryBertoia will be exhibited in the New Gallery of the Charles Hayden MemorialLibrary through June 20. Hours: Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m.-5:00p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, 2:00-5:00 p.m. - '

Photographic Salon prints by Mr. Art H. Oehl of Winnetka, Illinois,will be shown in the Photo Service Gallery, Basement of Building 1 1,. throughMay 31. .

- CALENDAR OF EVENTS

The Calendar of Events will NOT be published during the summerterm. The nexf-Calendar will appear in the first Tuesday edition of THE)

TECH in the fall, and will be sent separatel to subscribers as usual.

through- the mail:

To the Editor-of The Tech-. Perhaps the most apathetic of all

MI.I.T. students, are those who do not.take the time to look into the reasonsbehind legislation enacted by. theirelected Inscomm 6fficers; In a recentetter to The Tech the changes con-.crning Freshman rules were branded:pansy-legislation." ,

Why a school tie? Why an under-graduates pin? Why a song contest?Why make changes at all-? Is not the-answer to the last question .the basisto all progress? Let us stop to thinkwvhether the old rules ever- really ac-complished their end-the.jinculcationof school spirit. Didn't these old rulesonly serve to Ifadger and intimidatethe Freshman, and make East Campusalmost a fearful place for Freshmento frequent alone.

Since these old rules haVe neverreally accomplished 'their intendedends, a new and thought- out systemhas been adopted in an attempt 'torectify an old sore spot. A song con-test is hoped to encourage 'the learn-ng of school songs by. removing thestigma attached to having to learnthem. A school tie of- new design ishoped to fester a certain pride in be-onging. Freshman-Sophomore footballhas not and will not be discontinuedunless a suitable substitute can befound to alleviate the existing finan-cial problem.

M.I.T. is not turning into a,"pansy"school as certain people would haveyou believe. A little thought and corn--mon sense will show this to be true.

H. Michael Salesky '57Michael E. Brenner '57

To the Editor of The Tech:The question of spirit at Tech has<

long been a prevalent one. Abolitionof the freshmen rules is thought bymany to be an attack upon the exist-iLug school spirit. That Tech spirit istied to freshman rules is false; how-ever, the clamor for retaining the rulesrepresents the faction that believesthey are the faint glimmer of hopethat Tech will be like other schools.

Examine some indications of Techspirit. How many have Tech sweatshirts, how many Tech stickers ontheir cars, how many Tech jackets,and how many back down when com-paring the worth of Tech with otherschools attended by friends? Peoplewvant to be identified with the Insti-tute. The interest shown in the ques-tion of freshman rules is another in-dication of spirit at Tech.

We must realize that spirit herewill never be like spirit at Ivy Leagueschools. Even when we have an out-standing athletic team of whom 'weshould be more than proud becausethey are our own athletes and notscholarship bought, large crowds areabsent. Our crew is one of the best inthe country, yet the Charles Riverbanks. are not crowded on Saturdayafternoons; our track t6am is one ofthe best in New England, yet it hardly

(Continued on page 4)

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CrammingfOr- Exams?

__ __ f L a. '

Fight "Book Fatigue" SaMYour dotor wtill tell you-aHoDoz Awakeler is safe as anaverage ceUp of hot, black coeOfee. Take a, NoDoz Awakenerwhen you cram for that exam

..r,- Wohen. -mid-a fternoonbrings:n. those "3 o'clockcob.-webs." YTou'll find NoDoz'givesyou a lift: Withlout a letdown ...helps y tou sniap back to normaland fight fatigue safely!

far, 6. ta:0 s obf et; i&· _ _ _ _

.5a* 'As: t,,offee.1 ..... I -

______. '______.__ ' -W alker staff hebM Spine as a "hostage', . 1 ; i i t. i

... ito prevent the subeon m fro t c.nti--L' RU lE:1' I t .n of the irtfiltratiox,

by Paul W. Abrahams '56While gazing upon the televised

shenanigans being broadcast fromWashington, we reflected upon whatwould happen if the investigatory bugshould bite the Institute a little ha'derthan it has so far. It does lnot requiretoo much imagination to visualize thefollowing story in the columns of TheTech.

I~~~ . * *

The Inscomm Subcommn on Investi-gations went into. its fourth week ofsessions- today on the subject of theMcRathy-Walker dispute. The -Walkerstaff has -accused McRathy and hisaide, Ray Cahn, of attempting by im-proper means to secure a position scoffee-pourer for G. Daniel Spine, aformer counsel for the Subcomm.McRathy, who has stepped down fromhis position as subcomm chiirman, hascountered with an accusation that the

of Cambridge urchins- into the statf.The Walker indictment has listed Mc-Rathy, Cahn, and Frank Farr, sutb-comm counsel, as the principals in thecase, while the McRathy ' accusationsare directed at Robert Stubbins, Wal-ker staff head; H. Stove Tinsel, hisassistant: -and John Quincy Admans,liaison man betweein the subeon:m andthe staff.

In today's sessions, impartial coun-sel! Roy Junkh ens cross-examinedStubbins,- who has been on the stand

-for eight days. Early in the morningsession, the cross-examination was -in-terrupted:

McRathy:, A point of order, Mr.,Chairman, a very important point oforder.

Munk (acting chairman): What is(Continued on page, 4)

NOWDDSTOYEVSKY'S

THE,- IDIOTSunday, May 23 ,

FOLLY TO BE WISE

- - to be eager

or.MUST VIRTUE BE TS OWN REWARD?MUST VIRTUE BE ITS OWN -REWARD?

Once there was a Junior who devotedmost of his time and energies to SocialPursuits, with correspondingly littleemphasis on the Curriculuim in theCatalog. Consequently, while he wasRight lip There socially, academicallyhe was close to the Point of No Return.

Topping it off was an Irate Ultimatumfrom the Male Parent, warning that hisnext acquisition had better be either aList of Passing Grades or a SocialSecurity Card. All Our Boy could fore-see was a lifetime at Hard Labor, unlessSomething Drastic happened.

So he made it happen. Investedheavily in benzedrine and black coffeeand lined up tlree super.skull Tutors.Night and day he Sweated It Out-an; wound up with Remarkably Re.spectable Grades. First thing he did,naturally, was to consult his TrustyTelegrammar. (What-you haven't got

18 Boylston Street 'I

a Telegrammar? Just drop a line toRoom 1727, Western Union, -60 Hud.son St., New York City and get a copyof this bright and breezy little guide, forfree.) On its advice, he called WesternUnion and flashed the joyous Tidingshomeward by Telegram.

The Reaction came an hour later.A Telegraphic Money Order for $500,plus amessage that read: 'Delighted atyour confounding the Prophets, includ.inglmyself. Hope you will join me ontwo-month European tip, expensespaid, starting June 20th." Signed, POP.

AMoral? When you've got good -newsto impart, strike while the Item is Hot-by Telegram! It adds weight, as well aswings, to Your Words. In any kind ofCommunique, from Date Talk to DreamTalk to Job Talk, you'll get farther,faster, when you usothe Yellow Blank.Just call Western Union.

T'elephone: KIrkland 7-8910- - - - - ~ I - .-

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You don't' ave'- toIbe a beaver -' -

4

ondm,e)0it's4. C 0. For,ha I-N, illpio�qs VictofVY4 4.0 #i;6T hea".

The all For !Pa rk, :En harksly gineersplit its to,, Va'-Sa Spling- B,. I t "ek end alfi 11n4j. �rackQndeis 4 as ball te

e -1 and to WPI that saw lit CreW4 -0 Th Wjj t(P- some of weather, condition.Worces garne, Z P e 13- the b6�-'tg PrOceedin Coachter Inst ,itutO Playe 1 at the' nish line the wron, g toward Oscar nml.,11 Is field ered fir, d's charges hligh ts sp o��h t Pitchers. I way U., . , t, -r tsduel Was a poi sailors we the 3 in all J)utre edged, b. t saturnine inner - -eten ai nt by the day aft,)gS. R four eventsWeber eaVer' Coast .4 one ernoo,,155 starte:e' e Into. W - I , . cade Unded lVortheastern by, all as the J.'?as by- jac'weakened in the -p-ng anc, ola rn� Iva te k Pand Wpl The Beaver dinghie Mpionshi Inargifi. Two 86_11 -,y hing a Cardhint and re scored three more S, a. f"On, a friend. The lightshaliever, Di arcia '54 rnannedby Ted Of the k:nghieers c0untry h d wo -toll 'foule when I h,'Ice the ga,,,. ck Skavda 1, divisio and Nick fail W'Iliar4s '54 and IVadi as tO Offer and 4 a t Pl.illeelon.n and by Newman '56 - '56, tu'lled do Ohn tioll'al Royal I, had "n the I They had tkezd Jorge Dien. ,L else ,55

en]Th e Ire, Alain det, uble About two Regatta meet Engqand,

_hrnen igh t to-nonths ago I hardlon the Tha

hance had but O'ne SC atwo-point I '154 in Vrarren Latoir ,55 creW existed. Mes, I f,�ltSullivan .15 _h carne ?ring . dadfDr the ha' swept to an 0:14.8 Victory - broke the ice guess I u,,as Y kn'W]Ien, xvith Bob Saturday nplnshi Pretty el�' that Su6

1412 th ghtleverYbody seer ch a thinBob Lait ,54 On second base C4 t a steady dies. TOrn the .120 high - aln'tostne Much like e"erYbody 9 asairl -Irnson sailors right behin drizzle with the the offMan '56 hur. veight crew and d to have dish0l'vever d. Su centuM handily bes that covered that else But-e. t the Coast GU nday and then I)i took t in the P Weh there was sue]livan Was outs'ngldd sh arP13r an"7SI: /the lead by a c ard /:dt Shea ck Ollen and country and01 a the Plate atternptiul- lo took ove,.' of XOrtie. be-St in the world. They. ' tossibi�y, sessionng I jeopardy, till se m c ones stern breezedargin that was the twe di to od too. feln Pvetty ThisThe th Afil, oil" ne was 4 Ce events 9"I to realize thatOF nglne"s garne very end. en Is tir YOU bethe' b red but Qual -'I some Crew re dig�UY for 'three SO", Of spirit in t eie is 0 be a ol't ar

Lait Ig VVP'l fastballep. SIX S The second Place gained by t�e& cOPPed the two mile i thtWilliams, regai 21 9:37-7. PeOPI his schoo'got three of a P ta�.,J!n e YOU h ' I 'when have to individThe Beavers t , ern. lifies th--, sailing team i ;a- ing his Win ter YOU and And ,ith be a tremendousUched Brand , forn', Picked up th In over to ardly eve" kno,.v cor0 Intercollegiate Chan1pion , 0 and 220 witei e Z10 OR start talkingcher Shaz

�or-eno 8 pit- e ck 8alOma. '56 and h clelv. --tbollt chan)pionshai boat Of the cali-fourth inlilll,-, a fou .

a ate scheduled tor ju 1119- in the shorte 40rznan thaL e And when the

nd Were runs in the Tech'erew, yoagain- The ,our t NeVvP0I`t Rarbo� -follow- the crew firiable to. Califo. ne asweep race to giv th Y'll back Institute says be great pillse rn; e Tech en 9 _naveially 1�f cTigue `54

inore 4,- -a. Jack Farquahar thout ae,h runs, howe ore Won 'a

5 der 'Whether all-' nd, YOU begin detlan the necessary 'ver' Pro'ved cl-ng second in the after 'h"y 0 to -E27g th . t"ng :F1'O.,n th,"'a"Sh` R(gan Crew Ln": 9-16 to lead T - Mile" "art the 880 about the things oal'snta'n one of theheld the JU(j. 756 and I)ick Peh John ee-n to a swLep. have the administrat- You ATIT hases to nel ls�s P40refield been slightly '104 mighl- lie Of the greatest f allhits. on, 6 `56 led the Beav cially ever had,I "' th'e field ev e after they'd "agger he's only one Man. 0

'Un and (C02etillued from parts .I) ot aredsix ents With firsts i t "the we couldeat anq th ereby'%,OP the right t itly, Put'anddis.... n h the Pul-chase of agreed to fi- entil-e .at the heels to Will the hat In field, Tech I'lieup fl.oin the st]

-a single,

an

error,

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sIngle -runs cents on t�`O Walk s rest Of the % e and the c0XS,,aValerio 5 P2,in eld. 13, - Was out On the 'zIud each on..and a double steal vs, Yale e�on, Cornell an, '1998 'Oh"UtPiO.0ship When the "i-ver -Vale"io and Lait. p,,,,, WOrked ead of ther i Flield'will be the I /Yea�r- A sprintin With the creu, L'"Oltunately,by Order. n in tha 7th annual site Of the Y' won their Is ate them On a Is con�

'N first race th' i'sn't sPace- All 're can do

tlv'o Of the run.. .811a Single ;-EIC3A Track 97 Harvard boat ost We've greatIll the nde' all1pionships 'on a-,d Field 1 sought them. at the got to here Perforl,IS -Priday and Satu,

ay. Twent tCOP finish. term dtLittma nth When y Ka E111'ed to Th- Jnost su2-Prising race Of the d Y-Six Colleges ch Jack hear Frailey, too 11, d It toand - n n the Tech spectator, ay resented at -PI'ailey S Oach

slngled and V Will be re had better ievable job 'with than alrnostthe rh�et,

ay t ided Pinch hitter ehnellit for an Vvent. was the Presih- as favorites P': hatI ta That the Beaver 'worth DU 1119. I wines out Work on thel,down, ho 'Kirkwood. se� Ilk were elirn - and followed rated.tit oars On the ri SP] theres e boat. I

as Pretty ,Id the 'r

Avever, to ty . Inated in the en MIT, Rol closer Week, too. T ver 'oth'ng else tthe uch e treat heats n Y by t W ex great. 0 saytand end -fan Z n -' Cross Rhode

ext man -,cpected S Th�tgame. 'he Brandeis al C wa efending Charnpioll Tuft�s. Island-, and r In. was cornin ancl thS7d the but that the 9 down el T"i Weekenddrew V/h'ch In forrne'r races people hard so n,01Saw them splint Point'119'. The . Was fai IrOln dhbe beaten 6. COrneR I'Von 04 and Harval-d - by r(I. th� ailing t'zlrln QualiConds better I'ace in the Gold_ Won, be lVationals. The baseball'Yale and winnin . Pt ating B2,a tEsix

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Xavy's an few., it th eam retul'ned to it's he tr4Ivy cl'ew is eligible te is 4-1 T�a Year lightweight - - And notching a Nvinnin, 1,7a.

Strictly aelng Was n d., "'story Over 2VOI.tCeaste,of coul'se, thePos- At Ughts won.

an the COII-vocat-A'011 Friday itth noul)"d "'-hat Joe J, Vze C1 Pova '54 had

-s Of Y48 cup. We Iey Could have made a b don It thiniQon

Joe Is the guy you etter selectsee PlaYinhe can hardly walk.athlete. We IsQUESTION:

e like hirn. -e a'e Wei

what makes aSTOLEN

CROWIV GRAPHIC PRESS CAAJER.JLaeky taste better'IVO. 73065s

Retvat'd $50retum

leading Of camera or informationto arrest and conviction ofer S)" taAing centers.

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dowrnPke toIl anditherter ate -Ilace.Jack-'ibe-less~

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Al~~~~o .at 1 zgbetter. IYNTEAS Xkfi3-u>< :Lfi j ~~~No question'about it., Luckies taste better to thousands of D

_i F ~~~~~~No question about the reasolls why- Luckies, taste better, IAR|I - 7 ~~~~~either. Today, nearly everybody knows L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky luil Z

t~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I' To ! 1.d./the famous Lucky Strike process-brings 1 63 b n fat!Wgt' { 01 1 In~~~~~~~ldsg~Ood-tastingtobacco to make it taste even better./1ei|| / 8 it I ~~~~~~~~~~So enjoy better taste inyourcigarette. BeHappy-GoLucky! |-ALFSO4

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Before deciding on this important,,:" question read a copy of the F.C.C. re-

port yourself. Perhaps a son 'contestis not feasible. This is just a minor

. point. The question is-will the new.. policy more rapidly integrate the

freshman into Tech life and will itaid in inducing a school spirit. Rules

I

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have been of no help innot give this new idea

He nPresident of t

-

- A great deal of this "Rah, R ah"can be done without, as far as I'mconcerned. Certain things, though, are

sought after. It would be nice for mostof the school to know some school

songs. Would it be bad if there werea Tech tie that could identify mem-bers of the Institute to one another- ,, e way Prineeton r, ne n are known bytheir black and orange? F reshman

rules have fiot promoted the singingof school songs and have placed astigma on a Tech tie. Evidently theyare not working because Tech m en

.refuse to be forced to 'do things.Freshman class spirit is not influenced

by rules. It centers around field dayactivities which promise to be betterthan ever next year. Thus, class spiritis largely unaffected by this problem."I

I

f t z 's *;5 S ape ,Riz }< -89{bet~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~te %-#"A q.. . a~~~~~~~- . - , . , - , .r......,..... ~~T ~~ 8

i the pas"t, why hearing suspended." Stubbins ans-wer- I '' . ,

a whirls,' ed that he wanted "4the type of heal- i "4THlE GUY'LL LOSE':- Iank Salzhauer, ing" which the subcomm xva~s then. _.the Class of '57 conducting to be changed, but he di~ll1 HRSa

nlot, a~ctually want the healings stop- l*(0 A ped. He felt that the Walker loyaltyrr-rnT ftHW

board could'tackle the job of uncov- '"' 3 'v' ..- , = Si' .,-g , 7

; pag £) .ering urchins, and report to the -sub- \,\t; t ,$1i., fryDf, d , _ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~2r. McfeRathyIcomra. t' ' ' " L '

gsick and tired Isub~comm in its closed, hearillgs, and i~l a the mid(l of cited the case of John Zwickcling, who Ae-i ~J'~~ jfat it is ininia- McRathy had said was "unfit~to selape! {-I-, I fir fit; S k .- X i a. d i .,p

at this picture, afriedegg offta plate." -- - . ' ..

and Spine MiecRathy nex t brought up the cast i lI ,1t y

nciuded the en- ber who allegedly had voted to clear T Y Loralbaer in"wihths u o m was ctheoreit vascuta number of "Fifth Arnendnient ur-_t pheClss of'7cnutn ob hasg dbu'eend

chins." Mcuathy introduced in evi-s .n i's'sue of this, dence a, carbon copy of. a letter with | . |lalkis into thisbab~erdash1cr jllst of carnpus, ng~~ pd is el thatth Wal k e loat ...~ ~(~- ~ . v-eng iso that sho the typed signature of J. Osar Hee- see, and ask. I:r a .-:ite shirt. I-le sta" rts g:i.n' me -:.is -,

n order to get ver, chairman of Jtidconim. This letter son-nldlcaou htEn esnCnryih11.sin the Walker contained references to a numlber of .the soft collar that supposed io no~t v.rinkle ever. The jerk

persons who had brought zwidence starts snowin' me with sonicl-day free trial deal, that ifagainst this loyalty board member. l'm not satisfied after wearing it andi washing it for

wever, overruled The letter was angrily branded "a 14 diays, he'll ginime any dough back. ..I Junk~hens com- fake" by B11elch. --.,paeA one eint, Junkhens next questioned St.ubbins- "'m from Brooklvii, see, and I don't trust nobody. I ask.the

'insel denied this as to his own personal knowledge of guy, 'W4hat's the catch, buddlyi' Hie savs, 'No catch. Wear ded hat f Mcpressures exerted to get Spine prefer- itas mtlch and as hard as you wvant. if the collar ever nded~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-, tha if M:: entl treatmen. -/bbn /'t.-te/.: that.t

e accusations of he had insisted that Spine talke the .... kle ~ r wt y g you m back.-W'sl' "'"')uld also submit standard eightsweeksloffta,, '. It's easy. You ji.st iron the collar flat. fi., i t, andsearch. Atmebes had peen "aused" by the fold-line's woven in.

angd te sb.Spine be given a coffee-pouring jobIfntyorm eybc.'know if Tinsels i ts ced aring and

!n a Cambridge isofmnedaely tuings weithCan londge 'h guy tells me it's the only soft onle-pieceo collarlist~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ~_~-~~:--'~2.-~- of....... ; "_--Can ndM- -_It

c el to the min the world, that it lasts up to twice as lond 'as otherfat i ~ ~ Rath is wicha Mgthey had -ademas"nfido aed ... _-z= ,.,: ,,.,·- , .....

isisand Sthn o o pn.eats made rnnshirts and only costs $3.95 for Vhites'ancf $4.95 in colors ant, adMuktion of a threat by Cahn to "wreck adsuperfine whites. I tell hinzs he's nuts to make such ai

devoted t'-- '-'-a t " .stupid offer. I tell him he 'll ,lose his shirt. It's .kind of joke,

m membrs an time eferrd to te posibilit thatsee. I figure no shirt will live up to all that malarky.athis pictuereaferred egtof th posbliytate. .. isisted when he Spine wiould be shipped out to an as- ' K

the chail ,that he sit~nment in P~aker House. "And Y'know chat I been wearn' and ashin' it now for m-

t of chaross-eam- he l vs utoqetosb h a huinerd andi fourteen days, and I still can't find nothin'

McRathy asked subcomm mnembers, and then the mneet- sol ihi. e "wanted the ing -was adjourned at 4:29 p.m.a

SIMON,. . - . _ngIIeSTRr L is that Ad-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~see an as'o a white .veirt M-I sart gin me this

o 'effort etsong~~~~~~~~-an---------ht a HuenCntr wtn oeetogtvtchimano udom hslteMM~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~tesf ola htspoe ontwikeee.TejrinteWleXo t i e eeecst ubro

*11X~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. ...Jukestm fk"b ec.

.. ...... ..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~At onepoint

se o hvig Jnken nxt q e i o d Subns"ImfoBrklnsenlIdnttutnbdyIasth... ........~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

as to his own person'el knowledge of ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ...... . .....insel denied.... ..t. ...

1;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.g , '~ha' the c acbu d ? as 'octc.WaX%~~~pesue exre ogtSiepee-i smu c n s h r a o at £th olreenddtati c-etaltetmn.Stbist t d ta

wri~~~~~~~~~nkeorwlsyougtyumoebakWshte cuainX f h aMn s s e h tSietk h

-... >.-. ..- .. >>.................... :.:---.-& .-.--.... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~AP a -9 ALI .'.'..'_' .

I. I _ - I I ,I " ' I -'- I: "' - "':f"-. ,'

?.ws; , , ,5 -

Page Four

' -. Letiers~ . ~ ' .: . (Contim: -."" . has any spect

i. .; -- members. Ivygrowth -of a sp

'd; large groups o

i I

.,;?

tied from page 2)tators except the teamLeague spirit is an out-

;ports program bringingof people together. Lounger

(Continued fromyour point of order, Mr,McRathy: I'm getting

of being interrupted ina sentence. I insist thterial whether or riotwhich shows Admans aing together behindLounge counter, also irtire Walker staff befodown. The Cambridge

-attempting to make anbut the important thir

mans made a deliberatefavoritism to Spine inthe hearings on urchin,

staff suspended.

Chairman Munk, howthe point of order, andpleted his questioning

McRathy accused Tinshotplate in his room. Tivehemently, and demarRathy wanted to-makethat sort, then he shohis room to a hotplatejuncture, McRathy ch

ject and demanded to Ibrother had ever beeurchin. Joseph Belch,Walker side, then inquestion was irrelevsagreed with him.The afternoon was

tioning by the subcomby McRathy, who instepped down from thwould retain the right

ination of witnesses.Stubbins whether he

-D etermining opinion around the In-"" . -stitute is a difficult task, In trying to

decide how the freshman class 'felt- about the,rules question, the members

of the freshman council were askedto determine the feelings of their sec-

"{ions. At the meeting of April 12, with' 28 out of 30 sections represented, the

"vote was unanimous to support the. -F.C.C. report. This is the policy I have

been following at Institute Committeemeetings.

O'

I :

I :

CM Ch6 'c

II