$5-million grant to establish center for advanced study

12
Two others on probation Two expelled from dorms Building to start this year Harrington to head Center for Spare Research ! A third-year MIT student took part in Thursday's bomb raid on Cuban oil refin- eries. The student, a Back Bay resident, told The Tech he served as technical ad- visor in the preparation of the five home- made bombs that were used on the raid. Four cf the bombs were napalm fire bombs and the fifth was a 100-pound bomb made wZith a higher explosive. During the actual raid, the student served as part of a four-man crew led by Alexander Rorke Jr. The group of raiders also included a Cuban exile leader whon functioned as 'bombardier' - lighting .the 11-5second fuses with a cigar before releas- } ing the bombs. This raid marked the first time that Rorke has indicated a Cuban i as a member of his raiding party. Pre- I I I L ,1,I I s VI i I W I. ~ I .1 %I .. 'r; ram ~i' ·· i -·· In, ·· it _- , ;B ; · · ·· ·· ··· _," -t' :: ;i -TiC -4 ;C· it V i > v>- < -- i>{g-xt4< >- > .^ Technical advisor in preparing bomb - : - Tech student participates in air attack on oil refineries in Cubea viously reported raids had involved fother Boston area students, according to Rorke's statement to The Tech two weeks ago. The targets for this aerial raid were former Esso and Shell refineries, now un- der Cuban control, located in a suburb of Havana. The raiders arrived over the target area Thursday at 8:55 pm (Havama time) with the intent to bomb control ar- eas within the refineries. These control areas had been previously located by Cu- ban exile sources in Miami. When asked about Cuban defenses, the student replied, "We approached our tar- get at levels of 50-100 feet to avoid detec- tion by Cuban radar. Whenever wct were not ctherwise occupied, we watched for the MIG's. Fortunately, we did not see any- going in or coming out." He added that the flying conditions wIere very good throughcdt the entire operation. On the initial pass txvo bomnibs wiere dropped, according to the student. After a very sharp turn, the remaining three bombs wvere dropped as the plane flew out to s'a. Alter the raid, the student flew back to Bzr on in order to be in tinre for his Fri- day classes. Wlhen asked about missed xvcrk, the student replied, "I spent the entire weekend trying to catch up.' He: was located, however, by the Boston Trav- cler for an interviews that wAas printed 5Icnday afternoon. News reports from Cuba have indicated that the bombs did very little, if any, dam- age. The student commented. however. "There is a charce that you might do some damage, and the raid proves the value of an air operation." Dean of Student Affairs Kenneth R. W'adleigh said MIonday afternoon that he did not yet know who the student was, and that he would not plan any action until he had all the facts. Wadleigh said he woculd like to offer the student any help necessary. The student's first contact with Rorke cccurred after a Boston radio program about a month ago. in \which Rorke par- ticipated. At that time, the student indi- cated an interest in Rorke's operations and offered assistance. A five-miUllon-ollar grant has been made by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation for the establishment of a Center for Advanced Engi- neering Study. The new center, first of its kind in the world, will give practicing engineers and professors of en- gineering from other schools the opportunity to study at the fron- tiers of science and engineering. The establishment of the center comes in response to a national need for more engineering lead- ers who can exploit the most modern concepts of science, ac- cording to administration officials. Under plans developed for the center, $2.7 million of the grant will be used in the construction of a new building facing Massa- chusetts Avenue and extending northward from Building 7 to Building 33. The additional $2.3 million will be used for teaching expenses during the first five years of the center's operation. The center will comprise be- tween eighty and one hundred of- fices, a reading room, and class and lecture fooms. Each student wvill have his own office. It is planned that a limited number of engineers and teach- ers of engineering wlill be admit- ted in the fall of 1964. For the first three years, the center will experiment wzith cours- es of varying lengths, to adapt to the interests of the scholars and to the varying periods for which they may attend. Alfred P. Sloan Jr., chairman of the Sloan Foundation, initiated the plan to establish the Center for Advanced Engineezing Study. Last summer he wrote Dr. James R. Killian Jr., chairman of the corporation, inquiring whether there was not a national need for an opportunity for graduate engi- neers to study the modern dis- coveries cf science. At the request of President Ju- lius A. Stratton, a study of the value and feasibility of such a program was undertaken under the leadership of Dr. Gordon S. Brown, dean of the School of En- gineering. Dr. Brown's study re-empha- sized the urgency of rapid and continuous updating of the skills of engineers and engineer-manag- ers. It called attention to the im- portance of reducing the lag be- tween new scientific advances and their application to industrial use. "The establishment of this cen- ter reflects a grow.ing demand on cur universities to provide ad- vanced education beyond formal degree programs," he has stated. Vol. 83, No. 12 Carnbridge, Mass., Wednesday, May 1, 1963 5c $touffer Corporation, Restaurant Division, has received the con- ! tract for management of the food service in the new Student Cen- ter. A committee is presently being formed to set down specific plans for decor, menu, and service. The committee will consist of stu- dents; faculty members; the Cen- ter's architect, Professor Eduardo 'F. Catalano; and a representative of Stouffer's. The decision was made on the basis of conclusions reached by administrative members working with faculty members and stu- dents on the Activities Develop- ment Board and the Student Cen- ter Committee. Early planning included stud- ies of four large food-manage- ment corporations and visits to several of their operations. Ac- cording to administration officials, student opinion confirmed feeling that the 100-seat grill irn particu- lar must offer food that contrasts markedly in style with that of the institutional dining service. Stouffer's Restaurant Division will manage all dining service fa- cilities in the center, which in- Dr. Killian quits intelligenee post; Clifford named Dr. James R. Killian Jr., chair- man of the corporation, has re- cently resigned as chairman of the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. In accepting Killian's resigna- tion April 23, President John F. Kennedy reported that Clark M. Clifford will become the new chairman. IMr. Clifford, a Washington law- Yer, was special counsel to for- mer President Harry S. Truman. Of Dr. Killian's services as nhairman, the President has writ- ten: "It has been your hand which has held the board together, and not for the first time you have earned your country's thanks." Dr. Killian was President Eisen- t hower's first science advisor. He served in the Eisenhower admin- itration as chairman of a com- i .tee similar to the Kennedy ad- Inislration's Foreign Intelligenef Advisory Board. elude a 100-seat grill, adjoining dining rooms, a 300-seat cafeteria, catered banquet rooms, and a snack-bar. The Stouffer management that will be' developing the Student Center is the same management that developed and operates Top of the Sixes, in New York City; Top of the Rock, in Chicago; Top of the Mart, in Atlanta; Top of the Marine, in Milwaukee; and now Top of the Flame, in De- troit, as well as a number of less expensive restaurants in various parts of the country. The Restaurant Division also op- erates an experimental kitchen near Cleveland, which carries on extensive development of unusual recipes and foods. Ground breaking for the new Student Center is set for May 15, after the annual Awards Convo- cation. t t f The East Campus Judicial Committee found four residents guilty of "storage and use of dan- gercus chemicals" Saturday, Ap- ril 20. Two of the students were sen- tenced to indefinite "reporting probation." The other- two were expelled from the undergraduate dormitory system. An appeal by the two expelled students, contesting the severity of sentence, and an appeal by cne of the others, disputing the verdict, were turned down by the Dcrmrtcr1 Judicial Committee April 24. Cne student further appealed the case unsuccessfully to the In- stitute Committee Judicial Com- mittee last Sunday afternoon. In no other case since 1954 has the existing procedure for appeal been fully utilized. It was brought out in testimony that the four students involved had decided to retaliate to a hack perpetrated by a close friend, not an MIT student. After testing similar dosages on themselves, they administered a quantity of chloral hydrate to their friend. The drug has ef- fects similar to those of alcohol. They bound and blindfolded the friend and left him in one of the dark vaults beneath the Long- fellow Bridge: Revisiting the site less than two hours later, they discovered that their friend had escaped. Later that night, according to tes- timony, they met the victim and found him to be "wryly amused." At the trial, the five, including their friend, stressed that the hack was considered a "joke" by all concerned, and a harmless one at that. The Judicial Committee took a aifferent view. Delivering its ver- dict, the committee reported that it considered administration of a drug by those unqualified to do so as manifest "irresponsibility." Weatherall chosen Grad School officer Robert K. Weatherall has been appointed executive officer of the Graduate School. He was previ- ousiy associate dean of admis- sions. The position, a newly estab- lished one, was necessitated by the increasing size and complexi- ty of the graduate program, ac- cording to Dr. Harold L. Hazen, dean of the Graduate School. Mr. Weatherall is a native of Eton, England, and a graduate of Cambridge University. He came to MIT in 1956 as as- sistant to the dean of students. He became assistant to the direc- tor of admissions in 1958 and as- sociate director in 1962. Goody selected as architect for East Campus addition Professor Marvin A. Goody, of the Department of Architecture. has been selected as the archi- tect for the- proposed addition to the East Campus student housing facilities. No definite plans exist at this time. said Goody, and extensive investigation of the present sit- uation is needed. Dr. John V. Harrington, of Lin- coln Laboratorv, has been ap- pointed director of the four-mil- lion-dollar Center for Space Re- search. Mr. Lawrence E. Beckley '42 has been named a d ministrator Yf the center. C onstruction of the center, to be located )n Vassrar an Vassr Dr. Harrington Street behind Building 31, will' begin late this year. The scheduled completion date is 1965. Three million dollars c! the to- lal cost of the five-story building will be provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Admini- stration. The rest will come from the Second Century Fund. Dr. Harring- ton is a re- searcher in the Jevelopnment of -pace com- n u n ications 3nd in the am- plication of ra- dar techniques L. E. Beckley L. E. Beckley to the study of upper atmosphere and space phe- nonlena. Fcr the past five years, Dr. Halrringtcn has been head of the Division of Radio Physics at Lin- coln Laboratories. Born in New York City, he graduated from Cooper Union in 1940, received his master's degree fronl Brooklyn Polytechnic Insti- tute in 1948 and his doctor of sci- ence from MIT in 1958. Mr. Beckley. administrator of the center, received his bachel- or's degree from MIT ,and served as an aviation engineering officer in the United States Navy during Wcrld War II. Presently he is executive offi- cer cf the Division of Aerospace Research in the Department cf Ace-cnautics and Astronautics. $5-million grant to establish Center for Advanced Study Stouffer's wins contract for Student Center food Nash will read his poetry tonight Ogden Nash will read selections from his poems thi: evening at 8:00 in Kresge Auditorium. Nash, whcse presentation will be sponsored by the Lecture Series Ccmmittee. has wri;.ten m---n: volumes cf verse, including: 'Every- cne But Thee and Me,' 'You Can't Get There From Here,' 'The Private Dining Room,' 'Good Intentions,' 'The Primrose Prth,' and 'Parents Keep Out.' He attended Harvard University and is a member of the Ameri- can Academy of Arts and Letters. The lecture is free, and open to the public.

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Two others on probation

Two expelled from dorms

Building to start this year

Harrington to head Center for Spare Research

!A third-year MIT student took part in

Thursday's bomb raid on Cuban oil refin-eries. The student, a Back Bay resident,told The Tech he served as technical ad-visor in the preparation of the five home-made bombs that were used on the raid.Four cf the bombs were napalm firebombs and the fifth was a 100-pound bombmade wZith a higher explosive.

During the actual raid, the studentserved as part of a four-man crew led byAlexander Rorke Jr. The group of raidersalso included a Cuban exile leader whonfunctioned as 'bombardier' - lighting .the11-5second fuses with a cigar before releas-

} ing the bombs. This raid marked the firsttime that Rorke has indicated a Cuban

i as a member of his raiding party. Pre-

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i > v>- < --i>{g-xt4< >- > .^ Technical advisor in preparing bomb - : -Tech student participates in air attack on oil refineries in Cubea

viously reported raids had involved fotherBoston area students, according toRorke's statement to The Tech two weeksago.

The targets for this aerial raid wereformer Esso and Shell refineries, now un-der Cuban control, located in a suburb ofHavana. The raiders arrived over thetarget area Thursday at 8:55 pm (Havamatime) with the intent to bomb control ar-eas within the refineries. These controlareas had been previously located by Cu-ban exile sources in Miami.

When asked about Cuban defenses, thestudent replied, "We approached our tar-get at levels of 50-100 feet to avoid detec-tion by Cuban radar. Whenever wct werenot ctherwise occupied, we watched for the

MIG's. Fortunately, we did not see any-going in or coming out." He added thatthe flying conditions wIere very goodthroughcdt the entire operation.

On the initial pass txvo bomnibs wieredropped, according to the student. Aftera very sharp turn, the remaining threebombs wvere dropped as the plane flew outto s'a.

Alter the raid, the student flew back toBzr on in order to be in tinre for his Fri-day classes. Wlhen asked about missedxvcrk, the student replied, "I spent theentire weekend trying to catch up.' He:was located, however, by the Boston Trav-cler for an interviews that wAas printed5Icnday afternoon.

News reports from Cuba have indicated

that the bombs did very little, if any, dam-age. The student commented. however."There is a charce that you might dosome damage, and the raid proves thevalue of an air operation."

Dean of Student Affairs Kenneth R.W'adleigh said MIonday afternoon that hedid not yet know who the student was, andthat he would not plan any action untilhe had all the facts. Wadleigh said hewoculd like to offer the student any helpnecessary.

The student's first contact with Rorkecccurred after a Boston radio programabout a month ago. in \which Rorke par-ticipated. At that time, the student indi-cated an interest in Rorke's operationsand offered assistance.

A five-miUllon-ollar grant hasbeen made by the Alfred P. SloanFoundation for the establishmentof a Center for Advanced Engi-neering Study.

The new center, first of its kindin the world, will give practicingengineers and professors of en-gineering from other schools theopportunity to study at the fron-tiers of science and engineering.

The establishment of the centercomes in response to a nationalneed for more engineering lead-

ers who can exploit the mostmodern concepts of science, ac-cording to administration officials.

Under plans developed for thecenter, $2.7 million of the grantwill be used in the constructionof a new building facing Massa-chusetts Avenue and extendingnorthward from Building 7 toBuilding 33.

The additional $2.3 million willbe used for teaching expensesduring the first five years of thecenter's operation.

The center will comprise be-tween eighty and one hundred of-fices, a reading room, and classand lecture fooms. Each studentwvill have his own office.

It is planned that a limitednumber of engineers and teach-ers of engineering wlill be admit-ted in the fall of 1964.

For the first three years, thecenter will experiment wzith cours-es of varying lengths, to adapt tothe interests of the scholars andto the varying periods for whichthey may attend.

Alfred P. Sloan Jr., chairmanof the Sloan Foundation, initiatedthe plan to establish the Centerfor Advanced Engineezing Study.Last summer he wrote Dr. JamesR. Killian Jr., chairman of thecorporation, inquiring whetherthere was not a national need foran opportunity for graduate engi-neers to study the modern dis-coveries cf science.

At the request of President Ju-lius A. Stratton, a study of thevalue and feasibility of such aprogram was undertaken underthe leadership of Dr. Gordon S.Brown, dean of the School of En-gineering.

Dr. Brown's study re-empha-sized the urgency of rapid andcontinuous updating of the skillsof engineers and engineer-manag-ers. It called attention to the im-portance of reducing the lag be-tween new scientific advances andtheir application to industrial use.

"The establishment of this cen-ter reflects a grow.ing demand oncur universities to provide ad-vanced education beyond formaldegree programs," he has stated.

Vol. 83, No. 12 Carnbridge, Mass., Wednesday, May 1, 1963 5c

$touffer Corporation, RestaurantDivision, has received the con-

! tract for management of the foodservice in the new Student Cen-ter.

A committee is presently beingformed to set down specific plansfor decor, menu, and service. Thecommittee will consist of stu-dents; faculty members; the Cen-ter's architect, Professor Eduardo

'F. Catalano; and a representativeof Stouffer's.

The decision was made on thebasis of conclusions reached byadministrative members workingwith faculty members and stu-dents on the Activities Develop-ment Board and the Student Cen-ter Committee.

Early planning included stud-ies of four large food-manage-ment corporations and visits toseveral of their operations. Ac-cording to administration officials,student opinion confirmed feelingthat the 100-seat grill irn particu-lar must offer food that contrastsmarkedly in style with that ofthe institutional dining service.

Stouffer's Restaurant Divisionwill manage all dining service fa-cilities in the center, which in-

Dr. Killian quitsintelligenee post;Clifford namedDr. James R. Killian Jr., chair-

man of the corporation, has re-cently resigned as chairman ofthe Foreign Intelligence AdvisoryBoard.

In accepting Killian's resigna-tion April 23, President John F.Kennedy reported that Clark M.Clifford will become the new chairman.

IMr. Clifford, a Washington law- Yer, was special counsel to for- mer President Harry S. Truman.

Of Dr. Killian's services asnhairman, the President has writ-ten: "It has been your hand whichhas held the board together, and not for the first time you haveearned your country's thanks."

Dr. Killian was President Eisen- thower's first science advisor. Heserved in the Eisenhower admin- itration as chairman of a com- i

.tee similar to the Kennedy ad- Inislration's Foreign IntelligenefAdvisory Board.

elude a 100-seat grill, adjoiningdining rooms, a 300-seat cafeteria,catered banquet rooms, and asnack-bar.

The Stouffer management thatwill be' developing the StudentCenter is the same managementthat developed and operates Topof the Sixes, in New York City;Top of the Rock, in Chicago; Topof the Mart, in Atlanta; Top ofthe Marine, in Milwaukee; andnow Top of the Flame, in De-troit, as well as a number of lessexpensive restaurants in variousparts of the country.

The Restaurant Division also op-erates an experimental kitchennear Cleveland, which carries onextensive development of unusualrecipes and foods.

Ground breaking for the newStudent Center is set for May 15,after the annual Awards Convo-cation.

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The East Campus JudicialCommittee found four residentsguilty of "storage and use of dan-gercus chemicals" Saturday, Ap-ril 20.

Two of the students were sen-tenced to indefinite "reportingprobation." The other- two wereexpelled from the undergraduatedormitory system.

An appeal by the two expelledstudents, contesting the severityof sentence, and an appeal bycne of the others, disputing theverdict, were turned down by theDcrmrtcr1 Judicial Committee

April 24.Cne student further appealed

the case unsuccessfully to the In-stitute Committee Judicial Com-mittee last Sunday afternoon. Inno other case since 1954 has theexisting procedure for appealbeen fully utilized.

It was brought out in testimonythat the four students involvedhad decided to retaliate to ahack perpetrated by a closefriend, not an MIT student.

After testing similar dosageson themselves, they administereda quantity of chloral hydrate totheir friend. The drug has ef-fects similar to those of alcohol.

They bound and blindfolded thefriend and left him in one of thedark vaults beneath the Long-fellow Bridge:

Revisiting the site less thantwo hours later, they discoveredthat their friend had escaped.Later that night, according to tes-timony, they met the victim andfound him to be "wryly amused."

At the trial, the five, includingtheir friend, stressed that thehack was considered a "joke" byall concerned, and a harmless oneat that.

The Judicial Committee took aaifferent view. Delivering its ver-dict, the committee reported thatit considered administration of adrug by those unqualified to doso as manifest "irresponsibility."

Weatherall chosenGrad School officer

Robert K. Weatherall has beenappointed executive officer of theGraduate School. He was previ-ousiy associate dean of admis-sions.

The position, a newly estab-lished one, was necessitated bythe increasing size and complexi-ty of the graduate program, ac-cording to Dr. Harold L. Hazen,dean of the Graduate School.

Mr. Weatherall is a native ofEton, England, and a graduate ofCambridge University.

He came to MIT in 1956 as as-sistant to the dean of students.He became assistant to the direc-tor of admissions in 1958 and as-sociate director in 1962.

Goody selected as architectfor East Campus addition

Professor Marvin A. Goody, ofthe Department of Architecture.has been selected as the archi-tect for the- proposed addition tothe East Campus student housingfacilities.

No definite plans exist at thistime. said Goody, and extensiveinvestigation of the present sit-uation is needed.

Dr. John V. Harrington, of Lin-coln Laboratorv, has been ap-pointed director of the four-mil-lion-dollar Center for Space Re-search. Mr.Lawrence E.Beckley '42 hasbeen nameda d ministratorYf the center.

C onstructionof the center,to be located)n Vassraran Vassr Dr. HarringtonStreet behindBuilding 31, will' begin late thisyear. The scheduled completiondate is 1965.

Three million dollars c! the to-

lal cost of the five-story buildingwill be provided by the NationalAeronautics and Space Admini-stration. The rest will come fromthe Second Century Fund.

Dr. Harring-ton is a re-searcher in theJevelopnment of-pace com-n u n ications 3nd in the am-plication of ra-dar techniques L. E. BeckleyL. E. Beckleyto the study ofupper atmosphere and space phe-nonlena.

Fcr the past five years, Dr.Halrringtcn has been head of the

Division of Radio Physics at Lin-coln Laboratories.

Born in New York City, hegraduated from Cooper Union in1940, received his master's degreefronl Brooklyn Polytechnic Insti-tute in 1948 and his doctor of sci-ence from MIT in 1958.

Mr. Beckley. administrator ofthe center, received his bachel-or's degree from MIT ,and servedas an aviation engineering officerin the United States Navy duringWcrld War II.

Presently he is executive offi-cer cf the Division of AerospaceResearch in the Department cfAce-cnautics and Astronautics.

$5-million grant to establishCenter for Advanced Study

Stouffer's wins contractfor Student Center food

Nash will read his poetry tonightOgden Nash will read selections from his poems thi: evening at

8:00 in Kresge Auditorium.Nash, whcse presentation will be sponsored by the Lecture Series

Ccmmittee. has wri;.ten m---n: volumes cf verse, including: 'Every-cne But Thee and Me,' 'You Can't Get There From Here,' 'ThePrivate Dining Room,' 'Good Intentions,' 'The Primrose Prth,' and'Parents Keep Out.'

He attended Harvard University and is a member of the Ameri-can Academy of Arts and Letters. The lecture is free, and opento the public.

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Lobby, Building #10Tuesday. May 7-Wednesday, May 8

Wednesdlay May 159:30 A.M.-3:45 P.M. - $5.00 Deposit

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Pitfalls in city planningsubject of lecture tonight

The fourth and final lecture inthis year's Arthur D. Little serieson City Planning will be deliveredtoday at 8:00 pm in Room 7-403.

Dr. Louis Winnick, of the Ur-ban Affairs Program of the FordFoundation, will discuss 'SomePitfalls in City Planning Theory.'The program is open to the pub-lic.

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Write for 10-day free trial of DarrellHuff's book SCORE: THE STRATEGY OFTAKING TESTS. You pay only $3.76 pluspostage if you keep it. Address: Mere-dith Press, Dept. MIT 463, 1716 LocustStreet, De! Moines 3. Iowa.

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The tenth annual convention ofthe Society of Technical Writersand Publishers will be held atBoston's Statler-Hilton from May15 to 18.

The theme of the conventionwill be 'The Revolution in Tech-nical Communication.'

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One of the 14,000 visitors to Open House lastSaturday plays tic tac toe on the TX-O in Building 26.This exhibit was one of the more than 150 at OpenHouse. -Photo by Stephen Bless

T~P'8Z JEVNEWVIN THE MIAY

Barbara W. Tuchman: "The Any:ists"- an Atlantic Extra. An unuiaccount of the advocates and thetory of the idea of a stateless sodchere and abroad.

ALSO"John L. Lewis and the Mine W,ers": New York Times writer/kRaskin looks at a "skeleton of a unitthirty years after its heyday.

"A Rough Map of Greece": Adventsin the Greek island of Mykonos byTqAtlantic's Phoebe-Lou Adams.

"Sunday Evening": A Poem bytHughes.

What happens when an out-standing staff of edi-tors sets out to pro-duce a magazine of the highest academic

and cultural interest?You'll know when youread The Atlantic. Ineach issue you'll findfresh new ideas, ex-

-citing literary tech-niq ues,keen analyses of current affairs anda high order of crit-icism. Get your copy today.

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A new MTA bus route betweenMIT and North Station will beginoperation Monday, June 24, aspart of an experiment in masstransportation.

The buses will operate Mondaythrough Friday from 7:00 am to7:00 pr, at ten-minute intervalsduring rush hours and fifteen-minute intervals at other times.The fare will be ten cents.

The buses will run from NorthStation, via Causeway Street,Nashua Street, Storrow Drive, theLongfellow Bridge, Main Street,and Vassar Street, to Massachus-etts Avenue, then north on Massa-chusetts Avenue to Main Streetand back along Main Street tothe Longfellow Bridge, returningto North Station.

The route is one of five newbus experiments being conductedby the Mass Transportation Com-mission of the Commonwealth ofMassachusetts. To begin in lateJune, the experiments are partof a $5.4-million mass transporta-tion demonstration program. Two-thirds of this sum is a $3.6 mil-lion grant from the Office ofTransportation of the Housing andHome Finance Agency, and the

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Mass Transportation Commissionhas "purchased a certain experi-mental pattern of service" fromthe Metropolitan Transit Authori-ty in a one-year contract, whichmay be cancelled after six monthsby either the MITC or the MTA.

Dr. Maloney cited two reasonsfor the choice of the North Sta-tion-MIT route as part of whathe called a "laboratory experi-ment." Rail service to North Sta-tion has recently been improved;and the MIT area, including near-by industrial and research facibi-ties as well as the Institute it-self, is a center of employment.

remaining $1.8 milCommonwealth.

According to itstMr TNr Tcwprxn IF

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Developer of gyroscope Wr'er.publishersto meet May 15.1814,000 visitors attendZ Saturday's Open House

to lecture in KresgeElmer A. Sperry Jr., engineer and inventor

who helped develop the gyroscope into an indis-pensible instrumnent for airplanes, will give thefifth annual Lester D. Gardner Lecture on the his-tory of aeronautics at 3:30 pm in the Little Thea-ter of Kresge Auditorium.

Mr. Sperry will describe the history of aircraftinstrumentation from its origins up to World WarII. He will deal particularly with development ofgyroscopic instruments and with development ofgyroscopic stabilization equipment.

Speiry will trace the development of flyingfrom the days of visual reference only, throughblind flying, to fully automatic flight control.

The Gardner Lectures, given under the auspi-ces of the Department of Aeronautics and Astro-nautics, are made possible by a bequest of thelate Major Lester D. Gardner '98.

Mr. Sperry's career in gyroscopic instrumenta-tion began in 1910 when he helped his father,

Elmer A. Sperry Sr., founder ofthe company that bears the fam-lin1 ily name, build the first ship'snlink r gyro compass and test it aboardthe USS Delaware.

ion The Sperry firm was a pioneerin applications of the gyroscope

Ilion is from the to instrumentation. It developedthe directional gyro and artificial

executive direc- horizon in the 1920's, makingv M.nnnv. thp blind flying possible.

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Transistorized model

E E sophs assemble oscilloscopesSelected students in 6.70, the are the product of ten or twelve

Student Center Committee seeks freshme

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Activities Council Chairman Bob Popadic (left) isdunked at the Zeta Beta Tau booth at Saturday's APOCarnival. Above, a student tries his strength at theTechnique booth. ZBT won the prize for the second-most-successful booth, following Phi Delta Theta,which collected about 1600 tickets. Lauren Villen-euve, date of John Kassakian '65, was chosen Carni-val Queen. The 26 booths collected 11,500 ticketsfrom the 2800 people attending the carnival.

:onfer Grad studentsident Julius A. hurt in collision1 Wadleigh willlstitute Commit- James P. Geiser '62, a graduatestudent govern- student, was seriously injured in11 then be dis- an automobile accident last Sat-

urday at the intersection of Mass-achusetts Avenue and Memorial

w Inscomm will Drive. Geiser, riding on a motor-s program. cycle, was struck when the car

he had attempted to pass made a!n members U-turn. He was seriously hurt

and was taken to Mount AuburnI leave their Hospital in Cambridge, where he

Hendricks in underwent surgery Monday after-,_ __ _ _ ~noon.

Hospital officials described his1condition M o n d a y night as

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sophomore laboratcry in experi-mental electronics, are buildingoscilloscopes this term. If theprojects prove successful, all stu-dents taking the course may takepart in this program in futureyears. The Department of Elec-trical Engineering has believed,for some-- time, that studentsshould develop their own equip-ment as they proceed through thesequence of laboratory courses.

In the past they have beengiven kits of basic componentswith which they might build a fewsimple devices for use in thelaboratory. The oscilloscope isone instrument which they couldnot build from their kits.

Costly InstrumentProviding commercially built

oscilloscopes for each student isan expensive project, since agood but simple one costs from$350 to $450. Prof. Richard Thorn-ton, who is in charge of thecourse, has designed an oscillo-scope kit which students may as-semble themselves. The cost ofone of these instruments is aboutone third of the price of the com-mercial model.

Transistorized ModelProf. Thornton's design utilizes

the most advanced techniques inthe art of electronics. It is awholly new transistorized model.The present vacuum tube models

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years of intensive development byindustry. So far, no commercialoscilloscope has been successfullytransistorized.

The project is being carried outunder the close supervision of theinstructors, by students speciallyselected for the program. Thesestudents have already completedabout half the normal number oflaboratory projects before start-ing this one.

It is expected that they willonly complete part of the assem-bly work by the end of the term.The work may be finished by thesame students in 6.71, the nextsequential laboratory course, orby another group of 6.70 students.

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0 Education is never-endinga -~~~~~~~~~eeEditor's note: The first section of this edi-

torial is reprinted, with permission, from Satur-.~ day's edition of The New York Times. In the

second section, we add our own views on the-cenl/er.

< -The $5 million grant by the Alfred P.2 Sloan Foundation to the Massachusetts>2 Institute of Technology for the establish-< ment of a Center of Advanced Engineer-u ing Study is significant far beyond theZa frontiers of one campus. It is a hint of

the future pattern of education and man-power.

The first hint came two years agowhen Princeton's Woodrow Wilson

u School of Public and International Af-v- fairs was anonymously given $35 millionua for the advanced training of highly edu--r-v- cated persons in government service.

Now, MIT will offer similar advancedmid-career or catch-up education topracticing engineers, industrial engineer-ing managers and professors of engineer-ing.

This is not graduate education-, noreven post-doctoral training, in the con-ventional sense. It is recognition of theentirely novel fact that the rapid pace ofdiscovery and the constantly expandingfrontiers of knowledge and techniquesthreaten to expose even the most highlyeducated teachers and practitioners inmodern society to early obsolescence.

Thus the Sloan grant points to aneducational roadmap which winds in andout of school and university, with experi-ence in the field continually reinforcedby renewed contact with the world ofacademic research and scholarly investi-gation. It is probable that many promis-ing young people are now frightenedaway from careers in areas which ad-vance so fast that the considerable in-

Vol. LXXXIII No. 12 May 1, 1963BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman ............................ Tobias Zidle'63Managing Editor. David Trevvett '65Ed itor................................ Jason Fane '64Business Manager .............. Howard Brauer '65News Editor ........................ Howard Ellis'65Features Editor .......... Richard Schmalensee '65Sports Editor .................. Clifford Weinstein '65Photography Editor ............... Joseph Baron '66Entertainment Editor .Mona Dickson '66Advertising Manager . Bernard Yaged '64Associate Managing Editor. Linda Rollin '64Associate Editor ..Ronald Frashure'64Associate Sports Editor.John Reintjes '66Associate Photography Editors ... Maxim Smith '64

Conrad Grundlehner '64Copy Editor. Lyall Morrill '66Controllernneth Grace '63Treasurer ........................ Gac'6Treasurer. Man r . .... Malcolm Wheeler '66Circulation Manager . .........Kenneth Browning '66Typographic Consultant Joseph Hanlon '63News Staff .... Alan Rinsky '64. Alan Weinstein '64

Chris Blum, Donald Goldstein '65Stephen Katzberg '65, Ronald Lundquist '66Gary Spittal '66, Joseph Sullivan '66

David Vanderwerf '66Sutikshan Prakash '65Features Staff .. Clare Fetrow'63, Farbara Cohen '64Steven Lipner '65, George Mc~uilken '65Susan Hemley '66, John Montanus '66Anthony Pappas '66. Richard Russell '66

Eugene Sherman '66, Michael Shorenstein '66Edward Steinberg '66. Jeffrey Trimmer '66James Veilleux '66Sports Staff .James Taylor '63, John Eck '64Christopher Miller 64. David Schlossberg '64Donald Siefkes '64. Richard Minnick '65

Ted Young '65. Robert Frommer '66Robert MacDonald '66. Michael Newhouse '66John Rible '66Photography Staff.Ralph Grabowski '63

Harold luzzolino '64, Sanford Libman '65Arthur Sindoris '65, Saul Mooallem '66William Park '66, Stephen Teicher '66

John Eulenberg '64, John Torode 66Photographic Consultants. Boyd Estus '63Curtis Wiler'63Reviewers ...- Paul Zakrzewski, David Johnson '63Lawrence Stark. Gilberto Perez-Guillermo'64Business Staff .. Robert Lurie '66, Henry Perritt '66

Ernest Cataldo '66Deadlines: Noon Thursday-advertising: 3:00 pmSaturday-features, activities, letters to The Tech;11:00 pm Saturday -_photography; noon Sunday -sports, entertainment: 7:00 om Monday-news.

Second-class postage paid at Boston. Massachusetts.The Tech is piblishea every Wednesday during thecollege year. except during college vacations, by TheTech, Walker Memorial (Room 50-21t;. 142 MemorialDrive, Cambridge 39. Massachusetts. Telephones:TRowbridge 6-5855: Trowbridge 6-5856: UNiversity4-6900, extension 2731. United States mail subscriptions$2.75 for one year, $4.25 for two years.

This week's title picture, on Page 1, is a viewof the Building 10 facade as seen from the GreatCourt. Building 10 is the central section of IhcInstitute's main complex. Rising above it is theGreat Dome, symbol of MIT.

vestment of time and money in theirundergraduate and professional educa-tion may be too rapidly jeopardizedthrough obsolescence. The steps taken,first at Princeton and now at MIT, sug-gest that trained men (and women) neednot resign themselves to an inevitablefate of being pushed aside by progress.

0 0 0

The new Center will be the first ofits kind in engineering, although previ-ous centers at Princeton for governmentand at MIT for industrial managementare similar in concept.

The Center is designed to help topengineers in industry and professors ofengineering from other universities tomaster the new sciences that haveemerged since their professional educa-tion.

United States industry is often un-able to adopt new technology as rapidlyas it should, because of the scarcity ofkey technical people who have workingfamiliarity with the most up-to-date sci-ence and technology.

Center The gap between theresearch frontier and con-

promotes temporary industrial prac-education tice is often dangerously

large, not so much becauseof a shortage in numbers of engineers as-because of the lack of thcsc who canwork at the technical frontier.

As President Kennedy wrote in theforeword to a manpower report of theScience Advisory Committee, ". . . re-quirements for the more highly trainedengineers, mathematicians, and physicalscientists are rapidly outstripping our ca-pability to produce them."

Dean Gordon S. Brown '31 points outthat the quickest way to fill this gap inboth numbers and capability is to updatethe professional men now in industryand education. Half of the nation's 800,-000 engineers graduated more than 10years ago, and thus studied a now-out-moded curriculum.

Some of the new fields that havegrown rapidly during the last 10 yearsinclude solid-state physics and molecularengineering, feedback control, inertialguidance, nuclear engineering, computertechnology, and extra-terrestrial engi-neering, and so on.

Many of these new areas have be-come disciplines of major scope andgreat impact on our military and eco-nomic strength.

The new Center is intended to be anintegral part of the School of Engineer-ing in both function and location. It willbe located adjoining Building 7 on Mas-sachusetts Avenue.

The air-conditioned building will con-tain classrooms, a reading room, andabout 90 offices for students and profes-sors. It will use existing laboratory andlibrary facilities.

The constant mixing of SCenter students with the Shortagerest of MIT is intended to of toppromote a maximum dia-logue -of ideas, so that peo- peopleple in the center will contribute to MIT'seducation of students.

Vital as the work of the Center is, itis important that it must not be a burdenon any of the present MIT resources.Thus there will be a need for expansionof the MIT faculty when the Center be-gins operation. Forseeing this need, theSloan Foundation grant includes $2.5million for teaching costs in the Center.

A week ago Tuesday three otherMIT representatives and I attend-ed a meeting of international re-'lations clubs of representativeschools in the Boston area

The obstensible purpose of thatmeeting was to discuss whether itwould be profitable to jointly spon-sor a model United Nations in thecoming year. Earlier, it had beensuggested that MIT would be anideal host school, so we went witha cautious attitude.

In discussing this possibilityprior to the April 23 meeting, wedecided that a standard modelUN, with its emphasis on learningof the procedural and mechanicalcharacteristics of the United Na-tions, would not be a desirableInstitute Committee project.

Rather, we chose to suggest aninternational conference woven in-to a United Nations format. Werewe to sponsor such an event, thechances are that it would be ona single topic of International Re-lations.

However, each participatingschool would try to approach the

topic from the point of view of aparticular nation, preferably owhich was actually representsby one or more foreign student,from its student body.

In addition, we considered a.ding another new twist-that dasking some of our own foreitstudents to act as advisors to tNvarious delegations that would at.tend.

The idea was well received, ar'we have been asked to draft so0~kind of proposal. At the InstituteCommittee meeting last Thursday,several good points were made.

Such a conference would fatonly one topic, and would be edu.cational rather than mechanicaLIn addition, this would not be auannual affair, as it was felt thatthe value to the MIT communitywould be substantially 'less thesecond time around. These idAwould be incorporated into anyproposal advanced.

As usual, if you have any strongfeelings on this topic, I urge youto communicate them to us.

New Humanities head feelschange characterizes MIT

By Sutlkshan Prakash appointed to review the Institute"MIT has come closer to main- requirement in humanities and so.

taining traditions of innovation cial studies. The committee is:than any other university in Am- working tdi-ough a series of que& ierica," according to Prof. Richard tions like: "How should the eightM. Douglas. Formerly professor courses of humanities best be!of history at Amherst College, used?" "How much time shouldDouglas was appointed head of the be assigned to inter-disciplinary Humanities Department in Feb- courses such as those in the cur.ruary. rent curriculn, and how much to

Commenting on why he chose to single-discipline courses?come to a primarily technological Study of social problemsinstitution, he has said, "The Prof. Douglas says that the de.thing -that always attracted me partment is convinced of the needabout MIT is a tolerance for new of single - discipline c o u r s e s.ideas, innovation, and a certain "Every student should be obligedimpatience with custom as the to discover the meaning and theautomatic guide to the establish- importance of a non-scientific,ment of curriculum. MIT lives off non-engineering discipline. Tecertain energies of innovation." professional course should be sup-

He does not feel that top stud- plemented by a modest but im-ents should come to a -technical portant experience of a human--institute for majoring in human- istic social discipline. Problemsities. "Training here is profession- concerned with understanding hu-al, while in a liberal arts college man society, artistic experience Ethey will get a much greater con- and expression, need to be under- !centration of humanities. Those stood."who do come here, however, have His general impression of MITthe advantage of pursuing human- is that no university in Americaistic studies in a scientific en- has so important and profound anvironment." impact on American society andNot enough humanities

policy.Even though all MIT under-graduates spend almost one-fifth One might say that nowhereof their time studying humanities, does the study of humanities andaccording to Prof. Douglas, it s social sciences matter more thannot nearly enough. "Any less time it does here."would not add up to anything dur- Prof. Douglas, who is 41 yearsable or substantial. The eight- old, is married and has two chil-ccurse requirement is as lean as dren. His wife and children ameyou could have to mean anything. his primary non-scholarly interC.It is less, for example, than that ests, along with photography. Heat the California Institute of Tech- received his Ph.D. from Harvard,nology or the Case Institute of taught at the College of Wooster,Technology. 1947-1949, and was a FulbrightA committee of ten has been Fellow in 1952 and 1953.

SOME DOGS SOME 00OS CRltE STICKA~E FUN TO WHEN qOO THROW THEM...PLAYT'WITH-..

SOME DOG5 CHASE 5TICK'•AND THEN 1iNG THEM BAcK.. ARE PRETD -

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P E A N U T S -e~ e ar . ..I a n d S u n d a y . * h. · H e al

I

Inside IwsonuInternational relations j

conference may be at MIT Iby Jerry Luebbers, UAP

Making the Sene A Music groupsTHIES WEEX S M T W T F S cob's Intrada from '3,{usic for aC U S~SIC M T W T F S Festival; May 5, 3:30. Bach's 'Mass

t tUniversity Symphony Band - 1 2 3 4 in B minor'; S2.50, S3.50.o 1, 8:30, School of Fine and THEATRE

pplied Arts; Persichetti's Symphony 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 - Euripedes in Greekjo P6, Bo zza'ss 'Concertino for Trum- 12 13 14 Hay Outdoor Theatre, 4:30, N-ay 2.

' tS Stravinsky's Concerto for Pi- l l 3:00. May 4, Wellesley College.etand WiSrav InstY oner'ts, Hinde- The Shelter' - from a story by PRod

nt ,aSdymhiny ain Bme-flat. h ton M moi eSerling, May 3-4. R:00. Alumnae.ith' smn a Eric - Houhton Memorial Chapel, May 5. Hall. Wellesley College; .50.i Sa ndSigers Thatr Se, lon Oachym3i8t: N8:00; Haydn's B-flat major Mass.' I-S, ('la,,sles Sebrles - '-M' MNay 3.__.Snner s Th'heatre , M ay 3, 8:30 Krese New E gan C o n-

ac .e$tial -WMay.Gardnler istoum - New England Con- fRoom 10-250 6:30, 9:00; -% is di-lntemitin D e estvai - May 3 servatory Tour Chorus. May 5, 3:00; rected by Fritz Lan.g - starring8:30, Kresge Audit.; songs from fhe music of Bach, Brahms. Hovhannes Peter Lorre. Based on an actualPhilippinips, India, Prakistan Greece, Schickle, Schonberg, Loesser, and murder caVe, it is consiered one ofAfrica, Korea, the Arab nation;, others. the finest German films. GermanyScandinavia. Latin America; S2.00, Boston Youth Symphony Orche,,tra - 1931S1.50. May 5' Jordan Hal l, 3:00; Mozart'sCa'.ey Anderson -- May 4. 8:30, New s L(' Entertainment '-eries - 'BirdConcerto in C minor, and Clarinet Man of Alcatraz.' May 4. KresgeEn'gland Life Hall; oncerto in A. major, Rossini's Ov- Audit., 2:15, 6:00 9:; Burt Lan-$2.00. erture to 'La Gazza Ladra,' Bruck-lay Charles .-- with orchestra, Don- caster, Karl 'Malden. Thelma Ritter.ner's Symphony in E-flat majorM mCh rle l - wiTheatr ce stra.0 ID on- ner's Symphony In E-flat major Edm ond O'Brien. Based on the truenellY Memorial Theatre, 8:00, 10:30. Goodman's Canon for Percussion. story of Robert Stroud, a life-term-.May 4. Rimsky-Korsakov's 'Capriccio Es- er yho has been in prison since 1909

-Evening of Music' - Burke Family pagnol'; free. where he became a woril-renownedSingers, Boston Salon Orchestra, MIT Spring 'Festival of M,.Mic - May auhori on birds.Donnelly Memorial Theatre, May 5,' 4-5 Kresge Atidit.; May 4, `:30.8:15. Walter Piston's 'Suite from the In- . MI 'SCELLANEOUs

Tpeh Night at the PoPs -.- May 5, credible Flutist.' Lalo's 'Symphorlie 'I. 'Illlain Fulbright - 'The Ameri-8:30 symphony Hall; $3.50, $3.00, Espagnole,' Sander's Symphony in can Agenda.' Cohen Audit.. TuftsS2.50, $2.00, $1.50, $1.00 B-flat for Concert Band, Schon- University, May 1, 8:30; free.

weleslej' Choir, Amherst Glee Club - berg's "Theme and Variations,' Ja- Ogden Nash - May 1. Kresge Audit.

. ,--: - '~~~~~~~. ~ ~ B vy T o b yvZ id le '63 :-. .: j -

Cc~ee Daily Campus editor suspended;New Student Life editor protested

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the day of the election, however, was not just anobjective appraisal. It was, instead, an endorse-ment for two candidates for Senate President andVice-President.

This stunned the other 'members of the Board.In fact, they called an emergency meeting thatafternoon.

The result of that meeting was a unanimousdecision to relieve the editor of his duties andplace him on suspension. A front-page editorialon the following day said, "It is the opinion of theBoard that (the editor) has done the Daily Campusirreparable harm and that he has betrayed thebasic trust which is implicit in his position asEditor."

The suspension remained in ef-". " z" .. feet for almost weeks until a.:::- :': meeting was held to give the edi-

:.,/, , tor a chance to explain his ac-

' ::- :After- the hearing, the Board:::.:.:.:::: voted to request the editor's re-

· i .::: :.:- signation because they felt they· " : ... could no longer work with him.

The editor asked for, and wasgranted, 24 hours to consider therequest

:.. :::",'At the next day's meeting, how-:. ' ': .ever, the editor said he did not

wish to resign and asked furtherto be allowed -to conduct an elec-tion meeting already scheduledfor that week.After discussion, the request was

:.....:::::::: allowed and the elections held.The elections were routine, but

" ....the events preceding them were........ not as common..:!..:,.,.~i.:The Opposite End

Newspaper elections were also' recently held at Washington Uni-

.> , i .. versity in St. Louis. In this case,however, editors are not electedby the newspaper's Board of Di-rectors, but by the University's

I.%f ~ Board of Publications.//;:ffff.. Four students filed applications

for the position of editor of the6/ zi:.'.. Student Life. One of these, of

"course, was elected. Immediatelyafterwvard, however, a protest wasmade to the dean of studentsthat personal bias had entered

- into the decision of several mem-,"': b:.:.:::ers of the Board of Publications

and that the Board was numeri-I:.:)'.::...-.:. cally incomplete, thus depriving.... the publication of proper repre-

sentation.The dean concurred with the

objections and ordered anotherelection. In the meantime, one

Z. ~. . of the Board members resignedand two new members were ap-pointed. Following anotherlengthy round of interviews and

..... discussions, a second candidateHoat~ .. was elected to the editorship...:.::.: -'.: i An immediate protest was once

again lodged. this fime by thePresident of the Student Senate,who questioned the general valid-ity of the meeting and the propri-ety of the new appointments tothe Board.

ly helps | The dean of students then, goes agreed to convene the Board of~, goes Student Affairs to review the

area of legality of the various meetings.___ |After a four-hour meeting. theMtJ |'BSA ruled the first meeting of

the Board of Publications to be,1 ny! hi gthe valid meeting.Ilaily! The staff of the Student Life

has protested the BSA ruling,charging that the editorship hadbeen made a pawn of studentgovernment politicians and thatit "destroyed the autonomy ofthe paper."

The Management of Scientists - May2, Dr. Roydan Sanders, 'InterfaceProblems Betwepn Scientists andothers in Technically Oriented Com-panies.' May 6, Dr. Norman Kap-lan, 'Organization: Will it Choke orPromote the Growth of Scientists?'Alumni Audit. Northeastern 1'nlver-sity, S:30.

IS.A Fun Fair - May 4, noon to mid-night, International Student Associ-ation.

Ford Hall Forum - Prof. H. StuartHughes. 'The Politics of Peace,' Jor-dan Hall, %:00. May 5.

NEXT WEEKMUSIC

New England ('onservatory - DonaldWilling, organist. May 10, .S:30Memorial Music Hall; Bach's Fan-tasia and Fugue in G minor, andSonata V, Handel's Concerto in Gminor, Widor's Symphony VI, Vierne's Schezo from Symphony II.Strube's 'Cakewalk.' Bach's Toccatain F major; free.

Brandel% Folk 'Fe-stiva - Ullman Am-pitheater, Brandeis University, May10, evening concert, 'May 11, guitaran l banjo workshop, "Nationalities'afternoon concert. evening concert;S1.00 per afternoon event, S2.25 perevening event.

All Star Folk Showcase - May 11,Bates Hall, Huntington Ave. YMCA,

S:30; hootenanny.Gardner Museum - Lawrence Smith,

pianist May 12, 3:00.THEATRE

'Orpheus and Eurydice' - May 9-11,University Theatre, Boston U'niver-sity.

'Heinry I, Part I' - Shakespeare.May 9-11, 15-1%, Loeb Drama Cen-ter. 8:00.

tr:0 i('ELLANEOUSThe Management of Scientists - Alum-

ni Audit. S:30, Northeastern ' ni-versity; May 9, Dr. Anne Roe, 'ThePsychology of Scientists,' May :13,Dr Herbert A. Shepard, 'AdaptiveProcesses for Research and Innova-,lion.'

'Latin American Carnival' - May 11,Severance Green, Wellesley College,2:00.

ISA Fun Fair boothsto represent 20 nations

The fifteenth annual Fun Fairof the International Student As-sociation of Greater Boston willbe held May 4 at the association'sheadquarters at 33 Garden Street,Cambridge.

More than twenty booths rep-resenting countries in Africa, theNear East, South America, theOrient, Scandinavia, and Europewill be open from noon to mid-night. They will feature foods,arts, and crafts of the differentnations. Gifts typical of the coun-tries will be on sale.

A variety show will be present-ed on an open-air stage. by stu-dents presenting dances and songsfrom foreign countries.

combine to giveSpring Festival

The. Choral Society, Glee Club,Symphony Orchestra, ConcertBand, and Brass Choir will com-bine to give two consecutiveweekends of choral and orchestramusic May 4-5 and 10-12 in KresgeAuditorium.

The concerts May 4 and May 11at 8:30 will present the SymphonyOrchestra in a performance ofthe 'Suite from in Incredible Flut-ist' by Walter Piston and the Lalo'Symphonie Espagnole.' Coed Jan-et Stober will play solo violin.

On the same program, the Con-cert Band will give 'Theme andVariations, Opus 43A' by Schoen-berg, and Robert Sanders's 'Sym-phony in B-flat for Concert Band.'The Brass Choir will give a Buon-amente sonata and will act as anantiphonal choir in the Intradafrom 'Music for a Festival' byGordan Jacob.

May 5 at 3:30 and May 10 at8:30, the Choral Society and theCambridge Festival Orchestrawill present Bach's 'B-MinorMass,' with soloists Dorothy Ren-zi, soprano; Eunice Alberts, con-tralto; Donald Sullivan, tenor andThomas Pyle, baritone.

The closing day, May 12 at 3:00,will feature a performance ofFranz Joseph Haydn's The Sea-sons' with the Glee Club andthe Douglas College Choir, ac-companied by the Cambridge Fes-tival Orchestra. Soloists will beCatherine Linville, soprano; Wal-ter Carringer, tenor; and JohnPowell, baritone.

Tickets for each event are $2.50and $3.50, on sale in the lobbyof Building 10 from 12:00 to 2:00weekdays.

Greenwald to speak todayCrawford Greenwald, a mem-

ber of the corporation, will speakthis afternoon on bird songs at4:00 pm in Room 26-100. The talkwill be sponsored by the Depart-ment of Biology.

SpecialSTUDENT OFFER -

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THE TRIAL. by Franz Kafka,adl!,pted and directed by JosephEveringharm. assisted by HelenBottornly I-rumby, presented bythe Dramashop. Lighting (esigner.Larry Valby '63; set designer,Richard Krasin, '63; costume de-signer, John Leide '6G; stagernman;Lger, Philips Hoeper. '63:]rolerty mistress, Caroline Craw-ford; sound effects, StephenSchuman. '64; make-up, Joanand ()avid Dunton; musical set-tings. Fredl Prahl.

Cast included:Joseph K ..... .Roger Gans '63F'r;lu Grubach .. ILilian AylwardPolice Inspector, etc ............

Joseph MorlanErma. etc ....... iiriam DushmanFraulein Burstner ................

Norma AndlersonLaundress ........ Joan TolentinoFraulein MontaF: . .Beatrice PailpertUncle Albert . Rob Lanchester '63Advocate ... .. Fredt Prahl '63Leni ................ Sonia GrantRutdi Block ..... Michael JacobsTitorelli ........ Davijd Liroff '65Priest ........ PRichard Reese '66Childtren .. . Debby Wernuth, _ric

Wermuth. Gaye Mouse,Donna House

Taking several roles ..... . StevenFrank '63; Garv Feldman '63:Thomas Snrila '65; BarryWarner'6.5: Jeffrey Meldman '65

was at all times correctly believ-able in a highly unbelievable sit-uation.

K. seeks.aid from several wornen during his trial, and thesewere also well-played roles: Asthe mother-figure Frau Grubach,his landlady, Lilian Aylward; asFraulein Burstner, a lawyer's

While Leni (Sonia Grant) looksGans '63) denounces the bedriddeniBlock (Michael Jacobs) grovels on his-fa's 'The Trial' Wednesday, Thursday,,last week.

secretary whose only asset is her rloving nature, Narma Anderson;as her freind Fraulein Montag, who puts an end to this affair, pBeatrice Paipert; as the laundIress who sleeps with judges, Joan p4Tolentino; as Leni, the maid and di&mistress of a famous Advocate, t0Sonia Grant. t

Almost all these girls (Montag wand Grubach are the exceptions) botfall immediately for Joseph K., til4and their roles as willing but theuseless tools are almost identical, p.It is a credit to both the director Iand his actresses, then, that each °4-one emerged as an individual ma-portrait.

The play proceeds as a series Ib;of individual interviews, broken k.at four points by crowd scenes. PiOn the small Little Theatre stage, these crowds were very effective ga-ly managed the more so Iesince most of then were massed whin front of the curtain, to cover fiscene changes behind it.

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Franz Ktheatre .,By Charles Foster Ford

Franz Kafka's works have theappearan¢? of carefully recordeddream-sequences. They neverseem to arrive where they saidthey we:e going. Like dreams,they are loaded with opaque sym-bolism, which is unceasingly in-terpreted. I've been told, for in-stance, 'that the unnamed crimeof which Franz K. is accused in'The Trial' is insensitivity to hisfellow men. I have yet to seethis convincingly documented.

The adaptation staged by Jo-seph Everingham and the Drama-shop last week was pure Kafkafor the first half: chaotic, sur-prising, incomplete, charged withvery real emotions in very unrealsettings. In the second half,however, the materials of the no-vel were used in a much moretheatrical fashion, and the resultwas quite close to the best "Thea-tre of The Absurd" style.

As Joseph K., the puzzled-de-fendant, Roger Gans was brill-iant. From his initial arroganceand independence, through hisgrowing concern and his craftyattempts to seek aid, to his finalresignation to his fate, Mr. Gans

's 'The Trial' a superb:afka

Buy Af the C-

. . Luis Bunvel'si "The Criminal Life of ·* Archibaldo de la Cruz"

: 530 7:30 9:30 Sat. mat. at 3:30

m Starting Sunday cWJacques Demy's "Lola"

ac 5:30 7:30 9:30Sat. and Sun. at. at 3:30

mueuauiU-ib-¥uem u*enmueoanum-u

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Expresso Nightwith Jackie Washington and Mitch Greenhill

Boston University School of Fine andApplied Arts Lounge

855 Commonwealth AvenueFriday, May 3, 8 pm

Sponsored by the class of 64 of the college of liberal arts

A SPRING FESTIVAL OF MUSICAT M.I.T.

KRESGE AUDITORIUMMAY 4th and 5th

Saturday Evening, May 4 at 8:30 p.m.M.I.T. Symphony Orchestra, Concert Band, and BrassChoir, John Corley, conducting. Works by Schoenberg,Piston, Lalo.

Sunday Afternoon, May 5 at 3:30 p.m.M.I.T. Choral Society and the Cambridge Festival Or-chestra, Klaus Liepmann, conducting.BACH, B MINOR MASS

Dorothy Renzi, soprano Donald Sullivan, tenorEunice Alberts, contralto Thomas Pyle, baritone

MAY 1 Oth, 1 lth, and 12fhFriday Evening, May 10 at 8:30 p.m.

Repeat performance of BACH, B MINOR MASS.

Sunday Afternoon, May 12 at 3:00 p.m.M.I.T. Glee Club, Douglass College Choir, and CambridgeFestival Orchestra. Klaus Liepman, conducting.

HAYDN, THE SEASONS . . .Catherine Rowe Linville, soprano . .-Walter Carringer, tenor; John Powell, baritone

All seats reserved. Tickets: $2.50, ;3.50, ;5.00 (sponsors) foreach concert. Mail orders to Kresge Auditorium, M.I.T., Cam-bridge 39. Phone orders to UNiversity 4-6900, extension 2901.Checks payable to "Friends of Music at M.I.T."

A limited number of tickets (all locations) are available forM.I.T. students at $1.00. On sale Lobby. Bldg. 10.

L I

"..,WS13ovie sheduediWednesday, M ay 1, through Tuesday I1T- Friday 'M', Room 10-250, 6:30,.Nj ay 7 (Unless otherwise stated, 9:00; Saturday, 'B ird M an of Alca-

the Sunday schedule is the sam e as traz.' Kresge, 2:15, 6:00, 9:00.the w eekday schedule except that no MUSIC HALL -- 'Tho Ugly Ari-movies are shown before 1:00 pm IK aLL-.Ul)Aeimovies are showtn before 3,0 PM.) can,' 10:00, 12:21, 2:42, 5:03, 7:24,ASTOR - starting May 3, 'I Oottd 9:45, Sun., 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30.Go on Singing,' no times available.BfACON HilL - 'The Four Days of 9:40-

Naples ' no imo= available. P.ARA3MOUN~T - 'Papa's Delicate Con-1;6tO.PN' ('!_NERA_31A--"How the West dition,, 9:_50, 1:50, 5:50, 9:50; 'Sira_

~'as Won' evenings, 8:30, matinee tegic Air Command,' 11:30, 3:30,Sunday, 4:45. 7:30, Sun., 5:30, 9:30.

BRFATTLE -- Luis Burtuel's 'TheCriminal Life of Archibaldo de la PILGREn - 'Babes in the Woods.-Cruz,' 5:30, 7:30, 9:30, mat Sat. 10:50, 1:30, 4:15, 7:00, 9:45, SWun.at 3:30. Starting Sun.: Jacques De- 2:20 , 7: 10 9-50- 'World by

roy's 'Lola,' 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 daily, 'N ighf,' 9:3 0, 2:50, 5:40, .s:25mats. Sun. & Sat. at 3:30. Sun., 1:00, 3:25, 5:50, 8:30.

(-APRl - ' David and Lisa,' 10:00, SAXON' - 'Mutiny. on the Bounty,'12:00, 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, S:00, 10:00. evnigs -:15, mtinee Boutyc(OIIDGE C('ORIER - 'To Kill a evenings, 9:15, matinees, 2:15.

Mjockingbird,' 1:50, 9:30; Saturday, %WELLES.LEY COWLWAUNITY PLAY-SundaY200, 2:00, 5:00,80. HOU SE - through M ay 4, 'The -,an

yXE - - 'Wrong Arrn of the Law,' from the Diner's Club.' and 'The2-I0, 3:55, 5:45, 7:30, 9:20. Great Chase,' 7:45, mats. W ed., Sat.,1,Ay - - 'SundaY's and Cybele,'- 4:45; starting 'May 5. 'Boccaccio 70.'

1:10, 3:10, 7:10, 9:10, 7:45, mat Sun., 4:4.FI.N, ATS 'Te Seent Sel,'UPTOWN - 'Girl from Tarniko,' 1:10.and 'Th. -~evil's Eye,' no times 5:20, 9:35, Sun., 1:05, 5:15, 9:33:

available. 'Billy Budd,' 11:00, 3:10, 7:20, Sun.,(;.ARy - 'Lawrence of Arabia,' eve- 3:05, 7:20.

n/haS, g :00; matinee Sunday, 2:00.ut.,lCVARD SQUA]RE-'Days of Wine T hea* S hed l

and Roses,' feature at 2:30, 5:00, Th eatre S ch ed uie7:15, 9::30.}KfETH .MIE.MOR1AL - 'The Birds,' ('HAIU,,;X PIAN'HOU'SE - 'Candida.9:50, 12:10. 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30; I \ednesday-Friday, .:30; Saturday.Sunday, 1:00, 3:06, 5:12, 7:18, 9:24. 5:30, 9:040; Sunday, 3:00, 7:00.

]A OFE%%"S ORPHEU31 - 'Face in the 1MA(;E-'The .Masto, Bui~der.' Tues-Pain,' 9 .50. 1:29, 4:40, :05, SimB1-00, 4:20, 7:40; 'Iaxame,' 11:25 ; day -Friday, ':30; Saturday, 5:00.2:50, 6:15, 9:45, Sun, 2:30, s:@5, 9:0C;9:10. SHuBERT - starting May 6, 'Carni-

'.IAYFLOVH---' Man from the Din- vl,' eves., -:30. mats., *Ved., Sat..er's Club' 11:15, 2:35, 5:55, 9:15; 2:30.Sunday, 2:30, 5:50, 9:10; 'Fury ofthe Pagans,' 9:45, 1:00, 4:20, 7:40; W 1LBUR - 'Here Today.' eves.. ' :30.

SundaY, 1:00, 4:1.5, 7:35. mats. Wed., Sat., 2:30.

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HOW TO SEE EUROPEFOR ONLY $300 A DAY: NO. 2

Last week we discussed England, the first stop on the tour ofEurope that every American college student is going to makethis summer. Today we will take up your next stop-France,or the Pearl of the Pacific, as it is generally called.

To get from England to France, one greases one's body andswims the English Channel. Similarly, to get from France toSpain, one greases one's body and slides down the Pyrenees.And, of course, to get from France to Switzerland, one greasesone's body and wriggles through the Simplon Tunnel. Thus, asyou can see, the-most imiportant single item to take to Europeis a valise full of grease.

No, I am wrong. The most important thing to take to Europeis a valise full of Marlboro Cigarettes-or at least as many as

The Unicorn825 Boylston Street

Through SMay 12-John Winn,bethan Bowdy Songs

Eliza-

, 3[U~~N 4-^45unuoi

"Days of Wine: and Roses"· starring Jack Lem mon °c.0 and :

Lee Remick2:30 5:00 7:15 9:30

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thim~al)Imul-{ andII~curc

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Tony Saletan, Southeast Asianmusic; and Jackie Washington,Puerto Rican music, will be Sat-urday afternoon.

Saturday evening will featurePete Seeger, Ron Eliran, theCharles River Valley Boys, andJean Ritchie.

Tickets for individual concertsare $2.25 for each of the eveningconcerts and $1.00 for each of theafternoon events. A combinationticket for all events is $4.00, avail-able by writing to Brandeis FolkFestival, Brandeis University,Waltham 54, Massachusetts.

Brandeis University CreativeArts Festival will present its firstannual Folk Festival May 10 and11 at the Ullman Amphitheatre,on the Brandeis campus.

Workshops in banjo and guitarwill be held Saturday afternoon.

Friday evening the festival willinclude a concert with Bob Dy-lan, Jesse Fuller, the Lilly Broth-ers and Don Stover, Jean Red-path, and the Silver Leaf GospelSingers.

A nationalities concert, featuringRon Eliran, Israel music; DavidMWAllester, Navajo Indian music,Jean Redpath, Scottish music;

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I ;-he trl~~~~~non~~~uzzY~~ st~ Ies fa

44

+44

COULD THISBE WHYTHE FOURFRESHMEN

CAN'T FINISHSCHOOL?

Yes. But there's nothiing wrongwith their addition. Four mastervocalists, plus four swinginginstrumentalists, plus four onstage-off the cuff 'comedianstotal Four Freshmen. Honest.And this fantastic triple threatversatility is why college audi-ences refuse to let the Freshmenfinish school.

In "The Four Freshmen inPerson ·Volume 2" on Capitol,you'll hear them at their versa-tile best, in a recording madeduring an unforgettable per-formance at Long Beach CityCollege. The packed housecalled it great, and so will you.

Look for "The Four Freshmenin Person e Volume 2" on Capi-tol, and look for the Four Fresh-men in concert on your campus.

the customns regulations will allow. And if l)v elance vou shouldrun out of MIarlbros in Europe, do not despair. That fainili'a'red and vwhite .Marlhoro p)tckage is -s omnnipre.sent ill Europeas it is in all fifty of the United States. And it is the salme.superb cigarette you find at llolne-the same pure white filter,the sanme zestful, mellows blend of tobaccos preceding the filter.This gem of the tobacconist's art, this prodigy of cigaretteengineering, was achieved My Marll)oro's *well-known researchteam--Fred Softpack and Ntalter Fliptop-and I, for one, anmgrateful.

But I digress. We were speaking of France-or the Serpent ofthe Nile, as it is popularly termed.

Let us first briefly sum up the history of France. The nationwas discovered in 1066 by Madame Guillotine. There followeda series of costly wars with Schleswig-Holstein, the ClevelandIndians, and Jean Jacques Rousseau. Stability finally came tothis troubled land with the coronation of 'Marshal Foch, whomarried Lorraine Alsace and had three children: Flopsy, -Mopsy,and Charlemagne. This later became known as the Petit Trianon.

Marshal Foch-or the Boy Orator of the Platte, as he wasaffectionately called--was succeeded by Napoleon, who intro-duced shortness to France. Until Napoleon the French werethe tallest nation in Europe. After Napoleon most Frenchmen-,were able to walk comfortably under card tables. This laterbecame known as the Hunchback of Notre Dame.

Napoleon, after his defeat by Credit, Mobilier, was exiled toElba, where he made the famous statement, "Able was I ere Isaw Elba." This sentence reads the same whether you spell itforward or I)ackward. You can also spell 'Marlboro backward-Oroblralm. Do not, however, try to smoke Marlboro backwardbecause that undoes all the pleasure of the finest cigarette made.

After Napoleon's death the French people fell into a great fitof melancholy, known as the Louisiana Purchase. For over acentury everyone sat around moping and refusing his food.This torpor was not lifted until Eiffel built his famous tower,which made everybody giggle so hard that today France is thegayest country in Europe.

Each night the colorful natives gather at sidewalk cafes andshout "0o-la-la !" as Maurice Chevalier promenades down theChamnps Elysees swinging his malacca cane. Then, tired buthappy, everyone goes to the Louvre for howls of onion soup.

The principal industry of France is cashing travellers checks.Well sir, I guess tlat's all you need to know about France.

Next week we will visit the Land of the 'Midnight Sun--Spain.a 1963 Max Shulman

$ *: *

8:30 p.m.Orchestra, Con-

s [lT) 1860

e CAPITOL RECORDS, INC.

Next week, every week, the best cigarette you can buy thewhole world over is filter-tipped Marlboros-soft pack otFlip-Top box-you get a lot to like.

At the Coffeehouses{Cafe YanaIe~-''", B Are.

Near Kenmore SquareThrough ..,y a-iraul Clayton

Club Mt. Auburn 4747 Mt. Auburn Street

Today-Tom RushThursday-Jim Kweskin and Geoff

MuldaurFriday-Jackie WVashington and Irene

KossoySaturday-Rooney, Val, and Applin

Brandeis Folk Festival to presenttwo days of concerts, workshops

Saturday Evening, May I I atRepeat performance of M.I.T. Symphonyeert Band, and Brass Choir.

BRANDEIS UNIVERSITYIst ANNUAL FOLK FESTIVAL

FRI. EVE., MAY 10Bob DylanLilly Bros. & D. StoverJean RedpathSilver Leaf Gospel Singers

SAT. AFT., MAY I I(Nationalities Concert)

Ron Eliran-IsraeliDavid McAllester-

Navajo IndianJean Redpath-ScottishTony Saletan-S.E. AsianJackie Washington-

Puerto RicanSATURDAY EVENING, MAY I

Charles River' Valley BoysRon Eliran

plus workshops, hoots and panels

Jean RitchiePete Seegef

TICKETS: $4.00 for all events; $2.25 per evening concert;$1.00 for each afternoon event (on location)

AVAILABLE AT: Brandeis Univ., Waltham 54, Mass.Folklore Center, 83 Mt. Auburn St., CambridgeFolklore Productions, 176 Federal St., Boston

An Important Message toENGINEERS * MATHEMATICIANS

PHYSICISTS . NAVAL ARCHITECTS

who are interested inR&D Career Development

The David Taylor Model Basin - a complex of four labora-tories occupying 186 acres in a desirable suburb of Washing-ton, D. C.--is an advanced facility for fundamental andapplied research into SUBMARINE, SURFACE SHIP, AIR-CRAFT and MISSILE design concepts; applied mathematicsand operations research; and the design and developmentof related instrumentation. Each of these laboratories--HYDROMECHANICS. AERODYNAMICS. STRIJC.TURAL MECHANICS and APPLIED MATHtMATICS-is supported by some of the most advanced (and oftentimesonly) facilities of their kind. There are large Towing Basins-one more than half-a-mile long for prolonged towing,another for testing hydrofoil and hydroskimmers at highspeeds, and still another for generating violent environmentalconditions . . . high-speed computer systems . . . means forconducting R & D on submarine structures at great depths... a wide range of vibration generators for ship structures

several wind tunnels ranging from subsonic to hyper-sonic velocities ... and especially-equipped sea-going labora-tories for full scale study in the field of weapons effects,vibrations, acoustics, flow, etc.

Thus, The' Model Basin offers outstanding career de-velopment opportunities in each of these four laboratoryareas. Planned professional development programs providefinancial assistance and every encouragement to obtain ad-vanced degrees. Several local colleges and universities areclose by, and participate in these programs . . . with manyclasses conducted right at The Model Basin.

All career positions include the many real benefits ofCareer Civil Service . . 3 weeks paid vacation (4 weeksafter three years), 8 paid holidays and 13 days sick leaveeach year, partly-paid group life and medical insurance, andunusually favorable retirement policies.

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David TaylorF Model Basin

Department of the NavyWashington 7, D. C.

fI movies ...

i 'The Ugly American' now a movieBy Gilberto Perez-Guillermo

There can be little doubt con-cerning the good intentions withwhich the makers of 'The UglyAmerican' (director: GeorgeEnglund, script-writer: StewartStem) have presented an obvi-ously significant theme. That thefilm is not more successful is in-deed unfortunate.

The story is loosely based onthe best-selling novel of thesamie title, dealing with the prob-lems in American foreign policy.The setting is an Eastern countrystrongly suggestive of South Viet-nam. A new American ambassa-dor (Marlon Brando) comes withthe best intentions, but fails tocomprehend the native situation,and his actions prove disastrous.He breaks a long-standing friend-ship with a native leader (EijiOkada, whom I recall from 'Hiro-shima, mon Amour') on the basisof a black-and-white view of com-munism and democracy. Whenhe realizes his mistake, it is al-

ready too late to stop a revolu-tion which will benefit only -theCommunists.

The screenplay has a dramaticunity which the novel, as I amtold, lacks. In several instancesMr. Englund has taken full ad-vantage of its potentialities. Theambassador's meeting with aSenate subcommittee effectively

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depicts his capabilities and goodintentions, which will make hisfailure appear all the more strik.ing. In another successful scenethe country's Prime Minister(Kukrit Prarnoj) forces the am.bassador to acknowledge, upon di.rect evidence, his mistake.

Above all, the film is dominatedby Mr. Brando's presence, in awholly adequate performance.Mr. Brando adds a depth to theambassador's character whichthe script seems to have missed.Credit must also be given to thecharacterization of the primeminister, in which (the usual na.tive cliches (which are not altogether absent from the film) areavoided.

Unfortunately, the film oftenfails to be convincing. There isa good deal of over-simplification.The character of the native lead.er and his relationship with theambassador are never believable.The ambassador's disastrous ideaabout changing !the course of ahighway is admittedly naive, butit seems too obviously stupid. Theaudience, which can hardly haveany better grasp of the country'ssituation 'than the ambassador,sees the implausibility of theplan all ¢too easily. These andother details detract from the au.thenticity of the film, so essentialto its success. In the climacticsequence, the insertion of a sus.pense trick is a bad mistake. Thehandling of ithe languages is alsoannoying; the native leader'sspeeches in accented Englishseem hopelessly contrived.

Perhaps one might detect in'The Ugly American' somethingof the Stanley Kramer approachto significant issues (recall 'Onthe Beach,' 'Judgment at Nurem.berg,' 'The Defiant Ones') inwhich a lack of personal involve-ment inevitably detracts from theimpact of an admittedly impor-tant theme. On the other hand,one feels, at the end of the film,that Mr. Englund and Mr. Sternhave earned the right to theirconcluding sequence, a causticcensure of the common man's at-titude towards foreign-policy prob-lems. After his failure, the am-bassador addresses the UnitedStates public on television. TheCommon 'Man turns off the set.

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c Kaplan gives Mariner dataabout Venusian atmosphere

Dr. Louis Kaplan, of the Jetpropulsion Lab at -the CaliforniaInstitute of Technology, lecturedApril 16 on the atmosphere ofVenus. The talk, a COMPASSSeminar, featured analysis of theVenus probe, Mariner II.

Venus has long been known tohave an atmosphere; indentationsand protuberences on the termin-us-the day-night line-proved theexistence of some gaseous cover-ing. But to date little has beenknown about it except its pres-ence.

One thing definite is knownabout Venus-it is covered byclouds of carbon dioxide. This isthe only gas definitely revealedby spectroanalysis. It is also fair-

ly certain that water vapor is al-most completely absent.

The depth and density of theclouds is very uncertain. The re-cent occultation of the bright starRegulus indicated that the atmos-phere is about 55 km. high, withpressures ranging from severalatmospheres to 7 millibars.

Radioastronomy and microwaveexperiments, such as those onMariner II, indicate very hightemperatures and pressures at thebottom of the Venusian atmos-phere. Pressure may reach 10 at-mospheres, and at some point -exactly where is not known-tem-peratures of 700 degrees kelvinexist. Higher in the atmospherethe temperatures range from 200-440 degrees K.

Many of the recent tests, includ-ing Mariner II, indicate that theatmosphere is in two layers ofclouds. Exactly what is the com-position of either, or where thedividing point lies, is unknown.

Melman calls for drastic cut in military spendingThe current nuclear power of

the United States is much largerthan would ever be needed, ac-cording to Seymour Melman,professor of industrial manage-ment at Columbia University.

In a lecture April 18, sponsoredby the Student Organization fora Rational Approach to Disarma-ment and Peace, Professor Mel-man previewed a new studymade by a group of specialistsin foreign affairs, economics, andrelated fields. The study, entitled'A Strategy for American Secu-rity,' was released to the pressyesterday.

According to Professor Melman,the "over-kill" capacity of theUnited States is enormous. WithApproximately 3400 nuclear wea-pons-carriers of major size, manytactical fighters, and short-rangeballistic missiles, the UnitedStates has the potential to destroythe Soviet Union at least 300times over, allowing for Sovietdefenses of 50'/r effectiveness.

Obstacle to DisarmamentThe report points out that once

the United States can destroythe USSR, even allowing 991/,

defensive attrition, any excesscapacity is useless. The continuedstockpiling of nuclear weapons bythe United States may have anadverse effect on the civilianeconomy and is an obstacle todisarmament.

Related ProblemsThe committee states that

many of our unemployment andeconomic-growth problems aretraceable to military expendi-tures, and that the civilian sec-tor is being depleted in technicalmanpower and resources by themilitary sector.

Moreover, the multiplier effectis less for military spending thanfor civilian investment. Finally,Melman felt that military aidand procurement overseas con-tributes to the deficit in the bal-ance of payments.

Drastic Cuts NeededProfesor Melman stated 'that

military spending should be dras-tically cut, and spelled out pos-sible alternatives *to PresidentJom F. Kennedy's 1954 defensebudget.

He cited a 1960 report by Prof.Jerome Wiesner, presidential ad-visor for science and technology,stating that 250 hardened mis-siles are sufficient for UnitedStates military deterrence. Mel-man's proposal would, however,leave present nuclear forces in-tact.

The savings resulting from amilitary cutback could be appor-tioned in various ways, includinga large tax cut, public works andurban redevelopment. ProfessorMelman thinks that if any politi-cal party seizes this issue, it caneasily win the national electionsin 1964.

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League leaders begin to emergeas IM softball passes halfway mark

There were seventeen games played in IM softball this weekendas the league leaders began to emerge. Nine teams remain unde-feated in the cight leagues, with the season just past its halfwaymark.

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'::::. :- ... How They Did::. " : : -

BASEBALLTufts 8-MIT IMiddlebury 7-MIT 4Tufts (F) 10-MIT (F) 8Harvard (F) 10-MIT (F)

CREWVarsity Heavies

Won by MIT, 10:02;10:03.3

JV HeaviesWon by Yale, 10:12.6;

10:25.53rd Varsity

Won by MIT, 10:11.4;10:12.1

1st Frosh HeaviesWon by Yale, 10:39;

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2nd Frosh Lights2, Yale Won by MIT, 6:31.3; 2, Harvard,

6:33.6; 3, Dartmouth, 6:40.5GOLF

2, MIT Harvard 5-MIT 2MIT 60-/2-Brandeis '/2Wesleyan 5--MIT 2MIT 4-Merrimack 3

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MIT (F) 9-Dean Junior College 0MIT (F) 7-Belmont Hill 2

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o Sauash tourney approaches Frsh sports) )I , I I

With the intramural squash sea-son halfway over, many tightraces have developed as the teamsvie for tournament berths. Thetournament will get under wayduring the second week in May,and, due to finals, will be a single-elimination affair.

Squash standingsLeague I

Senior House A.craduate House BDelta Kappa EpsilonPhi Gamma DeltaPhi Sigma KappaSigma Alpha Epsilon BBaker House C

League IIElectrical EngineersSigma Phi Epsilon ATheta Delta Chi A

3--04-12-21--40-30-3

3--03-13-1

Lamrbda Chi Alpha AKappa SigmaPhi Beta EpsilonSigma Alpha Epsilon C

Squash tourneyLeague HII

Theta XiBurton House CChi PhiBaker House BSigma Alpha Epsilon ASigma Phi Epsilon B

League IVZeta Beta TauBurton House BLambda Chi Alpha BBaker House AAlpha Epsilon PiTheta Delta Clhi B

Ieague VBurton House AGraduate House APi Lambda PhiNRSASenior House BEast Campus

2-11-20-30--4

3--02-11-21-21-20-1

4-03-12-11-20-2O--3

3--O2-11-20---0-2--2

Tech nine loses two moreTech's baseball team lost to

Tufts 8-1 Wednesday and, weredowned by 'Middlebury College7-4 Saturday. The two defeatsbrought their season record to 2-12.

Tech Beaten 8-1Tufts scored five unearned runs

as the Techmen committed sevenerrors during the contest.

Dick Adamec '63 and DennisHinrich '64 both had doubles forMIT. Tech's sole run came in thefourth inning when Adamecdoubled and was scored on singlesby Larry Demick '63 and DonAlusic '64.

The winning pitcher was WallyWadmen who gave up one run andseven hits. The losing pitcher wasHarold Branson '63 who pitchedfour innings, gave up five runs,six hits, walked one, and struckout four. His relief was Henry Nau'63 who gave up three runs, sixhits, walked two, and struck outthree.

MIT Rally Falls ShortIn the contest with Middlebury,

the Techmen scored one run inthe first inning when Ademec wasknocked in on a single by DonAlusic '64. Dave Dunford '63scored for Tech in a three-runninth, but Middlebury had alreadypushed across seven runs on threefour-baggers to put the game outof reach.

Tall went the distance to win forMiddlebury. Bob Yanus '64 the los-ing pitcher, was relieved by HenryNau in the fourth.

The Engineers travel to theCoast Guard Academy for adouble-header Saturday and re-turns to Briggs Field for their lasthome game of the year againstBoston University, Wednesday.

AB R HTufts 37 8 12MIT 34 1 7Tufts ............... 110 301 20M I T ............ 000 100 00Middlebury 37 7 10MIT 34 4 6M'dbury ........ 002 301 10MIT ................ 100 00000

E17001203

Tennis team brings record to 4-3 with 2 winsBy Mike Newhouse

The netmen won both of theirmatches this week, defeatingDean Junior College 9-0 ahd Bel-mont Hill Academy, 7-2. Theteam's record now stands at 4-3.

The highlight of the Belmontmatch was the number one sin-gles. Paul Ruby, after fighting offseveral match points, edged KentTarrat 8-6, 4-6, 9-7. Number twoman Dick Thurber beat Price instraight sets 7-5, &-3. Mark Glick-stein, playing number three edgedPalmer 6-4, 7-5. John Yeasley out-steadied Bower 6-3, 0-6, 6-4, andBob Lurie, Tech's number fiveman, made a strong comeback towin over Densmore 2-6, 6-1, 6-0.In the doubles, Ruby and Glick-stein downed Belmont's first teamwhile Thurber and Yeasley were

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Dowhes a man really take unfair advantage of womenwhen he uses Mennen Skin Bracer?

All depends on why he uses it.Most men simply think Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the best

after.shave lotion around. Because it cools rather than burns.Because it helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Because ithelps prevent blemishes.

So who can blame them if Bracer's crisp, long-lasting aromajust happens to affect women so remarkably?

Of course, some men may use Mennen Skin Bracer becauseof this effect.

How intelligent!

edged in three sets at number twodoubles.

LacrossePlaying without the services of

top attacker Pete Grant, the stick-men were downed by Andover 8-0Wednesday.

The Techmen fell to Winchendon10-2 on Briggs field Saturday. PeteGrant scored one goal, and PeteKirkwood was given credit forthe other on a play where the Win-chendon goalie was knocked intothe goal while carrying the ballin his stick.

GolfThe MIT Freshman Golf Team

defeated Governor Dummer Aca-demy 27-9 last week at OakleyCountry Club. The Frosh linkstersrecord now stands at one win andone loss. Leo Flynn was low manfor MIT with a 76, soundly beatinglis opponent. Dave Andrews alsovon his match handily with a fine;core of 83.

BaseballThe baseball team journeyed to

1. My theory on looking for a jobis--Play it big! Shoot forthe top! Go straight to theprez for your interview.

I don't know any presidents.

S. Beautiful ! All you have to dois find a president who lilesdogs. You'll have him eatingout of your hand in no time.

I don't know an Elkhoundfrom an Elk.

Tufts Wednesday, and, playingwithout four first-string members,lost 10-8. Larry Calof pitched thewhole game for Tech, giving upseven hits. Tufts held a 7-2 leaduntil the eighth inning when Techexploded with six runs.' In theninth inning, however, Tech wentscoreless and Tufts pushed acrossthree runs. At Harvard Saturdayhurler Jack Mazola took themound against an extremely toughHarvard nine. The final score wasHarvard 10, Tech, 1. Mazola wentall the way, fannrng ten and walk.ing two.

2. Use your head, man. Have yourdad set up appointments withsome of the big shots he knows.

He's a veterinarian.

4. Frantell:

S. A letter to the emplonment manwger!Ho ho ho ! You've a lot to learn.

Then how come I lanlled agreat job at Equitable-an executive training spotthat's interesting, paysa good salary and has a lotof promise for the future.

6. Safo

The Equitable Lire Assurallne S:cwiety (o

Home Office: 12l5 Avenlue or the AmeSee your Placement UtticeLfr I

or write to William E. Blevins, Ei

nkly, I don't know what dse toyou. You've got aproblem.

It's not as bad as it seems.My idea is to find out the name of the employment manageat the company I'm interested in. Write him a letter tellinghiimy qualifications. Spell out my interests, marks. Simple ss tht

ay. could you set sometilliguP 1)r me at Equitable?

I'm not the president, but I'll try.

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;rin's. New York 19. N.Y. further informatiod Imployment Manager.

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Trackmen rally, but Bowdoin winsAn MIT rally fell short, as the

Bowdoin varsity outpointed Techand the University of New Hamp-shire in a track and field meetheld last Saturday at BriggsField.

Trailing by sixteen points at onetime, MIT edged ahead with onlyone event to go, only to see theBowdoin musclemen take firstand second in the discus, to makethe final score Bowdoin 71, MIT65, UNH 29.

Jim Flink '64 led the track mento victory in their segment ofthe meet, capturing firsts in the100 and 220-yd. dashes and fin-ishing second in the 120-yard highhurdles behind Al Tervalon '65.Tervalon later came from behindto win by inches in the 220-yardlow hurdles. The other MIT win-

ner was Tom Goddard '63, whopicked up first place in the 880-yard run ahead of Mike Oliver'65 and nearly won the mile run.

In the field events, however,Bowdoin erased MIT's margin,holding Tech to firsts in the polevault and high jump and secondplaces in only three other events.Gary Lukis '64, teamed with JohnShaner '64, and Mike Keehner '65,to dominate the pole vault, fin-ishing first, third, and fourth. BillEagleson '64, captured first in thehigh umrrip, and hurled the javelin1811 8" only to be beaten on thelast throw of the competition.Jerry Dassel '64, in the hammerthrow, and Kim Sloat '64, in theshot put, notched the other sec-ond places.

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Introduction To Sports9.01

By Susan M. RogersSince the twelfth century, Eng-

lishmen have been playing rugby.According to legend, up to a hun-dred villagers on a side would fro-lick in a meadow, attempting toput the ball between two trees.

Plaque Awarded First RuggerDuring the nineteenth century,

rugby or rugger became moreformalized. Distinctions weredrawn between the all-kickinggame and running with the ball.A plaque at the Rugby School inEngland commemorates WilliamWebb Ellis, who in 1823 picked upthe ball and ran with it, thus be-coming the originator of modernrugby.

Becoming increasingly popular inthe United States, the EasteffiRugby Union now has twentymembers. It includes clubs fromthe larger cities, ivy leagueschools, and universities and col-leges of the East coast.

15 Men And Prolate SpheroidPlayed on a field almost twice

the area of,the American footballgridiron, there are fifteen men ona team. The field is wider than inAmerican football (75 yards asopposed to 53 1/3), and is set upsimilarly with the exception thatthe goal posts are right on the goalline.

The prolate spheroid used inrugby is rounder than a footballand more difficult to throw buteasier to play with the feet.

RugbyA rugby match or game consists the play an immediate off-sides

of two 35-minute periods of con- is called.tinuous play separated by a fiveminute interval when teams ex-change goals.

Try For ScoreScoring is somewhat similar to

football, with a try (3 points) cor-responding to the touchdown. Theplayer tries to touch down the ballas near the center of the goalposts as possible. He must at-tempt to convert (for 2 points) bykicking the ball over and betweenthe goal posts from a point direct-ly in front of where he touched itdown.

Free kicks, infrequently attempt-ed, are made after catching theball and shouting, "Mark!" whilesimultaneously grinding one's heelinto the ground. If recognized bythe referee and successful in theattempt, 3 points can be scored.Drop kicks made on the run,punts, and penalty kicks are allworth 3 points if they go betweenthe goal posts and over the cross-bar.

Football DiffersAuthorities recognize three ma-

jor differences between rugby andAmerican football. 1) No blockingor interference is allowed. An op-posing player cannot be tackleduntil he is in possession of the ball.2) No forward passing is allowed.When a teammate precedes theball-carrier, and interferes with

"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!"says Marius (The Profile) Lucullus, star actor of the Players Romani. "Gaudeamus," he declaims,"at long last here's a filter cigarette with flavor bono - de gustibus you never thought you'd get from

any filter cigarette. Ave Tareyton!" ...-*' ."-'.. I. '*.::~::'*:-*: .. .*:'.::::

Dn.al Filter makes the (diff(erenlce i

DUAL FILTreyonIrodu. of ' '. zm. ,, t.r. rt. { r -~ ..'cg.. ,...... r .

And finally 3) the scrummage isused to put the ball back in playand not to help a team advance.The serum half throws the ball inand both teams have an equalopportunity to "heel it" or "wheelit" out to their backs, whereas infootball, one team begins alreadyin possession of the ball.

The SerumEight forwards constitute the

serum. They "bind" together,forming a mass of power, and at-tempt to push back the otherside's serum. The lower they"ride," the more success they willhave. As long as they are in theserum (i.e., binding together),they are protected from the off-side rule which states that theymust be in back of the ball. Inthe scrum, they need not be inback of the ball.

The rest of the team consists ofthe backfield in which the serumhalf corresponds somewhat to aquarterback, and behind him thethree quarterbacks are lined out.

Extremely mobile, they do agreat deal of the running about.

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JargonSome helpful terminology: A

"loose serum" forms whereverthe ball is lying free and playersstart scrapping for it. The ballmust be played with the feet untilit is kicked free.

"Touch" is simply out ofbounds. The ball must be thrownin by the side which did not putit in touch. This is done througha "lineout" formation in whichplayers line up parallel to eachother, the ball is thrown in, andthey jump for it, trying to hit itto their teammates.

A "knock-on" describes the ballgoing forward as in a forwardpass. This is almost always illegal,meriting a penalty, and can be-come extremely involved.

Blood and guts, rough and tum-ble, rugger is still a gentleman'ssport. After getting your windknocked out or landing with a thudafter a tackle, one hears (I amtold), "Terribly sorry old chap!"or "Pardon me, laddie!" Whetherinternational or local in origin,this custom sets the tone for rugbyin New England.

Tech sailors sweep regattaat Coast Guard Academy

The varsity sailors scoredsweeping victories over six otherteams in both phases of a twvo-dayregatta at Coast Guard Academylast weekend.

Ken Klare '63, Scott Hynek '65.and Fred Kern '65 took 11 first

i places in 14 races to sweep thedinghy competition Saturday. andqualify for the New Englandchampionships.

Skipper Mike Lifschitz '63, spin-naker-handler Bill Dichter '64,and crewmen Dave Hoover '63

I and Jack Hall '65 triumphed infive of six races in sloop compe-tition Sunday, to defeat UConn,Harvard, WPI, and Coast Guard.

Lacrossemen outscoredby Amherst, UMass

MIT's Lacrossmen droppedgames to Massachusetts and Am-herst last week to bring their sea-son record to no wins and tenlosses.

The Techmen were downed bythe University of Massachusetts5-4 last Wednesday. The contesthowever, proved to be an excit-ing one all the way to the finish.Tech goals were scored by WayneMatson '64 and Bill Dreiss '64.

The stickmen suffered a 104 de-feat at the hands of Amherst Sat-urday on Briggs field. Scoringhonors for Tech in this game wentto Matson, Jim Anderson '63. BobBeardsley '64, and Bill Roeseler'65.

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Lightweights take B ialin Bowl Varsity heavvweiahts score uDsetI a u- - -i

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By Bob VernonThe lightweights came back

>_ from Hanover Saturday with the< Biglin Bowl after eradicating Har-I vard's seven year domination of

the cup with a decisive three-< length victory. Not since the Big-o lin Bowl race of 1955 have theu" MIT lights registered a victoryZ over the Crimson in a regularLi season race.

The varsity surprised eventhemselves as they jumped out toa one-length lead only 30 strokesafter the start. From that point on

I the race was for second place(U between Harvard and Darthmouth' as the MIT lead increased stead-LU ily over the 1 5/16 mile course.I Let's get out of here!

Starting at 41 strokes per min-ute the first boat settled to a 34to match the fast racing condi-tions of the Connecticut River.They sat only briefly on theirlead as Pete Staecker '63, thenumber six man, yelled, "Let'sget out of here!," and the Engi-neers moved into their first "pow-er ten." Tech opened the gap totwo lengths with a half-mile leftand shortly after sprinted home toa three-length decision over Har-vard and Darthmouth in times of5:47.8, 5:59; and 6:00.6, respec-tively.

The MIT junior varsity earlierhad set the pattern for the after-noon by out-jumping their Har-vard and Darthmouth opponentsat the start. The gap began toopen slowly until, with about ahalf mile left, Harvard started tonarrow the margin. But Techsteamed back, then sprinted-overthe line with a comfortable 21/2length victory. Times were MIT

Netmen top UMassby 7-2 to register

fourth straight winTech's tennis team won -their

fourth straight by defeating theUniversity of Massachusetts 7-2,Saturday. The season's record isnow seven wins and four defeats.

At number one Bent Aasnaes'64 had recovered enough fromhis recent shoulder injury to startserving overhanded. He downedRoger Twitchell 6-1, 6-2. JackMoter '64 defeated U. Mass'snumber two man Tom Simons 6-0,7-5. Marty Ormond '64 was de-feated by Mike Rose 6-0, 7-5 forTech's only singles loss. TerryChatwin '63 edged Robert Neal11-9, 6-3. Bob Blumberg '64squeaked through his first set andthen romped in the second, defeat-ing Bill Martin 7-5, 6-0. Sopho-more Mike Long defeated RobertGreenberg 6-3, 6-1.

In doubles the number one teamof Aasnaes-Moter scored a 6-1,6-4, victory over Twitchell andNeal. Chatwin and Blumbergedged Martin and Greenberg 6.3,7-5. Jon Burkhardt '64 and DougPatz '65 were outscored by DickLeete and Tom Simons 6-0, -2.

The netmen are scheduled tomeet Dartmouth Thmursday formatches at Dartmouth and CoastGuard Saturday.

5:55.2, Harvard 6:05.3, and Dart-mouth 6:12.0.

Harvard frosh winThe Tech first freshman boat

lost to a very impressive groupof Harvard frosh. The MIT year-lings were outpowered and out-finessed all the way down thecourse as the boys from upriverended Tech's hope for a sweep.Times were Harvard 6:28.5, MIT6:35.4, and Darthmouth 6:37.2.

The two other races of the daywere split with Harvard. The sec-ond frosh from MIT won the clos-est race of the day over Harvardby 'two seconds in times of 6:31.3,6:33.6, and (Darthmouth) 6:37.2.The second loss of the afternoon

By Susan M. RogersAn all-American halfback and

an all-East tackle were two ofthe seven "converted" footballplayers Holy Cross brought to

MIT's golf team scored overBrandeis (6'-/2-/), Merrimack(4-3), and University of NewHampshire (4-3) while losing toHarvard (5-2) and Wesleyan (5-2)last week. These results give thesquard a 9-8 season record.

Harvard WinsThe golfers were downed by

Harvard at Oakley Country ClubMonday. Individual winners forTech were Peter Lubitz '65 andRoy Carver '65, while Bill Lakin'64, Neil Hull '63, Bill Graham'64, Mike Finson '63, and JohnSinnott '65 lost their matches.

In a triangular match the Tech-men beat Brandeis 6% -'2 whilelosing to Wesleyan 5-2 on Wesley-an's home course. In the Brandeismatch, Lakin, Carver, Graham,Hull, Finson, and John Golden('65) registered victories whileLubitz was held to a tie by his

for MIT came in the final race asthe third- varsity was decisionedby Harvard. Times were Harvard6:10.2, MIT 6:15.0 and Dartmouth6:40.5.

Coach Garry Zwart summed uphis elation with the day's per-formance simply, by saying, "Ireally enjoyed this one!"

LUghtweight boatingsVarsity - Bow, J. M. Greata; 2.

J. P. Proctor; 3. R. W. Metzinger;4. D. D. Buss; 5. R. M. Cheek; 6.P. W. Staecker; 7. H. G. Herrman-Stroke, 3N. B. Barron; Cox, R. E.Vernon.

Junior varsity - Bow, W. C. Car-ithers; 2. R. S. Arold; 3. D. S. Evans;4. L. Taff; 5. J. M. Piepmeier; 6.W. C. Haase; 7. J. T. Lynch; Stroke.E. L. Jorgenson; Cox, J. R. Adams.

Freshmen - Bow, D. L. Starr, 2.R. A. Sanchez; 3. P. E. Blankenship;4. T. A. Scott; 5. H. A. White; 6.R. E. Sayre; 7. W. R. Tippet; Stroke,B. T. Powell; Cox, P. F. Salipante.

play rugby oh Briggs field Satur-day.

In its third encounter of theseason, MIT tied the first game3-3 with Holy Cross and lost thesecond, 5-0.

Tech outside center Steve Dreier '64 carries ball in Saturday's sec-ond game against Holy Cross. Other Techmen in play are Russ John-son '66 (foreground) and Charles Rein '62 (background). MIT lostthis contest 5-0, after tying Holy Cross in the first game.

-Photo by Joe Baron

opponent. In the Wesleyan match,Lubitz and Graham provided Techwith its two points, while the restof the squad suffered defeats.

MIT Wins TwiceThe squad defeated Merrimack

and University of New Hampshireby identical scores of 4-3 Friday.In the Merrimack contest Lubitz,Lakin, Hull, and Carver registeredvictories, while Graham, Finson,and Al Pogeler '65 lost. Bill La-kin's 20 foot putt on the 19th holedecided the New Hampshirematch. This shot gave Bill hisfourth birdie of the day as he waslow man for Tech with a 74. Otherwinners for Tech in the matchwere Graham, Carver, and Fin-son. while Lubitz, Hull and Poge-ler lost in tight matches.

Coach Merriman will take asquad of seven to the Greater

MIT riflemen 3rd in Boston Handicap TournamentMIT's rifle team placed third in

a field of six in the annual BostonHandicap Tournament Saturday,despite shooting the high rawscore of 1420. Boston College's1432 won, based on a raw scoreof 1406. Wentworth fired a 1375,but were handicapped to 1421, justone point above MIT. Northeast-ern, Boston University and Har-vard finished fourth throughsixth. respectively.

Joe Boling '64 fired a 290 toearn two medals, twhile seniors

Jerry Skinner and Dike Ludemanpicked up a medal apiece with a286 and 285. Bruce Peterson '63,and Karl Frederick '65 filled outthe high five for Tech by firing280 and 279.

Tech first in leagueThis was the last competition

of the season for the riflemen.The team was presented with aplaque and a trophy for first placeduring the season, and a trophyfor third place in the handicapmatch.

MIT lost only one of its tenmatches in each of the twoleagues in which it participates.This loss was in a three-waymatch. The final scores were:Norwich - 1414, MIT - 1413, Har-vard - 1412.

The team may lose some of itsstrength next season, due to thegraduation of the three seniorsLudeman, Skinner, and Peterson,who placed second, 12th and 21st,respectively, in a field of 179 NewEngland shooters.

over Eastern Sprint champ YaleMIT's Varsity heavyweight crew

upset the Eastern Sprint cham.pion Yale Saturday in a two-milecontest on the Housatonic Riverin Derby, Conn.

The Techi'Junior Varsity wasbeaten by the Yale JV, MIT'sThird Varsity boat triumphedover their Eli counterparts, andYale took both frosh races.

Tech sprints into leadIn the varsity race, Tech stroke

man Chris Miller '64 decided ona long sprint start, which enabledMIT to gain a lead of about onelength with a quarter mile gone.For the next mile, it was a see-

v saw contest, with Tech holding onto a lead varying from about one.quarter of a length to about thre,quarters. MIT stroked from 30 to32 strokes a minute, and wasabout half a stroke over thesmooth-rowing Elis.

Neck and neckWith about three quarters of a

mile to go, Yale made their bidand drew up even. The boats pro.ceeded down the course neck and:neck until Yale gained a lead of itwo seats, or ten feet, at thequarter-mile to go mark.

MIIT comes throughSoon after this, Tech Coxswain

Jesse Lipcon '65 called for a-sprint, and the Engineers began to move again. Rowing at 42Qstrokes a minute as opposed to -Yale's 38, MIT pulled ahead andwent on to win by a third of a -length, in 10 minutes and two sec. onds.

In the JV contest, it was Yale!who gained a length at the start,MIT held on in this position for -

over a mile but then Elis began to move away. Yale finished in 10:12.6,- a little more than threelengths ahead.

The Third Varsity race followedthe same pattern as the varsityrace, Tech pulled a one lengthlead at the start, but it began tobe whittled down right away bythe game Elis, until Yale held aslight lead going into the sprint.MIT's stroke man Dave Miller '6then pulled all the stops, and Ted cwent on to win by 7/10 second, in -10:11.4.

Tech's yearlings, still huntingtheir first victory, ran into tyou ble With Yale, with the first andsecond boats losing by two and a jquarter and two and a half lengthsrespectively.

Heavyweight boating',Vanity - Bow, Bob Kurtz: 2. Dick

Leonard; 3. Ken Anderson; 4. Martin -Poe: 5. Bill Weber; 6. Anthony Fiory; e

7. Bob Wild; Stroke, Chris Miller; Cox -Jesse Lipcon.

Junior varsity - Bow, Sam Drake; _2. 'Bruce Lindorf; 3. Ray Fisher; 4iJim Falendar; 5. Herbert Doepken; I4 Bob Curd; 7, Jim Larsen- Stroke,Bob Sandel; Cox, Bud Boring.

Freshmen - Bow, Joel Tally; 2 Richard Brelnlinger; 3. Robert 0'- Donnell; 4. David Penny; 5. Joe Bd -sewicz; 6. Tom Rice; 7. Fritz Eberle: -Stroke, Bill Kampe; Cox, Dennis Ov. aerbye.

Cup races SaturdayTech's heavyweights will race

crews fromn Harvard and Prince 'ton for the Compton Cup this Sat .urday, in their biggest regular eseason regatta on the Charles, *while the lights travel to Ithaca Eto race Cornell and Columbia for _the Geiger Cup.

The races on the Charles should iprove especially close and inter. _esting, and a big turnout would Ehelp the MIT oarsmen.

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Playing an essentially defensivegame in the first match, Tech'sforwards led by Jim Postula '65proven effective in the scrum.

Had they done more passingand shown greater finesse andpolish, Holy Cross could havebeen an unbeatable batteringram.

Scoring for Tech at the end ofthe first half was Larry Pitts '62.With only a few minutes left inthe second half, ex-guard BillMarcellino of Holy Cross tied itup for good by scoring after atremendously powerful forwardrush.

In the second game, Bob Mor-rison made a try and convertedfor Holy Cross. Unfortunate fum-bling in Tech's backfield impededits progress.· Ironically; the team in posses-sion of the ball was prone to loseyardage. Several times Techgained ground when Holy Cross,who had the ball, retreated. Andvice versa.

Tech's lineup, weakened by sev-eral absences, promises to beback to full strength for Satur-day's game at Williams College.

Boston Colleges' Tournament Mon-day.

The Techmen are slated to meetB.U. and Babsorn at Babson Thurs-day and they meet Colby Saturdayaway.

'On Deck : : ::Wednesday, May I

Baseball - Andover (F), Home,3:00 pm

Tennis - Milton Academy (F),Away, 3:00

Track - Moses Brown (F), Away,3:00 pm

Thursday, May 2Golf - Boston University, Boston,

Away, 2:00 prm,Harvard (F), Away, 1:00 pm

Lacrosse - WPI, Away, 3:30 pmTennis - Dartwouth, Away, 4:00

pmSaturday, May '4

Baseball - Coast Guard (DoubleHeader), Away, I:00 pm,Exeter (F), Away 2:30

Heavyweight Crew - COMPTONCUP - Princeton, HarvardDartmouth at Cambridge

Lightweight Crew - GEIGER CUP-Columbia, Cornell at Ithaca

Golf - Colby. Away. 1:00 ornLacrosse - Bowdoin, Away, 2:00

pm. New Hampshire (F),Away, 2:00 pm

Sailing - Owen Trophy Regattaat West Point,Championships at NewLondon (F)

Tennis - Coast Guard, Away,2:00 pmExeter (F), Away, 2:00 pm

Track - Columbia, Rutgers(V&F), Away, 2:00 pm

Sunday, May SSailing - Both Saturday Contests

Continued

c.'

Second team loses

Tech ruggers fie Holy Cross gridders

Drop two matches

Golfers fop Brandeis, Merrimack, UNH

vveee er