gow set - the tech

12
Vol. 87, No. 35 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, October 10, 1967 5c $15.000 collected Johnson approves location for Fasser commemorafion A site has been chosen and approved by President Johnn of a "garden retreat" in memory of Julie Fassett the lte wife of Frederick Fassett, ex-Dean of Residence. One-half of a proposed $30,000 has been raised toward the construction of the gardemn The. Julie Fassett Foundation Cmm.ttee twas fo-c last fall by Dean Wadl. The committee plans to start constraction this spring. Location and design The garden will commemorate Julie Fassett both by its location and its design. The'plot, east of the Baker House teniMs courts, is very close to the old residence of Dean Fassett. The triangular plot will be surrounded by a wall and hedges to isolate the area and make it a "haven from the austerity and intense pace of the Institute." This goal comes partly from an effort to recall the relaxed enjoyment that many an undergraduate experienced in the Fassett home from Julbe Fasett's hospitality. Only $4,000 of the received $15,000 has been from undergrad- uates. The committee had expected, arEund $10,00 in student contributions. Anyone interested in niaking a contributfon should contact the Institute Committee in Room W20-401. By Johln Corwin Ian and Sylvia came through with a perfect performance at Kresge Auditorium S a t u r d a y night, following last-minute diffi- culties in s o u n d engineering, thanks to a few MIT students. Alvin Sellers '70, of Baker, re- ceived a telephone call Saturday morning from the MIT Varsity Club. Ian and Sylvia needed a bass amplifier for their concert, and Sellers had built his amplifier, called Superbass, during the last few days of the summer. So he brought the Superbass over to Kresge Auditorium later that af- ternoon to meet Ian and Sylvia and their bass player and lead guitarist, who had just landed at Logan Airport. 1Mismatch Unfortunately, the bass player's bass didn't match up with the Superbass, as a treble imbalance produced distortion. But Sellers was able to procure a second bass amplifier (called the Jugmobile) f r o m Baker's Bushkoff-Brown Blues Band, and Ian's bass player liked it. When the amplifiers for Ian and Sylvia's guitars were also set up, each member of the Canadian group carefully listened to the instrumental sound of the other three from a vantage point in the audience. Perfection and balance in tone and volume were the watchwords. The addition of the Kresge Sound system for, the voices pro- duced unexpected p r o b l e m s. "Well," remarked Sylvia, "it Sounds like a skating rink." Ac- By Steve All rumors were either con- firmed or denied Sunday night as the Class of 1969 Executive Comn- mittee announced full details of the 1967 Junior Prom. Friday night will be kicked off with a cocktail party at ZBT, 58 Manchester Road, Brookline. Last- ing from 4 p.m. to 6:30, the affai will feature music by Morgan and Whiteflield; the We, Too; and the Whining Brothers. Refreshments will be free to all with JP tickets, courtesy of ZBT. Formal at Sheraton At 9 the scene shifts to the Sheraton Boston for the traditional Friday night formal, which will take place in the Grand Ballroom, the Independence Ballroom, and the Constitution Ballroom. The Don Russell Orchestra will pro- vide a traditional sound, and the Spectras will spark a discotheque in the Constitution Ballroom. No liquor will be allowed on the premises, though those with age twenty-one identification may pat- ronize the bars in the hotel. Saturday morning from 10 to noon, the Class of '71 will take on '70 in the traditional Field Day on the broad expanse of Briggs Field. The theme of this year's events will be Snoopy and the Red Baron. (Please turn to Page 3) The Lovin' Spoonful will highlight the Saturday afternoon JP concert in the Back Bay Theatre. Appearing with the Spoonful will be Jerry Shane, a comedian who has been on the Tonight Show. Fr0sh elect Rastetter president; Seeajl, Stamh m wn other posts By Jay Hunin The elections ran smoothly, and Bill Rastetter (AEP) was John Kotter '68, one of Inscomm's elected president of freshman advisors to the council, was corn- council Sunday night in a hotly- mended for his handling of it. contested election than, ran to -Bob Condap '68, the other ad- three ballots. Elected- vice-presi- dent was Zane Segal (ZBT), and John Strayhorn ('SAE) was selected as secretary-treasurer. National f rmaernfty colonies to be encouraged bv IFC By Carson Agnew The Interfraternity Conference is taking steps to encourage the establishment of new colonies of national fraternities on campus. The newly formed Building and Expansion Committee is expected to act as a forum for discussion of this matter. Three reans There are three reasons for the establishment of the Committee. First, the Committee will attempt to liberalize the Constitution of the IFC to make it easier for colonies to exist and to join the IFC. Secomd, the group will serve to bring students together, to help to organize the new colony. Third, it will act as a clearinghouse for fraternity off-campus housing, (Tomrn Neal '68, committee chair- man, said that he presently knmew of a 40-man house which was available for any colony that might be formed. Nationals Ierested Although IFC rules prohibit (Please turn to Page 6) visor, was not present. Objectfives of council After the meeting, Rastetter outlined the objectives of this year's council: 1. "The unity of the clas of '71 spurred on by a victorious Field Day, and not culminated by it. 2. "A program and activities involving all freshmen for the benefit and entertainment of the class. 3. "Programs in conjunction with Inscomm to tie a united freshman class to the shool and its -ovrerall objectives. 4. "Numerous small-scale finan- cial programs to demonstrate cmmil acceptance of responsibil- ity and powers of organization." 5. Reevaluation of several pro- grans of interest to future classes, including Rush Week, freshman feedback, freshman council elections, and freshman course orientation. LUists of critical occupations and fields of graduate study for draft deferment will be is- sued in January, not Decem- her as reported last week. Soph 'Barons' to battle 'Snoopy' frosh Field Day, featuring kites,, biplanes Photo by Larry Stuart-Deutsch Folk singers Ian and Sylvia deliver their unique brand of songs over PA equipment loaned to them by MIT students. The Kresge Auditorium system proved unsatisfactory and last minute arrangements had to be made. tually, the system was not de- signed for musical entertainment but rather for speeches. Ian in- sisted that better equipment would have to be provided if he and Sylvia were expected to perform that ,night. Whereupon Sellers again stepped able to procure microphones and a PA amplifier from anofthier band, The Frumnious Bandersnatch. The sound installation was complete 15 minutes before curtain time. Later, each member of the group thanked Sellers for his ef- forts, and Sylvia invited him to By Dean Boller Field Day '67 will feature Charles M. Schultz's 'Peanuts' as its central theme. The traditional matching of the Freshmen against the Sophomores in a series of con- tests testing the wits, strength, and organization of both classes will be held Saturday, November 4 on Briggs Field. The events have been designed to comply with the main theme and classes are adjusted to work the theme into their design. Colors fixed Each class will have a partic- ular color or set of colors of its own which will be dominant in the dress of all the members throughout Field Day. The fresh- men colors are black and white for Snoopy and the sophomores', red, for the Baron. Each class is required to pre- pare a class kite. The kite must be 2' by 3'. Points will be given These kites will be certified by the Field Day Chairman Satur- day, Oct. 28, after which time they will be declared open for capture. Any class that does not produce its ite on the morning of November 4 will lose points from its total. Events listed Events at this year's Field Day are a conglomeration of the tra- ditional and the new. Established events nclude the tug of war (male urdimnited & female limited) and the all-important glove fight. Field Day '67 will feature such new activities as the Biplane Race (Snoopy vs. the Red Baron), The Charlie Brown express (one of two secret events to be unveiled Nov 4), and The Pig Pen Pie Eating Contest (The Great Pump- kin). Sportsman's points will also be awarded to the class that best adheres to the rules and spirit of forward, and, upon inquiry, was eat dinner with them in Boston. to the kite that flys the highest. Field Day '67. E | i E | E | | | fi I 0 0 hi on er ainimain even S Inc u a I 0 SI OVIN ion u uc err .gm a Ju nlo i e saves concer

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Page 1: gow set - The Tech

Vol. 87, No. 35 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, October 10, 1967 5c

$15.000 collected

Johnson approves locationfor Fasser commemorafion

A site has been chosen and approved by President Johnnof a "garden retreat" in memory of Julie Fassett the lte wife ofFrederick Fassett, ex-Dean of Residence. One-half of a proposed$30,000 has been raised toward the construction of the gardemn

The. Julie Fassett Foundation Cmm.ttee twas fo-c last fallby Dean Wadl. The committee plans to start constraction this spring.

Location and designThe garden will commemorate Julie Fassett both by its location

and its design. The'plot, east of the Baker House teniMs courts, isvery close to the old residence of Dean Fassett. The triangular plotwill be surrounded by a wall and hedges to isolate the area andmake it a "haven from the austerity and intense pace of theInstitute." This goal comes partly from an effort to recall therelaxed enjoyment that many an undergraduate experienced in theFassett home from Julbe Fasett's hospitality.

Only $4,000 of the received $15,000 has been from undergrad-uates. The committee had expected, arEund $10,00 in studentcontributions. Anyone interested in niaking a contributfon shouldcontact the Institute Committee in Room W20-401.

By Johln CorwinIan and Sylvia came through

with a perfect performance atKresge Auditorium S a t u r d a ynight, following last-minute diffi-culties in s o u n d engineering,thanks to a few MIT students.

Alvin Sellers '70, of Baker, re-ceived a telephone call Saturdaymorning from the MIT VarsityClub. Ian and Sylvia needed abass amplifier for their concert,and Sellers had built his amplifier,called Superbass, during the lastfew days of the summer. So hebrought the Superbass over toKresge Auditorium later that af-ternoon to meet Ian and Sylviaand their bass player and leadguitarist, who had just landed atLogan Airport.

1MismatchUnfortunately, the bass player's

bass didn't match up with theSuperbass, as a treble imbalanceproduced distortion. But Sellerswas able to procure a second bassamplifier (called the Jugmobile)f r o m Baker's Bushkoff-BrownBlues Band, and Ian's bass playerliked it. When the amplifiers forIan and Sylvia's guitars werealso set up, each member of theCanadian group carefully listenedto the instrumental sound of theother three from a vantage pointin the audience. Perfection andbalance in tone and volume werethe watchwords.

The addition of the KresgeSound system for, the voices pro-duced unexpected p r o b l e m s."Well," remarked Sylvia, "itSounds like a skating rink." Ac-

By SteveAll rumors were either con-

firmed or denied Sunday night asthe Class of 1969 Executive Comn-mittee announced full details ofthe 1967 Junior Prom.

Friday night will be kicked offwith a cocktail party at ZBT, 58Manchester Road, Brookline. Last-ing from 4 p.m. to 6:30, the affaiwill feature music by Morgan andWhiteflield; the We, Too; and theWhining Brothers. Refreshmentswill be free to all with JP tickets,courtesy of ZBT.

Formal at SheratonAt 9 the scene shifts to the

Sheraton Boston for the traditionalFriday night formal, which willtake place in the Grand Ballroom,the Independence Ballroom, andthe Constitution Ballroom. TheDon Russell Orchestra will pro-vide a traditional sound, and theSpectras will spark a discothequein the Constitution Ballroom. Noliquor will be allowed on thepremises, though those with agetwenty-one identification may pat-ronize the bars in the hotel.

Saturday morning from 10 tonoon, the Class of '71 will take on'70 in the traditional Field Dayon the broad expanse of BriggsField. The theme of this year'sevents will be Snoopy and theRed Baron.

(Please turn to Page 3)

The Lovin' Spoonful will highlight the Saturday afternoonJP concert in the Back Bay Theatre. Appearing with the Spoonfulwill be Jerry Shane, a comedian who has been on the TonightShow.

Fr0sh elect Rastetter president;Seeajl, Stamh m wn other posts

By Jay Hunin The elections ran smoothly, andBill Rastetter (AEP) was John Kotter '68, one of Inscomm's

elected president of freshman advisors to the council, was corn-council Sunday night in a hotly- mended for his handling of it.contested election than, ran to -Bob Condap '68, the other ad-three ballots. Elected- vice-presi-dent was Zane Segal (ZBT), andJohn Strayhorn ('SAE) wasselected as secretary-treasurer.

National f rmaernfty coloniesto be encouraged bv IFC

By Carson AgnewThe Interfraternity Conference is taking steps to

encourage the establishment of new colonies of nationalfraternities on campus. The newly formed Building andExpansion Committee is expected to act as a forum fordiscussion of this matter.

Three reansThere are three reasons for the establishment of

the Committee. First, the Committee will attempt toliberalize the Constitution of the IFC to make it easierfor colonies to exist and to join the IFC. Secomd, thegroup will serve to bring students together, to help to

organize the new colony. Third, itwill act as a clearinghouse forfraternity off-campus housing,(Tomrn Neal '68, committee chair-man, said that he presently knmewof a 40-man house which wasavailable for any colony thatmight be formed.

Nationals IerestedAlthough IFC rules prohibit

(Please turn to Page 6)

visor, was not present.

Objectfives of councilAfter the meeting, Rastetter

outlined the objectives of thisyear's council:

1. "The unity of the clas of '71spurred on by a victorious FieldDay, and not culminated by it.

2. "A program and activitiesinvolving all freshmen for thebenefit and entertainment of theclass.

3. "Programs in conjunctionwith Inscomm to tie a unitedfreshman class to the shool andits -ovrerall objectives.

4. "Numerous small-scale finan-cial programs to demonstratecmmil acceptance of responsibil-ity and powers of organization."

5. Reevaluation of several pro-grans of interest to futureclasses, including Rush Week,freshman feedback, freshmancouncil elections, and freshmancourse orientation.

LUists of critical occupationsand fields of graduate studyfor draft deferment will be is-sued in January, not Decem-her as reported last week.

Soph 'Barons' to battle'Snoopy' frosh Field Day,featuring kites,, biplanes

Photo by Larry Stuart-Deutsch

Folk singers Ian and Sylvia deliver their unique brand ofsongs over PA equipment loaned to them by MIT students. TheKresge Auditorium system proved unsatisfactory and last minutearrangements had to be made.

tually, the system was not de-signed for musical entertainmentbut rather for speeches. Ian in-sisted that better equipment wouldhave to be provided if he andSylvia were expected to performthat ,night.

Whereupon Sellers again stepped

able to procure microphones anda PA amplifier from anofthier band,The Frumnious Bandersnatch. Thesound installation was complete15 minutes before curtain time.

Later, each member of thegroup thanked Sellers for his ef-forts, and Sylvia invited him to

By Dean BollerField Day '67 will feature

Charles M. Schultz's 'Peanuts' asits central theme. The traditionalmatching of the Freshmen againstthe Sophomores in a series of con-tests testing the wits, strength,and organization of both classeswill be held Saturday, November4 on Briggs Field. The eventshave been designed to complywith the main theme and classesare adjusted to work the themeinto their design.

Colors fixedEach class will have a partic-

ular color or set of colors of itsown which will be dominant inthe dress of all the membersthroughout Field Day. The fresh-men colors are black and whitefor Snoopy and the sophomores',red, for the Baron.

Each class is required to pre-pare a class kite. The kite mustbe 2' by 3'. Points will be given

These kites will be certified bythe Field Day Chairman Satur-day, Oct. 28, after which timethey will be declared open forcapture. Any class that does notproduce its ite on the morningof November 4 will lose pointsfrom its total.

Events listedEvents at this year's Field Day

are a conglomeration of the tra-ditional and the new. Establishedevents nclude the tug of war(male urdimnited & female limited)and the all-important glove fight.Field Day '67 will feature suchnew activities as the Biplane Race(Snoopy vs. the Red Baron), TheCharlie Brown express (one oftwo secret events to be unveiledNov 4), and The Pig Pen PieEating Contest (The Great Pump-kin). Sportsman's points will alsobe awarded to the class that bestadheres to the rules and spirit of

forward, and, upon inquiry, was eat dinner with them in Boston. to the kite that flys the highest. Field Day '67.

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Page 2: gow set - The Tech

The Alumni Fund of July 1,1967 through June 30, 1968 hasset its goals at $2,700,000 and 20,-000 donors. Though the funds areto be used for all purpos/s, thetheme emphasized in the bulle-tin recently sent out to alumniis housing.

The new men's dormitory donat-ed by Frank S. MacGregor '07 Isin final stages of engineeringdrawing. At a meeting of the1V CorporaEtion Friday, Mac-

bmit1h appolatedo Ed~Ib h post

Robert A. Smith, Pro-fessat o Pancs and Dhveebr of&le Coder far Mater~ Scte=cand Vgeefg, has W qp

xnd a Pr a me 1 Sof o ft UAm

ais eqiaU toa, oflatt of pelnf e es in hbmj, an is, fm M1T, oiented

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Gregor was introduced andthanked. He spent the afternoontouring the. campus.

Under consideration is a Grad-uate Center for 1200 students. Itwould provide housig for someand a meetin place for all grad-uate students

Renovation costs for existingfacilities run from furnishing astudy ron (a fraternity house)for $259 per man and furfishinga student's room (AshdovmHouse) for $30 to renovatig acorridor (East Campus) for $15,-00) and instalft a new elevator(Ashown Hoe) fbr g$),00. Toremodel Bu C costup to $3p ,0, but reb ad

tes is $UO.

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Page 3: gow set - The Tech

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JP Saturday blasf featuresChuck Berry, A&ll WII ind

(Continuaed from Page 1)That afternoon The Lovin'

Spoonful and Jerry Shane, a com- edian who has appeared on theTonight Show, will be in the Back

Bay Theatre from 2 to 5. Parkingwil be limited, so those attendingare urged to use public transpor- , M..tation.

Chuck Berry and the Il Wind will be in DuPont at 8 Saturdaynight for the beer blast; entrancewill be through the back door ofthe athletic center only. No liquormay be brought, though refresh-ments will be available in large kquantities. Rock-and-roll artist Chudc

Dress will be informal, but no Berry will be fhe featured en.one wearing a sweatshirt will be tertainer for Saturday night ofadmitted. JP.

PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT

P ersonal mtatesment

oOn VietnamR.01ert Mc~aughton

This summer for the first time a significant proportion of theAmeriCan people have begun to turn against the administration'sVietnam policy.' Recent public-.opinion polls, as well as the factthat nomination-seeking George Romney has dared to expresshimself so forcefully, are enough evidence of this change.

Undoubtedly, the public is perturbed about the duration andintensity of the involvement: it has taken so long and such a heavycommitment to accomnplish so little in one half of such a smallcountry; and the prospects are that South Vietnam will not be"secure" in less than about ten more years with an even heaviercommin;tent. Indeed, Israel's farnous general Moshe Dayan, aftera five-week visit to Vietnam in 1966, was unable to predict any-thing but a stalemate.

There are many who are led, because of this frustration, tofeel that we are not "winning" because we are pulling our punches.These people say, "Le-t's bomb North Vietnam more intensivelyand get the war over with." Out of the frying pan into the fire!There is not the siigktest indication ihat inre'-sed bombing willforce the North to capitulate. And even if it did come to terms,the war in the South might very well continue at the same level.

The debate in His country over bombing the North has fendedto obscure the most important issue, the presence of U.S. forces inthe South. The administration has propagated a doctrine that ismorally and psychologically equivalent to a big lie: the doctrinethat the trouble in South Vietnam is due to an aggression fromNorth Vietnam. Most of us had paid little attention to events inVieftnam before our troops took over the fighting, and thus weaccepted the aggression doctrine without question.

In World War 11 American forces liberated many countriesthat had been conquered by aggression. After the aggressors werechased away, these countries were again able to govern them-selves. The involvement in South Korea followed this same pattern.The aggression doctrine led people to believe that the same thingwould happen in Vietnam: we could chase away the North Viet-namese aggressors and the South Vietnamese would then be ableto resume their normal peaceful existence.

If the situation in South Vietnam had been simply a case ofaggression, the war would have been over by now, given the vastlysuperior fire power of our forces. But the war is far from over andthere is now e tremendous credibility gap at home.

Probably few Americans, even now, have read in detail aboutthe nature of the American military operations in South Vietnam.(I recommend the article by Jonathan Schell, "The Village of BenSuc" in the New Yorker of July IS, 1967.) For example, in asweep by American forces certain villages are marked for extinc-tion. The pattern of action in such a village is as follows: the vil-lage is approached by surprise; men of military age are shot out-right if they look as if they are running away, otherwise they areheld as suspects; women, children and the elderly are sent todisplacement camps; and then the entire village is burned to theground.

In short, American forces are waging a war against the entirerural population in a vast part of the countryside of South Viet-nam. And the contribution of the Vietnamese in what we Americanslike to think of as their own cause has been negligible, at most;this fact is one that has caused many Americans to ask questions.Even more disturbing is the lack of any indication that the prfsentSouth Vietnamese government will ever have control over itscountryside without a sizeable American military commitment.

The first step in extricating ourselves from Vietnam is to rec-ognize that we are fighting a revolution and not an aggression.The second step ii to decide whether we are to spend ten yearsor so burning villages and building displacement camps, not tomention killing and being killed, or somehow to come to terms withthe political forces within the country. If we face this issue andmake a resolute decision, then the issue of bombing in the Northwill take care of itself.

Let us hope that our country never again involves itself be-yond its borders in a situation that necessitates remaking a nationperson-by-person. But let us resovle that, if it ever does, Americantroops will not be the instruments and victims of its folly.

Department of MathematicsRensselaer Polytechnic Inst.

September 30, 1967 Troy, N.Y. 12 1 81$ * * *

Robert McNaughton, a visiting professor at M.I.T. from 1964to 1966, was on Project MAC and taught in the Electrical Engi-neering Department.

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The Administrafive ServicesBuilding, formerly the DaggettBuilding, (E18-E19) has been re-named the Horace Sayford FordBuilding in honor of the pastBursar and Treasurer of the Ins-tituSe.

Bursar and treasurerFord served as Bursar for 20

years, beginning in 1914, and be-came treasurer and a memberof the MIT Corporation in 1934.During the next 16 years heserved not only as a competentadministrator, but as a helpfulconsultant on student financialproblems.

Awarded medalDuring World War II, Mr. Ford

cooperated with the govenmentin expanding the Institute's facil-ities for research and training. Inrecognition of his "exceptionallymeritorious conduct in the per-formance of outstanding servicesto the United States" he wasawarded the Medal for Merit, thenation's highest civilian award,by President TrIuman in 1948.

The Horace S. Ford building is

'=hoto by Dale Stone

Newly renamed in honor of Horace Sayford Ford, this build-ing houses a large portion of the administrative staff of theInstitute. Mr. Ford served as Bursar and Treasurer of the MITCorporation.

the second largest building in theInstitute. It now houses morethan twenty offices and 750 em-'ployees. A portion of the-building

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Page 4: gow set - The Tech

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The Ivory Tower

Equaliy and ther-

_ By Steve CarhartRecently the Selective Service

2 Act, a subject near to the heartct of all college students, was sig-m nificantly revised by Congress.0 Although undergraduate defer-. ments were retained, henceforth0 graduate school deferments will

be allowed only in disciplines re-< lated to the "national health anda safety." It has not been specifiedu whether this phrase includes such

disciples as physics, manage-ment and law.

The debate which led to thiscompromise decision vividly high-

u lighted a very difficult nationalL problem which results from a

conflict between our ideals ofI equality and the requirements for

highly trained manpower in ourmodern economy.

Equality todayOur problem, to paraphrase

George Orwell, is that all menare equal, but some are moreessential than others. Looking atthe facts of national survival intoday's world, it is immediatelyapparently that our existence de-pends on our economic and mli-tary strength which, in thesetimes depends on the state of ourtechnology and industrial manage-ment.

China has a large army, butthat army would be uselessagainst a smaller force equippedwith, for example, tactical nu-clear weapons (assuming for themoment, that it were politicallypermissible to use them). A cold-blooded overall view of thenational situation, then, woulddictate that our creative "elite"be protected and that less valu-able people be sent to the frontin Viet Nam.

Othes' attitudesThis attitude, it would seem,

has been adopted by our potentialenemides. In Russia, talent in sci-ence exempts one from militaryservice; had Mrs. Lutz been bornin Leningrad instead of in thiscountry, she would have had toseek some sort of employmentdifferent from her current po-sition.

Even China, despite all her"revivalist" fervor, has chosento leave her scientists alone sothat they will be able to produceher bomb. In addition, though allschools are supposedly closed inorder to make Red Guards avail-able, reports have filtered outthat China's technical schools areoperating as usual.

A moral needHowever, in this country we

feel a need to morally justify anysystem such as Selective Servicewhich makes such extraordinarydemands on only some of ourcitizens.

When one hears of high schoolclassmates fighting and occasion-ally dying in Viet Nam, he must(or at least this reporter does)ask himself what he did to earnenough of an IQ to be in Cam-bridge unread of - Nang. Ofcourse, the Institute isn't exactlya country club, but our men inViet Nam have their share oftension too.

One can be shot down here too,be it at Wellesley or in an 18.21quiz, but the results are not quiteso fatal.

Institute vs. armyIn the final analysis, though,

a student at the Institute is prob-

ably doing the country moregood than he ever could in themilitary. Of course, defermentsraise cries of "inequality;" let ustherefore examine our definitionof equality. One notion of equalityis that everyone should receivethe same thing; the other is thateveryone should have equal op-portunity to earn whatever hedesires.

America's notion of equality hasalways been the latter (though inthe case of the Negro, practiceis only- beginning to convergewith theory). Hopefully, highereducation and the positions in so-ciety which go with it will beavailable to all citizens havingsufficient ability, regardless ofother factors. Then, the only in-equality will be inequality ofability, which no one can control.

The net result of all this wouldseem to be that not everyone canbe happy with whatever solutionis chosen for this problem. Wewill have to either have defer-ments of certain classes and riskinternal friction, or otherwisehave an intelligent army whichmight be equipped with less ef-fective weapons defending a na-tion economically weaker than itmight otherwise be.

CLASS OF '70

FIELL DAY, HE 'i-

by Michael Warren79. The blackout which hit the

Institute on Friday afternoonraised several questions aboutpriorities at MIT. Although thePublic Relations office and all ofthe hallways were immediatelyswitched to auxiliary power, theoffice of Provost Jerome Weis-ner rernained in total darkness.Perhaps before the next dark-ening, steps will be taken tochange this situation, unless ofcourse, our Provost prefers towork in soft lighting.

When the lights dimmed atthe Coop, the police quicklyshut the doors, barring the exitof both customers and poten-tialfly "hot" merchandise. Onestudent was seen futilely andfrantically banging on thedoors, yelling: "Let me out! Ihave a class!"

80. The ad page of Tech Talkhas had a rash of offers to swap

t parking stickers. There werethree offers to exchange WestGarage stickers for AlbanyStreet stickers, and one offer togo the reverse route. (if youhaven't got your West Garagesticker yet, Joan, X4168, call upMrs. J. Kluge, X6068; or Joan,X4366; or Tom, X2364.)

81. At least once during hisundergraduate career everyMIT student is confronted wita skeptic who laments thateverything at the Institute isnumbered: courses, students,rooms, etc. However, mostschools, including many nearby"LibDral Arts" colleg9e sufferfrom the same malady, withoutso much publicity. if te skepticcomes from Brandeis, just askhim or her what room 54-207 attheir school is. It happens to bethe men's rooms a their siu.dent center.

82. The last two issues of TheTech have illustrated a basiccontroversy on the editorial

board: Who will win the WorldSeries? The three board mem.bers from Missouri managed tosneak in a boast for the Cardi.nals, which was following in thenext issue by a retraction andapology. The antics of the op.posing {factions made goodcopy for the wire services, andwas featured on New EnglandTV news shows.

83. If anyone happened tohear unusual noises emanatingfrom the general direction ofBurton House on Thursdaynight, your ears were not play.ing tricks eon you. Rather it wasa group of communication the.ory oriented Burfonites whowere trying to get across awierd message in an un-Mac.luhan type way. They had con.nected a huge speaker to anamplification system, and wereprojecting such sounds as thegurgling of water runningthrough a toilet. The racketcould be heard as far as Mass.Ave. and was finally quelledwhen the power to that sectionof {the dormitory was cut off.

84. Two of the candidates forSecretary- Treasurer of fhe Classof '71 are roomnmates in Mc.Cormick. Rumor had it, that ifeither won the election, shewould fake notes at meetings,and the other would balancethe class's books.

85. The following was handedto The Tech to be puf in as asmall notice. We fel it wouldbe more appropriate here:"Any graduate student mem.ber of Tau Beta Pi interested inreceiving information about themeetings and events of the or-ganization, please send a cardto Tau Beta Pi, W20-401 MITStudent Center, Cambridge,Mass." Well f:ellas, anytime wecan do your secretarial workfor you, don't hesitate to call.

Vol. LXXVII, No. 35 October 9, 1967Chairman ............................................... .... Guille Cox '68Editor ................. Mike Rodburg '68Managing Editors ................. John Corwin '68, Tom Thomas '69Business Manager ................... Dan Green '68News Editor ................. Mark Bolotin '68Features Editor ................... Michael Warren '69Sports Editor ................................... Tony Lima '69Entertainment Editor .............. Jack Donohue '69Photography Editor ....................................... Bill Ingram '68Advertising Editor ....... Nick Covatta '68

Editorial Consultants ................. Gerry Banner '68Dave Kress '67, M ark McNamee '68

National Advertising Manager ............................ Jack Swaim '68Associate Managing Editors ........... Greg Arenson '70, Bob Cubert '68Associate News Editors ..... ....... Steve Carhart '70, Paul Johnston '70Associate Sports Editors ..... .......... Stan Kask '70, George Wood.'70Intramural Sports Editor .......................... Joel Hemmelstein '70Associate Entertainment Editor ......................... Barry Mitnick '68Associate Photography Editor .......................... Jeff Reynolds '69Accounts Receivable ...... ..................... Pat Green '69Assistant Advertising Manager ........................... Regan Fay '70Controller ........................... Steve Kinney '70Secretary .......................... Linda F. Stewart

News Staff .............. Cary Bullock '68, Sue Downs '68, Dave Kaye '68Pete Meschter '69, Carson Agnew '70 John Foran '70. Jack Katz '70

Don Minnig '70, Dean Roller '70, Pat Szymanski '70, Karen Wattel '70Barry Weiss '70

Features Staff .......... Lee Shaeffer '70, Ed thalfie '70, Louis Zarfas '70Sports Staff . ... Herb Finger '68, John Kopolow '68, Jon Steele '68

Arm Varteressian '68, Steve Wiener '69. Jim Yankaskas '69Paul Baker '70, Roger Dear '70. Jeff Goodman '70

Larry Kelly '70, Bill Michels '70Entertainment Staff ............... Jack Bernstein , Orville Dodson '68

Jeff Stokes '68. Dave Grosz '69Bob McCrory '69, Ray Hagstrorn '69, Steve Grant '70

Photography Staff ... Pete Blicher '69, Tom Dooley '69Larry-Stuart Deutsch '67, George Flynn '69, Harold luzzolino G

Stan Hoderowski '70, Morris Markowitz '68, Dave Pack '68Kanth Rao '70, Steve Silverstein '68, Brad Williamson '70

Dale Stone '69, Mike Venturino '70, Steve Lee '70

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts. The Tech is pub-lished every Tuesday and Friday during the college year, except duringcollege vacations by The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT Student Center, 84Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge. Massachusetts 02139. Telephones: AreaCode 617, 676-5855, and 864-6900, extension 2731. United States Mailsubscription rates: $4.25 for one year, $8.00 for two years.

Frosh replyTo the tEdior:

"It is a sad commentary in-deed" to find that the editorialsof The Tech can not be trustedto say anything conclusive, e.g."Frosh Council Commentary,"October 6, 1967.

A careful reading finds theTech boldly stati... I havesearched the editorial and havefailed to find anything stated atall.

We may assume that "Inscommreacted strongly... to the threatsof caucus and conspiracy alongliving group lines" though TheTech never states whether thethreat had any basis in fact.

A casual reading of the editor-ial gives the impression of In-scomm, and The Tech "reactingstrongly" to halt Freshman Coun-cil bloc voting although The Technews article on the subject statesthat it was the freshmen them-selves who quelled the threat.

Cl6umnist Tony Lima states inthis issue that The Tech has areputation for going out on alimb. This particular branchseems not only to be unoccupied,but uninhabitable.

Stephen C. Ehrmann '71Freshman CouncilRepresentative

(Ed. note: Mr. Ehrmann'sstrongly defensive reaction isnot atypical of the way a goodmany of the council representa-tives have reacted to Inscomm'sintervention and any other crit-icismn. It seems to us, though,

that if a meeting called by onesegment of the council withoutthe knowledge of the council adsvisors is- indeed innocent, if theissue of bloc voting was quelledby the freshmen, if there isnothing suspicious about the factthat most fraternity delegateswere barred from a good partof the meeting, and if the sim-ilarities between this incidentand a similar meeting last yearare all just coincidence, then,Mr. Ehrmann, the facts wivllstand without needless lashingout at everyone.

As for Mr. Ehrmann's read-ing comprehension, perhaps aremedial rendering of the editor-

ial would be helpful to him.The four paragraph editorialdevoted one paragraph to ack-nowledging the work done onimproving fraternity - dormitoryrelations, and the fact that thiscouncil's activities are to be ex-panded. Another paragraph at-tempted to explain a little aboutdormitory-fraternity schisms andthe harm they entail, while theconcluding paragraph supportedInscomm's intervention on thegrounds that events were suspi-cious enough and the stakeshigh enough to warrant that in-tervention.)

(Please turn to page 5)

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Some- 200 radio astronomers,structural engineers and architectsfrom throughout the world willmeet at MIT Oct. 18-20 for an in-ternational symposium on thestructures technology of largeradio and radar telescopes. Pa-pers will be presented describingwork on "large dishes" in theUS, USSR, United Kingdom, Aus-tralia, Canada, and West Ger-many.

The purpose the mleetig is tobring together leading re-presentatives of diverse disiplies whocan contribute to the general prob-lem of designing and buildingvery large radio/radar telescopesthat, despite their -size, retain thestructural integrity and shape thatis vital to accurate astronomicalobservations. Some papers willemphasize stess analysis in com-plex struct--es. Others will dealwith the instabilities that occur inradomes, the giant spherical struc-tures used to enclose large tele-scopes and protect them from theelements.

The program is being co-spon-sored by the Office of Naval Re-search and MIT. Co-chairmen areProf. James W. Mar, Departmentof Aeronautics and Astronautics,and Dr. Harold Liebowitz of theOffice of Naval Research, Wash-ington, Cf. Professor EdwardPurcell Harvard Universitywill be airnan of the openingsession Wednesday moing. Pro-vost and Institute Professor Jer-ome Weisner will welcome thedelegates. All sessions will be heldin Kresge Auditorium.

for PFame. Weendt,

Interviews for Parent's Week-end Corm.miltte Chairman and formembers of the Spring WeekendCommittee will be held Thursdayin the InsComm Office (W20401).All interested persons should signup for an interview With the sec-retary in the InsComm Office bytomorrow.

The elections for these positionswill be at the InsComm meetingSunday at 2 pm.

(Continued- from Page 4)

- Collegiate SamplerTo the Editor:

Since 1960 the Collegiate Samp-ler program has primarily en-abled thousands of student, fac-ulty and staff members in theBoston area to save money whileat school by giving free admis-sion to theatres and plays as wellas discounts at restaurants andshops.

In seven years there have beenremarkably few incidents involv-ing an establishment not honoringtheir contract.

We are pleased to announcethat the Esquire theatre chainis at present once again honoringtheir contract which does excire'September 30, 1968 not September30, 1967 as previously reported bytheir general manager.

The statement that the Esquiretheatre chain offers half pricewith or without a CollegiateSampler to student, faculty orstaff members appears also to beerroneous.

Although this incident at theEsquire chain was not our fault,we will still honor the CollegiateSampler guarantee to any MIT

student who was refused admis-sion at the Esquire chain. If hewill contact us at the address inthe booklet, we will offer at leastone coupon of equal or greatervalue at no charge.

We would like to thank MIT stu-dents who notified us of Es-quire's breach of contract so thatwe were able to have rectifiedthe situation in a short space oftime.

With every good wish for asuccessful and money-saving yearto all Tech students.

Kenneth C. Barron for theCollegiate Sampler

To the Editor:Can somebody please tell me

how an MIT activity can becomesufficently de!veldop- to ,w;arrantfunds from Finboard? The MITTiddlywinks Association is send-ing a team to Waterloo, Canadaat the end of October to the NorthAmerican Tiddlywinks Champion-ships being held in conjunctionwith the Univ. of Waterloo'sTenth Anniversary Week, and wewere counting on Finboard's dem-onstrating to us that there is an

advantage to being an officialMIT activity, that bureaucracyhas its purpose. But no, 1% yearsgrowing on our own, and we arenot sufficiently developed, yet Iknow that two years ago, in orderto help develop a new activity,Finboard financed the 12-man (/our size) Debate Club to the tuneof $6,000. Moreover, I know thatour organization is proudly -point-ed to in order to show freshmenthe wide variety of activities MThas to offer and I know also thatMIT is also looking for publicitywhich our appearance in Waterloo(which will most likely be on Ca-nadian National TV) will certainlyprovide.

More than just a gripe againstFinboard, this letter is a plea tothe MI1T Community to help usraise the $260-$250 we will needto send an 8-man team to Water-loc. I appeal to any organizationson campus with some money (likethe Debate Club?), but muchmore to my fellow-students. Any-thing is welcome and will be usedonly towards bringing the NorthAmerican title back to the US.

Thanks very much.

Peter Wulkan '68

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The Stockholders, af their Annual Meeting on Wednesday, October 5, 1967, made the following nom-inations for Stockholders, Officers and Directors:

STOCKHOLDERSTo Hold Oifice for Five Years

Dean John P. ElderProfessor Carl F. Floe

To Hold Offie for One YearPresident-Milton P. Brown

Vice President and General Counsel-Ausfin W. ScottVice President-Maleolm G. Kispert

Secretary-PhilipA. StoddardTreasurer--L. Gard Wiggins

OTHER DIRECTORSFroma the Officers or hua nif Har vard

Bruce ChalmersRichard T. Gill

Louis LossRobert S. Mullen

Elliott PerkinsArfhur D. Trottenberg

From he Officers or Alumi of M.1oT.Robert J. Holden

Donald P. Severance

From the Graduate Schools of HarvardStephen C. JohnsonCornelius W. May

From the a tdu tae School of M.I.T.Dean H. Vanderbilf

From Harvard-Class of 1968 - Daniel H: Smih.From Harvard-Class of 1969 - Jack Davis

From Harvard-Class of 1970 - Alan K. AustinFrom Radcliffe-Class of 1969 - lisa Koretsky

From M.{.T.-Class of 1968 - Stanley B. PopielarzFrom M.I.T.-Class of 1969 - William C. Stfephen

- HARVARD SQUARE1400 Massachusetts Avenue. Cambridge, Mass. 02138

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Chemfal Manufacturng

R0hm and BaasCompany

Plastics, Fibers, Pharmaceuticals,and Chemicals for-Agriculture,and the Processing Industries.

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Ifaterity aoloresestablish n campus(Continued from Page 1)

national fraternaties from estab-lishing their own colonies- oncampus, Neal said that formationof the Committee was in partpropted by inquiries which theIFC had received from severalnational organizations.

Neal said that he hoped thatgroups planning to form colonieswould be made up of studentsfrom several differet' classes.The attempted formation of acolony of Phi Sigma Delta nat-ional failed last year in part be-cause members of the colonycame from only one class.

Administration favorableThe administration, especially

Kenneth Wadleigh, Dean of Stu-dent Affairs, feels that there is atpresent a favorable atmospherefor formation of a fraternity col-ony. Any groups interested informing a colony should contacteither T om Neal or Dean Wad-leigh.

Dra.ashop openswi two one-act plays

The MIT Dramashop opens itsseason next Friday and Satur-day, October 13 and 14. An in-teresting evening will be provid-ed with the showing of the oneact plays, "The Dirty Old man,"by Lewis John Carlino and"Kitchenette" by Ronald Tavel.Following the performance at8:30 pm in the Little Theatre ofKresge Auditorium, there will bea critique and coffee hour. Don'tmiss this opening performance-it's free..

OC. 21

" ..... By Steve Grant-.... ...../ ' Af 39 'j/9 9' '',The most important single per-

son in rock recording, aside fromthe performer, is the producer.George Martin has had a largepart in shaping the Beatles' mu-sic. Andrew Loog Oldham (alsoknown as Sandy Beach) has donethe same for the Roling Stones.Mostly because of Brian Wilson'spainstaking techniques;-'Good Vi-brations' was a prodigious work.The producer coordinates all thefunctions in a recording session,often' having suggested and se-lected the material beforehandwith the group. Serving as every-thing from artistic guiding handto overseer of the engineering, hecan have all-important impact ona record.

Early work with Beach BoysOne of the most talented such

men is a 26 year old Californiannamed Gary Usher. In 1962 hemade his debut on the nationalscene in a group called the T-Bones (not the same group thatdid the Alka-Seltzer commercial),which also included friend RogerChristian. The T-Bones were anuninspired hot-rod/surfing group.During that period Usher, Chris-tian; and Brian Wilson becameclose friends, often sitting in andhelping out on each other's re-cording sessions (as Mick Jag-ger has donre on 'All You Need IsLove' and other beatles songs).Christian wrote 'Shut Down,' 'Lit-tle Deuce Coupe,' 'Don't WorryBaby,' and six album cuts in con-junction with Wilson, plus 'TheLittle Old Lady From Passadena'with Don Ailfield. The Wilson-Usher team collaborated on '409,''In My Room,' and eight others.

Usher, it appears, had a moresignificant influence on the Beach

Boys. He and Wilson evinced thestyle of falsetto singing that isnow the Beach Boys' trademark,After the T-Bones disbanded,Usher stayed on as an assistantproducer to Nick Venet and thenBrian Wilson, while Christian foi.lowed independent pursuits.

Work with the ByrdsAfter Allen Stanton left Cola.

bia Records (he has since re.turned), the Byrds were withouta producer. Looking for somneoneto help enlarge the 'freaky' soundthey were evolving, but neverthe.less to keep perspective in thAdmusic, they hired Usher and putout the album 'Younger ThanYesterday.' It is a credit toUsher's versatility that songs asfar apart musically as 'CrA-102'and 'Timne Between' can appeartogether on this album. One byone the singles 'So You Want to bea Rock 'n' Roll Star,' 'My BackPages,' 'Have You Seen HerFace,' and 'Lady Friend' followed,(These' five releases comprise allof Usher's work so far with theByrds.) Ironically, the success ofthese singles.has taken a markeddownward trend, peaking out na.tionally at 29, 30, 96, and 82, re.spectively' although they havebeen successively better songs.

Switch to recording -

Usher has recently recordedtwo singles under the name 'Sagit.tarius,' which is sort of a pun onhis own name. Neither 'My WorldFell Down' nor 'Hotel Indiscreet'made Billboard's Hot 100, al.though the former reached thetop twenty in both Boston. andSt. Louis. 'My World Fell Down,'one of my favorite singles ofthe summer, also exists in anAmerican cover version by theImpact, as well as a French copyby the M.ertens Brothers. (Forsome reason it isn't at all unu.sual for a record in English tomake it big in a non-English-speaking country.)

Perhaps Usher and the Byrdswill have better commercial luckwith future single releases. Theyare both too good to continue notmaking it big this way. TheByrds' next lp is scheduled forrelease in the very near futureand should contain some surprises.

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By Roy Furman

Admirers of television's benev-olent pedagogue, Mr. Novak, willentertain fond memories at the-,Cheri 2" while viewing Sidneypoiter in 'To Sir, With -Love.'The memories, however, are tar-nishcd by a less than excellentperfonance. Although Poitierstands out as noble as a Grecian

· god, the plot meanders in a dullameness without reaching emo-

tional climaxes until the lastscene.

Rebellious animalsPut down by the world, Mark

Thackery (Poitier) must yield topragmatic interests by seekingemployment as a high schoolteacher in a London slum. A

j azz, ack nationalismi'highlight Shepp visit

An evening of new jazz will bepresented by the Archie SheppQuartet at Kresge Auditorium,rIT, this Wednesday -evening,October 11, at 8:30 pm sponsoredby station WTBS. Shepp, likeOrnette Coleman, Cecil Taylor,and the late John Coltrane, hasendeavored to broaden the me-lodic and rhythmic range of jazz.Further, he has been intent onshowing its relevancy to the cur-rent social-political climate. WithShepp playing tenor sax, thequartet also features RoswellRudd on trombone, James Gar-rison on bass, and Beaver Harrison drums. James Garrison willbe remembered for his electrify-ing bass solo performed in Kresgea year ago when John Coltraneplayed here.

In addition, Mr. Shepp will givea lecture, sponsored by the Hu-manities Department of MIT, onthe general topics of music andblack nationalism. The lecturewill be given at 4 pm Wednesdayafternoon preceeding the concertin Hayden Library Lounge, Build-ing 14F-310, MIT.

Tickets are available in thelobby of building 10, MiT. Forinformation and reservations callUN 4-6900, ext. 2910.

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ra .Depends on the giant. If thegiant happens to be Ford MotorCompany, it can be a distinctadvantage. See your placementdirector and make an appoint-ment to see the man from Fordwhen he visits 'your campus.We could grow bigger together.DATES OF VISITATION.

November 2, 3I'd like a big job please.

communications engineer by 'pro-fession, the gentlemanly teacheris harrassed by faculty, students,and his own lack of confidence.lroken homes, poverty, and apa-thy breed a band of animals whoare defiantly rebellious towardthe precepts of home and school.But as in all boy-makes-goodthemes, Thackery instills his per-sonal dignity and ambition-theoperation bootstrap of his ownculturally deprived adolescence-into his classroom hoard of hood-lums and sluts.

Soft-spoken but forceful, re-served but caring, practical butfeeling--these are the qualitieswith which Thackery projects hisleadership into his classroom jun-gle. Poitier evokes the quiet dig-nity and pride that commands at-tention in the racially mixed, butnevertheless strongly biasedneighborhood. Poitier's personalperformance is the sole nucleusof the story; without his soft-spoken dominance 'To Sir, WithLove' would degenerate into amotley grab bag of shallow,brash characterizations of Londonhoods.

Fails to impressVery little stands out in the low-

.key persistence of stereotyped

images of the classrooms. Lack-ing meaningful scenes which in-volve the viewer in the lives ofthe characters, the plot attainsonly the shallowest heights at theconclusion. The most notable as-pect is purely technical. A fastseries of composite stills skillfullyconveys the essence of a possiblylaborious school outing to the mu-seum.

'To Sir, With Love' is not thetrash that is so widely prevalent,but neither is it an engrossingfilm that lingers in the mind. Bet-ter thematic development or moreediting :would 'certainly enhancethe framework. within which Sid-ney Poitier displays his skills.

Professor E. E. Hagen, Departments of Economics and PoliticalScience, will speak at the first meeting of Viewp>int today at noonin the East Lounge of the Student Center. Hagen is the author of"Theory of Social Change," which stresses the importance of per-sonality and sociological factors in determning the rate of economicgrowth. He will present a psychological interpretation of the per-sonality factors and their roots, which may be causes of the riotsand unrest in American cities this summer. He believes that thecauses for the disturbances are in American history and Americanfamily life. The idea that the riots resulted from present poorconditions is correct, but somewhat superficial and incomplete, inhis view.

Which M..LT. man SiS a decision-maker at General Electcri?(They all are)

Charles E. Reed joined GeneralElectric as a research associate afterreceiving a Ph.D. in Chemical En-gineering from M.I.T. Today he's VicePresident and General Manager ofthe Chemical and Metallurgical Di-vision.

Decision-maker? You bet! Butevery M.I.T. grad gets his share ofresponsibility at General Electric.

Take laser physicist, DaveDusten, EEEE '65. Since graduating

from M.I.T., Dave has been doingresearch work with laser beam con-trol and laser ion interaction.

Floyd Dunn, '65, is a nuclearengineer at the General Electricoperated Knolls Atomic Power Lab-oratory in Schenectady, New York.He works with digital computers toevaluate and improve the proce-dures used in designing nuclearreactor cores.

Responsibility and decision-making come early at General Elec-tric. We're growing so fast and in somany challenging areas that there'sno waiting for the big opportunities.

How about you? Do you havewhat it takes to make importantdecisions for General Electric? Ifyou think you do, talk to the GeneralElectric recruiter when he's oncampus. 910-16

GENERAL Ot ELECTRICAn Equal Opportunity Employer

. . . .a. .. . _

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EVANGELCtAL SEINAR SERIESStudent Center---Thursday 7:30 P.M.

A weekly series of seven seminars arranged to discuss basicaspects of the Christian faith.

OCT 12, 19671Prof Max Deibert

Dept. of Chemical Engineering, M.I.T.

i HAE AB0LITIOn OF MAN"Dr. Deibert pursues the theme originally developed by C. S. Lewis:Moral relativism as a practical living standard can destroy notonly individuals, but society and culture as well--he abolition ofMan in the humanistic ad the Christian sense.

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YO'MUG AE-RICANSFOR FREDOM

" dedicated to libertaria" Aoughf" recognxzing the greatness of Man, the

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" believing thati a oj$soeq r nmenf musteloimate. Ais oercio>n rafner tlhn -insfi-gafe it

" acting as a ntiional organization to in-stifute and protect these ideals

U r-ge a vote 'in theGraduate-Studet Councg,

Poll for Unied StatsVICTORY ;n Vietnm2202NAMMr ~ ~ ~ ~ ll a --

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°: The marked diversification ofo interests present witfin the under- graduate population at MIT has inW the past two years added new din mensionrss to the meaning of the

0 activities Wogrrn.Acc. ordir tDU Al Singer, ' 63, chairman ol theO ctiv C , ut thirty-> five per cent of the undergraduate

student bEody now actvey partLi-Zn. .pate in activities other than ath-

= let . and student government.lth growth, the acvities pro-

gram has more need Um ever-before for effeive aowxlination

I and m xrnge ent in all parts ofLa its strucure.

i Mhe Acttidies Cabucil is com-p osed of nireteen activity heads,thirteen of whom represent per-manent member, annd six dwhom represent -rotatng mem-bers. The fdrteen Pm nentmembers are, large activitiesupon2 which the rea structure is sonewhat dependent, andinclude organizations Such as ILSCd,The Tech and Tech EngineeeingNews. The remaini six positionsare held by ogarnizations ofsmaler scale, and it is throughthese six positions that the ma-joxity nwnber Of groups xpresstheir opinions.

The AEB is composed of a nwn-ber of members elected by thecouncl, and is direIy responsiblefor thee matnten e of the activi-ties prograrr- Presently, th e AEacts as a fact-athrig agencsyand advisory bad tD the Activities CMIC, ofern polic sug-gestons. The AEB is also repnsible for invstigation of ireularids in activit~y opeamton. Toaford as mnuch autonomy as Pos-sible to thze a uttt grups, theAiEB exeris .its invesfigative

mecsm with p-denc, andonlfy where m~m~gement orq~uestonble ethc is iavolved.

The ABemphaze a two-waymode of resoibility inz its formulation of aevity polic. Anactivty mus prvie an educa-ton opportunit not avaiable inthe dlassroom whih will chalengeeach indiv~idual nolve Secondlyit must mange its resourcs

maea vauaie emtrbutonaailale at remnble 5Dt tO

tbe MT ommmit~Y. Iti Ls.Unthese two Ericiple tht te ac-fvtites prgm at the Instituteis built In all policythese tworqiies am the gmde

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Smeavd snd bottted by the Catisari Bmwalm C*Wftgtn. t^mark CatobM eamy. one.. 104 E.

You may select SPEized jobs, or broad systtype jobs. Or you can c&not to change assignmeryou'd rather develop in-cskills in one area.

Either way, we tyou'll-like the Hughesproach.lIt means you'll bel

more versatile in a shctime.

That's why we have a two-year Rotation Program forgraduating engineers whowould prefer to explore severaltechnical areas. And that's whymany of our areas are organ-ized by functison-rather thanby project.

At Hughes, you mightwork on spacecraft, communi-cations satellites and/or tacti-cal rmissiles-during your firsttwoyears.

If you qualify, we'sl arrangeforyou to work on several differentassignments...and you canhelp pick them.

IIE

HUGHES AIRCRAFT C

ASMOSPACM DIVISI'

(And yoursalary willshow it.)

Al you-need is an - or Physics degree and

EE, M Etalent.

0 BIEFEIBB ON0ME&IATEB(What they are. how they'remade, what they do acid howthey're used.)6:30 AM Wednesday Mcrming

WNWa Channel 7Bif-oughlt to you by

-------------- L-~----------IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

Efectro-Optical EngineersMicrocircuit EngineersSpace Systems EngineersMissile Systems EngineersGuidance & Controls EngineersSpacecrafa Design EngineersWeapon Systems EngineersComponents & Mlaterials EngineersCircuit Design EngineersProduct Design Engineers

For additional information,please contact your CollegePlacement Director or write:Mr. Robere A. MartinlHead of Employmena tHiughes Aerospace Divisions1 1940> W. Jeffersen Blsv.Culver City, California 90230U.S. Citizenship is requiredAn equal opporunity employer I

L~EB: regu atlg binyAt the present time, the coordi- facifities -in the 'new' s4tudelt cenamtig function of te Activities ter are already insufflient. to

Coundl is unmdergona a- steady meet demands, and with the pres-reforrnation a change necessi- ent growth rate, the pmoblea istated by The marked increae in not likely to imprmve. Anotherextm-curricula -participation m problem, not as widespread asthe past -two years. The present (Please turn to Page 9)

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~S ro lbrew Carl-sbwgmthe mellewq

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CAMPUSINTERVIEWS

Octo9ber 30 & 31Contact College PlacementOffice to arrange interview

appointment.

Page 9: gow set - The Tech

IIRC�W(aBIBB�glll�

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SAa~aor DANCESAT, OCT. 14 - 8a12

With Free Seabreeze andMusic by "ATHE PHLUPHB v

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BaThe callins card to success forcarr-minded People in all posi-tions and Professiones."Ld* us hishlifatt Your EXPaE.RkPENCE and special tatants in aResume bY PARNELL; and haelYou start or advance Hor carece,exploret rew filSeo &WF dan thedot t lob opJwUmit5es hErn MAmro. camerasy "arme &

MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTEDPAIMELU PEMNIEL a zLTI15 Court Square (off Court Styft

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sack in the hearth at Stonehenge.One of the most humorous as-pects of the film, in fact, is theplay of old wooen-walle Eg-;land against the fast, uptodate London society. Old, establishedartifacts and institutions are view- ed through the shaded eyes of the cynical younger generation.

Perfet jokter Michael Crawford is the perfect|

joker type, and plays the part o the younger brother to perfection.Reed plays the older, more seri- ous brother, whose ambition todo something great gives momen- tum to the theft. It is the youngerbrother, however, who exhibits thedevious and spontaneous genius ofa jester. Crawford, who has an 'Alfie' kind of magnetism aboutdhuim, is ideal for the par.

The other roles in the film arefairly stock-the overgrwn teenym-bopper, the carousing debutate,the flustered police chief, the dot-ing but shocked mother, etc. Allof them are creditably done.

The color photography is excel-lent; there are some marvelousshots of the Englishi landscape.

Fast amovnThe viewer will fid that the

film moves qute fast. Fortunate-ly, the Americans habit of over-working a comnic lire ad luausmdoesn't show anywhere in thefim.m

Director Mfichael. Winner, whoalso wrote the book, should becongratulated for mald sometbilg new of the time-worn themeof stealing the Cmwn Jewels. Infact, England might do well toarrest himn for comt up with aworkable plan.

lEC~~edRORe A~wIs Inrease ined acR HUBes

(Confinu~edf frorn Page 8)the lack of space, is Oinnce. Oft~he some one hundred orgaia-tions represented ill the program,over seventy-live per cent arefinancially independent, derivnanl income from some product orservce available to the AMTCommunity. The other twenty-five per cent are nlot so fortunate,and must rely heavily on Fin-Board for financial support.

Iln future Activities Spotlights,various activities on campus wfilbe examined, and their more in-teresting facets willt be noted. Itis hoped that through-closer ex-

auation if the Activities struc-ture, the efforts of the people in-volved will' be more Muly appreci-ated by the MIT community.

Tech blacked oufuFriday aff ernoon

A large Portion of the MIT com-Munit was plunged into dark-ness Friday, as the lights flick-ered and went out at 3:05 pm.

According to Jerry Barraford,MTGeneral Superintendent of

Power and Utilities, the lightswere out for "over hbal anhour." Mr. Barraford suspectedthat the cause of the blackout,which afected only MIT, was abroken cable between tvo newbuildings, the Space and Compu-tation Buildings, on Vasser Street.All power was restored by fiveo'clock.

comedy from England about anattempt to steal the Crown Jewels.Michael Crawford and OliverReed star. as tle notorious Tre-mayne brothers, a pair of game-some youpg bachelors in Ipndon'sJet set.

Grand gestureRather than endure a routine

bourgeois existence the two havedecided upon a 'grand gesture'that is to have international re-percussions, one of them being toshow the Queen how bad govern-ment security measures reallyare. Their plan unfolds withl im-pulsive genius, and soon they arethe proud possessors of a greattreasure. (Don't worry, Virginra,it's just a story.)

Of all possible hiding places, thejewels end lp buried in a burlap

'TH E JOKERS.' directed byMichael Winner: bokok by Mi-chael Winner,'starring M ichaelCrawford and Oliver Reed: nowDlaying at the Exeter StreetTheatre.

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By Jeff AuokesThere are two jokers in every

deck, and such is the case with'The Jokers,' a sparkling new

WANTEDMALES OVER 21

for Psychology experiment.

Call 232|0>257SONAGUARD is America's most effective auto alarm! Itprotects ax1 types of Cars - Foreign and American. Sona-guard has 4-way protection while other systems have onlyone. With Sonaguard you get an ear-wrenching siren, loudpulsating horns, 'Lashing headlights, and ignition cut-off.

btweenr 9:30 a.m. & 5 p.m.

You'll develop a talent for making hard-nosed, imagina-tive decisions. And you'll know how these decisions affectthe guts of dhe operation. At the grass roots. Because you'llhave been there.

If you'd like to be a giant yourself, and your betterideas are in finance, product engineering, manufacturing,marketing and sales, personnel administration or systemsresearch, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus.Or send your resume'to Ford Motor Company, CollegeRecruiting Department.

You and Ford can grow bigger together.

THfE AMEUICAN ROAD, DEARBORN, MICHIGANAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.

I'd like a big job please.

I Steal the crown jewels? Whhy no? s

Page 10: gow set - The Tech

Intramural sports

W8in

r-. By Joel Hemmelsteln- Regular season play ended Sat-

urday for Intramural Football asSigma Alpha Epsilon and BetaTheta Pi continued their unde-

u feated, unscored upon ways.O SAE swept to a 31-0 triumph

over the Delta Upsilon eight.Oo Bruce Wheeler '70 again maneu-vered .the Saelors to the win. SAE

6 struck early as Rich FreybergC '70 got open for the climactic play

of the first series. Wheeler hit.. Don Rutherford '67 for six more

and completed the first-half scor-ing with a long pass to MinotCleveland '71.

I Delta Upsilon couldn't get theirUU( offense going, and the SAE's con-- tinued with more of their firstLu half mastery. Wheeler hustled in- from the ten for six points and

hit Dave Dewitte '69 for the PAT.The SAElor's ended the gamewith a flourish as Wheeler andCleveland exchanged positions andconnected for a 30 yard comple-tion and touchdown.

Betas romp 28.0In the Division II counterpart,

the Betas forged a 28-0 victoryover ,the ever-tough Delts. Thegame, hard fought all the way,saw- the Betas spend most of thegame in Delt territory;

The Betas struck early in thesecond period on a sweep aroundthe right end by quarterback TomChen '68. The Betas knbciked atthe gate several more times in thehalf but were held just short bya fired-up Delt defense led byBob Wyatt '68 and George Hus-tak '69. With less than a minuteto go, the Betas got in close witha screen pass to Rink Young '68.Chen fired to Jim Reid '68 whohauled in the pass for the sixpoints. Chen flipped to Young forthe conversion as the half ended.

In the second half, strong defen-sive play notched two points whenPeter Dinsdale '68 and Bob O'Don-nell '66 caught Bob Wyatt, Delttailback in the endzone. DennyAlbright '69 took over the signal-calling chores and engineered twoscoring drives. Albright hit JimCormier '68 in the corner of theend zone for the first, while TomChen leaped high into the air tograb the other TD. Jim Reid gotfree for one PAT.

Satutd!ay, October 7Burton A 18 - PGD 7PDT 12 - TC 7LCA A 27 - Bexley 0AEP 12 - NRSA 0KS 20 - SPE 13

Sunday. October 8SAE 31 - DU 0BTP 28 - ODT 0PKT 24 - Sr. House 0PLP 18 - ATO 8Baker 44 - EC A 0Burton B 31 - ZBT 6SAM 19 - SAE B 12

Final Standings

Division IA Division 1181. SAE A 1. LCA2. Burton A 2. PLP3. DU 3. Bexley4. PGD 4. ATO ADivision IIA Division IllE1. BTP 1. AEP2. PDT 2. Baker A3. DTD 3. N RSA4. TC 4. EC A

Division 1B Division D IVBE1. SAM 1. KS2. SAE B 2. SPE A3. PKT 3. Burton B4. Sr. House 4. ZBT

LrI'MTWEtCHT EQUIPmI'ENT VOR

THMI BACKPACKE1R AND MOUNTAINEER

PC. Bat 306

CATALOQto. ARCo.LA.-L 'J: sIO.JE& ?

St:ore: X',A, Combo=. -twrat Ait.Atl3tonr, Mo,.ss- _:7254-6S?

Photo by Jeff Reynolds '69-Bruce Wheeler '70, SAE tailback, cuts up field behind block-

ing 'back Terry Bennett '70. Wheeler passed for three tallies, ranfor -one, and caught a pass for the final score as SAE won 31-0over 'DU.

I,

New calendar is proposed,wouNd be fixed, perpetual

By Don Minnig

Americans may be relieved of the need to count0otheir fingers to calculate on what day of the month netWednesday falls, thanks to the efforts of Dr. WilliagE. Edwards '26. Congress has been asked to approve anew calendar which has been a pet project of his foyears.

Roman emperorsAs a schoolboy Dr. Edwards learned that the ir.

regularities in the present calendar are due to changesmade by the Roman emperors, Julius and AugustusCaesar. In naming two months after themselves, theychanged the lengths of July and August from an "n.,lucky" 30 days to 31 each, thereby reducing February,then the last month of the year, to 28 days.

A 28-day month works a hardship on Americanwho are paid by the hour and earn considerably lessthan in other months since there are 12.5 percent fewerworking days than in January or March for instance,They still have, to pay bills at the end of the montl

(Please turn to Page 11), , , _ ........................ ~~~~~~~~.

-Mol.To HUMANITIES SERIES 1967-68presents

, The Zagreb Pro-Ate String uartet -- Sunday, October 29, 1967ERNST HAEFLIGER, TENOR - Sunday, November 26, 1967

Schubert, Wolf, and "The Diary of one who Vanished" by JanacekTHE ZURICH CHAMBER OCTET - Sunday, January 14, 1968

THE CHiGIANO STRING SEXTET - Sunday, February 11, 1968THE HUNGARIAN STRING QUARTET - Sunday, March 3, 1968

All concerts are in- Kresge Auditorium and start at 3:00 p.m. withthe exception of the Sunday, November' 26 recital by Haefligerwhich will start at 8:30 p.m.

Series tickets: $10.00; Single tickets: $3.00. All reserved seats.-Write Kresge Box Office, M.I.T. Cambridge 02139, or call UN

. 4-6900, ext. 2910. Make checks payableWto M.I.T. Humanities Series.

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if you don't

where should

FOR THE LABORATORY THATDOESN'T HAVE A MOLDtAnd Avco Everett's that sort of laboratory ... a laboratory that doesn'thave a mold ... a laboratory run by research scientists. The type ofpeople we are looking for are Ph.D.s who like the academic life ...its freedom, its pace,°its vast research facilities and its interchangeswith the foremost scientists in the country. Avco Everett is looking forthe man who appreciates those benefits, but who also wants all thepersonal advantages of working for a private firm. That sort of manwill be happy working with Avco Everett, and Avco Everett will behappy working with him.

Interested? Our investigations range from high temperature gasdynamics, plasma dynamics, aerophysics, atomic physics, reentryphysics, magnetohydrodynamics to low temperature physics includingsuperconductivity. If you're in any one of these fields, write Mr.Louis Rudzinsky, Industrial Relations Director. He'll be glad-to sendyou bibliographies and abstracts of our recent publications. Thenyou'll have a better basis to judge us. We think you' II see whatwe mean.

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Page 11: gow set - The Tech

Computer-tuned suspension systems. Impro-vedshock absorbers. New double-cushioned rubberbody mounts. They all team up to bring you thesmoothest, most silent Chevrolet ride ever. A freshnew idea in ventilation comes standard on every1968 Camaro and Corvette. it's Astro Ventilation,a system that lets air in, but keeps noise and wind

New standOUTpocket-model

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Pocket-size standOUTgoes with you, marksthe important stuff a

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By Steve WienerThe varsity-- golfers finished

fifth in a twelve team field at theECAC qualifying round this week-end. Boston College ran awayfrom the competition as its fourman team btotaled 30L Provi-dence, led by the tournamentmedalist Dana Quigley who fireda 71, was in second place with a309. These two schools qualifiedfor the finals at Bethpage, LongIsland next week. -

Trailing the leaders were URIat 310, WPI with a 312, MIT at314, and Worcester State and|UMass at 315. The oceansideM izuarmicut Country 1Qub whichhosted the event had a par 69and also witnessed ideal weaer.

MikeM ah '9 led the en-gkmi m with a 77. He started offfive over par ater the first fiveholes, the lost ly one to par inthe next twelve. Steppig to theeighteenth tee, he needed only abogey four to be one of the in-divduil qiuaters, bIt hi twoiron was short and his wescaught a trap for a double bogeyfive.

Tam Thomas '69 stated outFw/ a string of pars. Gog out

he bad a 36, only two over parand sixth best in a fild of fifty.Bt on fte bac niWe his ptgwas off and he sht a 42 for a78

Captain Gery Bamner '68 hada 42-37-79. GO the fnmt he hadtruble lkepieg his drives in theareway a as a reult'sed

seven greenr, After six holes onthe back Gerry was one anderpar, but he double bogeyed the16th and bogeyed the seventeenth,both par urs.

Don And so '70 played in thefourth position for MIT and firedan 80. Four penalty shots spoiledthe varsity debut of Anderson whodid not play in his freshmen sea-son because of a broken band.

suppor of h laem(Continued from Page 10)

however. Conversely, employerswho pay a monthly salary get lesswork from their employees dur-ing February.

'January O''Ihe first and most essential

change in Dr. Edwards' calendaris the creation of a day without amonth--"New Year's Day" (NYD)or "January 0," a holiday withno other name. January I wouldalways fall on a Monday, a busi-ness day, and all dates would fallon the same day. In addition, a"Leap Year Day" (LYD) or"July 0" would be inserted half-way through the calendar everyfour years.

Without NY)D, the renaining 361days could be divided into 52complete weeks. Each threemonth period would have 91 days,in a sequence of 30, 30, and 31days to a month. The civil calen-dar would be fixed and perpetual.

w dg f ndsup ertThe legislation promoting the

calendar was introduced by Rep.Spark M. Matsunaga Dem.-Hawaii); where Dr. Edwards nowlives. It has been endorsed by thelegislatures of two states; Hawaiiand Massachusetts. Dr. Edwardsrealizes that the reaction of mostAmericans to his plan will, atfirst, be flat opposition, but he isoptimistic over the prospects forits gradual acceptance.Be smaral

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Page 12: gow set - The Tech

CDmm~il ZE1$ XCDBy Bill Michels

On Sunday, the sailing teamI- placed second in the Wood Trophy,2z which was sailed in light variable

winds at the Coast Guard Acad-e- my. Sailing for Tech in the var-

LU sity division were Captain Dicko Smith '69 and Steve Milligan '70

U co-skippering one boat and Daveo Chanoux '68 and Dave McComb

> '70 co-skippering the other. Ina the Junior Varsity Division Tony-,o

L Picardi '70 co-skippered with DaveGoodwill '69, while Pete Nesbeda'71 and Pete Rostow '71 co-skip-pered for the Frosh. In the firsttwo races in each division, MIT

Uu earned a narrow one-point leadover Coast Guard. However, in

I the next varsity race, Coast Guardprotested the close tacking of Cap-tain Dick Smith '69; and the sec-ond Tech boat finished ninth. Dickwas unable to prove that theCoast Guard boat would havebeen able to evade him by react-ing sooner or more efficiently andwas thus disqualified. Just as inthe Danmark Trophy two weeksago, MIT was faced with a dif-ficult comeback. Going into thelast two series of races, they werein fourth place.

Tech places a strong secondThe varsity boats led the come-

back, but were unable to gain onCoast Guard, who once again didvery well in the light shifty windson the Thames. Tech oustailed theother schools and capitalized ontheir mistakes, but Coast Guardcontinued its consistent racing andwon by a&large margin. This re-

suit was simil/ar to that of twoweeks ago and proved that Techcannot have one or two bad racesand beat Coast Guard.

Even after its one bad race thevarsity team captured secondplace in their division by a con-siderable margin. The final varsitystandings were: Coast Guard (88),MIT (73), Harvard (55), Brown(55), and Dartmouth (50). TheFresh also did quite well andplaced second in their division.

By Joe AnglandFiriday afternoon saw the Tech

baseball team sweep a double-header from Hawthorne and in sodoing raise their fall season per-centage to .750.

The team had little trouble inthe first game, winning it 5-1 be-hind the pitching of Bruce Wheel-er '70. Bruce was in completecommand all the way, and coast-ed to victory behind the four runcushion the team built up.

.&LI -xStU gJd gtare was ilUore

hotly contested. Herman May-farth '70 started the game andgave a strong performance duringhis five inng stint. Unfortunate-ly, Tech sluggers had some dif-ficulty mounting an attack,collecting only 4 hits in the firstfive innings. As a result, whenMayfartlh gave way to Pat Mont-gomery '71, the team was down2-0. The batting __came alive inthe bottom of the sixth when thesquad jumped on Hawthorne pit-chem for two quick runs. Then,with the score mknotted 2-2, JimReid '68 became the sluggingstar of the game as he blasteda three run homer which put theteam on top for good. Things gottight however, in the top of theseventh as Hawthorne talliedtwice, cutting the margin to onlyone run. The inning ended withthe tying run being thrown out atthe plate.

Tech nine now 341With its fall season drawing

toward a close, the team hascompiled a 3-1 record and is

Trinity-stops kickers. 6=0oWJuyvees smash Stevens

By Ron Cline

Saturday was a dismal day for varsity soccer at Briggs Field,at least from the engineer's point of view. As the 6-0 final scoreindicates, Trinity College fielded a well-rounded squad, capable ofboth an aggressive offense and a tight defense..

The Trimnity goalie had an easy time as their defense managedto stop almost all of the engineer attacks. Only a few times wereshots able to get away, and these were gathered in easily.

Trinity uses fast breakMeanwhile, a fast-breaking Trinity offense seemed always to

keep Tech one man down as very fine individual players wormedthe ball upfield to continually harass our own goalie, Jeff Reynolds'69. Everyone on the engineer team put in a hard day's work, but,as Coach Morrison put it, "They (Trinity) were definitely a betterteam."

The brighter part of the afternoon was the junior varsity. Theydefeated Stevens Business School 10-0. To have not scored a goalwas the only pre-requisite for playing the game. Nine different Techwent to the dressing room at the half with a 4-0 lead. The secondhalf was even easier as the engineers had a field day scoring 6 morein that half.

Erhan Acar '69 was the only one who scored twice for Tech, aseveryone left the game once they had scored a goal.

Kickers to meet HarvardThe varsity kickers meet Harvard Wednesday aftenoon on

Harvard's field. A look at the series record between Tech andHarvard shows four wins against twenty-six losses and six ties.Harvard probably has a team on par with Trinity, but the engineershave shown they have a team that can mold itself when needed.With a top-notch effort the Beavers can show what Tech is reallymade of.

The final Frosh scores were: Har-vard (26), MIT (21), Dartmouth(20), Coast Guard (18), andBrown 15). The Junior Varsitydid not fare so well and placedfourth in their division. The cumu-lative totals were: Coast Guard(131), MIT (109), Harvard (106),Dartmouth (92), and Brown (81)o

On Thursday the varsity will at-tempt to regain the Oberg Trophy,which represents the Greater Bos-ton Championship.

I

Jim Reid '68 blasts a threewin the second game of Fridethorne. Tech squad swept bothquite optomistic about the pros-pects for the spring. Pitching ap-pears to be excellent and gettingbetter all the time, as the youngmound corps gains experience. Atthe outset of the season, the onlyreal question mark, was theteam's potential at the plate. Led

Season record 2-0

Harriers beat RPI, WPIto refain Engineer Is Cup

By John Wargo MIT captured the Engineer's

Cup for the fifth consecutive yearon RPI's home course at Troy,New York. Coach Art Farnhamquipped before the meet, "I takethe trophy along each year justin case but I always leave it on

Photo by George Flynn-run homer in the sixth inning io

ay's doubleheader against Haw-games, winning 5-1 and 5-4.by team captain Rick Young '68,Jimh Reid and Bruce Wheeler, theteam has been constantly improv-ing.

Right now, the team is antici-pating the close of its successfulfall season against Boston Statethis afternoon.

the bus. 'I don't think either pPIor WPI have seen it yet."

Tech's strategy of runing ingroups payed off, for they placedeleven runners in the top twenty,bunching them in just the rightplaces to counteract RPI's plaingone-two in the meet. WPI wasnever really in the race, placingonly two men in the top twenty,

Good depthIt looks like a good year for

Tech, with a possibility of greatdepth, something that MIT cross.country teams rarely see. A num.ber of injuries plague the squad,though, holding quite a few goodrunners from hitting their peaks,Bea Wilson, notably, has missedquite a few distance workouts dueto his knee injury. This, coupledwith the fact that his knee stillbothers him quite a bit, held himto a twelfth place in the meet.Most of the injuries are minor,however, and Coach Farnhamhopes that the squad can over.come them in the next few weeksin time to do well in the bigmeets.

The Engineers are now 2-0 andnext journey to Middletown, Con.necticut tUs Saturday to run Wes-leyan and Coast Guard. The MitVarsity has never beaten Wes.leyan, but last fail's freshman vie.tory over their freshman teampermits an optimistic view byTech's sophomoreabundant squad.

FC l kers, i-FrosB sporo s

-Trinity topsBy Scott Ramos new tea

The freshman soccer teao be-gan its season Saturday, October7, with a 5-1 loss to the Trinitysquad. Inexperience was in evi-dence as the Tech squad was in-capable of mustering more thana few pressured attacks.

Besides being somewhat out-classed, the Beaver eleven werealso diminutive in comparison totheir opponents as alrnest everyplayer on Trinity outweighed hiscounterpart on M.I.T. They alsoaveraged a few more inches inheight. However, the visitors didtake advantage of Tech's lack oforganization. Having trouble work-ing as a closely knit group, as a

TodayBaseball (V)-Boston State

College, home, 3:30 pmTomorrow

Soccer (V)-Harvard, away,3:30 pm

How They DidBaseball

MIT(V) 5, Hawthorne IMIT(V) 5, Hawthorne 4

GolfMIT(V) fifth in ECAC

SoccerMIT(V) 0, Trinity 6MIT(JV) 10, Stevens 0MIT(F) I, Trinity 5

Cross CounryMIT(V) first for Engineers Cup

SailingMIT (V. JY. F) 2nd for Wood Trophy

am will, the home playersoften left their weak side openand Trinity closed it quickly withfine cross-field passes. The squadhas onlySept. 25,unity can

been practicing sincetherefore, the lack ofbe slightly forgiven.

Mascowicz scores for TechA standout for Tech was Gerry

Mascowiez, who pushed in theonly goal for his team on a pen-alty kick. Gerry, playing sincehis youth, as he came originallyfrom Poland, showed an almostprofessional style in his efforts.Trinity's goals came on a penaltykick and on a couple of defensiveblunders leaving the goal fairlyunprotected. Despite the highscore, goalie Aaron Tovrich playeda fine defensive game, savingseveral difficult shots. Ed Johnsonwas his backup goalie; 'Other fineplay was contributed by EddieSafare.

Although the score indicated aonfie-sided contest, the game wasplayed much more evenly. Froshsoccer can look forward to anexciting season, if not completelysuccessful.

Sailors compete for WoodFrosh sailors Pete Nesbeda and

Pete Rostow were co-pilots in asecond place finish for the WoodTrophy last Saturday. The heptag-onal meet, held at the CoastGuard Academy (Conn.) was wonby the Harvard frosh who totalled26 points to Tech's 21.

Nesbeda and Rostow put togeth-er one first, second, third, andtwo fourths in compiling theirsecond place score. Light, shiftingwinds prevented what could havebeen a more exciting contest but.the Tech squad put in a proms-ing showing. Their 21 points wereenough to defeat Dartmouth with20 points, Colgate with 18, andBrown, 14.

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The MIT freshman basket-ball1 team bas announced anopening for an assistant coach;experience in college basket-ball is preferred but is not anecessity. Anyone interestedmay call Ca Singal (3268471) after 7 pm.

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