I I I . I ve -o nien Two new honors given at I un es a is e By Bon Frashure of the secrty after allowance Trhe yearly Awards Convocation pWThas names of the representatives estabished an Inde- for improvements. of the remang fraterriti'es were SexetResidence Development By Steve Portny field '64 for his "spirit, dedica- 3. The maxdmum. loan term antnounced last Mkght at a work- nhwhich may assist tindepen- The annual Awards Conlvocaton tion, and service" to Mffr. The will be 40 years. in meeting to implement the seon ivingid grops in improig. IRD Fund. was held last Saturday in Kresge new award came from a adexpaig 4. The minimum. rate of in- proposal by the Activities Devel- their housing fat Marshall. B. Dalton '15, Chair- Auditorium. Featured was the 0 oite administrtiors officers terest vEll be three percot. presentation of the Kar Taylor opment Board. Namned in honor 5. Gifts to the IRD Fund must man of the Board of the of William L. Steward Jr. '26, anounced Jast FridaY. Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Compton Awards given in reco- Fund provisins provide that the prncpal wil niition of 'outanftng contribul- the award is ~given to students not be expended, and givers must Company and -a Life Member of who have participated The IRD Flund will be an en- the MITX Corporatimn, will chair tions in promoing high standards actively in dwnnt, thie income of which permit use of the income of the of achievement and good citizen- school activities. fund for any corporate purpose both the Alumni IFC! and the Saye be used by the Corporation central ship mithinn the MIT community." Recipents of the award are: of MIT. comnmittee. Robert zelman Bachrach '64, Ho- Tfrany Institute purpose. Ile Other 'Ibis year the recipients of the picalof thisfnd may be in- Alumni IFC members of the central ward Morri Brauer '65, John Mi- committee are Kenneth S. awards, all seniors, were: Robert veted at MIT's The administration also an- Brock chael Davis '66, Barbara Ann discretion in '48, Director of Special Gifts for Lee Blumberg, Richard Alan Car- las to fraternities and othier in- nounced the formation of an penter, Stephen Burket Miller, Dersmond '67, Ronald Lee Gilman Alumni Interfraternity the Alumni Eund; James H. Eac- ependent living groups. The re- Conference Robert Peter Popadic, Robert '64, Lansing Hatfield '64, Richard and a central committee ker '55, Secretary of the Alumni tqirements governing such loans to assist Hugh Scott and Janet Kay Sto- Lester Krasin '64, and Amiel in the operations of the IRD Fund IFC; Frederick G. Fassett Jr., 1il ie that: ber. The awards also gave recog- Shulsiner '64. The following or- and the Alumni Dean of Residence; Philip A. 1. The loans must be secured IFC. nition to the Summer Study Pro- ganmzations were also honored by As of last Wed~nesday, 14 fra- Stoddard '40, Vice -President for these awards: 'Me Baton Society, bymortgages. . Operations and Personnel; Ken- gram at NUT for Highl School 2. Tile loan limit can range to ternities had announced their rep- Students. The Lecture Series Committee, 10percent of the appraised value resentatives on thee Altum. ! IFC. (Pledse JJfurn lo and the NUT Cheerleaders. Page 3 ) Two awards were presented 'Mle Everett Moore Baker A- this year for the first timne. The ward for Outstanding Undergrad- Frederick Gardiner Fassett, Jr., uate Teaching was presented thisi Ptarenits arrive at MIT, Award was given to Lanlsing Hat- year to Amar Gopal Bose, i a;,, s . Asso- gew lectures and labs ciate Professor of IElectrical En- gieering. EBy George BRussell 'AsFRO:TC: 3-11udent The Tau Beta Pi Outstanding More than 800 parents attended amxong tlop in Ug Freshman Award was given to gthe biannual Parents' Weekend, Stephen Burr Douglass and the Scott Paper Foundation Leader- held April 24, 25, and 26. Dean of wins twos awa|rds ship Award went to William gStudent Affairs Kenneth R. Wad- Ralph Brody '65. The Baton So- gleigh noted that attendance was Edward L. Arnn '64 is the re- ciety Awards for outstanding con- Wthe largest of any Weekend to cipient of two awards as an out- tributions to music were presspnt- date. standing AFROTC cadet. One is ed to Richard Sherman Bair '65, Parents came from as far as the Link Foundation-Arnold Air Glenn Stephen Oren-stein '64, John California to attend lectures and 3Ylicinaeli Rainier '64. and Janet laboratories and to meet infor~n- Society Award for outstanding I Kay Stober '&4. ally the professors, roommates, 0.-*-- ,; -'l -- scholastic achievement. This a- John 'reed Moter '64 received and friends of their sons and ward cDries a $1500 fellowship the Clifford Award as outstanding daughters at MIT. Parents' Week- --I- z - - - . for one year of graduate study. athlete of -hee year, and the Ad- Institute ever-y end is held at the Ann is one of two recipients in miral Edward L. Cochrane A- other year, alternatinkg with an the nation. ward for athiletic excellence and Open House for the general pub- I He is in Course VI and will sportsmanship was --presented to Elie. ' be return;.ng to MIT next fall as Michael Robert Williams '64. A CgMany families arrived Friday Act ^<...... -i a master's degree candidate with special award, the Eastern Col- evening in time to attend theatri- . t t& o that fellowship. lege Athletic Conference Merit gcal and musical productions - 'Me second award is the So- Medal, was given to Martinn Tur- gDrarnashop students performed .^ ciety of American Military En- ner Poe III '64. gIbsen's "The Wild Duck." The Vol 84 No I I Cambride a. gineers Award, given each year The Quadrangle Club Award EMITConcert Band held an open 8 9' SS., Wednesday, A~pr. 29, 1964 5c to the top twenty AFROTwC sen- for outstaydig freshman athletes rehearsal of a work composed for cies iors in engineering or science. was presented to Davoid Norman Kit, Engineering residenc Arnn is now Special Assistant Schramm and to Alexander Dan- Parents registered Saturday to the Comnmandanlt of Cadets. iel Wilson. Robert Neal Harvey Emonung and had the opportunity He is a member of Tau Beta Pi '64 was chosen Manager of the Wtoattend one of three demonlstra- 30 .N~f0 Fo i and Beta Kappa Nu, Electrical Year, and the Beaver Key 1ro tsionlectures. Special lecturers e$V i >rd grant Englgneeri.ng honor societies, and phy honoring a living group's %%,ereDr. Hans-Lukas Teuer, of Scabbard and Blade, the ROCIEhigh degree of athletic partici- gProfe-ssor of Psychology; Dr. In order to give engineering pro- their campuses and company posi- honor society. He has been comn-I pation want to Delta Tau Delta WHansMueller, Professor of Phys- fessors experience in practical in- tions. Funds will also be used to mander of -the Lt. Col. Jay Zea-I for the third straight year. Fics; and Dr. Warren M. Rohs- dustrial decision-making, the Ford defray the administrative costs of mer Squadron and a member of Major awards in athletic adl- Renow,Professor of Mechanical Foundation has set aside $300,000 the project. Alpha Phi O~mega. ministration went to: James El- gEngineering. to finance residencies in engineer- bert Allen Jr. '64, W~illiam Ralph Saturday afternoon, parents at- igpactice. Brady '65, Joseph Lee Kirk '64, Xtended informal talks with fac- Sixty faculty members will be APO Carnival grosses $1800 Saturday night, Henrys John Modetz Jr. '64, and Eultymembers and toured labora chosen to spend up to fifteen Kim Clyde Maxwell Sloat '64. Str aiiis pcaon eosr-monthsleave from their teach- PDT, AEPi, Grad Student Coun~cil win trophies The following received Minor Ptions included space war games ing positions at professional sala- Awards in Athletic Administra- oil the TXO and PDP-1 compu- ries. To ensure genuine learning 3,500 people attended the APO pha Epsilon Pi. The trophy for tionT: Steven Warren Brostoff '64, Fiters, an experimental study Of experience, the professors will Carnival Saturday evening, ac- the most original booth went to D:avid George Brown '64, Ronald ;q.the flow of abnormal blood, and work closely with engineers em- cordinrg to carnival chairman Stu- Graduate Student Council's wine Ira Mandle '65, Henryr John Rack ' experiments in crystal growth. ployed at the highest levels of art Shapiro '66. The carnival tasting booth. '64, and Donald Hermian Siefkes .X~usoh opttoetrtechnological decision-making in grossed $1800. A major attraction of the car- '65. BandNational Magnet Laboratory the cooperating companies. There were 26 booths at the nival was the piano-reduction -Were offered. Parents of Course CalW 3rmndietro carnival, sponsored by various contest. Pianos were smashed in- rzSXII majors toulred the new Cen- the Ford Foundations Science and grcups. Trophies were awarded to pieces small enough to fit Exanm schedule outf is,ter for the Earth Sciences. Engineering program, voiced "a for the first and second most through a .2-meter hole. Contest- On Sunday, parents were enter- grwn ocr htyUnger en- All students should obtain an successful booths and to the most ant teams were Walker Student examinationn schedule now at the Rtained at open houses given by gineering teachers lack awareness original booth. Staff, Phi Delta Theta, Baker JV Information Office, Room 7-111. §the resident housemasters and of maufacturing, marketing, fi- The trophy for the most suc- and Baker Varsity. Baker V~ar- Exams not listed or a conflict zglheir wives in the various dormi- nancing,,and other considerations cessful Mboth went to Phi Delta sity wan withi a time of 11 min- in exams, such as two, gri adbinfluence eDaefesnthat engineering deci- Theta, and second place to Al- utes, 1 secndie. exams Mdenceand his wife. in nratc. thle same morning, must be re- aChlairman of the Parents, Weekp Participants will be chosen from ported to the Registrar's Office tendCortlmittee was Robert Blurn- the nation's engineering faculty by Friday, Mray 8. "Iberg i. On the committee were under forty who hold Ph. D. or 4-Williarn Cohen '65, Henry Licht equivalent degrees. A committee Eintein '65, Donald Grimes '65, ,r selected from engineering educa- Audio tape missing-, ',old Kramer '66, Paul Ruby '66 tion andustry will help the Fbun- IST offers rewardl 31mil Taylor '65 and Dave Anlder- dation choose and place the resi- Mo '66. dents. Three editors of International Chairmn of the faculty 'ad- The Foundation funds will pro- Science and Technology Maga- asovcommittee was Professor Pride stipe nds to cover the expens- zine have asked the aid ofMIT BKenneth A. Smniff. es of teachers in moving betweZen security officers in their sedrch for a lost audio tape. The tape was made last Thurs- krnair to be held this Z'3aurday day at the Smit House on Me- mnorial Drive and is the record 1by Intemnationaal St§ud~ent 'Ass~oc of a dinner discussion with five British scientists on the "brain The International Student. As- features two- hours of student en- drain" from EZngland. ,1sociation in Cambridge wil hold tertaimnent includinlg unique mu- The tape was left with micro- Ots annual Foun Fair at 33 Garden sic and dances. phones and other equipment in St r ee t, Cambridge, year, Saturday, Last over 6000 people at- a box marked "Xerox Copy Pa- M^aY2. The public is invited. tended. per." It was to be used for an i The Fun Fair features booths The International Studenlt Asso- article, which cannot be written construtedt by students from 30 ciation is a non-profit organiza- without it. The editors offer a "' mtres. E~xotic foods and gifts tion for the benefit of all students reward for itsi return. fro'n far away lands will be sold in the Greater Boston area. Informationl should be sent to ,alday,noon to midnight. Fun Fair is touted by the ISA (Photo by Stephen Teicher) DE-n~iel Cooper, Executive Editor, niaddtion, Fun Fair's inters as the "foremost international These Voodoo International Science and Tech- gunalshow will run four times student event of the year" in the staff members are grinning through gobs of nolegy, 205 East 42nd Street, New 41 the Continental Hotel, at 2 pm, area. Dr. Hamdy Bechir of MIT shaving cream thrown at them by winners of their dart throwing Pm, 8 pm and York 17, New York, or call him 10 pn-L The show is chairman of the fair this year. contest at the APO Carnival. collect at 232-MbU9-3250. egJ 0r Public relations and MIT to What's news? MIT, that's what! Wylie and the Public Relations Office. MIT has, since the Centennial Cele- There is much that students groups can ~~-ll - O~J v u ~d B ic ~ ~ t ond o o t e s I bration, been the subject of cover stories do to help. ' in Newsweek, Holiday, and Business For example, the MIT Athletic Asso- - Week--among others. The Newv Yorker ciation could contact Sports Illustrated to is now concluding a three-part series on fill them in on MIT's very excellent sports I Judnlck -_ ,- >t what it terms the "center of a new program-and perhaps stimulate a story Bill world"-the technological world around on a little-known facet of the Lnstitute. Last week's headline story at least a year from now f MIT. Realites is planning a major story Jerry Luebbers, the former Undergrad- ("Bishop new dean of Human- reasons discussed in the ret < on MIT, and the United States Informa- uate Association President, suggested ities") confirms one-half of Foot- section. >: tion Agency is now shooting a film here such a direct contact over a year ago, note 4. We're still awaiting the 49. Elections for Technolog < for worldwide distribution. but says that no student group has at- announcement of who is re- Student Enterprises are comin a Kudos for getting MIT's name before tempted to follow up the idea. Direct con- placing Dean Belluschi, the up soon. i'll guess the top mek the public eye goes largely to Mr. Jeff tacts can work-Life's cameras came to other half. will be: Leon Liebman, prep za Wylie, a former Time magazine staffer Field Day and snapped numerous photo- Another e a r I y prediction, dent; and Aiain Barbier, vim W (head of the Boston bureau) and now graphs, although the coverage was never Footnote 5, is verified by the president. (Both have had e Director of Public Relations for the In- published. announcement last week that tensive charter flight expe. stitute. One indication of the success of The most logical student group to Professor Samuelson's 14.01 text ence.) the public relations staff: Mr. Wylie's help represent MIT to the public is the is now in its sixth edition. 360/System desk is now several feet deep in recently Public Relations Committee, a part of Let's see how these work out: The chief difficulty with IBM:. I published material which features MIT. Institute Committee. In the past, PRC The Crystal Ball n e w e s t mechanical monsth Mr. Wylie and his staff often work has attempted to publicize Inscomm more 46. Simulmatics Corporation mentioned above, is a relativ J into the night while assisting representa- than MIT, but there is no reason why it lack of "software." The librar: _ tives of the news media and explaining can't expand its horizons. will probably follow-up their successful simulation and pre- of pre-wriffen programs th: what MIT is really like to the public. This Making oneself understood is crucial accompany the system, inoth, effort is commendable, since there is a in a complex and competitive world. The diction of the results of the 1960 election with another words, is extensive but nowher popular mythology about MIT that will members of the new PRC, under Chair- near the volume programmer take time to erase. However, the task of man Doug Spreng '65, have a wide-open head-line making effort in this election year. may draw up using Fortran of representing the Institute to the outside opportunity to help bring about this the 70-series. world should not always be passed to Mr. understanding. They ought to use it. (Several MIT professors and personnel, including Prof. Ithiel The present SHARE librearyi de Sola Pool, are affiliated with one of the major. selling point this corporation. For back- for their 70-series that have ir. Social Action Committee ground you could consult: the fluenced institutions and corn orations to buy IBM rather fhtir The provisional membership recently support of SAC by providing the part- last issue of Business Week; New Yorker's recent three-part CDC (Control Data Corpori granted by the Activities Council to the time services of Richard L. McDowell series on Harvard and MIT; and tion). Social Action Committee is the first for- '60, who will give continuous and com- the New York Times of three Pay more? mal student recognition of a social serv- petent advice from the Dean's Office. Sundays ago.) I note in the April 25th iss: action movement There have been hints of financial 47. Thomas J. Watson, top of the Harvard Crimson the ice and community support by the Institute-which should that has long been active at MIT. man at IBM, and James R. Kil- following headline: "Student come, we feel in sizable amounts only af- ihan Jr., Chairman of the MIT Who Have Aid May Pay Motr Last week the Institute Committee, ter the group has demonstrated its abili- Corporation, may rejoin each in '64-5." The recent reduction after weighing many possible courses of ty through specific accomplishments. other's respective boards now in Federal income taxes may re action, decided to designate SAC as the Within the MIT community, SAC can that the patent litigation over suit in the assumption on thef sole administrator and coordinator of so- serve a vital function by making students Professor Forrester's invention part of their financial aid o0tic cial work done by MIT students. The in- aware of the vicious circle of ignorance, is settled. This would be a mu- that parents can now pay $50 dications are that a planning board of crime, and poverty which exists both tually beneficial exchange of to $100 more. representatives from the activities con- close at hand and throughout "the other talent. As I indicated in Footnofesl cerned with social service-Technology America." The isolated, sheltered life of 48. Speaking of IBM, those and 10, such a decision affec.: Community Association, Alpha Phi Ome- the academic community at MIT tends of you familiar with computers ihg amounts of loans grantedis ga, Demolay, Civil Rights Committee, to blind students to the serious problems have undoubtedly heard of still in the fire here; and a d- and others--will be formed this fall to which exist literally at our doorsteps. their "billion-dollar gamble," cision about NDEA loans i aid in coordination. Outside MIT, SAC can make a signifi- the 360/System. A question oc- stalled off every day the seni The Administration has shown its cant contribution by extensive programs curs: Will MIT get this latest tors continue to fillibuster ;r of settlement house, juvenile counseling, model? I would say, not until and mental hospital work. Such programs Congress. fly tv - 1*1117 7 are not unprecedented. Phillips Brooks 1 t House, an endowed and well-established Amh Inside inscomm - 0 social service organization at Harvard, has become the largest student activity on campus. I Inscormm will try to bring Im There is a selfish as well as an altruis- Vol. LXXXIV No. I I Apr. 29, 1964 tic reason for social serice-it helps im- election candidates to campus prove the local environment. Earlier in BOARD OF DIRECTORS this century, a large clearance and re- By Bill Samuels, UAP Chairman ...... Howard M. Brauer '65 building project at Harvard greatly ben- He has already go Managing Editor ...... John Reinties '66 How can any level-headed per- program. efited the surroundings of the faculty son be for Goldwater? After all Dr. Stratton's backing. Dr. Stiat Editor ...... Ronald Frashure '64 and students. The University of Chicago it has been the principles of the ton will write a letter accompa Business Manager ...... Kenneth Browning '66 and Columbia University, alert to the Democratic Party that have guid- ing the student government News Editor ...... William Judnick '65 growing slums around their campuses, ed this country in its great growth quest, praising the general Features Editor ...... David Vanderwerf '66 are sponsoring community improvement this century. cept. Sports Editor ...... Dave Kress '67 programs. Disagree? Probably a few do, Interested in working on t] Photography Editor ...... Stephen Teicher "66 The Institute, while concerned with but this is the whole point. Next Call Tom soon-he'll put you tht Entertainment Editor ...... John Montanus '66 local problems, has historically been year is an election year and I work. There is no assurance Advertising Manager ...... Michael Weidner '66 clumsy and monolithic in its community see no reason why we should not this program will produce anY relations in Cambridge. Portents of encourage the discussion of poli- suits. Hopefully, we'll get a a Associate Editor ...... William Byrn '66 tical issues and controversies on national figure, but if we do Associate News Editors ...... Allan Green '66 change such as the Social Action Com- ten Esther Glotzhober campus. For this reason. Ins- no harm has been done. Let Associate Sports Editor ...... Ted Trueblood '67 mittee are a welcome addition to the comm is going to make a major of invitation will go out wiithat Associate Photography Editors .... George Jelatis '66 John Torode '66 campus. effort to bring candidates and the next two weeks. Controller ...... John Flick '66 Treasurer ...... James Triant '67 other political spokesmen to MIT. Circulatian Manager ...... Donald Paul '67 Tomni Jones is in charge of this (Please /urn to Page 6) Associate Features Editor ...... Jeff Trimmer '66 .uI Assistant Treasurer ...... Joseph LaBreche '67 it Office Manager ...... Timothy Proctor '67 and awards !16 Honor E

'hiI I Managing Staff ...... Joel Shwimer '67 Last week the editorial entitled "Re- rr- Editorial Staff ...... Alan Rinsky '64 News Staff ...... Jasont Fane '64 search and the Institute" stated that I Michael Wolf '64. Stephen Katzberg '65 R Henry Lichstein '65. David F. Nolan '65 Prof. Kenneth R. Wadleigh '43, Dean of I Richard Millman '66, Stuart Orkin '67 t Mark Rockman '67. Harvey Schultz '67 Student Affairs, received the first Good- i Elaine Cravitz win Medal for outstanding teaching on L Features Staff ...... Barbara Cohen '64 I Steven Lipner '65, Anthony Pappas '66 the part of graduate students. Both Dean a Michael Shorenstein '66. Ed Steinberg '66 James Veiileux '66 Wadleigh and Prof. Holt Ashley '48 re- Sports Staff ...... Don Boseck '67 June 1952. Neal Gilman '67. Charles Willman '67 ceived separate awards in Entertainment Staff .... Gilberto Perez-Guillermo '64 Thus Prof. Ashley shares the honor with Joseph Lambert '66, Lawrence Stark Mdna Dickson '66 Dean Wadleigh of receiving the award Photography Staff ...... John Eulenberg '64 William Park '66. William Bloomcuist '67 during the first year of its presentation. James DeRemer '67. Steven Rife '67 Maxim Smith '64. Sanford Libman '65 A single award of the Goodwin Medal Joseph Baran '66. Saul Mooallem '66 Business Staff ...... Thomas Nakagami '67 -which consists of a bronze medal, a News Staff Candidate ...... Steven Eberbach '67 citation, and a cash award of $500-has Features Staff Candidates ...... Richard Lueth '66 Harvey Deitel '67, Lawrence Rsiman '67 been made in every year since 1952, with Lydia Castle the exceptions of 1953 and 1956. Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts. As we noted last week, such awards is published every Wednesday during the as the Goodwin Medal do much to stim- college year, except during college vacations, by ulate excellent teaching -for which the The Tech, Room 50-21 I, 142 Memorial Drive, Cam- incentives are often small when com- bridge, Massachusetts 02139. Telephones area code 617, 876-5855; 876-5856; 864-6900, Extension 2731. pared with the rewards for excellent re- United States mail subscription rates: $2.75 for one search. More teaching awards like the year, $4.25 for two years. Goodwin Medal should be established. Peahuts appears daily and Sunday in the. Boston 14eral I

Esgineering Flashing lights, eye study, sonar Trpy Awarded I rexfife m nferenee Oct. 20 are Edgerton's new research areas IFC holds firsf rally m-I

i'. Amincai n Society of Me- Tti' tuutm -;-~------u---- I: I The flashing lights on the Pru- Diabetic Clinic in Boston, adapt- a hanical Engineers has announced dential and Hancock buildings, to- ing present lighting methods to Iat its Textile Engineering Con- gether with their counterparts on this special subject. kerence will be held at MIT, Oc- 7 MIT buildings, are evidence of The eye, by virtue of the many [01ober 20-21. the variety of research topics small arteries, veins and capil- m carried on by Prof. Harold E. laries which crisscross it, offers ~~--~~~iL"-F--"~~~~~~~ Cllbpl~~~ Edgerton. L The flashing lights, which are a unique opportunity for a physi- NEW TIMES strobe bulbs, are intended as bea- cia.n to study a patient's circu- cons. They are being used to lation visually. It is difficult to Weekly from the Soviet Union study the effect of beam inten- photograph, however, especially sity and flash duration on beacon when the patient is subjected to English or Russian or Spanish life. Possible applications for the repeated flashes of light. I-e0 Deals w. foreign policy of all bulbs range from warning lights Prof. Edgerton revealed that on radio towers to ocean buoys. finally backlighting proved to be socialist countries including the I Prof. Edgerton indicated that the answer. Good results were obtained when the pa- .0N) USSR and Afro-Asian nations. work yet remains to be done to consistently '0 insure reliability of the lights. tient looked far to one side, with One year subscription-$3.50 Another field into which stro- the light coming in from his other Imported Publications & Prod. boscopic techniques have led him side. Work is now underway on i 3 (H) is the study of the human eye. motion pictures of the eye. 1 Union Square, N.Y.C. principle of Recently Prof. Edgerton worked In applying the John Groves '65 and Roland College parking lot and ended oJ-v earrrarrrp· Ipa J with Dr. Searle Rees '50 of the stroboscopic lighting to sonar de- Ca.nncn '65, winners of the first with the IFC picnic at Duxbury vices, Prof. Edgerton entered yet Annual IFC Rally, held last Beach. The rally received na- CD mamwom-mm- ---- il--~ ~U- LC~_ Y NEW another area of study. He was weekend, are presented with a tional publicity by the Associated w FOR DIAMONlDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY responsible for developing a trophy. Forty cars and 200 Press. means of electronic sounding couples. participated in the event. Presenting the award is Dave which would record the depth of The rally began at the Boston Cohen '65. IDAVIDSON JEWELERS the ocean floor's surface layers. These strike the floor, where Iof Kenmore Square a large fraction of them pene- trate mud, silt, and other soft Carpenter Committee developed original concept IGuaranteed Repair Service layers, to be reflected by harder layers below. The time delay of recommending that MIT acquire land for frats 518 Commonwealth Ave. CO 7.001 7 the incoming signals yields layer (Continued from Page 1) Chairman of the Alumni Fund depth. _ ___--l--C ------a----·----·-aCcarP--- F-r---R8L_ -L·U Board. ---- I neth R. Wadleigh '43, Dean of ~~--~~~~~1 a~~~~BI~~~~II -·QLII~~~~~~~LPI IPB~~~~~~~~~~~iLPIJ~~~~~~~llsq IPIIP-~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~ I -~ ~ ~ ~ 1Ia Student Affairs; Frederic W. Wa- History of fund triss '41, Assistant- Treasurer; The history of the IRD Fund and D. Reid Weedon Jr. '41, I begins in June, 1947, when the I'll I 11 11911c11MISP~na~asp~Corporation Committee on Stu- AOM MRIMWAglmt* dent Activity (Carpenter Commit- m mmhl.lqq TENNIS tee) recommended. that MIT ac- %A ftv Gswns~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~4 quire land on the west campus for fraternities. In March, 1962, President Julius The Coop is now taking orders for Rental Caps and Gowns. A. Stratton issued a progress re- Cancellations will be accepted. Large Variety port on the fraternities. Dr. All Makes Stratton noted that moving the BALCHELORS - MASTERS - DOCTORS fraternities to the campus "would $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 Rackets Restrung seriously diminish if it did not Ai extinguish the values which we Prompt Service and the fraternities wish to pre- Please order early serve." He suggested wider fi- nancial assistance to the frater- No Deposit Required at Time of Ordering nities as an alternative to setting TENNIS and up a fraternity rowy in Cambridge. Last week, more than two years SQUASH 'SHOP after President Stratton's pro- 67A Mt. Auburn Street gress report, the- details of the -I IRD Fund and the Alumni IFC Cambridge were released. A major funding Tel. TR 6-5417 effort will start soin, according I -II -. I_--- L------I I - - ! to Dean Fassett.

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me'. brisk, bracing-the original 4AZ spice-fresh lotion 1.25

An_E- A person is much more than meets the eye. How deeply have you pondered this question of who you really are ? Basically, a man's identity is spiritual. It de-

£ t- pends upon God. When you t··r s'· stop to think about it, a clearer

A.. idea of who you are can change your life. You're invited to join us for a one-hour talk on this subject by Lenore D. Hanks, a member of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship. The title: "Do You Know Who You Really Are ?" [Christian Science lectulrI FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, CAMBRIDGE Massachusetts Avenue at Waterhouse Street SUNDAY AFTERNOON, 0~C~~4w-with that crisp, clean masculine aroma! MAY 3, 1964 at 3:30 o'clock (Doors open at 2:45) . Nursery facilities available L-- - - , ------I -' - LSC o show film on campus love Idrama at unit..0 CoSamuel Goldwyn, Jr., scn of include an open questicn and an- the MGM magnate, will appear swer period; adnission is free. lashop enterfai in Room 100fll next Tunesdav Tha mnvie. starring Peter Fnn- by Dram

May 5, at 7:30 pm. Mr. Goldwyn da and Susan Hugeny, attempts By Mona Dickson the performance. There was a MIT Dramashop presents 'TI MIT's Dramashop gave its pre- minimum of extremes of acting WILD DUCK' By Henrik Ibsen; 10 will deliver a short lecture, 'The to deal with love and loneliness staged by Joseph Everingham; sets 0- Film Process,' and a preview on a large, impersonal, modern sentation of Ibsen's 'The Wild ability, which gave the play a by Richard Reese '66; lighting by he: definite smoothness. AMlan Hirsch '66; costumes by Jmhn showing of his motion picture, college campus. Mr. Goldwyn has Duck,' last week. The perform- Leide '65: wi:h Leonard Lynceh I ance was extremely entertaining. There were so many minor as Werle, Michael Jaxobs as Gre- 'The Young Lovers.' The three- been showing his film at various gers Werle, Joihn Sowle '66 as Old hour program, presented by the universities to determine audi- The acting was- better than characters in the dinner scenes of Ekdal, David LSroff as 'Hjalmar the first act that the major char- Elldal, Joan Toden'ino as Gine Ek- -J Lecture Series Committee, will ence reaction to the film. competent. None of the players. dal, Eileen Schwade as Hedvig, were outstanding, but this fact acters had some trouble dominat- Joseph lMorlan '65 as Molvilk, Ray Dittman '64 as G-'aaberg, John Ry improved the general texture of ing. The attempt to give the feel- laarsdam '67 as Pettersen, Leonair I ing of "dinner and salon in the Clohen '64 as Jensen, Warren Lit. tlefield '64 as a Fat Gentleman, I next room" did not quite come Adrian Gill as a Thin Gentleman C Michael Merritt '66 as a Clerical off. Aoctors roaming noisily across Gentleman, Kenneth Moore '66 as to gli the stage during information the Headwai 'er. Z speeches made the background a ;tr, IlcBgCrva r-c 618: explanations a bit hard to follow. ter, Hedvig, is not his own. To MHAW VANTAGE But after this slow start, the o For YToumanment Plaw actors fell into their roles with further complicate matters, Gre. 'liI BIBRlcps.a$rrr': ' b F Anlrox. Stdinain Cost vigor. gers tells fourteen - year - old enis ...... 'The Wild Duck' concerns the Hedvig tihat if she sacrifices her < Ekdal family. Hjalmar Ekdal's beloved pet, the wild duck, her father will love her again. U't1- old friend, Gregers Werle, comes back from a long stay in the Nor- Two ideas on the state of the ple wegian north wooIs. Gregers be- world are presented. G r e g e r s w takes platonism and applies it of I lieves that "true marriage can be I- built only on complete honesty" literally to the material world. bi ·rg an dBrU M.P r as a and proceeds to help Hjanlmar Dr. Relling insists on the exist- discover the lies his marriage is ential view that all life is a lie. aA based on. Because of Gregers, He finds the lie people base their a MIM11bil V- -" , "' --" Hjalmar believes that his daugh- ASAWAPRO-FECTED -i For Club Play i 0Making Approx. Stringing Cost thS I-- THIS W[EEK MUSIC Komites Choral Society - 'An Evening in Armenian Folk Culture.' at the ~ BU George Sherman University 3 - Union. 775 Conmnonwealth Ave., May _ ome face e/3 3, 6:30 p.m. 10 BU Symphonic Band - at the Sherman -. Union, April 30, 12:30 p.m.. admis. sion free. Jo Mapes usie.of Brahms - -New England Con- servatory, April 29, S:30 p.m.. Jor- VI I thru Thursday, dan Hall; program includes the clari- A I net trio. Sonata in D minor for violin ll April 30 an;dl piano, and songs. Admission free. Teamnso...... ASNAWA! MU TI-PLY JI Diploma Reelital - Douglas Risner, or- For Reguiar Play ganist, May 1, 5:30 p.m., King's Q rrarvg = a s g BBIPI I a' I Pi a' $ I Ian & Sylvia Chapel, admission free; program in- &A F Approx. tnnging Cost I cludes mrusic of Bach, Brahms, Hinde- !& T~~~ewr"L. ,.~~...... beginning Friday, mith. I Badminton.... $4 . Gardner Museum - May 2, 3:00 p.m., V · bB· II. music for clarinet and bassoon; May h I May I 3, 3:00 p.m., New England Conserva- t tory Tour Chorls; both free. 1 Si >X 72 Cambridge Street TIHEATRE iI eacon Hill. Boston 'The Bride Na.pping' - presented by If i the Ohinese Students' Club; in Chin- s Parking across sfreoe - 30K ese with subtitles; Kresge Auditor- '$Ti I- I 1-.---I 11IIIIF 1 Sophomores - Class of 1966 1 1|; Order your official M.I.T. Class Ring 1WI! I in Lobby Building # 10 I li I 1E Wednesday, May 6 I I 1|# 11 9:30 A.M. to 3:45 P.M. 11 I ~~~~I tS~~~~II 1|1 $5.00 Deposit I I _ _ irM_ _ _ -~~~~~~~~NPodE I I L. G. BALFOUR COMPANY I I

· -_ i I__,____ 1. ____ I i Quick Ser I Cleaning-Press'ng-Ri I I CHARLIE , the i from our University Shop lg; 71 Amherst St., Cambi LIGHTWEIGHT ODD JACCOKETS 1N 1~~~ - a- for wear right into Summer '11 For themf i (shown) Bold Striping of Navy 11 on White in Cool ArnelP Triacetate and f 1R II Cotton Blend, $37.50; in Solid Shades of 11 Blue, Green or Tan, $35 ig 1 11 I C1~pi Navy Orlon®Acrylic and Wool Blazers, $50 11 "Op~ Natural or Red Dacron®Polyester and Flax Jackets, $42.50 540 MJ' On Campus. Plenty of frI Striped Cotton Seersucker Odd Jackets, $27.50 in charcoal broiled Steaks, Hand-woven Cotton India Madras SPbecial Features: Jackets, $39.50 Nightly: The organ bar fo: A nd a wide choice of Odd Trousers, Jrom $1 1 Special song styles and rqa I enjoyment ESTABUlSHED 1818 Warm, intimate surroundi Choice wines and liquors" Reser"ations for your part I Unique gift suggsions att ner in the lobby |t B' r .ogs' !utnishingz. latsz hoet . The New Char for business lunch or 346 MADISON AVE., COR. 44TH, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017 46 NEWBURY, COR. BERKELEY, BOSTON, MASS. 02116 Sunday hru Thursay ll0 PITTSBURGH * CHICAGO * SAN FRANCISCO * LOS ANGELES Frjay and Sar'day 11I T oa L - -- -- a a -- I _,--P.-e ----- -------iFr I ~;~··~·l~··e~B~BOND- IM II ,- II, - ,p,, pI g

Chapel organ recitals 1m11oviem~~~~~wie~~~~~~ se.e ...... W.6-iesday, April 29, t~lough Tues- DIr. Lao' weekdays and Sat. 11:20 UPTOWN - 'The Victors.' weekdays Pater Sellers day, May 5 (Unless otherwise stated, a.m. 2:45, 6:10, 9:40 p.m. S"n. 2:25. 12'30, 4:45. 9:05; Sun. 1:00, 5:10, on WCRB Saturdays the Sunlray schedule is the same as 5:50, 9:20 p.m. 'Girls at Sea' 9:25; 'To Bed or Nct :o Bed,' week- 6eo0p C.Scoft Ihe weekly schedule except that no weekdays and Sat. 9'50 a.m., 1:15, days, 10:45, 3:00, 7:135, Snt. 3:20, movies are slhown before 1:00 pm. 4:45, 8:,10 p.m. Sun. 1:00, 4:25, 7:50 7:35. Five organ recitals originating p.m. ASTOR - 'Dr. Strangelove.' :Mon-Sat. WEST END CINEMA - 'The War of it, in in the MIT Chapel will be heard 9:55, 11:55, 1:55, 3:55, 5:55 PARK SQUARE CINEPIA - 'The Con- the But'ons,' 11:15, 1:15, 3:15, 5:16, nection,' 1:35, 3:30, 5:25, 7:15, 9:10; 7:15, 9:15. that 7:65, 9:55-; un., 1:25, 3:25, 5:25,. short, 'A la Mode,' s:arts 10 min. Dr. Strangelove over WCRB each Saturday dur- 7:25. 9:25: shorts start 25 minutes inthe before the feature. before fea'.ure. I ILewe/T STWoIng - ing May from 5:00 to 5:30 pm. SAXON - 'The Cardinal,' evenings ow wife, BEACON HIll - 'Tom Jones,' 10:15, 8:30, matinees Mon.-Fri., 2:00, Sat- m 12:30, 2:45, 5:00, 7.:15, 9:30; S-un., Sun., 2.00. The Bride Napping 9d for The recitals are part of a series 1:00. 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40. 5:00. BOSTON CINERAMA - 'It's a Mad, In color, in the Mandarin dia- 0 sponsored by the Boston Chapter Mad, Mad, Mad World.' evenings. BRATTLE lect, English and Chinese sub- cters, of the American Guild of Organ- - Emmnanuele Riva in Mau- Theatres V) riCing. riac's "Therese through Sat. Start- titles. ists. ing Sun.: Revival of Rene Clair's CGHARLES PLAYHOUSE - 'The Glass Miss "The Italian Straw 'Hat" plus Sean Menagerie,' by Tennessee Williams; InDate: May 3, 1964, (Sunday) Renoir's "A Day in the Country." performances Wed. at 8:00, Thurs. Place: , M.I.T. be a The MIT Chapel organ, built Shows dai'y 5:30, 7:30, 9:30, mat- and Fri. at 8:30. Sat. at 5:30 and inees Sa'. and Sun. 3:30. 9:00, Sun. at 3:00 and 7:30. Time: 7:15 and 9:15 P.M. iended by the Holtkamp Company, is a OAPRI - 'Paris When It Sizzles,' COLONIAL - 'Fade Cut, Fade In,' Admission: $1.00 by writing Box -o 1, the 10:30, 2:15, 6:05, 9:55; 'The Serv- st'a.rinlm Carol Burnett. eves. at 8:30 A$Edubi PMtMsR am 'small-form' organ suited to ba- ant,' 12:20, 4:10, 8:00. 554, 3 Ames St., Cambridge, -070 (except Sun.) mats. T'Iu-s. at 2:16, "DR. STRANGELOVE" shown daily Hjal- roque compositions. The organ CINEM7A KEN.MORE SQUARE - Sa'. at 2:30. Mass. or by calling TCA, r- Wu'"hering Heights! 2:30, 4:20, 6:10, HOTEL BOSTONIAN PLAYHOUSE - 9:56 A.M.-11:55 A.M.-0:5S P.M.- believ- finds frequeat use for religious 8:00. 9:50 p.m. M.I .T. 3:55 P.M.-S:55 P.M.-7:55 P.M.-9:55 P.M. two Pintelr plays, 'The Room' an'd :0 services and the informal con- EXETER - 'Murder, i le Said,' 2:05, The Dumbwaiter,' evenings, Thurs., Information: Mr. John Tse, Extral "THE GREAT TOY ROBBERY" - 5:05, 8:03; 'The Happiest Days of Fri., Sun. at 8:30, Wed. 8:00, Sat. tively certs given' on Sundays through- Your 'Life,' 3:40, 6:40, 9:40. 6:00 and 9:30; mat. Thnrs., 3:00 p.,m. EL 4-2357 s the out the year. ESQUIRE - The Vic'ors,' no times Sponsor: M.I.T. Chinese Stu- -0, available. IMAGE - Two one-ac's -by W. F. Mc- Performances a- iiand Institute or- GARY - 'The Pink Panther.' 10:00, Court, 'We Mignt As Well Be Here dents' Club ASTOR co.tiuos Victor Mattfield, 12:00, 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00. 10:00; As Where We Are,' and 'Six Million led a ganist, will present the Saturday, Sun. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00. and One and, Twa an:' . . .' playing teenth HARVARD SQUARE-- "Beat the Dev- Wed.-Fri. and Sun. at 8:30, Sat. a,t May 23 recital. il" Plus short subjects, comple:e 7 and 9:30. conm- shows 1:30, 3:30, 5:30 7:30 9:40. SHURBERT - Royal Shakespeare Com- I ---- - KElTH MEM[IORIAL - 'Captain New- pany, 'King Lear,' Thurs. arjd Fri. and r- man. M.D., Mon.-Sat. 9:45, 1:35, at 8:00; 'Comedy of Errors,' Wed. and Iouch Duceh Cleaners 5:30, 9:20; Sun. 2:30, 6:05, 9:40. Sa'.. 2:30 anlil 8:30. LOEW'S ORPHEUHM - 'Lilies of the WILBUR - 'Roar 'Like a Dove,' s:a.r- touch 233 Massachusetts Ave. Fieli.' no 'imes available. ring Betsy Palmer, Charlie Ruggles, MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY I de- M[AYFLOWER - 'Flight from Ashiya' and Jessie Royce Landis, opening Fri. FACULTY MEMBERS AND PERSONNEL Opposite Necco no times available. at 8:00, Sun. at 7:30, other eves. ex- g the MUSIC HALL - 'A Tiger Walks' cept Mon. 8:30, mat. Sat. at 2:30. ofthe TRowbridge 6-5662 weekdays and Sat. 9:30. 11:30 a.m. OVER 25,000 MAY PURCHASE Mf 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:40. 9-40 p.m. Ia~a~s~rms~8n~a~w. TIRESIN STOCK Sun. 1:30, 3:35, 5:40, 7:40, 9'40 p.m. INCLUDING Identification Quality - PAlRAMOUNT - 'The Seven Faces of Service FOREIGN AND -- .11 Immediate Job Required 11L' COMPACT SIZES At Whole.sale Prices 01 /pmmmm m --- mm 8I Opportunities 5a Contact Lenses - Prescriptions _E.W @Perfect The Great Love Story I I I p., V.tOfneI'p .. get., (2)· Filled - Glasses Repaired 9IB of Our Time! I In California! NEaW Qality UNITY OPTICAL CO. !! LAURENCE OLIVIER in i UniversityI graduates - engin- IX Abe Wise, Licensed Optician- *s "Wuthering Heights" 1 eers,I scientists, liberal arts ma- It jors, accounting 31 Mass. Ave. COpley 7.1571 I and business TUBELESS TUBE TYPE Special prices to MIT community majors-areI in demand now on Nearest Optical House to M.I.T. the West Coast. Send in the p.m. 750x14 $ 99" 560x15 $1276 670x15 $ 775 uilding coupon below for the new in- formative CIS packet, iust off 600x13 $ 984 80ox14 '1395 710x15 $ 1 97 e Clab I Brought Back by Popular theII press, which lists hundreds om 26- - N- UN 4-.SSO uaue Demand! Ingmar Bergman's of California companies in need 650x13 S1065 850x14 '1656 760x15 $1316 N, 6'80 of college graduates (both de- t1torium. !%., r '1 · "'Beat the g "THE SILENCE" greedI and advanced degreed). 8001820x15 $1841 I'm All II Jules I!MA CIS also lists qualifications for -b I.. 1, Old each job. 1,151 : Devil" Mc I W,mission L a Career No Trade-In Required with b Plis short subiects, com-r II Every Tire and Tube Unconditionally Guaranteed, Regardless of Time or Mileage Segel Explosive Excitement! S (Adq e Pr.,l -d - d Dp*h. I.d . I,,l..ol.r'ld tk.s) Ka0, ad- Carl Foreman's "The Victors" 4 Information 3 plet.e shows 1:30. 3:30, : le4mS 4"Z~le preview also-Alec Guinness in Service T 'n, Jr., 5:30, 7:30, 9:40. "THE LAVENDER HILL MOB" F'1EEil T11E1E I4QEINT NG4; :e pro- UCLA Post Office Box 247 p.m., 308 Westwood Plaza I -eduswe disributer in No_ ngl.ndSor asure,' I Los Angeles, California 90024 p.m., -m pRa~mm - B - ; i PREMIUMHSELbN TRES boxof- m _C 8uu Enclosed find $3.00(please send i Emmanuele Riva in F NATIONWIDE UfETIME GUARANTEE 0nrer,' - Mauriac's "Therese" through U check or money order-no n., ad- Sat. Starting Sun.: Revival of 3 Note-Special stamps) for my CIS packet on *. Rene Clair's "The Italian Straw D CAMBRIDGE TIRE COMPANY 'rgeants a Hat" plus Jean Renoir's "A a California job opportunities. I 1 9:45, Student Prices "Nationwide Wholesale Warehouse Distributors" o Day in the Country." Shows C NEV 290 ALBANY STREET . CAMBRIDGE 39, MASS. 6u , vat daily 5:30, 7:30, 9:30, mati- r Vertigo; Name WHEI ELS | Off Mass Ave. Near M. I T. 26-100, c nees Sat. and Sun. 3:30. *IMon.-Thurs. $1 (Kenmore &I1 c ~~~~~o~~c Address Genu Pine | · · UNiversity 4-7575 e . * 0 c I Park Square) 75c (Esquire) o a IHHOURS -7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. p .or- Good] year UUSLJUlSloUsouquou onlaU u nofu ads ISaturday: 7:30 A.M to 2:00 P.M. sics of City ... Zone Retret lecture HALF A CENTURY OF SERVICE '| unl Little State ...... II MEMBER: CAMBRIDGE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE rgaret SD·IC-- ---L 5--MI-·--·e _______ -- ·--P-P·qlllll Human Maior . Degree I, s:00 Name of I SUMIMER JOBS I kM for STUDENTS NEW S'64 directory lists 20,000 summer job openings in 50 states. MALE or FEMALE. Un- precedented research for students includes exact I pay rates and job details. Names employers and their addresses for hiring in industry, summer camps, national parks', resorts, etc., etc., etc. Hurry!! jobs filled early. Send two dollars. Satis- faction guaranteed. Send to: Summer Jobs Direc- tory-P. 0. Box 13 5 9 3-Phoenix, Arizona. i I------I j--·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~- I C,----- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-x --- ·3P· ll p p~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·llll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~b ~~~~~~~~~~~Q~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~ l I -·--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·-I~~~ ~~ ~~ ~~~~~ LEECCTOURE SwERNES COOMMITTEEl~E CALEN~kDAR Contemporary Entertainment Series Lecture Series Series Samuel Golidwyn, Jr. . 'Sergeants 3' of MGM Saturday, May 2 5:15, 7:30 & 9:45 lectures on and presents Vertigo' 26-100 35c his latest production Ip - -1-1-----·------CI1----b · ---_-p _I_ I ,. e --·----------n ---------cr ---· - -- 'Young Lovers' Friday, May 1 Classic Series 10-250 followed by question 6:30 & 9:00 'The Informer' and answer period Sunday, May 3, 8:00 Tuesday, May 5 26-100. 60c Free Admission without card 50c 26-100 8:00

^r !! -- ---1 ------a ------ ------a ill larasarmrsl r lara jU. bb' Cl airs problems I - __ - I -0 Boston Council wtih entertainers and contracts FOBj0 R wO'PA,&,D or TRtACK mail it to all schools. Hopefully, the transportation you want (Continued from Page 2) we've got 1 this will give each school a valu- SPRING WEEKEND - T h i s r able reference record which will A . was as successful as any 9 As R~~~k weekend help them judge prices that min recent this school has seen agents suggest. E years, both from the viewpoint Art Bushidn also suggested to CL of fun and money. I am glad that the group the Fpossibility of plan- events. MIT those who did nothing for the ning to coordinate but predict that it would might use a group in the after- weekend and BC use them at night, flop were wrong. Congratulations noon to Gilman and crew for a fine for example. go ------m event that contained many inno- ~~~~~~~~~-i' la (Y' great! vations. The train ride was I Is C14 There is no reason any more to -i ask if we can have a successful a-a spring event. You can bet that next spring will see another great 21 HARRISON AVE. weekend-and no deficit will be HA 6o4210 0 I planned either. (IBetween Essex & Beech I BOSTON COUNCI,-Some defi- [ Streets, Boston} I nite proposals concerning the iLAND & CANTONESE problems schools have had with )OaD EXOTIC DRINKS were made at the open doilay 'til entertainers uthenfic Hawaiian Luaus SAVES SEiCI TRrANSPORTA-no S last meeting of the Boston Council Moderate Pric-s NEW ENGLANDd'S SHOWPLACE FORt 2 WHEEL . held at Wellesley. Each school a.m. the I1 am.-3 will be asked to send to MIT Daily & Sunday I price paid for an entertainer, the aI .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 agent, special contract clauses, . . etc. We will duplicate this and _C--_ I_ r· " · ·?5 ·- .57fC-.. ,,,;x· ;, , `*; i' Co. .rair· ::.··::= Samuel Bluestein I·s.. r : ·^·r School Supplies" ·, ;- Ir .Lt : "Complete I .I I -,·,· I ;-1 TYPEWRITERS .= SALES - SERVICE - RENTAL . i·;·'i:· ;.· ·I 1080 Boylston St. 345 Main Street Boston ,Malden COpley 7-1100 DAvenport 2-2315 I -- ,W_ · IsI S~~~at Just Arriveda.. The Sensational New

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I~~~ _- Ninaw- i I i MUM4S -1' On Deck How They Did' I 1964 m Teninis' (V)-Dartmouth, Home, Baseball Golf --i Today. Wednesday, April 29 m 3:00 pm Tufts 8-MIT (V) 2 Harvard 4 MIT (V) 3 Baseball (V)-Northleastern, Away, Wesleyan 6-MIT (V) I AUTO INS. & PLATES 2:00 pm Saturday, May 2 Harvard 20-MIT (V) I A STONE'S THROW FROM MIT I Middlebury 7-MIT (V) 2 Tufts 6-MIT (V) i Baseball (F)-Phillips Andover, Baseball (V)-Bates, Away, MIT (F) 13'/ -Governor Dummer At 428 Mass. Ave., Cambridge Away, 2:30 2:00 pm Tufts 13-MIT (F) 4 pm Harvard 13-MIT (F) 2 13'/z 491-3330, 491-3331 Lacrosse (F)--New Hampshire, Baseball' (F)-Emerson College, Tabor (F) 261/2-MIT (F) 3½2 IIi- ---g~ I --1 ~ Home, 3:00 pm Home, 2:00 pm Heavyweight Cre Yale 8:57.6-MIT (V) 9:09.0 Lacros Tennis (V)-Amherst, Away, Heavyweight Crew (V)--Compton m 3:00 pm Yale 9:03.5-MIT (JV) 9:05.8 UMass 6-MIT (V) 3 EXCLUS IVE-! Cup, Princeton, Harvard, Home MIT (3rd V) 9:20-Yale 9:31 Amherst S-MIT (V) 3 Tennis (F)-Milton Academy, Lightweight Crew (V)--Geiger rl Home, 3:00 pm Yale 9:1 3-MIT ( I st F) 9:20 Andover 19-MIT (F) 2 Rolf Hochhuth Cup, Columbia, Cornell, Away Yale 9:20-MIT (2nd F) 9:29 Winchendon 3-MIT (F) 2 co Thursday, April 30 Lacrosse (V)-Bowdoin, Home, Sailing tells why he Golf (F)-Harvard, Home, 2:00 pm Lightweight Crew MIT (V)-Ist in NEISA Dinghy 1:00 pm Lacrosse (F)-Bowdoin, Home, MIT (Y) 6:39.0-Harvard 6:39.5 Eliminations wrote Lacrosse (V)-W.P.I., Home, 2:00 pm Dartmouth 6:47.0 MIT (F)-I st in Tufts Yacht Club 3:00 pm Tennis (V)-Williams, Away, MIT (JV) 6:52.0-Harvard 6:57 Freshman Minor 'THE DE PUTY' Friday, May 1I 2:00 pm Dartmouth 6:58 Tennis 70ri Golf (V)-Lowell Tech, New Tennis (F)-Phillips Exeter, Home, MIT 3rd V)-6:58.4-Harvard MIT (V) 6-Bowdoin 3 in the current Hampshire. Away, 1:30 pm 2:00 pm 7:01.4 MIT (V) 9--Colby 0 I Dartmouth 7:03.5--Harvard 7:08.5 Wesleyan 7-MIT (V) 2 RAM PARTS io MIT (Ist F) 7:08.5 MIT (F) 9-Dean Junior C. 0 MIT (2nd F) 7:07.5-Harvard Wesleyan 7-MIT (F) 2 ~O THIE ALPS... made inItaly by FABIANO 7:07.7-Dartmouth 7:10.5 Track Handmade Imported Boots for the Outdoor Man and Woman... MIT (V) 94-Williams 50 PROVEN IN 2500 MILE HIKE MIT (F) 88-Tufts 55 For Men, or Women. MIT (F) 79-Williams 46 Suede Rock Climbing and STYLE --. ""436' I m - ELSE'S _ m Hiking Boor. Leather s - lined, Padded Quarter and $14.95 Noted for the best Sandwiches Tongue, Vibrom lug soles. plus postage Auto Insurance .-~~~/"'. Men's N and IZ-IL-O to 12 ~ to eat in or take out. * All Risks * Easy Payments (Cocoa Brown only). Ladies FAMOUS ROAST BEEF SPECIAL * Open 9 to 9 & Saturday JAMES F. BRENNAN Ins. M-5 to 11 in these Fashion SANDWICH-KNACKWU RST- Agency Colors: #4364 - Cocoa 11 Union Sq., Somerville, Mass. Brown, #4361 -Green, BRATWURST with SAUERKRAUT 34362-Red, #4365 - or POTATO SALAD Call. 666-5600 Gray. "und die feinen Wurstwaren" Write for free brochure SPRING- 1964 FABIANO SHOE CO., INC. '71 Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge Dept. A, South Station 491.2842 Boston 10. Mass. ELSIE & HENRY BAUMANN Rolf Hochhuth: GUITAR AMP: Gibson "Falcon" d [ A Candid Interview mumor- built-in reverb. and tremolo, foot ] pedals for both. Handles ;two in- struments or P.A. system. Com- fortable size, plenty of power. $170. The Catholic Church Larry Gottlieb x3202, C17-9528. & The Birch Society: 1958 VAUXHALL Blue 4-door Vic- A Controversial Sparkling... tor Sedan (British). 'Body in fair Symposium condition. Good motor, brakes, tires, battery. A bargain at $150. I must sell it now. Mike Levin x5868 Brother Antoninus: or 491-7423. On The Death Of JFK flavorful... I WANTED used movie camera with zoom lens. Wentworth 247-8090. Two Dollars 1957 FORD Fairlane 500 convert- at ible, T-Bird engine, R&H, mint con- Campus Bookstores distinctive ! dition, auto, trans., extras, $550. 491-8982. & " BLACK MARKET prices paid for Select Newstands your extra commencement ticket. Call 868-7283 after 6:30 p.m. I RAMPARTS HEALTHY '57 Chevy. 210 V-8 | Menlo Park 14, California standard 4-door, grey. Some peel- I wish to subscribe for five yearly I I ing, no rust. $475. KI 7-5449. issues at $8.50. i MIT WESTGATE efficiency apart- I I ment to sublet June-Sept. Com- Check Enclosed [ Bill Me El pletely furnished for housekeeping. name Grocery and laundry in building. MIT students, faculty or administra- I address I tion, married or single, are eligible I I tenants. $95 month. Phone 491- l C~ !!. Il 4517. city & state -

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Illustrationsslightly enlarged oo Sailina team I st in NEISA Eliminations Heavies lose four to Yale U, ,low Man - F - - - -a ------I -- - - By Ken Browning Tech finished with 103 points, qualify, tying for first with a 3rd, varsit ordy winners MIT's varsity sailing team con- 17 ahead of second-place WPI. WPI skii-wer in the heat at MIT. tinued its winning ways last The other team to qualify for Missing qualification by one point- Elis from gaining two seats at. was Terry Cronburg who finished by C. R. Miller weekend, placing first in its heat the dinghy finals to be held May the start- Both crews settled to 9-10 was B.U., finishing third with fourth at URI by one point, and MIT's heavyweight crews suf- - of the Northeastern Intercollegi- about 32-strokes per minute, andi o- ate Sailing Association (NEISA) 74 points. Jack Hah '65, -fourth at Tufts. fered a setback as Yale swept Dinghy Championship Elimina- Two qualify In monotype The Tech sailing team is in the four of the five heavyweight races Yale began to pull ahead to stay. oz tions, and qualifying two men for Sunday saw four team members midst of what could turn out to on the Charles last Saturday. Con- With half a mile to go, Teac the NEISA Monotype Finals. compete in the NEISA single- be their best season in.a couple ditions for all races were excel- took the stroke up to 34 in an Sweep dinghy eliminations handed eliminations, two qualify- of years, having won four tro- lent, with a tailwind blowing down phies in four meets before last the one and three-quarters mile attempt to catch the smoothly a. In the dinghy eliminations, held ing for the finals on May 16-17. stoking Elis. The engineers sprint. < at the Coast Guard Academy in Joe Smullin '66 was second in his weekend. Their next action will course. be in the NEISA Dinghy Finals The MIT varsity started their ed at 42, but could make no > New London on Saturday, Don heat at Tufts, two points behind ground on the boys from New < Schwanz '66 was high-point skip- Tim Prince of Harvard. Ed Shaw which will be held at the Harv- duel at 41 strokes per minute, but ard Yacht Club. this wasn't enough to keep the Haven, who finished 11.4 seconds a per for the meet, winning all '65 was the other Tech skipper to ahead of Tech, in 8:57.6. Lu seven of his races against the six JVs lose by close margin Z other competing teams. Team The JV, unlike the varsity, was u captain Terry Cronburg '66 skip- ahead of Yale for most of the 3 pered the first five races in the race, but the superb Eli stamina other division, but due to a slight Lichts take Biglin Bowl gave the race to the opposition, illness turned the helm over to Both crews started at 38, and Dave Schlosberg '64 for the .last MIT gained a three seat lead and I two races. The combined score widened it to half a length. U of the two Tech skippers was Yale started their sprint early _ enough to win the division and and passed Tech with a quarter make the regatta a clean sweep mile left. At the wire, Yale was I for MIT. - --- X:= a half length ahead of the engin. i eers. Time for Yale was 9:03.5. 3rd varsity wins Baseball team drops 3; MIT's third varsity turned in i the only victory of the day, as Season mark now 1-9 they led Yale all the way from the start. With a half-mile left, E by John Schwartz the five man in the Yale boat lost E MIT had another tough time on Photo by John Torode control of his oar and the Eli boat the diamond this past week, los- had to stop rowing until he re. ing to Tufts 8-2, Harvard 20-1, The MIT lights move up to take Harvard in the last 10 strokes with Dartmouth far behind in gained control. The engineers i and Middlebury 7-2. Tech has now Bar- took advantage of the opportun. dropped nine straight since win- last Saturday's race. In the versify shell are (I. to r.): Cox Julian Adams '64, stroke Mark ron '64, Herb Hermann '64, Pete Staecker, Allen White '66, Dave Evans '64, Tom Perardi '64, ity and sprinted home three i ning the season's opener against lenths ahead of Yale in a time ' Salisbury State. John Proctor '65, and Denny Smith '64. of 9:20. The loss at Tufts was not en- Harvarrd still held a 3 seat ad- JVIs by 5 seconds tirely undeserved; sloppy Tech By Pete Staecker nar- vantag The Tech JV's had things pretty fielding in the third inning gave MIT's Varsity lightweights ge. Tech began to sprint. Tufts a 2-0 lead without the bene- rowly edged past Harvard last With I10 strokes left in the race much their own way once they Trackmen top Williams; to win the Biglin Bowl the tw fit of a base hit. Saturday 'o boats were dead even- passed Harvard Bridge, with by a scant decklength. One-half and 1 The Harvard game looked bad 0 strokes later the varsity Dartmouth and Harvard battling Take 13 of 16 events second separated the two crews had p(osted the slimmest margin from the very first pitch when a for 2nd spot honors the rest of the walk, a single, and two straight at the finish, with the winning of viectory since their three way by Don Bosack down the course. A valient errors at shortstop allowed the time only 4 seconds off the course tie forr first place in the 1962 way The MIT trackmen downed Wil. Crimson to grab four quick un- record. EARC Sprint Championships. It sprint effort .by the Crimson final- liams 94-50 for their third straight earned runs in the first inning of From the start to the closing was am amazing job of calling ly gave -them a one second edge victory here on Saturday. With Tech hard-luck pitcher Larry Ca- strokes of the sprint, the race was and sNtroking the race by cox- over the Green at the line. Tech's two firsts each, Jim Flink '64, lof '66. all Harvard; the Crimson jumped swain Julian Adams '64 and Cap- third varsity eased by the Crim- Kim Sloat '64, Terry Dorschner Mazola took the mound Satur- off to a 4 seat lead on MIT and tain Ailark Barron '64. son by 3 seconds in 6:58.4. '65, and Sumner Brown '66 led the Dartmouth, and Tech had to set- team as they won thirteen of six- day at Middlebury, and suffered ir the defeat, giving up seven runs tle for third place. At the Har- teen events. in the first three frames. The MIT vard Bridge, the Engineers made Ter Brown and Dorschner each set i inis squad beats Bowdoin, Colby; their own attack, which outhit Middlebury a move to pull even, and started I new records by beating eight to six, could garner just two to close the gap, but Harvard met FaI is To Wesleyan for 7-5 record previous marks. Brown ran the runs. the challenge, and once again the mile in 4:17.3, while Dorschner i R H E Crimson coxie was "riding" on The varsity tennis team defeat- close match to win 6-3. Jack Mo- took the 440-yard hurdles in 54.1. MIT 010 000 010--2 7 3 Ken Morash. '65 tied his pole Tufts 002 006 OOx-S 9 1 the Tech five man, Allen White, ed Boywdoin and Colby and lost to ter '64 at number 1 position won vault record with another jump of '66. The beat climbed and the Wesley,,an to bring their record to easily by 6-1, 6-3, while Marty Or- Harvar:t 410 600 621-20 .17 1 13'. MIT 000 100 000--'1 4 5 Engineers very slowly started to 7-5. mond '64 at number 3 had to move again. In th MIT 94, Williams 50 i M~IT 010 00 001--2 8 7 ie match at MIT on Thurs- fight hard to win 6-4, 4-6, 8-6. Mile Run Middlebury 124 000000--7 & 4 With less than 40 strokes left, day, T'ech defeated Bowdoin in a 1. Brown (MIT) 4:17.3 2. Oliver (MITI [ The other players who won for 3. Benson (W) Tech were Bill Petrick '65 and Two Mile Run 1. Wesson (MITI 10:25.s 2. Butler Bob Blumberg '64. At the end of (MITX 3. Benson (Wi 440-'ard Run Frosh sports the singles, Tech was ahead 4-2. 1. Schwoeri (MIT) 49.8 2. McKnight Blumberg and Petrick in doubles (Wi 3. Gunn (WI 100-Yard Dash won their game to clinch the 1. Flink (MIT) 9.9 2. Browne (VM)3. match. Ross (MIT) Trackt tem takes Tufts, Williams 220-Yard Dash In the match on Friday, Tech 1. Flink (MIT) 22.1 2. Browne (Wi 3. McKnlght (Wi By W. Thomas Compton led the Tech skippers with firsts 150's, however, as the 2nd frosh shut out Colby 9-0 on a cold and 880-Yard Run Track in both of his races. edged by Dartmouth by about windy day. The singles were 1. B.own (MIT\ 2:0..3 2. Johns'on The track team won the last took first (W) 3. Gibson W The frosh sailors also three feet (making their total swept in straight sets. The only High Jump two Saturdays, against Tufts 88- Acade- 1. Gaylord iW 5' 6' 2. Dixon ;W) in a meet against Tabor tense moment was in Captain Mo- 3. Jones (MIT) 55 and then Williams 79-46. my that was held on the Charles margin of victory in the last ter's second set. Leading 6-5, he Broad Jump 1. Ross (MIT i 21'3" 2. Carrier (MIT' Against Tufts the Engineers had last IWrednesday. This gives them two races 1.7 seconds). lost the next two games to go 3. Kershaw (W' three double winners - Gordon a record of two first and one sec- Pope Vault The. first frosh heavies lost behind 6-7, but took the next three 1. Morash (MITI 13' 2. Lucis (MIT, Dewi t t e, James Jerrell, and ond in their spring Regattas. their third straight, as the Elis to win 9-7. In the doubles, he Won 3. Gaillar.d (WI High Hurdles Bruce Ressler. Ressler again won Golf downed them by 6.8 seconds. handsomely. 1. Dcrschner (MIT) 15.0 2. Morash twice and Dewitte had a triple In the match played Saturday, (MIT) 3. Flink EMIT) Governor Dummer Academy Though MIT led at the start, dur- 440-Yard Hurdles win against Williams. tied the Engineers last Wednes- ing the middle of the race, Yale the Tech winning string was 1. Dcrschner iMITI 54.1 2. MacMillan (MIT) 3. Fiala (MITi Baseball day at 13Y2-131/2, and Tabor beat pulled out to a 1% length lead. snapped at three. After a tough Triple Jump The baseball team lost both Tech Tech's sprint at 37 didn't worry fight Blumberg and Mike Long '65 1. Kershaw (W 43'1' ',"2. Carrier MIT 261/2-31/2 Saturday. (MIT) 3. Ross (MIT) games last week, to Tufts 13-4 should have won easily, but on the the Elis, who finished almost two lost in three sets while Petrick and Harvard 13-2. last hole a forty foot chip shot lengths up in a time of 9:13.2. and Ken Comey '65 won. Petrick I Paul Hoxie went all the way the pin. The second frosh heavies, after won 7-5, 3-6, 6-0. Comey won 6-4, went in - and touched .00 against Tufts. Ron Kadomiya had Because it touched the pin, they beating Columbia last week, found 6-8, 6-2. In the first doubles Moter half of Tech's six hits. Rick Pap- forfeited the hole, and Dummer Yale to be tougher than they ex- and Gio Franzi '64 took the sec- penhausen started against Harv- gained a tie. pected, as they finished two ond set after losing the first, but ard and had a 1-0 lead at the end Lacrosse lengths behind the Eli's winning they lost the last. The final score of four. ?P0 Andover completely overpower- time of 9:20. was 6-3, 4-6, 6-3. ,,~,g o mm Tennis ed the Engineers 19-2 last Wed- The tennis team pounded Dean nesday. Winchendon School took -a Junior College last Tuesday 9-0. close one 3-2 on Saturday. Then the Techmen lost to Wesley- Betas romp to fourth straight IMtrack title: Steve Schroeder and Bill Elmer I~, '°ESo* an 7-2. scored against Andover's more for third . Mc- to Gerry Bunce played number six experienced team. Against Win- PSK second, Sig Eps, Burton tie Pi dominated the intra- -480 against Dean. The singles and chendon Schroeder scored in the Beta Theta 2. Jacobs (PFSK), 3. Keenan (SH) O!^":a"am"', Em mural track meet Sunday, April 26. 4. Hadley (Bak). 5. Ribe (Bak) 'Se CCD , -5 first two doubles won, so Coach first and MIT had a 1-0 lead. The Betas were first in six of ten Davies let Al Kruse and Ralph events and won with a to'al of 43 'Shot put: 1. Wilson (Bur) 43' 4-1/2", Then Winchendon opened up a paints. Phi Sigrnma Kappa took second 2. Lorentz (SH), 3. Franzel (TC) Sawyer play the last doubles. hole and scored three goals in wi'h 23 noints, while Burton and Sig- 4. Morisc.n (Bak) 5. Riley (BTP) Against Wesleyan, John St. Peter ma Phi Epsilon tied for thi.rl at 22. SS0: 1. Gerrity (BTP) 2:12, one minute of the second period. Ken' Grrni nger '63 of BTPi seXt a 2. Reder (PEK), 3. Rible (Bak) and Joe Sheridan won their sin- Jim Wheeler scored in the third. new rzc-.d of 24.0 in the 220-yard 4. Hester (SPE), 5. Link (Bur) gles, scoring MIT's only points. dash, and George Hadley '65. of Baker 880 Relay: 1. BTP, Monsler. Chinchillo. Crew pickqd- up the other new record with a Groninger, Horttor, 2. PDT, 3. SPE, Sailing Freshman Coach Mike Greata's 11.0 cr.ockinlg in the lUO.yard' dlash. 4. Burton The sailing team took top hon- Meet sce're. Mile: 1. Giles (TC) 5:21, 00x first boatload jumped to an early 1. Beta Theta Pi 42 2. Lange (SPE), 3. Dower (PSK) ors in a regatta held at the Tufts lead in the frosh lights race, but 2. Phi Sigma Kappa 23 4. Fisk (Bur). 5. Janson( PSK) Yacht Club last Saturday. MIT 3. Bur'on House 22 .q0 rnediiey: 1. BTP, Koch, Riley., Mon- could only hold it to the half- 4. Sigma Phi Epsilon 22 sley, Chinchillo. 2. P5K, 3. TC, 4. 'ITDC finished with 62 points, 6 ahead mile mark, where Dartmouth 5. Baker Hou-se 21 440: 1. Gerrity (BT'P) 55.5, 2. Hester 6. Theta Chi 8 SPE;, 3. ,Kasameyer (PSK), 4. Suth- of second place Dartmouth. Other most effectively capitalized on the 7. Senior House 9 erland (TDC) participating schools in order of R. lhi. Del'a Theta S 100: 1. MHadley (Bake 11.0 (recoult) - 4o higher stroke, posting a 5 sec- 2. Nemser (-SA'M), 3. Broadley - finish were Northeastern, Bow- ond victory over the Tech Frosh. Event Winners (Bak), 4. Kreihbeil (Bur) - High juMp: 1. Kreihbeil (Bur) 5'-4", 220: 1. Groninger (BTP) .24.0 (record ) doin, B.U., Merrimack, B.C., That was the only blackmark of 2. Hadley (Bak), 3. Wilson (Bur) 2. Godfrey (SPE), 3. Hinrichs (TC) Tufts, and Harvard. Chet Osborn 4. l{ardt (SPE), 5. Morgan (Bakl 4. Carrlngton (SH) 5. Sullivan an otherwise perfect day for the Broad Junmp: 1. Gronin- er (BTP) 19'-1' '(TC)