i'**r , a · l i ,akf-.' .. - (,7 ,vo-t 5 centi baker

Post on 12-May-2022

1 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

·OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNDERGRADUATES OF.. MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF. TECHNOLOGY

I'**r A , i · VV L ,AKf-.' .. - _i, lt'l I YYIV ?lt'"~ Io (..ANIBKIU LE_ MASSA-!i Hl.:TT- 1;IVAY APPII In .neA- - 9 -. I. I ...- It.., . ,vo-t 5 CENTI(,7 ' E T

$

Be

g-t

r.e

net.it1.dn

e

e

s

!

Baker Dormitor)To House Guest ,For Senior Week

East Campus House Committevoted this week to move its meetinjtime to Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. Athis time also, they elected Robert BRosenbaum '57 as -the new LoungChairman.

It was reported that the pool roonwill be reopened soon, as some of th,mnissing equipment has been locatedAthletic cards have been printed, buprobably will not be issued until FallEast Campus residents are remindedthat those rooms which have beeropened as Commons Rooms on thefifth floor of the Bemis and Hayderunits are not to have any furnitureremoved from them, and at all timesare to remain available for housingguests.

Dance TomorrowProfessor Leicester F. Hamilton,

Dean Frederick G. Fassett, and DeanPietro Belluschi will be the guests atnext Wednesday's Coffee Hour to beheld in Talbot Lounge, starting at 8:30p.m. Last week's beer party drew arecord attendance of 130 people. Prep-arations are under way now for "LaFesta Del Vino," which will take placetomorrow night on the third floor ofWalker Memorial.

New Juke BoxBurton House Committee voted to

install a juke box in the Snack Bar.Also, they are about to begin work ona new constitution.

In an extended meeting Wednesday,the Baker House Committee sat as ajudicial body, discussing firecrackers,bombs, chemicals, noise, and other il-legal actions in reference to an inet:dent which occurred last week. Sum-marizing the opinion of the commit-tee, Herbert Ainster '56, Chairman,stated, "Baker is our home, and weexpect every resident to respect the'other residents. Firecrackers, chemi-cals, and bombs form a hazard, andpeople have been hurt in the past be-cause of negligence. This is a sign ofdisrespect;' this is not a part of ourcommunity."

ARockwell CageWill Be fite

Science FestivalThis week-end, for the fifth con-

secutive year, the Massachusetts Sci-ence Fair will be held at RockwellCage. Nearly 250 students from sec-ondary schools throughout the statewill compete. The exhibitors all arewinnerp of local school science fairs.'Visitors to the fair in past yearshave been' numbered in the tens fothousands.'

Tlhe fair will be open to the publicon Friday, April, 30, from -6:00 p.m.to 9:00 p.m.; on Saturday, May 1,from 11:00 a.im. to 8:30 p.m.; andon Sunday, May 2, from 2:00 p.m.to 5:00 p.m A special invitation hasbeen extended to Institute studentsby the sponsdrs-the Boston Globe,M.I.T., and the Fair Committee. Ad-mission is free.

Judging will take place on Fridayand Saturday. At 4:00 pan. on Sun-day, the awards will be presented.

I CorncrtBand WiL Play On EpolanadeIn The atch Shell

On Sunday, May 9, 1954, at 2:3ip.m., the M.I.T. Concert Band wilpresent the fifth in its series of an-nual concerts at the Hatch Shell orthe Esplanade in Boston under thebaton of John -Corley.

The program will include:Rondo-Alla Marcia, from

"Royde Hall Suite" .... Healed WilliamFirst Suite in Eb for Military

Band ................................Gustav HolstFuniculi Funicula ..............Luigi DenzaPsalm for -Band (Boston

Premiere) ............ Vincent PersichettiKing Cotton-March

John Philip SousaThe Pines of the Appian Way from

I (Continued on page 4)

71

FI

I

I

I

I

01I

.iI.

Dorm Semi-Formal Tonight;Graham 4chestra To Play

Tickets are on sale for the Dorm Spring Semiformal, which will be heldtonight, April 30th, in Baker House. George Graham will supply the musicfor the dance. Tickets cost $2.50 each. East Campus is'holding its dance onSaturday, May 1st, on the third floor of Walker Memorial. Cost: $1.25 percouple at the door. Jerry Davis will provide the melodies for this dance.

Dormitory Council approved an amendment to the bylaws of BurtonHouse Committee, stating that the Athletic, Judicial, and ImprovementsChairmen of that house will not have a vote in House Committee, and theywill not be required to attend the meetings. They will, however, retain theright to bring up motions in the Committee. In connection with this issue, the

'The Little Foxes'To Be PresentedTwo More Times

Chair ruled that motions passed inthe several House Committees andsubject to . approval by DormitoryCouncil, such as amendments to theirbylaws, will not go into effect untilDormitory Council approves them.

Amendment Proposed

A motion was placed gn the floorLast night the Staff Players gave to amend the Constitution of tt

the first of three performances of Council, so that the presidentLillian Hellman's play, "The Little Dormitory Council will be elected cFoxes." This story features a family the fourth Tuesday of each sprirconflict of pathological proportions. term, rather than the third Tuesda

One of the main characters is Mary as naw. The purpose of this amendAnn Wolf in the role of Birdie, whose ment is to make the election fall ospirit has long been broken by her the same day as the elections for thruthless husband, and whose memories presidents of ,the House Committeesof Lyonnet, the happy plantation Although 8 voted in favor of thhome of her childhood, constitute her amendment 'and only two against, ionly pleasure in life. was defeated, because a minimum o

Burt ~Robie, Humnanities Librarian, 9 votes is required to pass an amendtakes the part of Oscar, her- sinister ment to the Constitution of Dormitor:and cruel husband. - .Council.

The role of their son, Leo, is played Subsequently, a motion was madeby Lacey B. Smith, assistant profes- to add another amendment to th(sor in the Humanities Department. Constitution of the Council, statingThis unfortunate individual is the ex- that members absent at a time whenpected product of such a marriage. there is a vote on a constitutional

Jean Nelson portray} Regina, who amendment, be polled. This was alsois greedy, hypocritical, 'and cruel, but defeated, seven voting in favor of the

(Continued on page 4) issue, and five against.

ART CONTEST Rules ExtensionThe final date for submitting en- "Tech Nite at the Pops" asked

fries to the T.C.A. Art Contest has Dormitory Council to extend openbeen changed to next Friday, May 7. house hours on Sunday, May 9th, fromStarting on Tuesdav, May II, many 10 p.m. to midnight, so that music-of these entries will be exhibited in lovers and their dates can go into thethe lobby of Buildinq 7. The contest dormitories after the concert. Dormi-was extended so that this exhibit tory Council approved this after awould not conflict with Open House. lengthy debate. This approval, how-

.. ,? ~~ -4.1 .. I _M

ever, is sili 'Suoject to approval bythe Dean's office. The Council's policyfor next year will probably be not toextend open house hours for eventsinfluencing only a small part of thedormitory residents.

Women HousedDuring Senior Week the second and

third floors of Baker House have been resid e nt illian Steak sreserved 'for women guests andparents. All residents of these floorswill have to move to temporary quar- IJIters by noon of the previous Satur-iday.

oP In a recent address before The "The problem of defense against1)r. Farnij",rtb -1 0 M.I.T. Club of the Twin Cities, Dr. atomic attack is perhaps the mostJames, R . Kil l ian, Jr. spoke on "Uni- complex in safety planning and en-versities Serve the Nation's Safety." gineering that any people has everDiscussing comprehensive safety faced. No informed and competentgoals of' the universities, Dr. Killian scientist or member of the militaryHealth Conference~ spoke on physical and political safety who has considered the problem hasagainst external attack, the economic concluded that a perfect defense issafety of the nation, and stressed the possible or probable. They have con-Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth, head of critical importance of intellectual and eluded that our present defense capa-the Institute's Medical Department, is moral safety in our educational insti- bilities can be improved several fold

Chairman of the Fourth National Con- tutions. ' and that we have the technical re-ference on Health in Colleges which Excerpts from Dr. Killian's address sources to accomplish this.wilt be held next week in New York follow: Economic DevelopmentCity. The affair is sponsored by the Military Defense "The second safety function of ourAmerican College Health Association, "The first of these goals has to do universities is to strengthen our na-of which Dr. Farnsworth is pfesident, with our military defense. This -vast tional and regional economy. Our ui-in conjunction with many national or- program impinges upon every aspect versities are important partners ofganizations interested in student of our national life, including our uni- management and labor in maintaining

!health, especially the National Tuber- versities. At the present time, the a vigorous economy. Out of the uni-culosis Association. educational institutions of the nation versities are coming directly new pro-The periodic survey of college health have mobilized thousands of scientists ducts, new industries, new wealth.Practice by means of these confer- and other scholars who are working Through research, the universities areences serves as a guide for health unselfishly, quietly, and patriotically developing the ;advanced technologyPlanning for colleges for a period of to give the country stronger defenses and know-how to create new industry.five to ten years. The conference is at lower cost. They'are also helping existing indus-devoted to several seminars on timely "A large and urgent defense project try to achieve new products and newaspects of health policy, organization, now operated by M.I.T., the Lincoln efficiency both in technology and in Por maintenance. It is open to all those Laboratory, is a dramatic example of lmanagement. Our universities are not 0interested in college health, including how Educational institutions can pro- (Contknued on page 4)Presidents, dei/ns, and student leaders vide emergency service to the nation, Ifrom colleges, as well as medical peo- for the objective of this Laboratory 'Pie. is to assist in providing 'the nation FINANCE COMMITTEE esDr. Farnsworth has had many with a more effective defense against Next Monday, May 3, at 5:00 p.m., rePapers published and has written air attack. Its major mission is to pro- there will be a Finance Committee ail.any articles for professional journals vide for the design and development smoker' in Tyler Lounge. The purpose p(m college health. He has been lee- of experimental models of certain of this smoker is to explain to mem- th-Urer in medicine at Harvard Univer- weapons -primarily intended for the bers of the Clas~es of '56 and '57 the Iwity, and is a physician at Massachu- defense of Continental North America workings, of this committee and the St~etts General Hospital. against air attack. benefits it offers those who jo;il it. til

,All students interested in acting asguides on Open House day are re-quested to place their names on The

he

ofIon

lgayi-)n

leS.

ieit)ffII-

y

e'

1 )

Boston Pops WillJoin With MusicClubsOnMay9th

%Next Tuesday, May 4, the Boston

Pops Orchestra opens it; 69th sea-son. On May 9, Sunday evening, theM.I.T. Musical Clubs will present"Tech Night at the Pops." The com-bined Glee Club and Choral Societywill present selections from Bruck-ner's Te Deum, after which the GleeClub will perform Vineta, a song byBrahms, arranged by Prof. KlausLiepmann, Director of the MusicalClubs. They will also presentHumble, a spiritual with solo byMike Mintz, '57, and Old Man Noah.The Logarhythms will then sing twonumbers and the Glee Club will con-clude with Take Me Back to Tech,and Arise Ye Sons of M.I.T., forwhich the audience is invited to joinin. The Pops Orchestra will thenplay the second half of its program,ending with everyone joining in onthe Stein Song.

Tickets are now on sale in Build-ing 10. The prices are: $2.50 for thefloor; $1.00 for the first balcony; and$.50 for unreserved second balconyseats.

Open House hours have been ex-tended until midnight on that day.

Broadcasting IsB.eg.un By WVMITFrom 2rid Studio

WMIT is now broadcasting fromtwo studios. The newly completed"Studio B" was inaugurated Mondaynight. Presently it is being used onlyfor news Announcing, but it is plannedthat when the new turntables arrivethe room will be used for broadcast-ing music as well.

Since WMIT was able to use equip-ment on hand, the cost of adaptingthe new studio was only $4.50. Event-ually, the station expects to expandthese new facilities to the point wherethey will have two complete studiounits.

WMIT informs us that everybody iswelcome to visit its newly-improvedquarters in the basement of WareDormitory.

Laarvard DumpsLacrosse Squad;

lw%,Cz~~~~~~~~~~~~~i ii7 III al Im II

dormitories. Fraternty men can see .~rosh V ctorIoustheir fraternity representatives ofBeaver Key, which is sponsoring the The Engineer varsity lacrosse teamprogram. Each student will be re- suffered a severe trouncing at thequired to spend from an hour fo an hands of 'Harvard, last Wednesday,hour -and a half in his capacity as going down by the score of 16-2. Har-guide. No experience is necessary. vard was never headed and led 7-0 at

halftime. Both Beaver goals came dur-ing the th~ird -quarter with LeakyDyke '56 and Walt Fry '56 doing the

La lz ha uer Struck scoring. The loss was the second forSa~ S ruck the Techmen. They have won three.The frosh stickmen took their first

game, edging Dean Academy, 7-6.By Hfam mer Tos;Tn J~a~rs. General CHEMISTRY LECTURE

Dr. J. H. Schulman, Professor ofColloid Chemistry at the Ernest Op-penheimer Laboratory, Dept. of Col-

On Monday, Henry' E. Salzhauer, loid Science at The University in)resident of the Class of '57, was hit Cambridge, England, will deliver twon the head by .a hammer thrown dur- addresses at the Institute on May 4ng track practice. He was taken to and 5 at 4:00 p.m. in Building 35,[assachusetts General H o s p i t a I, Room 225.'here is was announced that he had The addresses will be on the sub-scaped with no serious injuries. He ject of "Molecular Interactions ateceived a few stitches, and was up Solid Surfaces with Special Referencend around the next day. It is ex- to Flotation, Fretting, Corrosion,ected that he will be released from Emulsions Stabilized by Solid 'Part-he hospital either today or over the icdes."eekend. For the remainder of his Dr. Schulman will be honored at aay there he can receive visitors any tea on Tuesday, May 4, in the GivenmC aftetr 10:00 a.m. , Room in Building 35 at 3:30 p.m.

%

I

0

II-

I

I

r

I

I

I

I

I

I

JJ

AmAM AW

� If I -

'VVl-- I../,/ V.· I114%d I I7 .

e

III

3

I I

Am

$

I

I

I

OPEN HOUSE

_I

_ - - I v- -IOI I

rage -1'wo--M- - - --- ,

The l Terh,VOL. LXXIV Friday, April 30, 1954 No. 19

throth the, Wafl I I -To the Editor of The Teeh:

At Monday night's meeting of theDormitory.Council the following mo-tion was passed:- "Moved: To extend

NAGING; BOAM............ I................. .___ ....

.......... _ _ _ ._;_..,___......

9~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_ : _ _1~~ iI --- ~-rIL

- lEdtorivZ I

1 - -- - --�---�----

:

I

I

I

I

'56;'57;,;7;,

I

i

THIS IS -SECURITY? I

IAll that we learn from history is trout nations learn noth-

ing from history.!'-G. W. F. Hegel , -

I

I

I

i

, L

b,

L.F

fF

t

I

I

r

IL

fIIp

III

iiI

IIIIII-iIII

i . = r -- \ . ffi ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ r ~~~~ >~ as I A, jrr.;-fz .|Xzv

, Thereto -: S natty At 8 ";i-~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f

-

·..., ·.·7;···-·-··-··,-

.-i4`.

··--

·L`·i· ·

`""L'

,n - ^ ... d

..

ope~n house hours on Sunday, May 9,1954 at the request of the MusicalClubs for Tech Nlght at the Pops> thehours to be 12 noon to 12 midnight,"The motion was passed by a roll callvote of nine yeas, three nos. and oneabstention. I asked the chairman if Imight,- -in-set In the, Dinetes my rea-sons for.voting against this motion.Since permission was not granted(and, on reflectiona Ithink rightlyso), I feel that in this way I canImdake my objections known. I

The Dormitory Council has previ-ously this spring moved to extendopen house hours until 12 midnightevery Sunday. The action has not beenacted upon by the -admiistrationpending a review of open house rulesby the Faculty Committee on StudentEnvironment. Sinee our previous ac-tion included the. Sunday of TechNight at the Pops, the same as anySunday, I felt that the Music Clubsshould take their specific request di-rectly to the Dean's Office.

Also I cannot go along with extend-

ing hours for a special group and anoff-campus activity in haste at thelast meeting before the event. Theproblem of where to draw the line onboth special group parties and off-campus activities needs much moteconsideration than it got at Monday's

RD.__ .. " N. r'c rntan G. Rulgein,

--. ,----L ........ Rodney W. Logan,. . . .. ............ Philip B3ryden,

_: .. . ........................ Allan Schell,

.55,Ss'56'55

General Manager ..Man:aging Editor-.Edisf _ .

,fltsiness Manager. ALDEtoRS

- . Make-Up ...................... Frank Borrman, '5 Co-Sports . ....... ..... Diadar s A;pling, '57

-News .. .... _-._.Stephen Cohn, ';6 John Friedman, '57

- Feat res . ......... ..... Edward plans, '56 Copy .......................... Robort Ro-ebaun. ' 57

.. tssistant l.....................lo rn 1ossing, '56 PFimcdcaphy ..... ........... Philip Gaiiagher, '57

: ,snest _ a~as~crman

Advertising ............. .._. . rnt W asserm a.' 7

Office Manager .............. ... -. ....................... atob Gubb;a, 5'6

Treasurer ................ ..........-..... _ D g<>ffman, na'S

Circulation Manager. .................................... ...._................ ........... .............. Philip l. Mitchell, '57

Secretary .... .......................... Philip .. hilliou '5

S PSTAFF MMEBI=

Daniel Schneider, '57; Stephen Edelglass, '56: Paul Goldin. '54: Den Chertok. '57; Robert

Berg. '57: fleter Richards, '57; john Kretzer, 'j7; Joseph Schaeffer, 'i6; J. Philip Bromberg,

'56; Fredric Gordon, '56;--Paul W. Abrahams, '56; John C. Christian, 'S7; A. C. Turrisi, '56.

STAFF CANDIDATES

Charles Feldman '57: Alan S. Esbitt. '57; Gerald L. Marwell, '57: Luigi S. Cicolani,Anlthonv Iferz. 'ii- Martin Tacobs, ':f6; Thomas John Nemen. '.56; John Roberts,lDerthold Lippel. '56; John S. Brown. 'S7; Martin I. Goldstein, '57; Richard Bloomstein,John Roberts '57 Everete Trop, '57.

OFFICES OF THi TECS

N~ews, Editorial and !Bs3dese Roomn aOn, rW er 1enre'ml, Cambridge 39, Mass.Entered as second,ldas =atter at the post of=r at Boston, Mlassachusetts.

F

n

ti

E

mleeting.May I again state in closing that

the motion passed earlier this year by

Dormitory, Council for an extension of

hours did in fact cover the request of

the Musical Clubs.Sincerely,

FP Eugene Davis '55Chairman, East Campus

House Committee

The following interchange took place at the Nuremberg trit

als between Reich Minister Albert Speer, a defendant, and Pros-

ecutor Robert Jackson. Speer explained that Hitler's Reich suf-

&red, irreparable delay in its atomics research-Speer: " ., because unfortunately our best experts had 'gone

to America."Jackson: "The policy of driving people out who didn't agree with

Germany hasn't produced very good dividends, has it?"

Speer: "That, as far as we were concerned, had a very decisive

disadvantage, particularly in this sector."

-'How would you like a government job*? You're a scientist or

engineer, not too long out of the Institute. You've probably got

a wife, and perhaps a few kids to care for. You've an opp'ortu-

nity to do some vital government research. Twelve years ago a

man named Oppenheimer was just about where you are now ...

Two weeks ago the New York ATimes reported that Doctor

J. Robert Openheimer, who directed the building of the first

atomic bomb, had been cited as a ""security risk", and denied -.ac-

cess to all classified atomics data. The story went on to tell that

Dr. Oppenheimer is now fighting charges against his "veracity,

condulct, and ... loyalty" before a Personnel Security panel of

the Atomic E nergay Commission.Doctor Oppenheimer's suspension comes to us as a profound

shock. More shocking, however, ale the grounds for that sus-

pen.on. The warmed-over stew of Oppenheimer's pre-war pro-

Communist association was well known when he- was cleared for

Los Alamos in 1943, and reviewed again in 1947 for his AEC

w-ork. If these charges carried no weight then, why are they

nlow exhumed from the boneyard and served up again? Window

dressing, maybe, to ahore up a shaky case?

,The government also holds Dr. Oppenheimer responsible for

hiring Communists at Los Alamos. It is absurd to believe that

security investigations and clearances were Oppenheimner's Job

rather than that of the Federal Buleau of Investigation andi the

Countelr-Intelligenlce Corlps.

We firid the basis for the present investigation in Oppen-

h eimrefi 's 1949 opposition to building the hydrogen bomb. Moral,

political, and technical considerations contributed to his opinion,

in which all the otber General Advisory Commission scientists,

and a majority of the A.E.C. itself, concurred. If his opposition

Ras dis'loyal, couldn't tour considel edl judgment in a similar

situation be equally disloyal?The chalge of opposition to what later became national pol--

icy is a urlning indictment-not of Doctor Oppenheimer' but of

a terrl ified America, that sees disagreement as disloyalty, and

Oplopositicn as treason. Oppenheimer's case is no isolated instance,

but a typical result of the fear-clnucd enveloping the country.

'T'here is now a tendency' to regarfd dissenting expert opinions as

letrayal if they later till-I out to be ill advisedl. How can a mal

sticlk his leek out oil a theory or proglam, and how dale lie dis-

sellt. ulnlletr th~e.s coclnditiolis?

"Training can realy be interesting. Ifound that out when I joined A.T.&T.'s.Long Lines Department after getting,my B.A. at Cincinnati and my M.A. atMichigan in '52. Long Lines is theorganization specializing. in Long Dis-tance communications. I was- put in thetraining program, and there wasn't adull minute. l

"For instance, one of my jobs in teTraffic Department was estimating theexact number of calls that would beplaced in a city on Christmas Day. My.estimate was off by only 68 calls!

"Then in the Plafit Department, Imade a study of damage done to a certaincable. Found out that the most damiageoccurred in an area used by hunters.Some special public relations workamong hunters helped imoprove thatsituation.

III thin Oppenhebime : czase, the government has (lone its level

'hces-t-tD *liscorllag top-level experts in an1y' field from wolkini#

101- UiIncie Sam. Whlere (l confonl-ity is valuate Higher than OI'igi- |

11lit-, jio comlitvnt resostardier1 can affoird to wolrk. He w( on't

be' 11'i.;ssel. .. n1la1. I

lAe exslpectt tha;1}t if) a fsw weeks thlet Pelsontnel Sec(urity Board

iII colifirl- l)rD.oclo OppVl'l1wimner's new "'secur.ity lisl'* status.

zm~d zill. i rm I 001 (.AO Aieicanlls xvill 1rv7ioico> tilhat l-lother "subier-

ItX't 31 'll ) 'e1c(i , xpld ,u11d uinc(l. .Am<^l \c(!) sh:1,il sHa- {that tlic

joMn is 'r?, -- }fg. irl j)? Iller Krlemliln?

ID

, II -. ,, . W , s

:

'� ''

· � : ' -t

-.; ----- ·' ·-.--.;(;~. �..-~'c'r�'_C.,�"TT;-"C' -·1·;·1-(____;: .r -)l�·mbJJT�T��-

A CAMPUSTO -CAtEE:R CASiE HISTORY

W ; iXi ·· '·'lI··i E IC;S.. ........ ;.'..~ :~ ····: ::. ·........ ..... · iiC··:'.I'·

| | i i Dim} WALLNER, '52, left aE ~~~~~trailfiof work as he whirled

|1 I @ ~~~training. Here he recalls

l = l ~~~~the variety of his training jobs.o i _ I ~~~(Readdng time: 36 secondU)

"And in the C~ommercial Department,I helped analyze the communication pro~b-lemns of one of Ithe largest textile com-panies -it had widespread of fices andplants. The recommendations made arenow in use.

"The variety in my training has crieover to Iny regular job here in Cincinnati.My job is to see, that good service is

maintained for private line~customers-pipeline and power companies, theater

TV 'and the like'. Every day is different..

'As jar as I ant con-corned, I've fou~ndmy career."

Likee SO many college people who0 halve joined

the Bell System, Dick hats a Job he enjoys.There are also job opportunities with other

I" Bell Telephone-Comparliies, the Bell Tele-phonle Laboratories9, Western Electric andSanldia Corporation. This is a good time. iosee your Placement (Officer for full details.

B ELL T.ELEPH O NE SYSTEM

G. L FROST CO., INC.AUMODllM BODY BREPUNT & VRNISHING

ToUL be t 4.10. ABRG X~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 4 I

AD~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

z

-- X--Z"W

I

Technology -

I

IIIIIIt

iiIIII

-1

0

II

I

i

I-II -

1�

I

I

I

L

naslTh Tec

FRDAY, 'APRIL-309 1954 Page three

by Paul jay Goldin '54a.For the past three weeks, forty-odd intramlural softball teamis have been

rugby Saggregatio drpped 24, thaed I vcompeting for the right to enter the chanlpiollship playoffs. Althoupgh badrugbyaggrgatio droped ahard weather has forced schedule recisions, it appears that the nine leaguie winners

fought contest to the Westmount Rug- wvill square(- off against each other within the next two w eeks.by Club 6-9, at the Red Hook Stadiumfstar.- Sr.;

in Rrool~~~clyn. l~East Campus, last year's runner-up for the Tezch title, has taken over the.1Both scores for Tech twere racked favorite role. with the, upset of Grad'uate House B., tile perennial -,inner.

up by Austin Whillier, who di'd theBoasting, a good pitching staff led by wind-miller Dick Hurlbut, the Easttrick on a well-placed penalty kick Campus nine has blended good hitting and fielding with superlative pitchingand an equally well-placed fieldd goal, for three wrins. The Easties crushed Baker M 21-6, Phi Beta Epsilon 22-3,in the second half. Other standouts before ed- .ng the Phi Gams 8-3 in a great pitching duel between HIur'but andfor the Engineers wvere Mfillard John- Merrill Ebneft. The home-run punch of Ken Christie, Phil E~isner, and Hillyson, "Moose" Walquist, and Chuck Prager have kept the rival pitcher completely on the defensive, awhile slickHenry. fielding third-baseman Jack Britt and shortstop Prager has given the Eastie§

~a dependable defense.

I Baker Tops GradsBaker House VJ, upset viCtor's ovzer

wlhen vtdwa JO~IN Graduate House, have been the sur-g9 ~~~~~prise of the leagues to date. Playing

The " Eva Who Measure" a a o wsithoult the services of their regularpitcher, the Baker boys haste batteredSAM 12-6, Graduate House 14-7, and

^¢_ ~~When you leave school as aon engineer and Student House 16-5 to clinch thej o;n the ranks of the ..men who riecsure,'" yo-.'Il LegeVI title. The Bakerites boastwant the most accurate and durable measuring apowerful hitting nine led by short-

| A~~~lo pes. Lufkin Chrome Clad Tapes ARE the most stop Chuck Arledge and an exce~llenta// g Alaaccurate aind du~rable because their rnorkingz are inil e ytidbsm:.Stvt \ ~~banded to the line and protected by multiple Edel- leds byslBakera: is p tedvoeo l

platings of metal that aliso protect the fine steel Edl,-las ae Sp1e Og l., go ~~ in the line. This cill-metal line is longest wearing the wvay to the title, and waith a little

,g tf v-- -it won't crack, chip, peel -is easiest to keep luck, might do just that.t o 11 l1t *si clean-is most rust aind corrosion resistant, League V leas providled the highest

> ! i l | ~Chromne Clad Tapes are the choice of engineers scoring contests of the year as Beta._~~~~h wol ve. Theta Pi and Delta Upsilon have been

W~hether you're running a survey, building a belting out big scores all season. DUibridge or a building,.sailroccaing, road buildingluhdLmd h lh 7f, bmining or drilling-there's a Lufkin measuring CuhdLmd h lh 76 utape exactly right for the job. have suffered one defeat. BEeta, on the

Specify luffin when you get out ~on the job - other hand, edged Laknbda, Chi 1()-99 -* ~~ ~ send taday for our free catalog. bthas yet to be beaten. When the

two meet this Sulnday, you can takeJ . ~~~~TIHE AfFKI RULE C OMPANY your pick for it's winner take all;,7ip ~~~~~~SAGINAW, MICHIlGAN Lambda Chi and Agenda, by the way,

i/ , r-No_ t ___ 9___ _^ __engage in the highest scoringt game/ - _ -* l WTHE LUFKZIN RULE CO.,, Saginaw. 10.9c.. oll record when they battled to a 39-33

* _S Q | ~~~Gen~tement .Labd Chi win after eight innings.{, | f ~~~Please sand mre your illustrated ca.clos of measuring |WetgeCics ea l

-- ~~{ I Nomad Nam Another of last se~ison's playoff par-ni t ~~~ - | Address ticipants, Westgate, has all but

R,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~cice th legu 1 p'yf bert.E S i- &307 |CAtey tn cice h lau Ipayf e

... ~~~~~~L - -a - - - - - -- - - - - - - -- -- Continedle og pairs 4)

CHO0"OSE A. TROPICALWORSTED'SUIT FOR DAY-INDAY-OUT WEAR THISSUMMOER ee.e

A light weight Tropical Worsted Suit willmeet your evepy reqsuirement for hot weatherXwear. It's light, it's cool and retains the pressto give you that cool, crisp appearance for

every occasion.

J

Mohara $47.50Springwe6ave $49.50

Tropical Tweed $50.00(35% Dacron 65% Wool)

Visa $55.0011

(55%/ D:acron 45°/,, Wool)31-M0NTH PAYMENT PLAN AVAILABLE

0

Budweiser has been a tisty spectator's

delight as long as baseball can

remember. Brewed by the co~stliestprofess known, th- e distinctive

taste of Budweiser has wonmore fans than any

other beer in histbory.

I

r I

1 �2

Popularized on the campus .

¢ . . a year 'round favorite

with ipany young men for

smart summer casual wear.

Mansfield quality.

Mansfield comfort. i /

if., iv

ANHEUSER-OUSCH,- INC.ST. LOUIS, MO. NEWARK, H. L

.4 :.'

'l.. ''

353-10-lI

;OwestmonirtB-ests -East' Carp, Tae7gBeaver Rtugbyites * ^ 4 7A .Favorites wFor So tb,41 XTitleBy 9-6 Margin__

Ii

I

iII

II'

The C a 1 "

H-arvard -Square Store

Wel Io V"""ov yor uee0o 0 o IT 18 °U NO D LI 3E

14

Whilte

Sport*buck

Red Rubber

Enjoy 0-

isier, ,I(,To4ay

..a-f

's ree

- --- - -U- - L--·-LI -_-- -�- - - - - -- I ·-- - --? - - -- - ---·-- --- --

_

--

· a�-�LI ---- LI.--.�-�-hl--_ --

.... T-L _

Aw ~ae Foaur,i; -

). - , ., .Concert Ba(Cantinm

: .. "The Pines o

(InNational Capit

''� ' '

0 v ; Us~T-e iTec F ^RIDA:Y PI 36 .^

ances," he said, "are not enough ,toguarantee tfie safety of the nation.The stamping out of subversion is notenough. These essential safety meas-ures are but incidental to our centraltask of maintaining our national in-tegrity, of protecting the coalition ofideas, concepts, and ideals which giveour society its meaning, unity, andstability.

"Our schools have a crucial respon-sibility to safeguard our national in-tegrityo They must exemplify our na-tion!al ;ideals of qualitfyr social us-'tice, freedom,. and individual dignit.They must cultivate and refine themoral idealism which is the cementof our society.

"In exemplifying these nationalideals, the universities must serve asthe chief custodians of our natidnalheritage. The nation expects them toserve as a bureau of standards for ourintellectual and spiritual weights andmeasures, rejecting what is super-ficial, trivial, and mediocre. They mustprovide a free market of ideas whereerror can be revealed and objectivity

mndted from page 1)ff Romp"

, Ottorino Respighiitermission)al March

Staff Players (Coatinued from page 1)

maintains withal the graciousness ofa Southern lady.

William Harris plays the part ofRegina's husband, Horace, and JaniceLeacey is Alexandra, their daughter.

The play will be presented againtonight and tomorrow at 8:30' p.m. in10-250. Undergraduate tickets cost$.90 and the regular tickets are $1.20.They will be sold at the door.

and truth can be confirmed. They"con-stitute a laboratory where -youngminds may free themselves from thecommonplace as they develop theirindividuality and their sense of socialresponsibility, If the universities dotheir job well, they provide an 'habit-ual vision of greatness' to guide andinspire both young and old.

"To paraphrase John Buchan, it isthe business of education to buildquality into the nation and to educateour people into a nobler life."

i Alfred ZamberanoSuite of Old American Dances

Robert Russel BennettReverie ........................ Claude DebussyMarche Baroque .......... Andrew Kazdin,

MIT '56Polka and Fugue, from the opera

S,. "S.t!eBhagtrmdcl~ +h- Rnpiper"

Jaomir WeinbergerThe concert is free and open to the

general public.Marchle Baroque was composed by

'Andrew Kazdin, '56 in December1953, and received its first perfor-mance at the Band's Contert atTufts College in March, 1954. It willbe available as part of the programof a long-playing record to be re-leased soon by the MIT Band. Mr..Kazdin is the Band's timpanist, andhas composed other pieces such asthe "Technology Five-Step."

Special attention is drawn to thePsaIn for Band by Persichetti, asthis will be the work's premiere onBoston. The work was commissionedby the Pi Kappa Omicron NationalBand Fraternity, and was writtenin 1953. It embodies a concept of in-strumental scoring for concert bandwhich has been develope d onlyin the last decade or so, mainly byAmerican Composers such as Per-sicWetti, Schuman, Piston, and Bar-ber, It represents fine craftsman-ship and excellent varity of instru-

marental color, style and expression.

SoftbaR(Continued from page 3)

The Westgate nine has defeated Bur-ton House B 13-3, Lenox Club 7-0, andChi',Phi 14-10, and seem a cinch towin their final game to qualify,

The other big surprise tear hasbeen Kappa Sigma, picked recently inthis column as the dark-horse con-tender, I am happy to say the KappaSigs have lived up to expectations, Intheir big game, the Kappa Sig nineupset a powerful SAE team 2-1 behindthe fabulous hurling of Tony Merz.Merz has been touted as the fastesthurler in the intramurals, and if hisperformanlce against SAE is any in-dication, he is going to give a flock ofgood teams an awful lot of trouble.Kappa Sigma's weaknesses in the hit-ting and fielding departments, how-ever, seem to preclude the possibilityof their winning the whole shebang.

Grad A, Sigma Nu TiedGraduate House A 'and Sigma Nu

are tied for first place in League I.The graduates defeated the Sigs re-cently 9-7, but have a forfeit on therecord which will probably force aplayoff' between the two. Delta Psi isalso sporting a 2-1 slate but standslittle chance of beating either of theaforementioned pair.

In League IV, TIEP has celebratedthe.r first year in the intramurals byregaining first place wvith a 17-1 routof Phi Kappa. Early season victims ofa 1()-9 defeat at the hands of ThetaDelta Chi, the TEP's can clinch theleague title by defeating Sigma Chi.

At the three-quarter mark, it lookslike East Campus and Baker Housewill battle- for the title. Seven otherteams, however, should have plenty to.say about this point.

Killian(Continued from page 1)

only invaluable stockpiles of informa-tion, but also incomparable sourcesof the raw material of ideas."

Intellectual SafergHaving discussed military measures

for national defense and the rble ofresearch in the development of eco-nomic safety, Dr. Killian stressed theimportance of intellectual and moralsafety-the protection of.our freedom-in our educational institutions.

"Military strengthl or foreign alli-

LITERARY SUPPLEMENT'Contributions. for The Tech's

fourth Annual Literary supplemenfare now being accepted andshould be sent to Sheldon Dick,Box 210, Burton House, 420 Me-morial Drive; or care of The Tech,Walker Memorial. Students areurged to submit their short storiei,poetry, prose, or other forms ofcreative writing.

The cigarettet with t proven good recordWith smokers. Here is {he record. Bi-monthlyexaminations of a group of smokers show noadverse effects to nose, throat and sinusesfrom smoking Chesterfield.

The cigarette thate gives you proof ofhighest quality-low nicotine. For the'tasteand mildness you want-smoke America'snmost pepi_a_ -war__ojavarette.

TWE WlOTHnEX CHURN. ~ 3FALMOUTH. NORWAY

AND ST. PAUL STREEMiBOSTON

sunbay smcm 10.4~5 C.mn. end 7:30 pa,Saday STchool 10:45 ar.m.; Wednesday erenau/ matcfilgs af 7.:30, which inrcluda B;o;imnins of Christian Science healing.

BRading Rooms--Fre mo to e Public237 Huntiragton Avenue

84 Boylsfon St.. Little Bldg.8 Milk Stiee

An: AIE WECMEAutbcirxd and approved lifcrature anChristin Science mey be read or og

'�·Z

,A,~ e , , ,

'WE TECH"..A · ,.

opportunities in

News Writing

Make-up

Advertising

Circulation

Photography

Sports Writing

!

Contact

Norman Kulgein

,1Crafts 203

CHESTERFIELDis the Best Cigarette

·.:: : ::: ....:.:.-. :..::::.. :,::::. .. .. , . .::.

Xt to :: ·~i: .:~:~:~: :!:!:i.'.-' : ;:::..' : ::1%... ' :.-'i'.:..':!?.%':! '::.: ::'.;

"^hestr|ield' Afor MeI"i -!dbs lniv. of

/ t <~p4k4& -!mcho 154

, \

"Chesterfields for Me I'I A°,merlca's

N~o. I sondlooamr

_~~~~~~~~ . W~~~~~~~~~B5~

LargestSelling Cigarette

in America'sColleges

1 ,

"COhe$ ter@les for Mel'",W~~~UC;~ '.56..s

FOR SALE1947 Ford two-door sedan.Owner leaving country.

Call: REI:, MIT Baker House

top related