the techtech.mit.edu/v82/pdf/v82-n10.pdf · the ceylon .national dancers opened inernational events...

12
Abuses Suggested 4 Textbook Agents Fold; Judcomm In Probe Action By Thomas Brydges The Technology Textbook. Agents has dropped its previously ad- vertised plans to ser`hpirated editions" of American textbooks .at prices far below American retail listings. In related action, the In- stitute Judicial Comnmittee began an investigation Monday of ITA's activities in its two-week existence. TTA's four rmenbers, Durk Pearson '64, Gene Salamin '63, Wil- liam Schmid 'C3 and Erwin Strauss '65, made their decision known in a meeting wiih the Institute Committee Executive Committee last Thursday. At that time Mr. Schmid cited concern for the legality of ITA's operation, which he described as "questionable at best" as the reason for TTA's decision. Subsequent to this meeting, Mr. Salamin cited two other reasons for TTA's change in plans: the lack of Institute approval for the - 4 Jlo ___ - operation, ariand me tact that too American Civiization To Be Lerner's Topi In Lecture Tuesay Max Lerner Dr. Max Lerner will lecture on "America as a Civilization" at Kresge Auditorium Tuesday, Ap- ril 24. The lecture, at 8 p. m., is sponsored by the Lecture Series Committee. There will be no ad- mission charge. Lerner, an author, teacher and columnist, is presently Professor of American Civilization at Bran- deis and has taught at Harvard University. He is- well known for his book "America as a Civiliza- tion," his lectures, and his col- umns in hte New York Post. many students had learned how to order. the books on their own, by- passing and consequently not pay. ing extra for TTA's services. With regard to the legality of TITA's proposed operations, Mr. Salamin quoted a lawyer con- tacted by the group as saying the operations "seem to be legal." However, Mr. Salarin stated he had been told the Congress was rushing legislation to make the import of "pirated editions" illegal. TTA felt, he said, that ilt operations might be illegal by the time the books would be de- livered during the summer. The Judcomm hearing ended Monday, but the committee, head- ed'by John Rourke '62, expected to-continue its deliberatiors on the case Tuesday. The outcome of the investigation will be an- nounced in riext week's The Tech. Judcomm was investigating four specific points: 1) TrA's claim of Institute sanction; 2) TTA's use of the Institute mail system, a privilege not granted to commercial businesses under In- stitute' policy;' 3) TrA's use of Institute bulletin boards, a privi- lege restricted to recognized ac- tivities; and 4) ITA's negligence in not following instructions re- ceived from the office'of the Dean of Student Affairs in conversations prior to TTA's sales campaign. Although TTA has decided not to sell the "pirated" texts, one of the members .said the group may go ahead with plans to sell books for MIT humanities courses. The pirated editions are photo- (Please turn to page 2)- Red Diplomat To Speak On Disarmament International Week 1962 is featuring interna- tional activity in the arts and politics. The an- nual, student-sponsored cultural exchange at MIT cpened Friday, April 13, and will continue through Friday, April 20. Roland Timerbaev, counselor of the Soviet mission to the United Nations and a specialist in the field of disarmament, will speak on the Sov- iet position on disarmament, which he has rep. resented at London, Geneva, and other interna- tional disarmament conferences. The talk is scheduled for 8 p.m., Thursday, April 19, in Kresge. Admission is free and open to the-public. Assisting in the talk will be Peter Maslennikov, first secretary of the U.N. Soviet mission and a specialist in economy and disarmament. The topic of disarmament, as a subject for the Inter- national Week program, was chosen by the Soviet Gfficials. International Week, sponsored by International Program Committee of the MIT student govern- ment, also is providing programs for active par- ticipation by MIT foreign students of over 70 na- tions. On April 14, the annual International Fiesta with dancing to the music of the Latinaires was presented. An exhibition of international sporting The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and ceremonial an Indian film, "The World of Apu", will be la[nces in Kresge last Friday. The two girls pictured shown this Friday, April 20, at 9:15 p.m. The film bove are performing Govi Natuma. will be open to the public, free admission, in -Photo by Corad Grundlehner Ktresge. V d a THE TECH Estabrished At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. I0 Cambridge, Massachuseffs, Wednesday, April 18, 1962 5 Cents One If By Land, Two If By Sea No Classes 'Tomorrow At MIT All classes are cancelled to- morrow, Patriot's Day, a holiday in Maine and Massachusetts. Patriot's Day commemorates the famous ride of Paul Revere and William Dawes in 1775 to warn the colonists of the advance of the British, and the battle of Lexington the next day, April 19. The British had lost 273 and the Americans, 18 casualties. Chase Ends In Crash APO Queen To Be Crowned Saturday An automobile chase that reached a hundred miles an hour at ore-- poinif came to a halt in front of Baker House as ttne driver jammed on his brakes at an estimated seventy miles an hour to avoid the barracade protecting the difch for the Magnet Lab's-pipes. The car, which had been stolen, left the Drive and smashed into a tree. The driver, not cor- nected with the Institute, was slightly injured. -Photo by Conrad Grundlohner Bunni Liebman. psyichol- ogy major at Brooklyn Col- 1,* ih date of Dave Liroff'65.. Single Event Tickets Available For Spring Weekend Concert, Formal -Paulette Frazer, educa- ion major at Western Jeanne Montana CoIl. of Educa- date of ion is the date of Dave '63. Ketftn'r '65. Trmible is the William Schmid Laraine Hawes, a senior at Weymouth High School, is the date of John Kassa- kian '65. :i*'*:';:^::'::::-*~C::':": iF'~ .. .. : ,, The Spring Weekend Commit- tee will sell separate tickets to Weekend events, as well as pack- age tickets for the entire week- end. You may buy these from the Spring Weekend Booth in Building 10 this week and next. Tickets for Friday night, May 4, formal dance with Dakota Sta- ton and the Harry Marshard Orchestra will be sold for-$5 each. Tickets for the concert Satur- day night, May 5, featuring the Four Preps, Oscar Brand, and Sonny Stanton's Orchestra, will be sold for $7.50. Complete weekend tickets are available for $11. Both events are in the Cage. East Campus, Burton, 'and Baker House, have plamled a joint picnic at Bluehill Reserva- tion, with entertainment featur- ing Jackie Washington, a folk- singer, who has appeared at Club 47 and the Golden Vanity. Senior House has planned a picnic of its own, to be held at Breakheart Reservation, at which entertainment will include folk- songstress Ruth Ellen, often heard at Unicorn or the Loft. The IFC will revive the float parade tradition with entries from all fraternities. 4 Found Guilty of Stamp MachineTheft Ledl.e Dalton, a senior at Weymouth High School, is the date of Frank An- Suini '63. Nancy Quinnt a retailing 'Nita Tonso, a humani- major at Simmons, is the ties major at MIT, is the date of Gary Helmig '62. date of Art Corunolly '63. Judy Kazunas, a fine arts maior at Massachu- seffs College of Art, is the date of Jon Price '64. Voting for APO Carnival Queen continues en Buifding 1,0 Wednesday and Friday. The Winner, chosen from these eight candidates, is to be announced at the Carnival Saturday night. Four residents of East Campus have been found guilty of damag- ing an East Campus stamp ma- chine and stealing the money from it. The Iudicial Committee has ordered the students to repay the money taken and pay the cost of repairs. . One student has been placed on at $3. probation at the Dean's office ana one placed on Judcomm proba- tion. The fourth student, having violated a previous parole, has been expelled from the under- graduate dorms. This order has been suspended, but can be re- newed at any time at the dis- cretion of Judcomrn.' The amount stolen is estimated i I i I I I t I I I i I I i i I I I I IJ I I I I is ME I 3 .. :. :·,, :·::f'f"::::·O Z: z s:·j; -2· · ;:·I;·:·-.:::::.::ii 1·2. ····· ",;:i P: · :·z. i C:: i'CC-':,S :6:a;i i::: .i. :ii·;·· ;,··zy;I :.·. i·. · :·· i:: :,2 · sj·· .:.: .:.',:.:.r··· ···· ,·,:, j.:,i::::::·5 :i·i. i·i:i i: ::·s i ;r: .·· 1. .. , -... i 1-s,·;"' ': ,;-z.s· .3:

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Page 1: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

Abuses Suggested

4 Textbook Agents Fold;Judcomm In Probe Action

By Thomas BrydgesThe Technology Textbook. Agents has dropped its previously ad-

vertised plans to ser`hpirated editions" of American textbooks .atprices far below American retail listings. In related action, the In-stitute Judicial Comnmittee began an investigation Monday of ITA'sactivities in its two-week existence.

TTA's four rmenbers, Durk Pearson '64, Gene Salamin '63, Wil-liam Schmid 'C3 and Erwin Strauss '65, made their decision knownin a meeting wiih the Institute Committee Executive Committee lastThursday. At that time Mr. Schmid cited concern for the legalityof ITA's operation, which he described as "questionable at best" asthe reason for TTA's decision.

Subsequent to this meeting, Mr. Salamin cited two other reasonsfor TTA's change in plans: the lack of Institute approval for the- 4 Jlo ___ -operation, ariand me tact that too

American CiviizationTo Be Lerner's TopiIn Lecture Tuesay

Max Lerner

Dr. Max Lerner will lecture on"America as a Civilization" atKresge Auditorium Tuesday, Ap-ril 24. The lecture, at 8 p. m., issponsored by the Lecture SeriesCommittee. There will be no ad-mission charge.

Lerner, an author, teacher andcolumnist, is presently Professorof American Civilization at Bran-deis and has taught at HarvardUniversity. He is- well known forhis book "America as a Civiliza-tion," his lectures, and his col-umns in hte New York Post.

many students had learned how toorder. the books on their own, by-passing and consequently not pay.ing extra for TTA's services.

With regard to the legality ofTITA's proposed operations, Mr.Salamin quoted a lawyer con-tacted by the group as saying theoperations "seem to be legal."

However, Mr. Salarin statedhe had been told the Congresswas rushing legislation to makethe import of "pirated editions"illegal. TTA felt, he said, thatilt operations might be illegal bythe time the books would be de-livered during the summer.

The Judcomm hearing endedMonday, but the committee, head-ed'by John Rourke '62, expectedto-continue its deliberatiors on thecase Tuesday. The outcome ofthe investigation will be an-nounced in riext week's The Tech.

Judcomm was investigatingfour specific points: 1) TrA'sclaim of Institute sanction; 2)TTA's use of the Institute mailsystem, a privilege not granted tocommercial businesses under In-stitute' policy;' 3) TrA's use ofInstitute bulletin boards, a privi-lege restricted to recognized ac-tivities; and 4) ITA's negligencein not following instructions re-ceived from the office'of the Deanof Student Affairs in conversationsprior to TTA's sales campaign.

Although TTA has decided notto sell the "pirated" texts, oneof the members .said the groupmay go ahead with plans to sellbooks for MIT humanities courses.The pirated editions are photo-

(Please turn to page 2)-

Red Diplomat To Speak On DisarmamentInternational Week 1962 is featuring interna-

tional activity in the arts and politics. The an-nual, student-sponsored cultural exchange at MITcpened Friday, April 13, and will continue throughFriday, April 20.

Roland Timerbaev, counselor of the Sovietmission to the United Nations and a specialist inthe field of disarmament, will speak on the Sov-iet position on disarmament, which he has rep.resented at London, Geneva, and other interna-tional disarmament conferences. The talk isscheduled for 8 p.m., Thursday, April 19, inKresge. Admission is free and open to the-public.

Assisting in the talk will be Peter Maslennikov,first secretary of the U.N. Soviet mission and aspecialist in economy and disarmament. Thetopic of disarmament, as a subject for the Inter-national Week program, was chosen by the SovietGfficials.

International Week, sponsored by InternationalProgram Committee of the MIT student govern-ment, also is providing programs for active par-ticipation by MIT foreign students of over 70 na-tions. On April 14, the annual International Fiestawith dancing to the music of the Latinaires waspresented. An exhibition of international sporting

The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and'eek with teier performance of folk and ceremonial an Indian film, "The World of Apu", will bela[nces in Kresge last Friday. The two girls pictured shown this Friday, April 20, at 9:15 p.m. The filmbove are performing Govi Natuma. will be open to the public, free admission, in-Photo by Corad Grundlehner Ktresge.

Vda

THE TECHEstabrished At MIT In 1881

Vol. 82, No. I0 Cambridge, Massachuseffs, Wednesday, April 18, 1962 5 Cents

One If By Land,Two If By Sea

No Classes 'TomorrowAt MIT

All classes are cancelled to-morrow, Patriot's Day, a holidayin Maine and Massachusetts.

Patriot's Day commemoratesthe famous ride of Paul Revereand William Dawes in 1775 towarn the colonists of the advanceof the British, and the battle ofLexington the next day, April 19.The British had lost 273 and theAmericans, 18 casualties.

Chase Ends In Crash

APO Queen To Be Crowned Saturday

An automobile chase that reached a hundred miles an hour at ore--poinif came to a halt in front of Baker House as ttne driver jammed onhis brakes at an estimated seventy miles an hour to avoid the barracadeprotecting the difch for the Magnet Lab's-pipes. The car, which hadbeen stolen, left the Drive and smashed into a tree. The driver, not cor-nected with the Institute, was slightly injured.

-Photo by Conrad Grundlohner

Bunni Liebman. psyichol-ogy major at Brooklyn Col-1,* ih date of DaveLiroff'65..

Single Event Tickets Available ForSpring Weekend Concert, Formal

-Paulette Frazer, educa-ion major at Western JeanneMontana CoIl. of Educa- date ofion is the date of Dave '63.

Ketftn'r '65.

Trmible is theWilliam Schmid

Laraine Hawes, a seniorat Weymouth High School,is the date of John Kassa-kian '65.

:i*'*:';:^::'::::-*~C::':": iF'~ .. ..: ,,

The Spring Weekend Commit-tee will sell separate tickets toWeekend events, as well as pack-age tickets for the entire week-end. You may buy these fromthe Spring Weekend Booth inBuilding 10 this week and next.

Tickets for Friday night, May4, formal dance with Dakota Sta-ton and the Harry MarshardOrchestra will be sold for-$5 each.

Tickets for the concert Satur-day night, May 5, featuring theFour Preps, Oscar Brand, andSonny Stanton's Orchestra, willbe sold for $7.50.

Complete weekend tickets are

available for $11. Both events arein the Cage.

East Campus, Burton, 'andBaker House, have plamled ajoint picnic at Bluehill Reserva-tion, with entertainment featur-ing Jackie Washington, a folk-singer, who has appeared at Club47 and the Golden Vanity.

Senior House has planned apicnic of its own, to be held atBreakheart Reservation, at whichentertainment will include folk-songstress Ruth Ellen, often heardat Unicorn or the Loft.

The IFC will revive the floatparade tradition with entriesfrom all fraternities.

4 Found Guilty of Stamp MachineTheft

Ledl.e Dalton, a seniorat Weymouth High School,is the date of Frank An-Suini '63.

Nancy Quinnt a retailing 'Nita Tonso, a humani-major at Simmons, is the ties major at MIT, is thedate of Gary Helmig '62. date of Art Corunolly '63.

Judy Kazunas, a finearts maior at Massachu-seffs College of Art, is thedate of Jon Price '64.

Voting for APO Carnival Queen continues en Buifding 1,0 Wednesday and Friday. TheWinner, chosen from these eight candidates, is to be announced at the Carnival Saturday night.

Four residents of East Campushave been found guilty of damag-ing an East Campus stamp ma-chine and stealing the moneyfrom it.

The Iudicial Committee hasordered the students to repay themoney taken and pay the costof repairs.. One student has been placed on at $3.

probation at the Dean's office anaone placed on Judcomm proba-tion. The fourth student, havingviolated a previous parole, hasbeen expelled from the under-graduate dorms. This order hasbeen suspended, but can be re-newed at any time at the dis-cretion of Judcomrn.'

The amount stolen is estimated

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Page 2: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

Annual

Clearam

/3 1

Textbook

Lce Sale

to %2

In truth, the men at Ford who are engaged inresearch -end engineering have left theirmarks in the outstanding quality you'll findin every Ford-built car.Today, the pioneering work of Ford MotorCompany scientists and engineers has alreadygiven us newer. and better rustproofingmethods for longer-lasting automobile bodies

, . . better sound insulation . paints thatstay newer looking, longer . . . smootherriding, more comfortable automobiles . . .better insulation materials for all-weather

Iq

A Peace Walk and Rally will besponsored in this area Friday andSaturday by the New EnglandTurn Toward Peace, as part of anational simultaneous effort todemonstrate on behalf of a neweffort for peace through a programof American initiatives. Studentsand all others are encouraged tojoin in the walk and attend therally on the Boston Common, atwhich H. Stuart Hughes (inde-pendent candidate for U.S. Senator

(Continued from page 1)

offset copies of existing Americantexts, printed in countries whichdo not subscribe to the Interna-tional Copyright Agreement, andcan be priced far below Ameri-can prices because of the type-setting and royalty savings; thehumanities texts the group mayget will be legitimate UnitedStates editions.

The sale of "pirated editions"in the United States has alwaysrankled domestic publishers. Atleast two publishers (Prentice-Halland Addison-Wesley), have con-tacted the Dean's office to registertheir complaints about TrA.

=~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~hi copait abu Tr

driving comfort ... many service-saving fea-tures that rnklc [Iord-built cars last longer,need less care and retain their value better.From their continuing research will comefuture Ford-built cars, for.example, with auto-matic control systems for safer, faster driving. . . new kinds of power plants and energysources . . . stronger steels and plastics . .new aerodynamic design for greater vehiclecontrol. That's why Ford Motor Company isgaining a position of leadership through scien-tific research and engineering.

MOTOR COMPANYThe American Road, Dearborn, Michigan

PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD * THE FARM * INDUSTRY. AND THE AGE OF SPACE

from Massachusetts) and a groupof "Hiroshima pilgrims," survivorsof the first military A-blast, will -speak.

The walk will pass through Central Square and proceed upMassachusetts Avenue past MITabout 1:45 Saturday afternoon. Acomplete schedule and more de.tails on both the walk and rallymay be obtained from the TurnToward Peace headquarters, bycalling UN 4-5893.

Another complaint in the wakeof ITA's initial sales campaignwas directed to RepresentativeThomas J. Lane of Massachusettsby Malcolm Shuster '65. The following is reprinted from the Congressional Record of April 10:

MR. LANE: Mr. Speaker, underleave to extend my remarks inthe Record, I include the follow.ing every interesting letter, together with enclosure of state-ment by Technology TextbookAgents, that warrants the immedi-ate attention of every Member ofthe Congress:

Masachuxetts Isitatute ofTechnologyCanmbridge, Mass.April 8, 1962

Mr. Thomas J. LaneHouse of RepresentatfvesWashington, D. C,.

Dear Sir:It has come to mnry attentione from ad-

vetisements planed in my dmaito'yby an organization which calls itself theTechnology Textbook Agency (sic), thata forelgn publisher is prfntng Aznericantextbooks and seeing them at highlyreduced prices. They aim that byutillaing cheaper iah and materialsand avoiddng payment of a royalty theyare able to sell texts at upproxlmatety4 per cent of the list price in isAte ofa hih tariff. The fact that orders arebeing taken in advance and peamnt ismade when the books arrive in Septm.ber has led me to believe that theseoperations are made on a mail-ormenbasls.The texts they pbish are standardworks used by almost every engineer-trg and tectinial school in the eountry.

In the face of ever-rising tuition cotsthe factor which texts pMy in collegeexpenses is decreasing. Yet, if foreignPublishers are able to compete withAmerican, their vokuxme of buykne can-not be too small.

Such operations are a cErine againstboth the author and the publisher and,if not 'liegal, is highly cisonest andshould be stopped either by makingsuch tractions illegal or by raisingtariff reetrictions to such a depree thatsuch business is uMprofitable.

Thank you.Respectfully,Mal1olm Shuster

Also entered in the Record wasthe TTA statement distributed oncampus April 1T:

tTA's operations have appar-enly caused no other off-campuspublished comment.

Beiekamp OubngAs Tech Places 2ndIn Math C petionAn MIT team took second place

in the twenty - second annualWilliam Lowell Putnam mathe-matics competition in Kent, Ohio,last December 2. Top honorswent to Michigan State, whileCal-Tech, Harvard, and Dartmouth followed MIT in that or-der. The winning teams receivedcash prizes ranging from $500 to$100.

One- MT man, Elwyn Berle- kamp, '62, took third (individual)in the entire group of o094.Others in the top group included,

two from Cal-Tech, one from.Harvard, and one from Univer- sity of Manitoba.

Each of the top five receives;I$75, and one of them will be 'selected to receive the William Lowell Putnam scholarship forgraduate study at Harvard.

A total .of 192 colleges' anduniversities in the United Statesand Canada were represented.

The Mathematical Association of A m e r i c a sponsors the compe-ition,

Summer Registration The Registrar has announced e

hat registration material for the9MS summer session will be avail dable Monday, April 23, at the in -formation office, 7- - 1.

The registration forms must beued in and returned to tbe

Rericstrar's office, Ishe 7 IAOr~~ot be toom sunall.,

by Wednesday, May irs 1a

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Page 3: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

Theses Copied IRACQUerS RESTRUNG-e- .s Copied Prompt Sorvice-xe'sumes Tem,., Squash Si",

Bosto. Photocopy, Te is Shop65,1 Blsfon Street 67A Mt. Aubm St.. Crmbridge

CO 6-111-5 TR)i5417_ s _~~ - ,

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Erik the Red had no choice-but Vitalis with V-7will keep your hair neat all day without grease.Naturally.V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery.Vitalis~with V-7e fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness,keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try Vitalis today !

'Tareyton's Dual Filter in duos partes divisa est!'says Lucius (Dead-eye) Claudius, crack marltman of theXVI Cohort catapult team. "People come from Nero andfar forTareyton,"says Dead-eye. "Vero,Tareyton's one filtercigarette that really delivers de gustibus. MIy a pack and seewhy the whole gang in the cohort is forun."

Techmen Gamble Af Speak-Easy Den

The atmospiere was tense as for-tupes were won and lost at theKappa Sigma Speak Easy, an openbid party, Sa'urday night.

-Photos by Curfiss Wiler

Debafers Win Bid ToThe MIT debate team of Glen Books

an invitation to the National Debate Touplace at 'the Distlict VIII Qulifying Tctournament will Le at West Point, April

This year will mark MiT's fifth tripthe first since 19i8. MIT qualified withCollege and St. John's, New York, and fiHoly Cross.

On their way MIIT defeated Brandesplitting decisions v;itf St. John's UniveSt. Jolhn's of New York, and Eastern N:and Unirersities floni New York and bthe tournament.

The MIT Debate Society also particivitational Tournmaent at Notre Dame,of John Castle .nd Steve Wanner, both 'Idefeating Wiscmsin State, Dartmouth, a

Naiional Meet Parents To Haves'63 and Bill Morris '64 won A Hurried Viewirnament by tying for second Aournament at Vermont The Here April 27-29

25.to the National tournament, Parents' Weelkend will be Ap-

an 11-5 record, tying Boston ril 27 to 29. Programs, designe4[wee ballots behind first place to give parents a qulck view of

MIT hife include tours, sportsAis, Vermont, and Fordhanl, and departmental prora-xtr.ersity College, BC, Emerson, The Parents' Weekend Com-azarene. Thirty-two Colleges mittee, headed by like JablowNew England participated in and Barrdwe-ll Salmon has is-

sued the followi'ng sdlhedule:ipated in fthe Notre Dame In- 7:00-9:30 p. m.- I:assachaustts Sci-March 30-April 1. The team once Fatr;. teckwenl Cage.

8:30 p. n.- Tecltonians Concert:63, finished-with a 3-3 record, mresge I)Drra Stop Production; Lttlend Illinois. Theatre. Kresge.

S3turday, April 280:4:;-12:00 a. mi.-Registratiol, Build-

ntug 10 lobby; attead classes with sonor daugtiter; pre-arrranged meetlng withtfre.shan advisr.

11:00-12:(N0 a. m. - T)emonstrationlectures:; Hluttiagtoa HIall atud OomptonLecture Hall.

12:15-1:30 p. mn.- Lunheows: Walk-er. Engineoring; Eurton, Science; Bak-or, Oo.rses 4, 14, 15. 21.

1:45-5:00 p. m.- Departi'ental pro-grams: Tours, dcmnonsrakons. meet-ings with faculty. Tours of the Comnpu-tation Center and Nuclew3r Reactor.

1:0-68:00 p. m.- Marasschusetts Sd-enee Fair; Roclwel Oage.

2:00 p. m.- Fresrman basebal4 withHarvard; Brtsggs Field.

4:00 p. ni.- Heavy crew with Yale;cOarles River.

6:15-9:00 p. mn.- Banquets; Burtonand Uallecr.

8:30 p. a.- Ta14 by Dr. Stratton,and All-Techt Sing excerpts; KesgeIDrama Shop Prduction; Little Theatre.

S inday. April 20Morir, ni- Relious services.2:00-4:30 p. rn.- Opeen House ad

Dean Fa.qsett's, living grotps.3:00-5:00 p. in.-- Massahlusetts SGl-

ence Fair; RockwelI CaGe.ics.

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Typed. prepaid classified ads maybe submitted to The Tech. WalkerMemorial. Rate: 20 cents per 30character line.

FOR SALE; 1961 Volkswagen se-dan., 20,000 - presena mileage.

Call H. Rhodes, X 655 or J.Rhodes, K 4128.

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: Campingtrip leader at small boy's camp

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Page 4: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

THE ~TECH

' Vol. LXXXII No. 10 April 18, 19620-

- Chairman.. ... Thomas Brydges '62a Managing Editor ...................... Josep anlon 63

Business Manager ................ Joseph Kirk '64- Editor Allen Womack 63

C- News Editor ................... Jason Fane '63

< Sports Editor Howard Ellis '65

FEeatures Editor Toby Zldle 63

Entertainment Editor . .....................Tom Maugh 65

Associate News -Editor . Don Goldstein 65

V) Advertising Manager .................. Robert Powell '62LiJ Circulation Manager .Fred Souk '65z ireasurer ........................... ... Z Treasurer ...... William Hart '64

Assistant Treasurer'65AlJ Assistant Treasurer ....................... Carl King 65

Controller.Howard Brauer '65. controller ,·.-....................... ,Hwr rur6Pho-to Editors ......... .Maxim Smith '64

Conrad Grundlehlner '64, Boyd Estus '63

Deadlines: Advertising, noon Thursday. Entertalnment,Features. Letters to the Editor, Photography, Sports. noonSunday. News. 7 p. m. Monday.

Make-up: Editoral, Sports, Entertainment, Features-( Sunday. 1-4 p. m. News - Monday. 7-11 p. m.LLJ Office Hours: Monday, 11-12; Tuesday, 11-12, 2-4. Wed-i oesday. 11-12. 2-4; Thursday, 10-11, 2-4: Friday, 11-12, 1-3.

[LI Unsigned editorials appearing in THE TECH constitutethe opinion of the newspaper's Board of Directors. and notthat of 1MIT. The newspaper welcomes letters from itsreaders. Space permitting, such letters will be printed inwhole or in part, if deemed by the editor to be of sufficientinterest or benefit to the community. Brevity increases thechance of publication. Anonymous letters will not be printedNames will be withheld upon request.

Vanishing VolumesA large number of books are vanish-

ing from the MIT libraries. Because amissing book is usually not reported forsometime, the library staff is not awareof how many books have been lost orstolen, but having been once disappointedby his failure to locate a cataloguedbook, it is easy for the library-user tothink the number is large.

Many of these volumes are simply"walking out the door." We find that thebook checking system is conducted in themost cursory way, even providing temp-tation to book thieves. If brief cases areopened at all, they are given a merelysuperficial examination, so that theft isalmost child's play.

Since the MIT collection usually in-cludes only one volume of a work, if thatis stolen the only recourse is to anotherlibrary. But perhaps the most gallingthing about the whole situation is therefusal by library staff membes to ob-tain lost books for undergraduates byiner-libry loan. This is because therehas been too much request for such loawin the past. We feel this sort of discarimi-nation is both unjust and shortsighted.

As far as book theft is concerned, weurge that either the checker system bestrengthened to a level of usefulness,book inventories be conducted and stolenbooks be replaced immediately, or that,MIT consider closed stacks for itslibraries.

The latter solution is radical and un-desirable but may be necessary if theopen stacks privilege continues to beabused.

Users of the libraries who have en-

comntered problem may help to en-sure a quick solution in the followingways: When the user thinks a book maybe missing, he should request an investi-gation by the staff. Make quite sure thatit is understood that the book is wantedand missing. Then if time allows, heshould request the book by inter-libraryloan. If enough undergraduates requesttbLs service then perhaps the staff willbe moved to coarect this deplorable sit-uation.

ConferencesAs student concern for national and

inlernational affairs grows, we findspringing up an increasing number of.planned student conferences at collegesand universities across the country. Onesuch conference, at which MIT was rep-resented by Dick Stein, was the Ameri-can Assembly's conference on Arms Con-trol held at the Air Force Academy inColorado Springs.

The expenses involved in having MITrepresented at this conference amountedto about $270, of which $170 was pro-vided by the Institute Committee'sFinance Board from general. activitiesfunds.

More common are meetings heldnearer Boston which demand an outlayof $10 or more by the Finance Board. Inthe past, these invitations have beenhanmdled by the Institute Committee andthe Finance Board on an ad hoc basis;now the Institute Committee wishes tomake provision in advance of these ex-penditures.

Before deciding to accept an invita-tion to such a meeting, it is importantthat the Institute Committee look care-fully at the value which can be derivedfrom it, both for the individual partici-lpants and for the community in general.It is certainly worthwhile for MIT to berepresented at important conclaves ofthis nature, both from an educationaland a public relations point of view, butcertain premises should be made clear.

When evaluating an invitation, wemust determine whether or not qualifiedparticipants can be found. If the InstituteCommittee believes that they can, thenthe existence of the invitation must bepublicized so that all qualified partici-pants can be advised to apply. Pre-con-ferenee publicity like that given in lastweekend's conference at Yale is impor-tant.

When qualified participants are se-lected, they must be told of their respon-sibility to report their activities and find-ings upon their return, and these reportsmust be followed up with adequate pub-licity. In this way, the educational bene-fits of the meeting can extend beyond theindividual participant.

In the allotment of financial aid toparticipants, we feel that the individualshould pay some fraction of his own ex-penses; this increase his personal re-sponsbility to the project.

In addition, we encourage participa-tionll at conferences nearer the Boston ar-ea, a tourse which will not only decreaseexpenditures, but will allow more peopleto participate.

Each such request and invitationmust be evaluated on its own merits, butwe urge the Institute Committee and theFinance Board to face the problemsquarely and to decide in advance whatallowance may be made for expenses oftis type. Then a Idered program ofpublicity and selection should assure ade-quate representation.

Letters to The TechRev. Bloy Explains appreciate the Prosecutin

Freedom Ride Position torney's interest in our nTo the -Editor: 'tries, but assure .ham that

Last fall mu reported in The have been well-sustained,Tech my conflict with Mississip- as concerned for injustic,pi} "justice:" with fourteen oth- our respective homes aer Episcopal priests I was ar- Mississippi.rested in a Jackson, Mississippi On Tuesday, April 10, E

bus terminal for "breach of he a of our goup went tohpeace," jailed, tried and found son to intercede withguilty, and released on bond for Moore in behalf of theappeal at the County level this than 250 others who haveMay. This week there has been convicted on the sarne cba good deal of confusing news Unfortunately, the Judgeabout our situation which I parently angered by our =may be able to clear up and ment, has now change/whtch you may wish to report mind and will require uto your readers. stand trial as before.

On Monday, April 9th, the From what one of ourvire services carried reports in Jackson reported thiis that Judge Russell Moore of ng, the Judge felt thatthe Hinds County Court, Jack- should have been mr son, Mississippi, on the motion ful to Mississippi for- lettiof Prosecuting Attonney Jack off. The Judge appwrentl:Travis, had dismissed charges not realize that (A) sinragainst the fifteen Episcopal do not believe we are guilclergy (including me). On the first place, there is nmTuesday the New York Times son at all for gratefulnereported that "Mr. Travis' oo- his action of dismissal mtion said the prosecution had sippi was simply making gacted 'out of respect and ad- decision, albeit belatedly,miration for the Episcopal justice is a right of everyChurch and Mississippi Epusco- zen not a hand-out far pal churchmen.' It said the dis- who are privileged,, andmissals would 'permit each of (B) we have been fightingthese defendents to return to tile begnming for justicetheir priestly duties.' "ice for all, and not for

On the afternoon of April 9th sklis or the "diigniity" of

a spokesman for us issued the Episcopal Churdh. The following statement: "We wel-. of Judge Moore shouldcome the recognition of our in- the quality of Mississippinocence of Breach of the Peace tice quite clear to everyoccharges, but regret the incon- is precisely this kind ofsistencies of Mississippi justice, capriciousness whacl isin that charges against others daily against the weak,similarly arrested were not disenfranchised, the Negdropped. Some of us may go to Mississippi.Jackson to intercede with the Although I am perscourt in behalf of the others disappointed at having t

who were not so favored. We (Please turn Jo Page 5

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.:- Kibitzer fffi~a=Za.^m3 By Steve Levy '63 -

Usually this column featuresan interesting point in the playof the cards; this week for achange we will look at somebidding problems that arose inlast week's Open Pair Cham-pionship at the MIT BaidgeClub.

1.SOUTH NORTH$AK842 497653

AQJ5 V64J 7 K Q 8 36 2 ,105

Seven of seven pairs madefour spades, but just one pairbid the game. The wirningauction - 14, 24, 3V44. This is ome case where thenormal side suit game tries tri-umphed over the short suitgame try bidders. If South bidsanything but three hearts overtwo spades, then North with aminimum spade raise cannot seethat his hand fits so well withhris partner's. Over three heartsithe burden rests on North torecogndze the fit and carry allthe way to game if he likes afavorable gamble.

2.SOUTH NORTH

-A K J 4 4 86K Q 7 54 76A K 8 5 * I0-9 5 3 2

$- 4 Q642North-South Vulnerable

The good diamond gameseemed elusive for most pirslast Saturday. South opens 1Heart and West-bids 2 Clubs.North passes as does East andSuth reverses wiith 2 Spades.The key to the auction is theaction that North takes at thispoint. Any bid other than a cue

-hid or game call must be in-terpreted as extreme weaknessin view of partner's biddingWhich has been calculated toput you on the spot. My part-ner came up with the threediamond bid that pointed us tothe winning contract: He rea-soned that by bidding three dia-Inonds he could deny a fit ineither major, declare weaknessand at the same time show afive or six card suit.

3.

SOUTH NORTH4 K J 75 4 A984

AK 9 85 Q J 7 63+- *86

K865 46 Q4There is an excellent play for

six hearts or spades, yet ittakes a well thought out sequence to arrive there. Southopened one heaft and Northdecided that his hand was:worth tvo bids so he respond.ed oe spade. East came in withthree diamonds. Now Southproperly reevaluated his cardsas dummy at spades and count.ed nineteen points. He cue bidfour dianonds and North went-to six hearts. North must re-alize that all his values are in-the right place and remernbethat his partner cue bid know.:ing no more than that Northhad four spades and six pointAs

4.SOUTH NORTH4 Q105 4KJ7

A Q 9 6 V J 1054Q 7 3 64

4 A J 3 9 8 5 3This hand represents what i

Called a system fix hand, q1players of one bidding systemnnaturally end in one contractwhich by luck alone has an advantage over the contract nat.urally bid by playe--s of someother system. Im this hand thestandard auction is INT, P. P,P making one as the cards lieThe Kaplan-Sheinwold auction-is 14, 19, 2V down orgithough the four-four major fit-is usually the better spot.

There was an error mn tPuzzler last week. The contradcshould have been six spadeSThe question is the correct playof the heart suit with A Q 3 2-opposite 9 7 4. After all sidesuits have been striped playthe Ace of hearts, cross todummy and finesse the queenCashing the Ace firstwins evenif the king is offside if it sdoubleton, because East mustthen concede a rff and sluff,having no exit.

Page 5: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

(Continged from Page 4)mmp nto Miassicsiprmi for. furtheradjudicatiOn, I would rather go

kbac there than be a party tothe "Justice" of specil prvi.

Myron B. Bloy, Jr.Episoxpal Chaplain

ETA Objects toTHE TECf ArticlesTo the Editor:

Your article in the April 11issue of The Tech concerningTeclmology Textbook Agentsshowed an almost total lack ofany effort to determine the

facts of the case. The errors inboth the article and the edito-rial are so nmmerous that it isdifficalt to decide where to be-gin. Let's start with the head-line-: 'pirated Texts to be SoldBy 4 E. Campus Students."This shows that the editors didnot even spend two minutes tolook up the names of the merm-bers of TTA in the APO direc-tory to find out that all of usdo not live in East Campus.

La:ter in the article, you in-sinuated that we made upwardsof 100% profit. Even with thefacts known to you, it shouldhave been plain to you that

Letters:ouT profit was less than 20%.For example,' take Zinmmerman& Mason. This costs $9.00 atthe Coop, and about $2.00 fromour publisher. Since some mem-bers of your staff acknowledgedihaving dealt with this "unethi-cal" company, you should havebeen aware that they charge$1.00 for postage on a $2.00book. Add to this $1.35 that youadmit must be paid as royal-ties, and you can see that itcosts us $4.50 to obtain this

book, whidh we sell for $5.50.Tbis gives us a margin of 21%,out of whbch must cone adver-tising expemses. This leaves uswith very little profit indeed.

You also state that the U.S.Customs officer in Boston saidthere was no way customscould be paid of these books,and that any of them that werein the country had entered il-legally. We have a documentedcase, an individual of SeniorHouse, whose books were in-spected by customs, and who,after consultation with hislawyer and the Customs De-partment, paid a 5% duty on

th taste to start it...hetaste tosta withbe tasle ro start with..the tase t sta wlh

What makes Lucky Strike the favorite regular cigarette of college smokers? Fine-tobacco taste.The taste of a Lucky is great to start with, and it spoils you for other cigarettes. That's whyLucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. So, get the taste ou'll want to stay with. Get Lucky today.

Produt of Ž4 - cJin e oee is our m'iddle name

his books, ard received them with no further trouble.

It is interesting to note how mthe statement by one professor -4that our -idea of importing Cbooks was "wonderful" was ob- Itailed. While being interviewed,and after having stated thatwe planned to pay royalties, astaff member stepped out ofthe office, and came back later msaying that the professor had Ci"hit the ceiling." He admitted Zthat he had not mentioned theroyalties. We then called the professor back, and learned -<much to our surprise that hehad expressed satisfaction witlh >the idea, even before knowing xthat we planned to pay royal-ties. When we asked the re -porter about the ethics of this _0situation, we were told thatthey would get news 'any way o-we want." I?

While being interviewed byyou in your office, we were toldthat "editorials don't have tocontain facts." The fact that 'the editorial was written be- tfore the interview eerta'iily oabears this out. You flatly staot-ed that the importation ofthese books was illegal. Our -lawyer states that he is ad-vised that the books are beingpassed with the payment of the5%o duty. In addition, DeanWadleigh tells -us that Con-gress is "rushing" to pass leg-islation making the importationof the books illegal. This cer-tainly seems to indicate thatthere is nothing in the law atpresent on the subject of ouroperations.

There's an inaateresting foot-note to this matter. We wereapproached a few days ago bya member of The Tech's adver-tising staff, and asked if wewished to place an ad in thepaper. It seems that The Techfollows one ethical code on theeditorial page, and anotherwhen it comes to getting mo-ney.

Gene Salamin, '63Durk Pears-on, '64Erwin Strauss, '65

The Tech was in error as toMr. Schmid's residence. Afterinvestigating each of the otherobjections raised in the aboveletter the editors have foutndthat the statements in the issueof April 11 were correct as pub-lished. We are pleased to hearof the decision of the Technol-ogy Texibooks Agency to dis-continule solicitation for publish-ers ,ithout copyright.

RenaissanceHouse

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Other flights: Chicago, Florida,BERMUDA SPECIAL, Detroit.

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Page 6: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

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'miMfaking The Scenei r:MUSIC

Moston Arts Quartet: Josephl de Pas-quale, viola, will play two Mozart qudn-tets. Isabella Stewart Gardner Musem.Aprl 22, 3 p. m. No aamissiom.

Deserts, a new work for concert or-cbehstra and stereophonic tapes, by Ed-gaad Varese. Changed from the 18th.Jardan HalL ALpril 19, 8:30 p. m. Noadm4ssion

Lenten Music by the Harvard GleeClub. Harvard Epwcrth MethodistChurch, 1555 Mass. Ave. April 1, 8p. m. Admission $1.25.

LSCGlassie Series: "The Magnificent

Seven," considered by many to be oneof the finest Japanese films ever made.The story is of the defense of a six-teenth century village by seven recruit-

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The BIG Sound of JAZZfrom MIT and Harvard

The Techionians vs.The Big Band from Harvard

Kresge Auditorium8:30, Friday, April 27

Advance Tickets Free. $1.00 at the door

ed ]p f ,nal soldiers. Rm 1e-2W.6'.O, 9:00 p. m.

Entertanment Serles: "-7e ILeagueof Gentlemen." Eight ex-Brtish armnyofficers stage a daringly-planned, well.executed bank robbery because theyfeel their country has done nothing forthetm. Jack Hawkins and Nigel Patariekstar. Kresge Auditorium. :aZ5, 7:30,9:45. Admission 30 cents.

Ford Ha1l Forum: Dr. Jose Figueres,a former President of the Republic ofCosta Rica, and an ex-MIT studlentwill speak on "Allianee for Progessvs. Cuban Revolution." Jordan Hail.April 22, 8.00 p. m. No admission.

Harvard low Schol Forum: Mr.Benjamin J. Davis, SecretarY of theOonummunist Party, will .spek on " TheCommunist Party and ConstitutionalGuarantees." Lowell Lectwre HaXl. Ap.ril 18, 8:30 p. m.

WTBS Program ScheduleWVDNESDAY- 7 p. 3n.: Inscoamn

Open I.ne. A dasousslon of MIT ad-rmissions policy and procedure with epe-cial guest Roland Greeley, Director ofAdmissions. Audience telephone partici-pation is invited.

BRRIDAY- 6 p. m: Jazz Special.Part 2 of tle "History of Classic Jazz"series. Recordings covring New or-leans style, Boog Woogle and SkouthSide Chicago style.

SATURDAY- 8 p. nm.: Folk Musicfror Cub Mount Aulburn 47. Broadcastlive from this well-known Cambridgefolk. music center.

SUNDAY- 8 p. mn.: C. P. Snowspeaking on "The Scientist and Deci-sion-Making" from the series Manage-ment and the Computer of the Future.Recorded at Kresge Auditorium.

Academy Award Winner!

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Page 7: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

Limelighters' Performance Outstandingperfoaeniag to a standing-

roanonly audidence in KresgeAuditorium, the Li.melightersgave a rousing performance in

;I

By .Tom Maugh

'their concert last Saturdaynight. Vaying from such ten-der ballads as "Molly Mallone"to audience-participation songslike "Hey Le41y," the trioshowed an amazing versatilityinsinging style.

The highlight of the eveningwas "Have Some Madeira, MyDear," sung by Lou Gottlelb,the grup's comic spokesman.More aptly titled "Seduction in% Time," the song tells abouta young maiden being wooedby an old, but lecherous, suitor.It is this type of song, coupledwith the belting delivery of thegroup, that has made the Lime-lighters what they are today.Incidentally, half of the pro-ceeds of the concert, which wassponsored by the Alphi PhiOmega, will go to the StudentUnion FunL

* * $

Ray Charles, his orchestra,and his singers will give a con-cert performance at the Don-nelly Memorial Theatre on Sat-urday evening, April 28. The

reording artist, stage star,composer, msician, and voca-list is on his second annualconcert tour, which will end inCainegie Hall after the Bostonengagement. Tickets are cur-rrently on sale by mail-order atthe Donnelly.

* * *

"Amedee, or How to Get Ridof It" Eugene lonesco's bizarreconaedy about the couple whohave a oarpse that will not stopgrowing in their bedroom, willbe presented by the MIT Dra-mashop as their major springproduction. The play, directedby Joseph Eve-ingham, ]Direc-tow of Drama at MIT, opensWednesday might, Apil 25, at8:30 p.An, and plays nightlythrough Saturday, April 28.

All seats are $1.50, and tele-phone reservations may bemade at the Kresge box-office:UN 4-6900, ext. 2910. Ticketswill also be available at thedoor on the nights of perform-

a- LIMITED QUANTITY

SOL___

Sunday Evening, April 22 at 8 o'clock

DR. JOSE FIGUERES'> z g cg Former President of Cosa Rica

"Alliance fo-r Progress vs. Cuban Revolution"

FORD HALL FORUMJORDAN HALL - Gainsboro St car. Huntington Ave. - BOSTONDOORS OPEN 7:45 P.M. EVERYBODY WELCOME

P i a~~~pe knit IUl(Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The

Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)

CRAM COURSE No. 3: ENGLISH POETRYFinal exams will soon be upon us. This is no time for fun andgames. Let us instead study hard, cram fiercely, prepare assidu-ously.

In this column today let us make a quick survey of Englishpoetry. When we speak of English poetry, we are, of course,speaking of Byron, Shelley, and Keats. Some say that of thethree, Keats was the most talented. It is true that he displayedhis gifts earlier than the others. While still a schoolboy at St.Swithin's he wrote his epic lines:

If I am good, I get an apple,So I don't whistle in the chapel.From this distinguished beginning, he went on to write an-

other 40,000 poems in his lifetime-which is all the moreremarkable when you consider that he was only five feet tall l

I mention this fact only to show that physical problems neverkeep the true artist from creating. Byron, for example, waslame. Shelley had an ingrown hair. Nonetheless, these threetitans of literature turned out a veritable torrent of romantic

.poetry.Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devil

with the ladies, was expelled from Oxford for dipping ElizabethBarrett's pigtails in an inkwell. He thereupon left England tofight in the Greek war of independence. He fought bravely andwell, but women were never far from his mind, as evidenced bythis immortal poem:

How splendid it is to fight for the Greek,But I don't enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to cheek.While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley remained in England,

where he became court poet to the Duke of Marlborough. (Itis interesting to note in passing that Marlborough was the origi-nal spelling of Marlboro Cigarettes, but the makers were unableto get the entire word on the package. With characteristic in-genuity they cleverly lopped off the final "gh". This, of course,left them with a "gh" lying around the factory. They lookedfor some place to put it and finally decided to give it to theDirector of Sales, Mr. Vincent Van Go. This had a rather curiousresult. As plain Van Go, he had been a crackerjack director ofsales, but once he became Van Gogh, he felt a mysterious,irresistible urge to paint. He resigned from the Company andbecame an artist. It did not work out too well. When Van Goghlearned what a great success Marlboro Cigarettes quickly be-came--as, of course, they had to with such a flavorful flavor,such a filterful filter, such a flip-top box, such a soft pack-hewas so upset about leaving the firm that-he cut off his ear in afit of chagrin.)

But I digress. Byron, I say, was in Italy and Shelley in

England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try to grow. Whodoes not remember his wistful lyric:

Although 1 am only five feet high,Some day I will look in an elephant's eye.But Keats did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron,

touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. This toofailed. Then Byron, ever the ladies' man, took up with LucreziaBorgia, Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley. Shelley, a moredomestic type, stayed home with his wife Mary, and wrote hisfamous poem:

I love to stay home with the missus and write,And hug her and kiss her and give her a bite.Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that she went

into another room and wrote Frankenstein. Upon reading themanuscript, Shelley and Byron got so scared they immediatelybooked passage home to England. Keats tried to go too, buthe was so small that the clerk at the steamship office couldn'tsee him over the top of the counter. So Keats remained in Romeand died of a broken heart.

Byron and Shelley cried a lot and then together composedthis immortal epitaph:

Good old Keats, he might have been short,But he was a great American and a heck of a good sport.

© 1962 Max Shulman* * *

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Page 8: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

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Russian BeTo Retune

Lowell House at Harvard is being visited thismonth by Father Serafimn Slobodskoy of the Rus-sian Orthodox monastery at Nyack, N. Y. It ishoped that he will settle the long-raging disputeover whether or net Lowell House's Russian Bellsare in need of re.aning. Father Slobodsky, saidto be the West's foremost expert on Russian bells,will also instruct the Lowell House Society of BellRingers in the playing of traditional liturgical mu-sic and may give a public concert.

The bells have a rather unusual history atHarvard, dating back to 1931. Their story is toldin a Harvard Crimson article by Russell Roberts,of which. the following is a part:

'The bells have long been one of the morecurious elements in the Lowell House tradition.They first came to the University in 1931 after awandering American slavic scholar discoveredthem in a monastery near Moscow and broughtthem to the attention of Charles R. Crane, a lead-ing manufacturer of toilet fixtures.

"Learning that they were about to be melteddown for armaments, Crane purchased themfrom the Soviet government and offered them asa gift to Harvard.

"The bells were promptly accepted by A. Law-rence Lowell, then president of the University,and consigned to their present location.

Soviet Generosity"In an unusual display of generosity, the rea-

sons for which are still a source 'of historicalmystery, the Soviets sent to Lowell House one ofthe most prominent of their bell-ringing profes-sionals to direct the installation of the "zvon" ofbells.

"The man's name was Saradjeff and his cre-dentials were impeccable: his father and his ma-ternal grandfather before him had been ring-

=MITOMMIM, By Toby Zidle '63

.ll Expert At Harvard; Zvon In Lowell Towerers; he himself had made a long, and exhaustivestudy of the art and his theories on the subjectwere considered revolutionary even for the SovietUnion.

"In addition, he could recognize, by ear, anyone of the several thousand bells in Moscow andhad written dozens of compositions for bells in-cluding a special one for those now in LowellHouse.

- Drinks Ink In Infirmar"Personally, however, he was not so impres-

sive. He could speak little, if any, English andwas not particularly fluent in sign language. Hewas generally unfriendly, highly suspicious, andsubject to attacks of epilepsy. He was totally dig-satisfied with conditions in Cambridge and showedlittle restraint in revealing his displeasure.

"After one especially violent epileptic seizurehe was committed to Stillman Infirmary wherehe drank ink as an antidote for the poison hebelieved he was being administered there.

'But the University had few Russian bell ex-perts at its disposal in those days and the man'sreputation- could not be ignored. Saradjeff wasplaced in full, charge of the tuning of the zvonand the task was begun with no little enthusiasm.. "Almost at once, however, Saradjeff's hopesthat the Lowell House bells could be made intothe greatest set in existence began to diminish.

Missing Bells"He vigorously protested that some of the bells

were missing and that without them the carillonwould never be complete. President Lowell at-tempted to investigate the charge but the onlyperson who knew how many bells were in theoriginal set, the wandering Slavic scholar, was onhis way to Addis Ababa to witness the coronationof Hailie Selassie.

"He .ts eventuiar~y vaodhed,howerer, Eand it was determinedtalt aone of the beMits were

ssng. 'Nonsense,' Saradjeffalagegedly teid an interpetor,'we Rusisians irbvented b.l&Js andwe kvow what we are tafllvingabctu'

'"Not onrig after tWfis indlifdent,President Lowel disoovemedSaradjeff in the Loyeijl Housebasement, dcippbing pieces fromthe lips of the bellls. Slaradjefflalber expbianed tmhat thes wasthe accepted technique fortumng . bel1s but Pres~identtLowmdl believeld he was runinnigthe zvon and the Rus']s5an wasfinaflly dismissed. He sadily re-'tunned to Moscow wvere he wasTepct.edly corrmntted to a sani-tuarurn. -

Bells Finally Installed"Wikthout furtfheir tiuning, the

bellis wanee finagly insta.iled inthe LOweiil House tower aind anr-dtlher bell ringer was car.P:ed fromNew York to pllay the first ainm-cert on Easter in 1931.

"It_ was apparent fsom thelfirst playinag that the beiills werenot whAt President Lowe~ll hadAhoped they woud be. Eitherthe R-usDshan musiC was unsuYtedfor Westenm ears Or the zvOfnsuffered from Medc Clli difficul-

tfle rsd., ims G T~-]"Aways Lafgeir to pnoimotebeitteir town-gowin rellbtiornsihips,the Bostoin press seized the op-paptunuinty: TONS- OF CHIIESAT HARVARD -AND NOT ANOTE OF MUSIC,' screedhedthe headlines, 'GoFT CHIMESPROVE VWHITE ELEPHANT.'

'lhe Crimson realled.i viliolsof 'Ouifew Sheadl Not Ring To-niglhit,' in whbdh a beautifulmaiden as found dringinrg to the

(Please turn to page 9)

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Page 9: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

REALLY SINGS THE BLUES

Thurs.,. May 3, 8:30 P.M. atf.Eliot House, Harvard CollegeSat., May 5, 8:30 P.M. at YMCA, 316 Huntington Ave.,[I~ - Boston - Admission $1.75

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(Continuved from Page 8)&a.pper of a large dhin bedi.'On nigts when thie LowellbeUs thlratened to fml,' an edi-txi)&.l sug.,oeslted, 'the authromiitesmiBgh,t 9sevd over to Radcdiffe fcr19 beeaut!fu naiden--but thenthis suggestita, too, seems topresenat snbe pecmfliar dLffioul-.kies.',

Lowell House Tribute"Lovell Hose mnberps wee

equaiLy di satiLtfied w';h, theirnew co'ntrIbtDaL In tpwbute toCrane, acoordnmgto tfhe LowelHoyse Clmom'oal, hie men of theHowe seJecbed an aippropriatehour, fluished aM ltbeir ta!ents inumbson, and flooded the collegesewerage system'

'he Lowei House befl]s haveprnvoked mixed reviews eveirsince. If they cite hma-slily-worded proteist in -:mne quair-bers, they garner decCaratis offaith in oathes. Thouglh the im-nide3ate reation in L ,1

Houe was one of uvmestmnainedcoatenpt, the zvon hats snoe

estaRbf-aed sitself as a hoary, ifoouarfu. Hotuse trtal,'ticrL

"The new efforts to Lhnroxvethe quaC'ity of the bc.3'i rmsicame expected to be g.ee'-esd wtlhfavor by uc.degradduate. s 1]vimgnrzaLr Loweod who, tih,ougth ncAtembued wimth the_',r tadcItxonadlrores, can heaim their ch-mi~ng

Zsa Zsa At TuftsTufts UnIversity seems to be

initently cortiratbing on theeYiinination of the type of prob-lem lthat p'agued HaIrv'ard-Russ'iam relations, in the eamrly1930's. The fc£lowimnng lecturecoverage was on the fTrot paieof ie Tufts Weekly.

"Miss Zsa Zsa Gabor .poke an'Inte-ait:kiniaU Rel~aitionis' ]astWednesday nilight at tthe Univer-sity Lecture Series. Miss Gaber,aailed by one gsbudent 'the motr-vdling spe!aker Tuftts has hadso far,' proceeded to a profoundstn'dy of wovIld affa,:ms im am agewhidh, as M;i' Gabor stated, 'izzo baidly in ned of ]owe. Ze vay

lively Marylyn proser, PoMona f64

UIvilv On's: Marylyn Prosser. Sonhomnre Hmeclomino Princess at Pomona College. Claremont. California. and the new Galaxie 500/XL Sunliner-. , .. . ................. .................................................. _ ............... ........... _ .......................

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from a fiery Thunderbird405-hp V-8, linked to a quick-acting4-speed stick shift. Choose the gleaming hard-top or the sun-soaking convertible. See all the APROCr

Lively Ones at your Ford Dealer's ... .the liveliest place in town. W COMPM

to peace iz not zrough rocketsand m-ssilz, but by closer re-l'atCfnJhQps betveen mern andwomen everywhere.' As an ex-ample she ci ted the Peace Corps,whiCh bNringz Americcanz in closecotaet waz ze natives of fnlilands'

Questions And Answers'Miss Gajbor then proceeded

to anrswer q u e s t i o n s ablorut'Inteprnlatloan Reflationai' and

about herself. A transript fo-lows.

"Q: How od awe you, MimssGabor?

"A: 38-22-36.`Q: WI-at is yOUr goal in lf]e?"A: I love to do my pant in

liaymnig ze founidaitionis fcr worfdpeace. Zait is why I have joloedze 'Ban-ze-Bomn.bs' mcvemenmt.Alq ve need iz a l0tile love dlin zisVwOrlid.

"Q: What do ylu thmk of tlhepresent inflaitlon?

"A: Iz teaurible. I hate any-thimng mait is fial!e.

"Q: Is Oe Ai.gereran orims in-dcatuive of extireme aorswva-tirvisrm in tlhe rihlt-wing groupsof the Frenuh coJliomia govern-rntial Tc,1I0Oas.

"A: (rn, definEItegy. Zere izscilenltific way of diing every-

"Q: VWhat do you think of ourspaje progrgamm?

"A: Oh, I thlhing ze mi'sigenie l aTne very iast (cfihucle,Choucke).

"Q. Whait is r op flm offa:!.out, Miss GaCboar?

"A: VelU, I zink ze riding upiz Mo dangerou za ze falingout.- "The sesienc came to an

abrupt coase affter Mis Gabornotioed tlhait she and Dean Her-nrick were weardng the sarneDior oriinafl.

"Next monith's speaker wifll beNorbet Weier."

If you thibink tihat this letumewas too unisuiad to be true,you're righit. The stiory comesfrom the Tufts Weekly ApiiFool issnue.

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isn't if?

Shall we over kill each otheror shall we work out rules for

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Page 10: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

-- ------ ----*

LECTURES'MR. BENJAMIN J. DAVIS,

prominent member of theAmerican Communist Part/, will

. address the :Harvard Law° School Forum this evening at

-8:30 p.m. on "The Communist-- Party and Constitutional Gua--J .rantees." Mr. Davis' talk will

: be- followed 'by a panel dis-< cussion featuring Erwin N.

- Griswold, Dean of the Harvard< 'Law School and memrber of thec United States Commission 'onuu Civil Rights, and -Mark De-Z Wolfe Howe, a Professor in

the 'Law School specializing in3,American Constitutional Law.

The -lecture and discussion willbe in Sanders Theater, andtickets are available from theHarvard Coop or at the door.

U The AiEE-IRE JOINT STU-I DENT BRANCH is sponsoringJ aF 'lecture today i} room 4-270 at

3 p.m. on "Materials Researchand Electrical Engineering." Thespeaker is Professor Arthur C.Smith of the E. E. Department,and all are invited.

"THE SCIENCE OF DECI-SION," a lecture on OperationsResearch, will 'be given 'by Pro-'fessor Ronald A. Howard of:E. E. next Tuesday, April 24.The MIT AIEE-IRE Joint Stu-dent Branch is sponsoring theftalk, which will begin in room6-120 at 4 p.m.

DR. EDWARD H. BLOCH of"Western Reserve 'University'sSchool of Medicine .will give aspecial lecture on Thursday,April 26, entitled "High Speed.Photography of Blood Flow inthe Smallest Vessels of Man and,Animals." The lecture is opento all, and is in room 10-275beginning at 3 p.m.

SEMINARSLambda Rho (otherwise known

as 'the:Locker Room Society) con-ducts a daily discussion group ontopical .subjects Monday throughFriday to which all "talkers" areinvited. 'The bull sessions are :in-oom 2-090, and extend roughllyfrom 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Mondaythrough Thursday, and from 11until :5 p.m. on Fridays. Comeand air your view of the world!

The next seminar of the MITlnter-Amrnerican Program in CivilEngineering will be "Efficiencyof Resource Allocation in .Devel-oping Economies," led by Dr.Louis Lefeber, who is an Associ-ate Professor of Economics and amember of the Center for Inter-

- national Studies. The seminar willbe in room 3-133 at 4 p.m. onTuesday, April 24.

SOCIALA Course VI Student-Faculty

Steak and Beer Banquet will 'beheld at 6 p. m. this evening. 'Theinformal -get-together will -be in4rom 10-250, and admission is.Ft.75.

Phi Gamma Delta .presents the-Fiji Island -Party -this Friday eve-ning at 8 p.m. on the shore ofRobbins Lake. The gala party isfree to all couples dressed in sa-rongs. Further information anddirections to the "island" -may beobtained from the booth in build-:ing 10. or by calling extension321T or Cl 7-8048.

A "Matzo" Ball will be-.held.Saturday evening at Temple BnaiMoshe, 1845 Commonwealth Ave.in Brighton, by the MetropolitanCoeds of Temple Bnai Moshe.Dancing will be from 8-12 'p. m.to the music of Marty Kaye's or-chestra: door prizes will be award-ed and there are free -rerh-ments -provided. Donation is $1.50.per person.

IThe Chemical Engineering De-partment is holding a FreshmanOrienitation Open 'House Wednes-day, April 25 -in 'the Walker Room,.12-011.-The gathering will be from4:30 until '5:30 -and all iterested:freshmen are invited. ' .:

NOTICES .MISCELLANEOUS

Peace Corps placement testswill be given Salurday, April 21tat 8:30 a m. in Memorial Hall atHarvard. All applicants must be18 or over and citizens of theUnited States. One of the twotests offered requires a 'bachelor'sdegree. and is intended for thosewishing positions as teachers.'Training will begin this summerfor 30 Peace Corps projects inAfrica, Asia and Latin America

All -Sidn Diving enthusiasts andMarine- Biologists are invited toattend a meeting of the American-Littoral Society -Boston Chapter,at the Northeastern UniversityGraduate Center on April 23 at 8p. m. The meeting, sponsored bythe Northeastern Underwater So-ciety, will be held to formulateplans for an undersea survey tocommence May 31.

!

Varsity, Frosh Top Harvard

Tech Sailors Win RegaffaBoth the vartsit and freshmen siling teams racing t a r li

Saturday and Stnday respectively, won their regaas by large mat,.gins, with Harvard placing second each time.

Fresh Talie 9 sts Walter Denee, '63, and Gary Henlmig, '62, topped a fleet of xlt

by a healthy margin, while freshmen Scott Hynek, Fred Kern, aW -John Navas. took an octagonal .meet by 1S points. varsity rompeIto a number of first places, while the fresh tfok nine firsts out -14 races.

beh Places SecondThe varsity was defeated a week earlier by Harvard in a ser*

of team races (i.e. two teams of four boats each). Tech tied fIosecond with Coast Guard, and Boston -University finished last.

The same day, the freshmen, racing at Coast Guard, came frozbehind in the last of 14 races to win over a -fleet of 12 by. a scaoof 136 to 135. Ir this series, the frosh took only two firsts, but scoredconsistent thirds and fourths.

Varsity To Meet .Dartmouth'Next weekend both teams will be -racing in the elimination race

for their respective New England Dinghy Championships-the varsityat Dartmouth and the frosh at Coast Guard Academy. If they plat[among the top third df those racing, they will be eligible for the finals

The varsity finals are scheduled for :thee weeks later at CoatGuard, and 'the freshmen will race two weeks after their elimnitions, on Spring Weekend, at MIT.

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Page 11: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

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Goddard Takes Mile, 880

Cindermen Edged 751/V2591/2Despite good performances by several Tech trackmen, the har-

riers fell before Williams last Saturday, 751%-59½ at Briggs field.Tom Goddard, '63, put in a very good performance as he coppedboth the mile and 880 yard runs. In the mile teammate John Dress-ler '64 edged a Williams runner just before the tape to snare anexciting second place finish.

The other first place in the running events for the Beavers wasin the two mile run where Steve Banks, '62, finished first just aheadof Roger Hinrichs, '63, to give MIT a 1-2 finish in that event also.

In the field events Gary Lukis, '64', took a first in the pole vaultat eleven feet. Al Ramo, '63, won the hammer throw and Bill Eagle-son, '64' won the high jump. Second place finishers that addedpoints to the Beavers' score were captured by Jim Macmillan, '64,in the high hurdles, Forrest Green, '63, in the lows, Bill Remnsen,'64, in the shot, and Mike Simpson, '64, in the javelin.

The team as a whole looked good against Williams but severalglaring weaknesses, such as in the sprints, prevented them frombeing victorious.

The frosh also suffered defeat, losing to the Williams frosh, 73-53. Dave Carrier was the only double winner as he outjumrnped allthe high and broad jumpers. He had a good performance in thebroad jump with a leap of 20'3 k". The other really bright spoton the frosh squad were the usual sweeps in both hurdle eventswith A1 Tervalon winning the highs and Ken Morash taking thelows with Terry Dorschner also placing in both events. The onlyother first for the frosh was Mike Oliver's win in the mile.

Wednesday the frosh have a meet at Governor Dummer Acad-emy and next Saturday both the varsity and frosh travel to UNHfor a triangular with UNH and Tufts.

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IM Track Meet Includes 12 Events;Rosters Due Monday, April 23

Rosters for Intramural Trackare due Monday, April 23. Thiayear's meet, to take place anthe Sunday of Parent's Week-end (April 29), will Consist ofrine ruming and three fieldevents. Two of these events arebeing intaoduced- for the firsttime. They are the 120 yardHigh Hurdles, and the 180 yardLow Hu-les.

Betas Win LAt MeetIast year, Beta Theta Pi was

the decisive wiAnner of themeet with a point total of 61.Placing a distant second and

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third were Sigma Phi Epsilon-27, and Burton House-251/2.

Six School Records ToppleThough the meet was one-

sided, it was ,one that saw sixschool records broken. Themarks for the broad jump, shotput, 880 yard rn, 880 medley,880 relay, and the 440 yea'd runall fell by the wayside.

On DeckToday, April 18

Baseball (F) - Milton Acad-emy, Away, 3:00 P.M.

Lacrosse (V) - Holy Orcos,Away, 3:45 P.M.

Tennis (F)--overnor Dum-mer Academy, Home, 3:00 P.M.

Track (F - Governr Dmorn-mer Academy, Away, 4:00 P.MVL

Thursday, April 19Baseball (V) - Bowdoin,

Home, 2:30 P.M.Tennis (V) - Colby, Homne,

2:00 P.M.Friday, April 20

Golf (V) - Bowdodtn, Sping-field, Home, 1:00 P.M.

Tennis · (V) - BEowdoin,Home, 2:30 P.M.

Saturday, April 21Baseball (V) - Bates, Away,

2:00 P.VLBaseball (F) - Newton Jun-

ior College, Home, 2:00 P.M.Crew (HV) - Columlb,

Brown, at New YorkCrew (LV - Duamd C@wp-

Dartmouth, Yale, AwayGolf (V) - William, Trini-

ty, Away, 2:00 P.M.Iacrosse (V) - New Hamp-

shire, Away, 2:00 P.M.Lacrosse (F) - Harvard,

Homne, 2:00 P.M.Tennis (V) - Wesleyan,

Horne, 2:00 P.M.Tennis (F) - Ward,

Home, 3:00 P.M.Track (V&F) - New Hamlp-

shre, Tufts, Away, 1:00 P.M.Tuesday, April 24

Baseball (V) - Tufts, Away,3:00 P.M.

Baseball (F) - Tufts, Home,3:00 P.M.

Golf (V) - Harvard, Away,2:00 P.M.

Provost Townes HonoredAgain For Maser Research

Dr. Charles H. Townes, MITProvost, has been awarded theJohn J. Carty Medal of theNational Academy of Sciences.The award, "'in recognition ofnoteworthy accomnplishnents inscience," went to Dr. Towvnesfor his pioneering developmentof the Maser (microwave am-plification by the stimulatedemision of radiation).

Dr. Townes will receive emedal in Wastington, D. C., at:tle anmal meeting of teAcademy on April 23.

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Page 12: THE TECHtech.mit.edu/V82/PDF/V82-N10.pdf · The Ceylon .National Dancers opened Inernational events was presented on Sunday, April 15, and 'eek with teier performance of folk and

Tech Crewmen Sweep All Three Races With B.U. By Sandy Wagner

MIT heavyweight crewsswept the river Saturday af-ternoon against Boston Univer-sity in the first race of theseason for all eights. Verychoppy conditions and a stiffheadwind made the rowingquite difficult and at times ex-tremely slow. BU, long consi-dered an easy opponent increwv, has begun in recent yearsto increase its emphasis on row-ing and presented two strongcompetitors in the three races.

Fiory Strokes VarsityJack Frailey's varsity took

the final race of the day, ingathering darkness, by abottwo lengths. Tony Fiory '63,Frailey's last minute choice forthe stroke seat, led the recent-ly reshuffled e~ght as they wereahead all the way and neverin serious trouble.

J.V. Keeps Stroke Down'Me biggest surprise of the

day was the Tech JV, strokedby junior John Wasserlein againthis year, who rowed at a low-eir stroke than BU all the wayand finshed a full 38 secondsahead. Wasserlein, notorious

Yanus Hurls I-Hitter In BC Fray

last year for his Iigh stroking,was hduced by the poor con-ditions to keep down the beat,arnd BU suffered by ot-dongthe same.

Frosh Top BUIn the freshmn race Dick

Erickson's eight lost to theMrrIT third varsity, but. finishedwell in front of BU. In a clos-er race than the others, BUkept up until the Sailirng Pavi-lion, when, with a nmie to go,stroke Bob Ourd's low strokingsbarted to pay off. BU, at ahigher pace, was miss wa-

teir and not rowing effectivelyin the rough Charles. The fi-nisih was the third varsity,stroked by Lew Taff, twolengts over the freshmen, andthm BU another 2 lengths fur-ther back.

In earlier races the HarvardLightweight JV and Varsltyeasily topped Navy in raceswhich were not surprising bytheir outcome, but because ofthe wide margins Harvard wanby.bghts to Meet Dartmouth, Yale

Next week Gary Zwart'sligweights make their debut

Huskies Top MIT With Grand Slam

Tech Nine Splits Twinbill With WPI; Drops Contests To BC, H'EastemBy Mal Beaverstock -

MTI's baseball team won onegamne during the past weekwhile dropping three. TIhe lonevictory came during the firstgame of a double-headeragainst W.P.I. on Saturday af-ternoon.

Grand Slam Gives Huskies8-2 Win

A grand slam home run inthe last of the eighth irnninggave Northeastern an 8-2 vic-tory against Tech on Tuesday.The Huskies opened up with athree run lead in the first in-tinug but the Engineers cane

right back in the second withtwo markers on singles by JohnCostello, '62, Henry Nau, '63,and Dick Adaadnic, '64. North-eastern added one more run inthe fifth frame and then in thelst of the eighth, after twoout, the Huskies loaded thebases and catcher Dick Bunkhit a 3-2 pith over the fencein left field to ice the game8-2 for Northeastern. CaptainMick Haney went all -the wayan the mound for Tech.

Yanus Hurls 1-HitterOn Thursday sophomore Bob

Yanus hurled a one-hittergainst powerful Boston Col-

bge at the B. C. field but to

no avail as B. C. came up with Tech Splits Doubleheadera 3 - 2 victory. On Saturday the Engineers

B.C. started the scoring in split a doubl-header u withthe irritial franme with one run W.P.I. at Briggs Field by tak-that scored on a bases loaded ing the first- game 7-2 andwalk. Tech, however, knotted dropping the seoond 1-. Thethe game in the top of the sec- visitors opened up wath a hmbieond when fthey capitalized on r-n in the first imning buttwo walks and a B.C. miscue. Tech bounced back with fourIn the top of the seventh the big markers in the home balfEngineers had Len Ferrari, '63, of the same frame. Big blow ofon third with one away. Bill the inning came off the batBloebaum, '62, then laid down of John Costello wihich scoreda perfect bunt to score Ferrari Larry Demick, '63, and pitcheron the squeeze play and to put Mick Haney. Dick AdamrnicTech in the lead 2-1. scored in the second and Bob

Game Ends In Darkness Yanus came across the plate inSince the game didn't start the fourlth on a double by Iar-

until 4 p.m. the sun was more ry Demick to put Tech out inthan just going down when B.C. front 6-1. Dick Adamic made itcame to bat in the lst of the 7-1 when he soored from sec-seventh, usually the final ond on a single by Len Ferra-frame. A walk, an error and a ri in the sixth. he other W.P.I.wild pitch brought the tying tally camne in the bottom ofrun across the plate for B.C. the sixth. Mick Haney went theand left them with a man on distance on the mound andthird. The next- batter hit the handcuffed the visitors to onlyball in the direction of third four scattered hits.base but before anyone- could Engineers Held To One Hitsee where the ball went to, the In the nightcap WPI's onewinning run scored to give Bos- run in the tird frame on aton College the game. The hit double and a single stood thethat scored the .winrninrg rmUnthat scored the wi annig mr test as Tech bowed 1-0. Thewas t1e only hit off Yanus dur--- Q .-. , -. ,> az s -. w w-.irg the game; Tech collectedthree hits-

Engineers could only musterone hit during the game and

MIT Riflemen Win Final Two MatchesMT's rifle team emerged tni-nplphant in its final two con-

tests of the season, Friday andSaturday at Boston College.The first meet was 13r individ-ual competition among mem-bers of the teams in the Great-er Boston Rifle League. Theteam competition was held thnefollowing day.P'eterson, Olah Receive Medals

Medals were given to theigh four individuals in eai of

Ue 3 firing positions in Fri-day's competitiom In additionOw high man of the day re-mived a medal. Bruce Peterson113 earned a prone medal whileGeorge Olah &4 placed third

one and fourth kneeling.Boling's 293 ][ Highest

In HistorySaturday's meet was a handi-

gapped team match. The hand-k~p was based on MIT's sea-

mr average of 1417 and rangedbfOm 6 to 67 points..Joe Boling

shot a 293, the highest score in TWo sets of medals were giv-team history. Boling paved bhe en to the M1T team membersway to a season high in the. for being the undefeated dham-league of 1434. His 293 was sup- pions during the regular seasonported by a 286 and three 285's and for winning the handicap.by Dick Ludeman '63, Pete MIrT took 21 of the 32 possibleHoffman '62, Jerry Skinner '63, medals.and Bruoe Peterson. The bandi- -capped scores of the other Crushes Brandeisteams were Boston University1427, Northeastern -1411, Har-vaTd 1407, Boston College 13T6e

1379.Tennis Team 'amc Wentworth 1379.MIT Receives Ten 1st Place By Terry Setcield

Medals Mrr's tennis team vindicated,The medals were presented at least in part, their loss to

Saturday might at the league Harva:rd Wednesday by cruh-banquet. MIT received a plaque &Ig Brandeis University 9-0.and ten first place medals for Despite tihe cold, wndy weath-its undefeated Season. Scott er, the game, played SaturdayDraper of Northeastern was afternoon on our courts, wasawarded a first plae nedadl f an exbition of high quality,hs season average of 29L MIT tennis.took the other two high aver- Aasnaes Wins 6-3, 6-1

age medals w ith Steve Sih's Bent Aasnaes '63 played hisage muedals with Steve sual good game and took numn-

285 and Dick Ludeman's 284. be rwt ,in-, hn.dilv A . c(lktpl- VllC: skuil Ilkullly U-a;1.

Nick Charney 62 at rmnbertwo lst his first set by a close5-7, but camne back in a mara-thon like game to win the nexttwo sets 6-2; 7-5.

At number tree CharlesHeinvich '62 defeated Brades'Jerry Hantnmn 6-4; 6-3. JerryAdams '63, with his usual de-liberation and steadiness, wonover Charles Teller by the samescore. Terry Chatwin '63 gaveRino Schiavo-Camnpo t fiTstset 6-3, amd came back to winthe next two 6-3; 6-2. MartyOrmond '64 finished Alan LGt-terman in straight sets 6-4; 64.Jack Moter '64,. Giovanni Fran-zi '64, Bob Blueberg '64, andSteve Handel '63, playing unof-ficial singles, all beat theirBrandeis opponents.

MIT Sweeps DoublesThe doubles team played

equally as well. Aasnaes and

that was a single in the fourthframne off the- bat of DaweSikes, '63. Henry Nau, '63, wentthe route on the emound frTech.

Next game for MT's dia-mond ninre will be a ho .con-test against Bowdoin on lTh.s-day. Saturday the team travelsto Lewisbon, Maine to meet theBates rime.

agaist Yale ad hs alma ma.ter, Dartmouth, am the Connec..ticut River at Hanover. T1eheavies looking for moreshirts, travel to New York totake on Columbia and Brown

MIT CREW RESULTSVarsity Raoe: MIT 10:41.5, BU

10:49.2.IV Rae: MrT 11:13, BU 11:51.Freshmna Race: MKIT it Vard

11:10.4, MIT Freshmen 112Q, BU11:34.

M;,T Varslty HeaviesOox-George Dottso

8--Tony Fiery7--het Riley6---Dicic Milln.an5-Mike Lwtoua4-W-ill Tayl&r3--Bob Kurtz2---artin Poe1-Ken Anderson

MIT Fresman HeaviesOoCx-PAic Art

8--Baoh Kurd7-Jimn Lawen6-Bruce Seaton5-George McQuilken4-Jixn Faender3--Brxoe IAndorf

- 2-Richard Ionard1-Tony Slusa=z

MIT Jnilor Varsity Heeib*sOox-Bud Boring

8-John Wasei-eta7-Ron Chleek6--Bo< aSadel5-Tony IDoepkea4--Bo Brady3-B<o W1d

' 2-ay Maau1-Bil JuuMtz

KI Third Varsity HeaviesCox-Bill Moluar

8-LOW T&f -7-Tom Taylor6-Gaty DeIacher5--Joseph Codwellt4-Peter Staekee3-Sam TPaub2-John larsea1--Bill Pm4o

Lacrosse Team Tops UnionFor First Victory Of Season

ther team was able to soe,but' early in -the fourth, Brownbroke the. ice with an assistfron Robinon. Midway in thisframe Lamberti was sisted byMike Monsler '64, and scoredthe final goal for the Engnee

With 90 seconds remaiing,Coach Ben Martin cleared hisbench, and the stickmen of Un-ion College were able to scoretheir first and only goal of theday.

Engineers Fall to CrimLast Wd ay, the Tech-

men met Harvard at the 0-poments' field. Bill Dredss '64scored the first goal of thegame with an assist £rom DickLipes '64. Harvard tied thescore and then -tallied oncemore ,to lead 2-1 at the end ofthe first period.

Score Evened at 2-2In the second quarter MIT

evened it up with Don Yansen'63 scoring on an assist fromRobinson. However at thispoint, the Crimson broke looseto score four goals in quicksuccession and a fifth before.the period's close. Halftinmescore was Harvard 7, MIT 2.

In the third period H-rvardscored four more goals. Theonly MIr tally was an unassist-ed goal by Wayne Matson. Thefourth period saw Harvard tal-ly four more goals for a fialscore of 15-3.

The Vanity meets HolyCmss today and UNH Satur-day.

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Weekend action in intramuralloftball concluded with a numberC teams emerging as strong con-

renders for league titles. Despite_1d, windy weather, seventeenganes were played.

Theta Delta Chi, NRSA TieIn League I, Theta Delta Chi

nd NRSA fell into a tie for firstplace with victories over Zeta Be-ta Tau (14-12) and Phi Mu Delta(1-4) respectively. Burton HouseA' pulled into first place in

League HII by trouncing Tau Epsi-Phi, 11-3.

E. C. Leads League IIIDormitories continued theiriomination in Leagues III and IV.

East Campus with a 7-5 win overLmabda Chi Alpha moved into

the number one positionin LeagueIII; while Graduate Housesmashed Theta Chi, 15-0.

iMd SOFBAIJ, RE"ULTSLeagute I

PKT S .................... . Fijis 6Theta Delta Ci 14 ZBT 12NRSA 11 ......- P.... Ph Miu Delta 4

League UButrbon 'A' 11 T. - EP 3Paw. Cafe 8 Senior 'B' 6

League IIIEast Camptus 7 -X.k 5Burton 'B' 13 Bker 'A' 3

league IVGrad Hous-e 15 - Theta Chi 0Kappa Sigma 6 ............ DTD 4

League VSAM 14 ............... Pi Lam.-4.Atom 5 ............ Sig Phi Ep. Il

League VISenior 'A' 21 .......... stud. IK. 20Chkb Latino 18 ............ AEPi 17

(5 inning scare: to be continued)League VU

GHES 17 .......-..... A'PO 7GMi 25 . - .... Baker 'C 5

league VIIISAE IT ....................... CP Baker ' 1D .......... Theta Psi 6

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MIT's Lacrosse Team splittwo games last week, defeatingUmiom College 7-1, and fallingto the Crson of Harvard 15-3. This brings the Engineersseason record to 1-4

Matson Soores FirstThe Union fray was marked

by aggressivre playing ardstrong offensive moves. WayneMatson '64 drew first blood forTech by scoring unassisted ear-ly in the first period. In thesecord period Greg Brown '62,taking a feed from Matson,scored the second goal of thegame. Three more marks weretalied in this period by theTechmen. Phil Robinson '62 as-sisted by John Lamberti '63,scored- from crease attack.Then a rminute and a half la-ter, Brown took a feed fromRobion to tally another goal.The scoring closed for the halfwith Matson taking a faceoffanxd soorig unassisted.

Brown Breaks IceThrough the third period mei-

fictorious, 9-0Heinrich, at number one easilybeat Berlin and Oahen 6-1; 6-0.Chaney anrd Blumberg wonnumber two in straight sets6-4; 6-. Ohatwin and Franziquickly finished number three6-1;6-0. Adams ard Orondplayirng an unofficil fourthdoubles also beat their Bran-deis oppanents 6-1; 6-0.

The team's next match willbe with Colby College on Thurs-day, April 19. The match wistart at 2:00 .pn. on the courtsin back of Baker House.

How They DidBaeball

Northeastern 8; NT 2Boston College 3; MTrr 2

WP.I. 1; MIT 0MIT 7; W.PI. 2

Crew-Varsity Rac:

MIT 10:41.5, BU 10:49.2JV Race: MIT 11:13, BU 11:51

Frehma Race:MIT 3rd V. 11:10.4,

MIT Frosh 11:21; BU 11:34Lacrosse, -

MIT 7; Union 1Harvard 15; MIT 3

TenniHarVard 9; MIT 0MIT 9; Brandeis 0

TrackWiamm 752; MT 59/2

Cold Weather Fails To Slow DownWeekend Action In IM Softball

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