vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 - the techtech.mit.edu/v87/pdf/v87-n3.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · fa cu!...

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Fa cu! olty Sp H. L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer, conducfs neural studies I ln ercollegiate newspaper, publishes premier issue I ,j I 11 "I11 !l 11 l x I i 14 I I i I I I 11 i I I I I I i I I I i i ,I I 1,I I i i I i i 6 II I i Elecfions also 'held toBack Bay Efforts. toward a coordinated plan for the redevelopment of the Back Bay received a boost last Thursday when $2,500 was raised by MIT fraternities was pre- sented to the Back Bay Planning and Development Corporation. A check for this amount Was presented following a dinner meet- mg of the IFC by Chairman Kevin Kinsella '67. It was accepted.on behalf of the Back Bay Corpora- tion by James G. Roberts, pres- FM ident, and Daniel J. Ahern, exc- : utive director. The fund raising was initiated by the members of the DFC "in ~ connection with our efforts to as- > sume an active and responsible i role as members and residents of the Back Bay: community,' ac- c owrding to jnsl'a. A Funds for non-profit group T The Back Bay Planning and De- I velopment Corporation is a non- ,t:} profit organization formed by civ- 3 ic groups in the area to develop : coordinated plas for the Back Bay area.-'The program is fi- nanced through private subscrip- dtion to this Corporation, which is acting in cooperation with the- ,qBack Bay Redvelopment Author- e ity. gStatstics for 1'%965466 t : reeased n ast report I of ex-Pres. Stratton I I F, I k; I I By Jim Smith A Vietnam teach-in, sponsored by the 1VIT Committee to End the War in Vietnam, was held Thurs- day evening in 54-100. An over- flow crowd of about 350 attended and heard Prof. Noam Chomsky of the Department of linguistics, Prof. Howard Zinn of Boston Uni- versity, May Alice Waters of the Young Socialist Alliance, Prof. Louis kwapf of the Department of Humanities, and Pat Griffith, a recent visitor to North Vietrnam. War's fundamental issue Prof. Chomsky, the opening speaker 'began by naming the fundamental issue of the war - a conflict between a local and an international solution to the situa- tion. He emphasized that th e US alone insisted on the latter alter- native, which implies unilateral exertion of 'full power until sur- · render. By any other power, our actions would be called genocide, he stated. The National Liberation Front of Viet Cong was initially a pop- ular group; two years ago, when the greates escalation began, only 400 Northern troops were in the sout. Now, there are 40,000. "We have destroyed," said Prof. Chomsky, "one of the more hope- ful popular revolutions in the under-developed world." He referred to omr "tncredible sequence of lies that is unprece- dented in American history"' and which is now "so familiar that it is no longer shocking." He insisted that there is no place for absolutist philosophies in this age of mass destruction. "It is fortunate," he said, "that this lunacy was restricted to only one side of the Atlantic in 1962," referring to Khrushchev's with- drawal fromr ©ba. Prof. Zinti, author of a book on the war, spoke next on the "logic of withdrawal." "One measure of the badness of the war and our conduct," began the pnrofeSr, "is its mvo,;ng nf (Please turn to Page 7) a1 I ?I L- t F S I I -By Dave Kaye Course descriptions are ofter ' misleading, and the course label - led "Introductory Psychology' might better be named "An In- troduction to Hans-Lucas Teu- ber," for the semi-weekly lec- tues given by the chairman of A MIT's Department of Psychology are as much an expression of his own personality, interests and attitudes as they are a "survey of selected facts, principles, and theories in psychology." r'a i research For more than twenty years Dr. Teuber has been investigat- ing cases of bran injury as a mears of. detem_.hmng *:e neur! bases of normal behavior. Con- cerned with such questions as how we perceile a vertical line [ as vertical, the ultimate aim of his research is "the ~rentual coalescence of neurology and psy- chology." Toward that end he is engaged in follow-up sthdies of about 700 cases of brain injuries ulU is p-lseniy pa-ticy in- terested in examini the effects of injuries' incurred early in life as opposed to those acquired in adult years. For his work, Dr. Teuber was chosen last year to receive the Karl- Spencer Lashley A w a r d for Research in Neurobiology. . Asan :undergraduate, Dr. Teu- ber studied in Berlin and Switzer- land, and received his Ph.D. in psychology from Harvard Univer- sity. Before comicg to MIT i_ !960, he served as head of the Psycho-physiological Laboratory Dr. Hans-Lucas Teuber US Army Surgeon General, the US Air Force, United Cerebral Palsy, the Veterans Administra- tion, and NASA; and is currently consulting editor of the Journal' of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, Co-editor of Experi- mental Brain Research, and edi- tor of Neuro-pchologia (Inter- national Journal of Neuropsy- chol1gy). Professor and dertnt -head Yet to Speak of- Havm-L,,_c Teuber W.... .. V-.-IUU- wi'-- his research would do him an in- justice, for Dr. Teuber is inextri- cably involved in the psychology department - both as professor and department head. In the Europenm tradition, he regards teaching the introductory psychol- ogy course (9.00) as a personal responsibility and is also quite active in the presentation of the graduate-Pro-sem in Psychol- ogy (9.001 and 9.002).. Furthermore, a realization of Profer Teuber's role in the de- partnent is critical to an under- standing of his activ/ties. Upo n becoming affiliated with M1T six years ago, Dr. Teuber served as head of the psychology section of the Department of Economies and Social Science.- When that group achieved its own depart- mental status in 194, Professor Teuber became chairman of the Psychology Department. In eval- uating what Professor Teuber calls the "explosive growth" of the department, it appears that such progress has been guided, nurtured, and directed by Dr. Teuber himself. For example, (Please turn to Page 5) Ordrs for class rinh s to be taken for Sphs In Wuiding 1 0 isweetk Representatives from Dieges & Clust will be at the Institute be- ginning this Wednesday through Friday to take orders for class rings. Members of the class of 1969 may place their orders be- tween 9:30 am and 4:30 pin on these days in Building 10. Those of upperclassmen and graduate students will be accepted on Fri- day only. A five dollar deposit will be required. Any further questions will be answered by Stan Goldin, Baker House, d18407. Statistics for the year 1965-966 were released in ex-President Julius A. Strattons report to the Corporation for the year ending last June 30. The report was re- cently made available to all those connected with M1IT. Regiwstration inrae The student enrollment in 1965- 1966 was 7,408, an increase of 257 I was made up of 3,755 undergradu- ates and 3,653 graduate students. Degrees awarded by the Institute in 1965-1966 included 829 Bache- lor's degrees, 845 Master's de- grees, 126 Engineer degrees, and 360 doctoral dgrees, a total of 2,160. Graduate students who entered MIT last year held degrees from 304 colleges and universities, 175 American and ,19 foreign. The foreign student population was 951, or about 13 per cent of the total enrollment, and represented 72 different countries. More student aid offered This past year, 1,969 undergrad- uates, more, than half of those enrolled, received $1,730,722 in scholarship aid and $!,o29,339 in loans - an icrease in the total of 14 per cent over the year be- fore. T h e scholarshi. assistance granted included $843,405 from MrT's endowment fund. The fund was increased by $1,9'8,500 dur- ing the year. Total endowment now stands at $14,465,176, a 15.8 per cent increase over 1964-1965. Aid to grad s ts To graduate -students the Insti- tute awarded $2,285,525 in fellow. ships, trainerships and scholar- ships; $676,442 in staff tuition grants; $5,573,422 in staff salaries, and a.,g ;, l Gifts,,. grants and bequests to MIT from private donors totaled $40,740,000 during fiscal 1965-1966, as compared to $23,451,000 the pre- vious year. Major, factors- con- tributing to the high gift income, figure were the distribution from the estate of Alfred P. Sloan, Jr. '95, and the payment in full of c the large Ford Foundation granti to strengthen and expand the In- stitute's activities in internationalE fields. These benefactions togeth- er accomuted for slightly more t than half of the total gift income for the year. Vol. 87, No. 3 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, Feb. 14, 1967' The Collegiate Cauldron, organ of the Boston Intercollegiate Coun- cil formed last November, pub. lished its first issue Thursday. Its avowed purpose is to provide a unfied medium for communica- tion and the dispersal of inorima- tion among the 150,000 college stu- dents in the Boston area. It also proposes to serve as a zoia'uldhg board for student views and is- s-e2. It purports to be a non-politial, non-partisan publication, 'capable of presenting a more comprehen- sive picture of student life than campus newspapers, yet a less detached view than professional metropolitan journals. Its articles will deal wit "all facets of stu- det, acti.9y ........ MI ersnatv'sSee of New York University - Bellevue TheMIT representative[s Steven Medical Center. In addition, he Cahart "/0. has served as a consultant to the feasble to design a safe and prac- tical plan to limit and control the arms race." Although Dr. Wiesrer believes that there is still time to do some- diing about a trend that has in the past always resulted in war, he feels that there are certain psychological b arrding in the way. Six of them are as fol- lows: 0 "Most people, both in and out of government, look on dis- armament as a Utopian dream. If everyone believes the arms race is impossible to control, that very fear will make it impossible. No pressure for pace 0 "There is no effective con- stituency for peace im our own Congress or the' councils of other governments. Mlfitary interests, veterans' organizations, and wea- pons producers all have their large constituencies and powerful lobbies. cate disarmament demand that it be total disarmament, all at once. But the only way we will get uni- versal disarmament in one giant step is as a result of World War III. The survivors of a nuclear war will no doubt make it their first order of busines* to ensure that it doesn't happen. again. I'd rather not wait. $ "We participate in disarma- ment conferences, but we don't try sufficiently to understand ,the attitude of other people, such as the Russians, in these complicat- ed problems." Planning for 'Dr. Stangelove' 0 "In our strategy discussions. arms control measures are eval- uated hi terms of the most dan-- gerous possibility, no matter how unlikely it might be, with no con- sideration given to what will hap- pen if we fail to halt the arms race. The urge to protect our- selves against a madman or an adventurer-the psychotic general in Dr. Strangelove-has seemed to dominate the planning of our defense strategy. "Lastly, what started in Europe after World War I as a political confrontation between West and East has become a ma- (Please turn to page 6) Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner (This article is the first of three in a series about the thoughts of Dr. Jerome B. W~ies- ner, Provost, on the subject of disarmament. ) ]9~ John Foran An effective system of world disamament is possible, accord- ing to Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner. Dr. Wiesner, who has beer sci- ence adviser to Presidents- E-is-. hower, Kennedy, and, Johnson, wrote recently in an article for the Associated Press that he is "convinced that it is completely Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 Ates $2500 C orporofio - In the past, nearly 200 fratern- ity men from MIT organized and carried out a cleanup campaign in the Back Bay area. MIT stu- dents have also taken an active interest in the NeighbOrhood As- sociation of the Back Bay. - Elections held After the presentation of the check, elections of officers for the IF C for the coming year were held. Tom Neal '68 (PDT) was elected Chairman; Bob McCrory '6g (KS), Viee-chairman; Dave Matheson '69 (SN), Treasurer; and Steve Reimers '68 (SAE) Pur- chasing Manager.. S: ~g wX/ t Wiesner ViIS sarmaet plans

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Page 1: Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N3.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Fa cu! Spolty H.L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer, conducfs neural studies I ln ercollegiate newspaper,

Fa cu! olty SpH. L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer,conducfs neural studies I

ln ercollegiate newspaper,publishes premier issue

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Elecfions also 'held

toBack BayEfforts. toward a coordinated

plan for the redevelopment of theBack Bay received a boost lastThursday when $2,500 was raisedby MIT fraternities was pre-sented to the Back Bay Planningand Development Corporation.

A check for this amount Waspresented following a dinner meet-mg of the IFC by Chairman KevinKinsella '67. It was accepted.onbehalf of the Back Bay Corpora-tion by James G. Roberts, pres-

FM ident, and Daniel J. Ahern, exc-: utive director.

The fund raising was initiatedby the members of the DFC "in

~ connection with our efforts to as-> sume an active and responsiblei role as members and residents of

the Back Bay: community,' ac-c owrding to jnsl'a.

A Funds for non-profit groupT The Back Bay Planning and De-

I velopment Corporation is a non-,t:} profit organization formed by civ-3 ic groups in the area to develop :

coordinated plas for the BackBay area.-'The program is fi-nanced through private subscrip-

dtion to this Corporation, which isacting in cooperation with the-

,qBack Bay Redvelopment Author-e ity.

gStatstics for 1'%965466 t

: reeased n ast report Iof ex-Pres. Stratton

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By Jim SmithA Vietnam teach-in, sponsored

by the 1VIT Committee to End theWar in Vietnam, was held Thurs-day evening in 54-100. An over-flow crowd of about 350 attendedand heard Prof. Noam Chomskyof the Department of linguistics,Prof. Howard Zinn of Boston Uni-versity, May Alice Waters of theYoung Socialist Alliance, Prof.Louis kwapf of the Departmentof Humanities, and Pat Griffith, arecent visitor to North Vietrnam.

War's fundamental issueProf. Chomsky, the opening

speaker 'began by naming thefundamental issue of the war -a conflict between a local and aninternational solution to the situa-tion. He emphasized that th e US

alone insisted on the latter alter-native, which implies unilateralexertion of 'full power until sur-

· render. By any other power, ouractions would be called genocide,he stated.

The National Liberation Frontof Viet Cong was initially a pop-ular group; two years ago, whenthe greates escalation began,only 400 Northern troops were inthe sout. Now, there are 40,000."We have destroyed," said Prof.Chomsky, "one of the more hope-ful popular revolutions in theunder-developed world."

He referred to omr "tncrediblesequence of lies that is unprece-

dented in American history"' andwhich is now "so familiar thatit is no longer shocking."

He insisted that there is noplace for absolutist philosophiesin this age of mass destruction."It is fortunate," he said, "thatthis lunacy was restricted to onlyone side of the Atlantic in 1962,"referring to Khrushchev's with-drawal fromr ©ba.

Prof. Zinti, author of a book onthe war, spoke next on the "logicof withdrawal."

"One measure of the badness ofthe war and our conduct," beganthe pnrofeSr, "is its mvo,;ng nf

(Please turn to Page 7)

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-By Dave KayeCourse descriptions are ofter

' misleading, and the course label- led "Introductory Psychology'

might better be named "An In-troduction to Hans-Lucas Teu-ber," for the semi-weekly lec-tues given by the chairman of

A MIT's Department of Psychologyare as much an expression of hisown personality, interests andattitudes as they are a "surveyof selected facts, principles, andtheories in psychology."

r'a i researchFor more than twenty years

Dr. Teuber has been investigat-ing cases of bran injury as a

mears of. detem_.hmng *:e neur!bases of normal behavior. Con-cerned with such questions ashow we perceile a vertical line

[ as vertical, the ultimate aim ofhis research is "the ~rentualcoalescence of neurology and psy-chology." Toward that end he isengaged in follow-up sthdies ofabout 700 cases of brain injuriesulU is p-lseniy pa-ticy in-

terested in examini the effectsof injuries' incurred early in lifeas opposed to those acquired inadult years.

For his work, Dr. Teuber waschosen last year to receive theKarl- Spencer Lashley A w a r dfor Research in Neurobiology.. Asan :undergraduate, Dr. Teu-ber studied in Berlin and Switzer-land, and received his Ph.D. inpsychology from Harvard Univer-sity. Before comicg to MIT i_!960, he served as head of thePsycho-physiological Laboratory

Dr. Hans-Lucas Teuber

US Army Surgeon General, theUS Air Force, United CerebralPalsy, the Veterans Administra-tion, and NASA; and is currentlyconsulting editor of the Journal'of Comparative and PhysiologicalPsychology, Co-editor of Experi-mental Brain Research, and edi-tor of Neuro-pchologia (Inter-national Journal of Neuropsy-chol1gy).Professor and dertnt -head

Yet to Speak of- Havm-L,,_cTeuber W.... .. V-.-IUU- wi'--his research would do him an in-justice, for Dr. Teuber is inextri-cably involved in the psychologydepartment - both as professorand department head. In theEuropenm tradition, he regardsteaching the introductory psychol-ogy course (9.00) as a personalresponsibility and is also quiteactive in the presentation of thegraduate-Pro-sem in Psychol-ogy (9.001 and 9.002)..

Furthermore, a realization ofProfer Teuber's role in the de-partnent is critical to an under-standing of his activ/ties. Uponbecoming affiliated with M1T sixyears ago, Dr. Teuber served ashead of the psychology sectionof the Department of Economiesand Social Science.- When thatgroup achieved its own depart-mental status in 194, ProfessorTeuber became chairman of thePsychology Department. In eval-uating what Professor Teubercalls the "explosive growth" ofthe department, it appears thatsuch progress has been guided,nurtured, and directed by Dr.Teuber himself. For example,

(Please turn to Page 5)

Ordrs for class rinh sto be taken for SphsIn Wuiding 1 0 is weetk

Representatives from Dieges &Clust will be at the Institute be-ginning this Wednesday throughFriday to take orders for classrings. Members of the class of1969 may place their orders be-tween 9:30 am and 4:30 pin onthese days in Building 10. Thoseof upperclassmen and graduatestudents will be accepted on Fri-day only. A five dollar depositwill be required.

Any further questions will beanswered by Stan Goldin, BakerHouse, d18407.

Statistics for the year 1965-966were released in ex-PresidentJulius A. Strattons report to theCorporation for the year endinglast June 30. The report was re-cently made available to all thoseconnected with M1IT.

Regiwstration inrae

The student enrollment in 1965-1966 was 7,408, an increase of 257

I was made up of 3,755 undergradu-ates and 3,653 graduate students.Degrees awarded by the Institutein 1965-1966 included 829 Bache-lor's degrees, 845 Master's de-grees, 126 Engineer degrees, and360 doctoral dgrees, a total of2,160.

Graduate students who enteredMIT last year held degrees from304 colleges and universities, 175American and ,19 foreign. Theforeign student population was951, or about 13 per cent of thetotal enrollment, and represented72 different countries.

More student aid offeredThis past year, 1,969 undergrad-

uates, more, than half of thoseenrolled, received $1,730,722 inscholarship aid and $!,o29,339 inloans - an icrease in the totalof 14 per cent over the year be-fore.

T h e scholarshi. assistancegranted included $843,405 fromMrT's endowment fund. The fundwas increased by $1,9'8,500 dur-ing the year. Total endowmentnow stands at $14,465,176, a 15.8per cent increase over 1964-1965.

Aid to grad s tsTo graduate -students the Insti-

tute awarded $2,285,525 in fellow.ships, trainerships and scholar-ships; $676,442 in staff tuitiongrants; $5,573,422 in staff salaries,and a.,g ;, l

Gifts,,. grants and bequests toMIT from private donors totaled$40,740,000 during fiscal 1965-1966,as compared to $23,451,000 the pre-vious year. Major, factors- con-tributing to the high gift income,figure were the distribution fromthe estate of Alfred P. Sloan, Jr.'95, and the payment in full of cthe large Ford Foundation grantito strengthen and expand the In-stitute's activities in internationalEfields. These benefactions togeth- er accomuted for slightly more t

than half of the total gift incomefor the year.

Vol. 87, No. 3 Cambridge, Mass., Tuesday, Feb. 14, 1967'

The Collegiate Cauldron, organof the Boston Intercollegiate Coun-cil formed last November, pub.lished its first issue Thursday. Itsavowed purpose is to provide aunfied medium for communica-tion and the dispersal of inorima-tion among the 150,000 college stu-dents in the Boston area. It alsoproposes to serve as a zoia'uldhgboard for student views and is-s-e2.

It purports to be a non-politial,non-partisan publication, 'capableof presenting a more comprehen-sive picture of student life thancampus newspapers, yet a lessdetached view than professional

metropolitan journals. Its articleswill deal wit "all facets of stu-det, acti.9y........ MI ersnatv'sSee of New York University - BellevueTheMIT representative[s Steven Medical Center. In addition, he

Cahart "/0. has served as a consultant to the

feasble to design a safe and prac-tical plan to limit and controlthe arms race."

Although Dr. Wiesrer believesthat there is still time to do some-diing about a trend that has in

the past always resulted in war,he feels that there are certainpsychological b arrding inthe way. Six of them are as fol-lows:

0 "Most people, both in andout of government, look on dis-armament as a Utopian dream. Ifeveryone believes the arms raceis impossible to control, that veryfear will make it impossible.

No pressure for pace0 "There is no effective con-

stituency for peace im our ownCongress or the' councils of othergovernments. Mlfitary interests,veterans' organizations, and wea-pons producers all have theirlarge constituencies and powerfullobbies.

cate disarmament demand that itbe total disarmament, all at once.But the only way we will get uni-versal disarmament in one giant

step is as a result of World WarIII. The survivors of a nuclearwar will no doubt make it theirfirst order of busines* to ensurethat it doesn't happen. again. I'drather not wait.

$ "We participate in disarma-ment conferences, but we don'ttry sufficiently to understand ,theattitude of other people, such asthe Russians, in these complicat-ed problems."

Planning for 'Dr. Stangelove'0 "In our strategy discussions.

arms control measures are eval-uated hi terms of the most dan--gerous possibility, no matter howunlikely it might be, with no con-sideration given to what will hap-pen if we fail to halt the armsrace. The urge to protect our-selves against a madman or anadventurer-the psychotic generalin Dr. Strangelove-has seemedto dominate the planning of ourdefense strategy.

"Lastly, what started inEurope after World War I as apolitical confrontation betweenWest and East has become a ma-

(Please turn to page 6)

Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner

(This article is the first ofthree in a series about thethoughts of Dr. Jerome B. W~ies-ner, Provost, on the subject ofdisarmament. )

]9~ John ForanAn effective system of world

disamament is possible, accord-ing to Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner.Dr. Wiesner, who has beer sci-ence adviser to Presidents- E-is-.hower, Kennedy, and, Johnson,wrote recently in an article forthe Associated Press that he is"convinced that it is completely

Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50Ates $2500C orporofio - In the past, nearly 200 fratern-ity men from MIT organized andcarried out a cleanup campaignin the Back Bay area. MIT stu-dents have also taken an activeinterest in the NeighbOrhood As-sociation of the Back Bay.

- Elections heldAfter the presentation of the

check, elections of officers for theIF C for the coming year wereheld. Tom Neal '68 (PDT) waselected Chairman; Bob McCrory'6g (KS), Viee-chairman; DaveMatheson '69 (SN), Treasurer;and Steve Reimers '68 (SAE) Pur-chasing Manager..

S: ~g wX/ t

Wiesner ViIS sarmaet plans

Page 2: Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N3.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Fa cu! Spolty H.L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer, conducfs neural studies I ln ercollegiate newspaper,

tTE TECH COOPiN" Tr HE M.].T., STUDENT CENNER KI.X PRESS

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Dr. Julius Stratton ' an excerpt from -his new book "Science and the Educated Man."

Julius A. Stratton, Chairman of the Board-of Trustees of the FordFoundation and former President of M.I.T., has just had his newbook published by the M.I.T. Press."Science and the Educated Man," a collection of addresses deliveredby Dr. Stratton to administrators, educators, scientists and students,contains many valuable ideas for improving-the relationship betweenscientists and others. "We must allow- no gulf to grow betweenscientists and the great body of educated people," he Warns."Science and the Educated Man" is important and thoroughlyWorth-while reading for anyone interested in the relationship betweenscience and the liberal arts. Pick up a copy soon at the Coop.

Regular Hours: 8:50-5:30, Monday - Saturday.Free P'rkingc, D . us i ar.. .e to the Stude t C,-,,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..-,m

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Page 3: Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N3.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Fa cu! Spolty H.L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer, conducfs neural studies I ln ercollegiate newspaper,

To promote the sales of itsM ixed-Nuts issue, the VooDiostaff conducted its monthly stuntFriday in the Lobby of Building10. Staff members Harold Fed-erow '70, Walt Kuleck '67, andWesley "Weasel" Moore '67 gavea demonstration of thle uses of a5.01 non-retumable kit.

They showed that the over-abundance of paper in the kitscan be transformed into a screendoor or used to cut commonsrolls.

The Vp CLast bottl cai be fasten-ed to some rubber tubing and,with the addition of an illegal hotplate and some ice, wil Imake avery adequate still. The sameplastic bottle can be attached tosome glass tubing by a rubberhose to make a handy projectilelauncher.

To culminate this spectacularshow of exhibits, the staffers pre-sented a lamp, which had beenbuilt from a liter bottle with alittle Tech engineering, and a

The deft hands of Walt Kuleckre-assemble a still constructedfrom a 5.01 non-returnable kit.lampshade made from more paperfrom the 5.01 kit.

It was announced following thedemonstration, the staffers an-nounced that the Voodoo InverseCoin Contest is being postpmned.

Weiss honoredfor ab equipment

Professor Ranier Weiss, of theMIT Center for Teaching andLearning, received an honorablemention for his demonstrationequipment displayed at the Amer-ican Association of Physics Teach-ers Apparatus Competition.

The competition, the fifth in abiennial series, was used to intro-duce new apparatus for under-graduate college physics labora-tories and lecture demonstrations.In 1a, thirty-three colleges, uA-dversities, and research laborator-ies were represented.

The apparatus was exhibited andjudged at the joifnt annual meet-ing of the American Physical So-ciety and the AAPT in New York.

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CAREERSIN STEEL

Our representativewill be on campus

FEB. 27, '28

to interview undergraduateand graduate candidates for

Bethlehem's '67 Loop Course-our highly regardedmanagement training

program

OPPORTUNITIES areavailable in steel plant oper-ations, sales, research, min-ing, accounting, and otheractivities.

DEGREES required aremechanical, metallurgical,electrical, chemical, indus-trial, civil, mining, andother engineering special-ties; also chlel..iskry. phy-sics, mathematics, businessadministration, accountingand Hliberal arts.

I If you would like to discussyour career interest with aBethlehem representative,see your placement officerto arrange for an interviewappointment.

An Equal OpportunityEmployer in the Plans for

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Page 4: Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N3.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Fa cu! Spolty H.L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer, conducfs neural studies I ln ercollegiate newspaper,

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o of goalsand purpoose'Inr his last Report of the President; report: it- alsc- considers such- proble

former President Julius Stratton decided as the role of research, quality of teach-to dwell at some length on a "reaffirma- ing, commimLment to the outerworld, andtion of goals and purpose-a restatement others. We --commend the President'sof an institutional philosophy to guide us report as interesting and informativein the world of today." His report gives readings.each of us, faculty and student, a chance What we have presented here is ato step back a bit and review that which

u may be obscured by the complexity of>: day to day operation.< All the many problems confrontingI the university, MIT, and society in gener-: al require that we "make radical adjust-

ments to technological change, whilemaintaining clarity of, function and pur-

: pose." We, here, quote liberally from theO report to emphasize one aspect of MIT's

purpose.

z3 President Stratton reasserts from hisinaugural address "that everything thatwe do, whether for the advancement ofknowledge or in the interest of publicservice, should be viewed in the largercontext of our teaching mission. I acceptas inevitable and in the nature of pro-gress the close coupling between the in-tellectual life of the institution and theconcerns of the extra-academic commun-ity. I recognize, moreover, the import-ance of each of our three traditional,roles-of teaching, of research, and ofservice. But in only one of these is theuniversity unique, without counterpart-and that is in the preparation of youngmen and women for professional careersand for their responsibilities as citizens.It seems to me essential that as we moveforward, our overriding concern shouldbe for the development of each individualstudent-be he undergraduate, graduate,or postdoctoral-and that all bur endeav-ors should reflect this emphasis uponteaching in the broadest, most compre-hensive sense ...

"I.am convinced that undergraduateeducation is destined at MIT to assumean increasingly broad and fundamentalcharacter and that students will come tous in growing numbers in the belief that,whatever their ultimate professionalgoals, this kind of education will servethem well in an age so powerfully influ-enced by the social and practical impli-.cations of science. Nonetheless, we shouldnever lose sight of the fact that thegreatest strength of our particular planof education is a sense of purpose. .. thenew freedom that we offer is no mandateto roam at random and without focus.Their search should be with an openmind but in a purposeful way, reaffirm-ing an interest, perhaps discovering anew one, making it their own, and grad-ually forming a commitment-develop-ing their own style and beginning to de-sign a way of life.

"I come finally to one further ideawhich is always foremost in my thinkingabout MIT. It is the idea of the whole-ness of education that what we have tooffer the student, undergraduate or grad-uate, is a total experience, an experiencethat goes beyond the formal curriculum,beyond a program of courses and a ser-ies of examinations. It is more than lec--tures and classrooms and laboratories,however excellent they may be. It is thesum of all the associations with faculty,all the friendships that are formedamong classmates. It is the maturingthat comes from participation in studentactivities, the new perspectives awakenby visiting lecturers, by theater, andmusic. It is the experience of living aspart of a community-a community thatsnares a common concern for things ofthe mind and the spirit."

. Such an explicit statement of purposeas we present here is only a part of the

retas;urance to the student that he hasnot lost his fundemental position in therole of MIT. We also have a checklistagainst' which we may measure howwell our own behavior come up to thestandards of the complete education Dr.Stratton ouLlinc-. We may reflect on thetotality of ouir years here. How much arewe gaining from faculty associations,froin activities, from the entire com-munity? And are we gaining as much asis possible from our experience here?These are questions well worth asking.

I1

80 years ago... . The use of electricity to

light homes and train cars wasdiscussed in the March 17, 1887issue of The Tech. It was notedthat lights in the train cars couldbe operated by storage batteriesat a cost of Seven cents apieceper day. This would be more thanthe present cost of oil lamps,but the added safety and lowermaintenance of the electric lampswould more than make up for the'difference in price. Reference wasmade to a fire in which burningoil was spilled over many unfort-unate train passengers.

Electricity in homesThe possibility of electrically

lighting homes was also discussedAt the time the article was writ-ten, small areas of Boston were

(Ed. note: The AA has passed a resolution admitting coeds to membership,with all the associated honors, duties, responsibilities." See page 15.)

already receiving electric light.ing. The biggest danger was ircarrying the current to and get.ting it into the homes. Recen.-improvements in insulation andlightning arresters were notedbut fires could still result jworkmen were careless in layingthe cable. Public sentiment wasagainst electricity due to thelarge number of fires that hadoccurred. It proposed the cablesbe run underground to eliminatethe danger of lightning.

Finally, the students of Elec.trical Science at MIT were toldthat they had more opportunitiesthan the original inventors andpioneers, and were urged tospearhead the conversion to elec.tricity. "Our aim, then, as stu.;dents of electrical science, shouldbe to make the most of our pres.ent opportunities; and who cantell what glory we may one daybring upon our hard task-master,the TECH?"60 years ago

As the new term began, it wassuggested that an extra five dol.lars be added to the basic tuition-to defray athletic expenses. Theathletic program . had previouslybeen financed by the Tech Show,but this was not primarily amoney-making venture and as a'source of income it was unreli.able.

Objections raisedThe extra fee was objected to0

on several grounds. First of all,the MIT tuition of $250 had, for along time. covered all expenses(excepting laboratory breakageand books, etc.) and the specialffee would break this tradition.sSecondly, it was felt that not everyone could afford the extra $5.00 for something that may not[even interest him. A third ob-jection was raised on the groundstthat the Institute did not - evenofficial - recognize athletics.

Despite these objections, aneditorial in the Tech urged theadoption of a plan which wouldprovide the advisory 'council acertain, regular income each year (this undoubtedly helped bringabout the Athletic Card).

B' --- " T m 0;I

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Vol. LXXXVII, No. 3 Feb.' 14, 1967BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Chairman ........................................ Guille Cox '68Editor .............................................. Mike Rodburg '68Managing Editors .............................. John Corwin.'68

Tom Thomas '69Business Manager .................. Dan Green '68News Editor .................................... Mark Bolotin -'68Features Editor ............................ Michael Warren '69Sports Editor ........................................ Tony Lima '69Enferfainmenf Editor ...................... Jack Donohue '69Photography Editor .............................. Bill Ingram '68Advertising Editor ............................ Nick Covaftta '68

Editorial Consultants .............. Gerry Banner '68Dave Kress '67

Mark McNamee '68Associate Sports Editor . ............... Stan Kask '70Intramural Sports Editor ............ Herb Finger '68Associate Photography Editor ...... Jeff Reynolds '69Acct's Receivable ...................... Pat Green '69-Copy Editor ........................ Brian Harvey '69Treasurer ......... ............ Mike Ginsberg '69Nat'l Adv. Mgr .. ..................... Jack Swaim '68Circulation Managers .................. Ken Bracy '70

Regan Fay '70

Second-class postage paid at Boston, Massachu-setts. The Tech is published every Tuesday and Fridayduring the college year, except during college vaca-tions, by The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT StudentCenter, 84 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Masse-:nuseiTs .! 13. e, _ti nes.. Area Cde 6.7, 87q-5855, and 864-6900 extension 2731. United StatesMail subscription rates: $4.25 {or one year, $8.00 fortwo years.

Photo on page I by Bill Ingram 'R8

L:- By Michael Warren

4. Although the Institute'use of computers to schedulunderclassmen saves incalculable time, there are bugs to fthsystem. For instance, heads csubjects do not know the nun'ber of people who signed ulfor their classes, as a numnber osophomores taking 16.00J catestify. There were originallysections of i 6.00J schedulesbut when the first class sessiowas held last Wednesday, therewas a deficiency of studentsWhether this was due fo thesnow storm, or the hour (8:31am) is not clear, but the peopilin charge decided to cut ouone of the sections. BetweenWednesday and Friday, however, more students materialized, and it was decided to reinstate the cancelled section

o t,

's All this manipulating was to thee chagrin of students who werei- sent scurrying between build-e ings I and 31 on Friday morn.)f ing.

5- 5. Happy Valenfine's Day toR.M. & E.L. To those who claim

f thatl Tech students have non heart, the 25x30 ft. heard3 stamped out in the snow in thes, middle of the Great Courn might have changed your minde if you had seen if last Wedness. day morning. Somebody muste have seen if, however, as by the0 afternoon there was another;

m-!.r hea- beside if.6. Dormitory residents who

complain about the food they" are served should rejoice thatf- they need not eat the food fhatj- isn't served. Recently, some- hungry students passing through1- the Burton lunch line asked

about the grapenut custard,which was on the menu, but wasnot being served. The dieticianresponded, "It was so bad, Icouldn't even serve it!"

7. New revolving doors havebeen put on our favorite windtunnel, the Green Building, a;

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Itfernational Week

StEd$ -lC o dnCes ilt f0

RACETS RESTRUNGOne-Day Service

Tennis & Squash Shop67A, Mt. Auburn St., Cembridge

(Opp. Lowell House)TR 6-5417

Teuber takes 'physical appreach'.... / -M ~'~

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Ai-~'~'~:?~,2~:''-% ' 2 _:o.' ®. '.~ ~"--"'~:~ "o! '.~. .... ".. r- ,:, · rowoexp Sapnma. hr X an process(Continued from Page 1) tremely useul in talking to a

last year's "e port on he Activi- disturbed person," Dr. Teuberdes of the Psychology Deptr- seeks the expanatlon of humanment" reflects his attitude to- behavior primarily on the basis

-ward the department's evolution: of the laws of the physical scl-"We remain cmmitted to being ences. For instance, he claimsselective in our choice of areas that "The real answer to thefor research, for graduate train- major forms of mental illness isinS, and for undergraduate in- physical," and a major topic instructon." He believes that event- his introductory lectures 5s theualy the department will offer possible molecular basis of men-an undergraduate degree in psy- tal illness.chology. Such a prospect is con- Dr. Teuber defines psychologytingent upon the provision of as "that science which attemptsundergraduate laboratory train- to explain, predict, and contro;Hig; at present, however, "we the behavior of organisms, pa?-stiil lack facitie s -u for tieu'ariy humans. "laboratory training on the under- In addition to the question ofgraduate level." explanation, he is concerned with

oriented to phys'cal sciences the problem of control. Con-zantit is difficult to classify Dr. of the possibility that "out under-

Teuber as a otype sy 0 Anchor.- standing of another persons be-Ogist. He most certainly is not havior may be abused," Dr. Teu-enarnoured of the orthodox Frreud- ber points out that the problem ofian outlook, believing that such psychological mampulaton - a'an analysis- "interprets (in a cir-cular fashion) but doesn't ex- though "not as directly immi-plain" human behavior. Although nent," is potentially more seri-such a technique "can be ex- ous than the Atomic bomb."

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in the Sala de Puerto Rico. TheTechnology Dames will then pre-sent International Night, an im-pressive array of exhibits andbooths representing over thirtyforeign countries. Many varietiesof delicious foreign food will beserved, and there will be ethnicdancing and other forms of enter-tainment performed in Lobdell.Also, some fascinating foreign tra-vel slides will be shown. Only 50cwill admit one to the entire groupof events, which will bring Inter-national Week to an enjoyableclose. Again, all MIT communitymembers are welcome to partakeof the exciting international at-mosphere, and to sample some ofthe customs and products of their

(Please turn to PaRge 8)

By aJoseph R. FikselThe International Students'

Council will sponsor its annualInternational Week, a gala se-quence of recreational and cul-tural events, from Friday throughTuesday, Feb. 21. Traditionally,the Week has been a great suc-cess, and this year's programpromises to attract an even larg-er attendance than in the past.All graduate and undergraduatestudernts are invited to join in the£esti. ities.

Concert to launch programInternational Week will begin

with a concert in 'Kresge Auditor-ium, presented by the ChineseStudents' Club. This enjoyable in-troduction to Oriental music willtake place from 8:30 to 10:30 pmon Friday evening and there willbe no admission charge.

On Saturday afternoon, from2:00 to 7:00 pm, the Indian Clubwill feature the famed series offilms which every cinematic con-noisseur must be exposed to-theclassic "Afu" trilogy. d will be

shown in Room 54-100, at a costof- 50c per person for each film,or $I per person for all three.Though the trilogy does have con-tinuity, each movie can be viewedrewardingly by itself.

"Fiesta" to be heldThe highlight of International

Week will occur on Saturday eve-ning from 8:00 to 12:00 p.m. inthe Baker Dining Hall, the ClubLatino will host one of its re-nowned "fiestas," a gay eveningof dancing and merry-making. Ad-mission to the International Fi-esta will be $5 per couple, anduckaets nlay be bg.l. in ad.-vance.

On Sunday, from 4 to 6 pm, theGraduate Students' Council willsponsor a reception in the SalaPuerto Rico, to which the For-eign Students' Office staff and allinternational students are invited.Refreshments will be served, andthe atmosphere will be informal.

The culmination of InternationalWeek will take place Tuesday,Feb. 21, beginning at 7:00 pm

WHY ARE THERE SO MANYYOUNG FACES

AT HEWLETT-PACKARDMANAGEMENT MEETINGS?Responsibility - real responsibility - comes quicklyat Hewlett-Packard. Where you find responsibility,you find achievement, advancement. It's that simple.

Hewlett-Packard, a world leader in industrial,scientific and medical instrumentation, is growingrapidly. Some of our managemnent-minded youngmen with particular interests specialize early in suchareas as marketing, finance, manufacturing and sys-tems design, where they move ahead quickly. Manychoose a broader look at how a multi-million dollarelectronics corporation functions, and gather man-agement experience in various key areas. Eitherway, advancement at HP comes rapidly becauseopportunity pervades an atmosphere of growth.

Key positions are available at our corporate head-quarters near San Franciscq, and at other HPdivisions in California, Colorado, Massachusetts,Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Come in and talkto the HP executives who'll be interviewing atMIT on February 21. it may turn out to be your firstHewlett-Packard management meeting.An equal opportunity emnployer.

HEWLLETT I I PACKARD

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OCass redidafes getbusy

TCA sees election useofsAiR screens, presses

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sive civil defense programa wouldheighten public tension and tid

most certainly lead to war; (3) ;iextended arms race would pointup the hopelessness of an accordand other nations would begin toarm as well (this has alreadyhappened); and (4) no acewould result from armament-aUthat could ultimately bring peacewould be annihilation.

Friday: What is stpping us?'

and shelters. But Dr. Wiesner be-

gan to question the effects of

these measures as a means ofpreventing war and as a psycho-logical blow against potentialenemies and allies.

Dr. Wiesner felt that he hadgained some insights into theproblem, which he utilized in ad-vising the three Presidents.Among them were the following:(1) no matter how much would bespent on defense, only partial pro-tection could result; (2) a mas-

(Conztinued from Page 1)

jor military problem, a matter ofcontrolling the arms race. Asthese political and military issuesoverlap, they prevent movementin either field. By reducing themilitary component of the con-frontation-which we could safelydo-we would immediately openup more areas for political ac-

: comodations."91*r YCries for proteftion

Dr. Wiesner has been faced withthe disarmament question since

W orld War II, when he was in-volved wvith the development ofdefense systems. In 1957 he wasappointed to the Gaither study,which was formed by PresidentEisenhower in answer to cries for

ram protection with bomb shelters.t68, The President was in effect ask-5nd ing: "Assuming that a nuclearby war was going to occur, what ac-

tions should the government taketo protect the people and illnsurethe survival of our society andits political institutions?"

A psychological blowWhat was called for, then, was

a system of defense installations

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· NEX TO CUSTOMER SERVICE IN BOK DEPARTMIENT

Q (uali ind Servic-eis Our Bywoid -- Pironage Refund· Ophthanmotogists prescriptions are filled promptly - accurately,o Exceffelnt eleetlon of-' frames for Men-women-Children.0 Office Hours: .onday Friday, 8:50 to 5:30 - Lunch 2-3 (Closed)

Saturday,. 8:50 to 1:00oilhone 491.4230, Ext. 50 or from MIT dial 8950

e THE TECH Coo I N U MLi T. SUDWs. CETR

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Photo by Bill ingr

Bob Condap, candidate for President of the Class of 19is shown silk screening with Rich Stern '70,' Peter Rode '68, eBob Schaeffer '69. TCA'S silk screens have been overloadedthe rush of student body elections.

performed there for an audienceof one thousand persons and re-ceived a plaque honoring it for"Excellent performance and con-tribution" to the Kiwanis Clubmusic festival, a spring musicfestival in Niagara Falls.

John Corley, director of the Con-cert Band, has been invited toNiagara Falls to present theawards on behalf of IlT in Mayof this year.

Highlighting this year's tour ofthe MIT Concert Band was thecreation of two scholarships in thename of MIT. The scholarships,funded . by proceeds from theBand's concert in Niagara Falls,Ontario, will help two outstandingelementary or high school musi-cians from the Niagara Falls areafinance further study in music.Sponsored in Niagara Falis bythe local Kiwanis Club, the Band

down across

3. You might be working on the guidance/control system for this manned spaceproject.

5. You can be associated with the Com-pany that is the leader in this scientific fie!!.

ANSWERS ON PAGE I I

1. This Midwestern, vacationland, gatewaycity is the headquarters for AC Electronics.

2. You could be contributing to the successof this ballistic missile.

4. You can play an important part in devel-oping the guidance, navigation and controlsystem for this manned space venhtre.

If you filled in the puzzle correctly, you've probably guessed we're in the business of guidingvehicles. If it floats, crawls, flies or orbits, chances are we're at work on a guidance, navigationor control system for, it.For instance, we're building the guidance/navigation system for Apollo and LM (Lunar Module);we're working on SABRE, the new Self-Aligning Boost and Reentry system for missiles; on the

Manned Orbiting laboratory (MOL); on the'Titan III-C Space Booster; and on avionics systemsfor supersonic and subsonic aircraft of the future.We're also working on the Ship's Self-Contained Navigation System (SSCNS) for the Navy; a

fire-control system for the new Main Battle Tank, a joint U.S.-Federal Republic of Germanyprogram; and advanced digital computer development for other military, space and commercialapplications.You might like to know that we take your career growth seriously here at AC, too. Our CareerAcceleration Program-includes "in-plant" instruction. There is also a Tuition Refund Plan

available for any college-level courses taken to advance your career.

If you're completing your B.S. or M.S. degree in E.E., M.E., Math or Physics, check into the excit-ing career opportunities at any of our three locations - Milwaukee, Boston, and Santa Barbara.See your college placement officer or write: Mr. R.W. Schroeder, Dir. of Scientific & ProfessionalEmployment, AC Electronics Division; Dept. 5753, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201.

Ph.D.s, please note: positions are available in all three AC locations, depending upon concen-tration of study and area of interest.

Campus interviews-AC ELECTRONICS

Friday; Feb. 24, i 967 ' O!VISION OF GENERAL MOTORS_,. Al e 5 N {EQUA.L OPPORTUNJ1TY EMPLOYER M. F

_K. . . _ I M~KI OF EXCI~LLEC[~

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Shelters hurt disarmamen[

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FiRE yourself in on the career opportunities

at AC E ectroncs.

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,Capiiaism condemned

C hoeeky GrffitLh tl at teac liCharles Lloyd, one of the driv-

ing young voices in jazz todayand recognized throughout Europefor his excellence on flute andtenor sax, is just receiving noticehere in America.. The curent- is-sues of Time (3 Feb. 1967) andIHarper's (Feb.) both feature arti-cles about him. Charles, beforeleading his current group, workedwith Cannonball Adderley and wasmusic director with Chico Hamil-'ton. Appearing with Charles isKeith Jarrett, a young pianist;

Jack DeJohnette, one of the brightnew drummers on today's jazzscene; and Ron McClure, bass,the newest member of the group.This will be their first east coastappearance in over six monthsand their only appearance in, 3s-ton in over a year.

Tickets are available at $2.50,$3.00, and $3.50, and may be ob-tained before the concert in thelobby of MIT Building 10, week-days from 10 am to 5 pm, or atthe door. For information and res-ervations call UN 4-6M90, ext. 2910during the day or 868-1831 eve-nings.

Carrect 0 The Board of Directors of the

Tech Engineering News was in-correctly listed in Friday's issueof the Tech.

The Editor-in-hef is Alan S.Ratner, '69. The Comptroller isBarry Eisenstat, '69, and the Pub-licity Co-ordinator is David Sil-verman, '69.

The Aerospace Group of General Precision, Inc., makessure that your first assignment drops you right intothe middle of one of our many space engineering proj-ects, such as precision guidance and navigation equip-ment for Apollo, C5A, OSS, LEM, Mariner, F-111,Titan IIl, and others too numerous to mention. We'vefound that it's the best way to keep your interest high.If you find you're over your head technically, there arelots of seasoned pros to help you out (they came upthe same way you will).

You'll learn the intricacies of the space business quick-ly. Working in several departments on several projectsas you progress through our rotational training programgives you a very good idea after a year what yourcareer goals really are.

(Continued from Page 1)the worst Communist epithets. . . Since the start of the ColdWar, we have come more andmore to live up to Communist ex-pectations of us."

'Protect' thEough destructionProf. Zinn's adjective for the

war was "crass." The Mexicanand the Spanish-American warsmay have'been somewhat crass,he said, but they were "nothingquite like this." For example, hesaid that the "Iron Triangle cam-paign is the logical conclusion ofour pacification program." Inother words, the situation is suchthat the only way to "protect"the'countryside is to destroy it.

"There has been no such vigor-ous analysis of a situation sinceMcKinley," said Prof. Zinn. "NMc-Kinley waited for the word of Godto enter the Philippines. Now weare waiting for the word of Godto get out. This can be particu-lar'y worrisome what with thepresent talk about God being

Photo by George FlynnProfessor Noam Chomsky (left) discusses the conflict be-

tween local and international solutions to the Vietnamese war.,Mrs. Pat Griffith, recently returned from North Vietnam, shows apiece of an anti-personnel bomb to audience .

dead."At this point Mary Alice Waters

of -the Young Socialist Alliancetalked on the-actions of Americain the context of world politics.Essentially her point appeared tobe that America, by way of hereconomic control of even the greatEuropean powers, has managed toconduct the war relatively un-molested. On the other hand, she

Right now we're looking ahead with visionary programsin precision guidance and navigation instrumentationwhich will someday result in hardware for optical lasergyros and accelerometers, stellar inertial guidance sys-tems, strap-down inertial guidance systems, solid-statesensors and complex information systems for space-craft, missiles and aircraft.

And there's lots of room to move around in. A multi-million dollar equipped Research Center was completedin 1962. An extensive Systems Engineering Facility wasput into operation in late 1963. All in all, our advancedequipment complexes in Suburban Northern New Jer-sey represent 1,;500,000 square feet of research, devel-opment and production facilities.

CAMPUS INTE RV EWV§ Mondays February 27Arrange an appointment with your Placement Director now.

KEARFOTT PRODUCTS DIVISIONKEARFOTT SYSTEMS DIVISIsON

INC.

AEROSPACE GROUPLlTTLtLE FALLS, NEW JERSEY

A Plan For Progress Company An Equ[ Opportunity Employer

insisted, only Australia has been"strong-armed" into mnilitary con-tribution to the war.

She equated anti-colonialism toanti-capitalism, and told of theprogress of the world socialistrevolution even to Cuba. The pol-icy in Vietnam, she said, wasnothing but cautious, pre-deter-mined escalation.

Government dishonestyProf. Kampf spoke next about

the dishonesty of the United Statesgovernment. He began his casualtalk with some mumblings about"bourgeois academic intellect-uals" and ended it with thethought that perhaps teach-insthemselves are a lie in the thoughtthat' they actually accomplishsomething.

He spokes of the accepted needfor "strategic lies" and' the sli-niess of Americans not to acceptthem. He noted that the adoptionof the name "credibility gap"probably signmled that nor.v wecan live with it. He assigned theterm "existential tragedy" to themistakes of the war. He talkedof the war as a campaign in the"quotient of pain," wherein hetried to make the enemy yell"uncle."

Vietnam visiterPat Griffith, a housewife who

spent 11 days in North Vietnam,along with three other housewives,was the final speaker.

Answering Prof. Kampf, she be-gan her speech by saying, "'I amone of those naive Americans whobelieves that the governmentshould tell the truth." It was forthis reason that she visited NorthVietnam, interviewed Ho ChiMinh, and met the people.

Her sole souvenier, and herstrongest document, was half ofan anti-personnel bomb which, sheclaimed, had been used againstthe civilians around Hanoi. Thisbomb was admitted by the Penta-gon to being used in the North.Consisting of 265 tennis-ball sizeballs of exploding "ball bearings"this type of bomb is supposedlyineffective against buildings or"military targets."

Four final statementsMrs. Griffith made four politi-

cal points about North Vietnam.Frst, that they value independ-ence, and fear dependence onMoscow or Peking as much asdependence on Washington. "Theyare, while Marxian, clearly anti-Communist." We, she insisted,are imposing their dependence onPeking and Moscow.

Second, she said that unificationis a recognized impossibility inthe short run. But north-southiade aid relations are highly de-sired, especially since many fam-ilies are split geographically"The place is so obviously onecountry," said Mrs. Griffith.

Third, she insisted that negotia-tion m-st involve the stopping ofthe bombing and the admissionthat north and south compose onecountry.

Fourth, she said, quite simply,"the bombing is not working atall." In fact, she concluded, itmerely solved their severe do-mestic problems by uniting thepeople: ·

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CAR-TOURS IN EUROPE, INC.555 Fitfh Ave., New York, N. Y.Factory authorized distributorsof European cars, is offeringnow to students:$1 PER oDAY CAR IN EUROPE

(Price includes unlimited mile-age, registration, insurance, fac-tory warranty. Based on 4-pass-enger occupancy, full summeruse).

and uniqueLow Cet Charter Shipping

of the car you purchased inEurope, at 1/3 to 1/2 off regularprices ($88 for a VW, maximum$99., all charges included).CALL your experienced studentrepresentative:

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(Continued from Page 5)foreign colleagues.

The International Students'Council hopes that everyone willenjoy International Week to 'thefullest. Council President VictorSilva will be glad to inform or

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Home Ad

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College:

assist you in any way he can;4914456. We trust that next weekwill be a fitting climax to a yearof industrious efforts toward coordinating and improving foreignstudent activity at MIT.he may be reached at x3742 or

The Tton is cuBrecht pCircle' .vdisappointhe Thir

.Brech, play centers -onBy Jeff Stokes probably rival or outdo 'The

heatre Company of Bos- Good Woman of Setzuan' of twoirrently presenting another years ago. "Chalk Circle,' like theflay, 'The Caucasian Chalk usual Brecht creation, deals withvhich, after the relatively the martyrdom of those -who de-nting 'Fear and Misery- of vote themselves to righteousness,*d Reich' last year, will m o t h e rhood, -humanitarianism,

etc., as well as reminding us ofthe cruelty of kings and the mis-ery of the poor. Set in history anda remote realm, the play chain-pions indirectly the socialist ethic,in effect providing a moral morerelevant to Brecht's day than tothe time of the action in the play.

Technical brillianceBut like 'Good Woman' and un-

like 'Third Reich,' the presentwork has a good narrative line,with dramatic unfoldaient- thatevokes our sympalthy and rage,without wallowing too much indidacticism. We will probablynever get away from the didacticelement in Brecht, which sits likelead among the gold and silverthreads of Brecht's fantasy, butwith a decent plot we can put upwith a certain amount of it. Theplaywright here has merged muchof the philosophising into the ac-tion and characters themselves,so that 'Chalk Circle' is more than

-a soap-box harangue.One must not overlook, however,

the key element in the success of

1. McDonnell is a "name" in aerospace. . a name earned by solidengineering achievement in the current decade. The engineering leader-ship exemplified by successes in Gemini Spacecraft and the PhantomFighters lifts your career and shoves it toward success.

2. Stability and security sometines seem unimportant to youngS Ad • !~~~~~~~engineers just starting a career. But they are essential and you wouldbe unwise to ignore them. McDonnell has never had a major decline

in engineering and professional employment. The Company has grownrapidly in -every one of its product areas. It presently has a backlog

1W 21 E [ ~; 3 lof more than a billion dollars in production contracts, and yet researchis one of the fastest growing activities in the Company.

E * g 3. St. Louis is America's "City on the Go". In civic progress, in-;~~~~~~ A, ^ g A X entertainment, in stores and homes, in industry, in spots and recrea-

tion, in education, in construction, in human involvement, St. Louisis the city with a "future" in the center of America.

k- a i~~h at 3, t. Lo4-. You can best "change the world" by living in a world of change.The climate of -St. Louis offers the mental and physical stimulationof four distinct seasons. How can you enjoy a warm fire without anew snowfall for comparison? What other natural phenomena thanspring brings such a lift to your spirits? Who has failed to eniov thecomfort of a summer morning or the crisp smell of an autumn afternoon?

..-. ~..:.:.= .5. McDonnell's suburban location allows you, to choose from thetotal spectrum of living locations. You may like the pace of apartmentlife at the heart of this 2/Z million person metropolis. Or you mightlike the nearby suburbs 'with small city atmosphere and tree-linedstreets. Just as convenient are rural areas, where you can Jive apartfrom the hustle yet be close enough to enjoy city-living advantages.

6. Naturally you want to earn your way and you want all you canearn. McDonnell wages are competitive with that of other industries.But being competitive isn't enough after you begin to show yourmettle. Then, it is corporate policy to recognize the unique and indi-vidual efforts-of those who strive for and achieve engineering excellence.Success will stem from a combination of inspiration and perspiration

.. probably 10% of the former and 90% of the latter. But if you'rewilling to work, you'll never need to worry about your economic andorganizational progress at McDonnell.

7. Facilities at McDonnell are second to none in space, advancedaircraft and automation. You'll find organizational-and physical work

, ing conditions that complement your skills and education. McDonnelltesting and development facilities range from man-rated space cham-bers to Mach 28 wind tunnels, laboratories from microbiology tooptics; computers from analog through hybrid to digital. You willfind McDonnell is a team organization and nowhere is teamwork asessential as in the aerospace industry. Team organizations keep youfrom becoming a desk-bound engineer and stimulate the exchange ofexperience and knowledge so necessary to the development of wisdom.

8 The Gateway to Space is in St. Louis. You'll be working with theexperienced men at McDonnell who designed the aircraft and space-craft that have, for a decade, dominated aerospace technology.McDonnell is strongly oriented toward government contracting. It has

AW=~~~~~ -- v-...-*,demonstrated the talent that provides exceptional national servicewhile returning worthwhile earnings to'investors. As the fastest growingsegment of our national economy, the Government provides a stableand continuing marketplace for those companies whose organizationis oriented toward effectively serving the Nation's needs.

9. You may feel you've had enough education, but you'll soondecide to seek more. The McDonnell College Study Plan encouragesself development and offers economic assistance plus adjusted workweek benefits for advanced degree studies directly related to your jobresponsibilities. Many private and public colleges and universities inthe area offer applicable programs.10. Nowhere in industry can a young engineer find more job sat-isfaction than in contributing to national advancements in air andspace. At McDonnell, pride in workmanship is a habit nurtured by

Ithe national acclaim that is the reward for succes..

See your placement director for a personal interview or mail this form to:J. T. Snyder, McDonnell Employment Office, Box 516, St. Louis, Missouri 63166.

I.Phone Age

[dress City & State. ip '

n: BS MS PhD -Major Field:Date Date Date I

I would like to receive application form 0

IL - - - An Equal Opportunity Employer_ _ o -_J

Y-M~~~~~~~~~'mysfic syrbol'THE CAUCASIAN CHALK CIR-

) CLE,' by Bertolt Brecht, trans- lated by Eric Bentley. directedby David Wheeler; cast: PaulBenedict as the story teller, Nao- mi Thornton as the governor's wife, Penelope Allen as Grusha. a kitchen maid, Larry Bryggmanas Grusha's brother. Hector Eli- zondo as the Ironshirt Corporal, ',Wyman Pendleton as the Fat Prince, Morrie Peirce as Simon. f'f and Ralph Waite as Azdak;, nowplaying at the Theatre Company ~iof Boston.

this production: the Theatre Corn. pany input, both in the stage ef- .tfects and in the acting. The cos .tumnes are a true product of geni. -us: woven rags for the (abjectly ~poor) common people, and masks, headdresses, and long fingemrnails :for the ruling class, who are there.

t by represented as pompous you-know-whats. The use of projected g

t backdrops in conjunction with a forest hanging from an overhead [wire creates interesting effects of <:?light and shadow that put the au ~:dience right out there on the !steppes of central Asia and keep

r them there. t~~~~A touch of bawdiness

Those used to Brecht will be :surprised to find some routines in the play strongly reminiscent of Aristophanes, marked by the can. -did brandishing of foul words. It almost seems as if some divinely Kinterfering Hand were trying to :throw in a few irrelevant jokes to make up for the lugubrious recti. ,tude of Brechts outlook. That Hand probably belongs to Eric eBentley, who is responsible for -the translation of the play from ¢;'

the German. Only this could ac-',,count for the presence of a::(bawdy) pum or two that couldfnot exist in any language but English. And in fact the casual. day-to-day wording of some of the ?lines points to the possibility that rthe translator took a few liberties

vwith the original script.Redeeming eatur

Only one character, however, ~rescues this play from the gray ve- yard where stilted, extra-human, K/dstereotypes are buried, and that s Adak, the vilage ir-ueoder aru

eventually the kingdom's judge. '

He is played by Ralph Waite, who l:played Brother Julian in 'Tiny Alice,' lilkewise the only human creature among a cast of mon-sters. Azdak, with his profoundly ~'practical insight and half-clown- ish, half fatherly attitude, carriesthe play through to a conclusion that works; it works because of :an ingenious testing device called :the chalk circle, and because this chalk circle comes straight out of Lthe blue with such a burden of t7symbolic and mystical possibili Wties. Whether the 'circle' was '

plucked out of Caucasian lore or out of Brecht's fertile imagination :cannot be guessed, but it serves to decide the issue raised in the 7play without the last appearance ;of being an artificial solution. "There is something totally new and munexpected about the cirle, and the magic of this newness sticks with us.

Cast of thousands The Theatre Company is to be o

congratulated for finding enough actors to fill the some seventy

(Please turn to Page 10)

3 U '

3w GARBO as3 "QUEEN CHRISTINA" 3 3:00, 6:15, 9:35 S -i | 1MH MARX DoSo,

"AT THE CIRCUS" , _1:30, 4:45, 8:05

* §AMET"GAMBIT" 'o starts tomorrow!

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° lFrancois Truffaut'sO 9"THE SOFTS ~ SI

Thursday: g go~ ~~~~~~oa 10MORGAN I

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The Chambers Brothers and theHallucinations appeared at theBoston Tea Party this Saturdaynight, February 11, and set every-one and everything in sight andhearing on fire.

Rock and soulThe Chambers Brothers were

the main attraction of the nightwith their well lmo-n combina-tion of hard rock and soul music.The quintet danced and gyratedalong with the wild sounds theyplayed. Most of their songs weresolid rock rather than soul, prob-ably for the benefit of the dan-cing public, but the soul songsthat the brothers played cameon smooth and mellow, thoughover-amplified. This is one of thefew groups that sounds better livethan it does on records; theBrothers performance of their.latest hit "All Strung Out" leftevery one gasping for air Whenit was over. During their secondset the group really had the audi-ence switched on, dancing, clap-ping, and shouting in time to afive minute drum solo.

Freafic dancnNot to be outdone, the Halluci-

nations, who alternated sets withthe Chambers Brothers, roared inwith their own brand of rock androll. Depending heavily on thefrantic harmonics and screamingvocals of their lead, the Halluci-nations blasted out a sound thatput everyone within hearing ontheir feet. The mere volume ofthe music knocked the legs offchairs and the surge and move-ment of the beat inluced dancingthut paralleled the rites of spring.

Boson Tea PartyThe Boston Tea Party, where

this took place, is an amazing dis-cotheque of itself. The entranceis up a wide, steep flight of stairsbetween panels lettered with thenames of men who have givenlight to the world; Prometheus,Uranus, Watt, Edgerton, Edison,Lao Tse, and others. The dancing'

is.. in a huge cavernous roomwhere one is engulfed by cas-cades of light and sound and sur-rounded by dancers in all typesof clothing, from "mad mod" to"straight." The walls are coveredwith designs that glow purple andgreen under fluorescent lights,kaleidoscopic patterns that changeshape and color in apparentlyceaseless and unrepeating mosa-ics, Campbell soup cans, picturesof Batman, and flashing lights."Organic" movies, blobs of colorthat dance and pulsate with themusic, are projected onto a largemovie screen that hangs abovethe dance floor illuminated bybrilliant strobe lights that makethe dancers flicker in and out ofreality.

Nero-psychologyDave Hahn, who runs the dis-

cotheque and is an MIT graduate,like to think of the Tea Party asan experiment in neur-psychol-ogy; what happens to the mindwhen it has received so muchstimulus that it reaches the over-load point? Some people are sooverwhelmed by the noise andlights that they collapse into thenearest chair and don't move forthe remainder of the evening, oth-ers dance themselves into nearexhaustion and then there is thefellow who wore a button thatsaid "Take a trip with Jesus."

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W' T F S15 16 17 1822 23 24 25

MusicBoston Civic Symphony Orchestra-

Kaman Kovac conducting; Koda-ly's 'Concerto for Orchestra,' Wal-ton's 'Violin Concerto,' Listz's 'LesPreludes,' Weber's 'Overture to"Der Freischuetz" ' (Ronald Isaacconducting): Feb. 17, 8:30:; .JordanHall.

Boston Collese-Tom Rush in con-cert; Feb. 19, 2 prn: Roberts Cen-ter; $2.

Boston Conservatory of Music-Mu-sic Theatre Workshoe; Feb. 19,8:30 pm; Boston ConservatoryTheatre: free.

Boston Symphony Orchestra-Rich-ard Burgin, guest conducter; We-ber's 'Overture to "Oberon".'Shostakovitch's Symphony No. 5.Op. 47.' Rachmaninoff's 'PianoConcerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18'C_..

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(Gina Bachauer, soloist): Feb. 14,7:30 pm; Symphony Hall.

Boston Symphony Orchestra-ErichLeinsdorf. conducting: Beethoven's'Symphony No. 2 in D major, OP.36.' Colgrass' 'As Quiet As.Brahms' 'Violin Concerto in D ma-jor, Op. 77' (Joseoh Silverstein,soloist); Feb. 17, 2 prm, Feb. 18,8:30 om; Symphony Hall.

Boston Symphony Orchesita - E.Power Biggs joins Boston Sym-phony Orchestra in organ concert;concerti and sonatas for organand small orchestra by Bach.Haydn, Mozart, Poulenc, and Vi-valdi; Feb. 19. 8:30 pnr; Sym-phony Hall.

Boston University-B U Chorus andChamber Singers concert; Bach's'Gesu Meine Freude,' Buxtehude's'Herzlich Lieb Hab Ich Dich OHerr,' other works; Feb. 15, 8:30pm: Concert Hall of the School ofFine and Applied Arts; free.

Folk Music Scope - Leonda, BobJones, Eliot Kenin, Blues Children,Dan Gravas, Bill Nixon: Feb. 17,8:30 pm: Suffolk U. Auditorium;$1.50.

The Lovin' Spoonful-Feb. 17 8:30pm; Symphony Hall: $3.50-44.95.

Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra -Stanislaw Skrcwaczewski conduct-ing; Lutoslawski's 'Funeral Mu-sic,' Mozart's 'Concerto for Pianoand Orchestra No. 21 in C major,'Shostakovitch's 'Symphony No. 10in E minor'; Feb. 19, 3 am.

New England Conservatory - FirstArtist's Recital; Marsha -Vieck, so-prano; works by Haydn, Mozart,Poulenc. Wolf. Sibelius and Ro-rem: Feb. 15. 8:30 pm; JordanHall; free.

New England Conserivatory - NEC'Russian Tour' Chorus. Lorna Cookde Varon, directing; works sungon Russian tour, including thoseof Dufay, des Pres, Bach, Ives,Fine, Pinkham, and others; Feb.19, 8:30 pme; Jordan Hall; free.

New England Conservatory - TheNew Event Ensemble: FrancisCooke's 'Quintet for Piano andStrings,' lannis Xenakis' 'Dermafor Piano,' and Arnold Schoen-berg's 'Pierrot Lunaire, Op. 21;Feb. 22, 8:30 prm; Jordan Hall free.

INTERVIEWING AT

MITFeb. 16

Opportunity to work in a technically stimulating environment . . . at the state ofthe art . . . among high caliber professionals (over 30% engineers and scientists) . . . with R/Dexpenditures of over $2 million annually . . .

industrial Nucleonics is an acknowledged leader in the development and manufacture ofon-line analytical measurement and control systems for the country's basic raw materials proc-essors. in its 16 year history, the company has compiled a record of doubling in size every fouryears with combined sales now totaling over $15 million annually.MS and PhD Candidates

Electrical EngineeringNuclear Engineering

Mechanical EngineeringPhysics

Computer Scienceand Allied Fields

to beinterviewed

for:

Logic and Solid State Circuit DesignControl Theory and Systems EngineeringDigital and Analog Computer ProgrammingMechanical-Mechanism and Structure DesignRadiation Interaction with MatterIsotopic Radiation Generation and DetectionProject Engineering

If you are interested in a major technical challenge with opportunity to move into man-agement, to participate in a full college tuition refund program, and to be located in a pleasantresidential area of Columbus, adjacent to The Ohio State University, consult the Placement Officefor further information and your campus interview schedule. Or, send your resume, in confidence,to: Mr. Philip J. Robinson, Assistant to the President, hndustrial Nucleonics Corporation, 650Ackerman Road, Columbus, Ohio 43202. An Equal Opportunity Employer.

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(OR SMS)INf ONE YEAR"

IT'S THAT SIMPLE. AFTER AT LEAST FOUR YEARS OF COLLEGE,YOU EITHER WILL ER EARNING YOUR PRY I ONE YEAR OR YOU WONT.

By giving you responsible jobs during that one year period,we'll honestly know if you can handle responsibility. Andfinding graduates who want to move up rapidly is veryimportant to us at this time, because most of the top positionsin our company will be open for successors in the nextten years, due to retirement.

If the idea of solving some of the problems of four millionpeople and the industry in one-half of the greater New YorkCityv area appeals to you. read the following job categoriesand see if one fits your qualifications. Then arrange aninterview with our representative and ask him any pertinentquestions that come to mind. Finally, decide if you want toaccept our standing offer. It's the only one we'll make.

Our Company Representative Will InterviewOn Your Campus On February 23rd.

ENGINEERSConstructionCustomer ServiceDevelopment & PlanningDistribution

ACCOUNTTRST$Audits and SystemsCustomers Inquiry

Technical Service:ManufacturingNew Business SalPurchasing

Corporate AccounData Processing

- BUSINESS ADfMINISTRATION& ECONOMICSCommercial Publicity & AdvEconomic Research TreasuryInsurance & Claim RatePersonnel Secretary's Off

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195 MONTAGUE STREET, BROOKLYN, N. Y. 11201 An Equal Opporunity Employer

P~~~

If yo "i'rinoese in bUilding a careerwith the leading technological innovatorin the computer business, don't fnil tndrop by and chat with our representative.He'll give you the full UNIVAC story.How fast we're growing. And how fast

you can grow with us in Engineering,UnIVA

Opporuni estu nith E atercom On- TuMWesya nebuary 21

If yo-°er, inter.-st--- m. ~u,,u,,,, a careerwith the leading technlological innovatorin the computer bulsiness, do~n't .fat! iodrop by and chat with our representative.He'll give you the full UNIVAC story.Plw fast we're growng. And how fastyou can grow with us in Engineering,Programming , AccountingP or Marketing.

Opportunities exist iml the EastM~id-West~and West.Arrange an appointment with yourPlacement Director now.

DIVE-BONohro0 PERRlY ~AND COIIIIIORATICMM

P.OEl. Box 8100 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

An Equal Opportunity Employer

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AI ~ By Jack Donahueo- Folk music in Boston, was born,

and has been nurtured in small

- intimate establishments, the cof-> feehouses. Originally, these places< provided refreshment, whence theE name, and an atmosphere con-L genial to the folk singer. The im-> mense popularity of some of the

< more famous folk artists -hasA made their appearance for a smallD coffeehouse audience impractical,

Paxton concertFolklore Productions has initi-

ated a concert series to presentI these big name folk artists before° larger crowds than can be ac-- commodated in the coffeehouse..U

IE

'Chalk ircle'proves efftertainingif At profound

(Continued from Page 8)roles called for by the script. Notthat there are seventy separateactors, but the list of those whoact in one or several parts is stillimpressive. All in all, the play isquite entertaining, though not pro-found (or ambiguous, if you pre-fer) in the least compared to theprevious production by the Com-pany, Albee's 'Tiny Alice.' To un-derstand Brecht, you need not fol-low every last babbling of thepeasant .choruses or commit tomemory the lay sermons of peo-ple like Grusha or Azdak; youneed only keep in mind whatBrecht's mind is making a trackfor, what he is setting out toshow. But of course you still dobetter by listening to everything.

Toward greater -teelkuoWith the production of 'Chalk

Circle' it becomes evident that theCompany has seriously embarkedon an exploration of the technicalside of theatre. Of note is the useof music to heighten the effects ofthe play, and not the usual luteand harpsichord music either:the form of the accompaniment isquite modern, the drum being thechief instrument. In earlier yearstheir experimentation consisted oftrying new and unproven worksfor the theatre, of trying to makesuch plays communicate to an au-dience. Now they are aDparentlyexpanding this attitude of inquisi-tiveness and testing to other as-pects of production. In this waythey are reaching true originalityas an acting companmy.

Unorn presentsIN CONCERT

Dave Va

JORDAN HALLSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18Tickets: $2.75, $3.50, $4.50

MAIL ORDERS: Enclose stamp-ed self - addressed enve!o>._check or money order payableto Unicorn Coffee House, Boston,Mass. 0211i.

1l

Last Saturday, Tom Paxton waspresented by this organization, inconjunction with the Club 47, atJordan Hall.

The atmosphere,was not quitethat of the coffeehouse, but Jor-dan Hall is not a mammoth audi-torium, and was fairly well suitedto the occasion. The reverberationof the amplification system wasslightly annoying at first, but wasa necessary evil.

Original songsAll the songs performed were

his original compositions, withtwo exceptions. (one of which was'Sully's Pail,' which he learnedas a child). His songs are of twovery distinct sorts. His protestsongs range in intensity from thelight-hearted fun-poking of which

'Talking Pop-Art Blues' is typicalto the more virulent declamationsher is capable of, as exemplffiedby 'The Hooker,' one of his newercompositions.

Love songsAt the other end of the Paxton

spectrum is his tender love songs,such as 'Last Thing on My Mind'and 'Leaving' London' (on his lat-est album).

However the bulk of the per-formance was occupied by histongue-in-cheek protest songs, in-terspersed with these charmingballads, which are his best. Onewishes he would ,concentrate moreon these, since broadside and sa-tire, although amusing at first,tends to wear thin if overused.

S euba Diving CassesSeven Days a Week.

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As a student M.B.A., myou read Vols. I - I I

As a graduate M. B.A., 7you can put yourself l

in future volumes

We don't know much about yov (althoughve'd like to).

3ut you start with the sitgular advantagef knowing a'great deal about us: Standard)il Co. (N.J.).'These two volumes con-Lin facts of history, not figments of fiction.

Ve're looking for M.B.A.'s who have whatr takes to work for a company whose his-ory is important enough to be requiredeading in many schools. That takes imag-nation, hard work, and a rather specialrand of responsibility.f you'd like to be included in future vol-mes, and feel that you've got what itikes, ask your College Placement Serviceo set u: ahn appointment for you with aersey Standard Representative.There will Ee a team representing Jersey and its Newbrk-based affiliates visitingyour Campus W)on. Or write now for detailed informa- on about careers with us. For your per- 'X

)nal bookshelf. -

Standard O11- Company (New Jersey)College Recruiting Office, 30 Rockefeller Plaza,-New York, New York 10020An Equal Opportunity Employer.

SKI EQUIPMENTLarge Variety - eFmous Braunds

Tennis Squash Shop67A Mt. Aubum St., CambridgeOpp. Lowell Hoise TR 6-5$417

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Ii

"Study year abroad in Sweden, France orSpain. College prep., iunior year abroadand graduate programmes. $1,500 guaran-tees: round trip flight to Stockholm, Parisor Madrid, dormitories or apartments, twomeals daily, tuition paid. Write: SCANSA,

50 Rue Prosper Legoute,Antony, Paris, France."

We'd like to p.lear up what appears to be amisunderstanding. It is somewhat popularon campus todecry a business career onthe grounds that you stop learning onceyou start working for ClichM Nuts & Bolts.

That idea is groundless.We can't speak for Cliche, but we can

for ourselves-Western Electric, the man-,ufacturing and'supply unit of the Bell Sys-tem. 6 out of 10 college gaduates whn havejoined us over the past 10 years, for exam-ple, have continued their higher education.

How're these for openers:W.E.'s Tuition Refund Plan lets em-ployees pursue degrees while work-ing for us. Over 6 thousand have at-tended schools in 41 states underthis plan. We refund more than $1million in tuition.costs to employeesa year.To name another program: advancedengineering study, under the direc-tion of Lehigh University, s coan-ducted at our En ering <'

Tuesday, February 14Basketball (V)-Northeastern,

home, 8:15 pm

Basketball (F)-Northeastern,home, 6:15 pm

Wrestling (JV)-Stevens, home,7:30 pm

Fencing (V)-Holy Cross, home,4 pm

?Fencing (F)-Cambridge School,home, 7 pm

Hockey (V)--Babson, home, 5 pm

Center in Princeton, N. . Selectedemployees are sent there from allover the country for a-years concen-trated study ,leading to a master'sdegree.You get the idea. We're for more learn-

ing in our business. After all, WesternElectric doesn't make bluggy whips. Wemake advanced communications equip-mint Antd the eo.ill telFpinhnrne natir-rk uill

need even more sophisticated devices bythe time your fifth reunion rolls around.The state of the art, never static, is wherethe action is.

At Western Electric, what's happeningis the excitement and satisfaction of con-tinued doing and learning. If this happensto appeal to you, no matter What degreeyou're aiming for, check us out. And graba piece of the action.

M. NUVACUJWrnG&S te fYf lEFTB ELSM

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Photo by George Flynn

Clay Satow '68 (•7) raises his stick in triumph as DenisColeman '68 skates away from scoring Tech's first goal againstBabson. Despite the early 1-0 lead, the skaters lost, 6-4 as Babsonscored 6 goals in the final period.

By Jon SteeleThe varsity skaters dropped

their seventh and eighth games _ofthe season last week, losing atBowdoin Saturday night and toBabson College here last Thurs-day. The team's record - nowstands at 4-8.

At Bowdoin, the icemen facedprobably their strongest competi-tion of the season. Their lineswere big as well as fast, and pep-pered goalie Carl Bryant '67 with18 shots in the first period, scor-ing on five. Bill Cadogain '69 putthe first goat into the nets, withScott shodes '69 and Mike Zu-teck '67;getting the assists. Tech'sonly other goal was scored byDon Bosack '67, with Mike Nesch-leba '69 and Larry Hall '67 assist-in.g But, meanwhile, Bowdoin-knocked in six more, upping thefinal score to 1_-2

Babson wins, 6-4At home Thursday night MIT

again faced Babson, the teamwhich defeated us 5-1 in the MITtourney, and again they weregreeted by a crowd of almost 200Babson supporters. The Techmenskated hard and seemned set onrevemge. After fifteen minutes- ofgood defensive play by the wholeteam, Denis Coleman '68 fired thepuck past the Babson goalkeeper;five minutes into the second pe-

riod Tom Newkirk '67 also tal-lied for Tech. Steve Eriksen '69stopped all twenty-five Babsonshots to preserve the 2-0 leadheading into the final period.

In the third period, however,Babson broke loose. Sonny Cham-berlain scored twice in the firstfive minutes and his teammatesrifled in four more more goals inquick succession. Bosack andColeman each scored for Tech,but the final score was 6-4. MITmeets Babson here again tonight,so let's not allow the Babson fansto again outnumber us at our ownrink!

O HOW They Did gBasmketbGl

MIT(V) 7 1, Wayne State 52Harvard 65, MIT(JV) 52Harvard 95, MIT(F) 60

SwimmiagMIT(V) 50, Trinity 45MIT(F) 52, Babson 43

WrestlingCoast Guard 19, MIT(V) 13

HockeyBabson 6, MIIT(V) 4Bowdoin I i, MIT(V) 2

Squash'MIT(V) 7, Trinity 2MIT(F) 5, Trinity 4

FencingBrooklyn 14, MIT(V) 13

TreackMIT(V) 6th in GBCMIT(F) 5th in GBC

ANSWERSto the AC Career Anagram

on page

::: 2 '.,:::::::::: :: ::::::::::::.".:i::::

6 Then let's hear from you.

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lOU ' t Yonforiliatien ' 'tuinles!)-~~~~ ~ ~ ~~~~ - - 5' ,-, -A

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Robert W. Galvin, Edward Kokalas,Motorola Inc. Michigan State

Robert Byman, Mark Belnick,University of Illinois Cornell

James Hill, Iarry Warner,Harvard University of Texas

Thomas Fehn,University of Southern California

Dear Mr. Hill:

Through much current student thinking aboutbusiness runs a rebellion against the prospect ofknuckling under to a corporate mold. A smartcompany will welcome this attitude (though thesame smart company wiii distinguish between anindividual with creative ideas and a malcontent

*wvvith a chip on his shoulder).

You put the matter this way: The "distinguishingmark" of the businessman is "sameness." MarkBelnick at Cornell feels corporate use of personalitytests "destroys any attempt at convincing stude.ntsthat business is truly interested in them asindividuals." Harvard's Jim Hill says students wantto keep the "sense of individuality and creativity"which a college education nurtures.

From the University of Illinois, Bob Byman asks why,if business does indeed offer opportunities forindividuality, people do not know of it. Ed Kokalasat Michigan State writes about "the square peg in thesquare hole" and Larry Warner of the University ofTexas speaks of "being lost in the corporate crowd."

Across all these comments falls the ghostly shadowof a stereotype.

A writer friend of mine used to give a wind-up toy toeach child every Christmas. Now that his childrenare grown, they give one to him. This year's toy wasa little tin man in a business suit, complete withwind-up-key in his back.

Isn't this how some students see Mr. AverageBusinessman? Clockwork and hollow... no mindof his own ... wind him up and away he hops, justlike all his brothers from the same production line.Drive? Certainly. Values? Never!

Some of today's thinking and writing about "thebusinessman" has just about as much resemblanceto real life as this toy has. The more we cut throughthe fictional or unreal part of the gray flannel andorganization man talk (while we listen to and benefitfrom the rest of it), the better off both businessmanand college man wilI be.

Behind any folk myth is at least enough fact toe'kp it alive. Joe Colleges and Absent-Minded

Professors do exist; so do Dizzy Blondes andOrganization Men. But-a-l!H blondesa-ren't dizzyand all businessmen aren't robots. We must sortfact from fancy and act accordingly.

Here is the crux of this "conformity" question:Does or does not business try to make people intowind-up robots? The answer: Any company whichtries to do this ordoes not try to prevent it fromhappening is not a smart company.

This is how Crawford H. Greenewalt, chairmanof the 100,000-employee DuPont organization,spoke of this in The Uncommon Man,The Individual in the Organization:

The alert and well-managed organization will befully aware of the dangers associated with individualsubmersion. Progress will be made in directproportion to the intellectual freedom of actiongiven al-the men on the team. There is nothinginherent in large organizations which closes thedoor to high individual performance, but the largerthe organization, the more assiduously it must workat the job of keeping its channels of encouragementand recognition open and flowing.

In the preface to this book, Columbia University'sCourtney C. Brown points up the distinction between"debilitating conformity of thought" and "rational

-:conformity of behaviour within the bounds ofcommonly accepted purpose."

Would you buy this? I do, because I believe successand fulfillment come to men who innovate, engineer,develop, invent, create; to men who interact asindividuals with other individuals, each bringingunique backgrounds and insights to bear on acommon problem.

How much "cult of the organization man" do youthink there might be in a stock exchange? Listen.

1he Midwest Stock Exchange used to be just anapparently comfortable carbon copy of the NewYork Stock Exchange. When it realized it was in arut, it hired a 44-year-old stockbroker namedJames E. Day as president. His challenge: to develop

completely new and independent ideas, to builda meaningful and major exchange.

His first change was to allow corporations as wellas partnerships to join the exchange. This had neverbeen done anywhere. "Clearing by mail" wasDay's next innovation. This let out-of-town firmsdeal directly with the exchange and improved theservice these firms could give their customers. Theexchange next pioneered by installing a computercenter to do the bookkeeping for member firms.

Note here that the organization-a stock exchange-specifically welcomed radical innovations. Notealso that three "industry firsts" resu -and theNew York Stock Exchange has since adopted the firsttwo and is developing the third. Midwest volumegrew from $109 million to four billion dollarsin the process.

Would you expect to find "organization-ism" ina public utility? But Illinois Bell Telephone Company,for example, consciously and constantly-evensystematically-encourages its employees to questionevery system it has (from the customer's pointof view), to ask why it is the way it is, to findways to make it better.

Probe any successful organization and you will findattitudes like those in these two examples. Theyare what make the world go. Business benefits fromindividual creativity working in and through rationalconformity of behaviour. So does society. So do you.RobertW. GalvinChairman, Motorola Inc.

AN OPEN LETTERThis open letter about conformity in business iswritten by a businessman to one of six studentcorrespondents on six different campuses. it ispart of a continuing series of open letterspublished in 29 student newspapers reachingsome 300,000 college men and women.

James Hill is a student at Harvard. Robert W.Galvin is chairman of Motorola Inc. if you havecomments or questions, write Mr. Galvin at 9401West Grand Avenue, Franklin Park, Illinois 60131.

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Winner's in Saturday's dupli-cate game at the MIT Bridge Clubwere: North-South, 1. KennethKoenig and David Roy, 2. Rich-ard Freedman '65 and Jeff Passel'69. East-West winners were: 1.Mark Bolotin '68 and Mike (Chasan

II1See your

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'67, 2. Dave Olson '68 and LarryHarbuck, 3. Fred Ciarmaglia '69and Arthur Lieverman.

This week's game will be heldSaturday at 1 pm in room 407 ofthe Student Center.

By Mke SchiNlyThe Tech mermen outswam

Babson by nine points, 52-43, lastSaturday at MrT's Alummi Pool;their record now sads at 241.The most impressive perfonmancewas turned in by Babson's King,

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the only triple winner aof the con-test. His victories includled the200-yard individual medlay andthe 200-yard butterfly, with timesof 2:17.8 and 2:16.1 respectively,and a victory in the 500-yard free-style. However, first-and-secondcombinations by MIT in the 50and 100-yard Freestyle, the 200-yard tbackstroke, and the divingevents, as well as a wm in the400-yard medlay relay gave theengineers the victory.

Jeff Elhlison was Tech's highscorer, with wins in the 50-yardFreestyle (24.1) amd 100-yardFreestyle (55.0). Bob Rorsehachremained undefeated for the sea-son as he won the diving contest,and Tom Bulltman added a vic-tory in the 200-yard backstrokeand a second in the 200-yardbreaststroke to the winning effort.

Cagers trouncedThe hoopsters were manhandled

by Harard Saturday night to thetune of 35 points, 95-60. For thefirst ten, minutes of the game, theEngineers kept easily abreast ofthe Harvard five, and were downonly one point, 17-16. The Crim-son, however, moved into a 1-2-2zone defense in the second quar-ter, and completely baffled theTechmen. The score was 34-23 at

.halftime, and the rest of the gamewas a rout. It was late in thefourth quarter before Tech dis-covered how to operate againstthe zone, and by then the gamewas over.

Racketmen edge TrntyThe squash team extended their

record to 4 wins and 3 loses bytaking a close contest fromTrinity, 5-4. In the first eightmatches, Terry Champlain, RodWalker, Mamnny Weiss and ChrsMan scored victories, Rod by ascore of 3-0. However, Bob Mc-Kinley, Bob Armstrong, Mike Gu-

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If an interview is not convenient on the above date,please write for additional details to: Corporate CollegeRelations Manager, 730 Third Avenue, New York,New York 10017.

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stin and Skip Perldin were beat-en. The score was thus tied 4-4 asIrv Asher took the court, and, ina beautifully played set defeatedhis opponent 3-0, clinching the vic-tory for Tech.

Thinelads fifth in GIBCAAThe trackmen had a disappoint-

ing day at the GBCAA meet,finishing fifth out of seven teams.Harvard won the meet with 62points; MIT compiled o n 1 ytwelve. John Owens and BruceLautenschlager posted seconds forthe Techmen; John in the 1000-yard run, with a time of 2:23, andBruce in the weight throw. LarryPetro and the mile relay teamwere responsible for the remain-der of Tech's points; Larrycopped fourth in the tbvo-mile runin 10:18, and John Holding, DonMiig, James Leary and LarryKelly combined to do the same inthe relay in 3:41.

Crew trains for springin modem bathouse

Some

rowingtraining

Photo by George Flynn

of Tech's heavyweight

tank in a pre-seasonprogram.

By Chuck HlottingerWith eight weeks remaining be-

fore racing season, the Tech crewsquads are currently midwaythrough their first winter trainingprogram in the new Pierce Boat-house. For the first time, full-fledged indoor rowing facilitiesare available to the MIT oarsmnen,giving them equal footing withtraditional rivals such as Harvard,Yale, and Cornell, long-accus-tomed to winter rowing.

Considered the most modernrowing, tank ever built, the sys-tem contains a host of devices tosimulate actual rowing conditionsand to check on indvidual per-formance. With thp standard mov-able rowing seats and riggers sus-pended from a stationary track,the oarsmen row in water pumpedpast at speeds up to fourteen feetper second. Modifications now be-ing completed will soon permit"offL-keel" simuatilon by pairs,fours, and eights, and will repro-duce fore and aft rolling effects.Large mirrors are being installedaround the tank to aid in check-ing balance and blade alignment,while force gauges 'will soon re-cord each oarsman's effort.

Counting the tank and new boat-house as prime causes, the coach-ing staff reports one of the larg-est turnouts in recent years. Thir-ty-two varsity heavies u n d e rCoach Frailey and 28 varsitylightweights under Coach GaryZwart, the more than 120 varsityand frosh oarsmen look forwardto the beginning of a new era inMIT rowing.

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By Arm VarteressianTech's varsity grapplers lost

their first dual meet in New Eng-land competition last Saturday asthe Coast Guard Academy at NewLondon, Connecticut dealt them a19-13 defeat.

Ed Tripe '67. wrestling at 123pounds instead of his usual 115,was pimed by Coast Guard's BobLong in 2:13 of the second roundof their match. At 130, Bill Harrs'68 wrestled in place of GreggErickson.'69, who is sidelined forthe rest of the season with injur-ies. Bill could not contain CoastGuard's heavier Jim Hull, andlost a 9-3 decision. Jack Maxham'69 put the first points on theboard for MIT as he drew 3-3 wi/hJeff Harben. Jack Wu, '68 wrestl-ing 145 against Tom Mills, tooka 14-3 decision defeat. John Pish-back '68 gave the Techmen threepoints as he decisioned Rick Lar-rabee 8-5, bringing the score to13-5, Coast Guard. At 160, JulianSchroeder '69 lost to Maike Brad-aric 7-2, .and Coast Guard's MikeHerman put the meet on ice bywinning a 6-2 decision over MIT'sHank DeJong. Keith Davies '69had no trouble with Tim Balunis,winning a 10-2 decision in the 177-pound class, and Coast Guard for-feited the unlimited match to

Dave Schramm '67, bringing thefinal score to Coast Guard 19,

MIT 13.The wrestlers next match will

be at Tufts tomorrow night.

By Jim Yankaskas

MIT's indoor track team did notcompete as a unit in the GreaterBoston Championships held on Fri-day and Saturday, but severalindividuals entered and placedTech in the scoring column. Withthe limited number of performers,MIT placed sixth in the meet with6 points.

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�P-Tech's entries were all in the

field events, and three · men won=u places. Both Gordon DeWitte `67

and Dave Osborne '67 took pointsin the 354b. weight throw. Theirplaces were third and fifth, re-spectively. The event was won byKavanagh of BC and Harvard's

uL Wilson was runnerup.Steve Sydoriak '68, Tech's rec-

E ord breaking pole-vaulter, placedfourth. Lazarus of Harvxard wonthe event with a vault of 14 feet.Steve has cleared 14 feet manytimes, but injured himself on hisfirst jump and was unable toreach his normnal height.

Two dual meets remain in theseason for the team. This Satur-day they will host UNH in Rock-well Cage, and the following weekthey travel. to UConn. Folowingthat will be the IC4A Champion-ships and the Connecticut Relaysto finish off -the season.

Youth isn't wasted on the young. And the young don't

Our top people are never old-fashioned about any newidea, whether it comes from middle management orfrom our youngest college grad. We have a master planand the vitality to make it work. Marketing is way-outand zeroed right in. Finance knows that we have betterthings to.do with our money than let it grow barnacles...shelled out $465 million in capital expendituresover the last 3 years. In the scientific department, wecombine technical insight with an unusual grasp ofmarketing dynamics.

Thinking young explains how we chatked-up one of themost impressive corporate rebuilding jobs in recenthistory. How we turned what was basically a one-proauctbusiness into a solid and diverse international corporationdealing in chemicals, miracle fibers, plastics. paints,petroleum and forest products. How we multiplied sales5 fold in 10 years. How we now have 100 plants in theU.S., Canada, Latin America, Europe, Africa and Asia.

Possibly we could afford to relax a little. But successmakes young blood run even faster.

Which means that the -ambitious college grad couldn'tfind a more provocative opportunity anywhere else inAmerican industry.

Accountants, Chemists, C~hE$9 MRS9 hYslclstsqp MBAs

Our representative will be 'on your campus soon.~ - Contact your placement director to make an-interview.

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Page 15: Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N3.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Fa cu! Spolty H.L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer, conducfs neural studies I ln ercollegiate newspaper,

Tech fencerS drop matkh ? Broigyn. ;W foms . ?season record now sta nds at .44 r sI Int

By George WoodIn their tightest meet of the

year, MT fencers lost to BExoklynCollege, 14-13, Saturday at Brook-lyn College. The final outcome dothe meet hinged on the last foilbout and the last epee bout, whichwere fenced simultaneously. Thescore was 13-12, for MIT, as PeterHayward '69 in foil and BillStephan '69, in epee, began thelast 'bouts. Each match proceededto a 4-4 tie. One more touch ineither bout would have given MITa victory. Then, within a few see-U1UbJAJ v tJ . OUleC, 'LJUI vi .

fencers 'lost, giving Brooklyn avictory.

I

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Tech fencers won in epee, 5-4, asCaptain Bill Murray '67 won twoand Jack $tafurik '68 won one.Bill Stephan '69 won two in epee,his only loss was in the final bout.MIT fencers also did well insabre, winning 54. Fr ankCarroll '69 and Curt MaarX-'68 eachwon two and lost only one; BurtRothberg '68 accoumted for theother sabre win..

Broolyn College won in foil bya scre of 6-3, as Lenard Zucker'67 won two and George Churinoff9017 _ -T7J. . v.Us wv, one. W Od.-LV , L:UIC, S

fencers now have an even seasonrecord d 44.

By Tony LimaWomen in athletics was the

main topic for discussionweek's meeting of theAssociation. The AA unanpassed a resolution admiteds to membership, withsociated honors, duties ;sponsibilites . . . subjectMITAA Constitution . '

However, the women wito wait for a few things. 1exception is that the menof the Varsity Club willrese-ve slely for ..M.Cgraduates. This, however,necessarily involve an

ment to the Constitution, as thatsays nothing either way on thesubject.

Two women's varsity sportsUnder the provisions of the reso~

lution, the coeds now have twovarsity teams, retroactive to Sep-tember 1, 1963. Any women's teamcan be considered a varsity teamif it has been engaged in inter-collegiate competition for threeconsecutive years. If such is notthe case, a women's team will beconsidered a club sport. So, thewomen's saln teAm, anUd crew

doesn't and now varsity teams.amnend- A provision for insignia for the

~~~~I__ _ __~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

You know it. After graduation you'll havemany paths tofollow. And the path you takecould affect the rest of your entire life.

Right now you're probably looking for all theinformation about these paths that you canfind. So here's some about IBM-and you.

The basic fact is simply this: Whatever yourarea of study, whatever your immediate com-mitments after graduation, chances are there'sa career for you with IBM.

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That's it. Whether you're interested in Com-puter Applications, Programming, Financeand Administration, Research and Develop-ment, Manufacturing or Marketing, therecould be a career for you with IBM.

Another important point to consider: IBM isTHE leader in THE major growth hidustry:information handling and control. The indus-try itself may not mean much to you, just yet.But let us tell you about it.

Whatever your iur mediate commitments, whatever your area of stidy,si gn UP now for'anocapus interview wii'M b 2, ar. l

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new varsity teams is also made,but says only that it shall be de-termined through discussion be-tween a women's representativeand the Varsity Club subject toreview by the MITAA ExecutiveCommittee. The seat for the As-sociation of Women Students onthe Im Council, already agreed.upon by that body, is formalizedin this resolution.

Three-year trialT.e fA-_ section gvetS umlt Jru-

lution a three-year trial period. Itprovides for a review at the nomi-nation's meeting of 1970, at whichtime it will be either passed by athre-quarter's majority or be de-clared null and void. An affirma-tive vote would make this resolu-tion a constitutional amendment.

Also discussed at this meetingwere the nominations for nextyear's AA officers. The only nom-inees at this time were: president,Gerry Buaner '68; secretary, JimYnakaskas '69. It was announcedthat elections for the AA offices,as well as the managers councilwill be on February 23.

Auerbach to speakVarsity Club president Rick Gos-

tyla '67 announced that the feat-ured speaker at this year's varJ-sity club banquet will be RedAuerbach. It was also a reportedpossibility that several memberseach of the Celtics, Red Sox andPatriots would attend.

Secretary Gerry Banner an-nounced that booklets on the va-rious club' sports around schoolwould be coming out next week.These would describe what eachclub does, the extent of the sea-son, and give any other pertinentinformation.

J¥ cgrs loseO %CrimsoR ive

IBy Steve WeinerIn a return contest the Harvard

JV outdistanced the Tech JV by ascore of 65-52. Avenging lastmonth's 61-58 setback, the Crim-son fledglings broke away fromthe engineers early in the secondhalf despite a 19 point effort byAlex Bash '68.

The first half witnessed slowand sloppy play for several min-utes. Finally the visitor's RoyMcCllough caught fire and wenton a ten point scoring spree. TheTech offense alsDo began to rollas Dan Santini '68 swished ajumper and Bash banked two andsank a pair of free throws.

Harvard pulled to a six pointlead, but Steve Derodeff '68 madegood on two layups and a charitytoss to close the gap. The Crim-son registered eight while Santnihit three from outside to raise thehalftime count to 25-22.

Harvard exploded early in thesecond half to pull to a ten pointlead which they kept the rest ofthe game. Tech stayed withinstriking distance as Greg Jerrel'67 and Bob Listfield '69 eachtallied four. Bash then went on aaki'mc: WVI',;111 %I&tL=Ull UM qkx'i1-

son's steady scoring. Alex -hit on'two nice drives, a follow-up, andfour free throws.

Harvard gained a sixteen pointadvantage before Santini sank twojumpers to put the final count at65-52.

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Page 16: Vie/:.no ti ¢h- drolws 3 50 - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N3.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Fa cu! Spolty H.L. Teuber, 9.00 lecturer, conducfs neural studies I ln ercollegiate newspaper,

@Cagers face NU tonight

Tre records broke

%vifmne'rs e el~ rin PL

trouin- al ,2t B~y Jm 1iolow off, and Wayne State fought back

The varsity cagers romped3 to to tie at 22-all on the strength og

teir tenth shmight victor and 1f3 .nb fii ed mng scorer. M" Lebinn. Fine

fifteenth in 18 games this seao defensie play xby Bob Hat '67 Was thiey defeated Wayne State last and Davre Jansson '68 cmitinued Saturday right by, a .X-52 swe. to plague W SU, but Tech still The contest served as an, excell- coulldn't 'get untracked -offensivelyent preparation for their crucia in the remainder of the half.B

enuter wfit Northeastern to- Defene rattles WSU night. in Rokell Cae. After tlle interison the V

The Beavers were unable to Beavers a g g r e s s i v e defense take command of te game mti prsurdthi opnet it

bad passes and errtic shootin sothe second half, whic bea n a- tat Wayre State could manag

29.-29 deadlock, as dwy weLe onliy izhee Wirft.-- mi fl! - M !v~o hampered by cold shooting in the min~utes of the half and ony one first -stanza. Guard Roy Talus '67, field goal in the first ten mxinlutes. who was gven th starig nod Trhe cold shooing hand 'Di

by a cii sprke hi 6RlubJansor. was compensated for by XinA the earlY goinxg acrounft for Captain Alex Wilson'7 who ""5 of their first 7 points. MIT built maneuvered w e I I undemeath up a D-13 lead buat theno cooled a a Ssan.HsSon

- ~~~play with 14:42 left gave MIT a ORX

finish Tfr t hste 4the vsitors fo looe balls

4 D 0 ~~~~and gradually compiled a 604flDuplonshii~psi advantage with just 4:55 to go. _5

Reserves play~ed out the final

8th place finish. New Engla~nd Cog iu @t ffdey h lege wn 012dowiil c lthe Nl~ish they've acquied as the by second and Yale third. ~~~~~~result of playig experience ob- .:by secrld ad Ya~ ird.tained in recent MITS routs.

In te salom, poor snow condir- Wlo. pae teBavrlions led to many falls and missed bot soigad rebudn with ~gates. As in the jump, no resuts 19 pont an 11rbuds a

are available yet, so the final cout- n aled<7Hrt1 d come is stil in doubt. Ths week- wu end the skiers travel to Williwns Tau -9efor thie EISA Senlior Champion- Fc otetr ih shi3ps. another 4-evenlt meet. The An upset- vzictory over North- cross-counltry race~rs, led by BJEaa- eastern tonight would viyt E

land, -figure to challen~ge the top ensure for MIT Mew first inv7ita- Wteams once agai in tis compe tio to the college divisionl NCAA g2tition. r e gi o alss.

Down PGD, Burton A

LC:A, SAE andvance, la M 1fials -By Joel Blfemmelswn re~peately. I~n fact duig a g

Semi-final action saw Lambda stretch of twenty seconds he net- Chi Alpha and ft aAlphz Ep- ii I~ -w33t,>silon advac to the Enals in ID, Mathies totalled 25 and con- Sbasketbl. Te Lambda Cb!s tiued iis roe- as plazymaker. too advanltage of a strong de. Ted Nygree '67, supported the W

fense to soundiy trounce Burto atack wvit twvelve counters. Phii"A", 52-35, wh2ile te SAE's Deltat Teta was led by Rich Hoff t

edged te Fiji's- on Ted Nygreen Is' ( 11) and Neil Clark '69, who '67 twvo free thrws sunk five ftn th foul line to B

The hlf saw the Lambda Chi's tally nie.ahead by 14. Ile B~urto teamn was Butn"WI wis by forfit troubled bay a lack O. ag~ressive- Burto A also proeds to die M-ness, as well as the driviing I~~y fe i nals as the reualy Rups of OChit otkowski '67 anld schedulled gamle between it and

Me detsive ~ ~ .Rt %__e>olrYb s tia Pi had to be forf eited Gamble '67, both of LC-A. because of prioyr arragemeats. RThe SAE-PGD game was an- '2i e ta

ff~er ~r s i w; se s.,waument, was apprehenlsive about the

he way. The half saw the gae 8 te -. ktied at 34 all. With .32 secods Other games saw Baker A edge geft, the SAEloxs were downl by Bu .386 dDlaUei

ne. NgreenE~rlhi~t ,,,succumb1 to Theta Delta C~hi 42-39.

throws. The Flji's brought the ballv 6 i frent )ak, but missed their shot. Don ed h.Dlt.C

tuterforfd '67 then drove in. forg a Jon~es '6& tcok game honos with WayW Io SA~rma, th 3 eighteen poits. In the Baker- Ft

9Q3-46, SAJE, Bu~rtncflict Mark Laine's '6917 paints 'prwed the, diference

Ell's upse AEP~I _ 3EI thie gquartertinals, thie Fji's XtS c,

truck fast tco upset totpgh Alpha B S ,Wsiln Pi five 58-35. Walt Maling Ngd fi5f

S9 and Don B3aron poured in 21 - g

nd 19 points respectively for the § R

daes. Juping to an early'X?2 !ad, P&D gained momentumn and ,§ ' onltolled. the outside shooXtn to 00g .chieve victory. The Pi's ran into go%§fi.)ul trouble and lost high -scorer S t Sterry Bmiuet- . u X.LAICtM~1 ,

ietence of the winners fro thie W ~tgharity stripe played a distine- gZe>ve role. ,32.

SAE downs PDiT a g' In other action SAE trounced v le PhI Delts 645. The lead see- A32Btwed back aad fortb throughut §~ ie firt half but SAE manage¢d a 0. o wven point lead at thle end of 0 vo period. Homrever, thie SAS ,2 xrs sUrgedl onto te .cokurt in the F $SslaSlird qurter and initiated a it :_vastating press which enabled Bg t+ ern to outscore te Phi D elts O R f

I.Denny Matthies '68 proved .^1{ sp<>irtnal as he stole the tball .

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tory would virtually asdx thmof an opportunity to compete inthe tournament.

Home cond -for TL-chPlayin on their home court,

-Tech should have the psychologi-cal advantage. Nortestern fan,however, are notably loyal sul>porters of their team. At the Bos-ton College gamne, played at SC,Northeas~tern shad more fans pres-ent U= Baste Ctflege thnumber ten ranked tea ill tleenation.

An article in Saturday's Globe,accusing dTTo plning to keep Husksy fanls outside, is a futherincentve for Northewstemn sup-porers to amass in the bleachersearly. Due to, the sma seatincapaefty at the Cae, Huskey faswill probaby Ml the bleachers by6:15, the starig time of thefreshrran gaxe . . .. if we leltthem. The on~ly way to preventthis is to arrve before the ~s~h-ma game -begins. Don't let ourteam doim, comne to the game, bethere early, man show the en-gineers that they have our suppar.

,q Tonight, Perhaps the most im-1>_portnt event in the history . of

c.. MIT athetics wrill be held in< ZRockwell Cage. The eniee rs_ ) baskef'Dal team faces the power-LU fu Northeastem Umiversity H~us-LL kies in the game of the year. At>- stake is a posble bert in te< NCAA regonal playoffs.U. I- S-te krnpr<ressi ears

nevner before has anzy engineersquad had even a chane foyr aninvitation toi attend the N CA Atoarnaent. This year, te old

:drawback of a weak schedule doenot esist, as Tech has compiled a1 5-3 recrd including a ten game

Lu winig streak against m.any ofthe finer small college teams inthe area. An MIT win tonightwould give Engineers an excellent.chance to receive an nviatison

-to compete in a playoff with thireeother New England teas. Thewinner of tis playoff will thienface the New York-Pennrsylvwarachampion to decide tis regionl'srepresentative irL the nationaltournaent. This game is equallyimportant to Norte~stemn. A vie-

.",quash teadm

'Me M-r Varit~y squash tcea.resumed its L966-67 competition

Satuday, after a month's layff The Techmen were host to I~ityanld Cani awy wit a 7-2 vicor.The Beavers also -ad a matchscheduled agant Setn. Hall Ftri-day, but due to por travellhigcoditions, the match had to bepostpoed, It is rescheduied forTuesday night, FebrwryT 21.

Th Techmen played w e i iagist Trinity, wmingl fobr of

teir octests -by 3-0 talles. KEenWong '6%, playing. as number twoma, Joe Feraa '67, nvanbersix man, G~effy Halak 'ti9,number eight manL, and JoelPMdbgentM nume gz m ,

all whitewashed thieir opponents.BEill Mei '68, playing as nwn-

Photo by George Flyrnn

Alex Wilson '67 goes UP forthe shot against Wayne State.He kept this up all night inleading She engineers to the win.

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)By Rich RoenThe MIT skiing team captured

first place in the cross-coutryevent at the Eastern IntermediateIntercolegiate S ki Associationchaunpieoships held at NorwichCollege in Norffifeld, Vt. -TheTech teamn was 8t in the down-hill, completng the first day'scompetition. Final results are notyet in for the second day events,Ibut Tecoh -finlished somewhere inthe middle of the 10 teams in theslalom, with indetermined resultsin the jumip. Ems sh.Gu~ld Issue MITTa 4t place overall finish..

Helge Biaaland '67 won thecross-country as Tech placed 4men in thee top 20. Dick Haberma'67 was 8th, Doug Cale '69 was5thi, and Paavo Pytykkonlen '67came in 19,0h Ti~s is ctaidzthe big event of a successful sea-so~n fqr- the cross-countr s~der~sand cas a fine year for Biaalad.Colby, Axry and Yale followed-M17? in the standings. The down-hl squad met with some mis-fortmun as Rik Anderso '69, aL topprospect who -wvas expected to dowell, fell and was disquaified.Habernans 26fi was the best theteam could do, leading to their

tops Trinity,>shuf-oufsber seven man anld captain CyeT-atvit '68, the num-rber onle man,each neeed ttwar gp3m to van--

qih thieir oppnens. In Chye'sffath aginst Dame Craver,Chye 'kept Cxrver runn esn-stantly. Chye wo 15-10, 10-15, 158, 1542.-

Bob Melanson '68, thie number-fou~r man, mnade a fine combakin his mnatch. Playing M~al Hay.Ward MU- *la u%- E+ g t714, wi the secn 151, and lostthie third 15-11. After a 5 rndwtebreak, B ob omnPletely ovrer-whelmned Mal, takring th finaga mes - 52, 158. Erie Coe 6

nubr feenarlad EPete H~ur-ley '6i9, number five man, suffer-ed te only losses of the day, Ed~e3M, ad Pete 3-2.

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Ph1oto by D~ale Stone

Lee EDile~y 69 ulb Ifvq .,A I k 2Mfs -- ~rd buferfv aaainstTrinity's Vo:glesang. Dill ey eventually won the event, brea'kin~g thevarsify record by four seconds to help, the mermen fos a 50-45 win.

B1y JeR Goodmn: Lee Diley '69 won the 20 freMIT's swimers hireased their' style in 1:57.7 to put Tech on the

83.63 points fo~r thefirst brokenarecord of thie meet.

Lee Dilley turned in an out-stadirg performance by brealtngthe'20 yard butterly record in2:12.8, five secnds better ta-Wsbet time and foulr secods betterthan the old record. Rich Dorman'69 was thiird.

Trinity had, its bet shown ofthle day as they slammed themerinen in te 100 yard frestyle. Dave Tyler fiished firt in:50.5.1h the 20 yard baclotroke,Mullinax and Bill. Wagner '69placed two-three to make thzescore 36-34 AM.

Lids Clare finished the 50 yardfreestzyle swi ra yads ahead ofhis nearest competitor in 5:28.0 tobreak the third vasty record ofthe mneet. Clre took over fourseconds off Dick St. Peters' '65record., Mhs leaves all of lastyear's recojrds tied or shatteredexcept thie 200 yad breaststrhoke.

Preton, Nesitt lIfnch meet

Lar Presto~n anld Tom Nesb>itt'a swept the, 200 ydrd breast-

stroke to clinch the meet. In thepast two mneets Nesbitt has turnedill excellent performanes finish-ing juJst behind Prestonl bothmneets

A Ddey, Mqerrill Stage, Mc-Farren final relay los to a Tii-ty relay wlho swam in 3:26.1 toxnake the final scr 5G45.

season's record to 6-2 by defeat-ing Trnity College 50-5, Satur-day, at Alun Pool in a meetmarked by thee broken varsity

reod.

Luis Clare '69, Larry Prestin'68, Steve Mulfinak `69, and John

Mc~sarren '68 were edged out byless than a stroke by a Trnity

40yard medley relay. McFarrenstarted his anchor leg almost twolentsbhnn finshdenin an unofcial time of :49.4.

scoreboard. Mike Crae '67 andTim Merrll fiished two-three in50 bree behind Trirtyls Wright.

The rcords brke

The enBeers were -belundl now1.69 but slammed Trinity in thenext two consecutive events tomove ahead by seen. Clae andBill Stage '69 swept the 20 yardLO{. Then Dana Gentry '68 and

Pete Amstutz '67 placed onae-wmn the divinng. Gent}ry put on abeautiful exhbition racking up

thSathsetvv100thl,dethi20-im,

,:? The- Benchwarier @0p~t~rS

Nordic skiersI