n-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. president stratton …tech.mit.edu/v79/pdf/v79-n15.pdfthe...

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VOL...L.LXXIX NO. 15 ,Techman Receives National Award NEWSPAPER OF THE UNDERGRADUATES OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY - -- ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. · p arabhugCarriesthe Da E~~~~~~~~~ i?~~~~~~~~~~~E~~~~~~~~"'~~~~~~~ 'N..7 ',4 A eaaevstr lok naeuo h odr hc ITsue'swog'atle.Aha PhiOeaCria hl h aeo h pecle tet hersil 'BakrHos'spiz nng6 '. I I t i CB I 7 4; I 7 t- z 7 I I i i -. ? I I , : Of Tau Beta Pi One of the five national Tau Beta 'i ifellow,,ships for 1959-60 was award- Cd this -week to George K. Bienkow- 'ski '59, Course XVI who will pursue dloctoral 1study in aeronautical engi- )neering' hee next year. Bienkowski is the fourth w.inner of I. Spencer Fellow-ship, namned for III(, former- chief engineers of the Fed- orI-al Interstate Commerce Commis- s jion nd national president of Tau Fellowships are awarded by the en- ,,iteerin- honor society in a national comnpetition based on hig-h scholar- ship, leadership and service, and i)nI'oise of future development in en- g~inceerin g.· The Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad- van·;mice his own chapter of Tau Beta t'i and has contributed most to his I mAVn college. · Spring $ -A Western Theme 'For IFC Weekend T FC Week-end, to feature for the fist time a 'Western theme, will be- gin Friday night, May 8, with a for- eail dance at the Statler Hilton Ho- tel. The Glen Miller Orchestra will i providOe music for the event. Saturlday at noon, a float parade will begin, going across Harv%,ardl Ih'idIge in the same manner as last yezar. Also on the afternoon's sched- tripI arie county fair ;ramies, includIing ;: chuck wagon race, potato sack r-ace, and bicycle ra:ce. Afternoon cocktail parties at Chi ihi, Dover and Phi Kappa; evening Ipen-bid parties at DKE and Theta D,.lta Chi; an(1 a Sunday afternoon Iazz concert at DKE 'will complete ,(lie week-end's activities. Registrar's Notices Dir. Julius Stratton, 5IIT's presi- dent, spoke to over 300 students on Tuesday about MIT. The informal talk in Kresge was the idea of a .rI-·oup of student leaders who sub- mitred topic suggestions to the Pres- ident a few month s ago. Several (lays bet ore Tuesday's talk, Stratton -was q]uoted as saying, "I wvill not -ive definite answers to all of the ques- tions, but I -will present my personal views to the students." Star-ting' with the statement that "3'it is curonttuly in a period of unpr-ecedentedl 1-rowth ... and we arle cau-iht up in the gr·eat str-eam of activity about us," Dr. Sti-atton wvent on wiith a look at MIIT's past, and its foundations in particular. Noting that Tech -was founded -with the idea of piroviding an "education geared to "lie country's needs." President Stratton outlined the Institute's dlevelopment parallelled w·ith the development of the country as a whole. Dr. Stratton r·eceived a standin- ovation after the talk which endedl wvith the advice: "Think about your futur-e. If you choose your courses -wisely, you -will leave better pire- pared than those wvho -went to 'Jhe more enjoyable colleg'e. I think you've got something you'll never regret." Pointine. out that today's world en- vironment has been change d by a tre- n'endous order of mIagnit ude, Strat- ton listed thiree problems vwhich he felt are of great impor-tance to our own society' : there has been a great acceleration in the fields of science :lnd te(.hnol<}',,y, as well as an evi- dent conyera'oence of the sciences at theidr bsic le've'l; the increasing im- tortance of scicincc and eno-ineeriin- is no lonl-er confined to the labora- tory, but now concerns such hreas as labor,. mana-'eme nt, gox'ernment, and intel'national affairs. Stratton Gives Personal Views The third problem which Stratton mentio lned was one wNhich r-epresent- ed his personal view. He feels that "there is a g-reat likelihood of change in the conqing 25 years in the forces that .-. lIape our. national econonmy. Life -will not keep getting easier." He felt that the increasing peoples striving to obtain a better life wvould have cncsequences for the United States which must be taken seriously. Defining the scope of the Institute, Dr. Stratton pointed out that we should reach a balarce--MIT must, have a concorin in ALL areas where the imlpact of science aind technology is most greatly felt. "The U. N. a{ MIT" is represented as the theme of fhe International Dance Show in Kresge which closed MIT's International Week last Sunday. The week of acHvities was given by foreign students at MIT in appreciation of the hospitality shown fhem here. With decorations in night club style, the freshman semi-formal dlance will get underway tomorrow evening at 8 p.m. in the Sheraton Plaza Hotel. Between 150 and 200 couples are expected to attend the affair as indicated by ticket saies through WKednesday. In connection with the dance, a cocktail party will be held forL all fr-eshmen wvho have tickets to the ht~nce at the Phi Gamma Delta house from 4 p.m. till 6 p.m. tomiorro-w eve- nine1. Tickets wvill be sold at the door during the evening, ho-wever, they may be obtained earlier from any one of the newly elected freshmen section leaders or in the lobby of building ten today· Request Changes For Social Beaver SOCIAL BEAVER DEADLINE TCA is completinig revision for the Social Beaver, which is sent yearly to all incominiig students. One of the principal sections of the BEAVER is de'voted to m'-ticles on campus actix'i- ties. These groups ire requested to retviaw their articles and submit changes by 1 Mlay. Copies of last year's issue are available in TCA office. Open bid parties throwvin by Sigma Epsilon Chi, senior class drinking honorary, and Kappa Sigma, along with an MIT Symphony Orchestr a Concert will pr-ovide inexpenisive en- tertainment tomorrow night. SEX Club's Playboy Party will be- g'in at 8 p.m. at the Phi Gain house. Dr-ess will be inToreal and liqtuid re- fIres}ments -will sell at two for fifty cenits. Kappa Sig's Speakeasy Party -will also begin at 8 p.m. and wili furnish v-aried entertainment. There will be gambling of all forms, dancing, a band, and bountiful refreshments. Guiests are enicourag'ed to bring dates and~ dr-ess in 1.920 style. T he MIIT Symphonyv Orchestra Johni Corley conductor, will feature the First Piano Concerto of Beetho- veni as; the symiphony -ives its final peLr1o0rMance of the year, tomorrow nig'hlt (it 8:30 p.m. in Kresge. Mort Archer, wvell kniowni far his wvork in Tech Show, -will be the pi- ano soloist. Included on the program are the Coriolanus Overture by Bee- thoven and Scheherazade, music of A Thousand and- One Nights by Rimx- sky-kor-sakov. Admission to the con- cert is free. )umtrior Ke1or 1egistraTr l Ivd MateridaI Registration material for the 1959 sum- mer session will be available on Mon- day, April 27, at the information office. The registration forms must be filled in and returned to the registrar's Office, Room 7-142. by Wednesday, May 20. FIRST YEAR CLASSES SUSPENDED All first year ciases are suspended from 9:00 A. M. {o I:00 P. M. on Thursday, April 30, due to the selective service examination being given on ihis day. Discussing the aciiviiies with New England Region delegates at last weekend's conference is Reggie Green, NSA Educational Affairs Vice-Presidenf (center, with glasses). Reggie delivered rhe keynote address io over 90 siudents who participated in the conference New England's Boy Scouts 'Will Tour MIT Durincg Open House Approximately 2000 Boy Scouts firom all over New Englandl will. move onto the MIT campus next Saturday for a series of tallrs and depa'tmnen- tal dlemonstrationis in the morning and tours of the Institute ill thle house. This prog'ram, aimed at interest- ing' boys in science andl engineeri ng', is being sponsor-ed by Alpha Phi Omega and is being helid for the first timle this year. Opening exercises wvill be held in Kresge Auditoricumi in two shifts to accommodate the large number of scouts expected. One .- 'roup -,vill meet in the auditorium at 9 a.m. and the other will meet at 10 a.m. as the first goes out for a loo'k at MIT from the outside; the building's, dIorms, nu- clear reactor, recreational facilities, etc. At 11 a.m. the scouts will split up into special interest groups which -will witness talks and demonstra- tions by mn-embers of various depart- iiients, including Aeronautical, Elec- trical, 3'echanical and Chemical En- gineer-ing; Physics; Chemistry; Bio]- ogy; Military Science and Social Sci- 1nce. Mh'. Eucne Chamberlain of the Admissions Office will be on hand to talk to boys interested in attending any college next fall. -A noon lunch is scheduled on the athletic field with milk and ice cream supplied by APO. The afternoon tours will be under the guidance of APO members and miembers of the Order of the Arrow, the scouting hono-rary service g'roup. Invitations were sent out to scout units throughout the New England farea, representini about 12,000 boy scouts. The response has been nuch larg-er than wvas expected and a nuin- ber of requests for attendance have had to be turned down due to the lack of personnel annd facilities. APO plans to continue this program in future years if this year's is suc- cessful. gm am Am MF/lb .gr-lthl mw mm I= I -- gem ME I am AV-,b Aff-.,P Now- N-../ CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS. FRIDAY, APRIL 24. 1959 5 CENTS t · $r S `B · :t '1 i·i - · : i i: i i · ; ' i: a'ril i F i : 8161118, Is B i s. .a f I d *,4 President Stratton Speaks On Institnte's Develowpmment octal Events Many Frosh Da~&nce Will Busy Weekend Is I pA Have Two Bands Inexpsensive Also I , I I National Officer Giives Keynote To 90 NSA Regional Delegates

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Page 1: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

VOL...L.LXXIX NO. 15

,Techman Receives

National Award

NEWSPAPER OF THE UNDERGRADUATES OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

- --~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %.

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pecle tet hersil 'BakrHos'spiz nng6 '.

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Of Tau Beta PiOne of the five national Tau Beta

'i ifellow,,ships for 1959-60 was award-Cd this -week to George K. Bienkow-

'ski '59, Course XVI who will pursuedloctoral 1study in aeronautical engi-)neering' hee next year.

Bienkowski is the fourth w.inner ofI. Spencer Fellow-ship, namned forIII(, former- chief engineers of the Fed-orI-al Interstate Commerce Commis-s jion nd national president of Tau

Fellowships are awarded by the en-

,,iteerin- honor society in a nationalcomnpetition based on hig-h scholar-ship, leadership and service, andi)nI'oise of future development in en-g~inceerin g.·

The Spencer stipend recognizes thewxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own chapter of Tau Betat'i and has contributed most to his

I mAVn college.

·Spring $-A Western Theme

'For IFC WeekendT FC Week-end, to feature for the

fist time a 'Western theme, will be-gin Friday night, May 8, with a for-eail dance at the Statler Hilton Ho-tel. The Glen Miller Orchestra will

i providOe music for the event.Saturlday at noon, a float parade

will begin, going across Harv%,ardlIh'idIge in the same manner as lastyezar. Also on the afternoon's sched-

tripI arie county fair ;ramies, includIing;: chuck wagon race, potato sack r-ace,and bicycle ra:ce.

Afternoon cocktail parties at Chiihi, Dover and Phi Kappa; evening

Ipen-bid parties at DKE and ThetaD,.lta Chi; an(1 a Sunday afternoonIazz concert at DKE 'will complete,(lie week-end's activities.

Registrar's Notices

Dir. Julius Stratton, 5IIT's presi-

dent, spoke to over 300 students onTuesday about MIT. The informaltalk in Kresge was the idea of a.rI-·oup of student leaders who sub-mitred topic suggestions to the Pres-ident a few month s ago. Several (laysbet ore Tuesday's talk, Stratton -wasq]uoted as saying, "I wvill not -ivedefinite answers to all of the ques-

tions, but I -will present my personalviews to the students."

Star-ting' with the statement that"3'it is curonttuly in a period ofunpr-ecedentedl 1-rowth . . . and wearle cau-iht up in the gr·eat str-eam ofactivity about us," Dr. Sti-atton wventon wiith a look at MIIT's past, and itsfoundations in particular. Noting thatTech -was founded -with the idea ofpiroviding an "education geared to "liecountry's needs." President Strattonoutlined the Institute's dlevelopmentparallelled w·ith the development ofthe country as a whole.

Dr. Stratton r·eceived a standin-ovation after the talk which endedlwvith the advice: "Think about yourfutur-e. If you choose your courses-wisely, you -will leave better pire-pared than those wvho -went to 'Jhemore enjoyable colleg'e. I think you'vegot something you'll never regret."

Pointine. out that today's world en-vironment has been change d by a tre-n'endous order of mIagnit ude, Strat-ton listed thiree problems vwhich hefelt are of great impor-tance to ourown society' : there has been a greatacceleration in the fields of science:lnd te(.hnol<}',,y, as well as an evi-dent conyera'oence of the sciences attheidr bsic le've'l; the increasing im-tortance of scicincc and eno-ineeriin-is no lonl-er confined to the labora-tory, but now concerns such hreasas labor,. mana-'eme nt, gox'ernment,and intel'national affairs.

Stratton Gives Personal ViewsThe third problem which Stratton

mentio lned was one wNhich r-epresent-ed his personal view. He feels that"there is a g-reat likelihood of changein the conqing 25 years in the forcesthat .-.lIape our. national econonmy.Life -will not keep getting easier."He felt that the increasing peoplesstriving to obtain a better life wvouldhave cncsequences for the UnitedStates which must be taken seriously.

Defining the scope of the Institute,Dr. Stratton pointed out that weshould reach a balarce--MIT must,have a concorin in ALL areas wherethe imlpact of science aind technologyis most greatly felt.

"The U. N. a{ MIT" is represented as the theme of fhe International Dance Show inKresge which closed MIT's International Week last Sunday. The week of acHvities wasgiven by foreign students at MIT in appreciation of the hospitality shown fhem here.

With decorations in night clubstyle, the freshman semi-formaldlance will get underway tomorrowevening at 8 p.m. in the SheratonPlaza Hotel. Between 150 and 200couples are expected to attend theaffair as indicated by ticket saiesthrough WKednesday.

In connection with the dance, acocktail party will be held forL allfr-eshmen wvho have tickets to theht~nce at the Phi Gamma Delta housefrom 4 p.m. till 6 p.m. tomiorro-w eve-nine1.

Tickets wvill be sold at the doorduring the evening, ho-wever, theymay be obtained earlier from anyone of the newly elected freshmensection leaders or in the lobby ofbuilding ten today·

Request ChangesFor Social Beaver

SOCIAL BEAVER DEADLINE

TCA is completinig revision for theSocial Beaver, which is sent yearlyto all incominiig students. One of theprincipal sections of the BEAVER isde'voted to m'-ticles on campus actix'i-ties. These groups ire requested toretviaw their articles and submitchanges by 1 Mlay. Copies of lastyear's issue are available in TCAoffice.

Open bid parties throwvin by SigmaEpsilon Chi, senior class drinkinghonorary, and Kappa Sigma, alongwith an MIT Symphony Orchestr aConcert will pr-ovide inexpenisive en-tertainment tomorrow night.

SEX Club's Playboy Party will be-g'in at 8 p.m. at the Phi Gain house.Dr-ess will be inToreal and liqtuid re-fIres}ments -will sell at two for fiftycenits.

Kappa Sig's Speakeasy Party -willalso begin at 8 p.m. and wili furnishv-aried entertainment. There will begambling of all forms, dancing, aband, and bountiful refreshments.Guiests are enicourag'ed to bring dates

and~ dr-ess in 1.920 style.

T he MIIT Symphonyv OrchestraJohni Corley conductor, will featurethe First Piano Concerto of Beetho-

veni as; the symiphony -ives its final

peLr1o0rMance of the year, tomorrow

nig'hlt (it 8:30 p.m. in Kresge.

Mort Archer, wvell kniowni far his

wvork in Tech Show, -will be the pi-

ano soloist. Included on the program

are the Coriolanus Overture by Bee-

thoven and Scheherazade, music ofA Thousand and- One Nights by Rimx-

sky-kor-sakov. Admission to the con-

cert is free.

)umtrior Ke1or 1egistraTr l Ivd MateridaI

Registration material for the 1959 sum-

mer session will be available on Mon-

day, April 27, at the information office.

The registration forms must be filled in

and returned to the registrar's Office,

Room 7-142. by Wednesday, May 20.

FIRST YEAR CLASSES SUSPENDED

All first year ciases are suspended from

9:00 A. M. {o I:00 P. M. on Thursday,

April 30, due to the selective service

examination being given on ihis day.

Discussing the aciiviiies with New England Region delegates at last weekend's conferenceis Reggie Green, NSA Educational Affairs Vice-Presidenf (center, with glasses). Reggiedelivered rhe keynote address io over 90 siudents who participated in the conference

New England's Boy Scouts 'WillTour MIT Durincg Open House

Approximately 2000 Boy Scoutsfirom all over New Englandl will. moveonto the MIT campus next Saturdayfor a series of tallrs and depa'tmnen-tal dlemonstrationis in the morningand tours of the Institute ill thlehouse.

This prog'ram, aimed at interest-ing' boys in science andl engineeri ng',is being sponsor-ed by Alpha PhiOmega and is being helid for the firsttimle this year.

Opening exercises wvill be held inKresge Auditoricumi in two shifts toaccommodate the large number ofscouts expected. One .-'roup -,vill meetin the auditorium at 9 a.m. and theother will meet at 10 a.m. as the firstgoes out for a loo'k at MIT from theoutside; the building's, dIorms, nu-clear reactor, recreational facilities,etc.

At 11 a.m. the scouts will split upinto special interest groups which-will witness talks and demonstra-tions by mn-embers of various depart-

iiients, including Aeronautical, Elec-trical, 3'echanical and Chemical En-gineer-ing; Physics; Chemistry; Bio]-ogy; Military Science and Social Sci-1nce.

Mh'. Eucne Chamberlain of theAdmissions Office will be on hand totalk to boys interested in attendingany college next fall.

-A noon lunch is scheduled on theathletic field with milk and ice creamsupplied by APO. The afternoontours will be under the guidance ofAPO members and miembers of theOrder of the Arrow, the scoutinghono-rary service g'roup.

Invitations were sent out to scoutunits throughout the New Englandfarea, representini about 12,000 boy

scouts. The response has been nuchlarg-er than wvas expected and a nuin-ber of requests for attendance havehad to be turned down due to thelack of personnel annd facilities. APOplans to continue this program infuture years if this year's is suc-cessful.

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CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS. FRIDAY, APRIL 24. 1959 5 CENTS

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i · ; 'i: a'ril

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President Stratton SpeaksOn Institnte's Develowpmment

octal Events ManyFrosh Da~&nce Will

Busy Weekend IsI pA Have Two BandsInexpsensive Also

I , I I

National Officer Giives KeynoteTo 90 NSA Regional Delegates

Page 2: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1959--�-I ' - - -- - - -'~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I I

VOL. LXXIX MARCH 24, 1959 NO. 13

BUROPEDublin to the Iron Curtain: Africa fSweden. You're accompanied-not herdedaround. College groups. Also short tloPl

EUROPE SUMMER TOURS256 SEQUOIA (Box 4) Potedno, C,.

*,~

This Week EndWTBShas

SPRING FEVER

W wa~~~~~~~~~~~~~-____ I

_- -- _ __- _

GET MORE-POR LESS?Yes, lbeause of theL new

Dn 5reduced rates on many"economr-size" havingo

Bank Life lnouranco policies, i-oauod in amounts of $3,000 ormoreo. You can now got more pro-tection at lower cost. Ask forthe new folder showing themsREDUCED rateo.

CAMBRIDGEPORT SAVINGS BANKCentrel Square UN 4o5271

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MbUREEN STAPLETOI

WWAe o(t f S~ swn kw bey SCHARY

PK E Ni h 4 01t i: Kenrmre ,Sq.i ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii,-

LNG a llv c r uf iST I iis-L ; In';stilufn a NEW POLICYwhich te especialiy deoigned to incroeoeinterest in JAZZ for COLLEGE STUDENTS.Henceforth. unless otherise specified, e rhowill bo a Minimum Charge of ONLY SiO,imtoepd o0f the REGULAR $3.50 AilotlurnCharge, for all attractions appor;ing atSTORWILLE on MONDPAY end TUESDAYAights. Proof of college enrollment or acopy of this advortilement is all that isneeded to tfklio advantage of this NewPolicy. Minors ore welcome, but will not beserved Alcoholic Beveorges. Identificationis neessary. GEORGE WEIN

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BThe. Tech

I agree that no governmental 'body shoulid:. be ;able tocontrol the Admissions (or any other) Department of MITor any other private university.

The loyalty oath rider in the National Defense Educa-tion Act is a prime example of the forces our federal gov-ernment brings into play wherever federal funds are dis-sipated. The acceptance of federal aid by private educationalinstitutions is putting them in extreme danger of losingtheir sovereignty to the bureaucratic agencies which arealways set up to disperse federal funds. Such agencies aregenerally accompanied by extreme inefficiency, lobbying,and the ugliness of graft.

I know that MIT and other private colleges do not wantto submit to governmental control or to any inefficient,"boondoggling" bureaucrats. I therefore hope that ouruniversities will make the slight sacrifice of refusing federalaid in order to retain their independance.

Philip E. Beach, Jr. '59

red scare

To the Editor:In the last issue of The Tech, Mr. Philip E. Beach, in

an editorial entitled On The Red Frow/, insinuated that thegroup of students who handed out a paper opposing themethods of Dr. Frederick Schwarz were "soft" on theSoviet Union. Since this accusation is a serious one, wewish to defend our position. We are definitely and ir-revocably anti-Communist, as anyone who read the lettercan testify. We did not say, as Phillip Beach stated, that"Russia is neither truly Communistic nor bent on worlddomination." We said, in our paper, "That the Russianleaders have no interest in a military war; they want tofight an economic and propaganda war." If Mr. Beachlistend to Dr. Schwarz, he would have heard him sayexactly the same thing. However, we oppose the methodsof Dr. Schlarz. By falsifying his figures, he tried to "RedScare" the MIT community. We were opposed to Dr.Schwarz's statements, in the leaflets he handed out con-currently, that "It (Commnunismn) it totally immoral, and

enz/fa/ arnd einol;onzal barriers against it should be erectedin the minds of the young." We were opposed to Dr.Schwarz's statements to the effect that the U.S. should sup-port such "friendly" dictatorships such as the ex-Iraq one.We are opposed to the movies implication that a holy war,meaning the slaughter of hundreds of millions, shouldbest means of fighting Communism.

Our "ridiculous position," as Mr. Beach called it, wasstated in our paper as follows: We nave a faith in democ-racy that allows us to believe people can be taught aboutCommunism without "emotional barriers." We want to befree from a hysterical fear of Communism. We don't be-lieve America needs a dictatorship to oppose Communism.We believe "Russian Communism can be stopped by hav-ing democracy, by supporting it everywhere it exists, byli1ing it in America." We hope that Mr. Beach nowrealizes that one can be opposed to both Communism andthe Fascistly-inclined methods of scare, brainwashing andsuppression at the same time. In any case, he should bemore careful in his insinuations.

Gershon Horowitz '62

Entered as second class matter at the post office at Boston, Massachu-setts. Published every Tuesday and Friday during the college year,except college vacations, by THE TECH-Walker Memorial, Cam-bridge 39, Mass. Telephones TRowbridge 6-5855-6 or UNiversity4.6900, Ext. 2731. Twer.ty-four hour answering service: TR 6-5855.

Renneth F. Reinschmldt '60 ............................................................ ChairmanJohn B. Stevenson '60 .. ......................................................... Managing EditorPeter M. Silverberg '60 ..................................... Business ManagerDavid W. Packer '59 ................................................................................ EditorLinda H. Greiner '60 ................................................................ News DirectorAbraham Feinberg '60 . ....................................... ,,Sports DirectorJon P. Wigert '60 .................................................................... Features Editor

Gene W. Ruoff '61 ..................................... Associate Managing Editor]Raymond J. Waldmann '60 .............................. Associate Business ManagerJim Kistler '62 ............................................................ Associate News EditorBarry Roach '62 .......................................................... Associate News EditorBrian Strong '62 .............................................................. Circulation ManagerCharles Muntz '62 ............................................................ Advertising ManagerLeonard R. Tenner '60 ................................................ Associate Sports Editor]Robert N. Gurnitz '60 ................................................ Associate Sports EditorDeloss S. Brown '62 ............................................................ Editorial Assistant

Wilbur HU2-3818

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Powerhouse of a play!"

the GREAT BIG POWER and

the GLORY

by GRAHAM GREENE

UNIVERSITY

Harvard Square UN 4-458Now - Ends SaturdayStrictly For Laughs!

"THE PERFECT FURLOUGH"Tony Curtis--Jane' Leigh

2:00 - 6:00 - 9:40British Epic "DUNKIRK"

Starring John Mills3:30 and 7:30

Sun. "THE BLACK ORCHID"

A Warm FeelingWe left Kresge Auditorium last Tuesday night with a

fery warm feeling for the Institute and for its President.We feel that Dr. Stratton's speech to the students was aneminently successful event, and feel certain that it willbe the first of a long series. The enthusiastic standing ova-tion which the President received shonred we are not alonein our views.

We were, however, extremely disappointed in the stu-dent interest in the speech. Less than 300 people or onlyone out of every ten undergraduates had enough interest inthe kind of education which they are receiving to spendless than an hour listening to the most important voice atMIT.

Dr. Stratton spent a good deal of time delving into thepast history and motives behind the MIT education. Wefeel that this was a fascinating and even timely part of histalk, although it prevented him from going into some ofthe current problems which would probably have been ofthe greatest general interest and worth.

We hope that next fall, speaking in the same line, thePresident will briefly sum up the points and backgroundcovered Tuesday-and then delve into many topics whichhe had hoped to cover this week.

We feel sure that the next Stratton speech wrill attractmore interest than the first. If it does not, there is somethingvitally wrong with the Undergraduate body.

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Bach's B-minor Mass

Klaus Liepmann has directed enough performances ofprofessional quality at MIT that it becomes increasinglyhard to say anything original about him. Having heard theB-Minor Mass last Friday, we liust repeat that the chorussas clear, coordinated, and strong. Their precision has im-proved even since The Fairy Oveenz last month. It was apleasure to hear almost every word through the massive in-tricacies of this three-hour work.

As a group the soloists did not mnatch up to the chorus.Catherine Rowe, soprano, and Eunice Alberts, alto, seemeddraw n up into themselves, unable to project their ariaseven swith the famous Kresge Auditorium acoustics. Eachimproved as the evening went on, however, especially MissAlberts, whose aria in the third section (Agnus Dei, quitollis peccata mundi, miserere nobis . . . ) was one of thepurest. We heard very little fromn the tenor, Donald Sulli-,an, and his single aria was hea)y and self-conscious.

Paul Matthen wvas the single great exception. His voiceis exceptionall}, strong, completely equal to the music; butmore important, it is exy)r.l.Ssi'e, here as in The Fali,y Olee,7accomplishing a major feat in manking his part a dramaticindi iduality.

The instrumental section was excellent. WYe must brieflymention Roger Voisin and his superb /;e;;olo in the O.sa;;,i;s excelsi.: then Daniel Pinkham, the harpsichordist. He

ras nmost memorable in the bass aria in the Nicene Creed,primaril) because there, as the dominant instrument, he wasfree in his own peculiarly stylized realm.

Herbert Odom

in defense of the letter

Pete Camejo '62

Barry Sheppard '60

Gershon Horowitz '62

Dave Vilkomerson '62

Ken Seymour '60

George Lermer '60

Archie Thomas '62

signed by:

about The Crucible

Although I fully agree with your respected reviewer'spraise of the current production of The Crucib!e and hisstatement that "it is a play with a message," I feel thatthe reading which he gives is a rather limited one thatdoes not do full justice to Arthur Miller's subtle artistictalent. Certainly "the everlasting fight between men withfaith in God and men with faith in the church" is oneaspect of the central idea, but in a larger context TheCr -cible casts doubt upon the whole idea of moral progressin human society. We who are so shocked and embarrassedby the grossly primitive nature of the Salem witch trialsand the obvious short-sightedness of the judges and clergyinvolved were recently taken in by a certain Senator fromWisconsin, who, like Judge Hathorne of old, made nhole-sale accusations on the basis of shoestring "evidence."Communists rather than witches were the target this time,but the frenzied desire on the part of the general publicto rid themselves of the insidious Communist menace borea striking resemblance to the earlier situation.

Pointing out this parallel certainly does not representan, original work on my part, but I think it is well worthconsidering as being relevant to the "message" of thisskillfully written play.

Robert Sprich

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Mr. Samuels' editorial of April 14 refers, I feel, to onlya small detail of a great issue presently confronting the un-iversities of our country.

Criticism of governmental meddling in the affairs ofprivate educational institutions is certainly warranted and

Page 3: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

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Cushmadn Scooter for sale, sound runningcondition. Newly painted, recent bearingjo6s $30. Cal} Bill Burke of John McElroy,Cl 7-8048.

O bitu ar yThe Institute's flags flew at

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Ad-ado - - anURRY! ENTER NOW! CONTEST CLOSES MAY 29, 1959 - - -G-us-RULES-PLEASE READ CAREFULLY2. The College Puzzle Contest is open to collegestudents and college faculty members except em-ployees and their immediate families of Liggett& Myers and its advertising agencies.

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Page 4: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

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The problem was not thatMarty had fallen in love witha shirt. After all, he wasa Philosophy major.

The trouble was... Martywas in love with two shirts.

With Shirt No. 1, the VanHeusen Century, the seriousMarty spent hours in heaven-ly bliss. He worshipped therevolutionary soft collar thatwon't wrinkle ever. It wasCentury's one-piece construc-tion that drove him wild.(Other collars never did any-thing for our boy Marty, ex-cept wrinkle madly. You see,other collars are three pieces,fused or sewn together.)

With Shirt No. 2, the amaz-ing Van Heusen "Vantage,"the gay, frivolous Marty livedthe life of carefree abandon .He

could wear it and wear it-wash it-drip-dry it, or haveit tumble-dried automatically-and wear it again in a matterof hours. It was the most mon-ey-saving love he ever had.

But when Marty was withone shirt, he missed the other.It was terrible. Like so manyothers with the same problem,Marty wrote to us. And. soit came to pass that the VanHeusen "Century-Vantage"was born. This shirt combinedtheadvantagesof each intoonegreat shirt--awash and wear,no-iron, all cotton broadclothshirt with the soft collar thatwon't wrinkle ever! And just$5! Have you a problem?Write Phillips-Van HeusenCorp., 417 Fifth Avenue, NewYork 16, New York.

Dr. Glimcher (second from right) is shown receiving the Kappa Delta Award "for the bestresearch and the most outstanding contribution to the field of orthopedic surgery and re-lated basic sciences from 1956 to 1959." Mrs. Rov Reser, president of the national sororitypresents the award as Dr. H.R. McCarrol! (left) and Prof. Robert Robinson (right)President of the A.A.O.S. and Chairman of the A.A.O.S. Scientific Advisory Committee,respectively, look on

Whly do crystals form ill bone, car-tilage, and teeth, and why not inother tissues which have the samebasic fibrous structure?

Dr. Melvin J. Glimcher, biophys-icist, orthopedic surgeon, and now aFellow in the School for AdvancedStudies at MIT, has apparently foundsome of the answers to these ques-tions. Under the direction of Dr.Francis O. Schmitt, MIT's autholrityon collagen, Dr. Glimcher conductedexperiinents on the molecular Imech-anisms of biological crystallization invitro by utilizing polymers of natu-rally occurring protein macromole-cules.

In Dr. Schmitt's unit on the fifthfloor of Building 16? Dr. Glimcher

studied calcification as it occurs inbones and teeth using reconstitutedcollagen macromolecular threads: thetlreads made from the naturally oc-curring collagen macromolecules ex-tracted from soft tissue, such as skin,tendon, and ligament.

These threads or fibrils were iden-

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FRIDAY, APRIL 24, g195

AnswersCrystals

Found About theApparenatlyFormed In

By Da-e Nic

and Teethtical to those seen in living tissues,both hard and soft. While naturemakes only one kind of thread, lab-Dn'atory experiments have producedire or six different kinds of fibrilsby polymerizing the macromoleculesn different ways. However, only oneorm was calcified by the depositionf inorganic cystals, and -that formvas the reconstituted type found in:ature. This calcification was depen-lent upon a particular aggregationtate of the macromolecules.Another basic question was wviy

issues other than bones and teeth,ontaining the same basic fiblrous;tructure, did not mineralize. "Sincehe collagen in all connective tissuekin, ligament, bone) is apparentlyhe same," D1r. Glimcher explained,the hypothesis which the investigat-rs at MIT propose is that there arether substances in the tissue whichtolleally prevent it. The mucopoly-accharides may be one of these sub-tances." Fulrther experimentationas tended to confirm this theory. Hes now trying to isolate the materiasvhich act as inhibitors.Tissue such as slain, for instance,

toes not calcify in life or in testubes. Yet, D1. Glimcher found thatahen collagen is dissolved, purified,tad the threads reconstituted, thehreads can be made to calcify. Fromhe opposite direction, experiments:ave kept the collagen intact, butxtracted all other mnaterial around

(Continued on page 5)

I Bonetkles '62

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HIW i t, $25Take a word-garbage, for example. With it, you can make the contents ofan auto junk yard (carbage), Hollywood refuse (starbage), incinerator dust(charbage) or glass-factory rejects (jarbage). That's Thinklish-and it's thateasy! We're paying $25 for the Thinklish words judged best-your check isitching to go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N.Y.Enclose your name, address, university and class.

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Page 5: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

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J. CAESAR, Italian politician, says: "Allthe boys in Rome use Wildroot ontheir dome! How about you?"

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ACROSS IDOW1. Blow taken 1. Cuba ha

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demonstrated even(L. abbr.) 28. Alone, n

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about Willie's 36. Square akinfolk colleges

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ological conditions, such as arthritisand atherosclerosis. Mineral ions, oc-currling in body fluids, circulatethroughout the body, but normallycrystalize only in bones and teeth.In pathological conditions, these de-posits calcify normally soft tissues."May I emphasize the importance ofthe glround structure in regulatingandl possibly inhibiting the process ofmjineralizatio n in tissue where min-eiralization noirmally does not occur," asserted Dr. Glimcher.

At the annual meeting of the Amer-ican Academy of Orthopedic Sur-geons last January, Dr. Glimcherreceiveed the Kappa Delta Awardand a citation "for the best researchand the most outstanding contribu-tion to the field of orthopedic sur-g-ery and related basic sciences from1956 to 1959." This award carried acash prize of $1,000. The ScientificAdvisory Committee of the A.A.O.S.recommended Dr. Glimcher for thea-award which was presented by KappaDelta, a national sorority interestedin medical research.

Grants for the research on themechanisms of tissue control of min-eralization have come froom the Na-tional Institute of Health, the Or-thopedic Research an d EducationFoundation, the Easter Seal ResearchFoundation, the National Society forCrippled Children and Adults, theMcdical Foundation of Boston, theLiberty Mutual Insurance Company,and the John A. Hartford Founda-tion of New York.

In addition to his work at MIT, Dr.Glimcher maintains a laboratory atthe Massachusetts General Hospital,where he was recently appointed di-rector of the Orthopedic ResearchLaboratories now under construction.These laboratories will maintain aclose relation with MIT and the Har-vard Medical School.

Following his military service inthe U. S. Marine Corps, Dr. Glim-cher received a Mechanical Engineer-ing degree from Purdue in Febru-ary of 1946, and a B.S. in Physics inJune of the same year. In 1950, hewas awalrded an M.D. from the Har-v-ard Medical School. After six yearsof internship and residency trainingin orthopedic surgery at the Mass.General and the Children's MedicalCenter, he came to MIT as a Fellowin the School for Advanced Studies.

(Continued from page 4)it, and the collagen fibrils calcifiedas part of the tissue. This evidenceseems to substantiate his theory.

Currently Dr. C-limcher's work isaimed at determining the nature ofthe specific amino and mineral ions.The nature of the crystals nucleatedby the biological material has beenestablished by electron microscopyand X-ray diffraction studies. Thisresearch was carried on with the col-laboration of Dr. Schmitt and Dr.Alan J. Hodge, executive officer inthe unit.

The third basic problem wvas whycrystallization occurs in certain path-

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The Tech Page 5

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Page 6: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

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In what might turn out to be thegreatest single play of the IM season,Baker House B scooped up a hot linedrive into the hole near second baseand turned it into a triple play. KenLembach '61, at shortstop, caught theball at shoe top level, stepped onsecond and threw to Ed Weiss '60 atfirst to end an inning that had startedwith Sigma Alpha Mu loading thebases.

The league action this weekendfeatured the extremes in scoring.The close, low tally games includedBaker B, who held off Sigma AlphaMu 7-3. TEP fought to gain a narrowvvictory over Phi Gammna Delta 4-3.Graduate House Dining Staff didtheir best to control Lamba Chi Alphaon the diamond but lost the heart-breaker 4-1. League VIII saw theclosest competition as Delta Tau

Delta outplayed a spunky Phi KappaSigma team 2-1, and East Campuscame back to dlrop the Sky Gazers5-3.

A general survey of the eightleagues shows that few teams alreundefeated. Sevelral of the favoriteshave bungled their scheduled games,receiving stiff competition from someteams mot previously consideredcapable of offering much resistance.At this point the TEP's are out aheadin League II, as Grad A and LambdaChi Alpha battle it out in League V.

No race is decided yet as twelvegaines have been rained out andmuist be replayed. It is hoped thatthis ,vill be completed before IFCweekend, as following the weekendthe league winners will participatein a double elimination tournament.

The 1959 crew season opened on arather dismal note last Saturday asEngineer varsity, junior varsity, andfreshman lightweight crews bowed toCornell and Harvard in a triangularregatta on the Charles River.

In the varsity race, Harvard tookan early lead and was nevelr headedover the 1 5-16 mile course. TheBeaver shell led the Cornell eightunder Halrvald Bridge, but the BigRed passed the Tech boat and wenton to finish ten seconds behind theCriminson's time of 7:29.7.

The JV race was certainly the niostexciting of the day for several hun-dred spectators who lined the banksof the river near the boathouse towitness the events. After trailing inthe second spot for most of the dis-tance, Harvalrd closed fast and edgedCornell at the finish line by the prowof the shell. The winning timne w-as7:22.0, which was the fastest of theday for the course. MIT finished witha clocking of 7:52, their worst timeof the year. It is significant to note,perhaps, that the Tech boat was five

minutes late getting into the waterand may not have had enough warm-up time before the race.

Cornell came in the last half-mileto claim honors in the freshman race.Harvard finished one second off the7:45.0; the Engineers stroked toa 8:01.0 clocking. The Beavers led byone-fourth length after 20 strokesbut could not hold the margin underthe Cornell bid.

MIT did manage to finish second inone race, trailing Harvard in thethilrd varsity tilt. Brown, an addedstarter, placed third, The Beaver

second freshman crew, however, lostin a dual race to Halrvard.

Last Saturday's Boatings:MIT Liglhtweights

and lightweight clrews will be lall.ing, the heavies meeting Halvard,Syracuse and BU in their seasor,openelr while the lights travel toAnnapolis, Md., to race alrvald an,Navy.

The quadrangular race onl theCharles should be an imlporltallt testfor the heavies, who will meet twoof tomo1rrows's opponents, BU andHarvard, next wveek folr the Comlpto,Cup.

Bill Peck '60 will be in the bom- to.imlolrow with Bob Hofland '61 in the:number two position when the heaviehit the water. Bick Hooper '60, DonMIorrison '60, Irv Weinman '60, E.-Neild '60, Captain Steve Spooner '.59and stroke Dean \WTebber will cenl. plete the boat.

Craig Fletcher '60 will hold dowr..the bow position for the Beaver JVheavyweight boat with Chuck Negir.'60, Bill Kendall '61, Vic Utgoff '--Dare Culver '61, Bill Grimmell '51-and Mike Gockel '61 behind. 3IalkJensen '60 will be the JV strol-k.Peter Buttner '61 will cox the shell.

.......

\Varsityl Teffriie

7 ileischer6 MIor-an5 ]'lattc4 .\1I1cn3 ]'Plarkof2 l1lacilclllrdI Arlen Cox. Olshal<er

HEAVIES HOPEFUL

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]',Io,,eStefansk\-

Dolrfmllar

(By the A Wthor of "Rally Round the Flag, Rcos?" and:"Barefoot Boy with Cheek.")

Tomorrowv both Beaver heavyweight

Beaver Nine FacesBates On Saturday

The MIT varsity baseball squadwill play its first home game of theyear tomorrow on Briggs Field whenit takes on Bates College. This gamewill be a welcome relief for the trav-el weary teanm which has playedeight aw-ay games prior to this en-gagement.

In preparation for Saturday's con-test, the team has been participatingin daily workouts. The emphasis hasbeen on hitting in the hope that thebatters will be able to hit the longball and deliver that timely base hitin the clutch.

Either Al Beard '59 or Dick Oeler'60 will be the probable startingpitcher in this week-end's encounter.Behind the plate will be catcher andteam captain Warren Goodnow, whois pictured at right.

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Regllar habits, my foot! The most imllportant quality in aroom-mate is that he should be exactly- your size. Otherwiseyou will have to have his clothes altered to fit you, which canlbe a considerable nuisance. In fact, it is sometimes flatly im-possible. T recollect one time I 'roomed with anmn namnedOsage Tremblatt who was i ust under seven feet tall and weighednearly four hundred Ipounds. There wasn't a blessed thing Icould use in his entire wardrobe-until one night when I wasinvxited to a masquerade party. I cut one leg off a pair of Trem-blatt's trousers, junlped into it, sewed up, both ends, and wentto the party as a bolster. I took secoild prize. First prize wentto a girl namlled ALntenna Radnitz whllo poured molasses overher head and went as a clandied apple.

But I digress. Let us turn back to the qualities that makedesirable room-mates. SNot the least of these is the cigarettesthey smooke. Wheln we lbum eigalrettes, do we want them to beshoddy and nondescript' CertaFinly not! W'e want themn to bedistinguished, gently reared, zestful .tad zinlgy. And what ciga-rette is distinguished, gently reared, zestful and ziny'? WAhy,Philip Morris, of corris! Any11 further questions?

To go on. In selectinlg a roolml-mate, find someone who willwear well, whom you'd like to keep as a permanent friend.MAtny of history's great frielndshlips first started in college. Areyou Laware, for exalmple, of the rellmarkahle fact that Johnsonand Boswell were rooml-nlates at Oxford in 1712? TWhat nmakesthis fact so renlmrkablle is that in 1)712 Johnson was only threevears old and Boswell hadl not yet been born. But, of course,children mtatturedl earlier in those days. Take M1ozart, whowrote his first symphollny at four. C)r Titiall, who painted hisfirst -masterpiece at five. Or Hanso Fell)gtng, who was in manyways the Imost reml:trkable of all; he was appoinlted chief of theCopenhagen police departnlent at the age of six!

It niust be admitted, howeveer, that he (lid badly. Crinminalsroamled the city. rchi))hing end( looting aLt will. They knew littleHanso woul ndeer p ursue t h en--he Ievs otallowed to crossthe street. , 19.! Max SIulman

If yol are allowted to cross tire street, hie yourself to a to-bacconist and stock up on Philip Morris, outstanding amongnon-filter cigarettes, or Marlboro, the filter cigarette withbetter "makinra's." Pick your pleasure.

The TechPage 6 FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1959

to Cornell, Harvard;IM Softball Enzters Third Week Lighlt Crews BowBaker House Springs Triple Play All Oarsmen WVill See Action Tomorroy-

;dth

THE CARE AND FEEDING OF ROOM-MATES

Rooll-m:ates are not only heaps of fun, but they are also veryeducaltional, for the proper study of mankind is man, and thereis no better way to learn the dreams and drives of another malnthan to share a room With hin.

This being the case, it is wise not to keepl) the same room-mnate too long, because the nmore roonl-mates you have, themore you will know about tile dreams and drives of yourfellow man. So try to chlange roomrn-mates as often us you can.A recent study nmade by Sig'afoos of Princeton show-s that tilebest interval for changinlg room-malltes is every four hours.

Host do you choose a room-mate? Most counselors agreetllh.t the mlost important thling to look for in room-mates is thatthey be pleople of regular habits. This, I say, is arrant nonsense.WThat if one of their regular habits lhal)plens to be beating aChinese gong from mnidnight to d(trwn? Or grow-ing cultures inylour tooth gltiss? ()r reciting the Articles of War'?

, I.-b-L ·S-~

DATE. A great placeto meet is over tall glassesof golden Budweiser.You klnowr... where othere's life,there's Buds

KING OF BEERS ·ANHEUSER BUSCH, INC. ·ST. LOUIS · NEWARK - LOS ANGELES ·MIAMI ·TAMPA

Page 7: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

IFRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1959 The Tech Page 7

iSailors Third in Oberg Regatta; Varsity Lacrossemen Down Htrvard 6-4Capture Boston Dinghy Club CupThle MIT sailors topped teams from MIIT Third in Oberg Trophy Race

ltilel\e other schools last Saturday Fighting raw northeasterly winds,(;.m Sud ay to capture the Boston MIT's sailors finished third behind

Di}ghy Club Cup in races held on the BU and Harvard. Fouls hurt theih,,lles. The Techmien finished with Techmen as each of the three entrieslI foilni(lkible 237 points to beat see- dropped out of a race because of vi-

0iid place BU by fourteen. After BU olations.,lnle Bowocdoin with 203 points, Gray wras top man in the B Div'i-own, l i'ght behind with 202 and sion with five straight wins after an,,,,t Guiard Iwith 184. Harvard fin- opening race withdrawal. Skipperingsjlle( eighlth with 152. in the A Division was Jan Northby

.~`~ Hhosirohsi'59, and in the .C Division, Bill LongHih point skipper for the serie's '59. At the sheets were George Kirk

.NIIT's Dennis Posey '59 who '60, Don Nelsen'61, and Gary Hirsch-:,';assed 126 points out of a possible berg '61..43. Cle.l.ng for him w as Pete Gray The sailors will face another bigq61 Sailing in the other division w-as week-end as they will see action to-

tbill Wiidnall '59, with crew Jake van morrow in the Geiger Memorial Tro-lHeechkelen '60. phy Regatta on the Charles, and Sun-

p' B'isk ten to twenty knot winds:mzi(le Saturday's racing very keen. Al-t'though a complete change in condi-

,. tions tulned Sunday's races intod1ihifting nlatches, a slight increase in

b;lind strc ngth made further racing.possible later that afternoon.

ion deckFriday

I'iLrsity Tennis with Colby 3:00 p.m.Saturday

Iars'ity Track with UNH, Tufts1:15 p.m.

Freshuman Track with Tufts 1:15 p.mn.iarlsity Golf with Colby, Springfield

2:00 p.m.Varsity Tennis at UM1ass 2:00 p.m.Varsity Baseball with Bates 2:00 p. m.Valrsity Lacrosse with New Hamp-

shirie 2:(!) p.m.

day in the New England DinghyChampionship Eliminations at CoastGuard. The Geiger Trophy races willbe sailed in three divisions: 110'swith spinnakers in Division A, Fire-flies in Division B, and Tech Dinghiesin Division C.

Freshman Lacrosse at New Hamp-shire 2:00 p.m.

Heavyweight Crew with Harvard,Syracuse, BU 4:00 p.m.

Freshman Tennis at Harvard 3:00p.m.

Lightweight Crew at NavyVarsity Sailing at MIT for Geiger

TrophySunday

Sailing--Dinghy Championships atCoast Guard

Sunday Evening APRIL 26 at 8 o'clockHON. PAUL M. BUTLER

(Chairman, Democratic National Committee)

"Human Rights for All Americans"

FOIRD HALL OnRUMJORDAN HALL - Gainsboro St. cor. Huntington Ave. - BOSTONDOORS OPEN 7:45 P.M. EVERYBODY WELCOME

Show Great Strength Defeating WP1 13-1The powerful lacrosse team, after

having four easy victories, their lat-est over WPI by a score of 13-1, waspresented with stiff competition lastTuesday afternoon and had to comefrom behind three times to defeat

Trackmen Succumb;Broad Jump RecordSet by iNeil Bacote

Traveling to Providence last Sat-urday the varsity and freshmantrack teams were downed by theBrown University cindermen byscores of 94 1/6-40 1/6 and 84-38,respectively. Neil Bacote '62 provid-ed the highlight of the day in thebroad jump by leaping 21' 9/s" toset a new feshman record. The oldstandard of 21' 21/4" was set by DanMcConnell '61 last spring. Bacotewas also high scorer for the froshwith 11 points.

Pacing the varsity was Joe Davis'61 with 11 tallies. Davis copped thehigh jump while placing second inboth the high and low hurdles be-hind Brown's Angelo Sinisi, IC4Aindoor hurdles champion. Other Techwinners were captain Bill Nicholson'60 in the hammer throw, Jim Long'60 in the javelin throw, Dan Mc-Connell '61 in the broad jump, andNate Liskov '60 with a tie for firstin the pole vault.

Besides capturing first place in thebroad jump, frosh Neil Bacote tooksecond in both the 100- and 220-yarddashes to gain his 11 points. DaveKoch was a double winner for theyearlings with victories in the highjump and pole vault.

The freshman squad made theirfirst home appearance Wednesdaywhen they met Governor Dummer atBriggs Field. Both varsity and fresh-men will see action tomorrow atBriggs at 12:45 p.m. The varsity willface Tufts and the University ofNew Hampshire in a triangular meetwhile the frosh engage the Jumboyearlings in dual contests.spelled off numerous penalties by

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Harvard by a score of 6-4. The Crim-son, led by Bohn who scored all fourgoals, opened the scoring on a quickbreak late in the first quarter, butChuck Fitzgerald '59, on a solo play,backhanded one in while being foul-ed with half a, minute remaining inthe quarter.

Harvard opened their offensive inthe second quarter with Bohn gettingtwo in the first five minutes, but theEngineers proceeded to carry theplay, being stopped repeatedly as inthe first quarter by Chris Stone,Harvard's goalie, who made severaloutstanding saves, robbing attack-man Paul Ekberg '59 several times.However, Joe Skendarian '61 carriedthe ball alone all the way downfieldand through the defense to score at9:38. Then at 11:24, Ekberg tied thescore on a pass from Jim Russell'59 while Harvard was a man down.Bohn put the Cantabs out in frontagain when he scored on an emptynet after the Beaver goalie had at-tempted to clear.

Florian Ties ScoreLed by the second midfield, attack-

man Ekberg, and the exciting playof Phil Frink '60 in goal, the Tech-man ran Harvard into the ground.In the second half, Nat Florian '60drove in to tie the score and a min-ute later at 13:20 he passed to Sken-darian who scored the winning goal.With two men down for a minute,the Beavers showed their strengthby thwarting Harvard just as they

outstanding ball handling.Russell opened the fourth quarter

with the insurance goal for Tech ashe took a pass from John Comerford'59 and drove a hard shot for thescore and 2:04. Frink raised thebench to its feet as he took one ofthree solo dashes the full length ofthe field before passing off to Ek-berg who was robbed by a greatsave. There was no more scoring de-spite Tech's control of the play.

Engineers Down WPI 13-1The Techmen showed their great

strength by walloping WPI by a scoreof 13-1 last Saturday. Outstandingfor the Engineers were Chuck Fitz-gerald '59 and Jim Russell '59 whoeach contributed 3 goals. The re-maining seven were scored by sevenother men to round out an excellentteam effort. Chuck Conn '60 wascredited with four assists and JohnComerford '59 chalked up two. Inthis match WPI displayed manyweaknesses, exhibiting no depth.

Coach Ben Martin will lead thesquad against UNH at home tomor-row afternoon. This should be thesternest test of the season for histeam. The gan:e shows all indicationsof approaching and possibly surpass-ing Tuesday's game in excitement,and crowd pleasing play. Tomorrow'sgame will be one of the most im-portant single sport's event at MITthis year as a lwin over UNH wouldput the lacrosse team in line for anundefeated season.

While in practice for tomorrow's triangular meet, Bob Barrett '60 is shown at his specialty,the pole vault.

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Page 8: N-../ ~~~~~~~ - - ' .-- ,.. %. i i -. President Stratton …tech.mit.edu/V79/PDF/V79-N15.pdfThe Spencer stipend recognizes the wxlnnler Who has dlone most to ad-van·;mice his own

_ __ I _· _ _

Page 8

�- --

Ilc- -- I - -- --- - - '- I - ---J. PAUL SHEEDY,* hair expert, says: "Wild-root keeps hair neat and hamsome all daylong.".,, 1.la s,,. II,, f , 1 ,11 1d:., I$ lllisnl~ mle .x .1'.

Just a little bit of Wildroot . 2. %R"

and... WOW! i

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The Tech

Why pay the big-car price penalty ?

Last woeek-end the varsity netimenrecov-ered with a sihow of stlrengthof the courts aftel bowing to Har-v-ard 9-0 on Wednesday. Thle Beaverloss wras chalked up to great dephlion the Harvard teami, although fourof the nine matches wvent three sets.

On Friday MIT rlan into a tou--hAr5my team and emerged on top, 6-3.

Raul Kaurman '61, Jeff Winicour '59,Jack Klapper '61, and Bc-b Hods-es'60 swept t h e first four singles

matches, while the first and thirddoubles contests were wvon by Kar-man an(l Klapper, and Bob Palik '59and Winicour. Most of the battleswere taken in two sets as tthe teamlooked sharp.

Brown, showing a squad stronger

than the Cadets, outplayed a hardfighlting Beaver team on Saturdclay,ending w-ith MIT defeated 6-3. Ka,-man fought a close three set duel towin the first singles match 3-6, 6-4,7-5. Klapper won at third in twosets, and then teamed up wl ith Kar-man to take the first doubles en-counter in straight sets. Threematches were lost in three sets tohurt the noetnen's total score.

B t T]omimcedMionday saw a fired up Beaver team

roll over BU, 9-0. All Techmen won

in straihlit sets and it -was felt that

the Terrier team was wd\eaker than

usual, perhaps because this was theirfirst match of the season.

The M1IT freshmen welre defeated7-2 by Brown on Saturday, in theirfirst competition of the splring. JerryAdams won 6-0, 6-4, while Jimi Tay-lor and George Eimo took their doub-les match in straight'sets.

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THE REAL THING IN MILDNESS...THE REAL THING IN FINE TOBACCO TASTE

Lesson for today' In a few short months, Newv Dutal Filter Tareytons have

become a big favorite on U.S. campuses. For further references, see youlr

camipus smokle sllop.

I.A Book of Verses underneath the Bough,Some Schaefer Beer, a Loaf of Bread-and ThouBeside me yakketing in the Wilderness-Oh, just the Beer were Paradise enow!

..:..-..... .. --..:.: ..

IT.II. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~.: .' .-.-x

Come, fill the Cup with golden Schaefer brew,For in the Best of Circles it is trueEach parched Voice cries, "Schaefer all around!"Ah, Love, I echo them-and think of You!

III.

Oh, my Beloved, let us now make hasteTo sip our Schaefer with its smooth Round taste:We know it's never Sharp and never Flat,And in this WNorld we've little time to Waste!

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And those who husbanded the golden Grain-Sun-ripened, perfect, gently kissed by Rain-Have sent it to us now in Sehaefer Beer,And Worldly Hope is in my Heart again!

t':z

V.

And any time, my Friend, you come to passSchaefer to Guests star-scattered on the Grass,And in your happy errand reach the placeWhere I once stood-turn down an empty Glass!

THE F.&M. SCHAEFER BREWINP cn.. NEe YORK and ALBMNY M Y( A. T. Co.)

FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1959

RacquetmnenOvercomeArmny, B U;ToppedbyHarvard,Brown Squads

g0 dRaSmb/erPay hundreds of dollarsless-save more than everon gas and upkeep

God WILDROOTCREAM-IL Charlie!

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