sophs win field glove fight - the techtech.mit.edu/v82/pdf/v82-n23.pdf · ternoon, after only the...

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Field Duay Toftals Event '65 '66 Gondola Boat Race; Race (not finished) O O Best Dressed Coed 5 Best Designed Boat - to Bed Race: Race 10 54 Neatest bed - .5 Event X: Cigarette Butts 10 - Greased Pig (tie) 5 5 Resistor in Hay - 10 Tugs of War: Unlimited - 10 Coed -- Glove Fight 50 Totals o80 521~ * Penalty ~~ ---- L-ellhl~~~~ _IFii ------- _ _=l . - __ _ MEMBL-- - -- L. - -L Even their taped-on clothing did not protect these two victims of the Glove Fight for long. This year the Sophomores rallied to trounce the Frosh in this event. Ile Sophomores scored an 80 to 521/2 victory ove the Ohmen at Field Day last weekend. Originl- ly schedu/ed ar Saturday morn- rg, THe activities were postponed because of rain until Sundray a- ternoon, after only the gondola race had Ibeen completed. As in past years, *he glove fight decided the mield Day victor; be- fore wnirig the event, the soph- omores trailed by 221/2 points. Each of -he fGhren was given a red glove, each sophomore a yellow one. 'Me object was then to accumulate the greatest possi- ble stock of scraps of the other team's gloves. However, any participant 1ing completely his own glove was re- quired to Ileave -he contest. Although ou;numbered 160 to 120, the sopbs capitazed on the freshmnen's ,lack of experience by orgamzmng .themselvesm to groups. Then, When one of themn wLs at- tacked by a group of freshmen, he summoned help by yelling he names of other members of hEs group. The freshmen, on the other hand, merely shouted "66!" when attacked, and usually received lit- tle asitane. At the end of the aflloted 15 minutes, weighns, revealed that the sophomoves had gathered 1%/2 pounds of glove scraps, slightly ,more Than the freshmen's 1% pounds. The sophomores and freshmen split 15415 the 30 points for the Field Day mystery event, which included three .corests. The sophomores won the first of the three by colecting rthe great- est numrber of filter tips from old cigarettes ,e e Frday evening and Sunday Afternoon. The tder two contests were an- nounced iwnmmedaty before be- ing played. The first was the greased-pig Tare, which was played on a fenced field, with freshnfen and sophomores sta- tioned at the opposite ends. In addition, freshmen and sph- omores were ationed alternaately dt lattice points on ithe field. They attempted to drive the pig toward the ends of the field, members of the opposing teans encouraing the pig's flight toward thern re- spective goal lines. The wim'nin team was o be be one which first drove the pig 'to its own end of the field, where it was to be seized by a team member and deposited in a buck- et in the ceter of the field. At the end of he allObted time, neither team ,had succeeded in driving lthe pig across its goal line; the event was declared tied and each team received 5 points. In the third game, a needle-in- the-maysack comyteSt, six color- coded Tesistors wee buried in a staek of hay, bnm whicn teams of freshmen and sophomores were allowed five mnrmues (o recover them. When fe score was 1 to I at the end of the titne, a sudden death overtime was declared; and the freshmen won the contest, and ten poimts, by finding the bthird re- slistor. One aspect of the special mystery event involved this greased pig. Theoretically, the pig cannot be injured because all participants (except the pig, of course) must keep one foot on the white spot marked for him on the ground, and only influence the pig by waving and yelling. In fact, the pig did not fare so well this year; at one point he was the pigskin for a two-yard forward pass. I I O'~ar -u 8. CC a_ A_ E mtY I Another facet of the mystery event was a search in this for- mer haystack for six resistors. These searchers succeeded in re- trieving three of the six. Established At MIT In 1881 Vol. 82, No. 23 " Cambridge, Massachusetts, Wednesday, November 14, 1962 Five Cents Sophs a t Win Field 52'/2I 'sla 7C 5 ": -- '' "-~·`r' 1-::··78, r:-:.,·-'-· ,"l-23L ..y*5 Jt jr)llCjUCLI · ; tqY. Yi;.jhrrbi-- i; , .li' =· ib .:JF ticll.4a r.h-Y( wu a ·- · ·-- · , " -" ,,, t(PLLJII ,tu*i .'bfsi;PP·Y '("i· Glove Fight Crucial Mystery Event: Greased Pig, Resistors, Filter Tips ''AMIISFIR *f w THE Pa4. TECH -- T As Sophomores Given Grease Bath By Freshman Team In Tug-Of-War Before the Tug-of-War Frxslh teams emerged victorious could get under way, the from buth of the tug-of-war con- site was prepared with :tests on 'ielld Day. In the "unlirn- compressor oil and lard. nr,~l~ ~ .~ ~ ~ ~ , !n addiion tohaving e- ~k ,, .. ~-~a. ,4~,, ~..[a..~i ~ ired match, ;the freshmen out- "':' sirable frictional p ropr / m r 7'Jm- ,uv,... 'r!, ... As sirable frictional proper- i by forty men. As a result, they ties, this mixture was, a /x rifing grave for the easily ovrcame the sophomore sophomores. team. This year's tug-of-war "obsta- cle" was a canvas tamp covered wlith a mixture of lard and heavy 'lubricadtirg grease, through which ~,j? .,.-.- the sophomores were dragged by r: :~:r~ '~ their conquerers. In the coed tug, the '66 %women -:'LLI:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~TE~~~~~~~ ~outnum'be~red the sophs, 13 to 8. ..... -,= .:-. _ :_:~ The larger team was granted one- ... ~.' ' :':-.. . .... '~.::::':' ~~. _ . .~.~ .~,.~ 'half point for each participant1 be- ;- " _- .. ~ ~Z~--'.'-~-:.~, yond -the numrber competing on '·· . ... ·- ... . '~ ~ the smal'ler !teatm.

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Field Duay ToftalsEvent '65 '66Gondola Boat Race;

Race (not finished) O OBest Dressed Coed 5Best Designed Boat - to

Bed Race:Race 10 54Neatest bed - .5

Event X:Cigarette Butts 10 -Greased Pig (tie) 5 5Resistor in Hay - 10

Tugs of War:Unlimited - 10Coed --

Glove Fight 50

Totals o80 521~* Penalty

~~ ---- L-ellhl~~~~ _IFii-------

_ _=l . - __ _ MEMBL-- - -- L. - - L

Even their taped-on clothing did not protect these two victims of the Glove Fight for long. This year the Sophomores rallied to trounce the Frosh in this event.Ile Sophomores scored an 80 to

521/2 victory ove the Ohmen atField Day last weekend. Originl-ly schedu/ed ar Saturday morn-rg, THe activities were postponed

because of rain until Sundray a-ternoon, after only the gondolarace had Ibeen completed.

As in past years, *he glove fightdecided the mield Day victor; be-fore wnirig the event, the soph-omores trailed by 221/2 points.

Each of -he fGhren was givena red glove, each sophomore ayellow one. 'Me object was thento accumulate the greatest possi-ble stock of scraps of the otherteam's gloves.

However, any participant 1ingcompletely his own glove was re-quired to Ileave -he contest.

Although ou;numbered 160 to120, the sopbs capitazed on thefreshmnen's ,lack of experience byorgamzmng .themselvesm to groups.

Then, When one of themn wLs at-tacked by a group of freshmen,he summoned help by yelling henames of other members of hEsgroup.

The freshmen, on the otherhand, merely shouted "66!" whenattacked, and usually received lit-tle asitane.

At the end of the aflloted 15minutes, weighns, revealed thatthe sophomoves had gathered 1%/2pounds of glove scraps, slightly,more Than the freshmen's 1%pounds.

The sophomores and freshmensplit 15415 the 30 points for theField Day mystery event, whichincluded three .corests.

The sophomores won the first ofthe three by colecting rthe great-est numrber of filter tips from oldcigarettes ,e e Frday eveningand Sunday Afternoon.

The tder two contests were an-nounced iwnmmedaty before be-ing played. The first was thegreased-pig Tare, which wasplayed on a fenced field, withfreshnfen and sophomores sta-tioned at the opposite ends.

In addition, freshmen and sph-omores were ationed alternaatelydt lattice points on ithe field. Theyattempted to drive the pig towardthe ends of the field, members ofthe opposing teans encouraingthe pig's flight toward thern re-spective goal lines.

The wim'nin team was o be beone which first drove the pig 'toits own end of the field, whereit was to be seized by a teammember and deposited in a buck-et in the ceter of the field.

At the end of he allObted time,neither team ,had succeeded indriving lthe pig across its goalline; the event was declared tiedand each team received 5 points.

In the third game, a needle-in-the-maysack comyteSt, six color-coded Tesistors wee buried in astaek of hay, bnm whicn teamsof freshmen and sophomores wereallowed five mnrmues (o recoverthem.

When fe score was 1 to I atthe end of the titne, a suddendeath overtime was declared; andthe freshmen won the contest, andten poimts, by finding the bthird re-slistor.

One aspect of the special mystery event involved thisgreased pig. Theoretically, the pig cannot be injured because allparticipants (except the pig, of course) must keep one foot onthe white spot marked for him on the ground, and only influencethe pig by waving and yelling. In fact, the pig did not fare sowell this year; at one point he was the pigskin for a two-yardforward pass.

I I

O'~ar -u 8. CC a_ A_ E mtYIAnother facet of the mystery event was a search in this for-

mer haystack for six resistors. These searchers succeeded in re-trieving three of the six.

Established At MIT In 1881Vol. 82, No. 23 " Cambridge, Massachusetts, Wednesday, November 14, 1962 Five Cents

Sophsa t

Win Field 52'/2I'sl�a 7�C

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Glove Fight Crucial

Mystery Event: Greased Pig, Resistors, Filter Tips''AMIISFIR *f w

THEPa4.

TECH-- T As

Sophomores Given Grease Bath By Freshman Team In Tug-Of-WarBefore the Tug-of-War Frxslh teams emerged victorious

could get under way, the from buth of the tug-of-war con-site was prepared with :tests on 'ielld Day. In the "unlirn-compressor oil and lard. nr,~l~ ~ .~ ~ ~ ~ ,

!n addiion tohaving e- ~k ,, .. ~-~a. ,4~,, ~..[a..~i ~ ired match, ;the freshmen out-"':' sirable frictional p ropr / m r 7'Jm- ,uv,... 'r!, ... Assirable frictional proper- i by forty men. As a result, they

ties, this mixture was, a /xrifing grave for the easily ovrcame the sophomoresophomores. team.

This year's tug-of-war "obsta-cle" was a canvas tamp coveredwlith a mixture of lard and heavy'lubricadtirg grease, through which

~,j? .,.-.- the sophomores were dragged byr: :~:r~ '~ their conquerers.

In the coed tug, the '66 %women-:'LLI:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~TE~~~~~~~ ~outnum'be~red the sophs, 13 to 8.

..... -,= .:-. _ :_:~ The larger team was granted one-... ~.' ' :':-.. . .... '~.::::':' ~~. _ . .~.~ .~,.~ 'half point for each participant1 be-

;- " _- .. ~ ~Z~--'.'-~-:.~, yond -the numrber competing on'·· . ... ·- ... . '~ ~ the smal'ler !teatm.

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By Jason FaneDemrst:rating their rbenefit from

a year's eAngi d lrem trning atMIT, the sophomores won 'the bedrace Hwough .lreir ue of thou-sandr ile tested standardized,pats i 'the constn tio of thefrolling bed.

The proven components weretwo whole blicyales on which theirbed rested. D)awn Ftriedell wasqueen of the ship.

The ehmant bed, aflafcgh itused bilcycle wheels, used no otherstandard parts. Instead of an in-tegral frame, it had severat scrapsof wood clumslily attached to tiebed, and was umble to stand ithedynaiac ,oading of a hi speedrace.

Lucy Gannett, who it-de -efjeshman ,bed, had her ride cutshort ebruptly after 20 yards,when vre sophomore bed went outof lane amd collided wih ithefreshman bed as it sped by. Uberight front wheel of ,the freshmanbed buckled under.

Wrle the freshmen inspected'the damage, the sophs were push-ing thor fbed around the track atfull speed. They completed 1/2laps before the freshmen decidedit would be impractical to repairthe :bed. Instead the freshmenChose to change theiwr modus ope-randi.

Where formerly they were push-ing a {bed rolling on four -wheels,they decided to turn the bedarund, lift up the ,ear wheelsand carry ,t wheelbarrow-stylearound the track.

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In the Bed Race, the sop....ores tlef were bo..ted to agood start by one sophomore who was holding back the froshentry.

By the be ithe fetshrmn 'bedffiihed ifs fBrst lap around tetrack, the sophomores had com-pleted dtheir Furd lap. Ihen the.race, 'onmiin y schedmed to Tuna harf hour was ca-ed becauseof danger to the oed Iding thefreshmam 'bed.

The scoe vr the race was 10to 10. Tne sophomores recived 10points for w ing the trace; thefriosh go five for having the neat-est bed, Ad five for the soph foul.

Aeorxdg to Marshal Fisher,sophomore class president, thesoplhomdes did not intend to hitthe Freogmaan bed. They wantedto start out fast and get in thecenter ,rane as soon as posAble;hOwner, Iin herir ,hast, Oley ac-cidenrly ran dvn the Freshmen.

$50'f Prize OfferedFor Dance DecorBy Choral Society

Fifty dollars will be given tothe person who submits the bestcomplete plan of decorations forthe Armory for the Winter Week-end formal dance. Further detailson the contest and official entryblanks are available at LitchfieldLounge. Plans mmust be submittedbefore December 21.

The WVinter Weekend Commtilteewill hold a smoker on Monday,November 19, at 4:30 p.m., in theBush Room (10 - 105). Persons in-

i terested in working in decorations,; publicity, or ticket arrangements

for the weekend are invited toattend the smoker.

afternoon featur-

termned the hit of JP Weekend byJunior class ipresidt Ron Gil-man, more han made up for tis.A packed armmy greelted theirprogram, wlinh oombqned fcdlkmusic and cmnedy.

The Trcians took over ear-ly Satmxay xiBt, giving way at9 p.m. to Fats Domino amd hisorchestra. This group stayed onstage for nea y the full two-and-ane-half houws of danzing.

The cwi ub of MFeld Day,held Sunday Batercon at 1 p.m.,wound up is year's JP Week-end.

Pres'hmen GradesThe registrar announces that

freshman intermediate gradeswill be available through facultyadvisors after 1 p.m., Tuseday,November 20, 1962.

Braing a l.g-esanblished it*e ballraomm of e Statleer 4iltonprecdt, tis year's JP Weekend Hotel. Over 600 oupdles danced tostands a 10 to 1 0ance of mating the music of Bab ,Balchelder andmoney, said Coarles A. EUias of his banJ, led by JP Queen Mall-

lyn Burmeister, a ehman at BUand the date of Fred SilverStinof AEP. GueSts of Hour weoreDeans Wadleigh and HIden.

F'ield ,Day, except fo the gon-dolta boat race, was postponedfrom 'Saturdayoy mrnin due torainy aeather, but the perfonn-ance of Peter, Paul, and Mary,

{he JP Commniltbee.The certainty is duAe to he

chance of uorseen exmpens com-ing up, be said, but added thatthese would have to lbe ones notencountered y ast year's com-rmi'ttee.

me Weekend fitself began withthe foml1 dance Ftoday r/hgt in

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Collision IncapacitatesFrosh Bed; Sophs Win

JP Weekend Breaks Tradition; Treasury Solvent

The Saturday session of Junior Prom Weekend included a folksing in theing Peter, Paul and Mary, and twisting on the tables in the evening.

-Photos by Curtiss D. Wiler and Sanford Libman

Panel Wil'l Discuss Chinese-lndilan ConflictThe India-China border war will Roy, Indian Consul-General in

be the subject of a panel discus- New York, Prof. J. K. Fairbanks,sion in Kresge Auditorium at 8:00 history at Harvard, Prof. L. Le-p.m. this evening. Arranged bymng A~allgd byfeber, economics at (IIT and ~M .the Indian Students Assn., admis- feber, economis at MIT and Mr.sion to the discussion is free and Geoffrey Godsell, Asst. Foreignopen to the public. Editor of the Christian Science

The panelists will be: Mr. Sunil Monitor.

DOING IT THE HARD WAY b hos

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mathematicians are now using it to program digital computers.Any six year old can learn to play if, yet it can be so complicat-ed that it fascinates adults. So beautifully hand made in solidmahogany you'll leave it permanently on your coffee table tochallenge guests.

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Field Day Friction

Freshmen Kidnap Soph President

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Upper left: The Sophomoresdemonstrated on Briggs FieldThursday night, with a bonfireand a flag raising.

Right: Outnumbered 13 to 8,these Sophomore coeds wereunable to hold their own in thetug-of-war.

Above and left: The hardestpart of the glove fight is pryingopen the victim's hand.

!

Field Day Photographs byJoseph Baron

Conrad GrundlehnerJohn EulenbergCurfiss D. Wiler

"Presient, president, who's got,re president?"

Sucdh was Ithe question posed byntmuerous sophomores as, on theeve of Field Day, they /ound

thenseles ahckng four class letad-ers.

Tom Janes, .freshman class pres-ident, expained tht " *e sopho-mores traditionaly have less par-ltidpafion =an the fresmen, sothatt mst of U-e preparation tscentralized amund four or fivepeople."

Subsequently the freslhmen or-ganized raiding iarties, keepingtbs on their intended victimsthrough shadowing and wire 'ap-ping. About 7 p.m. Friday Mar-shail Fisher, gph president, wasjllmped ,by about 11 freshmenwhile crossing ithe Kresge parkinglot; he was dragged behind asha:k, ried, gagged, and blindfold-ed, and taken by car to he sitieof onstruction of te freshmangondola, next to Charahlti e The echTafior's.

A blanket was thrown over himand the freshmen returned toworking on their gondola. Itwasn't uniLr $ a.m. the next morn-ing, when only three' freshmenwere stih there, that Fi'sher, hav-ing runtied his feet unobserved,managed to escape. Hie had Abeenhandcuffed, Ibut this problem wassolved by an acetylene torch inBuilding 26.

Tle other ibductions took placein the morming's early hours:about 3 a.m. the sophomores atPMh Ganrma IDellba were suddenlymobbed by about 40 freshmen. Thefight which followed was soonstopped 'by a mutual desire tosave the house, wilkh the three"wanted" sophs giving up.

Dick Shmnalensee, soph vice-president; Bdb Curd, Q-JClub veep;and Jim .Wolf, one of ithe sophgondfolabilders, were hustled outto-wards IRevre Beadh and heldin a de d rCbtaurant. By 7a.m., however, their guards hadgone to sleep, and the Three left,catld g a -bus Iback to ton.The last Deuan offemsive was

diwreted at Bruce Liycdorf, chaiitman of the Sophomnore "ibuildingcommittee." Around 3 a.m. hisBurton House room was invadedby 17 freshmen who ,Rid him up,packed lhn into a car, and tookoff, followed closely by an "ene-my" vemle.

While the .freshmen's car wasskidding around at one point, itslowed down enough for Bruce tojump out and get into the othercar. The chase was reversed, thistime reaching Burton House, afaterarity across the river, andthe Central Square police tation;there Was a near-rumble at thefraternity, air was let oult of thefreshmen's tires, and a neighborcalled the cops.

After such an exhaating outing,the sophs settled down to workingon theilr gondola (alrhough neitherside realized it ait hie ntime, thetwo gondolas were only about 250yards apart.) The lone soph of-fensive occuued when several Fi-ji's, out lkaing for heilr missingbrothers, grabbed freshman v.p.Brady Iotridge and handcuffedhim to a sink; Brady, however,broke the handcuffs wifth a brickand escaped.

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No clear-cut victor emergedfrom the rain-soaked and gar-bage-strewn gondola boat race,held last Saturday to kick offField Day activities.

Although the freshmen received10 points for the best-designedboat, and the sophomores 5 pointsfor the best-dressed coed, BeaverKey awarded no points for win-ning the race. Neither team fin-ished.

The sophomore gondola hadsteering problems from the first,and entered the freshman gondo-la's lane several times during thefirst two laps. In the third lap,several sophomores began to push

their gondola, and a large num-ber of freshmen replied in kind bypropelling their gondola throughthe final part of the race.

Freshmen on the sideline greet-ed the sophomore pushing with ahail of garbage, commons rollssoaked in water overnight, andshaving cream bombs. The soph-omores replied with eggs, andspray paint cans and a smokebomb were also brought intoplay. At this point, Beaver Keycalled off the event and postponedfurther activities until 1 p.m. onSunday, and requested that thefreshman class clean up the area.

Field Day Rivalry Sharpens Class Esprit de Care

li.I

Garbage Adds Zest To Boat Race

BUY MENNEN AT THE COOP

I II

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in which no part of this institution canafford to rest on its laurels.

More specifically, we would ask why,among the giettring new centers -to bebuilt from the second century Fund, isthere no center for the physical sciences?Where in the sciences are the analoguesof the Engineering Projects Laboratoryand the ElectNoiaes !Systems Laboratorywhich strive to relate research to teach-ing?

In the traditional sciences, such asphysics and chemistry, the -feeling seemsto exist ,that the job of ,training studentsto the poi, nt ,at which they can becnmeinvolved in anything resembling modernresearch is so immense that efforts todo it at less than the'graduate level aremet with knowing smiles or contempt.But whie th,is artitude was being dis-pensed their e-~s ion engineering seemto have taken several giant steps whichprove them wrong. MIT has deeply com-mitted itself Ito being a ,research as wellas an educational institution, but whilethe facade of a "university polarizedaground science" remains at this ,institu-tion, we cannot consider an atibtudewhich allows an educator to separate hisresearch from his teaching as conscion-able.

While we feel that care and discre-tion in ,the above area and in the areasof curricular synthesis and revision arevery mudh in the spirit of wise educa-tional practice, we feel that stifling con-servatism and closed-mindedness is not.We deploredepartmental atttudes whichstifle improvement, because we haveseen What they have doneto other insti-utions.

Lest the above opinions appear total-ly negative, we should cite the vast pos-sibilities for improvement which are opento ,the Zadhcanrias Committee which isstudying just these problems as theyco~nceru the Freshman and Sophomoreyears. But, as the President has pointedout, the final responsibility for changerests with the ~.ndividual departments. Itis up to them to examine the futurecourse of the MiT educaion; we simply-hope they wi!l be less glib when squelch-ing suggestions wAth "im t can't ,be done."

gO_ Dean Offers Statement

On Malcolm X Arrangements

To the Editor:I feel obliged to respond to the

letter signed by Ned Block andJohn Kramer for the MIT CivilRights Committee which appearedin The Tech for November 7-andto comment on a front page art-icle in the same issue.

First, let me make it clearthat the words '*he administra-tion" in the letter should be in-terpreted as myself, since I tookthe primary responsibility forgetting general administrative ap-proval for this affair, and I alsotook primary responsibility forestablishing the requiremerts un-der which Malcolm X might ap-pear at te auditorium. If, there-fore, there are errors in judge-ment involved, I accept full re-sponsibility for them. I think Ishould also rote that neither JohnKramer nor the author of TheTech's article, David Vander-werff, were present at the meelt-ing at which these problems werediscussed.

Second, I take issue with whatI feel to be a distortion of factsput forth in the letter and in thearticle. The MIT Civil RightsCommittee stated that their rea-sons for inviting Malcolm X wereto provide an educationai ex-perience for members of the MITcommunity-particularly -the tu-dent body-by permitting them toobserve first-hand the content andcharacter of a Malcolm X per-formance. They stated that theywere not attempting to use hisaffair as a means to achieve pub-licity (or notoriety) within thecommunity at large.

In view of this objective and inthe context of the heightened ten-sions caused by the pathetic af-fair in Mississippi and the recer/tbomb scare at Kresge, I believeI acted in good faith in askingthe Civil Rights Committee tolimit advance publicity and gen-eral attendance to the MIT com-munity. (Note 'that a comparisonwith past experiences at Otherlocal schoois is not necessarilyvalid-because Wellesley is locat-ed outside of the immediate Bos-ton area, because this programat other colleges was arrangedin a manner similar to that re-quested by Whe Institute, and mostimportant, all of the engagementsmentioned in ,the letter took placebefore tthe Mississippi holocast.)

The Civil Rights Committee wasnot told "specifically, membersof the Boston Press are exclud-ed." They were asked not to cre-ate advance publicity in the Bos-ton Press by either notification ormass invitation 'to te affair. Cer-tainly ,those members of the presswho do appear will be accordedthe usual press courtesies. In fact,both our Public Relations Officeand the Auditorium staff havebeen so instructed, and Mr. Mur-phy has arranged a special presssection in the customary fashion.

Some latitude in interpretationof "members of the MIT com-munity" was left to Ned Block. Hewas told, for example, that it wasnot advisable to pass out sixtyor more tickets to other schools,but, on the other hand, he wasalso 'told that his group need notask for specific student or staffidentification to validate the saleof each ticket. In short, it was thespirit of c(ooperation to make thisan MIT affair which was request-ed-not "the letter of the law."

Probably the most importantissue raised by Messrs Block'andKramer is the charge of my dis-regard of "an important traditon--non-interference with studentactivities." Certainly, MIT has along and proud tradition of free-dcm for students and student ac-tivities, and I sincerely hope weshall continue in -this tradition.Coupled with this freedom, how-ever, is an equally long and proudtradition of student responsibility--

-responsibility to individuals, toMIT, and to the community atlarge.

It is precisely because of thistradition and its faithful keepingthat our student activities possessthe freedom they historically have

had and which assures them ofthe high priority in the use of MITfacilities. Had the Civil RightsCommittee been a non MIT organ -ization the use of the Institutefacilities for this program wouldhave been considered in a fardifferent light.

Clearly, in our student govern. 'mental and judicial arrange-ments, there are regions on-camn.pus of essentially complete stu.dent autonomy, and there are also -regions on-campus and off-campusinvolving relations wit civil -authority which are necessar'the responsibility of the facultiand administration. There arealso "gray areas" in between inwhich mutual trust and perspec-ffve are required to permit fairand effective decisions to bemade. The students, faculty, and -administration have for a long-.time accepted an analogous sit. 'uation in our activities and ath. -letic programs. In -the MalcolrhX case, the problem involved ahighly controversial person and-cause, and it also involved MITsrelations outside of the immediateMIT community. Consequently, tome there serems to be no violation Iof our -traditions of student free-dom in the actions taken.

Finally, I am disturbed at te-;timing of the appearance of this"protest letter" and the associat ed news article. The meeting inmy office at which these decisionswere made took place on themorning of Wednesday, OctoberI17. Several issues of The Techhave been published since tat-time. Adequate time for either I

protest or clarification of misun. derstandings certainly existed be 'tween October 17 and November7. I would ask if publication of *what to me appearto be distorted ~

or misunderstood facts on Novem. -ber 7 represent "responsible ac.tion?" =

Kenneth R. WadleighDean of Student Affairs

We regret the mzscon eptiomnwhich understandably arosefrom lasi week's article on the 1limitation of audience at theMalcolm X lecture. Our first in. Idication that any particular sug.,gestions had been made to heICivil Rights Committee came in [

the letter from Messrs. Block,and Kramer which appeared last -week. As The Tech was not in.- formed by the Dean's Office of -the October 17 meeting citedabove, it was impossible for 311r. reVanderwerff to have attended. It was not The Tech's intention Ieither to delay the release of this ainformation nor in so doing to Amisconstrue it. Editor I

Civil Rights AdvisorCompares Malcolm X, Baldwin S

To the Edi'tor:As you well know, the Civil

Rights Committee has 'been trying _to help the M.I.T. communi-n derstand ithe American race crsisby bringing to ,the campus many _strong voices on the subject: last esemester, ,Mr. Johnston (head of Ithe segregatinist Mississippi State --Sovereignty Commissim) and Mr. XFarmer (national head of theCongress on Radial Equality) werehere, and ,fhis semester we spon- sored the "Candidates Speak Outon Civil Rights" even'rg, lr. James Baldwin, Negro essayistarnd novelist, and 'Mr. Malcolm X, E"Black Muslim" leader. Mr. John. son and Mr. Farmer represented ~

clear-cut and opposite sociological and moral positions, the "Candi X

dates" exposed (implicitly as well _as explicitly) some of the political complexities involved in our race crisis, but it was James Baldwin and Malcolm X who helped me, a white man, to see for the firSt time _in any depth the personal dilem- ma of the American Negro and Iits significance for all Americans,black or white. I'd like to pass onto your readers what I havelearned.

Both meJ-- Baldwvin by his rak' ing honesty and brilliant prose and aMalcolrn X through the power and m

(Pleav'e t1/rn2 lo page 5) _

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Chairman ......................... Thomas Brydges '62Managng Editor .................... Joseph Hanlon '63Editor .............................. Alien Womrnac '63News Editor .......................... Jason Falne '63Sports Editor ......................... [Howard Ellis '65Features Editor ......................... Toby Zidle '63Photographr Editor ............. . Conrad Grundlehner '64Acting Butne Manager .... ,.... Howard M. Brauer '65

Assistant Managing Edltor ............ Linda Rollin '64Advertising Manager ................... Bernie Yaged '64Treasurer .......................... Carl King 65Sports Boaxrd ...... Mike Oliver 65, Dave Schlossberg '65

Cliff Weinstein '65Sports Candidates .... Ed Steinberg '66, John Reinties '66

Dave Enfeld '66, Jim Manos '66Features Staff .................... Thomas F. Arnold '64

David E. Trevvett '65

U.lsigned editorials appearing in THE TECH constitutethe opinion of the newspaper's Board of Directors, and notthat of MIT. TPhe newspaper welcomes letters from itsreaders. Space permitting, such letters wdll be printed inwhole ar in part, if deemed by thle editor to be of sufficientinterest or benefit to the comnnunity. Brevity increases thechance of publication. Anonymous letters will not be piCnt-ed. Nermes yvlll be withheld upon request.

President's Report iiIn our last issue, we posed the ques-

tion which The President's Report 1962left in our minds. It seemed to us thatthe past year, indeed the past four' years,saw .the -MIT School of Engineering at-,tack educational problems wAih impres-sive vitality and achieve solutions in ,bheaeas of curricular synthesis and revisionwhich left the ,rest of academic ,MIT farbehind.

Historicaa ly this turn of events ismindful' of the shift of emphasis fromengineering to science which took placea number of years lago. The tragedy ofthe situation is this: As President Strat-.ton has stated, the past-few decades havebeen marked by an explosive advance intechnical knowledge which has contrib-uted significantly to the rise of MIT's ed-ucational eminence. This advance hascertainly not been confined to any onearea of the Institute's interest, yet thedevelopment of the educational segmentsof MIT seems to have assumed a cyclicpattern in which a whole school can liefallow while another develops.

If our job were simply to strive forsome-clearly obtainable perfection, thenthis cyclic development might be tolerat-ed, but the development of technical ed-ucafion is an ongoing process, and one

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would cash the Ace and Queenof that suit, discarding a smallclub and diamond, with East, ourexecutioner, coming down to theKing, Queen of Clubs and King ofDiamonds. South now leads :theremaining Ace from dummy andEast is squeezed! If he lets goof the diamond King, South pitch-es his last small club, and has theAce of clubs and a high diamond.If he pitches the Queen of clubs,South pitches his diamond, andhas the last two tricks with theAce and a good club.

"To the Guillotine!" Southroared, and East was led away.And he was not the last personto lose his head over bridge.

PUZZLERAnswer to last week's hand:You South hold: * Q J 10 4,- , $10752, 4 KJ853

The bidding has proceeded:SOIJTH WEST NORTHEASTpass 1 V pass 1 notrumppass 2 v double pass

What do you bid now?Answer: passNorth's double is strictly for

penalties. In fact, he probablyholds four heart tricks. East'shand is most probably very simi-lar to yours, and whereas you andEast would probably do well to-gether as partners, it wvouldd notbe wise to compete against him.This week's hand:

You South hold: $ A1052,V432, *QJ10, 4A84.

The bidding has proceeded:NORTH EAST SOU-TH WESTpass I pass 1 notrumppass 2 ~ pass 3 Ipass 4 ALL PASS

What is your opening lead?

NORTH*AQ10864V A Q 108 64$-.2

ter player (as well as bridge col-umnist for Le Tecque, which Eastdoes not realize.

West opened the seven ofSpades, and South, applying -therule of eleven, knew that all fourcards higher than the seven werein dummy. He confidently playeddummy's eight, which won thetrick. East threw the Ace of dia-monds, and south threw a smallone.

The next eight tricks were likea game of ping-pong. Each timedummy was in the lead, anysmall heart or spade was 'lead.West just covered it to win, onlyto be forced to lead a card whichdummy would just cover to win.At the end of eight tricks, dummyhad won four tricks, and West hadwon four also, and the lead was inthe West hand. The situation wasas follows:

NORTH$ AQv AQ

-42

WEST

$ KJ97532V KJ9753$-

EAST

2$ AKQJ1094 KQJ1098

SOUTH$-

IV-08765432*,A 7 6 5 4 3

East dealt. North South vulner-able. The Bidding:EAST SOUTH WEST NORTH1 + 2 notrumppass 3 notrumpdouble redouble all pass

Opening lead 7 of Spades.George Coffin and S. J. Simon

wrote innumerable books of ahumerous nature about bridge.The books were characterized byboth clever commentary and ex-cellent deals. Today's hand isfrom George Coffin, originally ap-pearing in the Bridge World in1935.

Our hero, South, is prisoner inFrance during the Reign of Ter-ror. The villain, East, is the Ex-emtoner, who has designed thehand. When the nobility plead formercy after hearing the deathsentence, he rushes up with -ehand, and offers to die for themif they can make three notrumpredoubled with it. No one hasmade it yet, but South was a mas-

WEST

KJ9I KJ$-

EAST

4 -IV-*KQJ* KQ

SOUTH4 -

087-* 8 74 A 7 6

Whichever suit West led, South

Letters to The Tech

Vol. LXXXII No. 23 Nov. 14, 1962

people

I 'WInr~eKEr ARS FUNPI ax Tat WrstnosF'

It's the favorite rendezvous forj holidays, too (including Thanksgiving).

SPECIAL STUDENT RATES

$ 8.00 per person, I In a room$6.60 per person, 2 In a room$6.60 per person, 3 in a room

(Faculty rates upon request.)

The Wsldorf-Astorla a/o puts out the wel-come madt for proms and prvate part/sa In itheEmpire Room or In elegant private rooma.

0 0 0 0 0 C0 0 0 3 0 0 C O O 0 0 0 0o 0 0ColQge Department

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NORWEGIAN HAND KNITTEDSWEATERS & cardigans for sale.Large qseleciom of colors andpatfte, m, Made to order or soldfrom sock Pnice: $28954.

Ole C. Nord, 21 Lawrence St.,Cambridge. Phone: 491-2569

II .

I

I

himself." Ar.ou Malcolm X isapparently not ingenuous enough'to admit it, his whole style andbee eg this rage too.

Fuarthr, both men are at painsto point out that this rage is rotfed simply by ~ualfis -in civilrights, but that the existentialdepthof atheir sit.ttin is found intheir lack of a place to stad, intheir inability to find a history ormonuments of their own to affimn,inm that they trae their ancestryinevitably to the shame of somenameless slave ship. lMlalclm Xspent the first half of his tk driv-ig home e pomint that Americanblack man (he scorrns the wm-d"Naegro") is "without am identityor aguage,' ;that he "(oesn't on-neet with any past of hi own."And Baldi says, in his auto-tbiographical 'ireoduction to Nobtesof a NaJive Son: "I lknRow, in anycase, tMat the most crcia.timein my own development camewhen I was forced to recogi ethat I was a kidnd of 'baw§tard of AdleWest; vwhen I followed the line ofmy past I did not fihd myself inEurope but in Africa. And hffiismeant in some subtle way, in areally profound way, I brought toShakespeare, Bach, Rembrandt, tothe stones of Pares, :to the Cath-edral at Chartres, and to the Em-pire Stale Building, a special atti-tude. These were not Teally mycreatibns, they did not contain myhistmay; I r.igfht searcl in them in

vain forever for any reflection ofmyself. I was an inteqoper; thiswas not my heritage."

iBut nrow, in dhe quaflitty of thedirresponse to t:is dilemma, Mr. Xwith his ifolowers part companywith MIr. Baldw-in. The '"BlackMuslims" try fo find their way outof tiffs historical bind by flatly de-nying thfe Amefriban-Wester cui-tre in which they find Themselves.Because tle names they bear re-veal te rntless imposition ofwhite power :hey chage remn to"X" or "J", because -the reliion

hoey grow vup wth is uat *posedby their former mastrs Oey at-

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(Continued from page 4)

thrust of his platform presence -bof of Wtmse men reveal whatBalchrivn calls "te rage of the dis-esteemed-." In his essay, "Many

usnds Gone," Baldin says,"And Ithere is, I should thik, noNegro riving in Amerika who basot felt, briefly or for long peri-

ods, with awtdis sh sp or ~ll, inaryirg degrees and to varying ef-

fect, simnple, naked and unan-

swerable hEad; wef has notwanted Do s'mash any white ,facehe may exnamter in a day, to vio-late, out of nfides of the cruelestviene, tfeir women, to breaktie bodies of all white people andbring them low, as low as tatdust into which he himself hasbeen and is being ltrampled; noNegro, fi&xally, who has not had tomake bs own precarious adjust-ment to the 'nigger" who sur-ronrds him and to the 'Tigger' in

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PEANUTS appears daily and Sunday itn tie Bosonl, Herald.

tempt Ito assert a deeper ancestralidertity with Africa by becomingMIuslims, Ibecause they feel hern-selves to be "bastards of theWest" lthey drive for sepa-ationfrom the West. They live by apoignant and fanltical act of will.

poignant and fanatical act of will.of thinking, founded on a moresublte apprehension of reality,grasped with a deeper - but lessfanatic - courage, and open tomany more ,creative, possilbi'itiZsfor all Americans, black orwhite. Baldwin's answer is moresubtle because he recognizes thatdespilte his rage and alieation heis, paradoxically enough andwheth her ie likes it or not, still anAmerican; in describing the Amer-ican Negro's relaltion to the Afri-can he ,says, "Me African beforehin has endured privartim, injus-tice, medieval truelity; but tde Af-.rican has noMt yet endured ethe utteralienation of himself from hispeople and his past. His motherdid rtsi 'Sornethines I feel likea Mot;iwsl Cbid,' and he has

not, all his life long, arched for ac-ceptanoe in a culture which pro-munted straight hair and wahiteskin the Mnly acceptIable beauty.They Lace each other, ithe Negroand dWe Arican, over a gulf ofthree hundred years - an aliena-tion too vast to be conquered inan evening's good-will, Itoo heavyand too double-edged ever to betrapped in speedh. This aEienationcases the Negro to recogrize thathe is a hybrid. Not a physical hy-brid merely: in every aspect of hisliving he betrays the memory ofthe auction block and the im-pact of the happy ending. In whiteAmericans he finds reflected - -peated, as it were, in a higher key- his terstions, his Iterrors, histenderness. Dimnly and for the firsttime, there begins to fall into per-spective the nature of ,thle rolesthey have played in the lives andhistory of each dther. Now he isbone of their bone, flesh of theirflesh; They have loved and hatedand obsessed and feared eastvother and his blood is in -their soil.Therefore he cannot deny thenm,nor can they ever be dirced."To accept this -dichotomous realitywlthout flintiing, to grasp as theterms of exiitence both alienationand identity, both, hate 'and love,

veals a high and gallant cour-

age. And the sooner tfat we whoare white gain enough iTsight tosee that we, as fellow Americans- "flesh of theilr flesh," ine:tri'c-ably share in this dilemma, andfind ,a courage like Baldwin's toenable us 'to grasp it, the soonerwe will together find creative solu-tiorns. Malcolm X presents the onlyalternative.

Myron B. Bloy Jr.Adivsor to the CivilRights Committee

Cigarette Advertising;-Pay the Price?To the Editor:

In the "Facts of Life" editorialof November 7, 1962 concerningcigarette advertising, THE TECH'sposition is the same as that ofAdamn and Eve in the Garden ofEden. They were not willing topay the price that God demandedof them, and, when caught intheir disobedience, Adam tried toput the responsibility on Eve, andEve tried to put the responsibilityon the serpent!

What does it profit us if wegain the whole world and lose oursouls?

If you do what you know to beright, the Lord will surely rewvardyou with the imagination and in-spiration to acquire a widervariety of advertisers !In the in-terim, there might be individualswho would be willing to subsi-dize such a noble effort.

Georgia M. Nagle

There's a lot underneath the beauty of the '63Chevrolet. Its roomy, comfortable Body byFisher screens out noise and shock. There'sinstant response in a choice of 6- or 8-cylinderengines, a host of refinements to make it run

The Tech will be publishedTuesday next week, due to theThanksgiving Holiday. Newsmake- up will be Sunday nightand news deadline is 7 p.m.Sunday.

1963 Chevrolet Impala Sport Sedan shares its carefree Jet-smoothness with the new Bel Airs and Biscaynes!

Ask about "Go with the Greats," a special record album of top artists and hits and see four entirelydifferent kinds of cars at your Chevrolet dealer's-'63 Chevrolet, Chevy II, Corvair and Corvefte

Letters to The Tech

Comfort, silence and

luxury to challenge anyand look like new longer, and plenty more

car from anywhere that make it hard to believe it's a low-priced The make more fcar. But your Chevrolet dealer can prove it! depend on

I'�a�sl -- PII 1?II---- ·- _

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ISRAELI FOLKDANCE NIGHTevery Tuesday at 7:30

Leader, David Furash of the Orgay Zemer Troupe

Coordinator, Lyntn Shermian,, Presiden+, Bos4on Unliversi;Fy S.Z.O.Sponsored by Ihle S+uden+ ZionMst Org..

PERFORMING DANCE GROUP AT 8:45

Held at B.U. Hillel House, 233 Bay State Road

i

C---t=�----------------------~I---�-� I. � _ noI, _~~~~~~~~~

- ~~~~~~ ~~~~L I -- I-e~~~ .- - - - -- - -

-L II II C~~~

Iucclnl: Tosca (Callas/Di Stefano/Gobbi) 3508 B/L1

PuhtclnIfl: Turandot (Callas/Schwarzkopf)3571 C/L

Rossitnl: The Barber of Seville (Callas/Gobbi) (S)3559 C/L

·* *· Highlights (S)35936Rossini: il Turco In Italia (Callas/

Gedda) 3535 5s/LRossini: L'ltallana in Algeel (Sciuttl/

Giulini) 3529 B/LR. Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos

(Schwarzkopf/Seefried/Streich)3532 C/L

R. Strauss: Capriccio (Schwarzkopf!Gedda) 3580 C/L

IL Strauss: Der Rosenkavalier(Schwarzkopf/Karajan) (S)3563 D/LHishlights (S)35645

Verdi: Alda (Callas/Tucker) 3525 C/LHlghlights 35938

'dt A Masked Ball (CoallasDi Stefano) 3557 C/L

Vtrdit Falstaff (Schwarzkopt/Gobbil) (S)3552 C/L

Verdi: tl Trovetore (ColliDi Stefano) 3554 S/L

Verdi: La Forza del eto (Cellas/Tucker) 3531 C/LHighlights 35432

Verdi: La Tlaviata (StellslDi Stefano) 3545 8/L

Verdi: La Traviata (de Los Angeles/Serafin) (S)3623 C/LHighlights (S)35822

Verdi: Rigoletto (Callas/Di Stefano)3537 5s/LHighlights 35518

Verdi: Simon Boccanegra (de LosAngeles/Christoff/Gobbi) 3617 C/L

Wagner: Die Meistersinger (Schock/Frantz) 3572 E/L

Wagner: The Flying Dutchman (Fischer-Dieskau/Schech) (S)3616 C/LExcerpts From The Flying Dutchman:Die WalkUre (Hotter/Nilsson) (S)35585

Wagner: Tannhauser (Hopf/Grummer/Fischer Dieskau) (S)3620 D/LHighlights (S)35585

Wagner: Tristan Und Isolde (Flagstad/Furtwangler) 3588 E/L

OPERA"RECITALSAnna Moffo: Coloratura Arias (S)35861Birgit Nilsson: Opera Arias of Wagner

& Verdi 35540Birgit Nilsson Sings Beethoven,

Weber, Mozart (S)35719Callas in Puccini Arias 35195Callas Coloratura-Lyric Arias 35233Callas'at La Scala 35304Callas Sings Verdl at La Scala 35759Maria Callas Portrays Verdi Heroines

(S)35763Maria Callas Sings Great Arias from

French Opera (S)35882Capriccio (Final Scene); Four Last Songs

(Schwarzkopf) 35084Eileen Farrell in Grand Opera 35589Elisabeth Schwarzkopf Sings Weberand Wagner (S)35806

Great Scenes from Tannhauser and7.73 Gotterdammerung (Grummrner/Frick) (S)35844

8.98 Mad Scenes (Callas) S)35764Mozart Opera Arilas (Schwarzkopf) 35021Mozart Arias (Anna Moffo) (S)35716The Operatic World of Rita Gorr (S)35795Tito Gobbi at La Scala 35563The Voice of Wagner (Regine Crespin)

(S)35832Verdi Opera Choruses (La Scala) 35265

- _ · . ....

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645 Boylston Street, BostcSunday, November 18, 7:00

Admission FreiAvshalomov: How Long, OhBach: Jesu Meline FreCarissimi: JephtihahGabrieli: In EcclesiisGabrieli: Magn-ificat

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By Gilberto Perez-Guillermo

"The Island' is a picture ofman's life in a primitive environ-menlt. A Japanese film, directedby Kaneto Shritdo, it deals with asubjedt obviously fanLair to thedireotor. But Kaneto Shndo haslearned his ,kessons from Ithe West,and ,his outlook is that of a mod-ern man viewing a primitive sQci-ety, resulting in a semi-document-ary in the manner of Flaherty.However, partially as a result of

A Japanese family's g le forlife on a: smat Island is the sib-ject of te film. e Ms no dia.logue or commentary, mid .here isno plot, -the action being composedof .ragafmr/ts o f e ie of ,the tarn.ily. This life is a never-endingstruggle; pleasures and sorrowsmust be quikly put aside im thisbattle for survuial. There is deepmeaning and a 1trange 'beauty tobe found in ,their courageous,prtnitire, way of life.

Kanebo $3hndo'ks cin"eatic styleis -based o nagni errae useof m e, wilth an .amost totalrejection of 'eamera movements'There ,is a great emotinol use ofthe close-up. We find montagebased on similarity (motion of theoar, of Ore wman), contrast (landseen romn the sea, sea seen fromthe land); dierent views of tesane Object are often exploited;there are frequent cuts to somepictorially beau tiul angle fromwhrch the ,a(~ion is developed;feet, oars, and other objejets arewidely used for dramatic and vis-ual purposes. None of ,this is new,of comre, and some f the effectsa-e -used a 'bit Tepeifiively. Some-'imes it is .posille to predict what,he next cut ,is gohg Ito be or aclse-up of Which face is coming.But one may folow te patternbriLiatly, and Kaneto Shindo hasdone so ' his film.

The use of music and of maturalsounds (to which fide backgoundis corified) ~s vy elective. Likea xBaxTe continuo, 4he srekeeps ithe baisic affect/on goig,and we find the Same musicaba el, suggest ing thestrange beauty of the slruggle forlife, :i b gay and tragic mom-ents of the Om.

Some sequences stand out in tisimpresive whole. My favorite isLte ilragic one: one of the childrenMR ill when teir prets arearay; tche !tenSion is NE-it ,bycrosscutting te parents cominghome in~ the boat with the secondchild tmming to see If ~hey arecoming; the father's search for thedeoeor is mamterfully done: an ac-celeralted rowing pace, a franticrun to ithe doctor's house, stoppinghim f1ly m~ille he is Tiding hisbicycle, swiftiy taking him to tesick ,boy's 'bed. Some of KanetoSh'indl'o' best tech~nical effects ap-pear here: 'the father running isviewed from a11 amgles and dis-tances, irntermixed in a tension-building montage. The use of thec',her child tinoughout the illnessand death of one of the childrenis very effedfive: he recalls hisbrotfher, making the tragedy moreimminent.

"The Island" should definitelybe -seen. It is a powerful andmeaningful view at a different life,done with techi'cal virtuosity.

'NHE ISLAND; directed by KanetoShindo; screenplay by Kameto Shin-do: produced by Kaneto Shindo andEisaku Matsura: nmusic by HikaruHayashi; photography by KiyoshiKuroda. At the Exeter St. theater.Running time: 96 minutes.

CASTThe wife .......... Nobsuko OtowvaThe husband ..... Taiji TonoyamnaThe ohildlren ...... Shlnji Tanaka,

Masanori Horimotc

the more profound acquaintanct ofthe director with his setting "TheIsland" is muih more human thanFlaherty's "Louisia Story."

ca o11 lgive m3, at 7 ' --"Jesu iearlY

empo- ,ord;" brieli, M~urch

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Folk Singer

PRESTIGUE INTERNATIONAL RE-CORDING STAR M;ss Dobson hasa sweat, pure voice and bnings ahighIly personillized approach foher work thea+ denotlem deep convic-tVion.-VARIETY.

Featured Nightly at the UniconNOV. 12- NOV. 18

THE UN'ICOR'NCOFFE HOUS'Eand GAL'LERY

825 Boylston Street, BostonI

Beethoven: Fidelie (Ludwig/Vickers/Klemperer) (S)3625 C/L

Bellini: I Puritani (Callas/0i Stefano/Serafin) 3502 C/L

Bellini: La Sonnambulae (Callas/La Scala)3568 5s/L.

Belllnh Norma (CallasJCorelli/La Scala)"(S)3615 CIL

Highlights (S)35666/Highlights(Callas, Stignanl, Rossi-Lemeni) 35379

Berlioz: La Damnation De FaustHighlights/(Gorr/Gedda/Cluytens)(S)3594!

Bizet: Carmen (de Los Angeles/Gedda/Beecham) (S)3613 C/LHighlights (S)35818

Blzet: The Pearl Fishers (MlicheaGedtlDervaux) (S)3603 B/L

iizet: The Pearl Fishers (Opera CimlqWCluytens) 3524 B/L

Cimarosa: If MatrimonilO Selet0 (Alva/Sciutti) 3549 C /L

Debussy: Pelleas et 1ielbsands (do LoAngeles/Cluyten) 35;1 ¢/L

Oonizettl: Lucia Di Laamenoor (Callas/Tagliavini/Serafin) (S)3601 B/LHighlights (S)35831

Gluck: Iphigenle En Tauride Highlights(Gorr/Gedda/Pretre) (S)35632

Gluck: Orpha (Gedda/Micheau/Berton) 35 69JL

Gounod: Faust*de ILo Ageles/Gedda/Christoft) (S)3622 DILHighlights (S)3S827

Humrperdinck: Hansel & Gretel(Schwarzkopf/Karajan) 3506 B/L

Leoncavallo: I Pagliaccl (Callas/Di Stefano) 3527 3s/L

Leoncavallo: I Pagliacci (Corelli/Gobbi) &Verdi: Opera Choruses (S)3618 B/LPagliacci/Cavalleria (Callas/Di Stefano)3528 C/L/Highlights 35345

Mascagni: Cavalleria Rusticana (Callas/Di Stefano) 3509 3s/L

Menotti: Unicorn, Gorgon & Manticore(Schippers) 35437 L

Mozart: Abduction from the Seraglio(Marshall/Simoneau/Beecham)(S)3555 B/L

Mozart: Cosi Fan Tutte (Schwarzkopf/Merriman/Karajan) 3522 C/L

Mozart: Don Giovanni (Schwarzkopf/Sutherland/Waechter) (S)3605 D/LHighlights (S)35642

Mozart: Idomeneo (Jurinac/Simoneau/Lewis) 3574 C/L

Mozart: Marriage of Figaro (Schwarzkopf/Moffo/Taddei) (S)3608 D/LHighlights (S)35640Highlights (Schwarzkopf/London!Von Karojan) 35326

Orff: Der Mond (Chrlst/Kuen/Sawallisch) (S)3567 B/L

Orff: Die Kluge (Schwarzkopf/Khen/Sawallisch) (S)3551 B/L

Ponchielli: La GiOconda (Callas/La Scala)(S)3506 C/LHighlights (S)35940

Puulenc: Dialogues Des Carmelites(Duval/Gorr/Crespin) 3585 C/L

PuccIi: Gianni Schicch1 (de Los Angeles/Gobbi) (S)35473 L

Puccini: Girl of the Golden West (Nilsson/Von Matacic) (S)3593 C/L

Puccini: lA Boheme (Callas/Di Stefano)3560 /L/Hisghlights 35939

Pucclni: Madame Butterfly (Callas/LaScala/KaraJan) 3523 C/L

Puccini: Madame Butterfly (d LosAngeles/Bjoerling) (S)3604 C/L/Highlights (S)35821/Hlghlghtl(Sadler's Wells, In English)(S)35902

Puccini: Manon Lescaut (C&IJas/Di Stefano) 3564 CALBcini: Suor Angelica (do Lo Angeles/Barbieri) 35748 L

A rare opportunity to add

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For the first time, Angel--the oldest and mostrespected name in recorded opera - is able to offerone free opera disc with the purchase of everytwo This significant offer is being made throughNovember 30, 1962 and includes not only Angel'sbeautifully packaged sets, but all opera. highlightsand recital albums as well. For example, you maypurchase Angel's magnificent 3-record set of"Carmen" for the price of just two records. Yourchoice is from a critically acclaimed catalog thatincludes the memorable performances of opera'sgreatest names, such as Elisabeth Schwarzkopf.Victoria de Los Angeles, Franco Corelli, MariaCallas, Boris Christoff, Giuseppi di Stefano, NicolaiGedda, Reginc Crcspin and Rita Gorr. Takeadvantage of this opportunity to enlarge your col-lection of opera. Visit your record dealer. Theorld of Angel Opera awaits you.

I Chorus pro Mussi,The Chorus ,pro Musica wil

a performanoe Novem;ber 18p.m. 'at Old South Church.

They W.ill sing Bachs'Meine 'Freude;" Carissimrni'soratorio, "Jephtha'h;" a cont(rary work, "How IDng, Oh Land "In Ecclesiis" lby Galsung with the Old South (

Chair.

tmovies ..

I Japanese Import Opens At ExeterSunc<ay Evening NOVEMBER 18 a+ 8 o'clock I

-le. Ambassador E. K. DADZIEapD, g (Ghana Ambassador to Romania)

"Ghana's Position in World Affairs"

r FrORD HALL FORUMJORDAN HALL - Gainsboro St ceor. Huntington Ave. - BOSTONDOORS OPEN 7:45 P.M. EVERYBODY WELCOME

WVestern UnionTo President, U.S.A.:

Congratulations for your firm stand in the Cuban crisis.Will stand behind you always and back you with all oursubmarines. THE COVE.

Special to M.I.T. Students

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Alfred Nash Pat!erson,Co ductor

OLD SOUTiCHURCH

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MOBY DICK, at thie Shubert Trne-atre: Jerry Adler and Sanmuel Liffpresent Orson Welles' adaptation ofHerman Melville's novel "MobyDick." Directed -by Douglas Camp-bell; lighting by Klaus Holm; inci-dental music by Harold Glick.

CASTStage Manager, later Capt. PelegWilliam Needles.Voice of 'lhe RaichelA Member of the Company, later

Queequeg . . . Lex Momson.A Memober of The Company, later

Daiggoo . . . Melvin Scott.Young Actor, later Ishmael . . .

Rruno Gerusri.Young Actress. later Pip . . .

Francis Hyland.A Cynical Actor, later Flask . . .

Max Helpmnann.A Member of The ComLpany, later

the Mastheader . . . John Horton.A Member of The Coornpany, later

Elijah . . . Bill Fleteher.An Actor wish Newspaper, later

Stuibb . . . Hugh Webster.A Middle-Aged Actor, later Tash-

tego . . . Louis Zorich.A Serious Actor, later StaTrbuck

·. .R y Poole.An Old "Pro", later the Carpen-

ter . . . David Thomas.The Actor-Manager, later Father

Mapple and Capt. Ahab . . RodSteiger.

Biblical about Melville's mouth-filling prose. The effect, when thisis given shape onstage, is some-thing like the power and magnifi-cence of Shakespeare. Quotationsfrom Lear and Henry V in theprologue are thus quite appropri-ate,

The major thread of conflict inthis play is Ahab's with Starbuck,over Ahab's right to throw awayhis life and those of his crew totake vengeance on a dumb beast.Roy Poole's Starbuck is a brood-ing, Bible-quoting Quaker, whoseargument all but convinces whatis human in Ahab that the chaseis insane.

The matter of the play is trag-edy on a grand scade, but thereare flashes of genuine comedy.Several are the work of HughWebster. His Stubb is a horn-pip-ing merry man even whosedreams are comic. The youthIshmael also greets his first whal-ing voyage with a fresh and oftenwitty eye.

Herman Melville's novel hasbeen accorded a great deal ofcritical attention in recent years;a cult of American symbolists Der-sist in finding a good deal morein it than appears at first read-ing. But this production makesquite clear its monumental basis.When it moves to New York,-itshould be for quite a long run.

T'he senationlal Spanlishmezzo-s.sprano,

Teresa BerganzaFirst Boston apperalance

Thursday evening, Now. 15, 8:30at the Harvard Sq. Theatre

"One of the truly beautiful voices tohave come from abroad . . . IMiss Ber-ganza, lovely to behold, simply cannotdo wrong."--N. Y. Herald Tribune.

Music of A. Sca rlla*f, Cherubini,Peirolfeli, Haode{L Roui:ni,

Faura, DEbustsy, Vilfa-Lobos,Granados, Montsalva,~tje, Falia.

Tickets $5.00, $4.00, $3.00on s&ee at the door

iI I I I ; ..

E M. LOEW"'

CENTER TH'EATR~EWashington at Stcur St.

NOW -FIRST SHOWING

"Ai SHOCKER, .osuspenseful..atension runs high."

4tOll y d4rJ~ A .lf. TDaily News

,'Makes'Les LiaisonsDangereusesvseem sophmoric.'

-Paul V. Beckley, N.Y. Her.-Tribue

- plus second f rt une -

RPAGAN I'SLAND'

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Movie ScheduleWed., Nov. 14, through Thes., Nov. 20

(Unless otherwise stated, the Sundayschedule is the same as the weekdayschedule except no movies are shownbefore ,1 p.m.) .ASTOR- "The Longest Day," 8:15-

Wed., Sat., Sun., 2:00; Sun. 7:30.BEACON HNI-- "Phaedra," 9:30,

11:30. 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.CAPRI-- "G4ot," 9:30, 11:30, -1:30,

3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.CO.MMUNITY PLAYHOIUSE-- "Damn

the Defiant," "The Best of Ene-mies," eves. 7:45; mat. Wed., Sat.,2:00.

EXETER- "'he Island," 2:15, 4:00,5:50, 7:40, 9:30.

FENWAY- "Questlon 7," 1:00, 3:00,5:00, 7:00, 9:60.

CAR¥- "Bawbbas," evenings, 8:30;mat. Wed., Sat., 2.30; Sun., 2:30,5:30.

JOHN IH.,NOaCK- "Raomeo anid Ju-liet," Nov. 1A, Nov. 16: 7:00, 9:30.

CEITH MEMORIA-- Nov. 14-20,"Whatever Happened to Baby Jane,"10:50, 2:25, 6:00, 9:35; "Payroll,"9:30, 1:05, 4:40, 8:16; starbirng Nov.21, "If A Man Answers," 'o timesavat-lable.

LOEW'S ORPHEU~-- "War Lover,."11:15, 2:45, 6:10, 9:40; Sun., 2:35,6:05, 9:30; ",Mothra," 9:40, 1:05,4:35, 8:00; Sun., 1:00, 4:25, 7:55.

MIAY.FIeOWER-- "The Ohaprnan Re-port,"' 9:30, 11:45, 2:05, 4:30, 6:50,9:15; Sun., 1:15, 3:45, 6:115, 8'45.

Mr'T - Frlday', "Sunset aBoulevard,"Room 10-250, 6:30, 9:00; Saturday,"Saturday Night and unday Wlown-

ing." Roomn 10-250, 5:51, 7:30, 9:45.MIUSIC HALL-- "Manolturiam Candi-

date," 10:16, 12:34, 2:53, 5:12, 7:31,9:50; Sun., 1:{0, 3:13, 5:26, 7:39,9:52.

PARAMOUNT- Nov. 14-16, "ornomanHoliday," 9:20 1:20, 5:25, 9:30,"Sawbrina," 11:20, 3:25, 7:39; start-ing Nov. 15, "Girls, Girls, Girls,"10:55, 2:30, 6:10, 9:60; Su.n., 2:35,6:05, 9:40; "Two Plus Two MakesSix," 9:20, 12:45, 4:25, 8:05; Sun..1:00, 4:20, 7:55; /Nov. 20 -only "Brig-adoon." 10, 12, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:115.

I'.PRK SQUARE CINEMA- "DivorceItalian Style," 1:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30.

PILGRIM- "Escape frorn East Ber-lin." Nov. 14-16, 9:15, 12:2, 3:256:30, 9:30; Nov. 1'7-20, 9:30, .12:253 :20. 6:25, 9:30; Sun., 1:00, 3:6,6:50, 9:50; ''Savage Guns." Nov. 1l4-16, 10:45. 1:50. 4:55, 3:00, Abv. ,17-20. 11:00, 1:55, 5:00, 8:05' Sun.,2:30, 5:25, 8:20.

SAXON- ",Mutiny on the -,ouirty,eves. 8:15, rnats. Sat., Sun.., Wed.,2:15.

UPTOWN- "INorth By Northwest."11:00, 3:10. 7:25; Sun., 2:50, 7:05;"Rear Vindow, " 1:15, 5:30, 9:50Sun., 1:00, 5:15, 9:30.

act plays-Jean Cocteau's "Or-a completely theatrical expen- phee" and William Yeats' "Landence. There is much which is of Heart's Desire".

By Charles Foster Ford

When "Moby Dick" was filmed,Orson Welles delivered only thesermon of Father Mapple, an im-pressive bit near the beginning.Welles' latest venture is an ar-rangement of Melville's originalwords for acting on stage. Mappleand Ahab are played by RodSteiger on the nearly bare stageof the Schubert, but honors areshared equally by him, by Mel-ville, and by Welles, This "MobyDick" is a great piece of theatre.

Rod Steiger is amazing in along, difficult role. His Ahab runsa full range of human, and evensuperhurnan emotions. His brood-ing isolation, his tenderness withmad Pip, his vacillations withStarbuck, his frenzy in the finalchase, even his mere lung-power,are unbelievable. In the prologue,Steiger portrays a bustling actor-manager whipping his unwillingcast into shape for the new play,and suggestions of the author him-self are here inescapable. It ismucb to ask an actor to playOrson Welles, but Steiger is cap-able even of this.

There are no other stand-outperformances; rather, the entirecast melts into a thoroughly believably crew of whalers. Theycreate not only a set of individualcharacters, but manufacture thePequod itself out of simple ges-tures and movements.

A few simple platforms and

"Orphee", a modern version ofthe story of Orpheus and Euri-dice, tell of a man's journey torescue his wife from the under-world. "Land of Heart's Desire"concerns a night in the life of anIrish farm family whose son hasjust been married-the night fair-ies are believed to steal youngbrides.

The performance starts at 8p.m. in Jewett Auditorium; ad-mission 50 cents.

Theafre ScheduleAC(VOR'S PIAYHOUSE - "GallOws

Humor," Tuees.-Thurs., S :40, Fd.-Sat., 7:30, 9:30. Sun., 8:40.

UHARLEIS PLAY'HOUSE'--"* eee Pen-ny Opera," Tues.-Fri., 8:30, Sat.,5:30, 9:00, Sun., 3:00, 7:30.

HOTELL SOM.ERSEL T - Compass Iam-provisatlonal Theatre, Tues.-Wed.,9:00; Thurs., 9:00, 11:00; Fri.-Sat.,9:00, 11:30; Sunr., S:00, 10:30.

LOEB DRAMA CENTERE-" The GhostSonata," tomorrow thru Sat., Nov.19-24. 8:30 p.m.

ILOEB DRAMA (CEFNTIE:R EXMIgI-MENTAL TH'ATRE-- "The Houseof Bernarda Alba," tomorrow thruSunday, S:30 p..m.

SHUBERT - "Moby Dick," opensMonday, eves., S:30, mats. Wed.,Sat., 2:30.

WIALLII,EY EXPERIMENTAl, THE-ATRE-- "Orphee," "Land of Heart'sDesire." Nov. 16-17, $:00, JewettArts Center.

WILBUR-- "Never Too Late," Nov.14-17. eves.. S:30, mats., Wed. Sat..2:30; through Saturday.

benches, a tall ladder, and somerops coiled out of the flies are allthe props needed. The act-curtainhas been removed entirely, and inits place some rigging and sailshang above the stage. But this isthe only concession to realism.Forecastle, after-deck, whaleboat,wharf... all' are manufacturedwhen required by masses of men,simple gestures, and excellentlighting-effects.

"Some of this novel must bebeard," pleads Bruno Gerussi, asthe actor cast as Ishmael. He iscompletely correct. Though thewords are Melville's, the result is

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Experimental Theatre~~~RP~~ d*~~ ~~St X I ig Wellesley College's Expermen-Rod Scteiger mHeads 'Moby UDic c tal Theatre group 'pe rCits seasoneNovember 16 and 17 with two one-

21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes!CHESTERFIELD KING tastes great, smokes mild. You get21 vintage tobaccos grown mild, aged mild and blended mild,and made to taste even milder through its longer length.

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The 7'S Productions present

THE

MOONSHINERSat Jordan HalfFriday Evening, Nov. 16

at 8:30 P.M.Ticbets:' $1,.75, $Z5, $3.50

Mbill Ondelrs:77 Ciajas Sit, SBos*n LA 3-8745

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headqu~arters for unsdergdradsuates I OUR UNIVERSITYEIV` SHOP

AN~D OUR "346"5" DEPARTMENT I F1Q

TFhese two fine departments have every-thing for today's undergraduate... from IInew unfinished worsted suits to tradition-11 -~~~~kwer from i treafo

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'o WM WEEKQ. .ff'IMUSIC

aneeled, Dietrich Flscher- SymphonyHall. Nov. 14.

Teresa Berganza - mezzo-soprano,'Nov. 15, Harvard Square 'leatre.

The Moonshlners Nov. 16, 8:30 p.am.,Jordan Hall; tickets 3.50, 2.50, 1.75.

0 Boston Symnphony Orchestra-- Nov. 16,0- 2:15, Nov. 17, 8:30, Haydn Sym-

phony No. 96, Milhaud Viola Oon-certo, aBrahis Piano Quartet.

Curtis Strlng Quartet- Quartets byHaydn and Bartok, Gardner Museum,Nov. 18, 3 p.m.

Plttsburgh Snymphony Orehestra-- Sym-phony Hall, Jean;be-Marie Da-re,piano soloist, Nov, 18-

Fritz Buechtger - Conducting MITChoiral Society, 'his "Ch-tstnwas Ora-

LU torio," Nov. 18. 3 p.m., Kresge Au-> dltorium; tickets 41.50.

O Chorus Pro Slnsle&-- Nov. 1,8. 7:00,z 01d South Church, Bacx's "JesuZ Me/ne Freude," Carisslmi's "Jeph-

tbalh," Avshalormov's "Hxw ,,ongO h Lorl" GCmbriell's "In Excelsis";free.

Oambridge Festlval Orehestra- Nov.f2' 19, 8:30 p.m., Sanders Theater,

Haydkn '"Symplaony No. 1," No. 80LIJ Mozart ",Synphony No. 33" and "No.Z 27."Q Civle Symphony Orchestra- Nov. 20,.Li 8:30 p.m., Jordan Hall. Brahms'

> "Traglc Overture," IDello Jio's "TIheTrIumph of St. Joan," Schumann"Piano Concerto in A Miaor,"Jeanne-Eva stk soloist.

MOVIES-DRAMALoeb Dramna Center- The Ghost So-

nata," Strindberg, Nov. 15-24, 8:30T p.m.; tickets $1.50, Fri. and Sat. S2;

-1 no Sunrday performances.(_ Loeb Drama Center- "Tlhe House ofLU Bernarda Alba," Garxia Loroa, ecx-

perimental pxrduhctlon, Nov. 154,&:30 p.m.; tiokets S1.-0, Erl. and

LLJ Sat., $2.

LSC Classie Seres- "Sunset Boule-vard," Nov. 16, Room 10-250, 6:30,9:00. This film gives the story of afading silent film star (Glosia Swanson), her .lusba.ld-servant (Eric vonStroheirnm), anu a young screenwriter ¢Witiam Holden). Directed byBilly Wilder. (USA)

LSC Entertainment Serles-- "atutwdyNight and Suunday Morning," Nov.17, Room 10-250. 5:15, 7:30, 9:45. Agood-looking but arrogant braggarthas an affair with a fellow-worker'swife, but finally fais in love with agirl wtto holds out for a weddingring.

"Land of Heart's Deslre," Yeats, andCocteau's "Orphee," ExperimentalTheatre Production, Nov. 18-17.Jewe't Auditoritumn, 8 p.m., WellesleyCollege.

Tufts Arena- "Three Actors and TheirDrauam " Nov. 15, 4:30; ".PadiseLost," N.ov. 19, 4:30.

M ISCELA NEOUSCharles 0. Joaes Lectturing on elec-

tions, Nov. 14, 7:30 p.m., PendaetonHall, Wellesley College.

Variety Show- "Broadway for Hire,"presented boy Sernor Class. Mass.General Hospital School of Nfursing,Nov. 15-16, 8 pem., New ErglandConservatory; tickets $1.00.

Alex Qaluson-Sackey- Representativeof Ghana to the United Nations,"Ghan's ,Position in World Affairs,"Jordan Hall, Ford HIall Forum, Nov.1.S, 8:00.

NEXT WEEKFoo-Hsinc Theatre- Ohtldren's Tihe-

ater of Free China, Johon HancockHall, Nov. 23-24, eves. 8:30, Sat.nat., 2:30; tiokets $4.50, '$3.50,42.50.

Royal Soots Greys and the Argyll andRutherland: HighlaNders- Nov. 24,8:00, Boston Garden.

Ann lleu-- Mezzoipno, Nov. 25,3 p.ml, Gardner Xweumn

Fritz Buechtger, Prominent Ger-man cornposer, will conduct theMIT Choral Society, soloists andorchestra, in the American prem-iere of his Christmas Oratorio November 18 at 3 p.m. in KresgeAuditorium.

Soloists will be: Helen Boat-wright, soprano; Ruth Sullivan,contralto; Donald Sullivan, tenor;and Paul Matthen, bass. Founderand director of the Studio forModern Music in Munich, FritzBuechtger is a former presidentof the German Musicale and di-rector of the summer musiccourses given at Weikersheim,Germany. In these roles, he hasbeen a determining factor inteaching and judging -the youngEuropean composers. Buechltger'sown compositions have been ac-claimed in Europe as well as inthe United States. His most re-cent series of religious choral

works includes "The Transfigura-tion". "The Ascension," "TheResurrection According to St.Matthew", "Penteost", "'Johnthe Baptist", and this "ClristmasOratorio". In 1960 he directedthe Choral Society in the first twoworks.

Tickets are unreserved and cost$1.50.

Discusses "Ends andMeans in Politics"

The Harvard Law Shool Forumwill present a program entitled"Ends, Means and Justification inPolitics" November 16 in theAmes Court Room, Austin Hall,Harvard Law School at 8:30 p.m.

The featured speakers will beProfessor Hans Morgenthau, Pro-fessor Wassily Leontief, ProfessorEmeritus Arnold Brecht, and Pro-fessor Carl Friedrich.

Professor Morgenthau is a pro-fessor of political science at theUniversity of Chicago and direc-tor for -the Center for the Studyof American Foreign Policy.

Professor Leontief is the HenryLee Professor of Economics atHarvard.

Professor Brecit is ProfessorEmeritus of the New School forSocial Research in New York.

Professor Friedrich, Eaton Pro-fessor of Government at Harvard,will moderate.

Tickets are $1.00.!-

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BY ANTHONY PAPPASe politifal developter of

I~ast Arica was xe subject of aec u by Sir Emrest Vasey, No-vemnber 8. last Africa is c region e~,re nmjor pogt'cal chlang-es wigl occur in the near fture;wlat these portend is debatable.

Sir ~nst its well qutlified tociscuss this subject, mhaving livedin East Arica for 26 years. Hewtas 'Mla'irif of 'inrcane in Kenyaand Taganyika. He was mayor ofNaaimbi. In MltUbn, Sir Ernesthas been associatd witha MIT.Emah year a group of stude'tsfro MIT, Yale, and 'Harvad gobo East Afrioa, where fhey work insome branch of the governmen t

for 2 years. Sir Ernest has helpedto find posiians far ,tese Fellowsin goerrnment service. In his opin-ion, te project has been a notablesuccess.

Economic Differences AriseSir rneSt outfined the reasons

for 'the preserRt wW structure infiese commnries. About sixty yeaasago EaSt Aaiea had not beensettled to any degree. Thereafter,the ,Brifish govenmem t beganbuiMg ra ~ads and, as a neces-sary conmonmilnt, encouragedsettlers -to mrgrate to the region.

'Me Wtilding of railroads ,re-qaired a rgae, semni-slked laborkwoe. Among the rotive popula-imn s did nt exst. As a o

quernce, wokers from te Indinsub-aontr t were i m p o r t e d .GraduHy, twe1e ecommic stratawere esatliLed. The Eurpnsoccupied de mangeritl and ad-m'misl sitions; offie As5o;became artsans, traders, andsemiqs1iled labores; te Aficansperformed the unskied, menialjobs.

'e advent of de Europeans in-terruti/d the paltte of native rfie.Prior to thbs, the Aficais had nosense of eemployer or employee.Therwe were no pdvate bl0ings oflwnd: it was communally ownedby the tibe. l*e apropr pron ofland Iby -rte EUropens -for ftanm-ing caused resenent azd mis-undarsmrding.

Nationalists DemandIndependence

After World War 11 the nation-alsit niv mnt i Asia wnd .Ahicawas felt in 'Kenya. For severalyears in tfe 1950's the auttorities

dcm~bendd with Mau Mau terror-ism. Kenya has now ,been prom-ised independence by Great Brit-ain. Uganda, a former protto-rate, ,received nrUependene b. isyear. To the smth, lTganyika, aformer United Natiorns Trust Ter-ritr-y, is also independent. Kenyais officiallay a Crown Colny.

~S Ernest ertizid ~Brtain fornot prepwin the natives politic-ally foTr independence. In particu-lar, he condemnd the mtahod ofvdoting wheeby European vote for

Europeancdatiat~es orly, ,Asiasfor Asian, and Africans for AM-cans. Irstead of unifying -the coun-try, tis accentuated airdl differ-

ampus interviews at Massachusetts Institute of Tech-nology will be conducted on November 29, to select

qualified engineers and physicists to take part in the devel-opment of Stanford University's new two-mile linearelectron accelerator.

The accelerator, being built under a $114,000,000 con-tract with the Atomic Energy Commission, is designed toproduce an electron beam of 10-20 Bev (billion electronvolts), which can be increased to 40 Bev should it laterprove desirable. Planned for completion in six years, theStanford Linear Accelerator Center will then take itsplace among the principal international centers of particlephysics research.

The Center presents an outstanding opportunity towork in highly stimulating intellectual atmosphere. It issituated on the 9,000 acre Stanford University campus onthe beautiful San Francisco Peninsula. Engineers andPhysicists working toward advanced degrees in the follow-ing fields are especially needed at this time: = ELECTRONBEAM OPTICS * KLYSTRON TUBE DEVELOPMENT a MICRO-

WAVE ENGINEERING N MAC!IINE DESIGN.

To arrange for an interview on the above date, pleasecontact your University (or Engineering) PlacementOffice. If this is inconvenient, write Mr. G. F. Renner,Employment Manager, Stanford Linear AcceleratorCenter, Stanford University, Stanford, California. Anequal opportunity employer.

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Vasey Explains East Africam Trendseoes. & Elmest bilieves a com-mon electoral roll with a conunonlist of cai daes arold hIave beenbetter.

Wih mieepenc iam t,two Afican pofikW parties haveformed: the Kenya Afirican Na-1mini Uionm and the Kenya Afri-can Drmooraei Urion. KANU isled by Jomro Keata and TomMboya. It is composed d-iefy ofthe lTer tribes such as tfe Ki-kuyu. Party diseipbe and unityare lacking, W;ith the ty oftenunable to agree on a singe camli-date. Most observes aree, haw-ever, that it is te majo~ty partyIt favyor a slong, gentra~ed gov-emy t.'

~ADU, the mnority party, rep-resents ;the smaiqer riqbes. theyfavor more local autanomy wqt aweak, celmtrl go ert. It dsmore cohesive and discplined thanKANU.

At lpresent, oe cannot say whatomuse a future Kenya governmentuwil fololrow. Bot Iaies, are besetby a split betwee modeates andradicas. It 'is unurtan which fac-timon wil emerge contrdl.

At te end of 1he lecture threwere a ew questois. One penonwaned to know the role playedby Jomo ienyatta in the Mau Maumr ment. Sir Enegt ,ePlied thatan objedtive hfislby of the MauMIau movement has not been wmit-ten yet. Thus, Keryatta's Tole can-not properly be asessed.

A second lecture, deatking withTagnya and Uganda, wi beheld tomorrw at 8:30 p.m. in theLitle Theatre of Kresge Auditor-ilun..

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nhe annual fall conference ofall MIT activities will be held inthe Vannevar Bush Room (build-ing 10) at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18.

The presidents or executive as-sistants of each activity are in-vited to the meeting. Four topicswill be discussed at the meeting:

1) The Boston Stein Club wish-es to help -MIT activities by giv-ing them advice and business con-tacts and telling students about

I-I

jeans. Instead carry an ember from the dormitory fireplace inyour purse or pocket. Place the Marlboro against the ernber.Light it quietly. Smoke it quietly. Oh, I know I ask a greatdeal! I know that one's natural instinct upon encounteringMarlboro's fine flavor and filter is to throw back one's head andbellow great, rousing cries of joy. But you must not. You mustcontain your eestacy, lest you disturb the lecturing lecturer.You can, if you like, permit yourself a few small shudders ofpleasure as you smoke, but take care not to wear garmentswhich wtill set up a clatter when you shudder-like taffeta, forexample, or knee cymbals.

,et; us turn now to the problem of learning while sleeping.First, can it be done?

Yes, it can. Psychologists have proved that- the brain isdefinitely able to assimilate information during sleep. Take, forinstance, a recent experiment conducted by a leading Easternuniversity (Stanford). A small tape recorder was placed underthe pillow of the subject, a freshman named Glebe Sigafoos.When Glebe was fast asleep, the recorder was turned on. Softly,all through the night, it repeated three statements in Glebe'sslumbering ear:

1. Herbert Spencer lived to the age of 109 and is called "TlleFounder of English Eclectic Philosophy."

2. Tile banana plant is not a tree but a large perennial hlerl])

3. Tle Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in 1914 fit

Sarajevo by a 'oung nationalist named Nljilas Cvetnic. wvho l:l.lsbeen called "The Trigger of World War I."

When Glebe awoke in the morning, the psychologists said tohim, "Herbert Spencer lived to the age of 109. What is heca.lledl?"

GAle7be promptly replied, "Perennial Herb."

Next they asked him, "What has Mjilas Cvetnic been called?"

Replied Glehe, 'Perennial Serb."

Finally they said, "Is the banana plant a tree?"

But (;Glee, exh lusted from tile long interrogation, had fallenlback asleep, where he is to this day. ( 1962 Max Shulalaf

Glebe sleeps, but you, we trust, are up and about. WILy notimprove each waking hour with our fine product-MarlboroCigarettes? You get a lot to like-filter, Ravor, pack or box.

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job opportunities Tuvug3 he pmfessional societies.

2) Activities Council will estaL-lish a management · eemlar for the leaders of activities nextterm.

3) Possible expansimn and modi.ification of the Public RelationsCommnttee's newsletter will beIdiscussed.

4) Peter Van Aken will d-icmssFinboard's relationship to activi.ties.

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Everything looks brighter over a glass ofSchaefer beer. It's the one beer to havewhen you're having more than one.

Fall Activity Codference To Be Held Sundy

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EAT, SLEEP, AND MATRICULATE

The trouble with early nlorning classes is that you're too sleepy.A -lete morning classes you've too hungry. At early aftnoonclasses you're too logy. At late afternoon classes you're toohungry again. The fact is-and we might as well face it-thereis no ,ood time of day to take a class.

What shall we do then? Abandon our colleges to the ivy? Isay no ! I say America did not become the hope of mankind andthe world's largest producer of butterfats and tallow by runningaway from a fight!

If you're always too hungry or too sleepy for class, then let'shold classes when you're not too hungry or sleepy: namely, whenyou're eating or sleeping.

Classes while eating are a simple matter. Just have a lecturerlecture while the eaters eat. But watch out for noisy food. Imean who can hear a lecturer lecture when everybody is crunch-ing celery or matzo or like that? Serve quiet stuff-like anchovypaste on a doughnut, or steaming bowls of lamb fat.

And kindly observe silence while lighting your post-prandialMarlboro Cigarette. Don't be striking kitchen matches on your

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By Lyall MorrillBlack Muslim leader Malcolm

X advocated "praction" as op-posed to segregation as the solu-tion for America's Tace problemlast Thursday .ight.

The Muslim movement is anAmerican Negro sect of Islam; itsmembers worship Allah and fol-low the leadership of the Honor-able Elijah Muhammad, whomthey accept as a prophet of CGd.

Speaking in 'Kresge Auditoriumas the guest of the Civl.l RightsCommittee, MVlinister X explainedthe philosophy of the Muslimmovement. He also proposed al-terna'tives to the solutions pre-scribed for the nation's race prdb-lems by such groups as rheNAACP.

Minister X , began his, talk bydenying descriptions of 'his move-ment as ",segregationist." TheMuslims are steadfastly opposedto both segregation and inegra-'tion. Racial separation, they be-lieve, offers the o>nly real -solutionto Amnerica's ,race difficulies.

While segregation is forced ona group -by ~itts superiors, so as

5n which Megroes would run their0svn stores, banks, and other busi-

sses, Rhus prmviding jobs as wellas servicesfor their own people.

As long as the Negro is de-pendent on the white for a job,for Lte opportunity to purchasefod and dthver necessities, and forservices proviided only by thewhite community, just so long hewill rernmain effectively inrferior tothe white man, according to thespeaker.

[Mailcdlm X gave tvo reasonswhy 'the IMuslims are opposed tointegration. First, no one likes tohave an associaltion with others

Iforced upon hlim: whites ard Ne-groes alike share this Attitude.

Furthermore, t h eir religionteaches the Muslims hat the vwhiterace 'is sirlfl and corrupt. Its mostserious crimee was the ernslave-merint of the Negroes; today, theMuslins Ibelieve, drinking, smok-ing, drug atdticion, fornication,and adultery typify tthe imdmorali-ty of the whtle community.

The VMuslims, whose religionteaches, them to abstain from allthese Vices, preach that the whiteworld faces destruCtion by Allabecause of its Wickedness.

More'oer, Mirister X explained,the M.uslims believe lthat Theirleader Elijah Muhammad hasbeen ,misStotned by .Allah to saveHis people, Wle Negroes, when 1heWhitte man's world is Idstreed.They compare Muharmed toMoses, who was sent by God todeliver the Jews from their Egyp-t!an ,slavemasters.

To prevent corfusion aboult Is-laumic 'belieEs, MIirster X explainedthat the Muslims accept all theprophets as ,messengers 'spiedby Allah, indluding both Jesus andMohammed. (Not to be confusedwtih Black Muslim Elijah Muharn-mad, Mohammed was the oriignalfounder of I-slam.)

Minitster X 'belives that 'the Ne-groes' principal problemn is their'loss of identity as a race. Fourhurndired years of slavery strippedthe American Negro of his heri-tage: the history of his race, hismother tongue, and 'his culture.

In addition !to this loss of iden-'tity, Ahe speaker cited White hypo-crisy ias a cause of America'spresen't race problem. He pointedout that ,those lamong the whilteswho recognize the futility of en-forced integration hesitate to sayso, because they would thena beclassified as ,bigots and racists.

Because of the whites' hypocri-sy in pireterding to support inte-gration, American politicians areforced to resort to wvhat WMinistprX calls ",tokenism." Recognizingthe impossibility of achieving realintegration by -coercion, they un-dertake {token integration for pub-iicilty purposes.

This Itokernism, accordingto thespeaker, solves only ithe problemsof "a few handpicked, .bourgoiseNegroes." ";If it 'takes 15,000troops to 'integrate' the Univer-silty of 'Mississippi," he poin'tedout, "\what will lit Itake to inte-grate Ithe whole state? AnotherCivil War!"

Fundamentally, the Muslims be-lieve ,that a Ireal solution to -thenation's race problem will resultonly after the Negro race achievesirndependence. "You will neverachieve anything trying to forceNegroes upon whites," lMinister Xasserted. "Instead you have toteach Ithe Negro to stand on hisown feet."

In aicorcance with this goal,the Muslims attempt to encourageNegroes to take the initiative andstart their ovn businesses, tuscreating new jobs instead of hav-ing to 'beg them from more en-terprising citizens.

;Mirrister X attacked 'the effortsof sit-in strikers and others whotake part in protests; he defendedthe right of the owner of a busi-ness e.stabliShmebt to chose Whomhe wants 'to have as customers.

The Muslims feel -that a moreeffective uncdertaking would be thecestablishment of new businesses,such as restauron'tis, owned by Ne-groes.

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Mlalcolm X--Photo by Conrad Grundlehner

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to leave the minorrity group de-pendent on Ithe rest of the com-munity, separation is a voluntaryasrantgementagreed to by equals.Neither of the separated groupsis dependent on the other.

Today, Minister X said, the Ne-gro community is segregated: out-siders own and run everything. Incontrast, the followers of ElijahMuhammad favor an arrangement

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Kenmore Square CO 7-0017 Malcolm X Urges Racial 'Separation'

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Auto - Scooter Crash =Injures MIT Student:

David Spencer '63David R. Spencer, 'G6,, a course

6 student, and Miss Elaine Don.nelly, an 18-year-old Dorchestergirl, were injured Monday in a icollision between the motor scoot.er an which they .:weref riding and -a car driven by Neil J. O'Connor, {address uno.own.w

The scooter, which was unlicen.-sed and uninsured, was struck Mfrom behind by the automobiledriven by O'Connor at a pointabout 150 feet from the Boston ~side of Harvard Bridge. Skid dmarks made by the car extended tabout 100 feet, according to wit. nesses.

cwpencer was released from the {Massachusetts General Hospital_Morday night with a broken bone min one hand and multiple contl.- isions. Miss Donnelly was held Rovernight with a possible frac.itured pelvis.

TCA IBIM Available iTo MIT Community 1

A typewriter with 'five different Etyping styles is available to all lMIT people at TCA in Walker IMemorial. This typewriter, an m_IBM Selectric with an extra-wide mmargin, is well-suited for typingtechnical documents.

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The fifth element, universal, has ia wide variety of mathematicalsymbols, scientific printing, anda complete Greek alphabet. -

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t s m ^ ^ ~~~~~Butlington,,Verniont' ^Qu'aificattions' - Bachelor's or ad- exntKnuc

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pRochester, yintnesot. 0 r oi~e-r S 6ences; Econpmics,:>. siness Administration', Ac- More >"an 190 IBM

- ' ;counting, or Liberal Arms. Our service t isprer l*?~ "' ' :'oLres provid-e the fui n story. , norcties throughoau,;-' / ' ~ Re sear^h. . -. - . '". ·O ' ); men. Aro s -tC-o

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$ CALI FORNIA $ROUND TRIP AIR FARE plus tax

from $160 to $206 - MealsWhy pay more?

RALPH GORDONStudent Rep., CO 6.0122Other Flights: Chicago & Florida

Cleanihn.g - PressingRepairing - Laundry

Quick ServiceCharlie The Tech Tailor

71 Amherst St., CambridgeEL 4-2088

· N UNi 4-4580 s

"Flame in the Streets"3:10. 6:20, 9:35

"The Concrete Jungle"c :40, 4:50, 8:05 (TODAY.

Friday, Saturday)Thurs., Nov. 15, 8:30 p.m.:

a Concert by Spanishr mezzo-soprano Teresa Berganza

Starting Sunday, 'Nov. 18:"Two Women"

4'55 and 9:40: "Guns of Nayarone"

2:15 and 7:00II

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,rmbridge St., Cambridge 38, Mass. UN 4-6990. J!

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Antonion;i's "La Notte"S:IS. 7:30, 9:45; Saturday at

3:00, 5:15, 7:30. 9:45Starting Sunday:'

"The Lavender Hill Mob"3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30; weekdaysat 5:30, 7:30, 9:30, Thanksgiving

Day matinee at 3:30

., , >.

Opportunity forGroup Leader

Wandtd forColleje Student Toursi

CHESTNUT HILL TRAVELRE 4-0600

RACQUETS RESTRUNGPrompi Service

Tennmis & Squash' hp67A Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

(Opp. Lowell House)TR 6-5417

IBM'r:-

Interviews On Campus

Nov. 15,16

Marketing/Systems EngineeringScien

Have a real cigarette-have a CAMEL

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! Cockey :':: "Will SLUTS Meet GUTS At Harvard?"g at>¢t~ - aTiddlywinkers Ask Smith President

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The SLUTS will soon visit Harvard. In fact, ac-cording to The Sophian of the Smith College, theyhave already had informal praotice at Harvard.

The SLUTS are the Smith.Ladies' Undergradu-ate Tiddlywinks Society. The Sciety, in its forma-tion, sought the advice of the Snith president because college rules prohibit intercollegiate athleticcompetition.

Said President Thomas C. Mendenhall: "Thegreat threat is overemphasis, and to prevent thiswe must avoid high pressure tactics in favor ofoccasional, informal, amateurism. . .

"Training should be under diretion of the Col-lege Librarian, not the Athletic Department; andthe selection of the team whould be done by thleEire Captains and the Grass Cops ....

"If any instruction is needed I am sure the Deanstands ready to appoint a committee for the pur-pose." The purpose, of course, is to play tiddly-winks.

SLUTS wras formed initially to meet a challengefrom MHUTS, the Mount Holyoke UndergraduateTiddlywink Society. Its schedule has been expandedrecently, however, to include matches with GUTS(Harvard's Gargoyle Undergraduate Tiddlywink So-ciety) and with a team from Simmons.

The captain of the Smith team, in a telephoneinterview with The Tech, admitted that the nameof the club was picked to fit the initials. Whenasked if she thought the name would be used tocharacterize Smith girls, she replied hat "we don'tcare what reputation we have, actually."

Although dates have not been finalized, win orlose, the SLUTS will play at Harvard within thenext few weeks.

Male Maust Go ThruThere's another male versus female contest

going on in British Columbia, but this time it's

The Ubyssey of the University of Britis Col-umbia reports that Alfred Forrester sometimesfeels a bit tense when his name is called out forattendance in class. The reason? Alf's the onlymale member of the Ryerson Home Economicscourse.

The 6' 2", 170-lb. former high school athlete istaking the course because it's rthe only one therewhich leads to his chosen vocation - public schoolteaching. Alf reports that in general everythingmoves along very pleasantly: "Even the dress-making instructress told me not to feel out ofplace."

Alf's girl friend wants him to be a school teach-er, but she doesn't especially like the idea of histaking the all-female course. Nevertheless, All goeson; besides, "the girls are nice."

Learnig By DegreesIf Alf seems to be taking an unusual course to

get his degree, how much more unusual wouldseem certain theses submnitted by academic hope-fuls both past and present - e.g., the Harvardthesis of 1655 which earned the first Master of Artsdegree awarded in the New World was entitled,"Every Perfect Being Can Be Perfectly Defined."

Along with this classic goes an effort of 1765labeled, "Did Adam Have an Unbilical Cord?" Theauthor, a Cantabridgia named Belknap, took 4henegative and came out with a gleaming M.A.

But the unusual thesis is not the sole possessionof bygone centuries. Witness such recent titles as'"Metamorphosis of the Nervous System in theLumbrosacral and Caudal Regions of the Frog'(Harvard), "The Survival of Adrealectonmized Catsin Experimentally Induced Pseudo-Pregnancy"(Princeton), and "A sexual Inheritance in theViolet" (Cornell).

Everywhere there appear what seem to be ri-

fEWS / / XNow you can get $25,000 of SavingsBank Life insurance's famous termprotection for as little as $100 ayear, net payment, if you are age 39or younger. In fact the younger youare the less it costs. It's designed

male agairnst a host (or maybe hostess)~l.

a singleof worner diculous these on what are most definitely obscure

subjects. The reason is, of course,the requisite of original research:and with 9,829 PH.D's awardedduring one recent year, it's be-coming more and more difficultto find something truly original.

As Clifton Brock wrote in arecent edition of the NY TimesMagazine, "most students con-sider the process of obtaining aPh.D. in a modern university across between an extended desertmarch and a medieval inquisi-tion." And indeed it is more dif-ficult than during the early dayswhen "all a Harvard man had todo for his master's degree was topay five dollars and stay out ofjail."

Another difference between thepresent-day degree seekers andthose of yore is ithat the latterwere required to adopt a positionand could be called to defend it;today, however, one can choose atopic regarding which argumentwould seem impossible, such as"Some of the Factors Which In-fluence the Composition of Cab-bage and Their Relation to theQuality of Sauerkraut."

Thus, while the writers are inmost cases completely serious,and while their products, obscureas they be, may yet be of benefitto some small segment of human-ity, one still wonders when con-fronted with a modem-day thesison "Uses of the Subjunctive inKing Alfred's Old English Versionof Boethius's 'De ConsolationePhilosophiae'."

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FIELD SURVEY ENGNEER,GLEN CANYON DAM, ARIZONA ' :-

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This Coupon Is Worth

50¢Towards Any Dinner

Over $1.76

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to give the man who needs moreprotection NOW what he needs at acost he can afford NOW. You canbuy smaller amounts ($3,000 mini-mum) at the same low cost perthousand. Look into it. Ask for thefree folder: $25,000 for $100.

CAMBRIDGEPORT SAVINGS BANKRight in Central Square, Cambridge - Telephone UN 4-5271

NEWBURY'SSTEAK HOUSE

94 Mass. Ave., BostonYou may now avail yourselfof a $12.00 food check bookof $10.00 (offer limi+ed).

-- 7 The best tobacco makes the best smoke!Cc) c 1' It. J. Reynolds Tobacco Cuomany. %Winston,,u-Salem. -. OC.

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By Thomas Gerrity

Over the past year, a numberof questions have arisen concern-ing the eligibility of intercollegiateathletes for intramural sports, sothis article will clarify some ofthe basic rules of the situation.

First of all, a person who hasreceived a college varsity letterin a certain sport from IM.I.T. orany college is ineligible for -thecorresponding intramural sport.Second, any person out for an in-tercollegiate team, varsity orfreshman, is ineligible for any in-tramural sport during that sea-son. Being "out" for an intercol-legiate team is defined as (1) be-ing on the team roster, or (2)practicing with the team withoutexplicitly informing the coach thatyou have no intention of partici-pating in-intercollegiate contests.For your convenience, the threeseasons of both intercollegiate andintramural sports are outlined onthe first page of the IntramuralHandbook. Any person out for anintercollegiate sport in one ofthese seasons is ineligible for any

of the intramural sports listed inthe same season.

Although this article might an-swer one or two of the more com-mon questions on I.M. rules, therest of the answers should befound by a careful study of theIntramural Handbook, the officialoutline of all I.M. procedure andrules. A copy of this handbook ismailed to the athletic chairmanof every living group at thle be-ginning of each academic year.If for some -reason you do nothave a copy or you need anotherone, stop by the A.A. ExecutiveCommittee office and pick one upfrom Miss Gall Macdonald.

Naturally, questions will arisethat are not treated directly bythe Intramural Handbook. Insteadof making your own interpretationof the rules and taking the riskof finding yourself wrong later,please refer any further questionsto Thomas . Gerrity, IntramuralVice President. at CI 7-7717. Youshould note that the Handbooklists as one duty of the athleticchairman, "To keep posted onthe rules of eligibility .. . . and in

case a question arises, to contactthe Intr amural Office."

One final note: the IntramuralCouncil will welcome any criti-cisms or suggestions you haveconcerning the Intramural Hand.book or the I.M. program in gen.eral.

All Sports Clubs, NAUnder AA Jurisdiction;New Post To Be Filled

At the last Athletic Associationmeeting the athletic clubs andMIT's Nautical Association, wereplaced under the Athletic Associ.ation. Two classes were establish-ed: Class A for those clubs whichhave been functioning for threeyears, and Class B for all others.

November 20th, the AA Execu.tive Oommittee will appoint aClub Vice President to work withthe present clubs as well as en-courage the fo-mation of newclubs. He will have responsibilityfor keeping central records oneach club, helping club vice presi.dents set up budgets, and provid.ing club publicity. Since this manwill hlave a voice in the ExecutiveCommittee, a general experienceand interest in other phases ofthe sports progran is desirablealong with a strong interest in theclub program.

All candidates for those posi.tions should leave thtir name withGail McDonald (X-2913) or contactany member of the AA ExecutiveCommittee by November 19.

SAVINGS

An understanding of the truthcontained in Science andHealth with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy canremove the pressem' which con.cerns today's college studeantupon whonm increasing de-mands are being made foracademic excelence.

Free to You for X0 DpScience and Health may beread, borrowed, or purchasedfor $3 at any Christian ScienceReading Room. On request acopy will be mailed to you post-paid ALar 30 days you malkeep tie book by remitting thecost or return it to the ReadingRoom i dw mailing cartonprovided

Informatim abmat Scienceand Health Oa7 alo be ob.tained on campa tip~ the

Christian ScienceOrganization

M. I. T.Meeting Time

7:15 P.M. TuesdaysMeeting Place

MIT Chapel

, ., V.

In chain-drag test, truck raisesheavy dust clouds to check air filter effltciency.

'63!

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Rules Clarified On Player- EligibilityOf Varsity Athletes In IM Contests

I .Cenfra Wasr. Surplus433 Mass. Ave. TR 6-8512

Central Sq., Cambridge'Parkas & Jackets

Outdoor Clothing

'Boots & ShoesHiking & Waterproof types

'Army & Navy GearRainsuits & Blankets

'Bike EquipmentCrash Helmets & Knapsacks

'Camping & Sporting EquipmentSleeping Bags & Gym Clothing

ALL AT BIG

/ssigwRe r : fiad sworks kander AeM dl

EVERY COLLEG.ESTUDENTCAN BENFIT

byreading _

thisbook I

Results: Up to 30,000 miles between filter changes in Ford-built cars for

The 1963 Ford-built cars you see on the road these days caneat dust and keep coming back for more, thanks to improvedcarburetor air filters.

In our continuing quest to build total quality and service-saving features into Ford-built cars, our engineering researchstaff explored the entire field of physical chemistry for newair-purifying properties in materials.The result: a filtering material made of chemically treated wood pulp and paper that permits Ford-built cars undernormal operation to go from 24,000 to 30,000 miles before MOTOR COMPANYcarburetor air filter replacement is required. The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan

PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD · THE HOThe new, tougher filter paper is accordion folded to increase PEFRMODUCTS r H ANDRA THE HEOFSsurface area four-fold, permitting higher filtration in a smallerpackage. The more matter it accumulates, the better it filtersright up to its full rated service life. It saves owners time andmoney. It keeps Ford-buiit engines livelier longer.Another assignment completed-and another exanple of howFord Motor Company provides engineering leadership for theAmerican Road.

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student from the University ofColorado last year, and DaveCohn, who gained experience play-ing for the freshmen last year.

Practice for the team beganNovember 1. The team skatesevery Tuesday and Thursday atHarvard until the home icefreezes.

Coach Bob Frink's freshmenwill also start practice soon. Anyfreshmen interested in playing forthe team should watch for thenotices to appear on the bulletinboards around school. Upperclass-men may contact Ron Brinkerhoffat X3782 for information.

Tech Sailors DownedIn Year's Final Meet,Marred By MishapsMIT's varsity sailing team clos-

ed out its season this past week-end, sailing on the Thames in NewLondon, Conn. Tech skippersKlare, Kern, Lifschitz, and Weilsailed together this timae in teaniracing competition against CoastGuard. Being dogged by badbreaks, the Techmen won onerace, lost two by a 1/4 each, andlost two others as a result of acapsize and a foul-out.

This competition was part ofthe team racing eliminations forthe Fowle trophy; and henceM.I.T, was eliminated from fur-ther competition, as high winds onSunday made even a consolationround impossible. Coast Guard,Harvard, and two other teams willgo on to the finals next weekendon the Charles.

Frosh Sports

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The 1963 varsity hockey seasonwill get under way starting withan away game with the Univer-sity of Massachusetts on the fifthof December. The schedule thisyear includes a game with Armyand a trip to Pennsylvania to playRutgers and University of Penr-sylyania.

The team has 5 lettermen re-turning this year; four forwardsand one defensemen. It appearsthat this will be a building yearfor the Beaver skaters. There areseveral sophomores this year whoshould provide very good materialfor the team. Don Wismer, fromWinnepeg, Manitoba, seems to bethe most promising. He was astandout on the freshman teamnon the defense. Also his defensivepartner. Hank Newell should pro-vide the material necessary to fillthe defensive gap left by thegraduation of three of the four de-fense regulars this year.

The forward lines include re-turning lettermen Mike Denny,Jim Holcroft, Tony Weikel, andcaptain. Bill Vachon. The nets willbe minded by Joe Kirk, a transfer

This year's squash team isslated to play the toughest sche-dule of any team in the Institute.Their opponents include schoolsfrom the Ivy League, the, LittleThree, and other formidablesquash powers, such as Army andNavy. The roughest games areexpected to come against Har-vard, Princeton and Yale.

62-63 Period of RebuildingThe 1962-63 season will be a

period of rebuilding for CoachEd Crocker. Out of the stop ninemen of last year's team only MattLind '63 is returning. Lind, whois the captain of the team wason the co-operative program incourse V1 last year and is eligi-ble to play another season. Heholds down Ithe number one po-sition this year.

Giving him ample support areGeorge Adaniya '64 Bob Blum-berg '64 and Paul Bugl '63, allof whom have had varsity exper-ience. These three should figureprominently in the success of theteam.

Among those who have beenmembers of the -team in the pastare Ted Cruise '64, John Gruber'64 Jim Taylor '63, Ken Friedman'63, Alberto Solis '63, Farid Taw-fik '64, Marty Eisenberg '63 andRoland Weissmann '63. Out of thisgroup Cruise is the leading candi-date for one of the top berths onthe squad.

Sophs To Fill Key PostsSeveral outstanding members

of last year's frosh team are outto try to fill some of the vacan-cies in the varsity ranks. Theseinclude Ken Comey '65, Don Ward'65, Wayne Wilner '65, LewisGreen '65, Phil Strause '65 andEd Strauss '65. Comey is the bestprospect in this group and shouldwin one of the top positions onthe teanm.

Altogether there are thirty-onecandidates out for the varsitysquad and approximately thesame num ber out for 'the Froshteam.

Darthmouth December 1st isthe first contest of the season.

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But your fourth interview mightbe the most important. Especially ifit's with the man from JPL.That's right, Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Caltech operates JPL for NASA.Gives the place a campusatmosphere. 3500 people there.Eleven hundred of them are scientistsand engineers. The rest aretechnicians, secretaries, librarians- -all kinds of people to back up thesescientists and engineers.

JPL's job? Space exploration.Designing the spacecraft andinstrumentation that'll explore themoon and planets, They want to findout what the moon is made of and

if there's life on other planets. Andthey will. They're a dedicated bunch.And they like their work. After all, whatcould be more fascinating and morechallenging than the work they do?

Take a half hour or so to talk tothe man from JPL. Make anappointment now. It could be themost important 30 minutes in your life.

X "Research and development forAmerica's lunar, planetary and

M G interplanetary exploration programs'."

JET PROPULSIONLABORATORYCALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, California"An equal opportunity employer"

Racquetmen. Face Hard Schedule, Icemen Open Wifh UMass,One Starter Returns to Squad 5 Varsity Lettermen Return

COOPPIPE

ANOTHERCOOP

VALUE

at $2.69OUTSELLS ALLOTHER PIPES

COMBINED AT

TECHCOOP

Brown, Wesson PlaceAs Tech Clbses ThirdMIT finished rBird to Northeast-

ern and Trfts in a ,triangular crosscountry meet Wednesday in theonly Aosh actioin of the week.

Sunner Brown and 'Rob Wessonwere the only Engineers to finishin the first ten as Northeastern re-ceived 20 points to 54 for Tuftsand 57 for Tech. Joe Shaffery,Billy 'Friedman, and Scott Kene-man were the dther Tachmen toplace. The race, run over I'he 2.8mile Franklimn Park course, Wasthe fi' outing of the year for theharriers.

IMonday, Brown and Wessoncompete in the ICAAAA CollegeDivision ChamPionships at VanCortland Park :m t!he Bronx, NewvYork.

Highlanders InBoston Gardens

Two Highland bands, the RoyalScots Greys and the Argyll andSutherland Highlanders, will ap-pear together at the.-Boston Gar-dens, November 24 at 8 p.m.

Scottish bands have been an in-tegral part of their regiments forgenerations. Bagpipes have ledScots into battle and been on handto celebrate victories for centur-ies. Thus, the traditional High-land dancing and tunes have be-come part of the band's proced-ure.

Ski InstructorsWeek-end postifions availabefor skies ho instruct high schoolboyrs end girls., Prior instnuctiionexpe,riene nvot required. Goodcompernsa'iom. Excelfant ski fa-cilifies. Wnite or call:

Shaker Village Ski GroupP.O. Box 1149

Piffsfield, MassachusetfsLebanon Springs (N.Y.)

7-1255

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Annual All-Tech Swim MeetFe afure s CIa s sC~o m p e titi onFeaturesC~lassCompetition

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place freshman medley relay. Es200 individual medley relay. Istime of 2:24.8 in the-individualmedley broke the meet weordand also bettered the existingMIT school record by one tenthof a second. Engeler, last year's-team captain, was the victor inboth the 220 and 440 yard free-style events, setting meet recordsin both. In addition, he swam on'62's winning freestyle relay team.Matson, AIT varsity recordholderin the 50 and 100 yard freestyle,won both these races and alsoanchored '64 second place medleyrelay.

In addition to these three stand-outs, meet records were also setby Charlie Einolf '63 in the 200yard breast stroke, Tom Ising '63in the 100 yard butter fly, andby the graduate medley relaytear..

This year, '64 is relatively weakin a few key events and is expect-ed to find the class of '65 its mostformidable opponent in the battlefor the meet crown. '63, howevershould not be disconed as apossible dark horse favorite.

Meet Open To AllAll Tech Swim Meet is open

to vhe entire MIRT community. Inan attempt to induce greater in-teret on the par of ArT's femalepopulation, a co-ed relay eventhas been added this year for thefirst time. Trials are set for 1:00p.m., while the finals will takeplace at 8 p.m. For entry blanksand furtler information, one canconsult any member of -the swimclub, or inquire at the booth inBuilding 10.

Tech Wins In Rugby,Stops Holy Cross 6-0For Year's Ist Victory

Led by Mal Onstead TerryJonrs, rT's Rugby Club roUedto its hiTst Emcbxr of the seasmlst Saturday defeaeng HolyCross 6-. The win brings Tech'srecord to 1-3-1, mh one game leftto play. The girs w a meetthe 'Boston ~Ruy OClb Saturday,November 17.

Backfield Puts Tech In LeadRin, wAiih Lasble Troughout

the first half, and mud, which waspresem Mar die whoe gane,played tap f roles an Te scor-ing awion. In te first half, nefi-er team was able to dD much of-fensively. In the second hdifTeOh's backbit mdrne dtoughwith two scams, one eadi by Olm-stead amd Jugwi. H6%vv, it *asthe strong play of *he soam spelled out victory for the Engi-nee. 1hey orrmually kept pres-sure on me Crusader and enabledSe two backs to make t goals.

To Enter N.Y. TourneyTech's Rugby Club plalq Ito have

two teanms e d in e tgurna-ment kid wl te place an ,NewYork d te Thamgf hoh-days.

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By Leon KatzSaturday, November 17th marks

the date of the Seventh AnnualAll-Institute Swim Meet. This isthe event that pits freshmen, soph-omores, juniors, seniors, andgraduate students in spirited andvery strong competition with eachother. Traditionally, it promisesan evening of exciting swimmingcompetition. And apart from theraces, the Wellesley Water Bal-let, clown diver Chuck Montgomn-ery, and Olympic swimmers fromHarvard and Yale are expectedto provide great entertainmentfor all.

'64 Upsets '62Last year's meet was the clas-

sic standout of all previous All-Tech Swims. Class of '62-winnersin its freshman, sophomore, andjunior year-was aiming for anunprecedented fourth straight vic-tory. Dark horse Class of '64, how-ever, won the meet by the nar-row margin of 77-75. Althoughtaking only two first places ascompared to five for '62, the classof '64 relied on tremendous depthto pull the victory out. By piacing17 individuals and four relays inthe finals, '64 was able to steadilyeat away at '62's early lead.

Going into the last event, the400 yard free style relay, thescore was knotted at 61-61. The re-lay was won by '62, but '64 tooksecond and fourth to provide thetwo point margin of victory.

Howard, Engeler, Matson StarOutstanding performers in last

year's meet were Jay Howard'65, Jed Engeler '62, and Wayneat the time, took first place inthe 200-yard back stroke and the200-yard individual medley. Healso was a member of the third

By Terry WanderwerseC,,.o This week in the AmericanOl-

- League, Graduate House "A" con-tinued its winning ways by trounc-

r, ing Phi Delta Theta, 71 to 18. Co-u favorite Lambda Chi "A" also] won, edging Alpha Tau OmegauX "A", 49-45. In the Phi Delt con-) test, Welch of Grad House talliedOz 21 points to lead all scorers. In

the National League, Baker "A"> and Burton "A" each won again,C beating Phi Gamma Delta, 66-34,

and Alpha Epsilon Pi, 51-36, re-LLIZ spectively. Graduate Managementn "A" also posted a strong victory,Lu demolishing Theta Chi "A", 70-33.

SAE Edges Phi DeltsIn other American League ac-

.tion, Sigma Alpha Epsilon squeak-I ed by Phi Delta Theta by oneU point, 32-31, while Paradise CafeF posted only a two point victory] over Sigma Chi, 34-32.

'The only other game in the Na-- tional League saw Graduate House

"B" beat Sigma Phi Epsilon "A",34-31.

In the only game in the PacificCoast League, Phi Mu Delta beatthe Chinese Student Club, 41-32,to knock them from the ranks ofthe undefeated.

Burton 'W', DTD WinThe American Association saw

Burton House "B" and Delta TauDelta trouncing Lambda Chi "B",49-19, and Phi Kappa Sigma, 40-12, respectively, while Delta Up-silon beat Student House 31-23.

Samr Wilensly '59 drives in from the foul line for anothertally in Thursday's hoop contest between Alpha Epsilon Pi andBurton House 'A'. Burton 'A' went on to fake the contest 51-36.

-Photo by John TorodeThese games put Burton House"B" and Delta Upsilon in a twoway tie for first.

The top game this coming weekfeatures Burton House "A" andBaker House "A" of the NationalLeague Thursday night at 7:15.

iM Basketball ResultsAmerican league

Sigma Al'a Eps'n 32, Phi D'ta Theta 31Paradise Cafe 34, Sgma Chi 32

L'm'a Ohi A 49, Al'a 'Tu Omega A 45Grad. House A 71, Phi Delta, Theta 18

National lleagueGrad. Man'm'ft A 70, Theta Chi A 33Grad. H'se B 34, Sigra Phi Eps'n A 31

Burton A 51, AVpha Epsilon Pi 36Baker A 66. Phi Gamcma Delta 34

Pacific Coast LeAuePhi Mu Delta 41, Chinese Stu. Club 32

Amerlean Assoclat/onBuxton B 49, Laowa Ohi B .19

Delta Upsilon 31, Student House 23Delta 'Ma Delta 40. Phi K'pa Sigmra 12

International LeagueBaker B 36, Phi Kappa Theta-12

Phi Sigma Kappa 34, Zeta Beta 7rau 19Pi Lambda Phi 35, Sigma Alpha ,Mfu 19

Baiker B 38, Zeta Beta Tau 12Eastern League

Sigma Phi Eps'n B 46, Al'a Tau Om'aSig'a Phi Ep'n B 46, Al'a Tau O'a B 19

Southern IeagueBurton Fine 5th 44, Non-Res. Stu. 30

Baker C 34, Pi Lam0bda Phi 16G.rad. Dinirng Stafif 27, Theta Chi B 26

Western LeagueThe Chokers 38, Seldor Hbuse C 24

In the last meet of the season,MIrT's varsity cross country teamlost to Northeastern and Bateswhile topping Tufts in last Satur-day's quadrangular. Tom Goddard'63, Roger Hinrichs '63, ChuckSigwart '64, and Dick MeMillin '65set the pace for the Engineers.Bill Purvis '65, Frank Shaw '65,John Dressler '64, and Bill Glas-mire '65 were also running strong.

Sigwart Elected Captain

At the annual banquet lastWednesday, Cocaptains Tom God-dard and Roger Hinrichs, ChuckSigwart, and John Dressier wereawarded Varsity Letters. DickMcMillin, Bill Purves, Frank-Shaw, and Bill Glasrnmre receivedletter sweaters. In addition, Sig-wart was elected Captain of nextyear's squad.

Grad House, Lambda Chi Victorious;Burton, Baker Continue Win Streaks

Harriers Top Tufts, Lose To Northeastern

How They DidCross Country

MiT placed 3rd in QuadrangulartMeet

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