rvice students' friend c@arlisle c'i f@ - the techtech.mit.edu/v87/pdf/v87-n1.pdf ·...

20
f~1te ase o - \rvice Students' friend C@arlisle ivitn team And n Putnam _ By Mark Bolotin Frei permission to make his first state visit to the United States. The original-intent of the law was to prevent presidents from taking long European vacations, but this marks the first.time that this pow- er has been used. Following the Senate's decision to keep Frei in the country, Frei made an attempt to have their vote .overthrom in the Chamber of Deputies, where a -majority vote would send it on to the Sen- : -. T Ra v xx s... ' ,- >.: t -,a -. ~ ~.a.. ate for a second try. However, he was unable to change the Senate's decision. On his trip to the United States, Frei was scheduled to make stops in Miami and Williamsburg, Va., before continuing on to Washing- ton. In Washington, he had sched- uled two meetings with President Lyndon Johnson on such topics as prospects for Latin-American de- nuclearization, the projected inter- American peace force, stream- lining of the Alliance for Prog- ress, Latin-American integration, and reforms in the inter-American judicial system. United Nations address Also included in President Fei's plans was a trip to New York in order to address the United Na- tions. From New York, he was to continue to Boston as the guest of President Nathan M. Pusey of Harvard University and President Howard Johnson. President Frei's scheduled Compton lecture was supposed to be on 'The Changing Balance Between Econormic De- velopment and Social Progress. New board takes 'The Tach posts By Paul Johnston The Board of Directors for Vol- ume 87 of The Tech was elected at a pre-intersession meeting of the old Board. The new Board of- ficially assumes its duties with this issue of the newspaper. - Guille Cox '68 of SAE,- takes over as Chairman of the Board. Guille was Business Manager for Volume 86. The Editor will be Mike Rodburg '68 Of AEP; Mike served on Volume 86 as Features Editor. Managing Editors for the new volume will be John Corwin '68 of TDC and Tom Thomas '69 of SAE. Tom was Sports Editor ef Vo!"mc-~. Other Board Members for the. new volume include Dan Green '6~' of KS, who will be-Business Manager, Mark Bolotin '68 of Burton House, the new News Edi- tor, and Mickey Warren '69 of AEP, who will be Features Edi- tor. Tony Lima '69 of KS will be -the new Sports Editor, and Jack Don- ahue '69 of Burton House will be the Entertainment Editor. The Photography Editor will be Biln Ingram '6 of Burton House. Busi- ness Representative will be Nick Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial Consultants have also been elected. They are Gerry Banner '68.of AEP, Dave Kress '67 of TC, and Mark Mc- Namee '68 of TX.. Gerry was News Editor of Volume 86. Dave was Chairman, and Mark was a Managing Editor. The Karl Taylor Compton Lee- f@ l 3lin~ ~ture, which was- to have been ues -after lon.9 1 %ess. given Friday by President Ed- William H. Carlisle, Jr., 62, who Lodge of Masons and former dis- uardo Frei Montalvo of the Re- had devoted his efforts for nearly trict deputy commander of the public of Chile, has been can- forty years to helping students at- order. celled due to the inability of Pres- the Massachusetts Institute of Hionored by Johnson ident Frei to leave his country. Technology, died Monday, Jarn- Mr. Carlisle was given the Gor- Senate intervenes uary 23, in Mount Auburn Hos- don Billard Award by President Acting on an obscure 1833 law pital after a long illness. Howard W. johnson in recognition requiring congressional approval After attending EUT from 1924' of his outstanding service to the for all presidential trips abroad, to 1928, Mr. Carlisle became as- community. the Chilean Senate voted to deny sistant manager.of Dining Serv- : ice, with the special responsibility for student waiters. He originated \ and for more than Three decades was the advisor for the annual Assemblies Ball. In 1%1 he. be- ' 'X came manager of student person- I",. --- : . nel, .4ith the resposibity of ar- it ranging jobs for all students wish- ":i ~/'' ing to work part-time.- -Signma Chi memb~er !:~ ' A leading member of Sigma Chi t- fraternity, Mr. Carlisle was ad- visor to the MIT chapter and then grant- praetor, or 'chief national officer, for the New England- ' Nova Scotia FProvince. He became i~' ".: dean of- the Proctorial College of the fraternity last fall. Mr. Carlisle was a leader in , , founding a Del~olay chapter at / AI~T and was charter advisor for..'-.-:..:. the group. He was a past master of the Richard C. M~aclaurin.[t' =a ImrSi'd.g-,x'z Ra .... ': . 'sa. ,_ -, . Ts , ,- Febrary ,.- .,,. .1967 ...... ~ B ...-.. :,:'";,'O Cambridge, Massachsusefs, Tuesday, February 7, 1967 Vol. 87, No. i Fi . . en. . - .. .. Five Cenfs MIT placed second in thee twenty- Lowell Putnam Scholarship at seventh annual William Lowell Harvard. Each MIT team member Putnam Mathematical Competi- received forty dollars; in addition, tion- November 19, 1966. Three four houndred dollars was award- MIT students were among the top- ed to the MIT Mathematics De- five ranking individuals in the partment. contest, which was sponsored by The examination consisted of the Mathematical Association of twelve problems selected to test America. the students' mathematical in- The Putnamn Competition is the genuity. Most of the problems in- major intercollegiate contest in an academic subject. All colleges anld nv itr V universities in the United States Int and Canada are invited to partici-e pate; this year 259 students regis- ah fd . d v o4p tered, and a total of 1,526 -wrote d v p d the examination. Sixth second place ky Se D ns - 'The five winning intercollegiate Dr. -Robert J. Va de Graaf, inventor of the Van de Graaff teams were; in order:-(1) Har- yaerd' U vers~i,; (2) irT; (3). the particle accelerator, died in the U niversity of Chicago; (34) the Massachusetts General Hospital, University of Mi chig an; (5) January 16, at the age of 65. Udncetr University ofM has igaThe accelerator, chief product -Princeton Un iversity. MIT has placed second if the competition of the High Voltage Engineering placd scon int h e cometiionCorp. of Burlington 'was corn- six times; this was Harvard's Brngo w ninth victory. MIT team members pleted in 1933. were Theodore C. Chang '67, Ge- Under Van de Graaf's invendtve aid S. Gras '69, and Michael R. genius, the mrachine w larger Rolle '67. and more elaborate, aquiring more and more uses in funda- In individual competition the topmental hysics reearch, industry five were (in alphabetical order) meicin and medicine. Marshall W. Buck (Haarvard), Chang, Robert E. Mass ('the Uni- versity of Santa Clara), Richard C. Schroeppel '68, and Robert S. Winternitz '68. Gras was in the ec ron N I next ten ranking individuals. seventy-five-dollar awards By ar Bullock Each member of. the top-five A eletn icrosco Fait Inseetruont Laboraoryope Facilit group receives an award of sev- Instrument Laboratory have been enty-five dollars, and one will be the Department of Chemical Eng seilected to receive the William he btire is o ieae the s eluded on the test were original, and rarely would a contestant have seen any problems similar to those appearing on the exami- nation. The student was expected, during the all-day examination, to devise his own methods for each solution. The top contestants displayed a considerable amount of ingenuity in their solutions. raaff dies; rtcle agcegerator By acmxlerating the nuclei of heavier atoms with low energy, this machine provides physicists with information on the structure of an intact atomic nucleus. · s'mpeaty of aes "What distinguishes Dr. Van de Graaffs' apparatus from its pre- decessors is its extraordinary simplicity, for all its size," re- ports the New York Times in 1933. The usual proceeding is to gener-. ate electsros by means of a dy- namo, and then to .increase 'the- (Please turn to Pa£e 2) 1 Dr. Charles H. Townries field of quantum electronics, is internationally know n for his re- search in the specialized field of microwave physics, and for his work on the theory and deve'op. ment of masers and lasers. Dr. Townes received his Bachelor's degrees in Physics and Modern Languages from Furman Univer- sity, graduating summa cum laude at the age of 19. fHe took his M.S,' at 'Duke, and received his doctorate from Caltech in 1939.-- Alpha Phi Ome1ga insalls officers for sprie term The following Brothers of Alpha Chi Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega have been elected by ithe Chapter to serve as officers for the Spring Term, 17: President, R o b e r t Young '68; Service Vice Presi- dent, Ronald Rosen '68; Soia Vice President Patrick March 69, Treasurer, Timothy Rom- lein '69. Also elected were Publicity Di- rector, Arthur polansky 69; Publications Director, Michael Timko '69; Corresponding Secre- tary, Joseph Durazzi '69; Record- ing 'Secretary, Larry Viehlaid '69; and Historian, Robert Boyd '69, The reftring officers of Alpha Phi Omega are headed by Presi. dent Gardiner Gay '68. research and teaching carried out by department · - | [9 ~fadlty and students. a w fin m' a'% x 3 e = g t= Iwo eieciron microscopes iBniuded app oin~s | n 3The facility includes two electron microsopes, appoin/s Johnson Photo enlarging equipment, and a certain arount B9% 8Qn dire iof sample preparation equipment. 'The Instrument ire or ,Laboratory includes a variety of equipment for President Howard W. analysis and measuremerits, which include hrestr- MITJohnon has bident HowarIted W. merits for gas and liquid chromatography, spectro- scopy, light-scattering photometry, adsorption · director of the Federal Reeserve htmr aop n Badirector of Bostonhe Joederalson suerve phenomena, and differential temperature analhysi. Bank of Boston. Jofinon succeeds . , Of the two-electron microscopes in the facilit, William Webster, chief executive ne is capable of magfication ranging from 3, officer of the New England Eiec- e is Capable i ma~ifiafion fig from 3,000 ffie ot the N wEgan d ie- to 219,000 diameters; the other is capable of 1200 to tric System,' in the class 'C direc12D tr.ieStmnteCsCde- .12,000 diameters in magnification range. The- best -- ~light miscopes magnify only up to 1,500 dia- The Federal Reserve Bank of- meteor.s Boston has nine directors to re-' -- Greater magifficail possible' present the general public. -The photo enlaIng equipment makes it possible y and adjoiEng established in neering at MAT. ,p ad doept of to enlarge photographic images from'the nmicro scopes up. to 10 times their original size. Thus, using the larger microscope at maximum magrd- fication plus enlargement, experimenters may o1> i lDJ-se tur"', fn PAa ge -) .~~~~~ -6',fl f ,,,... Professor Allen R. Douglas supervises the use of one of the two electron microscopes in the Deparfmrnent of Chemical Engineering. C'i ean ineat haks Frei -ecture Dr Charles K, Townes assumes presidency of A Phys. Society Dr. nies Tow, nsti- tute Professor of Physics at 1Wl, took office as President of th.- American Physical Society February 2, at the conclasin of the society's annual meeting at tBe New Yor k Hilton HoteL Dr. Townes, a pioneer in the cro$cp le ra set

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Page 1: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

f~1te ase o - \rvice

Students' friend C@arlisle

ivitn team And n Putnam

_

By Mark Bolotin Frei permission to make his firststate visit to the United States.The original-intent of the law wasto prevent presidents from takinglong European vacations, but thismarks the first.time that this pow-er has been used.

Following the Senate's decisionto keep Frei in the country, Freimade an attempt to have theirvote .overthrom in the Chamberof Deputies, where a -majorityvote would send it on to the Sen-

: -.T Ra v xx s... ' ,- >.: t -,a -.~ ~.a..

ate for a second try. However, hewas unable to change the Senate'sdecision.

On his trip to the United States,Frei was scheduled to make stopsin Miami and Williamsburg, Va.,before continuing on to Washing-ton. In Washington, he had sched-uled two meetings with PresidentLyndon Johnson on such topics asprospects for Latin-American de-nuclearization, the projected inter-American peace force, stream-lining of the Alliance for Prog-ress, Latin-American integration,and reforms in the inter-Americanjudicial system.

United Nations addressAlso included in President Fei's

plans was a trip to New York inorder to address the United Na-tions. From New York, he wasto continue to Boston as the guestof President Nathan M. Pusey ofHarvard University and PresidentHoward Johnson. President Frei'sscheduled Compton lecture wassupposed to be on 'The ChangingBalance Between Econormic De-velopment and Social Progress.

New board takes'The Tach posts

By Paul JohnstonThe Board of Directors for Vol-

ume 87 of The Tech was electedat a pre-intersession meeting ofthe old Board. The new Board of-ficially assumes its duties withthis issue of the newspaper.

-Guille Cox '68 of SAE,- takesover as Chairman of the Board.Guille was Business Manager forVolume 86. The Editor will beMike Rodburg '68 Of AEP; Mikeserved on Volume 86 as FeaturesEditor. Managing Editors for thenew volume will be John Corwin'68 of TDC and Tom Thomas '69of SAE. Tom was Sports Editoref Vo!"mc-~.

Other Board Members for the.new volume include Dan Green'6~' of KS, who will be-BusinessManager, Mark Bolotin '68 ofBurton House, the new News Edi-tor, and Mickey Warren '69 ofAEP, who will be Features Edi-tor.

Tony Lima '69 of KS will be -thenew Sports Editor, and Jack Don-ahue '69 of Burton House will bethe Entertainment Editor. ThePhotography Editor will be BilnIngram '6 of Burton House. Busi-ness Representative will be NickCovatta '68 of SAE, who servedin the same post on Volume 86.

T h r e e Editorial Consultantshave also been elected. They areGerry Banner '68.of AEP, DaveKress '67 of TC, and Mark Mc-Namee '68 of TX.. Gerry wasNews Editor of Volume 86. Davewas Chairman, and Mark was aManaging Editor.

The Karl Taylor Compton Lee-f@ l 3lin~ ~ture, which was- to have beenues -after lon.9 1 %ess.given Friday by President Ed-

William H. Carlisle, Jr., 62, who Lodge of Masons and former dis- uardo Frei Montalvo of the Re-had devoted his efforts for nearly trict deputy commander of the public of Chile, has been can-forty years to helping students at- order. celled due to the inability of Pres-the Massachusetts Institute of Hionored by Johnson ident Frei to leave his country.Technology, died Monday, Jarn- Mr. Carlisle was given the Gor- Senate intervenesuary 23, in Mount Auburn Hos- don Billard Award by President Acting on an obscure 1833 lawpital after a long illness. Howard W. johnson in recognition requiring congressional approval

After attending EUT from 1924' of his outstanding service to the for all presidential trips abroad,to 1928, Mr. Carlisle became as- community. the Chilean Senate voted to denysistant manager.of Dining Serv- :ice, with the special responsibility for student waiters. He originated \and for more than Three decades was the advisor for the annualAssemblies Ball. In 1%1 he. be- ' 'Xcame manager of student person- I",. --- : .nel, .4ith the resposibity of ar- itranging jobs for all students wish- ":i ~/''

ing to work part-time.- -Signma Chi memb~er !:~ '

A leading member of Sigma Chi t-fraternity, Mr. Carlisle was ad-visor to the MIT chapter and thengrant- praetor, or 'chief nationalofficer, for the New England- 'Nova Scotia FProvince. He became i~' ".:

dean of- the Proctorial College ofthe fraternity last fall.

Mr. Carlisle was a leader in , ,founding a Del~olay chapter at /AI~T and was charter advisor for..'-.-:..:.the group. He was a past masterof the Richard C. M~aclaurin.[t'

=a ImrSi'd.g-,x'z Ra ....': .'sa. ,_ -, . Ts , ,- Febrary ,.- .,,. .1967

...... ~ B ...-..:,:'";,'O

Cambridge, Massachsusefs, Tuesday, February 7, 1967Vol. 87, No. i Fi . . en. .-. . ..Five Cenfs

MIT placed second in thee twenty- Lowell Putnam Scholarship atseventh annual William Lowell Harvard. Each MIT team memberPutnam Mathematical Competi- received forty dollars; in addition,tion- November 19, 1966. Three four houndred dollars was award-MIT students were among the top- ed to the MIT Mathematics De-five ranking individuals in the partment.contest, which was sponsored by The examination consisted ofthe Mathematical Association of twelve problems selected to testAmerica. the students' mathematical in-

The Putnamn Competition is the genuity. Most of the problems in-major intercollegiate contest in anacademic subject. All colleges anld nv itr Vuniversities in the United States Int and Canada are invited to partici-e pate; this year 259 students regis- ah fd .d v o4ptered, and a total of 1,526 -wrote d v p dthe examination.

Sixth second place ky Se D ns -'The five winning intercollegiate Dr. -Robert J. Va de Graaf,

inventor of the Van de Graaffteams were; in order:-(1) Har-yaerd' U vers~i,; (2) irT; (3). the particle accelerator, died in theU niversity of Chicago; (34) the Massachusetts General Hospital,University of Mi chig an; (5) January 16, at the age of 65.Udncetr University ofM has igaThe accelerator, chief product-Princeton Un iversity. MIT hasplaced second if the competition of the High Voltage Engineeringplacd scon int h e cometiionCorp. of Burlington 'was corn-six times; this was Harvard's Brngo wninth victory. MIT team members pleted in 1933.were Theodore C. Chang '67, Ge- Under Van de Graaf's invendtveaid S. Gras '69, and Michael R. genius, the mrachine w largerRolle '67. and more elaborate, aquiring

more and more uses in funda-In individual competition the topmental hysics reearch, industryfive were (in alphabetical order) meicinand medicine.Marshall W. Buck (Haarvard),Chang, Robert E. Mass ('the Uni-versity of Santa Clara), RichardC. Schroeppel '68, and Robert S.Winternitz '68. Gras was in the ec ron N Inext ten ranking individuals.

seventy-five-dollar awards By ar BullockEach member of. the top-five A eletn icrosco FaitInseetruont Laboraoryope Facilit

group receives an award of sev- Instrument Laboratory have beenenty-five dollars, and one will be the Department of Chemical Engseilected to receive the William he btire is o ieae the s

eluded on the test were original,and rarely would a contestanthave seen any problems similarto those appearing on the exami-nation. The student was expected,during the all-day examination,to devise his own methods foreach solution. The top contestantsdisplayed a considerable amountof ingenuity in their solutions.

raaff dies;rtcle agcegerator

By acmxlerating the nuclei ofheavier atoms with low energy,this machine provides physicistswith information on the structureof an intact atomic nucleus.

· s'mpeaty of aes"What distinguishes Dr. Van de

Graaffs' apparatus from its pre-decessors is its extraordinarysimplicity, for all its size," re-ports the New York Times in 1933.The usual proceeding is to gener-.ate electsros by means of a dy-namo, and then to .increase 'the-

(Please turn to Pa£e 2) 1

Dr. Charles H. Townries

field of quantum electronics, isinternationally known for his re-search in the specialized field ofmicrowave physics, and for hiswork on the theory and deve'op.ment of masers and lasers. Dr.Townes received his Bachelor'sdegrees in Physics and ModernLanguages from Furman Univer-sity, graduating summa cumlaude at the age of 19. fHe tookhis M.S,' at 'Duke, and receivedhis doctorate from Caltech in1939.--

Alpha Phi Ome1gainsalls officersfor sprie term

The following Brothers of AlphaChi Chapter of Alpha Phi Omegahave been elected by ithe Chapterto serve as officers for the SpringTerm, 17: President, R o b e r tYoung '68; Service Vice Presi-dent, Ronald Rosen '68; SoiaVice President Patrick March

69, Treasurer, Timothy Rom-lein '69.

Also elected were Publicity Di-rector, Arthur polansky 69;Publications Director, MichaelTimko '69; Corresponding Secre-tary, Joseph Durazzi '69; Record-ing 'Secretary, Larry Viehlaid'69; and Historian, Robert Boyd'69,

The reftring officers of AlphaPhi Omega are headed by Presi.dent Gardiner Gay '68.

research and teaching carried out by department· - | [9 ~fadlty and students.

a w fin m' a'% x 3 e = g t= Iwo eieciron microscopes iBniudedapp oin~s | n 3The facility includes two electron microsopes,appoin/s Johnson Photo enlarging equipment, and a certain arountB9% 8Qn dire iof sample preparation equipment. 'The Instrumentire or ,Laboratory includes a variety of equipment forPresident Howard W. analysis and measuremerits, which include hrestr-

MITJohnon has bident HowarIted W. merits for gas and liquid chromatography, spectro-scopy, light-scattering photometry, adsorption·director of the Federal Reeserve htmr aop nBadirector of Bostonhe Joederalson suerve phenomena, and differential temperature analhysi.

Bank of Boston. Jofinon succeeds ., Of the two-electron microscopes in the facilit,William Webster, chief executive ne is capable of magfication ranging from 3,officer of the New England Eiec- e is Capable i ma~ifiafion fig from 3,000ffie ot the N wEgan d ie- to 219,000 diameters; the other is capable of 1200 totric System,' in the class 'C direc12Dtr.ieStmnteCsCde- .12,000 diameters in magnification range. The- best

- - ~light miscopes magnify only up to 1,500 dia-The Federal Reserve Bank of- meteor.s

Boston has nine directors to re-' - - Greater magifficail possible'present the general public. -The photo enlaIng equipment makes it possible

y and adjoiEngestablished in

neering at MAT.,p ad doept of

to enlarge photographic images from'the nmicroscopes up. to 10 times their original size. Thus,using the larger microscope at maximum magrd-fication plus enlargement, experimenters may o1>

i lDJ-se tur"', fn PAa ge -).~~~~~ -6',fl f ,,,...

Professor Allen R. Douglas supervises theuse of one of the two electron microscopes inthe Deparfmrnent of Chemical Engineering.

C'i ean ineat haks Frei -ecture

Dr Charles K, Townesassumes presidencyof A Phys. SocietyDr. nies Tow, nsti-

tute Professor of Physics at1Wl, took office as President of

th.- American Physical SocietyFebruary 2, at the conclasin ofthe society's annual meeting attBe New Yor k Hilton HoteL

Dr. Townes, a pioneer in the

cro$cp le ra set

Page 2: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

V ,, ~

By Paul JohnstonThe guidance and navigation

o system tlhree Apollo -astronautswill use to steer their way to

j the moon and back is -the work_ of MIT's Instrumentation Labora-- tory.( Self-stufficient system: This 'system is self-sufficient,u flexible,' and makes maximumn

use of-the capabilities 'of bothman and machine.- It. can be pro-

' grarnmed to -perform guidance3- and navigation functions for an_ entire -nmision., In-flight modifica-

tbiis. of flight plans and 'tajec-tories are easily, accommod ated,bi the- hfardwvare. e. '.. .

- Astronauts try out system4) System -theory, mechanization,

mission programming, and theability of men to: use the systemeffectively are continually testedand proven in simulation-t y p edevices !oa'ted at the 'laboratorywhere the Guidance and Naviga-tion (G & N) system- was de-

.signed. Many of the astronauts,'including the late Ed W h it e,worked with the system from timeto time at the InstrumentationLaboratory.

The system consists of th r e emajor sub-units: inertial measure-mnen unit (IVIU), a computerunit, and optical unit. Inside thespacecraft, the G & N systemmounts on the wall of the lowerequipment bay at the feet of theastronaut occupying the middlecouch. The iMU holds 'a stableon-board frame of reference, andmeasures spacecraft accelera-tions within this frame of refer-ence.

Inside the I M UAt the heart of the IMU sphere

are three gyroscopes and threeacecelerometers recessed into ametal fixture. These instrumentsmake up the stabilized innermember. This is suspended insidethree concentric spherical gimb-als connected to each other bydrive motors and angle (readout) resolvers. The gyros and,ac-celerometers are sing e-degree-of-freedom, sensing motions act-

ing only along their input axes.The axes are aligned or;thogon-ally, one for each of the principaldirections :of- motion,. pitch, roll,'and yaw.- By summing what each.instrument senses, the G & .Nsystem-, determines the resultingactual. motion of the craft, andtakes- appropriate action by- gen-erating control signals -for thespacecraft rocket system. :

Re-alignment 'before useSince--the IMUJ is. often turned

off during long periods of -.freecoasting trajectory. in order to.save electrica. power,: it requiresinitial re-alignment to the ;starsbefore each use. One of the jobsthe astrbnaut-operator has in us-ing the syStem is this IMU align-_ment using the G- & N. opticalunit. The optical unit .consistsprimarily of a wide angle of view;unity-power .scanning telescope,and a -28 power - magnificationnarrow field of view space sex-tant. The astronaut uses thie scan-ning telescope to locate desiredstar fields 'and landmarks. F'Hethen Uses the sextant to measuredirections to and. angles 'between.stars for navigation data.

Computer operationThe guidance computer is a

general'pur digital machine ofversati'e design configured fordeep space flight use. Astronautand computer communicate in anumber language via a 21-d i g i tcharacter display and a 16-buttonkeyboard. The astronaut punchesdata and commands into the sys-tem. These are displayed to himfor verification in electro-lumin-escent counter-type windows. Thecomputer displays readout num-bers in the same windows.

N A 8 A contractThe system was designed and

developed by engineers and scien-tists at the MIT InstrumenationLab, under contract from NASA'sManned Spacecraft Center, Hous-ton. The Lahorarv.tnr wa founadM25 years ago and continues to bedirected by- Prof. Charles S. Dra-per, sometimes called the fatherof inertial guidance in the USA.

While the tragic deaths of thethree Apollo astronauts in theircapsule January 27-:is expected:

-to delay Project Apol'o by atleast six months, no serious de-lay is foreseen in the work' beingdone at the Instrumentation 1ab-oratory. Possible causes for-- thecapsule fire include the Environ-'mental Control System, the wir-ing system, or the explosion ofbatteries inside the craft. Noneof these causes are directly linked"to the Instrumentation Lab-de-

.- signed hardware. However, amajor redesign of the system willnecessitate reprogramming theon-board computers.

coe to MIT'

Trom Pr nceton(Continued from Page 1)

vollage by means of a compli-cated transformer."

"lThis is expensive, difficult and'cumbrous." The generator con-sisted of two units each with apolished aluminum sphere fifteenfeet in diameter.

Professor At MITFrom 1934 until his retirement

in 1960, Van de Graaff was an As-sociate Professor of Physics atMIT. Born in Tuscaloosa, Ala., hereoeived -his BS and IS in mech-anical engineering from the Uni-versity of Alabama. He receivedhis doctorate degree from OxfordUniversity, where he studied as aRhodes Scholar.

His work leading to the acceler-ator was done 'at PrincetonUniversity under physicist KarlCompton. When Compton movedto MIT and became president,Van de Graaf followed.

It waqs mlmd-r C(mrtm,'r n-couragement .that Van de Graaffscaled up his first crude electro-static generator into a machinethat developed 5.4 million volts.

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CAMP-US IN-TERVIEWS- fERUARY 11967

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-MAJOR PROGRpAM-S NOW UNDER WNAY:PLOWSHARE-Industrial and scientific uses ofnuclear explosives. WHITNEY--Nuclear weapons fornational defense. SHERWOOD-Power productionfrom controlled thermaonulear r8acmtinnc RiM-1ED! -CAL-The effects of radioactivity on man and his en-vironment, SPACE REACTOR--Nuclear powerreactors for space explorations...far-reaching pro-grams utilizing the skills of virtually every scientificand technical discipline.Laboratory staff members will be on campus tointerview students in the- Sciences and Engineering

WED. & THURS., FEBRUARY 15 & 16Call your placement office for an appoinfment.

U. S. Citizenship Required o Equal Opportunity Employer

____-~~~om -- Ens

cl~!~n of an advisor panel 'onhigh energy physics The panel

e ~t~a: by the AMm=c :Enery. sns' will putde adviceand guidance to--the CoumnIts-

mceri research on h i g hery physcs.-

To AidEAETebasi bgmI of the panel will

be direc t te acdfe of teAEC twards a Ard psm' X 14r ogia m_,

'Prolessr WyQskti% is hghlyrrespected fr his sound jutgmtaad sie atdIevemets. ':Hearened tO Me about a ya apwa, Switzerf -where -he--had

served -sne- MI -as DircoGeheral of the Ehrqaeun'Oiga4zati. for'- -Nuelei ,'Research

-lbe2 panel is por003~d o twelve

pi~g~eia/ ~se~em/s~ '9he~ mraenmPnbave been seleted to ahieve aa anble balane of competene

in thm-etcal and experimentalresearch, and competence in ac-clratr den and ufilization,and to rcde smentst. asso-ciated with lboratories and uni-versit'es. IThe memibers will serve

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or geographical regkms.Among the merberns of the

panel are Dr. Roney L. CooTl-OfBokaven Nadnal Labaaor,-Proiessar Robert G. Sachs ofArgoene Naitina l Laboratoy, andPEoiesor Robert L. Walker diCWifomnia Insfi Oi Technology.

8to9~+lsrssiiis~i~F~~8~ 1II ~~B~~- . .' a ' Oa' cave't0T>lW~l mm in c ve.,:

,NG RESE- - - -'. :S.:E: -..- .- . BMk MENT

-MANAiEMENT EDIT', ~ ~~~~ :

· ~ ~ ~,- .. %= .. . ·

inAresEd in ..chal-gead responsibiliT:

Preor Arthu Steinberg ofthe Department of Humanities s to.as-been guiding a month-long expedition sponsred by the Arch- '

.gical Institute of America.The tour, the first in. a seresunder Iasftute auspices desiged'.to raise Z.,090, is extending.brom Morocco to Sicily.

A ipoint of the exedition is.the prehistoric cave paintig inthe Tasil toountis of soatheemA'geria. To reach the fa3nous, butseldom-seen caves, requires anlarduous desert crossing. The lastten days of the trip will be aswnmg around the archaenologicalsites of Sicily.

Visit with .our College Recruiting Representative to discuss how youbecome a part of this growt. Interview arrangements and more specificmation can be obtained through your placement office.

mightinfor-

LIBERAL BENEFITS INCLUDE: Profit Sharing, Hospitalization,Life Insurance, Educational Assistance, Relocation Assistance.

Retirement,

All1 positions are located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

M70 c ~ ~BD M p-8 -M b cD M-0

I UIiVERSITY of CALIFORNIALivermore, -California

OPERATED BY THE UNIVERSITY OFCALIFORNIA FOR THE UNITED STATES

ATOMIC ENERGY C-OMMISSION

Dr. Weisskopf to char,AEC glu C-ney phe

Pfessor Victor F. Weissoppf, in this capacty in the nationalHead of .the Deparmnt of Phy- interest and not- as representativesics, has been apponted tie first of their respecdive organizations

K. J. REYNOLDS. TOBACCO COMPANYTOeBACCO PRO-DUCTS { PACKAGING MATERIALS

FRUIT. JUICE BEVERAGES g FooD AND INDUSTRIAL CORN PRODU'CTS

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Campus InterviewsTuesday, ThUrsday and Friday

February 219 23 and 24The many challenging aerospace programs at Boeingp. x J/vvZ c vtyl 1r~msb e a cs; w X s w w .X c.,,v F *i'ii'i..i'J t r ,~ :x

your spot ih applied research, design, test, manufac-turing, service or facilities engineering, or computer technology. If you desire an advanced degree andqualify, Boeing will help you financially with itsGraduate Study Program at leading universities nearcompany facilities.Visit your college placement office and schedule aninterview with tie Boeing representative. Boeing isan equal opportunity employer.

Divisions: Commercial Airplane MiSssile and Information Systems oSpace · Supersonic Transport · Vertol o Wichita o Also, Boeing

Scientific Research Laboratories

Page 4: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

..w-t I- A940 lAr I- 17--a IAO ffr,to & v qC6M e #St& I

BY Otan Kask --=

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c~ 4 sco're and 7This issue represents the -first effort

of the new editorial board for Volume 87.We bring with us our own ideas and ourc>own style, yet we are mindful' of a con-

-tinuing obligation to maintain the stand-r~ards and traditions of the poast.

Ce Our first duty as the official. under-Dgraduate newspaper is to provide our

reOa readers with clear, impartial, and accur-LLIu_ ate accounts of events and interests of>: the students and the entire MIT cam-ra munity. We hope to provide an entertain-

ing, informative, .and lively newspaperI- covering as full a range of the Institute's

many facets as possible.In addition, we feel an obligation to

.Ttake an active interest in the affairs ofthe campus, to illuminate matters where

m :he cdetails may be obscure, and to CORO-Tment on the particular'issues of the day.

As in the past, it is our belief that we donot have any specialized knowledge of orinsight into events of a national nature,hence We do not feel competent to com-ment, in this field. But within the broadarea of carnpus concern we Will presentDur own views of the issues.

Where there is disagreement with ourviews, we will reme~mber that this pageis a forum for dissent as well. We en-courage letters, and in particular, wehope to print guest editorials from con-cerned and responsible memnbers of thecommunity,

The ultimate judges off our efforts arethe readers° Only they can enlighten usas to our failings. We welcome criticism,but of even more value are suggestions,and ideas from the readership. As we ex-p~eriment on our own in exploring newareas and covering -new topics, we -need;he kind of support an interested studentbody can provide.

We of Volume 87 will give our best,to make The' Tech the enlightened publi-cation MIT undergraduates need and·l0serve.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS Chairman ............................................... Guille Cox '68Editor .............................................. Mike'Rodburg %68Managing Editors ..................... J ohn Corwin '68

Tom, Thomas '69Business Manager ......... ...................... Dan Green '68News Editor .................. :.....................-Mark Boilfin '68Features Editor .............. .............. Michael Warren '69Sports Editor ........................................ Tony Lima '69Entertainment Editor ...................... Jack Danohue' '69Photography Editor ....... ...................... Bill Ingram '68Business Representative ........ ........ Nick Covaiflu '68

The initial footnotres of Vol-ume 87 will generally follow fhepattern set by fhe foafnote rsof two preceeding volumes. Thecolum~n will fry to present infor-mation relevant to the MITcommunity in the form of an-ecdotes, rumors, both subsfan-fluted and otherwise, articles ofinterest that are not news stor-ies, and any 'ot'her things fhafstrike the author's, fancy. '

/1. Members o.f the Class of'69 seemed a hiffle dismayedwhen grade reports were open.

'ed last wee'k' Many of the sfu-

study at Harvard. Hu an gCh'ang-'s impressions of Ameri-can students were: "'They arebusy with money all day longand have no hearf for st.udy;They do not, or dare not in-quire about politics, being,afraid of geeting themselves in-to trouble-, They worship moneyand are dop-ed by religion;They are decadent, degener-ate, andmorll corp.

Huang's analysi's of the edu-cational scene included the MiT"'school. regulation" ihat fresh-men are to be blindfolded andtaken out fo suburban Bostonby upperclassmen, and then left fo find {heir way back in {hedark. Huang noted fhat '1"?;girlstudents the Harvard campusmeans a prohibited area to bedreaded. . ... If has been thescene of robberies, molestationsand all sorts of bad things." Heconcluded that "American ed-ucational enterprises are rot-ting."

3. Techmen should keep theireyes and ears open for an -an-nouncement on the length offhis. ferm's reading period. TileGommittee on Educational Pol-icy has given its approval to aweekliong reading period, and+he question is now~ awaitingconsieratio'n by other fa~culh]committees. Action might ' be& _~L I,a-Uen. as early as this week, andan announcement could , beforthcoming any fime after-wards.

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

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

', ~~~~~ Regan Fay '70

Managing Staff ................. Greg Arenson '70 dnstkn .3'a ilef Gale '70, Charles Movit '70 dnstkn .3hdaltl

Joan Enteweiler-170, John HavekotteG shock a airfing fhem in the formNews Staff ...... .... ...... ... Susan Downs :68w

Dave Kaye'8 Rof evnse'8 a grade ioweri than anfici-Jeff Reece '68, eoff Russell '69

Carson Agnew '70, Steve'Carhart '70 pared. Those who expected thePaul Johnston '70, John Foran '70 course to be graided on fhe

Karen- Wattell '70Features Staff .... Lee Shaeffer '70 lines of 8.01 and 8.02 learned

Ric h'ar'd' Stern '70, Jim Smith '683 how mistaken they had been.Louis Zarfus '70

Sports Staff ............... _: ....... John Kopolow '68 A professor in* charge of fwoArmen Varteressian '68, Steve Weiner -69 scin ~80 adtati

Chuck Hottinger '67, Larry White '69S~in f803si ht iJori Steele '67, Paul Baiter '70 ferm's grades were not nofic-

Jeff Goodman '70, Jim Yankaskas '69Entert~ainment Staff .................. Don Davis '67 ably different from those of fhe-

Sherry Gulmon '68. Jeff Stokes '68 preceeding semester. Although-Rc Klass '68, David Grosz '69

David' Koffman '69, Paul Linsay '69 ant exact breakdown "of thePhotography Staff ; ................. Gene Skrabut '69 rdswsnraalbe hr

Art Kalotkin '68, Larry Deutsch '67.grdswsnfa ilbetheEd Lamon '67, Tim Holiner '69 aO~1 o1 ecn

Steve Rife '67, Steve Silverstein '68 wereabu I o1 pecnPete 1Blicher '69, Tom Dooley '95 ,As and a similar amount of P's.

Chuck Howey '69, George Flynn '69 T Dave Pack '68 Te distribution of the remain-

Staff Candidates ........ ........... . Barry Weiss '70 '.Doug Wells '70, John Viiet '70 !ing grades indic-a~fea-,+af the.

Cary Bullock '68, John Werneken '70 course was solidly C -centered.Dean Roller '70, Steve Gregory '70

Rich Rosen '70, George Wood '70 2 nAscaePoesroRoger Dean '70, Sheldon Friedman '70 2 nAscaePoesroDavid Plaisted '70, Terry Rochford '70 -*Phy~sircs e* Pek;n- ,,,m n:~ a

Anthony Rufold '70: Jan Wissmuller '70 o'e dow s IoethuhsoLuis Zalgado '70, John' Huchra '70 jle onsm huhso

Robert Wachbraht '70, Brad Williamson '70 'the American educational! pro.Ric Rihey'70cess. drawing from his years of

Second-'class postage paid at Boston, Massachu-isetts. The Tech is published every Tuesday and Friday]during fhe college year, except during college vaca-]fians, by The Tech, Room W20-483, MIT Sfuld-nt -

Center, 84 Massachusetts Ave,, Cambridge, Massa-:-husefts 02139. Telephones: Area Coda 61.7, '76-5855, and 864-6900 extension 2731. United StatesMail subsetcriorin rarem $4=9_5 {or, ̂ne,-,_r $g@ .WItwo years.

The Tech· -yvi:oagy .has just become'

established here at MIT and be-fore long the Tech Tools might besubjected to tests similar to oneimposed upon a Southwest 1%~s-souri State College Psycholo~gyclass. A gwishat resoundedthrough the classroom and theprofessor slumpedl to the floor.`T-e-'class was dumnbfounded.Nm'mality returned when the pro--fessr resuteterd, himself ax ex-plained that the test was, design-ed to determned a group reactionto emotional stress.

The group reaction to the ex-periment--"I feel lUke a~fool."

ICafeteria BoycottStudents at Huner Ck]Hege in

New York decided that th~ey hadhad enotgh of the camnpus cafe-teria-:. The result was a boycott.The st~ucents at Hunter encounter-ed many problems with the cafe-teria maaeernt and .bro-ke offnegotiatioms stating that "Thecafeteria management appearsonly to hold the students min cmn-tempt."

The students charged that priceswere higher than at. any -otherNew York college' cafeteria. Themanagement replied that theirhamburgers cost more becausethey weighed more thian harn-burgers of the other city collegecafeterias.

of diligent b-oycotfg, the nmn-agement gave in and awardledthe students price reductions.They failed tD teln the students

that., reduced prices eomuld beachievecd only by reduci~ng -thequality of the food. In a fewweeks, we may hear about a bay-cart because of' cheap horseburg-ers..

At WRI, the students are eat-ing well, but they are about to losetheir voioes. The Tach SenateIulfly supported a motion, -to abol-ish itself and all the student gov-erning bodies. The reason is -acomplete lacko supr fr~om notonly the college officials but even-the students them-selves. Openmeetings were tried and failed,and the officers of the Senate havebecome completely disenchantedin their role as studert leaders.T'he essential quegti~oa is howmuch control the students shouldhave in the operation of the uni-versity's policy. Unfortunately,this -problem has existed for sev-eral hundred years and WVPIsSenate is encountering no newCMffioulty.

Oregon-UFOAt the University of Oregon, a

poe-tical science major represeeing a "flinjyg saucer. " He andhis girl friend were driving downthe street when they were con-fronted with a iwtball-like objecttraveh'n at an estimated 100mph. Skepticism was the usualreac-tion ,to such reports in yearsgone by, ,but recently experts havehinted. at the existence, d UFOs.M~ajo~r Keyhoe, Director of th Na-tioml -Investigations Committeeon' Aerial Phenomena, speakin'g ata press conference at COtterbeinCollege, when asked if UFOs ex-isted, replied "Oh 2yes, there's nodorubt about it. In fact, the Air'Force haes adriftteod it secretly."After reading thts,, there is apossibility that the Great Dome

w.tbe- clu"Iteed w~havid courseXVI nmajors awaiting the appear-.anceo f a special UFO from the

(Please tu rn to Page 17)'

'Shelving problems

To the Editor:The suggestion of Edwaid Cut-

ter in his letter to the Editor, TheTach, January 6, concertring thesystem for Science Library Re-,-_rv~e booeks ,:a. be seriously con,sidered by the Library. The pen-dulum has swung twce from openshelving to closed, shelving duringthe past decade.The changes have always. been

in response to student requests.MV.r. Cutler is right in his assurnp>"tion that one teason for removing,them this term fr-om "freely ac-cessible shelves" was that peoplewalk off with or hide them. 'Me1966 Report of the Library Sub-committee of SCEP recommiendedstrongly that the Science LibraryReserve books be "placed behinda barrier and that an attendantshould check out books for roomuse, as in the Reserve BoolkRoom." So place them in closedstacks we did!We had hoped that the fact that

a.11 of the same books are Gn openshelves in~-the Student Center Li-brary 24 hours a day would corn.piement having mhe Science Li-brary set behind a counlter. Inaddition the Science Librarian hasbeen adding to the reference booki

sections of the Science Librarycopies of titles from the reservelists that are in very heavy de.mand.

Trying out the suggestion oJplacing books on open shelves it)the Reserve Book Roomi would de.pend upon our ability to obtainproper personnel and budgeting tohave a bookchecker at thedoor100 hours per week, and beforewe try it, the reactions of otherstudents who use these. bookswould be helpful.

William N. LockeDirector of Libraries

TSE finances

To the Editor:On ther MITI campus student en.

trepreneural activity is channeled,to and controlled by TechnologyStudent Enterprises, Inc. This or-ganization was formed to elimi.nate the excesses which we sawin the promotion of charter flightsin the early ,sixties. As I under-stood it, TSE was also to, providecapital, guidance, a more profes-sional atmnosphere, and a financialsuperstructure for student entre.pi~en'mms w~hile protecting 'fne in-terests off the IkIvr c-m-munity.

Since its fduklng in December,1963, there have been a good hum-

ber of outward signs of an in-crease in the quality and quantityof TSE services. Yet, a few is-sues ago in The Tech there wasa statement by the TSE travelmanager that. the travel servicehad only broken even during thepast year. Since the travel serv-ice seems to be the largest TSEactivity I wonder how that. state-ment reflects on the rest of theTSE organization.

To the best of my knowledge,the financial condition and activi.ties of TSE have never been re-ported in The Tech or in anyother MIT publication. Two otherorganizations that serve MIT, TheCoop,, a-,da for the '}MIT stmwff ThleCredit Union, publish a yearly fi-nancial report. Can the MHIT com-munity expect such a documentfrom TSE?

B. P. Strauss '64

(Ed. noie: TSE is a corpora-tion chartered by the Common-wealth of Mass~chusetts, and bylaw submits operating statementsto its board of directors and itsstockholders. The original stock,..s b,,A~ . }'hc IA.. .. ,-,:)..,

in th~e name of three stockhold-ers, Vice-president Malcolm Kis-pert, Director of Situdent Aidlack Frailey, and the UAP.)

Bv Michael Warren O aZ�lr�

0 t

Vol. LXXXVII, No. I Feb. 7, 1967

Ledgrs

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of Montreal, and Mr. C. H. Dick- a special one for the awarding of

ens of Toronto. honorarSy degrees, and no regularThe Centennial Convocation is degrees will be conferred.

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(Contihtt/ed from Page 1)

tan visual presentation of struc-tures as small as three angsttomsin diameter.

The sample preparation equip-ment includes a microtome thatuses'-wedge-shaped blades to peelsample sections as thin as 100angstroms.

The electOn microscope facilitywill enable faculty and students to

.expand fundamental studies insuch areas as chemical catalystsand their physical interactionswith the materials used to supportthem, the structure and design ofmembranes for chemical separa-tion, and the chemical engineeringaspects of colloids.

Facility aids in membrane study

One Chemical Engineering De-partment group under Prof. Ed-ward Merrill is using the facilityin research on biomedical mem-branes. The field embraces bothmembrane technology and col-loidal chemistry and is applicableto development of improved arti-ficial kidney machines.

Another group including Prof.Baddour and his associates havea particular interest in industrialcatalysts and in membrane tech-nology. The microscopes are usedby the tiesis students in bothfields.

Prof.. Allan S. Douglas is usingthe facility for one, of MIT's ad-vanced topic-centered seminarsfor freshmen.'

Several industries contributeThe total cost of the- ' electron

microscope j__acility was approxi-mately $150,000. Qf this, $36,00was contributed by the NSF inthe form of an equipment grant.Other funds came from severalindustrial concerns through grantsto the department and from MIT'sown resources.'

These valuable instruments arein good handas. In c MLre of th

-operation of the facility and lab-

$1,400,000 relea eforr ea cederater

t be MDt In Hiddleton

11II �

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Start s0methig wth TVeradyne ...fast growing {more than 80% a year) manufacturer of auto-matic instruments for tesfing electronic componrsents andintegrated circuits- iranstruments so reliable that we canguarantee them for ten years.

Start something with-Teradyne. .where you'll have a chance to design circuifs, follow fheirprogress through manufacturing, and Inal eyaluation. In-terested in other'applications of your engineering back-ground? Consider technical sales, marketing, sales promo-tion, production control.

Start smeth"g wTh Teradyne e . Owhere you won't have much fimne to be an apprentice, you'llbe a pr-oducing men rmber of fhe organrafioan right away!:

Meet us on campus on February O--you- may start some-thing. .

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Dr. Charles H. Townes, Institute_ .__ 9 r>,-l .'- h-- C~a -n

oratory-are instrument technicians Protessor oI Pnysics, has eetn se-

Harry G r e e n 1 a w and Stanley lected to receive anjrhonorary de-

Mitchell, both of whom have had gree at the University of Alberta's

maniy years of laboratory experi- Centennial Convocation, March 10.

ence at MIT. Along with three Canadians, he

An informal dedication held re- Mill be presented with -the degreeof D~otor of Lawks, honoris cauxsa.

cently was attended by Dean Gor- of octor of Laws, honoris cadon S. Brown of the School of Dr. Townes, a world authority

Engineering; Prof. Edwin R, Gilli- of microwave spectroscopy andland, department head; Prof. Pay- masers, and related matters, has

mond F. Baddour, who tsook a held Fulbright and Guggenheimleading role in organizing the Fellowships;'and was awarded the

facility and laboratory; Mr. Lewis Nobel Prize for Physics in 19.

G. Mayfield, engineering chemis- The others to be receiving hon-tf, p rgr.rm dmir.trr for the . nf -nr tr deg'Pees re Mrs. Donald W-

gineering Division of the NSF; McGibbon of Toronto, His Emi-

and other faculty and students . nence Paul-Emrnile Cardinal Leger

6RAD1AT IM GE6MM fEMR6in a {ew months you'll be starting something - why notstart if with us.

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only those who could appreciate an academiccimate that has the personal advantages of privateindustry.At Avco Everett, you'll be working in just such an environ-ment . . . one which places a premium on ideas . . .where you'll be given all the freedom you need to dosignificant research and publish papers . .. and you'llbe working with some of the most respected scientistsin aerospace research.Our investigations range from high temperature gas dy-namics, plasma dynamics, aerophysics, atomic physics,reentry physics, magnetohydrodynamics to low tempera-ture physics including superconductivity.Avco Everett may not be for you. But if it is for you,you're shortchanging yourself by not investigating further.

If you. have an advanced degree and/or interest in oneof the above areas, please write Mr. Louis Rudzinsky.

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I?ahi

One million, four hundred thou-sand dollars of -Atomic Energy

Co mnission (AEC) funds have

been released for .e on the 400million electron volt linear-accel-eratot- to be built by MIT in--Mid-dleton, Massachusetts. --

Representative W i 1 1 i a m H.Bates (R-Mass.), a ranldng mem-ber of the. Joint Counimttee onAtomic Energy, mnade the an-nouncemeint, saying that the build-ing of the accelerator "marks an-other step in the scientific devel-opment of Essex County, which'Wl ~attrt many ol ne hest

minds and advanced industries 'ofthe nation."

Bates said that previously only$175,000Q of the $4.6 milion appro-priated for the MIT acceleratorhad been apportioned for this fis-cal year. Release of the additionalmoey makes it possible for' theproject' to proceed on schedulead witin original estimates ofcost for the $5.4 million accelera-tor, he said. The balance of the' ....... ' --= Les. added, is cx-

' pected to be released after juiyfi't.

I MIT is providing the land andi.$8W 000 of the total costeludes $150,000 more for the Mid-dleton accelerator's perating ex-penses.

o

-~ t~ir alicugingpmc _ree 's e-g neer ng

antl IraedhI se~e~ O-c.Bslb~

Con Edison is the dynamic andforward looking Company suap-plying electricity, gas and steamtO g Lowi,,g New 'JL'-- 4ity " .. J..-

adjoining Westchester Coulnty.Outstanding opportunities to

assist in solving the problems ofCon Edison's future growth anddevelopment are offered to grad-uates with degrees in EE, MIE,

C E , ChE, Met'lE and NuclearrEngineering.

Get additional informationhllUn youLr PraceimeIn[ 03f mcer Arrange for anr on campus inter-view with Con Edison's repre-sentative. Or, write PlacemerntManager, 4 Irving Place, NewYork, N. Y. 1000Q.

Equal opportunity for all.

Faculy rese'arch advanced 0F;;e a k@alry LI.D.eby nw milcroscope I.F

�T�a��

O.

Co" r~ "a"Oft

CAMPUS."S NEEWS ".* * e e' MA-BCH 7, 1967

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co

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cor:z

LlLL

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paried by a.-$5,00" Checkwk, was:given in recognitiorn. of the workof the MIT Physical Science Study.Committee, headed by Dr. JetroldR. Zacharias, which pioneered inthe development of a new highschool physics course, now -usedthroughout the world. This workled to the establishment of Edu-cational Services -Incorporated,which has been responsible forextensive curriculum reforms andwhich has now been incorporatedinto a new organization, Educa-tional Developnment Center.

Award available to Zacharias

Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner, provostof MIT, announced that the mone-tary award will be made availableto Professor Zacharias for use athis discretion for special educa-tional purposes. Dr] Zacharias, aphysicist who holds the .itle ofInstitute Professor at MIT, led inthe formation of the PSSC in 1956and became director of Academic affairs of ESI when it was formed.He is vice president of EDC.

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The Appreciation Award-of the Western Electric Fund isipresented by (right) J. W. Abbott, Jr.,-of Western Electric. Fromthe left are Bruce Harriman of NET&T, Dr. Jerome- B. Wiesner,and Dr. Jerrold R. Zacharias.

! $elective Service test applical tnsmust be postmarked by Friday ::Aptications for the March 311 e :test. Applications should be

and 31 and April 8, 1967 adminis- sent to Selective Service Exambn-trations of the College Qualifica- ing Section, Educational Testing

-tions Test are now- available Service, Box 988, Princeton, Newthrough Mrs. Lutz, Selective Serv- Jersey 08540.ice Advisor, in 20E-226. Completed' The April exam will not be of-applications for the. test must be fered at MIT, so students wishingpostmarked by midnight, Friday, to take the test then shotuld choose

I awNScroup i' ven,waid" has significant contributions toward

ie Western meeting the educational needs of"in recog- a free society."

forts in fur- In recognition of PSSCellence and The award, which was accorm-

An "Appreciation A,been presented by thElectric Fund to MITnition of outstanding eft

' thering academic-exce

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Technical representa- Ttives of The MTREMITRECorporation will beconduacting interviews A Equal Oprunity Emoyer (M&F)

oncampus February 20, 1967- If you have a M.s. or Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, Physics, or Mathematics and want

more information regarding opportunities al MITRE, call collect. James t.- Glinos (617)271° 2078 or write in confidence to College Relations Coordinator, The MITRE Corporati6n,Box 208 *'redford, Massachusetts.

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Dean L. Jacoby has been ap-pointed director of the Office ofInstitutional Studies at MIT,Malcolm G. Kispert, Vice Presi-dent of Academic Adn 'nistration,announcedl.

The Office of Institubona iStudies was established in I94 toprovide computer services to theRegistrar's Office. It now providLsthis service to a number of ad-miistrative offices at the Insi-ute including Admissions, Alumni,

and Sthdent Aid.MLr. Jacoby came to MIT fin 1964

as assistant director of the Stu-dent Aid Center arnd gera! m -ager of Technlogy Student Erterprises, Inc. He became associ-ate director of Student Aid inLq.

He graduated from MrrT in 1964,receiving a bachelor of sciencedegree in industial management.As a student, he was president ofthe Urdergraduate Associations.Mr. Jacoby served as class presi-dent for five years following gad-uation, and has been -class agentsince 1959. From 1961 to 1963 heserved on the Crporation-VisitingCommittee for Student Aifai-s.

From 1954 to 1957 he servedwith the Air Force as chief of AirForce Cxonbaf- Admuisii fion &Termination and as acting deputychief of the Contracts Divisior of

the Office of the Air Force Repre-sentatives at the Douglas AirCraftCompany. From 1958 to 1951 hewas a senior cormnsultant withPayne.Ross Ltd., Managerial Con-sultants in Canada, and from 1961to 1_964 he was manager of devel-opment and a partner of C. J.Jamby and Campany.

S0viet scientist Fomint lecture Thursdayn mo0dels of systemsProtesor S. V. Fomin, a visit-

ing Soviet Exchange Scientist,will lecture on MathematicalModels of Propagation of Excita-tion in Biological Systems Thurs-day at 2:30 pm in Room 6-120.

Professor Fomin is a memberof the Department of Mathemat-ics at M6scow University and thehead of the Mathematics Labora-tory of the Institute of Biophysics,USSR Academy of Sciences. He isin the US for a three-month ex-change visit under the provisionsof the Inter-Academy ExchangeAgreement between the NationalAcademy of Sciences and theSoviet Academy of Sciences.

- rle lecture is one of a serlessponsored by the Committee onEngineering and Living Systems.

Kosinski maintains complete

realism, even while treating ahighly emotional subject, by hisperfectly objective narration. Hechooses to tell his story in thenaive mind of a six-year-old childwho was separated from his par-ents at the outbreak of World.

War II. The boy wandered fromvillage to village seekring food andshelter, but because of his darkhair, black eyes, and strange ur-ban accent, he was taken for aGypsy or Jew by the simple peas-

(Please turn to Page 15)

Th'e Painted Bird, by JerzyKosinski, follows the sufferingsof a small boy in wartime Pol-and. The novel has been praisedas a study of Nazism in theabst ract.

By Thomas Nesbitt

I hesitate to say that this bookwill shockl you, for the fear of

appearing trite or even insincere,but there is no other word. 'ThePainted Bird' relates many sceneswhich, were they in any less reala context, you could label 'gross'and forget. Unfortunately, no sucheasy escape exists.

In as good a spot 4as you are today ?Well-informed ?

I- Up on things ?Intimately-acquainted with thstate of the art in yof study ?

an original contribu-tion to your-area of

. interest. In anenvironment like

r this, there's no~w telling how far

you can go. But this much iscertain. You'll not be over-looked, and you can't beovertaken.

Salary ? Benefits ? They'recompetitive, of course. Mdre-over, we have an excellentEducatiohal Assistance andSta.f Scholar Program.(Many MITRE employeespresently attend nearbyeducational institutions includ-ing Harvard, Boston University,Boston College, Brandeis,Northeastern, MIT, and Tufts.)Depending on your interests,qualifications and currentopenings, you may start in oneof the folowing, or other,departments:

System Planning andEngineeringAir and MissileDefense SystemsSystem' DesignSystems AnalysisAir Traffic SystemsTactical SystemsStrategic SystemsRange InstrumentaticanInformation SciencesComputer & DisplayTechnologyCommunicationsElectronic WarfareRadar Designand TechnologyInformation ProcessingSurveillance andWarning SystemsApplied Mathematics

"COhmiscall Elcn;gleeRs--ese:ad;h andu ievel-opment work in chemical and electro-chemical processes; gas and fluid flow.systems and 'equipment; air and watertreatment systems; semi-conductor ma-terials; lubrication; fuel systems and proc-:esses; filtration; hydraulic fuel systems.Physicists-Application of physical princi-ples to the areas of sound, electronics,optics, mechanics, irnstrumentation, orelectricity and magnetism.Chemists--Engaged in application of chem-ical principles to the areas of water treat-ment and purification, corrosion and dep-osition in naval equipment, atmospherepurification, thermoelectric materials, fuelcell power generation, lubricsation, fuels,hydraulic fluids, and instrumental analysis.Mathematicians-Apply the techniques ofmathematics to the solution of scientificand engineering problems in the supportof research and development programs ofthe laboratory. Analyze physical problemsand formulas suitable for numerical analy-sis and computation. Program for solutionby digital computer when appropriate.Metal lurgists--Research and developmentwork in the area of new or improved alloysfor ship hull and machinery applicationsinvolving considerations of physical -andmechanical properties of metals and al-loys, fatigue and corrosion characteristics,and weldability.

Salaries range from $6,387 to $10,927per year, depending on type of degree andscholastic standing.

Appointees acquire the benefits of careerCivil Service and regular salary increases.

All applicants will be considered on thebasis of merit without regard to sex, race,creed, color, national origin; age, physicalhandicap, marital status, or lawful politi-

n a l l ur.ivgll,

If you are interested in applying yourcapabilities to the vital and expanding

.business of improving ship and submarineperformances, arrange with your CollegePlacement Officer to see the Laboratory'srecruiting representative, who will be oncampus for interviews on

February 13or, write to:W. M. I SESKOHead, Employment BranchU. S. Navy Marine Engineersing laboratoryAnnaapolis, Maryland

your field~our field

Or will you (through no faultof your own) be dangerouslyclose to the brink ofobsolescence ?

Could happen. Often does.Which is one good reason toconsider a career at MITRE.

MITRE is pioneering in thedesign and engineering ofcomplex information, sensor.command, control and com-munications systemrs for theUnited States Government.Our assignmrents include suchprominent electronic systems-as the NORAD Combat -Operations Center, the Back-up Interceptor CommandSystem for SAGE, and theNational Military CommandSystem (NMCS).

These projects represent themost important systemschallenges of our time, andrequire the most advancedthinking on a broad range ofscientific problems and thetechnologies needed tosolve them.

As a member of the MITREteam, you'll be working in anatmosphere of scientificinquiry, alongside colleaguesof outstanding reputation,with the opportunity to make

azi cruelty scars childee|- 30dZ crue~lly S86rs cttilde

Richard Wright Jacoby uppoinared directornamed~ Ma-naca InaHst~lonal Stud'es Bepi

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of Tech ReviewRichard F. Wright has been

named advertising manager of

Technology Review, according toDonald P. Severance, publisher.

Wright has been ad manager ofthe magazine on a part-time basisfor the past year. Formerly, hewas advertising director of NewEnglander and had also served inthe national advertising depart-ment of the Boston Post.

On the waterfrontat' Annapolis

grovh opport nities for.- resaarnh engineers

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and sientistsT.hv U. . Navy Marine En;gI.eer.i :g La' -

oratory conducts RDT&E in naval ship-board and submarine machinery andauxiliary systems (electrical, propulsion,control, etc.). in addition to developingbasic improvements in performance andreliability, the Laboratory concentrates onship silencing, new concepts in energyconversion and control, ways to minimizefriction and wear, special operating ma-chinery for deep-diving vessels; and tough,resistant naval alloys to meet all oceanenvironmental conditions. .

The Laboratory buildings-now morethan 50 of them-house some of the finestresear.ch, experimerntal and evaluationequipments of their kind,' such as high-speed computers, electric power generators,

siIr;ation and shock test' stands, metalscomposition analysis instruments, cryo-genic storage and handling facilities, phys-ics and chemistry labs, and complex. in-strumentation for measuring strain, stress,pressure, acceleration, velocity, perform-ance, and reliability. The Laboratorygrounds resemble a modern industrialpark, and include special facilities forin-field experimentation.

And the locale is ideal. Washington,Baltimore and the ocean resorts are nomore than one hour's drive. Annapolis it-self is the state capital, and offers small-city living with metropolitan accessibility.

Urgent new projects require additionalengineering and scientific personnel withBS, MS, and PhD degrees.

Typical Duties of Engineers andScientists at MEL:

Mechanical Engineers-Research and de-velopment in shipboard propulsion ma-"~'; .... ':- ·- d '·--~ hy... ;..--t,,=v,,,"0,e o,,U Itr ag ul s iyistems-friction and wear equipment and devices-- machinery silencing-and many othernaval and shipboard mechanical applica-tions.Electrical Engineers Research and devel-opment in electrical power and its con-trl--magnetic fields-ship control systems-instrumentation--electro-chemicaI proc-esses-electro/electrornechanical equip-rment silencing-plus a variety of additionalnaval and shipboard electrical applications:.Electronic Engineers-Research and devel-opment in electronics--servo-mechanissms-electromechanical devices-instrumentand panel illumination-pressure measure-ment-fluid flow measurement.

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S YOU FST JO OUT OF CHOOL IS T POGAMIN6 JOB

Well. for a start consi der te foiowi ng possblferes:

,<~~~ ~~~~~ - ~0 becoming an experf in software design for.*~~~~ ~~small or large digital computers.

l learning what there is to know aboutf large- scale information systems.

- developing Ihe capabilify of aeking a seniorrole on scientific problern-solving projecs.

0 ioining the Tight fo make real-time sysinems areality.

o becoming a selling, designing, and program-ihg 2"accoun9 manrager" in the area of busin-ess da'a processing.

OUr professont is pro-.d..g comrputer servicesfo business and indusfry, and we're pretty proud ofwhat we've done so far. We're flooking for addif-ionel men to share 'he challenges, frusfrafions, andsi-a'nicrn .."are..c e"; ...mrn+r- in .. '" ra' We"PI'

These vary from one individual fo the next, but allof our staff members receive annual bonus, profit-sharing, and the opportunity fo buy stock, in addi-tion to salary and standard benefits.

If you've had some exposure To compuTers andwoeuld like to make them a {ull time job, pleasesign up to talk with Mr. Hankins in the SfudeniPlacenenf Office on February 14Ah. He has lots ofthings to discuss with you.

PHILIP HANKEI# s & (J.,|N IW 8G Massachusett"s Avenue. Arington, Massachusetts

Page 9: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

Hayden en ll ery to e hi ii Jean-,Anauoah's'R ehearsal' '- ' ~~Fa Vs wo weeksin Krekg

By Steve Carhardt fist Ernest Trova. The Falling by the MIT Committee on the'Falling Men' will invade the Man' series of figures is consid- Visual Arts, and will be held in

Hayden Gallery begirming Febru- ered by many to be one of the the Hayden Gallery. The grandary 20, The occasion will be a more significant aspects of mod- opening of the show, at wch re-one-man show featuring their cre- emrn sculpture. ator, the noted contemporary ar- The exhibition will be sponsored freshments will be served, will be

Study: Failling Man (Carman) is one of the works of sculpturewhich form the Exhibition of Recent Sculpture by Ernest Trova tobe displayed in the Hayden Library from February 20 to March19. This particular sculpture is of polished silicone bronze andenamel, 72"x28"x20". It is part of the collection of Mr. and Mrs.Frederick Wiesman. The exhibition is being sponsored by theMIT Committee on the Visual Arts.

from 7 to 9 pn, February 20.Thereafter the new hours at Hay-den will be in effect: 10 am to 9pm Tuesdays, 10 am to 5 pmother weekdays, and I to 5 pmSaturdays and Sundays. Most ofthe pieces which will be shownhave not yet been exhibited inBoston.

Emergence of TrovaIn his early years, Trova was

an expressionist painter and was-strongly influenced by the worksof de Kooning. Expressionism lednaturally to collages, which caneto involve attached pieces of junkor cloth. From there it was but ashort step to sculpture.

'Falling Men come in a varietyof disguise>, but they all have agreat deal in common. They areall made of antiseptic polishedmetal or plastic. They are neithermen nor woman, but rather astrange sort of armless, pot-bel-lied automatons. What messagethey might have for us is some-thing each viewer must decidefor himself.

The MIT Dramashop continues its series of productions withthe play, 'The Rehearsal' by Jean Anouilh. The play was pre-sented during the last two weeks before vacation.

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First proQgram Tuesday

Engineering-lXving syt em- Htopic for Spring Seminars

Although the applications of en.ginreeing disciplines in medicinehave been rapidly multiplying,

If you want a career'that really gives you room to grow, we have a suggestion.Start with the No. .1 family of companies:

fugimbil oDI l0 lln f ~g Company,.r-Provides more petroleum energy to this nationthan any other domestic oil company- literally No.. 1 -America's Leading Energy Company.

E81j90 CbOibCal C Ma a =-- One of the 10 largest chemical companies in theUnited States. As part of an industry marked by rapid growth, Enjay offers unusually strongadvancement opportunities.

lS33 PJJ dUl CU81 ReSI [L m CJM~DaPR -, Analysis and design work for drilling andproduction of natural gas and liquids, reservoir engineering using computers.EsN D iese0 areh nRd Engineeirai m p ,a.-. Basic and exploratoryresearch and development od products and processes, engineering research and process design,mathematical research.Start with any of the No. 1 family of companies and we'll help you grow-with frequent evaluations... development programs... encouragement to gain professional recognition--because that's the waywe grew to be No. 1..We need people in practically all disciplines, because our work includes oil and gas exploration andproduction; research; and,manufacturing;-transportation and marketing of petroleum and petrochemicalproducts -as well as the management of all these operations.There is almost no limit to the opportunities we offer--at every degree level. So go ahead...have a look at No. 1. See us on campus.

THESE ARE PLANS FOR PROGRESS COMPANIES AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERS.

the large volume of work beingdone in this field at MIT has gonefor the most part unnoticed dueto the fact that it is spreadamong many departments. Inorder to publicize these activitiesamong the student body and en-courage students interested inworking in this field, the SpringSeminar Series on Engineeringand Living Systems will be spon-sored by the MIT Committee onEngineering and Living Systems.

First Program To Be SurveyThe first seminar will be held

Tuesday, February 14, at 4 p.m.in the .Bush -Room, 10-105. Thespeakers will be the .Chairman o!the Committee on Engineeringand Living . Systems, ProfessorMurray Eden. and the conmmit-tee's executive officer, Dr. PhilipA. 'inker. The program will bea broad survey of the many bio-logical engineering research pro-jects currently in progress alMIT.

Although the schedule of futureseminars has not yet been full1determined, upcoming speakerswill be primarily MIT facultywho will describe their own pro-jects in some detail. Among theprojects which may be discussed.are the development of an artifi-cial arm with feedback capabili-ties not unlike those of thenervous system and the improve-mrrent of heart-lung machines.

Fui-ncions of CommitteeThe sponsoring Committee on

Engineering and 'Living Systemswas formed two years ago to actas the focus for all engineering-medical research at MIT sinethese endeavors have no natural"home" amiog MIT's depart-ments. The committee has a two-fold purpose: to encourage con-tact between researchers in thisfield and supervise the develop-ment of educational programs forstudents planning to work in thisarea.

Gemini 12 filmto be shown Fri.by Tech Review

Technology Review vill presenta 20-minute NASA motion pictureof the flight of Gemini 12, in-cluding the "space walk" of Ed-win ("Buzz) Aldrin '63, in KresgeAuditorium Friday. There will becontinuous showings from noonuntil 2 p.m. with oommentary byPeter Gwnyre, Acting ManagingEditor of the Review.

The flight of Gemini 12 will behighlighted in the February issueof Technology Review.

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T- F S

9 10 1116 17-18-

hO ~ THIS WEEKo- MUSIC

Boston Symphony Orchestra-ColinDavis, guest- conductor; Berlioz'Overture, "King Lear," Op 4;Stravinsky's 'Symphony- in Three

> Movements. Dvorak's 'SymphonyNo. 7, in D minor, Op. 70;' Feb.:

< 7, 9, 8:30 Im; Symphony Hall.Boston Symphony Orchestra-Erich

Leinsdorf, conducting; Prokofiev's'Scenes from "Romeo and Juliet,"

M Op. 64,' Rachmaninoff's 'RanoLUU- Concerto No. 2, in C minor, Op.18,' Gina Bachauer. soloist; Feb.10. 2 Pm, Feb. 11, 8:30 pm; Sym-

> . phony Hall.< Cantata Singers-Leo Collins, direc-

O tor, Marsha Vleck,. Jane Struss,V) Karl Dan Sorensen, and FrancisWL Hester, soloists; 'Ich bin ein guterD) Hirt,' 'lhr Menschen ruhmet Got-1- tes Liebe,' 'Der -Herr denket an

uns,' 'Komm, Jesu, Komm . . .'Feb. 11, 8:30 Pm; Sanders Thea-tre; $2, $3.50.

Folklore Productions-Tom Paxtonconcert; Feb. 11, 8:30 prn; JordanHall.

Handel and Haydn Society-Dr. Ed-LU ward F. Gilday conducts a per-formance of Randall Thompson's

'The Passion According to St.Wu Luke'; Feb. 12, 8 prnm; War Me-

_- morial Auditorium.-- MIT-New York Chamber Soloists;

Rameau's Cantata 'Diane et Ac-teoni.' Bach's Cantata No. 189,'Meine Seele ruhmet und priest,'Couperin's 'Concert Royale No, 4'Boismortier's 'Concerto in E Ma-jor,' and Telemann's 'Cantata No.31'; Feb. t2, 3 qm; Kresge Audi-torium.

Radcliffe-Radcliffe Freshman Cho-rus and the Amherst FresflmanGlee Club present a concert fea-turing Mozart's 'Coronation Mass';Feb. 10, 8:15 pm: Holmes Hall;free.

THEATREPeople's Theatre-James Baldwin's

'Blues for Mr. Charlie,' sponsoredby St. Cyprian's Episcopal Churchand Boston CORE; Feb. 10, 11, 12.8 Dm; St. Cyprian's EpiscopalChurch Parish Hall; $2 (students$1.50).

Rose Coffee House-Tempo Theatrepresents 'The Last Word' and 'TheBalloon'; Feb. 10, 11, 12, 25, 26,~~~~~~~._

8:30 pm; 50c (Mondays). $1.25(weekends).

MISCELLANEOUS-~Gsrxoper-A--Qa5l- ~---iXxhibit~io

and sale of Honore Daumier'slithographs; starts. Feb. 11.

NEXT WEEKmUSIC

Boston Symphony Orchestra E.Power Biggs joins Boston Sym-phony Orchestra in organ concert;Feb. 19, 8:30 pm; concerti and so-natas for organ 'and small orches-tra by Bach, Haydn, Mozart Pou-lenc, and Vivaldi: Feb. 19, 8:30Pm; Symphony Hall. .

THEATRERose Coffee House-- The Brattle

House , Players present BernardShaw's 'Great Catherine'; Feb. 17,18, 19, 8 pm; 50c (Mondays), $1.25(weekends).

Barsque musk cone. er scheduled for Sunday

Baroque music _by Telemann,J. S. Bach, and the French comn-posers Rameau, Boismortier, andCouperin will -be performed, bythe New York Chamber Soloistsat a concert min Kresge AuditoriumSunday at 3 p.m.

Distinguished t e n o r CharlesBressler will sing-the recitativein Rameau's Cantata 'Diane etActeon' joining soloists GeraldTarack, violin, Alexander Koug-ell, cello, and Albert Fuller,harpsichord. Mr. Bressler willalso perform in J. S. Bach's Can-tata No. 189, 'Meine Seele ruhitund priest.'

Couperin's Concerto Royale No.4, Boismortier's Concerto in EMajor and the Cantata No. 31 byTelemannrm are also included inthe program.

N3cet eekx explreeng ineeringopportunitiesas bi as today's

rand new ocean

Talk with on-campus Career Consultant from Newport News-world's largest shipbuilding company-involved withnuclear propulsion, aircraft carrier design, submarine- build.ing, oceanographic development, marine automation, allthe challenging advances on today's brand new ocean. TheNew York TIMES calls this "the last earthbound frontier"with "profit possibilities as big as the sea."

Learn what our.half-a-billion-dollar order backlog means toyou in terms of high starting salary and years of careersecurity with no lid on your future. With orders up$80,000,000 in five months, our need is urgent for imagina-tive men in all the disciplines listed here. Men who liketough challenges and individual responsibility.

Ask about opportunities for advanced degrees and research.We're next door to Virginia Associated Research Center withone of the world's largest synchrocyclotrons, where grad-uate engineers study high energy physics. We're across theharbor from Old Dominion College, offering graduatecourses in Microwave Theory, Solid State Eiectronics, Nu-clear Engineering. Nearby, too, is the Extension Divisionof the University of Virginia offering courses toward creditsfor masters degrees: And within easy driving is The Vir-ginia Institute for Scientific Research, a world leader insolid state physics. Linked up with these opportunities,Newport News offers scholarships, tuition grants, advancedstudy and research leaves. Ask about them.

Get-the facts on pleasant living and lower living costs herein the heart of Virginia's seaside vacationland with its su-perb beaches, go!f, fishing, .boating, hunting.

...... ,,, EIGI;EERxr4iG CAREER- OPENiNGS

Mechanical EngineersElectrical Engineers <

Marine EngineersIndustrial EngineersSystems Analysts

Naval ArchitectsNuclear Engineers-Civil EngineersMetallurgical Engineers

Mr. Lynn A. Schwartzkopf Our Career Consultant,

will be at the.Placement Office on Tuei-uday, February 14,to answer questions, talk over qualifications, take applica-tions for fast action.

NEWPORT VEWS SHIPBUILDING AND DRY DOCK COMPANY. NEWVPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA

An Equal Opportunity Employer.

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The Loves of a Blonde. At theCinema Kenmorec-quare. Direct-ed by Milos Forman. StarringHana Breichova as Andula andVladimir Puchoft as Mila.

By David Grosz'The Loves of a Blonde' can do

nothing but strengthen the alreadyincreasing popularity of Czecho-slovakian films in this country. Itis every bit as well done as 'TheShop on Main Street,' and-being acomedy and about young peopleand love, it is bound to be morepopular.

Adolescent problemsMilos Forman, the director of

'The Loves of a Blonde,' claimsthat he understands the world ofteenagers better than that of hiscontemporaries: "I like them, un-derstand them, know them, and,if yQu like, I am biased in theirfavor . . ." In any case, he showshimself clearly capable of mak-ing a beautifully poignant andoften amusing. statement aboutthe peculiar emotional problemsof young people growing up inmodern-day Czechoslovakia.

Scarcity of menThe blonde of-the title, Andula

(played by Hana Brejchova),works in a shoe factory in a smallisolated town W.fere there are not

Hana Brejchova confides intimate secrets to her girl frie-in this scene from Milos Forman's 'Loves of a Blonde.' The Cinma Kenmore-Square presented this Czechoslovakian film.nearly enough men for the sev-eral thousand young girls in thefactory. The frustration of thesegirls' lives comes across well inthe camera work and in a wholeseries of really fine performancesin minor parts. The director ofthe factory, in particular, is mem-orable for his smiling, constantconcern for' his charges, whichnever seems to reach them.

Andula's romanceBut sinple frustration is just a

minor element. While Andula'sgirl friends are subjected to theattentions of a group o'_i middle-aged enlisted men at a dance, shehas her eye on the pianist in theband (played by Vladimir Pu-

FiRENd 9 - 1ou canFEREU~~~J~ t~ Lif You can

help us probe the nature of matter, find a star, or betterunderstand life processes.

WE'RE DIF-.. because we are providing products and services that willhelp ,m-an to betiter udirersandc and control his environment.

If you're an engineering or science student with an interestin analytical instrumentation, radiation equipment, vacuum--systems, or tubes and related microwave components, let'stalk about your future. It might make a big difference to both.of us. Your Placement Office has all the details.

I >,CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

palo alto/california_ _ _ _ _~ -

-February 9, 1967

An Equal Opportunity Employer i_ t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I

The MIT GILBERT and SULLIVAN SOCIETY

THE MIKADOOrches r Aud [ons I

Sam areday Feib. 1 1'10 a.m. i p.m., Kresge Auditoriuem rehearsal-room A. Audition wI;th prepared maaer;a.For an audition fti.e or infor.mation call:

Dan Brio a, X3 161 or dial 8-320.·- arw ~~a~ma~y ~B~r~rarm~aca~ ~ a~saaa~aaarg~rr~e~m~t~as~-~ ~ Is~w'- -~8nn ~a Pnnaaaar;-~~-~b~·a~·lraa~pp~p~p~p~p~ I

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cholt). The main story is abcher 'romance' with the pianist,

'representative of the wild te-world of Prague, vwhich, in iway, turns out to be evgry bit -

frustrating as her own. -

The pianist coaxes her uphis room, where the love seeithat follows combines elementshun.or and sympathy in a merorable sequence. Andula is f-more than the simple rural giiwhose innocence lets her be foiokby the slick band member. Somhow they are both conspirator.she slightly unwilling, in a pi-to outwit their stifling enviro:ment. '

Confused parentsBut. when he casually invitr

her to Prague, she takes him s-riously, confronting his parentstheir door one night, suitcase

-hand. This confrontation with thparents (who understand neithEher nor their son, Mila) and, laer, with Mila, and the night thrfollows, provide Andula a saomtimes- bitter but often hilariouinitiation to the reality of whcthe loves of a blonde are liketto be. '

Disillusioned retmrnShe returns to the factory, a li

tie disillusioned, but still withope for the _ticure. As she stanrat her job paiHting shoes, she hano need for the attentions of thactory director, -who almos

seems more lecherous than sympathetic.

Forman's understang. of thteenager's problems embracesome that are universal and som-that are peculiar to the planneeconomy of socialism. The plarners in conerence express theiconcern"for the lives they manipulate, but their concern gets losin the bureaucracy. One may feethat Andula achieves a sort opersonal solution; but one muswonder what solace can comforsome thousands of her less fortunate fellow workers.

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Last fimes today!"HOTEL PAADISIO"

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PBy Don DavisThe top 'tir-b' artists and top

forty songs of 1966 as chosen inour poll are listed below.

1) Beaties 3942) Mamas and Par.as 3903) Rolling Stones 2564) Simon and Garfunkei 2195) Lovin' Spoonful 1836) Beach Boys 1707) SuPremes 1138) Association 899) Bob Dylan 65

10) Monkees 6211) Donovan 5712) Four ToPs 5313) Paul Revere and Raiders 4814) Animals 40-15) Temptations 3316) Tijuana Brass 3017) Petula Clark. 2g18) Biyrds 2719) Blues Proiect 2620) Jefferson.Airplane 2621) Righteous Brothers 2322) Frank Sinatra 2223) Mitch Ryder 2024) James Brown , 20

25) Kinks26) Cyrkle27) Wilson Pickett28) SandPipers29) Four Seasons30) Mothers of invention

Too songs1) California- Dreamin'2) Cherish3) Monday Monday4) Sumnmer in the City5) Eleanor Rigby6) Good Vibrations7) Paint it, Black8) Am a Rock9) Along Comes Mary

10 Did You Ever Have ToMake Up Your Mind

11) Gloria12) Kicks13) Homeward Bound143 Urge for Going15) Sloop John B.16) Eight Miles High17) You Can't Hurry Love18) Devil with a' Blue Dress On

&,Good Golly Miss Molly

(Please tarn to Page 13)

191815151414

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: .."" wants to be right in the thick of[k' i g i.: things.. who doesn't think it's?:? i:.^'!'. old hat to work your way to the top.

"$* l We'cordially'invite you to find your..: : ii'i.- place in the Sun, in a permanentii[!' : !. - or summer position. Visit your place-· ;--- ' ment office now to schedule an appoint-ment with ourrepresentative on campus. I.f you can'tmeet us on campus, we'll send you employmentinformation. Just drop a note to: Personnel & Col-lege Relations, Dept. H, Sun Oil Co., 1608 WalnutSt., Phila., Pa. 19103. SuLarn Oil Companyl

An equal opportunity employer m/f

Sun Oil Company is a "glamour"company. (That surprise you?)At Sun you work on projects as farout as anyoners, in areas ranging from petrochernistry to internal man-agement consulting, from operationsresearch to advanced engineerina.Sun Oil Company is also a very, very stable com-pany, enjoying solid sales and substantial growthyear after year after year. At Sun when a "glam-'our" project is completed, its people aren't. Thereis alway a new project to move to, to contribute to.And a new, higher position to fill. That's whereyou come in. If you're the kind of individual who

We'llI be one campusThursday, February 23

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iSir Jh i th e i a , MnS~i- John Grielqud, the noted British actor, and Miss Irene

-You will find expanding horizons and career fulfillment atIMPCO, All the knowledge you have gained at school willfind practical application; working with top engineers yourtechnical cominpetence will rapidly increase. Your assign-ments will be broad in scope, with total project involve-ment. You will assume responsibility in machine designu1 HiU eL;engineerinlg as rapluly as you dernmonstratecapabilities. Some assignments require special interestand background in hydraulics and-mathematical analysis.

. o-is an international leader in the design and produc-tion of machinery for the pulp and paper, and plasticmolding industries--- a solid company with outstandringgrowth rate and heavy non-defense commitments. Modern,well-equipped facilities in -a spacious 63-acre site.

Both at work and in your personal living, New Hampshireoffers room to breathe, room to grow. No state saies orincome tax, low insurance rates. Incomparable recreationarea in yoaur backyard, yet Nashua is only one hourfrom the cultural and entertainment centers of downtownBoston.

A company representative will be on campus

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13r- a; pu L %A Ui rldL;~!ll1flL UI=11r~;or itoeai yov ap pace ointieen ttorXfor interiiew appointment.

At 0 il Com oany

you can have your cake ,,

and eat it, tooJohmn- iegud e grene Worthgie Shakespean recital

CAMPUS NTRV MONDAY PE'B 13

IMPROVED MACHINERY INCO

UV . . rar,$ 3, 1, & T a eMr a g M, $ ,II a M f R w7t IF

B.S. or M.S.

M. A, Greenhill in association with Club 47presents I

Tom- Paxton.-,.:~e.: st. FEB. 1 1 8:30 p.m.

$4, -$3, $2

JORDAN HALL KE 6-24'12.30 Gainsbors -St., Boston

ProfessionalDevelopment

BMPCO, asubsidiary of

IngersolLRand

Living iseasy in

New Hampshire

I i ~~ .,There's much

more to t@e

3 A C H r ¥E R 1Y C.,A suBS IDIARY O -

INGL.RSoLL-.RAt. o COMPANY NASHUA; NEW, HAMPSHIRE 03060

An Ecqual Opportunity Employer

Page 12: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

I do not contend that every college student can,duplicat . the Percy story in whatever career hechooses. I do submit, however, that your ownversion of this story will start when you start toapply your.individual creativity to your first job theway he did to his.Answering cornmplaint letters can be a routine jih for.a routine sort of fellow. Come at the job withcreativity, however, and you can lift it from thehumdrum. You can even eliminate the jol-and therearen't many more forceful ways to show that you areready for a bigger job than to eliminatefyourpresent one.

Note also that here was a man who achieved jobfulfillment, recognition, security, advancement,individuality, a chance for creativityuall the thingstoday's college students want from their workinglives-and he achieved them ail within the businessstructure.

Society itself has a structure. A!. eement, .. I i!.insociety have structures. These structures generallywork for the good of the individual, not for his harm-and the degree to which this is so depends in thefinal measure largely upon the individual.

Chuck Percy did- not wait for chance recognition-he earned his early recognition by his own rerativevision, imagination, and action.

The fastest route to a job of major responsibility. is toimprovethe handiing of a'job OT lesser responsibility.

. ,

This two-way conversationis open to youHave you questions or opinions about business as-a possible career or as'a force in society? Have youreactions (proor con) to this series of open lettersbetween Jim Hill, a student at Hlarvard, andRobert W. Galvin, chairman of Motorola Inc.?Letters like this one-have appeared regularly in29.d.. . .e..e. wspae.r ,,s -""OLf" USi lount.l.I yatla

Octobe. You are invited to make your feelingsknown, too. Write Mr. Galvin at 9401 West GrandAvenue,, FranklinPark', Ilinois 60131. -

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It was a small department (there weren't too manycomplaints) and the college student spent about twoweeks doing exactly what he was paid to do: readletters, find the problem, write answers which gavethe solution. This is the way the job had always beendone, no matter who sat at that particular desk.Gradually, however, this particular answer-writer(his name was Charles H. Percy-the company'wasBell & Howell) began to see patterns emerging in thecustomers' letters. With few exceptions; he realized,each letter fell into one of perhaps nine categories.

Percy took a bundle of letters home that weekend,sorted them out on the floor, and began to composea group of specific, carefully thought-out letters ofreply. He checked and'rechecked each letter againsteach proposed answer letter and against all the otheranswer letters. He found that, sure enough,' he nowhad created ase/ries of answers which gave fulland courteous reply to almost every customer letterin the bundle.

On Monday morning, Percy checked the morningmail against his new letters and, when they, too,checked out, he took the whole bundle into theservice department manager's office.

The service manager heard Percy out, checked theletters in the-bundle, and agreed: a secretary couldsort incoming complaints by category, type theanswers, and'forward a copy for further action whereneeded. The manager a!n ngreed-tht Per/, h6dknowingly eliminated his own job.

This intrigued Percy's boss (jobs were scarcer thanthey are today) and he told Bell & Howell PresidentJoseph H. McNabb about "this enterprising kiddown there Who has Worked himself out of a-job."Mr. McNabb said, "That's a young man we shouldkeep an eye on."

Chuck Percy-went to work full-time for Bell & Howellafter he graduated in 1941. He was elected presidentand chief executive officer at 29. The companyrs -sales'-increased twelvefold under hisrle=-ership. Today, - -,at 47; he is a newly elected Unit ates senator.Counting his summer jobs, h' -ked for Bell& Howell for 28 years.

Dear Mr. Hill:

The fundamental concern expressed in the headlineabove has been voiced in one way or another by allsix studerits taking part in our current exchange ofviews on business. Because it is an issue of suchcommon concern, I am going to respond in the'samemanner to each of you.

We would.agree, I believe, that there are instancesin which sen iority,.prejudice in some form, nepotism,or personal chemistry havebeen influential to anunjustifiable degree in advancing or hinderingcareers in business, in government, in education. This-shows-human frailty; it is neither unique nordominant-in business. We must combat this for.the general improvement of society and we will beassisted in our task by the fact that inadequacy inany position of leadership tends to catch up withits owner.

Meariwhile, the great burden of evidence supportsa conviction that business is structured for the.recognition of individual merit.

There are.thousands of executives in Americanbusiness -today who made'their mark before theywere 50. Many before 40. 1 want to tell you about oneof these men, not because I seek to generalize onone srpeifir kh, Bec-aue ,khe i:,.4;;,,v;d4l,,. e...it .Whi.chhas been demonstrated in his career broadlycharacterizes Am'eerican 'busi'ness leadership.

This man's career might be entitled "How To SucceedQuickly in Business by Shuffling Letters." It is not atale of a young genius who invented a new productand zoomed to the high tax brackets overnight.There are true stories like that, but they don't speakdirectly to your questions.

No, this story starts with an 18-year-old student ofhumble circumstances at the University of Chicagowho had an ordinary summer job at a cameracompany. His job wasn't too different from the sortof summer job which many college students woulddescribe as dull and boring, fragmenited and incon-clusive. He worked in the company's servicedepartment. He answered complaint letters.

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Page 13: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

Dr. John B. Clark, post-doctoralfellow at MIT's Department ofBiology delivered the first in aseries of lectures to be presentedat the Graduate School, Divisionof Biophysics, at Ohio State Uni-versity Dr. Clark's lecture wasentitled "How Large MoleculesGo Into Solution," and showed thecomplexity of analyzing even themost simple water solution.

"We don't understand just whatwater does in a solution," Clarksaid. "But it is a fact that one ofthe big problems in . studying

large molecules is the tecloVaogi-cal limitations imposed .by waterin solutions." He is currentlystudying the way in which macro-molecules found in biological -sys-tems change their structure whenin contact with various solvents.

In order to study macromole-cules insolvents, an ultra-centri-fuge was employed. An ultra-cen-trifuge can produce a force of upto 300,000 times the force ofgravity, and when a solvent issubjected to this, its componentsseparate, makin-g it easier toanalyze.

Forget science fiction. We're talking about the"outer limits" of technology. And these days itcan be even more exciting than science fiction.

Right now IBM needs qualified men andwomen to nelp reach these outer limits. Inekind of people who have made IBM the leader

formation handling and control. And the kind.of people who can grow. with us as far as their

oil

unaff ete11) the songs and artists are the to-

so tal number of ballots on which57 they were mentioned. 1159 ballots5755 were marked with three songs

re 51 from 1966, while 1026 contained50 the names of three artists. 'Youn-4948 ger Girl' was not among the48 eighty listed songs on the ballot42 the first day; its votes the last4139 four days are factored up propor-37 tionately to account for this.3736 The voters seemed unimpressed3634 by sales records for songs, as3433 seven of the sixteen records which

sold over one million copies failedmes of to make the top forty. These were

talents and abilities allow.

The result? Greater personal responsibilityand recognition; the dual satisfaction of per-sonal achievement and continuing personalrewards. A nretT Esrtictf7;ni rsPCrlt-........ 1" ....J .... !' o

Job opportunities at iBM are in six majorarcas: ,ove ,laC utrz rxplaInIUuu, b lUg-aldlllllllg,

Finance and Administration, Research andDevelopment, Manufacturing and Marketing.

Whatever your immediate commitments, whatever your area of study,siga up now for an on-campus interview with IBM, February 28, Mareh 1

If, for some reason, you aren't able to arrange an interview, drop us a line. Write to: Manager of College Recruiting,IBM Corporation, 590 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

(in order of finish in the poll)'These Boots are made for Walk-in,' 'Sunny,' 'Strangers in theNight,' 'Last Train to Clarksville,''Winchester Cathedral,' 'Lil RedRiding Hood,' and 'The Ballad ofthe Green Berets,' Instead, theemphasis in the poll seemed to beon quality with a great folk musicinfluence. Rhythm and blues per-formed poorly, as it did last year,with 'You Can't Hurry Love' (17)and 'Reach Out' (24) the onlyNegro songs to make the top for-ty; they made the top ten almosteverywhere else.

Convincing lead

The 43 vote lead of 'CaliforniaDreamin' was convincing but notso much as the 87 vote which 'Sa-tisfaction' polled in 1965. 'Califor-nia Dreamin' could only poll 20%of the vote as compared to 27%for the Rolling Stones' big hit of1965. Recent songs such as 'Devilwith a Blue Dress On' and 'BornFree' probably performed -betterthan they would have if the pollwere conducted six. months hence.

The most exciting part of thepoll was the close race betweenthe Beatles and the Mamas andthe Papas, the former finally edg-ing out a four vote victory. Thestrong showing made by under-ground groups such as the BluesProject and Jefferson Airplane,although they have had virtuallyno Boston airplay, was significant.A similar poll conducted by WBZlisted thie top three artists as theBeatles, Stones, and Monkees.

Here's why Econo-Car is the BigNew Star in rent-a-carl We featureValiants & other fine Chrysler-builtcars. We include gas, oil. insurance.seat belts. We provide pick-up ordelivery. When you want a car, try us!

rent a car from

per collegeday piespennies a mile

Votesan engma o d entls (Continued from Paige19) Sunshine SuDerman20) Elusive Butterfly21) Walk Away Renee22) Good Lovin'23) Soul and Inspiration24) Reach Out, I'll Be Tt25) Zorba the Greek26) Red Rubber Batll27) 1 Saw Her Again28) Wild Thing29) Born Free30) Time Won't Let Me31) Younger Girl32) Gauntan'amera33) 96 Tears34) Nineteenth Nervous

Breakdown35) Nowhere Man36) Bus Stop37) Yellow Submarine38) Dirty Water39) Mellow Yellow40) Paperback Writer

1159 ballots castThe figures after the na:

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RACKETS RESTRUNG IOne-Day Service

Temns & Squash Shop67A Mt. Auburn St., Cambridge

(Opp. Lowell, House)TR 6-5417

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Page 14: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

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Taylor-career/7 the

Opprtunities .exist for qualifiedg,'adul-alte..'ssI'q, --

. NAVAL ARCHITECTURE* STRUCTURAL ENGINEERINGa PHYSICS AND BIO-PHYSICSa

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MARINE ENGINEERINGAPPLIED MECHANICS

i COMPUTER ENGINEERING* ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATIONaSYSTEMS ENGINEERING= SIGNAL PROCESSING

MATHEMATICS" AEROSPACE ENGINEERINGa MATER IALS ENGINEERING= ELECTRONICS ENGINEERINGa CIVIL ENGINEERING

The David Taylor ..Aodel Basin, a center of excellence amonggovernment research activities, is growing steadily in sizeand responsibiiity. The various laboratories conduct basic andapplied research, testing and development in:Hydromechanics-Fluid dynamics, seaworthiness, ship maneu-vering, ship powering, hydrofoil craft, novel ship types, cable-towed devices.Aerodynamics-Aircraft, missiles, V/STOL aircraft, wind tun-nel researci, concept design.

Structural Mechanics-Surface ship and subnia rine structures,:underwater exploninns raeparrh chin and 'nrsn..,nil t.c-tion, hydrofoil craft. -

Applied Mathematics-Conmputer-aided ship design, manage-ment data analysis, 'information retrieval systems, numericaltechniques, fluid flow analysis, computer systems science andtechnology.Acoustics and Vibration-Radiated, near-field, self, and hydro-dynamic noise, noise transmission, countermeasures, silencingdevices, signal processing, sonar systems.Ship Concepts Research-Programs such as those under wayfor Surface Effect Ships and Hydrofoil Development, whichcombine investigations of the above fields from advancedconcepts for new vehicle systems to engineering developmentfor the Navy of the future.Central Instrumentation supports laboratory research by pro-viding state-of-the-art measuring and control equipment.An engineering or scientific career at the David Taylor ModelBasin offers you many advantages:.a Participation in research, development, test and evaluationas an active aid inrrpp.inalv imnnnrftn mamkhr E ,., 4 .4-asJ aav......m..lIi df I' I tIq lk.- au l % w LOL I.

* Satisfaction and stimulation derived from working on proj-ects that are of national and international importance.i Working side by side with engineers and scientists whohave earned unusual professional stature in their fields. Thesecontacts will be of immeasurable value to you in your- ownprofessional development.a You will work in a 186-acre campus-like environment, inan installation valued at $74 million.For example, these modern resources include: A compre-

hensive range of large capacity hydromechanics facilities; apowerful time-shared computer system; a full range of windtunnels; the most modern equipment fogpressure and loadtesting, and a wide range of testing facilities for acousticsand vibration study and analysis.a Excellent on-the-job training, plus opportunities for furtherprofessional development, with financial assistance for after-hours or full-time advanced study on full salary.* Advancement based on achievement--you can pass the

$12,500 mark in 312 years.[ As a career Civil- Service employee you enjoy generousvacations and sick leave, inexpensive life and health insur,ance, and an unusually liberal retirement.a Washington, D.C., is a center for scientific research, andof unusual cultural and recreational opportunities.O Excellent living conditions.a Excellent' public schools and colleges are located in theWashington, D.C., area...Thn Moael ne;n ; about,,4 miles northwest of Washington,just off the Capital Beltway, Route. 495, at Exit 15.For more informatioen about the Model Basin and the nnnor-tunities it offers, see t4eit;i .INivrl '.lGll Visits your campusor write directly to Mr. S. Di Maria, Professional RecruitmentOfficer.

CAMPPUS INTERVIEWS

FePbruary 8

Dept. C2I CR, US. Departmesnt of the Navy, Washingtonp , DC. 2007 An Equal Opportnity £mployer

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Page 15: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

(Continued from Page 7)ants and was subjected to endless'tortures. In 'The Painted Bird,'the author lets 'us watch thisyoung mind as it begins to formits first conclusions about theworld.

"Cying did not help," the boyremarks in the first chapter in thestrangely detached tone which thereader comes' to expect-for thechild considers his torturers'cruelty to be normal human be-havior. Eventually he learns to

defend himself, but many years ofsuffering force him to conclude,"Man carries himself in his ownprivate war, which he has towage, win or lose, himself . ."

Alone and expendable,After six years of separation,

the boy is reunited with his par-ents. It could hardly be construedas the happy ending, though,' forthe years have left some indeli-ble marks upon his thinking. Evenas the book is drawing to a close,we find this 'child' looking in-

dulgently upon a man in prayer,amazed that a grown man couldstill not understand that "everyone of'us stood alone,, and thesooner a man realized that all[men] were expendable, the bet-ter for him."

We aren't looking for people who are looking for the life of anuryuda Ie:l'u! I I l'i:t -.

We aren't looking for people who get along by going along.And we aren't looking for people who tell the boss he's right

when they know he's wrong.We're the sixth largest industrial corporation in the country.We'd like very much to be fifth.And we figure the best way to make it is to hire people who

aren't content to do things the way they've always been done,peoplewho i i keto lookfor newwaysto dothings, and who aren't

satisfied until they find them.'-IIL i'vv, "VV w tU si ,ie e tinrs, YuIuuyiLS, I ,I It,: -,

geophysicists, financial analysts, accountants, sales represent-atives, programmers and systems analysts. And we're lookingfor good. people in various other fields.

We'll be coming to your campus soon.*If you're looking for the same things in a company that we're

looking for in a person; we'd like to talk with you.It doesn't matter what sex, age, religion or color you are.Just so.you aren't gray. M ig iz

*February 20 end 21 are the dates. Your placement or guidance counselor can tell you the time and place.

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Page 16: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

.. SKI EQUIPMENTLorp Vvelety -- ft-omus 13dsTends & Squash-Shop67TA-W~n. Aaba St., CambridgeOpp. Lowell Hoot-e TR 6-5417

CNA RLThe Tch 101for

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uo 'f a 'ards $33,000ix ar c %sseeb ere or rfmn-DuLon+.............. .......................{o-ur MFT e rfmenfls-sftmdents~ rPrfm-red ie conrtacted in room W20-423 at ............Six art classes oriented towards

beginners will be offered in the

-0 Student Center Art Studios duringthe spring term. Mrs. Lily Sqar-n hen, well known for her ceramic

>- sculpture-, will be guest lecturer< for the semester.-/ Students who ,enroll in her,, Tuesday evening seminar, The

.Language of Clay, will have' the< opportunity to explore thoroughly/ this ancient medium.

Mrs. Mimi Luft will teach a newclass using experimentally -avariety of media, -includg acry-lic paint, ink. clay, and wire. Theclass will be offered both Tues-

- day and Thursday evenings.u Daytime Class Offered

- A' class is being scheduled on aweekday aftmmom for the fasttime to see if students have theinterest and ime to participated uh-~g the daytiue. lWlrs. LuEt will'also teach a Wednesday nightclass on portrait painting and lifedrawing, both realistic and ex-press/mnistic. A more traditional'ife-drawing class will be taught'rIursd-,4 nights by nisr. ArthurWood.

Mrs. Cora Puccfs new Saturdaymmaydn class will work withplaster, cement, wax, clay andwire. Design problems will besuggested but students may workon whatever they wish; they'll beable to take advantage of potter'sWheels and concentrate on wheel-thuvwing techniques.

NSF fIFROSMI

of federal fundsA new National Science Funmda-

tion report showedl thiat MIT wasthe largest recipient ot federalmoney granted during fiscal 1965.MIT, which garnered $59.6 mil-lion, was followed closely by theUniversity of Michigan.

This report was issued to coun-ter the compl: -ants of midwesterncongressmen that their' universi-ties were gettig thet short ehd (YEfederal research f qdds. The NSFreport showed that nine mindwest-ern udiversties wre am _ng thetop twenty-five in terms of totl· rants&

Senator ;rank, Lusche. of 0~oand,Represenati ve Melvin Lairdof Wh'mcnsin had threatened toform a bipatisan bloc to defeatresearch projects for coastalstates on the grounds that thepaucity of -ederal research fundsfor midwestern schools was fmo-ducing a "brain drain."

Since the report is the first, ofits- kind, no compai sm- withearlier federal largesse to mid-western schools' is . pairble, butthe report did stifle the congress-men's complaints.

The Foundatt o nreport showedthat in fiscal 1965 the UnitedStates poured. $23.3 'bfiln- into cat-leges across the country, mostlythrough eight agencies. Biggestdwuors- were the Flubic HealthService (for medical reseatmh),the Offeic of Education, anxl theNatonl Sr'!ence Foundation ' it-

slf.{

$~tdents interested in joining x7019. ence and engineering, particularlyat the undergraduate level. WhenDu Pont's program was started,the grants-were made primarilyfor university research. Duringrecent years, however, the goals

of the program have broadened-considerably. This'increased sup-port and encouragement of teach-ing is intended to balance the in-creasing emphasis on researchand development in the universi-ties.

MIT is among the seven schoolsin the Greater Boston area to re-ceive educational grants from theDu Pont Company. Six awards to-taling $33,000 were received byTech people. Three were in chemn-istry, one in chemical engineering,one .in physics, and-one in me-chanical engineering.

Other schools in the area wereHarvard University, Tufts Univer-University,, Northeastern Univer-sity and Wellesley College.

Nationaly, -grants totaling morethan $2,100,099 have been awarded+~.4 ...... +- 9 colleges and uni-versities in the Du Pont Com-pany's annual- program of aid toeducation.

This year, the major -paA is for strengthening t e teaching of sci-

any of these classes are urged tocome to the meeting. Thursdaynight at 7:30 in the Student Cen.ter, orom W20-425. The instructorswill be on hand to answer ques-tions about the classes. Registra,ion iforms will be avaiable then

and throughout that week. Stu-dents will have first preference inregistering, but others at VMYmay .join'the classes if space isavailable after the first weeks ostudio classes.

In addition, students and othermembers of the MIT communitycan use the equipment and ma.terials available in the studi(*during non-lass time by payinga fiveoltoar semester fee. F.wthis privilege, Mrs. Luft should

Three Lecturers' -InitedOther activities in the studios

this semester include an' exhibi.:t~ion !roan February 6 to 11 ol

work done by students and theteaching staff and ta, lks by threeixmited speakers. Peter Benjaminwill present a prcgram on-filmmaking February 20; GeorgeLockwood Wil1 speak on printmaking March 13; and GardneiCox will lecture about portraltur'aApril i0.·

FIrhns on art and artists will beshown once a month in room W20.425; -the first on February 13 willfeature br,-ush, printing, and ot.

-:ting techniques. Ano~ther monflh.l~feature wili ,be tours of Bostongalleries with Mrs. Luft by ,in.terested students.

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If you're our'kind of engineer,you have some very definite ideas

actual hardware.iThat-means YOUhave the oppor- 'tunity to start witha -customer's problem

about your career.For example:You've worked hard to get a

rgood education. Now ybou want toput it to work in the best waypossible.

You will never be satisfied with'run-of-the-miffll assignments. Youdemand xciting, : :

and see it through to asystem that will get the job done.

The product lines atAiResearch,Los Angeles Division, are environ--mental systems, flight information

and controls sys-tems,, heat transfersystems, secondary :

:.- powe-r generator'":4:;:'-E-4 ' systems for missiles

and space, electri-.cal systems, andd

:< specialized indus-trial systems.

In eack'category AiResearch-nemploys three kinds of engineers.

.Preliminary design engineers dohthe analytical and theoretical

work, then write proposals. -Design engineers do the' lay-

",outs; turn an idea into a product.D:Developmental engineers are

responsible for making hardware:,out of concepts.

Whichever field fits you best,- we·can guarantee you this: you. cango as far: and fast as your It--'r--*~

can carry you. You can make as·much money as~any engineer in a

comparable Spu[' -- utnytrhm-e. A'uu-of course, at AiResearch, you'illget all the plus benefits a top com'-pany offers,

Our-engineering staff is smaller'than comparable companies. Thisspells opportunity. It gives a manwho wants tomake a mark plentyof elbow room to expand. And. while ·he'.dng at Ahe's workding,with, . andlearning -fram, some6- ofthe real pros-in the field.

II the AiResearch- story soundsEkike opportunity speaking to you--don't fail to-contact AiResearch,.Los A~ngeles, r see our repre-sentative when he. comes to yourcampus.

WUel be happy. to talk to you -about you and y -our' future.

And put this in the back of yourmind:

In a field 'where meeting chal-lenges pays off in rewards...

AiResearch-is challengei

· An equal opportunity, .~ -employer,

AiResearch'Manufacturing DivisionLos Angles"

You not only acceptIn'dividual resp-ondibii--*, /.ity - you insist uopon it.

Does that sound..iikeyou? Then Ailkesearchis your uep 'of tea.,2 j-,-. :-~

.Our business iesmainly in Sophisticated aerospacesystems, and subsystems.

Here:' research, design, and de-velopment lead to production of

):

Wh iy become an engineer atG nr~e tIt-AL essearch?.You'l hsve to'work.% h.arder and use miore: of.your' knowledge than engineersat most, oher-oma einpiss

Signup now in the Placement Office for interviews. An ALResearchrepresentative will be interviewing on campu-s Monday, Feb. 13.

Page 17: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

Collge Worl d(Caontined from Page 4) -

great munknown designed especial-.ly for the' Institute.-

Oregon's problems are not con-fined to on1 ythe air aboe. Dcrvnbelow, the students are chargingthat the facty is hoarding power.The studerts want representativeson perUnent committees, such asthe Cmmittee on Educational Ex-pernmein, Iovation, a n dImprovement. The debate hasturned into a rather heated dis-

ausson, with neither side vwillingto let up. Dibtent seems to be

OOOGOOOOOOOOO@@e@90000

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Wantl to be morethan a faceIn the crowd?At Ford Motor Company we'relooking for better ideas-in everything from automotivemarketing to steel-making andbasic research. Ideas thatdon't come from people who lookalike, act alike and think alike.

Whatever your major-arts,science or business-if you wantto be more than a face in thecrowd, we want to talk with you.

Call your placement officefor an appointment.

Dates of visitation:

(IM)-Febiruary 15, 1967

T. .1- THE AMlERICAN ROAD, DRORN, MICHIGAN-AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

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of the country's colleges. What

ail be- the .resu? The admtis-

trtions could ask Uncle Sam for

help, and that would kill two

birds with one stone. The-colleges

would be peaceful and the jungles

of Vietnam will become infestedwith angry young men.

Exteamists on CampusThe Seudent Senate at the Idaho

State University has gotten itselinto hot water with the AmeriecanLegion by invting extremistgroups to establish hemselrves oncampus. The studlent body-passedthe resol.utio hoping'to createconstructive controversy. T h eAmerican Legion is oppod to theestablishment of Comm uni org-anizatons at state supported un-versities. The ISU President isbacking the students in this case.

Coach Art Farnham's indoortrack and field team finally metwith success in the new year.They defeated Colby Januaxy 13,1042, for their first victory of theseason. Many individuals turnedin good performances Saturdayin the informal MIT Invitationalmeet.

Against Colby, - Teh's strongfield team won all five events, aswell as .taking- three seconds andthree third places. Gordon De-Witte '67, Dave Osborne '67, andArt Von Walcdbur '67 took thefirst three, places in the 35 lb.weight throw to register the onlysweep of the meet.

Greg Wheeler '67 and KiellKarlsrud '68 o.mbi_ d to t*ake t)etop places in the long jump. PeteMaybeck '68 and GcPrdon DeWitteplaced first and secand in the shotput. Art Von Waldburg and DaveOgrydziak '68 were fist andsen d in the high jump at 5-10.Steve Sydoriak '68 and Jim Reid'68 placed first and third in thepole vault to rbond out tl;e scor-ing in the field events.

Kaman Stil UndefeatedBob Karnman '67 oantinued his

undefeated streak in the 1000 witha time of 2-25.2. He also tied withteanmate Bob Dunlap '67 for firstin the 600. Sam Guilbeau '67T.wasthird in the- 1000. Pete Peckarsy

'68 won the turo mi'e in 10:19 andwas followed by Jim Yankaskas'69 in third place.

Pole vaulter Steve Svdoriakplaced sescond in the low hurdles.Don Rosenfield '69 was third inthat event. Bob Dunlap placedsecond. in the dash, and Tom'Naijaria '69 was third in the mileto conplete fIfr's scoring.

Individuals StarNo score is kept in the MIT In-

vitational, ,but several Techmendid very well. Greg VVheeler and

Frosh sports

Bill MacLeod '69 placed first andsecond in the long jump. Theweight tfiw was overwhelmed byMIT as Gordon DeWitte, DaveOsborne, Art Von Wadburg, anldPete Maybeck placed 1, 2, 4, and6.

Steve Sydorialk was also an in-dividual winner, clearing 13-6 inthe pole vault. Tech's 880 yard re-lay team, composed of Bdb Dun-lap, Cxeg Wheeler, Steve Sydroi-ak, and Bill MIaceod pulledthrofgh with a surise victory.

mainhug in the game, the engi-ners ripped off nine stiaight

\feints to knot the score 62-62.'Each of the five starters, Wheeler,

amberlain, Vegeler, Mumford,aid Vliet scored d g is rally.In the overtme period, the engi-neers tallied 14 points beforeBstes scored and coasted t/ aneasy victory.

Racketmem splitThe squashi team split its two

games, mating Lawrence 6:0 andlosing 7-2 to Exeter, while thehockey, swimmg and fencingteams bowed to their opposition.In their seond game of the sea-son, Tech's inexprienced puck-.sters yieldaled two goals in the cias-ing minutes of the third period,losing 4-3 to Brown and Nichols.

he engineers shovwied vas n-provement and led much of thega-me.

Swimmers edgedAfter taking an early lead, the

mermen were out-decked 5440 byBates. Tech's orfly first placeswere in the 400 yard medley re-lay (Toni BulRtman, Tom Walton,Steve Kinney, Louis Edelson) andin the diving. 13ob Rorschaeh,plaed first in this event, whileJesse Heines captured the numbertwo spot. jim bronmenbrenner andDon Riley each placed second intwo races, Bromfenbrenner in the200 yard butterfiy and 200 IM andRiley in the 200 freestyle and 200backstroke. Jeff Goodman took athird place in the 50 freestylc.

Fencers edgedIn a tight meet with Concord,

the fencers lost 1512. The engi-neers did poorly in the sabre, los-ing 8-1. George Wood was the onilyTechman to gain a point in thiscompetition. The Beavers wonboth the epee and foil, but couldnot overcome the deficit. PaulMurphy, undefeated this year,won all three of. his matches inthe epee.

The matmen pounded WPI, 41-0.Seven engineers registered pins,while only HIoratio Daub (154) andJohn Spenpeck -(177) won byWlis.

Wilson sets recordIn the Knights of Columbus

track meet Ben Wilson shatteredthe freshman indoor mile recordwith a time of 4:16. The previousrecord was held by SumnerBromw '6.

By Paul BakerFacing a full slate of contess.

before exams, freshman teamsparticipated in nine games, com-piling a 3-6 won-lost record.

Cagers 1-2'The hoopsters suffered two de-

feats while chalking up one vic-tory. Colby ovewvhelmed Tech, 78-41, and a tall New Hampshire fivenipped the engineers 70-68 in over-time. The frosh prevented a com-pletely disastrous week by comingfrom behind to top Bates- 81-66.Down 6251 with three minutes re-

ULARRY"BARBER SHOP

- 545 Tech Square(Opposite garage in back of

East Campus)C"For that we groPomed

alook, go to larry9'

EL 446165(I Hour Free Parking)

Techmen for over 35.years

i

At Ford Motor, Company thou-. .ands of tnintrquely rldiffPrPnt people work at thousands of different jobsto produce thousands of differentnproducts.'

But there's one thing we'll never run through an~ssembly line. You.

So, if you want to be more than just another face in thecrowd, write our College Recruiting Departnent. Or Betteryet, make a date to see our representative. He'll be oncampus soon looking for better people with better ideas.

k.

We're looking for better ideas at Ford Motor Company.Ideas that don't come from people who look alike, act alike.and think alike.

That's why we look for the man who doesn't fit themass mold.

And we don't stop with looking, either. When we findthe man, we try to cultivate his uniqueness. With a CollegeGraduate Program which offers immediate opportunities forindividual development. With a rotational assignment sys-,

tem which assures immediate responsibilityand constant visibility by management.

0 1 70 $2the predomarnt theme at several. _ n lads doIX

Courtmen upend Bates'lose o Cdoby, Wesgeyan

©AMPUS CUE590 Commronwealh -Ave.

Boston, Mass.

O pposite the B.U. Towers6

Oraste for a Date'

POCKEBILLIARDS

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Page 18: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

nip WesleanTech swimmers, led by Mike that Captain Lary Preston -'68 Dilley placed second n the 20-

Crane '67, edged Wesleyan -7 could place first. The meet de- yard freestyle behind Amherst'sin their' toughest meet to date, -encied on Tom Nesbitt's Co.nig Phillips who recorded a 1:f54.SSaturday, Januar 1, but the n second. In.a -tremedous e Crane and- Merrill finished two

oNesbitti placed - seond -behind three in the 50 f ee. Clare -placedPrestm MI wa. still alive for second in the '200-yard LM. 'iley

Amherst last a Sahtd, E-2u-z ·he latSaturday 71-24. the final rela. Diley, Crane, 'was outswum by 'Van Oss aind

Wesleyan. began by- win-himg the Stage, and Jobn -McFarren '68 Pelzer -of Amherst, maldug him400-yard medley relay due to a broke -the 400 feestyle relay rec- third.*.Tedh dualirimon by.. a false ord by three seconds in 3:231. Crane .was slammed in the 100

-tD remain -in free. as Amhersts- wtestart an~ ceu tiu' ma a ' [ese ~- ~ee,:~s a mtneestLsos' to- -An ng iue.the lead tutil the last rela. In -the The mermen .id-. nt so -was in 49.9 ecods Bill Wagner200-yard _feestyle, Lee Dilley '69 weel agaist Amherst. The 'eagi- :'69-. fi d secodn the 200 back-and Bill Carson '69 finished tw o- jneers amassed oy one first Place stroke. 9Clare VMs- 2d in the 500three. behind Wesleyans. G1d - wb i-i came f om -iver -Dan Gen-. te, .ffi'cily braalk-g ar.kamp, tho.swam in :.;. t_. .iT rcor-. " --

Mke Crane ied '-bs vaty re -ord in the 50 free at 22. -- i. -�--- "'seconds. Wesle yas' Gallas and- Mil ler

' slami'ed' the merena in the 200-yard th Rich Dorman '69 ird - - --Da Gnr ' won. -the div i9ng:'event. *.

Gallas was too much for Dil ey " ' ' in the 2Q By au they i oe- SgM new slopes- Riblet chairift.- . T.bi r . . ulh atwo, Glas.-in 2:119. . . modernm base lodge fr. Winging. Sieri. High in e. un--

Mike' Crane then broe the MiT spoiled. White Mountains of Nu.. Bunk house accommnod'varsity record in the 100 free at Tions as low -as $--or mo-relsxurious lodging aft fe famoaus'

.*7 with B ill Stage 09@ cls~e be LSAMS Hotel. Package plans available. Phone orfiurfier.hind. Lus Clare '69 broke hishinrd L u theare '9 broke hisl information and reservafiorns: f:rom Boston, 617/27-8288;

recording a time of 2:11.5 The At Dixvtile Notch, 603/255-3400. Wesleyan team of Gallas and Mi- -iler slammed the engiineers in the·500 freestyle swim. e i eress S e

To keep alive, the engineers The Balsams - DIXVILLE NOTCH, N.H.needed both a first and second inthe 200-yard breast stroke. Fromprevious experience, it was known

IM volleyball pe -edto graduate studer s0n departmnta basis

Graduate students will be givenan opportunity to exhibit theirproWess, on the. voll"eybl

this winter as a special divisionis being formed for graduate stu-dents and faculty members in theilU-dlir-axii voy-tiyu. ieag. Thea

teams should -be organized pre-dominantly on a departmental ba-sis, but any group which consistsof graduate students is eligible toenter a team. Sign up sheets willbe posted on the bulletin boardsoutside each of the departmentheadquarters -later this week.Those organizations other thangraduate departments, AshdownHouse, or Westgate, desiring. in-formation about how to enter ateam in the league should callBob Burpee at x2280 between12:30 and 1 pm any weekday.

Fina shindings

A DivisionLeague I League 11

1; Burton A 1. Fiji "A"2. SAE "D" 2. Lamb Chi "A"3. AE.Pi "A" 3. Beta4. NRSA "A" Phi Delts5. Sigma Phi 5. Pi Lam

EpsilorI 6. SAM "A"6. ATO "A" 7. Senior House7. DU8. Sigma Chi

B DivisionLeague I League I I

1. Theta Chi "A" 1. Delts "2. Theta Delta 2. Phi KanDa Si!

Chi "A" 3. Lamb- Chi "B'3. Burton "C" 4. Baker "B"4. Fiji "B" 5. TEP5. Phi Mu Delta 6. Sen House "G"6. SAM "B"

League Ill League IV1. Baker "A" 1. DKE2. Student House 2. SAE. "E"3. ZBT "A" 3. East Camrous4. Sigma Nu 4. Pi Laitn "B"5. =""'--' °3:--- - Pl,

6. AEPi "B" Ensilon "Bi'6. Phi Kap Theta

I

NEW AND CONTINUINGPROGRAMS AN'u PnROJEC:I

PHOENIX Missile & Fire Control SystemSURVEYOR Lunar Landing SpacecraftSynchronous Communications SatellitesTOW Anti-Tank Missile SystemATS (Applications Technology Satellites)AIM-47A/AIM-4E MissilesVATE Automatic Cbeckout EquipmentCORDS

These examples of Hughes Aerospace activities are rep-resentative of more than 230 major product and servicecapabilities ranging from aerospace vehicles to ASW sys-tems. Diversification such as this promises long-rangestability both for the company and its employees. i

NEW MISSILE SYSTEMS DIVISIONMore than 1,600 engineers, scientists and technicians arenow at work'on expanding R&D programs at Hughesnew 85-acre Canoga Park complex in the San FernandoValley. Unexcelled facilities and the professional atmos-phere at Hughes encourage creativity and achievement'

;:..:*:i:: **::.:::.:.:::..: .;-:.:-!;:.: i.

Nextf $ummeoEarn UiversiHy credi s- abroad plus your- 1967 sumnzation at iffle cost. Letyour norma iaiesiy dub cudo most of the vwrk for you. Your jet fransportationNo- exra-rricular effortf required from you on tiW rite: Tom Turner, P.O. Box 59-2482, Miami, ,a. 3

-C ._

- ~ .- - o-

-~ou £ nkmite-

P. 0.e o s>o Xae 08

c ~ =

$:pn Coyear aeoad n- Sweden, FrancrSpain. College prep. juior year abrand graduateprograrmmes. $ ,500 9uaees: round trip flight to Stockholm, P

or Mdridd, dormnifories or apartments,meals daily, tufition paid. Write: SCAN

50 Rue Prosper Legou+fe,Antony, Pais,- France."

ENGINEERINGGRADUATES

1963 1964 195 1965 1987

0f the over 12,000 employees of the Aerospace Divisions,over 5,000 are Members of the Technical Staff. Averageexperience is 11.7 years. Average agege.s 37.9 years.

HUGHES-CULVER CITY/CANO9GA PARK

'mNAM~C IW C.

N V- ... -.. ,

Hughes Aerospace Divisions at Culver City, and CanogaPark offers Engineers and Scientists a unique combina-tion of urban and suburban advantages. Located adjacentto major freeways. Los Angeles Civic Center is'about ahalf-hour distant-beaches, just a short drive. Attractiveresidential neighborhoods are nearby. U.C.L.A., U.S.C.and Cal Tech offer outstanding educational facilities.

IMPORTANT OPPORTUNITIES, steady CAMPUS INTERVIEWSgrowth, diversification, long-range stability, professional Feb4 & atmosphere, advanced facilities, fine living conditions- rua 4 these are the advantages which Hughes Aerospace Divi- r .nsions can offer you at Culver City and Canoga Park.For additional information and to arrange an appointment Iwith our Technical Staff Representatives, please contact L…_

HUGH'ES AICRAaFI cOMPANYyour College Placement Office or write: Mr. Robert A. HUGHES AIRCRAF COIVISO NS

Martin, Head of Employment, 119~40 W. Jefferson Blvd., An equal opportunity employer / U.S. citizenship requiredCulver City, California 90230.

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ELSIE'SNoted for the best Sandwiches

to eat in or take out.FAMOUS ROAST BEEF SPECIALSANDWICH-KNACKWURST--BRATWURST with SAUERKRAUT

or POTATO SALAD"und die f{enen Wursfwaren"71 Mt. Auburn St. Cambridge

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Page 19: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

tieThe 1967 Easternm:Intercoegiate/ -re 1: -. pai s have :qualifid''.

Bridge Tournamentn will b held '7 f6r :the iona Pa d play-in the MIT Student Center during off, senmifinal stage. of the 19*7 ]the. weekend of Febraiiry _25--26. Najtionaiil Intercollegiate ;Tourn4-7:A tWois'tesictn pairs event' will be ment,- as -a result- of. their p- .played Saturday, --Februiary :24;. -forminnces _at, -tthe MIT Bridgewith' a t asessmon team ' chain- -C:lb's, duplicate gaie of :J-nuapionship the next day. Entry. fee 15, The three .pairs; Mar- BBi- Bis $1.50: For further infrmati on :' 'i-:68 nd--- '6 il---.Icontact Mark Thompson, M-31Eliot House, Harvard University.

Horton '68 and Joe Viola '69, andKen. Lebensold and .Phil Selwyn,will compete against other play-ers from -the New England areaFebruary 18-19 at the Boston Uni-versitj Student Union.

'The MIT Bridge Club will holdits full -naster--- point game forFebruary Saturday at 1 p.m.in room 407 of,the Student Center.

By Arm Varteressian

In the last two weeks, the var-sity. wrestlers - cofitpeted in . twoNew .England conference dual;meets,- winning, both, and. tied forthird in a- quadrangular meet with..Springfield, --)Franklin and- Mar-shall,, and Amherstt..1 the. quqfrangular meet, held

at MIT last weekend; the'Tech-men tied for third with Amherstwith.' 13 ·poits. Sprigfield- tookthe meet with 35, followed by theFranklin & Marshall team.with' 31.

Gregg--Erison '69, wrestling at130, lost, his, -first. two matches,first to Warrean Long of Amherst,11-2, and then to Blair Ames ofFranklin and. Marshall, 7-2. Jack

axham '69 lost his first contest

to John Fomiak .of Franklin and then- beat.. Amherst's. Pete Dor-Marshall, 6-1,-'biat -came back in - land, 6-0; In the final rouind of thethe second round to pin Steve Su-mida. of Amherst in 3:32. Jack.lost his final round, to Tom- Stoneof. Springfield, 11-4. At 145, Jack,.Wu. '8 won his frst round matchagainst Harvey Kaltsas of Amm-herst, 7-2, but lost his next twomatches. Jack camne out. on the_short end of a.9-7 squeaker, los-ing to F&M's Dick Krause on rid-ing time. In the.final round, Jacklost a 7-3 decision to john Romasof Springfield.. John Fishback '68,132, lost .to Dave Mart of F&M,4-3, and to, 'Am erset's Johp David-son, 1'1-. Julian Schroeder '69 lost-his first- match, 15-4, to Jim Clairof -FrankriFn anid Marshall, and

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double eliminations, Julian .cameup against Clair again, and -lost8-1. .At 167, Hank DeJong '67 wonhis. first match with a s-2 deci-sion over..Larry .Lincoln of Am-herst. -Hank dropped his next twomatches, losing an 11-4 decision toF&M's Bruce Leonard, and losing6-4:to Springfield's George Popel-la. Keith Davies '69 wrestled 177.for MIT, and in -his first matchpinned Dick Sullivan of Amrherst-in 5:20. In- the second round.Keith was pinned by- Dave Krike-laier of.F&M in 4:30. Aftr. pin-ning, Springfield's Fratnk Perainoin 4 51, Keith once again cameup against Krikelaier, and lost aclose. 5-4 decision. An escape byKrikelaier in, the last 40 secondsdecided. the match. FreshmanFred Andrea wrestled heavy-weight for the varsity, but- thepoints he collected could not' becounted in the final -tally. Freddefeated both his opponents easi-ly, taking a 6-0 decision over Am-herst's Kim DeRiel, and a-10-0 de-cision over F&M's Dave Lehman.

WPI easily pinnedA week earlier, the varsity de-

feated WPI in dual meet compe-tition, 24-7. Bill Harris '68 tookJeff Tamolonis down in 36 sec-onds and pinned him in 1:46 ofthe 123-pound match. At 130,Gregg Erickson took a 6-2 deci-sion over Rich Robey. John Rey-nolds '67 and Rit Simoneau wres-lled to a 2-2 draw at 137. At 145,Jack Maxham lost his first dualmeet contest of the year to PeteGrosch. 4-2. After a 35 secondtakedown, John Fishback went onto defeat WPI's Scott Wilson 6-2at 152 pounds. Julian Schroederdefeated Russ Bone 6-2 at 160, andHank DeJong '67 beat GeorgePomfret 4-2 at 167. Chris Davis'69 and Ralph Eschborin drew,41-4, at 177, and at Heavyweight,Dave Schramm capped the meetvith a 12 second takedown and1:36 pin against Jim Braithwaite.

Wesleyan also droppedThe WPI win came on the heels

of a defeat of Wesleyan, 21-14,eaving Tech as yet -undefeated inNew England dual meet competi-Uion. GIitstanSICgi Uth Wr sMl ey.

meet were Bill Harris, who tookan easy 9-0 decision against DavePatrick with a takedown, nearfall, and reversal added to 2points riding time; Jack Wu, who-pinned Chip, Gray in a cradle. in5: 49 of the 137-pound match; andDave Schramn, with a 3-0 deci-sion over Dusty Carter, last year'sfrosh New England champ.

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Page 20: rvice Students' friend C@arlisle C'i f@ - The Techtech.mit.edu/V87/PDF/V87-N1.pdf · 2008. 9. 26. · Covatta '68 of SAE, who served in the same post on Volume 86. T h r e e Editorial

mown .Air Force,*- Wesleyan

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AA agenda includes prOpOsalon women In athletics at -Tech

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stand-outs in the New Hampshiregame. Alex Wilson '67 scored 18points to bzqng his three- seasototal to 1066 and break the schoolrecord. And, it was recently an-nmuced that guard R* Talus '67was named to te weekly EastColIegiate Athleti Cbnfrence College Division All Star team onthe egh of his 20 points and 5steals in this game.

The next game will be importantto M1T, as they take on on of thebest teams in the midwestl, WayneStatd, Saturday at 8:15.

Wednesday, Febmruar 8

Basketball JV)--Boston Coli'ege.home, 7:30 pm

Wrestling (JV)-Rhode Island,horme, 7 pm

Fencing (V--Harvard, away, 7 pm-

'u.rsay, Febrary 9

Hockey (-)-Babson, home, 5 pm

m:: H o w They DId MOBasketball

MIviT(¥) 1 00, Coast Guard 63MIT(Y) 71, Brooklyn Col. 64MITMV) 61, Stevens 47MIT(F) 81,, Bates 66UNH 76, MIT{F) 68

Wrestling

MITMV) tie for 3rd in QuadrangleMIT(¥) 21, Wesleyan 14MIT(VM 24, WPi 7

Hockey

MIT(V) 4, Air Force 3MIT(V) 3, Wesleyan 2Babson 5, i 4 T () iConnecticui 8, MIT(V) 3Browne and Nichols 4, MIT(F) 3

Amherst 71, MIT(V) 24MIT{¥) 48, Wesleyan 47

With a nine- game winningstreak, the cagers have extended

r- their season record to 14-3. In the.oo- last: sx gamies, the engineers

have downed Colby, Bates, Newr Hampshire, Stevens, Brooklyn Col->- lege, and Coast Guard.

< Stevens surprises Teeh

co At Hoboken, New Jersey, tie,, Beavers found the gp suris-> [ Ingly rough against a determined< Stevens Business team. Playing aC slowly deliberate style of basket-D ball, the Stevens squad kept the

game close as Tech's mn-to-mandefense was stymied. Early in thegame, the engineers were down

_ 8 82, but they switched to a;zondefense midway through the sec-

S) ond quarter and pulled even atS the half. Stevens stayed in. theI game mainly because they hit on

55% frm the field.In tim secod half, the cagers

styed in -their zone and began toget some offensive rebounding.The fIront line and Alex Wilson '67in particular began to hit unde-neath and went on to a 6147 win.Wilson was high point mars with25. Bob Hardt '67 Ihit fbr 14, whUleDave JTs '68 had two morethan that. Wilson also ctributed14 rebs. .d-

Brooklyn Clege also tough

Against Broklyn College, tfeteam also found the going smne-what rougher than iey had anti-cipated. Br=Ilyn lad a shotguard who was a fantastic* drib-bler and kept them in the garne.Once again, the Beavers beganwith a marto-man defense, andsuddenly fow-d .no,^utarenvsn1-1. They then h to the zwmewucl had been so effctdive thenightt e Once ~am, t zonewrkLed, as the enginems cut thelead to 38-31 at the half. gakept -the hoopsters in-the contestin the first hi-af th 12 points.

Once agai, the Technen cameback. in the second half to wingoig away, 71-64, With two min-Ute.S he -- t-

a 20 point lead, which slowly dis-appeared as the starters were moved from the game. .Janssnfinished with i8 points, followedclosely by Wilso with 17. Bob

Snith accidently tapped a weakshot past his own goalie to tie thegame and sent it mto a sudden-death overtime period. Smith re-deemed 'inself two minutes latethough by flicking the whningshot -past the Air Force goal-keeper.

Satuday morning the teamkept its spark going and easilyout-hustled Wesleyan 3-2. Despitethe clme scre 1M was in con,trol thvgtut, - tan fortyshots on the Wesleyan goal eom-parTed against twenty-two shots.for Wesleyan.

Lose To BabsonIn the other garmes the Babson

Brewers had' lso beaten AirForce and Wesleyan, settff i/pthe championship game Satxday'night. The Teehmen tDok the icein the firt period 'loodng as ifthey were headed for the trophy.

They kept pace with -the firedup 'm squad and after sev-eral near misses Petldn slappedin the puck off a perfect centerfrom Satow. In the second period,however, Balbson soared threegoals, taking twenty-tw shots onEri~ce.-

Erly in the third period Bruce-Alton of Babson kocked in hisftird goal of the night to clinchthe trophy.

Despite the home team's dis-app0i'ment the MIT tournamett.med out to ,be a trem. asuccess. For the first time thisyear o~' rin-k' was r-ungd withaspectators and tey were treatedto exci'dng hockey. Bofl the teamAnd the spectators showed sormeof the spirit which has, been solackg ,this year, the kind ofspirit whch can lead to a winningseas.

By Jin Steele

The MIT skaters won three oftheir six games over the ,past

three weeks, booting their seasonrecord to 4-6 and- placing seeandin the MiT Romd-Robin Tourna-ment here over the weekend.

Down Wesleyan, 8-2

Before fis, the icemen travel-ed to Wesleyan, where their aee-,.rate shoo-ting led them to an 8-2victory. Don Bosack '67 led thesodring wit two goals and anassist while Larry Hall '67 'col-lected one goal and three assists.

The next opp t was the Un-veriY of Connecticut at Storrs,but Connecticu ju/nped off to a5-1 lead in the first period toeventually win 83.'

Edge Air Force In Overtime-The team then spent all -of in-

tersessioa practicing for the MiT

tomament last weekend, and thework- paid of. In the opening'game the Techmen faced the AirForce Academy and skated theirbest game to date this season.The first period was a scorelesstie with good fast play on bothends of the ice, but Air Force tookthe opening face-off o e sedperid and slapped it past Tgoalie Steve Erilse '69, BobPetki '68 retaliated twelverinUtes later for MI. At the

openin of the hd period Cap-ta Bb Sith .'67 d onlyfi-¢ten sec='s to sore- an apass from Harris. After another

ten minutes of hard fightig ScotRhodes '69 tallied for Tech andNiel Carson scored for the Fal-cons. It was at 1his point, thescme 3-2 for rvnr and less- man

'three minutes remaining that

Photo by Bill Infgram

Tom Hinricks '67 goes high'into the air to add two morein Tech's sparkling victory over

.UNH.Hardt had 14 ponts ard Ray Fer-rara '67 had 10. Wilson had 12pn i, the secnd half, withFerrara s 6 to pace the

MIrT attacki also pulleddown 14 re b'x$ ,-ith Hardt tak-irg 13 off the boards. Mhis pointsup the big height adlvantage thatthe cagers engoyed in the game.

Coast Gueard trmeed

The team made it nir in a M,Sataday with a. resou gntmrmchg of Coast GuaA, 10(63.This time, the Tech scuting wasaccu-ate, as the mau-to-mam de-fense worked very effecively. The

engieers jumped off to a quik.10-1 lead, and mantained a 10point lead throug first ~kahf.

The closest Coast Guard ouldcome in tae ' wa.s 8points near the b . . %fththree rinutes left, the Technenwere leading 85-7. At this pomt,COach jack Ba-,T- puE3 in"',ssecond tm. Mus group Severyone, as they actual jr,creased the lead to the fil mar-gin. Dan Green '68 played espe-ciany well, scoring 6 points. WaltSuehOn '69 also dumpedi n 6. The

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28. The IOM poit was a tip-in byRoss' Huter '9.

W'mM, Talus starAs an addition to their 14-3 1e-

ord, the cagers had -two indvidual

single-season and two careerreeords. He has scored morepoints (559), field goals (214), andmore free throws (131) in a singlesea n than any player i TeChhistory..In addition to the scoingmark, he also holds ,the rd forMnst eareer field gckas, with 406.

Wilso's tbsketa career atTech I.s been an ilustrious one.I,.ns 'sk ye o va .ty com-petition, 'he scored 277 points innineteen gwm; and was namedto the all-toumnament team. in the

Montreal Invitational. Last year,besides setting tee varsitys-tindar- he was voted outstand-ing player in the Union CollegeHoliday Tommament -and, theBluenose Classic Imvitational. Healso received honorable mentionon te All New England team.This year he was named to theal-t-urrkaent team in. the Wor-Cester Jaycee Tournament, whichis generally emsdered the bestsmall colege tounament in, thecountry.

Gradfather Starre In Trck

Wilso is the turd generatioof outstanding Tech athletes. Hisgradfather was we cd the fewpeople toea a straght T awarddur his fresman year. He wasawarded this for his prowess on'he trackl, bec'iid ne 'udA-eshman in the school's historyto wqn Nhs' award. He also gotthe duPont trophy for 'the school'sbest au1-a aflete.

Failmr Led Cagers

Alex's father, Richard, led theengineer basketbai. squad duringthe 1939 and '40 campaign. Hisvarsity career inluded a 41-28trtmCig of Harvard, in whichhe scored 19.,poits and had 11 re-bounds. Appropridtely enough, hisson was ital, in Jast

year's , victory o v e r Had,scoring .34 points.

Look To NCAA

What lies- alead for the engineerfive and Alex WVOgs in particu-lar? Alex has set his sightsfonthe A11 New England first teai,which he stands an, excellentchance of maling. And t h eteam's current 14-3 reord givesthem high hopes of an NCAAregional bid, first in Nvr's his-tory. T'e crucial paints in thispursuit could be the Wayne Stategame Saturday and the North-eastern game a, week from today.Whether or not ftey make it, thisseason has undoubtedly markedthe revival of varsity basketballas a spector sport on the BUTcampus.

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has been Maria Niid '6.;- anexC bae he bain'*pnin swin~mift amd excellent tenrisplayer. A is the ng athle:tic ch.Imiran for McCormik, andhas been instrneal in themovement toward wmnen mi ath-letits.

Thepropo=at afoot-S fri the AA -Ihs taken noofiial action on tSs subjet. imWinters '69, fencing manager, hasvisited a meethg of tlhe Va!st;Xanager's Counil. The IM Cwn-cil gave a unanimous-vote toamend its consituion, and thus,graht a sat to the Association ofWornen Students. However, thereare several proposals which wilE.be cnsdered Thursay. One is,raturally, to keep women out of

athletics enirely; howeve, it isgenera]y conceded that fis does.t st-n much chance. Anh

into the exiOsng strucuire of theA&. Te thiru is to have thewomen set up an AA of their own,under the auspices of the AA, asthe IM C{nc is, but with astructure of its own. The presi-dent of 'this would be the onlymember to have a seat on tie AAExecutive Cbra nittee. It is 'ex-tremely likely that one of fthe twolattr Do- <.. ,tl~~~a-- it//~ !boe~~_~}_ ad~I~ opted.Whichever is, e AA will .um-doubtedly be hanged radicallyin the near future.

By TLny lima

The M1T Athletic As fitWM1 hold a meeting Thursday.There are two items on he agenda. One of them, theations for oflicers for the caningyear, will not be of much interestto the MIT community. The olher,howeve, could have far-reachingsignificance. At ftlis meeting, aproposal vill be drafted 0n thesubject of women in athletics.

Ceed in atdeficsNo matter what your opizion an

this subject, the fact remains thatthe Tech coeds are pp aingin atletics, bot inthomural andinterscholastic. The women's sail-'ig team has long bee recognizedas one of the.best m the East, ffnot the country. The more recent-ly initiated fencing team has nortenjoyed the imr-uiae f-

_e4 uah,,oea for, b4 -- ~ ~=,-

thmstic, which s all tat isnecessay to keep a team o4ert-i'g. The girls have als fielded acrew, with several races eahyear. In intramural spots, thecoeds have just begun tkis yearand have etered Mc(~ncteans in bowling, sailing, volley-ball, and badminton, which is notbad for their first year. nhere willno doubt be even further u- !J'-pation in future yearv

Kivisi4M heads movnemaDPrime mover in this ne-w vave

Photo by Bill Ingram

Co-captain Alex Wilson '67is the new holder of Tech's all-time scoring record with 1066points.

Two higs were reached by thevarsity eagers in their recnt con-test with New Hampshire. TheSenior eDmaptain Alex Wilsonscored 18 points, setting a new'all-'tme Tech iszrng mrnk. The

revious record of 1058 was heldby Bil Eaeo '6. With. nineg-ans left, Wilsom's three-seasotxtal stood at 1066 points. In addi-tion, it was also announced lastweek thLt Roy Talu's '67 has beeiinamed to fihe weeldy Eastern Cl-legiate Athletic C.onferce Col-lege-Division A-l:, team. Roywas award the spt for his per-Rnmane against New Hamp-shire, where he scored 20 pointsand ad five steals.

W'son Holds 5 Eeords

At ts point Wilson holds tfree

To .g9@v am tatters 'Writ J ever tersesse'tO~~~~r wi tnersessiol