4
r~ustic costume, to fit th~e occasion. Af-~o YL VVU~j lin~.-_,. std isfud eesryt The schedule calls for both Square Wt iktslsprnti- w neac ftentoa neet a-ld Ballroom dlancing, a dteparture NewlyAp one bad l errm nStuavi!a 11 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I heanswlth aefrnd Satudy tile mintenanc bftenaionaliteet diehl dacerswill be'present to give Aponmn fTomsCnv R tsIsiueHg l Hall and the other in the gywnnsium. ithat such students sh'ould be deferre'd sional dancers vell, ~~~~ ~ - 'until they have completed their col- free instruction to anyone who desires Jr., of Cambridge, Mass., and of Eu- Professor Laurens Troost, newly, According to Dean Jacoby of thellege training. it. A professional caller, Hayden gene B. Skolikoff of Jackson Heights, appointeel head of the department If IPromn Committee, prog-ress on the! Use of the tests by the Selective Sw ett, will1. be present to call the New York, as Industrial Liaison" Of' Naval Architecture and M~arine En- Prom has been good, and thingsa-Srieytmwsoignlypo Square Dances. Refreshments on hand flecers at the Institute was announced gincoring, said in an interview with per ready to rolThcmiteispedaarsutfrcmentos will include punch and cookies. !today by William R. Weems, Director! the Tech, that educational opportuni- copsdo h rsdn fteo h i cetfcAvsr omt The Dormitory Social Committee of M.I.T.'s Industrial Liaison Pro- ties at M.I.T. roughly equal those i Junior Class, Bob Ward, along with'tees appointed in 1948 by General has laned on-, hours to make this gram. at the best European schools and that Ithe Secretary, Bob Anslow, and five Hershey. Once the tests had been (lance a success. Mr. Cantwellr received the degrees; in research, A.I.T. outstrips even the;eetdmmes omltd h dctoa etn of bachelor of s c ience and ma~P"Oestrof~etEropa intuiosPrfsr Theme for the weekend is entitled, Service, noted for its testing pro- sciene inchemical engineering f rom. Troost emphasized that a really exact "Strut and Stagger," quite self-ex- grarns, Iwas designated to carry out, Mock Stockholders Mfeetingy the Institute in 1948 and 1949 and the comparison is difficult becau se the planatory when considered with the construction of the test. ~t t~.~ r. T. l/~ r. [. ~gU Sgozdegree of' master of business adin-woepiooh n rga fe decorations which have a Halloween; The passing mark-, which entitles a istr ation fromn Harvard University in cation is different in America. Eu-' motif. sue stdet to reclassification from 1-A How Cororatio Operats 19s~. Whilestudyig at M.I.T., he also ropean students are entirely on their ,attended the engineering practice'o-wn. The only inducement to attend IAdvance tickets for groups of five;t - r2S fhsdatbadse ;fit, is 7 0 per cent. In the past, two · The General Mills Company wvill, school at- Oak Ridge, Tennessee. classes or to study (other than a de- couples or mnore -will go on sale Otto- sre iesxyfu e eto hold amock sockholers meting at' Mr. Cantwell has been associated sire to -et an education) are examina- ber 13. The reason for this is to re- she eaines giescxyourper ceenty orfete ,he next get-together of the M.I.T.-} with the Buffalo Electric Chemical tos ever sprin and fall whichsevtalsoagepties.' Pric on the first and fifty-eight per cent 11I.A. early in November. The meeting i Company and the Procter and Gamble a student mav continue to ta-ke until :for both'dances together is 38.50, andscrdpsigaksothsen· will uplicte a eal soekhoders Compny. Prior to his M.I.T. ap-Jhe passes. frteStra ac ny 20. will~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~~~~o duliae Satureayl sokldrsC pa vn-ae In y $20 tudents eligible to take this test mieeting in all respects, wvith the ex-! pointment, he served as a chemnical! A social difference between the;It should be noted that the ove-l ut/tn orqetdfre(a coption of voting.' engineer with the firm of Ionics, In- United States and EuropewhcpreislgtyIorti seatantunsmtbeusigafi- · i jun o ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~time course, undergraduate or grad- comipany will direct -the mneeting. Com- the American Institute ofl Chemical! is the-fact that here t~here is neD strong Ti ersdnei o iacdb ae a utnthv ae h plete plans will be announced soon Engineering and a member of Tau "worker's party" or other evidence teJno ls rayohro~n-ts rvosy l /Bbesuet by the M.I.T. ManageetAscaBtaP.o ls itncin.H adta zation. Tickets, the committee states, should take the test regardless of tin tdn ration i n o r C us t M. Skliofrcie h ere(Contbmed on, Page 3.1) are priced as low as is practical. !their status -with the R.O.T·C., except Fifteen. of bachelor of science and manster of v trnh oa e a d r f c/sifi pointed out that this novel approach the Institute in 1950 and the degree iTo apply to take the test, one to the demonstration of corporation of bachelor of arts from Oxford Uni- mutfl h plcaincrsaal rnechnanics is a new and unique teach- versity, where be studied under CA' Vabl tro -0 eoe- oeb /ng technique. Rhode's scholarship, in 1952. No;Ow l de/de n t 1. Each student will be required to While studying under the Institute's / e~ / / p s n t aofialdcetshwg coo~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~peraiespouen an oflectical docmnt-hwn cooperative program in electrical en-~~~~~~~~~hi Selective -Service numb.iler and the FOOTBALL TICKETS g ineering, Mr. Skolnikoff served with Statements issued to The Teck last -night by the Executiveexc des i gain ubr n d T.C.A. Ticket Service has each the General Electric Company. H~e ha s Offc roh .I......Dtcmn, Iooe H a l ispelled dress of his local di-aft board having week foolball Joickefs af gate prices Ialso been associated with the Servo-la large number of rumors concerning advance course R.O.T.C. ridtonvehi.hsehoo for all home games of Bosfon Col- mechanisms Laboratory at M./.T an cnracs hr a enteimpeso htteRsreAto ot possess these data sihould -write !eg an Havar. Rsere salsmaywith the High Voltage Institute at I195M2, an amendmient of the acts of 1916 and 1932 forced R.O.T.C.'terlclbad toc ooti be obfained up to 5 P. M. {onighf Upsala University in S~eden. He isim-en accepting reserve commiissionsteifrain {or fomrrow's o~umb~aHarvar~a member of Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pt, to rmin neiieyi h re ubn- ie~ d Accordtin- to the Educational Testing Iand Eta Kappa Nu. services, intea7fs'in o o gam~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i will be greatly to the stu- tal of eight y ~ ~~~~eams Fspecie y e eatured In a'epit. dent's advantage to file his applica.- another law (which requires two years active service, and six addition- S~ iM~ m iel~ to tocrgrls ftedt al years in the active reserve.) Col- (Coyntraced Ont P1,.9e 4) one Hal tatd hatth Ac o 1921 BY STEVE COHEN o~~~~h Y ~~~~~~ only makries it possible for reservist Two Institute students ar-e featured Zow ing Z~~~eC~~b n n er T0111 W~~ho want to remain in the A4rniy in- in the Septemiber, 1952, issue of tre' deiieyto do so without mneeting' popular wornen's m~agazine, ,tad-i~~F b /f-~~~_ ~' ~'t~~~~~a ~ ~ -any of the requirements of the older emoiselle.ewF b rohs "~ .la~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w. Reservists, line order to stay lin When Science is M[ajor-, by -Nancy T2 otatlas On .. vv -I e-ena ithe Army, formerly had to demno-n- Lynch. s-how\s -Ah'. and1( 5iIs. John,, af¢f~~ces W'~o(cg BY EDWARD KAPLAN, '56 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ srat their. interest so that ;at thae Fitzgerald at wvork, 'i-I ajn M.!T.h- The Fall inter~~-oleit and .C(lose of eacha five year period their oratory. He's anl 31.D.. It-r the !n1sli- ~Qt~~_F2'' in~tra-nlural sailling sea.son is 110"V , activitry would be sufficient to merit 'Lute of) an Am~er-ican Cancer 'Sottory, . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The -Nautical _Associationj 1bos put well under way. ~~~~~extension of their commissionsr for, Fellowship. She's a Ph.DT. candidate ..... Preliminary elliminations afro fO g~¢,_1 ~J ancother five years. here andl( also holdls a scholanshiq). ship.) (Ford tr'ophy), heave been ya sctve duty followed by the six p~'uitsfoyun'wenihthChrlsRe.Te ' taetob hield and won by Ted Garcia `%5, As part of the general changes in) i .S. Ideg!rees to acivaince in the . e( t~-,~c( oe Insitue,(ahos -r~~~~aduate, (~~~~~~,Conztintcd oIL Page 2) oSceeas iz.boa¢,yasitnt.lerc inl the fall1. In its trial tests, and Bil Sheparda gra~late the physical plant of the institute. sttident.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Th,? story emiphazsizes the fact that tile tenwca~poe ob ~hi The Inst~~~~~ itueS, n, Ta tied'the library system. has been reno- aue s o tefenierads.fn-faster saili' thfan its wvooden pre- the Coast Guard for third place in the 'crd.hecnw s s e a h i r r ii esne lmntdtene eessor, while retaining', all the sta annumal Coast Guard Quadrangle hleld conasisting- of the Central Library and { TECH SHOW TRYOUTS f~or anxiety oN-el f indin- a position. b/it f thle olde. boat. 0}: th Thame Riverat NewLono ive divisional libraries, one for each adta(teipovmn ftesr last unday Harvrd wa firs and of tim schools of the institute. tinsntfsebeinheea last Sunday. Harvard -wasfirst and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Prof. ()wenl, I)s~igne~r Tuftsplace secod in he th ee class nThe secndraloobrry of stilln locate Auditions for t'he Tech Show wivf 1 -futurje. The :mthre,,o.s L a't es th:,et the' Thc. 1Lnew_ vez'(:so<x.uc e~~n ~~~~~~~~~ontescon d l o r f Buti.~ 4 continue untill Tuelsday: October 7th, need for1 e-xten-sive and exp~ensive ]>rof'e.4sr(icrw( ()v'c ro.)o h Two regattas ai'e scheduled I-or this sot 'i- z Th "uaiisLbayfom 4 inl the avtomeoon un-il 7 at 'aduate ho' sunc~avato~l e:rmm ~Na ",, wiL also be !ocated her-e when all Lc Wer(Ikendt. On Saturday and Sunday the . t.,n;s-nv~ tearn~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~ngh inp told: be. Aiby to._..0e reande gs sehveran e:'msi(:,, danxceh( orai-.:~t wooe~ ur,res.(f~,) ]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"c :-1 _are ' Iel Boat . Saln'tea oe to' Lbe-r vb~e treire oorgis complted he Arhiectuewo cnsngda n e 'ata( ~.~ tof suces ilf ,m-n :r P'sac:a,(:~ebin'bilb h .. teDannmark Trophy by winningjteLbay ilrmi on th s e o d g r-out. Since femilninle r',)es, a'-ehelpers. Jiiclu,ted in the f'eatur-e is:(?.o evB:fo,. conte-st at the Coast Guard Acadena.y~ t'r o Bidn 7 h ewyL-neded, Tech soeretares, avte also list ,}f those, ]]--r.!osiee by' Tiht success nf the ( dr~s.nses k)~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~bcyo the Schoofirdustrial. In r'ed to try-ouz. I .,st year seve:'al scientists :~,s Pi'-m,':a the- "Cls!: bcece b borne out Lby the facti thiat both the 01i Sunday, the Institute will piayv a)neths enmvd rm eb rdering1 colleges filled the co-ed p~prt, io.Miwsan !'tl'f£os .,eo- Polyte(.hn~~~~~~~ ~ic Istitorsute, Yale,- ofBuinit)~i 14 Polvt ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ t f~ econdc Insttute Yale Trihe Slo ill supplement rehearsals. The Tech tha~t ;n tb 'leIa rue no science nm:~jm aopted ::l cs ~hi fffin/~l 4.qiiin- amln Holy Cross, on the Charl es River'. (Contin. ud on _Page 2) 'Showv rehearsials wi]! begin October 14. js zi mino-en .hen she's a wo. Ct~ I ':ft. I i I i I 1~ VI HI1 i i The next Selective Service System College Qualification Tests, estab- lished as a result of the 1951 Con- gressional Amendments to the Uni- versal Military Training Act, will be held at the Institute December 4, 1952 and April 23, 1953. These tests grew out of the Con- gressional declaration that adequate provision for national security re- quires maximum effort in the fields of scientific research and developmient.. Congress authorized the President to provide for dleferment of cany or all categories of persons whose activity Tickets are now on sale in the main lobby of Building 10 for the Annual Donmitory Fall Acquaintance Dance. The dance is to be held in Walker Memorial on Friday eve- ning, October 10, from 8 till 12 o'clock. The price of admission is $1.25. Hundreds of girls from such surrounding schools as Wel- lesley, Radcliffe, Simmons, Boston University, etc., will be present. The enthusiastic turmout of girls to earlier fall dances indicate a rousing crowd for this event. Plans are Lo decorate Walker Me- nmorial in the Autumn motif, with lan- terns, pumkins, and all the trimmings, including a liberal supply of hay. The Industrial Program entire orchestra will be dressed in EDITORIALS . b Installment Tuition 6 Sports "dTelsion OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF 7HE UNDERGRADUATES OF MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY VOL. LXXIL NO. 30 CAMBRIDGE, MASS., FRIDAY. OCTOBER 3. 1952 5 'CENTS JP And Field Dbay To Be Presented On Same Weekend One of the main social functions of the fall, the Junior Prom, will be Iheld this year with dances both on Friday, October 31, and Saturday, November 1. The affair will take place during the weekend of the annual Field Day events, climaxing the week- end with a Saturday night dance in the Walker Menmorial. A formal dance !on Friday night will be held at the Hotel Statler in Boston, while the Saturday dance is to be informal. For Friday, the noted band of Charlie Spivak will play, while the band for Saturday has not yet been announced. ! KNEW COURSE '-H HEAD 1 .7V - Selective Service Test To Be Given Dormitory Fall Acquaintance Dance To Be -Held On Oct. loth At Tech On Dec. 4 Iro. Tost Appoeinte

EDITORIALS . b Installment Tuition - tech.mit.edutech.mit.edu/V72/PDF/V72-N30.pdf · r~ustic costume, to fit th~e occasion. Af-~o YL VVU~j lin~.-_,. std isfud eesryt The schedule

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r~ustic costume, to fit th~e occasion. Af-~o YL VVU~j lin~.-_,. std isfud eesryt The schedule calls for both Square Wt iktslsprnti- w neac ftentoa neet

a-ld Ballroom dlancing, a dteparture NewlyAp one bad l errm nStuavi!a11 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I heanswlth aefrnd Satudy tile mintenanc bftenaionaliteet

diehl dacerswill be'present to give Aponmn fTomsCnv R tsIsiueHg l Hall and the other in the gywnnsium. ithat such students sh'ould be deferre'dsional dancers vell, ~~~~ ~ - 'until they have completed their col-free instruction to anyone who desires Jr., of Cambridge, Mass., and of Eu- Professor Laurens Troost, newly, According to Dean Jacoby of thellege training.it. A professional caller, Hayden gene B. Skolikoff of Jackson Heights, appointeel head of the department If IPromn Committee, prog-ress on the! Use of the tests by the SelectiveSw ett, will1. be present to call the New York, as Industrial Liaison" Of' Naval Architecture and M~arine En- Prom has been good, and thingsa-SrieytmwsoignlypoSquare Dances. Refreshments on hand flecers at the Institute was announced gincoring, said in an interview with per ready to rolThcmiteispedaarsutfrcmentoswill include punch and cookies. !today by William R. Weems, Director! the Tech, that educational opportuni- copsdo h rsdn fteo h i cetfcAvsr omt

The Dormitory Social Committee of M.I.T.'s Industrial Liaison Pro- ties at M.I.T. roughly equal those i Junior Class, Bob Ward, along with'tees appointed in 1948 by Generalhas laned on-, hours to make this gram. at the best European schools and that Ithe Secretary, Bob Anslow, and five Hershey. Once the tests had been

(lance a success. Mr. Cantwellr received the degrees; in research, A.I.T. outstrips even the;eetdmmes omltd h dctoa etnof bachelor of s c ience and ma~P"Oestrof~etEropa intuiosPrfsr Theme for the weekend is entitled, Service, noted for its testing pro-

sciene inchemical engineering f rom. Troost emphasized that a really exact "Strut and Stagger," quite self-ex- grarns, Iwas designated to carry out,Mock Stockholders Mfeetingy the Institute in 1948 and 1949 and the comparison is difficult becau se the planatory when considered with the construction of the test.

~t t~.~ r .T. l/~ r. [. ~gU Sgozdegree of' master of business adin-woepiooh n rga fe decorations which have a Halloween; The passing mark-, which entitles aistr ation fromn Harvard University in cation is different in America. Eu-' motif. suestdet to reclassification from 1-A

How Cororatio Operats 19s~. Whilestudyig at M.I.T., he also ropean students are entirely on their,attended the engineering practice'o-wn. The only inducement to attend IAdvance tickets for groups of five;t - r2S fhsdatbadse;fit, is 7 0 per cent. In the past, two

· The General Mills Company wvill, school at- Oak Ridge, Tennessee. classes or to study (other than a de- couples or mnore -will go on sale Otto- sre iesxyfu e etohold amock sockholers meting at' Mr. Cantwell has been associated sire to -et an education) are examina- ber 13. The reason for this is to re- she eaines giescxyourper ceenty orfete

,he next get-together of the M.I.T.-} with the Buffalo Electric Chemical tos ever sprin and fall whichsevtalsoagepties.' Pric on the first and fifty-eight per cent11I.A. early in November. The meeting i Company and the Procter and Gamble a student mav continue to ta-ke until :for both'dances together is 38.50, andscrdpsigaksothsen·

will uplicte a eal soekhoders Compny. Prior to his M.I.T. ap-Jhe passes. frteStra ac ny 20.will~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~~~~o duliae Satureayl sokldrsC pa vn-ae In y $20 tudents eligible to take this test

mieeting in all respects, wvith the ex-! pointment, he served as a chemnical! A social difference between the;It should be noted that the ove-l ut/tn orqetdfre(acoption of voting.' engineer with the firm of Ionics, In- United States and EuropewhcpreislgtyIorti seatantunsmtbeusigafi-

· i jun o ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~time course, undergraduate or grad-comipany will direct -the mneeting. Com- the American Institute ofl Chemical! is the-fact that here t~here is neD strong Ti ersdnei o iacdb ae a utnthv ae hplete plans will be announced soon Engineering and a member of Tau "worker's party" or other evidence teJno ls rayohro~n-ts rvosy l /Bbesuetby the M.I.T. ManageetAscaBtaP.o ls itncin.H adta zation. Tickets, the committee states, should take the test regardless oftin tdn ration i n o r C us t M. Skliofrcie h ere(Contbmed on, Page 3.1) are priced as low as is practical. !their status -with the R.O.T·C., except

Fifteen. of bachelor of science and manster of v trnh oa e a d r f c/sifi

pointed out that this novel approach the Institute in 1950 and the degree iTo apply to take the test, oneto the demonstration of corporation of bachelor of arts from Oxford Uni- mutfl h plcaincrsaalrnechnanics is a new and unique teach- versity, where be studied under CA' Vabl tro -0 eoe- oeb

/ng technique. Rhode's scholarship, in 1952. No;Ow l de/de n t 1. Each student will be required toWhile studying under the Institute's / e~ / / p s n t aofialdcetshwg

coo~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~peraiespouen an oflectical docmnt-hwncooperative program in electrical en-~~~~~~~~~hi Selective -Service numb.iler and the

FOOTBALL TICKETS g ineering, Mr. Skolnikoff served with Statements issued to The Teck last -night by the Executive exc des i gain ubr n dT.C.A. Ticket Service has each the General Electric Company. H~e ha s Offc roh .I......Dtcmn, Iooe H a l ispelled dress of his local di-aft board having

week foolball Joickefs af gate prices Ialso been associated with the Servo-la large number of rumors concerning advance course R.O.T.C. ridtonvehi.hsehoo

for all home games of Bosfon Col- mechanisms Laboratory at M./.T an cnracs hr a enteimpeso htteRsreAto ot possess these data sihould -write!eg an Havar. Rsere salsmaywith the High Voltage Institute at I195M2, an amendmient of the acts of 1916 and 1932 forced R.O.T.C.'terlclbad toc ooti

be obfained up to 5 P. M. {onighf Upsala University in S~eden. He isim-en accepting reserve commiissionsteifrain{or fomrrow's o~umb~aHarvar~a member of Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pt, to rmin neiieyi h re ubn- ie~ d Accordtin- to the Educational TestingIand Eta Kappa Nu. services, intea7fs'in o o

gam~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ervce i will be greatly to the stu-tal of eight y ~ ~~~~eams Fspecie y e eatured In a'epit. dent's advantage to file his applica.-

another law (which requires twoyears active service, and six addition- S~ iM~ m iel~ to tocrgrls ftedtal years in the active reserve.) Col- (Coyntraced Ont P1,.9e 4)

one Hal tatd hatth Ac o 1921 BY STEVE COHENo~~~~h Y ~~~~~~ only makries it possible for reservist Two Institute students ar-e featured

Zow ing Z~~~eC~~b n n er T0111 W~~ho want to remain in the A4rniy in- in the Septemiber, 1952, issue of tre'

deiieyto do so without mneeting' popular wornen's m~agazine, ,tad-i~~F b /f-~~~_~' ~'t~~~~~a ~ ~ -any of the requirements of the older emoiselle.ewF b rohs

"~ .la~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w. Reservists, line order to stay lin When Science is M[ajor-, by -Nancy T2otatlas On ..vv -I e-enaithe Army, formerly had to demno-n- Lynch. s-how\s -Ah'. and1( 5iIs. John,, af¢f~~ces W'~o(cg

BY EDWARD KAPLAN, '56 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ srat their. interest so that ;at thae Fitzgerald at wvork, 'i-I ajn M.!T.h-The Fall inter~~-oleit and .C(lose of eacha five year period their oratory. He's anl 31.D.. It-r the !n1sli- ~Qt~~_F2''

in~tra-nlural sailling sea.son is 110"V , activitry would be sufficient to merit 'Lute of) an Am~er-ican Cancer 'Sottory,

. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The -Nautical _Associationj 1bos putwell under way. ~~~~~extension of their commissionsr for, Fellowship. She's a Ph.DT. candidate .....Preliminary elliminations afro fO g~¢,_1 ~J ancother five years. here andl( also holdls a scholanshiq).

ship.) (Ford tr'ophy), heave been ya sctve duty followed by the six p~'uitsfoyun'wenihthChrlsRe.Te ' taetobhield and won by Ted Garcia `%5, As part of the general changes in) i .S. Ideg!rees to acivaince in the . e( t~-,~c( oe Insitue,(ahos

-r~~~~aduate, (~~~~~~,Conztintcd oIL Page 2) oSceeas iz. boa¢,yasitnt.lerc inl the fall1. In its trial tests,and Bil Sheparda gra~late the physical plant of the institute.sttident.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Th,? story emiphazsizes the fact that tile tenwca~poe ob ~hi

The Inst~~~~~ itueS, n, Ta tied'the library system. has been reno- aue s o tefenierads.fn-faster saili' thfan its wvooden pre-the Coast Guard for third place in the 'crd.hecnw s s e a h i r r ii esne lmntdtene eessor, while retaining', all the staannumal Coast Guard Quadrangle hleld conasisting- of the Central Library and { TECH SHOW TRYOUTS f~or anxiety oN-el f indin- a position. b/it f thle olde. boat.

0}: th Thame Riverat NewLono ive divisional libraries, one for each adta(teipovmn ftesrlast unday Harvrd wa firs and of tim schools of the institute. tinsntfsebeinheealast Sunday. Harvard -was first and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Prof. ()wenl, I)s~igne~r

Tuftsplace secod in he th ee class nThe secndraloobrry of stilln locate Auditions for t'he Tech Show wivf1 -futurje. The :mthre,,o.s L a't es th:,et the' Thc. 1Lnew_ vez'(:so<x.uc e~~n~~~~~~~~~ontescon d l o r f Buti.~ 4 continue untill Tuelsday: October 7th, need for1 e-xten-sive and exp~ensive ]>rof'e.4sr(icrw( ()v'c ro.)o h

Two regattas ai'e scheduled I-or this sot 'i- z Th "uaiisLbayfom 4 inl the avtomeoon un-il 7 at 'aduate ho' sunc~avato~l e:rmm ~Na ",,wiL also be !ocated her-e when all LcWer(Ikendt. On Saturday and Sunday the . t.,n;s-nv~

tearn~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~ngh inp told: be. Aiby to._..0e reande gs sehveran e:'msi(:,, danxceh( orai-.:~t wooe~ ur,res.(f~,)]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"c :-1 _are ' Iel Boat .Saln'tea oe to' Lbe-r vb~e treire oorgis complted he Arhiectuewo cnsngda n e 'ata( ~.~ tof suces ilf ,m-n :r P'sac:a,(:~ebin'bilb h ..

teDannmark Trophy by winningjteLbay ilrmi on th s e o d g r-out. Since femilninle r',)es, a'-ehelpers. Jiiclu,ted in the f'eatur-e is:(?.o evB:fo,.conte-st at the Coast Guard Acadena.y~ t'r o Bidn 7 h ewyL-neded, Tech soeretares, avte also list ,}f those, ]]--r.!osiee by' Tiht success nf the ( dr~s.nses

k)~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~bcyo the Schoofirdustrial. In r'ed to try-ouz. I .,st year seve:'al scientists :~,s Pi'-m,':a the- "Cls!: bcece b borne out Lby the facti thiat both the01i Sunday, the Institute will piayv a)neths enmvd rm eb rdering1 colleges filled the co-ed p~prt, io.Miwsan !'tl'f£os .,eo-

Polyte(.hn~~~~~~~ ~ic Istitorsute, Yale,- ofBuinit)~i 14Polvt ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ t f~ econdc Insttute Yale Trihe Slo ill supplement rehearsals. The Tech tha~t ;n tb 'leIa rue no science nm:~jm aopted ::l cs ~hi fffin/~l 4.qiiin-

amln Holy Cross, on the Charl es River'. (Contin. ud on _Page 2) 'Showv rehearsials wi]! begin October 14. js zi mino-en .hen she's a wo. Ct~ I ':ft.

I

iIiI

1~

VI

HI1i

i

The next Selective Service SystemCollege Qualification Tests, estab-lished as a result of the 1951 Con-gressional Amendments to the Uni-versal Military Training Act, will beheld at the Institute December 4,1952 and April 23, 1953.

These tests grew out of the Con-gressional declaration that adequateprovision for national security re-quires maximum effort in the fields ofscientific research and developmient..Congress authorized the President toprovide for dleferment of cany or allcategories of persons whose activity

Tickets are now on sale in the main lobby of Building 10 forthe Annual Donmitory Fall Acquaintance Dance.

The dance is to be held in Walker Memorial on Friday eve-ning, October 10, from 8 till 12 o'clock. The price of admission is$1.25. Hundreds of girls from such surrounding schools as Wel-lesley, Radcliffe, Simmons, Boston University, etc., will be present.The enthusiastic turmout of girls to earlier fall dances indicatea rousing crowd for this event.

Plans are Lo decorate Walker Me-nmorial in the Autumn motif, with lan-terns, pumkins, and all the trimmings,including a liberal supply of hay. The Industrial Programentire orchestra will be dressed in

EDITORIALS .

b Installment Tuition6 Sports "dTelsionOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF 7HE UNDERGRADUATES OF MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

VOL. LXXIL NO. 30 CAMBRIDGE, MASS., FRIDAY. OCTOBER 3. 1952 5 'CENTS

JP And Field DbayTo Be PresentedOn Same Weekend

One of the main social functionsof the fall, the Junior Prom, will be

Iheld this year with dances both onFriday, October 31, and Saturday,November 1. The affair will take placeduring the weekend of the annualField Day events, climaxing the week-end with a Saturday night dance inthe Walker Menmorial. A formal dance!on Friday night will be held at theHotel Statler in Boston, while theSaturday dance is to be informal. ForFriday, the noted band of CharlieSpivak will play, while the band forSaturday has not yet been announced.

! KNEW COURSE '-H HEAD

1 .7V - Selective ServiceTest To Be Given

Dormitory Fall AcquaintanceDance To Be -Held On Oct. loth At Tech On Dec. 4

Iro. Tost Appoeinte

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i~ -ELTTERTo the Editor of TH E TECH: The Baker H ouse Committee was

The Institute is at present under- slow in working up anything to ame-taking a gigantic $15,000 renovation liorate the situation, but last springof the M aster Suite Lounge in Baker it finally same -p with som e plans

House. It has acquired some fine |These envisaged running w ater. a bararchitects in the firm of Anderson &!for serving refreshments, a cabinet

~ckwvith and is pushling the prloject 'for the glasses, a refrigerator cabinetto rapid conlpletion. Also, under con- for storage, an enclosed portion for a

struction is an adjacent m usic room. piano and drapes and paintings toThis, on first -lance, looks like a: cover the pipes and walls. These plans

very noble gesture to the students called for a now seemingly modestthere but this observer w as able to $3,000. They w ere conceived by aglance At the plans and despite sub- Course IV student after much I es-

sequent'discussions w ith the adminis- dent par ticipant discussion.+,t{r +] .. a~, ,~+~.+~ HWthis stilln cncepstions coithrn-p b - ' l, I n..;lt. I, bL-, ' LI.. t (j o L, , V I I b IA I., ,xt ,I-l. tz .

room is being renovated in accord,

STAFF MEMBERS

Rajend,'a N. Blhel. '53;: Geote A. Goepfert, '55; Victo':--{enr:- Goddet, '54: Wlliam T.Kniesner, '55; Joselh K ozol, ' ;4; Norman Kulgein, '55; Rodney %-. Logan, 'r D; Frank J.Sarno, '55; K<evin G. Woeldein, '54.

STAFF CANIDID ATES

David Lobel, ' D6: Frank Berrymnan, '56; Bjorn Rossing-, '56; Hmatris -Weinstein, '56; VWallylfack, '56; Stephen Cohen, '56; Edward Kaplan , '56; Phil Br-yden, '56; Richard feramer, '36;

Arthur Frank, '56; Stuart Frank, '56; A. Aaron 5I itz , '54; Steve Berger, '56 .

OFFICES OF THE TECH

News, Editorial and Business-Room 020, Walker Memorial, Cambridge 39, Mlass.Business-Room 031, \Walker Meemorial. Telephone: Kirkland 7-1881, KIrkland 7-1882,'

]%[.I.T. Ext. 2731.Mail Subscription $3.50 per year, $6.00 for two years.

Published every Tuesday and Friday during college year, except during college vacation.and mailed under the Postal Act of March 31, 1879.

1 Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service, Inc., College Pub-lishers Representative, 420 Madison Ave., New Yorkc, N. Y.

NIGHT EDITOR: Mark Caplan '54

ATTENTION UNDERGRADUATESREGISTER NOW FOR

STUDEHTS' BALLROOM CLASSESBEGINNING FRIDAY EVENING: SEPT. 26BEGINNERS' AND ADVANCED GROUPSFREE DANCE ANALYSIS FOR CLASS PLACEMENT

2htharA e Eaicksoy m HDarce Studio21 CONCORD AVE. Easy Walk from Harvard Square TR 6-5334

REFRIGERATORS RENTEDREASONABLE RATES

-DEPENDABLE SERVICE

WALCOTT SALES & SERVICESO 6-9519

862 Broadway Somerville ,_____~~~~~~~UMO

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The Engineering Library is in theBuilding 10 dome with the exceptionof the Aeronautical Engineering col-lection, which will remain in Building33. The dome will be repainted andrelighted, and the acoustics improved.A new ventilation system will also beadded to make the library more ap-pealing.

Chemical Engineering literature willbe in the Science Library. The oldHumanities Library on the first floor,north wing of Building 14 will nowhouse Literature, Reseive and Recrea-tional books.

As a special aid to students, theScience Library will be open Mondaythrough Saturday from 8:00 a. nm.until 11:00 p. m., and on Sunday, from1:00 p. m. until 9:00 p. m.

Dewey Library Completed

Total number of volumes in the li-brary is now over 480,000, 17,000 ofwhich have been acquired within thepast year. In addition, there are ap-proximately 75,000 uncounted volumeson the shelves.

The general purposes behind thesechanges in the library system are toprovide a more judicial use of space,less clerical work for employees, long-er library hours, and the- maximumbenefit to the Institute. Thus far,only the Dewey Library is completelyfinished, but the others should besoon. It is hoped that when they are,these general purposes will be real-ized.

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-1IIVOL. LXXIf FRIDAY. OCTOBER 3, 1952 NTO. 30

MANAGTING BOARD

General Manager ................................................................................. ...... Alexander H. Danzberger, '53E ditor ......................... ................................................................................................St p e A . li nt 5Editor . ............... _ ~~~Stephen A. Kliment, '53.M anaging Editor ....................................... ................. ................................Edw ard F. Leonard, '53

Business Man ager .................................................................................................. Luis A .P eralta, '53

EDITORS

Co-Sports .......................... Jerom e Cohen, ' 5a

................... I................ .M ark C aplan, '54Exchanrge ........... Sheldon L. Dick, '14Photography ... .........Arthur F. Eckert, '54

P.S

Treasurer ............................ Klaus Zvwilsky, '54A sst . .................................... jerry C ohn. '54

Assignments .................... Edwin G. Eigel, '54.Co Newv. .........John IF. D'Anlco, '5 4

................................ Arthur W . Haines, '54Features .................... Joht }4. Dixon '55

I~.NAGE]

Advertising ...................... 3 artin B. Mills, '54Circulation ........... Raymond J. Szmerda, '54

pares with what the Institute is about oeen L auring unia6i, twv yea.Lto do is difficult to comprehend. But of that second five year period; the-

|Anderson & Beeksith ill now pro- Ithe old law's provisions might auto.rusatically have terminated his conm-

ceed to turn this 'back' room into ofall things "a sitting room.'7 |mission. Nowi that commission wit-

Full length carpeting, massive continue until the officer retires orIleather divans, tables, and luxurious iresigns.Officers commissioned front the

chairs will now grace the heretofore Officerstill resign any t heparty room. The parties, dancing,R.0.T.C. m ay still resign any time

1 after they have completed their,social programs seemingly have not | per of, e years ser

made inroads on the thinking of the promised period of eight years ser -Institute stalwarts. The Institute has vce

long prided itself on-m aximum student The new law, applicable only toparticipation in formulating and ac-Il rm y and Air Force officers place allcomplishing its goals. This is not a services on the sam e footing; the

good example. What happened to the Navy and Marine Corps hav e b eerI ~ . comnlissioninlg their officerss for anstudent plan is anybody's guess, there .i s s i n i te peiod for at

being no mention made of most of itsi i.features.What with the M.I.T: social calen- Library

dar looking so bare this term it isdifficult to figure how or where stu- (Cmtixuec, from, Page 1)dents are to gather these days for Building 52. The Science Library nowv

good college fun. occupies the space vacated by theEdward Facey '52 Dewey Library-.

Dome Renovated

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with student desire.' The Master Suite Lounge is a roomwhich is located on the extreme east-ern end of the New Dorm away fromthe general living' quarters of theHouse. Its area and fireplace com-mend it as an ideal room for smallinformal parties a.nd has been usedalmost exclusively as such in the past.Each weekend, and occasionally on aweekday afternoon, it is reserved, notonly by Baker House residents, butalso by other activities, like AICHE,for dances and beer, parties. It hasalso been the scene of the very finedance program of instruction spon-sored by the Dormitory Social Com-inittee.

The room is at' the present time,however, extremely cold. Asbestoscovered pipe against a bare brickwall greet any entrant and no perma-nent. furniture exists. In short, it lacksconvenience and warmth.

TUITION BY INSTALLMENTSThe recently announced tuition increase has in this period of

rising inflation raised doubts in the minds of students and parentson how to continue to finance a college education.

In this connection we hear that this summer Stevens Instituteof Technology proposed a plan-now in effect-designe'd to easelthe burden.

The plan is based on a loan made by one of several banks whocooperate with the college in this respect. Students who so wishreceive at the beginning of the academic year a loan, which maycover fall and spring term tuition, and expenses for books, sup-plies, dormitory charges as well as tuition and camp fees for thesummer session if requested. The loan is paid off monthly at aninterest rate of 4,-%c, with no additional charges.

The plan is in effect the purchase of a college education on aninstallment plan. It does away with the accepted procedure that

fees must be paid en bloc at the beginning of an academic session,and is of particular benefit to those parents and students who areforced to pay college expenses fromn current income.

The Technology Loan Fund is an extremely beneficial and lib-eral organization. However it is of a somewhat different characterthan the Stevens plan: the Loan Fund with its very low 1%sointerest rate and with its fairly strict requirements (a cum of

3.5 is necessary, freshmen are not eligible and amounts are limitedto the cost of tuition only) it has certain characteristics of thescholarship.

The Stevens plan, on the other hand, is a pure business ar-rangement. It does not specify minimum. academic standards,freshmen are eligible, and the amounts available may exceed thecost of tuition. From the point of view of college authorities it hasthe advantage over the Technology Loan Fund in that responsi-,bility for repayment of the loan is taken by the bank and not bythe college.

The two plans are not mutually exclusive and could operateside by side here at the Institute.?The good will of the Instituteis such that finding banks to cooperate in the plan should notmeet with any difficulties. In the interests of higher education it iswell worth the effort.

THE ISSUE OF TELEVISIONThe economic and moral issues involved when sports pro-

moters decline to furnish television and broadcasting rights, came,after the end of the college football controversy, once more intosharp focus on the occasion of the recent heavyweight boxingchampionship.

Then, from among many millions interested in the match,only those relatively few who were in a position to secure ticketsto the Municipal Stadium in Philadelphia or to a few selectedcinemas across the country, had a first hand view of the event.Normal TV channels were blacked out and no radio broadcast wasmade.

Those who invest in a radio or a teievision set do so in thehope that they will be able to get all the advantages of modernscientific progress. They want to be able to see some outstandingsports event like the recent championship fight without the ex-pense of buying admission to a stadium or movie.

Radio and TV sponsors are prepared to pay large sums ofmoney for the right to broadcast such events. Promoters mayreckon in spite of this that higher profits are to be had by with-holding these rights, and they act accordingly. But in so doing theyshow a censurable disregard for the responsibilities which theyhave towards the public.

Not only the ethics of the situation. but also a realistic ap-praisal of present trends should motivate a change in outlook.

Statistics show that production of TV sets has risen several100%51o since the end of the war, with no levelling off of the pro-.duction curve in sight. As a civilization progresses materially, itbecomes less prone to physical exertion; and it is quite conceivablethat in the future, top TV sponsors may start promoting sports.Present promoters, at a disadvantage, would be obliged to giveway' in thle same way that televised movies are already causingHollywood producers to look at the moving picture business in anentirely new light. Movies as such may disappear, and lead to arebirth of the play--this time enacted in a TV studio-as a popu-lar form of entertainment.

A hundred ' years from now may see the athletic stadiumdevoid of stands, and have boxing, baseball and other sports tele-vised from spacious studios of a type for which plans are alreadyin existence.

Producers of popular forms of entertainment who have hither-to considered television as an evil to be combatted should re-examine their point of view thoroughly, and observe this mostnmodern of communication media in its true perspective.

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The COLLEGE DANCE CLUBstarts its 7th successful year!! ThisClub's purposes are to provide forcollege students an enjoyable dance

in the atmosphere of a first-classhotel and to provide the opportun-

ity for mneeting other college stu-dents from the various campuses.These dances have been so success-

ful that they have been operatinig,52 weeks each year for the past 6-years.

Admission is by membership card.Membership cards are obtainedonly after some visible proof ofeducational status has been pre-sented, such as, bursar's receipt,college ring, etc.

These dances are held every Fri-day at the Hotel KENMORE from8:30 to 12:30 and every Saturdayat the Hotel SOMERSET from

8:30 to 12. Stags--S1.20.

Come see us--win friends-anldhave a wonderful time!!!

The Tech

Reserve(Co?,tijnued fromr Page I)

year period in the active reservesstill stand.An example of the application of

both laws explains the situation: Astudent of the 1953 class is commis-sioned. He now imust serve for twoyears on active duty and for six moreyears in the active reserve. Thus, atthe end of five years, under the oldlaw, there would have been no ques-

tion concerning the continuation ofFhis enlistment, for he had been re-quired to have been active. However.at the end of ten years, he would havecompleted his second five year periodunder the old law:', and might have

The Techi

Friday, October 3, 1952@The lech Page Three

Soccer Activities TolSiarti; Coach MartinExpects Success

The Beaver Soccer Team 'began itsactivities for the season last Monday. T O a]Both Freshman and Varsity squadsappeared for the first practice of the In Firseason. Coach Ben Martin s',;i that!tIhe're was. an ooxellont fturnout irl

7ay Back W'hen" OF !o !

y Crew Defeats Cornell By'id Three-Quarters Lengthsst Importanrt Crew Viciory

From Harvard-at-Large

From MI.I.T.-at-Large

From Officers of HarvardFrom Aluni of HarvardFrom Students of M.I.T.From Harvard Class of '53From Harvard Class of '54From Harvard Class of '55

Delmar LeightorElliott PerkinsArchibald Cox

Robert Amory, Jr.Ralph E. FreemanHarold E. Lobdell

Kenneth B. MIurdockWilliam I. BinghamJay F. Koog!eJanmes 5[. Storey-

Daniel Lee RitchieJohn Timothy Anderson

Thesis In Course X'Three Eastern StudentsNow Attending InstitutePermits Exploring n Rotary Fellowships

New Science Field;s Under terms of the Rotary Foun-dation Fellowships three graduateRecint thesis offer ings in tile Chem-, students, J. H. B. George of Swansea,

W'iles Andre Misk of BeyroutLbical Engineering Department point ls, Ade ik of Byo uth, Leb-anon, and David A. Shutt of Buriley,the way to fabulous new fields in England, are now attending'- the In-technological development, all the way stitute. They are among 111 youngfrom making' fresh water from sea- men and womenl from thirty-fourxaate- by an economicai- u Iartical countries awarded Rotary grants for

At last it happened. After going able to -keep up the pace. The Engi- P rocess to the derehipment of p tac-he has high hopes for a very success he as high hopes fo a very success- through the stages of development and neers appeared to have the advantage tical nuclear power plants.ful season this year. However, there performing in a mediocre manner in everything except weight; ti'ey L'nder the direction of Dr. Edwinare still plenty of openings for any-'since crew was inaugurUated, Tech- rowed better, had the reserve power' . Gili/land, acting head of Courseone who is interested. The team prac- nology has at last made a place for when stroke Valentine called forsi it, tices every day from 4:30 to 6:00 at herself in the crew world. Coach Bill and used good judgment as to puttingi eiors i tt ouse canorklHaines' varsity defeated Cornell over over the final punch. More credit is o , a new process which Gilliland,Bi-i--ss Field and anvone can ContactsField and anyone can contact a two-imle course on Cayuga Lake; due 'to the crew because they rowed president of Ionics Incoporated, pio-the coach at this time. Saturday and defeated them decisive- in a borrowed shell; they had only one neered and which permits the cheapth~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~y eavn oac atsto ahs tioe.Schedu ly, leaving no question as to which day to get used to. a boat in which manufacture of friesh water from seaSchedule was the better eight. Almost thaee they- had never rowed before whileIIITefsfno;lengths separated Captain Eaton's of Cou'.at Cram-ol hnri fh, ;i.-,, o,^ i vater by a new unit process, ion-ex-Their first zrame of the searon -i;z 1 boat from the Cornell shell when the;with Trinity at Tech 6n Saturday, Engineers crossed the line a winner. Congratulations

October 11. Both Freshmen and Var-All who watched the race con-October 11. Both Freshmen and Var- in 11 minutes 6 2/5 secoiids. tulated the Enginers on theiri~~-situ teams will copete. Matngineers on theirass9itv teams wvill comnpete. Mal-tin has P .T

placed a great deal of hope on twoupperclassmen, Sarroga and Alles whoplay center and fullback respectively.T1hese two are very ably assisted byfour sophomores who are just up fromthe freshman team: Rizo-TatronSuarez, Arrera and Nieto. Martin isenthusiastic about these players andexpects a great deal from them.

a/

Prof. Troost(Continued f'mn Page 1)

the main reason the Socialistic andCommunistic parties are so strong inEurope is that most workers therethink of themselves as belonging toa distinct class whose interests arerepresented only by these parties.

Professor Troost was so well im-pressed with this country and the In- stitute that, when he received his ap- Ipointment,'he decided to leave Hol- i land and make a fresh start here. This,was a big decision because he hasmany personal attachments in the,Netherlands and because currency re-strictions allowed him to transfer only$200 of his property and financialholdings to this country.

However, the decision was made,and, by now, the Troost family hasadjusted to the new life. The Profes-sor has taken out his first papers,the family has made many closefriends among the faculty, and his twosons are enrolled in the Institute. One,Daan, is a freshman this year whilethe other, Marius, plans to startgraduate work in Course X thismonth.

The Professor's main worry now isto find two competent musicians tojoin with him and Professor Den Har-tog in a string quartette. ProfessorTroost, an accomplished violinist, in-tercalated a year of musical traininginto his technical education.

Professor Troost's wide experiencein his field has been 'accumulatingsince his youth when he watched shipssteaming up and down the harbornear his home in Rotterdam, but hismost important position was directorof the ship model basin at Wagenin-gen from 1929 to 1951. This famousbasin tests up to 120 self propelledmodels per year for commercial ship-builders and for the Dutch navy. Dur-ing the German occupation, the labor-atory devoted all its time to researchbecause testing contracts stoppedcoming in. T4is research formed partof the material included in a compre-hensive text, Resistance, Propulsionand Steering of Ships, which was writ-ten during the slack war years byProfessor Troost and two of his col-leagues on the basin staff. Towardthe end of the war, Professor Troostundelrtook the redesign and moderni-zation of the Dutch coastal-trade andfishin'g fleet which had been de-Stroyed and, in 1949, received thegold De Ruyter medal for this service.

Although he does not believe anyradical changes in the Departmentof Nav/l Architecture are needed,Professor Troost intends to emphasizeresearch more than has been done inthe past. He plans to promote a lab-oratory for testing structures used inShips and to continue the work beingdone of skin friction at the M1.I.T.towring basin.

r-'S[ u1ereatSaturday's victory marks the first

time a Technology crew has defeatedone of the recognized leaders amongthe college crews of the East, anddefinitely stamps Coach Haines' oars-men as future contenders for easterncrew honors. Crew followers had highIhopes for next season, few daredhope a victory this year against thecrews scheduled, but Coach Hainesturned the trick and what he said theother day has been the keynote of thecrew's spirit. "We will not be satis-fled until we win a victory, and afterthat not until we continue to winvictories."

Row In Borrowed ShellCaptain Eaton's oarsmen took the

lead at the start, held it throughoutthe contest, and gained a little onCornell on the final stretch of waternear the finish. Cornell never threat-ened Technology; although they didtry to put on a burst of speed duringthe course of the race, they w'ere not!

The Stockholders at their anOctober 1st, made the follovholders, Officers and Directors

STOCKHOLDERS: to hold office fc

Francis M. RogersE. Pennell Brooks

OFFICERS: to ho:d office for one y

President

Chairman, Exec. CommitteeVice President, in Cha-rge

Legal MattersSecretaryTreasurer

showing and the Cornell coaches-iT-r] -, . . ... ,'" ..

change. The revolutionary new pro-cess requires no supply of expensivechemicals and uses only a fraction of:thie heat required by the only other

1 -.VIt', ..Ullu .... eivl gave uoacni process heretofore applicable, distil-Haines the w-armest of compliments lation.for the way the crew performed. TheIshowing Technology made w-as corn- iDevelopment of the fluidized bed,showing Technology -made was coni-mented upon by the followers of the a technique largely developed by Pro-:crew in the East who were present and fessor Warren K. Lewis, lecturer andthe opinion seemed to be that a new professor emiritus, will continue in aopponent who was worthy of compet- series of Bachelor's thesis offered thising with first class crews was morethan welcome in college crew circles. temp.

* , ~ , ~ Professors Pigford and BenedictThis inspiring race took place on are offering thesis in nuclear technol-!

Cayuga Lake on Saturday, BMay 10, ogy to seniors and graduate students i1924. Since then the boathouse has The thesis,, largely resulting fromacquired numerous' shells and the best recently-deassified material, willof equipment. ecently-decrassified material, o d

Varsty oachJimMcMillin andVarsity Coach Jim TcMiiin and carry further along the path of de-Frosh Coach Chuck Jackson have velopment, plans for nuclear powerlproduced many notable crews and have stations.helped make crew one of the most Recognition of the serious shortageavidly followed sports at Tech. With of elemental sulfur is made in thethe arriv-al at the Institute of niany;the arrival at t he Institute of many thesis offered in the course this year.tall, husky freshmen, the crew men-tors look forward to a noteworthy The extraction of sulfur from pyritesBeaver Crew in the near future. is the subject of two theses offerings,

and will be carried on as a possible (solution to the almost c2rippling tshortage of sulfuric acid which the world's chemical industries are feeling ttoday. I

Other subjects are directed at im- 1proving existing theories of mass transfer, particle entrainment, andcdistillation.

At a recent gathering of Course Xnual meeting onr, Wednesday, seniors, Gilliland stressed the value

of the thesis to students. He describedadng no~minations for Stock- it as an experience not gained in anyother educational offering at Tech-nology, and praised it for the chanceit offered the student for develop-ing his ability. resourcefullness, and'

or five yers ity. SGilliland stressed the fact that S

Course X had always felt that the nthesis was a valuable educational rrtool, and explained that the objectof requiring it for graduation wasnot to force the student to make acontribution to science as much as it

'~~~ed~~r j ~was to give him a chance to develop Ar, ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ )zmeear -1 - e tcnia nChimself into a better technical man.

George E. ColeStanley F. Teele

Austin W: ScottWalter HumphreysHorace S. Ford

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the current school year.MB'r. George, wvho is studying chemi-

cal engineering, received the degree ofbachelor of arts from Jesus Collegeof Oxford University (England) in1949. He was a collegre prizeman hav-ing achieved First Class ii the HonorSchool of Chemistry.

Also planning a career in chemicalengineering, Mr. Misk is studying in-du'strial chemistry. He received theBacca laureate degree fromi the Anieri-can University of Beirut in 1945, andthe degree of engineering fronm the.National Superior School of Mines inParis last July.

Dr. Shutt was graduated with theB.S. degree from' the University ofBirmnigham, England, in 1947 andreceived the degree Ph.D. from thesame university in 1950. Since thenhe has been employed as a mnietallur-gist by the National Smelting Com-pany in Bristol, England. He is contin-ing his work in metallurgy at the in-stitute.

Since the Rotary Fellowships pro-gram was inaugurated in 1947, awardshave been given to 394 young menand women in forty-eight countries ofEurope, Asia, Africa, and North,South and Central America, as ameans of promoting international un-derstanding, good will and peaceamong the peoples of the earth.Grants for the one year fellowshipsrange from $1800 to $340G, and al-ready total over one million dollars.

Candidates must be endorsed by theRotary Clubs in their home towns andmust be within the age limits of 20and 28 years. They must have a col-lege or university degree, a recordof high scholastic standing, and athorough knowledge of the languageof the country in which they 'propose;o study. Ability to make, friendseasiny, international minded-ness, andeadership ability are also c-pnsidered.No regard is given to race, '-creed, orcitizenship.

THE MOTHER CHUZICHFALMOUTH, NORWA'"YAND ST. PAUL STREETS,

BOSTONunday services 10:45 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.,unday School 10:45 a.m.; Wednesday eve-ing meetings at 7:30, which include iesfi-ionies of Chrisftian Science healing.

Reading Rcoms-Free to the Public237 Huntilngton Avenue

84 Boylston St., Litfle Bldg.8 Milk Street

Authorized and approved literature on:hristian Science may be read or obfained.

ALL ARE WELCOME

A AWC

HAGERSTOWN, MARYLAND

OTHER DIRECTORS:I

I1,If

"A secure future, exceptional opportunities for advancement,and a high starting salary await you at FAIRCHILD, if yOU areone of the men we are looking for. We have openings rightnow for qualified engineers and designers in all phases ofaircraft manufacturing; we need top-notch men to help us inour long-range military program: turning out the famousC-119 for the U.S. Air Forces.

"FAIRCHILD provides paid vacations and liberal health andlife insurance coverage. We work a 5-day. 40-hour week.

"If you feel you are one of the men we are looking for,write me. Your inquiry will be held in strictest confideuce,of course."

* Ialter Tvdo.z, widely know-n aviation engineer and aircraft designerand veteran of 23 )ears in ariation, is Chief Engineer of Fairchild'sAircraft Div'sion.

ENGINE AND AIRPLtNE CORPORAT!O '

- I RCNIL w?

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WVG BH is a non-commnercial, edrh ca- I. .~0--BBC O pera. Excerpts fro m Cnl};d andDeath,' a 17th century m a~que by Jamlle.I

z tionazll, frequeesc~y wtodulation statio)Z Shirley, vith music by Alatthlew Locke ald IChristopher Gibbons; and Sav'trl, by Gus- I

operated with th, e advice conel coopera- tave Hoist.

tion of the Lowell lnstitutte Cooper- 9 .3;-News. Louis 'I. Lyons (rebloadcast).

lative Broadcasting Council. Members Weeatber, highlights..

o/ the colntcil are T he Lowell Institztte, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, !.MI.

Boston College, Bosto?? Sym7ph jonjy Or- \ VGBH FIRST AN-NIVERSAR Y

chestra, Boston University, Harvtrd 3.30-The Pre-idents alld Directors of LowellInstitute Cooperative Broadcasting Council

University, M.I.T., Museum of F ine Mfernbers. Ralph Lowell, Trustee, tile LowellInstitute; Very Reverend joseph R. N. Max-

Arts, New .En gland Conservatory of ,ell, S.J., President, Boston College; Henry

M usic, Northeastern U niversity, and B. Cabot, President, Trustee of the BostonSymphony Orchestra; Harold C. Case, Pres-

Tufts College. The studios are located ident, Boston Universitv; James 1ryantConant, President, Harvard University;

?;'YI Synp ho0?7v y H alll, BostonZ, and tie James R. Killian, fr., President, $[assachu.

transmiitter is at Great Blhe Hill setts Institute of Technology; George Har-old Edgell, Director, Mfuseum oI ZFine Arts,

M ltotn. WGBH broadcasts Gn 89.7 }0Boston; Harrison Keller, Director, NewEnglanrd Conservatory of Music: Carl S.

megacycles. , Presideut, -Northeastern University;Leonard' Carmichael, President, Tufts Col-

lege.

SCHEDULE 4.00--WGBIH aud Educational Bioadcasting.Discussoan bv the Trustee of the LowellInstitute audi Coordinators of the Lowvell

FRIDAY, OCTOBE' R 3, P.M . Inst.tutc Cooperative Broadcastinig Counci.Rev. Thornas: F. Fleming, S.j., BCoston Col-

13.30-New-s, weather, highlight,.iege; George E. Judd. Manager, o30ston

3.35-The Tragic Sense in .ndern .iteraure. Syrnphony Orchestra: P'rofessor Leo A., 3.D-Te T~lgc Slls :n5Ts~era I.ter~lze. Ma.rtnl, B3oston mil; versity' David Nk'.-laryard Summer School, 1951. 'ierre En- Mailen, -lar osto Uner .4ty; Uavid J.

manuel B ie, Hrvrd Unversity'; john E. Bunch-ard, Aassachusetts Llstitute of Technology;

4.30--A Basic Record Library: Chamber ',Villiain Germain Dooley, Mluseunm of FineMluslc. (Conllitzant: Klauq Rcoy, Boston Arts, BPoston; Harrison Keller. ~'ew Eng-I University). Progralm: Miendelssohn. Octet: land Conservatory of Music; Profes.-or M\1il-

\\Valto)i. 'Ouartet in A mninor: Beethoven. ton Schlagenhaiuf, -Northeastern Universatv;i uartet No· 14 in C-sharp nilno, Opus 13 Provost john P. Tilton, Tufts College;

,.pecial nmessages by former corldldnators:6.00-N'ewvs. l~olis; M1. Lyo>, Hafarvard U7ni- Rtev. David R. Dunligan, S.J., College of the

ver~lty.i e r-;lty. 1I oly Cross, and Professor Samnuel B.

6.15--Faculty Report. Gould, Bostou University; Ralph Lowell,Trustee of the Lowell Inastitute, Chairman.

6.25--Mussic to Dine To.4.30-lighlilghts from Afternoon Courses Re-

l6.~;--C. S. \Veather Bureau Report and Fore- corded in the Classroom. The Forms ofcast (fromt Logan International Airport). Drama; Professor Marston Balch, Tufts

('College. Ulnited States and World History;I7.00-Tell Yot a Story. Johnny Pye ald the Professor Thomas H. D. Mahoney. Massa-

I Fool-Kller bv Stephen Vincenlt 1,elet. I'ro- chusetts Institute'of Technology. Introduc-lessor Donald Dorn, Boston IUniveisity. tiO to Psychology; Dr. Edwin 1. Newniuaci

7.15-A Day in the Life of . . *The Speaker Htarvard IUniversity. Mlacters of Aloderlnof the Hotuse of Commons (B]31C). Sir Ralph Drama: Dr. William B. \'an Lennep, Har-Verney- yard ITcniversitv. The Romantic Mlovesut

in English Literature: Professor l'. Albert7.30-Early American Literature. HatrvardI Dulanel, Boston' Colle-e. Twentieth Cent-

Summer School, 1951. Professor Perrv G. E. urv 'ationalismr Professor Hans Kohn'Miller, H-tarvard Unliversitv. College of the City of New York. Tlie

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Tragic Sense in M[odern Literature; Pierre, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, P.M.

Emmanuel. P e r , 13.30--University of Chicago Round Table

5.10-Highlights from Mlusic Courses. 'Musi.cI (NBC-NAEB).of the Ballet; ]laird Hastings. Two Huudred 4.00-Music of tbe\Pallet. The Production-, of

Years of the Symphony; Professor Tucker 4.00--Music ofrise\Ballet. TheiProductiongsoKeiser, Northeastern University. Tomorrow's.

Reeases~o~olhhessylerp~lulyiersifvblollrr\;se f D iaghilev: l'oris Godlouulov. Baird ftastings.Symponoly; I'rofessor G. W allac W ood- |z5.00-The Jeffersonian Heritage (NAEB Tape%worth, Harvard University. The Madrigal, Network). Light and Liberty. Consultant:Lorna Cooke DeVaron, New Eugland Co)n- Dunmas Malone, Columbia University; with

servatory of Mutsi&. Alusic of tle Baroqlue; Claude Rains as Thomas Jefferson. ProducedAllell Sapp, Harvarcl University. vlunder a grant from the Fund for Adult

*.45--lighlights from Chilren's Circles. Education, established by the Ford Founda-

Nancy Harper, N'tursery Training School of tion.

Bo1stonu, Tufts College. Guests: Dr. Dura- 5 Q-Netherlands Composers (Radio Neder-

Louise Cockrell, Director, Nursery Traiuing land). I'rogram: Badings, Introduction to a

School and Dr. Abigail A. Eliot, Pacific Tragedy; Utrecht Municipal Orchestra, con.Oaks Friends School; formnerly Director, ducted by laul Hupperts. Voormolen, Con-Nursery Training School. certo foI Two Oboes; Hague Residentie

6.00-01 n the Death of WHarold Ross. , Louis Orchestra, conducted by \Willem van Otter., oo (postpoued front September 21).

M. Lyons, Harvardl University.6.00-Facultv. Report. A review of Faculty

6.10-Highlights from Faculty Report. Report broadcasts of the past week.

6.20--International Broadcasts. Selections fromBritish Broadcasting Corporation, Radio- .

diffusion Fralcaise, Radio Munich, Radio 7.30--Music of the Baroque.- Richness of the

Eireann, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Baroque. Allen Sapp, Harvard University.

7.00-XVGBI-T Features. Tell You a Story; 8.30--13BC W'orld Theatre. The Case of Henri

l'rofessor Donlaldl Bornl, 13oston l~ I ~Desire Landru. A dramatization of theOld Bools: Old Friend,. New Eugland I French murder trial.Conservatotv Recital. Guest Collector. ThePoet Speaks. Boston College Candle as 9.30-.News, weather, highlights.

Lecture. 'Museum of Fine Arts Conferenceof Historians. M.I.T. Choral Societv. Sav Itiin French; Professor Robert K. Crave:,lTufts College. Lowell Institute Lectuee. I Selective Service

7.30-Highlight, £rom Evening Courseq Re- 1corded in1 tlhe Claisroom. Our Changing (Continued fromn Page 7)Earth: l'rfessor C. \\'roe \Wolfe, 31ll oto

7nliversity. Greek I'olitical Theory; Pro - ; he selects. Results will be reported tofessor Joseph I'. -Maguire, Boston College. Ithe student's Selective Service BoardInternati oal I Politi cs; I'rofe,.sor Leo Gross,

Tufts College. The Epic; Professor John 11. I of jurisdiction for use in consideringFinlevy Jr.. H-arvard 'University. How Others iLive: Professor Frederick R. '\ulsin, Tufts his deferment as a student.College. Principles of International Politico;l'rofessor ]-fans Morgenthau, ITIliversity of I Mrs. Lutz of the Advisory Commit-Chicago. Early American Literature; Pro-eicaor Perry (;.:E.icll er tee on Selective Service at the In-eso Perry G(;. I". Mi~ller H}arvard Univer-sit-. stit.ute requests students not to apply

8.2;-Boston Svymphony Orchestra. Charles ;at local board number 17 CambridgeMunchM~u~ial Di ector· Pz-ogram 'ee--Munchll, 1-ti~ical Dir in Bee- t re gister or have an order for a

thoven, Symphony No. 4 in B-flat M.aJor. IOpus 60; Berlioz, "'Roya llunt and Storm," physical exaamination transferred todescriptive symplihony from The Trojans;Brahmis, S yfllon)y *. 1 iu C minor, Opus Boston. A board of transfer has been68. j established at the Phillips Brooks

10.20--Anniver.~ary Greetings. 'Ihe Honorable House in the Harvard Yard to take}Paul A. \Vialer, Chairman, Federal Coin-I 111nlicatiolts Commll3lissioll. car'e of Tech students.

I

The meeting will be held in Room!1-190 on Monday, October 6th, at !

5:00 p. m. An opportunity will be afforded at this tme for those whodesire to ioin the Society to do so.

MANAGEMENTASSOCIATION

II

Here's your chance to make yourself $25.Just write a 4-ine Lucky Strike jingle,based on the fact that Luckies are madebetter to taste better.*

Then, if we sele ct your jingle, we'll payyou for the right to use it, together with

your name, in Lucky Strike advertising.. oprobably in this paper.

Read the sample jingles on this page.Then get the gang together, break out therhyming dictionary, and start writing. It'sfun! And w'e're buying jingles by the bushel!

Hint-if you can sing your jingle, it's agood one!

Hint-the more-jingles you write, themore money you have a chance of making.

Hin t-be sure to read all the instructions !

HERE ARE TlHE 124STRU1CTIC:IA35

X, Write vour Lucky Strike jingle on a plainpiece of paper or post card and send it toHappy-Go-Lucky, P. O. Box 67, New York46, N. Y. Be sure that your name, address,college and class are included-and that theyare legible.

2. Base your jingle on any qualities of Luckies."Luckies are mnade better to taste better,"is only one. (See" Tips to rmoney-nzakcers.")

3. EVery student of any college, university orpost-graduate school may submit jingles.

4. You may submit as many jingles as youlike. Remember, you are eligible to win morethan one $25 award.

To write a winning Lucky Strike jingle, you'renot limited to "Luckies are made better totaste better." Use any other sales points onLucky Strike such as the following:

L.S./M.F.T.Lucky Strike Means Fine TobaccoLuckies' cigarette-tearing demonstrationLuckies taste cleaner, fresher, smootherBe Happy--Go LuckySo round, so firm, so fully packedSo free and easy on the draw'Buy Luckies by the cartonLuckies give you deep-down smoking enjoyment

COPR., THIE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY

Friday, October 3, 1952The Tech

__ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~I

SO I :E SCHIDULEW7SBHIPHOTOGRAPHIC

EXHIBITIONThere will be a Photographic Ex-

hibition by Ansel Adams from Oc-fober [5 to November 5 at the new!gallery of the Charles Hayden Me-morial Library.

LSC LECTUREBlanche Yurka will give a solo per-

formance of "Great Scenes fromGreat Plays" this afternoon at 5:00p. m. in Room 10-250. This LSCpresentation is admission free.

MECHo ENG. SOCIETY"What does the Mechanical Engi-

neer do in industry" will be Professor,C. R. Soderberg's topic at the open-ing meeting of the Student Branch}of The American Society of Mechani-:|cal Engineers. Professor Sodenbergis the head of the Mechanical Engi-neering Department at the Institute.

"What Industry Expects from ICourse Fifteen Graduates," will be'the subject of a talk by Lawrence A.Apley, president of the AmericanManagement Association to be heldat 4:00 p. m., Friday, in the FacultyClub Lounge. This lounge is on thesixth floor of the Sloan Building onMemorial Drive.

Everyone, including freshmen, con-side'.ing enrolling in the new Schoolof industrial Management next fall iscordially invited to attend. Coffee.and ;:~{reshments will be served. Atthe enc~ of the meeting, ample op-,porfunit ) will be given to join" theMITMA.)

XkCTWITIES MEETINGtill Class A activity representa-

-iv. 'es must meet in Room 3-370,Q¢ ctober 9, at 5:00 p. rn. A similar

meeting will be held in Room 3-sJ 370, October 7, at 5:00 p. m. fori Class B representatives. The pen-

alty for absence is temporary sus-pension.

The purpose of the meetings isfo acquaint the representativeswith the capacities invested withthe Secretariat in regards to theactivities. This is the reason for|extreme importance attached toattendance.

41'a 0 0 14,

. ... ... X ^ A~

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gEREW~18

W~rite a Lacky, Strik~E ]iagleO box tops NO ENTRY BLANKS, It's easy!

lust write a 4-Dine jingle based ob the fact thatX W % E E E @ ^ E E SUE S we E S E g g E X~~'Cara 31p S""avo

W. istorg, p gsmohes-:o r viaer,-r.,: btl vackl

TO TASTE BETTERI*

HI-FIDELITY

The successor to the Baruct,-LaLn'corne: enclosure may be seenand heard at the Kelton Co.. 958Mlassachusetts Avenue. Cambridge,

M~ass.

Using only1 1.7 cubic ifeet Of space,the Keltoin system accomplisheswhat im-anyv hi cubic content, h-i costspeaker-s fail to do. True bass re-sponse and Smooth extended highfrequency response a)'e 110no avail-able in small pamckages. CarbomeauIndustries working in close co-op -eration with Lan-- have l-ope(' specia) ioudspeake'rs specifi-callv t o clie Kelton Co. Thesespekike-s t(,aether wsith the httes'

deveilopment.s in thoe 11aruch-Laml,' >''<'rel fiO'M ;a initi 'which is superb

i i-l ,:3ulity :. a' f"action of -he c.-osrIof CVt (Ipa 1' be systems.

The X-elft "diploenzi" :'ny be| seen and he-tr'd now. Itr vill be! avtlilablo :'1 ai special inlltr otductom'

price of ':35'.00 to stu"dents onl Octo-ber 20t.

:-TEPS TO MONEY-MAKERS