.OFFICAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNDE6RGRADUATES OF- MASSACHUSETS INSTITUTE OF.- TECHNOLOGY. Harvard Is First, MvIT Takes- Flth InDebate Contest

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l ~~ ~.'?;: ; >. rl#e '..'. w* Echt~. ~.OFFCAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNDE6RGRADUATES OF MASSACHUSETS NSTTUTE OF. TECHNOLOGY V. X X _ ' 5 ' C'SET.! F A CENTS LXX'. NO. 5 ' C:AMBRDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, FRDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1954.CENTS L l ~ ~.'.,...... _VOL. AppeEr Renstaterment By Perloff Tce Turned Down latdrmtoy t~at DCormtoy C~ounclen Coetng Dormtory Councl twce turned down the moton by Lennard Wharton '55 to renstate Gerald Perloff '55 on that body at ts Tuesday rneetng. Perloff had been ruled automatcally expelled earler after he had mssed four meetngs durng the academc year. Perloff had clamed that accordng to the commtte's consttuton, each member s permtted three absences per academcd term. The commttee however nterpreted the phrase "dormtory term" n 'ts consttuton as meanng the perod between Dorrmcomm electons, an entre year. n addton, Perloff clamed that one of the meetngs at whch he was absent was held llegally, because Charles Masson '54, who was charman of the commttee dd not lve n the dormtory systenm at the tme of the meetng. When Perloft was ruled off Dormtory Councl, he automatcally lost hs post as Charman of Baker House Commnttee. However, at ts meetng Wednesday nght, Baker House Commttee renstated hm for the last week of hs term as charman so as to nsure a smooth successon when the new house charman s elected next Tuesday. Snce there wll be no Dormcomm meetng before the electon, there wll probably be no revew of Baker House's acton by the superor body. Assocate Dean RonaldHRob el Dead A At Age 48 and vcepresdent of the Undergraduate Assocaton on party tckets. at ths meetng. 1. Ths dea, proposed by Davd B. j Professor Ronald H. Robnett, As socate Dean of the School of ndus (Contrnued on page 6). tral Management at the nsttut{ : AllStar Selectons Made skater, Jack Clfford '48, and Dck snce 1952, ded at hs home n Wn Strzleck '53, last year's captan and chester on Tuesday nght, Februar) Y For Comng Varsty Tlt 'Gusa. Tech Show" goale, the Beavers antcpated a close 16th. He was fortyeght years old. contest. & A natve of Salem, Oregon, where Walt Duffn '54 opened the scorng Wl Be Cshoen At e he was born n 1905, Dean Robnett at 5:03 of the frst perod. Nck D' was educated at the Unversty of On Monday evenng, March 8, the Marvell '57, try to mold the team nto Bona '55 and Harold Wells '55 got Oregon', from whch he was graduatedd ntramural allstars wll face the a cohesve unt. 'n addton to the Cage Tomorrow the asssts. Jack Clfford countered for varsty n a beneft doubleheader. The varsty game, the allstars wll meet wth the degree of bachelor of scence n 1928. He remaned at the Unversty of Oregon for four years after hs s follows: colleges. "Mss Tech Show", advertsed as the Tech's selecton for ths team are as the freshmen, and several neghborng Centers: Russell Cox '56, Baker "most beautful coed n Boston" wll House; Dmtry Vergun '56, East be chosen ;rom sx fnalsts tomorrow Campus; Wllam Erman, Graduate.n Rockwell cage at 1:00 p.m. House. mmedately afterward, a drawng Guards: Hlly Prager '56, East wll be held to determne vhch tcket Campus; Tom Comporato '55, SAE; j ( holder wll accompany "Mss Tech Davd PalamountanD '56, Theta Ch; Marnes Gerakars '56, Baker House; [ [4 Genep Gordon, Graduate House; Larry graduaton, servng as assstant graduate manager. He then took up graduate work at Harvard Unversty, recevng the degree of master of busrness admnstraton n 1934, the year n whch he joned the, staff of the nsttute as an assstant n the Department of Busness and Engnee: ng Admnstraton. He was promoted to the rank of assstant professor n 1937, assocate professor n 1942, and Professor of accountng n 1947. Be K l aufm an, Graduate House;v'John Stel ;:: ng AT0. '56, Forwar ds: W l lam M Grad Thfssmer, of fore becomng Assocate Dean he had served as fscal offcer of M..T.'s Dvson of ndustral Cooperaton, and uate House; Ken M eler '56, e East Cam pus; Mcha el Kennedy '56, Ph outclass t fa:lt q n h Kappa; Dck Hurlbut '57, East Cam durng 1942 was vstng lecturer n pus; John Funkhauser, Graduate accountng at Harvard Unversty. House. Other Postons The allstars wll boast men several 'over sx feet Vergun, Mssmer, w th and Er ma standng n, well 6h'e ove r each. Vergun form, a Unvers of ty Texas player s expected to team wth E rman (Notre Dame) and Mssmer (Wllams) to, control the allmpo~rtant reboundng department. The outsde shootng needed to break the ' Vazf aes cn Dean Robnett was a member of the nsttute's Commttee on Educatonal Survey from 194750 and n 1947 was a member of the Advsory Board on Relatonshps of the Atomc Energy Commsson wth ts contractors. n 1948 he served on the Advsory Commttee Research and Development Contracts of the Department of the [Army and n the followng year was :Consultant to the Charman of the Research and Development Board of the Department of Defense. Dean Robnett s survved by hs wfe, Roberta, and a son, Rchard Alan.. Harvard s Frst, MvT Takes Flth ndebate Contest MT's debatng team placed ffthl out of twentyfour 'partcpatng colleges and unverstes n the nnthj Eldon H. Reley '55 has been elected annual debate tournament held February 19 and 20 at the nsttute. caton. Approxmately 40% of the nscoml Refuses /~~~~~~~ r presdent of the Undergraduates Asso TCABloodDrve n the' fnal of the four rounds, $800 Grant For undergraduates partcpated n Tuesday's votng, one of the heavest n Harvard defeated Bates College nor '1 Expects To Have frst place n the tournament. Brown Sta to n WM t recent polls (for example the offcampus hazng referendum drew only Unversty and the Unversty of 900 Contrbutors Pennsylvana captured thrd and a 30% turnout). nsttute Commttee has turned fourth places,.beng elmnated after Harry Schreber '55 won the vcepresdency n a close contest wth Pledges to donate to the ToC.A. down a request for an outrght grantt the semfnals. Sprng Blood Drve are mountng of $800 to staton, WMT to be usedt The topc of the debate was: Resolved That the Unted States Should John Seller '55, after Gerald Perloff to replace rado equpment stolen durng the Chrstmas vacaton. d '55 had been the frst man elmnated Adopt A Polcy of Free Trade." At by the preferental system. Reley The decson, reached at nscomm's a debate luncheon held before the wth a fnal tally of over 600 out of Wednesday meetng does not n any tournament, Professor Paul A. Samuelson, head of the Economcs Depart count. 1272 votes, led each preferental way cancel the loan of $500 to the staton voted at ts last meetng. s ment, led a dscusson on ths topc. Reley wll take offce at the end, Among the reasons advanced by.of the nsconem meetng on Wednesday, March 10. Both the new and old Membels of the MT Debatng members of the commttee for not ex Team ncluded Kevn Forsberg '56, tendng the grant to the staton werey! _t commttees wll be dnner guests of Robert Evans '54, Vrgl Broane '57, that "the staton, ought to get on ts jdean and Lowell Wlson '57. and Mrs. E. Francs Bowdtch feet by ts own means", and that the on that nght. grant (whch would have come from n a statement to The Tech, Reley 1 expressed hs grattude to the student body. "For your support Tuesday, rapdly, accordng to Dck Schwnd '55, charman of the campagn for blood donors. Wth the canvassng of the undergraduate body almost completed and the contactng of graduate students and other adults well under way, about 500 pledges have been receved out of an expected total of 900 by the openng of the drve on March 15. n the past, the blood drves were spurred on by the need for blood n Korea, but ths falt as a. result of the ceasefre, the number of donatons dropped sharply. The current drve, however, promses to rank wth the most successful, whch should help replnsh the dwndlng supples of the Red Cross Cambrdge blood bank. Canvassng Methods The bggest problem facng the campagn s the contactng of the entre M..T. famly. The commuters, for nstance, are especally hard to reach. Outsde of the posters and pledge forms that were passed out, most of the work s done by representatves who personally vst the dorms, fraternty houses, and faculty members, and through announcements n R.O.T.C. classes. t s estmated that about 25 per cet of the M..T. famly s unable to gve blood for some reason, and T.C.A. hopes that a large part of the elgble donors wll respond to the urgent need for blood. Voss To Address AnnualMetngO f En gzeern Show" to the openng nght of ths year's producton, "Suspended n Ar." Tckets wll be on sale at the cage, and n the lobby of buldng 10. The fnal drawng to determne the escorts of the fve runnersup n the contest wll be held at noon, Wednesday, March 3, at the "Suspended n Ar" sales booth n the lobby of buldng 10. Accordng to Thomas S. Doherty Jr. '56, producton manager of the show, "Suspended n Ar" s "faced wth the prospect of playng to an almost empty house on openng nght." Only a few seats are avalable for Saturday nght, March 6, wth several hundred places open for Frday nght's performance. Doherty states that "Suspended n Ar" s the frst Tech Show to have a "sngng chorus of nearly 50 members, have an ensemble dance, have a varsty's zone wll be suppled by The freshmen fve, possessors of 8tellng, Comperatto, and Melere, all 0nly one wn ths season, should easly chorus sngng n sxpart harmony, of whom possess excellent shootng outclass the faculty quntet n the have an ntergrated costumng plan, eyes. evenng's opener. The faculty team be performed n John Hancock Hall,The allstars begn a wetk of n wll boast such standouts as Scottyl (whose acoustcs, sght, and backstage facltes are unparalleled n, 'tensve drlls ths Sunday fnght as Whtelaw, Roy Merrtt and Ben Mar coaches Jack Fredman '57, Paul Gel tn, but should prove no match for the Boston, and have a chorus number n dn '54, Fred Gordon '56, and Gerald wellcondtoned fresh.' counterpont." ggrgop Professor Walter C. Voss, former Head of the Department of Buldng Engneerng and Constructon, wll be the featured speaker at the Annual Meetng of the Southeastern Secton of the Atheredan Socety for Engneerng Educaton. At ths meetng, whch wll take place on March 25, 1954, at the North Carolna State College, Ralegh, North Carolna, Professor Voss wll speak on "ntaton of Researcl'Projects." Twentynne colleges and unverstes wll be represented Reley Elected Presdent Of Undergraduate Assocaton As 40r Of Students Vote the specal fund derved from parkng fnes on the nsttute's parkng lots) would come from a "general fund' whch ought not to be used to help a speclzed body. No offcal representatve of WMT wvvas present at the nstcomm meetng, and none were avalable for ~omment on nstcomm's acton as of the tme of gong to press. A moton was passed at Wednesday's meetng requrng the nserton of a clause n the contract of the manufacturer of undergraduate class rngs, statng that the manufacturer wll nt make these rng styles avalable to, anyone but undergraduates. Ths clause s desgned to keep graduate students from acqurng rngs of the same type as undergraduate styles. Also dscussed at the meetng was the possblty of runnng presdent can offer only a very nadequate 'thanks'. You have gven me a great deal to lve up to. sncerely hope that n w.orkng wth the new nsttute Commttee.we shall be able to mold our student government nto everythng you thnk t should be.".skaters Top H.C., Te Alunm, 66, n Annual Batfe The TechAlumn hockey game, played at Boston Arena, ended, n a 66 te for the thrd tme n the four games played to date. Wth such former hockey stars as Don Lea '50, all New England the Alumn wth a beautful slapshot at 7:52 to te the score at 11. Alfred Gough '52 gave the Alumn the lead wth a score at 2:57 of the second perod. He was asssted by Tom Tsots '49. Jm Russell '51 ncreased the lead to 31 as he scored wth a shot from twenty feet out. Wells got hs frst of three goals as he talled at 8:57 to cut the Alumn lead to 32. DBona ted the score shortly after wth a score at 9:39 asssted by Wells and Duffn. Duffn then scored two mnutes later to gve the Engneers a 43 lead. He was asssted by Bev Goodson '57, a manstay on the Frosh team ths year. Jack Hamlton '50 retalated for the "Old Grads" at 13:24 asssted by Lea. Ths made the score 44 as the last canto started. Wells, on a beautful play skated the length of the ce wth the puck, pulled goale Strzleck out of poston and slapped the puck home to gve Tech a 54 lead. Emory Hosmer scored a mnute later asssted by Herb Hayden '23 and Charley Sefert '48. Wells completed hs "hat trck" at 7:33 asssted by Fred Culck '56. Ths gave the beavers a 6]5 lead, but Lea came through wth the fnal and tyng score at 9:14 asssted by Clfford to make the fnal score 66. A keyed up Beaver hockey teann beat the Holy Cross sextet at Worcester 42. The score was ted 11 at the end of the frst quarter and 22 gongz' nto the fnal frame when 'Tch (.aerlf ((Gntutued onl p, gey 5) ~ ~ ~ 'l ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ 1, 1.p'.

e,,,.:, O.LXXV The Frday, February 26, 1954, No. a MANAGNG BOARD General Man zqer..... N orman G.:K ugen, '55 Managng Edtor a...........rodney W. Logan,,Ss Edtor............ Phlp Bryden, '565S B3usness Manager........ Allan Schell, '55 EDTORS MakleUp...... Frank Berryman, '56 CoSport... Davd Applng, '57 '.. News... Stephen Cohen, '56 John'Fredman, '57 Featutres... Edward Kaplan, '56 CoCopy... Martn Brllant, '54 ' Bjorn Rossng, '56 Robert Rosenbaum, '57 Photography... Phtp Gallagher, '57 MANAGERS 'A s......... Ernest W asserm an, '57 O ffe Manager... 4,... Jacob Gubbay, '56 Treasurer... Donald Koffm an. '56 STAFF MEMBERS ~: ', Danel'Schneder, '57; Harry Gldea, '57; Morton Cohan, '57; Stephen Edelglass. '6; a Goldn, '54 Ben Chertok, '57; Robert Berg. '57; Peter Rchards, '57; John Kretzer, '57; Robert'Klne, '57; Joseph Schaeffer, 56; J. Phlp Bromberg, '56. STAFF CANDDATES Charles Feldman, '57; Charles Perez, '56; Phlp Mtchell, '57; Alan S. Esbtt, '57; Gerald L. Marwell!. '57; Lug S. Ccolan, '56; John C. Chrstan, '57. OFFCES OF THE TECH News, Edtoral and BusnessRoom 020, Wallter Memoral, Cambrdge 39, Entered as second class matter at the post offce at Boston, Massachusetts. l; Adz.. / ^FRDAY, FEBRUARY; 26, 104: A,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.. f[... f~,thromy1th th e malanlac n 5 ual Mam Trad Dancel ro~he~dteo,~het~h Held By Fraterntes' Last W% ek, On behalf of the Secretarat,.; would lke to take ths opportunty to thank The Tech for ther excellent. ". coverage of the past Undergraduate Assocaton Presdental electon. Your coverage had a great effect on the exceptonally large votng turnout and dd more to acquant the student body wth the canddates and the electon procedures than anythng ever done before: Many thanks for a splendd job, and % hope you wll contnue ths electon ssue practce n the future. :W. Chandler Stevens Jr. '55 Charman, Electon s Dvson Secretarat 24, 1954 February NOTCE ',=,,,E,,,_dt,, "The Unverstyl the.commun. and ty,',' an address gven by Dr. Kllan at the nauguraton of the Graduate School Arts and of of Scences Brandes Unversty on January 14, wll be Two happy couples at the Hotel Staffer.,,, ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~ broadast y FMStatn WGH at Last Frday eventn.g, February 19, dances and outngs durng that week ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7hown pn0m. 50 on Tuesday, March 12, 2, Beta Theta Ph Delta Theta, a end.e "We Saw t a Happen", flm Sgma'Ch held pro Annuald ther ffteenth duced duee and bytheprat Whtne Whtney Pratt BllSgma MamBeta Mm TadDane thegrad ThadPtaheetn ThetaandBa Ch all were founded at M~aml Company to commemorate the 50th room of the Bradford Hotel. About Unversty n Oxford, Oho, and "are annversary of powered flght, wll be 250 couples attended and danced to shown na10250 on Tuesday, March 2, thal musc of Brad ent's Orchesra.e Over the years, t has the become M a atrad. 'trad. on hs electonto the offce of Presdent of the Undergraduate from 5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.. The flm, Honored guests ncluded Dr. and Mrs. t/on on' many campuses to hold an anwhch s beng,sponsored by the Aero James Rhyne Kdllan, Mrs. Wllam Assocaton. We wsh hm success, and pledge hmt our every assstance n hs new poston. nautcal Engneerng department, wll Hamlton Carlsle Sr., and Mr. Wllam nua ac opooetefn, be shovn agan on Wednesday, Mar'ch Hamlton Carlsle Jr. Ths bg dance relatons among these three f'atern 3, from 4:00 to 6:30 p.m. t ouched off many ndvdual fraternty tes. ' VCTORY The Tech extends ts congratulatons to Eldon H. Reley '55 AND A FEW SUGGESTONS n the course of the recent campagn, the canddates'brought out seversa ssues that wll be of nterest n the comng year, and offered some very constructve suggestons on a few of them. Now that the electons are over, t s possble to look back on these campagn statements and fnd the best of them. One of the most delcate of all problems s that of dscrmnaton. As has been dscovered only too often n the Southern states, t s mpossble to legslate human emotons. However, n a school such as M..T., where not only every regon of the country, but every regon of the world s represented, there s no place for' dscrmnaton. At present, most of the fraterntes that have dscrmnatory clauses are tryng to persuade ther natonal organzatons to do away wth the sectons. t has been suggested, however, that the houses ether get rd of the clause or leave the campus. n many cases ths would mean resgnng from the natonal organzaton, an acton whch some of the poorer houses smply cannot afford to take. Rather than ssung an ultmatum on ths matter, therefore, t would seem better to try to elmnate the dscrmntory clauses by "gentle forcefulness", wth a lmt of, say, fve years before more drastc acton s taken. Another problem that has been called to the attenton of most students n the last year s that of Feld Day and freshmansophomore hazng. Wth regard to Feld Day, the strategy of the last two years makes t evdent that the glove fght rules must be better defned. Other than ths one change, there s lttle wrong wth Feld Day tself. The queston of freshman hazng s another one ndeed. n recent years, hazng at the nsttute has deterorated nto an mature, adolescent desre to do someone else bodly harm for no partcular reason other tkan "lettng off steam". Some attempt was made ths past fall to allevate ths condton when nsttut4 Commttee abolshed 'rdes' and other forms of offcampus hazng. That s not enough; as hazng exsts now, t s lttle more than a htormss affar that can at tmes be extremely destructve and njurous. A possble soluton of the problem les n the enforcement of freshman rules. These rules already exst, but are vrtually gnored. Breakng of the rules, such as wearng the freshman te and knowng the M..T. songs, could be punshed by menal, but harmless tasks such as are employed by many fraterntes durng Hell Week. Such a soluton would elmnate much of the destructon and general hellrasng that goes on now. t s also necessary for student government to mantan a effcent communcaton system wth both the admnstraton and the student body. Student government by no means s forced to comply wth every request of the admnstraton, no matter how t may affect the students. However, t does not have to accept every proposal of the students, ether. t s the duty of the student government, nstead, to mantan a poston of equlbrum between the students and the faculty. Ths ncludes temperng the student's demands, as well as the faculty's. n order to better realze ts poston of mportance, student government should mnazke ts decsons known as soon as possble to the students. These are only a few of the ssues that wll come before lsttute:commttee next year. Some constructve progress wll undoulbtedly be made on all these matters to the betterment of thle nsttute. Tech Mass. A CAMPUSTOCAREER CASE HSTORY ' t~ BOB WLSON works on a "breadlboard" crcut, study. ng the electrcal propertes ot a carrer system. "n' some ways t was hard to beleve. had receved my B.E.E. at the Unversty of Delaware n June, 1953, and a week later was workng n the worldfamous Bell Laboratores. "But ddn't have tme to be awed because they put me rght to work. They gave me responsblty fast. "My goup was workng on the expermental applcaton of transstors to carrer systems: My assgnment was the electrcal desgn of'a varolosser for the compressor and for the expander to be located n the termnals. "The supervson receved and the equpment had were tops. quckly dscovered that had to rely on my ngenuty as much as on the college courses had taken. Perhaps that's one reason for the..gavlk Fresh out of school Bob Wlson, '53, was put to work on a Transstor project at Bell Laboratores. He explans why he never had tme to be awed. (Readng Tme: 39 seconds) great new dscoveres contnually turned out by the Labs. "Now, 'm n the Communcaton Development Tranng Program, contnung my techncal educaton and learnng what al the Laboratoes sectons do and how ther work s ntegrated. "n a year 'll be back workng wth the group wth whch started." * a Assumng responsblty fast s a common experence among the engneerng, phys. cal scence, arts and'socal scence, and busness admnstraton graduates who jon the Bell System. Bob Wlson went wth Bell Laboratores. There also are job opportuntes wth the 'operatng telephone companes, Western Electrc and Sanda Corporaton. tbell TELEPHONE SYSTEM r t E t L r: E = r e k9 E lk t r F : ",.",,.......r.... J m~ ~ *~ ~ ~v ~,,, ", C " 11.111,, ~... ~,..2, =~ ~;~... " all....,.... '~,, ~,

*, *%. * ',~a..~..... :,:::~,.:[. :'_;~,:~L',.,[/;'~?',....(;,?~ :.5.:~.~,:.~:f':.:/%':;'';.{.;"5"f7.?',;: ~ x' :7 ' 7, ''.,",*~ ~'? ~,~h';' :: " ~,"'~. "" ~,~'"" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. ' '',.', ': ''' ':" ;.. '. / : ' ; '~,,.' "/ = af er hours ' by John T. Chrstan, '57! + DANCES Frday, February 26, M..T.At Walker Memoral the annual Sprng Acque;ntance Dance wll be held from 8:30 to 12:30. Hal Re;eves' orchesr tr.'wll provde the musc' and the charge s $1.00. Come around and meet someone, refreshments also. NTERNATONAL NSTTUTE OF BOS TONare havng ther Mard Gras Bat tonght at the Hotel Statler. Those gong must be wearng a costume. Przes wll be gven for the best costumes and dancng couples. A ng and Queen wl offcate over the Boll. Dancng from 8:00 p.m. 1:00 a,m. to the musc of Jacques Renard and hs Orchestra. SMMONSthe Freshmen and Junors are sponsorng a Sprng Acquantance Dance at Alumn Hall tonght. General admsson 50c. There wll probably be a band, dancng From 8:00 to 2:00 p.m. HARVARDyou can meet the "fellows" at the Harvard Sprng Acquantance Danced tonght at the Harvard Unon d!nng hall. Dancngfromn 8:30 to 12. So f you are n the Harvard Square area, follow Mass. Ave. to the corner of Quncy and Prescott and gve the fellows a thrll. Safurday,. February 27 M..T.Brng your ball and char to the Burton House Dance. Tckets at $1.25 wll be avalable at the door. HARD and soft drnks wll be suppled. Try and have a good tme at ths '"Sng Sng Swng". NEWTON COLLEGE OF THE SACRED HEARTAn all College nformal Dance s beng held at the College Playhouse tomorrow from 8:00 to :2:00 p.m. Free stag nvtatons are avalable from Dck Qunn at the Catholc Club or George Wood at the'newman Club. So drop n at 385 Cenfre to dance to Jack Edwards' orchestra and have a good tme. BOSTON YWCA Art Brckley's nne pece orchestra wll play as usual for the Saturday nght dances from 8:30 to 11:45 p.rrn. at 149 ClarendonStreet. Stag admsson s 90c. M..T.The class of '57 s holdng a dance open to allclasses n the Baker House dnng room tonght from 8:00 to 12:00. Dave Jenney's orchestra s featured. Tckets are $1.80 per couple and can be obtaned from any Freshman Councl member. Tckets go on sale' March 8 n the CAMPUS 'CRUSNG lobby of Buldng 10 for M..T's. 1954 WELLESLEY tonght s Walt Dsney Mltary Ball. "MlBall", presented Nght at Wellesley. Some of the noted Dsney move cartoons wll be shown at by the Socety of Scabbard and Blade, Pendleton Hall. Sponsored bs/ ther wll be held n the Grand Ballroom of Bology Club. the Sheraton Plaza Hotel, Frday, HARVARDCheck wth the Harvard Coop for nformaton concernng the 'stu Marc 19. Tables wll surround the dent muscal presentaton of "Drumbeats end Song"; Harvard and Radchestra, Hal Reeves conductng, 'wll dance floor, and a thfteenpece orclffe's answer to Tech Show. Frday, provde the dance musc. Lquor wll < March 12. be served from the' MlBall's own RADCLFFE the freshmen are havng ther socal weedend at Radclffe to bar. The'ball :features the Queen of nght and tomorrow n the form of Freshman Weekoend. Also on campus there wll be several "JojlyUps" at some of the dormtores. JollyUps are mnor acquantance dances, SMMONSNext Saturday, March 6, and and the Frday follbwng wll nclude the Smmons Class Dance and 4unor Class Dance respectvely. Keep those chcks' guessng! CREATVE ARTS WORKSHOP s presentng' a "Calypse Carnval" tonght prevous to the ball by th~e en~trel and tomorrow nght at 8:30. Admsson student body at M..T. Pcture entres f6r the Queen of the Mltary : $1.20. 119 Hah St., Boston. South Amerca, take t away. ENTERTANMENT Ball Contest must be submtted before : ' : TOTEM POLEThs weekend the Hlltoppers (the. recordng group+, wll be be the date of a student n the Ad ::: March 12. The potental Queen must featured at the Totem Pole. Dancng vaneed ROTC Tranng Program and!:~:~! starts at 8:30, admsson per drag s must come from the Boston area. $1.75. Monda OLD HOWARD opened last Monday The honor guard for the evbnng. wll be provded by the Pershng Page Three Tckets Sales For, AMl'tary Ba// egn M arcrh Hal Reeves To Provde Aluscc: For Formal the Ball and Mss Cndy Lo'd, popular ' ' ; young MGM recordng star. Formal attre for the Mnlary Ball wll be a tuxedo, or the mltarycadet unform worn accordng to formal dress rejuratolls. zrs * One of the hghlghts of the even, ng wll be the presentaton of the Queen of the Mltary Ball elected ; '"v~,'~2 ~,.n, %,,. wth a Varfty Show. Show starts at 8:30. So for a novel date...!, Rfles, who wull also gve a drll ex /. 6, ~ BLNSTRUMSs starrng Patt Page ths hbton. At 10:30, new members ae.. ":... ', :.:, week. No cover. BOSTON GARDENShpstadsand Johnsons ce Folles, 1954, wll have ther and Blade wll have ther saber~s pr e cepted nto the Socety of Scabbard : :.,::<.~. 3 last performance Sunday nght Anyone sented to them n a tradtonal plannng to go should make ther reservafons now. : ~~~~~~~ Y~~,. :.,..,.,:~~. mltary ceremony. :.,;; c.,~l,:: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BRA!N $U8RGE / `~ FOR GUDED MSSLES = ~ p s wfundamentally, guded mssles are, ~'~ 9 planes wthout plots or "plot J { Ad < ) ~~~less" arcraft. To enable the mssle to fulfll ts msson, a substtute s needed for the human element. M NS <'@ Our"bran surgeons"... scentsts \<~~~ Wok ~ and engneers of Bell Arcraft's electroncs and servomechansms departments... suppy ths substtute. Complex electroncs systems are the brans of a mssle. Servomechansms provde the "muscles." Engneers are needed to develop these mportant "branmusdcle" systems. kf G t ~, ~You.can't lrr possbly fnd a more hal. lengng or satsfactory assgnment! ELECTRONC ENGNEERS o MECHANCAL ENGNEERS * AERONAUTCAL ENGNEERS PHYSCeSTS MA1THEMATCANS Contact your Placement Drector to arrange for as ppontment on... March 4th and 5th or WrWe to ENGNEERNG PERSONNEL S THEATRE Glbert and Sullvan'sTral by Jury and H.M.S. Pnnafore wll be presented tonght and tomorrow nght by the college group of the Frst Congregatonal Church of Cambrdge. Near Harvard Square on Garden Street. NTERNATONAL STUDENT ASSOCA TONf you are around the Hrvard Square area tonght, you mght drop c,vr.. ;.,.. :.. j ;: : : rj :: Q. '" : Mss Cndy Lord, popular snger who wll appear at the Mltary Ball. ~.,, ~ ~~L ~ ~~ ~. 0. ^ lp \Rhers you~ know yourl beer re, v. lt s0r Enjoy ssua~esser Today UN T se People who go places and do thngs prefer Bud. And there's a very good rason for Budweser's superorty... t s brewed and aged by the costlest process known to gve Bud the dstnctve taste that has pleased a... more people than any other beer n hstory..;: : :~,,. F,~ 0 1 d<r~ ) "'" cts~~ P.O. Box 1 Buffalo 5, N.Y. CORPO RATON 3533.1 ANHEUSERBUSCH, NC; ST. LO15$ lmo. NEWA!RK N.J. _c X as t "', t_.,. _..: :~,, _ V, A PP Cml4c ; Y l 'L' _

;.x A ~,:.. _ E ;::~ ~, ~" )7 :... ~~;.......,? :: : :agfour Ru dznsk, Team. 1Take ]3' Crowns N WthUpsetW V ns ' Tech's varsty squash standout, Paul.Rudznsk '54, upset topseeded Shepard Holt to wn the class B state tourney. Tralng by a 106 count n' the fnal game, Rudznsk ralled to take the gam e and the ttle. The tournament wetn along strctly accordng to form as Rudznsk elmnated fourth seeded Ted Rose of Harvard, 30, n the. semfnals; whle Holt, a Tech grad, edged Harvard frosh Ben Hecksher, 31. The ttle match proved an endurance contest as nether man could take a clearcut advantage. Rudznsk won ;the frst' two games only to have Holt rally n both the thrd and fourth game..to deadlock the ssue. The fnal 'count saw Rudznsk wnnng 1512, 1817, 1315, 1418, 1513. n a tremendous uphll battle, the T: ech'varsty clnched the state B team champonshp wth a 41 wn over the.harvard Club. Ths gave the ;arsty a record of 3411 compared to the 3312 slate for the second place Tech facultygraduates. Throughout the entre season, the varsty had traled the facultygraduates by as much as fve games n the losng column, but a fne 182 surnge n ther last four matches gave them the ttle. Paul Goldn '54, Paul Rudznsk, Hugh Harrman '54, and. John Mela :: vas '54, provded the four allmpor ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,, t ' :. =:,;=zs;2:. ' r..: Paul Rudznss '54 ;. 1 L'l tant wns. The ffth member ok the team, cocaptan Hossen Nasr '54, suffered a tough defeat. Rudznsk (M) defeated Flaschner (HC) 1513, 1510, 158. Goldn (M) defeated Shapro (H.C) 158, 1510, 156. Harrmnan (M) defeated Kaufman '. ',,...:~.::.:.:Y: ~'~.,,:, : ' ;.,. ', :, St. George ' r Beats Freshmen rz, Swm mng MgnngM Meet 'The freshman swmmelrs wll put ther seasonal record of four vctores aganst three losses squarely on the lne tomorrow afternoon whep tley play host to the frosh of Boston U. and Tufts n a bg threeway meet. The frst race wll begn at 2:30 n the Alumn Pool. The class of '57's most, recent engagement was ths past Wednesday when they were thumped by St. George's, 4827, n the home pool. The frosh dsplayed far from tjher best performance, and wll have to be n much better form f they are to pck up wnnng ponts n tomorrow's duel. Especally n the three freestyle races and n the backstroke were the Techmen lackng n strength as they faled to pnk up ether frst or second,places n these events. M..T. ted up the meet n the second race when Chuck Mallett and Henry Cotter fnshqd onetwo n thl 10)0 yard breast stroke after St. George's had accomplshed a smar feat n the openng 50 yard freestyle event. But after that the vstors wasted no tme n dunkng the Frosh as they (HC) 1511, 1512, 1215, 1510. chalked up 24 ponts to Tech's three Melavas (M) defeated Grant (HC) n the next three events. Ths gave 1817, 1512, 1512. them a staggerng 3311 lead gong Relly,(HC) defeated Nasr (M) '1515, nto the dvng; and they put the 1716, 158. frostng on the puddng n the battle.. f! F. A,. FEBRUARY 26j154 ''~~~~~~~~~~~ ' ' ~~~~~ ~ ~~ '% 'd '~. 4. of the sprng'board when Bll Scott's 50 yad freestyle1.. Summers (2n, qeo.).. Parsons (St. Geo.). 3 Gerson (M..T.) t w'w dves = Lrave VGssJ.them fve,fancy. ons 26.3.. 100 yard breststrokel. Mallett (M..T.), 2. eenough to clnch the meet. Cotter (M..T.). 3. Hll (St. Geo.) 1:1O.3. 200 yrrd,freestyle1. Ceres (St. Ceo.). 2. Hanley (St. Geo.), 3.. Brosens (M..T.), 2:15.1. 100 yard backstroke1. Chapple (St. Geo.), 2. owe (St. Geo.), 3. Doble (M.L.T.) 1:11.9. yoo yard freesty!el. Geenty. (St. Geo.), E 2. Ceres (St.,Geo,), 3. Orlot (M..T.) 57.2. dvnm1. Scott (St. Geo,').5'26 ponts, 2.' Coach Roy Merrtt looks for hs charges to show'mnprovement over Wednesday's meet and to gve a good shownb n tomorrow's mportant 6ontest aganst B. U.'and Tufts. The statstcs: Bryson' (M..T.), S. F&;aone (M..T.). 15 yard nd. melleyl. Cooter (M..T,) 2 Smth (St. Geo.). 8. Doble (M..T.) 1:47.7. 150 yard medley relayl. M..T. ('St. Geo. d. qualfed). No offcal. tme. '200 yard freetylr relay 1. St. George's 1.44.4. cked l n the Face by a Bootee or... Who Ever Called t a "'Blessedl Event".? Once there was a Sophomore Who stamp and dropped the Mssve n hada Sster. He also had a Grl. As the Mals. Concdence would have! t, both fe Our Sophomore stll has a sster males labored under the Baptsmal named Ermntrude. No' Grl. And he Handcap of Ermntrude. Snmall world. stll has No dea why. The sster (call her Ermnttrude for Had he but had a Telegrammar, he'd the record) got marred. n due proc have Knawn Enough to send Ss and ess, she produced an Offsprng. So,' Spouse a handsome Congratulatons fraternallke, Our Boy sat down and telegram. (Telegrammar an deawrote her a Letter of C,ongratula packed, pocketsze gude to teletons, startng " hear yc)u have a graph use. To get one, free, just wrte Baby..." Only trouble was, he for to Room 1727, Western Unon at 60 got to mal t. Went off for the Week Hudson St., New York Cty.) Telethere hs grams get to thp Rght Destnaton end, leavng t on hs desk, Roommate spotted t.... carry Good News, nvtatons, The latter, beng The Soul of Honor, Bds for Dates (or Cash) more result the lead fully than any other Form of Com ddn't read any farther thazn off... whch was, logcalley enough, muncaton. When you have a mes at a sage to send that Means Somethng, "Dear Ermntrude." Jumrpng Concluson, he addressed an enve just call Western Unon or aprnt to lope'to Ermntrude 1, sla1pped on a your Western Unon offce. 18 Boylston S! treet Tel. K 78910,.. L, a _ KCB,, 'g~ ELECTRCAL '~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~"'''''~ ;..t,.... ~~:'":::::::::5.'j~!! : _~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'!''~~ ENGNEERS.a7d PHYSCSTS HUGHES RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT LABO RATORES last year added toc ther Staff 75 graduates n Eectrcal Engneerng arnd Physcs from colleges and unverstes throughout the country. n addton, more than,go ther graduates joned the Hughes organzaton for contnued opportuntes n ther felds through the HUGHES COOPERATVE FELLOW SHP PROGRAM FOR MASTER OF SCENCE DEGREES. Ths s a contnung plan to assst outstandng graduates n obtanng ther Master of Scence Degrees whle employed n ndtlstry and makng sgnfcant contrbutons to mportant mltary work. } Hugh}es, one ofthe natotf's leadng advanced electroncs trgatzatons s located n Sout/lern Calfortla. Colhge and unversty gradluates vwho qualj? twork ln thefollouwng dvslons at Hughcs:, RADAR LABORATORY GUDED MSSLE LABORATORY.'' :?..' ADVANCED ELECTRONCS LABORATORY ELECTRON TUBE LABORATORY!! v >:@:jf: :'9 ':g. " :: l!~ :::..:r:,~:.~s:.::. MCROWAVE LABORATORY SEMCONDUCTOR DEVCES FELD ENGNEERNG. Z.< t r :...back Hstory n 1342 repe *!...: L. l. ~~a fav~orte alnx ~~~~~Today Scha et.. beer {~hat; wn: seday. The teaa t.!:'~.., C :. :::;:.::::::::::::::::::::: '. V'. N: R:H D A : :,: ::::::::::::::::: RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT personnclwork wth Radar Systems, Scrvomnechansms, Computers, Systems Analyss, nformaton Theory, Automatc Controls, Physcal Analyss, Mcrowave Tubes, Pulse Crcutry, Semconductor Physcs, Dodes, Transstors, Photo Devces, Test Equpment Desgn, Mnaturzaton, Electromechancal Desgn, Gyros, Hydraulcs, Submnatulrzaton, Mechancal Desgn, nstrumentaton, Telemeterng, Antennas, Wave Gudes. ENGNEERNG WORK NCLUDES THE FELDS OF Techncal Wrtng, Msse Feld Engneerng, Engneerng Admnstraton, Radar and Mssle nseructon, Radar Feld Engneerng, Patent Law. HOW TO APPLY: Con.ht your PlacementOffer. for personal appontment wth a mnember of our Engneerng Staff Jh,, wll vst your campus March 3rd and 4tAh SCENTFC AND ENGNEERNG STAFF HUGHES RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT LABORATORES' lculve,acty, Los Angeles County, Calfornz L OUR _ LL L L H A, s N E V E R tl'o S T, T S :,'.K L.The F. & M. Schaefer rewnk o., New York :1,' _ r._. YM*Mla L Y*rm" r*l ;DUU,._, t

FRDAY, 'FEBRARY 26;.^ 19,54, ThTe / J1.... Tech Cagers Bow To Mass. U., 6447 SnappngWmrmng.,Streak At Fve Ganes After Topplng Weslyan By 6861 After downng a favored Weslyanboth the scorng and reboundng defve, 6861,. on: Saturday nght for ts partments, were Weber ana Schultz ffth wf n a row, V.T.'s basketeers who scored 18 and 16 ponts respecbowed before the Unversty of Massa tvely. Hess chpped n wth 12 and chusetts, 6447, on Tuesday. When Jack "Tger" Brtt netted 7. Larry asked the reason for hs teams Hallee, n the bref tme he played abrupt aboutface, Tech Coach "Scot plunked 6 mportant ponts and played ty" Whtelaw sad that the dfference mpressve ball. n effectveness of Carl Hess '55 and Thrteen was Tech's unlucky num Stan Shlensky %55, two of hs. teams ber n the UMass gaame. That was the manstays, between games and the shootng percentage n the.frst half. drop n shootng pereentage suffered t accounts for the 156 score after by the team as a whole were the the frst quarter and the 3217 halfdecsve factors. tme count. Ptful shootng eyes The story of the Weslyan game was were not the only reason for ths poor the story of W..T.'s superor heght. For three perods the Cardnals led on the strength of ther extraodnarly M.. T. accurate shootng. They sunk bgtween fg ts 40 and 50% of ther shots. Pete Weber, rf... 5 l 11 Nxon, a guard Nxon, a wth agreat a great setshot, etshotchrste Schultz, f...... 0 5 2 2 Bob Hazen, a jump shot artst, and Hallee... D 2 Don Numes domnated the game. n Shlensky, c... 0 2 2 contrast to ths dependance on sharp Fredman... 0 2 shootng the Beavers reled on Gf Hess, rg... 3 2 8 Byrnes... 0 ford Weber '55, Allen "Dutch" Schultz Brtt, g... 2 1 5 '54, and Shlensky to monopolze the Paterno... 3 backboards and thereby gve them... {8 { 47 three or four shots for every one U 8 MASS. Weslyan took. t was a close, exctng * fs tp gam e to w atch. Aho, f... 5 1 11 Fnally, after two mnutes of the Frye... 0 2 2 Eld, rf... 3 8 14 fourth quarter were gone, Hess put McDonough, c... 2 2 6 Tech ahead to stay wth a drvng, MacLeo rg d,... 2 2 6 curlng layup. The Beavers scored 18 Howard... 5 0 10 ponts n that perod as compared to Berman, 19... 9 for the Cardnals. Conceson... 2 3 3 2 7 8 The bg men n M.T.T.'s vctory, n 22 20 64 showng. An excellent saggng man to man defense completely bottled up all nsde shootng. Tech's 6' 6" center Stan Shlensky was held to two ponts. Up to ths game he had averaged n double fgures. An nterestng sdelse concernng ths years record s that M..T. has l'st only one of ts sx home games but has won only one of ther sx away contests. Happly ther two remanng games, wth Stevens Tech and Tufts College, are both to be played n the frendly confnes of Walker Memoral. W eber, rf... Schultz, f... Halee... S hlensk y, c... Hess. rg... Brtt, g... Byrnes... Chrste... Hazen, g... M lewsk... Nxon, rg... ngraham... Tremper, c... Ranscht, f... Peakes... Numes, rf... TSAllW ATR@ AT.. PageFve Tracksters WVn, 'Weghtlfters Wn Top NortheasternSecond Straght For Two n RowEastern Crown The Tech track team swept to ther The M..T. varsty weghtlftng second straght vctory of the season team gave a repeat o last year's performance by takng frst place n the over a stubborn Northeastern squad at Brggs Feld last Saturday. The Eastern ntercollegate weghtlftng overall strength of the team, so evdent aganst Bowdon, agan enabled year, edgng out C.C.N.Y. by a score champonshps, for the second straght Tech to ple up a large margn of of 1917. ndvdual wnners were ponts to wn by a score of 6741. Arthur Butz '55, Tom Alexander '56, Warren Lattof '56 started the vctory parade by wnnng the hgh Arthur Butz, one of the naton's top and Ralph Wanger '56. hurdles. Tecl followed ths up by weghtlfters, was by far the most sweepng the ffty yard dash, whch mpressve performer. Butz's total of was won by Syd Klen '54, who also 740 pounds for the three lfts was 140 won the 300, and barely mssng a pounds hgher than the score of hs closest compettor, Donald Moskowtz of C.C.N.Y. Art lfts n the 165 pound class. record tme for the event. Capt. an Wlhams '54 fnshed an easy second behnd teammate Klen n the 600. Tech also swept the pole vault. Rchard ellen and Ed Shea were the standouts of the Northeastern M.. T. team. Ollen,'closely hounded by Shea, fg fs tp set a new Northeastern record n the 7 4 18 mle wth a flashy 4:17.8. Shea, the 8 0 16 New England two mle champ, came 3 0 6 back to.wn the two mle event beatng out Ray Smth '56 of Tech n a 3 2 8 5 2 12 1 5 7 thrllng duel for frst place. 0 { The deal weather condtons were 0 0 0 n part responsble for the exceptonal tmes, and all n all, the meet was a Wanger's 525 pound total n the 132 pound class marked a tremendous clmax to hs steady mprovement 'over the last year. The most exctng event of the day was suppled when Tom Alexander just edged out teamate George Ploussous n the 148 pound class. A mere 10 pounds separated the contenders. n wnnng, Tech bested representatves from C.C.N.Y., N.Y.U., Farlegh Dckenson, Brooklyn College, and the Polytechnc nsttute of Brooklyn. 27 14 68 successful one for Tech n almost WESLEYj FAN every respect. The freshman team dd portuntes n the frst perod, and fg fs tp not fare as well as the varsty however, bo wng to the Northeastern Goale Sandy Atken '56 and defensemen John Kley '54 and Harold Wells 5 5 15 1 3 frosh 3068. 9 2 20 '55 prevented Holy Cross from scorng 0 2 '. twce wth mraculous scrambles n O 2 Skaters front of the net. John L. Sullvan '56 2 0 411 J (Contnued from page 1) 0 2 fnally opened the scorng at 17:03 as 5 3. 13 up wth t.wo scores and won ts second he receved a perfect pass from Fred.1 vctory of the year. Culck '56 n front of the cage and 25 61 Each team mssed many scorng op slapped the puck n. Kley and Sullvan both sustaned penaltes mmedately after the frst score, and the Crusaders talled wth only four Tech men on the ce. Jm Bartsch '55 gave the Engneers a momentary lead at 11:26 wth a "rfle shot" score asssted by Bff Baker '%5 and Walt Duffn '54. The Crusaders countered fve mnutes later to agan te the score. n the fnal perod Culck gave Tech the decdng goal wth a rebound shot asssted by Sullvan and moments later Sullvan skated n on a solo, faked the goale out of poston and scored the fnal tally of the game to make the fnal score 42. " THE MOTHER CHURCH 33ell FALMOUTH, NORWAY AND ST. PAUL STREETS, BOSTON Sunday servces 10:45 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Sunday School 10:45 a.m.; Wednesday eve meetngs at 7:30, whch nclude fest nng mones of Chrstan Scence healng. Readng RoomsFree to the Publc 237 Huntngfon Avenue 84 Boyls'on St. Lffle Bldg. 8 Mlk Sfreet Authorzed end approved lferafjre' en Chrstan Scence may be read or obtaned. ALL ARE WELCOME Roosevelt t zm, ': ffmmm2 COR., TH AMERCAN TOBACCO COMPANY A V UCKES TASTE BETTE~RE'HR# ~ ~ ~~~SOTE SPECAL STUDENT RATES $4.50 per person per day Three n a room $5.50 per person per day Two n a room $6.50 per person per day One n a room All rooms wth shower and bath Hotel convenent to all entertanment Home of Roosevelt GrllGuy Lombardo For nformaton and reservatons wrte Anne Hllman, College Representatve HOTEL OOSE VEJLT A HLTON HOTEL lt the heart of New York Ct>y at Madson Avenue and 45th Street

~~~~~~~~ _ : as ;,,f3 ''' e lke t :'.:,)One of the ra're treats of the school :j year oceurred last Sunday as the M.': ;.;T. Humantes 'Seres presented. noted :tlhe concert panst Ernst Levy. t An audence.whch nearly flled ; small Huntngton Hall compensated,." for ts. lack of sze by ts strrng recepton for the artst who ptovded what was undoubtedly the fnest mus.. cal event of the year at M..T. ' At the start of the program t was evdent that Mr. Levy was faced wth. a dua taskthat of tryng to perform :'Beethoven's dffcult Hammerkaver. sonata, and at the same tme, adjust ng : hmself to what was close t6 beng : the worst possble condtons n whch to' gve a rectal.. Asde : from some unpleasant sounds from the "off stage" lecture.preparaton room, and an occassonal bangng of the rear entrance doors, the only TEMPLE SRAEL 602 Commonwealth Ave. at Kenmore Square Frday, February 26 8:15 P.M. COLLEGE NGHT FOR GREATER BOSTON STUDENTS Rabb Roland B. Gttelsohn wll speak on "WHAT SHOULD WE EXPECT.OF A COLLEGE GRADUAT3E" ALL ARE WELCOME.3..v ) C1 r q*x,,, 'r : ' " " '' :: " '..'' " rc,,,:r,..rr 3P;lka : K '\' :.,,:DaY,. Be F " [a;...: 26, 14 ~ ' t,z, _ 1 ~ nose was that esultng from.the, "My Three Angels"A delghtful comedy The names of Lennard' Wharton '55 nscomm echos n a "concert hal" far better concernn g. three convcts and ther efhelp an unsuccessful busnessman (Contnued f r e m page 1) and Thomas A. Marlow: '55 were subamtted, but other canddates :many be (orts tct suted to the talents :'f Professor n French Guana: Pymouth Tleatrel Mueller than to those of Mr. Levy. "By the Beautful Sea"Ths. new muscal Brooks '55," was turned down, manly proposed at the next meetng of ns comm. Ths next meetng on March 10 The fnal movements, adago and ' takes place n Coney sland af theturn of on the grounds that the posssblty largo, of the sonata were thngs of the centoury. Shrley Booth s starred. Shuatre. that allfraternty and alldor rmtory wll be the last for the old commttee. sheer 'beauty, born of years of pe rt Th tckets mght arse, reducng the ef After they elect a Judconm charman ĊONCERTS' formance, and executed wth a perfect FREE ~ CON fectve representaton of one lvng and fnsh the busness of the meetng, CERT the Chorus Pro Musca balance and understandn'g. lthough,, an'd'he 1Brass Enser be,;'musca organza' g''..at *thc c' pn~ Se of_ the aoher.. the members wll yeld ther places to Mr. Levy s not a young man, not tons run by graduate students from +he Nomnatons were accepteed, for 'the new group headedby Eldon H. n the Boston area, wll gve a once could he be found lacklng n colleges charman of the'judcal Cornmttee. Reley '55., ncert n 'Trnty Church, Copley sprt and force. Square, Sunday, February 25, at 8:30. Both groups are very good. Some of the members n the Brass Ensemble are n '`he 1, Boston Ssymphony Orchestra. After Hours (Contnued from..age S) n at 33 Garden Street and see "The Conference", a very excellent play produced by an Amercae member of the nternateonal Student Assocaton. t wll be presented at 8:30 'by ther Lght Drama Group. Frday, February 26 "Dnner at EghY'Students of Emerson College wll present ths play on Frday and Saturday nghts, February 26 and 27. Tckets are avalable at 'he door. Emerson Theatre. 130 Beacon Street. "Guys and Dolls"Ths zany muscal based on Damon Runyon's short stores s stll gong strong n Boston. One of the outstandng moments occurs when the show. grls of the HotBox Cafe sng "Take Back Your Mnk". Colonal Theatre. 11 ADVERTSEMENT Late 1928, '4door Packard, roomy nteror, jump seats, very good runnng condton, new batteres, good tres of whch one s new. Straght out of the Natonal Geographc. Queen of the hghway. Watertght bulkheads, thgh wheel base, not complcated by automatc shft. Perfect for' the Mt. Washngton ascent. $50.00. Call Ted Mnauch, Wellesley College. W:ellesley 50320. G.L. FROST CO:, NC. AUTOMOBLE BODY REPARNG 8 REFNSHNG F. E. PERKNS 31 LANSDOWNE STREET, Tel. EL ot 49100. CAMBRDGE, MASS. No Cover _ No Mnmum ENGNEERED FO' MEN :AT, TECH 2 ALTERNATNG BANDS Dukes of THE UAD A Lathan Dxe Jazz Tro The ntercollegatenght Club Hotel Buckmnster o Kenmore Square Low Prces,7 :30 p. m. to Closng Dancng foptags lokes er e S e Bes a~te lver a e 1. z z Em f,.,, RESTRNG WTH ".. 1, :t':. : '!,'STANDS OUT * Harder Smashes o Better Cut and Spn STANDS UP n your rocket * Mosture mmune * Lastng Lveness, COSTrSE S eh>s~ APPROX. SK O COST, ProFectd Bratld...$6.00 multply Brtd... $.00 At tenns shops and sportn goods stores, Want to travel and studya abroad? Take a unverstysponored tour va 'TWA ths sumner and earn full college. credt whle you travel', Vst the countres of your choce.. study frotn 2 to 6 eeks at a foregn unversty. You can do both on one trp when you arrange a un 'rerstysponsored tour va TWA. tnerares nclude countres n Europe, the Mddle East, Asa and Afrca. Specal study tours avalable.. Lof allnclusve prces wth TWA's economcal Sky Tourst servce. For nformaton, wrte: John H. Furbay, Ph.D., Drector, Ar World Tours, Dept. CN, 380 Madson Ave., ]New York 17; N. Y. Be sure to mnenlon countres you wsbh to vst, / CGPohr 1P4. KL 8sM& lvasftoso Co.. 8 W x,..!. r :C.jr7.L. c.*... ' ; 0:. a. L 1.1 '' ''' rj :" 0.." ''..,, :, 1 : '( / 1_1 j \,..'... `.....1 " : ' ' ' L