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Page 33 text:
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rute Committee :ance tg under' rommittee was t World War. xSiS during this its former two :rous problems assistance. lg nresenting stu. dministration, ie committees l eight faculty Out personal ilty. The very licity, but the ons for chang. ttee this past I on to those is gaining in tic changes in will greatly THEY COUNT THE BALLOTS Another essential adjunct to student government at Technology is the Elections Committee. Least known least 7 often encountered cog in the machine of undergraduate life 3 the Elections Committee nevertheless performs its functions regularly and efiiciently to keep the organization of student affairs at the Institute one of the best in American colleges. Charged with the task of announcing, running and re- porting student elections-Junior Prom and Senior Week Committees in the fall, class officers for the four classes in the spring, and the freshman council at intermediate times- the committee has annually carried out these tasks with expedition. Theirs is a job Which, though not difficult, puts upon them a large volume of work in short periods. It has been their duty to develop the preferential voting system so that it can be employed efficiently at Tech. This system re- quires more time and effort for the committee to set up and operate than any other form of balloting. However, they have done their work Well. In spite of several attempts early in the winter to reor- ganize the committee, the group, by the action of the Insti- tute Committee, was retained in its present form, with Franklin P. Seeley at the head of the six sophomores and six juniors who do the work of the committee. Schnell, McClelland, Rowe, Schoenwald Tyrrell, Artz, Childerhose, Marakas, Ottinger, Brown FRANKLIN P. SEELEY ' Chairman Elections Committee l29l
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Page 32 text:
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CARL L. McGINNIS Chairman Student-Faculty Committee Secretary of Institute Committee FUR A BETTER UNDERSTANDING An important sub-committee of the lnstitute Committ ec . under- graduate life is not in any way small. The committee Wa s is the Student-Faculty Committee. Its importance to instituted Shortly after the close of the hrst World War Tech had been on a three semester speed-up basis duringthig period and at the end of the war returned to its former two semester schedule. This switch-back left numerous problems which could not be solved without student assistance. In essence, the committee acted as a means of presenting gm- dent opinions and ideas in a fair light to the administration, It soon proved very valuable in this work and the Committees function was carried on with eight student and eight faculty members. The committee is active in smoothing out personal matters between the student body and the faculty. The very nature of their work does not lend itself to publicity, bugthe results are more than gratifying. Many suggestions for Chang. es in the curriculum have come to the committee this pm year and after due discussion have been passed on to those directly concerned. The committees function is gaining in importance since the school is considering drastic changes in both curriculum and administration which will greatly affect both the student body and the faculty. DlcCinnis, Hull-ll. Luffoon. Foster. Sa-liullv T281 C l THEY Ant Technol often er the Elem fegularl affairs a Ch: porting Commit the spri the con expediti upon th been thc that it 4 quires rr operate have dog In s ganize t. tute Co Franklir six junic
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Page 34 text:
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E GI EER BECGME To some two hundred students the word publication has a very special meaning, for to them it spells not the reading of written material but the writing of collegiate periodicals This is a full time job and demands men of all talents. i The M.I.T. two hundred are responsible for TL V00 Deo, The Tech Ezzgineermg Neuur, and TECHNIQUE, an 6 Tech, d more recently for the newcomer, Vu. Each has its particular func- tion, and each plays a necessary part in rounding outthe Institute student year. Twice a week the student body is given a newspaper summary of Institute social, athletic, scholastic, and religious activities in The Tech, while once a month the school funny. men see what they can do to provoke a laugh from the stu. dent body with the pages of their humor magazine, Vee DW, The Tech Ezzgifzeering Neuxr, Americas number one student Engineering publication, surveys monthly the scientific and engineering situation with photographs and timely articles. At the end of the year the yearbook, TEcHNiQUE, comes out as a lasting record of all undergraduate functions-journaling a composite private life of the Tech man. Youngest publica- tion, an offspring of The Tech, is Vu, which promises to be one of the most popular life magazines on the market, with its seasonal picture coverage of Life at Tech. ADVISORY COUNCIL essor Fasselt, hir. Killian, llc-un Lnlnlvll i i l 1 T301 .Og O O Malcolm Donn W- Frederick Albert F. Bernard E Leo Fei Warren E. Roland G James T. 1 Orvis B. I J. Henry I A. Carletc Warne P. 1 Edwin B. John O. K Robert J. John W. I William R Cathrae IV Charles D John W. IN Carl L. M 5 M
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