WHO IS
SOLLY GOLD!
18-Year-Old Boy Gets MIT Doctorate in Mathematics
BOSTON — An 18-year-old boy
w h o never formally graduated
from high school or college re-
ceived a PhD in mathematics last
week from the Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology.
EVERY
WEDNESDAY IS 49er DAY
Dip Into All of the Golden
BUTTERMILK PANCAKES
You Can Eat
C
For Only
Bring Along
Your Prospectors
15325 W. 8 MILE RD.
1360 SO. WOODWARD
10001 TELEGRAPH
Harvey M. Friedman of Chicago
will soon begin work as an as-
sistant professor of logic at Stan-
ford University.
Dr. Friedman began taking in-
structions in mathematics from
his father at the age of 7, easily
completed elementary school and
high school and entered MIT at
the age of 15, and, after receiving
a bachelor's and master's degree,
obtained his PhD.
MIT said he was the youngest
student ever to receive a doctorate
from the school.
In Stanford, in Palo Alto, Cal.,
Dr. Friedman will teach two
graduate course s, one in a
branch of logic known as recur-
sion theory and the other in the
foundations of mathematics. His
salary will be about $10,000 a
year.
Dr. Friedman said that the fact
that he will be many years younger
than his students "won't make any
difference to me. I don't care .. .
And they (his students) probably
won't either."
Born in Chicago in 1948, Dr.
Friedman claims he had a "com-
pletely normal childhood" despite
his flair for mathematics. In the
eighth grade he passed all high
school mathematics courses after
having taken instruction from his
father.
At age 11, he began taking col-
lege courses, attending the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma and North-
western University before entering
MIT.
Dr. Friedman said of American
education, "Everyone has more
creative ability than they are al-
lowed to express. The pressures
of American society are too great
to allow for creativity unless you
get luck. I was lucky."
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
30—Friday,September 29, 1967
Ows to the Unusual
Subhmt of this
Motion Picture,
Words Cannot
Describe the
Contents
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1.1„ 1:,
FRI., MON., TUES.: Open 6:45, shown
7:00, 10:35. SAT. EVE: Open 6:45,
shown 9:05 only. SUN.: Open 1:00,
shown 3:25, 7:00, 10:35.
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FRI., MON., TUES.: 8:45 only. SAT.
EVE.: 7:05, 10:40. SUN.: 1:25, 5:00,
8:40.
SAT.: Matinee Children's Show
Open 1:00 Starts 1:20, Over 4:20
B•RKLEY THEATRE
LI 2-0330
12 MILE AT COOLIDGE
FO
WO 14111
►ilEE /MI MB
First Curtain
In Three Weeks
THE IMPORTANCE OF
BEING EARNEST
The years
1967 and 1968
hereby cede
18 hours
of their time
to the
following
times and places:
THE GOLDEN AGE, WOOLTON, HERTFORDSHIRE, ENGLAND
1891, NORWAY
1892, OXFORD, ENGLAND
JUST YESTERDAY, LEUCADIA, MISSISSIPPI
842, BRITAIN
EVERYDAY, HELL
1937, A CITY IN FLAMES
1897, RURAL RUSSIA
18 hours apart from the Electronic Age. Away from the
everyday push. Away from the everyday world. 18 hours in the
world of the Meadow Brook Theatre. 21/2 hours on seven
nights in places and times only the stage can bring you—the
second season of one of America's finest repertory companies,
the John Fernald Company, professional repertory company
in residence at Oakland University. A season
you should not miss.
a
by Oscar Wilde
October 6 through November 5
JOHN GABRIEL
BORKMAN
by Henrik Ibsen
November 10 through December 10
CHARLEY'S AUNT
by Brandon Thomas
December 15 through January 14
AND PEOPLE ALL
AROUND •
by George Sklar
January 19 through February 18
KING LEAR
by William Shakespeare
February 23 through March 24
NO EXIT
by Jean-Paul Sartre
THE FIREBUGS
by Max Frisch
March 29 through April 28
THE SEA GULL
by Anton Chekhov
May 3 through June
2
18 hours, seven nights
—yours for the price
of a season ticket.
r
I would like more information
about the second season of the
Meadow BrtOok Theatre. espe-
cially information regarding
season tickets.
1
Name
Address
City
State
Zip code
L
Mail to: Meadow Brook
Theatre, Oakland Univer-
sity, Rochester, Michigan
48063
feavie'61)04
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