Parking lot to the salisbury sports to register accessories central 's Overture for the Dedication of a Nuclear Reactor, was performed by the Rochester Philharmonic. At the University of Chicago he also became interested computer-produced music. Recently, Dr. Roberts has been involved another piece of unusual research, this time a study of the possibility of using the ocean as a giant detector of neutrinos. He told a Fermilab seminar recently that devices located five kilometers down the ocean prove useful as detectors for neutrinos with energies ten to a hundred times higher than that of Fermilab neutrinos. Such a device might also detect supernova explosions distant galaxies up to ten million light-years away where the neutrinos originated. The possibility of locating such a detector off the coast of Hawaii be the subject of a workshop at the University of Hawaii next which he is leading. Meanwhile, as one of the stars of The Physical Revue performed by physicists and physicist's wives at the meeting of the American Physical Society New joshed and spoofed the profession what a New Times reviewer called a medley of staggering variety. He returned home time to help direct the Hyde Park group their performance of the and Sullivan operetta The Gondoliers. It was their 17th joint musical production. They both agree that the camaraderie and the excitement of producing a musical keep them coming back for just one more. Source: The Village Crier Vol. 8 No. 16, 22 Benjamin as head of Fermilab's Theoretical Physics Department, is frequently asked what the new discoveries high energy physics mean, where is the field headed, what is going to happen next? Dr. comments on these matters the following remarks prepared for a seminar for science writers at the recent meeting of the American Physical Society: There is exhilaration the air wherever particle physics is discussed these days, excitement about the rapid progress that has taken place the last few years. On the theoretical side, we have glimpsed the unity of all forces that act among particles; we have constructed a theoretical framework which to unify three forces nature the -called electromagnetic and weak forces, and perhaps even the strong force which is responsible for binding quarks to form hadrons The unified understanding of these forces nature demands that there be at least one more quark the charmed quark and perhaps other quarks and even heavier forms of electrons and muons, of the family of weakly interacting particles we call leptons. If there is a charmed quark, there ought to be charmed hadrons made up of charmed quarks and ordinary quarks. On the experimental side, there have been a number of indications that we might already have seen such particles. It is likely that we have discovered charmed particles and a heavy lepton, although profusion of the new events clouds our vision at the moment. When I explain to family and friends what I do and how we go about it, I often liken the process of physics research to solving a jigsaw puzzle As we put together pieces to form patches, a certain image of the overall picture emerges, but until the game is sufficiently progressed, we are not quite sure. I feel much the same way about the wealth of signs for new particles. We have patches that have been put together, but we are not quite sure how all pieces fit together into a coherent whole. There are also certain pieces which do not seem to fit into any patches at all. For the most part, the experimental findings have not been completely unexpected, but there have been certain surprises that I, for one, had not foreseen. This is what makes particle physics exciting and tantalizing. At moments of despair and frustration, I feel as though somebody has scrambled two boxes of jigsaw puzzles for me to put together. But I believe what Einstein once said: God is subtle but He is not malicious. Aside from the new particles we have spoken of far, there are several new objects we must discover. Can quarks be liberated from the confines of a hadron? Prevailing theoretical prejudice says