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(EoMttrttrut latly (Eamjms a. o3 Serving Storrs Since 1896 .-a c:o> fill IMVI'tSITVOI 'OVMI llfl I STORRS Till RSDAY, MAY 4, 1067 VOl. I.VM V> • »« ■ International Fair Sunday Offers Variety of Fun The International Fair, to be formed by Stavros Kottarldls All of the groups will appear held on Sunday, May 7, 1967 from Greece and Turay Ucal from in costume and give their per- from 2-5 p.m. at the Interna- Turkey. A 4-H group from Storrs formance on the terrace immed- tional House and surrounding will also dance as they have been iately outside the International Mirror Lake area, will be the Instructed by Miss Ucal. House at different Intervals dur- scene of a variety of fascina- From the Philippines comes ing the course of the afternoon. ting foreign entertainment. a group of our own foreign stu- Another member of the cast, A group of sixteen students dents who will demonstrate the who will not dance and who Is from the Immaculate Conception intricate bamboo pole dance. a native American but who nev- School In Putnam, Conn, will pre- Carol Whltaker will perform ertheless must be treated as an sent a demonstration of Lithu- the Maori pol dance from New interesting personnage Is Chris- anian folk dances, while an Am- Zealand and Patrick Mandowa tine Maty].is. Chosen as this erican group, called the "Wind- with several friends will sing year's UConn Ambassador to Po- ham Whlrlers" will give ex- songs from Malawi accompan- land, Christine will work at the hibition square dances. ied by two guitars. fair. Alfred Campbell, an Andover resident, will appear lnfull nigh- Noted \merntn "Mlrt, Robwl Lowell, presented the fourth land regalia to offer Scottish umiii.il »alla< e Stevens Wards for poetry at I Conn and read music on his bagpipes. Camp- selections of his own ooetrv and that of Stevens l«st ninht bell will also provide dancing in Von der Mehilen Recital Hall music for three "wee lassies" and their exciting Highland Fling. Wallace Stevens Winners Turkish dances will be per- Baubles Named Here Last Night John F. De Witt, a graduate dow", "Paladin Off the Air", and student has won the fourth an- and the "First Invocation" from nual Wallace Stevens Memorial "Design for/on Ahtl". Bangles Prize for poetry at the Univer- Second prize went to Elliot sity of Connecticut. K. Goldberg, a UConn senior. The International Fair will The 24-year-old graduate of feature an exciting variety of Honorable mention recipients Northeastern University is were Barbara Bassett, Sharon baubles bangles, and beads all scheduled to receive his mas- at reasonable prices. Pierced next Felngold, Elizabeth Hahn, Nich- tor's degree In English olas Johnson, Susan B. Kaye, earrings and the pierced look month at UConn. will start at $1.00 and most are Aaron Rutherford in, and Ro- De Witt was Informed of his bert Shannahan, under $2.00. Small lady-bug pins honor last night at the annual also begin at a $1.00 and other Wallace Stevens Lecture, this The Wallace Stevens Lecture pins and brooches range up to year delivered by Robert Low- and Award was set up in the $3.50. Ladles can also buy cuff- ell, one of the nation's leading spring of 1964 and Is designed to links and tie bars for their men literary figures. honor the memory of one of Con- at reasonable prices. De Witt won the cash prize necticut's leading poets and In- Household decorative items for his three poems: "The Wl- surance executives. for your mom for Mother's Day such as Irish porcelain ash trays, beautiful Swedish Art glass bud Moms Feted on Campus vases, and finely carved figures from Africa and South America all beginning at $1.00 and rang- Sunday as Traditioned ing to $4.00 and $5.00. UConn students are busy group at UConn will perform at Italy is offering gaily painted sprucing up their rooms and 2 p.m. in the Studio Theater of pottery mugs lor only 1.29. Lea- preparing to roll out the wel- the Fine Arts Center and the U- ther goods for mother and also come mat for the annual "Mom's Conn Art Museum also will be Dad Include cigarette cases, Day" program Sunday on the open. change purses, eye glass cases, main campus. The traditional "capping" and passport folders. Thousands of parents are ex- rites of the School of Nursing Is Beautiful monkey pod wooden In :'re)'rUion for the Inter- pected to visit their offsprings' scheduled for 3 p.m. at Jorgen- ware from the Philippines - bowls national '-'".ir '*Mirue "enne- home away, from home. They will sen Auditorium and mothers are plates, and platters In exotic dy, chaimivui of the Inter- be feted at residence halls and welcome. Earlier, at 1:30p.m., shapes will also be featured. ir'tinna! rouse, '<—nt"r) mid will have a chance to visit many Alpha Lambda Delta, academic Buy your birthday and Christ- At the Fair two hel- ers nrice the mer of the academic facilities where honor society for freshman wo- mas presents while you have rtrwdiKP. "ost o! the K»»4N "open house" Is being observed. men, will conduct Its annual in- some money and this rare op- ■vere received through the The Associated Women Stu- itiation ceremony in the United portunity to purchase such fas- lit*) "• of ' Ttrord inf orter. dents is coordinating the full day Nations Room of the Student Un- cinating foreign gifts. of activities which Include a band ion Building. concert on the Student Union Mall "Academic Open Houses" at 3:30 p.m. will be observed at the School Chemist Presents Lecture Series In addition, the University's of Home Economics, the green- first "International Fair" spon- house and animal barns of the Prof. Sir Christopher Ingold, "The Benzldlne Rearrange- A Fellow of the Royal Society sored by International House will College of Agriculture, the School one of the world's leading au- ments," will be given May 15. of London, he was knighted In of Education, the School of Phy- 1958. Professor Ingold recently be held on the shores of Mirror thorities on modern theoretical Subsequent lectures, on "Car- Lake from 2 to 5 p.m. sical Therapy and School of Phy- organic chemistry, Is scheduled bonlum-Ion Rearrangements -- has been visiting lecturer at the Oichesls, the modern dance sical Education. to deliver a series of special Classical and Non-Classical' * Universities of Kansas, Notre public lectures next month at and "Carbonium-Ion Rearrange- Dame, Illinois and Minnesota as UConn. ments — General Synartesls," well as at Stanford, McMaster Conflicting Views on Draft Dr. Ingold has been appointed will be held May 17 and 19, res- and Cornell Universities. a Visiting Professor at UConn for pectively. a new American Cyanamld Lec- The author of two recent books Offered for Speculation ture Series. The three-lecture on organic chemistry, Dr. Ingold Study has written more than 300 tech- Two suggestions have recent- ral grounds and who objected on program is Jointly sponsored by political grounds. the University's Department of nical papers. He currently Is em- ly been made to revise the cur- eritus professor and special lec- Setback? rent draft laws. One would let a In other developments, Pro- Chemistry and the American Cy- fessor Walter Y. 01, a professor anamld Corp. turer In chemistry at the Uni- The College-Work-Study pro- person be a conscientious ob- versity of London where he was gram at UConn will suffer a set- jector to a specific war. The o- at the University of Washington, General topic for the talks and director of a Pentagon man- — all of which are scheduled at director of the chemistry labor- back next year. Peter V. Jodla- ther proposal would create an atories and chemistry professor tls, Jr. Institutional Represen- all-volunteer army. power study, proposed plans 4 p.m. in the Physical Sciences leading to the creation of an all- Building — will be "Problems for more than a quarter century. tative of the program said that A group of 1000 seminarians He has won many medals for from July 1967 to June 1968 from 65 divinity schools have sent volunteer army. He said that an of Molecular Arrangements." f,f all-voluntary military force of The initial lecture, titled contributions to chemistry. the program will be scaled Secretary Defense McNamara down. a letter urging that those opposed 2.7 million would cost about $4 to a specific war not be forced billion a year. A notification from Washing- 01 opposed the Marshall Co- Shakespeare for Juniors| ton stated that the state of Con- to fight In It. The letter said that "Without some procedure that mmission's recommendation for necticut was granted 64.3% of a 19 year-old lottery. He re- limited numberof tickets are still the funds requested for the per- could ease such a confrontation The American Shakespeare (with current laws), we fear the commened a lottery at 21 be- Festival will havetwogreatplays available. Donn Gtlmore of PI iod between July 1967 to June cause "the uncertainty of a draft Beta Phi is the ticket chairman. 1968. All previous requests for grave prospect of growing num- on the boards lor Its Spring Pre- bers of young men refusing to is not an unmitigated evil" since view Weekend Season. "A Mid- "A Midsummer Night's funds were met In full, according it leads to voluntary enlistments Dream", that brilliant complex to Jodlatls, and the reduction fight in Viet Nam whatever the summer Night's Dream" Is cur- legal consequences to themselves that would be lost with a 19-year- rently previewing, and on May 13 comedy, is directed by Cyril Rlt- this year was not anticipated.