Connecticut Daily Campus P Serving Storrs Since 1896 \J>

Connecticut Daily Campus P Serving Storrs Since 1896 \J>

Connecticut Daily Campus p Serving Storrs Since 1896 \J> VOL. CXVI. NO. 122 STORRS, CONNECTICUT MONDAY, MAY 6, 1963 - Phi Beta Kappa Lecturer: Annual Spring Baldwin To Give Dr.Kenyon Speaks Choral Concert Is Wednesday Commencement Talk At Hub Tomorrow The University of Connecticut's Chief Justice Raymond Bald- cuts ranking jurist. Music Department will present a win of the Connecticut Supreme Knviable Record Out of a handful of Connecti* A distinguished woman attor- vocal tour de force Wednesday Court of Errors will deliver the ney and advocate of civil liberties May 8, when it holds its Annual principal address at the Univers- cut citizens who have risen to the Will deliver the annual Phi Beta Spring Choral Concert at 8:15 ity of Connecticut's 80th Com- top positions in the executive and Kappa Lecture at the University p.m. in the Jorgensen Audito- emncement, June 9, it was an- judicial branches of State gov- of Connecticut May 7 at 8 p.m. rium. nounced Friday. ernment, Judge Baldwin alone Four < lioral Oroups One of the most distinguished compiled an equally enviable rec- In the HUB. Four different clioral groups ord of service in the State L-; Former nidi;,. public servants in the long his- totaling some 300 voices, will per- tory of the State, Judge Baldwin [islature and the U.S. Congress Dr. Dorothy Kenyon, a former form in the concert, which will J A 1916 graduate of Wesleyan New York City municipal court plans to step down from the be directed by John Poellein, a | bench in August. His participa- University, he received his law Judge, will discuss the U.S. Su- Uconn music instructor. The! degree from Yale in 1921. after preme Court in light of contro- 1 tion in the Uconn graduation ex- choral festival, which will lea- ercises will be one of his last ' spending two years on active sea versy surrounding its recent de- ture a wide range of selections, , duty as a naval officer. cisions on civil liberties. including madrigals, folksongs, public appearances as Connecti- Her address will follow the 7:30 Upon graduating Irom Yale, he and contemporaiy works, is open entered privite practice in New p.m. initiation of some 38 out- to the public at no charge. Haven and soon moved to Strat- standing Uconn students into the The 130 - voice University local chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. ford where he became town pros- Chorus will open the program ecutor. In 1931. the year he en- Dr. Kenyon\s lecture Ls spon- with its interpretation of several tered the General Aasemblj as a sored by Phi Beta Kappa Associ- songs by Brahms, Carissimi and ates, a group that provides fin- House member, he also became Diemer. The 18-voice University Stratford Town Court Judf ancial support to the Society. Singers will then sing "Three House Majority Leader The program w.as established in Madrigals" by Mailman and Judge Baldwin became House 1942 and there are now some "Mary liynes" by Barber. T5 distinguished lectures on the majority leader in 1933 and five Concert Chora* years later entered the exivu- Speakers panel. The 45-member Concert Chorus Graduate Of Smith branch of government as will appear next, singing two Governor Baldwin. Defeated in A 19<>8 graduate of Smith Col- mit tees on quest ions ranging motets by Giovanni Gabrieli and lege, Dr. Kenyon received a his 1940 bid lor re-election, he front integration and internation- three contemporary selections, returned the Republican adminis- doctorate in jurisprudence in 1917 al relation 'o juvenile delinquency called "Riddle Me Thus." by Wil- from New York University and tration to the State Capitol in and minimum wage legislation. liam Bcrgsma. 1942 and 19-14. has been awarded five hononary University Chorus degrees. Woman Of Year At the end of his third term as In 1948 she received the "Wom- The University Chorus will re- Governor, Judge Baldwin was , Admitted to the ha'' in 1917, turn to present a group of folk- Dr. Kenyon was a partner in the an of the Year" award from the elected to fill the U.S Women's Trade Union League. songs: "Soldier, Soldier Will You vacancy caused by the resigna- law firm of Straus and Kenyon Marry Me?" "Black Is The Color from 1930-39. She has been direc- Slie has held Office in the tion of Thomas C. Hart at I tor American Civil Liberties Union, of My True Love's Hair," and 'he full term beginning Jan. >, tor, office and legal advisor to "Russian Picnic." Soloists in- many consumer cooperat ive corp- Americans for Democratic Ac- 1917. He resigned to accept ai»- tion, the American Association of clude: Anne Gillard, RR 3. Wil- pointment as an associate justice orations and has served on local, <Continued On Page 5) national and international com- University Women and the United n the State Supreme Court in Chapters of I'hi Beta Kappa. Dr. Dec. 1949. He became chief jus- Kenyon served on the League ice a decade later. HI .Nations Committee of Jurists Highlights \s Governor 2 Day Session appointed to study the legal Research Grants Available Highlights of his administra- .siatus of women (1938-12) and tion as Governor, include the es- was U.S. delegate to the United tablishment of the Rrsl del Will Examine Nations Commission on the council in the country, the : st Status of Women. In Foreign Countries job training program for Indus- School Problems More than 200 graduate fellow-1port only the grantee. "■» SSSment^Snnital r. Library Bolstered ships offered by foreign govern- Students now enrolled at a col- » ' ment.s, private donors and uni- lege or university should consult egislation for new bridges at The wide range of techniques versifies are available to quali- the campus Fulbright Program Hartford. New London and Say- Involved in the non-academic The University of Connecticut's brook, and the first budgetary Foreign language Department li- fied American graduate students Adviser for further information operations of public schools will for the 1964-65 academic year. (Continued On Pace 71 (Continued On Page 7) be examined at the University of brary was bolstered by the ac- Connecticut May 7-8. whet* the quisition of 45 volumes donated The grants, for study or research by the German Research Council in a dozen or more foreign coun- "> Uconn hosts the 10th Annual In- tries, are administered by the In- stitute for Connecticut School Of Gottesberg. 75 Regional Engineers Meeting Business Officials. Valued at some $500. the books stitute of International Educa- Address By Zabriskie will be utilized by graduate stu- tion. Availability Highlight of the two-cay session, dents in the Uconn Language To Discuss 'Materials Science' which is ex|>ecled to attract some Seminar. Included in the collec- The scholarships, which gen- 60 [>ei sons from across the State, tion are dictionaries, lexicons, erally cover tuition and full or Some 75 engineers from United Nation* Room of the Stu- will be an address by Everett bibliographical and biographical partial maintenance, are avail- throughout th« region w-ill focus dent Union. Zabriskie, national president of handbooks and editions by clas- able for study in Austria. Den- their atention on the emerging Dr. Grant will show color Hie Association of School Build- scial authors. mark, France, Germany. Israel, field of materials science, May slides Illustrating his tour recent big Officials. T1»e presenation was mad© by Italy. Mexico, the Netherlands. 10 when they attend a soring trips to the Soviet Union. During Mr. Zabriskie. who Speaks at Dr. Helmut Arndt, attache at the Poland, Sweden, Switzerland and meeting of the New England these visits he compared tin- Rus- 10:30 a.m. during the opening German Consulate in Boston, to Yugoslavia. U. S. government District, American Society for sian scientific educational sys- general session in the Uconn Com- Dr. Jaime Ar.jona. head of the travel-only grants are available Testing and Materials, at the tem to that of tlie U.S. mons, will be preceded at the University's Department of For- to supplement the awards offered University of Connecticut. During the afternoon technical rostrum by words of welcome eign Languages. A second con- by Austria, Denmark. France. Day-l-on* Session session at 2 p.m. Dr. Walter from Arthur Branigan, CASBO signment of German books, of Germany, Israel, Italy and the The dav-long sesion. which is Siegmund. assistant director of president, and Dr. Homer D. similar value and size, is ear- Netherlands. Forty special Eng- being held in cooperation with research at t+v American Optical Babbidge Jr. Uconn president. marked for die Uconn linguists lish language teaching assistant- i he Uconn School of Engineering, Co. will deliver a paper on "Ls> Keynote Speaker laier this year. ships are available in French will meet at the HUB. The meet- ten " secondary schools; and teacher ing is designed to acquaitvt New •S.-iiiiciMMlurlor-e The keynote address will be - delivei-ed at 11 a.m. by Sen; training institutes. Kngland members of the AS I'M Dr. M. A. Melehy, I "conn pi *- Frank J. DiLorelo of New Britain, Art Exhibit KliKtMHty with developments in the field. lessor of electrical engineeiing, chairman of the Senate Education Paintings by three resident General eligibility require- Materials science is a study A ill then present a second tech- Committee, Connecticut General councilors will be on display be- ments include U. S. citizenship at involving tlie uses of tile nvanv nical paper—this oi\e on "Semi- Assembly. ginning today in the HUB Mu- the time of application, a bache- newly discovered substances.

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