.- -mo --- - - . ' -n. - * . - _ i.d 14Treasury of firt F OR CENTURIES the Monastery of St. Catharine below the peak of Mt. Sinai has contained a : magnificent treasure of Byzantine~ Iart seen only: by the few scholars kw Q° who have traveled there.v°k This year an expedition of UM,j Princeton University and Alexan- dria University scholars and tech-' nicians returned from the Egyp- tain site with a photographic record of the 3,000 illuminated manuscripts, 2,000 icons and unique architectural forms. It is the only place where there is an appreciable number of icons . from the sixth and eighth cen- turies and from the Middle Byzan- tine period of the ninth and- twelfth centuries.- THE MONASTERY also contains' .one of the finest medieval li- braries ever found. St. Catharines' marks a sacred spot for Judaism, Christianity and I Islam. Inside the monastery walls ' stands a Greek Orthodox Church, the Chapel of the Burning Bush and a Moslem mosque. If the Mohammedan conquest had -ot isolated the Monastery during the seventh century, many Silver covers, held together by silver nails, were used of the icons probably would have on manuscripts. The covers depict Biblical scenes. been destroyed by the Byzantine emperor during the Iconoclastic I controversy of the eighth and ninth century. Economic Development in Puerto Rico Is Hard, But a P' Graduate Has Succeeded with OPERATION BOOTSTRAP By THOMAS TURNER Monastery's basilica (church) is ornately decorated with hanging icons and ostrich eggs. on right is throne for Abbott of Monastery. Will I I "OPERATION Bootstrap," as the American press has christened Puerto Rico's remarkable economic development program, is headed by a graduate of the University's pharmacy school. Teodoro Moscoso, '32Ph, has been administrator of the island commonwealth's Economic De- velopment Administration since its' inception 18 years ago. The Ad- ministration, known as Fomento (Spanish for "growth" or "de- velopment") has "spearheaded" the activity which has given Puerto Rico Latin America's second high- est per capita income, behind oil- rich Venezuela. Moscoso smilingly says, "I wrote the law for the program, got it approved by the legislature, and so they had to make me administra- tor." But statistics alone belie this modest self-appraisal. Since 1940, immediately prior to Fomento, ex- ports have increased over 500per, cent, imports over 600 per cent.1 And this progress has spread be-. yond economic areas: while popu- lation increased only one-fourth, the number of school - children nearly doubled. Today, observers from under- developed nations throughout-the free world come to Puerto Rico to study the example of a people suc-; cessfully improving their lot. MOSCOSO, the man directly responsible for stimulating and guiding this growth, and be-' hind Governor Luis Munoz Marin the most important man on the island, comes from Puerto Rico's1 educated property-owning upper- class. Until coming to work for the. Commonwealth government in 1941 as Fomento chief, he had worked in his family business; a pharmaceutical firm on the island, since his graduation from the Uni- versity.4 Thomas Turner, a night editor on The Michigan Daily, lives in Puerto Rico. Although industry is new, productivity is impressively high. t . 1 t 3 t . R 3 I c f I t I a I S Y t t T k k I 9 e SI take your place n the sun . in a clip cotton separate! . To charm "~or r.;. y y print top .,.$5.98 full skirt ...$8 98 jacket top. slim skirt ~OLI NS State and Liberty store hours: UMMER FLORALS Mix And Match crisp cottons that take you 'round the clock hrough the summer .. . ping field flower prints, plain with only a touch )rint He first came to the University because he wanted to graduate from the best university in the United States with a pharmacy school. "I decided Michigan was it," he said. At the time, he explained, he thought of 'postgraduate study, perhaps in medicine. This was abandoned, however, for the family, business. While at the University, Mos- coso was a member of Hermitage, a now-defunct local fraternity, to which University President-Emeri- tus Alexander G. Ruthven be- longed. "The house was so far out Wash- tenaw Avenue we were authorized to keep a bus to come in on," he recalled with a smile. ON A RECENT visit to Ann Ar- bor he visited the former loca- tion of the fraternity- house and found it quite built up, in contrast to the former isolation. Another recollection of his days at the University brought a smile' to Moscoso's face--working on the Gargoyle staff. The humor magazine that year first put out a parody of The New Yorker. Moscoso solicited some previously unpublished ma- terial from a New Yorker con- tributor so the magazine had some particularly good writing in that issue.. Moscoso indicated particular concern with two current Uni- versity problems: size of the stu- dent body and the role of athletics. Pointing out that the total en- rollment when he was here was 8,000, he believes autonomy for various arms and branches of the University is necessary. As for athletics, Moscoso's -criti- cism was still more direct: "The business of the University is to make people uncomfortable; watching football doesn't make you uncomfortable." 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