i PAOZ EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1967, PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1967 Ending of Fund Raisi arlsBgnigo The curtain-raiser for the Uni- versity's observance of its 150th anniversary came this week with docking of the S.S. President Roosevelt in San Francisco. The ship set sail around the world from San Francisco last Oct. 12 carrying 126 University alumni whose aim it was to advertise the upcoming University's sesquicen- tennial celebration at every port of call. The University has enrolled large numbers of foreign students since the. 1880's. and has more than 5,000 alumni living in other countries. The cruise ship served for alumni club, gatherings in some spots. Hatcher Joins Harlan H. Hatcher, University President, joined the cruise for its last two weeks. In a campaign started last year to raise $55 million in private gifts before the 150th birthday celebra- tion ends,/ the University reports more than $50 million already has been pledged. Described by Hatcher as the largest private fund-raising effort ever undertaken by a state uni- versity, the $55 million will go to support such projects as a new children's hospital, highway safety researcha institute, new theater building, graduate library, student scholarships and endowed profes- sorships. Many Visitors At least 100,000 visitors, many of them scholars or public officials from other countries, are expected to be attracted to various Ses- quicentennial Year events. A dozen or so national scholarly and sci- entific societies will hold annual meetings on the campus this year. Five major plays by Arthur Mil- ler, a University graduate, are to be produced by the speech depart- ment and the Professional thea- ter Program. Five major events arranged by a faculty committee are: Alumni .celebration, Marchl-5, to be climaxed by a banquet for 5,000- in Cobo Hall in Detroit; international conference on "High- UNION-LEAGUE il : I iil 1 " 'r I t ' ii ; 1 I i ! -_. - ___._- -- .._. ' n, x- fIv, 4:M£ : ": ": ' ':'i '. %" 5; r ._ - --. _. _. ..-.._.__~~ ~~_- _ ___+.""",_________________________,.__"_____ w..b...k;,..: ~.., :..:4 .,..Sxe'x oi ,.:aa' 'k . v aigCruise .AcrossGAE Aebrtion Camps ,& HOBBIES er Education in Tomorrow's FIDY"FB.1 World," April 26-29; international 6:45 and 9:30-Cinema II will 0Ps-u ae conference on "The University and present "Zorba the Greek" in the Body Politic," July 12-14. Aud. A.j Two Conferences 7 and 9 pm.--Cinema Guild will' 4 Sha kes pea re Ga mes A series of seminars, lectures show Orson Welles' "The Trial" =A f rofGae and discussions, led by 20 of the in the Architecture Aud. 0 VVi~fl ro a e world's leading scholars and in- 8 p.m. -University Players will %n tended mainly for students and present Arthur Miller's "Incident . Round Jig Saw Puzzles faculty, Oct. 1-6; an international at Vichy" at Lydia Mendelssohn conference on "Fertility and Fain- Teare Boat Kits-Car Kits ily Planning-A World View," Nov. 8:30 pan. - The University of 15-17. Montana Concert Band, conduct- *;Suffed Animals CA N D IE S Other international events will ed by David Whitwell, and the incudea cnfeenc on"Copa-Ohio State University Symphonic .ASOTD4 rative Electoral Behavior," AprlBncnutdbyDnlSc r VCOOLTES x 6;te W rdC nrs fOina-Ginnis, will give a public concert ;jC O O A E iss Ang. 12-19; conference oninHlAu.DLI I I1lbbo $.74 "The Atlantic World," Sept. 26-28; - ca pus2 b. box 335r an international conference on Ren, uy Leukemia and Lymphoma, Oct. 9-Sl ,rd 54E ilimNO203 13, and a conference on "Can- DaiyeClssiieds_______ Oriental Congress$ t adi!~an-Amer¢,icanr+4 Relations,""Chl Nov. 2.'. ~___ >l______________?" .hz+ +% The meeting of the World Con-_ru( gress 6f Orientalists is expected to attract some 2,000 experts on.V all facets of Asia and will be they organization's first meeting in theZ United States since its founding'~ 94 years ago. Politics, economics, t« art, geography and history will §&s t Natinalorgniztios .Just ahint of aheel... figure in discussions. hlIg" ' RED annual meeting on theSnig s Michgan Sm dgn FOIL HEARTS campus this year will include the § b 5I/2boz 8 5cii~ American Society for Engineering § y 3§134b. .6 Education, College Band Directors § National Association, American§ Society of Testing Materials, As- * : sociation of College Honor Socie- §" ties Council, American Meteoro- §f logical Society, National Univer- city Extension Association, Society for AmrcnArchaeology, Amier- icnSociety of Hospital Pharma .. '' E 10 wSITiSH.?1E IZ.'YEIY LOOK ists, National Academy of En -§ gfinen.ndNtonlAadm1 Take off with verve in stylized comfort. .' ~ ofmecifnce. international par- .1 Fabulous hand detailing, designed stitch X< ticipants in the various events are §« expetedto be Alexander Danilov- ;§frsic o te ofr . n ich Alexandrow, mathematician §c just a smidgin of heel for flavor. from Novosibirsk State University § of the Soviet Union; Sir Eric Ash-§ by, master of Clare College, Cam- § LC O E bridge University, England; Su- § BLC O E brh a y n C ad aeh r strophysicist from India, now at '§ $1A95 A S University of Chicago. h,7 Sir Colville Deverell,~ secretary- , §SATIN HEARTS , zl" general of International Planned §$.0t 62 Parenthood Federation, England; S. N. Eisenstadt, professor of soci- 4xq . ology, Hebrew University, Israel; ' Thomas V. Gemkrelidze of the l,§ z x§R Oriental Institute, Tbilisi, USSR, Ia and Juan Gomez-Millas, minister' § § of Education, Chile.* :7 r tJacobson s § §".