PAGE TEN THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 "a AT RACKH AM BUILDING: Michigan Academy Gathering Features Reception, Exhibition . I IHA PRESENTS: M By LEE WEITZENKORN The 71st annualmeeting of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters will be highlight- ed by a fine arts reception and exhibition in the Rackham Gal- leries this week-end. The academy meeting, sched- uled for today, Friday and Satur- day, March 16-18, will be attended by experts in 23 fields of human thought and. expression. While most of the participants will be drawn from universities and col- leges throughout the , state, the gathering will also include scien- tists, artists, educators, and house- wives. In addition to the art exhibit, the academy meeting will feature speakers, panel discussion and over 300 individual papers on sub- jects ranging from American stu- dies to zoology. All sessions will be open to the public. Headquar- ters will be in the Rackham Build- ing. A bus tour is planned for the members of the academy today. They are scheduled to visit num- erous art studios in the Ann Ar- bor area. The academy will hold a busi- ness meeting at 8 a.m. Saturday to elect officers for the coming year. Afterward, the Council of the academy, which consists of officers and committee members, will meet at the North Campus Commons. Section meetings have been planned for tomorrow morning and afternoon. Saturday morning and will be divided into the twen- ty-three subject areas. Tomorrow evening, at 8 p.m., Academy President Alexander H. Smith, professor of botany and director of the University Her- barium, will deliver his presiden- tial address at Rackham Amphi- theater. The subject of his speech is "Mushrooms Through the Ages." Special awards will be made at this assembly. SGC CA DlIDl TE FOROi Student Spy Ring at BYU Disclosed by President Brigham Young University Pres- ident Ernest Wilkinson acknowl- edged yesterday that a student in- vestigation team had existed on the campus to check on liberal professors. Wilkinson stated that he would pledge "his sincerest efforts to see that such a situation does not oc- cur again in the future." Two political science students had charged that the administra- tion had "instigated a student spy ring" to report on the reactions of eight professors to a speech made by Wilkinson on April 21 of last year. Wilkinson's address was de- scribed as "a conservative view of totalitarianism, federal aid, capi- talism, and socialism ' by Ronald Hankin, one of the students who disclosed the "spy king." Hankin reported that 15 students were asked to report on professors with "liberal, leftist leanings." Hankin charged that six pro- fessors were forced to resign from the university for political reason. He said that, following the Wil- kinson speech, he had "recrim- inations and realized what was wrong." A former John Birch So- ciety member, Hankin said he then "began passing information from both sides around." TONIGHT, Thursday, March 16 7-10 P.M. AUDITORIUM B, ANGELL HALL YOU will decide the future of SGC BE INFORMED!. tI of 1235 Iscount records, n. S. S. UNIVERSITY STATE 300 FLY WITH THE JEFFERSON AIRPLANE or MONKEE AROUND WITH THE MONKEES (your choice) ALL on RCA VICTOR 6i JEFFERSON AIRPLANE TAKES OFF their first album-containing "Tobacco Road" & "Come Up the Years" SURREALISTIC PILLOW- JEFFERSON AIRPLANE Their latest, including their new smash single, "Somebody to Love" SALE! THE MONKEES-- their first album-containing "I Wanna Be Free" & "Last Train to Clarksville" MORE OF THE MONKEES- their nev album, including "I'm a Believer" & "Mary, Mary" NOW ON were 3,79 NOW 79 were 4.79 NOW 49, stereo mono L S!- ALL RCA ictor ed Seal classics including these great releases: AND Ives-Piano Sonata No. 1-William Masselos Prokofieff-Sym. No. 3 & Scythian Suite- Boston Symphony, Leinsdorf cond. Superlative Recordings by REINER-CHICAGO SYMPHONY ARTUR RUBINSTEIN Verdi-Un Ballo in Maschera- Price, Bergonzi, Merrill, Verrett, Leinsdorf cond. GUARNERI QUARTET AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS were A 4.79 NOW mono were 5.79 I ifAW c+o ran* A01 Irish Night at the Pops-Boston, Pops, Fiedler cond. Bartok-Piano Concerti No. 1 & 3-Peter Serlein ANNA MOFFO JUILLIARD QUARTET MARIO LANZA VAN CLIBURN VLADIMIR HOROWITZ R. Strauss-Alpensinfonie- Royal Philharmonic, Kempe cond. nr-tir% i-7a4-+i l i tr^rn-7;n Pn r-' in IJ ii IlztI I LL111t/.ILZ LJvJLIIDJ I ,