THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y' T USDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY TRTIrRSnAY. A 1 11L1 1 Views Illinois Bans Housing Bias fro m Iirosh ima west Conference Student Associa- tion is not compatible with the na- ture of A & M." SYRACUSE - The "Syracuse 10," a magazine published by stu- dents at Syracuse University, will appear on the campus next month, two months after it was supposed to come1 out. Publication, which was slated for Feb. 11, was held up on the orders of the chancellor of the university, who objected to an ar- ticle on the university's food serv- ice. The article was a result of student complaints. The chancellor told the editor of the magazine that their finan- cial subsidy was in danger if the article was included in the maga- zine. IOWA CITY - The Iowa City chapter of the Congress on Ra- cial Equality voted late last month to set up an autonomous campus group at the State University of Iowa by disaffiliating from the national organization. These photographs of Hiroshima atomic bombing part of an exhibit sent to the are the # United States by Japanese stu- dents at Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan. They will be on display from 2-5 p.m. Sunday, and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday of next week in t he Hussey Rm. of the Michigan League. The exhibit comes to the Uni- versity through the courtesy of Yoshio Sugimoto, former editor of the Kyoto University student newspaper. He is presently study- ing at Swarthmore College on a National Student Association Foreign Student Leadership Pro- ject scholarship. I 0 the park were done on a deferred payment basis," Boyd, also As- sistant Director of the Office of Research Administration, said "The money from the sale of each site is prorated, and no one will get paid until the land is sold." 'U' Minority The Economic Development Committee is composed of persons from research and development units in community and state in- dustry. "University people repre- sent a minority," he said. But promotion mailings to in- dustrial executives who have been personally associated with Univer- sity faculty members have stimu- lated the best response, Boyd re- ported. Research Park got its first cus- tomer last year when Federal Mo- gul Division, Research & Develop- ment, Ann Arbor, bought a tract of land. It will be relocated about October in the park after building an office-laboratory building there. More Business "Although only one tract of land has been sold, several people and corporations have taken out options on property," he noted. The committee estimates that $90,000 of land will be sold by June, 1964. "I would have no reservation at all about predicting that we will be able to meet the deadlines that have been set up for the park's development," Boyd said. Cold Feet Many smaller research organiza- tions contemplating moves to new communities don't want to im- mediately invest in land and fa- cilities, he explained. They first desire to establish themselves and see whether their ventures will be successful. "Therefore, as a part of the park's development, the commit- tee is in the process of interest- ing someone in building rental facilities on a three to five year basis," he said. is so good you drink Prof. Cornelius Lanczos of the 4 ~theoretical physics school, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, SWei, g'sufflwill speak at 4 p.m. today in Aud. B, giving "A General Survey of Einstein's Scientific Achievement." The lecture is the first of a series of six concerning "The Place ed in the old Bavarian tradition. of Albert Einstein in the History leveln Bros. Brewing C. ran u thMic. of Physics." The series is spon- BY ALL STAR BEV. CO., ANN ARBOR sored by the Institute of Science eyer Bros. Brewing Co.-Frankennwth, Mich. and Technology. - - -ii .$1.25 ..$1.90 ..$1.50 '