A group of ten Latin-American journalists, including seven Mexicans and three Bolivians, will pay an informal visit to the University this afternoon as part of a study of wartime conditions throughout the United States and Canada at the invitation of the National Press Club of Washington.
After a morning visit to the Museum of Fine Arts and Gardiner Museum in Boston, the party will go to Dunster House at 12:45 o'clock for lunch in the House Dining Hall with Clarence H. Haring, Robert Woods Bliss Professor of Latin-American History and Economics, Master of Dunster House, and Chairman of the University Committee on Pan-American Relations.
To Conant's Office
Following lunch, the viitors will be officially received in President Conant's office in Massachusetts Hall by George H. Chase, '96, Dean of the University, David M. Little, '17, Secretary to the University, and other University officials. Dean Chase, in the absence of President Conant, will extend the greetings of the University to the Latin-Americans.
The party will then tour the University and visit Widener and Houghton libraries, through which they will be shown by Keyes DeW. Metcalf, Director of the University Library.
Three From Bolivia
The Bolivian journalists are Luis Zavala, editor of La Razon; Frederico Guteierrez Granier, publisher of La Ultima Hora, all of La Paz.
The Mexican group are Bernardo Ponce and Gonzalo Baez Camargo, both of Excelsior; Jose Perez Moreno of Universal; Cesar Ortiz Tinoco, of El Popular; Rafael Herrerlas, of Novedades; Francisco M. Armand, of La Prensa; and Xavier Sanchez Gavito, of El Nacional.
Read more in News
MOVIEGOER