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Show Panel To Discuss National Poor People's March Today on of administrative assistant for community equality with the appointment ap-pointment of Kerry Segal. "I'm very heartened by student government's program for racial injustice," in-justice," said Dean Grundfosscn," and Steve Gunn's forthright pronouncement pro-nouncement that he intends to place it on his list. It is an important thing to name Kerry Scgel as administrative ad-ministrative assistant." A report on the poor people's march scheduled for this weekend will be given at today's Action in Racial Crisis (ARC) meeting. An ARC member who visited the Guadalupe Center will speak at the meeting at 12:30 p.m. in the Alumni Lounge, Union 277. Students involved in the civil rights movement on the University campus will meet Thursday to discuss dis-cuss their division of labor. All Invited Peter D. Grundfossen, assistant dean of students, said Monday members of ARC, Student Educational Educa-tional Endowment for King (SEEK), Student Opportunity University Uni-versity League (SOUL), a Law School group and ASUU as well as other interested persons are invited in-vited to the ARC meeting Thursday Thurs-day at 12:30 p.m. in the Emeritus Room, Union 279. "All five of these organizations have been working on behalf of human rights and civil rights," said Dean Grundfossen, "The leader of each of these organizations has expressed ex-pressed concern that efforts may be being duplicated and inefficiency may develop. We are going to meet to discuss practical division of labor." Organizations Differ Although all five organizations are concerned with civil each has a "remarkable u., i- ence," he said. SOUL, oldest of the organizations, is aimed at the development of "black pride," says its president Grover Thompson. ARC, said Dean Grundfossen, is concerned with developing academics acad-emics with responsible, specific courses. This would entail courses in Negro history and culture (a class in Negro history was recently added to the History Department curriculum), and the bringing of Negro staff members to the University. Uni-versity. SEEK, which is established in the memory of the late Dr. Martin Luther Lu-ther King, Jr., is a fund designed for a member of a minority group to study in the social sciences at the University. Students Set Goals University College of Law students stud-ents after Dr. King's death declared three immediate goals for their civil rights program. These include tutorial assistance to children of underprivileged and minority families, fam-ilies, a progress to aleviate in-equaities in-equaities in the bond system and a program to provide investigatory services for daily legal problems of minority rights. ASUU recently created the posi- i A i . DEAN PETER GRUNDFOSSEN . . . heads panel |