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Show Intellectual freedom exhibit in EraYv" en s liberation. Most controversial material is not open to public use to protect the material from damage dam-age or abuse. The material can be seen by asking the librarian attendants, atten-dants, said Miss McQuown. "At no other time has the question of censorship been so Pertinent," said Miss McQuown. The display will show the general public materia which will become of immediate interest and study. "An exhibit such as tliis will give people a chance to examine the issues firsthand-which is what education ed-ucation is all about." A special intellectual freedom exhibit featuring various factions of society currently in question and controversy is on display through Saturday in the Marriott Library Auditorium (second floor). The display is open to the public Monday through Thursday 1 p.m. to 8 p.m.; and Friday and Saturday, 1 pjn. to 5 p.m. The exhibit is sponsored by the University Libraries in cooperation coopera-tion with the American Library Association's Intellectual Freedom Free-dom Office. According to Eloise McQuown, display chairman and librarian in the social sciences department, the exhibit spotlights the political scene of the far right and far left; civil rights; the underground press; the pacifist movement; and worn- |