Show Man s Fate In World Themes Reynold Talk The necessity of a change in man and his thinking if he is to be saved from totalitarianism or destruction will be discussed in the annual Reynolds Lecture SYDNEY W. associate dean of the College of Letters and will give ff 11 SYDNEY W. ANGLEMAN Reynolds lecturer the address at p.m. in Kingsbury The Reynolds Lecture is an annual address in honor of Frederick William the first director of the University Extension It is sponsored by the division and the Frederick William Reynolds w ho joined the University faculty in has titled his between Two He will discuss the dissolution that has occurred during the past century and resulted in the loss of traditional values and beliefs without their replacement by new Today's man is alone in a lonely and alien universe where irrationality and disorder are the ANGLEMAN will then show that religion and the arts offer little to counteract this negative and impotent view of that man has lost his former inner and that science and technology have changed the environment in ways that threaten man's very The lecture will then swing to the seeds of hope that a major change in man possible but not certain can Angleman this change as coming from a renewed faith in man himself and in his The basis of this new what it may be and the changes it will require in education will be the concern of the concluding section of the Angleman is active in state and regional educational organizations and is former president of the Utah Conference on Higher Education and chairman of the Pacific Northwest Conference on Higher HE IS co-editor of two college English texts and has spoken widely on educational subjects and participated in public forums and television Angleman has been associate dean since For six years before he was dean of the Lower |