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 The 
                  New York Times, Sunday, March 23, 1958 Ceylonese 
                  Here Does Triple Duty U.N. Delegate, a Buddhist Scholar, Is a Graduate Student at 
                  Columbia
 
 Three-ring circuses have nothing on a 38-year-old Ceylonese 
                  Buddhist who is seeing New York for the first time.
 
 The Venerable Havanpola Ratanasara does triple duty as an alternate 
                  delegate to the United Nations, a full-time Columbia University 
                  graduate student and a devoted practitioner of Buddhism. In 
                  his spare time he tours the city on foot.
 
 Though Mr. Ratanasara is new to this country, his diversified 
                  abilities are even newer to his classmates at Teachers College, 
                  where he is studying for a masters degree in education.
 
 He is an expert in Singhalese, an honor graduate of a school 
                  for Buddhist monks and personal friend of Ceylons Prime 
                  Minister, Solomon Bandaranaike.
 
 A lively little man with a flair for Oriental languages, Mr. 
                  Ratanasara has a habit of speaking rapid-fire English in candid 
                  spurts.
 
 Scorns Power Bloc
 
 You Americans believe in atomic bombs, hydrogen bombs 
                  and all those things, he said the other day. Well, 
                  we dont. We are peace-loving people and want no association 
                  with any power bloc.
 
 When the United Nations General Assembly was meeting last fall, 
                  Mr. Ratanasara regularly attended the all-day sessions of the 
                  Social; Humanitarian and Cultural affairs Committee, to which 
                  he is attached as a member of the Ceylonese delegation.
 
 Sitting in the United Nations chambers, garbed in his 
                  native yellow robes, Mr. Ratanasara can rely on a varied background 
                  to serve him in his work on the committee.
 
 In Ceylon he was a school principal. He was educated at a school 
                  for Buddhist monks, where he received a bachelors degree 
                  in Pali, the official language of Buddhism. In addition, Mr. 
                  Ratanasara gave frequent radio talks on Ceylons educational 
                  system, and plans to become an instructor in languages when 
                  he returns home.
 
 At the end of a days diplomatic sword-clashing, Mr. Ratanasara 
                  leaves for Columbia. His classes there usually begin at 5 P.M. 
                  The rest of the evening, and well into the early morning, he 
                  spends studying for the next days classes.
 
 Its a bit tiring at times. He grins, But 
                  I manage all right.
 
 Mr. Ratanasara is the only Ceylonese at Teachers College. He 
                  arrived last September as an exchange student on a fellowship 
                  grant from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural 
                  Organization. Shortly after his arrival, he became an alternate 
                  United Nations delegate and got the title Venerable to go with 
                  his new position.
 
 Between politics, studies and Buddhism, Mr. Ratanasara finds 
                  time to visit various points in the United States. He will visit 
                  Harvard next month.
 
 Teachers College officials have considered asking him to stay 
                  on for a Ph.D. after he gets his masters this June.
 
 Its another two years, Mr. Ratanasara muses. 
                   But Id do it. After all, Im getting to like 
                  it here.
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