SUNDAY, APRIL. 29,1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ...................... .._ ......... . Michigan Sweeps Doubleheader 'M' SCORES: Thinelads Win Big in Open Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS-The Michigan baseball team made its weekend road trip a complete success yes- terday by sweeping a doubleheader from dangerous Minnesota, 8-3 and 3-2. The double win left Michigan with a 51 Big Ten record, with the only loss coming on opening day. A trio of lefties, Fritz Fisher, John Kerr and Dennis Spalla were the chief vehicles to victory. Fish- er went the route in the opener to post his second victory of the season, against four defeats. Kerr won his fourth straight without defeat in the second game. Kerr needed two innings of sparkling relief ball from newly- found ace, Wayne Slusher in the Chalk Up Two First Game MICHIGAN Jones, 2b Honig, ss !Tate, rf l Steckley, if Spalla, cf Merullo, c Campbell, lb Chapman, 3b Fisher, p Totals MINNESOTA Carlson, of Thiel, ss Evans, 3b" Southard, rf Wally, c Oster, If Wally, c , Andresen, 2b Davis, lb Stephens, p a-Raasch Holzemer, p b-Mulligan Totals AB R H RBI 5 3 3 2 5 0 1 2 3 0 0 2 4 20 5 0 1 0 4 1 1 0 35 0 10, 6 AB R H RBI 4 0 2 0 4 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 5 0 0 0 4020 3 1 2 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 33 3 8 2 a-Struck out for Stephens in 6th; b--Struck out for Holzemer in 9th. MICHIGAN 012 020 003-8 Minnesota 020 010 000-3 E-Andres n 3, Davis, Holzemer, Evans, .Campbell. DP-Wally .and Evans, Jones, Honig and Campbell. LOB-Michigan 6, Minnesota 10. 2B -Oster, Wally. 3B-Honig, Chap- man. SB-Jones, Spalla, Andresen 2. SF-Steckley 2, Andresen. IF H R ER BB SO Fisher (W, 2-4) 9 8 3 3 6 7 Stephens (L, 3-1) 6 7 5 2 1 2 Holzemer 3 3 3 1 0 1 Second Game MICHIGAN AB R H RBI Jones, 2b 4 0 0 0 Honig, ss 3 0 0 0 Tate, rf 3 1 1 0 Steckley, If 3 1 1 0 Spada, cf 2 1 1 3 Merullo, e 2 0 0 0 Chapman, lb 3 0 0 0 Newman, 3b 3 0 0 0 Kerr, p 2 0 1 0 Slusher, p 1 0 0 0 Totals 26 3 ,4 3 MINNESOTA AB R H RBI Carlson, cf 3 1 2 0 Thiel, ss 3 1 1 1 Evans, 3b 3 0 1 0 Wally,c 20 1 1 Southard, rf 2 0 1 0 Foster, rf 1 0 0 0 Oster,lf 3 0 0 0 Andresen, 2b 3 0 0 0 Davis, lb 3 0 1 0 Buhrt, p 1 00 0 a-Raasch 10 0 0 Weckman, p 0 0 0 0 b-Halcrow 1 0 0 0 Totals 27 2 7 2 a-Grounded out for Buhrt in 5th; b-Grounded out for Weckman in 7th. MICHIGAN 000 300 0-3 Minnesota 001 001 0-2 E-Thiel, Merullo, Honig, Tate. DP-Thiel, Andresen and Damis; Jones, Honig and Chapman; New- man, Jones and Chapman. LOB- Michigan 3, Minnesota 4. 2B-Kerr. HR--Spalla. SF--Wally. IP H R ER BB SO Kerr (W, 4-0) 5 7 20 0 5 Rlusher 2 0 0 0 0 0 Buhrt (L, 2-1) 5 3 3 1 4 Wecknan 2 0 0 0 2 1 ,PB--Merullo 2. Con-Con Lets Betting Stay The Constitutional Convention changed its mind today and re- instated pari-mutuel betting at Michigan race tracks. Delegates had previously voted to ban pari-mutuel betting at race tracks but changed their minds in two votes today, 80 to 48 and 95 to 26. The convention, however, adopt- ed the present language of the constitution which prohibits lot- teries and the sale of lottery tickets. Some delegates complained that although horse racing returns tax money to county fairs, such pay- ments were actually payola. Herbert M. Turner, (R-Sagin- aw), in p otesting the adoption of the proposal said: "Gambling is a disease and all gamblers are sick." William C. Marshall, (D-Tay- lor), admonished the position of the delegates He said they were not at the convention to write the ten commandments and suggested that they leave the matter up to the legislature. He suggested leav- ing all references to gambling out of the constitution. nightcap, but the game's laurels went to Spalla, the centerfielder. Michigan got only four hits in the seven-inning nightcap, but one of them was a three-run homer by Spalla. It was only his first homer of the season. The blast came in the fourth inning and staked Kerr to a 3-1 lead. Ron Tate and Dick Steckley, singled and scored ahead of him. Kerr weakened in the sixth, however, and Gophers rallied to score a run. At this point Slusher came in with no one out and pitched no-hit ball the rest of the way. In the first game, the Wolver- ines supported Fisher with a ten- hit attack. Shortstop Dick Honig did the most damage with three hits in five trips, including his third triple in Big Ten action. It was his fourth for the whole sea- son. Nears Triple Record Honig is within reach of the Big Ten record of five triples in a season jointly held by four players. Joe Jones and Spalla each con- tributed a pair of singles to the attack, but it was really six Go- pher errors which decided the game. Minnesota pitchers John Stephens and, Glen Holzemer al- lowed only three earned runs. Stephens was the starter and loser. Secondbasem rn Jon Andreasen contributed three errors himself. Fisher Troubled Fisher was in almost constant trouble, giving up eight hits and six bases on balls. He stranded ten Gopher runners and one double play helped him out of another jam. Minnesota was never out of reach until the ninth when Michi- gan cemented the victory with three runs. The Wolverines moved out in front for the first time in the game in the third inning Blue Over Purdue in Tennis, :6-3 Special To The Daily An inexperienced and under- rated Purdue team went down to defeat at the hands of a powerful Wolverine racquet squad yester- day afternoon, but not before registering three hard-fought and unexpected victories. Several hours after the match .had started in, windy, cloudy La- fayette, Indiana, things looked as expected with little inkling of the problems to come. The ,Purdue squad was thought so weak that Michigan's number one man, Ray Senkowski stayed home and each man moved up one notch on the ladder. Harry Fauquiet playing first singles quickly delt with. his opponent, Bob Powless, 6-3, 6-1, and his team-mate, Gerry Dubie roared over Ross Helft, 6-3, 6-4. Purdue Rally About this time trouble came on the courts for Michigan. Jim Ten- ney, playing the third spot, drop- ped his first set 2-6 and was hot in the midst of the second and might well be deciding one. Wol- verine Tom Beach was upset badly 6-2, 7-5 and his team-mate in the fifth spot, Ron Linclau was edged, 8-6,7-5, by an aggressive racquet-wielder, Steve Kalacany. Neither Kalacany nor Hanans had figured in pre-match considera- tion and their wins came as com- plete surprizes. Tenney however, managed to' calm after the first set, and push- ed the match to the three-set limit by taking the next two, solidly, 6-2, 6-2. With the Wolverines leading the match 3-2 at this point, fill-in Alex McCleery, playing his second match of the season in seventh, proceeded to put the meet on ice in a ' tough victory over Purdu e's Bob McNeely, in the third set. McNeely forced McCleery into the third after taking the second 6-2. Net Rally Wins SINGLES: 1. Fauquier (M) def. Powless, 6-3, 6-1; 2. Duble (M) def. Helft, 6-3, 6-4; 3. Tenney (M) def. Butterfield, 3-6, 6-2, 6-2; 4. Hannas (P) def. Beach, 6-2, 7-5; 5. Kala- cany (P) def. Linclau, 8-6, 7-5; 6. Mecleery (M) def. McNeely, 6-4, 2-6, 6-4. DOUBLES: 1. Duble and Tenney (M) def. Helft and Powless, 6-2, -2; 2H Hannas and Kalacany (P) def. Beach and Linclau, 6-4, 6-3; 3. Fauquier and McCleery (M) def. Butterfield and McNeely, 6-3, 7-5. when a two-run outburst furnished a 3-2 lead. Michigan counted twice more in the fifth, but Minnesota scored once in the bottom of the inning. But Fisher proved equal to the task and protected the two-run margin until the ninth inning splurge gave him some breathing space. Errors Hurt The second game was no breeze as errors by Joe Merulle, Honig and Tate, two passed balls charged to Merullo, and seven Gopher hits made life dangerous in the first five innings. The Wolverine infield, however, came up with two more double plays and Kerr walked none and struck out five to ease the situa- tion. Kerr also added the fourth Michigan hti, a double. Michigan's Harvey Chapman, who had been leading the team with a .400 average, colled off some yesterday, collecting only one hit in seven tries. Michigan will take its seven- game winning streak to Detroit tomorrow to face the University of Detroit Titans. The Wolverines return to Big Ten action next Friday with a single game at Michigan State and a double- header with the Spartans here on Saturday. Michigan, who dropped six out of ten on their Spring tour, has come back strong since then win- ning seven out of eight. Their only loss came in the opener DOUBLE-WINNERS: 'M' Successfully Defends Two-Mile Penn Relay Crown -Daily-Bruce ayior AT LAST-Michigan's star hurler Fritz Fisher is on the mound against anohter foe. Fisher won his first ball game yesterday against Minnesota although he allowed a scattering of hits and walked six. Previously he lost two straight 1-0 ball games. By STAN KUKLA The sixth annual Michigan Open, was run yesterday under threaten- ing skies and before a sparse crowd of less than a hundred spectators. The Michigan track team made a very fine showing and im- proved its last year's record of six first places, six second places and six third places. This year they took seven firsts, eight seconds and two thirds. Other teams competing in the meet were the Western Michigan Freshman (who made a strong showing despite only two first place finishes), Eastern Michigan, Detroit, Michigan State, the "Un- attacheds," and Barney Crouse, a lad from Cranbrook. All-Round Group The Michigan freshmen, some MSU thinclads and various other trackmen competing without any team affiliation, were lumped un- der the general heading of un- attached. Two meet records fell today and both of them to the Wolverine squad. Well, not exactly to the official Michigan squad, as a relay team composed of former Michi- gan men ran in the 440-yd. relay. The team was made up of John Gregg, Les Bird, Dick Cephas and Tom Robinson-all former M' greats. Yesterday they proved that they haven't lost the form which maide them great as they rushed to a 0:42.8 meet record, breaking the old record by seven-tenths of a second. Two More Marks The other record fell to a red- headed flash, Ted Kelly, a sopho- more, running the 660. He easily out-classed his opponents and streaked to a 1:21.9 finish, to set both a meet and a Ferry Field record. The old meet and Ferry NCAA Rules On Probation The National Collegiate Athletic Association slapped a two-year probation on the University of Colorado Friday night in what one top NCAA official called "one of the most serious cases'' ever to come before the group. The action climaxed athletic scandals involving the Big Eight Football Champion Buffaloes and their for:nrr coach, Everett (Son- ny) Grandelius. William (Bud) Davis, the uni- versity's alumni secretary. was hired to replace him. The Colorado penalty stommed from a "slush fund" operated by football coch Everett (Sonny) Grandelius, whom the university fired on March 17. NCAA executive director Wa ter Byers sad there "is no doubt in my :nind that the penalty for these ctenses would have been among the most serious ever handed cut by the NCAA were it not for mitigating circumstances." Cciorado Investigates The 'mitigating Circumstances, Byers explained, included the un: velsity launching an investigation of its cwn "which was very Ef- fective", and the sEction Coo ado took ence the facts of the case were unuvered. ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE For Complete Collision and Body Shop Service Call Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars tied a meet record had there not been a wind of velocity greater than 4.439 miles an hour, helping him out. Crouse, a senior from Cran- brook, made a good showing de- spite his youth and inexperience. He placed fourth in the 100-yd. dash and won his qualifying heat in the 220-yd. dash with a time that tied the then existing meet record of 0:22.1. Schmitt Wins Michigan showed great one-two punches in the shot put and the discus throw. Roger Schmitt won the shot put with a 49' 103/4" toss and Ernie Soudek finished right behind him. discus throw. Soudek won with a Their roles were reversed in the toss of 157' 11%". Schmitt was a close second. Field records were set by Frank Geist of Michigan last year, the first year that the event was run; the record was 1:22.3. Abdul Amu of Michigan State ran a 0:9.7 100-yd. dash in the qualifying heat which would have The Western Michigan Fresh- men showed strength in their re- lays; they entered two teams in each of the relays and won the 880 and placed in several others. Vogler showed great speed in clearing the 120-yd. low hurdles with a winning time of 0:15.0. Mile Relay Victors The final event of the day was the mile relay won by the Michi- gan team in 3:24.4, eight-tenths of a second over the meet record. The race was Michigan's all the way. Billi Hornbeck led off and gave his second man, Dave Ro- main, a five yard lead. Romain lost a little ground in the first turn but made it up and by the time he handed off to Ted Kelly, the outcome of the race was al- most certain. Kelly, however, found himself eight yards behind Ray Williams of Western Michigan on the backstretch. A great kick by Kelly in the last turn gave him the lead. Talt Malone, anchor man, made short work of his competi- tors and was never seriously chal- lenged. The meet ended and the rains came, which proves assistant track coach Elmer Swanson's maxim, "It never rains for a track meet." Running High POLE VAULT: Jim Underly (Un- att.), 14'; HIGH JUMP: Jack To- ner (WMU Track Club), 64"; BROAD JUMP: Sol Akpata (MSIT), 24'11"; DISCUS: Ernie Soudek (M), 157'1111; S H 0T P;UT: Roger Schmitt (M), 4911011"; MILE BE- LAY: Michigan, 3:24.4; TWO-MILE: Chris Murray (M), 9:59.9; 220-YD. DASH: Abdul Amu (MSU), :21.7; 880-YD.: Bill Stewart (MSU), 1:58.2; 880-YD. RELAY: WMUF Team 1, 1:31.0; 120-YD. HIGH HURDLES: Jim Vogler (WMUF), :15.0; 100-YD. DASH: Abdul Amu (MSU), :09.8; 660-YD.: Ted Kelly (M), 1:21.9 (meet and Ferry Field record); 440-YD. DASH: Kent Bernard (Un- att.), :49.4; MILE RUN: Angus Mac- Dougald (M), 4:29.5; 440-YD. RE- LAY: 'M' Grads, :42.8 (meet record); 220-YD. LOW HURDLES: Chuck Mattson (Detroit), :24.4. CHARLES PELTZ ... finishes third By The Associated Press Michigan became a double win- ner in the 1962 Penn Relays yes- terday when the Wolverines - anchored by come-from-behind specialist Ergas Leps - won the two-mile relay in 7:37.8. A crowd of about 35,000 at Pennsylvania's Franklin Field saw Don Canham's Michigan outfit win the four-mile relay Friday, also with Leps handling the stock on the final leg. This time, Leps, a Lithuania- born Canadian, started out even with Fordham's Frank Tomeo on the anchor leg. Tomeo gradually took a five- yard lead but coming into the home stretch, Leps turned on the steam and hit the tape about two yards to the good. Looking Ahead "I expect great things from this team," Canham said. "Leps is the only senior. All the others are sophomores." Running in front of Leps were Jay Sampson, Dave Hayes, and Charlie Aquino. Bennie McRae finished second in the 120-yd. high hurdles be- hind Russ Rogers of Maryland, who turned the course in :14.2. Finally Win New York University broke a seven-year drought and won two major titles - the sprint medley and the mile. Joe Healey's Violets whipped to a 3:25.3 victory in the sprint med- ley, then became the first team since 1954 to break Villanova's stranglehold in the mile relay, hustling to a 3:12.9 decision over Morgan State. Villanova scratched from the mile because, said coach Jumbo Pole Vaulter- Sets Record WALNUT, Cal. (-) - Crew-cut Dave Tork, a rangy Marine lieu- tenant from Camp Pendleton, Cal., used a fiber glass pole last night and sailed over the bar at 16'2" to eclipse all official and unofficial world's records in the pole vault. John Uelses' mark ofr16'34" is still pending. The recognized world standard is 15'9/" set by Don Bragg. We are now Delivering PIZZA and SUBS DOMINICKS NO 2-5414 {. , Jim Elliott, "we couldn't field a representative team. It wouldn t have been fair to the others for us to start, knowing we* didn't have a chance." But the Wildcats from Philadel- phia's main line, crippled by a long list of injuries, did manage to win the 880 Relay in 1:25. Abilene Christian took the 440 in :41.6 and Win.ton-Salem carted off the shuttle hurdles in :59.3. So NYU, Villanova, and Michi- gan all wound up double xv7nners. Record-Breakers The crowd saw three meet rec- ords broken -in the javelin, 3,- 000-meter steeplechase and shot put. Another was broken Friday in the discus, and the 400-meterI hurdles mark was tied. Jerry Dyes of Abilene Christian set the javelin record in the trials with a toss of 243'1". This erased' the mark of 232 set last year by Nick Kovalakides of Maryland. In the final, he could do no better than 232'10/2' because of a sore back. Pat Traynor of Villanova, who was voted the most valuable col- legian in the meet because of his efforts on the Wildcat relay teams, was clocked in 9:11.1 in the 3,000- meter steeplechase. The old record was 9:14.2 by John Lawdler of Abilene Christian last year. Law- ler was in the race but dropped out with a bad knee. Gary Gubner of New York smashed the meet record with a 61'4%" toss in the shot put. The old mark was 59'1%" by Ken Ban- tum of Manhattan in 1956. The mile turned out to be a thriller between NYU and Morgan State and it was decided on the anchor leg, when Cliff Bertrand outstepped Lawson Smart and crossed the tape about two yards to the good. Abilene Christian was third, Western Michigan fourth,,, St. John's fifth and Oklahoma State last. Abilene and Oklahoma State were the big favorites on their 3:10 and 3:10.2 clockings in the Texas Relays, but neither ever really was in the race. -- - --- i ++rri I Z-e-; (Author of "Rally Round The Flag, Boys", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.) Keeping Up with the Best 120-YD. HIGH HURDLES: 1. Russ Rogers, Maryland; 2. Bennie Mc- Rae, M; 3. John Betrea, Morgan State; 4. Ken Shepherd, Winston- Salem. :6:14.2. 100-YD. DASH: 1. Dennis Ricl~ard- son, Abilene Christian; 2. Joel Johnson, Western Michigan; 3. Gerald Ashworth, Dartmouth; 4. George Smartt, Virginia State. :09.7 HIGH JUMP: 1. Alonzo Littlejohn, Western Michigan, James Oliphant, W~estern Michigan, and Sam Stei- bert, Yale (tie); 4. Wilmore Davis, Morgan State, and Jeff Little, New York, (tie). 6'4". SPRINT MEDLEY: 1. New York; 2. Oklahoma State; 3. Morgan State; 4. Vilanova. 3:25.3. 440-YD. RELAY: 1. Abilene Chris- tian; 2. villanova; 3. Morgan State; 4. Manhattan. :41.6. JAVELIN: 1. Henry Hallas, Yale; 2. Steve Haneroff, . Maryland; 3. George Reynolds, Villanova; 4. Doug Tozour, Navy; 5. Bob Marshall, Rhode Island. 201'71%". 880-YD. RELAY: 1. Villanova; 2. Manhattan;3. Morgan State; 4. Western Michigan. 1:25.0. TWO-MILE RELAY: 1. Michigan; 2. Fordham; 3. Georgetown; 4. Man- hattan. 7:37.8. POLE VAULT: 1. Dick Plymale, Army; 2. Rolando Cruz, Villanova, and John Belitza, Maryland (tie); 4. Tom Glass, Maryland; 5. Richard Nutt, Navy, and Rod Denhart, M (tie). 15'7%1". SHOT PUT: 1. Gary Gubner, NYU; 2. Billy Joe, Villanova; 3. Dick Gess- wein, Duke; 4. Ed Kohler, Fordham. 61'44"" 480-YD. SHUTTLE HURDLE RE- LAY: 1. Winston-Salem; 2. Yale; 3. Villanova. :59.3. MILE RELAY: 1. NYU; 2. Morgan State; 3. Abileine Christian; 4. Western Michigan. 3:12.9. CRAM COURSE No. 3: ENGLISH POETRY Final eams will soon be upon us. This is no time for fun and games. 'et us instead study hard, cram fiercely, prepare assidu- ously. In this column today let us make a quick survey of English poetry. When we speak of English poetry, we are, of course, speaking of Byron, Shelley, and Keats. Some say that of the three, Keats was the most talented. It is true that he displayed his gifts earlier than the others. While still a schoolboy at St. Swithin's he wrbte his epic lines: If I am good, I get an apple, So I don't whistle in the chapel. From this distinguished beginning, he went on to write an- other 40,000 poems in his lifetime-which is all the more remarkablewhen you consider that he was only five feet tall! I mention this fact only to show that physical problems never keep the true artist from creating. Byron, for example, was lame. Shelley had an ingrown hair. Nonetheless, these three titans of literature turned out a veritable torrent of romantic petry Nor did they neglect their personal lives. Byron, a devil with the ladies, was expelled from Oxford for dipping Elizabeth Barrett's pigtails in an inkwell. He thereupon left England to fight in the Greek war of independence. He fought bravely and well, but women were never far from his mind, as evidenced by this immortal poem: How splendid it is to fight for the Greek, But I don't enjoy it half as much as dancing cheek to cheek. While Byron fought in Greece, Shelley remained in England, where he became court poet to the Duke of Marlborough. (It is interesting to note in passing that Marlborough was the ongi- nal spelling of Marlboro Cigarettes, but the makers were unable to get the entire word on the package. With characteristic in- genuity they cleverly lopped off the final "gh". This, of course left them with a "gh" lying around the factory. They looked for some place to put it and finally decided to give it to the Director of Sales, Mr. Vincent Van Go. This had a rather curious result. As plain Van Go, he had been a crackerjack director of sales, but once he became Van Gogh, he felt a 'mysterious, irresistible urge to paint. He resigned from the Company and became an artist. It did not work out too well. When Van Gogh learned what a great success Marlboro Cigarettes quickly be- came-as, of course, they had to with such a flavorful flavor, such a filterful filter, such a flip-top box, such a soft pack-he was so upset about leaving the firm that he cut off his ear in a fit of chagrin.) But I digress. Byron, I say was in Italy and Shelley in STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL PETITIONING FOR RELATED BOARDS Opens Tuesday, April 25- (loses Friday, May4 EARLY REGISTRATION PASS COMMITTEE: Active during registration week ... hears requests from students working, in athletics, in campus organizations, and others for out of order registration. Two one-year terms are open. HUMAN RELATIONS BOARD: Considers cases and areas involving discrimination against students . . . and works in a positive manner to encourage better human relations in the Uni- versity and Ann Arbor communities. Five one-year terms open. CINEMA GUILD: Is the board which chooses movies shown at Cinema Guild and receives petitions from student organizations who wish to sponsor the showings. Members of the board are guests of the sponsoring organization at any movie. Two one-year terms open. STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE MANAGER: Receives $100.00 per semester for running the Student Book Exchange in the Student Activities Building. Has two assistant managers and staff. One-semester term. STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE ASSISTANT MANAGERS: Assist in operation of Student Book Exchange . . . receives $50. compensation per' semester. Two one-semester terms open. ELECTIONS DIRECTOR: Runs the campus elections in November including petitioning, polls, open houses, publicity, and Count Night . . . One-semester term. ie r1'6i? ar/y 4c Pe England. Meanwhile Keats went to Rome to try to grow. Who does not remember his wistful lyric: Although I am only five feet high, Some day I will look in an elephant's eye. But Keats did not grow. His friends, Shelley and Byron, touched to the heart, rushed to Rome to stretch him. This too failed. Then Byron, ever the ladies' man, took up with Lucretia Borgia, Catherine of Aragon, and Annie Oakley. Shelley, a more domestic type, stayed home with his wife Mary, and wrote his famous poem: I love to stay home with the missus and write, And hug her and kiss her and give her a bite. Mary Shelley finally got so tired of being bitten that she went into another room and wrote Frankenstein. Upon reading the FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. Williamn Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Telephone NO 5-9131 uiI. LI.-.. A II VI/2 . .1 f*1 J ...... ....:s....T .. STUDENT RELATIONS BOARD: Acquaints student body with the activities of the Develop- ment Council and the University's alumni program. Develops programs and activities on campus designed to arouse student interest and later participation in the University's alumni program. One two-year term is open. INTERNATIOWAL RELATINS COMMITTEE: Airs n ndvises existinorornoms and develoos I I II > A