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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 29, 1963 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-09-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THNE MICHIG~AN DfAILY

QT1LT nAv CT lrr Et'v t * liaILLIDILo-,

___________________________________________________________#'1.1j: 1

1A X., LLI FTLD1BER z9, 1963

Bandsmen Throng Gridiron To Salute Their Day

DIAL 8-6416
Continuous Today From 1 P.M.
HELD OVER

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-Daily-Ed Langs
BIG BAND SOUND-The gridiron is lined with 13,000 high school band members who came to participate in the Un iversity's annual "Band Day." A crowd of 63,659 watches
the festivities held during halftime of the Wolverine 27-16 triumph over Southern Methodist University.

COMMUNITY COLLEGES:
Bartlett Forsees Expansion

DIAL
HELD OVER 2ND WEEK!

L3 Shows Daily at 1:00-
4:30 and 8:00
Evenings ...... ... $1.25
Matinees till 5 p.m. $1
Chlren .... ...c
WINNER OF

NEXT
"SPARROWS CAN'T SING"

By the fall of 1964, Michgan
will have 18 community colleges,
more than double the number of
locally operated colleges in Mich-
igan since the passage of the Com-
munity College Act in 1951, ac-
cording to State Superintendent
of Public Instruction Lynn M.
Bartlett.
Bartlett said recently that this
growth rate is expected to in-
crease at an even greater rate.
"While this growth rate has
been outstanding, we will again
need almost double this number in
the next 10 years if we are to sat-
isfy anticipated demands for post-
twelfth grade education," he said.
Baby Boom Needs
"Even though the locally oper-
ated schools' enrollment has shot
from 8000 ten years ago to an an-
ticipated 40,000 this fall, we have
yet to deal with the influx of the
post-war baby boom."
To partially meet these needs,,
the 1963-64 school year will see
the opening of the state's 17th
community college this fall and its
18th next fall, Bartlett announced.
Bay de Noc Community College
in Escanaba, operated by the Delta
community college district, opened
this fall to become the.17th such
community institution.
Current Enrollment
Its present enrollment is 144
full-time students and an almost
equal, number of part-time stu-
dents. It is presently using the fa-
cilities of the former Escanaba
High School.
Michigan's 18th community col-
lege, Schoolcraft College, will be
located in northwest Wayne Coun-
ty and is scheduled to open inthe
fall of 1964. A multi-million dollar
building program is under way for
the new institution, Bartlett said.
Bartlett warned that "by 1965
the number of college applicants
Across
Campus
Prof Ronald Freedman of the
sociology department and director
of, the University Center for'Popu-
lation Studies will be one of three
panel members discussing "The
Population Explosion Problem" at
8:30 p.m. today at the Beth Israel
Congregatiop social hall.
Orchestra .. .
The University Chamber Or-
chestra, under guest conductor
Boyd Neel, will present a program
of 18th century symphonies at
4:15 p.m. today in Rackham Lec-
ture Hall:
Featured will be works by Filtz,
Toeschi, Schwindl and Haydn.

will have increased by 43,000 over "Considering also the fact that
1962." some of our community colleges
Appeals for Expansion are now unable to accommodate all
He used this fact to emphasize those who seek admission, we can
his appeal for the continuation see the imperative need for rapid
and expansion of the Michigan expansion of community college
community college program. facilities."
'PresentsBuilding List
To State for Next 5 Years

7ACADE
AWARD
"LAWR
tainly tl
spectacu
Zimme
ColumbiaPictures presents Daily.
THE SAM SPIEGEL, DAVID LEAN Production
LAWRENCE
OF ARABIA

EMY
IDS I
ENCE" is cer-
the most intel-
of the epic-
,ulars! - David
.rman, Mich.

R

Use,,
Daily'
Classified
Ads

:4I

(Continued from Page 1)

and scheduling. Those buildings in
the construction stage comprise
group I.
All new constructions currently
being undertaken by the Univer-
sity fall into the Central Campus
Plan concept. The planners hope
to make further expansion fit into
.. relevant pattern tuilt around
structures already existing.
"We are working for a.function-
al grouping of buildings and col-
leges," McKevitt said. "We hope to
have the departments and colleges
develop within a specific area. For
instance, the East Medical Bldg.
on central campus will be vacated
with the development of all Medi-
cal School facilities in the Medical
Center area. It will most likely be
turned over to the biological
sciences of the literary college.
This would put most of the build-
ings concerned with this study in
the vicinity of the Museum. This
also would be wise because'it calls
for a minimum of renovation."
Need of Expansion
The libraries show a "definite
need for expansion. The growth of
enrollment and intensification of
use of the facilities indicate action
must be taken," McKevitt said.
In particular the special libraries
in the General Library need ex-
pansion now. And in order to avoid
duplication of the card catalog, it
would be best to expand in the
immediate vicinity of the General
Library, he continued. "We want
ready access to the General Li-
brary, possibly adjoining it. The
West Physics site is the one being'
studied." This would find most of
the libraries grouped in that area.
A central campus library is called
for as a group II project.
A need has also been indicated
for a new classroom and office
building in the central campus

area. The Buildings Under Study
report classifies this as group III.
The tentative area being discussed
for the class and office building is
that behind Hill Aud.
Board Recommendations
The Board in Control of Inter-
collegiate Athletics recommended
three initial items: a basketball
arena, an intra-mural facility for
boys no farther away than 'the
existing one and one for girls, near
Paliner Field. All three of these
items are mentioned in the report.
Housing Planned
The long-range expansion plan
of the business administration
school includes student housing.
The plans are still indefinite, how-
ever the concept of student hous-
ing affiliated with the school is
being planned.
"We plan to develop housing
as part of our educational pro-
gram," Dean Floyd Bond of the
business administration school said
recently.
It will be like the Lawyers Club
with facilities for graduate stu-
dents primarily.
What is being worked for is not
the dormitory style, but a live and
learn kind of environment with
apartment type housing where
perhaps four single students would
like and work together as a study
team, working on team projects,
he said.
HEADS WANTED
-MEN'S
MICHIGAN UNION
BARBER SHOP
Daily 8:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M.

'I
Q"
Why buy a pen this good
when you might just, lose it?
A.
Parker won't let you lose it.
If you do, it will be, replaced*

*SPECIAL REPLACEMENT OFFER
If you buy a Parker 45 for $5 between now
and October 31, 1963, it will be protected
against loss for one full year at no extra cost.
Just register its purchase by mailing one-half
of the Parker 45 Registration Certificate to
the insurance company listed on the certifi-
cate. Then if the pen is lost, the insurance
company will replace it at no charge. All you
have to do is mail the other half of the certifi-
cate, properly notarized, and describe how
the pen was lost. ,
Here's why this is such a good pen for a
college student:

It's "convertible". You can load it with a car-
tridge o or you can replace the
cartridge with this ingenious little "converter
== rand fill it from an ink bottle.
Hard to run out of ink duiing an exam.
Solid 14K gold point. You get a choice of
seven widths from extra fine to extra broad.
And if you damage a point, your dealer can
replace it instantly.
For only $5 you get: The pen, a "converter,"
a cartridge, and free exchange of any undam-
aged point within 30 days of purchase. PLUS
Parker's special replacement offer. This guar-
antee against loss will be offered until Octo-
ber 31st only; so better see your Parker dealer
right away.

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+ PARKER-At 75 years-Maker of the world's most wanted pens

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$5

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1. load it with a cartridge
2.... or fill it from an ink bottle

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