THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, IF Science Fair Set Board Elects Klambach Chairman Leland J. Klambach was elect- ed chairman of the University of Michigan Development Council's Board of Directors at a meeting on Saturday, Jan. 30. Klambach ,who graduated from the University in 1923 and pres- ently is president of the Massa- chusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, succeeds Raymond T. Perring as chairman. He served as vice chairman last year and head- ed the Finance Committee. The function of the Develop- ment Council is "to assist in the public relations of the University, especially in those aspects which will lead to improved financial support through gifts, grants and bequests." Last year the Council raised over one million dollars from alumni, corporations, and foundations. The money is used for research sponsorship, special equipment, fellowships, scholar- hips, and other student aid. In addition, the Development Council is engaged in conducting a special capital gifts campaign called the Phoenix Continuation Campaign. Approximately $1 mil- lion has been secured for this c a m p u a wide atoms-for-peace program. SCIENCE FAIR-This scene from last year's First Annual Southeastern Michigan Science Fair will be repeated April 8-10 at Yost Field House. Junior and senior high school students from Hillsdale, Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe and Washtenaw counties will be participating in the second fair. Prizes valued at more than $800 are to be awarded and several thousand visitors are expected to view the scientific projects on display. ANTIOCH PAPER: Harvard's Returning to NSA Discussed (EDITOR'S NOTE: Harvard Univer- sity students recently voted to re- turn to the National Student Asso- ciation, from which Harvardwith- drew in 1958. The following article, reprinted from "The Antioch Rec- ord," discussed Harvard's return.) Harvard University has returned to the fold. After withdrawing from the National Student Asso- ciation (NSA) last year over strong opposition, the student body voted almost two to one this fall to rejoin. Harvard originally withdrew be- cause of the prohibition on cross regional conferences (the Student, Council felt that holding confer-! ences only with schools in their region placed a needless restriction on them and limited the useful- ness of the conferences), the stu- dent apathy at Harvard itself, a basic disagreement with the tenets of NSA (the general opinion, as far as there is one, seems to be that the United States student body is too diverse to allow any one group to represent it all) and certain specific objections to NSA practices; many arising from the annual NSA convention. 'No Student Movement' A member of the Harvard Stu- dent Council who favors NSA ex- pressed his, and apparently many Harvard students' opinions, when he said, "There is no student movement in this country and there shouldn't be. We should be politically active as individuals, not as students. "Students are too diversified for one group to represent them all; whether or not there should be a student organization, NSA isn't it. As far as it claims to represent students, it's fraudulent. NSA is 'nice,' but I'm skeptical. When it does any good, I'll support it. And It is good for our public relations for us to belong. Maybe we can moderate it a little. After all, if there is a national organization of students, Harvard should be in it. But what can NSA possibly do for Harvard?" Few Vote Although only 40 per cent of the Harvard student body voted in the referendum, 223 of the 1,507 who voted "don't care." Due to the apathy in the last referendum, the committee this time provided space for registration of this sentiment. One Harvard student who work- ed at the polls said, "Kids I knew would come up to the polls and set up all over so no one would ask me 'Which way do I vote?' have to go out of his way to vote- Then they'd vote whichever way and still only 40 per cent were in- I told them. We had voting places terested enough to show up." DEL io RESTAURANT FREE DELIVERY Also STEAKS - CHOPS - CHICKEN SPAGHETTI -RAVIOLI - LASAGNE BEER and Wine - (in or Out) Closed Monday 122 W. Washington Phone NO 2-9575 -_Ingersoll-Rand research aura' develpee,, de s; p raducla an asaes eop/oeet/iarmochioery prad/rc/S - - Finest Powder Snow! ,g ig t Thrift Ski, Weeks\ ON THE BIG MOUNTAIN IN THE ROCKIES AT WHITEFISH, MONTANA $ 68 per person plus rail far. Low cost "all-season" package rate Includes: " A week of glorius skiing on The Big Mountain. " Chalet or fine in-town lodg- ing (free bus to slopes). " Three meals daily. " Unlimited use of all lifts. * Six ski lessons. Three-time sit, of the Na- tional Ski Championships, The Big Mountain offers 9 miles of open slopes and trails. Ski it on your way to and from the Winter Olympics! 29 HOURS FROM CHICAGO on Great Northern EMPIRE BUILDER Leave Chicago 2 P.M. Ar- rive Whitefish next eve- ning. Great scenery from Great Domes. R P. G. HOLMES. A