PAGE EIGHTEEN • B i ds Student Personal Library Contest Enters Last Weeks Awards will be given to the five undergrad . uate students judged to be the owners of the best personal libraries at the University •on Friday, April 26, in Pattee Library. Students planning to enter the competition must have libraries of 35 books or more, and they must present an annotated bibliography of 35 books, describing each volume and its special value or interest to him or her. Paperbacks are accept able. Entrants must also provide a commentary on his or her library covering how, why and when SHEBOYGAN, Wis. (M) Richard M. Nixon called repeatedly on Wisconsin voters yesterday to vote Republican in next week's Republican primary if they are dissatisfied with the Johnson administration. "Let Wisconsin on April 2 say to the nation that if we want a change, the choice is of voting for the Republican candidate," Nixon said. Victory Assured The former vice president, whose path to a primary victory is virtually uncontested, sounded the call amid warnings by his aides that a heavy Republican crossover vote is possible into the Democratic primary where Johnson is matched with Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy. Nixon raised the issue as his last day of scheduled campaigning for Wisconsin's 30 Republican convention votes carried him from Oshkosh to Milwaukee. But he kept an eye on the big picture Clark Cites His Status UNIONTOWN, Pa. (AP) Sen. Joseph S. Clark wound up a two-day campaign swing yesterday in which he argued that his status in the Senate is the best reason to return him to Washington. He also zeroed in on Re publican hopeful Richard M. Nixon. At a news conference prior to a speech to local officials in Uniontown, the Democratic senator was asked if Johnson could win an election con ducted in the midst of the Vietnam wa-. "I couldn't picture anyone voting for Nixon," said Clark. Clark has been a frequent critic of President Johnson's Vietnam .)olicies. The senator is being opposed for the nomi nation by Rep. John H. Dent of Jeanette, who says he sup ports Johnson "down the line." Clark said in Uniontown he's confident he'll survive the Dent challenge. "I haven't seen anything yet to convince me that my earlier prediction that I would defeat Dent 2 to 1 was wrong," said Clark. In his luncheon speech to Fayette Count y officials, Clark returned to the seniority theme he had stressed the previous day in New Kensing ton. Clark noted in Uniontown that he is a member of the Senate Subcommittee on Em ployment, Man power and Poverty and helped draft much of the nation's anti poverty legislation. BICYCLES!! Specialists for Schwinn, Raleigh Robin Hood Complete Repair Facilities for All Makes 3, L, 10, 15 Speed Bicycles Tandems Unicycles The Bicycle Shop One Block past Campus 441 W. College 2384422 as well, with release of a major address taped for national television showing Sun day. On that day, he will return to Milwau kee with his family for a pre-primary party. Nixon noted that Wisconsin is "the one state in the Union where you can go into that polling booth and vote for the man without being restricted whatever." Under state law, there is no party regis tration at the polls and each voter may use the ballot of his choice. But, Nixon said, "America will not turn to a party that's divided." McCarthy, he said, is "a sincere and dedicated man who is presenting his case as he sees it." And Kennedy, Nixon added, also is presenting his case as he sees it but both candidates offer voters only a divided party. "We need a united United States," said Nixon, "and they can't provide it." Students Go to Europe Outside it was just an ordinary Penn State March day—rainy, blustering and cold. But inside the Hetzel Union Building lounge a gathering of excited University students filled the air with talk of the sunshine of Rome, Salamanca in the spring, and the beauties of Strasbourg on the Rhine. The more than 130 participants in this year's Study Abroad Program departed last Tuesday (March 26) for universities in England, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, France and ,Germany. At the end of the winter term the group was given a farewell tea, where excitement reigned high. "I'm thrilled, but also nervous," one girl traveling to Salamanca, Spain, confessed. She added that the proximity of her first trip to Europe made it difficult to study - for finals. Other students, obviously believers in advance planning, were talkina b about traveling to Europe after their clasases end in July, or about the trip home aboard an ocean liner some will be taking. Paul M. Althouse, vice-president for resident instruc tion told the students he wanted them to be "ambassadors for Penn State" in the foreign countries. "Think of what you can take there and what you can bring back as an educational experience," Althouse said. "Remember you have to put something into your experience to get some thing out." The deadline for applications for the 1969 SAP has been extended to April 15, 1968. They should be returned to the Study Abroad Office in 212 Engineering "C". McCarthy, Kennedy On Campaign Trail (Continued from page one) Kennedy's throat. But the voice was still faint and hoarse as he spoke along the motorcade and at the City Audi torium, there police said some 10,000 Kennedy fans packed an auditorium designed to seat 6,000. Boisterous Welcome Their welcome was boisterous as he told them the 1968 election "will mean nothing if it ends with the country as divided as when it began." The message was the same he has delivered in about 10 states since he began his campaign: "We can have a better country, a more decent coon try, a country where men are not separated and alienated from the concerns of their fellows. That is why I run for President. And I ask for your help. With it, we shall win in August, win in November and we will turn this country around." No Restriction THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA they became interested in building a personal library, their ideals for a complete home library, and the ten books they hope to add to their library. Collections may be a general personal library, a collection centered in a subject or a collection of a single author or group of authors. Three faculty members will judge the libraries on a basis of intelligent interests; knowledge of books collected as revealed in the annotations and commentary; scope and imagination shown in creating the collection, and their value as a nucleus for a permanent personal library. Rarity FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1968 or monetary value will be of secondary considera tion to the judges. There will be five awards given, with first prize being $5O worth of books. The competition is being sponsored by the University Library in co-operation with Keeler's, the Pennsylvania Book Shop, Nittany News, Horner's Book Store and Student Book Store. Entry forms may be obtained, and filed when completed, at the Pattee Library, Circulation Desk; at the Undergraduate Library; or at the sponsoring bookstores. Closing date is Sunday, April 21.