PAGE EIGHT Value of Experience Stressed by Green Dr. Robert W. Green, assistant professor of history, said Thursday night that in dealing with things in life today we should "train the mind to think in terms of experience." Dr. Green spoke on "The Tiger Who Took Over" at the second of the Last Lecture Ser senior women's hat society. "The Tiger Who Took Over" is a fable of the tiger who wished to take the place of the lion as king of the beasts. The tiger succeeded in persuading the. other animals to aid him in his usurpation, but he later betrayed the trust the animals had placed in him. Made False Promises The tiger had gained the confi dence of the animals by prom ising them that when he was king they would not be in danger of being killed as they were under the lion. Once the tiger gained Vit. throne he found it necessary to kill these animals to obtain food. Dr. Green pointed out that the tiger did not learn LT experience. We should, as the tiger should have, consider people as individ uals. Then only will we be able to see things in perspective. He went on to say that exper ience and knowledge or past ex periences ar‘r! our key to power. For example the simple things we / Why shi YOU pa I t electric s \ in Tenne `Y. , -- 34- ` I P<I4, - -- tf„ - In almost all of Tennessee, and in the other areas of the U. S. served by federal government power systems, a strange twist in federal law puts sev eral million families and businesses into a special "privileged class." Your taxes help pay their electric bills! Here's what happens: Unlike independent electric light and power companies, federal gov ernment power systems pay no federal taxes at all and pay little or no state and local taxes. This means- that customers of these federal power sys tems don't pay the taxes on electricity that you pay. As a - result, you have to be taxed more to make up the difference—and to build the federal power plants in the first place. Shouldn't the basic unfairness of this kind of subsidy and tax exemption be given thorough study and discussion? We think so. That's why we bring you this message. WI Tr* WEST PENN POWER NMI By LYNN WARD es sponsored by Mortar Board, come in contact with every day are derived from experiences of the past. Today's mechanical clocks are patterned after the European clocks of the 14th century. Men's trousers are modern versions of those worn in Persia in the 6th century B.C. 'Knowledge is Power' "Knowledge is power," Dr. Green said, for a man is able to I deal with the adversaries of his life if he knows about them and is conditioned lo them. Therefore we should consider what people did at other times, and we see that the explanation of the history of mankind in a meaningful way is very . valuable. Dr. Green said. The individual] finds, as he looks into man's past, that he has a responsibility for what his society does in the future. •Crystal Cave in Bermuda has a natural lake which covers two acres and is 80 feet underground. Id ' THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE. PE UCA Will Hold Ist Cookie Sale The University Christian Asso ciation will sponsor a cookie sale from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, including the noon hour. Cookies will be sold both days at the Corner Room and the bul letin board on the Mall, and Mon day only at the entrance to the Hetzel Union card room. Peanut butter, oatmeal, choco late chip and sugar cookies will sell for fifty cents a dozen. Brownies will be sold for sixty cents. Over 12,000 cookies have been baked by members of UCA and the Various student religious foudations to raise money for the UCA budget. Profit., from the sale, the first ever held by the association, will be used to fi nance firesides, coffee hours, mar riage consultations and books for the UCA library. Profits are expected to reach $3OO to $4OO. Carol Keplinger is chairman of the sale. Psych Prof Will Speak Dr. Robert Stover, assistant professor of psychology, will speak at a meeting of Phi Sigma, biological research society, at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in 209 Hetzel Union. He will speak on "Effects of Environmental Dif fe r ences on Motor Responses and Subsequent Survival of Trout." A Campus-to-Career Case History Leader of an exploration Owen Williams leads a team of re search and development specialists at Bell Telephone Laboratories. His is one of many teams set up at the Labs to ex plore the frontiers of electronics and com munications. In the picture above, Owen (right) discusses modulation problems in electron tubes with Robert Leopold, M.S., Electrical Engineering, University of Michigan, 1949. Owen himself is thirty-one, and a B.E.E. from Rensselaer Polytechnic In stitute, class of '49. He joined the Labs upon graduation, and was assigned to communications development training the equivalent of a two-year postgraduate course in communications. Mixed with his classes were various assignments in Many young men like Owen Williams are finding , interesting and rewarding. careers in the Bell System at Bell Telephone Laboratories, in Bell Telephone Companies, Western Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your placement officer can give you more information about career oppor tunities in all Bell System companies. NSYLVANIA Camp Interviews The following camps will inter view at the Student Employment Service, 112 Old Main: Blue Mountain Camp, Pa., March 16; Clear Pool Camp, N.Y.. March 20; Camp Lakeland, N.Y., and Cradle Beach Camp, N.Y., March 23. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE 1949 CHEVROLET 2-door sedan with radio and heater. Excellent condition. Call E. Brown ext. 674 or 5t9. 1948 BUICK Convertible: good condition. - Call Herb Patterson at Theta Delta Chi, AD 7-4402. PARKER Si black pen with silver top and clip. vicinity Parking Lot 42. Reward. Call EL 5-9787 after 6. 'TAN MACKINTOSH raincoat Owner's name in pocket. Taken by mistake from first floor Main Ent. at 10 a.m., March 14. Sentimental value. 1 have your "AGU." Call John, AD 7-3332. 1957 CLASS RING between McElwain and Simmons. Call Paul AD 7-2984 after I WO. Reward. FOR RENI ONE DOUBLE room available at 207 E. Park Ave. Call AD 8-6042 or inquire between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. WANTED RANTER TO buy in June: 35 foot. 2 bed room or larger House Trailer. Call AD 7-2447 between 12 and 3 Sat. p.m. MAID FOR general housecleaning work in fraternity house. Monday through Saturday 8 a.m. until noon. All equipment supplied. Call Delta Upsilon. AD 7-3398. A FOURTH Roommate to share the ,re• sponsibilities and benefits of a luxurious 6-room apartment. One block from campus. Call AD 8-1055. the Chem Lab, the switching and wave filter departments, and work on transmis sion systems and coaxial cables. In 1954 Owen was promoted to super visor. He works with two eleCtrical en gineers, both systems analysts, and four technical assistants. Their current job is exploratory development of submarine cable systems, looking towards great new transoceanic communications links. Owen is one of many engineers and scientists in the Bell Systeni whose prin cipal responsibilities include those of leadership. The work of improving tele phone service in the Bell System is guided, and decisions are made, by men who understand the problems involved at first hand. SATURDAY. MARCH 16. 1957 !Tito's Lieutenant Dies PARIS, March 15 (fP)—Veteran Communist Moshe Pijade, long time lieutenant of Yugoslavia's President Tito, died of a heart at tack today on his way home from a good-will visit in Britain. He was 67. PASSENGERS WANTED FLORIDA BOUND STUDENTS! Have room for passengers over Easter vacation. Call AD 7-3533. MISCELLANEOUS PHI TAU and SAMMIES •present Paul Serrin's Quartet Mar. 23 at Sammy House. FOR PROMPT and *apart radio and phono• graph service stop at State College T.V, GU South Allen Street IS YOUR typewriter giving you, trouble? If so. call AD 7-2492 or bring machine to 633 W. College Ave. IT'S HASSINGER for racket stringing the No-Awl Way. Latest factory equipment, prompt service, guaranteed work. Longer life to string and racket. R. T. Hassinger, White Hall or 514 Beaver Ave.'after 5 p.m. WORK WANTED EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires typ. ins of theses, reports, term papers. ete. Fast, reasonable service. Phone Al) 8-6943. HELP WANTED STUDENT PINBOYS—Steady part-time job if you can schedule the right two or three evenings. It's 81.95 singles or $3.98 doubles for a full two-hour tournament. Inquire Dux Club, 129 S. Pugh St. WOMAN STUDENT or employee to ex. change part-time help with children for living accommodations. Pleabe- call Al) 7- 7206. , • I 1 SILL TCLISPHONS SYSTIIIVI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers