PAGE EIGHT NZ= —Collegian Photo by Bob Thompson GOING ONCE ... Auctioneer Harold E. Leightley sells a group 4 of surplus beds at the semi-annual auction of surplus equipment. The children in the foreground used the beds as trampolines before they were auctioned off Saturday at the University warehouse. The CAREd Enou : h To Give Their Very Best By ZANDY SLOSSON A speech that payed off! Larry Baker, sophomore in education from St. Thomas, learned that a well-prepared speech can result in both pub lic service and a high grade. Given the assignment to give a "speech to stimulate," Larry decided to talk on what a dollar donated to CARE would buy. It wasn't that easy however. At the end of the talk, his teach er, Helen Blumentteld, a gradu ate student in sp e ec h from Queens, N.Y., told the class she was going to withhold Baker's grade until they had shown how effective the talk had been. "My philosophy is that the aim of communication is to get a certain response," Miss Blum- CAMP LENORE in the Berkshires Private Camp for Women Openings for Waterfront. Land Sports, Arts and Crafts, General Counselors. Interviews held at Student Em ployment Office, 112 Old Main, Thursday and Friday, April 23 and 24. Sign up in advance for an appointment. Take the sky road for TOGETHERNESS! 331/3% DISCOUNT ON GROUP TRAVEL! 10 or more traveling together Save Y 3 Have 5 full days of fun! NEW YORK • WASHINGTON For reservations see your travel agent or call MW,NYAffitag enfield explained. "H Larry's speech is good, he will get a good response." Baker had no reason to fear. Seventeen of the twenty-one stu dents in his Speech 2`,0 class con tributed. The class ' , cited to send the $l3 they collectetd to Formo sa through CARE in New York City. Did Miss Blumenfield uphold her end of the bargain? Baker was given an "A" on his speech. Baker told the class that four-fifths of the world was starving and of that percen tage, one-half had no way of obtaining food for their daily lives. He cited such examples as the Chinese that live on the cliffs of Hong Kong and the in habitants of the desert in the Middle East. He brought the need 'close to home' by saying that $1 donated 8 FLIGHTS DAILY PITTSBURGH DETROIT THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA to CARE will buy 40 people one cup of milk a day for three months. He added that the same amount will also give 140 people rations for one week or 10 people daily bread for two months. •20 New Frigidaire Washers 1 / 2 Block L West of -- ' Campus 459 Railroad Avenue Automatic , , NOW OPEN SELF-SERVICE LAUNDERAMA •6 New Jensen Gas Dryers • Doors Never Closed •Finished in V 2 Hour Stavely to Complete 43 Years of Service Earl B. Stavely, associate dean of the College of Engineer ing and Architecture and professor of electrical engineering, will retire July 1 having served longer on the faculty than any present faculty member. Stavely, who will retire with the title of professor emeri tus of electrical engineering, will have completed 43 years of continuous service at that time. He enrolled at the University 50 years ago, and he was con ferred the technical degree of electrical engineering in 1915. He began his teaching duties here the following year. For many years Stavely di rected the instruction in the machinery and electronics lab oratory, while conducting stud ies related to the improvement of teaching methods. He introduced the "job meth od" of laboratory instruction, which required students to pre pare reports on practical prob lems assigned by a ficticious chief engineer, "A. B. Jones," rather than the routine laboratory re port. He served in 1944-45 as chair man of the administrative com mittee that headed the Depart ment of Electrical Engineering, and in 1956 was appointed acting dean of the College of Engineer ing and Architecture. Stavely played an important role in the design of the Elec trical En g i neering Building, completed in 1939, and in the electrical and lighting design for many of the campus build ings constructed between 1920 and 1938. Stavely, who is interested in • Prices to Fit the Student Budget . . . possible because of self-service WASH wit I ;',Y T . ~ -~ hc: ~'i. 411111. WOO ' totegt 061 e ndry of Stat TUESDAY.. APRIL •21. 1959 boy scouting, organized and con ducted a financial campaign which evolved into the State Col lege Area Community Fund, on which he serves as a member of the Executive Board. He is a charter member and past master of State College Lodge 700, F and AM, past presi dent of the University Club and former secretary and vice presi 'dent for the State College Con certs Association, Parade— (Continued from page three) engines. However, because of the possibility of television coverage they have allowed the change. Johnson said the parade com mittee had not set any legal dimensions for the size of floats but suggested that measure ments be no larger than IS feet high from the ground. 12 feet wide, and 24 feet long. He said these were the maxi mum measurements that would allow the float to participate with out any trouble in turning cor ners or going under trees. COIN-OPERATED fNlFfoe' ao , - ' ,2 - , ,1 ,d-sgt: !WWI DRY ' , O.' S -4 " • ; 6'7, -. ~ - >~ -, ._'~~: z. !.71 ; 21 rr"7‘l, `4""'”, 7-7r7 4 1 ••- 7 ije s 7.- .SLlk` ",fif ../teziAt- College
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers