PAGE EIGHT Leeisides To Aid Indies In SprifigWeek Leonides Council voted last night to give financial support to groups working with inde pendent women on Spring Week activities. Groups desir ing aid should contact council members. The residence hall staff tea, sponsored by Leonides Council, will be held March 18 in Mc- Elwain lounge, Jeoelle Bronstein, chairman, announced. The pur pose of the tea is to provide the opportunity for independent women to meet the Dean of Women’s staff. Three buses have been hired to transport invited children from Stormstown. Woodycrest and Mil brook for Leonides' Easter egg roll, it was announced. Twenty dozen eggs will be hardboiled by the Department ot Housing and will be colo'red March 24 by in terested independent women, ac cording to a council member. In other business, the coun cil voted to hold a Mother's Day tea and decided to post pone voting on Leonides' gift to the University, Patricia Hagan, vice president and acting president of the Coun cil, announced that- Leonides’ constitutional revisions will go before the Senate Subcommittee on Organizational Control later this month. The revisions provide that council members will be chosen on the basis of an interview, in terest and participation in Leon ides instead of being popularly eb'eted by independent women. Foreign Prof To Give Talk Di'. Martin Lindauer, professor of zoology at the Zoological Insti tute', University of Munich, Ger many, will deliver his second lecutre during his visit here this week. lie will speak to the members of the Academic Year Science Institute at 4:15 p.m. today in 111 Bouckc. on "Demonstrations and Experiments in Color .Sense, Chemical Senses and Communica tions in Bees.” Faculty and grad uate students may attend today’s meeting. Delta itigma Pi Smoker Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, will hold a rushing smoker today at 7:15 n.m. nt Phi Delta Theta fraternity. David 11, McKinley, associate deai of the College of Business Administration, will be the guest, speaker. Following the talk. Phi Chi Theta, professional business sorority, will hold a mixer. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS BUY SELL. TRADE. TELL Rtach for the Sky NEW KING OF THE WEST FRANK'S STEAK SANDWICHES 8 Great Big Hoagies salami ham chicken iuna salad egg salad ham salad cheese and Ihe foot long regular FRANK'S HMGIE HAVEN (Formerly Morrell's) 112 S. Frazier St. SPEEDY DELIVERY 5 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. CALLt AD 8-8381 Land. Grants Mark Centennial Penn State is joining 67 oth er American colleges and uni versities in celebrating the 100th anniversary of the land grant system. In Washington, D.C., centen nial headquarters, arrangements have been made for nationwide conferences, seminars and exhib its to spotlight the origin of the land grant institutions and their contributions to education in America. The idea for a lan,d grant sys tem actually began in the time of the Civil War when education was still mainly "academic.” A new concept was taking hold, however, and was based on the belief that learning should also be practical. Another "new" idea in edu cation in the 18G0's was that the privilege to learn should be open to anyone who could use it and not just to a certain few. Supporting these ideas, Repre sentative Justin Smith Morrill of Vermont, drew up a legislative RELATED TRAINING Principles of supervision Principles of public utility management Technical presentations Plant inspection trips Principles of conference leadership Applied Research FORMAL TRAINING AND EDUCATION Company Courses Seminars College,. Technical and Trade Organizations Advance Study Through Tuition Aid See our representative when he visits your college on MARCH 22,1961 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA plan which he submitted to Con gress. In final form, it provided for a Federal grant of land to each state. Grants were to be made on the basis of 30,000 acres for every senator and representative from the state. With money from the sale of land, each state was to estab lish and endow "at least one college where the leading ob ject shall be. without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and mechanic arts." Thus, a practical education, par ticularly in agriculture, came into existenc In Pennsylvania, the Morrill Bill was heartily accepted and Penn State, then the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania, was es tablished as the state’s land grant institution. Gov. Andrew Gregg Curtin (after whom Curtin Road is named) gavf his approval on April 1, 1863. Today, land grant institutions CADET ENGINEERS’ TRAINING COURSE for EE’s, ME’s or lE’s Individual Planned Schedule —lB month Duration Development DEVELOPMENTAL FACTORS DIRECTLY RELATING TO JOB ASSIGNMENT Encouragement to take responsibility Performance appraisal Assignment rotation within the job Job rotation Promotion SPECIFIC TRAINING Participation in all phases of departmental work JOB ASSIGNMENT Planning Design flourish in the 50 states and Puerto Rico. They enroll 20 per cent of all United States col lege students. The original idea for practical education has spread to include science, arts, lan guages, business and education! Land grant colleges also provide nearly half of the civilian-trained regular and reserve officers of the Armed Forces through the Re serve Officers Training Corps program. University Plays Host To Swiss Physicist Dr. Raymond Sanger, head of the Laboratory of Atmospheric Physics, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, is the guest of the Department of Me teorology and the College of Min eral Industries until Friday. During his stay on campus, he will deliver a number of lectures and participate in discussions with the staff and graduate stu dents of the University. PERIPHERAL DEVELOPMENT FACTORS Performance appraisal and counseling Association with practicing engineers Advance study through Tuition-aid plan Encouragement to obtain professional engineer’* license Company technical library Operations PERIPHERAL DEVELOPMENTAL FACTORS RELATED TO 100 ASSIGNMENT Committee assignments Company and technical organizations Encouragement to publish technical papers Attendance at engineering conventions Participation in civic affairs Participation in community organization* You may obtain a copy of our brochure, “Train ing Courses for College Graduates" at your placement office or by writing to Public Serv ice, Room 2152 a, 80 Park Place, Newark 1, New Jersey. Men's Debate Takes Honors The Men's Debate Team par ticipated in three debate tourna ments recently and captured a first place team award, a first place oratory award* two second place team awards and a second place speaker’s award. The top debate teams in the East met for the Boston Invita tional Tournament at which the University was represented by David Goodhart and William Swisshelm, whi debated both af firmative and negative sides. Attending the St. Vincent Nov ice Tournament were represen tatives from Pennsylvania as well as those from out-of-state. Uni versity delegates who took a first place team award were Steve Cavark, Keith O’Leary, Carl Thormeyer and Brick Breyer. Debaters who won a second place team award at the Mt. Mer cy Debate Tournament in Pitts burgh were James Goodman, Ed ward Snyder, Stanley Goren and Brick Breyer. —Temptation may be strong, but it seldom overtakes the man who runs from it. Maintenance Construction TUESDAY. MARCH 7v 1961 Field Engineering
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers