WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1961, Peace Plans Neither Penn State nor any other institution has been given special consideration for participation in the initial projects of the Peace Corps training program, Sally Bowles, executive assistant.in the program, said last week. In a special interview'wi Bowles, Undersecretary of Sta th The Daily Collegian, Miss Bowles, daughter of Chester A. 1 .te, said that no training centers will be selected until after specific projects for the Peace, . 1 Corps are decided upon. The Peace Corps staff is now ju s t gathering information, "! DOC Honors IMiss Bowles said. After the proj -' Top Students ects are cleared the staff with probably "move in and check on! facilities of the nation's colleges w• 'and universities in order to find; ith Banquet those which are best equipped to;' train personnel for these prof -1 To be able temake the dean's, ects," she continued. {list even once at Penn State isl i something to be proud of for the Thirty-nine oil paintings by The total number of institu- i !rest of one's college career, Dr. Lions to be selected will depend Eleanor Zygler, assistant pro-i (Donald Ford, director of the Dun . . - I entirely on the number of prof- I • iston of Counseling, told DOC stu-1 fessor of art, are on exhibitioni ects cleared for Peace Corps par ticipation, she said. She added dents Sunday evening. in the Gallery of the HetzeF I that the centers will have to be Ford spoke at a dinner spond Union Building. ; selected by early summer if the i sored by the DOC student coun- The paintings are on various: training programs are to be ef- icil and staff in honor of their fective by next fall when 500 to 'dean's list students. subjects and include Mexican, ; 1000 volunteers are expected to The guest speaker, Dr. Paul :.1. 1 New be sent abroad. Althouse, spoke on "Education: scen England and Pennsylvanian es. Several were done alongi Pendulum of Society." Alt- Benner Pike and Branch Roadl Speaking to the national con-,Theh us said education is the that v o here in Centre County, Miss Zyg-ivention of the Intercollegiate As-; ler said. Eight of the paintings, in- sociation of Women Students imi gu i l e alt i umn a clock regulates or ofsociety, just as the n i l i e cu chiding "Wharves of Gloucester,"Madison, Wisc., last Tuesday miss ,F i e were done while she was studying Bowles said that the training pro-, I As . the pe n dulum of a clock ] at Brandeis last summer, gram , for volunteers will prob-: ,must swing freely, so must edu Although all the paintings are -1 ably last about three months. !cation swing freely from society,! done in oils, Miss Zygler said her "During this period the trainees he said, but there are always fric-J style varies from picture to pic-!will live as closely as possible to:tions in the pendulum that must ture. "When I decide :to paintconditions prevalent in the areas be compensated for by changes something, I have a definite re-to which they will be assigned.land advances. action to the subject, and I try t o !After training. volunteers will be; In concluding, Althouse said find the right way to express it," sent to work on specific projectsthat the four-term system is an she explained. "Each idea must in areas requested by the foreign example of an attempt to coin be handled in a different way,' , !government." 1 ,pensate for friction in society, she said. 1 In commenting on probable 1 living conditions abroad, Miss Zygler has exhibited her, Miss paintings at such places as Smith I A th Bowles said volunteers would _ n ropology Prof -1 live under the same dram- ~„ sonian Institute, Carnegie Muse-{ stances Shat most of the natives I Ta lk i o on Iceland urn of Art, Stanford University; , do, but " n ot necessarily at the , and the Battell Foundation. IDr. Laura Thompson, distin-1 1 lowest level of living sten- I Her education in art has in-i dards." Volunteers will live at guished visiting professor of an eluded study at the Institute of levels similar to those of na- i thropology, will speak on "Explor- Design in Chicago, Yale Univer- fi ves engaged in the same type lations in Iceland" at 8 p.m. sity, Ohio University and the In-i o f work or ro • p )ect. (tomorrow in 121 Sparks. stituto Bellas Aries in Mexico,; It is ,expected that the greatest She has spent two summers in under such men as Moholy-Nagy, number of requests for volunteersllceland, which she describes as world leader in design and Haus, I,v ill come for teachers, that typical island culture," and Hofmann, internationally known Bowles said. "It is unlikely that i in her lecture Thursday night will Ice painter. !countries with a surplus of la-1 in slides that she took in Ice- The paintings will be on exhibit bor are going to ask for more land. until April 22., ditchdiggers,"' she commented. 39 Paintings Exhibited By Zygler Positions with Potential ENGINEERS • CHEMISTS • PHYSICISTS Chemical • Electrical • Industrial • Mechanical Union Carbide Consumer Products Company, America's foremost manufacturer of dry cell bat teries and flashlights, and one of America's most forward-looking companies in the development of new battery con;epts, now offers career oppor tunities to qualified B. S. and M. S. graduates who are interested in creative scientific advancement. Positions are available at Union Carbide Con sumer Products Company's 8 plants, located in the following states: lowa, North Carolina, Ohio, and Vermont. Interesting, rewarding careers in research, process and product development, production and methods engineering, product and process control, machine development and plant engineering. A Union Carbide Consumer Products representative will be on campus— April 19 UNION CARBIDE CONSUMER PRODUCTS COMPANY Division of Union Carbide Corporation EVEREADY TRADE-MARKS PRESTOIN BRAND *NINE uvCS ANTI-FREEZE BATTERIES Corps Official Explains for Training Programs THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA By PAT DYER 11116110••••••••••••••••••••••••••••00009000••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• After College ?What? 41 FIND THE ANSWER TO THIS AND OTHER CAREER QUESTIONS CAREER EXPOSITION • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • Representatives from business, government, industry, and edu- • • cation will explain•their fields and discuss job qualifications for • • • le all types of work. • • • • • ••••••rnetibeeiteolialiessem•miteoessaa•sessessia•s•a•••••••••••••elease••••• Adams to Serve As 'Pivot' Editor David Adams, junior in arts and letters from Havertown, has been chosen editor of Pivot, the cam pus poetry magazine, for this year. Other editors chosen were Da vid Kipp, first assistant editor; and Elizabeth Schoonover, second assistant editor. Serving on the board of editors are Mike Corato, Paige Butolett, Robert Cordover, Trudy Gerlach, Roger Lowenthal and Barbara Serr. 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