FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1966 College Bowl Team on TV Jan. 16 (Continued from page one) HtP belli eon Ihe age? n f 18 and 20. I hrv are a well rounded r;roup with Jlo mr nfie specialisation.-:. Maloney said. Mis.s Remier is n lustoiv maior who plans to be H college teacher. She is a National Mont scholar and has bee/i on the Dean's List a t the University. She has been a member of the Liberal Arts Student Council, the Ih-lory Hound Table, and the English Club. Kciter plans a career invoking math ematics. Up has been on the Dean's Let at the University ami is a member ol System 'Corrupt' "Corrupt" is the woid for Pennsylvania’s system of awaidiiig senatorial scholarships, Charles 0. Simpson, chairman of the Slate Council of Higher Education, said Wednes day. Simpson coupled this charge with at tacks on universities which employ what lie termed "college lobbyists" to work for their individual interests in Harrisburg. He said the University cun cutty employs five lobby ists at the State Capitol. Speaking before an honors convocation at Immaculala College near Philadelphia, Simpson charged that colleges which main tain representatives in Harrisbuig are con cerned with their own “selfish interests." University President Eric A. Walker was out of town and unavailable for comment yesterday, but E. Craig Sweeten, a Univer sity of Pennsylvania vice president, defended colleges’ legislative lobbying. Sweeten said the lobbyists were merely in "healthy competition for public supped” and were adding to "intelligent decision mak ing and to the viability of the democratic Many More Needed As Teachers of Deaf Less than 175 students trained as teachers of the deaf will be graduating from colleges and universities across the country this year, a small fraction of the trained personnel need ed in this field. The need is indicated by the fact that more than 135.000 hearing-impaired children are receiving help in schools for the deal and in classes for the hard of hearing taught in our schools. Hi addition, 1,500,000 adults also re quire auditory training and assistance. George S. Haspiel. assistant professor of audiology, emphasizing the shortage of men and women trained in this field, says tha l the Commonwealth alone could use almost all of these graduates to equip hospitals, clinics and schools. Recognizing the need, the University two years ago established a curriculum in speech pathology and audiology. The prospective teachers of the deaf re side at the University for the first three and one-half vears of their college careers or transfer from another school. The last phase of the senior year is spent at the laboratoiy school, the Pennsylvania School for the Deaf (PSD) m Philadelphia. The teachei of the deaf program at the University has been carefully- planned to provide maximum of professional training without any sacrifice in the humanities and in science preparation. The philosophv of the program is that each student should bring to the classroom a wealth of experience and information, as well as competency in specific professional areas. During the twenty weeks at PSD, the students have a full academic program and intensive practical experience with deaf chil dren. Teaching experiences are provided at the primary, intermediate, and secondary levels. The students become proficient in the PAPERBACK TEXTS AT NITTANY NEWS We Have The Largest And Best Selection Of Paperback Books For All Your Required Courses And Leisure Reading. Also: NEWSPAPERS and MAGAZINES 108 W. College Avenue A Few Doors Up from the Corner Room Pi Mu Epsilon, music honor society. His activities include hislorv, political sci ence and Hie .Model Railroad Club. Engli.-h and French with the eventual goal of college leaching in some field of the liberal arts. He has been on the Dean’s List at the University and lias contributed to The Daily Colegian am! Froth, the campus humor magazine. Tisehler plans an eventual Ph.D. in biochenin-irv and a career in research. He attended the Bronx High School of Simpson's Criticism Interests and Activities Schaible’s interests center around system" by keeping legislators informed. Concerning the senatorial scholarship distribution, Simpson termed the whole al fair a ’‘completely tawdry and disreputable practice.” A few big universities, that receive state aid. he said, "kick back to the 50 senatorial scholarships totaling about $2 million.” This adds up to about $40,000 annually for each senator, he added. "These scholarships are sold, traded and awarded according to the uninhibited de sires of each senator," he said. "Recently one of the senators put up a scholarship as a prize in a beauty contest,” Simpson added. Simpson, urging students to help over come political influence in the State's higher education, said Pennsylvania in many ways remains a backward stale in higher educa tion. “Only about one-third of the State’s college-age youth enter college, compared to a national average of more than 50 per cent,” he said. diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of deaf education. Through a grant from the U.S. Office of Education to the University, each student in the program this year received full tuition for the senior year, both at the University during the first term and at PSD for the final two terms. In addition, students were award ed $l,BOO stipends. Courses are offered at the undergraduate level in this program which include language and speech for the deaf, lipreading and audi tory training, leaching or school subjects to the deaf, and education and guidance of the deaf. After the two terms at PSD the students receive diagnostic and therapeutic experience at Harmony Hall, which is part of the Easter Seal Society in Pennsylvania, and provides an opportunity for mothers of voting deaf children to learn more about rearing their deaf children. It is also an opportunity for the student teacher of the deaf to become intimately- acquainted with the problems oc curring in the deaf child’s family. After successful completion of the aca demic and clinical training program at Penn State and PSD. the student is certified as a teacher of the deaf in Pennsylvania. Haspiel, who serves as coordinator of this program at Penn State, says that the prepar ation of the prospective requirements in almost any state. Job opportunities arc plenti ful in many environments—including hospi tals. clinics, and schools for the deaf. In addition to the undergraduate course, the University also offers a master's degree in education of the deaf which prepares stu dents to become master teachers of the deaf or administrators of programs for the hear ing handicapped. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Science and was a member of the honors ; c . m , , j Final plans for the additions group of Westingliouse Science Talent (l 0 B urrowes have been ap- Search and participated in the Ford .proved hv the University Board „ . , , , . of Tiu-ueos. ? uture Scientists of America competition. 1 ™ , The piotect provicies for the At the University. Tisehler is a mem- ; addition of north and souih her of die Folklore Societv, the Jazz ur } t 0 existing building. (Which was completed in 1940 Club, the Outing Club and was captain as one of the first General State of an intramural college bowl leam. Authority projects here. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers