PAGE SIX (Continued from page five) $3,500, from the Forest Service of the U.S. Department o: Agri culture. B. R. Baumgardt, professor of animal nutrition, will make a study of the se of wood pro ducts in animal nutrition under a $5,000 grant from the Fort Production Laboratory of USDA. The Soil and Water ,Conserva tion Research Division of the U.S. AgriCultural Research Ser vice has provided $9,681 for the analysis and synthesis of bed, load formulas for use in soil and water, conservation. The re search is directed by Samuel Shulits, professor of civil engi neering. Research on the physics of cellular synthesis, growth, and division will be conducted under the direction of Ernest C, Pollard, professor of bio physics, under a grant of $170,- Time will fly while you're at Penn State Why not Let iir Let The Daily Collegian do your writing for you and keep your parents, pin -mate, grandparents or friend in Viet - Nam informed on what's happening here, at school. Your' Daily Letter wi formative. Each day The Daily Collegian current news, photos, editorials, and Adveriising about Peanuts, Penn State. RATES: 1 Term 2 Terms 3 Terms 3 Terms and Summer . Universjty Grants Total $1 Million 000 from the National Aeronaut. les and Space Administration. NASA has also provided two other research grants: $29,664 for a 'theoretical and experi mental.- investigation of the quantum mechanical effects on communication„ systems b y Gerard Lachs, assistant pro fessor of electrical engineer ing; and $18,217 for a study of stabilization for differential systems 111 by Allan M. Krall, assisf.ant professor of mathe matics. The National Science Foun dation has transferred title to the University of property alued at $102,946 to be used solely for basic scientific re search in the department of meteorology. Charles L. Hos ier, dean of the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, is in charge. Research on electron-photos will be conducted by Heinz K. aiLj Order your Letter home today! $2.90 $5.25 $7.90 $8.50 Henisch, professor of applied physics in the Materials Re search La oratory, with the suport of $12,860 from the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Laboratory. The U.S. Naval Oze .ograph ic Office has provided $1,400 for a fellowship in adva nc e d studies in geophysics. The fund is administered by Paul M. Althouse, vice-president fo r resident instructioa. C. Alan Riedesel, associate professor of education, will ad minister a program in the use of computer-assisted instruc tion to teach spelling to sixth graders with the - support . of a grant of 532 , 926 fro; the State College Area School District to the C, rater for Cooperative Re search with Schoo' , A graduate assistantship of SBO2 for the Fall Term in the department of educational ser- I be entertaining' Street Address ... Zip Code# for: ( ) One Term ( ) Two Terms• ( ) Three Terms ( Three Terms THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY' PARK, PENFISYLVANIA vices has been providA by the UniVersity Council for Educa tion Administration, Columbus, 0.. Robert E. Swcitzer, profes sor of education, is in charge. A grant of $3,150 :or a gradu ate fellowship in the electronics material field in the Materials Research Laboratory has been provided by General Telephone and Electronics Laboratories. Rustum Roy is_ director of the Mlterials Research Labora tory. The National Lead Company fellowship in ceramics science, amounting to $4,700, has been continued for an _ additional year to June 20,.1968. Ferro Corp. has provided a grant of $27,272 for research im pig ments for ceramics and plas tics. Floyd A. Hummel is head of the ceramics science section of the department of materials science. Tottegian Be your Letter home as well as is filled with Letters-to-the-editor, every facet of life at Clip and Mail In The Attached Subscription Blank NOW ) Check Enclosed Please Return To: THE DAILY COLLEGIAN IS FREE TO ALL PENN STATE STUDENTS Rarold Read, professorof 'metallurgy, will conduct 're search on barrel zinc plating of carbo-nitrided steel parts under a grant of $B,lOO (-Om Arrieri can Electroplaters' Society. A contribution of $5OO has been made by International Minerals and Chemical Corp. for research dealing with the control of face flies on cattle, conducted by W. G. Yendol, associate professor of entomol ogy. A contribution of 31,500 has been made by Chevron Chemi cal Co. to support research on fruit diseases conducted by F. H. Lewis, professor of plant pathology, at the Arendtsville center. The •....eveiend Carleton M. Sage, Tucson, Ariz., has con tributed $3OO to support re search by W. T. Sanders, pro fessor of anthro ( ) Bill Me ' $7.90 The Daily Collegian P.O. Box 467 State College, Pa. 16801 & SuMmer $8.50 Safety Expert ,Warns • f Fire Drill Importance Too many of today's teachers and school children still , view the fire drill as a chance to "goof off" rather than a device that some day may save their lives, an expert on fire safety warned yesterday. Speaking at the annual convention of the state firemen's associaiion, Edward A. Campbell, of the University, listed the fire exit drill as the most important life-saving exercise a school can offer. i "Fire fighters are too prone to demon strate fire extinguishers and ways of putting out a fire," Campbell said. I nstead, he called on fire officials to use IFire Prevention Week," Oct. 8-14 to concentrate on showing teachers how to conduct evp.cuation drills. More Than a Break "Let's face it," Campb, the time it takes to find a extinguisher, half the schod evacuated. We must impres children alike that the fire '! just a break in the day or outside for some sunshine) important than- that." ' A research associate ii education, Campbell has safety one of his major fiel research. He wrote his disserta and codes of school fire states and has published on the subject. In addition,l called upon to testify befo Ghetto Named David A. Schulz, an Episco- Louis, Mo. pal minister and leading 1.1- , As a researcher, he lived in thOrity on the culture and the ghettos, stmt,i 1 them and poverty of Negro ghettos i r in gathering information. _ I urban America, has be . e n Schulz ; who will be teaching ii amed assistant professor; of the sociology of the family and sociology at the, University. public welfare, obtained his Prior to coming to the Uni- bachelor's degree at Princeton versity, Schulz served as Ire- University and his master's de search assistant on the PrUitt- gree and doctor of philosophy Igoe Project, a study of Negro degree from Washington. He ghettos through the auspices of studied theology at , Virginia Washington University in iSt. Seminary. "TIM ELECTION" Any town' man interested in joining Town Independent Man's Council Pick up petition and information at 203 G HUB. or call Tom Grant 237.6098 so, Use:. collegia,n Classifieds, ell went on, "in nd operate a fire ii could easily be on teachers and rill is - more than a chance to get It's much more m the college of long made fire Is of interest and tion on the laws !safety in the 50 umerous articles last April, he was re a U. S. Senate Authority o Faculty hearth-baked peso-in -the-round daily special 5 to 8 Where? Hi• Way Pizza; of caurtel FRIDAY; SEPTEMBER 29; 1967 subcommittee on the proposed' new Federal Fire Research and Safety Act. Federal Aid for Fire Wins "Here is one area where such an act Would help immensely," Campbell told con vention delegates today at the Pittsburgh Hilton Hotel. "Federal aid for research could help, us develop more effective tnethods for fire drills and evacuation procedures." Calling once again for immediate action ,on the bill, Campbell repeated his admoni tion that a teacher's responsibility is to eva cuate students, not to fight fires. "If you feel teachers should . fight fires, then plan to train a school fire brigade," he added. "But even a school fire brigade snould assist evacuation before it attempts extin guishment." Cites Fire To back up hig argument, Cgmpbell cited the Morely Elementary School:fire in Detroit in May of 1966. "One hundred kids were injured in that fire," he said. "It was up to the teachers and schol officials to get those students out of there, because it was practically impossible for ambulances and fire fighting apparatus to get through the crowded and congested streets." "The school is solely responsible for getting its people out when fire first breaks out," Campbell said. "The only , fool-proof alternative would be to locate a fire depart ment next door to every school." Explosives Discovered In Jerusalum JERUSALEM (AP) A cache of explosives including three dud grenades was found Wednesday evening on a gar den wall at the residence of Israel's Prime Ministef Levi Eshkol in central Jerusalem. He was, out at the time. Authorities said they were investigating several possibi lities, including a theory that pranksters were involved. LEVI EtliKOL