Island biology program in fourth session eliNiiM lIZTA7Z=3%.7mS ° Applications are now available for 10 weeks of sun, sea and studying in Wallops Va. The University . will sponsor its, fourth annual marine biology program Spring Term. Applications ,for the program .Ire available from Albert Guber, program direc tor, in 309 Deike. Fifty-two students will be accepted for the program made up of three four : credit courses The courses are: An engineering course which teaches students to make instruments for their ex periments; A geology course snejs LE.C i Angsi , %RE I FLAMM . 10 15 . 11144 41 ‘ *Ftll5 A FULL LINE or RECYCLED * mbiem",..Locrtm i zwevrs* ~Z- 3"S @:,4;_ailla-CE,AViIz covering the areas around Wallops Isl.*. A maritie biology course on the plants and animals. The program includes a two day, cruise on a research vessel and other field trips. Each of the three-week courses is, taught by a dif ferent faculty member. In structors live on the premises and are available to work with - students at all times. Students pay tuition to Penn State and a $5OO room and board fee to the Marine Sci ence Consorttum, a group of 18 colleges and universities which owns the property in Eastern Virginia. =.'la Recycling service discontinued By JOHN MeDERNIOTT CollegianStaiff Writer Recycle this . paper'l From now on that may tie a difficult task due to the discontinuation of Ecol Action's recycling iser vice. Jim Prothero, president of the environmental group, said economic difficulties and a disap pearing paper market have made the recycling process impractical. Prothero said Eco-Action used to collect the paper and take it to a scrap dealer for shredding and baling. It „then was sold to the building industry for use in plaster boards, he said. fV\NCtl* 71111111,„1112 if * '" f ,t.dN. I ''E, , I • * Prothero said that too many people got into the recycling business and the paper became difficult to sell, "And with the housing industry hurting," he added, "the whole econontic picture looks bad." • Prothero said ECG-Action, a branch of the Penn State Outing Club until 1971, will collect papers next term if the outlook is better. "Don't count us out as dead," Prothero said. "Our emphasis is just switching." Prothero said Leo-Action was originally started for recycling, which constitutes more than 50 per cent of the workload. He said he would like to de crease it to about 25 per cent so. the group can con centrate on other projects. ~; e~~ IN \„„------- -------, tI 1 . • r ' • --_ it bl , ~ , ~..„. ~,,,,, i When it's . going to be a two-car day with only one car... - LoOk'us up! It's easy to avoid problems on those days when one family car isn't enough . . . like when he's going out of town on business and she's got to go into on errands. You can rent a luxury Gran Torino, a sporty Mustang II or economical MaveriCk or Pinto. • Our Rent-A-Car rates are low and insurance is included. Don't be caught short a car. Call Miller , , McVeigh Ford. We're right in the neighborhood. ' - '' ; '` e RENT-A-CAR Miller-McVeigh Ford, Inc. (on Rt. 322-, just north of Stare College) . i3B-5041 The Daily Collegian Wednesda) • No% ember 6. 1974- Eco-Action, also will sponsor a state-wide en vironmental conference of high schools and college, Prothero said. It will be held near the end of April and will include guest lecturers from the en vironmental field, he said. Prothero said the group also is working to provide public education on environmental issues. He said one method is to present facts, or "earth savers," on ways of preserving the environment as newspaper fillers. Prothero said he would like to present these facts in a column like the "Consumer Corner" ad vertisement put out by the Organization of Town In dependent Students.