THE BATTALION SEABURY CLASSES KINDS OF LOVE The seven kinds of marital love, according to David Seabury, psychol ogist and author, are, in the order of their ability to make married life happy: Mate Love, founded on natural compatibility. Romantic Love, that is in love with love. Sex Love, based on physical at traction. Home Love, based on the universal longing- for a retreat. Intellectual Love, founded on men tal attraction. Propinquity Love, which develops from having the same social back ground. Virginia to use Traveling School^ Richmond, Va.—The Virginia de partment of education is considering the use of schools on wheels, equip- 4 ped with blackboards, desks and oth er necessities, to be taken into the isolated and sparsely settled moun tain districts of the state. Morris Hart, state superintendent of schools, says the teacher could easily learn to drive the but. In this way it could serve one community in the morning and another in the afternoon. Plans considered would include in the equipment a small traveling li brary, adequate heat, drinking water and a first aid kit. WHAT YOUNGER COLLEGE MEN ARE’ DOING WITH WESTINGHOUSE I Special cars were needed . . . railway tracks had to he lowered, to handle the transformers these men built AT Conowingo, Maryland, is the _Zjl second largest hydro-electric devel opment in the world. Power generated there at 220,000 volts will be fed into lower voltage transmission lines of the Public Service Electric and Gas Company at Roseland, near Newark, New Jersey. The transformers that will perform this transfer of energy are physically the largest ever built, for their capacity is sufficient to serve the home lighting needs of a city of a million people. Four in number, each is larger than a house, weighs when empty as much as a large locomotive and holds three E. W. TIPTON R , L. BROWN University of Kansas. ’25 Ohio State University. '22 Development of Commercial Tap changer Development Design tank cars of oil. Four specially built railway cars and fifty-two standard cars of various types were required to trans port them from the factory to the job. At one point the railway tracks had to be lowered so the units would clear an overhead viaduct, so great was their size. When spectacular jobs like this come up, it is natural that they go to an institution like Westinghouse. Pio neers in electrical development, West inghouse engineers often know the thrill of achieving the “impossible” in seeing their work through from design to erection. Westinghouse /yyy ,EMIL STEINERT University of Minnesota, ’25 Electrical Designer A. C. STAMBAUGH University of Pittsburgh, '24 Engineer of Tests H. H. WAGNER University of Illinois, ’27 Designing Engineer