John L.Marsh,English Department,and Karl Nordberg,Educ­ ational Foundations Department,are the co-recipients of a grant from The Public Committee for the Humanities in Pennsylvania. Their project,’’The Rural Experience in northwestern Pennsyl­ vania; ye st er day, today, and tomorrow,’’involves the detailed study i J ; z - • ti-i (al} fcx >-» of a late Victorian fatm in the immediate area.Once cpmpleted, their findings will be presented at a public ~^oi"um featuring, as well,the look of the farms of today and of tomorrow.Co­ sponsors of the project^are the Borough of Edinboro,the Edinboro Historical Society,and Edinboro State College. In a collaboration that produced Edinboro:a dirt street town. Profs.Marsh and Nordberg were impressed by how little sense of th^ area’s agricultural past existed among newer residents in the community.Yet that rural heritage seemed not only worth i exploring but preserving.To this end Marsh and Nordberg have .''•'3 ch"viiaod a werkohop w.«»£a39as!?^nd-oppOrCunitv wiH— be provided-if or those present to hear and speak with leading area J- , h ... farmers and to visit their farms.WithAdevelopers and steel mill proponents urging their special interests, it seemed appropriate ‘ |