In the summer of 1956, Needles gave a speech at the
Rotary Club of Kitchener-Waterloo entitled
WANTED: 150,000 Engineers – The Waterloo Plan. In this presentation, Needles offered a different approach to education that would include both studies in the classroom and training in industry that would eventually become the basis of the
cooperative education program at the University of Waterloo. Needles suggested that universities and industry should work together to fill the growing need for skilled graduates. In 1958, he was named the first Kitchener-Waterloo Citizen of the Year by the K-W Jaycees and was a member of the Kitchener Chamber of Commerce.
Waterloo College (now
Wilfrid Laurier University) planned to open a science faculty that would become known as the Waterloo College Associate Faculties in 1957. Needles—along with his B.F. Goodrich colleague, then-president of Waterloo College, and first president of the University of Waterloo,
Gerald Hagey—founded the Waterloo College Associate Faculties, which later became the University of Waterloo, with Needles' vision of a cooperative education program that involved industry. After founding the university, Needles served as chairman of its board of governors from 1956 to 1966 and then became chancellor from 1966 to 1975. ==See also==