The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, December 10, 1957, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TUESDAY. DECEMB
Final E
Schedu
Annoui
(Continued froi
Pay 2.1.2. Jan 15 7 PM
P«y i. 4.5.6.7 Jan 17 7 I
Pay 3.1.2 Jan IS 3:30 2
Pay 4.1.2 Jan 14 3:30 :
Pay IS Jan 22 8 312 S
Pay U Jan 18 10:20 i
P«y 15.2.3 Jan IS 7 PJ
Pay 13.1 Jan IS 7 PM
Pay 21.1.2 Jan 15 3:3
n page six)
Schwab Aud
M 1. 2. 3 Carnegie
!8 Sparka
16 Sparks
>arks
ee list
L 112 BL
228 Sparks
i 305 Sparks, 203,
M 3 Willard
Psr 37 Jan 15 10:20 3
Psy 401 Jan 22 8 104 '
T*f 403 dan 18 8 312 ,
Psy 414 Jan 17 1:10 3«
Psy 415 Jan 22 8 105 i
Psy 417 Jan 20 8 219 1
Psy 418 Jan 15 1:10 22
Psy 422 Jan 15 8 228 !
Psy 425 Jan 21) 8 227 i
Psy 427 Jan 17 8 305
Pay 431.1.2 Jan 17 10
Psy 437 Jan 17 8 3 Wh
Psy 450 Jan 17 8 124
Psy 482 Jan 16 1:10 3(
Psy 501 Jan 22 8 234
Psy 513 Jan IS 10:20
Psy 627 by App’t
Psy 635 Jan 18 8 234
Psy 539 by App't ‘
Psy 542 by App't
Psy 550 Jan 14 1:10 2
• a
Be Ed 226 Jan IS 8 10
Rc Ed'434 Jan 22 8 2)
Re Ed 456 Jan 15 8 24
Re Ed 461 Jan 17 8 2
Rc Ed 560 by App't
R Lit 547 by App't
R Ph 573 by App’t
R Ph. 574 by App’t
R Soc 11 Jan 20 8 3
R Sue 459 Jan 18 8 10
R Soc 559 by App’t
Bus 1 Jan 22 10:20 1 S
Bus 2 Jan 21 8 127 )
Rus 3 Jan 15 8 128 S
Rus 4 Jan 17 1:10 1
Rus 41 Jan 20 8 208 \
• •
Short 1.1.2 Jan 18 10:20 228. 233 Sparks
Short 3 by App't
Short 3 Jan 18 8 233 Sparks
So Sc 1.1 Jan 21 3:30 409 Boucka
So Sc 1.2 Jan 21 3:30 216 Boucke
Soc 1.1 Jan 18 8 111 Boucke
Soc 1.2*16 Jan 17 8 Schwab Aud, 121 Sparks
Soc 1.20212 Jan 20 10:20 105, 206 Armsby
Soc 1.21 Jan 16 8 303 Willard
Soc 1.23.24 Jan 20 10:20 109. 110 Osmond
Soe 2.1 Jan 20 8 105 Armsby
Soc 2.2 Jan 14 8 214 Boucke
Soc 2.3 Jan 16 1:10 214 Boucke
Soc 5.1 228 Sparks
Soe 52! Jan 16 8 2 White Bide.
Soc 5.3 Jan 18 8 2 White Bide.
Soc 12.1.2 Jan 21 3:30 Schwab Aud
Soc IS Jan 16 1:10 217 Willard
Soc 15 Jan 14 8 216 Willard
Soe 22 Jan 18 1:10 216 Willard
Soc 30 Jan 15 8 100 Weaver
Soc 54 Jan 18 8 209 Willard
Soc 55 Jan 21 8 303 Willard
Soc 60 Jan 22 8 303 Willard
.Soc 61 Jan 20 8 216 Willard
Soc 401 Jan 17 1:10 219 Willard
Soc 424 Jan 20 8 124 Sparka
Soc 427 Jan 18 8 227 Sparka
Span 1 Jan 17 10:20 10 Sparka. 110 EE
Span le Jan 15 1:10 125 Sparks
Span 2 Jan 20 3:30 121 Sparks
Span 3 Jan 21 3:30 110 EE, 112 BL
Span 4 Jan 15 7 PM 105 White Bide.
Span 30 Jan 17 1:10 124 Sparka
Span 40 Jan 21 8 128 Sparka
Span 53 Jan 16 1:10 128 Sparks
Span 301 Jan 21 8 19 Sparks
Span 302 Jan 17 8 19 Sparka
Span 330 Jan 20 8 19 Sparks
Span 407 .by App't
Span 490 Jan 17 8 19 Sparka
Span 532 by App't
Spch 200 Jan 22 1:10 see Hat
/Spch 203.1 Jan 14 1:10 214 Willard
‘Spch 203.2 Jan 15 1:10 214 Willard
Spch 205 Jan 20 8 215 Willard
Spch 250 Jan 17 1:10 216 Willard
Spch 280 by App't
Spch 312 Jan 16 8 302 Willard
Spch 320 Jan 14 8 303 Willard
Spch 400 Jan 14-1:10 201 Willard
Spch 401 Jan 15 1:10 216 Willard
Spch 402 Jan 16 1:10 208 Willard
Spch 410 Jan 16 1:10 209 Willard
Spch 433 Jan 17 8 126 Sparka
Spch 445 by App’t
Sp Ed 430 Jan 18 8 2 Sparka ~
Sp Ed 434 Jan 17 8 2 Sparka
Sp Ed 436 Jan 20 8 233 Sparks
Sp Ed 440:1.2 Jan 22 3:30 316 Sparks
Sp Ed 442 Jan 16 8 2 Sparka
Sp Ed 415 Jan 22 8 2 Sparks
* • •
The* 11 Jan 22 3:30 228 Sparka
The* 62 Jan 21 7 PM 3 Carnegie
Them 70 Jan 17 1:10 208 Willard
Tkea 202 Jan 14 1:10 209 Willard
The* 431 Jan 17 1:10 214 Willanl
Then 480 by App't
The* 501 Jan 14 1:10 204 Willard
* • •
Typ'l.l Jan 18 8 313 Willard
Typ 1.2 Jan 15 8 313 V, Hlard
TVp. I.S Jan 22 8 119 Boucke
Typ 1.4 Jan 16 8 .119 llouckt
Typ 1.5 Jan 21 8 219 Bpucke
Typ J. 6 Jan 20 8 119 Boucke
Typ 2 Jan 22 8 313 Willard
Typ 3 Jan 15 8 119 Boucke
* * i *
V-S« 1 Jan 18 10:20 112 BL
V Se 400 Jan 15 1:10 1()5 Armaby
a• ! a
W D S 7 Jan 16 10:20 105 For
W U 404 by App’t »
White Bldg.
'eaver
parks
5 Sparks
tfechE
:e
8 Sparka
parka
iparks
Sparka
20 S Whit* Bldg,
te Bldg.
Sparka- ■
5 Sparks
Sparka
234 Sparka
H Sparks
•
' Armsby
1 Rec Bldg.
1 Rec Bldg.
03 Willard
ackett. 214 Boucke
iparks
larks
iparks
A’illard
* • •
ZotH 3 Jan 13 3:30 112 BL
Zool 25 Jan 22 3:30 aee list
Zool 26 Jan 20 8 109 Armsby
Zool 29 Jan 13 1:10 105 White Bid?.
Zool 41 Jan 20 10:20 Schwab Aud.
Zool 410 Jan 1* 1:10 105 FL
Zool 43? Jan 22 8 113 FL
Zool 461 Jan 16 1:10 113 FL
Ser/ograpfis Shown
At HUB Exhibit
Seriographs by Sister Mary Cor
ita are the subject of an exhibition
in the Hetzel Union gallery which
will continue until Dec. 21.
Sister Corita, a [leading liturg
ical artist whose books have been
illustrated in Time and Life mag
azines, is professoi of art at Im
maculate Heart College in Los
t Calif. .
!R 10. 1957
Behind Food Service
2/ Deadlines Biggest
Food Service Director
e
iced
By RALPH MANNA
First of Two Articles
“The biggest job we have is meeting 21 deadlines a week,” according to Robert C.
Proffitt, director of Food Service.
“Feeding students well is a full-time job— 24 hours a day, seven days a week,”
Food Service is probably the least understood department at the University.
! probably comes into contact with the students more than anything else
From the time food is brought
to the time leftovers are discarded
as garbage, there is a continuous
complex operatio n—utilizing
many man- and machine-hours—
of which most students are un
aware
The cost of food, dishes, uten
sils, machinery, furniture, office
expenses and Food Service em
ploye salaries all come out of
student fees. Food Service is not
subsidized by either state or fed
eral governments.
, A semi-centralized system is
now used by Food Service.
Food is prepared in each indi
vidual dining hall but the Food
Stores Building, on North Ath
erton Street next to the golf
course, is the central unit of
operation. Here the menus for
weeks in advance are prepared
and the dining halls order their
food stuffs from its storerooms.
Now, every dining hall has the
same menu; in the past, the
individual dining halls acted
independently.
)'hite Bldg.
Weaver
Food Service orders food sup
plies direct from commercial
[firms. The department strives to
buy the best food possible from
the best firms at the least ex
pense. Requisitions are sent to
firms as far as Alaska for salmon
and Oregon for beans or as close
as Peach Glen for apples and Al
toona for fresh vegetables.
An attempt to prepare food
more to the students’ liking is
displayed in the workings of the
experimental kitchen in the Food
Stores Building. Here new recipes
are tried out by the dining hall
supervisors. They are perfected
and then sent out to a “test” din
ing hall. The new recipe is mea
sured according to many criteria,
the most important of which is
the number of second helpings.
The experimental kitchen al
so tests "cuttings" or samples
of canned foods. Here the sup
ervisors taste, lest and score
many brand-name foods but,
to insure impartiality, the sup
ervisors have no knowledge of
the brand name of the food
they are tesiing. The food is
scored according to color, con
sistency, workman ship, and
flavor.
The menus are prepared by a
committee composed of all the
dining hall supervisors. All the
committee members have an op
portunity to plan menus; all
menus are' planned four weeks in
advance. Louise Schermerhom is
food production manager in the
Food Stores Building.
The Food Stores Building has
its own bakery and butcher shop.
The bakery, a maze of machinery,
produces bread, cakes, pies, cook
ies and doughnuts. The bakery is
THE DAILY COLLEGIAN STATE COLLEGE PENNSYLVANIA
—Daily CollerUn Photo by Marty 3ch#rr
A FOOD SERVICE employee prepares a “test” salad in the experi
mental kitchen. The salad will be sent to a “test” dining hall where
student reaction will be measured.
in operation from 3 a.m. to 9 p.m,
daily.
Approximately 3000 loaves of
bread are baked a day. The
bread dough is put through a
variety of processei Including
steam proofing. The bread is
baked in huge ovens, each con
taining six shelves. About 60.-
000 pounds of flour is used a
month.
The butcher shop takes the U.S.,
choice meats, bought from lead-j
ing meat venders, and prepares,
it for roasts, Swiss steaks andi
other meat dinners. A giant meat!
freezer, fish cooler and smoked
meat room hold the meats from
the time they are bought until
they are used. The meat freezer
holds about 6000 pounds of meat,
enough for two campus meals.
Other compartments through
out the building hold eggs, butter,
cheese, fruit and nuts. Eggs are
kept at a temperature of 29 de
grees with 90 per cent humidity.
A minimum of 80 per cent of
eggs must be “grade A” before a
shipment can be accepted at the
| FOR A WONDERFUL \
I • f
|
f & I I
gl For Everyone p *
l*
w
Jtbe Chentb fa yogr
window If
Symbol of th«
Inmost traasortd
1 ifSbrtsfout gifts o fstL
18. P. MOYER - Jeweler I
5 *
J 218 E. COLLEGE AVE. x
S STATE COLLEGE. PA. |
iMoatMjattooauaooaaacMdow
. . j'Sit 1 Meals
Problem , Voted Down
Says IBy Leonides
building. j
Butter, cheese, fruils and nuis
are also kept at specific temp
eratures. In addition to pur
chasing cheese from commer
cial firms. Food Service cures
its own cheese. The cheese is
cured in large round receptacles
lor more than a year.
An addition to the Food Stores
Building is currently under con
struction. The addition will dwarf
the existing building. This addi
tion will house a training center
|for Food Service employes, a cen
ter for product testing, additional
jfreezers, additional butcher shop
| space and a huge ultra-modern
bakery.
Metals Group to Meet
The University chapter of the
American Society for Metals will
meet at 7:30 tonight in the Min
eral Sciences Auditorium to hear
Theodore P. Pajak speak on.
“Metal Sandwich Materials and
Structures.”
Flatter Her Ego...
with a 100% Banlon f
cardigan ... in pink, . Jjr*
blue, or whita •
She'll like .their novelty
and bracelet length " 'JfV/ •§ # |
sleeves. vtHPv/ l - %'¥ 1
For the finest of J
holiday giving come J
in and browse through
our complete selection
of holiday wear.
Mary Leitzinger
E. College Ave.
For Dad
Waich
Desk Clock
Cuff Links
Billfold
Ring
Lighter -
Fraternal
- Jewelry
Leonides Council last night
voted against re-establishing
“waiter served” or “sit down”
meals for the women's residence
halls dining rooms.
The members of the council
felt it would be “impractical”
with the present overcrowding
in the dining rooms. Some mem
bers felt it would be feasible to
have “served, sit down” meals for
special holiday dinners only. Oth
er members said they disliked the
idea of having to be in the dining
room at a certain time or else
missing the meaL
The council decided to Christ
rnas-carol next Monday instead
of holding the regular meeting.
The group will sing before the
dormitories and pick up carolers
as they go along. The singing
group will end its tour by singing
in front of the University Health
Center.
Leonides decided to continue its
program of getting orders for food
from students in the University
Hospital, but adopted a new sys
tem. Each women’s residence hall
unit will be responsible for the
service each week.
The representative from each
unit will be in charge of making
sure the program is carried out.
A tea for housemothers, soon
sored by Leonides, will be held
at 7 p.m. on Dec. 18 in Simmons
lounge.
he said.
Yet if
Council to Hear
iiROTC Question
The Education Student Council
will discuss the ROTC question
at 7 tonight in 204 Burrowes.
The council has not taken any
: formal stand on the question of
! whether or not the University
! should abolish compulsory ROTC.
j Also scheduled for discussion at
the meeting will be a proposal
that the council donate money to
the George “Larry" Sharp fund.
Sharp was paralyzed from the
I neck down when he fell on a
j trampoline in Recreation Hall in
■October. He had been hospitalized
’ in Geisinger Memorial Hospital at
Danville until last week, when he
| was moved to a hospital in New
York City.
Players Ad Workshop
A technical workshop will be
held for persons interested in
working on the Penn State Play
ers advertising crews at 7 tonight
in the loft of Schwab Auditorium.
Collegian Promotion
Staff
Important Meeting
6:30 209 Willard
PAGE SEVEN