PAGE TWO Food Plans Planning adequate housing and teaching facilities for the 1 25,000 students expected on campus by 1970 is not the only! job of long range development planners. I Another top concern is feeding them. \ A new addition to the foods building, which is almost 2 Freshman Officers Put On Probation Jay Kahle, freshman in liberal arts from Rixford, and James Terry, freshman in metallurgy from Pittsburgh, are no longer president and vice president re spectively of the freshman class. Both have been placed on aca demic piobation because their averages iiave dropped below a 1.7. According to Article 1, Section 2.f of the constitution of The Stu dent Government Association, “No person shall be a member of Cab inet who does not hold an All- Univeisity average of 2.4 or high er.” tn the seventh bylaw of the constitution it is stated that “no person shall hold a class office who is not a registered student in the class and who does not pos sess an AU-Umversity average of 2.4 or better.” It is also stated in the eighth bylaw that “the class secretary shall succeed to the office of the president in the event of the res ignation or disqualification of the president and vice president.” Robin Brooks, freshman in edu cation from Erie, who was elected secretary of the class in the fall, will be sworn in at Cabinet to night as president of the Class of 1962. The problem of the selection of a new vice president and secre taiy of the class will be taken up after the Freshman Advisory Board has been chosen. Interviews for the Advisory Board will be held on Feb. 15. Applicants ' will be notified by postcard as to the time of inter view. Any new freshman students may wnte letters of application to Miss Brooks not later than Feb 12. Mud Hampers Campus Construction By TOM EGGLER Chilly temperatures and frozen subsurface soil topped by five or six inches of mudj are continuing to slow down construction on campus. Large dump trucks in the Pol lock area had to be pushed by a heavy bulldozer to get through the mud while construction crews working on the new Military Sci ence budding have been tempor arily laid oft because of the poor working conditions. A supervisor on the Military- Science building job said they were about a month behind Send a Subscription Home... $3 per Semester $5 per Year STOP IN THE OFFICE IN CARNEGIE BLDG. OR WRITE: BOX 2SI. STATE COLLEGE. PA. lailg Collegian FOR A BITTER PENN STATE Service for Future By LOLLI NEUBARTH completed, has been designed with facilities to take care of Uni versity expansion plans which piovide for three new dining halls to service various living areas, according to Robot C. Proffitt,' duector of food service. J The new addition, actually aboutl three times the size of the original! building, was begun in the fall of! 1957 after four years of planning. It includes office space, rooms for' meat cutting, stotage space, mas-| sive freezing and refrigerating rooms, and a bakery eight times larger than the old one. Modifications in the original building have resulted in amus ing new uses for old areas. Some employees have found of fice space in a former doughnut room, and one refrigerator now serves as a coat room. An unusual feature of the new addition is the variety of floor surfaces provided within one area Several types of tile were in laid to provide a place where custodians can be trained to work with the floors in various build ings on campus. Gleaming metal and stark white equipment stand out against a red brick-like floor to make the bak ery one of the most impressive rooms in the building. Eight bak ery engineers pooled their effortsl to deteimine the most efficient' set-up to save time and labor,! Proffitt said. ; "This is definitely one of the I finest, most modern bakeries in ! the area, outside of commercial plants.” he added. Baked products are the only ones sent out to individual units already prepared. Miss Louise Schermerhorn, manager of the building, explained. Bread and; pastry is baked daily in massive] ovens and delivered four times; during the day, starting at 5 a.m i This is why the menu in all halls must be uniform, she said. It would be impossible to prepare a variety of baked goods with any degree of efficiency. Although the approximately 51.5 million construction was designed to house the largest and most modern equipment, many of the old facilities will be used for a while. According lo Proffitt, the number of stu dents now served is not large enough to make the use of some super equipment economically feasible. Foods building expansion had to be planned and completed all at once, he said, providing space for! foods service to “grow into” as University enrollment increases. j schedule; however, he said he , They said that last week three believes they will be able to coeds walked beneath a steel gir j catch up when the weather im- der that was being lifted by a : proves. Plumbing and electrical crane. Another coed walked next ! dews are still working on the to a building where workmen j building. were using an air hammer to! . But bad weather isn’t the only j break stones loose from a second thing that has hampered con- story level. struction of the new Home Eco- According to James Shoff, nomics Building. According to a General State Authority representative and the job supervisor, students have been taking short cuts through restricted areas near the build- ings. They said that persons get- ting near the buildings are en dangering themselves, because they could easily be struck by a piece of heavy equipment. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Employers To Recruit June Grads The University Placement Serv ice's campus recruiting program [will begin Monday. About 375 employers will visit the University in the next few months to interview June and August graduates. Job opportuni ties are of a wide variety and in clude positions in government, electronics, banking, research, 'manufacturing, retailing and in ! surance. The trend this year shows a greater demand for top academic students, according to the Place ment Service Office. In compari ison to last spring, more students will be needed to fill job open ings particularly in the non-tech lnical fields. Showing an increase also this year are listed salaries. This spring the program has been altered slightly to better as sist students. Three weeks before an employer visits the campus an announcement will appear in the Daily Collegian and on the Place ment Service’s bulletin board. During the first week after the announcement is posted, students should read the company litera ture on file and decide if the type of work interests them. If so, stu dents may schedule an interview during the two weeks before the visit by reporting to the schedul ing desk located in the Placement office. In addition to the company literature files, the service main tains company address files, a government service file and com pany information sheets for stu dents use. 5 Professors Get Committee Jobs Five faculty members have been elected to the Faculty Luncheon Club Steering Committee for thel spring semester. | They are Dr. Thomas Smyth Jr., assistant professor of ento mology; Lt. Col. William C. Pel ton, associate professor of military science and tactics; Dr. Frank I. i Anthony, assistant professor of agriculture, education; Dr. Teresa) Cohen, professor of mathematics, 1 )and Miss Genevieve M. Dilts, as sociate director of the University ! Christian Association. New officers of Delta Gamma are: Anne Ruthrauff, president; Jean Grosh, first vice president;; Patricia Frank, second vice presi dent; Judith Colbeck, correspond ing secretary; Nancy Jo Campbell, recording secretary; Elizabeth Ingley, treasurer; and Bonnie Doo little, social chairman. resident engineer on the Pol lock area project, the last of 18 deep caissons will be poured this week. holes about four feet square drilled into the earth until solid rock is struck. They are then filled with cement. Shoff said that they have kept the job “basically on schedule de i (Continued on page four) (^o-£clits The caissons are TIM Lounge 'Okay' Called Erroneous A member of the Association of Independent Men Board of Governors reported to the board last night that the Board of Trustees had approved a Town Independent Men’s lounge for the Hetzel Union Building expansion, but a University official denied the report. Frank Pearson, who made the announcement, said he did not remember where he had heard it. C. S. Wyand, vice president for development, said the whole HUB expansion project was under study and no part of it had been approved yet. All-University Cabinet had passed a resolution approving the TIM lounge, providing it could be used by all students when TIM wasn't using it. Neither Edward Frymoyer, AIM president, nor William B. Crafts, assistant to the Dean of Men, had heard anything to con firm Pearson’s report. The Board also went on record favoring short-term parking spaces in the HUB parking lot. Some board members felt they were needed for persons stopping in the HUB for a few minutes. Carl Smith, AIM vice president, announced that AIM has been in vited to send a delegate to the eastern regional independent stu dent conference Feb. 20 to 22 at Marshall College, Huntingdon, W. Va. The University is in the northeastern region. A delegate will be chosen later. Smith also announced the Na tional Independent Student As sociation conference will be held March 19 to 21 in Boulder, Colo. Crash Kills— (■Continued from page one) low. Such equipment was avail able at the opposite end of the same runway. Some 25 Civil Aeronautics Bu reau investigators, working out of LaGuardia, were checking the wreckage of the plane. Autopsy reports on victims dis closed the terrific force with which the airliner hit the water. Nearly all victims died of crushed chests, broken necks or mangling injuries. Drownings were few. “MUSIC AT NIGHT” m Coming! Center Stage! Repairs Car Radios Television Phonographs Radios television m service center State College TV 232 S. Allen St. WMAJ Morninf Devotions 11:15 _ CUssleal Interlsde What'a Goins On Nows and Bport* LP's and Show Tones 5:3® Nm 5:35 - LP*s and Shaw Tanei (:(® Nm and Markets LP’i Show Tenet Fulton Lewla Jr. LP’i in