WHICH BRAND WILL STUDENTS EAT? Miss Grace Boyd, supervisor of the experimental kitchen, prepares five brands of pears for sampling. The chosen brand will be served in the dining halls. Food Service Plans For 6600 Students By ELAINE MIELE First of Series How- much food does it take to serve 4 million meals a year? This is only one of the problems of the Department of Food Service which serves meals to 6600 students in residence halls and about 1500 customers a day in the Hetzel Union Terrace Room. The staff must be equipped to plan menus, develop recipes, buy supplies and prepare and serve meals. The process does not end here either. Food Service has its own cost accounting staff which provides up - to - the-minute information about the cost of supplies and the preparation of food. According to Robert C. Prof fitt, director of food service, who has been with the department for 11 years, the accounting staff can tell the exact location of food which has been ordered or pur chased. The cost department handles reports about daily food costs, dining hall production and other financial operations. The dining hall and Terrace Room service are separate. The difference in the two operations is that the Terrace Room makes a profit and the dining halls do not, he said. The food service in the dining halls is a self-supporting, aux iliary enterprise of the Uni versity. It receives income from students' boarding . fees. With this money it provides for the building and maintenance of dining halls, equipment, food and labor costs and operating expenses. * When new dining halls are be ing built, food service plans their arrangement, furnishings and dec orations, Proffitt said. The department personnel v, ork closely together within the frame work of a semi-centralized type of system. The Food Stores Build ing located south of the Uni versity golf course is the center of operations. Here, both food and equipment supplies are re ceived and stored. The experimental kitchen where research and development of new recipes is carried on is located in this building. Men to Debate In Tournament This weekend both the regular] and new members of the Men’s] Debate Squad will argue the pros and cons of the national debate! topic, Resolved: that Congress should be given the power to re verse decisions of the Supreme Court. ] Participating in the Allegheny Debate Tournament at Allegheny College, Meadeville, will be David Goodhart, sophomore in business administration from Rutherford, NJ.; Vernon Barger, senior in en gineering science from Curlls ville; William Stout, sophomore in engineering science from Pitts burgh, and Peter Galie, junior in labor-management relations from Pittsburgh. The following students will de bate at the novice tournament at Temple University: Michael Dzvo nik, freshman in chemical engin eering from Leechburg; Ira Zat coff, senior in business adminis tration from Wilkes-Barre; Rich ard Snyder, junior in business ad ministration from Carlisle; and Stephen Berezin, senior in phys ics from Philadelphia. Pearson Resigns From University Party Post Frank Pearson, University Par ty chairman, has resigned from the post. James Nelligan, junior in labor management relations from Ken sington, Md., has been temporari ly appointed by Pearson as chair man. Election of a new chairman will be held at an open meeting for all party members at 7 p.m. Dec. 13 in 121 Sparks. _ 1 t SPECIAL CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR TH ou'Jf be Proud to Give, and iy'll be Pleased to Receive ... REASURE HOUSE The 138 E. COLLEGE AVE. Stop in at THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Brown To Speak In Schwab Dr. Kenneth I. Brown, exec utive director of the Danforth Foundation, will speak at the 1 University Chapel service of worship at 10:55 a.m. tomor row in Schwab Auditorium. He will speak on “Commitment and/or Open Mindedness.” The Chapel Choir, under the di rection of Willa Taylor, will sing “Deo Dicamus Gratias” by Homi |lius as choral introit. The anthem : will be taken from the “Elijah” |by Mendelssohn. Miss Sonja ;Brown will be the contralto solo- Ust. University organist George E Ceiga will play Pachelbels “Herr Gott, Dich Loben Alle Wir” and Der Tag, Der Ist So Freuden Reich as the prelude and post- Jude. As offertory he will play Es Ist Gewiszlich An Der Zeit.” Brown received his bachelor of arts degree from the University of Rochester. He holds a doctor of philosophy degree from Harvard University, doctor of law degrees from Denison University and Keuka College and a doctor of divinity degree from the College of Idaho. He is the editor of “Character: Bad. war letters of a consien »‘? us ?, b i ecfo1 ‘. and of “Not Minds Alone and “A Campus Decade.” Borough Merchant Establishes Scholarship A scholarship to aid a sopho more m the curriculum of agri cultural and biological chemistry | has been established by Leonard jPawlson owner of the Colonial Pastry Shop, in State College. The award, to be known as the Colonial Pastry Shop Award, will provide $5O for tlje student chosen this year and $lOO for the student chosen for the 1960-61 academic year. Soph Awarded Scholarship Robert I. Schwartz, sophomore in chemical engineering from Williamsport, has been awarded the $4OO Lubrizol Scholarship in chemical engineering for the cur rent year. Braun to Speak On 'Pilgrimage' “Perm State Pilgrimage’’ will be the topic of the Rev. Theodore Braun, United Church of Christ Chaplain, at the Protestant Service of Worship at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. The Meditation Chapel Choir, under the direction of James Beach, will sing the choral anthem “Be Peace on Earth” by William Crotch. The organists will be William Mas trocola and Sandra Lehman The Baptist Student Movement will meet at 7 tonight at the home of Rev. James Spangenberg for a dessert party. Rev William Hackett will speak on "New Tasks Demand New Structures."! Bible study will be at 8:30 a.m j tomorrow with church services at 9'30 and 10 50 a.m. The fellow-j ship will meet at 6:30 p.m. to moirow' to hear Rev. Hackett speak on “The Life and Mission of the Church Where I Work.” r The United Student Fellowship will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow' at the Faith United Chinch ot| Christ. The program will consist of a panel discussion on “Voca tions” including the rise of the organization man in the business world. The B'nai B'riih Hillel Founda tion will sponsor a lecture by Dr. Henry A Finch on “Buber—l and Thou” at 7.30 p m Monday in the Hillel lounge The Unitarian Fellowship Sun-, day seivice will be held at 30-45 a.m. tomorrow at the home of Mr and Mis. Evan Johnson, 345 S. Buckhout St. . The Wesley Foundation will at tend the sanctuary services at 8.30 and 10:45 am. tomorrow in St Paul’s Church with the Wes ley morning worship at 9.15 a.m. Masses for Roman Catholics: will be said at 8, 9.30, and 11 a.m.] and 4-30 p.m. at Our Lady ofj Victory Church and at 9 am. in Schwab Auditorium. The New man News will be distributed after masses tomorrow. New Art Wind Quintet Will Hold 2 Concerts ! The New Art Wind Quintet will present the second concert of the , Ninth Annual Chamber Music ■ Series at 8 p.m. .tomorrow m the iState College High School Audi torium. Admission is by season subscription ticket. The quintet will also present a special youth concert at 3:30 p.m. at the senior high school. The af ternoon concert is open to all stu dents. UCA Colloquy Will Feature Talk by Brown Dr. Kenneth I. Brown, exec utive of the Danforth Founda tion, will be the principal speaker at a Faculty Colloquy at 2 p.m. today at the- Nittanv ]Lion Inn. j The colloquy will be sponsored jby the faculty committee of the I University Christian Association. ] Brown’s talk is entitled “Re ligious Commitment in the Uni ! versity ” i Two'faculty panel piesentations ,will complete the program Paiti .cipants in the first panel, dealing jwith "The Types of Commitment Found in the University,” will he Dr. Mary Dodds, professor of foods ,and nutrition; Dr. Walter Coutu, ! professor of sociology; and Dr. Robert Tschnn, assistant dean of ] the Graduate School, j The second panel, discussing I “The Commitment of the Self and jthe Fredom of die Mind,” will in .iclude Dr. J. Mitchell Morse, as sistant professor of English com- Iposition; Dr. Ray Pepinsky, rc j. search professor of physies:_and iDr Rustum Roy, professor of geo ! chemistry. | A registration fee of $4.50, which 'includes dinner, will be charged. : Reservations should be made by calling the UCA office, UN 5-7627. ; iowenfeid Will Speak l Viktor Lowenfeld, professor end 'head of the Department of Art [Education, will give the keynote jaddress at the Convention of the iMiddle Atlantic Section of the i American Society for Engineeimg lEducation in New York, N. Y., ‘today. PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers