SATURDAY. DECEMBER 12. 1959 ! “My Peace I Give Unto You” will be the sermon topic of | Charles Trautman, program associate on the University Chris tian Association staff, at the Protestant Service of Worship jat 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel, j The Meditation Chapel Choir under the direction of | James Beach will sing the choral i anthem “Come, Thou Long Ex pected Jesus” by Henry Ley. The organist will be Jerry Manning, j Trautman came to the Univer sity for this year, as an intern jwith the Presbyterian University ; Center. He is between his second and third years at Yale Divinity I School. | The Westminster Fellowship !will meet at 6:20 p.m. tomorrow 'for a worship service, followed by Christmas Caroling. The grad uate group will meet at 5:30 p.m at the home Miss Ruth St. Clair, JlOO6 Bell Ave. j The Baptist Student Organiza tion will meet at 8:30 a m. lomor irow for Bible Study. Church serv ices will be at 9:30 and 10:50 a.m. with a Christmas Candlelight Ves p-.- cervice at 4-30 pm. Members Will have dinner at 5:30.-p.m. and ■ win go Christmas caroling at 6-30 p.m. The Newman Club will sponsor a Communion breakfast at 10-30. a.m. tomorrow at the State Col-1 lege Hotel. Breakfast will costi 51.25. Matthew C. Farrell of Seton! Hall University will speak on “Separation of Church and State.”! Masses for Roman Catholics will be said at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m.j This replica exists inside the many tubes and wires of the Lady 4 of* victory M Church ancPat $150,000 Westinghouse Network Calculator when students 9am - in Schwab Auditorium. J _ i are working problems dealing'. ?? na * ® rith Hillel Founds-; with electrical and mechanical tlon w, “ sponsor the showing oi systems a rnov,e 011 George Gershwin en- Paul E. Shields, associate pro-i l<le ? Rhapsody in Blue.” It will, lessor of electrical engineering,j^ e s ,o "'n a * 9 -tonight at Hillel. said the machine may therefore I Henry A. Finch will speak be called a systems simulator. on “Green—The Last Angry H® adds that the calculator's |Mari” at 7:30 pm. Monday in the most important function is the -lounge. Rabbi Hillel A. Fine will; solution of a complex problem ; s P ea k on Thursday on “Where in a relatively short time. Be- Judaism Differs”—The Place of! fore these machines were in- !Judaism Among the Religions of vented, there were many phen- the World. omena which were not under- The United Student Fellowship stood. Now they can be solved will hold a Christmas Carol sing quickly. at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the! “This time element was very Faith United Church of Christ, important. It often took a year or The Christian Science service more to solve one problem,” will be at 11 am. Sunday with Shields said. “Now we can start Sunday school also at 11 a m. The from scratch, set up the prob- Wednesday evening meeting will lem, and get a complete answer be at 8 pm. within an hour.” ! The calculator was built by the * Westinghouse Electric Corporation for the University. It was presented on Nov. 22, 1957, by the Elliott Company, the Pennsylvania Electric As sociation. Westinghouse Electric Corporation and the Centre County Subsection of the Stu dent Branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Two other network calculators in the state are at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia and at the Westinghouse Electric Corpor ation in East Pittsburgh. All electrical engineering stu dents have some training with the calculator before they graduate They use it to solve equations and network problems, as well as to dan electrical and mechanical systems. —Collegian Photo by Margie Freer ADD-SUBTRACT-MULTIPLY-DlVlDE—Richard Schmoyer, grad uate student in electrical engineering from Macungie, operates the Westinghouse Network Calculator in the basement of the Electri cal Engineering Building. The calculator will be used by electrical engineers to solve complex mathematical problems. $150,000 Caculator Aids EE Students A replica of the systems of all major power companies can often be found in the basement of Electrical Engineering Building! Men to Debate At Pittsburgh A court-room type debate is on the agenda this weekend for four members of the Men’s Debate Squad when they participate in the Pitt Cross Examination Tour-, nament at the University of Pitts burgh. This debate differs from the usual type in that after a mem ber of one team has given his arguments, a member of the op posing learn cross-examines him. Vernon Barger, senior in engi neering science from Curllsville. and Arthur Ichter, senior in busi ness administration from Ashley, will debate the affirmative. The negative side will be up held by Robert Uetz, senior in arts and letters from Philadel phia, and Alan Davidson, senior in arts and letters from Clearfield. The results of one of last week end’s tournaments at Temple University in Philadelphia showed the team won six of their debates and lost two. SAME Will Conduct Final Semester Meeting The Society of American Mili tary Engineers will hold its final meeting of the semester at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Mineral Science auditorium. Following a business meeting, an uncut' World War II battle film will be shown. PI9MDEPK& HOMS eAeaXe&t @*/it/ade/jt/iia {jPtadium OFFER SPECIAL LIBERTY BOWL ROOM RATES! ... for Penn State students economical tegular rates and faculty for alumni and friends Single rooms . $5. Single rooms $ 6.50 Twin rooms so. pers. $4. Double rooms $ B.SO Rooms for 3 or 4, ea. pers. $3. Twin rooms $ll.OO All rooms with private bath, and radio - many with TV Boses direct to stadium Wire, phone, or writei J«hnßarlrant Syivama 811 Broad & locust Streets IB SB locust just off Brood Street JSMB Philadelphia 7, Po. _ |I_H fMted»!pMfl7,Po. SfiiJni Kl 6-1100 S-7200 By KAY MILLS THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Troutman to Present w . ,7,iam 1 s . wiH k a n iG/ve Christmas M6SSQQ6 Oil 16QC6 Chapel Sermon ' " the sermon topic ofj The Rev, Preston N. Wil :”ersity Chris-jliams, acting University Chap '”Tr>rship|lain, will deliver “The Christ mas Meditation” at the I University Chapel service of I worship at 10:55 a.m. tomor row in Schwab - Auditorium. ! One hundred members ©f the Meditation Chape! Choirs, con ducted by James W. Beach, will present the special Christinas Music. ! The musical numbers include: “How Brightly Shines the Moin ;ing Star’’ by Nicolai-Baeh as the •introit, “Come, Thou Long Ex pected Jesus" by Henry G. Ley as ,the anthem, followed by three ! carols, “The Morning Star” bv Vigil Thomson, “Shepherds Loud .Their Praises Singing” by Alec Rowlery and “The Three Kings” by Lluis Romeo. | George E. Ceiga, University : orgamst, will play Fantasis on ;“Veni Emmanuel” by Alec Row ilev as Prelude; Greensleeve—- • “What Child is This" by Richard • j Purvis as Offertory; and Toccata ;on “How Brightly Shines" by Garth Edmondson as Postlude. Darwinian Tickets jAvailahle Monday | The distribution of tickets for 'the lecture to be presented 'Wednesday night by Di. Carleton S. Coon will begin at 9 a.m. Mon jday at the Iletzel Union desk. ! Coon, who is curator of ethnol ogy and professor of anthropology 'at the University Museum, Phila delphia, will speak at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Schwab Auditorium on “The Origin and Development iof Man's Culture.” ] The lecture is the third of the Daiwinian Series, sponsored by the University Lecture Series. ;Tickels are distributed to stu dents without charge and will go 1 on sale for non-students at 51.25 apiece. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 13 7:30 P.M. G. F. HANDEL'S "THE MESSIAH" at GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH 400 W. College Ave. 45 VOICE CHOIR S PIECE ORCHESTRA GO GREYHOUND (for out-of-this-worlci savings/) No, there’s no Greyhound Scenicruiser® Service to outer space—yet. But if you’re rocketing home for the holidays, there's no better way to go! It costs less than driving your own jalopy, too. With this exclu sive Greyhound Service, you get more—pay'less. Getinorbit—goGreyhound. BAGGAGE PROBLEMS? You can take more with you on a Greyhound. Or, send your belongings by Greyhound Package Express. They arrive in hours and cost you less! It's such a comfort to take the bus ... and leave the driving to uat US', i N. Athtrton Bt. StaU Coll.Ee, Pa. A» 7-4181 COMPARE THESE LOW, LOW FARES: Philadelphia . . . $5.65 New York ..... 58.25 Harrisburg-. ... $2.55 Pittsburgh $4.95 •plus tax PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers