SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1960 Gibson Will On 'Have a "Have a Heart" will be the topic of the Rev. Samuel Gib son, executive director of the University Christian Associa tion, at the Protestant Service of Worship at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the Helen Eakin Eisenhower Chapel. Music for the service will be provided by the Meditation Chapel Choir under the direction of James Beach. The choir will' sipg the anthem "Psalm 124," as. arranged by Shaw-Parker. Larry Handwerk will be the organist for the service. The Lutheran Student Associ ation will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomor row at the student center. Rev.i Dale Bringman will speak on "Foe Better, Not for Worse," a discus- ) sion of modern courtship and mar- Sunday morning seminars will riage. be conducted at 9:30 a.m. tomor row at the Westminster Founda tion, at which time new groups will be formed. The topics of dis cussion will be "Christian Con science in Contemporary Living" land "Protestant Denominations, That Whats and Whys." Dr. Milton S. Osborne, head of the Department of Architecture. 'will speak on "The Expression of l Faith in Architectpre" at 6:30 p.m 'tomorrow at Westminster Fellow ship "Biblical Faith and Political Understanding" will be the sub ject of a lecture by Dr. Will Her-1 berg at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the, Chapel lounge. This is the first in religion and politics, sponsored by a series of lectures concerning the Committee on Interreligious Affairs. The Wesley Foundation will present the first lecture of a mar riage series at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow at the student center. Mrs. Helen Buchanan, instructor in family relations, will be the guest speak er. Drew Prof Will Speak At Chapel Dr. Will Herberg, professor bf Judaic Studies and Social Philosophy at Drew Univer sity, will speak at the Jewish- Christian Chapel service at 10:55 a.m. tomorrow in Sch wab Auditorium. The theme of Herberg's sermon will be "The Strangeness of Faith " Adapted Jewish and Christian orders of worship will constitute the service outline to provide an opportunity for members of the Jewish and Christian faiths to worship together. Clifford A. Nelson, interim director of the B'nai B'rith Hil lel Foundation, and the ReV. Preston N. Williams, acting UM: - versit y Chaplain, will lead the Jewish and Christian services of worship. The combined Hillel Foundation and the University Chapel choirs, under the direction of Willa Tay lor, will sing "0 God of Bethel by Whose Hand," a Scottish Psal ter as the choral introit. Selections of Hebrew liturgical music and "En Kelohenu," a tra ditional hymn of the Jewish faith, will also be sung by the combined choirs. University organist George E. Ceiga will play "Hear 0 Is rael" by Weinberger to open the service; "To Thee We Give Ourselves Today" from "Three Chorale Variations of Hebrew Hymns" by Kohs as the offer tory and "Fugue in G major" by Mendelssohn as postlude. Herberg received his under graduate, graduate and doctor of philosophy degrees from Colum bia University. For many years he served as a research analyst for a branch of the American Federa tion of Labor. He has written "Judaism and Modern Man: An Interpretation of Jewish Religion" and "Protes tant-Catholic-Jew: An Essay in American Religious Sociology." Five O'Clock Theatre To Give Original Play An original one-act play, "The Return," by Janet Durstine, senior In iournalism from Ellwood City, will be the first production of Five O'Clock Theatre on Tues day. A semester-long program of plays acted, written and directed by students will be given at 5 p.m. each Tuesday in the Little Thea tre in the basement of Old Main. _ I • • You rendering are personal service the ch i o a 1 I oe t n h g e e r sof I You 0 your areown interested w i th • training. Coimn p b a e n i y ng in a sup r b business support and of IF. You are interested in sales and the possibility • for future sales management. + + + The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, the nation's 14th largest corporation, will have a Home Office representative on your campus on Monday, February 22, 1960. Contact your Placement Office to arrange an interview and see our Company material. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Speak Heart' The World Student Day of Prayer, formerly planned for Feb. 14, has been postponed until next week. The date has been changed to conform to the world celebra tion of the day. The service will be held at 4 p.m. Feb. 21 in the Wes ley Foundation. A Lox and Bagel brunch will be held at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at the B'nal B'rith Hillel Foundation. Hostesses for the brunch will be the Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority. Masses for Roman Catholics will be said at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of Victory Church and at 9 a.m. in Schwab Auditorium. Daily mass is at 5:15 p.m. in the Chapel. Science Foundation Announces Grant The National Science Founda tion has announced a grant of $33,200 for two years in partial support of the work of the Cyro genic Laboratory. Research under this award is directed jointly by Dr. John G. Aston, director of the laboratory, and Dr James J. Fritz, associate professor of chemistry. This is the third such award made by the Foundation to the laboratory in the past six years. Originally the research supported by the Foundation included only studies of para-magnetism, but support had been broadened to in clude most of the activities of the Cyrogenic Laboratory. Students to Be Subjects Calorimeter Tests to Last 30 Hours By ED ROLF Would you like a chance to study for an uninterrupted 30 hours? Or perhaps you'd like a chance to eat some specially pre pared meals this semester . . . free. You can do both if you are selected to participate in the next series of experiments with the world famous respiration calori meter in Armsby Building. "We never have trouble getting volunteers," said Dr. Raymond W. Swift, head of the animal nutri tion department. He is in charge of all experiments conducted in the calorimeter. Experiments will compare the utilization between one person eating two meals a day and an other person eating three meals a day. Both subjects will consume exactly the same number of cal ories each day. Tests will run during February and March. Swift said these tests are a variation of the experiments conducted last year. He said, however, that last year's results were inconclusive and required further study this winter. Students, who are required to 2 Eng Students Receive Grants James Kushner, sophomore in electrical engineering from Col lier, and Stephen Engle, sopho more in electrical engineering from Mahanoy City, are recipients, of the Engineering-Architecture Student Council scholarships, Wil liam Bowers, president of the council, has announced. The schol arships are worth $240. The council, _during their bi monthly meeting, elected Gerald Logue, sophomore in engineer ing science from Parker, to fill the vacated post of correspond ing secretary. Bowers announced that there would be no ICCB Career Day this year and, after discussing the matter, the council felt that there should definitely be a career pro gram next year. Several council members ex pressed their opinion that the Eng-Arch Council should take the initiative in setting up such a day in conjunction with any other councils that would benefit from and would want to participate in the program. Frosh Coed Housing-- (continued from page one) Watts and Jordan Halls. Women will live in McKee and Irvin. The 1960-61 housing requests for upperclass women who wish 'reassignment to their present rooms will be available from Feb. '29 ' until March 11. All other upperclass women may request rooms from March 28 to April 8. Upperelass men may request rooms from Feb. 29 until March 11. About 1800 upperclass men can be accommodated. Geneva, scene of many interna tional diplomatic conferences in Switzerland, is 2,000 years old. Nave a WORLD of FU,VI A ORE Orient SPEND LESS 43-65 Der. from s99* Mons rotor encl.& collopo ;mitt Also low-cost trips to Mwske $169 up, South Americo $499 up, Hawaii Study Tow WI up and ma Yeas Around the World sll9s up AA Vow Iroys4 Agent I WA, IP Istittts4•l Plan lin York X, WORLD TRAVEL Co•vm• eat all their meals in Oak cot tage, are placed on a special diet about 10 days before they go in tolthe calorimeter for tests. They are not permitted to eat between , meals and may do only normal' exercise. Swift said they may drink all the water they wish' since this has no nutritional value. Tests usually run about 30 hours but Swift said subjects have been kept under observa tion as long as 48 hours. He said, however, that results of the sec ond 24-hour period are identical with the first half of the test, and, therefore, the longer testing 'period is not needed. Subjects are tested in pairs in order to reduce boredom. The boys are able to do all nor mal things in their small con fined space. There are two cots and two chairs squeezed into the calorimeter, and boys usual ly take advantage of the forced confinement to study. Five min utes of exercises are prescribed during the test. Swift emphasized that there is ,no danger to the subjects in the Student Penalized For Misconduct John Barth, junior in civil en gineering from Scranton, has been found guilty of disorderly conduct for molesting a woman last Sat urday night. He was fined $75 and costs by Justice of the Peace William Bell in a hearing held Thursday. The attacked woman and her husband both testified that Barth grabbed her and then threw her into the shrubbery on E. College, Ave. near McAllister St. Barth said the whole thing was just a case of Mistaken indentity, according to police sergeant Mat thew Seckinger. Barth said he thought that the woman was someone else and he only wantedi to scare her. For CLASSIFIEDS Call UN 5-2531 NOTICE ... KEELER'S OPEN TODAY 8:45 until 5:30 YOUR HELP CAN COME BACK A HUNDRED TIMES OVER If enough of us help, the SS. Hope every dollar do the work of many, you will be outbound in 1960. First port of can earn a priceless dividend. With call: Indonesia. A bold health project health comes self-respect. Men or called Hope will be underway. nations who are at peace with them- The need for Hope—and your help selves are less likely to war with —is crucial. In many nations, too their world. .. many health hazards exist. Too many Hope is yours to give. It's a people people robbed of the will to live and to-people project. For one year's work. Too few hands to help. Often, worth, 3 1 / 2 million Americans must there, may be one doctor for 100,000, give a dollar. Please make it more Hope's approach is most practical. if you can. Help where a nation's doctors ask help. Then help them help themselves _ _ IA to health. By training, upgrade their skills—multiply their hands. Hope's doctors, dentists, nurses and techni cians will man a center complete to 300-bed mobile unit, portable TV. With Hope, you can not only make Space Donated by The Daily Collegian calorimeter. Two trained opera tors are on duty at all times, one of whom is in constant view of the boys in the "tank." Volun teers may talk to the operators at any time by means of an inter com set. The Armsby Calorimeter was first built in 1903 at the request of the government which gave financial assistance for the con struction. Its original purpose was to test the effects of certain foods consumed by cattle and other farm animals. It was first con verted to use for humans in 1957, Dr. Katherine Fisher, of the, Foods Nutrition Department of the College of Home Economics, is in charge of the preparation of the meals for the subjects. Each meal is exactly measured each day to determine the num ber of calories and also the number of grams of protein it contains. Swift noted that Fisher is a trained biochemist, and he pointed out that such training has led to excellent cooperation be- Itween the two departments. Canavan Will Lecture To Color Slide Club The State College Color Slide Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Mon day in 26 Mineral Industries. James Canavan will speak and show slides on "Antarctica IGY, 1957-58." George S. Bush, associ ate professor of journalism, will judge the monthly slide competi tion. —CHICKEN— HALF or WHOLE DELIVERED to YOU Ton. * thrat Thura. p.m.—12:30 a.m. II p.m.— 7 Sat. 10 a.m.— Sun. 9 a.m.-12:30 a.m. Herlocher Bar-B-Oued Chicken Take-Out 227 E. Bearer AD 8-1016 I=l GIVE TO HELP LAUNCH HOPE Don't wait to be asked. Mail your contribution now to HOPE. Box 9808, Washington 15, D. C. PAGE FIVE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers