TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 14. 1961 Steinhauer Names Bookstore Committee Philip Steinhauer, chairman of the SGA bookstore com mittee, yesterday announced the appointment of sub-com mittee chairmen who will help compile a report for the Board of Trustees on the possibility of a University-run bookstore. To head the sub-commit Steinhauer named Dean Wharton, sophomore class president. Steinhauer said this committee will examine past reports on bookstore proposals presented to SGA, the administration or the Board of Trustees and will select facts pertinent to helping the . present proposal, Heading the sub-committee on universities will be James Sloane, freshman class presi dent, and Susan Eberly, junior in arts and letters from State College. The committee will contact large universities in the. same sit uation we are in—that is, univer sities in isolated areas, Steinhau er said. In addition, the committee will contact large universities, such as the University of Pittsburgh, that have successfully operated a bookstore. Steinhauer named Walter Darren (Sr.-U.) to chair the fact finding sub-committee. He said this committee will interview students, administrators, facul ty and townspeople to deter mine the need for a bookstore. David Grubbs, sophomore in la bor management relations frorn Bethlehem, and Robert Taylor, junior• in animal husbandry from Ellicott City, Md., will head the sub-committee on management. The committee will study how sand by whom the bookstore could be run, what ilems could be sold and the method that would be used in running the store. Steinhauer said. Chairman of the sub-commit tee on physical plant facilities will be Ted Simon, who com piled the initial report on the bookstore which was presented to the Board of Trustees at their December meeting. Ann Ghiglione, junior in arts and letters from Arlington, Va., and Betty Stanley, junior in sec ondary education from Philadel phia, will co-chair the secretariat sub-committee, which will be re. sponsible for compiling the fina bookstore report. Steinhauer named Richart Leighton, junior in journalism from Philadelphia. and Herber Nurick, junior in ails and letter from Philadelphia; to head tht public relations sub-committee and help with coordination. New Show To Benin . On WDFM Radio station WDFM will introduce a new feature "Campus Beat," from 7 to 1( p.m. tomorrow. Hosted by Susan Wheeler, jun ior in Arts and Letters from Uniontown, and Ira Berman, sen ior in journalism from Bethlehem this new show is aimed to brin: continuity to the station's Wednes. day night programming. Rego• hilly scheduled programs will Ix run successively with no time limit for each one. The programs included in the three-hour "Campus Beat" will br "Washington Reports." featurin g interviews with 11. S. Senators; "Album Review," with Miss Whee ler as hostess; "Jaz Panorama," hosted by Al Pollen: "Obelisk." with Roland Reed; "Forum of the Air," moderated by Steve Milner; "Portrait of a City," a taped pro. gram which spotlights a different city each week, and the latest, local and worldwide news. Station WMAJ will carry the latter two hotirs of "Campus Beat," beginning at 8 p.m. each Wednesday. LA Trar.!cr:p!s Availt.ble iiib7ral arts students may -ob tain their fall transcripts today and tomorrow in 138 Sparks. ee on historical information, Lattman to Talk In LA Series Dr. Lawrence Lattman. asso ciate professor of geomorphology, will speak on "A Panoramic View of Scientific Thought" at 7:30 to night in the Hetzel Union assem bly room. Lattman's talk, the third in a lecture series titled "Introducing the Liberal Arts College," is open to all students and faculty mem bers. Following the lecture a re ception will be held in the HUB lounge. Lattman earned his bachelor of arts degree at City College of New York, and his master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees at the University of Cincinnati. He taught at the University of Michigan in 1952-53 and then worked for the Gulf Oil Corpora tion doing fundamental research from 1953 to 1957. Lattman is presently serving as a University Senator and is a member of the Committee on Student Affairs. Monarch butterflies can be found wherever the so-called butterfly milkweed grows. ThE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Small Boys 'Snow' Coeds By Old Main Three coeds were terrorized in front of Old Main Friday by four elementary school students armed with nature's most abundant product at this time of year snow. The four small boys stood on the east side of the Mall and bombarded the girls with freshly packed snowballs to the cries of "fire when ready" and other un intelligable cries from which only two words could be made out "Yogi Berra." The coeds shrunk back in a de fensive retreat, but the boys ad vanced up the walk after them and one headed up the Mall ap parently maneuvering to get be hind the girls. But before he could get into position the coeds held a ,short but unusually productive !summit meeting., The strategy of the coeds was to move forward in the face of the enemy. As the coeds strolled through the lines of the startled State College school-kids, the de feated boys looked for another and less brave victim and found it the Obelisk. Michigan Prof to Open Spring EE Seminars Dr. T. A. B. Senior. of the Radi ation Laboratory, University of, Michigan, will speak at 4:15 p.m.! today in 207 Electrical Engi-i !leering, at the first of a series, of Electrical Engineering Semi-: nars scheduled for the spring', semester. His subject will be "Radar and, Thermal Studies of the Physical; Constants of the Lunar Surface."l HiNI to Exhibit Prints The opening of an exhibition of Dr. William F. Prokasy, Jr., contemporary prints will take assistant professor of psychology, place from 2:30 tg 5 p.m. on Sun- will be the speaker at the Psy day at the B'nai Frith Hillel,chology Colloquium at noon Foundation, 224 Locust Lane. 'tomorrow in Dining Room A of This exhibition• will continue l the Hetzel Union building. until March 12 and will be open to His talk is entitled "Condition the public from 9.30 a.m. to 10 ing and the Inhibition Construct" p.m. daily. and is open to the public. Prokasy to Give Talk PAGE FIVE