WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1961 Student to Compile List for Campaign Ronald Sheetz, junior in secondary education from Belle fonte, is compiling a list as part of the "Write to Your Representative" campaign. The list, which will contain the names of the state repre sentatives and senators, their counties or districts and their Fraternities Reinstated By Council Lambda Chi Alpha, Theta Delta Chi and Sigma Nu were re-instated yesterday by the Interfraternity Council, Ben Bronstein, secretary-treasur er of IFC, said. These three fraternities were suspended from IFC activities at the Monday meeting b of the IFC. The groups had failed to pay bills owed to the council. According to IFC regulations. a fraternity is eligible for sus pension if it has failed to pay bills owed to the IFC for more than two months. After pay ment the fraternities were auto matically re-instated. The official fraternity pledging date quoted in yesterdays Colle gian as 12:01 a.m., Feb. 25 should have read 12:01 a.m. Feb. 26. Nominations for IFC offices will start at the Feb. 27 meeting and close at the March 13 meeting with self-nominations from the floor. Nominees for the offices of president, vice president and sec retary-treasurer will be named. All nominees should be past or present presidents of their fra ternities or a member of one of the IFC standing committees, Ronald Novak, IFC president, said. Excavations have shown that Stone Age people lived in Russell Cave near Bridgeport, Ma., for more than 9,000 years. FUN! FUN! FUN! If you're having a party this is a must! Entertain your friends with the most clever, most humorous comedy idea ever offered to the public. Never before has a record of this type been pre sented. Complete with hilarious tie-in illustrations. Send for your copy of "LEW BEDELL AND FRIEND". Recorded by the author of the best sellers "SEE, YOU DON'T HAVE TO LAUGH TO HAVE FUN" and "WILL MY REAL FATHER PLEASE STAND UP". Send $2.00 in cash, check, "or money order to Fun-1481 Vine—Hollywood 28, Calif. Postage will be paid by us. SPEEDY 3-hr. CLEANERS One hour dry cleaning service Tailoring and Alterations Complete Laundry Service If you have a loose or missing button or gapping seam, stop in. Our seamstress will take care of them while you wait. Dressing room is available. OPEN DAILY: 7:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. • SPEEDY CLEANERS NEXT DOOR TO THE POST OFFICE 110 E. BEAVER AVENUE STATE COLLEGE AD 7-2162 Harrisburg addresses is part of an effort to get a full appropriation from the state for the University so that student tuition will not be raised next fall. It will appear in The Daily Collegian when com pleted. Sheets said a 'bad of letters from students could not be ig v nosed by representatives. "The boys down there would know something is up," he said. Sheetz, who also wrote a "Let ter to the Editor" which appeared in Friday's Collegian, is scheduled to appear before the SGA Assem bly Thursday night to present an outline of his campaign. If the Assembly supports the plan, Sheetz said he will start the campaign next Monday and con tinue it for one week. Sheets said he hopes to 'il able to have banners placed on the mall and posters on campus bulletin boards, and to have an nouncements in political sci ence classes urging students to write letters. Interested students may be vis,. iting residence halls to acquaint students with the campaign and copies of the list will be distrib uted to residence halls and fra ternities, Sheetz said. Sheetz said he talked to Sen. Jo Hays (D.-Centre) about the plan and to Dr. Robert G. Bernreuter, vice president for academic af fairs, who termed it a "good idea." "They (the representatives) will see that the student body is not sitting back and saying 'we'll get what you give us'," Sheetz said. Jobs in Camps, Resorts Available for Students Students interested in jobs in private and service camps for this summer should consult the Office of Student Aid, 218 Willard. Over 100 camps and 25 resorts 'have openings in arts and crafts, athletics, food service, riding and other areas. ThE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Student Council IWill Sponsor Coffee Hours The Education Student Coun cil last night announced that it will sponsor its first evening Cof fee Hour in March with Dr. Clar- I ence Berguson, professor in visual aids, scheduled to speak on the "School System in the Soviet Union." In other business, the council chose several committee chair men. Among these were Coffee Hours, Barbara Maley, junior from Verona, N.J., and Ann Farnsworth, freshman from De- Witt, N.Y.; Daily Collegians to Student Teachers, Barbara Reese, junior from Philadelphia; Reor ganization of Council for FOur Term Plan, Jacqueline Wenk, sophomore from Sayville, N.Y.; and Monitor Editor, Susan Hous ton, junior from Harrisburg. The council also recommended check lists for advisors to eid them in determining what cred its upperclassmen must have. The Agriculture Student Coun cil decided last night to hold an open house for high school stu dents April 7 and 8 in cooperation with the councils of Mineral In dustries and Chemistry and Phys ics. .:•;•40 4.5 k . • mrk". 1 1 .:MMI New additions to the family! NERAL TELEPHONE&ELECTRONICS Lattman Discusses Scientific Progress By SUE TAYLOR Geniuses are the men who are remembered throughout time, Dr. Lawrence Lattman, associate professor of geomor phology, said at the liberal arts lecture last night. "As we look back in history, we see that the contributions that have meant something were made by geniuses," Lattman said in the third of the lecture series. "An excellent way to study sci ence is to attach it to human beings," he said. "The start of science was in Greece:where there was &great variety of men,", he said. Such men as Euclid, Pytha goreas and Aristotle gave their contributions to the world. "Science vanished during the Dark Ages," Lattman said, "but during the Renaissance it came alive , again." It was at this time that Fran• cis Bacon, one of our greatest scientists, appeared, Lattman said. "Bacon formalized the scientific method—the keystone upon which science is built," he continued. "This method entails first gath- The two new telephones in the bassinet are the result of a perfect marriage of research and design. They illustrate the way Gen Tel constantly strives to make the telephone an ever more convenient and helpful service of modern life. The Starlite* phone in the foreground is a new "compact" only half the size of a standard desk phone. Its PANELESCENTe (electroluminescent) dial glows in the dark for easy dialing, and can be turned up to serve as a night light. The Space-Maker• phone can be hung anywhere—• on posts and in tight corners. Both dial and handset can be adjusted to fit the space and the conven• ience of the user. These new and modern phones for the home were developed by our subsidiary, Automatic Electric, largest supplier of telephone equipment to Ameri• ca's Independent telephone industry. They are but two examples of how General Tele phone & Electronics works to improve equipment and advance communications for the home, for industry and national .defense— both here and abroad. •Trade Mart ering infoi'mation, then forming the hypothesis, deducing several conclusions, and then testing these predicted conclusions," Latttnan said. "In England, Isaac Newton, in a period called "the 18 golden months of science, laid the foundation for the classical con cept of mechanics," he said. When Newton's theories had been proved, correct, men began applying his fundamental laws to everything, according to Leaman; "Today, however, most people accept the probabilistic concept that laws work most of the time, but we can't expect them to work all of the time," he said. "Albert Einstein disagreed with this concept, saying, 'I can't believe that God plays dice with the universe'." "There is'a strong possibility that Ein stein is right," Lattman said, "since repeatedly throughout science the minority has been right. "But today we are In a state of flux. The only thing we really know is that we've got a lot to learn," he concluded. Cincinnati originally was called Losantville or "the town opposite the mouth of the Licking River." 4 • *• ".- - 4c • 'N• GENERAL PAGE FIVE