THURSDAY. JANUARY 12. 1961 Questionnaires Show Faculty Divided Thompson to Remain On Merits of New Four-Term Plan As Men's Dormitory Faculty opinion appears to be almost evenly divided on plan, according to results of a survey taken by The Daily C Returns from approximately 100 questionnaires show w: subjects as quality of the courses, “breaks,” teaching plans, Approximately 20% of the faculty members polled fel Mountan To Resign Post As Dean The dean of women’s office announced yesterday the res ignation of Mrs. Norma M. Mountan, assistant to the dean of women. Mrs. Mountan gave her husband’s transfer to a 1 Answers to how many terms the ...» , . , . , , professors intend to teach ranged different job in Pittsburgh asifrom “as many as possible” to “as the reason for leaving. ; few as possible.” Most professors . —6O per cent—said they intended Mrs. Mountan has served in ( 0 on ]y three terms each her present position since Sep- year. About 28 per cent plan to tember, 1909. As assistant to thO: teach a u f our terms while two dean of women she was in charge p ei . cen t were unsure. One solu of Panhellenic affairs, women s on was offered by a professor honorary societies, the summerj who p ] ans to take every other pre-orientation program, women’s 'summer off. student loans and student rec-: • „ ' _ =Ttra d sf l e° n t S f ?L j ° b diSded on the subjects of final and ti ansfer to other colleges. She i exams The majority—s 3 per cent has also served on the Onenta-!_ of those po j] ec t opposed the ad tmn Committee and the Manual 1 ministration of exams during the ° n J rOC n? Ure f ComrTlltte f; , last class period. Mrs. Mountan. originally fromi Grove City has been at the Uni- 1 Most opponents of the plan felt varsity since 1953 when she en- that , the exams u would be rolled as a freshman. She grad- and less comprehensive, as well as uated with a bachelor of science imore difficult for studCTt study degree in 1957 and earned herjj n «- tban und f ,he P resent , S>.R masters in education in 1959. 1 n fn hS two She did part time secretarial thing up m his own two work in the summer sessions de-i 0 ’ partment and the College ofj Forty-one per cent either fa- Home Economics as an under-]y ore d Jhis kind of exam or felt graduate and later worked in the ! the difficulties encountered would Division of Counseling office. ;° e negligible. “The opportunity afforded me| Only 22 per cent of the returns by Dean Lipp to be a part of her, showed professors plan to change staff at the University will always: the type of final they give. The be one of the highlights of mv; other 78 per cent plan to continue life,” Mrs. Mountan said. She with the same type of finals. One added that she hoped she would; professor said that he intends to be able to derive as much en-itake up_two class periods in ad joyment and satisfaction from en-jministering his final exam, deavors she might undertake ini Most of the professors seemed the future ! to agree with the philosophic com * J ! A. - J 1 - » A Mrs. Mountan said she planned iment added to one questionnaire, to "retire into housekeeping” andj“. . . good students will still get that she had no plans at presentlgood grades and poor ones poor to continue in the same type of; grades and that’s the way the •work she has done here. 'cookie crumbles.” Aid for Future Grad-Students Now Available for Next Fall Seniors considering graduate studies and wanting financial aid in graduate school for the fall term, 1961. should act now. Most universities set February 15 or March 1 as their closing dead line for applications for fellow ships, scholarships and assistant ships. The deadline for many financial aids such as the National Science Foundation Awards and the Woodrow Wilson Fellowships have closed for 1961-62. As many of these deadlines are in October or November it is not too early for juniors to start thinking about which ones they wish to apply for. Further information' for pro-, speclive graduate students may be Soc Prof Writes Article Dr. George A. Theodorson, as sistant professor of sociology, is the author of an article, “Change and Traditionalism in the Ameri can Family: Part I of a Compara tive Study of the Indian and American Family,” published in the Journal of Social Research (India). miHMIIHMMMIIUMUIHmUItHHIIIMIIIMIIIIIHIMI TAXI RETURN GRATIS of course material will be im proved by the change. Thirty four per cent foresaw a change for the worse while 46 per cent felt that there would he no change in course quality. Most students probably will j have to sit through the entire 75 minute class period as only 24 per cent of the professors questioned indicated they planned to allow for a break. Fifty-five per cent were defi nitely opposed io a break and 31 per cent were unsure. One professor said he would allow ! his classes to vote on a 10-min- I ute break. Leonides and the Town Inde pendent Men’s Council will spon sor the Las Vegas Banquet for all dealers and assistants from , . ~ Las Vegas Night at 7 tonight at obtained m the reception room {j ie Autoport restaurant. of the Graduate School Office persons may sign Suite, 103-107 Willard. |up f o r the dinner in the TIM of- Information regarding special j fice,' 203 HUB. types of aid for special groups of j Cars will leave S. Garner St., students or for study in special:in front of the Copper Kitchen, areas is posted on the Graduate at 6:30 p.m. Anyone who can School bulletin board in the front;drive, or who needs a ride, should hall on the first floor of Willard, be there at that time. Deadline for Deposits Penn State in Bermuda Jan. 16,1961 at the unchanging price of $242.00 for Coeds $218.00 for Men UNIVERSITY TRAVEL BUREAU STATE COLLEGE HOTEL Above the Corner Room Phene AD 8-6779 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA he worth of the new four-term lollegian. idely diverging views on such final exams and grading, t that the quality or breadth Warmth , Kindness Aid Injured Family By LYNNE CEREFICE It was a cold night just five days before Christmas near the small town of Marion, Virginia. The road was icy and traces of the recent snowstorm still re mained. Sam and Myrna Zamriek, a University couple, and their two small children, were driv ing home to Jacksonville, Texas, for the holidays. Mrs. Zamriek had relieved her husband at the wheel; he and the children were asleep. It was very dark and the road was deserted. In the next instant, the car went into a skid, overturned and plunged over a 20-ft. cliff into the Holston River. Zamriek, a graduate assist ant in mechanical engineering, said he and his little girl, Jamila, 4 yearn old, escaped the wreckage With only minor cuts and bruises. He explained that his son, Sammy, Jr., 18 months old, had been tossed out on the highway above and suffered a fractured skull. But, Mrs. Zamriek, he said, was trapped in the car ser iously hurt. "When 1 pulled her from the water she was almost dead." he said. "But what happened next was amazing!" Zamriek said he carried his wife up to the highway, and suddenly out of nowhere, an ambulance appeared on the scene. “It was like a miracle,” Zam rick said. He soon learned that the Leonides, TIM Will Host Banquet Director of Housing Otto E. Mueller said yesterday that Thompson Hall will probably remain a men’s residence hall despite a request by the West Halls Men’s Area Council. The council voted, at it’s meeting Monday night, to ask that Thompson Hall be made a women’s residence hall so j that the present West Halls Coni- Jmunity ratio of thi-ee men to one ; woman would become a one to one ratio. j Mueller said that this would not be feasible because of the diffi culties it would cause in the over all housing plans for the Univer sity. ambulance had been sent by a family living across the river who had heard the crash and assumed there was an accident So began a fantastic cam paign of kindness and gener osity. First, Mrs. Zamrick, who was taken 120 miles to the Roanoke Memorial Hospital, was greeted on her arrival by three specialists who immedi ately performed a nine hour operation to save her life. The surgeons were summoned as a result of a phone call from the local Marion Hospital. Mrs. Zamrick, who suffered head lacerations, fractures to both arms and a fractured collarbone, is recovering nice ly. Zamrick said. In the days that followed, Zamrick and the children, re ceived calls and visits from residents while they were in the hospital. “They told me that they had recovered all our clothes from the river and that everything had been cleaned and mended. They refused to acept any pay ment,” he said. The Zamrick children also received letters and presents from children all over the country wishing them well. In addition, a tree was set up in their room for Christ mas, and they were given a party by the Roanoke Red Cross, the . hospital staff and the people of Roanoke, Zam rick said. Also, from their home town of Jacksonville, Texas, the Zamricks received an offer of a privately - owned chartered plane to carry Mrs. Zamrick hpme when she is released from the hospital. Y eat on Authors Article Kelly Yeaton, associate profes sor of theatre arts, is the author of an article on theatrical make-up technique published in the De cember issue of “Dramatics.” j Illustrated with photographs. Ithe article is titled, “A Latex Skin :for Old-Age.” TOTAL RELIEF FROM PERIODIC DISTRESS Hospital-tested, prescription-type formula provides total treatment in a single tablet Now, through a revolutionary discovery of medical science, a new, prescription-type tablet called FEMICIN provides total relief from menstrual complaints. When cramps anil pain strike, FEMICIN ; S exclusive ingredients begin to act in seconds, help stop cramps, relieve tension, calm jumpy nerves, eliminate aches and pains. FEMICIN ends your suffer ing, gives you back a sense of well being. If taken before pain starts McLANAHANS Self-Service McLANAHAN'S Drug Store ' Mueller said, however, that ißunkle Hall would be a worn- Sen’s residence hall next Septem ber. Riinkle. which can accom modate 287 students, would thus [become the first women’s hall in /North Halls which is now an all male community with over 1100 (students. i Mueller added that the new ;East Halls dormitories, which will house 1050 students when they ,open in September will have a one to one ratio of men and wom en. A spokesman for the West. Halls Council said that, with the com munity's present three to one ra tio, the girls are a "little shy” :n participating in area social activ ities because they are usually out numbered. ! Tile council plans to make its [request in a letter to Dean of iWomen Dorothy J. Lipp. Miss ILipp said that she was not able jto make any statement on the matter at the present time. NBC Televises Math Course ! Students may receive three credits during the spring semes ter by watching “Probability and Statistics,” the Continental [Classroom course offered by the ■Continuing Education Services, in (front of their home TV sets. i The course will be telecast from ; 6:30 a.m. to 7 a.m. Monday (Wednesday and Friday over the (National Broadcasting Company's (TV network facilities,-beginning I Jan. 30. j Students who have sueccsfully completed three years of high j school mathematics including ja second course in algebra and .meet course prerequisites may en roll for the course which is known 'as Mathematics 8-CC. Enrollment will be through John D. Mencher, j assistant regional director of Con itinuing Education Services. The fee is $2O per credit or $6O. —Penn State has the only Min eral Industries Art Gallery in the world (established 1930). —at those first signs of heaviness and distress—further discomforts may never develop. No simple aspirin compound can give you this complete relief. Get FEMICIN today! It is guaranteed to give you complete relief or your money will be fully refunded. For samples end informative booklet, send 10c to: Box 225, Church Street Station, New York S, N. Y. «THAYtf) LABS. IStO 414 E. College Ave. 134 S. Allen St. PAGE THREE