FRIDAYMARCH 24. 1961 3000 Students Involved In Study of Impressions Close to three thousand students are now taking part in a survey conducted by the' English department to answer the question: Who is the Penn State student? Dr. Henry W. Sams, head of the department of English, said. Students enrolled in English courses, 1,2, 3, 12, 16 and 18, hqve been asked to submit in es say form their impressions of the people they have encountered at the University. It should be made quite clear, continued Sams, that this is not an attempt to draw a picture ofl the Penn State prototype, but to get an appraisal of the 'students' attitudes toward his association. It will also enable the depart ment to get a general idea of their writing ability without in vading the privacy of the class room, he added. When asked if he had any ideas about the results, Sams remarked that he expected to discover or confirm a hunch that students feel less "collegueship" with the facul ty than is desirable. Perhaps these papers will show that the general student body doesn't understand the profes sor's attitude toward his class and vice versa, he said.. At any rate,, any remedy for this will have to be the University's concern rath er than the English Department's. These papers don't have to be signed by the student and will not be graded, Sams added. The essays, which must be sub mitted no later than Monday, will be studied during the vacation, and the results are expected to be made known before the end of the semester. Orientation Applications The deadline for turning in ap plications to be Special Orienta tion counselors for foreign stu dents has been extended until 4 p.m. today. Applications are available at the HUB desk, 2nd FROS -MORE DUO N N U A L MURPHY'S _ THE MUSIC ROOM DANKS WOOLWORTH'S • MR. CHARLES CLEARFIELD'S GARDNERS CANDY STORE By MAXINE FINE Prosser Issues Caution Appeal To Bicyclists The Department of Security is sued an appeal to bicycle riders recently asking them to remain off sidewalks and use extreme caution on the roads and streets. The request came from Charles A. Prosser, safety coordinator. Prosser said more bicycles will be in use now. He asked motorists during the spring to be on the alert for cyclists in the streets. "This is a stop-gap measure which arose from administrative discussions on the traffic situa tion," Prosser said. "It is the first time such an appeal has been is sued," he said, "and the issue will remain in the appeal stage until a final decision is made." The Campus Patrol will just remind students not to ride on the sidewalks, he said. No formal pen allies will be issued. "We are hoping to . enlist the cooperation of- the students," Prosser said, "and not make a formal regulation right now." Magazine Seeks Models Coeds interested in modeling for the August issue of Mddemoiselle Magazine will be interviewed dur ing April in Mademoiselle's New York offices. Prospective models must be be tween five feet, five inches and five feet, nine inches tall. featuring the music of The Swingtetts THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Presidents Elected By 2 Councils Howard •Needleman, junior from Bala Cynwyd, and Ervin 'Hill, senior from Hatboro, were elected presidents of the College of Business Adminis tration Student Council and of the Engineering and Architec ture Student Council respectively Wednesday night. Other officers elected for the Business Administration Student Council are: Edwin Grinberg; vice president; Barbara Feit, secretary; and David Walker, treasurer. The other officers for the. En gineering and Architecture Stu dent Council are: Gerald Logue, vice president; Richard Westrick, treasurer; Linda Leuthold, record ing secretary; and Joseph Buhl nak, corresponding secretary. In other business, Richard M. Colwell, associate professor of; accounting, was elected to repre-1 sent the Business Administration Council in the Prof Snarf contest, The elections for members for, both councils will be held on' April 13 and 14. Wilcox to Speak On Foreign Policy Francis Wilcox, former Assis tant Secretary of State for Inter national Affairs, will speak at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Hetzel Union ballroom. His topic will be "The United Nations and American Foreign Policy." Wilsox, who will also be speak ing to classes in international re lations on Monday, was appointed to his former post in the State, Department by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1955 .and held that position until January of this! year. Door Prizes Courtesy of SCHLOW'S CRABTREE'S JEWELRY STORE KALIN'S DRESS SHOP CONTEMPORARY SHOP McLANAHAN'S • PENN-WHELAN DRUGS E. P. MOYER JEWELRY EE Summer includes 13 . Thirteen undergraduate courses in electrical engineering will be offered for the summer term, Lawrence J. Perez, assistant dean of engineering and architecture said Wednes day. • This is, practically a full undergraduate class Ihe said. The courses to be offered I are E.E. 33, 133, 135, 35, 39, 139, 41, 141, 221, 470, 471, 8 and E.E. Lab 8, he said. The Department of Electrical Engineering had formerly decided to offer only one summer course, E.E. 813, an associate degree course, according to William D. O'Connell, assistant professor of electrical engineering. This decision was made on the basis of a survey of 580 of the approximately 700 electrical engineering students who were asked to indicate the summer courses they would take, he said. The response showed only 11 per cent planning to take summer courses, too small a number to justify offering a full program, he said.- However, a petition submitted in February by Modesto Martinez, Jr., junior in electrical engineer ing from Philadelphia, was one of the reasons for revising the summer schedule of classes, Perez We have them 1../ The Safe Cosmetics For Sensitive Skint , AR - EX hypo-allergenic AR~ X. COSMETICS 114 1 41. FRIDAY, MARCH 24 HUB Ballroom 120 E. College Ave., State College, Penna. 9-12 P.M. GAMBOLIER'S plus JAZZ CONCERT with FRIEDA LEE REFRESHMENTS TICKETS AT HUB DESK COUPLES ONLY KEELER'S METZGER'S KALIN'S MEN'S SHOP HARPER'S PARISH'S MAC'S LEVINE'S Term Courses said. The petition gave five elec trical engineering courses and listed an average of 25 students planning to take each course, Martinez said. • The courses listed on the pe tition were E.E. 41, 141, 221, 29 and 19. Three of these courses are being . offered this summer, Martinez said, but two which had the greatest number of signatures on the petitions, E.E. 29 and 19, are not scheduled. O'Connell said that these courses are not scheduled be, cause of a staff shortage. Fac ulty members are under 10- month contracts and many have prior commitments for the sum mer months,• he explained. The University requires that each class below the 400 level must have 15 students registered. However, the summer engineer ing courses will be offered even though 15 students will not at tend each course, Perez said. AR-EX Cosmetics answer your problem of sensitive skin. They're non-irritating .. free from substances known to cause allergies . . . delightfully feminine and refreshing, Scented or unscented. GRIGGS PHARMACY PAGE SEVEN schedule, e) ~