Call Junior Colleges Promising Herter Prods Moscow ATLANTIC CIY - Educators4 held the Junior college to be the most promising facet of education in the future at the American As-' sociation of School Administrators Convention yesterday. For five days 20,000 educators attended the convention. Two more points were also made: 1) It's going to get much hard- er for a high school graduate to get into college. 2) The testing programs in high schools are becoming so great in number they are a problem. The population explosion, the limited facilities of the four-year college, the high cost of a college education, and the need for more highly trained personnel by in- dustry are said to be responsible for the junior college boom. Thomas D. Bailey, Florida state school superintendent, felt that the junior colleges could provide for the youths who need post- high school education but who are unable to gain admission to col- lege because they fail to meet ,hese standards or can't afford to ittend. Michigan has one of the lafg- est systems in the nation with 16 junior colleges enrolling over 38,- 000 students. Not included among these is the Tri-County College of Saginaw, Bay, and Midland, which will open in 1961. Noting the fantastic cost of enlarging four-year colleges to accommodate all students in the future, Peter Masiko, Jr., Dean of Chicago City Junior College, sup- ported the junior college plan as a way of reducing this expense. Masiko added that high school teachers are better qualified by training to instruct freshmen and sophomores in college than many college instructors who are gradu- ate students more interested in financing their own continued studies than in teaching others. To Avoid Chance War By Backing Arms Ban >ao a>o c=> o cc<=.>o tro oo omo. Imported Madras and India o Print Bedspreads , Imported Jewelry and Gifts 0 INDIA ART SHOP 3 3 MAYNARDSTREET - O YOt"""' efd }pO O G'_O