Sunday, September 23, 1973 I HE MICHI(GAN DAILY Page Five %rspective: The pre-ined's plight By CARLA RAPOPORT It has been said that nearly half of all entering freshman consider themselves pre-med. A nebulous distinction that means the next four years will be de- voted to training for medical school, becoming a doctor, and dreaming of that elaborately dec- orated sheeps skin hanging on the office wall. Somewhere along the line, however, people seem to disappear, the goal drifts far- ther away, and the dream of that beautiful diploma goes out of focus. .At this University, to be pre- med means to have a science- liberal arts background and to be worried, tense, and mono- maniacal. By the end a major- ity have long since dropped the idea of ever becoming doctors. The offer of a vice-presidency in their uncles textile firm becomes irresistable. WHAT IS THE grueling mech- anism that weeds put prospec- tive med school students and spits out only the hardiest? tThe process is called competi- tion and it is a tradition which carries through every pre-med course taught at the the Univer- sity. It is recognized as bad but necessary evil by most profes- sors. Students learn to live with it, because they have no choice. As an unfortunate result, the at- mosphere in the pre-med courses would make old Blackbeard him- self shudder with fear. If a student comes to the Uni- versity with hopes of bettering humankind, it doesn't take long for him/her to ldose it. Human- hti kind soon turns into the kid who ruined the curves with a 97, the professor who maintains medi- ans of 55 on the chemistry exams and the person in laboratory who actually sabotages a neighbor's experiment and waltzes out with someone else's data. THE PROBLEM is not with the courses as much as with the ten- sion they produce in an under- classman's mind. Sit in some- time on a Physics 125 class to find out for yourself. There is a story around about the professor who was disturbed by the mechanical nature of his students and so decided to give a lecture on the principles of up- hill flow of water. An hour of gibberish later, the apparent au- tomotons, in an almost a manic tizzy, continued to scribble down every word. "Will that be on the hourly?" must be the most common ques- tion asked of pre-med science professors. What is necessary? What can be skipped? What has to be memorized? The mindless multitudes cannot be- bothered w it h unnecessary, extraneous facts. There are already enough to drown a normal human being in a sea of trivia. Besides it has been a long time since anyone questioned the exams. It's just assumed that grades are of pri- mary importance, and learning is rarely considered. This seems only natural since no medical school need consider any appli- cant with less than a 3.4 grade point. IN A RECENT closed-ballot poll, Bot-Zoo 106 students were asked what grade they were working for in the course. One hundred per cent said "A." In the end, less than 20 per cent will get "A's" while the pre- ponderance pass into oblivion. As a Chemistry 116 lecturer re- cently explained to his class, "Med schools look at us to tell them who the top-notch students are. They look right to the grades in these chemistry courses . . . I know this is hard on you to compete this way, but it's the function we serve." All of this of course ignores the 50 point subjective evalua- tion by your teaching fellow. BEFORE LONG, it becomes easy to understand why less wo- men make it through the pre- med muddle. With the exception of a handful, every pre - med course at the University is taught by a male. Teaching fellows for science courses are overwhelm- ingly male. These male profes- sors have a way of talking about the scientist and his problems, his dilemnas, his world . . . etc. Women sneak in with the chap- ters on reproductive systems and population control. In the book now being used for Bot-Zoo 106, a basic pre-med course, one author introduces himself and his hobbies. Pre- senting: William E. Boggs-enjoys cog- nac, tennis on grass, Mozart piano sonatas and women with high cheekbones. So much for his attitude to- wvards women. THE WHOLE problem is a lousy system that makes for lousy uptight pre - med students (dare I mention 1 o u s y physi- cians?). This country sorely needs doc- tors and it needs more medical schools to train them. Students shouldn't be plucked like weeds from pre-med just because there aren't enough seats available. This summer there was nearly a 500 person waiting list for the mightly weedout course of them all, Organic Chemistry 225. The impact of these numbers is amazing. Few people take Or- ganic unless they are heading for medical school or perhaps toward a chemistry major. THESE STUDENTS might get locked out because the Chem building is cramped, but they are not going to evaporate be- tween now and next term. The most immediate effect is that all students who do get into the co rseare ready to beg, hustle, and even openly battle for a place, not to mention for an "A." The possible solutions abound: Encourage professors to exper- iment with new grading systems and testing procedures, expand audio-tutorial methods and per- haps allow greater numbers of students into the pre-med mill. There are no faciilties for the confused and troubled pre-med student to go for sympathetic advice. Develop a better orien- ing number of older students who end up returning to lower level courses to complete pre-med re- quirements. THERE ARE pot holes through- out the route to receiving the pre-med requirements at the University. Many are falling into them and it is a sad situation. We need to encourage our future doctors, not trip them up. Carla Rapoport, a senior, is a former Daily Editor now strug- gling along as a pre-med. _ e PFRS!4AN HOUSE {>:.HOME OF AUTHENTIC PERSIAN RUGS * SE' THE LARGEST SELECTION OF SHEEPSKIN COATS IN ANN ARBOR 0 32 OFF LADIES SILVER & TURQUOISE RINGS _ TIL SEPT. 30 3 0 E. LIBERTY ST. * HOUSE ANN ARBOR, MICH. OF ~open 6 days a weekv OF Sundays by appotment yMPORTS 769-8555 -O O --:-) 4 0=0=0 4 0<- ALL-,CAMPUS ELECTIO0N The new Student Government Council wilt contain the directly elected representa- tives of the various constituencies of students on campus. The new Council struc- ture was put into effect by an overwhelming vote of the student body in the Spring All-campus election. In a record turnout election, 92% of the voters voted for the new reform Council plan. The new SGC will be elected on October 9, 10, and 11. All of the seats on the newly constituted Council are up for election this Fall. Each stu- dent is allowed to vote in each of the three constituencies, residential, divisional, and school and college. The seats up for election are as fol- lows: tation program for the increas- "Te ryA ULTS OLlt "The v~ery best Film ever made" Al G oldstein I-- r 8:30 MON. & TUES. U. UTAH PHILLIPS LSA COFFEE HOUR TVUESDAY 3:00-4:30 Sept. 25 +for Anthropology Dept. Angell Hall Basement everyone welcome *LAST CHANCE e TO EVER SEE .. You can run for office in any district of which you are a constituent. Filing forms are avail- RESIDENTIAL CONSTITUENCY Dorms (3 seats) Fraternities (1 seat) Sororities (1 seat) ICC Co-ops (1 ,eat) Univ. Married Housing (1 seat) Independent Housing (apartments) (6 seats) IPLAYBOY ENDS TUESDAY Wednesday DIVISIONAL CONSTITUENCY Rackham (grad) (2 seats) Undergraduate (6 seats) Professional (Non-Rackharn grad) (2 seats) able in the SGC office on the third floor of the Michigan Union, room 3X. The filing deadline is Monday, September 24, 1973 at noon for the dorm seats, the Independent Housing (apart- SCHOOL and COLLEGE CONSTITUENCY LSA (4 seats) Engineering (1 seat) Education (1 seat) Law (1 seat) Medical (1 seat) Business (1 seat) Nursing (1 seat) Arch. & Design (1 seat) Music (1 seat) Social Work (1 seat) Dentistry (1 seat) Natural Resources (1 seat) Library Science (1 seat) Inter-College degree. programs (1 seat) Pharmacy (1 seat ) rtUll.0N413&03 AHCINEMN YSLAT ment) seats, the undergraduate seats, and the LSA seats. The filing deadline for all other seats is Monday, October 1, 1973. Any person who desires to run or has any questions should come to the SGC office in room 3X Michigan Union or call 763-3241. also are open President and all eight district seats of the University Housing Council the Golden Voice of the Great Southwest 2.00 1411 Hill SREET T"'-qI I ter.. ' -- - ------- I ... ... U JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL9:00 P.M. 1 THE NEW YORK TIMES, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1972 Film Festival: A Gem From Truffaut f 3' ' yr.'f ,. By VINCENT CANBY Francois Truffaut's "Two Eng- lish Girls" is a film of such beautiful, charming and comic discretion that it isn't until the end that one realizes it's also immensely sad and even brutal. though in the nonbrutalizing way that truth can sometimes be. The film was shown last night at the New York Film Festival at Alice Tully Hall and opens its commercial engagement Sunday at the Fine Arts Theater, where, I trust, it will remain through Thanksgiving, Christmas and be- yond. The source material Is "Les Deux Anglaises et Le Continent;" the second novel by Henri-Pierre Roche, who didn't get around to writing his first until he was 74. That was "Jules et Jim," which Truffaut adapted into his finest film in 1961. A bit too much will probably be made of the fact that "Two English Girls" reverses the cen- tral situation of "Jules and Jim," in which the two heroes spend their lives being turned on and off by the liberated Catherine. The new film, like the earlier one, is set largely in an unde- fined past-that is, sometime in pre-World War I, Paris, though the exact time is left fuzzy, as times usually are in fables. In- stead of two young men, the victims (who are in great meas- ure the mistresses of their fates) are two proper English girls, sis- ters, who share a profound at- tachment for the same young Frenchman. In many ways, however, "Two English Girls" is more closely linked to such later (and dis- similar) Truffaut films as "The Soft S k i n," "Mississippi Mer- maid" and "Stolen Kisses," each a variation on the conflict be- tween a love that is obsessive (soeimes c alled nurel andi a a film in color by Francois Truffaut AREA PREMIERE!?Auditorium t'A", AngelI Hall Monday, Sept. 24 through Sunday, Sept. 30 Evenings 7 & 9 p.m.-Admission $1.50 Weekend Matinees 1 & 3 p m:-Admission $1.00 ANN ARBOR FILM COOPERATIVE / CINEMA 11 THE CAST TWO ENGLISH GIRLS (LES DEUX ANGLAISES ET LE CONTINENT), directed by Francois Truffaut; screenplay in French (with English sub- titles) and English by Mr. Truffaut and Jean Gruault, based on the novel by Henri- Pierre Roche; music, Georges Delerue; director of photog- raphy, Nestor Almendros; pro- duced by Claude Miler; a Films du Carosse-Cinetel production, released by Janus Films. Run- ning time: 108 minutes. Shown last night at the New York Film Festival at Alice Tully Hall; opens Sunday at the Fine Arts Theater, 58th Street near Lexington Avenue. This film has not been classified. Claude Roc .. Jean-Pierre Leaud Anne Brown .... Kika Markham Mrs. Brown .... Sylvia Marriott Mme. Roc......Marie Mansart Diurka ........ Philippe Leofard Ruta................Irene Tunc Mr. Flint ........ Mark Peterson The Palmist .... David Markham occupied by not only the ex- tremely complicated moral bar- riers to love, but also by the manages to look like both Queen Elizabeth and Catherine De- neuve, behaves like a princess in a. fairy tale. She hides behind dark glasses, as if she had suf- fered a wicked enchantment, and says such things as "I want all of Claude or nothing. If it's no, let it be like death." The film covers seven years in the lives of the curious trio, much of it as if the film were the daily j o u r n a l that was Roche's fgvorite literary form. The s c e n e s are sometimes so short they are almost subliminal, with the voice of the narrator (Truffaut) often supplying a text. Purists, I expect, will again object to this tampering with the accepted relationship be- tween image, which the purists think is paramount, and word, which has always been thought to be a lesser tool in cinema. The effect, nevertheless, is lovely, and even appropriate, since fables begin with spoken words. The performances are fine. Leaud may well be - as Truffaut calls him-the greatest French actor of his generation. At least I think that explains why he seemed so off-putting- w h i c h he was supposed to-in "Bed and Board" and here, as the earnestly free-loving rake, so appealing. Miss J believes in the shirtables with the 70's razzmatazz! The great unflappables. . .electric red polyester/acrylic knits with those easy- moving skirts. . .rayon/acetate crepes in black crisped with white polka dots. Softly shaped with hugged-in waists, puffed sleeves and necklines strikingly collared, by David Howard. Sizes 5-13. A. Long shirtdress with sash tie and black-buttoned front, $30. B. Three-piece suitable. . .collarless jacket, skirt and short sleeve ruffled blouse, $48. C. The twosome. ..tunnel-waisted shirtdress and collarless jacket, $48. L tTAA fI C