PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1944 Highlights On Campus Newcomb To S peak . Following Sabbath Eve Services at 7.45 p.m.. today, Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb will address members of the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation on "Pride-Prejudice" in a Fireside Dis- cussion. * . * Dance Committee . .. The West Lodge Dance Commit- tee will hold its weekly meeting at 5 p.m. Monday in the League. The room number will' be posted on the bulletin board. Weekly Tea Dance . . The International Center will hold its weekly tea dance from 4 to 6 p.m. today in the social rooms of the Center. All foreign students and friends are invited to attend. ** * Girl Scout Tea... The Girl Scout Council of Ann Arbor will honor Kay Beckman, new executive director of the Coun- cil, at a tea from 2 to 4 p.m. today in the Rackham Bldg. Miss Beckman is a former mem- ber of the National Girl Scout Staff of Chicago. Mrs. Beatrice Price Russell, a member of the District Committee of Scouts in Southport, Conn., will be guest speaker at the tea. Scalp and Blade .. Scalp and Blade will meet at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Union to discuss rush- ing plans. All old members have been asked to attend. Student Officers Will Meet Here Officers of High School Student Councils throughout the state will hold a conference Nov. 15 in the Rackham Building under the sponsor- ship of the University Extension Service, the education school, and the student council officers of Uni- versity High School and Ann Arbor High School. The general topic for discussion will be 'How To Make High School Student Councils More Effective." Specific topics to be discussed will be "How To Promote Broader Par- ticipation in Student Council Work," "Why Student Councils Fail". and similar subjects related to the func- tioning of high school student coun- cils. LIMIT ED TOP JOBS: Schools Should Teach Facts Of Industrial Life, Sexton Says American school children need to be taught the "industrial facts of life," including the fact that there are a limited number of jobs "on top" and that it is possible for a man to be happy on $1.25 an hour, Brendan Sexton, regional Educational repre- sentative of the UAW-CIO, said yes- terday. Speaking at the Conference on Vocational Education, Sexton de- clared that the schools should com- bat the prevalent idea that a suc- cessful life is measured only in terms of income.. "We in the trade union movement have a right to expect that children shall be taught that it is no disgrace to be a part of the American indus- trial machine," Sexton said. In particular, school courses should inform young people that unions exist, and should teach something of their functions and of the principles of collective bar- gaining. "We do not ask that the schools be pro-union, any more than we think Hold Those Bonds! that they should be pro-manage- ment," he said, "but in a country where there are 15,000,000 trade un- ion members, we believe we have the right to expect the schools to show a sympathetic approach to the whole labor movement." P re-Game Air Show Planned Approximately 20 Navy planes- Corsairs, Hellcats, and Avengers- will fly in a pre-game air show to begin at 1:36 p.m. tornorrow over the stadium. The planes, which spelled out a block "M" and block "I" at the Illi- nois game Oct. 26, this time will dis- play combat and parade formations used by Marine and Naval pilots in air tactics. The planes will be piloted by mem- bers of the Naval and Marine Or- ganized Air Reserve based at Grosse Ile. Some of the pilots are University students who are maintaining their reserve commissions by flying week- ends at Gro"se"le. In the event of bad weather, the show will not be given. .l JAMMED REGISTRATION-This situation will persist for years to come, according to Dr. Benjamin Fine, education editor of The New York Times who holds that 3,000,000 students will throng to U.S. colleges and universities by 1950. Educators must stop thinking that the 'good old days' of lowered enrollment will ever return, Fine said. 4) .'4 * * * 'A PIPE DREAM:' Technic Will Make First Appearance* Resplendent in a new cover, the Michigan Technic, engineering stu- dents publication, will make its first fall appearance on campus Mon- day. The first issue will feature a "Time and Motion Study" by Arthur Jones. The article is a general analysis of the methods of promoting greater production efficiency used by engi- neers to save consumers millions of dollars every year. Also featured will be a discussion of "Silicones" by Ted Gier. The ar- ticle presents a brief historical sum- mary of the development of sili- cones, explains the production flow- sheet and includes the uses of the new compounds. Fine Attacks Educators' Hope For Return of 'Good Old Days' (Continued from Page 1) not adjust quickly enough to veter- ans' needs." 'The veterans have produced, now it's upto the colleges to produce," he asserted. If there were no veterans in high- er educational institutions, the col- lege administrators would be clamor- ing for them, Dr. Fine pointed out. "I can't think of anything more promising in terms of the nation's future than the veterans who have thrown down their guns and re- placed them with books," he said. We could and should have 6,000,000 college students, he stated. "This idea will meet with opposi- tion," Dr. Fine said. "But there was opposition to extension of high school education in 1872, and that plan has worked out well." We cannot as a nation allow a feeling to persist that higher edu- cation must be limited to a few, he stated. "New and expanded colleges must come about," he said. "Educators are just beginning to think along those lines- they are just beginning to come our of their lethar- gy," the Pulitzer Prize winner said. The surface has not yet been scratched as far as enrollment in col- leges and universities is concerned, Dr. Fine added. FLOWERS 0 0 Ior the Game ... for theDan CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP 04;;; Qec e TON ITE at 8 P.M. MASONIC TEMPLE JAZZC'het . ..CARLTON RYDING SEXTET... JOE NORRIS QUARTET. . DAVE LEVINE'S QUINTET... BOB MAYREND'S TRIO .. .BETTY BONNIER... Also: Bobl Baldwin, Leo Osebald, Bud Casey DON SLAUGHTER, BILL SPENCER Presented by BILL RAN DLE $1.20 . . . AT THE DOOR . . . $1.20 (I -- _-__ _______ ____ _______________ _ _________________i Read and Use The Daily Classifieds For warm tl in outdoor action... 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