PAGE SIX ~T~TR ICT1TGA1NDAILY 53A C1 E11 I0, 1948 _.I U GRIPE SESSION: Freshmen Blame Troubles On Inadequate Training By ALICE BRINKMAN Freshman English, heavy read- ing assignments, and note -taking difficulties came in for a big share of freshman "gripes" at the twen- tieth annual Principal-Freshman Conference here yesterday. "Why didn't they make high school tougher"? and "Why didn't they make us write more composi- tions"? were some of the common- est questions principals faced. LARGE ASSIGNMENTS and Engineers. .. (continued from Page 1) JIM HARSANT: I believe that I am qualified to be secretary of your class because of experience gained holding similar positions in high school. If elected I will do my best to represent you on the Engineering Council. * * w ARLENE LANGE: I am running for the office of Secretary of Freshman Engineers for three rea- sons: 1. First semester freshmen should be allowed to have a voice in their government in the form of a secretary. 2. The interests of women should be represented in the council. 3. I am sincerely in- terested in helping to make the activities of the engineers more enjoyable than ever before. Football Ducat Deadline Set Ohio State Ticket Sale To End Friday Pointing out that combination train and game tickets to the Ohio State football game will not be sold after noon Friday, the Wol- verine Club urged students plan- ning to attend the game to buy tickets as soon as possible. Only 200 ducats are left for the game which will be played in Co- lumbus on Nov. 20. Sales will con- tinue from 8 a.m. to noon in Rm. 2, University Hall. The special train will leave Ann Arbor Saturday, Nov. 20, at 6:30 a.m. For the return trip, the train will leave Columbus at 9 a.m. and arrive in Ann Arbor at 3 p.m. Women students attending the game will receive automatic per- mission for the trip by filling out special blanks when buying their tickets. Art Display Will Close "Michigan on Canvas," the art exhibit currently on display in the Rackham Galleries will close at 10 a.m. tomorrow. note-taking have given freshman John Guettler a "rough time."'' "You don't have the volume of as- signments in high school that you do here," he said. "Also they don't prepare you for taking lecture notes." Similar difficulties were echoed by other students. The Dean of Jackson Junior College said his transfers stressed "heavy reading assign- ments" and "lack of personal contact with instructor" as their main problems. After hearing student problems in individual interviews yester- day morning, visiting principals got a chance in the afternoon to put their problems to members of the panel on 'The Articulation of High School and College English." IN REPLAY TO questions of how to improve high school prep- aration the panel recommended that composition experience be given all through high school One course in the senior year is not enough. Exercises, and drills, moreover, they declared, are not effective. The only successful preparation is actual writing. On the problem of better col- lege teachers,hProf. Wells de- clared "English will be better taught in college when we have more full-time teachers who are not worrying about graduate studies." "There has been a ten per cent improvement in the staff this year," he said. "We need a bi-partisan policy in whichhhighrschool and col- lege teachers are constantly in touch and trying to improve stand- ards," he concluded. Omega Phi Psi Holds Contest National Achievement Week To Be Observed With the theme, "Make America Safe By Insuring Justice for All," the University's Phi chapter of Omega Phi Psi, national Negro fraternity, is observing National Negro Achievement Week. Under the chairmanship of Jesse Hill, the local chapter is publicizing its nation-wide high school essay contest 'The Indi- vidual, Key to TruerDemocracy." First place winner in the con- test, which is open to high school seniors, will receive $125, the run- ner-up $75, and the third place contestant $50. A meeting will be held by Phi chapter at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Union to hear a report on ef- forts to secure a chapter house. The local chapter was founded on campus in 1923. It recently re- ceived official recognition from the Interfraternity Council in part of IFC's post-war reactivation pro- gram. CAB Begins Petition Drive The Committee to Abolish the Ban has formally launched its petition drive to collect 10,000 sig- natures in support of their plea to the University Board of Re- gents to lift the political speakers ban. Supporting the drive, which has the approval of the Student Leg- islature are thirteen campus groups including AVC, AIM, Betsy Barbour, Hillel, IRA, NSA, Sigma Delta Tau, SRA, UWF, United Na- tions Council, Wallace Progres- sives, West Quad Council and the Young Democrats. The campaign is scheduled to continue through this week. No word has been received yet on the group's request for a hear- ing with the Regents, Nov. 13. FLIERS INJURED 'BUZZING' HOME-First a'd is given to Pilot Harold Salvino (left), 21, and his passenger, Richard Runge, 19, at Davie Fla., after their single-engined light plane crashed while the pilot was "buzzing" the home of his passenger. Single Tickets Available for Next Concert Cincinnati Symphony Will PlayMonday Single tickets are still avail- able for the Cincinnati Symphony concert at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium. The orchestra, ranking among the top six major symphonies in the country, will make its local appearance in the season's second Extra Series concert. * * * WIELDING THE BATON for the group will be American-born Thor Johnson, who is well-known to Ann Arbor concert-goers as the guest conductor for choral works at the May Festivals. Before joining the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Johnson conducted the University's Lit- tle Symphony, with which he toured the country. He then took over the American University Symphony at Shrivenham, Eng- land, while in the armed forces during the war. Returning to the states, John- son was invited to conduct the New York Philharmonic Sym- phony in its Stadium Concerts in June 1946. The former faculty member will lead his Cincinnati group, which he has headed for two seasons, in the performance of works by Brahms, Mozart, Vaughan Wil- liams, Alfven and Strauss when they appear here Monday. STUDENTS M~ake a good income in your spare time. Sell a nationally-ad- vertised product manufactured in Michigan. Liberal commission. WRITE ZEPHYR VENT. AWNING CO. 47-49 11th St., Battle Creek TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Sold, Bought, Rented, Repaired STATIONERY & SUPPLIES G. I. Requisitions Accepted 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. ( -.. N Is FRIGHTFULLY SPORTIN'-this Beer Vault. Simply hop in your auto, motor down, and order your sack (beer). No time wasted, y'know and values are quite amazing. It's really all very jolly. Raw-ther! BEER VAULT 303 North Fifth Avenue II THE FOUR CORNERS: U' Awards 66 Scholarships STo Resident Foreign Students A total of 66 scholarships were awarded to foreign students on campus by University sources this year. The University granted 43 of the scholarships and Barbour awards went to 21 Oriental wom- en. Two fellowships in journalism were granted by the University Press Club for the first time. THE FOREIGN student schol- arships provided by the University were distributed in 29 countries. For of the recipients were from China, three each from France, Holland, and Norway and two each from Mexico, West Africa, Bolivia, Finland and Hungary. One each was granted to stu- dents from Korea, Lebanon, Ar- gentina, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Peru, Turkey, Czechoslovakia, Morocco and Puerto Rico. Oth- ers were Persia, Poland, Greece, India, Palestine, Italy, Chile, South Africa, Esthonia and Germany. The 21 women holding Barbour scholarships represent five coun- tries. Ten are from China, four from the Philippines, three from India, two from Korea and two! fromJapan. Patterson To Talk On Aid to(;lree American Aid to Greece will be the subject of a talk by Prof. Gardner Patterson at a luncheon for the League of Women Voters at 12:15 p.m. today, in the Union. Prof. Patterson was a member of the Greek Currency Committee, for 2 years, acting as an official of the Greek government with veto power over currency matters. He also served in the Navy in North Africa in connection with economic affairs and in the Bal- kans during the war. BY GAD, SIR! THE SCHOLARSHIPS were es- tablished in 1917 through a gift from the late Levi L. Barbour, a former regent of the University. The fellowships in journalism provide for one year of graduate study and one year of experience on the staff of Michigan news- papers. Report Way To Reduce Caries The kids may not like it, but Prof. Kenneth A. Easlick of the public health school has reported a way to keep their teeth prac- tically free from cavities. The plan, described by Dr. Eas- lick at the 76th annual meeting of the American Public Health As- sociation, involves the use of a sodium flourine solution and an ammonia liberating dentifrice. The joker, as far as the young- sters are concerned is the part of the plan that involves the restric- tion of the eating of sweets for short periods of time. Dr. Easlick said that t fe of the flouride solution on children's teeth has reduced the decay rate by forty per cent. The flouride makes the tooth enamel more re- sistant to acids. French Lecturer Isere Dr. Georges Friedman, profes- sor at the National Conservatory of Arts and Professions, and di- rectcr of Studies, Ecole des Hautes Etudes, the Sorbonne, Paris, will discuss "Man and Machines in Industrial Civilization," at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackhai Am- phith1eatrc. Dr. Friedman will speak under the auspico of the sociology de- partment. SDA Le ader Speaks Today Bill Shore, national chairman of Students of Demogratic Action, will address the local ADA group at 7:30 p.m. today in the ABC Room of the League. Shore, a graduate of the Uni- versity of Minnesota and an aide in Hubert Humphrey's senatorial campaign, will discuss "SDA's Place in the Post-Election World." Members of the group will lay their own plans for post-election political action. They will also elect officers. RARE OPPORTUNITY! STUDY... 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