trw MICHIGAN iAIL SUNDAY, DEGEMBERt 5, 1948 'ROM WISCONSIN TO LONDON: Kaiser Frazer Buys Willow Run Plant British, U.S. American. LONDON-(A')-As an Ameri- can school teacher working a year in England, Agnes Dunne has found her toughest task is teach- ing the stiffly formal British youngsters to come around after class and chew the fat with, teacher. "At first they were astonished when I spoke to them outside of class, in the halls and outdoors," she said. She has been fixing that. Now they stick around after hours to pop questions about indians, cow- boys, penthouses, gangsters and other phenomena of American life as portrayed in Hollywood. * * * MISS DUNNE, ninth grade Eng- lish teacher at Washington Junior High School in Manitowoc, Wis- consin, is one of 112 American teachers now in Britain under an exchange system. This system is arranged by the United States Office of Education and the Eng- lish Speaking Union, in coopera- tion with other organizations. She is teaching for a year at the Laxson Street Secondary Girls School in a working class of southeast London. ,, , . "Our youngsters are more in- formal than the English children in their classrooms," Miss Dunne' said in an interview. "Here there is more of a gulf between the teacher and the pupil." "A formality of manner is taken for granted. The children are harder to get to know than ourj children-but they are lovable when you do get to know them." * * * SOME OF the questions her pupils are poping at her-nowl that. they know she won't bite- show strong curiosity about the United States. For instance: "Do the cowboys chase red In- dians?" "What are penthouses like?" "What are bobby-soxers?" "Do gangsters try to rob you." Many ask Miss Dunne about Hol- Teacher, lywood and the makeup American girls use. "The influence of American movies is very evident," she says. Miss Dunne believes Americans have an "erroneous view" of con- ditions here. She has found Brit- ons better nourished and better dressed than she had been led to expect. MISS DUNNE also found the British schools better equipped than she had expected. She brought over dozens of pencils, erasers, crayons and rules. An- other teacher, she said, brought a trunkful of classroom equipment, only to find there were plentiful supplies in the British schools. "Of course we're all pleased to see conditions so much better than we had thought they would be," she said. There are 37 girls in Miss Dunne's class, corresponding to a group in an American junior high school. They range in age from 12 to 15. p p as Trade Jobs ItiIlsTM~ o ~*$r British . MANITOWOC, Wis.-(/P)-Be- tween the spacious school building and the prospect of winter sports, Mrs. Winifred Rose MacVicar thinks America-particularly Wis- consin-is a very fine place to live and work. Mrs. MacVicar is an exchange teacher who swapped jobs for a year with Miss Agnes Dunne. Mrs. MacVicar is teaching ninth grade English in Manitowoc's Washing- ton Junior High Sp hool; Miss Dunne has taken over classes at Laxson Street Secondary Girls School in London. * * * THE MOST startling difference between British and American school systems are the buildings. "Here you have a building the likes of which I don't think I've ever seen in England," Mrs. Mac- Vicar said. "These big, well-light- ed classrooms, the wide, open cor- ridors, the gymnasiums with all those seating accommodations and the auditorium such as we in England only dream of - all are part of a modern building planned for education." She compared them with schools in bomb - damaged, crowded districts of the British capital, with little playground space and no gress. Although Mrs. MacVicar is firmly convinced that the job of teaching children is basically the same the world over; she still is a little amazed at the lack of form- ality with which her students ap- proach her. "When an English student walks past me, he will say, 'Good Morn- ing Madam'," she explained. "When I pass one of my Manito- wo" students outside the class- room, he yells, 'Hiyah, Mrs. Mac- Vicar'." SHE ADDED that she's having plenty of trouble learning which "forms of speech" are acceptable here. "Certain things offend my ear -not actually grammatical mis- takes, but what to me is careless speech," she said. "But, then we also have that in London." However, she's catching on. fast and - as her assistant principle declared-"the kids are crazy about her." The British teacher thinks Manitowoc likes education better than London does. "There's greater enthusiasm. Parents seem more interested and the youngsters seem to like school more." * * * "BUT MANITOWOC is an en- tirely different community from my school's section in London. Circumstances are so different in a crowded city. If those British children had the facilities you have here probably they and their parents would be more interested in school, too." The blonde, smiling English- woman is one of 112 British teachers who arrived in the United States Office of Educa- tion and the British Committee for the Interchange of Teach- ers, joint sponsors of a program now in its third postwar year. After several months introduc- ing her young, slangy charges to the perils of the dangling partici- ple and the stimulating chargs of the English language. Mrs. Mac- Vicar obviously likes her tempo- rary job. SHE FINDS that the organiza- tion of the individual schools is more free in London than in Mani- towoc, however. In the British capital, each school is permitted to develop its own curriculum and control its own activities-"like your federal government, with each state making rules for itself." "Here all schools are organ- ized along similar lines with the same curriculum, books and methods. "In London each school decides these things for itself. There is more freedom of choice for the teachers - more things left to the teachers' judgment. We don't have to produce education accord- ing to a specific pattern." THE BIG difference between the two systems, she added, is that in America 'every child has about the same education as every other child throughout his whole school life." In England, children of 11 years are divided into three groups: Those who may go on to college; those with particular talents for technical work, and the rest, who attend modern secondary schools. The classification is based on inclinations and ability, parents' wishes and teachers' judgment of pupils. DETROIT-(IP)-The huge Wil-' low Run plant, one of the largest of the government's wartime in- stallations has been purchased by Kaiser-Frazer Corp., for $15,100,- 000. Estimates of the original cost to the government have ranged as high as $100,000,000 including much of the plant equipment. For plant construction alone it is understood to have represented a cost of $43,000,000. Kaiser-Frazer which had a lease and renewel options that would have run until 1965 will pay for the plant in installments spread over 20 years. Under the lease from the War Assets Administra- tion it was paying $1,406,000 a year for the use of the big plant. Kaiser-Frazer took over the big former bomber plant early in 1946 for the manufacture of automo- biles. It built about 11,700 ve- hicles in 1946 and 144,500 last year. This year's production will come close to 200,000 units. The purchase involves 320 acres of land and 35 buildings, with I,® I Men! Here's a Christmas Gift for You! A FINE FUR FELT HAT with the Purchase of a SUIT, TOPCOAT, ,,,,,,or OVERCOAT more than 4,500,000 square feet of manufacturing space. The big airfield adjoining the plant is not included in the sale. It is owned by the University of Michigan and is used as the principal landing and departure point for commer- cial planes bound to and from De- troit and nearby areas. $34 50 to $5950 Hitch a Ride With a Classified One of the many style hats to choose from as our gift to you with your purchase. * LARGE SELECTION of CHRISTMAS CARDS from five cents and up New Michigan Christmas cards fifteen cents each. DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING AT MICHIGAN'S OLDEST AND MOST COMPLETE BOOKSTORE. Wahr's University Bookstore 316 South State Street OPEN SATURDAY AFTERNOONS FROM NOW UNTIL CHRISTMAS I-x l? t.. / y, I t ; :4 Until Christmas In college and social life, enjoy the advantages obtained from looking your best. And that is easy enough too! SUITS, TOPCOATS and OV. ERCOATS from RABIDEAU-HARRIS, while not expensive, have qualities of workmanship, style and fabric that will give you distinction! Besides, receive one of our fine x$5.85 FUR FELT HATS with your purchase. 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