- SUNDAY, SEPTEMER 26. 194 THE MI HI N DAILY ., THE MICHTGAN IIAITY SUNDAY. SEPTElwrn~u 2R.. I ~4R r TH E COLGATE REPORT: Student Sex Education Needed, Study Shows HAMILTON, N.Y.-(AP)-Colgate University is turning the spot- light on sex education. A committee appointed by President Everett N. Case is going to see that every Colgate man knows what sex is all about. The committee and its activity comes about as the result of a .ecently completed study on the adequacy of sex education among Colgate students. This report showed: 1. STUDENTS believe they receive insufficient sex education for their needs before entering college, and the feeling of inadequacy is largest among veterans and the older students. 2. The secondary schools, the public ones especially, and the parents seem to have done a pretty poor job of sex education. The greatest sources of information were friends of their own age and older boys and girls. 3. Very few students turn to their family doctors for informa- tion and men in military service did not learn much about sex that was of real value. * * * 4. STUDENTS believe that there should be college level work in sex education, and the older the student the more likely he is to feel this way. The committee, headed by Assistant Dean William F. Griffith, agrees that Colgate has not been doing much in the way of sex edu- cation except to present the physiology of sex, and that inadequately, in the basic course on biological science for freshmen. * * * AS AN INITIAL move this year, Colgate is bringing in a doctor of medicine to give two lectures to freshmen biological students on the physiology pf sex. The doctor's lectures, however, will be open to the entire student body. In addition, students may hand in written questions which will be taken up in discussion periods. The student body. will then be given a chance to make recom- mendations for a broadened one for future years. Colgate also will inform its students that it has certain people on campus, the physician and chaplain, for instance, who are in a position to deal with the psychological aspects of sex. Ruthven Address To Keynote Welcome of ForeignStudents President Alexander G. Ruth- yen and three guest speakers will highlight the University's annual fall reception for new foreign stu- dents, at 7:30 p.m., tomorrow, in the Michigan League Ballroom. Following Dr. Ruthven's review of the University's traditional pro- gram in international education, Dr. Esson M. Gale, director of the International Center and Coun- NSA Initiates Discount Plan For Students Purchase Cards Introduced at Buffalo (ED. NOTE: This is the second in a series of four interretive articles on the National Student Association first annual congress which was held from Aug. 23-28, at Madison, Wis. The series was prepared by the University NSA committee.) Students at the University of Buffalo are getting discounts ranging from 10% to 25% on sporting goods, clothes, theaters, and restaurants under the Pur- chase Card System sponsored by the National Student Association. This plan, which marks a posi- tive accompishment for both stu- dents and the NSA, is at present being considered for Ann Arbor. * * * THE SYSTEM makes use of the student's mass buying power and is based on the assumption that students are a special group of people who need such assistance. At Buffalo, the NSA commit- tee signed contracts with just one store selling each particular type of merchandise, letting the contracts on the basis of com- petitive bidding. NSA agreed to encourage its members to buy at the store offering the discount. The pur- chase cards were sold to stu- dents for one dollar apiece. This project is saving students at the University of Buffalo sub- stantial amounts, and is working proof that the plan can be put into operation. THE UNIVERSITY NSA com- mitee realizes the difficulties in- volved in putting this plan into operation in a small college town such as Ann Arbor. The committee feels, however, that the purchase card system can work if it is set up with the realization that a smaller city has problems different from a large metropolis such as Buf- falo. Harvey Weisberg, chairman of the Michigan Region, NSA, will direct the project in Ann Arbor. Students interested in working on this plan should contact him at 614 Monroe, or call 2-0438. selor to Foreign Students, will in- troduce Dr. Francis J. Colligan, of the state department, Dr. Paul Meng, director of the China In- stitute of New York, and James J. Hurley, council for Canada in Detroit, S * * DR. COLLIGAN, who directs the government's program culture interchange between the United States and other nations as Chief of the division of International Exchange of Persons will give the main address. 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