loot I 'ortu ' Gets PROBLEMS UNRESOLVE Coeducation's 'atterns 'op' 1. ersity researchers an- Thursday that most re in the market for e at least once every h the car owner be-' sent model is in good is still in the market car. aiger, Eva Mueler and of the University's search Center an- ir findings at the atistical. Association, 2. eir 32-month survey, of the families inter- in the market for a nce, 14 per cent twice cent three times or 0, the researchers ericans change cars frequently, each time buying a car which is only a few years newer than the one they replace." New car purchases, they said, are planned more often than used car buying but the rate of fulfill- ment is about the same in each case. "Under the present liberal credit terms,.' they added, "the antici- pated method of financing does not affect the fulfillment of plans. A substantial change in credit terms could alter this, however." Most car owners believe their machines were in excellent condi- tion and most of the rest felt their cars were in good shape. Only two or three per cent thought of their cars as "clunkers." Most of those who felt their cars were unsatisfactory soon pur- chased a newer automobile. $4,968 In Grant A research grant of $4,968 for the study of cerebral palsy has been made to the Medical School's' pharmacology department. The grant, made by the United Cerebral Palsy Association, is to be used to study muscle relaxants. Dr. Edward F. Domino, assistant professor, of pharmacology, will conduct the program. Since 1949, almost J3,000,000 has been allocated by the association to further basic and clinical re- search which will help train pro- fessional personnel in their work with cerebral palsy patients, "Though women have ad their public status at a di * pace and have the worlda feet, the problem of the and content of their colleg cation is still unresolved,"1 sity President Harlan Hatel quoted in this week's is Newsweek magazine. Newsweek's statistics sh dramatic pace in educati 3,400,000 students, 1,170,0 women. Only 189,000, or cent, attend women's collei Since World War II, me leges have remained abo same in number; all-wom leges fell from 279 to 249 time. But in the same peri educational institutions from 1,202 to a high of 1,4 Strongest Outside Ea The co-educational influ 'strongest outside the East, for its tradition of separat tutions. The huge schools in th west, the West and the make co-education the and expedient form of sch the magazine asserts. The "co-ord" innovation tered in the East. In the pa teen years, Radcliffe Colle become increasingly coor -Photo Courtesy University News Service with nearby Harvard, a nard with Columbia. Moun turing teeth by cutting them into slices oke, Smith and Bryn Maa ted in plastic (as above, lower left) is undertaken coordinated pr dental project here. with men's and co-ed insti rvanced Vassar and Wellesley, completing at their the Big Seven roster of women's nature colleges, are holding -aloof from ge edu- the trend. Commenting on in- Univer- creased enrollment in women's her was colleges, Vassar- ,President Sarah ssue of q. Blanding contends: "This indi- cates a trend toward the purely ow the women's colleges, not away from on:Ofhem Yale and Princeton Aloof 22 are Of men's schools in the East, es per Yale and Princeton remain non- n'sa coordinated. Newsweek reported an 's col "huproar among the Eli's last year ut the at the mere suggestion that women ten cl- might breach their sacrosanct at this walls." But it adds that ". . . most iod, Co boys were looking at the prospect leaped with some anticipation." 114. An Illinois women's college, Mac- st Murray, welcomed 130 men this fence is fall and its president expects that known -male enrollment will eventually e insti- equal MacMurray's 600 women. "The big news in higher educa- ie Mid- tion this year is that, for reasons South of efficiency, economy, and aca- natural demic reward, more and more men ooling," and women students are studying s e together and liking it," Newsweek is cen- said. A four- Speaking further on co-educa- ege has tr'on, President Hatcher is quoted dinated asking, "What are we educating d Bar- for? To what extent and degree is t Holy- the national interest involved?, gr have How much of the process and pur- 'ograms poses are individual and personal tutions. to the fulfillment and happiness of the student herself?" - A/ vice-president of Michigan State University had this to say: ". . . men simply recognize that women have abilities that need to be utilized, and education in all fields is pretty readily accepted." ," "It certainly isn't partict necessary in modern society all women know how to coo sew, or care for children." Northwestern University f women to be brighter. The I of Men there reported a y average grade for women as against 2.31 for men. Cornell University of California. are reported as agreeing that "wi are the better students." An English professor (mal( MacMurray College gives four eral reasons in support of phenomenon: 1) "Women are more i ag ttve and emotional and hei teTested more in self-express 2) "Women are inclined tc cept the instructor's pronou ments as supreme authority Men are inclined to challenge matic statements and are al asking the question why." 3) Women are less aggressi presenting their ideas, and mixed class they remain s while men monopolize the di sions." 4) "Women are more sen to criticism, sometimes feeling a dissatisfaction with work in a dislike of them personally. 'Health Servi( 'Adds, Doctor; The medical staff of H Service now has 11 full time tors with the addition of four appointments ma4e during summer. Dr. Morley Beckett, dire announced the one-year app ments of Dr. Theresa T. Woc Dr. Edmund H. Whale as c physicians and Dr. Melvin L. zer as an associate psychiatr Dr. C. Frank Knox, Jr. serve as an assistanit psychia When You're Looking for a Better Laundry in Ann Arbor.. . 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