L. PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1953 U I I 4 HOLDS LITERARY COLLEGE POST: Versatile Young Heads Daily Staff 'Butterfly' Events of the Week By DIANE DECKER Merwin Crawford Young will leave the University in June, equipped with an infectious grin, a sense of humor and a backlog of experiences ranging from rabbit- raising to becoming Managing Editor of The Michigan Daily and vice-president of the literary col- lege senior class. The rabbit-raising came at an early age. People had told young Crawford that rabbits multiply. Two years of raising "the world's most unproductive and sterile rab- bits" proved people wrong. Switched to a different environ- ment-"I practically gave them away to a neighborhood grocer"- the rabbits became true to their heritage and producedprodigous litters. NEITHER HIS naturalist ten- dencies nor his stamp collection influenced Young when he came o college. Instead, he decided to follow in his father's footsteps and be- come an economics major, sel- ecting the University because he wanted to get away from the East. He had never set foot in Michigan until he arrived here as a freshman. It did not take him long to learn' his way around. After one semes- ter, he found his way to the Stu- dent Publications Building and has stayed close to it ever since. * * * HE WORKED his way ups "through the ranks" on The Daily staff, getting a good look at the writing and editing aspects of publication before obtaining his executive post. In the meantime, he switched to a political science major because it was more in keep- ing with his interests. The Daily did not furnish Young with his first newspaper experience. He spent a summer on a smalltown paper, edited the Cooley House newspaper while a freshman. Earlier, he covered athletic events for a local newspaper dur- ing his senior year at Woodrow Wilsonshigh schoolin Washington, D.C. COVERING SPORTS was about as close as Young ever got to the gridiron or the basketball court. "Consistently mediocre" at ath- letics, his only sports triumph came when he "beat up" a class- mate in the first grade. However, he made up for these lacks in high school by becoming a chess player - "My major achievement was being first board when I was a senior." Now, when his duties as Daily managing editor-including a phenomenal amount of letter- ! a . *# -Daily-Malcolm Shatz MERWIN CRAWFORD YOUNG ... .from rabbit-raising to riches #* * writing-allow, he finds time to sneak off to play billiards, eat pizza, ski or play golf. It seems improbable that he will ever test his golfing skill against that of President Eisenhower, de- spite his Washington residence, because "I'm a member of the small Democratic minority of my family." * * * 'V * * * Production Set iTo Open' Puccini's opera "Madame But-I terfly" will be presented by thek speech department and the School1 of Music beginning at 8 p.m. Thursday at Tappan Junior High School located, - at the corner of Washtenaw and Stadium Blvd. Other performances will be giv- en Friday, Monday and Tuesday.- In rehearsal since the produc- tion of Faust, the opera will in-1 clude a libretto translated into English by Prof. Josef Blatt of the music school, musical director of the show., ITS PLOT involves a young United States naval officer, Lieu- tenant Pinkerton, who is charmed by Cho-Cho San, a Japanese girl when stationed in Japan. He mar- ries "Madame Butterfly" in an Oriental ceremony not recognized as binding in the United States. Then, after the lieutenant is call- ed back to his own country, he marries Kate, an American girl, under the United States law. Three years later, when he and his bride travel to Japan, he finds Cho-Cho-San with a son The broken-hearted Japanese girl gives up the infant to Lieu- tenant Pinkerton to take back to America, then commits hari- kiri. Prof. Blatt will conduct the 65- piece orchestra, chosen from stu- dent instrumentalists. Prof. Valen- tine B. Windt of the speech de- partment is stage director. Tickets are on sale for $1.50, $1.20 and .90 at the Lydia Men- delssohn box office. Student tickets, priced at .75, will be avail- able for all performances. Visiting Dean To Give Talk Prof. Philip M. Hauser, Asso- ciate Dean of the division of social sciences at the University of Chi- cago, will lecture on "Training Social Scientists for Research via Research" at 4:10 p.m. tomorrow in Auditorium C. Angell Hall. The talk, sponsored by the soc- iology department, will be open to the public. Prof. Hauser, a sociologist and an expert on population, was As- sistant to the Secretary of Com- merce from 1945 to 1947 and dep- uty director of the Bureau of the Census in 1947 and 1948. He is currently the United States representative on the Population Commission of the United Nations. The, professor has just returned from Burma where she made a UN population study. TUESDAY- Leona Baumgartner, Assistant Commissioner of the New York Department of Health, will address a School of Public Health Assem- bly on "Maternal and Child Health Problems," 4 p.m., School of Public Health Auditorium. * * * WEDNESDAY- Baseball, Michigan vs. Notre Dame, 3:30 p.m., Ferry Field. University Lecture, "Training the Social Scientist for Research via Research," by Philip.M. Hauser, Associate Dean of the Division of Social Sciences at the University of Chicago. 4:15 p.m., Auditorium C, Angell Hall. * * * THURSDAY- Carillon recital by Prof. Percival Price of the School of Music, Uni- versity Carilloneur, 7:15 p.m., Burton Tower. Puccini's opera "Madame But- terfly," presented by the speech department and the School of Music, at 8 p.m., Tappan Junior High, School. Continues Friday, Monday and Tuesday. * * * FRIDAY- Law School's annual Founder's Day program. The Hon. Charles E. Clark, Judge of the $nited States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, will speak on "The Illimitable Freedom of the Human Mind" at a dinner in the Lawyers' Club.- Forum on College and University Teaching, auspices of the Commit- tee on College Relations, 3 p.m. Rackham Amphitheater. Baseball, Michigan vs. Western Michigan College of Education, 3:30 p.m., Ferry Field. SL Cinema Guild movies, "State Read and Use Daily Classifieds 1 Fair" with Will Rogers and "Back Alley Uproar;" 7 and 9 p.m. Addi- tional showings at 7 and 9 p.m. Saturday and 8 p.m. Sunday, Arch- itecture Auditorium. Movies, "South Pacific Island Children" and "Pacific Island," 7:30 and 8:10 p.m., Kellogg Audi- torium, sponsored by the Univer- sity Museums. SATURDAY- School Band and Orchestra Fes- tival, presented by the Michigan School Band and Orchestra As- sociation, Hill Auditorium, Harris Hall and Tappan and Slausen Junior High Schools. ENGINEERS, SCIENCE MAJORS A representative of the Du Pont Company will be on this campus April 15, 16 and 17 to interview Bachelor and Master degree candidates majoring in Chemistry Chemical Engineering Civil Engineeriing Electrical Engineering Engineering Mechanics Mechanical Engineering Metallurgical Engineering HE EXPLAINS his political be- liefs-"I think the Democratic party represents the progressive portion of the political sphere." This same interest in the pro- gressive has caused him some dis- satisfaction with the University, although he generally likes the big school, small town atmosphere. His chief complaint is "too much public relations orientation on the part of the administration" and "not enough to the fundamental ideals of education." Decisions on the two issues with which The Daily and SAC brought him in closest contact -the lecture committee and bias clauses-were public rela- tions motivated, he believes. "Tale-Chaser" Young, as his Michigamua brothers have dubbed him, has not limited his college Read Daily Classifieds career only to SAC, The Daily and helping to lead the senior class. He has rolled up a 3.4 average and belongs -to Pi Sigma Alpha, polit- ical science honorary. He is also a member of Sphinx and of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. * * * ALL THIS ADDS up to a heavy list of achievements for one stu- dent, but it is nothing new in the Young family. His 14-year-old brother has' read a great number of books, as well as writinghis own volume about the Civil War. (Well - informed sources claim Crawford was a child prodigy.) His father is director of the research division of the Federal Reserve Board and his mother, well known for her political- social science writings, is listed in "Who's Who." His sister, with an exceptional average at the University music school, com- pletes the family roll call. Young's plans for the immediate future are ruodest. The first of July will find him at Fort Benning, Ga., where he has already spent one summer with the ROTC. After that, it will be law school or graduate work at Harvard. But there's always a chance that 20 years may find him in a news- paper office, and, if he's there, his friends predict he'll be sitting in the editor's chair. I 4 I Contact your placement office for an interview appointment C.U. S.PAT.Of BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING : . THROUGH CHEMISTRY OPEN TO SENIORS ONLY. 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