PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1951 f PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1951 I A Raft of Kids -Daily-James Butt DETROIT-AREA YOUNGSTERS TAKE TO THE WATER AT UNIVERSITY FRESH AIR CAMP NEAR PINCKNEY " COUNSELLOR NANCY WATKINS, UNIVERSITY SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENT, SUPERVISES WATER SPORTS Library Hours Revision Still Very Tentative Plans for extending the propos- ed fall library hours were still in a highly tentative stage this week. According, to Student Legisla- ture President Len Wilcox, '52, University officials have not made a definite "promise" to lengthen the hours as was reported to The Daily Tuesday. They have only indicated that they will look into the matter, Wilcox said. Because of budget restrictions, a 40,000 man-hour cut in library service is now scheduled for next fall. Library authorities have said this would force the Library to curtail service and probably keep the building shut down on Sun- days. When the proposed cuts were first announced last semester the SL unanimously voted to send Library Direetor Warner G. Rice a letter of protest. Wilcox has since been negotia- ting with authorities in hopes of1 effecting some change in the sche-1 duled service restrictions. First Fresh Air Camp Session To Close Today By SANDY SCHLAGER More than 100 children from the Detroit area will return to their homes today when the first four-week session of the Univer- Share-Book Plan Started A "share the book" plan has )een started in the School of Edu- cation with professors providing the books and students doing most of the sharing. At the urging of Dean J. B. Ed- monson, faculty members have been clearing their shelves of books, bulletins and reprints deal- ing with educational topics. The items are placed on tables and in- terested students are invited to help themselves. Dean Edmonson said he hoped the idea of sharing books would be taken up elsewhere, especially by various community organiza- tions. "KORETS" TUB'-I-NYL (Nylon and Acetate) Parader Sundress and Bolero SPECIAL 00 The baked - in pleats that are permanently guaranteed, even after repeated wash- ings. They need no ironing! Think of it! Pleats that will 4f}k< not come out ... pleats that r do not have to be dry-clean- ed frequently at exorbitant .: costs. JUST SUDS, RINSE, AND HANG TO DRY 3 D Choose from 6 fresh huese: TANGERINE, SUNTINT, LAKE AQUA, PACIFIC NAVY, CLOUD WHITE AND BLACK. Sizes 10-18 sity Fresh Air Camp comes to a close. They will return from four weeks of swimming, boating, na- ture hikes and overnight camping trips made possible by the Uni- versity through donations from students and various social agen- cies. THE CAMP is maintained to give help to boys with special be- havioral problems and to provide a training ground for students, both graduate and undergraduate, who are majoring in education, sociology and psychology. These students act as counsel- lors during the two month-long sessions which begin the first day of summer school each June. Counsellors are allotted six cre- dits toward their degree for work- ing with the children. Eighty percent of the student- counsellors attend the University of Michigan, the remainder come from schools as far away as Cali- fornia and Stanford. The counsellors eat and sleep with the children and partici- pate in their daily round of ac- tivities. In the evening, each counsellor writes a full report on the behav- ior of every boy in his or her par- ticular cabin. ALTHOUGH THE counsellor is; the basic unit, the camp has a complete staff of pediatricians, so- cial case workers and child psy- chologists who are ready for im- mediate assistance in case any difficulties arise. The camp, which is on Patter- son Lake near Pinckney, Michi- gan, was founded in 1924 by a religious club for children, head- ed by Louis Reimani It was lat- er taken over by the University. "The Fresh Air Camp is the kind of place where people who want to work in human behavior get the opportunity," according to Prof. William Morse of the education school, who has been the director of the camp for the past six years. Pillars Moved on Phi PsiProperty Phi Kappa Psi fraternity mem- bers returning for the fall semes- ter will find the ideal base forE suspending a hammock in two brick pillars which have been mov- ed to fraternity property. The pillars had been construct- ed on foundations extending six feet over the line of the new Hil- lel Foundation property next to the fraternity house on Hill St. They were moved by crane yes- terday to newly poured founda- tions on the Phi Psi property. Speech Dept. Confab Will Start Today Radio, debate, public address, the theatre and speech science will be the topics highlighted in a speech conference here today and tommorow, according to Prof. G. E. Densmore, chairman of the speech department which is spon- soring the meeting. A demonstration debate on the question, "Resolved that all Am- erican Citizens Should be Subject to Conscription for Essential Ser- vice in Time of War," will open the conference at 9 a.m. today in Rackham Amphitheatre. LEROY LEWIS of the American Institute of Banking, New York will address the meetingaat 10 a - m. on "The Banker Speaks," fol- lowed at 11 a.m. by Prof. Harrison B. Summers, Ohio State Univer- sity, speaking on "The Audience Factor in Broadcasting." Dina Rees Evans, director of Cain Park Theatre, Cleveland, will speak on "Thespis in High School," at 1:30 p.m. Les Mitchell, president of the American Educational Theatre Association, will discuss "Broad- way and the American Theatre Worker" at 2:30 p.m. A reception will follow in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. ,-* * THE PROGRAM will resume at 9 a.m. Saturday in the amphithe- atre with an address by Paul Bag- well, vice-president of the Speech Association of America, on "Speech: A Bridge or Barrier to Effective Human Relations." The demand for speech teach- ers will be discussed by Orville A. Hitchcock, secretary of the speech association at 10 a.m. in a speech entitled, "Wanted- Teachers of Speech." He will be followed at 11 a.m. by a discrip- tion of "Voice Communication Research for the U.S. Navy" by Mack D. Steer, president of the American Speech and Hearing Association. At a luncheon meeting in the Union, Wilbur E. Gilman, presi- dent of the Speech Association of America, will discuss "Challenges to Our Speech Profession." Persons attending the confer- ence will be invited to attend to- night's evening performance and tomorrow's matinee and evening plays given by the Young Ireland Theatre Company in Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Biophysics To Highlight Symposium Noted Physicists I To Speak Here Attention will focus on the field of biology during a three-week symposium on biophysics sched- uled here from July 23 to August 10. Outstanding authorities in the field will study fundamental bio- logical processes, which are still very obscure, according to Prof. E. E. Barker, chairman of the phy- sics department. * * * IN THE more than twenty years the summer meetings have been held, many of the world's leading physicists have discussed develop- ments in pure physics. Three professors will give lec- tures throughout the three-week period and three others will be on the program for one week each. Speakers for the entire program and their subjects are: Prof. S. E. Luria of the Univer- sity of Illinois, "Viruses: Structure, Reproduction and Origin;" Prof. J. L. Oncley, Harvard University, "Structure of Proteins;" and Prof. G.B.B.M. Sutherland, University of Michigan, "Infra Red Studies on Proteins." Prof. Paul Doty, Harvard, will speak on "Light Scattering Studies on Proteins and Nucleic Acids" during July 230to 27. "Ionization and Thermal Ef- fects on Viruses and Enzymes" will be discussed in three lectures July 30 to August 3 by Prof. E. C. Pol- lard, Yale University. Prof. M. Delbruck, California Institute ofTechnology, will lec- ture on "Phage Activation and Re- production Excitation of Sensory Cells" during the third week of the symposium, Art Teachers To Pay V sit To Institute It's off to the big city and a visit to the Detroit Institute of Arts today for public school art teachers enrolled in the new sum- mer course "Interpreting the Vis- ual Art in School and Society." I( s . " FIELD TRIPS consisting of tours to Greenfield Village, Cran- brook, and an optional week-long visit to art centers in New York City are part of the program of this six week course designed to "give Michigan art teachers a chance to meet and extend their creative activities," according to Prof. Emil Weddige of the archi- tecture college. The faculty consists of Prof. Weddige and Nicholas Marsican- io, instructor at Cooper Union and the Brooklyn Museum School. Immediate acceptance of this course was not expected by ad- ministrators of the S u m m e r School due to its unique nature, but Prof. George M. McEwen, Se- cretary of the Summer Session re- ported that "rather wide interest was expressed by many who were unable to come." This interest insures that the course will be repeated next year as an annual program of the summer school, Prof. Weddige added. Lectures by guest specialists in art and art education will supple- ment the program of studio work- shops, lectures and visits to se- lected galleries. Planners Predict City's Daily Traffic to Double i .,._ . U Every day will be "Football Sat- urday" in terms of traffic in the Ann Arbor area by 1970, County Planning Engineer Einer Hend- rickson has reported to the Plan- ning Commission. To meet the demands of increas- ing traffic volume over the next twenty years Hendrickson predic- ted that more than twelve million Frenchmen To ArriveSunday Nineteen teachers from France will arrive at the University Sun- day for a summer of study. The six women and 13 men are teachers of English or American civilization in the French lyceum, comparable to the twelfth grade and junior college level in the United States. While at the University they will take courses in American litera- ture, history and government. A basic orientation and course in linguistics will be given the French teachers at the English Language Institute. Special lec- turers about educational leaders and educational philosophy have been arranged for the group. dollars will have to be spent here for highway improvements. PART OF the cost will cover- construction of three bypasses around Ann Arbor-M-112 (the Detroit-Chicago Expressway), U.S. 12 and US-23. Traffic on Washtenaw Road (M-17) is expected to climb from 16,000 daily to 26,000, the equivalent of hte traffic on this road on a "sellout football Sat- urday," while the same period will see Ann Arbor daily traffic doubled, the report continued. As Detroit-area industry contin- ues its westward movement, there are new outlooks predicted in oth- er fields. Population in the Ann Arbor- Ypsilanti area will total 170,000; thirty-seven new school build- ings must be built to care for the rising number of school chil- dren; 10,000 new homes will have to be constructed and at least 4 million dollars spnet for sewer and water conduits. Action on the basis of this re- port is already being planned by at least two county school districts who are shaping their expansion to coincide with the predicted po- pulation growth. A A * I' ":.v Originally 9.95 to 10.95 Drastic Reductions! . ,. White, Natural and Multicolor Town 6' Country Casuals of Leather and Fabrics! Low and High Wedge Styles. Shop for Best Selection. IN TWENTY YEARS: I i M.v D. Strike Threatened In Britain LONDON-(1)-All 20,000 phy- sicians in Britain's 'socialized Health Service told the Govern- ment last night they would resign Sept. 25 unless their demands for increased pay rates were submitted to arbitration. The ultimatum was delivered to Minister of Health Hilary A. Mar- quand after British Medical Asso- ciation committees from all coun- ties conferred for seven hours in London. Unless arbitration is agreed up- on by the September deadline, the B.M.A. statement said, the resig- nations of the 20,000 should be considered submitted as of that date. The doctors now get a flat fee of $2.50 a year per patient and are allowed to sign on a maximum of 4,000 patients. They have been complaining they have to take on too many to earn a decent living. The 20,000 medical men who signed up under Britain's National Health Service include all except 1,000 of the nation's general prac- titioners. The income of each of them is estimated between $3,000 and $6,- 000 a year. The average British worker is credited with an in- come of $873 a year. 1 e Al 41 4 i Two Great Jrazz Sets on COLUMrIAL RECORDS Benny Goodman Carnegie Hall Concert with Bobby Hackett, Count Basie, Teddy Wilson, Gene Krupa, Lionel Hampton, H. James and others - Two 12" LP Records - 23 Selections ]Louis Armstrong Story with Teagarden, Singleton, Redman, Earl Hines, Kid Ory, {/ F- N t A. s . --a w-astC. e r 0'J- d ... ^A n _.. - A Q A{Ae1 -r- A. :i ANN OWENS .-E A (I a.