THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1952 Music Camp - 4 e* * ens Qps 25th * * * Year * S By MARGE SHEPHERD ' The University's National Music Camp at Interlochen, Michigan will open its twenty-fifth season with a full musical summer plan- ned fo rthe record-breaking enroll- ment of 1,600 teen-age students. Founded m 1928 by Joseph E. Maddy, professor of radio, music, the camp has grown from its hum- ble start with 115 students and a few buildings to become the world's largest and oldest summer music Camp. THIS SUMMER a new $50,000 Administration Building, financed by students and friends of the Camp will be dedicated in honor of Prof. Maddy. Official opening day cere- monies for the anniversary year were held Sunday in the out- door Interlochen Bowl, where 5,000 visitors joined the teen- agers, dressed in the uniform blue corduroy britches, to fill the rustic benches for the birth- day celebration. Years of labor union contro- versy have clouded the camp's his- tory, beginning in 1942 when the teenage symphony orchestra was banned from the national net- works, after a row with James C. Petrillo, president of the American Federation of. Musicians. The Camp was blacklisted by the AFM in 1945 and Prof. Maddy was ex- pelled from the union for his In- terlochen activities. * * * TERMED "THE greatest single center of youth culture" in the country, the music camp now draws non-union faculty from music colleges and conservatories from throughout the United States, and students from 42 states and Canada. The first public concert of the anniversary season will be pre- sented today by the newly formed National Music Camp Opera Company under the direction of Barre Hill, of the American Con- servatory of Music in Chicago. During the 57-day season, the company will perform 33 per- formances of 14 different scores. I PROF. JOSEPI4 E. MADDY, PRESIDENT AND FOUNDER EXERCISE IN GRACE * * * Pigeon Discovered Hitching Ride WOLFF ways under a state of tension, PROF. JOHN SHEPARD of the psychology department was in- clined to attribute the pigeon's train ride to luck. He did not feel it planned to hitch the ride be- cause of the lack of evidence that pigeons are capable of such car- ryings-on. Explaining that they are al- Harvard Crimson Surveys Academic Freedom Violations (Continued from Page 1) Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.'s "What About Communism" banned by the Denver Board of Education. THE ROLE of accuser was prominently filled last year by the National Council for American Education and two American Le- gion posts. The Council, headed by Allan A., ZolI, issued a list entitled "Reducators at Leading Wom- en's Colleges." It names 100' professors in nine schools as possessing affiliation with "sub- versive" organizations. Six col- lege presidents are among the accused group. This brought the total of the NCAE's "reducators" to 345. Pre-, vious lists had been issued for Harvard, Chicago, Yale, California, Stanford, Columbia, Dartmouth and the California Institute of Technology. THE AMERICAN Legion was involved in an eight month run- ning battle with Sarah Lawrence+ New Education Course Set' 'Education for Today's Children'] will be the theme of a two-week,] two hour credit course at the Uni- versity July 7 to 18. The topics for discussion include child development and pupil ad- justment, mental and physical] health of the child, school-com- munity relations, developing the basic skills, and evaluation and College. In a Legion magazine article written by Louis Budenz, the school was accused of har- boring "Communists." The Legion post in Westchester, New York, adjacent to Sarah Lawrence, im- mediately demanded an investi- gation. A similar attack on Pennsyl- vania State College by the Bella- fonte, Pa. Legion post, also met with flat refusal to bow to the pressures. The University of Colorado and the University of Minnesota were both involved in controver- sies over the disputed firings of faculty members. Permission to -leave the coun- try was refused to two professors, John L. Fairbanks of Harvard, a trustee of the Institute of Pacific Relations and Linius Pauling of California Institute of Technol- ogy, who was once charged with "subversive" affiliations. s* * OTHER DISPUTES over aca- demic freedom involved Brooklyn College which expelled the Young Progressives; the University of California which accepted a full- time state employee to look for "subversives"; Cornell, where the president labeled as "leftist" a petition to have the university deny its approval to boarding houses known to discriminate; and Piedmont College where a trustee and a dean have resigned in pro- test over -accepting a grant from the Texas Educational Associa- tion; headed by General Van Horn Mosely, a former American First- er with extreme racist views. In an editorial in the Aca- demic Freedom issue, the editors 442 Foreign Students Here Foreign student enrollment fig- ures for the summer session stand at 442, Robert B. Klinger, assist- ant counselor to foreign students announced yesterday. The number shows no marked deviation. from last summer's en- rollment when 440 foreign stu- dents were listed. Nearly 60 countries and regions are represented in the enrollment, Klinger said. Latin America leads in the re- gions with 162 students. Others are: the Far East, 119; the British Commonwealth, 62; Europe and Africa, 52; the Near East, 47. Canada and China are the two leading countries. Forty-six Ca- nadian students are enrolled, and China has 42 students represented. Other countries with more than ten students represented are In- dia, Venezuela, Brazil, Colombia, Iraq, The Philippines, Mexico, Thailand, Turkey, Chili, Cuba, El Salvador and Japan. Children's Art To Be Shown Here 'Children's Art Work from the Public Schools of Michigan' will be shown at the University July 9 to 18 in the Mezzanine Galleries of. the Rackham Building, Exhibit items, totaling approxi- mately 200 paintings and craft work, are intended to furnish in- structional examples in the ,visual arts course, given this summer in the College of Architecture and Design. I imney. 'U' Promotes 103 to Rank Of Professor (Continued from Page 1) ren (Organ and Church Music). College of Architecture and De- sign: Carlos Lopez (Drawing and Painting). Department of Physical Educa- tion and Athletics: Pearl Berlin (Physical Education for Women), Richard Henry Hagelin (Physical Education), Newton Clayton Lo- ken (Physical Education and In- tercollegiate Athletics), Dennis Rigan (Physical Education). TO THE RANK OF ASSISTANT PROFESSOR College of Literature, Science and the Arts: William Payne Als- ton (Philosophy), Dean Craven Baker (Journalism), Harry Berg- holz (German), Raoul Bott (Ma- thematics), Hayden Kenna Car- ruth (Speech), Nelson George Hairston (Zoology), John Whit- ney Hall (History), Paul Van Campen Hough (Physics), Ure- less Norton Lanham (Zoology), Kenneth Baylis Leisering (Mathe- matics), Cyrus Levinthal (Phy- sics), Arthur L. Lohwater (Mathe- matics), Daniel Stephen McHar- gue (Political Science), John Fre- derick Muehl (English), Donald Ross Pearce (English), George Ammon Peek, Jr. (Political Sci- ence), Charles Wilbur Peters (Phy- sics), Karl Henry Reichenbach (History), Christian Sc river Ron- destvedt, Jr., (Chemistry), Yao Shen (Chinese), William Richard Steinhoff (English), Frederick Patton Thieme (Anthropology). College of Engineering: Maurice Andre Brull (Aeronautical Engi- neering), Stuart Winston Chur- chill (Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering), Thomas Alexander ~Hunter (Engineering Mechanics), Jules Sid Needle (Electrical Engi- neering), John Randolph Sellars (Aeronautical Engineering), Fre- derick John Vesper (Mechanical Engineering), E dw in Harold Young (Chemical and Metallur- gical Engineering). Medical School. Dr. Robert Wayne Bailey (Surgery), James Felter Hogg (Biological Chemis- try), Dr. Jack Lapides (Surgery), Dr. Howard Bennett Latourette (Roentgenology), Dr. John Edwin Orebaugh (Surgery), Dr. Robert Eugene Yoss (Anatomy), Thorn- ton Woodward Zeigler (Psychia- try). Eastman Says English Should Be Improved By MADELINE SCHULTZ There is a great heed for im- proved communication in the English language-not only for its commercial value, according to Arthur M. Eastman of the Eng- lish department. Eastman spoke at the second weekly meeting of the Conference for English Teachers held Mon- day. The topic under discussion was basic skills in communication for pupils not going on to college. Taking part in the discussion were Dorothy C. Roe, Michigan Bell Telephone Co.; Brendan Sexton, educational director, UAW-CIO; Edgar W. Whan, a production planner in Kaiser-Frazer Co.; and Eastman who was group chairman. * * * EACH OF these persons felt that by use of correct grammar, good speaking ability and legible handwriting one is able to obtain a responsible position in either business or industry. Practical suggestions to high school teachers were given. Mrs. Roe suggested that there should be more training on conversa- tion and spelling. She stated that motivation is being inade- quately stressed in the schools. Whan felt that "the way we write is more important than rules. Those who understand grammar know how to use it." Sexton offered another point of view. He said that teachers think' students going into manual labor do not need grammar. The stu- dents' interest in reading is there- by stifled by the training they receive in school. I P DANCE STUDENTS PRESENT CONCURT IN INTERLOCHEN'S NATURAL SETTING irhi gttn NOW ONLY $1.75 I Datt C. 4; for the Summer Session get FULL convention details SPECIAL CONVENTION COVERAGE BY - WASH INGTON CORRESPON DENT DORIS FLEESON - OTHER WASH I NGTON COLUMN I STS - "DAILY" CORRESPONDENTS "ON THE SPOT" IN CHICAGO -THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AVAIL YOURSELF OF THE OPPORTUNITY TO RECEIVE THIS ANJD OTHER Subscription only $1.75 Subscription only $1.75 "'4. -4~ .4.4