F IGT "Il E MIJCHA;N D AILY TIIURSDAY, MAY 9, 1940 . ................ . .. SRA Director Speaks Mond Iy On Cooperatives M(" ing For All fltVreSte'( WVi1l Be lielil At Uiioh; St udea Plans Featured Kenneth Morgan, director of the Student Religious Association, will be featured speaker at an open meet- ing to be held at 4 p.m., Monday at the Unicn for all those interested in student cooperatives. William H. Rockwell, '41, a mem- ber of the Brandeis Cooperative House, and June Harris, '40, a mem- ber of the Alice Freeman Palmer Cooperative House, will also speak. Rockwell will describe the life and purposes of a men's cooperative and Miss Harris will explain the privileges and responsibilties of living in a wo- men's cooperative house. The meeting, designed to acquaint students with the campus coopera- tives, is primarly planned to explain cooperatives to those interested in living or boarding at a cooperative next semester. It is the first large meeting sponsored by the newly-or- ganized Inter-Cooperative Council. Graduates To Live In isdale House Graduate and professional students may apply for rooming accommoda- tions in Hinsdale House of the East Quadrangle for the coming year, Prof. Karl Litzenberg, director of residence halls, announced yester- day. The article appearing in The Daily yesterday erroneously stated that graduate students would not be eli- gible to live in the Residence Halls. Fraternity members and men al- ready pledged are not eligible to live in Residence Halls according to a ruling made in response to a request of the Interfraternity Council. Ex- ceptions may possibly be made in cases where a fraternity house is full. City Editor Editorial Director 'Ensian Editor .. . 0 .. Manager Gargoyle Editor... . . . Manager PAUL M. CHANDLER ALVIN SARASOHN CHARLES B. SAMUELS JOItN W. CORY DAVID DONALDSON PATT TJ4rxnW Cn Win Aids Roosevelt Third Term Supporters Gain Confidence WASHINGTON, May 8. -(P)- Third term supporters regarded President Roosevelt's sweep in Cal- ifornia today as corroboratory evi- dence of what they have been say- ing for weeks--that the nomination, is automatically his, if he will take it. Added to the third term triumphs in Illinois and Wisconsin and the support of many party leaders else- where, they saw it, at least, as strengthening Mr. Roosevelt's abil- ity to choose the party's candidate, if he does not run himself. The election gave' a slate of dele- gates pledged to Mr. Roosevelt's re- nomination a lead of nearly three to one over the combined ballots cast for three other tickets. One of these, pledged to Vice President Garner, term. They presented it to Mr. of his Administration by their Statej lost by more than six to one. Roosevelt. convention and the instruction of With everything still depending "He simply read it," Gov. E. D. its delegation for Secretary Wallace. upon the President's decision to run Rivers told reporters. "We didn't ask Wallace has strongly urged a third or not, Washington saw that ques- him for any action or comment. We term. tion put squarely up to him, but told him in advance we didn't ex- "The Presidrent did not make atty under circumstances which required pect any." commitmenit," Sen. Gillette (Dem.- no answer. He made none. And, a short while later, an Iowa Ia.) said afterward. Party leaders from Georgia called delegation visited the Chief Execu at the White House with a resolution tive. They presented a request from The University of Wisconsin was adopted by the entire delegation 70 Iowa Democratic leaders that Mr. the first American college to have pledging their support for a third Roosevelt approve an endorsement courses in Scandinavian languages. Dewey For President ooi Starts In State LANSING, May 8. -(P)- Michi- gan supporters of Thomas E. Dewey formed an organization today de- signed to swing the state's delegation to' the Republican National Conven- tion to the New York prosecutor's Presidential bandwagon if a first- ballot test indicates the cause of U.S.' Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg is lost. Chairman Melville B. McPherson of the State Tax Commission, a vet- eran Kent County Republican, heads the executive committee created dur- ing a rally today as a nucleus for the Dewey organization. The committee is charged with furthering the selec- tion of national convention delegates who will accept Dewey as their sec- ond choice among Republican Presi- dential aspirants. l .. bombers, but no bombs w 11ANDY SEaVICE DiarcTORY How America got the news of Norway's Benedict Arnolds IHiidy Service Advertising Rates Cash Rates 1'c per rea ding iInc fe r one or two ins eriion5. 10e per reading line for three or more insertions.' Charge Rates 15c pei rea ding line for one or two insertions. 13c per readng line for three or more insertions. Five avrerage~ words to :a reading line. Minimum of three lines per insertion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST Our want=Ad visor will be de- lighted to assist you in composing your ad. Dial 23-24-1 or stop at the Michigan Daily Business Office, 420 Maynard Street. STRAYED, LOST, FOUND--i A TAN Doxter gabardine raincoat. Finder please call Calcutt-Phone 2-1196. LO'T Ci old Lady lBulova between Mary Lee Shop and Jordan en Wednesday. Reward. Call 393 Jordan, 2-4561. 421 TYPING- 18 ''YPING L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., Phone 5689. 374 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist and notary public-excellent work. 706 Oakland, phone 6327. 20 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2--1416'. 34 LAUNDERING -9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 16 .. ..__._FOR RENT TO R7,ENT: Study and bedroom in private home. Available summer or fall semester. 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WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 - MOVING - STEVENS INTERSTATE MOVING We DIeliver In Any Direction Our Own Vans 410 N. Thayer St. Phone 2-3802 ELSIFOR MOVING & STORAGE CO. Local and Long Distance Moving Storage - Packing - Shipping Every Load Insured 310 W. Ann Phone 4297 Leland Stowe O N MONDAY EVENING, April 8, Leland Stowe--correspondent for the Chicago Daily News and its syndicate-sat in Oslo's Grand Hotel talking idly about Europe's dormant war. No guns rumbled nearer than the Sylt. The good burghers of Oslo were safe in their beds. At.half past midnight the city heard a noise like a thousand angry motorists stalled in a traffic jam-the raucous bel- lowing of aii- raid sirens. At 7:45 the next morning, Stowe and his colleagues, Edmund Stevens of the Christian Science Monitor and Warren Irvin of N. B. C., watched Nazi bombers roar over the trim Norwegian housetops -not in sky-darkening swarms, but by twos and threes. No bombs fell. Scarcely a shot was fired. By 2 in the afternoon, the incredible had happened. The tramp of Nazi boots was echoing through Oslo streets. The conquerors, marching by threes, made the thin gray column look longer. People gaped like yokels on the Fourth of July at the spectacle of 1500 Germans taking possession of a city of 256,000--a handful of invaders so sure of easy conquest that they had a brass band! Was this an instance of awesome Nazi might?... of a little neutral's pathetic un- preparedness? To the keen mind of Leland Stowe, sharpened by experience with Eu- ropean intrigue, familiar with Oslo's de- fenses, the thing didn't make sense. Stowe got busy, and began to pick up the pieces of the most fantastic story of onced can find their way around. And the propaganda front ... reactions of the peo- ple ...an area that takes the shrewdest kind of reporting. The din of battle is just an incident in this war. It is the touch of red with which a painter brightens a somber canvas. It means something only when seen against the rest of the picture. Just the same, we all love red, so the newsmen go through hell and high water to give it to us. And a whole long year ago, TIME, the Weekly Newsmagazine, began to paint the background that would give those flaming stories meaning-in Back- ground for War, TIME's famous panorama of Europe on the brink. In every new issue, TIME changes and illuminates the shadows behind the crack- ling, red-hot stories of the week. Stories from TIME's own big and growing foreign staff, from the Associated Press, of which TIME is a member, from the ace corre- spondents (with enthusiastic credit). TIME gives the total coverage that total war demands. TIME unravels the economic and diplomatic snarl. TIME reconciles con- flicting stories-weighs one against the other, knows the sources and the mental slant of each reporter, comes up with the composite, clarified answer. No man knows where the rlext explo- sion will be and neither does TIME ... But TIME knows and tells where the TNT is stored. It's pretty important to know where we are in this war. TIME shows you both the woods and the trees. . into Oslo led bya band the war. A story of a small but potent Nor- wegian war fleet in the harbor whose crews had been deliberately ordered ashore. A story of fortresses and anti-aircraft bat- teries that didn't fire, or fired startlingly wide of the mark. A story of mines whose electrical control system had been discon- nected. A story of a free people infested through and through with spies, who could never have crept into key positions with- out the aid of traitors: Chauffeured by a fair compatriot with a smiling comeback to German gallantries, Stowe escaped to Stockholm and gave the world the news of Norway's gigantic in- side job. Another feather in the cap of the reporter who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1930 ...the 40-year-old man who was told by a New York newspaper last fall that he was "too old to cover a war." * * * . Take a poll among newsmen for ace cor- respondent of World War II, and Leland Stowe's name would probably top the list. But there would be runners-up ... and total reporting means manpower. All told, it takes 10,000 men to report the holocaust in Europe. The economic front is everywhere and all newsmen help to cover it. The corre- spondent in the dugout, noticing how the men are fed and clothed. The man in the capital gathering facts on production. The traveling thinkman with eye peeled for slowdown or sabotage. The editors or bu- reau heads who fit the jigsaw puzzle to- gether. Then there is the diplomatic front, a labyrinth where only the most experi- RIDE... utside00.0$1 00 RIDEr 999Inside 9 e.75c S ppr RideIS.'00004$100 This is one of a series of advertisements in which the Editors of TIME hope to give College Students a clearer picture of the world of news-gathering, news- writing, and news-reading-and the part TIME plays in helping you to grasp, measure, and use the history of your lifetime as you live the story of your life. Lochner of AP and Oechsner of UP, covering Berlin. Walter Kerr of the N. Y. Herald Tribune. Columbia Broadcasting's T1 KrtE mTLA1r. - ~ s~