THE MIi-,'IITf, AN 11A ffV THMSDAY, aTas MTCHa t .V 1 VCY11 L 3' 1LY 1 yasvayw u['!l j Mill4 r.Q, Au'lu Banquet Today Honors Heads Of Glee Club Installation Of Officers, Movies Of Spring Tour Will Precede Serenade Polling Places And Times The annual Installation Banque of the Varsity Men's Glee Club wi be held at 7 p.m. today in the Unio followed by the second half of th traditional spring serenade. The newly elected officers to b installed are Charles Brown, 41 president; James Berger, '41, vice president; Cary Landis, '42, secre tary and Robert Lovell, '42, treasure The student manager will be an nounced at the banquet. Prof. Davi E. Mattern of the School of Musi will continue as director of the clul Featured at the banquet will b moving pictures of the club's spring concert tour taken by Landis, an also records made of the Annua Spring Concert in Hill Auditorium. Invitations as special guests of th club have been extended to Dea Walter B. Rea, Pres. Charles A. Sin of the School of Music, Herbert Wat kins, faculty manager of the Gle Club, and Stanley- Waltz, manage of the Union. Following the dinner, members o: the club will continue serenading coe groups at Couzens Hall, Mosher-Jor- dan, Stockwell, Kappa Alpha Theta Collegiate Sorosis, Chi Omega, Kap- pa Delta, Alpha Phi, and Gamm Phi Beta. The serenades startec last Thursday when the club visite other dormitories and sororities. Heinen Names Union Deadline June 1 Set As Final Date For Life Membership All graduating male seniors had better shop early for their Union life memberships, Charles Heinen; '41, secretary of the Union, warned yesterday, because there are only nine more school days until exam- inations, the deadline for getting the gold pin and certificate. The certificate and gold pin which is given without charge may be called for at the business offices of the Union, located directly beneath the front stairway. Any senior who has completed four accredited years of academic work is eligible to receive a life membership. Summer session work is given credit in determining eligibility for a life membership. , The tradition of Union life mem- berships began in 1926, and since that time upwards of 12,000 pins and certificates have been given, an average of 800 a year. Anmng Will Speak To Astronomers Prof. N. H. Anning of the mathe- matics department will discuss some mathematical phases of the moon's orbit around the sun at today's meet- ing of the Observatory Journal Club which will meet at 4 p.m. in the Ob- servatory lecture room. The announce topic, "An Anomal- ous Orbit", will be discussed from the mathematician's viewpoint, a phase often overlooked in the usual astronomy course, and should be of interest to mathematicians as well. The ObservatoryJournal Club, com- posed of members of the astronomy staff, meets at irregular intervals to discuss news and events of interest to the astronomer. Tomorrow's meeting will be pre- ceded by a tea. Club Reelects Officers Le Cercle Francais reelected all of is present officers at its last meeting of the year. Carrie Wallach, '41, will continue as president; George Kiss, 3rad, vice-president; Alice Ward, '41, secretary, and George Sabagh, '42, treasurer. SENIORS! Order your Subscription for the Michigan Alumnus NOW $2.00 for 1 year 10:00 BPi;]) ueL 11 :00 Dick ('unley 12:00 Ward Quail 1:00 Art Schoenberg 2:00 Dick Baer 3:00 Dick Baer 4:00 Dick Baer Union Lobby 10:00 Chick Zolla 11:00 Bob Sibley 12:00 Bob Sibley 1:00 Dick Strain, Dave McKinney 2:00 Ruby Fried 3:00 Ruby Fried Jim Rossman 4:00 Ruby Fried Jim Rossman II.03 aiail 12:00 J:ai lmWinuke 1:00 Tom Goodkiiid, Jack Grady 2:00 Bruce Suthergreen Ronald Shanck 3:00 Bob Matthews, Ronald Shanck 4:00 Bert Ludy Ronald Sha ick West Engineering Second Floor--Above Arch 10:00 Aaron Kahn 11:00 Ira Katz 12:00 Bob Steinberg 1:00 Leon Landsberg Jim Pierce :00 Bob Hoffmnan, J11m0plierce 4:00 BoI) loffman, Mdt. Zeriman 116 Law 3:00 Fred Anderson 4 :00 Fred Anderson 2042 Natural Science 3:00 Bob McWilliams 4:00 Bob McWilliams Lobby of East Medical 3:00 Buel Morley 4:00 Buel Morley Basement Lecture Room Dental 3:00 Jim Hall 4:00 Jim Hall Stump Speakers W-(ll Get Prizes At Prize i of b- 1 ps and gavels madt e lIg W WodWill be presented to the wn ,ners of tie Stump Speak-r ers' Society's speech contests at the; 11th annual Tung Oil Banquet Tues- day in the League Ballroom. The types of addresses which will be judged are the Hall of Fame talk, nominati some engineer to the hon- ored group, the raconteur of story telling speech: the project talk con- vincing someone of the merits of a certain idea; thedebating lecture and the after dinner address. An addiional prize will be awtarded to the man who has done most for Sigma Rho Tau, honorary speech society. Gov. Luren D. Dickinson, featured speaker at the Banquet, will present his first address on this campus on "Character in Democracy." The "Cooley Cane" which is given annually to the leading member of the society, will be presented at the dinner by Charles 0. Probst, '39E, last year's winner. Tickets are available at the League and at Ulrich's and Wahr's Worley To Preside Prof. John S. Worley of the De-' partment of Transportation Engineer- ing will preside at the annual state safety meeting which is being held today and tomorrow at Lansing. Allies Check Enemy Forces Dec ;'IvvBattle Expeced At Ypres And Arras (Coutinued from Page 11 advice to Americans re'ently in otlher parts of Europe. A surge of optimism swept Britain and France at the day's news from the warfront. "Our troops are holding the Ger- mans at all points," the French said. "Even the rumors are better today." General Maxime Weygand, Com- mander of the Allied forces, was de- scribed as "really satisfied." The British, joining the French in retailing the- Allies' good news. told of large-scale bombing attacks on the German main line of commu- nications and military objectives in Germany itself. Moreover, they said their own front had held firm all day and that counter-attacks had been delivered between Arras and Douai. Up in Belgium, along the line of ' the Scheldt, the Belgians, conter-attacked successfully. JUNE GRADUATES and Renewals Only TIME"m (instead of $5.00) ONE ENTIRE YEAR MAILED ANYWHERE HOMER HAYDEN 3582 - 715 Hill also, WORKERS ATTENTION: Punch the '40 in 1939-40 on all voters' identification cards. Only men vote for the Union vice-presidents. No electioneering on the same floor of the ballotting under threat of disqualification. Last man on each polling place please bring ballot boxes and unused ballots to the Student Offices-Michigan Union. Each man should stay on duty until relieved. 7 Actress Cites Req ire ments For Success E pre; Cou Cou Fr N. - Co-Ops Elect Fried New Council Head dward Fried, '41, was elected Rochdale Cooperative House and is sident of the Inter-Cooperative at present a member of Brandeis ncil for the coming year at the Cooperative House. The Inter-Coop- ncil's meeting yesterday. erative Council is an organization ried, who comes from Long Beach, representing the nine cooperative Y., has been a member of the rooming houses on campus, Pens - Typewriters - Supplies "Writers Trade With Rider's" RIDER'S 302 South State St. today and tomorrow at Lansing. _______ __________________ U By S. R. WALLACE Mady Christians walked into a Speech 41 class yesterday to watch University students emote. Bona fide daughter of the theatre, protegee of the internationally known Max Reinhardt, star of Broadway and Hollywood, and at present lead- ing "lady in the Dramatic Season's "The Winter's Tale", she was not ex- actly interested in picking up point- ers from the aspiring Thespians, but revealed that the visit sprang from her interest in colleges as a training ground for the legitimate theatre. The class, conducted by Frederic 0. Crandall, worked with short in- tepretive scenes, and afforded her the opportunity to watch some of their fundamental stage preparation. "It's all very fine," confided the affable, light-complexioned actress afterwards in an interview, "that is, as an appreciation course. But as for actual professional training-it lacks so much!" Although complimenting Crandall on his "excellent direction," Miss Christians pointed out that while 'inner visualization' and emotional development are definite requirements in young hopefuls, diction and tech- nique will secure them parts. "First appearances are so import- ant," she explained. "If a youngster cannot project his voice, nor sound his vowels correctly, a producer will look no further. I think diction, thus, should be the starting point." Miss Chritsains, who has associat- ed with such actors as Maurice Ev- ans in "Hamlet" and "Henry IV", and successful Hollywood actors in "Come and Ge It" and "Heidi", de- clared that after technical training here students seeking a career on the stage might gain small town and stock experience. "A combination of both University and stock training is the best pos- sible background preparation," she opined finally, but questioned the fu- ture of the horde of stage aspirants graduating each year. "Only those with striking talent should be en- couraged," she warned. "The stage is honestly a heart-break career. I know." "The Winter's Tale", a Shakespear- ean comedy, will continue its run at 8:30 p.m. today at the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. azine has come to occupy such a high place in the A nos -for news- and a stomach for whiskey THE CITY ROOM knows him no more. He has passed on to some private and personal Nirvana of his own, where every typewriter has all its keys and a bottle waits at every four-alarm fire. And the only epitaph he would have wished is this .. ."He was a good reporter." His greatest, and most unconscious, character- istic was an insatiable curiosity. He seethed with questions. Nothing was as it seemed, and he picked frantically at surface facts until the shell broke and the muck, or the treasure, underneath was exposed to his greedy mind. i With or without the vine leaves in his hair, his sense of news verged on the occult. He knew bish- ops and gunmen, politicians and pickpockets, and treated both the great and the sham with the same casual impertinence. His mind was a brimming pool of assorted facts, which he turned on and off like a tap. Under a glass-hard exterior, he had a heart as soft as mush. He rooted fiercely for the underdog, perhaps because he was so much the underdog himself He got paid very little-and when other people talked of the "profession of journalism" his was the loudest laugh. . Sometimes he grew out of it. Sometimes he be- came a famous columnist, a noted author, or even an Editor. But mostly he grew old at 45. And when he saw a new youngster in the City Room he figured the best thing he could do was to take him But he left behind him a legacy of incalculable ,value to the nation. For he established the tradi- tion of good reporting as the foundation of a free press. What happened? Who did it? Where? When? Why? As long as these questions can be asked by good reporters free to write the truest and frankest an- swers they can find, freedom will have survived. True, since the days of the old-time reporter, both men aqid minds have changed. The reporter of today is a better man than his predecessor. He has to be. He is better-educated, better-paid. Neither he nor his editor can get away with the cheap sen- sationalism of yesterday's Yellow Journalism-and neither of them insists on any special license to get drunk. The reporter's passport today is re- spected everywhere, and he is expected to live up to the code of his profession. Too, America's appetite for news has grown sharper. It takes some 25,000 local reporters and 1,888 daily newspapers to gratify it. Altogether, 300,000 men and women are engaged in telling you what is happening in the world, with all the trimmings you're accustomed to-comic strips, women's pages, photographs, society notes, advice to the lovelorn, columnists, cartoons, editorials, crossword puzzles. But whatever the extra values newspapers and For the Newsmagazine has, as grist for its weekly mill, all that has been found out by all the world's good reporters. Sometimes these good re- porters are TIME's own correspondents or legmen. Sometimes they work for one of the great Press Associations. Sometimes they are obscure people whose nuggets have been buried on page 10 of some little-read publication. Sometimes they are men and women in TIME's home-office, who-at one end of a wire-probe a reporter three hundred or three thousand miles away until a few confused facts become a well-ordered, living story. The world is the good reporter's hunting ground. No man can tell where a nose for news may pick up the scent. Stories may break in the White House, the Holland tunnel, the Balkans, the South Pole, Number 10 Downing Street, or 1913 Central Ave- nue, South Bend. No man can anticipate TIME's stories. The News- magazine is as unpredictable as the warring, struggling, creating, cock-eyed human race, whose historian it is. Only this is certain.. In today's world the true adventures of your fellow humans, gathered and told by good report- ers, make more absorbing reading than anything in the world of make-believe. 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. Send Your PALM BEACH SUITS for Proper Cleaning magazines may offer today, one thing remains the same ... the heart of a free press is T T. - a IA