THE MICHIGAN DAILY U' Federalists To Hear Talk By Helen Ball Helen Ball, a student member of the nation:l exc utive council of the United World Vederalists, will speak before tw group's cam- pus chapter at L7:30 p.m. today in the Union. Miss Ball wa I le national chairman of the Sudent Federal- ists before its rwrgrr with five other world gov rnmnent groups this year to form the present or- ganization. She will de;rrie the confer- ence at which the merger was effected, some of the functions and methods of the present group and the activities being carried on by college chapters throughout the nation. A short business meeting, start- ing at 7 p.m., will be held before Miss Ball's talk. The speech will be open to the public. Hil U WllEect New members of the B'nai B'riti Hillel Foundation Student Council will be elected today and tomorrow. Polling places will be open from 1 to 5 p.m. in Lane Hall and from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. in the Foundation. Hillel membership cards must be shown at the polls 'I AM TIRED, TIRED': Tenor Ponders Native Land And Heavy Concert Schedule, Spring Concert) To Be Given By Glee C(:1111 A 1 1PICr iL IF NEWS By NATALIE BAGROW tan opera season next fall, after The University Women's Glee Vaily Special Writer I which another concert tour has Club. under the direction of Mar- Ferrucio Tagliavini leaned back been scheduled for the tired tenor. guerite V. Hood, will present its in the chair in front of his dress- It was at this point that a gleam annual Spring Concert at 8:30 ing-table backstage at Hill Audi- brightened Tagliavini's eyes. "In P.m. tomorrow at Lydia Mendels- torium and sighed, "I am tired, March, 1948, I will go to Italy for sohn Theatre. repose, he said, adding, "no con- tired, so tired." certs, no tours, just take it easy." Margaret Lint. zarpiL will be Tofeatured in the program, which This comment was reiterated Proud of the few American slang will includ songs ranging from scvetal times as the May Festival phrases he has picked up; Taglia- l6th century madrigals to present artist wearily outlined the full vini beamed broadly as he at- day popular songs and heavy program which re- tempted to describe his newly ac- mains to be carried out before he quired love for the United States. The concert will also highlight can return to his native Italy "to He enthusiastically declared his selections by soloists Charlotte tale it easy." intention to become a citizen of Boehm, Ruth Spore, Lennis Brit- Speaking in the carefully dis- this country, while expressing his ten, Suzanne Smith. Jean Thal- tinct but halting manner char- determination to learn English "as ner, Marilynn Watt, Bonnie Elms acteristic of those who are still soon as I have time," a commodity and Ruthann Perry FitzGerald. experimenting with a new lan- which seems to be strictly on the A quartet composed of Lennis I guage (he arrived in this country just five months ago), Tagliavini described his near-future plans. He was to have starred in the Philadelphia La Scala Opera Com- pany production of "La Boheme" in Philadelphia today with an- other performance of the same opera scheduled for Newark, N. J., Saturday of this week. The Tele- phone Hour will feature him on a nation-wide hook-up in selec- tions from "La Traviata" next Monday, May 19, after which his concert tour will take him to Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro He will be joined ty his wife, Pia Tassinari, an opera star in her own right, in the Metropoli- scarce side in a life such as his. As he talked, Tagliavini reveal- ed the one outside interest he is able to maintain in his very spare spare-time. Glancing now and then at the dressing-table mirror before which he was seated, he sketched a self-portrait with a, pencil borrowed from a back- stage usher. "It is my past-time, my divertissement," he explained. A slightly more than moderate smoker who never carries his own cigarettes and has no preferences as to brand, Tagliavini was seen to "bum" cigarettes from at least four persons during intervals be- fore, between and after his num-1 bers as Nedda. Britton, Jean Thalner, Suzanne Smith and Charlotte Boehn will present Peter DeRose's "Deep Pur- ple." A group of art songs by Brahms and Griffes and songs by Rom- berg, Debussy, Respighi, Bryan, McKay, Hoist and Schumann will be included in the program, which will close with three Michigan songs to be presented by the entire Glee club. Lennis Britton will di- rect. The concert will be open to the public. Save Those War Bonds! -- I APRIL SUNBATH ER-Mis, Joan Davis found the water a bit cold but the sun warm April 20, as she ventures onto the Lake Michigan beach at Manistee, Mich. Miss Davis was one of the first sunbathers to take advantage of the white sand and warm sun in North- ern Michigan this season. P E T A N D Q U A D R U P L E T S - Six-year-old Vern Reames of Chattaroy, Wash., is proud of his pet milk goat, Daisy, who presented him with quadruplet kids. Ven's parents_ saidhit was the second time Daisv had brought forth four of a kind. 4 I U D C E--U. S. District Judge Henry Schweinhaut (above) pre- sided over the trial of Andrew J. May and three others charged with conspiracy to defraud the United States. M O T H E R L Y M A T I L D A - These puppies, taken' from their mother by an abdominal operation, are shepherded by Matilda the cat, owned by Mrs. Norman W. Durost of Portland, Me., I 'I F U T U R E K I N G -.This picture of Princess Sibylla and her baby, Prince Carl Gustaf, only son of the late Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden, who lost his life in an airplane accident, was made on the tot's first birthday anniversary. A great-grandson of Sweden's 89-year-old monarch, King Gustav V, Carl Gustaf is in direct line to the throne." MO N T Y V I8S IT S S0 N.-Field Marshal Viscount Ber- nard L. Montgomery, (left) chief of the British Imperial general staff, visits his son, Trooper David Montgomery, at Chatterick Camp, where David is taking training. I " . .. ...