rArlyE 1NGITT THE MICHIGAN DAILY { SM-MAY, DECPMt,,R 1?, 1941 - ~ '-t'~-'r-' ~ - - STNflAY, DE~MB1JR 12, 194~ CHANCES ARE SLIM: Visiting Vocalist Desires Law Quad Pilgrimage ,' -~ * t By JO MISNER Nan Merriman, who will singj the mezzo-soprano role in the "Messiah" at 2:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium, has been looking forward to her first trip to the University for a long time. Miss Merriman has received some very pleasant impressions of the campus here by proxy. Her husband studied at the University during the war when he was tak- ing training in "a judge advocate's division. * * * MISS MERRIMAN would like very much to make a special pil- grimage today to his former abode -Rm. K-13 in the Law Club. However, regulations of Uni- versity residences being what they are, she is not exactly sure whether the tour will be com- pleted. The present resident of Rm. K- 13, Carl Reagh, '51L, said he con- sidered her getting in "about as impossible as "a trip to China." HE WAS NOT too sure he could extend the welcome mat with an easy conscience, either, due to some events which occurred last year. "One of the fellows here was visited in his room then by his' girl and her father," he said. "When the authorities found out, he was given 24 hours to pack his bag and get out of the. Club." Miss Merriman did not attend college herself because she knew a private teacher she wanted to study under-Mine. Alexia Bas- sian in Los Angeles. WHETHER or not a vocalist Secret U.S. Documents MadePublic (Continued from Page 1) months before World War II broke out with Hitler's invasion of Europe. Chambers, admitted former courier for a Red spy ring, has accused Hiss of passing him secret documents from State Depart- ment files. Hiss has denied the charge. THE MEMO SAID: "March 3. (Herschel V.) Johnson, U.S. Charge at London, cabled that Lord Chatfield has told the Naval Attache that . . . he would not change his plans for cruisers this year, and in any case, new battleships would not be laid down before the *end of the current year." Lord Chatfield was Britain's first Sea Lord and Naval Staff Chief from 1933 to 1938. A long message signed "Grew," dispatched from Tokyo at noon, Feb. 12, 1938, and marked "strict- ly confidential," told then Secre- tary of State Cordell Hull of Jap- an's rising temper against the British in China. Grew told Hull of a stormy conversation between British Ambassador Sir Robert. Leslie Craigie and then Japanese For- eign Minister Koki Hirota in which he said that "for the first time in our respective dealings with him, Hirota twice lost his temper with Craigie." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 110, \ l ' J NAN MERRIMAN . plans pilgrimage should take college training is pretty much an individual matter, she said. However she feels that college, is a definite asset to the singer because it trains the mind to react automatically. "A good voice is a pre-requis- ite for the vocalist, but even more is the intelligence to use it properly," Miss Merriman said. "Whether a singer goes to col- lege or not, the important thing is to work-work like a fiend," she continued. "The vocalist must be prepared when the big break comes." The work does not end when one reaches the top, either. Miss Merriman said she has travelled 50,000 miles in concert trips alone since the beginning of the year. C O M M U N N NT GWE1*9T U RKLE S- Jacques Ducls, sec- retary general of the French Communist party, speaks at press conference in Paris on the arrest of Communist leaders in the U.S. ALI A N LU N C H C OQU N T E R-Pigeons of Venice gather in St. Mark's Square as a city hall employe empties sack of corn for them. They wait for him each day at 2 p.m. New Engineering Aviation Unit OffersOpenings for 75 Men i. An engineering aviation com- pany of the Michigan Air National Guard, the 1806th, will be activat- ed before Christmas, with open- ings for 75 men. Dave Proctor, former Univer- sity student, is organizing the group, which will have the job of supporting the 127th Fighter Group of the Guard, and will be centered in Detroit. ENGINEERING students, con- -truction workers, people with ad- ministrative experience and heavy equipment operators and main- tenance workers are needed, Proc- tor said. The unit will work with earth, moving machinery such as bull- dozers, angle dozers, jeeps and trucks. Once organized, the 1806th will meet one night a week during the year and spend a 15-day encamp- ment at Grayling during the summer. There will be five officers and 71 enlisted ratings open with a pay scale ranging from $157.50 to $346.50 per year. IN THE EVENT of war, Proc- tor added, the mission of the unit would be to construct, maintain and rehabilitate airdromes. Under the draft act, men who join the unit before their eigh- teenth and one half birthday will be classified 1B and be au- tomatically exempted from the draft, he said, provided they keep in good standing in the organization. Proctor will hold meetings at the Detroit Artillery Armory, 15000 West Eight Mile Rd., from 8 to 10 p.m. on Monday nights to meet potential members. His phone number in Detroit is Belleville 7-1285. Cancellation The Arts Chorale caroling party scheduled for tomorrow at 10 p.m. has been cancelled. Members of the group mayE contact Lillias Wagner, phone 4002, for additional informa- tion. (Continued from Page 4) ecutive Council Meeting, Mon., 4:10 p.m., Michigan Union. Every person, officer and member, working on a chapter project must present a written report at this meeting. Meeting is open to gen- eral membership. Play Reading Section, Faculty Women's Club: 1:45 p.m., Tues., Dec. 14, Michigan League. I.Z.F.A.: General meeting, 7:45 p.m., Tues., Dec. 14, Hillel Founda- tion. Jewish Ethnology and discus- sion of next semester's program. U. of M. Dames Music Group: Meet at the home of Mrs. Donald F. Goss, 2684 Bellewood Ave., Mon., Dec. 13, 8 p.m. U. of M. Dames Drama Group: Meet at home of Mrs. Robert Love, 2662 Pittsfield Blvd., Pittsfield Vil- lage, Tues., Dec. 14, 8 p.m. Dra- matic records will be played and discussed. Transportation Chair- man, Mrs. LaVerne Pitcher. Ph. 2-7483. W OUL U-.$E A C T2kSE S - Mrs. Ruthel Provet, instructor, points to imaginary accident to get reactions of appli- cants for admission to New York School of Performing Arts. Girls are (1. to r.): Anne Krumbcin, Inge Becker, Phyllis Wein. U P A N D 0 V E R-C. Iload goes over the head of his. horse, Royalflue, during hurdle crash at Royal Horse Show at Adelaide, South Australia. The rider suffered a back in~jury. I I * 1 I 1949 MICHIGRNENSIRN "everybody's yearbook" COMMA N DER - . W I N N E R-Mrs.Reva Beek Br nof flefamnt ,T--, was Bosone, Salt Lake City, Demo= named commander of American cratic police court judge, was Legion A Miaml convention. elected to the U.S. House of Rep- tesentatives from Utah's second congressional district. / t, i ead ftAe Class whether it be - FRESHMAN SOPHOMORE JUNIOR OR SENIOR Buy YOUR copy now G T H E S I L K - These paratroopers bail out of a Fairchild C-82 so fast they appear clustered together during a training jump at Fort Benning,, Ga. before the price increase III C O M M U N I S T S P A R A E-Portraits of Communist leaders are carried through People's Square in Rome in parade ,recedinog a meeting to raise funds for Communist newspapers. ,III .,,.. .. ..;:;; ., " =:i ---t°-- .- ,,. . .