Fro 197 THE MICHIGAN DAILY )AN ALEXANDER: Actress Calls 'Witness' Favorite Role By DIANE FRASER Radio and TV actress Joan Al- exander claims that her part in the Drama Season production "Witness for the Prosecution" is her favorite role., After five years with the TV panel show "The Name's the Same," Miss Alexander starred in the New York production of "Wit- ness for the Prosecution" last year. She is repeating her role in the Agatha Christie mystery for Ann Arbor audiences. "It's strange to sit down here for a change," the dark-haired actress commented as she took a seat in the empty Lydia Mendels- sohn theatre. "I really hate to talk about myself I'd much rather just talk about you." Background? Miss Alexander settled back to answer this stock question. First Broadway Role "When 16 years old I walked into a producer's office and he gave me a job in a Broadway play. I was just lucky," she remarked. After her first important assign- ment in Leslie Howard's produc- tion of "Hamlet," she spent a year studying in England under the German director Fritz Kortner. Miss Alexander was offered a lead in a radio series after appear- ing in "Trojan Women." "I was very young and tempted by the money that radio offered, and the theatre seemed insecure - so I took the lead." Success in Radio, TV A long career of radio and TV successes followed. She thinks the variety of parts is what makes radio so wonderful. "I havewdone as many as eight shows a day," she said, recalling that in' one day she played a 12-year-old girl, a crying baby and an 80-year-old woman. Comparing TV and the theatre, the actress finds the theatre "in- finitely more rewarding. In TV you have to guess at the audience response while in the theatre the audience reaction determines your performance," Miss Alexander pointed out. Can Vary Peiformance "If the audience is unreceptive in the theatre, you attempt to win them over; if an actor playing op- posite you is slow, you try to step up the pace - an actor must be able to vary the performance de- pending on the audience and sur- Job Bureau Assists 'U' Placements Summer may mean leisure to some, but to at least 3,300 Univer- sity students it means a chance to earn extra money. This is the number of students, who have already received summer jobs through Ward D. Peterson, chief of summer placement for the University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Informa- tion. Peterson is the head of probably' the most extensive placement serv- ice run by any college in the coun- try. Started in 1950, it has oper- ated on a large scale since 1955.1 The number of students who benefit by its services has doubled in the last three years. Summer jobs mean almost con- stant work for Peterson. As early as November he begins sending letters to various camp and resort owners and businessmen, asking if they need help during the sum- mer months, and what qualifica- tions they require for their em- ployees, Then begins the round of stu- dent meetings, starting in mid- December and continuing, every Wednesday, through the end of May. At these meetings, available jobs are listed according to states. Camps, in addition, are separated according to whether or not theyl are coed. According to Peterson, the most popular jobs are those in resorts.! Many positions remain open for this summer. Five hundred camps are still in need of counselors, and other industries' are requesting help in both technical and non- technical posts. Salaries for University-placed employees run within the average for each position. A normal camp salary, for instance, is $200 for eight weeks, with room and board included. Center Plans Niagara Trip The International Center is sponsoring a trip to Niagara Falls between the end of this semester's final exams and the start of the summer session, according to Helen Tjotis of the International Center. The 'trip will cost each of the 25 participating interrnational students ten dollars, she said. The trip will go from Ann Arbor to Cleveland, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Chatam Ontario and then return to the University. It will last from June 16 to June 19. Miss Tjotis emphasized that the only exchange students with mul- tiple entry visas can make the trip. Students interested in going on the trip can contact Miss Tjotis in Rm. 18 of the International Cen- ter. Chaplains Ali Many Worries Religion, love and marriage are the three main problems college students bring to their chaplains for help in solving, according to a report recently presented at the University. The report was given by Robert Bonthius, Vassar College chap- lain, at the 10th annual confer- ence of the National Association of College and University Chap- lains. Findings were based on a sur- vey of 50 college chaplains, about one-fifth of all those now serving in this capacity. /D ( 1/ >Y:7 .9 N -; 11 11 9 9 9 9 w - - 0 V V 9 W - V V w 9 1 q 'P v v ;P -" -Daily-Irv Henrickson FAVORITE ROLE-Joan Alexander claims her part in the Drama Season production "Witness for the Prosecution" is her favorite role. The radio and TV actress recently finished five years with the TV panel "The Name's the Same." roundings," she explained. "Every performance should be slightly in- spirational and bring something new to it. "TV can't be as creative or give the actor as much freedom as the theatre because of the time ele- ment," she continued. "You must constantly watch the clock on TV -or the toothpaste ad won't be shown!" TV Helps Drama TV will help people to become more selective of drama, exposing them to new ideas and actors. This will raise the standard of drama, she predicted. Miss Alexander has had several years' experience in summer stock. Folklore Society Meets Monday Folklore Society will hold its next meeting on Monday, May 27, 7:30, in Rm. 3G of the Union. All members are requested to at- tend the meeting. She called summer stock a won- derful experience for young people. "You are part of the whole pro- duction, painting sets, directing and playing all imaginable kinds of parts. You live and breathe and eat theatre all summer," the act- ress recalled. In her offstage role of wife and mother, the star claims she's very lucky. She and her husband, a Volkswagon distributor, live in New York City with their two children. Expressing a warm interest in Ann Arbor, Miss Alexander added PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, STATIONERS 119 E. 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