General Election Will Follow MICHIGAN STATE NEWS Dissolution of Parliament Daily Student Publication of Michigan State College King George Asks Churchill to Form Temporary Government During Eleelion Period; Vol. 33 834 EAST LANSING, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY. MAY 24, 1945 No. 152 l.ahor Parly Gird* for Fight LONDON, May 2:1 (AP)—Prime Minster Churchill ' Keys Presented Council Elects to Top Helen Fisher forced Britain's first general election in 10 years by re¬ signing today as chief of the nation's wartime coalition government in the midst of an old-fashioned slugging ••*{? Publication Workers • • • _j political campaign. • Annual President King George VI, to whom Banquet Highlighted hy State News, the 70-year old premier for¬ Veterinarian, Wolverine Appointments; KimI Smith, Anitr Cowan mally tendered his resigna¬ tion, f Certificate of Merit Awarded lift Other Officer appointed Churchill to to Six form a temporary "cart taker State News, Wolverine and Veterinarian l\»«l» at Dinner government" to serve until after staffs for the ■mintf year were announced last ni^ht at the annual the elections, which promised Helen Fisher, Grand Hav-I indications banquet held in the main fireworks between the aggi of Student council at For the third straight year, women will hold the nant Conservatives. isitions on the first two* top]the organization's dinner At Churchill's request th* king meeting for all old and new whlle a "oman wl" Truman's announced that the present par- members, held last night in the -> rve as editor on the Vet- Cabinet Union, according to retiring 1.anient would be dissolved by • rinarian for the first time. Pres. Ed: Wallace. Miss Fisher is royal- proclamation «n Jun 15, The almost completely femi- • c staff of the State News will Reorganizes For the second woman to head 1hc council. Peg Hurhans was presi¬ the general next step toward calling a election, probably on ■ tinuc the daily publication Home Frohlcms dent in 1942-43. • Other officers eh'sen at the July 5. ■ U fall, after becoming a week- Servicemen to Vote. meeting include Bud Smith, during the summer, Jan WASHINGTON, May 23 (AP) Dearborn junior, vice-president, The result will remain lotkcil it ops. Ypsilanti junior and —Pre dent Truman shook up and Anne Cowan. Detroit new-, junior, In the ballot boxes for 20 days, ■ appointed manager, announc-' his cabinet today by naming ed. I secretary and treasurer. Miss I'htil the-servicemen's voti has . I three new member ind signal- j Fisher has held the latter posi- i been talked. Miss Hopps said that staff np- ',>(i a new. streamlined attack onltion for the ist year. At the hour Churchill vim ■ imcnts would be- made now:!hc nation's No. 1 home front j Jon Bibbm bi rakmg up the wartime Snyder. N. Y. .ibi- next fall term only, and that problem—food shortages. who was graduated winter term, itiet >; h term the list would be re- The new cabinet members are: vacated the | ne formed jn Britains's presidency at that | i darkest days in 1940. his C'on- time, and Wallace, then vice- t I Attorney General Tom C. I sci vative party was undergoing Assistants Named | Clark, succeeding Francis Bid- president, moved up. l,i st,ii ng attack at Blackpool by V-sistant editors for fall term 10 .Members i two 1-ibontc cabinet { die. Clark. 55-year old Texan. Under the revised provisional!! I Ernest Bovin, m niters, ■ e ii' kel, Detroit junior, whose announced by Marion) is now assistant attorney gen¬ constitution, the council will bell - Cjnd Clement minister if 'abor . ap-i eral. Attlee, dm.uty ntment as editor was recent- composed" of 19 members ncxt .L t prime minister. ade. Secretary of Labor, federal Miss Fisher was elected at > i judge Lewis B. Addressing a con.ention the u juniors who have served I ssistant editors during DmMnlf^fwiran re^rthc'Sce ' f WINSTON CHURCHILL out after 10 years., . , i Labor Isunessor party, Bevin—a i* to Churchill as pre mi 1 .ble the; Washington. He succeeds Misshhe chool of Science year will j-ontinue jn that Frances Perkins. 1 Smith was chosen asand curricu.um Arts. . . . i --Named the Conservatu n par- ty. Dee Dcaring. Pontiac.j tire rep¬ i ly lor the suspicion which he , i Barbara Jones, Glen Rockil rI^crt',"ry. "J. •«ricuJ!ure.t Rep. resentative of the school of Vct- Mexi- , , , Ho/thins, Davies Leave .said was growing in British- ' \ .1. will hold the twoi position; positions co Anderson. New Mexi-1 Democrat, succeeding Claude I an i " Home ennary medicine, and Miss C«w- Russian relations and bound the seniority. R. Wickard. Economics"repre- Oil On Sftecial Mission* Special Ichor party, if elected, to .or- • sentative. Women's cooperative ' m.ors Jean Jarvis. from De- icct the situation. and Jeanette Nixon, of __ Truman disclosed that Ander-1l,nt' dormitory representatives. To Moscow, l.onelon I thorites Hold Meeting nl Oak wlli 'take two'more fon Blso wil1 become war food and 'he member from Intcrfra- I WASHINGTON. May 23 fAI') Bevin said he always had b» - t editorships. The third va- jdminis,ril,0': when Mar. in teroity council, have not been —The White House announced I lifted that the tragedy after the v will be filled by Bonnie Jonf>s Mcps out •,{ that position | announced yet rt. Grosse Pointe sophomore. Junt' 30 New Representative* rcume h.s position i New Represent....... . today that Harry L. Hopkins, ha [las* great war was the fnilme Other new members of council ^ vnec at mission for' to ,nvite Ru-via to Versailln,. • vertising Manager Leone « the court of claims. | Other new members of council £« «» • *P«cm' . M Attlee, joining Bevin in out- ? rorn, Geneva include Jack Brcshn. Battle III., junior, Wickard the retiring agricul- , cr^k^unmr Kd^ ! shal Stalin - lunted that Jane Walker.) ture secretary, has been puked | Creik junior, "1 J:J, for'union for Union board; There he is to converse on mutual with Marlining U.S.-Sovict i thetheUbor party', policy, ''«"' lared the problems of pester, N. Jaunita Soergcl, South Haven Y., junior, will as rural electrification adniinis- j interests. I could .be solved only by "build- tinue to serve as circulation trator, the president also dis-i freshman, for off-campus wo¬ and Marion C'hrnery, Ann Joseph E. Davies, former am-1 lnB UB international orga.-i.va- ager for the coming year. closed at his news conference | men, ■ ' r appointments for the ad- Arbor sophomore, for Red Cross. bassudor to Moscow, also will The rovention overwhi)m- The President indicated thati undertake a special presidential, " 8'y adopted a resolution charg- ...ng staff will be made next) today s "cabinet changes may" be I „ u i may *WS representative will be ut. (that organization s president, Sue mission to London. t Davies will discuss with Prime ' ' British government rothy Englehardt, -innouneed Lansing ,'1 Mated that he _ a ad n •. . te-!! ^verill, „ DavidsonBirmingham junior: Joe will represent religious Minister Churchill and other of- "ow ;"u) ,"r 'be future y. the three - r. announced thiee an- ap- j ^ offer or rrvg-| See COUNCIL, Pare 3 finals "certain matters of com-, lln liberated countries in Eu- '"lents in her capacity as re-: We PUBLICATION'S, Page 3 niltlon from Henry Morgenthau. mon interest" to the United; particularly Belg .mi, Jr., secretary of the treasury, and States and Great Britain arisingGrCpce' "aly and Poland, was Today is the last day that added that he would not have nut of the war. mor'' concerned with the pn. • r- seniors «ill be able to sign up accepted it if the latter had n ade for their pienic. June 6. The Hopkins, who attended many yation of vested interests ban the offer. ' table for this registration international conferences with; fnr '"c welfare, liberty and equality of social security of Today's He also said he did not plan the late President Roosevelt, left will be in the Union lobby un¬ any changes in the state depart¬ til 5 p.m. for Moscow today accompanied I l0fC Pt°Plcs " ment, presided over by Secretary by Avcrill llarriman, U.S. Suggestion Refused Edward R. Stettinius. Jr. bassador to Russia. j The Labor party has giv» • its Campus History of Comprehensives Calms Frosh "jiiibinrt 1 . ; Churchill's ment" or ministers "caretaker taking a mandate against participating in any part clear-cut govtrn- in the administration until after the . . . What Is Life By MARIAN' VANDAI.L could continue w ith uppcrclas* i The comprehensive cxant of-j election. r "They say they're flunking 50 work. I fcrs further advantages to stu- Churchill, whose sugge '. on " rles Danforth, instructor! percent of the freshman class," j Gradually, other colleges bc-jbc'1^ sincc it furnishes them that the coalition government i-.'sic College biology, asked "They say they're the toughest g;,n to rccogni/c the value of'with an opportunity to complete, function until the Japanese war lecture class this week to things we'll ever hit." ((They say 1 comprehensives and plan their icourscs at » ra,c 'n accordance ended w as rejected by the' La- v. <• an unsigned opinion of they'll be MSC's funeral. I curriculum to include them. At j w»tF» their own desire, or even bontcs. turned in his resignation the course and the in-1 These are only a few of the ru-j the present time, many eastern r'm't them, for example, many j initially at noon, without structors. Since on coed i mors which frantically cramming , * wife? summed colleges including Swarthmrre returned veterans have a con- . | Four liours later ho rttuvicd up the whole, freshmen arc hearing as the day i college and Harvard university ' siderable knowledge of physical to Buckingham palace through a situation by writing, j approaches for the first freshman require their students to take: science; these men may take the v.olent electric stoim to ai, cpt you're wonderful," | class to take comprehensive ex- comprehensive tests, and Yale Davorth has been staying with j animations at MSG. However, the, plans to alter its undergraduate [ comprehensive^ for this course, ..ng, the task of forming a stop-gap Ir;«: 4s until his wife cools off. | receive credit for it. and yet ncv- government. j history of comprehensives should program so that by next fall it cr aPPcar in s"c physical science ,—_____ soothe nervous freshmen's fears. • will be similar to MSC's Basic Comprehensive exams, as they . College. p'lasi!- II ondrous Wilson Eneouragrment Given TINE TABLE M1 ] are know-n today have been giv- AdvanUge# T#M ■ I en in this country since 1900. | Freshmen who have difficulty ' .. .... I X.V '• ^jany Many (refhmen are asking! freshmen asking In adjusting xn in anjusting to college work and _ ii !°S?i }? wwd In the They wei e firjt used chie y what the advantages of compre-I receive low marks for the first | lit "L?.5^k Onur Wilson, foreign S^»Uh._C_U" I" I Wle^ fhpv longnage iors would graduate and if they ■ hensives are. and why they must term or tw o find compr omprehensives god-send, since their marks TODAY— instructor. Upon noticing a coed would receive honors. Covering a i, last six hours. Long tests arc ne- . order to obtain a fair throughout the term are ignored Red Cross, 9 a.m. *»'tiig in the hall for hU daw period of severa days tlhe be excused, he graciously op- were berth written and oral. exai^ kamplc of what Ulc and their course mark is de¬ Org. rooms 1 and 3, Union trifj the studl.nt-s a„3jnment is. termined by their exam. Blind students, 7 p.m. door and asked her Into Chicago Fir&l 4 „ . . Deau Howard C. Rather of 194 Union annex r»om. He remarked to the co- The University of Chicago in j They are also an excellent in- Basic '« Uiat she didn't have to stand 1931 was the first to incorporate dication of how well the student College sums up the situa¬ Pan Hellenic, 7:15 P-m. waiting: out In the ball for her the objective comprehensive test j can apply his knowledge to spe- tion with the following advice to mend, but could come in and into its program. At that time, cific and general problems, rath- freshmen, "Don't worry so much. take herself comfortable, until undergraduates were required to«er than how much hes memoriz- College students have been pass¬ 115 Union annex Baker St. Irregulars 4* ,hf tnd of the hour. ing comprehensives for 45 years." 7:39 p.m., Org. room 1, Union pass comprehensives before they ed the night before the test. Thursday, May 24, 1045 MICHIGAN 8TATX NEWS . By LicKty mmiM STATE NEWS Spartans EnteNd aa naeond-claaa matter under act of March IMS at Uw poet-offim." Bast Lansing. Mich Building Annex, room ■. Offloaa located on ground floor Published dsqy exeebf gmktey and ftftmday morning* ol east wing of Union during the regular At War school ftsr add Thursday marnlitg« ofMichigan SUIT college dining summer Session by the students' By BONNIE F.S8KRT Telephone — College Phone S-lSll. Member Amecteleg deltaste* Frew Editorial oirhee — Ext. MB; Butanes* Office — Rat. MS. SGT. ALEX J. KEMP . . . MrMfiNtlio Co* NgrMMlfk aovEmtiAmo Nation»lAdvwliMneSwviCT.Inc. '46, has spent 22 of his 25 iMttt r>IMin JtrprvnereWa* by college carrier to students; UN months in service on the other ago Macisom Ave. dew Yoan. N. y. per year by college ranter to OOP side of the ocean. At present he wr * • (Mm* • 1st smuts • tse nwruit students. is stationeiLin the signal corps in Paris,. France. Sergeant Kemp MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS was a business administration The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the uoetor republication major at State and a member of all new* dtopatche* credited to It or not otherwise credited In UU* and Stab the Ihcal new* published therein. AU rights of publication on of the track sqllad. special dispatches herein are also remrved. I.T. LAWRENCE DOWNER . . . ramrfty Advhtar '41, assumes, according to his Manager ... Fag MMglrmlm V-mail correspondence, that he Arfvrritalnr MkUI't . . . will have to swim back to the Nlpcht Kritlor States if he is ever to get his well-deserved leave. Because of A*«t«taat Advrrtliln* Managrr. a chase from island to* island agar. M"A1»AT.YN WII.I.MRNn — Downer has concluded that the navy, in its fury, has lost the J* FAMHIim. present position ol his crew. Lieutenant Downer has served in the navy for the past nine months and has completed over 50 missions. THE WOMAN'S By nOKOTHf MARVIN WORLD I.T. JACK HTNE wrote . 1 . recently, "The News just came in—wc State renlly road them over and pass them on." This hand to hand method TOWER GUARD 7 p.m. and \0ill continue for the is understandable for there nre, remainder of the term. Members of Tower Guard who where Lieutenant Mine is sta¬ No guests will be allowed in .ire helping blind students tioned on Luzon, 15 other State women's residences the weekend through the cafeteria line in the men. "Your Honor, I say this man is NOT a quack! Why he'- 1 before finals. June 8. 9. and 10. Union are asked to continue this PFC. ROBERT STORMS . . . playing Doctor Snodgrass on the radio for 10 year.- service for the remainder of flOMMKNCHRNT GUESTS '45. was recently flown to a spring term. . Senior women will be permit- hospital in Englnnd after being Pledges and actives of Tower ttal to haw guests Friday. June liberated from a German hospit¬ Guard going on the picnic today 3, the night preceding com¬ al where he had been a prisoner will meet at 5 p.m. on the uppcr mencement. since December. He was active deck of the Union. MKMlHttAt HAT in commercial art while on cam¬ FRESHMAN HOURS The special il to 10 p.m. library Classes the day before Mem¬ pus. WANTED! orial day, Tuesday. May 29. will UAIT. CLARENCE VAN I.OPIK ^remission for freshman women not be excused except for the is service officer and president doFs* not permit them to leave convocation at 11 a.m. Coeds of the officers club, assigned to their place of residence after !> Will have 12:30 p.m. permission the modern and new Mellahn air p.m. They may sign out for 10 that Tuesday. Regular hours. 9 p.ih. only if they do so before i) p.m. for freshmen and 10 p.m. base, m the North African di¬ HELP vision, of the air transjiort com¬ pi the evening, for upperclns* women Will lw* mand. WITH A orirr not Rs observed on Memorial day. Wed¬ As supervisor of transient ser¬ Because of Basic College com¬ nesday. vice, Captain laypik is in a posi- prehensive examinations Satur¬ aws rrrmrovs tion to observe the vast job un¬ CAPITAL day. the regular final week quiet Petitions to the legislative- dertaken by the division whose hours will be observed Friday in Judiciary board of AWS must be all women's residences where turned in the Tuesday noon fol¬ planes fly around the clock the there are Basic College students. lowing the violation, or a penalty Beginning Sunday. June 3. of five lute minutes will be im¬ Europe, Russia and the Middle all-year all-weather route to HE and Far East. exam quiet hours will begin at posed. • • • TIIETA SIGMA PHI (Hfirers Announced Members of Theta Sigma Phi, For FurMtry CHib journalism honorary, will meet at 7:15 tonight in room 107 of INFORMATION PART TIME the Union annex, according to Officers for the coming year Jvanctte Nixon, president. tof the Forestry club have been SPEECH BANQUET WAR WORK Tickets for the speech banquet announced by Fred Schulte, Lansing freshman. They are: COUNCIL may be obtained at the speech office until 11 a.m. today, accord¬ president. Wesley Latham, Ap- (Continued from Page 1) (20 - 35 Hours pur Week) pleton. Wis., freshman; vice ing .to Sally O'Connor, Grosse council. PanHellenjc council will president, Fred Schulte. Social Point* sophomore. chairman will be Wayne Gnsk- be represented by Mary Slack. INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL • • • ms, Indianapolis, Ind., sopho¬ Flint Junior State News member Everyone participating in the more. Dave Larson. Muskegon on the council will be the new¬ International festival is request¬ . sophomore will serve as secre¬ ly elected editor, Marion Meckel, Detroit ed to attend the final rehtanal EARN WHILE YOU LEARN junior. to be held at 6:30 tonight in the tary-treasurer. Constitution Approved Winners of the annual chop¬ Music auditorium. Representatives of the vari¬ ping and cross cutting contest held recently w e r e Wcndall ous schools elected at the last AMERICAN LEGION All important meeting of the FOUNDRY Smith, chopping, and Fred council meeting include John Mc Red Cedar Post 402 of the Am¬ Schulte and Wesley Latham, Cnughna, St. Charles sophomore, erican Legion will be held at 7 AND cross-cutting. Winners will have for Business and Public Service; tonight in room 11 Union annex, Mary TePoorten, Pontiac sopho¬ th(ur names on a plaque to be according to Richard Straight, more, for the arts curriculum of placed in the Forestry cabin Science and Aids; George Mil- venan, Niagara Falls. N. Y soph¬ commander. Election of officers for next MACHINE SHOP CLASSIFIED ADS . omore, for Engineering, and Dale year will be held and prejiar- ations for the poppy sale will be LOST Brown, Huron junior, tor Agri¬ culture. Bill Page. Muskegon made. All members are urgently PRACTICE Pinctunv freshman, and Margaret P'ster. requested to attend. ~SORORITY PIN loM in 152 Detroit freshman, will represent • • • Reward Call Barb vn-ui Basic College students on the iiPTU'eVV ILmi hsill 11 it! t student governing body. Mailt (.roup Initiates Other business transacted at the council mCeitig last night was I I Now Members NOVO ENGINE CO. the approval of the Union Board Pi Mu Epsilon, National math¬ constitution. . ematics honorary, initiated 11 702 Porter St. new members at a meeting re- iciuly, according to Eunice An¬ LANSING MV.ul'i 1'»l Ml w j ,i go through if six or seven Detroit sophomore; Carolyn oxfoids P-AA. patui k. Call 4S3NI after more indicate their interest. Trimm. Lansing sophomore: Pa¬ * . (Old Musk* BIdg.) lipprrs The cooperative plan will be tricia Wilson. Berrien Springs Ext. 525 less expensive than usual room sophomore; David Kaukclies. and board. Men interested may Lansing sophomore; Barbara call John Price. YMCA secretary Brisbin. Monroe senior, and 1P45 WOLVKRtNK Anyone inter- Paul Fuller* instructor in at 8-2573, or Reno Maccardini, W. ettted in selling receipt see C. S. Dan forth. Room 307. Morrill hall. Bessemer freshman at 8-3006. mathematics. Thursday, May 24, 1945 MS€ Publications Make Spartans Win Awards, Appointments iome Match (Contlnued from Page 1) ; cently appointed editor of the flensbuRo, may 23* c/tf)— yearbook. .Russian intelligence regiifitl; to" Margo Green. East Lansing .supreme headquarters sanE tij- iom Wayne freshman, will be classes edi¬ tor; Bernice Horn, Lansing jun¬ tlay that Adolf Hitler was jn«f ft> death in a mercy killing 4>y a ior, has the position of organi¬ tihysician who administered an Tartars Absorb 10 to 6 zations editor; Ken Willoughby, injecHon vhHt "put Him to -jlitp Defeat From Coney Lansing sophomore, photo assist¬ forever." ant, and Roland Young, Lansing • Hitler was paralyzed".and in¬ On College Field freshman, will act as sports ed¬ sane with pain the last five -lays itor. of his life, a high SJiAEF «.in- Playing for the first time Business Manager Doris Engle- cial' quoted a Russian general as hardt. also a Lansing junior, nn the college field, the said that Jo Bowman, Almont reporting. Spartan baseball team sophomore, will he office man¬ WASHINGTON, May 23 fAf) whipped the Tartars from ager, and Dipk Straight, East Gasoline rations Mi* America's Vavne university, yesterday by Lansing, has been appointed ad¬ civilian motorists were diHRnsf .'i ( ore of 10 to 6. Darrell Cou- vertising manager. Miss Engle- increased tontgHt as a rCmll' rtf Detroit junior, went eight hardt will announce the sales victory in F.nrope. airings, and was taken out in manager later. Effective June 2, the A 'ins! Wayne half of the ninth in- Quarterly Names Staff value will be increased* DO iter Veterinarian appointments cent, from four tn ;iV |bd6>ny. 0 game started out in a big were announced by Jo Browne, On June 11. B card'ceilings v/tfl for State as the Spartans Fayettcville, Ark., senior, editor increase to fiso miltw per nMnth cd two runs over the plate of the magazine, and Harry throughout the country. e first inning. Vanar Kos- Rlair, business manager, Dan¬ ;,n, the new third baseman, ville. Ind., senior. JO BROWNE HARRY BLAIR ' ,ed to center, and then stole FLKNSBURO. Germany, Way Copy editor for the staff will Veterinarian editor business manager . 23 (API- Allied supreme hind¬ . , . nd. He was followed by Mar- be Joe Miller. Terre Haute, Ind., Hansen, who walked. Both sophomore. Bud Smith. Dear¬ quarters acting in concert' with the Russian high command), ar¬ ners advanced on a passed born junior, will handle the il- il-! /i a> l I n •if ■ > •• * a I* • rested Grand Admiral Karl Dden- and scored when Breslin lustrati lustrations, and James Sullivan. (preen splash n ill Vresent thee in itz and other German lender, to¬ led to right. Detroit soohnmor^. sophomore, has thr»! the! * day. destroying the : o-e.d!td Breslin Errors In Wayne's half of the sec-j make-up editor's position. Others on the staff are: Gerard-' Waterland' aI Perry Jones* June I Flensburg government nnir rum¬ inning, the first two "men Heyt, Grand Rapids junior, as I inants of the Nazi high comihaod! DOenitz was taken into f'lte- down easily, but the third 1 circulation manager; Victor La- . w _ Green Splash, Women's swim- Exhibition diving will he por- tody along with Col. Gen. Girsbe/ ..i:,n_to bat got on base onerror Blanche. Haverhill] Mass'" iuri-! "ling honorary, will present its formed by Tommy Barber, Chi-, bv Breslin, and pitcher Couey ior, as accounting manager and ' swimming pageant entitled "Alice cago, 111.; Betty McDonald, l.ans- Jodl, army chief of staff; Ad or. Von Fricdeberg, heaif" Of the •aIked the ritxt three men, fotc- ' John Bardons. Lowell. Ind i in Waterlnnd" at Percy Jones ing junior, and Romona Wernet. Geiman navy, and' ReicrtrOioi- l ,n one run. The next Wayne1 junior in accounting manager's' hospital in Battle Creek on Mon- j Birmingham freshman. Other ister of production came in the fourth inning position. ' I day, June 4, at 9 p.m. leading characters are: court Albert* FfSS r. 1 two consecutive doubles; Setwlce Keys Awarded Having already given the pro-i jesters Marjorie Wood. Charle- nothcr man across the plate.i State News gold key awards Auction twice at State with great! voix senior, and Elaine Halstcad. c fifth and sixth innings for! were presented to Miss Hoops i riiceriw. the women have under- Huntington Woods freshman; I rr" ' " the Green and White saw five: Miss Heckel and Miss Seastrom'',Hken 10 enact it before 300 ser- Mad Hatter. Thelma Junker,! The women s physical cthiGi- runs chalked up. In the; by Prof. A. A. Applegate head A'icemen, despite the difference Rellaire senior, and Dormouse, tirtrt club will" hold a dinner this Rudy Cnstellanl scored on of the journalism department i in swimming pools at Percy] Josephine Ridge junior. Johnson, Pleasant| evening I the HuntinFood honor of senir.iT; at shop'at it -dt -ingle by Hansen to center. Professor Applegate then I anf' State, Bui Hudenko singled in the awarded silver kevs to Jane I rhe acts will have to be some- :x'i jfor the start of a four run Walker. Rochester, N. Y. junior,! what revised since the Battle .ly Going to second on a bad who has been circulation man- Cr<,ek P°o1 IS 30 feet l""«rr than row to first base, Hudenko ager for the paper for two years ! stn,e s and has 'le shallow sec- ;r«prry Joh< s m the after- a i d Qrant at Chird. While Standish senior; Kay Besemer "onn to enable them to practice c the hall around the dia- Belleville senior; Jean Finnings- ln ,hc P00'- A" f,age properties t i both Schuler annd Couey dorf. Mil ford sophomore- and | anrt equipment will be carried by army trucks. .. (•cd one more base. Peg Dubry. Detroit A the Wayne pitcher started More Awards Made Sharing the lead during the iridup, Schuler stole home, Remaining silver keys were performance will be sophom / n the confusion that follow. given to Miss Dearing and Mrs. Ann Shontz, Columbiana. Ohio, and Jean Procter, Detroit. Miss I i iiey also slid home safely. Jones. ■ I' again loaded-the bases, The Misses Fnglehnrdt also re¬ Shontz will be the first scene ;• Hudenko grounded out soc¬ ceived gold keys for the Wolver¬ "Alice" and Miss Procter will ewim as "Alice" during the se- io to first. ine, and the silver awards were 'partans Get More Runs given to Bethany Beardslee, East cond scene. i t- more runs were scored Lansing sophomore; Sue Averill, ■ eighth inning for the Spar- Birmingham junior, and Bill Both Castellan! and Kos- Sticksell, Detroit sophomore. Dinner H ill Honor Iked, and Castcll Charlotte Bay City sopho¬ SP.■AKTANS, Page 4 more, and Doug Hird. Farming- Frank' Mitrliell ton junior, were awarded the Frank Mitchell, chief clcctri- Wolverine certificate for service. cian at the college for the last Recipients of gold awards on 46 years, will be honored at a the Voter.nanan staff were Miss testimonial dinner tonight ,11 the Browne and' Blair. Silver keys'Union ballroom, according to were given to Heyt, Bardens, Edward E. Kinney, siipcrinti Zecb and Smith. ent of buildings and utilities and Hird was master of ceremonies program chairman for the event. for the program. Entertainment Keenly interested in all carp- tor *he evening centered around pus activities. Mitchell has tak¬ on "Ode for Publications Row" en active participation in ath¬ written by Mrs Jones and Miss letic events by ether sitting on Horn to caricature the various the bench with the team or run¬ staffs. ning the score board. At the age of 67, Mitchell is the oldest em¬ ploye of the college in point of service and will retire on July 1 Visit our store TATE Toastinastor for the evening will bo Guy H. Hill, assistant professor of education, and Dr. John A. Hannah "Will speak for everything briefly. James O Hays, extension as¬ Hare Pleat y <>f sistant prof- vsoi 111 dairy, w II lie in music. the principal speaker, and the guest of honor will fi ve the re¬ sponse. Music will be furnished by the Songu.a-ters' Barbershop quartet of Lansing. See our music Foremost in ail summer .scenes where wi and rceortl department for both popular looking pleated shorts by Tom Boy, tailored and classical music. from cotton twill, navy blue or white. $•'$. -Now Sliowi ng— ALSO Build's Music House — LATEST NEWS, NOVELTY STARTS TOMORROW 'Ravaged Earth' Authentic Newsreejs 31* S. Wash. Ave. Phone 4-6615 of the Japanese atro¬ cities and invasion of (lliina. V MICHIGAN ITATE NEWS Thursday, May 24, 1945 Superforts Blast Tokyo Industries, Railroads Marianas Based Planes Rock Important Target With Deadly Incendiaries As Fire Campaign Progresses OF MICHIGAN GUAM, May 24 (AP)—Striking before dawn, more than 550 Superfortresses today dropped 4,500 tons of A MICHIGAN FASHION INSTITUTION FOR 76 YEARS bombs on important Tokyo industriaHargets, the greatest load of destruction hurled on the Japanese capital to date. The target area included* the highly important Shin-' agawa sector. The railroad Council Sets Coal marshalling yards there, through which a third of Jap¬ an's rail traffic passes, was Of BOO in Drive key objective. For Big Sisters A spokesman for Maj Gen. Curtis Le May, commander of Big sister recruiting campaign the 21st bomber command, point¬ which has as its goal approxi¬ ed out the Shinagawa area pro¬ mately R00 women students, will vided "one of the happiest com¬ continue its second "day today. binations of inflammability and Sign-up sheets have been plac¬ congestion" that could be found ed in every sorority house to fa¬ for the Superfortresses. cilitate the signing-up of soror¬ Aim at Industrial Area ity women. Women students may Taking off from- liases in the also sign up with big sister coun¬ Marianas, the B-2Ss carried cil members in dormitories and thousands of pounds of deadly co-operative' houses. fire bombs to be hurled on flimsy A sign-up desk has also been Japanese residences. It was es¬ set up In the lower deck of the timated probably 750,000 Japan¬ Union whore council members ese lived in the Shinagawa area. will register "women from 10 Tills area has more small pro¬ a.m. to 4:30 p.m. throughout to¬ ducers of light machine, aircraft day and Friday. precision instruments and tech¬ According to Betty Sattcrlee, nical aircraft component parts Evanston. III., sophomore, at than any other Japanese district least 800 women students will be with the exception of Nagoya needed to serve in the capacity of which, too, lias I icon heavily hit big sisters because of the expect¬ by the Superforts. Nagoya Is Jap¬ ed increase of 150 percent over an's principal aircraft cente the record women's enrollment Tokyo Suffers to date. Ttie goal for big sisters Wave after wave of the big! has accordingly been set high, war birds struck at a target area j and upperclnss women are urged which extended from the Tama to support the program. river 011 ttie south of Tokyo to | a boundary only three miles south of the imperial palace. If.S. Infantrymen Turn Tokyo has been a lucrative target for the B-29s since they Japs on East Coast began their incendiary campaign against Japanese key industries. ! Ridges of Okinmca Prior to today's assault 32.fi GUAM. May 24 (API — Sev¬ Square miles of the Nipponese j enth division infantrymen in ud- capital were burned out In pre¬ rso weather turned the Japan- vious fire bomb raids. In addition, 8.37 square in miles!™* miles j /lank °" °k'™wn ,for in greater Tokyo and adjoining -another 1.000 yards Wednesday Kawaaki. south of the Tama, • alonK cast coasl rid«« from have been destroyed. which artillery can pound enemy 1 supply lines tn behind the "little Siegfried line;" a fleet SPARTANS communique reported today. The seventh, which on Tues¬ (Continued rrom Page 3) scordc on a single by Hansen. day swung through captured Yonabaru for 1,000 yards, plung- llreslin followed by poking out j a one-bagger to the rightfied- ^ ,m gouthwnrd yesterday , , m u f Tmrn er. scoring Kostegian. While the T, Yanks already have cut 1 Wayne team er Hudenko waf throwing catch- out a first .Hansen j „ cast.west roiui from Nnha on Okinawa's west coast to ruin- rrosscd home plate for the third Ld Yonabaru and presently are Wayne staged a big four-run ] seizing can heights trom which guns blast vital supply road: streak in their half of the ninth. i fortress Shuri in the center of C'ouey walked the first man. fol¬ I the line. lowed by a single to left and)""" 1 the first man scored on another single to left. At this point Coach tliiiuiuli* Plan Reception COOL THREE-PIECE PLAY SUIT John Kobs took out Couey and placed Bill Page on the Spartan! Pres. and Mrs. John'A Hannah mound. Three more runs were! have invited ail seniors, profes- '•scored before the end of ttie, sors, and associate professors to IN SPARKLING SEERSUCKER STRIPES game, attend the annual senior recep- Today the Spartans journey to turn at 7:30. Thursday evening. Detroit to play the University of May 31. in the Union. Detroit. There will be another! The traditional informal nf- game between Detroit and State fair is in honor of the gradual- tomorrow. ' ing seniors. here's a trim trio for your summer outdoors made of printed pre-shrunk seersucker in OPES DALLY ADDftlFIIM AIR 11 A. M. VKr IlLUn CONDITIONED brown, blue or red stripes over white . . . skill¬ THURSDAY, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 25 fully designed to flatter, from the cap-sleeved Gene Tiernev Bill Elliott midriff to the-bem of the button-up skirt. Bruce Oahot Bokbv Blake "SUNDOWN" "SmAntonioKid" 3-piece matching outit 10.45 complete SATURDAY, MAY 26 "THREE OF A KIND" • OPEN A CONVENIENT JACOSSON CHARGE ACCOUNT • and • OPEN THURSDAY EVENING TILL 9 • "BORDERTOWN TRAILS" Cartoon and Comedv