Page Two MONDAY, MAY The Brothers Four Gag By JACKIE KORONA Ass t. Spotlight Editor area, and music. all had Turns an Interest in Amateurs The phone at die University of They all liked folk tunes and Washington Fiji house rang one they liked to tinker with lyrics fall night four years ago. and melodies. But it was all A formal sounding feminine for laughs. Studying came first, voice asked for John Paine, Bob and fooling around with music, Flick, Mike Klrkland, or Dick second. Their "performances" Folley. One of the boys came to were restricted to fraternity the phone, only to hear the voice parties and other informal uni¬ ask if he and his three frater¬ versity functions. nity brothers would like to audi¬ They were young college men tion for the manager of the Colony having a good time together -- Club, a swank night spot in Seat¬ today they are still young men tle. having a good time. The voice explained that she What has happened to their was secretary to the manager, original goals, those with which who had heard of the four young they entered the University of Phi Gamma Deltas and their am¬ Washington? The young men, still ateur entertainer reputation at in their early twenties, haven't the school. Would the four like forgotten why they started school. to come down to the club the They just feel that they are learn¬ next day to play for him and a ing a great deal through their possible job? travels and concerts, and some¬ day they may return to their No urging was necessary. The academic studies and realize following morning the four Fljls their former ambitions, showed up complete with instru¬ ments - Bob Flick with a bass _ a viol - and were told by the Colony FntAV^n I ft Of*C Club boss that it was .1 gag. He hadn't called. And he had no secretary. The four were crushed, but Show Typical the manager decided he might as * ia well listen to what the boys had to sing and play. They did, and he hired them. COllCQe ICISt©S Although they no longer attend Today the four young men from the University of Washington, the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity the Brothers Four are typical house at the University of Wash¬ of the young college man. ington ^re known as the Brothers JOHN PAINE, baritone, loves Four. water sports and photography. And today the four know to He does some of the promotional whom they owe their first real work for the group, but concen¬ job. The formal feminine voice trates on his guitar. Before en¬ who claimed to be the manager's tering the University, Paine secretary was a fellow U. of W. served two sessions as a page In student, a cheer leader who only the Washington State Senate, was Intended to play a joke on the on the debating team In high boys. school, and was Junior Class The joke mushroomed into a President and Student Body Pres¬ fact: the Brothers Four are now ident. Between his sophomore and rated as one of the most popular junior years in college, Paine singing acts In the country with made a trip to Europe and Russia the college students. With the with a fraternity brother. Now he Tli* Brothers Four, loft to right, Miko Kirk- music ond folk I 28-weekend run at the Colony sings for his bread, and that of land, Dick Foloy, John Paine, and Bob Flick take Club, the four hit big time en¬ his wife. will ho on campus to ontortain May 9. place at 8:15 in the Auditor!* Tho tertainment with a bang; BOB FLICK, baritone-bass. Their next job, at the hungry specializes In skin chvingln his i in San Francisco, brought a bigger and better break for the spare time, with tennis and pho- tography also hobbies. Every L.retime II Calendar of Evei J* 'h* ■cJlLESEZ , four. Mort Lewis, personal man¬ once In a while Flick likes to put ager for Dave Brubeck spotted them and within six months the 7 and MONDAY, MAY 7 - 9p.m.—Polish film. "Eve Wants to Sleep," Falrchfl Brothers Four had a Columbia «»>« f-f «*« - Records contract and a hit record r,,'Fv„ CX! the Oval Club membership for Arbor Drama season starts today through May 14 called "Greenfields." J»h under- andupperclassicho- Montgomery starring In "Toy. in the Art?," theLU Leaving their studies at the ,a8tlc »ccompllrt?ments. Kirk- *>lch received the NewYork Drama Critics University, the four went to New liked to entertain at USO shows ™de *e Dean's List and ^ MendelssohnTTeatre, Am, Arbor. York and made their first tele¬ in the Seattle area. vision appearance on the Jimmy raC^Vv^enor la a chef dent'S ic* A«rd- outstanding School Serv- He Ukes to tekehome , . 0 „ TUESDAY, MAY 8 FaircMM" ? and 9 -P-^-Polish ftlm, Rodger's Show. Since that time, at heart. Foley sometimes cooks ™ »«nome ""*• "Eve Wants to Sleep. the Brothers Four have appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, the Kate for the rest of the group while collect btx*". rec- 7 p.m.—Information Open House for non-preference Smith Show, Mitch Miller's Ford or. tour, and has come to be western one ^fkia^d Pr°mptS sophomores interested in communication arts: JoumaH»l Startlme Spectacular, the Dick Clark Show, "Be Our Guest," makers In the entertainment future. * P ro- —Dr. WEDNESDAY, MAY 9 Thomas Walsh, senior staff specialist. field. Besides standing over a hot and the award-winning Canadian Ramp- Wooldridge Inc., Cleveland, Ohio, speaking on Ftl stove, Foley spends much time 107 Olds Hall. M"flcThe «> Show. playing five Instruments, the ^ _ 8:15 p.m.—Brothers Four Bothers Four have also sung at concerts on college piano, organ, ukelele, banjo and oUflflflY CotlCCTi Concert, Auditorium. tenor guiur. Before going to col- ^ campuses from coast to oast, and will arrive at lege, he was active In high school THURSDAY, 8:15 p m.-Lecture Concert MAY 10 for a song session on Michigan Stite student government, Informal ^JjeT* rOKOmy of the United Series final feature Und£ May 9. singing groups, football, track The United Nations Nations, Ralph J. Bunche, speaking' But before that all-Important and swimming, and be was editor The Collegium Muslcum of and Africa," Auditorium. phone call, what had the four of the year book In his senior Michigan State fraternity men done? John Paine, term. Does he do University will anything rise? preoent a program of orchestral 11 e.m—. Carl G. FRIDAY, MAY 11 law student, Dick Foley, en¬ Comedy records are anirreslst- music by Franz Xaver Pokorny. Lllliequlst, Staff member High AWjJ mem of gineering major, Bob Flick, radio able item for this 21 ysw old 1728-1794, on Astro-Geophysics, Boulder, Colo., talkingm and TV management Sunday, May 13 Trappings of Charged Particles," 140 Natural «*!«**' major, and piano player, stager, and chef. at 4:00 p.m. In die Music Audi- Mike Klrkland. student of medi¬ 8 MIKE KmKLANDk tenor, was torium. p.m.—Literary Discussion Club, "One Hundred cine, were friends, fraternity cummlngs, Honors Collage Lounge, 4th floor Library, fa-other*, natives of the Settle In high Commentator will be Prof. J. j school, and at the Murray Barbour, who Michigan State News academic year. 1960-61. an- spent die 8 a.m. 12 SATURDAY, MAY 12 alyzing the works of Pokorny In - noon—Small Animals Day, University _ SPOTLIGHT the Thurn end Taxis Library in 9-10 p.m. International Festival Auditorium Magazine edition Regeneburg, Bavaria. 1:30 and 3:30 Published by the students of Michigan State University, p.m. "The Wizard of Or." Cni» Pokorny was a prolific Czech presentation 49 issued on Mondays as a part of the dally Michigan State composer, 100 of whose 130 sym- Auditorium. RKmIM 2 and 8 News, (luring the fall, winter and spring quarters. SPOT¬ ke«M * t. p.m.—International Festival talent sho*s AudW LIGHT offices at 341 Student Services Building, 5:30 p.m.~Ag Council O* Roast, Old College Field, State University, East Lansing, Michigan, p.m.—May Hop [*nce, Unto, Ballroom. tumor SUNDAY, MAY 13 » im-in. ^ « Mother'• Day 1*62 Ik rondo Jandc£L*i~2 1 :Z p-m' Soror,ty '"d IPC Stag, Auditorium. form fan- *iver9 4 P-m.— Music at Pokorny, concert, Music Aitdiw*81' UY. MAY 7, 1962 Page Three •y on Bridge Prisoners Lived the 23rd Psalm iat Double Means THROUGH THE VALLEY OF THE KWA1. By Ernest Gordon. Harper. $3.95. an Basically, this Is a story about agnostic who discovered Christ in the midst of the utmost point that the bridge tal to the railroad was Inciden¬ itself.) By a. R. DRURY The stark fact alwut this book Gordon suffered an incredible human degradation, as did many combination of diseases as well is that "the valley" ts a place be¬ of his fellow sufferers. all "double" in bridge has many useful and meaningful as starvation. But at the edge of yond the Biblical valley of the At -ions. A partnership, to be really effective, must under- shadow of death. It is the Chungkai the Japanese con¬ death he was able to take part In [l of its meanings in its various positions of the bidding of death itself. place troverted a basic international a spiritual rebirth that swept convention of war by making V. ft is ohe of the conventions that makes bridge a partner- That Gordon remains alive 1b through the whole camp. It was a prisoners work for them —and story of men who descended no small miracle. He was in a I may be for penalties-Or it may be to direct a partner to Scottish regiment in World driving them to death. These to the law of the fang and claw, human hulks built a 250-mile then finaiiy discovered that self- having passed (examples 3 and War t rtain suit (this maneuver II, was on his own In an at¬ railroad through the Jungle in 10 sacrifice and fellowship could when opponents are re- 4), you are showing fewer than tempt to escape capture by the months, and a bridge over the transform their lives. toconventions and would 14 points, but you are telling your Japanese, and was caught. He was Kwat in two months. Gordon's own transformation r be planning to play the partner to bid something as it ap¬ thrown into the living hell of pris¬ might never have occurred if he trump.) Another use pears on (Incidentally, Gordon asserts is to demand that your opponents may be camps at Changi, Chungkat, that IMerre Houlle's "The had not been helped Bridge by "Dusty," sr bid - - this is the so- '"stealing" the bid otherwise. Nakawm Paton and Kanburi, of Over the Kwal" wrongly gtvee who happened to be a Methodist, All you want him to do is to whtch the principal onewas the impression that British of¬ and by "Dinty," who -out double, happened to make a choice of trumps. You Chungk.it, In the valley of the ficers took part willingly in the be a Roman Catholic. ut double is used on a will pass when your rum to bid Kwat. construction: he also makes a 3-21 points and no Miles A. Smith comes aeain. of trumps. 1 use it A typical hand Is illustrated I with over 14 points with the bidding as ih examples II No Trump provides 1 and 2: [description of the hand. North the one-level ob- rpartner to bid, unless either an intervening bid i three tricks in the suit [ and no other suit forces your part- West into the bidding with and is especially ♦ K 4 ♦A 9 8 7 f K J 4 3 2 f A 987 Ehen you have no clear your own hand. It applies rst chance to make a bid, one by simply saying { J10 88 77 ♦6 ♦ A K 3 2 South the following would be ♦ J 10 6 3 t double: f 6 5 E S W ♦ J 9 S 2 Dbl P •MB ♦ 9 6 5 Pass Pass Dbl Neither vulnerable. The bid¬ •MB ding: ID Pass Pass Pass •MB N E S VV Pass Pass 1 D 1 D Double P 1 H Pass Dbl Pass 2D 2 H P 3 H P 4H P P .Dbl 1 H P Notice East's dilemma. How |id can he decide among his three Ji't bid unless suits? So he turns to the take¬ Is values out double to let his partner jy°u double after once make the decision. Remember, West must bid, even if he does not have a point In his hand, so East has to take it easy on the rebid until he knows his partner « INFORMATION really has some support. West ED t*M will bid again if he Isn't com¬ pletely broke. Wei,- r.m **, • Sunday— l.M jun. Inspection of the hand will re¬ veal that 4 Hearts are easily made, whereas the Spade con¬ tract would have been impos¬ [the Foreign best in sible, and yet the Heart and films Spade holdings in the East hand ADULTS 904 are identical. ST SHOW 7P.I The difference is the West hand, which has 5 Hearts, and this can be discovered only through use of the take-out double. This bid also finds the de¬ sirable 4-4 major fits, which are hazardous to overcall when based on only 4 cards in one hand. When you use the take-out double, you must be prepared to support any suit your part¬ ner may bid. or have the un- bid major in sufficient strength to bid on the level that may be necessary when your turn comes to rebid. happened Shows Again 1 Vie skw* At Ziegfdd |the .-^Hppep 2 NEW YORK (AP)-The Zleg- feW Theater ts to become I up a*** a legit house again —but only temporar¬ ily. The ornate memorial to Florenz Zlegfeld has had a varied career as a cinema and TV stu¬ IB dio since first opening In 1924 as showcase for musical comedy. With expiration of a long-term lease to the National Broadcast- Scott. |yf(>Mr Comnaiw. the owner. Bill* lr,sFriday~ • Lateu « w ,arienbervlsed the UN Emergency the basement of the Auditor!® is smoothed with a file and sand¬ Force (UNEF) of six thousand Curtain time is 1:30 and i paper. While he holds the cast¬ men. at 3:30. ing in a vise (with the added sup¬ "The Wizard of Oz" lsidn- port of a bare foot), a worker As Special Representative of matization of L. Frank Biua*i quickly puts a rough, finish on the Secretary-General, Bunche world-famous children's classic the metal. flew to the Congo during the Then the metal is dyed a tem¬ concerning the young girl, Men crls's in 1960 and organized the away from Kansas to the rrsagicti porary black, with a strong sol¬ UN operation there which in¬ land of Oz, who acquires sewnl ution of copper sulfate, so that the volved over twenty thousand UN new friends and the etched-on design will stand in enmity armed forces. witch or two in the process! relief. After the design is etched In recent trying to get back to herhom on -- the design may be anything years, he has been Linda Lashbrook, a sen* from flowers to a fancy pattern working on a program of peace¬ Theatre major from Lmcashi* — a skilled craftsman uses a ful uses and control of atomic en¬ small hammer and a tiny, ergy. One result of this program England, will take the pan 4 sharp has been the establishment of the Dorothy. Her ft lends will ll chisel to gouge out the design. _ . . When the engraving process is complete the article appears to crow; Robert be finished — but the process Arnold, as the is only half done. At this stage Actually Mr. Bunche began Woodman; Uura Gould a Bii the metal is still black, but it working for the UN. during its 9™ *nloJj is silver-colored where the en¬ formative years. He was a mem- ber of the United States i^on' the Wizard o. Ot graving process has removed the tlons to the Initial conferences delega- F* QuentlnLevin, Franklinfre*j temporary black finish and ex¬ Others in the ca>: vhichij which resulted in the posed the bare metal. organiza¬ Using pure silver wire (or even The skilled craftsman intently hammers tion: Dumbarton Oaks Conference made up of both college -tuial solid silver wire into the in 1944, the United Nations and children, are Bria:^ /ermcxf gold, on special order) the arti¬ Con¬ san intricate, engraved design of Birdri. ference on International Organi¬ Jo Noack, Peggy Hart, patiently fills each out in the Frishnecht, Marjorj HigM.1 bidri article — a time consum¬ zation at San Francisco In 1945. ing and demanding job (see photo). Newest Thing Afoot Current In 1946 he attended the First Barbara Thomas. RicharcNid-J After the inlaying General Assembly of the United ols, Joey Hicks, Dear, Wrigi process the article is once more turned over Is Leather Sneaker Best Sellers Nations In London as a member Rex Gates, Janet Barth, Broutman and Lois Martin. to a of the US delegation. file-and-sandpaper man, who AP Newsfeatures (Compiled by Publisher*' Weekly) Tickets will be available puis on an absolutely smooth The leather industry is making FICTION Fairchlld Box Office on thedM a:*| finish. As a result of this finish¬ Appearing in a Michigan news¬ a hopeful bid for some of that FRANNY AMD ZOOEY, of performance, one hourbeJoel ing the temporary black color paper, a story on Ralph Bunche money ami affection teen-agers Salinger. is about a home state each curtain. For inforrr.atuM is removed, and the entire ob¬ now have for tennis shoes THE AGONY AND THE boy. He by in¬ was born in Detroit, but left the call either 35S-6690nr 355-01*1 ject is so uniformly silver-col¬ ECSTASY, Stone. ored that troducing leather sneakers. state in favor of California. I had to look CATHOLIC-PROTESTANT closely Although the industry, schools THE FOX IN THE ATTIC, He earned his AB to see where the silver was de¬ and parents have despaired be¬ Hughes. degree at PRAYERS the University of California and posited. cause gym shoes make feet BULL FROM THE SEA, MELBOURNE, Australia (A? per¬ went on to receive his MA and Finally — the miraculous part spire ami- often do not provide Renault. — Melbourne's Roman CathoMcj of the process. The unfinished Ph.D. in Government and Inter- TO KILL A MOCKING¬ national R elations from Harvard Archbishop Daniel Mannlx needed support, the young crowd nw_r_ bidri piece is heated slightly over some charcoal and then is has been wearing them around BIRD. Lee. University. authorities of eight Protest^ the clock anyway. denominations have approved t smeared with a watery paste and, NONFICTION He is lo and behold, everything turns However, the new leather particularly proud of the f°r black except the silver inly. The sneaker is expected to make CALORIES DON'T fact that he has bJen er~-- entirely ^^denominational meetings- some inroads. Available in all COUNT, Toller. self-supporting since the age of paste is the secret. A little am¬ MY LIFE IN COURT, Information Dial 48^-6485 colors and in smooth, brushed, fifteen. monium chloride is added to a Nlzer. gratned and patent leather tex¬ All that Bunche has contributed special type of earth, brought » tures, it is supposed to be all THE MAKING OF THE to the world has not Hyderabad from the nearest sup¬ gone by un¬ things the canvas sneaker is, and PRESIDENT I960. Whits. noticed or unappreciated. ply — which is hundreds of miles THE GUNS OF AUGUST, sway -- and enough water is added one thing more. Kids can't Twist In rubber - He has received numerous NOW - 65C to 5:30, to the mixture to make a paste. awards, trophies, placques. de¬ The bidri art owes its name to soled shoes, but they can slide THE ROTHSCHILDS, grees, and In 1950 he was awarded Feature 1:40-4:15-6:55^ 'he town of Beeder, where the all over the place In leather. the Nobel Peace Prize. I 2o' special earth is obtained. 1 don't know what is in that paste, Noun Cunoii but it turns the zinc-copper alloy a permanent Jet black, with which the shining silver contrasts sharply. After a final finish with coco¬ nut oil, the article goes on sale either in the many handicraft shops in India, or it is exported. Bidri articles are very decora¬ tive (and relatively expensive) and are also quite durable and unbreakable. The makers claim that the silver inlay is seated so well that it will never come out. There is only one drawback: if you are traveling by air and or over, the weight (aren't we all?) then an be murder on the pock- ifs heavy. A LARGE STORY GRAND RAPOM, Mich. (AP)— TIM entire story of the Bible, to the book of told to the tan- '—~— ItOKDAY. MAY 7, 1962 Page Seven ]oeds See Movies - - Editors note: This is the first Student life in the 1920* s con¬ young men in raccoon coats or freedom but the unscheduled hol¬ lowlng April to protest the high in a two-part series on campus trasted visibly with that of earlier yellow slickers or plus-fours, idays of the decade were near cost of living turned into an¬ fife in Michigan State in the years, thereby contributing to a and of bobbed-haired coeds in enough to revolt to earn the other Bolshevik day. Although ■ 020"s. The excerpts are taken prevailing Impression that a col¬ short skirts and flapping four- title "Bolshevik Days." Not con¬ these "days" became less fre¬ from "Michigan State : The First lege was a haven for flaming buckled overshoes that earned tent with official holidays in the quent in later years, the Hol- Fine Hundred Years" by Madison youth. them the title of "flapper." first, second, and last weeks of dad editor summed up the year luhn, MSt 's official historian. ire was a concentration of Although these sights were not May, 1919, students organized an 1919-20 in the words "Jazz and confined to the campus, their con¬ illegal one in the third week, us¬ Bolshevism." |P« There was much talk of drunken centration attracted attention. ing as an excuse the Governor's Decrepit, slogan-covered signing of the appropriation bills. parties duringthe decadi, but liq¬ "Fords" uor was none too obtainable here. came along out of hi¬ "Meetings of cheering students bernation with the first East Lansing had been "dry" warm and tin pan processions were the since its chartering in 1907 and days of spring to clank along the order of the day on the campus the state had voted for prohibi¬ winding drives. and in the evening an impromptu tion In 1916 despite such per¬ Six passengers inside the car but what is reputed to have been suasion as the suitcase, found and five on the running-boards a very successful and enjoyable in the campus shrubbery, con¬ constituted the normal load Pres¬ dance was conjured up in the taining twelve bottles of excellent ident Butterfield observed. "In Armory." whiskey wrapped in literature the past three days," he added, The faculty did not partici¬ that explained: "1 have seen cases where a wreck would have occurred had pate; in fact, the Record ex¬ "This is a sample of what you not an plained, "they appeared quite won't get if the State goes dry." apparent stranger on the campus dejected at all the goings on." stopped dead stilt or run his own Confusion over the change from auto onto the sidewalk or upon Eastern to Central time in Oc¬ the grass." tober prompted many to omit , A survey in 1927 Indicated that classes; when coeds persisted in car for at least a term and spent thereon an average of $11 a year. attending, the Women's Building was raided. NOW! 65C to 5:30 On Senior stunt days in spring, An "overall" day In the fol- Feature at 1:25-3:25- those who were about to graduate dressed as children and carried 5:25-7:25-9:25 toys to class, or green freshmen, or appeared as roller-skated SAVE MONEY vm : about the campus. GokWt : thatui, • When You Travel. frite rnon who helped tome Arizona, Mr. David Worcester en}oys Social rules were relaxed at the close of the war as a result of ST /figfcfe 'aim. grading about the days when the West was wild and wooly. the work of the Women's Student Council' which later became EUROPE JlMHUTTON "" funnier A.W.S. Thereafter couples could le Was the Law stroll unchaperoned across Farm Lane ON PAUIA PRENTiSS ever' Bridge or Grand River Ave J A"hat was It like lo be Justice nue. the Peace in a small mining Worcester, born in West Camp- ton, 1876, came to Detroit with Coeds could go canoeing, al¬ 5 DOLLARS when \rlzona was still a though only In the company of his parents. members of the flourishing men's JoTltory" I "It was dangerous and quite Before he left for the wild and wooly west, he worked in canoe women club. Junior and senior might attend Lansing the¬ A DAY I job keeping peace between the machine shops around Detroit, aters .without a chaperone. pro¬ papers, especially wtien you had and went to a mining school In vided there were two or more wi cattlemen and sheep herders the same camp", said 87- ear-old, David Worcester, for¬ Houghton. He recalls the "horse drawn couples In the party. There was a new hilarity as by Arthur Frommer now available at HORIZONTAL cars," that filled the stre¬ LIEUTENANT street mer mining engineer and East well. A Holcad editor In 1920 ets of Detroit In 1900, the all- |wslng resident for 31 years. wood bicycles, and the gas street condemned the "rotten Immor¬ LANSING'S TRAVEL I In W04, Worcester became the ality" of the "Shimmy" which Cinemascope • metrocolor. ■Mtlce of the Peace for the Su- lamps. had been BOOK SUPERMARKET FRIDAY perpetrated by a dozen He set out for Arizona in 1903. couples at pf,'or Mining Camp in Arizona. a recent faculty-chap¬ Judgment at J 'When the cattlemen and PWers got sheep together there was "I rode horseback," he said, "from one mining camp to anot¬ eroned party. Five years later the State News SPARTAN T«w to be trouble", he said. her. I rode through Devils Can¬ sponsored lessons in the "Char¬ BOOKSTORE with Nuremberg [He recalls the time when two yon and Apache Leap one time. leston." Academy Award Winning corner Ann & MAC MAXIMILIAN SCHELL pttlemen were making a claim They're famous locations where These events typified a new - « mine and they were am- stage robberies used tooccurr", ^ed and killed. he ssid. ["Butremained When asked how he felt riding ° one of the men who was alive long enough through the West all alone, he ^ite down, 'Bob Stuart killed commented, "It was lonely all- but the worst part of it was Vote Yes For Popular P; or^televisionwas Just like what you right, I thought my knee caps would today." he said. L found Stuart and held him never get back Into place." F wspicion. He was later tried Worcester returned to Detroit Entertainment On Campus found guilty," he added. ■ from Arizona In 1907, and mar¬ Being the JusticeofthePeace ried Miss Naomi *• »*me Bally. They thing as being have celebrated their 55th wed¬ We actually couldn't ar- ding anniversary. He worked In |«t anyone," said Worcester. Port Huron and throughout Michi¬ Lr. were there to see that ]us- i-n.?® Ldone»" he continued, t"* toughest part about it was gan building roads. In 1931 he came to East Lan»- lng, and has lived here ever since. THE had t0 writ on the Now 87-years-old, and In very BROTHERS i ErS^I** BgLbesides Ihe clm'),,ort wmP- keeplwy good physical condition, he is an avid western reader. pice". LAST 3 DAYS! Itytil 5:30 Eve & Sun FOUR 2 20 -6:10-10:00 60' 12:30-4:15-8:dS HSU Auditorium Wed. May 9 STARTS , „ IQO and $1.50 All Seats isfe v uglfi Page Eight I students) | ARISE V^uLv * 0-» •~*s Oi >— (one-at-a-time) Order Your Graduation NOW AND Be Ready for Sic your cap and gow in BETTER GRADUATION GIFT selection at The "THE RISE and FAIL oi THE THIRD REICH" Union Book Store NOW ON SALE IN PAPER BACK only 1" DROP IN AND BROWSE Union ' OUR COMPLETE —Sssti^ Paper Back Book BUILDI