RUTH BRETON, CYRENA VAN GORDON, I DO OVIAIDIT[DC in~r M . _... RU T H BR E TON, CY REN A V AN GOR2DON, Q ITSCSE WILL APPEAR ON T ODAY'S CONCERTS 1O d 1PRSiANROUYA[lIES ,. x r d v r v Y d'1 r "w 'rte r h r A r r r A-% r% n ev rT A r-a A n .r ra r1 r OV A' ;A r t TO 7t t 0 NAV Y OFFICIAL HUPE' FOK AMEKICAN Nine Michigan State ENTRY IN 1933 SCHNEIDER CUP RACE Paper Editors Face Cites Three Factors Necessary T1e story of the airvnane's de- Faculty Discipline to Enable United States vnopment is told in the follow- to Compete Then. ing record of the comparative EAST LANSING, Mich., May 15.- _-s 01eds which have won the Sch(- A)--Possibility that nine Michigan WASHINGTON, May 15.-(AP)- eidcr cup in races ince 1913: State College students who Wed- America, for five years out of the Year Piot and Nationality Speed nesday published the semi-annual major world air classic, the Schnei- (13 M. Prevost (France) 45.75 eiition of "The Eczema" would face der trophy race, may fly into the 191 Howard Pixton (Eg). 55.3 disciplinary action appeared today high speed picture in 1933 on navy 20 Cci. Bologna (Italy) 102.5 when President Robert S. Shaw ap- wings. 1 O21 r. do Briganti (Italy) 117.4 pointed a faculty committee to in- David S. Ingalls, assistant secre- 1.22 Capt. H. Biard (Eng). 146.5 vestigate the paper. The student tary of navy for aeronautics, tells 1923 Lt. Rittenhouse U.S. 177.4 are initiates of Pi Delta Epsilon, what must be done as he shapes a iazs Lt. J. Dootlittle U.S. 232.6 honorary journalism fraternity. program for stretching $220,000 to 1921 Maj. Bernardi Italy 246.5 The publication was barred from the limit for the initial step, basic 1927 S. N. Webster (Eng). 281.5 the mails Thursday by Postmaster research. 192 H. Waghorn (Eng). 328.5 B. A. Faunce of East Lansing, who tnedeclared that in his judgment it Three things, he enumerated, are u cdmmercia'Iy or from miii- "comes under the classification of necessary to enable. the United isyc~nnri~yo rmxii Staestoyenter a high speed race tary or private points of view, obscene and indecent literature." States toenrahghsedac in 1933 "with a fair chance to win- except for racing; but it may ,,,be truly stated that the racing ning" ~.plane of today is the ordinary WANT ADS PAY 1. An engine development an plane of tomorrow. production that will provide sever- "Of this we are sure-that we-. al engines of around 3,000 horse- cannot long continue merely to fol- power; low in the footsteps of other coun- 2. Design, construction, and flight tries in speed and still maintain an LAST TIMES TODAY testing of leveral racing planes equality in our aviation material. improved over anything America "With great delight, therefore, we has ever seen; viewed the amendment to the 1932 LA WRENCE 3. A complete racing organiza- navy appropriation bill by Repre- tion of engineers, pilots, mechan- sentative F. H. La Guardia, New ics, and crew, well-trained over an York, providing $1,000,000 toward appreciable period before the race. having the navy re-enter the rac- "Nearly $3,000,000 and two to ing field." three years of development will be required, hedepaitment has borne White House Children the brunt of development of racing Desire to See Bears planes in this country. Before 1925, when speeds were lower and compe- WASHINGTON May 15. -()- tirion less keen, it was able to keep President Hoover is making gr- in step through its experimental rangements to take the White House "Since then, the situation has' - grandchildren to the first circus particular- of the season here next Monday or come radically differentricar'Tuesday. Peggy Anne Hoover, 6 ly because nothing whatever ha ' years old, and Herbert III, 4 years been done in America to develop old, made a request that they be } engines of great horsepower and no jllowcd to see the bears. Their in- funds have been available. terest in bears has been aroused "A racing plane itself is of no by repeated admonitions that bears ~ lurk in the east room of the White SALVADOR HEAD House and therefore they must not enter this forbidden chamber. HOPES FR UNION WHT E Araujo Wants Central American is here now in the Republics in One Nation. _ most human and SAN SALVADOR, May 15.-(/P)- lovable talkie in Arturo Araujo, who hones to see the r I. r x°: T I Jtt' 4. Central American republics united into one nation, is starting his term as president of Salvador with a de- termination to free his own coun- try of debt. "I want the indebtedness of my country elimin ted, so that we may have a self-sustaining government, one of prosperity and progressive- ness," he said. "With this done, we can go ahead on the needed public improvements, works that will talke full advantage of modern ideas and inventions and help to uplift the people. "And it is also my ambition to see brought about a unity of the Central American states. Such a development would enable them to attain a high place in the world's commerce and production and, of course, would lift them to a com- mensurate higher plane of living." MON., MAY 18 Seats Thurs. ETHEL. in THE LOVE DUEL :. k Podigal F With ESTHER RALSTON CLIFF EDWARDS ROLAND YOUNG "PETE AND REPEAT" PICTORIAL PARAMOUNT ANEWS Sunday, 'TRADER HORN" Lower Floor $3 Balcony $2.50, $2, $1.50 0. TODAY LAST TIMES Thos. Meighan Dorothy Jordan WIC 11 I STARTING SUNDAY Does Big Business Mix with Romance . . . Stocks and Bonds with Stockings and Blondes . . 'Stars of "Holiday" MARY ASTOR ROBERT AMES RICARDO CORTEZ Breezy .f.... Low-Down I00 .Fi S on Day Time Wives Pathe Review EXTRA Gilda Grey "Her Matt" Hearst News .JL .n$.A h$. 4yat 111 an 11- Y!l1 1T I lWiu iIvwt.IAWL'-,IE I n , .at*?!).A A A1.7!!l(. 0ff --9 ±(1(1