CTHE MICHIGAN 'DAILY Accuse Hare Of Ignoring Wayne 'U' Senior editors of the Wayne State Collegian accused Secrtary of (State James M. Hare, a Wayne alumnus, of neglecting their uni- versity in a front page edtitorial last week. Specifically, the editors claimed Hare should have put Wayne's colors, green and gold, on Michi- gan's license plates. In 1954, the Wayne students pointed out, the University's maize and blue adorned the state's licenses. In 1955, Michigan State's centennial, green and white were on the plates, revers- ing to white and green in 1956. Since 1959 marks the 90th year of Wayne's existence and since the Detroit school is now a state university, the Collegian editors suggested green and gold '59 plates to alumnus Hare. In a letter to Collegian Editor John Husher, Hare agreed: Wayne State's ^olors will be test- ed for contrast and visibility on license plates, he announced yes- terday. Later testing will consider the colors of other state-supported schools: Treatments Increasing For Cancer Improved methods of surgery and X-rays have doubled man's hope for cure of cancer of the throat or mouth, according to two medical experts. These new methods, they said, have spread across the entire country, while only a generation ago they were offered in only a handful of medical centers. Speaking before the American Medical Society in New York, Dr. John V. Brody and Dr. Milton T. Edgerton, of Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, noted the following signi- ficant cancer decreases: 1) In cancer of the mouth cases, figures show that 50 per cent of those surviving five years or more recover today. Twenty years ago, only 25 per cent of the victims lived tlat long. 2) Just eight years ago, less than eight per cent of those suf- fering from c a n c e r of the pharynx, the back of the upper throat, had any hope of surviving five years. Today 35 per cent live at least this period of time. (' "v .. r7te :$ . .aj .{{ oiY tli". ~ "-smxa .i. y ..vo. :};t jSij$:_: