E sAN DAILY M.S.C. Heads May Organize Crime School State Crime Commission Asks For Curriculum In Police Education LANSING, June 26. -(P) - Mich- igan State College deans listened to- day to a proposal from the state crime commission that a scientific man- hunting school be established in East Lansing. Dean R. C. Huston, of the applied science division, will head the group of four deans who will confer with a sub-committee of the crime commis- sion appointed by Attorney General Harry S. Toy. Commissioner Oscar S. Olander, who suggested the idea originally, will attend. The members of the sub-committee are former State Senator Herbert P. Orr, of Caro; Jay W. Linsey, of Grand Rapids; Harry G. Gault of Flint. The conference is designed to draft a ten- tative curriculum for the proposed school, which will be submitted to the state board of agriculture, governing body of the college, July 8. Orr, who is vice chairman of the crime commission and who has served as a member since 1931, outlined his idea for a curriculum today. "I believe every student enrolled should have a basic education," he said. "He should live at the state police barracks in East Lansing while undergoing the usual intensive train- ing given recruits, specializing in fin- ger printing, a study of the police radio and practical pistol marksman- ship. "At the college he should be taught a smattering 'of psychology, psychiat- ry, sociology and given intensive training in criminal evidence and criminal law." Dean Huston believes each student in the proposed scientific crime detec- tion course should be required to take four years of military training. He would demand completion of a four- year academic course leading to a bachelor of science degree. Glowing Account Of Pioneer Town Given By Hopkins WASHINGTON, June 26 - (') -- A picture of Alaskan "pioneering" with railroad service, radios, a hos- pital and a laden commissary today represented Harry L. Hopkins' reply to charges that the Matanuska Valley was a nest of disease' and discontent. The FERA administrator put his case before the Senate in a report submitted at the request of Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, Michigan Re- publican, who had assailed the Alas- kan colonization as a "crazy experi- ment." Vandenberg read to the Sen- ate telegramscharging that disease and discontent were prevalent at the Palmer colony. Hopkins conceded that construction was about three weeks behind sched- ule, but presented as part of his re- port a telegram from Administrator Irwin of the colony explaining that 225 more men were being rushed in to help with construction to provide homes for the colonists by winter. Month-End Clearance! Silk Dresses PRINTS - STRIPES - PASTELS $7.95 $9.95 $12.95 Values to $19.75 A few Silk Suits are also in- cluded in this Clearance Horse-Tennis Born Into World-- To Reduce Congress' Waistline WASHINGTON, June 26 - (M) - Go the waist-line problem on Capitol In the name of congressional waist- Hill. Sen. Huey P. Long, Louisiana, lines - which get rather paunchy in does his battling at the dinner table. spots - a new game has been invent- He lives on a rigid diet which he ob- ed. .serves so carefully he carries a copy It is "horse tennis," played in the in his pocket. Four days out of five house gymnasium between 5 and 6 he eats a slim, but adequate diet. The p. in. by congressmen with equator fifth day he drinks his meals - milk trouble. and fruit juice. One of the "ade- Team members are chosen in a quate" days permits him: breakfast, novel manner. Dr. George W. Calver, grapefruit juice, black coffee, toast; the capitol physician, .points an ac- lunch, clear soup, baked apple, tea, cusing finger at a waist-line begin- toast; and dinner, consomme, fish, ning to extend too far south, and the green peas and apricots. gentleman in question, if he has will Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg of power, buys shorts and sweatshirt. Michigan kills two birds with one Thereafter he becomes a member of stone. He goes to a bowling alley the waist-line legion. He shows up while he waits for his wife to do her in the gymnasium after the day's ses- shopping. sion, and with 50 or so other members Joe Robinson Fishes pushes a ball around for an hour. There are several who take their Horse Instead of Net I ,rt itti s ,n,-. i r r He may push it in horse tennis, or if he is conservative, he' can stick to handball or volleyball. He finishes off with a shower, and then goes back to work with a feeling that all's well. This horse tennis is a simple game, invented by the congressmen. It is played on a court with a carpenter's wooden horse in place of a net. The ball, which weighs five pounds, is put into play by a plump gentleman who bends over, picks it up, and heaves it over the horse to another gentleman who must wait until it bounces before he can return the play. Rep. James M. Mead of New York is to blame for all this exertion. He has been in Congress 18 years, and he dislikes the way young members quickly lose their youth. He remem- bers with a frown the session when 29 members died. Champions Developed "Too much work and no exercise," he diagnoses. "So we agitated a gym- nasium, and just got it this year by chipping in $5 apiece and buying equipment. And the paunches and flabby muscles are disappearing." Several champions have developed. The two handball experts are Repre- sentatives Mathew J. Merritt of New York and William M. Citron of Con- necticut. The baseball team includes two former big league players; Thomas S. McMillan of South Carolina, and Edward A. Kelly of Illinois. There are, of course, other solutions Miss Earhart Recovering After Operation On Nose LOS ANGELES, June 26. -() - Amelia Earhart Putnam was in a' hospital here today recovering from an operation on her nose. Dr. Joseph Goldstein said it was "minor and un- important" and that she would be able to leave the hospital in a day or two. GOLD IN GIZZARD LINDEN, Cal., June 26 - (P) - A gold nugget about the size of a pea was found in the gizzard of a three- month-old chicken when it was killed by Mrs. Nettie Stanley here. sp si u 5'A n gVown wi ai- is -poein n hand. They include Sen. "Joe" Rob- inson of Arkasas, who will vary the program by attending a ball game with Vice President Garner; and Rep. Lindsay Warren of South Car- olina, who shanghaies friends on Sunday for fishing on the Potomac. Sen. Pat Harrison of Mississippi is She" recognized golf charripion of Congress. Laurels for the most energetic sport go to Rep. Kent E. Keller of Illinois, who likes to wrestle. His secretary is the one who suffers. He has to be the other half of the match. Koella, Thieme Will Lecture At French Meeting Summer Session Club To Present 'Get -Together' Program Tonight The first meeting of the Summer Session French Club will be a "get- together" to be held at 8 p. m. today in the second floor terrace room of the Union, it was announced yester- day by Prof. Charles Koella of the French department, director of the club. No formal program has been plan- ned, but Professor Koella will wel- come the members and Prof. Hugo Thieme, chairman of the French de- ,partment, will also speak. Other members of the French faculty will also be present. This is the first time that the French Club has been orgarnized dur- ing the Summer Session. - Member- ship is open to any graduate or un- dergraduate student in the depart- ment, and to any student or faculty member who can speak French rea- sonably well. All students wishing to join the club must register with Professor Koella and pay the $2 membership fee. South African Grows Drouth Immune Maize Expected To Revolutionize Maize Growing In Areas Of LightRainfall PRETORIA, Union of South Africa, June 26-(P)-The production of a new type of drouth resistant maize of prolific yield has been announced here. The new maize, named the Mor- genster Marvel, is the product of four years' patient cross-breeding between Wisconsin white maize and American flint white maize. S. W. Morkel, known as the North- ern Transvaal's largest maize grow- er, is responsible for the production of this new type, which experts state is likely to revolutionize maize grow- ing in South Africa, and particularly in uncertain rainfall areas. Grain Proves Heavier Unlike the Wisconsin and the American. flint, the progenitors of the new maize, which are normally grad- ed by the elevator system as threes, the new maize is readily accepted as flat white twos in elevators. Features claimed for the new type of maize are its extraordinary drouth resistant powers and the heavy weight of grain: a crop of 9,760 bags reaped from 700 acres averaged 239 /2 pounds a bag, as against the standard weight of 203 pounds. The excessive hardness of the usual flint mealie for milling purposes, which has hitherto made flint maize unpopular, with consequent lower values, is not apparent in the new breed of maize. The cobs are of an average length of 12 inches, while the grain is slightly larger than the ordinary Wisconsin wide. Does Not Revert To Type Experiments over a number of farms on large scale planting during the past two years have demonstrated 'that the new maize does not revert to type as in the case of normal cross breeds. A typical example of the drouth- resisting powers of the new maize is to be seen on Morkel's farm, where the new maize is yielding, under ex- cessive drouth conditions, slightly over six bags to the acre, while other types planted at the same time and under identical conditions are scarce- ly producing one bag an acre. -xA TE JTREET - EWEtE R WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING Mi LTONS,, cMEN'S SHOP SANFORIZED SLACKS $119 to 9 All Patterns SIZS 28 to 50 SPORT S H OfES New White Rough Buck. Plain and Wing Tip. One Low Price $3.7 5 " *7. SHOE SALE of SUMMER STYLES i. _ $485 and ' WOOL SUITS HALF PRICE! Our Regular $6.50 to $8.50 Values in a Wide Variety of Styles and Sizes. 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