THE M'ICHIGAN DAIIY THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1944 Defendants in StateConspiracy Come Ready To Stan d Trial Action on 13 Turned Over to Circuit Court Former 'U' Regent Testifies as Witness By The Associated Press LANSING, May 31.-Thirteen de- fendants named in a grand jury war- rant charging them with conspiracy to corrupt the 1939 legislature's ac- tions in passing the intangible tax law were bound over today to the circuit court for trial. Major Charles F. Hemans, former regent of the University of Michigan and self-styled dispenser of graft to legislators, testified as the prosecu- tion's chief witness, declaring that as the hired agent of five of the de- fendants, he had paid "bribes" ap- proximating $2,000 to nine others, who then were members of the State Senate and House. Only 13 Defendants Involved Only 13 of 14 defendants named' in the warrant were involved in the examination completed today before Circuit Judge Leland W. Carr,the grand juror. The 14th, Armand E. Robichaud, public relations counsel of the Beneficial Management Cor- poration, is fighting extradition to Michigan from his home in Newark, N.J. One-by-one, Hemans named the defendants and testified that each had played a part in efforts to corrupt legislative consideration of the in- tangible tax. He asserted in a matter-of-fact voice that a "jackpot" was formed to "buy" legislators' votes and- assure that the tax bill was either amended as the alleged bribe payers wanted, or defeated. Obtains "Jackpot" from Many He testified that to form the "jack- pot" he obtained a sum of money, the amount not mentioned, from Robi- chaud as the agent of Beneficial Management, which operates small loan companies in the state; $3,200 from Julian Thompson, lobbyist for the Household Finance Corporation of Chicago and the Michigan Associ- ation of Small Loan Companies, and another contribution from John E. Hancock as the "treasurer" for a group led by Abraham Cooper and George Omacht eDefense counsel moved to have the warrant quashed after Hemans had testified as the final witness, but Judge Carr held these arguments were not convincing. The defendants were released in bond for trial tentatively scheduled for the current term of court, which will not end until Sep- tember. Inter-Guild Will Hear Frankena At Conference Prof. William K. Frankena of the philosophy department will speak on "A Personal Religion for World Liv- ing" at the Inter-Guild Spring Con- ference to be held at Holiday House from Saturday afternoon to Sunday evening. The group will leave Lane Hall at 1 p.m. Saturday for the Episcopal retreat camp on Pine Lake near Pon- tiac, according to Midge Cavins, pres- ident of Inter-Guild. Prof. Frankena will speak Saturday night and Sunday afternoon and Wil- liam Muehl, director of the Student Religion Association, will speak Sun- day morning. Also on the program for the two days are swimming, a wiener roast, square dancing ,and other outdoor activities. The student directors of the guilds will take part in a panel discussion on "Purposes of the Guilds." The main purposes of the Confer- ence are to make it possible for the leaders of the guilds to become better acquainted, to plan the program for the following year, and to exchange new ideas, Miss Cavins said. The guilds on this campus work to enrich the individual student's religious life and plan their programs accord- ingly, she added. Committees for the Conference are Central Committee, Fred McKinney, Jean Graham, Midge Cavins; food committee, Priscilla Hodges, Faith Simpson, Doris Lee, Joe McMillan; recreational committee, Andy Ander- son, Phillip Eggertson; registration committee, Ernest Van Valkenberg; transportation, Jean Graham; func- tional corhmittees, social, Priscilla Alden and programs, Dorothy Pugs- ley, Anyone interested in obtaining fur- then information about the Confer- ence may call Ernest Van Valkenberg, 2-4489. OHiO--CALIFORNIA-NEW YORK-Governors John W. Bricker (left) of Ohio, Earl WVarren (center) of California and Thomas E. Dewey (right) of New York exchange greetings before -the Governors' Conference luncheon at Hershey, Po. BIartlett Jitli Speak Before Phi Ka pa Phi Prof. Harley H. Bartlett, chairman of the botany department and di- rector of the Botanical Gardens, will speak at the spring initiation of Phi Kappa Phi, scholastic honorary so- ciety,.at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Prof. Bartlett, consultant to the Department of Agriculture in the rub- ber plant investigations, will speak on "Pan-American Solidarity." He has just returned to the University after spending a year and a half in South American countries in connec- tion with his investigations for the Department of Agriculture. While in South America Prof. Bartlett also did research on social, civic and econ- omic problems. Approximately 100 students selected from the various units of the Uni- versity and a small number of facul- ty members will be inducted into membership following Prof. Bartlett's address. A reception for members will be held immediately after the initiation in the Assembly Hall of the Rack- ham Building. H-iohlights On Camn )u .. . Pictures on uDisply.. A photographic display of pictures taken by Bob Felton and William Samborski will be on exhibit in the lobby of the International Center through the month of June, Lili Rabel, a member of the staff of the Center, announced yesterday. The photograplhs by Bob Felton are studies in color taken at Greenfield Village, the Botanical Garden in De- troit and a few on the campus. There are a number of pictures taken by Samborski including several pictures of campus scenes. * - Club To Etertain ... . The Dance Club will present a classical dance program at 4 p.m. today in the Dance Studio of Bar- bour Gym. This program will con- clude the group's activities for the season, according to Jean Parsons, '46, president. The public is invited to attend. .' * Uni To lBe Open.. . Surgical Dressings Unit will be open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow, according to Harriet Fish- el, head of the unit. Attendance was very poor yester- day, Miss Fishel explained; only 11 women attending, when capacity is 70. .No dormitory has yet filled its quota. "When invasion comes, surgical dressings will be a necessary part of the supplies, so we need all the help we can get right now," Miss Fishel stressed. JGP Bond Sale Eids .. .. Because this is the final week of JGP stamp and bond sales, stamp representatives of dormitories must turn in their money and unsold stamps from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the League. League house col- lections will be held from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. G.I. BOYS ABROAD: Soldiers Try Chinese Ways Along Banks of the Salween By WILLIAM F. BONI Associated Press Correspondent WITH CHINESE EXPEDITION- ARY FORCE on Salween Front-You find Americans in the darnedest pla- ces, and looking as if they were at home in almost every one. On the way up to look at the Sal- ween, for instance, you stop off to fill your canteen at the camp of one of the "Y" force units working with the Chinese troops. This unit is set up in a house on the outskirts of a large Chinese village, and in the kitchen, where you get your boiled water, Pvt. Boyd J. Watson of Ezel, Ky., is pre- paring the noon meal. Though he is working with Chinese utensils in a Chinese kitchen, he acts as if he'd been there all his life. In a large metal bowlrset into arn opening in a mud brick stove, he is cooting a .very choice-looking dish composed chiefly of chicken livers and gizzards and eggs. Then several hours of jeep riding later, you run into Capt. Henry J. Lemire of Attleboro, Mass., and Lt. John R. Sanders of Fargo, N.D., who are attached to a Chinese regiment temporarily bivouaced in a much smaller village just a short distance from the Salween. Finally, after an hour and a half's fast up-hill hike (the uphill speed is caused by the pace-setter, Lt.-Col John Nance of Portland, Ore., who used to climb mountains for fun back home), you come upon a Chinese ar- tillery position overlooking the Sal- ween Valley, and here you meet tall, rangy Lt. Ray Pitman of Fayetteville, N.C., and Sgt. Albert F. Chambers of Martin's Ferry, O. Here are two Americans stuck in a remote corner of China's "wild west," Concert Band To Play Sunday Highlighting the 31st annual Uni- versity Concert Band spring concert to be given at 4:15 p.m. -Sunday in Hill Auditorium will be Paganini's famous "Moto Perpetuo" (Perpetual Motion), performed by the first clar- inets and woodwinds. This number, usually a show piece for violin, will be played by a band for the first time. A symphonic para- phrase of Jerome Kern's "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" will also be performed. The woodwind quartet, organized last fall by Barbara Litchfield, flute; Mary Laughlin, clarinet; Doris Reed, oboe; Ann Choate, French horn; Sylvia Deutscher, bassoon, will play Carl Eppert's "A Little Syphony." This group of students is rapidly becoming one of the feature musical attractions on campus and in the state. On May 22 the quintette played six programs to more than 6,000 stu- dents arid musicians of the Grand Rapids high schools and junior col- lege. Gustav Hoist's "First Suite in E- fGat, Opus 28," which the band will play, was one of the first works by an important modern composer to be written expressly for band. Morton Gould's "American Salute" will close the concert in a rousing finale. Compositions and arrange- ments by Gould have been featured by Toscanini, Stokowski, Iturbi and Reiner. Katharine Gibbs Opportunities " A college girl with " r Gibbs training is pre- 6i5IS pared for a top secret&. yet almost contpletely acclimated, notl only to the primitive living conditions but to working in harmony with peo- ple who have not only a different language but even an entirely differ- ent outlook. It was dark by the time we reached the jeep-head and as we started for headquarters Capt. Fred Watson of Oakland, Calif., riding beside Nance in the front seat, loaded his .45 in the hope we might come across a wolf. Once they thought they had one. The jeep's headlights picked up two golden eyes to one side of the road. They disappeared in the dark- ness, but Watson spotted the animal with his flashlight. "Cat, house, grey- striped," he said in disgust. Alumni Award Scholarships , Seniors from Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and Chelsea High Schools were awarded Alumni scholarships and list scholarships from the University clubs throughout the state it was an- nounced yesterday by Dean Clarence S. Yoakum of the graduate school and Clark Tibbits, director of the In- stitute for Human Adjustment, heads of the scholarship program for the University. Alumni awards were presented to Frances E. Bull of University High School and to V. Loren Brooks, Charles Chadwick, Jeannette N. Col-. lins, Roger D. Wellington, Marjorie H. Warren, Jean Cummins and Don- na E. McCourtie of Ann Arbor High School. These will receive scholar- ships which provide tuition for the two semesters of the freshman year and for each year thereafter if 'a high standard of scholarship is maintairied. List scholaitships were awarded to Robert H. Ware, Ann Arbor High School; Janet L. Cork, Ann Arbor High School; Richard Richards, Chel=- sea High School: Alice L. Kirby, Yp- silanti High School; Juva R. Trausch, Lincoln Consolidated High School; and Ruth Devine, St. Thomas High School. The list scholarships go to students in schools accredited by the Univer- sity and the Alumni scholarships are awarded to students in towns where the alumni clubs are located. Donald C. May and Miss Mildred Hinsdale headed a joint committee of the Ann Arbor Alumni and Alum- nae Clubs,'which selected the recip- ients after interviewing 32 candidates who were recommended by schools in the county. C. F. Ramsey, Mrs. Erie Layton Gates, Dr. Hazel Losch and John E. Nicholson, Jr., were also members of the committee. T he City Beat:" Today's Ann Arbor News I hi snmmary Band To Piay . . . The Ann Arbor High School Band. directed by Charles M. Yates, will open its sixth annual summer musi- cal season at 8:15 p.m. today in the. West Park Shell. The program includes "The March- ing Band" by Kleffman, "Cavatina" by Huff, "King Cotton" by Sousa, "The Mosquitoes Parade" by Yoder, "Anchors Aweigh" by Zimmerman and "My Hero" by Strauss. A cornet duet will be played by Paul Mason and William, Penn, ac- companied by Martha Wells at the piano. S * *w Concert Planned . , - The Ann Arbor Civic Orchestra will present the second concert of the annual summer musical sea- son at 8:15 p.m. Thursday, Jupe 8, in the West Park Shell. * * * Proceeds Announced.. .. Proceeds from the American Le- gion and Auxiliary Poppy ay sales held Saturday totaled $2,071.84. The Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Auxiliary collected the gross amount of $1,513.25. * * * Sg. B oyce Appointed... Sgt. Leon Boyce of the Women's Army Corps has been put in charge of the local WAC recruiting office, replacing Sgt. Virginia Day, who left Ann Arbor yesterday for De- troit. First Lt. Janet Lindner of the Air WAC, is replacing Lt. Barbara Rogers as head of the WAC re- cruiting in the territory which in- cludes Ann Arbor. * * * S couLt Camlip To Oen.. . The Boys Scout Council of Michi- gan will operate its Conservation Camp from July 20 to Aug. 31. Sen- ior scouts, 15 years old and over, can register for the camp. The scouts will camp in tents and will spend about five hours a day in conservation work under the direc- tion of authorities of the State De- partment of Conservation. ** * * Wcaste Paxper C'ollectd .e Fifty-three tons of waste paper was contributed by Ann Arbor res- idents in the drive held last Thurs- day and Friday, according to George H. Sandenburgh, city en- gineer. - - * * * * Driver °Fied .. . Allan James, age 59, of 543 Eliza- beth Street, driver of a car in which he and his companion were injured Tuesday when the car hit a parked automobile in the 1300 block of State Street, was fined $35.70 by Jay H. Payne yesterday. James was charged with driving while intoxicated and for not having a driver's license. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Friday, June 2, at 4 p.m., in Rm. 319 West Medical Bldg. "The Role of the Adrenal Cortex in Metab- olism" will be discussed. All inter- ested are invited. Formal Fun: The USO does it again with another formal dance! There will be an orchestra for dan- cing, and it's a good one. Junior Hostesses, orchestra, refreshments- who wants more? The Research Club: The final meeting of the year will be held in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building at eight o'clock, Wednesday evening, June 7, 1944. Professor John W. Bean will read a paper on "Oxy- gen Poisoning" and Professor Harold E. Wethey on "The Cathedral of Cuz- co, Peru." Officers for the ensuing year will be elected. Horse Show Registration Closes Friday WAA Will Sponsor Nine Riding Contests Registration at the booth in the League Lobby for the Annual Spring Horse Show to be held at 2 p.m. Saturday will be kept open through tomorrow, according to Emily Peter, '45, president of Crop and Saddle, WAA club which is sponsoring the show. All men and women interested in riding are invited to enter the show, which -will have nine competitive events. The show will take place at the Golfside Riding Stables, with transportation to the stables furn- ished. Those who desire transporta- tion will meet in front of Barbour Gym at 1:30 p.m. on the day of the show. The show will be opened by a flag raising ceremony led by Shelby Die- trich, '45, president of WAA, follow- ed by the riding events. Although no prizes will be given, ribbons will be awarded to those placing first, sec- ond and third in each class. Highlight of the show will be a drill presented by eight members of the Crop and Saddle. This drill will demonstrate the horsemanship of the coeds in the club. The Univer- sity Women's Riding Club will ride in the Women's Horsemanship Class. "All members of Crop and Saddle and the University Women's Riding Club must fill out registration blanks also," Miss Peter said, "and it is main- ly for them that we are holding the registration open another day." Deeb Is ienoninated WASHINGTON, May 31.- (. )- The Senate confirmed today the re- nomination of Joseph 'F. Deeb as United States District Attorney for western Michigan. Drive Opens For Women's Land Army With a goal of enrolling 500 women students for Women's Land Army work camps this summer,nstudent leaters at the University and seven other Michigan colleges will begin canvassing prospects this week. Work to be done through July and August will be primarily picking cher- ries and snap beans, according to Miss Ruth Peck, state supervisor at East Lansing. Women who enroll will camp either in the Allegan or Traverse City region. Workers will receive piece work pay averaging 50 cents a lug for cherries with an average day's pick estimated at least five lugs. Snap beans will bring two cents a pound Students in the Women's Land Ar- my will pay for their board out of the earnings and will receive trans- portation back to their Michigan homes if they work two weeks or longer, Miss Peck said. A prelimin- ary work leader's training camp is scheduled for June 19 to 24 at Alle- gan for those eligible to attend. Additional information and appli- cations may also be available in the office of the County Agricultural Agent# or by mail at Miss Peck's office at Morrill Hall, Michigan State College, East Lansing. Gas Rationing? LANSING, May 31.- (P- The StateConservation Department, sup- porting predictions of an improved tourist business this year, reported today that Memorial Day brought out 30 per cent more persons to state parks than on the same holiday a year ago. The increase was attributed to per- fect holiday weather and a mounting desire for recreation. The depart- ment said state parks close to popu- lous centers showed the greatest up- swing in attendance. I "" """"""" _. ceHt o ARM I ... - y .. t, 7: f 1 M 5 ~ , .y ya ,,. .l 7 I'- r . . :. ...,,. I E .. Nl~ Top off your summer skirts, shorts, and pinafores with a peasant blouse. Low necklines trimmed with lace or embroidery . . . perky short sleeves that are cool yet dressy enough for your "big affair." A perfect frame for that summer tan. LANZ ORIGINALS ... from $3.95 i 1. , For that Particular Give a nice piece of 11 ,f 9r - t ti :? 'r' . . : : t r: , e s SHORTS is the Fashion News. Hot sultry days full of plenty of work and play, call for the freedom and coolness of shorts. Types for every figure and occasion. WHITE - COLORS SUSPENDER MODELS ... frm 2.95 I.- - ' , JEWELRY -a preUy pin For INDIVIDUA IZED iI II I El i is 41 I'll