SATURDAY. JUNE 8 1946 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WAC, Colonel Held for Theft Of Valuable Hessian Jewelsj By The Associated Press W A SHINGTON, June 7 - The Army today revealed the arrest of a WAC Captain and her colonel-hus- band in the story-book theft of a fabulous $1,500,000 of jewels and other treasure from a castle owned by the ancient German House of Hesse. Two others-a major still on active duty and a corporal who has been discharged---are sought, but their ar- rest is expected momentarily. Of the treasure itself-diamonds, pearls, amethysts and royal heir- Prison Laxity Sign of State Illness' -- Kelly JACKSON, Mich., June 7-(IP)- Conditions which led to the investi- gation and ouster of officials at the State Prison of Southern Michigan were "an outward and rather spec- tacular symptom of an illness that is still unremedied," Raymond J. Kelly asserted here today. Kelly, Republican aspirant for gov- ernor in the June 18 primary elec- .tions, declared that "as long as a political machine holds the state gov- ernment in its grasp, there is always the probability that such corrup- ion may flourish in other branches of government. "The shocking episode of the re- cent laxity at the southern Michigan State Prison was-only a symptom of the disease that is destroying honest, efficient administration in all branch- es of your state government," he de- clared. Kelly charged . that state penal system with being "politics-ridden" and "so soft that a' notorious law breaker was allowed to escape and terrorize the nation before his orgy of crime was ended by the police of another state. "Conditions that allowed such lax- ity to develop are still unchanged," he continued. "When the heads of your government begin playing poli- tics with their responsibliity and au- thority, they open the way for more unscrupulous men to invade your state and prey on its citizens." Amputee Film Scheduled An Army film on the rehabilita- tion of Percy Jones amputees will be shown at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday in the Rackham- Amphitheatre. looms-officials recovered that part which they said was the woman's toot. They placed this at 25 to 50 per cent of the hoard. The rest, they said, went to the colonel. The author- ities do not have this portion now but indicated they know where it can be found. Col. A. C. Miller of the Provost Marshal General's Office and his as- sistant, Lt. Col. J. S. Myers, unfolded the story at a news conference. They told it as follows: The hoard, in a lead-lined casket within a wooden box, ,was hidden in the deepest cellar of the 100-room Kronberg Castle near Frankfurt-on- Main, which susequently was taken over for an officers' rest :home. When Third Army troous first moved into the area, thirsty GIs went hunting for liquor in the castle. They found 1,800 bottles of choice wines. Then they found 1,600 bottles of very ancient vintage more carefully hidden near the treasure hoard. The cir- cumstances indicated something else was hidden. The corporal is alleged to have carried on the search, dug up the jewels and turned them over to the WAC, who was in charge of the rest home. Where the major came in, and just how the hoard was smuggled to this country, were not disclosed immediately. At any rate the major and the cor- poral, Miller said, apparently did not get their share. It was not any tip from those two but the subsequent marriage of the WAC and the colonel, Miller related, that aroused the suspicion of Army authorities and set them on the trail. The jewels had been buried be- neath the castle in the fall of 1944 when heavy Allied air raids convinced the members of the Hesse family, relatives of Queen Victoria of Eng- land, that they would be safer there than in their bank vaults. Yet .tom s or MAay Total $700,0 DETROIT, June 7 -(/')-- Loans totaling $27,362,265.43 were made to veterans through last month, the Detroit regional office of the Veter- ans' Administration announced to- day. The loans went to 9,839 veterans, the Administration office said. The veterans' educational program has an enrollment of 36,201, while an additional 3,951 disabled veterans have been placed in training "on the job." Sold jers Decry Arm"y Injustice In Germany 7 7Refire l o hSf SI i(tlenanfl's Tril fy The Associated Press BAD NAUHEIM, Germany, June 7 -- Seventeen American soldiers, staging a mass protest against what they called Army injustices," re- fused to testify today at the trial of a lieutenant charged with brutality to U.S. Soldiers, and thereby forced the prosecution to wind up its case against another officer. One witness, Pfc. Peter Claim, 21, of Uniontown, Pa., declared the Lich- field Detention Camp case trials "are the biggest frame job I've seen in the Army, and I want justice." Another, Aubrey L. Richey, 22, of Birmingham, Ala., asserted he would testify "only if this case goes to the United States, which beyond doubt is the only place where justice will be done." The seventeen refused to testify at the trial of Lt. Leonard W. Ennis of Peekskill, N.Y., charged with mis- treating inmates of the 10th Re- placement Depot Guardhouse at' Lichfield. They today refused to talk even though threatened with military punishment. Several of the men-each of whom declared he had not talked with the other witnesses-criticized the $60 fine imposed on Pfc. William B. Nor- ris, of Mulga, Okla., who was con- victed Wednesday. Pvt. Otto C. Holt, of Gilman, Ill., declared "I'm not going to be better off if I testify in this trial, and I'm certainly not going to be worse off." "From what I've seen of the Ar- my, I've not seen much justice," he said. "Somebody beats me on the head and gets a $60 fine. I go AWOL and get 20 years. I don't think ano- ther six months will hurt me." Hold Your Rloils TRUMAN SHAKES HANDS WITH NOMINEES-Pre resident Truman shakes hands with Fred M. Vinson (left) and John W. Snyder (right) in Washington, after nominating Vinson to be chief justice of the United States and Snyder to succeed Vinson as secretary of the treasury. DISPUTE RAGES: Murray's OppOSitiOn to Case Bill Mttacked by Six Senators By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, June 8--Six sena- tors hit back today at CIO President Phillip Murray's criticism of the Case Labor Disputes Bill as pressure by opposing sides for a presidential ap- proval or a veto reached a peak. In a lengthy statement, Senators Ball (Rep., Minn.), Byrd (Dem., Va.), Ellender (Dem., La.), Hatch (Dem.' N.M.), Smith (Rep., N.J.) and Taft (Rep., Ohio) asserted that an analysis of the bill issued by Murray Sunday DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LOST AND FOUND LOST: Black and gold Shaeffer pen. Initials "E.L.S.". Reward. Please call Enid, 7672. (11 LOST: Chi Omega pin with name Florence Murray on back, between E. University and Washtenaw on Willard. Reward! Call Nancy 2- 1146. (9 HELP WANTED PART TIME WORK: Male or female. Evenings and weekends. Dining room and other work. Barton Hills Country Club. Phone 8656. (7 WANTED: Athletic counsellor; also male secretary with typing and bookkeeping experience. Private boys' camp. June 23-August 24. Phone 7265. MEN for part time work on farm, preferably with farm background and experience. Laboratory orch- ard, 1831 Traver Road. Phone 8023. (10 HELP WANTED: Male drug clerk, full or part time, experience pre- ferred. Top pay. Apply Witham Drug Company in person only. WANTED TO RENT HIGHEST PRICE! Paid for a one or two bed room furnished apartment. Lease of two or more years re- quired. Occupancy at earliest con- venience. Best references. Care given property. Call Kashmiry 2- 5553. (28 A RECORD! Up to $250 per month for a furnished house up to 6 (min- imum of 4 required) bed rooms. Wanted by a family at earliest convenience for a lease of more than 2 years. No children. Best references. Call A. Aly, 2-5553. (1 WANTED WANTED: Driving to Seattle, Wash- ington, June 23. Two students to help drive and share expense. Ref- erences exchanged. Phone 8794. (12 WANTED: Girl's bicycle with shift, in good condition. July or sooner. Call 3185. (3 WANTED: Either Bolex H-16, Filmo Sportster, or B&H Aristocrat. Pay top price. Other makes considered. Call 8156. (8 MIDWAY Bicycle Shop, 322 E. Lib- erty. We have rebuilt used bikes for sale. Your bike can be expertly repaired also. WANTED: Paying guests for dinners at Chi Omega house for summer session. Tel. 2-4808. FOR RENT A FEW rooms still available for sum- mer session in Washtenaw fratern- ity house. Call Ypsi 2808W3. (25 FOR SALE WILL SELL A.B. Cap and Gown. Call 8024 mornings. For $9 plus price of ad. (13 FOR SALE: Whizzer Motorbike. Ex- cellent condition. Equipped. Phone 2-5645, 6 to 9 p.m. (14 ENGINEERING books and equipment for sale. 1 transit (Heller & Bright- ly). 1 tripod. 1 flow meter. Volumes I thru VIII Encyclopedias of Civil Engineering (American Technical Society). J. O. Greenway, Jr., 713 W. Oliver St., Owosso, Michigan. FOR SALE: Knee-hole study desk. Reasonable. 1615 E. Stadium. Ph. 5651. FOR SALE: 1 Senior Ball ticket. Call 2-4561, Room 491. 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. or after 4:00 p.m. FOR SALE: Naval officer's bridge coat, size 38 small. Practically new. Inquire at 523 N. Main, Apt. 1. Evenings. (23 FOR SALE: Lynx fur coat. Size 14. Very cheap as it is quite worn. Phone 4143, ext. 38. (26 MISCELLANEOUS HILDEGARDE SEWING SHOP, 116 E. Huron. Let us make your drapes, alterations, and custom made clothes! Phone 2-4669. rublication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the President, 1)21 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1946 VOL. LVI, No. 159 Notices Faculty Tea: President and Mrs Ruthven will be at home to members of the faculty and other townspeople Sunday, June 9, from 4:00 to 6:00. Cars may park in the restricted zone on South University between 4:001 and 6:30 p.m. Tickets for Graduation Exercises: Entrance tickets to Ferry Field and Yost Field House for the graduation' exercises on June 22 are ready for distribution. Please apply at the In-, formation Desk, in the Business Of- fice, Room 1, University Hall. Those' eligible to receive tickets will please present theid identification cards. For Ferry Field a reasonable num- ber of tickets to each graduate will be available; to Yost Field House, however, owing to lack of space, three only can be provided. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Notice to all Graduating Engineer- ing Students: Caps and Gowns for the Commencement Exercises will be available for rental Monday and Tuesday afternoons, June 10 and 11, from 1 to 5 in the Garden Room of the Michigan League. All Engineer- ing students must make their-rentals on one of these days, as they will not be available after Tuesday. Student Accounts: Your attention is called to the following rules pass- ed by the Regents at their meeting of February 28, 1936: "Students shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes each semester or Summer Session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; however, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and; "(a) All academic credits will be withheld, the grades for the semester or Summer Session just completed will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such ac- counts will not be allowed to register in any §ubgequent semester or Sum- mer Session until payment has been made." Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Faculty, College of Engineering: There will be a meeting of the Fac- ulty of this College on Monday, June 10, at 4:15 p.m., in Room 348, West Engineering Building. Senior leather bound and card- board announcements will be ready for distribution Monday, June 1'0, and Tuesday, June 11, and may be picked up between the hours of 10 to 12 and 1 to 3 in Room 4, Univer- sity Hall, on those days. Seniors are required to bring either their re- ceipts or their identification cards to obtain their orders. Every senior should check his order to see that it is correct as no corrections will be made after the student leaves the room. For those who are unable to pick up their leather and cardboard orders on June 10 and 11, there will be a later distribution on June 18 from 1 to 4 in Room 2. German Departmental Library Books are due in the departmental office on June 10 regardless of thej due date stamped in the book. Students having lockers at Water- man Gymnasium should clear lockers and secure refund prior to June 20. Graduate School Summer Session registration material will be avail- ! able at the Graduate School Office starting Jude 10. Summer Session (Continued on Page 4) BEER VAULT Beer - Wine - Mixers - Keg Beer 10 to 10 Daily 8 A.M. to 11 P.M. Sat. 303 N. 5th Ave. Ph. 8200 "shows clearly that the CIO is op- posed to any restriction on the right of unions to conduct a strike in any industry at any time and in further- ance of any demands they see fit." Murray Asks Veto Murray had called for a veto of the bill, on which the President must act by midnight Wednesday with the assertion that it was designed to "repress labor and destroy its rights" and would "encourage and increase labor disputes." The Case measure would among other things establish mediation machinery, create fact-finding boards in public utility disputes, make unions subject to contract suits. The six senators said Murray's position is "tenable only if we agree with certain basic premises upon which he proceeds: "1. That the right to strike is an absolute right, the exercise of which may under no conditions by curtailed or restrained, even when it threatens to deprive the public of transporta- tion, fuel, light, water, and other essentials of life. "2. That labor organizations should be immune from laws applying to all others, which prohibit robbery and extortion in interstate commerce. Immunity from Anti-Trust Laws "3. That labor organizations should be immune from the anti-trust laws, which apply to all others, although the purpose and effect may be the same when done by labor organiza- tions as when done by any others. "4. That although all others who engage in business are responsible for the acts of their agents acting within the scope of their authority, labor unions should not be held re- sponsible. "5. That although a labor organ- ization is treated as an entity for purposes of exemption from taxation and for purposes of exercising privi- leges under the Wagner Act, it should not be treated as an entity for pur- pose of suit for violation of its con- tracts. Music Camp Expects Record Student Group A record enrollment of approxi- mately 900 students is expected by the National Music Camp at Inter- lochen for the forthcoming 19th an- nual season, from July 1 to August 24. This estimated figure includes stu- dents from 45 states in the Union, two from Panama, several from Can- ada, and one each from Bolivia and Chile. The number does not include the 300 students who will participate in the All-State High School Band, Orchestra, and Chorus, each of which will meet for a two-week period of intensive training. Courses in art, including drawing and painting, will be offered for the first time on the college level and may be taken for University credit. These subjects will be taught in the new Fine Arts Building, which has been given to the camp by the Mich- igan Federation of Women's Clubs. Other courses on the college level will include music, speech and physi- cal education for women. Two new additions to the faculty are Karl A. Kasten, instructor in painting at the University, and Mar- garet Wardle, graduate, who will teach harp. Band To Hold Spring Banquet The University of Michigan Band will hold its annual Spring Banquet at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the Allenel Hotel. Guest speakers will include Prof. Fred Wahr of the German Depart- ment, who was once manager of the band, Dean Keniston and Prof. John Brumn, who will officiate as toast- master. Prof. and Mrs. Earl Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Wat- kins will be special guests. Dean Rae will present awards, one of which will be given to the most valuable band member. This will be the first band Spring Banquet since 1940. Two Crimes Linked with KKK Group 'Strong Arin' Iand Is Charged with Killing ATLANTA, June 7--t ?-A Geor- gia assistant attorney general re- ported today his undercover agents had linked an inner "strong arm" group of the revived Ku Klux Klan with a killing and a flogging. Dan Duke, who is conducting the state legal department's investiga- tion of Klan activities by order of Gov. Ellis Arnall, said that mem- bers of the Kavalir Klub boasted openly of the two crimes, Publication of the charges in At- lanta newspapers drew from Dr. Samuel Green, a physician who is Georgia grand dragon of the Klan, a statement that they were "idiotic." "Next they'll be accusing us of starting the LaSalle Hotel fire in Chicago," he said. "Or I would't be surprised if they blame us for the maritime strike." He said every klansman took an oath to uphold the iaw and to help prosecute any klansman found vio- lating the law. Duke said the crimes his secret agents attributed to the Kavalier Klub were the slaying of a Negro taxi driver and the flogging by a masked band of a 21-year-old Negro Navy vetei'an, The Kavalier Klub, Duke said, is composed of specially chosen repre- sentatives from all the Klan klaverns or chapters in the Atlanta area. No one outside the Kavalier group knows who its members are. Duke described the Kavalier Klub as the strong arm or "meat squad" of the Klan. Its members were cho- sen, he said, for their brawn and willingness to commit terroristic acts. Student Authors To Be Honored Hopwood Winners Will Be Revealed Tuesday Winners of the Avery and Jule Hopwood contests will be announced after the annual Hopwood Lecture at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Lec- ture Hall. There are 38-contestants in this year's contests, submitting a total of 41 manuscripts in the major and minor divisions of the creative writ- ing contest. Two more manuscripts were.submitted this year in the major division and 20 fewer in the minor. Competition is for between $5,000 and $6,000 in prizes. The amount of each award is determined by judges selected in advance by the Hopwood Committee. The speaker at this year's Hop- wood Lecture will be Dean Harlan Hatcher of the literary college of Ohio State University. Dean Hatcher is the author of numerous books in- cluding "Tunnel Hall," "Creating the Modern American Novel," "The Ver- sification of Robert Browning" and "Lake Erie" which is one of the five volumes in the "American Lake Series." Continuous COOL from 1-.. O L Week Days 30c to 5 P.M. Last Times Today i I I i) i } 4 North Main Opposite Court House -- STARTS TODAY Roy Rogers in "RAINBOW OVER TEXAS" --- plus "SMOOTH AS SILK" World News and Serial Chapter 12 -- Last Day Today --_- COL .EFINGIIAM'S RAID with Joan Bennett ---and--__ LIVE WIRES - Starts Sunday THE BANDIT OF SHERWOOD FOREST ------- and BEHIND GREEN LIGHTS -I Vera Hruba RALSTON . William MARSHAL. Coming Sunday r u' I I 1f 11 MICHIGAN. *A i * *- e ill e t \ Don't worry about your money! Use TRAVELER'S CHEOUES MEN'S Used Clothing Wanted. Best prices paid. Sam's Store, 122 East Washington. I Telephone 3008 We Deliver 7Q a.m. Open 11:00 a.m. to 1 :C HOI lit I 1% r bq iUsir U 1 WA-