fJLY 12, 1936~ TiH MICHTIGAN DAILY ' AGE Tun= NEWS Of The DAY (From The Associated Press) Mrs. Owen Weds Danish Captain HYDE PARK, N. Y., July 11.- (A)-While President Roosevelt beamed his approval, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, United States min- ister to Denmark, was married today to Captain Boerge Rohde, a gentleman in waiting to Den- mark's King Christian X. The blue-eyed Captain stooped gallantly at one point in the cere- mony and picked up a handker- chief Mrs. Owen dropped. , Between 70 and 80 guests were present in James' Chapel, the Roosevelts' family church when the Rev. Samuel Shoemaker, pas- tor of Calvary Episcopal church in New York, read the brief serv- ice. Captain Rohde clasped the hand of his bride, who is the daughter of the late William Jennings Bryan and the United States' firs} woman envoy, and kissed her at the end of the cere- mony. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, in flowered blue chiffon and a big hat, greeted many of the guests at the door and told them "sit where you please." Mayor Misses Date With Extortionist ROCKFORD, I11., July 11.-(P) -Mayor George S. Brydia, of Prophetstown, was late tonight for his rendezvous with an ex- tortionist who threatened to blow up the village's business district unless he was paid $1,000. Brydia, who has served 16 years in office and is one of the prin- cipal grocers of the town of 1,- 500, drove here with Sheriff Em- ery Thornell of Whiteside Coun- ty. They joined Sheriff Paul John- son of Winnebago County and the three dined leisurely at a res- taurant, a half mile away from the Rockford Public Library where Brydia was to have met the man who sent him the extor- tion letter Wednesday. Flanked by the two sheriffs, Mayor Brydia drove pastethe hi- brary several times, both eyes peeled for the man who said he was from the "Lamorra Society," and "meant business" when he instructed the mayor to collect $10 apiece from 50 Prophetstown business men. The extortionist was not in sight. The mayor and his body guards did not get out of their automo- bile and it could not be deter- mined immediately whether he still carried the empty shoe box adorned with red cord which was the receptacle in which the ex- tortioner ordered the money placed. Mickey Cochrane To Leave For Detroit CODY, Wyo., July 11.-(')- Mickey Cochrane, manager of the Detroit Tigers, packed his grips for departure from Cody tonight to rejoin his team after a three- week rest cure on a dude ranch. Hearing at his hotel room that Washington defeated Detroit in today's game, Mickey said: "They're a great bunch of boys and Baker (Coach Del Baker) is doing a swell job. Those Tigers are getting lined out and will give some team a lot of trouble." Commenting on the lead of the New York Yankees in the Amer- ican League race, Cochrane said "bigger leads than that have been wiped out in a short time, and there is still lots of time." The Tiger manager expects to resume play shortly after his re- turn to Detroit, after the New York series. Call Is Issued For WPA Projects DETROIT, July 11.-A'P)-A call for Michigan communities to submit new WPA projects for consideration was issued today by Harry L. Pierson as the state administrator made plans for the second year of the Works Pro- gress Administration in the state. Summer Term Sports Events BeginMonday Summer Seson Program Opens With Swimming Competition At 5:15 The first of a series of summer school intramural sport tournaments will begin at 5:15 p.m. tomorrow when the swimmers will complete a 25- year free style swim. The swimming contestants will meet every Monday and Wednesday until all 10 events in the meet are completed. Up to today, 15 persons have signed up for this sport. With a half dozen other sports scheduled to get under way Wednes- day, Ernie Smith, director of the summer program ,announced that the deadline for entering any sport is set for Monday afternoon at 6 p.m. No entries will be received after that time. A complete announcement of pair- ings and programs in the various in- tramural sports will be announced in Tuesday's issue of the Daily. The leading sport, tennis, will have at least 64 entries; table tennis, a new sport here, 19; handball, 18; golf at least 30. These figures may be larg- er after Monday's registration. Golfers in the meet may purchase regular student tickets at 50 cents for 18 holes, or 10 tickets for $4.00. Ribbons will be awarded to winners and runners-up of all sports, with the privilege of buying a .trophy througt the intramural department, Smith said. Despite the hot weather the past few days, many handball en- thusiasts have been practicing up for the tournament, he stated. Tennis players also have been warming up under the hot sun. Kemutz Plans Great Future For Movement (Continued from rage 1) sale houses in central points, as the one we anticipate in Lansing," he said. "We will follow with factories, when the demands of the coopera- tives' membership is sufficient, and after a time one can walk into a co- operative and know that he is getting the best product on the market." Speaking of the local cooperative movement, Mr. Kemitz said that it will develop "slowly but surely. After all," he said, "the people's money will be better taken care of if we grow gradually." (At present, the cooperative gro- cery store is being begun in the gar- age of Mr. Hill). There is one of every five families in the world today in a cooperative and one out of every 20 persons is a member of a cooperative, Mr. Kem- nitz said. As a world movement he believes it cannot be stopped because it is too firmly entrenched in Europe, where he said the largest businesses in Eng- land and Sweden were cooperative, and growing too rapidly in this coun- try. As encouraging signs Mr. Kemnitz pointed to Henry Wallace's "Who's Constitution," which favorably sug- gests the. cooperative system as the "way out," and President Roosevelt's recently-appointed committee of three to study the movement in Europe.. It is his hope that his Wednesday lecture will take the form of a dis- cussion and that some of those at- tending will form a permanent sum- mer society for a study of the move- ment. Gov. Landon Conf ers With Frank Lowden Frank O. Lowden (left), former governor of Illinois, and Governor Alf M. Landon of Kansas, Republican presidential nominee, are shown as they conferred on agricultural problems at Topeka, Kas. Gov. Landon is expected to discuss the farm question in his acceptance speech July 23. Story Of Graduate Imprisoned As SpFor Two Years Is Told (Continued from Page 1) avoiding giving direct information as to the type of position he was going into with the statement that it was "merely statistical work." Several months later, word was received from the Jacobsons in Berlin. And then, in the fall of 1933, came the surprising news of his arrest in Hel- sinki as a Commusist spy, along with a gang of Soviet agents, ranging from the Finnish capital to Paris. Friends in Northville finally suc- ceeded in securing the release of Mrs. Jacobson, and then raising money for her return to the United States. She immediately protested their inno- cence, and told her story this way: Jacobson was, admittedly, a Com- munist "sympathizer," she said, and he obtained a position as a statis- tician for the Communist party in New York. Then he was transferred to Berlin, where he went willingly be- cause he could study at the Uni- versity of Berlin. All of this time, Mrs. Jacobson claims, her husband did not know that the true nature of his work was espionage, and he did not discover it until they were sud- denly transferred to Helsinki. As soon as he found out that he was really a red spy, according to Mrs. Jacobson, he asked Communist lead- ers to release him from his work. This, they told him, they could not do im- mediately, but would try to oblige hin) eventually.. Then the trap was sprung, and the Northville school teacher found him- self within the shadow of a Finnish firing squad. His case aroused considerable at- tention. Sen. Arthur H. Vanden- berg, through the state department in Washington, looked into the sit- uation, provided Jacobson with coun- sel and stood by to see that he had a fair trial. He decided to tell the Fin- nish authorities all he knew, provid- ed they gave him a light sentence. Hei received five years ,while some of his alleged accomplices were sentenced to 20 years, life imprisonment and death. Mrs. Jacobson, in Michigan, de- nounced the whole trial as trickery. And then, when her husband refused to eat a year ago, she became ill with fear. Again, her friends urged the American legation in Helsinki to in- tercede, which it did, finally getting him to take food after more than a week of "striking." . Jacobson was well treated in the Turku prison. He was'allowed to do mechanical drawing, despite the fact DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Thiletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy reeceived at t he ofice of the Summer Session, Room 1213 Angell Hal" until 3:30: 11:00 a.in. on Saturday. he was sentenced to "hard labor," and to all appearances he was a model prisoner. But he only could write and receive one letter a week, to and from his wife, and he wanted his freedom. Now that he has it, what the future holds for him in the United States no one knows. He is, more or less, on the spot. The Communists are against him for "squealing," and the anti-reds are against him for being hooked up with the Communists. He has not indicated his plans, and Mrs. Jacobson, at last reports studying in the University of Chicago, has not yet been reached. There is a possibility, his friends believe, that he may enroll as a grad- uate student here at the University of Michigan. Varied Sermons To Feature Services (Continued from Page 1) speak on "An Untried Religion: The Old Testament." This is the first of two lectures to be given by Professor Waterman on the Old and New Tes- taments. "The Wisdom of the Human Body" is the subject of the sermon to be given by the Rev. Allison Ray Heaps at 10:45 p.m. today in the Congrega- tional Church. The Rev. Theodore Schmale, pastor of the Bethlehem Evangelical Church, will preach on "Increase of Faith" at the service at 10:30 a.m. The Sunday morning service of St. Andrew's Episcopal church will be conducted by the Rev. Henry Lewis. A special evening entertainment is planned for Summer Session students at the summer home of Mr. F. J. Da- vidson at Whitmore Lake. Cars will leave the church aG 5 p.m. "Creative Personality" is the sub- ject of the sermon to be given by Dr. Walter S. Ryder at 11 a.m. at the Unitarian Church. (Continued from Page 2) sing Hamblen's "Cast Thy Burden on the Lord." A special invitation is extended to Congregational summer students. Summer School Students: The reg- ular Sunday evening meeting for Episcopal students will be held this evening at the cottage of Mr. F. J. Davidson at Whitmore Lake., Cars will leave St. Andrew's Church at 5 p.m. All students and their friends are cordially invited. Stalker 11all: Wesleyan Guild meet- ing Sunday at 6 p.m. Prof. Preston Slosson will speak on "Christianity's Answer to International Questions." Fellowship hour and refreshments following the meeting. First Methodist Church: Morning worship at 10:45 a.m. Dr. William E. Harrison, Superintendent of Ann Arbor District, will preach on "The Mood of Emancipation." First Baptist Church, Sunday: 10:45 a.m., Morning worship. Ser- mon by minister, Rev. R. Edward Sayles, on "The Difficulties of Faith." The Church School meets at 9:30 a.m. Roger Williams Guild, student or- ganization, 6 p.m. in the parlors of the Guild House, 503 E. Huron St., opposite the church. Prof. Leroy Wa- terman will give the first of two spe- cial addresses, speaking on "An Un- tried Religion: The Old Testament." Next Sunday evening the second de- velopment will be, "An Untried Re- ligion: The New Testament." Op- portunity for questions will be given. A social.period and refreshments will follow the program. Church of Crhist (Disciples) 10:45 a.m., Morning worship, Rev. Fred Cowin, minister. 12 noon, Student Bible Class, H. L. Pickerill, leader. 8 p.m., Dr. Wilhelm Pauck of Chi- cago will address students at the Con- gregational Church on "Critical Is- sues of Contemporary Culture." The picnic that had been tentatively planned for Sunday evening is post- poned. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship today are: 8 a.m. Holy Communion; 11 a.m., inder- garten; 11 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon by The Rev. Henry Lewis. The Graduate Outing Club will meet at Lane Hall on Sunday, July 12 at 3 p.m. sharp where they will be taken to Base Lake for a swim and picnic supper. The approximate cost will be 45c. Those who have cars should bring them in order to pro- vide transportation for every one. A refund will be made to those furnish- ing cars. All graduate students are cordially invited to attend this and other meetings of the club during the summer. Library ,Science Department: Fac- ulty and students of the department of Library Science are most cordially invited to attend a Get-Acquainted Tea to be served in the Garden of the Michigan League, Sunday, July 12, at 6 p.m. Tickets may be pur- chased from Mrs. Smith at the Study Hall desk until this noon. Price 35 cents. Foreign Student Reception and Tea: All foreign students enrolled in the Summer Session are invited to an informal tea to be given by Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students, and Mrs. Nelson in the Grand Rapids Room of the Mich- igan League next Sunday, July 12 from 4 to 6 p.m. Students enrolled for the first time are especially urged to avail themselves of this opportuni- ty to meet other foreign students and members of the faculty in the inter- national groups. J. Raleigh Nelson. Conference on Religion, July 12, 13 and 14: Prof. Wilhelm Pauck, Chicago TheologicaluSeminary, will deliver three lectures-the opening lecture, Sunday at 8 p.m., at the First Con- gregational Church upon "Our Cul- ture and the Outlook for Christian- ity." Two lectures upon "Unrealized Spiritual Resources of the Bible" will be given by Prof. Leroy Waterman, one of the translators who produced "An American Translation," (1927), 2 p.m. Monday and Tuesday. A Symposium by men representing Medicine, Religion and Psychology will discuss "Common Problems of Religion and Mental Hygiene." 3 p.m. Rare manuscripts will be exhibited Monday by Prof. Henry A. Sanders who will give two lectures upon "The Epistles of Paul in the Third Cen- tury," Monday and Tuesday at 11 a.m. Most of the sessions will be in the Grand Rapids room at the League. Open to all members of the Summer Session. E. W. Blakeman, Counselor in Re- ligious Education. There will be a joint meeting of the Men's and Women's Education Clubs in the ballroom of the Michigan Union Monday at 7:30 p.m. Dr. Pres- ton Slosson of the department of history, will speak on the American Presidency. "Pirates of Penzance." Final try- outs for both chorus and principals at 4:30 pm. Monday at the Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Everyone interested in being in this musical to be given by the Michigan Repertory Players and the School of Music should re- port at this time. At 4:05 Monday afternoon Dr. H. C. Hutchins of the staff of the Edu- cation Policies Commission, will lee- ture on "Appraising Human Re- sources," in the University High School Auditorium. Niagara Falls Excursion: Reserva- tions for the Niagara Falls excursion, July 17 to 19, which is open to all stu- dents of the Summer Session and friends, should be made at the Sum- mer Session Office. These reserva- tions should be made preferably by Tuesday, July 14, in order to assure hotel accommodations, but will be It Does Make a Laugh at the - Thermometer! a Kee Cool o ,u in Wvashable- SI LK July Clearance Price $500 and,$895 RISING mercury won't bother you, for you can depend on printed crepes to keep you cool and crisp!,They're wash- able ...smart ....and' so inexpensive. DIFFERENCE Who Cleans Your WH ITE CLOTHES You Always Get The Best Quality When You Call ..