a Official Publication Of The Summer Session ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1934 Wolverines: That's Gridiron Opponents ED met Michigan State, Chicago, and straight Georgia Tech, Coach Bob Zuppke will Confer- bring the Illini here to avenge the 7 [ichigan to 6 defeat of last year, and will be f every followed on the schedule by Minne- .en vic- sota, Wisconsin, Ohio State and Crossing Of Lake Erie Is, Girl'sObject Entered Water At Point Pelee, Ont., Yesterday At 10 A.M. Will Try 33-Mile Swim To Sandusky Brewer May Be Hidden In West Ontario Agents Believe That Labatt Is Being Held Prisoner In Farmhouse Two Contacts Have Already Been Made Discover Eye-witnesses Of Victim's Canture Near rl.e iesota, ashe s ever ich of year, . m the Fa d. Eri wo Boats, To Make, Sarnia a 16. ers of Lake -year-old in what made to er areas an to the TORONTO, ronto police c S. Labatt. k -A To- I held by in wes Alth source of his info nce Brushaber, said the Labatt f k grease and a contacts with .the i into the water Hugh Labatt, a b at 10:55 a.m. in Toronto. swim the 33 The whole invi not far from turn late today v Hugh Labatt ha .ng, she stroked the hotel room .. dls New Cleve rk .............67 d .. . ........58 emplJuIeU. L i-a very unpopular upon the entire am. emphasis on rom unwarrant- administration- 'hopes, and higher prices in re crops are good will measure the drought Students On Summer S OSession Tours' -3 Trip To Proving Ground d And Campus Excursion - Most Successful Approximately 637 students made is tours conducted by the University 1., this summer, according to Prof. Carl h J. Coe, director of excursions for the -2 1934 Summer Session, who announced attendance totals yesterday after- noon. ie While this figure was slightly un- r der the total for 1933, Professor Coe , pointed out thatrit would have shown a considerable increase of last year's 2, totals if it had not been necessary to er cancel the Jackson Prison tour due d to inability to secure permission for tn the trip. n In Professor Coe's opinion, the most er successful of the tours were the first, which was a tour of the campus, and ls the fifth tour, which was the visit to ... the General Motors Proving Grounds' of at Milford. ke The tour of the campus was made j_ by approximately 105 students, a to- tal greatly exceeding the 1933 total, when there was the added feature of a tour of Ann Arbor by automobile. eisfT.. .X.o c.l.n-.4... _a fl a. n_.. "I believe the Lord will come on the Feast of Trumpets," the religious dictator told his flock at prayer meet- ing. "And I believe he will come this year. At the close, of every age God has called a messenger. In Zion there will be a little circle, and God will destroy the rest, "We are in the end . . . things are winding up in Zion." Italian Army, Is Wfithdrawn From Border ROME, Aug 16.-- (AP) -Italy to- day ordered the withdrawal of the 48,000 troops whom she concentrated on the Austrian porder at the time of the Nazi putsch late last month. Several regiments started south from the frontier this iorning im- mediately after their receipt of the order. They were bound for their regular camps, 25 to 50 miles away. Only the normal border garrisons will be retained near the frontier. The withdrawal order was cited in official quarters as proof that Italy believes the situation in Austria has been cleared up. Prince Ernst von Starhemberg, vice chancellor -of Austria, conferred with Premier Mussolini two days ago. He went from Rome. to Venice yester- day and is expected to return to Vienna shortly. Evangelist's Wife Gets Ransom Note GOLDSBORO, N. C., Aug. 16. - JP) - The wife of the Rev. R. H. Askew, an evangelist who has been missing from his home here for two days, dis- closed today that she had received a note telling her to "get $25,000" if she hoped to see him alive again. The twenty-two-year-old evange- list who has been preaching what he terms the "Four-Square Gospel" in a tent here for several months, failed to return from a trip to Smith- field, 25 miles west of here, last Tues- day. His wife, who is about 50 years old, turned over to Sheriff Paul Gar- rison this morning a note which she received through the mails Wednes- "Anxious To Get -Going" "But I slept well last night with the help of one slight medicine tablet," she said. "I was in bed at 9:30 p.m. and slept through until 3 a.m., and I am anxious to get going." A five-mile wind was blowing off- shore when Florence departed from the Canadian shore. The water tem- perature was 74 degrees. The sun shone brightly at intervals through- out the day, and by afternoon there was barely any wind and the lake's surface was comparatively smooth. Before her start the girl ate a solid breakfast of fried bacon and eggs, but during the trip her nourishment was limited to liquid foods, princi- pally meat broths and cocoa which Coach Schell prepared from time to time aboard the Cbast Guard craft.. Florence planned to drink the nour- ishment at two-hour intervals. Three Summer amp Sessions To End Today' By C. BEACH CONGER Sessions in the remaining three' University Summer Session camps will close today concurrently with the termination of classes in Ann Ar- bor. Members at the Geological and Ge- ographical Field Station left their camp at Mill Springs, Ky., July 21, and spent a week on a survey trip through Virginia to Washington, D. C. The other three camps which con- tinued their sessions were Camp Da- yis, the University's engineering and surveying camp at Jackson, Wyo., Camp. Filibert Roth, the Forestry camp on the Hiawatha National Re- serve near Munising, and the Biologi- cal Station on Douglas Lake near Cheboygan. Students at the western station have planned survey trips throughout the West, visiting mainly engineering and irrigation projects of especial in- terest to the students. Two foreign students, Hasan T. Rufai, '36, Najaf, Iraq, and Hussein T. Saffar, '36E, Bagdad, Iraq, plan an extensive au- tomobile tour for an examination of Ameridan irrigation systems, and many students plan to visit the Boul- der Dam project. No special plans have been an- nrnnuaq h th nthpr +wmn namno National League W New York ............71 Chicago............67 St. Louis ...... ......65 Boston....... .....56 Pittsburgh...........54 Brooklyn............46 Philadelphia ......44 Cincinnati........40 L 41 45 46 55 55 63 66 72 Boston ........... .60 53 Washington ........... 49 59 St. Louis ............... 47 59 Philadelphia.........44 61 Chicago ...............38 74 Yesterday's Results All games postponed, rain and grounds. Today's Games Detroit at New York (2). Cleveland at Washington (2). St. Louis at Boston (2). Chicago at Philadelphia (2). .531 .454 .443 .419 .339 wet Pct. .634 .598 .586 .505 .495 .422 .4001 .357 49 -,542 Yesterday's Results Chicago 3-1, Boston 2-6 (First game 10 innings). St. Louis 4-4, Philadelphia 3-1. Cincinnati 8, Brooklyn'1. New York at Pittsburgh, rain. ' of breaks in running up 14 straight. l It is just beginning a tough trip around the East and may be due for a slump. The Yankees are not fi out of it, not by a long shot.st "We have a long home stand that ei should bring the club back to its best. a Johnny Broaca's fine pitching yester- e day was one of the tonics we needed.,i There's one thing you can depend on - the Yankees will keep fighting." "We'll keep bearing down," coun- a tered Cochrane, "and win every gamew we can.1I'm not claiming the pennant yet myself but I don't see how this ball club of ours is going to be stopped, the way 'it's hitting." Cochrane said he planned to start Eldon Auker, his freshman pitching star, in the first game of tomorrow's double-header. He is not decided n whether to start Vic Sorrell, one of a his veterans, or to give the sensa- is tional Schoolboy Rowe another crack n at the Yankees in the second game. C Today's Games New York at Pittsburgh (2). Boston at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis. Brooklyn at Cincinnati k Michigan Repertory Players End Sixth Successful Seasoi f CE For six summers, the Michigan Repertory Players have furnished en- tertainment for the Summer Session at the University of Michigan. The, Players are, in reality, the -students ,and faculty of the University who are interested in the courses in Play, Production. With the conclusion of the current summer, the Players will have pro- duced a total of 46 plays of almost every type and period. The produc- tion of the play does not consist mere- ly of the actual performance but in- cludes the construction of all the scenery by the classes in stagecraft, the making of the costumes by the classes in costuming, and the building and painting of such stage equipment as is necessary by the classes in play is large.- In fact, the production costs received h during the summer exclusive of thea- ifornia in tre rental and play royalties total he was an over $1,000. The plays are entirely Princeton self-supporting through the income ilar post a received for theatre admissions. He was The average expenditure during a the New season is $4,000. The income for the sion while season approximates very little more. tion, his : In the event that a profit is made, the a special amount is put into a sinking fund to author. of meet emergencies. Averaging out all line of Ec six seasons, they have paid their own - way.-- way. Divinit - The entire business responsibility for the plays rests in the Department To 1 of Speech and General Linguistics, The Re and during the past four years has The R been handled by Carl G. Brandt of hbrarian: that denartment The direction nf the ! School, a: