THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, mown" THE MICHIGAN DAILY Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service.. MEMBER Associtd Soll2egat 'dress -x1934 Queowel I1935-E MArnso WSCOSIN MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. 11 West 42nd Street,.New York, N.Y. -400 N. Michigan Ave. Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ............. THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR............THOMAS E. GROEHN ASSOCIATE EDITOR...............JOHN J. FLAHERTY SPORTS EDITOR ...................WILLIAM R. REED WOMEN'S EDITOR ..............JOSEPHINE T. McLEAN MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF EDITORSO .HEY .. ..DOROTHY S. GIES, JOHN C. HELEY EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS News Editor...........................Elsie A. Pierce Editorial Writers: Robert Cummins and Marshall D. Shul- man. Night Editors: Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Rich- ard G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, and .Bernard..Weissman," SPORTS ASSISTANTS: George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred Delano, Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy A. Briscoe, Florence H. Davies, Olive . Griffith, Marion T. Holden, Lois M. King, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfe. REPORTERS: E. Bryce Alpern, Leonard Bleyer, Jr, Wil- iam A. Bles, Lester Brauser, Albert Carlisle, Rich- ard Cohen, Arnold S. Daniels, William John DeLancey, Robert Eckhouse, John J. Frederick, Carl Gerstacker, Warren Gladders, Robert Goldstine, John Hinckley, S. Leonard Kasle, Richard LaMarca,rHerbert W. Little, Earle J. Luby, Joseph S. Mattes, Ernest L. McKenzie, Arthur A. Miller, Stewart Orton, George S. Quick, Robert D. Rogers, William Scholz, William E. Shackle- ton, Richard Sidder, I. S. Silverman, William C. Spaller, Tuure Tenander, and Robert Weeks. Helen Louise Arner, Mary Campbell, Helen Douglas, Beatrice Fisher, Mary E. Garvin, Betty J. Groomes, Jeanne Johnson, Rosalie Kanners, VirginiasKenner, Barbara Lovell, Marjorie Mackintosh, Louise Mars, Roberta Jean Melin, Barbara Spencer, Betty Strick- root, Theresa Swab, Peggy Swantz, and Elizabeth Whit- ney. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ..........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER ...........JOSEPH A. ROTH3ARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGERS . ........TAD ......MARGARET COWIE, ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS: Local advertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Con- tracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohgemuth; Circulation and National Advertising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publications Lyman Bitt- man. BUSINESS -ASSISTANTS: Jerome I. Balas, Charles W. Barkdul, D. G. Bronson, Lewis E. Bulkeley, John C. Clark, Robert J. Cooper, Richard L. Croushore, Herbert DFallender, John T. Guernsey, Jack R. Gustafson, Morton Jacobs, Ernest A. Jones, Marvin Kay, Henry J. Klose, William C. Knecht, R. A. Krnenberger, Wil- liam R. Mann, John F. McLean, Jr., Lawrence M. Roth, Richard M. Samuels, John D. Staple, LawrenceA. Star- sky, Norman B. Steinberg. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betty Cavender, Bernadine Field, Betty Greve, Helen Shapland, Grace Snyder, Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Mary McCord, Adele Polier. NIGHT EDITOR: CLINTON B. CONGER col-- - Spirit is more than noise. Enthusiasm creates momentum. -Coach Franklin C. Cappon The S.C.A. - Comes Back... WENTY-FIVE years ago the Stu- dent Christian Association was per- haps the m st influential student organization on the campus. Its activities were legion, and they were directed with such efficiency and effectiveness that the organization was called upon to perform many functions outside of its own sphere. It has seen many of its ideas taken over and enlarged by the University, the Union, and the League. Formerly, as soon as a freshman came to Ann Arbor, he made his way to S.C.A. headquarters. A list of approved rooming houses was kept; and an employment bureau for students was main- tained. It was a place where he met friends. Numerous forums and discussions' helped him to become actuainted. with Michigan traditions and to orient himself in his new surroundings. Thus the idea for orientation week was begun, and the University a few years ago took over this worthy and extensive activity. Only the freshman Handbook and the Rendezvous camp are the remnants of a once extensive freshman week program sponsored by the S.C.A. In the old days student religious activities centered around the Student Christian Associa- tion. Now the student guilds of the different de- nominations have been organized. Its only role in this regar. now is that of coordinator and pro- moter of frkendly cooperation among the. guilds. Its work with foreign students was one of its largest activities and two years ago the Univer- sity by the appointment of a Counsellor to Foreign Students took over a large part of the activity of the S.C.A. in this field. After steadily losing prestige for a number of years rejuvenation of the organziation was begun last year. A program more along the line of social service was inaugurated, for fully the S.C.A. feel some pride in knowing that it first inaugurat- ed them. And the rejuvenation which was begun last year again shows that the S.C.A. is of pro- found benefit to the campus. Even though it is one of the oldest organizations on the Michigan campus, it is one that can meet changing condi- tions and one that will ever be of big value to Michigan students. Case Club Trials . U NDERGRADUATE STUDENTS in the University who are preparing for the study of law will find it to their advan- tage to attend the Law School's case club trials which will begin within a few weeks. By so do- ing, they will be able to acquaint themselves with court procedure and some facts of substantive law; or, they may be able to find out early that their personalities are incompatible with legal work, and thus be able to change their under- graduate study courses before proceeding too far in the pre-legal curriculum. The aim of the case clubs -of which there are five, with an aggregate membership of nearly 300 student lawyers -is to teach the students to analyze legal problems in a way that will allow them to prepare properly their arguments for presentation in court. Senior students with two years' experience in case club research and argu- mentation take small groups of new case club members through the Cook Legal Research Li- brary, and acquaint them with the intricacies of "digging up legal precedents" upon which they may' best predicate their arguments. The stu- dents are given instruction in how to prepare "briefs" before the court. Because this activity teaches law students to do the same work on hypothetical =cases that they will later have to do on actual cases in their pro- fession, case club participation is considered of the utmost importance by the Law School faculty. In recognition of the value of case club research, the faculty excuses those students who partici- pate in this activity for two years from preparing their final "briefs" in practice court, a required law subject, In view of the excellent training these case clubs afford the student lawyers, it is well that undergraduates doing pre-legal work should fa- miliarize themselves with their future profession by attending case club trials soon to be held at the Law School. THE FORUM1 Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. Tolerance To the Editor: The recent refusal of the University of Mich- igan to readmit certain students active in radical propaganda has opened up some very fundamental questions as to the duties and responsibilities of a liberal institution; questions that have nothing to do with the merits of communism or pacifism as such. It is obvious that freedom for "correct" views in politics, economics, philosophy or any other controversial field is no freedom at all; it is like the examination remark of one of my stu- dents: "In that country everybody was tolerated except heretics!" If we are to be liberal or tol- erant at all, it must mean that we are ready to permit other people to express their views by speech, by print, by peaceful mass meeting or in any other way that does not involve violence, even if we think those opinions in themselves both nox- ious and absurd. The real question is, does the college student deserve this measure of freedom? I think he does, and I would go even further and hold that it is wholesomer and in the long run safer for students to think even erroneously and express their opinions even crudely than to avoid thinking of fundamental issues at all or to stifle their thoughts from a fear of coercive action of any sort. Unsound arguments die most quickly in the open air of free controversy. This ought to be a platitude, but unhappily it seems that truisms have to be restated from time to time. -Preston W. Slosson. A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Oct. 11. ONE WONDERS whether it was by accident or design that Herbert Hoover, speaking to young Republicans in California, blossomed out as the first studied party responder to President Roose- velt's series of western expositions of the New Deal. Did National Chairman Fletcher or the Repub- lican national organization have any hand in it? Or was it mere accident, due to plans laid before the President's speaking itinerary was known, that brought these two titular heads of their respective parties into . action so close together geographically and in point of time? At a guess, it was pure accident. The atmo- sphere of the Republican executive committee gathering in Washington, just before Mr. Roose- velt headed west, does not invite the idea that Mr. Hoover's role as party spokesman in answer- ing Roosevelt was due to national committee strategy. Those executive committeemen would not touch the Republican '36 nomination matter officially with a 10-foot pole. Most of them would not touch it even privately in a way to be quoted, There is too much dynamite in it. * * * * NEVERTHELESS, Mr. Hoover's appearance be- fore the California Young Republicans in the circumstances was certain to be hailed as a bid for nomination by more than "Big Jim" Farley. There is not much doubt that wings of his own party so construed it. The demands from certain Republican groups that Mr. Hoover eliminate himself at once and completely from the '36 race were of too recent date - and went too pointedly unanswered-- for it to be otherwise. The former President could have met that dif- ficulty by including language definitely renounc- ing '36 aspirations in his talk. You can find in Washington men formerly close in Hoover con- fidence who are vehement in asserting that he has no such aspirations and will, in due course, dis- close that by declaring for someone else. They even tell you, mysteriously, that they know who that somebody else is, that he already has been picked by Mr. Hoover. Some will whisper a name; coupled with warnings that its publication as the Hoover choice almost certainly would be denied at Palo Alto. * * * * VERY NATURALLY, the Hoover Young Repub- lican speaking date appealed strongly to Far- ley. He had a young Democrat speaking date of his own simultaneously in Kentucky. He also had a difficult, intra-party clash fto try to iron out in the Blue Grass state, emphasized by the open snub to the President by the party wing de- feated in the recent gubernatorial primaries. The most outspoken for a Hoover-for-president Republican ticket in '36 has been Farley, Demo- cratic chairman. His obvious desire is to rub as much salt as possible into Republican '32 and '34 wounds. And ",by talking much about Hoover in Kentucky and not at all about Democratic party strife there, "Big Jim" Farley could let him- self go regardless. He was on safe ground. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1935 VOL. XLVI No. 10 Notices Faculty Directory, 1935-36: The combined Faculty and Campus Tele- phone Directory for 1935-36 will go to press early next week. Although the Faculty Directory cards already recevied have been checked with the payrolls, members of the Faculty and University staff are urgedhto report any new appointees, for whom cards. have not already beenrturned in, to the Editorial Office, 108 Mason Hall, so as to avoid, if possible, the omis- sion of names from the Directory. To Deans, Directors, Department Heads and Others Responsible for Payrolls:Kindly call at the Busi- ness Office to approve payrolls for October 31. This should be done not later than October 18. Edna G. Miller, Payroll Clerk. Social Chairmen of Fraternities and Sororities: All party requests, ac- companied by letters of acceptance from two sets of chaperons and a letter of approval from the Financial Adviser must be submitted to the Office of the Dean of Women or the Office of the Dean of Students on the Monday preceding the date set for the party. J. A. Bursley, Dean of Students. Women Students Attending the Wisconsin-Michigan Football Game: Women students wishing to attend the Wisconsin-Michigan Football game are required to register in the Office of the Dean of Women. A letter of permission from-parents must be received in this office not later than Thursday, October 17. If a student wishes to go otherwise than by train, special permission for such mode of travel must be included in the parent's letter. Graduate women are invited to register in the office. Byrl Fox Bacher, Assistant Dean of Women. Single Concert Tickets: Tickets for individual concerts in the Choral Union Series, will be offered "over the counter" beginning* Monday morning, October 14 at 8:30 o'clock at the School of Music, at which time all remaining season tickets will be broken up at the following prices: Main floor, $2.00, first balcony $1.50, second balcony $1.00. The sale of season tickets will also continue so long as tickets remain. Oratorical Association Lecture Course: The Hill Auditorium box of- fice will be open today from ten to twelve for the sale of season tick- ets. Academic Notices English 149: The Course in Play- writing, meets Monday night from 7 to 9 in Room 213 Haven Hall. Stu- dents interested in the course should consult with Professor Brumm. R. W. Cowden. Events Of Today Presbyterian Students: There will be a party at the Masonic Temple (4th and Williams Sts.) 9:00 p.m. Presbyterian Students are cordially invited to attend. Popular local or- chestra will play for the dance. Games and refreshments. Cost $.15. Coming Events Congregational Church, Sunday. Service at 10:30 a.m. with sermon by Mr. Heaps, "Can One Live the Ser- mon on the Mount?" Lecture by Professor Slosson on "Francis and Dominic, Christian Propagandists," second in series on "Great Catholics." 6:00 Student Fellowship supper to be followed by a talk by Mr. Kermit Eby on "New Frontiers for Modern Youth." First Baptist Church: 10:45 a.m. Sunday R. Edward Sayles, minister, will begin a series of sermons on the Prophets, his topic being, "Amos - Prophet of Righteousness." Others to follow are, "Hosea - Prophet of Spiritual Insight," Isiah - Most Ma- jestic Prophet" and "Mican-Spokes- man forthe Poor." Roger Williams wGuild (students). 12 M, Meets at Guild House. Rev. Howard R. Chapman, Minister for Students, will speak on "Some Real- isties of Personal Religion.' W. E. Umbach will lead in a discussion. 6:00 p.m. Students at Guild House. Mr. Chapman will give an opening ad- dress. Friendship Hour. "Eats.' Stu- dents welcome students. Trinity Lutheran Church. E. Wil- liam at S. Fifth Ave. 9:15, Church School. 10:30 Sermon "Character or Chaos" by the pastor, Rev. Henry O. Yoder. 5:30 Lutheran Student Club in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. 6:30 Talk by Prof. R. P. Briggs on Student and his finances. Zion Lutheran Church, Washing- ton St. and Fifth Ave., E. C. Stell- horn, Pastor. 9:00 a.m. Sunday School; lesson topic, "Jeremiah the by Rev. Fred Cowin. 12:00 M. Stu- dents' Bible Class. Leader, H. L. Pickerill. 5:00 p.m. If the weather permits there will be an outdoor pro- gram at the fire placenear the Island. Students will meet promptly at 5:00 p.m. at the Guild House, 438 Maynard Street, Transportation will be provided. In case of rainy or very cold weather the program will be held at Lane Hall. If in doubt because of the weather phone 5838, a fifteen cent supper will be served at either place. The meeting will close at 7:30 p.m. Harris. Hall: The regular student meeting will:be held Sunday evening in Harris Hall at seven o'clock. The speaker for the evening will be The Right Reverend E. N. Schmuck, D.D. of Wyoming. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship Sunday are: 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. Church School; 11:00 a.m. Kinder- garten; 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Right Reverend E. N. Schmuck, D.D. of Wyoming. St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Third and West Liberty Sts. 9:30 a.m. Sun- day school; 10:45 a.m. Sermon by Rev. Fr. A. Sattelmeier, Freedom, Mich. 3:00 p.m., (Service in Ger- man). Sermon by Rev. Paul Waschi- lewsky, Inkster, Mich. 6 p.m. Student Supper, followed by the meeting which will be conducted by the several visiting ministers. 7:30 p.m. Sermon by the Rev. H. A. Burandt, Toledo, Ohio. Bethlehem Evangelical Church, South Fourth Avenue, Theodore Schmale, pastor. 9:00 a.m. Sunday, Early Service (Conducted in Ger- man). 9:30 a.m. Church School. 10:30 a.m. Morning Worship with sermon by Dr. E. W. Blakeman, Counselor in Religious Education at the U. of M. Sermon topic, The Service of the German and English Bible Transla- tions to the Cause of Religion. 7:00 p.m. Junior League meeting. Miss Esther Carstens will lead. Unitarian Church, Sunday, 5:30 Twilight Devotional Service, "The Personal Element in Living." 7:30, Liberal Students' Union, "Students Who do Not Cooperate." Engineering Council Meeting Tues- day, October 15, M. E. Computing Room, West Engineering Building, 7:30 p.m. - Kappa Tau Alpha announces an important business meeting to be held Monday, October 14, 4 o'clock, room 213, Haven Hall. Glider Club: First meeting Tues- day, October 15, Room 348 West En- gineering Building, 8:00 p.m. Plans for the year to be outlined and brief motion picture of activities shown. Group assignments to be made. All interested are urged to attend. All Graduate Students are cordially invited to attend the Graduate Out- ing Club trip scheduled to leave Lane Hall at three Sunday afternoon. The club plans to go to the George Wash- ington cabin for soccer and hiking. Supper will be served at an approxi- mate cost of 30c. Ten Years Ago From The Daily Files Of Oct. 12, 1925 President Clarence Cook Little and Mrs. Little were welcomed by the Ann Arbor Chamber of Commerce in the Union ballroom. Mayor Robert A. Campbell welcomed the new Presi- dent in behalf of the townspeople and Roscoe Bonisteel in behalf of the University. The University Women's Club elected 27, all juniors and seniors, to membership. Michigan's Varsity golf team suf- fered defeat, 29-7, at the hands of the Detroit Country Club team on Barton Hills course. Opposition to the proposed con- struction of the stadium was ad- vanced with the publication of the Sunday Chimes. The Daily met the opposition with a barrage of editor- ials. The foundation for criticism was a desire to do away with in- tercollegiate football entirely. Weber To Discuss Game NIlext Monday A record gathering of the Univer- sity of Michigan Club of Ann Arbor will hear Wally Weber "re-hash" the Indiana game when the club holds its first football clinic of the year at noon Monday in the Michigan Union. Dean W. Myers, president of the club, announced yesterday that more DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. Repair Keeps Caretakers Of Grounds Busy Several Buildings Receive FiberCoatings On Roofs For Protection The task of repairing and improv- ing the plant of the University is keeping the Buildings and Grounds department occupied in several di- rections at present. Perhaps the most noticeable ac- tivity is the work of paving the curb sidewalks along East University Ave., and the laying of new plazas in front of the East Engineering and Medical Buildings. Paving is also being start- ed on E. Catherine St. behind the Hospital. This work has been under- taken as a PWA project. Better protection from the fury of the Ann Arbor rains and snows will be furnished the Economics and Pharmacology Buildings, Waterman Gymnasium, Tappan Hall, East Hall and the University Storehouses by fiber coating for their roofs. The West Physics Building and University Elementary School will also receive fresh coatings of paint in preparation for winter. In order to afford the Bureau of Appointments two new offices, Room 207 University Hall has been parti- tioned; and in Haven Hall, Room B, a partition has been removed to double the classroom space, a move necessitated by an overcrowded his- tory lecture section: Alongside the R.O.T.C. Headquar- ters there is a pile of 18-inch pipe and a frequent recurrence of a tarry odor. These are occasoned by the installa- tion of a new steam tunnel there- abouts. As the neat step in their current program of improvements, the de- partment plans the air conditioning of the operating rooms in the Uni- versity Hospital. Autobiogray Of LHauptmann To Be Printed Prison Warden Releases Manuscript To Lawyers Of LindbergKidnaper TRENTON, N. J., Oct. 11.-- W) - Col. Mark O. Kimberling, prison war- den today released to Bruno Richard Hauptmann's attorneys a 218-page autobiography written by Haupt- mann in the death house. The attorneys for months have sought release of the autobiography to permit its sale to obtain funds to finance Hauptmann's appeals. The colonel issued the following statement: "On May 4, 1935, Bruno Richard Hauptmann completed his autobi- ography and made a request to the principal keeper that his story be released to his wife and counsel. "The autobiography was translated into English, carefully read by the principal keeper, who discussed the possibilities of release with Gov. Hoff- man, Commissioner Ellis and the prison board of governors. "It was felt that no permission shouldnbengranted for the release of this manuscript while Hauptmann's case was on appeal to the court of errors and appeals. There appeared to be little or no basis for objections to its release following the decision of the court." Extension Of Year Granted }Detroit Banks Prolong Receivership Of Guardian-Detroit-Union Group, Inc. DETROIT, Oct. 11.- (P)- Circuit Judge Adolph F. Marschner extended today for one year the receivership of the Guardian - Detroit - Union Group, Inc., holding company for the Union Trust Co., Guardian National Bank of Commerce and a number of other Michigan financial institutions. Alex J. Groesbeck, receiver for 'the group, told the court it probably would take two years to terminate the receivership. Groesbeck said there are 18 cases pending involving the group and that it would be unwise to dispose of the groups' interest in certain stocks and bonds at this time. The report commented on the sat- isfactory progress during the year in four institutions owned by the group, including the.First National Bark & Trust Co., of Kalamazoo. It Men- tioned specifically the increase in deposits in the Kalamazoo institution. It was revealed by A. W. Semp- liner, attorney for Groesbeck, that so [ A r THE SCREEN I AT "THE THE MICHIGAN GAY DECEPTION" q MUSIC "MAN OF ARAN" A British Gaumont picture directed by Robert Flaherty and being presented by the Art Cinema League at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. It is probably first necessary to explain the headline appearing directly above this review. It does not mean that "Man of Aran" is necessarily best compared to a symphony, though that com- parison is a very good one, but it is rather to de- stroy the notion that this is another movie. Whether you call it music, poetry or painting, "Man of Aran" is a real work of art. It is an ap- plication of cinematographic technic that has been awaited for years by a great many theater- goers. The subject is simple: the story of a people wresting life from rock and ocean. Flaherty was fortunate in two respects: he had the roar of the sea for his dialogue and he found no actors to do the acting. Peasants of the island played the parts, their parts, and as the story is the story of their life, better actors could not be found. Inasmuch as adjectives seem a little weak at present, it will sLAffice to say that the photography was good. How the shots of the sea were obtained, it is impossible to say, and does not matter. But the sea and the life of the "Man of Aran" is more real than its original. The reaction of some of the audience was this: Very often pictures that are intended to be farces turn out to be so over-done as to be ludic- rous, but "The Gay Deception" is the real thing - a farce that is a farce. The two Franc (i)es, Lederer and Dee, are the two reasons why this show is far above the ordinary and achieves the success which belongs to it. Lederer as the count and bellboy is extremely good and Miss Dee goes along with him as the unsophisticated girl from the tall corn country in a way that is little short of sensational. The former has a spontaneity and a contagious good-humor that one cannot help but catch, and the latter has the ability and charm for which she has been famed for many a pic- ture. The story concerns the winning of a $5,000 sweepstakes prize by Mirabel (Miss Dee) which she resolves to use for one grand fling in New York, having lived in a place called Greenville all her life. As soon as she gets there she runs into a count .who is masquerading as a bellboy in order to discover how American hotels are run, and the rest of the action concerns his carrying the de- ception. However, they go to a party in the-latter sequences of the show and Lederer is then in his real character of a count, in spite of the fact that she still won't believe that he is more than a servant in the hotel. High honors in this show go to both Miss Dee and Lederer, who contribute excellent perform- ances and make what might have been a dull story into an entertaining tale. The surrounding cast, though not exceptional, is good. In the rest of the program you will see a short which contains some of the best scenery ever filmed, and the companies which try to get trav- elers "out west" should really take it over for pub- licity. There are also some shots of the two boys who delighted at station WHY in "The Big Broad- cast of 1936" doing their dances, and as a final touch you can see Goose Goslin driving in the winning run of the World's Series. -J.C.F.H. We have the inside on Red Grange being held for leaving the scene of a collision. He thougtht it was -the interference blocking out a tackler. -The Detroit News : - Casualty figures pouring in from the Eritrean