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October 14, 1936 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1936-10-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



sleep, Landon prepared to deliver his
address at Navin Field. He con-
ferred again with Lawrence, Vanden-
berg and Brucker before leaving for
the speakers' rostrum. After the
speech he returned to the hotel where
he expects to meet with Republican
leaders and visiting delegations un-
til after midnight. Fifty-three dele-
gations seeking an audience in the
afternoon were turned away, accord-
ing to Carl Rote, Landon's secretary,
and he was unable to address an
especially planned reception of
G.O.P. campaigners.
Wherever Governor Landon went,
there was the tremenduous enthusi-
asm of a paper rainfall and he time
and again expressed himself as
"deeply pleased." Only once was
there a slip. On the return up Mich-
igan Avenue from Dearborn, a group
of women felt called on to give the
Republican candidate the Bronx
cheer.
Landon's train leaves Detroit at 9
a.m. tomorrow for Grand Rapids,
making a dozen stops on the way. He
will address an audience in Grand
Rapids, spend the night there and
leave for Kansas Thursday morning,
just about a minute before the train
bearing President Roosevelt pulls in-
to town. Roosevelt will come to De-
troit Thursday by way of Lansing and
Pontiac.
EVENING RADIO
PROGRAMS
6:00-WJR Stevenson News.
WWJ Ty Tyson: Dinner Hour (6:10).
WXYZ March of Melody.
6:15-WJR Rubinoff-Peerce.
CKLW String Trio.
WXYZ Fact Finder.
CKLW News and Sports.
6:30-WJR Jimmie Allen.
WWJ Bulletins.
WXYZ Day in Review.
CKLW String Trio.
6:45-WJR Renfrew of the Mounted.
WWJ Flying Time.
WXYZ Lowell Thomas.
CKLW Keyboard Twins.
7:00-WJR William Hard.
WWJ Amos and Andy.
WXYZ Easy Aces.
CKLW Little Jak.Litte.
7 :15-WJR Popeye the Sailor.
WWJ Evening Melodies.
WXYZ Presidential Poll.
CKLW Prescott's Ensemble.
7:30-WJR Goose Creek Parson.
WWJ Death Fighters.
WXYZ Lone Ranger.
CKLW Variety Review.
7:45-WJR Boake Carter.
CKLW Word Wonderland.
8:00-WJR Cavalcade of America.
WWJ One Man's Family.
WXYZ Revlue de, Paree.
CKLW Dick Jurgen's Music.
8:30-WJR Burns and- Allen: Henry
King's Music.gs s
WWJ Wayne King's Music.
WXYZ Ethel Barrymore.
CKLW Music Box Review.
9:00-WJR Nino Martini: Andre
Kostelanetz' Music.
WWJ Town Hall Tonight.
WXYZ Charles S. Eamens.
CKLW Gabriel Heatter.
WXYZ Music Hall.
9:15-WXYZ Music Hall.
9:30-WJR President .Roosevelt.
WWJ President Roosevelt.
WXYZ Bishop and the. Gargoyle.
9:45-CKLW Mullens Sisters.
10:00-WJR Gangbusters.
WWJ Your Hit Parade.
WXYZ This 1s Paris.
CKLW Little Jack Little.
10:15--CKLW Freddy Martin's Music.
10:30-WJR Democratic National Com-
mittee.
WXYZ Jubilee Singers.
CKLW Lloyd Huntley's Music.
10:45-WJR Musical. Program.
WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music.
CKLW Phil Marley's Music.
11 :00-WJR News.
WWJ Dance Music.
WXYZ George Kavanagh's Music.
CKLW News and Music.,
11:15-WJR Songs You Remember.
CKLW Mystery Lady.
11 :30-WWJ Dance Music.
WXYZ Phii Ohman's Music.
CKLW Dick Jurgen's Music.
11:45-WJR Lions Tales: Roger Pryor's
Music..
12:00-WJR Ozzie Nelson's Music.
WWJ Dance Music..
WXYZ Jack Dougla' Musc.
CKLW Shep Fields' Music.
12:30--WJR Dick ;Stabile's Music,
WXYZ Luigi Romanelli's Music.
CKLW Louis Prima's Music.
1:00-CKLW Little Jack Little.
LOS ANGELES, Oct 13.-(P)--
Samuel Seymour ,retired capitalist,
announced plans today to reopen the
race track at Agua Caliente, Mex., on
Thanksgiving Day

Charles Taft Hits
New Deal Spending'
(Continued from Page 1)
Landon was governor was character-
ized as a good thing by Mr. Taft.
There were a great number of schools
with only a small number of pupils,
according to Mr. Taft, and the cost
of running these numerous institu-
tions were proving costly. No one
had to go without schooling because
of the closing of some schools. Pupils
instead attended other schools in
neighboring districts, Mr. Taft said.
Thus the operations amounted to es-
sentially a consolidation of district
schools.
Mr. Taft was enthusiastic in his
praise of Landon as a promise keep-
er. "When he went in as governor of
Kansas people began to find out that
they could rely on his promises. It
made no difference that politicians
wanted him to soft-pedal some of
them. He went ahead and did ex-
actly what he said he would," Mr.
Taft said.
"He did not have a majority in the
legislature but in spite of that he got
through 90 per cent of his legislative-
program, all without any show off or
bluster. I doubt if he used the word
'must' in the whole session. What he
wanted was results that people could
agree on."
Landon Calls For
Explanation OF
New DealPolicy
(Continued from Page 1)
went--directed and managed by pol-
itics."
But, Governor Landon hastened to
add, "I do not believe that greater
and greater concentration of power
in the hands of the Federal govern-
ment, and particular in the Executive,
is either wise or necessary. I believe,"
he explained, "that we should co-
tinue to use our 48 sovereign state,
to try out new ideas in the field of
government.
The Republican leader rejected na-
tional economic planning-"the term
used by this Administration to de-
scribe its policy"-as a violation of
"the basic ideals of the American sys-
tem. It starts on the assumption that
the people are not capable of look-
ing after their own affairs. It says
that America's greatness was just an
accident.
"That," asserted Governor Lan-
don, "is not true. It is a libel on
our people. This Administration,"
he charged, "would put an end to
individual effort.
"This wholesale economic plan-
ning," he told his not so responsive
audience, which sometimes cheered
in the wrong places, "has not led to
the promised security. It has dis-
turbed industry, prolonged unem-
ployment and delayed recovery.
"The price of economic planning
is the loss of economic freedom," he
thundered. "And economic freedom
and personal liberty go hand in
hand."
He cited the rise of dictatorship
and loss of personal liberty in Euro-
pean countries and thus made a bid
for the voter who supports Roose-
velt as a personality:
"We must not, out of regard for
any man or men, blind ourselves to
the forces that are loose in the
world. It is not a question of any
man or men. It is a question of
human freedom."
NOW SHOWING
MICHIGAN

iYJP]i~! I

______ -1

'I

I

CALLING
ALL
LOVERS!
of
Good Food
Try those sizzling
BLUE PLATE
LUNCHEONS
at
C H U B B'S
MAXIMUM
of Quality at the
MINIMUM
of Price
25c
I

1-

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