AUG. '7, 1936 Tilt ICRfi;_Alit - DA*1L THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEWS Place Winners In Olympic 1,500 Meter Run Of The DAY (From The Associated Press) Russian Flyers Reach Seattle SEATTLE, Aug. 6.-(P)-Sig- ismund Levanevsky and Victor Levehenko, Russian airmen, landed at the Sand Point Naval air base at 4:50 p.m., (7:50 p.m. EST) today, en route from Cal- ifornia to Russia by way of Al- aska and the Arctic. They averaged 170 miles an hour, arriving from Alameda, Cal., so much earlier than ex- pected that no one except the station crew greeted them. Weather permitting, they said, they plan to hop at 8 a.m., ((1 a.m. EST) tomorrow for Juneau, Alaska. After immediately refuelling their plane-it had only 15 gal- lons on arrival-the fliers went to the U. S. Weather Bureau to study reports. Having arrived 40 minutes be- fore their Seattle interpreter, Nicholas Sokoloff, had expected them the Russians had difficulty making known their wants. Levanevsky said the fliers' in- terests are purely scientific; that the flight will benefit commercial aviation, but has no military sig- nificance. He said he hopes a practical aerial route linking America and Russia can be found by way of the Arctic. The Russians left Alameda at 11:21 a.m. after flying there yes- terday from San Pedro. Paroled Convict Named As Kalamazoo Gunman KALAMAZOO, Aug. 6.-P)- Police said tonight that Theo- dore Bergstedt, paroled Indiana convict who was killed in a gun battle with two Kalamazoo of- ficers, had been identified as a participant in a robbery here on June 19. - State Police lifted their block- ade of southwestern Michigan highways, convinced that Berg- sted's companion who fled during the gun battle, had escaped. The identification, police said, was made by James Slayden, a clerk in the National Biscuit Co. offices here. Slayden said he was positive Bergstedt was one of the two men who invaded the offices, forced him and another man to lie on the floor, and then ran- sacked the office. Oscar Bergstedt, the slain man's father, told police he be- lieved his son was working in a Detroit automobile factory. Bergstedt was not one of the men involved in the earlier shooting of Police Chief Fred Bosma of Zeeland, the police were told. Trotzky Rumored Accused Of International Intrigue OSLO, Norway, Aug. '7.-(Fri- day)-(RP)-Leon Trotzky, exiled Russian Communist leader, was reported early today to have been accused by police authorities of carrying on international in- trigue. Trotzky's permit to stay in Nor- way was conditioned on the pro- mise that he would not carry on such activity. It was understood police en- tered his home at Honefos yester- day. Officers were said to have determined that he had received a number of foreign visitors in recent weeks and had had fre- quent telephone conversations with Paris, especially during the recent period of widespread French strikes. The former Bolshevik leader was described as extremely nerv- ous because of recent Norwegian Nfizi activity against him. He was. said to have declared an auto- mobile containing Nazis. pursued him through Southern Norway yesterday when he was en route to Christiansand, where he visited a well-known Marxist editor. The Norwegian government granted Trotzky permission, on June 19, to remain in the country for two more months. He was said at that time to be doing lit- erary work with the assistance of two Russian secretaries. Baseball Pool Tickets Seized In Detroit . DETROIT, Aug. 6.-(k)-Base- ball lottery tickets with a selling value of $375,000 were seized to- OlympicsAt A Glance (By the Associated Press) eighth in 8-meter and ninth in 6- Track and Field meter divisions. Forrest Towns gives United States Polo its ninth gold medal in 16 events by Hungary defeats Germany, 16-6, in winning 110 meter high hurdles final replay of earlier tie. . in 14.2 after equaling his own world Soccer Football record of 14.1 in semi-finals; Fritz Peru defeats Finland, 7-3, and Great Pollard is third behind Don Finlay, Britain wins over China, 2-0. Great Britain; Roy Staley eliminated Field Hockey in semi-finals. Holland and Germany earn vi- Jack Lovelock wins coveted 1,500 tories, former beating Switzerland, meter title in new world record time 4-1 and Germany blanking Denmark of 3:47.8; Glenn Cunningham, clocked 6-0 in 3:48.4, is second; Luigi Beccali of Italy, defending champion, finishes Handball third and Archie San Romani fourth; Austria 18, Rumania 3. Gene Venzke places ninth. Germany 22, Hungary 0. Gerhardt Stoeck, Germany, breaks Finnish monopoly on Olympic javelin Old Jinx Again Costs championship with winning toss of 71.84 meters, 253 feet 8 13/32; Alton Cunningham First Place Terry leads American contingent by placing sixth at 67.15 meters, 220 BERLIN, Aug. 6.-W)-Glenn Cun- feet 3 3/4 inches; Lee Bartlett is 12th Angnam for the third time today and Malcolm Metcalf 15th. found a world record beating per- Nacto Tajima wins hop, step and funaworrnd the1o50 etiners go jump title for Japan with world rec- formance nthecod0plmer ord performance of 16 meters, 52 feet enough only for second place. 5 15/16 inches; Roland Romero is Glenn trailed Bill Bonthron home fifth; Dudley Wilkins eighth and Bill by a scant yard two years ago at Mil- Brown 18th. waukee when "Bounding Bill" low- Trebisondia Valla of Italy wins ered the mark to 3:48.8. Last winter, womens 80-meter hurdles title. in New York's Madison Square Gar- Jimmie LuValie, Archie Williams den, Gene Venzke beat Cunningham and Harold Smallwood all qualify for to set a new world indoor mark of 400 meter semi-finals, Luvalle run- 3:49.9 while Glenn's 3:50.1 was alsof ning fastest heat of the day, 47.6 sec- under his own former board standard. ends. And again today the Kansan's mar-1 Unofficial team standings (on 10- velous 3:48.4 was balked by Jack 5-4-3-2-1 basis) : Lovelock's more marvelous 3:47.8. 1 Men's track and field: United- States 153; Germany 54 3/4; Finland 41 1/4; Japan 34 13/22; Great Britain 20 1/11; Italy 15 13/22; Canada 14 1/11; Sweden 11 1/11; New Zea- land 10; Holland 9; Switzerland 8; Norway 5; Philippines 4; Australia 4; Latvia 4; Czechoslovakia 3 1/11; Po- land 3 1/11; Brazil 2; Greece, 2; Ar- gentine 1; Australia 2 11; Hungary 2/11. Women's track and field: Germany 44; Poland 14; Italy 13; United States 12; Japan 7; Canada 4; Austria 3; Holland 2; Sweden 1. Modern Pentathlon United States wins unofficial team championship as Gotthardt Hand- rick, Germany, gains individual crown with Charles Leonard of St. Peters- burg second. Alfred Starbbird, Bur- lington, Vt., finishes seventh and Lt. Fred Weber ninth. Yachting Americans trail in all divisions asLA competition continues, ranking fourth in star class; eighth in monotype; Admits. Killing Son . -Associated Press Photo. Mrs. Susie Stephenson (above), 26, of- Niagara- Falls, N. Y., con- fessed, officials said, to drowning her 18-months-old son, David .Eu- gene, in the family washing ma- chine. CLARK NAMED DIRECTOR aa ii qurcumwra DETROIT, Aug. 6. -(R)-Homer W. Clark. acting director of the WPA FRIDAY NIGHT in Wayne County since the resigna- tion of John J. O'Brien, was appoint- 35c Each ed director -today.. Clark is an engi- PROM ANN ARBOR: S. Main to sa- neer and was a member of the city tine, right on U.S. 112, 20 miles, to water board while Frank Murphy was Sylvan Gardens sign. mayor. -Associated Press Photo When this picture was taken Archie San Romani, American distance runner, and Luigi Beccali, of Italy, winer of the 1,500-meter race at the 1932 Olympics in Los Angeles, were working out together at the Olympic village in Berlin. Both qualified in their respective heats, and yesterday Beccali finished third and San Romani took fourth place in the final when Jack Lovelock of New Zealand broke the Olympic record to win. Final The LENS By ROBERT L. GACH What Is The Candid Camera? In recent years we have heard more and more about Candid pictures. Ag- gressive publicity men have tied the words "candid camera, or candid pictures" to every product from the newspapers all the way down to tooth paste. Technically speaking there are only two type of cameras that I feel can be really called candid cam- eras. One costs almost $300. and the other is almost $400. This statement is based not. only on the speed of the lens but the ease of operation and high quality. But let us forget tech- nicalities and now the question takes on an entirely different aspect. No camera is definitely a candid camera, but any camera, even the 39c toys that swept over the country last summer, can be a candid camera if used as such. Candid photography is not ad- vanced photography, but it~ is ad- vanced photographicypsychology, it is a study of human nature rather than photography. The camera that you own will determine the smallest amount of light under which you can get pictures, but out in the sun- light, the brownie box camera and the f.1.5 Contax are on an equal basis. Of course the Contax will get pic- tures that are better photographically speaking (for $400 it should) but they don't have to be one bit morecandid than the ones taken with the box camera. On the subject of equip- ment, don't ever get the idea that the very fastest lens is necessary to work indoors under Mazda light. But if lighting is equal the faster the lens the shorter the period that your shut- ter has to be open. Wait Till Subject Is Still So if you are working with a slow lens you have to wait until your sub- ject is perfectly still then take a short time exposure; perhaps it will be only a few seconds and quite easy to take, but notice that you have to wait for the subject to hold still. If you own a fast machine then you can shoot any time that your subject assumes an interesting position, but only if you own the very fastest lens, and it is on a camera that can be focused on the dot, and manipulated very easily, can you catch some of those rare ex- pressions in the type of picture best described as "Now or never." This is the advantage of the fast camera, but most of us have millions of opper- tunities for candid pictures in day- )ight and then it is not the camera but the operator that counts. You can find new interest in your camera that you never thought could possibly ex- ist. Stop asking people to watch for the birdie (you are probably only making a cuckoo bird out of yourself anyway). Get Natural Poses Try to catch pictures of people do- ing things, acting natural, and being themselves. Most people are very self conscious and when they face the camera they look scared stiff. Catch them in unposed action and you will have a photographic record that you will treasure forever. But remember two things. First Coughlin Aids Americanism, StatesBishop ROME, Aug. 6.--(P)-Bishop Joseph Schrembs of Cleveland pic- tured the Rev. Charles E. Coughlin tonight as a protector of American institutions. "Father Coughlin," B i s h o p Schrembs said in an interview, "is really fighting for the preservation of American democracy which I am sure will successfully withstand Eur- opean surges both toward Commun- ism and toward Fascism." Bishop Michael J. Gallagher of De- troit, Father Coughlin's ecclesiastical superior, yesterday described the Priest's work as counteracting anti- clericalism such as in Spain and said he encouraged him to continue it. Both prelates were granted recent audiences by Pope Pius XI. After Father Coughlin's attacks against President Roosevelt there was specu- lation he had incurred papal dis- pleasure. Both, however, maintained neither the Priest's charges, for which he apologized, nor even his name en- tered the conversations. Tonight, Bishop f Schrembs com- pared likenesses and differences in the work of Father Coughlin andI Premier Mussolini of Italy. ii IMER Jim Farley Scored By Wilber Brucker - ROSCOMMON, Aug. 6.-UP)-Wil- ber M. Brucker, campaigning for the Republican nomination for United States senator, told an audience here today that "Boss Farley is bargain- ing for votes with tax money." He charged that "ten million dol- lars of WPA money is being held up today" because State Highway. Com- missioner Murray D. Van Wagoner "refuses to promise that it will be used in the New Deal campaign." Brucker said that "Big Jim Farley accuses the Republican party of heartlessness when I and others crit- icize the New Deal's waste and cor- ruption, disguised as relief to the needy." Offering drastic c Stocks have been selections as comp lose-out savings on all summer fashions. brought from our Jackson store to make lete as possible for this final summer sale. Friday and Saturday i i (ELWCTI ORONRS*THE ANDAOW (ELECTION NEWS THEN AND NOW i Iii Dresses- COTTON and WASHABLES, $1.95 to $7.95, plenty of large sizes- '/2 PRICE SUMMER FORMALS, Crisp and fresh, sparkling with newness. 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