(5 of 5)
Your second error was in regard to Moe Goldman. He was not knocked unconscious in the Temple game, but got a bad crack on the nose which caused an external bleeding; in fact he could hardly breathe all through the second half. Since that game, he has been playing with a cumbersome noseguard, which although everybody would expect it to, did not detract from his playing, as one can see by his performances against Providence, against whom he scored twelve points and against Rutgers . . . (City won 31-21).
The success of the City College team is not only due to the coaching of Nat Holman and to the playing of Moe Goldman, but also to the performance of such capable players as Sam Winograd, one of the hardest cutting forwards that I have ever seen, Pete Berenson and Artie Kaufman, two stellar guards, Meyer Pincus. Abe Weisslgodt and a squad of very capable reserves. . . .
JEROME SOBOLOS
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Deep Sea Mail
Sirs:
1) I note some of your provincianos in the U. S. bragging in your Letters column about receiving TIME while on vacation. They have nothing on me.
2) Before I left here for the U. S. in 1932 I sent you my itinerary and told you I wanted TIME to read en route.
3) When I arrived in Los Angeles all copies of TIME which had been printed since you received my itinerary were waiting for me at the Dollar Steamship office. I read them at the Grand Canyon and en route to Chicago.
4) When I arrived at Chicago the next copy was waiting for me at 6916 Clyde Avenue.
5) I continued my trip, sailing from Seattle. There were no copies at Seattle as none had been printed while I was en route from Chicago to Seattle.
6) When the S.S. President Cleveland slowed up at the International Date Line to take on the deep sea mail, lo and behold there were two copies of TIME which had passed the Cleveland waiting for me there to read en route to Manila.
7) And the next copy of TIME was in the Cleveland mail which I opened in my Manila office
8) I never missed a copy.
9) Can any of your smart subscribers beat my record?
J. A. STIVER
Manila, P. I.
