and teachers can be sent periodically to the smaller torres and villages. The Sport Office works in different ways. After the War, and particularly during the more prosperous years of the 1920's, many factories built playing fields and swimming pools for their workers. In collaboration with the Office for Beauty of Work, which aims at improving working conditions, the Sport Office seeks to encourage the building or extension of such facilities. If a factory has no available space, the Sport Office may induce it to hire a nearby field if this is feasible. For those who would otherwise have no access at all to physical exercise, the Sport Office undertakes a great deal on its own initiative. Taking over school gymnasiums or hiring or borrowing any kind of hall available, it will give public courses with its own instructors in general gymnastics (for men and women together), calisthenics for the elderly and for mothers, tap dancing, etc. These are known as "open courses," meaning that a person may join them at any time and is not bound to attend regularly. The Strength through Joy charge(double in the case of those not entitled to its special rates) is 30 pfennigs for an hour and a half of exercise, with a reduction of 20 per cent for the purchase of five tickets. The so-called "closed courses" in which participants must start at the beginning and sign up for the whole course, embrace |