The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 22, 1937, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 22, ‘THE MAN WHO BROKE THE BANK at Monte Carlo, is the chief claim to fame of Syngwriter Charles Coburn, but at 85 he kas turaed 1o peli Paddington, London. Looking more like a dyed-in-the-wool for votes. n standing as munizipal candidate “mcrican rostrum pounder, he shouts -~ ASSOCIATED PRE CTUR BACK TO HIS POST following reports of trouble with Haiti rushed U Minister to Dominican Republic Narweh. SS FROM GASHOUSE TO OIL STATION wentDiz 2y Dean, voluble-tongued Cardinal pitcher to open a filling statio at Bradenton, Florida. Here is the talkative one in his new role o proprietor and grease monkey. IN POLITICS Anthony !;Ixh British foreign secretary, [ a leading role at the nine- power parley ‘n Brussels over Sino-Japanese conflict. SHE ALSO SKATES, ard movie tie well IN SPORTS 17-year-old William De Corvevont of Chis cago's Austin high school set a prep school gridiron record by tallying 156 ‘vints in live gamesy BELGIUM, 20 YEARS AFTER the World War fighting had laid waste its cities and'countryside, took on a warlike appear- ance again recently during manuevers in the District of Namur, King Leopold of the Belgians (nenl';:r. staading) is shew: inspecting a flele gia IN SOCIOLOG Y Julits Streicher, No. 1 foe of Jews in Germany, opened an anti - se- mitic exposition with an attack on western countries’ demog: xacy. MORE THAN A FRIEND TO MAN, racehorses often prove major financial bene- factors as in the case of Seabiscuit, leading money horse of 1937 with $167,142. At the left is Mrs. C. S. Howard, owner, with Jockey John “Red” Pollard (up) and Trainer J. Smith. LIKE A PEAK IN THE ROCKIES, Guarterback Byron “Whizzer” White of University of Colorado’s undefeated. un- tied eleven stood out above other Rocky Mountain Conference players as candidate for All-America honors. A triple threat on the gridiron, the Silver and Gold ace makes straight “A’s” in the class- roomi ie W IN POLITICS Michigan’s Senator Arth* r Vandenberg de- clared himself satisfied wkl‘l the EVERYTHING WAS UP TO THEM asDuquesne’s football warriors introduced some- HE COULD HEAR NO EVIL when he became deaf two years ago, so Duke, Boston bulldog. nad to give up his duties as watchdog. But Dr. George Cohen (above), New York City veterina- rian, devised a microphone for his back and bone-conducting re- result of a Chicago G.U.P./meet- ing which delayed action on a proposed mid-term party con- vention, thing new in aerial attacks, successfilly blocking a Carnegie kick for point after touchdown. Ray Car- nelly (36) did the booting. All up in the air are Fly ing Dukes Grabinski (43), center, who blocked the ball with his legs; Platukis (28), end; Amann (26), guard, Karrs (35), fullback; and Serangelli (25), end. But Tech won without the peint, 6 to 0 ceiver for his head, restoring the 12-year-old dog’s hearing. L 1k MAX LOOKS INTO THE FUTURE ataconferenceat” his German home with his trainer, Max Machon, and his attractive. .. wife, known on the screen as Anny Ondra. Schmeling has decided, tq,,.. fight both in New York and Germany before his scheduled meeting. with Champion Jou Louis next year, ALKING TOWARD PEACE at the nine-power par- ey in Brussels was Norman Davis (left), heading the United States . vitamins won a Nobel prize for elegation. He is shown here wil h i B s 0 Prof. Adalbert Szentgyoergyi, of i Szeged University, Hungary, AFTER DE BATTLE, MUDDER this was the scene on the California Institute of Tech nology cam at Pasadena. prdmarfly serious-minded students tossed aside their dignity and mos of their clothing and jumped into this mass of muck, goo and squirming collegians in the annual fresh man-soohomore field day. At least they were able to tell the answer to “How sticky is mud?” after the scrap, called a “mudeo.” SERVING SCIENCE through research in the field of

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