The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 30, 1940, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 30, 1940. 1940 dlightights of the News o : g inland, o Soviet manpower overcomes Fin % i but thousands of Russians pay with their lives for victory P 1. i vigns 21-nation hemisphere neutrality i pact at Havana ; . e S The United States rades fifty destrogers (o Blind Children & p England for war bases % and civilians seek 3 : % : g : T London sheiters 3 3 4 ; it Norwegian King Haakon flees Germans Adolf Hitler visits occupied Paris Yealy, Gevuann. and military pact Leon Trotska slain s ness men, promoted the Cotton' sissippi State and Georgetown in , 5 e HE year it has been turned over to and the Texas Aggies in the Cot- . 5 » TEN STORIES WILL BE 1 the Southwest Conference to run.'ton Bowl, In oth¢r less publicized The Orange Bowl game was con-|bowl games Western Reserve meets NE B wl GAME ceived nine years ago as a publicity | Arizona Staté in El Paso's Sun stunt | Bowl. PUBLISHED IN EMPIRE bx e Miami boosters, searching for e > mething to attract early-season AP FEATURE SERVICE | teans Mid-Winter Sports Associ gt atténtion to the winter resort, hit PASADENA, Cal. Dec. 30—How|ton, in the process of organiza- upon the idea of a New Year's did all these New Year’s Day foot-| tion, asked civic and business Day football game. | ball bowl games get started? groups and citizens to join Only, chick Meehan brought Manhat- Well, the Rose Bowl, oldest of|39 citizens and organizations com- (an College to play the Univer-| B R E A K I E. the holiday gridiron attractions | bined thought enough of the pros- gty of Miami. Some 3,500 specta-| ' put on its first game in 1916 when | Pect to become members. tors sat in improvised wooden Washington State beat Brown 14-0 | But their dream came true. The stands on January 1, 1933, and But Pasadena had been in the‘SUEar Bowl and a sports week of watched as Miami toppled fa-| s with a January 1 celebra-| top-ranking amateur competition vored Manhattan, 7 to 0 | Clair Bee, whose basketball teams doing the wrong things that have at Long Island University for years pecome habitual with a player. ¢ ween a model for perfect exe-' It was just such a guide that 1 of fundamentals, was talk- Bee was asked to prepare for the of cutis ing on his favorite subject—basket-' AP Peature Service—a se ball. lessons designed to give young n tion long before that. Away back|in track, - tennis, basketball, bOX- Tpa; was the beginning, al-| “Where,” he asked, “do you think basketball players a proper slant great basketball players are made? on fundamentals of the game. in 1890 its first Tournament of|ing, yachting and rowing has yhough the affair then was called' college? gh school teams| The 10-article series, in whic] | ¢ Rl I ’ o il e s Jeit Y Dsnt s e t Roses was held. And the Tourna-|grown out of their idea. the Palm Festival Game. In 1934 COlOf d Finally G n B SF G edine AR dePen den e R f Roses parade still far out-| The sports committee got 300 Duquesne whipped Miami, 33 to 7 ado Finally boes in & tearms the game for years may find s: E 01 D“rutl;fll" (ih fne i o e fip:)r s con £ suifo s Buu: e ’1“>< L A Ol ; T s otbal al . | citizens 0 guarantee eac ucknell walloped la 26~ He didn't wait for an answer.|Belpful hints, starts at the draws the football g feiflsent ute, supmoies A0, cady Buo P i 26-0 i for Winter SDO”—WGS'- He had it. beginning — training — and tak More than a million and a quar- | for ;xpd " S, :h gt Du sl 35 L’k " P e the player all the way through to ter pepple swarm into this town,| much, during the first three years. “mhe game had caught on and erners | e Sl pc“}“’i‘. beogune ,Blrm the importance of teamwork with & normal 85000 population, Since then the Mid-Winter Sports tne Orange Bowl (itle was adopi-| L playe: '.\\hen ?.‘u,x? as _rar ».1 cnmlli e first of these articles, of the George Howard Earle, {th, son of . e the five-mile long morning | .A_ssocianon has assumed all oblige- ¢q. Miami built a steel-and-con- Gkl ST e shaig, ek eben. 105 hugias sond) se?;s of ten, will start in the the U. S. envoy to Bulgaria and for- . 4qe Around 86000 see the grid| tions. They raised $710,000 to iN- cree stadium and plans were laid| . b ¥ de v WD, Mgt egine. ol mer Pennsylvania governor, is in- .. ..o iy the afternoon, But the|crease Tulane's stadium—The Suga: {5 make the event serve double] COLORADO SPRINGS, Col. Dee, | pire tomorrow. All players will fi lege men. UL cetisnt Hie. i ‘f,t"f.:‘;"é?.fi*;‘élfgfl;”’?«'fiyke?.?; game pays for the parade. The| Bowl—to seat 70,000. duty in publicizing the cit- 23—Colorado, a state that has “But the great basketball player i g The boy tried to join the RAF last ss is around $325,000 and after| There is no sectional represen- rus industry and tourist attrac- plenty of snowy peaks and its share ADRIAN DODSON usually is moulded in his junior| summer, but was thwarted when $20.000 expenses is taken out, the|tation idea behind the Sugar Bowi. tions. of freezing winter weather, always: R high school days and in his ThnrtstWhen papa Is af Home, his mother sppealed to the State profit is split three ways—roughly| An 1l-man executive commitfee Through sheer luck, backers has been resident, for some reason, puTON ROUGE, La.—Molding & year or Soxm “Sm Schc‘gx- i 2 4y Department to stop him. He now 26 percent to the Tournament of|cHooses and invites competini managed to match opponents who t0 ice hockey. ctatue or painting a picture are il b e S 0 Mama Must 6o 10 Jail sspirestobecomea U. S. Navy flier, Rosez Association, and 37 percent teams. These teams usually get 1'% turned in two corking contests,| People wouldn't cotton to it and a tousher work for Adrian Dodson, :xfnxlzair_m:h:l:vi‘:z da;:e re;::"c‘l‘? g;:‘ 'Z;!::sber;:t(lis“fi:dumitlh fi:’;'gn:z‘u" to each of the competing teams. | percent ‘of the gate. The 1939 game, in which Tennessee Denver rink went broke after fixing |rouisiana State halfback, than tot- less of what the.b(’st coach can do! LYNCHBURG, Va., Dec. 30. — ple’tes flight training. The Teurnament of Roses Asso- The Cotton Bowl at Dallas wa; conquered previously unbeaten Ok- up a smart arena and trying to pop- g a focthall. Or so he L § vhy Vi /i in jail ‘onference selet . J. 5 d. e BrOBS ‘ 7 - 4 be either an artist or a fool i Mg mfi;-v 51:3:: se?l‘r’:: e f&”eflxeficaaififi Chates| Mix two tablespoons chopped alll 0 Lt ® e “poce” Bowl. | He just about put on thie first game gate was $91000, each team get- 1y small school situated close to the o 1 C i M RO 90 T 9 T some gux('!e ls - .t.hAaD B ot Burkg N dlg b o Rt pickles Wllh‘thl'.ce taplespoons vine- .. team is allowed to choose an single-handed. But it was a success ting about $27,000. |foot of 14,110-foot Pikes peak here,| ;. ¢, tepping sophomore. He fs zles todgun ychi:gs right. There H‘e decided that when papa is at gar and nlx o Wil Miee pee “castern” club. The Association and Texas Christian and Marquette This year's program features took up the game several years a20.| ) and comes from Columbus, Miss. Sm"?d G things to teach in Work, mama may stay at home; cooked, seasoned spinach. You will | " FTo. ioe and 300 assoclate! drew around $16000 each, Sanford Stanford and Nebraska in the NOW hockey is practically a major * A¢ s kiq Dodson liked to draw and flrgv bo ;na?;skebhafil that there when papa is at home, mama goes i com;;llmenii{ihfflj{u}:7 ____ | members. = just broke even. Rose Bowl, Tennessee and Boston ‘Port at the college upon which| o igeq o make something of it. Savanss f d - to jail 3 led ad in The Empire.. Seven years ago the New Or- He, along ~ith other Dallas busi- College in the Sugar Bowl, Mis- Dutch Clark focused national in-'ygiely while speeding nearly 500 isw't much time (o spend on un- fo Jall e i ) & ¥ Z_— [terest when he was named all-Am- | G rac (his fall to become L.S.U. .. G BmGING UP FATI_'IER : » BY GEOHGE‘MCMANUS i Pri{\t}lh.” x::z;x’tl:rrb;‘c“l(%lxrlflfimk el -T;‘J;’x:i”f; und-gairer, he picked SO SR O VE DONE ALY AT s SO RCINER RS S b such foes as Michigan and Dodscn studies curves as hard as ' ! ORRY-SIR~ I'Vi : éCN)‘Oli> AGENT IS HERE AGAIN- COULD-BUT THIS MR. JIGGS THIS 5 THE FOURTH TIME 1S ONE _BOOK | BELIEVE - TODAY AND INSISTS ON AGENT THAT WON'T s (o]W] Colforpia and lcst only to Univer-| yo fontpall signals. His art teach- SEEING YOU - TAKE NO EF'SE ! season -they will tackle an even|.ijtices claim that with experience he E%ESSOME mere ambitious whuh:lf- Al | nay become a touchdown title con- FHE OFFICE- - C. C. opens at home against Mich- | sengar. gan, then meots Yale, Iilinois, Cal- R I ol e ifornja, U, 8. C., and U. C. L. A. | A trip to the Pacific Coast foi engagements with U. 8. C., U. C. L. | A and California will be sand- between the Yale and Illin-| AFTER ALL~ sity of Southern California. This| ay he has real ablity. And sports AN ANSWI recticut, Minresota and Illinois. Coach Garrett Livingston says his eam should be just as strong as ‘ast year's club and “might even be HOW MANY TIMES HAVE | TOLD_YOU | DO NOT WANT TO EVEN SEE ANY BOOK AGENTS? b '»‘) | 1 little better.” Mainstays are Goalie 3 Home games playsd at an 3ob Scarlett, highly praised by foes ; co arena clese by nic Cheyenne |25t Year, and Capt. Chick Ross of A Mcuntain. Attendance was so good | Saskatchewan. S last: winter that an additicnal 750 | W it » Jj eats have been installed. |, TOM AND JERRY BATTER The Tizer team, like so many Am- | Made to order, during holiday sea- [ g 1 ) ‘ricen cellege hockey cutfits, has ax [son.—Sully’'s Bakery. T adv. ¥ TP . o \ nierrational flaver with players | o Tt 2 i NS i (] (o from Saskatchewan, Ontario and| The Daily Alaska Empire has the other Conadian previnees, as well | largest paid circulation of any Al- as from such distant states as Con- [ 15ka newspaper, ) il | i I I )

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