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Seven defending champions return from last year's meet, four of them Harvard men. In the 1600 Alf Hallowell will be hard pressed to beat Johnny Scheu, his team-mate, and Morton Jenkins of M.I.T.; Johnny White, who took the 800 a year ago, will have some trouble in repeating this year, inasmuch as he is suffering from a stone bruise. Milbrandt of Northeastern, who is entered in four field events, is favored to take the shot put over Harvard's Johnny Dean, defending champion of both the shot and discus. Bob Playfair, Harvard's star sophomore distance...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GREATER BOSTON TRACK TRIALS TO START TODAY | 4/27/1934 | See Source »

...onetime Republican Congressman Simms and his wife, Ruth Hanna McCormick; 4) Santa Fe, N. Mex.; 5) Kit Carson, Colo.; 6 ) Hutchinson, Kans. to lunch with onetime Republican Congressman J. N. Tincher; 7) Emporia, Kans. to dine with Republican William Allen White; 8) Topeka, Kans. to visit with Republican Governor Alf Landon; 9) Kansas City to meet Arthur Hyde, his old Secretary of Agriculture, and Editor Henry J. Haskell of the Kansas City Star; 10) Des Moines, to dine with Register and Tribune Publisher John Cowles; 11 Cedar Rapids, to see Republican Committeeman Harrison Spenglar; and 12) Chicago where Arch Shaw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Apr. 9, 1934 | 4/9/1934 | See Source »

...While Alf Harrodon sat dazed the news shot through the poverty-stricken little colony of 250 at Bolinas. All that night the beach was bright with torches and bonfires, moving with bent shadows. Miles Pepper, 12, was the first in his family of eleven to hear what had happened. Father Pepper had just been dropped from CWA. A bank had just foreclosed on the home, beach tearoom and land which Mother Pepper had inherited from her father. While the other ten Peppers sat gloomily thinking of their misfortunes, Son Donald slipped quietly out of the house. Few minutes later...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Ambergris | 3/19/1934 | See Source »

...stroll on Bolinas Beach, north of the Golden Gate, one afternoon last fortnight went Alf Harrodon, 33-year-old radio operator. Striding along with head in air he stumbled on something soft. Looking down, he saw a large mass of greyish stuff, mottled and opaque. In his hands it felt and smelled like limburger cheese...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Ambergris | 3/19/1934 | See Source »

Never in his life had Alf Harrodon seen ambergris, which begins as a secretion in the bowels of a sick sperm whale, ends as a base for precious perfumes. But he had been raised on the coast of Norway and like coast children throughout the world had been taught to keep his eyes peeled for it. With shaking hands he scooped up the cheesy stuff, 60 lb. of it, and carried it home. Next day he got a schoolboy friend to take a sample to his chemistry laboratory. That night the boy came back to report that the sample...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Ambergris | 3/19/1934 | See Source »

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