Word: dietrichs
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...pound class--L. M. Hurvich '32 defeated G. Salva '35 by a fall in 1.14. D. G. Dietrich 1G.B. defeated Hurvich by a fall...
...well-concerted fast bout out of which Keyser, who wrestled in most of the University meets this year, finally emerged victorious. J. B. Gilbert '33, another man with considerable University team experience, found little difficulty in throwing his opponent in the 135-pound class. D. G. Dietrich 1G.B. cleaned up the 145-pound division with a quick fall, while R. R. Levin '32 won the 175-pound gold medal two days ago. Silver medals were awarded to all runner-ups, the winners receiving gold prizes...
...Mariene Dietrich is an emotional and aesthetic experience. To see her in the fabulous modernism of the new Paramount Theatre adds further color to that experience. Only a picture of the forcefulness of Shanghai Express could tear one away from the exotic pastime of watching full-blown colonial maidens, done in the style of Louis XVI, cavorting in modernistic panels under the influence of subdued lighting effects. Paramount has again attempted to be all things to all men and has again succeeded in its own fashion...
...Marlene Dietrich is a heroine of the contemporary order, a "coaster" (poule de luxe) of the Chinese shoreline. The other characters are a group of the ill-assorted personages customarily assembled for "one location" stories-a sour-tongued missionary, an old lady with a lapdog, a U. S. gambler, a German opium dealer who seems to suffer from chilblains, an oriental trollop, a half-breed Chinese named Henry Chang, a British Army surgeon with an Addisonian turn of speech. In the up-to-date habit of Transatlantic, Union Depot and Grand Hotel, they are all inhabiting a train of luxurious...
...medium less persuasive than the cinema. Because the cars, the engines, the soldiers, the flags and noises of cities through which the Shanghai express passes are thoroughly realistic, the villainies of Mr. Chang and even the curiously elaborate speeches written for Clive Brook seem real also. Miss Dietrich's legs are not so evident as usual and she acts well in the manner of a less stoic Garbo. The wars to which the picture alludes are the civil disturbances which raged in China early last year; but, alert to the advantages of the Sino-Japanese conflict, Paramount last week...