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FILE - In this Nov. 10, 1935, file photo, Brooklyn Dodgers' Ralph Kerchavel (26) bats away a pass for an unidentified Pittsburgh Pirates player, second from right, that was caught by Pirates' Jim Levey, left, who carried the ball in for a touchdown at Ebbetts Field in Brooklyn, N.Y. The Pirates defeated the Dodgers 16-7. The NFL saw its biggest influx of teams for the decade in 1933, with the additions of the Philadelphia Eagles, Pittsburgh Pirates (later the Steelers) and Cincinnati Reds. (AP Photo/Murray Becker, File)
FILE - This Sept. 11, 1935 file photo shows  Storm Troopers raising their hands in salute as Adolf Hitler leads his staff down the aisle during opening of the National Socialist Party Convention in Nuremberg, Germany.  In March 1933, six years before the war began, Adolf Hitler’s storm troopers violently shut down a small German newspaper,  the Munich Post ,  that had devoted close to a decade warning about Hitler’s dangers to a free society.  A recent biography published by The Associated Press called, “Enemy of the People: The Munich Post and the Journalists Who Opposed Hitler” by Terrence Petty, captures the early era of Nazi Germany.   (AP Photo)
FILE - In this April 22, 1935 file photo, accompanied by a bodyguard, a nurse, and a chauffeur, Gloria Vanderbilt enters the home of her mother, Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, in midtown Manhattan, New York, for an Easter weekend visit. Vanderbilt, the intrepid heiress, artist and romantic who began her extraordinary life as the "poor little rich girl" of the Great Depression, survived family tragedy and multiple marriages and reigned during the 1970s and '80s as a designer jeans pioneer, died Monday, June 17, 2019, at the age of 95.  (AP Photo/File)
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CP1STO578017 | 1935 
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1935-08

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1935-08 
Unique identifier: CP2STO194755 
Legacy Identifier: CP1STO1769_1935-08 
Type: Folder 
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