The News-Sentinel 1937
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26/20/77 Alumni Association Alumni Harold M. Osborn Papers, 1917, 1919-83
26/20/77 Alumni Association Alumni Harold M. Osborn Papers, 1917, 1919-83 Box 1: Correspondence A, 1930-31, 1934 M. R. Alexanders, Carl Anderson Amateur Athletic Union, 1944-58, 1961, 1967, 1971 B, 1925-32, 1941, 1943, 1947-48 Douglas Barham, John Behr, Hugo Bezdek, George Bell, Frank Blankley, Frank Brennan, Avery Brundage, Asa Bushnell C, 1924, 1931-32, 1936, 1938-39 Carl Carstensen, Jim Colvin D, 1925-26, 1928, 1932-36 Harry Devoe, George Donoghue, John Drummond, Howard Duncan, T. Duxbury E, 1936, 1940-41 F, 1930-32, 1935-36, 1939-40 Arthur Fast, R.A. Fetzer, Walter Fisher, W. J. Francis Ferris, Daniel F. (AAU), 1928, 1930-39 G, 1930-32, 1936 H, 1928-32 Walter Herbert, Charles Higginbottom, Adolph Hodge I, 1935-36 IOC - Olympic athletes admission to Berlin games J, 1928, 1930-35, 1938-40 Skotte Jacobsson, Kelvin Johnston, B. & C. Jorgensen K, 1928, 1931-32, 1934-36 Thomas Kanaly, J. J. Keane, W. P. Kenney, Robert Kerr Volker Klug and Rainer Oschuetz (Berlin), 1962-69 Volker Klug re “Fosbury Flop,” 1969 Volker Kllug re Junge Welt articles on Decathlon, 1971 L, 1928, 1930-31, 1935-36 A. S. Lamb, James A. Lec, Ben Levy, Clyde Littlefield M, 1929, 1933-36, 1940 Lawrence Marcus, R. Merrill, C. B. Mount N, 1927-28, 1936-37 Michael Navin (Tailteann Games), Thorwald Norling O, 1928, 1930, 1932, 1935-37 Herman Obertubbesing Osborn, Harold, 1925-26, 1931, 1935 P, 1932-38, 1940-41 W. Bryd Page, Paul Phillips, Paul Pilgrim, Marvin Plake, Paul Prehn, Rupert Price, 26/20/77 2 Frank Percival R, 1943, 1949 R. -
Trackmen Compete Dr. Von Eckerman Mask and Bauble Lebanon Valley in Two Meets Speaks at F
VOL. IV GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D. C, FEBRUARY 15, 1923 No. 17 TRACKMEN COMPETE DR. VON ECKERMAN MASK AND BAUBLE LEBANON VALLEY IN TWO MEETS SPEAKS AT F. S. CAST CHOSEN LOSES TO G. U. Championship Relay Team to Learned Swedish Scholar Lee- College Thespians to Present Captain Flavin's Team Displays Defend Record at tures on Industries of "Merchant of Venice" Exceptional Basket Buffalo. Native Land. in Gaston Hall. Accuracy. The coming Saturday looms up as one On Friday evening, February 9th, at The "Merchant of Venice," by the In a speedy display of clever floor of the most important on Georgetown the Foreign Service School, Dr. Bergsin- members of the Mask and Baudle Club, work and passing the Georgetown Uni- University's indoor track schedule, for gnior Harry von Eckermann, of Ljusue, is being rehearsed every Saturday and versity five decisively defeated the Leb- the Blue and Bray runners will be called Sweden, spoke on the timber and iron in- Sunday afternoon. The coach, Mr. anon Valley basketers 36 to 19, Friday upon to defend two titles won last year, dustries of his native land. His Ex- Charles W. O'Connor, has selected for evening in Ryan gymnasium. Capt. and Coach O'Reilly will be faced with cellency, Captain Wallenberg, the Min- the cast: Flavin's team was in the lead from the the problem of sending representatives ister from Sweden, made a brief intro- The Duke of Venice William Kalt opening play and at no time in the con- to two different cities in order to defend ductory speech. -
Hannes Kolehmainen in the United States, 1912– 1921 By: Adam Berg, Mark Dyreson Berg, A
The Flying Finn's American Sojourn: Hannes Kolehmainen in the United States, 1912– 1921 By: Adam Berg, Mark Dyreson Berg, A. & Dyreson, M. (2012). The Flying Finn’s American Sojourn: Hannes Kolehmainen in the United States, 1912-1921. International Journal of the History of Sport, 29(7), 1035-1059. doi: 10.1080/09523367.2012.679025 This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of the History of Sport on 15 May 2012, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/09523367.2012.679025 Made available courtesy of Taylor & Francis: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2012.679025 ***© Taylor & Francis. Reprinted with permission. No further reproduction is authorized without written permission from Taylor & Francis. This version of the document is not the version of record. Figures and/or pictures may be missing from this format of the document. *** Abstract: Shortly after he won three gold medals and one silver medal in distance running events at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics, Finland's Hannes Kolehmainen immigrated to the United States. He spent nearly a decade living in Brooklyn, plying his trade as a mason and dominating the amateur endurance running circuit in his adopted homeland. He became a naturalised US citizen in 1921 but returned to Finland shortly thereafter. During his American sojourn, the US press depicted him simultaneously as an exotic foreign athlete and as an immigrant shaped by his new environment into a symbol of successful assimilation. Kolehmainen's career raised questions about sport and national identity – both Finnish and American – about the complexities of immigration during the floodtide of European migration to the US, and about native and adopted cultures in shaping the habits of success. -
1944 All-American Girls Baseball League
HISTORY MAKER BASEBALL 1944 All-American Girls Professional Baseball League One of the top movies of 1992 was the film “A League of Their Own,” starring Tom Hanks, Geena Davis, Rosie O’Donnell and Madonna, a story about a women’s professional baseball league formed during World War II. The movie was a critical and commercial success, earning glowing reviews, topping the box office by its second week of release, and earning over $150 million in ticket sales. The catch phrase, “There’s no crying in baseball!”—uttered by Rockford Peaches manager Jimmy Dugan (played by Hanks) made the American Film Instutute’s list of Greatest Movie Lines of All-Time, and the film itself was selected by the Library of Congress in 2012 for preservation in the National Film Registry, as being “culturally, historically or aesthetically significant.” Interestingly, when the film opened in ’92, relatively few of the people who saw it knew that it was based on an actual, real-life league—many thought it was complete fiction. But the fictionalized account portrayed in the movie was, in fact, based on a very real story. The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League was formed in 1943 out of concern that with so many players serving in World War II, big league baseball might be forced to suspend operations. The idea was that perhaps women could keep the game active and on the minds of baseball fans until the men could return from the war. The new league was bankrolled by big league owners, conducted nation-wide tryouts to stock its four inaugural teams with talented women players, and began competitive play in the spring of ’43—just as the movie’s screenplay detailed. -
Commemoration Day Exercises to Be Held Friday
VOL. XXVIII, No 35 HaMEWOOD, BALTIMORE, MD., FEBRUARY 21, 1924 PRICE 5 CENTS COMMEMORATION DAY EXERCISES MUSICAL CLUB CONCERT TO- TO NIGHT AT MD. CASUAL- 600 ATHLETES OF 30 ORGANIZATIONS BE HELD FRIDAY MORNING AT LYRIC TY CLUB HOUSE TO COMPETE IN INDOOR GAMES Home Concert of Musical Club Biggest Dr. Herbert Spencer Hadley, Chancellor of Washington University, Feature in Its Season. Formal Dance SATURDAY NIGHT AT ARMORY to Be Principal Speaker Following Concert Important Event in University Social Calendar Meet to Contain 48 Events. Booth, J. H. U., and Lermonde, Boston Commemoration Day exercises will be held at the Lyric at 11 Everything is in readiness for College, to Meet in 5,000 Meter Run. Numerous A. M., on Friday, February 27. The exercises, in conformity with Other Features those of previous years, will be of great interest and importance not the annual home concert of the only to the Johns Hopkins University, but to thousands who have Johns Hopkins University Musi- Almost six hundred athletes, including about twenty-five young been influenced by the Baltimore institution. The program, while cal Club, which will be presented women, will compete in the Johns Hopkins-Fifth Regiment Indoor not definitely arranged, will probably be similar to those of other tonight in the auditorium of the Games Saturday night at the Fifth Regiment Armory. These ath- Years. First will be the procession, that most impressive ceremony letes are the representatives of about fifteen universities and the same Maryland Casualty Club House. that adds a dignity worthy of the occasion. Invocation will be fol- number of clubs. -
Ella Ware, Md, the Country
“NO NIGHT WAS EVER TOO DARK OR ROAD TOO LONG FOR HER”: ELLA WARE, M.D., THE COUNTRY DOC A STATE-EDUCATED WOMAN PRACTICING MEDICINE IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY RURAL TEXAS ___________ A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History Sam Houston State University ___________ In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts ___________ by Kassie M. Dixon December, 2016 “NO NIGHT WAS EVER TOO DARK OR ROAD TOO LONG FOR HER”: ELLA WARE, M.D., THE COUNTRY DOC A STATE-EDUCATED WOMAN PRACTICING MEDICINE IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY RURAL TEXAS by Kassie M. Dixon ___________ APPROVED: Nancy E. Baker, PhD Committee Director Rosanne E. Barker, PhD Committee Member Thomas H. Cox, PhD Committee Member Abbey Zink, PhD Dean, College of Humanities and Social Sciences ABSTRACT Dixon, Kassie M., “No night was ever too dark or road too long for her”: Ella Ware, M.D., The Country Doc, a state-educated woman practicing medicine in early 20th- Century rural Texas.” Master of Arts (History), December, 2016, Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, Texas. Around the turn of the twentieth century, women carved out paths for themselves as physicians in the young field of modern medicine in Texas, graduating at a rate of about one per year from the state’s first medical school, The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB). Little research on these women exists. In fact, the majority of work on women physicians in the history of medicine concentrates on the urban Northeastern United States, the location of the country’s first medical schools to admit women. -
2004 USA Olympic Team Trials: Men's Marathon Media Guide Supplement
2004 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Men’s Marathon Guide Supplement This publication is intended to be used with “On the Roads” special edition for the U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Men’s Marathon Guide ‘04 Male Qualifier Updates in 2004: Stats for the 2004 Male Qualifiers as of OCCUPATION # January 20, 2004 (98 respondents) Athlete 31 All data is for ‘04 Entrants Except as Noted Teacher/Professor 16 Sales 13 AVERAGE AGE Coach 10 30.3 years for qualifiers, 30.2 for entrants Student 5 (was 27.5 in ‘84, 31.9 in ‘00) Manager 3 Packaging Engineer 1 Business Owner 2 Pediatrician 1 AVERAGE HEIGHT Development Manager 2 Physical Therapist 1 5’'-8.5” Graphics Designer 2 Planner 1 Teacher Aide 2 AVERAGE WEIGHT Researcher 1 U.S. Army 2 140 lbs. Systems Analyst 1 Writer 2 Systems Engineer 1 in 2004: Bartender 1 Technical Analyst 1 SINGLE (60) 61% Cardio Technician 1 Technical Specialist 1 MARRIED (38) 39% Communications Specialist 1 U.S. Navy Officer 1 Out of 98 Consultant 1 Webmaster 1 Customer Service Rep 1 in 2000: Engineer 1 in 2000: SINGLE (58) 51% FedEx Pilot 1 OCCUPATION # MARRIED (55) 49% Film 1 Teacher/Professor 16 Out of 113 Gardener 1 Athlete 14 GIS Tech 1 Coach 11 TOP STATES (MEN ONLY) Guidance Counselor 1 Student 8 (see “On the Roads” for complete list) Horse Groomer 1 Sales 4 1. California 15 International Ship Broker 1 Accountant 4 2. Michigan 12 Mechanical Engineer 1 3. Colorado 10 4. Oregon 6 Virginia 6 Contents: U.S. -
Rice Host to Many Famous Track Stars
VOLUME X RICE INSTITUTE, HOUSTON, TEXAS, MARCH 28, 1925 NUMBER 24 RELAYS TAKE SPOTLIGHT INl — li — ii — Rice Topics No ted Champions Among Relay Carnival S WHEN the Relay Carnival is over Rice Host to " Saturday afternoon Rice will have accomplished a big thing for the track sport in the Southwest. » * • Many Famous ANNUAL relay carnivals on ex- tensive scales have been estab- lished in the North, South, East, West and Southeast. And now Rice is ere- at ng a similar track ever.t 1'm the Track Stars Southwest. Such an annual affair ir will mean much to Rice, Houston and the entire Southwest. Extensive Program Is Ready; Relays TF THE Relay Carnival grows locally Regarded as Epoch-Making in as it has done in other parts of the United States, it will be but a few Local Sport History years until the annual Southwest Re- lay Carnival at Rice takes its place Hundreds of athletes are ready and thousands of sport fans are alongside those held yearly at Penn waiting for the stupendous track program that is to be presented State, Drake, Georgia Tech and other on Rice Field Saturday afternoon. The eyes of the Southwest are famous athletic centers. watching with eager interest the staging of one of the biggest * * * events in the history of this section. /CREDIT is due Coaches John P. The Southwest Relay Carnival is expected to create a new era ^ Nicholson, Heisman and Rafferty in the history of local track. Champions and aspiring champions, in putting over this pioneer move- university, college, academy, high school, and grammar school ment in Southwestern track circles. -
Cambridge - June 13-14
1924 Cambridge - June 13-14 As in 1920, all finals were held on the second day except the walk, with heats on the first day, while all semi-finals took place on June 14, except for the 400m hurdles. A number of athletes did not make the top-4 in the trials, but were nevertheless selected because of their consistency in previous competition, showing a far greater flexibility of approach than was to be seen after World War II. The principal athletes who benefited were: Loren Murchison, Leroy Brown, John Watters, Alan Helffrich, George Lermond, Alfred LeConey, William Comins, Ernest Oberst and Pat McDonald. The New York Times noted that there were 419 entries, compared with 259 in 1920. Timing was with 1/10th and 1/5th of a second watches. Times are shown in tenths of a second for uniformity of presentation. The venue was efficiently served by the Boston Elevated Railway, which enabled large crowds to quickly get to and from the stadium. 100 Meters 15.20 Hr 1. 1. Chester Bowman (Syracuse) 10.6 2=. 3. Charley Paddock (LAAC) 10.6e 2=. 7. Jackson Scholz (NYAC) 10.6e 4. 2. Frank Hussey (Stuyvesant, NY HS) 10.7e 5. 5. Al LeConey (Meadowbrook AC) 10.7e 6. 4. Keith Lloyd (USC) 10.7e 7. 6. Loren Murchison (NYAC) 10.8e Semi-finals: (First 3 qualify), 14.25 Hr 1/ 1. Scholz 10.6, 2. Lloyd 10.8e, 3. Bowman 10.8e, 4. Paddock 10.8e, George Hill (Penn) 10.8e, Albert Washington (Chic AA) 2/ 1. LeConey 10.8, 2. -
| Buick Sport. Model |
of Prussianiam North said. are most successful with,” said the League at the Hague state of affairs as the Browns were Dr. declar-j has been done. At the the pennant, and militarism is forever.” should the prac- nothing Mrs. Boyle. “The gradual change ed on her return here after a i gone commission stop out of the pennant last “Thus far we have had suc- are Expecting it even looks like kept most cases latent Magnates too much tc time at the is in nothing five weeks tice of making weight present year by a weakness dizzy cess. We hope there will be few- trip through Germany. Year For Baseball American runners will make that is ‘just coming out on them’ Big into a division. the corner.' “I am convinced that the Ger- get down lighter er men later on to put in peni- some developing King’s Youngest Son * * in the events had a but is caused by * p showing If the Brooklyn Robins* 2! Big poorer elec- it can be cor man people as a whole are really New York, February mile than they team to out a third tentiaries, reformatories and disorder. Usually In Motor Car Crash For the first time since he se- •ibovc the quarter help good are tric chairs.” rected.” that Germany lost the war league baseball parks being did in 1920. baseman, if they had one, they glad leeted the eastern field ;*s a new North his- associates the clinic records children Feb. 21—Prince George off se»son so developing most rap’d-! would in the National Dr. -
29.5-FEB-28-1931.Pdf
Pqo M hlle-Detetailson the ox To Help~Mr. G arvey~ - ---- -- -Lead Us toViet_~or_y/~ t tt Case, Thrilling, Instructive ILl as Worthy Examples to be free people¯ Y To Urge Wide Change Trachoma Tests Begin Florida’s Ureen lltings THIRD INSTALLMENT penedon the24th ol May?A. The (Continuedfrom last week) 24th,yes. Copiedby 1Negroes Mr.J. M. Hazehvood IU IndianSupervision Clinic Vs~ Monkeystn Effortto UnitedStates Is White BY MR.LASH: LIBERTYHALL, New York City, Theabove named speaker drew to FindDisease’s CauSe Q. On May24th 1930 what was Q. Yousay that tile defendant N.Y., Feb. 15¯ 1931,--A very inter- the attentionof the audiencetile con- WASHINGTON.--Drasticchanga~ yourcaoacitv of emuloyment?A. Knoxwas an.honorary omcer oz tne estingmeeting of theGarvey Club, trast of leaders that the Hen. Marcus in theadministration of Indian Aslocal’circulati0a manager, concernrunmng the Negro World? Inc.,was held at Liberty Hall, 2667 Garvey left behind to carry on the affairswill be recommended to Con- Q. Howlong had you known Knox?! A. Yes,he wasappomteu oy Mr. gthavenue, New York City, Those work of thn U. N. I. A. to the kind of gressby thesubcommittee of the Garvey-- whoattended were greatly benefited leaders that Gandhi left behind when SenateCommittee onIndian Affairs, bylistening toa very impressive pro-he too was taken to prison. Our headedby SenatorFrazier (R., N. leader was double-crossedby his own Dak.),which is preparing to submit gramof the evening. cabinet and associates. They failed Theritualistic services andselec. itsreport before the close of the tionsfrom the band and choir were to carry out the instructionsthat he presentsession asthe climax to an gave them to execute. -
Be Sure to Register for Lowell Day Plan
THIS ISSUE CONTAINS- LEDGER 8 Pages 6If. Columns ENTRIES 1U0 Inches BelnK a Collection of Various Topics of Local and FORTY-FIFTH YEAR LOWELL, MICHIGAN, SEPTEMBER 23. I9.')7 No. 19 General Interest THE WOBBLY STOCK MABKET Needed Home Modernization New Beauty Shop rTHE STOCK MARKET is a tem- 5,000 More Trees 24 Duck Eggs Opens Here Monday peramental creature. Like Would Be Boon To Labor aome folks full of nerves, it varies Be Sure To Register from high elation to extreme de- A new and modernly equipp'd pression. At one moment it is step- To Be Planted in Kent County's 53.901 one and (cent cf Kent County's 61.200 fam- Five Years Ago, beauty shop will open here next ping high and conjuring up golden two-family houses offer a potential Hies own their homes and that Monday under the proprietorship visions of fat dividends. Not many market for $2,600,038 worth of non-farm dwellings, occupied by of Claudt Thome, well known local days may pass before it is down in modernization, according to a na- the owners, number 35,899 and have barber. Mr. Thorne recently com- the dumps. Municipal Forest tion-wide, county-by-county study, in average value of S5,077. 1,000 Ducks Now pleted a comprehensive course in The market during recent days For Lowell Day Plan based on government statistics. Other interesting data disclosed ail phases of cosmetology, gradua- had two startling breaks. Wall just completed. % telephones and 22? automobiles| ting from one of the state's best street compiains that the regula- The survey is part of an investi- per 1.000 people in the county.