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Albany Avenges Prior Scalping; Saaersman Top Siena in Overtime
*m* ALIAUr STUDINT PRIU Tuesday, February 28, 1967* Albany Avenges Prior Scalping; Saaersman Top Siena In Overtime With the SRO orowd sounding their pleasure, the Albany State oagers eked out an overtime victory, 76-75, over arch-rival Siena College, last Saturday nightat the Washington Avenue Armory. Standing out from a solid team effort by .coach Richard DO YOU KNOW "Doc" Sauers charges was Junior Scott Price. Price, State's 6-3 center and^top WHERE TO GO? rebounder, scored 24 points and pulled down 16 rebounds while sitting out much of the second half. tlon, the lead again seesawed before Opening the five minute overtime The balanced attack fea the sure ball handling of Lonnie session, Siena scored to make It Alb Press tured strong performances Morrison and the boardwork of sub 73-11. Marty O'Dknnell then hit on Tim Jursak thrust the Danes into one of his patented long jump shots' ALBANY, NEW YORK by seniors Marty O'Donnell the lead until the last two minutes to tie the score with 2:16 remaining FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 VOL. Llll, NO. 7 •and Mike Bloom with 10 of the contest. Siena then managed in the game. Scott Price then put the points each, Lonnie Mor to tie the score despite the loss of Danes ahead on a field goal, but SO Theatre Tryoits four starters: Mark Palinski, Tom Siena came back with the equalizer. Cooperation Of Ml rison with 9 points and Jim Sheridan, Tom Amello, and Harry After a made exchange of posses Constantino with 7 points. -
Secretary's Pages
SECRETARY ’S PAGES MISSION STATEMENT The American Kennel Club is dedicated to upholding the ATTENTION DELEGATES integrity of its RMegIisStrSy, IpOroNmo ting the spSorTt Aof TpEurMebrEeNd dT ogs and breeding for type and function. ® NOTICE OF MEETING TFohuen Admederiin ca1n8 8K4e, ntnhelAKC Cluba nisd dites daicffailtieadte td o ourpghaonlidziantgio nths ea idnvteogcarittey foofr iths e Rpeugriset brrye, dp rdoomgo atisn ga tfhame islyp ocrot mofpapnuiroenb,r ead vdaongcs e acnad nibnree ehdeianlgthf oarndty pwe elal-nbd eifnugn,c wtioonrk. to protect the rights of all Fdougn odwedneinrs1 a8n8d4 ,ptrhoe mAKCote raensd piotns saifbflieli adtoegd orwgnaenrizsahtipio. ns advocate for the pure bred dog as a family companion, advance canine health and well-being, work to protect the rights of all The next meeting of the Delegates will be held dog owners and 805prom1 oAtrec ore Csopropnosribaltee dDorgiv oew, Snueirtseh 1ip0. 0, Raleigh, NC 276 17 101 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10178 at the Doubletree Newark Airport Hotel on 8051 Arco Corporate Drive, Suite 100, Raleigh, NC 276 17 Raleigh, NC Customer Call Center ..............................................................(919) 233-9767 260 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016 10, 2020, beginning no earlier New York, NY Office ...................................................................................(212) 696-8200 Tuesday, March Raleigh, NC Customer Call Center ..............................................................(919) 233-9767 9:00 a.m Fax .............................................................................................................(212) -
Shrewsbury, N
The Daily Register V0L.98- NO.139 SHREWSBURY, N. J. MONDAY, JANUARY 19,1976 15 CENTS Teen-age drinking: Not just a passing fad •y JULIE MCDONNELL couple of tlx-packi with tome after a weekend of drinking, riously abusing alcohol, and of the Central Jersey chapter most was Mary Ann Perzel, Mosl high school students bly cropped up in the com- friends on a Saturday night. has become increasingly diffi- according to local authorities of the National Council on Al- director of the Red Bank drink because it's "the thing ments of all the experts ques- Steve li i 14-year-old junior He liked feeling a little high cult. So now Steve occasion- on the problem, Monmouth coholism (NCA). "And It's Area Outreach Center, who to do," according to Miss Per- tioned. In i local high school He's an — It made him relax and ally drink* a little vodka be- County has its fair share of not confined just to high said that teen-age alcohol ab- zel. "From the feedback I re- avenge ttudenl, popular with gave him a breezy confidence fore coming to school, to take them. school students It's filtered use is primarily a "weekend "They drink because every- ceive, the kids are into very hli classmates, has never he admired In the older au away the edglneis. Today, The Daily Register down to the junior high school party thing" rather than an one else is drinking." she heavy drinking," said Mrs been In tny trouble with the denti. Steve goes to Middletown begins a It-part Associated level." "in-school" problem. -
2017 Horrible Hundred Report
The Horrible Hundred 2017 A sampling of problem puppy mills and puppy dealers in the United States May 2017 For the fifth straight year, The Humane Society of the United States is reporting on problem puppy mills, including some dealers (re-sellers) and transporters. The Horrible Hundred 2017 report is a list of known, problematic puppy breeding and/or puppy brokering facilities. It is not a list of all puppy mills, nor is it a list of the worst puppy mills in the country. The HSUS provides this update annually, not as a comprehensive inventory, but as an effort to inform the public about common, recurring problems at puppy mills. The information in this report demonstrates the scope of the puppy mill problem in America today, with specific examples of the types of violations that researchers have found at such facilities, for the purposes of warning consumers about the inhumane conditions that so many puppy buyers inadvertently support. The year 2017 has been a difficult one for puppy mill watchdogs. Efforts to get updated information from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) on federally-inspected puppy mills were severely crippled due to the USDA’s removal on Feb. 3, 2017 of all animal welfare inspection reports and most enforcement records from the USDA website. As of April 20, 2017, the USDA had restored some Puppies at the facility of Alvin Nolt in Thorpe, Wisconsin, were found on unsafe wire flooring, a repeat violation at the facility. Wire flooring animal welfare records on research facilities and is especially dangerous for puppies because their legs can become other types of dealers, but almost no records on entrapped in the gaps, leaving them unable to reach food, water or pet breeding operations were restored. -
Anglo-American Blood Sports, 1776-1889: a Study of Changing Morals
University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014 1974 Anglo-American blood sports, 1776-1889: a study of changing morals. Jack William Berryman University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses Berryman, Jack William, "Anglo-American blood sports, 1776-1889: a study of changing morals." (1974). Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014. 1326. Retrieved from https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/1326 This thesis is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ANGLO-AMERICAN BLOOD SPORTS, I776-I8891 A STUDY OF CHANGING MORALS A Thesis Presented By Jack William Berryman Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS April, 197^ Department of History » ii ANGLO-AMERICAN BLOOD SPORTS, 1776-1889 A STUDY OF CHANGING MORALS A Thesis By Jack V/illiam Berryman Approved as to style and content by« Professor Robert McNeal (Head of Department) Professor Leonard Richards (Member) ^ Professor Paul Boyer (I'/iember) Professor Mario DePillis (Chairman) April, 197^ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Upon concluding the following thesis, the many im- portant contributions of individuals other than myself loomed large in my mind. Without the assistance of others the project would never have been completed, I am greatly indebted to Professor Guy Lewis of the Department of Physical Education at the University of Massachusetts who first aroused my interest in studying sport history and continued to motivate me to seek the an- swers why. -
Alumni @ Large
Colby Magazine Volume 94 Issue 4 Winter 2006 Article 10 January 2006 Alumni @ Large Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/colbymagazine Recommended Citation (2006) "Alumni @ Large," Colby Magazine: Vol. 94 : Iss. 4 , Article 10. Available at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/colbymagazine/vol94/iss4/10 This Contents is brought to you for free and open access by the Colby College Archives at Digital Commons @ Colby. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colby Magazine by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ Colby. alumni at large Goldfarb, Hussey, Devine, and Halloran Nominated by Council The Nominating Committee of the Alumni Council has nominated four Freeman Spogli and Company in New York City. alumni trustees, with terms to begin at Commencement 2006. Two, John Goldfarb serves on the executive, audit, campaign cabinet, and investment B. Devine Jr. ’78 and Todd W. Halloran ’84, would be new to the Board committees of the board. He lives in Avon, Conn., and is a principal with of Trustees. William H. Goldfarb ’68 and Timothy B. Hussey ’78 would HRW Resources, Inc. He is a former overseer and served as a corporate begin their second three-year terms. trustee from 1985 to 1993 and 1994 to 2002. He was a recipient of the Devine was an overseer from 1994 to 2002. He was on the Alumni Council Colby Brick award in 1993 and is a former officer of the Colby Club of from 1987 to 2003, including 10 years on the executive committee and three Hartford. He is the father of Paula S. -
Convention a Marathon Bedlam, Eyewitness Says
1 i" '• [Don't Forget Yttir k« Summit's July 4th Donation! July 4th B Success \^ and Summit Record nun SECTION SUMMIT. N. J., . JULY 1, 1948 $4AYfAR fCSNTS IN TWO SECTIONI Summit Day Sata Convention a Marathon Ut for July 22. 23, 24 118 Different Displays Will Summit Days, the annual three^day »uoira«rtime bargain Be Seen in July 4 Fireworks Bedlam, Eyewitness Says sprw staged by Summit mer- chant., will be bold July 32, 29 W. H. WoodtMe Vandenberg had not given enough Dare devil bombshells, flaming caterpillars, and colored encouragement to his own candi- and 84, the Metefcftnta Commit* Comap<md«it tee of the Chamber of Com* meteors are but three of 118 different displays that will be Convention dacy—a feeling which pervaded a in men* haa aotnmuioed, seen in the thrilling Fourth of July fireworks exhibition to last week wai my majority of the Jersey group with Particlpatttaa: atorw will after be given at Memorial Field, Monday, July 5. "tendance at * national pollt- headquarters at the Barclay Hotel I Starting at 9 p, m., a group of conventlon--«n<J this fact in in 19th street many bargains In aumrae* mej^iondtae for the three-daj' fireworka -expert* will»eg«*<".:t&ft< had me somewhat agog and Mrs. Helen M. Glaeser of Clark Schedule of Events lavish show by, touching off * ived among phalanxes of cx- Township,^the other Union County period, Including items |n every 4ox#n 9-inch *&luU3. This will ba line from wearing apparel to l.Or»ns. alll of them so-Beem- delegate, -plugged a%v»y for Van- For July 4 Program followed by a "Waihingtoa -Cross* household furnishings and ap- "completely cftlm. -
The SPHAS: the Life and Times of Basketball's Greatest Jewish Team
1 on The road I remember the team getting off the train once in a little town in Ohio and a group of people staring at us. They said we looked pretty normal—like they had never seen Jews before. —Shikey Gotthoffer, quoted in the Jewish exponent n Sunday night, January 1, 1939, an estimated 13 million Amer- icans around the country, including in the greater Detroit area, oturned on their radios to listen to the popular weekly address of Father Charles Coughlin. Father Coughlin, the country’s most well-known radio priest, oversaw the Shrine of the Little Flower in Royal Oak, Mich- igan, a suburb of Detroit. Throughout the 1930s, Coughlin grew increas- ingly disenchanted with President Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. As the decade drew to a close, his rhetoric increasingly became anti- Semitic. Newspapers and radio were the two modes of keeping up with the news at that time, and radio proved widely popular as families would often gather around and listen to news, sports, and variety shows. Many listened to Father Coughlin. Traveling that same New Year’s weekend in an unheated car from Mich- igan to Wisconsin was a group of seven basketball players, their manager, and public address announcer. They hailed from Philadelphia, and they were all Jewish. The team was known as the Philadelphia SPHAS, which stood for South Philadelphia Hebrew Association. The SPHAS began as a club team in 1918; by the 1930s, they were regarded as one of the nation’s top bas- ketball squads. The team played in the American Basketball League (ABL), the premier professional basketball league in the country at the time. -
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An Chomhairle Ealaíon An Naoú Turascáil Bhliantúil is Fiche, maille le Cúntais don bhliain dár chrioch 31ú Nollaig 1980. Tíolacadh don Rialtas agus leagadh faoi bhráid gach Tí den Oireachtas de bhun Altanna 6 (3) agus 7 (1) den Acht Ealáion 1951. Twenty-ninth Annual Report and Accounts for the year ended 31st December, 1980. Presented to the Government and laid before each House of the Oireachtas pursuant to Sections 6 (3) and 7 (1) of the Arts Act, 1951. Cover: Druid Theatre's presentation of "Island Surrounded by a Bridge of Glass" by Gary Hynes. The play featured live music by De Danann. Photography by Fergus Bourke. Drawing and layout by Robert Armstrong. Members James White, Chairman Brendan Adams Kathleen Barrington Brian Boydell Make de Paor Andrew Devane Bridget Doolan Dr J. B. Kearney Hugh Maguire Louis Marcus Seán Ó Tuama Donald Potter Nora Relihan Michael Scott Richard Stokes Dr T.J.Walsh James Warwick Staff Director Colm Ó Briain Drama and Dance Officer Arthur Lappin Opera and Music Officer Marion Creely Traditional Music Officer Paddy Glackin Education and Community Arts Officer Adrian Munnelly Literature and Combined Arts Officer Laurence Cassidy Visual Arts Officer/Grants Medb Ruane Visual Arts Officer/Exhibitions Patrick Murphy Finance and Regional Development Officer David McConnell Administration, Research and Film Officer David Kavanagh Administrative Assistant Nuala O'Byrne Secretarial Assistants Veronica Barker Patricia Callaly Bernadette Eastwood Kevin Healy Bernadette O'Leary Colette Waters Receptionist Kathryn Cahille 70 Merrion Square, Dublin 2. Tel: (01) 764685 An Chomhairle Ealaíon An Chomhairle Ealaíon/The Arts Council is an independent organization set up under the Arts Acts 1951 and 1973 to promote the arts. -
City Oks Salary Ordinance Over Police Opposition
SUMMIT, NEW JtKSM The Staff Of The Staff Of The Summit Herald The Summit Herald Wishes All A Wishes All A Very Happy New Year SUMMI Vary Happy New Year <uu/ Summit Record BnutM u ••oral CIMO mtUr «1 th. POM OfflM at •smmll. N. 1 ITUL Mil UtUif Hint L llt» 76th Year No. 33 CRattvfew 3-4000 SUMMIT, N.J., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1964 ••oond ClaM PoBtmjra Pild »t lummlt. N. J. $6 • year com State Aid to City OKs Salary Schools Seen At $262,503 Ordinance Over Summit can expect to receive $252,503 in state aid to education this year, and for the 1965-66 term, a boost of $11,818 to $274,- Police Opposition 321, Walter S. Eddy, business manager, reported at a recent Following continued and heated opposition by the Board of Education meeting. Police Department and local residents over the wage step-scale for sergeants and lieutenants. Common Coun- Mr. Eddy also said that it is cil Tuesday night unanimously adopted am amended IMS possible the city's schools could Five Hurt Municipal Salary Ordinance. also receive in the future 50 per Under the original onMnanca cent of salaries for certified per- introduced by Council on Dee- Hughes M. Ryder sonnel in school services related In Series of ember 1, the rank of sergeant to emotionally disturbed and would have been broken into socially and emotionally mal- four salary levels and Ueuten- adjusted pupils. Ryder New Car Mishaps ants into fix. An The estimated state aid was measure introduced two placed at $262,500 in the current Five persons were Injured later on December 15, cut the school budget. -
Frank Lloyd Wright - Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
Frank Lloyd Wright - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frank_... Frank Lloyd Wright From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Frank Lloyd Wright (born Frank Lincoln Wright, June 8, 1867 – April 9, Frank Lloyd Wright 1959) was an American architect, interior designer, writer and educator, who designed more than 1000 structures and completed 532 works. Wright believed in designing structures which were in harmony with humanity and its environment, a philosophy he called organic architecture. This philosophy was best exemplified by his design for Fallingwater (1935), which has been called "the best all-time work of American architecture".[1] Wright was a leader of the Prairie School movement of architecture and developed the concept of the Usonian home, his unique vision for urban planning in the United States. His work includes original and innovative examples of many different building types, including offices, churches, schools, Born Frank Lincoln Wright skyscrapers, hotels, and museums. Wright June 8, 1867 also designed many of the interior Richland Center, Wisconsin elements of his buildings, such as the furniture and stained glass. Wright Died April 9, 1959 (aged 91) authored 20 books and many articles and Phoenix, Arizona was a popular lecturer in the United Nationality American States and in Europe. His colorful Alma mater University of Wisconsin- personal life often made headlines, most Madison notably for the 1914 fire and murders at his Taliesin studio. Already well known Buildings Fallingwater during his lifetime, Wright was recognized Solomon R. Guggenheim in 1991 by the American Institute of Museum Architects as "the greatest American Johnson Wax Headquarters [1] architect of all time." Taliesin Taliesin West Robie House Contents Imperial Hotel, Tokyo Darwin D. -
The Blue in “Pit Bull”
Info shared by Pitbull SA. Manjaro APBT kennel. South Africa. My Website www.pitbullsa.co.za My E mail “[email protected]” My Facebook “Gawie Manjaro” My Facebook page “Manjaro Kennel” My mobile +27827838280. Zello.com “VoIP” – ask for info. The blue in “pit bull”. The blue in “pit bull” became a point of controversy. Various information extracts about the “Blue” in Pitbull’s – as with so many reasoning’s about “out” breed, this is what we have to work or deal with. Wayne D. Brown's book “History of the American Pit bull terrier” - on pages 25 and 26 he notes: That in the late 1930's one of the most important bloodlines of Pit Bulls was the Lightner dogs. He illustrates that in the conventions of 1936 and 1937, there were Lightner dogs of the dark variety and Lightner dogs of the red nose variety, and a classic confrontation of the two. When Bob Hemphill wrote to Lighter that they were going to use Hall's Searcy Jeff, of the red nose Lightner strain, in the Oklahoma Convention of 1936 at Medicine Park Oklahoma, Lightner wrote back that the red nose blood in Jeff was as game was would ever be bred and, further that the black and blue breeding in (Runyon's Colorado) Imp (II) was as game as would ever be bred. So, the contest between Hall's Searcy Jeff and Runyon's Colorado Imp II at the Oklahoma Convention of 1936 was a classic confrontation between the red nose Lightner dogs and the dark and blue Lightner dogs.