Afternoonunewsparper Publishe

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Afternoonunewsparper Publishe HIGH TIDE 10-13'-W EVERYe:V, HTHEf"IRSoT AFTERNOONUNEWSPARPER ___ 3.3 AT 0734 PUBLISHE~D_A....;;i;;;;;:YW;;;;;:H;;;;;;.[;;;;;:R[~IN---..;;T;;;;;;,HE--=WO::;,RL_D-=':;.S ~_1?_;_li_;_~_2_04~----1 4.0. AT 2016 _ 2.3 AT 131 VOL KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS MoNDAY 12 OCTOBER I 24-HOUR WEATHER FORECAST Two OR THREE ROUSING HUZZAHS ARE DUE VENEZUELAN CHIEF PARTLY CLOUDY SKIES, FEW SCATTERED KWAJALEIN'S SMOKE-EATERS rOR AN OUT­ SHOWERS. W,ND WILL BE LIGHT-SOUTHERLY, JO INS~ IN MANHUNT BECOMING GUSTY IN SHOWERS. STANDING JOB DONE ON THE ftREMtN'S CARACAS (UPI)--PRESIDENT RAUL lE~NI HIGH TEMPERATURE BALL SATURDAY NIGHT. TODAY ASSUMED PERSONAL SUPERVISION OF 88 -- THE BALL, TRADITIONAL WINDUP or fiRE THE MASSIVE SEARCH FOR PRO-CASTRO TER­ 76 -- LOW TEMPERATURE PREVENTION WEEK, WAS ATTENDED BY NEAR­ RORISTS WHO KIDNAPED A U.S. AIR FORCE RELATIVE HUMIDITY -- 90 TO 75- WEEKEND RAINrALL -- 1.5 INCHES LY 400 PERSONS, AND IT WAS OBSERVED OFFICER AND HAVE SOUGHT TO BARTER HIS LATER THAT "NEARLY EVERYONE WHO IS LIFE FOR THAT OF A CONDEMNED COMMUNIST RAINFALL FOR MONTH -- 6.41 INCHES ANYONE WAS THERE." IN SOUTH VIET NAM. MAJ. GEN. NGUYEN CHIEF BOB RAGAN, ASSISTANT CHIEr CAO Ky SAID IN SAIGON THAT THE PLANNED fRED SCHILLARErF AND THEIR ENTIRE CREW EXECUTION OF COMMUNIST TERRORIST NGUYEN JOHNSON IN PHOENIX; GETS THE CREDIT FOR THE EXPECIALLY EN­ VAN TROI HAD BEE~ POSTPONED. HOSTILITIES SLIGHT JOYABLE EVENING ArrORDED KWAJALEIN'S IN TELEPHONED THREATS TO CARACAS PHOENIX, ARIZ. (UPI)--PRESIDENT PARTY-GOERS. Two FIREMEN WERE SINGLED NEWSPAPERS AND RADIO STATIONS, PERSONS JOHNSON RECEIVED AN ENTHUSIASTIC WEL­ OUTj RED OILI, WHO HANDLED GENERAL AR­ IDENTIFYING THEMSELVES AS KIDNAPERS OF COME IN SEN. BARRY M. GOLDWATER'S HOME RANGEMENTS, AND FREDDID CACHOLA, WHO LT. COL. MICHAEL SMOLEN HAD THREATENED TOWN TODAY BUT THE RECEPTION WAS MARRE WAS IN CHARGE OF rOOD AND DRINK. TO KILL THE AMERICAN UNLESS THE LIFE WHEN SOMEONE CONKED HIM IN THE HEAD A HIGHLIGHT or THE rESTIVITIES --AND OF THE V,ETNAMESE TERRORIST WAS SPARED. WITH A GOLDWATER-MILLER CAMPAIGN SIGN. TRADITION HOPES IT WILL EVER BE THUS-­ THE UNITED STATES TOOK THE THREAT SECRET SERVICE AGENTS GRABBED FOR WAS THE PRESENTATION or LOVELY PENNY SERIOUSLY AND ASKED THE SOUTH VIETNAM­ THE SIGN CARRrERS, BUT HE DISAPPEARED BEAUMONT AS QUEEN or THE BALL. AT THE ESE GOVERNMENT TO PUT OFF THE EXECUTION IN THE CROWD OF SEVERAL THOUSAND PER­ rIREHOUSE, HER REGAL TITLE IS COMMONLY THE VIETNAMESE COMMUNIST HAD BEEN SONS BACKED UP BEHIND POLICE LINES AT APPENDED WITH "GIRL I '0 MOST LIKE TO DOOMED TO DEATH BY FIRING SQUAD FOR SKY HARBOR AIRPORT. RESCUE rROM A FIRE." PLANTING A BOMB UNDER A BRIDGE IN AN JOHNSON KEPT SMILING AND LATER SAID DANNY AVILLA AND HIS BAND PROVIDED ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT AGAINST VISITING HE WAS "POSITIVE IT WAS ACCIDENTAL" MUSIC rOR A DANCJNG CONTEST AND FOR U.S. DEFENSE SECRETARY ROBERT S. Mc­ WHEN THE PLACARD BOPPED HIM, DENTING DANCING AT LARGE, TO THE PARTICULAR D~ NAMARA LAST SPRING. HE WAS TO HAVE HIS STETSON HAT AND PUSHING IT BACK ON LIGHT EVEN or THOSE or US WHO HAVE TWO BEEN EXECUTED IN SAIGON BY NEXT WEEK- HIS HEAD. LErT rEET. THEIR PERrORMANCE AT THE END. OTHER WITNESSES SAID IT APPEARED THE BALL WILL ALMOST SURELY PRODUCE DEMANDS POLICE AND MILITARY FORCES ESTIMATED ACTION MAY HAVE BEEN INTENTIONAL. FOR MORE APPEARANCES IN THE VERY NEAR AT ABOUT 6,000 MEN PRESSED THE SEARCH THE PRESIDENT SEEMED COMPLETELY UN­ FUTURE. FOR SMOLEN AS THE CASTROLITE UNDER­ PERTURBED BY THE INCIDENT AND KEPT SO LAVISH WERE BOTH PREPARATIONS AND GROUND ARMED FORCES FOR NATIONAL llBER WALKING ALONG THE LINES OF SUPPORTERS PROVISIONS THAT IT SEEMS UNLIKELY TKRE TION (rUN) HELD HIM CAPTIVE THROUGH WHO CHANTED "WE WAlIT JoHNSON." To WILL BE ANY LARGE AMOUNT or CASH LErT THE THIRD DAY. THE CONSTERNATION or SECRET SERVICE OVER. WHAT THERE IS, HOWEVER, WILL BE (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR) AGENTS, HE PLUNGED BOTH HANDS INTO THE USED FOR ONE OR MORE or THE BENEVOLENT CROWD AND IT APPEARED AS MANY AS TWO PURPOSES WHICH THE FIRE STATION SPON­ JUANITA CASTRO SAYS DOZEN PERSONS AT ONCE WOULD GRAB HtM. SORS. CUBA~S THERE WERE MANY "WE WANT JOHNSON" YOURS TRULY, FOR ONE, IS LOOKING rOR­ A CEMETERY AND "VIVA JOHNSON" PLACARDS VISIBLE. MIAMI (UPI)--JuANITA CASTRO CHARGED WARD WITH CONSIDERABLE ANTICIPATION TO ONLY ABOUT TWO DOZEN GOLDWATER-MILLER IN A SHORTWAVE BROADCAST TO CUBA ANO THE WINDUP OF NEXT YEAR'S FIRE PREVEN­ SIGNS COULD BE SEEN. TION WEEK. lATIN AMERICA LAST NIGHT THAT HER ED. BROTHER FIDEL'S rlRING SQUADS ANr POLI­ TICAL PRISONS HAVE "CONVERTED OUR KHANH REASSERTS XAUDEVILLIAN CANTOR ISLAND INTO THE CEMETERY OF THE HEMI­ SPHERE." DECISION T9 RESIGN DEMJN SEVENTY SHE CALLED ON THE INTERNATIONAL RED SAIGON (UPI)--PRIME MINISTER MAJ. HOLLYWOOD, CALlr. (UPI)--EODIE CAN­ CROSS AND UNITED NATIONS HUMAN R,GHTS GEN. NGUYEN KHANH TODAY APPEALED FOR TOR, BANJO-EYED VAUDEVILLIAN WHOSE COMMISSION TO INTERCEDE ON BEHALF or SOMEBODY TO TAKE OVER HIS JOB BY DANCING FEET AND DOUBLE-TAKES BROUGHT 75,000 POLITICAL PRISONERS SHE SAYS OCT. 27. HIM STARDOM IN MOVIES, R~OIO AND TELE­ ARE BEING HELD UNDER "INHUMANE" CONDI­ KHANH, IN A LETTER TO THE "HIGH VISION, DIED SATURDAY AT~THE AGE OF 70. TIONS IN PRISONS SIMILAR TO NAZI JAILS. NATIONAL COUNCIL" WNICH IS NOW PLAN­ THE COMEDIAN, FAMED FOR~HIS CHARIT­ HER 25-MINUTE TAPED ADDRESS WAS BEAM­ NING A NEW CIVILIAN GOVERNMENT FOR ABLE WORKS AS HE WAS FOR HIS FRIED-EGG ED TO CUBA AND OTHER HEMISPHERE NATIONS SOUTH V,ET NAM, STATED: EYES, CONTINUED TO BE A SHOWBUSINESS ON THE REGULAR EVENING PROGRAM BROAD­ "I SINCERELY ASK YOU TO CHOOSE SOME­ FIGURE A DECADE ArTER GIVING UP GREASE CAST BY EXILE COMMENTATOR lUIS CONTE ONE TO REPLACE ME AS PRIME MINISTER. PAINT AND PUBLIC APPEARANCES. AGUERO. I WILL RETURN TO MY POST AS A GENERAL. SEMI-RETIRED SINCE SUFFERING A HEART SHE SAID, "THE REVOLUTION IN CUBA KHANH'S REQ~EST WAS NOT A SURPRISE SEIZURE IN 1953, CANTOR WROTE BOOKS AND WHICH FIDEL CASTRO BETRAYED TO THE BECAUSE HE HAS REPEATEDLY PLEDGED TO TOOK PRIDE IN HIS DISCOVERY or A NEW COMMUNISTS" MUST BE RESTORED IN HER TURN OVER HIS MILITARY REGIME TO CIVIL TALENT. HIS ENERGY AND DRIVE, WHICH HOMELAND. SH~ URGED "REVOLUTIONARY IAN CONTROL BY OCT. 27. LEO TO THE SEVERE HEART CONDITION, MADE EXILES" TO MAKE A WORKING PACT WITH THE NEW GOVERNMENT IS SUPPOSED TO HIM ONE OF THE BEST LOVED PERFORMERS or SUPPORTERS or rORMER DICTATOR FULGEN­ BE CHOSEN BY THE 17-MEMBER HIGH HIS GENERATION. CIO BATISTA FOR COOPERATING IN OUSTING NATIONAL COUNCIL, WMI~~ WAS RECENTLY DURING WORLD WAR I AND WORLD WAR II CASTRO. ASSEMBLED FROM REPRESENTATIVES OF THIS CANTO WAS A SUPER-SALESMAN AT BONO BUT SHE SAID THOSE BATISTA SUPPORTERS COUNTRY'S FOWR MAJO. RELIGIONS AND DRIVES. HE WORKED CEASELESSLY FOR WHO ENGAGED IN "POLITICAL CRIMES" MUST MYRIAD POLITICAL PARTIES. CAUSES IN WHICH HE BELIEVED WITH A Bt DENIED THEIR "POLITICAL RIGHTS" WHEN THE COUNCIL fTSELr ANNOUNCED TODAY DEDICATION IN DIRECT CONTRAST TO HIS THEY RETURN TO CUBA. IT WILL FINISH WORK WITHIN A WEEK ON CAREFREE COMEDY ROLES. A PROVISIONAL CONSTITUTION UNDER WHICH CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR NIXON CHARGES JOHNSON THE NEXT GOVERNMENT WILL HAVE TO ~Vl\G I NG I CI GUS CAtvlPA I GN OffiCIAL BUllETIN V OPERATE. P,NEHURST, N.C. (UPI)--FoRMER VICE DUTY Of"fICER fOR kWAJALEIN TEST 51 PRESIDENT RICHA~NIXON CHARGED IN THREE lAUNDERETTE TO OPEN DATE: NAME: HOME PHONE: SOUTHERN CITIES TONIGHT THAT A CONTIN­ THE LONG AWAITED LAUNDERETTE, rOR I~T64 CAPT. J.J. OSBORN 2371 UATION OF DEMOCRATIC POLICY IN VIET NAM WHICH A SPECIAL BUILDING WAS CONSTRU OCT64 CAPT. BAKER 2344 13 R.M. COULD BRING A "MAJOR WAR" TO SAVE THE ED ADJACENT TO THE LAUNDRY AND DRY 14 OCT64 CAPT. G.S. DOCKLER 2239 PHILIPPINES. CLEANING PLANT, WILL BE OPENED TOMOR­ OCT64 MAJ. THAYER 624 15 M.R. N,XON ALSO ACCUSED PRESIDENT JOHNSON ROW AT 4 PM. 10 OCT64 MAJ. SPECKER 2240 R.W. OF WAGING "THE MOST IRRESPONSIBLE, THE LAUNDERETTE HAS BEEN EQOfPPED OCT64* MAJ. SAMMONS 22 17 J.O. 89 VICIOUS CAMPAIGN IN AMERICAN POLITICAL WITH CHANGE-MAKING MACHINES AND SOAP 180CT64* J.D. KEELING 644 cwo. HISTORY." DISPENSERS, AND WILL BE OPEN 24 HOURS *INDICATES WEEKENDS OR HOLIDAYS DUTY NIXON SPOKE IN SALISBURY AND P,NE­ A DAY. FrlCER IS THE KWAJALEIN TEIT SITE HURST IN NORTH CAROLINA AND, LATER TO­ THE PRICE FOR WASHING LAUNDRY IS 25¢ COMMANDING OrFICER's RE'RE.ENTATIVE NIGHT, N fHATTANOOGA. PER LOAD, AND FOR DRYING, 10¢ FOR TEN DURING OTHER THAN NO AL DUTY HOURS. PAGE 2 HOURGLASS MONDAY 12 O;TOBER 1964 PUBLISHED AT THE DIRECTION or THE COMMANDING OffiCER, KWAJALEIN TEST SITE TSHOMBE COMPLAINS TO O.A.U. NON-ALIGNED NATIONS ~ CAIRO {UPI)--THE AFRICAN HEADS OF OWE SUKARNO NOTHING MARSHALL ISLANDS, CONTRACT DA-0IOQ21- STATE HAVE REJECTEQ A COMPLAINT BY 2 LONDON (UPI)--THE TIMES SAID E.~" AMC-90004 (Y) (NI 3-(67156) 35133A CONGO PREMIER MOISE TSHOMeE THAT THE TORIALLY TODAY THE LEADERS OF THE NON­ PMR WITH GLOBAL ASSOCIATES. UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC PREVENTED HIM ALIGNED NATIONS MEETING IN CAIRO THE HOURGLASS IS PUBLISHED DAILY FROM ATTENDING THE SUMMIT CONFERENCE MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY DEADLINE FOR SHOULD FIND LITTLE OR NO REASON FOR OF NON-ALIGNED NATIONS, INFORMED sow ... SUPPORTING INDONESIA'S FIGHT AGAINST NOTICES IS 4PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION CES REPORTED. MALAYSIA. AND DEADLINE FOR NEWS ITEMS IS lOAM THE SOURC(S SAID TSHOMBE HAO LODGED "THE NON-ALIGNED NATIONS MEETING DAY OF PUBLICATION THE COMPLAINT \11TH THE ORGANIZATION IN CAIRO HAVE HAD A GENEROUS HELPING THE HOURGLASS RESERVES THE RIGHT FOR AFRICAN UNITY.
Recommended publications
  • PAG. 14 L'unità Lunedi 22 Eettembre 1980
    4V*<i iAt<fiKVA'-e^:-:-:i-t^* »? .-.«-jv/w-,, ..j^.un^.K. ^.v«y;«*i'Ji-M'-."jjfcot:,-\ i.:.s-,C^-r.^aÌ«Wif>/*v^afe.U >»*=«-'* vi-k^-> •••(••--'.i- "£W£>~" 'js.4ii^nM<M'lHkA'V'Ai'À'J>'fi^i^''<<^;H>>i4 -*.»rt«'WNi'w^-^~'-V-r-«.»»*n»<r"-*-«rt',«*'*r v»-V*-1.'*~~•'V'** „^*.(3i ..•tìW^^/^»iW3Wì»^^^,W-^^*^^-WvlV'^vw:v•w•''JVv^*--.. «,.»»»•-.,. « PAG. 14 l'Unità Lunedi 22 eettembre 1980 Un bilancio dopo la passerella delle II calcio che cambia ultime medaglie d'oro le ot­ tennero all'Olimpiade di Ber­ lino (1936) con ti peso medio . Jean Despeaux uh talento in­ 0 disciplinato e con il medio- massimo Roger Mtchelot un ECCOÌ112 metodico sgobbone. La tradi­ zióne italiana risulta assai migliore. Oltre a Patrizio O- Uva, l'oro olimpico lo vinsero anche - Cartetto Orlandi (1928) e Bolognesi (1952) nei leggeri. Vittorio Tamagnini (1928) e Sergo (1936) nei gal­ lo. Ernesto Fotmenti (1948) e Musso (I960) net piuma. Pie­ è il manager ro Toscani (1928) nei medi. Nino Benvenuti. (1960) , nei :•' J . / francesi hanno il sarca* smo facile. In agosto /'Équipe . welters. * Franco De Piccoli Una scuola di gestione aziendale aperta di Parigi pubblicava: «... gli (1960) nei massimi; Atzorì organizzatori - londinesi del (1964) nei mosca e Cosimo a Coverciano - Allodi spiega a cosa serve mondiale dei medi tra Alan Finto (1964) nei mediomassi­ Minter e Marvin Haglcr, ave­ mi. Nei'professionisti soltan­ vano pensato al court centrale to Benvenuti, Orlandi, Tama­ Dalla redazione .'.-•• tecnico. Il primo córso, co­ di docenti in possesso di una di Wimbledon.
    [Show full text]
  • TB Vol 25 No 04B December 2008
    Volume 25 Issue 4b TORCH BEARER THE 1948 OLYMPIC GAMES, LONDON 999 ELPO. SOCIETY of OLYMPIC C OLLECTORS SOCIETY of OLYMPIC COLLECTORS The representative of F.I.P.O. in Great Britain YOUR COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN Bob Farley, 3 Wain Green, Long Meadow, AND EDITOR : Worcester, WR4 OHP, Great Britain. [email protected] VICE CHAIRMAN : Bob Wilcock, 24 Hamilton Crescent, Brentwood, Essex, CM14 5 ES, Great Britain. [email protected] SECRETARY : Miss Paula Burger, 19 Hanbury Path, Sheerwater, Woking, Surrey, GU21 5RB Great Britain. TREASURER AND David Buxton, 88 Bucknell Road, Bicester, ADVERTISING : Oxon, OX26 2DR, Great Britain. [email protected] AUCTION MANAGER : John Crowther, 3 Hill Drive, Handforth, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 3AP, Great Britain. [email protected] DISTRIBUTION MANAGER, Ken Cook, 31 Thorn Lane, Rainham, Essex, BACK ISSUES and RM13 9SJ, Great Britain. LIBRARIAN : [email protected] PACKET MANAGER Brian Hammond, 6 Lanark Road, Ipswich, IP4 3EH new email to be advised WEB MANAGER Mike Pagnamenos [email protected] P. R. 0. Andy Potter [email protected] BACK ISSUES: At present, most issues of TORCH BEARER are still available to Volume 1, Issue 1, (March 1984), although some are now exhausted. As stocks of each issue run out, they will not be reprinted. It is Society policy to ensure that new members will be able to purchase back issues for a four year period, but we do not guarantee stocks for longer than this. Back issues cost £2.00 each, or £8.00 for a year's issues to Volume 24, and £2.50 per issue, or £10 for a year's issues from Volume 25, including postage by surface mail.
    [Show full text]
  • Paris Par Nod to Support a Democratic by Her Father
    •X- The Weather MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1959 AvemEC Daily Net Preiw Ran roreeast al U. S; WeaUwr 8«reM Far tha Week Ending. PAG* FOURTEEN HanrhfBtpr EiiPttittB April 11, iasa eW r with scattered {raat ta- nlght. I»w 28-85. Wediwaday FALSE TEETH 1 2 ,9 1 0 - mostly sunny, littia change In tem­ The Thomas, Spencer Circle of MemorUI Temple, Pythian SU , Philatelic Society perature.' High near 5.5. the South Methodist WSCS will tera, will meet tmporrow at 8 p.m. j That Loosen Mambar at tha Audit About Town hold a rummage sale tomorrow at in Odd Fellowa hall. The bualnesa, Colt'Learned Wedding Will Hear Wilson Need Not Embarrass Burean af OIrenlatlon Manchester— A City of VHinge Charm 9 a m. tn Weslev hall of the rhurch. aesalon will be followed by a aoclal I period, with refreahmenta aerVed ■ Msny wnrera of fsiM teeth hST* SoropUmiBU are urgtA to attenrt, Tbe Rev. Charles Reynolds, as­ (uffered reel embarrewment becauM by Mrs. Gladys Gamble and her; Miss Hop* Cheney Learned ^ d Harry Wilson of the Hartford (Classified Advertising on Page Itl PklCE FIVE CEN119 Ui« meetlnp this e^'emn^: st the | sociate minister, will apeak on the their plate dropped, ahpped or wob­ MANCHESTER, CONN., TCESDAY, APRIL 14 19.39 committee.' j Harris Strickland Colt were mar­ Stamp Club will speak at Tues­ bled at Ju>t the wmni time. Do not VOL. LXXVIII, NO. 165 (SIVIEEN PAGES) home of Mr». Josephine Munson, j Gospel of Mark st a meeting of the day's meeting of the Manchester lire in fear of.
    [Show full text]
  • Men's Boxers Profiles
    AIBA Youth Women’s & Men’s World Boxing Championships BUDAPEST 2018 Men’s Boxers Profiles 49KG – FARIS DJABALLAH – ALGERIA (ALG) Date Of Birth : 19/04/2001 Club : AMEL 2018 – AFBC African Confederation Youth Boxing Championships (Casablanca, MAR) 2nd place – 49KG Lost to Alayu Mekonnen (ETH) 5:0 in the final; Won against Marcial Wouang (CMR) 4:1 in the semi-final; Won against John Fisher Odoch (UGA) 5:0 in the quarter-final 2018 – Emil Zhechev Youth Memorial Tournament (Sofia, BUL) 3rd place – 49KG Lost to Ergyunal Sebahtin Sabri (BUL) 3:2 in the semi-final 2017 – Algerian Junior National Cup 1st place – 46KG Won against Ahmed Bouchena (ALG) 5:0 in the final; Won against Aymene Douibeta (ALG) 5:0 in the semi-final 2017 – Algerian Junior National Championships 3rd place – 46KG Lost to Azzedine Tartoura (ALG) 3:2 in the semi-final 49KG – SEYRAN YEGHIKYAN – ARMENIA (ARM) Date Of Birth : 31/01/2001 Place Of Birth : Shirak Region Height : 162cm Coach : Garik Baghdasaryan Club : Shirak HMM Residence : Saratak Stance : Orthodox His most influential person : His father Boxing idol : Karo Murad Hobby : Recipes Number of training hours : 9 in a week Number of bouts : 52 Began boxing : 2014 2018 – EUBC European Confederation Youth Boxing Championships (Roseto degli Abruzzi, ITA) 7th place – 49KG Lost to Jude Gallagher (IRL) 5:0 in the quarter-final; Won against Ergyunal Sabri (BUL) 4:1 in the second preliminary round; Won against Aleks Karamani (SRB) 4:1 in the first preliminary round 2018 – Armenian Youth National Championships 1st place – 49KG
    [Show full text]
  • II «Pasticciaccio» Olimpico Del Calcio Tore Mancino Dalle Mani La- Canoisti Della RDT Annunciano Boriose E Pesanti
    r Unit a / vtntrcfi 25 agosto 1972 olimpiadi / PAG. 11 I V La leggenda dl Harry Mallin, pugile olimpionico inglese Olimpiadi: un'affascinante storia lunga settantasei antii IL LASZLO PAPP Era malata DI SCOTLAND YARD e conquist6 II grande « medio* conquisto l'«oro» ad Anversa (1920) e a Parigi (1924) - La prima medaglia it* liana . Gli straordinari futuri professionisti di Colombes - Finnegan, ovvero un'attesa di 44 annl La leggenda di Harry Mal­ da, si era aggiudicato il tito­ lin, sergente di polizia a lo del British Empire. A Mo­ Londra e pugile peso medio HI naco il Sud-Afrtca non sard tre medaglie! trecento incontri t arrivata presente a causa della sua assai prima di quella di Lasz- | discriminazione razzista, pe- lo Papp, I'ungherese con i \ rb nella boxe olimpica L'explolt a Mexico '68 delta dklottenne nuotatrice USA Debbie Meyer baffi di ferro, i pugni d'ac- I vanta una lontana e solida ciaio e tre medaglie d'oro in tradizione illustrata dalle II sensoilonale 400 hs di Hemery • / bolit prodlglosl di Beamon, So- altrettante Olimpiadi. Per la medaglie d'oro toccate e Cla­ genie inglese, almeno, il po­ rence Walker (gallo. 1920). nayev, Prudenclo e Gentile • L'Italia conquhtb solamente tre tltoll liceman Harry Mallin «se­ Willie Smith (gallo, 1924) nior », per distinguerlo dal e Laurie Stevens (leggeri, fratello cadetto pure lui « bo- 1932), a Gerry Dreyer (leg­ (e non e questa la sede per illustrarne i xeHr» di valore, e apparso geri, 1948), Dave Carstens motivi) e lo sport italiano e in procinto di nel ring un «big» abile e (mediomassimi.
    [Show full text]
  • Legends of the Games - from 1920 to 1980
    TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2016 SPORTS Legends of the Games - from 1920 to 1980 RIO DE JANEIRO: The 31st Summer waved to him in passing. But Owens was Olympics starts on August 5 in Rio de snubbed by his own president on his return Janeiro. Here is AFP Sport’s first set of leg- to the United States when Franklin D. ends of the Games. Roosevelt failed to greet him, a customary honour for returning champions. “When I PAAVO NURMI, THE ‘FLYING FINN’ came back to my native country, after all the One of the Olympics’ first superstars, stories about Hitler, I couldn’t ride in the Finland’s Nurmi stole the show at Antwerp front of the bus,” Owens said later. “I had to 1920, winning three gold medals in the go to the back door. I couldn’t live where I 10000m, individual and team cross country, wanted. I wasn’t invited to shake hands with and silver in the 5000m, in the space of just Hitler, but I wasn’t invited to the White House three days. But he outdid himself four years to shake hands with the president, either.” US summer of later in Paris, winning the 1500m and then Owens, a pack-a-day smoker for much of his the 5000m two hours later, before success- life, died of lung cancer in 1980. In testament racial tension fully defending his team and individual cross to his enduring popularity among the country titles and then taking gold in the German public, he has a street and a school surfaces on 3000m team race, becoming the first athlete named after him in Berlin.
    [Show full text]
  • JSP Vol 07 No 09-10 1969May-Jun
    „a\ ot ffffb /| Number 9 & 10 May & June 1969 Volume 7 RESEARCH PROJECT OK BASKETBALL PHILATELY - Bob Bruce - Dr. Salvatore Caruso of Catania, Italy, has joined the collectors collaborating in this research on basketball philately. Additional volunteers are most welcome. Contact the author at 1457 Cleve­ land Road, Wooster, Ohio £4691, to join the group, to supply needed information, or to raise perti­ nent questions. Compilation of a master check-list of perforate basketball stamps produces some interesting prob­ lems concerning dates of issue. These are summarized in the following dates; catalogue data comes first, followed by data from other publications and from our collaborating collectors. A list of needed data rounds out each presentation. If a perforate stamp (through 1967) depicting basketball is not listed, one can be certain that the date of issue contained in the original check-list in the March-April, 1969 issue of 'JSP' is generally acceptable. Again we request your help in completing this report. Without your assistance we cannot progress much farther in this phase of our research. Report #2 QUESTIONABLE DATES OF ISSUE _0F PERFORATE BASKETBALL STAMPS Albania 544—Scott: .../59; Landmans: 11/20/59, Seebacher: 11/20/59; Pistiner: 11/20/59 (cover). Needed: Gibbons, Michel, Yvert. Bolivia C151—Gibbons: 7/l/51, Michel: 7/l/51, Scott: 8/23/51, Sanabria: 8/23/51, Depolier: 7/18/51; Enhagen: 7/18/51, Landmans: 7/18/51, Seebacher: undecided, Schneider and Schmidt: 7/18/51; Caruso: 7/18/51, Schirmer: 9/5/51 (cover), Williams: 7/18/51, Yerkes: 7/12/51.
    [Show full text]
  • July-2013.Pdf
    HALL OF FAME: VIRGIL HILL’S UNLIKELY JOURNEY TO CANASTOTA 168 POUNDS 147 POUNDS 135 POUNDS OUR IN-DEPTH AND EXCLUSIVE DIVISION-BY-DIVISION ANALYSIS FRESH START NEW USA BOXING BOSS OPTIMISTIC AMERICANS WILL REBOUND HBO VS. SHOWTIME BATTLE OF NETWORKS HEATS UP WITH MAYWEATHER’S DEFECTION HE’S BACK DAVID HAYE STILL COMMANDS ATTENTION AS HE PLOTS HIS FUTURE JULY 2013 JULY SAFETY FIRST $8.95 BRAIN HEALTH STUDY AIMS TO EDUCATE PROFESSIONAL FIGHTERS CONTENTS JULY 2013 FEATURES DEPARTMENTS 4 | RINGSIDE 5 | OPENING SHOTS 10 | COME OUT WRITING 13 | ROLL WITH THE PUNCHES Jabs and Straight Writes by Thomas Hauser 18 | NEW FACES: FRANKIE GOMEZ By Mike Coppinger 21 | RING CARD GIRL 25 | READY TO GRUMBLE By David Greisman 28 | OUTSIDE THE ROPES 31 | SWEET SCIENCE By Scott LaFee 34 | WOMEN’S BOXING By Tom Gerbasi 36 | RING RATINGS PACKAGE 78 | BEST I’VE FACED: VIRGIL HILL By Anson Wainwright 100 | LETTERS FROM EUROPE By Gareth A Davies 104 | RINGSIDE REPORTS 84 108 | WORLDWIDE RESULTS 110 | COMING UP COVER STORY 84 FRESH START 112 | FROM THE ARCHIVE 44 STATE OF THE GAME NEW USA BOXING PRESIDENT THE RING’S EXCLUSIVE DIVISION-BY- BURSTING WITH OPTIMISM 114 | AT THE FIGHTS DIVISION ANALYSIS By Bernard Fernandez By Don Stradley 90 IMPACT OF PUNCHES AT RINGTV.COM CANELO WINS PRAISE 68 HBO VS. SHOWTIME BRAIN STUDY AIMS TO EDUCATE AND Saul “Canelo” Alvarez BATTLE OF THE BOXING PROTECT BOXERS earned the RING title and NETWORKS HEATS UP By Gordon Marino grudging respect with his By Tim Smith victory over Austin Trout. Read RingTV.com Editor 72 VIRGIL HILL Doug Fischer’s column.
    [Show full text]
  • Sport En 2019
    Fact Sheets Fact Publisher: Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade || Text: László Borbély || Editor: Gyöngyi Komlóssy Photo: MTI / MTVA, Hungarian Sports Museum, Fortepan.hu, Hungarian Olympic Committee || Graphic design by Árpád Fákó || Printed by Pharma Press ISBN 978-963-7038-79-2 || Budapest, 2019 on Hungary onS Hungaryheets Hungarian sport Hungarians in sport Go HUNGARIANS IN SPORT IN HUNGARIANS Hungary! – Our publication does not intend to provide an exhaustive list of the past and present achievements of Hungarian athletes worldwide. Instead, by recalling the past and presenting the future we would like to show how alongside world-famous scientists, HUNGARIAN SPORT SPORT HUNGARIAN doctors and artists, Hungary has been adding • to the number of most successful athletes for more than a hundred years. Sports still offers the same opportunity ranking sixth in the medal table at the that our football players were coming of breakout, advancement and success first Olympics. to play: beside the Golden Team, her- for strong and talented youth as it did in The number of our champions alded by the name of Ferenc Puskás or 1896, when the modern Olympic Games multiplied with the passage of time. the only Hungarian Golden Ball winner, were revived upon the idea of Baron Since the first official match of the Hun- Albert Flórián, many other excellent Pierre de Coubertin. Alfréd Hajós, the garian national football team on 12th players awed their audiences. swimmer already won a gold medal for October 1902, stadiums sold out fast in There is hardly any traditional Hungary in 1896 with Hungarian athletes the 1950s and 1960s upon the news Olympic discipline in which Hungarians HUNGARY ON SHEETS FACT 1 did not excel on numerous occasions, even as trainers of teams and athletes that they led to victory.
    [Show full text]
  • Up the Stairs with Cus D'amato
    The Library of America • Story of the Week Reprinted from At the Fights: American Writers on Boxing (The Library of America, 2011), pages 312–17. © 2011 Literary Classics of the U.S., Inc. Originally published in the Village Voice, November 19, 1985. Copyright © 1985 by Pete Hamill. Reprinted by permission of International Creative Management, Inc. Pete Hamill Although he has earned acclaim as a novelist and screenwriter, Pete Hamill (b. 1935) is regarded as the quintessential New York newspaperman. A col- umnist for both the Post and the Daily News, the onetime high school drop- out eventually became editor-in-chief of both papers, and his journalism has appeared in The New York Times, Newsday, and The Village Voice. This piece, written in November 1985 for the latter on the occasion of Cus D’Amato’s death, echoes his introduction to journalism. Following service in the U.S. Navy, Hamill studied art on the GI Bill, and in 1958 was working as the art director of Atlantis, a Greek-language weekly. In the midst of laying out one edition, he suggested to editor Jimmy Vlasto that running a few stories in English might improve circulation, and the editor challenged him to try his own hand at writing one. Hamill chose to profile a promising Puerto Rican middleweight who trained under D’Amato at the nearby Gramercy Gym. Hamill was paid $25 for what was his first published story, and the occasion boded well for both subject and author. By the time José Torres won the world light-heavyweight title seven years later, his lifelong friend Hamill had become the lead columnist for the Post.
    [Show full text]
  • The Olympic Ring: a Pound-For-Pound Look at Olympic History
    The Olympic Ring: A pound- for-pound look at Olympic history By Norm Frauenheim– Opening ceremonies mean first bell for an ancient craft older than the Olympics. Punches for medals. Punches for prize- money. Punches for vengeance. Punches for bribes. Punches for national pride. It’s been hit, miss, memorable and misery for as long as anybody can recall. The show must go on, this time in Tokyo for troubled Olympics dubbed the Pandemic Games. COVID is no game. I’m not sure these Olympics will be much of a game either. But the modern version of Olympics has survived world wars and boycotts. It has even survived boxing, an Olympic stepchild again at the brink of expulsion for scandals that have become a permanent scar. Preliminary bouts begin Friday without the usual acronym, AIBA, running the show. In effect, AIBA is on probation for reported financial transgressions, controversial judging and who-knows-what-all. That leaves questions about who and how judges and referees will be appointed. And paid. The International Olympic Committee says it will be running the competition. But if the IOC really knew anything about boxing, the corruption would have ended generations ago. Boxing, which can be as resilient as it is corrupt, survives in spite of itself. It’s there in part because third-world nations don’t need world-class swimming pools to field a team. A pair of hand-me-down gloves can be a down payment on a ticket to the Olympic ring. According to the IOC, boxers from 73 nations are in Tokyo.
    [Show full text]
  • Helsinki 1952
    HELSINKI 1952 The Games of the XV Summer Olympiad. July 19 - August 3, 1952. Helsinki, Finland. 1 ATHLETICS MEN 400 m 1.George Rhoden (Jamaica) 2 1500 m 1.Josy Barthel (Luxembourg) 2.Bob McMillen (USA) 3.Werner Lueg (Germany) 4.Roger Bannister (Great Britain) 5.Patrik El Mabrouk (France) 3 5000 m 1.Emil Zatopek (Czechoslovakia) 5000 m: 2.Alain Mimoun (France) 10000 m: 2.Alain Mimoun (France) 4 10000 m 1.Emil Zatopek (Czechoslovakia) 3.Aleksandr Anufriyev (USSR) 110 m hurdles: 1.Harrison Dillard (USA) 4 x 100 m: 1.USA (Harrison Dillard) 5 4 x 400 m 1.Jamaica (Arthur Wint, Leslie Laing, Herb McKenley, George Rhoden) 100 m: 2.Herb McKenley (Jamaica) 400 m: 2.Herb McKenley (Jamaica) 800 m: 2.Arthur Wint (Jamaica) 6 Marathon 1.Emil Zatopek (Czechoslovakia) 3.Gustaf Jansson (Sweden) 50 km walk 1.Giuseppe Dordoni (Italy) 7 Triple jump 1.Adhemar da Silva (Brazil) 8 High jump Shot put 1.Walt Davis (USA) 1.Parry O’Brien (USA) Pole vault 1.Bob Richards (USA) 3.Ragnar Lundberg (Sweden) Discus throw 2.Adolfo Consolini (Italy) 9 Hammer throw 1.Jozsef Csermak (Hungary) 10 Decathlon 1.Bob Mathias (USA) 2.Milt Campbell (USA) 11 WOMEN 100 m 80 m hurdles 1.Marjorie Jackson (Australia) 1.Shirley Strickland de la Hunty (Australia) 200 m: 1.Marjorie Jackson (Australia) 100 m: 3.Shirley Strickland de la Hunty (Australia) Long jump 1.Yvette Williams (New Zealand) Javelin throw 1.Dana Zatopkova (Czechoslovakia) 12 Discus throw 1.Nina Romashkova (USSR) 3.Nina Dumbadze (USSR) Long jump: 2.Alexandra Chudina (USSR) Javelin throw: 2.Alexandra Chudina (USSR) High jump:
    [Show full text]