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Professional Football Researchers Association
Professional Football Researchers Association www.profootballresearchers.com Marty Schottenheimer This article was written by Budd Bailey Marty Schottenheimer was a winner. He’s the only coach with at least 200 NFL wins in the regular season who isn’t in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Marty made bad teams good, and good teams better over the course of a coaching career that lasted more than 30 years. He has a better winning percentage than Chuck Noll, Tom Landry and Marv Levy – all Hall of Famers. “He not only won everywhere he went, but he won immediately everywhere he went,” wrote Ernie Accorsi in the forward to Schottenheimer’s autobiography. “That is rare, believe me.” The blemish in his resume is that he didn’t win the next-to-last game of the NFL season, let alone the last game. The easy comparison is to Chuck Knox, another fine coach from Western Pennsylvania who won a lot of games but never took that last step either. In other words, Schottenheimer never made it to a Super Bowl as a head coach. Even so, he ranks with the best in the coaching business in his time. Martin Edward Schottenheimer was born on September 23, 1943, in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. That’s about 22 miles from Pittsburgh to the southwest. As you might have guessed, that part of the world is rich in two things: minerals and football players. Much 1 Professional Football Researchers Association www.profootballresearchers.com of the area was employed directly or indirectly by the coal and steel industries over the years. -
Elegant Memo
Office of the Governor David Ronald Musgrove Governor Greetings! On behalf of the State of Mississippi, thank you for expressing an interest in our state, its history and the life of its citizens. I am proud to serve Mississippians as their governor. Mississippi is a beautiful state with a rich culture and a promising future. Our state is experiencing tremendous growth as evidenced by the lowest unemployment rate in thirty years, the significant increase in personal income levels, the astounding number of small businesses created in Mississippi, and national recognition of Mississippi’s potential for economic growth. Our schools are stronger. Our hope is broader, and our determination is unwavering. This is our Mississippi. Together, we have the courage, the confidence, the commitment to set unprecedented goals and to make unparalleled progress. Best wishes in all of your endeavors. May God bless you, the State of Mississippi and America! Very truly yours, RONNIE MUSGROVE State Symbols State Flag The committee to design a State Flag was appointed by legislative action February 7, 1894, and provided that the flag reported by the committee should become the official flag. The committee recommended for the flag “one with width two-thirds of its length; with the union square, in width two-thirds of the width of the flag; the State ground of the union to be red and a broad blue saltier Coat of Arms thereon, bordered with white and emblazoned with The committee to design a Coat of Arms was thirteen (13) mullets or five-pointed stars, corresponding appointed by legislative action on February 7, 1894, and with the number of the original States of the Union; the the design proposed by that committee was accepted and field to be divided into three bars of equal width, the became the official Coat of Arms. -
1967 APBA PRO FOOTBALL SET ROSTER the Following Players Comprise the 1967 Season APBA Pro Football Player Card Set
1967 APBA PRO FOOTBALL SET ROSTER The following players comprise the 1967 season APBA Pro Football Player Card Set. The regular starters at each position are listed first and should be used most frequently. Realistic use of the players below will generate statistical results remarkably similar to those from real life. IMPORTANT: When a Red "K" appears in the R-column as the result on any kind of running play from scrimmage or on any return, roll the dice again, refer to the K-column, and use the number there for the result. When a player has a "K" in his R-column, he can never be used for kicking or punting. If the symbol "F-K" or "F-P" appears on a players card, it means that you use the K or P column when he recovers a fumble. Players in bold are starters. If there is a difference between the player's card and the roster sheet, always use the card information. The number in ()s after the player name is the number of cards that the player has in this set. See below for a more detailed explanation of new symbols on the cards. ATLANTA ATLANTA BALTIMORE BALTIMORE OFFENSE DEFENSE OFFENSE DEFENSE EB: Tommy McDonald End: Sam Williams EB: Willie Richardson End: Ordell Braase Jerry Simmons TC OC Jim Norton Raymond Berry Roy Hilton Gary Barnes Bo Wood OC Ray Perkins Lou Michaels KA KOA PB Ron Smith TA TB OA Bobby Richards Jimmy Orr Bubba Smith Tackle: Errol Linden OC Bob Hughes Alex Hawkins Andy Stynchula Don Talbert OC Tackle: Karl Rubke Don Alley Tackle: Fred Miller Guard: Jim Simon Chuck Sieminski Tackle: Sam Ball Billy Ray Smith Lou Kirouac -
Film Essay for "The Best Years of Our Lives"
The Best Years of Our Lives Homer By Gabriel Miller Wermels (Harold Russell), a “The Best Years of Our Lives” originated in a recommen- seaman, who dation from producer Samuel Goldwyn's wife that he read has long a “Time” magazine article entitled "The Way Home" been en- (1944), about Marines who were having difficulty readjust- gaged to the ing to life after returning home from the war. Goldwyn girl next door. hired novelist MacKinlay Kantor, who had flown missions He returns as a correspondent with the Eighth Air Force and the from the war Royal Air Force (and would go on to win the Pulitzer Prize a spastic, in 1955 for his Civil War novel “Andersonville”), to use that unable to article as the basis for a fictional adaptation of approxi- control his mately 100 pages. Inexplicably, Kantor turned in a novel movements. in verse that ran closer to 300 pages. Goldwyn could barely follow it, and he wanted to shelve the project but Sherwood was talked into letting Kantor work on a treatment. and Wyler made some William Wyler, his star director, returned to Goldwyn significant Studios in 1946, having been honorably discharged from changes that the Air Force as a colonel, also receiving the Legion of added more Merit Award. Wyler's feelings about his life and profession complexity had changed: "The war had been an escape into reality … and dramatic Only relationships with people who might be dead tomor- force to the row were important." Wyler still owed Goldwyn one more story. In film, and the producer wanted him to make “The Bishop's Kantor's ver- Wife” with David Niven. -
1963 San Diego Chargers
The Professional Football Researchers Association The AFL’s First Super Team Pro Football Insiders Debate Whether the AFL Champion San Diego Chargers Could Have Beaten the Bears in a 1963 Super Bowl By Ed Gruver It's an impossible question, but one that continues to intrigue until January 12, 1969, when Joe Namath quarterbacked the members of the 1963 AFL champion San Diego Chargers. upstart New York Jets to a stunning 16-7 victory over the heavily- favored Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III, that the AFL earned its If the Super Bowl had started with the 1963 season instead of first championship game win over the NFL. Even so, it wasn't until 1966, could the Chargers have beaten the NFL champion Chicago Len Dawson led the Kansas City Chiefs to a similar win one year Bears? later over the Minnesota Vikings in the fourth and final Super Bowl between the AFL and NFL that the AFL finally got its share of "I've argued that for years and years," says Sid Gillman, who respect from both the NFL and football fans. coached the 1963 Chargers. "We had one of the great teams in pro football history, and I think we would have matched up pretty well Those who know the AFL however, believe that the 163 Chargers, with the NFL. We had great speed and talent, and I think at that rather than the '68 Jets, might have gone down in history as the time, the NFL really underestimated the talent we had." first AFL team to win a Super Bowl. -
The Rhetoric of the Benign Scapegoat: President Reagan and the Federal Government
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 2000 The Rhetoric of the Benign Scapegoat: President Reagan and the Federal Government. Stephen Wayne Braden Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Braden, Stephen Wayne, "The Rhetoric of the Benign Scapegoat: President Reagan and the Federal Government." (2000). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 7340. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/7340 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. -
BUFFALO BILLS Team History
PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME TEACHER ACTIVITY GUIDE 2020-2021 EDITIOn QUARTERBACK JIM KELLY - hall of fame class of 2002 BUFFALO BILLS Team History The Buffalo Bills began their pro football life as the seventh team to be admitted into the new American Football League. The franchise was awarded to Ralph C. Wilson on October 28, 1959. Since that time, the Bills have experienced extended periods of both championship dominance and second-division frustration. The Bills’ first brush with success came in their fourth season in 1963 when they tied for the AFL Eastern division crown but lost to the Boston Patriots in a playoff. In 1964 and 1965 however, they not only won their division but defeated the San Diego Chargers each year for the AFL championship. Head Coach Lou Saban, who was named AFL Coach of the Year each year, departed after the 1965 season. Buffalo lost to the Kansas City Chiefs in the 1966 AFL title game and, in doing so, just missed playing in the first Super Bowl. Then the Bills sank to the depths, winning only 13 games while losing 55 and tying two in the next five seasons. Saban returned in 1972, utilized the Bills’ superstar running back, O. J. Simpson, to the fullest extent and made the Bills competitive once again. That period was highlighted by the 2,003-yard rushing record set by Simpson in 1973. But Saban departed in mid-season 1976 and the Bills again sank into the second division until a new coach, Chuck Knox, brought them an AFC Eastern division title in 1980. -
PERFECTION, WRETCHED, NORMAL, and NOWHERE: a REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY of AMERICAN TELEVISION SETTINGS by G. Scott Campbell Submitted T
PERFECTION, WRETCHED, NORMAL, AND NOWHERE: A REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN TELEVISION SETTINGS BY G. Scott Campbell Submitted to the graduate degree program in Geography and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. ______________________________ Chairperson Committee members* _____________________________* _____________________________* _____________________________* _____________________________* Date defended ___________________ The Dissertation Committee for G. Scott Campbell certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: PERFECTION, WRETCHED, NORMAL, AND NOWHERE: A REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN TELEVISION SETTINGS Committee: Chairperson* Date approved: ii ABSTRACT Drawing inspiration from numerous place image studies in geography and other social sciences, this dissertation examines the senses of place and regional identity shaped by more than seven hundred American television series that aired from 1947 to 2007. Each state‘s relative share of these programs is described. The geographic themes, patterns, and images from these programs are analyzed, with an emphasis on identity in five American regions: the Mid-Atlantic, New England, the Midwest, the South, and the West. The dissertation concludes with a comparison of television‘s senses of place to those described in previous studies of regional identity. iii For Sue iv CONTENTS List of Tables vi Acknowledgments vii 1. Introduction 1 2. The Mid-Atlantic 28 3. New England 137 4. The Midwest, Part 1: The Great Lakes States 226 5. The Midwest, Part 2: The Trans-Mississippi Midwest 378 6. The South 450 7. The West 527 8. Conclusion 629 Bibliography 664 v LIST OF TABLES 1. Television and Population Shares 25 2. -
Hollywood Cinema Walter C
Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC Publications Department of Cinema and Photography 2006 Hollywood Cinema Walter C. Metz Southern Illinois University Carbondale, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cp_articles Recommended Citation Metz, Walter C. "Hollywood Cinema." The Cambridge Companion to Modern American Culture. Ed. Christopher Bigsby. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. (Jan 2006): 374-391. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of Cinema and Photography at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Publications by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “Hollywood Cinema” By Walter Metz Published in: The Cambridge Companion to Modern American Culture. Ed. Christopher Bigsby. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2006. 374-391. Hollywood, soon to become the United States’ national film industry, was founded in the early teens by a group of film companies which came to Los Angeles at first to escape the winter conditions of their New York- and Chicago-based production locations. However, the advantages of production in southern California—particularly the varied landscapes in the region crucial for exterior, on-location photography—soon made Hollywood the dominant film production center in the country.i Hollywood, of course, is not synonymous with filmmaking in the United States. Before the early 1910s, American filmmaking was mostly New York-based, and specialized in the production of short films (circa 1909, a one-reel short, or approximately 10 minutes). At the time, French film companies dominated global film distribution, and it was more likely that one would see a French film in the United States than an American-produced one. -
Greenhill Web Listing
Wednesday, September 1, 2021 Greenhill Cemetery 8:18:31 AM ROW BLOC LOT SPACE NAME PLACE OF DEATH SEX DEATH_DATE AGE 78 55 2 AALTO, EVOR J LARAMIE, WYOMING M 12/26/1995 85 R 57 4 ABBOTT, ALICE E. GRAND JUNCTION, COLORADO F 03/15/1977 66 R 57 2 ABBOTT, ALLEN C. LARAMIE, WYOMING M 04/11/1938 71 R 57 1 ABBOTT, CLIFFORD J. WHEATLAND, WYOMING M 04/02/1994 85 34 12 3 ABBOTT, JACK W. ENGLEWOOD, COLORADO M 7/26/1987 81 34 12 4 ABBOTT, JENNIE CHEYENNE, WYOMING F 7/24/1959 54 34 49 4 ABBOTT, JULIA LARAMIE, WYOMING F 7/21/1957 54 34 49 3 ABBOTT, LYMAN COLEMAN LARAMIE, WYOMING M 3/1/1977 71 R 57 3 ABBOTT, MINNIE LARAMIE, WYOMING F 2/9/1932 54 IOOF 12 11 3 ABEYTA (MUNNELL), ANNA BOULDER, COLORADO F 12/26/2003 53 MARIA 12 11 4 ABEYTA-CORCHADO, BOULDER, COLORADO F 7/13/2006 56 CLAUDETTE ANDREA P 72 6 ABRAHAM, HERMAN E. LARAMIE, WYOMING M 2/3/1962 84 P 72 5 ABRAHAM, JENNIE LARAMIE, WYOMING F 7/4/1948 IOOF 53 3 1/2 ABRAMS, DIETRICH PUEBLO, COLORADO M 9/12/1945 76 IOOF 53 4 ABRAMS, JOHN LARAMIE, WYOMING M 11/8/1873 IOOF 53 1 ABRAMS, LUDOLPH LARAMIE, WYOMING M 1/8/1913 72 IOOF 53 2 ABRAMS, SOPHIA F 9/12/1895 49 O 12 1 A ACKERMAN, ALFRED F LARAMIE, WYOMING M 01/13/1996 81 T 56 5 ACKERMAN, EDWIN ROY COLORADO M 11/22/2002 68 O 12 2 ACKERMAN, ISABELLE HELEN LARAMIE, WYOMING F 08/04/1960 36 O 12 2 ACKERMAN, ISABELLE HELEN LARAMIE, WYOMING F 8/4/1960 36 Page 1 of 749 ROW BLOC LOT SPACE NAME PLACE OF DEATH SEX DEATH_DATE AGE L 66 5 ACKERMAN, JACK ALLEN LARAMIE, WYOMING M 7/4/1970 20 T 56 8 ACKERMAN, ROY FRANCIS LARAMIE, WYOMING M 2/27/1936 51 O 12 1 ACKERMAN, RUDOLPH LARAMIE, WYOMING M 10/10/1951 35 HENRY O 60 2 ACKERSON, JAMES R. -
Famous People with Alzheimer's Disease
Famous people with Alzheimer's Disease Joe Adcock, baseball player Mabel Albertson, actor Dana Andrews, actor Rudolph Bing, opera impresario James Brooks, artist Charles Bronson actor, film director Abe Burrows,author Carroll Campbell, Former Rebublican Senator Joyce Chen, chef Perry Como, Singer entertainer Aaron Copland, composer Willem DeKooning, artist James Doohan, actor Thomas Dorsey, singer Tom Fears, professional football player and coach Louis Feraud, fashion designer Arlene Francis, actor Mike Frankovich, film producer John Douglas French, physician Barry Goldwater, Senator of Arizona Rita Hayworth, actress Raul Silva Henriquez, Roman Catholic cardinal, human rights advocate Charlton Heston actor and political activist Mervyn Leroy, director Jack Lord, actor Ross MacDonald, author Burgess Meredith, actor Iris Murdoch, author Edmond O’Brien, actor Arthur O’Connell, actor Marv Owen, baseball player Molly Picon, actor Otto Preminger, director Bill Quackenbush, professional hockey player Ronald Reagan, 40th President of USA Harry Ritz, performer Sugar Ray Robinson, boxer Norman Rockwell, artist Simon Scott, actor Irving Shulman, screenwriter Betty Schwartz, Olympic gold medal winner in track events Kay Swift,composer Alfred Van Vogt, science fiction writer E.B. Alzheimer's Disease is not senility, and it is not a normal part of the aging process. It is a disease. It can strike anyone. It is the most common cause of severe intellectual impairment in older people. Alzheimer's disease is a degenerative brain disease that causes progressive loss of memory and mental abilities. It is often accompanied by depression and personality change. The cause is unknown. The symptoms and rate of progression vary, but for most patients, the disease progresses slowly over a period of 5 to 10 years, or longer. -
13187 Leeds Pride Programme 2017.Indd
LEEDS PRIDE 2017 THANKS FOR TAKING PART IN LEEDS PRIDE! PROGRAMME Leeds Pride main event is taking place on Sunday 6th Make sure you get involved on social media during August and will include two hours of entertainment the day by sending pictures to @LeedsPride on on the Sainsbury’s Stage in Millennium Square, a Twitter, Leeds LGBT Pride on Facebook and using the parade through the city centre with over 60 floats and hashtag #LeedsPride! five hours of entertainment on the first direct bank main stage on Lower Briggate. In the Lower Briggate While everyone coming along is there to unite and event space you will also find the Asda Children’s enjoy a fantastic day, we would really appreciate area, a dance zone, community market place, outside your co-operation regarding various safety matters. bars, a fun fair and much much more. Access to Lower Briggate and the main stage event space will be controlled by security check points. Bag Running since 2006, Leeds Pride is the largest Pride checks and random searches will be in place so please in the UK to still be a completely free event with over only bring with you what you really need. This will 40,000 people attending over the weekend. It is also really help us to carry out bag checks quickly. considered the UK’s friendliest Pride. The celebrations are run by a skilled team of volunteers with close links No alcohol is allowed into either of the event spaces SUPPLIED BY to local Leeds LGBT+ community and the event is but water and soft drinks in sealed bottles, drinks funded through community fundraising, grant funding for babies and young children and small amounts of and sponsorship agreements with national brands such food will be allowed.