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Receive Bids for Major Road Traphagen Warns of Pardun
m A Panorama COVERING O f Local MMTNSHIM OP HOLMDBU MADIMM People And MA1UOVO, MATAWAN Events >: MATAWAN MMOIKM Mtmbtf f7Mi YEAR — 3rd WEEK MATAWAN, N. J .a THURSDAY, JULY IS. 1968 Editorial Aaaaetittaa SingW Copy Ton ConH Receive Bids For Major Road Uphold Levitt On Aerial View Of New Beaclifill Project Bus Bids Again b . Strathmore Stakes Are Too High Superior Court Suit Transportation Fund U n M a w Coalractlni Co;, Mat- Ruling Ii Msds In Budget Eiceeded W u , Moadty ■Ifht wbmitted • in> Md ol t& .M t for the raiur- Superior Court Judge Elvln R. Matawan Regional Board of Ed frcia# at Marly IM n i d i and Simmill Monday reverted a Mat ucation has failed a sccond timo tfra a ta ia the townahip. Three con- awan Township decision which to get bids on transportation for ths ftracMnMtMiittoi (eadera tor lb* would have required Levitt and 1965-66 school year that come within Sons Inc., developera of Strath | the $32,500 allocated for this pur | H i M m w M iccluded providing more, to Install surveyor's stakes pose in the budget. Edward Scul • l£4*cfcbituminous concrete iur- at the corners of 1900 individual lion, board secretary, said yester tacaaa anroximitely M major building lots, day the tabulation of bids opens! Ihorofira*. The I balance of the Levitt had brought the suit at a meeting Monday showed the to ftfw tr ia tbe r a d improvement against the Towns' Ip Committee, tal of all minimum bids on ten fraJaetwiU he treitedwlth tiplul- the Planning Board. -
Fort School Gets New Major Role
Weather # 7 (.a. MmpntnM n, pIEDMLY to tuUr *•* tthy, «ad MMftmr. »# today tat 24,500 tmttim ta the 7la. Low te- Red BankArea J •fcftt It *« I*. Thursday, wri- able ckmdintM, cooler. Set' Copyright—The Red Bask Register, Inc., 1965. weather, page 2. DIAL 741-O01O MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 87 YEARS VOL. 88, NO. 21 FMU(* TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1965 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE OUlcff Fort School Gets New Major Role By DORIS KULMAN all three of the armed forces who will work with the new sys- The first class is expected to number 20. The number of stu- all at once, the 773,693 words of the King James Bible in 32 tem has been handed to the Signal School. dents will increase gradually to a maximum of 300 in training minutes and 12 seconds' time. FORT RWNMOUIH - The U. S. Army Signal School,-here, at any one time. The maximum number to be reached in the What actually happens is that incoming messages are re- fa ilated to take on a new, major mission within the next two A complete AUTODIN terminal will be installed here for in- summer of 1970. corded in the computer's storage device, or "memory", and years. , structional purposes. It will be the second such terminal m the United States. The AUTODIN classes are expected to have the same ratio are subsequently "played back" at a speed acceptable to a veryxv^ In r«spoo»e to * Register inquiry, the Army yesterday con- of civilian instructors to students as the rest of the Signal high-speed printer, teletypewriter, card-punch or other, re- 'The Defense Department has placed a "classified" label on v firmed that the training program for the Defense Depart-i School—approximately 5 per cent. -
Pony Express June 6, 2003 • Page 1
Pony Express Pony ExpressJune 6, 2003 • Page 1 Volume 34, Number 9 • San Marin High School, Novato, California • June 6, 2003 Pony Express SENIORSSENIORS June 6, 2003 • Page 2 Pony Express SENIORSENIOR STAFFSTAFF June 6, 2003 • Page 3 Ariel Brown: Valedictorian Niki Kidd : Salutatorian By Niki Kidd by Rebecca Guthrie On the day that the Valedictorian and Ariel has always been an outstanding The first words that come to mind as well as I should have. However, I did get Salutatorian were announced, many stu- student, but her conscientious and when describing Niki Kidd are well an A in calculus both semesters.” How’s dents rushed up to Ariel Brown to con- hardworking behavior was never more evi- rounded. This girl not only plays on varsity that for a comeback? gratulate her on her accomplishment. dent than in high school. Her 4.2 cumula- sports year round; she also has time to Niki says her favorite San Marin Problem was, they were all congratu- tive GPA led her classmates, thanks to her bring her cumulative GPA to a 4.2, making memory was last year when the girls varsity lating the wrong person. rigorous schedule including every AP and her the class of 2003’s Salutatorian. soccer team beat Marin Catholic in the That day just happened to be the same honors class offered at San Marin. This female sports and news editor of MCAL playoffs. “It is a memory that makes day that she and her identical twin sister, “It’s an honor to be named Valedic- the Pony Express seems to be quite on top me feel all fuzzy inside. -
At Villanova. the Program's First Year Of
ATHLETICS ADMINISTRATION ~ QUICK FACTS COVERS ABOUT VILLANOVA 2008 Senior Class . Front and Back Covers Location . .Villanova, Pa. 2007 BIG EAST Tournament . Inside Front Cover Enrollment . .6,240 Glimpse of Villanova . Inside Back Cover Founded . .1842 2008 Schedule . Back Cover President . .Rev. Peter M. Donohue, O.S.A. 2008 SEASON Nickname . .Wildcats Athletics Administration/Quick Facts. 1 Colors . .Blue (PMS 281) and White Roster . 2 Affiliation . .NCAA Division I Season Outlook . 3-4 Conference . .BIG EAST/National Division Head Coach Joe Godri . 5 Assistant Coaches Matt Kirby, Rod Johnson, Chris Madonna. 6 COACHING STAFF Meet the Wildcats . 7-16 Head Coach . .Joe Godri ‘96 VILLANOVA BASEBALL IS... Alma Mater . (New Mexico State ) Record at Villanova . .159-148-3, .518 (6 Years) Tradition . 17 Career Record . .Same Success . 18 Pitching Coach/Recruiting Coordinator . .Matt Kirby (2nd Season) A Regional Power . 19 Third Base Coach/Infield Coach . .Rod Johnson (7th Season) PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS Hitting Coach . .Chris Madonna (1st Season) Villanova Baseball in the Professional Ranks . 20 Baseball Office . .610-519-4529 Wildcats in the Major Leagues . 21 Head Coach E-Mail . [email protected] Villanova Baseball and the Major League Draft . 22 Assistant Coach E-Mail . [email protected] Villanova Ballpark at Plymouth . 23 BIG EAST Conference . 24 HOME GAMES 2007 YEAR IN REVIEW Stadium . .Villanova Ballpark at Plymouth Accomplishments/Overall Results . 25 Location . .Plymouth Meeting, Pa. (15 minutes from campus) Statistics . 26 Capacity . .750 TEAM HISTORY Surface . .Grass BIG EAST Championship History . 27 Dimensions . .330 LF, 370 LC, 405 CF, 370 RC, 330 RF Postseason History/Head Coaches/Year-by-Year Record. -
Private Motor Insurance
1 This transcript is confidential and may contain information that is protected by Part 9 of the Enterprise Act 2002. Do not publish 2 or disclose its contents without the permission of the Competition Commission. 3 4 5 COMPETITION COMMISSION 6 PRIVATE MOTOR INSURANCE MARKET INVESTIGATION 7 8 9 Notes of a joint hearing with BIBA, BGL Group, Endsleigh, Hastings Insurance Group 10 and Swinton Insurance 11 held at Competition Commission, Southampton Row, London 12 on Monday 15 July 2013 13 14 PRESENT: 15 16 FOR THE COMPETITION COMMISSION 17 Alasdair Smith - Chairman 18 Robin Aaronson - Member 19 Stephen Oram - Member 20 Anthony Stern - Member 21 22 FOR THE STAFF 23 Andrew Wright - Inquiry Director 24 Graeme Reynolds - Director of Remedies and Business Analysis 25 Tony Curzon-Price - Economist 26 Kirsty Miller - Legal Adviser 27 Pietro Menis - Legal Adviser 28 Philip Dixon - Business Advisor 29 30 FOR THE BROKERS 31 Graeme Trudgill - Executive Director, BIBA 32 Steve White - Chief Executive, BIBA 33 Ron Simms - Corporate Services Director, BGL Group 34 Peter Thompson - Group Director, BGL Group 35 Darren Pardon - Associate Director Supplier Management, BGL Group 36 Ian Passmore - Managing Director, Endsleigh 37 Mark Wainwright - Business Delivery Manager, Endsleigh 38 Jennifer Day - Head of Direct Markets, Endsleigh 39 Jacquie Ward - Compliance and Assurance Manager, Endsleigh 40 George Nicol - Claims Manager, Gallagher Group 41 Michael Lee - Managing Director Insurer Services, Hastings 42 Lucy Johnson - Commercial Director, Hastings 43 Jonathan -
Board Members Named
s In sid e W eath er MICHIGAN Partly cloudy today and Viet Nam protests, p. 2; tonight. High 48 to 53. Seniors of the week, p. 7; STATE Gusty winds. Green Splash, p. 9. UNIVERSITY NEWS East Lansing, Michigan Tuesday, April 20, 1965 Price 10c ASMSU Picks Chairm an; %& Board Members Named Meeting North Viets Reject Scheduled i tomorrow C a ll F o r o tia tio n s By JO BUMBARGER State News ASMSU Writer TOKYO T1—Communist North settlement. is to carry out the under this formula the United Viet Nam rejected Monday an points” laid down by North Viet States would pull out of South John McQuitty, East Lansing appeal by 17 neutralist nations namese Premier Pham Van Dong Viet Nam, leaving the Saigon gov Junior, was named chairman of for negotiations without precon April 12: ernment to contend with contin the Student Board at its organi ditions to end the fighting in Viet —Recognition of basic national ued North Vietnamese aggression zational meeting Sunday. Nam. rights of the Vietnamese people. without American support. The Receiving the two appointed The rejection - - announced by —Withdrawal of foreign mili result would be to deliver South positions in the seven and a half- the official Viet Nam news agency tary personnel in accord with the Viet Nam to the Reds, they said. hour meeting were FrannieFrei, INTERNATIONAL FUN — Just preparing for the In- (VNA) in a radio broadcast — 1954 Geneva agreements on Viet JOHN McOUITTY Dearborn junior, and John Mil U.S. Undersecretary of State JIM TANCK ler, Bangor junior. -
College Field Day Sports |
EDITED BY News See The Field HUGH W. ROBERTS Sporting aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaataaaaaaaaaBaa .. .a...a..aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaCollege aaaaaaa a aaaa...............*......a.Day aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Sports aaaaaa aa a aaaaaaa*aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa« | COLLEGE SPOOLS The Game Yesterday As STRANG PLUNGES T Ivo Thousand See Tolvell M AWFUL RAP Witnessed Local Man Win Grammar School Meet HAVE FOLL Sffl By THROUGH FENCE OF NICK LARSEN BY BILL AX. Powell won the grammar school field the Henley school, Powell second, Mar- • tin third. meet yesterday, making a total of 86 Nashville, 7— (Special)—T saw the Later, when Seigle came to the bat with The 85-pound relay race was won by the i May Has Narrew Es- points, followed by Paul Hayne, 48 points, Terrific Drive In Seventh this Molesworth's throw the banes full and one out, he had the Driver Powell school, Paul Hayne second, Martin Gets game afternoon. Daring Henley 28 Martin 12 and South points, third. to the plate in the first inning, which misfortune to hit into a double play. Highlands 4. race was won was frum Death The 95-pound relay by retired Bay at the plate, was from deep The fault was not Seigle’s. Dickson Through Seigel cape The highest Individual scores were made the Powell school, Paul second, to Hayne center. It was a mighty heave, for Bay, pitching well. But they roasted Seigle Meet At the Fair by Arthur Driver of Powell school and Henley third. Field as we know, is a fast man. a fare you well. The relay race was won by Big Emmet Collins of Paul school—15, | 115-pound were liberal in hits Hayne They have often said. -
This Entire Document
Copyaiuiir, 1885, IT TUK SPOBTISG LIFE Pi'BLiimiNQ Co ^v^^^^^^ ^^^^» ^^^MM^^P ^^ ENTEBiD AT 1'HILA.'HiLA. FOOTPiwr Omc*Assico!fi>CLASSiuTKB.Itmr** A a av/wu-n M . .-,..•, u . __•»« VOLUME U, NO. 1. PHILADELPHIA, PA., OCTOBER U, 1885. PRICE, FIVE CENTS. FROM DETKOIT. whole base ball world centres in the event of this con Another Rank Specimen of Umpiring Sprung test, and I believe it is sate to (my that, with this inter THE SPORTING LIFE LATE NEWS. est in their favor, these two clubs have taken in more on Detroit—The Team Playing Remarkable BASE BALL. PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT money than all the other dabs put together. Does any Ball, Etc. one iu h's senses suppose that this overpowering intere«t No. 202 South Ninth Street, FbJlada. DETROIT, Oct. 7. Editor SPOUTING LIFE: The is to cease with the termination of this year's battles? BY THE worst is over. "Chump" Sullivan, another rank Or that Iwth th.' contestants are not keenly alive to the EVENTS OF A DAY. NEWS OF THE WEEK fact and watching for every opportunity to reinforce it Sparling Life Publishing Company, umpire, has been taken from our midst, much to strength or to gain an advantage over the other? Or ia the relief of our audiences. He is enough to rattle eit'ier club to weaken itself for parsimonious Boston, To u'tose order all Clitckt, Drafts, Money Ordtn any pitcher by his judgement on balls impecunious Providence, peccant St. Louis or wavering and Remittance* muat be made payable. Results of Saturday'sIBall'Games and strikes, but his cheek carries every Funny Work by Detroit-News Uetroit? I trow not. -
Gekkotan Lizard Taxonomy
3% 5% 2% 4% 3% 5% H 2% 4% A M A D R Y 3% 5% A GEKKOTAN LIZARD TAXONOMY 2% 4% D ARNOLD G. KLUGE V O 3% 5% L 2% 4% 26 NO.1 3% 5% 2% 4% 3% 5% 2% 4% J A 3% 5% N 2% 4% U A R Y 3% 5% 2 2% 4% 0 0 1 VOL. 26 NO. 1 JANUARY, 2001 3% 5% 2% 4% INSTRUCTIONS TO CONTRIBUTORS Hamadryad publishes original papers dealing with, but not necessarily restricted to, the herpetology of Asia. Re- views of books and major papers are also published. Manuscripts should be only in English and submitted in triplicate (one original and two copies, along with three cop- ies of all tables and figures), printed or typewritten on one side of the paper. Manuscripts can also be submitted as email file attachments. Papers previously published or submitted for publication elsewhere should not be submitted. Final submissions of accepted papers on disks (IBM-compatible only) are desirable. For general style, contributors are requested to examine the current issue of Hamadryad. Authors with access to publication funds are requested to pay US$ 5 or equivalent per printed page of their papers to help defray production costs. Reprints cost Rs. 2.00 or 10 US cents per page inclusive of postage charges, and should be ordered at the time the paper is accepted. Major papers exceeding four pages (double spaced typescript) should contain the following headings: Title, name and address of author (but not titles and affiliations), Abstract, Key Words (five to 10 words), Introduction, Material and Methods, Results, Discussion, Acknowledgements, Literature Cited (only the references cited in the paper). -
PAUL SAYS T*O M U Ch a M Erg Er A* an Absorption
M CE SIXTEEN THE COMMERCIAI, LEADER AND SOUTH BERGEN REVIEW TÏÏTRSD \ Y MW 7. 1950 I aw ay. M r. Average Taxpayer en j alliance. G ro u p 781K#»tart a __ Conservation. or Else I just wishes the smell would go fund for eventual purchase of Now is a time when the trees are unfurling their leaves and away. a vt mdovt in new St. Michael Commercial leader buds to the sun. The whole country «id** is green and the wild ___________________ Church. life are roaming in search of food after that long winter. a n » t h * soiTii BEHCET« «crtrw To all those who supported our y Established 1921 To see all this Uautv and splendor one merely has to take Mrs. Pkkerelli card party you are very much T V Commercial In in k the oflriat aewapaper af a ride up to the rural areas or go to one of our local reservations. I £ Gentlem en, Appreciated for all your sustain But in fifty years, will we have any forests. No, not if .man dors j VrVI I W O I I ID S I OI* Thank yeu for your wonderiu! ing support LYNDHURST HOME OF CHAMPIONS not realize that we must reforest, plant brush and cover for wild- A SIS help as well as sin ere thanks tf Mrs. I Sergan, life, and help nature in many other ways Can conservation groups A U X IIIO ry all the benefectors .who ha\e C h a irlad y and agencies do enough woik for conservation7 No, conservation h* l| cd *he C.rcle of Polish Worn Mrs. -
Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Profits, Beer, and the Origins of the Brotherhood War Robert Allan Bauer University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
University of Arkansas, Fayetteville ScholarWorks@UARK Theses and Dissertations 7-2015 Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Profits, Beer, and the Origins of the Brotherhood War Robert Allan Bauer University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd Part of the Sports Studies Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Bauer, Robert Allan, "Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Profits, Beer, and the Origins of the Brotherhood War" (2015). Theses and Dissertations. 1215. http://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd/1215 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UARK. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UARK. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Outside the Line of Gilded Age Baseball: Profits, Beer, and the Origins of the Brotherhood War Outside the Lines of Gilded Age Baseball: Profits, Beer, and the Origins of the Brotherhood War A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History by Robert A. Bauer Washington State University Bachelor of Arts in History and Social Studies, 1998 University of Washington Master of Education, 2003 University of Montana Master of Arts in History, 2006 July 2015 University of Arkansas This dissertation is approved for recommendation to the Graduate Council. ___________________________________ Dr. Elliott West Dissertation Director ___________________________________ _________________________________ Dr. Jeannie Whayne Dr. Patrick Williams Committee Member Committee Member Abstract In 1890, members of the Brotherhood of Professional Base Ball Players elected to secede from the National League and form their own organization, which they called the Players League. -
SABR Baseball Biography Project | Society for American Baseball
THE ----.;..----- Baseball~Research JOURNAL Cy Seymour Bill Kirwin 3 Chronicling Gibby's Glory Dixie Tourangeau : 14 Series Vignettes Bob Bailey 19 Hack Wilson in 1930 Walt Wilson 27 Who Were the Real Sluggers? Alan W. Heaton and Eugene E. Heaton, Jr. 30 August Delight: Late 1929 Fun in St. Louis Roger A. Godin 38 Dexter Park Jane and Douglas Jacobs 41 Pitch Counts Daniel R. Levitt 46 The Essence of the Game: A Personal Memoir Michael V. Miranda 48 Gavy Cravath: Before the Babe Bill Swank 51 The 10,000 Careers of Nolan Ryan: Computer Study Joe D'Aniello 54 Hall of Famers Claimed off the Waiver List David G. Surdam 58 Baseball Club Continuity Mark Armour ~ 60 Home Run Baker Marty Payne 65 All~Century Team, Best Season Version Ted Farmer 73 Decade~by~Decade Leaders Scott Nelson 75 Turkey Mike Donlin Michael Betzold 80 The Baseball Index Ted Hathaway 84 The Fifties: Big Bang Era Paul L. Wysard 87 The Truth About Pete Rose :-.~~-.-;-;.-;~~~::~;~-;:.-;::::;::~-:-Phtltp-Sitler- 90 Hugh Bedient: 42 Ks in 23 Innings Greg Peterson 96 Player Movement Throughout Baseball History Brian Flaspohler 98 New "Production" Mark Kanter 102 The Balance of Power in Baseball Stuart Shapiro 105 Mark McGwire's 162 Bases on Balls in 1998 John F. Jarvis 107 Wait Till Next Year?: An Analysis Robert Saltzman 113 Expansion Effect Revisited Phil Nichols 118 Joe Wilhoit and Ken Guettler: Minors HR Champs Bob Rives 121 From A Researcher's Notebook Al Kermisch 126 Editor: Mark Alvarez THE BASEBALL RESEARCH JOURNAL (ISSN 0734-6891, ISBN 0-910137-82-X), Number 29.