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BOWDOIN MAGAZINE VOL. 82 NO. 2 SUMMER 2011 BV O L . 8 2 N Oow . 2 S UMMER 2 0 1 1 doin STANDP U WITH ASOCIAL FOR THECLASSOF1961, BOWDOINISFOREVER CONSCIENCE JILLSHAWRUDDOCK’77 HARI KONDABOLU ’04 SLICINGTHEPIEFOR THE POWER OF COMEDY AS AN STUDENTACTIVITIES INSTRUMENT FOR CHANGE SUMMER 2011 CONTENTS BowdoinMAGAZINE 24 AGreatSecondHalf PHOTOGRAPHS BY FELICE BOUCHER In an interview that coincided with the opening of an exhibition of the Victoria and Albert’s English alabaster reliefs at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art last semester, Jill Shaw Ruddock ’77 talks about the goal of her new book, The Second Half of Your Life—to make the second half the best half. 30 FortheClassof1961,BowdoinisForever BY LISA WESEL • PHOTOGRAHS BY BOB HANDELMAN AND BRIAN WEDGE ’97 After 50 years as Bowdoin alumni, the Class of 1961 is a particularly close-knit group. Lisa Wesel spent time with a group of them talking about friendship, formative experi- ences, and the privilege of traveling a long road together. 36 StandUpWithaSocialConscience BY EDGAR ALLEN BEEM • PHOTOGRAPHS BY KARSTEN MORAN ’05 The Seattle Times has called Hari Kondabolu ’04 “a young man reaching for the hand-scalding torch of confrontational comics like Lenny Bruce and Richard Pryor.” Ed Beem talks to Hari about his journey from Queens to Brunswick and the power of comedy as an instrument of social change. 44 SlicingthePie BY EDGAR ALLEN BEEM • PHOTOGRAPHS BY DEAN ABRAMSON The Student Activity Fund Committee distributes funding of nearly $700,000 a year in support of clubs, entertainment, and community service. -
AROUND the HORN News & Notes from the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum September Edition
NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM, INC. 25 Main Street, Cooperstown, NY 13326-0590 Phone: (607) 547-0215 Fax: (607)547-2044 Website Address – baseballhall.org E-Mail – [email protected] NEWS Brad Horn, Vice President, Communications & Education Craig Muder, Director, Communications Matt Kelly, Communications Specialist P R E S E R V I N G H ISTORY . H O N O R I N G E XCELLENCE . C O N N E C T I N G G ENERATIONS . AROUND THE HORN News & Notes from the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum September Edition Sept. 17, 2015 volume 22, issue 8 FRICK AWARD BALLOT VOTING UNDER WAY The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum’s Ford C. Frick Award is presented annually since 1978 by the Museum for excellence in baseball broadcasting…Annual winners are announced as part of the Baseball Winter Meetings each year, while awardees are presented with their honor the following summer during Hall of Fame Weekend in Cooperstown, New York…Following changes to the voting regulations implemented by the Hall of Fame’s Board of Directors in the summer of 2013, the selection process reflects an era-committee system where eligible candidates are grouped together by years of most significant contributions of their broadcasting careers… The totality of each candidate’s career will be considered, though the era in which the broadcaster is deemed to have had the most significant impact will be determined by a Hall of Fame research team…The three cycles reflect eras of major transformations in broadcasting and media: The “Broadcasting Dawn Era” – to be voted on this fall, announced in December at the Winter Meetings and presented at the Hall of Fame Awards Presentation in 2016 – will consider candidates who contributed to the early days of baseball broadcasting, from its origins through the early-1950s. -
By Kimberly Parkhurst Thesis
America’s Pastime: How Baseball Went from Hoboken to the World Series An Honors Thesis (HONR 499) by Kimberly Parkhurst Thesis Advisor Dr. Bruce Geelhoed Ball State University Muncie, Indiana April 2020 Expected Date of Graduation July 2020 Abstract Baseball is known as “America’s Pastime.” Any sports aficionado can spout off facts about the National or American League based on who they support. It is much more difficult to talk about the early days of baseball. Baseball is one of the oldest sports in America, and the 1800s were especially crucial in creating and developing modern baseball. This paper looks at the first sixty years of baseball history, focusing especially on how the World Series came about in 1903 and was set as an annual event by 1905. Acknowledgments I would like to thank Carlos Rodriguez, a good personal friend, for loaning me his copy of Ken Burns’ Baseball documentary, which got me interested in this early period of baseball history. I would like to thank Dr. Bruce Geelhoed for being my advisor in this process. His work, enthusiasm, and advice has been helpful throughout this entire process. I would also like to thank Dr. Geri Strecker for providing me a strong list of sources that served as a starting point for my research. Her knowledge and guidance were immeasurably helpful. I would next like to thank my friends for encouraging the work I do and supporting me. They listen when I share things that excite me about the topic and encourage me to work better. Finally, I would like to thank my family for pushing me to do my best in everything I do, whether academic or extracurricular. -
Good Fellows: the Walpole Society by Jeanne Schinto Photos Courtesy the Walpole Society “He Buys ‘Like a Prince’ What He Wants
- FEATURE - Part II of V Good Fellows: The Walpole Society by Jeanne Schinto Photos courtesy the Walpole Society “He buys ‘like a Prince’ what he wants. He does not ‘pussyfoot,’ ‘soft pedal,’ or haggle. What he feels is beyond his reach or excessive in price is simply left alone, and he is so modest that he does not continually talk about his acquisitions. More than all this, he is a ‘Prince of Good Fellows,’ full of life and sparkle, and does not hesitate to ‘look upon wine’ when it is of a red color.” ——George Dudley Seymour to Philip Leffingwell Spalding, regarding the nomination of Morgan Bulkeley Brainard to the Walpole Society, March 21, 1925.1 he Walpole Society, a highly exclusive club ded- where prices paid help icated to Americana, was founded in 1910 and to furnish an average, Tcontinues today. Many of the biggest names in it would be, from our collecting, curating, and studying American furniture, point of view—espe- decorative arts, fine arts, antiquarian architecture, histor- cially those of us in ic-house preservation, and rare books have been or are the Museum here—of now members. Yet with no fixed address, no website, value in giving advice and a roster limited to 30 men only—a member must die, to many people who be designated “inactive” (unable to attend meetings), or want to know what resign before the election of a replacement—few peo- they should pay for ple, even those who consider themselves informed about this or that.”5 Americana collecting, know about it.2 If these lists of Within the first year of the society’s life, when Florence prices and caches of N. -
CHAIRMEN of SENATE STANDING COMMITTEES [Table 5-3] 1789–Present
CHAIRMEN OF SENATE STANDING COMMITTEES [Table 5-3] 1789–present INTRODUCTION The following is a list of chairmen of all standing Senate committees, as well as the chairmen of select and joint committees that were precursors to Senate committees. (Other special and select committees of the twentieth century appear in Table 5-4.) Current standing committees are highlighted in yellow. The names of chairmen were taken from the Congressional Directory from 1816–1991. Four standing committees were founded before 1816. They were the Joint Committee on ENROLLED BILLS (established 1789), the joint Committee on the LIBRARY (established 1806), the Committee to AUDIT AND CONTROL THE CONTINGENT EXPENSES OF THE SENATE (established 1807), and the Committee on ENGROSSED BILLS (established 1810). The names of the chairmen of these committees for the years before 1816 were taken from the Annals of Congress. This list also enumerates the dates of establishment and termination of each committee. These dates were taken from Walter Stubbs, Congressional Committees, 1789–1982: A Checklist (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1985). There were eleven committees for which the dates of existence listed in Congressional Committees, 1789–1982 did not match the dates the committees were listed in the Congressional Directory. The committees are: ENGROSSED BILLS, ENROLLED BILLS, EXAMINE THE SEVERAL BRANCHES OF THE CIVIL SERVICE, Joint Committee on the LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, LIBRARY, PENSIONS, PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS, RETRENCHMENT, REVOLUTIONARY CLAIMS, ROADS AND CANALS, and the Select Committee to Revise the RULES of the Senate. For these committees, the dates are listed according to Congressional Committees, 1789– 1982, with a note next to the dates detailing the discrepancy. -
Woman's Presbyt^R*^ of Missions of Tfièt Northwest
FORTIETH ANNUAL REPORT Í DAY MISSIONS! Woman’s Presbyt^r*^ of Missions of tfièT Northwest ORGANIZED IN 1868, IN CO-OPERATION WITH THE “ WOMAN’S BOARD OF MISSIONS OF THE INTERIOR.” REORGANIZED IN 1870 AS THE "WOMAN’S PRESBY TERIAN BOARD OF MISSIONS OF THE'NORTHWEST.” APRIL, 1911 TERRITORY:- COLORADO, ILLINOIS, INDI ANA, IOWA, MICHIGAN, MINNESOTA, MON ¿Vo TANA, NEBRASKA, NORTH EAKOTA, SOUTH DAKOTA, WISCONSIN AND WYOMING ROOM 48, 509 SOUTH WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS T e l e p h o n e Ha r r is o n 2437 A copy of this report is sent to the Secretary of each Auxiliary Society FOR THE USE OF THE SOCIETY, and she is requested to put it promptly into the hands of the President. Additional copies of this report sent on receipt o f 1 0 cents each. 3 9002 09912 2377 FORTIETH ANNUAL REPORT oP™E/ C ^ U N IV f/^ , j — -^vV.VV«Vs^ ______ ^I ■ day MÎSSiONb Woman’s Presbyterian Board of Missions of the Northwest ORGANIZED IN 1868, IN CO-OPERATION WITH THE “ WOMAN’S BOARD OF MISSIONS OF THE INTERIOR.” REORGANIZED IN 1870 AS THE “ WOMAN’S PRESBY TERIAN BOARD OF MISSIONS OF THE NORTHWEST.” APRIL, 1911 TERRITORY: COLORADO, ILLINOIS, INDI ANA, IOWA, MICHIGAN, MINNESOTA, MON TANA, NEBRASKA, NORTH DAKOTA, SOUTH DAKOTA, WISCONSIN AND WYOMING PRESBYTERIAN OFFICES RO O M 48, 509 S. WABASH AVENUE Telephone Harrison 2437 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE WOMAN'S PRESBYTERIAN BOARD OF MISSIONS OF THE NORTHWEST. President Emeritus. MRS. HENRY H. FORSYTH, 1318 Ritchie Place, Chicago. P resident. -
L E T T E R H E
DIRK KEMPTHORNE President & Chief Executive Officer Governor Dirk Kempthorne ACLI Annual Conference October 20, 2014 Thank you, good morning, and welcome to our nation’s capital and the ACLI Annual Conference. We’re honored that so many of our industry’s top executives could join us today. I want to take a moment to recognize a couple of them. First, ACLI Chairman Johnny Johns of Protective Life. Johnny has been a fantastic leader for ACLI and for the life insurance industry. Johnny, I want to personally thank you for all that you’ve done for us over the past 12 months. I also want to take a moment to recognize incoming ACLI Chairman Roger Crandall of MassMutual. Roger will add to ACLI’s legacy of strong industry leaders as he assumes the chairmanship later this morning. Roger will work closely with our executive committee and with our Board of Directors who are deeply involved in our industry. We are very fortunate to have such knowledgeable, passionate and committed leaders on our team. They are the some of the best people I have ever worked with, and I am very grateful for your hard work and support. I'd like to also acknowledge Governor Haley Barbour in the audience... you know Haley, former Mississippi Governor who addressed us last year. Haley, welcome once again. To my wife, Patricia Kempthorne, and to all the spouses who have joined us … welcome. A few weeks ago so many of us here in the nation’s capital were excited about our baseball team, the Nationals, and its chance of making it into the World Series, which starts tomorrow night in Kansas City. -
National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Submission Listings Michigan
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES MULTIPLE PROPERTY SUBMISSION LISTINGS MICHIGAN FINDING AID Old Fire House No. 4, Kalamazoo Multiple Resource Area, Photo by Gary Cialdella, Kalamazoo Historical Society Prepared by National Park Service - Intermountain Region Museum Services Program Tucson, Arizona February 2015 National Register of Historic Places – Multiple Property Submission Listings - Michigan 2 National Register of Historic Places – Multiple Property Submission Listings - Michigan Scope and Content Note: The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the official list of the Nation's historic places worthy of preservation. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America's historic and archeological resources. - From the National Register of Historic Places site: http://www.nps.gov/nr/about.htm The Multiple Property Submission (MPS) listings records are unique in that they capture historic properties that are related by theme, general geographic area, and/or period of time. The MPS is the current terminology for submissions of this kind; past iterations include Thematic Resource (TR) and Multiple Resource Area (MRA). Historic properties nominated under the MPS rubric will contain individualized nomination forms and will be linked by a Cover Sheet for the overall group. Historic properties nominated under the TR and MRA rubric are nominated as part of the whole group and will contain portions of nominations that come directly from the group Cover Sheet. -
Baseball Trivia Questions and Answers
Baseball Trivia Multiple Choice Questions: 1. Which of these types of food is a baseball slang term for an easy catch pop fly? a) Rhubarb b) Cheese Stick c) Meatball Sub d) Can of Corn 2. British Baseball features how many innings? a) Nine b) Two c) Twelve d) Five 3. In what year was the first game of baseball played in the New World? a) 1838 b) 1784 c) 1902 d) 1895 4. Which professional player had the best career batting average in MLB history? a) Joe Jackson b) Ty Cobb c) Rogers Hornsby d) Tris Speakers 5. Who was the first National League President? a) Morgan Bulkeley b) William White c) B. Bancroft Johnson d) Bowie Kent Kuhn 6. Which MLB team has hit the most home runs in a single game? a)Cincinnati Reds b)New York Yankees c)Toronto Blue Jays d)Oakland Athletics 7. In what year was the catcher’s mask invented? a)1985 b)1935 c)1875 d)1850 8. Which item was not commonly used as the center of baseballs in the mid-1800’s? a)Apple b)Fish eye c)Walnut d)Rock 9. Players in which position were the first to wear baseball gloves? a)Pitcher b)Catcher c)First Baseman d)Third Baseman 10. In what year was the term base-ball first used? a)1744 b)1456 c)1835 d)1689 True or False Questions: 1. A player who strikes out three times in a game is said to earn the “golden sombrero.” 2. Baseball was the first professional sport in the U.S. -
Selected Subjects
9-10-85 Tuesday Vol. 50 No. 175 September 10, 1085 Pages 36861-36982 Selected Subjects Air Pollution Control Environmental Protection Agency Animal Drugs Food and Drug Administration Aviation Safety Federal Aviation Administration Banks, Banking Farm Credit Administration Communications Equipment Federal Communications Commission Food Additives Food and Drug Administration Government Procurement Defense Department Hazardous Wastes Environmental Protection Agency Milk Marketing Orders Agricultural Marketing Service Postal Service Postal Service Nuclear Materials Nuclear Regulatory Commission Railroad Unemployment insurance Railroad Retirement Board CONTINUED INSIDE n Federal Register / Vol. 50, No. 175 / Tuesday, September 10, 1985 / Selected Subjects Selected Subjects FEDERAL REGISTER Published daily, Monday through Friday, Surface Mining (not published on Saturdays, Sundays, or on official holidays), Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Office by the Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC 20408, under the Water Pollution Control Federal Register Act (49 Stat. 500, as amended; 44 U.S.C. Ch. Environmental Protection Agency 15) and the regulations of the Administrative Committee of the Federal Register (1 CFR Ch. I). Distribution is made only by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. The Federal Register provides a uniform system for making available to the public regulations and legal notices issued..by Federal agencies. These include Presidential proclamations and Executive Orders and Federal agency documents having general applicability and legal effect, documents required to be published by abt of Congress and other Federal agency documents of public interest. Documents are on file for public inspection in the Office of the Federal Register the day before they are published, unless earlier filing is requested by the issuing agency. -
Official Program... 48Th National Encampment
E462 .A1797 EriKn»lH^Xtflefia»r)£«E«£rR K LIBRARY OF CONGRESS DDDOblSDDO? * ^^ ^. ''^'^Jt ^y^-V. ^o. ' ^"^ *!iik.%%^ .^^% » • • ^ f- vV m ;i?^' VrWTTWJ OFFICIAL I I I PROGRAM j and General Information | '>^#t*^ ^j^gEg^^ Detroit lllllll Aug. 31 to Michigan CTlii|i,ililb Sept. 5, 1914 48th National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic Issued by Citizens' Committee on Arrangements S Honorary Chairman Chairman ^ MAYOR OSCAR B. MARX ABNER E. LARNED S Secretary, EDWARD T. FITZGERALD | Headquarters—^Parlors K and L—Hotel Pontchartrain g EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Frederick M. Alger Col. Frank J. Hecker Charles B. Warren Henry B. joy E^Ta.^ «>^ Hugh Chalmers Fred H. Holt 7^ James Couzens James Vernor • ^'.oari Edward H. Doyle Charles F. Bielmaiii » 1 j CHAIRMEN OF SUB-COMMITTEES AUTOMOBILES—Edwin Denby. AQUATIC ENTERTAINMENT—Alex I. McLeod BOY SCOUTS—Dr. James H. Sowerby. DECORATION—Philip Breitmeyer. ENTERTAINMENT—William R. Orr. ILLUMINATION—John J. Barium. INFORMATION—Arthur E. Gordon. MEDICAL CORPS—Dr. B. R. Shurly. MUSIC— James Devoe. PARADE REVIEW AND GRAND STAND—CoL Walter Barlow. PUBLIC COMFORT—William J. Nagel. PUBLIC ORDER—John Gillespie. PUBLICITY—Henry Ewald. QUARTERS—Robert M. Grindley. RECEPTION—Gen. William S. Green. REUNIONS AND CAMPFIRES—Divie B. Dufficld. SOUVENIRS-John C. Lodge. WOMEN'S COMMITTEE—Mrs. R. H. Ashbaugh. NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS AND CONVENTION HALLS Headquarters Convention Hall Grand Army of Hotel Pontchartrain the Republic Armory Woman's Relief Hotel Pontchartrain Corps First Presbyterian Church Ladies of the G. Cadillac Hotel A. R Y. M. C. A. Bldg. Daughters of Cadillac Hotel Veterans Cadillac Hotel Ass'n of Army Ste. -
Facilities Maintenance Employers - USA
www.Jobcorpsbook.org - Facilities Maintenance Employers - USA Company Business Street City State Zip Phone Fax Web Page Neighborworks Anchorage 480 West Tudor Road Anchorage AK 99503 (907) 677-8490 http://www.nwanchorage.org Southside Seniors 9480 Morningside Loop Anchorage AK 99515 (907) 522-6393 Birchwood Homes 1066 Turnagin Loop Fairbanks AK 99701 (907) 356-1616 http://www.birchwoodhomesak.com River Point Village 2595 Chief William Drive Fairbanks AK 99709 (907) 374-1642 Alaska Housing Finance Corporation 3410 Foster Avenue Juneau AK 99801 (907) 586-3750 (907) 463-4967 http://www.ahfc.state.ak.us Bayview Terrace 309 Erskine Kodiak AK 99615 (907) 486-4733 Weeks Apartments 217 W 2nd Avenue Nome AK 99762 (907) 443-3194 Marine View Apartments 1306 N Nordic Petersburg AK 99833 (907) 772-2330 TrimPro llc 2149 CHURCH RIDGE DR. Wasilla AK 99654 (907) 299-0850 (907) 373-7811 Adams Crossing 73 Angela Circle Albertville AL 35951 (256) 894-7500 Greystone 1655 Creekwood Trail Auburn AL 36830 (334) 705-0173 (334) 740-0647 http://www.thegreystonemansion.com Lemans Square Apartments 560 Perry Auburn AL 36830 (334) 821-9192 http://www.lemanssquare.com Flint Hill Pointe Apartments 600 Flint Hill Lane Bessemer AL 35022 (205) 425-1919 Ahepa 3 Senior Apartments Service 3320 Old Columbiana Road Birmingham AL 35226 (205) 978-8809 Branchwater Apartments 901 Old Forest Rd. Birmingham AL 35243 (888) 259-6074 Eagle Ridge Apartments One Eagle Ridge Drive Birmingham AL 35242 (888) 305-9599 Emerald Pointe Apartments 2149 Emerald Pointe Drive Birmingham AL 35216