U.S. to Court for Dock Strike

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

U.S. to Court for Dock Strike '*-■ ■ ' V WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER T, 19B# fli« WoBtlwr Arenge Dafly Net Preaa Riui reremot ef C. % Weather fgmom P A O B T W B N T f Far the Week Ended jffiattrhPBtpr lEupititig ifpralb Oct. 3. 1889 Meetly ateody, eonaMemM* fg f; The MATES will meet tonight! tonight. 1/im MMMt. UemMofoMF Mr. and Mre. Karl JohneUm of Membeia of the Infant Jeaua of The October meeting of the Fer- l E u m i t t g Cerlton J. Bergeron, torpedo- Manchester rieodlaeaa, Httle chaOge la IMBDOO- Airman Auguat Turnbull, aon of Prague Mother*’ Circle will meet rt* Reynold# group of Second Cod- at 7:30 at the home of Jo*eph 13,009 man'a mete third dee*, U.8. Nevy, Vernon left thie morning for To­ Sullivan, 317 Spring St. Commit-' Wallpaper and Paint Co. ateres Friday Nigh la 70*. Peter F. Turnbull. 108 Ridge St., ronto, Caned*, where Johnaion will tomorrow at 8 p.m. at the Church gregational Church will be held Member ef the Audit About Town hea been aaaigned to a unit of the eon of Mr. end Mre. William C. | tomorrow at 10 a.m. at the home tee report* will be given for the ^ 349 BROAD ST. Bergeron. 87 Herlan St., la eervtng j be on the ataff for the Atlantic of the Aaiumption hall for in- MANCHESTER. CONN. lloreau ef Orenlatloa! Mancheeter— A City of Village Chnrm j I Strategi* Air Commend at Howl Square Dance convention, H# will atructlon by the Rev, FrancI* But­ of Mr*. Carl GeUaler. ,300 N. Main Nov. 7 banquet. j LakoU OouflcJl. D pjtw of Poco-! Air Force Beee, Maine, for train-| aboard the aubmartne U. B. 8. Cut-1 S Member* are reminded to bring leee operating with the Sixth Fleet ; Mead two panel group.*. Johnaion ler. Member* will proceed from the Cnatom Framinf hotitu. m««U tonight *l * In Ing end dutv eg a motonaed and! Inatrurtlon claa* to the home of organdy apron* for the fall fitr. The Mancheater Pharmaceutical j (Claaadlad AaverOalng an Png* PRICE FIVE CBNTB Odd Fellow* Hell to me He plene > mlarellai'ieoua equipment apectal-‘ In the Medllerraneen. The eub- la caller for the Mancheater Square Society will maet tonight at 9:301 Arllata' Supplies MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 19.59 Danca Club. Mra. Jame* F, Barry. 18 Unnmore Hoatesaea will be Mr*. Rose Con- VOL. LXXIX, NO. 7 (TWKNTY PAGES) for the co|i'‘onUon. Memhere ere tat. He rci entlv completed haalc ^ merlne will perllcipete In opera- j verae and Mra. John Buck. at the Red JBmber In Bolton. ) uHed to donete fflfU for the con-1 tionel exerciaet and la acheduled ; Dr. Mra. Jamee P. Mulready will training at Lackland Air Force, Mlaa iVancy Davda. daughter of be co-hosteaa. vwiUon gift Uble. Gifte ehouM be Beae, Tex. j to vleil Spain. France, ftely end | Greece ana return to the United . Dr. and Mra. Eugene M. Davi*. 348 Balloting Winner left «ith Peel Pocohontea Merj- The I»y*l Circle of King'# Vendiillo. 67 Alton St A miaaionary aerx’ice will he held' States In early December. j Porter S t. I* enrolled at Wheelock 2 Unions Join College. Boaton, Maaa. Datighlera will meet Monda.v at Just Can’t Serve at Calvary Chapel. 22 Vernon* St ,; 7:4.1 p.m. In the Fellowahip room The Mancheater Garden Chib a tonight at 7;30, The Rev. end Mra I •The executive board of the Khrushchev Reveals Keeney Si. PTA will apontor a tea | The Mancheater Aaaodlatlon for at Center Congregational Church. Sao Paulo, Braril, .Oct. 8 evening flower arranging group Leon Elliott, rerently returned] the Help of Retarded Children will Hoateaaet will be Mra. Jame* For Pay Boost vWl meet tonight at S at the home mlaainnanca from India, will tell for tt)e room mother* end faculty j S H O P B A L E V (Ah—A rhlnocaroa named to Court tomorrow at 3:I5 p.m. el the meet tomorrow at 8 p.m. at Bunce [Thomaon and Mr*. Frank Fair- U.S. Cacafeco—a write-in candi­ of Mre. M. U Enckaon, 8fl Heleine about their work end ahow colog i weather. alldea. The public It welconie. echool. Center. Why Americk Trails At UAG Plants date—polled more votes than Rd. I anyone else In yesterday's election of city cpuncllmen. SEIF SERVE H MEAT DEPT. Hartford, Oct. 8 f/P)—Ttxo EHection officials conceded big Connecticut labor unions Cacareco 88.000 vote*. In Rockets to Moon say they will work together A member of Mayor Adhe- for a pay increase for some mar de Barros' Social Pro­ .{^ni|l*SU te, Khruahehev aaid, ha wa* 34,000 workers at four United gressive faction, with more For Dock Strike Ban Fashion-Wise and Budget-Wise Foiks SHOP H A LFS FiRST! Hale's Quality Meat Dept.' Offers . Moscow, Oct. 8 (A*)' ‘ Mked repeatedly whether the Sept. than 44.00 votes, led ,th# 2- m has left the moon’s gravi­ Aircraft Corp. plants. legged candidates. 12 launching of a Soviet moon Sought will be a I5-rent-an-hour The vole was Interpreted You Choice Meat At Real SoYings! tational field and its s p ^ is rocket wa* arranged'specially for pay hike plus a major overhaul as a protest demonatratlon falling as it nears the point his visit. of the grievance, seniority and againat all politicians since Fall Is *^EW TIMr at Hale’s Fabric Depl for the start of its return “I usually' replied, ’Why don’t arbitration procedures, union Cacareco, who waa lent only Eisenhower you try to time an American rock­ spokesmen said yesterday. recently by the Rio de Janeiro RENTER CUT toward the earth, Tass an­ et to coincide with one of your You'll quickly hlonnom into n remarkable dre»$ nounced tonight; The contracts for the various Zoo to'Sau Paulo's, la eligible visit*. You will see that it la not United Airc-aft divisions won’t be­ to aeiwe. • rlenfiner and interior decorator with thenc love- By Russian reckoning, Lu- a* simple aa *11 that. For thta, gin to expire for two months, but Aides Seek ly netr fall fahrirn to inspire many tewinfi idean. ' nik III will reach a point 292,- gentlemen.i the deeire alone la not the unlqn* have already submitted 043 miles froht the Earth Sat­ aufflcient.’ ” their demands to the company. A grand variety of color, weight, texture and Khrushchev hinted at Vladivo- The labor organixatlons Involved PORK urday and then turn back on alok that he ia looking forward to «J*'- To Use T-H dexign. ^ are the International Assn, of USW, Steel ORYSTAL CLEAR MICRO-FILM RUN RESIST course that will return it a summit meeting this fall or Machinists and the United Auto­ { 0 the vicinity of the Earth winter. mobile Worker*. New York, Oct. 8 (4F7-—A SHEER NYLON SEAMLESS HOSIERY ABC 33% WOOL CREPE Oct. 18. Today he made a atopover at Spokesmen aaid the two union* Await Ike’s government aUomey A LCXI R lo rs BLEND OF WOOL AND RATON Kraano'yarak. a Siberian trans­ have Joined in a compact for. uni- K’.i port and maniifacturihg center on here bv plane today to aeek B Reinforced «t heel and toe for extra wear. Color.*: CHOPS London, Oct. 8 (/P)—Niki- fled demands. the Yenisei River. A Taa* dispatch The lAM represents employe* at Taft-Hartley Law InjuiBCtlira ts S. Khrualichev suggests said the townspeople gave him a Blush tone and beige tone. Compare for quairtA:! Pratt * Whitney Aircraft In F.ast Use of T-H to halt the. Longshonsmelt ■ RIB PORTION Americans trail the Russians i strike on the Atlantic and in launching mtion rockets "'Tn"'hr'«ddi'e.s at Vladivo.tok, | Hartford, Dril-' ^ 45" wid« the premier said: 1 P>«» Hamilton Standard Dlu Pittsburgh, Oct. 8 (/P)— - iff' Gulf CoasU. He wa* acting <m becausb the United States orders of President EiaBn- ((^onriniied on Pag* Twelve) I St«el negotiators today came I Pork ROAST doesn’t have a Communist (Continued on Page Twelve) I liowsr* $1.50 government. ' up again.st President Eisen pr. pr. Feela and, look* like wool, wool crepe that eella for I bower’s im)ilied strike settle- I Aast. Atty. Gen. OwrjK CdCll* more than twice aa much. Ses’en beautiful color*. Before a cheering crowd In i ran Doub and hia aide, Donald B. Vladivostok Tuesday, the Soviet j menl deadline without hope ' MacGutneaa were expected t® premier teaaed the United State* I of (iuickly ending the 86-day- I reach here In a Whlta H«niea plane C for ita failure to follow the Rus­ HOSIERT DEPART^IEXT—Main Floor, Center ’ l U.S, Clamps Curbs I old strike and apparently re- this aft -moon and go at (Mice to 100% / CRILAN sians to the moon. signed to government use of ' Federal District Court to reqoeet a A hitherto unreport-d section of- temporary restraining order di­ Khrusachey's speech, made on'hia ' the Taft-Harlley Law. recting the 85,000 striking dook WASHABLE JERSEY way home\from Red China, waa Each aide sSid It did not want worker* to return to work. NEW LOW’ PRICE ONLY Ryoadcaat by Radio Moscow today. Dn Highway Funds government legal Intervention. ITiere wa* little doubt a Taft- Khrushchev asked: United Steelworkers president Ha- Hartley Law injunction- requirtng “WTist t* the explansflon of our vld J. McDonald" said his union j an 80-day return to work—would great sticcMsea? Are we the clev­ WrtYhington.
Recommended publications
  • View 2012 Program
    INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR IMPROVISED MUSIC SIXTH FESTIVAL/CONFERENCE Improvisation · Self · Community·World February 16-19, 2012 William Paterson University Wayne, New Jersey, USA Keynote artists and performers: Pyeng Threadgill & trio Ikue Mori, Sylvie Courvoisier & Jim Black Mulgrew Miller WyldLyfe Robert Dick & Tom Buckner Karl Berger with the University of Michigan Creative Arts Orchestra And over 50 other artists presenting concerts, panels, talks and workshops! ISIM President’s Welcome ISIM President’s Welcome On behalf of the Board of Directors of the International Society for Improvised Music, I extend to all of you a hearty welcome to the sixth ISIM Festival/Conference. Nothing is more gratifying than gatherings of improvising musicians as our common process, regardless of surface differences in our creative expressions, unites us in ways that are truly unique. As the conference theme suggests, by going deep within our reservoir of creativity, we access subtle dimensions of self—or consciousness—that are the source of connections with not only our immediate communities but the world at large. It is dificult to imagine a moment in history when the need for this improvisation-driven, creativity revolution is greater on individual and collective scales than the present. Please join me in thanking the many individuals, far too many to list, who have been instrumental in making this event happen. Headliners Ikue Mori, Pyeng Threadgill, Wyldlife, Karl Berger, the University of Michigan Creative Arts Orchestra, the William Paterson University jazz group, Mulgrew Miller, Robert Dick, and Thomas Buckner—we could not have asked for a more varied and exciting line-up. ISIM Board members Stephen Nachmanovitch and Bill Johnson have provided invaluable assistance, with Steve working his usual heroics with the ISIM website in between, and sometimes during, his performing and speaking tours.
    [Show full text]
  • 2008 LMU BASEBALL MEDIA GUIDE QUICK FACTS the University Location Los Angeles, Calif
    S J O 2 U P 0 N H I O 0 O M 8 R O S R E L S M U BUILDING CHAMPIONS B A F S R E S E E S B N H A I M O E L R N L S LMU HAS BEEN... Named among the “25 cutting edge schools with an eye toward the future” in Kaplan’s “You Are Here” College Guide, 2008. Included in “Best 366 Colleges,” “Best Colleges in the West” and “10 Most Beautiful Campuses” in Princeton Review, 2008. Ranked 4th in “Best Universities With Master’s Program in the West” in U.S. News, 2008. Named among top 10 in the nation for its Entrepreneuship Prgram in Princeton Review and Entrepreneur magazine, 2007. Named a “top producer” of Fulbright awardees, 2006- 07 in Institute of International Education. Named “Hottest for Hispanics” in Newsweek/Kaplan’s “How to Get into College” Guide, 2006. 2008 LMU BASEBALL MEDIA GUIDE QUICK FACTS THE UNIVERSITY Location Los Angeles, Calif. Founded 1911 Enrollment 8,300 Nickname Lions Colors Crimson and Navy National Affiliation NCAA Division I Conference West Coast QUICK FACTS Home Field George C. Page Stadium Capacity 600 President Rev. Robert B. Lawton, S.J. Athletic Director Dr. William Husak BASEBALL Staff Head Coach Frank Cruz Cruz’s Office Phone 310-338-2949 Cruz’s E-mail [email protected] CONTENTS Alma Mater/Season Pepperdine ‘83/12th Season THIS IS LMU BASEBALL Career Record 306-324-3 (11 years) Table of Contents 1 LMU Record 306-324-3 (11 years) Quick Facts 1 · Assistant Coach Scott Walter (First Season) 2008 Rosters 2 Alma Mater LMU ‘00 Media Information 3 OF CONTENTS TABLE Assistant Coach Drew Keehn (First Season) 2008 Season Outlook
    [Show full text]
  • Lmu Baseball Media Guide 2007
    2007 LMU BASEBALL MEDIA GUIDE 2007 2007 LMU BASEBALL QUICK FACTS THE UNIVERSITY Location: ............................Los Angeles, CA Founded: ............................................1911 Enrollment: ........................................8,300 Nickname:............................................Lions Colors: ..............................crimson and navy National Affiliation:..............NCAA Division I Conference:................................West Coast INSIDE THE LIONS Home Field: ..........George C. Page Stadium Capacity:................................................600 President:............Rev. Robert B. Lawton, S.J. Athletic Director: ..............Dr. William Husak Inside the Lions BASEBALL STAFF Head Coach: ..........................................................................Frank Cruz Cruz’s Office: ..................................................................(310) 338-2949 Cruz’s E-Mail: ..................................................................fcruz@lmu.edu Alma Mater: ....................................................................Pepperdine ‘83 Record at LMU: ..................................................284-291-2 (10 seasons) Collegiate Career Record: ..................................284-291-2 (10 seasons) Associate Head Coach: ............................Vince Beringhele (third season) Alma Mater: ............................................................................UCLA ‘83 Assistant Coach: ............................................Benny Bonilla (first season) Alma Mater:
    [Show full text]
  • My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014
    My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014 A complete record of my full-season Replays of the 1908, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1975, and 1978 Major League seasons as well as the 1923 Negro National League season. This encyclopedia includes the following sections: • A list of no-hitters • A season-by season recap in the format of the Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia- Baseball • Top ten single season performances in batting and pitching categories • Career top ten performances in batting and pitching categories • Complete career records for all batters • Complete career records for all pitchers Table of Contents Page 3 Introduction 4 No-hitter List 5 Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia Baseball style season recaps 91 Single season record batting and pitching top tens 93 Career batting and pitching top tens 95 Batter Register 277 Pitcher Register Introduction My baseball board gaming history is a fairly typical one. I lusted after the various sports games advertised in the magazines until my mom finally relented and bought Strat-O-Matic Football for me in 1972. I got SOM’s baseball game a year later and I was hooked. I would get the new card set each year and attempt to play the in-progress season by moving the traded players around and turning ‘nameless player cards” into that year’s key rookies. I switched to APBA in the late ‘70’s because they started releasing some complete old season sets and the idea of playing with those really caught my fancy. Between then and the mid-nineties, I collected a lot of card sets.
    [Show full text]
  • Download (121Kb)
    The Music That Time Forgot Further Perspectives & Distortions (3CD box set, Cherry Red) In an interview I undertook for Punk and Post-Punk journal, Dick Witts of The Passage (a band surprisingly missing from this compilation), stated that 'You might say that post-punk existed before punk. It was submerged during the punk days, and re-emerged touched by punk but not imbricated with it'. Post-punk is notoriously difficult to define, but for me it would include much of the experimental music gathered together in this box set, which has the awkward – if accurate – subtitle 'An Encylopaedia Of British Experimental and Avant-Garde Music 1976-1984'. Here, says the press release, post-punk has been used as a 'paradigm-shifting lens' to bring together 'disparate names from across the experimental spectrum'. I guess that means musicians who carried on doing what they were doing outside post-punk but influenced those within, as well as the more experimental music being produced by post-punk bands themselves. I say 'I guess', but that's basically what we've got here. That includes synthesizer music from the likes of Blancmange, Chris & Cosey and Robert Rental; what became known as industrial music from the likes of Nurse With Wound, Test Department and Throbbing Gristle; improvised jazz or systems music from from David Toop & Paul Burwell, Stinky Winkles, Lindsay Cooper, AMM III, Lol Coxhill & Morgan Fisher, as well as David Cunningham; harsh subverted funk from Hula, 23 Skidoo and The Pop Group; spoken word or sound poetry from George Melly and from Bob Cobbing; and awkward pop and rock music from Eyeless in Gaza, Swell Maps and Robert Wyatt.
    [Show full text]
  • Notes from the Underground: a Cultural, Political, and Aesthetic Mapping of Underground Music
    Notes From The Underground: A Cultural, Political, and Aesthetic Mapping of Underground Music. Stephen Graham Goldsmiths College, University of London PhD 1 I declare that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Signed: …………………………………………………. Date:…………………………………………………….. 2 Abstract The term ‗underground music‘, in my account, connects various forms of music-making that exist largely outside ‗mainstream‘ cultural discourse, such as Drone Metal, Free Improvisation, Power Electronics, and DIY Noise, amongst others. Its connotations of concealment and obscurity indicate what I argue to be the music‘s central tenets of cultural reclusion, political independence, and aesthetic experiment. In response to a lack of scholarly discussion of this music, my thesis provides a cultural, political, and aesthetic mapping of the underground, whose existence as a coherent entity is being both argued for and ‗mapped‘ here. Outlining the historical context, but focusing on the underground in the digital age, I use a wide range of interdisciplinary research methodologies , including primary interviews, musical analysis, and a critical engagement with various pertinent theoretical sources. In my account, the underground emerges as a marginal, ‗antermediated‘ cultural ‗scene‘ based both on the web and in large urban centres, the latter of whose concentration of resources facilitates the growth of various localised underground scenes. I explore the radical anti-capitalist politics of many underground figures, whilst also examining their financial ties to big business and the state(s). This contradiction is critically explored, with three conclusions being drawn. First, the underground is shown in Part II to be so marginal as to escape, in effect, post- Fordist capitalist subsumption.
    [Show full text]
  • Sport & Celebr T & Celebr T & Celebr T
    SporSportt && CelebrCelebrityity MemorMemorabiliaabilia inventory listing ** WE MAINLY JUST COLLECT & BUY ** BUT WILL ENTERTAIN OFFERS FOR ITEMS YOU’RE INTERESTED IN Please call or write: PO Box 494314 Port Charlotte, FL 33949 (941) 624-2254 As of: Aug 11, 2014 Cord Coslor :: private collection Index and directory of catalog contents PHOTOS 3 actors 72 signed Archive News magazines 3 authors 72 baseball players 3 cartoonists/artists 74 minor-league baseball 10 astronaughts 74 football players 11 boxers 74 basketball players 13 hockey players 74 sports officials & referrees 15 musicians 37 fighters: boxers, MMA, etc. 15 professional wrestlers 37 golf 15 track stars 37 auto racing 15 golfers 37 track & field 15 politicians 37 tennis 15 others 37 volleyball 15 “cut” signatures: from envelopes... 37 hockey 15 CARDS 76 soccer 16 gymnastics & other Olympics 16 minor league baseball cards 76 music 16 major league baseball cards 82 actors & models 19 basketball cards 97 other notable personalities 20 football cards 97 astronaughts 21 women’s pro baseball 98 politician’s photos 21 track, volleyball, etc., cards 99 signed artwork 24 racing cards 99 signed business cards 25 pro ‘rasslers’ 99 signed books, comics, etc. 25 golfers 99 other signed items 26 boxers 99 cancelled checks 27 hockey cards 99 baseball lineup cards 28 politicians 100 newspaper articles 28 musicians/singers 100 cachet envelopes 29 actors/actresses 100 computer-related items 29 others 100 other items- unsigned 29 LETTERS 102 uniforms & jerseys, etc. 30 major league baseball 102 PLATTERS MUSIC GROUP (ALL ITEMS) 31 minor league baseball 104 MULTIPLE SIGNATURES, 36 umpires 105 BALLS, PROGRAMS, ETC.
    [Show full text]
  • Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter
    PSA/DNA Full LOA PSA/DNA Pre-Certified Not Reviewed The Jack Smalling Collection Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter Cap Anson HOF Letter 7 Al Reach Letter Deacon White HOF Cut 8 Nicholas Young Letter 1872 Jack Remsen Letter 1874 Billy Barnie Letter Tommy Bond Cut Morgan Bulkeley HOF Cut 9 Jack Chapman Letter 1875 Fred Goldsmith Cut 1876 Foghorn Bradley Cut 1877 Jack Gleason Cut 1878 Phil Powers Letter 1879 Hick Carpenter Cut Barney Gilligan Cut Jack Glasscock Index Horace Phillips Letter 1880 Frank Bancroft Letter Ned Hanlon HOF Letter 7 Arlie Latham Index Mickey Welch HOF Index 9 Art Whitney Cut 1882 Bill Gleason Cut Jake Seymour Letter Ren Wylie Cut 1883 Cal Broughton Cut Bob Emslie Cut John Humphries Cut Joe Mulvey Letter Jim Mutrie Cut Walter Prince Cut Dupee Shaw Cut Billy Sunday Index 1884 Ed Andrews Letter Al Atkinson Index Charley Bassett Letter Frank Foreman Index Joe Gunson Cut John Kirby Letter Tom Lynch Cut Al Maul Cut Abner Powell Index Gus Schmeltz Letter Phenomenal Smith Cut Chief Zimmer Cut 1885 John Tener Cut 1886 Dan Dugdale Letter Connie Mack HOF Index Joe Murphy Cut Wilbert Robinson HOF Cut 8 Billy Shindle Cut Mike Smith Cut Farmer Vaughn Letter 1887 Jocko Fields Cut Joseph Herr Cut Jack O'Connor Cut Frank Scheibeck Cut George Tebeau Letter Gus Weyhing Cut 1888 Hugh Duffy HOF Index Frank Dwyer Cut Dummy Hoy Index Mike Kilroy Cut Phil Knell Cut Bob Leadley Letter Pete McShannic Cut Scott Stratton Letter 1889 George Bausewine Index Jack Doyle Index Jesse Duryea Cut Hank Gastright Letter
    [Show full text]
  • Pink Floyd Sogni E Visioni Stellari Anselmo Patacchini
    Pink Floyd Sogni e visioni stellari Anselmo Patacchini rassegna domenicale The Spontaneous Underground organizzata dal duo Steve Stollman e da John Hopkins. I Pink Floyd si cimentarono in lunghe e sconvolgenti versioni di Roadrunner e di altri pezzi di Chuck Berry, divertendosi, inoltre, a sovrapporre strati di feedback a volume altissimo. Peter Jenner (professore alla London School Of Economics) e l'amico Andrew King rimasero inebriati da quelle sonorità fuori dagli schemi e decisero di puntare su quei quattro talentuosi ragazzi a tal punto da formare assieme a loro la Blackhill Enterprises, società che avrebbe curato il management. Il 15 ottobre i Pink Floyd, o meglio, la Pink Floyd Steel Band - così annunciavano le locandine dell'epoca - assieme ai Soft Machine «Il sole splende sul mio cuscino/più Questo articolo, che riporta le fasi - gruppo di punta - si cimentarono salienti della lunga carriera dei mitici alla Roundhouse (una vecchia soffice di un piumino.../Vorrei che il Pink Floyd dagli esordi sino al 1969, stazione ferroviaria londinese in salice piangente agitasse intorno i vuole essere un doveroso omaggio disuso) che festeggiava con uno rami.../Sogno Julia/la sogno regina, alla figura di Syd Barrett, il geniale scatenato All Night-Rave la nascita artista passato a miglior vita lo dell'International Times (IT), la regina di tutti i miei sogni...» scorso 7 luglio. Ci piace ancora prima rivista underground nel ricordarlo come autore Regno Unito. Oltre duemila persone (Syd Barrett da Julia Dream) d’incantesimi stravolgenti, adornato si accalcarono all'interno del locale. da pantaloni a zampa d’elefante, Gente comune e bizzarra mischiata camicie sgargianti e una folta a personaggi famosi come il regista chioma che gli scendeva sulle Michelangelo Antonioni spalle, tra boccoli di capelli arruffati, accompagnato da Monica Vitti o con quei suoi occhi spaesati a Paul McCartney che si presentò costruire idealmente spazi vestito da arabo con tanto di tunica immaginari e infinite dimensioni.
    [Show full text]
  • A Critical Review Syd Barrett: a Very Irregular Head
    University of Huddersfield Repository Chapman, Rob A Critical Review Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head Original Citation Chapman, Rob (2011) A Critical Review Syd Barrett: A Very Irregular Head. Doctoral thesis, University of Huddersfield. This version is available at http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/id/eprint/17530/ The University Repository is a digital collection of the research output of the University, available on Open Access. Copyright and Moral Rights for the items on this site are retained by the individual author and/or other copyright owners. Users may access full items free of charge; copies of full text items generally can be reproduced, displayed or performed and given to third parties in any format or medium for personal research or study, educational or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge, provided: • The authors, title and full bibliographic details is credited in any copy; • A hyperlink and/or URL is included for the original metadata page; and • The content is not changed in any way. For more information, including our policy and submission procedure, please contact the Repository Team at: [email protected]. http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/ UNIVERSITY OF HUDDERSFIELD PhD BY PUBLICATION ROB CHAPMAN A CRITICAL REVIEW SYD BARRETT : A VERY IRREGULAR HEAD ORIGINALLY SUBMITTED. DECEMBER 2011 RESUBMITTED WITH AMENDMENTS JULY 2012 CONTENTS. 1. INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………………..p3 2. METHODOLOGY………………………………………………………….p22 3. THE ART SCHOOL……………………………………………………….p54 4. PSYCHEDELIA……………………………………………………………p85 5. END NOTES……………………………………………………………….p114 6. BIBLIOGRAPHY…………………………………………………………..p124 7. APPENDIX…………………………………………………………………p127 Copyright Statement i. The author of this thesis (including any appendices and/or schedules to this thesis) owns any copyright in it (the “Copyright”) and s/he has given The University of Huddersfield the right to use such Copyright for any administrative, promotional, educational and/or teaching purposes.
    [Show full text]
  • Base a ~Researc JOURNAL
    THE Base a ~Researc JOURNAL As usual, we have many fascinating articles-statis­ We've also got Al Kermisch (what would a Research tical, historical, and a mixture of both-in this issue Journal be without his researcher's notebook?), David of BRJ. Tom Shieber's lead piece is a wonderful ex, Voigt, and a sprinkling of the usual suspects I seem to ample of basic SABR research, which deserves a place round up every year as SABR's Claude Raines. on the required,reading list of anyone who wants a Thankfully, we also have lots offirst,time authors, complete picture of the game. One special article, by whose work is so vital to the health of our Society. Eddie Gold, is about John Tattersall, an early SABR Geographically, we stretch from North Dakota to the member and creator of the Tattersall Homerun Log, Dominican Republic, and chronologically from 1845 which we hope will soon be made public in updated to the late, lamented 1994 season. form. -M.A. The Evolution of the Baseball Diamond Tom Shieber 3 The Gowell Claset Saga Jamie Selko 14 Teammates with the Most Combined Hits "Biff" Brecher and Albey M. Reiner 17 Disenfranchised All,Stars of 1945 Charlie Bevis 19 Games Ahead and Games Behind: A Pitching Stat Alan S. and James C. Kaufman 24 Don Newcombe: Grace Under Pressure Guy Waterman 27 If God Owned the Angels Tom Ruane 32 Alonzo Perry in the Dominican Republic Jose de Jesus Jimenez, M.D 39 The DiMaggio Streak: How Statistically Likely? Charles Blahous 41 19th Century Pitching Changes Robert E.
    [Show full text]
  • 'All Movements Are Accomplished in Six Stages, and the Seventh Brings
    ‘All movements are accomplished in six stages, and the seventh brings return. Thus the winter solstice, with which the decline of the year begins, comes in the seventh month after the summer solstice. So too sunrise comes in the seventh double hour after sunset. Seven is the number of the young light, and it arises when six, the number of the great darkness, is increased by one. In this way, the state of rest gives place to movement. In winter the life energy, symbolized by thunder, the Arousing, is still underground. Movement is just at its beginning.’ I Ching: Book of Changes Chapter 24: Fû/Return – The Turning Point Richard Wilhelm, translator, 1950 Thanks to Blackhill Enterprises, Pink Floyd started receiving significant mainstream media coverage. Jenner and King, for all their managerial inexperience, had an immediate knack for getting their boys into print. Music weekly spreads led to features in fashion and lifestyle magazines Queen and Town. In London, Pink Floyd had built a cult following without releasing a single. On 5 January, at their Marquee mini-residency, Joe Boyd brought Chris Beard of underground jug band the Purple Gang to meet them in the tiny dressing room. As Syd wailed on ‘Astronomy Dominé’ Beard recalled the oil-wheel light show and the pilot lights on Binson units blinking in the dark. Under the candy-striped awning, they found mods stood stock-still in silence, getting their heads around this new music. Record Mirror reported: ‘Excellent and extremely exciting, but I couldn’t help thinking how dangerous this free-form thing could be in the hands of not such good musicians.’ The first British band to have an integral visual unit, Pink Floyd’s underground following increased by bounds.
    [Show full text]