JULY 10, IH9 Jack Bruner Named College All-American Pitcher Across 7~

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

JULY 10, IH9 Jack Bruner Named College All-American Pitcher Across 7~ / # Suit , Fee On the Inside ' The Weather Bruner Named to All·Amertecm Nin., •.• Pao- 2 Fair and I... humid today. H19h today Fanner Ch.at. DrouQht ... Paoe 5 al 81. low 70. y.....saY'. hl9b 90. low 71 • Core Course.. Get New Schedul,. ••• Paq. I Est. 1868 - AP Leased Wire, AP Wirephoto, UP Leased Wire -- Five Cents Iowa City. Iowa, Sunday. JulY' 10, 1949 - Vol. 83. No. 188 ,U. S. Envoy Beaten 'Japanese Mob Stones is Ar- In Shanghai Prison SHANGHAI (AP) - U.S. Vice-Consul WiUiam M. Olive. Allied Railroad Coach who was releaSl'd yesterday by police of this Communist city after three days in jail, "was utterly, brutally beaten," Consul General John Oa bot declal'ed. Th e Communist liberation daily published a statl'ml'nt Just Like a Wartime Physical Flving Lumber attributed to Olive which said. "I have not received any ill. LOS ANGELES (IP)- Ten-year-old Harvey Bronstein sobbin$­ tl'l'lItment during my deten- ------"------- ly told police a man stepped up to him as he was playing, snatch­ ed off hi~ glasses, stepped back a pace and asked: "How many Seriously Hurts ,<ta tement such as thatlOne Russian Killed fingers am I holding up?" ti~~~y "T)lJo," answered Harvey, correctly. which appeared in the l~beration IWh US S 'd' "You don't need glasses," the man retorted, 1I'0und Harvey's Army Sergeant daily was obtained from him as en 0 ler under hb heel and stalked away. a result of the barbarous trfat- • I 1 TOKYO IU'I - An angry mdb of ment he received," Cabot assert- R 1 R F" Japanese early yesterlay hurled St. ed in a press conference late e urns uss Ire stones, large chunks of wood and Uni· yesterday. other missiles at a plainly-marked (This dispatch was more 'than ' F1RANKFURT, GERMANY UP) Hungarian Court Okays allied cccupatlon car in a rail­ will 12 hours In transmission, appar- - A U. S. army off.icer 00 bord~r road station here, seriously injur­ ently having been held up by the patrol In the ~mrrlcan zone saId Ing an army sergeant, U.S. Mili­ Communist military censorship.) yesterday he killed a Russian sold- Mindszenty's Life Term tary Pollce announced. ilding. Olive, 32, of Ironton, M,., ier in a rifle duel at 30 feet. A. five-foot lengtrt of four-by­ was arrested last Wednesda.y Lt. WIlliam C. Llnderose. 34, BUDAPEST, H iNGARY (AP)-Hungary's highest court tour lumber hurled thrcugh a when his cOllllulate jeep be- of Port Huron, MJch., ",aid tbrre declared yesterday Josef Cardinal Mindszenty should hove been window of the car struck Sgt. came involved In a ma. parllde Russians "buan shooUnl' a.t me hanged. But it decided to let his life sentence stand because the Emanuel Aycock, of the Tokyo In which the Communists were 10 [ shot at them." cose has "lost its ol'iginal im portance." quartermalter', office knocking ~bservin!!, the 12th annivenary The inqident took place Friday. 'l'he tribunal, lhe national council of peo ple's courts, affirmed him unconsoicus. Bleeding pro­ of the Japanese war and tbe the U. S. army constabulary an­ fusely, Aycock was taken to an of t.hlrd annivel'!la.l'Y of the Ohln- nounced' when a border patrol of ---- (I\P 'NJrubolo> the priso n terms of three the Roman Catholic primate's as­ army dispensary for treatment. He civil war. three American enlisted men and sociates and reduced the sentences o'f tht:ee others: His U.S. home address was not Cabot said Olive was released a German policeman was fired Texas Polio Victims Get Airlift Service 'I he cardinal was rru led immed.l.ately available. yesterday, after being bt'aten, upon whil~ checking border mark­ last Doo. 2G and was convicted MIU&ary pOlice salli they were ""OUR yonNG POI.tO paUen" from San AD&,elo, Tex., are unloaded Crom an aJrforce plane at San handcuffed incommunicado in a ers nea Rothenbach, north of Co­ by a flve-mltn peoplp's court inve,tl&'atln, 'he pORlbillty that MarcOi alrforee bue yesterday. They were taken by ambulance to the Gontalex, Tex., Warm Sprlnp cell for three days, and forced burg. Feb. 8 of treaSon, plotting to the Ittack Wall made by a rroup 10undatlon for treatment. The National Found"Uon for Infantile Paralysl. re,,:)rt3 that San Angelo Is overthrow the Communist gov­ SOS Vessel tq sign several statements, a "con- The Sovlet-lic@nsed Berlin news of dlirrunUed ra Iroad workers, iessio n," and an "apology," agency AnN reported a border In- the hardest hit U.S. clb" In 'thls year'!! polio outbreak. ~ee story pale 6. ernment and lIle!!,al tradinr In thousand. of wbom are beln.. "I have personally seen OUve's eldent in the same gmeral area AmerIcan (bilar•. laid off in an occupation-spon­ injuries," said Cabol. "We had but said there was no shooting. The preillte rxerclsed his righ t sored aUlterlty pro,ram. of appeal. Prosecutor Gyula Elap Nol Localed him examined medically, and The U. S army constabulary Another posslblJty, according to have taken photographs Bnd will account of the shooting said lhe urged the high court (0 exact the NO~l.JK, VA. 111'1 _ A "'host" the MiP's, was that the attack was Indicts :14 lor , Hooded Violence .~ upreme penalty, death by hang- message of fire at sea set c(f lake X-rays. American patrol "left Us jeep .. made by Communists, several "There is no doubt wba.tlO- and hU &he dirt for protection" SffiMINGHAM, ALA. M - ----------------:--~--;-----­ Ing. Chief Prosecutor Josef Brobe- gigantic search over the Atlantic hundred of whom have been re­ ever that Olive was brutally when fired upon. Fourteen persons were indicted tempt of court. IfY took the same stand berore yesterday. but as the. hour, went the appeals court. That court patfiated recently from Siberia. lbealtn by the pollee·" Latrr, the patrol slipped away yesterday by a grand jury that , Circuit Judge Robelt "Nheeler had the power to reduce the life by there- was nothing to back uP The iI1cident occurred whelU the The consul general said that, and returned with two officers. "scratched" the surface of mob was asked to release Willillm Bimbo's'End sentence, let it stand or increase the report that a ship was aflame train stopped at Nippori station "on the Qther hand, I am grat[- including Linderose. Again the violence by hooded men in the Hugh Morris, but the state pro­ it. and its crew in lifeboats. on .Tokyv's loop line shortly after fied and reassured that higher Americans were fired upon. Birmingham area. tested that he should not be al- 'Car Ride Fatal for The appea.is coun took up the "We have no implication that it rn,ldnlght. authoritirs-when the matter was Linderose said he saw tour A total of 45 indictments were· lowed baH until he brings in the cue quletIy Wednesda.y nll'M. J.s a hoax, except that It is shaping The mob wUllout warJlinl' brought to their attention-ar- Russians and fired single shots at returned, naming some of the roster. , Baby I!lephant. The five Juqes Umlted the up like one," a coast iuard spo~es­ rallied rock, wood and other ranged lor his speedy release." three of them. One fell. He ap- alleged nightriders in one Incl- Finally, hcwever, Wheeler al- hearinl' w a study of dll'Curnents man 'here. said. "But we definitely lIlI"Ue:. a,all1lt. Jhe. steel ear, Olive, in a highly nervous and Pl!ared to be a youth of 18 or 19. dent after al'lother. lowed Morris to go free for the .NEW YORK (IP) - Bimbo was a ,," attorneys' arguments. are not ,koin, ' to call off the plainl)' marked wlUt the em­ emotional state, was under a phy- Several other Russians were lurk­ Flegging accounted for 28 of weekend under $500 bail, but a well-behaved elephant - for "There is not the slIghtest doubt search . ~' blem of Japan's conquerors. such a little elephant, so far away sielan's care. He did not see re- ing in the vicinity behind tree~ the charges, boycotting for eight, warned he would order him back that Miudszenty should have been For' at least another 24. hours, It was the first direct attack porters. and other cover exchanging ~ ig- burglary lor six. carnal knowledge to a cell - where he was put from hiS native Africa. sentenced to death ," said the .he indicated, vessels and airplanes on. occupation personnel riding in nals by whistles and ca lls, he ad­ for another, and ' there were two ThursdaY4- if he does not pro­ When the plane landed at decision read by the presiding will . continue to scour a large trains, 'colJl\ng among a mounting ded. counts cf misdemeanors. duce the membership ,list on .de- the international airport, Bimbo judge, P eter Janko. area east of Charleston, S.C. T)l( dumber . of incident Invc.)ving Altorether the RulSians were The names ot. &hOse Indicled mand. , walked down the ramp withbut name of the vessel, and the. num­ sabo~,e and obstruction ot the estbnateti &0 have fuel! .bout will not be dlsclo.e" nnttl they The Jurr acted ailer a week .. bit cf help. ber ot its crew, were not iiven in railroad. Demos the single SOS picke'S up by a Eyeing Th~ l!leiden~ th~ 20 lbets. are arrested, an4 Ulat '1rlU not of benin, victims of flolrl'inn It just to::>k a little push to Po/,ccf) Arrest .
Recommended publications
  • Todd Frazier 2005
    2021 RUTGERS BASEBALL 2021 ROSTER 2021 SCHEDULE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC COMMUNICATIONS # Name Pos. Yr. Ht. Wt. B/T Hometown/High School (College) Location ......................... New Brunswick, N.J. Baseball Contact .... Jimmy Gill (10th Season) 1 Andy Axelson C R-So. 6-0 180 R/R Roxbury, N.J./Roxbury • Weekend of 3/5: at Minnesota (2) Founded ................................................ 1766 ....Associate Dir. of Athletic Communications w/ Indiana (2) Enrollment ......................................... 69,000 Email ...................... [email protected] 2 Kevin Welsh INF 5th-Sr. 5-9 175 S/R Columbus, N.J./Northern Burlington Regional President ......................... Jonathan Holloway Office Phone............................732-445-8103 3 Sam Owens C/INF R-Jr. 6-0 195 R/R Scituate, R.I./Scituate (Bryant) • Weekend of 3/12: at Maryland (4) Director of Athletics ......................Pat Hobbs Cell Phone ...............................732-991-9486 4 Tim Dezzi INF R-So. 5-11 190 R/R Mullica Hill, N.J./Clearview Regional (St. John’s) Nickname ...............................Scarlet Knights Office Location ......... Rutgers Athletic Center • Weekend of 3/19: Ohio State (3) Color ....................................................Scarlet Mailing Address .............83 Rockafeller Road 5 Danny DiGeorgio INF R-Jr. 6-5 210 R/R Staten Island, N.Y./Tottenville • Weekend of 3/26: at Purdue (3) Conference ......................................... Big Ten .....................................Piscataway, NJ 08854 6 Bradley Norton INF R-So. 6-1 185 R/R Pleasanton, Calif./Amador Valley (Ohlone CC/Nevada) Mascot .................................... Scarlet Knight 7 Peter Serruto C R-So. 6-2 195 R/R Short Hills, N.J./Millburn Website ...........................ScarletKnights.com • Weekend of 4/2: Penn State (3) FACT BOOK TABLE OF CONTENTS 8 Mike Nyisztor INF/OF R-Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • 44 Wake Forest Baseball Series Records
    Series Records Opponent W L T First Last Opponent W L T First Last Opponent W L T First Last Alabama 0 1 0 1996 1996 George Washington 1 0 0 1970 1970 Oklahoma State 1 0 0 1955 1955 Appalachian State 24 9 0 1970 2001 Georgia 7 14 0 1963 2001 Old Dominion 5 0 0 1977 2001 Arkansas State 1 0 0 1989 1989 Georgia Southern 14 8 0 1961 1989 Pace 1 0 0 2001 2001 Armstrong State 2 0 0 1989 1991 Georgia Tech 26 44 1 1957 2001 Pan American 1 0 0 1989 1989 Atlantic Christian 1 0 0 1954 1954 Glenville State 2 0 0 1977 1978 Parsons 1 0 0 1963 1963 Auburn 0 2 0 1966 1999 Guilford 15 3 0 1974 1990 Pembroke State 1 1 0 1981 1981 Ball State 1 0 0 1991 1991 Hartford 4 1 0 1990 1995 Penn State 3 1 0 1968 2001 Baltimore 2 0 0 1977 1977 High Point 10 8 0 1973 2001 Pfeiffer 8 8 0 1974 1988 Baptist 1 1 0 1980 1980 Illinois 1 1 0 1998 1998 Pittsburgh-Jonestown 2 0 0 1986 1987 Baylor 0 1 0 1989 1989 Illinois-Chicago 1 1 0 1994 1994 Potsdam State 2 0 0 1974 1978 Bradley 0 1 0 1987 1987 Indiana (Pa.) 1 0 0 1972 1972 Princeton 2 0 0 1979 1979 Brockport State 1 0 0 1975 1975 Jacksonville 2 1 0 1961 1969 Purdue 0 1 0 2001 2001 Brown 5 0 0 1968 1991 James Madison 1 0 0 2001 2001 Purdue-Ft.
    [Show full text]
  • The Role of Preferences, Cognitive Biases, and Heuristics Among Professional Athletes Michael A
    Brooklyn Law Review Volume 71 | Issue 4 Article 1 2006 It's Not About the Money: The Role of Preferences, Cognitive Biases, and Heuristics Among Professional Athletes Michael A. McCann Follow this and additional works at: https://brooklynworks.brooklaw.edu/blr Recommended Citation Michael A. McCann, It's Not About the Money: The Role of Preferences, Cognitive Biases, and Heuristics Among Professional Athletes, 71 Brook. L. Rev. (2006). Available at: https://brooklynworks.brooklaw.edu/blr/vol71/iss4/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals at BrooklynWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Brooklyn Law Review by an authorized editor of BrooklynWorks. ARTICLES It’s Not About the Money: THE ROLE OF PREFERENCES, COGNITIVE BIASES, AND HEURISTICS AMONG PROFESSIONAL ATHLETES Michael A. McCann† I. INTRODUCTION Professional athletes are often regarded as selfish, greedy, and out-of-touch with regular people. They hire agents who are vilified for negotiating employment contracts that occasionally yield compensation in excess of national gross domestic products.1 Professional athletes are thus commonly assumed to most value economic remuneration, rather than the “love of the game” or some other intangible, romanticized inclination. Lending credibility to this intuition is the rational actor model; a law and economic precept which presupposes that when individuals are presented with a set of choices, they rationally weigh costs and benefits, and select the course of † Assistant Professor of Law, Mississippi College School of Law; LL.M., Harvard Law School; J.D., University of Virginia School of Law; B.A., Georgetown University. Prior to becoming a law professor, the author was a Visiting Scholar/Researcher at Harvard Law School and a member of the legal team for former Ohio State football player Maurice Clarett in his lawsuit against the National Football League and its age limit (Clarett v.
    [Show full text]
  • Baseball Classics All-Time All-Star Greats Game Team Roster
    BASEBALL CLASSICS® ALL-TIME ALL-STAR GREATS GAME TEAM ROSTER Baseball Classics has carefully analyzed and selected the top 400 Major League Baseball players voted to the All-Star team since it's inception in 1933. Incredibly, a total of 20 Cy Young or MVP winners were not voted to the All-Star team, but Baseball Classics included them in this amazing set for you to play. This rare collection of hand-selected superstars player cards are from the finest All-Star season to battle head-to-head across eras featuring 249 position players and 151 pitchers spanning 1933 to 2018! Enjoy endless hours of next generation MLB board game play managing these legendary ballplayers with color-coded player ratings based on years of time-tested algorithms to ensure they perform as they did in their careers. Enjoy Fast, Easy, & Statistically Accurate Baseball Classics next generation game play! Top 400 MLB All-Time All-Star Greats 1933 to present! Season/Team Player Season/Team Player Season/Team Player Season/Team Player 1933 Cincinnati Reds Chick Hafey 1942 St. Louis Cardinals Mort Cooper 1957 Milwaukee Braves Warren Spahn 1969 New York Mets Cleon Jones 1933 New York Giants Carl Hubbell 1942 St. Louis Cardinals Enos Slaughter 1957 Washington Senators Roy Sievers 1969 Oakland Athletics Reggie Jackson 1933 New York Yankees Babe Ruth 1943 New York Yankees Spud Chandler 1958 Boston Red Sox Jackie Jensen 1969 Pittsburgh Pirates Matty Alou 1933 New York Yankees Tony Lazzeri 1944 Boston Red Sox Bobby Doerr 1958 Chicago Cubs Ernie Banks 1969 San Francisco Giants Willie McCovey 1933 Philadelphia Athletics Jimmie Foxx 1944 St.
    [Show full text]
  • November 13, 2010 Prices Realized
    SCP Auctions Prices Realized - November 13, 2010 Internet Auction www.scpauctions.com | +1 800 350.2273 Lot # Lot Title 1 C.1910 REACH TIN LITHO BASEBALL ADVERTISING DISPLAY SIGN $7,788 2 C.1910-20 ORIGINAL ARTWORK FOR FATIMA CIGARETTES ROUND ADVERTISING SIGN $317 3 1912 WORLD CHAMPION BOSTON RED SOX PHOTOGRAPHIC DISPLAY PIECE $1,050 4 1914 "TUXEDO TOBACCO" ADVERTISING POSTER FEATURING IMAGES OF MATHEWSON, LAJOIE, TINKER AND MCGRAW $288 5 1928 "CHAMPIONS OF AL SMITH" CAMPAIGN POSTER FEATURING BABE RUTH $2,339 6 SET OF (5) LUCKY STRIKE TROLLEY CARD ADVERTISING SIGNS INCLUDING LAZZERI, GROVE, HEILMANN AND THE WANER BROTHERS $5,800 7 EXTREMELY RARE 1928 HARRY HEILMANN LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTES LARGE ADVERTISING BANNER $18,368 8 1930'S DIZZY DEAN ADVERTISING POSTER FOR "SATURDAY'S DAILY NEWS" $240 9 1930'S DUCKY MEDWICK "GRANGER PIPE TOBACCO" ADVERTISING SIGN $178 10 1930S D&M "OLD RELIABLE" BASEBALL GLOVE ADVERTISEMENTS (3) INCLUDING COLLINS, CRITZ AND FONSECA $1,090 11 1930'S REACH BASEBALL EQUIPMENT DIE-CUT ADVERTISING DISPLAY $425 12 BILL TERRY COUNTERTOP AD DISPLAY FOR TWENTY GRAND CIGARETTES SIGNED "TO BARRY" - EX-HALPER $290 13 1933 GOUDEY SPORT KINGS GUM AND BIG LEAGUE GUM PROMOTIONAL STORE DISPLAY $1,199 14 1933 GOUDEY WINDOW ADVERTISING SIGN WITH BABE RUTH $3,510 15 COMPREHENSIVE 1933 TATTOO ORBIT DISPLAY INCLUDING ORIGINAL ADVERTISING, PIN, WRAPPER AND MORE $1,320 16 C.1934 DIZZY AND DAFFY DEAN BEECH-NUT ADVERTISING POSTER $2,836 17 DIZZY DEAN 1930'S "GRAPE NUTS" DIE-CUT ADVERTISING DISPLAY $1,024 18 PAIR OF 1934 BABE RUTH QUAKER
    [Show full text]
  • ORGANIZATION League
    * Race Bums Big ■ Runner-Up—^~1i _______ League ill BACKING UP HIS CHAPTER II 1 A TALK AT HUSTON Yanks Must Beat Macks ONE DEPRESSION Houston, Tex, Aug 27.—(UP) OF —Jerome “Dizzy” Dean, the To Pace With talkative pitcher who promised Keep THAT’S ALMOST OVER Houston fans he would win SO games for them this season, had Senators number 2S chalked up to his Washington credit to-day and had within By DAM PARKER his reach the conclusive proof that he knew what he was By L. S. CAMERON about when he made talking Press hie boast. (United Sports Editor) In shutting out Dallas, 4 to 0, from their final west- In a Texas league game Sun- New York, Aug 28—(UP)—Baek bat- THE DEPRESSION WILL END and tha Inflation will commence day, “Dizzy" struck out IS ern invasions the Washington Senators and the New York ters. him a total of 230 next week, If you want to know the facts. Ten Eyck, old fellow. The making strikeouts for the season thus Yankees to-day began drives which each hope will earn sec- depression and Inflation of footballs, I mean. far. College boys who have been kicking the gong around all summer ond place in the final American league standings. will start booting that old wind-stuffed pigskin over the greensward me senators, one-nair frame now, in preparation for the bowl-fllllng pastime of October and Novem- ahead of the third-place Yankees, ber. stand a (rood chance of Increasing that next The chief concern of the football world this year will be advantage during the two for while whether or not Notre Dame can carry on without the flesh-and- days, they are playing blood of the immortal Rockne.
    [Show full text]
  • Boston Red Sox (82-57) Vs
    BOSTON RED SOX (82-57) VS. DETROIT TIGERS (81-57) Tuesday, September 3, 2013 • 7:10 p.m. ET • Fenway Park, Boston, MA LHP Jon Lester (12-8, 3.99) vs. RHP Max Scherzer (19-1, 2.90) Game #140 • Home Game #71 • TV: NESN/MLBN • Radio: WEEI 93.7 FM, WUFC 1510 AM (Spanish) STANDING TALL: Boston plays the 2nd of 3 games LESTER’S LAST 5: Tonight’s starter Jon Lester has quality against the Tigers tonight in the 3rd and fi nal series of a starts in his last 5 outings since 8/8...In that time, he ranks RED SOX RECORD BREAKDOWN Overall ........................................... 82-57 9-game homestand...The Sox are 5-2 thus far on the stand, 3rd in the AL in ERA (tied, 1.80) and opponent AVG (.198). AL East Standing ....................1st, 5.5 GA after taking 2 of 3 from Baltimore, sweeping the White Sox At Home ......................................... 45-25 in 3 games, and dropping last night’s series opener. PEN STRENGTH: The Red Sox bullpen has been charged On Road ......................................... 37-32 On the homestand, the Sox are outscoring opponents with runs in just 1 of 7 games during the current homes- In day games .................................. 25-13 37-22 with a .286 batting average and a 3.14 ERA. tand...In that time, Sox relievers have allowed just 2 runs In night games ............................... 57-44 and 8 hits over 18.2 innings (0.96 ERA). April ................................................. 18-8 Boston’s weekend sweep of the White Sox was the May ................................................ 15-15 club’s 1st sweep since 7/30-8/1 vs.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1952-08-12
    , Serving the State The Weather University of Iowa Fair aJleI hOi .. ceol ..- clar. Partly el... y and Campus and warmtr Wt clntlday. Hlrh Iowa City iOda)'. 78; low, St . Ilirh at .owan }Jonel ay. 78: low, '0. Est. 1868 - AP LeaSP.<i Wire - Five Centa Iowa C ity. Iowa. Tuesday. Auqust 12, 1952 - Vol. 86, No. 21 9 t' Ike Says GOP Demo Chiefs· To Map Strategy Can. Beffer Win Ridgway Calls ,Defense New Stevenson Appointees President May · Durable Peace Of West 'Inadequate' Get Secondary DENVER (A') - Gen. Dwight D. -----------­ SUPREME HEADQUARTERS, ----------------------­ Eisenhower said Monday' he be- and his vice presidential running A.U.IED POWERS IN EUROPE amounl of money to be granted by lieves the Republicans generally mate, Sen. Richard M. Nixon of (,4>)-Gen. Matthew Ridgway said America for military offshore pur­ Campaign Role can dQ a better job of winning CaUtornia, 10 discuss plans for a Monday the military means tor .chases in Europe. France has In­ WASHINGTON (A') - Harry S. durable world peace than the GOP bid in the south. defense of the West are "seriously slsted she cannot keep her arms Truman and Adlai E. Stevenson Democrats. 8 States Represented inadequate In seve:al vital cate- lactories gOing without additional The GOP presidential nominee In addition to Louisiana, there gories" and that the 1952 targets U.S. money, and the U.S. has been meet today for Democratic slrate­ mode the remark at a news con- were representatives trom Texas, Generol Hershey for men and material might not ~ equally insistent that no more ' gy talks that may consign the terence when he was asked for Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, Mis­ met.
    [Show full text]
  • 1955 Bowman Baseball Checklist
    1955 Bowman Baseball Checklist 1 Hoyt Wilhelm 2 Alvin Dark 3 Joe Coleman 4 Eddie Waitkus 5 Jim Robertson 6 Pete Suder 7 Gene Baker 8 Warren Hacker 9 Gil McDougald 10 Phil Rizzuto 11 Bill Bruton 12 Andy Pafko 13 Clyde Vollmer 14 Gus Keriazakos 15 Frank Sullivan 16 Jimmy Piersall 17 Del Ennis 18 Stan Lopata 19 Bobby Avila 20 Al Smith 21 Don Hoak 22 Roy Campanella 23 Al Kaline 24 Al Aber 25 Minnie Minoso 26 Virgil Trucks 27 Preston Ward 28 Dick Cole 29 Red Schoendienst 30 Bill Sarni 31 Johnny TemRookie Card 32 Wally Post 33 Nellie Fox 34 Clint Courtney 35 Bill Tuttle 36 Wayne Belardi 37 Pee Wee Reese 38 Early Wynn 39 Bob Darnell 40 Vic Wertz 41 Mel Clark 42 Bob Greenwood 43 Bob Buhl Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 44 Danny O'Connell 45 Tom Umphlett 46 Mickey Vernon 47 Sammy White 48 (a) Milt BollingFrank Bolling on Back 48 (b) Milt BollingMilt Bolling on Back 49 Jim Greengrass 50 Hobie Landrith 51 El Tappe Elvin Tappe on Card 52 Hal Rice 53 Alex Kellner 54 Don Bollweg 55 Cal Abrams 56 Billy Cox 57 Bob Friend 58 Frank Thomas 59 Whitey Ford 60 Enos Slaughter 61 Paul LaPalme 62 Royce Lint 63 Irv Noren 64 Curt Simmons 65 Don ZimmeRookie Card 66 George Shuba 67 Don Larsen 68 Elston HowRookie Card 69 Billy Hunter 70 Lew Burdette 71 Dave Jolly 72 Chet Nichols 73 Eddie Yost 74 Jerry Snyder 75 Brooks LawRookie Card 76 Tom Poholsky 77 Jim McDonald 78 Gil Coan 79 Willy MiranWillie Miranda on Card 80 Lou Limmer 81 Bobby Morgan 82 Lee Walls 83 Max Surkont 84 George Freese 85 Cass Michaels 86 Ted Gray 87 Randy Jackson 88 Steve Bilko 89 Lou
    [Show full text]
  • The Kid Steps Down Baptism
    Th* WITNESS APRIL 10, 1969 104: publication. and reuse for Ed i tor i al required Pollution: - Whose Responsibility? Permission DFMS. / Articles Church The Kid Steps Down Episcopal the of W. B. Spofford Jr. Archives Baptism: Public or Private? 2020. Cornelius P. Trowbridge Copyright NEWS: Interchurch Action Guidelines Adopted at COCU Meeting. Sanctuary in Church Creates Stir in Diocese of Michigan SERVICES The Witness SERVICES In Leading Churches In Leading Churches For Christ and Hie Church NEW YORK CITY EDITORIAL BOARD ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH Tenth Street, above Chestnut THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE JOHN MCCIIX KHUMH, Chairman The Rev. Alfred W. Price, D.D., R< Sunday: Holy Communion 8, 9, 10, Morning W. B. SPOFFOBJD SS., Managing Editor The Rev. Gustav C. Meckling, B.D. Piayer, Holy Communion and Sermon. 11) Minister to the Hard of Hearing Organ Recital, 3:30; Evensong, 4. EDWARD J. MOHR, Editorial Assistant Sunday: 9 and 11 a.m. 7:30 p.m. Morning Prayer and Holy Communion 7115 O. SYDNEY BAKH; LEE A. BBLFORD; ROSCOS Weekdays: Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fri, (and 10 Wed.); Evening Prayer, 3:30. 12:30 - 12:55 p.m. T. FOUST; RICHARD E. GABY; GORDON C. Services of Spiritual Healing, Thurs. 13:30 and 5:30 pun. THE PARISH OF TRINITY CHURCH GRAHAM; DAVID JOHNSON; HAROLD R. LAS- Rev. John V. Butler, Rector DON LESLIE J. A. LASO; BENJAMIN MrNcmj CHRIST CHURCH TRINITY CAMBRIDGE, MASS. WILLIAM STRINGFBLLOW. Broadway & Wall St. The Rev. W. Murray Kenney, Rector publication. Rev. Donald R. Woodward, Vicar Sunday Services: 8:00, 9:15 and 11)15 Ma* Wednesday 12:10 and 5:30 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • All-Time Series Records
    ALL-TIME SERIES RECORDS Opponent W L T First Last Opponent W L T First Last Alabama 0 1 0 1996 1996 Fairleigh Dickinson 2 0 0 1994 1994 Albany 1 0 0 2002 2002 Florida 1 6 0 1957 1998 Appalachian State 26 9 0 1970 2002 Florida Int’l 1 4 0 1987 1988 Arkansas State 1 0 0 1989 1989 Florida State 16 53 0 1962 2002 Armstrong State 2 0 0 1989 1991 Fordham 1 0 0 1981 1981 Atlantic Christian 1 0 0 1954 1954 Francis Marion 4 0 0 1983 1987 Auburn 0 2 0 1966 1999 Franklin-Marshall 1 1 0 1971 1972 Ball State 1 0 0 1991 1991 Furman 6 1 0 1961 1997 Baltimore 2 0 0 1977 1977 Gardner-Webb 4 2 0 1984 1988 Baptist 1 1 0 1980 1980 Geo.Washington 2 0 0 1970 2002 Baylor 0 1 0 1989 1989 Georgia 8 15 0 1963 2002 Bradley 0 1 0 1987 1987 Georgia Southern 14 8 0 1961 1989 Brockport State 1 0 0 1975 1975 Georgia Tech 28 44 1 1957 2002 Brown 5 0 0 1968 1991 Glenville State 2 0 0 1977 1978 Buffalo 7 4 0 1982 1997 Guilford 15 3 0 1974 1990 Butler 1 0 0 1996 1996 Hartford 4 1 0 1990 1995 Cal St. Northridge 1 0 0 1992 1992 High Point 12 8 0 1973 2002 Cal Santa Barbara 0 1 0 1991 1991 Illinois 1 1 0 1998 1998 California (Pa.) State 2 1 0 1977 1987 Illinois-Chicago 1 1 0 1994 1994 Campbell 22 9 0 1976 2001 Indiana (Pa.) 1 0 0 1972 1972 Jeff Ruziecki Catawba 14 5 0 1973 1986 Jacksonville 2 1 0 1961 1969 Central Florida 1 2 0 1996 2001 James Madison 1 0 0 2001 2001 Central Michigan 1 1 0 1989 1989 Kent 11 3 0 1961 1997 Charlotte 23 18 1 1980 2002 Lafayette 2 0 0 1964 1964 Cincinnati 3 0 0 2002 2002 LeMoyne 1 0 0 1982 1982 Opponent W L T First Last Citadel 3 4 0 1977 1997
    [Show full text]
  • National Pastime a REVIEW of BASEBALL HISTORY
    THE National Pastime A REVIEW OF BASEBALL HISTORY CONTENTS The Chicago Cubs' College of Coaches Richard J. Puerzer ................. 3 Dizzy Dean, Brownie for a Day Ronnie Joyner. .................. .. 18 The '62 Mets Keith Olbermann ................ .. 23 Professional Baseball and Football Brian McKenna. ................ •.. 26 Wallace Goldsmith, Sports Cartoonist '.' . Ed Brackett ..................... .. 33 About the Boston Pilgrims Bill Nowlin. ..................... .. 40 Danny Gardella and the Reserve Clause David Mandell, ,................. .. 41 Bringing Home the Bacon Jacob Pomrenke ................. .. 45 "Why, They'll Bet on a Foul Ball" Warren Corbett. ................. .. 54 Clemente's Entry into Organized Baseball Stew Thornley. ................. 61 The Winning Team Rob Edelman. ................... .. 72 Fascinating Aspects About Detroit Tiger Uniform Numbers Herm Krabbenhoft. .............. .. 77 Crossing Red River: Spring Training in Texas Frank Jackson ................... .. 85 The Windowbreakers: The 1947 Giants Steve Treder. .................... .. 92 Marathon Men: Rube and Cy Go the Distance Dan O'Brien .................... .. 95 I'm a Faster Man Than You Are, Heinie Zim Richard A. Smiley. ............... .. 97 Twilight at Ebbets Field Rory Costello 104 Was Roy Cullenbine a Better Batter than Joe DiMaggio? Walter Dunn Tucker 110 The 1945 All-Star Game Bill Nowlin 111 The First Unknown Soldier Bob Bailey 115 This Is Your Sport on Cocaine Steve Beitler 119 Sound BITES Darryl Brock 123 Death in the Ohio State League Craig
    [Show full text]