Click to View The
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Of Aging: Wistar Researchers Shed New Light on Getting Old
ocus F Summer 2008 The Science of Aging: Wistar researchers shed new light on getting old Wistar Launches High-Tech Research Center The Federal Funding Crunch: What Does It Mean for Wistar? FROM THE PRESIDENT Wistar: Research at the Frontier he Wistar Institute has a pioneering tradition. TCaspar Wistar, for whom the Institute is named, was a forward-thinking 18th-century physician who wrote the first American anatomy textbook and was an early proponent of vaccination. His great-nephew, Insti- tute founder Isaac J. Wistar, was a pioneer in his own right who trekked west by wagon train to spend winters as a trapper in the wilds of California. Isaac Wistar founded The Wistar Institute in 1892 with the stated intention of creating a center for “new and original research” in the biological and medical sci- Peter Olson ences. In the ensuing century, Wistar lived up to that charge, and it continues to do so today. massive amounts of data and pinpoint disease-causing Wistar’s first scientific advisory board, convened in genes and proteins. The center supports work like that of 1905, declared research as the Institute’s principal objec- David W. Speicher, Ph.D., who is developing blood tests tive and specified three areas of focus: comparative for the early detection of the deadliest cancers. anatomy, embryology, and neurology—fields that repre- Likewise, the Institute’s new chemical screening facil- sented the leading edge of science and medicine at the ity, set to launch this fall, will allow investigators to turn of the century. screen vast numbers of compounds and identify those The Institute’s research focus has evolved over the years. -
Hinkey Haines: the Giants' First Superstar
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 4, No. 2 (1982) HINKEY HAINES: THE GIANTS' FIRST SUPERSTAR By C.C. Staph Oh Hinkey Haines, oh Hinkey Haines! The New York Giants' football brains. He never loses, always gains. Oh Hinkey Haines, oh Hinkey Haines! -- anonymous New York sportswriter, 1926 Hinkey Haines was one of those running backs who blaze across the NFL sky for only a short time, yet burn so brightly that they are honored long after their last touchdown. Gale Sayers is a recent example; George McAfee was another. Haines completed his playing career before the league began keeping statistics. As a consequence, he is remembered not for huge yardage totals but for brilliant individual performances. During his short but spectacular career, he put together enough outstanding plays to be ranked with Grange, Driscoll, and Nevers as one of the great runners of his time. He was a phenomenal breakaway runner, famous for his speed. Bob Folwell, the New York Giants' first coach, insisted that in his twenty years of coaching he had never seen a faster man on the gridiron than Haines. If he were playing today, he would almost surely be turned into a wide receiver. Even in those rather pass-sparse days, Hinkey scored several of his most spectacular touchdowns on passes. On punt and kickoff returns, he was deadly. He joined the Giants in 1925 at the comparatively ripe age of 26. For four years, he was the toast of New York. He put in one more season with the Staten Island Stapletons and then retired. He was lured back in 1931 as player-coach of the Stapes, but, at 32, he played only sparingly. -
Statistical Leaders of the ‘20S
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 14, No. 2 (1992) Statistical Leaders of the ‘20s By Bob GIll Probably the most ambitious undertaking in football research was David Neft’s effort to re-create statistics from contemporary newspaper accounts for 1920-31, the years before the NFL started to keep its own records. Though in a sense the attempt had to fail, since complete and official stats are impossible, the results of his tireless work provide the best picture yet of the NFL’s formative years. Since the stats Neft obtained are far from complete, except for scoring records, he refrained from printing yearly leaders for 1920-31. But it seems a shame not to have such a list, incomplete though it may be. Of course, it’s tough to pinpoint a single leader each year; so what follows is my tabulation of the top five, or thereabouts, in passing, rushing and receiving for each season, based on the best information available – the stats printed in Pro Football: The Early Years and Neft’s new hardback edition, The Football Encyclopedia. These stats can be misleading, because one man’s yardage total will be based on, say, five complete games and four incomplete, while another’s might cover just 10 incomplete games (i.e., games for which no play-by-play accounts were found). And then some teams, like Rock Island, Green Bay, Pottsville and Staten Island, often have complete stats, based on play-by-plays for every game of a season. I’ll try to mention variations like that in discussing each year’s leaders – for one thing, “complete” totals will be printed in boldface. -
The Ursinus Weekly, May 22, 1950
Ursinus College Digital Commons @ Ursinus College Ursinus Weekly Newspaper Newspapers 5-22-1950 The Ursinus Weekly, May 22, 1950 Willard Wetzel Ursinus College Douglas MacMullan Ursinus College Dick Hector Ursinus College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly Part of the Cultural History Commons, Higher Education Commons, Liberal Studies Commons, Social History Commons, and the United States History Commons Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Wetzel, Willard; MacMullan, Douglas; and Hector, Dick, "The Ursinus Weekly, May 22, 1950" (1950). Ursinus Weekly Newspaper. 594. https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/594 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Digital Commons @ Ursinus College. It has been accepted for inclusion in Ursinus Weekly Newspaper by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Ursinus College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BACCALAUREATE COMMENCEMENT SERVICE, SUNDAY EXERCISES, MONDAY JUNE4 JUNE 5 Vol 49, No. 24 MONDAY, MAY 22, 1950 Price, Ten Cents Ursinus Institutes Chapter ATTENTION SENIORS ! This Wednesday at 7 :00 p.m. iTitus and Mutch to Address in rm. 6, a i·ep1·esentative of the North America Companies will Of Social Science Society talk . to all seniors who are in terested in a straight salary job. 'Large_st Graduating Cla~s Thirty-seven students and mem state officer of the organization, These jobs will not consist of bers of the faculty became charter wa$ instrumental in organizing a I selling and do not concern life membel'S of Pi Gamma Mu, nation chapter at Ursinus, along with Rus- j insurance. -
Glenn Killinger, Service Football, and the Birth
The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School School of Humanities WAR SEASONS: GLENN KILLINGER, SERVICE FOOTBALL, AND THE BIRTH OF THE AMERICAN HERO IN POSTWAR AMERICAN CULTURE A Dissertation in American Studies by Todd M. Mealy © 2018 Todd M. Mealy Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2018 ii This dissertation of Todd M. Mealy was reviewed and approved by the following: Charles P. Kupfer Associate Professor of American Studies Dissertation Adviser Chair of Committee Simon Bronner Distinguished Professor Emeritus of American Studies and Folklore Raffy Luquis Associate Professor of Health Education, Behavioral Science and Educaiton Program Peter Kareithi Special Member, Associate Professor of Communications, The Pennsylvania State University John Haddad Professor of American Studies and Chair, American Studies Program *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT This dissertation examines Glenn Killinger’s career as a three-sport star at Penn State. The thrills and fascinations of his athletic exploits were chronicled by the mass media beginning in 1917 through the 1920s in a way that addressed the central themes of the mythic Great American Novel. Killinger’s personal and public life matched the cultural medley that defined the nation in the first quarter of the twentieth-century. His life plays outs as if it were a Horatio Alger novel, as the anxieties over turn-of-the- century immigration and urbanization, the uncertainty of commercializing formerly amateur sports, social unrest that challenged the status quo, and the resiliency of the individual confronting challenges of World War I, sport, and social alienation. -
The Staten Island Stapletons
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 7, No. 6 (1985) THE STATEN ISLAND STAPLETONS By John Hogrogian Special thanks to N.F.L. Properties, Inc. for permission to publish this article. Trollies rolled down Broadway and Calvin Coolidge was president when the NFL came to New York City in 1925. In the years since Tim Mara founded the Giants, NFL teams have made their home in each of the City's five boroughs. The Giants played in the Polo Grounds in upper Manhattan through 1955, then moved to Yankee Stadium in the Bronx through 1973. The Brooklyn Dodgers football team thrived in Ebbets Field during the 1930s and 1940s. The Jets made their home in Shea Stadium in Queens from 1964 until recently. And, in the sleepiest of the boroughs, the Staten Island Stapletons played NFL ball from 1929 through 1932. The Stapes struggled through life on a shoestring, but helped keep the NFL afloat as it fought for life in the Depression. The Stapes started out in 1915, five years before the NFL was born in the midwest. Dan Blaine, a good halfback and a native of the working-class neighborhood known as Stapleton, along with three other players formed the team to play other semi-pro squads from New York and New Jersey. The Stapes played more for fun than money. Just as well: crowds were small; salaries averaged $10 per game. Nevertheless, they managed to do well, winning several local semi-pro titles before World War I. After military service, Blaine took over sole ownership in 1919. Blaine himself prospered in the 1920s. -
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 -
The Jewish Phenomenon Bridges
Seven Keys to the Enduring Wealth of a People Revised Edition Steven Silbiger Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 I Understand That Real Wealth Is Portable; It's Knowledge 21 2 Take Care of Your Own and They Will Take Care of You 35 3 Successful People Are Professionals and Entrepreneurs 53 4 Develop Your Verbal Confidence 87 5 Be Selectively Extravagant but Prudently Frugal 107 6 Celebrate Individuality: Encourage Creativity 127 7 Have Something to Prove: A Drive to Succeed 157 Appendix 1: Yiddish: "Can't Spell It, Can't Pronounce It, and Don't Get it" 175 Appendix 2: Hebrew: Fifty Helpful Vocabulary Words 191 Appendix 3: Ten Yiddish Proverbs 195 Appendix 4: The Jewish Calendar and Jewish Holidays 197 Notes 201 Humor Sources 209 Index 211 Ywould like to thank John Yow, my editor at Longstreet Press, who immediately saw the potential of the project and made invaluable contributions to the book. I would also like to thank my editors who provided me a greater sensitivity and perspective: John Braun, Helen Gioulis and Rachel Silbiger, my mom. Comments, questions? E-mail the author at [email protected]. JJteven Spielberg. Ralph Lauren. Sergey Brin. Michael Dell. They're all successful, at the top of their fields. They're all fabulously wealthy. And they're all Jewish. Those three characteristics-successful, wealthy and Jewish-are linked repeatedly in America today. And it is no accident. Jewish Americans are, as a group, the wealthiest ethnic group in America. But the factors that work together to create Jewish wealth, which I identify in this book, can be applied to individuals and groups from any background. -
2004 Annual Report
A World of Possibilities Hillel 2004 Hillel has Foundations, Program Centers, Student Organizations and Affiliates in the following areas: United States Missouri Canada Alabama Nebraska Alberta Alaska Nevada British Columbia Arizona New Hampshire Manitoba Arkansas New Jersey New Brunswick California New Mexico Nova Scotia Colorado New York Ontario Connecticut North Carolina Quebec Delaware North Dakota Saskatchewan District of Columbia Ohio Florida Oklahoma Georgia Oregon Argentina Hawaii Pennsylvania Australia Idaho Rhode Island Azerbaijan Illinois South Carolina Belarus Indiana Tennessee Brazil Iowa Texas Chile Kansas Utah Georgia Kentucky Vermont Israel Louisiana Virginia Moldova Maine Washington Russia Maryland West Virginia United Kingdom Massachusetts Wisconsin Michigan Wyoming Ukraine Minnesota Uruguay Mississippi Uzbekistan In hundreds of locations around the globe, Hillel professionals offer Istudents a world of possibilities: a variety of opportunities to grow as individuals, as leaders, and as members of the Jewish community. In this interconnected world, students from South America participate in Hillel leadership training programs in the United States; Israeli students lead Passover Seders in Ukraine; North American students rebuild homes in Uruguay; thousands of Hillel students visit Israel every year… the choices are endless. Today, 80 years after its creation, Hillel is an international community devoted to learning, personal growth, pluralism, Israel, Jewish celebration and the perpetuation of the Jewish people. Student by student, community by community, country by country, Hillel is forging a strong Jewish future. In 2004, the Hillel world continued to expand. Hillel Foundations were created in Santiago, Chile, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Beer Sheva, Israel. Beautiful state-of-the-art facilities were constructed in nine communities. -
Vol. 29, No. 6 2007
Vol. 29, No. 6 2007 PFRA Committees 2 Football’s Best Pennant Races 5 Bob Gain 11 Baseball & Football Close Relationship 12 Right Place – Wrong Time 18 Overtime Opinion 19 Forward Pass Rules 21 Classifieds 24 THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 29, No. 6 (2007) 2 Class of 2003: Class of 2004: Gino Cappelletti Gene Brito Carl Eller* John Brodie PFRA Pat Fischer Jack Butler Benny Friedman* Chris Hanburger Gene Hickerson* Bob Hayes COMMITTEES Jerry Kramer Billy Howton By Ken Crippen Johnny Robinson Jim Marshall Mac Speedie Al Nesser Mick Tingelhoff Dave Robinson We are happy to report that another committee has Al Wistert Duke Slater been formed since the last update. Gretchen Atwood is heading up the Football, Culture and Social Class of 2005: Class of 2006: Movements Committee. A description of the committee Maxie Baughan Charlie Conerly can be found below. Jim Benton John Hadl Lavie Dilweg Chuck Howley The Western New York Committee is underway with Pat Harder Alex Karras their newest project, detailing the Buffalo Floyd Little Eugene Lipscomb Bisons/Buffalo Bills of the AAFC. Interviews with Tommy Nobis Kyle Rote surviving players and family members of players are Pete Retzlaff Dick Stanfel underway and will continue over the next few months. Tobin Rote Otis Taylor Lou Rymkus Fuzzy Thurston The Hall of Very Good committee reports the following: Del Shofner Deacon Dan Towler In 2002, Bob Carroll began the Hall of Very Good as a Class of 2007: way for PFRA members to honor outstanding players Frankie Albert and coaches who are not in the Pro Football Hall of Roger Brown Fame and who are not likely to ever make it. -
THE HARTFORD BLUES Part 2
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 4, No. 9 (1982) THE HARTFORD BLUES Part 2 by John Hogrogian Hartford, Connecticut, is one of those cities that somehow got lost in the shuffle of medium-sized East Coast metropolises that ring New York like static electrons. There haven't been any popular songs written about Hartford. Broadway plays traditionally open for previews downstate in New Haven. Even W.C. Fields gave it short shrift, aiming his barbs at another locale, Philadelphia. Likewise, all of Hartford's ventures into big-league sports have ended in frustration. The Connecticut capital fielded a baseball team in the newborn National League in 1876 but dropped out after one season. The New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association of recent years drew healthy crowds, but the collapse of the roof of the Hartford Civic Center left the team homeless and it moved to Springfield, Massachusetts. Hartford even had a fling with pro football as a member of the National Football League in 1926. There were semipro football teams throughout Connecticut in 1925 with the All-New Britains and the Waterbury Blues the best. George Mulligan, the leading boxing promoter in the state, operated the Waterbury team; Mulligan planned to bring Connecticut into the national football scene. While the other semipro teams used local sandlot players and New England collegians, Mulligan daringly hired Harry Stuhldreher, one of the famed Four Horsemen of Notre Dame, to play in the Blues' backfield in 1925. When the Hartford semipro team folded in November, Mulligan transferred his team's home games to the capital city, where the larger population provided better box office potential. -
Jews, Church & Civilization
www.Civilization1000.com Contemporary Jewish Museum San Francisco Architect: Daniel Libeskind VII VII 1956 CE - 2008 CE 7-volume set $100 / New see inside for Paradigm TM barcode scan Matrix New Paradigm Matrix 21st CENTURY PUBLISHING www.NewParadigmMatrix.com David Birnbaum’s Jews, Church & Civilization is a uniquely distinctive work on the extraordinary historical odyssey of the Jews. New Paradigm Matrix TM Birnbaum starts not with Abraham, but somewhat more adventurously, with the ‘origin’ of the cosmos as we know it. The au- thor uniquely places the Jewish journey within the context of Western and Asian history and advance. Playing–out themes of the ebbs–and–flows of empires, discovery and exploration, scien- tific, intellectual and artistic advance, Birn- baum injects history with spice, flavor, irony and texture. Jewish and rabbinic scholarship are given not inconsiderable attention. The author of the iconic Summa Metaphysica philosophy se- ries articulates the flow of Jewish intellectual advance winding through the centuries – in the context of world and Jewish history. A feast for the mind and the soul. * * * 21st CENTURY PUBLISHING New Paradigm Matrix Publishing About the Author David Birnbaum is known globally as “the architect of Poten- tialism Theory” – a unified philosophy/cosmology/metaphysics. The paradigm-challenging theory is delineated in Birnbaum’s 3-volume Summa Metaphysica series (1988, 2005, 2014). A riposte to Summa Theologica of (St.) Thomas Aquinas, the Birnbaum treatise (see PotentialismTheory.com) challenges both the mainstream Western philosophy of Aristotelianism and the well-propped-up British/atheistic cosmology of Randomness (see ParadigmChallenge.com). The focus of over 150 reviews and articles (see SummaCoverage.com), a course text at over 15 insti- tutions of higher learning globally (see SummaCourseText.com), Summa Metaphysica was the focus of an international academic conference on Science & Religion April 16-19, 2012 (see BardCon- ference.com).