(Libby, Mont.), 1936-06-04

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(Libby, Mont.), 1936-06-04 Thursday, June 4, 1936. THE WESTERN NEWS, LIBBY, MONTANA Page Seven ■■ the present attempt to get legislation DREAKNESS Picking*: should fall altogether. Their thought * Bold Venture Joined an lliuetrlous M vlround la that if no new law results from the company of ponle* Including Sir Bar­ s efforts of the present congress. It wlU ton, Gallant Fox, Burgoo King and BRISBANE N Omaha that have won both the Ken­ an be much easier to get a real law, with sharp teeth, through the next session. tucky Derby and the Preaknea*. Twen­ THIS WEEK âe House ty Grand and Cavalcade, Derby win­ Whereas, If a law should be put If liquid In which olives are bot­ through at this session, In some weak ner*, were second when they tried tled Is thrown away when bottle Is H form, It might be next to Impossible their luck at the Preakne**. The Big “Black Legion” opened, olives may be kept Indefinite­ to get through the kind of law they Only two fillies have reached the win­ around the More and Better Babies ly If olive oil Is poured over them want at the next session. ners’ circle. They were Rhine Maiden A Worried Empire aftftr they are put back Into bottle. NATIONAL p* In 1915 and Nellie Mor»e In 1924. Fight Complicated Tom Healey ha* been the mo*t *uo- U. S. Dollars Emigrate A paste made of scouring powder Complicating tbe fight Is a bitter dif­ Î ce»sful of the modern trainer* In the The “ritual” of the murderous secret moistened with ammonia will remove JC API TAL ference between advocates of new leg- $25,000 classic. He «addled four win- society called the “Black Legion” con- unsightly stains on brass trays. Ap­ Islatlon as to where the power of en­ ner*, Vigil, Pillory, Display and Dr. tains some old ply paste, remove when dry, then py Carter Field \ forcement should be lodged. At pres­ Freeland. The combination of Owner “Know - Nothing” .1 polish tray. ent the law Is enforced by the Depart­ G. L. Lorlllard and Trainer R. W. ; features. The can­ ■sT.; • ; • • • Washington.—Two groups of Repub­ ment of Agriculture. Incidentally, of­ Walden wa* tope among the ancient*. didate for admis­ When serving a steak smothered lican leaders wish James A. Farley ficials there are not only anxious to They had all five winner* from 1878 to sion must be "will­ lu onions, squeeze the juice of a would keep right on hitting Gov, Alf retain their present power, but they C New York Poet.—WNU Servie*. 1882. Walden also was the winning ing to commit mur­ lemon over It before serving and you M. Landon of Kansas. The harder the think a new and stronger law a neces­ trainer In 1875 and wa* both owner der, to proceed will find the flavor greatly Improved. better. Especially In the period be­ sity. Grimm Full o’ Hope and trainer of Refund, who romped against Catholics, tween now and the convening of the But there Is a very strong group who, home In front In 1888. Jews and Negroes” ; To remove a fresh grease spot on Republican convention at Cleveland. while agreeing that a new law la a Though 1936 Pennant Just to »how that thing* were on the he must be “native One of these Is the Old Guard die­ necessity, want Its enforcement lodged up and up In those day* a horse named born, Protestant, a rug, cover the spot with blotting hard contingent—the boys who want with the federal trade commission. Chase Is Plenty Tough Welcher finished second In a field of white and gentile.” paper, then press with a hot Iron. Cover the spot with magnesia, let It to stop Landon. They hope Farley, Both administrative outfits have been two in 1884. lobbying as bard as they could, the The "Black Le­ remain for 24 hours, then brush off. I and for that matter the vitriol-penned Not In the Box Score : Charles Mlchelson, will keep up a bar­ one to keep the power where It Is at pHARLEY GRIMM—“WhaV* that? gion,” which prob­ There Is an unwritten baseball law If the bottoms of legs of furniture present, the other to transfer It to No, I’m not thinking about becom­ ably will not last rage agglnst the Kansas Coolldge. that - there shall be no “throwing” at The otîier group is composed of men the federal trade commission. ing a pitcher Juat because I’ve got long, had ambitious are waxed they will not scratch pol­ night. The lights and shadows make It Arthur Brlabaa* ished floors when moved »round on who believe Landon Is going to be nom­ The food processors and the drug this big yellow-finger mitt on and be- plans. Among so difficult for a batter to dodge that inated, and who, while not particular­ and chemical trade are split jwlde open cauce you’ve Seen me warming up for other things It proposed to overthrow them. even the hardest-hearted pitchers pre­ * ly enthusiastic at the moment, Intend as to their desires In this direction, ten minutes. I’m merely breaking It In the federal government, which Is not fer to aim at the outside corners rather some of their representatives fighting for Larry French, who’s got a lot of an original Idea. It was also going to Never serve food In a dish that Is to support him with all their strength. than be charged with manslaughter. on one side, and some on the other. other things on hit mind now besides set up a dictatorship, with nlght-rldlng too large for amount of food served. Their motive la to draw all the fire . , Baltcazar „Sanchlle, recognized The nearest approach to an agree­ regiments to enforce discipline. Dic­ It detracts from the appearance of possible now, rather than have the new gloves, and asked me to do it for In Europe as the^Hvorld’s bantamweight Democratic smearing machine move ment as to prospects, which can be ob­ him. It's all In the day’s work for a tatorship Is not a new Idea, either. your table. tained by questioning everybody Inter­ champion, says he started boxing be­ into action only after the convention, manager. Even when you're with the Strange things are done or planned cause he didn’t want to go to work. To remove whitewash from a cell­ in short, they would like to know now ested, is that If a food and drug bill league champions, you’ve got to help In the name of “liberty" now, as they passes at all, the final text will be so . The Meusels, Irish and Bob, are ing, dissolve one pound of alum In Just what sort of ammunition the Dem­ out wherever you can, and— What's were when Madam Roland mounted rewritten In conference that It Is Im­ playing semi-pro baseball In Los An­ one gallon of strong vinegar. Apply ocrats Intend to use against Landon. that? the guillotine platform. possible for anyone to forecast even geles. .Pa Strlbllng now peddles with brush, let soak In well and Moreover, they operate on a theory “You think from what you’ve seen a general Idea of the final form. automobiles In Hattiesburg, Miss. scrape and wash as usual. frequently stated In connection with Russia wants bigger families, like that I’d be a lot more help If I did go Elmer Layden, the Notre Dame foot­ • * • the famous Alfred B. Smith speech be­ In there and pitch? Mussolini and others with "plans.” Slap for Morgan ball mentor, Is flooding the malls with Salt should never be added to fore the Liberty league. Many Demo­ Stalin wants plenty of new little citi­ Appointment of David EL Llllenthal I Well, that’s where circulars advertising his forthcoming stews, soups and boiled meats until crats as well as Republicans believe I you’re wrong. We’ve zens. to serve nine years as a member of the Olympic tour. Jack Kearns now after they are cooked. If put la st that had this speech been delivered I got a pretty fair staff A thousand million rubles will be set Tennessee valley authority was t operates a tavern on Randolph street first It toughens the fiber of the meat next October, Instead of last winter, It I Just the same and get- aside by Moscow to “subsidize large square kick In the face to Dr. Arthur In Chicago, . Vaughan Williams, and takes out the juices. would have had a tremendous effect. families and aid mothers.1 Birth con- E. Morgan, head of TVA. Doctor Mor­ I ting Curt Davis will long one of the most capable soccer © Bell Syndicate.—WNU Benrloa. I help us plenty. May- trol ladles and gentlemen will hear, Thus they would like all the charges gan's resignation has been lying on referees, now Is vice president of the surprised, that aid to large families against Landon that can possibly be President Roosevelt’s desk for weeks, | be he’ll start slow, but Brookhattan A. C, I you can bet he’ll win will begin after the seventh child. StudentB Stole a Howitzer; brought put before the public now, In­ and Doctor Morgan has made It very I plenty of games for Seven are taken as a matter of course; Moved Five Tons by Night stead of later In the campaign. clear to the President that he could Bill Tilden Fading î us. And don’t let any- that Is just the beginning of a Russian The political sagacity of this hope not work with Llllenthal.
Recommended publications
  • Lexington Phases Mastermap RH HR 3-24-17
    ELDORADO PARKWAY MAMMOTH CAVE LANE CAVE MAMMOTH *ZONED FUTURE LIGHT RETAIL MASTER PLANNED GATED COMMUNITY *ZONED FUTURE RETAIL/MULTI-FAMILY MAJESTIC PRINCE CIRCLE MAMMOTH CAVE LANE T IN O P L I A R E N O D ORB DRIVE ARISTIDES DRIVE MACBETH AVENUE MANUEL STREETMANUEL SPOKANE WAY DARK STAR LANE STAR DARK GIACOMO LANE CARRY BACK LANE 7 8 NORTHERN DANCER WAY GALLAHADION WAY GRINDSTONE MANOR GRINDSTONE FUNNY CIDE COURT FUNNY THUNDER GULCH WAY BROKERS TIP LANE MANUEL STREETMANUEL E PLAC RAL DMI WAR A DAY STAR WAY *ZONED FUTURE 3 LIGHT COMMERCIAL BOLD FORBES STREET FERDINAND TRAIL LEONATUS LANE LEONATUS PONDER LANE SEATTLE SLEW STREET GRAHAM AVENUE WINTERGREEN DRIVE COIT ROAD COIT SECRETARIAT BOULEVARD COUNT TURF COUNT DRIVE AMENITY SMARTY JONES STREET CENTER STRIKE GOLD BOULEVARD 2 DEBONAIR LANE LUCKY 5 CAVALCADE DRIVE CAVALCADE 1 Yucca Ridge *ZONED FUTURE FLYING EBONY STREET LIGHT RETAIL Park AFFIRMED AVENUE Independence High School SUTHERLAND LANE AZRA TRAIL OMAHA DRIVE BOLD VENTURE AVENUE CONQUISTADOR COURT CONQUISTADOR LUCKY DEBONAIR LANE LUCKY OXBOW AVENUE OXBOW CAVALCADE DRIVE CAVALCADE 4 WHIRLAWAY DRIVE 9 IRON LIEGE DRIVE *ZONED FUTURE IRON LIEGE DRIVE LIGHT COMMERCIAL 6 A M EMPIRE MAKER ROAD E RISEN STAR ROAD R I BUBBLING OVER ROAD C WAR EMBLEM PLACE WAR A N Future P H City A R O Park A H D R I V E 14DUST COMMANDER COURT CIRCLE PASS FORWARD DETERMINE DRIVE SPECTACULAR BID STREET REAL QUIET RD. TIM TAM CIRCLE EASY GOER AVENUE LEGEND PILLORY DRIVE PILLORY BY PHASES HALMA HALMA TRAIL 11 PHASE 1 A PROUD CLAIRON STREET M E MIDDLEGROUND PLACE
    [Show full text]
  • Prisons and Punishments in Late Medieval London
    Prisons and Punishments in Late Medieval London Christine Winter Thesis submitted for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University of London Royal Holloway, University of London, 2012 2 Declaration I, Christine Winter, hereby declare that this thesis and the work presented in it is entirely my own. Where I have consulted the work of others, this is always clearly stated. Signed: Date: 3 Abstract In the history of crime and punishment the prisons of medieval London have generally been overlooked. This may have been because none of the prison records have survived for this period, yet there is enough information in civic and royal documents, and through archaeological evidence, to allow a reassessment of London’s prisons in the later middle ages. This thesis begins with an analysis of the purpose of imprisonment, which was not merely custodial and was undoubtedly punitive in the medieval period. Having established that incarceration was employed for a variety of purposes the physicality of prison buildings and the conditions in which prisoners were kept are considered. This research suggests that the periodic complaints that London’s medieval prisons, particularly Newgate, were ‘foul’ with ‘noxious air’ were the result of external, rather than internal, factors. Using both civic and royal sources the management of prisons and the abuses inflicted by some keepers have been analysed. This has revealed that there were very few differences in the way civic and royal prisons were administered; however, there were distinct advantages to being either the keeper or a prisoner of the Fleet prison. Because incarceration was not the only penalty available in the enforcement of law and order, this thesis also considers the offences that constituted a misdemeanour and the various punishments employed by the authorities.
    [Show full text]
  • 1930S Greats Horses/Jockeys
    1930s Greats Horses/Jockeys Year Horse Gender Age Year Jockeys Rating Year Jockeys Rating 1933 Cavalcade Colt 2 1933 Arcaro, E. 1 1939 Adams, J. 2 1933 Bazaar Filly 2 1933 Bellizzi, D. 1 1939 Arcaro, E. 2 1933 Mata Hari Filly 2 1933 Coucci, S. 1 1939 Dupuy, H. 1 1933 Brokers Tip Colt 3 1933 Fisher, H. 0 1939 Fallon, L. 0 1933 Head Play Colt 3 1933 Gilbert, J. 2 1939 James, B. 3 1933 War Glory Colt 3 1933 Horvath, K. 0 1939 Longden, J. 3 1933 Barn Swallow Filly 3 1933 Humphries, L. 1 1939 Meade, D. 3 1933 Gallant Sir Colt 4 1933 Jones, R. 2 1939 Neves, R. 1 1933 Equipoise Horse 5 1933 Longden, J. 1 1939 Peters, M. 1 1933 Tambour Mare 5 1933 Meade, D. 1 1939 Richards, H. 1 1934 Balladier Colt 2 1933 Mills, H. 1 1939 Robertson, A. 1 1934 Chance Sun Colt 2 1933 Pollard, J. 1 1939 Ryan, P. 1 1934 Nellie Flag Filly 2 1933 Porter, E. 2 1939 Seabo, G. 1 1934 Cavalcade Colt 3 1933 Robertson, A. 1 1939 Smith, F. A. 2 1934 Discovery Colt 3 1933 Saunders, W. 1 1939 Smith, G. 1 1934 Bazaar Filly 3 1933 Simmons, H. 1 1939 Stout, J. 1 1934 Mata Hari Filly 3 1933 Smith, J. 1 1939 Taylor, W. L. 1 1934 Advising Anna Filly 4 1933 Westrope, J. 4 1939 Wall, N. 1 1934 Faireno Horse 5 1933 Woolf, G. 1 1939 Westrope, J. 1 1934 Equipoise Horse 6 1933 Workman, R.
    [Show full text]
  • The North Carolina Historical Review
    The North Carolina Historical Review Volume XX October, 1943 Number 4 PUBLIC BUILDINGS IN CRAVEN COUNTY 1722-1835 By Alonzo Thomas Dill, Junior I No greater problem faced the counties of early North Caro- lina than the periodical new construction and almost continuous demand for repair of public buildings. The costliness of some materials and the scarcity of skilled labor were only part of the trouble. The frequent indifference of officials and their inept- ness at collecting and accounting for revenues added to the diffi- culty. Public building was therefore a long-drawn-out under- taking. Construction of a courthouse might last a decade or more, and during these years taxes would sometimes double, so far as county levies were concerned. The erection of such a building required much effort, and its completion was a real accomplishment—one which this opulent generation, with its federal grants-in-aid and easy long-term borrowing, cannot fully appreciate. Today's epidemic of federal construction has resulted in the erection of so many public buildings of all kinds that perhaps, too, it is difficult to realize just how important these structures were to the early life of North Carolina. The jails with their pillory, stocks, and whipping post, the powder magazines for the militia, the courthouses and later pest houses and poor houses, served as a kind of common social denominator in whose creation everyone who paid taxes had a share and in whose benefits or miseries a large proportion of the population took part. The courthouses are a good example of this.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Media Guide NYRA.Com 1 FIRST RUNNING the First Running of the Belmont Stakes in 1867 at Jerome Park Took Place on a Thursday
    2018 Media Guide NYRA.com 1 FIRST RUNNING The first running of the Belmont Stakes in 1867 at Jerome Park took place on a Thursday. The race was 1 5/8 miles long and the conditions included “$200 each; half forfeit, and $1,500-added. The second to receive $300, and an English racing saddle, made by Merry, of St. James TABLE OF Street, London, to be presented by Mr. Duncan.” OLDEST TRIPLE CROWN EVENT CONTENTS The Belmont Stakes, first run in 1867, is the oldest of the Triple Crown events. It predates the Preakness Stakes (first run in 1873) by six years and the Kentucky Derby (first run in 1875) by eight. Aristides, the winner of the first Kentucky Derby, ran second in the 1875 Belmont behind winner Calvin. RECORDS AND TRADITIONS . 4 Preakness-Belmont Double . 9 FOURTH OLDEST IN NORTH AMERICA Oldest Triple Crown Race and Other Historical Events. 4 Belmont Stakes Tripped Up 19 Who Tried for Triple Crown . 9 The Belmont Stakes, first run in 1867, is one of the oldest stakes races in North America. The Phoenix Stakes at Keeneland was Lowest/Highest Purses . .4 How Kentucky Derby/Preakness Winners Ran in the Belmont. .10 first run in 1831, the Queens Plate in Canada had its inaugural in 1860, and the Travers started at Saratoga in 1864. However, the Belmont, Smallest Winning Margins . 5 RUNNERS . .11 which will be run for the 150th time in 2018, is third to the Phoenix (166th running in 2018) and Queen’s Plate (159th running in 2018) in Largest Winning Margins .
    [Show full text]
  • 10/21/20 06:47:45 AM Page: Ab List (V.191006) 1 GUADALUPE COUNTY
    Date: 10/21/20 GUADALUPE COUNTY ab_list (v.191006) Time: 06:47:45 AM -- Consolidated Election -- Ballot List Page: 1 Election: 1120-00 Absentee Type: All Types Return Status: OK Order By Name Type Voter # Req # Name Address Line 1 Precinct Sub Blt. Party Request Printed Returned Status Y65 00242684 00-1 AARONSON, LEWIS C 5001 SCHERTZ PKWY #224 SCHERTZ TX 78154 305 02 38 NP 09/01/20 09/01/20 10/15/20 OK RM 00203453 00-1 ABDULLAH, DEBORAH DIANE 4500 GRAND FOREST DR SCHERTZ TX 78154 308 01 38 NP 08/19/20 08/26/20 10/07/20 OK DME 00267302 00-1 ABRAHAM, COREBRIANS ANTOINE [email protected] 411 02 38 NP 09/15/20 09/16/20 10/08/20 OK YDS 00116907 00-1 ABRAMEIT, DAVID WAYNE 1219 EASTWOOD DR SEGUIN TX 78155 104 06 10 NP 09/24/20 09/29/20 10/07/20 OK Y65 00022192 00-1 ACEVEDO, ALMA 740 W KINGSBURY ST SEGUIN TX 78155 203 03 10 NP 09/04/20 09/09/20 10/14/20 OK RM 00204101 00-1 ACEVEDO, ARIANNA MARIE 150 RIVERBOAT VILLAGE RD SOUTH HADLEY MA 01075 409 04 4 NP 08/26/20 09/01/20 10/13/20 OK Y65 00000039 00-1 ACKERMANN, HUGO WILLIAM JR 903 E IRELAND ST SEGUIN TX 78155 210 02 10 NP 07/21/20 08/26/20 09/25/20 OK Y65 00119529 00-1 ACOSTA, CRUZ LIRA 367 COPPER WOOD DR NEW BRAUNFELS TX 78130 213 01 3 NP 09/01/20 09/01/20 09/30/20 OK Y65 00173916 00-1 ACOSTA, RAUL SR 4117 WHISPER POINT CIBOLO TX 78108 404 16 38 NP 08/26/20 09/01/20 10/15/20 OK Y65 00234890 00-1 ACOSTA, VIRGINIA 3609 DIAMOND FALLS SCHERTZ TX 78154 308 01 38 NP 07/21/20 08/26/20 09/28/20 OK Y65 00151262 00-1 ACOSTA, YOLANDA T 367 COPPER WOOD DR NEW BRAUNFELS TX 78130 213 01 3 NP 09/01/20
    [Show full text]
  • From Pillory to Penitentiary: the Rise of Criminal Incarceration in Early Massachusetts
    Michigan Law Review Volume 80 Issue 6 1982 From Pillory to Penitentiary: The Rise of Criminal Incarceration in Early Massachusetts Adam J. Hirsch Yale University Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Law and Society Commons, Law Enforcement and Corrections Commons, and the Legal History Commons Recommended Citation Adam J. Hirsch, From Pillory to Penitentiary: The Rise of Criminal Incarceration in Early Massachusetts, 80 MICH. L. REV. 1179 (1982). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol80/iss6/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Michigan Law Review at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. From Pillory to Penitentiary: The Rise of Criminal Incarceration in Early Massachusetts by Adam J. Hirsch* I. INTRODUCTION. • • . • • . • • . • . • • • . • • • . • • . • • • • • • • • • 1179 II. INSTITUTIONAL TRANSITION•...••.•.••••..•.•..••••••.•• 1181 A. The Gaol in Early Massachusetts ................... 1182 I. Function . 1182 2. Institutional .Design .............................. 1187 B. The Rise of the Penitentiary ......................... 1191 III. THE IDEOLOGY OF CRIMINAL PUNISHMENT •••••••.•••.. 1192 A. The Rothman Thesis ................................ 1192 B. Images of.Deterrence . 1194 I. Beccarianism
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 Media Guide NYRA.Com 1 TABLE of CONTENTS
    2021 Media Guide NYRA.com 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS HISTORY 3 General Information 4 History of The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) 5 NYRA Leadership 6 Belmont Park History 7 Belmont Park Specifications & Map 8 Saratoga Race Course History 9 Saratoga Leading Jockeys and Trainers TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE 10 Saratoga Race Course Specifications & Map 11 Aqueduct Racetrack History 12 Aqueduct Racetrack Specifications & Map 13 NYRA Bets 14 Digital NYRA 15-16 NYRA Personalities 17 NYRA & Community/Cares 18 NYRA & Safety 19 Handle & Attendance Page OWNERS 20-44 Owner Profiles 45 2020 Leading Owners TRAINERS 46-93 Trainer Profiles 94 Leading Trainers in New York 1935-2020 95 2020 Trainer Standings JOCKEYS 96-117 Jockey Profiles 118 Jockeys that have won six or more races in one day 118 Leading Jockeys in New York (1941-2020) 119 2020 NYRA Leading Jockeys BELMONT STAKES 122 History of the Belmont Stakes 129 Belmont Runners 139 Belmont Owners 148 Belmont Trainers 154 Belmont Jockeys 160 Triple Crown Profiles TRAVERS STAKES 176 History of the Travers Stakes 185 Travers Owners 189 Travers Trainers 192 Travers Jockeys 202 Remembering Marylou Whitney 205 The Whitney 2 2021 Media Guide NYRA.com AQUEDUCT RACETRACK 110-00 Rockaway Blvd. South Ozone Park, NY 11420 2021 Racing Dates Winter/Spring: January 1 - April 18 BELMONT PARK 2150 Hempstead Turnpike Elmont, NY, 11003 2021 Racing Dates Spring/Summer: April 22 - July 11 GENERAL INFORMATION GENERAL SARATOGA RACE COURSE 267 Union Ave. Saratoga Springs, NY, 12866 2021 Racing Dates Summer: July 15 - September
    [Show full text]
  • The Horse in European History, 1550-1900
    THE HORSE IN EUROPEAN HISTORY, 1550-1900 by Tatsuya Mitsuda, B.A. (Keio), M.Phil. (Cantab.) Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Faculty of History University of Cambridge 2007 Je hais tout autre voiture que le cheval Montaigne Acknowledgements At the dinner table, when polite conversation turns to the inevitable etiquette of exchanging hobbies and interests, people are often surprised – and some disappointed – to hear, that I have had very little to do with horses. What’s more, I probably never will. My years spent in Japan, England and Germany – which are countries invariably passionate about their horses – seem to lead some people to suspect that I would be too. Not that there have been a lack of opportunities to become interested, of course. During childhood, my parents were keen to take me pony-riding in the countryside, at the ‘Mother’s Farm’ in Chiba, near Tokyo. But my recollection of this experience is far from fresh, and pictures that my parents have thrust in front of me to jog my memory depict a mounted child exuding a sense of utter indifference. When, some years later, I visited Sandown racecourse, in Surrey, albeit to play Par-Three golf in the areas inside the racetrack, it did not dawn on me that horses galloped around the same space on meeting days. Much later, when friends at university wanted to take me to racecourses in and around Tokyo, to experience the roars of thousands of punters urging their thoroughbreds on, I had better things to do.
    [Show full text]
  • Do Judicial Scarlet Letters Violate the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eight Amendment Gregory M
    Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly Volume 16 Article 4 Number 1 Fall 1988 1-1-1988 Do Judicial Scarlet Letters Violate the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eight Amendment Gregory M. Brown Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.uchastings.edu/ hastings_constitutional_law_quaterly Part of the Constitutional Law Commons Recommended Citation Gregory M. Brown, Do Judicial Scarlet Letters Violate the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eight Amendment, 16 Hastings Const. L.Q. 115 (1988). Available at: https://repository.uchastings.edu/hastings_constitutional_law_quaterly/vol16/iss1/4 This Note is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals at UC Hastings Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly by an authorized editor of UC Hastings Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. NOTE Do Judicial "Scarlet Letters" Violate the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of .the Eighth Amendment? "[A] penalty which, in our days, would infer a degree of mocking infamy and ridicule, might then be invested with almost as stem a dignity as the punishment of death itself."1 Introduction In an attempt to reduce escalating correctional facility costs and prison overcrowding as well as find a more effective form of punishment, some trial judges have begun imposing "scarlet letter" probation condi- tions on convicted defendants. These creative sentences can be effective punishments2 because they expose individuals involved in "antisocial" conduct to public scrutiny.' In three recently decided cases, Goldschmitt' v. State,4 State v. Kirby,5 and State v. Bateman,6 judges imposed scarlet letter probation conditions upon the convicted defendants.
    [Show full text]
  • My Drift Title: Triple Crown Written By: Jerry D
    My Drift Title: Triple Crown Written by: Jerry D. Petersen Date: 20 May 2017 Article Number: 259-2017-15 The Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Horse Racing, better known as the Triple Crown, is a title awarded to a three-year-old thoroughbred horse who wins the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, and Belmont Stakes. The three races were inaugurated in different years, the last being the Kentucky Derby in 1875. These races are now run annually in May and early June of each year. The Triple Crown Trophy, commissioned in 1950 but awarded to all previous winners as well as those after 1950, is awarded to a Triple Crown winner. The Triple Crown Trophy Churchill Downs thoroughbred racetrack is located on Central Avenue in south Louisville, Kentucky. It is most famous for hosting the Kentucky Derby annually (on the first Saturday of May). This race is nicknamed, “The Run for the Roses.” The track is named for John and Henry Churchill who provided the land. It officially opened in 1875 and held the first Kentucky Derby and the first Kentucky Oaks in the same year. Churchill Downs has also hosted the renowned Breeders' Cup on eight occasions, most recently in 2011. Churchill Downs Front Inside Churchill Downs The Kentucky Derby Pimlico Race Course is a thoroughbred horse racetrack in Baltimore, Maryland, most famous for hosting the Preakness Stakes. Its name is derived from the 1660s when English settlers named the area where the facility currently stands in honor of Olde Ben Pimlico's Tavern in London. The racetrack is nicknamed "Old Hilltop" after a small rise in the infield that became a favorite gathering place for thoroughbred trainers and race enthusiasts.
    [Show full text]
  • One Hundred Years of Criminological Development in Illinois Andrew A
    Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Volume 24 Article 2 Issue 1 May-June Summer 1933 One Hundred Years of Criminological Development in Illinois Andrew A. Bruce Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/jclc Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Criminology Commons, and the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons Recommended Citation Andrew A. Bruce, One Hundred Years of Criminological Development in Illinois, 24 Am. Inst. Crim. L. & Criminology 11 (1933-1934) This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology by an authorized editor of Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF CRIMINOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT IN ILLINOIS ANDREW A. BRUCE1 Since the year 1833, which is the beginning of the century that we are chronicling, we find a steady growth of humanitarianism in the American criminal law and in its administration, though that humanitarianism has not always been scientific, consistent or even in- telligent. What is true of the United States as a whole is true also of Illinois. No American state has been without its forebears. In the history and development of Illinois are to be found the influences of many inheritances and of many traditions. Illinois Under the French As far as the white man is concerned, the history of the state or territory started in 1718 when colonists were sent out from France and the Fort of Kaskaskia was erected in its southern portion. If any law was known during the French occupancy other than that of the military officers and of the clergy and the law of self-help of the frontier, it was the French Law of the so-called Customs of Paris which antedated the French Revolution.
    [Show full text]