Two British Warships Ordered to Proceed to Mallorca

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Two British Warships Ordered to Proceed to Mallorca lARTON TELLS GOP TWO BRITISH WARSHIPS TO WIN FAITH NOW ORDERED TO PROCEED 1f»» PUT IN ROOSEVELT S ajs People DemanJ A PUb , J A P S SCRAMBLE TO MALLORCA ISLAND Urpe.Bro.dUVr.JPr.; PQR COHON AS Destroyers Depart Saddenly ' gram, Declares Railroads, . aunn\ Duce Advises Franco From Gibraltar For Italian ^ Mast Have Lower Rates. LIU b ILAl HrbU To Use ^Moderation* Airplane Base; Believed Indianapolis, June 29 — (A P ) — Imports Banned, 47 Types Rep. Bruce Barton (R.. N. Y .l. said A Warning Gesture To In Bombing of Ships today the “mass feeling" of faith — Of Articles Barred From whether "well founded or lU-found- Stop Attack On Steamers. ed"— In President Roosevelt was Production, As Screw Of Rome, June 29.— (A P ) — A spokes-.7name free ports In western Spain "the controlling political Influence man for the Fascist regime de- (Insurgent-held) where "honest of our day," and advised the Re- clared today that Italy had advised traffic" would have free entry. liOiuJon, June 29.— (A P ) — publican party to try to capture General Francisco Franco, the Cayda said the bombings were W ar Needs Is Tightened. Two British destroyers, the that faith for Itself. In a plain- Spanish Insurgent leader, to use fully justified and asserted that f spoken keynote speech prepared for "moderation" tn hla efforts to pre- "the Spanish command has not Imogen and the Isis, were or- the Indiana state Republican con- vent British and other foreign ships tombe(i British ships but contra- dered suddenly to Mallorca to- Tokyo, June 29— ( A P )— Wild ex- vention, Barton projected a party from bringing supplies to. govern- band ships.” He went on: campaign program which would ac- day from Gibraltar. citement prevailed In textile mark- ment Spain. •The rule that the flag covers the cept the New Deal reforms deemed The Admiralty described the eta today as manufacturers’ agents ’The spokesman, the noted editor merchandise certainly can not gov- "soimd," but would put national ad- Vlrglnlo Gayda, said, however, that ern In a struggle which has for Its movement as “routine” in con- ministration back in the hands of a fought frantically to buy the last Stalled at Scranton. Pa., by rain and a strike of workmen who refused to take a wage cut, Rlngllng Italy approved of the tombing of end the life and fortune of an entire nection with the Nyon anti-pi- "Republican party cleansed, chakt- shreds of raw cotton with the pub- Brothers-Barnum * Bsllcy’s "Greatest Show on Earth" folded its "big Top" for the summer at an unpre- vessels carrying contraband but nation.’’ ened, re-dedicated to service." racy patrol. lication of a government decree or- dentedly early date. Here workmen are folding the canvas to ship it along with other equipment to disclaimed any Italian responsibility The Fascist spokesman denied He told the convention that to The Italian-operated air- dering factories to quit producing a tha circus winter quarters at Sarasota, Fla. therefor. tjiat Lord Perth had" "menaced" Ignore the President’s popular ap- long list of cotton cloth and Iron In an Inspired article In the Glor- Italy In any way or brought up the plane base at Palma, Mallorca, peal was “blindness; to Inveigh products for domestic use. Giving nale D’ltalla, Ga](da disclosed the question of "Italian responsibility is the source of many of the against It Is political Insanity." Japan’s economic thumbscrews an^ content of the conversation last for the bombings." People Demand Plan insurgent air raids on the coast other twist as a result of the Chi- night between the Earl of Perth, N o doubt, said Gayda, the British “ 'Give us a plan.’ the people cry. of government Spain and Brit- nese war, the decree waa designed PROBERS TO CHECK Britain’s ambassador, and, Eorclgn ambassador talked about Spanish 'Show us 4 picture,’ ’’ he went on In part to promote export trade, Minister Count Galeazzo Cltno. affairs "with calm words” and "In- ish shipping in Spanish wa- ; "Here, In broad outlines. Is the STATE SEN. LAWLOR, particularly of cotton textiles, with- The editor said Clano told Lord vited" the Italian government to use Republican Iplclure: We see a lanji ters. Mallorca is 150 miles east Perth that Franco already had Ito “Influence In persuading General In which no more great fortunes are' out Increasing raw cotton imports. WILLIAMS’ SPEECH of Spain. taken a series of measures to give Franco to change hIs 'aerial war likely to be ama.saed: a land where Pleading with the people to re- May Halt Attacks main calm, the government assured the British government satisfaction policy." those who now have great fortunes Observers connected the move- them that present stocks of raw NAMED IN BRIBERY with regard to the long list of Rumors are Denied will be compelled to put those for- bombings of British ships, against ment of the destroyers with reports cotton would be sufficient to last Idslnuations that Italy was di- tunes Into production for the pub W PA Official Asked Work- which London has protested vigor- from Rome that Premier Mussolini thls^year. Thereafter .-Uple fibre rectly responsible for the bombings 11c good, or to have them legrally re. ously. had interceded with Insurgent Gen- distributed. and synthetic products will be used were strongly denied. "The conduct These measures, Gayda said, eralissimo Francisco Franco in an Instead. of the war and employment of "But It Is a land where the power CHARGE, IS STRICKEN ers To Keep Friends In were: effort to halt attacks on British Ves. to tax, which has been rightly term- Retailers Near I*anir equipment must be left exclusively First, Franco had given orders sels. ed ’the power to deetroy,’ Is used Exporters were jubilant since the to the will and decision of the that British ships should not be at- Both Mussolini's action and ths not to destroy but to stimulate. order wlll^*TOv+fhM3reIr) machines Power; Talk Unfortunate. Spanish commander", Gayda wrote. tacked while navigating. Admiralty’s were believed to be rs. "W e see a land where the farm with more rirr^materiaUbut retail- Any interference from Italy, he Reported Seriously lU From Respect British Flag suits of Increasing pressure on problem and the railroad problem ers were thrown Into a near panic. said, would be "a contradiction of Second, ho had ordered that the Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and the tariff problem, the houelng Scenes r e ^ b l l n g a frenzied bar- Spanish Independence, which Italy Washington, June 29.— (A P ) — British flag be respected as far as at home to do something to stop ths problem and the relief problem are L A T E N E WS respects and Intends to respect.' gain counter sale developed as they Ruptured Appendix; Had Tha Senate campaign funds com- possible In Spanish government attacks. treated not as separate problems ■The Perth-Ciano conference pro- battled to acquire every available porta. While worahlps are privileged to but as Integral parts of the-greater mittee checked up further today scrap of finished cloth. Third, Franco was willing to call at Mallorca at any time It was whole. W e see our soli conserved by Just Recentiy Recovered on a W P A official’s speech urging (Contlnned on Page ’^ o . ) Promulgated by Selhln Deeds, the FLASHES! believe<l the present movement was federal edd; we eee faelllUee for the minister of commerce, with the slo- the unemployed t o .. Rasp their In th*.nature of a "gesture" to com- free enrage of ot]rphjtf*viv)!|0' wc gan, "toward victory with all re- friends In power. mand the Insurgents’ attention and see an end to the program of scare* From Pneumonia Attack. sources and efforts," the decree list- SIGNS FLOOD CURB BIIX at the same time quiet opposition 9| Ity.” Chairman Sheppard (D., Tex.) ed 47 types of articles which will Hyde Park, N. 'Y., June 29.— (A P ) Parliament. Tens of Thousands of Jobs said, however, there was llttlo the be banned from production after — President Roosevelt announced to- committee could do beyond Its NYE INCREASES HIS LEAD Opposition members of Parlll^ "But we see railroads rehabllltat Waterbury. June 29.— (A P ) July 1, and announced 34 additional day that he had signed the 8386,- ment have been getting more and ed and tens of thousands of unem statement yesterday terming “un-, types of goods would be banned State Senator Joseph H. Lawlor, 500,000 onilbus flood control bill more sarcastic in asking where the ployed workers back at work— not fortunate" the address by Audrey July 18. one of five men charged with ac- “with some reluctance." British Navy was while ships flying by the strangulation process of Williams, deputy W P A sdfKlnistra- The newspapers reported that Asserting that It “1b unnecessary tor. OVER GOVEIWOR LANGER the Union Jack were being sunk. higher rates, but by the Ilfe-glvlng cepting a bribe while a member of | Ikeda’s hand trembled as he signed for nte to emphasize the importance Chamberlain was heckled by ths process of very low rates. Prosper. "W e have expressed our disap- the decree, but they found some the 1935 General Assembly, was re- ol carr.ring on a large and continu- opposition again at today’s session Ity, as every sensible man knows, ported today In a critical condition proval of the speech," Sheppard of the House of Commons. ing program to eliminate floods, told reporters. "There Is not much consists of volume multiplied by as a result of a ruptured appendix.
Recommended publications
  • Destroyer Jacob Jones Sunk by Sub; Japs' Invasion of Java at Standstill
    MONDAT, MARCH 2,1942* B ® TWELVE iSIamttrstrr lEvrtting lUniUi Average Daily Circulation The WMither John De Salvo of 24 Emerapn Fereeoet of V. 8. Weather Borsau The Cecillan club will hold Ita Susan Ann, five-year-old daugh­ A meeting of the Amerlcan- For the Month of Fehmory, 1*42 Mr. and M ra Harold t,. Mott Lltnuanian Civic Club, held to­ street is absent on a business trip and son Thomas have moved from regular < rehearsal Tuesday eve­ ter of Mr. and Mra. , Clayton E. ning in the South Methodist Pineo of • 58 W alker atrect, who night at 8 o'clock in thelr'hall on to NewlYork City. He la register­ A bou t Tow n Phelps Road to their newly built ed at thb Hotel Eklison. Ooeoaloasl Hght rain, slightly house at 22 Bowers street. church at seven o'clock <>ecause of was admitted last Wednesday at Oolwny street. 7,120 the blackout. the Hartford hospital, suffering Featured for Tuesday colder tonight; diminishing winds. Troop 16,‘B03r Scout* wffl hold with pneumonia, la much improv­ General Welfare Center No. 41 The Mary Cheney Library will Member of the Audit iU rosular meeting thle evening St. John's Sew-ing Club will omit dose tomorrow evening at 8:30 Bnreoa of CtrenUtions its meeting tomorrow evening on During th^month of February, ed and her parents hope to be able will omit Its meeting tomorrow taigteod o f tomorrow evening, and evening on account of the trial so that patrona of the library Manchester— A City of Village Charm account of the blackout.
    [Show full text]
  • Wings Win Scoring 3 Goals in 49 Seconds
    PAGE 22 DETROIT EVE NI N G TIMES (PHOSH CHERRY SBOOJ February 1943 Sports Wings Win Scoring 3 Goals in 49 Seconds HEIGHT MAKECTHEM PREP FAVORITES Irish to Follow A COMPETITIVE LESSON Rangers Fail to Book Reveals Baseball's Big Big 10 in Frosh Win 18th Time Service List Change r VJPS M- .. In Row, 5-4 By LEO MACDONELL Rule '¦w, - NEW YORK. Feb. 18 -The De- CHICAGO, Feb. 19 (INS).— W| ** 56 outstanding big lr igur troit Red Wings, who stopped the With ' Notre Dame was expected today f'"j S, Qi,}- * players listed for service. Cliff i r i'«S ffr' 'si* J ! Rangers last New Year Eve after | to join in whatever action Western going without being shut out latest edition Bloodgood’s Conference officials take Sunday through 128 games, and have been Who .n Baseba Just “Who* on the freshmen residence rule for intsrumental in several Ranger 7 rrVflvp,’ strikingly re\<al* t varsity sports competition during setbacks since, hurdled them into their eighteenth game * contribution to I'nde wartime. consecutive con- test without victory last night at fighting forces The South Bend. Ind., university Sam s ,yV.tLJB/V R H jf Madison Square Garden. the heron* was invited to send a representa- 1 ' The It likewise reveals score was 5 to 4. lonn task the Ame 1 tea n a?' d tive to the meeting of Big Ten ImF League- face il they directors of athletics which follow'* The Rangers have suffered more National than their share of injuries this ’ hope to provide the fan' hasrh.tl! the session of the conference fac- ' that approaches the brand of ulty committee at which abroga- season and the Wings have been* responsible greater ball to which Detroit and other tion of the freshmen rule will be for the part metropolitan centers arc accus- discussed.
    [Show full text]
  • 1937-02-11, [P ]
    w THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 11.1937 Major Leagues to Spend Over Half Million in Training Camps H. Y. GIANTS $60,000 Promoters Set New Contract-Si gning Date for Tide Warfare in Chicago, JOURNEY TO HAVANA Death of Virginia Cadet Reveals HOPE TO GET LOUIS FIRST SETBACK IN 35 GAMES Blackstone Club, TOPS EXPENDITURES FAILS TO UNSEAT 'A' LEADERS Tribune Victors Need of Reform in College Boxing BRADDOCK TOGETHER Frank Patera of Bakery Team Minot Holds Top Position; De­ Cards, Yankees, Athletics ant Poor Conditioning Another Rea- Has High Single and Three . Tragic Example Was Victim oi Joe Meyers Leads Tigers Receiving Substan­ mons Trail Aggies by Few Game Totals . Mismatch Frequent in son for Current Attack FEBRUARY 18 OR 19 tial Guarantees Pack Team to Win Percentage Points Collegiate Sport on Coaches Blackstone dub trundlers won two Soldier Field Site Still Uncer­ (By the Associated Frees) out of three games from the Bismarck match may be 4-4, each of the bouts Tallies Four Timet at Bismarck Despite their lone black mark in the Bakery and the Bismarck TMbune BEDS RETURN TO TAMPA By RICHARD McCANN may have been a pitiful mismatch, tain; Sheldon Clark I* took the Rlggs Place team by the same' NEA Service Sports Writer losers column, a defeat handed the like the Eastham-Lombardo bout. Weary of Delays Sextet Defeat* Mandan, Minot Magicians by the University margin In Commercial League Billy Eastham, his youthful pink Poorly Conditioned freshmen ending a string of 35 con­ matches rolled Wednesday night. Lifting of Ban on Pacific Coast cheeks speckled with blood and But even if the boys are equally 10 to 5 secutive victories cm the maple court, Frank Patera of the Bakery aggre­ splotched with angry red welts, matched in ability and experience it Chicago, M>.
    [Show full text]
  • * Text Features
    The Boston Red Sox Friday, April 3, 2020 * The Boston Globe Here are the best ballplayers I’ve covered, position by position Peter Abraham My first game as a beat writer was Aug. 6, 2002. The New York Mets played the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park and I was there working for the Journal News, a newspaper based in White Plains, N.Y. Two future Hall of Famers, Roberto Alomar and Mike Piazza, were in the lineup for the Mets that night. With Alomar on first base, Piazza homered off Ben Sheets in the top of the first inning and the Mets went on to win the game, 5-1. Looking up that box score led to this thought: Who are the best players I’ve covered in 18 years on the baseball beat? I had the Mets from 2002-05, the Yankees from 2006-09, and the Red Sox since 2010. For the purposes of this list, only players from those teams are eligible, and it’s based on how they played at the time I was covering the team. Here is my list: First base Mark Teixeira I covered one year of Mo Vaughn with the Mets when he was still good, and that was a lot of fun. But Teixeira had a .948 OPS for the Yankees in 2009 and finished second in the MVP voting for a World Series champion. He also won a Gold Glove. Mike Napoli had an outstanding 2013 season for the Sox. Adrian Gonzalez hit .321 with an .895 OPS in two seasons with the Sox.
    [Show full text]
  • Download the PDF of the National Pastime, Volume 20
    THE ----------- National G Pastime A REVIEW OF BASEBALL HISTORY The Lost Art of Fair-Foul Hitting Robert H. Schaefer 3 Ila Borders, Pitcher jean Hastings Ardell 10 Strike Out: A 1946 Baseball Strike Bill Swank 16 Dick Higham: Umpire at the Bar of History Larry R. Gerlach and Harold ~ Higham 20 My Start in the Newspaper Business Eddie Gold 33 The Polo Grounds Stew Thornley 35 Harry and Stanley Coveleski Dave Anderson 39 The Hawaii Winter League, 1993-1997 Frank Ardolino 42 Finding Andy Nelson Bob Tholkes 46 Pepper: The House of David Way joel H. Hawkins and Terry Bertolino 51 Chick and Jake Stahl: Not Brothers Dick Thompson 54 The Southern California Trolley League jayBerman 58 The Last Days of the New England League Charlie Bevis 61 Bill Frawley and the Mystery Bat Rob Edelman 66 Nelly Kelly's Waltz Edward R. Ward 69 Utica Indoor Baseball Scott Fiesthumel 70 Willard Hershberger and the Legacy of Suicide Brian j. Wigley, Dr. Frank B. Ashley, Dr. Arnold LeUnes 72 Ronald Reagan and Baseball james C. Roberts 77 Carroll Hardy, Pinch Hitter Bill Deane 82 Throwbacks: The Erie-Buffalo Baseball Club Mike Ward 84 Joe Gedeon: Ninth Man Out Rick Swaine 87 A Celebrity Allegory Larry Bowman 90 George Sisler Paul Warburton 93 Rube Marquard's Lucky Charm Gabriel Schechter 98 Millor League Pla'yer Ross Horning 101 Tilly Walker Marky Billson 105 Waite Hoyt, Conveyor of Baseball Memories Rob Langenderfer. 109 1907 Pacific Coast Championship Series Tom Larwin 112 Urban Shocker: Free Agency in 1923? Steve L. Steinberg 121 SaiIll Mally and lile Prince of Darkness Martin D.
    [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]
  • (Ireat Lakes Navy Nine Whips Fort Custers-0
    TIGERS TIE 2D AFTER LOSING IST ? ???? ???? (Ireat Lakes Navy Nine Whips Fort Custers-0 Tiger Box Scores COCHRANE BACK Pyllaks Homer Indians Chase FIRST GAME DETROIT Tt«S SPORTS DETROIT CLEVELAND AB H O A AB II O A 5 4 0 Hchcck.aa 2 0 2 Wthrly.cf 5 2 • McCky.lf 5 12 0 Hocket.rf 4 13 0 DETROIT, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JULY 5, 1942 Bridges Cramr.cl 5 3 2 0 Kellner,3 5 5 2 2 IN OLD STAND Scores 2 Runs to Win HlKin«.3 4 111 Meath.lf 4 110 York.l 3 0 5 0 Flmlng.l 4 2 9 0 Roas.rf 4 2 2 0 Bdrau.sa 3 2 13 Bldwrth 2 4 1 5 2 Mack,2 5 12 2 Tebetts.c 3 17 1 Denlng.c 3 15 0 Bridges,p 1 0 0 0 Mtlnar.p 1 0 O 1 Rally Opener, Goralca.p 0 0 3 Hrvtng.p 2 0 0 1 10 to 3 2 In Sailors' Tulals 35 11 24 9 Total* 35 15 22 9 DETROIT 020 010 000— 3 and Harris Second Game Is Called Cleveland 300 302 02a—10 Hutchinson Kuna -Cramer, Rmi, Bloodworth. Weath- in Tenth, 3-3, as Teams erly 2. Hocked. Kellner 3, Heath 2. Mack, Both Hurl Scoreless Dinning Error York Run* hatted In Keltner 2, Fleming. Boudreau 4. Bridges. Forced to Vacate Park Hitchcock. Denning. Weatherly. Rosa, Ball at Briggs Stadium Heath Two-base hits- Hockett, Mack, Keltner. Heath. Htolen bases Ross. W'eatherly. Sacrifice hlta—Boudreau 2.
    [Show full text]
  • France and Britain Fear Spanish Strife May Involve
    ^ Th* Manchester Barbers Aasocla- Joseph O’Brien has entered th* be donated for prises la short sarim- - ——... Those who hava J l l T f l O W N M tioo will bold their annual meeting employ of Fred Anderson at Us mlng race*. It Is plannsd also to ORFORDSOAPCOMPAMY been with tha company for I tonight In Pagani’s barber shop. lak atrsst tavsm. taeluds a numbsr of other prises that yeara will b* given malr pay for o f priMO glren away at Reports will be given and officers aril] be well worth winning. two week* and those who have been ^ Rafl Mon’a eanilval laat Batur* for the coming year will be elected. A surprlas birthday party was The drawings at the Pcmular have CLOSES FDR VACATION employed for a ehorter period ariU f war*: Attandano*. Traa- Tb* president of the Connecticut held Saturday night In honor of made a decided hit, and although be given their pay for on# waek. I Tooraand, PU; thrs* too* of State Ccmmisslon of Barbers’ was Miss Jean Parebak of 78 North they wUl be omitted thie week, next The RIAIJH cokp street and WUUam Chapman of 168 week—aa usual—they will be held at U, WUUain Uttla, WUUanu itreat, la Manchester recently and made Shot Down Saturday Noon for MAlkHW ili CONH- Bbiny: 800 ndloiu fuel oU, B. an investigation of'all th* shops Summit street at the home of the 8 o’clock, Tbureday night Two Weeks— Employees Get (TWELVE PAG ES) PRICE THREE CENTS tUmfwaM, 43H Sprue* atreet.
    [Show full text]
  • Front Page 7-7-16.Indd
    DETROIT TIGERS GAME NOTES WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS: 1935, 1945, 1968, 1984 Detroit Tigers Media Rela ons Department • Comerica Park • Phone (313) 471-2000 • Fax (313) 471-2138 • Detroit, MI 48201 www. gers.com • @ gers, @TigresdeDetroit, @DetroitTigersPR Detroit Tigers (45-40) at Toronto Blue Jays (48-39) Thursday, July 7, 2016 • Rogers Centre, Toronto, ON • 7:07 p.m. ET RHP JusƟ n Verlander (8-6, 4.11) vs. RHP Drew Hutchison (1-0, 5.40) Game #86 • Road Game #47 • TV: FOX Sports Detroit • Radio: 97.1 FM RECENT RESULTS: The Tigers closed their series in Bunning for the fourth most in franchise history. Cabrera TIGERS AT A GLANCE Cleveland with a 12-2 win on Wednesday a ernoon at is an All-Star for the seventh straight season and is the Overall ............................................................. 45-40 Progressive Field. Nick Castellanos fi nished a triple shy fi rst Tigers posi on player to go to seven straight All-Star Current Streak ...................................................W1 of the cycle, going 3x5 with two runs scored, a double, Games since Bill Freehan, who went to 10 straight All- At Comerica Park ...........................................23-16 a home run and fi ve RBI, while Ian Kinsler also had Star Games from 1964-73. On the Road...................................................22-24 three hits and scored three runs. Cameron Maybin also Day games .....................................................20-14 ON THE ROAD: The Tigers are 5-2 on their current 11- Night games ...................................................25-26 scored three runs and was 2x4 with a two-run home vs. AL East ........................................................12-8 run. Michael Fulmer started for Detroit and picked up game road trip, which includes four games at Tampa Bay vs.
    [Show full text]
  • Rousing Calls Lure Labor
    THE PLAIN DEALER . SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1998 5-D OURCENTURY 1937 ATA GLANCE City leads the way in public housing Rousing Dreams came true in 1937. Eighteen- hundred Cleveland families were able to move from rat-infested tenements or relatives’ spare rooms into gleaming new apartments at the Cedar Apartments, Outhwaite Homes and calls Lakeview Terrace, the first public housing in America. Dreams also came true for a 36-year-old council- lure man from Hough, then a middle-class neighbor- hood. Ernest Bohn had moved city, state and fed- eral governments — and, it labor seemed at times, the heav- ens, too — to create the Cleveland (now Cuyahoga) Strikes hit Bohn Metropolitan Housing Au- thority, also the first entity businesses of its kind in America. As a freshman councilman in 1930, the di- minutive Republican had talked his colleagues across Midwest; into setting up a special housing committee with himself as chairman. Its hearings turned violence reigns a spotlight on the wretched conditions in PLAIN DEALER FILE which thousands of Clevelanders lived. In By Fred McGunagle Strikers watch Corrigan-McKinney reopen from a bluff high over the Cuyahoga River. They were barred from 1933, he invited U.S. and world housing ex- gathering within 1,500 yards of the plant of the Republic Steel Corp. A maximum of 12 pickets were allowed at perts to a meeting in Cleveland, which drew ‘‘Organize!’’ John L. Lewis each gate. nationwide attention. shouted in halls across the Midwest, Bohn wrote legislation and pushed it his voice booming off the rafters. through the legislature.
    [Show full text]
  • Berlin 1936 Berlin 1936
    BERLIN 1936 Giochi della XI Olimpiade Berlino, GER ● 1/16 Agosto 1936 Discipline sportive : 21 ● Gare : 129 (Uomini 104 – Donne 15 – Open 10) Nazioni : 49 (Nazioni sul podio: 32) Atleti : 4066 (U 3738 – D 328) Atleti italiani : partecipanti 182 (U 169 – D 13) ● iscritti 210 (U 205 – D 15) Medaglie assegnate : 388 (130 Oro – 128 Argento – 130 Bronzo) Medaglie italiane : 22 (8 Oro – 9 Argento – 5 Bronzo) Premi italiani ai Concorsi d’Arte : 1 primo premio, 4 secondi premi ATLETICA 1500 METRI [6-8] 1. Jack E. Lovelock NZL 3'47"8 Olympia-Stadion (400 m - 7 corsie) 2. Glenn Cunningham USA 3'48"4 3. Luigi Beccali ITA 3'49"2 ● Uomini 100 METRI [3-8] vento = +2,7 Una delle più grandi corse di mezzofondo della storia. Al 1. Jesse Owens USA 10"3w cospetto di 100.000 spettatori e alla presenza di Hitler, la 2. Ralph Metcalfe USA 10"4w finale prese il via alle ore 16,15, con una temperatura di 3. Martinus Osendarp NED 10"5w quasi 18° e con i dodici atleti schierati in linea curva. “Ninì” Beccali partì alla corda mentre Lovelock si trovava Jesse Owens fu il primo al mondo a correre i 100 in 10"2. all'esterno, all'altezza della quinta corsia. L'italiano, che era Ottenne questo risultato il 20 giugno 1936 allo Stagg Field il primatista mondiale in carica con il 3’49”0 ottenuto tre di Chicago vincendo i Campionati NCAA con vento anni prima, non seppe sfruttare l'indubbio vantaggio favorevole misurato a +1,12 m/sec.
    [Show full text]
  • 05-27-2016 Tigers Game Notes
    DETROIT TIGERS GAME NOTES WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS: 1935, 1945, 1968, 1984 Detroit Tigers Media Rela ons Department • Comerica Park • Phone (313) 471-2000 • Fax (313) 471-2138 • Detroit, MI 48201 www. gers.com • @ gers, @TigresdeDetroit, @DetroitTigersPR Detroit Tigers (23-23) at Oakland AthleƟ cs (20-28) Friday, May 27, 2016 • Oakland Coliseum, Oakland, CA • 10:05 p.m. ET RHP Michael Fulmer (3-1, 5.13) vs. LHP Sean Manaea (1-2, 7.62) Game #47 • Road Game #24 • TV: FOX Sports Detroit • Radio: 97.1 FM RECENT RESULTS: The Tigers had their four-game in 74 games vs. Oakland. Cabrera is ba ng .343 TIGERS AT A GLANCE winning streak snapped on Wednesday as they (81x236) with 46 runs scored, 17 doubles, 19 home Overall ............................................................. 23-23 suff ered an 8-5 loss to the Phillies at Comerica Park. runs and 61 RBI in 64 career games vs. Oakland. Current Streak .....................................................L1 Cameron Maybin had a pair of hits, scored two runs Mar nez leads all ac ve players with a .348 ba ng At Comerica Park ...........................................12-11 and had one RBI, while Jose Iglesias was 2x4 with a average vs. the A's, while his .405 on-base On the Road...................................................11-12 Day games .......................................................11-8 run scored and a RBI. Miguel Cabrera, J.D. Mar nez percentage ranks second. Cabrera leads all ac ve Night games ...................................................12-15 and Victor Mar nez each added a hit and a RBI in the players with a .434 on-base percentage and a .657 vs. AL East ..........................................................4-5 loss.
    [Show full text]