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Nazis, Take Poltava; Defense Crumbling; Kiev Gate Reached
Average Daily Circulation For the Mmth at Angwrt, 1941 T ht Weather ■ofemst «r U. B. W rnm sr B et m e 6,762 Fair sad eoatianed eml tonight. Msmber sf the Andit Saturday fair and woinwr. Med- BnroM of CIrculalleea eiots Borthcast to east wteds. Manche$ter^A City of Village Charrti (Clsaoifled Advertising On Page 14) rOL. L X - NO. 299 M a n c h e s t e r , c o n n ., F r i d a y , S e p t e m b e r i 9, 1941 (SIXTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS Russian and British Soldiers in Iran ^ oosevelt Rejects Nazis, Take Poltava; r Plans for Military Defense Crumbling; Defense Jobs Rule las Taken Action to In Kiev Gate Reached Lights Seen sure Civilian-Domin ated Agencies Control RuHsiaiifl Admit Penetra Way to Foil Two Groups , Sweep Supply o f Raw Mate- tion by Besieging Ger 300 Divisions Around Kiev in Mam Fials, Priorities, Pro Air Attacks man Forces - After moth Converging Of Under Arms duction and Exports. Fierce Fighting; Fresh fensives to Meet 125 \ Washington, Sept. 19.— (/P) Changing Patterns of Nazi Units Succeed in On Nazi Side Miles East; Four Red a -President Roosevelt, in- Bright Illumination Piercing Russian De Armies .Trapped Now ormed quarters reported to- fense Lines; Red Air Could Be Substitute Army. Official Says 100 Being Annihilated; Set lay, has rejected proposals ' For Blackout Theory^ Force Hits Invaders. Of These Yet to Be Ixisses at .3,600,000. hat would have placed a Itreater degree of control Thrown into Battle ------ Lynn, Mass., Sept. -
The Popular Culture Studies Journal
THE POPULAR CULTURE STUDIES JOURNAL VOLUME 6 NUMBER 1 2018 Editor NORMA JONES Liquid Flicks Media, Inc./IXMachine Managing Editor JULIA LARGENT McPherson College Assistant Editor GARRET L. CASTLEBERRY Mid-America Christian University Copy Editor Kevin Calcamp Queens University of Charlotte Reviews Editor MALYNNDA JOHNSON Indiana State University Assistant Reviews Editor JESSICA BENHAM University of Pittsburgh Please visit the PCSJ at: http://mpcaaca.org/the-popular-culture- studies-journal/ The Popular Culture Studies Journal is the official journal of the Midwest Popular and American Culture Association. Copyright © 2018 Midwest Popular and American Culture Association. All rights reserved. MPCA/ACA, 421 W. Huron St Unit 1304, Chicago, IL 60654 Cover credit: Cover Artwork: “Wrestling” by Brent Jones © 2018 Courtesy of https://openclipart.org EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD ANTHONY ADAH FALON DEIMLER Minnesota State University, Moorhead University of Wisconsin-Madison JESSICA AUSTIN HANNAH DODD Anglia Ruskin University The Ohio State University AARON BARLOW ASHLEY M. DONNELLY New York City College of Technology (CUNY) Ball State University Faculty Editor, Academe, the magazine of the AAUP JOSEF BENSON LEIGH H. EDWARDS University of Wisconsin Parkside Florida State University PAUL BOOTH VICTOR EVANS DePaul University Seattle University GARY BURNS JUSTIN GARCIA Northern Illinois University Millersville University KELLI S. BURNS ALEXANDRA GARNER University of South Florida Bowling Green State University ANNE M. CANAVAN MATTHEW HALE Salt Lake Community College Indiana University, Bloomington ERIN MAE CLARK NICOLE HAMMOND Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota University of California, Santa Cruz BRIAN COGAN ART HERBIG Molloy College Indiana University - Purdue University, Fort Wayne JARED JOHNSON ANDREW F. HERRMANN Thiel College East Tennessee State University JESSE KAVADLO MATTHEW NICOSIA Maryville University of St. -
A State College
'it .;*%> <Vt» ' I A (I j<5 4?.a * State's 16,000 Alumni Octolteb 1940 STATE COLLEGE N&uM. ABOUT THESE ALUMNI liif Qladyi M. 4->ua4>vk4, James A. Waldron is located in the American Express Company building Patriarchs in San Francisco where he is regional director of farm projects for the John I. Breck, '84, former director of the state bureau of foods and Farm Security administration. standards, died in Jackson, Michigan, on July 7. Mr. Breck received his law degree from the University of Michigan in 1888 and practiced in Paw Paw and Jackson, serving a term as prosecutor of Van Buren county. 1911 He became associated with the state department of agriculture in 1923 Howard and Fuchia Ryall Taft are making their home at 202 Fourth and made his home in Jackson. street, East Jordan, Michigan, where Mr. Taft is connected with the James Judson Benjamin, '87, a real estate dealer in Flint, Michigan, Eveline orchards. for the past 30 years, died in that city on July 10. He is survived by his wife and one son. Three members of the class of 1888 recently celebrated golden wedding 1913 anniversaries: Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. Yerkes held a reception at their Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Soltman (Ruby Clemens) and Louise I. Clemens home in Northville, Michigan, on May 28 ; and on July 30, Dr. and Mrs. recently moved from Seattle to Tacoma, Washington, where they are Nelson S. Mayo (Mary Lucy Carpenter) received their friends at the located at 1109 South 13th street. Her many friends will be pleased to Moraine Hotel in Highland Park. -
Certified School List 12-03-2014.Xlsx
Updated SEVP Certified Schools December 3, 2014 SCHOOL NAME CAMPUS NAME F M CITY ST CAMPUS ID "I Am" School Inc. "I Am" School Inc. Y N Mount Shasta CA 41789 424 Aviation 424 Aviation N Y Miami FL 103705 ‐ A ‐ A F International School of Languages Inc. A F International College Y N Los Angeles CA 9538 A F International School of Languages Inc. A F International of Westlake Y N Westlake Village CA 57589 Village A. T. Still University of Health Sciences Kirksville Coll of Osteopathic Y N Kirksville MO 3606 Medicine Aaron School Aaron School ‐ 30th Street Y N New York NY 159091 Aaron School Aaron School Y N New York NY 114558 ABC Beauty Academy, INC. ABC Beauty Academy, INC. N Y Flushing NY 95879 ABC Beauty Academy, LLC ABC Beauty Academy N Y Garland TX 50677 Abcott Institute Abcott Institute N Y Southfield MI 197890 Aberdeen Catholic School System Roncalli Y N Aberdeen SD 21405 Aberdeen Catholic School System Roncalli Primary Y N Aberdeen SD 180510 Aberdeen Catholic School System Roncalli Elementary Y N Aberdeen SD 180511 Aberdeen School District 6‐1 Aberdeen Central High School Y N Aberdeen SD 36568 Abiding Savior Lutheran School Abiding Savior Lutheran School Y N Lake Forest CA 9920 Abilene Christian Schools Abilene Christian Schools Y N Abilene TX 8973 Abilene Christian University Abilene Christian University Y N Abilene TX 7498 Abington Friends School Abington Friends School Y N Jenkintown PA 20191 Above It All, Inc Benchmark Flight /Hawaii Flight N Y Kailua‐Kona HI 24353 Academy Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College Tifton Campus Y N Tifton GA 6931 Abraham Joshua Heschel School Abraham Joshua Heschel School Y N New York NY 106824 ABT Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School ABT Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Y Y New York NY 52401 School Abundant Life Academy Abundant Life Academy‐Virginia Y N Milford VA 81523 Abundant Life Christian School Abundant Life Christian School Y N Madison WI 24403 ABX Air, Inc. -
Chapter CCXXIV.1
Chapter CCXXIV. 1 GERMANE LEGISLATION RETRENCHING EXPENDITURES IN APPROPRIATION BILLS. 1. The Holman rule. Sections 1481, 1482. 2. What constitutes retrenchment. Sections 1483–1502. 3. Reduction of number and salary of officers of the United States. Sections 1503– 1514. 4. Reduction of Compensation of persons paid out of Treasury. Section 1515–1517. 5. Reduction of amounts covered by bill. Sections 1518–1526. 6. Proposition must show on its face a retrenchment of expenditure. Sections 1527– 1546. 7. Proposition must be germane. Sections 1547–1549. 8. When accompanied by additional legislation. Sections 1550–1554. 9. General decisions. Sections 1555–1560. 1481. An exception to the rule forbidding legislation in a general appropriation bill admits germane legislation retrenching expenditures. Section 2 of Rule XXI provides: Nor shall any provisions in any such bill or amendment thereto changing existing law be in order, except such as being germane to the subject matter of the bill shall retrench expenditures by the reduc- tion of the number and salary of the officers of the United States, by the reduction of the compensation of any person paid out of the Treasury of the United States, or by the reduction of amounts of money covered by the bill. The original rule adopted in 1835 2 forbidding legislative provisions in general appropriation bills gradually became construed through a long line of decisions to admit amendments increasing salaries but as excluding amendments providing for decreases. To remedy this defeat the House in 1876 3 on motion of Mr. William S. Holman, of Indiana, amended to the rule to include the following: nor shall any provision in any such bill or amendment thereto, changing existing law, be in order except such as, being germane to the subject-matter of the bill, shall retrench expenditures. -
WICHITA STATE BASKETBALL TUNING in OPENING TIPS No. 4
WICHITA STATE BASKETBALL Contact: Bryan Holmgren, Asst. Director/Media Relations • [email protected] • o: 316-978-5535 • c: 316-841-6206 [4] WICHITA STATE (25-7, 14-4 American) vs. [13] MARSHALL (24-10, 12-6 C-USA) Friday, Mar. 16, 2018 • 12:30 pm CT (10:30 am PT) • San Diego, Calif. • Viejas Arena at Aztec Bowl NCAA Men's Basketball Championship • First Round 33 Winner to Second Round: Sunday, March 18 vs. [5] West Virginia or [12] Murray State [4] WICHITA STATE [13] MARSHALL OPENING TIPS TUNING IN Overall Conf Overall Conf No. 4 seed Wichita State (25-7 and ranked 16th in the latest AP TELECAST TNT 25-7 14-4 Record 24-10 12-6 and USA Today Coaches Polls) tips off its seventh-consecutive NCAA Talent: Carter Blackburn (pbp), Debbie Antonelli 13-3 7-2 Home 15-2 7-2 Tournament appearance Friday morning in San Diego against No. (analyst) & John Schriffen (reporter) 9-2 7-2 Away 6-8 5-4 Streaming ncaa.com/march-madness-live 3-2 Neutral 3-0 13 seed Marshall (24-10) on TNT. The WSU-Marshall winner advances to Sunday's second round RADIO Shocker Radio // KEYN 103.7 FM (Wichita) Lost 1 Streak Won 4 Talent: Mike Kennedy, Bob Hull & Dave Dahl 16 / 16 AP / Coaches -/- to face either No. 5 West Virginia or No. 12 Murray State. Streaming: none 16 NCAA RPI* 87 WSU and Marshall meet for just the third time. The teams split 20 KenPom* 114 a home-and-home, with WSU winning in Wichita in December, RADIO Westwood One // Sirius 145 & XM 203 14 At-Large S-Curve 54 Auto Talent: John Sadak & Mike Montgomery 1940. -
Michigan State Coaching Staff (Since 1947) Outlook
ALL-TIME RESULTS 1896 | 1-2-1 1900 | 1-3 1903 | 6-1-1 No Established Coach Head Coach: Charles O. Bemies Head Coach: Chester Brewer Sept. 26 W 10-0 Lansing H.S. H Sept. 29 L 0-23 Albion H Oct. 3 L 0-12 Notre Dame A Oct. 17 L 0-24 Kalamazoo A Oct. 10 W 45-0 Adrian H Oct. 10 W 11-0 Alma A Oct. 25 T 0-0 Alma H Oct. 20 L 6-21 Detroit A.C. A Oct. 14 W 11-0 Michigan Fresh. H 2013 Nov. 11 L 16-18 Alma H Oct. 27 L 0-23 Alma H Oct. 17 W 11-0 Kalamazoo H OUTLOOK Oct. 31 W 51-6 Detroit YMCA H HENRY KEEP GEORGE DENMAN Nov. 7 W 43-0 Hillsdale A Nov. 14 T 6-6 Albion H Nov. 21 W 45-0 Olivet H 1904 | 8-1 Head Coach: Chester Brewer 2013 Oct. 1 W 47-0 Mich. Deaf Sch. H SPARTANS 1897-98 (2 SEASONS) 1901-02 (2 SEASONS) Oct. 8 W 28-6 Ohio North H MSU RECORD: 8-5-1 (.607) MSU RECORD: 7-9-1 (.441) Oct. 15 W 29-0 Port Huron YMCA H Oct. 22 L 0-4 Albion A Henry Keep held the distinction of being Michigan The school’s third football coach was George Oct. 29 W 104-0 Hillsdale H State’s first head football coach. Not much is known Denman, a man whose Aggie teams won seven of Nov. 5 W 39-0 Michigan Fresh. -
06 FB Records1.Pmd
Annual Southern Conference Football Honors Coaches Player of the Year Media Player of the Year 1989 - (offense) George Searcy, RB, East Tennessee State The media player-of-the-year award is named after Roy M. “Legs” Hawley, who served as athletics director at West (defense) Junior Jackson, LB, Chattanooga Virginia from 1938 until his death in 1954. Hawley was instrumental in West Virginia’s admittance to the Southern 1990 - (offense) Frankie DeBusk, QB, Furman Conferece in 1950. He was inducted posthumously in to the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (defense) Troy Boeck, DL, Chattanooga Hall of Fame in 1974. (defense) Kevin Kendrick, LB, Furman 1991 - (offense) Michael Payton, QB, Marshall 1948 - Charlie Justice, RB, North Carolina 1988 - (offense) Gene Brown, QB, The Citadel (defense) Allen Edwards, DL, Furman 1949 - Charlie Justice, RB, North Carolina (defense) Jeff Blankenship, LB, Furman 1992 - (offense) Michael Payton, QB, Marshall 1950 - Steve Wadiak, RB, South Carolina 1989 - (offense) George Searcy, RB, East Tennessee State (defense) Avery Hall, DL, Appalachian State 1951 - Bob Ward, G, Maryland (defense) Kelly Fletcher, E, Furman 1993 - (offense) Chris Parker, RB, Marshall 1952 - Jack Scarbath, QB, Maryland 1990 - (offense) Frankie DeBusk, QB, Furman (defense) Alex Mash, DL, Georgia Southern 1953 - Steve Korcheck, C, George Washington (defense) Kevin Kendrick, LB, Furman 1994 - (offense) Todd Donnan, QB, Marshall 1954 - Freddy Wyant, QB, West Virginia 1991 - (offense) Michael Payton, QB, Marshall (defense) -
2019 Boys Basketball Records and History
KHS Basketball History James Naismith was credited with inventing the game of “Basket Ball” in 1891 in Massachusetts, and the great game made its way to Kokomo in the fall of 1903. Ironically, basketball started with the female gender, brought to the city by Miss Catherine Ashton Hughes, a Hanover College graduate and German teacher at Kokomo High School. Hughes had intramural leagues for the girls, and then boys started to show interest in the game as well. Toward the end of 1903, Louis Guetz was named the boy’s basketball coach in a sport just starting to gain interscholastic approval. The first boys’ basketball game in Kokomo High School history was on February 12, 1904. Kokomo hosted a team from Logansport, and the game was played in the eighth grade assembly room in the basement at the high school. Kokomo, which lost that game 23-21, had a starting five of Walter Applegate, Wayne Carr, Everett Bennett, Charles Rice, and Lee Rhodes. The first season saw a record of two wins and two losses. The Sargasso, Kokomo’s yearbook, reported that the first basketball team was “. .loyally supported by the school board, the superintendent of schools, the faculty and the students, and will no doubt remain the most popular athletic game in the school.” The nickname for Kokomo High School seemingly dates back to basketball in the 1915-16 season. A team showing great speed, agility, and a ferocious attitude led to a moniker of “The Wild Cats.” Of course, that turned into Wildcats, and in 1984, it officially became the Kokomo Wildkats. -
Butler Alumnal Quarterly (1925)
Butler University Digital Commons @ Butler University Butler Alumnal Quarterly University Special Collections 1925 Butler Alumnal Quarterly (1925) Butler University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/bualumnalquarterly Part of the Other History Commons Recommended Citation Butler University, "Butler Alumnal Quarterly (1925)" (1925). Butler Alumnal Quarterly. 13. https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/bualumnalquarterly/13 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the University Special Collections at Digital Commons @ Butler University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Butler Alumnal Quarterly by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Butler University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. V i THE BUTLER ALUMNAL QUARTERLY u ^i ^u I H iBailofliniYersi APRIL, 1925 INDIANAPOLIS Entered as second-class matter March 26, 1912, at the post office at Indianapolis, Ind., under the Act of March 3, 1879. CONTENTS THE FOUNDERS' DAY ADDRESS Dr. Charles H. Judd DINNER SPEECHES Professor Johnson and Dr. Judd AN EARLY FOUNDER'S DAY SONG Lee Burns ANCIENT LIGHTS Meredith Nicholson TRIBUTE TO CATHARINE MERRILL Dr. Harvey W. Wiley COLLEGE NEWS— Editorial From the City Office Athletics Butler in Chicago Butler Publications Commencement Program Faculty Notes Alumni Mention Marriages Births Deaths Our Correspondence — Butler Alumnal Quarterly Vol. XIV INDIANAPOLIS, IND., APRIL, 1925 No. 1 Founders' Day THE ADDRESS By Charles Hubbard Judd Head of Department of Education, University of CMcago. A NEW HUMANISM SUITED TO MODERN CONDITIONS There is a passage in one of Walter Page's letters which puts very vividly the theme which I wish to discuss today. Mr. Page, writing as the American ambassador to the British Court, describes to President Wilson a royal dinner given by England to the King of Denmark and in the course of his description comments on the difference between the American attitude toward ceremonial and the attitude of the typical Englishman. -
2017-18 Big Ten Records Book
2017-18 BIG TEN RECORDS BOOK Big Life. Big Stage. Big Ten. BIG TEN CONFERENCE RECORDS BOOK 2017-18 70th Edition FALL SPORTS Men’s Cross Country Women’s Cross Country Field Hockey Football* Men’s Soccer Women’s Soccer Volleyball WINTER SPORTS SPRING SPORTS Men's Basketball* Baseball Women's Basketball* Men’s Golf Men’s Gymnastics Women’s Golf Women’s Gymnastics Men's Lacrosse Men's Ice Hockey* Women's Lacrosse Men’s Swimming and Diving Rowing Women’s Swimming and Diving Softball Men’s Indoor Track and Field Men’s Tennis Women’s Indoor Track and Field Women’s Tennis Wrestling Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Women’s Outdoor Track and Field * Records appear in separate publication 4 CONFERENCE PERSONNEL HISTORY UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Faculty Representatives Basketball Coaches - Men’s 1997-2004 Ron Turner 1896-1989 Henry H. Everett 1906 Elwood Brown 2005-2011 Ron Zook 1898-1899 Jacob K. Shell 1907 F.L. Pinckney 2012-2016 Tim Beckman 1899-1906 Herbert J. Barton 1908 Fletcher Lane 2017- Lovie Smith 1906-1929 George A. Goodenough 1909-1910 H.V. Juul 1929-1936 Alfred C. Callen 1911-1912 T.E. Thompson Golf Coaches - Men’s 1936-1949 Frank E. Richart 1913-1920 Ralph R. Jones 1922-1923 George Davis 1950-1959 Robert B. Browne 1921-1922 Frank J. Winters 1924 Ernest E. Bearg 1959-1968 Leslie A. Bryan 1923-1936 J. Craig Ruby 1925-1928 D.L. Swank 1968-1976 Henry S. Stilwell 1937-1947 Douglas R. Mills 1929-1932 J.H. Utley 1976-1981 William A. -
Student Bill of Rights Submitted Free University R
Vol. LI, No.4 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASmNGTON, D.C. Thursday, October 12, 1967 Student Bill Of Rights Submitted Free University r. Action On Document Planned At GU I To Be Taken Shortly As Experiment i The Rev. Thomas R. Fitzgerald, In a letter to each of these, by Brian O'Oonnor :1 S.J., academic vice president, has Father Fitzgerald pointed out that Preparations are now well under submitted a student bill of rights the bill of rights is "an exception way for the establishment of a to the University Senate and to al document, deserving careful Free University at Georgetown. the University's six student coun study; while there may be indi The "curricula" of such a "univer cils. Entitled "Statement on Rights vidual details subject to dispute, sity" would amount to a series of and Freedoms for Students," the the underlying assumptions offer COurses and discussion groups tai document was drafted by five na a basis for fruitful discussion lored to the interests and talents tional educational associations. among the faculty, students, and of the participating students and The bill of rights will become administration." faculty. the basis for a discussion on the He continued, "What is assumed Initiation of the Free University student's state. It will be under is not a parental relationship to was begun in the last week of Sep taken by the entire University. wards the students, but one of tember with the organization of "We have been working in the mutual trust among groups of the Ad-Hoc Committee for a Free area of student freedoms for a adults willing to accept responsi University by Reese Fullerton and good three years," stated Father bilities." He also noted that "a Rich Rosenblatt.