(Iowa City, Iowa), 1956-06-15
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1955 Bowman Baseball Checklist
1955 Bowman Baseball Checklist 1 Hoyt Wilhelm 2 Alvin Dark 3 Joe Coleman 4 Eddie Waitkus 5 Jim Robertson 6 Pete Suder 7 Gene Baker 8 Warren Hacker 9 Gil McDougald 10 Phil Rizzuto 11 Bill Bruton 12 Andy Pafko 13 Clyde Vollmer 14 Gus Keriazakos 15 Frank Sullivan 16 Jimmy Piersall 17 Del Ennis 18 Stan Lopata 19 Bobby Avila 20 Al Smith 21 Don Hoak 22 Roy Campanella 23 Al Kaline 24 Al Aber 25 Minnie Minoso 26 Virgil Trucks 27 Preston Ward 28 Dick Cole 29 Red Schoendienst 30 Bill Sarni 31 Johnny TemRookie Card 32 Wally Post 33 Nellie Fox 34 Clint Courtney 35 Bill Tuttle 36 Wayne Belardi 37 Pee Wee Reese 38 Early Wynn 39 Bob Darnell 40 Vic Wertz 41 Mel Clark 42 Bob Greenwood 43 Bob Buhl Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 44 Danny O'Connell 45 Tom Umphlett 46 Mickey Vernon 47 Sammy White 48 (a) Milt BollingFrank Bolling on Back 48 (b) Milt BollingMilt Bolling on Back 49 Jim Greengrass 50 Hobie Landrith 51 El Tappe Elvin Tappe on Card 52 Hal Rice 53 Alex Kellner 54 Don Bollweg 55 Cal Abrams 56 Billy Cox 57 Bob Friend 58 Frank Thomas 59 Whitey Ford 60 Enos Slaughter 61 Paul LaPalme 62 Royce Lint 63 Irv Noren 64 Curt Simmons 65 Don ZimmeRookie Card 66 George Shuba 67 Don Larsen 68 Elston HowRookie Card 69 Billy Hunter 70 Lew Burdette 71 Dave Jolly 72 Chet Nichols 73 Eddie Yost 74 Jerry Snyder 75 Brooks LawRookie Card 76 Tom Poholsky 77 Jim McDonald 78 Gil Coan 79 Willy MiranWillie Miranda on Card 80 Lou Limmer 81 Bobby Morgan 82 Lee Walls 83 Max Surkont 84 George Freese 85 Cass Michaels 86 Ted Gray 87 Randy Jackson 88 Steve Bilko 89 Lou -
Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1955-08-17
--", .......... -- ..... - .. .. Serving the State University of Iowa Camp"s and Iowa City oman ~I'. t 161 - A' ~aed Wire, Wl,.photo - p;~ Cents Iowa City, Iowa, Wednewoy, August 17. 1955 I Hurricane Diane edifor;al . (The ......1 .. ettit.,., ...........cest ." ,... ....-. KXIC .. Itt 5:30 ...wac.. T..... , ...n"", lay .... M........ IOn.) Last night night about 8:30 a young manied (owa City woman wa apcosted in the north end oE town by a younl man, who blindfolded her, gagged ber, and fol'Ctl{l her down aD alley ~ , . at knifepoint. TIle a ailant stripped off her clothing, mole.ted her, then left. There was no assault. n '\loa The woman reported the incident to Iowa City pol joe, wbo . have been investigating it - ~uletly, proceedi,.g 0 as not.to tip . • • INO/A oCE the assailant that. he was being hunted, and al 0 0 as Dot to ~outh Kor.ea arouse thc cornmuOIty. ! ,., / :60lnjured In the spirit of moore interest In. the welEate 0( Iqwa City, A ~ . R . and out of desire to cooperate with our law-enforcement gain elects /- "During Riots officer, we observed their restrictioD on pobJiciziJa, the In· I . cident and the invc tigatlon. I\~ under simlfar circumstances in Red 8,' dS i the pa 't, w turned over relevant information that came tG our Bombay attention to the police department, in order to assist them in any SEOUL (Wedneaday) (,4') _ In way we mjl'ht be able. , South Korea l'uesPay rejecled BOMBAY. India ("'? - Riots, ~ Communist Chinese and North strikes, and demonstrations We felt that we wcre doing our duty; that we Welc acting Korean propo als lor unification I broke out TuClliday In many parts a bonellt, re~poJl ' lblc joumali1lts - passing by a nailer scll$a~ talks u "the ame old Com- ot Jndla to prolest the ra\~ I tiollal-typc ~tory - pa sing it by 00 fjv uccc i (" newscas munlst propapnda Une." ~,~~~Ill!t ',"f:,~ shootJnl of IS or more Indtans because we had becn asked by our police department, because "Any dlscusslons with the PUP- f during M.ooday's "pcaceful in vasion" ot Port~lIUese Jndla. -
The Lantern, Chester SC-October 7, 1904
Winthrop University Digital Commons @ Winthrop University The heC ster Lantern 1904 The heC ster Lantern 10-7-1904 The Lantern, Chester S.C.- October 7, 1904 J T. Bigham Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/chesterlantern1904 Part of the Journalism Studies Commons, and the Social History Commons Recommended Citation Bigham, J T., "The Lantern, Chester S.C.- October 7, 1904" (1904). The Chester Lantern 1904. 79. https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/chesterlantern1904/79 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the The heC ster Lantern at Digital Commons @ Winthrop University. It has been accepted for inclusion in The heC ster Lantern 1904 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Winthrop University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. NTERN. , S. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1904. SUCCESS, mocratic dicsepsiona Jha Repub- nuuaa. Col. Morae on Gambling. K-'MJJMy...!* Court ia Wionsboro. A Nrgto? No. "** is when hams are Charging that Chairman ion that the of tha cam- We are informed that the ore- The case of Keys vs. The Winni Another lynching? Certainly. A united—in the Dsm M'cGrsw ia aeceretly working to paign has ju and that dur torical hit ot the Cotton Planter's bO'O Granite Company, which was negro. No. Por the unmentiona- octette column. The IsteR bitting mskehfmstlftlie succersor of Sen- Ing the next 1 a record Convention recently held at St. being tried at the lim^ of going to wes at 10 to 9 that Hsrrlck would etor Scott and that he will use the breaking should be wsg- ble crime? Ns. -
American Studies Offered Owen Sets Plans for Summer Race
■■> I 1 ■•'_- " vol. L Madison College, Harrisonburg, Va., Tuesday, April 30, 1974 No. 51 J If these students didn't already know It from Art 200, they found out last Thursday on the quad — Art CAN be fun. (More on page 8.) Photo by Morgan Interdisciplinary Program American Studies Offered Owen Sets Plans Beginning next fall Madison the kinds of courses he or she many different professions For Summer Race will offer a new inter-dlscipl- desires. So far, 11 depart- such as museum and curat- Barry Owen, an outspoken Faced with an all Demo- inary degree in American Stu- ments are Involved In the pro- orial work, and more Indir- senior political science ma- cratic council that has govern- ] dies. The degree is under joint gram and 13 faculty members ect application to such fields jor, plans to run for an at- ed Glassboro for the last four sponsorship of the History and will be teaching courses appli- as Journalism, law, and libra- large city council seat this years, Owen hopes to expose English Departments, and will cable towards the degree. Five ry science. A minor in Amer- summer In his hometown of a local pornography issue with j at first offer only a minor deg- of the faculty members Dr. ican Studies nicely complim- Glassboro, New Jersey. He a truthful but aggressive cam- ree in the discipline. Sidney Bland, Dr. Cameron ents a major In English, His- Is one of two Republican can- paign. In reference to the While American Studies is a Nickels, Dr. Francis Adams tory, Philosophy, or any nu- didates on the June 6 primary problems that other local Re- new field of study at Madison Dr. -
W' Day Board of Ed Committee Sets
FORMERLY THE SCOTCH PLAINS TIMES AND FANWOOD INDEPENDENT 7OL. 9 NO. 19 SCOTCH PLAINS-FANWQQD, N.J., THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1968 10 CENTS A COPY W' Day Board of Ed Committee Sets By JOAN MQNAHAN Meeting Set rieail_1]n T)flv The regular meeting of ththee ^AvWll U U l^Uf Board of Education will be held up In honor of Mother's Day this Sunday, we present Board of Education will be held •«• * next, Thursday May 16, at 8p.m. some thoughts on the much-lauded, sometimes criti- in the Administration Building on cized, endlessly time consuming, often rewarding task Defines Action on East Second Street. of Mothering, What is it? The public Is invited to attend. Unsafe Buildings We think Mothering is: Included on the agenda will be Smiling - svhen an offspring pulls a special school a report by two members of the Plans for a general community clean-up in Scotch Plains were surprise from behind his back and, in so doing, faculty on the topic, "Health outlined at a Township Committee meeting on Tuesday, May S, dumps It - moist earth, two stalks of corn, and Education In Our Schools". Miss A low bid of $18,400 for the operation was approved, with low pansy seedlings - all over the new stair carpeting,,, Lynette Birkins and Mrs, Flor- bidder Scientific Chemical Treatment Company to receive the Convincing yourself, on the way to the hospital, ence Smarski, of the High School contract. To facilitate the cleanup, the township has been div- that stitches across the nose won't show In a fesv staff, will make the presentation. -
My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014
My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014 A complete record of my full-season Replays of the 1908, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1975, and 1978 Major League seasons as well as the 1923 Negro National League season. This encyclopedia includes the following sections: • A list of no-hitters • A season-by season recap in the format of the Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia- Baseball • Top ten single season performances in batting and pitching categories • Career top ten performances in batting and pitching categories • Complete career records for all batters • Complete career records for all pitchers Table of Contents Page 3 Introduction 4 No-hitter List 5 Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia Baseball style season recaps 91 Single season record batting and pitching top tens 93 Career batting and pitching top tens 95 Batter Register 277 Pitcher Register Introduction My baseball board gaming history is a fairly typical one. I lusted after the various sports games advertised in the magazines until my mom finally relented and bought Strat-O-Matic Football for me in 1972. I got SOM’s baseball game a year later and I was hooked. I would get the new card set each year and attempt to play the in-progress season by moving the traded players around and turning ‘nameless player cards” into that year’s key rookies. I switched to APBA in the late ‘70’s because they started releasing some complete old season sets and the idea of playing with those really caught my fancy. Between then and the mid-nineties, I collected a lot of card sets. -
2013 Syndicate Directory
2013 Syndicate Directory NEW FEATURES CUSTOM SERVICES EDITORIAL COMICS POLITICAL CARTOONS What’s New in 2013 by Norman Feuti Meet Gil. He’s a bit of an underdog. He’s a little on the chubby side. He doesn’t have the newest toys or live in a fancy house. His parents are split up – his single mother supports them with her factory job income and his father isn’t around as often as a father ought to be. Gil is a realistic and funny look at life through the eyes of a young boy growing up under circumstances that are familiar to millions of American families. And cartoonist Norm Feuti expertly crafts Gil’s world in a way that gives us all a good chuckle. D&S From the masterminds behind Mobilewalla, the search, discovery and analytics engine for mobile apps, comes a syndicated weekly column offering readers both ratings and descriptions of highly ranked, similarly themed apps. Each week, news subscribers receive a column titled “Fastest Moving Apps of the Week,” which is the weekly hot list of the apps experiencing the most dramatic increases in popularity. Two additional “Weekly Category” features, pegged to relevant news, events, holidays and calendars, are also available. 3TW Drs. Oz and Roizen give readers quick access to practical advice on how to prevent and combat conditions that affect overall wellness and quality of life. Their robust editorial pack- age, which includes Daily Tips, a Weekly Feature and a Q & A column, covers a wide variety of topics, such as diet, exercise, weight loss, sleep and much more. -
Greenberg and Interleague Play Tigers in Danger from Train Fire
Official Publication of Retrosheet, Inc. Volume 5, Number 4 December 1, 1998 Greenberg and Interleague Play As we come to the close of another year, it is conventional to summarize the big events of the last 12 months. We have done a lot this The last issue of TRS carried an article concerning interleague play year, for example, as discussed in the late 1950s. Hank Greenberg was the originator passing the 50,000 of the idea and our crack staff has tracked down the information. In View from mark in total May 1954, Greenberg, then GM of the Indians, offered a plan for games entered, games that count in the standings to be played between all NL and the Vault AL clubs. gathering David Smith, thousands more President Greenberg’s plan included four games between each AL and NL game accounts club, with two at home and two away. The intraleague contests from many sources would be cut from eleven to nine (home and away) to and increasing our visibility with the general accommodate these new games. However, that arrangement public as well as many Major League teams. would have to be modified each year since the eight game inter- league sets would add 32 games while the intraleague reductions However, this is also a good opportunity to would only account for 28 games. Greenberg said that the details think of ways to improve the organization in could be worked out later but the idea was to have a home and the coming year. To me there is one area away engagement with each club. -
The Wizard of Id: the Dailies & Sundays
THE WIZARD OF ID: THE DAILIES & SUNDAYS - 1972 PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Brant Parker,Johnny Hart | 224 pages | 09 Oct 2012 | Titan Books Ltd | 9781848566842 | English | London, United Kingdom The Wizard of Id: The Dailies & Sundays - 1972 PDF Book He co-created and drew The Wizard of Id comic strip until passing the job on to his son, Jeff Parker, in LitFlash The eBooks you want at the lowest prices. Johnny Hart Illustrations. Simon Gardenfors. Bedtime Games. Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date. Charles M Schulz. This book was my blind date! I always liked the "Wizard of Id" comic strip when we took the paper and my favorite ch On a trip to the library in February, I noticed a display with books wrapped in red paper and decorated with hearts and the sign, "Blind Date with a Book. Refresh and try again. There are running gags relating to the main cast, to a variety of secondary, continuing characters, and to the kingdom itself. August 17, Sep 14, Cecilia rated it did not like it Recommends it for: No one. Loraine Nunley marked it as to-read Jun 25, Apollo Creed added it May 01, In , Parker received a Reuben Award for his work on the strip. Looking for More Great Reads? This book is not yet featured on Listopia. Simon Fletcher rated it really liked it Mar 02, Add to Wishlist. Inspired by Your Browsing History. Categories : comics debuts American comics characters American comic strips Comics characters who use magic Comics set in the Middle Ages Gag-a-day comics. -
Interchange New Brunswick, New Jersey
VOLUME 1 of 2 nce Upon a Time in New Brunswick OPHASE II/III TESTING AND DATA RECOVERY, ROUTE 18/27 ALBANY STREET INTERCHANGE SITE NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY d Prepared for GANNETT FLEMING, INC. and NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION by JOHN MILNER ASSOCIATES, INC. MAY 2007 ONCE UPON A TIME IN NEW BRUNSWICK PHASE II/III ARCHEOLOGICAL TESTING AND DATA RECOVERY ROUTE 18/27 (ALBANY STREET) INTERCHANGE NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY Volume 1 of 2 submitted to Gannett Fleming, Inc. 1 Craigwood Road, Suite 205 South Plainfield, NJ 07080-2305 and New Jersey Department of Transportation P.O. Box 600 Trenton, NJ 08625-0600 by Rebecca Yamin, Ph.D. Alexander B. Bartlett Tod L. Benedict Juliette Gerhardt Catherine Masse Claudia L. Milne Leslie E. Raymer Karl J. Reinhard, Ph.D. John Milner Associates, Inc. 1216 Arch Street, 5th Floor Philadelphia, PA 19107 May 2007 ABSTRACT ABSTRACT John Milner Associates, Inc. conducted Phase II/III archeological investigations on the Route 18/27 (Albany Street) site between July 31 and October 23, 2003. The site included eight historic lots, four facing Albany Street, and four facing Water Street. The southern half of the site was previously tested by Dan Crozier and a team from Temple University in the 1970s. The features they found, some of them only partially excavated and several looted, were left in place and covered with tarps and a blanket of soil since construction at that time was not slated to disturb them. JMA re-located six of the previously identified features and found 31 more, 19 on the southern half of the site and 12 on the northern half that Crozier had not examined. -
One Fine Sunday in the Funny Pages” Exhibit
John Read is the creator and curator of the “One Fine Sunday in the Funny Pages” exhibit. A freelance cartoonist, John also teaches cartooning to children and is the publisher and editor of Stay Tooned! Magazine, considered the trade journal of the craft. The Comic Mode The comic strip provides a colorful and humorous respite from the serious and often tragic news that precedes it. There are many reasons for reading the “funny pages”; from the basic need to be entertained, to the desire to escape for a moment into what seems a playful combination of a joke and a sequence of images that illustrate the nonsense and play that generates it. Yet, what really constitutes the “comic” in a comic strip? Are they simply funny, as in Blondie, Garfield or Hagar the Horrible? Or do we sense underlying tones of irony, satire, political and social commentary as evidenced in Doonesbury, Non Sequitur, and Between Friends? How are we to understand the double entendre, the sting of wit or the twist of the absurd that infuses so many contemporary comic strips? It would seem that as in dreams, there are many levels to the comic mode. On the first take, the superficial or manifest appeal generates a smile or laughter. But as with many dreams and good jokes, there is the second take, a latent need to establish or defy meaning as embedded within the structure of the images themselves. The paradox or playfulness of the comic strip partially lies in discovering the truth in the nonsensical aspects of day-to-day living. -
Typical Girls: the Rhetoric of Womanhood in Comic Strips Susan E
Typical girls The Rhetoric of Womanhood in Comic Strips Susan E. Kirtley TYPICAL GIRLS STUDIES IN COMICS AND CARTOONS Jared Gardner and Charles Hatfield, Series Editors TYPICAL GIRLS The Rhetoric of Womanhood in Comic Strips SUSAN E. KIRTLEY THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS COLUMBUS COPYRIGHT © 2021 BY THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY. THIS EDITION LICENSED UNDER A CREATIVE COMMONS ATTRIBUTION- NONCOMMERCIAL-NODERIVS LICENSE. THE VARIOUS CHARACTERS, LOGOS, AND OTHER TRADEMARKS APPEARING IN THIS BOOK ARE THE PROPERTY OF THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS AND ARE PRESENTED HERE STRICTLY FOR SCHOLARLY ANALYSIS. NO INFRINGEMENT IS INTENDED OR SHOULD BE IMPLIED. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Kirtley, Susan E., 1972– author. Title: Typical girls : the rhetoric of womanhood in comic strips / Susan E. Kirtley. Other titles: Studies in comics and cartoons. Description: Columbus : The Ohio State University Press, [2021] | Series: Studies in comics and cartoons | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: “Drawing from the work of Lynn Johnston (For Better or For Worse), Cathy Guisewite (Cathy), Nicole Hollander (Sylvia), Lynda Barry (Ernie Pook’s Comeek), Barbara Brandon-Croft (Where I’m Coming From), Alison Bechdel (Dykes to Watch Out For), and Jan Eliot (Stone Soup), Typical Girls examines the development of womanhood and women’s rights in popular comic strips”—Provided by publisher. Identifiers: LCCN 2020052823 | ISBN 9780814214572 (cloth) | ISBN 0814214576 (cloth) | ISBN 9780814281222 (ebook) | ISBN 0814281222 (ebook) Subjects: LCSH: Comic strip characters—Women. | Women in literature. | Women’s rights in literature. | Comic books, strips, etc.—History and criticism. Classification: LCC PN6714 .K47 2021 | DDC 741.5/3522—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020052823 COVER DESIGN BY ANGELA MOODY TEXT DESIGN BY JULIET WILLIAMS TYPE SET IN PALATINO For my favorite superhero team—Evelyn, Leone, and Tamasone Castigat ridendo mores.