Phillipe & Jorge: Comey, Linc and Congrats —

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Phillipe & Jorge: Comey, Linc and Congrats — Phillipe & Jorge: Comey, Linc and Congrats — Is That Good Enough? Comets, Computers and Comey May we now put the sensationalized testimony of former FBI director James Comey before Congress into the mausoleum already containing such equally overhyped events as the extravagantly promoted (non) appearance of Comet Kohoutek in late 1973 and the Y2K “Millenium Bug” that was going to crash every computer in the world and throw the planet into darkness and disarray. Okay, okay. Yes, he called Trump a liar. Anyone drop in from Mars recently that we need to get up to speed on that daily-proven charge? Yes, he made a fairly good case for eventual obstruction of justice charges, but do you think that is going to get him impeached by his bought-and-paid-for fellas in the US House of Representatives (read: Trogolodytes)? No chance, thank you very much. And was there ever a question that Comey was cashiered because he was looking into the Russia/Trump administration collusion with Russia? If you think otherwise, let Phillipe and Jorge show you our photos of some prime waterfront properties we can get you for a song right now on the barrier islands of North Carolina, which are guaranteed to be sea level rise resistant. Given the above, P&J went searching for the finer moments attending Comey’s diva performance at the Capitol on June 8 that pre-empted programming on every TV station/network with even a pretense of having a passing relationship with real news. How Andy Cohen stayed on topic with housewives that day is a mystery to us. Perhaps the best sideshow was “the nut doesn’t fall far from the tree” performance by one of the Orange Orangutan’s sons on Twitter. (We don’t know if Donald, Jr. is Beavis or Butthead, not that it matters between those two pomaded, arrogant douchebags. Let’s just say Beavis, since he’s the oldest.) Beavis evidently tweeted, a la Daddy, more than 80 times before 6:30pm that day, generally defending and explaining his father (don’t try this at home, kids). Now P&J know it is not easy to type out mini- screeds that many times using only your cloven trotters, and recognize the effort that must have gone into this twitstorm. While it may have possibly lacked any intelligence — and we’re talking the 2+2 variety, not that of international espionage — we give full points to Beavis for maintaining his focus for that long and not being distracted by shiny objects, pieces of brightly colored paper or reruns of ”Duck Dynasty” being aired at the same time. It is indeed a sad time in America when a brainless, limited-to-140-characters (not even 140 words!) method of communication rules our personal discourse. Has our inability to speak for longer than that, never mind hope that someone may be able to actually digest messages that exceed that amount, is now deemed acceptable? (At this point, someone should kick the soapbox out from underneath us and shut off the valve to imperious and embarrassing moral grandstanding upon which we are evidently feeding.) “In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure dome decree. Where Alph, the sacred river, ran through caverns measureless to man down to a sunless…” Oops, sorry Mr. Coleridge, you’ve got to hold it right there. Thanks for coming in for the communications audition, and we’ll get back to you. Yes, It Was Good Enough In a memorable scene in the semi-sports 1957 movie Fear Strikes Out, a wild-eyed Anthony Perkins, portraying former Boston Red Sox star Jimmy Piersall, climbs the mesh screen behind home plate in a moment of madness following a home run, screaming at his domineering father in the stands, played by Karl Malden, “Is that good enough? Is that good enough?” It has been a Phillipe and Jorge twisted catchphrase even since. We mention this because Piersall, beloved by Boston fans, and those of the teams he subsequently moved on to in a 17-year career, passed away just recently. And Fear Strikes Out not only focused on Piersall the player, but his mental illness, as he was formally diagnosed later in life as being bi-polar. In those days he was just, in baseball parlance, a “flake.” And the film was cited by many in the medical/psychiatric field as an important spotlight on how mental illness could manifest itself and be treated. Piersall was a star athlete at nearby Waterbury High in Connecticut, actually more renowned for his basketball skills than his baseball skills. After the Red Sox signed him and brought him up to the majors in the early 1950s, the Piersall circus had started. And while he became a two-time All Star for the BoSox, he had some truly sad moments such as taunting legendary pitcher Satchel Paige to the point of being reprimanded for it and spanking a teammate’s child in the clubhouse. And he got into a fistfight with the Yankees’ Billy Martin, but that could be viewed as commendable in many quarters. But Jimmy did deliver some moments that could bring a smile to the faces of those who saw the playfulness within the disease. In Yankee Stadium, he disappeared during a game in New York from his position mid-inning to hide behind the famed monuments in center field. Afterward, he said he was having a conversation with Babe Ruth. And when he hit his 100th career home run while he was with the NY Mets, he ran around the bases in the proper direction for a home run trot, but did it facing backward. And one time he went to bat wearing a Beatles wig, playing air guitar with his Louisville Slugger. Piersall was able to control his illness in later years, becoming a well-liked announcer for the Texas Rangers and Chicago White Sox, the latter of which he was fired from for criticizing the team’s management on the air. Hey, whatcha gonna do? They doubtless deserved it, and he had the balls to say so. Hail and farewell, Jimmy Piersall. You left some joyous memories. And planned or not, brought some important and humanizing moments to the perception and treatment of mental illness. Linc to Create New Party? An item reported by the Associated Press on June 9 caught Phillipe and Jorge’s eyes. The story claimed that former Biggest Little governor, US senator and (yes) presidential candidate, Linc Chafee was considering another gubernatorial run, but probably not as a Democrat (his current party affiliation) and definitely not as a Republican. What could this mean? Darned if we know. Of course, we’re already in the bag for Joe Trillo (not!). Sleep tight, Little Rhody. Kudos and Congrats … to the 42 workers from Taco Inc. in Cranston who were able to claim a million bucks in “Bow Wow Ball” (formerly known as Powerball) winnings last week. … to Mother Nature for coming through with that warmer weather all us Vo Dilunduhs have been waiting for. As your superior correspondents always say, “Better late than nevah.” … we truly would have liked to have added the state DMV to this list. We guess that’s going to be another “better late than nevah” situation..
Recommended publications
  • Castrovince | October 23Rd, 2016 CLEVELAND -- the Baseball Season Ends with Someone Else Celebrating
    C's the day before: Chicago, Cleveland ready By Anthony Castrovince / MLB.com | @castrovince | October 23rd, 2016 CLEVELAND -- The baseball season ends with someone else celebrating. That's just how it is for fans of the Indians and Cubs. And then winter begins, and, to paraphrase the great meteorologist Phil Connors from "Groundhog Day," it is cold, it is gray and it lasts the rest of your life. The city of Cleveland has had 68 of those salt-spreading, ice-chopping, snow-shoveling winters between Tribe titles, while Chicagoans with an affinity for the North Siders have all been biding their time in the wintry winds since, in all probability, well before birth. Remarkably, it's been 108 years since the Cubs were last on top of the baseball world. So if patience is a virtue, the Cubs and Tribe are as virtuous as they come. And the 2016 World Series that arrives with Monday's Media Day - - the pinch-us, we're-really-here appetizer to Tuesday's intensely anticipated Game 1 at Progressive Field -- is one pitting fan bases of shared circumstances and sentiments against each other. These are two cities, separated by just 350 miles, on the Great Lakes with no great shakes in the realm of baseball background, and that has instilled in their people a common and eventually unmet refrain of "Why not us?" But for one of them, the tide will soon turn and so, too, will the response: "Really? Us?" Yes, you. Imagine what that would feel like for Norman Rosen. He's 90 years old and wise to the patience required of Cubs fandom.
    [Show full text]
  • 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
    [Show full text]
  • The Baseball Film in Postwar America ALSO by RON BRILEY and from MCFARLAND
    The Baseball Film in Postwar America ALSO BY RON BRILEY AND FROM MCFARLAND The Politics of Baseball: Essays on the Pastime and Power at Home and Abroad (2010) Class at Bat, Gender on Deck and Race in the Hole: A Line-up of Essays on Twentieth Century Culture and America’s Game (2003) The Baseball Film in Postwar America A Critical Study, 1948–1962 RON BRILEY McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Jefferson, North Carolina, and London All photographs provided by Photofest. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Briley, Ron, 1949– The baseball film in postwar America : a critical study, 1948– 1962 / Ron Briley. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-7864-6123-3 softcover : 50# alkaline paper 1. Baseball films—United States—History and criticism. I. Title. PN1995.9.B28B75 2011 791.43'6579—dc22 2011004853 BRITISH LIBRARY CATALOGUING DATA ARE AVAILABLE © 2011 Ron Briley. All rights reserved No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. On the cover: center Jackie Robinson in The Jackie Robinson Story, 1950 (Photofest) Manufactured in the United States of America McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers Box 611, Jefferson, North Carolina 28640 www.mcfarlandpub.com Table of Contents Preface 1 Introduction: The Post-World War II Consensus and the Baseball Film Genre 9 1. The Babe Ruth Story (1948) and the Myth of American Innocence 17 2. Taming Rosie the Riveter: Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949) 33 3.
    [Show full text]
  • Torrance Herald
    18 THE TORRANCE HERALD NOVEMBER 18, 1962 Fearless Charles McCabe 'Goonybird' Draws Blue Law Legislation One notes with interest that a Boston legislator A blue law is some officious John's idea of what is It's a pity our Boston friend based his high prin­ other reasons to deplore any attempt to temper the at athletes. t Is trying to fix it so a spectator directing abusive lan­ good for even-body else, made into a writ. ciples on so fragile a vessel as Jimmy Piersall. Piersall more violent verbal brickbats thrown and partly a cunning man who It's one of the axioms of show business that the guage toward a participant in a sporting event would In times past in New England it has been deemed is partly a sick man illegal for a woman to kiss her child on the Sabbath, trades on his sickness and his even greater reputation price of a pasteboard includes the right to boo like b« subject to a $50 fine. or for anyone saw an authorized clergyman to cross for it. hell, if the spirit moves. And in case you haven't been This valiant effort to take the fun out of sport a river on the same day. or to play any musical in­ That he does all this with the pleased connivance let in on the secret, professional sport is a part of comes from deep in the heart of the blue law country. strument except drums, trumpet and jewsharp. or of his employers does not enhance the sacred name of show biz.
    [Show full text]
  • National~ Pastime
    'II Welcome to baseball's past, as vigor­ TNP, ous, discordant, and fascinating as that ======.==1 of the nation whose pastime is cele­ brated in these pages. And to those who were with us for TNP's debut last fall, welcome back. A good many ofyou, we suspect, were introduced to the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) with that issue, inasmuchas the membership of the organization leapt from 1600 when this column was penned last year to 4400 today. Ifyou are not already one of our merry band ofbaseball buffs, we ==========~THE-::::::::::::================== hope you will considerjoining. Details about SABR mem­ bership and other Society publications are on the inside National ~ Pastime back cover. A REVIEW OF BASEBALL HISTORY What's new this time around? New writers, for one (excepting John Holway and Don Nelson, who make triumphant return appearances). Among this year's crop is that most prolific ofauthors, Anon., who hereby goes The Best Fielders of the Century, Bill Deane 2 under the nom de plume of "Dr. Starkey"; his "Ballad of The Day the Reds Lost, George Bulkley 5 Old Bill Williams" is a narrative folk epic meriting com­ The Hapless Braves of 1935, Don Nelson 10 parison to "Casey at the Bat." No less worthy ofattention Out at Home,jerry Malloy 14 is this year's major article, "Out at Home," an exam­ Louis Van Zelst in the Age of Magic, ination of how the color line was drawn in baseball in john B. Holway 30 1887, and its painful consequences for the black players Sal Maglie: A Study in Frustration, then active in Organized Baseball.
    [Show full text]
  • Ejection Patterns
    Ejections Through the Years and the Impact of Expanded Replay Ejections are a fascinating part of baseball and some have led to memorable confrontations, several of which are readily accessible in various electronic archives. Perhaps surprisingly, reliable information on ejections has been available only sporadically and there are many conflicting numbers in both print and on-line for even the most basic data such as the number of times a given player, manager or umpire was involved. The first comprehensive compilation of ejection data was carried out over many years by the late Doug Pappas, a tireless researcher in many areas of baseball, including economic analyses of the game. He not only amassed the details of over 11,000 ejections, he also lobbied intensely to have ejection information become a standard part of the daily box scores. He was successful in that effort and we have him to thank for something we now take for granted. After Doug’s passing, his ejection files made their way to Retrosheet where they were maintained and updated by the late David Vincent who expanded the database to over 15,000 events. In 2015, David used the expanded data in the Retrosheet files as the basis for an article which provided some fine background on the history of ejections along with many interesting anecdotes about especially unusual occurrences ((https://www.retrosheet.org/Research/VincentD/EjectionsHistory.pdf). Among other things, David noted that ejections only began in 1889 after a rule change giving umpires the authority to remove players, managers, and coaches as necessary. Prior to that time, offensive actions could only be punished by monetary fines.
    [Show full text]
  • Piersall Never Politically Correct, Always
    Piersall never politically correct, always a great listen By George Castle, CBM Historian Posted Sunday, June 4, 2017 The term “politically correct” pervades our so- ciety. Fortunately for Jimmy Piersall’s later claim to fame, he burst on the broadcast scene before on-air personalities had to practically weigh every word and who it might upset. He could have not become the wild, and crazy (as Piersall said he had papers to prove) guy the liberal Bill Veeck barely could allow on the air on White Sox broadcasts, and the far more conservative WGN did not dare re-unite with Harry Caray on Cubs games in the mid-1980s. If anything, sometimes Piersall – who died June 3 at 87 -- was too hot to handle. The first in-depth interview I conducted with Piersall at his Wheaton home in 1985, when he hosted a WIND-Radio talk show, featured one stream of consciousness about prominent Chicagoans, and by connection to me, so far beyond politi- cally correct that I did not dare use it in a local article. Jimmy and Jan Piersall at their Wheaton home. Fortunately, Piersall had mellowed just a tad by 2013, when through the assistance of longtime Chicago media mainstay Tom Shaer I returned to the Piersall homestead. With wife Jan producing her trademark brownies to sweeten the deal, Piersall still had his rapier style sharpened at 83, yet he was as in- formative and revealing as an octogenarian can be. The session ended up with the last in-depth interview Piersall conducted: http://chicagobaseballmuseum.org/files/CBM-Jimmy-Piersall-part1-20130423.pdf http://chicagobaseballmuseum.org/files/CBM-Jimmy-Piersall-part2-20130426.pdf We’ve heard back that Piersall appreciated the finished product on the Chicago Base- ball Museum web site.
    [Show full text]
  • 1952 Bowman Baseball Checklist
    1952 Bowman Baseball Checklist 1 Yogi Berra 2 Bobby Thomson 3 Fred Hutchinson 4 Robin Roberts 5 Minnie MinRookie Card 6 Virgil Stallcup 7 Mike Garcia 8 Pee Wee Reese 9 Vern Stephens 10 Bob Hooper 11 Ralph Kiner 12 Max Surkont 13 Cliff Mapes 14 Cliff Chambers 15 Sam Mele 16 Turk Lown 17 Ed Lopat 18 Don Mueller 19 Bob Cain 20 Willie Jones 21 Nellie Fox 22 Willie RamsWillard Ramsdell on Card 23 Bob Lemon 24 Carl Furillo 25 Mickey McDermott 26 Eddie Joost 27 Joe Garagiola 28 Roy Hartsfield 29 Ned Garver 30 Red Schoendienst 31 Eddie Yost 32 Eddie Miksis 33 Gil McDougRookie Card 34 Alvin Dark 35 Granny Hamner 36 Cass Michaels 37 Vic Raschi 38 Whitey Lockman 39 Vic Wertz 40 Bubba Church 41 Chico Carrasquel 42 Johnny Wyrostek 43 Bob Feller Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 44 Roy Campanella 45 Johnny Pesky 46 Carl Scheib 47 Pete Castiglione 48 Vern Bickford 49 Jim Hearn 50 Gerry Stale Jerry Staley on Card 51 Gil Coan 52 Phil Rizzuto 53 Richie Ashburn 54 Billy Pierce 55 Ken Raffensberger 56 Clyde King 57 Clyde Vollmer 58 Hank Majeski 59 Murry Dickson 60 Sid Gordon 61 Tommy Byrne 62 Joe Presko 63 Irv Noren 64 Roy Smalley 65 Hank Bauer 66 Sal Maglie 67 Johnny Groth 68 Jim Busby 69 Joe Adcock 70 Carl Erskine 71 Vern Law 72 Earl Torgeson 73 Jerry Coleman 74 Wes Westrum 75 George Kell 76 Del Ennis 77 Eddie Robinson 78 Lloyd Merriman 79 Lou Brissie 80 Gil Hodges 81 Billy Goodman 82 Gus Zernial 83 Howie Pollet 84 Sam Jethroe 85 Marty Marion 86 Cal Abrams 87 Mickey Vernon 88 Bruce Edwards 89 Billy Hitchcock 90 Larry Jansen Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com©
    [Show full text]
  • Congeni Final Pages.Indb
    Copyright © 2016 by The University of Akron Press. All Rights Reserved. Cleveland’s Bitter Pill Copyright © 2016 by The University of Akron Press. All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2016 by The University of Akron Press. All Rights Reserved. Cleveland’s Bitter Pill A Diagnosis of Injured Title Dreams and Die-Hard Fans Joseph Congeni, MD with Thomas Bacher Ringtaw Books Akron, Ohio Copyright © 2016 by The University of Akron Press. All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2015 by The University of Akron Press All rights reserved • First Edition 2015 • Manufactured in the United States of America. All inquiries and permission requests should be addressed to the Publisher, the University of Akron Press, Akron, Ohio 44325–1703. 19 18 17 16 15 5 4 3 2 1 isbn: 978-1-935603-50-4 (paperback) library of congress cataloging-in-publication data Congeni, Joseph. Cleveland’s bitter pill : a diagnosis of injured title dreams and die-hard fans / Joseph Congeni, MD, with Thomas Bacher. pages cm ISBN 978-1-935603-50-4 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Sports—Ohio—Cleveland—History. 2. Sports injuries. I. Bacher, Thomas. II. Title. GV584.5.C58C66 2015 796.771'32—dc23 2014044295 ∞ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of ansi /niso z 39.48–1992 (Permanence of Paper). Cover: (Left to right) Ray Chapman (Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, LC-DIG-ggbain-27249), Ernie Davis (Photographs and clippings of Ernie Davis, University Archives, Syracuse University Libraries), and LeBron James (AP Photo/Mark Duncan). Cleveland’s Bitter Pill was designed and typeset in Minion with Helvetica display by Amy Freels, with assistance from Samantha Pasa, and printed on sixty-pound natural and bound by Bookmasters of Ashland, Ohio.
    [Show full text]
  • Brand New Vintage Sets 1955 BOWMAN FOOTBALL 1972-73 TOPPS 1962 TOPPS FOOTBALL Complete SET BASKETBALL COMPLETE SET Complete SET
    Page 1 KIT YOUNG’S SALE #165 Brand New Vintage Sets 1955 BOWMAN FOOTBALL 1972-73 TOPPS 1962 TOPPS FOOTBALL Complete SET BASKETBALL COMPLETE SET Complete SET Condition sensitive set with black borders, many EX/EX+, Average grade is EX+/EX-MT, some NR-MT, a few less. some EX-MT, some VG-EX/EX. Difficult and expensive Nice set (missing #100 Jabbar) – mainly EX-MT, some Classic 65 year old set. Includes Layne EX-MT, Walker to put together card-by-card due to the tough single NR-MT, a few less. Very consistent and sharp. A hot #1 EX+, Gifford EX+/EX-MT, Ameche rookie VG-EX, Ford prints in the set. Includes Unitas EX+/EX-MT, Berry EX+/ set due to Chamberlain, Jabbar, Erving, etc. Includes rookie VG, Van Brocklin EX, J.H. Johnson rookie EX, EX-MT, Ditka front VG-EX, back 2 small tears, Brown Chamberlain EX-MT, Maravich EX-MT, Robertson Perry EX-MT, Summerall rookie EX-MT/NR-MT, Blanda VG-EX print line, Ernie Davis VG-EX creased, Meredith EX-MT, Phil Jackson rookie EX+/EX-MT, West EX-MT, EX-MT, Ringo rookie EX+/EX-MT, Tittle EX, St. Clair EX+, Starr EX+/EX-MT, Hornung EX+/EX-MT, Taylor Jabbar A.S. EX-MT, Chamberlain A.S. EX-MT, Erving rookie NR-MT mc, Gatski rookie EX-MT, Landry rookie EX-MT, Packers team VG-EX, checklist 1 EX unmarked, rookie NR-MT back oc, Erving A.S. EX+/EX-MT, etc. VG-EX/EX, etc. $1375.00 Tarkenton VG-EX, Gifford VG-EX/EX, checklist 2 nice $1599.00 but several pencil marks, Marchetti PSA 7 NM oc, etc.
    [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]
  • Important Baseball, Political Ephemera, Political Cartoons and Photographic Collections of Cliff Evans, (1915-1983), Award Winning Print and Broadcast Journalist
    10/02/21 03:45:04 Important Baseball, Political Ephemera, Political Cartoons and Photographic Collections of Cliff Evans, (1915-1983), Award Winning Print and Broadcast Journalist Auction Opens: Mon, Oct 19 9:39am ET Auction Closes: Thu, Oct 29 9:00pm ET Lot Title Lot Title 0001 Nixon All Time Baseball All Star Team. 0004A 1971 Official Program of the Inaugural Concert In response to a WH press conference question at the John F. Kennedy Center for the from Clifford Evans, Nixon compiled and Performing Arts; Washington DC. Arts & published his all-time baseball all-star team. Culture Memorabilia Includes Signed Correspondence from the 0005 1960 Pittsburgh Pirates Souvenir Team President to Clifford Evans and Cassette Tape Baseball, sold at stadium. See list of signatures. Recording of His Interview with the President. From collection of Clifford Evans. {Full story recounted in ESPN hyperlink below} 0005A Letter from New York radio and press Baseball and US Presidential Memorabilia commentator Walter Winchell to Clifford Evans on New York Mirror Letterhead; Signed. 0001A Telegram from Ted Williams to TODAY show Journalism Memorabilia. sports editor Clifford Evans expressing his displeasure with how he was treated in an 0006 Signed 1956 Official All Star National League interview; and letter from Evans in response to Ball, All Star Game. Spalding.:Williams, Williams dated two days after receiving the Aaron, Musial, Spahn, Drysdale,+++ from telegram, April 16, 1958. Baseball collection of Clifford Evans (period piece, Memorabilia. excellent condition). 0002 1962 Letter from Jackie Robinson to Clifford 0006A Early Broadcast Journalist Clifford Evans' Evans; Signed. Baseball Memorabilia proposal to NBC executive Julian Goodman in Autograph 1960 to produce a documentary on Dr.
    [Show full text]