Nixon to Address Nation Tonight
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Wih Seek to Mm Aldene Rail Plan
WiH Seek to Mm Aldene Rail Plan Distribution / Weather Heavy mow accumulation lix Today to «C«ht Inches by evening then Mdlog tonight. Windy and very 26,325 ,tyi today and tonight. High to- Red Bank Area f ~Wf 20-25, low tonight in teens. Tomorrow mostly,tunny windy Copyright—The Red Bank Register, Inc. 1967. DIAL 741-0010 • and cold, blglf 2M». MONMOUTH COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER FOR 88 YEARS thn>u*h Frid Seeonl CIIM Poitist 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE BA Mrv i K1 - Uiurt dilty, Monday th oBti Mtium otticw. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1967 89, NO. 157 pinii fi«l K! I Siat&M&j School Contract Awards KEANSBURG — The Board of Education continued to have change orders, to cut costs. It was on this procedural point "If we're putting the same weight in this building and yet Now we are told things can be. At this point we need research, Us problems last night as it learned that the state Department that' the state objected, noting that the pacts would be subjecC are cutting' $20,000 by using a different kind of piling why that's what we're paying the architect $100,000 for. Let's of Education has turned thumbs down on the board's method to challenge by other bidders. wasn't that saving put in originally?" she asked. not make decisions on suppositions, and put the taxpayers in of awarding junior-senior high school contracts. \ , Last night, as a result, the board rescinded its previous President Mrs. Margaret Boyle said she thought the archi- jeopardy." action and rejected all bids. -
National Pastime a REVIEW of BASEBALL HISTORY
THE National Pastime A REVIEW OF BASEBALL HISTORY CONTENTS The Chicago Cubs' College of Coaches Richard J. Puerzer ................. 3 Dizzy Dean, Brownie for a Day Ronnie Joyner. .................. .. 18 The '62 Mets Keith Olbermann ................ .. 23 Professional Baseball and Football Brian McKenna. ................ •.. 26 Wallace Goldsmith, Sports Cartoonist '.' . Ed Brackett ..................... .. 33 About the Boston Pilgrims Bill Nowlin. ..................... .. 40 Danny Gardella and the Reserve Clause David Mandell, ,................. .. 41 Bringing Home the Bacon Jacob Pomrenke ................. .. 45 "Why, They'll Bet on a Foul Ball" Warren Corbett. ................. .. 54 Clemente's Entry into Organized Baseball Stew Thornley. ................. 61 The Winning Team Rob Edelman. ................... .. 72 Fascinating Aspects About Detroit Tiger Uniform Numbers Herm Krabbenhoft. .............. .. 77 Crossing Red River: Spring Training in Texas Frank Jackson ................... .. 85 The Windowbreakers: The 1947 Giants Steve Treder. .................... .. 92 Marathon Men: Rube and Cy Go the Distance Dan O'Brien .................... .. 95 I'm a Faster Man Than You Are, Heinie Zim Richard A. Smiley. ............... .. 97 Twilight at Ebbets Field Rory Costello 104 Was Roy Cullenbine a Better Batter than Joe DiMaggio? Walter Dunn Tucker 110 The 1945 All-Star Game Bill Nowlin 111 The First Unknown Soldier Bob Bailey 115 This Is Your Sport on Cocaine Steve Beitler 119 Sound BITES Darryl Brock 123 Death in the Ohio State League Craig -
America's Church
Inside Twenty Something Slowing down and saying thank you, Criterion page 12. Serving the Church in Central and Southern Indiana Since 1960 CriterionOnline.com November 13, 2009 Vol. L, No. 7 75¢ Cardinal praises vote for health America’s care reform with CNS photo/Nancy Wiechec federal ban on church abortion funding ‘Nation’s parish’ WASHINGTON (CNS)—Cardinal Francis E. George of Chicago, president of the celebrates 50 years U.S. bishops’ conference, praised as place of prayer the House of Representatives for approving a reform and pilgrimage bill that provides WASHINGTON (CNS)—The Basilica of the National “adequate and Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington—the affordable health care largest Catholic church in North America and one of the to all” and “voting 10 largest churches in the world—is a familiar place to overwhelmingly” for a U.S. Catholics who regard the immense structure as prohibition on using their own. federal money to pay The basilica, which marks the 50th anniversary of its Cardinal Francis E. George for most abortions. dedication on Nov. 20, is not a parish or a cathedral. An amendment to Instead, it was designated by the U.S. bishops as a national ban abortion funding sponsored by Rep. Bart place of prayer and pilgrimage, something the basilica’s Stupak, D-Mich., and other House members 1 million annual visitors know well. passed 240-194, and led to passage of the The book America’s Church, published by Our Sunday Affordable Health Care for America Act in a Visitor in 2000, describes the basilica as having “no parish 220-215 vote. -
Illinois Association for Gifted Children Journal, 2002. INSTITUTION Illinois Association for Gifted Children, Palatine
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 477 216 EC 309 629 AUTHOR Smutny, Joan Franklin, Ed. TITLE Illinois Association for Gifted Children Journal, 2002. INSTITUTION Illinois Association for Gifted Children, Palatine. PUB DATE 2002-00-00 NOTE 62p.; Published annually. For the 2001 issue, see ED 451 639. AVAILABLE FROM Illinois Association for Gifted Children, 800 E. Northeast Highway, Suite 610, Palatine, IL 60067-6512 (nonmembers, $25). Tel: 847-963-1892; Fax: 847-963-1893. PUB TYPE Collected Works Serials (022) JOURNAL CIT Illinois Association for Gifted Children Journal; 2002 EDRS PRICE EDRS Price MF01/PC03 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Ability Identification; Creative Activities; Creative Writing; *Creativity; Educational Strategies; Elementary Secondary Education; Fine Arts; *Gifted; Home Schooling; *Music Activities; Theater Arts; Underachievement IDENTIFIERS Kenya ABSTRACT This issue of the Illinois Association for Gifted Children (IAGC) Journal focuses on creativity. Featured articles include: (1) "Creativity: What Is It? and What Does It Look Like" (Sally Y. Walker);(2) "What Is Creativity?" (Debbie Cho);(3) "Creativity and Underachievement" (Sylvia Rimm); (4)"Stacy Hayden: Creativity-One Mother's Perspective" (Stacy L. Hayden); (5) "An Immodest Proposal for Preventing the Children We Teach from Being a Burden to Their Parents, Schools,or Country, and for Making Them Beneficial to the Public" (Ray Sheers);(6) "Finding Lost Keys: Creativity and the Fine Arts" (Michael Cannon);(7) "The Future of the Gifted in the 21st Century: The Need for Creative Solutions to Perennial Problems" (Maurice D. Fisher and Michael E. Walters);(8) "Thinking Outside the Box: The Power of Creativity in Content" (Karen Meador and Jim Granada); (9) "Cultivating the Gift of Creative Listening to Music" (Douglas Ashley); (10) "Music: Its Creativity and Integration into the Regular Classroom" (Kathryn P. -
Wildcats in the Pros
WILDCATS IN THE PROS WILDCAT NBA DRAFT PICKS YEAR RND PICK PLAYER TEAM 1973 16 4 Sam Barber Boston 1972 SUP Aulcie Perry Boston 1969 4 6 Johnnie Allen San Diego 1968 5 6 Carl Fuller Detroit 1967 7 6 Carl Fuller St. Louis WILDCAT NBA/ABA PLAYERS PLAYER TEAM YEAR(S) John Postley Pittsburgh (ABA) 1968 Carl Fuller Florida (ABA) 1970-72 Aulcie Perry Virginia (ABA) 1974-75 ERIC LEWIS, NBA Official Former B-CU basketball team member Eric Lewis has completed his 12th season as a National Basketball Associ- ation referee, officiating 749 regular season games and 24 playoff games during his time in the show. Lewis got the call after spending three seasons working the NBA Develop- ment League, where he called the 2004 D- League Finals and the 2003 and 2004 Playoffs. He also spent two years work- ing in the United States Basketball League, officiating the Finals in 2002 and 2004. He tallied eight years in the college ranks, participating in the Atlantic Sun, Ohio Valley, Sunshine State, Florida Sun and Mid-Florida confer- ences. Lewis officiated in Florida high schools for six years. As a student, he was a member of the basketball team at both Bethune-Cookman and Mainland High School. In the offseason, Lewis works with troubled teens. Updated: October 25, 2016 AULCIE PERRY One of the most prolific rebounders in Bethune-Cookman basketball history found professional success and stardom in Israel. The 6 foot 10 inch, 215 pound center was signed to the Virginia Squires of the American Basketball Association in 1974. -
Illinois Council for the Gifted Journal, 1992
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 347 752 EC 301 368 AUTHOR Smutny, Joan Franklin, Ed. TITLE Illinois Council for ttle Gifted Journal, 1992. INSTITUTION Illinois Council for the Gifted, Palatine. PUB DATE 92 NOTE B5p. PUB TYPE Collected Works - Serials (022) -- Guides - Fon-Classroom Use (055) JOURNAL CIT Il1inci-.; Council for the Gifted Journal; v11 1992 EDRS PRICE MFUl/PCG4 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Ability Identification; *Child Rearing; Classroom Environment; Cooperative Learning; *Curriculum Development; Educational Planning; Educational Practices; Elementary Education; *Gifted; Models; Parent Child Relationship; Preschool Children; i-reschool Education; *Program Development; Student Characteristics; Student Evaluation; *Talent Identification; Thinking Skills; Whole Language Approach IDENTIFIERS Illinois ABSTRACT This annual issue of the Illinois Council for the Gifted Journalkincludes 20 articles focusing on young gifted children. Titles and authors are: "How Can I Tell If My Preschooler is Gifted?" (Susan Golant); "Early Childhood Education for the Gifted: The Need for Intense Study and Observation" (Maurice Fisher); "Assessing Gifted and Talented Children" (James Webb); "Early Assessment of Exceptional Potential" (Beverly Shaklee and Jane Rohrer); "Teacher Assessment of Preschool and Primary Giftedness" (Jane Wolfe and W. Thomas Southern); "Characteristics of Gifted. Children and How Parents and TeaChers Can Cope with Them" (Arn3oarie Roeper); "The Needs of the Young Gifted Child (A Short and Incomplete Overview)" (Annemarie Roeper); "The -
CICERO LASSITER “No Problem Can Be Solved with the Same Level of Consciousness That Created It.” -Albert Einstein
CICERO LASSITER “No problem can be solved with the same level of consciousness that created it.” -Albert Einstein Cicero Lassiter, the younger of the two sons of James Sr. and Viola Lassiter, followed a very different path to his induction into the Freedom Educational Foundation Hall of Fame. Two years younger than his brother Junior, Lassiter was born in 1949 in Americus, Georgia before moving to Aliquippa as a toddler and eventually settling in Freedom. Athletics were an important part of Lassiter’s high school years, and he displayed his talents as a member of the track and field team and the basketball team. He held Freedom’s record for the high jump of 6’3 1/4”, which stood for 40 years. As a senior he qualified for the PIAA State Track Meet at Penn State University. During the week prior to the State Meet, Lassiter suffered a neck injury while playing a pickup basketball game at the Eighth Street Playground but still competed in the State Meet and managed an eighth place finish. Lassiter made a name for himself as a premier basketball player during his junior year. He was a unanimous coaches’ choice as first team All-Section of the Mid-Western Athletic Conference and was the conference’s number one scorer with 347points. In 1968 he broke the Freedom’s single season scoring record with 522 points, besting Bill Hewko’s 507 points scored in 1956. Lassiter’s record has since been broken. The WPIAL named him to its 1968 All-Star Team; he was nominated for the Pittsburgh Dapper Dan Round Ball Classic; and the Pittsburgh Press nominated him as a basketball MVP candidate. -
Irem Temple Flooded with Music As 11The Music Man11 Continues
PLAN TO ATTEND "FOCUS" DISCUSSES THE The Beacon CENSORSHIP CHRISTMAS FORMAL WNAK. SUNDAY, 1 P.M. WILKES COLLEGE • STUDENT WEEKLY Vol. XXVII, No. 10 WILKES COLLEGE, WILKES-BARRE, PENNSYLVANIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1962 Irem Temple Flooded with Music Fee Set for Amnicola; Students Vote for Honor Code As 11The Music Man 11 Continues Orders for Yearbook Presented at Student Seminar The vibrant strains of "76 Trombones" will reverberate Must B~ Placed Today by Vicki Tatz throughout Irem Temple tonight and tomorrow night as Meredith Students may obtain the yearbook Ask yourself the question, "If an instructor were to leave Wilson's famed musical comedy, "The Music Man" takes the for the present academic year for his class during a test. would students take advantage of this stage. Curtain time is 8 o'clock. Wilkes-Barre Kiwanis Club is the price of one dollar, provided situation to cheat?" Ideally the answer is no. Recognizing sponsoring the production for the benefit of its Wheelchair Fund. they order today, the Amnicola that students can assume individual responsibility for personal Professor Harold Hill, the Music Man, is a glib salesman staff announced. Today is abso- honor, the establishment of an Honor Code at Wilkes College who charms his way into people's hearts while depleting their lutely the last day orders will be is now being planned. taken, and students may sign at pocketbooks. After fast-talking small-town Midwesterners into the Cafeteria lounge, the Bookstore Its stated purpose is to stimulate student maturity and digni- buying musical instruments and band uniforms, he skips town, lounge, or Parrish Hall lobby. -
Vol. 29, No. 6 2007
Vol. 29, No. 6 2007 PFRA Committees 2 Football’s Best Pennant Races 5 Bob Gain 11 Baseball & Football Close Relationship 12 Right Place – Wrong Time 18 Overtime Opinion 19 Forward Pass Rules 21 Classifieds 24 THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 29, No. 6 (2007) 2 Class of 2003: Class of 2004: Gino Cappelletti Gene Brito Carl Eller* John Brodie PFRA Pat Fischer Jack Butler Benny Friedman* Chris Hanburger Gene Hickerson* Bob Hayes COMMITTEES Jerry Kramer Billy Howton By Ken Crippen Johnny Robinson Jim Marshall Mac Speedie Al Nesser Mick Tingelhoff Dave Robinson We are happy to report that another committee has Al Wistert Duke Slater been formed since the last update. Gretchen Atwood is heading up the Football, Culture and Social Class of 2005: Class of 2006: Movements Committee. A description of the committee Maxie Baughan Charlie Conerly can be found below. Jim Benton John Hadl Lavie Dilweg Chuck Howley The Western New York Committee is underway with Pat Harder Alex Karras their newest project, detailing the Buffalo Floyd Little Eugene Lipscomb Bisons/Buffalo Bills of the AAFC. Interviews with Tommy Nobis Kyle Rote surviving players and family members of players are Pete Retzlaff Dick Stanfel underway and will continue over the next few months. Tobin Rote Otis Taylor Lou Rymkus Fuzzy Thurston The Hall of Very Good committee reports the following: Del Shofner Deacon Dan Towler In 2002, Bob Carroll began the Hall of Very Good as a Class of 2007: way for PFRA members to honor outstanding players Frankie Albert and coaches who are not in the Pro Football Hall of Roger Brown Fame and who are not likely to ever make it. -
Lhatu:I|P0tpr Leuemng Te a Lji
lHatu:i|p0tpr lEuemng te a lJi MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1975 - VOL. XCIV, No. 114 Manchester—A City of Village Charm TWENTY-FOUR PAGES PRICE: FIFTEEN CENTS Kissinger Says Mission Is ‘Still in Business’ DAMASCUS (UPI) — Secretary of State started, but instead the two men would month, after the Israelis and the Egyp Henry A. Kissinger flew to Syria today give a broad review of the Middle East tians have had time to ponder possible from Cairo, saying his talks with Egyptian situation. compromises. V - ■. President Anwar Sadat were “very In Cairo, after finishing a meeting with The senior official said that while Egypt positive” and his Middle East peace mis Sadat, Kissinger said before boarding his and Israel were far apart on terms of an sion was "still in business.” airliner, “I consider the talks were very A senior official aboard Kissinger’s positive.” Israeli pullback in the Sinai Desert, Kissinger would not be returning to the plane said the secretary’s mission was the Later, on the plane flying to Damascus, area if he felt the situation was hopeless. D p e most difficult so far of all his shuttle- he told newsmen, “We are still in liwash diplomacy tours of the Middle East. business.” The official also said he believed that ’The official said the Egyptians and the A senior American official said both sides would have to sign some Israelis were far apart on terms for a Kissinger will report to Israeli leaders in agreements, but he refused to speculate [ e second-stage troop pullout in Sinai but detail on Sadat’s position tonight in on their nature. -
Report Calls for PSU to Convert Campuses
from the associated press News Roundup: From the State, / World Ted Thompson defeated New Party op- congressional race. New Party In class elections, Robert Emery of the Nation 6* By KITTY PHILBJN and DENNIS STIMEUNG the fraternity ponent Steve Gerson, 2,702 to 2,616, in the candidate James Sandman squeaked by New Party was elected senior class presi- Collegian USG Reporters vice-presidential contest. Student-Lion opponent Murray Schechter dent by a 389 vote margin over Cathy Willi- Independent candidate James Womer For treasurer, Harvey Reeder, Student- 230 to 216 votes. gerod of the Student-Lion Party. The World won the Undergraduate Student Government Lion Party, overcame the New Party's Don Sandman said "campus fraternities are presidency last night by the slimmest margin In the Junior Class presidential race, Pauie by a tally of 3,018 to 2,140 votes. not represented full y. I want to help fra- Larry Wallace of the Student-Lion 'Party de- B-52 's Bomb A Shau Valley Troops in USG election history. Eai'ly this morning New Party chairman ternities get the representation they need Theodore Itzko- Following a two per cent vote penalty feated New Party candidate SAIGON — B52s loosed their massive bombing power Rick Mowi y announced that his party will and the leadership they need. witz 822 to 787. Itzkowitz was penalized two Valley, where the North Viet- fo r viol ations of the elec tions code , Womer's seek a recount in the vice presidential con- "I want to equate the visitation rights yesterday on the A Shau vote totaled 2,759 to 2,651 for Jon Fox, the per cent for election code violations. -
WILKES-BARRE, PA Timesleader.Com MONDAY,JUNE 6, 2011 50¢
CMYK TODAY’S $ $ Dallas can’t Smile! You’re on DEAL 20 ONLY@ take the Heat the Click page. FOR 10 DAILY Miami takes 2-1NBA Finals Fight For Air Walk; Cancer PA lead with 88-86 victory. Survivors; Rev. O’Hara Farewell. DEAL! NE SPORTS, 1B CLICK, 1C Sign up now at nepadailydeals.com The Times Leader292398 WILKES-BARRE, PA timesleader.com MONDAY,JUNE 6, 2011 50¢ COUNTY JUDGE RACE HOMELESS SITUATION Dual-party Lackawanna takes spotlight Bill aims picks seen County Commissioner A.J. Munchak and former Christopher Powell said. He estimated the trial will last about 2½ weeks. to restore Commissioner Robert Cordaro go to court today for Munchak, 64, of Scranton, and Cordaro, 50, of Dunmore, trial on corruption charges. were originally indicted by a grand jury on March 16, 2010, as big plus on 40 counts, including racketeering, money laundering, bribery, extortion and tax evasion. Prosecutors later mod- services Experts: Straight-party voting By TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER ified the indictment, which now contains 41 counts. abenefit to five; two [email protected] The government alleges that from 2003 to 2007, Mun- Cordaro SCRANTON – Fifteen months after they were first chak and Cordaro, who was voted out of office in 2007, candidates face tough job. charged, Lackawanna County Commissioner A.J. Mun- abused their positions of majority commissioners by ac- funding chak and former Commissioner Robert Cordaro will ap- cepting hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and gifts pear in federal court today to answer allegations they ac- from eight companies and other individuals, who have not By BILL O’BOYLE cepted bribes and extorted companies that did business yet been identified by prosecutors.