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Nats Rushing Newsom to Mound Against Chisox
I Nats Rushing Newsom to Mound Against Chisox 4 Fifth in Row Battle of Undefeated ose or Triumph Ennis' Punch Tells for Phillies; Uline Gets Franchise Over Chicago Is Goal; Nines Bosox Maintain Lead By FRANCIS E. STANN Midget Tops Strong In Newly Formed Which Was the Best Batting Team? Hudson Foils Tribe Boys' Card Pro Court "If you were a pitcher,” asked one of the young Nats the other Loop Loop The two undefeated night, "would you rather pitch to the 1946 Red Sox or to some of those By Burton Hawkins teams In the Special Dispatch to Tha Star other like midget class of the Western Division great hitting teams, the Yankees of 1927, the Athletics of Double-O Bobo NEW Newsom, the air- of the Club of YORK, June 7.—Mike 1929 or the Yankees of 1937? I never saw any of these teams, Boys’ Washington except conditioned who was last owner the Red Sox we pia> today,” pitcher in Baseball League clash in the feature Uline, of Uline Arena in line of tomorrow’s Now there s posing a little question that could when modesty was being dis- five-game schedule. Washington, D. C., has purchased a stir a few It will be Eastern winners up arguments. If I were a pitcher I’d tributed, will establish a beachhead Quins, franchise in a new professional bas- to the Mexican of four straight, against Alexandria jump League, temporarily, any on Griffith Stadium’s ket mound to- B. undefeated in three ball league organized here yes- time these clubs came to town. -
World Champion Briggs Bombers Play Here Sunday Stage Clink, Drawing Cards Tommy Bell Washington Senators Sports Roundup- Surprise Nationals Ty HUGH FULLERTON
World Champion Briggs Bombers Play Here Sunday Stage Clink, Drawing Cards Tommy Bell Washington Senators Sports Roundup- Surprise nationals ty HUGH FULLERTON. JR. Exhibition Faces LaMotta BY JACK HAND starts, 11 of 14 on a sizzling Auiflalil Pres* Sport* Writer —UP) — ,he was able to rank sixth *n May Mean Title western tour, 'the Nats are in NEW YORK, July 6 Washington is the latest shin- ! 1941." . Ted adds that Fred second place, ahead of the New Navy Lt. Ted Schroedcr, who 3 Go With Cochrane ing example of the anything- Perry and Bill Tilderv tops in for Juniors v-o , o WW f*ovpnooOr- York Yankees and only 4Vfa is con- ooVv can-happen-in-wartime isn’t at sea where tennis their day, have long since passed A- o 4 MWI# school games back of front-running De- ad- <yo vi o a 0 o oq‘o • v NEW YORK. July o—tJP) of baseball thought. cerned though his present that day and other leading pros Interesting Bill o;o oo troit. Atlantic fleet, 11 ¦,) Tommy Bell of Youngstown, dress is with tlie admittedly aren't in the same o 00 D 0 Picked to wind up in the cel- The pitching that was suppos- with Welby Is Scheduled at makes his Madison Square Gar- rises to take issi>e class as these leaders, against lar, the same fate decreed for ed to make them a pennant recent selection of den debut Jake LaMotta con- Van Horn's SIMPLE SOLUTION Covered Wagon tonight in the Brooklyn Dodgers, Ossie tender a year ago but flopped professional racquetcers who j a scheduled 10-round ten “The truth is that professional bout that may determine Bluege's amazing Senators are into an eighth place finish, has lick the ranking amateurs. -
Nats Win at Last, Backing Good Pitching with Power to Trample
Farm,and Garden ■*•«**,Financial News __Junior Star_ 101(1^ Jgtflf jgptiTlg_Stomps _ WASHINGTON, I). C., APIIIL 21, 1946. :_■__ ___ Nats Win at Last, Backing Good Pitching With Power to Trample Yankees, 7-3 ★ ★ _____# ★ ★ ★ ★ ose or Assault Shines in Wood, Armed Lands Philadelphia at 'Graw By FRANCIS E. STANN --- 4 Heath's Benching Follows Simmons-Bonura Pattern AT LEAST ONE GOT BY —By Gib Crockett Test The benching of Outfielder Jeff Heath by the Nationals after Texas Ace Passes Derby less than a week of play is not without precedent. Heath, you re- Spence's Homer member, was acquired for one purpose—to hit that long, extra-base In Finish at Jamaica wallop for Washington. But so were A1 Simmons and Zeke Bonura Sizzling some years ago. Marine Simmons had been one of the greatest right- Heads Rips by Favored Hampden, Victory hand sluggers m the history of the American Slashing On to Win League. For that matter, iie may have been In Stretch, Goes 2-Length the absolute greatest. Critics generally rated By the Associated Press licked a $22,600 pay check for Simmons and Rogers Hornsby of the National f up 1 lis him a bank as 14-Hit NEW YORK, 20.—The Texas day's work, giving the two modern Attack League best of times. April ■oil of $30,100 for the year and The Milwaukee Pole was over the hill when terror from the wide open spaces,,’ 47,350 for his two seasons. Clark Griffith got him, but he still was a home Leonard, stretch-burning Assault, sizzled to a He’ll take the train ride to the run threat. -
Training a New Generation of Leaders
TRAINING A NEW GENERATION OF LEADERS Woodrow Wilson Center Reports on the Americas • #3 Edited by Joan Dassin, Joseph S. Tulchin, and Amelia Brown W TRAINING A NEW oodr GENERATION OF LEADERS ow W Public Administration and Public Policy Graduate ilson Center Repor Programs in Latin America Elizabeth Balbachevsky Joan Dassin Danae de los Ríos ts on the Americas • #3 Ana M. García de Fanelli Efraín Gonzales de Olarte José Augusto Guilhon de Albuquerque Janet Kelly Rollin Kent Alejandra Mizala Rosalba Ramírez Edited by Joan Dassin, Joseph S. Tulchin, and Amelia Brown Latin American Program WOODROW WILSON INTERNATIONAL CENTER FOR SCHOLARS LEE H. HAMILTON, DIRECTOR BOARD OF TRUSTEES Joseph A. Cari, Jr., Chair; Steven Alan Bennett, Vice Chair. Public Members: James H. Billington, Librarian of Congress; John W. Carlin, Archivist of the United States; William R. Ferris, Chair, National Endowment for the Humanities; Roderick R. Paige, Secretary, U.S. Department of Education; Colin L. Powell, Secretary, U.S. Department of State; Lawrence M. Small, Secretary, Smithsonian Institution; Tommy G. Thompson, Secretary, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Private Citizen Members: Carol Cartwright, John H. Foster, Jean L. Hennessey, Daniel L. Lamaute, Doris O. Matsui, Thomas R. Reedy, Nancy M. Zirkin. WILSON COUNCIL Charles S. Ackerman, B.B. Andersen, Cyrus A. Ansary, Charles F. Barber, Lawrence E. Bathgate II, Joseph C. Bell, Richard E. Berkowitz, A. Oakley Brooks, Thomas J. Buckholtz, Conrad Cafritz, Nicola L. Caiola, Raoul L. Carroll, Scott Carter, Albert V. Casey, Peter B. Clark, William T. Coleman, Jr., Michael D. DiGiacomo, Donald G. Drapkin, F. Samuel Eberts III, J. -
Win, Lose Or Draw
Jtoenmg f&pfjte Plans *» Nats’ Infield Held Tardiness of Torres Washington, D. C., Thursday, March 29, 1945—A—16 Up by Clift, Problem in Shortfield Hamners of Phillies, 21 and 17, La Brucherie, School Walker, N. L. Lose or Draw Batting Champ, Win, Bothering Bluege; Do Brother Double-Play Act Grid Mentor, Given Heading Group of Holdouts By JOHN B. KELLER By JOE REICHLER, Dykes yesterday, to make 31 player* Associated Press Sports Writer. in camp. Pint-Sized Pieretti Packs Pitching Power Braves Blanked Job at U. C. L. A. NEW YORK, Mar. 29.—With the Chicago Cubs—Manager Charlie league season less than three Grimm announced the sale of Ja- He’s only pint-sized, but he can throw that baseball, so Marino By JOHN B. KELLER. By the Associated Press. major weeks off, several club owners still phet (Red) Lynn, wh# had a 5-4 Pieretti shouldn't be long in making American League fans forget he With of LOS ANGELES, Mar. 29.—Bert F. three weeks training gone, are faced with holdout record last year, to Los Angeles. is a His 5-foot-7-inch frame a as well problems. “shorty.” carries fighting heart Washington’s Nats have convinced La Brucherie, Los Angeles High Cleveland Indians—Pitcher Red as a fine arm and he's to take a turn football What is the biggest name flinging right eager nine-inning observers they will have few pitch- coach, has been appointed probably Embree joined squad but Ambrose on the hill now. mentor at of California holdout of them all is Fred (Dixie) pitching right ers, but some good ones, and that University Palica said he expected an Army The more Os sees of Pieretti in the more at Los Edwin C. -
Grammy Award-Winning Pianist Chucho Valdés Returns to Symphony Center with a Celebration of the Legendary Cuban Band Irakere
For Immediate Release: Press Contacts: October 29, 2015 Eileen Chambers, 312-294-3092 Rachelle Roe, 312-294-3090 Photos Available By Request [email protected] GRAMMY AWARD-WINNING PIANIST CHUCHO VALDÉS RETURNS TO SYMPHONY CENTER WITH A CELEBRATION OF THE LEGENDARY CUBAN BAND IRAKERE November 6, at 8:00 p.m. CHICAGO—The 2015/16 Symphony Center Presents (SCP) Jazz series continues on Friday, November 6, at 8:00 p.m. with Irakere 40, a celebration of legendary Cuban pianist Chucho Valdés and his iconic group, Irakere, which marks 40 years of groundbreaking Latin jazz this year. Irakere, assembled by Valdés in 1973, has taken many forms over its near half-century of touring and performing, but Valdés has remained one of its constants. For this one-of-a kind retrospective concert, Valdés leads a 10-piece band in Irakere’s classic hits such as “Misa Negra” “Estela Va A Estallar” (“Stella By Starlight”), ”Juana 1600,” and “Bacalao Con Pan,” as well as more recent compositions, originally performed with the Afro-Cuban Messengers, in new arrangements by Valdés, such as “Yansa,” “Abdel” and “Lorena’s Tango. In conjunction with the current U.S. tour of Irakere 40, the Jazz Village/harmonia mundi label will release a new recording, Chucho Valdés: Tribute to Irakere (Live in Marciac), on November 13, 2015, featuring Chucho’s current group, the Afro-Cuban Messengers. “When I decided to do a tribute to that marvelous band (Irakere), I also decided I didn’t want to do it with the charter members, but with players from a generation of musicians that grew up and learned from Irakere. -
Harmonic Metaphors in Silvio Rodríguez S Songs
Trans. Revista Transcultural de Música E-ISSN: 1697-0101 [email protected] Sociedad de Etnomusicología España Manabe, Noriko Lovers and rulers, the real and the surreal: harmonic metaphors in Silvio Rodríguezs songs Trans. Revista Transcultural de Música, núm. 10, diciembre, 2006, p. 0 Sociedad de Etnomusicología Barcelona, España Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=82201013 How to cite Complete issue Scientific Information System More information about this article Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal Journal's homepage in redalyc.org Non-profit academic project, developed under the open access initiative Harmonic Metaphors in Silvio Rodríguez’s Songs Revista Transcultural de Música Transcultural Music Review #10 (2006) ISSN:1697-0101 Lovers and Rulers, the Real and the Surreal: Harmonic Metaphors in Silvio Rodríguez’s Songs Noriko Manabe CUNY Graduate Center December 2006 Abstract: This article, which analyzes 136 of Silvio Rodríguez’s over 500 songs and provides a close reading of seventeen, highlights musical patterns that recur in songs with similar themes across three periods: 1967-1970, when Rodríguez was censured; 1971-1989, when nueva trova became institutionalized; and post-1990, in Cuba’s Special Period. Differing viewpoints and emotions are often set in different keys (“Debo partirme en dos” (1969)); songs with a political message are set in simple repeating patterns (“Resumen de noticias” (1969)); and many of his love songs are highly chromatic or harmonically unstable (“Ojalá” (1969)). Double-plagal progressions often signify fatalism and never-ending struggle (“Sueño con serpientes” (1974), “Reino de todavía” (1994)). Analyses are complemented by pdf, 4Mb. -
Introducing Leonardo Acosta, Music and Literary Critic
Vol. 5, No. 3, Spring 2008, 95-121 www.ncsu.edu/project/acontracorriente Introducing Leonardo Acosta, Music and Literary Critic Raúl A. Fernández University of California—Irvine Daniel Whitesell Irvine Valley College The recent awards bestowed on Leonardo Acosta, in particular Cuba’s Premio Nacional de Literatura (2006), come as no surprise to the authors of this article who have long been aware of the breadth and depth of Acosta’s essays on music and literature. To many, however, Acosta’s writing career has remained largely invisible. In part this is because Acosta’s major essays began to appear in the early 1980s when he was nearly fifty years old, a time by which most professional writers have established their careers; in part, because he had labored rather independently of any official Cuban institutions. As Acosta noted in his acceptance speech for the Premio Nacional de Literatura he had not been identified as “associated with any literary ‘group,’ or ‘revista,’ or ‘generation,’ or ‘cohort’. Neither had [he] participated in any aesthetic or ideological polemic affecting arts and letters…” His ‘invisibility” may also be in part because his writing has consisted primarily of ensayos, a genre Fernández 96 that attracts less attention from literary critics than poetry or prose narrative. Another contributing factor has been the diversity of the intellectual field Acosta defined for himself—he began as a professional musician, became a journalist, poet and short story writer for a decade, and then became a writer on music and literature. This career trajectory makes it difficult for any other single author to evaluate Acosta’s work as a whole. -
History of Toledo Baseball (1883-2018)
History of Toledo Baseball (1883-2018) Year League W L PCT. GB Place Manager Attendance Stadium 1883 N.W.L. 56 28 .667 - - 1st* William Voltz/Charles Morton League Park 1884 A.A. 46 58 .442 27.5 8th Charles Morton 55,000 League Park/Tri-State Fairgrounds (Sat. & Sun.) 18851 W.L. 9 21 .300 NA 5th Daniel O’Leary League Park/Riverside Park (Sun.) 1886-87 Western League disbanded for two years 1888 T.S.L. 46 64 .418 30.5 8th Harry Smith/Frank Mountain/Robert Woods Presque Isle Park/Speranza Park 1889 I.L. 54 51 .568 15.0 4th Charles Morton Speranza Park 1890 A.A. 68 64 .515 20.0 4th Charles Morton 70,000 Speranza Park 1891 Toledo dropped out of American Association for one year 18922 W.L. 25 24 .510 13.5 4th Edward MacGregor 1893 Western League did not operate due to World’s Fair, Chicago 1894 W.L. 67 55 .549 4.5 2nd Dennis Long Whitestocking Park/Ewing Street Park 18953 W.L. 23 28 .451 27.5 8th Dennis Long Whitestocking Park/Ewing Street Park 1896 I.S.L. 86 46 .656 - - 1st* Frank Torreyson/Charles Strobel 45,000 Ewing Street Park/Bay View Park (Sat. & Sun.) 1897 I.S.L. 83 43 .659 - - 1st* Charles Strobel Armory Park/Bay View Park (Sat. & Sun.) 1898 I.S.L. 84 68 .553 0.5 2nd Charles Strobel Armory Park/Bay View Park (Sat. & Sun.) 1899 I.S.L. 82 58 .586 5.0 3rd (T) Charles Strobel Armory Park/Bay View Park (Sat. -
Man Arrested in Shooting
SATURDAY,JUNE 17, 2017 Inside: 75¢ Clovis area honor rolls — Pages 3A, 4B Vol. 89 ◆ No. 67 SERVING CLOVIS, PORTALES AND THE SURROUNDING COMMUNITIES EasternNewMexicoNews.com Pageant contestants take aim at crown ❏ Hopefuls say confidence comes from each other. By Alisa Boswell MANAGING EDITOR [email protected] PORTALES — As the first night of pre- liminaries approached on Thursday, there was no denying the title of Miss New Mexico requires a woman with a lot of ambition and a lot of heart. Schedule Prior to this week’s Miss New Mexico Today Scholarship Pageant, ■ Miss NM local title holders have Outstanding Teen Staff photo: Tony Bullocks spent their time con- Officer Antonio Orosco of the Clovis Police Department takes aim at the home on the 500 block of Sheldon Street. ducting events to push finals: 2 p.m. at the their platforms while ENMU University being full-time stu- Theatre Center ■ dents at Eastern New Miss NM finals: 6 Mexico University. p.m. at the ENMU Man arrested in shooting Leah Taylor, 22, of University Theatre Logan, who was Miss Center ❏ Quay County in 2016 ■ Miss NM awards Joshua Martinez, 32, suspected and is Miss Portales and celebration: 9 this year, has been p.m. at the ENMU of shooting his girlfriend. working with a per- University Theatre BY THE STAFF OF THE NEWS sonal coach in regard Center to pageant competing CLOVIS — Police on Friday afternoon arrested a and has spent the last man suspected of shooting his girlfriend southeast several months doing of the Clovis Area Transit System station. -
Revista De Investigación Musical Vol
Revista de investigación musical Vol. 23, nº 44, enero-junio 2019 Nº ISSN 0717-3474 Resonancias - Revista de investigación musical vol. 23, nº 44, enero-junio 2019. Publicación semestral del Instituto de Música, Facultad de Artes de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Jaime Guzmán Errázuriz 3300. Santiago - Chile. www.resonancias.uc.cl Directora Instituto de Música Karina Fischer Director Resonancias Alejandro Vera A. Editora Resonancias Leonora López Ch. y Francisca Meza B. (editora subrogante). Comité Editorial Nacional Rodrigo Cádiz (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile), Daniel Party (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile), Felipe Otondo (Universidad Austral de Chile), Rodrigo Torres (Universidad de Chile). Comité Editorial Internacional Geoff Baker (Royal Holloway, University of London, Reino Unido). Nicolas Collins (School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Estados Unidos). Ricardo Dal Farra (Concordia University, Canadá). Heloísa de Araujo Duarte Valente (Professora titular junto ao Programa de Pós-graduação em Comunicação - UNIP / Professora colaboradora junto ao Programa de Pós-graduação em Música - USP, Brasil). Rajmil Fischman (Keele University, Reino Unido). Rubén López-Cano (Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya, España). Jõao Pedro Oliveira (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brasil). Raúl Renato Romero (Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú). Carolina Santamaría (Universidad de Antioquia, Colombia). Rodrigo Sigal (Centro Mexicano para la Música y las Artes Sonoras, México). Susan Thomas (University of Georgia, Estados Unidos). Álvaro Torrente (Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España). Colaboran en este número Yael Bitrán, José Miguel Candela, Laura Fahrenkrog, Daniela Fugellie, Sonia Gonzalo, Cristián Guerra, Hermann Hudde, Ana Lombardía, Alejandro Madrid, Silvina Mansilla, Miguel Ángel Marín, Iván César Morales, Héctor Santos. Las opiniones vertidas aquí son de exclusiva responsabilidad de sus autores y autoras. -
Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1945-04-17
.IATS. PAT II. ,.•• t.... TI ......... II ••• AI , ••••• b PII no.. ,.... ,\uiCI88ID WOODS. ..•• _,'. c: Ibr.... XI Yalld. 8VO"., ...... 'ur .,.. , 1141 n ... '.r " •• ,...... 8BOBS........ re •• Cloudy, • , ••,. I • •••• , fo ... 1••• ".11." . GASOLJl'fB. III-A ... ,••••••• '.r •• r ,." ••••• , .....". C·, ••• lOW... : TuHda, partly cloudy. , C·, ••"" '.r II.. ,.1'.... WVIL 011., ,.r'.' ••• 11I •••• b flYO ooa ,... r.... ,I.. I.. , ,..... ,.rl•• THE DAILY IOWAN cooler. ,•••• a' "n ••••. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper In CENTS IOWA CITY, IOWA TUESDAY, APRD. 17. 1945 VOLUME XXI NUMBER 173 merlcan• event nters ue·rnI erg Estate to Mrs. Roosevelt- MUNITIONS SHIP BLAST KILLS 360 ranks Bag At a Glanc..- Flank Leipzig 168 Jap (raft President's Will Sets Up Trust Today's In Wurzen NEW YORK (AP)-The late veyed the main house and adja Roosevelt, however, a&lced his President Franklin D. Roosevelt cent grouDds of the Hudson valley heirs "to select on~y such articles Ninth Gains Foothold !laid on Jap Home in his will filed yesterday be- estate to the {ederal government, of personal property" as they Island Brings Toll quested to his widow, Anna with the provision that Mrs. "may be in a position to use per Iowan Beyond Elbe, Third Eleanor Roosevelt, all the income Roosevelt and their children could sonally in their own homes." 85 Miles From Reds fo 1,674 Craft Hit from a trust fund to be set up Live there during their lifetimes. Mrs. Roosevelt was giveD th~ Truman to* broad,cW* * b r i e f Irom his residuary estate. The will, executed Nov. la,l use of property at campobello speech at 9 tODight.