The Daily Egyptian, August 12, 1967
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April 18, 1899
PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. TUESDAY APRIL THREE CENTS. ESTABLISHED JUNE 23, 1882-VOL. 37. PORTLAND. MAINE, MORNING, 18, 189#,__PRICE prosecuted by the authority of tble HAROLD SEWALL MAY RUN. •‘He st trted out to hnd Tuning. Ho MISCEI.LANBOCT. ONE OF VICTIMS DEAD. house.” went to his house but be was not. there. BRIBERY The was to JJTTE1IPTED. Spat / Is at present a member of the next day I subpoenaed court. POLICE L met at me to wait un- a SHARED. d he toid house from Berks county and I* Demo- Hawaiian Minister Suggested as Candi- Schultz Prlc** crat. wm a member of the olth ami til he went to see Police Captain Kulp date for Congress. The Waterfllle Stabbing Affray fifth Conurosses from the 17th Pennsyl- and ask him what be should clu 1 toid vania district, and Is a Republican. Schultz 1 did not want to go on the wit- ness stand and he said all I could a Murder. Coyle. Costello, Brvne end filerlee, were ISPECIAL TO TW* PRESS.) right, some are go to Philadelphia if I wanted to.” Proof of in formerly in the legislature. Bath, April 17.—Hon. Harold M. Corruption Democrats uod some are Republicans. Stephens* said that Schultz sent a man who has t<*en the with hlui Uj th.* who went as far as The majority report 1s signed by hve of Bewail, representing train, Barn Idcntlfle.l Newark. und us «lMlron Said, to Have Pa. Legislature. the nine members of the committee, First For Rock- United States government at the Ha- Dive Divided Kob- They gut oil there Stephen chairman; Victory Keepers was told to go tc the Lafayette hotel and by Ilia Victim. -
1967 APBA PRO FOOTBALL SET ROSTER the Following Players Comprise the 1967 Season APBA Pro Football Player Card Set
1967 APBA PRO FOOTBALL SET ROSTER The following players comprise the 1967 season APBA Pro Football Player Card Set. The regular starters at each position are listed first and should be used most frequently. Realistic use of the players below will generate statistical results remarkably similar to those from real life. IMPORTANT: When a Red "K" appears in the R-column as the result on any kind of running play from scrimmage or on any return, roll the dice again, refer to the K-column, and use the number there for the result. When a player has a "K" in his R-column, he can never be used for kicking or punting. If the symbol "F-K" or "F-P" appears on a players card, it means that you use the K or P column when he recovers a fumble. Players in bold are starters. If there is a difference between the player's card and the roster sheet, always use the card information. The number in ()s after the player name is the number of cards that the player has in this set. See below for a more detailed explanation of new symbols on the cards. ATLANTA ATLANTA BALTIMORE BALTIMORE OFFENSE DEFENSE OFFENSE DEFENSE EB: Tommy McDonald End: Sam Williams EB: Willie Richardson End: Ordell Braase Jerry Simmons TC OC Jim Norton Raymond Berry Roy Hilton Gary Barnes Bo Wood OC Ray Perkins Lou Michaels KA KOA PB Ron Smith TA TB OA Bobby Richards Jimmy Orr Bubba Smith Tackle: Errol Linden OC Bob Hughes Alex Hawkins Andy Stynchula Don Talbert OC Tackle: Karl Rubke Don Alley Tackle: Fred Miller Guard: Jim Simon Chuck Sieminski Tackle: Sam Ball Billy Ray Smith Lou Kirouac -
History & Tradition All-Time Letterwinners
history & tradition all-time letterwinners Since 1947 Warren Belin 1987-90 Dwayne Crayton 1977-80 Nick Belisis 1948-49 • c • Mark Cregar 1974-77 • e • Nick Bender 1997-2000 Bob Caesar 1955-56 Ward Cridland 1979 Paul Eberle 1978-80 • a • Doug Benfield 1973-75 Jimmy Caldwell 1998-2000 Derek Crocker 1979-80 John Eck 1981 Greg Adkins 2002 Terry Bennett 1970-71 Richard Cameron 1962-64 Dan Croom 1973 Farrell Egge 1961-62 Mark Agientas 1987-88 Tim Bennett 1999-02 Jim Camp 1945-46 Matt Crosby 1990-91 Mike Elkins 1985-88 Steven Ainsworth 1989-91 Brad Benson 1987-89 Edward Campbell 1972 Claude Croston 1954-55 Greg Eller 1982 Chad Alexander 1995,97 Steve Bernardo 1976-77 Glen Campbell 1984 Austin Crowder 1992-95 Tom Elrod 1996 Boyd Allen 1946-47 Joe Berra 1963-65 Tommy Campbell 1970 Ron Crume 1983 Ken Erickson 1966,68-69 Bob Allen 1958-60 Cornelius Birgs 2002 Mike Capone 1971 Carlos Cunningham 1979-82 Urban Ericksson 1976 Lee Allen 1972-74 Carroll Blackerby 1948-50 Bernie Capps 1945-46 Aubrey Currie 1956-58 George Ervin 1976-79 Tom Allen 1999 Terry Blanch 1978-79 Joe Carazo 1963-65 Carl Curry 1974-76 Marlon Estes 1992-93,95 Ryan Alston 1991-92 Rhett Blanchard 1991-94 Bill Carlisle 1961-62 Marlon Curtis 1998-99 Solomon Everett 1974-76 Louis Altobelli 1986,88-89 James Bland 1952-53 Andy Carlton 1972-73 Dominic Anderson 2002 Chris Blank 1997-2000 Frank Carmines 1985-86 • f • Jason Anderson 2001-02 Mike Blasiole 1967 Charlie Carpenter 1955-57 Mark Anderson 1975 Bill Bobbora 1969-71 Tehran Carpenter 1998-2000 Wilbert Faircloth 1962-63 Tom Anderson 1972 -
Pro Football Hall of Fame Educational Outreach Program
Acknowledgements The Pro Football Hall of Fame expresses its deepest appreciation to those who put forth the time and effort in assisting the Hall of Fame in developing this educational packet. These individuals were charged with the task of not only revising previous lessons, but creating new lessons as well. The format is designed to fit the educational needs of the many school districts who participate in the Hall of Fame’s Educational Outreach Program throughout the country. Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Educational Advisory Panel Jerry Csaki Educational Programs Coordinator Pro Football Hall of Fame Canton, OH Jami Cutlip, NBCT Crestwood High School Crestwood Local School District Mantua, OH Carol Ann Hart, NBCT McDonald (OH) High School McDonald Local School District Kristy Jones, NBCT Crestwood High School Crestwood Local School District Mantua, OH Jon Kendle Educational Programs Assistant Pro Football Hall of Fame Canton, OH Jon Laird Elyria (OH) Elementary Elyria City School District Jesse McClain, NBCT Boardman (OH) Center Middle School Boardman Local School District Thomas R. Mueller, Ph.D California (PA) University of Pennsylvania Lori M. Perry, NBCT Art Resource Teacher Canton (OH) City School District (* NBCT = National Board Certified Teachers) Pro Football Hall of Fame Educational Outreach Program 1 Indianapolis Colts Edition Pro Football Hall of Fame Educational Outreach Program - Indianapolis Colts Edition - Section I: Football Facts and Figures Section III: Mathematics Colts History ..............................................................5 -
Uailed May 3, 1963 for Release Upon Receipt. HINNEAPOLIS
Uailed May 3, 1963 For release upon receipt. ~ UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND ATHLETICS MINNEAPOLIS 14 "The Gophers" HINNEAPOLIS. - The performance may not be as polished as those in recent years, but l"men the young U1'liversity of Minnesota football squad :1chooses up sidesa and squares a",ay for the armual spring practice windup intra-squad game May 11 in Memorial Stadium, the head-knocking will be something to make the folks up in row 52 wince a bit. The football game will highlight the triple attraction Spring Sports Day at the University. First item on the day's full program is a double-header baseball game between Indiana and Minnesota starting at 11 a.m. The Gopher track.and field squad makes its only hane dual meet appearance of the season against Uisconsin starting at 12:30. The football game follows at 2:00 p.m. Because of the graduation of 20 lettennen, including 10 starters, fran the 1962 Big Ten runnerup.squad all positions excepting tackle are ltide open. At no time in l·iurray rlarmathts 10 seasons at Hinnesota has the competition for starting jobs and a place on th.. potential :ltravel squaduof 38 men been so keen. The result is a highly-spirited contest between the 11 lettering reserves participating in spring practice, a dozen non-lettering reserves, and about the same number of iigraduatesil of the 1962 freshman squad. The three-way battle at center between Frank Marchle\'lSki who played 50 minutes last fall as a sophanore, Joe Pung who clocked 83 minutes in relief of·Paul Benson, and Paul Faust who sat out the t 62 season because of injuries has particularly dralm Uarmathts attention. -
The Irish Crokers Nick Reddan
© Nick Reddan Last updated 2 May 2021 The Irish CROKERs Nick Reddan 1 © Nick Reddan Last updated 2 May 2021 Table of Contents Table of Contents ....................................................................................................................... 2 Background ................................................................................................................................ 4 Origin and very early records ................................................................................................ 4 Acknowledgments.................................................................................................................. 5 Note ........................................................................................................................................ 5 Origin ......................................................................................................................................... 6 The Settlers ................................................................................................................................ 9 The first wave ........................................................................................................................ 9 The main group .................................................................................................................... 10 Lisnabrin and Nadrid ............................................................................................................... 15 Dublin I ................................................................................................................................... -
Egypt Accusese^.S. of Arming Israel Doctor M^Y Have Lunged at Killer on Seeing Slain
______ \ ^ ' 'l ^ ’ ________ . • ■ Bloodtuobile Visits Concordia Lutheran Church Tomorrow, 1:45 to 6:30 p. m. / Average Daily Net Press Run The Weather For Hie Week Ended O ctober 17, 1970 . Cloudy, cool, chance ot light drizzle through tomorrow; to night’s low about 60. Tuesday’s 16,020 high near 60. Wednesday part Manchester— A City of Village Charm ly cloudy, seasonable. VOL. LXXXX, NO. 22 (TWENTY-FOUR PAGES—TWO SECTIONS) MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1970 (Classified Advertising on Page 21) PRICE TEN CENTS Nixon Meets American Egypt AccusesE^.S. President Wins Nobel O f Romania OhEconomy Of Arming Israel WASHING’rCXN (AP) — Presl- STOCKHOLM (AP) — Paul A . By WOXIAM N. OATIS dent Nixon today welcomed Ro- Samuelson of Massachusetts In- ' Associated Press Writer manian President Nicolae Ceau- stitute of Technology was UNITED NATIONS, N.Y, (AP) — Egypt today ac sescu to Washington stressing awarded the 1970 Nobel Prize in cused Israel, with the support of the United States, of that he has “ great respect for acquiring new planes and tanks while Israeli leaders the independence of your gov economics today. ’The prize call upon Cairo to dismantle its missile sites in the Suez ernment.” committee said he “ has done Ceausescu, completing a twO' more than any other contempo- Canal zone. Opening a General Assembly of the Arab territory occupied week tour of the United States, rary economist to raise the level debate on the Middle East, by Israel as a result o i the got the red carpet treatment scientific analysis In econom- Eg;yptlan Foreig;nsJdlnlster Mah aggression of Jime 6, 1967.” with full military honors when Ic theory.” 2 moud Rlad placed much of the he arrived for two-day official Called by a newsman at his Riad declared that Egypt was visit with Nixon. -
UN Marks $33.9 Million for Middle East
A m gvD aily Net PreflB Ron ■ W «lM Week Ended Doomber is, IMS The Weather tdffht snow developing te» 1 4 ,5 7 7 night, low in the teens; snow continuing: tomorrow, Ugh tn D MandteU^r-^A Ciiy of VUiage‘Charm the 20s. VOL. LXXXV, NO. 68 CTWENTY-POUR PAGES—TWO SECTIONS) MANCHESTER, CONN„ MONDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1965 (Olusifled Adverthdng on Fnge 21) Anhiyersary Raid Tree Status LOS ANOELES (AP) — A railroad freight agent says wholesalers here have UN Marks $33.9 Million alretuly sold out 3S6 car loads o f Christmas trees tmd gives one reason for the bumper stUes: The newest Southern California status ^rmbol is having two Christ mas trees. For Middle East Aid Richard Givens, South ..SAIGON, South yiet depot of fuel and ammunlOon in \ael Oong to mark the annlver- ern Pacific Railroad freight N am ( A P ) — Forces guard- country. gary. x agent In charge of handling AM*in g .Saigon against KCom-jOTTI* American wnivciofficer otuusaid Oieuie xuanierEarlier in methe evening, a teter- tree shipments here, said the munist terrorist attacks on apparently was rorlst -hurled a grenade at ’ trend is toward a natural, the^ne fifth■iirrn anniversary of i.u 'lI ‘"tended------ to get at themo uumpdump truckloadii-u,:niu<tu mo f U.S.u.o. aoioiersaoldlers onon* * green tree, plus a colored or O v em iles th^Ol6 Viet HnnoCone hoofhpnt nftoff o . ' “ bumped Into alerted bridge on the northern outsklroutsklrU artificial one. com ijanv-sizp pnpm v honH first may have of the city en route to a U.S com pan y-size enem y band suspected this was the target. -
Tom Nowatzke, All-Ameircan
THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 25, No. 5 (2003) Tom Nowatzke, All-American: The Lions’ Fullback and the Colts’ Super Bowl Hero By: Jim Sargent, June 16, 2003 Near the end of Super Bowl V in Miami on January 17, 1971, on his yards for all games) as a junior, and gained 545 yards as a senior. second try from the two-yard line, Tom Nowatzke, the big fullback The players voted him Team MVP after his junior season. of the Baltimore Colts, plowed into the end zone and narrowed the score against the Dallas Cowboys to 13-12. With Jim O’Brien’s Nowatzke scored 136 points at Indiana, including 73 as a senior, successful extra point, the Colts tied the Cowboys with less than and earned All-Big Ten honors during his last two seasons. His two minutes to play for the championship. greatest effort came when the senior rushed for 140 yards and helped his team beat Minnesota, 24-6, after the Golden Gophers Following the kickoff and Mike Curtis’ interception of Craig Morton’s were favored by two touchdowns. Despite the fact that IU had a overthrown pass, Baltimore’s offense ran three plays from three-year record of 8-19, Tom was picked by the American scrimmage. Then O’Brien kicked the game winning 32-yard field Football Coaches Association to be one of 11 First-Team All- goal, lifting the Colts to the championship of the National Football Americans. In 1986 he was inducted into the state of Indiana’s League. For many of the Colt players, the hard-fought triumph Football Hall of Fame, and IU’s Football Hall of Fame inducted him helped soothe two years of pain left over from Baltimore’s 16-7 in 1996. -
Mob Rule Vs. Progressive Reform
Bard College Bard Digital Commons Senior Projects Spring 2016 Bard Undergraduate Senior Projects Spring 2016 Mob Rule vs. Progressive Reform Ethan Moon Barness Bard College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.bard.edu/senproj_s2016 Part of the Political History Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation Barness, Ethan Moon, "Mob Rule vs. Progressive Reform" (2016). Senior Projects Spring 2016. 185. https://digitalcommons.bard.edu/senproj_s2016/185 This Open Access work is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been provided to you by Bard College's Stevenson Library with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this work in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights- holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Mob Rule vs. Progressive Reform The struggle between organized crime, machine politics and the Progressive Reform Movement for control over New York City municipal politics from 19001935 Senior Project submitted to The Division of Social Studies Bard College by Ethan Barness 1 Acknowledgements I would like to thank my Project Advisor Myra Armstead for guiding me through the research process in my senior year at Bard. I would like to thank my mother, my father and my sister as well as all my closest friends and relatives, whose support I greatly appreciate. -
Uslaner, the Bulging Pocket and the Rule of Law, Ch. 9 (1)
Uslaner, The Bulging Pocket and the Rule of Law, ch. 9 (1) CHAPTER NINE Therefore do all stand fast where you are standing. And lift your voices in the choral anthem, devoted to the poorest of the poor. For in real life the ending isn’t quite so fine. Victorious messenger does not come riding often. And the reply to a kick in the pants is another kick in the pants. So pursue but not too eagerly injustice. From “Finale: The Mounted Messenger,” Berthold Brecht and Kurt Weill, The Threepenny Opera The Threepenny Opera has a happy ending. The small-time criminal Macheath is freed from prisoner and given a lordship and a huge fortune. A thief living at the margins has been rewarded with the great riches ordinarily reserved for big-time plunderers. The lessons of this parable are that crime (and corruption) pays–and that you cannot eliminate small-time thievery or petty corruption. Yet, the final song, “The Mounted Messenger,” warns that this is just a story and in the real world, petty thieves neither become rich nor respectable. Macheath was supposed to be executed, as demanded by his antagonist (and father-in-law) Jonathan Peachum. Yet Peachum ultimately pleads (successfully) for a pardon for the prisoner for an uplifting end to the Uslaner, The Bulging Pocket and the Rule of Law, ch. 9 (2) drama, but he cautions: "Happy endings only really happen on stage, and people are saved from poverty only rarely."1 The rich stay rich, the poor stay poor and messengers from the throne do not reward the latter with unexpected fortunes, much less social status. -
1993 Wake Forest Roster
1993 WAKE FOREST ROSTER NO NAME POS HGT WGT CLASS HOMETOWN 87 Chad Alexander TE 6-1 230 Fr. Coppell, TX 66 Reggie Avery" OL 6-1 295 Jr. Columbia, SC 23 George Banks" WR 6-1 212 So. Woodford, VA 67 Kerry Billingsley OL 6-3 290 So. Oakboro, NC 86 Rhett Blanchard** TE 6-4 232 Jr. Norcross, GA 50 Doug Bolt c 6-4 240 #Fr. Columbia, SC 35 Nelson Bonilla DB 5-11 200 Fr. South River, NJ 55 Dred Booe*** OT 6-2 279 Sr. Winston-Salem, NC 12 David Cerchia QB 6-4 195 Fr. Middletown, NJ 32 Cardell Chavis" RB 5-10 212 So. Fayetteville, NC 99 William Clark TE 6-2 197 #Fr. Reidsville, NC 2 Kevin Cole** DB 6-2 185 Sr. Portsmouth, VA 58 Austin Crowder" LB/LS 6-0 252 So. Lucas, TX 80 Todd Dixon*** WR 5-11 173 Sr. Billerica, MA 13 Adam Dolder QB 6-2 185 So. Alexandria, VA 1 Marlon Estes" WR 5-11 195 Jr. Raleigh, NC 85 Robert Fatzinger TE 6-4 245 Fr. Northampton, PA 90 Milgo Floyd DE 6-2 235 Fr. Winston-Salem, NC 52 Frank Folino LB 6-0 230 Fr. Pittsburgh, PA 3 B.J. Franklin WR 5-9 170 Fr. Boca Raton, FL 96 Rick Cardner" DE 6-3 245 So. Greensboro, NC 97 Chris Gaskell OT 6-4 255 Fr. Hampton, VA 36 Kevin Giles** LB 6-0 216 Jr. Hampton, VA 28 Richard Goodpasture** DB 5-11 187 Jr. Roanoke, VA 79 Tim Goodson OL 6-5 275 Fr.