IOWA's FOURTH the Weathe, Partly Cloudy Today with Ie.Tt,Red .-,Rs in the Largest Morning Daily Southust .Nd ",T...Me ,Ast .Arly in the D.Y

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

IOWA's FOURTH the Weathe, Partly Cloudy Today with Ie.Tt,Red .-,Rs in the Largest Morning Daily Southust .Nd ~ IOWA'S FOURTH The Weathe, Partly cloudy today with Ie.tt,red .-,rs in the Largest Morning Daily southust .nd ",t...me ,ast .arly in the d.y. G.n· 01 .rally f.lr tonight. Hlllh tecI.y 10 .. IS. Serving the State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City Established in 1868 Associated Press Leased Wire and Wirephoto 5 Cents per Copy Wednesday, July 25, 1962, Iowa City, Iowa • • i t any emonstratlon an , Police Chief Fears Disorders, Ben Khedda Bows to Rivals; Terrorism Seen King Returns to Negotiate ATLANTA, Ca. (AP) - The chief judge of the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals set aside temporarily Tuesday an l Expect Quick earlier order of another federal judge which had banned dem­ onstrations by egroes seeking to end segregation prnctices at r Ben Bella * * * Albany, Ca. The action oC Judge Elbert P. ·f S d Tuttle in staying a temporary in· LI e pare junction granted city officials by Takeover Judge J. Robert Elliott brought an immediate and ominous statement ALG1ERS IA'I - Algerian otricials from the Albany police chief. nashed an alert Thursday against a In AI ab ama Laurie Pritchett, of possible dis· po sible new wave or European orders. terror while the tottering govern­ Pritchett said he expecls demon· menl or Premier Ben Youssef Ben strations to be renewed on a broad· Khedda warily bowed berore its Racial Issue ened scale. He announced that the more dynamic rivals. 200 policemen and state troopers MONTGOMERY, Ala. "" - Gov_ Ben Khedda and his ministers now on duty In the southwest Geor­ approved a proposed meeting of John Patterson has spared the \ire gia city o( 58.000 would be supple· the Algerian Revolutionary Parlia­ of a condemned white slayer whose mented by addillonal state patrol­ ment that would vole inlo power a lawyers Iuld argued that he was de­ men. seven·man pOlitical bureau of the prived o! his rights by the absence Killf to Return In an interview immediately alt· Front of National Liberation FLN. of Negroes on triol jlJries. This is a victory for dissident er Tuttle announced his deCision, deputy premier, Ahmed Ben Bella. Patterson commuted the death Negro integration leader Dr. Mar­ .. 5 a.m ..... 5:02 o.m .•.. 5:05 a.m. sentence Tuesday of Edward S. tin Lutller King Jr. said he planned The Ben Bella faction, entrenched to return to Albany immediately. in the wester\! city of Tlemcen, has Bosarge, 40. o! Mobile to life im- Picke's marched .round this glSoline lantern out. for 5 a.m_ (CST) Tuesday. At 5:02 a.m., the trap· King said he would advise the pu. hed for formation of the poli­ prisonment. Bosarge was scheduled side the State Penitentiary all night Monday until door was sPNnll. Brown was pronounced de.d at Negro leadership to seek to re-open tical bureau. Ben BeUa is one of to die in the electric choir Aug. 10. the seven men who would have un­ condemn.d slayer Charles B row n was h.nl/ed 5:05 '.m. The torch was snuffed out when pick.ts di puted power over the nation Tuesday morning. The ex.cution was scheduled learn.d that Brown was dead. The racial issue - unexpected in BULLETIN once in such a bureau. view of the Cact that Bosarge was ALBANY, Ga. III - Sever. I hundred slnglnll N'l/nItS start· The Ben Khedda government * * * * * * * * * convicted a! the hammer killing ad • m.rch tow.rd t"- down. leaked what amounted to virtual or a white waitress, Dorothy Cash town u.. of raci.lly troubled capitulation in informal statements, - was injected at his clemency Albany Tuesd.y night .nd about but never made a flat announce­ hearing before the Governor July 40 wer. hustltd off to 1.11. ment. Brown Dies on. Gallows, Asks 11. The Negroes w.r. urged on bv Algiers Police Prefect Amar His attorney. Ira Dement ot Dr. M.rtin Luther Ki/lf Jr.• t • Mohammedi warned that the Eu· Montgomery, pointed to a recent mISS rally whir. an Int,gratlen porean Secret Army Organization decision by the U.S. 5th Circuit letder disclosed court .dlen is reconstructing its network to in· Forgiveness of God, Society Court of Appeals reversing the con­ .Imed .t crumbling sag,....tt«t crease the new nation's difficulties viction of a Mobile Negro, Willie barriers in public facilities. by more terror and bloodshed. FORT MADISON (A'\ - Slayer from the room where he spent his outside the prison walls from '1 Seals, who was sentenced to death He said European terrorists Charles Noel Brown went to his last hours, to the gallows. He Monday night until Charles Brown for raping a white woman. The with city officials negotiations to staged a concentrated, organized death on the gallows at the State climbed the 16 steps unaided and was hanged at 5 Tuesday mornin¥. court set the jury verdict aside on end racial troubies which have attack against Algerian policemen Penitentiary here Tuesday, breath­ stood quietly on the platform while The pickets carried signs protc9l­ the ground of exclusion or Negroes brought the jailing of nearly 1,000 and soldiers in the heart of Algiers Ing the hope that "the people will Associate Warden Bernard Nelson ing capital punishment In genera Crom juries in Mobile. Negroes at various tlmes since Monday night. Four Europeans forgive me for what I've done." and his assistant James M. Rich­ and Brown's execution in particu­ last December ror violating city and three Moslems were killed and His last words, immediately be· ard, strapped his .arms and legs. iar. ordinances. ' seven Moslems were wounded. fore he dropped through the lrap­ He wore a black prison-made Local police dispersed any other King, who llimselC served two Mohammcdi told a news confer· door sprurtg by Sheriff Roy Wich· suit of the type given to men re­ groups that formed. Aboul 2 a.m., Judge Denies days in jail there recently (or ence his men seized immense ael or Pottawaltamie County, were leased from the prison. two Fort Madison youths. William leading a protest march, said that quantities of arms and ammuni· "God forgive me." The trap was sprung at 5:02 Koellner and Edward Ludden. both if the officials refuse to negotiate tion in European apartment build­ Brown was executed for the fatal '.m. and Brown was pronounced 21, were arrested afler they had difrerences in good faith, "We will ings. He said he has mobilized shooting Feb. 22, 1961, of Alvin dead by prison physicians Drs. heckled the pickets for about 20 Medicare have no alternative but to resume troops and au:xiliary police to ward Koehrsen, 54, of Walnut, in Coun­ Frank Poepsel and Rob.rt minutes. our peaceful demonstrations until of! a planned wave of terrOr. cil Bluffs. as he and Charles Ed­ Feightner at 5:05 a.m. CST. Each was fined $25 Tuesd.y victory is complete." ward Kelley, 21, tried 10 steal Fifty·nine persons witnessed for using wh.t Pollee Chief R. L. 'Victory for Justice' Mohammedi's statement was Koehrsen's car. P•• k called "abusiv ••nd sar· Iniunction viewed by many Europeans as an Iowa's first execution in 10 years. "We felt all along," he said, Kelley, also under the death Warden John Bennett 'said Brown castic langull/e," Th.y were "that Judge Elliott had rendered effort to find a scapegoat for the REGINA, Sask. (A'I - A federal s.ntence for the shooting, was In passed a quiet night. The Rev. charged with disturbing thl ptace Grim Vigil an unjust and unconstitutional de· country's internal chaos. and Intoxication. judge rejected Tuesday an applica. his death row cell only about 50 Lester Peter, prison Protestant tion Cor a temporary injunction cision. Our feeling that our rights European witnesses said Mos­ feet from the building where the Two of about 26 pick.ts - who maintained a vigil outside the w.lls have been denied is substantiated lem policemen started the shoot­ chaplain, spent the night with the Police had earlier broken up a against operation of Saskatche· execution took place, thoul/h h, prisoner. He said they discussed crowd of about 400 people. some of the Stat. Penitentiary Mond.y night - grimly await n.ws of by the remarks of Judge Tuttle. It ing. Charl.s Brown's de.th. Pickets marched until Brown w.s pro­ wan's compulsory medical insur­ could not see the proceedings. passages of Scripture among other of whom had been heckling and ance program. is a victory not for the Negro peo­ Takeover of power by the Ben The slaying of Koehrsen was nounced dead early Tuesday. The torch in the for.ground burned ple but for justice and democracy Bella group seemed only a ques­ things, but declined to give further throwing pennies at the pickets. near the end or a bloody crime details. Shortly after 5 Tuesday moming until the execution was completed. Justice D.C. Disbery of {he in America." tion of time. spree by the two men, both of Min· Brown's body was released to Court of Queen's Bench said in his Tuttle indicated no temporary in· Ben Khedda's information min­ - as wilnesses to the execution -Photos by P.t.r Donhow. neapolis, through three states. his widow, Mary Lou, mother of were leaving the prison - solemn . -----------,--------------­ ruling: junction should have been issued i~ler , Mohammed Yazid, told news­ They also have admitted slaying his six children. He will be buried picketers extinguished a gasoline "It is not lor the court to in by Elliott.
Recommended publications
  • The Cowl, Wednesday, April 7, 1948
    11100 DOI.I.AKs CAN III AIKI'I.ANK CLUB YOUKs HAH' l,K TICKETS ON SAM'; VOL. X. No. 16 SIX PAGKS PROVIDENCE COLLEGE, PROVIDENCE. R. 1 . APRIL 7. 1848 10 Cents a Copy Monogram Dance Features •1 KFA1m On behalf of the student body MSGR. FULTON J. SHEEN Stan Moore's 10-Piece Band aim faculty, thr COWL expresses sincere svmpathy with John B. WILL LECTURE SUNDAY Hagerty, Jr., In Hie recent death •The Varsity Hop." sponsored by the Monogram Club will of his father. In pare rrnqulearat. feature the ten-piece Stan Moore aggroijatmn augmented by the AT CRANSTON ARMORY smooth song stylings of Lorraine" a week from thi Fridav iiisht April 16th. in the Harkins Hall auditorium as it draws the curtain Distinguished Radio Orator And Lecturer Will Talk On on the Spring social season at its* "The Modern Soul In Search Of God" annual semi-formal dance. Dani- Instruction Begins inc will be from nine to twelve \ Oculist The bids are priced at two STUDENT TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE dollars and can be obtained at For Flying Friars thr Athletic Offlee In Donnelly Hull At State Airport The Rt Rev. Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen, Ph.D., S.T.D.. foremost or from any of the committee mem- Catholic radio orator in the United States, will talk on "The bers The wearing of corsages 1$ op The Providence College Flying Modern Soul in Search of God," at the Cranston Street Armor tional in Providence, this Sunday, April 11th, at 3:00 P.M. Club has already started on lt> pro Stan Moore, who for the past tw • This lecture is being sponsored years has played at the College's on gram of flight Instruction and train- standing dances.
    [Show full text]
  • Want and Bait 11 27 2020.Xlsx
    Year Maker Set # Var Beckett Name Upgrade High 1967 Topps Base/Regular 128 a $ 50.00 Ed Spiezio (most of "SPIE" missing at top) 1967 Topps Base/Regular 149 a $ 20.00 Joe Moeller (white streak btwn "M" & cap) 1967 Topps Base/Regular 252 a $ 40.00 Bob Bolin (white streak btwn Bob & Bolin) 1967 Topps Base/Regular 374 a $ 20.00 Mel Queen ERR (underscore after totals is missing) 1967 Topps Base/Regular 402 a $ 20.00 Jackson/Wilson ERR (incomplete stat line) 1967 Topps Base/Regular 427 a $ 20.00 Ruben Gomez ERR (incomplete stat line) 1967 Topps Base/Regular 447 a $ 4.00 Bo Belinsky ERR (incomplete stat line) 1968 Topps Base/Regular 400 b $ 800 Mike McCormick White Team Name 1969 Topps Base/Regular 47 c $ 25.00 Paul Popovich ("C" on helmet) 1969 Topps Base/Regular 440 b $ 100 Willie McCovey White Letters 1969 Topps Base/Regular 447 b $ 25.00 Ralph Houk MG White Letters 1969 Topps Base/Regular 451 b $ 25.00 Rich Rollins White Letters 1969 Topps Base/Regular 511 b $ 25.00 Diego Segui White Letters 1971 Topps Base/Regular 265 c $ 2.00 Jim Northrup (DARK black blob near right hand) 1971 Topps Base/Regular 619 c $ 6.00 Checklist 6 644-752 (cprt on back, wave on brim) 1973 Topps Base/Regular 338 $ 3.00 Checklist 265-396 1973 Topps Base/Regular 588 $ 20.00 Checklist 529-660 upgrd exmt+ 1974 Topps Base/Regular 263 $ 3.00 Checklist 133-264 upgrd exmt+ 1974 Topps Base/Regular 273 $ 3.00 Checklist 265-396 upgrd exmt+ 1956 Topps Pins 1 $ 500 Chuck Diering SP 1956 Topps Pins 2 $ 30.00 Willie Miranda 1956 Topps Pins 3 $ 30.00 Hal Smith 1956 Topps Pins 4 $
    [Show full text]
  • Franklin County Accident Kills 1
    Thursday, July 12, 2012 XXXXX XXXXXX Six more days of snapper THEYOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER SINCE 1937 for Gulf anglers | B1 YEAR 74, NUMBER 39 TAR Thursday, JULY 12, 2012 ForS breaking news, visit www.starfl.com 50¢ Director: TDC at ‘launching point’ By VALERIE GARMAN “We are just at a great place to Jenkins said. “I’ve been speak- and development of long-term “There are a lot of places — 229-7843 | @valeriegarman do really great things together,” ing to our lodging partners, and loyal customers. luxury places — that have brand- vgarman@starfl .com Jenkins said. “I feel like we’re at they’re full. We have people com- Because people take the ed themselves,” Jenkins said. “It a really good launch stage.” ing in from all over.” time to choose their vacation would be a different story if we With bed tax collections on the The TDC reported a 20.86 per- Jenkins has been on board homes based on family make up were a commodity product.” rise and area hotels and vacation cent increase in bed tax collec- with the TDC for about a month and interests, Jenkins said she Jenkins said one of her goals is rentals booked solid, Gulf County tions for May over the previous and is working to develop a uni- considers Gulf County a luxury to have the Gulf County Welcome Tourism Development Council year, a number Jenkins said she fi ed brand for Gulf County and product, much different than a Center open seven days a week Director Jennifer Jenkins sees fi nds very encouraging.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Campus Erupts Over Gibbon's
    +BWRO' _' sti C , -l. aA ..rr.l.l e.... l~ ... l TAT D 11 e5namu .acuon U en7uiJrup nt SOUTWer Gb bn B a Campus Erupts Over Gibbon's Ban A massive Southwestern student of Southwestern, about the restau- troduced a motion providing that demonstration in front of Gibbon's rant's policy on serving Negroes. a petition be offered for student Steak House, 2439 Summer Ave- Childress said that it does not support of the resolution and that nue, both objecting to and support- make much difference to the pick- the resolution be sent to The Com- ing a boycott of the restaurant, ets if Gibbon's is a private club, mercial Appeal. was sparked this week by the re- since the moral issue of individual Cook asked if a referendum fusal of Steak House Manager Bill rights is still involved even if the would be more effective than a Taylor to serve Negro student restaurant is in fact a private club. petition. Both Hollingsworth and Lorenzo Childress. Murray Makes Motion SGA President Bill Hubbard said In an effort to support the boy- Rising Junior Senator Craig that the students might call for a cott organized by several students, Murray introduced the motion to referendum on the issue if they so the Southwestern Senate passed a adopt the resolution. desired and that the Senate was resolution last Tuesday urging the Murray stated that the resolu- only expressing its own opinion on student body to join in the move- the Gibbon's incident. ment not to patronize Gibbon's.
    [Show full text]
  • Scarborough, Hollingsworth Meet in Runoff Election
    BURROW LIBRARY Sol.uhw-ser m i-Af A a1r 'nut u at vmpllwrittrr 47th Year MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1966 Volume 47, No. 17 Scarborough,- - - w Hollingsworth Meet InRunoff Election .............................. Student Council Edington and Jackson Selected Election Returns For Vice-President, Secretary Student balloting today for the position of president of President the Student Government Association has resulted in the neces- Chip Hatzenbuehler .........................179 sity for a run-off. The vote was Don Hollingsworth............................----------250 split between the three candi- Bo Scarborough-..............-----.. .........-272 dates-Don Hollingsworth, Chip Hatzenbuehler and Bo Scar- Vice-President brought--and no one candidate had a simple majority of the David Blankenship.....................---------.......291 votes cast. Don Hollingsworth and Bo Scarborough had the Willie Edington...............-------------..................393 most ballots and will be in the run-off which will be held Secretary-Treasurer Monday from 8:00 a.m. to 4:15 Eleanor Jackson................................402 p.m. outside Palmer Hall if the is Willie Edington, and Eleanor Julie Stanton......................................-----281 weather permits; if not in the Jackson will be in charge of the Athletics Student Council's East End of Palmer Hall. Chip secretarial duties. Mary Jane Riegler............................----------251 Next year's commissioners will Jimmy Whittington ......---------...........--........437 Halzenbuehler had the smallest be Athletics--Jimmy Whittington, Eduaction number of votes and thus was Education-Barry Boggs, Intercol- Barry Boggs .......................................-----------------402 eliminated from contention. legiate Relations--Jack Burch, Re- Doug Post------------------...................---------------------.....275 A smiliar situation occurred in ligious Activities-Charles Murphy, Intercollegiate Relations the race for Commissioner of Pub- Social-Knox Phillips, and Student Welfare-Sam Highsmith. Jack Burch.....
    [Show full text]
  • Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter
    PSA/DNA Full LOA PSA/DNA Pre-Certified Not Reviewed The Jack Smalling Collection Debut Year Player Hall of Fame Item Grade 1871 Doug Allison Letter Cap Anson HOF Letter 7 Al Reach Letter Deacon White HOF Cut 8 Nicholas Young Letter 1872 Jack Remsen Letter 1874 Billy Barnie Letter Tommy Bond Cut Morgan Bulkeley HOF Cut 9 Jack Chapman Letter 1875 Fred Goldsmith Cut 1876 Foghorn Bradley Cut 1877 Jack Gleason Cut 1878 Phil Powers Letter 1879 Hick Carpenter Cut Barney Gilligan Cut Jack Glasscock Index Horace Phillips Letter 1880 Frank Bancroft Letter Ned Hanlon HOF Letter 7 Arlie Latham Index Mickey Welch HOF Index 9 Art Whitney Cut 1882 Bill Gleason Cut Jake Seymour Letter Ren Wylie Cut 1883 Cal Broughton Cut Bob Emslie Cut John Humphries Cut Joe Mulvey Letter Jim Mutrie Cut Walter Prince Cut Dupee Shaw Cut Billy Sunday Index 1884 Ed Andrews Letter Al Atkinson Index Charley Bassett Letter Frank Foreman Index Joe Gunson Cut John Kirby Letter Tom Lynch Cut Al Maul Cut Abner Powell Index Gus Schmeltz Letter Phenomenal Smith Cut Chief Zimmer Cut 1885 John Tener Cut 1886 Dan Dugdale Letter Connie Mack HOF Index Joe Murphy Cut Wilbert Robinson HOF Cut 8 Billy Shindle Cut Mike Smith Cut Farmer Vaughn Letter 1887 Jocko Fields Cut Joseph Herr Cut Jack O'Connor Cut Frank Scheibeck Cut George Tebeau Letter Gus Weyhing Cut 1888 Hugh Duffy HOF Index Frank Dwyer Cut Dummy Hoy Index Mike Kilroy Cut Phil Knell Cut Bob Leadley Letter Pete McShannic Cut Scott Stratton Letter 1889 George Bausewine Index Jack Doyle Index Jesse Duryea Cut Hank Gastright Letter
    [Show full text]
  • 2018-19 Media Guide
    2018-19 Media Guide Kentucky’s Winter Racetrack • Home of the Jeff Ruby Steaks & Bourbonette Oaks 2019 Jeff Ruby Steaks winner Somelikeithotbrown. Coady Photography TURFWAY PARK MILESTONES August 27, 1959 April 9, 1986 May 19, 1990 Latonia Race Track opens in Florence, Ken- Jerry Carroll and partners purchase Latonia Summer Squall wins the Preakness Stakes, tucky, running a 34-day meet. Highest for $13.5 million and rename it Turfway becoming the first Jim Beam Stakes winner one-day attendance is 11,415; top one-day Park. Price Pike, which fronts the facility, is to take a Triple Crown race. handle is $427,647. The name recalls the renamed Turfway Road. original Latonia, which operated from 1883 January 1992 to 1939 about 10 miles north of Florence. September 14, 1986 Hansel becomes the first Jim Beam Stakes Trained by Jack Van Berg, Alysheba breaks winner to earn an Eclipse Award, taking top September 9, 1968 his maiden in Turfway’s third race. Famously 3-year-old honors for his wins in the 1991 Jim On the first day of the Fall Meet, Latonia pres- dismissed as “the pony from Latonie” by Beam, Preakness, and Belmont stakes. ents the first Thoroughbred race in Kentucky training legend Woody Stephens, Aly- to be run at night. sheba later wins the 1987 Kentucky Derby May 2, 1992 and Preakness, finishes second by a nose Lil E. Tee becomes the first Jim Beam Stakes September 24, 1969 in the 1987 Breeders’ Cup Classic, is 1988 winner to win the Kentucky Derby. Judes Song wins at 241-1 and pays $484.40, Horse of the Year, and retires as the then-richest March 27, 1993 highest win payoff in the track’s days as Thoroughbred in history.
    [Show full text]
  • Kit Young's Sale #125
    KIT YOUNG’S SALE #125 WILLIE MICKEY AND THE DUKE SPECIALS The 1950’s was a wonderful time for baseball, especially in New York. The Yankees! Da Brooklyn Bums! The Giants! Each team featured Hall of Fame center fielders and fans argued constantly about who was New York’s finest. While they last, we are offering specially discounted cards of Willie, Mickey and The Duke. 1958 Mays/ Snider #438 ......Reg. .... Special EX-MT .......... $78.00 ......$63.00 EX ................... 50.00 ........37.00 VG-EX ............. 39.00 ........29.00 1957 Mays .......Reg. .... Special 1959 Mays .......Reg. .... Special 1961 Mays .......Reg. .... Special 1963 Mays/Musial 1954 Bowman NR-MT ........ $349.00 ....$308.00 NR-MT ........ $234.00 ....$209.00 EX-MT .......... $80.00 ......$59.00 #138 .................Reg. .... Special Snider ................Reg. .... Special EX-MT .......... 271.00 ......238.00 EX-MT .......... 198.00 ......173.00 EX ................... 49.00 ........34.00 NR-MT .......... $78.00 ......$65.00 EX-MT ........ $135.00 ....$104.00 EX ................. 160.00 ......127.00 EX ................... 88.00 ........71.00 EX-MT ............ 60.00 ........48.95 EX ................... 99.00 ........71.00 VG-EX ............. 59.00 ........45.00 EX ................... 40.00 ........31.50 VG-EX ............. 78.00 ........62.00 VG-EX ............. 32.00 ........24.00 1959 Mays/ 1958 Mantle/ Ashburn #317 ...Reg. .... Special Aaron #418 .......Reg. .... Special NR-MT .......... $79.00 ......$67.00 EX+ ............ $220.00 ....$162.00 EX-MT ............ 53.00 ........41.00 VG-EX ........... 155.00 ......109.00 EX ................... 40.00 ........27.00 1962 Mays .......Reg. .....Special VG-EX ............. 28.00 ........22.00 1957 Snider ......Reg. .... Special EX ................. $99.00 ......$74.00 VG-EX ............
    [Show full text]
  • Base a ~Researc JOURNAL
    THE Base a ~Researc JOURNAL As usual, we have many fascinating articles-statis­ We've also got Al Kermisch (what would a Research tical, historical, and a mixture of both-in this issue Journal be without his researcher's notebook?), David of BRJ. Tom Shieber's lead piece is a wonderful ex, Voigt, and a sprinkling of the usual suspects I seem to ample of basic SABR research, which deserves a place round up every year as SABR's Claude Raines. on the required,reading list of anyone who wants a Thankfully, we also have lots offirst,time authors, complete picture of the game. One special article, by whose work is so vital to the health of our Society. Eddie Gold, is about John Tattersall, an early SABR Geographically, we stretch from North Dakota to the member and creator of the Tattersall Homerun Log, Dominican Republic, and chronologically from 1845 which we hope will soon be made public in updated to the late, lamented 1994 season. form. -M.A. The Evolution of the Baseball Diamond Tom Shieber 3 The Gowell Claset Saga Jamie Selko 14 Teammates with the Most Combined Hits "Biff" Brecher and Albey M. Reiner 17 Disenfranchised All,Stars of 1945 Charlie Bevis 19 Games Ahead and Games Behind: A Pitching Stat Alan S. and James C. Kaufman 24 Don Newcombe: Grace Under Pressure Guy Waterman 27 If God Owned the Angels Tom Ruane 32 Alonzo Perry in the Dominican Republic Jose de Jesus Jimenez, M.D 39 The DiMaggio Streak: How Statistically Likely? Charles Blahous 41 19th Century Pitching Changes Robert E.
    [Show full text]
  • We Patrician Published by the Students of St
    130 JAM THIRD HALLOWE’EN DANCE SPONSORED BY SENIORS Committees, Headed by J. Cauda, Bring in Social Year with a Bang! We Patrician Published by the Students of St. Patrick's High School By John Vondras and Jerry Cauda The first dance sponsored by the Class of ’53 turned out to be a magnificent success. We wish to thank all Volume 6 NOVEMBER, 1952 Number 2 those who were fortunate enough to be in attendance PRINCIPALS OF OCTOBER 24 A.D.C. MEETING Right to left: Victor Pecore, Secretary; Ralph Brown, Treasurer; Brother Aelred; Richard Dillon, President; James Fanning, Vice-President. for making it the big affair it was. Under the reliable guidance of Brother B. Henry, class moderator, the decorations com­ CONFRATERNITY HEARS BRO. AELRED mittee . John Vondras, Jim McKnight, Dick Dillon, Ronald Wilson, Nick Pucino, ON VOCATIONS AS NEW SEASON BEGINS Gene Kessler, Jack (the hulk) Martin, Vinnie Keller, John Burns, Gerry Byrnes, Charlie Schneider, and Ludwig Ruf . transformed New Members Inducted at Church Ceremony; Tigers Receive Oscars; the cafeteria into a veritable autumn wonder­ land. The walls were adorned with stalks of Guest Stresses Finding Out One’s Vocation by Means of Prayer corn and with pumpkins donated by the Keller farm. Mssrs. Vondras and McKnight construct, by Victor Pecore j club, senior dance, etc., the honored guest of ed a beautiful shrine to the Blessed Mother ! the month was introduced. while Mr. Dillon worked on a gory scene in The Archconfraternity of the Divine Child Vocations through Prayer volving two dummies, one splattered with held its initial meeting of the 1952-53 school "blood,” and the other calmly passing a knife year in Columbus Hall on Friday, October 24.
    [Show full text]
  • Aouttwrrtern at Ilemphis
    -Zy~h~s0 m1rr aouttwrrtern at ilemphis 47th Year MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, FRIDAY, MARCH 18, 1966 Volume 47, No. 18 Impact '66 Will Explore Scarborough Edges Hollingsworth World Challenge At Vandy The weekend symposium at Van- In Close SGA Run Off Election Independent derbilt University, IMPACT '66, will candidate Bo Scarborough squeezed by Don Hollings- be held this year at the campus worth in Monday's run-off election for presidet of the Student Govern- April 1 and 2. An unusually interest- ment Association. Scarborough gained a slim majority of twenty-one ing group of speakers has been votes in the balloting, edging his opponent 360-339. lined up for the two-day affair. Bob Glasgow, Commissioner of- Elections, pointed out the remark- He served as a representative The celebrities enlisted for Im- to able number of students who turned the Executive Council of the pact '66 Barry Goldwater, 1964 SGA out to the polls Monday. In last and Commissioner of Intercollegiate Republican Presidential nominee; Friday's voting a total of 705 stu- Activities last year. He was chair- Dr. H. Arthur Steiner, nationally dents cast their ballots for a full man of the Dilemma '66 committee recognized expert on Communist slate of candidates, or about 74 per and co-ordinator of Danforth also. China; Gerard Gaussen, counselor cent of the student body. Monday In the other campaign requiring of the French Embassy; William 669 students decided on either Scar- a run-off, David Adcock polled 407 Griffith, director of the Interna- borough or Hollingsworth. These votes to Jim McKnight's 273 to tional Communism Project at MIT; totals constitute an unprecedented gain the position of Commissioner John Bartlow Martin, former U.
    [Show full text]