Green Bag Almanac and Reader 2010
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Jurisprudence of the Infield Fly Rule
Brooklyn Law School BrooklynWorks Faculty Scholarship Summer 2004 Taking Pop-Ups Seriously: The urJ isprudence of the Infield lF y Rule Neil B. Cohen Brooklyn Law School, [email protected] S. W. Waller Follow this and additional works at: https://brooklynworks.brooklaw.edu/faculty Part of the Common Law Commons, Other Law Commons, and the Rule of Law Commons Recommended Citation 82 Wash. U. L. Q. 453 (2004) This Article is brought to you for free and open access by BrooklynWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of BrooklynWorks. TAKING POP-UPS SERIOUSLY: THE JURISPRUDENCE OF THE INFIELD FLY RULE NEIL B. COHEN* SPENCER WEBER WALLER** In 1975, the University of Pennsylvania published a remarkable item. Rather than being deemed an article, note, or comment, it was classified as an "Aside." The item was of course, The Common Law Origins of the Infield Fly Rule.' This piece of legal scholarship was remarkable in numerous ways. First, it was published anonymously and the author's identity was not known publicly for decades. 2 Second, it was genuinely funny, perhaps one of the funniest pieces of true scholarship in a field dominated mostly by turgid prose and ineffective attempts at humor by way of cutesy titles or bad puns. Third, it was short and to the point' in a field in which a reader new to law reviews would assume that authors are paid by the word or footnote. Fourth, the article was learned and actually about something-how baseball's infield fly rule4 is consistent with, and an example of, the common law processes of rule creation and legal reasoning in the Anglo-American tradition. -
Bibles, Badges and Business for Immigration Reform News Clips January – August 2015
Bibles, Badges and Business for Immigration Reform News Clips January – August 2015 JANUARY ....................................................................................................................................................... 4 CHRISTIAN POST: Top 10 Politics Stories of 2014 ......................................................................................... 4 CHRISTIANITY TODAY (Galli Column): Amnesty is Not a Dirty Word ............................................................ 5 THE DENVER POST (Torres Letter): Ken Buck is right on immigration .......................................................... 6 SIOUX CITY JOURNAL: Church News ............................................................................................................. 6 CBS-WSBT (Indiana): South Bend police chief helps launch immigration task force ................................... 7 FOX NEWS LATINO (Rodriguez Op-Ed): Pro Life, Pro Immigrant .................................................................. 7 TERRA: Funcionarios de seguridad crean fuerza de tarea migratoria en EUA ............................................. 9 UNIVISION (WFDC News): Noticias DC – Edición 6 P.M. ............................................................................... 9 THE POTPOURRI (Texas; Tomball Edition): Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia helps launch national immigration task force .................................................................................................................................. 9 CBS-WSBT (Indiana): South -
Alumni Columns Oflicial Publication of Northwolcm State University Dr
Magazine Spring 2012 Northwestern State University of Louisiana CAMPUS BEING ORGANIZEDJOi ^^^Current Sauce COLLEGE PARTICMION IN WAR WORK oA'noN op I "3 LOUISIANA STATE NORMAL l'S XXX- NUMBEJR trOAY. NOVEi\mER 6. 3: t Monday fired room of Mdmlay a iiiU of all r^ >n> uill be Mudfiit \\\-l the diiMlton Xlunt^ at dinner operation on several war en iident parlioipatio as authorities fee nei-cssai.v. The Red Cross Surs Oressing Room has been in op tion for several weeks but m local coeds are not yet pai-ttcl; ing in this aetlvlty. MijiS C'lMdey has LssBed i (ur loral stiulriiUi lo titlic t JrtH; time lor national defi Reeonunendine: th;»t lOK h of tlie 16«-liour week b<' dev ADeca r History: A glimpse at ca II ; life in the 1940s 1 Alumni Columns Oflicial Publication of Northwolcm State University Dr. Randall J. Webb, 1965, 1966 Natchitoches. Louisiana President, Northwestern State University Organi/cd in I SK4 •A member ol'C ASE Volume XXII Number I Spring 2012 The Alumni Columns (USPS 015480) is published Dear alumni, by Northwestern Stale Uni\ersity. Natchitoches. Louisiana. 7I4974KX)2 While serving as president of Northwestern Periodicals Postage Paid at Natchitoches. La . and at additional mailing offices. State University, I have many opportunities to POSTMASTRR: Send address changc-s to the be humbled by the generosity of people who are Alumni Columns. Northwestern State University. NatchiliK-hes. La. 714y7-(HXl2. associated with this special institution. It means so much to me and Alumni Office Phone: .1 18-357-4414 and 888-799-6486 those who work here to know that people value what we do so highly I AX: 318-357-4225 • E-mail: owensd unsula.cdu that they are willing to make donations to support Northwestern State. -
33 Publishers Affidavit
PUBLISHERS AFFIDAVIT \-LrPlf TI IE STATE OFTEXAS § .■9 COUNTY OF FORT BEND § Before me, the undersigned authority, on this day personally appeared Clyde C. King, Jr. who being by me duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the Publisher of The HeraldlCoaster and that said newspaper meets the requirements of Section 2051.044 of the Texas Government Code, to wit: PUBLIC NOTICE 1. it devotes not less than twenty-five percent (25%) of its The Commissioners Court of Fort Bend County, Texas will consider an Order Adopting an Amendment total column lineage to general interest items; to the Fort Bend County Regula tions of Subdivisions in Fort Bend County, revising the following sec tions: 2. it is published at least once each week; Paragraph 5.2.B.1., to read: The minimum width of the right-of- way to be dedicated for any desig nated major thoroughfare shall not 3. it is entered as second-class postal matter in the county be less than 100 feet, nor more than 120 feet." where it is published; and Paragraph 6.2.B.2., to read: "Where the subdivision is located adjacent to an existing designated major thoroughfare have a right-of- way width of less than 100 feet, suf 4. it has been published regularly and continuously since ficient additional right-of-way must be dedicated, within the subdivision 1892. boundaries, to provide for the de velopment of the major thorough fare to a total right-of-way width of not less than 100 feet nor more 5. it is generally circulated within Fort Bend County. -
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 -
With a Combination of Speed, Daring and Brains, Ty Cobb Is Surely the Terror of the Opposing Infield.” – 1912 Hassan Cigarettes Tobacco Card
Ty Cobb By Jimmy Keenan “With a combination of speed, daring and brains, Ty Cobb is surely the terror of the opposing infield.” – 1912 Hassan Cigarettes tobacco card. “Rogers Hornsby could run like anything but not like this kid. Ty Cobb was the fastest I ever saw for being sensational on the bases." – Hall of Fame manager Casey Stengel. 1 “The Babe was a great ballplayer, sure, but Ty Cobb was even greater. Babe Ruth could knock your brains out, but Cobb would drive you crazy." – Hall of Fame outfielder Tris Speaker. 2 "The greatness of Ty Cobb was something that had to be seen, and to see him was to remember him forever." – Hall of Fame first baseman George Sisler. 3 Ty Cobb made his mark in baseball during the first three decades of the 20 th century. To this day, the mere mention of his name resonates baseball excellence. Cobb was credited with setting 90 individual records during his 24-year major league career. He played with the Detroit Tigers from (1905- 26) and the Philadelphia A's from (1927-28). He was the player-manager of the Tigers from 1921-26. Cobb hit over .400 three times (1911, 1912, 1922). He currently holds the highest lifetime batting average (.366) of any major league player. During his tenure in the bigs, he was credited with 12 American League batting titles, nine of them in a row. An error regarding Cobb’s 1910 hitting statistics was discovered in 1978. This correction led to him losing a point on his lifetime average as well as the 1910 batting crown. -
The Ongoing Fable of Baseball by MARK Mcguire
NEW Y ORK Volume 2 • Number 4 • Spring 2003 8 Americans revere Cooperstown and Abner Doubleday as icons of baseball, although historical evidence leaves both birthplace and inventor in doubt The Ongoing Fable of Baseball BY MARK McGUIRE he National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York contains: •2.6 million library documents • 30,000 “three-dimensional” artifacts, Tincluding 6,251 balls, 447 gloves, Babe Ruth’s bowling ball, and Christy Mathewson’s piano •half a million photographs •more than 15,000 files on every Major Leaguer who ever played • 12,000 hours of recordings • 135,000 baseball cards • one pervasive, massive, enduring myth Hall of Famer Hughie Jennings For in this mecca of the sport, history and historical fancy co-exist. Undoubtedly, the village that’s synonymous with baseball’s glory is the home of baseball. It’s just not baseball’s hometown. NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL OF FAME LIBRARY LIBRARY BASEBALL HALL OF FAME NATIONAL NEW YORK archives • SPRING 2003 9 Many kids first learning about the game’s lore hear that baseball was invented by Abner Doubleday in Cooperstown. But most histori- ans––and even the Hall––acknowledge that the Doubleday tale is a myth concocted with the thinnest of evidence early in the twentieth century, a yarn promoted by a sporting goods Abner Doubleday fired the first magnate determined to prove that the game Union shot of the Civil War at was a uniquely American invention. Fort Sumter. And Doubleday was truly a unique American. NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL OF FAME LIBRARY A West Point graduate, he fought in the Mexican War in 1846–48. -
Winter I 1999 Y Name Is Viorel, and I'm from an Eastern European M Country
Winter I 1999 y name is Viorel, and I'm from an Eastern European M country. I am 12 years old, and although I'm a boy I cry easily. Some boys laugh at me, but my mother says I ha,-e a good heart. After all, wouldn't you cry in my place? I am at a boardin a school in Resita, Christmas at Home miles away from my home town of 3 Iasi. This was the onh· school in the country that would accept me where Royal Rangers I could learn a craft. I'm training to National Competition make musical instruments such as 4 violins, mandolins, and flu tes. My best fri end is Florin. He's an Powder Plunge orphan. One day h e told me, "I've never 6 seen inside a house. I ah,·ays wanted A Happy Millennium to see one." "What do you mean?" I as ked. 8 "I have n e,·er once left this Rascal Rangers boarding school. I ha,-e spent almost 13 years within the e aates." 10 "Don't you ha,-e anyone?" I asked. Darby Jones Florin shook his head. I cried a lot for the next 2 days. 12 I would soon be aoina home for How To Get To Hell Christmas vacation. Ho,,- could I leave Florin here? 14 "I will see if I can take you home with me for Christmas," I told Florin. Comedy Corner He looked at me 1\·ith a ray of hope 15 in his eyes. I ,,-ent to the director and asked him, "Sir, can Florin come home with me for Christmas?" "Impossible," said the tall, strong man who had a mustache and metal HIGH ADVENTURE-Volume 29, Number 3 ISSN (0190-3802) published teeth. -
Listening In
Success of Baseball Teams World's Most Famous Four" Princeton Sure Due to Strong Combinations "Big Battery Combination To Have Crew Nj'ed Hanlon's Orioles Had Keeler, McGraw, Kelley and Coming Season Jennings.Spalding, White, Barnes and McVey Another Famous Group on Old Boston Club Plans Being Made for Races With Big Colleges of By W. J. Macbeth the East The history of professional baseball is replete with striking examples cf the value of certain strong combinations within Connie Mack's old particular nines. The PRINCETON, N. J., Jan. 26..An un¬ glory of Athletic pennant trust, which held almost unin- official announcement by the manage¬ sway in the diamond from ment of the Tiger rowing association tcrrupted spotlight 1910 to 1914, was reflected has been out a "hundred-thousand-dollar"' given to the effect that atouWl infield.Home Run Baker, Eddie Col. Princeton will be represented by a :)i. Jack Barry and Stuffy Mclnnis. 'varsity crew this year. It has been definitely decided to hold the annual Ned Hanlon's famous Orioles of earlier days were carried to fame and inter-class and pennants regatta plans are being ;hrcc straight principally because of the skill and cunning of an¬ made for outside 'varsity races with other "Pig I-our".Willie Keeler, John J. McGraw, Joe and those larger universities of the East Cobb and Kelley Hughie which will support rowing, provided Jennings. Ty Sam Crawford, on the other hand, furnished the the association can secure, the inti¬ artillery with which mated sanction of the Board of Athletic heavy Hughie Jennings blasted his way to three Control. -
Send2press® Media List 2009, Weekly U.S. Newspapers *Disclaimer: Media Outlets Subject to Change; This Is Not Our Complete Database!
Send2Press® Media Lists 2009 — Page 1 of 125 www.send2press.com/lists/ Send2Press® Media List 2009, Weekly U.S. Newspapers *Disclaimer: media outlets subject to change; this is not our complete database! AK Anchorage Press AK Arctic Sounder AK Dutch Harbor Fisherman AK Tundra Drums AK Cordova Times AK Delta Wind AK Bristol Bay Times AK Alaska Star AK Chilkat Valley News AK Homer News AK Homer Tribune AK Capital City Weekly AK Clarion Dispatch AK Nome Nugget AK Petersburg Pilot AK Seward Phoenix Log AK Skagway News AK The Island News AK Mukluk News AK Valdez Star AK Frontiersman AK The Valley Sun AK Wrangell Sentinel AL Abbeville Herald AL Sand Mountain Reporter AL DadevilleDadeville RecordRecord AL Arab Tribune AL Atmore Advance AL Corner News AL Baldwin Times AL Western Star AAL Alabama MessengerMessenger AL Birmingham Weekly AL Over the Mountain Jrnl. AL Brewton Standard AL Choctaw Advocate AL Wilcox Progressive Era AL Pickens County Herald Content and information is Copr. © 1983‐2009 by NEOTROPE® — All Rights Reserved. Send2Press® Media Lists 2009 — Page 2 of 125 AL Cherokee County Herald AL Cherokee Post AL Centreville Press AL Washington County News AL Call‐News AL Chilton County News AL Clanton Advertiser AL Clayton Record AL Shelby County Reporter AL The Beacon AL Cullman Tribune AL Daphne Bulletin AL The Sun AL Dothan Progress AL Elba Clipper AL Sun Courier AL The Southeast Sun AL Eufaula Tribune AL Greene County Independent AL Evergreen Courant AL Fairhope Courier AL The Times Record AL Tri‐City Ledger AL Florala News AL Courier Journal AL The Onlooker AL De Kalb Advertiser AL The Messenger AL North Jefferson News AL Geneva County Reaper AL Hartford News Herald AL Samson Ledger AL Choctaw Sun AL The Greensboro Watchman AL Butler Countyy News AL Greenville Advocate AL Lowndes Signal AL Clarke County Democrat AL The Islander AL The Advertiser‐Gleam AL Northwest Alabaman AL TheThe JournalJournal‐RecordRecord AL Journal Record AL Trinity News AL Hartselle Enquirer AL The Cleburne News AL The South Alabamian Content and information is Copr. -
C:\Documents and Settings\Kenneth Walcott\Desktop\Baseball Facts And
By Tony Parker 2005 Baseball Canada Senior Championship- August 28-28th, 2005 Welcome to the web site of the 2005 Baseball Canada Senior Baseball Championship. Baseball history doesn’t always have to be boring statistical analysis. This is a game that began somewhere in the early 1800’s and was increasingly documented after the first major professional league was founded in the United States in 1876 and Canada has been very much a part of that game as you will find below. In addition to this section we have also created a series of baseball trivia and informationals that will allow you to learn more about the game in what we hope is an entertaining fashion. As few boring stats as possible , because few of us are bookkeepers or accountants. Foxy & Tip Marchildon Too Canadian Baseball is alive and well and has contributed greatly to the Major League game, even if Ferguson Jenkins remains the only Canadian born player enshrined at Cooperstown. You may think that Larry Walker is the lone Canadian to win a Major League batting crown and if so, you would be wrong, but if you weren’t alive in 1887 then you didn’t see a Canadian lad named Tip O’Neill become the first ever triple crown winner in professional baseball history or that legendary U.S. Speaker of the House Tip O’Neill was named after that same Canadian triple crown winner. And did you know that the first player to use a padded glove (Foxy Irwin), the first retired player to start broadcasting games on radio (Jack Graney) and the first no-hitter recorded after the top players returned from service in WW II (Dick Fowler) were also Canadians? Graney also played in the same starting outfield with baseball legend Shoeless Joe Jackson as well as Hall of Fame player Tris Speaker and batted behind Cy Young in his final big league season when Cy was wrapping up his career record of 51 1 wins (Unquestionably baseball’s most unbreakable Major League mark). -
AMERICANS for TAX FAIRNESS SELECTED NEWS STORIES and COMMENTARY May 1, 2014 – April 30, 2015
AMERICANS FOR TAX FAIRNESS SELECTED NEWS STORIES AND COMMENTARY May 1, 2014 – April 30, 2015 Media clips included in this report were generated from activities sponsored by ATF, primarily at the national level, as funding for state groups ended in March 2014. A press clip is included that either in whole or in large part was generated by work by ATF and its communications consultants. Included are news stories, op-eds, editorials, opinion columns and blog posts. NATIONAL MEDIA 27 Blog: Opponents: Estate tax repeal would only benefit the wealthy -- FarmWorld.com 27 Column: The Death Tax Deception -- Bloomberg View 27 Column: Fix The Tax Code Friday: Should We Repeal The Federal Estate Tax? -- Forbes 27 How the government taxes rich dead people, explained -- Vox 28 Blog: Congress Might Repeal the Estate Tax, But Here's What They Could Do Instead -- Attn.com 28 In defense of Walmart: Why corporations shouldn't be responsible for preventing poverty -- The Week 29 Column: The Republican Recipe for Widening Inequality -- The New York Times 29 Op-Ed: House GOP Votes to Take Food From the Mouths of Hungry Children to Give Huge Tax Break to Children of Multi-Millionaires -- Really? -- Huffington Post 30 Blog: Walmart Heir Does Not Deserve Assets It Would Take a Worker a Million Years to Earn -- Truth-Out 30 Op-Ed: Ben & Jerry: We don't need this stupid tax cut -- USA TODAY 31 Op-Ed: Undermining the American dream -- The Hill 32 Editorial: Repealing estate tax would reward 0.2%: Our view -- USA TODAY 32 House Votes 240-179 To Repeal Estate Tax