Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1943-03-24

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1943-03-24 1943 -:::: I I ges I Ration Calendar Warmer A, 0 and C blue Ila'Dpl uplre ~I.r.h 31: ors 11'( tL 01/, .0UpOII expire. April II, OOI'I'EI u.pon 28 •• plr.. April ,11 IOWA: ODIewbat 'warm!'r 111 01\8 "A" •• "~ ••• ~ .. pi,. MIY t i l cuteI'D perilOD toclay IIh IItJOAB ".pOD 11 •• ,.... May III: THE DAILY IOWAN er 8HOES .oupon 17 ..plr.. J.D. U, Iowa City's Morning Newspaper dlmlnl.bl~ wbuIs. Idame reading fIVE CENTS 'lUI ASSOCIATED PRUI IOWA CITY, IOWA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1943 VOLUME X1llI NUMBER 152 'I rlldio IIY, d(!.. I shoUld Ilthel'e(1 only in e's oWn no goOd r;t lady u.s ., British" Flan~ing Movements Peril l5S Pt'C. IS meet. d that t it may e might Ie shall ives ranspOl't Axis Trqops, as Mareth Li"ne 9 Way II forces IeI' Ilide greedy, BOUNDARIES LOOM ALREADY AS POST-WAR HEADACHE I rescue ~~v-'---l Soviets Stabilize Lines South nent, 10 Appalachian (oal Operators Urge Immediate nd that he four Of Kharkoy With Nazis Shifting ull thal Submission of Wage Dispute to Labor Board sUpporl ~ Atlan· ve that Advance to Area West of Kursk :nntalize Accept President's Request for Continued Austrian Unit Trains eh peo. B, BICUAIlD McltlURR Y nce nor 110 laird Pr War Editor lecesslty Bituminous ,Production During Settlement At Camp in Indiana the mo­ Til British hroke the IIlareth line at i llIlchor aIter 're can. NEW YORK (AP) - Soutlicl'I1 Appalarhian soft coal oPol'at'1 3 Brothers of Royal out!lanking it from th real' and th Va Iy JIl ul d axi arm,' \\'8 in th!' p ri! of double enlrapml'nt I t night by till' Eighth d based 01'S re~tel'day uI'ged immediate submisr,ion of the clifl'erenccs be, family of Hapsburgs rinciples tw~ell Appalachian area operators and the Ullited !\filiI' Workel's lIrm~' Ilda ·!tlll 'ut that hndwun~ ar und th lin t th plain " of AlIICI'ica to the WIU' labol' board" for heat'ing alld final deter. Serving as Privates Ileal' Unb" 6l1d tlt(' American 'ho captured :\[0 no y and mjnotion . " piling d on to" it hin :n mile of tb a. Acceptiug PI'~ ' idel1t Roo, cvell's proposals 1'01' cuntillued bitlUJI, CAMP ATTERBURY, Ind. (AP) 'fh thick COl'lification gave wily n r Znrat. 'ix mil north t of town . 1art·tll. and llontgolllrry's 'iup<'l'b d ert \' rs illous ('oal pt'oduction clUJ'iug !lIe scttlement of the CIIl'I'ent dis, -The Austrian battalion, organ­ the of CiM. t· crnn. werll pOlll'ing thl'lIugh tht j(llp 11'1\ IIrd lall(.> , 22 mil away. )Jutc, the southem opel.'atol'S uuded in !L statemellt that "the issue8 ized as a United States army unit in hi"h hopI'S of catching l\Ja~bol Bl"dn Romrnpi nd chopping ng at tJli,.; coufel'ollee cannot be composed by the pl'OCC'S of co llect· in December at the urging of i\'e blll'gain in g. " hi armored fore 10 bit in a "rl'st buttle of Ll h'uction. Archduke Otto, is getting the ~\ II ~tl'l'l t i~h VI' \)OllliJ<l . memo Jl[call wh ile, meetiJlg sepamtcly, llol'UJeJ'Jl op<,mtOI'H 1I11110UIlCed ....... Flnt World War rui of from n ri Ill,till ry allll pIt) i from same basic combat trainil)g as w n V (' buttling 1 School tltey would acecpt the presid!'nt's ~ lI gg-cst i o ll to cUIlI iUlI e 0PI']'U, ndll"o or. any other group at this midwest­ Illull(, pulY1'l'iz( <l I h(' hOMY· confer· tion lIUdCl' all lIIH](JI'standing I haL all~ ' wagc a'l'cclilent I'eaclll'd be e111 cantonment. (lomb of gl\l1 mpl I' menl , m - eta high l'etroacUye to April 1. The pt'f'sent 'ontract, expil'ill" Marclt 31, Included in the ranks as pri­ Plan to Raise Salary COl'el'S 450,000 miucrh WllO, John h JJcwis, Ul\1W pl'csidcnt, has vCltes in Company A are Otto's "hilll' ~1111 1I1'~I, lllJl'lwd wir' iOn, di. aill , would not Il'cspas-' Oll mine properties aftel' Apl'il 1 if a three brothcl's, Felix, Charles '·ntallgll'llwllt. c u \' (' and :S, will Louis and Rudolph Hapsburg. 01 Governor Spiked tr nch that wu th Mar ih Une. nbly on wage agreement \I' l' not reuched. Proposals by the opcrators counl crell un olTer signell by Lewis Lieut. Col. Vincent J. Conrad, Rip 11 ure Gap lis topic L unchln, the battle for south­ Oppor. and mell1b 1'8 of the MW negotiation committcc, to continue commanding the battalion, de­ Move Automatically work for 30 days from April J, pending an agreemcnt, thus fiXing sCI'ibed these sons or the Empress ern Tunisia, the rrack Ell/hth army School Zita yesterday as "good soldiers, Shelved for Current ripped a, p in th pow rCul Mar­ a definite time limit OD the talks. making their own friends on thoir eth fortifications from the coaMl director Gaell side voted down tlJC otllet's Pl'opo.'lll, II0WCI'CI, own merits." Term of Legislation to II po itlon two mUCII inland. lent of· Ezra VUH Horn, chairman of tIle l1ol'them ,juint cullicl'cllct? Emphasis on IdC'ntily , Id A oclated PI'CflS correspond­ m "Our ~aiil ut the end of the aiterllOOlJ session tliat thr UiHW declined ling Sit· Activation of the will last Dec. DES MOJNE (AP)- iowa s n· ent Don Whitehead, who w with to accept tbe operator " proposal fOI' el iminati ng the time,limit , 15 drew congressional criticism. the Brit! h troops. ! lunch. alors yesterdoy spiked tor the cur­ and that tile opel'atol's, in tUt'll, Officers of the group make no rent sos ion a move to rat the The breuklhroueh wo won t rejected th(' 30.day limit to ne· comment on the policy that led to 3 a, m. y .t l'tIIlY morn in, aftcr gotiaLions. its formation, but thcy emphasize salary or the govc1'll0r 1,500 11 Ie s than 30 hOUI or lavage 111/ht­ and that its identity wlll be main­ Meanwhile, 'J'lIomas KCllllCdy, GQvernment year. illi-tlghtlna thill 811 rp' In tained. Those now in the battalion ferocity th baltle at EI Alameln topic ot eel' tal'r-tl'ea llrer of the l\1W, who are not Austrian are to be 'The sen t voted down 23 to 17 last tall-by troops ~h t plullied mcasler, replied, in auswcl' to n dh ct , transferred ~o othel' units. It own measur to ral the chief ;0 memo question whether thc union had Nearly all members of the bat­ ('xe 'uti •. plal'Y fr m 7,:\00 10 thro~lI/h th precipitous Wadi l tomor· an werect President Roosevelt's Indicts Viereck talion arc native Austrians, and ZiJ(wu and clam\) 'rC<i liP Its far tClcgl'am: $t2,OOO oftcr the nam or Hurry wall to cnltk th axl (.'oncretg c. Melll· :no:t of them have allplied 10J' [ethodis\ "No-not as [til' as I kllOw." United States citizenship. 1l0pkinll, executi\'e w;' tant to fortifications. Then the>, eslab­ Another ullion spokesman said Ii. h d a brid,c.hcad 1,000 yard. Atte;"pts to Sidestep Vacancie~ in the battalion l'snks President Roo evell, had been = there probably would be an an­ are being lilled by volunteers who brought Into the d bale and there deep, I)pllllcement today, howevcr. 2nd Supreme Court - trunsier from other army units. had been discussion ot the Politlcol Ytl dr. pit tit dim ult or Reversal of Charges 42 Pereent Jewish th OP raUon, .111 d uaJU The religious make-up of the aspirations of . nat01'l who did were l't')1ort d to be lI,hL Truman Committee battalion at present is 46 percent WASHINGTON (AP)-The gov- not vote. In other lale war d velopmenUJ, Catholic, 8 percent Protestant and Th s nate's action has U1C elI ct the Russians reported the repulie Subpoenas Lewil ernment sought to bulwark its 42 percent Jewish, most of the of killine such a proposal for the of Gennan (orces that had driven WASHINGTON (AP) - Refus· charges against George Sylvestcr latter group being refugees from E current session inee the hous aealn t the Moscow - ryan. k ing to take a "maybe" answer Viereck o( New York yesterday the Nazi regime instituted in lheir native country. will not eel the upper chamber's ralLI'oad north or Zhlzdra, and from John L. Lewis, the senate's with a new indictment designed to ETERNAL QUESTION of settling Illtermdional boundaries already Is being ral cd lollowlnr RuSsian dec­ allied headqUtll'iers In Au tralla Lieut. Col. Conrad believes larations that tlle U. S, S. R. expects to retain tho e territoriI' which It took artl'r Germany's occupa· Truman committee issued a sub- avoid another supreme court 1'e- tbere has been ,a lot of mlsin- bill and there Is no such measure told of powerful r id on Rabaul, tton of Poland in 1939. These Include Latvia, Lithuania. E tonia. Be larable. and part of Paland. The pending in. the hou • in New Britain, in whirh 1i4 to.u poena yesterday to make sure that versal such as freed the alleged 10rmation given thc public con­ maps above show tlle boundaries that exl ted before 1914, after 811"111nl' of Ute Versaille 'realy and Ihe United Mine Workel's presi- pro-German propagandist three ceming his group.
Recommended publications
  • National Collegiate Baseball Writers Newsletter National Collegiate Baseball Writers Newsletter
    NATIONAL COLLEGIATE BASEBALL WRITERS NEWSLETTER (Volume 41, No. 1, January 30, 2002) Barry on Baseball NCBWA President’s Message by Barry Allen The wait is finally over. The 2002 college baseball season has officially begun. While most of the schools do not open play until Feb. 1, 2002, there are some that have already opened their seasons entering the final week of January. The 2002 college baseball season promises to be one of the most exciting seasons in memory. Can Miami make it three in a row at Rosenblatt Stadium? The defending champs return a number of key players and will play one of the nation's most demanding schedules. How will baseball at Alex Box Stadium differ now that legendary Skip Bertman is no longer in the first base dugout? New Tigers skipper Ray "Smoke" Laval opened practice on Saturday, Jan. 19, and is the favorite to win the SEC in a vote by the league's 12 head coaches. Can Nebraska claim its third straight 50-win season and turn Rosenblatt Stadium into another sea of red at the 2003 College World Series? Will Stanford journey back to America's heartland again this season, boasting another talented team under Mark Marquess? Who will be the eight teams to fight for the 2003 national championship in June? All of these questions will be answered over the course of the next 21 weeks as the college baseball season unfolds. It promises to be an exciting year. Off the field, there is excitement, too. There will be a trip to the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum this year as the annual CoSIDA convention will be held in Rochester, N.Y.
    [Show full text]
  • 1941-09-18 [P
    GOOD MORNING ARCHIES TO DRILL UNDER LIGHTS ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * X XXX XX* _Billboard PUBLIC IS INVITED By GLENWARD BLOMME Cards Win Trail One Game Dodgers—■ an all-star for Two; .__I_ —A. program The local sports billboard offers TO WATCH DAVIS for all are going and tickets performances —■— the week-end ■ ■ — ---- ggn Lombardo and his euns. Tonight at Lumina Guy CRABTREE irent to swing WORK AT STADIUM SOCKS will the dance fans a chance Rnval Canadians give look Now some of you may not and sway to his soft music. Rehearsal Is to but when you sit and Dress Open TWO as a form of athletics, HOMERUNS nnon dancing exercises on Free of go through their Everyone Charge watch the modern jitterbugs ST. LOUIS, Sept. class it as gymnastics. To- From 7 to 9 P. M. 17-(ju floor you will readily Cardinals edged a the1 dance little near mnmiw nieht you can take_- , -rn mm n Brooklyn by sweeping a Davis football will header from the Boston choice between grunt Camp players Braves t vour rnlLS 6 to 1 and 3 to week- REDS TAKE work out under the lights of Legion day, 2, and now tackle and run. The tmi and stadium this evening in a dress the leaders by only one will be on at ganie ly wrestling card rehearsal for Saturday night’s clash Estel Crabtree, Vill- 37-year-old 0nt Thalian Hall with Ray IN TWIN AFFAIR with the Demon Deatons of Wake fielder, smacked a home run”’ Red Forest college. The practice ses- the ninth inning of the mer, Billy Bartush, second h giving forth to bring victory in a Shadow and The Angel Meer Wins 3-Hitter pitchers d« and misery.
    [Show full text]
  • East Carolina Notes
    INDIVIDUAL QUICK HITS EAST CAROLINA NOTES • Alec Burleson, who was named to five All-America teams in 2019, has earned inclusion on four teams ** 86th Season of Pirate Baseball (1932-42, 1946-2020) ** heading into his junior campaign ... Named presea- son AAC Player-of-the-Year accolades by leagues * 30 NCAA Regional Appearances / 16 of last 21 years * head coaches, Baseball America and D1Baseball ... Named to initial Golden Spikes Award and PROBABLE STARTERS Stopper-of-the-Year Watch List ... Owns an 13-5 Tuesday: ERA W-L APP GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER BB SO (72.2 win pct.) career record with nine saves in 47 ELON: Brian Edgington (RH) 7.00 0-0 5 0 0 0/0 0 9.0 14 8 7 5 10 appearances (21 starts) ... Can also play multiple ECU: Elijah Gill (LH) 7.36 0-1 3 1 0 0/1 0 3.2 7 3 3 0 5 positions (1B, RF, LF and DH) ... Sports a .342 career batting average with 11 home runs and 90 Wednesday: ERA W-L APP GS CG SHO SV IP H R ER BB SO RBI ... Named AAC Player-of-the-Week (3/9/20) ECU: TBA --- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- and to the AAC Honor Roll (2/24/20). UNCW: TBA --- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- • Tyler Smith has allowed four runs over 18.1 innings with 19 punch outs to 10 walks ... Owns an 18-3 career record (.857 win pct.) with one save and PIRATES ON THE AIR ... 2020 TEAM QUICK HITS 128 strikeouts in 196.2 innings (61 games/30 starts) ...................................................Pirate Sports Properties • ECU enters the week with a 12-3 record and has Radio: ..
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 Baseball Fact Book
    Eric Tyler 2017 BASEBALL FACT BOOK Travis Watkins Evan Kruczynski Keith LeClair Head Coach (1997-2002) Introduction Pronounciation Guide .................................................32 Single-Season Individual Pitching Records ..............98 Schedule ........................................................................2 Pirate Birthdays/Fun Facts .........................................33 Career Individual Pitching Records ...........................99 General Information & Quick Facts ..............................3 Player Profiles ........................................................34-61 Single-Season/Career Fielding Records ..................100 Media Guidelines.......................................................4-5 Pirates In the Community ..........................................62 Single Game Records ................................................100 Staff Directory ...............................................................6 Freshman Hitting Records .........................................101 Primary Media Outlets ..................................................7 2017 Opponents Freshman Pitching Records .......................................101 Getting to Greenville ....................................................8 2017 Opponents .....................................................64-69 Miscellaneous Records ...............................................102 Lodging, Dining & Transportation ...............................9 Record Vs. All-Time Opponents .................................70 Strength
    [Show full text]
  • 1999-00 NCAA Men's Baseball Championships
    Bsball_M (99-00) 11/28/00 8:32 AM Page 14 14 DIVISION I Ba s e b a l l DIVISION I 2000 Championship Hi g h l i g h t s Tigers End Dream Season with Fifth Title: LSU catcher Brad Cresse drilled a single to left field off of Stanford’s Justin Wayne in the bottom of the ninth, plating Ryan Theriot from second base, giving the Tigers a 6-5 win and their fifth College World Series championship since 1991. Cresse was mired in a miserable College World Series before his final at-bat. The senior was 1- for-12 in the CWS prior to his game-winning single. Trey Hodges pitched four scoreless innings for his second win of the tournament. Hodges, who Brad Cresse overcame a slump at the plate to retired 10 of the 11 batters he faced, also picked up a save and was selected as the most out- drive in the title-winning run for LSU June 17. standing player of the College World Series. The catcher’s single to left field scored team - mate Ryan Theriot, giving LSU a 6-5 win over Wayne gave up four hits and four runs in relief of starter Jason Young. Wayne started the fifth St a n f o r d . inning and seven of his first nine outs were strikeouts, four looking. The Tigers’ normally strong offensive game seemed to be silent. But LSU (52-17) tied it in the eighth inning with two home runs, setting up Cresse’s dramatics.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1942-06-09
    , 1942 = .,. IPS I , Yankl Drub Light Showers ) (JJevel&~ Indl&na. IOWA: Nol ••eb tbaoae In ~m • • 10 11 to 10 eraban IoU)" wllh OfJC&Ilonal Bee • 8w" on p.,e , lleht tbowen. arv. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper rag, I 1 FIV~ CENTS THI ASSOOIATED ,aus IOWA CITY. IOWA TUESDAY, JUNE 9. 1942 TBI AaIOO~T.D PaBSS VOLUME XLD NUMBER 221 ~r'Q' - The illl! Ie\{ poa\of. ~e col_ Isslon~r :Ina the lat pOe. o · be nec. ee gasoline where *** ,/. *.: **. *** *** *** *** *** rised by lshauon , use Of an bn. be the the use ·Tea,·Cof.fee,.C:()c·oa Rationing' '~uite Likely' I where and In ~~--~~~~~~~-b~~--------------------'------------------~----------~ I WIU~ e ata~ use tu ~ide ol)e Supply Director Weiner Sees Belieye Enemy Preparing 'Face ~ Iden{i. ~ith the )f ga80. No Immediate Shipping Relief SaYing' AHack af U.S. Defenses ~ent has ,tate and chase of W.A S HI NG'l'O~ (AP)-Consumer rationing of coffee, tea and Official Reports Say 3 Japan... Warships Sunk, ., cocoa is "quite likely", .J ol;(lp h L. Weiner , director of the (J'ivitian Eleven Badly Damaged and Air Arm Jver the supply division of tbe war production board, reported yeste,rday, y I and Weiner said he could foresee no improvement in the shipping Virtually Wiped Out tamp Iii­ situation whioh would oJleviate the coffee, tea and cocoa shortages, or which "Rationing is being practiced now in one form," he lold Ii. press PEARL HARBOR (AP)- tung d f!P rately by the horn t ' cOnference. "You cnn't always buy all the coffee you want at the nest it unwittingly uncovered at Midway i land, what.
    [Show full text]
  • Westcovington Daviskirkpatrick
    WESTCOVINGTON DAVISKIRKPATRICK Keith LeClair Head Coach (1997-2002) Introduction Player Profiles ������������������������������������������������32-55 Career Individual Pitching Records ������������������� 93 Schedule ���������������������������������������������������������������� 2 Pirates In the Community ����������������������������������56 Single-Season/Career Fielding Records ������������94 General Information & Quick Facts �����������������������3 Single-Game Records �����������������������������������������94 Media Guidelines������������������������������������������������4-5 2018 Opponents Freshman Hitting Records ����������������������������������95 Staff Directory �������������������������������������������������������6 2018 Opponents ���������������������������������������������58-64 Freshman Pitching Records ��������������������������������95 Primary Media Outlets �������������������������������������������7 Record Vs� All-Time Opponents ������������������������� 65 Miscellaneous Records ����������������������������������������96 Strength & Conditioning��������������������������������������� 8 Record Vs� The Conferences �������������������������66-68 Athletic Training ���������������������������������������������������� 8 History American Athletic Conference Pirate Notes ���������������������������������������������������������98 The University The American ������������������������������������������������������ 70 Coaching History ������������������������������������������99-100 2017 AAC Final Standings �������������������������������������71
    [Show full text]
  • Class of 1947
    CLASS OF 1947 Ollie Carnegie Frank McGowan Frank Shaughnessy - OUTFIELDER - - FIRST BASEMAN/MGR - Newark 1921 Syracuse 1921-25 - OUTFIELDER - Baltimore 1930-34, 1938-39 - MANAGER - Buffalo 1934-37 Providence 1925 Buffalo 1931-41, 1945 Reading 1926 - MANAGER - Montreal 1934-36 Baltimore 1933 League President 1937-60 * Alltime IL Home Run, RBI King * 1936 IL Most Valuable Player * Creator of “Shaughnessy” Playoffs * 1938 IL Most Valuable Player * Career .312 Hitter, 140 HR, 718 RBI * Managed 1935 IL Pennant Winners * Led IL in HR, RBI in 1938, 1939 * Member of 1936 Gov. Cup Champs * 24 Years of Service as IL President 5’7” Ollie Carnegie holds the career records for Frank McGowan, nicknamed “Beauty” because of On July 30, 1921, Frank “Shag” Shaughnessy was home runs (258) and RBI (1,044) in the International his thick mane of silver hair, was the IL’s most potent appointed manager of Syracuse, beginning a 40-year League. Considered the most popular player in left-handed hitter of the 1930’s. McGowan collected tenure in the IL. As GM of Montreal in 1932, the Buffalo history, Carnegie first played for the Bisons in 222 hits in 1930 with Baltimore, and two years later native of Ambroy, IL introduced a playoff system that 1931 at the age of 32. The Hayes, PA native went on hit .317 with 37 HR and 135 RBI. His best season forever changed the way the League determined its to establish franchise records for games (1,273), hits came in 1936 with Buffalo, as the Branford, CT championship. One year after piloting the Royals to (1,362), and doubles (249).
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction: Frictive Pictures 1 Cartoon Internationale
    Notes Introduction: Frictive Pictures 1. There may be even earlier social groups united by an interest in pre-cinematic visual technologies or animation-like performances such as shadow-plays. But before animation came into being as a cinematic genre between 1898 and 1906 (Crafton 1993, 6–9, 21), these groups could not be properly termed “anima- tion fan communities,” and should be called something else, such as “zoetrope hobbyists” or “utsushi-e [Japanese magic lantern] audiences.” For that reason, I have chosen to begin with film animation in the early twentieth century, starting specifically in 1906–7 with the earliest verifiable hand-drawn ani- mated films in the West and somewhat less-verifiable experiments in Japan. Readers interested in the international influences of earlier visual media such as painting and printmaking on animation should consult Susan J. Napier’s fascinating history of fine arts influences between Japan and Europe, From Impressionism to Anime (2007). 1 Cartoon Internationale 1. For more on the technical specs of the Matsumoto Fragment, see Frederick S. Litten’s “Japanese color animation from ca. 1907 to 1945” available at http:// litten.de/fulltext/color.pdf. 2. Since the mid-2000s, there has been a small but heartening swell of inter- est in recovering and preserving early anime among film conservators and distributors. Some major DVD collections of pre-1945 animation include: Japanese Anime Classic Collection. Tokyo: Digital Meme, 2009 (4 discs, English, Korean, and Chinese subtitles); The Roots of Japanese Anime Until the End of WWII [United States]: Zakka Films, 2008 (English subtitles); Ōfuji Noburō Collected Works.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 Pulaski Yankees
    TABLE OF CONTENTS Quick Facts ........................................................................................................................... 1 2019 Schedule and Promotions ............................................................................................. 2 Front Office ........................................................................................................................... 3 Calfee Park ........................................................................................................................... 5 2019 Pulaski Yankees .............................................................................................................. 6 Field Staff ..................................................................................................................... 7 Player Profiles .............................................................................................................. 11 2018 Season in Review ........................................................................................................... 21 Notes and Highlights .................................................................................................... 22 Schedule and Results ................................................................................................... 23 Individual Statistics ....................................................................................................... 25 Transactions ................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Animation Fandom in North America and East Asia from 1906–2010 By
    Animating Transcultural Communities: Animation Fandom in North America and East Asia from 1906–2010 By Sandra Annett A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies of The University of Manitoba in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Department of English, Film, and Theatre University of Manitoba Winnipeg © 2011 Sandra Annett Abstract This dissertation examines the role that animation plays in the formation of transcultural fan communities. A ―transcultural fan community‖ is defined as a group in which members from many national, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds find a sense of connection across difference, engaging with each other through a mutual interest in animation while negotiating the frictions that result from their differing social and historical contexts. The transcultural model acts as an intervention into polarized academic discourses on media globalization which frame animation as either structural neo-imperial domination or as a wellspring of active, resistant readings. Rather than focusing on top-down oppression or bottom-up resistance, this dissertation demonstrates that it is in the intersections and conflicts between different uses of texts that transcultural fan communities are born. The methodologies of this dissertations are drawn from film/media studies, cultural studies, and ethnography. The first two parts employ textual close reading and historical research to show how film animation in the early twentieth century (mainly works by the Fleischer Brothers, Ōfuji Noburō, Walt Disney, and Seo Mitsuyo) and television animation in the late twentieth century (such as The Jetsons, Astro Boy and Cowboy Bebop) depicted and generated nationally and ethnically diverse audiences.
    [Show full text]
  • SABR Minor League Newsletter ------Robert C
    SABR Minor League Newsletter ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Robert C. 'Bob' McConnell, Chairman 210 West Crest Road Wilmington DE 19803 Reed Howard July 2001 (302) 764-4806 [email protected] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ McConnell Unavailable from Mid-July Until Late August Bob McConnell will be on his annual sojourn to the wilds of Nova Scotia and will be unavailable from mid-July until late August. If you have questions during this period please contact Reed Howard at the above e-mail address, or at 619 Mt. Lebanon Road, Wilmington DE 19803-1707; (302) 478-1004. Members New Members: Gary Ashwill; 1209 North Duke Street, Durham NC 27701; e-mail: [email protected]. Gary is particularly interested in the very early 19th Century minor leagues. Stephen J. Davis; interested in the 1946-57 PCL, especially the Oakland Oaks. San Francisco Chronicle and Los Angeles Times available. Willing to help SOME. John R. Husman; e-mail [email protected]; interested in J. Lee Richmond and the history and statistics of baseball in Toledo. Toledo newspapers available. Willing to help SOME. Steven Lawrence; Steven's questionnaire has not yet been received. New Addresses: Jack Carlson; same street address, new town; Beavercreek, OH 45431 Dave Chase; 175 Toyota Plaza, Suite 300, Memphis, TN 38103; phone: (901) 722-0207; fax: (901) 726-5502 Jon Dunkle; [email protected] Don Lancaster; 215 Crest Ave., Belle Vernon, PA 15012-4205 Terry O'Neil; 607 Vista Bonita, Newport Beach, CA 92660-4537 Ron Selter; [email protected] Bill Weiss; P. O. Box 5061, San Mateo, CA 94402 Miscellaneous Jerry Jackson has a question on how to account for franchises when all of the teams in a league play in only a few cities.
    [Show full text]