AFL-CIO Bosses Quit Pay Board

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

AFL-CIO Bosses Quit Pay Board WASHINGTON (AP)--The U.S. Commission on report, said President Nixon still opposes Marijuana and Drug Abuse has proposed that the legalization of marijuana. The commission jail terms and fines no longer be imposed for report brought qualified approval yesterday smoking marijuana in private. from young people and some But smoking pot in public local officials. still would be subject to But many law enforcement such penalties. And growing M aijuana officers opposed the recom- marijuana, selling it for mendations as too lenient or profit or possessing it with Report Debate impractical. Some officials intent to sell would remain even questioned Congress' felonies, right to legislate in an area The commission does not recommend legaliza- previously reserved for the states. And the tion of marijuana. At the White House, Deputy commission's proposal to not prosecute mari- News Secretary Gerald Warren, asked about the (Please see Par, page 2) U.RSNAVAL BASE GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA AFL-CIO Bosses Quit Pay Board WASHINGTON (AP)--Three AFL-CIO members of President Nixon's Pay Board resigned yesterday, saying they could no longer co- operate in a control program they viewed as slanted against the nation's workers. "In the guise of an anti-inflation policy, the American peo- ple are being gouged at the supermarket and squeezed in the THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1972 paychecks," said the executive council of the 13.6 million member labor organization. The announcement was made by 77- year-old AFL-CIO President George Meany that he, United Steel Workers President I. W. Abel and Machinist President Floyd Smith were quitting the board immediate- ly. Meany said he had informed the other two labor members of the Pay Board of the AFL-CIO decision, but did not know whether they might also resign. The other two are United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock and Teamsters Union President Frank E. Fitzsimmons, who were invited to but did not attend yesterday's meeting of the AFL-CIO ex- ecutive council. Meany said Woodcock told him by tele- phone from Detroit the Auto Workers ex- ecutive board will consider the matter. The Auto Workers and the Teamsters are UAW President Leonard Woodcock, left, confers with not among the 129 unions in the AFL-CIO. AFL-CIO's George Meany and ste elworkers' I. W. Abel. (Please see LABOR, page 2) Page 2--LATE NEWS ROUNDUP Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, March 23, 1972 LABOR-LABOR from E"page one Meany, reading the statement of the 35-member AFL-CIO GAZETTEER Executive Council, said the Pay Board was stacked .a digest of late news against labor and that only wages were being controlled while prices, profits, rents and other business income continued to climb. "Meanwhile, millions of American workers remain un- employed, their wages frozen at zero, with no real pro- spect of relief," he said. Meany charged that the Nixon administration was moving House passed a sickle cell The anemia prevention toward complete government control of the nation's bill yesterday after rejecting an amendment that would economy unless labor can stop it. have brought Cooley's anemia under the legislation to "The Russian worker is controlled by government and battle blood disease. Sickle cell anemia is a chief kil- Russian business is controlled," Meany said. ler of blacks. Cooley's anemia affects those of Italian, "This is the road this administration is traveling," Greek and Spanish backgrounds. he said. The AFL-CIO walkoff from the Pay Board followed its Adam Clayton Powell, 63, former New York recent rejection of a 20.9 per cent wage hike for West congressman , yesterday remained on the critical list at Coast longshoremen and an earlier rejection of an 12 a hospital in Miami. Two women, each claiming to be per cent hike for aerospace workers represented by the Powell's wife, were near his bedside Tuesday. The former machinists and automakers. The business and public mem- U.S. House of Representatives member is in a coma. bers of the Pay Board said the aerospace workers could have a raise of about 8 per cent this year and that named a 53-year old Britain yesterday career dip- longshoremen could have one of 14.9 per cent. lomat, Anthony Golds, as its first ambassador to the newly-appointed state of Bangladesh. Golds, now serving as ambassador to three African countries, has previously one served for two years in Calcutta and New Delhi. POT- from page juana users but to not legalize it either was, in the barricaded himself in a second- A young man mind of Alabama Public Safety Director W.L. Allen, like floor apartment and began shooting into the street early "trying to follow the line of being just a little preg- yesterday. He held Albany police at bay for more than nant." five hours before apparently turning a gun on himself, Allen said he was in total disagreement with the com- authorities said. mission and he described the recommendation for ending criminal penalties of users as "another incidence of A tanker went aground on a reef in Long Island national assininity." Sound Tuesday, spilling a 10-square-mile slick of home But many student leaders around the country said the heating oil, the Coast Guard said. It was the second national commission "had taken a step in the right major oil spill in the sound in 15 months. A Coast Guard direction." said it would be "almost impossible" to con- spokesman "I agree with the commission's report," said Mary tain the slick so it could be cleaned up. Scifres, student body president at Indiana University. "For too long young men and women have been penalized isno longer just another pretty Burt Reynolds for using a drug whose effects are not as harmful as Cosmopolitan magazine's first face. The brawny actor is alcohol, in my opinion." male nude, unblushingly sprawled out in the centerfold Alan Fong, co-president of students at the University of the April issue, an unadorned Adam for ogling by a of California at Berkeley, said the commission did not readership of Eves. go far enough. is needed, including sale," Fong announced today the launch "Full legalization The Soviet Union said. of Cosmos 479 the latest in its series of secret un- The commission recommended that felony penalties be manned satellites. Tass said Cosmos 479 was launched continued for growing and trafficing in marijuana. yesterday irto an orbit with a high point of 341.1 miles and a low point of 321.2 miles. Stateside Temperatures Guantanamo \% Gazette Atlanta clear 50 fa. arianMeanley Capt. Heb Alford Boston cloudy 47 eman,,der coaneding officer snow 25 d. r I.,Mhite Afftaie Officr Chicago Jo3 Allan Smith. Edito Dallas clear 64 Local Forecast d. Hich. iant Editor JUN Vie-e it.ey. .Pr ctio Tehnii Denver clear 52 JZN Keith Sandl. sprt. Editor -N Irank Kutl .Staff -tist snow 28 Mostly clear with scattered showers L/Cpl. David BaieyH. e As.ttat Detroit WCpl. Pat Hoare . ditorial Spcialist Jacksonville clear 50 this afternoon. Visibility unrestric- Los Angeles clear 56 ted. Winds easterly 8-12 knots, gust- 66 ing to 20 knots,becoming northerly Miami clear ru.e and eulations for hip and station n.erra partly cloudy 40 4-6 knots this evening. Today's outlined tn Nh-m 115 and under th. dirottio New York Hf the Naval pahli affottak officer. It is int- cloudy 45 high 88, tonight's low 70. Bay con- ed foa days a mak at goe.rment epnse on gwOrn- Norfolk mnt aepi n the opinion, , state in ew partly cloudy 42 p.m. it-e thet appar herein ar. not to be.constmed as Philadelphia ditions 1-3 feet. High tide 4:30 official or . reflecting the iews of C anage or San Francisco clear 50 low tide 10:42 p.m. the Mertment of the Nag. Seattle cloudy 41 S Washington cloudy 44 Thursday, March 23, 1972 Guantanamo Gazette LOCAL NEWS--Page 3 Club Movies CLUB IGUANA Fewer Thefts, Caution Linked TODAY--"Priest Killer" George Kennedy, David Huddleston, NRA A significant drop in vehicle thefts on base recently FRIDAY--"The Collector" Ter- has been attributed to increased caution among motorists rance Stamp, Samantha EggatNRA by Cdr. Dean Stocklmeir, base provost marshal. SATURDAY--"Beneath the Planet Only one attempted theft of a civilian car and three of the Apes" Charlton Heston, thefts of military jeeps have occurred in the last four James FranciScus. GP weeks, Stocklmeir said. SUNDAY--matinee: "Cat Ballou" That compares with nine vehicles stolen in the first Jane Fonda, Lee Marvin NRA two weeks of last month. evening: "Walk About" Jennie Augar, Lucien John. GP TUESDAY--"Bed and Board" Gene Pierre Leaud, Claude Jade. GP COMO CLUB 'Guys and Dolls' Set SUNDAY--"Cat Ballou" Jane Fonda Lee Marvin. NRA TUESDAY--"Dirty Harry" Clint Eastwood, Harry Guardino. R WEDNESDAY--Bingo For June Production THURSDAY--"When Eight Bells Toll" Anthony Hopkins, Natha- Plans are under way for a Guantanamo Bay lie Delon. GP Little Theatre production of the rollicking Broadway musical hit "Guys and Dolls" to be CPO CLUB presented the first part of June. Director Bob Chimini issued a production SATURDAY--"The Railway Chil- crew and cast call today, noting that there dren" Dinah Sheridan, Bernard will be many jobs for all kinds of talented Cribbins. G people. He said auditions for SUNDAY--"Dirty Harry" Clint the production will the first Eastwood, Harry Guardino R week next month. Specific dates MONDAY--"Priest Killer" George Clean All Property will be announced later. Re- Kennedy, David Huddelston. GP hearsals are scheduled to be- TUESDAY--"When Eight Bells Before Shippilg It, gin in mid-April.
Recommended publications
  • Revive Interschool Commiltee Will Not Be Put to Referendum
    In this Issue ... • WTTG to Telecast Hoya Basketball ...... page 12 • Flying High on Federal Funds .......... page 7 • Woody Allen and The Front .......... page 6 56th Year, No.5 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D.C .. Friday. October 1, 1976 Revive Interschool, Commiltee. Will Not Be Put to Referendum by Ed La Tour academic policy. guidelines, however, were, according effective and will allow more effi­ Citing "obvious need and inter­ The re-establishment of the com· to one MCFC member, "so vague as cient commu nicaLions between the , ;1 to be useless. The committee school on campus. q est," Executive Vice President for mittee was to be included in "the Academic Affairs and Provost, Fr. October 20 student referendum. (MCFC) was in effect working Slone said the committee would ,jl Aloysius Kelley, SJ has reinstated the Kelley decided to re·establish the without gUidelines." be "a facilitator of academic policy," ';'1 Interschools Academic Committee: committee himself because "the Kelley agreed that the MCFC was and added that he is enthusiastic The committee, which last met; vehicle already exjsted." setting academic priorities through' about the possibilities of the com­ two years ago, is composed of Student Body President Bob Gage the budget process rather than mittee. ::~ students, faculty, and administrators said that he had planned to put the shaping the budget to meet academic ':~ guidelines. ") from the five undergraduate schools. matter on the referendum because he' It advises Kelley on questions of thoght that the committee's com­ Student Support position was going to be changed. '~1 Gage stressed that the committee. Gage supports the re·establish· -:)1.
    [Show full text]
  • Boxing, Governance and Western Law
    An Outlaw Practice: Boxing, Governance and Western Law Ian J*M. Warren A Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Human Movement, Performance and Recreation Victoria University 2005 FTS THESIS 344.099 WAR 30001008090740 Warren, Ian J. M An outlaw practice : boxing, governance and western law Abstract This investigation examines the uses of Western law to regulate and at times outlaw the sport of boxing. Drawing on a primary sample of two hundred and one reported judicial decisions canvassing the breadth of recognised legal categories, and an allied range fight lore supporting, opposing or critically reviewing the sport's development since the beginning of the nineteenth century, discernible evolutionary trends in Western law, language and modern sport are identified. Emphasis is placed on prominent intersections between public and private legal rules, their enforcement, paternalism and various evolutionary developments in fight culture in recorded English, New Zealand, United States, Australian and Canadian sources. Fower, governance and regulation are explored alongside pertinent ethical, literary and medical debates spanning two hundred years of Western boxing history. & Acknowledgements and Declaration This has been a very solitary endeavour. Thanks are extended to: The School of HMFR and the PGRU @ VU for complete support throughout; Tanuny Gurvits for her sharing final submission angst: best of sporting luck; Feter Mewett, Bob Petersen, Dr Danielle Tyson & Dr Steve Tudor;
    [Show full text]
  • Female Sportswriters of the Roaring Twenties
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School College of Communications THEY ARE WOMEN, HEAR THEM ROAR: FEMALE SPORTSWRITERS OF THE ROARING TWENTIES A Thesis in Mass Communications by David Kaszuba © 2003 David Kaszuba Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy December 2003 The thesis of David Kaszuba was reviewed and approved* by the following: Ford Risley Associate Professor of Communications Thesis Adviser Chair of Committee Patrick R. Parsons Associate Professor of Communications Russell Frank Assistant Professor of Communications Adam W. Rome Associate Professor of History John S. Nichols Professor of Communications Associate Dean for Graduate Studies in Mass Communications *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School ABSTRACT Contrary to the impression conveyed by many scholars and members of the popular press, women’s participation in the field of sports journalism is not a new or relatively recent phenomenon. Rather, the widespread emergence of female sports reporters can be traced to the 1920s, when gender-based notions about employment and physicality changed substantially. Those changes, together with a growing leisure class that demanded expanded newspaper coverage of athletic heroes, allowed as many as thirty-five female journalists to make inroads as sports reporters at major metropolitan newspapers during the 1920s. Among these reporters were the New York Herald Tribune’s Margaret Goss, one of several newspaperwomen whose writing focused on female athletes; the Minneapolis Tribune’s Lorena Hickok, whose coverage of a male sports team distinguished her from virtually all of her female sports writing peers; and the New York Telegram’s Jane Dixon, whose reports on boxing and other sports from a so-called “woman’s angle” were representative of the way most women cracked the male-dominated field of sports journalism.
    [Show full text]
  • Guys and Dolls 14
    120786bk Guys&Dolls 4/11/04 4:42 PM Page 2 Guys And Dolls 14. Sue Me 2:25 21. Make a Miracle 3:29 All Music & Lyrics by Frank Loesser Original Broadway Cast Vivian Blaine & Sam Levene Ray Bolger & Allyn McLerie, with orchestra Transfers & Production: David Lennick 15. Sit Down,You’re Rocking the Boat conducted by Sy Oliver Digital Restoration: Graham Newton 1. Runyonland Music; Fugue for Decca 40065, mx W 74760 2:11 Original 78s from the collections of David Tinhorns 2:05 Recorded 15 February 1949 Stubby Kaye, Johnny Silver & Douglas Deane Stubby Kaye & Chorus Lennick and the Belfer Audio Laboratory and 22. The New Ashmolean (Marching Archive, Syracuse University 2. Follow the Fold 1:15 16. Marry the Man Today 2:53 Society And Students Conservatory Cover: 1929 poster of New York Broadway (Mary Isabel Bigley & The Mission Group Vivian Blaine & Isabel Bigley Band) 2:31 Evans Picture Library); ‘dollies’ by Ron Hoares 3. The Oldest Established 2:35 17. Guys and Dolls: Reprise 0:38 Johnny Mercer with Paul Weston’s Orchestra Guys And Dolls Chorus Sam Levene, Stubby Kaye, Johnny Silver & Capitol 15385, mx 3881-3D-4 Producer’s Note Chorus Orchestra conducted by Irving Actman Recorded April 1949, Hollywood By the time Guys And Dolls came to Broadway, 4. I’ll Know 3:29 Decca 27379/85, mx W 80219/32 23. My Darling, My Darling 2:30 Issued as 78 album Decca DA 825 and ‘LP’ the long-playing record (‘LP’) had been Robert Alda & Isabel Bigley Jo Stafford & Gordon MacRae & The established as the favoured format for Original DL 8036 Starlighters, with orchestra 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Ihe University of Notre Dame Alumni Association
    The Archives of The University of Notre Dame 607 Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 574-631-6448 [email protected] Notre Dame Archives: Alumnus Vol. 38, No. 3 SEPTEMBER, 1960 NEWS: •NOTRE oOUR BELOVED C.^RDIN.A.L OTIAR.\ DIES WE HAVE A NEW PRELATE- DAME BISHOP-ELECT MENDEZ •ALUMNUS FIRST NOTRE D.-\ME PILGRIMAGE TO EUROPE FEATURES: NOTRE DAME MEN OF SCIENCE NICK LAMBER'IO. REPORTER FATHERS AND SONS AT NOTRE DAME DEPARTMENTS: THE WHITE HOUSE June 7, 1960 COMMENCEMENT Dear Father Heshurgh: 1960: UNIVERSAL NOTRE § DAME NIGHT Now that I am hack in Washington I want to try to tell you hov/ deeply appreciative I am of the honor REUNIONS the University of Notre Daire did me in conferring upon me, on Sunday, an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. I am particularly touched hy the sentiments EDITORIAL: BUSINESS set forth in the citation that you presented to me; I ST.VrESMEN AND A hope I shall alv/ays he worthy of the generosity of NEW LIBRARY those statements. As I am sure you know, I enjoyed greatly heing v/ith you and seeing the splendid young people that comprise YOU, THE ALUMNI — the Senior Class and the entire student hody. It was PART I a privilege, too, to meet so many of the memhers of SELF-STUDY SUR\'EY OF THE your faculty and to see at first hand the operation of 1960 REUNION CLASSES one of our finest and most distinguished Universities. I congratulate you on the great contribution you are making to our country.
    [Show full text]
  • Damon Runyon Program
    Damon Runyon Biography By Jeffrey Couchman Damon Runyon was a man of many lives—notably a journalist, a fiction writer, and a bona fide New York character. He was born Alfred Damon Runyan in 1880. A newspaper printer accidentally changed the spelling to Runyon in 1900, and several years later an editor on the New York American chose to delete “Alfred,” creating the byline Damon Runyon, which would become famous the world over. Runyon started life in Manhattan, Kansas, and grew up in Pueblo, Colorado, when the West could still be considered wild. According to family legend, Runyon carried a six-gun in his youth, and there is no reason to disbelieve the story. Runyon’s mother died when he was eight years old, and for the next few years he wandered the steel town of Pueblo, playing hooky, smoking cigarettes, and drinking whiskey. (He would swear off drink around 1910, though he replaced alcohol with coffee, drinking some forty cups—by some accounts, sixty cups— a day.) He also, however, spent time reading in libraries and learned the newspaper business from his father, Alfred Sr., who was a typesetter and partner in a string of Western papers. The Pueblo Chieftain published a poem by the eleven-year-old Alfie Runyan, and a year later the boy was working as a reporter on the Pueblo Evening Press. When the Spanish-American War broke out in 1898, Runyon was not old enough to join the army, but the determined young man, not quite eighteen, found his way to San Francisco and wangled his way into a contingent of Minnesota volunteers, who were shipped out to fight insurrection in the Philippines.
    [Show full text]
  • DEADBALL ERA WORLD SERIES BOOK PUBLISHED Long Awaited, SABR’S the World Series in the Deadball Era Has Recently Been Released
    DEADBALL ERA WORLD SERIES BOOK PUBLISHED Long awaited, SABR’s The World Series in the Deadball Era has recently been released. And examination of its content reveals that the book was well worth the wait. Edited by accomplished DEC member Steve Steinberg, the work’s subtitle succinctly states: “A history in the words and pictures of the writers and photographers” who chronicled the early Fall Classics. Yet that matter-of- fact description does inadequate justice to this imaginatively conceived, meticulously researched, and handsomely illustrated volume. The book, in a word, is superb. The text begins with a Foreword by distinguished baseball historian and Larry Ritter Award winner Charles C. Alexander, followed by a brief Preface and Acknowledgement by editor Steinberg that recognizes the SABR members who contributed their talents and/or financial backing to the project. The work then proceeds to in-depth consideration of the World Series played from 1903 through 1919, with a chapter devoted to each championship match (as well as to 1904 when the NL pennant- winning New York Giants refused to meet the AL champion Boston Americans.). Unlike other World Series retrospectives, The World Series in the Deadball Era does not provide a modern take on bygone events. Rather, the author(s) assigned to individual Series transport the reader back in time, allowing him or her to experience the Series as it unfolded, game-by-game, to baseball fans back in the day. The chapters accomplish this by combining a broad spectrum of contemporaneous reportage, including Series related observations by such now-legendary sportswriters as Tim Murnane, Hugh Fullerton, Grantland Rice, and Damon Runyon, with finely reproduced photographs of Series participants, game action, and ballpark scenes.
    [Show full text]
  • Damon Runyon: Creating Characters in the Historical Present ……….……..43
    The Jefferson Performing Arts Society Presents 1118 Clearview Parkway Metairie, LA 70001 504-885-2000 www.jpas.org 1 | P a g e Table of Contents Teacher’s Notes………………………..……………….………..……..3 Standards and Benchmarks…………………………....……….…..7 Background…………………………………….………….….……..……8 Damon Runyon: Creating Characters in the Historical Present ……….……..43 Damon Runyon’s New York, Our New Orleans………….…..91 Set Design: Measurement, Estimation, Fractions and Ratios……………………..………..108 A Few Other Ideas…………….……………………….……………137 Additional Resources……………………………….…..….……...186 2 | P a g e Teacher’s Notes Book by Abe Burrows and Jo Swerling Music and Lyrics by Frank Loesser Based on “The Idyll of Sarah Brown” and characters by Damon Runyon Synopsis: Set in Damon Runyon’s New York City, Guys and Dolls JR. follows gambler, Nathan Detroit, as he tries to find the cash to set up the biggest crap game in town while the authorities breathe down his neck; meanwhile, his girlfriend and nightclub performer, Adelaide, laments that they’ve been engaged for fourteen years without ever getting married. Nathan turns to fellow gambler, Sky Masterson, for the dough, but Sky ends up chasing the straight-laced missionary, Sarah Brown. Guys and Dolls JR. takes us from the heart of Times Square to the cafes of Havana, but everyone eventually ends up right where they belong. Guys and Dolls JR is a JPAS Theatre Kids! production. The JPAS Theatre Kids! program gives children year-round opportunities to participate in theatre, experience the process of putting on a show, as well as learning 3 | P a g e basic acting techniques and skills. Enrollment is by auditions which are held prior to each show.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 What Sports Authors, Commentators, and Historians Are Saying About 1921 Rev. 9.4.2011
    What Sports Authors, Commentators, and Historians are Saying about 1921 Rev. 9.4.2011 “1921 is an incredibly comprehensive look at a pivotal baseball season—for the sport, for New York, for an America that was finally distancing itself from war. Steve Steinberg and Lyle Spatz have created a mosaic of a year in baseball that is both illuminating and entertaining.” —Frank Deford “Two decades into the twentieth century, much of baseball was still playing a turn-of-the-century game. 1921 represents one of the pivot points in baseball history, as the old style and its proponents, embodied by John McGraw and his Giants, began to give way to what would become the modern game, as embodied by Babe Ruth and his Yankees.” —Bob Costas "This is Lyle Spatz's and Steve Steinberg's sweet spot - nobody reports on this era better than they do, and the cast of characters from 1921 remains fun, combative, and ready for baseball to become big business." —Marty Appel “Steinberg’s and Spatz’s 1921 is a finely detailed, meticulously researched and documented, and well-illustrated book that conveys a vivid feel for the times in baseball and American society in general. I wasn’t there, but Steinberg and Spatz often made me feel that I was.” —Professor Charles C. Alexander “Why are the Yankees the defending World Series Champions? The answers are found in part in this well-written, fully documented, and sometimes gripping account of a previous pivotal year, coming on the heels of the 1919 Black Sox scandal. The Yankees had sound management and an eye for plucking talent from other teams.
    [Show full text]
  • Ballparks As America: the Fan Experience at Major League Baseball Parks in the Twentieth Century
    BALLPARKS AS AMERICA: THE FAN EXPERIENCE AT MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PARKS IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY A Dissertation Submitted to the Temple University Graduate Board In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY by Seth S. Tannenbaum May 2019 Examining Committee Members: Bryant Simon, Advisory Chair, Department of History Petra Goedde, Department of History Rebecca Alpert, Department of Religion Steven A. Riess, External Member, Department of History, Northeastern Illinois University © Copyright 2019 by Seth S. Tannenbaum All Rights Reserved ii ABSTRACT This dissertation is a history of the change in form and location of ballparks that explains why that change happened, when it did, and what this tells us about broader society, about hopes and fears, and about tastes and prejudices. It uses case studies of five important and trend-setting ballparks to understand what it meant to go to a major league game in the twentieth century. I examine the Polo Grounds and Yankee Stadium in the first half of the twentieth century, what I call the classic ballpark era, Dodger Stadium and the Astrodome from the 1950s through the 1980s, what I call the multi-use ballpark era, and Camden Yards in the retro-chic ballpark era—the 1990s and beyond. I treat baseball as a reflection of larger American culture that sometimes also shaped that culture. I argue that baseball games were a purportedly inclusive space that was actually exclusive and divided, but that the exclusion and division was masked by rhetoric about the game and the relative lack of explicit policies barring anyone.
    [Show full text]
  • Hugh S. Fullerton, the Black Sox Scandal, and the Ethical Impulse in Sports Writing
    Hugh S. Fullerton, the Black Sox Scandal, and the Ethical Impulse in Sports Writing Steven Mark Klein Professor Emeritus/Journalism MA Journalism thesis Michigan State University May 1997 Acknowledgement and Introduction Here’s the thing about original research: You get to be a kid again. You’re innocent. Everything is new. Everything is for the first time. You’re the first man on the moon. You’re Lewis. Or Clark. Your mission, if you’ll pardon the pop culture reference, is to go where no man — or woman — has gone before. And here’s the thing about writing: You get to put your mark on the research. For eternity, really, you are now part of the subject you have researched and reassembled. I have lived with the subject of this research, Hugh Fullerton III, for a very long time, even though he died almost three years before I was born. To most people, Fullerton is the man who uncovered the fix of the 1919 World Series, remembered as the Black Sox scandal. For more than a quarter century preceding that World Series, Fullerton was the best known and most read sports writer in America. Working out of Chicago between 1893 and 1920 before the City on the Lake ceded the center of the baseball — and therefore the sports — universe to New York, Fullerton had the guts to write about a subject most American journalists, especially sports writers, ignored: gambling. I always wondered why he did it. Why Fullerton and not Ring Lardner or Grantland Rice, sports writers better and longer remembered than the man who was mentor to the former and a role model for the later.
    [Show full text]
  • Jacobs Beach the Mob, the Garden & the Golden Age of Boxing
    JACOBS BEACH THE MOB, THE GARDEN & THE GOLDEN AGE OF BOXING KEVIN MITCHELL FOREWORD BY MIKE STANTON First Hamilcar Publications edition, 2019. First published in Great Britain by Yellow Jersey Press, 2009. Copyright © 2009 Kevin Mitchell Foreword © 2019 Mike Stanton All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without permission in writing from the publisher. ISBN: 978-1-949590-02-9 Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Mitchell, Kevin, author. | Stanton, Mike, 1957–, foreword author. Title: Jacobs beach : the mob , the garden , and the golden age of boxing / Kevin Mitchell ; foreword by Mike Stanton. Description: Includes bibliographical references and index. | Boston, MA: Hamilcar Productions, 2019. Identifiers: LCCN 2018964155 | 978-1-949590-02-9 (pbk.) Subjects: LCSH Jacobs, Michael. | Boxing—Corrupt practices. | Organized Crime. | Boxing—United States—History—20th century. | Madison Square Garden (New York, N.Y.)—History. | BISAC SPORTS & RECREATION / Boxing | TRUE CRIME / Organized Crime Classification: LCC GV1125 .M58 2019 | DDC 796.83—dc23 Hamilcar Publications An imprint of Hannibal Boxing Media Ten Post Office Square, 8th Floor South Boston, MA 02109 www.hamilcarpubs.com Printed in the United States of America On the cover: (Top) Joe Louis punches Abe Simon during their fight at Madison Square Garden on March 27, 1942. (Bottom) Mike Jacobs sits in his office in the New York Hippodrome after signing a lease to run boxing shows at Madison Square Garden on August 6, 1937. Frontispiece: Mug shot of Frankie Carbo, 1950.
    [Show full text]