The Daily Egyptian, December 09, 1966
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Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1966-12-09
~ ail Iowan Serving the niverslty of Iowa and the People of Iowa City ----------------------~---------- 10 cenu a COpy lowa at." Ion-P'ridIy, December t, 1 Art Additions Okayed; HOLIDAY QUEENS, fln.Il ... III the ftttt "s.nt. Lucia IN," .re, from ..,,: ,.tty CIoIc, AI, De. Moina.; Martt.a N...... , PI, Cylinder; Uncia aillr, .u. CecIIr It""'; SlIt Go.kI., A2, Hoo.,.r, N.... ; .l1li KIthy McCulley, AI, 0.1'....". An lIeI o.nI.. Board Unhappy At Cost ....m requIre. ttIIt the ......, It lie cMt. r, Currier HilI,...,.... __ .... _lie • trlditlona' "br.. kfe" vi,II" ... the I•• lilii"ii1", IIefwe Iht ChriltnWl .... 1· ay NIC GOERES additio . The additiona would be paid Regent Jonathan Richards of Red Oak, throu&h the eoDege of IJbera\ Arta be Uyt. - PIlote r, DIck Taffe Editar for, hoYiever, by I I I tive appropri tl In IOUth1l'elt Iowa, AId that much of the cinninl nat September. DES MOINES - Tb state Board of IIIhen th y are approved next ),eBr. promotion for a fourth collece for lOUth- • The approved proll'lIm inC\Ud J9 boun Reaenta reluctantly approved Thursday Th only ibiUt)' In which the audio 11' Iowa wsa • "Chamber o( Cornmerte" ot prerequiJit ,Ill boW'll of required cour- $1,125,000 {or University Art Building ad torlum fund would be used is that the effort. , and 12 boon of electiv Up to 50 eIltlons. I gisl ture mieht appropriate no capital The two croups ageed that the~ was ~enu maJorinc In the field can be ()o The Re n dislibd approving bl fu for the Board of Regents. -
The Ledger and Times, November 23, 1966
Murray State's Digital Commons The Ledger & Times Newspapers 11-23-1966 The Ledger and Times, November 23, 1966 The Ledger and Times Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt Recommended Citation The Ledger and Times, "The Ledger and Times, November 23, 1966" (1966). The Ledger & Times. 5473. https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt/5473 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Murray State's Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Ledger & Times by an authorized administrator of Murray State's Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. • • 'City Dilemma:remands Grow But Revenue Does Not. What To Do? More demands are being made mittee meeting held at the city the city and Its revenue was held the resources of the city. He }titian an the hortace, a on the city administration. of ournplete tinned with street improvement and firemen will be needed at the new Max Hurt reviewed the library more lush with Mayor Holmes Ellis and and a look Into the future on pro- pointed out the early work of the re-evaluation of the financing was traffic control, more park facili- fire sub-station as well as a new SitungiOn services are desired, street improve- Dr. Harry U. Whayne, chairman with the group, saying that jects contemplated was given to commission in preparing studies on needed and means of obtaining ad- ment is needed, exTtansaosi of cert- of the ties, airport improvement, a com- fire truck. by next June the present pilot pro- Murray Planning Commis- those present. -
The B-G News December 8, 1966
Bowling Green State University ScholarWorks@BGSU BG News (Student Newspaper) University Publications 12-8-1966 The B-G News December 8, 1966 Bowling Green State University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news Recommended Citation Bowling Green State University, "The B-G News December 8, 1966" (1966). BG News (Student Newspaper). 2035. https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/2035 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at ScholarWorks@BGSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in BG News (Student Newspaper) by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@BGSU. Profs Project In Space Shot 'Asfrof/ies' Ready To Orbit By ROSEMARY KOVACS genetics, growth and development of living or- Asa NASA consultant on cosmic radiation. Dr. Feature Editor ganisms. The flight of the fruit flies and other Oster was asked to submit an experiment. After specimens Is planned to pave the way for future its acceptance from nearly 100 others submitted, A "missile menagerie" is scheduled to blast long duration ventures by monkeys and rats. he began developing the special strains of flies. into orbit Wednesday from Cape Kennedy and "The purpose of my experiments will be to Then he began making flights. the University's own "dropsophila melanogaster" study the effects of radiation and weightlessness on He had to fly to California and Philadelphia will be going along for a purposeful ride. the developing larvae," Dr. Otter explained last where the special modules or chambers holding Nearly 1,000 fruit fly larvae developed by Dr. -
Football Award Winners
FOOTBALL AWARD WINNERS Consensus All-America Selections 2 Consensus All-Americans by School 17 National Award Winners 30 First Team All-Americans Below FBS 41 Postgraduate Scholarship Winners 73 Academic All-America Hall of Fame 82 Academic All-Americans by School 83 CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS In 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau (the NCAA’s service bureau) compiled the first official comprehensive roster of all-time All-Americans. The compilation of the All-America roster was supervised by a panel of analysts working in large part with the historical records contained in the files of the Dr. Baker Football Information Service. The roster consists of only those players who were first-team selections on one or more of the All-America teams that were selected for the national audience and received nationwide circulation. Not included are the thousands of players who received mention on All-America second or third teams, nor the numerous others who were selected by newspapers or agencies with circulations that were not primarily national and with viewpoints, therefore, that were not normally nationwide in scope. The following chart indicates, by year (in left column), which national media and organizations selected All-America teams. The headings at the top of each column refer to the selector (see legend after chart). ALL-AMERICA SELECTORS AA AP C CNN COL CP FBW FC FN FW INS L LIB M N NA NEA SN UP UPI W WCF 1889 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – √ – 1890 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – √ – 1891 – – – – – -
NCAA Division II-III Football Records (Award Winners)
Award Winners Consensus All-America Selections, 1889-2007 ............................ 126 Special Awards .............................................. 141 First-Team All-Americans Below Football Bowl Subdivision ..... 152 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners ........................................................ 165 Academic All-America Hall of Fame ............................................... 169 Academic All-Americans by School ..... 170 126 CONSENSUS All-AMERIca SELEctIONS Consensus All-America Selections, 1889-2007 In 1950, the National Collegiate Athletic Bureau (the NCAA’s service bureau) of players who received mention on All-America second or third teams, nor compiled the first official comprehensive roster of all-time All-Americans. the numerous others who were selected by newspapers or agencies with The compilation of the All-American roster was supervised by a panel of circulations that were not primarily national and with viewpoints, therefore, analysts working in large part with the historical records contained in the that were not normally nationwide in scope. files of the Dr. Baker Football Information Service. The following chart indicates, by year (in left column), which national media The roster consists of only those players who were first-team selections on and organizations selected All-America teams. The headings at the top of one or more of the All-America teams that were selected for the national au- each column refer to the selector (see legend after chart). dience and received nationwide circulation. Not -
(Iowa City, Iowa), 1966-11-23
No Need For New Inquiry Into Assassination 0f JFK oted By House Leaders WASHINGTtJ I.f\ - The leaders of 'naUon - and [ !mow 01 no sucb '" never had any doubt that the eonunis both parties in the House of Representa evidence," Ford said. ion answered tile basic questions. , am tives said Tuesday they see no need now If some sl!DiCicant new (ads WW! to not dOling my mind to the possibility new for a new, congressional investigation of turn up, he said, he would not object to I evidence may come up, but as of tbls the a inaUon of Pmident John ,. new inv ligation by responsible authori tage I see no rea n for a congressional Kennedy. ties invtlitigatlon." These vl~ came separately from the Recent boob and artld castin& doubt The office of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy majority leader, Rep. Carl Albert, (I). on the conclusion that OswaJd aded alone, (J).N.Y.l said be had DO comment 011 Okla '. and the minority leader, Rep. Ford laid, are only "speculation based on the suuestion. for a new IIIv U,aUon. Gerald R. Forel. (R-Mich.l. wbo was a the Information, testimony and evidence Sen. Ruasell B. Loq II).La.l laid Mon· member of the pre 'denUal commission carefully co idered by the Warrm Com day in New Orleans be has .Iways thoutht that investigated the Wing. mission ," a ~ perllOQ was Involved in the as· Both emphasiud that th y know of DO In a similar vein, Albert said in an sa ination who was "a mud! better shot sub tantial new evidence to sbake the interview "There Is no new evideJ1( I than OsWald." Long said he thinks there over·all conclusion of the commission, have seen that ~d justify even consid .heuJd be further investieation. -
Aluminum Siding Installed
y n *i MOM n ‘" 1 B ' \ _ j - ■ , ; I - —'• p : ^ ^ V . ^»AGfi TWENTY-EIGHT TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1966 - i ' iian(i;paf(r lEtt^ntng Ayenora Daily Net Press Run For the Week Ended The Weather Deoember I, IBM Cloudy with snow devdopUlff this evening; snow Mixed with sleet and freezing rain tonight . and tomorrow; low 96-80 TURNPIKE TV and Mmcheater^A City of Villagm Charm night, U gh In 80e tom om iir. VOL. LXXXVI, NO. 7ii (TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES—TWO SECTIONS) / MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1966 (Olualfled AdvertlatBg on Page 98) PRICE SEVEN CEN18 — — -------------- — 4 ;: ,:J , ^ -----------------------^-------------------------------------- ---- — WBBK-BETWEBN Engulfs Train, Die in State Cra^h Chile Hit Diesel Car By Violent Hits Stalled Earthquake Tank Truck 2 SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — A violent earthquake shool^ noi^h'- EVERETT, Mass. (AP) em Chile early today and de Twelve persons were QUANTITIES LIMITED ON THESE OUTSTANDING VALUES stroyed about BO per cent of the killed and 18 others inj'ur* houses and buildings in the ni-' ed early today in the flam trate port city of Taltal, officials \ 1 ^ - ing (iolliaion of a Bostop & reported. j Maine railroad diesel car One death was reported at Taltal. A boy.w as killed by a and'fin oil truck stalled on BRAND NAME 220 Voll^FulEy Airtomcrtic falling wall. Three other per a street Crossing. The impact exploded some T,« 8 .......... sons were reported injured „ RADIOS' there. 000 gallons of fuel oil. Ths The earthquake struck about flames engulfM ;gie passenger BEG. AM—CXX)CK AM—REG. AM /E^ ELECTRIC DRYER And Awaaay They Go in Virginia car with some 36 persona CLOCK AM/FM 700 miles north of Santiago in Six Lynghburg,^ Va., residents Dy through the air as they part company with the provinces of Tarapaca, An aboard.