Sewanee Alumni News, 1940-41
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83550NCJRS.Pdf
If you have issues viewing or accessing this file contact us at NCJRS.gov. .-. --.-..--------- -- " , ~, -' . ~ 0'-;,0 , ..... ' . , '..;:- .' : " --r ,. .. ' . ;,.,..'. .,t' " ., ~ /1 '"fY) " --~~ '/ ' , ~ ., , r- . .;~ I ... ~",,--,.-.-'---' -...,...,----- '..,......., --"" -~- . ,-, ,:' ); "~ ,,,";~r .•. t:-- ' ":","-,,f,(., .), " ,~ /': ~~.,y'~" ~............ ----------------~.-~------------------------------------~----------~----------~ ----~-------------------- - -s-- !1 ) ~) ~ i ,';' ~ : 'THE CORRECTIOnS PROGRAr1 A "Corrections Program" within the Office of Vocational and Adult Education has been established by the Department of Education. The National Institute of Corrections has provided senior level staffing through a cooperative grant as their commitment to this new corrections initiative. A FOR CORRECTIONAL The overall goal of this joint effort is to increase the quality and quantity of ~ECTORY education and training opportunities for adult and juvenile offenders. In order to EDUCATION ADMINISTRATORS reach this goal, the Corrections Program wlll.;nitiate a variety of liaison, technical assistance and clearinghouse activities, includi'ng: 1. Coordinate existing ED funding programs which could benefit corrections. 2. Coordinate ED programs with those of other federal agencies such as the Departments of Labor, Justice, Health and Human Services, Housing and U.S. Department of Justice Urban Development, Veterans' Administratio~, and the Military Services. National Institute of Justice This document has been reproduced exactly -
Theatrical Personalities of Old St. Paul Franj^ M
MINNESOTA HISTORY VOLUME 23 • PUBLISHED IN DEC 1942 • NUMBER 4 Theatrical Personalities of Old St. Paul FranJ^ M. Whiting ACCORDING TO veteran troupers of the modern theater, there are three bad weeks in the show business — Christmas week. Holy week, and St. Paul. Whether Minnesota's capital city deserves such a reputation is largely a matter of opinion, for there is evidence that poor and mediocre companies have often played to empty theaters in St. Paul, while productions of outstanding merit draw packed houses. What ever St. Paul's present reputation may be, this much is certain — skepticism regarding the city's ability to support the theater did not arise until after the 1850's, for during that feverish decade St. Paul was one of the best towns for summer theatricals in the entire na tion. The financial boom, the flood of summer immigrants, the terri tory's reputation as an ideal vacation spot, and the Mississippi, which provided steamboat transportation for theatrical troupes from St. Louis, New Orleans, and Cincinnati, seem to have been primarily responsible for the theatrical prosperity of the period. At the same time the contributions of a few outstanding personalities should not be overlooked, for without them the first chapter in St. Paul's the atrical history would lose much of its color and fascination. Perhaps the first to deserve mention is none other than the fron tier Jack-of-all-trades, Joseph R. Brown. His achievements as a fur trader, lumberman, land speculator, legislator, politician, newspaper editor, inventor, and founder of cities are well known, but his unique place as an actor has been overlooked. -
Sewanee News, 1965
February, 1965 Sewanee News THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH SEWANEE. TENNESSEE ,«! mM V«SB B^^**^ " J/ee. — THE Sewan BEST HOPE NEWS by Arthur Ben Chitty Regional peaks of excellence are essential to nationwide intellectual vigor. This assumption The Sewanee News, issued quarterly by the was one of several which governed awarding ASSOCIATED ALUMNI of Ford Foundation challenge grants to forty-seven liberal arts colleges between 1961 and the end of 1964. of The University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennes- Overall purpose of Ford's $218.5 million Special see. Second Class postage paid at Sewanee, Tennessee. Program, according to a just-published Report from Foundation, has reach levels of aca- John Guerry, '49, President of the Associated Alumni the been to "new demic excellence, administrative effectiveness, and fi- Editor Arthur Ben Chitty, '35 nancial support." Ford sees as a distinctive feature of our pre-2000 half century a worldwide commitment Managing Editor Edith Whitesell to education destined perhaps to be the most important Consulting Editor Elizabeth N. Chitty social movement of our time. A fourth of the nation is in school. Expenditures for Class Notes Peggy Ervin education exceed $30 billion a year as America drives citizen high- Frederick R. Freyer, '29, Fice-President for Bequests; Dr. L. toward the goal of educating every to the Spires Whitaker. '31, rice-President for Capital Funds; Dudley est level of his ability. Undergraduate enrollments in C. Fort, '34, Fice-President for Regions: R. Morey Hart, '34, the nation have risen 40 per cent since 1950. Corres- Fice-President for Church Support; Rev. -
Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Kentucky Library - Serials Society Newsletter
Western Kentucky University TopSCHOLAR® Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Kentucky Library - Serials Society Newsletter Summer 2007 Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter Volume 30, Number 3 Kentucky Library Research Collections Western Kentucky University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/longhunter_sokygsn Part of the Genealogy Commons, Public History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Kentucky Library Research Collections, "Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter Volume 30, Number 3" (2007). Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter. Paper 64. https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/longhunter_sokygsn/64 This Newsletter is brought to you for free and open access by TopSCHOLAR®. It has been accepted for inclusion in Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter by an authorized administrator of TopSCHOLAR®. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Longhunter Volume xxx - Issue 3 Summer, 2007 ISSN 1067 7348 Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Bowling Green, Kentucky SOUTHERN KENTUCKY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY P. O. Box 1782 Bowling Green, KY 42102-1782 2007 Officers President Gail Jackson Miller, CG~ gailmiller@ mindspring.com Longhunter Editor 425 Midcrest Drive, Bowling Green, KY , 42101 Vice President J. Mark Lowe, CG'· 505 Josephine, Springfield, TN 37172 Secretary Cora Jane Spiller 1056 Oakland Road, Oakland, KY 42159 Treasurer Rebecca Shi pley 702 Eastwood, Bowling Green, K Y, 42103 Membership Membership in the Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society is open to anyone interested in research in A lien, Barren, Butler, Edmonson, Logan, Simpson, and Warren County, Kentucky or th e ir neighbors. Dues is $20.00 per year fo r an individual or family. The quanerly publication, The LonghUnler, is included with membership. -
Sewanee Alumni News, 1949
ALUMNI NEWS A Sports History OF Wi\t Hntoersitg of the 3outh BEING A Statistical Compilation of all Inter-Collegiate Athletic Contests in which Sewanee Teams have participated, together with the Names of all Sewanee Athletes. 1875-1948 THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH SEWANEE, TENNESSEE fol. XV, No. i February 15, 1949 (§ewanee ^Alumni V\(ews THE ASSOCIATED ALUMNI Officers Charles McD. Puckette, '07. .President Sjewamee Alumni News, issued quarterly by the John B. Greer, '08 1st Vice-Pres. Associated Alumni of The University of the ^outh. at Sewanee. Tennessee. Entered as second- Edmund C. Armes, '13 ..2nd Vice-Pres. class matter May 25. 1954.. at the postoffice ar Se- Coleman A. Harwell, '26_3rd Vice-Pres. wanee. Tenn.. under the Act of March 3. 1879. Rev. Lee A. Belford, '35 . -Rec. Sec'y '35 FEBRUARY 15, 1949 Douglas L. Vaughan, Treasurer Arthur Ben Chitty, '35. .Alumni Sec'y t Member American Alumni Council and Editor, Alumni News CONTENTS Introduction: Sports at Sewanee by James Gregg, Jr 3 Sewanee Football Statistics: Dates and Scores of All Games 7 Summary of All Games by Seasons 12 Summary of Records Against College Teams 13 Lettermen in Football: Names of Coaches, Managers, Players 14 Principal Scoring Plays: Runs, Passes, Field Goals 21 Sewanee Ail-Time Football Team: All-Star Selections . 25 Basketball Statistics: Scores of All Games, Lettermen 27 Baseball Statistics: All Recorded Scores, Lettermen 29 Track Records, Meets, and Teams 33 Tennis Records, Meets, and Lettermen 37 Golf Meets and Lettermen 39 Iron Men of Sewanee: The Team of 1899 40 ATHLETIC STAFF— 1948-49 Gordon M. -
G:\Featherkile in Kentucky.Wpd
2413 Creekridge Drive McKinney, Texas 75070-7792 April 1, 2004 Featherkile The surname Featherkile [Featherkoil, Featherkyle, Fethercile, Fetherkile, etc] is mentioned in sundry records. Featherkile appears to be an anglicized spelling of the German name Federkiel. Federkiel in German means a feather quill used in writing and comes from the words feder (feather) and kiel (quill or straw). The surname in the United States is extremely rare. Later immigrants from Germany preserved the German spelling of their name as shown in more recent US censuses. For example: Andrew Federkiel was born August 30, 1853 in Lichsbadt, Baden, Germany; died Sandusky, Sandusky County, OH, July 10, 1910. Andrew Federkiel married in Huron, OH, July 7, 1879, Mary Zimmerman. The family of Eulila Featherkile shown below probably arrived in American about 1775- 1780. George Fethergile was a Tithable in Nelson County, Kentucky July 28, 1785. He resided on Coxes Creek and Simpsons Creek in an area easterly to the county line and northerly to Chaplins Fork. He is shown on the Tithable Lists in 1789 in northwest central Nelson County when he paid one Tithe. George Featherkill of Nelson Co., KY, was in court in 1790: 1 County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1790-1791 : May 11, 1790: pages 122-124: Commonwealth of Kentucky versus Georg, Featherkill, on presentment for concealing a tithable [not reporting the same for tax]. Order dismissed. In 1790 George Featherkill is shown near McDonald's Run in Nelson County. Nelson County, Kentucky Taxable Property in District of Gabriel Cox in the year 1792: 2 Featherkele, Euly, 50 acres Fetherkele, George [blank] Kentucky 1800 Tax List: 3 Featherkile, Eulily - Nelson County - August 30, 1800 1 Bettie Cummings Cook, C.G., Nelson County, Kentucky Records, Volume II, Kentucky Records Series Volume 33; Cook Publications, 3318 Wimberg Ave., Evansville, Indiana 47720. -
(Hayes) COFFEY
COFFEY COUSINS' CLEARINGHOUSE page OFFEY COUSINS' LEARINGHOUSE December 2007 Issue NO. 107 ISSN 0749-758X EDITOR’S LETTER Dear Cousins, This issue completes 27 continuous years of Coffey Cousins’ Clearinghouse. We can applaud Leonard Coffey for his courage and innovation in getting us started. Issue 108 in March will begin our 28th year. This year has been fun. There has been so much dug out of the records and groups of you are piecing it all together. I can only applaud the efforts and time put in these projects. Computers make sharing so much more fun. Then the DNA project is really getting off the ground. It just gets more exciting with every participant. continued page 2 PUBLISHING INFORMATION This printing .............. 300 This Mailing .............. 220 CCC. issued Mar., June, Sept., & Dec How she was found! was she How Back issues are available: $1.00 each numbers 1 thru 21 $2.00 each numbers 22 thru 102 Subscription - $10.00 per year USA Other than USA - $12.00 MOLLY (Hayes) COFFEY COFFEY (Hayes) MOLLY From: Coffey Cousins' Clearinghouse SEE "NEW FINDS" - PAGE 5 PAGE - FINDS" "NEW SEE Bonnie Culley 4012 Cambridge Circle Jefferson City, MO 65109 Phone: (573)635-9057 email: [email protected] page December 007 My personal thrill was when Bennie Loftin and Ed Coffee came up with Benjamin Coffey’s FINAL PAY VOUCHER (part of the pension) from the Revolutionary War. This is the check that goes to his heirs after his death. It is the first time his wife’s name (Molly) has been documented. I was hoping the children would also be listed but will have to be satisfied with at least some success. -
1943-1944. V82.01. February Bulletin. Hope College
Hope College Digital Commons @ Hope College Hope College Catalogs Hope College Publications 1943 1943-1944. V82.01. February Bulletin. Hope College Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.hope.edu/catalogs Part of the Archival Science Commons Recommended Citation Hope College, "1943-1944. V82.01. February Bulletin." (1943). Hope College Catalogs. 111. http://digitalcommons.hope.edu/catalogs/111 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Hope College Publications at Digital Commons @ Hope College. It has been accepted for inclusion in Hope College Catalogs by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Hope College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. S u l l r t m , , VOLUME 82 NUMBER 1 1943.1944 HOLLAND, MICHIGAN FEBRUARY, 1944 ■ ;; • • S" H ope M emorial C h a p e l HOPE COLLEGE Founded as the P ioneer School 1851 Incorporated as H ope College 1866 ^ in ^mcrtca Y E A R B O O K F O R 1943-1944 INCLUDING A N N O U N C E M E N T S F O R 1944-1945 ACADEMIC STANDING H ope College is fully accredited by both the Association of American Universities and the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. ■ The College also maintains membership in the American Council on Education, the Associa tion of American Colleges, and the National Conference of Church-related Colleges. CONTRACT H ope College reserves the right to matricu late students and to continue them in residence on the basis of its conclusions regarding the capacity of the student to do work of college grade and his fitness to live under the social conditions fostered on the campus. -
Holland Memorial. Sketch of the Life of George
Jr n rr m Hi SB ess MM . > > > » > i >> II * > >> >.l ••> > I •» > > »"» > ;x>>> >> >> >> > >) >> » _>>» &3 .' Xk\ >^> ^ >> > > » » i -O J; - > > > "> * -> > » a > :> > » . -> * >-> > J» > JP»- -> > '> »>« . > i >z» *> »> :> > > •> > > >» . > .). >> > i) i» > . >• > ' >y> ) > >>> "> -> •' - > p • > o> "» > 5 > >> > o> > -> -, o> > > ->. .>> >» ii> Tt> j > > > > -> ""» • ,- >> . - > 3E» > > , ) > -i "» ~» ."> >> a < O I >*> T> » >;> - >"5 V> >-> ' 3> '™ ->.>' I » i >•> . 3i » >>> » £> 3 > » >••; .-» -' -3*' - . >. 8> "3^ >>>.. - "3^ & > » »T7 ^fc i > 2 > • » j>-> > ^ i » I >J>.; :» • > "> ~J>: » > > > . :» > » t> > i> > -> S>> IB > > ^>» >, 3 "a ^3> > > I 5>J3I > • > ) > > i.> J» > i --3 >> -; >a»-^» 3 J3J> ;. > P J 5» > > • > 3 ' • » ^^> .D>>>£e»-»5o -^ . ' > •> J> 3 . >] > .3 • > 1 J •> > - > s> > > -• - > » -• .> _> > > • >J > > _, ^> . > • • a » a a » 3 j > > >-^> i _! * »^ >~.»'ji " * •* -> -» > J*» •i> 1 -^ "^ >'_'> Tfc • o ->;. C; >3t v» ^j * > •> v^>~ S »a . *'' :' -^£j* • * -S 'm» ' > »>j > ' ^» >»> > > ^>~7afc - ^-U^P *~ > > >'ito . t». 'Mm >J^£, c."»orare Holland. "> Ftom tht New York Ihrald, Dec :<:jty, arter A lorg life of 79 vuara and a**" >" f < ' h. -j '',,-j/ <7> j o ( : L HOLLAND MEMORIAL. SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF George Holly n d . THE VETERAN COMEDIAN, WITH DRAMATIC REM I X [SC E XC ES. ANECDOTES, &c. Edition limited to 250 Copies, 50 of which are on quarto paper. NEW YORK T . H . MORE E L 78 Nassau Street. 1871. 7tf' ' MEMORIAL. AZLITT, an acute critic in all that relates to the stage, has justly observed that "the most pleasant feature in the profession of a player, and which, indeed, is peculiar to it, is that we not only admire the talents of those who adorn it, but we contract a personal intimacy with them. There is no class of society whom so many persons regard with affection as actors. -
Economic&Fiscalassessment
TENNESSEE NATIONAL GUARD Economic&FiscalAssessment Dr. Murat Arik | Director | MTSU Business & Economic Research Center Tennessee Leaders, I commissioned this Tennessee National Guard Economic and Fiscal Assessment to inform future decision making by increasing our understanding of the synergetic relationship between the Military Department, the communities in which we serve, private sector business, and the state as a whole. Over the ensuing several months, scholars at the Business and Economic Research Center of Middle Tennessee State University gathered and analyzed hundreds of relevant data points to produce this detailed study of the economic and fiscal impact of the Tennessee National Guard and the Military Department. The results were astounding… The Military Department directly employed 14,637 people, and generated a total of over 18,000 jobs across the state We have a significant employment, economic, and fiscal impact in every congressional district, and in 82% of Tennessee counties With $557 million in personal income, our presence generated over $888 million in business revenue, and $24 million in taxes – the rough equivalent in business revenue of General Motors and Nissan combined We provide our state and local stakeholders noteworthy services including emergency management, response, and recovery assistance, robust youth development programs, safety and security at special events, and a substantial contribution to Tennessee’s counterdrug effort and the Governor’s Task Force on Marijuana Eradication Aside from these business related statistics, our citizen Soldiers represent the very best of the Tennessee Volunteer spirit. Whether responding to the call to assist those in need here at home or fighting for our freedom around the globe, our young men and women get the job done in exemplary fashion. -
Stephen Robinson, Sr. Temperance Hall's First Settler Compiled By
Stephen Robinson, Sr. Temperance Hall’s First Settler Compiled by Jerry L. Winfrey From the book: Temperance Hall Remembers Book II A Brief History of Temperance Hall, Tennessee Compiled by Marjorie Hayes – January 1990 Published by Temperance Hall Community Club Pgs. 92 – 138 Stephen Robinson, Sr., my great•great•great•greatgrandfather, was the first settler to arrive near the present site of Temperance Hall. Stephen, a native of Virginia, and his wife, Elizabeth “Betty” (Holland) Robinson, sold their land in Cumberland County, Virginia, in 1797 to Field Robinson, his brother. Stephen, Elizabeth, and their family apparently left Virginia at that time to come to Tennessee. For, a son, John Robinson, was born near the settlement at Nashville in the newly organized state of Tennessee, on 27 January 1798. According to the history of DeKalb County, Tennessee, written by Thomas 0. Webb, Stephen Robinson first came to the area which is now DeKalb County about 1798 with Adam Dale, who was the county’s first permanent settler, and Leonard and John Fite, who were brothers. These men were looking for good land and brought the first wagon into the Smith Fork Valley. Stephen Robinson, Sr., returned with his family and house hold goods to become the first settler at Temperance Hall. In an account which was written on the life of John Elbert Robinson, Stephen's grandson, for Goodspeed’s history, it is related that John Robinson, the son of Stephen who was born near Nashville, was brought by his father while still an infant to the farm where John Elbert Robinson later lived. -
Sewanee Football Roster
IS_ Sewanee Football Roster Ralph Peters Black Sylvania, Ga. Landon Randolph Mason Marshall; Va. Richard Elliott Bolling Edna, Texas Floy Hoffman Parker Canton, Miss. Preston Smith Brooks Sewanee, Tenn. William Henry Poole Gl:yndon, Md. William Sterling Claiborne Amherst Co., Va. Henry G. "Diddy" Seibels Montgvrnery, Ala. Harris Goodwin Cope Savannah, Ga. Ormand Simkins Corsicana, Texas Albert T. Davidson Augusta, Ga. Bartlet et Ultimus Sims Bryan, Texas Andrew Cleveland Evins spartanburg, S. G. Hugh M. T. "Bunny" Pearce Jackson, Tenn. Charles Quintard Gray Ocala, Fla. William B. 'Warbler" WIlson Rnck Hiu, S.G. Daniel Baldwin Hull Sa:vannah, Ga. John William Jones Marshall, Texas Head Coach: H.M. "Billy"Suter (Princeton Henry Sheriden Keyes Cambridge, Mass. '1899) RF. Rex Kilpatrick Bridgeport, Ala. Manager: Luke Lea Joseph Lee Kirby-Smith Sewanee, Tenn. Trainer: Cal Burrows 'rile beginnings of the NCAA Alexander Guerry advised Sewanee to with- Football spawned the NCAA By to encourage football reform. The same draw from the league, which it did in 1940. the early 1900s, the game was nearly abol- year, Chancellor Henry MacCracken of Playing bona fide small college football from ished across the nation. Due to its rugged NYU convened a meeting of thirteen insti- the post-World War IT years up to the present, nature, and an offensive scheme known as tutions to initiate changes in football play- Sewanee enjoyed undefeated (8-0) seasons in the flying wedge, injuries were numerous. ing rules. At a subsequent meeting in New 1958 and 1963 under Coach Shirley Majors, who Many schools dropped the sport as players York, the Intercollegiate Athletic from 1957 to 1976, guided the Tigers to six were getting killed and protective equip- Association of the United States (IAAUS) College Athletic Conference championships.