Cabinet Officer Hits Pending Labor Laws; Urges Study Agency
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Robert Tiny Maxwell
VOL. I, No. IV MAY, 1988 Robert 'Tiny' Maxwell By Richard Pagano In 1905, 18 players died playing college football and 159 were seriously injured. One particular injured player probably caused more attention to be brought to the brutality of the game than any other. He was a lineman from Swarthmore College and his name was Robert "Tiny" Maxwell. Robert was a giant of a man in an era when most linemen weighed under 200 pounds. He tipped the scales at 250 pounds and stood 6'4" tall. The most significant game of that 1905 season was played at Franklin Field on Oct. 7 between Swarthmore College and the University of Pennsylvania. Maxwell had played so well in 1904 that Penn assigned three players to cover him during this game, and on every play those three worked on Max- well and on him only. He took what was described as a savage beating. His nose was broken, his eyes swollen shut and his face dripped with blood. Bob courageously continued playing until near the end of the game, when his face was so bloody and swollen that he could no longer see, yet he never complained of the physical beating. A photograph of Maxwell's face shocked President Roosevelt into threaten- ing to abolish football, if the colleges themselves did not take steps to eliminate the brutality and reduce injuries. President Joseph Swain of Swarthmore responded by saying, "Swarthmore College stands for clean manly sport, shorn of all unnecessary roughness. President Roosevelt should have and I believe will have, the cordial support of the colleges and univer- sities of the country .. -
Glenn Killinger, Service Football, and the Birth
The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School School of Humanities WAR SEASONS: GLENN KILLINGER, SERVICE FOOTBALL, AND THE BIRTH OF THE AMERICAN HERO IN POSTWAR AMERICAN CULTURE A Dissertation in American Studies by Todd M. Mealy © 2018 Todd M. Mealy Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2018 ii This dissertation of Todd M. Mealy was reviewed and approved by the following: Charles P. Kupfer Associate Professor of American Studies Dissertation Adviser Chair of Committee Simon Bronner Distinguished Professor Emeritus of American Studies and Folklore Raffy Luquis Associate Professor of Health Education, Behavioral Science and Educaiton Program Peter Kareithi Special Member, Associate Professor of Communications, The Pennsylvania State University John Haddad Professor of American Studies and Chair, American Studies Program *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT This dissertation examines Glenn Killinger’s career as a three-sport star at Penn State. The thrills and fascinations of his athletic exploits were chronicled by the mass media beginning in 1917 through the 1920s in a way that addressed the central themes of the mythic Great American Novel. Killinger’s personal and public life matched the cultural medley that defined the nation in the first quarter of the twentieth-century. His life plays outs as if it were a Horatio Alger novel, as the anxieties over turn-of-the- century immigration and urbanization, the uncertainty of commercializing formerly amateur sports, social unrest that challenged the status quo, and the resiliency of the individual confronting challenges of World War I, sport, and social alienation. -
Fenomén K-Pop a Jeho Sociokulturní Kontexty Phenomenon K-Pop and Its
UNIVERZITA PALACKÉHO V OLOMOUCI PEDAGOGICKÁ FAKULTA Katedra hudební výchovy Fenomén k-pop a jeho sociokulturní kontexty Phenomenon k-pop and its socio-cultural contexts Diplomová práce Autorka práce: Bc. Eliška Hlubinková Vedoucí práce: Mgr. Filip Krejčí, Ph.D. Olomouc 2020 Poděkování Upřímně děkuji vedoucímu práce Mgr. Filipu Krejčímu, Ph.D., za jeho odborné vedení při vypracovávání této diplomové práce. Dále si cením pomoci studentů Katedry asijských studií univerzity Palackého a členů české k-pop komunity, kteří mi pomohli se zpracováním tohoto tématu. Děkuji jim za jejich profesionální přístup, rady a celkovou pomoc s tímto tématem. Prohlášení Prohlašuji, že jsem diplomovou práci vypracovala samostatně s použitím uvedené literatury a dalších informačních zdrojů. V Olomouci dne Podpis Anotace Práce se zabývá hudebním žánrem k-pop, historií jeho vzniku, umělci, jejich rozvojem, a celkovým vlivem žánru na společnost. Snaží se přiblížit tento styl, který obsahuje řadu hudebních, tanečních a kulturních směrů, široké veřejnosti. Mimo samotnou podobu a historii k-popu se práce věnuje i temným stránkám tohoto fenoménu. V závislosti na dostupnosti literárních a internetových zdrojů zpracovává historii žánru od jeho vzniku až do roku 2020, spolu s tvorbou a úspěchy jihokorejských umělců. Součástí práce je i zpracování dvou dotazníků. Jeden zpracovává názor české veřejnosti na k-pop, druhý byl mířený na českou k-pop komunitu a její myšlenky ohledně tohoto žánru. Abstract This master´s thesis is describing music genre k-pop, its history, artists and their own evolution, and impact of the genre on society. It is also trying to introduce this genre, full of diverse music, dance and culture movements, to the public. -
Tennessee Baseball History
History College World Series 1951, 1995, 2001, 2005 109 Tennessee Baseball History The Early Years ... tant Frank Moffett headed up the 1918 and 1919 teams. Tennessee posted winning seasons in Newspaper records trace Tennessee baseball history to 1897, the first year the university had three of those four years as the squad continued to play exhibitions against both major and minor an official baseball team. The earliest teams wore gold and white and played high schools, inde- league teams. pendent teams and visiting professional clubs in addition to other collegiate squads. The players The Vols opened the 1918 season with a 14-0 blanking by the Pittsburgh Pirates, but rebound- traveled by train, tried out every year, paid their own expenses and received no scholarships. ed to post an 8-2 mark against collegiate competition. Coach Moffett, who had been around the The program was discontinued in the years of 1901, 1932-38 and 1943-46. They played their baseball program since 1903, termed the performance of the 1918 squad, “the most successful games at Wait Field at the corner of 15th Street and Cumberland Avenue on campus. The field season in the university’s history.” was also where the football team played its games until moving to Shields-Watkins Field in 1921. In Moffett’s last year with Tennessee in 1919, Sunday baseball was not permitted in the state. The earliest teams were managed by player/coaches as the student-body took it upon them- The team was strong on hitting and fielding, but short on baserunning as it finished 5-7-1. -
Federal Bureau of Investigation the Best Copy Obtainable Is Included in the Reproduction of These Documents
FOIPA COVER SHEET FREEDOM OF INFORMATION AND PRIVACYACTS SUBJECT: BARKER/KARPIS GANG BREMER KIDNAPPING FILE NUMBER: 7-576 SECTION : 104 FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION THE BEST COPY OBTAINABLE IS INCLUDED IN THE REPRODUCTION OF THESE DOCUMENTS. PAGES INCLUDED THAT ARE BLURRED, LIGHT, OR OTHERWISE DIFFICULT TO READ ARE THE RESULT OF THE CONDITION OF THE ORIGINAL DOCUMENT. NO BETTER COPY CAN BE REPRODUCED. c c L suBJK@ 1 Fne numén __z_z@______-5 - 92 . A seczaion numE>eR___m-£_____.' . %RiALs Z<3OZ§792L DA§¬S__g_,_Q_______ PA§¬5 ReLeA5eC>.___a1.u.___.______ ; pA_9&5 w1@>m>e92.c>____;>_____._______ exemp@i0n! U5¬O >2 --_ ..< »__.-M, T ' tm 92 0 I a A , . , 1, _92 . _<.-' . ._ ., TIER.-V: W? . T .Q-1 ' "'-;__'»'§-i~. .__~ -;§. _9292_";-fJ~ "'.'-' ' .- , 1*! w »;T MW~ W ,__, 92wLhr,*, , ' '.W$»Jv&§~" X I _. ~_-I.-_ J, 5 #L._ _,|.;¢._' . ¢ ls V , "I I ._= , a ,4 , :- . ._;. '11!. ' 1'1 § -Ar. SM w A -_.=_ ¢ ..é, " J Q. h }§ _b':§ .;;.l_ Q 0 .. _'~ 1 *1» - _929292."E T 1 .'192" Ar! ,5 " A '41 . I ¢ . :4, ,. -.131! E, @n§4 A L vv - ! 1| , Q T »»= -T ,_O _ 1 1 Rh 2 - 6 4 $94,»?-1' H-_ -~ 1 I lam or Snvlcl '. 1 I 6 I111: In a lull-nu BY nmsqrwmamom A@ A Z, Telqnm or Cable- l 1 fnm unlen In do and character is Irv f dimmed by u rumble WM ESTERN A1 "DL-Daylxnu "'4 3 Ilmnbov lzznmnmx 92.,; Mme eorpu:oed-926AM LC Deferred Cobb NLT Cabin Nib! Lani - I. -
Download Print Version (.Pdf)
HSocial ISSUE Hot Hot Summer: Sizzling it up with more provocative K-pop By James Turnbull Summer’s heating up outside and on-screen, where K-pop’s girl groups have been shedding even more clothes than normal. !e public debate has reached new heights, with critics pointing to ex- cessive female objecti"cation. But, as James Turnbull points out, the controversy is nothing new. K-pop girl group After School swinging around stripper which featured pelvic thrusts from RaNia and the Brave Girls, as poles, grabbing their crotches and singing wet and topless well as 4Minute’s notorious “Wide Leg Spread Dance” for “Mir- in “First Love”? Dal Shabet ripping their skirts open to reveal ror Mirror”. skin tight pants for “Look At My Legs”? Long, lingering close- It is true that there have been more cases than normal recent- ups of BIKINY’s breasts and panties for “Please Accept Me”? ly, with management companies of boy bands openly wonder- These examples are just a small sampling of what you can see ing how their employees can compete for attention. But that is on Korean music channels this summer, in what has widely been precisely the point: with a constant glut of new groups debut- described as an unprecedented, unacceptable pornification of ing, legal downloads costing less than a tenth of their iTunes K-pop. Predictably, many netizens have been slut-shaming the counterparts, and an ensuing overdependence on commercial girl groups involved, whereas more discerning critics have gen- endorsements, the Korean music industry has long been predi- erally complained of their excessive sexual objectification, and/ cated on using sex—and anticipated bans—to keep groups in or portrayed them as victims of their management companies. -
2017 National College Football Awards Association Master Calendar
2017 National College Football 9/20/2017 1:58:08 PM Awards Association Master Calendar Award ...................................................Watch List Semifinalists Finalists Winner Banquet/Presentation Bednarik Award .................................July 10 Oct. 30 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [THDA] March 9, 2018 (Atlantic City, N.J.) Biletnikoff Award ...............................July 18 Nov. 13 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [THDA] Feb. 10, 2018 (Tallahassee, Fla.) Bronko Nagurski Trophy ...................July 13 Nov. 16 Dec. 4 Dec. 4 (Charlotte) Broyles Award .................................... Nov. 21 Nov. 27 Dec. 5 [RCS] Dec. 5 (Little Rock, Ark.) Butkus Award .....................................July 17 Oct. 30 Nov. 20 Dec. 5 Dec. 5 (Winner’s Campus) Davey O’Brien Award ........................July 19 Nov. 7 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [THDA] Feb. 19, 2018 (Fort Worth) Disney Sports Spirit Award .............. Dec. 7 [THDA] Dec. 7 (Atlanta) Doak Walker Award ..........................July 20 Nov. 15 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [THDA] Feb. 16, 2018 (Dallas) Eddie Robinson Award ...................... Dec. 5 Dec. 14 Jan. 6, 2018 (Atlanta) Gene Stallings Award ....................... May 2018 (Dallas) George Munger Award ..................... Nov. 16 Dec. 11 Dec. 27 March 9, 2018 (Atlantic City, N.J.) Heisman Trophy .................................. Dec. 4 Dec. 9 [ESPN] Dec. 10 (New York) John Mackey Award .........................July 11 Nov. 14 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [RCS] TBA Lou Groza Award ................................July 12 Nov. 2 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [THDA] Dec. 4 (West Palm Beach, Fla.) Maxwell Award .................................July 10 Oct. 30 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [THDA] March 9, 2018 (Atlantic City, N.J.) Outland Trophy ....................................July 13 Nov. 15 Nov. 21 Dec. 7 [THDA] Jan. 10, 2018 (Omaha) Paul Hornung Award .........................July 17 Nov. 9 Dec. 6 TBA (Louisville) Paycom Jim Thorpe Award ..............July 14 Oct. -
Zerohack Zer0pwn Youranonnews Yevgeniy Anikin Yes Men
Zerohack Zer0Pwn YourAnonNews Yevgeniy Anikin Yes Men YamaTough Xtreme x-Leader xenu xen0nymous www.oem.com.mx www.nytimes.com/pages/world/asia/index.html www.informador.com.mx www.futuregov.asia www.cronica.com.mx www.asiapacificsecuritymagazine.com Worm Wolfy Withdrawal* WillyFoReal Wikileaks IRC 88.80.16.13/9999 IRC Channel WikiLeaks WiiSpellWhy whitekidney Wells Fargo weed WallRoad w0rmware Vulnerability Vladislav Khorokhorin Visa Inc. Virus Virgin Islands "Viewpointe Archive Services, LLC" Versability Verizon Venezuela Vegas Vatican City USB US Trust US Bankcorp Uruguay Uran0n unusedcrayon United Kingdom UnicormCr3w unfittoprint unelected.org UndisclosedAnon Ukraine UGNazi ua_musti_1905 U.S. Bankcorp TYLER Turkey trosec113 Trojan Horse Trojan Trivette TriCk Tribalzer0 Transnistria transaction Traitor traffic court Tradecraft Trade Secrets "Total System Services, Inc." Topiary Top Secret Tom Stracener TibitXimer Thumb Drive Thomson Reuters TheWikiBoat thepeoplescause the_infecti0n The Unknowns The UnderTaker The Syrian electronic army The Jokerhack Thailand ThaCosmo th3j35t3r testeux1 TEST Telecomix TehWongZ Teddy Bigglesworth TeaMp0isoN TeamHav0k Team Ghost Shell Team Digi7al tdl4 taxes TARP tango down Tampa Tammy Shapiro Taiwan Tabu T0x1c t0wN T.A.R.P. Syrian Electronic Army syndiv Symantec Corporation Switzerland Swingers Club SWIFT Sweden Swan SwaggSec Swagg Security "SunGard Data Systems, Inc." Stuxnet Stringer Streamroller Stole* Sterlok SteelAnne st0rm SQLi Spyware Spying Spydevilz Spy Camera Sposed Spook Spoofing Splendide -
Football Award Winners
FOOTBALL AWARD WINNERS Consensus All-America Selections 2 Consensus All-Americans by School 20 National Award Winners 32 First Team All-Americans Below FBS 42 NCAA Postgraduate scholarship winners 72 Academic All-America Hall of Fame 81 Academic All-Americans by School 82 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 – – – -
History of Intercollegiate Athletics at the University of Arizona (1897-1948)
History of intercollegiate athletics at the University of Arizona (1897-1948) Item Type text; Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Svob, Robert Stanley, 1943- Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 05/10/2021 20:06:50 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/553813 HISTORY OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA (1897-1948) by Robert Sv Svob A Thesis submitted to the faculty of the Department of Education in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS in the Graduate College, University of Arizona Approved: Date 80ITZJKTA KTAID-LLIOOHSTITI 10 Y5I0T2IH SIHT TA i m s i Y U . 10 VTIBHSVIHU ■ . '-d g'o y S «2 ihcocfoE aild- to %jIwoal edo- od- SQd-dlucfjLrs noid-;3oifKi to d-nen.t^qsG to eoigeA odd «iol cdxiome'iiirps'x odd to dcoisIIZtZijt XBJtdisq nl 8THA 10 HZTam anoslsA to idlcsovinU t&gsIIoO edcwaasD odd irZ Y) V 2X20 n'x i o ‘ic j o O'fi Ct £ 9 7 9 / / 9 & 0 t o 212500 TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter Page I. INTRODUCTION............................... 1 Athletic .Plant ......................... 4 Purpose of Study ....................... 6 ... Limitations of Study ..... .... ; 6 Sources of Material ........ ...... 7 II. BASKETBALL, 1904-1949 ...... ........ 8 History ......... .............. 8 Year by Year Record ..................... 14 III. BASEBALL, 1901-1949 44 History................................ 44 Year by Year Record ................... -
NCAA Division I Football Records (Coaching Records)
Coaching Records All-Divisions Coaching Records ............. 2 Football Bowl Subdivision Coaching Records .................................... 5 Football Championship Subdivision Coaching Records .......... 15 Coaching Honors ......................................... 21 2 ALL-DIVISIONS COachING RECOrds All-Divisions Coaching Records Coach (Alma Mater) Winningest Coaches All-Time (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 35. Pete Schmidt (Alma 1970) ......................................... 14 104 27 4 .785 (Albion 1983-96) BY PERCENTAGE 36. Jim Sochor (San Fran. St. 1960)................................ 19 156 41 5 .785 This list includes all coaches with at least 10 seasons at four-year colleges (regardless (UC Davis 1970-88) of division or association). Bowl and playoff games included. 37. *Chris Creighton (Kenyon 1991) ............................. 13 109 30 0 .784 Coach (Alma Mater) (Ottawa 1997-00, Wabash 2001-07, Drake 08-09) (Colleges Coached, Tenure) Yrs. W L T Pct.† 38. *John Gagliardi (Colorado Col. 1949).................... 61 471 126 11 .784 1. *Larry Kehres (Mount Union 1971) ........................ 24 289 22 3 .925 (Carroll [MT] 1949-52, (Mount Union 1986-09) St. John’s [MN] 1953-09) 2. Knute Rockne (Notre Dame 1914) ......................... 13 105 12 5 .881 39. Bill Edwards (Wittenberg 1931) ............................... 25 176 46 8 .783 (Notre Dame 1918-30) (Case Tech 1934-40, Vanderbilt 1949-52, 3. Frank Leahy (Notre Dame 1931) ............................. 13 107 13 9 .864 Wittenberg 1955-68) (Boston College 1939-40, 40. Gil Dobie (Minnesota 1902) ...................................... 33 180 45 15 .781 Notre Dame 41-43, 46-53) (North Dakota St. 1906-07, Washington 4. Bob Reade (Cornell College 1954) ......................... 16 146 23 1 .862 1908-16, Navy 1917-19, Cornell 1920-35, (Augustana [IL] 1979-94) Boston College 1936-38) 5. -
Blondy Wallace and the Biggest Football Scandal Ever
1984 PFRA Annual No. 5 BLONDY WALLACE AND THE BIGGEST FOOTBALL SCANDAL EVER By Bob Braunwart and Bob Carroll In 1906, the fierce rivalry between the Canton and Massillon pro football teams took a nasty turn toward the unsavory. Most of the nastiness that sometimes showed through in 1905 came from fans goaded by newspaper hyperbole. Incendiary phases like "hated foe" and "bitter enemy" lit up sports pages and ignited fiery oaths on street corners, but managers George Williams of Canton and J.J. Wise of Massillon conducted their clubs with the ethics typical of American businesses at the time. There might be surprise signings of stars such as Michigan's Willie Heston and tricky contract negotiations like Canton's "exclusive" with Carlisle, but ultimately there were real limits to how far either side might go to humble and humiliate the other. It was all right to hit below the belt, but no brass knuckles please. But before the 1906 season ended, all restraints disappeared. Each side stood accused by the other of unfair and illegal practices. There were charges of darker, more dastardly deeds by individuals on both sides. Each club swore never to play the other again. And each was likely to follow through on the threat because both were out of the football business. For Ohio professional football in general and for Massillon and Canton in particular, 1906 was a season of unprecedented disaster. * * * To many Canton minds, the first shot fired in all- out war came a few days after the Massillon Tigers defeated the Canton team for the 1905 state championship.