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SPEAKER Game." SEE REGULAR GAME Ond Win," Says Be Beaten Next Time T
- m,X W ' ittj m- .. - vi --iJit ) r ""Vr .; 18 THE WASHINGTON TBIES; stJNDAY; QC7TOBER, 10. 195. ', ,"; ; 7 ; ; r Gilmore Sees Real Game and Starts Rumors Alexander Will Twirl Tomorrow 1 '", 'J' .J ; . ,"i : : " - , GILMORE WANTS 10 Says "Foster Deserves "Rlfler's Blander In All Credit, and He Got Crucial Place Hurt Our Says Alexander Will It, Too, After the Sec- - Chances Materially to MORAN SPEAKER Game." SEE REGULAR GAME ond Win," Says Be Beaten Next Time t BY: BIG LEAGUERS Red Sox Outfielder Says Twirler fooled Them on the Phillies' Manager Offers No Sign of Alibi and Will Red Sox Manager Claims His Boys Are Just Hitting, Mound and Then Beat Them With His Flail Ad-mi- ts Send Alexander After the Scalps of Enemy To- the Stride and Are Sure to Win the Series. That Erskine Mayer. Proved Bother- morrow When Braves' Field Sees the Moran's Lads Are Not Downcast - $o He Visits Philadelphia, Stops some on Hill. World's Series Battle. at Bellevue, and Starts the PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 10.-"- now on watch our amoke. "Rumor Mongers. By TRIS We are after SPEAKER. By PAT MORAN, I them and wHI never let up until the The Standings. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 10-F- os- that park until the last man Is out. If Some people may think I am feat, and taking It nut of the umpire. series is clinched," waa the optimistic a hitter drifts one over the wall, which I am Just trylns to show where tho view taken by Manager Carrigan of ter was the hero of the game yes- Is not hard, club Is right hunting for say the Phillies Red Sox. -
Aaotmarksfall!
! II I 1 * * 1 i i puttday pM WASHINGTON, D. C., SUNDAY MORNING. JULY 18, 1915. Superior All-Row)d Play Etables Alationals t Clevelanid Twice LEAVE FOR TOURNEY. SCOTT WINS TWO EVENTS. FIRST OF NA.TIONALS' PI"!rCHERS TO CAPTURE Takes Medal Plav Event and Handi- TAKETWOGAMES Local Professional Golfers to J REDSOXINLEAD at New London. Compete cap Match Against Par. two George Sargent and Fred McL-eod. BOTH GALMES OF DOU(BLE-HEADER THIS SEASON G. F. Scott captured honors in _ professionals at events at the Chevy Chase Club Chevy Chase and Richards, respectively, expect to leave afternoon. He and George yesterday mm\whill FROMCLEVELAND Columbia, John W. Childress and R. Hayden were here Wednesday night for New and Conn., where they will compete in tied in last week's medal play event, London, in the play-off he took first prize, with the annual open invitation tournament Race After First For First Time This Season of the Shenecossett Club. The a card of 90.IS.72, while George Top Winning Country net him second calls for an eighty-one gave Richards' program eighteen-hole prize. of Double Bill From Chicago, Nationals Win Both Ends amateur-professional four-ball match, a (/Mfl ) Yesterday's regularly scheduled event a I professional competition, driving J? was a handicap match against par and 6-4. of Double-Header. professional approaching and putting Scott also was first in this, being even event and a thirty-six-hole open event with par. H. R. Duiancy, jr., and T. A. at medal play for the championship. -
Workers! Unite All Forces Martin Balks Still Awaits Frankensteen Real Challenge Against the Union Wreckers! Plot Ln U.A.W
WORKERS OF THE FOR THE FOURTH Socialist Appeal INTERNATIONAL! WORLD UNITE! OFFICIAL WEEKLY ORGAN OF THE SOCIALIST WORKERS PARTY Vol. II. - No. 20. Saturday, May 14, 1938 Five Cents per Copy Hague’s Rule Workers! Unite All Forces Martin Balks Still Awaits Frankensteen Real Challenge Against the Union Wreckers! Plot ln U.A.W. By JA M E S P. C A N N O N where you will, from one end of the country to another, in one union after another, the record of internal discord Browder’s Candidate For Union Presidency Gets Farmer-Labor Congressmen, Acting On Advice Of The “ big push” of the Communist Party to take over describes the fever chart of sick unions in convulsive Stalinist I. L. D., Fail To Make Good On or smash the United Auto Workers raises a question struggles to throw off an alien poison. The name of Rebuff At Executive Board Meeting; Threat To Defy New Jersey Dictator which is rapidly coming to a head in many unions. this poison is Stalinism. Stalinists Begin to Squirm Supported by a strong press and apparatus, and with huge funds at their disposal, the Stalinists have become Crisis Aggravates Union Problems FREE SPEECH FIGHT IMPERATIVE a big factor in the trade union movement, especially The problems of the trade unions are many and UNION-BUSTERS STRIKE SNAG in the C.I.O. Catering to every prejudice of the most varied. These problems are aggravated under condi backward workers, combining with the worst types of Boss Hague, his private police force, and his army of tions of the deepening crisis. -
Vclt.Y-"Hospital, Nurses Homes ^-: X|Jersey^'City""Medical"Cetiter
;l/Jiirlfe^::VClt.y-"Hospital, Nurses Homes HABS No. NJ-891-A ■^-: x|Jersey^'City""Medical"Cetiter, Nurses Homes C:^-^fe-:;i::arid NoV 2) ";;SlI2-114- Clinton/Place - ;F jersey" City ;:-:/'.. :;/Hti4son Gpuiity -::/;&e# -Jersey r PHOTOGRAPHS WRITTEN HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE DATA Historic American Buildings Survey Mid-Atlantic Region, National Park Service Department of the Interior Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106 HISTORIC AMERICAN BUILDINGS SURVEY IH-fc- JERSEY CITY HOSPITAL, NURSES HOMES HABS No. NJ-891-A (Jersey City Medical Center, Nurses Homes No. 1 and No. 2) Location: 112-114 Clifton place, Jersey City, Hudson County, New Jersey Present Owner: City of Jersey City Present Use : Demolished March, 1982; site now holds a parking facility Significance: Established in 1907, the hospital Nurses School existed until about I960, Nurses Homes No. 1 and No. 2 (occasionally called Central Hall and West Hall, respectively), built in 1918 and 1917, not only housed the hospital's nurses but also the entire Nurses School in the 1920s. Architecturally, these buildings represent the early stages of the career of John T. Rowland, the most important architect in Jersey City during the first half of the twentieth century. PART I. HISTORICAL INFORMATION A. Physical History: 1. Dates of construction: Nurses Home No. 1 - 1918; Nurses Home No. 2 - 1917 2. Architect: John T. Rowland, Jr. While no comprehensive study has been made of Rowland or his architecture, it can be stated that he was the most important architect in Jersey City, if not Hudson County, during the first half of the twentieth century. He was born in Rockland County, New York, on October 20, 1872. -
The Department of Justice and the Limits of the New Deal State, 1933-1945
THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE AND THE LIMITS OF THE NEW DEAL STATE, 1933-1945 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND THE COMMITTEE ON GRADUATE STUDIES OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Maria Ponomarenko December 2010 © 2011 by Maria Ponomarenko. All Rights Reserved. Re-distributed by Stanford University under license with the author. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial 3.0 United States License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/ This dissertation is online at: http://purl.stanford.edu/ms252by4094 ii I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequate in scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. David Kennedy, Primary Adviser I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequate in scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Richard White, Co-Adviser I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequate in scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Mariano-Florentino Cuellar Approved for the Stanford University Committee on Graduate Studies. Patricia J. Gumport, Vice Provost Graduate Education This signature page was generated electronically upon submission of this dissertation in electronic format. An original signed hard copy of the signature page is on file in University Archives. iii Acknowledgements My principal thanks go to my adviser, David M. -
On London^ 3:30 to -4 P
lU RTEEir AU nsambers of S t Mary's Bible class ars ro<iuested to meet Sun Manoheaier ut Town day morning at nine o'clock, to St. James’ (Uacuas matters pertaining “ Date Book work ft>r the coming year. ■m ncular mantIUy meeting / Tomorrow . P__m PolUh-Ainerican AthleUc For Over Fifty Years ^ Oct. 6,—Coon trials at Manches Ik will held Monday night at Bodi/Parties E^or^ Bride Gets Gifts ter ,Coon and Fox Club grounds off MANCHEST]BR, CONN.^ MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1940 (FOURTEEN PAGES) ck, at the CUnton atreet Route 44 in Coventry. ididate fo r /^ le e t - M yt DONALD PUCK VOL. LX., NO. 6 (OImhUM AdvsrtWnff M rag* U) I. AU membe^ are urged At Shower Party Arthur Keating Tells of Also, Amateur Night at S t and be on time ae there John's church. an in South/Windsor I'biialneei to be dlaeuased. First Time . That He kext Week^ - , / . Took Part in ,the Sem „ Mary’s T. P. F. will bowl to- Mrs. Harry Rudeen was the Oct. 7. — First fali'meetlng With town elections being held ENaosa m m s iu t e i, s t kt at'8 o’clock at the West Slde Chamlnade Musical Club at C< in nearly alj OL the towns and The four newly appointed guest of- honor last .night at a ites; Oldest Member. ter churcb, 2:80 p. m. cities in OonneiAlcut next Monday IrS SAFE m SM M iNonEi 1 who will be In charge are mlsceUaneous shower at the home diet. -
Franklin Roosevelt, Frank Hague, and the Presidential Election of 1936 in New Jersey
NJS: An Interdisciplinary Journal Winter 2016 120 “A Common Interest” Franklin Roosevelt, Frank Hague, and the Presidential Election of 1936 in New Jersey By Si Sheppard DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14713/njs.v2i1.30 The Great Depression and the New Deal forged a mutually beneficial alliance between President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City. Each needed the other. Hague benefited from the federal funds he was allocated by the New Deal relief agencies. Channeling this government assistance through his political machine in Jersey City enabled him to consolidate his control over Hudson County and ultimately become the dominant figure of the Democratic Party in New Jersey. In return, Hague pledged to secure New Jersey for Roosevelt in his reelection campaign. Ironically, Hague got the better of this arrangement. Roosevelt’s personal popularity would have ensured his reelection in 1936 regardless of Hague’s level of commitment. But by entrenching Hague’s authority, as the New Deal tide ebbed over the ensuing years, and elections in New Jersey became more competitive, the President became ever more dependent on the capacity of the Mayor to deliver the votes he needed. This necessitated a policy of willful indifference towards Hague’s increasingly autocratic and corrupt maladministration. New Jersey today is a loyal “Blue” state, having delivered its electoral votes to the Democratic Party’s candidate for President in every election for a generation. That was not always the case, however; when Franklin D. Roosevelt ran for reelection in 1936, New Jersey was considered a key “swing” state. -
RED BANK SECTION and Surroundlnf Town* T»M Mrlmflv and Without Bias RED BANK REGISTER ONE
AIX the NEWS of RED BANK SECTION and Surroundlnf Town* T»M mrlMflv and Without Bias RED BANK REGISTER ONE VOLUME LX1II, NO. 8. RED BANK, N. J., THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1940. PAGES 1 TO 14« Shrewsbury Hoie No Reduction In Did Sapp Sock Social Service To Spoure With Saucer?, Company Opposes Interest Rate On Mrs. Vinnle T. Sapp of M5 River Dollar Days In Red Bank street was taken to Riverview hos- Hold Annual Session Fire Ordinance Taxes At Rumson pital Monday morning with bruises on her forehead and cheek and a cut on the forehead which was Chief Says New „ Finance Committee closed with one stitch, received dur- Today, Tomorrow and Sat.; Six Student Nuriet to Receive ing an argument with her husband, Law Too Elaborate- Decides to Retain Thomas Sapp. Mrs. Sapp explained that she threw Certificates September 4 To Seek Changes Eight Per Cent Rate a saucer at her husband and In some mysterious way the saucer returned Store-Wide Bargains Galore The Monmouth. County Organiza- Members of Shrewsbury Hose com- The Interest rat* on delinquent to bruise her. Mrs. Sapp refused tion (or Social Service will hold 1U pany Tueaday night went on record taxes in Rumson will remain at to aay whether Sapp caught the annual meeting Wednesday, Septem- "Abe," Boat Porter aa unanimously opposed to the new eight per cent. Councilman Sheldon aaucer and returned it on the wing Legion Meets Warning Period For Many Merchants Co- ber 4, at Brookdale Farm, Llncroft, fire ordinance which waa introduced T. Coleman, chairman of the finance or whether the recalcitrant plate home of the president of the organ- and pawed on first reading Tueaday committee, reported to the mayor boom e ran Red to damage her face. -
Political Party Machines of the 1920S and 1930S: Tom Pendergast and the Kansas City Democratic Machine
Political Party Machines of the 1920s and 1930s: Tom Pendergast and The Kansas City Democratic Machine. BY JOHN S. MATLIN. A thesis submitted to the University of Birmingham for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Department of American and Canadian Studies, School of Historical Studies, University of Birmingham. September, 2009. Table of Contents. Page No. Acknowledgments. 3. Abstract. 5. Introduction. 6. Chapter 1. A Brief History of American Local Government until the end of the Nineteenth Century. 37. Chapter 2. The Fall and Rise of Political Party Machines in the Progressive Era. 51. Chapter 3. Theories of Political Party Machines and Their Core Elements. 81. Chapter 4. “Bossism”: The Need for Strong Leadership. 107. Chapter 5. Patronage: The Boss’s Political Capital and Private Profit. 128. Chapter 6. Challengers to the Machine: Rabbi Mayerberg, The Charter League and Fusion Movement. 145. Chapter 7. Challenges from the Press. The Self-Appointed Role of Newspapers as Moral Watchdogs. 164. Chapter 8. Corruption: Machines and Elections. 193. Chapter 9. Corruption: Machine Business, Organized Crime and the Downfall of Tom Pendergast. 219. Chapter 10. Political Party Machines: Pragmatism and Ethics. 251. Conclusion. 264. Bibliography. 277. 2 Acknowledgments It is a rare privilege to commence university life after retirement from a professional career. At the age of 58, I enrolled at Brunel University on an American Studies course, assuming that I would learn little that I did not already know. My legal life had taken me to many of the states of America numerous times over the previous forty years. My four years at Brunel as an undergraduate and post-graduate opened my eyes about the United States in a way I had not thought possible. -
Griffs Hospital List Includes Johnny Bentley, Pitcher
SCfl li THE WASHINGTON TDIES. WEDNESDAY. IAY 20, 1914. i LIVE SPORTS JZS3., I Griffs Hospital List Includes Johnny Bentley, Pitcher NAPS' CRACK TWIRLER JACK MINES ROBS EGAN FINISHES HE'S PLAYING GOOD BALL MM BENTLEY IS 1 MINCE PIE $&&$ A LITTLE OF EVERYTHING. HONGU CICOTTE OF RECORD TRAINING FOR BOUT By "BUGS" BAER. Seems that Travcrs putts re-- fused to stay put. Vomising Young Southpaw Chunky White Sox Twirler Is Washington's Veteran Promises Complains of Chills and Within Step of Equaling Cy to Give Young McCue the The English polo team loses all it'i practice games. The Athletics Young's Work. Beating of His Life. also r Fever and Can't Twirl. lose all their practice games. Hope tht Britishers aren't stealing Connie thunder. PHILADELPHIA. May 20.-E- ddie That Kid Egan is sparing no pains to BIRMINGHAM PLANS OFFENSE Clcotte was robbed of a no-hi- t. no-ru- n, prepare himself for his fifteen-roun- d game yesterday battle with Youn McCue tomorrow Outside of J50,000, Willie Ritchii when Jack Mclnnes stung him for a night at Ardmore, was shown today doesn't want a thing for fighting Fred- eighth the Washington featherweight die Welsh. May Roy Wood single in the inning. Until then when Play at First and after, as well, the stunted White boxed sixteen hard rounds with his Sox flinger was simply invincible. In sparrlnc partners and finished without And Victoriano Suerta only rtjatrn a Base Today Because Doc the nine frames only twenty-eig- ht men even breathing; fast. -
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. -
Spring' Base Ball
DEVOTED TO BASE BALL AND TRAP SHOOTING VOL. 64. NO. 24 PHILADELPHIA, FEBRUARY 13, 1915 PRICE 5 CENTS A FEDERAL LEAGUE WAR MOVE The Independent League's Line of Battle Strengthened By the Transfer of the Kansas City Franchise and Team, Under Veteran P. T. Powers' Wing, to Either New York City or Newark more's telegram that a meeting of the direc tors wonld be held and plans would be mads A Vital Circuit Change to force the Federal League to keep the club here. Club officials contend that the time granted by the league for the raising of the The independent Federal League necessary $100,080 fund has not yet expired. has taken a long-erpccted step to It is conceded here, however, that under the ward solving the serious circuit conditions the affairs of the Kansas City Club problem, under "^ich 1'ittaburgh will be wound up as quickly as possible. The had to be claaeit as an Eastern team, intact, and under the management of city an arrangement which made George Stovmll, will be transferred to the East ern city. Those who are stockholders at pres it impossible to arrange satisfactory ent in Kansas City Club have the option of schedules as foils to the schedules remaining stockholders in the new club or of the rii-al old major leagues. As being reimbursed for their stock koldings who was expected, the Kansas City fran make the request. chise and team will be transferred to either Xew York City or Newark, The Sale Confirmed In Chicago X.