Racial Riots Ravage Detroit; Fecieral Units Join

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Racial Riots Ravage Detroit; Fecieral Units Join .V . \ Aiwnta M y N«t PVMt Hu ^ The Weather T t t W M k IM e A ^^ahn and humid tonight - «idr<»>Mv With 80% ^ chance of thunder- ahowers;xt:loudy and warm to­ morrow with 00% chance of 14,945 . I! ahowers. Maneheater^A City o f VUlage Charm , . , - T<Xi. LXXXVI, NO. 261 (TWENTY PAGES—TWO SBCHONS) MANCHESTER, CONN., MONDAY, AHGUST 7, 1067 (dMaUled AdvMitaiaf oa Face 17) PRICE SEVEN C!ENTS Viet Troopers ;k - %■3^ SAIGON (AP) — Hie IM of an estimated ISO enemy Since then, American troops BottOi Vietnamese army soldiers. have been back only once, but petroling the southern American pilots attscMng the South Vietnamese )uive North \letnam struck north of made several pa^ ls in and out of the demilitarized Hanoi at the vital raU links with of the sone, their headquarters zone Uiled 2S North Viet­ Red China. They reported no dls4dosed today. The spokesman namese regulars Sunday meetings with enemy m O s and implied this was a regular thing id>out a mfle inside the no losses to ground fire. and further patroUing in the <mce-neutnd area, a South . U.8. Marines and Soutti Viet­ sone could be expected. Vietnamese spokesman namese troops first invaded the The U.S. Command said 22 said today. demlUtarlied sone In mid—May Americans were killed and 89 ' Bnaewfaere, U.8. 4th Division for a massive sweep of positions wounded In the action west of the Communists had- in the Plelku and that eight enemy . i infantry wUh massive artillery southern half of the sone. After prisoners were taken. Most' of Biqipoct wiped out a North Viet­ a running series of batUes, the the American losses occurred In namese company in the central Americans and South Vietnam­ a heavy enemy mortar and 2 hUMands near Plelku, kUling ese withdrew. rocket barrage at the start of the four-hour engagement In the steaming Jungle. As an infantry patrol came into heavy Initial contact, 4th Toll May Be in Hundreds Division artillerymen began a rain of 8,820 shells on the North m etnam ese. Dosens of battles, many in­ Turkey Digs Out; conclusive, have been fought In 4 the area of Jagged, mist-shroud­ ed peaks along the frontier which Is one of the chief Infiltra­ tion routes for the North Viet­ 86 Bodies Found nam ese. ........ 1 Ptiotofsz) Sweeping along Route 9 Just Numerous blazes are evident in this airview of the riot-tom section of Detroit, about three miles west of the downtown area. Michi­ ‘ ADAPAZABI, Turkey (AP) — Premier isuleyman Demlrel, below the demilitarized zone. gan National Guardsmen have been called out to help stem the racial violence in the city which began early Sunday morning. Turklah offlciala say 86 bodies who wUl meet Pope Paul VI In Marines discovered have been recovered so far Istanbul Tuesday, drove aU reach claymore mines—each capa­ fjrom the earthquake that night from Ankara to reach ble of spraying deadly frag­ rocked Western and central Tur- Adapazarl, a city of 110,000 ments a hundred yards or more key Saturday. At least 110 were which thrives on farm mar- —which the Communists had IhJured, half critically, and offi- keting and Ught industry. strung along the road for a said the death toll could The Pope, who is coming to Racial Riots Ravage Detroit; mile. A convoy caught by the run mm the Istanbul primarily to visit Or- ' Workers dug through rubble thodox Patriarch Athenagoras I, cabled a message of sorrow to in Adapasarl and 480 other vil­ U.S. headquarters reported Sunay. He also sent what the lages and towns under a scorch- four B02 raids in South Vietnam a very con- Ing sun, seeking persons burled today including two ih the dense lb the ruins of flattened commu- ^ O' ^ valley. m tlea. The valley is a main Red base Fecieral Units Join the The first severe tremor in the camp and Infiltration route to­ The U.8. Oonaulate In Istanbul early evening Saturday de­ ward the central highlands and checked American personnel, stroyed nearly 1,000 homes in an the northern section of the na­ Including those at the U.S. Roy­ area exteiuUng southeast from tion and has been hit about 25 al and Goodyear rubber plants the Sea of Marmara. Many times this month. near here and reported none more were badly damaged. But Nasser Asks Air Force, Navy and Marine killed or injured. most of the Turks living in the pilots flew 120 missions Sunday Death Toll at Five; President Cevdet Sunay and earthquake belt along the great over North Vietnam depslte Sacrifices in Anatolian Fault were sitting in spotty weather. cafes or private gardens, sip- Marine pilots in one of their Nearly 1,000 Injured ping drinks or doing Uieir week- -t_,kea of the war hit New Budget Republicans end marketing. Experts said the total dead Lght have been Thm Ni^yen^wer complex CAIRO (!l^[^ — President WASHINGTON (AP) — President Johnson ordered above 1,000 had the quake f*"® " "‘“*® Gamal Abdel Nasser’s new federal troops to the Detroit area today and promised May Assail struck in the middle of the every needed assistance in handling the riot which has Air Force and Navy pilots, in budget being published today night. ravaged the city. Johnson also drafted Cyrus R. Vance, calls, for sacrifices to enable War Policy Earth tremors shook Istanbul' (See Page TVn) former deputy secretary of defense, to fly to Detroit and western and central Anato- war-crippled Egypt to struggle for conference to determine exactly what conditions W ASm NOTON (AP) lia again Sunday but they on against Israel, but Nasser are and what federal help is needed. Pormer President Dwight_ D. caused no more damage. The says the door is still open for a The troops are being flown to Selfridge Air Force Slight Error political settlement. Btsenhower and RetmWcan Kandllll Observatory outside Base, about 30 miles from Deiwit. It will be up to leaders could produce a fresh Istanbul said after shocks of the In a broadcast speech Sunday K A N SA S M o. (A P ) Johnson to issue additional orders if they are actually OOP assault on President John­ cmr. night, Nasser said he had “no (See Page Ten) —Tliere was a S ll^t hitch In to be sent into Detroit. ^— --------------------------- ------- son’s Vietnam war policies. objection to conferring with the arrangements for a Demo­ Amerlcahs” on restoring peace DETROIT (AP) „— Th© ...death and took its heaviest toU in Eisenhower’s suggestion that toU mounted to " cratic party fund - raising to the Middle East and had in­ moimted to five and the property damage and injuries. Congress consider declaring number>er\of \^of injured climbed near n r h,. picnic at nearby Lake Jaco- structed Egypt's United Nations near Of the five dead, only two war on North Vietnam got a 1,000 today as Gov. Highway Deaths mo yesterday. delegation “to meet with the G eorge were Negroes, the looter shot cold reception from party lead­ Romney called for The crowd, estimated a!|t Americans if feasible.” federal today eoid the East Side fire ers late last week. troops to help quash two days of Increase hy 12 3,000 to 5,000, consumed l,r Nasser's speech, his first in death. But his contention that the wild Negro rioting. 500 pounds of barbecued six weeks, was considered sur­ The discovery of the body war must have priority over Property damage soared over Over 1967 Total brisket, ham and beef, 400 prisingly restrained in tone al­ dramatically underlined the domestic programs seems to $10 m illion. have solid support among mem­ hot dogs, beans, potato though there were plentiful ref­ unique quality of Detroit’s ra­ HARTFORD (AP) — Traffic Chips, beer and soft drinks. erences to the United States. Fires set Sunday raged un­ cial explosion — that it knows bers of the Republican Policy accidents in Connecticut during Tbe arrangements com­ The Egyptian leader again checked and many sections no bounds and is showering Coordinating Committee. the. first half o f 1967 have mittee also paid for 3,000 blamed it for the Israeli victory rioting coursed crazily through sparks of unrest over vast and The coordinating group, made caused 201 deaths—12 m ore (AP Fhotofsx) helpings of cole slaw and po­ in the June 5-10 war but revised an ill-defined area covering not necessarily attached areas. tq^ of congressional leaders, than during the same period tato salad which were his charges. A man being taken into custody takes a firm grip more than six of the city, the Most recent riots — like those governors and former presiden­ in 1906, accordin g to the Con­ hauled to the grounds in a Nasser dropped his claim dur­ on the riot gun held by the policeman leading him nation's fifth: largest. in Newark, Harlem, Rochester, tial candidates, meets today but necticut Safety Commission. refrigerated truck by a vol­ ing the war that U. S. planes away following renewed racial violence in Detroit. The govermr retired to his N.Y, and the. Watts section of had no specific Vietnam items Communities with a popula­ unteer worker. attacked the Arabs. Instead, he home in Suburban Bloomfield Los Angeles — were confined to on Its day-long agenda. tion of 10,000 or more registered The man in custody was unidentified. The volunteer went away said President Johnson engaged Hills for a nap, after touring the Negro ghetto areaii. 8enate Republican Leader 05 per cent of the total fatali­ with the only keys to the in deceptive diplomatic maneu­ city with Mayor Jerome Cavan- Everett M.
Recommended publications
  • Pan Fish Biting Well Throughou T Sta Le TIRE
    Pan fish Biting Well They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo [THE CAPITAL TIMES. ThurMla^Aug.jU966-27 jPancakes No Colts Hammer 1'DON'T Pltf AW STOCKS NONE OF OUR ZfRAJS GOING TO NOT THAT I BEUEVE\1N THAT STUFF, BUT r/GALS GO FOR CROSS WATER ALL 'Skius, 35 to 0 IK !T,YDU UNDERSTAHD.'JWHERE IS SHE? I'D THAT BALONEY' RIGHT'- THERES Help Now to Throughou t Sta le BUT THIS FORTUNE-V LIKE HER TO TELU NOT MUCH! OUR PUDDLE IN OUR WASHINGTON' t.fi - Quarter- TELllER IS UNCANNY'"! MINE 3UST-FOR FUN- DOUGH WILL BE KITCHEN FROM j backs John Unilas and Gary SHE SAH>1'/A GOING PUTTING THE THE LEAKY ROOF.' C'uo/zo ignited an explosive of- TO CROSS WATER . OF COURSE I'M NOT ^ Bird Hurler 35-Pound Cat GYPSY£ ki OS- fensive attack and a defensa AND THAT I'M SUPERSTITIOUS, BUT I'M, THRU COLLEGE , MV BRIDE MUST BE BALTIMORE W - Pitcher JimWednesday night as the Baltimore COMING INTO WILLING TO TRY- HOW GOING IN THE BUSINESS Lew Cornelius' List \MOKEV! MUCH DOES SHE Palmer of the Baltimore Orioles, Celts slaughtered the Washington HERSELF. OUR SINK IS who had been winning every Wisconsin's big fish of the week CHARGE? ALWAYS FULL OF Redskins, 33-0, in a National Knot- TEA LEAVES time he ate pancakes for break- ball Jx>ague exhibition. as a 35-pound catfish caught out fast, has soured on flapjacks. the Wolf river in Shawano A sellout croud of 45.803, in- The Cleveland Indians shook eluding President Johnson, SCOREBOOK lunty, "How's Fishing?" reports Palmer's faith in the supersti- om conservation wardens tion Wednesday night by smash- Unilas showed no ill effects howed today.
    [Show full text]
  • Viet Cong Death Toll Is up As U.S. Presses Offensives
    'HIGH TIDE LOW TIDE 4.1 AT 0736 1.8 AT 1424 3.6 AT 1924 2.0 AT 0100 0-8-66 6-8-66 VOL. 7 NO. 30?2 ~JALEINJ MARSHALL ISLANDS TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1966 PASADENA, CALIF. (UPI)--AMERICA'S SUR­ VIET CONG DEATH TOLL IS UP VEYOR LUNAR CA~ERA TOOK A RECORD 1,048 PICTURES BEfORE SHVTTI~G DOWN TODAY AS U.S. PRESSES OFFENSIVES AND SCIENTISTS SAID THiY WOULD SUSPEND SAIGON (UPI)--U.S. PARATROOPERS KILLED 77 NORTH V,ETNAMESE REGULAR ARMY SOLDIERS TODAY OPERATI~S fOR TWO NIGHTS TO GIVE EARTH IN ONE OF THE BIGGEST RECENT BATTLES Of THE V,ET NAM WAR. OTHER AMERICAN TROOPS CAPTURED OPERATO~~ 4 REST. A MASSIVE COMMUNIST UNDERWATER ARMS CACHE THE CLICKING, SWIVEL EYE Of THE SPACE IN THE AIR WAR, U S. AIR FORCE AND NAVY PILOTS FLEW 55 BOMBING MISSIONS AGAINST NORTH CRAfT HAS SENT 4,000 fRAMES TO EARTH AND VIET NAM'S VITAL SUPPLY SUPPLY L'NES, BRIDGES, VA1ER TRAfFIC AHD ST~lAGE CEN~[RS. CONTINUED TO OPERATE IN A FLAWLESS MAN­ SOUTH 9f TH£ 17TH PARAL~EL, ~MfRICAN WARPEANE3 RAIDI~G ~IET CONG P~SUT~ON$i KIL~ED AN ES­ NER DESPITE SEARING HEAT FROM THE SUN TIJ MA Tf 0 86 OR M0RE GUE:RR I LLA S. SINCE ITS SOFT LANDING LAST WEDNESDAY. TROOPS Of THE U.S. 10IsT AIRBORNE DIVISION SMASHED A REINfORCED COMPANY Of NORTH V,ET­ IN ADDITION TO FATIGUE OF JET PROPUL­ NAMESE TROOPS IN THE BATTLE THAT BROKE OUT BEfORE DAWN IN THE HIGH PLATEAU COUNTRY Of SION LABORATORY CAMERA OPERATORS A CENTRAL KONTUM PROVINCE SOME 300 MILES NORTH Of SAIGON.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020-00 NTDA Tyre & Automotive Aftercare Directory
    UK TYRE & AUTOMOTIVE AFTERCARE DIRECTORY 2020 UK TYRE & AUTOMOTIVE AFTERCARE DIRECTORY UK Tyre & Automotive Aftercare DIRECTORY 2020 Maritime Cargo Services Freight Forwarding Agents NOT ALL SUPPLY CHAINS ARE EQUAL.... PROUD TO BE FIRST IN MIND FOR TYRE IMPORTERS FOR OVER 25 YEARS www.maritimecargo.com edicated to D hel pin Del g ive yo ri u U n g Frank Ruggles Walter Marr Don Gibson Mike West Brian BrownProud winnersDerek of Mossthe K g President President President President PresidentNTDA’s Tyre WholesalerPresident rategic r st all ’s a o 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 of the Year1978 2019 11 y p l w Call u la la l s FR c r o EE e g v y d o to e e d w s r u a y a t t r f r d h b r e o h i e u Derek Peaker Richard Davies John Reeves Gordon Bain Trevor Allen Allan Murray m s President President President President President President o s t U 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 i u r l K n a s i b e n e u d s s u p s l i f t n w o o t e o r r s i t c 8 Peter Fearn Findlay Picken Charles Hespin Malcolm Shields Ivan Smith David Stanton a o h u President President President President President President n f t 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 s d S i t p m t o m a a m o e p s b s e l s i e r l e a e t c s n o o d o g n n n a Liz Wright John Holland Mike Craddock Peter Gaster John Thurston Hugh Pitcher v 0 e ’ y 8 President President President President President President s e 0 r 8 n 1991 1992 1993 1993 1994 1995-1996 1 r c i 3 1 e 1 4 2 3 a a n c r n e , g 4 x e 4 s a o e r n y d t f v n a r e t a i Tony Cooke Ashley Croft Martin Rowlands John Tarbox Peter Gaster David White l s President National Chairman National Chairman National Chairman National Chairman National Chairman u s p n p o 1997-1998 1999-2002 2002-2005 2005-2007 2007-2010 2010-2012 i o t r u t l s o To our forefathers and all the Past Presidents, National Chairmen and the many Regional Officers who have voluntarily and selflessly served the www.profitlink.co.uk Call us free today from landlines and mobiles onAssociation over the last 90 years we say THANK YOU.
    [Show full text]
  • BACK G E R M a N P R I S O N E R S
    tiV THURSDAY,' SEPTEMBER 8, 19Sl| Avtmgc Diilsr N«t P n a Ron Vir tka WMk KuM iiancliriater lEvrutne H^ralh ■•lit S. IfU of Saida, Lebanon, the city mana­ sage by the pastor, the Rev. K. Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop A. Reed ger of New .London, the Rev, Hage 11,536 Ejnar Raak. A sqp\»iftfr will be Attend Reception of Tolland, form erly.of this town,' of St. Ann's Church, New London, at IfM iiatUt About Town given to each' o n f attending the have issued Invitations for the and members of the clergy from laf ( ■ . * t ^ service.' An offering will aleo be DON'T "TIT" Man^he$ter~-^A CUy o f ViUogo Chorm marriage of Mrs. Reed^s daughter. In New London all parts of North and Soutli Amer­ Still, pleaty'ot wmr left hi U ^ b c n o f the Junior Ghumber Miss Nancy Huntington Bldredge, received for Ihe benefit of. Co­ ica. His Beatitude the Melklte shoea whM broaght hw* Mr ' pf Commerce'and their, .wivee will to Charles Daniel Kellogg Jr., of venant people w ho suffered losses Patriarch, spoke to the enthralled expeH repairtag. In the receijt flood. ■ ” Mr. and Mta. Richard S. Nasslff, M) mark the atart of the fall aeaaon Fairfield. The ceremonk will be gathering In fluent French and In WORK DONE WBUJB yOL.LXXIV.NO.28f (EIGHTEEN PAGB3) BIANCHESTER, CONN., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1955 and the Mlrses Marie and Hieresa Saturday night at a dinner aoclal performed Saturday, Oct. 1, at 3 high Arabic, his native tongue, TOO W A IT meeting at the Manchester Coun­ p.m., in Christ Church Cathredial, Nasalff attended the dinner recep­ A solemn Pontifical Uturgy was try Club.
    [Show full text]
  • My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014
    My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014 A complete record of my full-season Replays of the 1908, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1975, and 1978 Major League seasons as well as the 1923 Negro National League season. This encyclopedia includes the following sections: • A list of no-hitters • A season-by season recap in the format of the Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia- Baseball • Top ten single season performances in batting and pitching categories • Career top ten performances in batting and pitching categories • Complete career records for all batters • Complete career records for all pitchers Table of Contents Page 3 Introduction 4 No-hitter List 5 Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia Baseball style season recaps 91 Single season record batting and pitching top tens 93 Career batting and pitching top tens 95 Batter Register 277 Pitcher Register Introduction My baseball board gaming history is a fairly typical one. I lusted after the various sports games advertised in the magazines until my mom finally relented and bought Strat-O-Matic Football for me in 1972. I got SOM’s baseball game a year later and I was hooked. I would get the new card set each year and attempt to play the in-progress season by moving the traded players around and turning ‘nameless player cards” into that year’s key rookies. I switched to APBA in the late ‘70’s because they started releasing some complete old season sets and the idea of playing with those really caught my fancy. Between then and the mid-nineties, I collected a lot of card sets.
    [Show full text]
  • Wfdwa-Rsl-181112
    SURNAME FIRST NAMES RANK at Death REGIMENT UNIT WHERE BORN BORN STATE HONOURS DOD (DD MMM) YOD (YYYY) COD PLACE OF DEATH COUNTRY A'HEARN Edward John Private Australian Infantry, AIF 44th Bn Wilcannia NSW 4 Oct 1917 KIA In the field Belgium AARONS John Fullarton Private Australian Infantry, AIF 16th Bn Hillston NSW 11 Jul 1917 DOW (Wounds) In the field France Manchester, ABBERTON Edmund Sapper Australian Engineers 3rd Div Signal Coy England 6 Nov 1918 DOI (Illness, acute) 1 AAH, Harefield England Lancashire ABBOTT Charles Edgar Lance Corporal Australian Infantry, AIF 11th Bn Avoca Victoria 30 May 1916 KIA - France ABBOTT Charles Henry Sapper Australian Engineers 3rd Tunnelling Coy Maryborough Victoria 26 May 1917 DOW (Wounds) In the field France ABBOTT Henry Edgar Private Australian Army Medical Corp10th AFA Burra or Hoylton SA 12 Oct 1917 KIA In the field Belgium ABBOTT Oliver Oswald Private Australian Infantry, AIF 11th Bn Hoyleton SA 22 Aug 1916 KIA Mouquet Farm France ABBOTT Robert Private Australian Infantry, AIF 11th Bn Malton, Yorkshire England 25 Jul 1916 KIA France France ABOLIN Martin Private Australian Infantry, AIF 44th Bn Riga Russia 10 Jun 1917 KIA - Belgium ABRAHAM William Strong Private Australian Infantry, AIF 11th Bn Mepunga, WarnnamboVictoria 25 Jul 1916 KIA - France Southport, ABRAM Richard Private Australian Infantry, AIF 28th Bn England 29 Jul 1916 Declared KIA Pozieres France Lancashire ACKLAND George Henry Private Royal Warwickshireshire Reg14th Bn N/A N/A 8 Feb 1919 DOI (Illness, acute) - England Manchester, ACKROYD
    [Show full text]
  • 1964 Topps Baseball Checklist
    1964 Topps Baseball Checklist 1 Dick Ellswo1963 NL ERA Leaders Bob Friend Sandy Koufax 2 Camilo Pasc1963 AL ERA Leaders Gary Peters Juan Pizarro 3 Sandy Kouf1963 NL Pitching Leaders Jim Maloney Juan Marichal Warren Spahn 4 Jim Bouton1963 AL Pitching Leaders Whitey Ford Camilo Pascual 5 Don Drysda1963 NL Strikeout Leaders Sandy Koufax Jim Maloney 6 Jim Bunnin 1963 AL Strikeout Leaders Camilo Pascual Dick Stigman 7 Hank Aaron1963 NL Batting Leaders Roberto Clemente Tommy Davis Dick Groat 8 Al Kaline 1963 AL Batting Leaders Rich Rollins Carl Yastrzemski 9 Hank Aaron1963 NL Home Run Leaders Orlando Cepeda Willie Mays Willie McCovey 10 Bob Allison1963 AL Home Run Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 11 Hank Aaron1963 NL RBI Leaders Ken Boyer Bill White 12 Al Kaline 1963 AL RBI Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 13 Hoyt Wilhelm 14 Dick Nen Dodgers Rookies Nick Willhite 15 Zoilo Versalles Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 16 John Boozer 17 Willie Kirkland 18 Billy O'Dell 19 Don Wert 20 Bob Friend 21 Yogi Berra 22 Jerry Adair 23 Chris Zachary 24 Carl Sawatski 25 Bill Monbouquette 26 Gino Cimoli 27 New York Mets Team Card 28 Claude Osteen 29 Lou Brock 30 Ron Perranoski 31 Dave Nicholson 32 Dean Chance 33 Sammy EllisReds Rookies Mel Queen 34 Jim Perry 35 Eddie Mathews 36 Hal Reniff 37 Smoky Burgess 38 Jimmy Wynn 39 Hank Aguirre 40 Dick Groat 41 Willie McCoFriendly Foes Leon Wagner 42 Moe Drabowsky 43 Roy Sievers 44 Duke Carmel 45 Milt Pappas 46 Ed Brinkman 47 Jesus Alou Giants Rookies Ron Herbel 48 Bob Perry 49 Bill Henry 50 Mickey
    [Show full text]
  • University of Florida Thesis Or Dissertation
    ENGLAND’S ANSWER: IDENTITY AND LEGITIMATION IN BRITISH FOREIGN POLICY By STUART STROME A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 2014 1 © 2014 Stuart Strome 2 To my grandfather 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank my mom, dad, grandparents, and entire family for supporting me through this taxing process. Thank you for being voices of encouragement through can sometimes be a discouraging undertaking. Thank you to the rest of my family for being there when I needed you most. I truly love you all! I would like to thank my professors and colleagues, who provided guidance, direction and invaluable advice during the writing process. They say you don’t get to choose your family yourself, although whoever up there chose it did a wonderful job. I’d like to thank all my colleagues and mentors who provided intellectual inspiration and encouragement. Most specifically, I’d like to thank my dissertation committee, Dan O’Neill, Ido Oren, Aida Hozic, Matthew Jacobs, and above all, my committee chair, Leann Brown. Dr. Brown was incredibly supportive throughout the process, kept me grounded and on track, and provided a shoulder to cry on when needed (which was often!) I’ve never heard of a committee chair that would regularly answer phone calls to field questions, or sometimes just to act as a sounding post with whom to flesh out ideas. You are an inspiration, and I am lucky to have you as a mentor and friend.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 California League Record Book & Media Guide
    2019_CALeague Record Book Cover copy.pdf 2/26/2019 3:21:27 PM C M Y CM MY CY CMY K 2019 California League Record Book & Media Guide California League Championship Rings Displayed on the Front Cover: Inland Empire 66ers (2013) Lake Elsinore Storm (2011) Lancaster JetHawks (2014) Modesto Nuts (2017) Rancho Cucamonga Quakes (2015) San Jose Giants (2010) Stockton Ports (2008) Visalia Oaks (1978) Record Book compiled and edited by Chris R. Lampe Cover by Leyton Lampe Printed by Pacific Printing (San Jose, California) This book has been produced to share the history and the tradition of the California League with the media, the fans and the teams. While the records belong to the California League and its teams, it is the hope of the league that the publication of this book will enrich the love of the game of baseball for fans everywhere. Bibliography: Baarns, Donny. Goshen & Giddings - 65 Years of Visalia Professional Baseball. Top of the Third Inc., 2011. Baseball America Almanac, 1984-2019, Durham: Baseball America, Inc. Baseball America Directory, 1983-2018, Durham: Baseball America, Inc. Official Baseball Guide, 1942-2006, St. Louis: The Sporting News. The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball, 2007. Baseball America, Inc. Total Baseball, 7th Edition, 2001. Total Sports. Weiss, William J. ed., California League Record Book, 2004. Who's Who in Baseball, 1942-2016, Who's Who in Baseball Magazine, Co., Inc. For More Information on the California League: For information on California League records and questions please contact Chris R. Lampe, California League Historian. He can be reached by E-Mail at: [email protected] or on his cell phone at (408) 568-4441 For additional information on the California League, contact Michael Rinehart, Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • The Legislative Leadership Role, of the British
    THE LEGISLATIVE LEADERSHIP ROLE, OF THE BRITISH PRIME MINISTER by Chia-chin Hsieh I! Bachelor of Arts Tunghai University Taichung, Formosa 1959 Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May, 1964 OKLAHOMA ITATE UNIVER ~!BRARr JM j l9t>5 THE LEGISLATIVE LEADERSHIP ROLE OF THE BRITISH PRIME MINISTER Thesis Approved: ~/rP-7 /Cd_ Thesis Advisor 569616 ii PREFACE The British parliamentary-cabinet system, which is characterized by the fusion of executive and legislative powers, is one of the two most imitated models in the contemporary world. It has produced a responsible type of legislative leadership in which the concentration of authority has been balanced by obligations of political accountability. The Prime Minister, in assuming the leadership of the Government and the House of Commons, must politically render an account of his public mandate to his party, to the House of Commons, and to the electorate. For the past three hundred years, the Prime Minister has gradually usurped the exercise of almost the totality of the formal constitutional powers still nominally vested in the Sovereign and in Parliament. Commencing from rather humble status as chief advisor to the monarchy and then undergoing transformation into the parliamentary agent and custodian over the Monarch, the Prime Minister has become the kingpin of the Government and Parliament. This transformation of the Prime Minister from the position of servant of the Crown and Parliament into master of both is the consequence of the formation of well-disciplined and highly-centralized political parties in Great Britain.
    [Show full text]
  • Knowlesad032.Pdf
    Copyright by Adam Daniel Knowles 2003 The Dissertation Committee for Adam Daniel Knowles Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: MEMORIES OF ENGLAND: BRITISH IDENTITY AND THE RHETORIC OF DECLINE IN POSTWAR BRITISH DRAMA, 1956-1982 Committee: _____________________________________ Elizabeth Cullingford, Co-Supervisor _____________________________________ Elizabeth Richmond-Garza, Co-Supervisor _____________________________________ Mia Carter _____________________________________ Alan Friedman _____________________________________ Wm. Roger Louis MEMORIES OF ENGLAND: BRITISH IDENTITY AND THE RHETORIC OF DECLINE IN POSTWAR BRITISH DRAMA, 1956-1982 by Adam Daniel Knowles, B.A., M.A. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin May 2003 MEMORIES OF ENGLAND: BRITISH IDENTITY AND THE RHETORIC OF DECLINE IN POSTWAR BRITISH DRAMA, 1956-1982 Publication No. ___________ Adam Daniel Knowles, Ph.D. The University of Texas at Austin, 2003 Supervisors: Elizabeth Cullingford and Elizabeth Richmond-Garza I take the near coincidence in 1956 of the premiere of John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger and the Suez crisis as a starting point for a study of the context, reception and politics of a selection plays by Osborne, John Arden and Margaretta D’Arcy, Howard Brenton, David Hare and Caryl Churchill. The end of my study is marked by Margaret Thatcher’s consolidation of power in the early eighties and the 1982 Falklands War. My analysis focuses on how these plays represent forms of British national identity that developed during the era of Britain’s imperial strength and how they show these formations changing after World War II.
    [Show full text]
  • The Official Magazine of Angels Baseball
    THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF ANGELS BASEBALL JESSE MAGAZINE CHAVEZ VOL. 14 / ISSUE 2 / 2017 $3.00 CAMERON DANNY MAYBIN ESPINOSA MARTIN MALDONADO FRESH FACES WELCOME TO THE ANGELS TABLE OF CONTENTS BRIGHT IDEA The new LED lighting system at Angel Stadium improves visibility while reducing glare and shadows on the field. THETHE OFFICIALOFFICCIAL GAMEGA PUBLICATION OF ANGELS BASEBALL VOLUME 14 | ISSUE 2 WHAT TO LOOK FORWARD TO IN THIS ISSUE 5 STAFF DIRECTORY 43 MLB NETWORK PRESENTS 71 NUMBERS GAME 109 ARTE AND CAROLE MORENO 6 ANGELS SCHEDULE 44 FACETIME 75 THE WRIGHT STUFF 111 EXECUTIVES 9 MEET CAMERON MAYBIN 46 ANGELS ROSTER 79 EN ESPANOL 119 MANAGER 17 ELEVATION 48 SCORECARD 81 FIVE QUESTIONS 121 COACHING STAFF 21 MLB ALL-TIME 51 OPPONENT ROSTERS 82 ON THE MARK 127 WINNINGEST MANAGERS 23 CHASING 3,000 54 ANGELS TICKET INFORMATION 84 ON THE MAP 128 ANGELS MANAGERS ALL-TIME 25 THE COLLEGE YEARS 57 THE BIG A 88 ON THE SPOT 131 THE JUNIOR REPORTER 31 HEANEY’S HEADLINES 61 ANGELS 57 93 THROUGH THE YEARS 133 THE KID IN ME 34 ANGELS IN BUSINESS COMMUNITY 65 ANGELS 1,000 96 FAST FACT 136 PHOTO FAVORITES 37 ANGELS IN THE COMMUNITY 67 WORLD SERIES WIN 103 INTRODUCING... 142 ANGELS PROMOTIONS 41 COVER BOY 68 ALUMNI SPOTLIGHT 105 MAKING THE (INITIAL) CUT 144 FAN SUPPORT PUBLISHED BY PROFESSIONAL SPORTS PUBLICATIONS ANGELS BASEBALL 519 8th Ave., 25th Floor | New York, NY 10018 2000 Gene Autry Way | Anaheim, CA 92806 Tel: 212.697.1460 | Fax: 646.753.9480 Tel: 714.940.2000 facebook.com/pspsports twitter.com/psp_sports facebook.com/Angels @Angels ©2017 Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
    [Show full text]