E R S Res IS E Era

E R S Res IS E Era

<Tuesday, Ylugust 31, 1999 Section of<Ifie Safem ~ws e r ns' s res IS• e era. By Robert W. Greier Jr. formed Cleveland team was n September the 12th, in playing against the Brooklyn the year of our Lord 1999, Dodgers, yes, the football team Osomething will swirl from New York had the same through the air in northeastern Ohio. name as the baseball team. Grown men will openly weep as the Cleveland was playing in the moist fragments of dog biscuits dot All-American Conference, and their quivering chins. Ladies will was aptly called the Browns, in · wave towels, bake brownies and re­ honor of their head coach Paul consider the names of their impend­ Brown. Fans dished out the The home of the Oeveland Browns, the Oeveland Stadium, is shown in this photo taken in the 1950s. ing children. Possibly Tim, Palmer, $3.60 it took to get a prime seat, Kirby? or settled for the $2.40 ho-hum Kids will vacate their head­ variety. Seats in the nose bleed phones, put away their inline section of the municipal stadi­ skates and skateboards, turn off um were priced at $1.80. their playstations and forget for They won that game. Then the moment. They'll forget that they won a lot of games. In the the undulating mound of emo­ four years Cleveland played in tions sitting next to them, the the All-American League they guy dressed in the Browns jer­ won the title ... four times. In sey, the guy in the Browns hat, many ways, the league folded in is the same guy who grounded 1950 because of the lack of com­ them for poor grades or staying petition. Fans just didn't want to out past curfew. come out and see their team get­ In a moment the city of pasted by the Cleveland Cleveland and the people of Browns. northeastern Ohio will throw a In 1950, the Cleveland collective and massive fit. Browns joined the established Was it this way when the NFL. Our boys by the lake were Browns first played in 1946? going to get a chance to play the "We didn't know what to big boys. expect," comments former "The commissioner sched­ Browns fullback Marion Motley (76) helped break professional football's color barrier and was a f?rce in Paul Salem News sports editor Bob uled the Browns to play: the Brown's offensive squad. In six of his eight seasons at Oeveland, Motley led Browns rushers. His yards .per Dixon. Philadelphia Eagles in the first rush average was 5.7, and he aclrieved a single game NFL record of 17.09ina188-yard11-carry effort agamst That August day, the newly See Browns, page 4 Pittsburgh. Paul Brown enjoys the victory after the Browns won its ~st AAFC championship with Otto Graham (from left), Dante Lavelli an~ Mac Speedie. They won the championship game against the New York Yan­ kees 14-9, the first of four straight titles they claimed. Motley (76) was a deadly force in his linebacker role with the Oeveland Browns as seen in this 1946 photo. ~ .:; :::_ :; =. ~ -~ -:,_ .~ .3" -:'- ~ -~ -~ ~ ~ ,,,: =' 7: ± -= ? c:. ~ ;. 2 ~ ~· -7 •/ "'- :.,"' ,- : c": ( - : : : c-· t- r (-· -- · ~ l ~ _, ,:_ ~ ...J - ; ~ - : _. ,:, ...'., -!:: 0:: ~ ::-_ -: "'- - "-'. ;. :;: ~ ;;. ~ "= :;. ~ ~- ~ .;_ ~ £. ~· "" :- i: ~ 0 - ""= ~ ...;. "":'" ..:, ..;- • <--' ..,- • - -- - :'.:_ :::. ::: - = :_ ;_. ::: - -""7;;-,.---;-~··--~· - ,. esteryears ~~ 'Tuesday, J!ugust 31, 1999 -~ ......_~-=-_..;;~~~~- An appreciative mob of fans swarms onto the field to congratulate the Oeveland Browns team after they won Orson Welles reads from his script during the 1938 broadcast of his radio the first AAFC championship. show, "Ihe War of the Worlds." Wells' fictional account of a Martian in­ vasion of Earth created widespread panic in the minds of thousands of Championship. medals across their chests does­ listeners. .. That's how it began last time, n't remember the Miami game? ..~s..~ d~B rowns ~.:.~ when tans rooted for Otto The Drive? The Fumble? The ''·\~\..Cont. from page 1 .,,)f./; Graham, Lou "The Toe" Groza Cardiac Kids? Like battles we ...~1~7 and eventually Jim Brown. lost in a seasonal war they come usical estate of son As seasons passed, games back to us, haunting, sometimes game of the year because the could be remembered by heartbreaking, but always Eagles had won two straight Browns fans as fondly as battle­ uniquely ours. of ohann Bach found titles. The thinking was tnat the fields would be recollected by a Modell tried to force our sur­ Eagles would put the Browns in veteran of war. What true render for a few pieces of gold ore than 50 years after it well over 50 years," Christoph their place," says Dixon, who Browns fan doesn't know about more. Shame on you, Art. was lost in the chaos of Wolff, who is also dean of tlie was in the press box that day. red-right-88? Yes ... on Seftember 12, 1999, M World War II, a trove of Graduate School of Arts and The Browns won 35-10, and it What veteran with multicol­ the area wil join the collective music written by Johann Sebastian Sciences, said Wednesday. "For wasn't that close-. Then the ored dog biscuits pinned like massive fit. Go Browns! Bach has been discovered in a long time, we Bach scholars Browns won the NFL Ukraine. were led to believe that the "This is really adding a sig­ The music, fart of the miss­ material was destroyed." nificant new dimension to the Forward, pass! Arbaugh-Pearce ing archives o the Berlin Sing­ Wolff said the Germans took study of 18th-century music," Akademie, a still-performing the Sing-Akademie archive from he said. eerii~ert group established in 1791, was uarterback Gus Dorias led r Funeral Berlin in 1943 to frotect it from The compositions were found Notre Dame to a 35-13 G Home found in Kiev after a 20-year the destruction o war. When among the 5,000 or so docu­ search by a Harvard music pro­ win over Army on Nov. 1, hostilities ended in 1945, it fell ments in the Sing-Akademie 191 , an historic college football RAY J. GREENISEN fessor. Q 332-4401 OWNER into Soviet hands. archives as part of the musical game. "It was believed lost. There Wolff had spent the past two estate of Carl Philli.f>p Emanuel Dorias completed 13 of 1 7 PERSONAL RECORDS was absolutely no trace of it for decades tracking various leads, _ Bach, one of J.S. Barn's sons, throws for 243 yards to highlight but his real break came in April himself a well-known composer. forward passing for the first time & PLANNING BOOK when another Harvard The archive also holds works since it was made legal in 1906. 0 Because your last wishes researcher found a Russian doc­ by some of J.S. Bach's 19 other Head coach Jesse Harper's pass­ are so important ument from the post-war years children, as well as a variety of ing strategy helped Dorias to hit "that described fhe existence of other 18th- and early 19th-cen­ Knute Rockne, a future Fighting 5,000-plus music manuscripts in This FREE ff tury German composers. It also Irish coach, for a 25-yard touch­ Ki ev. has letters written by poet down. Record It wasn't until June that Wolff Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Book Allows located the archive, cut through Wolff said he hopes the significant red tape and spent Now taking reservations for You To: works may someday be Fall and Winter Celebrations three days rooting through the returned to Germany, but no old papers at Ukraine's Central decisions have been made about " Fill In Vital Information State Archive. the documents' future. Shangri-La • Pre-Plan Your Funeral • Select The Funeral You Wish Today's date in history Banquet Center • Relieve Your Family of Worry Qo _!h~ fEr Jh~ @e_! '(Eu_Lo.ye In 1886 an earthquake rocked Charleston, S.C., killing up to 110. Maximum Seating for 500 · In Thomas A. Edison received a patent for his "Kinetoscope," Please send us: 1887~ Perfect for Wedding & Anniversaries O The Family Personal Record Book. a device which produced moving pictures. , O Information on Inflation-Proof In 1888, Mary Ann Nicholls was found murdered m London s East Jones Hall Funeral Pre-Plan. End, generally regarded as the first victim of "J'.'c~_the Ripper." O Information about funeral costs, In 1935, President Roosevelt signed an act prohibiting the export of Seating For 50 People procedures U.S. arms to nations at war. Family banquets and receptions, Name. __________ In 1941, the radio program "The Great Gildersleeve" debuted on bachelor and bachelorette parties. NBC. Address, ______~-- In 7203 CALLA RD. 1954, Hmricane Carol hit the northeastern United States, result- CitY-----------m ing in nearly 70 deaths. Kitchen Facilities Available In 1969, boxer Rocky Marciano died in the crash of a hght plane m State, ______.iP----1 Iowa, a day before his 46th birthday. 533-5594 Phone , _, .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    2 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us