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rvtravelswithmike · 2 years ago
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Florida Winter RV Camping With No Reservations | Tampa
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wereviewssocial-blog · 5 years ago
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A chandelier is an elaborate fixture that lightens up your room and offers a dramatic effect to your space. Chandeliers bring sophistication while creating an instant focal point in the dining area.
Read More: http://tiny.cc/cc20ez   
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neseblodrecords · 4 years ago
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Plasencia Alma del Campo Cigar Review
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wereviewedau · 4 years ago
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justalarm · 2 years ago
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Resizing backround images ac3d
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RESIZING BACKROUND IMAGES AC3D SERIAL
The sample preparationcan be optimized on the basis of the class of molecule to beimaged. A wide variety of molecules can beimaged in this way including proteins, peptides, lipids, andendogenous and exogenous metabolites. Any of the thousands of signals that arerecorded in the mass spectrum from each spot or pixel can giverise to an image, when the intensity of a signal (peak) is plottedfor each pixel in the array. Thin tissuesections are collected onto a target plate and a laser or ionbeam raster of the tissue section inside the mass spectrometer isused to desorb analytes, producing mass spectra at discretecoordinate locations. 1−4 The ability to produce molecularimages directly from sections with high mass accuracy bringsnew and exciting possibilities to significantly advance theknowledge and understanding of health and disease. Caprioli*Malin Andersson, Erin Seeley,and Richard CaprioliMolecular imaging of tissue sections by mass spectrometry(MS) has become an enabling technology in biologicaland medical research. Here, wereview the current state of 3D imaging mass spectrometry as well as provide insights and perspectiveson the process of generating 3D mass spectral data along with a discussion of the process necessary togenerate a 3D image volume.Erin H.
RESIZING BACKROUND IMAGES AC3D SERIAL
ac3D Imaging by Mass Spectrometry: A New FrontierImaging mass spectrometry can generate three-dimensional volumes showing molecular distributionsin an entire organ or animal through registration and stacking of serial tissue sections.
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carmelobirdsong-blog · 6 years ago
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Making Tax Electronic For Business
Each and every of our consultancy assignments is led by a Director who is your primary level of make contact with and assures that your requirements are currently being fulfilled.Karen Lloyd died recently at 51 from cancer. Should you loved this informative article as well as you would want to acquire details relating to Independent Representatives i implore you to stop by the site. She favored ingesting espresso so significantlyThe notion of currently being a sociable person is today heavily linked with finding It was a sunny Sunday afternoon you had been nine several years outdated. Your mother and fatherWe can support you regardless of your enterprise stage or the sector you work in. Our mentors can carry out organization diagnostics, finding out what is done nicely and what could be improved. This could give you all the relevant details you need to make knowledgeable decisions about whether or not to grow, up-talent workers or take a new advertising course for instance.The factors that get us (and others) sexually enthusiastic can frequently audio instead Go through testimonies from some of the organizations we have labored with not too long agoThe desire to match in is deeply engrained in our nature. Were socialFitzpatrick and Kearney Restricted have preserved and created our experience in meeting all of the numerous specifications placed on us by the little enterprise group and we supply a total provider to all consumers huge and small. It sounds extremely strange to suggest that we may possibly want to understand how to store. WeReview social media methods at Deakin and gain perception into how contemporary organisations use world wide web 2. systems for business.As supply chain professionals perform to digitize their functions and seamlessly integrate their source chain ecosystems, a provide chain management tower provides analytics, integrated visibility and process orchestration based mostly on relevant KPIs that allow them to boost company efficiency.
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the-firebird69 · 4 years ago
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went there to get obi won out using diplomacy.  failed and offered nothing, jsut wanted himout... she reached for a treaty packet and said can wereview the treaty, maybe wecan workon it he said no... Thor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vr-ubZhyDCA
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niccongo0-blog · 5 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, May 1
... as always on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, I bring a you a wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history. The embedded links often point to articles that I’ve chosen as illustrative of the scenes, from The Society for American Baseball Research, reproductions of period newspapers, images, and other such material as is often found lurking on the interwebs.
“It’s a little bit cheesy, but it’s nicely displayed.” — Frank Zappa
Animals are fine, but their acceptability is limited. A small child is even better, but not nearly as effective as the right kind of adult. — Lord Summerisle
You might learn something, but mostly, it’s for fun!
Today in baseball history:
1884 - Moses Fleetwood Walker becomes the first black man to play in the major leagues when the Blue Stockings drop a 5-1 decision to Louisville at Eclipse Park. The 27 year-old Toledo catcher, who will hit above the league average, batting .263 in the 42 games he plays with the American Association team, goes 0-for-3 and commits four errors in his much-anticipated debut.
1920 - The longest game ever played ends after 26 innings in a 1-1 tie, with Brooklyn Robins right-hander Leon Cadore and the Braves hurler Joe Oeschger, also right-handed, both go the distance for their respective clubs. Boston third baseman Charlie Pick establishes the major league record for hitless at-bats in one game, going 0-for-11 in the marathon.
Box score. Lots of familiar names in those lineups.
1939 - At Comiskey Park, the White Sox defeat the Cubs and Dizzy Dean, 4-1, in an exhibition game to benefit Monty Stratton. The former pitcher, who lost his leg in an off-season hunting accident, tries to pitch in the game and receives a new car and nearly $30,000 as a result of the contest.
As this was an exhibition game, there’s no box score available that I could find.
1957 - The Cubs trade Gene Baker and Dee Fondy to the Pirates for Dale Long and Lee Walls, who will combine to hit 45 home runs for their new team. Fondy will hit .313 for the Bucs, but the first baseman will be traded in December to the Reds for Ted Kluszewski.
1991 - Rickey Henderson passes Lou Brock to become baseball’s all-time stolen base leader with his 939th career steal. The A’s outfielder, who will finish his 25-year career with 1,406, establishes the new major league mark when he swipes third base in the team’s 7-4 victory over New York at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum.
2001 - As a result of being struck by the flying barrel of a broken bat, the ulna bone in Mike Fyhrie’s left arm is broken. The Cubs’ righty reliever used his arm to protect himself when the Padres’ Santiago Perez’s broken bat exploded in the direction of the mound.
Cubs birthdays: Paul Carter, Rudy Meoli. Also, Jose Lind.
Sources:
Thanks for reading.
Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2019/5/1/18524806/baseball-history-unpacked-may-1
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wiremenu93-blog · 5 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, October 31
A wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history.
Today we look at some of baseball’s All-Hallow’s moments. There aren’t a lot, but the ones that exist are pretty Cub-flavored. No pumpkin spice!
Today in baseball history:
1931 - The Cardinals release right-hander Burleigh Grimes, the last legal spitballer. Ol’ Stubblebeard will finish his 19-year Hall of Fame career with a 270-212 record along with an ERA of 3.53. (1)
The story of Hall-of-Famer Burleigh Grimes:
“I used to chew slippery elm - the bark, right off the tree. Come spring the bark would get nice and loose and you could slice it free without any trouble. What I checked was the fiber from inside, and that’s what I put on the ball. The ball would break like hell, away from right-handers and in on lefties,” Grimes once said.
Grimes started out in unspectacular fashion, winning 5 and losing 19 in two years with the Pittsburgh Pirates before getting traded to the Dodgers. He was an immediate hit with Brooklyn, going 19-9 his first year and winning another 139 in eight additional years, “while leading the National League in complete games three times (1921, 1923, 1924), innings twice (1923, 1924) and both wins (1921) and strikeouts (1921) once.”
It was during the latter portion of his career that the spitball was outlawed, but Grimes (and 16 other pitchers) was/were grandfathered in and allowed to continue throwing the pitch. He pitched through 1934, and would end up playing for the New York Giants, Pittsburgh Pirates, Boston Braves, St. Louis Cardinals, Chicago Cubs and New York Yankees. His most noteworthy effort came in his second stint with the Pirates in 1928 when he again paced the NL in wins (25), games (48), complete games (28) and innings pitched (330.2). In 1931 as a member of the St, Louis Cardinals, Grimes claimed his first and only championship, as he won both of his starts in the World Series versus the Philadelphia Athletics.(5)
“The only time I was ever scared in my life was one time when Burleigh threw at me on a 3-and-0 count.” — Frankie Frisch (5)
1995 - Retired second baseman Ryne Sandberg announces that he will return to the major leagues in 1996. The ten-time All-Star signs a one-year contract to play for the Chicago Cubs. (3)
2005 - On Halloween night, former Red Sox General Manager Theo Epstein, on the night of his resignation, eludes the media parked outside Fenway Park disguised in a gorilla suit. At a future charity event, the hairy costume will be auctioned and will make $11,000 for the Jimmy Fund and Theo’s Foundation, To Be Named Later. (1)
2011 - Although offered approximately $4.5 million for a three-year extension, four times the amount of his previous salary, Theo Epstein decides to leave the BoSox after being the youngest general manager to lead a team to a World Championship. The split with team president Larry Lucchino, who hired the 18 year-old Yale undergraduate as an Oriole intern, gave him a position with the Padres before bringing the ‘Boy Wonder’ to Boston, takes the Red Sox Nation by surprise. (1)
2014 - The Cubs dismissed manager Rick Renteria, who, according to GM Theo Epstein, “deserved to come back for another season." The availability of Joe Maddon, announced as the team’s new skipper an hour after Renteria’s dismissal, puts an end to the first-year skipper’s managerial career in Chicago.
“We saw it as a unique opportunity and faced a clear dilemma: be loyal to Rick or be loyal to the organization. In this business of trying to win a world championship for the first time in 107 years, the organization has priority over any one individual. We decided to pursue Joe.” - THEO EPSTEIN, explaining manager Rick Renteria’s dismissal. (1)
Sources:
A note from my sponsor:
Happy Halloween! The Kindle versions of Test Patterns and Creature Features will be free for one day and one day only, today. . Also, Caravans Awry is just out. It’s not free but it IS awesome.
Thanks for playing along.
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Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2018/10/31/18045558/baseball-history-unpacked-october-31
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moatmagic4-blog · 5 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, November 14
A wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history.
Today in baseball history:
1900 - The National League rejects the American League as an equal, declaring it an outlaw league outside of the National Agreement, thus inaugurating a state of war. This follows the AL’s announcement two days ago that it has made arrangements to go into Washington, DC, Baltimore and Philadelphia. Two weeks later the American Association makes it a three-way battle, but that third circuit will remain a minor league. (3)
Peter Bendix of Beyond the Box Score had an excellent writeup of this situation and the evolution of the National and American leagues. Rather than duplicate that effort, I recommend the work.
1961 - John Fetzer, a passionate fan of the game, becomes the lone owner of the Tigers when he buys out the estate of Fred Knorr. After the 1983 season, the media mogul will sell the team to pizza entrepreneur Tom Monaghan. (1)
Fetzer was a radio station owner originally, and an electrical engineer by training, and is credited with a lot of innovation, especially regarding developments in broadcasting signal. He was also a spiritualist, founding the Fetzer Institute. He is largely to blame for the spread of Muzak but let’s not hold that against him.
Monaghan sells bad pizza but is otherwise a pretty decent sort by most reports.
1986 - Nelson Doubleday and Fred Wilpon buy the World Champion Mets from the Doubleday Publishing Company for $80.75 million. In 1980, the book company had bought the franchise for a then-record $21.1 million. (1)
2011 - Mike Matheny is named to succeed Tony La Russa, who retired as the manager of the Cardinals a few days after leading the Redbirds to a world championship. The 41-year-old former minor league instructor, who served as a special assistant to general manager John Mozeliak, has no previous managerial experience. (1)
Cubs birthdays: Jim Brewer, Willie Hernandez, Kent Bottenfield, Xavier Nady. Also notable: Jim Piersall.
Sources:
Thanks for reading.
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Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2018/11/14/18093740/baseball-history-unpacked-november-14
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dashfire2-blog · 5 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, January 23
A wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history. The embedded links often point to articles that I’ve chosen as illustrative of the scenes, from The Society for American Baseball Research, reproductions of period newspapers, images, and other such material.
You might learn something, but mostly, it’s for fun!
Today in baseball history:
1932 - The Brooklyn Dodgers acquire slugger Hack Wilson from the St. Louis Cardinals. Wilson, who costs only $45,000 and a minor league pitcher, will sign for $16,500, half his previous year’s salary. He will hit .297 with 23 home runs and 123 RBI for Brooklyn this season. (3)
1953 - Argyle R. Mackey warns ‘alien players’ they will face deportation if found jumping U.S. professional contracts. The Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization cites the McCarran-Walter Act as the basis of his decision. (1)
Further reading: The history of the Antitrust Exemption (NYT); Los Chorizeros.
MLB collusion, explained.
Sources:
Thanks for reading. #Cubsnews
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Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2019/1/23/18193836/baseball-history-unpacked-january-23
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heatbun4-blog · 5 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, November 14
A wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history.
Today in baseball history:
1900 - The National League rejects the American League as an equal, declaring it an outlaw league outside of the National Agreement, thus inaugurating a state of war. This follows the AL’s announcement two days ago that it has made arrangements to go into Washington, DC, Baltimore and Philadelphia. Two weeks later the American Association makes it a three-way battle, but that third circuit will remain a minor league. (3)
Peter Bendix of Beyond the Box Score had an excellent writeup of this situation and the evolution of the National and American leagues. Rather than duplicate that effort, I recommend the work.
1961 - John Fetzer, a passionate fan of the game, becomes the lone owner of the Tigers when he buys out the estate of Fred Knorr. After the 1983 season, the media mogul will sell the team to pizza entrepreneur Tom Monaghan. (1)
Fetzer was a radio station owner originally, and an electrical engineer by training, and is credited with a lot of innovation, especially regarding developments in broadcasting signal. He was also a spiritualist, founding the Fetzer Institute. He is largely to blame for the spread of Muzak but let’s not hold that against him.
Monaghan sells bad pizza but is otherwise a pretty decent sort by most reports.
1986 - Nelson Doubleday and Fred Wilpon buy the World Champion Mets from the Doubleday Publishing Company for $80.75 million. In 1980, the book company had bought the franchise for a then-record $21.1 million. (1)
2011 - Mike Matheny is named to succeed Tony La Russa, who retired as the manager of the Cardinals a few days after leading the Redbirds to a world championship. The 41-year-old former minor league instructor, who served as a special assistant to general manager John Mozeliak, has no previous managerial experience. (1)
Cubs birthdays: Jim Brewer, Willie Hernandez, Kent Bottenfield, Xavier Nady. Also notable: Jim Piersall.
Sources:
Thanks for reading.
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Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2018/11/14/18093740/baseball-history-unpacked-november-14
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wereviewssocial-blog · 5 years ago
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🤖 A robot can’t yet be programmed to figure out how to grasp any object just by looking at it, as people do. 🔥  
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beetleboard29-blog · 6 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, April 15
... as always on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, I bring a you a wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history. The embedded links often point to articles that I’ve chosen as illustrative of the scenes, from The Society for American Baseball Research, reproductions of period newspapers, images, and other such material. It’s all lightly unpacked and folded neatly, just for you.
You might learn something, but mostly, it’s for fun!
Today in baseball history:
1921 - At Redland Field, Pirates right-hander Chief Yellow Horse makes his major league debut against the Reds. The Pittsburgh hurler, a member of a North American Plains Indian tribe called the Pawnees, is believed by many baseball historians to be the first full-blooded American Indian to play in the big leagues.
1942 - At Sportsman’s Park in St. Louis, Hiram “Hi” Bithorn becomes the first Puerto Rican to play in major league baseball. The Cubs right-handed pitcher from Santurce makes a relief appearance in the 4 - 2 loss to the Cardinals. (3)
1947 - In his National League debut, Hank Greenberg has the lone RBI in the Pirates’ 1-0 win over the Cubs. Pittsburgh bought the slugging first baseman from the Tigers in the off-season for $75,000.
1969 - Roberto Clemente’s first hit of the season easily escapes the friendly confines of Wrigley Field. “Clemente, who had been 0 for 12,” writes Bill Christine of the Pittsburgh Press, “attempted to add some adrenalin to the Pirate attack in the 1st inning when he blasted a Joe Niekro fastball out in the street beyond left field.” The first-frame bomb, however, yields but a short-lived lead. “Billy Williams,” writes Lee Jenkins of the Chicago Daily Defender, “showing off his recently acquired ability to go with the pitch, slammed one into the left field bleachers in the 1st and rookie Don Young performed the same feat good for 2 runs in the 2nd to more than counteract Clemente’s tremendous shot over the left-field stands.” Additional adrenalin – accounting for Pittsburgh’s remaining three runs – is supplied by Clemente’s 5th-inning, bases-loaded single, whereby he will significantly enhance Niekro’s understanding of the phrase “dangerous hitter.” Jenkins writes: “Clemente fired a shot through the middle that knocked Niekro down and raced to second base when Young tried for a one-handed scoop and the ball got through for a two-base error with three runs counting.” By the 7th inning, the Cubs have finally wised up. Jenkins continues: “Hank Aguirre knocked off five Pirates before pinch-hitterJose Pagan lashed a single to lead off the 7th and advanced to second on a wild pitch. Clemente was given an intentional walk after he refused to bite at three Aguirre wide ones. But the crafty veteran fanned Willie Stargell to escape.”
1972 - Reggie Jackson sports a mustache as the A’s top the Twins 4-3 in 11 innings. Jackson is reported to be the first major league player with facial hair since Wally Schang in 1914. (2)
Cubs birthdays: Sy Sutcliffe, King Cole, Ted Sizemore, Mike Diaz, Jeromy Burnitz.
Sources:
Thanks for reading.
Cats rool.
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Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2019/4/15/18310721/baseball-history-unpacked-april-15
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altobrandy31-blog · 6 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, February 20
A wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history. The embedded links often point to articles that I’ve chosen as illustrative of the scenes, from The Society for American Baseball Research, reproductions of period newspapers, images, and other such material. It’s all lightly unpacked and tidied up, just for you.
You might learn something, but mostly, it’s for fun!
Today in baseball history:
1920 - The Chicago Cubs give his unconditional release to Lee Magee after having learned from him a week ago that he has been betting against his team. Magee will sue the Cubs for his salary of $4,500, charging that his livelihood as a ballplayer was destroyed through the sudden canceling of his contract. The Cubs will ask for a dismissal of the suit, saying that “previous to the making of the contract the plaintiff was guilty of betting against the team of which he was a member, and sought to win bets by intentional bad playing to defeat said team.” (3)
1923 - Christy Mathewson and Giants attorney Emil Fuchs put together a syndicate that buys the Boston Braves for $300,000, The future Hall-of-Fame right-hander become the principal owner and team president, but due to his deteriorating health, he was no more than a figurehead, turning over the presidency to Fuchs at the season. (1)
1943 - Chicago Cubs owner Philip Wrigley and Brooklyn Dodgers executive Branch Rickey draw up charter for the “All-American Girls Softball League”, which will eventually become the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL). The league, originally conceived in the belief that the major leagues would suspend play because of World War II, will operate from 1943 to 1954 around the Chicago area. When the league changes its name and switches to hardball, the pitching distance is 40 feet and bases 68 feet apart. After struggling through poor attendance in its early seasons, the league will draw over one million fans in 1948. (2)
1953 - August A. Busch, seeing the purchase as a marketing tool, convinces the Board of Directors of Anheuser-Busch to buy the Cardinals from Fred Saigh for $3.75 million. The beer baron convinces the former owner, who has been convicted of tax evasion, as a matter of civic pride to take less money than the offer from an ownership group that would move the Redbirds to Houston. (1)
1953 - The U.S. Court of Appeals rules that organized baseball is a sport and not a business, affirming the 25-year-old Supreme Court ruling. This effectively dismisses the antitrust suits of Jack Corbett and former Brooklyn Dodgers minor leaguer Walter Kowalski. The $300,000 suit of Corbett, the owner of the El Paso Texans, is based on his belief that he lost money when Major League Baseball prohibited him from signing several players suspended for participation in the Mexican League. Kowalski’s $150,000 suit is based on the general principles of the antitrust and restraint-of-trade laws. Their lawyer in these cases is Frederic Johnson, who also represents player Danny Gardella in his suit against Major League Baseball. (3)
1963 - The Cubs officially put an end to their radical approach in using multiple field bosses during the season when they hire Bob Kennedy as their only manager. With the “College of Coaches” system disbanded, the club will post an 82-80 record under their lone skipper. (1)
1992 - After Hall-of-Famer Homer Simpson and his co-workers qualify the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant’s softball team for the league final, Mr. Montgomery Burns, the owner of the facility, hires nine professional MLB players, to win a $1 million bet with his Shelbyville rival. Although he hits nine home runs, the southpaw-swinging Darryl Strawberry, the only major leaguer to actually participate in the game, after Roger Clemens, Wade Boggs, Ken Griffey Jr., Steve Sax, Ozzie Smith, Jose Canseco, Don Mattingly, and Mike Scioscia are all sidelined after being involved in a series of bizarre pregame accidents, will be replaced by Homer in the last inning, because Burns wants a righty to face the opponent’s left-hander. (1)
Sources:
Thanks for reading. #Cubsnews
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Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2019/2/20/18232721/baseball-history-unpacked-february-20
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changechest3-blog · 6 years ago
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Baseball history unpacked, December 24
A wildly popular Cubs-centric look at baseball’s past. Here’s a handy Cubs timeline, to help you follow along as we review select scenes from the rich tapestry of Chicago Cubs and Major League Baseball history.
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Today in baseball history:
1949 - Early in the morning on Christmas Eve, Grover Cleveland Alexander is found lying unconscious in an alley near his apartment in Hollywood. The seriously ill Hall-of-Famer, who will spend several days in Los Angeles County General Hospital before being released, is suffering from alcoholism and epilepsy. (1)
1969 -
“I do not feel that I am a piece of property to be bought and sold irrespective of my wishes.” - CURT FLOOD, responding to being traded to Philadelphia.
In a letter to Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, Curt Flood states his refusal to report to the Phillies after being traded by the Cardinals, citing he is not a piece of property to be sold. The MLB Players Association announces support for the outfielder’s suit against baseball and agrees to pay the legal fees for the case that will eventually be heard in the U.S. Supreme Court. (1)
The Christmas Eve when Curt Flood changed baseball forever.
Sources:
Thanks for reading. #Cubsnews
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Source: https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2018/12/24/18154509/baseball-history-unpacked-december-24
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