Jim Thorpe
Jim Thorpe (James Thorpe), 1888-1953, American athlete, b. near Prague, Okla. Thorpe was probably the greatest all-round male athlete the United States has ever produced. His mother, a Sac, named him Bright Path, and in 1907 he entered the Carlisle Indian School at Carlisle, Pa. He joined (1908) the Carlisle football team, coached by Glenn ( "Pop" ) Warner, and in 1911-12 Thorpe, playing left halfback, led Carlisle in startling upsets over such highly rated teams as Harvard, Army, and the Univ. of Pennsylvania. In 1912, Thorpe took part in the Olympic games held at Stockholm, Sweden, and performed magnificently. He won the broad jump and the 200-meter and 1,500-meter runs of the pentathlon; won the shot put, the 1,500-meter run, and the hurdle race of the decathlon; and was the runner-up in the other events of the pentathlon and decathlon. In 1913, however, Thorpe surrendered his awards, at the request of the Amateur Athletic Union and the insistence of Glenn Warner, to the Olympic headquarters in Switzerland; it had been discovered that Thorpe had played (1909-10) semiprofessional baseball with the Rocky Mount, N.C., team of the North Carolina Eastern League. The medals were restored posthumously in 1982. In 1919, Thorpe played briefly with the New York Giants baseball team. He afterward played professional football with the Canton (Ohio) Bulldogs and other teams and later became supervisor of recreation for the Chicago parks. Jim Thorpe, Pa., where he was buried in 1954, is named in his honor. With T. F. Collison, he wrote Jim Thorpe's History of the Olympics (1932).
Bibliography: See R. W. Wheeler, Jim Thorpe (1981).
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When daily life had real style ; JUST THE TICKET: Charles Ginners Piccadilly Circus from 1912.
Newspaper article from: The Mail on Sunday (London, England); 3/23/2008; 700+ words
; ...strange and evenpoetic. The group was a large one, but this exhibition focuses rewardingly on fivecentral figures. Charles Ginner is the most mannered of them, developing VanGoghs style into an enamel-like artifice. Spencer Gore seems the most...
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OSHA AND SMALL BUSINESS:CHARLES STENHOLM
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 1/29/1998; 700+ words
; ...0000 Testimony of Rep. Charles Stenholm Before Small Business...compliance. Folks like cotton ginners are trained to know cotton...violations. Just ask cotton ginners are not trained in regulatory law, neither are they ginners trained to be accountants...
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Taking a potholed path to the stars; Trainer Charles Booth isn't sure how he makes a living, but he keeps chasing his dreams. Part four of our series focuses on a day in his life.(Sports)
Newspaper article from: The Racing Post (London, England); 9/23/1998; 700+ words
; ...mother, and better known as Charles Booth, describes the day...after them is what I enjoy." Charles sits on the toilet, studying...into the horsebox, along with Ginner Morris, Tarradale, La Cinecitta...La Cinecitta and D'Marti. Charles smokes his way through another...
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Little pictures for little patrons ; The late Edwardian painters of Camden Town, currently at Tate Britain, aspired to provide low-cost art for ordinary people
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 2/15/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...I should look at Robert Bevan, Charles Ginner, Harold Gilman, Spencer Gore and...parameters better a good Sickert or good Ginner than sweepings from the studios...over a customary dinner attended by Ginner, Bevan, Gore, Gilman and Sickert...
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Visual Art: A little off colour
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 3/21/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...painters gathered around Sickert included Spencer Gore, Charles Ginner, Harold Gilman, Malcolm Drummond, William Ratcliffe...certainly in Spencer Gore's Mornington Crescent, or Charles Ginner's River Aire, Leeds, or his Leeds Canal, the...
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Connecting cotton. (Cotton Inc.'s network and software program, Engineered Fiber Selection Cotton Fiber Management)(Fiber & Fabric Review)
Magazine article from: WWD; 5/20/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...textile industry -- mills, ginners, producers and merchants...software designed to assist ginners and cotton producers in improving...in the marketplace," said Charles Chewning, vice president...advantages here for growers, ginners and mills is that EFS can...this can give the grower or ...
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The art of modern living: Peter Furtado previews a show of the British response to the Post-Impressionist view of modern life, at Tate Britain.(FRONTLINE)
Magazine article from: History Today; 2/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...returned in 1907. Artists such as Charles Ginner, Spencer Gore, Harold Gilman...popular culture of the music hall and Ginner's 'Piccadilly Circus' records...applied in broken touches, and Gore, Ginner, Gilman and Bevan adopted a vibrant...
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Hardwick to Lead the National Cotton Council in '09
News Wire article from: Targeted News Service; 2/16/2009; 542 words
; ...a Marianna, AR, producer/ginner. Hardwick's Somerset Plantation...Robert Norris, Bakersfield, CA; GINNER - Charles Owen, Pima, AZ; COTTONSEED...Harrison Ashley, vice president, Ginner Services; and Fred Johnson, vice...
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MEMBERS AND ALTERNATES NAMED TO ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON UNIVERSAL COTTON STANDARDS
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 3/11/2008; 634 words
; ...represent merchants, manufacturers, ginners and producers. The members and alternates...Williamston, S.C. The appointed ginner members are: Kirk D. Gilkey, Corcoran...Evans, Sanford, N.C. The appointed ginner alternate members are: Charles C. Owen, Sr., Pima, Ariz.; William...
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Velvet revolutionaries
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 3/8/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...of a drawbridge in Arles, while Charles Ginner's 'Embankment Gardens', a famous...between the slowmoving vehicles. Ginner's 'Leicester Square' (1912...Gore nor Bevan use the fat paint of Ginner, whose 'Piccadilly Circus' is...
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Charles Ginner
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Charles Ginner , 1878-1952, English painter. After study in Paris, Ginner settled in London, becoming a founder of the neorealist school. During both world wars he was an official government artist. Among his World War II paintings are several scenes of air raids.
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Ginner, Charles
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists
Ginner, Charles (1878–1952). British painter. He grew up in France (his...his associates, who were united by an admiration for French painting. Ginner was primarily a townscape and landscape painter and he is known above...
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Neo-Realism
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
...philosophy developed by Harold Gilman and Charles Ginner in 1913. They exhibited together...exhibition was prefaced by an article by Ginner entitled ‘Neo-Realism...lost direct contact with reality. Ginner thought that the lack of such contact...
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Camden Town Group
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
...Robert Bevan , Malcolm Drummond , Harold Gilman , Charles Ginner , Spencer Gore (president), J. D. Inness , Augustus...characteristic of others, notably Bevan, Gilman, Ginner, and Gore. These four best represent a distinctive...
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Friday Club
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
...the time of the final show, other exhibitors had included Robert Bevan , Frank Dobson , Eric Gill , Charles Ginner , Eric Kennington , Charles Rennie Mackintosh , and Lucien Pissarro .
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