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Johnson wrote this generous biography - a veritable progress of a
rake's rake - with enthusiasm and engaged fascination with
Rochester (1647-1680)...Johnson's forte, in addition to the
extensiveness of his information, is his strong narrative sweep:
this is an exciting biography. Highly Recommended. CHOICE Of the
glittering, licentious court around King Charles II, John Wilmot,
the second Earl of Rochester, was the most notorious.
Simultaneously admired and vilified, he personified the rake-hell.
Libertine, profane, promiscuous, he shocked his pious
contemporaries with his doubts about religion and his blunt verses
that dealt with sex or vicious satiric assaults on the high and
mighty of the court. This account of Rochester and his times
provides the facts behind his legendary reputation as a rake and
his deathbed repentance. However, it also demonstrates that he was
a loving if unfaithful husband, a devoted father, a loyal friend, a
serious scholar, a social critic, and an aspiring patriot. An
Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Rochester, James
William Johnson is the author or editor of nine books and many
articles treating British and American Literature.
The Black Bruins chronicles the inspirational lives of five African
American athletes who faced racial discrimination as teammates at
UCLA in the late 1930s. Best known among them was Jackie Robinson,
a four-star athlete for the Bruins who went on to break the color
barrier in Major League Baseball and become a leader in the civil
rights movement after his retirement. Joining him were Kenny
Washington, Woody Strode, Ray Bartlett, and Tom Bradley-the four
played starring roles in an era when fewer than a dozen major
colleges had black players on their rosters. This rejection of the
"gentleman's agreement," which kept teams from fielding black
players against all-white teams, inspired black Angelinos and the
African American press to adopt the teammates as their own. Kenny
Washington became the first African American player to sign with an
NFL team in the post-World War II era and later became a Los
Angeles police officer and actor. Woody Strode, a Bruins football
and track star, broke into the NFL with Washington in 1946 as a Los
Angeles Ram and went on to act in at least fifty-seven full-length
feature films. Ray Bartlett, a football, basketball, baseball, and
track athlete, became the second African American to join the
Pasadena Police Department, later donating his time to civic
affairs and charity. Tom Bradley, a runner for the Bruins' track
team, spent twenty years fighting racial discrimination in the Los
Angeles Police Department before being elected the first black
mayor of Los Angeles.
Olympus launched the OM-D E-M5 Mark III camera with a specific
purpose in mind: to create a Micro Four Thirds camera for advanced
enthusiast and professional photographers who prefer a smaller, yet
very powerful mirrorless camera. The E-M5 Mark III is a true system
camera for those who demand the best in cameras, lenses, and image
quality. Darrell Young and Jim Johnson's Mastering the Olympus OM-D
E-M5 Mark III explores the features and capabilities of the camera
in a way that far surpasses the user's manual. It is designed to
guide readers through the camera's features with step-by-step
setting adjustments; color illustrations; and detailed how, when,
and why explanations for each option. Every button, dial, switch,
lever, and menu configuration setting is explored in a
user-friendly manner, with suggestions for setup according to
various shooting styles. The authors' friendly and informative
writing style allows readers to easily follow directions while
feeling as if a friend dropped in to share his knowledge. The
learning experience for new E-M5 III users goes beyond just the
camera itself and covers basic photography technique.
A biography of the poet and libertine the Earl of Rochester. Of the
glittering, licentious court around King Charles II, John Wilmot,
the second Earl of Rochester, was the most notorious.
Simultaneously admired and vilified, he personified the rake-hell.
Libertine, profane, promiscuous, heshocked his pious contemporaries
with his doubts about religion and his blunt verses that dealt with
sex or vicious satiric assaults on the high and mighty of the
court. This account of Rochester and his times provides the facts
behind his legendary reputation as a rake and his deathbed
repentance. However, it also demonstrates that he was a loving if
unfaithful husband, a devoted father, a loyal friend, a serious
scholar, a social critic, and an aspiringpatriot. An Emeritus
professor of English at the University of Rochester, James William
Johnson is the author or editor of nine books and many articles
treating British and American Literature.
To the only wise God our saviour, be glory and majesty, dominion
and power, both now and ever, A-MEN
The average pitcher has about a .000645 chance of throwing a
no-hitter. In the spring of 1938, Cincinnati Reds rookie pitcher
Johnny Vander Meer pitched two, back to back. The feat has never
been duplicated, which comes as no surprise to sports professionals
and aficionados alike. Decade after decade, in one poll after
another (from "Sport" magazine, "Sports Illustrated," and ESPN),
Vander Meer's consecutive no-hitters turn up as one of baseball's
greatest and most untouchable achievements.
"Double No-Hit" offers an inning-by-inning account of that historic
second consecutive no-hitter accomplished during the first night
game in New York City, with the Cincinnati Reds facing the Brooklyn
Dodgers in Ebbets Field. James W. Johnson sets the stage and
assembles the colorful cast of characters. Highlighting the story
with recollections and observations from owners, managers, and
players past and present, he fills in the details of Vander Meer's
accomplishment--and his baseball career, which never lived up to
expectations heightened by his sensational performance. In the end,
"Double No-Hit" brings to life a bygone era of the national pastime
and one shining spring night, June 15, 1938, when a
twenty-two-year-old fireballing left-hander with lousy control
pitched his way into the top tier of baseball's record book.
In the mid-1950s three unrecruited black basketball players,
coached by a white former prison guard who had never before coached
a college team, led a small Jesuit university in San Francisco to
two national titles. "The Dandy Dons" describes for the first time
how the unprecedented accomplishment of the Dons, led by coach Phil
Woolpert and future hall-of-famers Bill Russell and K. C. Jones,
paved the way for black talent in major college basketball and
transformed the sport.
James W. Johnson traces the backgrounds of the coach and players,
chronicles the heart-stopping games on the road to the
championships, and details the Dons' novel techniques: a more
vertical game, more central defense, and intimidation as part of
game strategy. He also gives a textured picture of life on an
integrated basketball team amid a culture of racism and Jim Crow in
mid-twentieth-century America.
In 2002 ESPN rated football's shift to the modern T-formation
offense as the second best sports innovation of all time--just
behind baseball's free agency. The story behind the move to the
T-formation is also the story of a season unparalleled in the
annals of college football--the year Stanford's new coach, fresh
from seven dismal seasons with the University of Chicago, deployed
an out-of-favor offense to take a team of talented underdogs to a
Rose Bowl victory.
"The Wow Boys" (the title refers to the nickname the team earned
at its very first game) chronicles Stanford's miraculous 1940
season, from the surprise hiring of coach Clark Shaughnessy and his
marshalling of the previously untapped talents of left-handed
quarterback Frankie Albert, runners Hugh Gallarneau and Pete
Kmetovic, and fullback Norm Standlee, to his reintroduction of the
T-formation and its profound and enduring effect on football. James
W. Johnson gives a game-by-game rundown of this dramatic season as
well as an in-depth account of Shaughnessy's accomplishment in the
face of overwhelming criticism and skepticism. This story is one of
tenacity, character, and radical ideas prevailing against
formidable odds--a sports revolution engineered one play at a
time.
The Black Bruins chronicles the inspirational lives of five African
American athletes who faced racial discrimination as teammates at
UCLA in the late 1930s. Best known among them was Jackie Robinson,
a four-star athlete for the Bruins who went on to break the color
barrier in Major League Baseball and become a leader in the civil
rights movement after his retirement. Joining him were Kenny
Washington, Woody Strode, Ray Bartlett, and Tom Bradley-the four
played starring roles in an era when fewer than a dozen major
colleges had black players on their rosters. This rejection of the
"gentleman's agreement," which kept teams from fielding black
players against all-white teams, inspired black Angelinos and the
African American press to adopt the teammates as their own. Kenny
Washington became the first African American player to sign with an
NFL team in the post-World War II era and later became a Los
Angeles police officer and actor. Woody Strode, a Bruins football
and track star, broke into the NFL with Washington in 1946 as a Los
Angeles Ram and went on to act in at least fifty-seven full-length
feature films. Ray Bartlett, a football, basketball, baseball, and
track athlete, became the second African American to join the
Pasadena Police Department, later donating his time to civic
affairs and charity. Tom Bradley, a runner for the Bruins' track
team, spent twenty years fighting racial discrimination in the Los
Angeles Police Department before being elected the first black
mayor of Los Angeles.
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