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For three decades, Louis Norman "Bobo" Newsom (1907-1962) was one
of the most well-known pitchers in baseball. Frequently quoted by
sportswriters, he appeared in all the popular sports publications
as well as on Wheaties boxes and bubblegum cards, and was the
undisputed star of the 1940 World Series. Despite his success, he
was sold or traded 14 times during his 20-year career. He pitched
for nine of 16 Major League teams - including five stints with the
Washington Senators - and made sports headlines nearly every year
for holding out, being suspended or traded. In an era when players
seldom changed teams more than once and rarely defied authority,
Newsom seemed always at odds with the powers that be. Drawing on
interviews with family, friends and former teammates, this first
full-length biography of Newsom takes an entertaining look at the
life and career of one of sports' most memorable characters.
Despite his nickname and nonstop antics, Bobo was much more than a
clown, and gave more to the game than he ever got from it.
This is an affectionate history and description of life in Lake
County, Oregon. The book offers an affectionate glimpse of the land
forms, history and people of Lake County. Located at the extreme
north of the Great Basin, the county's high desert environment was
home to a nomadic First People who lived here peacefully but
perilously for many thousands of years before the coming of the
white man. The coming of white pioneers brought the classic old
west "Indian Wars," range wars, "sheep wars," homesteading; and,
for a time, a thriving timber industry. The high desert country is
a land of contrasts - stark, steep-faced escarpments, buttes and
plateaus surrounding vast lakes and valleys - whose lowest
elevation is more than 4,000 feet above sea level and highest is
more than 8,400 feet. Its average annual precipitation rate is less
than 15 inches, but because of its many lakes it is -- by far --
the wettest county in the state in terms of water surface area.
Except for a brief time in the spring when wildflowers flourish
among the sagebrush and bunch grass, the landscape is painted from
a palette of pastels: the light greens and greys of sagebrush, pale
green and yellow of bunchgrass, umbers and greys of the rimrocks
and outcroppings, punctuated by the darker green of the ubiquitous
juniper trees. The changing shadows of the land forms and
spectacular colors of the sunrises and sunsets more than compensate
for the muted colors. The author, a retired architectural
consultant, now lives in Hood River, Oregon.
This is a fast-paced and accessible non-fiction narrative of the
Scottish Reformation that produced the world's first system of
universal public education and its first constitutional monarchy.
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