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A strong-armed devastating spitball pitcher from rural Tennessee
who once won 16 games with the Boston Braves, Hub Perdue is better
remembered today as one of the clown princes of the Deadball Era.
Often compared with fellow player-comedians Germany Schaefer, Nick
Altrock, and Rabbit Maranville, Perdue had a quick wit and a
rebellious streak that amused teammates but sometimes led to
conflicts with management and umpires. (""Mix 'em up!"" manager
George Stallings had told him, encouraging the weak-hitting pitcher
to take his at-bats more seriously; Perdue, a right-hander,
dutifully took his strikeouts from alternating sides of the plate.)
His penchant for the subversive--he was also a players' union
representative who freely dispensed advice on contracts and
negotiation--might in fact have curtailed what had been a promising
big league career. But his antics in the majors and minors became
the stuff of legend, known as ""Hublore.
In 1908 baseball was the only game that mattered in the South. With
no major league team in the region, rivalries between Southern
Association cities such as Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis, and New
Orleans were heated. This season, however, no city was as
baseball-crazed as Nashville. After an unpromising start, the
Nashville club clawed its way into contention during the month of
July, rising into the upper division, then into a battle for first.
Local interest intensified, as the competitive fire of Nashville
fans was stoked by sharp-tongued columnist Grantland Rice and the
city's three daily newspapers. By the time the Vols met the New
Orleans Pelicans for a season-ending series, and the championship,
the city was gripped by a pennant fever that shut down the
commercial district. Nearly 13,000 people thronged the Nashville
ballpark, Sulphur Dell, for the third and deciding contest. What
they saw was described by Rice as ?the greatest game ever played in
Dixie.?
What will happen to the near-Earth space environment? How can we
ensure the survival of future scientific, commercial and military
satellites and space stations? This book addresses the questions
that must be asked as debris in space around the Earth--from dust
particles to rocket casings, and even radioactive
materials--becomes a critical problem. In this volume, many
specialists from around the world address the issues, problems, and
policies concerned with the preservation of near-Earth space. Their
articles cover the technical aspects, and the economic and legal
issues concerned, including the enforcement and monitoring of
international agreements and the resolution of disputes. This
clearly written and well illustrated survey offers the professional
and concerned nonspecialist an authoritative and comprehensive
review of the problems with and solutions to space debris.
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