User:Woodshed

I'm adrift
I don't know what I'm doing here. So I'd probably be interested in working on your project – please drop me a line. No job too menial.

I'm personally interested in:


 * Newspapers***


 * Baseball (esp. the old-time variety)
 * U.S. Supreme Court cases
 * Waco, Texas topics

and would enthusiastically welcome any such collaborations.

Useful pages for ref.
and...
 * Template:Cite book
 * Template:Cite news
 * Citing sources
 * Manual of Style
 * WikiProject Stub sorting/Stub types
 * Dab solver
 * Disambiguation pages with links
 * Disambiguation pages with links/The Daily Disambig

Guidelines

 * Places of local interest

Articles I'm almost proud of writing or expanding

 * AIM Media Texas
 * American Consolidated Media
 * Trinity and Brazos Valley Railway
 * William Harding Mayes
 * Bill McGunnigle
 * Baltimore Orioles (19th century)
 * Chronicle-Telegraph Cup
 * Robert Morris (lawyer)
 * Lymantrini
 * College Football Playoff

and the others...

 * George Bernard Erath
 * John Robinson (drummer) (this one really deserves to be written properly)
 * Frampton Comes Alive! II
 * Guts and Glory
 * Johnny Gill (baseball)

Newspaper articles I started

 * Seguin Gazette
 * The Paris News
 * Fort Bend Herald and Texas Coaster
 * Bay City Tribune
 * New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung
 * Big Spring Herald
 * Borger News-Herald
 * Sweetwater Reporter
 * Brenham Banner Press
 * Austin Citizen
 * Austin Press
 * Austin Times Herald

https://www.reddit.com/r/Austin/comments/9xwkg2/austin_daily_tribune_building_920_colorado_st/

The Austin Tribune was a daily newspaper in Austin, Texas that published from 1889-1915.

The Tribune absorbed a competitor, the Austin Daily News, in 1904.

Alongside the morning Austin Statesman, the Tribune it was one of two daily newspapers in the city in 1914. That year, however, a rival morning newspaper, the Austin American, began publication. In 1915, the Statesman bought the Tribune and abandoned its morning publication schedule, putting out the daily Austin Evening Statesman.

Notability of newspapers

 * Notability of periodicals (essay)
 * Notability of media (essay)
 * Newspaper articles (essay)
 * Orgs/cos

Current to-do list

 * User:Woodshed/Newspapers
 * User:Woodshed/Charles E. Marsh
 * User:Woodshed/The Baseball Encyclopedia
 * Katy Park

Not-so-current

 * User:Woodshed/National University School of Law
 * Augustus R. McCollum
 * Frank Baldwin (journalist)
 * Carmage Walls
 * Permanent School Fund

Cricket

 * Cricket in the United States
 * United States of America Cricket Association
 * United States Cricket Federation
 * American Cricket Federation

CFP

 * San Diego (Holiday Bowl) was only other to bid for semifinals
 * Fiesta Bowl has no more conference tie-in
 * Cotton, Chick-fil-A shakeup; also confirms CFA Peach Bowl name
 * Bowl lineup projections
 * ACC ties:
 * Big 12 angle:
 * pre-CPF plus-one talk:
 * plus-one as an umbrella team:

Chavez Ravine

 * http://www.kcet.org/updaily/socal_focus/history/la-as-subject/history-of-chavez-ravine.html

I'm much newer than you are and know of no other way to contact you other than interrupting your page. If you're interested in working on a movie about baseball with a comedian from Toronto then please let me know! woodshedbaseballemail@devonhyland.ca

Quad City DJ's
The term "Quad" in the group's name is a local reference to bass, possibly deriving from the Quad Electrostatic Loudspeaker or the related Hartley Quad Decca (HQD) System. Another possibility is quadraphonic sound.

MetaFilter: "My understanding is that it's a Miami Bass-oriented reference to either a car stereo speaker enclosure which holds four speakers, or a speaker with a 4" voice coil, which is a common feature of subwoofer-type speakers."

Badmin
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ingeborg_Danz&action=history https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Duck%27s_Block&action=history

Irving Jacoby
Irving Jacoby Is Dead at 76; Producer of Documentaries

Dec. 3, 1985 B12

Irving Jacoby, a producer of documentary films, died Sunday at Yale-New Haven Hospital. He was 76 years old and lived in Guilford, Conn.

Mr. Jacoby was in Europe with the film branch of the Office of War Information in World War II. In 1946, he and three other documentary film makers, John Ferno, Henwar Rodakiewiecz and Willard Van Dyke, formed Affiliated Film Producers in Manhattan.

Mr. Jacoby wrote and produced some of the first documentaries dealing with psychiatric therapy. They were made for the Mental Health Film Board, which was established in Manhattan in 1949 as a department of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene.

In 1975, Mr. Jacoby received the Robert Morse Award from the American Psychiatric Association for his films in the mental health field.

Mr. Jacoby was born in Manhattan and was a graduate of City College. In the early 1940's, he was supervisor of the Institute of Film Techniques at City College.

He is survived by his wife, Alberta; a daughter, Tamar, of Manhattan; a son, Oren, of Guilford, and a sister, Beatrice Perinchief, of Copiague, L.I.

Hitler-fighter articles need help: Erhard Auer & Münchener Post
Erhard Auer was the Editor in Chief of the Münchener Post, it was shut down by Hitler in March 1933 immediately after he became the Reich Chancellor. Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party called the newspaper and its editors "Giftküche" (The Poison Kitchen) and "Münchener Pest ("Munich Pestilence" or "Munich Plague"). Hitler considered the paper one of his most vexing public adversaries, and the paper was the target of libel actions by the Nazi Party. The paper was one of the few early warning voices regarding the dangers posed by the rise of the Nazi Party, although their warnings went largely unheeded at the time. Auer was imprisoned in the Dachau concentration camp and died 20 March 1945. The first book written on Erhard Auer and the Münchener Post was in 2013, in Brazil. .... 0mtwb9gd5wx (talk) 01:06, 19 September 2021 (UTC)