Posted on 11/11/2005 11:26:24 PM PST by ncountylee
Naaaaw...that would be either Wymens Softball or the WNBA.
But I thought it was only the internet that had no editors or filters and the print and electronic media was safe from such abuse.
When I was in high school the cheerleading team was #1 for the state -- so the paper headline read "Cheerleaders Go All The Way."
For about two minutes......
Evidently simply honoring their accomplishments is just too difficult.
Probably not so much at a Catholic school. Take another look at the name...
If it were a public school, then no big deal.
Mark
Not all womens softball players are that way... Of course, I have to follow the official Free Republic rules...
Jenny Finch!
With her fiance... :-(
Mark
Really?? Well, I guess I'll have to tell my 15 year-old, soccer playing daughter that she is actually a lesbian. Thanks for straightening us out on this issue, we were so confused in thinking that she was normal.
I worked with a woman who put up the following headline on election night: Morrisville Dems beat off GOP foes.
My all time favorite: Mr. Ellis, after whom the Evansville racetrack is named, had a secretary, Anna Fisher. Years after their deaths, the track ran the annual Anna Fisher Stakes in two divisions.
Daily Racing Form headline: Ellis splits Anna Fisher.
Trust me. The altered headline was still perfectly accurate. If unkind.
My elder brother works for a fairly prominent newspaper in the Deep South, and he tells me that one "Jack Mehoff" has written several letters to the editor.... as has "Haywood Jablome."
This Double Indemnity, as Wilder called it, was something that derived from an old newspaper story. Back at the dawn of time, back even before Arthur Krock first arrived in Washington to cover the administration of William Howard Taft for the Louisville Times, a terrible thing happened at the printing plant in Louisville. There was an ad in the paper for womens underwear, as Krock recounted the episode to a young writer [James M. Cain] on the New York World, and it was supposed to say, If these sizes are too big, take a tuck in them. But as Krock was reading through that nights first edition, he saw that someone had changed the first letter in the word tuck.Krock ordered the ad changed for the next edition, then summoned the printer and demanded an explanation. The printer couldnt provide one. He couldnt understand how such an embarrassing accident could have happened. Krock remained suspicious. Two days later, he went and interrogated the printer again, in the interrogatory manner that would daunt future presidents and secretaries of state when Krock became Washington bureau chief for the New York Times. The printer confessed. Mr. Krock, he said, trying finally to explain, you do nothing your whole life but watch for something like that happening, so as to head it off, and then, Mr. Krock, you catch yourself watching for chances to do it.
-- Otto Friedrich, City of Nets.
Moreover, I had some wine with my dinner.
Thats a fine young lady and she likes Baseball, which in my opinion is the Ultimate Sport. Good looking couple also. I wish them both well.
Goofing around by headline writers is universal.
the most famous incident happened when Carter was president.
Fast forward about 30 years, Flux. You don't have to be threatened by a girls' soccer team anymore.
You should now be vigilant of girls' soccer cleats, however. Regardless of sexuality, it's soccer players' love of smashing loose balls into oblivion that has propelled the game into a worldwide sport.
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