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471. Don Moorhead (12/31/09)
... that quarterback Don Moorhead set 24 Michigan Wolverines football records from 1969 to 1970, including career records for total offense and passing yards?
470. Michigan Wolverines men's gymnastics (12/26/09)
... that after a winless 0–11 record in 1996, the Michigan Wolverines men's gymnastics team won the NCAA championship in 1999 and finished in the "Super Six" in 10 of the past 11 seasons?
469. Michigan Wolverines softball (12/26/09)
... that the Michigan Wolverines softball team in 2005 became the first team from east of the Mississippi River to win the Women's College World Series ?
468. Roland Nilsson (12/20/09)
1,400
... that the 6 foot, 6 inch Swedish Wolverine Roland Nilsson won six consecutive Big Ten shot put championships in the 1950s?
467. Phil Northrup (12/19/09)
... that Michigan Wolverines Hall of Famer Phil Northrup won three NCAA championships in the javelin throw and pole vault ?
466. Michigan Wolverines men's track and field (12/19/09)
... that athletes from Michigan Wolverines men's track and field have won 43 NCAA individual event championships, 14 Olympic gold medals, and 57 Big 10 team championships?
465. Don McEwen (12/18/09)
1,400
... that Michigan 's Don McEwen , two-time NCAA champion in the two-mile run, also won consecutive Big Ten cross country championships even though his school had no varsity cross country team?
464. Flint Hanner (12/17/09)
400
... that Stanford 's Flint Hanner , winner of the first NCAA javelin championship , later coached the Fresno State Bulldogs to 27 track and field championships?
463. Eric Wilson (12/14/09)
360
... that American athlete Eric Wilson won the 220-yard dash at the first NCAA track and field championships in 1921 ?
462. Leonard Paulu (12/13/09)
2,050
... that Leonard Paulu won consecutive NCAA championships in the 100 yard dash despite war injuries that included the loss of an eye and a right-leg stride four inches shorter than his left?
461. John Romig (12/11/09)
750
... that Penn State 's John Romig , the first NCAA champion in the two-mile run, later became an explosives expert?
460. St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church (12/5/09)
1,700
... that the day after a UCLA art student set the St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church afire, the pastor of the church prayed for forgiveness for the arsonist? Proposed hook: ... that St. Martin of Tours Church (pictured) was the site of Dan Akroyd 's eulogy to John Candy and a media frenzy when O. J. Simpson appeared at his slain wife's funeral?
459. St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church (Los Angeles) (12/5/09)
600
... that a 1999 fire in St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church caused an estimated $1.2 million in damage?
458. St. Timothy Catholic Church (Los Angeles) (12/5/09)
740
... that St. Timothy Catholic Church in Los Angeles, California , has an antique gold leaf altarpiece believed to have been made in Spain in the 1600s?
457. Jan Leighton (12/4/09)
1,800
... that Jan Leighton played over 1,200 famous persons in television and print advertisements, and 1,800 more on radio?
456. Mike Penner (12/4/09)
5,300
... that Los Angeles Times sports writer Mike Penner told readers he was a transsexual in a 2007 essay entitled "Old Mike, new Christine"?
455. Alice McGrath (12/4/09)
1,300
... that Luis Valdez called American activist Alice McGrath , who inspired his play Zoot Suit , "one of the heroines of the 20th century"?
454. Lester Shubin (12/3/09)
6,800
... that chemist Lester Shubin has been credited with saving the lives of thousands of police officers?
453. Waldo Hunt (12/3/09)
3,000
... that Waldo Hunt , "King of the Pop-Ups ," could "make dinosaurs rear up, ships set sail and bats quiver in belfries"?
452. St. Basil Catholic Church (12/3/09)
2,500
... that the 1969 dedication of St. Basil Church in Los Angeles prompted a "club-swinging mob" of Chicanos to break into the church during Christmas Midnight Mass ?
451. Precious Blood Catholic Church (Los Angeles) (12/2/09)
3,600
... that the Los Angeles Times wrote that a motorist passing the playground at Precious Blood Church (pictured) might think "he'd been transported to a Catholic school in circa-1950s Chicago or Pittsburgh"?
450. St. Cecilia Catholic Church (Los Angeles) (12/1/09)
1,000
... that LA 's St. Cecilia Church , built in 1927, adapted to its multiethnic community by installing shrines to a beatified Nigerian priest, a Oaxacan Virgin, and a Guatemalan "Black Christ"?
449. Dick Gould (11/25/09)
330
... that NCAA tennis coach Dick Gould was named "Coach of the Decade" for both the 1980s and 1990s and coached 50 All-Americans, including John McEnroe and the Bryan Brothers ?
448. Chet Murphy (11/25/09)
800
... that Big Ten champion Chet Murphy defeated America's top-ranked woman tennis player Alice Marble in a 1939 exhibition match played in front of a "throng" of spectators?
447. J. D. Morgan (11/25/09)
... that J.D. Morgan led UCLA to at least 6 NCAA championships as tennis coach and 30 NCAA championships, including 10 men's basketball titles , as athletic director ?
446. Irby Curry (11/24/09)
2,300
... that Vanderbilt 's 130-pound quarterback Irby "Rabbit" Curry , an elusive runner who "only needed the suspicion of an opening to wriggle through," was killed in aerial combat in 1918?
445. Fritz Shiverick (11/24/09)
... that Fritz Shiverick , known as "a scoring machine", served in 1919 as Cornell 's quarterback , punter , drop kicker, kickoff returner and play-caller on both offense and defense?
444. Max Morris (11/23/09)
... that Northwestern 's Max Morris was a consensus All-American in both basketball and football , played both sports professionally, and twice led the Big Ten in scoring?
443. Pudge Wyman (11/21/09)
1,672
... that Minnesota 's Pudge Wyman scored the first kickoff return for a touchdown , the first blocked punt returned for a touchdown, and the first passing touchdown in the history of the NFL ?
442. Joe Curtis (11/19/09)
... that "Big Joe" Curtis was the starting left tackle for Michigan Wolverines football teams that outscored opponents by a combined total of 1,627 to 30 from 1903 to 1905?
441. John Messmer (11/18/09)
... that John Messmer was captain of Wisconsin 's football and swim teams, set a U.S. high school record in the discus and was the first Badger to win nine varsity letters in major sports?
440. Cliff Sparks (11/17/09)
2,425
... that Cliff Sparks , hailed in 1916 as "eel-like," a "whirlwind" and "the greatest quarterback Michigan ever has had," punted by forcefully throwing the ball at his uprising foot?
439. Iolas Huffman (11/15/09)
... that Iolas Melitus Huffman reportedly played in every quarter of every Ohio State football game except one from 1918 to 1921 and later played for the Cleveland Indians of the NFL ?
438. Joe Magidsohn (11/15/09)
3,700
... that Russian -born Joe Magidsohn was the first Jew to win a varsity "M" at the University of Michigan and the first athlete known to have refused to compete on the High Holy Days ?
437. Jim Trickey (11/13/09)
1,500
... that flags at the University of Iowa were flown at half-mast following the death from peritonitis of Jim Trickey , one year after he became the first Hawkeye to win All-American honors in 1912?
436. Robert Treat Paine Storer (11/11/09)
1,600
... that Bob Storer , captain of Harvard 's undefeated, untied 1913 football team, was cited for bravery for saving a French officer during World War I ?
435. Douglas Bomeisler (11/10/09)
... that Yale 's two-time All-American "Bo" Bomeisler , called "King of the Hard Luck Players," had his foot crushed by a trolley car on Brooklyn 's Flatbush Avenue in 1914?
434. Wesley Englehorn (11/9/09)
... that "Moose" Englehorn , who played for Washington State and Dartmouth College , was the oldest living All-American football player when he died in 1993 at age 103?
433. Dave Morey (11/9/09)
... that Dartmouth football halfback Dave Morey was given the nickname "David the Giant Killer" by American sportswriter Grantland Rice ?
432. George Crowther (11/9/09)
2,900
... that Brown 's All-American 135-pound quarterback "Kid" Crowther played with an elastic band around his head in lieu of a helmet?
431. Sam Felton (11/8/09)
... that Harvard All-American Sam Felton averaged between 60 and 70 yards (55 to 64 meters) on football punts in 1912?
430. Donna Mae Mims (10/22/09)
2,786
... that Donna Mae Mims , known as the "Pink Lady" of racing, became the first woman to win a Sports Car Club of America national championship in 1963?
429. Leonie Pray House (10/18/09)
1,200
... that Leonie Pray House hosted recitals by Liberace and Risë Stevens and served as the home of Patrick Swayze 's character in Donnie Darko ?
428. W. I. B. Crealock (10/14/09)
... that naval architect and author W.I.B. Crealock designed a yacht that was inducted into the American Sailboat Hall of Fame ?
427. John Hyson (10/12/09)
... that John Hyson published articles on the history of the toothbrush, George Washington 's dentures, and one entitled "Did You Know A Dentist Embalmed President Lincoln ?
426. Lee Robins (10/11/09)
... that Lee Robins "pioneered the field of psychiatric epidemiology " and "played a key role in determining the prevalence of mental problems in the United States and the world"?
425. Maria Gulovich Liu (10/11/09)
1,728
... that Maria Gulovich sheltered Jews, worked for the anti-fascist underground, and was awarded the Bronze Star for saving the lives of OSS agents during World War II ?
424. Ernie Lopez (10/8/09)
5,800
... that the selection of Ernie "Indian Red" Lopez for the California Boxing Hall of Fame led to his discovery in a Texas homeless shelter after being missing for 12 years?
423. Raymond B. West (10/8/09)
560
... that Raymond B. West developed a new standard of double exposure photography while directing a 1917 film in which one actress played two sisters?
422. Wagon Tracks (10/7/00)
1,900
... that The Atlanta Constitution wrote that William S. Hart 's face (pictured) was "the synonym for power and manliness" in its review of the film Wagon Tracks ?
421. C. Gardner Sullivan (10/6/09)
800
... that C. Gardner Sullivan , once named among the ten greatest contributors to the motion picture industry, has four films in the U.S. National Film Registry ?
420. Clara Williams (10/6/09)
11,200
... that silent film star Clara Williams (pictured) , known for her "forty famous frocks", appeared in more than 100 films between 1910 and 1918?
419. Shorty Hamilton (10/6/09)
3,800
... that silent film comedian Shorty Hamilton died in 1925 when his automobile crashed into a steam shovel in Hollywood?
418. Nicolae Pleșiță (10/5/09)
4,900
... that former Romanian secret police chief Nicolae Pleșiță , notorious for his dealings with Carlos the Jackal , admitted dragging dissident writer Paul Goma around his cell by his beard?
416-417. The Italian (1915 film) , George Beban (10/5/09)
14,100 + 6,000
... that the 1915 film The Italian tells the story of an immigrant played by George Beban (pictured) who goes to America in search of fortune but finds a "Darwininan jungle" on New York's Lower East Side ?
415. Civilization (film) (10/5/09)
7,000
... that the epic anti-war film Civilization (poster pictured) , depicting Jesus walking through the carnage of war, was credited with helping re-elect U.S. President Woodrow Wilson in 1916 ?
414. Paul Weiland (10/2/09)
1,800
... that director Paul Weiland , whose credits include Mr. Bean , 66 and more than 500 television commercials, owns an 18th-century country estate in Wiltshire , England ?
413. John Herzfeld (10/2/09)
576
... that Emmy Award winner and Golden Raspberry nominee John Herzfeld has directed films about the Long Island Lolita , the Preppie Murder , Ryan White , Don King , and 2 days in the Valley ?
412. Wilfred Buckland (10/1/09)
1,900
... that an exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1980 argued that "everything we know as Hollywood traces to Wilfred Buckland ", film innovator and Hollywood 's first art director ?
411. Breakers Hotel (Long Beach) (9/29/09)
11,500
... that the Sky Room atop the Breakers Hotel (pictured) was the local Airwatch headquarters in World War II ?
410. First Congregational Church (Long Beach) (9/29/09)
... that a pastor of the First Congregational Church in Long Beach, California , vowed to defy an order to block homeless people from sleeping on the church steps?
409. Sex (film) (9/28/09)
9,300
... that the 1920 film Sex , opening with its star performing a seductive "spider dance" clad in "a translucent cloak of webs", had its title censored in Pennsylvania ?
408. The Wolf Woman (9/27/09)
5,100
... that reviewers called The Wolf Woman the "greatest vampire picture of all" and its star, Louise Glaum , "the greatest vampire woman of all time"?
407. Insurance Exchange Building (9/27/09)
... that the landmark Insurance Exchange Building in Long Beach, California , has housed a boy's clothing store, courthouse, dance studio, nightclub and Jamaican restaurant?
406. John T. Elson (9/27/09)
... that John T. Elson , who in 1956 famously asked, "Is God Dead? ", is dead at age 78?
405. Bembridge House (9/25/09)
... that the namesake of the Victorian Bembridge House was strangled to death in 1999 at the house where she had lived for 81 years?
404. Robert Searcy (9/24/09)
... that Robert Searcy , who served with the Tuskegee Airmen in World War II , was employed after the war by United Airlines cleaning aircraft?
403. Cooper Arms Apartments (9/24/09)
... that when Cooper Arms opened in Long Beach, California , it boasted the latest amenities, including "disappearing beds" and "dustless roller screens"?
402. Long Beach Main Post Office (9/23/09)
... that the Long Beach Post Office has been called "Post-Quake Moderne " due to the local prevalence of the style after the Long Beach earthquake of 1933 ?
401. Arnold Laven (9/23/09)
... that Arnold Laven directed feature films about a psychotic gardener/serial killer, an army of giant mollusks and George Armstrong Custer , and episodes of The A-Team ?
400. Palms-Southern Pacific Railroad Depot (9/22/09)
... that Palms Depot (pictured) was known as the "Grasshopper Stop" because "grasshoppers were present in veritable clouds" when it opened?
399. Junior Coghlan (9/22/09)
6,500
... that Frank Coghlan said "damn" in Gone with the Wind , but is best known known for saying "Shazam" in Captain Marvel , the first big screen depiction of a comic book superhero?
398. Scottish Rite Cathedral (Long Beach) (9/22/09
... that the Scottish Rite Cathedral (pictured) , covered in some 250 tons of ornamental terra cotta , was among the first eight structures designated as a Long Beach Historic Landmark ?
397. Villa Riviera (9/20/09)
... that the luxurious Villa Riviera was the second tallest building in Southern California from the time of its completion in 1929 through the mid-1950s?
396. Slick Coffman (9/18/09)
... that baseball player Slick Coffman pitched an 11-inning victory over Hall of Famer Lefty Grove in his first game in Major League Baseball ?
395. Charles Bond (9/17/09)
2,868
... that Maj. Gen. Charles Bond was credited with shooting down nine-and-a-half Japanese planes and was himself shot down twice while serving with the Flying Tigers in Burma and China ?
394. Chick Lathers (9/16/09)
1,791
... that Chick Lathers quit Major League Baseball in 1913 to become a car salesman for Ford Motor Company ?
391-393. 1917 Pitt (9/16/09)
... that "Pop" Warner 's undefeated 1917 Pitt Panthers football team, known as "The Fighting Dentists", featured dental students "Katy" Easterday , "Tank" McLaren , "Skip" Gougler and "Jake" Stahl ?
390. Jesse Fortune (9/15/09)
1,469
... that blues singer Jesse Fortune , better known as the "Fortune Tellin' Man," passed on performing in Europe because he did not want to disappoint customers at his Chicago barbershop?
389. Lloyd Brazil (9/15/09)
1,679
... that Lloyd Brazil , once called "the ideal football player," averaged more than eight yards per carry and gained 5,861 yards in three years at the University of Detroit ?
388. Icehouse Wilson (9/15/09)
3,908
... that Icehouse Wilson , a member of "Oakland 's first world champion baseball team," had a career batting average of .000 in Major League Baseball ?
387. Skip Miller (9/14/09)
800
... that former Motown Records president Skip Miller began his career as a stock clerk and has been credited with helping to develop the rap genre?
386. David Avadon (9/14/09)
4,200
.. that David Avadon earned his livelihood for 30 years as "a daring pickpocket with dashing finesse"?
385. Gaius Shaver (9/13/09)
... that USC quarterback Gaius Shaver was the leading rusher in the American football competition at the 1932 Summer Olympic Games ?
384. George C. Paterson (9/13/09)
that Michigan center "Bubbles" Paterson was the namesake of an award recognizing academic achievement by football players?
383. Andy Hastings (9/12/09)
... that halfback Andy Hastings led the 1916 Pitt football team to a national championship and was also elected president of Pitt's University Glee Club?
382. Bart Macomber (9/9/09)
... that after leading Illinois to "the greatest football upset of all time," Bart Macomber left school for the Orpheum vaudeville circuit?
381. Eddie Gillette (9/9/09)
... that Eddie Gillette led the Wisconsin Badgers football team to an undefeated season and in baseball "beat some of the best pitchers in the 'Three-Eye League '"?
380. Ockie Anderson (9/9/09)
1,434
... that Buffalo 's "Ockie" Anderson scored more points in the 1920 NFL season (the league's first) than four entire teams?
379. Everett Strupper (9/8/09)
... that Georgia Tech halfback and College Football Hall of Fame inductee "Stroop" Strupper used lip-reading to overcome deafness ?
378. Gaylord Stinchcomb (9/5/09)
... that Gaylord Stinchcomb , one of the stars of Ohio State 's first football victory over Michigan , also won the 1921 NCAA championship in the broad jump ?
377. Eddie Mahan (9/3/09)
2,689
... that three-time All-American Eddie Mahan was named by Jim Thorpe as the greatest football player of all time?}
376. Joe Maddock (8/12/09)
... that Joe Maddock (pictured) was one of the biggest ground gainers, and played four positions, for Michigan 's 1903 "Point-a-Minute" football team?
375. William C. "King" Cole (8/11/09)
... that William "King" Cole played for a national championship team at Michigan and coached Nebraska to two championships?
374. Paul Jones (8/10/09)
... that federal judge Paul Jones sentenced a pregnant mother of ten to jail for selling a quart of liquor, lectured her on birth control, and asked, "Doesn't this woman know how to stop it?
373. Everett Sweeley (8/10/09)
... that Michigan fullback Everett Sweeley set a college football record in 1902 when he kicked the ball 86 yards?
372. Irwin Uteritz (8/10/09)
4,152
... that Irwin Uteritz (pictured) , "one of the lightest 'big time' quarterbacks in American football history" at 140 pounds, led Michigan to two undefeated seasons and a national championship?
371. Bruce Shorts (8/9/09)
... that Bruce Shorts , head football coach at Nevada and Oregon , was described in 1904 as "the best coach west of the Mississippi River "?
370. Harry Hawkins (8/9/09)
... that Harry Hawkins won the U.S. national collegiate hammer throw championship in 1926 and was rated by Fielding Yost as the best football lineman of 1925?
369. Curtis Redden (8/8/09)
7,457
... that Michigan end Curtis Redden (pictured) died in World War I after he had described the night sky over the battlefield as "weird, hideous, fascinating, sublime"?
368. Mike Lantry (8/7/09)
1,487
... that Mike Lantry , a Vietnam veteran and walk-on place-kicker , broke the University of Michigan record for the longest field goal twice in the same quarter?
367. Bob Westfall (8/4/09)
4,261
... that Michigan 's "chunky fullback ," "Bullet Bob" Westfall , known for his "spinner play," was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987?
366. Milan Lazetich (8/3/09)
1,589
... that All-Pro linebacker Milan "Sheriff" Lazetich , a rodeo rider before joining the NFL , reported that no end or back ever threw a block like a wild pony "when he feels the first touch of a saddle"?
365. Herman Everhardus (8/2/09)
... that future U.S. president Gerald Ford waited tables at the fraternity house of Michigan halfback Herman Everhardus ?
364. George Ceithaml (8/1/09)
... that Fritz Crisler called George Ceithaml , quarterback of the Michigan Wolverines 's single-wing offense from 1941 to 1942, "the smartest player he ever taught"?
363. Tom Kuzma (7/31/09)
... that Michigan halfback Tom Kuzma was described as "a smacker from Smackersville"?
362. Primo Villanueva (7/31/09)
... that "Calexico Kid" Primo Villanueva led UCLA to the NCAA football championship in 1954 and was inducted into the British Columbia Restaurant Hall of Fame in 2009?
361. Bob Reynolds (7/26/09)
... that Bob "Horse" Reynolds founded the Los Angeles Angels baseball team and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame within a year?
348-360. 1935 College Football All-America Team (7/25/09)
... that the players selected for the 1935 College Football All-America Teams included SMU 's "Iron Man" Wetsel , Stanford 's "Vow Boy" Bobby Grayson , military historian Jac Weller , aspiring G-Man Paul Tangora , Charles Wasicek of the "unbeaten, untied and uninvited" Colgate team, Minnesota 's "battering ram fullback " Sheldon Beise and tackles Ed Widseth and Dick Smith , Cal end Larry Lutz , Ohio State end Merle Wendt , Princeton second-generation All-American Gilbert Lea and Walter Winika , the first Rutgers varsity athlete killed in World War II ?
347. Gaynell Tinsley (7/25/09)
... that Gaynell Tinsley , a two-time All-American end at LSU , set an NFL record with 675 receiving yards as a rookie in 1937?
346. Sid Wagner (7/24/09)
... that Sid Wagner led Michigan State to their first consecutive football wins over the Michigan Wolverines and was the first player selected by the Detroit Lions in the first NFL Draft ?
345. Truman Spain (7/23/09)
2,306
... that SMU All-American Truman "Big Dog" Spain , known for his "rumba king" good looks, was described as "hard as ship's steel and as torrid as a foundry furnace"?
344. Richard France (7/17/09)
... that rough hits from Michigan 's Richard France induced Wisconsin star Pat O'Dea to slug France, leading to O'Dea's ejection from the 1899 Western Conference championship game?
343. Martin Wheelock (7/16/09)
... that Martin Wheelock , football player for the Carlisle Indian School in the 1890s, was inducted into the American Indian Athletic Hall of Fame in 1980?
342. Paul Bunker (7/15/09)
3,977
... that Paul Bunker died in a Japanese POW camp in 1943 but kept hidden a remnant of the U.S. flag from Corregidor now displayed at the West Point Museum?
341. Charles de Saulles (7/14/09)
1,520
... that Charles de Saulles coached an undefeated football team of workers from a Kansas zinc smelting works that defeated the Carlisle Indians and was dubbed "the oddest football team in the country"?
340. John Baird
... that All-American fullback John Baird was forced to withdraw from Princeton in 1898 after playing a football game on a wet field while recovering from tonsilitis ?
339. Bemus Pierce (7/14/09)
... that Bemus Pierce , a guard for the Carlisle Indians football team, ran back three kickoffs for touchdowns in an 1896 game against the University of Illinois ?
338. Bert Waters (7/11/09)
... that Harvard All-American Bert Waters was accused of jabbing a finger into a Yale player's eye in the 1893 football game that became known as "The Bloodbath in Hampden Park"?
337. Albert Sharpe (7/11/09)
... that Albert Sharpe participated in football , basketball , baseball , gymnastics , rowing , and track and field , and was called "the greatest living all round athlete" in 1915?
336. Howard R. Reiter (7/11/09)
... that Howard Reiter has been credited by some with developing the overhand spiral forward pass while playing for the Philadelphia Athletics of the original National Football League (1902) ?
335. Dudley Riggs (7/10/09)
... that Princeton All-American Dudley Riggs was the son of a wealthy banking family that lent $16 million to the United States to fund the Mexican-American War ?
334. Franklin Morse (7/10/09)
6,188
... that American football halfback Franklin Morse (pictured) was the model for a drawing, prints of which reportedly "hung in most college rooms throughout the country" during the 1890s?
333. 1898 Michigan Wolverines football team (7/6/09)
... that the 1898 Michigan Wolverines football team ' s Western Conference championship inspired a student to write the fight song "The Victors "?
327-332. 1890 College Football All-America Team (7/5/09)
... that the 1890 College Football All-America Team was composed entirely of players from Harvard , Yale and Princeton , including Ralph Warren , John Cranston , Billy Rhodes , Frank Hallowell and Jesse Riggs ?
326. Walter Boal (7/2/09)
1,582
... that American hammer thrower Walter Boal astonished passengers on a ship traveling to England in 1899 by skipping rope around the deck with another athlete on his back?
325. Allen Steckle (7/2/09)
... that medical doctor A.C. Steckle (pictured) gained fame coaching the University of Nevada , a school with only 80 students, to a 1903 victory over the University of California football team?
324. Pete Overfield (6/30/09)
... that Pete Overfield won a professional American football championship in 1901 and was later nominated by U.S. President William Howard Taft as a federal judge in Alaska ?
323. 1901 Homestead Library & Athletic Club football team (6/30/09)
... that the success of the championship 1901 Homestead Library & Athletic Club football team inspired promoters to form the first National Football League in 1902?
322. Clarence Herschberger (6/29/09)
1,694
... that University of Chicago fullback Clarence Herschberger (pictured) has been credited as the first player to run the Statue of Liberty play ?
321. John McLean (6/26/09)
... that the 1906 firing of John McLean (pictured) for paying an athlete to play college football was called "the biggest scandal in the history of Missouri athletics"?
320. Freeman Fitzgerald (6/24/09)
... that Freeman Fitzgerald played football with Knute Rockne and once struck out 19 batters in a baseball game?
319. Eugene Mayer (6/23/09)
... that Virginia Cavaliers halfback Eugene "Buck" Mayer became the first consensus first-team All-American from a Southern school in 1915?
318. Dick King (6/23/09)
... that Dick King , who played in the early days of the NFL , was called "one of the greatest backs who ever wore moleskins"?
317. Johnny Gilroy (6/22/09)
1,920
... that "The Great Gilroy" , the leading scorer in college football in 1916, was charged in 1940 with stealing 35 shoe stitching machines from a Massachusetts factory?
316. Laurens Shull (6/22/09)
9,460
... that University of Chicago football star Laurens "Spike" Shull died of wounds suffered rushing a machine gun nest at the Battle of Château-Thierry (pictured) ?
315. Ted Coy (6/21/09)
3,020
... that Yale All-American Ted Coy (pictured) , who played football with "his long blonde hair held back by a white sweatband," was the basis for a character in a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald ?
314. Paul Veeder (6/20/09)
... that Yale All-American Paul Veeder has been credited with throwing the "first forward pass in a major game" and as an early innovator of the onside kick ?
313. Mack Supronowicz (6/20/09)
... that in 1947, University of Michigan basketball player Mack "Soup" Supronowicz was hailed as "the greatest cage prospect in college history"?
312. Tom Shevlin (6/18/09)
3,707
... that four-time All-American football end and millionaire lumberman Tom Shevlin (pictured) died of pneumonia after contracting a cold while training the Yale football team?
311. Diane Dietz (6/16/09)
... that Diane Dietz set the Big Ten single-game basketball scoring record with 45 points in 1982 and the University of Michigan career record with 2,076 points?
310. Herman Fishman (6/11/09)
... that University of Michigan pitcher Herman Fishman set a Big Ten record in 1936 with a 0.86 ERA and was named to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency 's Jewish All-American baseketball team?
309. Alicia Seegert (6/10/09)
1,762
... that catcher Alicia Seegert set Big Ten Conference records for batting average , hits , total bases and RBIs while playing softball for the University of Michigan from 1984 to 1987?
308. Frank Legacki (6/7/09)
... that venture capitalist Frank Legacki set American records in the 50-yard freestyle and 100-yard butterfly while attending the University of Michigan in 1961?
307. Nikki Nemitz (6/6/09)
1,819
... that after facing 2009 All-American softball pitcher Nikki Nemitz 's fastball, a sports writer for the Detroit Free Press wrote that he "actually felt a breeze" and his "knees buckled"?
306. Marshall Newell (6/1/09)
14,200
... that "Ma" Newell (pictured) , one of the few four-year All-Americans in college football history, was run over by a railroad engine on Christmas Eve 1897?
305. Dudley Dean (5/25/09)
2,315
... that Harvard 's All-American football quarterback Dudley Dean was cited by Theodore Roosevelt for bravery after the Rough Riders ' charge of San Juan Hill (pictured) ?
304. Beaton Squires (5/25/09)
... that All-American Beaton Squires wrote an editorial in 1905 against turning football into a "parlor game" after Harvard 's president criticized its violent nature?
303. Sheppard Homans Jr. (5/24/09)
... that Grantland Rice wrote that All-American football fullback Shep Homans , who played in every minute of all 22 games for Princeton in 1890 and 1891, "represented the football that used to be"?
302. Isaac Seneca (5/24/09)
... that in 1899 Isaac Seneca became the first Native American to be named as an All-American football player while playing halfback for the Carlisle Indian School ?
301. Thomas Graydon (5/24/09)
... that two-time All-American fullback "Blondy" Graydon performed a tumbling routine with the Barnum & Bailey Circus while dressed "in resplendent pink tights"?
300. Neutra VDL Studio and Residences (5/21/09)
... that architect Richard Neutra used mirrors and reflecting pools to provide spaciousness for his home on a small lot, the Neutra VDL Studio and Residences , on Silver Lake in Los Angeles ?
299. The Manor (Los Angeles) (5/18/09)
... that Aaron Spelling 's 56,500-square-foot mansion, known as The Manor , is the largest house in Los Angeles County ?
298. Duane Purvis (5/16/09)
... that Duane Purvis 's right arm made him a world-class javelin thrower and "without peer" as a long passer in football ?
297. Earl Sprackling (5/16/09)
... that Earl Sprackling , who was selected as the best college football player of 1910, gained 456 total yards and kicked three field goals in one game?}}
296. Lester Belding (5/15/09)
... that Lester Belding was the first Iowa Hawkeyes football player to be named an All-American ?
293-295. City Hall Gang (5/12/09)
... that George Cryer , Mayor of Los Angeles in the Roaring Twenties , was allegedly controlled by the city's political boss Kent Parrot and vice king Charles Crawford , whose coterie of bootleggers and criminals was known as the "City Hall Gang"?
292. William H. Lewis (5/4/09)
... that William H. Lewis (pictured) became the first African-American college football player in 1888 and the first African-American to serve as U.S. Assistant Attorney General in 1911?
291. 1889 College Football All-America Team (4/29/09)
... that the quarterback for the first College Football All-America Team in 1889 was Edgar Allan Poe ?
289-290. Dick Wallen , W. J. Voit Memorial Trophy (4/26/09)
... that UCLA Bruins end Dick Wallen won the 1957 Voit Trophy as the outstanding football player on the Pacific Coast?
288. Tom Maentz (4/21/09)
... that ends Tom Maentz and Ron Kramer , known as the "touchdown twins," were the first University of Michigan athletes to appear on the cover of Sports Illustrated ?
287. Archie Weston (4/17/09)
5,587
... that Michigan 's All-American quarterback Archie Weston (pictured) was once tackled during a game by an irate female fan?
286. Gibby Welch (4/13/09)
... that University of Pittsburgh halfback Gibby Welch broke the single-season yardage record set by Red Grange , gaining 1,964 yards in just nine games in 1926?
285. Bernard Kirk (4/10/09)
2,413
... that Michigan end Bernard Kirk , who Knute Rockne called the "apple of my eye," died of complications from a fractured skull days after being named an All-American in December 1922?
283-284. Herb Treat , 1922 College Football All-America Team (4/7/09)
4,007
... that Herb Treat , unanimously selected as a 1922 College Football All-American , was hit by a car in 1943 and plunged nine stories from a hotel window in 1947?
282. 1948 College Football All-America Team (3/29/09)
... that the 1948 All-America team was the first to include separate offensive and defensive college football teams?
281. Charlie Chaplin Studios (3/12/09)
2,018
... that Charlie Chaplin Studios , founded in 1917 and now home to Jim Henson Productions , has a 12-foot (3.7 m) color statue of Kermit the Frog dressed as the "Little Tramp" above the main gate?
280. KCET Studios (3/11/09)
1,107
... that KCET Studios , where Invasion of the Body Snatchers was filmed, is the longest continuously-producing studio in Hollywood ?
279. The Salt Box (3/2/09)
3,016
... that The Salt Box , one of the first Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments , was razed by fire seven months after being relocated to make room for a $500 million skyscraper development?
278. Palm Court (Alexandria Hotel) (3/1/09)
1,920
... that the Palm Court , called "the most beautiful room in Los Angeles ," has been the site of speeches by Presidents Taft and Wilson and balls where Rudolph Valentino danced with starlets?
277. 1886 Michigan Wolverines football team (2/28/09)
2,359
... that the 1886 Michigan football team had a "goalkeeper" and played games measured in "innings"?
276. Horace Greely Prettyman (2/27/09)
8,713
... that Horace Prettyman (pictured) played eight years of "college" football for the University of Michigan from 1882 to 1890, some when he was in his 30s and no longer a student ?
273-275. 1948 Michigan hockey (2/26/09)
314 + 207 + 182
... that Gordon McMillan from Saskatchewan , Wally Grant from Minnesota's Iron Range , and Wally Gacek from Manitoba led the Michigan Wolverines to the first ever Frozen Four NCAA hockey championship in 1948?
272. Mel Wakabayashi (2/26/09)
3,122
... that Mel Wakabayashi , born in a wartime Japanese-Canadian internment camp , was called "perhaps the most unlikely star in the long history of Michigan sports, and surely one of the most inspirational"?
271. Gordon Wilkie (2/25/09)
2,202
... that when Gordon Wilkie and his Michigan Wolverines teammates scored 21 points in a single ice hockey game against Ohio State University , their coach threatened to bench anyone else who scored ?
270. Dave Debol (2/22/09)
279
... that University of Michigan Hall of Honor inductee Dave Debol , known in the 1970s as "the Guy LaFleur of college hockey", set an NCAA record by scoring three goals in less than one minute?
269. 1881 Michigan Wolverines football team (2/21/09)
688
... that the 1881 Michigan Wolverines football team is credited with playing the first intersectional football games against Harvard , Yale and Princeton ?
268. Tad Wieman (2/20/09)
1,202
... that when Elton Wieman moved east to play football for the University of Michigan in 1915, the Los Angeles Times called it "a calamity of almost national importance"?
267. Bill MacFarland (2/19/09)
1,113
... that attorney Bill MacFarland had a dislocated knee and six broken teeth after playing 11 seasons of professional ice hockey ?
266. Mindy Gehrs (2/19/09)
763
... that 2009 Michigan Hall of Honor inductee Mindy Gehrs was called "the best swimmer to ever part the waters of the Atomic City"?
265. Franklin Cappon (2/19/09)
3,516
... that "Cappy" Cappon (pictured) , known for his "five-man weave" basketball offense, was mentor to Princeton athletes from the 1930s to the 1960s, including Bill Bradley and Frank Deford ?
264. Albert E. Herrnstein (2/17/09)
694
... that after scoring six touchdowns for Michigan against Ohio State in 1902, Albert Herrnstein became the winningest coach in Ohio State football history up to the time he retired?
263. Bo Molenda (2/15/09)
834
... that Bo Molenda played professional football , baseball and basketball and was the "workhorse" for the Green Bay Packers teams that won three consecutive NFL championships from 1929 to 1931?
262. Ernie Vick (2/14/09)
668
... that Ernie Vick was an All-American football center while enrolled at the University of Michigan medical school even though his schoolwork did not allow him to practice with the team?
261. Cedric C. Smith (2/11/09)
612
... that sources indicate that Cedric "Pat" Smith , who later worked at Ford 's Rouge plant , was either the second or third leading scorer in the NFL during its first season in 1920?
260. Art Walker (2/11/09)
... that All-American football player Art Walker played in 479 of 540 minutes in the Michigan Wolverines ' 1954 season and later played seven years for the Edmonton Eskimos ?
259. Boss Weeks (2/11/09)
1,508
... that Boss Weeks was quarterback of Fielding H. Yost 's "Point-a-Minute" University of Michigan football teams in 1901–1902 that outscored opponents 1,211 to 12?
258. Ernest Allmendinger (2/10/09)
14,208
... that American football player "Aqua" Allmendinger (pictured) , once described as "a young giant in perfect physical condition," acquired his nickname after working as a waterboy for railroad building crews?
257. Neil Snow (2/10/09)
5,420
... that Neil Snow (pictured) , ranked by Grantland Rice as one of the three greatest all-around athletes ever turned out in college sports , died of heart failure at age 34 after a game of squash ?
256. Beth Wymer (2/7/09)
699
... that University of Michigan gymnast Beth Wymer won three consecutive NCAA championships in the uneven bars and was a first-team All-American in the all-around and balance beam ?
255. Bev Plocki (2/6/09)
430
... that gymnastics coach Bev Plocki led Michigan to 15 Big Ten championships and 18 NCAA championship tournaments after taking over a last-place program in 1990?
254. Carol Hutchins (2/5/09)
266
... that Carol Hutchins , coach of the first eastern team to win the Women's College World Series , is the winningest coach in the history of the University of Michigan in any sport?
253. Angus Goetz (2/3/09)
991
... that Angus Goetz played for Buffalo in the National Football League on the weekends while attending medical school at the University of Michigan ?
252. Eddie Tolan (2/1/09)
1,400
... that Eddie Tolan , the first African-American to be the "world's fastest human" after winning double gold at the 1932 Olympics , returned home jobless and appeared in vaudeville with Bill "Bojangles" Robinson ?
251. Ken DOherty (1/30/09)
954
.. that University of Pennsylvania track coach Ken Doherty removed Bruce Dern from the track team in 1957 after his Elvis -like sideburns caused a commotion while running the two-mile relay ?
250. Sam Stoller (1/27/09)
2,522
... that the U.S. Olympic Committee awarded medals to Sam Stoller and Marty Glickman 62 years after the only two Jews on the U.S. track team were pulled from the 400-meter relay team at the 1936 Berlin Olympics ?
249. Mike Murphy (1/27/09)
2,313
... that Mike Murphy (pictured) trained heavyweight boxing champion John L. Sullivan , was the first Michigan Wolverines football coach, and has been called the "the father of American track athletics"?
248. Steve Farrell (1/26/09)
5,400
... that Steve Farrell , called "the greatest professional foot-racer" in America, raced against horses for several years in the 1890s and reportedly only lost a half dozen times?
247. Charles B. Hoyt (1/26/09)
418
... that sprint champion Charles Hoyt , who lost a chance for an Olympic medal when the 1916 games were cancelled due to World War I , later coached Eddie Tolan to two gold medals in the 1932 Olympics ?
246. Keene Fitzpatrick (1/24/09)
1,302
... that Keene Fitzpatrick (pictured) invented modern pole-vaulting technique, coached five Olympic gold medalists, and trained the University of Michigan 's "Point-a-Minute" football teams from 1901 to 1905?
245. Philip Bartelme (1/23/09)
750
... that University of Michigan athletic director Philip Bartelme (pictured) hired Branch Rickey as a baseball coach in 1910, and the two later worked together for the St. Louis Cardinals and Brooklyn Dodgers ?
244. Charles A. Baird (1/13/09)
1,517
... that Michigan 's first athletic director Charles Baird (pictured) built the largest college athletic ground in the United States and negotiated the school's appearance in the first Rose Bowl game?
243. Blowout (sports) (1/16/09)
2,414
... that during a blowout , fans often chant to request that players who only play in garbage time be put in the game?
241-242. Robert H. Hume , H. Ross Hume (1/15/09)
1,204 + 2,206
... that twin brothers Robert and Ross Hume became known as the "Dead Heat Kids" after finishing nine straight mile races, including the Big Ten and NCAA championships, holding hands in dead heat victories?
240. Francis Heydt (1/15/09)
288
... that 1941 NCAA backstroke champion and University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor inductee Francis Heydt later owned a business that sold camouflage clothing to the U.S. military ?
239. James Tanis (1/13/09)
2,512
... that former guerrilla James Tanis undertook a trip through some twenty fast-flowing rivers and creeks before being inaugurated as the second President of Bougainville ?
238. William Murphy (1/13/09)
319
... that William Murphy won two Big Ten doubles tennis championships with his twin brother, and later coached Michigan tennis teams to 11 Big Ten and one NCAA team championships?
237. Harold Nichols (1/13/09)
633
... that in Harold Nichols ' 32 years as Iowa State wrestling coach, his wrestlers placed among the top three teams in the United States 25 times and won 38 individual and six team NCAA championships ?
236. Dave Porter (1/12/09)
1,916
... that Dave Porter won the NCAA heavyweight collegiate wrestling championship twice and was subsequently drafted by the Cleveland Browns to play in the NFL ?
George R. Christmas (nom)
11,120
... that George R. Christmas (pictured) , then known as Captain Christmas, received the Navy Cross for "extraordinary heroism" in the Vietnam War ?
235. M. C. Burton Jr. (1/12/09)
1,118
... that after becoming the first basketball player to lead the Big Ten in both scoring and rebounds, Michigan 's M.C. Burton turned down a contract to play in the NBA to attend medical school?
234. Edward I. Schalon (1/12/09)
195
... that Edward Schalon , inducted into the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor as a golfer, later became the president of a Fortune 500 company, SPX Corporation ?
233. Dominic Tomasi (1/11/09)
398
... that 180-pound (82 kg) guard Dominic Tomasi was selected as both captain and Most Valuable Player of the undefeated National Champion 1948 Michigan Wolverines football team ?
232. Bob Osgood (1/11/09)
531
... that University of Michigan track team captain Bob Osgood set a world record in the 120-yard (110 m) high hurdles in a "driving rain" that turned the track at Ferry Field into "a miniature lake"?
231. Kappe Residence (1/9/09)
5,019
... that the Kappe Residence , described as "a virtual tree house poised over a steep hillside", was named one of the top ten houses in Los Angeles by an expert panel selected by the Los Angeles Times ?
230. Walter L. Dodge House (1/8/09)
6,607
... that the 1916 Early Modern Dodge House in West Hollywood, California , called one of the fifteen most significant houses in the United States, was demolished in 1970 to make way for apartments?
229. William Watson (1/3/09)
738
... that Time magazine predicted "Big Bill" Watson , the first African-American to win the U.S. decathlon championship, would be America's No. 1 hero at the 1940 Olympics , later cancelled due to World War II ?
228. ʻIolani Luahine (1/1/09)
2,694
... that Iolani Luahine , considered the high priestess of the ancient hula , was said to be able to "call up the wind and the rain" and to "make animals do her bidding"?
227. Bless You Boys (12/30/08
... that Bless You Boys is Sparky Anderson 's diary as manager of the first American League baseball team since the 1927 Yankees to "lead the race from wire-to-wire" and win the World Series ?
226. Royce Howes (12/29/08)
450
... that Royce Howes won the Pulitzer Prize for an editorial on the shared responsibility of labor and management for an unauthorized strike that put 45,000 Chrysler workers out of work?
225. Procopio (12/26/08)
2,645
... that 19th-century California bandit Procopio , also known as Red-Handed Dick, was said to "love the feel and the color of warm blood," and his name was used by mothers to frighten their children?
224. Dick Kempthorn (12/21/08)
... that 1949 Michigan football MVP Dick Kempthorn later flew more than 100 missions as a jet fighter pilot in the Korean War and received the Distinguished Flying Cross ?
223. 1980 Michigan Wolverines football team (12/21/08)
1,100
... that the 1980 Michigan Wolverines football team did not give up a touchdown in the final 22 quarters of the season?
222. Bruce Hilkene (12/21/08)
300
... that Bruce Hilkene was captain of the 1947 Wolverines who were selected as the greatest Michigan football team of all time?
221. John P. McCormick (12/19/08)
353
... that the Chicago Tribune 's John McCormick received the 2002 Distinguished Writing Award for Editorial Writing for his work on 9/11 , Afghanistan , and the sale of naming rights for Soldier Field ?
220. The Swimming Hole (12/19/08)
8,600
... that artist Thomas Eakins was fired shortly after the exhibition of The Swimming Hole pictured) , cited as a prime example of homoeroticism in American art ?
219. Henry Hatch (12/19/08)
2,008
... that University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor inductee Henry Hatch lived with his wife and daughter on the grounds of Michigan Stadium for more than a decade?
218. Garden Gnome Liberationists (12/17/08)
14,200
... that the leader of the French Garden Gnome Liberation Front was given a suspended sentence after the group "liberated" over 150 garden gnomes in 1997?
217. Timeline of Australian inventions (12/17/08)
3,800
... that Australian inventions include the boomerang , didgeridoo , black box flight data recorder , Vegemite , spray-on skin , and bionic ear (pictured) ?
216. Bill Paparian (12/15/08)
1,312
... that Bill Paparian , who visited Cuba while mayor of Pasadena, California , was reported to admire both Che Guevara and the U.S. Marine Corps ?
215. John Barbato (12/13/08)
1,746
... that "Johnny Sausage" Barbato , charged with being a "capo" or "captain" in the Genovese crime family , was released from prison in July 2008 at age 74?
214. Sue K. Hicks (12/11/08)
5,914
... that Sue K. Hicks , a prosecutor in the Scopes Monkey Trial who later became a judge in Tennessee , may have been the inspiration for the song, "A Boy Named Sue ," popularized by singer Johnny Cash in 1969?
213. Lincoln Broyhill (12/10/08)
10,108
... that B-17 Flying Fortress tailgunner "Babe" Broyhill set a record by destroying two Messerschmitt ME-262 jet fighters in a mission over Berlin in March 1945?
212. Zoia Horn (12/9/08)
2,286
... that the Zoia Horn Intellectual Freedom Award is named for a librarian who was jailed for refusing to testify in the 1972 trial of the Harrisburg Seven anti-war activists?
211. Rachel Hirschfeld (12/9/08)
1,950
... that attorney Rachel Hirschfeld works in the field of pet rights, including the creation of pet trusts allowing pets to inherit property?
210. Sunburst (community) (12/1/08)
2,648
... that the Sunburst community , a Southern California commune combining elements of mysticism , Christianity and Hopi rituals, was once one of the largest shippers of organic products in the U.S. ?
209. Florizel von Reuter (12/1/08)
5,815
... that Florizel von Reuter (pictured) , a child prodigy on the violin , later developed psychic interests and wrote books describing communications with dead composers, including Paganini and Rimsky-Korsakov ?
208. Hacienda Arms Apartments (11/24/08)
6,108
... that Hacienda Arms on the Sunset Strip was the "most famous brothel in California " in the 1930s and now houses a celebrity-owned restaurant described by Newsweek as "so hip it hurts"?
207. Tea Fire (11/20/08)
2,899
... that the Montecito Tea Fire , which destroyed more than 200 homes in California , was caused by smoldering embers from a bonfire party at an abandoned tea house?
206. Sayre Fire (11/19/08)
2,200
... that the Sayre Fire resulted in the worst loss of homes due to fire in the history of Los Angeles , surpassing the loss of 484 residences in the 1961 Bel Air fire ?
205. Hugo Bettauer (11/18/08)
1,400
... that Hugo Bettauer , author of a satire depicting Vienna after expulsion of its Jews, was shot and killed in 1925 after Nazis branded him a "Red poet" and "corruptor of youth"?
204. Rob Epstein (11/17/08)
755
... that Rob Epstein , Academy Award-winning director of The Times of Harvey Milk , also directed Paragraph 175 chronicling the treatment of homosexuals in Nazi Germany ?
203. Dick Liddil (11/16/08)
1,578
... that James-Younger Gang member "Dick" Liddil surrendered to authorities after killing Jesse James ' cousin, reportedly out of fear of that James would seek revenge?
202. Stuart Macrae (inventor) (11/13/08)
2,514
... that the sticky bomb was designed by Stuart Macrae at a laboratory known as "Winston Churchill 's Toyshop"?
201. Michigan Tech Huskies (11/10/08)
335
... that the Michigan Tech Huskies , from Michigan 's Upper Peninsula , have won three NCAA Division I championships in ice hockey , with players such as Tony Esposito ?
200. List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles (10/16/08)
2,315
... that the Historic-Cultural Monuments in South Los Angeles include Ray Charles ' recording studio, a stadium that hosted two Summer Olympics (pictured) , and an early home of the Oscar ceremonies?
198-199. List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the Harbor area , Powder Magazine (Camp Drum) (10/7/08)
1,794 + 1,206
... that the historic monuments in the Los Angeles Harbor area include a Civil War Powder Magazine , a World War I coastal artillery battery , and the bridge of a World War II heavy cruiser ?
197. Encino Oak Tree (10/6/08)
11,416
... that Los Angeles police were sent to guard the remains of the 1000-year-old Encino Oak Tree , a victim of "slime flux", after it was felled by an El Niño storm in 1998?
196. Orcutt Ranch Horticulture Center (10/4/08)
2,509
... that the main house on the grounds of the city-owned Orcutt Ranch Horticulture Center in Los Angeles incorporates swastikas in its architecture?
194-195. List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the San Fernando Valley , Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument (9/30/08)
13,797 + 770
... that a tower of 2,000 wooden Schlitz beer pallets described as "a rotting vestige of one man's egotism" that festers "like a sore on the community's body" is a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument ?
193. Menlo Avenue–West Twenty-ninth Street Historic District (9/28/08)
732
... that the Menlo Avenue Historic District in Los Angeles reflects the transition to American Craftsman style architecture?
192. North University Park Historic District (9/27/08)
1,044
... that North University Park in Los Angeles contains many well-preserved Victorian houses and was the birthplace of U.S. Presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson ?
191. Alfred Rosenheim (9/25/08)
731
... that architect Alfred Rosenheim doubted whether modern architecture could strictly be regarded as architecture?
190. Burro Flats Painted Cave (9/23/08)
3,806
... that some believe the pictographs in Burro Flats Painted Cave were drawn by Native American maidens who slept in the cave as part of a puberty ritual?
189. Elmer Grey (9/21/08)
1,196
... that architect Elmer Grey recalled that "my health broke down completely" after he finished a major commission on a Christian Science church in Milwaukee, Wisconsin ?
188. Bardsdale United Methodist Church (9/20/08)
365
... that the 1898 Carpenter Gothic Bardsdale Methodist Episcopal Church in California underwent extensive renovations after a portion of the ceiling fell on a parishioner during a 1982 service?
187. Frederick Roehrig (9/19/08)
1,113
... that Frederick Roehrig 's Castle Green (pictured) in Pasadena, California , was called "a fantastic folly created from the imagination of a Victorian architect with a penchant for Arabesque opulence"?
186. Camarillo Ranch House (9/17/08)
4,014
... that Camarillo Ranch House (pictured) , headquarters for "the largest bean ranch in the world", was renowned for its Arabian stallions that led the Rose Parade ?
185. San Buenaventura Mission Aqueduct (9/16/08)
6,512
... that the seven-mile-long Ventura Mission Aqueduct , built between 1780 and 1815, has been called "an engineering marvel"?
184. National Register of Historic Places listings in Pasadena, California (9/15/08)
2,109
... that there are nearly 100 Registered Historic Places in Pasadena, California , including a 25-foot Space Simulator and the JPL Space Flight Operations Facility (pictured)
183. John C. Austin (9/15/08)
379
... that English-born architect John C. Austin designed several landmark buildings in Southern California , including the Griffith Observatory ?
182. Carnegie Art Museum (Oxnard) (9/13/08)
260
... that the Carnegie Art Museum in Oxnard, California originally opened in 1907 as a Carnegie library ?|
181. Albert C. Martin Sr. (9/12/08)
2,756
... that architect Albert C. Martin successfully defended his design of the 28-story Los Angeles City Hall (pictured) against those who argued the city government could fit into the first four floors?
180. Adamson House (9/7/08)
5,225
... that Adamson House , called the "Taj Mahal of Tile ", has an elaborately tiled dog bath (pictured) ?
179. Azusa Civic Center (9/7/08)
612
... that a parade honoring Jack Benny was held at the Azusa Civic Center , commemorating his running gag in which a conductor called out, "Train leaving now for Anaheim, Azusa and Cucamonga"?
178. Pomona City Stables (9/6/08)
1,103
... that the Pomona City Stables , which housed 22 horses upon its completion in 1909, is reported to be one of the oldest municipal buildings still extant in California ?
176-177. Phillips Mansion , Louis Phillips (9/5/08)
6,256 (PM)
... that the Phillips Mansion , described as having been built in the "Classic Haunted Mansion" style, was the home of the richest man in Los Angeles County from 1875 to 1900?
175. San Dimas Hotel (9/4/08)
9,667
... that the 33-room San Dimas Hotel (pictured) built in 1887 never had a paying guest due to a land boom that never occurred?
171-174. Adobes of Rancho San Jose (9/4/08)
478 + 312 + 334 + 722
... that the Palomares Adobe , Casa Alvarado and Casa Primera , built between 1837 and 1855, provided a stagecoach stop, chapel, school and early homes for the 22,000-acre Rancho San Jose in Los Angeles County ?
170. Sunset Tower (9/1/08)
3,511
... that the Sunset Tower (pictured) in West Hollywood, California was home to gangster Bugsy Siegel , who was asked to leave after being charged with running a bookmaking operation there?
169. Harold Lloyd Estate (9/1/08)
4,210
... that Harold Lloyd's Estate , called "the most impressive movie star's estate ever created," included a golf course and a 900-foot canoe stream?
168. Drum Barracks (8/31/08)
4,054
... that Drum Barracks were built in 1862 and 1863 at a cost of US$1 million to quell pro-Confederacy sentiments in Los Angeles ?
167. Banning House (8/30/08)
1,131
... that the 1864 Banning House (pictured) reportedly hosted "the first yachting party on the West Coast" and has been called "one of the best examples of Greek Revival architecture in the west"?
166. Old Warner Brothers Studio (8/28/08)
2,601
... that the Old Warner Brothers Studio , where the first "talkie " was filmed in 1927, has recently been the location for Judge Judy and Hannah Montana ?
165. Millard House (8/28/08)
21,499
... that Frank Lloyd Wright said of the Millard House (pictured) that he "would rather have built this little house than St. Peter's in Rome "?
164. Minnie Hill Palmer House (8/27/08)
2,411
... that the namesake of the Minnie Hill Palmer House was born there in 1886 and remained in the 1970s, still tending her garden, then located adjacent to a golf course, with an antique hand plow?
163. C.E. Toberman Estate (8/14/08
1,572
... that the C.E. Toberman Estate was used as the "trophy" house of Vincent Chase on the first two seasons of HBO 's Entourage ?
162. Convento Building (Mission San Fernando) (8/13/08)
3,103
... that the Convento Building is the largest adobe building in California and the largest original building at any of the Spanish missions in California ?
161. Ramsay-Durfee Estate (8/12/08)
7,905
... that the widow-owner of the Durfee Mansion died in 1976 at age 99, leaving an untouched wine cellar stocked with vintage wines and whisky dating to the 1890s?
160. U.S. Post Office-Los Angeles Terminal Annex (8/12/08)
3,100
... that the Terminal Annex Post Office was LA 's central mail processing facility for 50 years and became a filming location when it closed?
159. Municipal Warehouse No. 1 (8/10/08)
1,104
... that for many years, Municipal Warehouse No. 1 at the Port of Los Angeles stored the railcar that carried Winston Churchill 's body to burial?
158. Heinsbergen Decorating Company Building (8/9/08)
692
... that the Heinsbergen Decorating Company Building was built in 1928 with bricks salvaged from the old Los Angeles city hall?
157. El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument (8/8/08)
2,206
... that the Plaza Historic District was the historic center of Los Angeles in the days of Spanish and Mexican rule?
156. Exposition Park Rose Garden (8/8/08)
843
... that LA 's Exposition Park Rose Garden has more than 20,000 rose bushes and 200 varieties of roses?
155. Ralphs Grocery Store (Westwood) (8/8/08)
9,000
... that Ralphs Grocery Store (location pictured) , part of a plan to build the "model college town" in 1929, was photographed by Ansel Adams ?
154. Pico Canyon Oilfield (8/5/08)
3,841
... that Well No. 4 in the Pico Canyon Oilfield was the first commercially successful oil well in the Western United States and the longest producing oil well in the world at 114 years?
153. Highland Park Police Station (8/4/08)
2,309
... that the Highland Park Police Station , where the radical Symbionese Liberation Army (emblem pictured) once planted a bomb that proved to be a dud, is now the Los Angeles Police Museum?
152. Neutra Office Building (8/4/08)
2,526
... that the Neutra Office Building , once the office of Modernist architect Richard Neutra , is said to be the only commercial structure that is still intact with Neutra's original design?
151. Smith Estate (Los Angeles) (8/1/08)
2,600
... that the Smith Estate was the home of a writer on occultism , the head of a railroad, and a deputy mayor , and the shooting location for the cult film Spider Baby ?
150. Highland Park Masonic Temple (8/1/08)
5,900
... that the old Lodge Room at the Highland Park Masonic Temple (pictured) has been preserved with original anaglyphs and cherry wood paneling?
149. Miller and Herriott House (7/31/08)
2,870
... that original stained glass from the Miller and Herriott House was removed to a restaurant near Disneyland , prompting one writer to compare the new glass to the wooden leg on Sarah Bernhardt ?
148. Frederick Mitchell Mooers House (7/30/08)
5,170
... that Mooers House (pictured) , an example of West Coast Victorian architecture , is named for its owner who struck gold after years of prospecting in the Mojave Desert ?
147. Spring Street (Los Angeles) (7/28/08)
... that the Spring Street Financial District , known as the "Wall Street of the West", contains Los Angeles 's first skyscraper (pictured) and more than twenty historic financial buildings?
146. Bryson Apartment Hotel (7/28/08)
2,077
... that The Bryson , featured in Raymond Chandler 's The Lady in the Lake and the neo-noir film The Grifters , has become a symbol of LA 's film noir past?
145. El Molino Viejo (7/28/08)
1,886
... that El Molino Viejo (pictured) , a grist mill built in 1816 by native Indian converts from the San Gabriel Mission , is the oldest commercial building in Southern California ?|
144. Santa Fe Freight Depot (7/23/08)
3,885
... that Sci-Arc architecture school built its Los Angeles campus from the 1907 Santa Fe Freight Depot (pictured) , a concrete structure with 120 bays stretching as long as the Empire State Building is tall?
143. Pisgah Home Historic District (7/23/08)
2,745
... that the Pisgah Home (pictured) was the centre of a controversial movement in the early 1900s by a Pentecostal faith healer to care for the poor and downtrodden?
142. Dick Larkins (7/21/08)
... that petitions called for the firing of Ohio State athletic director Dick Larkins when he hired little-known football coach Woody Hayes in 1951 instead of Paul Brown ?
141. Fire Station No. 23 (7/21/08)
... that LA 's Fire Station No. 23 (pictured) has been a location in over 50 film productions, including Ghostbusters headquarters and scenes from The Mask and National Security ?
140. Mary Andrews Clark Memorial Home (7/18/08)
3,165
... that the Clark Memorial Home , built in 1913 as a home for single working women, has been a shooting location for Rocketeer , Twins , and Mr. Saturday Night ?
139. Watts Station (7/15/08)
4,525
... that Watts Station was the only structure to remain intact along "Charcoal Alley" during the Watts Riots ?
138. SS Catalina (7/14/08)
12,887
... that SS Catalina , after reportedly carrying more passengers than any other ship anywhere, has been stuck half-submerged in Ensenada, Mexico for more than ten years?
137. Eugene W. Britt House (7/13/08)
... that the largest sports research library in North America is located on the grounds of LA 's Britt House , a Colonial Revival mansion built in 1910?
136. Hale House (7/12/08)
5,007
... that the 1880s Victorian Hale House (pictured) , with its exuberant ornamentation and color scheme, has been called "the most photographed house" in Los Angeles ?
135. South Park Lofts (7/11/08)
3,718
... that South Park Lofts in Los Angeles , originally an eight-story parking garage , was converted to lofts, whereupon residents complained about a lack of parking?
134. Garbutt House (7/7/08)
5,624
... that the 20-room Garbutt House in Los Angeles, California was built with concrete walls and ceilings, steel-reinforced doors and no fireplaces due to the owner's intense fear of fire?
133. Broadway Theater and Commercial District (7/7/08)
4,638
... that the Broadway Theater District , with 12 movie palaces (example pictured) in six blocks, is the first and largest historic theater district listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places ?
132. El Cabrillo (7/7/08)
2,256
... that El Cabrillo courtyard apartments, built in 1928 by Cecil B. DeMille and later home to transvestite actor Divine , are said to be "steeped in old Hollywood lore"?
131. Los Angeles Board of Trade Building (7/5/08)
1,405
... that LA 's Board of Trade Building (pictured) , site of the California Stock Exchange, was the first office building on the Pacific coast with automated elevators ?
130. San Fernando Building (7/4/08)
1,706
... that the San Fernando Building in Los Angeles, California , recently converted into upscale lofts, was raided several times for illegal gambling operations between 1910 and 1930?
129. Avenel Cooperative Housing Project (7/3/08)
2,724
... that units in LA 's Avenel Cooperative Housing Project , reportedly built as "a cooperative living experiment for a group of communists ", were selling for US$300,000 in 2002?
128. Sears, Roebuck & Company Mail Order Building (7/1/08)
... that boxer Oscar De La Hoya has been involved in efforts to redevelop the Sears, Roebuck & Company Mail Order Building in the Boyle Heights neighborhood where he grew up?
127. Ralph J. Bunche House (7/1/08)
654
... that the Ralph J. Bunche House in South Los Angeles was the boyhood home of Ralph Bunche , the first person of color to receive the Nobel Peace Prize ?
126. Florence Casler (6/30/08)
2,814
... that after moving to Los Angeles, California in 1912 as a widow with two daughters, Florence Casler became a pioneering woman real estate developer , constructing more than 60 buildings?
125. Bruno Fonseca (6/29/08)
1,425
... that Bruno Fonseca 's paintings The War Murals , inspired by violence in Eastern Europe , have been called "the most powerful statement of their kind since Picasso 's great Guernica "?
124. Alvarado Terrace Historic District (6/20/08)
657
... that the Alvarado Terrace Historic District includes a church built in 1912 that was the LA home of Jim Jones ' Peoples Temple before the group's 1977 mass suicide in Jonestown ?
123. Ebell of Los Angeles (6/19/08)
4,900
... that young Judy Garland was discovered, and Amelia Earhart made her last public appearance, at Ebell of Los Angeles (pictured) ?
122. El Greco Apartments (6/18/08)
6,900
... that the El Greco Apartments (pictured) , once home to Casablanca director Michael Curtiz , were saved from demolition with fund-raising help from Star Trek 's Leonard Nimoy ?
119-121. LA Carnegie libraries (6/15/08)
282 + 216 + 217
... that the Vermont Square , Lincoln Heights , and Cahuenga Branches are the only surviving Carnegie libraries in Los Angeles ?
118. John Sowden House (6/08)
5,700
... that the Lloyd Wright -designed John Sowden House (pictured ) is known as the "Jaws House" because its facade resembles the open mouth of a shark ?
117. Storer House (6/12/08)
7,353
... that Frank Lloyd Wright 's textile block work, Storer House , was restored in the 1980s by Joel Silver , producer of the films Die Hard and The Matrix ?
116. Dunbar Hotel (6/10/08)
1,530
... that the Dunbar Hotel was the heart of LA 's jazz scene with visits by Duke Ellington , Billie Holiday , and Louis Armstrong ?
115. Centinela Adobe (6/9/08)
3,219
... that the builder of Centinela Adobe traded his 2,200-acre (880 ha) ranch encompassing the modern city of Inglewood for a keg of whisky and a small home in Los Angeles ?
114. Los Angeles Fire Department Museum and Memorial (6/8/08)
1,815
... that Engine Co. No. 27 served a dual function as a movie location and an operating firehouse serving the Hollywood studios ?
113. Wadsworth Chapel (6/6/08)
1,713
... that the 1900 Carpenter Gothic Wadsworth Chapel has separate Catholic and Protestant chapels under one roof?
112. Montecito Apartments (6/6/08)
3,207
... that the Art Deco Montecito Apartments (pictured) had been the home of Ronald Reagan , James Cagney , Montgomery Clift , and George C. Scott before becoming a senior citizens ' housing project?
111. Judson Studios (6/5/08)
1,117
... that stained glass from Judson Studios is found not only in churches, but also in Frank Lloyd Wright houses, the U.S. Capitol and the Tropicana Casino ?
110. Hollywood Studio Club (6/1/08)
4,500
... that Marilyn Monroe posed naked in 1948 to raise US$50 to pay the rent for her room at the Hollywood Studio Club (pictured) ?
109. Hollywood Masonic Temple (5/29/08)
5,016
... that the Neoclassical Hollywood Masonic Temple (pictured) has been used as a Masonic Lodge , opera house , and nightclub , and is now the home of the Jimmy Kimmel Live! television show?
108. Jardinette Apartments (5/28/08)
3,932
... that Richard Neutra 's Jardinette Apartments building in Hollywood is considered one of the first Modernist buildings in America?
107. Bolton Hall (5/21/08)
1,913
... that Bolton Hall , the community center for a Utopian community formed in 1913 in the foothills north of Los Angeles , was later used as a jail?
106. National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles (5/21/08)
2,728
... that the City of Los Angeles has 186 sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places ?
105. El Cortez (San Diego) (5/15/08)
2,439
... that San Diego 's El Cortez Hotel , site of the world's first outdoor glass elevator and moving sidewalk , became a school for evangelists in the 1970s?
104. Golden Gate Theater (5/14/08)
5,511
... that the historic Golden Gate Theater was saved by a stop-work order after demolition crews had begun to dismantle the walls?
103. Stimson House (5/10/08)
4,630
... that after surviving a dynamite attack in 1896, fraternity parties in the 1940s, and an earthquake in 1994 , Stimson House (pictured) is now a convent for Catholic nuns ?
102. McCarty Memorial Christian Church (5/8/08)
4,300
... that McCarty Church (pictured) in Los Angeles gained attention for its pastor's decision to racially integrate his white Protestant church in the mid-1950s?
101. Leonis Adobe (5/4/08)
1,609
... that the spirits of a wealthy rancher and his Indian wife have been seen and heard since the 1920s at Leonis Adobe , according to TV show Most Haunted ?
100. Breed Street Shul (5/4/08)
1,835
... that Breed Street Shul , now vacant in a Hispanic part of Los Angeles , was the largest Orthodox synagogue in the western United States from 1915 to 1951?
98-99. Lopez Adobe , Rómulo Pico Adobe (5/4/08)
324, 411
... that Lopez and Pico Adobes , built near the San Fernando Mission , are the oldest residences in San Fernando Valley ?
97. Burbank City Hall (5/2/08)
2,008
... that the art deco Burbank City Hall (pictured) , with murals by Hugo Ballin , uses more than twenty types of marble in its main lobby?
96. Lorenzo Tucker (4/30/08)
4,222
... that a scandal arose when African-American actor Lorenzo Tucker , known as the "Black Valentino", playing a pimp in a play, kissed Mae West , playing a prostitute ?
95. Wilshire Boulevard Temple (4/29/08)
4,513
...that Wilshire Boulevard Temple , with its landmark Byzantine dome (pictured) , is the oldest Jewish synagogue in Los Angeles ?
94. Blessed Sacrament (Hollywood)
1,729
... that Hollywood 's Blessed Sacrament Church was the site of Bing Crosby 's wedding and funerals for John Ford and Mack Sennett ?
93. Mary Star of the Sea (San Pedro)
3,807
...that the bronze of Mary (pictured) atop Mary Star of the Sea , known as the "Fishermen's Church," is lit at night so she can be seen from the Port of Los Angeles harbor?
92. Padre Serra Parish (4/27/08)
366
...that Cardinal Mahony petitioned Rome to name Padre Serra Church after Junipero Serra despite controversy over his treatment of California Indians ?
91. St. Brendan (Los Angeles) (4/24/08)
5,270
..that St. Brendan's Church (pictured) has been a location for two apocalypse movies: the Martian attack in 1953's War of the Worlds and the wedding at the end of Armageddon ?
90. St. Augustine (Culver City) (4/22/08)
3,906
...that a Muslim fundamentalist beheaded a statue of the Virgin Mary at St. Augustine 's and carted a statue of Father Serra to a nearby mosque in October 2001?
89. St. Monica (Santa Monica) (4/22/08)
2,104
...that Academy Award winner Going My Way was filmed at St. Monica 's (pictured) , and the irascible old Irish priest character was based on its pastor?
88. St. Cyril (Encino) (4/20/08)
3,440
...that St. Cyril of Jerusalem Church (pictured) was the site of the baptism of Clark Gable 's son and the funeral of Mercury Seven astronaut "Gordo" Cooper ?
87. Incarnation Church (Glendale) (4/21/08)
2,064
...that police patrolled Incarnation Church during the 2000 funeral of a Hispanic youth killed by Armenian-Americans ?
86. St. Finbar (Burbank) (4/20/08)
...that St. Finbar Church in Burbank , faced with a dwindling flock and changing demographics , was one of the first U.S. parishes to offer Spanish language Mass ?
85. St. Andrew's (Pasadena) (4/19/08)
1,506
...that when St. Andrew's Church in Pasadena was built in the 1920s, it was compared to "a jeweled crown on the head of a Byzantine queen"?
84. St. Robert Bellarmine (Burbank) (4/17/08)
464
...that the pastor of Burbank 's St. Bellarmine Church was a World War I chaplain who modeled the campus on Monticello and Independence Hall ?
83. St. Charles Borromeo (North Hollywood) (4/13/08)
1,513
...that Paul Salamunovich , choir director since 1949 at St. Charles Borromeo Church (pictured) in North Hollywood , has also conducted choirs for dozens of feature films, including The Devil's Advocate ?
82. Sportsmen's Lodge (4/8/08)
1,614
...that Robert Kennedy stayed at the Sportsmen's Lodge (sign pictured) , formerly the "Hollywood Trout Farms", in Studio City, California the night before his assassination ?
81. Hillcrest Country Club (4/2/08)
5,400
...that Groucho Marx joined Hillcrest Country Club even though it was willing to have him as a member?
80. Biff, the Michigan Wolverine (4/2/08)
7,908
...that the Michigan Wolverines ' practice of parading their live mascot Biff before matches was stopped as the animal grew larger and more ferocious?
79. McCabe's Guitar Shop (4/2/08)
7,100
...that more than a dozen artists have recorded live albums in the back room of McCabe's Guitar Shop , including Townes Van Zandt , Ralph Stanley , and R.E.M. ?
78. Santa Monica State Beach (4/2/08)
1,211
...that the Veterans for Peace erect a memorial called Arlington West every Sunday at Santa Monica Beach consisting of a cross in the sand for each U.S. military person who has died in the Iraq War ?
77. Pico Boulevard (3/31/08)
1,859
...that the 1947 song "Pico and Sepulveda " about an intersection on LA 's Pico Boulevard (pictured) was frequently on Dr. Demento 's radio show?
76. Van Nuys Boulevard (3/21/08)
3,416
...that Van Nuys Boulevard , running through the heart of LA 's San Fernando Valley , was a center of teenage cruising from the 1950s through the 1970s?
75. Reseda Boulevard (3/12/08)
1,049
...that 16 people died when the top two floors of the Northridge Meadows Apartments on Reseda Boulevard collapsed in the 1994 Northridge Earthquake ?
74. Victory Boulevard (Los Angeles) (3/11/08)
3,519
...that Victory Boulevard (pictured) , running the 25-mile length of the San Fernando Valley , is mentioned in Randy Newman 's I Love LA : "Victory Boulevard (We Love It!)"?
73. Vicki Morrow (2/27/08)
2,203
...that softball pitcher Vicki Morrow was named Big Ten Player of the Year in 1987 after winning 26 games, including 18 shutouts, and striking out 446 batters?
72. Ruth Pickett Thompson (2/26/08)
...that synchronized swimmer Ruth Pickett Thompson received the AIAW 's 1979 and 1980 Broderick Awards ?
71. Ann Colloton (2/25/08)
1,501
...that swimmer Ann Colloton , the University of Michigan 's Female Athlete of the Decade for the 1980s, was inducted into the school's Hall of Honor in February 2008?
70. Gus Stager (2/23/08)
234
...that before his 40th birthday Gus Stager swam for an NCAA championship team and coached three high school championship teams, four NCAA championship teams, and the 1960 U.S. Olympic team?
69. Francie Kraker Goodridge (2/21/08)
1,709
...that Francie Kraker Goodridge , who set a world indoor record in the 600-yard run, did not receive a varsity letter or sports scholarship and had to work as a waitress to put herself through college?
68. Mike Leach (tennis) (2/20/08)
535
...that the American tennis player Michael Leach gained national rankings in doubles playing with his father?
67. Penny Neer (2/18/08)
751
...that Penny Neer , 1982 AIAW discus champion and one of the top U.S. discus throwers, also blocked 64 shots for the University of Michigan women's basketball team?
66. Al Renfrew (2/17/08)
214
...that University of Michigan Hall of Honor inductee Al Renfrew was the first person to play on a NCAA championship college hockey team and later coach a national champion?
65. Bill Orwig (2/17/08)
241
...that Bill Orwig hired Bob Knight as basketball coach at Indiana and has been inducted into the athletic halls of fame at three universities — Indiana, Michigan and Toledo ?
64. Marie Hartwig (2/17/08)
512
...that Marie Hartwig , faculty member at the University of Michigan from 1930–1976, was a lifelong advocate for women's sports and one of the first women inducted into the school's Hall of Honor ?
63. Chuck Ortmann (2/15/08)
1,505
...that halfback Chuck Ortmann punted 24 times in the famed 1950 Snow Bowl , having decided the best strategy was to keep the slick ball on the other side of the field in the opponents' hands?
62. Wally Weber (2/13/08)
2,904
...that Wally Weber , football player, coach and broadcaster at Michigan for 45 years, was renowned for his "polysyllabic fluency" and sounding like an "an educated foghorn"?
61. Doug Roby (2/13/08)
700
...that USOC president Doug Roby initially took no action against Tommie Smith and John Carlos after their Black Power salute at the 1968 Olympics , but expelled them after an IOC threat to expel the entire U.S. track team?
60. Harry Holiday (2/10/08)
506
...that swimming Hall of Famer Harry Holiday won 6 NCAA championships, and set 7 world and 18 American records in the mid-1940s but never competed in the Olympics due to World War II ?
59. Charlie Fonville (2/8/08)
2,523
...that Charlie Fonville broke a 14-year-old shot put world record by almost 12 inches (30 cm) at the 1948 Kansas Relays but was not allowed to stay with the other athletes because he was African-American ?
58. Bob Webster (2/7/08)
1,809
...that two-time Olympic diving gold medalist Bob Webster won his first collegiate diving title for a junior college with no pool, training off a board in his coach's back-yard sand pit?
57. Jenny Allard (2/4/08)
774
...that University of Michigan All-American softball player Jenny Allard has led Harvard University to its first four Ivy League softball championships since taking over as coach in 1995?
56. Dick Kimball (2/4/08)
903
...that Dick Kimball , University of Michigan diving coach 1958–2002, won national championships both as a springboard diver and trampoliner ?
55. William Revelli (2/2/08)
518
...that William Revelli , director of the University of Michigan Marching Band for 36 years, was the first to synchronize music and movement, in place of traditional rigid military-style formations?
54 Ralph W. Aigler (1/31/08)
...that law professor Ralph Aigler , once known as the "dominant figure in Michigan's athletics," negotiated the Big Ten 's exclusive contracts with the Rose Bowl in 1946 and 1953?
53. Newt Loken (1/30/08)
533
...that before coaching gymnastics at the University of Michigan from 1948 to 1983, Newt Loken was the NCAA all-around gymnastics champion in 1942?|views=533}}
52. Thomas Trueblood (1/29/08)
6,700
...that University of Michigan elocution professor Thomas Trueblood received nationwide attention when the Chicago Tribune reported in 1903 that he was offering a new "course in love making"?
51. Cliff Keen (1/29/08)
886
...that Cliff Keen ' s tenure as Michigan ’s wrestling coach (1925-1970) was the longest of any coach in any sport in NCAA history as of 1991?
50. Willis Ward (1/30/08)
2,668
...that Gerald Ford threatened to quit the Michigan football team when African-American player Willis Ward was kept out of a 1932 game in response to Georgia Tech 's refusal to play an integrated team?
49. George Jewett (1/27/08)
718
...that George Jewett was the first African-American to earn a varsity letter in football at both the University of Michigan and at Northwestern University ?
48. Rich Strenger (1/26/08)
1,233
...that offensive tackle Rich Strenger told reporters that Michigan Wolverines football coach Bo Schembechler ran a more strenuous training camp at the college level than he experienced in the NFL with the Detroit Lions ?
47. Scott Shafer (1/24/08)
...that Scott Shafer , hired in January 2008 as the Michigan Wolverines defensive coordinator , started in football as a high school and college quarterback in Ohio ?
46. Harry Newman (1/19/08)
572
...that New York Giants quarterback Harry Newman threw the first touchdown pass in an NFL Championship Game 75 years ago in the 1933 NFL Championship Game against the Chicago Bears ?
44-45. Ralph Heikkinen (1/17/08)
...that Ralph Heikkinen was the first All-American football player from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan , being raised in the Finnish-American communities of the Gogebic Range ?
43. Stanfield Wells (1/16/08)
605
...that Stanfield Wells was the first of more than ten All-American football players from Washington High School in Massillon, Ohio ?
42. Anton Zamloch (1/11/08)
2,901
...that 19th century magician and vaudeville star Anton Zamloch was accused, and then exonerated, of having "bewitched" a woman's wedding ring from her gloved hand?
41. Ed Frutig (1/11/08)
399
...that All-American end Ed Frutig was the main pass receiver for Heisman Trophy winner Tom Harmon from 1938-1940?
40. Maynard Morrison
506
...that coach Harry Kipke had to travel to the home of All-American Maynard Morrison in 1930 to seek his father's permission to switch Morrison from a fullback to a center ?
39. Bill Daley (1/7/08)
1,312
...that All-American fullback Bill Daley is the only person ever to win Little Brown Jug games playing for both Minnesota and Michigan ?
38. Paul G. Goebel (1/6/08)
...that All-American footballer Paul G. Goebel (pictured) recommended Gerald Ford to the coach of the Michigan football team and later urged Ford to run for Congress
37. Bob Chappuis (1/3/08)
...that, after eluding capture for three months when his B-25 bomber was shot down behind enemy lines in World War II , Bob Chappuis was the MVP of the Rose Bowl 60 years ago?
36. Bump Elliott (1/1/08)
...that All-American Bump Elliott and his brother Pete Elliott played halfback and quarterback for the Michigan football team that beat the USC Trojans 49-0 in the Rose Bowl 60 years ago today?
35. William Cunningham (12/30/07)
316
...that William Cunningham became Michigan's first All-American based on his performance in an 1898 game against Chicago that inspired Louis Elbel to write the school's fight song, The Victors ?
34. Gustave Ferbert (12/30/07)
1,468
...that Gustave Ferbert quit his job as head football coach at the University of Michigan in 1900 to prospect for gold in the Klondike Gold Rush and returned home in 1909 as a millionaire?
33. John Maulbetsch
...that the All-American football player John Maulbetsch was known as the "Featherweight Fullback " because he weighed only 155 pounds (70 kg) and ate two pies a day for dinner during his playing career?
32. Germany Schulz (12/26/27)
...that German-American football center Adolph F. "Germany" Schulz is credited for developing the "roving center" technique, which became the basis for the linebacker position?
31. Jack Blott (12/23/07)
500
...that Jack Blott , an All-American football center for the Michigan Wolverines , had a Major League Baseball career with the Cincinnati Reds lasting only two games?
30. James B. Craig (12/22/07)
261
...that James B. Craig , an All-American football halfback and quarterback , was the brother of Ralph Craig , a sprinter and gold medalist at the 1912 Summer Olympics ?
29. Frank Steketee (12/19/07)
5,512
...that, though records from the era are sketchy, press accounts reported that All-American football player Frank Steketee once kicked a 100-yard punt ?
28. Merv Pregulman (12/19/07)
1,919
...that All-American footballer Merv Pregulman , the Green Bay Packers ' first pick in the 1944 NFL Draft , nearly died in a kamikaze attack on his ship before ever playing a pro football game?
27. Robert Wahl (12/14/07)
1,030
...that twice named All-American football tackle Robert "Brick" Wahl later became CEO of a Fortune 500 irrigation equipment company?
26. Butch Woolfolk (12/13/07)
...that running back Butch Woolfolk was named MVP of both the Rose Bowl and the Bluebonnet Bowl in the same year?
25. Jamie Morris (12/12/07)
1,361
...that Jamie Morris of the Washington Redskins , originally considered too short to be a running back , holds the NFL record for the most rushing attempts in a game with 45?
24. Ted Petoskey (12/9/07)
...that 1933 Michigan Wolverines football All-Americans Ted Petoskey and Whitey Wistert debuted for the Major League Baseball Cincinnati Reds two days apart in September 1934?
23. Chris Howard
...that undefeated national champion 1997 Michigan Wolverines football team rushing leader and Hula Bowl MVP Chris Howard was released after fumbling five times in the preseason of the 1998 NFL season ?
22. Gene Derricotte (12/8/07)
...that in the 1947 college football rankings, southern voters refused to vote for the integrated Michigan Wolverines football team with black stars such as Gene Derricotte ?
21. Tom Slade (12/7/07)
...that college football coach Bo Schembechler died the day after attending the funeral of his 1971 quarterback Tom Slade and urging the football team to be "as good a Michigan man as Slade"?
20. Chuck Bernard (12/6/07)
...that Gerald Ford 's two greatest regrets in life were losing the starting center job in college to All-American Chuck Bernard and losing a presidential election?
19. George Hoey (12/5/07)
...that George Hoey still holds Michigan Wolverines football career and single-season records 40 years after his best season?
18. Ed Muransky (12/5/07)
...that in 1979 University of Michigan tackle Ed Muransky set the all-time record at the traditional pre-Rose Bowl "Beef Bowl" by eating 16 pounds of prime rib?
17. Jack Clancy (12/4/07)
...that although several Michigan Wolverines football wide receivers have eclipsed most of Jack Clancy ' s team records, they all have needed more games to do so?
16. Jim Detwiler (12/4/07)
...that the Toledo, Ohio native football player Jim Detwiler refused a recruiting trip invitation to Ohio State prompting a tonguelashing from Woody Hayes for disloyalty to Ohio?
15. Elmer Gedeon (12/3/07)
...that Washington Senators outfielder Elmer Gedeon , who pulled a crew member from a burning wreck, died while piloting a B-26 bomber over France?
14. Dan Dworsky (12/3/07)
...that former Michigan Wolverines football player Dan Dworsky designed Crisler Arena , the home of Michigan Wolverines basketball?
13. Dick Rifenburg (12/2/07)
...that Dick Rifenburg was a Michigan high school state champion in basketball and track & field , but was drafted to play professional American football ?
12. Julius Franks (12/2/07)
...that Julius Franks was the first African-American Michigan Wolverines football player to earn All-American honors?
11. Dean Dingman (12/1/07)
...that American football guard Dean Dingman was only the third true freshman to start on the Michigan Wolverines football offensive line ?
10. George Lilja (12/1/07)
...that George Lilja once played a Michigan Wolverines football game wearing another player's jersey , confusing many of his fans?
9. Jarrett Irons (12/1/07)
...that Jarrett Irons was the second freshman to lead the Michigan Wolverines football team in tackles?
8. Rod Payne (11/30/07)
...that when American football center Rod Payne broke his right wrist during a Michigan Wolverines football game, he started snapping the ball with his left hand?
7. Don Dufek (11/29/07)
...that safety Don Dufek was cut from the Seattle Seahawks four times?
6. Bill Yearby (11/29/07)
...that Michigan Wolverines football player Bill Yearby was an All-American football player as well as a champion shot putter who the coaches felt could have starred for the Wolverines basketball team?
5. Gordon Bell (11/29/07)
...that although Ohio State Buckeye Archie Griffin defended the Heisman Trophy in 1975, Michigan Wolverines football player Gordon Bell won the 1975 Big Ten rushing championship?
4. Jim Pace (11/29/07)
...that Michigan Wolverines football player Jim Pace not only won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football as the Most Valuable Player in the Big Ten Conference, but also won the Big Ten 60-yard indoor dash title?
3. Dennis Franklin (11/27/07)
...that Dennis Franklin was the first African American quarterback for the Michigan Wolverines football team?
2. Bob Timberlake (11/27/07)
...that Bob Timberlake , an unsuccessful placekicker for the New York Giants who made only 1 of 15 field goal attempts in his NFL career, was an award-winning quarterback for the Michigan Wolverines before he was drafted in 1965?
1. Carl Zamloch (8/23/07)
...that the Major League Baseball pitcher Carl Zamloch was also a professional magician ?