Joseph turner tcu

J. M. W. Turner

2024.02.07 19:41 qflybyyqm J. M. W. Turner

subreddit of Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775 - 1851), the British painter
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2013.08.26 04:15 sosuhme /r/nfl mods fantasy and pickem

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2018.08.09 02:46 mjg13X Home for fans of the 2017 A-10 Regular Season Champions

Rhode Island-born! Go Rams! This is the proud home for fans of the two-time A-10 tournament and two-time A-10 regular-season champion URI men's (and women's) basketball teams.
[link]


2024.05.14 07:21 ft420 D1 Baseball TV/Streaming for Tuesday 5/14: National Decency Day / Independence Day (Paraguay)

ET AWAY HOME VIDEO
11:00 AM UCONN at CINCINNATI ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM OMAHA at CREIGHTON FLOBaseball ($)
12:00 PM EASTERN KENTUCKY at MOREHEAD STATE ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM QUINNIPIAC at SACRED HEART Youtube / @PioBaseball
12:00 PM PRESBYTERIAN at WESTERN CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
12:30 PM TEXAS SOUTHERN at RICE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM FAIRFIELD at SAINT JOHN'S ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM VILLANOVA at SAINT JOSEPH'S ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON at SIENA Siena All-Access
*3:00 PM INDIANA STATE at BALL STATE CANCELLED
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3:00 PM DELAWARE at DELAWARE STATE NEC FRONT ROW
3:00 PM FLORIDA ATLANTIC at FLORIDA GULF COAST ESPN+ ($)
*3:00 PM WILLIAM & MARY at GEORGE MASON CANCELLED
3:00 PM ALBANY at LE MOYNE NEC FRONT ROW
3:00 PM MANHATTAN at LONG ISLAND NEC FRONT ROW
3:00 PM COPPIN STATE at MOUNT ST. MARY'S ESPN+
3:00 PM PENN STATE at PITTSBURGH ACCNX
3:00 PM NIAGARA at St. BONAVENTURE ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM NORTHEASTERN at UMASS - LOWELL AMERICA EAST TV
3:00 PM JAMES MADISON at VIRGINIA TECH ACCNX
3:00 PM OKLAHOMA at XAVIER 🔈 Audio Only
3:30 PM CENTRAL MICHIGAN at OAKLAND ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM STONEHILL at BRYANT AE TV
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4:00 PM COLUMBIA at WAGNER NEC FRONT ROW
4:30 PM VALPARAISO at NORTHWESTERN B1G+
*5:00 PM THE CITADEL at CHARLESTON SOUTHERN CANCELLED
*5:00 PM ALABAMA A&M at MURRAY STATE CANCELLED
5:00 PM UC DAVIS at SAN FRANCISCO ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM FLORIDA STATE at STETSON ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM BELMONT at TENNESSEE SECN+
5:00 PM GEORGIA STATE at USC UPSTATE ESPN+ ($)
*6:00 PM UNC ASHEVILLE at CHARLOTTE CANCELLED
*6:00 PM CLEMSON at COASTAL CAROLINA CANCELLED
*6:00 PM CHARLESTON at DUKE CANCELLED
6:00 PM CAMPBELL at EAST CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM MIAMI at FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL ESPN+ ($)
*6:00 PM QUEENS at GARDNER-WEBB CANCELLED
6:00 PM JACKSONVILLE at GEORGIA SOUTHERN ESPN+ ($)
*6:00 PM MERCER at GEORGIA TECH CANCELLED
6:00 PM EASTERN ILLINOIS at ILLINOIS STATE ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM JAX STATE at KENNESAW STATE ESPN+ ($)
*6:00 PM INDIANA at LOUISVILLE CANCELLED
6:00 PM EASTERN MICHIGAN at MICHIGAN STATE B1G+
6:00 PM MARSHALL at OHIO Youtube / @OhioBobcatTV
6:00 PM CAL POLY at PEPPERDINE ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM VIRGINIA MILITARY at RADFORD ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM NORTH FLORIDA at SOUTH FLORIDA ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM BETHUNE-COOKMAN at UCF 🔈 Audio Only
6:00 PM MD EASTERN SHORE at UMBC AMERICA EAST TV
*6:00 PM NORTH CAROLINA A&T at UNC GREENSBORO CANCELLED
*6:00 PM NORTH CAROLINA at UNC WILMINGTON CANCELLED
6:00 PM LIBERTY at WAKE FOREST đŸ“ș ACC NETWORK
6:30 PM WRIGHT STATE at KENTUCKY SECN+
7:00 PM UTRGV at A&M - CORPUS CHRISTI ESPN+ ($)
*7:00 PM EVANSVILLE at AUSTIN PEAY CANCELLED
7:00 PM SOUTH DAKOTA STATE at KANSAS STATE ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM ALCORN STATE at LAMAR ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM CENTRAL ARKANSAS at LITTLE ROCK ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM TEXAS STATE at McNEESE STATE ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM NORTH ALABAMA at MISSISSIPPI STATE SECN+
7:00 PM WASHINGTON at PORTLAND ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM Auburn vs Samford 🔈 Audio Only (AUB)
7:00 PM SOUTH ALABAMA at SOUTHEASTERN ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM NEW ORLEANS at SOUTHERN Jaguar Sports Network ($)
7:00 PM BELLARMINE at SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 🔈 Audio Only
*7:00 PM MIDDLE TENNESSEE at SOUTHERN INDIANA CANCELLED
7:00 PM OLE MISS at SOUTHERN MISS ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM BAYLOR at TCU ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM INCARNATE WORD at UTSA ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM ORAL ROBERTS at MISSOURI STATE ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM Houston vs Sam Houston State 🔈 Audio Only
7:30 PM SAINT MARY'S at UC SANTA BARBARA ESPN+ ($)
8:00 PM GRAND CANYON at BRIGHAM YOUNG ESPN+ ($)
8:00 PM PACIFIC at NEVADA MTN WEST NETWORK
9:00 PM CSU BAKERSFIELD at FRESNO STATE MTN WEST NETWORK
9:00 PM USC at GONZAGA ESPN+ ($) đŸ“ș SWX
9:00 PM LOYOLA MARYMOUNT at UC IRVINE ESPN+ ($)
*= time changed
submitted by ft420 to collegebaseball [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 03:54 JustinFantasma I made a beautiful Poker Table Randomizer for Tournaments

I made a beautiful Poker Table Randomizer for Tournaments
Hey poker and fellow card game enthusiasts!
As someone who frequently hosts poker tournaments for a group of 20-30 people, I've often found the task of assigning seating a bit of a logistical nightmare. It's crucial to keep the seating fair and random, but doing this manually every time was becoming a hassle.
So, being a problem-solving software engineer, I decided to take matters into my own hands! I've developed a tool that not only randomizes seating arrangements but also makes it convenient to display on a TV for everyone to see. No more last-minute scrambles or accusations of biased seating!
Key Features of the Poker Seat Randomizer:
  • Fully Randomized Seating Fast: Ensures that seating assignments are fair and unbiased.
  • Display on TV: Plug laptop into TV to easily share and shuffle the seating arrangement in real-time during your meetups.
  • Customizable Options: Tailor the settings to fit the specific needs of your tournaments.
  • Simple to Use: Just input the names of players, and the tool handles the rest.
  • Good looking: Design looks good in my opinion, made an effort to make it visually appealing.
I'm really excited to share this tool with the community and would love for you all to give it a try at your next game night. It's free and will stay free at core feature level, I don't really benefit from sharing this too much besides maybe some more mailing list subs and people finding my other random projects lol.
Check it out here: https://fantasma.dev/poker-table-randomizer
Looking forward to making our poker nights smoother and more enjoyable. Shuffle up and deal!
https://preview.redd.it/uju0mll1n30d1.png?width=1685&format=png&auto=webp&s=4b23f726320663385bb14713109cda83881a0534
https://preview.redd.it/1xzlell1n30d1.png?width=1900&format=png&auto=webp&s=bfc0a060b03723c661a842a8ebf95eff1caaaa31
https://preview.redd.it/nmdiws0nn30d1.png?width=673&format=png&auto=webp&s=59516c6d22ea15103963cbe409ef1e7703dcaded
submitted by JustinFantasma to poker [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 22:35 EJC28 Vikings 2024 Draft Analysis Compilation

Round 1, Pick 10 - J.J. McCarthy, QB, Michigan:
NFL: The Vikings move up one spot to find their future at the quarterback position. McCarthy is a winner (SEE: 27-1 record as a starter at Michigan) and big-time playmaker with arm talent and athleticism. Head coach Kevin O’Connell routinely sets his quarterbacks up for success and it should be no different with McCarthy.
CBS Sports: C+. They had to fill the quarterback spot, so it makes sense to take McCarthy. I don’t love him as much as others do, but it will be interesting to see how Kevin O’Connell and gang will make it work.
ESPN: The Vikings had no Plan B in the first round. They knew they had to come away with a quarterback after letting Kirk Cousins depart via free agency. They set their initial sites on North Carolina's Drake Maye, who went to the Patriots at No. 3, before moving up one spot to No. 10 to make McCarthy the fifth quarterback taken in the draft. While McCarthy was not their first choice to succeed Cousins, the Vikings will put him into the best environment for success among any of the 2024 first-round quarterback class. He'll sit behind Sam Darnold, at least initially, while coach Kevin O'Connell applies his considerable quarterback development skills. McCarthy will also be in good hands with new quarterbacks coach Josh McCown. And when he does get on the field, McCarthy will have a terrific array of skill players around him, from wide receivers Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison to running back Aaron Jones and tight end T.J. Hockenson.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Knows the lyrics to the MAS*H theme song.
Round 1, Pick 17 - Dallas Turner, DE, Alabama:
NFL: Turner played in a high-leverage scheme under Nick Saban, so he should fit well into Brian Flores’ unit in Minnesota. Adding an athletic freak like Turner with great first-step quickness, bend and burst is huge for a defense that’s always challenging the IQ of opposing QBs.
CBS Sports: A. Love this move to go get Turner. He will be the best edge player in this class. The Vikings have had a lot of success with edge players and he fits with what Brian Flores wants to do.
ESPN: The Vikings benefitted from the early run on quarterbacks, and the record number of 23 offensive players taken in the first round, to get one of the best defensive players in this draft. Turner will further revamp a Vikings defense that bid farewell to four starters during the spring and signed three others. While versatility is important in defensive coordinator Brian Flores' scheme, Turner said that the team's initial ask of him will be simple: "Start rushing the passer as soon as I get off the plane."
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: His browser homepage is the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Round 4, Pick 108 - Khyree Jackson, CB, Oregon:
NFL: Jackson is a later bloomer, having bounced around to several schools, and he'll turn 25 in training camp. But he has unusual length for a DB, at nearly 6-foot-4, and can be tried as a matchup piece for Brian Flores' defense.
CBS Sports: A. Alabama turned Oregon star. Reminds me of Xavien Howard as a prospect in that he’s a towering, physical CB with high highs and low lows. Tries to suffocate WRs at the line and reasonably effective doing so. Tackling is good. Quicker separators can get the best of fine. Precisely a Brian Flores type.
ESPN: The Vikings addressed the cornerback position after focusing on their front-seven during free agency. Jackson will be 25 when the season begins, but the team loved his height (nearly 6-foot-4), length (32 3/4 arm length) and instincts. The temptation is to consider him a multi-positional hybrid player at that size, but senior vice president of player personnel Ryan Grigson said: "We think he can be a hell of an outside corner." Jackson joins veteran Shaquill Griffin as the top two newcomers at the position.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Slept in a blanket fort throughout most of college.
Round 6, Pick 177 - Walter Rouse, OT, Oklahoma:
NFL: Rouse's run blocking is ahead of his pass protection, but the Sooners trusted him at left tackle more than former five-star recruit Cayden Green last year. Rouse has good experience at that spot and boasts ideal length, but he really hasn't played anywhere but left tackle and is a bit clunky in space.
CBS Sports: B. Classic Sooners blocker. Huge, clunky feet with plenty of power. Will torque defenders out of running lanes. Plays with strong grip strength. Not a tortoise getting out into space just won’t be a speciality in the NFL. Further ahead in pass protection but can be stretched beyond athletic limit by outside rushers.
ESPN: Rouse has extensive experience at left tackle, having started 52 games there during his college career at both Oklahoma and Stanford. He also showcased versatility at right tackle in the East-West Shrine Bowl, and that makes him a potentially valuable swing backup considering left tackle Christian Darrisaw has missed games for injuries in each of his three NFL seasons. Veteran David Quessenberry also re-signed after a year as the team's swing tackle.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: With the 1st pick of the 6th round, [team name] selects [positiion] [name].
Round 6, Pick 203 - Will Reichard, K, Alabama:
NFL: Our second specialist. Reichard is extremely accurate from 50 yards in, and he delivered a clutch 52-yarder in the Rose Bowl. With the new kickoff rules, Reichard's lack of booming leg strength might not be a problem, and playing more than half his games indoors also helps.
CBS Sports: C+. Multiple years of high-level accuracy, and his make percentage actually increased in each of three years. Big, not enormous leg. This is a need.
ESPN: Reichard has the inside track on replacing incumbent kicker Greg Joseph, who signed with the Packers as a free agent. O'Connell has said there will be a competition during training camp, and former XFL kicker John Parker Romo is already on the roster. But the Vikings were enamored with Reichard's field goal accuracy (6-for-7) in the pressure situations he faced in Alabama's playoff runs and believe he improved his kickoffs between 2022 and 2023 as well.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Played 2 seasons in Miami before realizing he was in Ohio.
Round 7, Pick 230 - Michael Jurgens, C, Wake Forest:
NFL: Jurgens probably has to make it as a center, lacking ideal power or movement skill. He's a bump-and-steer center who wins as much with his mind as with his physical gifts.
CBS Sports: B. Experienced center with reasonable burst off the line but no ability to sustain speed throughout the play. Power is there but can get overzealous and lunge, which hurts his balance and recovery ability. NFL-caliber size and length for the center spot.
ESPN: Jurgens was not invited to the combine or any all-star games, but senior vice president of personnel Ryan Grigson said the Vikings have been tracking him for several seasons. He was primarily a center but moved to guard during his final season at Wake Forest, proving to be "very productive," Grigson said. Proving that positional flexibility will be key for making the roster. The Vikings appear to be headed for a transition at left guard, where Blake Brandel -- a backup over the past few seasons -- is the favorite to start.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Dumped a garbage can of marbles down the stairs at school.
Round 7, Pick 232 - Levi Drake Rodriguez, DT, Texas A&M-Commerce:
NFL: He was playing at Southwestern Assemblies of God two years ago, so the leap in competition he'll face in the NFL will be significant. But his feisty, violent play style makes him intriguing.
CBS Sports: C+. Upfield rusher at defensive tackle who tends to make himself an easy target for interior blockers because of his high pad level and not always active hands. Showed some initial pass-rush plans but not a big counter type. Motor hums every play.
ESPN: Drake-Rodriguez came a long way to get drafted, something the Vikings considered heavily in their evaluation. He began his career playing football and baseball at Southwest Assemblies of God University, an NAIA school, and worked his way up. The Vikings loved his attitude during a visit and know "he doesn't take anything for granted" and "plays like a crazy man," according to senior vice president of personnel Ryan Grigson.
NFL Absolutely Not Fake News: Has additional 8mm film from Dallas, not the Kennedy thing just birds.
submitted by EJC28 to minnesotavikings [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 16:13 gdwallasign Homegrown achievement

It only took 600 years but I did not really start trying until 40 years ago when I noticed I only had one FA and was cooking. After that star FA aged out I just rolled with my yearly two draft picks and finally got it.
submitted by gdwallasign to BasketballGM [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 15:00 av-law Brigham Young and John D. Lee, The Executor of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, Were Joined At the Hip: They Were "Birds of a Feather" - Part IIIB

BRIGHAM YOUNG AND JOHN D. LEE, THE EXECUTOR OF THE MOUNTAIN MEADOWS MASSACRE, WERE JOINED AT THE HIP
THEY WERE “BIRDS OF A FEATHER”
Part III - B
Disposal of Property:
Brigham Young gave cattle stolen from the emigrants during the Massacre to John D. Lee. What to do with cattle in the possession of Brigham Young’s militia (for whatever reason) was a decision Brigham Young was asked to make and made. The Indians were supposed to have ambushed the emigrants all by themselves, yet Brigham’s soldiers ended up in charge of the spoils. Those rewards included seventeen children of tender age later recovered from southern Utah Mormon homes, where they were placed after their parents were murdered. Initially, John D. Lee had charge of Charley Fancher. “I told the Indian to let the boy alone. I took the child up in my arms, and put him back in the wagon, and saved his life. This little boy said his name was Charley Fancher, and that his father was Captain of the train. He was a bright boy. I afterwards adopted him, and gave him to Caroline. She kept him until Dr. Forney took all the children East.” (John D. Lee, “Last Confession and Statement of John D. Lee,” p. 16-17). The possessions of the Arkansas Company were a literal treasure trove of the kinds of things urgently needed on any frontier. Much of what had belonged to those unfortunate emigrants, who were beautifully equipped, was placed in the hands of Phillip Klingensmith, a Mormon Bishop in Cedar City, Utah. Bishop Klingensmith had been a prominent participant in the multi-day attacks against the Fancher party at Mountain Meadows. He would later ignore his dreadful oath and put his life at risk to publicly reveal the disgraceful details of that great American crime.
The cattle assigned by Brigham Young to John D. Lee, after the massacre, were clearly those taken from the murdered emigrants at Mountain Meadows. “At Lee’s first trial [he was saved by a hung jury], Klingensmith testified, and reaffirmed his story under cross-examination, that he and Charles Hopkins had accompanied Lee to the home of Brigham Young while they were in Salt Lake City to attend the October Conference [in 1857], and that President Young told him [Bishop Klingensmith] to give the cattle to Lee to use for the benefit of the Indians and the mission. Klingensmith added that Young also cautioned them, ‘What you know about this, say nothing about it.’” (Cleland and Brooks, Diaries of John D. Lee, Vol. 1, 319 n 18). “Charles Hopkins, a former member of the Mormon Battalion,” settled in southern Utah. “Present at the Mountain Meadows Massacre [and one of the speakers at the council held at the scene of the crime], he was also with Lee and Klingensmith when they discussed the disposal of the emigrants’ cattle with Brigham Young.” (Cleland and Brooks, Diaries of John D. Lee, Vol. 1, 320 n 22).
“If there isn’t a hell, there ought to be.” (Baskin, Reminiscences of Early Utah, 149). Young was a recipient of a carriage stolen from the Mountain Meadows emigrants. It was used by the Mormon leader in Salt Lake City as late as ten years after the crime. R.N. Baskin: “One day in 1867, when I was walking up Main street in Salt Lake city with John Chislet, one of the persons who crossed the plains with one of the celebrated hand-cart trains, but who afterwards apostatized from the church, he pointed to a carriage which was approaching at a few yards distance, and said: ‘That man in the carriage with Brigham Young is John D. Lee, the leader of the Mountain Meadows massacre, and the carriage in which they are riding is one which the emigrants had owned.’ That was the first time I had seen Lee. The carriage was accompanied by Brigham’s mounted, sacred guard. The next time I saw Lee was at his first trial, and I recognized him as the man whom I had before seen in the carriage with Brigham Young.” (R.N. Baskin, Reminiscences of Early Utah, 138-39).
Young lied again, under oath in an affidavit, when he “denied any knowledge of the disposition of the emigrants’ property.” (Baskin, Reminiscences, 116). Brigham Young Affidavit, under oath, July 30, 1875: “Eleventh: Did you ever give any directions concerning the property taken from the emigrants at the Mountain Meadows massacre, or know anything as to its disposition? Answer: No; I never gave any directions concerning the property taken from the company of emigrants at the Mountain Meadows massacre, nor did I know anything of that property or its disposal, and I do not to this day, except from public rumor.”
It was claimed that “Young as Utah’s Governor failed to have Lee arrested . . . oversaw the church appropriation of the spoils, and allowed Lee and Haight to act in the legislature despite his knowledge of their guilt.” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 393). “Lee claimed Brigham Young told a Cedar City congregation that members of the Fancher party had persecuted the Saints and ‘killed our prophets in Carthage Jail.’” (Bagley, Blood of the Prophets, 249). With hundreds of head of cattle and stolen spoils, the Church’s acquisition, all by itself, puts lie to the claim that the Indians, and not John D. Lee and his minions, did the dirty work. “ . . . ‘Young had the benefit of the property of the murdered Emigrants and defrauded the United States’ by claiming it as his gift to the Indians.” (Prosecutor Sumner Howard informed the U.S. Attorney General “of his belief,” cited at Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 396).
The First Trial – Joined at the Hip:
George Hicks, a brave dissenter in a sea of Saints, was excommunicated for “sending a letter to the Salt Lake Tribune noting that Lee rode his horse ‘by the side of Brigham’s carriage.’” Hicks implied that Young shared in Lee’s well-known guilt. (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 391). An 1874 meeting, after Lee’s excommunication, was the last time the old warriors met. For all of his life – John D. Lee’s life, at least into the 1870s – Brigham Young protected him from apprehension. Lee knew secrets which, if once exposed, threatened the life of Brigham Young, and the future of the Church he ruled from about 1844 to 1877, the date of his death.
Marshall William Stokes captured Lee, found hiding in an animal pen near his house in Panguitch. “Young was clearly worried about his own legal jeopardy.” He “asked Daniel Wells to find the copybook containing his September 10, 1857, letter to Isaac Haight ‘and put it into a safe where it will be secure and at hand if called for.’” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 391). It is not noted that he requested the same disposition for Haight’s September 7, 1857, Letter to him. He would later deny, under oath, that he could produce his letter to Haight, even after a diligent search, probably because it tacitly encouraged the Indians to do as they liked. The letter to Haight, which was never produced during Young’s lifetime – though he clearly knew exactly where it was – was produced in 1884, after his death. Isaac Haight’s September 7, 1857, Express to Brigham Young, the Mountain Meadows equivalent of the eighteen-and-a-half-minute gap on the Watergate tapes, has never been produced. That letter, perhaps the most important letter the prophet ever received, has been destroyed, concealed or suppressed (like the 1832 first and only Holographic Account of Joseph Smith’s First Vision of the Son without the Father “brought to light” from Joseph Fielding Smith’s office safe in 1965). The loss of Haight’s Letter bespeaks the absurdity of the claim, made by the authors of Vengeance Is Mine, the long-awaited apologetic Church-aided publication of the history of the cover-up, who say that they have received, unlike anyone else ever on earth, one hundred percent of the documents, many held from public view for more than a century by the less-than-transparent Church. Documents seen to pertain to the cover-up of that great American crime. When the Government tried to ascertain in the nineteenth century where the bear hid the honey, pages were removed from dozens of histories and documents, including some from the diaries of John D. Lee. And most particularly Haight’s Express to Young prepared and sent before the final solution at Mountain Meadows ever occurred.
The Second Trial – Brigham Young Betrays His Most Obedient Servant:
“Brigham Young gives unsuccessful order to prevent massacre but becomes accessory after the fact. He later tells participants that he approves of the massacre and lets them know he expects them to exonerate each other in [a] court of law. He publicly intimidates anyone who is inclined to give evidence against Mormon participants. He refuses to give federal authorities information that would implicate nearly all [of the] adults of [a] small Mormon community in [the] massacre and division of victims’ property. Then, when total denial becomes impossible, Young scapegoats three men through excommunication and arranges for participants to testify against (and jurymen to convict) only John D. Lee, Brigham Young’s adopted son and Council of Fifty member.” (Quinn, Extensions of Power, 755-56). Lee challenged the excommunication and asked for a hearing. Young promised him relief. In a letter from Apostle Erastus Snow delivered by one of Snow’s sons, that Lee “knew” had been “written by orders of Brigham Young,” Lee learned that Brigham Young didn’t mean what he had said about the excommunication. He had told his colleague, “I am your friend and not your enemy. You shall have a rehearing.” (Lee, Confessions, 265). The letter, however, told Lee, “You will not press an investigation at this time . . . . Our advice is to make yourself scarce, and keep out of the way.” (Ibid., 266). “When I read the letter, I knew I had nothing to hope for from the Church, and my grief was as great as I could bear. To add to my troubles, Brigham Young sent word to my wives that they were all divorced from me and could leave me if they wished to do so. This was the greatest trouble that I had ever had in my life, for I loved all my wives.” In consequence of Brigham’s advice, “eleven of my wives deserted me . . . .”
A verdict in a second trial, following a hung jury in a first trial, convinced Lee that Church leaders had selected him to be the “scapegoat.” “In Lee’s mind, Young had decided to offer his blood [Lee’s blood] as an atonement for the sins of all those complicit in the massacre.” “The verdict dissolved the fidelity Lee had long maintained toward his surrogate father.” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 394). Daniel H. Wells, a weasel, close to the prophet and the militia, traveled south to superintend the cynical process, reporting the facts back to his boss. The deceitful plan was intended to direct criticism (and punishment) elsewhere.
Lee insinuated Brigham Young’s guilt for the Mountain Meadows Massacre in a brief but fiery speech delivered to the crowd assembled to view his execution in 1877. Two weeks later, at the dedication of the St. George temple, Brigham Young worried that he too might be arrested “after Lee’s insinuation of his guilt.” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 404). Lee’s intransigence surfaced at the execution, and in his end-of-life account, Mormonism Unveiled. Brigham Young noticed, and was shaken by, his adopted son’s criticism. Approximately six months after the execution of his previously trusted servant, Brigham also passed the torch. Perhaps, in the halls of a Mormon heaven, a disentangled John D. Lee, who dismissed his previously precious Master on the day of his death with an embittered reprisal, may have something further to say.
As evidence of the final break between the two old warriors, as reflected in Lee’s end-of-life concerns, Young and Daniel H. Wells gave an interview to a New York Herald correspondent. Lee is dead, and Young and Wells can say whatever they like without fear of rebuttal. “Lee,” they said, “and a few other sinners took advantage of the emigrants’ boorish behavior and the unsettled state of the territory to gratify their desire for plunder.” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 397). It was an ultimate insult, the unkindest cut of all. A cruel and thoughtless postmortem. Young’s biographer, John G. Turner, noted, by way of response that, “No amount of friendly journalism or further statements by church leaders would have removed the dark stain the Mountain Meadows Massacre had left on Young’s reputation.” (Ibid., 397). There had been no punishment for two decades, and when the reckoning came, one fanatic paid with his life for the deaths of one hundred and twenty emigrants, men, women and children. Every other offender skated, avoiding responsibility for that great American crime. There was no impartial investigation. There was no ecclesiastical punishment for more than a hundred people implicated one way or another in the atrocity at Mountain Meadows. And until, and even until some time after 1870, Brigham Young protected his subordinate from efforts to bring even him, one man, to justice.
A Final Analysis:
John D. Lee, because of his privileged access to Brigham Young, was not just a local leader. He was Young’s southern Utah alter ego. As the southern Utah emissary of the supreme leader, his jurisdiction, like that of Porter Rockwell (another notorious enforcer with notches on his belt), may be seen as that of a deputy at large, as an agent without boundaries. No southern Utah leader – not Haight, Higbee, Dame, Klingensmith, or any of very many others – had John D. Lee’s “cojones,” or equal access to the prophet’s ear. The bonds between the violent leader, and his most obedient servant, were eternal. The thought that these two men were ambivalent about their shared objectives, at odds with each other and dishonest in their personal communications, one with another, is farcical. As is the notion that the sly fox was deaf and dumb and blind for more than a decade. Lee was Brigham Young’s strong southern Utah competence, the man among men who knew what his master required. Young’s harsh rhetoric, violent to extreme, George Albert Smith’s harsh rhetoric, equally ugly, Young’s incitement of the southern leaders and chiefs, his invitations to Indian allies on the northern and southern routes to steal the emigrants’ cattle, martial law, the Prophet’s restrictions on overland travel, and his indifference to his militia’s murders and beheadings of Indians and dissidents hardly bespoke tender feelings capable of ever being “harrowed” up.
After it became apparent to everyone that the old story (the Indians did it, the Mormons did not) had no legs, that longstanding “official lie,” told to everyone everywhere many thousands of times until 1869 was abruptly abandoned. “The Salt Lake Tribune later noted the policy change. For twelve years [1857 to 1869] their voice [the voice of the Church] was one of indignant denial that any Mormons were engaged in the affair.” By 1869, any person who believed that tall tale was deaf, dumb, blind or devious. “[After a few hesitating admissions in 1871], ‘the whole Mormon people [turning on a dime] changed front as suddenly as a well-drilled regimine,’ the paper noted caustically. LDS newspapers had furiously denounced the Tribune for accusing Mormons, but the denunciations were now aimed at Haight, Higbee and Lee. ‘The defense they then had for all the Mormons they now reserve for Brigham Young and the heads of the Church,’ the Tribune noted.” (Bagley, Blood of the Prophets, 270-71). To understand that ignominious policy change is to understand the central theme of the new book on the cover-up, Vengeance Is Mine. Blame anyone else for whatever you will, but protect the tyrant Brigham Young. The book, by faithful Mormon authors, with the assistance of the Church, is just the latest effort to put that burr on someone else’s saddle. The Tribune spoke the truth to the Saints in 1873. “If they were so badly mistaken in the former case, is it not just possible that they are mistaken as to Brigham’s innocence?” (Salt Lake Tribune, cited at Bagley, Blood of the Prophets, 271).
“Called to be the presiding elder of the branch at Harmony on December 22, 1861 [four years after the massacre], he [Lee] was sustained with the typical unanimous vote and invited everyone in the settlement to a great Christmas feast. Before the celebration ended, it began to rain. It would not stop for forty days . . . . The upper story of Sarah Caroline’s house collapsed and crushed two of Lee’s sleeping children, killing them.” “Lee, who saw the hand of God in everything, blamed himself for the catastrophe.” (Bagley, Blood of the Prophets, 299). “Great torrents ripped through the fields of Mountain Meadows and cut the trace of Magotsu Creek into a deep arroyo. The resulting disruption of the water table changed the valley from a luxuriant oasis into a sagebrush plain, a transformation that helped to inspire the local belief that God had cursed the place.” (Ibid., 250). “[Juanita] Brooks reported that 857 families had lived in Cedar City in 1857, but two years later only 386 were left. Official church records indicate the depopulation was even more dramatic, that only about twenty families remained in Cedar City in April 1859.” (Ibid., 242).
In the final analysis, this buck stopped with Brigham Young, and with the right-hand man attached to his hip in a Mormon temple. And to the shared history and experiences of two fanatical rascals. To those a disappointed George Hicks, a man who had weathered many storms, was heard to call, for the best of all good reasons, “Birds of a feather.”
Website: MormonismUnderTheMicroscope.com
submitted by av-law to exmormon [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 07:43 ft420 D1 Baseball TV/Streaming for Sunday 5/12: Mothers' Day / Memorial Day (Israel)

ET AWAY HOME VIDEO
11:00 AM WESTERN KENTUCKY at LOUISIANA TECH ESPN+ ($)
11:00 AM CANISIUS at MOUNT ST. MARY'S ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM MANHATTAN at ALBANY AE TV
12:00 PM GEORGIA STATE at COASTAL CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM KENTUCKY at FLORIDA đŸ“ș SEC NETWORK
12:00 PM SAM HOUSTON STATE at FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM UMASS at GEORGE WASHINGTON ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM XAVIER at GEORGETOWN Youtube @GeorgetownAthletics
12:00 PM MERRIMACK at LE MOYNE NEC FRONT ROW
12:00 PM BRYANT at MAINE AMERICA EAST TV
12:00 PM FAIRFIELD at NIAGARA ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM LOUISVILLE at NORTH CAROLINA đŸ“ș ACC NETWORK
12:00 PM RICHMOND at RHODE ISLAND ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM IONA at RIDER BRONCVISION
12:00 PM SAINT JOHN'S at SETON HALL FLOBaseball ($)
12:00 PM NORFOLK STATE at STONEHILL NEC FRONT ROW
12:00 PM DELAWARE at STONY BROOK FLOBaseball ($)
12:00 PM PRESBYTERIAN at THE CITADEL ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM NJIT at UMASS - LOWELL AMERICA EAST TV
12:00 PM GARDNER-WEBB at UNC ASHEVILLE ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM BUTLER at VILLANOVA FLOBaseball ($)
12:00 PM CLEMSON at WAKE FOREST đŸ“ș ESPN2
12:00 PM CHARLOTTE at WICHITA STATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM KENT STATE at AKRON ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM CENTRAL MICHIGAN at BALL STATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM UMBC at BINGHAMTON AMERICA EAST TV
1:00 PM NORTHEASTERN at CHARLESTON FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM RADFORD at CHARLESTON SOUTHERN ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM MD EASTERN SHORE at DELAWARE STATE NEC FRONT ROW
1:00 PM BOWLING GREEN at EASTERN MICHIGAN Eagle All-Access
1:00 PM COPPIN STATE at FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON NEC FRONT ROW
1:00 PM EASTERN KENTUCKY at FLORIDA GULF COAST ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM VCU at FORDHAM ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM LOUISIANA at GEORGIA SOUTHERN ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM DUKE at GEORGIA TECH ACCNX
1:00 PM WINTHROP at HIGH POINT ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM EVANSVILLE at INDIANA STATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM KENNESAW STATE at JACKSONVILLE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM MARSHALL at JAMES MADISON ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM HOUSTON at KANSAS ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM WAGNER at LONG ISLAND NEC FRONT ROW
1:00 PM USC UPSTATE at LONGWOOD ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM OHIO at MIAMI OH Chatterbox Sports ($)
1:00 PM CAMPBELL at MONMOUTH FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM ELON at NORTH CAROLINA A&T FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM HOLY CROSS at NAVY ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM MILWAUKEE at OAKLAND ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM NORTHWESTERN at OHIO STATE B1G+
1:00 PM APPALACHIAN STATE at OLD DOMINION ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM RUTGERS at PENN STATE B1G+
1:00 PM FLORIDA STATE at PITTSBURGH ACCNX
1:00 PM STETSON at QUEENS ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM CCSU at SACRED HEART Youtube / @PioBaseball
1:00 PM DAYTON at SAINT LOUIS ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM TROY at TEXAS STATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM TEXAS at UCF ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM CREIGHTON at UCONN FLOBaseball ($) / BEDSN
1:00 PM SAMFORD at UNC GREENSBORO ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM HOFSTRA at UNC WILMINGTON FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM SOUTH FLORIDA at UTSA ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM NC STATE at VIRGINIA ACCNX
1:00 PM MIAMI at VIRGINIA TECH ACCNX
1:00 PM KANSAS STATE at WEST VIRGINIA ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM MERCER at WESTERN CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM SOUTHEAST MISSOURI at WESTERN ILLINOIS ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM NORTHERN ILLINOIS at WESTERN MICHIGAN Broncos All Access
1:00 PM TOWSON at WILLIAM & MARY FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM EAST TENNESSEE STATE at WOFFORD ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM WRIGHT STATE at YOUNGSTOWN ST 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM LSU at ALABAMA SECN+
2:00 PM FLORIDA A&M at ALABAMA STATE Hornet Sports Network ($)
2:00 PM SOUTHERN MISS at ARKANSAS STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM MISSOURI STATE at BELMONT ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM AUSTIN PEAY at CENTRAL ARKANSAS ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM MOREHEAD STATE at EASTERN ILLINOIS ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM IOWA at ILLINOIS B1G+
2:00 PM ILLINOIS STATE at ILLINOIS CHICAGO ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SOUTHEASTERN at INCARNATE WORD ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM BETHUNE-COOKMAN at JACKSON STATE JSU Sports Network ($)
2:00 PM MIDDLE TENNESSEE at JAX STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM BELLARMINE at LIPSCOMB ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SOUTHERN INDIANA at LITTLE ROCK ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM MICHIGAN STATE at MINNESOTA B1G+
2:00 PM AUBURN at MISSOURI SECN+
2:00 PM VALPARAISO at MURRAY STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM INDIANA at NEBRASKA B1G+
2:00 PM NEVADA at NEW MEXICO MTN WEST NETWORK
2:00 PM LAMAR at NICHOLLS STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM NORTH FLORIDA at NORTH ALABAMA ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM NEW ORLEANS at NORTHWESTERN STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SAINT THOMAS at OMAHA MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
2:00 PM NORTHERN COLORADO at ORAL ROBERTS MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
2:00 PM GEORGE MASON at SAINT JOSEPH'S ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM TENNESSEE TECH at SIU EDWARDSVILLE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM NORTH DAKOTA STATE at SOUTH DAKOTA STATE MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
2:00 PM BRADLEY at SOUTHERN ILLINOIS ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM NEW MEXICO STATE at TCU ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM EAST CAROLINA at TULANE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM MEMPHIS at UAB ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM LINDENWOOD at UT MARTIN ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM PURDUE at MICHIGAN B1G+
3:00 PM MISSISSIPPI STATE at ARKANSAS đŸ“ș SEC NETWORK
3:00 PM MARYLAND at BOSTON COLLEGE đŸ“ș ACC NETWORK
3:00 PM UTRGV at CAL BAPTIST ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM UTAH TECH at CAL POLY ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM ABILENE CHRISTIAN at GRAND CANYON ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM CANISIUS at MOUNT ST. MARY'S ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM BAYLOR at OKLAHOMA ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM TEXAS TECH at OKLAHOMA STATE ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM UCLA at OREGON STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 NETWORKS
3:00 PM PORTLAND at PEPPERDINE ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM STEPHEN F. AUSTIN at SACRAMENTO STATE ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM SAN DIEGO at SAN FRANCISCO ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM LOYOLA MARYMOUNT at SANTA CLARA ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM UT ARLINGTON at SEATTLE U WAC International
3:00 PM MARIST at SIENA ESPN+
3:00 PM TENNESSEE at VANDERBILT đŸ“ș ESPN2
3:00 PM OREGON at WASHINGTON đŸ“ș PAC-12 WASHINGTON
3:00 PM USC at WASHINGTON STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 LOS ANGELES
3:30 PM GEORGIA STATE at COASTAL CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM UC DAVIS at CAL STATE FULLERTON ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM UC SAN DIEGO at CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM SAN JOSE STATE at CALIFORNIA PAC-12 PLUS (CAL-2)
4:00 PM UC SANTA BARBARA at CSU BAKERSFIELD ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM UNLV at FRESNO STATE MTN WEST NETWORK
4:00 PM UC IRVINE at LONG BEACH STATE ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM HOLY CROSS at NAVY ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM PACIFIC at SAINT MARY'S ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM AIR FORCE at SAN DIEGO STATE MTN WEST NETWORK
4:00 PM ARIZONA STATE at STANFORD PAC-12 PLUS (STAN)
5:00 PM MERCER at WESTERN CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM TEXAS A&M at OLE MISS đŸ“ș SEC NETWORK
7:00 PM UC RIVERSIDE at HAWAI'I 🔈 Audio Only
9:00 PM ARIZONA at UTAH đŸ“ș PAC-12 NETWORKS
*= time changed
submitted by ft420 to collegebaseball [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 07:24 Successful-Bread-347 December, 1984 bands to check

Here is the next list of bands for checking. These bands played on NDR radio in December, 1984.
I've removed bands that were already in the October or November 1984 lists as these have already been checked and so have been removed. Also quickly went through and removed some obvious wrong bands. Thanks to everyone but especially to u/Nitokris666 and u/violetvvviolet for checking the November, 1984 list so carefully (I think both went through almost the entire list).
Search terms I use with youtube, google, discogs for rarer bands are "[band name] +band +1984 (or +demo)".
If you think a band is ruled out - please leave a comment with the band name and the workds "RULED OUT" - and please give a sentence as to why they are ruled out ('female lead', 'jazz band', etc.) but please ONLY say RULED OUT if it is clear they are not the TMS band. Just because you hear they are using a synth and no guitars in a song doesn't mean that they didn't use heavy guitar in another song! If you think a band sounds similar - please leave a comment with the band name and "SIMILAR" so we can really dig deeply into them more.
submitted by Successful-Bread-347 to TheMysteriousSong [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 06:05 daffodillover27 Help! How do I avoid info dumping on a TBM? Asking for a friend


That “friend” is my Mother, and I’m pretty sure IATA. I just ruined my Mom’s day/life right in time for actual Mother’s Day (USA)
so yeah

Some backstory: My Mom and I have a good relationship. All of her kids are still TBM except my two gay brothers. (Go figure) we have Pioneer ancestors, RM’s, married in the temple, yada yada yada.
I’ve been deconstructing for years, now PIMO. I decided to start strategically talking about my “concerns” with TBM family. Recently I told my Mom I was reading John Turner’s “Brigham Young; Pioneer Prophet.” At a family dinner I read aloud a disturbing excerpt that mentioned one of our Pioneer ancestors, who, at 73 tried to get Brigham Young to let him take three 13 year olds as additional wives. My family all agreed; “Those were different times.”
This morning my Mom called me to ask if I was reading anti-Mormon literature. I decided it was a good time to mention a few of my church history concerns; specifically the Book of Abraham. She became defensive. She said she knew Joseph Smith was a prophet, then started crying. We talked for 30 minutes. Eventually she hung up on me.
I don’t think I was consciously trying to destroy her shelf, but I’ll admit I wouldn’t be sad if it broke. And when she said “and you think everyone at the Kirkland temple lied about seeing Jesus?” I said, “well they were all drunk.” Then “And the three witnesses didn’t see the gold plates?!?” And I mentioned that they said they saw them with spiritus eyes.” 👀 Then đŸ€ź out came: Book of the Hebrews, the Kinderhook plates, JS in the barn, mummies
.so yeah
..
All of the things I shared were in Bushman’s “Rough Stone Rolling” which (correct me if I’m wrong) you can buy at Deseret Book, or were things on the church website. I asked her to read RSR, she refused.
She asked me why I even served a mission if I didn’t believe. I told her that I had received further light and knowledge (I’m paraphrasing) and that now it seemed very unlikely to me that JS was a man of God. And although loosing the faith of one’s childhood is conflicting and uncomfortable, I felt at peace with what I had read. Many things I’d always questioned suddenly made sense. I told her that I hope to always be a person open to truth, goodness, and learning.
☎ click.
Right before she hung up on me in tears, she begged me to at least let my kids still attend church. (My husband and I are primary teachers so
duh)
I texted her immediately to apologize. I said I wouldn’t talk about my faith crisis with her anymore. I told her I loved her. But wow
 It wasn’t good. My EXMO brother warned me that her shelf was unbreakable. Considering tomorrow is Mother’s Day and TSCC is the most important thing in her life, my timing could have been different.
Info dumping is bad right? It never works, right? Why is it so tempting to do????? Is she ever going to be able to sympathize with my concerns or doubts? How do you all “resist the temptation” to talk about everything

Happy Mother’s Day everyone. đŸ”„ outer darkness here I come đŸ”„
submitted by daffodillover27 to exmormon [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 18:32 hallach_halil Undrafted free agents from 2024 who could make an early impact:

Undrafted free agents from 2024 who could make an early impact:
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The 2024 NFL Draft has come and gone, as we wrap up our extensive coverage of this stage of the league calendar. Before we sort of transition over into the final stages of discussing how teams have built up their rosters, discussing how the new additions fit in across my divisional draft and roster review series starting next week, I wanted to show some love to a few players who didn’t actually hear their names called over the course of the weekend in Detroit.
Just last year, I called out Bears quarterback Tyson Bagent, who ended up starting four games, Vikings linebacker Ivan Pace Jr., who was a borderline Pro Bowl performer, and Buccaneers defensive back Christian Izien, who was their quasi-starter in the slot. So there’s always still talent to be found once the draft is wrapped up and while opportunity has to be taken into account here, in the right situation there are UDFAs that could play significant roles as early as this season, even if it’s not in a starting capacity necessarily.
Here are some names, who I believe are capable of contributing and are in a situation where they could get a chance to do so:
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RB DeShaun Fenwick, Oregon State – New England Patriots

This was actually one of the first players I wrote about during this pre-draft process, when I outlined him as one of the biggest standouts from the 2024 college all-star events, having watched him consistency showing up in positive ways during East-West Shrine Bowl practices. Funnily enough, I talked a lot about what Fenwick did during one-on-ones as a receiver in that piece, considering he only hauled in 30 passes across 50 career games between South Carolina and Oregon State. You saw him detach from guys down the field on corner and streak routes, but really what stood out was his attention to detail in that regard, altering tempo, throwing in rocker-steps and freezing the feet of guys covering him. Along with that, he has clearly worked on his technique as a pass-protector, erasing the space to blitzer and striking them with a tight punch. As a runner, he plays up to his size at 6’1”, 220 pounds as a battering ram RB2 for the Beavers paired up with what could be a top-ten back in next year’s class in Damien Martinez. However, while the ran a lot inside and outside zone there, I also really like Fenwick’s projection into more of a gap-scheme oriented approach, thanks to how well he can press creases vertically, make subtle adjustments to get to the opposite edge after blockers after forcing guys on the second level to commit and get skinny through tight creases despite his size.
So as I consider what this Patriots offense could look like under their new leadership, I think this is a back that could fit very well. Coming over from Cleveland, I expect offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt to re-commit to a more downhill-oriented approach, considering the pieces they have on the O-line outside of maybe former first-round pick left guard Cole Strange, when they seemingly wanted to dabble more in the wide zone meta we saw across the NFL. While they did bring in Antonio Gibson as more of a receiving option and someone who can provide some big-play potential, I think he’s someone you want to take mental processing off the table as more of a one-cut-and-go zone runner. Yet, Rhamondre Stevenson for as an even slightly bigger back then Fenwick, has some pretty sweet feet to navigate around points of pressure and pace himself as he sets up pulling linemen. As a fifth-year player, I think the former Oregon State RB can operate in a similar mold, even though I don’t like him as much when he gets out to the perimeter and utilizes blockers in space, while lacking that extra gear to pull away from the pursuit. However, he can take some of the load off the starter with his willingness to drop his pads and have a cumulative effect on the defense taking those kinds of blows. Paired with that, for a rookie he can also be useful taking on pass-pro reps and only dropped two of 32 catchable targets in his career with consistent overhand technique. Neither JaMychal Hasty nor Ke’Shawn Vaugh have really established themselves as committee options and Kevin Harris, who the Pats drafted two years ago with a similar profile, has only been active in nine games and touched the ball 37 times.
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WR Isaiah Williams, Illinois – Detroit Lions

Someone I didn’t bring up as a player who emerged from the college all-star circuit but had a solid Shrine Bowl week himself, was Isaiah Williams. Formerly recruited as a four-star dual-threat quarterback, he made the transition to catching passes three years ago and while Illinois put the ball in his hands to hit his fellow receivers a few times during stretch, he put up just under 1100 yards and five touchdowns on 94 touches this past season, earning himself first-team All-Big Ten accolades. However, the reason not him but teammate Casey Washington actually got drafted is that Williams that he’s on the smaller end at 5’9”, 180 pounds and ran a 4.63 at the combine. To me, unless you look at the former as a pure special teamer, the NFL clearly took the wrong guy here. Wiliams is highly elusive off the line with subtle shifts or more violent sticks to gain positioning on the release, putting the defender in trail technique off the snap pretty much and then he plays so much faster than hos 40-time would indicate, to where you see him rapidly get on top of guys with that burst in slot fades. He can accelerate through his cuts, packs some effective swipe-moves to create separation against tighter coverage at the break-point and consistently was friendly to his quarterback. His drop rate is a little higher (7.0%) than you’d like to see and his contested-catch rate (35.3%) lower, but he shows no hesitation of extending for the ball in traffic and you love what he provides after the catch. He already has that lower center of gravity to be efficient with his transitions and make more dramatic moves in the open field, but he also shows the balance to pull through wraps, forcing 51 missed tackles across 164 combined catches over the last two seasons.
So I look at this Lions depth chart, they just locked up Amon-Ra St. Brown as their “power slot extraordinaire”, they hope former first-round pick Jameson Williams can build on some of the flashes late last season as a field-stretcher and Kalif Raymond is back for a fourth season in Detroit as someone who’s averaged 560 yards per year with them and has been their designated punt returner. However, beyond that, you’re looking at Donovan Peoples-Jones, who they traded a sixth-round pick to Cleveland for, but only averaged just over six offensive snaps outside of a meaningless week 18 game. I kind of liked Antoine Green as a seventh-round pick for them last year, who was this vertical ball-winner for North Carolina, because they didn’t really have that skill-set outside of maybe Marvin Jones Jr. – who’s now off the roster – but the then-rookie only caught one pass for two yards. The only other receiver currently on the roster anybody would even recognize by name is former Saint Tre’Quan Smith, who was bouncing between practice squads and was only active for one game last year. So there’s a pretty good chance Isaiah Williams makes it through final cuts as this team’s WR5 at least. He provides the YAC skills that this team is somewhat lacking and can be an extension of this run game, just like he was for the Fighting Illini, being a fly sweep threats, running backside bubbles or just creating microwave offense on screens.
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WR Marcus Rosemy-Jacksaint, Georgia – Washington Commanders

Sticking with the wide receiver position, we’re looking at quite a different profile to Isaiah Williams with this 6’1”, 205-pound Georgia wideout. Rosemy-Jacksaint was four-star recruit in 2020, who struggled to work his way onto the field for a deep Bulldogs receiving corp, with just 11 catches over his first two years. He became a bigger part of the rotation in 2022 (29-337-two touchdowns), but really established himself as a senior, turning 34 grabs into 535 yards and four TDs. I first became aware of this player during Senior Bowl practices, but I actually didn’t love what I saw there. In a setting that favors shifty separators, who can take advantage of the extended space provided to them during one-on-ones, his routes became somewhat predictable with no deceptive speed and footwork alternations. That’s not saying I didn’t also see him come out of his front-loaded staggered stance without any wasted movement and didn’t like how he was able to violently stick his foot in the ground for sharp transitions as a bigger body-type, along with catching the first touchdown on gameday through contact. Going to the tape, I thought he was very disciplined with his route-stems, snapped off curls well and I really appreciated his play-strength, battling for positioning, defeating leverage of defenders and nudging them off at the top of routes. You combine that with big, natural hands (zero drops on 98 targets over the past two seasons), large catch-radius with those 33-inch arms and competitiveness with the ball in air, hauling in seven of 11 contested targets last year.
However, what really made me buy in with Rosemy-Jacksaint and what I think the Commander coaching staff will fall in love with is what he provides as a blocker. Works up to off-corners under good control and is able to latch his hands inside their frame at a high rate. You can deploy him in closer splits, cracking back on safeties, getting a tight grip on the point-man of bunches or even pinning edge defenders inside on plays out to the perimeter. And you see this guy’s hands stay attached until the echo of the whistle a lot of times to take defenders for a ride. Is there anybody this profile reminds you of, thinking about what new GM Adam Peters had in San Francisco? – Jauan Jennings is who came to mind for me. Just like the Niner’s dirty-work receiver and chain-mover, the question with the former Bulldog is the long speed, backed up by running an abysmal 4.81 at Georgia’s pro day. I’m not aware of any off-field concerns, which led to Jennings going undrafted, who I believe offered more after the catch. Washington’s offense will have a much more spread-out look than San Francisco of course with the combination of OC Kliff Kingsbury and second overall pick Jayden Daniels, but to complement a smaller receiving corp that will likely rely on the guy they selected 100th overall in Luke McCaffrey – who I believe is still learning the intricacies of the position – I think as a big slot and role player to help get the run game off the ground, I think Rosemy-Jacksaint has a good chance to make the roster. Assuming they’re looking at different options for the return game, this guy offers more on offense than Dax Milne.
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TE Dallin Holker, Colorado State – New Orleans Saints

One of the more surprising players from this list who ultimately didn’t get picked as part of a fairly underwhelming tight-end class is Dallin Holker. There were only 12 guys who got selected altogether, but I had him just inside my personal top-ten. That was more of a reflection of the quality of the group overall, as I only saw five TEs inside my top-100 while everybody else had some clear warts. For Holker, he wasn’t asked to line up next to the tackle or would create displacement in the run game, while as a receiver he would tip off defenders by drifting during his route stems, he ran a 4.78 at 241 pounds at the combine and he’s not the most natural at contorting his body for off-target grabs. With that being said, there is plenty of good with the second-team All-American, who just put up career-highs across the board in catches (64), yards (767) and touchdowns (six). I thought his actual game speed was a lot better than what he was timed up, watching him gain a step on guys up the seams or racking up yards after the catch when hauling in passes on the run. Holker can also drop his hips and create space for himself and generally navigates well around ancillary zone defenders to find openings. He tracks the deep ball well over either shoulder, not losing focus with someone on his hip, and generally does a good job taking advantage of his large frame to shield the ball and absorb contact, as well as being flexible enough to pluck passes below his knees. As a blocker, you’re best served to utilize him on the move, whether that’s sifting across the formation, inserting against linebackers or covering up bodies in space when you try to get the ball out towards the sideline.
One of the keys to Holker not at least getting a call late on day three is that he didn’t leave the greatest impression during Shrine Bowl week, with a couple of semi-drops with contact and not approaching the ball optimally. However, I didn’t notice that as a general issue for him and as he acclimates to a higher level of competition, I think he has a place on an NFL roster as someone who can earn opportunities by being a reliable target who will fight for extra yardage, and he even lined up some at fullback during team sessions of those aforementioned practices. As I consider how he might fit in with the Saints specifically, I’m looking at a fantasy sleeper from a year ago in Juwan Johnson who didn’t match his prior production in a more prominent role, Foster Moreau as someone who they limited to an underneath option in terms of the pass game and whatever you want to define Taysom Hill as. Whether the latter is on the roster or not, with Klint Kubiak now taking over play-calling duties I’m expecting a fair share of multi-TE sets and could see Holker earn a role as an H-back on early downs and someone with alignment versatility in defined dropback settings.
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IOL Drake Nugent, Michigan – San Francisco 49ers

Moving on to the offensive line now, I saw a path where teams would pass on Drake Nugent compared to see more impressive physical profiles on day three, but I was still shocked to see him go undrafted entirely. Depending on what you count some of these tackle/guard flex options as, there were between 25 and 30 interior O-linemen selected overall. For me, Nugent was IOL18, even though I acknowledge that he may be considered a center only at 6’1”, right around 300 pounds with pretty small hands. After barely seeing the field his first two years in college, he started all 39 games between Stanford and Michigan over the past three years, earning first-team All-Big Ten accolades and helping pave the way for a national championship as the replacement for another highly-regarded transfer at the pivot in Olu Oluwatimi. Nugent definitely lacks some size and length, to where you don’t see him just overwhelming nose-tackles at the point of attack or stun interior rushers with his punch. However, he wins as a run-blocker with great technique and naturally built-in leverage, being able to execute down- and back-blocks as part of the Wolverines’ gap schemes where they pulled their guards a lot, but he’s also very capable of getting his hips around to reach-block first-level defenders or secure moving targets climbing off combos. As a pass-protector, he operates with good flexion at his hips, knees and ankles in order to protect a firm interior of the pocket despite only being around 300 pounds. He consistently fits his hands underneath the chest of rushers, showcases impressive reactionary quicks to mirror active movers and is able to guide crossing linebackers or loopers off track at a high rate.
Considering what Kyle Shanahan and company value in terms of the offensive line – particularly at the center position – I think Nugent fits those qualifications very well. While the rest of the measurements aren’t as intriguing, he put up borderline elite agility numbers at the combine and you see that short-area quickness on tape as well. Michigan didn’t run a whole lot of outside zone, because the guys around the pivot were much more power-based and they’d mash people inside, creating extra gaps with their guards being used as pullers. However, I think Nugent can absolutely get to the play-side shoulder of shades and 2i-technique, wall off bodies on the second level and then has the lateral movement skills to slide in front of blitzers with how much 5-0 protections San Francisco runs, because they want to get five eligibles out in the pattern. Outside of their starter Jake Brendel, the only guy under contract who has really snapped the ball in the NFL is Jon Feliciano, who they brought in third-round pick Dominick Puni (Kansas) to compete for the starting gig at right guard for most likely. So I’m not sure if the Michigan standout makes the active roster week one, but if Brendel misses any time and Feliciano wins that position battle, he may end up starting at center or at least be your primary backup. And I can see a world where Puni starts a few contests at right tackle as well (after he played on the blindside for the Jayhawks), which would open up further opportunities.
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IOL Kinglsey Eguakun, Florida – Detroit Lions

You’ll see a couple of other teams make the list with two potential impact UDFAs, but Detroit is the only one with multiple guys on one side of the ball, as I could see both wide receiver Isaiah Williams and Florida’s starting center over the last three years make the cut. What probably hurt him in this process is the fact that he was lost a month into the 2023 season with an ankle injury and he also didn’t work out at the combine due to tight hamstrings. However, we did see him perform at the Senior Bowl and I thought he had a really nice week. What stands out right away as we compare him to Michigan’s Drake Nugent for example is that he may not even be a full ten pounds heavier, but Eguakun presents a much denser build. Thanks to that, combined with throwing out a nice snatch-trap move a couple of times, his ability to anchor against power-rushers and put people on the ground when they get off balance, made him a very effective pass-protector. On 145 pass-blocking snaps last season, he was only charged with one sack and five additional pressures. In the run game, he has some impressive reps on tape executing different assignment on zone concepts, whether he’s latching and sustaining against D-linemen deep into the play-clock, overtaking/folding underneath on combos or shove scraping linebackers past the target. And for what that more squatty build might suggest, he’s pretty effective with getting to further extended landmarks and secure bodies in space.
With that being said, I did have a few other names ahead of Eguakun in my IOL rankings and he certainly has his flaws. Whether that’s not always bending at his knees and bringing his feet along as a run-blocker, his hands generally sliding to high in both facets and needing to gear up the level of activity in his hand-usage to battle interior pass-rushers. Combining those issues, he was penalized an insane 31(!) times across 1029 total snaps these last three years combined. Nevertheless, not only do I believe those issues are fixable down the road with the right coaching, but I also look at a pretty clear path to earn the backup center job and provide value as someone who can probably jump in at guard as well. Right now, with Graham Glasgow expected to jump in at left guard for Jonah Jackson, who just left in free agency, the only other O-linemen on this roster currently are Colby Sorsdal, who they selected in the fifth round as a developmental tackle out of William & Mary last year, the guy they surprised us with in the fourth round of this draft out of the University of British Columbia, who is also looked at as a guy who isn’t NFL-ready but has intriguing athletic tools, and former Boston College guard Christian Mahogany, who went a good 100 picks later than I expected late in the sixth round due to some medical concerns. None of those have experience at the pivot and otherwise there’s no other drafted player on this roster. Depending on if Detroit signs another free agent on the tertiary market, I see a good chance for Eguakun to make it through cuts.
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EDGE Gabriel Murphy, UCLA – Minnesota Vikings

Nobody hit a bigger homerun on the undrafted free agent market last year than the Vikings. I heard the concerns around linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. coming out of Cincinnati and thought he’d go later than where I valued him, considering he was my 90th overall prospect, but when he landed with defensive coordinator Brian Flores in Minnesota, I immediately thought he’d be an impact starter, and he ended up playing at a fringe Pro Bowl level. This time around, they brought in a player I considered a fourth-round prospect but had some similar concerns based on length. His 30.5-inch arms place him in the sixth-percentile, although the rest of his measurables and athletic testing all basically were in the upper third for the position. Now, that does create some issues when he’s in those close combats against offensive tackles in both facets and you didn’t really see him be asked to stack-and-shed on the edge in the run game, as he was more so allowed to “make plays”. However, there are flashes of him even lining up at three-technique and anchoring against down-block, plus he just has a knack for swiping away the hands of offensive linemen and disrupting the backfield. What you really bring him in for however is that he can probably contribute early on already as a pass-rusher. He effectively sets up cross-chops and beats guys laterally with almost “euro-step”-like footwork. Murphy shows a great feel for the weight-distribution of blockers and has the versatility to move along the front, creating issues on the interior with his quickness. Playing along a loaded D-line at UCLA last season certainly helped, but he racked up 62 QB pressures across 355 pass-rush snaps last season.
Looking at Minnesota’s EDGE situation, they basically swapped out long-time veteran Danielle Hunter for a younger version in Jonathan Greenard coming off a career-year at the end of his rookie deal in Houston. Unlike many suspected them having to trade away both their first-round picks for a quarterback in the top-five, they were able to move up to 17th overall to pair quarterback J.J. McCarthy with what many regarded as EDGE1 in Alabama’s Dallas Turner. And they did sign former Dolphin Andrew Van Ginkel to a back-loaded two-year, 20-million-dollar contract, in part due to DC Brian Flores’ familiarity with him. However, while Jihad Ward is currently listed as an outside linebacker, at 290 pounds you’re not really going to ask him to drop into coverage, which they do a lot in a system that either brings six or only three, being very extreme-oriented. Other than that, it’s down to Pat Jones, who just played a career-high in snaps but more out of necessity and he didn’t grade out particularly well, and a developmental guy in Andre Carter who they picked up as a UDFA from Army last year and primarily was used on special teams. As I consider who can give you the most production on passing downs right now, Murphy at the very least comes in fifth in that pecking order. So I think he could be used as a spinner over the center and be valued due to his sudden hands to quickly win those one-on-ones Flores generates.
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IDL Fabien Lovett, Florida State – Kansas City Chiefs

While they’ve made more investments recently, the Chiefs have a history of finding quality contributors on the defensive line late in the draft and as part of the UDFA market. They signed an edge rusher that I think could give them some snaps as part of the rotation with his urgent, violent style of play in Charlotte’s Eyabi Okie-Anoma. Yet, I want to focus on the big bear they added in the middle from Florida State. Lovett was tied for tenth in my interior D-line rankings and I thought his skill-set was worthy of investing an early day three pick in him. In terms of owning his space and sliding off blocks in run defense, he was up there with anybody outside of Texas’ massive T’Vondre Sweat as a guy playing between the guard. What I always said about him was that he had an innate feel for where pressure was being applied from and how to counter it, as he dealt with double-teams. Yet, his ability to lock out against soloes and then how slippery he is at disengaging and eating up the ball-carrier is equally impressive. Now, he doesn’t offer a whole lot of pop out of his stance and short-area twitchiness to be a legit part of a third-down package in the NFL, but he does have some dominant snaps of putting guards or centers on skates when left one-on-one and his level of activity with his hands is commendable for a guy at 6’4”, nearly 320 pounds.
As a sixth-year senior who some people may look like as a two-down player, it’s understandable that the league may value other guys above him, but there’s no way he should’ve gone undrafted entirely. Considering how Kansas City has treated their defensive front, these types of players like Derrick Nnadi, Mike Pennel and others have been valuable contributors. Especially this past season, we saw them run the second-highest rate of base defense and generally they go fairly depth into their depth chart with that position group, to keep guys healthy and give them quality snaps. So while those names I mentioned are still under contract, I think there’s definitely a path to playing time for Lovett since they value those early-phase run stoppers. This guy can occupy bodies to allow their linebackers to run freely, as they just some speed with the departure of Willie Gay Jr., but when they mug someone like Leo Chenal up and create even numbers up front, his ability to work off blockers and create quick stops allows them to get to longer downs and be aggressive in their pressure-packages. Yet, when they run more stop-drop coverages, Lovett can stay on the field and contribute as a pocket-pusher or someone who frees up lanes by pulling multiple bodies with him. I think he makes that roster or at the very least is one of the first call-ups from the practice squad, and he stands out as people watch the All-22 in DecembeJanuary.
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LB Easton Gibbs, Wyoming – Seattle Seahawks

Moving on to the second level of the defense, there wasn’t as obvious a choice at linebacker as last year, but there still a few guys I could see making rosters, at least if they are significant contributors on special teams. One of those names become keen of was the last in line of some quality Wyoming LBs in Easton Gibbs. I first laid my eyes on him during Shrine Bowl week, especially in terms one-on-one reps vs. the running backs in coverage. He displayed quick feet to redirect with opponents and kept them in front of him, to where even if he did surrender catches, he would’ve been right there to set the tackle for minimal yardage. He was asked to move over the slot quite a bit during team drills, where he showed the ability to read the eyes of the quarterback as a quasi-overhang, yet he’d toggle back to targets in his vicinity and his play of the week came at the goal-line, undercutting a slant route, where he would’ve been off to the races for a pick-six. On tape, his closing burst as a delayed blitzer or taking off as a spy popped a few tomes, as well as the force to plow through running backs in protection. At 6’1”, 230 pounds, Gibbs presents a pretty dense build, with a wide chest, strong arms and a powerful lower half. He excels at creating leverage and stepping past the hips of linemen in order to circle around for the tackle when the ball is going his way, yet his lateral mobility to track (wide) zone concepts from the backside is equally strong.
Now, Gibbs can be overly concerned with beating blockers to the spot and loses vision on the ball at times, where he runs himself out of the picture. His transitions as a zone-defender and in open field tackling situations can be a little heavy-legged, leading to a missed-tackle rate of 11.6% across three seasons as a starter. So I thought he projected best as a SAM in a defense that utilizes his edge-setting skills and ability to cover tight-ends. That role doesn’t necessarily exist in Mike Macdonald’s system, but I think if paired with more of a rangy player on the second level, he can be a useful piece. That’s where the pairing with former Dolphin Jerome Baker makes a lot of sense, who can be the one that drops out of mugged-up looks and match up with guys out of the backfield as Gibbs is used as a pressure player. As I look at what else they have on the roster, there’s really only Tyrel Dodson in terms of guys with legit NFL experience, who logged two third of his career starts last season (10). Otherwise, they only have 23 total defensive snaps to show for at off-ball backer. Seattle did draft Tyrice Knight out of UTEP in the fourth round, who is a fun player in terms of the violence he plays with, but it also leads to him running himself out of trouble quite regularly at this point. I think there’s an outside chance Gibbs actually wins that second starting gig at inside linebacker and unless they love what one of those other guys provides on teams, he’s at least LB4 for this group.
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CB Josh Wallace, Michigan – Los Angeles Rams

This was an insanely deep corner class and it would surprise a lot of people probably to hear there was actual one more selected (36 total) than at wide receiver, which was the topic of discussion alongside the quarterback all draft season. However, there were still a couple left who didn’t end up hearing their names called, who I expect to battle for roster spots. Josh Wallace is one of those, as someone who spent the first four years of his collegiate career at UMass before transferring to Michigan for his final season of eligibility, where he didn’t intercept any passes but did start 11 of 15 contests, with four PBUs, one fumble forced and two recovered. He’s more so average-sized at 5’11”, 185 pounds, but he plays above that weight-class, where he can bother receivers at the line. When he’s playing straight-up press-technique, Wallace does well to deny receivers to get to the edges of his frame, when he’s allowed to shade inside, he can ride guys into the sideline and then he can stop his momentum pretty well. As a zone defender, he showcases impressive recognition for route combinations, is forceful with his hands to funnel targets towards the safety to his side and generally his awareness for down-and-distance and game situations is excellent. On the negative side, he lacks great twitch at the break-point to erase that window of separation receivers are able to create on him, flipping with vertical releases a step early raises concerns around Wallace’s long speed – backed up by running in the high 4.6s at his pro day – and he’s not really a play-maker with the ball in the air, only intercepting three of 32 total passes defensed in his career.
Having said that, he did have an impressive Shrine Bowl week, stacking over top of routes, forcing guys to widen their stem, without allowing guys to detach on him, at one point coming up with an awesome interception in the end-zone during red-zone one-on-ones, walling off his man, getting his eyes back on the quarterback and diving for the ball. And the big case for him is the physical presence he provides out on the perimeter. This guy steps downhill vs. the run with a purpose and is looking to be the one initiating contact with blockers, then aims low as a tackler and significantly cut down his miss rate this past season against top competition, only missing two of 42 attempts. So while we don’t fully know what the structure of the Rams D will look like under new coordinator Chris Shula, taking over the principles and largely personnel of the previous iteration under Raheem Morris, there’s a pretty clear differentiation between the bigger, more hands-on boundary corners like Tre’Davious White and Derion Kendrick, and the quicker field-side options such as Darious Williams and Cobie Durant. White and Williams coming in as free agents, with Williams having familiarity with L.A. already, are slated to start week one, but I think Wallace could battle Kendrick – who had similar speed concerns, which were even more prevalent on tape – for the backup role on the short side of the field, where he’s asked to disrupt receivers early but doesn’t necessarily stick with them all the way across the field, while having help over the top or inside.
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CB Chigozie Anusiem, Colorado State – Washington Commanders

The other top-30 corner for me who didn’t end up getting selected is someone else I saw early on at Shrine Bowl week but didn’t get to study fully until late in the process. For reference, there were eight guys at that position who got drafted – a couple as early as the fourth round – who I had ranked below Anusiem. Unlike Josh Wallace, I really don’t understand why he ended up not getting taken, since he has even better size at 6’1”, 200 pounds and ran a 4.39 at the Colorado State pro day. A former three-star safety recruit for Cal back in 2018, it took this guy a little bit to find his footing and it took until the final two of his six seasons in college for him to become a fixture in the lineup, once he had transferred to the Rams, where he logged a pick and 12 PBUs across 23 total games. Anusiem operates with good balance and his eyes locked in on the belt of his man from soft-press alignment. He shows the football IQ for what routes to anticipate based on splits and formations, slightly adjusting his technique, and then has 32-and-ÂŒ-inch arms to impede to progress of the guy across from him as he commits to the release. He has the wheels to run with just about anybody, his closing burst once receivers try to separate on secondary routes is excellent and then his length allows him to bat down targets others would settle for the tackle on. On 228 snaps in man-coverage over the past two years combined, Anusiem allowed just 12 of 36 targets his way (33.3%) to be completed for 157 yards and one touchdown, while actively forcing nine incompletions. In reality, he might be at his best however playing top-down in quarters and closing on stuff in the flats, where he looks comfortable peaking back at the quarterback, mid-pointing routes and passing along or falling off for targets in his vicinity.
He can definitely get a little too aggressive with wanting to dictate the route development and gets turned the wrong way, leading to some wasted movement – which you saw during Shrine Bowl week against more skilled route-runners – he’s quick to get into that three-quarter turn in deep zone assignments and lose vision of the wideout at times and when he’s attacking downhill against the run, he’s more so just catching ball-carrier, allowing them to drive through him for additional yardage due to his high center of gravity. However, it’s not like he’s missing tackles (just 5.2% of his attempts last season, compared to 6.3% for his entire career) and he’s generally a strong edge-setter, where he’s sliding inside of receivers to create early stops when the ball bounces his way or he punches off receivers with those long limbs, not shying away from sticking his nose in the fan against bigger bodies out on the perimeter. That’s why I thought someone would bet on his traits, teaching him how to hone in his aggressiveness in man-coverage, since he’s pretty reliable against the run from day one. And looking at what new Commanders head coach values from that position, it aligns with a lot that he brings to the table in terms of dictating terms to receivers with a high rate of man-coverage. That’s why they brought in Michael Davis from the Chargers to pair with Benjamin St. Juste, while drafting Mike Sainristil to start in the nickel for the them, but I’m a lot more concerned about last year’s first-rounder Emmanuel Forbes, who was over-drafted based on speed and having a nose for coming up with interceptions. This new front-office isn’t as invested in him to succeed and I could see Anusiem end up as their primary backup on the outside, since he’s a good 20 pounds heavier and fits more with their mantra.
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SAF Millard “Nook” Bradford, TCU – New Orleans Saints

Finally, I want to discuss one safety here. This is a class that receive a whole lot of publicity, but taking my top-100 big board and the guys I listed as “the next 30 names”, I had 11 names up there and depending on how you want to define a couple of them who ultimately got picked, there were are 20 selected total.
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The rest of the analysis can be found here!

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One more UDFA to keep track of for each team:

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Arizona Cardinals – Xavier Weaver, WR, Colorado
Atlanta Falcons – Austin Stogner, TE, Oklahoma
Baltimore Ravens – Beau Brade, SAF, Maryland
Buffalo Bills – Frank Gore Jr., RB, Southern Miss
Carolina Panthers – Jalen Coker, WR, Holy Cross
Chicago Bears – Keith Randolph Jr., IDL, Illinois
Cincinnati Bengals – Aaron Casey, LB, Indiana
Cleveland Browns – Javion Cohen, IOL, Miami
Dallas Cowboys – Brevyn Spann-Ford, TE, Minnesota
Denver Broncos – Thomas Yassmin, TE, Utah
Detroit Lions – Steele Chambers, LB, Ohio State
Green Bay Packers – Donovan Jennings, OT/IOL, USF
Houston Texans – Jadon OR Jaxon Janke, WR, South Dakota State
Indianapolis Colts – Kedon Slovis, QB, USC
Jacksonville Jaguars – Josh Proctor, SAF, Ohio State
Kansas City Chiefs – Eyabi Okie-Anoma, EDGE, Charlotte
Las Vegas Raiders – Lideatrick “Tulu” Griffin, WR, Mississippi State
Los Angeles Chargers – Zach Heins, TE, South Dakota State
Los Angeles Rams – Kenny Logan Jr., SAF, Kansas
Miami Dolphins – Storm Duck, CB, Louisville
Minnesota Vikings – Dallas Gant, LB, Toledo
New England Patriots – Charles Turner III, IOL, LSU
New Orleans Saints – Sincere Haynesworth, IOL, Tulane
New York Giants – Alex Johnson, CB, UCLA
New York Jets – Leonard Taylor III, IDL, Miami
Philadelphia Eagles – Gabe Hall, IDL, Baylor
Pittsburgh Steelers – Dajuan Edwards, RB, Georgia
San Francisco 49ers – Evan Anderson, IDL, FAU
Seattle Seahawks – Garrett Greenfield, OT, South Dakota State
Tampa Bay Buccaneers – Kalen DeLoach, LB, FSU
Tennessee Titans – Dillon Johnson, RB, Washington
Washington Commanders – Tyler Owens, SAF, Texas Tech .
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If you enjoyed this article, please visit the original piece & feel free to check out my video content!
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2024.05.06 15:41 DesignTugboat Thoughts on the books vs the televisions series? Anyone else find it jarring?

I should start by saying I watched the series first. I've now read 2.5 of the books. I watch CTM as an uplifting break from real life so I suppose I thought the books would be an easy read. Wow, some of the books' stories are so haunting and sad. Some of stories are so familiar but the endings are so different! A few of the marked differences I found. I'm curious what other's have found.
I'm sure there are many more but those are the ones standing out. Did anyone else experience differences that stood out?
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2024.05.06 15:33 Leather_Focus_6535 The 113 inmates executed by Virginia in the post Furman era and their crimes (warning, graphic content, please read at your own risk) [part 1, cases 1-58]

This is the list that I wrote for the 113 inmates executed by the state of Virginia, from the 1976 Gregg national reinstatement of the death penalty to the state abolishing it in 2021. For the sake of clarification, the dates given here are an approximate timeframe of the offender's earliest known criminal activities to their executions. Many of the crimes surveyed here are also extremely horrific, and the gory details are discussed in my descriptions. Please read at your own risk.
Unfortunately, as with Missouri, the list exceeds the maximum 40,000 character count Reddit allows for submissions, and thus I had to split it into two separate posts. Here is the link to part 2 of this list.
The 113 executed offenders:
1. Frank Coppola (~1960s-1982, electric chair): Coppola, his wife, and two other accomplices hatched a plan to rob Payton Wetchell, a 55 year old car dealer, at his home. One of the accomplices posed as a delivery girl, and lured Payton's wife, 51 year old Muriel, out by ringing the doorbell. The group then forced themselves inside at gunpoint and tried extorting from her valuables though beatings. Mariel’s head was slammed against the door numerous times, and she ended up dying from suffocating on her vomit and a brain hemorrhage. When Peyton arrived at the scene, he was beaten as well. Although he survived, the treatment for the fractures required Peyton to have a steel plate grafted on his forehead, and he took his own life about a decade after the incident. The Coppolas and their accomplices made off with $3,000 and 3 rings. Coppola was a career burglar, and lost his job as a policeman for failing to report inmate abuse. His execution caused some controversy, as a witnesses described Coppola's legs catching fire during the electrocution.
2. Linwood Briley (~1971-1984, electric chair): In 1971, at the age of 16, Briley killed his neighbor, 57 year old Orline Christian, in a sniper attack from his bedroom window while she was laying clothesline. He escaped prosecution by convincing authorities that it was an accident. 8 years later, Briley went on a rape and robbery spree with two of his brothers (including James) and another accomplice. They murdered anywhere between ~12-21 males and females in their attacks. Their means of killings were very diverse and circumstantial, and completely indiscriminate on who they killed. The eldest known victim was 76 year old Mary Gowen, whom they raped and shot to death, while their youngest was 5 year old Harvey Barton, who was shot dead after the gang gang-raped and murdered his pregnant mother, 23 year old Judy. Some like, 17 year old Christopher Philips had his head crushed with a concrete block, a few others like 62 year old Mary Wilfong were beaten to death with baseball bats, and 59 year old Charles Garner was fatally stabbed with scissors and a fork. Almost all the victims were murdered in their homes, but some were attacked at their jobs. While on death row, Briley and James escaped with 4 other inmates, but were recaptured after a 3 week long manhunt.
3. James Briley (~1970s-1985, electric chair): He was one of Linwood Briley's brothers, and he assisted in him in the robbery, rapes, and murders of at least 12 to 21 people. As previously mentioned, Briley and Linwood broke out of prison on death row with several other inmates, and were all recaptured within weeks after their escape.
4. Morris Mason (~1960s-1985, electric chair): Mason broke into the homes of two elderly women, 86 year old Ursula Stevenson and 71 year old Margaret Hand. In both attacks, the victims were raped, beaten with an ax handle, bound and nailed to chairs, and burned alive when he set their houses on fire. He also attacked a pair of sisters, who were 12 and 13 years old, in their home. The 13 year old grabbed a gun from their father’s closet for protection, but Mason wrestled the gun away, and shot her instead. She survived with crippling injuries. Mason then kidnapped the 12 year old, took her to a nearby forest, and sodomized her. He covered the girl with leaves, lit them on fire, but she survived with only minor burns to her hair and shirt. Mason was also responsible for several burglaries during his crime spree, and was convicted several previous times for arson attacks. Authorities believe that Mason was committing acts of arson since his childhood. His execution sparked some controversy, due to him allegedly having a cognitive disability.
5. Michael Smith (~1970s-1986, electric chair): Smith kidnapped 35 year old Audrey Weiler while she was walking from a beach. He dragged her into a forest and raped her. During the sexual assault, Smith stabbed Weiler and drowned her in a nearby river. At the time of the attack, Smith was a sex offender with a rape conviction, and had reoffended against Weiler only months after his release from prison.
6. Richard Whitley (1980-1987, electric chair): Whitley went to the home of his occasional employer, 63 year old Phoebe Parsons, to vent about his broken marriage. As they were conversing, he stabbed Parsons to death. During the attack, he sodomized Parsons with an umbrella, and engaged in sex acts with her body. He then sacked the home of any valuables, stole her car, and fled to Florida.
7. Earl Clanton Jr. (~1971-1988, electric chair): At the age of 17, Clanton killed an unidentified woman in circumstances largely undisclosed beyond it being a robbery. Although Clanton was given a 26-28 year sentence, he was paroled 8 years later. A year after his release, he strangled a neighbor, 38 year old Wilhemina Smith, during a robbery of her home. He also had a malicious wounding conviction when he badly injured a teenage boy with brass knuckles, and his mother had made complaints of him stealing money from her. However, Clanton claimed that she faked her complaints in retaliation for him refusing a sexual relationship with her. Clanton also took part in the mass prison escape orchestrated by the Briley brothers, but was recaptured with them.
8. Alton Waye (1977-1989, electric chair): Waye invaded the home of 61 year old Lavergne Marshall, and stabbed her 42 times. He then raped Marshall and poured bleach on her body.
9. Richard Boggs (1984-1990, electric chair): After Boggs killed an unidentified man in a hit and run accident, he rushed to the home of his neighbor, 87 year old Treeby Shaw. When she offered him tea, Boggs hit her in the head with a steel object, and stabbed her to death with a butcher knife. He stole some silver from the home, which was discovered by investigating police officers in his car. On an unrelated side note, Boggs' older brother was shot dead by police during a car chase some years after his execution.
10. Wilbert Evans (~1964-1990, electric chair): While incarcerated for a robbery in North Carolina, Evans was transferred to Virginia to testify at a murder trial. While being transported in a prison van, he decided to take the opportunity to escape, and seized a gun from one of his escorts, 47 year old William Truesdale. Truesdale was shot dead during the struggle and Evans used the gun to destroy his handcuffs. Although he managed to jump out of the van, Evans was cornered by police officers only a few blocks away, and was recaptured followed a bungled suicide attempt. Evans had an extensive criminal history, and was convicted of robbing a gas station at the age of 18. During his time on death row, he protected staff members held hostage from being raped and abused by the Briley brothers during their attempted escape. His execution caused some controversy, as blood was observed coming out of his blood, nose, and eyes during the fatal shocks.
11. Buddy Justus (1978-1990, electric chair): Justus abducted and raped 3 women, 32 year old Rosemary Jackson, 21 year old Stephanie Hawkins, and 21 year old Ida Moses, and shot them to death. He was charged with a 4th murder, as Moses was pregnant and her unborn child also died in the attack. In two of his known murders, Justus was assisted by an 18 year old man that he befriend after he picked him up hitchhiking. He also received several life and death sentences in the states of Georgia and Florida.
12. Albert Clozza (1983-1991, electric chair): Clozza snatched 13 year old Patricia Bolton while she was walking home from a bookmobile. He dragged the girl into a forest and sodomized her with a twig. She was also severely beaten in the attack, and the corner's report mentioned that Bolton was "asphyxiated by her own blood."
13. Derrick Peterson (1982-1991, electric chair): During a holdup of a grocery store, Peterson shot and killed the manger, 45 year old Howard Kauffman. He then ran off with thousands of dollars worth in checks and cash.
14. Roger Coleman (~1977-1992, electric chair): Coleman tricked his sister-in-law, 19 year old Wanda McCoy, into letting him inside her house. He then raped and stabbed her, and she was nearly decapitated in the attack. A long standing sex offender, Coleman was convicted of raping a woman in her home a few years prior to McCoy's murder, and had exposed himself to two other women just before the killing. Unfortunately for him, one of the women happened to be an artist, and she drew a sketch that enabled the police to identify him for the murder. Despite his past offenses, Coleman had a strong following for his innocence among the anti death penalty crowd. A notion that was debunked following a 2006 DNA test that concluded his guilt.
15. Edward Fitzgerald Sr. (1980-1992, electric chair): Out of fear of her being a police informant, Fitzgerald abducted his drug dealer, 22 year old Patricia Cubbage. He raped and stabbed her 184 times, and reportedly carved a "tick-tack-toe design" into Cubbage's back.
16. Willie Jones (1983-1992, electric chair): Jones tricked the parents of an acquaintance, 78 year old Myra and 80 year old Graham, into letting him inside their house by pretending to be an undercover cop searching for missing children. He shot and killed Graham, tied up and gagged Myra, locked her in a closet, and stole their entire life savings (which amounted to $30,000). To destroy any evidence of his crime, Jones set the house on fire. Myra, who was still tied up and trapped in her closet, was burned alive. Jones was also one of the inmates that escaped from death row with the Briley brothers, but was recaptured weeks after the breakout
17. Timothy Bunch (1982-1992, electric chair): Bunch, a then active service Marine, was dating Su Cha Thomas, a 40 year old South Korean immigrant. Believing that Thomas was too much like his “slut” ex wife, Bunch decided that he wanted to rob and kill her. He tricked Thomas into letting him inside her home with the promise of a date. She was shot in the head and Bunch hung the body to a closet doorknob with a scarf. Bunch then ransacked the home, and stole a watch, diamond ring, and a pearl necklace. According to investigators, he confided in them that he had an orgasm while robbing and murdering Thomas. After the killing, Bunch was deployed to Japan, but extradited back to Virginia to face trial for Thomas’ murder.
18. Charles Stamper (1978-1993, electric chair): While robbing a restaurant that he worked at, Stamper shot and killed three of his co workers, 43 year old Agnes Hicks, 35 year old Franklin Cooley, and 20 year old Steven. He stole a total of $4,000 in the robbery. On death row, Stamper was attacked by fellow death row inmate Lem Tuggle for allegedly being a snitch. The assault left him permanently paralyzed, which made his execution somewhat controversial.
19. Syvasky Poyner (~1970s-1993, electric chair): Poyner shot and killed 5 females, 72 year old Louise Paulett, 45 year old Joyce Baldwin, 44 year old Carolyn Hedrick, 43 year old Chestine Brooks, and 17 year old Vicki Ripple during a two week long robbery spree. He directed his attacks towards beauty parlors, supermarkets, ice cream shops, and motels. A life long career criminal, Poyner had several auto theft, forgery, and burglary convictions, and his earliest date back to when he was 14 years old.
20. Andrew Chabrol (1991-1993, electric chair): Chabrol, a Navy serviceman, made unwanted advances on a fellow married sailor, 27 year old Melissa Harrington, and refused to back down despite repeated rejections. Harrington filed sexual harassment charges, and Chabrol was dismissed from service following an investigation. Angered by the loss of his career and her rebuffing his advances, Chabrol kidnapped Harrington from her home with the help of a friend, and tied her to his bed. He then raped and strangled her to death. The case attracted outcry years later when it was discovered that Chabrol and Harrington’s remains were buried in close proximity to each other in the Arlington cemetery.
21. Joe Wise (1983-1993, electric chair): Wise abducted 45 year old William Ricketson during a robbery. He beat and shot his captive in the eye and chest, dumped him in a water hole used for an abandoned power plant's lavatory, and drove off with his truck. Although Ricketson survived the shooting, he drowned in the hole.
22. David Pruett (~1975-1993, electric chair): In 1975, Pruett fatally stabbed his co worker, 22 year old Debra McInnis, while robbing a restaurant they worked at together. As the investigators weren't able to solve the McInnis murder, Pruett remained a free man. 11 years later, he tied up his friend's wife, 35 year old Wilma Harvey, in the couple's home while her husband was out of town. He raped Harvey, stabbed her 29 times and slit her throat, ransacked the house for any valuables, and stole an undisclosed amount of money. Pruett was also tried and sentenced for an unrelated rape incident alongside Harvey and McInnis' murders.
23. Johnny Watkins Jr. (1983-1994, electric chair): Watkins gunned down two store clerks, 41 year old Carl Buchanan and 22 year old Betty Barker, during a week long robbery spree. In the robberies that killed Buchanan and Barker, Watkins stole a combined total of $125. His brother Ronald was also executed for an unrelated robbery murder [for more details, please see section 49 on Ronald Watkins].
24. Timothy Spencer (~1980s-1994, electric chair): Spencer broke into the residences of at least 5 women and girls, 44 year old Susan Tucker, 35 year old Debbie Davis, 32 year old Susan Hellams, 32 year old Carolyn Hamm, and Diane Cho, a 15 year old South Korean immigrant, and raped them. All the verified victims were strangled to death with ligatures and ratchets. Another man was falsey convicted of Hamm's murder, but was cleared of guilt in a 1989 DNA test. The falsely accused man was one of the first inmates to be exonerated using DNA testing, while paradoxically Spencer was the first serial killer to be convicted with DNA evidence. Spencer also had a history of burglaries before his killing sprees.
25. Dana Edmonds (1983-1995, lethal injection): During a robbery of a grocery store, Edmonds tied up a grocer, 62 year old John Elliott. He bashed Elliot's head with a brick, stabbed his neck, and took $40 from the register.
26. Willie Turner (~1970s-1995, lethal injection): In 1978, Turner shot and killed W. J. Smith, a 54 year old jeweler, during a jewelry store robbery. A few years prior to Smith's murder, Turner had killed an unidentified inmate in largely undisclosed circumstances while serving time for a malicious wounding conviction, but was let out on parole. While on death row, Turner took part in the Briley brothers led breakout, and made several escape attempts on his own. In one incident, Turner pretended to have smuggled a gun in his cell, and used the hoax to make threats against the prison staff.
27. Dennis Stockton (~1950s-1995, lethal injection): 18 year old Kenneth Arnder allegedly crossed a dealer during a drug deal. The dealer retaliated by paying Stockton $2,000 to kill him. Stockton lured Arnder in his car with the promise of driving him to safety, and shot the youth in the eyes. He cut the hands off his body to prevent identification and dumped it in a remote North Carolinan forest. Stockton had a long criminal history since he was a teenager, which included several convictions of arson, safecracking, drug dealing, and weapons possession charges. Police also found dismembered body parts kept in a jar in his home, but Stockton claimed that it was simply a gift given to him by a biker gang, and he only kept the remains to show off at parties.
28. Mickey Davidson (1990-1995, lethal injection): Davidson’s wife, 36 year old wife Doris, made a decision to leave him for her ex husband. In a jealous rage, he beat her and her two daughters, 14 year old Mamie and 13 year old Tammy Clutterback, to death with a crowbar.
29. Herman Barnes (1984-1995, lethal injection): Barnes held up a grocery store at gunpoint, and shot and killed the owner, 72 year old Clyde Jenkins. Mohammad Afifi, a 42 year old Palestinian immigrant that worked as the store’s clerk, was also gunned down when he came to his boss’s aid.
30. Walter Correll Jr. (1985-1996, lethal injection): Correll and two accomplices ambushed, carjacked, and kidnapped 24 year old Charles Bousman Jr. after they motioned him to stop on a remote highway. After they stole his rings and watch, they beat and stabbed Bousman to death, dumped his body in a nearby forest, and drove off with his car. His execution was a source of contention, as Correll's supporters and attorneys assert that he was an intellectually disabled man set up by his accomplices for lesser sentences.
31. Richard Townes Jr. (~1970s-1996, lethal injection): Townes shot a clerk, 32 year old Virginia Goebel, in the head while robbing a grocery store, and stole $183 from the register. He had a long history of violent robberies, and had shot and wounded a taxi driver after holding him hostage for 6 hours several years before Goebel's murder.
32. Joseph Savino III (~1980s-1996, lethal injection): After he was released on parole from an armed robbery conviction, Savino beat his boyfriend, 64 year old Thomas McWaters, to death with a hammer in their home. According to Savino, McWaters was pressuring him for sex, and threatened to have his parole revoked if it was withheld.
33. Ronald Bennett (1985-1996, lethal injection): Bennett broke into the home of Anne Vaden, a 28 year real estate agent. After he tied Vaden up, Bennett beat, strangled, and stabbed her to death. One of Vaden's rings was stolen in the robbery, and he gave it to his wife. The murder was left cold for a year, but was solved when Bennett's wife drunkenly confessed her husband's deeds to a friend while showing off the ring.
34. Gregory Beaver (~1980s-1996, lethal injection): After Beaver escaped from a Maryland rehab center, he went on a rampage that involved stealing a car and storming a restaurant his stepfather owned to rob and assault him. While speeding away from the scene with a hitchhiker he picked up, Beaver was pulled over by Leo Whitt, a 49 year old state trooper. In the scuffle that broke out, Beaver shot and killed Whitt. The hitchhiker then tricked Beaver into stopping at a nearby restaurant, and he used the payphone to call the police on him. Beaver previously had 10 unspecified felony convictions, which was why he was placed by his family in the Maryland rehab center.
35. Larry Stout (1987-1996, lethal injection): Stout assaulted a dry cleaning store with a knife, slashed the throat of the owner, 40 year old Jacqueline Kooshian, and stole $1,200.
36. Lem Tuggle Jr. (~1971-1996, lethal injection): In 1971, Tuggle raped and fatally strangled 16 year old Shirley Brickey, and was given a 20 year sentence for it. He was released from prison after serving 10 years. Two years after his release, Tuggle lured 52 year old Jessie Havens from a dance hall, and then raped and shot her to death. On death row, he participated in the mass escape orchestrated by the Briley brothers, and paralyzed the above mentioned Charles Stamper for allegedly being an informant.
37. Ronald Hoke (1985-1996, lethal injection): Hoke forced his way inside the home of 56 year old Virginia Stell, a woman he met at a bar. He raped and stabbed her to death with a knife taken from the kitchen, and stole some medication from Stell's purse.
38. Michael George (1979-1997, lethal injection): In 1979, George lured 9 year old Larry Perry from his grandparents' home, and shot the boy dead after raping him. As the body was never found and the prosecution couldn't disprove his claims of it being an accidental killing, George was able to secure an involuntary manslaughter plea deal from the courts, and was released within two years for good behavior. After his release, he molested several teenage boys, and expressed fantasies about them being sexually tortured by "evil creatures" in the forest in his written works of fiction. In 1990, George made his fantasies a reality when he ambushed and abducted 15 year old Alexander Sztanko while the boy was ridding a motorbike. He shackled Sztanko to a tree, sodomized him with a stun gun, sliced pieces of his skin with a machete, shot him in the head, and stole his motorbike. Other teenage boys in the area also reported being assaulted in the same manner as Sztanko by a “Rambo like” camouflaged assailant. Although it is strongly believed that George was responsible for the attacks, he wasn't convicted of them.
39. Coleman Gray (1985-1997, lethal injection): Gray kidnapped 49 year old Richard McClelland while robbing a store he managed. He forced McClelland to collect over $12,000 in cash, drove his captive to a remote dirt road, and shot him six times in the head.
40. Roy Smith (1988-1997, lethal injection): Smith got into a violent argument with his wife in their home, and the neighbors called the police on him. He fired on the responding officers, and killed John Conner, a 38 year old sergeant. The remaining officers managed to subdue him after a brief standoff and physical struggle.
41. Joseph O'Dell III (~1958-1997, lethal injection): O'Dell was condemned for the abduction, rape, and strangulation murder of 44 year old Helen Schartner. She was last seen leaving from a night club, and her body was found near a beach. His execution was controversial, as O'Dell had a massive support base who believed in his innocence. The circuit court's decision to burn the DNA evidence relating to the Schartner case in 2000 sparked further outcry from them. Despite this, O'Dell was a long time felon with over 17 convictions dating back to the 1950s, and a woman claimed to have escaped a kidnapping attempt from him.
42. Carlton Pope (~1982-1997, lethal injection): Pope shot and killed 24 year old Cynthia Gray and wounded her sister while robbing them at a pool. He had a malicious wounding conviction when he shot a friend in the toe, and was paroled months before Gray's murder for that sentence.
43. Mario Murphy (1992-1997, lethal injection): 37 year old James Radcliff's wife hired Murphy to kill him in order to collect a life insurance policy. She, her boyfriend, Murphy, and 3 other conspirators pounced on Radcliff while he was sleeping in his bed, and they stabbed and beat him to death with a metal pipe. Due to all the other conspirators accepting plea deals, Murphy was the only one sentenced to death for the murder, which he perceived was because of Mexican nationality. His death sentence and execution also caused a minor diplomatic dispute with Mexico.
44. Dawud Mu'Min (1973-1997, lethal injection): At the age of 19 in 1973, Mu'Min shot and killed Charles Shupe, a 43 year old taxi driver, while robbing his taxi. He was given a 48 year sentence for the murder. 15 years later, Mu'Min was assigned to a inmate labor program. While working on a road, he pretended to be on a lunch break, and took the opportunity to sneak away from his escorts and supervisors. Mu'Min broke into a shopping center, raped Gladys Nopwasky, a 42 year old retailer, and stabbed her 16 times with a screwdriver. After he stole $4 from her purse, Mu'Min returned back to the work program.
45. Michael Satcher (1990-1997, lethal injection): Satcher ambushed 23 year old Anne Borghesani while she was biking near a highway. He raped, beat, and stabbed her 16 times with an axl. Another young woman was also assaulted by Satcher in a similar fashion, but she survived the attack. Both of their purses were stolen and disposed of in the same bush.
46. Thomas Beavers Jr. (1990-1997, lethal injection): Beavers broke into the home of 61 year old Marguerite Lowery, and raped and suffocated her to death with a pillow. He sacked the house, stole her jewelry, and drove off with Lowery's car. The killing went unsolved until a year later when Beavers was arrested for sexually assaulting a neighbor in circumstances nearly identical to Lowery's murder. A police search while investigating the neighbor incident found Lowery's stolen jewelry in his house.
47. Tony Mackall (1986-1998, lethal injection): While holding up a gas station at gunpoint, Mackall shot the cashier, 31 year old Mary Dahn, and took $515 from the register.
48. Douglas Buchanan Jr. (1987-1998, lethal injection): Enraged that his father, 43 year old Douglas, married a much younger woman, 31 year old Geraldine, shortly after his mother's passing, Buchanan shot him to death in their home. He also gunned down and stabbed Geraldine and her two sons, 13 year old Joel and 10 year old Donnie.
49. Ronald Watkins (1988-1998, lethal injection): While robbing a store that he formerly work at, Watkins stabbed the store owner, 29 year old William McCauley, 7 time in his back and slit his throat. McCauley's body was discovered by his father, who stopped by to check on his son after he failed to return home on time. As a sidenote, Watkins was the younger brother of the above mentioned Johnny Watkins Jr..
50. Ángel Breard (1992-1998, lethal injection): Breard stabbed his neighbor, 29 year old Ruth Dickie, to death during a botched rape in her home. He also made another unsuccessful attempt at sexually assaulting a second neighbor half a year later, which enabled investigators to tie him to Dickie's murder. His death sentence and execution sparked outrage in his native Paraguay.
51. Dennis Eaton (1989-1998, lethal injection): Eaton and his girlfriend, 24 year old Judy McDonald, carjacked 68 year old Ripley Marston Sr. and 26 year old Walter Custer Jr., and shot them both dead. While speeding away from the murder scene, the couple were pulled over by a state trooper, 48 year old Jerry Hines, and gunned him down as well. In the following police chase, Eaton ended up crashing his car into a telephone pole, and injured McDonald in the process. As they were corned, Eaton finished off McDonald by shooting her in the head, and made an attempt to commit suicide before he was subdued.
52. Danny King (~1980s(?)-1998, lethal injection): King and his then wife duped Carolyn Rogers, a 55 year old real estate agent, into letting them inside a vacant house by posing as clients. They jumped Rogers as she was giving them a tour of the house. She was choked with King's bare hands and stabbed to death in the assault. The couple then stole rings and checks from her purse. Both King and his ex wife blamed each other for the murder, but King was the one that was convicted of it by the courts. King also had a long history of robbery and car thefts, and was released from prison 10 days before the murder.
53. Lance Chandler Jr. (~1987-1998, lethal injection): Chandler shot and killed a clerk, 33 year old William Dix, during a convenience store robbery. He had a criminal record dating back to the age of 14, and had previous arrests for armed robbery, assaulting officers, and public intoxication.
54. Johnile DuBois (~1990s-1998, lethal injection): During a convenience store robbery, DuBois and 3 teenage accomplices tried forcing the clerk, 39 year old Philip Council, to open the register for them. When they thought he was acting too slow, the DuBois and the other robbers beat Council and shot him to death. DuBois had a history of thefts, illicit firearms possessions, assault, and probation violations.
55. Kenneth Stewart Jr. (1991-1998, lethal injection): Stewart separated from his wife, 35 year old Cynthia, after their marriage disintegrated. He was forbidden by the courts from being in contact with their son, 5 month old Jonathan, without Cynthia's consent. To overcome the custody barriers, Stewart tried to reconcile with Cynthia. When she refused, he shot her and Jonathan dead in her home.
56. Dwayne Wright (1989-1998, lethal injection): Wright went on a weeklong crime spree in Maryland and Virginia. In his Maryland attacks, he shot and killed 31 year old Odell Thomas and 24 year old Reginald Turman, and stole Turman's car and a total of $400. He then drove to Virginia, and held Saba Tekle, a 34 year old Ethiopian refugee, at gunpoint in her apartment. Wright forced Tekle to undress, shot her dead when she resisted his attempts at sexual assault, and swapped Truman’s car for hers.
57. Ronald Fitzgerald (1993-1998, lethal injection): Fitzgerald shot and killed 39 year old Coy White in his home in order to get his hands on the man’s 13 year old daughter. He abducted and raped the girl after forcing her to steal money from her father’s pockets, and left her locked in the trunk of his car. After abandoning White’s daughter, Fitzgerald flagged down a taxi driver, Hugh Morrison (age unknown), and shot him dead. Fitzgerald used Morrison’s stolen taxi to kidnap an 18 year old woman and her two children, and drove them to a motel. He raped the 18 year old in the motel room while her two children were watching tv. The family were spared and released, and Fitzgerald forced a couple to drive him to a courthouse with the intentions of committing suicide there. However, the attempt failed with his gun jamming, and he was captured by the police.
58. Kenneth Wilson (1993-1998, lethal injection): Wilson forcibly entered the home of his cousin's girlfriend, 31 year old Jacqueline Stephen, with a knife. He bound Stephen to a bed, and tied her 12 year old daughter and her daughter's 14 year old friend to the bed's posts. Wilson then made an attempt to rape Stephen, and cut her and the girls' throats. Stephen died at the scene, while both of the girls survived their injuries.
submitted by Leather_Focus_6535 to TrueCrimeDiscussion [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 20:53 dannyredbones Joseph Mallord William Turner, 'Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight', 1835, [4096×3042]

Joseph Mallord William Turner, 'Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight', 1835, [4096×3042] submitted by dannyredbones to ArtPorn [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 15:00 av-law Brigham Young and John D. Lee, the Executor of the Mountain Meadows Massacre, Were Joined at the Hip: They Were "Birds of a Feather" - Part II

BRIGHAM YOUNG AND JOHN D. LEE, THE EXECUTOR OF THE MOUNTAIN MEADOWS MASSACRE, WERE JOINED AT THE HIP
THEY WERE “BIRDS OF A FEATHER”
Part II
Polygamy:
Emmeline and Louisa Free, two young and attractive sisters, were both under promise to be sealed to John D. Lee, who was preparing to plurally marry them both. Brigham Young saw Emmeline Free, fell in love with her, and asked John D. Lee (his trusted subordinate) to surrender his claim to her to him. Although privately reluctant, because he loved her as well, Lee deferred to his leader. (Lee, Confessions, 166-67). According to Brigham Young’s biographer, Lee’s “Paternal and ecclesiastical loyalty” to Brigham “trumped his interest in Emmeline.” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 135-36). Emmeline Free “became a favorite with Brigham, and remained so until he met Miss Folsom, who captivated him to a degree that he neglected Emeline [sic], and she died broken-hearted.” (Lee, Confessions, 167). While Lee had but one child with Louisa (from whom he was later separated), Brigham Young had ten children with Emmeline. John D. Lee told George D. Grant in 1849 “that Brigham told him if he would give up Emmeline,” allowing her to marry him, that he “would uphold him in time and eternity & he never should fall, but that he [John D. Lee] would sit at his right hand [Brigham Young’s right hand] in his [Brigham Young’s] Kingdom.” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 135-36). John D. Lee, because of his devotion, would be Brigham Young’s right-hand man in the Kingdom yet to come. Lee gave Young his then most favorite wife and, ultimately, ten children.
Brigham Young rewarded John D. Lee and Isaac C. Haight, Mountain Meadows men, with dashing young brides to renew their vitality (Lee, Confessions, 239), just after the Massacre at Mountain Meadows (Lee: Emma Batchelor, January 7, 1858; Haight: Elizabeth Summers, January 1858). The Mormon prophet married both couples, at different times, but in each case, in January 1858 – months after the September 1857 Massacre – in his private sealing room. Brigham granted Emma a reprieve from an earlier marriage, making her available to a just then highly favored Lee. Brigham Young, the leader who decided who got whom, gave Emma to Lee, who described his “dashing” new bride in these terms: “Emma is the 1st English girl that [has been] Given me in the covenant of the P.H. [priesthood], & a more kindhearted, industrious & affectionate wife I never had.” (Cleland and Brooks, Lee Diaries, Vol. 1, 147). She was Lee’s seventeenth wife, and a mother to six of his children. Lee married nineteen wives with whom he had fifty-nine children, which was more children with fewer wives than his patron, Brigham Young. Like Brigham Young, Lee married ten teenagers. Those young wives included four sixteen-year-olds – one with whom he had seven children – a fourteen-year-old – with whom he had eleven children – and a twelve-year-old who resisted connection and was later consigned to one of his sons. With his teenage brides, Lee had 45 of his 59 children. (George D. Smith, Nauvoo Polygamy, 604-5, 635-37). Six of Lee’s wives, the first six of nine, received their second anointings in the Nauvoo Temple. (Lee, Confessions, 171). Eleven of his nineteen wives left him, over the years, after and because of his role in the notorious Massacre. If the Indians were charged with the massacre, as Vengeance Is Mine reports, because Lee was supposed to have lied to Brigham, if Lee was nothing more than an after-the-fact observer to an Indian atrocity, what did Lee do to cause Brigham Young to give him that “dashing young bride” – four months after the Massacre – to renew his “vitality”? In a ceremony, conducted by Young, in the President’s private sealing room.
The Mountain Meadows Massacre:
“Young’s edict, declaring martial law in the early fall of 1857, closed the borders of Utah Territory, virtually bringing travel to a halt across the Great Basin, isolating California, and cutting the nation in half.” (John Gary Maxwell, Robert Newton Baskin and the Making of Modern Utah, 25).
John D. Lee, like Apostle George Albert Smith (Joseph Smith’s cousin), was a member “of the ultra-secret Council of Fifty, the ruling body of the earthly Kingdom of God [led by Brigham Young].” (Bigler and Bagley, Mormon Rebellion, 160). That Council, a shadow government (“functioning as a secret provisional legislature,” John G. Turner), intended to take control when Jesus came and Mormons ruled the world before the end of the nineteenth century. George Albert Smith was not local, at least not then, in the truest sense, and neither was John D. Lee, Brigham’s right-hand man. Those two men had credentials above and beyond (different than) the southern Utah crowd. Apostle Smith had been the First Colonel in the Iron County Brigade, and Lee was a Major. The proximity of these two partisans, prior to the Massacre, was up close and personal. “Lee conducted much of Smith’s ‘pleasant but somewhat arduous journey of 185 miles’ through Santa Clara Canyon to Mountain Meadows.” (Bigler and Bagley, Mormon Rebellion, 160). There was ample opportunity in those times, and on that journey, for Brigham’s son and Joseph Smith’s cousin to discuss anything of consequence. Smith predicted dire consequences for the emigrants in the presence of Jacob Hamblin, when those Mormons, Indians and emigrants “from Arkansas ‘on thare way to Calafornia’” camped in close proximity at Corn Creek. Hamblin: “Thare was a Strang[e] atmosphere Serounded them.” “The apostle spoke of it, Hamblin said, unable to resist the temptation to prophesy what he may have known was coming, Smith said he believed ‘Some evle [evil] would befall them before they got through.’” (Bigler and Bagley, Mormon Rebellion, 167).
Since Mormons “intercepted, read, even copied or destroyed” letters deposited by non-Mormons at the post office, and since no letters “ever left the valley” without their contents being known, “Indian agent Jacob Holeman hand-carried his 1852 letter to the non-Mormon mail post at Fort Bridger.” Holeman’s letter (written years before the Mountain Meadows Massacre) had a message for those who would later dutifully study the details of that southern Utah atrocity. “Its contents [Indian Agent Holeman’s letter] told of white men’s participation in Indian attacks on emigrant trains. Caution was employed, for he expected that white men in the attacks were Mormons who would read his mail.” (Maxwell, Baskin, 74). Holeman’s conclusion in 1852 was repeated by historian Juanita Brooks one hundred years after he first addressed that terrible fact. Juanita Brooks “resolutely placed the blame where it belonged,” concluding that “white men, not Indians, were chiefly responsible” for the ambush of the Arkansas emigrants and that “she had come to feel that Brigham Young was directly responsible for this tragedy. John D. Lee, she believed, would make it to heaven before Brigham Young.” (Bagley, Blood of the Prophets, 363).
George Albert Smith traveled south with but one traveling companion. But he returned to the Great Salt Lake with an Indian entourage, by that to say with as many as twelve to fourteen southern Utah Indian leaders and chiefs. On September 1, 1857, Brigham Young said this in his daily journal: “Kanosh the Pavaunt chief with several of his band visited me.” The Journal History of the Church for the same day “tells of the visit of Jacob Hamblin and twelve Indian chiefs from the south.” (Juanita Brooks, The Mountain Meadows Massacre, Author Statement II, Preface). “President Young talked with them all, but it seems that Kanosh was given private audience. He was the chief who had killed Captain John Gunnison and several of his men as they were camped on the Sevier River on October 28, 1853.” Juanita Brooks didn’t know if Kanosh, a chief close to Brigham Young and a future temple-endowed Mormon elder, was at Mountain Meadows some few days later. Some of Brigham’s September 1 visitors would seem to have been present days later at the scene of the crime.
George Albert Smith, with Lee, was a powerful presence in Mormonism’s southern Utah precincts. (Mormon Rebellion, 160-61). Smith, a regional founder, outranked both Isaac Haight and William Dame because of his position as Colonel, Apostle and Brigham Young’s spokesman. But Lee, the Prophet’s right-hand man in a kingdom yet to come, had his own particular place in the supreme leaders’ hierarchical equation. “Apostle Smith who had been the Iron County Brigade’s first Colonel, met with local leaders and gave them instructions, both written and verbal.” Following that, “He stayed overnight in the home of the man who would play the key role in the coming atrocity.” (Bigler and Bagley, Mormon Rebellion, 160). George Albert Smith asked John D. Lee a hypothetical question: “Brother Lee, what do you think the brethren would do if a company of emigrants should come down through here making threats? Don’t you think they would pitch into them?” “‘They certainly would,’ Lee [reported having] said.” (“Lee’s Last Confession,” cited at Mormon Rebellion, 160). “Southern Utah leaders, who met with Colonel Smith knew what was expected of them.” (Ibid.).
January 11, 1857: First Presidency First Counselor Heber C. Kimball preaches “against wild enthusiasm.” This is, according to Michael Quinn, the first official reference that the “religious zeal of [the] Utah Reformation is getting out of control.” (Quinn, Extensions of Power, 754). February 8, 1857: President Brigham Young asks a congregation, “Will you love that man or woman [who has committed a sin beyond redemption] well enough to shed their blood?” Quinn notes that “Blood Atonement sermons are the most publicized feature of the Reformation,” a movement that started in 1855. In April, Brigham Young restores the passage of the sacrament “after withholding it from all church members for [the] past six months of Reformation which ends with Utah War.” (Ibid.).
John D. Lee, Diary entry, Monday, March 7, 1859. “About 2 P.M. an Expressed came to me by H. & T. Woolsey from a Friend in the North Stating that all hell was about to brake loose. A Detatchment of Johnson’s Troops were expected within a few days & to take care of myself. The bearer of the express was instructed not to sleep night or day untill the Letter reachd me, . . . .” (Brooks, Lee Diaries, Vol. 1, 200). “This timely warning from ‘a Friend in the North’ followed a pattern that ran through all the remainder of Lee’s life. He was always told, well in advance, of any threatened danger; the messenger was usually one of his ‘adopted sons,’ and the ‘faithful Friend’ was his own foster father, Brigham Young.” (Cleland and Brooks, editors, Lee Diaries, Vol. 1, 326 n 54).
The September 1, 1857, arrival of the southern Utah chiefs placed men at Brigham’s disposal “whose bands had previously raided but never directly attacked Americans moving west.” (Bigler and Bagley, Mormon Rebellion, 143). Their chances of success, if left to themselves, were close to impossible, as even they perceived. And they hesitated to steal those well-guarded emigrants’ cattle, horses, carriages, wagons, belongings and possessions. By the time Mormon militiamen – some of them disguised as Indians –planned, organized and commenced this surprise attack, with the assistance of their Indian allies, no less than 250,000 Americans had made that great American trip. Brigham Young was playing with fire. His edict (martial law) requiring American citizens to have his permit, a passport to traverse American land, at the imperious dictate of a squatter sovereign, was an affront to everyone everywhere that didn’t belong to the one true church. When the Southern Utah leaders selected the person of all persons to relay the facts about the Mountain Meadows Massacre to their leader, Brigham Young, the choice was an obvious one. It was Lee (Young’s adopted son).
At Mountain Meadows, the throats of emigrant women and children were cut. Brigham Young could not but have known that throats were cut. And that while (the cutting of throats) was “not Indian practice,” it was “consistent with Mormon beliefs about blood atonement.” Decades later one participant acknowledges “that Mormon men slit [the] throats of women and children.” (Quinn, Extensions of Power, 756). The shedding of innocent blood had consequences for men like John D. Lee and Brigham Young, both of whom had been recipients of the vaunted second anointing. There were no military deaths in the Utah War, a conflict often cited as justification for the deaths of the one hundred and twenty emigrants. The “Reformation,” as it was called, was a period of extreme indoctrination and violent rhetoric, a low point in the checkered history of the Mormon Church. Much of the violent discourse (“sermons like pitch forks”) angering susceptible Saints passed the mouths of Jedediah Grant, Brigham Young and George Albert Smith.
The Mountain Meadows Massacre Cover Up:
John D. Lee helped Young craft an alibi by denying Young’s involvement, and keeping his counsel, after the crime. It was the Mormon way. Keeping secrets was a first principle of the new and demanding faith. Brigham Young denounced John Pack, a member of the Council of Fifty, for “‘devulging the secrets of this council’ and for warning a man to leave the valley by ‘intimating that his life was in danger.’” Young to Pack: “‘[T]he things that belong to this Council should be as safe as though it was locked up in the silent vaults of Eternity.’” Pack begged for forgiveness, offering to “have his head cut off if he transgressed again.” “Pack ‘wept biterly like a child.’” (Turner, Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet, 187-88). And for good reason. It was no empty threat. When Bishop Klingensmith blew the whistle on the Mountain Meadows atrocity, he predicted his death. Men like Jesse Hartley and John Gunnison, though not oath bound, may have died for telling the forbidden truth.
At Young’s request, John D. Lee didn’t tell others, like Heber C. Kimball, what he told Brigham when they met, and both he and Brigham agreed to charge the Indians, and not the Mormons, with the crime. This conversation was a secret of such magnitude that locking it up in “the silent vaults of Eternity” had high priority. Lee wrote a letter, as Farmer to the Indians, to Brigham Young, the Superintendent of Indian Affairs, because Young said that he should. He charged the Indians with the crime because Brigham said that he should. The reason Mormons disguised themselves as Indians was always intended, if things went south, to shield Mormon culprits from culpability. At the expense of their Indian allies, the “Battle Ax” of the Lord. In their book Vengeance Is Mine, authors Richard E. Turley Jr. and Barbara Jones Brown maintain that John D. Lee lied to Brigham Young when he represented the Iron County Brigade in its report to the Utah Territorial Militia’s Supreme Commander, Lee’s surrogate father, Brigham Young. He lied, they say, when he said “the Indians did it” and absolved himself and a hundred others, Brigham Young’s closest southern allies, high authority elders and confidantes, from any participation in that great early American crime. One question surrounding those contentions may be easy to answer: “Can the authors of Vengeance Is Mine point to other times when John D. Lee might be said to have ever lied to the man he worshipped [and protected], Brigham Young?”
Brigham Young promulgated that outrageous lie (“the Indians did it”) publicly from 1857 until about 1870 or so. He had practiced deception for much of his adult life. Young took his first plural wife in 1842. The Church he ruled with an iron fist didn’t admit that it believed, preached or practiced polygamy until 1852. Joseph Smith, who plurally married something close to forty women during his lifetime, denied that he ever believed, taught or practiced polygamy to the date of his death. It was common in the early Church to speak one way in private to confidantes (let us say to the “Quorum of the Anointed”), and another way in public to less worthy not-so-highly esteemed sluggards and drones, members who didn’t know what their leaders did behind closed doors.
John D. Lee said this of that: “When I arrived in the city I went to the President’s house.” After the brutal affair, and on September 11, 1857, a council was held at the emigrant camp, at the scene of the crime on the day of the crime. (John D. Lee, Mormonism Unveiled, 236). On that occasion the leaders, including Lee, made speeches. “Thanks to God for delivering our enemies into our hands . . . .” And thanks to “the brethren for their zeal in God’s cause . . . .” The leaders stressed “the necessity of always saying the Indians did it alone . . . .” “The most of the speeches, however, were in the shape of exhortations and commands to keep the whole matter secret from everyone but Brigham Young.” (Ibid., 237). “It was then agreed that Brigham Young should be informed of the whole matter, by some one to be selected by the Church Council, after the brethren had returned home.” (Ibid., 237). By that to say home to Cedar City, Parowan and other environs after the crime, from the scene of the crime. That “some one to be selected,” John D. Lee Young (a member of Young’s family) had been the point man and executor of the atrocity.
“When I arrived in the city I went to the President’s house and gave to Brigham Young a full, detailed statement of the whole affair, from first to last – . . . I told him everything. I told him that ‘Brother McMurdy, Brother Knight and myself killed the wounded men in the wagons, with the assistance of the Indians . . . . He asked me many questions, and I told him every particular, and everything I knew . . . I gave him the names of every man that had been present at the massacre . . . .’ When I finished . . . he said: ‘This is the most unfortunate affair that ever befel the Church.’” He said that he was “afraid of treachery among the brethren,” and “if any one tells this thing, so that it will become public, it will work us great injury.” (John D. Lee, Mormonism Unveiled, 240-41). “I want you to understand now,” he then further said, “that you are never to tell this again, not even to Heber C. Kimball. It must be kept secret among ourselves. When you get home, I want you to sit down and write a long letter, and give me an account of the affair, charging it to the Indians. You sign the letter as Farmer to the Indians, and direct it to me as Indian Agent [Superintendent of Indian Affairs].” (John D. Lee, Mormonism Unveiled, 241).
Deception and Betrayal:
Brigham Young, Brigham Young Jr., George Albert Smith, George Q. Cannon, and others, concoct a story about the Massacre.
After the Massacre (September 6-11, 1857), and until the Fall of 1870, a period of thirteen years, Brigham Young and John D. Lee were on good terms. They protected each other. Their last productive encounter occurred at Tocquerville in 1870, where they talked about John D. Lee’s future at a new location, then parted company “in a very friendly manner.” (Lee, Confessions, 251-52). About two weeks after that amicable parting, Lee, by now a fugitive on the run, was shocked to learn that he had been “suspended from the church.” The following spring, in 1871, Lee visited Young, in the depths of his despair, and asked President Young why he hadn’t cut him off earlier “if what I had done was evil.”
Brigham Young’s reply to Lee in 1871, fourteen years after the Massacre, was, simply said, “I never knew the facts until lately.” (Lee, Confessions, 265).
The Mountain Meadows Massacre in September 1857 was carried out by the Iron County Brigade, a division of the Utah Territorial Militia commanded by the Utah Territorial Governor, Brigham Young. Brigham Young’s militia was aided by the Indians. In the year or two that followed the crime, multiple witnesses provided damning evidence that “white men, not Indians, were chiefly responsible” for the ambush of the Arkansas emigrants. “Multiple raids on emigrant wagon trains in Utah Territory, both before and after September 11, 1857, demonstrate that the train massacred at Mountain Meadows was not the only one attacked.” (Turley and Brown, Vengeance Is Mine, xiv). It is a well-established fact that by 1857, just before the Massacre, Brigham Young gave his Indian allies permission to steal the cattle of American emigrants on the North and South routes to the Coast without a Territorial consequence. Brigham Young authorized and encouraged the armed robberies of the emigrants’ cattle.
By and just before 1871, which was fourteen years after the 1857 Massacre, and the year in which Brigham Young told John D. Lee, “I never knew the facts until lately,” only Mormons continued to proclaim the innocence of Brigham Young’s militia. The Massacre occurred in 1857. Apostle Brigham Young Jr. defended the militia in the Philadelphia Morning Post on November 1, 1869: “Some years ago a party of emigrants, in crossing the plains, lost a couple of horses, and at once suspected the Indians of having stolen them. As a piece of malice they sprinkled the meat of an ox that had died through the night with strychnine. After their departure, a band of Indians found the meat and ate of it; the result was that nearly all who did so died; the remainder of the tribe then took up the trail, and gaining fresh accessions by the way, came up with the emigrants at Mountain Meadow, where in three days they killed 130 of the party. Some of our people, noticing that something was wrong, followed after, and arrived in time to save the remainder of the train; some sixteen women and children. That is the history of the ‘Mountain Meadows Massacre,’ for which we have always received the blame.” (Uncle Dale, cite from Recovery from Mormonism, April 6, 2013). “When the junior Brigham spoke in public, for the record in the national press, he spoke for his father and the other elite members of the Mormon leadership.” Part of Brigham Young Jr.’s statement was reprinted, “without criticism,” in the Deseret Weekly News on November 24, 1969. (Ibid.). This was the official explanation of the early Church made by Brigham Young’s biological namesake son.
The Massacre occurred in 1857. George Q. Cannon, Apostle, Secretary to Brigham Young, Mission President, Prophet, Seer and Revelator, Editor, Deseret News Weekly, December 1869: “In December 1869, fully twelve years after the murders at Mountain Meadows, Cannon who ‘had known the truth for more than a decade,’ continued to blame the Mountain Meadows Massacre on the Indians [“he claimed the citizens from Cedar City heard rumors of a battle but arrived too late to help”].” (Will Bagley, Blood of the Prophets, 270). “News editor [Deseret Weekly News] and Apostle George Q. Cannon repeated the old story that the Arkansas company was hostile to the Indians and poisoned an ox at Corn Creek and probably poisoned the spring. Ten Paiutes died, and the survivors rallied their neighbors to attack the emigrants at Cane Spring.” (Ibid.). Cannon, while the article’s author, derived his text from a letter written by Apostle George Albert Smith, Joseph Smith’s cousin, Brigham Young’s spokesman and the LDS Church Historian. “Cannon had learned in 1858 that Mormons ‘did the job.’” (Ibid., 430 n 10).
Let us ask again: “Can the authors of Vengeance Is Mine point to other times when John D. Lee is supposed to have ever lied to the man he worshipped, Brigham Young?” Brigham Young, Brigham Young Jr., George Albert Smith and George Q. Cannon lied about the Massacre to everyone everywhere all of the time for more than twelve years.
Part III of this series of three separate submissions will be posted on Sunday, May 13, 2024.
submitted by av-law to exmormon [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 12:00 milb_bot 05/04/2024 Daily Minor League Hitter Standouts

Yesterday's Standout Hitters

stats for games since 03/26/2024
 

AAA Standouts

Junior Caminero 2/5 K -- [3B, 20, INT - TB] - [F] [T] .333 BA .391 OBP .365 ISO 63 AB 6 HR 1 SB 8 BB% 21 K%
Javier Sanoja 1/4 BB -- [SS, 21, INT - MIA] - [F] [T] .167 BA .250 OBP .111 ISO 36 AB 10 BB% 5 K%
Owen Caissie 1/2 2BB -- [RF, 21, INT - CHC] - [F] [T] .288 BA .435 OBP .154 ISO 104 AB 2 HR 4 SB 19 BB% 29 K%
Victor Mesa Jr. 3/5 -- [LF, 22, INT - MIA] - [F] [T] .312 BA .363 OBP .215 ISO 93 AB 5 HR 7 BB% 15 K%
Everson Pereira 2/5 2B HR K -- [RF, 23, INT - NYY] - [F] [T] .263 BA .333 OBP .289 ISO 114 AB 8 HR 3 SB 7 BB% 37 K%
Livan Soto 2/4 2B BB -- [SS, 23, INT - CIN] - [F] [T] .286 BA .385 OBP .143 ISO 77 AB 1 HR 2 SB 14 BB% 17 K%
Brett Johnson 2/3 2B 3B 2BB -- [LF, 24, PCL - ARI] - [F] [T] .265 BA .405 OBP .353 ISO 34 AB 2 HR 1 SB 19 BB% 21 K%
Will Banfield 2/4 2B HR BB -- [C, 24, INT - MIA] - [F] [T] .235 BA .295 OBP .185 ISO 81 AB 3 HR 6 BB% 38 K%
Steward Berroa 1/4 HR K SB -- [RF, 24, INT - TOR] - [F] [T] .321 BA .441 OBP .161 ISO 56 AB 3 HR 15 SB 16 BB% 23 K%
Diego A. Castillo 3/3 2B 3B BB SB -- [3B, 26, INT - MIN] - [F] [T] .280 BA .384 OBP .146 ISO 82 AB 2 HR 3 SB 14 BB% 14 K%
 

AA Standouts

Nelson Rada 2/4 BB -- [CF, 18, SOU - LAA] - [F] [T] .227 BA .290 OBP .031 ISO 97 AB 9 SB 6 BB% 24 K%
Samuel Basallo 2/5 K -- [1B, 19, EAS - BAL] - [F] [T] .263 BA .290 OBP .189 ISO 95 AB 5 HR 2 SB 3 BB% 25 K%
Roman Anthony 1/2 2B BB K SB -- [CF, 19, EAS - BOS] - [F] [T] .224 BA .347 OBP .129 ISO 85 AB 2 HR 4 SB 15 BB% 33 K%
Moises Ballesteros 3/4 K -- [C, 20, SOU - CHC] - [F] [T] .344 BA .440 OBP .219 ISO 64 AB 3 HR 13 BB% 13 K%
Cole Young 2/4 -- [2B, 20, TEX - SEA] - [F] [T] .255 BA .342 OBP .088 ISO 102 AB 1 HR 6 SB 10 BB% 15 K%
Nacho Alvarez Jr. 2/3 BB SB -- [DH, 21, SOU - ATL] - [F] [T] .289 BA .404 OBP .036 ISO 83 AB 9 SB 16 BB% 18 K%
Harry Ford 1/2 BB K 3 SB -- [DH, 21, TEX - SEA] - [F] [T] .261 BA .425 OBP .227 ISO 88 AB 4 HR 7 SB 19 BB% 21 K%
James Triantos 2/4 3B -- [DH, 21, SOU - CHC] - [F] [T] .326 BA .360 OBP .207 ISO 92 AB 3 HR 7 SB 5 BB% 9 K%
Eddinson Paulino 1/2 2B BB -- [2B, 21, EAS - BOS] - [F] [T] .286 BA .398 OBP .229 ISO 70 AB 3 HR 3 SB 14 BB% 25 K%
Warming Bernabel 2/3 BB -- [3B, 21, EAS - COL] - [F] [T] .207 BA .235 OBP .134 ISO 82 AB 3 HR 3 SB 3 BB% 21 K%
Jacob Wilson 3/5 2 2B -- [SS, 22, TEX - OAK] - [F] [T] .429 BA .443 OBP .250 ISO 84 AB 3 HR 2 SB 1 BB% 11 K%
Robert Hassell III 3/5 K SB -- [RF, 22, EAS - WSH] - [F] [T] .341 BA .434 OBP .129 ISO 85 AB 2 HR 8 SB 12 BB% 20 K%
Christian Cairo 1/2 3BB -- [2B, 22, EAS - CLE] - [F] [T] .298 BA .394 OBP .158 ISO 57 AB 2 HR 9 SB 12 BB% 19 K%
Cody Freeman 2/5 HR K SB -- [3B, 23, TEX - TEX] - [F] [T] .279 BA .333 OBP .186 ISO 86 AB 4 HR 2 SB 6 BB% 16 K%
Aaron Zavala 3/5 HR K SB -- [RF, 23, TEX - TEX] - [F] [T] .272 BA .402 OBP .148 ISO 81 AB 2 HR 4 SB 16 BB% 32 K%
Ben Malgeri 3/4 BB 2 SB -- [LF, 24, EAS - DET] - [F] [T] .207 BA .242 OBP .086 ISO 58 AB 1 HR 4 SB 4 BB% 38 K%
Frainyer Chavez 1/3 3B 2BB K SB -- [2B, 24, TEX - TEX] - [F] [T] .197 BA .344 OBP .079 ISO 76 AB 1 HR 5 SB 18 BB% 20 K%
Anthony Servideo 3/4 2B HR -- [SS, 25, EAS - BAL] - [F] [T] .236 BA .321 OBP .181 ISO 72 AB 3 HR 4 SB 11 BB% 28 K%
Matt Rudick 3/4 HR SB -- [CF, 25, EAS - NYM] - [F] [T] .274 BA .376 OBP .178 ISO 73 AB 3 HR 1 SB 14 BB% 24 K%
 

A+ Standouts

Ethan Salas 1/3 -- [C, 17, MID - SD] - [F] [T] .200 BA .309 OBP .050 ISO 80 AB 4 SB 13 BB% 28 K%
Luis Lara 3/5 2B K -- [CF, 19, MID - MIL] - [F] [T] .276 BA .368 OBP .041 ISO 98 AB 12 SB 10 BB% 16 K%
Cam Collier 0/2 BB K SB -- [DH, 19, MID - CIN] - [F] [T] .306 BA .349 OBP .276 ISO 98 AB 7 HR 1 SB 6 BB% 19 K%
Jorge Ruiz 1/3 2BB 2K 2 SB -- [CF, 19, NWL - LAA] - [F] [T] .195 BA .242 OBP .080 ISO 87 AB 1 HR 3 SB 5 BB% 19 K%
Victor Acosta 1/3 3B -- [2B, 19, MID - CIN] - [F] [T] .173 BA .259 OBP .067 ISO 75 AB 5 SB 5 BB% 26 K%
Wilfredo Lara 1/4 3B -- [3B, 20, SAL - NYM] - [F] [T] .200 BA .302 OBP .055 ISO 55 AB 3 SB 12 BB% 20 K%
đŸ”„â€‹ Pedro Ramirez​ 3/5 HR SB -- [2B, 20, MID - CHC] - [F] [T] .375 BA .427 OBP .125 ISO 80 AB 2 HR 5 SB 7 BB% 15 K%
đŸ”„â€‹ Bryan Rincon​ 2/4 2 2B BB SB -- [SS, 20, SAL - PHI] - [F] [T] .203 BA .346 OBP .094 ISO 64 AB 5 SB 17 BB% 30 K%
Luis Baez 1/5 HR K -- [RF, 20, SAL - HOU] - [F] [T] .258 BA .305 OBP .180 ISO 89 AB 4 HR 3 SB 6 BB% 25 K%
Carter Jensen 2/4 2 2B BB K -- [C, 20, MID - KC] - [F] [T] .326 BA .466 OBP .163 ISO 92 AB 2 HR 9 SB 20 BB% 19 K%
Quinn McDaniel 1/3 HR 3BB -- [CF, 21, NWL - SF] - [F] [T] .308 BA .455 OBP .115 ISO 78 AB 2 HR 13 SB 20 BB% 26 K%
Tyler Whitaker 1/3 HR BB K -- [CF, 21, SAL - HOU] - [F] [T] .197 BA .301 OBP .099 ISO 71 AB 1 HR 1 SB 12 BB% 36 K%
đŸ”„â€‹ Ronaldo Flores​ 2/4 HR BB SB -- [1B, 21, NWL - LAA] - [F] [T] .200 BA .243 OBP .171 ISO 35 AB 1 HR 1 SB 2 BB% 26 K%
Euribiel Angeles 2/3 2B BB SB -- [SS, 21, MID - OAK] - [F] [T] .276 BA .323 OBP .161 ISO 87 AB 2 HR 5 SB 6 BB% 13 K%
Brett Bateman 3/5 2 SB -- [CF, 22, MID - CHC] - [F] [T] .354 BA .490 OBP .101 ISO 79 AB 9 SB 19 BB% 18 K%
Gabriel Moncada 3/3 BB SB -- [1B, 22, NWL - SEA] - [F] [T] .176 BA .373 OBP .020 ISO 51 AB 1 SB 20 BB% 16 K%
Jake Vogel 2/4 HR -- [RF, 22, MID - LAD] - [F] [T] .194 BA .292 OBP .161 ISO 62 AB 3 HR 2 SB 9 BB% 27 K%
Scott Bandura 1/3 HR 2BB K SB -- [RF, 22, NWL - SF] - [F] [T] .158 BA .293 OBP .184 ISO 76 AB 3 HR 5 SB 15 BB% 30 K%
E.J. Exposito 2/4 HR K SB -- [SS, 23, SAL - ATL] - [F] [T] .262 BA .333 OBP .311 ISO 61 AB 5 HR 7 SB 10 BB% 27 K%
Guy Lipscomb 4/4 2B BB -- [RF, 23, MID - CLE] - [F] [T] .340 BA .466 OBP .085 ISO 47 AB 6 SB 18 BB% 12 K%
Andrew Kachel 3/4 2BB SB -- [3B, 23, NWL - SF] - [F] [T] .274 BA .423 OBP .145 ISO 62 AB 1 HR 5 SB 17 BB% 23 K%
Chase Luttrell 3/3 2B HR -- [CF, 23, MID - MIA] - [F] [T] .254 BA .324 OBP .238 ISO 63 AB 3 HR 2 SB 8 BB% 30 K%
Brock Rodden 2/3 HR BB -- [2B, 23, NWL - SEA] - [F] [T] .250 BA .350 OBP .163 ISO 104 AB 4 HR 3 SB 11 BB% 15 K%
Brett Squires 3/3 2B HR 2BB -- [1B, 24, MID - KC] - [F] [T] .286 BA .398 OBP .198 ISO 91 AB 4 HR 6 SB 15 BB% 27 K%
Turner Hill 3/5 2B 2 HR BB -- [LF, 25, NWL - SF] - [F] [T] .258 BA .361 OBP .226 ISO 62 AB 3 HR 5 SB 13 BB% 15 K%
 

A Standouts

Adrian Santana 2/5 -- [SS, 18, CAR - TB] - [F] [T] .195 BA .271 OBP .026 ISO 77 AB 9 SB 9 BB% 24 K%
Antonio Anderson 0/3 BB SB -- [SS, 18, CAR - BOS] - [F] [T] .120 BA .276 OBP .012 ISO 83 AB 2 SB 16 BB% 25 K%
Jaison Chourio 3/4 BB -- [CF, 18, CAR - CLE] - [F] [T] .276 BA .444 OBP .158 ISO 76 AB 2 HR 7 SB 21 BB% 12 K%
Byron Chourio 2/5 2B K SB -- [DH, 18, FSL - MIN] - [F] [T] .250 BA .349 OBP .173 ISO 52 AB 4 SB 14 BB% 31 K%
Cristian Benavides 1/3 K SB -- [3B, 18, CAR - BAL] - [F] [T] .167 BA .286 OBP .000 ISO 6 AB 2 SB 14 BB% 42 K%
đŸ”„â€‹ Jean Joseph​ 2/4 HR 2 SB -- [CF, 19, FSL - TOR] - [F] [T] .208 BA .367 OBP .167 ISO 24 AB 1 HR 2 SB 16 BB% 20 K%
TJayy Walton 2/3 2BB -- [CF, 19, FSL - PHI] - [F] [T] .235 BA .339 OBP .196 ISO 51 AB 2 HR 3 SB 11 BB% 32 K%
Thomas Sosa 0/3 BB K 2 SB -- [CF, 19, CAR - BAL] - [F] [T] .207 BA .305 OBP .087 ISO 92 AB 10 SB 11 BB% 38 K%
Wady Mendez 0/2 BB K 2 SB -- [LF, 19, CAR - TEX] - [F] [T] .196 BA .315 OBP .109 ISO 46 AB 1 HR 7 SB 14 BB% 40 K%
Fraymi De Leon 1/3 BB SB -- [3B, 19, CAR - BOS] - [F] [T] .211 BA .362 OBP .079 ISO 38 AB 4 SB 19 BB% 27 K%
Boston Baro 1/2 2BB -- [2B, 19, FSL - NYM] - [F] [T] .364 BA .562 OBP .182 ISO 11 AB 2 SB 31 BB% 18 K%
Kevin McGonigle 2/4 2B K SB -- [2B, 19, FSL - DET] - [F] [T] .333 BA .467 OBP .125 ISO 24 AB 5 SB 19 BB% 9 K%
Alfonsin Rosario 1/5 2K 2 SB -- [DH, 19, CAR - CHC] - [F] [T] .222 BA .243 OBP .222 ISO 36 AB 2 HR 5 SB 2 BB% 40 K%
Sammy Hernandez 2/4 2B -- [C, 19, FSL - STL] - [F] [T] .333 BA .443 OBP .121 ISO 66 AB 1 SB 11 BB% 10 K%
Esmerlyn Valdez 2/4 HR K -- [RF, 20, FSL - PIT] - [F] [T] .282 BA .383 OBP .154 ISO 78 AB 2 HR 1 SB 9 BB% 30 K%
Ariel Almonte 1/4 HR BB 2K -- [LF, 20, FSL - CIN] - [F] [T] .197 BA .330 OBP .382 ISO 76 AB 9 HR 16 BB% 37 K%
Eddy Rodriguez 2/3 BB SB -- [LF, 20, FSL - PIT] - [F] [T] .391 BA .464 OBP .087 ISO 23 AB 3 SB 14 BB% 17 K%
Leonel Espinoza 2/4 2B HR BB 2K SB -- [CF, 21, CAR - CHC] - [F] [T] .250 BA .280 OBP .188 ISO 48 AB 1 HR 3 SB 2 BB% 28 K%
Jeral Toledo 2/3 3B SB -- [2B, 21, FSL - PIT] - [F] [T] .180 BA .323 OBP .060 ISO 50 AB 2 SB 17 BB% 19 K%
Dylan Jasso 2/4 2 HR -- [3B, 21, FSL - NYY] - [F] [T] .261 BA .377 OBP .250 ISO 88 AB 4 HR 1 SB 14 BB% 27 K%
Cristian Feliz 2/4 2 HR 2K -- [1B, 21, FSL - TOR] - [F] [T] .138 BA .263 OBP .215 ISO 65 AB 4 HR 7 BB% 52 K%
Jose Colmenares 2/3 HR -- [C, 21, CAR - WSH] - [F] [T] .213 BA .377 OBP .085 ISO 47 AB 1 HR 19 BB% 18 K%
Modeifi Marte 1/2 HR 2BB -- [1B, 21, CAL - ARI] - [F] [T] .154 BA .250 OBP .096 ISO 52 AB 1 HR 1 SB 10 BB% 30 K%
Tommy Hawke 2/4 BB 2 SB -- [RF, 21, CAR - CLE] - [F] [T] .290 BA .400 OBP .065 ISO 62 AB 7 SB 16 BB% 22 K%
Casey Yamauchi 2/3 2B BB 2 SB -- [2B, 23, CAL - OAK] - [F] [T] .259 BA .339 OBP .093 ISO 54 AB 4 SB 9 BB% 12 K%
 

Rookie Standouts

Mario Baez 1/3 BB SB -- [2B, 17, GCL - ATL] - [F] [T] .333 BA .500 OBP .000 ISO 3 AB 1 SB 25 BB% 0 K%
Brailer Guerrero 0/2 2BB 2K 2 SB -- [RF, 17, GCL - TB] - [F] [T] .000 BA .500 OBP .000 ISO 2 AB 2 SB 50 BB% 50 K%
Derniche Valdez 1/2 3B BB -- [2B, 18, AZL - CHC] - [F] [T] .500 BA .667 OBP 1.000 ISO 2 AB 33 BB% 0 K%
Enmanuel Bonilla 4/5 3 2B -- [CF, 18, GCL - TOR] - [F] [T] .800 BA .800 OBP .600 ISO 5 AB 0 BB% 0 K%
đŸ”„â€‹ Braylin Morel​ 3/3 2B 3B 2BB -- [RF, 18, AZL - TEX] - [F] [T] 1.000 BA 1.000 OBP 1.000 ISO 3 AB 40 BB% 0 K%
Starlyn Caba 1/3 HR BB -- [SS, 18, GCL - PHI] - [F] [T] .333 BA .500 OBP 1.000 ISO 3 AB 1 HR 25 BB% 0 K%
Robert Calaz 2/4 2 2B BB 2K -- [RF, 18, AZL - COL] - [F] [T] .500 BA .600 OBP .500 ISO 4 AB 20 BB% 40 K%
Yeiker Reyes 3/5 2B -- [CF, 18, AZL - COL] - [F] [T] .600 BA .600 OBP .200 ISO 5 AB 0 BB% 0 K%
Luiyin Alastre 2/4 K 2 SB -- [2B, 18, AZL - MIL] - [F] [T] .500 BA .500 OBP .000 ISO 4 AB 2 SB 0 BB% 25 K%
Yerald Nin 2/3 2B 2BB -- [SS, 18, AZL - ARI] - [F] [T] .667 BA .800 OBP .333 ISO 3 AB 40 BB% 0 K%
đŸ”„đŸ”„â€‹ Yeremi Cabrera​​ 2/3 HR 2BB 2 SB -- [LF, 18, AZL - TEX] - [F] [T] .667 BA .800 OBP 1.000 ISO 3 AB 1 HR 2 SB 40 BB% 0 K%
Ramon Ramirez 2/3 2 2B -- [DH, 18, AZL - KC] - [F] [T] .667 BA .750 OBP .667 ISO 3 AB 0 BB% 0 K%
Eduardo Guerrero 2/3 3B -- [2B, 18, AZL - LAD] - [F] [T] .667 BA .500 OBP .667 ISO 3 AB 0 BB% 0 K%
Franyerber Montilla 1/3 2B 2BB K 2 SB -- [SS, 19, GCL - DET] - [F] [T] .333 BA .600 OBP .333 ISO 3 AB 2 SB 40 BB% 20 K%
Yordany De Los Santos 1/2 2BB K 2 SB -- [SS, 19, GCL - PIT] - [F] [T] .500 BA .750 OBP .000 ISO 2 AB 2 SB 50 BB% 25 K%
Jaron Elkins 1/3 2BB 2K 3 SB -- [LF, 19, AZL - LAD] - [F] [T] .333 BA .600 OBP .000 ISO 3 AB 3 SB 40 BB% 40 K%
Esteban Mejia 3/5 HR 2K -- [3B, 19, AZL - TEX] - [F] [T] .600 BA .600 OBP .600 ISO 5 AB 1 HR 0 BB% 40 K%
Victor Rodrigues 2/3 2BB K SB -- [C, 19, AZL - LAD] - [F] [T] .667 BA .800 OBP .000 ISO 3 AB 1 SB 40 BB% 20 K%
Jose Escobar 3/3 2B BB -- [2B, 19, AZL - CHC] - [F] [T] 1.000 BA 1.000 OBP .333 ISO 3 AB 25 BB% 0 K%
German Ortiz 5/5 2 2B -- [1B, 19, AZL - OAK] - [F] [T] 1.000 BA 1.000 OBP .400 ISO 5 AB 0 BB% 0 K%
Jonathan Peguero 2/4 2B HR K -- [C, 19, GCL - TOR] - [F] [T] .500 BA .500 OBP 1.000 ISO 4 AB 1 HR 0 BB% 25 K%
Dervy Ventura 3/4 HR 2BB -- [2B, 20, AZL - SEA] - [F] [T] .750 BA .833 OBP .750 ISO 4 AB 1 HR 33 BB% 0 K%
Keiner Delgado 2/5 HR 2 SB -- [2B, 20, GCL - PIT] - [F] [T] .400 BA .400 OBP .600 ISO 5 AB 1 HR 2 SB 0 BB% 0 K%
T.J. Schofield-Sam 4/4 2B 3B 2BB -- [LF, 22, AZL - OAK] - [F] [T] 1.000 BA 1.000 OBP .750 ISO 4 AB 33 BB% 0 K%
 
submitted by milb_bot to DynastyBaseball [link] [comments]


2024.05.05 08:19 ft420 D1 Baseball TV/Streaming for Sunday 5/5: Cinco de Mayo! / National Ride a Bike Day

ET AWAY HOME VIDEO
9:00 AM SOUTH ALABAMA at APP STATE ESPN+ ($)
10:00 AM SAINT JOSEPH'S at FORDHAM ESPN+ ($)
11:00 AM CORNELL at BROWN ESPN+ ($)
11:00 AM WESTERN KENTUCKY at UNC ASHEVILLE ESPN+ ($)
11:00 AM OHIO at VIRGINIA TECH ACCNX
12:00 PM LAFAYETTE at ARMY ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM AKRON at CENTRAL MICHIGAN Chippewas All-Access ($)
12:00 PM RICE at CHARLOTTE ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM RHODE ISLAND at DAVIDSON ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM SOUTH FLORIDA at EAST CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM UAB at FLORIDA ATLANTIC ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM WOFFORD at GARDNER-WEBB ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM LEHIGH at HOLY CROSS ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM ARKANSAS STATE at JAMES MADISON ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM MD EASTERN SHORE at LE MOYNE NEC FRONT ROW
12:00 PM QUINNIPIAC at NIAGARA ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM NORTH ALABAMA at QUEENS ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM COASTAL CAROLINA at SOUTHERN MISS ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM HOFSTRA at STONY BROOK FLOBaseball ($)
12:00 PM OLD DOMINION at TEXAS STATE ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM IONA at VILLANOVA FLOBaseball ($)
12:30 PM SOUTH ALABAMA at APP STATE ESPN+ ($)
12:30 PM NC STATE at FLORIDA STATE ACCNX
1:00 PM UTRGV at ABILENE CHRISTIAN ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM WESTERN MICHIGAN at BOWLING GREEN ESPN+ ($) / BCSN
1:00 PM WEST VIRGINIA at CINCINNATI ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM GEORGIA TECH at CLEMSON ACCNX
1:00 PM MONMOUTH at DELAWARE FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM LONGWOOD at DUKE ACCNX
1:00 PM BELLARMINE at EASTERN KENTUCKY ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM WILLIAM & MARY at ELON FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM BETHUNE-COOKMAN at FLORIDA A&M FAMU All-Access ($)
1:00 PM JACKSONVILLE at FLORIDA GULF COAST ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM VANDERBILT at GEORGIA SECN+
1:00 PM BELMONT at INDIANA STATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM MIAMI OH at KENT STATE Boxcast
1:00 PM ARKANSAS at KENTUCKY SECN+
1:00 PM GEORGIA STATE at MARSHALL ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM LONG ISLAND at MERRIMACK NEC FRONT ROW
1:00 PM UT MARTIN at MOREHEAD STATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM RIDER at MOUNT ST. MARY'S The Mount All-Access
1:00 PM PENN STATE at NAVY ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM LOUISIANA TECH at NEW MEXICO STATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM BRYANT at NJIT ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM NORTHEASTERN at NORTH CAROLINA A&T FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM INDIANA at PURDUE B1G+
1:00 PM MARYLAND at RUTGERS B1G+
1:00 PM GEORGE MASON at SAINT LOUIS ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM UTAH TECH at STEPHEN F. AUSTIN ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM AUSTIN PEAY at STETSON ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM UNC GREENSBORO at THE CITADEL ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM EASTERN MICHIGAN at TOLEDO ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM CHARLESTON at TOWSON FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM HIGH POINT at USC UPSTATE ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM WESTERN CAROLINA at WAKE FOREST ACCNX
2:00 PM McNEESE STATE at A&M - CORPUS CHRISTI ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SAN JOSE STATE at AIR FORCE MTN WEST NETWORK
2:00 PM GRAMBLING STATE at ARKANSAS PINE BLUFF Youtube / @uapblionsroar
2:00 PM TCU at BAYLOR ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM ILLINOIS CHICAGO at BRADLEY 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM JAX STATE at DALLAS BAPTIST ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM UCF at HOUSTON ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM OHIO STATE at ILLINOIS B1G+
2:00 PM SOUTHERN ILLINOIS at ILLINOIS STATE 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM NORTHWESTERN at IOWA B1G+
2:00 PM KANSAS at KANSAS STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM NORTHWESTERN STATE at LAMAR ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SOUTHEAST MISSOURI at LINDENWOOD 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM TEXAS A&M at LSU SECN+
2:00 PM NEBRASKA at MINNESOTA B1G+
2:00 PM ALABAMA at MISSISSIPPI STATE SECN+
2:00 PM SOUTH CAROLINA at MISSOURI SECN+
2:00 PM SAINT THOMAS at NORTH DAKOTA STATE MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
2:00 PM SOUTH DAKOTA STATE at NORTHERN COLORADO MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
2:00 PM BALL STATE at NORTHERN ILLINOIS NIU All-Access ($)
2:00 PM PITTSBURGH at NOTRE DAME đŸ“ș ACC NETWORK
2:00 PM OMAHA at ORAL ROBERTS MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
2:00 PM PEPPERDINE at SAINT MARY'S ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM MERCER at SAMFORD ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM ALCORN STATE at SOUTHERN Jaguar Sports Network ($)
2:00 PM SIU EDWARDSVILLE at SOUTHERN INDIANA ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM EASTERN ILLINOIS at TENNESSEE TECH ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM OKLAHOMA STATE at TEXAS đŸ“ș LONGHORN NETWORK
2:00 PM PRAIRIE VIEW A&M at TEXAS SOUTHERN Youtube / @TSUathletics
2:00 PM LOUISIANA at TROY ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM MEMPHIS at TULANE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM EVANSVILLE at VALPARAISO 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM LITTLE ROCK at WESTERN ILLINOIS ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM CAMPBELL at UNC WILMINGTON FLOBaseball ($)
2:30 PM LAFAYETTE at ARMY ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM STANFORD at ARIZONA PAC-12 PLUS (AZ-3)
3:00 PM CAL BAPTIST at GRAND CANYON ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM LEHIGH at HOLY CROSS ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM MICHIGAN at MICHIGAN STATE B1G+
3:00 PM UTAH at OREGON PAC-12 PLUS (ORE)
3:00 PM NEW ORLEANS at SOUTHEASTERN ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM OKLAHOMA at TEXAS TECH ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM NEW MEXICO at UNLV MTN WEST NETWORK
3:30 PM SOUTH FLORIDA at EAST CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
3:30 PM WOFFORD at GARDNER-WEBB ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM WASHINGTON at ARIZONA STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 ARIZONA
4:00 PM OLE MISS at AUBURN đŸ“ș SEC NETWORK
4:00 PM NICHOLLS STATE at INCARNATE WORD ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM GONZAGA at PACIFIC ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM SANTA CLARA at SAN DIEGO ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM FRESNO STATE at SAN DIEGO STATE MTN WEST NETWORK
4:00 PM LONG BEACH STATE at UC DAVIS ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM CAL POLY at UC IRVINE ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM UC SAN DIEGO at UC SANTA BARBARA ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM CALIFORNIA at USC PAC-12 PLUS (USC)
4:00 PM WESTERN CAROLINA at WAKE FOREST ACCNX
4:00 PM OREGON STATE at WASHINGTON STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 NETWORKS
5:00 PM LONGWOOD at DUKE ACCNX
5:00 PM CAL STATE FULLERTON at UCLA 🔈 Audio Only
5:00 PM CSU BAKERSFIELD at UC RIVERSIDE ESPN+ ($)
5:30 PM PEPPERDINE at SAINT MARY'S ESPN+ ($)
5:30 PM ALCORN STATE at SOUTHERN Jaguar Sports Network ($)
7:00 PM CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE at HAWAI'I 🔈 Audio Only
*= time changed
submitted by ft420 to collegebaseball [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 21:00 throwawaytempest25 Hot take: we need an All Star season at least after every five seasons. Life is too short, we shouldn't wait till season 37 for all returning players, and we need to see both newer and older players who clearly want to play again get next chances to play again, play hard, & prove themselves.

* Get whoever does the comps for BB Can and Reindeer games. Now that that statement's out of the way:
Yeah I know, All Stars 2 sucked. And again I don't blame a single person on the cast. Yes Christmas is the only person I did not want to see on that cast, but even she has some merit to be on their, and if you can stretch it, every player that season did. And it came down to the comps and people not fighting or shifting hard.
We saw new players afterwards who didn't want to play like that, better casting for more superfans and getting recruits from some unexpected places (Kyle did TikTok but they got Ameerah from LINKEDIN of all places), we had alumni in and out of 22 who hated how things turned out and wanted to play again, more channels in Ethanimale and .....the one with the Dawn pfp from Total Drama whose name I can't remember speaking about Big Brother alongside Peridiam, TMR, and ....I need to listen, and looking at Big Brother 23, 24, and 25, everyone has an opinion on those seasons: arguably three seasons with the most variety in terms of rankings and placements. We even had players who talked about returning even more or didn't get the chance to come and play in Reindeer Games: Danielle, Josh, etc come and play again.
Like in terms of past players:
1: they could probably get Chicken George or Eddie back if they tried
2: I think Monica wants to play again, maybe they could get Nicole or Hardy?
3: Danielle and Jason keep up with the show, and I think they can get Marcellas or Lisa
4: Jun wants to play again
5: Drew keeps up with the show and Cowboy wants to play again
6: Janelle and Kaysar most likely would return, Ivette could make it
8: They got Dani back so maybe Dick would come?
9: ....if they ask Parker and treat Adam as a story of redemption?
10: If they call Keesha early this time, Jessie says yes or they ask Michelle
11: Kevin returned...maybe Jordan or Russell could?
12: Rachel's not pregnant anymore and would've done it anyone, they got Britney & Enzo back, even Hayden or Matt are still well known
14: Jodi deserves a second shot, Ian still shows up
15: Andy wants to play again, and I think Candice and Helen show up to events. They can get Elissa or McCrae easily.
16: Anyone from 16 seems like a lock.
17: Vanessa's not pregnant anymore, Jason's a maybe despite being Jason,
18: Paulie's clearly available, Natalie's on the Challenge, they could get Michelle, and Paul might be ready to play eventually.
19: They could get Josh, and I think Jessica/Mark/Elena might say yes
20: Brett, Rockstar, and Kaycee would say yes, I think.
Like imagine if we had an All Star season at the end of 19 or 20 with people from 15 though 20:
A house of Josh, Tyler, Kaycee, Paul, Nicole F, Paulie, Vanessa, Johnny Mac, Jason, Davonne, Code if they have to, Frankie, Zach before he ruined his relationship with production, The Shepard, Andy, and past players from seasons 2-14 would go really hard.
And it got me thinking. If we had an All Star season of just returning players from BB23, BB24, and BB25, could it work? Yeah! Then I threw in a few variables of BB21 into the ring, and honestly, these new players have a lot of heat to fix the flaws Big Brother All Star 2 failed in. For example:
But the big thing for me is that a lot of these players have SO MUCH CONFLICT and past problems with each other, as well as older players who had to see some of this play out.
But those are just examples. Canada's going to do an All Star season when they feel like they've done everything but Canada's proven they're willing to bring back annyone. Arisa even talked about It in an interview. But with so many players who want to play again contrasted with how long it takes to even get an All Stars season, I'd rather have more than less, but that's just my opinion. What about you, what did you think?
submitted by throwawaytempest25 to BigBrother [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 07:44 ft420 D1 Baseball TV/Streaming for Saturday 5/4: Star Wars Day / National Homebrew Day

ET AWAY HOME VIDEO
10:00 AM ARKANSAS STATE at JAMES MADISON ESPN+/resume 5/3 game
11:00 AM OHIO at VIRGINIA TECH ACCNX
11:30 AM CORNELL at BROWN ESPN+ ($)
11:30 AM PRINCETON at COLUMBIA ESPN+ ($)
11:30 AM DARTMOUTH at PENN ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM LEHIGH at ARMY ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM MIDDLE TENNESSEE at BINGHAMTON ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM LOUISVILLE at BOSTON COLLEGE ACCNX
12:00 PM MD EASTERN SHORE at LE MOYNE NEC FRONT ROW
12:00 PM BRIGHAM YOUNG at MIAMI ACCNX
12:00 PM MARYLAND at RUTGERS đŸ“ș BIG TEN NETWORK
12:00 PM MANHATTAN at SIENA Siena All-Access
12:00 PM IONA at VILLANOVA FLOBaseball ($)
12:00 PM LITTLE ROCK at WESTERN ILLINOIS ESPN+ ($)
12:30 PM UMASS LOWELL at ALBANY AE TV
12:30 PM FAIRFIELD at MARIST Marist All-Access
12:30 PM CANISIUS at SAINT PETER'S Peacocks All Access
1:00 PM WESTERN MICHIGAN at BOWLING GREEN ESPN+ ($) / BCSN
1:00 PM AKRON at CENTRAL MICHIGAN Chippewas All-Access ($)
1:00 PM STONEHILL at DELAWARE STATE NEC FRONT ROW
1:00 PM BELLARMINE at EASTERN KENTUCKY ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM LAFAYETTE at HOLY CROSS ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM ARKANSAS STATE at JAMES MADISON ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM NORTH FLORIDA at KENNESAW STATE KSUowls.com
1:00 PM LONG ISLAND at MERRIMACK NEC FRONT ROW
1:00 PM DAYTON at RICHMOND ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM CREIGHTON at SAINT JOHN'S ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM UCONN at SETON HALL FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM HOFSTRA at STONY BROOK FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM EASTERN MICHIGAN at TOLEDO ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM CHARLESTON at TOWSON FLOBaseball ($)
1:00 PM UTAH TECH at STEPHEN F. AUSTIN ESPN+ ($)
1:30 PM RHODE ISLAND at DAVIDSON ESPN+ ($)
*2:00 PM TCU at BAYLOR ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM ILLINOIS CHICAGO at BRADLEY ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM BETHUNE-COOKMAN at FLORIDA A&M FAMU All-Access ($)
2:00 PM JACKSONVILLE at FLORIDA GULF COAST ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SAINT JOSEPH'S at FORDHAM ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM VANDERBILT at GEORGIA SECN+
2:00 PM SOUTHERN ILLINOIS at ILLINOIS STATE 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM NICHOLLS STATE at INCARNATE WORD ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM BELMONT at INDIANA STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM ARKANSAS at KENTUCKY SECN+
2:00 PM SOUTHEAST MISSOURI at LINDENWOOD 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM GEORGIA SOUTHERN at LOUISIANA MONROE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM UT MARTIN at MOREHEAD STATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM QUINNIPIAC at NIAGARA ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM NORTHEASTERN at NORTH CAROLINA A&T FLOBaseball ($)
2:00 PM SOUTH DAKOTA STATE at NORTHERN COLORADO MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
2:00 PM BALL STATE at NORTHERN ILLINOIS NIU All-Access ($)
2:00 PM INDIANA at PURDUE B1G+
*2:00 PM MERCER at SAMFORD ESPN+ ($)
*2:00 PM OKLAHOMA at TEXAS TECH ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM WESTERN KENTUCKY at UNC ASHEVILLE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SEATTLE U at UTAH VALLEY WAC International
2:00 PM EVANSVILLE at VALPARAISO 🔈 Audio Only
2:00 PM GEORGE WASHINGTON at VCU ESPN+ ($)
2:30 PM LEHIGH at ARMY ESPN+ ($)
2:45 PM OHIO at VIRGINIA TECH ACCNX
3:00 PM SAN JOSE STATE at AIR FORCE MTN WEST NETWORK
3:00 PM McNEESE STATE at A&M - CORPUS CHRISTI ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM SOUTH ALABAMA at APP STATE ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM GRAMBLING STATE at ARKANSAS PINE BLUFF Youtube / @uapblionsroar
3:00 PM MIDDLE TENNESSEE at BINGHAMTON ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM CORNELL at BROWN ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM WEST VIRGINIA at CINCINNATI ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM JAX STATE at DALLAS BAPTIST ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM MIAMI OH at KENT STATE Boxcast
3:00 PM GEORGIA STATE at MARSHALL ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM NEBRASKA at MINNESOTA B1G+
3:00 PM ALABAMA at MISSISSIPPI STATE SECN+
3:00 PM MURRAY STATE at MISSOURI STATE 🔈 Audio Only
3:00 PM FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON at NORFOLK STATE NSU Showcase ($)
3:00 PM SAINT THOMAS at NORTH DAKOTA STATE MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
3:00 PM OMAHA at ORAL ROBERTS MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
3:00 PM DARTMOUTH at PENN ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM MANHATTAN at SIENA Siena All-Access
3:00 PM COASTAL CAROLINA at SOUTHERN MISS ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM EASTERN ILLINOIS at TENNESSEE TECH ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM PRAIRIE VIEW A&M at TEXAS SOUTHERN Youtube / @TSUathletics
3:00 PM UNC GREENSBORO at THE CITADEL ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM SACRAMENTO STATE at UT ARLINGTON WAC International
3:00 PM WICHITA STATE at UTSA ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM RADFORD at WINTHROP 🔈 Audio Only
3:30 PM OLD DOMINION at TEXAS STATE 🔈 Audio Only
3:30 PM UMASS LOWELL at ALBANY AE TV
3:30 PM PRINCETON at COLUMBIA ESPN+ ($)
3:30 PM FAIRFIELD at MARIST Marist All-Access
3:30 PM MICHIGAN at MICHIGAN STATE B1G+
3:30 PM CANISIUS at SAINT PETER'S Peacocks All Access
3:30 PM OKLAHOMA STATE at TEXAS đŸ“ș LONGHORN NETWORK
4:00 PM UTRGV at ABILENE CHRISTIAN ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM SOUTH FLORIDA at EAST CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM WILLIAM & MARY at ELON FLOBaseball ($)
4:00 PM UAB at FLORIDA ATLANTIC ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM LAFAYETTE at HOLY CROSS ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM OHIO STATE at ILLINOIS B1G+
*4:00 PM NORTHWESTERN at IOWA B1G+
4:00 PM NORTH FLORIDA at KENNESAW STATE KSUowls.com
4:00 PM FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL at LIBERTY ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM SOUTH CAROLINA at MISSOURI SECN+
4:00 PM PITTSBURGH at NOTRE DAME đŸ“ș ACC NETWORK
4:00 PM CREIGHTON at SAINT JOHN'S ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM PEPPERDINE at SAINT MARY'S ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM TARLETON at SAM HOUSTON STATE 🔈 Audio Only
4:00 PM UCONN at SETON HALL FLOBaseball ($)
4:00 PM SIU EDWARDSVILLE at SOUTHERN INDIANA ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM UTAH TECH at STEPHEN F. AUSTIN ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM LONG BEACH STATE at UC DAVIS ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM CAL POLY at UC IRVINE ESPN+ ($)
4:30 PM LOUISIANA at TROY ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM LIPSCOMB at CENTRAL ARKANSAS UCA Showcase
5:00 PM KANSAS at KANSAS STATE ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM PRESBYTERIAN at CHARLESTON SOUTHERN ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM UTAH at OREGON PAC-12 PLUS (ORE)
5:30 PM GEORGIA SOUTHERN at LOUISIANA MONROE ESPN+ ($)
5:30 PM SEATTLE U at UTAH VALLEY WAC International
6:00 PM NORTHWESTERN STATE at LAMAR ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM PENN STATE at NAVY ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM LOUISIANA TECH at NEW MEXICO STATE ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM BRYANT at NJIT AE TV
6:00 PM UC SAN DIEGO at UC SANTA BARBARA ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM CAMPBELL at UNC WILMINGTON FLOBaseball ($)
6:00 PM WESTERN CAROLINA at WAKE FOREST ACCNX
6:30 PM MONMOUTH at DELAWARE FLOBaseball ($)
6:30 PM TENNESSEE at FLORIDA SECN+
6:30 PM AUSTIN PEAY at STETSON ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM UCLA at CAL STATE FULLERTON ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM NC STATE at FLORIDA STATE đŸ“ș ACC NETWORK
7:00 PM NEW ORLEANS at SOUTHEASTERN ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM UCF at HOUSTON ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM TEXAS A&M at LSU đŸ“ș ESPNU
7:30 PM MEMPHIS at TULANE ESPN+ ($)
8:00 PM OLE MISS at AUBURN đŸ“ș SEC NETWORK
8:00 PM GONZAGA at PACIFIC ESPN+ ($)
8:00 PM SANTA CLARA at SAN DIEGO ESPN+ ($)
8:30 PM LIPSCOMB at CENTRAL ARKANSAS UCA Showcase
9:00 PM STANFORD at ARIZONA PAC-12 PLUS (AZ-3)
9:00 PM FRESNO STATE at SAN DIEGO STATE MTN WEST NETWORK
9:00 PM CSU BAKERSFIELD at UC RIVERSIDE ESPN+ ($)
9:00 PM NEW MEXICO at UNLV MTN WEST NETWORK
9:00 PM OREGON STATE at WASHINGTON STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 NETWORKS
9:30 PM WASHINGTON at ARIZONA STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 NETWORKS
9:30 PM CALIFORNIA at USC PAC-12 PLUS (USC)
10:00 PM CAL BAPTIST at GRAND CANYON ESPN+ ($)
12:30 AM CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE at HAWAI'I 🔈 Audio Only
*= time changed
submitted by ft420 to collegebaseball [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 06:07 adudeguyman Yankton Dakota (Sioux writer and activist) ZitkĂĄla-Ć ĂĄ at age 22, photo by Joseph Turner Keiley in 1898.

Yankton Dakota (Sioux writer and activist) ZitkĂĄla-Ć ĂĄ at age 22, photo by Joseph Turner Keiley in 1898. submitted by adudeguyman to OldSchoolCool [link] [comments]


2024.05.04 04:44 Leather_Focus_6535 The currently 98 offenders executed by the state of Missouri since the 1970s and their crimes (warning, graphic content, please read at your own risk) [part 1, cases 1 to 49]

Here is my list for Missouri's post Furman execution roster that I wrote for my personal death penalty project. I'll probably release Florida next, and I'm currently working on completing my list for Texas.
As always, the dates given are a time frame of the offender's earliest known criminal activities to their execution. Many of cases described here are extremely depraved in nature, so please read at your own risk. Missouri has also scheduled David Hosier for execution on June 11, and is filling death warrants for Christopher Collings and Marcellus Williams. If these future executions are carried out as planned, then I might update this post with their information.
Due to it exceeding the character count limitations that reddit allows for submissions, I had to divide this list into two separate posts. For the link to part 2, please click here.
The currently executed 98 offenders, cases 1 to 49:
1. George Mercer (~1960s-1989, lethal injection): Mercer was the president of the Missing Links MC motorcycle gang, a title he inherited after his predecessor was killed in a bar fight. Under his leadership, the gang involved itself heavily with organized crime, and had a well earned reputation for extreme violence. The gang harassed and assaulted what they deemed to be "political undesirables" such as left leaning hippies and prohibitionists, and terrorized those aligned with rival motorcycle gangs. They were also predatory towards teenage girls and young women. In one incident, Mercer beat a Vietnam veteran unconscious when the man tried to stop him from sexually harassing underaged girls at a concert, and gang-raped a kidnapped 17 year old girl with some associates in another. One of his followers lured Karen Keeton, a 22 year old tavern waitress, to Mercer's home as a "birthday present" for him. Mercer raped Keeton in his bedroom, and manually strangled her to death. Mercer and his gang members were also speculated to be involved in the murder of 15 year old David Eyman by some webslueths due to his ties with them, but credible evidence is currently lacking.
2. Gerald Smith (1983-1990, lethal injection): Smith beat his girlfriend, 22 year old Karen Roberts, to death with a metal pipe out of fear of her having a venereal disease. While awaiting execution, he stabbed a few death row inmate, 35 year old Robert Baker, with the help of another death row inmate, Frank Guinan. Baker was originally sentenced to death when he shot and killed a detective in a robbery.
3. Winford Stokes (~1969-1990, lethal injection): In 1969, Stokes and his accomplices shot and killed 60 year old Ignatius DiManuele while robbing his tavern. The trio were arrested weeks after the murder. During the trial, they made an escape attempt, but were all recaptured. Stokes was released from prison in 1977, and assaulted a 71 year old man with a claw hammer during a burglary a month later. He fatally shot 73 year old Marie Montgomery and stole her watch in one home invasion, and strangled and stabbed 33 year old Pamela Benda to death in another. Stokes seized Benda's jewelry after rummaging through her drawers.
4. Leonard Laws (1980-1990, lethal injection): Laws and his girlfriend's brothers (one of which was George Gilmore) decided to that the easiest way to earn money for their families was to rob and murder the elderly. He acted as a lookout while the Gilmore murdered and robbed the victims. They were responsible for a total of 5 killings.
5. George Gilmore (1980-1990, lethal injection): Gilmore, his brother, and their sister's boyfriend, the above mentioned Leonard Laws, targeted the elderly in a string of robberies. Their victims, 83 year old Elizabeth Roderique, 83 year old Mary Watters, 65 year old Woodrow Elliott, 83 year old Clarence Williams, and his 81 year old wife Lottie, were shot, stabbed, or strangled to death. After the gang sacked everything of value, they lit the homes on fire. The trio were also suspected in the strangulation murder of 75 year old Edna Winter, but the prosecution weren't able to convict them of it in court.
6. Maurice Byrd (1980-1991, lethal injection): Byrd stormed the Pope’s Cafeteria, a restaurant in a Des Peres mall, and shot 4 employees dead. He stole a total of $9,000 in the robbery. The victims include the manager, 51 year old James Woods, and cooks, 68 year old Edna Ince, and 51 year old Carolyn Turner, and 37 year old Judy Cazaco.
7. Ricky Grubbs (1984-1991, lethal injection): Grubbs and his brother tied 46 year old Jerry Thornton up with neck ties, and stabbed him to death in his trailer. The brothers stole an undisclosed amount of money and food stamps, and burned down the trailer to destroy any evidence of their crime.
8. Martsay Bolder (1973-1993, lethal injection): In 1973, a then teenage Bolder shot and killed 69 year old Louis Donovan in a robbery, and given a life sentence for it. While incarcerated, Bolder feuded with a fellow inmate, 24 year old Theron King. He stabbed King to death for allegedly yelling sexual obscenities at him, and received a death sentence for the killing. King was serving a life sentence for robbery at the time of his murder.
9. Walter Blair Jr. (~1979-1993, lethal injection): Blair allegedly shot and killed 16 year old Sandy Shannon in a robbery, but he wasn't convicted due to the apparent witnesses refusing to testify at the trail. After Blair was cleared of Shannon's murder, he was hired to kill 21 year old Katherine Allen by a man she accused of rape. Blair kidnapped Allen from her apartment, robbed her boyfriend, and shot her to death. His case received notoriety due to the number of his family members that were also convicted for unrelated high profile crimes. One of Blair’s brothers, Terry, was a serial killer that raped and murdered a minimum of 7 sex workers. Another brother, Clifford, abducted and sodomized a woman during a robbery. His sister Warnetta and her husband killed a man together in a robbery and murdered her boyfriend for trying to cut off her drug supply. One of her sons, Nolla IV, later murdered her husband as well. Two more of Warnetta’s, sons, Diamond and William had several robbery convictions. Last but not least, Blair’s mother Janice shot her children's stepfather to death during an argument.
10. Frederick Lashley (1981-1993, lethal injection): Lashley fatally stabbed his foster mother, 55 year old Janie Tracy, during an ambush in their home and stole $15 from her. Tracey had been raising Lashley since he was 2 years old, and had several infirmities, including heart diseases, diabetes and a neuromuscular disorder, at the time of her death.
11. Frank Guinan (~1964-1993, lethal injection): While serving a 40 year sentence for armed robbery, Guinan and another inmate, Richard Zeitvogel, stabbed a fellow prisoner, 30 year old John McBroom (who was incarcerated for drug dealing), to death. Gunian received the death penalty for Pugh's murder. On death row, Gunian assisted the previously mentioned Gerald Smith in the killing of Robert Baker. Guinan had a troubled youth, and was involved with several burglaries and a high speed car chase with police. He had also gotten into several fights with other inmates, and badly injured his cellmate, 38 year old Thomas Pugh (who was also serving a prison sentence for robbery), in one of his incidents.
12. Emmitt Foster (1983-1995, lethal injection): Foster and his accomplice forced themselves into the house that their acquaintance, 26 year old Travis Walker, shared with his girlfriend at gunpoint. The pair shot the couple, killing Walker and injuring his girlfriend. She survived by playing dead. They then sacked the home of any valuables and left. After Foster and his accomplice departed from the scene, Walker's girlfriend wrote down the attackers' names and ran out of the home for help.
13. Larry Griffin (1980-1995, lethal injection): According to prosecutors, Griffin shot and killed 19 year old Quinton Moss while was dealing drugs in a drive by shooting. As Moss was allegedly involved in the murder of Griffin's brother, the investigators believed that it was a revenge killing. His death sentence and execution was controversial, as Griffin's supporters and attorneys alleged that police misconduct occurred during the investigation. However, a posthumous review of his case in 2005 concluded Griffin's guilt.
14. Robert Murray (1985-1995, lethal injection): Murray and his brother held up two men, 27 year old Jeffrey Jackson and 26 year old Craig Stewart, and two women at gunpoint in an apartment. The brothers tied all four of them up, and raped both of the women. They extorted an undisclosed amount of money from their hostages with beatings and shot Stewart and Jackson in the head. The female captives on the other hand managed to jump out of windows to safety.
15. Robert Sidebottom (1985-1995, lethal injection): Sidebottom was upset by how little inheritance that his grandmother, 74 year old May, gave him and decided to grab more money by force in the form of collecting a life insurance policy from her. He broke into May's home and beat her unconscious with chair. As she was incapacitated from the beating, Sidebottom set the house on fire. Although the firefighters were able to put out the flames before she was seriously harmed by them, May died of the injuries she received in the assault.
16. Anthony LaRette (1976-1995, lethal injection): LaRette raped and murdered a minimum of 16 women between the ages of 18-60, but he might have been responsible for a total of 31 murders. All of his known victims were killed in stabbing attacks in their own homes and apartments. While awaiting trial, LaRette was also convicted of conspiring to murder a county jail guard with his father.
17. Robert O'Neal (1979-1995, lethal injection): O'Neal and an accomplice broke into a house that was owned by a prominent doctor, and encountered Ralph Sharick, the homeowner's 78 year old father in law. The pair bound Sharick, locked him in a closet, and shot him to death. They stole several musical instruments and guns in the robbery. O'Neal was captured a few days later and given a life sentence for the murder. During his time in prison, he joined the Aryan Brotherhood, and fatally stabbed a black inmate, 33 year old Arthur Dade, on the behalf on the local leadership. The motives for Dade's killing vary greatly on the source. Some claimed that he was murdered out of racism, while others asserted that it was over a drug trafficking related dispute.
18. Jeffrey Sloan (1985-1996, lethal injection): Sloan entered the bedroom of his parents, 41 year old Paul and 38 year old Judith, and shot them to death while they were in bed. He turned his attention towards his brothers, 18 year old Timothy and 9 year old Jason, and shot them dead in their rooms as well.
19. Doyle Williams (~1967-1996, lethal injection): In 1980, Williams and his partner shot and stabbed A. H. Domann, a 68 year old physician, while breaking into his office, and stole several prescription drugs. His partner's roommate, 28 year old Kerry Bummett, found the stolen drugs baring Domann's name, and the pair abducted her to eliminate a loose end. She was bound with handcuffs that Williams borrowed from a friend in the police force, taken to the Missouri river, and pistol whipped. Bummett jumped into the river in an attempt to escape, but ended up drowning in the process. William had several previous convictions for stealing cars and boats.
20. Emmett Nave (~1958-1996, lethal injection): In 1983, Nave shot his landlady, 53 year old Geneva Roling, dead after he knocked on her door. He then abducted his wife and forced her to drive him to a hospital. On arrival, Nave took 6 nurses hostage, and forced them to inject Demoral and Valium into his body. The kidnapped nurses were then taken to a house and raped. Most of them managed to escape, but Nave forced the remaining captive to administer more Demoral and Valium into him. Nave went unconscious from an overdose and was hospitalized after he was apprehended. He had a criminal record dating back to 1958, and many of his previous arrests include armed robbery, burglary, sexual assault, soliciting prostitutes, and joyriding.
21. Thomas Battle (~1979-1996, lethal injection): Battle and his brother-in-law's brother invaded the home of 80 year old Birdie Johnson and raped her. She was beaten and stabbed to death with a butcher knife. A year before Johnson's murder, Battle was fined for filing a false police report.
22. Richard Oxford (~1968-1996, lethal injection): Oxford and his cellmate escaped from the Conner Correctional Center in 1986, and kidnapped a married couple, 63 year old Harold and 57 year old Melba Wample, from their farm. The Wamples were missing for two months until the discovery of their bodies in a motel parking lot. Both of them had been bound and shot in the head. At the time of his escape and the murders, Oxford was serving a 85 year sentence for a rape and robbery spree, and had several previous convictions of burglary and theft that started when he was 11 years old.
23. Richard Zeitvogel (~1974-1996, lethal injection): While serving a combined total of 20 years in prison for rape and armed robbery, Zeitvogel assisted the above mentioned Guinan in killing John McBroom. He was given a life sentence for his part in the murder. A few years later, he fatally strangled his cellmate, 24 year old Gary Dew (who was also convicted of armed robbery), in their cell and was given the death penalty for it. Allegedly, Guinan and Zeitvogel were in a sexual relationship, and prosecutors believed that he murdered Dew to be placed on death row in a bid to be reunited with him.
24. Eric Schneider (1985-1997, lethal injection): Schneider and two accomplices broke into a home that two school teachers, 53 year old Richard Schwendemann and 55 year old Ronald Thompson, shared together. The homeowners were both bound with rope, wire, chains, and Christmas lights. Schwendemann was choked with a dog leash tied around his neck and shot twice in the head. Thompson suffered from 17 stab wounds in his neck, back, side, and head. A total of $1,800 in cash was stolen from their safe and car.
25. Ralph Feltrop (1987-1997, lethal injection): Feltrop got into an argument with his girlfriend, 27 year old Barbara Roam, in their home and stabbed her to death. He then cut off her head, hands, and legs from her body, and a foot from her one of her already dismembered legs, and tossed them into several garbage bags. In an attempt to dispose of Roam's remains, Feltrop dumped them into nearby ponds.
26. Donald Reese (1986-1997, lethal injection): Reese fatally shot four men, 38 year old Christopher Griffith, 54 year old James Watson, 57 year old John Burford, and Burford's 64 year old brother-in-law Donald Vanderlinden, at a shooting range. He took a total of $1,200 and all the victims' wallets from the scene.
27. Andrew Six (1984-1997, lethal injection): In Iowa, Six beat 41 year old Sarah Link, her 20 year son Justin Hook, and Hook's 19 year old fiance Tina Lade, to death with an unknown blunt instrument in their trailer. A few years later, Six and his uncle stormed a trailer that a pregnant 17 year old girl lived in with her family to rape her. They bound the target and her parents, and sexually assaulted her. The pair then abducted Kathy Allen, the target's cognitively disabled 13 year old sister, and slit their mother's throat in a failed attempt to kill her as they left. Allen was taken to Missouri, where she was repeatedly raped. Her throat was slit and and she was dumped in a ditch. Although Six was captured and sentenced to death for Allen's murder, the triple killings of Link, Hook, and Lade went unsolved until a DNA test in 2014, some 30 years after the murders and 16 years after Six's execution.
28. Samuel McDonald Jr. (~1960s-1997, lethal injection): McDonald held up 46 year old Robert Jordan at gunpoint while he was shopping with his 11 year old daughter. When Jordan pulled out his wallet, McDonald realized that he was a police officer, and shot him. Although he killed Jordan in the shooting, McDonald was wounded by his return fire. McDonald was captured after he was taken to the hospital by a friend. According a blogger that allegedly corresponded with McDonald on death row, he had killed an elderly woman and an infant in a village sweep during the Vietnam War, and lived as a petty criminal with several robbery convictions after his discharge from service.
29. Alan Bannister (~1980s-1997, lethal injection): Bannister accepted an offer for $4,000 by a man to kill 43 year old Darrell Ruetsman. The client wanted Ruetsman dead for running off with his wife. With the help of a piece of paper with Ruetsman's address, Bannister tracked his target to his trailer and shot him dead at his front door. At the time of the murder, Bannister was on parole for rape and armed robbery convictions.
30. Reginald Powell (1986-1998, lethal injection): Powell and his friends beat and stabbed two brothers, 39 year old Freddie and 29 year old Lee Miller, to death during a party. A total of $3 and a pack of cigarettes was stolen in the attack. Earlier that day, the Miller brothers had both refused to buy Powell and his friends (who were then below drinking age) alcohol for them. Powell had a conviction for receiving stolen property at the time of the murders.
31. Milton Griffin-El (1986-1998, lethal injection): Griffin-El went to an apartment to burglarize it. He tied up the residents, 22 year old Jerome Redden and his 19 year old girlfriend Loretta Trotter, and assaulted them in front of their 4 month old son. Trotter was fatally stabbed and Redden was bludgeoned to death with a wrench. Several electronics, including a stereo set and a television set, was stolen in the robbery.
32. Glennon Sweet (~1976-1998, lethal injection): In 1987, Sweet was pulled over by Russell Harper, a 45 year old officer, for speeding. Sweet opened fire on the officers as he climbed out of his truck, and killed Harper. He had several felonies and misdemeanors on his record, which included several charges of disturbing the peace, public intoxication, assault, drug possession, and theft.
33. Kelvin Malone (~1979-1999, lethal injection): Malone kidnapped at least 4 men and women, 62 year old William Parr, 55 year old Myrtle Benham, 51 year old Minnie White, and 39 year old James Rankin, in several robberies across California and Missouri. Most of his victims were shot in the head, but Benham was raped and beaten to death with a pipe. Belongings such as cars and credit cards were taken in the attacks. He was given a death sentence in both states, but chose to be incarcerated in California's San Quentin. Marlone was deported to Missouri when governor Mel Carnahan signed his death warrant. Beyond his murders, he was involved in several non fatal robbery abductions and robbed a judge at gunpoint in the man's own home.
34. James Rodden Jr. (1983-1999, lethal injection): Rodden got into a fight with his ex girlfriend on the phone, and threatened to have sex with Terry Trunnel, a 23 year old women he picked up from a bar, in an apparent attempt to make her jealous. After shouting more threats at his ex girlfriend, Rodden stabbed Trunnel and his roommate, 40 year old Joseph Arnold, to death. He then tried to burn their bodies in an attempt to destroy them.
35. Roy Roberts (~1970s-1999, lethal injection): In 1983, while serving an 18 year sentence for robbery, Roberts allegedly assisted in the stabbing death of Tom Jackson, a 62 year old correctional officer during a prison riot. His death sentence and execution was controversial due to wildly contradicting accounts from eyewitness testimonies. Some of the witnesses claimed to have seen him partaking in Jackson's murder, while others swore that they encountered Roberts in a different prison wing at the time of the murder. Roberts had other previous convictions such as theft and witness tampering at the time of the murder.
36. Roy Ramsey Jr. (1986-1999, lethal injection): Ramsay, his brother, and his brother's girlfriend held a couple, 65 year old Garrett and 63 year old Betty Ledford, at gunpoint after they opened their front door for them. The trio stole a combined total of $7,500 in cash, jewelry, silver coins, and guns, and shot both of the Ledfords dead. Ramsay had several previous robbery convictions, and sodomized a man during one of those incidents.
37. Ralph Davis (1986-1999, lethal injection): Davis shot his estranged wife, 35 year old Susan, to death in their car. Despite the fact that her body was never found, traces of Susan's blood and bone fragments were discovered in the vehicle. Furthermore, shotgun pellets were also recovered from the seats, and they matched to Davis' shotgun. He had a history of domestic abuse before the murder, and Susan's friends reported that Davis threatened to kill her when she filed for divorce.
38. Jessie Wise (1971-1999): In 1971, Wise ambushed 39 year old Ralph Gianino, and beat him to death with a pipe wrench. He then stole $26 from Gianino's wallet, and took his car on a joyride with the body still in the backseat. After Wise's capture, he was given a life sentence, but was paroled in 1983. A few years after his release, Wise went to the apartment of 49 year old Geraldine McDonald to discuss a job relating to washing her car. They got into an argument over money, and he beat her to death with a pipe wrench. Wise stole McDonald's credit cards, jewelry, and undisclosed amount of money. Some of the stolen jewelry was bartered for cocaine and the rest was given to his wife.
39. Bruce Kilgore (1979-1999, lethal injection): One of Kilgore's friends was fired from a restaurant after a coworker, 54 year old Marilyn Wilkins, reported him stealing food. Kilgore, the friend, and his friend then conspired a revenge scheme against Wilkins together. They accosted Wilkins in the restaurant's parking lot and dragged her into their car. During the abduction, Kilgore and his accomplices snatched her rings, slit her throat, and sold two of the stolen rings to a pawn shop. Kilgore had several robbery convictions prior to Wilkins' murder.
40. Robert Walls (1984-1999, lethal injection): Walls and two accomplices forced themselves inside the home of 88 year old Fred Hampton. They attacked Hampton, and broke several of his ribs and fractured his skull in a beating. Hampton was then stuffed alive in a freezer, and he succumbed to a combination of suffocation, hypothermia, and his injuries. The trio stole $100 and Hampton's car in the robbery. Walls had several robbery convictions prior to the murder.
41. David Leisure (~1980s-1999, lethal injection): Leisure, a Syrian immigrant, operated as an enforcer for the Leisure gang, a criminal syndicate under the rule of his cousins. During a gang war over the control of a labor union, he assassinated 75 year old James Michael Sr., a rival crime boss, with a car bomb.
42. James Hampton (~1950s-2000, lethal injection): Hampton abducted 58 year old Frances Keaton and her fiance Allen Mulholland in their own home. He bound them both and demanded $30,000 at gunpoint. After he detected the presence of arriving police officers with a police scanner, Hampton dragged Keaton to his car, and left Mulholland tied up alone in the house. Not wanting to be encumbered with a hostage while on the run, he beat Keaton to death with a hammer, buried her body, and burned her belongings. Hampton fled to New Jersey, and shot and killed 48 year old Christine Schurman during a botched kidnapping. He had spent most of his life in and out of prison for various crimes such as robbery, assault, and drug trafficking, and was first arrested at the age of 11.
43. Bert Hunter (~1963-2000, lethal injection): In 1968, Hunter shot and killed 64 year old John Lyle while robbing his tavern. He was given a life sentence for the murder, but was able to leave prison on parole in the 70s. After his release, Hunter partnered up with another ex convict, Tomas Ervin, for several robbery schemes. They invaded the home that 75 year old Mildred Hodges shared with her 49 year old son Richard. Hunter and Ervin bound the mother and son with duct tape, and ransacked the house for money. Despite their captives' desperate pleas for their lives, the pair suffocated them both with plastic bags. The pair then stole the Hodges' car and burned it in a motel parking lot. Hunter had several burglary arrests as a teenager.
44. Gary Roll (1992-2000, lethal injection): Roll and two other robbers tricked 47 year old Sherry Scheper into letting them inside her home by posing as police officers. They forced Sherry and her 17 year old son Randy to lie on the ground at gunpoint. After he shot Randy in the head, Roll beat Sherry to death with the butt of his gun. The trio also encountered Sherry's older son, 22 year old Curtis, and they fatally stabbed him during a scuffle. A total of $215 and some bags of marijuana were stolen in the robbery.
45. George Harris (~1982-2000, lethal injection): Harris entrusted his illegal submachine guns that he won in a crabs game to a friend for safe keeping. The friend then tasked his younger brothers with hiding the firearms, which they hid in the home of 20 year old Stanley Willoughby without telling him. When Harris returned to retrieve his guns, the friend redirected him to Willoughby's house. However, Willoughby had no clue of what Harris was talking about when he asked for his guns back. It quickly turned into a heated argument, and Harris shot and killed Willoughby out of anger. Years before he murdered Willoughby, Harris was arrested and convicted for armed robbery. He was also captured weeks after the killing while committing another armed robbery.
46. James Chambers (~1971-2000, lethal injection): Chambers struck 33 year old Jerry Oestricker in the head with his pistol and shot and killed him during a bar fight. He also had previous convictions of fraud, burglary, and attempted murder. The attempted murder conviction was for an incident involving him shooting a man in another bar fight.
47. Stanley Lingar (1985-2001, lethal injection): After Lingar lured 16 year old Thomas Allen into his jeep, he tried to force him to masturbate at gunpoint. When Allen was too terrified to obey, Lingar shot him. Allen survived the initial shooting, but he was finished off by a beating with a tire iron and Lingar running him over with the jeep. His execution was a source of minor controversy, as Lingar claimed that he was condemned solely for his sexuality.
48. Tomas Ervin (~1967-2001, lethal injection): In 1967, Ervin stabbed Robert Berry, a 36 year old cab driver, to death in a robbery, and was given a life sentence. After he was paroled in the 80s, he linked up with the above mentioned Bert Hunter, and assisted him in the robbery murders of Mildred and Richard Hodges.
49. Mose Young Jr. (1975-2001, lethal injection): Young fatally shot 3 pawn shop employees, 80 year old Sol Marks, 33 year old James Scneider, and 22 year old Kent Bicknese, after they refused to buy stolen jewelry from him. A fourth employee, who was also Mark's grandson, was injured in the shooting. He had a long criminal history, which included convictions for drug possession and first degree assault.
submitted by Leather_Focus_6535 to TrueCrimeDiscussion [link] [comments]


2024.05.03 19:46 Purduevian Reddit Roster Bubble Prediction Post-Draft [RESULTS]

Hello Everyone, yesterday I posted a Poll for people to vote on whom they felt was more likely to make the team. Of note, I didn't include players I thought were locks or longshots for the roster. Here are the results after 2,758 total votes
1.James Houston (EDGE)**How likely to win: 94%**Wins: 151 Losses: 9
2.Colby Sorsdal (OL)**How likely to win: 87%**Wins: 146 Losses: 21
3.Mekhi Wingo (DT)**How likely to win: 85%**Wins: 133 Losses: 22
4.Emmanuel Moseley (CB)**How likely to win: 82%**Wins: 114 Losses: 24
5.Christain Mahogany (OL)**How likely to win: 81%**Wins: 135 Losses: 30
6.Scott Daly (LS)**How likely to win: 79%**Wins: 121 Losses: 32
7.Craig Reynolds (RB)**How likely to win: 76%**Wins: 107 Losses: 34
8.Dan Skipper (OL)**How likely to win: 73%**Wins: 111 Losses: 40
9.Michael Badgley (K)**How likely to win: 71%**Wins: 103 Losses: 42
10.Levi Onwuzurike (DT)**How likely to win: 70%**Wins: 109 Losses: 47
11.Mathieu Betts (EDGE)**How likely to win: 69%**Wins: 12
3 Losses: 5412.Antoine Green (WR)**How likely to win: 66%**Wins: 113 Losses: 57
13.Jame Mitchell (TE)**How likely to win: 65%**Wins: 108 Losses: 57
14.Shane Zylstra (TE)**How likely to win: 61%**Wins: 90 Losses: 56
15.Kayode Awosika (OL)**How likely to win: 60%**Wins: 90 Losses: 60
16.Brandon Joseph (S)**How likely to win: 53%**Wins: 100 Losses: 89
  1. Kindle Vildor (CB)**How likely to win: 52%**Wins: 92 Losses: 85
18.Khalil Dorsey (CB)**How likely to win: 47%**Wins: 83 Losses: 94
19.Steven Gilmore (CB)**How likely to win: 38%**Wins: 63 Losses: 102
20.Maurice Alexander (WR)**How likely to win: 38%**Wins: 63 Losses: 103
21.Zonovan Knight (RB)**How likely to win: 36%**Wins: 57 Losses: 102
22.Steele Chambers (LB)**How likely to win: 35%**Wins: 47 Losses: 89
23.Isaiah Williams (WR)**How likely to win: 33%**Wins: 56 Losses: 114
24.Nate Sudfeld (QB)**How likely to win: 32%**Wins: 55 Losses: 117
25.Tre-Quan Smith (WR)**How likely to win: 32%**Wins: 47 Losses: 103
26.James Turner (K)**How likely to win: 31%**Wins: 48 Losses: 110
27.Tom Kennedy (WR)**How likely to win: 28%**Wins: 37 Losses: 99
28.Connor Galvin (OL)**How likely to win: 27%**Wins: 44 Losses: 122
29.Mitchell Agude (EDGE)**How likely to win: 26%**Wins: 40 Losses: 113
30.Hogan Hatten (LS)**How likely to win: 25%**Wins: 33 Losses: 99
31.Jemar Jefferson (RB)**How likely to win: 24%**Wins: 38 Losses: 121
32.Chelen Garnes (S)**How likely to win: 20%**Wins: 28 Losses: 118
33.DaRon Gilbert (LB)**How likely to win: 18%**Wins: 28 Losses: 133
34.Loren Strickland (S)**How likely to win: 18%**Wins: 25 Losses: 120
35.Isaac Rex (TE)**How likely to win: 12%**Wins: 17 Losses: 137
submitted by Purduevian to detroitlions [link] [comments]


2024.05.03 09:21 ft420 D1 Baseball TV/Streaming for Friday 5/3: Constitution Day (Poland)/National Public Radio Day

ET AWAY HOME VIDEO
12:00 PM GEORGIA TECH at CLEMSON ACCNX
12:00 PM MIAMI OH at KENT STATE Boxcast
12:00 PM EASTERN MICHIGAN at TOLEDO ESPN+ ($)
12:00 PM MAINE at UMBC AMERICA EAST TV
*12:00 PM MD EASTERN SHORE at LE MOYNE NEC FRONT ROW
*12:00 PM STONEHILL at DELAWARE STATE Youtube @DESU TV
*12:00 PM FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON at NORFOLK STATE NSU Showcase ($)
1:00 PM LIPSCOMB at CENTRAL ARKANSAS ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM RHODE ISLAND at DAVIDSON ESPN+ ($)
*1:00 PM FAIRFIELD at MARIST Marist All-Access
1:00 PM DAYTON at RICHMOND ESPN+ ($)
1:00 PM HIGH POINT at USC UPSTATE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM UTRGV at ABILENE CHRISTIAN ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO at PORTLAND ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM RICE at CHARLOTTE ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM WEST VIRGINIA at CINCINNATI ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM PRINCETON at COLUMBIA ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM DARTMOUTH at PENN ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM NORTH ALABAMA at QUEENS ESPN+ ($)
2:00 PM HOFSTRA at STONY BROOK FLOBaseball ($)
2:00 PM GEORGE WASHINGTON at VCU ESPN+ ($)
*2:30 PM UMASS LOWELL at ALBANY AE TV
3:00 PM WESTERN MICHIGAN at BOWLING GREEN ESPN+ ($) / BCSN
3:00 PM XAVIER at BUTLER FLOBaseball ($)
3:00 PM AKRON at CENTRAL MICHIGAN Chippewas All-Access ($)
3:00 PM TENNESSEE at FLORIDA SECN+
3:00 PM NICHOLLS STATE at INCARNATE WORD ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM RIDER at MOUNT ST. MARY'S The Mount All-Access
3:00 PM QUINNIPIAC at NIAGARA ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM CREIGHTON at SAINT JOHN'S ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM CANISIUS at SAINT PETER'S Peacocks All Access
3:00 PM MANHATTAN at SIENA Siena All-Access
3:00 PM CHARLESTON at TOWSON FLOBaseball ($)
3:00 PM St. BONAVENTURE at UMASS ESPN+ ($)
3:00 PM IONA at VILLANOVA FLOBaseball ($)
4:00 PM GRAMBLING STATE at ARKANSAS PINE BLUFF Youtube / @uapblionsroar
4:00 PM LOUISVILLE at BOSTON COLLEGE ACCNX
4:00 PM GEORGIA TECH at CLEMSON ACCNX
*4:00 PM Penn State vs Georgetown YOUTUBE
4:00 PM SOUTHEAST MISSOURI at LINDENWOOD 🔈 Audio Only
4:00 PM MURRAY STATE at MISSOURI STATE ESPN+ ($)
*4:00 PM UT MARTIN at MOREHEAD STATE ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM SOUTH DAKOTA STATE at NORTHERN COLORADO MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
4:00 PM BALL STATE at NORTHERN ILLINOIS NIU All-Access ($)
4:00 PM DAYTON at RICHMOND ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM GEORGE MASON at SAINT LOUIS ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM UCONN at SETON HALL FLOBaseball ($)
4:00 PM EVANSVILLE at VALPARAISO 🔈 Audio Only
4:00 PM LITTLE ROCK at WESTERN ILLINOIS ESPN+ ($)
4:00 PM RADFORD at WINTHROP 🔈 Audio Only
4:30 PM RHODE ISLAND at DAVIDSON ESPN+ ($)
*4:30 PM FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL at LIBERTY DH1 ESPN+ ($)
4:30 PM HIGH POINT at USC UPSTATE ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM SAN JOSE STATE at AIR FORCE MTN WEST NETWORK
5:00 PM PRESBYTERIAN at CHARLESTON SOUTHERN ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM BETHUNE-COOKMAN at FLORIDA A&M FAMU All-Access
5:00 PM NORTH ALABAMA at QUEENS ESPN+ ($)
5:00 PM MERCER at SAMFORD ESPN+ ($)
5:30 PM RICE at CHARLOTTE ESPN+ ($)
5:30 PM SAN FRANCISCO at PORTLAND ESPN+ ($)
5:30 PM LONG BEACH STATE at UC DAVIS ESPN+ ($)
5:45 PM GEORGE WASHINGTON at VCU ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM SOUTH ALABAMA at APP STATE ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM MIDDLE TENNESSEE at BINGHAMTON ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM SOUTH FLORIDA at EAST CAROLINA ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM WILLIAM & MARY at ELON FLOBaseball ($)
6:00 PM NC STATE at FLORIDA STATE ACCNX
6:00 PM SAINT JOSEPH'S at FORDHAM ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM WOFFORD at GARDNER-WEBB ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM VANDERBILT at GEORGIA SECN+
6:00 PM SOUTHERN ILLINOIS at ILLINOIS STATE ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM NORTH FLORIDA at KENNESAW STATE KSUowls.com
6:00 PM GEORGIA STATE at MARSHALL ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM MICHIGAN at MICHIGAN STATE B1G+
*6:00 PM NEBRASKA at MINNESOTA B1G+
6:00 PM BRYANT at NJIT ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM NORTHEASTERN at NORTH CAROLINA A&T FLOBaseball ($)
6:00 PM INDIANA at PURDUE B1G+
6:00 PM PEPPERDINE at SAINT MARY'S ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM PRAIRIE VIEW A&M at TEXAS SOUTHERN Youtube / @TSUathletics
6:00 PM UNC GREENSBORO at THE CITADEL ESPN+ ($)
6:00 PM CAMPBELL at UNC WILMINGTON FLOBaseball ($)
6:00 PM SEATTLE U at UTAH VALLEY ESPN+ ($)
6:30 PM MONMOUTH at DELAWARE FLOBaseball ($)
6:30 PM UAB at FLORIDA ATLANTIC ESPN+ ($)
6:30 PM JACKSONVILLE at FLORIDA GULF COAST ESPN+ ($)
6:30 PM BELMONT at INDIANA STATE ESPN+ ($)
6:30 PM ARKANSAS at KENTUCKY SECN+
6:30 PM PITTSBURGH at NOTRE DAME ACCNX
6:30 PM MARYLAND at RUTGERS B1G+
6:30 PM AUSTIN PEAY at STETSON ESPN+ ($)
6:45 PM TENNESSEE at FLORIDA SECN+
7:00 PM McNEESE STATE at A&M - CORPUS CHRISTI ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM OLE MISS at AUBURN SECN+
7:00 PM ILLINOIS CHICAGO at BRADLEY ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM OHIO STATE at ILLINOIS B1G+
7:00 PM NORTHWESTERN at IOWA B1G+
7:00 PM ARKANSAS STATE at JAMES MADISON 🔈 Audio Only
7:00 PM KANSAS at KANSAS STATE ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM NORTHWESTERN STATE at LAMAR ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM GEORGIA SOUTHERN at LOUISIANA MONROE ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM BRIGHAM YOUNG at MIAMI ACCNX
7:00 PM ALABAMA at MISSISSIPPI STATE SECN+
7:00 PM SOUTH CAROLINA at MISSOURI SECN+
7:00 PM OMAHA at ORAL ROBERTS MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
7:00 PM NEW ORLEANS at SOUTHEASTERN ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM ALCORN STATE at SOUTHERN Jaguar Sports Network ($)
7:00 PM SIU EDWARDSVILLE at SOUTHERN INDIANA ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM COASTAL CAROLINA at SOUTHERN MISS ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM OLD DOMINION at TEXAS STATE 🔈 Audio Only
7:00 PM LOUISIANA at TROY ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM WESTERN KENTUCKY at UNC ASHEVILLE ESPN+ ($)
7:00 PM SACRAMENTO STATE at UT ARLINGTON WAC International
7:00 PM WICHITA STATE at UTSA ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM TCU at BAYLOR ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM JAX STATE at DALLAS BAPTIST ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM UCF at HOUSTON ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM MURRAY STATE at MISSOURI STATE ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM SAINT THOMAS at NORTH DAKOTA STATE MIDCO Sports Plus / SLN ($)
7:30 PM TARLETON at SAM HOUSTON STATE 🔈 Audio Only
7:30 PM UTAH TECH at STEPHEN F. AUSTIN ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM OKLAHOMA STATE at TEXAS đŸ“ș LONGHORN NETWORK
7:30 PM OKLAHOMA at TEXAS TECH ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM MEMPHIS at TULANE ESPN+ ($)
7:30 PM UC SAN DIEGO at UC SANTA BARBARA ESPN+ ($)
7:45 PM RADFORD at WINTHROP 🔈 Audio Only
*8:00 PM FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL at LIBERTY ESPN+ ($)
8:00 PM TEXAS A&M at LSU đŸ“ș ESPN2 & SEC NETWORK
8:00 PM LOUISIANA TECH at NEW MEXICO STATE ESPN+ ($)
9:00 PM STANFORD at ARIZONA PAC-12 PLUS (AZ-3)
9:00 PM UTAH at OREGON PAC-12 PLUS (ORE)
9:00 PM GONZAGA at PACIFIC ESPN+ ($)
9:00 PM SANTA CLARA at SAN DIEGO ESPN+ ($)
9:00 PM FRESNO STATE at SAN DIEGO STATE MTN WEST NETWORK
9:00 PM CAL POLY at UC IRVINE ESPN+ ($)
9:00 PM CSU BAKERSFIELD at UC RIVERSIDE ESPN+ ($)
9:00 PM Cal State Fullerton vs UCLA 🔈 Audio Only
9:00 PM NEW MEXICO at UNLV MTN WEST NETWORK
9:30 PM WASHINGTON at ARIZONA STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 ARIZONA
9:30 PM CALIFORNIA at USC PAC-12 PLUS (USC)
10:00 PM CAL BAPTIST at GRAND CANYON ESPN+ ($)
10:00 PM OREGON STATE at WASHINGTON STATE đŸ“ș PAC-12 OREGON
12:30 AM CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE at HAWAI'I ESPN+ đŸ“ș Spectrum Sports
*= time changed
submitted by ft420 to collegebaseball [link] [comments]


2024.05.03 04:01 katanddog 2,000 Names (and their meanings) For Your Baby Boy found from a Vintage Mennen Company Booklet

My mom passed along this booklet that belonged to my grandmother when we were expecting. Figured I would share it here before discarding it. The Girl Name list is already posted 😊 Enjoy!
WHAT'S IN A NAME
Don't let the meanings concern you. Think instead of how the name will fit the child, when the child is grown, or known. Choose the name with care. It's very important to your baby-all through life. Here are some guides: - Say each name aloud, along with your own family name, to check rhythm and sound. - Use soft first names with sharp-sounding family names. - Use multi-syllable first names with short family names. - Avoid using a first name that ends with the same sound that starts the last name, such as "Jane Nevins." - Avoid "famous combinations" such as "Abraham" and "Lincoln." - Watch out for initials that spell out familiar letters, like “S. O. S”
if it's a BOY
A AARON.. Exalted ABBOTT.. Fatherly ABEL.. Proud ABELARD. . Noble ABNER. . Full of light ABRAHAM.. Great Father ABSALOM.. Peaceful ACHILLES.. Brave ADAM.. Man, manly ADDISON.. Son of Adam ADELBERT.. Bright ADLAI.. Just ADOLF.. Noble animal ADONIS.. Lord, lordly ADRIAN.. Courageous AENEAS.. Praiseworthy ALAN, ALLEN.. Swift, cheerful ALARIC.. Ruler over all ALASTAIR.. Worthy defender ALBERT.. Illustrious ALBIN.. Fair ALBION.. Name for England ALDEN.. Friend ALDO.. Experienced, skilled ALDRED.. Wise counselor ALDRIC. Wise ruler ALDRICH.. See Aldric ALDWIN.. Wise friend ALEXANDER.. Aid to men ALEXIS.. Helper ALFRED.. Good counselor ALGERNON.. Wise ALLISON.. Holy fame ALLISTER.. See Alastair ALOYSIUS.. Famous ALONSO, ALONZO, ALPHONSE, ALPHONSO Good Warrior ALVIN.. Friendly AMBROSE.. Immortal AMIEL.. God's helper AMORY.. Loving AMOS.. Reliable ANATOLE. . Sunrise ANDERS.. Strong ANDERSON.. Manly son ANDRE.. See Andrew ANDREW.. Manly, strong ANGELO.. Saintly messenger ANGUS.. Virtuous ANSELM.. Warrior of God ANSON.. Born of God ANTHONY, ANTON, ANTONIO.. Thriving ARCHER.. Bowman ARCHIBALD.. Valiant ARDEN. . Fervent ARGUS.. Watchful ARIEL.. Lion of God ARISTIDE.. The best ARMAND.. Brave ARNO.. Eagle-eyed ARNOLD.. Eagle-strong ARTHUR.. High, noble ASA.. Healer ASHER.. Fortunate ASHLEY.. Ash meadow ATWATER.. Near the water ATWELL.. Near the spring ATWOOD.. Near the forest AUBREY .. Fair-haired ruler AUBURN.. Red-haired AUGUST, AUGUSTINE, AUGUSTUS.. Imperial AUSTIN.. See August AVERIL.. Courageous AVERY.. See Averil AXEL.. Heaven blessed AYLMER.. Famous
B BAILEY.. Officer of the law BAINBRIDGE.. Short bridge BALDWIN.. Bold friend BALFOUR.. Pasture BANCROFT.. Bean field BANNING.. Newsworthy BANNISTER.. Fruitful BARCLAY. . Birch meadow BARD, BAIRD.. Minstrel BARLOW.. Brave BARNABAS, BARNABY, BARNEY.. Consoler BARNARD.. See Bernard BARNETT.. Commands BARRETT. Mighty BARRY.. Diligent BARTH.. Sacred BARTHOLOMEW.. Guardian of the plough BARTON.. Homestead BARUCH.. Blessed BASIL.. Kingly BAXTER.. Baker BAYARD.. Wise BEAUFORD.. Good crossing BEAUFORT.. Good fort BEAUMONT.. Good hill BELLAMY.. Good friend BELMONT.. Good hill BEN.. Son BENEDICT.. Blessed BENITO.. See Benedict BENJAMIN.. Favorite son BENNETT.. See Benedict BENSON.. Son of Ben BENTLEY.. Meadow BENVENUTO.. Welcome BERKELEY ..See Barclay BERN. Strong as a bear BERNARD.. Bold as a bear BERTHOLD.. Bright ruler BERTRAM.. Bright as a raven BERTRAND.. See Bertram BERWYN.. Famous friend BEVERLY.. Beaver meadow BEVIS.. Bow BION.. Energetic BJORN.. Bear BLAINE.. Slim BLAIR.. Plain dweller BLAKE.. Dark complexioned BLAKELY.. Dark meadow BLYTHE.. Light-hearted BOAZ.. Agile BONIFACE.. Fortunate BOOTH.. Sheltered place BORIS. . Spirited BOWEN.. Son BOWMAN.. Archer BOYCE.. Woodland BOYD.. Blond BRADEN.. Broad minded BRADFIELD.. Broad field BRADFORD.. Broad crossing BRADLEY.. Broad meadow BRADSHAW.. Broad forest BRADSTREET.. Broad street BRADY.. Spirited BRAND, BRANT.. Fiery BRENDEN.. Fiery BRENT.. Hill dweller BRET, BRETT.. A Breton BREWSTER.. A brewer BRIAN, BRYAN.. Strong BRIGHAM.. Home near a bridge BRISBANE. Horseman BROOK, BROOKS.. Stream BRUCE.. Ruler BRUNO.. Dark complexioned BRYCE.. Swift BURGESS.. Freeman BURKE.. Stronghold BURL.. Castle BURLEIGH.. Castle meadow BURTON.. Fine BYRNE.. Armor-protection BYRON.. Clear vision
C CADMAR.. Valiant. CADMUS.. Adornment CADWALLADER.. Strategist CAESAR.. Emperor CALDWELL.. Cold spring CALEB. . Faithful CALVERT.. Head man CALVIN.. Bold CAMERON. . Scottish nobility CAMPBELL. . Scottish nobility CANUTE.. See Knut CAREW.. Castle moat CAREY, CARY.. Beloved CARL.. Manly CARLETON.. Country town CARLYLE.. Country tower CARMICHAEL.. Stronghold CAROLL.. See Carl CARSON.. Beloved son CARTER.. Driver CARVEL.. Song CARVER.. Sculptor CASEY.. Valorous CASIMIR.. High prince CASPAR.. Horseman CASSIDY.. Inventive CASTOR.. Purity CAVANAUGH.. Cavalier CECIL.. Misty-eyed CEDRIC.. General CHAD.. See Chadwick CHADWICK.. Country home CHANDLER.. Candle-maker CHANNING.. Cannon-like CHARLES.. Strong CHAUNCEY.. Chancellor CHENEY.. Forest dweller CHESTER.. Camp CHEYNEY .. Strong as an oak CHRISTIAN.. Follow the Lord CHRISTOPHER.. Christ-bearer CICERO. . Farmer CLARE, CLARENCE.. Illustrious CLARK.. Scholar CLAUDE.. Delicate CLAUS.. Victory CLAY.. Mortal CLAYTON.. English CLEMENT.. Merciful CLIFFORD.. Cliff crossing CLINTON.. Hill town CLIVE.. Cliff CLYDE.. Strong COLBY. . Coal town COLIN.. Triumph COLVIN.. Dark-haired friend CONAN, CONANT.. Wisdom CONRAD.. Wise counselor CONROY.. Wise ruler CONSTANTINE.. Steadfast CONWAY.. Wise COOPER.. Barrel maker CORBET, CORBIN, CORBY.. Little raven CORDELL.. Binding cord COREY.. Chosen CORNELIUS.. Crowned CORNELL.. Sturdy CORRIE.. Glen dweller CORT.. Courageous orator CORWYN.. Gentle friend COSMO.. Orderly COURTNEY.. Farm dweller COWAN.. Mason CRAIG.. Steadfast rock CRISPIN.. Curly-haired CULVER.. Peaceful CURRAN.. Romantic hero CURTIS.. Courteous CUTHBERT.. Famous, bright CYRIL.. Lordly CYRUS.. The sun
D DAGOBERT.. Sword bearer DALE.. Valley DAMON.. Conquering DAN.. A judge DANA, DANE.. Arbiter DANIEL.. God is my judge DARIUS.. Ruler DARRELL, DARRYL, DARYL.. Dear little one DARWIN.. Brave friend DAVID. Beloved DEAN.. Churchman DEEMS.. Judge of men DELAND.. Dark-eyed DEMETRIUS.. Of the earth DENIS, DENNIS.. Joyous DERRICK.. Ruler DESMOND.. World power DEWEY.. Like the dew DEXTER.. Fortunate DIETRICH.. Ruler DION. See Denis DICKSON, DIXON. Strong DMITRI. See Demetrius DOMINIC, DOMINICK.. Belonging to the Lord DONALD.. Proud chief DORAN.. A gift DOREMUS.. We shall give DORIAN.. Conquering hero DOUGLAS.. Dark-haired DOYLE.. Dark stranger DREW .. Adept, gifted DRUMMOND.. Lover DUANE.. Hill dweller DUDLEY .. Fair meadow DUFF.. Dark-haired DUKE.. Leader DUNCAN.. Dark-haired DUNSTAN. . Dark stone DURAND.. Enduring DURWIN .. Dear friend DUVAL.. From the valley DWIGHT.. Wise fellow
E EARL.. Noble EBEN, EBENEZER.. Strong EDAN.. Bright as flame EDBERT.. Blessed EDELBERT.. Illustrious EDGAR.. Fair protector EDISON.. Blessed son EDMUND.. Blessed peace EDRED.. Blessed counselor EDSEL.. Profound EDWALD.. Powerful EDWARD.. Blessed guardian EDWIN.. Blessed friend EGBERT.. Bright as a sword EGMONT.. Protector EINAR.. Battle chiet ELBERT.. Illustrious ELDEN, ELDON.. Old friend ELDRED, ELDRID.. Wise ELDWIN.. Wise friend ELEAZER.. God has helped ELI, ELIAS, ELLIS.. High ELIHU.. God is He ELIJAH..The Lord is God ELIOT, ELLIOTT.. Hunter ELISHA.. God is salvation ELLERY.. Strong as a tree ELLSWORTH.. Nobility ELMAR, ELMER.. Famous ELMO.. Congenial ELROY.. Royal blood ELTON.. Town dweller ELY.. See Eli EMANUEL.. God is with us EMERSON.. Nobly born EMERY, EMORY.. Leader EMIL.. Follows the good EMMETT.. Industrious ENNIS. Praiseworthy ENOCH.. Dedicated ENOS.. Man ENRICO.. See Henry EPHRAIM.. Productive ERASMUS.. Lovely ERASTUS.. Beloved ERIC.. Heroic ERNEST.. Zealous ERNST.. See Ernest ERROL.. Adventurer ERWIN.. Triumphant ESME.. Esteemed ESMOND.. Protector ETHAN.. Strength ETHELBERT.. Illustrious EUCLID.. Famous EUGENE.. Well born EUSTACE.. Sturdy EVAN.. Young fighter EVELYN.. Youth EVERARD.. Strong as a boar EVEREST, EVERETT.. Bold EWART.. Strong EZEKIEL.. God makes strong EZRA.. Help
F FABIAN.. Farmer FAIRFAX.. Fair-haired FARLEY.. Sturdy FEDERICO.. See Frederick FELIX.. Happy FENTON. Marsh town FEODOR.. Gift of God FERDINAND.. Bold in peace FERGUS.. Fierce chief FIELDING.. Lad of the fields FINDLAY.. Competent FIORELLO.. Little flower FISK. . Faith FLETCHER.. Arrow maker FLORIAN.. Flourishing FLOYD.. Brown-haired FORREST.. Woodland FOSTER. . Forester FRANCHOT.. Free FRANCIS.. See Franchot FRANK.. See Francis FRANKLIN.. Freeholder FRASER, FRASIER FRAZER.. Curly-haired FREDERICK,.. Peaceful ruler FREEMONT.. Peaceful guard FRITZ.. See Fred FULTON.. Big town
G GABRIEL.. Man of God GAILLARD.. Lively one GAMALIEL.. Reward of God GARDELL.. Protector GARDNER.. Garden keeper GARETH, GARTH.. Garden GARRET.. Honored GARRICK.. Fighter king GARRISON, GARRY.. Protector GARVEY.. Soldier GARY.. See Garvey GASTON.. From Gascony GAVIN, GAWAIN.. Battle hawk GAYLORD.. Lively master GAYNOR.. Lively head GEOFFREY.. Peace-loving GEORGE.. Farmer GERALD.. Spear wielder GERARD, GERHART.. Strong with spear GERVAIS.. Warlike GIDEON.. Hewer GIFFORD.. Merciful GILBERT.. Bright servant GILES.. Shield GILFORD.. Wide crossing GILROY.. King's servant GIORDANO.. See Jordan GLENN.. Valley GODFREY.. God's peace GODWIN.. God's friend GORDON.. Strong, upright GRAHAM.. Serious GRANT.. Great GRANTLAND. . Deeded land GRANVILLE.. Great city GRATTAN. . Fenced land GRAYSON.. Gray's son GREGG.. Flourishing GREGORY.. Vigilant GRENVILLE.. See Granville GRIFFITH.. Faithful GRISWOLD. Gray woods GROSVENOR.. Great hunter GROVER.. Grove dweller GUS, GUSTAVE.. Good staff GUTHRIE.. Military sage GUY, GUIDO.. Leader GUYON .. Soldier
H HAAKON..Spearsman HALBERT.. Bright stone HALDANE, HALDEN.. Valley home HAMILTON.. Hill town HAMLET.. Village HAMLIN, HAMLYN.. Home HANK.. See Henry HANLEY.. Wide meadow HANS.. See John HARDY.. Enduring HARLAN.. Warrior-born HARLEY.. Of the meadow HAROLD.. Army leader HARRISON.. Son of Harry HARRY .. See Harold, Henry HARTLEY.. Stag meadow HARVEY.. Noble warrior HARWOOD.. Wood dweller HAVEN.. Refuge HAYWOOD.. Hedged wood HEATH.. Open land HECTOR.. Dependable HEINRICH.. See Henry HENRY.. Home ruler HERBERT.. Bright soldier HERCULES.. Chosen one HERMAN.. Army man HERSCHEL.. See Henry HEYWOOD. See Haywood HEZEKIAH.. Might of God HILARY.. Happy, merry HILDEBRAND.. War sword HIRAM.. Noble HOBART.. See Hubert HOLDEN.. Good HOLMES.. Meadow HOMER.. Promise HORACE, HORATIO.. Keen HOSEA.. Salvation HOWARD.. Castle guard HOWELL.. Lordly HOYT.. Joyous HUBERT.. Bright in spirit HUCK.. See Henry HUGH, HUGO.. Lofty HUMBERT.. High and bright HUMPHREY.. Peaceful HUNTER.. One who hunts HYMAN. . Long life
I IAN.. See John IGNATIUS.. Fiery IMMANUEL.. See Emanuel IRA.. Watchful IRVING.. Leader IRWIN.. See Erwin ISAAC.. Laughter ISIDORE.. Gift of Isis ISAIAH.. Salvation of Lord ISRAEL.. Soldier of God IVAN.. See John IVAR, IVER, IVOR.. Archer
J JACINTO.. Born to the purple JACK.. See Jacob, John JACOB.. One who replaces JACQUES.. See Jacob JAMES.. See Jacob JAN.. See John JARED.. Descent JARVIS, JERVIS.. Challenger JASON.. Healer JASPER.. Treasurer JAY.. Lively JEAN.. See John JEFFREY. . See Geoffrey JEREMIAH, JEREMY, JERRY.. Exalted of the Lord JEROME.. Holy JESSE.. Wealthy JESUS.. Saviour JETHRO.. Excellence JOAB.. The Lord is my father JOACHIM, JOAQUIM.. The Lord will judge JOB.. Patient JOCK.. See Jack JOEL.. The Lord is God JOHN.. God is gracious JONAH, JONAS.. Peace dove JONATHAN.. Gift of God JORDAN.. Garden JOSEPH.. Prosperous JOSHUA.. God is salvation JOSIAH.. God supports JOYCE.. Merry JUAN.. See John JUDAH, JUDE.. Praised JUDSON.. Son of praise JULES, JULIAN, JULIUS.. Soft-haired JUNIUS.. Roman JUSTIN, JUSTUS..Just
K KANE.. Exacting KARL. . See Carl KASPER.. Precious KEANE, KEENAN.. Sharp KEITH.. Windy place KELLY. Fighter KELVIN ..Army friend KEMP.. Champion KENDALL.. Valley chief KENNARD.. Great lover KENNETH.. Handsome KENT.. Chief KENTON. . Chief town KENYON.. White-haired KERBY, KIRBY.. Church town KERMIT.. Great warrior KERRY.. Mysterious KERWIN.. Good friend KEVIN.. Handsome, kind KIM.. Leader, chief KING.. Ruler KIT.. See Christopher KNUT, KNUTE.. Weapon KONRAD.. See Conrad KURT.. Concise
L LACHLAN.. Courageous LAIRD.. Lord LAMBERT.. Bright land LANCE, LANCELOT.. Warrior LANDERS, LANDIS.. Son of the plains LARRY.. See Laurence LARS.. Lord LATHAM.. Low village LAUREN, LOREN, LORIN.. Sign of victory LAWRENCE.. Victor LAWTON.. Praiseworthy LAZARUS.. See Eleazer LEANDER.. Reknowned LEE, LEIGH.. Meadow LELAND. Meadow land LEMUEL.. Dedicated to God LENNOX.. Quiet stream LEO, LEON.. Lion LEONARD.. Bold as a lion LEONIDAS.. Lion-like LEOPOLD.. Lion of the people LEROY.. The king LESLIE.. Low meadow LESTER.. Meadow camp LEVI.. United LEWIS.. Bold warrior LINCOLN.. Deep stream LINDLEY.. Linden meadow LINDSAY, LINDSEY.. Gentle LINUS.. Flaxen-haired LIONEL.. Young lion LISLE, LYLE.. The islander LLEWELLYN.. Lightning LLOYD.. Brown-haired LOCKWOOD.. Enclosed forest LORENZO.. See Lawrence LORING.. Famed warrior LOTHAIR, LOTHARIO, LOWTHER.. Fighter LOUIS.. See Lewis LOWELL. Low spring LOYALL. . Faithful LUCIAN, LUCIUS.. Light LUDLOW.. Humble man LUDOVIC, LUDOWICK, LUDWIG.. See Lewis LUKE.. See Lucian LUTHER.. Famed warrior LYMAN.. Manly LYNN.. Lake LYSANDER.. Emancipator
M MACAULAY.. Stalwart son MACE.. Sceptre MADDOX.. Power MAGNUS.. Great MAHON.. Chief MALACHI.. God's messenger MALCOLM.. Servant of (St.) Columba MANFRED.. Great peace MANLEY, MANLY.. Strong MANUEL.. See Emanuel MARC, MARK.. See Marcus MARCELLUS.. From Mars MARCUS.. War-like MARMADUKE. . See Duke MARSHALL.. Groom MARTIN.. War-like MARVIN.. High hills MATTHEW, MATTHIAS.. Gift of God MAURICE.. Dark-haired MAURY.. Twilight MAXIM, MAXIMILIAN, MAX.. Of the greatest MAXWELL.. Fair son MAYNARD.. Mighty MEAD.. Meadow MELVILLE, MILVIN.. Chief MEREDITH.. Sea guardian MERLIN. Hill by the sea MERRILL.. Fragrant MERRIT.. Worthy MERTON.. See Martin MERVIN.. Raven of the sea MEYER.. Steward MICHAEL, MICAH.. God-like MILES, MYLES.. Soldier MILLARD.. Grinder MILO.. Warrior MILTON.. Mill town MITCHELL.. See Michael MONROE.. Mt. on River Roe MONTAGUE.. Of the mount MONTE.. From the mountain MONTGOMERY.. Hunter MORGAN.. Coastal dweller MORRIS.. See Maurice MORTIMER.. Place by sea MORTON.. Big hill MOSES.. Blessed leader MOSS.. See Moses MURDOCH.. Sailor MURRAY.. Great water MYRON.. Incense bearer
N NAPOLEON.. Strong ruler NAT, NATHAN, NATHANIEL.. Gift of God NEAL, NEIL.. Champion NED.. See Edmund, Edward, Edwin NEHEMIAH.. Comfort of God NELSON.. Son of Neal, Neil NERO.. Powerful NESTOR.. A rememberer NEVILLE.. New city NEWCOMB.. Newcomer NEWELL.. New spring NEWTON..New town NICHOLAS.. Conqueror NIGEL. . Dark-haired NILS.. Victorious NIMROD.. Great hunter NOAH.. Rest NOEL, NOWELL.. Christmas NOLAN.. Well-known NORMAN.. Man from North
O OAKLEY.. Oak meadow OCTAVIUS.. Eighth (born) OGDEN.. Dell of oaks OLAF.. Champion OLIVER.. Bearer of peace OMAR, OMER.. Better ORAN, ORIN.. White-haired ORLANDO.. See Roland ORRICK.. Golden king ORSINO, ORSON.. Little bear ORTON.. Golden town ORVILLE.. Golden city OSBERT.. Divine brightness OSBORN.. Divine bear OSCAR.. Leaping warrior OSGOOD.. Godly OSMOND.. Protection of God OSRIC.. Divine power OSWALD.. Divine ruler OTIS.. Keen of hearing OTTO.. Mountain OWEN.. High-born
P PABLO.. See Paul PADDY.. See Patrick PADRAIC.. See Patrick PAOLO.. See Paul PARKER.. Park keeper PASCAL.. Easter PATRICK.. Noble, a patrician PAUL.. Little one PAYTON, PEYTON.. Noble PEARCE, PIERCE. See Peter PERCY, PERCIVAL.. Keen-eyed PERRIN, PERRY.. See Peter PETER..Firm as a rock PHELAN.. Wolf PHILANDER.. Lover of people PHILBERT.. Outstanding PHILEMON.. Loving PHILIP.. Lover of horses PHINEAS.. Frank, candid PIERRE.. See Peter PIP.. See Philip PIUS.. Pious, filial PRENTICE, PRENTISS.. Learner PRESCOTT.. Church PRESTON.. Of the church PRIMUS.. First (born) PROCTOR.. Officer PUTNAM.. Watering town
Q QUENTIN, QUINN, QUINTIN, QUINTUS.. Fifth (born) QUILLER.. Fledgling QUINCY.. Fifth son Worshipper of God
R RADCLIFF.. Red cliff RADFORD.. Red ford RALPH.. See Randolph RAMSAY, RAMSEY.. Island RANDALL, RANDOLPH.. Protected by the wolf RANGER.. Forest guard RAOUL.. See Ralph, Rudolph RAPHAEL.. Healed by God RASTUS.. See Erastus RAY.. See Raymond RAYMOND.. Quiet protector RAYNARD.. Sound judge REDMOND.. Adviser REED.. Red-haired REGAN.. Noble man REGINALD.. Strong ruler RENARD.. See Raynard RENE, RENATO.. Reborn REUBEN.. Behold, a son! REUEL.. God is his friend REX.. King REXFORD.. King's crossing REYNOLD.. See Reginald RHYS.. Chieftain RICHARD.. Bold fighter RIDGELEY.. Ridge meadow RIORDAN.. Royal singer RITCHIE.. Stern leader ROBERT, ROBIN.. Illustrious RODERICK. . Famous king RODMAN.. Surveyor RODNEY.. Famous in counsel ROGER.. Famous with spear ROLAND.. Glory of the land ROLF, ROLFE.. See Randolph ROLLO.. See Randolph ROMEO.. Man of Rome RONALD.. See Reginald RORY.. See Roderick ROSCOE.. Swift as a steed ROSS.. Gallant as a steed ROY.. King ROYAL, ROYCE.. Kingly RUDOLPH.. Famous RUFUS.. Red-haired RUPERT.. See Robert RUSSELL.. Red-haired RUTHERFORD.. Meadow
S SALVADOR.. Saviour SAMSON.. Like the sun SAMUEL.. Asked of God SANDER(S), SANDOR, SAUNDERS.. See Alexander SANFORD.. Sand crossing SAUL.. Asked of God SAWYER.. Woodcutter SAXON.. Swordsman SCHUYLER.. Learned SCOT, SCOTT.. Northman SEABROOK.. Sea spring SEAN.. See John SEARL, SERLE.. Armed SEBASTIAN.. Majestic SEBOLD.. Bold conqueror SEDGWICK.. Victorious SELIG.. Blessed SELWYN.. Royal friend SETH. . Appointed SETON.. Countryman SEWARD.. Sea warden SEWELL.. Sea spring SEXTUR.. Sixth (born) SEYMOUR.. Like St. Maur SHAUN, SHAWN.. See John SHELBY.. Shell city SHELDON.. Shield bearer SHELLEY.. Of the meadow SHERMAN.. A cutter SHERWIN.. Bright friend SHERWOOD.. Bright wood SHIRLEY.. County meadow SIDNEY, SYDNEY.. Joyous SIEGFRIED.. Conqueror SIGMUND.. Victor SIGURD.. Ruler SILAS.. Woodsman SILVAN.. Of the forest SILVESTER.. Forester SIMEON, SIMON.. Hearkening SINCLAIR.. Ilustrious SOLOMON.. Peaceable SPENCER.. Steward STACEY, STACY.. Steady STAFFORD.. Staff crossing STANISLAUS.. Praiseworthy STANLEY. Stone meadow STANTON. Stone town STEPHEN, STEVEN.. Crown STERLING.. Little star STEWART.. One in charge STROTHER, STRUTHER, STRUTHERS.. Stream(s) SUMNER.. Summoner STUART.. See Stewart SVEN.. Youth, swain SYLVESTER.. See Silvester
T TAD.. See Theodore TALBOT.. Hunter TAYLOR.. Tailor TED, TEDDY.. See Theodore TERENCE, TERRY.. Tender THADDEUS.. Praise THANE.. Aid THATCHER.. Roof maker THAYER.. Strong THEOBALD.. For the people THEODORE.. Gift of God THEODORIC.. Ruler of people THEOPHILUS.. Dear THOMAS.. Twin THORNE.. Thorn tree THORPE.. Village THURSTON.. Stone of Thor TIMOTHY.. Honoring God TITUS.. Protected TOBIAH, TOBIAS.. The Lord is good TOD, TODD.. Thick foliage TOM, TOMMY.. See Thomas TONY.. See Anthony TRACEY, TRACY.. Leader TRAVERS, TRAVIS.. Traveller TREMONT.. Three-hilled TRENT.. Thirty (French) TREVOR.. Prudent TRISTAN.. Romantic TURNER.. Acrobat TYBALT.. See Theobald TYLER.. Tile maker
U UDOLPH.. Fortunate noble ULRIE, ULRICH.. Noble lord ULYSSES.. Greek God UPTON.. Hill dweller URBAN.. Of the city URIAH.. Light of God
V VALENTINE.. Valiant VALERY.. Strong, worthy VAN.. Advance VARDEN.. Hill dweller VAUGHAN, VAUGHN. . Small VERGIL, VIRGIL.. Flourishing VERN, VERNON.. Green country VICTOR.. Conqueror VINCENT.. Conquering VIVIAN .. Full of life VLADIMIR.. Glory of princes
W WADE.. Wanderer WADSWORTH.. Traveler WALCOTT.. Stone cottage WALDEMAR.. Famed power WALDEN.. Powerful WALDFORD.. Mighty ford WALDO.. See Waldemar WALLACE.. Scottish hero WALT, WALTER.. Leader WARD.. Guardian WARE.. Keen-witted WARING.. Watchful WARNER, WERNER.. Protector WARREN.. Park WARRICK, WARWICK.. Fighting king WASHINGTON.. Town on The Wash (Thames estuary) WAYLAND.. Traveler WAYNE.. Wagon-maker WEBSTER.. Weaver WENDELL.. Wanderer WESLEY.. West meadow WHITELAW.. White hill WHITNEY.. White island WILBUR.. Forest dweller WILFRED.. Lover of peace WILL, WILLY.. See William WILLARD.. Strong of will WILLIAM.. Protector WILLIS.. Shield WILLOUGHBY.. Willow town WILMAR, WILMER.. Resolute WINFRED.. Peace maker WINSTON.. Friendly town WINTHROP.. Friendly Village WOLVERTON.. Town of good peace WOODROW.. Officer of the forest WRIGHT.. Worker WYNDHAM.. Windy village WYNNE.. Gain
X XAVIER.. Glorious XERXES.. King
Y YARDLEY.. Meadow yard YATES.. Gate dweller YVAIN, YWAIN.. Young warrior
Z ZACHARIAH, ZACHARY.. Whom God remembers ZEBEDIAH.. The gift of God ZEKE.. See Ezekiel ZENO, ZENOS.. Gift of Zeus ZIGMOND.. Winning
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