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#1
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Take a Southern Gentleman who never ventured far from home and thrust him into a city like Philadelphia, and he is likely to bolt, turn his back on MLB, and return to more comfortable territory. However, if you ease him into the game via Cleveland for a while, before presenting him with Chicago; he may be more able to adapt to his situation. Given time, complimented by his wit and charm, he will (sorta) blend in with the "in" crowd. |
#2
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Posted By: Julie
by approaching Gleason the night before the game and saying he felt physically rotten, and didn't want to play. "You'll play, Jacksonm, you'll play," said Gleason. Which probably explains why he played so well while being in on the fix. |
#3
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Posted By: warshawlaw
The issues raised do not prove Jackson was innocent; at most they prove he was an idiot. |
#4
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Posted By: Brian Weisner
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#5
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Posted By: Scott
is that what actually happened...in the real world? |
#6
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Posted By: Max Weder
Scott |
#7
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Posted By: Julie
fiction...someone (not Asinov) pointed out to me that this incident might explain a) why Jackson played well (as far as anyone could tell), and 2) why, in his confession, he told about how easy it was to muff a fielding play... |
#8
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Posted By: warshawlaw
1. Joe Jackson took the money to throw the series; and |
#9
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Posted By: Max Weder
Julie |
#10
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Posted By: Julie
on "www,Blacksox.com." They saw it here and asked for it. (I have no idea who took it; I guess nobody does). |
#11
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Posted By: Max Weder
Julie |
#12
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
As we all know, Jackson was one of the very best Baseball players of all time. However, we all know he was not a genius. So, going by what you stated, NOBODY should ever get by with an "insanity" plea!?!?!? Correct? I am not saying Jackson was "insane", just that with his intelligence and the hardships provided by people making fun of his intelligence, I could understand him wanting to "fit in" and not really thinking his actions were wrong at the time. People get light sentences all the time b/c of their intelligence in court! People also get lighter sentences acting on "impulse"! |
#13
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Posted By: Julie
and not the link I gave. There's also a "www.blackbetsy.com"--which also uses my photograph of Joe. It really gets around. Poor old orphan--wish I knew who took it. |
#14
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Warshawlaw, I really hesitate to disagree with you on this, but it appears to me that by mandating that convicted pedophiles be listed on the internet and otherwise made subject to revealation, public scrutiny and ridicule after they have already served their sentence; we are in fact allowing new punishments to be created after the fact for crimes done before the punishments were enacted. |
#15
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Scott: Yeah but...he did know it was wrong when he did it. The insanity defense is based on either irresistable impulse (i.e., a schizo being told by God to act) or lack of understanding due to mental disease so severe that he doesn't understand what he did was wrong. |
#16
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I think that there was ample time between Gandil's initial offer and the taking of the payoff for even an idiot to figure out what he was doing. |
#17
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Posted By: Julie
Buck was. |
#18
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Posted By: Scott
I know very little about the events, outside of the movie (which is my favorite baseball movie) and things related to cards, like: Bill Burns didn't know which hand to wear his glove on, so I'm not surprised he bungled the blacksox caper. |
#19
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
No, he was not innocent. An innocent. For a while. |
#20
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Posted By: Bill Cornell
Buck was. |
#21
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
On August 4, 1921 Judge Landis established the rules which were then retroactively enforced, thereby instantly ending the careers of nine baseball players. This approach of making a rule and then using this new rule to judge past behavior is a technique which many may feel is arbitrary. His edict stated: |
#22
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Cicotte, Jackson and McMullin (to use the guys cited) took money to cheat their boss. I think Landis was correct to kick them out, regardless of whether they actually cheated in the WS or merely cheated the gamblers too. Weaver is different. He did not agree to cheat. |
#23
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Posted By: Kenny Cole
I really get tired of hearing how Landis "saved" baseball because I'm not sure that's a real accurate take on what occurred. He was one of the lousiest federal judges ever, almost completely uneducated, tyrannical, rigid, self-rightious, and very often reversed. He was also a huge racist. Gee, come to think of it, he could very well be a Bush appointee. |
#24
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Posted By: Brian
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#25
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Posted By: warshawlaw
direct knowledge. |
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