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  #1  
Old 05-31-2012, 10:16 AM
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bn2cardz bn2cardz is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jerry G View Post
Now that we have her picture wouldn't she be a great fantasy card project for one of our creative members?
I took up the challenge, but used a different photo.
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File Type: jpg SteinhagenFront55Bowman.jpg (53.8 KB, 723 views)
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  #2  
Old 05-31-2012, 11:46 AM
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I think it scared more than players, much like the recent movie "Fatal Attraction" scared the bejeezus out of a lot of men who watched it.
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  #3  
Old 05-31-2012, 12:08 PM
bbcard1 bbcard1 is offline
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Originally Posted by tbob View Post
I think it scared more than players, much like the recent movie "Fatal Attraction" scared the bejeezus out of a lot of men who watched it.
My wife used to sit down with me and watch it everytime before I left on a business trip. Then one day she realized I'm really not very attractive or interesting.

That was an interesting piece. Good call Leon. I would not have seen it on the other forum and enjoyed it immensely.
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  #4  
Old 05-31-2012, 12:32 PM
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The note she left for Waitkus, just shows how seemingly sane an insane person can be:

"It is extremely important that I see you as soon as possible. We are not acquainted, but I have something of importance to speak to you about. I think it would be to your advantage to let me explain this to you as I am leaving the hotel the day after tomorrow. I realize this is out of the ordinary, but as I say, it is extremely important.”


Interesting, but mainly forgotten part of baseball history.
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  #5  
Old 05-31-2012, 12:35 PM
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Jerry G Jerry G is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bn2cardz View Post
I took up the challenge, but used a different photo.

Very cool card, Andy! Thanks.

This link gives a very good overview of the story as well as othe pictures.
http://darkdeeds.susanfleet.com/blog...ann+steinhagen
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  #6  
Old 05-31-2012, 02:27 PM
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Default Is she still living?

In an attempt to avoid work this afternoon, I've spent a little time online trying to find out more. His life ended at a young age, what happened to her? I can't seem to find anything out after her release three years later, apparently being declared sane.
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  #7  
Old 06-01-2012, 09:40 AM
pariah1107
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Originally Posted by StuckInOmaha View Post
In an attempt to avoid work this afternoon, I've spent a little time online trying to find out more. His life ended at a young age, what happened to her? I can't seem to find anything out after her release three years later, apparently being declared sane.
According to Jean Hastings Ardells' book "Breaking into Baseball: Women and the National Pastime" she spent thirty three months in a psych ward before her release. She moved to a home on the Northwest Side of Chicago with her sister, Rita. She avoids reporters and refuses to speak publicly about the incident. She has never married. This book was published in 2005

I can not find an obituary for Ruth Ann Steinhagen the past eight years which makes me believe she is still alive.
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  #8  
Old 06-01-2012, 03:21 PM
packs packs is offline
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Would be a pretty interesting ball if you had both on it.
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  #9  
Old 06-02-2012, 05:19 AM
talkinbaseball talkinbaseball is offline
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Default great article

I loved the movie but didn't know the real story.
I just picked up the '55 Bowman.

good call leon by putting it on this thread.

thanks,
john
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  #10  
Old 06-02-2012, 05:58 AM
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Default Interesting Article: The Shootings of Billy Jurges and Eddie Waitkus

Doing some "googling", I found an article entitled, The Shootings of Billy Jurges and Eddie Waitkus.

Approximately 17 years before Waitkus was shot, another major league
player Billy Jurges was shot by a 21-year-old Violet Popovich Valli, a
“cabaret girl” in Chicago.

According to the Chicago Daily Tribune, Billy Jurges had been “playing
brilliantly” for the Cubs prior to July 6, 1932, the day that 21-year-old Violet
Popovich Valli, a “cabaret girl,” put his career on hold for a while. They had
been seeing each other for about a year, and Valli said that Jurges was “one
in a hundred thousand. I met him at a party, and I fell hard.”

Apparently Jurges (age 24) did not share the same feelings. After he broke
off the relationship, she confronted him at his room in Chicago’s Hotel Carlos,
where several other Cubs players lived. (The hotel, just a couple of blocks
from Wrigley Field, is now called the Sheffield House, though the old name
can still be seen above the door.) The New York Times related that
Valli “made one final plea for his love” and pulled a .25 caliber pistol from her
purse. As Jurges made “a wild lunge” for it, the gun went off. One
bullet “struck him in the right side, ricocheted off a rib and came out the
right shoulder. The second ripped the flesh about the little finger of his left
hand.” The third bullet hit Valli, striking her in the left hand and traveling “up
the arm six inches.”



According to the article:
This photo appeared in newspapers on July 16, 1932. From left to right:
Herbert G. Immenhausen, defense attorney; Violet Valli; James M. Burke,
another of Valli’s attorneys; and Billy Jurges (with handkerchief to his face).
Although Jurges refused to sign a complaint, Valli signed a contract to sing in
local nightclubs, billing herself as “Violet ‘What I Did for Love’ Valli.”






From the article:
This photograph appeared in newspapers around the country on June 21,
1949. The caption in one paper reads: “Ruth Steinhagen (right) tries her
hand at first base, Eddie Waitkus’ position, in practice baseball session among
inmates at the jail. Mrs. Ann Markov, chief matron, takes the ump’s role.”
Other posed (and rather strange) photos show Steinhagen in jail admiring
photos of Waitkus.





As for the Waitkus photo, according to the article,
"With a nurse behind him, Eddie Waitkus sits in his wheelchair in a crowded
Chicago courtroom as State’s Attorney John S. Boyle (far right) gestures to
Ruth Steinhagen (far left). Standing next to Steinhagen is Deputy Bailiff
Jennie Du Bray. Behind Du Bray is Steinhagen’s attorney, Walter Steinbieber
(wearing bow tie)."





Here's the URL for the entire article:

http://jackbales.com/the-shootings-o...eddie-waitkus/
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