The prevalence of scapular malalignment in elementally school aged baseball player and its association to shoulder disorder

2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 942-947 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenichi Otoshi ◽  
Shinichi Kikuchi ◽  
Kinshi Kato ◽  
Ryohei Sato ◽  
Takahiro Igari ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey Scholes

Race, religion, and sports may seem like odd bedfellows, but, in fact, all three have been interacting with each other since the emergence of modern sports in the United States over a century ago. It was the sport of boxing that saw a black man become a champion at the height of the Jim Crow era and a baseball player who broke the color barrier two decades before the civil rights movement began. In this chapter, the role that religion has played in these and other instances where race (the African American race in particular) and sports have collided will be examined for its impact on the relationship between race and sports. The association of race, religion, and sports is not accidental. The chapter demonstrates that all three are co-constitutive of and dependent on each other for their meaning at these chosen junctures in American sports history.


Author(s):  
Heath P. Melugin ◽  
Annie Smart ◽  
Martijn Verhoeven ◽  
Joshua S. Dines ◽  
Christopher L. Camp
Keyword(s):  

2008 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wataru Miyamoto ◽  
Souichirou Yamamoto ◽  
Takahito Inoue ◽  
Yuji Uchio

Author(s):  
Translated by Wenceslao Gálvez y Delmonte ◽  
Smith Noel M. ◽  
Andrew T. Huse

Tampa: Impressions of an Emigrant is a translation of Tampa: impresiones de emigrante written by Cuban author Wenceslao Gálvez y Delmonte, published in 1897 in Ybor City, Tampa, Florida, translated from the Spanish by Noel M. Smith. Gálvez was an early diaspora writer in the costumbrismo genre, which emphasized the depiction of everyday manners and customs of a particular social milieu. Gálvez emigrated from Havana in 1896 to escape the Cuban War of Independence and join the Cuban exile community in Tampa. Gálvez was a champion baseball player in the earliest years of Cuban baseball, a lawyer/prosecutor/judge, and journalist/author. His charming and opinionated first-person narrative is in four parts. Part 1 begins with the escalation of the Spanish war effort that prompted his sea voyage to Tampa, followed by part 2 and descriptions of Tampa’s people and activities, geography, landmarks, municipal features, and cultural pursuits. Parts 3 and 4 extensively discuss many aspects of the Cuban exile community in Ybor City and West Tampa, including the patriotic pro-independence fervor that gripped the emigrants. He names notable personages in the exile community and describes their efforts to support the war against Spain and recounts his struggles working as a door-to-door salesman and as a lector (reader) in a cigar factory. Thirty historical photographs and newspaper clippings illuminate the text.


Neurology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 92 (1) ◽  
pp. e76-e80
Author(s):  
Christopher Vachon ◽  
Amal Abu Libdeh

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