<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
		>
<channel>
	<title>Comments on: Cobb Awards: Voting Open</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html</link>
	<description>Poise! Poise!</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Sat, 20 Mar 2010 08:03:10 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=2.9.2</generator>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
		<item>
		<title>By: deanna smith</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-822732</link>
		<dc:creator>deanna smith</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2009 20:13:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-822732</guid>
		<description>he was known for his bad temper</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>he was known for his bad temper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: deanna smith</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-822726</link>
		<dc:creator>deanna smith</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2009 20:11:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-822726</guid>
		<description>im related to him accually he was related to nellie cobb and angela smith darrell smith it goes way back into history im related to him he had a saying  and it was (dont mess whith my nigger my money or my wife)</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>im related to him accually he was related to nellie cobb and angela smith darrell smith it goes way back into history im related to him he had a saying  and it was (dont mess whith my nigger my money or my wife)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Wesley Fricks</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-67803</link>
		<dc:creator>Wesley Fricks</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Jul 2006 20:27:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-67803</guid>
		<description>TY COBB&#039;s INFLUENCE ON BLACKS.


July 27, 2006

Dear Friends:

As I have recognized a need to present facts about Ty&#039;s relationships with blacks, I have enclosed some material that advocates TY COBBâ€™s support for blacks and other minorities. This is to provide facts supporting the reality that the negative publicity came after TY COBB died in 1961. I also enclosed several articles, but interestingly, one that I found where his son, Jim Cobb, made the exact same assessment in 1977. 

My friends, if you were to research the facts, youâ€™ll find that Mr. Cobb was different than he is portrayed in the eye of the modern public. He was rich with popularity and writers could always count on his name to generate interest in their newspaper. Mr. Cobb was a charitable natured man who actually was soft for the minority, whether the minority was someone who had different colored skin, or handicapped, or someone who was less fortunate, or even someone who was small in size. He would always tell the little fellow who was standing in the back and could not get close to come to the front. He wanted to make sure they got a chance, too. 

In the late 1920â€™s, TY COBB leased a hunting preserve with over 12,000 acres in MaGruder, Georgia, and built a house on it for a black man, named Uncle Bob Robinson, and his family to live there. In place of the rent, they would make sure no intruders trespassed on the property. Anytime Cobb and his friends were hunting on the land, this fellow, by his own choice, would always hunt along beside COBB. At times, he would entertain the guest with his story telling.

After a long day of hunting, they would gather around a campfire and talk baseball, or whatever came to mind. On this particular day, COBB had bagged twelve birds and had not missed a one (Mr. Cobb was a crack shot). Mr. Robinson told the story to Tris Speaker and the others, â€œYeah, Mr. COBB had a bad day today.â€? What do you mean, Cobb bagged twelve birds and didnâ€™t miss,â€? said Speaker. â€œYeah, but he near â€˜bout missed one,â€? recounted Mr. Robinson.

Present day authors have distorted COBBâ€™s reputation to a point of the ridiculous. For example, in the book â€œCOBBâ€? that the movie â€œCOBBâ€? was based on tried to show that COBB hosted orgies and drinking parties. I have the contract agreement on the land and it clearly states that there was to be â€œabsolutely NO alcohol on the premises.â€? This was at Major League Baseballâ€™s Brunswick, Georgia retreat. It was called â€œDover Hall Clubâ€? and TY COBB was 1/16 part owner of the 2,500 acre hunting and fishing camp. The MLB magnates owned it from the early 1910s until the late 1930s. COBB was the only player of the sixteen investors who bought into the $1,000 stock-leasing plan.

Mr. Cobb was in financial straits in the spring of 1906, but by the end of 1907 he had worked and saved his money. He began investing it in real estate in Georgia. In 1908, he bought 15 acres in Toccoa, Georgia and built and remodeled some of the nicest little homes, in a predominately black neighborhood. He named the subdivision â€œBooker T. Washington Heights,â€? and financed these homes to these residents for a minimal amount. 

He owned the property until 1940 and he turned it over to his son, Herschel Cobb, to assist him with starting him a Coca-Cola franchise in Idaho. One transaction sold a lot (#22) to J. H. Johnson for only $42.50 in 1909. It was a relatively good price even for that era. There were 109 lots in Booker T. Washington Heights. 

I hear a great deal about COBBâ€™s racism in the present, especially on the Internet, but no one ever does or has actually have provided factual or even specifics about their racial allegations. If COBB had been a racist, some newspaperman would have made remarks about the specifics in some way. I have over 40,000 newspaper articles, and NOT one article makes any correlation to TY COBB being a racist. All the evidence demonstrate COBBâ€™s support for the advancement of colored people, and yet, there is NO evidence that give any indication that Mr. COBB made any movement toward oppressing the black population.

Contrary, when Jackie Robinson entered into the Major Leagues, it began a slow process of allowing blacks to began entering into every league in the country. When the Dallas club of the Texas League was considering allowing blacks to enter, COBB was there to bat for them.

Ty Cobb, Fiery Diamond Star, Favors Negroes In Baseball
Independent Journal - January 29th, 1952

MENLO PARK (AP) Tyrus Raymond Cobb, fiery old time star of the diamond, stepped up to the plate today to clout a verbal home run in favor of Negroes in baseball.
Himself a native of the Deep South, Cobb voiced approval of the recent decision of the Dallas club to use Negro players if they came up to Texas league caliber.
The old Georgia Peach of Detroit Tigers fame was a fighter from the word go during his brilliant playing career. He neither asked for nor gave quarter in 24 tumultuous years in the American League. Time has mellowed the one time firebrand and he views the sport in the pleasant role of a country squire. He spoke emphatically on the subject of Negroes in baseball, however.
&quot;Certainly it is O.K. for them to play,&quot; he said, &quot;I see no reason in the world why we shouldn&#039;t compete with colored athletes as long as they conduct themselves with politeness and gentility. Let me say also that no white man has the right to be less of a gentleman than a colored man, in my book that goes not only for baseball but in all walks of life.â€? 
&quot;I like them, (Negro race) personally. When I was little I had a colored mammy. I played with colored children.&quot;
Referring again to last week&#039;s developments in the Texas league, Cobb declared, &quot;It was bound to come.&quot; He meant the breaking down of Baseball&#039;s racial barriers in the old south.
Cobb expressed the belief Negroes eventually would be playing in every league in the country. He concluded with: &quot;Why not, as long as they deport themselves like gentlemen?&quot;

TY COBB did have an altercation with at least four African-Americans during his lifetime, but I have all the documents from these incidents, and in every case, the problem can be traced back to an action, not related to racism, that was committed by COBB himself, the black person, or a third party, that cause the issue to escalate into an altercation. I am not going to discourse tediously on who was at fault in either of the incidents because I only want to exhibit that there was a reason that the incidents happened that had nothing to do with color. And I must mention that COBBâ€™s incidents with whites far exceed the number of occurrences with the blacks.

TY COBB was not a racist, he did not sharpen his spikes to slash other players just to steal a base, he did not kill a man in Detroit as alleged by recent nickel writers, and he did not live the life of a bigot. Contrary to those myths, TY COBB exerted a kindness toward blacks. One of his fondest memories of his youth was being taught how to swim by a black laborer named, Uncle Ezra. Ezra would get young TY to cling to his neck and wade out into the middle of the river or stream. At this point, TY would be released and forced to swim back to the riverbank.

Blacks lived in COBBâ€™s house behind his home on Williams Street there in Augusta. COBB employed blacks the whole time he lived on the â€œHillâ€?. Emaline Cosey lived with and worked for TY COBB in 1920. 

Jimmy Lanier grew up in Augusta with one of TY COBBâ€™s sons. Jimmy has told a story many times about him and Herschel going to the Rialto Theatre in downtown Augusta to see one of them shootâ€™em up movies. â€œWe came out of the theatre and Mr. Cobb, like a father, was waiting on the other side of the road,â€? claimed Lanier. â€œAs we were getting into the car, Mr. Cobb overheard the owner of a nearby restaurant explaining to a man dressed in shabby clothes how to get to the Linwood Hospital â€“ a veterans hospital. Mr. Cobb interrupts and says, â€˜Son, Iâ€™ll take you there.â€™ 

â€œThe man stood on the running board of Mr. Cobbâ€™s La Salle coupe, and they were talking back and forth, and this man was a veteran of World War I. When they pulled up to the gate at the Linwood Hospital, I saw Mr. Cobb hand this man a $20 bill. Herschel was looking off at somewhere else, but I saw what Mr. Cobb done. It was incidents like this that never made it to the press,â€? concluded Lanier.

Friends, I believe that one of Mr. Cobbâ€™s problems was that he never looked for credit for anything that he done. He could never boast of his philanthropic nature that would put celebrities like Babe Ruth or Joe DiMaggio riding on the crest of publicity. And two, he never refuted accusation against him publicly. If someone alleged that he had spiked another player intentionally, he gave an explanation only to the person or people that it mattered to most, like owner of the Tigers or President of the American League, but very seldom to the press. If he would have stood up and said to people, â€œYou are wrongâ€? or â€œThat is not true,â€? maybe these present day authors would have had less room to reinvent his reputation to their own liking.

TY COBB was a close associate to the 2nd Commissioner of baseball, Albert B. â€œHappyâ€? Chandler, who was head of the baseball realm when Jackie Robinson entered into Major League baseball. COBB was a big supporter of Chandler. In a press interview on August 30tth, 1950, COBB shared his support for Chandler, â€œSo far, Chandler has lived up to everything that I thought he could do as a commissioner. To me, every one of his decisions have been fair.â€? The article goes on explaining COBBâ€™s support for â€œHappy.â€? Three years later, he was elected to serve as member of the Board of Trustees of the COBB Educational Foundation. 

The Foundation contributed $2,800.00 in scholarships the first year. Fifty years later the annual grants have reached well over a $500,000 dollars. As of July 2003, the Foundation has provided scholarships to 6,876 students, equaling 9,743,000 dollars.

Thanks to his charitable nature, Ty Cobb has made it possible for thousands of students of Georgia to achieve a higher mark in education. There is no limit to what this Foundation can provide to future students who truly want an education. One thing is certain; it is bound to generate a winning team of students in this great state of Georgia. 

And as I mention frequently, I could go on forever talking about great things that Mr. COBB did to enrich the lives of other people. He did this without any expectations from the recipient or others who witnessed his philanthropic deeds. In an interview in the mid 1950s, Mr. COBB made this statement, â€œYouâ€™ve ask me about this Cobb Educational Fund, and now Iâ€™m going to have to answer it. I do not wish to be eulogized for what I have done. Iâ€™m proud of it, yes. This Educational Fund has given me the greatest possible happiness and pleasure, and maybe when Iâ€™m gone weâ€™ll have some real great men developed out of the Cobb Educational Foundation.â€? 

The TY COBB Healthcare Systems, Inc provide jobs to thousands of healthcare professionals in northeast Georgia, and I know personally, and young black fellow that I went to school with who works for the healthcare system and has made a huge impact on the community. He got his start at the COBB Memorial Hospital and now is a providing much leadership in the direction of the city. 

TY COBBâ€™s father was a Georgia State Senator from the 31st District who voted against a bill introduced and approved by the Senate that allowed taxes deriving only from black properties to finance the black schools. This was in 1900. He stated in the Atlanta Constitution that the â€œNegroes had done, and were doing a good deal for the up building of the state, and I am in favor of allowing them money for education.â€? He believed that the race should be protected from class legislation.
TY COBB set more records in baseball than any other player. He was the first player inducted into baseballâ€™s Hall of Fame in 1936. He was the most celebrated athlete in baseballâ€™s history.

In 1950, COBB dedicated the new hospital in Royston, Georgia to provide medical attention to the region. In Dr. J. B. Gilbert, COBB found one of the finest African-American doctors to serve the black population, and this was before desegregation. Dr. Gilbert also serviced white patients and later became Chief of Staff at the COBB Memorial Hospital. Dr. Gilbertâ€™s daughter remembers TY COBB visiting the home when she was just a young lady. COBB signed baseballs for all three of Dr. Gilbertâ€™s grandchildren. 

In 1953, COBB established the TY COBB Educational Foundation to give scholarships to needy students in Georgia. Hundreds and hundreds of young black students have become a beneficiary of this educational fund. 

Alexander George Washington Rivers was a black employee of COBB for 18 years and named his first-born Ty Cobb Rivers, â€œEven if it would have been a gal, Ah would have named her the same,â€? Rivers relayed to his friends in an interview with The Detroit News. Rivers served as COBBâ€™s batboy, chauffer, general handyman, and was an avid supporter of the famed â€œGeorgia Peach.â€? 

After 22 seasons with Detroit, COBB joined the Philadelphia Athletics to finish out his twenty-four year career. Rivers followed COBB, â€œI wasnâ€™t exactly against the Tigers, but I still had to be for Mr. Ty.â€?

TY COBBâ€™s racial reputation came only after he had died in 1961. Racial reform should not be fought at the expense of a man who helped make Baseball a great sport for colored people to enjoy, too.

COBB loved Augusta! He did not just live there for a while â€“ it was his home. He raised all of his children there. He lived at 2425 William Street in the Summerville district. He held common and preferred stock in the Augusta Chronicle. He sold Hawkeye trucks there in the Augusta area. He was president and principle owner of the TY COBB Tire Co. on Broad Street. He owned the TY COBB Beverage Co. who had their office at 313 in the Leonard Building. He was one of three principle owners in the City Bank of Thomson. He hunted and fished in all parts of the Augusta area and even down the Savannah River. He was on the Board of Directors of the First National Bank in Lavonia, Georgia for all his professional life. 

He coached and umpired some at the Richmond County YMCA and in the Nehi League. He entered his girls into beauty pageants, horse shows and musical recitals. He helped the city authorities host outside guest. When a large group of Philadelphia businessmen came to Augusta, COBB participated in a first-of-its-kind aeroplane golf tournament for the visiting spectators. COBB owned a great deal of property in the city. 

One piece of land was 444.72 acres south of Spirit Creek and the Augusta Orphan Asylum. Mr. COBB owned the properties on the east side of Tuttle, between Fenwick and Jenkins Streets; corner of Broad and Seventh (McIntosh); ten acres, five miles out on old Milledgeville Rd.; two lots on the corner of Druid Park and Gwinnett Street; southwest corner of Twiggs and Boydâ€™s Alley containing five lots; four lots close to the corner of Phillip Street and Walton Way; and the COBBâ€™s property list goes on and on. Looking over the Richmond County Court documents, it appears to me that in some cases COBB loaned money to help prevent foreclosure on some of the properties.

He lived adjacent to a dentist that started the South Atlantic League back up after it shutdown during the depression. Eugene Wilder worked as secretary to the Mayor of Augusta for many years, and was an admirer of COBBâ€™s. When COBB entered the United States Army in 1918, he left Dr. Wilder instructions and money he had set aside for his famous prize dog, â€œCobbâ€™s Hall,â€? in case he failed to return from the war. COBB served as a Captain in the Chemical Warfare Division over in France at the close of the war. 

COBB also became part owner of the Augusta Tourist in 1922. The team name was later changed to Augusta Tygers to honor COBB. He developed many young athletes into strong competitors. He managed the Detroit Tigers from 1921-1926, and during that time, a Detroit batter won the batting title 4 out of 6 years. He was a great teacher, and loved to devote his time to helping others advance.

TY COBB was always concerned about the advancement of the city of Augusta. He was always striving to promote and stimulate the cityâ€™s economy. He donated his vehicle to the fire station to be auctioned off. He owned numerous businesses in Augusta and drew people of every nature to the city. He once hosted the sole owner of the Diamond Tire Company who came down from up north. There were a couple of Presidents of the United States that COBB became acquainted with on the streets of Augusta. 

In closing, I just want to say that all these little things add up to give us plenty of reason to say that COBB deserves being memorialized with a stadium. Especially from his home city, a place that he helped to make a wonderful place to live and work. If the people of Augusta do not want COBBâ€™s name on the Olmstead Stadium, that&#039;s up to them â€“ I donâ€™t live there. But I canâ€™t sit an allow people to say such negative remarks such as â€œCOBB was a racistâ€? without at least trying to educate the public on the absolute truth. 

I would hope that if there is this much of an issue in naming the stadium, period, then it might be apprehended that there is a greater force that is calling us to name the facility â€œCOBB MEMORIAL STADIUM,â€? or something that would commemorate the great Georgia athlete. â€œGEORGIA PEACH STADIUMâ€? may be a happy medium that would satisfy both sides of the debate. 

At any rate, my position is only to educate and pass on the information that is sometimes forgotten or unknown. I hope that I have provided you with enough information that it may give you a different perspective on who TY COBB really was. I have enclosed different passages and material that you can read and see more aspects of TY COBB and his legacy. This is only a speck in the sand of the material that I possess on this great athlete. I would be happy to assist you or your colleagues in any capacity should that be your desire. I hope that you will be enlightened and receptive to this information, and I hope that it will assist everyone in the reconstruction of his or her opinion of TY COBB. I want to leave you with words straight from TY COBBâ€™s own personality, â€œI like them, personally. When I was little I had a colored Mammy. I played with colored children.â€?

Sincerely,
Wesley Fricks
TY COBB Historian</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>TY COBB&#8217;s INFLUENCE ON BLACKS.</p>
<p>July 27, 2006</p>
<p>Dear Friends:</p>
<p>As I have recognized a need to present facts about Ty&#8217;s relationships with blacks, I have enclosed some material that advocates TY COBBâ€™s support for blacks and other minorities. This is to provide facts supporting the reality that the negative publicity came after TY COBB died in 1961. I also enclosed several articles, but interestingly, one that I found where his son, Jim Cobb, made the exact same assessment in 1977. </p>
<p>My friends, if you were to research the facts, youâ€™ll find that Mr. Cobb was different than he is portrayed in the eye of the modern public. He was rich with popularity and writers could always count on his name to generate interest in their newspaper. Mr. Cobb was a charitable natured man who actually was soft for the minority, whether the minority was someone who had different colored skin, or handicapped, or someone who was less fortunate, or even someone who was small in size. He would always tell the little fellow who was standing in the back and could not get close to come to the front. He wanted to make sure they got a chance, too. </p>
<p>In the late 1920â€™s, TY COBB leased a hunting preserve with over 12,000 acres in MaGruder, Georgia, and built a house on it for a black man, named Uncle Bob Robinson, and his family to live there. In place of the rent, they would make sure no intruders trespassed on the property. Anytime Cobb and his friends were hunting on the land, this fellow, by his own choice, would always hunt along beside COBB. At times, he would entertain the guest with his story telling.</p>
<p>After a long day of hunting, they would gather around a campfire and talk baseball, or whatever came to mind. On this particular day, COBB had bagged twelve birds and had not missed a one (Mr. Cobb was a crack shot). Mr. Robinson told the story to Tris Speaker and the others, â€œYeah, Mr. COBB had a bad day today.â€? What do you mean, Cobb bagged twelve birds and didnâ€™t miss,â€? said Speaker. â€œYeah, but he near â€˜bout missed one,â€? recounted Mr. Robinson.</p>
<p>Present day authors have distorted COBBâ€™s reputation to a point of the ridiculous. For example, in the book â€œCOBBâ€? that the movie â€œCOBBâ€? was based on tried to show that COBB hosted orgies and drinking parties. I have the contract agreement on the land and it clearly states that there was to be â€œabsolutely NO alcohol on the premises.â€? This was at Major League Baseballâ€™s Brunswick, Georgia retreat. It was called â€œDover Hall Clubâ€? and TY COBB was 1/16 part owner of the 2,500 acre hunting and fishing camp. The MLB magnates owned it from the early 1910s until the late 1930s. COBB was the only player of the sixteen investors who bought into the $1,000 stock-leasing plan.</p>
<p>Mr. Cobb was in financial straits in the spring of 1906, but by the end of 1907 he had worked and saved his money. He began investing it in real estate in Georgia. In 1908, he bought 15 acres in Toccoa, Georgia and built and remodeled some of the nicest little homes, in a predominately black neighborhood. He named the subdivision â€œBooker T. Washington Heights,â€? and financed these homes to these residents for a minimal amount. </p>
<p>He owned the property until 1940 and he turned it over to his son, Herschel Cobb, to assist him with starting him a Coca-Cola franchise in Idaho. One transaction sold a lot (#22) to J. H. Johnson for only $42.50 in 1909. It was a relatively good price even for that era. There were 109 lots in Booker T. Washington Heights. </p>
<p>I hear a great deal about COBBâ€™s racism in the present, especially on the Internet, but no one ever does or has actually have provided factual or even specifics about their racial allegations. If COBB had been a racist, some newspaperman would have made remarks about the specifics in some way. I have over 40,000 newspaper articles, and NOT one article makes any correlation to TY COBB being a racist. All the evidence demonstrate COBBâ€™s support for the advancement of colored people, and yet, there is NO evidence that give any indication that Mr. COBB made any movement toward oppressing the black population.</p>
<p>Contrary, when Jackie Robinson entered into the Major Leagues, it began a slow process of allowing blacks to began entering into every league in the country. When the Dallas club of the Texas League was considering allowing blacks to enter, COBB was there to bat for them.</p>
<p>Ty Cobb, Fiery Diamond Star, Favors Negroes In Baseball<br />
Independent Journal &#8211; January 29th, 1952</p>
<p>MENLO PARK (AP) Tyrus Raymond Cobb, fiery old time star of the diamond, stepped up to the plate today to clout a verbal home run in favor of Negroes in baseball.<br />
Himself a native of the Deep South, Cobb voiced approval of the recent decision of the Dallas club to use Negro players if they came up to Texas league caliber.<br />
The old Georgia Peach of Detroit Tigers fame was a fighter from the word go during his brilliant playing career. He neither asked for nor gave quarter in 24 tumultuous years in the American League. Time has mellowed the one time firebrand and he views the sport in the pleasant role of a country squire. He spoke emphatically on the subject of Negroes in baseball, however.<br />
&#8220;Certainly it is O.K. for them to play,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I see no reason in the world why we shouldn&#8217;t compete with colored athletes as long as they conduct themselves with politeness and gentility. Let me say also that no white man has the right to be less of a gentleman than a colored man, in my book that goes not only for baseball but in all walks of life.â€?<br />
&#8220;I like them, (Negro race) personally. When I was little I had a colored mammy. I played with colored children.&#8221;<br />
Referring again to last week&#8217;s developments in the Texas league, Cobb declared, &#8220;It was bound to come.&#8221; He meant the breaking down of Baseball&#8217;s racial barriers in the old south.<br />
Cobb expressed the belief Negroes eventually would be playing in every league in the country. He concluded with: &#8220;Why not, as long as they deport themselves like gentlemen?&#8221;</p>
<p>TY COBB did have an altercation with at least four African-Americans during his lifetime, but I have all the documents from these incidents, and in every case, the problem can be traced back to an action, not related to racism, that was committed by COBB himself, the black person, or a third party, that cause the issue to escalate into an altercation. I am not going to discourse tediously on who was at fault in either of the incidents because I only want to exhibit that there was a reason that the incidents happened that had nothing to do with color. And I must mention that COBBâ€™s incidents with whites far exceed the number of occurrences with the blacks.</p>
<p>TY COBB was not a racist, he did not sharpen his spikes to slash other players just to steal a base, he did not kill a man in Detroit as alleged by recent nickel writers, and he did not live the life of a bigot. Contrary to those myths, TY COBB exerted a kindness toward blacks. One of his fondest memories of his youth was being taught how to swim by a black laborer named, Uncle Ezra. Ezra would get young TY to cling to his neck and wade out into the middle of the river or stream. At this point, TY would be released and forced to swim back to the riverbank.</p>
<p>Blacks lived in COBBâ€™s house behind his home on Williams Street there in Augusta. COBB employed blacks the whole time he lived on the â€œHillâ€?. Emaline Cosey lived with and worked for TY COBB in 1920. </p>
<p>Jimmy Lanier grew up in Augusta with one of TY COBBâ€™s sons. Jimmy has told a story many times about him and Herschel going to the Rialto Theatre in downtown Augusta to see one of them shootâ€™em up movies. â€œWe came out of the theatre and Mr. Cobb, like a father, was waiting on the other side of the road,â€? claimed Lanier. â€œAs we were getting into the car, Mr. Cobb overheard the owner of a nearby restaurant explaining to a man dressed in shabby clothes how to get to the Linwood Hospital â€“ a veterans hospital. Mr. Cobb interrupts and says, â€˜Son, Iâ€™ll take you there.â€™ </p>
<p>â€œThe man stood on the running board of Mr. Cobbâ€™s La Salle coupe, and they were talking back and forth, and this man was a veteran of World War I. When they pulled up to the gate at the Linwood Hospital, I saw Mr. Cobb hand this man a $20 bill. Herschel was looking off at somewhere else, but I saw what Mr. Cobb done. It was incidents like this that never made it to the press,â€? concluded Lanier.</p>
<p>Friends, I believe that one of Mr. Cobbâ€™s problems was that he never looked for credit for anything that he done. He could never boast of his philanthropic nature that would put celebrities like Babe Ruth or Joe DiMaggio riding on the crest of publicity. And two, he never refuted accusation against him publicly. If someone alleged that he had spiked another player intentionally, he gave an explanation only to the person or people that it mattered to most, like owner of the Tigers or President of the American League, but very seldom to the press. If he would have stood up and said to people, â€œYou are wrongâ€? or â€œThat is not true,â€? maybe these present day authors would have had less room to reinvent his reputation to their own liking.</p>
<p>TY COBB was a close associate to the 2nd Commissioner of baseball, Albert B. â€œHappyâ€? Chandler, who was head of the baseball realm when Jackie Robinson entered into Major League baseball. COBB was a big supporter of Chandler. In a press interview on August 30tth, 1950, COBB shared his support for Chandler, â€œSo far, Chandler has lived up to everything that I thought he could do as a commissioner. To me, every one of his decisions have been fair.â€? The article goes on explaining COBBâ€™s support for â€œHappy.â€? Three years later, he was elected to serve as member of the Board of Trustees of the COBB Educational Foundation. </p>
<p>The Foundation contributed $2,800.00 in scholarships the first year. Fifty years later the annual grants have reached well over a $500,000 dollars. As of July 2003, the Foundation has provided scholarships to 6,876 students, equaling 9,743,000 dollars.</p>
<p>Thanks to his charitable nature, Ty Cobb has made it possible for thousands of students of Georgia to achieve a higher mark in education. There is no limit to what this Foundation can provide to future students who truly want an education. One thing is certain; it is bound to generate a winning team of students in this great state of Georgia. </p>
<p>And as I mention frequently, I could go on forever talking about great things that Mr. COBB did to enrich the lives of other people. He did this without any expectations from the recipient or others who witnessed his philanthropic deeds. In an interview in the mid 1950s, Mr. COBB made this statement, â€œYouâ€™ve ask me about this Cobb Educational Fund, and now Iâ€™m going to have to answer it. I do not wish to be eulogized for what I have done. Iâ€™m proud of it, yes. This Educational Fund has given me the greatest possible happiness and pleasure, and maybe when Iâ€™m gone weâ€™ll have some real great men developed out of the Cobb Educational Foundation.â€? </p>
<p>The TY COBB Healthcare Systems, Inc provide jobs to thousands of healthcare professionals in northeast Georgia, and I know personally, and young black fellow that I went to school with who works for the healthcare system and has made a huge impact on the community. He got his start at the COBB Memorial Hospital and now is a providing much leadership in the direction of the city. </p>
<p>TY COBBâ€™s father was a Georgia State Senator from the 31st District who voted against a bill introduced and approved by the Senate that allowed taxes deriving only from black properties to finance the black schools. This was in 1900. He stated in the Atlanta Constitution that the â€œNegroes had done, and were doing a good deal for the up building of the state, and I am in favor of allowing them money for education.â€? He believed that the race should be protected from class legislation.<br />
TY COBB set more records in baseball than any other player. He was the first player inducted into baseballâ€™s Hall of Fame in 1936. He was the most celebrated athlete in baseballâ€™s history.</p>
<p>In 1950, COBB dedicated the new hospital in Royston, Georgia to provide medical attention to the region. In Dr. J. B. Gilbert, COBB found one of the finest African-American doctors to serve the black population, and this was before desegregation. Dr. Gilbert also serviced white patients and later became Chief of Staff at the COBB Memorial Hospital. Dr. Gilbertâ€™s daughter remembers TY COBB visiting the home when she was just a young lady. COBB signed baseballs for all three of Dr. Gilbertâ€™s grandchildren. </p>
<p>In 1953, COBB established the TY COBB Educational Foundation to give scholarships to needy students in Georgia. Hundreds and hundreds of young black students have become a beneficiary of this educational fund. </p>
<p>Alexander George Washington Rivers was a black employee of COBB for 18 years and named his first-born Ty Cobb Rivers, â€œEven if it would have been a gal, Ah would have named her the same,â€? Rivers relayed to his friends in an interview with The Detroit News. Rivers served as COBBâ€™s batboy, chauffer, general handyman, and was an avid supporter of the famed â€œGeorgia Peach.â€? </p>
<p>After 22 seasons with Detroit, COBB joined the Philadelphia Athletics to finish out his twenty-four year career. Rivers followed COBB, â€œI wasnâ€™t exactly against the Tigers, but I still had to be for Mr. Ty.â€?</p>
<p>TY COBBâ€™s racial reputation came only after he had died in 1961. Racial reform should not be fought at the expense of a man who helped make Baseball a great sport for colored people to enjoy, too.</p>
<p>COBB loved Augusta! He did not just live there for a while â€“ it was his home. He raised all of his children there. He lived at 2425 William Street in the Summerville district. He held common and preferred stock in the Augusta Chronicle. He sold Hawkeye trucks there in the Augusta area. He was president and principle owner of the TY COBB Tire Co. on Broad Street. He owned the TY COBB Beverage Co. who had their office at 313 in the Leonard Building. He was one of three principle owners in the City Bank of Thomson. He hunted and fished in all parts of the Augusta area and even down the Savannah River. He was on the Board of Directors of the First National Bank in Lavonia, Georgia for all his professional life. </p>
<p>He coached and umpired some at the Richmond County YMCA and in the Nehi League. He entered his girls into beauty pageants, horse shows and musical recitals. He helped the city authorities host outside guest. When a large group of Philadelphia businessmen came to Augusta, COBB participated in a first-of-its-kind aeroplane golf tournament for the visiting spectators. COBB owned a great deal of property in the city. </p>
<p>One piece of land was 444.72 acres south of Spirit Creek and the Augusta Orphan Asylum. Mr. COBB owned the properties on the east side of Tuttle, between Fenwick and Jenkins Streets; corner of Broad and Seventh (McIntosh); ten acres, five miles out on old Milledgeville Rd.; two lots on the corner of Druid Park and Gwinnett Street; southwest corner of Twiggs and Boydâ€™s Alley containing five lots; four lots close to the corner of Phillip Street and Walton Way; and the COBBâ€™s property list goes on and on. Looking over the Richmond County Court documents, it appears to me that in some cases COBB loaned money to help prevent foreclosure on some of the properties.</p>
<p>He lived adjacent to a dentist that started the South Atlantic League back up after it shutdown during the depression. Eugene Wilder worked as secretary to the Mayor of Augusta for many years, and was an admirer of COBBâ€™s. When COBB entered the United States Army in 1918, he left Dr. Wilder instructions and money he had set aside for his famous prize dog, â€œCobbâ€™s Hall,â€? in case he failed to return from the war. COBB served as a Captain in the Chemical Warfare Division over in France at the close of the war. </p>
<p>COBB also became part owner of the Augusta Tourist in 1922. The team name was later changed to Augusta Tygers to honor COBB. He developed many young athletes into strong competitors. He managed the Detroit Tigers from 1921-1926, and during that time, a Detroit batter won the batting title 4 out of 6 years. He was a great teacher, and loved to devote his time to helping others advance.</p>
<p>TY COBB was always concerned about the advancement of the city of Augusta. He was always striving to promote and stimulate the cityâ€™s economy. He donated his vehicle to the fire station to be auctioned off. He owned numerous businesses in Augusta and drew people of every nature to the city. He once hosted the sole owner of the Diamond Tire Company who came down from up north. There were a couple of Presidents of the United States that COBB became acquainted with on the streets of Augusta. </p>
<p>In closing, I just want to say that all these little things add up to give us plenty of reason to say that COBB deserves being memorialized with a stadium. Especially from his home city, a place that he helped to make a wonderful place to live and work. If the people of Augusta do not want COBBâ€™s name on the Olmstead Stadium, that&#8217;s up to them â€“ I donâ€™t live there. But I canâ€™t sit an allow people to say such negative remarks such as â€œCOBB was a racistâ€? without at least trying to educate the public on the absolute truth. </p>
<p>I would hope that if there is this much of an issue in naming the stadium, period, then it might be apprehended that there is a greater force that is calling us to name the facility â€œCOBB MEMORIAL STADIUM,â€? or something that would commemorate the great Georgia athlete. â€œGEORGIA PEACH STADIUMâ€? may be a happy medium that would satisfy both sides of the debate. </p>
<p>At any rate, my position is only to educate and pass on the information that is sometimes forgotten or unknown. I hope that I have provided you with enough information that it may give you a different perspective on who TY COBB really was. I have enclosed different passages and material that you can read and see more aspects of TY COBB and his legacy. This is only a speck in the sand of the material that I possess on this great athlete. I would be happy to assist you or your colleagues in any capacity should that be your desire. I hope that you will be enlightened and receptive to this information, and I hope that it will assist everyone in the reconstruction of his or her opinion of TY COBB. I want to leave you with words straight from TY COBBâ€™s own personality, â€œI like them, personally. When I was little I had a colored Mammy. I played with colored children.â€?</p>
<p>Sincerely,<br />
Wesley Fricks<br />
TY COBB Historian</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Brandon</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-59711</link>
		<dc:creator>Brandon</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Jun 2006 17:06:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-59711</guid>
		<description>Worst community ever: michael berube</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Worst community ever: michael berube</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Marq</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9966</link>
		<dc:creator>Marq</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2006 16:21:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9966</guid>
		<description>Or, as Swank might put it, &quot;boob splash.&quot;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Or, as Swank might put it, &#8220;boob splash.&#8221;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Marq</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9965</link>
		<dc:creator>Marq</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2006 16:19:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9965</guid>
		<description>OK, here come my &lt;i&gt;real &lt;/i&gt;votes. Damn, this is a place where strike-thru would come in handy. Ah, well.

Least Humorous: Kevin Drum! Smack him upside his haid with thet Louisville Slugger--ya just &lt;i&gt;might &lt;/i&gt;wake him up!
Most Deserving of Less Recognition: Daily Eschaton. Kos and Atrios serve their functions, of course. But, there&#039;s more to the lefty blogosphere than just these two.
Worst Community: Sadly, No! &#039;Cos we&#039;re teh &lt;i&gt;evil.&lt;/i&gt;
Blog With the Biggest Tits: Atlas Shags. Only a fragile bra stands between you and death by horrible, suffocating mammary wave, so be careful.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>OK, here come my <i>real </i>votes. Damn, this is a place where strike-thru would come in handy. Ah, well.</p>
<p>Least Humorous: Kevin Drum! Smack him upside his haid with thet Louisville Slugger&#8211;ya just <i>might </i>wake him up!<br />
Most Deserving of Less Recognition: Daily Eschaton. Kos and Atrios serve their functions, of course. But, there&#8217;s more to the lefty blogosphere than just these two.<br />
Worst Community: Sadly, No! &#8216;Cos we&#8217;re teh <i>evil.</i><br />
Blog With the Biggest Tits: Atlas Shags. Only a fragile bra stands between you and death by horrible, suffocating mammary wave, so be careful.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: chicago dyke</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9964</link>
		<dc:creator>chicago dyke</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2006 14:57:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9964</guid>
		<description>i&#039;m so clearly outclassed here. teh funny, sadlynonites. very funny.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>i&#8217;m so clearly outclassed here. teh funny, sadlynonites. very funny.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: ccobb</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9963</link>
		<dc:creator>ccobb</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 26 Mar 2006 14:20:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9963</guid>
		<description>Umm, as a Cobb I have two questions:

1) Should I be pissed?
2) Am I due a royalty check?

Ignore that last question.  Should have gone to my lawyer.

Good luck with the competition, y&#039;all.  Let us Cobbs know who wins!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Umm, as a Cobb I have two questions:</p>
<p>1) Should I be pissed?<br />
2) Am I due a royalty check?</p>
<p>Ignore that last question.  Should have gone to my lawyer.</p>
<p>Good luck with the competition, y&#8217;all.  Let us Cobbs know who wins!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: grytpype</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9962</link>
		<dc:creator>grytpype</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 26 Mar 2006 01:11:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9962</guid>
		<description>Least humorous: Drum

Worst community: Atrios is going to sweep this one and deserves to, but Kos has gotten pretty bad... long sophomoric rants from the same people over and over, that shoot to the top of the recommended list every time.

Less recognition: Eschaton, it&#039;s not the best blog around by a long shot but it&#039;s the one everyone reads.

Worst photoshops:  Gilliard.  Here&#039;s a hint: when you take a little image and blow it up, it looks like shit.

Most Clapped-out:  Jesus&#039;s General.  &quot;Heterosexually yours&quot; was funny the first time, maybe

Fakest:  Wonkette.  Anna Whatsit doesn&#039;t write for the blog anymore... it&#039;s two dudes now, isn&#039;t it?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Least humorous: Drum</p>
<p>Worst community: Atrios is going to sweep this one and deserves to, but Kos has gotten pretty bad&#8230; long sophomoric rants from the same people over and over, that shoot to the top of the recommended list every time.</p>
<p>Less recognition: Eschaton, it&#8217;s not the best blog around by a long shot but it&#8217;s the one everyone reads.</p>
<p>Worst photoshops:  Gilliard.  Here&#8217;s a hint: when you take a little image and blow it up, it looks like shit.</p>
<p>Most Clapped-out:  Jesus&#8217;s General.  &#8220;Heterosexually yours&#8221; was funny the first time, maybe</p>
<p>Fakest:  Wonkette.  Anna Whatsit doesn&#8217;t write for the blog anymore&#8230; it&#8217;s two dudes now, isn&#8217;t it?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: What Do I Know?</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9970</link>
		<dc:creator>What Do I Know?</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 20:06:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9970</guid>
		<description>&lt;strong&gt;A Short Treatise on Blog Awards and Gender&lt;/strong&gt;

I&#039;m really sick of all the blatant self-promotion going on over the latest round of blog awards (if you tout your blog one more time I&#039;m removing it from my blogroll! I didn&#039;t get nominated [due to the fact my
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>A Short Treatise on Blog Awards and Gender</strong></p>
<p>I&#8217;m really sick of all the blatant self-promotion going on over the latest round of blog awards (if you tout your blog one more time I&#8217;m removing it from my blogroll! I didn&#8217;t get nominated [due to the fact my</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Marq</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9961</link>
		<dc:creator>Marq</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 20:01:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9961</guid>
		<description>AKA &quot;Michael BÃ©rubÃ© Out On The Patio Sipping A LattÃ© Online.&quot; The &lt;i&gt;only &lt;/i&gt;blog consisting &lt;i&gt;entirely &lt;/i&gt;of comment threads and a Hate Mail Bage (Â©2005 MJ&#039;).</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>AKA &#8220;Michael BÃ©rubÃ© Out On The Patio Sipping A LattÃ© Online.&#8221; The <i>only </i>blog consisting <i>entirely </i>of comment threads and a Hate Mail Bage (Â©2005 MJ&#8217;).</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Michael BÃ©rubÃ©</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9960</link>
		<dc:creator>Michael BÃ©rubÃ©</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 10:32:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9960</guid>
		<description>O-Girl must be obeyed!  The questionlessness and commentlessness and suggestion-addinglessness of the Liberal Oasis must cease, and it must join the New Blog Order or face the consequences!  

I hail the soon-to-be-announced Liberal Oasis CafÃ©.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>O-Girl must be obeyed!  The questionlessness and commentlessness and suggestion-addinglessness of the Liberal Oasis must cease, and it must join the New Blog Order or face the consequences!  </p>
<p>I hail the soon-to-be-announced Liberal Oasis CafÃ©.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Marisacat</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9959</link>
		<dc:creator>Marisacat</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 09:38:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9959</guid>
		<description>LOL... Biggest Cock-up of the infinitesimal variety:

Daily Kos.

&#039;&#039;Online&#039;&#039; was the final thug/operative universe for the Dems. 
Bravely they went forward into the known unknown. 

Might as well laugh.  Beats tossing spit balls at the choke point that is DKos and the aligned blogs.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>LOL&#8230; Biggest Cock-up of the infinitesimal variety:</p>
<p>Daily Kos.</p>
<p>&#8221;Online&#8221; was the final thug/operative universe for the Dems.<br />
Bravely they went forward into the known unknown. </p>
<p>Might as well laugh.  Beats tossing spit balls at the choke point that is DKos and the aligned blogs.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Mr.Murder</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9958</link>
		<dc:creator>Mr.Murder</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 06:52:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9958</guid>
		<description>Fafblog rises above partisan pander and avoids mention in any bad category.

:)</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Fafblog rises above partisan pander and avoids mention in any bad category.</p>
<p>:)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Oaktown Girl</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9957</link>
		<dc:creator>Oaktown Girl</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 03:52:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9957</guid>
		<description>Caution: Radical change of tone ahead. Please set your dials to â€œObliqueâ€? and remember to turn your steering wheel INTO the direction of the skid.
 
My write-in vote is for Liberal Oasis for Worst Community for not taking comments (one of the Cobbâ€™s listed criteria). 

 
Itâ€™s not because I feel everyone has a right to (and needs to hear) my opinion. Itâ€™s that with no means of communication, thereâ€™s no way to ask him a question or for further clarification about what heâ€™s written (emails go unanswered). Maybe he feels all the two-way Democratic strategizing in the blogosphere that needs to happen already happens on other blogs. But we all know thatâ€™s bullshit.  The least he could do is set up a sister page like Talking Points Memo did with that TPM CafÃ© dealio.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Caution: Radical change of tone ahead. Please set your dials to â€œObliqueâ€? and remember to turn your steering wheel INTO the direction of the skid.</p>
<p>My write-in vote is for Liberal Oasis for Worst Community for not taking comments (one of the Cobbâ€™s listed criteria). </p>
<p>Itâ€™s not because I feel everyone has a right to (and needs to hear) my opinion. Itâ€™s that with no means of communication, thereâ€™s no way to ask him a question or for further clarification about what heâ€™s written (emails go unanswered). Maybe he feels all the two-way Democratic strategizing in the blogosphere that needs to happen already happens on other blogs. But we all know thatâ€™s bullshit.  The least he could do is set up a sister page like Talking Points Memo did with that TPM CafÃ© dealio.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Demogenes Aristophanes</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9956</link>
		<dc:creator>Demogenes Aristophanes</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 01:05:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9956</guid>
		<description>Yosef, I was looking for that thread where you pointed out the stupidity of Red State&#039;s policy on new commenters, where they make you comment before you can appeal for permission to comment. That was HI-effin&#039;-LARIOUS. Was that on 3 bulls or here?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yosef, I was looking for that thread where you pointed out the stupidity of Red State&#8217;s policy on new commenters, where they make you comment before you can appeal for permission to comment. That was HI-effin&#8217;-LARIOUS. Was that on 3 bulls or here?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Yosef</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9955</link>
		<dc:creator>Yosef</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 00:59:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9955</guid>
		<description>Who ya callin&#039; thin-skinned, chundermuffin?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Who ya callin&#8217; thin-skinned, chundermuffin?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Demogenes Aristophanes</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9954</link>
		<dc:creator>Demogenes Aristophanes</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 00:09:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9954</guid>
		<description>I have a wee problem, but that&#039;s not important right now. I mean to say, I have a problem with including Atlas in the Cobbies. It&#039;s like, you let her in, then all of a sudden it&#039;s open to LGF, Misha, Instahehindeed, et al. Then it sort of ceases to be satirical cobaggery in the key of blog incest. And all you&#039;re left with is the usual straightforward scorn for rightwing chumpwaggonry.*

I also need to reiterate my vote for Least Humorous to Kevin Dull&#039;s Paint-Drying and Actuary Table Emporium. Reading Political Animal is like being sucked into an infinite loop of &#039;What Dreams May Come: The Microsoft Excel Cut&#039;.

Oh, and a couple suggestions for more Cobbie categories:

- Most Earnest
- Most Plagiaristic
- Most Likely to Start a Netroots Campaign in My Pants
- Most Thin-Skinned
- The First Mover Award for Lifetime Achievment in Maintaining High Traffice while Not Adding to the Conversation since 2002 

*It seems 3B!!1!one!** has successfully shifted the epithet/footnote paradigm.

**Also teh l4m3~

~Also 3B!!!!!1!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have a wee problem, but that&#8217;s not important right now. I mean to say, I have a problem with including Atlas in the Cobbies. It&#8217;s like, you let her in, then all of a sudden it&#8217;s open to LGF, Misha, Instahehindeed, et al. Then it sort of ceases to be satirical cobaggery in the key of blog incest. And all you&#8217;re left with is the usual straightforward scorn for rightwing chumpwaggonry.*</p>
<p>I also need to reiterate my vote for Least Humorous to Kevin Dull&#8217;s Paint-Drying and Actuary Table Emporium. Reading Political Animal is like being sucked into an infinite loop of &#8216;What Dreams May Come: The Microsoft Excel Cut&#8217;.</p>
<p>Oh, and a couple suggestions for more Cobbie categories:</p>
<p>- Most Earnest<br />
- Most Plagiaristic<br />
- Most Likely to Start a Netroots Campaign in My Pants<br />
- Most Thin-Skinned<br />
- The First Mover Award for Lifetime Achievment in Maintaining High Traffice while Not Adding to the Conversation since 2002 </p>
<p>*It seems 3B!!1!one!** has successfully shifted the epithet/footnote paradigm.</p>
<p>**Also teh l4m3~</p>
<p>~Also 3B!!!!!1!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Lame Man</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9953</link>
		<dc:creator>Lame Man</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 23:13:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9953</guid>
		<description>&lt;b&gt;Least Humorous&lt;/b&gt;

Sandpaper.  The desert.  Eating saltine crackers after an hour&#039;s worth of bong hits.

Things that are dry!

Vote: Yglesias

&lt;b&gt;Most Deserving of Less Recognition&lt;/b&gt;

&quot;...a way to pick on blogs bigger and/or more respected than us...&quot;

It&#039;s not that those other blogs are more popular than Sadly, No!, it&#039;s that Sadly, No!&#039;s &quot;appeal is more selective.&quot;

&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.spinaltapfan.com/scripts/tist411.txt&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;link&lt;/a&gt;

Vote: Atrios

&lt;b&gt;Worst Community&lt;/b&gt;

For developing and sponsoring a meta-anti-recognition award for blogging, by a blog that is about, of, over, and shot through other blogs, with an attitude that says, the blog that snarks last, snarks best:

Vote: Sadly, No!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Least Humorous</b></p>
<p>Sandpaper.  The desert.  Eating saltine crackers after an hour&#8217;s worth of bong hits.</p>
<p>Things that are dry!</p>
<p>Vote: Yglesias</p>
<p><b>Most Deserving of Less Recognition</b></p>
<p>&#8220;&#8230;a way to pick on blogs bigger and/or more respected than us&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not that those other blogs are more popular than Sadly, No!, it&#8217;s that Sadly, No!&#8217;s &#8220;appeal is more selective.&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.spinaltapfan.com/scripts/tist411.txt" rel="nofollow">link</a></p>
<p>Vote: Atrios</p>
<p><b>Worst Community</b></p>
<p>For developing and sponsoring a meta-anti-recognition award for blogging, by a blog that is about, of, over, and shot through other blogs, with an attitude that says, the blog that snarks last, snarks best:</p>
<p>Vote: Sadly, No!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: RETARDO</title>
		<link>http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/2468.html/comment-page-3#comment-9952</link>
		<dc:creator>RETARDO</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 22:59:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sadlyno.com/wordpress/archives/002468.html#comment-9952</guid>
		<description>Least Humorous: Drum, Josh Marshall
Worst blog: elementropy
Most likely to buy you beer: alicublog
Most likely to rig the voting: Michael Berube
Most likely to accept a Cleveland Steamer from Chuck Johnson: Atlas</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Least Humorous: Drum, Josh Marshall<br />
Worst blog: elementropy<br />
Most likely to buy you beer: alicublog<br />
Most likely to rig the voting: Michael Berube<br />
Most likely to accept a Cleveland Steamer from Chuck Johnson: Atlas</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
</channel>
</rss>
