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❤️ Ray Tift 🐨

"Raymond Frank Tift (June 21, 1884 – March 29, 1945) was an American professional baseball pitcher. He played in Major League Baseball with the New York Highlanders in . Biography A native of Fitchburg, Massachusetts, Tift graduated from Brown University in 1907. While at Brown, he was a star baseball player who reportedly "showed great nerve in tight places and fielded his position with the greatest accuracy." Tift signed with the New York Highlanders after graduation, and appeared in four games during New York's 1907 season. With the Highlanders, Tift played with Baseball Hall of Famers Jack Chesbro, Willie Keeler, and Branch Rickey. Tift's major league debut came on August 7, when he pitched six innings in relief of Slow Joe Doyle, allowing five hits and one run in New York's 8-4 loss to the St. Louis Browns at Hilltop Park. Three days later, Tift was the starter for New York in the second game of a doubleheader with the Browns, going seven innings and allowing three runs. In Tift's third appearance he again relieved Doyle, and reached base himself after being hit by a Bill Donovan pitch, but the Highlanders suffered a 13-6 shellacking at the hands of the Detroit Tigers and Hall of Famers Ty Cobb and Sam Crawford at Bennett Park. Tift's final major league appearance came at Hilltop Park on September 2, when he went five innings in relief of Al Orth as New York was stomped, 12-1, by the Boston Americans and their ace hurler, Hall of Famer Cy Young. Over four major league appearances, Tift had a 0–0 record, and posted a 4.74 ERA with six strikeouts and four walks in 19 innings. In 1914, Tift pitched for the Falmouth, Massachusetts "Cottage Club" town team in what is now the Cape Cod Baseball League. Earlier in the season, he had defeated the Cottage Club as a member of the West Somerville, Massachusetts town team. Tift continued to pitch for the Somerville town team for several seasons, and in 1919 was briefly a teammate of Hall of Famer Pie Traynor at Somerville. Tift died in Verona, New Jersey in 1945 at the age of 60. References External links Category:1884 births Category:1945 deaths Category:Major League Baseball pitchers Category:Baseball players from Massachusetts Category:New York Highlanders players Category:Auburn (minor league baseball) players Category:Montreal Royals players Category:Falmouth Commodores players Category:Cape Cod Baseball League players (pre-modern era) Category:Brown University alumni "

❤️ Show Me (Moya Brennan song) 🐨

""Show Me" was the only commercial single taken from Moya's Grammy-nominated 2003 album Two Horizons. This was Moya's first single under her new name (all previous singles were released under "Máire Brennan"), and her first single available to download (via iTunes USA). The cover shows a photography by Peer Lindgreen. Other versions (featuring various lyrics from the original song) of 'Show Me' have also been remixed by the likes of Schiller. Concept As the album had a concept of a story being told, 'Show Me' had its own story. Described by Brennan as "being shown the way - where to go to find this harp". Track listing #"Show Me" #"Show Me" (Jakatta remix) References External links * Category:2003 singles Category:Songs written by Ross Cullum Category:2003 songs "

❤️ Verle Tiefenthaler 🐨

"Verle Matthew Tiefenthaler (born July 11, 1937 in Breda, Iowa), is a former Major League Baseball pitcher who played for the Chicago White Sox in 1962. He batted left and threw right-handed. Tiefenthaler had a 0-0 record, with a 9.82 ERA, in three games, in his one-year career. He was signed by the New York Giants in 1955 as an amateur free agent. External links Category:1937 births Category:Living people Category:Major League Baseball pitchers Category:Baseball players from Iowa Category:People from Carroll County, Iowa Category:Rio Grande Valley Giants players Category:Tacoma Giants players Category:Corpus Christi Giants players Category:Sioux City Soos players Category:Muskogee Giants players Category:Danville Leafs players Category:Chicago White Sox players "

Released under the MIT License.

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