Sunday, July 31, 2016

July 31
















Too preppy for words:


















Vintage Olympic Heroes



Glenn Morris



Colorado native Glenn Morris (1912-1974) was a track and field athlete who won
a decathlon gold medal at the Berlin Olympics in 1936,
setting new world and Olympic records with a score of 7,900 points.
Winning the decathlon traditionally conveyed the title of "World's Greatest Athlete".



After receiving his medal and laurel from Eva Braun, Hitler’s mistress,
the Germans offered Morris $50,000 to remain in Germany
to appear in sports films, an offer Morris refused.
Instead, he returned to the USA to receive a ticker tape parade in New York City.



1938 saw the release of “Tarzan's Revenge”, a feature film
starring Glenn Morris as Tarzan.
Morris was the fourth Olympic athlete to portray Tarzan.
He completed only one additional movie before leaving
the film industry for good. 

Morris subsequently worked as an NBC sports commentator, a football player
for the Detroit Lions, an insurance agent
and completed a stint in the U.S. Navy during World War II.












Bound for glory:





























Friday, July 29, 2016

July 29


















Vintage Olympic Heroes

Buster Crabbe


California native Buster Crabbe (1908-1983) attended Southern Cal as an undergrad
and a law student. Although he won only one NCAA swimming title,
he went on to win 18 AAU championships and set 16 world records.
In 1928 he won a bronze Olympic medal (1,500 meter freestyle),
and at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics (above) he was the only U.S. gold medalist
in men’s swimming.

After the games, he was signed by Paramount Studios, which was looking for a rival
to Johnny Weissmuller’s Tarzan at MGM.
He went on to make 175 movies, but he portrayed Tarzan only once.


 King of the Jungle 1933



Crabbe was a life-long advocate of physical fitness
and conducted televised physical fitness programs.
In 1971 at age 63, he set a world age group record for the 400 meter freestyle.
He also had extensive business interests, including Buster Crabbe Swimming Pools.





























With a side of jockstraps:




















Silhouettes




















You gotta have art:

Renato Laffranchi




Italian Jesuit priest Renato Laffranchi (b. 1923) is also an author and painter.
In 2004 the Catholic university faculty of St. Louis University voted to remove
one of his paintings, which symbolized four rivers flowing
from the Garden of Eden, with gardens in four quadrants.
Critics pointed out that the work resembled a swastika with shortened arms.
However, the university's president refused to remove the painting
prior to its scheduled annual rotation.