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Campanella and died
Of these, only Bruno was executed ; Galileo died under house arrest, and Campanella was imprisoned for twenty-seven years.
On April 30, 1945, he married Ruthe Willis and had three children together ( including a son, television director Roy Campanella II ), though their relationship deteriorated after his accident ; they separated in 1960 and Ruthe died in January 1963.

Campanella and on
Campanella began playing Negro league baseball for the Washington Elite Giants in 1937, after dropping out of school on his sixteenth birthday.
The Elite Giants would move to Baltimore the following year, and Campanella would go on to become a star player with the team.
This made Campanella the first African-American to manage white players on an organized professional baseball team.
Jackie Robinson's first season in the Major Leagues came in 1947, and Campanella began his Major League career with the Brooklyn Dodgers the following season, playing his first game on April 20, 1948.
The Dodgers won that game, got another home run from Campanella in a Game 4 victory that tied the series, and then went on to claim the series in seven games.
Campanella caught three no-hitters during his career: Carl Erskine's two on June 19, and May 12, and Sal Maglie's on September 25,.
Campanella lived in Glen Cove, New York, on the North Shore of Long Island, while operating a liquor store in Harlem between regular-season games and during the off-season.
Campanella was the catcher on Stein's black team.
In 1999, Campanella ranked number 50 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Baseball Players, and was a nominee for the Major League Baseball All-Century Team.
In 2006, Campanella was featured on a United States postage stamp.
The book mentions the years of tireless efforts by physical therapist Sam Brockington which allowed Campanella to regain some use of his arms, eventually overcome his initial bitterness about his fate, and finally adopt an optimistic outlook on life.
Roy Campanella was interviewed by Edward R. Murrow on the CBS program Person to Person on October 2, 1953 and again on January 2, 1959.
Campanella also appeared as Mystery Guest on What's My Line?
Campanella was also honored on the famous Ralph Edwards show This Is Your Life.
* 1955 TIME article on Campanella
At the time, such speculation was of a rather rarefied sort, and was limited to astronomers like Christiaan Huygens who wrote a book, Cosmotheoros ( 1698 ) considering the possibility of life on other planets ; or to philosophers like Campanella, who wrote in defense of Galileo.
Between 1925 and 1928, he attended the University of Bucharest's Faculty of Philosophy and Letters in 1928, earning his diploma with a study on Early Modern Italian philosopher Tommaso Campanella.
He also made the claim that his overall influence on the game was greater than that of Chris Avellone, Eric Campanella, or Dave Maldonaldo, but since a producer often has to make unpopular decisions his role was later downplayed.
Campanella was finally released from his prison in 1626, through Pope Urban VIII, who personally interceded on his behalf with Philip IV of Spain.
Farther west again are villas, as far as the temple of Athena on the promontory named after her at the extremity of the peninsula ( now Punta Campanella ).
Roulette and Campanella during a concert at " The Exit " in Fresno, California on April 23, 2008.

Campanella and June
On June 4, 1972, the Dodgers retired his uniform number, 42, alongside those of Roy Campanella ( 39 ) and Sandy Koufax ( 32 ).
* June 26 – Roy Campanella, American baseball player ( b. 1921 )
Roy Campanella ( November 19, 1921 – June 26, 1993 ), nicknamed " Campy ", was an American baseball player, primarily at the position of catcher, in the Negro leagues and Major League Baseball.
On June 14,, Roseboro succeeded Roy Campanella, whose playing career was ended the following January by a paralyzing automobile accident, as the Dodgers ' full-time catcher.

Campanella and 1993
* 1921 – Roy Campanella, American baseball player ( d. 1993 )

Campanella and California
* Alyssa Campanella, Miss New Jersey Teen USA 2007, 1st-Runner-up at Miss Teen USA 2007, Miss California USA 2011, and became Miss USA 2011.

Campanella and home
It was a cultural powerhouse during the Baroque era as home to artists including Caravaggio, Rosa and Bernini, philosophers such as Telesio, Bruno, Campanella and Vico, and writers such as Battista Marino.
That same year, Campanella hit 40 home runs in games in which he appeared as a catcher, a record that lasted until, when it was broken by Todd Hundley.
After the Dodgers dropped the first two games of that year's World Series to the Yankees, Campanella began Brooklyn's comeback by hitting a two-out, two-run home run in the first inning of Game 3.
In 1951 he became the first Dodger to hit 40 home runs, breaking Babe Herman's 1930 mark of 35 ; Campanella hit 41 in 1953, but Hodges would recapture the record with 42 in 1954 before Snider eclipsed him again with 43 in 1956.
His single-season home run record for catchers would stand for 23 years, until Roy Campanella hit 40 home runs in.
* Joseph Campanella as Ralph Longo, the sick grandfather evicted from the home he had squated in for 21 years, in Season 3's Episode 9, " Let God Sort ' Em Out.
A multipurpose dome would be the new home to the Browns and Indians, and would attract the Cavs back to Cleveland, according to the original proposal by County Commissioner Vincent Campanella.
Hundley broke the single-season home run record for catchers ( then held by Roy Campanella ) in 1996 with 41 home runs, which was also the single-season record for the Mets.
In 1, 573 games over 16 seasons, he finished with a batting average of. 254 with 179 home runs ; his 175 HRs in the National League trailed only Campanella ( 242 ), Gabby Hartnett ( 236 ) and Ernie Lombardi ( 190 ) among the league's catchers.

Campanella and .
The stamp is one of a block of four honoring " baseball sluggers ", the others being Mickey Mantle, Mel Ott, and Roy Campanella.
* 1959 – Juan J. Campanella, Argentinian director
Both " La Campanella " and the A minor caprice ( Nr.
* Franz Liszt – Six Grandes Études de Paganini, S. 141 for solo piano ( 1851 ) ( virtuoso arrangements of 5 caprices, including the 24th, and La Campanella from Violin Concerto No. 2 )
Among the subjects of this Inquisition were Franciscus Patricius, Giordano Bruno, Tommaso Campanella, Gerolamo Cardano, Cesare Cremonini, and Galileo Galilei.
* 1568 – Tommaso Campanella, Italian theologian, philosopher, and poet ( d. 1639 )
* The City of the Sun ( 1623 ) by Tommaso Campanella depicts a theocratic and egalitarian society.
* Tommaso Campanella publishes The City of the Sun.
* Philosopher Tommaso Campanella organizes an uprising in Calabria against the rule of the Spanish viceroy ; he is captured, tortured and sentenced to 27 years in jail.
* January 28 – Hall of Fame baseball player Roy Campanella is involved in an automobile accident that ends his career and leaves him paralyzed.
* September 5 – Tommaso Campanella, Italian theologian and poet ( d. 1639 )
* Tommaso Campanella ’ s book In Defence of Galileo is written.
* May 21 – Tommaso Campanella, Italian theologian and poet ( b. 1568 )
Other members of the Hall who played in both the Negro leagues and Major League Baseball are Hank Aaron, Ernie Banks, Roy Campanella, Larry Doby, Willie Mays, and Jackie Robinson.
Except for Doby, their play in the Negro leagues was a minor factor in their selection: Aaron, Banks, and Mays played in Negro leagues only briefly and after the leagues had declined with the migration of many black players to the integrated minor leagues ; Campanella ( 1969 ) and Robinson ( 1962 ) were selected before the Hall began considering performance in the Negro leagues.
The stamp is one of a series of four honoring baseball sluggers, the others being Mel Ott, Roy Campanella, and Hank Greenberg.
Many Christian writers, including Lactantius, Augustine, Giordano Bruno, Marsilio Ficino, Campanella and Giovanni Pico della Mirandola considered Hermes Trismegistus to be a wise pagan prophet who foresaw the coming of Christianity.
In 1635 Mersenne met with Tommaso Campanella, but concluded that he could " teach nothing in the sciences (...) but still he has a good memory and a fertile imagination.
" Mersenne asked if René Descartes wanted Campanella to come to Holland to meet him, but Descartes declined.

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