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Wismer and also
Its villages include Carversville ( also in Solebury Township ,) Cross Keys ( also in Doylestown Township ,) Curley Hill, Danboro, Dyerstown, Gardenville, Griers Corner ( also in Bedminster and Hilltown Townships ,) Lumberville, Plumsteadville, Point Pleasant ( also in Tinicum Township ,) and Wismer.
Wismer was also involved for a time in the broadcasting of Notre Dame football.
Wismer's volatile personality was of little help in this area ; he resented not only other media figures but also Dallas Texans owner Lamar Hunt, whom Wismer saw as a rich boy whose father had bought him a football team as a toy.
) Wismer also lacked the truly " deep pockets " of some of the other early AFL owners, particularly Hunt, possessed.

Wismer and had
Harry Wismer, a businessman, had been interested in sports for much of his life when he was granted a charter franchise in the American Football League.
Wismer, who had previously had a 25 % stake in the Washington Redskins, was interested in the American Football League and was given a franchise to develop in New York.
Owner Harry Wismer sought out a place for the team to play their home games but was only able to secure the dilapidated Polo Grounds, which had not had a major tenant since the New York Giants vacated the stadium in 1957.
He did advocate it for the merged NFL ; however he was simply embracing the concept which had been implemented by Harry Wismer and the AFL ten years before the merger.
Unlike ABC's Notre Dame coverage, DuMont's NFL game was presented live on Saturday nights, but interest was not adequate to save the DuMont Network, which had by this point already entered what would be a terminal decline ( although it did mount a subsequent 1954 season of NFL telecasts, minus Wismer, which proved to be one of its last regular programs ).
The Titans drew just 114, 682 total paid admissions for the league's entire initial season in 1960 ; by 1962 this number had dwindled to a mere 36, 161 and Wismer was broke.
Wismer, who had long tended to live " hard-and-fast ", began to drink even more heavily, and eventually ruined his relationships with all of the other AFL owners, even Adams.

Wismer and with
A three-sport letterman, football, particularly, stuck with Wismer who went on to play for the University of Florida and Michigan State before a knee injury ended his playing career.
Undeterred, Wismer began his career as a broadcaster originally with Michigan State and become a pioneer of the industry.
Particularly crucial to the league's early years was Adams ' relationship with Harry Wismer, original owner of the league's New York franchise, the Titans.
Wismer often added the sound commentary long after the games were over, and added a radio style commentary with sound effects such as referee whistles to recreate an authentic sound.
At one point Wismer was a 25 % owner of the club as well, with the majority of the stock being retained by founding owner George Preston Marshall.
In 1953, Wismer was involved in an early attempt to expand football into prime time network television, when ABC, now with a renewed interest in sports, broadcast an edited replay on Sunday nights of the previous day's Notre Dame games, which were cut down to 75 minutes in length by removing the time between plays, halftime, and even some of the more uneventful plays.
) Also that season was the first attempt at prime time coverage of pro football, with Wismer at the microphone on the old DuMont Network.
Wismer devised a plan in which the proceeds from the broadcast rights to league games ( initially with ABC ) would be shared equally by all teams, very innovative at the time but setting the standard for all future professional football television broadcasting contracts.
As Wismer owned what would seem to have been the most potentially lucrative franchise, especially with regard to broadcasting rights, in the nation's largest media market, the act seemed at first blush most generous for a self-described " hustler ".
Wismer was left embittered and with debts totalling approximately $ 2, 500, 000, which he eventually struggled to settle for 78 cents on the dollar.
Wismer agreed, later forgot about it, and Plimpton ended up playing with and writing about Wismer's old team, the Detroit Lions, for the magazine and in the book Paper Lion.

Wismer and first
The Bluegrass Bowl was the last broadcast of Harry Wismer and the first national telecast to feature Howard Cosell.

Wismer and AFL
By 1962, the debt continued to mount for Wismer, forcing the AFL to assume the costs of the team until season's end.
In 1963, Sonny Werblin and his partners purchased the American Football League ( AFL ) Titans of New York from original owner Harry Wismer.
Wismer was a charter owner in the AFL, which was announced in 1959 and began actual play in 1960.
Supposedly it was loans from other AFL owners, including Wilson and Houston Oilers owner Bud Adams, which kept Wismer and the Titans ( as well as several other teams including the Oakland Raiders and Boston Patriots ) afloat.
While pulling the New York Titans and the AFL together, Wismer was approached by writer George Plimpton, who asked to join the team's training camp for a Sports Illustrated profile.

Wismer and at
Harry Wismer, representing the city of New York at the meeting, proclaimed the state was ready for another professional football team and that he was more than capable of running the daily operations.
A native of Port Huron, Michigan, Wismer displayed great interest and prowess in sports at an early age.
Wismer soon began doing a ten-minute daily radio show covering the Lions in addition to his PA duties, while continuing as a student at Michigan State.
However, a subsequent management change at ABC led to a new regime that was hostile to sports, and Wismer became a free-lancer, selling his service to the highest bidder.
Wismer became known for an enormous ego and developed a reputation as a " namedropper ", preferring to announce the names of celebrities of his acquaintance who were in the audience to the actual game action, and was alleged at times to include them in the crowd of games which he announced when they were in fact elsewhere.
Today Wismer is remembered, when he is remembered at all, primarily as something of an eccentric rather than as a crucial founder of the American Football League and one of the creators of professional football's modern era through shared broadcast revenues.
* Donald Wismer at Sff. net

Wismer and Redskins
Wismer achieved the height of his fame as the voice of the Washington Redskins.

Wismer and .
Wismer was granted the charter franchise later dubbed the Titans of New York as Wismer explained, " Titans are bigger and stronger than Giants.
Later, as the Titans owner, Wismer formulated a league-wide policy which allowed broadcasting rights to be shared equally amongst the teams.
Wismer, whose philosophy was who you knew mattered most, tried to make the team and the league a success.
Wismer hoped the Titans could play in what would become known as Shea Stadium beginning in 1961.
Wismer signed a memorandum of understanding in late 1961 to secure the Titans ' new home.
* December 3 – Harry Wismer, American baseball owner ( b. 1913 )
The county is divided into twenty-five townships: Buffalo, Dayton, Dumarce, Eden, Fort, Hamilton, Hickman, La Belle, Lake, Lowell, McKinley, Miller, Newark, Newport, Nordland, Pleasant Valley, Red Iron Lake, Sisseton, Stena, Veblen, Victor, Waverly, Weston, White, and Wismer.
* Wismer Center, opened in 1964, named for Ralph Fry Wismer, class of 1905.
Harry Wismer ( June 30, 1913 – December 3, 1967 ) was a sports broadcaster and charter owner of the New York Titans franchise in the American Football League.

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