Walter Camp - The Daily Dozen mp3
Tracklist
| 1 | Exercise No. 11, The "Wave" |
| 2 | Exercise No. 10, The "Weave" |
| 3 | Exercise No. 9, The "Roll" |
| 4 | Exercise No. 12, The "Wing" |
Notes
© 1921
Barcodes
- Matrix / Runout (Side A runout): 5-1 D5
- Matrix / Runout (Side B runout): 6-2 D6
- Matrix / Runout (Side A label): 3861
- Matrix / Runout (Side B label): 3864
Companies
- Manufactured By – Health Builders
Info
Walter Chauncey Camp April 7, 1859 March 14, 1925 was an American football player, coach, and sports writer known as the Father of American Football. Among a long list of inventions, he created the sport's line of scrimmage and the system of downs. With John Heisman, Amos Alonzo Stagg, Pop Warner, Fielding H. Yost, and George Halas, Camp was one of the most accomplished persons in the early history of American football. He attended Yale College, where he played and coached college football. Performer: Walter Camp. Exercise No. 1, The Grind Exercise No. 2, The Grasp. Digitized at 78 revolutions per minute. Four stylii were used to transfer this record. They are truncated conical, truncated conical, truncated conical, truncated conical. These were recorded flat and then also equalized with Turnover: 250. The preferred versions suggested by an audio engineer at George Blood, L. have been copied to have the more friendly filenames. Matrix number: D1 Catalog number: NO. Other IDs from the record include: 1-1. Select the department you want to search in. The Daily Dozen by Walter Camp is a simple little pamphlet, but one that I think is sure to inspire you Pamphlets are quite rightly in my opinion making a huge comeback. It used to be that for or in this case you could get your hands on a small booklet that would help you to learn almost anything Once you mastered the basics you could then move on to a The Daily Dozen by Walter Camp is a simple little pamphlet, but one that I think is sure to inspire you Pamphlets are quite rightly in my opinion making a huge comeback. It used to be that for or in this case. The Daily Dozen that Walter Camp taught the U. military, and then the entire nation, consisted of exercises he had created and practiced himself over six decades of life. The movements were born both of a dissatisfaction with. Camps philosophy on fitness didnt sound too different than that espoused by present day groups like MovNat, lamenting as he did that modern citizens are caged creatures, even though we do not see the bars that imprison us and devising the Daily Dozen as a substitute for the normal activities of mankind in the primitive state. Camp observed how much animals stretched their bodies, and instructed humans to do likewise. Weasel Walter-no-wave movement archivist and historian, free-improvising drum virtuoso and noise-rock guitarist-is lounging on his couch at home in the very unfashionable Midwood section of Brooklyn. The infamously ornery Walter-a protean composer who first made his indelible mark in Chicago as leader of the self-anointed brutal-prog collective The Flying Luttenbachers in the 90s-is in a rare complimentary mood as he describes his Bandcamp experience. One of the things that I find useful about the Bandcamp format is the ability to chronologize the releases and put them in a meaningful orde. He set about devising 12 simple exercises that would be quick, simple, and of equal use to everyone, regardless of size, shape or current level of fitness. Updated and rewritten with a 21st Century audience in mind, Walter Camps Daily Dozen is certainly worth another look. Fully Illustrated. Developed by Walter Camp in 1920, the daily dozen originally consisted of 12 simple exercises that took about 15 minutes to complete. Both the Army and Navy incorporated this training regimen into their programs for recruits, as it proved. Much like the original daily dozen, calisthenics feature prominently in modern Army training. Conditioning Drill 1 is designed to develop motor skills while incrementally building strength, endurance and flexibility, and is always conducted during the warm-up. Walter Palmer, 60, from Minnesota, is believed to have made his return to trophy hunting after an image of him next to a slaughtered wild sheep in Mongolia appeared on social media. Dentist Walter Palmer who killed Cecil the Lion 'is spotted hunting sheep in Mongolia' five years after he slaughtered the famous predator with a bow in Zimbabwe. Walter Palmer, 60, from Minnesota, said to have made return to trophy hunting. An image of him next to a slaughtered Altai argali in Mongolia appeared online. It comes nearly five years after he killed Cecil the Lion in Zimbabwe in 2015. By Bhvishya Patel For Mailonline

Performer: Walter Camp
Title: The Daily Dozen
Country: US
Release date: 1921
Label: Musical Health Builder
Style: Health-Fitness, Education
Catalog: 5, 6
Genre: AudioFiles
Size MP3: 2104 mb
Rating: 4.3 / 5
Votes: 385
Record source: Shellac, 10", 78 RPM










