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00:38:40
00:40:43
00:38:40
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Transcription: [00:38:40]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
And later on other football teams used it.

[00:38:43]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
So every Sunday when/if you watch a football game in the fall, you'll see all the teams using huddles.

[00:38:49]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
And when you do, think of the deaf people. Ha Ha!

[00:38:54]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
They use it, so that the other team wouldn't see their signals.

[00:38:58]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
Makes a lot of sense, right?

[00:39:03]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
And there was a deaf baseball player named William Hoy.

[00:39:09]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
People called him Dummy.

[00:39:12]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
That was a nickname, many deaf people had during the turn of the century.

[00:39:18]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
William Hoy played baseball for the Cincinnatti Reds as an outfielder.

[00:39:27]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
He was a short man, but very good player.

[00:39:30]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
And in one game, he caught the ball and threw it to home base.

[00:39:36]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
Struck him out three times in the same game.

[00:39:38]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
And he established a record.

[00:39:42]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
Anyway it was Hoy who was given credit for the baseball count.

[00:39:47]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
You know, ball strikes? Hoy claims credit for that.

[00:39:53]
{SPEAKER name="Jo Radner"}
Thank you.
[[Clapping]]
Bill? You have one?

[00:39:56]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
Oh I can't match his rich histories but, I do know some things.

[00:40:04]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
Can you see me? Okay.

[00:40:10]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
I'm going to take this from a good friend of mine, Dick Moore.

[00:40:17]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
Just performed an hour ago and he told, asked if he knew any legends in sports and he said yes, he knew one.

[00:40:21]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
And I think it's funny and want to share it with you. Ok with you? Fine he says.

[00:40:27]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
Yeah, this is in Kentucky. It's a high school football team.

[00:40:32]
{Unknown Speaker 1}
And the coach had to go to the train station, to reserve 20 seats for mutes


Transcription Notes:
Again, same notes i will say from the previous recordings that I've transcribed. the speaker voices are confusing and not identified in the recording or listed. Unknown Speaker 1 is a female voiced interpreter who is not Jo Radner from what I can tell.