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  1. In short, Avery Brundage is not very, very popular. "I am aware of this," Brundage said recently in Chicago, "but I am not greatly disturbed by it." The implacable Mr. Brundage, who is now the most powerful man in sport, in 1952 became president of the International Olympic Committee, a position which actually has no counterpart in the world ...

  2. Avery Brundage ( Detroit, 1887. szeptember 28. – Garmisch-Partenkirchen, 1975. május 8.) amerikai atléta, sporthivatalnok, műgyűjtő volt. Brundage részt vett az 1912-es olimpián, és az Egyesült Államok legsokoldalúbb atlétájának választották 1914 -ben, 1916 -ban és 1918 -ban.

  3. 5. Dez. 2023 · Few have had a grander international presence while living in Montecito than a wealthy Chicago businessman named Avery Brundage. His story is a quintessentially American one – a rags-to-riches, Horatio Alger tale, though not without its twists. Brundage grew up in the Teddy Roosevelt era of bold, rugged achievers.

  4. Avery Brundage ( / ˈeɪvri ˈbrʌndɪdʒ /; September 28, 1887 – May 8, 1975) was the fifth President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) from 1952 to 1972. He was born in Detroit, Michigan . Brundage died in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, West Germany on May 8, 1975 from complications of surgery, aged 87. He is buried at Rosehill Cemetery ...

  5. 1. Aug. 2013 · Avery Brundage aber setzte sich durch. Und so ist es auch ihm zu verdanken, dass am 1. August 1936 der Führer und Reichskanzler Adolf Hitler im Berliner Olympia-Stadion die XI.

  6. Avery Brundage was born on 28 September 1887 in Detroit, Michigan, but his family moved to Chicago when he was young. He attended the University of Illinois, graduating with a civil engineering degree in 1909. While in college he competed on the track & field team, winning the conference discus championship in his senior year. After college, Brundage worked as a construction superintendent in ...

  7. 14. Mai 2012 · Wie umgehen mit der Fußball-EM in der Ukraine? Auch vor Olympia 1936 in Berlin wurde ein Boykott diskutiert – und auf Betreiben eines Amerikaners verworfen, des späteren IOC-Chefs Avery Brundage.