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This list of items as of August 20, 2021 is ordered by consumer price index inflation-adjusted value (in bold) in millions of United States dollars in 2024. [note 1]This list includes only the highest price paid for a given card and does not include separate entries for individual copies of the same card or multiple sales prices for the same copy of a card.
It grew to a tabloid-sized, glossy-covered magazine in the late 1980s before shrinking back to standard magazine size (8 by 10 7/8) with a glossy cover in 1990. [ 4 ] The Richmond, Virginia-based magazine was sold to Landmark Communications , which sold it to Krause Publications in 1999, publisher of the competing Sports Cards Magazine .
The first American football cards were included in cigarette packages in the late 1800s. [1] In 1888 Yale player Henry W. Beecher was included as the only football player in a set of 50 cards distributed in packs of "Old Judge" and "Gypsy Queen" cigarettes by Goodwin & Company., [2] becoming the first American football card ever. [1]
Leon Goldin (1923–2009) was a post-war American painter and printmaker who worked in the tradition of abstract expressionism and high modernism. [1] Goldin was born in 1923, earning his BFA at the Art Institute of Chicago and later his MFA at the University of Iowa, where he studied intaglio printmaking under Mauricio Lasansky . [ 2 ]
Bobby Miguel Price (born April 25, 1998) is an American professional football cornerback for the Washington Commanders of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Norfolk State Spartans and signed with the Detroit Lions as an undrafted free agent in 2020. Price has also played for the Arizona Cardinals.
Prices of cards from previous sets increased dramatically and the American market saw an influx of Chinese counterfeits capitalizing on the demand. This created a unique situation where the most desirable and expensive cards could be printed by counterfeiters, but not by the brand owner, due to a promise made with collectors in 1996 and refined ...
The judge denied both petitions, on the grounds that the regulations under Title 31 were referring to gold in general and that a large statue made of gold would negate the assumption of good faith that was presumed by the jury in this case. [1] The government also argued that the court ruling was against the legislative intent of the Gold ...
Gauld's taped conversations were ultimately used to convict him and the other players, the judge making it clear that he held Gauld responsible for ruining them. At the end of the trial on 26 January 1965, Gauld – described by the judge as the "central figure" of the case – received the heaviest sentence of four years in prison.