Championship Regular Duty
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Penn Championship Regular Duty Tennis Balls - 24 Can Case | ![]() |
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US $68.95 | 25d 20h 29m |
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Wilson Yellow Championship Regular Duty Tennis (734) | ![]() |
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US $2.95 | 11d 8h 19m |
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Penn Yellow Championship Regular Duty Tennis Ball (727) | ![]() |
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Championship Regular Duty

Used PS2 Consoles and Games worth?
How much do you think I could get at Gamestop or on ebay for 2 ps2 consoles, and a list of games including:
GTA: Liberty City Stories and Vice City Stories
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow
Medal of Honor Frontline
NCAA Football 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010.
MVP Baseball 2004, 2005.
NFL Madden 07
MLB The Show: 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
NBA 2k5
NBA Live 2006, 2007, 2009
Call of Duty: Finest Hour, 2-Big Red One, 3, World at War
Risk: Global Domination
World Poker Championship
Dynasty Tactics 2
True Crime: Streets of LA
Hitman: Blood Money
FIFA Soccer 2010
ESPN College Hoops
Brothers In Arms: Road to Hill 30
I have the two consoles with all the cords, two regular controllers, two cordless controllers, a multitap to connect up to four more controllers and memory cards, two memory cards, and every game is in working condition with very limited scratches, etc.
Thanks in advance for the help.
I only know Gamestop stuff if you want cash dont do Gamestop I would go ebay and sell them all together for like $75 if you go to Gamestop you really wont get anything for the sport games and like 10 buck for the systems
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Penn Championship Regular Duty Tennis Balls - 24 Can Case | ![]() |
![]() |
US $68.95 | 25d 20h 29m |
![]() |
Wilson Yellow Championship Regular Duty Tennis (734) | ![]() |
![]() |
US $2.95 | 11d 8h 19m |
![]() |
Penn Yellow Championship Regular Duty Tennis Ball (727) | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.00 | 11d 8h 19m |
![]() |
Wilson Championship Regular Duty Felt (Clay&Indoor) Tennis Balls New/Sealed! | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.99 | 6d 9h 16m |
![]() |
Penn Tennis Balls Regular Duty Championship Tennis Balls 3 Pack Brand New Balls | ![]() |
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US $8.99 | 4d 7h 38m |
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Penn Championship Tennis Balls Set of 3, NEW Regular Duty Felt approved by USTA | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.99 | 3d 4h |
![]() |
Wilson Championship Regular Duty Ball Case | ![]() |
![]() |
US $59.50 | 29d 16h 4m |
![]() |
BRAND NEW Wilson Championship Regular Duty Tennis Balls T1003 - 2 Packs Of 3 | ![]() |
1 Bid | US $1.99 | 5d 15h 13m |
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Dunlop Championship All Court Regular Duty Tennis Balls (Can) $9.98 The Dunlop Championship All Court (Regular Duty) balls are high quality and durable to meet the most exacting demands of both the recreational and serious player. Specifically designed and engineered for U.S. Players and courts. Now with Dunlop's breakthrough "DuraFelt" cloth technology players can have a longer lasting ball without sacrificing playability. 3 balls per can |
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Wilson Regular Extra Duty Championship Tennis Balls - 3 Cans $17.95 Three tennis balls per can. Yellow extra duty tennis balls. |
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Penn Championship Yellow Regular Duty Tennis Balls - 3 Cans $18.55 PLEASE NOTE: THIS ITEM CANNOT SHIP VIA 3-DAY DELIVERY.Three tennis balls per can. |
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2005 Acc Championship Game $71.7 The 2005 Dr. Pepper Atlantic Coast Conference (ACe Championship Game was the inaugural contest of the game. It was a regularseason ending American college football contest at Jacksonville Municipal Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida between the Virginia Tech Hokies and the Florida State Seminoles. The game decided the winner of the Atlantic Coast Conference football championship. Florida State University (FSU) defeated Virginia Tech 2722 in a game characterized by penalties, defense, and a fourthquarter comeback attempt by Virginia Tech. The game was the final contest of the regular season for the two teams, as bowl games are not considered part of the regular season. In addition, the contest marked the inaugural championship game for the recently expanded conference. Virginia Tech entered the 2005 season having won the 2004 ACC Championship, the last to be awarded without playing a championship game at the end of the season. Tech won its first eight games and appeared to be on course to have an untroubled run to the ACC Championship Game. But against the fifthranked Miami Hurricanes, Tech suffered its first defeat of the season, losing 277 on November 5. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 86 Publication Date: 2010/04/27 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.00 x 0.21 inches |
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Wilton 82514798 812 118 Inch To 12 Inch Regular Duty $123.17 Regular duty with standard throat depth. Wilton PermaPads |
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2009 KLeague Championship $68.51 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles 2009 KLeague Championship is postseason championship playoff of 2009 KLeague. The championship are a series of playoff matches contested by the teams 1st to 6th in the 2009 KLeague table. All matches are played one leg, except final is played two legs. With 6th playing 3rd and 5th playing 4th, winner of each matches play one match in higher teams homeground. This matchs winner gain the next 2010 AFC Champions League spot by the secured 3rd position. The winner of second round playing regular seasons 2nd position team in the 2nd teams homeground. The final is played home and away format. The 2009 KLeague Championship was won by Jeonbuk for the first time, who defeated Seongnam by the aggregate score of 31. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 76 Publication Date: 2010/07/06 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.18 inches |
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Championship Net And Post Set $20.04 Slip-on - 72" heavy-duty open mesh polyethylene, perfect tension net with extended net clamp on heavy-duty posts. 3/8" square. |
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NFL Championship Game, 1935 $70.1 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The 1935 National Football League Championship game was held on December 15, 1935 at University of Detroit Stadium (some sources call it Titan Stadium) in Detroit. It was the 3rd annual title game for the NFL. The champion of the Western Division was the Detroit Lions (732) and the champion of the Eastern Division was the New York Giants (93). The National Football League (NFL) is the highest level of professional American football. It was formed by eleven teams in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association, with the league changing its name to the National Football League in 1922. The league currently consists of thirtytwo teams from the United States. The league is divided evenly into two conferences the American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC), and each conference has four divisions that have four teams each. The NFL is organized as an unincorporated association of its 32 teams. The NFL is by far the best attended domestic sports league in the world by average attendance per game, with 67,509 fans per game in the latest regular season (2009). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 94 Publication Date: 2010/08/16 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.23 inches |
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2007 BCS National Championship Game $114.71 The 2007 Tostitos BCS National Championship Game or BCS Title Game was played on January 8, 2007 at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. The BCS #2 Florida Gators defeated the BCS #1 Ohio State Buckeyes, 4114. The Ohio State Buckeyes secured a spot by finishing the 2006 regular season undefeated and ranked #1 in the BCS. It was the first time ever for the Buckeyes and Gators to meet. The 121 Florida Gators earned a spot after defeating Arkansas in the SEC title game and jumping from #4 to #2 in the final BCS Rankings, passing #3 Michigan and previous #2 USC. The game was the first BCS National Championship Game to be televised on the FOX network. It was sponsored by Tostitos. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 190 Publication Date: 2010/04/27 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.00 x 0.44 inches |
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Alabama Crimson Tide Perfect Season With Championship Game $69.62 Rated: NASynopsis: This set contains every regular season game of the championship season that included Alabama's 1st Heisman Trophy winner, 6 All Americans, 13th National Championship and Butkus Award winner Rolando McClain. Also included in this historic set are the SEC Championship Game vs. Florida Gators and the National Championship Game vs. Texas. All games are presented in full screen digital video and without commercial interruption. The main menu allows you to jump from quarter to quarter. You can replay your favorite plays and touchdowns that led the Alabama Crimson Tide to their National Title. Own every second of the Alabama Crimson Tide perfect season and the 2010 National Championship game today! 14 Discs |
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Official University of Connecticut Championship: Top Dogs $11.7 Rated: NASynopsis: This video is jam packed with highlights from UCONN's wire-to-wire run to the national championship. All regular season, Big East and NCAA Tournament games are highlighted in this video, including the thrilling come-from-behind victories over Pittsburgh in the Big East Tournament Championship and Duke in the NCAA tournament semi-finals. The video also includes footage from the national championship parade and rally in Hartford. A special feature of this video is exclusive behind the scenes footage from the Final Four in San Antonio, which includes team meetings, practices, leisure activities and even locker room pep talks and celebrations. This collector's edition video is a must have for any Husky fan. |
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NFL Super Bowl XLIII -Steelers Championship DVD $32.3 NFL Super Bowl XLIII -Steelers Championship DVD Own the most anticipated and watched sporting event of the year. Complete with highlights from the regular season, playoffs and the big game itself. The 2009 release will contain over 3 full hours of Super Bowl coverage and behind the scenes action. |
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Casters, Regular Duty for Carton Rack. Case of 4 Casters $102.13 Case of 4 Casters. Regular duty casters for carton rack. Set of 4. Customers also search for: Carton Stand Casters |
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2010 Alabama Crimson Tide BCS National Championship $24.99 Two of college football’s most historic programs will take the field at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena on January 7th to decide the BCS National Championship. Head Coach Nick Saban’s Alabama Crimson Tide (13-0) finished with their second consecutive undefeated regular season and topped defending national champion Florida to capture the SEC Championship. The Texas Longhorns (13-0)- behind head coach Mack Brown- won the Big 12 Championship to earn their shot at top ranked Alabama. Alabama is seeking their first national championship since 1992. Texas won their last title on this same Rose Bowl turf in 2006 as they topped the USC Trojans. This isn’t the first time these two programs have met in a bowl either although it is the first since 1982. The Longhorns have a 7-0-1 record against the Tide. |
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Wilson Championship Extra Duty Tennis Balls - (1 Dozen Cans) $39 Extra Duty: Excellent performance and durability on hard courtsThe traditional performance standard, featuring exclusive Dura-WeaveTMSet of 1 dozen cans for a total of 36 tennis balls |
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NFL Championship Game, 1952 $92.4 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The National Football League (NFL) is the highest level of professional American football. It was formed by eleven teams in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association, with the league changing its name to the National Football League in 1922. The league currently consists of thirtytwo teams from the United States. The league is divided evenly into two conferences the American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC), and each conference has four divisions that have four teams each. The NFL is organized as an unincorporated association of its 32 teams. The NFL is by far the best attended domestic sports league in the world by average attendance per game, with 67,509 fans per game in the latest regular season (2009). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 142 Publication Date: 2010/08/16 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.33 inches |
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NFL Championship Game, 1947 $79.66 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The National Football League (NFL) is the highest level of professional American football. It was formed by eleven teams in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association, with the league changing its name to the National Football League in 1922. The league currently consists of thirtytwo teams from the United States. The league is divided evenly into two conferences the American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC), and each conference has four divisions that have four teams each. The NFL is organized as an unincorporated association of its 32 teams. The NFL is by far the best attended domestic sports league in the world by average attendance per game, with 67,509 fans per game in the latest regular season (2009). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 114 Publication Date: 2010/08/16 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.27 inches |
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NFL Championship Game, 1963 $92.4 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The National Football League (NFL) is the highest level of professional American football. It was formed by eleven teams in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association, with the league changing its name to the National Football League in 1922. The league currently consists of thirtytwo teams from the United States. The league is divided evenly into two conferences the American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC), and each conference has four divisions that have four teams each. The NFL is organized as an unincorporated association of its 32 teams. The NFL is by far the best attended domestic sports league in the world by average attendance per game, with 67,509 fans per game in the latest regular season (2009). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 134 Publication Date: 2010/08/16 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.31 inches |
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NFL Championship Game, 1949 $79.66 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The National Football League (NFL) is the highest level of professional American football. It was formed by eleven teams in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association, with the league changing its name to the National Football League in 1922. The league currently consists of thirtytwo teams from the United States. The league is divided evenly into two conferences the American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC), and each conference has four divisions that have four teams each. The NFL is organized as an unincorporated association of its 32 teams. The NFL is by far the best attended domestic sports league in the world by average attendance per game, with 67,509 fans per game in the latest regular season (2009). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 118 Publication Date: 2010/08/16 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.28 inches |
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NFL Championship Game, 1964 $92.4 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The National Football League (NFL) is the highest level of professional American football. It was formed by eleven teams in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association, with the league changing its name to the National Football League in 1922. The league currently consists of thirtytwo teams from the United States. The league is divided evenly into two conferences the American Football Conference (AFC) and National Football Conference (NFC), and each conference has four divisions that have four teams each. The NFL is organized as an unincorporated association of its 32 teams. The NFL is by far the best attended domestic sports league in the world by average attendance per game, with 67,509 fans per game in the latest regular season (2009). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 134 Publication Date: 2010/08/16 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.31 inches |
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HASTRO - Call of Duty 4 2008 MLG National Championship
Recollections of the Early Days of Aikido in Great Britain
Recollections of the Early Days of Aikido in Great Britain
By Henry Ellis - Ellis Aikido School
In 1957, I was studying Judo and Karate at the Abbe School of Budo at the "Hut" in Hillingdon, Middlesex, a suburb of London. My teacher was Ken Williams Sensei, and we were all students of Kenshiro Abbe Sensei (8th dan in Judo, 6th dan in Aikido, and 5th dan in Karate and Kendo). At that time, very few people in the United Kingdom had heard of Aikido.
Around 1957, Abbe Sensei told Mr Williams that he had recieved a letter from O-Sensei saying that instuctors outside of Japan had permission to teach Aikido to anyone who wished to learn it. Mr Williams was Abbe Sensei's first Aikido student. Eventually, Abbe Sensei made Mr Williams National Coach for Aikido, and I became Mr Williams assistant - which I remained for approximately 15 years.
Abbe Sensei's Aikido was the prewar style of Aiki-Jutsu, which was very physical. Both Abbe Sensei and Williams Sensei were excellent teachers, who worked very hard to train us while promoting Aikido to an initially unreceptive public. Abbe Sensei and Williams brought eight of us up to 1st dan. At the time, we were the only dan grades in Great Britain, and we were all in one dojo. Sunday morning practice was for dan grades only. Williams Sensei would lock the doors to the dojo, and the real serious practice would start. Williams Sensei would allow the younger dan grades to try and prove themselves against him, but they had no success.
Williams Sensei started to visit other dojos and to introduce Aikido. He was a highly respected Judo teacher, and this helped him to arrange visits to Judo clubs. Occasionally, a Judo instructor would allow a few students to practice Aikido in a corner of the mat.
In the early days, the training was extremely difficult with the emphasis on very strenuous exercise. My students and I used to train four or five nights a week as well as Sunday mornings. After running for several miles, we would return to the mat and perform 200 push-ups on the backs of our wrists, which we then followed with general practice and a further two hours of hard practice.
When I was graded 1st dan by Abbe Sensei, Williams Sensei instructed me to take a good student as an assistant. I chose a young man of 17 years of age by the name of Derek Eastman, who is now 3rd dan and Technical Director or our Basingstoke Headquarters. Mr Eastman is still a loyal friend after all these years.
When Mr Eastman reached 1st dan and I was 2nd dan, William Sensei advised us to travel and spread the word of Aikido. Both Mr Eastman and I gave up our jobs and travelled around the United Kingdom. It was very difficult to introduce Aikido, because most people had never heard of it.
Mr Eastman and I left home and headed for the Midlands without much money or hope. We would visit Judo and Katate clubs, sports centers, etc. In some areas, where Williams sensei had already introduced Aikido, we would find accommodation with the students, and we would get paid a small fee for teaching. Where there was no Aikido at all, we would take jobs for a few days to feed ourselves. In one area, we worked as assistants to a funeral director. We had to goto the morgue, collect the bodies. And take them upto the chapel. (Once the boss caught me in the chapel of rest with a young local maiden whom I was laying to rest - one who was alive and well. He was very angry.)
We also worked as road sweepers, wearing bowler hats which attracted a great deal of attention from the girls.
In the north of England, the girls loved to hear the London or southern accent, and this was a great help with invitations for dinner. But it was still a struggle to survive.
We also worked in steel factories and had many other jobs around the country. Without a doubt, the worst was repairing an old railway line. We called it the "railway of death." Needless to say, we did not stay on that job very long.
The author with Nakazono Sensei, Santa Fe, NM (1991)
Still as I look back on life in Aikido, I think that this is was a really great time. As with all memories, we tend to forget the bad times and remember the good. We contributed greatly to the promotion of Aikido, and I do not regret one day of it.
Williams Sensei would send out all the Dan grades out to teach and to demonstrate in the hope that people would watch us and listen to us. Our teaching was free of charge, and this often enabled us to obtain free accommodation with the students. Although Williams Sensei was not a particularly religious man, I remember him saying, "You are my disciples, and now you must go out and teach the gospel of Aikido."
In the earley 60's, Williams Sensei called all the Dan grades together and said that he wanted us to attend the longest and most important seminar to date. It was to be held in Cardiff in Wales. The demonstrations and interviews were to be televised.
As usual, our accommodations were to be with local students. When we arrived at the Cardiff dojo - Williams Sensei and eight Dan grades - all the students crowded around saying, "Sensei, would you please stay with me?" One student politely took my arm and said, "Sensei I would be very pleased if you would stay with me at Sunnybank Farm." After living in London, I thought it would be a great treat for me to stay at the farm for the weekend.
The student and I drove for miles into the wilds of rural Wales, eventually arriving at a very remote farmhouse. The weather seemed very cold but dry.
I woke up the next morning at 5am with cocks crowing and the cows doing whatever cows do to create noise. After I shock my head and realized where I was, I looked out of the window. To my horror, I saw that the snow had fallen and drifted right up to the bedroom windows.
We were snowed in for three days until a neighbour from miles away dug us out with a mechanical digger. I missed the seminar and the television appearance. It was then that I resolved to stay a city boy.
When Abbe Sensei told us that he had invited a new teacher from Japan to visit us, we were all quite excited. We had never seen a Japanese Aikido master other then Abbe Sensei.
The new teacher was Nakazono Sensei (then 6th Dan). Abbe Sensei told us that Nakazono Sensei would teach us for two weeks. It was two weeks of hell. Nakazono Sensei had us practicing on the mat for three hours in the morning and three hours in the afternoon, and then the dan grades had to practice an additional three hours in the evening. During this seminar there were many broken bones and other injuries.
Abbe Sensei had taught us to be strong and not be thrown unless the technique was effective - that being strong showed respect for your teacher. He also taught ukes to attack on balance so as not make the throw to easy. As he taught, Abbe Sensei would hit us with a shinai and explain that, while his English was not very good, the shinai spoke English fluently. So, in those early years, that was what we knew - the strong fighting art of Aikido
At first, when Nakazono Sensei saw how we practiced, he was angry with us and perplexed. He did not understand. But, at the end of the seminar, Abbe Sensei explained why we were the way we were. Then Nakazono Sensei realized that we were genuine students with great respect for him and a strong desire to learn.
In England, after a hard practice, it is traditional to finish the evening off with a pint of beer at the local pub. But Nakazono Sensei was keeping us on the mat until 10pm, and the pubs closed at 10:30pm. So Williams Sensei said to me, "Ellis, as my assistant, it is your duty to ask Sensei if we can leave the mat at 9pm so we can have time to get to the pub." I asked Nakazono Sensei (what a fool I was!), and he became angry. He said that he had travelled across the world to teach us Aikido and that all we wanted to do was go to the pub. What he didn't seem to understand was that this was our vacation from work. (I reminded Nakazono Sensei of this incident when we met later in Santa Fe, and we were able to laugh about it.)
In 1963, I was Nakazono Sansei's assistant at a national martial arts demonstration at the Royal Albert Hall in London. That was a proud moment for me, and also for my parents, as this was the first they had ever seen me in a Aikido demonstration.
There was a vast difference between Abbe Sensei's old style Aikido and Nakazono Sensei's new style, which was far more flowing. The new way seemed so much softer and yet very strong.
We quickly adapted to this new style. Then Abbe Sensei dropped a "bombshell" on us: we would all have to be regraded to meet the current standards of Hombu Dojo. The grading was physical and mentally demanding. At its end, Abbe Sensei lined all the eight Dan grades up and said that he accepted our ranks - with the exception of one. He looked at that one for a timeless moment and said, "Necessary sell your gi while price is high." Even after 37 years, I have not forgotten that sentence. Abbe Sensei took away that students rank.
In the early 1960's I was asked to conduct an Aikido demonstration at the British Judo Council's National Judo Championships in London. Among the VIPs in attendance were the Japanese Ambassador and Lady Baden Powell, the wife of Lord Baden Powell, who was then the head of the World Organization of Boy Scouts. Kenshiro Abbe and Otani Sensei emphasized how important this evening was and that they wanted an impressive display from the Aikido people.
While we were waiting to go on, a Judo man came up to Otani Sensei who was speaking to the Japanese Ambassador, and said, "Hey, Smiler." I couldn't believe the disrespect, and took the man to one side. We were having a confrontation when Derek Eastman, who was outside smoking a cigarette, told me that we were due on stage immediately. We rushed onto the stage.
As I performed the first technique, Mr.Eastman's cigarettes and matches fell out of his gi onto the stage. I was already upset from the incident with the Judo man, and now the embarrassment! I smashed Mr Eastman all over the tatami and back again.
Later, when we were doing a knife technique with a live blade the knife went through my gi and I felt the cold blade against my stomach. I thought, "My God, it's in me!" I dropped onto my knees with Mr Eastman in an immobilization, and I looked down at the front row. Looking up at me with shock and horror was her Ladyship. I knew by the look on her face that any hopes we had of her sponsoring Aikido were over.
After the display, her Ladyship said, "That was the most horrific display of violence I have ever witnessed."
The Japanese Ambassador congratulated us on a excellent demonstration. (On inspection, I realized that the blade had only grazed me.)
Abbe Sensei brought over from Paris a young 5th Dan, Noro Sensei - the first sensei we had seen in a white hakama. Noro Sensei was perhaps the most graceful of all the teachers I have ever seen to date.
There then followed many other teachers: Tada Sensei, Hishomura Sensei, Tadashi Abbe Sensei, Tamura Sensei and Chiba Sensei. I was with Chiba Sensei for several years.
Chiba Sensei and I taught Aikido in a dojo at The Times newspaper in London. We were asked to take part in a 30-minute broadcast on the BBC world radio. Sensei asked me to do all the talking because, at the time his English was not very good. A television producer who had heard the broadcast asked if we would do a demonstration on Anglican TV. We agreed.
While we were waiting for our slot on TV, we were taken to a hospitality room, where the had just about any drink you can imagine. The hostess asked if we would like drinks. I thought a Jim Beam would go down well, and I said, "Sensei can we have a drink?" "Yes," he replied, but before I could order my Jim Beam he ordered two orange juices.
Some of the Aikido I have seen in recent years depresses me because it can only be done by two Aikidoists who practice together on a regular basis - like a pair of dancers who know each others moves. But Chiba Sensei's style of Aikido is effective. If I wanted Yoga, I would study; if I wanted dance, I would take dancing lessons. I believe that Aikido not only has to look good, but also be effective.
Once I had to go to see Abbe Sensei at his apartment in Acton, London. (He shared a house with Otani Sensei, a 7th Dan in Judo, and his son Tomio Otani, a good friend of mine who was the national coach for Kendo.)
The house was like a martial arts museum with suits of armor, swords, and other weapons scattered around.
From childhood, athletics has been one of my great loves. But the one sport I cannot watch is our English game of cricket. So you can imagine my disappointment when I came to the house and found Abbe Sensei, Whom I viewed almost like a god, watching the cricket, "The World Series." The windows were open, and small birds and pigeons were flying around the room.
Carefully choosing my words, I said, "Sensei, I didn't realize that you liked cricket."
"I don't," he said. "I watch this boring, stupid game every day, and still don't understand it."
He then said something very true: "They call it the World Series, but it is only played in countries that Britain conquered."
Eventually, Williams Sensei, whom I believe to the best Aikidoist the United Kingdom has ever produced, began studying Ki Aikido with Tohei Sensei while a group to while I belong remained traditional.
Williams Sensei strictly controlled Aikido in the United Kingdom for approximately 15 years. No one would start a dojo or take a seminar without consulting with him first. But Aikido has now grown far beyond our early expectations, and many factors have broken up the special unit of dan grades that once existed.
I was not politically minded in the old days, and I have not changed. Sometimes students telephone me and ask what style I practiceor what organization I belong to. Before they tell me their allegiance, I just say, "if you practice Aikido, you are more than welcome to attend our dojo."
On my next visit to the US, I hope to visit Alaska. The secretary of the Ellis School of Traditional Aikido (ESTA) in Alamogordo, Mrs. Aida Prazak, has moved to North Pole in Alaska, with her husband, who is a captain in the United States Air Force, and she hopes to open an Aikido school in the area in the near future.
Whan I was last in the United States, I taught in New Mexico at the El Paso University, where I recieved a very warm welcome. I also taught at Roswell Military Academy and Holloman Air Force Base.
When I last saw Nakazono Sensei he asked, "What are you doing now?" I told him how things were. He said, "Henry, you think you are only 20 years of age. You should slow down. You are a old man." But, if I refrain from looking in the mirror, I can go on pretending I am a young man in heart and mind - thanks to a lifetime of Aikido.
About the Author
Henry Ellis co-author of Positive Aikido.
http://www.EllisAikido.org ----- http://www.british-aikido.com
http://aikidoellisvideo.magnify.net














