Tim Judge - BMX Press Magazine Interviews and Articles

BMX Press Magazine Interviews and Articles

  • "Here Comes The Judge"Super BMX May 1981 Vol.8 No.5 pg.24
  • "Tim Judge: World Champion" BMX Plus! June 1981 Vol.4 No.6 pg.26
  • "Timmy Judge" BMX Action September 1983 Vol.8 No.9 pg.64
  • "United they conquer: The Rise and Rise of Team Hutch" BMX Action Bike December 1983 Iss.14 pg.50 Article about the Hutch BMX team as a group and as individuals.
  • "Racing Tips From 'Tabletop' Tim Judge" Bicycles and Dirt August 1984 Vol.2 No.9 pg.14
  • "1984's Hottest Rookie Pros" BMX Action October 1984 Vol.9 No.10 pg.75
  • "Moto-Notes: Chewin' The Fat With Timmy Judge" BMX Action December 1984 Vol.9 No.12 pg.72
  • "Da Judge" Super BMX & Freestyle July 1985 Vol.12 No.7 pg.42

Read more about this topic:  Tim Judge

Famous quotes containing the words press, magazine, interviews and/or articles:

    My advice to any diplomat who wants to have a good press is to have two or three kids and a dog.
    Carl Rowan (b. 1925)

    The world has already learned that woman has other virtues than meekness, patience, humility and endurance. She possesses courage above all fear, and a will that knows no obstacles; and when these are called forth by some great emergency, false modesty is trampled in the dust, and spheres are scattered to the winds.
    A. Holley, U.S. women’s magazine contributor. The Lily, p. 38 (May 1852)

    What a perpetual disappointment is actual society, even of the virtuous and gifted! After interviews have been compassed with long foresight, we must be tormented presently by baffled blows, by sudden, unseasonable apathies, by epilepsies of wit and of animal spirits, in the heyday of friendship and thought. Our faculties do not play us true, and both parties are relieved by solitude.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    There are several natural phenomena which I shall have to have explained to me before I can keep on going as a resident member of the human race. One is the metamorphosis which hats and suits undergo exactly one week after their purchase, whereby they are changed from smart, intensely becoming articles of apparel into something children use when they want to “dress up like daddy.”
    Robert Benchley (1889–1945)