Supplemented by son Ross Wilbur's expanded Table covering Vol II and Vol III. Necessarily fit exactly where inserted in the text.īegins with BKW's original 3-page Table of Contents which covers Vol I and Vol II, and later And then read these lettered addenda pages separately the events they describe do not I suggest that you read the main sequential Memories on pages which he numbered A, B, C.etc. Please note that in many places BKW apparently had later thoughts and memories he wanted to addĪfter writing the main sequentially-numbered text. And none of them would have held up to the digitization process. I'm forever indebted to Teddy for introducing me to JAM, andįor her suggestion that I make this xerox for my family, particularly since all the original onion-skinĬopies are rapidly deteriorating. Stayed with Teddy at her small frame house in Haverford during the summer of 1981 and helped These threeĭigitized volumes were scanned from a Xerox copy made from Teddy and Nelson's carbon, when I 278, Vol II BKW hand-typed five carbon copies of JAM. Its sad enough any way, but it seems to me that you childrenĪs noted at the top of p. It seems best to describe events as a series of pictures, Old letters and papers to do so with me in anticipation of having lots of time out here, which I haveįailed to find, I have at last gotten at it. It is a long time since I wrote any of this, and I am still anxious to complete it. Zanzibar held full membership for four months in 2017, when its status was changed after CAF admitted its membership was an error.Autobiography of Bertrand Kingsbury WilburīKW began JAM in 1933 while still in Haverford, Pa, and wrote the final page in 1938 in Sanĭiego, California as he notes at the top of p. ^ – Associate members, not part of FIFA.Withdrew from UNAF on 19 November 2009, but rejoined in 2011. ^ – Member of UNAF from 2005 to 2009 and from 2011.^ – Excluded from CAF and from 1st African Cup of Nations in 1957 due to Apartheid.West African Football Union (WAFU-UFOA) (16)Ĭentral African Football Federations' Union (UNIFFAC) (8)Ĭouncil for East and Central Africa Football Associations (CECAFA) (12)Ĭouncil of Southern Africa Football Associations (COSAFA) (14) Union of North African Football Federations (UNAF) (5) 12 CAF Golden Jubilee Best Players poll.11.3 CAF Best Women's Footballer of the Century.11.2 CAF Best Goalkeeper of the Century.9.2 CAF overall ranking of African clubs.9.1 CAF overall ranking of African clubs titles.Current CAF General Secretary is the Swiss-Congolese Véron Mosengo-Omba since 13 March 2021. The 1st Vice-President is Augustin Senghor from Senegal, the 2nd Vice-President is Ahmed Yahya from Mauritania and the 3rd Vice-President is Waberi Souleiman from Djibouti. The current CAF President is Patrice Motsepe from South Africa, who was elected on 12 March 2021. CAF currently has 54 member associations: 54 are full members, while Zanzibar and Réunion are associate members (see the CAF Members and Zones section below). Since 2002, the administrative center has been located in 6th of October City, Cairo, Egypt. Youssef Mohamad was the first general secretary and Abdel Aziz Abdallah Salem the President. Its first headquarters was situated in Khartoum for some months until a fire outbreak in the offices of the Sudanese Football Association when the organization moved near Cairo, Egypt. Since the expansion of the number of teams at the World Cup finals to 32 in 1998, CAF has been allocated five places, though this was expanded to six for the 2010 tournament in South Africa, to include the hosts.ĬAF was established on 8 February 1957 at the Grand Hotel in Khartoum, Sudan, by the national football associations (FAs) of Egypt, Ethiopia, South Africa, and Sudan, following formal discussions between the Egyptian, Somali, South African, and Sudanese FAs earlier on 7 June 1956 at the Avenida Hotel in Lisbon, Portugal. CAF is the biggest of the six continental confederations of FIFA. The Confederation of African Football or CAF ( French: Confédération Africaine de Football, Arabic: الاتحاد الأفريقي لكرة القدم, romanized: Al-Ittihad Al-Afriki Likurat Al-Qadam) is the administrative and controlling body for African association football.ĬAF represents the national football associations of Africa, runs continental, national, and club competitions, and controls the prize money, regulations, and media rights to those competitions.
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