(Iowa City, Iowa), 1956-03-29

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(Iowa City, Iowa), 1956-03-29 • A ,b'l *' sPOt Land· Serving The State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City f- Ok: [ ~ . ~ts~' ~_O~II~SI_l~~'O__ II1~J~~,~ij_ -__F_il_ve~~_e_nl~s_a __ ~_ ' O~PY~ _________________________~ __________________~M~e~~~~r_o~(~A~~~~la~tea~~P~rc=s=s __ ~A~P~cea==~~d_W~rr~e~a=n~d~P~bO=t=o-=se=r~v~lc=e ________________________~ __~ ________________I_ow __ a_c_I~ly~,~I_Owa, T6unaiy. M~-~ oski,' , • . - al 5 ,outlDe Red Solulion • To Be Aire4 AI Meeting ., LOS ANGELES Lfl-Adlai Stevenson Wednesday ni,hl accused Sen. Estes Kefauvet of trying to "injure me and wln support" in California WASHINGTON 111- The Intemai by the same "false and divisive boss nonsense," he raised in Mlnne· Revenue Service said WecIneada)' sota. , the sudden and sweeplq federal Stevenson, s!)8rked int.() renewed action by his defcat by Kefauver in tAX raids against Communist party the Minnesota primary Il\st wcck, * * * offices and the newspaper DaD, opened his heacko battle with the Worker were In liJle with at.aDdard • Tennessee ~nator for California's operating pr~ure. ., 68 Democratic prcsldentlal dele­ Johnson Says While the Daily Worker', atlor· gate votes in a prepared, televised ney talked In New York 01 ..... address. 10 court and Its editor cIenitd .., He declared that by "discredit· He:Will Not tax debt, Revenue CommlsslOacr ing the leaders or thll. Democratic Russell C, Harrlnaton said: party" in Calliomla, Kefauver and Lead ·'Fae· I,·on' "I can assure you that th~ eue his spokesmen "~an only weaken is being handled ~lsely as any and divide the party and thereby other limUar Ulx~ matter help the Republicans. I WASHINGTQN ti1'I- Sen. Lyndon would be handled by the servke Mo.t ,., litH .Johoc;on (D·'rex.) said Wedncsday under Its obligation to enforce the Stevenson loOk pot shpts at the ....IIt.,: ' "'IC has no desire revenue laws. II Eisenhower administration's han- o lead the Texas H. Netlce , dling oC foreign and domestic prob­ lelegatlon at the Harrington bad just aooe o\;er lems. But he aimed his heaviest )emocratic N a - the case with Donald R. MOYie)', salvos at Kefauver. who just con· ional Convention the New York regional tAx ehlet, c1uded a whirlwind live-day cam· i it represent!' who apparently englll()eJ'ed the , paign of Southern California. 'anyone faction." J Tuellday raids without .dvance no­ He thus stepped Hce to Wasbinrton, The former , Illinois governor. ., '. 'Ito at least the said he had no alibis for his Min· Sevrral informed officials s.id ,dges of the quar· 1 • that Moysey acted alooe, usinl hl. nesota defeat. but he added some· 'el between Texas - - SIDEWALK 'SUPERINTENDENTS - over 300 of them - looked en thing "iulppened In Minnesota that (Dally Itwaa .la.l. by Be .. Kora.) .uthority as dlreMor 01 the sen" actions led by lee's Manhattan diJtrkt. He bt· Wtelnesd.y .. workmen b.Hled the w;inel to kftp • fel ..·front con­ I must speak about because It also o usc Speaker happened here in California." TWO YOUNGSTERS AT THE NURSERY of tfIa SUI HMpltal·School fer Seve""" Handicapped Chllel,..n carne director oC the di5trlct Ftb. struction partition frOft1 being blown over into tile .tr.et, A big gllSt Sam Rayburn and Gov. Allan Shiv­ Ihow Mrs, Don Si"IRor, a nur ..ry alc1e, how the., _ IICcupyln. their time, They are Tlmoth., Kennedy, 2111, of) wind at 2:4S !).m. b'ew the structure ne.rly half w.y down. Polic. 7. after servin, as acUng director That ~omething, he said, was ers, who have been feuding over of lew. City, I.ft, and Pet.r Ziton, 2','J, of Burlln.t.n, since last August. w.re called to kHP pas ..rsby from str.ying into the eI.n ..... ar.a. the charge by Kefauver and his Shivers' support of President Ei· By 4 !S.m. the f.'H·front wa. back in p'ace and workmen w.,.. rein­ supporters that Stevenson was senhower in 1952. In New York, • Communist party forcing it with ropes .nd cables. backed in Minnesota by "political * * * * * * pokesman came up with a lunel' Rayburn has proposed t hat tion Cor bailing out the seIzed party bosses". and a "maejllne" that was Johnson head the state convention trying to freeze Kefauver out. Handicapped ,, Helped assets. He said treasury omelals delegation and be Texas' favorite SO Drown had agreed to consider It at a con· F~ SI/ppof't son candidate as well. , I ference Thurtd.y. He said he was honored to have $'pr.ing Storms Tuesday night. In a speech at By Sbriners' ~Pool' Comm""lstl' Pia" f the "unsolicited support and con· Houston. Shivers termed the Ray· .' - fiednce" of Sen. Hubert H. Hum­ The plan c.lIs (or a joint CR· burn proposal "a cynical and cal· By D.AROLD POWERS In Si.nking tlmatc as to the value assets - phrey. Gov. Orville Freeman and culated effort to divide the con­ An outpatient of the SUI Hospital·School lor Severcly Handicapped ot other party lea~ers In Minnesota. both those of the party headquar· servative Democrats of Texas." Children can use many special devices to help him regain control of his ters and the Dajl)' Worker. Then L',is'h Midwest He added hi~ slate of delegates in muscles whUe in the school. California includes many party He said the Rayburn element the party would po t that amount was trying "to take over the state ~u until last June, he could not us& such aids after fill had returned on Mexico In cash until the courts detcrmin C~CAGO !II - A licr ce--sJ'rin~r-storm lashed the n~tion Is middle west leiders • "-came · ~ me volun- : home anlosa ,hil pamlts could af· convention, the Texas delegation - BULLETIN Its talC liability- Me8llwht1e. WIttI Wodnesday.. tarily and without any strings at· and Lyndon ,1ohnson.·' ford to buy the expensive equip· lt smothered crops in the Great Plains 'with dust and cast sleet, tached." Stevenson added: such a cash bond, the government Shivers also Unked Rayburn to ment. NEW ORLEANS t.f! - The would return the IClzcd asset. to freezing rair1. snow and Ice on the northern midwest. "1 am adVised that Sen. Kelauv- In June, the first piece of equip­ Coast Guard said the Mcxlcan Ch!l1, 30-1.0·60 m.p.h. winds raged from Kansas northward into the er personally soulh\. the support Democrats who. he said, are led by Russians Lift the party. The erne pattern would the National Association Cor the Ad­ ment from the Iowa Shrlners' be followed In other clU . Dalto.tas. Minnesota, Wisconsin. ------------ of many of these very same pea. equipment pool was scnt to an pa$SCnger ship Matul, carrying Michigan and the Great Lakes. plc-of Atty, Gen. Pat Brown. of vancement of Colored People, the 50 persons. burned and sank in "It Is very promising," the patty labor Union's Political Action Com­ Iowa handicapped child for usc In spokesman said. Se~tion of the midwest were The We9ther John Anson Ford, Los Angeles mittee and the Texas DemoclIBtic his home. the Bay of Campeche oCf the Moysey fl,lrred that the party virtually paralyzed, ear-blizzard County, Supervisor; of Elizabeth Travel Ban S1,640 fit' ECiulltmOnt Advisory Council. coast of Mexico Wednesday owed $389.28$ In Income taxes Cor winds frilled utility lines and ice- Snyder, Democratic state chair· • . The Iowa City Shrine Club spon· night. There was no word of any 195L and the Dally Worker owed j Clo dy man; of Paul Ziffern, Democratic In comment. Johnson told a MO~COW ttf! 'r" The Soviet go~- sors the pool. With tbe help of pri. cloaked trees. Ice, slush and deep U national committeeman and a news conference Wednesday : ernment. an~ounced Wedne~ay It ,'ate donatloM and such projecls survivors $46.049 for 1951 throu,h 1953. snow losed many highways, s~ore of others. "No one knows better than Allan WOUld, hft. Ils ba~ on forelgne~s as their Royal American Circus, The scene of the sinking was OthIn C..... r ... With the cooperation of other re· Shivers that I am not and newr travehng 1D Georg.la and Armenta Iowa Shriner. have raised $1.640 reported at 60 mile~ north·north· Three Die and bacltn IncIorw ncxt wcek to permit a tour of those Tor equipment. gional tax directors, he had pad­ In Michigan, three persons col- "Here in C'Ufornja, as in New have becn the creature of the ADA west ot Campecbe. - Amcricans for Democratic Ac­ ~outhe~ Sovie~ republics by Swed· Without the help of the Shrlncrs. locks put on party oCficcs In Phila· lapsed and died while shoveling Hampshire and Minnesota, the en- Ish Pnme Min~ster Tag,e Erlander. most of tho hospital school's out. The Coast Guard said a Mexi· delphia, San Francisco .nd Los snow or scraptng icc dumped by dorsement of the leaders oC ' our tion - the DAC. thc PAC and the Cold NAACP, the CIO or any other The CommuDlst party s campaign patients would not be able to use can seaplane, sent to search the Allieles, aa well as In New York. the storm. party evidently becomes repre· denouncing Joseph Stalin and .. the such equipment In thelr homcs The paper came out Wednesday. ,r.oup the governor may have area, crashed ' about 20 miles however, and vowed to kecp on T~ere was untold damage to hensible 'only ~hen the senator named. cult of the individual" - Stalin's MIss Marie Tilly, educatlonai crops in six stales of the Great current turbulent weath- docsn't get It.
Recommended publications
  • Violence Hits Cambridge
    Today: Special State Tercentenary Salute Edition Weather DISTRIBUTION 7 sum. temperature 60. Mostly TODAY fair today, Ugh 70. Cloudy to- BED BANK night, low In the 50s. Tomorrow, 23,925 chance of scattered showers, high 70. Thursday, gradual clearing, cooler. See weather, page 2. I DIAL 741-0010 diUr, Monday through FrMir. Second Clu« Pettaft PAGE ONE VOL. 86, NO. 225 t Rd Bi ud Mi Aatltiaui Halliac OBICM. RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1964 7c PER COPY In the Wake of Wallace Speech Violence Hits Cambridge CAMBRIDGE, Md (AP)-An Democratic primary and was sent to the hospital for treat- which were called out at the outburst of violence in the wake Applauded more than 40 times ment of minor injuries. height of similar violence in of a presidential campaign during a 45-minute- speech at- Deputy Atty. Gen. Robert Cambridge last summer. A to- speech by Alabama Gov. tacking the civil rights bill pend- Murphy said charges to be filed ken force of 10 had been as- George C. Wallace left this cen- ing in the Senate. against some of those arrested signed to the uneasy city Use Tear Gas still were under study. throughout the winter, but there ter of racial strife in the grip had been no curfew or other re- of new tensions today. Balked by guardsmen wearing "It may be foolish, if the cli- gas masks and holding rifles mate stays as it is, to turn strictions similar to those im- Two demonstrators and five with fixed bayonets, the integra- them loose in this inferno down posed after an outbreak of National Guardsmen were in- tionists squatted in the street here," he said.
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 Information & Record Book
    2017 INFORMATION & RECORD BOOK OWNERSHIP OF THE CLEVELAND INDIANS Paul J. Dolan John Sherman Owner/Chairman/Chief Executive Of¿ cer Vice Chairman The Dolan family's ownership of the Cleveland Indians enters its 18th season in 2017, while John Sherman was announced as Vice Chairman and minority ownership partner of the Paul Dolan begins his ¿ fth campaign as the primary control person of the franchise after Cleveland Indians on August 19, 2016. being formally approved by Major League Baseball on Jan. 10, 2013. Paul continues to A long-time entrepreneur and philanthropist, Sherman has been responsible for establishing serve as Chairman and Chief Executive Of¿ cer of the Indians, roles that he accepted prior two successful businesses in Kansas City, Missouri and has provided extensive charitable to the 2011 season. He began as Vice President, General Counsel of the Indians upon support throughout surrounding communities. joining the organization in 2000 and later served as the club's President from 2004-10. His ¿ rst startup, LPG Services Group, grew rapidly and merged with Dynegy (NYSE:DYN) Paul was born and raised in nearby Chardon, Ohio where he attended high school at in 1996. Sherman later founded Inergy L.P., which went public in 2001. He led Inergy Gilmour Academy in Gates Mills. He graduated with a B.A. degree from St. Lawrence through a period of tremendous growth, merging it with Crestwood Holdings in 2013, University in 1980 and received his Juris Doctorate from the University of Notre Dame’s and continues to serve on the board of [now] Crestwood Equity Partners (NYSE:CEQP).
    [Show full text]
  • Probable Starting Pitchers 31-31, Home 15-16, Road 16-15
    NOTES Great American Ball Park • 100 Joe Nuxhall Way • Cincinnati, OH 45202 • @Reds • @RedsPR • @RedlegsJapan • reds.com 31-31, HOME 15-16, ROAD 16-15 PROBABLE STARTING PITCHERS Sunday, June 13, 2021 Sun vs Col: RHP Tony Santillan (ML debut) vs RHP Antonio Senzatela (2-6, 4.62) 700 wlw, bsoh, 1:10et Mon at Mil: RHP Vladimir Gutierrez (2-1, 2.65) vs LHP Eric Lauer (1-2, 4.82) 700 wlw, bsoh, 8:10et Great American Ball Park Tue at Mil: RHP Luis Castillo (2-9, 6.47) vs LHP Brett Anderson (2-4, 4.99) 700 wlw, bsoh, 8:10et Wed at Mil: RHP Tyler Mahle (6-2, 3.56) vs RHP Freddy Peralta (6-1, 2.25) 700 wlw, bsoh, 2:10et • • • • • • • • • • Thu at SD: LHP Wade Miley (6-4, 2.92) vs TBD 700 wlw, bsoh, 10:10et CINCINNATI REDS (31-31) vs Fri at SD: RHP Tony Santillan vs TBD 700 wlw, bsoh, 10:10et Sat at SD: RHP Vladimir Gutierrez vs TBD 700 wlw, FOX, 7:15et COLORADO ROCKIES (25-40) Sun at SD: RHP Luis Castillo vs TBD 700 wlw, bsoh, mlbn, 4:10et TODAY'S GAME: Is Game 3 (2-0) of a 3-game series vs Shelby Cravens' ALL-TIME HITS, REDS CAREER REGULAR SEASON RECORD VS ROCKIES Rockies and Game 6 (3-2) of a 6-game homestand that included a 2-1 1. Pete Rose ..................................... 3,358 All-Time Since 1993: ....................................... 105-108 series loss to the Brewers...tomorrow night at American Family Field, 2. Barry Larkin ................................... 2,340 At Riverfront/Cinergy Field: .................................
    [Show full text]
  • 1962 Topps Baseball "Bucks" Set Checklist
    1962 TOPPS BASEBALL "BUCKS" SET CHECKLIST NNO Hank Aaron NNO Joe Adcock NNO George Altman NNO Jim Archer NNO Richie Ashburn NNO Ernie Banks NNO Earl Battey NNO Gus Bell NNO Yogi Berra NNO Ken Boyer NNO Jackie Brandt NNO Jim Bunning NNO Lou Burdette NNO Don Cardwell NNO Norm Cash NNO Orlando Cepeda NNO Bob Clemente NNO Rocky Colavito NNO Chuck Cottier NNO Roger Craig NNO Bennie Daniels NNO Don Demeter NNO Don Drysdale NNO Chuck Estrada NNO Dick Farrell NNO Whitey Ford NNO Nellie Fox NNO Tito Francona NNO Bob Friend NNO Jim Gentile NNO Dick Gernert NNO Lenny Green NNO Dick Groat NNO Woodie Held NNO Don Hoak NNO Gil Hodges NNO Elston Howard NNO Frank Howard NNO Dick Howser NNO Ken L. Hunt NNO Larry Jackson NNO Joe Jay Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 NNO Al Kaline NNO Harmon Killebrew NNO Sandy Koufax NNO Harvey Kuenn NNO Jim Landis NNO Norm Larker NNO Frank Lary NNO Jerry Lumpe NNO Art Mahaffey NNO Frank Malzone NNO Felix Mantilla NNO Mickey Mantle NNO Roger Maris NNO Eddie Mathews NNO Willie Mays NNO Ken McBride NNO Mike McCormick NNO Stu Miller NNO Minnie Minoso NNO Wally Moon NNO Stan Musial NNO Danny O'Connell NNO Jim O'Toole NNO Camilo Pascual NNO Jim Perry NNO Jim Piersall NNO Vada Pinson NNO Juan Pizarro NNO Johnny Podres NNO Vic Power NNO Bob Purkey NNO Pedro Ramos NNO Brooks Robinson NNO Floyd Robinson NNO Frank Robinson NNO Johnny Romano NNO Pete Runnels NNO Don Schwall Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Mays Poles 3 Homers and Triple As Giants Crush Orioles, 27-10
    Abernathy Bounces Thing RESORTS end TRAVEL Sometime Sunday FARM ond GARDEN C £fef SPORTS ???? Back, Beats Stobbs Beats Searching WASHINGTON, D. C., APRIL 1, 1956 In Squad Game, 3-2 In Race Thriller By BURTON HAWKINS I]!play grounder and both runners Myrtle's Jet Third Star Staff Correspondent were safe. Mays Poles 3 Homers and Triple ORLANDO, Fla., Mar. 31. Jim Lemon walked to fill the In Barbara Frietchie;, Ted Abernathy, virtually annihi- bases and Johnny Groth popped 21,781 | Killebrew Bowie Draws by the Dodgers and White out.' but Harmon lated drilled a single to center, scoring By LEWIS F. ATCHISON | White Sox in previous outings,,] Becquer and leaving the bases Sometime Thing. Alfred; staged a comeback against an . jammed. Ted walked Ed Fitz-ji iGwynne Vanderbilt’s aptly named As Giants Orioles, 27-10 WrightJ Crush undistinguished collection of his Geraldj to force across filly, stepped on the gas at the Then, his fine performance teammates today as the Senators; with halfway mark and kept it there; jeopardized. Abernathy fanned : rest way squad game to assure the of the to win the Willie Puts Two played a Lyle Luttrell for the third time , filth running of the $25.000-1 a portion of their athletes a rare Chuck Stobbs, who went then Frietchie Handi- triumph. %dded Barbara j Over Wall in 3d, taste of distance for the Beavers, pitched 1 'cap yesterday at Bowie. generally acceptably. He clipped for; Such contests are was A roaring crowd of frivolous affairs, but it eight hits and bothered in 21.781 Bats In 9 Runs was was hardy fans, who sent $1,735,225 deadly serious business for young only two innings.
    [Show full text]
  • 1St Connection Between Baseball and Opera
    Baseball & Opera (compiled by Mark Schubin, this version posted 2014 April 14) 1849 : 1 st connection between baseball and opera: Fans of American actor Edwin Forrest, who is playing Macbeth in New York, hire thugs from among ballplayers at Elysian Fields in Hoboken, New Jersey (1 st famous ball field) to disrupt performances of British actor William Macready, also playing Macbeth in New York at what had been Astor Opera House. Deadly riot ensues; Macready is rescued by ex-Astor Opera House impresario Edward Fry, who later (1880) invents electronic home entertainment (and probably headphones) by listening to live opera by phone. 1852: Opera-house exclusivity dispute with composer’s niece Johanna Wagner forms legal basis of baseball’s reserve clause. 1870 : Tony Pastor’s Opera House baseball team is covered by The New York Times (they won). 1875 : San Francisco Chronicle reports on that city’s opera-house baseball team. 1879 : Pirate King role created for Signor Brocolini, who, as John Clark, played first base for the Detroit Base Ball Club. 1881 : Dartmouth College opera group performs to raise money for college’s baseball team. 1884 : Three telegraph operators, James U. Rust, E. W. Morgan, and A. H. Stewart, present live games remotely. One sends plays from ballpark, second receives and announces, third moves cards with players’ names around backdrop. Starting in Nashville’s 900-seat Masonic Theater, they soon move to 2,500-seat Grand Opera House, beginning half-century of remote baseball game viewing at opera houses (also Augusta, GA Grand Opera House starting 1885). 1885 : The Black Hussar is probably 1 st opera with baseball mentioned in its libretto (in “Read the answer in the stars”).
    [Show full text]
  • Kit Young's Sale #131
    page 1 KIT YOUNG’S SALE #131 1952-55 DORMAND POSTCARDS We are breaking a sharp set of the scarce 1950’s Dormand cards. These are gorgeous full color postcards used as premiums to honor fan autograph requests. These are 3-1/2” x 5-1/2” and feature many of the game’s greats. We have a few of the blank back versions plus other variations. Also, some have been mailed so they usually include a person’s address (or a date) plus the 2 cent stamp. These are marked with an asterisk (*). 109 Allie Reynolds .................................................................................. NR-MT 35.00; EX-MT 25.00 110 Gil McDougald (small signature) ..................................................................... autographed 50.00 110 Gil McDougald (small signature) ..............................................................................NR-MT 50.00 110 Gil McDougald (large signature) ....................................................... NR-MT 30.00; EX-MT 25.00 111 Mickey Mantle (bat on shoulder) ................................................. EX 99.00; GD watermark 49.00 111 Mickey Mantle (batting) ........................................................................................ EX-MT 199.00 111 Mickey Mantle (jumbo 6” x 9” blank back) ..................................................... EX-MT rare 495.00 111 Mickey Mantle (jumbo 6” x 9” postcard back) ................................................ GD-VG rare 229.00 111 Mickey Mantle (super jumbo 9” x 12” postcard back) .......................VG/VG-EX tape back 325.00 112
    [Show full text]
  • Forest Fires Hit 500 Ocean County Acres
    Weather DISTRIBUTION 7 un. temperature SI. Sumy TODAY today, Ugh in the 7H. Fair to- RED BANK night, low in the Ms. Tomorrow, 23,925 «r, Ugh M. Wednesday, partly cloudy, naJM, dunce ofMattered sbojwers. See wether, page 2. DIAL 741-0010 luiud datly, Hendwr thtoagb *rl«ay. SMond CUM Po»uw RED BANK, N. J., MONDAY, MAY 11, 1964 7c PER COPY PAGE ONE VOL. 86, NO. 224 fml~ "l at Rid Bank ud it MdWonai Miillni OHICM. Flames Jump Parkway Section, Force Its Closing Forest Fires Hit 500 Ocean County Acres DOUBLE TROUBLE (AP) — The Ocean County com- One arm of the fire at Double Trouble was stopped half Berkeley Township and covered 1,800 acres. Five building! munity of Double Trouble provided just that for state police and a mile short of the 12-story Pine Haven Nursing Home of were destroyed, including two homes. forest service men yesterday—wind and fire Berkeley Township. No serious injury was connected with any of the fires Another portion of the blaze fanned across the six-lane around the state, but several firemen were burned slightly, Flames whipped through 500 acres of pineland here, jump- Garden State Parkway. Police had to close a 12-mile stretch authorities said. ' ing the Garden State Parkway and forcing its closing. of highway at 4:15 p.m. northbound lanes reopened at 6:26 South Jersey had 14 fires that scorched about 720 acres. p.m. and southbound lanes about an hour later. The Nesco area of Mullica Township in Atlantic County lost The same double trouble of burning wood and fanning Double Trouble is just south of Toms River and west of 500 acres of wood and another 50 acres burned at McKee winds hit other areas throughout the state, with a total of 25 the parkway.
    [Show full text]
  • My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014
    My Replay Baseball Encyclopedia Fifth Edition- May 2014 A complete record of my full-season Replays of the 1908, 1952, 1956, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1975, and 1978 Major League seasons as well as the 1923 Negro National League season. This encyclopedia includes the following sections: • A list of no-hitters • A season-by season recap in the format of the Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia- Baseball • Top ten single season performances in batting and pitching categories • Career top ten performances in batting and pitching categories • Complete career records for all batters • Complete career records for all pitchers Table of Contents Page 3 Introduction 4 No-hitter List 5 Neft and Cohen Sports Encyclopedia Baseball style season recaps 91 Single season record batting and pitching top tens 93 Career batting and pitching top tens 95 Batter Register 277 Pitcher Register Introduction My baseball board gaming history is a fairly typical one. I lusted after the various sports games advertised in the magazines until my mom finally relented and bought Strat-O-Matic Football for me in 1972. I got SOM’s baseball game a year later and I was hooked. I would get the new card set each year and attempt to play the in-progress season by moving the traded players around and turning ‘nameless player cards” into that year’s key rookies. I switched to APBA in the late ‘70’s because they started releasing some complete old season sets and the idea of playing with those really caught my fancy. Between then and the mid-nineties, I collected a lot of card sets.
    [Show full text]
  • 1964 Topps Baseball Checklist
    1964 Topps Baseball Checklist 1 Dick Ellswo1963 NL ERA Leaders Bob Friend Sandy Koufax 2 Camilo Pasc1963 AL ERA Leaders Gary Peters Juan Pizarro 3 Sandy Kouf1963 NL Pitching Leaders Jim Maloney Juan Marichal Warren Spahn 4 Jim Bouton1963 AL Pitching Leaders Whitey Ford Camilo Pascual 5 Don Drysda1963 NL Strikeout Leaders Sandy Koufax Jim Maloney 6 Jim Bunnin 1963 AL Strikeout Leaders Camilo Pascual Dick Stigman 7 Hank Aaron1963 NL Batting Leaders Roberto Clemente Tommy Davis Dick Groat 8 Al Kaline 1963 AL Batting Leaders Rich Rollins Carl Yastrzemski 9 Hank Aaron1963 NL Home Run Leaders Orlando Cepeda Willie Mays Willie McCovey 10 Bob Allison1963 AL Home Run Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 11 Hank Aaron1963 NL RBI Leaders Ken Boyer Bill White 12 Al Kaline 1963 AL RBI Leaders Harmon Killebrew Dick Stuart 13 Hoyt Wilhelm 14 Dick Nen Dodgers Rookies Nick Willhite 15 Zoilo Versalles Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 16 John Boozer 17 Willie Kirkland 18 Billy O'Dell 19 Don Wert 20 Bob Friend 21 Yogi Berra 22 Jerry Adair 23 Chris Zachary 24 Carl Sawatski 25 Bill Monbouquette 26 Gino Cimoli 27 New York Mets Team Card 28 Claude Osteen 29 Lou Brock 30 Ron Perranoski 31 Dave Nicholson 32 Dean Chance 33 Sammy EllisReds Rookies Mel Queen 34 Jim Perry 35 Eddie Mathews 36 Hal Reniff 37 Smoky Burgess 38 Jimmy Wynn 39 Hank Aguirre 40 Dick Groat 41 Willie McCoFriendly Foes Leon Wagner 42 Moe Drabowsky 43 Roy Sievers 44 Duke Carmel 45 Milt Pappas 46 Ed Brinkman 47 Jesus Alou Giants Rookies Ron Herbel 48 Bob Perry 49 Bill Henry 50 Mickey
    [Show full text]
  • Isesssssr I TUBELESS Or
    § AS SPRING TRAINING STARTS THE SUNDAY STAR, Washineton. D. C. WttßnUßSfflSßm w 1 IQB7 C-3 1 \ I SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 34. <<&&« m .. fIA «: f ».;agBL~. -.if a tvW v Majors Hunt Answers warn? THE BASEBALL F &IhHhhß WfT To Host of j9n«9BßßMjfi&ajftßSßHßfiHjßHflHß9@Hß^^HSHS9Sßß^^^^^^R^^^l^. Questions BEAT ST. PETERSBURG. Fla.. Peb. der Manager Birdie Tebbetts. HHn| hl BY BURTON HAWKINS |j -]fl| gM 23 (A*).—ls this the year Mickey However. It took an almost , _ ,’,’* | y _ j super-human gjsp *p B B| /¦ vs. i Mantle will break Babe Ruth's slugging effort by HP «H : ' tth (a record-tying the team 221 ORLANDO, Fla., 23 ings the matter. It's I home run record? Will the Cin- home runs) to make the club a Feb. on multi- fl derella story of Sal Maglie This is a critical year for Wash- million-dollar stuff. A major Bf _ add challenger. pitching Cincinnati’s ington baseball. Cal Griffith is ; league is of chapter, staff remains franchise one the another lustrous or will mediocre. obligation the possessions. the clock strike midnight With nearly everyone conced- aware of an to more attractive for city. people of Washington : Maybe the Kohinoor MBBm ing another pennant “Xhe diamond The Barber? Can the Dodaers to the made possible for of would be nicer leave successfully defend Yankees, of ‘have it all to to the their Na- ’most the attention ;us enjoy life,” Cal said, “and children, major league tional League will be focused Mantle. Even to but a crown without on entire family is of ' franchise is inheritance ¦¦MpfSr vv if Mickey fails top !the mindful better S - ’ ' BH -.• Jackie Robinson? to Ruth’s 60 it.
    [Show full text]
  • 1965 Topps Baseball Checklist
    1965 Topps Baseball Checklist 1 Tony Oliva AL Batting Leaders Elston Howard Brooks Robinson 2 Roberto CleNL Batting Leaders Hank Aaron Rico Carty 3 Harmon Kil AL Home Run Leaders Mickey Mantle Boog Powell 4 Willie MaysNL Home Run Leaders Billy Williams Jim Ray Hart Orlando Cepeda Johnny Callison 5 Brooks RobAL RBI Leaders Harmon Killebrew Mickey Mantle Dick Stuart 6 Ken Boyer NL RBI Leaders Willie Mays Ron Santo 7 Dean ChancAL ERA Leaders Joe Horlen 8 Sandy KoufNL ERA Leaders Don Drysdale 9 Dean ChancAL Pitching Leaders Gary Peters Dave Wickersham Juan Pizarro Wally Bunker 10 Larry JacksoNL Pitching Leaders Ray Sadecki Juan Marichal 11 Al DowningAL Strikeout Leaders Dean Chance Camilo Pascual 12 Bob Veale NL Strikeout Leaders Don Drysdale Bob Gibson 13 Pedro Ramos 14 Len Gabrielson 15 Robin Roberts 16 Joe MorganRookie Stars, Rookie Card Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 Sonny Jackson 17 Johnny Romano 18 Billy McCool 19 Gates Brown 20 Jim Bunning 21 Don Blasingame 22 Charlie Smith 23 Bobby Tiefenauer 24 Minnesota Twins Team Checklist 25 Al McBean 26 Bobby Knoop 27 Dick Bertell 28 Barney Schultz 29 Felix Mantilla 30 Jim Bouton 31 Mike White 32 Herman FraManager 33 Jackie Brandt 34 Cal Koonce 35 Ed Charles 36 Bobby Wine 37 Fred Gladding 38 Jim King 39 Gerry Arrigo 40 Frank Howard 41 Bruce HowaRookie Stars Marv Staehle 42 Earl Wilson 43 Mike Shannon 44 Wade Blasi Rookie Card 45 Roy McMillan 46 Bob Lee 47 Tommy Harper 48 Claude Raymond 49 Curt BlefaryRookie Stars, Rookie Card John Miller 50 Juan Marichal 51 Billy Bryan 52 Ed Roebuck 53 Dick McAuliffe 54 Joe Gibbon 55 Tony Conigliaro 56 Ron Kline 57 St.
    [Show full text]