1945-06-13 [P
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Cards Increase Lead by Edging Bucs, 1-0 Run Scored From
Sunday, June 1,1, 194.1 I) E TROIT aS 1’ N I) A V TIM K S (P HUM hi CHKRRY SSOO) TART 3. PAGE 3 Cards Increase Lead REPEATER Run Scored From Ist Bob Tales By Edging 1-0 AT TRACK On Single Wins in 11th Senators Team Bucs, «?» . mMMMFS -4 *v... 7 -Wo.’| MB; To Beat, Says Lets *» / s&sss%'**’ ¦ Boudreau Catches Wild Pitch j ¦ Sexton Will Test Connie Mack Phils Win Two In Winning Run 2 Innings; Tribe » By 808 MURPHY in Sixth Frame Loses to Browns DeGlane Here (SPORTS EDITOR) From Giants as (FPI- 12 <INS> Mark ST LOUIS. June 12 The CLEVELAND. June RAMBLING Connie ('ardinals Don Gutteridge scored all the heat in the St Louis increased their insists the team to League over the way from first ba*-e on a j>op league is Washington National lead Mat American single Arena to by elev- On Spiked ! Brooklyn Dodgers one and one- Chet Laabs in the N( >T York. Rowe Is ami New games today by defeating the enth inning here today to give Washington natural for half the' is a Pirates, 1 to 0. St. Louts Browns their third Pierre DeGiune. 213-pound and Clark (INS)—- Pittsburgh night hall games NEW YORK. .Tune 12 A vs lift pitch hy Jack Hallett of straight victory over the Cleve- I-Tcru hniun will be the opponent Griffith right now is arguing rank- The Philadelphia Phillies swept the Pirates in the sixth inning al- land Indian- of Knink Sexton, now No 4 vv It h .1 u<l g e > unsuccessfully hoth ends of a twin bill with the lowed Harry Walker to score with The score was 7 to 6 and the ing heavyweight or F.d t Si t angler 1 ,Hndi> to allow him to increase defeat the Tribe-, the number New York Giants today, 3 to 2 the lone tally. -
Ietrtttum Ifrralji Bowvrb Tonight and Tneodarx Not
T AVEBAOE DAILT OIBOOLAnDN ' for the MoBth of April, UM WEATHEB Fo! It of c. a. W 6,124 Baitford MMnlwr at Urn A om ^ Meotly flloney and probably Ugfit Bareeo of OM latloM iEtrtttum IfrralJi bowvrB tonight and Tneodarx not much ohoDge In temperatore. MANCHESTER — A CITY OF VILLAGE CHARM VOL.LVIL.no. 187 (fXaaoMUd AdvoctlMBg m Paga it) MANCHESTER, CONN, PRICE THREE CENTS “Faces Blindness or Death 11 MEN ARRESTED LEAGUE COUNCIL TO RECOGNIZE O’CONNOR ASKS HOUSE AFTER A RAID ON DUC^CLAIMS TO SPEED UP ACTION COVENTRY STILLS Majority Of Members Re- Bootleg Outfit Capable Of ported As Favorable; Brit- caMA i m i s ON HOURS-WAGES BILL Cheating Goyenuuent Out ain And France Co-oper- Of $2,000 A Day In Tal- NEIV SUCCESSES Food, Food, Give Us Food! ate In Drafting Final Plan. Chaimian Of The Rules Com- es; More Arrests Expected IN B A TH E ZONE mittee htroduces Resoh- Geneva. May fl,_ (A P )—A ma- jority of the League of NaUona Hartford, May 9.— (API— The Council members was represented tion To Permit Petitioo Guerrillas Continue To Har- . Dumber of arreata made tn the larg- toda.v as favorable to granting eat raid In Connecticut In aeveral France and Great Britain freedom To Be Called Up At Any years agalnat revenue violators was ass Lines Of Communica- raised to 11 today with half a dozen to recognize the Italian conquest of more expected In various parts of Ethiopia. Time; Passage Predicted. the state. tion; Japs Claim Two Mi- ’‘Realistic” diplomacy, as the Arraignment was begun here to- French and British term their cur- day before U. -
Iowa City, Iowa, Under the Act Around This - Intersection Are Go to Tile New Amphltheatllr
• -- - --~. - - .- tard. Add Cooler Full aame to Senior lOW : ~alknd lib_en ... Loop Lead ,TH,E DAILY IOWAN thund~nto~ mII5lc1erab17 See SIory on Par" " Iowa City's Morning Newspaper :::: fIVE CENTS 'lB. A•• OOIMI., 1'111'.. IOWA CITY. IOWA FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 18. 1942 VOLUME XLDNUMBER 3tf1--1 , I = £ ." f t e , e a -In... 4 •• ra Russians Halt . Initial German Break-Through Hundreds of Enemy Shock Troops Slain In Street Fighting By EDDY GILMORE MOH 'm, Friday (AP)-. Bayonrt - wielrlin~ R n I ian troop wip d out hundredll or (jrrman h 0 r k troop who m a h d into talingrad's trt'et. YI."iIr.rday, lind the m8in ('onCliet till ral on the north. writ rn outskirl or the . eity wh re thou and of nazi have flll/PII, th Sovirt annollnc d <These dramatic plctur. Ihow the attack upon and the Rink-I The navY withheld announcement on the 'Yorktown's 108 1as .he wUh &ood a heavy air attack by bomber and tor-I June 7. At rl~M ",ay be seen some of tht' ship' crew and arly t day. InI of the United stales aircraft carl'ler Yorktown, which until now In the belief Ihe enemy did not know he had pedo planes on June'. Cenler photo shoWl! Ihe carrier rJiKhl personnel walklnl wllh dlfflcuUy on tb lopl~ n"ht WaR lOll. ort Midway, durin, the heavy 11rMInK there June 1. actually sunk the Ihlp. At left the Yorktown may be seen IIstlOS after behlc torpedoed by an enemY sUllmarlne on d('ck of 'he doomed earrl r h rtl beCore he ank. -
In Solomons Lishui Is Attacked
'-‘S«-w ' ,- ■ . '■ • ■ ’ % ' 1^1 MCHTDAT. A W W IC^' MimrireB^ Etmtlhg Hmtnt i Average Daily Cireafattiofi The Republican Town committee Annette Schurr of Chicago applied For tha MoiHh ad M y , 1942 The Weather wriU hold a meeting In the hearings More Joining Manchester ^ for a marriage license in the town Police Court About Town room at the Municipal building at clerk’s office Saturday and ob Local Market Auio GancralorSlirtcr Forooast o t V . B. Weatbor aursau 8 o'clock tomorrow night, and not Date Book tained a waiver of the 5-day 7,494 tonight as had bqen reported. The Coa^ Guard clause' and were married In St. M enbar ad #w Audit and RiolMRl Kmngton Democratic town committee will James’s church this morning. Francis Furphy,^ 187 Hackma Prices Poor and Ignition Service Oontlaued eool tonighL 40 Oxford atreet mre (pending meet there at 8 o'clock tonight. Tonight John F. O’Brien of 1698 Broad tack street, was given a suspended Bmreaa e< OIreulatious • ivMk with Mr. and Mra. Henry Standard First Aid Clam, Lin street, Hartford and Alice Lucille sentence of 30 days in jail this and daugfateav Florad’ce, Contrary to reports there will Three Loral Youths En coln school, 7:30. Fagan of 45 Biro street applied morning by Judge Raymond R. String Beans Only Pro MancheHeih^A City of Village Charpt U L not be any meeting this evening of Last day to tils i^lioations for for a marriage license Saturday. Bowers and ordered to stay away list Following Exam towm primary. -
Softball Opening Postponed to Monday
Harry Grayson’s Softball Opening Postponed to Monday Scoreboard THEY PLAYED THE GAME ... NO. 22 May Wikel Named Jupe Pluvius Optimist Club 30.76 of Favorites Prevail Braves ? Delahanty Led Both Leagues; Meeting 44 Captain Set to Defend During Race Oust Dodgers 17 Bases in Five Times at Bat; Forces Second Title at Jamaica of ‘M’ Nine 9 Fumble GRAYSON Optimist Club, champion of By HARRY ANN ARBOR. Mich , May 20 off \i;A Sports F.ditor lN—The new University of He Tore Infielders Shoes Delay the Fumble Softball League last NL Lead Schedule defend - from year, coming an- *••••• *• is back to Racing Commission «"»».• NEW YORK. May 20 Nrw York Michigan baseball captain—if Tvvcntv-sccond of a series •»w**4.v • * ««p the & Its laurels Stanley Worthing- nounces with evident pride that 37 03 per cent of the favorites, Boston Wins Seven there is college base *all in 1944 By II \RRY GRAYSON Hubarth Schott, ton, president of the local civic exact figure set a year ago, copped the duke during the 2i-da> is Howard Wikel, strong arm- NFA Sports Editor Straight; Cop Two Covered Wagon organization, announced today spring meeting at Jamaica. ed sophomore shortstop from Edward J Delahanty alone that the Optimists would be Looking at the board’s report in reverse. 62 07 per cent of the from Pittsburgh Ann Arbor. led both present marjor leagues to Start Season ‘ baek to “take on all comers.” choices were lost somewhere back in the pack Second, choices had Wikel was nar yesterday m batting. He accomplished I You can im- this remarkable feat by hitting Old Jupiter Pluvius. -
National Pastime a REVIEW of BASEBALL HISTORY
THE National Pastime A REVIEW OF BASEBALL HISTORY CONTENTS The Chicago Cubs' College of Coaches Richard J. Puerzer ................. 3 Dizzy Dean, Brownie for a Day Ronnie Joyner. .................. .. 18 The '62 Mets Keith Olbermann ................ .. 23 Professional Baseball and Football Brian McKenna. ................ •.. 26 Wallace Goldsmith, Sports Cartoonist '.' . Ed Brackett ..................... .. 33 About the Boston Pilgrims Bill Nowlin. ..................... .. 40 Danny Gardella and the Reserve Clause David Mandell, ,................. .. 41 Bringing Home the Bacon Jacob Pomrenke ................. .. 45 "Why, They'll Bet on a Foul Ball" Warren Corbett. ................. .. 54 Clemente's Entry into Organized Baseball Stew Thornley. ................. 61 The Winning Team Rob Edelman. ................... .. 72 Fascinating Aspects About Detroit Tiger Uniform Numbers Herm Krabbenhoft. .............. .. 77 Crossing Red River: Spring Training in Texas Frank Jackson ................... .. 85 The Windowbreakers: The 1947 Giants Steve Treder. .................... .. 92 Marathon Men: Rube and Cy Go the Distance Dan O'Brien .................... .. 95 I'm a Faster Man Than You Are, Heinie Zim Richard A. Smiley. ............... .. 97 Twilight at Ebbets Field Rory Costello 104 Was Roy Cullenbine a Better Batter than Joe DiMaggio? Walter Dunn Tucker 110 The 1945 All-Star Game Bill Nowlin 111 The First Unknown Soldier Bob Bailey 115 This Is Your Sport on Cocaine Steve Beitler 119 Sound BITES Darryl Brock 123 Death in the Ohio State League Craig -
(Iowa City, Iowa), 1942-07-11
10, 1942 =~ Hold ' ~ Cards "at --, Continued Fair -, Today New York In 10lh Innlnl' Contmued fair In eeRtral and east S lo Z. DAILY' IOWAN porUoDl toda,. See Slor, on Pal'e , THE !Ii ''}tecl. IO'fla City's Newspaper " .... : , the Plib. FIVE CENTS 'tBJ!: ASIIOCIATID paull IOWA CITY. IOWA SATURDAY, JULY 11. 1942 VOLUME XLD NUMBER 248 Ire 8akect require. Ir or none I later be e he Use Of ,a gradu. liversilts nent tbls I by Eliza. me eton. oVle 5 an OSSOSI ! Center. rs. R. J Irs. EIdo~ enkinson, Railway Supply,ing, has been Nazis Cut r. Battle of 'Egypt- Rene.wed Central, Red Armies' are J _...:..:..!...-:. ! lead Ways, Means Group Nazis Now Siand Halfway Across Russia , • British r Axis Senate Group sSlon " .. Votes to Up Income As Reds Have Lost Almost All of Ukraine: ~ utz IIlld Desert Forces Tax by 1Per Cent Boosts OPA Ie parenl MOSCOW, aturday (AP)-German troops have driven into he IOWI Rossosh, 150 miles east of the industrial city of Kharkov, and ation, led In(rease to Be Added cut the main railway linking the central and southern red lurageous Fight Fiercely To Previously Agreed Appropriation night at armies. 001 room 12-81 Per Cent Levies A communique early today announced the Russian withdrawal· ,t a meet. Report English, U.S. Raise House-Approved from R08S08h- before a German wedge thrust parallel to the steel ! club. : WASHINGTON (AP)-T h e Planes Disable Many Fi~ure $45,000,000; arm now plucking at Voronezh, 100 miles to the north. [J of the house ways and means committee Restricts Use of Fund R0880sh itself is 20 miles shoJ;t of the Don river which already ation will Nazi Supply Vehicles decided last night to increase sur had been crossed by the Germans striking at Voronezh, but it lis morn. -
@UCMMULES • @Mules Baseball • #Teamucm BASEBALL 1 Crane Stadium / Tompkins Field Has Served As Host Site for Numerous MIAA and Regional Tournaments
@UCMMULES • @Mules_Baseball • #teamUCM BASEBALL 1 Crane Stadium / Tompkins Field has served as host site for numerous MIAA and Regional Tournaments. In the spring of 1998 Central Missouri enjoyed the completion of an outstanding baseball facility to go with its already outstanding baseball program – James R. Crane Stadium at Robert N. Tompkins Field. A $1.2 million construction project, funded primarily by Crane, added a locker room and coaches’ offices for the Mules, an umpires dressing room, new dugouts, permanent seats, a concession stand, a press box and lights to the already existing playing field. In the fall of 2004, a new facility was added to include indoor batting cages and bullpens, a weight room, storage facility, and umpires dressing room. Following that in 2006, permanent seatback chairs were installed for the fans. All of this was funded by Crane. In the summer of 2013, the stadium received another upgrade with a new grass playing surface being installed. In the fall of 2015, a $1.1 million project to outfit the stadium with a sythentic turf playing surface was funded primarily by Crane. The project, which includes synthetic turf from AstroTurf, was completed prior to the Mules’ 2016 home-opener On January 21, 1998, Central Missouri’s Board of Governors approved the naming of the facility, formerly known as Mules’ Field, in honor of Crane and Tompkins. Official dedication ceremonies were held on May 2, 1998. The facility was showcased in the October 1998 issue of Athletics Administration magazine. The first night game played under the new lights took place on March 25, 1998, with the Mules beating Benedictine College 21-6. -
Class of 1947
CLASS OF 1947 Ollie Carnegie Frank McGowan Frank Shaughnessy - OUTFIELDER - - FIRST BASEMAN/MGR - Newark 1921 Syracuse 1921-25 - OUTFIELDER - Baltimore 1930-34, 1938-39 - MANAGER - Buffalo 1934-37 Providence 1925 Buffalo 1931-41, 1945 Reading 1926 - MANAGER - Montreal 1934-36 Baltimore 1933 League President 1937-60 * Alltime IL Home Run, RBI King * 1936 IL Most Valuable Player * Creator of “Shaughnessy” Playoffs * 1938 IL Most Valuable Player * Career .312 Hitter, 140 HR, 718 RBI * Managed 1935 IL Pennant Winners * Led IL in HR, RBI in 1938, 1939 * Member of 1936 Gov. Cup Champs * 24 Years of Service as IL President 5’7” Ollie Carnegie holds the career records for Frank McGowan, nicknamed “Beauty” because of On July 30, 1921, Frank “Shag” Shaughnessy was home runs (258) and RBI (1,044) in the International his thick mane of silver hair, was the IL’s most potent appointed manager of Syracuse, beginning a 40-year League. Considered the most popular player in left-handed hitter of the 1930’s. McGowan collected tenure in the IL. As GM of Montreal in 1932, the Buffalo history, Carnegie first played for the Bisons in 222 hits in 1930 with Baltimore, and two years later native of Ambroy, IL introduced a playoff system that 1931 at the age of 32. The Hayes, PA native went on hit .317 with 37 HR and 135 RBI. His best season forever changed the way the League determined its to establish franchise records for games (1,273), hits came in 1936 with Buffalo, as the Branford, CT championship. One year after piloting the Royals to (1,362), and doubles (249). -
Win, Lose Or Draw
Nats, Kept by Rain From Playing Chisox, Gain Half Game as Bosox Beat Tigers ± 4- 4r +■ ^ — .J- ——^ tmfiajj JSaf $§yat 1$ Scores in A—14 WASHINGTON, D. C., JULY 15, 1945.’ Pot o* Luck Nabs Wildlife Upset Dwyer Arlington, -— ----- ■■—-1 Wright Horse Snares $67,150; Lose or Draw Wolff, Niggeling Win, Pavot Runs Last at Aqueduct BY WALTER McCALLUM. Hurl as Odds-on Favorite, Ridden by Arcaro, Takes Konoye's Death Recalls Golf Stardom Against G. U. Today Early Lead, Folds After Six Furlongs Perhaps Billy Shea, Billy Dettweiler, Charley Pettijohn and the late Lt. John P. Burke, all formerly crack golfers on Georgetown Uni- By thf Associated Press. « By the Associated Press. versity’s best links team, would have a twinge of conscience when Browns Visif CHICAGO, July 14.—Pot o’ Luck, NEW YORK, July 14.—On one of of has been killed on they leam that Prince Fumi Konoye Japan route-running 3-year-old son of the biggest turf upsets of the year, Okinawa. It was Konoye more than any one else on the Princeton Chance Play, finally got lucky today Wildlife won the $50,000-added team who turned in an amazingly fine piece of golf at Manor one aay Two Games From First chilled Dwyer Stakes at Aqueduct today aa in May of 1937 to thwart Georgetown’s burgeoning bid for the Eastern exactly as 25,000 spectators Pavot, the 4-to-5 favorite, finished intercollegiate golf title. Place, Club Slugging at Washington Park figured he last, nearly 30 lengths behind the Burke lies buried in Tunisia, victim of a Nazi bullet. -
TRIPLE PLAY DESCRIPTIONS by Chuck Rosciam and Frank Hamilton (1940-2004)
TRIPLE PLAY DESCRIPTIONS By Chuck Rosciam and Frank Hamilton (1940-2004) GameID Event Text Play Sequence Date Teams Inning Scores Men On Base Play-By-Play Description of First Out Play-By-Play Description of Second Out Play-By-Play Description of Third Out Note of Special Significance BOS194007180 43(B)1X2(36)3XH(652)/GTP 4-3*-6*-5-2* 7/18/1940 Detroit Tigers @ Boston Red Sox - Bottom of the 7th - Score 6-8 (2 Men on: Johnny Peacock 1B, Jim Tabor 3B) Marv Owen (BOS) is the batter with a ?-? count. He hits a grounder to the 2B (Charlie Gehringer) who was set to tag the runner from first, Johnny Peacock, but threw a shot to the 1B (Rudy York) to retire the batter, Marv Owen (OUT 1) 1B threw to the SS (Red Kress) who was covering second in time to tag the slow footed runner from first, Johnny Peacock (OUT 2) SS threw to the 3B (Pinky Higgins) who relayed home to the C (Birdie Tebbetts) who nailed the runner trying to score from third, Jim Tabor (OUT 3) NOTE: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - BSN194007250 3(B)6(2)4(1)/PTP 3*-6*-4* 7/25/1940 Boston Braves @ Chicago Cubs - - Top of the 8th - Score 6-2 (2 Men on: Dom Dallessandro 1B, Gabby Hartnett 2B) Bill Lee (CHN) is the batter with a ?-? count. He tried to sacrifice bunt but hit a popup to the 1B, Buddy Hassett (OUT 1) 1B shot the ball to the SS (Eddie Miller) who doubled up the runner caught off second, Gabby Hartnett (OUT 2) SS pegged -
Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1943-04-30
• 943 == Ration Calendar • D. II aD4 F blao .lamp. eo:p're April II. A, 8, C, n " .... t itampI rspJre ,Aprn!ll; Cooler GAR 'IA" elOupoD. G ....Ir • .Mar ZI; COFFEE ••• poo 2S uplre. May lit; IOWA: Cooler today; rresb to. SUGAR •• 0'00 I ~ exp're. Ma, 51; stro"," winds dlmlnlshlnr aed £ meat damp. expire -.." SI, I DAILY IOWAN O. H, aD. J ,tamp. e.plre kaf I.; THE . this afternoon. ...OIS ••• p.. 17 espl,.. JuD. 11. Iowa City's Morning Newspaper FIVE CENTS THE ASSOOIATED raul IOWA CITY, IOWA FRIDAY. APRIL 30, 1943 Tkl .I.OOIATIO rRISI VOLUME XLm NUMBER 184 Inin, e e lerecl d by hlch ~g ' ia rl.ca-n e enses.. I laton ' Ihe ~iOUJ IB, a RUSSIA, GERMANY PREPARE FOR SPRING DRIVES l ~yCd RAF SOWS Mine Trap , f~D.R~ Warns Solt (oal Miners to End ' Strikes Yanks, French mnie RUSSIA alnla In Nazi Sub Training I\nne , FARTHEST GERMAN !/l1ab By Saturday Morning or Suller Consequences '-,.: ADVANCE, 1941 Waters of Baltic Sea DriYe Deeper :leYe; '- )ARTHEST GERMAN lrtln; \ , * * * rtiels; - l~----------------~ ...... ADVANCE, 1942 Diversionary Bomber lidee: local Leaders,Declare They 'Won't Go Back AFt Unit to Abide ~y PRESENT DAY BAnLELINE Armada Pounds Naval In Mountains man: Salk of Miln .J , and Base at Wilhelmshaven b . 160 5 :(&,. ,: ITller, Without Contract Unless J. L. Lewis Says So' By No Strike Pledge 1 Sharp Counterattacks LONDON (AP) - The RAF Temporarily Stave OH Uaee, William Green Says sowed a massive pattern of mines rll\ce WA. IlTNOTON (AP) - A historic showdown bctwcen Pl'c~i IIcross Hitler's U-boat training Approaching 1st Army dent Roo~('velt nnrl ,Tolin TJ.