Opens Tonight Susan Rogers Shines CHARLES TOWN

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Opens Tonight Susan Rogers Shines CHARLES TOWN GETS CRACK AT CARDS THE EVENING STAR Wojhington, D. C. Restless Wind Shenandoah I Arril 16, 1960 jpOITS A-13 Choiceasl6Go Sherry Experiment Continues Tomorrow Opens Tonight Susan Rogers Shines CHARLES TOWN. W. Vfc„ In Excelsior LOS ANGELES, April 16 1959, broke into the starting April 16 (Special).—West Vir- (AP).—The Larry Sherry ex- lineup Thursday night. ginia’s spring-summer horse With 2d Swim Record scheduled to Br th, Aaaoclated Preaa periment is be re- He got one of the Dodgers’ racing begins tonight at Shen- sumed tomorrow. sparse six hits and er- andoah Downs. BARTLESVILLE, 0k1a.., of Beverley the There are 16Ji0KeS entered played Hills, Calif., The crack relief rorless former record holder. in the $30,800 Excelsior Handi- pitcher for ball, And from now on the horses April 16 (AP).—Swimmers from the Los Angeles Alston has benched will be The cap at Aqueduct today ¦ and Dodgers gets tempo- galloping here and at the Pacific Coast hold a firm finish wu so close it his chance to start his second Don traffic is in rarily a regular, Demeter, neighboring Charles Town, a took officials almost 14 min- some heavy pros- grip today on most of the titles game of the whose hitting thus far failed track utes confirm for the 53d of new season against day-time just a stone’s to the winner. pect running in the National AAU*indoor the St. Louis Cardinals in Me- to match his red-hot work at throw almost the 1-mile test. away, continually Miss Von Saltza easily won morial Coliseum. the plate at this same stage of for the rest of the women's swimming and diving Restless Wind, the Llangol- year. the 500-yard freestyle but The the season a year ago. but slender failed the len is the favorite opposing moundsman, Shenandoah's meeting ex- championships, a to equal 5:36.5 Amer- Farm’s star, Whether Manager Solly Hemus the speedy Davis tends for 31 ican record she established in and is topweighted under 126 an- days, with post- girl from Massachusetts also will be stays remains to be decided. nounced, Ernie Broglio, time for the first at 7:15 the afternoon preliminaries. pounds. Restless Wind is start- race commands a big share of starting for the first time this glory. ing as an entry with Crasher nightly. The 400-yard freestyle relay season. Seventeen - year -old Susan who carries 114. General Manager Bob team from the Multnomah Ath- Sherry, insistent a of the Greenwood on being the Rogers letic Club of The Excelsior Is Leavitt gave track a last Portland, Oreg., only one starting pitcher, got his first Miteff Will Swim Club of Gardner has set mild with a of the inspection this morning and provided a upset good racing cards dot- chance of 1960 against the Fight pronounced 100 and 250 breaststroke record-breaking triumph over ting the country. The $25,000 Chicago Cubs Wednesday everything ready yard night. Machen for the the Santa Southern Cross start. All he needs is records to become double Clara, Calif., team. Handicap at He gave up nine hits in nine Following a a Gulfstream drew friendly nod fropi the The Portland girls, given a seven entries; innings and lost, 4-0, on the winner along with Chris Von of Warner weatherman. Late afternoon terrific boost fin- a dozen 3-year-old fillies were home-run blasts of Ernie Banks Kayo Saltza of the Santa Clara, by a strong showers in the named for the $20,000 Ashland and Frank Thomas. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., April were predicted Calif., Swim Club. ishing lap by Carolyn Wood, Washington-Baltimore Stakes at Keeneland; 11 were 16 (AP).—Alex Miteff can take area, were timed in 3:51.5. Other Sherry’s performance was no but Leavitt Miss Von Saltza. rated the entered for the $20,000 Gover- care of the newcomers in the hopes for a moon- members of the winning team disgrace, however, and his light top Olympic prospect for the nor's Handicap at Mead- heavyweight class, but he still ; night here. were Noel Gable, Joan Mitich Bay teammates didn’t help him United States, has. cruised home must learn to handle the and Nancy Bbs ows, Sportsmans Park opens ex- Appropriate ceremonies will Kanaby. • much. They got only five hits in record time in capturing the BhSIW t • * with the $15,000 Inaugural' perienced fighters. mark the inaugural with Miss Nancy Ramey of the Wash- " joss Glen Hobie. 100 and 500-yard freestyle That was the here Lee Claire ington Athletic Club of Seattle **y '' Handicap in which 13 were en- : consensus Bowman, Cherry Broglio in his only game re- titles. She also was favored to after the big Argentine pum- Blossom Festival bettered her American record tered, and 10 were entered for lieved Bend Mizell in princess from another first Vinegar meled get in the 250- JE the New Philadelphian Don War- Hawaii, officiating at cere- in the 100-yard butterfly event, $5,000 Haven Handi- San Francisco after all was lost in wind- k \ ner into sixth-round technical yard freestyle today’s at Lincoln Downs. a monies following the feature winning in 1:00.3. \ *ww » cap for the Cards. He pitched six of this three-day knockout last night in their up aquatic JRF . and sft furlong Inaugural Handi- innings yielded only five bout. classic. Vendetta Returns nationally televised cap. The Aloha hits and one run as the Giants $1,500 Purse, Warner, away 10 Already eight records have giving a mile and will Walter Wickes, jr.’s Ven- won, 6-1. one-sixteenth, pounds at 192, couldn't answer be been set in as many events, and winner of last run as a secondary feature Race detta. week’s Manager Walt Alston of the the bell for the sixth because four Middleburg in more easily could drop Hy \ Westchester Handicap at honor of Miss Bowman. Aque- Dodgers is in a quandary over of a torn left rib cartilege suf- from sight in the preliminary duct in a 4-horse is Joseph Serio’s Dr. Herb drew Horse Slate photo, Sherry. He would prefer him fered when Miteff exploded a this afternoon and finals Tops back again for the Excelsior for bullpen duty and has the body punch in the fourth round. top impost of 122 pounds for tonight. Two hunt race and with 119 the on meetings pounds. That is the greatest confidence in the Miteff said after the Inaugural, largely the fight Miss came here with i two horse shows the *~ for of victories last Rogers are on same weight Arnold young in that that he has been signed for strength eight man capacity. a no national acclaim, but her week-end calendar in Virginia Hanger’s Whitley, who won the But Californian ¦ year. Alston is going along, at May fight against performance has caught the and Maryland race at Jamaica today. vfe; last spring. least for the Eddie Machen in Madison Chief in the 10- »• .-x-W:? moment, in giving 1 opposition eye of George Haines, United The Middleburg Hunt Cup is Howell E. Jackson's Tick Tock, Square Garden. He subbed for horse field Sherry a shot at a starting role. was expected to States women’s Olympic swim- the feature of this afternoon's in the fourth Westchester, is as Machen last night when Machen come from William B. Casilear’s Sherry, everyone knows, was ming coach. five-race card for the steeple- Sam Snead, six-time winner of the Greens- second high weight with 122. the hero in had to back out because of his Ware, carrying 119 and hurling the Dod- pounds, “She is truly the surprise of chasers at Glenwood Park near The distance is one mile. mother’s illness. Alan B. Hummer’s boro (N. C.) Open golf tournament, reacts gers’ World Series victory over Kiperic, the meet and it's encouraging Middleburg, Va. Post time for his first W. S. Miller’s Better the White Warner, fighting packing 115. to find a to a successful birdie on the 16th Bee, Chicago Sox when good breaststroker in the first race is 2:30 putt green ranked and p.m. with 120 pounds, heads the he two and opponent making this on the to 66 and 36- won saved two Olympic year,” Haines Two timber tests are slated vesterday way a score a his initial field for the Ift-mile Southern games. appearance on na- said. at the nole total of 134. Dow same hours at Monkton. Defending Champion Cross. Better Bee tional TV, bloodied Miteff's Her won the Alston is going on with an- mark of 1:12.8 in the Md., where the John Rush also has 134 face with of lefts and Finsterwald a at the halfway in 1958 and 1959. Mrs. other a flurry last race experiment—this one his McCorkle Heads 100-yard breaststroke night Streett Memorial and My to tie Sam for the lead.—AP A. Shaw rights in the first and second came in point Wirephoto. Q. Me Kean’s Polylad own—is btarting Tommy Davis sensational style. She Lady's Manor are to be run. rounds. had and Elmendorf Farm’s Day in Centerfield tonight and prob- Bolling Trio in only the fifth best qualify- The Orange Schooling Show Court are next with 116 each. ably tomorrow. Davis, at Spo- ing time. is an all-day affair for hunters She trailed kane the most valuable player Service by two full strokes at Orange, Va.
Recommended publications
  • OW TIDE 10/10 5.5 at 0418 10/9 0.6 at 2216 Ro/Lo 5.7 at 1636 ::Lite 10/10 0.4 at 1026 HOURGLASS"'
    ...' -------- -------------- HIGH TIDE LOW TIDE 10/10 5.5 AT 0418 10/9 0.6 AT 2216 rO/lo 5.7 AT 1636 ::lite 10/10 0.4 AT 1026 HOURGLASS"'. VOL. 3 No. 938 KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS MoNDAY 9 OCT06ER 1961 REDS FIR~ AT & CAPTURE 10 EAST-WEST DEADLOCK OVER BERLIN REMAINS AS TlGHT AS EVER PEOPLE FLEEING TO WEST BERLIN IN SPITE OF KENNEDY-GROMYKO TALKS IN WASHINGTON BERLIN, OCT. 8 (UPI)-EAST GERMAN WASHINGTON, OCT. (UPI)-THE EAST-WEST DEADLOCK OVER BERLIN REMAINED TIGHT COMMUNIST POLICE TONIGHT FIRED AT 10 7 AS EVER TODAY DESPITE A TWO-HOUR CONFERENCE BETWEEN PRESIDENT KENNEcry AND MEN AND WOMEN AND CAPTURED THEM AS SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER ANDREI GROMYKO. THEY TRIED TO ESCAPE INTO THE AMERICAN OFFICIAL SOURCES SAID THE MEETING LAST NIGHT AT THE WHITE HOUSE PRODUCED SECTOR OF BERLIN, WEST BERLIN POLICE u REPORTED. NO "GIVE WHATSOEVER. KENNEDY, ACCORDING TO U~S. OFFICIALS, EMPHASIZED THAT THE WEST IS AS DETER­ THERE WERE TWO SEPARATE INCIDENTS, MINED AS EVER TO DEFEND ITS RIGHTS IN BERLIN AND ITS ACCESS TO THE RED-ENCIR­ ONE INVOLVING EIGHT AND THE OTHER TWO CLED CITY. PERSONS. HE MADE IT CLEAR THAT HE WANTED GROMYKO, WHO LEAVES FOR MONDAY, TO FOUR OF THE MEN WERE BELIEVED TO BE Moscow WEST BERLINERS WHO HAD SNEAKED INTO EMPHASIZE THIS ALLIED STAND TO SOVIET PREMIER NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV. GROMYKO, EAST BERLIN TO TRY TO SMUGGLE THEIR FOR HIS PART, RESTATED KHRUSHCHEV!S DEMAND THAT ANY FORMAL BERLIN NEGOTIAT­ IONS BE BASED ON RUSSIA'S PROPOSED PEACE TREATY WITH COMMUNIST EAST GERMANY, EAST GERMAN GIRL FRIENDS TO THE WEST.
    [Show full text]
  • Bazooka Baseball Card Checklist
    1959 Bazooka Baseball Checklist Richie Ashburn Hank Aaron (Name In White ) Hank Aaron (Name In Yellow ) Ernie Banks Ken Boyer Orlando Cepeda Bob Cerv Rocky Colavito Del Crandall Jim Davenport Don Drysdale Nellie Fox Jackie Jensen Harvey Kuenn Mickey Mantle Willie Mays Bill Mazeroski Roy McMillan Billy Pierce Roy Sievers Duke Snider Gus Triandos Bob Turley Vic Wertz 1960 Bazooka Baseball Checklist 1 Ernie Banks (Hand Cut) 2 Bud Daley (Hand Cut) 3 Wally Moon (Hand Cut) 4 Hank Aaron (Hand Cut) 5 Milt Pappas (Hand Cut) 6 Dick Stuart (Hand Cut) 7 Bob Clemente (Hand Cut) 8 Yogi Berra (Hand Cut) 9 Ken Boyer (Hand Cut) 10 Orlando Cepeda (Hand Cut) 11 Gus Triandos (Hand Cut) 12 Frank Malzone (Hand Cut) 13 Willie Mays (Hand Cut) 14 Camilo Pascual (Hand Cut) 15 Bob Cerv (Hand Cut) 16 Vic Power (Hand Cut) Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 17 Larry Sherry (Hand Cut) 18 Al Kaline (Hand Cut) 19 Warren Spahn (Hand Cut) 20 Harmon Killebrew (Hand Cut) 21 Jackie Jensen (Hand Cut) 22 Luis Aparicio (Hand Cut) 23 Gil Hodges (Hand Cut) 24 Richie Ashburn (Hand Cut) 25 Nellie Fox (Hand Cut) 26 Robin Roberts (Hand Cut) 27 Joe Cunningham (Hand Cut) 28 Early Wynn (Hand Cut) 29 Frank Robinson (Hand Cut) 30 Rocky Colavito (Hand Cut) 31 Mickey Mantle (Hand Cut) 32 Glen Hobbie (Hand Cut) 33 Roy McMillan (Hand Cut) 34 Harvey Kuenn (Hand Cut) 35 Johnny Antonelli (Hand Cut) 36 Del Crandall (Hand Cut) 34 Al Kaline (Hand Cut-Holding Two Bats) 35 Ken Boyer (Hand Cut-Cap To Waist) 36 Tommy Davis (Hand Cut-Batting) 1961 Bazooka Baseball Checklist 1 Art Mahaffey
    [Show full text]
  • 1960-63 Post Cereal Baseball Card .Pdf Checklist
    1960 Post Cereal Box Panels Mickey Mantle Don Drysdale Al Kaline Harmon Killebrew Eddie Mathews Bob Cousy Bob Pettit Johnny Unitas Frank Gifford 1961 Post Cereal Baseball Card Checklist 1 Yogi Berra (Hand Cut) 1 Yogi Berra (Perforated) 2 Elston Howard (Hand Cut) 2 Elston Howard (Perforated) 3 Bill Skowron (Hand Cut) 3 Bill Skowron (Perforated) 4 Mickey Mantle (Hand Cut) 4 Mickey Mantle (Perforated) 5 Bob Turley (Hand Cut) 5 Bob Turley (Perforated) 6 Whitey Ford (Hand Cut) 6 Whitey Ford (Perforated) 7 Roger Maris (Hand Cut) 7 Roger Maris (Perforated) 8 Bobby Richardson (Hand Cut) 8 Bobby Richardson (Perforated) 9 Tony Kubek (Hand Cut) 9 Tony Kubek (Perforated) 10 Gil McDougald (Hand Cut) 10 Gil McDougald (Perforated) 11 Cletis Boyer (Hand Cut) 12 Hector Lopez (Hand Cut) 12 Hector Lopez (Perforated) 13 Bob Cerv (Hand Cut) 14 Ryne Duren (Hand Cut) 15 Bobby Shantz (Hand Cut) 16 Art Ditmar (Hand Cut) 17 Jim Coates (Hand Cut) 18 John Blanchard (Hand Cut) Compliments of BaseballCardBinders.com© 2019 1 19 Luis Aparicio (Hand Cut) 19 Luis Aparicio (Perforated) 20 Nelson Fox (Hand Cut) 20 Nelson Fox (Perforated) 21 Bill Pierce (Hand Cut) 21 Bill Pierce (Perforated) 22 Early Wynn (Hand Cut) 22 Early Wynn (Perforated) 23 Bob Shaw (Hand Cut) 24 Al Smith (Hand Cut) 24 Al Smith (Perforated) 25 Minnie Minoso (Hand Cut) 25 Minnie Minoso (Perforated) 26 Roy Sievers (Hand Cut) 26 Roy Sievers (Perforated) 27 Jim Landis (Hand Cut) 27 Jim Landis (Perforated) 28 Sherman Lollar (Hand Cut) 28 Sherman Lollar (Perforated) 29 Gerry Staley (Hand Cut) 30 Gene Freese
    [Show full text]
  • The Ledger and Times, July 17, 1959
    Murray State's Digital Commons The Ledger & Times Newspapers 7-17-1959 The Ledger and Times, July 17, 1959 The Ledger and Times Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt Recommended Citation The Ledger and Times, "The Ledger and Times, July 17, 1959" (1959). The Ledger & Times. 3658. https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt/3658 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Murray State's Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Ledger & Times by an authorized administrator of Murray State's Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. s • •• ' AP ••••S 'hi irized Selected As A Beet Al? Round Kentucky Community Newspaper The Full "Largest e. Picture Cirt:ulation In MS of Kentucky The City Politics Largest Whole Circulation In ilk lb.-- The County United Ptess International IN OUR 80th YEAR Murray,'Ky., Friday Afternoon, July 17, .1959 MURRAY POPULATION 10,100 Vol. LXXX No. 168 rik Portion. ;9° lb. CASTRO RESIGNS AS CUBAN PREMIER tt Portion Children Killed As ippling Polio On Nixon Plane To Try To Beat Big Crowd Stampedes Dr. Fite Is swing; Urge The $202,249 Is Speculation Rises Since The II). I, SEOUL (UPI).— Me• than e Of Vaccine NY-Moscow Time Of Kozlov a dozen children were skilled in Speaker At isked In Suits Resignation Was Not Forced Pusan tonight when thousands of spectators at an open air show By HELEN THOMAS By ERNEST BARCELLA Airport in a different type of. feught their way but of a narrew Uniteel Press International By RUDY CERNKOVIC ,Reynolds and Kaiser.
    [Show full text]
  • Kit Young's Sale
    KIT YOUNG’S SALE #21 Welcome to Kit Young’s Sale #21. Included in this sale are more fantastic sets MAKE US from The Barry Korngiebel Collection (and we have extended the “make us an AN OFFER II offer” option). Also included are outstanding new arrivals, 1/2 price GAI graded For a limited time you can make us an offer cards part II, baseball lot specials part II, a new set special section, Ted Williams on any set below (or any set on specials and much more. You can order by phone, fax, email, regular mail or www.kityoung.com). We will either accept online through Paypal, Google Checkout or credit cards. If you have any questions your offer or counter with a price more acceptable to both of us. or would like to email your order please email us at [email protected]. Our regular business hours are 8-6 Monday-Friday Pacific time. Toll Free 888-548-9686. 1948 BOWMAN FOOTBALL A 1962 TOPPS BASEBALL B COMPLETE SET VG-EX/EX COMPLETE SET EX-MT This 108 card set issued by Bowman consists of mostly Popular wood-grain border set loaded with stars and rookie cards as it was one of the very first football sets ever Hall of Famers. Overall grade is EX-MT (many better and issued. We’ll call this set VG-EX/EX overall with some better some less). Includes Koufax EX-MT, Clemente EX+/EX- (approx. 20 cards EX-MT) and a few worse. Most cards have MT, Mantle PSA 6 EX-MT, Maris EX/EX+, Berra PSA 6 some wear on the corners but still exhibit great eye appeal.
    [Show full text]
  • A2tatt Aide to Pro..Pecti%C Employers
    Sign-Up Vets Talent Sign-Ups Korean veterans and PL. 634 cheek with eltit.11:11111111*-111 tsar orphans) should vett. office, AdmIUS, the Korean acts of an kind *Mould fill .sit study card is on flle to see if a cards In activities office. Adm. tor the tall eemester, according co- ?Al. by Friday. to lir 1111.111414.11 in 1 Mary SI lllll ns, veterans' all a uslitirogrupItcd list jiaui ardinator. Attendance bruit, for September mid (1, -tuber will be a2tatt aide to pro..pecti%c employers. Sd- viKised Nov. 1-3. Cheeks will ar- according to Stic Curia. oriersta Mrs. Sijuinlis of the about Nov. SU, Iliai chairman. VW. added. SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE 47,- ank VOL. 49 4111110 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10 196I No. 10 Dr. Pouting Professor To Discuss of Travelers From SJS nse World Peace, the 'On Thermonuclear iNar' iza- 'European Way View Not Shelters 'On Thermonuclear War.'' an bill/Adam and the Cantlier CUM. all its 'IONI IlEtn.ES allint ’Ail1111’- examination of the militaly altern- flit lee. 1 ill waterfronts, bargaining tor wares atives with which Sour country is "II is Kahn's contention that We ,,-Lighting. .street dancing not increase safety from nuclear on the famous Rialto bridge. attack, declared Dr. Linus Paul- faced, will be reviewed he Dr. must accept the possibility of the ...bathing on the Italian Rivieria VIEW OF RUINS ing, Nobel Prize winner in (item - Ralph Parkman, professor of chem- beginning of thermonuclear war at French Rivieria , ogling on the Rome...the ancient ruins of the bitty, at an informal press confer- ical and metallurgical engineering, any time; and that if proper plan- ink drinking German beer, French dead empire.
    [Show full text]
  • Cabrera, Lorenzo 1941-1943 Club Contramaestre (Cuba)
    Cabrera, Lorenzo 1941-1943 Club Contramaestre (Cuba) (Chiquitin) 1944-1945 Regia de la Liga de Verano 1946-1948 New York Cubans (NNL) 1949-1950 New York Cubans (NAL) 1950 Mexico City (Mexican League) (D) 1951 Oakland Oaks (PCL) 1951 Ottawa (IL) 1951 Club Aragua (Mexican Pacific Coast League) 1952 El Escogido (Dominican Summer League) 1953 Aguilas Cibaenas (Dominican Summer League) 1954 Del Rio (Big State League) 1955 Port Arthur (Big State League) 1956 Tijuana-Nogales (Arizona-Mexico League) 1956 Mexico City Reds (Mexican League) 1957 Combinado (Nicaraguan League) 1957 Granada (Nicaraguan League) Winter Leagues: 1942-1943 Almendares (Cuba) 1946-1947 Marianao (Cuba) 1947-1948 Marianao (Cuba) 1948-1949 Marianao (Cuba) 1949-1950 Marianao (Cuba) 1950-1951 Marianao (Cuba) 1951 Habana (Caribbean World Series - Caracas) (Second Place with a 4-2 Record) 1951-1952 Marianao (Cuba) 1952-1953 Marianao (Cuba) 1953 Cuban All Star Team (American Series - Habana, Cuba) (Cuban All Stars vs Pittsburgh Pirates) (Pirates won series 6 games to 4) 1953-1954 Havana (Cuba) 1953-1954 Marianao (Cuba) 1954-1955 Cienfuegos (Cuba) 1955-1956 Cienfuegos (Cuba) Verano League Batting Title: (1944 - Hit .362) Mexican League Batting Title: (1950 - Hit .354) Caribbean World Series Batting Title: (1951 - Hit .619) (All-time Record) Cuban League All Star Team: (1950-51 and 1952-53) Nicaraguan League Batting Title (1957 – Hit .376) Cuban Baseball Hall of Fame (1985) 59 Caffie, Joseph Clifford (Joe) 1950 Cleveland Buckeyes (NAL) 1950 Signed by Cleveland Indians (MLBB) 1951 Duluth Dukes (Northern League) 1951 Harrisburg Senators (Interstate League) 1952 Duluth Dukes (Northern League) 1953 Indianapolis Indians (AA) 1953 Reading Indians (Eastern League) 1954-1955 Indianapolis Indians (AA) 1955 Syracuse Chiefs (IL) 1956 Buffalo Bisons (IL) 1956 Cleveland Indians (ML) 1956 San Diego Padres (PCL) 1957 Buffalo Bisons (IL) 1957 Cleveland Indians (ML) 1958-1959 Buffalo Bisons (IL) 1959 St.
    [Show full text]
  • Cornell BAKE
    - I - i - i . ■ T " - ' FRIDAY, MARCH 81, 1981 PAGE EIGHTEEN Ayerage Daily Net Preaa Ron The Weather lianrIjPBtpr lEufttittg IJpralb For the Week Ended Foreeut of U> S. Weather Boreae March 11, 1961 the addiUonal year or begin col­ Rain ending this evening, breeey, David L. Crafts, son of Mr. and ] Early Choice Plan lege-level courses In off-duty edu­ Program Slated cool tonlghL Low In 80a., Breew, Mrs. Roger E. Crafts,- 97 Prince-. 13,317 About Town cational programs. lEupnittg cool Bnnday, chanee of wiew inr- ton St., earned high honors during Monday by WSCS Member of the Andit ‘ ' / Offered by Army High school seniors are offered Bureau of Olrcnlatlon rtea..High In 40a. the winter term et Wllliston i a special “early choice’’ option. Academy in Eaatham^lon. Mass. Manchester’^ A City of Village Charm Connd N. Shannon, aviation Thi senior may apply for the grad­ A program of entertainment and electrician’s mate airman. VSN. ! Sgt. Charles J. Greenfield, Man­ chester U.S. Army. recruiter, has uate enlistment training during fellow’shlp for WSCS members and *on of Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. • Robert E. McIntosh Jr.. 28 i all mothers and daughters of North announced a special graduate en­ the 60 days before he graduates, (ClMZifled AdverttaiBg on Pago 10) Shannon. 1" Ot'al Lane; is sem’ng Harvard Rd.. has been elected city I and choose the course he wishes to Methodist Church will be held VOL. LXXX, NO. 154 (TWELVE PAGES—TV SECTION)-’ MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1961 PRICE FIVE CENTS with Fighter Squadron 101 at the ; editor of the Peddler, yearbook at listment prt^ram open to high school seniors and graduates.
    [Show full text]
  • Liil. VOL 3 No
    11()lIIl. VOL 3 No. 839 KWAJALEIN, M.I. THURSDAY 15 JUNE 1961 IMPORTANT VISITORS TO ARRIVE HERE TUESDAY RUSS ACCUSES U.S. OF VIOLATIONS OF NEXT TUESDAY,TWO PARTIES WILL ARRIVE ON THE TRUCE IN LAOS - HOLDING UP AJALEIN FOR FAMILIARIZATION TOURS PEACE CONFERENCE ~DM R. L. CAMPBELL, RADM C. D. RIGGS, GENEVA, JUNE 13 (UPI) RUSSIA TODAY ACCUSED AND A PART( OF TEN OTHER NAVAL OFFICERS THE UNITED STATES OF SUPPORTING "FLAGRANT" WILL TOUR KWAJALEIN ANn ASSOCIATED FACIL­ VIOLATIONS OF THE TRUCE IN LAOS AND OF HOLD­ ITIES DURING THEIR BRIEF STAY FROM JUNE ING UP CON~ERENCE NEGOTIATIONS HERE ON A 20 TO 22 NEUTRALITY SETTLEMENT FOR THE SOUTHEAST MAJOft GENERAL G. A. BLAKE, USAF, AND A ASIAN KINGDOM PARTY OF TEN AIR FORCE OFFICERS WILL ALSO SOVIET FOREIGN MINISTER ANDREI GROMYKO RIVE ON TUESDAY, TO DEPART THE FOLLOWING BLAMED U.S. AMBASSADOR W. AVERELL HARRIMAN AY HE IS VICE COMMANDER AND CHIEF OF AND HIS DELEGATION ~OR HOLDING UP THE STAFF, PACIFIC AIR FORCES CONFERENCES WORK FOR A MONTH "USING VIOLATIONS OF THE CEASErlRE IN LAOS AS A PRETEXT" BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY VISITS U.S. FOR A~ AMERICAN SPOKESMAN SAID THE RUSSIANS TALKS WITH SECRETARY OF STATE DEAN RUSK" CHARGE WAS "A VERY WEAK ATTEMPT TO DEFEND WASHINGTON, JUNE 13 (UPI) BRITISH FOREIGN COMMUNIST VIOLATIONS OF THE CEASE-fiRE" SECRETARY LORD HOME ARRIVED HERE TONIGHT EVEN AS GROMYKO ADDRESSED THE 14-NATION FOR TALKS ON THE DEADLOCKED GENEVA CONTERENCE, REPORT ARRIVED HERE OF A PRO­ NEGOTIATIONS FOR A LAOS PEACE SETTLEMENT, COMMUNIST REBEL ATTACK NEAR BAN HAT Bo IN A NUCLEAR TEST BAN, AND THE RENEWED THREAT LAOS IN WHICH GOVERNMENT DEfENDERS WERE OF A BERLIN CRISIS FORCES BACK LORD HOME LISTED THESE THREE SUBJECTS AS "WE ARE PREPARED TO GET DOWN TO WORK THE MAIN POINTS HE WOULD DISCUSS WITH NO\-J," THE AMERICAN SPOKESMAN SAID OF SECRETARY OF STATE DEAN RUSK RUSSIA's CHARGES OF U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Billy Joe Davidson, “Tar Heel Bonus Baby” ©Diamondsinthedusk.Com
    Billy Joe Davidson, “Tar Heel Bonus Baby” ©DiamondsintheDusk.com First spotted by a Cleveland Indians scout while pitching for a Marion, North Carolina, American Legion team at the age of 13, Billy Joe David- son signs with the American League team four years later on May 28, 1951, at the Robert E. Lee Hotel in Winston-Salem. It’s reported that Davidson signs for ” $150,000, eclipsing the $100,000 the Pittsburgh Pirates paid to Paul Pettit two years earlier as the highest total to date paid to a “Bonus Baby”. “It’s the Bob Feller story all over again,” said Cleveland general man- ager Hank Greenberg. “This kid was taught by his father to pitch. He started out teaching him to throw in the living room of his home in Marion, N.C. Then when he got big enough, he trained him out in the back yard.” The 6-3, 215-pound Davidson later reveals that the deal was for $75,000 and that it was a package deal, with the pitcher getting $37,500 and his father, Troy, getting the same amount to act as a Cleveland scout. After going 19-1 in two years (1949 & 1950) at Oak Ridge Military Acad- emy in Greensboro, Cleveland reaches an agreement with the 17-year- old phenom to sign a contract in 1950 with the San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League, who have a working agreement with the Indians ... unfortunately for Davidson, the working agreement ends before he can pitch an inning in the PCL. Having completed his two years of athletic eligibility at Oak Ridge, Davidson is not eligible for conference competition in 1951 ..
    [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]
  • Baseballtown 1 History Book
    ASEBALLTOWN ISTORY OOK B 1 H B TABLE OF CONTENTS THE HISTORY OF PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL IN READING .......................................................................................................... 2 OFFENSIVE LEADERS SINCE 1952 (KEY: PHI = READING PHILLIES SOX = READING RED SOX IND = READING INDIANS) TOP BATTNG AVERAGES AND HOME RUN HITTERS ........................................................................................................... 5 RBI AND AT-BATS ........................................................................................................................................................ 6 MOST DOUBLES AND TRIPLES ......................................................................................................................................... 7 HITS AND RUNS SCORED ................................................................................................................................................ 8 TOTAL BASES AND WALKS ............................................................................................................................................. 9 STOLEN BASES AND CAUGHT STEALING ......................................................................................................................... 10 STRIKEOUTS AND HIT BY PITCH .................................................................................................................................... 11 SACRIFICE BUNTS AND FLIES .......................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]