U.S. to Stop Reds in Laos Reds Block UN Adlai

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

U.S. to Stop Reds in Laos Reds Block UN Adlai ATcragre Dally Net Preas Rdn The Weather For the Week Ended FerecMt of IT. 8. Weather Bweaa March 11, 1961 _ _ '* 8now or elect beflniibic late 9^. nlcht, ehaaglaa to rata Wedaea- n si 13,317 dajr. lioweet toalght M to El. Member of the Audit Hiah«at Wedneeday 46 to 66. Bulwui of OiroalBtIpn Manchester— A City of Village Charm VOL. LXXX, NO. 144 (SIXTEEN PAGES) MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1961 (Claaeified Advertlefaif on Page 14) PRICE FIVE CENTS Btitish Back Plan State News Roundup U.S. to Stop Reds in Laos U.S. Bids Reds “ 1— Officials Seek Check N-Tests Bus Strike End Hartford, March 21 (A^— Geneva, March 21 — ♦United Btatai propoeee to hold State officials confer again Reds Block UN (/P) Adlai The United States proposed some underground tests using old today in attempt to end the today to allow Soviet inspec­ devices. Under Dean's new pro­ 24-day-old strike against the posal these would be open to un­ Connecticut Railway & Light­ tion of American atomic de­ restricted Soviet Inspection. vices exploded either in seis­ David Ormsby - Gore, British ing Co. mic research programs or for minister of state, backed Dean's The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph P. Hits Soviet President proposals. Donnelly, chairman of the State peaceful purposes. The negotiations had been in Mediation Board, and State L>abor The American propoaal was recess since Dec. 5 to gdve Presi­ Commisisoner Renato E. Rlcclutl Congo Plan made with British backing at the dent Kennedy's new administra­ called their meeting to discuss pos­ Talks to resumed 3-power talks on suspen­ tion time to prepare Its negotiat­ sible new moves to break the dead­ sion of nuclear weapons tests. ing pdisltions. lock. Soviet ' Delegate Semyon K. All the delegates were cheerful The strike by 497 bus drivers and As Ruinous Tsarapkin declhied to express an on their arrival at Palace of Na­ mechanics began Feb. 27. It has attitude until his government can Advisors tions. forced 70,000 daily bus riders in study the proposal in detail. Tsarapkin was asked by report- Waterbury, Bridgeport, Norwalk United Nations, N. Y Tthe West earlier had proposed and New Britain areas to seek March 21 (IP)—U.S. Delegate By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER . « 27-month moratorium on small other means of transportation. (Contlnued on Page Eight) Adlai E. Stevenson today ac)- Washington, March 21 (/P) underground tests. The Russians Msgr. Donnelly and Rlcclutl met cused the Soviet Union of ob- asked for at least four years. The yesterday. They discussed th e, . .. e ffo rts in Thp —President Kennedy has de­ United States now is willing to ex­ Nikifa Prods Reds union members' 209-104 rejection ptrucung U.IN. eiioris m ine cided that the United States tend the moratorium. over the weekend of the company's 1 Congo and Of injecting into will not stand idly by and let During the moratorium research latest settlement offer. the U.N. Congo debate "the would be undertaken to improve To Conquer World Rlcclutl also met briefly yes­ Soviet - backed Communists most destructive spirit of the take over Laos. The President detection methods. terday with Gov. John N. Dempsey Cold War." U.S. Delegate Arthur H. Dean Moscow, March 21 (/P)—Premier at the capltol. is reported $o tiike an increas­ said the United States and Britain The Soviet Union does not Khrushchev told the Soviet people The governor made no decision want the United Nations to suc­ ingly urgent view of the Laos are willing to grant East-West today that they, can rest content I intervene again in .the dead­ parity in the control commission ceed in The Congo," Stevenson crisis. only when jhe whole world goes locked negotiations between the told the U.N. General Assembly. Exactly what aettona the United to enforce the treaty. Communist. company and the Amalgamated States should now set in motion Dean's proposals were aimed at Stevenson spoke after Soviet "We are happy when we build Association of Street, Electric Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gro­ to deal with Red pressures re­ breaking the deadlock in the 2 Vi communism (here) but that is not Railway and Motor Coach Em­ mains to be determined.' This was year old negotiations. myko had denounced U.N. Secre­ r enough," he said. “We shall be ployes of America. tary-general Dag Hammarskjold understood to be the major con­ He said the two western powers happy when the people of all coun­ Both sides emphasized last night cern of a meeting which the are ready to adopt a "full ban on “as an accomplice and organizer” tries stand under the banner of they had no new proposals to of the slaying of deposed Congo­ President called at rile White high altitude tests and to install Marxism-Lieninism and the Com­ make. House this afternoon.. ' a high altitude monitoring sys'‘ munist banner will fly over the The union's chief negotiator,- lese leader Patrice Lumumba. Gromyko demanded the dis­ The session was the second with­ tern” proposed by eastern and west­ whole planet." Archie Cuthbertson, said in Bridge­ missal of the Secretary-general, in two days bringing toge>er the ern scientists. Khrushchev spoke on a nation­ port the weekend vote showed "the President's top military and dip­ The western powers also are wide radio hookup from Alma Ata, company should do a little soul- withdrawal of the U.N. forces from The Congo within a month lomatic advisers for a review of willing, to reduce the number of capital of the virgin land repub­ searching and come up with a bet­ the problem of Laos. The situation control posts to be constructed In lic of Kazakhstan. This was the ter offer.'" smd a thorough overhauling of the whole U.N. structure. has grown more ominous because the Soviet Union. second speech on his current tour CRAL officials repeated that the a Soviet-Amerlcan conference last The negotiations have bogged of agricultural areas to be broad­ proposal was management's last Stevenson called Gromyko's at­ tack on Hammarskjold "wild, irre- Saturday produced no hope of an down over methods of policing a cast live. agreed diplomatic solution for test ban and particularly over the His declaration about the ulti­ ‘’"■Jhe repected offe^ called for an I Laos. difficulty of detecting under­ mate victory of communism got a immediate 5-cent-an-hour w age' e na e i been spared the charge of an accomplice of The United State-s is under­ ground tests. To gain more in­ increase, retroactive to Oct. 1, an stood to hav» advised its chief al­ formation on this subject, the (Contlnued on Page Eight) murder," he said. additional hike of 114 cents on Stevenson received several lies, Britain and France, last week April 1. bringing the scale to $2.30, rounds of applause during his that it intended to meet Soviet plus an agreement to reopen wage short speech and was gfiven a big pressures on Laos with counter British Naval Spy TrUd ‘ discussions after 00 days. ovation at the conclusion. pressures, ' but at that time the The last contract expired in main hope here was for a diplo- I He said that for Gromyko to use September, but the union employes the. assembly for such "Insensate 1 maUc solutfbn of the crisis. remained on the job during the attacks” threatened the very sur­ On Saturday, Secretary of State protracted talks on a new pact. vival of the United Nations "as an Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko makes an emphatic gesture ss he denounces the Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Mystery Man Denies The current wage scale for driv­ effective Instrument for peace and proposed Congo federation in an address before the UN General Assembly today. (AP Minister Andrei Gromyko confer- ers is $2.23 1/2 cents an hour. The progress." Photofax). red at the State Department for union originally had demanded The U.S. delegate declared that five hours. They spent more time $2.41 an hour. if the United Nations acceded to on Laos than' on any other sub­ the Soviet demand it would mean Near End of January ject. Groonyko stood firm on the U.S. Pair Red Spies Raybimn Links Soviet position that rite .way to Denies Tax Evasion . substitution,, , , of „ anarchy. « for con- New Haven, March 21 (;P)—The- stroctive Int^ational effort break the crisis is to hold an In­ ___ He referred to the great and ex­ ternational conference. Rusk, who London, MaroA'—il VP)—The^ Lonsdale made no mention of public defender of Windham Coum- Defense Costs, considers such a conference a ty has pleaded innocent in federal pensive effort of the United Na­ mystery man of the British naval the other two defendants: Henry tions in. The Congo and said "I New RB4 7 Incident stalling device, unsucce.ssfully F. Houghton, 55-year-old British court to a charge Of- evasion of sought' Soviet cooperation in Im­ spy trial told the court today that wish the Soviet Union would con­ Budget Deficit naval clerk, and his girl friend more than $16,000 in federal in­ tribute something to it besides ob­ mediate measures to end the civil apy equipment found in a suburban Ethel E. Gee, 46, a fellow em­ come taxes. struction and criticism.” This was war and Unify the country under bungalow had no connection 'With ploye at the Portland Naval Base He is Irwin I. Krug, 51 of Wllli- reference to the Soviet .refusal Washington, March 21 VPh~ a policy of guaranteed neutrality.
Recommended publications
  • The Legend of Big Klu Still Lives Large
    Fifty years later: The legend of Big Klu still lives large By Paul Ladewski Staff Writer Posted June 9, 2009 The area once referred to as Argo is located eight miles west of old Comiskey Park, a decidedly blue‐collar town known for a corn milling and processing plant that is among the largest of its kind. As the barely 10,000 residents would tell you, it has the odor to prove it, too. But to many Chicago baseball fans, especially those on the South Side, the location is known for something of far greater significance. It also was home to Ted Kluszewski, the 6‐foot‐ 2, 225‐pound mountain of a man with the famous 15‐inch biceps, whose legend in White Sox history will live even longer than the home runs he hit decades ago. “I remember the first time that I saw Ted in those cut‐off sleeves," former White Sox pitcher Billy Pierce still recalls his trademark style nearly a half century later. "They were good‐sized. He was a big man. A big man." Says Bill "Moose" Skowron, the former White Sox and New York Yankees first baseman who crossed paths with Big Klu many times in their careers. "Everybody knows Ted could hit a baseball. What some people don't know is that he was a helluva first baseman and a helluva nice guy, too. And he always played in those short‐sleeve shirts. He was built like a rock, you know." How can the South Side of Chicago ever forget? There Kluszewski will forever be remembered as one of the greatest Brinks jobs in White Sox history, a local boy who made very, very good one unforgettable season.
    [Show full text]
  • Kit Young's Sale
    KIT YOUNG’S SALE #20 Welcome to Kit Young’s Sale #20. Included in this sale are more fantastic sets from MAKE US The Barry Korngiebel Collection (and for the first time you can make us your best offer AN OFFER! For a limited time you can on them, please see below). Also included outstanding new arrivals, a 1939 Play Ball make us an offer on any set below set break, bargain priced baseball lots, ½ priced GAI graded cards, vintage wrapper (or any set on www.kityoung.com). specials and much more. You can order by phone, fax, email, regular mail or online We will either accept your offer through Paypal, Google Checkout or credit cards. If you have any questions or would or counter with a price more acceptable to both of us. 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. 1960 TOPPS BASEBALL A 1962 TOPPS BASEBALL B COMPLETE SET EX-MT COMPLETE SET EX-MT Popular horizontally formatted set, loaded Awesome wood grain border set (including 9 variations) with stars and Hall of Famers. This set also loaded with stars and Hall of Famers. Overall grade of set includes a run of the tougher grey back series is EX-MT with many better and a few less. Includes Maris cards (#375-440 - 59 of 65 total). Overall #1 EX+/EX-MT, Koufax EX-MT, Clemente EX-MT/NR-MT, condition of set is EX-MT with many better Mantle/Mays #18 EX-MT, Banks EX-MT, B.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1956-04-28
    . ~ 89-Year-Old Coed tIl May Game fo SiJl .', Serving The State University of Iowa and the People of Iowa City ., AUDRIY ROORDA ,., ~ ...,. .' 7 .. An 89-year-old coed may come to '. ~ , ~~ in 1" - Five Centt a Copy Member oC Associated Press - AP Leased Wire and PhoCD Serviro ]owa City, Iowa, Saturday, April 28, 1956 SUI next (all. At au .,e wben many women are read)' for rock­ " ing-chair remlnisclDJ and knitting. this woman js determined to get a college .~. Miss Julia MUler, who will be 10 in August, hoJ)H to come to SUI next lall Cor tbIl rlDai 15 residence­ hours abe needs for her B.A. de­ ·tiJast Ri.ps ~irQi~ia gree_ Miss Miller, who lives in Daven­ port. was f1J'St enrolled at SUI in 1904 In the auntmer session. She attended four other summer 8t'I­ sions and several Saturday ~ons before switching to correspond· A'partment; 1Q Die ence study in Jm. She has earned 46 hours o( coUerc eredlt by cor· respondence since then. Majoring in history, Miss Miller lacks three hours in that depart. ~·~!~U-...!..-j h----'·ce-· R-e~sig--:--n~s as SUI Dean of Studenti- 3 ChilHren , ment and seven In natural science to meet SUI requirements lor • B.A. degree. University relUlatlofts y I. ~.,. F ..,,, "",_ lrom hI. "'" .. SUl "'.. " "...... ' Among Dead; require that a I~udent take the He ·has been named vice-president in char,e 0( public and stu· Instrudor Gets 12 Cars final 15 hours of study In resI.ncc. servioel at Western Michigan College.
    [Show full text]
  • Davince Tools Generated PDF File
    }?'} ~1\' ~r;;! t· ::' ... ,\ ... ,' 1" . ~ . ' :~:-:,",~~ •. ' ••••~I Isenhower .CallsComm~nism "Failure" 9.30 a.m.-The 81g Six Program. 10.15 a.m.-Rose Ranch Time. PRESEJI,'rS SIBELIUS 11.30 o.m.-Reddy's Varieties THE DAIL-Y NEWS available at S.OO p.m.-Back to the Bible. Vol. 63. No, 117 ST, JOHN'S, NEWF.I':)UNDLAND, SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1956 (Price 5 centsl Charles Hutton & Sons Itch T."y Clean Up Underground • II resi ent ee's • .:. : , ! ,I, nlon ear .{ uropean I 'I WACO, Tex. (AP) - President viding help to the free world's co· It is 3 threat, he said "from whi~h 1 He said such centres should be 5et : i Eisenhower said Friday European operation in the baltic against even this mighty natiGn is not up without trying to "transplant union seems ncarer now tllan in Communism. wholly immune." inlo a new area the attitudes,: I I centuries. He called Communism The president referred to Com. Eisenhower gave no specific de· forms and procedurcs of Amer· ~ " I "a gigantic failure" but saiu evcn munism as "cruel, Intolerant, athe· lails on his suggestion that Ameri· iea," and that they should be staf· ,I the United States "is not wholly istic" and "committed to conquest I can universitics establish world. fed and conducted by the people: . ( immune" from its lhreat. by lure, intimidation and. force." wide science and cultural centres. in each area. l .: , ".":' 1I,'r,' m::de In The president suggested private foundations and lhe universities of 't,.' I', :':o·-"~; .'I\d till' p"lice DISARMAMENT' .
    [Show full text]
  • Al Smith Was First and Foremost a Ballplayer Whose Major-League Career Spanned 12 Seasons with Four American League Teams
    Smith was quiet man who made his noise on field By Gary Livacari Al Smith was first and foremost a ballplayer whose major-league career spanned 12 seasons with four American League teams. Primarily an outfielder, he played six positions as a major leaguer and was a fine defender with a strong arm and good speed. Smith finished with a .272 life-time batting average, hit 164 home runs, and reached base nearly 36 percent of the time. He also made two A.L. All- Star teams and played for two pennant winners (both managed by Al Lopez). He hit a career-best .315 in 1960 and posted his biggest power numbers—28 homers and 93 RBIs—in 1961. But despite his considerable on-field accomplishments, he will always be best remembered as the unwitting subject in one of baseball‘s most lasting images: the “beer bath” photo from Game Two of the 1959 World Series. When Smith died in 2002, his obituary in the New York Times was headlined, “Al Smith, 73, Dies; Was Doused in Series.” Alphonse Eugene Smith was born on February 7, 1928, in Kirkwood, Missouri, a St. Louis suburb. He grew up a fan of both local big-league teams, the Cardinals and the Browns, and his hero was Cardinals outfielder Joe Medwick. Nicknamed “Fuzzy,” Smith was a versatile, multitalented athlete at Douglas High in Webster Groves, Missouri. The MVP of the baseball team, he also starred in football, basketball, and track, and was a Golden Gloves boxing champion in the 160-pound division. Smith scored 33 touchdowns in one football season and was reputed to have scored 10 touchdowns in one game.
    [Show full text]
  • Cubs Win Again, Mets Fall 5½ Games
    This season marks the 25th and 50th anniversaries of the memorable 1984 Cubs and 1959 White Sox teams, respectively. Each week the Chicago Baseball Museum chronicles the significant events that took place at a similar time in their dramatic seasons. Roll reversal: Cubs win again, fading Mets fall 5½ games behind CHICAGO, Aug. 24 – It may be too early for magic numbers, but the Cubs seem intent to put the ghosts of 1969 behind them. While the New York Mets continued their free-fall in stark contrast to the East Division race of 15 years earlier, the Cubs continued to roll in a 3-0 victory against the Atlanta Braves at Wrigley Field on Friday afternoon. Starter Rick Sutcliffe limited the visitors to five hits, and Ryne Sandberg homered for the only run that he would need in front of 35,496 fans. The Cubs opened a 5 ½-game lead in the division chase, as the Mets dropped both ends of a doubleheader against the San Francisco Giants at home. The Cubs have won five of their last six games, while the Mets have lost six of their last eight. Sutcliffe (12-1) won his fifth consecutive start. He retired the final nine batters in order. In the first inning, Sandberg went deep against Braves starter Rick Camp (6- 6) for the first run of the game. Gary Mathews followed with a triple, and two batters, he scored on a wild pitch. Sutcliffe helped his own cause in the seventh inning, when he singled off Jeff Dedmon and scored on a Sandburg single.
    [Show full text]
  • Estimated Age Effects in Baseball
    ESTIMATED AGE EFFECTS IN BASEBALL By Ray C. Fair October 2005 Revised March 2007 COWLES FOUNDATION DISCUSSION PAPER NO. 1536 COWLES FOUNDATION FOR RESEARCH IN ECONOMICS YALE UNIVERSITY Box 208281 New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8281 http://cowles.econ.yale.edu/ Estimated Age Effects in Baseball Ray C. Fair¤ Revised March 2007 Abstract Age effects in baseball are estimated in this paper using a nonlinear xed- effects regression. The sample consists of all players who have played 10 or more full-time years in the major leagues between 1921 and 2004. Quadratic improvement is assumed up to a peak-performance age, which is estimated, and then quadratic decline after that, where the two quadratics need not be the same. Each player has his own constant term. The results show that aging effects are larger for pitchers than for batters and larger for baseball than for track and eld, running, and swimming events and for chess. There is some evidence that decline rates in baseball have decreased slightly in the more recent period, but they are still generally larger than those for the other events. There are 18 batters out of the sample of 441 whose performances in the second half of their careers noticeably exceed what the model predicts they should have been. All but 3 of these players played from 1990 on. The estimates from the xed-effects regressions can also be used to rank players. This ranking differs from the ranking using lifetime averages because it adjusts for the different ages at which players played. It is in effect an age-adjusted ranking.
    [Show full text]
  • Gas Heat 5HOURS ONLY SCARFS Anti-Test Waik^Ungary Reds Told
    / ■ . y \- / .r / ■M . - / roAY, APRIL 4, The Weather -• Arersge Gaily Net Press Run PAG* ETGHTEEN ' For the Week Reded Pereeaat ,»f U. 8. Weather B orsu \ '. \ >- \ V March IS, 1958 Fair tanlght,‘ net quKe a# cold. The M Xachesti^abild . Study St John'a/PoUali' N ation al Lew SO-45. Sunday BMmisg,:ia the Church ludd a HOly Hour this 12,669 Group win visit the>l^abody Mu­ 80s, leww 80b Sunday aftemesii.. About Town seum In New Haven Tuesday. All af tem< li. Tonight Member at the Audit / at.? ^lock^l^ere will beI a penltfn- B u r e w ^ CXrealattMi Th« Au*lll»ry l» AndwawShea those Ihterested In fom g should M ancf^ter^A City Qf Vil{age Charm be j k ’ the NBuclcley SohooKat 8:30 ttaKMaaef'^Tomorrow, Holy Sat- Poat, v r w , .win .not hold lU regu­ day,AIass will be said at B a.m.; lar eaWl BartyUml^r. a.m. On tha return trip % stop will z be' made for iU|iicheon at the ■hd on Sunday at 8 a.m.,' Rasur- (Classined AdvaHiaiBg qa Pag# 10) Price f iv e cen tr '* - redtion Mass; low Maas at 8130 (TWELVE PAGES) lif^AISCHESI^ CONN*, SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1958 j- kee Silversmith: \ VOL. L K ^ L NO. 1S8 Tha Miry Ghenav, Whlton and; and high Maas at 10:30 a.m. ^ ........... ■•^ .,.■ .1 .'a. ... I ............... laii. ..M ■ ^li t . ' I ' ~ ... Weat Bide libraridS, cloaed today: z L Dr. and Mrs. Will D. Stroudy for the h^Way, win ti^tpen tomor- j enjoying; a Miss Joan Olivt Lihgard, dai X rdv aa liNal.' i 91 Strickland St., an V springmg vacation In Me^coStico a ty .
    [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]
  • Kit Young's Sale #132
    Page 1 KIT YOUNG’S SALE #132 2017 TOPPS NATIONAL RETRO SETS Just In!! Exciting news: For the 10th time since 2005 we have the popular Topps Retro sets. As in previous years, Topps has produced special issue cards of Hall of Famers, all in the style of the popular 1987 set - this year’s set features 5 all time greats - Ted Williams, Cal Ripken Jr., Johnny Bench, Nolan Ryan and Ken Griffey Jr. These are regular sized cards that were issued only to VIP attendees at the 2017 National Convention, making them pretty scarce. Backs show that cards were spe- cially issued at The National. We suggest you order soon - supply this year is limited. All cards Mint in the original sealed packs. Only $29.95 (2 set special $49.95) 1951 TOPPS RED BACKS & BLUE BACKS 1951 RED BACKS Yogi Berra Yakees NR-MT Warren Spahn Braves 1951 BLUE BACKS 125.00; EX-MT 95.00; EX #30..............PSA 6 EX-MT Richie Ashburn Phillies 62.00; VG-EX 50.00; GD- $79.95 NR-MT 255.00 VG-EX $35.00 GD-VG Johnny Groth Tigers.....NR-MT VG 31.00 49.00; EX-MT 42.00 Sid Gordon Braves....EX-MT $18.00 Sam Jethroe Braves......PSA 8 NM/ 13.00; EX 7.50; VG 5.50 Gil Hodges Dodgers......... MT 59.95; VG-EX 21.00 Ferris Fain A’s...........NR-MT NR-MT 69.00; EX 35.00; Mickey Vernon Senators....NR-MT 17.00; VG-EX 13.00 VG 23.00; GD-VG 16.00 49.00 Vern Stephens RedSox.EX- Hank Thompson Giants...
    [Show full text]
  • Dec 11 Cover.Qxd 11/5/2020 2:39 PM Page 1 Allall Starstar Cardscards Volumevolume 2828 Issueissue #5#5
    ASC080120_001_Dec 11 cover.qxd 11/5/2020 2:39 PM Page 1 AllAll StarStar CardsCards VolumeVolume 2828 IssueIssue #5#5 We are BUYING! See Page 92 for details Don’t Miss “Cyber­Monday” Nov. 30th!!! It’s Our Biggest Sale of theYear! (See page 7) ASC080120_001_Dec 11 cover.qxd 11/5/2020 2:39 PM Page 2 15074 Antioch Road To Order Call (800) 932-3667 Page 2 Overland Park, KS 66221 Mickey Mantle Sandy Koufax Sandy Koufax Willie Mays 1965 Topps “Clutch Home Run” #134 1955 Topps RC #123 Centered! 1955 Topps RC #123 Hot Card! 1960 Topps #200 PSA “Mint 9” $599.95 PSA “NM/MT 8” $14,999.95 PSA “NM 7” $4,999.95 PSA “NM/MT 8” Tough! $1,250.00 Lou Gehrig Mike Trout Mickey Mantle Mickey Mantle Ban Johnson Mickey Mantle 1933 DeLong #7 2009 Bowman Chrome 1952 Bowman #101 1968 Topps #280 1904 Fan Craze 1953 Bowman #59 PSA 1 $2,499.95 Rare! Auto. BGS 9 $12,500.00 PSA “Good 2” $1,999.95 PSA 8 $1,499.95 PSA 8 $899.95 PSA “VG/EX 4” $1,799.95 Johnny Bench Willie Mays Tom Brady Roger Maris Michael Jordan Willie Mays 1978 Topps #700 1962 Topps #300 2000 Skybox Impact RC 1958 Topps RC #47 ‘97-98 Ultra Star Power 1966 Topps #1 PSA 10 Low Pop! $999.95 PSA “NM 7” $999.95 Autographed $1,399.95 SGC “NM 7” $699.95 PSA 10 Tough! $599.95 PSA “NM 7” $850.00 Mike Trout Hank Aaron Hank Aaron DeShaun Watson Willie Mays Gary Carter 2011 Bowman RC #101 1954 Topps RC #128 1964 Topps #300 2017 Panini Prizm RC 1952 Bowman #218 1981 Topps #660 PSA 10 - Call PSA “VG/EX 4” $3,999.95 PSA “NM/MT 8” $875.00 PSA 10 $599.95 PSA 3MK $399.95 PSA 10 $325.00 Tough! ASC080120_001_Dec 11 cover.qxd
    [Show full text]
  • Sword Dancer Beats Filly
    CHICO DRIVES IN TASBY Orioles Nose Out Sunday ?Stat SPORTS E Yanks, 2-1, in 11th EIGHT PAGES WASHINGTON, D. C., APRIL 26, 1959 1W YORK, April 25 (API. looping single that loaded the -Aookle Willie Tub? doubled bases, but the Orioles had to to open the 11th Inning and settle for only one run when scored on a single by Pinch- Jim Plnlgan banged into a hitter Chico Carraaquel as the double play. Orioles edged the Yankees, 2-1, The Yankees threatened in Ramos Coasts by Sox, 8-4; today and moved Into a tie Red the last of the 11th when with the White Sox for second Mickey Mantle singled for his place. third hit, stole second and got Billy Loes, who pitched a to third with two out against scoreless 10th inning for his Baltimore rookie Wes Stock. third straight runless relief job Stock then closed out by { it in a week, received credit for retiring Pinch - hitter Enos the victory, his first. Johnny Slaughter on a pop foul. Sword Filly Kucks, who pitched to only one Dancer Beats Ace Art Ditmar and Jack Harsh- hitter, lost it for an 0-1 mark It the man both had four-hit shut- was Yankees’ fifth defeat outs until New York’s Bill 4 ' ' : .... in 11 games. 7 Kucks became Skowron lined his fourth the third homer of the season into the : Silver Spoon at :¦ ¦' Griffs Chase pitcher . - y Yankee the start of rightfleld bullpen V V.. 1 -¦ t { Tasby with the the 11th and sliced a bases empty in the seventh.
    [Show full text]