Win, Lose Or Draw Leonard's Convincing Work Booms Nats

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Win, Lose Or Draw Leonard's Convincing Work Booms Nats Leonard's Convincing Work Booms Nats' Hopes — 9- Dutch Is NEW YORK.—HE JUST MISSED IT—Jeff Heath of the Nats Sports or Impressive made a furious but futile slide to the in the second 5-Star Program Win, Lose Draw plate inning Washington's of the game in which the Yanks were licked last night, 2-1. He For Local Fans By FRANCIS E. STANN In Yanks for TODAY. Licking tried to count from second on Gerry Priddy’s hit to right, but Slab Staff Seen as Star Staff Correspondent Baseball. Tom Henrich made a perfect throw to Catcher Bill Dickey. Art Washington at New York. Auto Race Driver Is a Athlete Strange His Fifth Passerella is the umpire. —AP Wirephoto. Menace to Bosox Maryland at Navy. 4:00. INDIANAPOLIS, May 29.—By all odds the automobile racing Straight Georgetown Prep at Blair, 3:30. driver is among the strangest of men who walk in the world of sports. By Burton Hawkins By Jack Hand Charlotte Hall at Landon, 3:30. He is a curious combination of under- Star Staff Tennis. athlete-engineer, iron-nerved, Correspondent Associated Press Sports Writer paid, often frustrated, He be Roosevelt vs. Wilson, Rock undiscouraged. may rich, poor, young NEW YORK, May 29.—Dutch or middle-aged. Never more than once a does Washington’s five-star pitching Creek, and Coolidge vs. Tech, year Leonard, who was leading a charmed he bask in the national Pierce Mill spotlight. existence in accumulating his first staff, with its accent on dipping (interhigh series), Tomorrow is his day—Memorial For a few 4:00. Day. four victories of the season, has knucklers and darting butterfly hours on the famed brick-and-asphalt Indian- Wrestling. presented ample evidence he now looms as the latest stum- 33 of these pitches, apolis Speedway strange thrill-seekers has more than a Weekly wrestling program. load of luck to block in Boston's will sit behind their racers bling pennant Turner’s Arena, 8:30. weird, souped-up and offer the Nats in their struggle for try to drive 500 miles at an of close to 120 Auto Racing. average serious consideration as a pennant path. miles an hour with not more than one West pit stop. possibility. Only seven games dff the pace Midget racing program, Not more than 10 cars are likely to finish the 500 Lanham, Md., Speedway, 8:30. In achieving his fifth successive and a scant half game out of the miles. Some of the men who drive may not be TOMORROW. without a defeat here last alive at the end oi the day. triumph runnerup spot, Ossie Bluege's Na- Baseball. night before 48,895 customers, a Few of the 150,000 spectators who are in town tionals have “fluttered” into the Washington at Boston <2>. 2-1 win over New York which lifted today for the race, and few of the millions who chase on a sizzling two-week Georgetown Prep at Gonzaga, the Nats within a half- game of the flag will otherwise follow it, know of the drivers nor record of 12 wins in their last 15 3:30. second place Yankees, Leonard dem- know precisely what the grind is meant to ac- starts. onstrated he no longer merely is complish except to drive at incredible speeds. has more solid effective against Detroit, Chicago Although Bluege Back in 1911, when the first Indianapolis “500” hitting this season than he had Francis E. Stann. and Philadelphia, at whose expense Rain-Hit was run ofl, Ray Harroun's average speed of 74.59 in 1945, when he made a run of it Tennis he compiled 14 of his 17 wins last City miles per hour was astounding. Tomorrow, if the weather is clear, until the final day of the season, year. the winner may average 117 or more miles per hour, which means speeds the Senators still lean heavily on Joe McCarthy, recently retired as high as 150 or 160 on the straightaways. Yet the purpose of the pitching. Despite the recent batting to Resume once Tourney manager of the Yankees, said “500” is not altogether to develop speed and satisfy the thrill-seekers. surge of Mickey Vernon and Jeff of Leonard when asked if he were Competition in The Star's City of Heath, the mound record of 10 Their Are No interested in dealing for him, “why Washington tennis tournament on Chariots Less Unusual complete games in the 13-game should we want him? He keeps us the public courts at Sixteenth and Racing cars don't have much in common with the average motor- string is the most important suc- on top. We can beat him every Kennedy streets N.W., was to con- ist's car. They have no self-starters, no batteries, no deeply-treaded cess factor. time and if we don’t whip him he'll tinue this afternoon provided no tires, no speedometers. Most of them don't even burn gasoline, but, The ancient Johnny Niggeling beat himself on a passed ball with more rain fell. The tournament, instead, blended fuels containing alcohol and castor oil. They range and Dutch Leonard each have ac- those knucklers.” McCarthy’s suc- plagued by showers, was at a com- from four-cylinder cars, which are in the majority, to 12-cylinder jobs. counted for three decisions in the cesor, Bill Dickey, isn't sharing plete standstill. The Indianapolis Speedway, however, is regarded as one of the recent hot streak, Niggeling going those sentiments. Chairman Austin Rice announced greatest automotive proving grounds in the country. Countless de- all the way three successive times Leonard was the Yan- several changes in the schedule for vices and improvements in motors, fuels, tires and types of drives spanking Roger Wolff, Mickey Haefner and kees for the second time this season, today. At 4 o’clock in women's have#been tested and found practical over the 2'/2-mile oval. Walt Masterson of the starting con- having previously traveled six in- singles Helen Levy plays Ellen One of the oddities this year is a car with two supercharged en- tingent each have one verdict and nings against them before pulling a Oberti and at 5:30 Ann Vlasak meets gines, one to power the front wheels and the other the rear wheels. Sid Hudson and Rae Scarborough leg muscle and, against the Nats Joan Bransford. The Burns-Grindle A native, George Barringer, is entering a six-cylinder, supercharged, triumphed on relief. portly knuckle-ball specialist New match slated at 4 is shifted to 3:30. four-wheel-drive job with the engine in the rear. A Californian named Home Debut. York can show one run and Spoils Dickey's In women's doubles the Connor has a car with front-wheel drive only Gray- George four-cylinder only. success was a neat: eight hits in 15 innings. i Leonard’s latest MacDonald vs. Zimmerman-Fond Some of these cars, impractical for any purpose except racing, 2-1 effort against New York last match is rescheduled. have been known to cost as much as Dutch Finally Convincing. being $200,000 and wealthy enthusiasts both Bill Dutch also has defeated Cleveland. night, spoiling Dickey's j have owned 'stables” of three or four cars valued at $400,000. sue-; would home debut as Joe McCarthy's But the drivers are no less unusual than their chariots. Cliff Detroit and Chicago, which G. W. cessor and the Yankee Stadium's: Blanks Loyola in Golf Bergere, for example, is a former Hollywood stunt man who has driven illustrate he won't be confining his first night game. in 14 races never won. Inci- winning manner to three clubs al- Indianapolis totaling 5,704 miles—and Larry McPhail outdid himself with his 1946 car has a name most exclusively. Not until last As dentally, that haunts one—Noc Out Hose the finest lighting plant in baseball Brownrigg Sparkles night, however, were the Nats con-; Clamp Special. but the Yankees still couldn’t see George Washington University’s vinced that Leonard is prepared to Leonard’s doodles.” In golf team blanked Loyola, 6-0, at Dot Race's help them. He showed ’em—the hard flitting “dipsy Heartbreaking Collapses History Midget Auto Contests Marshall Sells Palace fact, Leonard himself administered Baltimore’s Bonnie View links yes- Joe way—that his success henceforth Laundry Thorne probably is the richest driver, although he did not the fatal blow to Freshman Clarence terday as Bill Brownrigg, the Co- to more than make his races. In he’s never won. But he’s may be attributed lonials’ money by winning fact, Marshall s chances when he singled No. 1 golfer, set a blistering a millionaire who's the He sent two cars to and four leaf clovers. got bug. Indianapolis Slated With To Headed Chevalier home a run in tne fourth inning to pace with a 68 over the par 72 lay- Dutch was ofl to a shaky start Tonight, Group by planned to drive one himself, although early in March he sustained out. He defeated Lewis F. * break a 1-1 tie. L. Faltysiak, 7 head two broken a in a when the Yankees’ George Stim- By Atchison injuries, legs and wrist motorcycle accident. a threat of rain and 6. Dave Wortman and Di Topcoat weather, George Race drivers evfer are calloused to weiss doubled and Joe Maggio Preston Marshall has sold hardly give up. They tough George and a wind combined to cut Vass of G. W. turned in 72s. and Nick Etten singled in the first Fair Skies Seen chilly breaks.
Recommended publications
  • 1936-10-02 [P D-1]
    Sports News □ « | Features and Classified | I ~ WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1936. D^l~ Series Delay Gives Giants Break, Yankees Morbid Fancies ■■ Big _ ■ .. —— -- -— ■ A Cubs, Cold Fail ON THE RECEIVING END. —By JIM BERRYlVfAN. easy to hit as a snipe in a midnight I roll. He expects his heavy and light swamp. artillery to shell away any remaining - In the face of this somber picture, Giant pitcher with the same all- IN UNE -___I SCREWBALL the Yankees can't afford ■ELL To AWES to let an- season Stop Kennedy blast that wrecked the Amer- other Giant pitcher run the blockade ican League with scattered debrl* October 2 OP).—The only ^(CHICAGO. before Carl moves into the rifle pit left. secret has leaked out why for his second start. Joe doesn’t believe that any othec Vernon Kennedy showed such a 10 RIVAL m M’CARTHY’SCROWD With this extra day of rest tossed Giant pitcher can put the deadly the liking for damp, 50-degree into the act. Bill and his silencer on r big Terry bats handled by Gehrig, breezes which whirled through Giants are confident that Hubbell can Di Maggio, Dickey, Powell, Lazzerf Field when he set the MAKES IT Wrigley HE win three games. He will need out- and others. Gets Great Chance to Beat down with four hits LOOK SO EASV Fears Carl on Chicago Cubs Facing King side help on at least one occasion, and He rates Schumacher and Fitzsim- in the White Sox 6-to-l WHEW HE yesterday if he can get this help the Yankee mons as first-class pitchers—but Hub- A.
    [Show full text]
  • Go-Go to Glory
    Durable Lollar found niche as White Sox anchor, run-producer By John McMurray Soft spoken and self-effacing, Sherman Lollar provided a strong defensive presence be-hind the plate during his 12 seasons with the Chicago White Sox. An All-Star catcher in seven seasons of his 18-year major-league career, Lollar won the first three American League Gold Glove awards from 1957 through 1959. Although he was not known as a power hitter, Lollar hit 155 career home runs and collected 1,415 hits. He also produced one of the White Sox’ few bright moments in the 1959 World Series apart from their Game One victory, a two-out, three-run homer that tied Game Four in the seventh inning. (Unfortunately the Sox lost that game, 5-4.) Even though Lollar played well and received awards during the 1950s, he did not receive as much national recognition as fellow catcher Yogi Berra, who won three Most Valuable Player awards. As Red Gleason wrote in The Saturday Evening Post in 1957, “It is the fate of some illustrious men to spend a career in the shadow of a contemporary. Adlai Stevenson had his Dwight Eisenhower. Lou Gehrig had his Babe Ruth. Bob Hope had his Bing Crosby. And Sherman Lollar has his Yogi Berra.” John Sherman Lollar Jr. was born on August 23, 1924, in Durham, Arkansas. His father, John Sherman Lollar Sr., had been a semipro baseball player and was a veteran of World War I. When Lollar Jr. was three years old, he moved with his family to Fayetteville, Arkansas, where his parents opened a grocery store.
    [Show full text]
  • Nats Rushing Newsom to Mound Against Chisox
    I Nats Rushing Newsom to Mound Against Chisox 4 Fifth in Row Battle of Undefeated ose or Triumph Ennis' Punch Tells for Phillies; Uline Gets Franchise Over Chicago Is Goal; Nines Bosox Maintain Lead By FRANCIS E. STANN Midget Tops Strong In Newly Formed Which Was the Best Batting Team? Hudson Foils Tribe Boys' Card Pro Court "If you were a pitcher,” asked one of the young Nats the other Loop Loop The two undefeated night, "would you rather pitch to the 1946 Red Sox or to some of those By Burton Hawkins teams In the Special Dispatch to Tha Star other like midget class of the Western Division great hitting teams, the Yankees of 1927, the Athletics of Double-O Bobo NEW Newsom, the air- of the Club of YORK, June 7.—Mike 1929 or the Yankees of 1937? I never saw any of these teams, Boys’ Washington except conditioned who was last owner the Red Sox we pia> today,” pitcher in Baseball League clash in the feature Uline, of Uline Arena in line of tomorrow’s Now there s posing a little question that could when modesty was being dis- five-game schedule. Washington, D. C., has purchased a stir a few It will be Eastern winners up arguments. If I were a pitcher I’d tributed, will establish a beachhead Quins, franchise in a new professional bas- to the Mexican of four straight, against Alexandria jump League, temporarily, any on Griffith Stadium’s ket mound to- B. undefeated in three ball league organized here yes- time these clubs came to town.
    [Show full text]
  • Briggs and Welsh Win Softball Titles
    NEWLY CROWNED MEN’S AND WOMEN'S SOFTBALL CHAMPION TEAMS ] 7 Rt* i#* jHF ' 4 v £ . MS* ¦ f .%opf%rk l IXPrjHpP \ / / ' v|.' ; '.'• ¦'• . ."',a,-'^ : CoiyHfM by Dtfrolt Tlmat All rt«Mt rii«rv«i BRIGGS BEAI TYWARE AND WELSH CO-EDS SOFTBALL TEAMS POSE AND SMILE AT BIRDIE AFTER WINNING METROPOLITAN-DETROIT TIMES TOURNAMENT AT MACKPARK DETROIT TIMES. SEPTEMBER 9. 1941 PAGE 15 Briggs and Welsh Win Softball Titles Wood, Nelson SLIDES HOME LIKE A CHAMPION Triumph Over All Foes Hope to Stop Times Tournament EDITOR In By SHELDON MOYER Yanks Won't Have Easy Asheville Manager Says Hogan, Demaret Out of hundreds of teams, weeks of competition, thousand* of hit* and runs, and the greatest of all metropolitan softball Time With Cards or Wakefield Is Another Stars Will Compete tournaments, today ascended two winners of The Detroit Time* softball championships—Briggs Beautyware and Welsh's Co-eds. Dodg ers, Says Connie | Babe Herman at Bat in Golf Benefit These two teams soared to new heights last night before * thrill-packed crowd at Mack Park, and with the accolades carried Here Sept. 23-24 long the coveted Detroit Times HOLES-IN-ONE AREN'T ALL LICK! softball trophies, emblematic of By M. V. DRI KF.NBROD Wanted >oftball supremacy m this locality. But even greater days Connie Ma< k says the Yankees will have their hands full things to lie before All good mu<t come these two teams. New to • fields with cither the Brooklyn Dodgers nr St. D»uia Cardinals next an end At lea>t so Craig Wood STUDENT conquer await them in the right McCarthy s and Byron Nelson hope.
    [Show full text]
  • November 13, 2010 Prices Realized
    SCP Auctions Prices Realized - November 13, 2010 Internet Auction www.scpauctions.com | +1 800 350.2273 Lot # Lot Title 1 C.1910 REACH TIN LITHO BASEBALL ADVERTISING DISPLAY SIGN $7,788 2 C.1910-20 ORIGINAL ARTWORK FOR FATIMA CIGARETTES ROUND ADVERTISING SIGN $317 3 1912 WORLD CHAMPION BOSTON RED SOX PHOTOGRAPHIC DISPLAY PIECE $1,050 4 1914 "TUXEDO TOBACCO" ADVERTISING POSTER FEATURING IMAGES OF MATHEWSON, LAJOIE, TINKER AND MCGRAW $288 5 1928 "CHAMPIONS OF AL SMITH" CAMPAIGN POSTER FEATURING BABE RUTH $2,339 6 SET OF (5) LUCKY STRIKE TROLLEY CARD ADVERTISING SIGNS INCLUDING LAZZERI, GROVE, HEILMANN AND THE WANER BROTHERS $5,800 7 EXTREMELY RARE 1928 HARRY HEILMANN LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTES LARGE ADVERTISING BANNER $18,368 8 1930'S DIZZY DEAN ADVERTISING POSTER FOR "SATURDAY'S DAILY NEWS" $240 9 1930'S DUCKY MEDWICK "GRANGER PIPE TOBACCO" ADVERTISING SIGN $178 10 1930S D&M "OLD RELIABLE" BASEBALL GLOVE ADVERTISEMENTS (3) INCLUDING COLLINS, CRITZ AND FONSECA $1,090 11 1930'S REACH BASEBALL EQUIPMENT DIE-CUT ADVERTISING DISPLAY $425 12 BILL TERRY COUNTERTOP AD DISPLAY FOR TWENTY GRAND CIGARETTES SIGNED "TO BARRY" - EX-HALPER $290 13 1933 GOUDEY SPORT KINGS GUM AND BIG LEAGUE GUM PROMOTIONAL STORE DISPLAY $1,199 14 1933 GOUDEY WINDOW ADVERTISING SIGN WITH BABE RUTH $3,510 15 COMPREHENSIVE 1933 TATTOO ORBIT DISPLAY INCLUDING ORIGINAL ADVERTISING, PIN, WRAPPER AND MORE $1,320 16 C.1934 DIZZY AND DAFFY DEAN BEECH-NUT ADVERTISING POSTER $2,836 17 DIZZY DEAN 1930'S "GRAPE NUTS" DIE-CUT ADVERTISING DISPLAY $1,024 18 PAIR OF 1934 BABE RUTH QUAKER
    [Show full text]
  • Hrizonhhighways February • 1951
    HRIZONHHIGHWAYS FEBRUARY • 1951 . THIRTY-FIVE CENTS , l /jJI I\fj Spring has a good press. The poets make much ado about birds, bees, flowers and the sprightliness of the season. They neglect such mundane subjects as spring house cleaning and overlook the melancholy fact that armies with evil intentions march when the snow melts. We hope our only concern is with flowers, bees and birds and things like that. As for spring house cleaning, just open the doors and let the house air out. Why joust with vacuum cleaners and mops when spring beckons? Spring does a good job of beckoning in the desert land. It is our pleasure to show you some panoramas of the desert and desert plateau country when nature's fashion calls for spring dress. We wish we could promise the most colorful spring ever but the effiorescence of spring depends on the rainfall. We have had a darned dry "dry spell" hereabouts, broken only by a good rain in late January. If the rains keep on, then we can predict a real pretty March, April and May, but who the heck is going to be silly enough to try to tell whether it'll rain. Anyway, we'll promise you grand weather. An Arizona spring can't be beat. The weather had better be perfect! Sometime this month a group of wonderfully agile and extremely well paid young men who answer to the roll call of the Cleveland Indians, and another group of even more agile and even better paid young men who form the New York Yankees baseball team arrive in Tucson and Phoenix for spring training, the latter to get ready to defend the World's Championship, the former to try to bring it to Cleveland.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1949-07-08
    On the Inside The Weather MIckey Haefner Flred ••. Paq. 2 Partly cloudy today crud kImorrow with E 'Paiaan' Unllinching Drama le­ poaslble allow.ra In lot. afternoon '" Page 3 day. HlCjJb today 95: low 68. Yesterday's Pegler Rap. Union Bo •••• hlgh 88; low 72. • , • PaCjJ. 6 I Est. 1868 - AP Leased Wire, AP Wirephoto, UP Leased Wire - . Five Cents Iowa City, Iowa, Friday, July 8, 1949 - Vol. 83, No. 186 I ______________~--~------------- '----------~----------------------------------~--------------------__________~--------------------------------- Jury Deadlocked .Over Hiss; Resumes Deliberations Today Truman Sees National TElW YORK ( P) - A federal court jury deliberating perjury c har ~es against A lger Hiss r ported la t njght that it W8 d ad locked and was ordered to retire for the llight. F ederal ,hl(l'3e Samuel Kaufman sent the jurors to a hotel Economic· Health"Good and ordered thrm to return this morning to consider again fal p of the fOI'IllP]' hi!!h state department official. At that time they presumably ------------­ Asks A-80mb's will ,resume ~ tudying importa nt JusticePuis Heat on Thi'eves exhibits in Ihe case - summaries New Peace Alliance NASHVILLE IIPI-Il got so hot in Nashville yesterday Rolland Fay of secret state department docu­ St. Croix and Franklin Donald Newman confe ~s ed an automobile Controls' Before ments in Hi s~' handwriting and theft in the hope of being sent back to Michigan. ftJe "pUmpkin" papers of chiet Planned by S~nafors prosecution witness Whittaker "We want to get beck to Michigan to face the music-anything to to get out of this hot hole," said he youths, both from Centerline, World Disarms Chambers.
    [Show full text]
  • Kit Young's Sale
    KIT YOUNG’S SALE #92 VINTAGE HALL OF FAMERS ROOKIE CARDS SALE – TAKE 10% OFF 1954 Topps #128 Hank Aaron 1959 Topps #338 Sparky 1956 Topps #292 Luis Aparicio 1954 Topps #94 Ernie Banks EX- 1968 Topps #247 Johnny Bench EX o/c $550.00 Anderson EX $30.00 EX-MT $115.00; VG-EX $59.00; MT $1100.00; EX+ $585.00; PSA PSA 6 EX-MT $120.00; EX-MT GD-VG $35.00 5 EX $550.00; VG-EX $395.00; VG $115.00; EX o/c $49.00 $290.00 1909 E90-1 American Caramel 1909 E95 Philadelphia Caramel 1887 Tobin Lithographs Dan 1949 Bowman #84 Roy 1967 Topps #568 Rod Carew NR- Chief Bender PSA 2 GD $325.00 Chief Bender FR $99.00 Brouthers SGC Authentic $295.00 Campanella VG-EX/EX $375.00 MT $320.00; EX-MT $295.00 1958 Topps #343 Orlando Cepeda 1909 E92 Dockman & Sons Frank 1909 E90-1 American Caramel 1910 E93 Standard Caramel 1909 E90-1 American Caramel PSA 5 EX $55.00 Chance SGC 30 GD $395.00 Frank Chance FR-GD $95.00 Eddie Collins GD-VG Sam Crawford GD $150.00 (paper loss back) $175.00 1932 U.S. Caramel #7 Joe Cronin 1933 Goudey #23 Kiki Cuyler 1933 Goudey #19 Bill Dickey 1939 Play Ball #26 Joe DiMaggio 1957 Topps #18 Don Drysdale SGC 50 VG-EX $375.00 GD-VG $49.00 VG $150.00 EX $695.00; PSA 3.5 VG+ $495.00 NR-MT $220.00; PSA 6 EX-MT $210.00; EX-MT $195.00; EX $120.00; VG-EX $95.00 1910 T3 Turkey Red Cabinet #16 1910 E93 Standard Caramel 1909-11 T206 (Polar Bear) 1948 Bowman #5 Bob Feller EX 1972 Topps #79 Carlton Fisk EX Johnny Evers VG $575.00 Johnny Evers FR-GD $99.00 Johnny Evers SGC 45 VG+ $170.00; VG $75.00 $19.95; VG-EX $14.95 $240.00 KIT YOUNG CARDS • 4876 SANTA MONICA AVE, #137 • DEPT.
    [Show full text]
  • (Iowa City, Iowa), 1940-08-27
    , / , 25, 1940 / -. =----- 'Grid Candidate, -, Cloudy, Shower, >ig Dr. Ande""n Tells 59 Hawkey" lOWA-ar.tlT c100cb Ioitay aDd S To Repori Sept. 10 tomorrow. occasional Mowen ex­ t{ rj See Story on Pace " tre_ lO11theut -portion &oday. blared Out ~I t Bail» e was hl. loua City', lIornin, ,... •• r- will foUOIt FIVE CENTS IOWA CITY, IOWA TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1940 n..A I"r- VOLUME XL NUMBER 280 block, 'I'he :he Way to (onday. hilt red at least charlt 01 --~f rolla IIld "that .bltt. - If that IIr ~rd for ~ Ila Senator *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** rolla biCI )(),Ooo frotn Berlin Bombed Again; Nazis Begin New Phase of War ss charles," ----------------------------~-----------------------------------------------.. day callie I and lnde. To Begin 'Planned Destruction' Students Urged W orld',s Largest Plane Built for U. Anuy let that the Property Damage, Casualties' I did not ' I d · I PI To Continue tstigate hint Of E I d him," up; an s n ustria ants Their Education Apparently Are Heavy After 'lalnt Since 'Preliminaries' Are Over hio) jn~. Importance of continuing edu- Longest Air Raid of the War WPA ro~ cation as a means of national de~ from earl7 Nazis Send warm of Raiders Over 30.Mile Front fense was emphasized Monday by t this prob. Air Ministry Declares 46 Planes Shot Down; 50 )r Wlllkie', I11to England, Blasting at Key Points, Acting President Chester A. Phil­ lips of the Universit.y of Iowa Killed in Folkestone Raid, Attacks Logical Iuvasion Sites following receipt of material from Center on Southea8t English Coa8t ~~-Tenn) the United States office of educa- )mlllee hacI BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS tion.
    [Show full text]
  • YANKEES at RED SOX
    YANKEES at RED SOX 100 YEARS OF THE YANKEES AT FENWAY PARK January 3,1920: The Yankees purchase the contract of Babe Ruth from the Boston Red Sox for $125,000 and a $350,000 loan against the mortgage on Fenway Park . Box Score from First Game September 28, 1923: The Yankees record 30 hits in a 24-4 win over Boston at Fenway at Fenway Park Park… the hit total remains the most in a nine-inning game in Yankees franchise history, April 20, 1912 while the 24 runs mark the second-most ever by the club in a road game and they’re most ever at Fenway Park . September 8, 1925: At Fenway Park, Babe Ruth hits his 300th career home run off Buster Ross in a 7-4 Yankees victory . June 23, 1927: In an 11-4 Yankees win at Fenway Park, Lou Gehrig becomes the first player in franchise history to hit 3HR in a single game against the Red Sox… the feat would be matched by Mark Teixeira on May 8, 2010 at Fenway Park . September 5, 1927: The Yankees lose, 12-11, in 18 innings at Fenway Park in the second- longest road game in franchise history (in terms of innings played)… was the first game of a doubleheader… the Yankees scored two runs in the top of the ninth to send it to extras… both teams scored three runs in the 17th inning… Red Sox pitcher Red Ruffing threw 15 .0 innings in the start . September 24, 1929: At Babe Ruth Day at Fenway Park, the Yankees win, 5-3, with Ruth going 2-for-3 with a double .
    [Show full text]
  • 1947-05-18 [P ]
    Win, Lose, or Draw Tribe By FRANCIS E. STANN latsWip KncfgMg Oooooh-Day for the Autograph Hounds Probably the first toumairient at which the genuine, bug-bitten golf fan* were outnumbered turned out to be one of the bigger and more democratic social events of the season. Mingling with Secre- tary of the Navy Porrestal, Gens. Eisenhower, Grove and Bradley, Admiral Nlmitz, Senator Taft and Attorney Gen- eral Clark, among others, were upward of 7,000 other guests of the Columbia Country Club, com- posed chiefly of autograph hounds and camera fiends. And who do you suppose most of the guests came to see? Der Bingle. Harry Lillis Crosby. As far as the people were concerned Bing was the biggest celebrity in the Celebrities Tournament. Bing Crosby is owner of a major league baseball team and there were two other baseball owners on hand, Clark Griffith and Del Webb. But neither owns a set of pipes like Crosby. That was the difference. That was the difference between Bing and Jack Dempsey, Gene Tunney, Bobby PMaeb BUnn Jones, Gene Sarazen, Babe Didrikson and even Baseball Commissioner Happy Chandler, a well-known tenor. It was the star-gazer’s dream come true. It was manna from Heaven for the camera shop*, whose cupboards must be empty of film. It was Oooooh-Day for the bobby soxers and autograph hounds. And for the comparatively small number of old-time golf fans the glorious pages of time were turned back when Jones, Sarazen, Bobby Cruick- shank and Walter Hagen played in the same foursome.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 St Army Opens Big Push Air Fleets Planes and Shells Blast Reich and Front Rip German Line
    Man Spricht Deutsch Ici On Parle Frangais Zeigen Sie mir den Weg. THE TRIPES BE On peut-on prendre verre? Tsaigcn Zee meer den Wayj. OO put own prond ran vair? Daily Newspaper of U.S, Armed Forces Show me the way. in the European Theater of Operations Where can we have a drink? Vol. 1—No. 78 New York—PARIS — London Tuesday, Oct. 3, 1944 1 st Army Opens Big Push Air Fleets Planes and Shells Blast Reich And Front Rip German Line SUPREME ALLIED HQ, Oct. 2 (AP).—A mighty fleet To Start Assault of more than 1,200 U.S. heavy bombers, escorted by 500 fighters, returned to Germany Pouring through gaps torn in the Siegfried Line after today and banged industrial a concentrated air attack and one of the heaviest artillery targets at Cologne, Kassel barrages of the war, First U.S. Army troops last night were and Hamm, while another reported to have gained two miles in some areas north of 1,000 planes joined the First Aachen, in a new major offensive. Army in assaulting the Sieg- The gains placed Lt. Gen. Courtney Hodges' troops in fried Line near Aachen. Virtually an area of the Siegfried Line where it narrows into one no enemy opposition was reported. flank north of besieged Aachen. Other First Army troops While almost 1,000 Portresses were reported to have reached a point 400 yards beyond a struck industries at Cologne and Kassel, 300 Liberators pounded railway track on the east side of the River Wurm. Germany's largest marshalling The major assault on strong enemy entrenchments yards at Hamm.
    [Show full text]