Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 74, Ed. 1 Friday, October 28, 1960 Page: 10 of 15
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Ffday, October 28, 1960
THEDENTONRECORD.CHRONICLE
PAGE TWO—-RECTION TWO
Williams Leads Colts RerzEarns Opinions Vary Over AL Move
With Kisses, Scores
FRONT-END
LIGHTWEIGHT CROWN
WHEEL ALIGNMENT
Brown Defends
SPECIAL
Against Andrade
Slidell Girls
Estes
GUARANTEED
FOR 6 MONTHS
to
This time Sherman got to Den-
to
his
j 7 Young
4 J II Thomas
II IS 41 Tetals
Tetais
€
Score by quarters:
- 7
____11 4
-
89:
&:
YOUR SECURITY
sa
y-'
4,
8866188
2; ' 8
ter. Mass., with 209s.
A
BUY YOUR INSURANCE THROUGH
7 INTERNATIONAL
YOUR
Denton Association of Insurance Agents
TRUCKS
M
Sales and
GEORGE 1. INMAN INSURANCE AGINCY
206 W. Oak
Ph. DU2-2915
Service
W. 1. (BILLY) LANFORD AGINCY
JEWELL SMITH AGENCY
Morris Bldg.
Ph. DU2-5523
Ph. DU2-8414
Morris Bldg.
ALLIE 1. MILLER INSURANCE
STOCKARD INSURANCE AGENCY
414 University Drive
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Raley Bidg.
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THE NIBLETT AGENCY
102 WEST OAK
BARROW INSURANCE AGENCY
Merrit Bidg.
Ph. DU2-6524
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Ph. DU2-9621
RAMEY INSURANCE AGENCY
FRED L DENDY INSURANCE
Merril Bldg.
Ph. DU2-9691
Ph. DUl 4411
McClurkan Bldg.
4
V
1
f
l
I
9
Morrow Quits
Amateur Ranks
Next Door t« J. C. Penney’s
See "DAT MASTERSON" Thurnday
7 FM, WIAP-TV Channel s
second TD. Williams passed
Larino for the extra points.
FINEST QUALITY, SINGLE VISION
GLASSES AS LOW as $14.85
Complete with frame, lenses ond examination
Convenient Credit At Mo Extra Cost
Montgomery
Clarke
*. Gritfith
Muncey
Pruett
FOOTBALL
SCORES
advance.
With the spring training season
little more than three months off,
the American League busied it-
crew
after
from
4 Glenn
3 Jones
Slidell
Brock -
Ba sure. Insure with your independent in-
surance agent.
TExRS State
Optical
Denton .....
Sherman ...
Andrade tangle at the Olympic
Auditorium.
Brown, a remarkable athlete for
Ah
(T
plays of the game lost Sherman
22-yards.
The victory gives the Colts a
4-3 season record with two games
remaining. They host Carrollton
Thursday and Dillingham Junior
High of Sherman Nov. 10.
Score by quarters:
First downs
Rushing yard.!,
tilling yardage
Pesses
Passes intercepted by
Punts
Fumbles lost
Yards penalized
/
< .d
SHUMAN
10
86
33
3-10
0
5-29.2
0
4 40
15
213
118
10-16
?
2-25.2
1
8-90
When your eyes are examined at Texas State Optical... the interior of each
eye is thoroughly examined with the Ophthalmoscope, an instrument used by both
Optometric Doctors and Medical Doctors. Blood vessels and nerves are carefully
examined for evidence of disease or other abnormalities.
Other scientific instruments are used to determine the presence of astig-
matism, the degree of nearsightedness or farsightedness, and to measure the
efficiency of the interior and exterior eye muscles.
Your eye condition is thoroughly analyzed and, if glasses are needed (or if
you prefer, contact lenses), you can be confident of getting the exact lenses
required for clear comfortable vision.
Visit one of 76 conveniently located TSO offices throughout Texas and
benefit from their 25 years of dependable Optometric service.
2
2
i
h.“
BIG SPRING (AP)—Bobby Mor-
row. winner of three gold medals
in the 1950 Olympic Games, will
compete as an amateur no longer.
Morrow renounced his amateur
standing Thursday and went into
the sporting goods business with
Elmer Tarbox, the former Texas
Tech football player. They are
marketing a starting block for
sprinters.
Precision -Fitted
CONTACT LENSES
$65.00 Complete
= Cost M much is $125 to $185 ELSEWHERE
= SalufactuHi uavanteed
Duden Captures
Sahara Tourney
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP - Bob
Duden employed his arched put-
ter to capture first money in the
$10,000 Sahara Pro-Amateur Golf
Tournament Thursday.
The 40-year-old Portland, Ore.,
pro fashioned a 68 in the final
round to finish with a 54-hole
score of 207. He won $1,000.
Duden is the Inventor of the
arched shaft, which is used be-
tween the feet like a croquet mal-
let. His uncanny putting enabled
him to finish four under par.
Tied for second place, with $725
each, were Doug Sanders. Ojai,
Calif., and Paul Harney, Worces-
7695
Directed by Dr. S. J. Rogers, Dr. N. Jay Rogers
■ -Optometrists ----------
0
1
SLIELL
Ft W Tp:
B & W INSURANCE AGENCY
C. P. Whisenant, Agt.
CAM! AT A GLANCE
DENTON
KNOX RHEA AGENCY
1007 University Drive, West,
Suita "H"
■SOCK
Ff Ft. Tp.
4 6 14
5 4 14
3 0 6
0 0 0
You wouldn’t choose your family doctor or lawver
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eollege Freshman
Del Mar Junior College 1. Rice o
Texas AIM 21, Mouston 7.
Baylor 1, Tamai Christian 6,
Migh Seheel
fl Fam Tech 12, El Fam Jefferson 8.
Fort Worth North Side 14, Fort Worth Car-
ter-Riverside 6.
Aldine 32, Hourton Reagan 14.
Houlton Bellaire 22, Houlton Lamar 0.
Freeport 11, Pasadene 6.
Temple 23, Austin McCallum 2.
Son Antoni* Brackenridge 57, Son Antonio
Lanier 14.
Allanta 33, DeKalb 1.
Pearland 19, Eest Bernard 12
Prosper 22, Collinsville 14.
Lindiay 26, Genter 20.
until a thorough eye examination at TSO
revealed no evidence of disease or defectl w
International’s exclusive truck service organization,
the world's largest, assures you fast, readily avail-
able, expert truck service, also genuine replacement
parts that are exact duplicate* of original part*,
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16 is 42
11 14 - 41
14 7-42
CALVERT
MOTOR co.
303 L Sycamore •'Truck Canter of North Texas"
- 1
Wky gamH®
supply players was devised Thurs-
day by the eight general manag-
era and will be presented to the
owners at next month’s meeting.
26berMse
811 S. Locust
DU2-3864
tonight for his Jamesville. N.C.,
home for a double celebration.
The 8-4 hurler, ace of the Cleve-
land Indian mound staff, was
named Thursday as the American
League's Sophomore of the year
by baseball writers in the annual
Associated Press poll.
Sunday is his 24th birthday, so
favorite in the non-televised bout,
billed for 15 rounds.
NINTH DEFENSE
It will be the ninth defense of
the title by Old Bones, establish-
ing a record of title defenses for
the 135-pound division. The late
Benny Leonard successfully de-
fended the title eight times.
The co-promoters, Cal Eaton
and George Parnasses. hope for
a turnout of 8,000 and a 370,000
gate.
Brown was guaranteed $40,000
and his 30-year-old foe, from near-
by Compton, gets 20 per cent of
the gate. A rematch was guaran-
teed if Brown loses.
Few will be surprised if the
match ends before the scheduled
15 rounds, but the longer it goes
the more the younger Andrade
ONE-PANEL ARTIST
Brown is noted as a one-punch
artist and has knocked out 38 op-
ponents in his 80 victories.
Andrade also boasts a punch. Of
his 44 wins, 24 were by knockouts.
The Cisco Kid, who twice retired
in the past two years, stopped all
four of his 1960 opponents.
Brown, a native of Baton Rouge,
La., won the title from Wallace
(Bud) Smith in 1956.
York, 13 each; first baseman
Norm Cash, Detroit, 6, and pitch-
er Don Lee, Washington, and out-
fielder Carroll Hardy, Cleveland-
Boston, 1 each.
Coach Tommy Smith’s
scored on the second nlay
forcing Sherman to punt
Sherman’s 48 yard line
Williams handed to Bill
Aoo°
Woo
39 Mike McCain, Larry Larino
and Williams carried the ball 38-
yards to the 17-yard line of Sher-
man. Williams then tossed to Ken-
ton Lynn, who jumped high in the
air and nulled the pass in for the
1 0 2
1 0 2
0 0 0
2 0 4
IWING INSURANCE AGENCY
First State Bank Bldg. Annex
Ph. DU2-2715
saying he had been assured the • self with the problem of stocking
continental group was consulted in two new franchises. A plan to
"I was concerned about the
1O
‘e M
15 and tossed a 45-yard pass to
Scoggins then teamed with Larino
for another first down via rush-
ing. He tossed an eight ■ yard pass
to Scoggins and completed an 11-
yard pass to Lynn to move the
ball to Sherman’s eight. The lan-
ky field general then followed his
blockers around right end for the
20-0 lead.
Sherman moved the ball 55
yards in 12 plays to score with
Ken Wible running off left tackle
the final four yards. Wible passed
to end Tom Smith for the extra
points and 2:21 remained before
intermission.
Denton moved the ball to the
Sherman four before McCain fum-
bled and Sherman ran the clock
out.
Denton kept the ball in Sher-
man territory throughout the third
quarter but couldn’t score. The
Colts took the kick off and mov-
ed to Sherman's 20 where they
lacked a foot for a first down Af-
ter Sherman punted, Denton mov-
ed the ball from Sherman’s 45 to
♦he six before the drive ran out
of steam
SHERMAN MOVES
Sherman moved the ball to its
30 before attempting a long pass
which Williams intercepted on the
50. He picked up blockers and ran
down the left sideline the final
score with 7:04 left in the game.
Sox, but they are expected to sell
their stock in the near future.
"Greenberg and Veeck had sev-
eral irons in the fire," an Ameri-
can League baseball man said.
"If Los Angeles had not opened
up, they would have gone into
Washington. If that had failed to
open up, they were prepared to
buy the Kansas City club.”
FOUR BUYERS
There are at least four would-be
purchasers for the Washington
franchise. They include Adm.
John J. Bergen, board chairman
of the corporation which owns
Madison Square Garden; Elwood
Quesada, administrator of the
Federal Aviation Agency; John
formerly held stock in the Sen-
ators, and H. Gabriel Murphy,
chief minority stockholder in the
Senator*.
Owners of the present clubs
and Frick will have to approve the
parties who apply to operate the
new franchises. This may come at
the next scheduled meeting of the
American League, Nov. 17, in New
York.
The American League's surpris-
ing action brought censure from
still another quarter. Bill Shea,
founder of the defunct Continetal
League, charged the owners with
reneging on an agreement, double
crossing the Continental group,
and "committing a disservice" to
baseball.
TO GET EVEN
"The whole thing was done to
health of my eyes...
for four yards then hit Mack Scog-
gins. who made a nice catch and
raced 66-vards for the first ’core
with the ball game 2:41 old. Extra
point try failed.
Sherman was again forced to
punt, getting no further than its
Cop Third
SLIDELL (Staff» — Slidell High
came within two points of sweep-
ing a twin bill from Brock in non-
district basketball here Thursday
night.
Slidell * girls ran up victory No.
3 with a 47-45 victory. Sharon We-
ber was top scorer with 18 points
and Kathy Schertz furnished if
more.
In the boys competition, Slidell
trailed 21-16 at the half and 35-27
going into the final period. Al-
though the small, scrappy Slidell
crew outpointed Brock 14-7 in the
final period. Brock won 42-41.
handing Slidell its third straight
loss of the season.
Slidell’s girls are the feature
attraction at a basketball clinic
at NTSC in Denton Saturday. The
girls finished fourth in state com-
petition last season. The opponent
will be Joshua.
The next game for the boy* le
Tuesday when Slidell hosts Belle-
vue.
He passed to McCain for the ex-
tra points.
Both sides spent the remainder
of the game fighting off drives.
The Colts were forced to punt
twice while Sherman had another
pass intercepted, this time by
Ricky Barnes, and had to punt
once. The game ended with Den-
ton defensemen pushing Sherman
back at every t irn. The last three
C. 1. MILLER INSURANCE AGENCY
McCray Bldg. Ph. DU2-2215
Alden D. Miller, Jr.
As Sophomore To Operate 10 Teams In ’61
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)—Lanky I
drawling Jim Perry hoped to head
By CARL DINGLER
Record-Chronicle Staff Writer
it was hard for the 500 fans on
hand for the Denton Junior High-
Sherman football game Thursday
night to tell whether it was Jim-
mv Williams night or Homecom-
in"
The versatile ninth grade quar-
terhack paced the Colts to a 28-8
victory over Piner Junior High of
Sherman and at intermission got
to kiss Miss Betty Brinkman, who
was crowned Homecomine Queen
by Williams and Bill Clarke.
Williams tossed for three touch-
downs the first three times Den-
toe gained possession in the first
half, scored two others with an
etht - yard run and a 50-yard
pa«s interception runback.
He completed ’0 of 16 passes
for 188 yards and gained a large
portion of the 213 - yards rushing
by the Colts.
COLT DEFENSE
The Colt defense stood out as
the stingv crew limited Sherman
to only 17 yards rushing the sec-
ord half and no pa.” comoletions.
.. 14 6 0 8—23 he has the two-ply celebration
... 0 8 0 0— 8 planned.
Tall Jim is in the Army at Fort
Hayes, finishing up a two-week
training period due to end Mon-
day. He served six months a year
ago.
"But they generally let us off
for weekends so I’m going to see
if I can get away tonight so I can
spend my birthday With the folks,
and tell ’em about this,” Perry
said.
"I feel wonderful about being
named, and it’s a big surprise.
Everybody talks about the sopho-
more jinx, but I didn’t even think
about it. I just did my best and
everything came out fine.
"I have five more years of this
two-week training with the Army,
and I like it. I had planned to go
back to Campbell Junior College
near Raleigh (N.C.), but I don't
think I will this winter. I want to
get my legs in shape, so I'll do
plenty of hunting and fishing —
mostly hunting.
"I've been going pretty hard for
about five years, and I need a
rest. I want to be ready for spring
training—and I feel almost ready
to go right now.”
Jim had a 12-10 record with the
Indians in his freshman year, aft-
er signing with the Cleveland or-
ganization in 1956 for an esti-
mated $4,000 bonus. He hoisted
the record this year to 18-10, with
a 3.62 earned run average as P
sophomore to pick up 97 of 188
votes cast in the poll. Jack Fisher
of Baltimore, also a right-hand
pitcher was second with 57.
Others drawing vote* were out-
fielder Bob Allison of Washington
and pitcher Jim Coates of New
NEW YORK <AP>-Commis-
sioner Ford Frick, National
League President Warren Giles
and Los Angeles Dodger owner
Walter O'Malley notwithstanding,
the American League definitely
will operate as a 10-team league
in 1961, one year before the rival
older circuit follows suit with as
many clubs.
"I respect the commissioner’s
wishes and I don't wish to sound
like we ire opposing him,” said
George Medinger, vice president
of the Cleveland Indians and a
member of the AL Expansion
Committee, "but we’re going
ahead with 10 teams next year.
There were people in our league
who thought we were moving too
fast, but the majority agreed it
was the proper move.”
Frick met with Joe Cronin
Thursday and told the American
League president he would have
preferred expansion in 1962.
PROBLEM
"I told Joe that trying to get
started in 1961 constituted quite a
problem.” said Frick. "That was
doing things awfully fast and I
wished they might have waited
until 1962.”
Giles, upon learning the Ameri-
cans had granted franchises to
Los Angeles and Minneapolis-St.
Paul (shifting the Washington
Senators to the Twin-Cities and
placing another team in the na-
tion's capital), contended the NL’s
granting of franchises to New
York and Houston for 1962 was
a "more practical” plan.
O’Malley, who pioneered maior
league ball in Los Angeles, de-
plored the American’s "hasty ac-
tion,” and added: “Another full
baseball schedule would wreak
havoc in Los Angeles."
"We are aware there’ll be
problems,” said Medinger, “but
we feel we can surmount them.”
NO BUYERS
Although no prospective buyers
for the Los Angeles and Washing-
ton franchises have been identi-
fied, it was learned that Hank
Greenberg and Bill Veeck will
land the Los Angeles plum. Veeck,
as president, and Greenberg, as
vice-president, are principal
I stockholders in the Chicago White
190
7)
get even witn O'Malley,” he
shouted, "but it was done at the
expense of the Continental
League. They (the AL owners)
not only went back on their prom-
ise to accept only CL franchise
holders but they didn't even have
the decency or the courtesy to
cal) in our people and tell them
what they were doing ”
Frick, in effect, denied this by
tour/
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LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
world lightweight crown, one of
the brighter baubles of boxing,
will be at stake tonight when
champion Joe Brown of Houston
and California's Bobby (Cisco)
his 34 years, is a 2-1 betting
ton's 48 before being forced
punt.
45-YARD PASS
Williams took command on
O
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Kirkland, Tom. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 74, Ed. 1 Friday, October 28, 1960, newspaper, October 28, 1960; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1468407/m1/10/?q=%22~1%22~1&rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.