The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 8, 1960 Page: 3 of 8
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Taylor Daily Press, Sunday, May 8, 1960, Page 3
22 Games
Sr. League Plays
Warmup Games
Monday Night
Pre-Game Starts 6:30
Tuesday, May 24:
Kiwanis vs. Optimists
Rotary vs. Lions
Thursday, May 26:
Lions vs. Rotary
Optimists vs. Rotary
Tuesday, May 31:
Rotary vs. Kiwanis
Lions vs. Optimists
Thursday, June 2:
Optimists vs. Kiwanis
Lions vs. Rotary
Tuesday, June 7:
Kiwanis vs. Lions
Rotary vs. Optimists
SECOND HALF
Thursday, June 9:
Optmists vs. Lions
Kiwanis vs. Rotary
Tuesday, June 14:
Kiwanis vs. Optimists
Rotary vs. Lions
Thursday, June 16:
Lions vs. Kiwanis
Optimists vs. Rotary
Tuesday, June 21:
Rotary vs. Kiwanis
Lions vs. Optimists
Thursday, June 23:
Rotary vs. Lions
Optimists vs. Kiwanis
Tuesday, June 28:
Rotary vs. Optimists
Thursday, June 30:
Lions vs. Rotary
Kiwanis vs. Optimists
Tuesday, July 5:
Optimists vs. Lions
Kiwanis vs. Rotary
Thursday, July 7:
Rotary vs. Optimists
Lions vs. Kiwanis
Cotton Bowl Turf
Due Heavy Pounding
Mayor Kollman to Pitch First Ball
To Open 60 LL Tuesday Night
The Bankers will play the Vet-
erans, and the Grocers will play
the Cleaners in Senior League
warmup games Monday night on
Sportsman’s Field.
The new league’s official open-
ing is being delayed, awaiting
the arrival of all the uniforms
for players.
Comprised of four teams, the
league was formed' along Pony
League lines for boys 13 and 14
years of age. The Bankers, man-
aged by Charles Parker and Jim
Taylor, are sponsored by the
First-Taylor National Bank; the
Veterans, managed by Bill Hen-
nig and Richard Quebe, are spon-
sored by the Taylor VFYV Post;
the Grocers, managed by Stanley
Zetak and Louis J. Kind, are
sponsored by Reichenbach’s Red
& White; and the Cleaners, man-
aged by Neal Young and B.
Banks, are sponsored- by DeLuxe
Cleaners.
The first game will begin at
7, the second to start 10 minutes
after the completion of the first.
State Farm Saved
Texans Money
We aim to insure careful
drivers only. Savings here
have allowed us to pay divi-
dends to Texas policyholders
year after year. Call me.
F. L. GREEN
421 Talbot St.
Taylor, Texas
Phone EL2-4080
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Compart*
Home Office—Bloomington. Illinois
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dallas football fans won’t
have to leave town to see at
..least one game each week ex-
. cept in one instance next fall.
' ^he Cotton Bowl turf never be-
.foce will have taken such a beat-
-ing. Over a period of five months
.22 games will be played there.
The State Fair of Texas, which
gets .15 per cent rental, should'
make- enough to retire about
‘fflgSfiyr bond.
^ The .reason for so much foot-
ball is the formation of the
"American Football League and !
■fhe moving in of a club in the
*i8$tional Football League. ;
The Dallas Texans are the ;
AFL entry. The Dallas Cowboys ;
.represent the NFL.
first game on the schedule '
;iS:::Aug. 5 when the all-stars of ]
at it in the big saucer. Aug. 19
the Cowboys play the Baltimore
Colts in an exhibition and Sept.
2 the Texans engage the Houston
Oilers of the AFL. There is a
three week skip until the next
game — Dallas Cowboys vs. I
Pittsburgh Steelers Sept. 24.
From then
With Little League President
Harry Zeplin at the plate and
directors making up the infield,
'Nitter” Kollman
two halves. The winner of the
first half will play the winner of
the second half to determine the
Little League champs. In the
event the same team wins each
half that team is automatically
the champion.
Games are scheduled to be
played each Tuesday and Thurs-
day nights, a doubleheader sche-
duled for each night. The first
game will begin at 7.
Here is the complete schedule.
Players are asked to clip it for
future reference: The first team
listed is the home team.
FIRST
Mayor R. E.
will pitch the first ball to official-
ly get the 1960 Little League sea-
son underway Tuesday night.
After the brief pre-game cere-
monies, which begins at 6:30 p.
m., it will be the Rotary vs. Ki-
wanis in the first game of offic-
ial play, to be followed by the
game pitting the Lions and Opti-
mist. The first game is expected
to get underway around 7.
Bennie Hurta, the league’s vice
president, will open the program
by welcoming everyone to the
Little League Field.
Players of the four teams, Ro-
tary, Lions, Optimists, and Ki-
wanis, will be introduced and
lined up along the base lines.
Also slated to be introduced by
Mr. Hurta are: Mayor Kollman,
_____ HALF
Tuesday, May 10;
Rotary vs. Kiwanis
Lions vs. Optimists
Thursday, May 12:
Lions vs. Rotary
Optimists vs. Kiwanis
Tuesday, May 17:
Rotary vs. Optimists
Kiwanis vs. Lions
Thursday, May 19:
Optmists vs Lions
Kiwanis vs. Rotary
STATE FARM
on, except for one
week in October, there will be
at least one game each week.
There are three Friday games,
seven Saturday and 11 for Sun-
day. And there’s also one on
Monday — the Cotton Bowl clas-
sic, which this time will be on a
Monday because Jan. 1 falls on
Sunday. •
Six college games are sand-
wiched in between the numerous
Kiwanis vs. Lions
SAVE! SAVE! SAVE!
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boys and Philadelphia Eagles the
following Friday and the Texans
and New York two days later.
OPTOMETRIST
Across from City Hall
Then take the period Nov. 5 to
Nov. 20 when there will be five
games.
It looks like football saturation.
171 under the direction of Louis
J. Kind, assistant scoutmaster,
and a color guard composed of
Ronnie Hurta, Nicky Nichols, Ar-
THAT
FIT
Cowboys and Pittsburgh on a
- Saturday night, the) Texans and
Los Angeles on Sunday, the Cow-
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 119, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 8, 1960, newspaper, May 8, 1960; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth800288/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.