Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1970-09-26 J. A. Beauchamp MARION JACKSON Views Sports of The World Ted A. Wright, a long-time outstanding sports figure in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, has been released from Emory University Hospital and has returned to Savannah State College. He is scheduled to return to the Atlanta medical institution in a month for new tests. Wright also put Savannah State on the Southeastern Inter collegiate Athletic Conferene in pivotal respect with winning teams in basketball and track and field... It is newsworthy that the SWAC has made sports publicity directors an official arm of that circuit. North Carolina A&T University squeezed past South Carolina State 24-23 in the first annual Sickle Cell Classic, with a storybook finish... B. T. Harvey, all-time winning coach at More house College, former Commissioner of the SIAC and executive-secretary of the Southern Coaches and Officials Association, is planning a visit to the American League version of the 1970 World Series, after receiving an approval note from his med ic. THEDA JACKSON, who has taken on the obligation of publicizing Head Coach Frank Merchants More house College Maroon Tigers in football play this season is off to a good start. Theda has been putting pictures and news stories on our sports desk and his efforst have not gone unnotices. Small colleges need good public relations in view of the ascendancy of professional sports and major university competition in the Deep South and if our schools are to win space on the sports pages they will have to get on the ball. There was a time when our small private and state institutions could play to campus and community audiences, but not anymore. The bigger of our small state-supported schools are moving more and more toward play in the big cities of the nation to attract audiences and win new fans. This was a necessity due to the ever-in creasing encroachments not only of the play-for-pay ranks, but the formidable competition of radio and television. NEW APPROACHES ARE NEEDED if small colege football is to survive. One thing is the high cost of equipment, travel, housing, officiating and numerous other expenses that are not obvious to the human eye. Playing for campus and community and the occasional "homecomings" is not enough. There must be a new, more enlightened and skilled promotion of small college games and put out placards is not ecough. Small college football like any other product must be sold. I have watched with sincere Sorrow the tendency of many schools not to even purchase placards or newspaper space anymore and the "new intellecttualism" on most campuses make students look with disdain at victory rallies, ballyhoo and rivalry. It is sort of a snobbery that suggests protests, separatism and the innocent by stander philosophy is the real thing for the campus haute monde which has gone on to the arena of politics pollution of thought and muddling the administrative waters. It seems that these fifth columns of education are so busy under minding the academic foundations of our schools, that they scorn partisanship, rivalries, loyalty and support for intercollegiate teams. THERE ARE SCHOOLS I have visited that had enrollments larger than the campus enrollments, but there were hundred of empy seats, because of boycotts on emphasis of sports, but the most Facist and Nazi approach I've viewed has been in the SWAC. IF YOU VISIT A SWAC—School 10 - 1 is a bet that it has a new president. The old administrators have resigned long ago, mainly because they were abused, cured, heckled, censure in the press, held up as "uncle Toms" on radio and television and generally humiliated when they tried to address campus audiences. It was sort of hell with all the fires and damnation that sent these respected educators into retirement and obscurity. To pinpoint this, only Ralph Waldo Emerson Jones has survived this ordeal of controlled and impassioned student insanity. Starting in Texas, Prairie View A&M and Texas Southern University have new administrators. Southern University following tragic events forced the late Felton G. Clark into retirement following the most flagrant defilement ever suffered by an educator. SWAC institutions in Mississippi have new presidents at Alcorn A&M and Jackson State and Mississippi Valley College survived only after the National Guard, highway patrol and law enforcement authorities put down rebellion and riot Across the nation you know the story, Kent State University, Jackson State, Ohio State, Columbia University, troubled University of California, both at Berkley and Santa Barbara Syracuse University, Florida State, Tennessee A&I, Tuskegee Institute and all Atlanta institutions have if flet this iron heel of disaster and disenchanment. THEREFORE, let us make this a real football autumn, in which the glory and nostalgia of yesteryears were symbolic instruments of pride in our athletic teams and an era of glory in the majesty of conquest. There was a time when campus football was a weekend of exhilaration, enjoyment, re newal of old friendships, and an enticement for the better spirit of conviviality, friendships and fellowships, inbuded with all the conviviality which down through the years made football the show window of education. Sept. 25 Miles vs Morehouse Atlanta Sept. 26 Alabama A&M vs Savannah State, Savannah Tennessee State vs Albany State, Macon Fayette State vs Fort Valley State, Fort Valley Morris Brown vs Bethune Cook man, Daytona Beach, Fla. Alabama State vs S.C. state Orangeburg, S. C. Lane vs Kentucky State, Frankfort, Ky. Clark vs Fisk, Atlanta Tuskegee Institute vs J. C. Smith, Charlotte, N. C. N. C. A&T vs Florida A&M Tallahassee, Fla. Support for Small College Football Ted A. Wright, a long-time outstanding sports figure in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, has been released from Emory University Hospital and has returned to Savannah State College. He is scheduled to return to the Atlanta medical institution in a month for new tests. Wright also put Savannah State on the Southeastern Inter collegiate Athletic Conferene in pivotal respect with winning teams in basketball and track and field... It is newsworthy that the SWAC has made sports publicity directors an official arm of that circuit. North Carolina A&T University squeezed past South Carolina State 24-23 in the first annual Sickle Cell Classic, with a storybook finish... B. T. Harvey, all-time winning coach at More house College, former Commissioner of the SIAC and executive-secretary of the Southern Coaches and Officials Association, is planning a visit to the American League version of the 1970 World Series, after receiving an approval note from his med ic. THEDA JACKSON, who has taken on the obligation of publicizing Head Coach Frank Merchants More house College Maroon Tigers in football play this season is off to a good start. Theda has been putting pictures and news stories on our sports desk and his efforst have not gone unnotices. Small colleges need good public relations in view of the ascendancy of professional sports and major university competition in the Deep South and if our schools are to win space on the sports pages they will have to get on the ball. There was a time when our small private and state institutions could play to campus and community audiences, but not anymore. The bigger of our small state-supported schools are moving more and more toward play in the big cities of the nation to attract audiences and win new fans. This was a necessity due to the ever-in creasing encroachments not only of the play-for-pay ranks, but the formidable competition of radio and television. NEW APPROACHES ARE NEEDED if small colege football is to survive. One thing is the high cost of equipment, travel, housing, officiating and numerous other expenses that are not obvious to the human eye. Playing for campus and community and the occasional "homecomings" is not enough. There must be a new, more enlightened and skilled promotion of small college games and put out placards is not ecough. Small college football like any other product must be sold. I have watched with sincere Sorrow the tendency of many schools not to even purchase placards or newspaper space anymore and the "new intellecttualism" on most campuses make students look with disdain at victory rallies, ballyhoo and rivalry. It is sort of a snobbery that suggests protests, separatism and the innocent by stander philosophy is the real thing for the campus haute monde which has gone on to the arena of politics pollution of thought and muddling the administrative waters. It seems that these fifth columns of education are so busy under minding the academic foundations of our schools, that they scorn partisanship, rivalries, loyalty and support for intercollegiate teams. THERE ARE SCHOOLS I have visited that had enrollments larger than the campus enrollments, but there were hundred of empy seats, because of boycotts on emphasis of sports, but the most Facist and Nazi approach I've viewed has been in the SWAC. IF YOU VISIT A SWAC—School 10 - 1 is a bet that it has a new president. The old administrators have resigned long ago, mainly because they were abused, cured, heckled, censure in the press, held up as "uncle Toms" on radio and television and generally humiliated when they tried to address campus audiences. It was sort of hell with all the fires and damnation that sent these respected educators into retirement and obscurity. To pinpoint this, only Ralph Waldo Emerson Jones has survived this ordeal of controlled and impassioned student insanity. Starting in Texas, Prairie View A&M and Texas Southern University have new administrators. Southern University following tragic events forced the late Felton G. Clark into retirement following the most flagrant defilement ever suffered by an educator. SWAC institutions in Mississippi have new presidents at Alcorn A&M and Jackson State and Mississippi Valley College survived only after the National Guard, highway patrol and law enforcement authorities put down rebellion and riot Across the nation you know the story, Kent State University, Jackson State, Ohio State, Columbia University, troubled University of California, both at Berkley and Santa Barbara Syracuse University, Florida State, Tennessee A&I, Tuskegee Institute and all Atlanta institutions have if flet this iron heel of disaster and disenchanment. THEREFORE, let us make this a real football autumn, in which the glory and nostalgia of yesteryears were symbolic instruments of pride in our athletic teams and an era of glory in the majesty of conquest. There was a time when campus football was a weekend of exhilaration, enjoyment, re newal of old friendships, and an enticement for the better spirit of conviviality, friendships and fellowships, inbuded with all the conviviality which down through the years made football the show window of education. Sept. 25 Miles vs Morehouse Atlanta Sept. 26 Alabama A&M vs Savannah State, Savannah Tennessee State vs Albany State, Macon Fayette State vs Fort Valley State, Fort Valley Morris Brown vs Bethune Cook man, Daytona Beach, Fla. Alabama State vs S.C. state Orangeburg, S. C. Lane vs Kentucky State, Frankfort, Ky. Clark vs Fisk, Atlanta Tuskegee Institute vs J. C. Smith, Charlotte, N. C. N. C. A&T vs Florida A&M Tallahassee, Fla. THE SIAC SCHEDULE Ted A. Wright, a long-time outstanding sports figure in the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, has been released from Emory University Hospital and has returned to Savannah State College. He is scheduled to return to the Atlanta medical institution in a month for new tests. Wright also put Savannah State on the Southeastern Inter collegiate Athletic Conferene in pivotal respect with winning teams in basketball and track and field... It is newsworthy that the SWAC has made sports publicity directors an official arm of that circuit. North Carolina A&T University squeezed past South Carolina State 24-23 in the first annual Sickle Cell Classic, with a storybook finish... B. T. Harvey, all-time winning coach at More house College, former Commissioner of the SIAC and executive-secretary of the Southern Coaches and Officials Association, is planning a visit to the American League version of the 1970 World Series, after receiving an approval note from his med ic. THEDA JACKSON, who has taken on the obligation of publicizing Head Coach Frank Merchants More house College Maroon Tigers in football play this season is off to a good start. Theda has been putting pictures and news stories on our sports desk and his efforst have not gone unnotices. Small colleges need good public relations in view of the ascendancy of professional sports and major university competition in the Deep South and if our schools are to win space on the sports pages they will have to get on the ball. There was a time when our small private and state institutions could play to campus and community audiences, but not anymore. The bigger of our small state-supported schools are moving more and more toward play in the big cities of the nation to attract audiences and win new fans. This was a necessity due to the ever-in creasing encroachments not only of the play-for-pay ranks, but the formidable competition of radio and television. NEW APPROACHES ARE NEEDED if small colege football is to survive. One thing is the high cost of equipment, travel, housing, officiating and numerous other expenses that are not obvious to the human eye. Playing for campus and community and the occasional "homecomings" is not enough. There must be a new, more enlightened and skilled promotion of small college games and put out placards is not ecough. Small college football like any other product must be sold. I have watched with sincere Sorrow the tendency of many schools not to even purchase placards or newspaper space anymore and the "new intellecttualism" on most campuses make students look with disdain at victory rallies, ballyhoo and rivalry. It is sort of a snobbery that suggests protests, separatism and the innocent by stander philosophy is the real thing for the campus haute monde which has gone on to the arena of politics pollution of thought and muddling the administrative waters. It seems that these fifth columns of education are so busy under minding the academic foundations of our schools, that they scorn partisanship, rivalries, loyalty and support for intercollegiate teams. THERE ARE SCHOOLS I have visited that had enrollments larger than the campus enrollments, but there were hundred of empy seats, because of boycotts on emphasis of sports, but the most Facist and Nazi approach I've viewed has been in the SWAC. IF YOU VISIT A SWAC—School 10 - 1 is a bet that it has a new president. The old administrators have resigned long ago, mainly because they were abused, cured, heckled, censure in the press, held up as "uncle Toms" on radio and television and generally humiliated when they tried to address campus audiences. It was sort of hell with all the fires and damnation that sent these respected educators into retirement and obscurity. To pinpoint this, only Ralph Waldo Emerson Jones has survived this ordeal of controlled and impassioned student insanity. Starting in Texas, Prairie View A&M and Texas Southern University have new administrators. Southern University following tragic events forced the late Felton G. Clark into retirement following the most flagrant defilement ever suffered by an educator. SWAC institutions in Mississippi have new presidents at Alcorn A&M and Jackson State and Mississippi Valley College survived only after the National Guard, highway patrol and law enforcement authorities put down rebellion and riot Across the nation you know the story, Kent State University, Jackson State, Ohio State, Columbia University, troubled University of California, both at Berkley and Santa Barbara Syracuse University, Florida State, Tennessee A&I, Tuskegee Institute and all Atlanta institutions have if flet this iron heel of disaster and disenchanment. THEREFORE, let us make this a real football autumn, in which the glory and nostalgia of yesteryears were symbolic instruments of pride in our athletic teams and an era of glory in the majesty of conquest. There was a time when campus football was a weekend of exhilaration, enjoyment, re newal of old friendships, and an enticement for the better spirit of conviviality, friendships and fellowships, inbuded with all the conviviality which down through the years made football the show window of education. Sept. 25 Miles vs Morehouse Atlanta Sept. 26 Alabama A&M vs Savannah State, Savannah Tennessee State vs Albany State, Macon Fayette State vs Fort Valley State, Fort Valley Morris Brown vs Bethune Cook man, Daytona Beach, Fla. Alabama State vs S.C. state Orangeburg, S. C. Lane vs Kentucky State, Frankfort, Ky. Clark vs Fisk, Atlanta Tuskegee Institute vs J. C. Smith, Charlotte, N. C. N. C. A&T vs Florida A&M Tallahassee, Fla. TIPS ON CAR CARE From Bangor, Me. to Columbus, Ga. it's that time of year again—time to winterize your car. Depending on where you live, winterizing can mean anything from a tune-up to the full treatment including antifreeze to your cooling system and checking the condition and tread depth of your snow tires. To avoid a cracked engine block in severe winter weather, B.F. Goodrich car care specialists advise havsystem back flushed and checked for leaks. Enough anti-freeze should be added for temperature conditions in your area. Even if you have permanent anti-freeze, you should have the cooling system checked before the first frost to determine the temperature level to which your car is safe. Why? Because a simple loss of pressure, due to a worn radiator cap, could mean the evaporation of coolants and the subsequent replacement with water during the summer months. This dilution makes your anti-freeze less effective. A tune-up is also a wise move — in both North and South — as winter approaches. Even in Columbus, Ga., the nights can get pretty cold, making it difficult to fire up the family car in the morning. A good pre-winter tuneup will make your car more responsive on those cold mornings and prevent you from cranking the life out of your battery. If you live in the snow belt, now is the time to check your snow tires for wear and damage. BFG safety specialists recommend using the same criteria that you apply to your regular tires —less than 1/16 inch thickness of tread rubber means tires should be replaced. Most states now allow safety studs to be used during the winter months as an aid to braking and accelerating on ice and packed snow. A study by Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory showed that studs used on the rear will reduce stopping distance by approximately 30 per cent at temperatures around freezing. The same report indicated that stopping distances on glare ice are reduced by nearly 50 per cent when all four wheels have safety studs. Recently B.F. Goodrich began marketing a winter tire suitable for the installation of safety studs and use on all four wheels. One last bit of advice: if your car is equipped with windshield washers, make sure you add the anti-freeze made for them or you'll find that nothing will happen when you try to clear some of that turnpike film from your windows. Assassins To Defend Title Friday Night The Assassins No. 1 and No. 2 will defend their Georgia heavyweight championship against "The Professional" and Bobby Shone, Friday night, Sept 25th, 8:30 P.M. at the City Auditorium. Promoter - matchmaker Paul Jones has scheduled this all star card to begin at 8:30 P.M. This main event feature will be one fall, one hour time limit.. In supporting main event action, Buddy Colt, the Georgia heavyweight champion will go against Paul De Marco, in a one-fall, one hour time limit match. In preliminary action, Skandor Akbar meets Ray Gunkel, Mr. Ito and the Great Ota will square off against El Mongol and Sabu Singh. Melvin Sullivan will be the opponent for Pepi Gomze and the Masked Cougar meets Timothy Geohagen. Advance tickets may be ottained at ABC Wrestling, Inc. 310 Chester Avenue, S. E. Detroit Tigers Rookies Move Toward Majors Living proof of the new speed with which the major leagues are developing stars these days is offered by three youngsters who saw service with the Tigers in 1970. Elliott Maddox, Ken Szotkiewicz and Lerrin LaGrow are three out of a host of players who took their first professional steps in the last two years. LaGrow, the big right hander currently in military service after a month at Tiger Stadium, was drafted in June 1969. Maddox and Szotkiewicz, with the Tigers all season, were selected in June and January, respectively, of the previous year. There are more than two dozen like them on major league rosters — youngsters who have succeeded, on exceptional ability and promise, in making the big jump from the classroom to the majors with a minimum of experience. Steve Dunning, for example, stepped off the campus at Stanford and astounded the baseball world with a threehit victory for the Cleveland Indians last June. Don Gullett, a Cincinnati lefthander who was pitching for a Kentucky high school only a year earlier, had his big day in August when he retired 12 straight batters and fanned the first six in four innings of relief against the Mets. Bert Blyleven, Dutch-born righthander of the Minnesota Twins who also was pitching high school baseball a year earlier, won a regular starting with the Twins and in his best effort shut out the Red Sox on four hits in an August encounter. Both Gullett and Blyleven were picked by their clubs in the June, 1969 sessions of the free agent draft which was inaugurated in 1965. Ed Katalines, the Tigers' director of player procurement, cited the rapid advancement of this new crop as proof of the opportunities in baseball today. "Never was the baseball world more anxious to n and develop players," said the veteran talent hunter. "Expansion has intensified scouting and scouting and signing beyond anything. Football Scores K.C. Chiefs, Baltimore Colts On ABC-TV Mon. Night NFL Two Super Bowl teams led by great quarterbacks — the Kansas City Chiefs with Len Dawson and the Baltimore Colts with Johnny Unitas — face each other in a National Football League contest televised live on the ABC Television Networks new series, NFL Monday Night Football" Monday, Sept 28, 9 p m., EDT to conclusion. Sportscaster Keith Jackson will report on the field events from Baltimore Memorial Stadium while Howard Cosell and former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Don Meredith provide color commentary and expert analysis. **** Nine - ABC color cameras with two complete production units will cover the contest between the two outstanding contenders for division titles in the American Conference. Last year the chiefs won the AFL's Western Division championship, went on to the league title and beat the Minnesota Vikings in the Super Bowl to be crowned the top team in pro football. **** In 1969, Baltimore won the NFL championship and earned the right to face the New York Jets in the Super Bowl, setting the stage for one of the biggest upsets in pro football history as the Colts lost to the 17-point underdogs. Now the Colts and the Jets are both in the newly-aligned Eastern Division of the American Conference. **** Dawson is firmly established as one of the premier passers in pro football having led the AFL in passing in 1962, '64, '66 and '98. He was picked as the MVP in the Super Bowl and has thrown more touchdown passes in the past eight years than any other active quarterback in pro football. The Chiefs defense led the AFL, in virtually every major category test year, led by such stalwarts as Bibby Bell, Aaron Brown, Curley Culp, Buck Buchanan, Willie Lanier, Jerry Mays and Emmitt Thomas. Unitas was named the professional football player of the decade (1930-69) and the greatest quarterback of all time by the Associated Press in a poll taken last year, the 50th anniversary of the NFL. He has attempted more passes (4,456), completed more (2,450), gained more yards (35,502), and thrown more touchdown passes (266) than any quarterback in history. Earl Morrall the NFL's leading passer in 1968, is the backup quarterback. The receiver for many of Unitas passes is John Mackey, the bruising tight end who was picked for the alltime NFL team. The versatils Tom Matte led the Colts' runners for the third straight year. His 1,422 combined rushing-pass receiving yards led the NFL last season and he was the league's third-leading rusher. The defense is spearheaded by big Bubba Smith — at 6'7" and 295 pounds — starting his fourth year and already feared as one of the strongest, toughest linemen in the league. Safety Rich Volk is an All-Pro with 16 interceptions in his three in the NFL. Chet Forte will produce and direct ABC Sports' live color coverage of the Chief-Colts game on "NFL Monday Night Football" Jim Feeney will coproduce. Dennis Lewis will produce and Lou Volpicelli direct for the second unit Roone Acledge in the Executive Producer of "NFL Monday Night Football." The San Diego Padres will make their final appearance in Atlanta tonight when the Braves take on the visitors at 8:05 p.m. Pre-game show for tonight will start at 7:30 p.m. Rookie pitcher Mike MoQueen will be on the mound for the Braves, while the Padres will send either Dave Roberts or Pat Dobson to the hilltop. McQueen is sporting a 0-4 record for the season after being called up from the farm midway this year, while Debson is 12-15 and Roberts 7-3 won-lost wise. On Friday night, the Braves will kick off their final weekend at home with a threegame set against the Houston Astros, with the big Fans Appreciation Day set Sunday afternoon where several prizes will be given away. Still keeping pace with fourth place in the Western Division, the Braves edged San Diego, 3-2 Tuesday night in the opening game. With a crowd of 6,293 watching the slow drift contest, they broke a 2-2 tie in the 9th inning to overpower the visitors from the west coast. Mike Lum could very well be the big hero, because he slammed an infield hit with the bases loaded, thus driving home Felix Milan for the winning run. The Braves took an early lead, 1-0 in the first inning when Rico Carty, battling for the National League batting championship, blasted a double, driving in a run. But the Padres came back and scored in the second inning for a 1-1 tie. After Atlanta went ahead 2-1 to the eighth inning, the Padres locked the score, 2-2 in the top of the ninth. Then came Lum's single with the bases loaded and no outs. BRAVES BITS: The Braves announced that veteran knuckleball pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm has been claimed by the chi on waivers. Braves Take On Padres In Final Game Tonight The San Diego Padres will make their final appearance in Atlanta tonight when the Braves take on the visitors at 8:05 p.m. Pre-game show for tonight will start at 7:30 p.m. Rookie pitcher Mike MoQueen will be on the mound for the Braves, while the Padres will send either Dave Roberts or Pat Dobson to the hilltop. McQueen is sporting a 0-4 record for the season after being called up from the farm midway this year, while Debson is 12-15 and Roberts 7-3 won-lost wise. On Friday night, the Braves will kick off their final weekend at home with a threegame set against the Houston Astros, with the big Fans Appreciation Day set Sunday afternoon where several prizes will be given away. Still keeping pace with fourth place in the Western Division, the Braves edged San Diego, 3-2 Tuesday night in the opening game. With a crowd of 6,293 watching the slow drift contest, they broke a 2-2 tie in the 9th inning to overpower the visitors from the west coast. Mike Lum could very well be the big hero, because he slammed an infield hit with the bases loaded, thus driving home Felix Milan for the winning run. The Braves took an early lead, 1-0 in the first inning when Rico Carty, battling for the National League batting championship, blasted a double, driving in a run. But the Padres came back and scored in the second inning for a 1-1 tie. After Atlanta went ahead 2-1 to the eighth inning, the Padres locked the score, 2-2 in the top of the ninth. Then came Lum's single with the bases loaded and no outs. BRAVES BITS: The Braves announced that veteran knuckleball pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm has been claimed by the chi on waivers. BRAVES EDGE PADRES 3-2 The San Diego Padres will make their final appearance in Atlanta tonight when the Braves take on the visitors at 8:05 p.m. Pre-game show for tonight will start at 7:30 p.m. Rookie pitcher Mike MoQueen will be on the mound for the Braves, while the Padres will send either Dave Roberts or Pat Dobson to the hilltop. McQueen is sporting a 0-4 record for the season after being called up from the farm midway this year, while Debson is 12-15 and Roberts 7-3 won-lost wise. On Friday night, the Braves will kick off their final weekend at home with a threegame set against the Houston Astros, with the big Fans Appreciation Day set Sunday afternoon where several prizes will be given away. Still keeping pace with fourth place in the Western Division, the Braves edged San Diego, 3-2 Tuesday night in the opening game. With a crowd of 6,293 watching the slow drift contest, they broke a 2-2 tie in the 9th inning to overpower the visitors from the west coast. Mike Lum could very well be the big hero, because he slammed an infield hit with the bases loaded, thus driving home Felix Milan for the winning run. The Braves took an early lead, 1-0 in the first inning when Rico Carty, battling for the National League batting championship, blasted a double, driving in a run. But the Padres came back and scored in the second inning for a 1-1 tie. After Atlanta went ahead 2-1 to the eighth inning, the Padres locked the score, 2-2 in the top of the ninth. Then came Lum's single with the bases loaded and no outs. BRAVES BITS: The Braves announced that veteran knuckleball pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm has been claimed by the chi on waivers. Grid Jottings GREEN BAY QUARTERBACK BART STARR is entering his 15th NFL season at age 36. He has missed a dozen games over the last two seasons because of injures. How much longer will he play? "I haven't given that any thought and I don't plan to during the season," the Packers No 1 QB said recently. Star then revealed that his two sons. Bart Jr., 13, and Eret, 6, are at least partially responsible for his active status. "Bart has been watching me play since he was six, but this is the first year Bret has seed me play. My wife, Cherry, and I had set six as the age for him to start going to games. Two yens ago, after Coach Lombard left Green Bay. I seriously considered retiring and I asked Bart what he thought about it All of a sudden he really puddled up. I asked him what was wrong, and he said, 'If you quit now, Bret will never see you play. IF YOU ARE PLANNING A EUROPEAN VACATION THIS FAIL, you do not have to miss all of the excitement of NFL football American Express agate will sponsor a series of weekly highlights of AFC and NFC games produced by NFL cns that will be flown to Europe by TWA and Pan Am for distribution to U. S. & embassies, consulates and civic organisations. Football Scores (COLLEGE) Williams' Streak Ends At 1,117 Billy Williams was benched Thursday, Sept. 3. The Chicago Cubs outfielder ended a string of 1,117 consecutive games as Chicago defeated the Philadelphian Phillies, 7-2, behind the fourhit pitching of Ferguson Jenkins. Old Taylor Presents: Ingenious Americans #7 in a series On a cold, windy night in 1893, a man was rushed to Chicago's Provident Hospital with a knife wound a fraction of an inch from his heart. On duty was the hospitals young founder, Dr. Dan Williams. Instead of administering the usual sedatives and prayers, Dr. Williams summoned six of his colleagues to help him make history. It was a long shot. X-rays, sulphurdrugs, blood transfusion—today surgical necessities—were little known medical tools at the time. Yet, with great skill, Dr. Williams performed the impossible: the first successful heart operation. And the patient lived. Had it been any other hospital or any other surgeon, the man might have died within the hour. "Sewed up the human heart", headlined a Chicago newspaper. That hospital operating room was a long way from the small frame house outside Pittsburgh, where Dan was born. By the time he was twelve, his father had died and his mother had deserted. So, Dan took to the road and settled in Wisconsin as a barber. Scraping to gether enough money for an education. Dan put himself through a local academy. From Wisconsin he went to Chicago, and with the help of a prominent family, Dan Williams entered Northwestern. Medical School. He graduated in 1883 and opened an office on Chicago's Southside. In 1891, Williams founded the Provident Hospital, the first infirmary open to all patients and physicians, regardless, of race or creed. From Chicago, Williams was called to Washington to reorganize and head the Freedmen's Hospital, then operated by the Federal government. He organized Freedmen's into departments, collected a staff of twenty specialists, and created the beginnings of a nursing school. Under William's administration, this once primitive institution housed in six pre-Civil War buildings, soon became the forerunner of our modern hospital. Every time another heart operation saves a life, it is a living tribute to one of the truly great "Ingenious Americans". Dr-Daniel Hale Williams (1858-1931) #7 in a series On a cold, windy night in 1893, a man was rushed to Chicago's Provident Hospital with a knife wound a fraction of an inch from his heart. On duty was the hospitals young founder, Dr. Dan Williams. Instead of administering the usual sedatives and prayers, Dr. Williams summoned six of his colleagues to help him make history. It was a long shot. X-rays, sulphurdrugs, blood transfusion—today surgical necessities—were little known medical tools at the time. Yet, with great skill, Dr. Williams performed the impossible: the first successful heart operation. And the patient lived. Had it been any other hospital or any other surgeon, the man might have died within the hour. "Sewed up the human heart", headlined a Chicago newspaper. That hospital operating room was a long way from the small frame house outside Pittsburgh, where Dan was born. By the time he was twelve, his father had died and his mother had deserted. So, Dan took to the road and settled in Wisconsin as a barber. Scraping to gether enough money for an education. Dan put himself through a local academy. From Wisconsin he went to Chicago, and with the help of a prominent family, Dan Williams entered Northwestern. Medical School. He graduated in 1883 and opened an office on Chicago's Southside. In 1891, Williams founded the Provident Hospital, the first infirmary open to all patients and physicians, regardless, of race or creed. From Chicago, Williams was called to Washington to reorganize and head the Freedmen's Hospital, then operated by the Federal government. He organized Freedmen's into departments, collected a staff of twenty specialists, and created the beginnings of a nursing school. Under William's administration, this once primitive institution housed in six pre-Civil War buildings, soon became the forerunner of our modern hospital. Every time another heart operation saves a life, it is a living tribute to one of the truly great "Ingenious Americans". He performed the first successful heart operation. #7 in a series On a cold, windy night in 1893, a man was rushed to Chicago's Provident Hospital with a knife wound a fraction of an inch from his heart. On duty was the hospitals young founder, Dr. Dan Williams. Instead of administering the usual sedatives and prayers, Dr. Williams summoned six of his colleagues to help him make history. It was a long shot. X-rays, sulphurdrugs, blood transfusion—today surgical necessities—were little known medical tools at the time. Yet, with great skill, Dr. Williams performed the impossible: the first successful heart operation. And the patient lived. Had it been any other hospital or any other surgeon, the man might have died within the hour. "Sewed up the human heart", headlined a Chicago newspaper. That hospital operating room was a long way from the small frame house outside Pittsburgh, where Dan was born. By the time he was twelve, his father had died and his mother had deserted. So, Dan took to the road and settled in Wisconsin as a barber. Scraping to gether enough money for an education. Dan put himself through a local academy. From Wisconsin he went to Chicago, and with the help of a prominent family, Dan Williams entered Northwestern. Medical School. He graduated in 1883 and opened an office on Chicago's Southside. In 1891, Williams founded the Provident Hospital, the first infirmary open to all patients and physicians, regardless, of race or creed. From Chicago, Williams was called to Washington to reorganize and head the Freedmen's Hospital, then operated by the Federal government. He organized Freedmen's into departments, collected a staff of twenty specialists, and created the beginnings of a nursing school. Under William's administration, this once primitive institution housed in six pre-Civil War buildings, soon became the forerunner of our modern hospital. Every time another heart operation saves a life, it is a living tribute to one of the truly great "Ingenious Americans". Texas Southern Ruins Southern Cats, 29-6 The roof caved in on the Southern University Jaguars as they fell victim to a vicious first half attack by the Texas Southern Tigers who went on to win 296 behind a 23-point first half effort. Southern's only score came with 4:01 left in the game when Howard Hall found freshman Keith Raglin alone in the endzone. The attempt for a twopoint conversion failed as Eddie Richardson was dropped at the line of scrimmage. TSU's first score came on a field goal by quarterback David Mays that covered 33 yards and sent the Tigers ahead. Mays accounted for the next TSU score after an interception by Chester Agness gave the Tigs the ball at their own 47. A fifteen yard pass to Mike Holmes opened the drive. Two runs sandwiched in moved the ball only 2 yards before Mays found Holmes at the Jag 21 A penalty moved it to the southern 11 yard line. After a gain of 4 by David Thomas, Mays moved it to the one and scored on a plunge two plays later, His pass was good. Thomas later scored from two yards out to make the score 16-0. The point after attempt failed. A bad snap on the next Southern punt hurt the Jags when uly Jones under stress managed to barely get off a kick that covered only 15 yards. The Jag defense held TSU off but another bad snap caused Jones to get caught on the 18 yard line and TSU pushed it over with Harold Hart carrying for the last five yards. Mays pass was good and the Tigs went in to the locker room with a 230 lead, the most points that TSU had scored against the Jags in the history of their com petition. TSU's alone second half score came on a Larry Foster connection to David Thomas that covered 33 yards. The pass was no good. Southern was held to a 10 yards rushing the first half and wound up with 54 for the game. The Jags finished plus to the passing category with 165 yards on 13 completions. Defensively, linebackers Paul Shivers, Warren Jordan and Isiah Robertson with 6,5 and 9 individual tackles respectively. Henry Brandon led the Jag rushing with 6 carries for 24 yards. BUICKS, BUICKS, BUICKS Specials Lasbere E 225 Hardtops & Convertibles. We Arrange Financing When Others Fail Don't Walk Call Us REGARDLESS 60 Others To choose 758-6358 1202 Stewart Ave., S. W. 63 THRU 67 MODELS Specials Lasbere E 225 Hardtops & Convertibles. We Arrange Financing When Others Fail Don't Walk Call Us REGARDLESS 60 Others To choose 758-6358 1202 Stewart Ave., S. W. NFL NOTES ADD EDUCATION DEPARTMENT — Washington quarterback Frank Ryan, who has a doctor'0s degree in mathematics will teach a course to advanced geometry at the University of Virgin as Center of Continuing Education in Falls Church. Va., one night each week during the regular season. LAST JANUARY, the Atlanta Falcons went to the NFL draft locking for defensive line hlep. The second player picked was D. T. Mike McCoy by Green Bay. Boston made DT Phil Olsen the fourth selectee. DE Al Cowlings was chosen next by Buffalo. Cinoinnati made DT Mike Reid the seventh player named. And, when San Francisco made the ninth pick, the 49ers selected DE Cedrick Hardman. "We were We were 12th up and by then the pass rushers were pretty well picked clean." said Falcons coach Norm Van Breaklin. "So we went for John Small, who was rated the top linebacker and had played at 240 pounds. No one could figure us going for a linebacker, but all along I figured he could get up to 250 or so and we could shift him up front." who stands 6-4 is now carrying 258 pounds and is the regular defensive left tackle for Atlanta. Following his first effort at the ney position, some one said to John, "You sure were hitting out there." to which Small replied, "I know, but I'm not sure I was hitting the right people."