SI Vault
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS
February 11, 1957 | Volume 6, Issue 6
Previous Previous
Mar 12, 2007 | Volume 106, Issue 1

February 11, 1957 | Jeremiah Tax
It was a great night in Lawrence, and the whole town was there to watch Iowa State and Kansas U. meet in their rubber match

February 11, 1957 | Horace Sutton
That's Rio de Janeiro, where bikinis dot the beaches now and the spirit of carnival is in the tropic air

February 11, 1957
PRINCE CHARLES STRIKES A BLOW FOR BOXING, SLIDE, EMMETT, SLIDE, BASEBALL TRANSLATED, JOEY MAXIM AS A VOICE OF EXPERIENCE, THE PUBLIC AND THE PARKS

February 11, 1957
•Caliente's Future Past?The Post Office Department took a swing at the Caliente Future Book (futures on Kentucky Derby, etc.), announced that Caliente-bound mail will be intercepted, marked...

February 11, 1957
BLOOD TELLS AGAINRemember Nashua and Swaps? Well, last week their Thoroughbred 'half brothers,' just turned 3, were running on separate roads both signposted Louisville and the Derby. At Hialeah,...

February 11, 1957
At the Millrose Games a new photographic device is expected to take the guesswork out of racing

February 11, 1957 | Donald MacDonald
Daytona's Speed Weeks get hotter than ever as Detroit and sports cars move in

February 11, 1957
RECORD BREAKERS

February 11, 1957
John Devitt, husky 19-year-old Aussie freestyler, gulped customary vitamin pills, slipped into 50-meter pool at Brisbane, churned water white as he set two world long-course records: 49.1 for 100...

February 11, 1957
Striding across finish line, Olympic Champion Tom Courtney completes record-tying 600-yard run in 1:09.5 at Boston.

February 11, 1957
BOXING

February 11, 1957 | Jimmy Jemail
DICK CORNISH President Metropolitan Rod and Gun Editors' Assn. Not a novice who unknowingly took one fish more than the limit. But I would report a jacker, the guy who uses a light to bewilder a...

February 11, 1957 | Jimmy Jemail
Is there a physical fitness problem among the youth of your country? (Asked of foreign dignitaries)

February 11, 1957
One of the world's oldest fabrics, so old that no one knows exactly where it was first made, is becoming an American favorite. Its colors make madras look pale

February 11, 1957 | Dorothy Stull
Once maligned, even feared, weight lifting has won Dr. Peter Karpovich's endorsement as a sound off-season training aid for baseball and tennis players, swimmers—and even golfers

February 11, 1957 | Dorothy Stull
Baseball and tennis players, golfers and swimmers will benefit from most of these lifts. Exceptions are noted where they occur

February 11, 1957 | Dorothy Stull
These three exercises are designed to give tone to specific muscles

February 11, 1957 | Oscar Otis
California pasteboard is safer for man and beast, and the East's favorite charge is also rejected: TIME IS NO OBJECT

February 11, 1957 | James Murray
Bill Casper came through for the Young Guard in the Phoenix, but the midwinter circuit still resembles an OLDTIMERS' PARADE

February 11, 1957
3—John G. Zimmerman, Marvin Newman6—Alden Clarke, Al Taylor, Jerry Cooke15-18—Ormond Gigli from Rapho-Guillumette20, 22—drawings by Ajay23—Keith Korolden-Miami Daily News, U.P.24, 25—Keystone...

February 11, 1957 | Alice Higgins
Over 2,000 canine blue bloods face the supreme test, none more confidently than Kay Shouse's PROUD BARRAGE

February 11, 1957
Charles Cruft, who sold cakes for dogs, began a show now considered the world's finest

February 11, 1957 | Ray Gafford
In the course of his rounds, every golfer is confronted with situations in which he must hit a shot on a higher or lower trajectory than he would normally achieve. He needs a higher trajectory,...

February 11, 1957 | Harry Phillips
This behatted man is Photographer Jerry Cooke, a prolific contributor to SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, who in this issue gets credit not only for our cover but also for the Cruft's Dog Show and the SPORTING...

February 11, 1957 | Compiled by MORT LUND
SPOT TO SKI: MAMMOTH MT.

February 11, 1957
SO—season opened (or opens); SC—season closed (or closes).C—clear water; D—water dirty or roily; M—water muddy.N—water at normal height; SH—slightly high; H—high; VH—very high; L—low; R—rising;...

February 11, 1957 | Nardi Reeder Campion
An ex-Army sergeant named Spike Webb joined the Navy in 1919—and taught the budding admirals how to fight

February 11, 1957 | Nardi Reeder Campion
Nardi Reeder Campion comes from a family steeped in the tradition of the Army. But one brother—Rear Admiral Fred Reeder—managed to escape Army gray and thus provide Mrs. Campion with an entrée to...

February 11, 1957 | Nardi Reeder Campion
HOW THE NAVY GOT ITS PUNCH A tournament at sea; practical jokes; learning and teaching; a golden era comes to an end

February 11, 1957
HOT STOVE: IT'S FAIR, IT'S FOULSIRS:NATURALLY WAS INTERESTED IN ADMIRAL DANIEL GALLERY'S STORY ON RULES IN FEB. 4 ISSUE. WHILE RAISING SOME GOOD POINTS IT ALSO CONTAINS SEVERAL ERRORS. IN COLUMN...

February 11, 1957
It seems unlikely that Robert Goheen, as a member of the Princeton graduating class of '40, had any inkling he would be kingpin on the campus in less than 20 years. Yet this former member of Old...

February 11, 1957
[TV]TV [COLOR TV]COLOR TV [NETWORK RADIO]NETWORK RADIO.