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TABLE OF CONTENTS
October 03, 1960 | Volume 13, Issue 14
October 03, 1960 All times are E.D.T.
October 03, 1960 Diving for gold
October 03, 1960 A RAISE FOR SOLLY
October 03, 1960 Trish Champion, 20, 5-foot-3, brown-eyed brunette from Nashville and cheer-leading, water-skiing senior at Vanderbilt (majors: history and English), outsparkled 12 other coed beauties to win the...
October 03, 1960 In the early days of college football the coach gave his team necessary training during the week and on Saturday turned the strategy over to the quarterback, the game over to the players, and...
The battle cry of a city and a team has become reality with the first Pirate pennant in 33 years. Here are the reasons Sports Illustrated believes the Bucs will win the Series, too
Last time the Pirates played in a World Series it was their misfortune to run into the most famous baseball team of all time. The 1927 Pirates had won the pennant by beating out John McGraw's...
A detailed
comparison of the hitting, fielding and pitching skills of the two pennant
winners, along with a discussion of probable managerial strategies, as
evaluated by Staff Writer Walter Bingham
Eddie Arcaro carried a good luck charm into the starting gate, and he won the Woodward with Sword Dancer. But don't jump to any obvious conclusions
Sword Dancer unquestionably is a fine horse, but he was first in the Woodward because Arcaro combined patience with perfect, split-second judgment. Arcaro wasted not a step of his mount's energy...
Pone Kingpetch retained his flyweight title last week, to the intense satisfaction of a rough-hewn graduate of Stillman's Gym who taught Thailand how to fight
October 03, 1960 The day's bag dangling from his helicopter. King Hussein (right, in cockpit) whirls triumphantly back from a royal hunt in the southern reaches of Jordan. A highly practical sportsman, Hussein...
October 03, 1960 As the 1960 waterfowl season opens, Albert Hochbaum, biologist and hunter, calls for restoration of the dwindling flocks of ducks and the waning dignity of the hunter.
A half-blind quarterback, Bob Schloredt, may again lead Jim Owens' Huskies into Pasadena
October 03, 1960 In the salty rips of Montauk Point at the end of Long Island, the surf caster above and his fellows on the next three pages take their stand against winds and tides and—they hope—fighting fish....
Last July 21 a 39-foot sloop named Gipsy Moth III sailed past the Ambrose Lightship and set a record as remarkable as any in a year remarkable for records. Francis Chichester, an English...
Neither rain nor sleet nor dark threats from his wife can stay the dogged surf fisherman from the slow completion of his appointed—and often fruitless—rounds. Buffeted by the waves, perplexed by...
In last week's issue Rex Lardner told the grim story of the tension that develops whenever women are encountered on the golf course. Now he shows how this kind of tension—in fact, any kind of...
I should like to offer my thanks to Jerry Hicks, the pro at Brook Valley Golf Club near Wampahonsset, Long Island, for consenting to write the preface for my book (Out of the Bunker and into the...
Proper way to make High Tension iron shot is to dig up divot. Size of divot (left) determines how well shot is hit. In fact, it makes no difference whether player hits the ball or not, as long as...
October 03, 1960 October is World Series month, not only in the U.S., but also in Japan, where a nation of baseball addicts has adopted the American game with astonishing zeal. As these scenes of last year's...
Northwestern's experienced backs and green line led the Big Ten back to the top, a Texas halfback straightened out and Lehigh's engineers turned the pressure on Delaware
THE EAST
Penn State over Missouri. Rip Engle will have his Penn
State defenses set for Missouri's Mel West. His other worries should be
minor.
Bob Waterfield's Rams may not be Little Bighorns, but they proved pretty easy to massacre
October 03, 1960 | Nick Thimmesch Most original of the new compacts, the Tempest is rid of that annoying bump in the front-seat floor. Pontiac designers have put the transmission in the rear where it bothers no one
In two magnificent bursts, Bullet Hanover rewarded his driver with a third Jug victory
THE MELODIES INSPIRED BY THE GAME ARE RICH, RARE, SOMETIMES EVEN REVOLTING. WATCH OUT-PITTSBURGH MIGHT SING ITS WAY TO VICTORY
October 03, 1960 BASEBALL—CLEARWATER (Fla.) BOMBERS won the world tournament of the Amateur Softball Association (for the fifth time) at Jones Beach, New York, defeating the Delta Merchants of Stockton, Calif....
October 03, 1960 4—Chris Brasher-London Observer13—Ronald D. K. Hadden15—A.P., Mike Durham-Gloucester Daily Times, Henry Reichard-Columbus Citizen-Journal, Bill Shepherd-Dayton Daily News, Dick Hoover,19—Leonard...
October 03, 1960 STILL READYSirs:Thank you for your editorial Freedom to Kill (Sept. 19). We career Coast Guard families can vouch firsthand for lax marine laws, poor enforcement and rock-bottom appropriations for...
October 03, 1960 Winners on the PGA tour through August
October 03, 1960 No one doubts that the Yankees pulled the rope tight, but two bullheaded men helped knot the noose
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