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TABLE OF CONTENTS
August 28, 1972 | Volume 37, Issue 9
The pros have moved the football to center field. If all goes as expected, watch the scores climb
The White Sox blaze as Dick Allen saves his homers for the days and Wilbur Wood's knuckler continues to amaze. Even the scoreboard seems to faze foes in Chicago where the Sox are a new craze
Pool prodigy Jean Balukas, 13, breezed through the best women players to take the crown from 57-year-old Dorothy Wise
August 28, 1972 A golfing jigsaw takes place in Pinehurst when the top pros meet in a combination medal-match play tournament that may require a math degree to solve. Dan Jenkins tries.
That Rolls-Royce rebel, James Van Alen, wants to save yacht racing, baseball, bustards, Donder and Blitzen and the U.S. Navy, but most of all he wants to save his beloved tennis
Chill rains splattered against Munich's mind-boggling $60 million Olympic tent roof last week, leaving bundled-up visitors to wonder whether this might not actually be the Winter Games that were...
At 4:45 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 26, an 18-year-old West German police cadet named Günter Zahn, a lad, it is said, chosen because of his unusually graceful running style, will carry the Olympic...
Since the two of them always have so much to smile about, what with all those trips to the victory stand, it is small wonder that Shane Gould and Mark Spitz have been so preoccupied with the...
August 28, 1972 Some 9,000 athletes from 123 countries have gathered at Munich for the XXth Olympiad. Two weeks hence, when they go home, nearly 8,000 of them will be leaving empty-handed, there being only 1,109...
August 28, 1972 The U.S. and Russia will once again be fighting it out for the overall title but East Germany, a power in women's track and field, may mount a challenge
August 28, 1972 | J. Richard Munro Handicapping is a chancy business under the best of circumstances, but picking the winners at an event like the Olympic Games, with more than 120 nations and 9,000 athletes competing, is an...
August 28, 1972 There's a long, long trail awinding to Munich, but Gordon Naysmith will never sec the end of it. The 35-year-old Scotsman set out 21 months ago from Lesotho in southern Africa on horseback,...
Can Vic Davalillo, the minuscule and peripatetic Venezuelan who plays now and then for the Pittsburgh Pirates, be the victim of that most pernicious form of bigotry—size-ism?
AL WEST
Topsy-turvy is the only way to describe the 1972 Summer National Contract Bridge Championships held recently in Denver. Virtually nothing went according to form. For example, in 43 previous years...
August 28, 1972 | Coles Phinizy In the blistering heat of St. Louis, 18-year-old Mary Budke, helped by "little gifts from on high," won the U.S. Women's Amateur title
August 28, 1972 | Jonathan Rhoades There is a theory—not widely held, to be sure—that the 1972 Munich Olympiad will never, happen. The theory was expressed most recently in a Munich beer cellar, one of those smoky places with...
August 28, 1972 AUTO RACING—DAVID PEARSON, driving a Mercury, won the $84,000 Yankee 400 stock car race in Cambridge Junction, Mich. after a bumper-to-bumper duel with Bobby Allison over the last 50 miles.
August 28, 1972 6—Neil Leifer14, 15—John Iacono, Sheedy & Long16—Rich Clarkson, Sheedy & Long17—Dick Raphael, Larry Nighswander18—Walter Iooss Jr.19—John F. Jaqua20—Walter Iooss Jr.30—Lane Stewart35—Jerry...
August 28, 1972 Mrs. Elsie Bracken, 39, has caught 224 tarpon off Boca Grande, Fla. this year, releasing all but six, which she retained as tournament entries. Mrs. Bracken, who weighs just 90 pounds and stands 5...
COST-OF-LIVING-IT-UP NOTE
•Upton Bell, New England Patriots' general manager, whose roster includes graduates of Yale, Colgate, Dartmouth and Princeton: "When some guys come in to talk contract, I may be reading a...
August 28, 1972 BOBBY'S GAMESirs:My thanks to Robert Cantwell for a brilliant article on the world chess championship (How to Cook a Russian Goose, Aug. 14). Bobby Fischer has given new meaning to the game by...
August 28, 1972 | Leonard Wibberley The headless body of the queen was laid for burial in a box of elm designed to hold sheaves of arrows, and this was fitting for she had been fond of archery. Scarcely a year before, her husband...
August 28, 1972 | John Cottrell Emily Davison hoped to advance her cause by bringing down the royal colors. But even while dying she was upstaged
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