The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 177, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 14, 1960 Page: 2 of 10
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Page 2, Taylor Daily Press, Thursday, July 14, 1960
Amarillo Is Number Texas College
Moving Up in |eams to Remain Same
Texas League
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Amarillo’s Gold Sox, who lan-
guished in the Texas League cell-
ar for half the season, are mov-
ing up.
The Sox won their third
straight from Austin Wednesday
night to climb within a half-game
of fourth place.
They boosted only a 1-point
margin over last place Tulsa.,
however, because the latter whip-
ped the league leaders, Rio
Grande Valley, 5-2.
Rio Grande maintained its 7%-
game bulge because San Antonio
beat Victoria 7-2 and moved past
the latter into second place—one
point better than Victoria.
Amarillo rammed over five
runs in the sixth to come from
behind and beat Austin. Southpaw
John Davolio scattered eight hits
in posting his eleventh victory of
the season. He fanned 10.
Ron Herbel of Rio Grande Val-
ley finally met defeat as Tulsa
beat' him 5-2. It made his record
10-1 for the campaign. Gordon
Richardson pitched 7-hit ball and
got credit for the victory although
he had to have help from Ted
Thiem in the ninth.
Lefthander Jack Curtis was in
rare form as San Antonio whipped
Victoria 7-2. He pitched 5-hit ball.
Oilers to Start
Grid Workouts
HOUSTON rn — About half the
90-man Houston Oiler football
squad will start on early bird
workout today.
The remainder of the American
Football League team starts the
eight week training grind Mon-
day.
The early sessions today, Fri-
day and Saturday are designed
mainly for the ’ quarterbacks.
Oiler Coach Lou Rymkus said
about half the 45 to 50 early
starters won’t be around for the
first full practice Monday.
“We’ll cut day by day,” Rym-
kus said. “It’s unfair to keep a
boy around and string him along.
But they’ll all get a fair shot.”
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Associated Press Sports Writer
There have been a few changes
and shifting about but the same
number of colleges that played
football in Texas last season will
face the barrier in September.
There will be 47.
For one thing the independents
have grown into what could be an
eight-school conference except
that it will never be because of
the difference in sizes and ambi-
tions.
University of Houston has quit
the Missouri Valley Conference
and will play an independent
schedule. Houston thus brings to
eight the number of independents.
Texas colleges are in four con-
ferences—seven of them in the
Southwest, three in the Border,
eight in the Lone Star and one—
North Texas State—in the Missouri
Valley.
There have been a few changes
in the junior college setup but 14
schools will play football the
same as> last year, Henderson
County left the Texas Junior Col-
lege Conference and entered the
Texas Eastern, which has new
rules this year. The principal one
limits athletic scholarships to 25,
plus 15 part scholarships. In the
past the schools could give 33
full scholarships and as many part
scholarships as they wished.
It is part of a retrenchment go-
ing on among the junior colleges,
many of which are having a diffi-
cult time staying in football. Ef-
forts are being made to organize
one conference with rules aimed
at living within the means.
Only four schools are left in
the Texas Junior College Confer-
ence with the departure of Hen-
derson County. But that increases
the Texas Eastern Conference to
five schools. The Pioneer Con-
ference remains as it was with
San Angelo, Tarleton State, Whar-
ton, Corpus Christi, Del Mar and
Victoria. San Angelo was rumor-
ed thinking about leaving this
conference but Coach Max Baum-
gardner says there’s nothing to it.
The Pioneer may lose a mem-
ber next year, however, because
Tarleton State becomes a senior
college.
There has been some talk though
of Tarleton remaining in two-year
athletics .
Texas Tech became a member
of the Southwest Conference in
1956 but had to wait until this
fall to start playing for the
Championship. It makes a some-
what overbalanced league—seven
of eight members in Texas.
First games are scheduled as
early as Sept. 10 with Howard
Payrie, Lamar Tech, Arlington
State and Stephen F. Austin open-
ing the season, Lamar Tech will
be playing the National Polytech-
nic Institute of Mexico at Port
Neches.
And at least two of the Texas
colleges already are assured of
bowl games. Prairie View has
its own—the Prairie View. Lamar
Tech will meet a team of Mexi-
can all-stars in the Azetc Bowl
at Mexico City Dec. 2.
Here is the lineup of Texas col-
leges in football this fall:
Southwest Conference— Texas,
Texas A&M, Baylor, Texas Chris-
tian, Texas Tech, Rice, Southern
Methodist.
Missouri Valley Conference —
North Texas State.
Lone Star Conference— Sam
Houston State, Southwest Texas
State, Sul Ross, Lamar Tech,
Stephen F. Austin, A&I, East
Texas State, Howard Payne.
Border Conference—-Texas West-
ern, Hardin Simmons, West Texas
State.
Independent— Abilene Christian,
Austin College, McMurry, Texas
Lutheran, Corpus Christi, Arling-
ton State, Trinity, Houston.
Negro colleges—Bishop, Paul
Quinn, Prairie View, Texas Col-
lege, Wiley, Texas Southern.
Pioneer Junior College Confer-
ence—San Angelo, Tarleton State,
Wharton, Corpus Christi Del Mar,'
Victoria.
Texas Eastern Junior College
Conference— Texarkana, Kilgore,
Tyler, Henderson County, Paris.
Texas Junior College Conference
—Blinn, Ranger, Cisco, Navarro.
Granger Team
Due in Finals
GRANGER, July 14 (Spl) —
After notching two more victories
to their credit last Sunday in
Temple by defeating the George-
town club 8-3, and the Andice
team 17-2, the Granger CYC base-
ball team will be eligible to play
in the finals next weekend at
Bryan.
Since losing their first two ear-
ly season games, one to the Tay-
lor Brethren and the other to the
Coupland club, the Grangerites
have won five straight and it ap-
pears that they will be a hardy
aggregation to contend with in
the finals.
In the semi-finals games in
Temple Sunday, Bennie Rychlik
hurled for the Granger group in
the Georgetown game, and Jodie
Svehlak pitched during the An-
dice contest. Willie Cervenka and
Timothy Hajda each hit a home
run for the Granger club in the
Andice game.
All-Star Game Heroics to be Remembered
NEW YORK ® — They’ll be a grand slam in baseball by win- lie was his magnificent self, rnak- ing to hit a homer. I can t ex-
talking about the second' All-Star
game for years to come.
Not so much because the Na-
tionals won it for an unprecedent-
ed sweep of the two-year-old two-
game midsummer set to narrow
the Americans’ over-all margin to
16-13.
Not so much because for only
the third time since its inception
in 1933 has an All-Star game
ended in a shutout, such as Wed-
nesday’s 6-0 victory, or for the
third time have four home runs
been hit by one club.
Not so much because for the
second time in three days was
the victory credited to a Pitts-
burgh pitcher. Bob Friend' won in
Kansas City Monday and Vernon
Law won in New York Wednes-
day.
Not so much because in win-
ning, NL Manager Walter Alston
accomplished, within 10 months,
ning a pennant, a World Series
and two All-Star games, or be-
cause in losing, AL Manager A1
Lopez suffered his sixth All-Star
loss, two as a player, one as a
coach, and three as a manager.
The 38,362 paying customers in
Yankee Stadium will long remem-
ber the second 1960 All-Star
game because of the heroics of
three really superlative perfor-
mers, three players who belong
on any All-Star team, in any gen-
eration—Willie Mays, Stan Mus-
ial, and Ted Williams.
Willie the magnificent back in
New York where he last played
in 1957, duplicated his spectacular
Kansas City performance by
smashing a single and home run
off New York southpaw Whitey
Ford and another single off De-
troit right-hander Frank Lary
The San Francisco special also
stole a base. In center field, Wil-
ing four putouts. One was on a
425-foot smash by Mickey Mantle
to deep center which he made
look easy.
Mays, who also cracked three
hits—a single, double, and triple
—in the first game, now shows
a .438 All-Star average on 14
hits in 32 at bats.
The only person not excited
about Mays’ performance was
Willie himself.
“Can’t let it go to my head,”
he said. “When I find myself
feeling good about something
done, I remember that next day
could be a bad one. And man, I
have had some bad ones. Some
were so bad I could cry.”
At a nearby cubicle in the win-
ning team’s clubhouse was anoth-
er smiling player, the ageless
Musial.
“You know,” he was saying,
“I really had a feeling I was go-
plain why you feel that way. But
you do.”
Stan, at 39, and playing in his
19th All-Star game, was referring
to the home rim he hit as a
pinch hitter off Gerry Staley of
Chicago in the seventh inning.
The 41-year-old Boston Red' Sox
slugger didn’t disappoint the fans,
either.
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 177, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 14, 1960, newspaper, July 14, 1960; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth777749/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.