The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 155, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1961 Page: 7 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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:s
Nettleton
s-dnoiday
a junior
Schools
Friday
Title For Grabs -
Golden Gloves Finale Tonight
*cnocke<J out hi* opponent then If against Bobby Wilhelm of Oorpua
cieam of Texas boxing crop the bell hadn't intervened. Cnristi while Jack Henry of tyler
make* Its final bid tonight for a As It «,««
coveted team championship, eight rdf with M’aeconda
individual tides and a trjp to Chi- SLi j!,nfa seeonds in ,hp
action in
the aea-
alfurriaa
lost out
hr ltay-
to the
Delight
vs Bar-
id round
to Har-
«dd Kzell
7-5, M.
s one of
t
tarsal ou
kcr and
M.6-2,
■ '•••
H 6-4.
Class A
« state
S.*ft
Corpus
feded in
Hal-
vless to
the San
larshall
ret and
on. Ste-
alou, a
ain for
ttjp to_
cago for the Golden Gloves Tour-
nament of Champions.
A veteran field of Texas fight-
ers Monday night set the stage
for the finale and It's anybody's
guess who'll compose the Chica-
go-bound team.
The team title likewise will be
up tor grabs in Will Rogers Coli-
seum but the race has narrowed
to two teams, Corpus Chriitl with
12 points and three fighters left
and Amarillo with 11 points and
five fighters still around.
Fort Worth, the leader through
Uie first three rounds, lost four
of five bouts Monday night and
dropped out of the running with
It) points and on* remaining
fighter.
But the on« Fort Worth scrap-
per left, massive Claude Daven-
port, takes
on Alfred (Pete) Pe-
memon 4m nlnVit'a
!SM.rrhS*afi‘ bS.
final stanza.
Mils McCawley of Texarkana,
who meets Peters for the light
heavyweight title, literally fought pins.
himself into a state of exhaustion
Monday night. He decisloned W.
H. Woodall of Dallas, but wheir
the fight ended both were too
weak to leave and Just clung to
one another in the center of the
ring. A crowd of 4,423 screamed
delight
isti while Jack Henry of Tyler
meets Burton Gilliam of Dallas
for the welter crown.
Tie lighter divisions still must
complete semifinals before they
can crown their respective ldng-
Thc top match in the lighter
classes unfolds in the feather-
weight division where Sherman's
Reginald
A. Davis, a finalist last
year In the lightweight class at
Chicago, meets Enrique Gonzalez
of Corpus Chriitl,
I |£ ■ ■ H I Tie winners in aU classes to-
Tie middleweight final pits!night will represent Texas Feb.
Randy Blackwell of Beaumont'28-March 1 at Chicago.
Brumel Reviews Jumping
Duel With John Thomas
By WILL GRIM8LEY an older sister, who is an engi
Associated Pros* Sports Writer
Peterson, who Saturday elimi-
nated defending champion Henry
Harris Jr. gained a technical
knockout Monday night over Tex
Paris of Sherman.
The bout lasted nearly one
round, which apparently was
about one round too much lor the
Brownwood youth.
Davenport, like Peterson a col-
lege football plaver, decisloned a
game but outclassed and out-
weighed Joe Jarvis of Dallas.
Once again Corpus Christi's
John Peters, a Ssk and Foot In-
dian lighting in the light-heavy
division, stole the thunder from
the heavies!
The colorful UCC student,
tagged the "Dancing Indian" for
his bouncy dancing tactics,
knocked out powerful Elmer
Clement of Amarillo Monday
night In what stacked up to be
the greatest fight of this fiveday
state tournament
dement battered Peters
throughout the first round but that
high Jumper, la as i
straight-backed
as a West Point cadet, land some
as a TV Idol, extremely modest-
and human.
"I was nervous—very nervous,”
Brumel acknowledged in review-
ing his return duel last Friday
night at Madison Square Garden
with America’s John Thomas.
"But I was mere nervous in the
Olympics.”
The 18-year-old Moscow college
cleared 7 feet, 3 indies in
student
the New York Athletic Club meet,
winning his first competition oh
boards. Thomas, beaten by both
■■ Brumel
Robert Shavlakadze and
in the Rome Olympic* ftiBiff
out at 7-2. ‘
Thomas said he was bothered
by photographers’ flashlight
bulbs. Brumel told intimates he
saw only the bar. He appeared
as cool as an ice cube.
“I knew the conditions were un-
usual, so I practiced on a wood-
en floor at the institute in Mos-
cow," Brumel told New York
track writers at their < middy
second round and would have
wasall. Peters pounded Dement luncheon Monday. “A long time
into the ropes near the end of the ago I dreamed of coming to
America,, I was impatient to meet
Thomas again.”
Raiders Could
Nail Down SWC
Title Tonight
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Games at Waco and Dallas
headline the Southwest Conference
basketball schedule Tuesday
night. Texas Tec* might nail
night. Texas Tec* might
down the championship.
Tech, leading the conference
with an 8-2 record, plays lowly
Baylor at Waco.
Texas AftM, In second place
with 7-3, meet* bitter rival South-
ern Methodist at Dallas.
Should Ted) win and AftM
lose, then the Red Raider* would
said his aim is to beat the 7-4‘/i
leap be made recently in Lenin-
grad. “I worked hard and now
maybe I better my own result,”
he added.
He gets two more chances be-
fore returning home—in the Na-
tional AAU Indore championships
Saturday and the Knights of Co-
lumbus Games the weetoaftefc—
Brumel doesn’t speak English,
but his blue eyes light up like a
Reman candle when be discusses
athletics through his interpreters
— Ylri Serdov, assistant team
manager, and Igor Ter-Ovanes-
22-year-old Soviet broad
mi
Tech lose and _JI
gies would go Into a tie for first
place with Tech.
Only three games are sched-
uled Tuesday night with Texas
hosting Rice in the other one.
Texas is in a tie for third place
with Arkansas, each boasting a
64 record. Tie Longhorn* and
Razorbacks have only an outside
chance of figuring in the cham-
pionship.
Arianaaa plays Wetoesdsy
night, meeting Texas Christian at
Fort Worth. '
,A full schedule is on tapfre
Saturday night when Texas Tech
entertains Texas Christian, Texas
AftM meets Teams at College Sta-
tion, Baylor and Arkansas strug-
gle at Fayetteville and Rice and
Southern Methodist collide at
Houston.
The clean-cut Soviet athlete ^ audience.
neer, and two younger toothers,
one 17 and the other 8. The 9-
year-old, like me, likes athletics."
What has Impressed the Rus-
sians most about the capitalistic
U.S.. — the tall buildings, the
pretty girls, the Jazz bands re mo-
vie houses?
The food,” Brumel replied
through Ter-Ovanesyan. “Those
thick steaks-they are wonderful.
The girls? We have met no Amer-
ican girls. Movies? We have seen
no movies. We train hard, but we
must eat.”
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
; AP TV-Radio Writer
NEW YORK (AP)—In the fall
of 1959, as an aftermath of the
quiz show scandals, a lot of tel-
evision programs disappeared
from the networks. Most of them
were programs in which the au-
dience participated.
Now, however, the quiz and
game shows are back In greater
numbers than ever, although the
financial rewards aren't as great.
Most of them are In daytime
spots with a predominantly fern-
Rozsy
ts cost-
i,u>erep QUrrg
CM0*0AL fOR A
RUMOR /ft THAT
fte’* A CHA/ft
SMOKER, SOT
AW8E THAT
AELPt/ft T/tOEt
SMOKE-R/LLEP
INPOOR AREHAS.
FCD. ZZ
Your Daily TV Telescope §|ff!*r
.r... p WMnwnufidu*,
show. It puts on seven shows ev-
ery weekday. In addition, it has
toe Groucho Mare show on a
weekday night “People Are Fun-
ny" on Sundays, and its prime-
time evening version of its day-
time success, “The Price Is Right”
is rated among the top 20 shows
began Jumping when I was
11 years old,” he said. “I always
toted sports. I tried running and
hurdling and I played some foot-
ball, but I discovered -that I was
best at high Jumping.
“I was born to a little mining
town called Luganks, in the Urals.
Audience • participation shows
use up a 37 weekly hours of net-
work television—more than West-
erns or even situation comedies.
Tiey range all the way from
CBS' high-level "College Bowl” on
Sunday afternoons, when teams
from institutions of higher learn-
ing match brain power, to ABCs
"tyeen for. a Day” on which con-
testants match hard luck stories
for dishwashers and sets of
matched luggage. In between are
all the games shows—"Video Vil-
lage,” "Say When,” ‘Tuth or
Consequences"—many of than
adapted from parlor or children’s
games.
There are more than a dozen
of these, and an adroit houaewife,
if rite twirls her channel selector
carefully, can watch them every
weekday from midmoming to mid-
afternoon without a break. .
NBC currently is undisputed
My father was a miner. I have king of the audience-participation Hon.
Western, Southern
Uh Has Big bin
Tie Western and Southern Life
Insurance Co. has had a growth
of more than $3 billion insurance
in force and assets to excess of
{635 million during the past 19
years, according to William C
Salford, president
Western and Southern Life In-
surance Co. Is represented to Bay- ai
town hy'C. R. McNabb, 617 W. a
Sterling, district sales manager.
Safford said 1960
the company had
assets to3.059.000
force to {5,241,000; and ,
to policyholders to {7 million, f
insurance written amounted to
million.
Western and Southern ha* a
sales force of more than 6,000
who serve more than six million
policyholders.
A new seven - story building,
t^ZSSSST-
in TV. All this consumes 19 hours
of NBC time each week, and it
will be 19tt hours when an eve-
ning version of “Concentration”
goes Into the schedule in April
ABC devotes 12H daytime hours
a week to Its audience partidpa-
tion shows
DBS, which discontinued all its
audience partiripation shows in
late 1959,-is quietly getting back
into business. Last season it re-
1:00 I
8:15 1
8:251
8:30
9:00
opened the door with its daytime
“Video Village.” On March 13 it
will toss three others into its chan-
nel: “Double Exposure," “Sur-
rise Package, and “Face the
i^cts.” To do It, it will Junk two
soap operas—"Tie dear Horizon”
and “Fhll Circle"—and reruns of
perennial "December Bride.”
10:00
.Dally Word
JArm Report, News
Mr. Caboose
Todav in Houston
Morning News
Today
Cadet Den
Capt. Kangaroo
Todav to Houston
Tumbleweed Thai
Today
Say When
Our Miss Brooks
My Little Margie
Jack La Lame
Jack Wigmore, out of work since
Christmas, doesn't mind pulling a
string or two to find a job.
Flying high over this coastal
' city these days is a kite. The let-
tering on toe 10-foot-long kite
reads: "Situation wanted — Call
r r •>
PROGRAM LOG
Ute ON YOUR DIAL
t oe
5JWSW1UTHHI
si
p# MgLBagUY -
5:05 SP0RT8C0PE
3:10 TERRY LAHN
5:30 ALEX DREIER
late w^ther-swayze
NEW8 8P0RT*
Video Village || ?mr^y“a22&
Play YourHunch ?:$ g®* JACMO>
Plav Your
Price s Right
CD Star Showcase
JERRY JACKSON
MEWS
JERRY JACKSON
NEWS
JERRY JACKSON
WSSEgBSSSm
audience participation shows
total of 45 hours a week, al -
gh they will need two re three
.to do it on because there
conflicts.
1. »*. •*-—
Recommended tonight: -Tie
Moore Show, CBS, UML
Lawford fills in for the va-
cationing star. <
ROVE PROFIT
MEXICO CITY (AP) - T*
Treasury Ministry said today that
Ohio, any small merchant who reports
home office in three years, is now less than 600 pesos ({48) a month
completed at a cost of {4.5 mil-1 profit must prove it before he re-
am. ceives the legal tax-free benefits.
i» xrkXW&*
I Sps0*
<:30 FRED Si-root.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - For
years Agnes Goycoolea' watched
as massive new structure* — a
whole new skyline — rose in the
Civic Center below her home on
HillStreet.
She had a good view from her J
front windows, .and it was -
thrilling sight
FRED XATOOL
7:10 NEWS-WEATHER
7:35
7* FRED KATOOL
7:10 PAUL HARVEY
DON McNEIL
-A
OLLIE CUNNJNCUUH
OUJE CUNNINGHAM
Tien the city elevated a sec-
tion of Hill Street reducing her {fjl
forVoOOO k6*' 316 *Ue<i 1,16 dty o
Superior Judge Leon T. David
freed today that the lost
_______ ew had a market value. He
tax-free benefits, awarded her {3,460.
gpKE
ALCALDWELL
LI 8-1304."
Wigmore, a kite hobbyist when
be was working as plant mana-
Mrs. Mike Franssen
ger for a now defunct electronics
ten. ‘ 1
. made the latest one to kill
time between Job hunting excur-1
STATE RESERVE LIFE
"Sm M* Infant Yen Din"
> CALDWELL
! ”
TERRY tAHH
_ Half Hour
NOTICE
CLYDE SPEAR INSURANCE AGENCY
HAS SEEN PURCHASED 17
RAMSEY INSURANCE AGENCY
CfyJ# whliss to thank Ms many loyal customnrs
for thtir patronage .■, . and Ramsay's wishes to
welcome their new clients. B« assured your Insur-
ance will be properly handled end appreciated.
Our agney hat been in operation since 194ft end
we art members of the Baytown Insurance Ex-
change. Please feel free to cell us if thorn is any
question concerning your insurance.
RAMSEY INSURANCE AGENCY
m N. MAIN, HIGHLANDS
OFFICJC PH. 4M-I521, RESIDENCE PH. 48MOI
Eight Bi-District
Games Begin 4-A
Elimination Play
wun eigru ui-uisuiui games
day night.
Ysleta Bel Air put* its 25-3
red on the line at tMdland,
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
■ laaat AAAA starts eliminating
down-to four team* for toe state
schoolboy basketball tournament
with eight to-dlatrict games Tues-
i its 25-1 ree-
_______Idland. Bird-
ville will be at Amarillo Palo
Durq. Dallas temuril at Ftot
Worth Paschal, Denton vs. Lufkin
at Daltefc Aldine vs. Houston Aus-
tin and Beaumont vs. Freeport at
sstautjHi
with Jasper
ickles
ill
• Creek tai
irg at Houston
in be at Robs-
■*
fee represmtativM to the^to
tournament to regional tourna-
ments at the weekend.
Each of the A clas
four teams to- the state
ment at Austin next week.
B qualifies eight
CEMENT DEMAND
MEXICO CITY (AP)—Mexico’s
demand for eementroee from 2J
million tdns in to ^lignuy
more than 3 million Iwt W the
National Chamber of the Cement
Industry said today.
i
_
m
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 155, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 21, 1961, newspaper, February 21, 1961; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057355/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.