The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 6, 1983 Page: 5 of 18
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Leo the Lip still spews
Pair of top grid recruits
Moore calls for
pick Irish as No. 1 team
baseball wisdom
ts
Herd physicals
Leo
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SPORTS
WHO AM I?
Top pro golfers
skipping GMO
U.S. to battle
MILWAUKEE APi - A Country Club Course in
he could throw the bull into a minent players, and this year
P.O. Boi 73
5
with nine
Angeles Olympics should be
B
The
methodical
8
Tuesday,
Australia
t
penny a pound
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RCA
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f
0
C.Y
Is
le
distinguishing feature of the
Greater Milwaukee Open golf
tournament is its traditional
trouble with attracting pro-
Australians, 2-2, stayed in the
tame for the first six
minutes, trailing only 17-14.
But the Americans then
outscored the Australians
04 to take a 50-19 bulge
L
H
SAW EVEN MOM BY
THE BOX OR KRY- MAC
PACKAGE
Jerry Taylor, New head football coach at
Hereford High School, has announced all boys in-
terested in playing high school or junior high
football this fall should arrange for a physical ex-
amination with their family doctor.
Students must pay for the physicals, for which
forms are available at doctor offices throughout
town, Taylor said.
Shoes and socks will be issued to high
schoolers on Wednesday. August 17 at 7 p.m. in
the fieldhouse. Two-a-day. non-contact drills will
begin Monday, August IS with contact work
slated to start Friday, August 19.
In Tuesday's US men's
basketball victory. guards
Johnny Dawkins of Duke had
15 points and Erie Turner of
Michigan had 14
RCA 25"dlagonal XL-100
Color TV with
Digital Remote Control
skipper of the victorious Na-
tional Leaguers in the Old
Timers Game — the ap-
petizer for tonight's Mh All-
Star extravaganza.
I got No .2 when I broke in
with the Yankees in 1925,"he
continued "Never had
anything else Lasorda i Tom
Lasorda, manager of the
Dodgers) grabbed it, maybe
thinking it was good luck
"One day when I was just a
kid on the Yankees I'm lying
on a table like this all
dr ess id in my uniform - and
the Babe (Ruth) cornea up
and dumps me in the middle
of the floor."
Durocher, who will be 78
later this month, is still a
crusty codger who spews his
words at a MS a muwto dip
and snaps out his baseball
wisdom in raspy chunks that
don't tolerate dispute
in his managerial heyday
he was a volatile. contentious
guy who conducted a tight
ship. feuded with umpires,
fans and the establishiment
It was the fifth medal of the
games for Hayes, the only
American to win a gold medal
in the first five days of com
petition
Both the American and
Cuban men ■ basketball clubs
are 44 Cuba lost by a big
margin to the Americans in
the 1979 Pan Am competition
Before coaching the US
team to a 100-52 romp over
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Durocher la a baseball
uniform. sitting on s table in
the manager's office and
cusain ' upa storm
This cap is two sizes too
big for me," he growled,
wrapping layers of adhesive
tape around the inside band
"And Yosh gave me a M
waist on these panto
"I haven’t been a M since I
quit playing nearly 40 years
ago."
Durocher wore a Chicago
Cuba uniform provided by the
Cuba' locker room custodian
Yosh Kuwano although he u
better known for his tenures
with the Dodgers and Giants.
"Look. No 1,'” he said,
showing the back of the shirt
I've always been No. 2, all
my career .”
Leo the lap, as they once
called him, made one of his
rare baseball appearances at
Comiskey Park Tuesday as
i
ans
ght
I.
r
2
$5
T
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Dune, is going to the Sugar
Bowl "
Francisco, a running back,
played at Moeller High
School in Cincinnati under
coach Gerry Faust, who
became Notre Dame's head
coach two years ago But his
first two campaigns produced
un-Irish-like records of 56
and 44-1
Francisco and Miller, a
wide receiver from St Louis,
were among 51 high school
athletes - one from each state
and Puerto Rico - honored in
New York last weed with
"No l” swards from the
Hertz Corporation for an
tad standing athletic perfor-
mance
Francisco rushed for more
then 1,500 yards as Moeller
won its sixth Ohio state cham-
pionship in seven years
Miller, touted in some
quarters as the No 1 football
prospect in the nation, won a
record four first places in the
86th running of the Missouri
large school state track meet
He scored 40 of his team's 46
points, four points more than
the entire second-plai e lean
Francisco, who was named
after his father has learned
to live with his unique name
although he admits that
when people would kid me I
wanted to punch them out
Faust solved that problem
He gave me the nickname
H as a sophomore," Fran-
cisco said "I really started
getting fed up with people
pronouncing my name wrong
and making all kinds of yokes
and I was thinking about
changing my name He said
H. don't change your name
One day that name will work
wonders for you.' After that
everything started picking
up '•
Miller knew all about Notre
Dame's football reputation
but what really sold him on
the school was its academic
tradition
'They graduate 98 percent
of their football players
Academics and football are
the reasons I'm going to
Notre Dame , " he said
familiar scone
and never minded taking an
occasional poke at an
obstreperous fan who might
get too flighty
Did he ever consider the
similarity of his and the style
of the Yankees' Billy Martin '
"They're always saying
somebody imitated me." he
replied "Eddie Stanky im-
itated me Bill Rigney im-
itated me As far as I know
everybody manages like
somebody
But BiUy Martin, he will
never change Who's going to
change him? I'm not saying
this in s derogatory sense
That 's just Billy "
Durocher said his players
once told him. If you can
manage a ballclub, anybody
can manage "
"You know, they were
right It's not as hard as peo-
ple make out I never paid
any attention to charts and
computer stuff like they use
today
"I told my pitchers Keep
the ball high and tight or low
and away ' If they do that,
who can hit them
"It's just a matter of con-
trol I wanted to cry when I
read about Fergie Jenkins
(Cubs) Once you could turn
the lights out in a tunnel and
suburban Franklin is looked
upon by golfers as an easy
one, where GMO pros
average 15 strokes under par
The record is 266 by Bil
Kratzer! in 1980 Peete had
Tit last year
The par-77 layout has few
natural obstacles. The sand
traps are less than bunkers in
the true sense
There is even a shortage of
gripes about the trees along
the fairways because they
are still young and small,
having been planted only a
few yean ago on the 11-year-
old course
Only a penny for each
pound your child weighs
fora 5x7 color portrait*
e Rag 3 00 e Age limit 12 years
a No appointment necessary
a Add 1 00 tor 2 O’motw chddren
a umit one portrait special per chid
selc on ong nade ey envo • oy
omervaldtrom 7683through 1-983
JCPenney 3
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and
Saturday
July 6-74-9
10 am to 2 pm 3 pm to G pm
111 in a row
t » to fall
a series it
■ to his last
he hopes he
thers me,”
nbarrassed
• like to win
nn This is
win. I want
see the
win.”
tory. a 44
4, came in
before the
e adopted
By WILL GRIMSLEY AP
Special Correspondent
CHICAGO < API - It was a
Ronnie Black s second-
year tour pro, reported after
a practice round it is going
to take some good golf to
make the cut here
With the competition fading
sway Peete emerges in-
creasingly as the favorite,
having also won it in 1979
One of Wisconsin s few
natives known to the national
tour Andy North of Madison
rated the top contenders as
Peete larry Mize, Haas.
Jerry Pale and Colbert
North said the GMO is an
opportunity for little-known
players to get a share of the
It's no different
George Burns telephoned
from the Wester Open at Oak
Brook. Ill saying he would
skip the GMO That means
one more vacancy on the
rooter that can be filled by a
lesser-known hopeful for
Thursday s opening round
The absenc e list keeps
growing Tournament of-
ficials said Tuesday that six
more touring pros were
withdrawing giving injuries
and illness as explanations
They include Mike
Nicolette, who tied for third
in the Western
Mike just got sick," GMO
presidend Gordon Kress said
He had wanted to quit at the
Western and his caddy talk
ed him out of it."
Burns quit in the Western s
third round Monday Also
bowing out of the GMO Tues-
day were Jeff Mitchell, Mu
OGrady, Jim Jamieson and
Joe Inman
At that point, just two
players in the top XI Jun Col-
bert and defending titlist
(6666 -qU"A •A
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UH -IN 11041*41 eewt
42 •me ■ - »I uru-*
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Calvin Peele were still in the limelight usually reserved by
GMO Peete was scheduled to the well-known pros
tee off Thursday at 4 14 a m The quality to players is
CDT with 1M1 GMO winner high. he said There are a
Jay Haas lot of good, young players on
The tee-off list contains the tour People don t realize
names of fewer than 15 of the how many there are
tour's top 44 money winners The $250,000 tourney s win
The 7,010-yard Tuckaway ner gels $5,000
UCLA's Bruce Hayes had taken at a time when it is
to settle for his third silver clear the local organizers
medal when he finished se- have succeeded in assuring
cond to Soviet star Vladimir all of the regulations are
Salnikov. world and Olympic followed.’* Soviet Union
champion in the 400-meter Olympic Committe member
freestyle Salnikov was Nikolay Riashentzev told a
clocked in 3:48.32 with Hayes news conference
at 3:54 «
RC/I____—
mitt in s game the other day
he threw 17 straight balls ”
Durocher said it's
ridiculous to build up a
manager as a genius
Casey Stengel could have
stayed in bed and managed
those Yankee teams in the
1950s, he said You also
have got to have some luck
Take 1969 with the Cubs), I
tried everything Nothing
went right We finish second
"Go back to 1954 cham
pion year with the Giants i
Everything I did was right
The guys dole hit and run
squeezed, hit the long ball
But I was still the same
man
Durocher regarded as hav-
ing one of the finest minds in
baseball, has made no effort
to get back in the game Hr
lives the high life in Palm
Springs. Calif playing golf
almost daily with the
Hollywood and yet set
When I agreed to come to
the Old Timers game here,"
he said I looked in the trunk
for an old uniform They were
moth-eaten and full of holes
"I had four decent
uniforms I gave one to
Sinatra one to Dean Martin
caw to Jeff Chandler and the
other to Jerry Lewis
What the heck - I had no
use for them on the golf
course "
My trademark was
my batting eye I knew
how to hit I belted 359
homers And I had a
career batting average
of 112 - with 2 411
hits Even so I had to
wait nearly 10 years to
make the Kul of Fame
A.0.THOMPSON
Abstract Company
Margaret Schroeter
"0,,,
• A“e• Title Policies, Abstracts, Escrow
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
Hiawatha Nahomia
Nokomis Francisco and Alvin
Miller, two of the top football
recruits in the nation. are
looking forward to the up-
coming football season at
Notre Dame
But they're not just excited
about playing at the college
level They're already think-
ing national championship
"The big thing going
around this year is that Notre
Dame can really come out
No 1,” says Francisco
When I made my official
visit to Notre Dame a lot of
guys I knew from high school
cam* up to me and said Notre
Cuba tonight
Emonton. Alberta * AP i -In Missouri’s Norm Stewart
a rematch at the 1979 Pan watched the Cubans erase a
American Games finalists, seven-point halftune deficit
the unbeaten U S and Cuban and beat Ivory Coast 10742
teams will play tonight in a The Americans c rushed the
men's basketball headliner at Africans 10445 on Munday
the World University Games Well have to be ready,”
The Americans are heavy Stewart said
favorites on the basis of a top- Cuban Coach Pedro l happe
sided exhibition victory in Garcia said. If there is
Kansas City. Mo . earlier anything that gets a Cuban
But the way things have team up. It is playing the
been going for the Americans States '
here in other sports, you Politics emerged al the
never can tell games Tuesday when Soviet
The Soviet Union continued Union officials hinted they
its domination in the swimm- may delay a decision to enter
ing competition Tuesday the 1984 Olympics in Los
night posting (our victories Angeles until the last mo-
in five events ment The US boycotted the
The Soviets are far ahead 1980 Olympics in Moscow
in the swimming medals race because of the Soviets in-
with 21. 15 of them gold Th* tervvention in Afghanistan
United States is second with The final decision on our
12 medals and Canada third participating in th* Los
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Nigh, Bob. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 83, No. 2, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 6, 1983, newspaper, July 6, 1983; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1451323/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.