Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 209, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 13, 1965 Page: 11 of 14
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Tuesday, April IS, INS
THE DENTON RECORDCHRONICLE
GRANDMA
Koufax To Take His Turn
h
After Successful
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NANCY
By Ernie Bushmiller
MAYBE THIS WILL
S
SCARE HIM WHEN
HE DROPS IN
Ode O
y
i
2y
L
1
z
HENRYS DEEP IN STUDY!
1
#
7
a
s
f
r
5
J
CaL-
4-1^
BIG BEN BOLT
By John Cullen Murphy
against its increasing threat to
BIN6O 1
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03
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LOIS
f
By Mort Walker And Dik Browne
H
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Astros Draw
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Sellout Crowd
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THE PHANTOM
By Lee Falk And Wilson McCoy
652 paid) and gave the Astros
YES! DIDN’T
DRAG vou
BULL AND--
how it might work out.
L.(
$
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12
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406 Bell
312-6395
ERICA
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FARERo
A & eMa L
T O TM E
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ARCHIE
By Bob Montana
A
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By Blake
EVER HAPPEN TO YOU?
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SOLUTION OF YESTERDAY’S PUZZLE
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THE BERRYS
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r WHAT
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SOUND THEOLOG HAS A
OF POING THAT!
v‘6
THAT ?
Ed
come, baseball cannot afford,
now or ever, to allow television
or any other outside agency to
41. Demolishes
42. Dollars
operate a minor league team or
teams and sign its own players
who would be free from the
THE SOX WON
TWO TO ONE
HIGHEST AVERAGE
Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee
P
L
A
I DIDN’T GET A
600 LOOK- BUT
Hf’5 STRONG ASA
=
Hovve TAKEN A 6REAT
LOAD OFF W MIND...
nicoa RINGING
ROZ IN FROM THE
UIDEDTOUR-
• AND RODS BRINING ANOTHR
HAPPY GUEGT IN WITHA PRIZE/ .
SP4
S
E
SURE,
BUT
WHAT
OOOD
IS
GET VOU
ourr UH-
WHAT-15
A
R
K
P
A
N
S
L
A
N
EXAMS
TOMORROW
2
2s
2
their fourth standing room only
audience in four days.
Three Friday-Sunday exhibi-
tion games with the New York
Yankees — all extra innings —
were sellouts and totaled 144,-
193. Two exhibitions with the
Baltimore Orioles drew 44,569.
Houston had only one sellout
DOWN
1. Hand: IM.
}
N
G
R
A
D
IE
WMO N
BROUGHT
YOU HERET)
•nee for the games was 29.264.
An average crowd of 32.344 saw
the openers in 1964.
Largest paid crowd of the day
— 43.554 — was at Washington
where Boston helped the Sena-
tors get the season started. A
total attendance of 48.546 was
drew 237,308 fans.
The Philadelphia-Houston Na-
tional League opener Monday
A
S
P
E
N
N
E
E
P
5
P
E
5
P
o
I
est pitcher in modern-day base-
ball.
“I am going to leave out
throwing between games, once I
get back in regular turn. I may
have to do a little throwing Fri-
day because it will be so long
between starts.
“All I know is that I have
traumatic arthritis. I’ll have to
play it by ear as I go along. The
arm felt fine in Florida but the
day after I pitched the last time
down there I couldn't straighten
out my arm. I decided to go
home and find out what it was.
At least the arthritis is all in
one spot and not all through my
system.
“The way I felt Sunday I
wished that I had tried to pitch
sooner."
Manager Walter Alston of the
2
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...
10
TH OWNERS (EN THEIR
NOI9Y DOGS AS FAR AS
FOssIBLE AWAY FEOM
THEl2 Mouse .1
1 -3
i {
HE’S ALWAYS
GETTING- INTO
•__, MISCHIEF
( LATELY
2
29
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8
43
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)
N
N
E
R
Illi
■ **
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k'
M.
ir
| cause it would be difficult to
convince, any of the existing
teams they should move into the
more than 30,000 in 1962 with the do not think it would be practi-
Los Angeles Dodgers. cal to have three leagues be-
NINTH CHAPTER OF 6ENE515,
600 PROMIED NOAH THAT UOULD
NEVER HAPEN A6AiN, AND THE $16N
OF THE PROMSE 15 TH RAINBOW.
OUT HERE?/ YOU BOYS
—, -FWANT TO SEE
/ \ ME HERE’’
s
s
p
it
NEW YORK (AP) - Sandy
Koufax, the mystery man of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, expects to
take his regular pitching turn
Sunday in Philadelphia.
After a three-inning test run
at Washington Sunday in which
Sandy struck out five batters,
there was no recurrence of the
swollen elbow that sent him
home from spring training.
The troublesome left elbow,
which had puffed up to grape-
fruit size after his last outing in
Florida, was packed in ice for
20 minutes after his trial in
Washington. Earlier in Los An-
geles he had been given a cort-
isone injection.
“I am going to try a new sys-
tem." said thespersonable Dodg-
089
HENRY
THE SPEED SWIMMER
IS A SEAL?
Bim
R
E
A
A
I
4-13
J
23. Gr. island
24. Account
entry
27. Exist
26. Nobleman
29. Appropri-
ate
33. Stowe char-
acter
34. In a line
35. Yours and
mine
36. Good taste
38. — Stanley
Gardner
39. Evening
lovesong
40. Employer
9
G
V
A
M
I
D I
c
Nm
u..........
By Carl Anderson
A
V-
, *
, 3
3
: 1
. j
e
-irvo
-2,
4
I
i
l ,
I do think that baseball will
come to two 12-club major j
leagues with each league divid-
I
a
84
ACROSS
1. Masculine
5. Stage of
I life
10. Malaria
11. Black birds
13. Teutonic
goddess of
fate
14. Pacifie
theology-
16. Site of Tell
legend
17. Equal
18. Offspring
19. Misery
21. Floating
icefield
22. Craft
happens but I believe additional unofficial money for a total $42,-
expansion is inevitable. I think 825. Only official money counts
it is much nearer than many . . 2 1. 1
want to admit. It is time that toward the PGA standings.
baseball recognized this and set Doug Sanders was second
up the ground rules. Perhaps with $30,707 in official money,
"" yt WHY LRAG
ME ALL THE
HEY- LOOK WHO’S I WAY OUT HERE?
HERE;.HIZZONER!A L.
i
IN
■ Cu5
MOENHY
4-13
5e 40
Congratulations
Jack Browder
General Chairman of the 1965 Chamber Banquet
RAYMOND D. KING
"Your Insurance Man"
137-139 RAYZOR OFFICE BUILDING
N
THE TENTH j
YEAH ’ WHO CARES,\
MR. MAYOR, AS ) i
LONG AG YOU RE )
7.7
0l
)
J
. I
policies, scheduled or other op-
erations.
We have made a start on solv-
ing our television problem with
11
(
•I Pl
4
v/ NICE GOING, CHIP/
( MOM TOLD ME YOU
I GOT A ONE IN YOUR
> FITNESS EXAMS/ y
Pe
'GREAT/my [that’s notj
TAACK MAH I ALL, KID ?
LAYS TRACK/THE SERVICE-
FOR THE < MAN
. RAILROAD? ) GREASES
Sy-CARS, AND...
) )v
%
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r
in
a total of $33,964
Billy Casper was third with
$21,948 and $20,106 for a total of
$42,054.
lit
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Approximately 3,000 fewer
persons per game turned out for
r
ir
h
ix
k
d
/91
K
in
W
6
h
3 J
av
3
,1
I am coming to the end of the third league with the new
reported at Houston for the first
official league game under the’
Astrodome, but the paid crowd
R numbered 42,652.
dictate procedures, business
ed into two six-team divisions.
In three yars in its old stadi- j in that manner they can return
um, a doubleheader crowd of to the old 154-game schedule. I
/ SOMETIMES I
, GUESS I JUST
I CAN’T WIN,
MR. OTIS/ .
—VK-
22
*23
222
ree
UMVM
i
| The average paid attend-
9
6:5
Testing
Dodgers naturally was relieved,
“Sandy will be in there as of-
ten as he is ready to pitch,"
said Alston. "Nobody can tell
how often that will be except
Sandy. Whether it’s once a week
or every fourth day we'll be
glad to have him."
Koufax, only 29, led the Na-
tional League with a 1.75 earned
run average last season but fell
short of a 20-win season with a
19-5 record. The same elbow
trouble, not then diagnosed as
arthritis, forced him to miss
several turns and put him out of
action from mid-August on.
In 1963, Sandy was every-
body's “pitcher of the year"
with a 25-5 record and a strike-
out record in the World Series
sWeep over the New York Yan-
kees.
a
n
o-
'i
as television is, important as
television’s dollars may bee
WELL...I SORTA GO )
FOR TRACK MENU
Par time 23 min, APNewafeeture
NGF UH — '
mw
► A LITTLE
FLUSHED ALL
AFTERNOON!
they should set up a period of a $3,257 in unofficial earnings, for
minimum of two years after a .....
4
3 (N
M 1. MM-4
n
1
2. Or. market
place
3. Sensational
4. Poetic con* j
gg traction
" 5. Minister
» 6. Babbits
7. Attest
8. Jap. cola
9. Isolate
12. Dart
15. Dagger
17. Saucy
2(1. Talon
21. Dsengage
23. Gang
24. Exploit
25. Roof edges
26. Tonic
27. Essences
29. Dried plum
30. Imbecile
31. Heartbeat
32. Curl
34. Wargod
37. Anglo-Sax-
on motey
38. Oilyielding
Ute
T
—> THAT?/
---
_ . draft. The year before the city —
night had a crowd of 48.546 <42,- was to operate each of the exist- Braves has the highest lifetime
ing teams would designate 15 batting average of any active!
untouchables and let the new . . . , ,
teams each take one from its National Leaguer who has play-
regular 25-player list. This is noedain more than 500 games. It’s
campaign. just a rough idea of j 320,______.__________________
city is selected before the club
HOUSTON (AP) — The six- actually would operate. In the
game s-in-four-days opening meantime, the new group could
schedule for the Astrodome
Sloyal pools
of Denton
Financing Available
5 years to pay
I)
1
By Mel Graff
f THAT MAKES TWO OF
THE SIX TROPHIEG HELL
ESENDIN® THROUGH
CUSTOMS - AND EMHER
MIGHT Be THE ONE WTH
THE MLLTI-MILLION-
k DOLLAR STUFFING /
9
0
—omoudeye
'i MAO Al/ ARE vou e
EagIxJCA2F9MAE S3*E
-HOWATHEN I CAME1
n TT STRAIGHT
—+ L_ HOME /
growjiShou? Cbeingd "sehicm ofSa mOJey won paA4ann
I won't be around when it tioned tournaments and $8,425 in
SJMy
11
M."
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,c3
r
fl
&
IELm
FA,
3
_______er left who could be the great-
Fewer People Looking Back, Ahead
View Openers; 0
ry.g Baseball Commissioner At 6The End Of The Road?
1 Ins Season By FORD FRICK
Commissioner of Baseball
(Written for the AP)
sua road after 14 years in office so it' teams.
baseball's opening-day games might be appropriate to look Television has developed so
|! Monday than did for the first back at what has happened and rapidly that we must guard
gamelastyear, to try to peer ahead. ..........
A total of 234,109 saw the eight optimrstic no rtendance । s™1'0* UP game" important th new game-of-the-week tele-
games played. A ninth contest, grown year by year. There is casts in which the receipts will
Cleveland at Los Angeles was more participation by the Masters Victory be divided evenly among the 18
rained out. Baltimore and the; youngsters. What has happened ,11 I ■ • * • participating teams. Perhaps
Chicago White Sox were not । and what will happen as people Fills I OCkethook the time will come when we
scheduled. [have more and more leisure limit the number of games to be
time is a diversification of inter- PALM BEACH GARDENS, seen nationally or even in the
est. People used to work a six- Fla. (AP) _ jack Nicklaus’ local area. Perhaps it will be
day week with two weeks off in record-setting victory in the I wise eventually to give the visit-
the summer. Now they have] 1 • .... | ing team a share of the regular
more time and more money for Masters tournament at Augusta, television receipts as we have
spectator sports. Ga., Sunday sent him zooming1 done for years in the case of
I see no threat in professional! to the top of the Professional i gate admission.
football or basketball. There is Golfers’ Association money list. We are in need of legislation
to establish common exemp-
tions for all spectator sports to
conduct the unusual phases of
our operations.
The present sports bill before
Congress is a good bill. It would
place baseball and other sports
under the antitrust laws but
would exempt such practices as
the reserve clause, the draft,
waivers and territorial rights.
2
______
UHUd/ W, LOOK at IT
110 ^.WTlFIT
FUOD0STEWNOL,
20"
SI
/not A SINGLE ONE N-
( OF MY FRIENDS HLL
FUNKED IT/ /
• i
W I
t
Era
i
1
VMs
I 451322
IF THE KIDS ARB I 1
REAL NOISY IT ) {
MAKES Mt I
I JITTERY }
je
Ek. 4-3
LL AND-- HERE, HOW A THIS?
, e• k ABOUT GETTING )S- , _
/ —5
(■R 0
M BEGER
A Uu
BUT IF THEY'RE I
QUET... I•A.
-v.C,
--------------IJ-gg
OH, DEAR—SLUGGO'S
IN TROUBLE AGAIN!
Ip *|^ A" izhui ”**
( BETTY, i’ll'
-----~ GET YOU A
I THINKIT’s) DATE? WHAT
MEAN OF YOU I DO YOU LIKE?
TO GO WITH { SERVICE -
VERONICA X MEN? SPEED
WHILE 1 )SWINMERS,
STAY HOME’) TRACK MEN.
- . U/BALL PLAYERS ?
W
0 /
N/"
A
N
*2sN
234
. bAA,,
PAGE ELEVEN
By Charles Kuhn
/ I FALL ASLEEP/l . »
______ V ’
f 222=
By Carl Grubert
./140
V
X
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 209, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 13, 1965, newspaper, April 13, 1965; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517696/m1/11/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.