The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 119, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 20, 1971 Page: 2 of 6
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i' ■ nil-. (TF.no m-roKD 'i ■.■ >m. •m. ;i
Colts Try To Remain
On Top InLL Play
S
•y KECOKI) r|1
iMiimo
it\ imt i.aake
i
Rentzel and Alworth
Involved In Trades
Little I/apie
•akn n\’er
wrrk
THE LITTLE GIANT - - - By Alan Mover
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Four Teams
Comprise 1971
Pecan League
Thi- 1.0.71 F;,< • ;i l /c.i::'i*v vv 1 im Ii-
I (M iSts > ! t ...IN lin.’H Y'U'k-
to\ui. Nurdheirn nn.d Runyi* iin'l
Fi.i .in A iu,j Itr im .;iv boon
|il:iyin..' !*• »r;\ I -• .iL''l<» hull snice
May 7th
F,!T''l'li'llt (JJ tin1 i.'fll’ i<
K'lkjfii I- Mueller nf VnTktoWM
an ! m ni;i':i'h ?ira• Phillies, Ken-
neth Gmhmaiih : I * «l".ers, Nor*
ns • 11•)Jt/. .Noi'ilhiim Indians,
111 ihiv! Y‘ H IkrI mil Km/e
0\sls. I >:»nir*l l '.spaI/a.
B tea Mr mana'.'rrv ;n r Arr-
thony (’urn ia. I *1 i i 11 i<m ; Nelson
Tu-m.'iiin, I )<xIu* j s , I / a). (lips,
Astros and Carlton Mueller
Hunt:*' I *iih .
< Janie- start at X :<)() |). lii. and
the n< xt .scheduled tilts are Fri-
day, May 21 when the 1) dt'er;
po to Nonlheim to pjav tho In-
dians and the Runi'e ()w Is play
tho Phillies in Yorktown
Tho next scheduled R team
oil si a-1 f ini: Mas thru May V
d i1 o to ox an is at (’ uiTn srlurols.
M'iy If'.’ th'1 M i lor I • • a ■ ’i»■ C’olN
take f.n tho Major K'/uuio In-
dians and in the Minor I/napne
tho (\ .Its mo. t the Cards in tit
last a tion lor a while,
oO »’
The 10-lit1|o Indians sayinq
',n.i prel|> ( lose to ( .mirip true
t1»o oilier day when the Cleve-
land Indian- ram.' up two Ju-
lian outfielders short and one
shortstop missile/ when they
collided while ehasinp a pop
My. AKvav.s will say the out-
fielder his tit-1 ripht-i/l-way m
i situation as was presented
in the In.lian-S< nator parne. If.'
naturally has a hotter shot at
a hall hy e .miMp in on it rather
than an infielder ,running hack
■ a haekwards No malter
.who’s f<. hlame I'm sorry that
tliev rot hurl.
oO »
Alex Johnson, the lf)7() haltinr;
k’in'p has been henrlvd by bis
manager kefty Ph i II i f >s The
An,pels OI 'Holder has not filayerl
up to Ins capability and thus
will ride the' bench. Alex is
known to arpue with the him-
pire'v decisions and as Jim Car*
h'-ii speaker at the A11-Sjx»rts
Han«iuet would say "Show me
a n ,,yj luior. and I’ll show
1,0S ANCFLKS iL’PIi In
a hloeklnister trade involving ,
three teams and seven players, i
tlie'I.o.s Angelo's I tarns landed
Lance Rent/el from Dallas i
Wednesday and the San Diego !
Charger's gave up Lance AI- |
worth to the Cowboys,
To p. t Rent/. I, the Rams sent j
light end Bill Trunx and wide
receiver Wendell Tucker to the
Cow h >ys.
For Alworth, Dallas shipped
three [flayers to the Chargers
defensive tackle Ron East, tight
end' Pettis Norman and offen- j
sive tackle Tony Liseio.
'The trading off of Rentzel j
ar I Alworth, two of the Nation j
al Foot I a II league's premim
wide receivers, was no surprise
Renf/.ei, A, >> ms charged with
indesemt exp >suri» iief«»re a 10-
v (‘ar -old girl las' season and
pleaded guilty to the charge.
Alworth, a nine-year pro
veteran who iia« had financial
problems, shed the Charger,
last December for 57).6 million,
alleging breach ct contract, and
follow’d that up with an anti
trust suit aeamst the NFL and
all of its 21) teams.
games are June 1 when tig
Kiim-c Cubs host Hie ' York...wn j' V" •' Ibs.-r " This finite 'lof-sn-.
iVxtgers and the Astros [)lay
the Phillies.
NOW VO I
Itv I iiit«’«t Press
KNOW
International
fh Oribul' 4 !’D & i * J flttuita iy.i.lu ..»»
'I he mailbox nameplate ort
the New York home of act a
Rip Torn ami his wife, actre ^
Ceraldirie Page, reads "Torn
Page "
hold line m this situation. ~-
.Jolinson j/ets mad when he loses
and yet fg- his beeh iKuichf'd,
an,| Johnson certainly isn’t a
good loser .so I d >n't get what
Mr arlen means Do you???
of) .
W'aiaen Wells, Oakland Raid-
er wide regeiver is r<‘c e ering
from a stab vMaund suffered
uIn'll he was al the wrong 'place
• • • •
MI'S
V uik
\ - : »d
v v i
San Diego Padre's Beat
Houston 2-1 I 10-Innings
I,.WITT ((II MV SI.O ITKII
i.i-;a(.i k sta.vdimis
\\ 1. Pit.
2 0 I.000
hI the wrong time. Seems like;
.hut if he isn't at the wrong!
place at liie wrong time he us- \
ttally gets there anyway by try*. I
ittg to out run the highway
patrol. Mr. Wells has had
a lot of had luck lately hut
can't help but Ihink he’s bring-
ing it all on himself.
- of).
Leading pitchers in the map
ors are Jenkins, 7-2 and I tier- j
ker, fi-1 in the. National and
Ulne 0-1 and Hunter 7-2 in the
American.
- ...Oi -
In thp horn,, run department ;
it's Aaron. Rerjch and Stargell
with 17 in Hie NL, and Oliva ,
uith nine in the AL;
- oO >
Stargell has V, runs batted
in while Killebrew has 28 to!
lead ill this category,
oOi
Heard that Jeff Diet/c has (
been doing A-OK in the Little l
League. Would like to. hearj
alsiut nioi" of the youngsters j
Keep up Hip good work Jeff.
• oOo -
My mother was real pleased i
the other day when she shot a
82 while playing golf with my
dad. Morn said she even tied
dad on one hole when they both!
had sixes. — Dad wasn’t too
happy alx.ut being tied but Morn :
was all smiles. A 62 is pretty j
good for some.ine who doesn’t [
play golf very much.
.iOo
Have ya’ll heard that
< HAIU.lt: BKAtIN
ItlltniKIJ NO. .1
Sport Briefs
Yorktown at Meyersville
CYF at Mission Valley
In Fast Pitch Tonight
liy PAT IAAKK
Record Sportn Writer
The h'oxt Pitch League con-
tinues its pro-league ehedule
tonight with games in Meyers- |
ville anri Mission Valley.
Yorktown Pearl Beer will h >
in Meyersville, while the Cuem |
Young Farmers travel to Mis-1
sion Valley, The Cuero Jaycees i
ge't a night off from 1he wars,
with an open date on the calen-1
dap'.
Games start at 8:00 T rn. and
while the hubbies >r hoy- j
friends) are trying to hit and
catch the big round sphere,, the
women ran visit, chase the .kids
or even occasionally watch the
hall Same,
Monday night. May 21 Meyers-
ville will hr' in Cuero to take on
the Cuero Jaycees while Mis-
sion Valley travels to York-
town and the Cue.ro Young
Farmers fake a rest.
F>r family entertainment and
a night away from the TV set,
come out and have some fun
and maybe a few laughs by
watching the fast-pitch teams
in action.
Major League Standings
Hy United Press International
NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE
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arid a sa/ r ilir c tly hy I'esar Ce-
1 tlt-i: . I he A'lio1- had a < lianee
l<> \s hi in !h*’ ninth hut reliever
lioh Miller- sliij< k out Jim Wynn
with fhe . potential winning run
1 /!i see* Old.
The two teams fun-h tin- four-
game m ries tonight with Wade
Biasing imr 2-1 of the .Astn»s 1
t'oing against (Jay Kirby, 1-?. 1
Other .National League Neof-s
wen* Clneago 9. San Franeiseo
a, Ihtlsl)iji-gt) d'lwnerl CiiK iuua-
ti ti-1, Philadulfjfiia topp'd New
Y«»rk 1-1 I/ls Angeles nip[/cd
St Louis tj-f) and Atlanta ■ rush
ed Montreal 10-1.
L’lsewhr're in the Amerieari
Lea/ue, Minnesota r.pped (’ali- i
forana ,‘.>-F Boston downed N'ew |
York . 7-2, Detroit eiobb'-redi
(j'eVeland 12-1. Baltimore hc;.t
Washington 4-1 and Kansas City |
blanked Chicago 2-0.
( j no Food* r aft
tmns-49 opp -211
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truns-12, opih-ITi
Ykt. Lone Star Beer 1 1 .7)<)0
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( ’11\ of Cuero 1 1 .7)00
truns-17. opp.-'lOi
Ykt. P<*nrl Wranglers 0 1 .000
iriins-X, opp,-!)i
Cuero Lions Club 0 1 .000
f runs-12, op[).-27)i
HK’rrLK TRAINED.
ID: I TER EDI ( A I El).
MK’ITKIC MOTIVATTIII.
II IK K IIIH \ ’KTKKAN!
Earth’s So-Called uIIot Spots”
Could Reveal Unpolluted Water
WINNING WAYS - - - By Alan Maver^
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By RAYMOND WIICOVE
C> ntrat Press AsuonaUun
Correspond mt
UNIVERSITY PARK. Pa. —
A two-year study hy a young
geologist has disclosed the ex-
istence of "hot ■pots" on the
Earth's surface which mark the
presence of new and abundant
su'p;-lies of unpolluted water,
flo” ng under the ground at
shallow depths
Further experimentation is
under way* to detect the “hot
spot s’ from the air with In-
fra-red devices. Such a develop-
ment would revolutionize water
prospecting In many parts of
the world.
Philip J. O'Brien, while a
candidate for a doctor's degree
at Penn State, found that cer-
tain subterranean water-bear-
ing strata telegraph their pres-
ence to the sm face by produc-
ing subtle changes in the tem-
perature of the soil above. The
surface soil may he as much
as three or four degrees Fa.hr-.
enheit warmer than the neigh-
boring ground.
• • •
AT :'i0’TO 60 fe**t, the water-
bearing st i a! i - railed arjiiifers
are often beyond the reach
of pollution. Their detection In |
Die past, however, through 1he!
sinking of exploratory wells, j
h is been too expensive in many,
arras to be widespread as it
costs more than $100,000 to drill j
and equip a high-cap.icity well, i
O Hr ren s new method for de-
fecting the presence of an aqui-
f< r from ...e temperature pat-
tern of the surface soil will
make the development of well-
fields less haphazard arid less \
costly.
It could, said O'Brien, help
many communities where fresh
surface water is in short sup-
ply. O’Brien said that “there
are enormous stores of under-
ground water, pollution-free
and protected from evaporation,
that w« hav# not yet begun to
Philip O'Brien
Clean voter finder
tap” In Greater Seh.enei f ad y;
N. Y. 20 million gallons of wa-
ter a day are 'drawn from 15
underground wells.
However, O’Hn'en pointed
out that the Schenectady water
system, representing an invest-
ment of several million doll? s
is in an area where the aquifer
distribution is well known. "Our
method." he stated, “is export-
ed to help other cities* find
aquifers not on the geological
map and, what s equally im-
portant. tell the city fathers
where to drill for the maximum
flow."
The Penn State geologist said
that the method he developed
works best in glaciated areas.
These are areas where glaciers
left deposits of loose gravel that
have eince been covered Iv oth-
er eedunenU.
The gravel contains more
void /pare for water than
densely placed clays or other
soils and this can result in a
temperature contrast between
the aquifer and the surrounding
sediments which will show up
on the surface.
O'Brien said that many popu-
lated areas of North America
and Europe are located on ice-
age deposits and could draw
water from aquifers not yet
identified. His technique per-
mits the detection even of areas
of maximum subsurface water •
flow, ideal for a small city to
tap' Into because they promise
a continuous supply.
• * •
O'jjRIEN’S theory of femper-
nture variance was confirmed
during a two-year experiment
in which he laboriously staked
out more than a hundred tem-
perature - measuring stations:
narrow, six-foot shafts into
which a thermistor (an elec-
tronic thermometer) was in-
sert ed.
O'Brien chose an area whose
aquifers were known in order
lo verify his hypothesis that
such strata make their exis-
tence felt on the surface. O'-
Brien said the entire course of
an aquifr r, w hi' h may he dif-
fieijjf. to trace hy other means,
can he plotted from soil-tem-
perature data.
• • •
O’BRIEN now is working at
the Air Force Cambridge Re-
search Laboratories In Bedford,
Mass, on the development of
an infra-red sensing device that
would enable "hot spots” to be
detected from the sir. This
would pave the way for “ther-
mal prospecting" that may one
| day enable a high-speed air-
craft to find underground wa-
ter on one photo mission over
a region where surface water ia
scarce or too polluted to use.
O’Brien plans to publish his *
findings in his doctor's disser-
i Lation.
B\ United Press International
CATCHER ACQUIRED
CHICAGO lUBI) Chris Can-
nizzaro, veteran catcher was
acquired Wednesday hy the |
Chicago Cubs from the San j
Diego Padres in return for min-
or league Infielder Garry Jes- 1
tad I and (’ash.
HOOD SIONS
PHILADKLPIIIA lUPli
Richard H< d, fifth-round draft j
choice of tilt Philadelphia 76rrs, j
i Wednesday signed a contract j
: will) the National Basketball i
Association ciuh,
CHAMPIONS IIO.MK
MONTRKAL <UPI.) The j
Stanley Cup champion Montreal [
Canadiens were welcome home I
Wednesday hy the largest!
crowd ever to turn out in Mon-
treal history. An estimated j
iitKI.OOO-fiOfl.OCII) greeted the Na-!
tionul Hockey Leagtic Citant-t
pions in the downtown area of
the city.
COACH OIKS
OCEANSIDlv, Cahf H.’PI) :-
Karl J. "Tommy” Thomson.!
East
East
w
I.
Pet.
GH
w
I.
Pet
C.B
Pittsburgh
2?,
14
.639
Boston
23
11
.676
Npw York
21
14
.600
1 | Baltimore
21
14
.600
2’i
St. I/)uis
21
16
.368.
2 1 Detroit
17
19
.472
7
(Thirago
19
18
.514
4 New York
16
18
.471
7
Montreal
13
16
.448
H Washington
15
22
.405
9 Pa
Philadelphia
12
23
.343
10 Cleveland
14
21
.400
9!i
West
---
San Franeiseo 28
11
.718
1
West
Atlanta
20
18
.526
71a | Oakland
27
14
.659
l/os Angeles
19
20
.487
9 Minnesota
20
18
.526
5’a
Houston
18
20
.474
9 Vi 1 KansasCity
19
19
.500
61 a
Cincinnati
14
23
.361
33 i California
19
21
.475
7Va
San Diego
11
26
.297
16 1' Milwaukee
14
20
.412
9'a
Wednesday’*
Results
1 Chicago
13
21
.382
10'j
Chicago 9
San Fran.
5
—---r-
'Atlata 10, Montreal 4, night
Pittsburgh fi Cine. 1 night
L.A. S St,, fxiuis 5, night
S.D, 2 Houston 1, 10 inn nite
Phila. 4 N.Y. 1, night '
Today’s Frobahle I’ltohem
Montreal Renko 4-2 at Atlanta
Niekro 3-ii, night.
I/>s Angeles Singer 2-7 at St.
I-ouis Carlton 6-2, night.
Pittsburgh Hlass ii-1 at Cin-
cinnati Grimsley 0-1, night,
San Francisco Maricha! 6-2 at.
Chicago Hands 4-4
San Diego Kirby 1-3 at Hous-
ton Hlasingarne 2-4, night.
New York Gentry J-J at Phil-
adelphia Wise 2-2, night,
Friday's Came*
I/OS Angeles at Chicago
Pittsburgh at Montreal, night
Atlanta at New York, night
Cinci. at Pltila., night
San Diego at Sf. l/ouis, night
San Fran, at Houston, night, j
Wednesday's Results
Boston 7 New York 2. night
Baltimore 4 Washngtn 1, night
Kansas City 2 Chicago 0, night
Oakland ,'{ Milwaukee 0, night
Minnesota 12 Calif.. 6, night
Today's Probable Pitch, r*
Milwaukee Krause 1-4 at Oak-
land Fingers 1-4, night.
Minnesota Hamm 1-0 al Cal-
ifornia Wright 3-3, night.
Dertoit Coleman 4-0 at Cleve-
land Foster 3-2, night.
Baltimore McNally 6-2 at
Washington Janeski .1-2 night.
New York Bahnsen 1-5 at Itos-
ton l.ee night.
Friday's Baines
Minnesota al Oakland, night
Chicago at California, night
Milwaukee at K.C., night
New York at Cleveland, night
Boston at Baltimore, night.
wh i served as head track coach troit Pistons of the National
at the U.S. Naval Academy for I Basketball Association Wednes-
:t6 years, died Wednesday of ! day announced the signing of
cancer. Thomson was 76. Steve Butcher, a lOth-round
1 draft pick and Leroy Jenkins, a
DKTROIT (CPU The Dr- 6-2 guard from Detroit College.
sm\\\iui mum
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Prentice, D. L. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 77, No. 119, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 20, 1971, newspaper, May 20, 1971; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth702469/m1/2/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.