The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 87, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1962 Page: 3 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
istrict Championship
On Line Saturday
The Taylor Ducks will enter the
a full squad in defense of their
district championship. Taylor is
the favorite to repeat its win of
a year ago.
The entries in the 180 yard low
hurdles will be Kelly Marek, John
}
Richards and Rodney Kind. In
the high hurdles Dennis Mucha
will replace Kind and the other
two entries remaining the same.
In the sprints it will be Tim
Hurta, Kenneth Czimskey, and
Jimmy Kind in the hundred yard
dash, with Hurta and Kind re-
peating in the 220 with Larry Cer-
nosek replacing Czimskey.
The Duck banner in the open
quarter will be borne by Wayne
Pavlicek, Roger Youngblood and
Steve Allgood. The half mile en-
tries are Bobby Sorenson and Al-
len Schoener. Milers will be Rob-
ert Silva, Bill Garrett and fresh-
Bob Lehmberg.
e Duc'k relay foursomes are
di favorites to win, with the
sprint combination being Hurta,
Sorenson, Youngblood and Jimmy
Kind. The mile relay group will
be Youngblood, Pavlicek, Soren-
son and either Steve Allgood or
Larry Cemosek.
In the weights it will be Roy
Green, Elton Berry and C. L.
Carson in the shot put, and Green
and Berry along with Buzz Her-
mann in the discus. High jumpers
are Nyle Mann, Dennis Mucha
and Kelly Marek. Pole vaulters
will be Mucha, Gene McAlpine,
and K. Marek. Broad jumpers
are Kenneth Czimsley, Dayson
Goetz and Randall Woods.
A junior meet will be held at
WHAT'S
YOUR f
dividend!
o
%
rafSTAIt fin
t~......J11900 prestom Road,
L. GREEN
421 Talbot St.
EL2-4080
Mutual Automobile
Insurance Company
11900 Preston Road, Dallas 30, Texas m-imo
same time with
only team having a
entries.
-o-
Taylor the
full set o
MU Semifinals
Slated Tonight
DENVER UP) — Just as expect-
ed, three teams of AAU veterans
and the hard-rrunning U.S. Mar
ines play tonight in the semi-fin
also of the 55th National AAU
Bsketball Tournament.
The top-seeded Denver Truckers
are matched in the first game
against the third-seeded Marines.
Second-seeded Bartlesvi.le, Okla..
meets Akron, Ohio, fourth seed-
ed in the pre-tournament bracket-
ing.
If form prevails, as it has
throughout this week, Denver and
Bartlesville will play Saturday
night for the championship va-
cated by the Cleveland Pipers
when they turned pro and entered
the American Basketball League.
Only Akron was hard pressed
in Thursday night’s quarter-finals.
The Ohioans, more poised in the
closing minutes, won 81-76 from
Salt Lake City’s entry of Utah
collegians, featuring All-America
Bill (The Hill) McGill. He pump-
ed in 33 points in th elosing ef-
fort.
Bartlesville, coasted by Vallejo,
Calif., 89-63, Denver sailed by
Williamsville, N.Y., 83-55 and the
Marines outran Port of San Diego
82-59.
Only the Salt Lake-Aon duel
saved the quarter-finals—usually
the high point of this oldest of
basketball tournaments—from be-
ing a complete bust. Only 6,200
fans, the fewest in many years,
turned out for the four-game card
in the 10,000-seat Denver Colis-
eum.
FIGHT SET TONIGHT
LOS ANGELES i® — Argenti-
na’s Alejandro Lavorante, who
may be on his way to the top,
and Archie Moore, who has al-
ready been there, meet in a 10-
round heavyweight battle tonight.
-—__0-
NORTH TEXAS WINS
ABILENE (ffl — North Texas
State routed Abilene Christian 6-0
in tennis Saturday. The winners
have a 6-2-1 season record
now
Mr. and Mrs. Taylorite: Back
your Chamber of Commerce, it
backs you.
Texas, A&M
To Vie for
Loop Lead
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Defending champion Texas and
'exas A&M, which share statist-
:al honors as well as the league
ead. vie for undisputed posses
;ion of first place in Southwest
Conference baseball at College
Station Saturday.
Barring a tie, which was the re-
sult of their first meting last
season, the arch rivals will esta-
blish a favorite in the pennant
chase. Each has won its two
starts. Both have players sharing
individual batting and pitching
leads.
Tom Belcher of Texas, a sen-
ior and still undefeated in confer-
ence competition, has pitched both
Texas victories. Sophomores
Chuck McGuire and Richard Bel-
ler are credited with the A&M
decisions.
Shortstop Bill Bethea of Texas
and pitcher Ed Singley of A&M
share the batting lead at .677, al-
though they have appeared in
only one game each. The two-
game leader is sophomore Bob
Bigley of TCU, who has connect-
ed for five hits in eight trips
for a .625 average.
Newcomers are very much in
the spotlight in batting through
the first two games. Four of the
eight leaders are sophomores.
Other sophs hitting 500 or better
through two games are Jay Wal-
rath of TCU, David Johnson of
A&M and Ed Kasper of Texas
Baylor’s Frank Charton, anoth-
er soph, has made an impressive
start as a pitcher, yielding only
one earned run in his 5-3 con-
quest of SMU.
Ironically, the 1961 batting
champion—Baylor’s Ronnie Good-
win—has gone hitless in eight
trips, Ray Hall of A&M, who
ranked fifth, is also seeking his
first safety.
Familitar names among the top
ten are Pat Rigby, the longhorn
captain, and Chuck Knutson, who
gained All-America recognition as
a sophomore outfielder last sea-
son.
Baylor and Rice, which share
third place with 1-1 records, will
seek to break that deadlock in
Houston Saturday, while SMU
travels to Fort Worth in a battle
for evacuation of the cellar.
State Orders Full Probe
Of Cage Game Fixing
AUSTIN, Tex. UP) — State po-
lice undertook a full scale investi-
gation today of charges'that some
Southwest Conference basketball
games have been fixed.
The Texas House Investigating
Committee ordered the probe by
the Department of Public Safety
after hearing eight hours of secret
testimony from conference and
school officials Thursday.
Chairman Charles Ballman said
the committee felt its information
“warranted a continuation of the
investigation because of the ser-
ious nature of the allegations.”
The committee plans another
hearing “as soon as additional in-
formation is obtained, and con-
structive results can be obtained,”
Ballman said.
Conference and member school
spokesmen disclosed the informa-
tion known to them, he said, and
extended their fullest cooperation
to the committee.
An investigation began after
New York sports columnist Gene
Roswell wrote that Eastern gam-
blers were “having headaches
with the hoop shenanigans report-
edly coming out of the Southwest
Conference. . .The point spreads
on SWC games move like water
and most books won’t carry their
action.”
Roswell said rumor had it that
referees, not players, were in-
volved.
Twenty-two game officials vol-
untarily took lie detector at De-
partment of Public Safety offices
here early this month. The de-
partment did not make the results
public but sent them to the con-
ference, which then gave them to
the officials.
Rep. Tom James of Dallas, a
former vice chairman of the com-
mittee and now a candidate for
attorney general, said recently he
had information that several con-
ference officials had been in-
volved in fixing scores.
Ballman refused to comment on
whether James might be called
to give his information to the de-
partment or his committee.
Those testifying before the com-
mittee were Abb Curtis, super-
visor of conference officials;
coaches Buster Brannon of Texas
Christian, John Frankie of Rice
and Harold Bradley of the Uni-
versity of Texas; athletic director
and former coach Polk Robison
of Texas Tech; O. N. Humph-
reys, intelligence division chief of
DPS; H. A. Albert, lie detector
examiner; Howard Grubbs, con-
ference executive secretary ,and
Bill Henderson, former Baylor
coach.
Committee members with Ball-
man are Reps. Dewitt Hale of
Corpus Christi, Menton Murray
of Harlingen, Bill Pieratt of Gid-
dings and Bill Holowell of Grand
Saline.
-o-
Pro Basketball
At A Glance
NBA PLAYOFFS
Thursday’s Result
1 Detroit 118, Los Angeles 117
(Los Angeles leads best-of-7
Western Division final, 3-1.
Today’s Schedule
No games scheduled.
-o-
BLANCAS OUT FRONT
HOUSTON UP) — Homero Blan-
cas led the All-America Intercol-
legiate Golf Tournament by a
stroke going into the third round
today. Blancas shot a 1-under-par
71 Tursday to rewin his lead at
6 holes with 141, but Houston
teammate Fred Marti’s 70 left
him within one stroke of the de
fending champion.
-o-—
Buy in Taylor and build your
own home town.
Heame Golf
Tourney Sof
HEARNE — The ninth annual
Hearne Invitational Golf Tourna-
ment, a blind bogey event, will
be held April 8 at the Hearne
Municipal Golf Course, according
to George F. Smith, president
of the Hearne Golfers Assn.
Plans and preparations are un-
der way now to welcome over
200 out-of-town golfers.
More than $800 in awards will
be offered in the five flights of
18 holes each.
The tournament will begin at
daybreak and no contestants will
be allowed to tee off after 1 p.m.
Entry fee will be $6. Tournament
round may be played on Saturday
with alternate course available on
Sunday.
Free barbecue chicken and
drinks will be served Sunday to
all entries. The public is invited
to attend the barbecue.
Taylor Daily Press, Friday, March 30, 1962, Page 3
THIS SATURDAY AND EVERY SATURDAY
“It Pays to Shop
at ZidelPs”
Special Group of Brand New.. Fashions
Never Before Reduced!! 50 Pairs
Taylor Merchants are your
friends — shop with them and
save money.
HAVE TUX
WILL RENT
Proms, Weddings,
Graduations, Dances,
Etc.
mmlmm
314 N. Main EL2-2636
Dollar Day Special! Monday, April 2
Wash, Grease1 and 'Polish Your
Car For Only............. ..........$8.95
We Giv!e Texas Gold Stamps
NOTICE: New Phone Number — EL2-9016.
Kenneth Schroeder's Conoco
601 N. Main Taylor, Texas
Exhibition
Ball Scores
TELEVISION TIMETABLE
Austin — Tempi® — KgytMa _
KTBC, Fri., March 30
6:30 Cont. Classroom
7:00 Today
9:00 Calendar
9:30 I Love Lucy
10:00 Video Village
10:30 Surprise Package
11:00 Love of Life
11:30 Search for
Tomorrow
11:45 Guiding Light
12:00 CBS News
12:15 Woman’s World
12:30 As the World Turns
1:00 Password
1:30 House Party
2:00 The MUlianalri
2:30 Verdict Is Yours
3:00 Brighter Day
3:15 Secret Storm
3s30 Edge of Night
4:00 Am. Bandstand
4:30 Uncle Jay
5:00 Yogi Bear
5:30 Uncle Jay Show
5:45 Huntley-Brinkley
6:00 Sports Scene
6:10 Weather Hilltea
6:15 Paul Bolton News
6:80 Rawhide
7:30 Flintstones
8:00 Route 66
9:00 Twilight Zone
9:30 Eyewitness
9:00 Twilight Zone
11:00 News & Weathes
11:15 Hawaiian Eye
11:45 Sign Off
KCEN, Frl., March 30
1:00 Today
9:00 Say When
9:30 Flay Your Hunch
11:00 Your First
Impression
11:30 Truth or
Consequences
12:00 News & Weathai
12:10 dark Bolt
12:30 Cathy’s Cornste?
1:00 Jan Murray
1:30 Loretta Young
2:00 Young E t. Malone
2:30 Our 5 Daughters
3:00 Make Room
for Daddy
3:30 Here’s Hollywood
4:00 Susie
4:30 Happy Hour
5:00 Popeye
5:30 Wild BUI Hlekok
6:00 Texas Report
6:05 TV Weather Report
6:10 Sports
6:15 Huntley-Brinkley
6:30 Outlaws
7:30 Detectives
8:30 Telephone Hour
9:30 Chat Huntley
10:00 Weather; Newai
Sports
10:30 Jack Paar Show
12:00 Sign Off
KBTX, Frl.. March 30
7:30 College of the Air
8:00 Morning New*
8:15 Capt. Kengaro*
9:00 Calender
9:30 I Love Lucy
10:00 Video Village
10:30 Surprise Parkas*
11:00 Gale Storm
11:30 Town Talk
12:00 CBS News
12:15 Ten Acres
1:00 Password
1:30 House Party
2:00 The Millionall*
2:30 Verdict is You**
3:00 Brighter Day
3:15 Secret Storm
3:30 Edge of Night
4:00 Am. Bandstand
4:50 Am. Newsstand
5:00 Amos ’n Andy
5:30 Bugs Bunny
6:00 News & Weather
6:15 Douglas Edwarda
6:30 Rawhide
7:30 Tightrope
8:00 77 Sunset Strip
.9:00.Twilight Zone ..
9:30 Third Man
10:00 News, Weather.
Sports
10:30 Twllght Zoos
11:00 TV Theatre
12-30 r>ff
KTBC, Sat., March 31
_7:50 Sign On
5:00 Cape. Kangaroo
hOO Shari Lewis
9:30 King Leonard
10:00 Fury
10:30 Roy Rogers
11:00 Mr. Wizard
11:30 My Friend Flica
12.% World of Sports
1:30 Basketball
3:30 World Traveler
4:00 Frontier Circus
5:00 Walt Disney
6:00 Sander Vanocur
News
6:15 State News and
Weather
6:30 Wells Fargo
7:30 Bob Hope
8:30 Have Gun, Will
Travel
9:00 Gunsmoke
10:00 Shannon
10:30 Sat. News Special
10:35 Theatre 7
12:30 Sign Off
KCEN, Sat., March I
8:00 lest Pattern
8:30 Pip the Piper
9:00 Shari Lewis
9:30 King Leonardo
10:00 Fury
10:30 Make Room
for Daddy
11:00 Watch Mr. Wizard
11:30 Championship
Debate
12:00.Big Picture
12:30 Christophers
1:00 World in Review
1:30 NBA Pro
Basketball
3:30 Ask Washington
4:00 Post Time
4:15 Light Time
4:30 Bugs Bunny &
His Friends
5.00 Social Security
In Action
5:15 Saturday News
5:30 Dub King Sports
Parade
6:00 Brothers
Brannagan
6:30 Wells Fargo
7:30 Tall Man
8:00 Saturday Night at
the Movies
10:20 News & Weather
10:05 Late Date Theatre
KBTX. Sat., March ’
8:00 Capt. Kangaroo
9:00 Vidio Village
9:30 Mighty Mouse
10:00 Magic Land
10:30 Roy Rogers
11:00 Music from
Sam Houston
11:30 Big Picture
12:00 Saturday News
12:30 Accent
1:00 All Star Basketball
3:00 TEA
3:30 Pro Bowlers
Tournament
5:00 The Answer
5:30 Pete & Glayds
6:00 Leave It To
Beaver
6:30 Perry Mason
7:30 The Defender
8:30 Have Gun, wtli
Travel
9:00 Gunsmoke
10:00 World News
10:10 Local News
10:18 Final Weather
10:25 Sports
10:30 The New Breed
11:30 TV Theater
12:30 Sign Off
Thursday’s Results
Milwaukee 6, New York (N) 2. j
Minnesota 7, Detroit 4.
Kansas City 6* Washington 1.
Baltimore 7, St. Louis 2.
Chicago (A) 11, Pittsburgh 5.
Cincinnati 15, Philadelphia 6.
Los Angeles (N) 5, New York]
(A) 4, 10 innings).
Chicago (N) 7, Houston 5. 1
Boston 4, San Francisco 2.
Los Angeles (A) 7, Cleveland 4.
Today’s Schedule
Cincinnati vs. Detroit at Tampa.
Philadelphia vs. New York (N)
at St. Petersburg.
St. Louis vs. Pittsburgh at Fort
Myers.
Chicago (N) vs. Boston at
Scottsdale.
Houston vs. San Francisco at
Phoenix.
New York (A) vs. Baltimore1 at
Miami, (night). !
Chicago (A) vs. Minnesota at
Orlando.
Washington vs. Kansas City at
West Palm Beach.
Clieveland vs. Los Angeles (A)
at Palm Springs.
-o---
BOWLING TOURNAMENT
SAN ANTONIO UP) — A record]
five - game score helped Harry
Smith of St. Louis take the lead
with 2,345 Thursday night in qual-
ifying for the $25,000 San Antonio
Bowling Tournament. He rolled
1,227 to hang up a Professional
Bowling Association mark and fin-
ished with 1,118 for a 115-pin ’edge
over his nearest rival.
GAS-TOONS
by
Ray Schroeder
KTBC, Sun., April 1
9:50 Sign On
9:30 Look Up & Live
10:00 Off to Advqnture
10:15 iChristian Science
10:30 Tbls is the Life
11:00 Religious Insight
11:30 Washington
Conversation
12:00 Holiday
12:30 American Odyessey
1:00 Austin Home
Builders
1:30 Sports Spectacular
3:00 Mr. Ed
3:30 Young America
Speaks
A 4:00 Sunday Edition
J 4:15 Tell Me, Dr.
4:30 College F.cwl
5:00 Meet the Press
5:30 Twentieth Century
6:00 Lassie
6:30 Dennis the Menace
7:00 Ed Sullivan
8:00 Bonanza
9:00 Theatre 62
•10:00 Hazel
10:30 Father of Bride
11:00 Racket Squad
KCEN, Sun April 1
12:00 Family Fisher
12:30 Frontiers of Faith
1:00 Sunday Matinee
2:30 Opera
3:30 Pattern in Music
4:00 Wisdom
4:30 Update
5:00 Meet the Press
5:30 1-2-3 Go
6:00 Bullwinkle Show
6:30 Walt Disney’s
Wonderful World
of Color
Are YouT
7:30 Car 54, Where
8:00 Bonanza
9:00 Show of the Week
10:00 Channel 6 Report
10:15 Late Date
Theatre
t
KBTX, Sun., April
12:00 The Answer
12:30 The Christophers
1:00 Hadley Berg
1:30 Sunday "ports
Spectacular
3:00 Joint Appearance
4:00 Amateur Hour
4:30 College Bowl
5:00 Young America
Speaks
5:30 Mr. Ed
6:00 Thrills' and Skills
6:30 Dennis the Meuse*
7:00 Ed Sullivan
8:00 G. E. Theatre
8:30 Jack Benny
9:00 Candid Camera
9:30 What’s My Line
10:00 World News
10:18 Weather
10:25 Sports
10:30 Target: The
Corrupters
11:30 TV Theater
12:00 Sign Off
“Whatch that hood, Ray . .
IT SLIPS’'
vVe watch for the little things |
that need our attention.
SCHROEDER’S
Texaco Service
Best Service In Town
24 Hours Every Day
PIIONE EL2-4051
209 West ivt 2nd St,
WHY STOP TAYLOH
PROGRESS?
Thelndustrial Development Committee of your Chamber of Com-
merce here in Taylor was set up for the ultimate result of promoting and
securing new industry for the city of Taylor.
Also, the Industrial Foundation of the city of Taylor was set
lip for the promotion of locating new industry and manufacturing estab-
lishments and for promoting the public interests of the city of Taylor.
If these committees and foundations were organized with the
financial support of the citizens of Tay!or-—for the promotion and the
progress of Taylor, why should two of the oldest and influential institu-
tions in the city try and hold hack progress????
We have received from Washington, D. C. a notification that the:
TAYLOR SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
THE CITY NATIONAL BANK OF TAYLOR
THE GEORGETOWN SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
have submitted a formal opposal to the application of the FIRST FED-
ERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION OF AUSTIN to establish a
branch office in the city of Taylor. This letter of opposition was received
from the law firm of Willey & Crooks of Washington, D. C., representing
the opposition from Taylor and Georgetown.
It is rather difficult for us to understand why men, as well estab-
lished in the business world as some of the above are, should be so op-
posed to helping their city and their friends and customers progress!
The FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS OF AUSTIN did not go into
the proposed branch office without first making a complete and detailed
survey of the present home loan and thrift facilities. A great deal of con-
sideration was given to the history and to the thrift and home loan activi-
ties of the Taylor Savings and Loan Association, as well as to the future
building and savings requirements for Taylor and surrounding area.
In the proposed expenditures of the FIRST FEDERAL SAV-
INGS OF AUSTIN, of approximately $50,000.00 for our facilities at 5th
and Talbot, and the transferring of some $2,500,000.00 in assets (which is
larger than both the Taylor and the Georgetown Savings & Loan has to-
gether—-and the Taylor association is 77 years old and the Georgetown
(association is 46 years old) how can anyone that has the promotion of
their city at heart be opposed to such new industry?
We would like to remind all of the citizens of Taylor and the
surrounding area that the FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS OF AUSTIN will
be operated as an independent institution as far as our charter and regu-
lations will aFow. Our management and employees will be local citizens
that have worked with you and will work for you. The promotion of Taylor
and its industrial development and progressive programs will be one
(of the foremost duties to our friends and customers in the Taylor trade
area.
We have the greatest confidence in Taylor and the surrounding
towns, an I dedicate our management and employees to the promotion of
that confidence in every way we can-—if given the opportunity. We shall
PROMOTE not DE-MOTE the progress for the city of Taylor.
Every Pair In Bone,
Your Newest* Shade 'For Spring
VALUES
12.95
Medium and High Hee/ls
35 PAIRS H ^FASHION
FLATS
Values To 7.95
& LOAN
r-ASSOCIATION-i
OF AUSTIN#—
HOME OFFICE: 11th & San Jacinto
Box 74
Bone Mostly in A Sharp Group of Buys!
Every Pair First Quality! 60-15
Reg. $1.00 Hose
Nylon Hose*49e
New Colors, Finely Fashioned Seams
Best Buy In Taylor! Beautiful Seamless
NYLONS
Reg.
$1.65
All Sines, New Shades! Finest Qualify
Table of Values! Cotton - Knit
T-SHIRTS 8 s
Big Assortment of
Styles, Patterns, Sizes!
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 87, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1962, newspaper, March 30, 1962; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth800213/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Taylor Public Library.