Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 78

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
78
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

REPUBLIC Friday, October 23, 1981 The Arizona Republic TV Continued from Fl Dunkel college football index Bottom 10 MHIfrMrViiU EXPLANATION Tke Dunkel tvirem provides continuous Inde to the relative; strength of oil teams. It reflects overage scaring opposition rating, weighted in favor of recant performance. Example: a 50.0 team hat been 10 scaring a 40.0 team against opposition of identical strength. Originated in 1929 by Dick Dunkel. ma rain combined with overage point stronger, per game, than in GAMES OF WEEK ENDING OCT.

25, 1981 W'minster 59.3 25) Canisius 34.8 Opposing Team Rating Diff. Higher Rating Team then in the New York area. They had been witness to the future, even if no one knew it. "I don't believe anybody ever dreamed that pro football would be like it is today, because nobody then was reckoning with television," said Allen Walz, the antecedent of today's announcers, who now lives in Palm Springs, Calif. That day in 1939, he was known as Bill Allen, a pseudonym he concocted from his middle name (William).

He said he thought it "would sound easier to the public." A former football player at New York University, Walz had a job then coaching crew at Manhattan College. In addition, he was host for a sports talk show on radio. Soon he was asked to announce Manhattan's games at Widener 53.6 (28) Moravian 23. Waynesb'g 48.4... (33) Mercyhurst 15.3 Wagner 43.6 (17) Pace 26.9 MAJOR GAMES SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24 OTHER MIDWESTERN OhioState 89.1 (12) Indiana 77.5 Okla.St 81.2 Louisville 80.4 Oklahoma 92.3 (24) OregonSt 68.8 Oregon 81.6 (15) AirForce 66.3 Pacific 72.2 (7) Fresno 64.8 PennState 106.8.

W.Virginia 89.0 Pittsburgh 104.2.... (21 Syracuse 83.6 Purdue 93.8 (6) Mich.St 87.8 Rice 84.5 (2) 83.0 C. State 68.7 (7) Fla.A&M 61:3 S. Illinois 73.3.. (1) S'westLa 72.5 S.M.U.

99.4.. Texas 90.2 SanJose 89.9 (15) UtahSt 74.9 Ala.St 64.7 (301 Pralrte M.i Alabama 95.7 (Z4) ituigere ii.o Alcorn 56.8 (14) SouthemU 43.0 OCTOBER 24 (30) Earlham 20.4 Butler 36.1 SATURDAY, Anderson 50.1.. Ashland 47.2 B-Wallace 58.2 (29) Kenyon 29.6 ArizonaSt 101.7 (17) stantora- oo.i Arkansas 98.8 (11) Houston 88.0 B-Cookman 52.6 (6) Tuskegee 46.7 Baylor 81.7 (5) T.CU. 76.8 Ro? mi (fit WeberSt 64.5 Benedictine 34.5 (9 Bethany ns.t) J.Carroll 24.7 Carnegie 37.0 So.Calif 95.6 (7) NotreDame 88.4 Temple 79.4 (5) Cinc'nati 74.7 DePauw 50.1 (17) Olivet 33.6 Findlav 44.8 (15) Taylor 29.5 his work. The entire program cost less-than $1,000.

Today, an average of 25 million Americans watch professional football games each Sunday afternoon, according to a spokesman for the Nielsen Company in New York. A commercial minute at last year's Super Bowl cost sponsors more than $500,000. To televise Monday Night Football, according to an ABC-TV spokesman, ABC usually uses seven cameras, nearly 50 technicians and often rents the Goodyear Blimp for overhead shots. Director Chet Forte directs everything from his trailer outside the stadium. There, he can choose from any of 34 monitors to broadcast what the public will see.

The trailer is. packed snugly with $3 V2 million worth of electronic equipment. The three four-year contracts agreed to in 1978 between the Na- tional Football League and the televi- sion networks totaled a stunning $650 million. Each of the 28 NFL clubs is guaranteed a year from television alone. But who could have known that in 1939? "It was just a routine type of thing," Walz said.

"There was certainly nothing significant in the minds of the ballplayers. I don't think they knew they were even being televised. In fact, I'm sure they didn't." In other words, there were no, sideline hellos to Mom that day. And, ironically, this first pro football telecast soon lost most of its' luster. "As the sun went down, we didn't get a picture anymore," Walz said." "The daylight waned, the picture waned, so I just kept on as if it were a radio game." Tenn.St 75.7 (19) Nicholls 56.7 BostonCol 75.9 (91 Army- Brig.Young 96.9.-.

(131 Wyoming 84.4 Cent.Mich 71.8 (4) Kent St 67.8 Cha'nooga 74.0..(15l W.Carolina 58.6 Citadel 67.2 (20) Newberry 47.7 Franklin 53.8 -(24) Evansville 30.0 GrndVal 59.2 (15) CentralSt 44.4 Tenn.Tech 61.0 Morehead 44.6 Tennessee 84.7 (3) Memphis 81.9 Tex.Arl'n 66.7....L. (0) N.Tex.St 66.5 Tex.South'n 55.0 (6) Miss.Val 48.7 Hannver 26 7 (18) Manchester Hiram 27.8 13) Allegheny 24.8 Kparnev 515 (101 Mo.South'n 41.5 Toledo 79.1 (141 Bowl'eGr'n 65.4 Clemson 99.7 Z1 io.i Colgate 71.9 (24) Columbia 47.5 Colo.St 66.2 (16) Tex.ElP 50.1 Tulane 78.5 (1) Ga.Tech 77.1 Mo.West'n 51.6 (16) EmporiaSt 35.3 Mt.Union 44.7 (0) Otterbein 44.6 Muskineum 33.3 (6) Heidelb'g 27.0 Tulsa 78.9 (10) Wichita 69.0 U.C.L.A. 88.8 (6) California 82.4 Connect't 74.2 Maine- oi.i Dartmouth 60.5. (6) Cornell 54.1 Davidson 57.6 -(30) H-Sydney 27.6 V.M.I. 72.5 (22) Marshall 50.7 ByStSve Harvey Universal Press Syndicate The colleges Northwestern University and the Chicago Bears i have rolled to Bottom 10 titles in their respective divisions before, but never in the same year.

In fact, this is the first time ever that a college and pro team from the same metropolitan area have a chance to capture the coveted Bottom 10 dunce cap excuse me, crown which makes this season kind of special. The Mildcats (0-6) got a little help over the weekend when the Little Red of Cornell (1-4), one of the last of the winless teams, succumbed to victory, 14-9, over black-and-blue Brown (1-4). Any time you're No. 1, the pressure is great. But Northwestern fortunately has a laugher against Michigan this week.

The temperature and point spread for that one are expected to be in the low 60s. SCHOOL RECORD LAST LOSS NEXT LOSS 1. Northwestern (0-6) 35-0, Purdue Michigan '3 UTEP (0-6) 63-12, Wyoming Colorado State 3. Colorado State (0-6) 24-13, Utah UTEP 4. Long Beach St.

(1-5) 17-10, Pacific Atlantic 5. Vanderbilt (1-5) 53-21, Georgia Young Miss 6. Brown (1-4) 14-9, Cornell Holv Cross 7. Kentucky (1-5) 24-10, LSU Georgia 8. Georgia Tech (1-5) 31-7, Auburn Tulane 9.

Columbia (1-4) 48-17, Yale Colgate 10. Notre Dame (2-3) in therapy USC 11. Boston College (1-4); 12. Syracuse (1-4-1); 13. Penn (1-3); 14.

Duke Virginia (3-9); 15. Cal (1-5); 16. Wake Forest (2-5); 17. tie between Oregon (1-5) and Oregon State (1-5) (or vice versa); 19. Stanford (1-5); 20.

Oklahoma (2-2-1). ON FURLOUGH: Pentagon. CRUMMY GAME OF THE WEEK: Colorado State (0-6) at UTEP (0-6) (tickets still available). ROUT OF THE WEEK: Michigan (4-2) vs. Northwestern (0-6).

PLAYING BOTTOM 16 REQUESTS: Harold O'Brien of Pomona nominates Pomona-Pitzer tor its 0-5 record; Thomas De Lav nominates ABC for subjecting viewers to San Jose State games two weeks in a row (once against Fresno State's Killer Bees). WHERE-ARE-THEY-NOW Cal State-Fullerton (Disneyland) may never make it to Pasadena on New Year's Day. But their new football stands have been there they were previously used for the Rose Parade. O.North'n 39.4 (6) O.Wesl'n 33.0 Pittsburg 52.4 (13) Ft.Hays 39.5 R-Hulman 37.7.... (16) Centre 21.5 S'eastMo 37.8 (18) Lincoln 19.5 S'eastOkla 37.1...

3l N'westOkla 34.1 VaTech 79.3 (8) Appalach'n 71.4 W.Michigan 69.7 (6) BallSt 63.3 W'keForest 76.7 (5) Virginia 71.4 Delaware 69.8 (151 Khodei 34.8 Drake 77.2 (4) W.Tex.St 72.9 ETenn 66.2 (7) Wofford 58.9 Wash. St 90.7 (2) Arizona 89.1 EasternKy 78.6. (17) wesiernriy oi.i FloridaSt 93.5. Ull L.S.U. 83.0 Furman 71.0...

(39) LibertyBap't 32.2 St.Josephs 40.5 (12) Vlpar'o 28.4 Wabash 56.0 (42) Marietta 13 9 Wayne.Neb 40 0 (31 Washburn 36.6 Wittenb'e 59.5 (25) Denison 34.8 Washington 89.9 TexasTech 75.1 Wisconsin 79.9 (1) Illinois 78.8 Yale 80.2 (351 Penn 44.8 Youngst'n 65.8 (7) E.Illinois 59.1 Georgia 101.0 KentucKy 71.8 Harvard 52.7. (0) Princeton 52.5 Hawaii 85.5 (2) S.DiegoSt 84.0 Wooster 41.4 (5) Capital 36.6 OTHER EASTERN HolyCross 64.8 (141 Brown 51.2 Howard 44.1 3 N.C.A4T 41.2 OTHER SOUTHERN Ebbets Field, which led him to the same job with the Dodgers. It was then that RCA came along with its original idea of televising a college game. The colleges, though, wanted no part of the show, so Walz, who had many industry friends, proposed the pros. "I just said, 'Hey, listen, let's do the pro And it was done, that's all," he recalled recently.

"They gave me a box on the 50-yard line in the mezzanine, and we set a camera up in the box. There was only one camera, no field cameras, nothing else, just the camera that was behind me. I would point to the play, and the guy on the camera would turn it in the direction I was pointing." A total of five people were involved in the telecast. Walz was paid $25 for SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24 IndianaSt 79.0 (20) IllinoisSt 59.0 Iowa 97.0 (19) Minnesota 77.8 Inwa St 94.8 (15) Colorado 79.7 i SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24 Abilene 66.0 (2) E.Tex. St 64.4 AneeloSt B4.7 (25) How.Payne 39.4 JacksonSt 75.5 (4) Grambling 71.5 Kansas 75.0 (9) KansasSt 65.7 A.I.C.

42.3 (5) Ithaca 37.8 Alfred 40.1 (1) Cortland 39.1 Brockp't 34.7 (1) Mansfield 33.4 Calif. St 41.0 (4) Lk. Haven 37.0 Cheyney 23.5. (0) Bloomsb'g 23.4 La.Tech 65.0 (6) N'westLa 59.4 Ark.Tech 48.7 (7) Monticello 41.8 Austin 46.7 (1) SulRoss 45.4 C-Newman 54.2 (6) G-Webb 48.5 T.afAvette 64.2 (32) Gettysb'a 32.1 Lehieh 66.1 BUCKneil 43ii Dayton 63.5 (291 Butiaio' Del.Valley 39.3 (28) Wilkes Cent. Ark 56.4 Ouachita 39 LongBeach 68.7 (3) Fullerton 65.8 34.8 11.7 19.5 24.7 45.6 (26 Ursinus" E.Cent.Okla 33.0 (1) Tex.Luth'n 32.3 Elon 58.3 (16) Catawba 42.6 Glassboro 30.2 N.Y.Tech Madison 52.0 Hampton 4U.

Maryland 87.2 16) Duke 81.2 Mass.U 62.3 (91 BostonU 53.3 McNeese 77.8 12) Ark.St 76.2 (7) St.Peters 9.2 16.1 Em-Henry 25.6 (Ill Bridgew'r 15.0 Frostburg 28.6 (12) GroveCity 16 6 Henderson 51.9 (15 Harding 37.2 Hamilton 22.5 (21 Hobart 20.9 (8) St. Johns 21.4 Miami.Fla 93.0 18) E.Carolina 75.2 Ind.Cent 42.9 (23) 20.1 (15) Edinboro 29.7 Hofstra 28.9 Indiana. Pa 44.4 J.Hopkins 30.5.. Juniata 41.4 Miami.O omou 6.7 Michigan 96.6 (39) N'western 57.8 J.C.Smith 34.5 (14) D.C Teach 20.5 (41 Leb. Valley 26.8 (11) Albright 30.9 Mid.

Term 65.2 lo) Aus.reay si.i Mis'sippi 77.6 (5) Vanderbilt 73.1 (13) Dickinson 18 0 Lycoming 30.7 Livingston 55.0 (5) DeltaSt 49.8 MarsHill 49.2 (1) Presby'n 48.4 McMurry 28.7. (4) Tarleton 24.9 Millsans 38.0 (11) Marvville 27.4 Miss. St 95.5 (4) Auburn 91.1 Montana 69 6 (23) PortlandSt 47.1 Morehouse 36.1. (35) Fisk 1.0 N.Alabama 67.7 (5) TrovSt 62.7 PineBluff 42.5 (21 Ky. State 40.7 S'westTex 81.0...

(261 S.F.Austin 55 4 MontanaSt 62.3 (3) N.Arizona 59.3 Murray 62.7 (7) Akron 55.8 N.Carolina 102.0... (15) S.Carolina 86.9 N.H'shire 59.9 (17) N'eastern 43.3 Kings find backup guard The pros M'lersv'le 55.1 E.Stroudsbg 38.5 Montclair 46.5 (141 Cent. Conn 32.7 Ramapo 28.5.- Paterson 27.2 Salisbury 22.5 d) Kean 21.2 Shippensbg 54.0.... (12) C.W.Post 42.5 Slip.Rock 45.9 (3) Clarion 43.1 Sus'hanna 36.4. F-Dick'son 1.0 Sw'thmore 34.6 (21 Upsala 33.0 Towson 52 0 (23) KingsPt 28.6 Trenton 28 2 (23) JerseyCity 5.0 Trinity 41.9 (121 Union 30.4 W.Chester 42.6 '8) Kutztown 34 8 W.Maryland 41.1..

(11) Muhlenb'g 30.0 N. Illinois 58.0 E.Michigan 43.3 N.Mexico 76.0 (161 N.Mex St 60.1 By the fourth quarter Monday night, Chicago's T-Martin 56.2 14) Miss. Col TexasASiI 74 2 (351 S.Houston Trinity 23.6 (12) LubbockChr'n Va. Union 59 5 (171 Norfolk W-Salem 47.0 (2) Len.Rhyne N'eastLa 66.5 (2) S'eastLa 64.2 Navy 83.9 (24) 59.5 who complements Ford Nebraska 104.4 (16) Missouri 88.4 Nev.LasV 83.5 (2) Utah 81.1 Home Team Nev.Reno 75.6 (12) Idaho 63.7 drew had four of his six assists in the second quarter as the Kings erased a NATIONAL AND SECTIONAL LEADERS MIDWEST NATIONAL 1044 Nebraska Penn State ..106.8 Window of Vulnerability defense was giving up points as quickly as the numbers change on a gasoline pump. The Bears' 48-17 defeat enabled the Monstrosities of the Midway, as they are affectionately known around Chicago, to take over the Bottom 10 lead from Oakland, which went wild and scored 18 somewhere.

The Bears' match-up against the Lions (3-4) was so unattractive that ABC network officials, to aitract viewers, let slip the news beforehand that Howard Cosell's voice would be idle. Though 1-6, the Bears have now appeared on the Monday night game twice in the last three weeks, 104.4 Iowa Michigan Iowa St 104.2 ..102.0 Nebraska Pittsburgh Carolina Arizona St ...97.0 94.8 93.8 ..89.1 FAR WIST Arizona St .101.7 Brig.Young .96.9 So.Calif .95.6 Wash. St 90.7 Washington .899 San Jose 89 9 Arizona 89.1 U.C.L.A. 888 Hawaii 85 5 Stanford 85.1 SOUTH N.Carolina .102.0 Georgia 1010 Clemson 99.7 Alabama 957 Miss. St .95.5 Florida ..94 8 Florida St 93.5 Miami.Fla 93.0 So.

Miss 91.4 Auburn 91.1 EAST Penn State .106 8 Pittsburgh .104 2 Navy 839- Syracuse 83 6 Yale 80.2 Temple 79.4 Boston Col Connect't 74.2 Colgate .71.9 Rutgers 71.6 SOUTHWEST S.M.U 99 4 Arkansas 98.8 Texas 90.2 Houston 88.0 Rice 84.5 Texas .83.0 Baylor 81.7 S'west Tex ...81.0 T.CU. 768 Ark.St 76.2 Svc Purdue Oklahoma Ohio State Notre Dame Missouri Mich.St Georgia 101.0 Clemson 99.7 S.M.U. 99.4 Arkansas 98.8 Iowa 97.0 88.4 884 87.8 Copyright 1981 by Dunkel Sports Research Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. No longer do the Kansas City Kings live in fear that an injury to point guard Phil Ford will force them to alter their style of play. The reason is Larry Drew, a 6-foot-2, former Missouri guard the Kings acquired from the Detroit Pistons during the off-season for second-round draft choices in 1982 and 1984.

"Now that we have Larry Drew, Phil Ford will be able to play with reckless abandon," said Frank Hamblen, Kansas City assistant coach. "We expect Drew to go in there and be able to play the same way." When Ford was injured last season, Ernie Grunfeld filled in, but Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons was forced to slow down the Kings' attack to accommodate Grunfeld more deliberate style. But if Drew's performance during the preseason is any sign, Fitzimmons won't have to do that this year. Although scoring just 24 points in five games, Drew has dazzled opponents with his passing. In Kansas City's 89-78 victory over Atlanta Wednesday night in St.

Louis, 22-18 deficit to take a 42-40 halttime lead. "Drew is not just a passer," said Fitzsimmons, whose team took a record into Thursday night's game-with Portland at St. Joseph. "He can play. He plays good defense, and he's a good shooter.

He'll hit the basket." Hamblen said: "Drew is a strong, quick kid with great wrists who can deliver a pass through a small opening. He'll complement Phil Ford. In certain circumstances, we'll have him in there to play defense. As soon as he learns to not to force passes, he'll be awfully efficient." Drew said he thinks his game will improve once the Kings adjust to his deceptive passing style. "In college, you run into a lot of zones," he said.

"In the NBA, it's man-to-man, and things open up more. You run, run, run. You have more places to pass the ball. I feel I have to find the open man, give him the ball. That's the best part of my game." On deck 2 free-agent punters to try out with Oilers United Press International HOUSTON Free-agent punters Frank Garcia and Stan Talley, both cut from NFL teams in the preseason', flew Thursday to Houston for tryouts with the Oilers.

paired by ABC with and overshadowing That's Incredible. TEAM RECORD LAST LOSS NEXT LOSS 1. 'Chieago (1-6) 17-48, Detroit SanOiego 2. Seattle (1-6) 0-32, NJ Giants NY Jets 3. Baltimort (1-6) 14-43, San Diego Cleveland Washington (1-6) 10-13, Miami New England 5Oakland (3-4) beat Tampa, 18-16 Kansas City 6.

New Orleans (1-6); 7. Green Bay (before John Jefferson) (1- 2); 8. Green Bay (with Jefferson) (1-3); 9. St. Louis (2-5); 10.

ABC Monday Night Game (with or without Howard). QUOTE BOOK: Rams Coach Ray Malavasi, denigrating the Cowboys' flex defense before the two teams met Sunday: "We've boon successful in the past. Other people haven't attacked it right." The Cowboys stopped the Rams, 29-17, though not as badly as they whipped them in the playoffs last year (34-13). Phoenix vs. San Diego 8:30 p.m.

(approximate), San Diego International Sports Arena GENERAL The Phoenix Suns and San Diego Clippers meet in the second of two NBA exhibition games. Denver and Golden Stale play in the tint game. Tonight' game it the last in the preseason tor both the Suns and Clippers. The Suns, who have won their past two exhibition games, will open their regular season Oct. 30 In Portland.

Probable starters Practice notes Head coach Ed Biles, dissatisfied with the punting of veteran Cliff Parsley, said both would work out today as the Oilers prepare to play the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday. The two were to have worked out Thursday, but their planes were late. Through seven games this season, five-year veteran Parsley has a 38.4-yard punting average and a 31.9-yard net punting average. The second figure, which is derived from subtracting punt-return yards and 20 yards for each touchback, is the poorest in the NFL. SAN DIEGO (1-2) Joe Bryant (6-10) Michael Brooks (6-7) Swan Nater (6-11) Brian Taylor (6-2) Freeman Williama (6-4) PHOENIX (3-2) Pes.

Truck Robinson (6-7) Jell Cook (6-10) Alvan Adams (6-9) Walter Davit (6-6) Dennis Johnson (6-4) ASU TEMPE Arizona State fottball coach Darryl Rogers said Thursday that all of his injured players should be available for Saturday's Pacific-10 Conference road game against Stanford. Rogers said that Newton Williams will start at fullback for the second straight week but that Gerald Riggs, who missed the Cal game last week because of a knee injury, will be able to play. Dan Mackie, who took over at center last week wKeniion Sowers suffered a back injury early in the Cal game, will start this week, Rogers said. He said Sowers should be able to play. Rogers said tailback Willie Gittens, who suffered The Suns Rise yIU TV.rnrrVi Cr I JL VeleVLelAfc VU THE WORLD SERIES Today at 5:10 PM on DODGERS VS YANKEES GAME 3 Then, after the game Listen to LEE HAMILTON on the "620 SPORTSLIUE" American a bruised shoulder against Cal, will make the trip, though his status is questionable.

NAU Buckeye says he'll pass up NFL's draft CINCINNATI (AP) Ohio State receiver Gary Williams will pass up the National Football League draft and play for the Buckeyes in 1982, the Cincinnati Post reported Thursday. Williams, ranked second in the Big 10 and 15th nationally in receiving, is eligible to piny one more year in college because a knee injury forced him to miss football his freshman year. As a fourth-year stu Cable and SuperChannel! 1 tffca 1 1 tU 7 See the Suns in their final pre season tuneup tonight when they tace the young and Improved Clippers. coached by former Sun Paul Silas FLAGSTAFF Guard Don Groscost, one of three Northern Arizona University linemen injured against Portland State last week, will be out for the 1 Groscost will be out for the year because of a knee injury but will not require surgery, trainer Mike Nesbitt said. Groscost's leg will be put in a cast to heal on its own.

Center Dave Anders will not play in Saturday's game against Montana State because of a pinched nerve in his neck. His status for the rest of the season is unknown. Guard Paul Smith, who suffered a concussion against Portland State, is questionable (or Saturday. Hum 1110 xui uieyu oyuua rueuu ua they prepare to defend their NBA Pacific Division crown. lv 37 Big Games! dent, Williams is eligible for the NFL draft next spring.

PRO-FORMANCE ARM WRESTLING SYSTEM and MILLER HIGH LIFE BEER INVITES YOU TO ENTER THE Nowrunning The best and most comprehensive look at the Suns comes your way only on American Cable and SuperChannel Catch the action of at least 37 games 20 home and 17 on the road more than any other television station or service can offer! This Is your network for Suns basketball all season longl Order Today! Be a part of the NBA most exciting franchise Subscribe to American Cable or SuperChannel and experience the Suns as well as blockbuster movies and specials all for one low monthly price. Subscribe now to Phoenix' best entertainment value and don't miss a minute of actlonl TT Arizona Championship AMATEUR ARM WRESTLING CONTEST OCTOBER 24 WEIGH-INS: Friday 6-9 P.M., 1 P.M. Saturday 9-1 1 :30 A.M. W.lfht Division: 1 40 and Under ArVEFSS Channel 140 160 161 180 220 221 and Over left Hond 1 80 Ovor Men Under Women No Clothing Allowance Entrance fee $10 00 Individual $20 00Toam TROPHIES Will BE AWARDED lirc.it I'Mrruiniiu'tit d.nly except Tucsil.iy Tluirvl.iv. ir.inJst.mJ 2 00, Cluhhoiisc $4 00.

I.mlics yet trtv in admission every Wedru'vliy. For inform, it ion reservations i 942-I I OH. I'Jth Avenue IV 1 1 Road. No rating this umunn Monday. Turf Paradise Itsiliehestentertainiik'ni ninninu ntW MOVieS Qt mOW 2449900 996-8840 EAS1CACTUS ROAD AT TATUM BLVD..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Arizona Republic
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Arizona Republic Archive

Pages Available:
5,583,855
Years Available:
1890-2024