Passer au contenu principal
La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
Un journal d’éditeur Extra®

Democrat and Chronicle du lieu suivant : Rochester, New York • Page 19

Lieu:
Rochester, New York
Date de parution:
Page:
19
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

People Theater TV.Radio Want Ads Comics 5.6C 4C 8-14C 15C SECTION J.OCHi N.Y.. I IUUAY. JULY I i 1 I tT- f. iLJ Ji ts' V. tj.iij.ji Talent Win Boosts Miss Rochester August A.

Ruseh known Busch's'Let 'em strike1 shook game Jiiilnli Ann Krllliley. Miss Uh hc.ster, movrd aiiotlu-r step closer to Incoming Miss New York State last nie.ht irt Olean by winning first place in talent eonix tition. She took first place in SwiniMiit coinx-tition Wednesday. AImj Lot night. Katliryn E.

VUImt. Miss Ni-agat'a. won fcer ponps suimsuit competition. Mi liuil won the group's talent contest Weilnes-day. Pageant officials said it was the first time that two fiii Is had swept both the talent and suimsuit categories.

This makes the two leading contenders for tin crown. Miss Itoehesler. 19. a student at the Kastman i 1 4t5F 2 If i i' -i II School of Music, played "Rhapsody in Blue" at the piano. Miss New York State will chosen tonight from 10 finalists.

The winner will be eligible for tlie Miss America pageant. Channel 13 plans to televise tonight's program at 9 Front Mandi Harris. it wai hi grandfather's image that August Jr. clung to. And las lives the way Adolphus lived.

There is a town bouse and there is the mammoth retreat southwest of the city, called "Grant's Farm." This is tlie acreage that V. S. Grant tilled and went broke tilling before the Civil War. Grant would never recognize it. The most startling feature of the "farm" is a French renaissance mansion imported brick-by biiek.

It is truly a showplace and Gussie, who likes to show people, shows it to regular tours. The grounds are vast and arc stocked with animals including buffalo and deer. There is a large stable of horses. And, of course, there is a coat-hand four which Gussie drives on the grounds much as grandfather did. Busch knows about children.

He has been married three times. His first wife was a childhood sweetheart. She died. His second marriage ended in divorce after a couple of decades. And then one day, while traveling through Switzerland, Gussie stayed at an inn.

The innkeeper had a beautiful daughter. Gussie married the innkeeper's daughter. Busch has 10 children from his marriages. "That's 'Old a present-day Cardinal said. "He loves animals and children.

Only he thinks his players are children, too, and he gets sore at us when we want to sound like adults." For several jears now, many Cardinals have insisted on acting like adults. Busch has piqued. But it isn't only Please Vim page with and without affection as Guvsie," ownn the St. I)ui Cardinals hrd Budwelsr, the world' most widely distributed leer. He lias tlio civic pride of a Fiorello I.aGunrdia, the largest Big Daddy Complex sim Juan Peron's and a habit of slamming down his hand on the nearest object while saying.

"Dammit, I said so, that's why! August A. PiUsch Jr. is a presence. The good burghers of St. Louis have grown to accept Busch and they have words for him: philanthropist, altruist, salt of the earth, and tyrant, bully, hard headed, overbearing.

It took a threatened strike of all of the ballplayers in both major leagues to make the real Gussie Busch stand up. "Let 'em strike. I won't give them one more damned he roared. Presumably his fist slammed onto a desk top or a bar. The words reverberated, richocheted and banked off the stanchions of baseball.

The player-representatives from each of Uic 24 teams gulped when they heard the words. Calling a strike had been a remote possibility to some, but now they had their backs to the wall. Let them strike? Really? All right. And 23 of the 24 representatives voted to strike. The 24th abstained.

"Who was that Dodger player that abstained in the strike vote?" Busch yelled out once to anyone who wanted to field the answer. "Wes Parker," three people shot back in unison. "Smartest damned player in baseball," Busch said. Then he turned back to his questioner. "I mean that," he said.

"I'm honest. I mean hat I say. I was brought up mean what I say. I was born that way." Gus Busch was born "that way" 73 years ago to midwest royalty a beer baroncy. The baron was Busch's flamboyant grandfather, Adolphus Busch.

He was Gussic's idol. Grandfather Busch had come to this country from Germany as an eager salesman. He went to work for a brewer named Anheuser who made a beer that had a limited distribution. Then he married Anheuser's daughter and the beer's distribution became wider. Then he became half of Anheuser-Busch, and his products became world famous.

Adolphus, the legend goes, would use Sunday mornings to make a courtly tour down Broadway in his four-horse-driven coach. He v.vud sit back casually and tip his hat regally to the people on the street who slopped in their trolls long enough to smile, bow and pay him the homage he enjoyed. rf Jay Stearns '11 'Brigadoon1 Star Baritone Jay Stearns, whrt plays Tommy Al-briqht, romantic lead in tonight and tomorrow night's "Onora Under the Stars" production of Lerncr and Locwc's "Brigadoon," is currently a soloist with the United States Army Chorus. Outside Army duty, Stearns has also sung in such musical productions as "The Fantastics," "Annie Get Your Gun" and "The King and He was also a soloist in the last Isomer and Loewe pops concert given by the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington, D.C. "Brigadoon" begins at 8:43 p.m.

in Highland Park Bowl. Rain date is Sunday From Theodore Price. Rock 'Flower' Alive? August Busch with Cardinals Joe Torre and Dale Maxvill. (AP) Bill Beeney ''itajJr XI' ft 1 Lucky Badge The Fillmore East, onetime flower of the East Coast rock music scene, may bloom once again. The Fillmore in New York will open again this September under new management and with a new name, Frank N.

Morgenslcrn, a Long Island realtor, has announced. He said he had purchased the Fillmore East until its closing in June 1971 the showcase of rock music on the East Coast for an undisclosed price. "Contemporary rock and its jazz, rhythm and blues and folk music is an integral part of our culture," said Morgenstern. "When I walked through the empty theater, I got the feeling that New York deserved to have the Fillmore again." o. 13 Retires tm, -r Jr 't "I '0! kS i i.m..,,i XhJ From AP.

Panties Purge "By the lime panties normally get to be seen," Bri'ish feminist Germain Greer writes in the current issue of MS. magazine, "the hour for modesty has passed." And so, the forces which downed the bra are prepared to do the same for panties, or "knickers," as GreCr and her counlrypeople call them. According to the article, panties are neither warm nor hygienic nor becoming nor comfortable. And besides, panties are erotic to men another good reason to get rid of them, she believes Women's Lib is also making itself felt in British factories, not on paycheck levels but on production lines according to Ronnie Palfrey- Spassky, waiting for Bobby Fischer to show up Tuesday in photo, waited in vain yesterday. (AP) Fischer Forfeits 2nd Game man, cnairman of tnc belincourt textile Group.

For 12 of the 24 years he was an officer in the Rochester. Police Department, Anthony A. Guarino wore badge No. 409. When he retired the other day he had badge No.

13. 409 had no particular significance for Tony who, during his tenure on the force, established an unusal rapport with youngsters. Then came the night of May 13, 1960. Patrolman Guarino was covering his beat which included the Hunting Co. building at 127 Railroad St.

He surprised a burglar. The burglar fired two shots at Guarino from about 40 feet. Both missed. "But I think I aged 10 years," he said. The burglar escaped.

Because the incident occurred on Friday the 13th, Guarino asked for, and was able to receive, badge No. 13. He's worn it ever since. "I figured it was my lucky number." I guess it was; nobody ever shot at him from that point on. Tony, who lives at 483 Newbury was one of the rare ones.

He was a detective or plainclothesman for four or five years but asked to be returned to the uniform role because "I liked it better." He worked the Public Market beat from 8 p.m. to 4 a.m. for more than 16 years, later was school police officer at John High School, and in between was the man responsible for establishing the Gringo Athletic Club in the North Goodman Street area. He had better than four credentials for an athletic club initiator: He was an ex-Navy man and a one-time active weight lifter who was considered prime Olympic team material. He was a realist in working with the kids, and I don't doubt that he used the back of his hand noon mo-e tha one occasion, although that is not the sort of thing police officers admit in this day and age.

But I do know that the kids in that area resnected him; they tabbed him as a square shooter who would not sit still for any double-crossing. Anyway, when Tony retired the other day his wife, Rose, and their two sons, Ancclo and Matthew, hosted a testimonial dinner at the Wishing Well restaurant, and he received his No. 13 Badge mounted on a plaque which meant that the badge number, after clearance with the police department, has been retired from service. THE NEW FEDERAL BUILDING OX STATE STREET won't be completed until late this year, but yesterday it had Please turn I'age Three of his firm's factories have ceased mak ing women's underwear because, as he said, "girls appear to be wearing less underneath, The Chess Championship and less of what they do wear. Palfrey-man factories will manufacture dresses and blouses instead.

From Washington Post. sentatives went on throughout the day in an effort to resolve the impasse. Spassky, 35, arrived about two minutes before the scheduled start of tlie second game He and Schmid walked slowly aroung the stage waiting for the challenger. Tlie audience sat silently in the hall watching the empty black swivel chair that Fischer nad flown in from New York for the match. The third game of the match, which could go 24 games, is scheduled for Sunday.

American chess sources would not predict whether Fischer would continue his boycott. 29, two games down in his attempt to wrest the championship from Spassky. Judge Lcthar Schmid of West Germany announced thf forfeiture when Fischer, playing the white pieces, failed to show up within the alloted hour to make the first move of the second game. Fischer's aides say he never signed the Amsterdam regulations, set up prior io the match to govern its play. Negotiations between the organizers and Fischer's repre were in proper order.

They said Fischer felt the arbiter had violated the rules of tne International Chess Federation and would ask the match committee to cancel the results of the game. Under the rules they have 12 hours to make a decision. Icelandic chess sources quoted Fischer as saying ho was not only protesting the cameras but also the fact that "there is a conspiracy against me here." The forfeiture put Fischer, REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) Charging there was "a conspiracy against me," the U.S.'s Bobby Fischer locked himself in his hotel room yesterday and refused to conic out for the second game of the $250,000 world championship chess match, forfeiting the game to Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union. Despite last-minute attempts by organizers to get him to the hall before the p.m. (2 p.m.

EDT) deadline, Fischer refused to listen and turned off his telephone. Aids said the unpredictable chessman stayed in bed to protest the presence of closed-circuit television cameras in the contest hall. He later allowed an old friend, Icelandic chess grand master Fridrik Olafsson, into his hotel suite. "Talk to me about just about everything else but the match," Olafsson quoted Fischer as saying. "I am not interested in it any more.

In fact, I lost interest already six months ago." The American camp announced four hours afterward that Fischer was filing an 1-ficial protest against the decision to give Spassky the second game. Fischer's spokesmen said they would protest on the grounds the clock was started before the playing 2,500 Attend Last Stars Concert hi 1" Last Night In Review from "Carmen" to flow easily. Ho got similar, free-flowing results 'vith Faure's lovely Pavane. The second of those four orchestra ed memorials to Francis Couperin some of the most subtly effervescent music in the entire French orchestral literature was limp in accent and a stiff as three-day-old meringue. The orchestra responded with elan occasionally, as in the two final, bubbling movements to the Bizet Symphony.

But usually it played in an uninspired battle-scared routmc. and benches with competitive conversations. Otherwise there was little interferencr of the music, which like the other two "Symphony Under the Stars" programs thi.s summer was notable for its gloss, mechanical level of performance and Jones' metronomic leadership. Jones was at his best in the slow movement of Bizet's youthful (written as a student exercise at age 171 Symphony in C. There he shaped the phrasing with sensitivity, allowing those lines foreshadowing the gypsy mountain camp scene ROCHESTER PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA, Somuel Jonci, conductor.

At Hlohlond Pork Bowl. PROORAM: Bsrlloi: "Romon Cornlvol" Overture; Faure: Pnvanr; Rnvel: "Lt Tombeou fle Blift: Symphony No. 1 In Chabrler: Fet Polonolie (L Rol Molgre Lull. By THEODORE PRICE The third and last of three free "Symphony under the Stars" concerts by the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra featured French music last night at Highland Park Bow l. The audience of approximately 2,500 people haard Samuel Jones conduct 'Polly Returns works by Berlioz, Faure, Ravel, Bizet and Chabrier in this program sponsored by the Emmet Blakeney Gleason Memorial Foundation.

Mosquitos were abundant. Jets aiming for Monroe County Airport vied with the orchestra three times. And the usual chirping chatterboxes peppered hillside Actress Ann Rutherford, known for Iter Polly P.enedict role in 17 Andy Hardy films, returns to MGM after 30 years. She will star in a new MfJ.M film. (VVl Photo) .1.

Obtenir un accès à Newspapers.com

  • La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
  • Plus de 300 journaux des années 1700 à 2000
  • Des millions de pages supplémentaires ajoutées chaque mois

Journaux d’éditeur Extra®

  • Du contenu sous licence exclusif d’éditeurs premium comme le Democrat and Chronicle
  • Des collections publiées aussi récemment que le mois dernier
  • Continuellement mis à jour

À propos de la collection Democrat and Chronicle

Pages disponibles:
2 657 149
Années disponibles:
1871-2024