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The Times du lieu suivant : Munster, Indiana • 46

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The Timesi
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Munster, Indiana
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46
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i i0 THE TIMES Sunday, July 2, 19T2 mmtmmmmmmmmmammtmtmm I llliwrn ami i i I It's Anybody's Ball Game CZECH GAL EQUALS MARK BUDAPEST (AP)-Eva Gleskova of Czechoslovakia Saturday equalled the world record of 11 seconds in the women's 100-meter dash during a track and field meet between Czechoslovakia and Hungary. Her time tied the mark shared by three others, including Wyomia Tyus of the United States and Chi Cheng of Taiwan. the boat. After a lengthy struggle, the boat came off the sandbar. Was all clear sailing then? Not quite.

He couldn't get back into the boat. The free board was high and his wife wasn't exactly Hercules when it came to pulling him aboard. It was a str! jump tug and fall back time after time. Luckily, our hero had a strong heart. Dave Kennedy McLain To Hurl Tuesday tion.

The payoff about $7,000. Of 'ourse, Dandy Dade never pulled quite the crowds or money that Arlington even though the track did have more" character. The winning ticket was held by an old friend of track owner Jim Ellis, who always came up from Owensboro, to Evansville each summer fo ra visit Rick Reichardt, who should be playing for the Lansing Old-Timers instead of the White Sox, came to bat Saturday with two on base and two out in the first inning. He is supposed to be a hittor. He bunted.

He was tossed out by 30 feet. If this was a Chuck Tanner bit of strategy, which I doubt, he should retire to the Hessville Little League. The Sox will go over the half-millicx nwk in attendance today. These paying' customers shouldn't pay to see the man hitting fifth in the lineup bunt with two on and two out LEO DUROCHER'S prodigal son, Joe Pepitone, has returned to the Cub's starting line-up. There are several of us, including my old friend Christopher Zarth, who are not too enthused about replacing Jim Hickman at first base in favor of the early-season dropout.

And the last guy you'll hear complain about the maneuver is Hickman. But, as they say in Monroe County, "Still water runs deep." Both radio and television announcers for Chicago WGN are getting mighty familiar with the names of the Cubs, calling them "Beck, Hick, Hoot, etc." Any day now, I expect to hear 'em refer to Carmen Fanzone as "Fanny." I'm not even going to think about Juan Pizarro. There's an old saw which prescribes, "The major league team leading its league on the Fourth of July will win the pennant." This conclusion ranks in falacious reasoning with "catchers must be right-handed, pitchers shouldn't be expected to hit and it's bad luck to strike out thi first batter." Except for the American League's West Division, where Oakland is rolling along, the races all are closer than your next breath. The National League, particularly, is a tight fit. In fact, there could be ties in both NL divisions after the last firecracker explodes Tuesday.

With all teams having slightly less than 90 games to play, it's still anybody's ball game and probably will until a couple of outfits start a 10 or 12-straight victory jag. As of now, there appear to be only five teams in the National League which can't qualify as contedners IT'S BEEN a considerable spell since the following incident occurred, so, hopefully, I can relate it without fear of decapitation or less serious mayhem: This gnetleman from Munster and his wife rented a boat in Florida. The marina suggest a guide for the unfamiliar waters. The area resident pooh-poohed the idea. After all, he was an old sailor from back.

In just about an hour, the boat was hard aground on a sandbar. All attempts to free the craft were to no avail. FINALLY, the old salt jumped into the water and worked mightly to release A final lunge and pull and he flopped over the railing. By then it was time to head back to the marina. The moral of this story might be Prof.

Hill's famous philosophy: "You gotta know the territory." Cr, maybe all boats should be equipped with a boom and hoist IT'S DIFFICULT for area colleens to find summer employment. Even Pete Trgovich, who hopes to get a crack at UCLA's starting basketball lineup in December, is still looking. The former East Chicago Washington sharp-shooter now resides in Griffith THAT WHOPPING trifecta at Arlington Park ($38,801.10) in which only two winning tickets were sold reminds me of a daily double at Dpde Park (new Dllis Park) shortly after World War Two. On the latter occasion, there was only ONE ticket on the winning combina Dr. W.

J. Bryan uses hypnosis in treating injuries. Hypnosis Aids Healing World Title Match in Secret playing for the world championship of chess. Even in Reykjavik. Mainly because he thinks he's going to win.

I wouldn't be at all surprised if he's right, and that has nothing to do with chauvinism. Spassky is good, but Fischer is better, and when the tall, curly-haired New shouldn't make a guy play with a broken leg." What does the hypnotist do if a player breaks a leg? "If you're right there at the time, you can place the person under hypnosis. You can stop the pain, swelling, bleeding you can do all kinds of things because with hypnosis you can get a hold on the subconscious mind and therefore the autonomic nervous system, which controls such things as the muscles that surround blood vessels and determine how much fluid seeps into the tissues. "YOU CAN have a tremendous control over the healing properties of wounds. So right from the very beginning the patient's fracture can be set.

The pain can be stopped. "The greatest advantage of hypnosis is not just anesthetic, but lessening, almost eliminating post-operative complications. It has virtually no side effects. You can't be allergic to it." Bryan said his patients have included, besides athletes, U.S. senators, governors and movie stars.

"Many, many players are using hypnosis and are unaware of it. They just don't call it hypnosis. "THEY MAY never have read a book on hypnosis but 'r concentrating their minds, they're relaxing their bodies and they're giving themselves positive suggestions over and over and over, and conditioning themselves. "That's what hypnosis is, and they're doing it, every one of them is doing it." But Bryan warned that coaches should be careful with unqualified use of hypnosis. He referred to "the coach who has heard about hypnotism and decides that he's going to go in and hypnotize the whole team and win all the games.

He may be very good as a coach but he doesn't know enough about hypnosis and psychology and may not know how deep he's getting in. "THIS. SHOULD be in the hands of a physician or psychologist, but preferably a physician because a lot of things are going to involve physical injuries. You By RON ROACH LOS ANGELES (AP)-The time will come, says a leading physician-hypnotist, when a football team's training schedule could call for relaxation on the doctor's couch. Dr.

William J. Bryan also says a team physician could use hypnotism to set a player's broken or sprained limb almost immediately with practically no pain or swelling, and the recuperative time would be diminished all through subconscious control of the autonomic nervous system. A pitcher or quarterback's sore arm, a halfback's fear of injury and other such real and imaginative maladies could be treated by team doctors trained to use hypnotism medically and psychologically. THIS WELL be common in "five, seven or whatever years," says Bryan, organizer and head of the 17-year-old American Institute of Hypnosis. Individually, many athletes have sought hypnotism.

Some Milton Hickman NEW YORK more Bobby Fischer thinks about it the more it bugs him. Why Reykjavik, Iceland? "Why not Rome?" Fischer would like to know. "Why not Paris, Oslo, Zurich, Dallas or New York? Or even Moscow? Any large city where there's people, activity and decent restaurars would be fine. Some place at least where there's something to do at nig'it." Bobby Fischer, America's 29-year-old chess genius, has a theory about why Reykjavik was picked as the site of the world championship which starts today. The Russians are the ones who picked Reykjavik.

Fischer thinks the Russians have a motive. HE THINKS they want to "hide" the championship because he feels he's going to take it from the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky. What's more, Fischer thinks the Russians know he's going to do it. In this own way, Fischer is a demonstrator. He has been demonstrating the way he feels about having to play in Reykjavik by taking his good old time getting there.

This has shaken up a lot of people but Fischer had a reason for his actions. Call it oneupsmanship if you like. Boris Spassky neededn't worry about Fischer not making it for their first match though. BOBBY HULL, may or may not play for the Winnipeg Jets next season and Rick Barry may or may not play for the Golden State Warriors, but there is no way Bobby Fischer ever is going to miss other person; Spassky is already with what amounts to an entourage. Fischer reads significance into that also because the championship goes on for some time and while Spassky will have people to talk to and help him relax, Fischer won't.

Fischer doesn't thLk any of these things are pure accidents. He sees them all as part of a general program by the Soviets to try to beat him psychologically. "THE WORLD champion has the right to pick the site of the championships," says Fischer. "Spassky wasn't even there when the international governing body chose the site. A Russian delegation was there and they picked the site." Fischer feels the championships have become a political matter.

That annoys him. But it hasn't lessened any of his desire to beat Spassky. Fisher has a lot of that same "killer instinct" Jack Demp-sey had when he was fighting. Some of that instinct shows up even when he's not sitting at the chess board. Earlier this month, for example, he competed with 15 other top athletes in the Dewars Sports Celebrity tennis champi- onships at LaCosta, and it was a little funny to watch such headliners as Rick Barry, Deacon Jones and Elgin Baylor all ask Fischer for his LN THE FINAL" of the tournament, Hank Greenberg, the baseball Hall of Famer, and Bob Boyd, the basketball coach at Southern California, beat 0.

J. Simpson and Gail Goodrich for the title. Bobby Fischer was among the losers. "Next year," he said. "I'm going to win." He said it as if he meant it, too.

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ HOUSTON (AP) Everybody has to be somewhere and Denny McLain figures it might as well be Atlanta for him. "I'm happy to be here," the former Cy Young award winner said as he joined the Braves for their series with Houston. "The phone call from player personnel director Mr. Eddie Robinson helped my mental outlook more than anything.

At least one time in your life everybody likes to be wanted and I'm no different. I don't try to be." IT WAS Robinson who informed McLain he had been traded Thursday to the Braves from the Oakland Athletics for Orlando Cepeda, sending the right-handed pitcher, once a 31-game winner, to his third major league team since spring training. McLain was traded after spending time in the minor leagues to get himself back in shape. He said he's ready to return now with his arm in shape and his mental outlook improved. "If I can't pitch in the big leagues anymore, I'd be the first to admit it," McLain said.

"I won't stay around and embarrass myself." THERE WAS no fanfare accompanying McLain's arrival. In fact, Atlanta Manager Lu-man Harris and Braves pitching coach Lou Burdette weren't too talkative about the controversial McLain. "I don't know how he can pitch," Harris said. "I've never seem him pitch but I'm going to find out. He'll start Tuesday.

We scouted him and the scouts liked him so we traded for him." Harris said McLain's arrival wouldn't i the Braves' pitching rotation. "I ain't got one," Harris said. "I pitch whoever is available. I rotate Phil Niekro and Ron Reed when it comes their turn to pitch." "I've never been Associated with him," Burdette said. "I've never seen him pitch so I can't comment on something I don't know anything about." McLAIN WAS traded to Oakland by the Texas Rangers during spring training for two young pitchers and cash.

"Boy, I've sure worn some different colors this year," McLain said as he slipped on his new Atlanta uniform. McLain said his departure from Oakland was premature to his way of thinking. "I didn't pitch that bad at Oakland," McLain said. "The thing that is hard for me to believe is a club can look at you five times and decide it doesn't want you." Told he would start Tuesday, McLain said he was excited and a little apprehensive. "You're always a little apprehensive," he said.

"I'm just excited about being here." Yorker is right, he's like Joe Frazier and Tom Seaver when they're right. Meaning nobody's going to beat him. Fischer doesn't hold back. He is exceptionally outspoken and honest, and when you hear his objections to playing in Reykjavik, they do make a good deal of sense. Fischer has been there, so when he talks about Reykjavik he isn't doing so from hearsay but from personal experience.

He says there is so little to do there, particularly at night, a guy can go out of his ever-loving mind. NOT THAT Fischer is a rounder. If anything, he's much more of a loner, but there are times he would like to become part of the general mix, or at least observe it, and how can he possibly do that when there is no general mix? He also says the television coverage will be limited. If he beats Spassky, he doesn't see why it should be some kind of secret. Fischer originally planned to go to the world championships with only one if Aikw.

ROE.ERT FRANKS No. 2 in state LENELBAOR back in Indiana State Limits Often Unknown Tech Grads Franks, Elbaor Get Grants impoundments than it is those deep hereabouts. have revealed its effects, such as baseball's Maury Wills of the Los Angeles Dodgers and football's Dick Schafrath of the Cleveland Browns. Schafrath believes it has helped him concentrate and maintain a high level of competition in a long career as an offensive tackle. Wills says it helped relieve pain in his legs after he set a major league record of 104 stolen bases in 1962.

WILLS SAYS his legs hemorrhaged toward the end of the 1962 season from so much" running and sliding, and during the winter "they ached. Or at least I got it into my head that they ached. I began to worry." Under hypnosis, Wills says, he was told to do leg exercises, and the legs would not hurt unless there was something wrong. "It was amazing," Wills says. "I felt no pain in my legs.

Of course, some people will say that the pain was all in my head in the first place, which is true." Bryan said he has had hundreds of athletes from virtually all sports come to him as individuals, and one professional team in the Midwest, which he would not name, has talked with Bryan's organization. "AS. SOON as a team wins a championship or shows success with hypnosis, they'll all follow," Bryan says. "They'd simply have to, because the edge would be so great." Bryan, interviewed in his office, where he can treat three patients simultaneously with tape recordings and closed-circuit television, said hypnosis can help all athletes. In fact, he said, successful athletes use a form of self-hypnosis and some coaches use hypnotic technique in psyching up players.

"Concentration of the mind, relaxation of the body that's what hypnosis is," he said. state meet losing by only a quarter of an inch. Franks averaged 11 points a game for coach Jerry Fra-zier's Tigers. He was also voted the Outstanding Senior Athlete at Tech this past year. Elbaor, a 1971 graduate, attended North Platte, Junior College this past year.

He set a school rebounding record there. The 6-foot-6 Elbaor was Tech's top rebounder a year ago. HAMMOND Robert Franks, a basketball and track standout at Hammond Tech, and former basketball player Len Elbaor have accepted athletic scholarships to Oakland City College. The 5-foot-ll Franks has been the long jump and low hurdle champion in the Hammond sectional the past two years. He won the regional long jump this past season, but finished second in the boundaries within these waters are legally defined by each state.

The Indiana boundry is not very far off shore. The extension of the northern Indiana and southern Michigan border extends into the lake to tlv. owe where Illinois comes into the lake at is ali that belongs to Indiana. Mici controls the largest portion of the i well over half of the total Fishermen roaming these waters had better obtain some good navigational maps to realize where they are fishing an in turn purchase licenses covering these waters. FRED BRECKNER, recently of St.

John, gave up toiling away in the local steel mills and plunged headlong into the resort business. "Couldn't be happier," says Fred, who now owns the Bavarian Village Resort at Table Rock Lake near Branson, Mo. Fred reports that the big bass are hungry and the crappie fishing is great. He's looking forward to hosting and guiding his old steel-making buddies as well as any other regionites. A little bit of Hoosicr hospitality in the Ozarks.

If you pride yourself in your ability to catch bass in local waters and decide you want to fill a stringer with those Missouri Junkers you'd better latch on to a guy like Fred or one of his "native" friends. Bass fishing is a mite different in By Z. K. BASS Times Outdoor Writer As the days grew longer and warmer, the big fish in Lake Michigan moved away from the shorelines, seeking water temperatures more to their liking within the realm of the deep. Skippers in turn had to leave the relative comfort of the shoreline and follow the fish out into the open lake.

The season rolled along and each passing week brought news of state records being made. A problem has come to light. Many anglers claim Indiana and Illinois record fish, when technically or legally, the angler may have not been catching fish in the state in which he has purchased a license and claimed a record catch. MANY BOATERS, venturing away from Indiana and Illinois shorelines can in short order find themselves to be in some other state. Illinois fishermen can find themselves actually fishing Indiana or Wisconsin waters.

Hoosiers in turn are liable to be wetting a line in the waters of Illinois, or more likely within the boundaries of the state of Michigan. The waters of the great lakes are not federal waters as some anglers believe. Each state bordering Lake Michigan has legal claim to some portion of it. The THE FOUR STATES bordering Lake Michigan have finally reached agreement in game fishing laws involving the salmonids. Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin all allow year round fishing for coho, chinook and the various members of the trout family.

Each state has agreed on a 10-inch minimum for keepers and a total of five fish per day. This total meaning no more than five fish daily in The U.S. Coast Guard announces a new ruling regarding life-saving devices for all boaters. "No person may use a boat of less than forty feet unless there is at least one readily accessible life saving device for each person aboard the craft." Further, each device must be Coast Guard approved with legible markings to that effect, and be in good condition. This ruling includes everything from canoes to The INDIANA Department of Natural Resources is stocking two northern Indiana streams this week with rainbow trout averaging eight inches.

About 1,500 rainbows will be placed in Pigeon River between Nasby Dam and Scott Mill Pond, and 650 fish will be planted in 15 miles of Crooked Creek in Porter County from County Road 30 north to Ind. 49. Cage Clinic Set 10:30 a.m. at the high school gym. Eighth and ninth graders will workout from 10:30 a.m.

until noon. Both sessions will be Monday through Friday. Prospects may sign up at their designated times, bringing their own shoes and HAMMOND-New basketball coach Tim Russell of Gavit High will conduct a summer basketball school from July 10 through July 21 for elementary age students. First session will be for fifth, sixth and seventh graders July 10 at 9 a.m. until Boys Land 64 Fish HIGHLAND-Kurt Stirling highlighted a week-long trip to Canada for 13 Highland High School boys as he bagged a 27-inch Northern pike.

When it was over, the youngsters caught 61 walleyes, two lake trout and Stirling's Northern. "And all of those we kept were two and a half pounds or over," reported Herb Schmidt, a member of the Highland faculty who accompanied the boys on the trip. The Highlanders flew from O'Hare Airport to Prairie Portage, Canada, to begin their trip. Another trip is being planned, according to Schmidt, Aug. 5.

Four positions are still open. Interested students mry contact Schmidt for details. FANFARE Starr, 38, Again Signs With Pack fvwSWEEpW I Pr 9 ABOUT EVE3VOTHE3. neftlLVC f-1 COUNTRY OWNS A He said much progress had been made from a year ago "but not as much as I had hoped for." HE SAID he had hoped for a complete recovery and had been prepared to retire if he wasn't 100 per cent ready to play. But because Coach Dan news conference.

"However, this club has asked me to stay, fully aware of my limitations, so that I may contribute to the success of the 1972 Packer squad." Starr did not play until the last five games of the 1971 season after undergoing surgery a year ago. GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -Veteran quarterback Bart Starr announced today that despite arm and shoulder problems he would play for the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League next season. "I was prepared to retire," the 38-year old Starr told a Devine and the Packers had asked him to continue, he said I he would remain on the team. I "I have great respect for Coach Devine and pledge him I and his staff my complete dedication to ensure the con- tinuing development of this fine young team," Starr said..

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