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

Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 43

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Location:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
43
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2-C St. Petersburg Times, Sunday, March 26, 1972 Issue wners Other major rule changes agreed upon included the following When a player runs out of bounds and then returns to the field to catch a pass, the play will be ruled an incompletion. Formerly the offensive team was penalized 15 yards plus loss of a down. A receiver may run back punts fielded in the end zone. Formerly punts into the end zone were whistled dead.

Tacklers grabbing face masks will have their teams penalized five yards instead of 15 as under the old rule. Intentional grabbing of the face mask may result in a 15-yard penal- ty. HONOLULU (UP1) National Football League owners met in Hawaii for five days on defense-offense regulations, Super Bowl sites and the establishment of a special award honoring the late owner of the Los Angeles Rams. The weary NFL titans were enroute home Saturday after scheduling further meetings in May at New York City. The owners of 26 clubs voted Friday to keep their Intercon-ference player trading period as it now is beginning at the end of the football season and terminating July 21 They also initiated a 'Tinnrrr Award" in the memory of Dan Reeves, the lute owner of the Rams.

The award is to be given persons making a "significant" and innovative contribution to professional football, said Commissioner Fete Rozelle. They met Into the late hours of the night Friday, clearing committee reports and looking over constitution amendments. But a spokesman said they failed to discuss the All-Star game, the contract for which expires after a clash between the World Champion Dallas Cowboys and the College All-Stars July 28. The subject is a sore spot among some coaches. They feel that the rookies on the All-Star squad would be better off in their own camps rather than competing in the 40-year-old annual contest.

Rozelle said the game would be on the agenda of the league's New York City meeting. Earlier In the the owners awarded the seventh annual Super Bowl to Los Angeles and set the date for Jan. 14, 1973. The 1974 Super Bowl goes to Houston on Jan. 13.

The Tro Bowl, played in Los Angeles since its inception in 1951, was moved to Dallas. It will be staged Jan. 21, 1973. Club owners also voted to move In the playing field hash marks toward the center of the field, eliminating the defensive advantage of the sideline. Mark Duncan, NFL personnel director who also serves as head of officials, said that under the old rule defensive teams could use the side lines as an extra player when the ball was on or near the hash marks.

i FL Ignore College Star Cards' Streak Ends At One Fischer Iceland Nixes Chess Sports In Brief i fe. 1 a v-nK v. Ai "Ay 1 jt AA A AA Av 1 Lx i r'AT A Act I rxo-x XxA s. 1 a Av1 a a r- 1 St. Louli Detroit abrhbl abrhbl Brock rf 4 110 McAuliffe 2b 3 110 Sizemore 2b 4 0 11 Taylor 2b 10 10 Alou If .3 0 0 0 R'rlguz ss-3b 4130 Torre 3b 3 0 0 0 Northpf-rf 4 2 2 1 Martinez lb 0 0 0 0 Kaline rf 2 0 12 Simmons 2 0 0 0 Brlnkmn SI 10 0 0 McNertneye 1 0 0 0 Cash lb 3 0 2 0 Clendenon lb 3 0 0 0 Horton If 3 0 11 J.Cruz cf 3 0 0 0 Blessltt If 10 0 0 Ramirez sa 3 0 10 Jones 3b 3 0 0 0 Wise 2 0 0 0 Seelbach 0 0 0 0 Hudson 0 0 0 0 Hallerc 4 0 10 Linzy 0 0 0 0 Cain 2 0 0 0 Shamsky ph 1 0 0 0 Stanley cf 10 0 0 race-track in Phoenix, Ariz, Sovereign Bill won the Irish Sweepstakes Lincoln Handicap.

Holders of tickets on him won $130,000. A light spring snow forced postponement of the $20,000 world drag racing championships at Charlotte, N.C. Totals 29 1 1 1 Totall 32 4 12 4 St. Louis Detroit 000 000 000 1 Wx 4 Cash; DP St. -Louis 1, Detroit LOB-St.

Louis 1, Detroit 2B-Cash, Sizemore, Northrup; 3B Kaline, Ramirez; SB Rodriguez; Seelbach; SF Kaline. IP ER BB SO Wise (L) 61-3 11 4 4 13 Hudson 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Linzy 1-3 0 0 0.0 0 Cain (W) 6 3 110 4 Seelbach 3 0 0 Time 2:01, Attendance 2,069. Pike's Three-Hitter Helps Trojans Split Staff Photos by Ron Pinner Five Errors Into Third On One Of The Young Set St. Petersburg Junior Col- lege settled for a baseball split with Lake-Sumter JC Saturday, winning the opener 5-0 behind Larry Pike's three-hitter but losing the finale 4-2 in 10 innings. Jim Withrow and Robbie Wood provided the batting punch for the Trojan victory.

Withrow knocked in two runs with a double' and single and Wood provided one with a triple and single. Rick Chapman pitched two-hit ball through Makes A Move Can You Carve Yourself a Much Richer Future as a Stockbroker1? Times Wire Services Bobby Fischer, the United States' top chess player, has informed officials he will not play the second half of his world title match with the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky in Iceland. In a telegram to the president of the local chess association of Reykjavik, Iceland, Fischer said he refused to play because of unacceptable financial terms. Fischer proposed that all money left after the match be divided between Spassky and himself. The association refused.

Basketball Seniors Corky Calhoun of Penn, Ed Czerntoa of Sacred Heart and Jim Tedisco of Union have been named players of the year in their respective divisions of the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference. Eastern Michigan University named Allan Frcund head baseketball coach to succeed Jim Dutcher, who resigned last week. Grant Guthrie, former Florida State placekicker, was signed by the New York Jets. He was cut from the Buffalo Bills last season. According to NFL figures, Roger Staubach led the league in 1971 with the highest average yards-per-pass 8.92.

Floyd Little of Denver, was the rushing leader with 1,133 yards. Larry Jacobson of Nebraska signed a one-year contract with the New York Giants. People Tanya Anisimova set a world indoor record for the women's 100-meter hurdles with a time of 13.6 seconds, according to the Soviet news agency, Tass. The Los Angeles-Anaheim chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America awarded a journalism scholarship to Jackie Lapin, 20, the first female selected for the award. Events Brazil eliminated Venezuela from the Davis Cup tennis tournament in Rio de Janeiro and advance to the second round zone playoff against Argentina.

v. Local qualifying for the U.S. Open will be held May 22-23 at 57 locations. Left-hander Don Helling of St. Louis won two games and captured first prize money of $10,000 in the $70,000 Andy Granatelli Bowling, Classic at New Orleans.

The second stable fire in the three months destroyed eight horses at the Turf Paradise Be Frisch's guest 5 1 4 Gutrhie Staubach Four Texas architects under indictment on charges of conspiracy and bribery in connection with Erie County's (Buffalo, N.Y.) once-proposed domed stadium project entered innocent pleas. The four were indicted for allegedly conspiring to bribe certain members of the Erie County legislature to vote In favor of the $50-million proposal. The Seattle Totems, the Western Hockey League team which had not won a road game in 32 trips, finally was victorious, beating Phoenix 5-1. eight innings of the loss, but yielded a pair of runs in both the ninth and 10th as SPJC committed two costly errors. The Trojans, now 17-7 overall and 11-5 in Division 3, First Game Lake-Sumter SPJC 000 000 0-0 1 000 401 5 I 0 Holllns and Rixie; pike and Lowrv.

2B-Withrow (SPJC). 3B Wood (SPJC). Second Game Lake-Sumter SPJC 000 000 002 2 4 4 001 000 001 0- 2 4 2 Walker and Rlxlt; Chapman and Searles. II If SJiS i i AS ffjl (C State 7E 5 if fr a 5 Phils' From l-C Hodges said. "I just don't know what we're going to do.

Certainly we'll have to revise our thinking. If Danny can't come on and throw the way we know he can I don't know how we're going to resolve it, to be truthful." Today Is Camera Day at Al Lang Field as the Mets meet the Los Angeles Dodgers at 1:30 p.m. Jon Matlack will start for the Mets, and Tommy John for the Dodgers. Fans with cameras will be allowed on the field to take pictures of the players from 1 to 1:20. Kathy Favorite; Breer Beaten On 22nd Hole PORT ST.

LUCIE (I) -Kathy Whitworth, emerging as the favorite in the $85,000 Sears World Golf Classic, survived her second round of match play by defeating Louise Suggs 5 and 4 Saturday. Miss Whitworth of Richardson, closed out Miss Suggs of Delray Beach on the 14tht hole with consistent long-ball hitting and a two-under performance on the par 73 Port St. Lucie Country Club course. Joyce M. Jackson of Birmingham, beat Muriel Breer of Nashville, on the 22nd hole in the most gruelling match of the day.

Betty Burfeindt of Canton, N.Y., beat out Sandra Elliott of Oakville, for a finalist spot on the first extra hole. And Joan Carner of Lake Worth, overcame Barbara Womack of Atlantis, on the 19th hole. Other finalists are Joyce Kazmierski, Donna Caponi Young, Judy Kimball, Betsy Cullen, Lesley Holbert, Betsy Rawls, Sharon Miller, LAKELAND Things returned unhappily to normal Saturday afternoon for the St. Louis Cardinals. They were held to three hits and lost to the Detroit Tigers 4-1.

The Cards' 11th loss of the spring came one day after they had won their fourth game. But their bid to match their longest spring winning streak two games was stalled by the Tigers (11-8)', who won their sixth of the last seven games. THE MOST disappointing feature of the game for the Cards was not the lack of hitting. It was the first subpar spring performance by right-handed pitcher Rick Wise, who was obtained from Philadelphia before spring training opened. Wise pitched 6 1-3 Innings and gave up four runs, the first earned runs he has yielded in 20 1-3 innings this spring.

His earned run aver- age now is 1.77. The Cardinals scored first in the fourth inning. Lou Brock singled and scored on Ted Sizemore's double. They got only one more hit off Detroit starter Les Cain, Milt Ramirez' leadoff triple in the sixth, which the Cards wast- ed. That might have been a big run, could the Cardinals have scored it.

Detroit had tied the score in its fourth on a singled by Jim Northrup and triple by Al Kaline, who was out trying for an inside-the-park home run. After holding the Cardinals in the sixth, the Tigers scored three times in their half. Dick McAuliffe singled and went to third on Aurelio Rod-riquez' single, one of his three hits. Northrup doubled in one run and Kaline's sacrifice fly scored another. Willie Horton singled in the final run.

Chuck Seelbach pitched three perfect innings at the Cardinals in the seventh, eighth and ninth, while Char-. ley Hudson and Frank Linzy shut out the Tigers in the seventh and eighth. The Cardinals will pitch Bob Gibson against Cincinnati today at 1:30 at Tampa's Al Lopez Field. AT COCOA Lot Angeles Houston 000 300 000 300 021 3 11 21X 10 Strahler, Hough (1), Dawson (6), Allen (8) and Cannizzaro, Yeager (); Wilson, Gulnn (9) and Stinson, Hiatt (6). Wilson.

Strahler. HR-Ce-dtno, Garvey. AT WINTER HAVEN Minnesota Boston 002 000 210 002 000 000 5 11 2 3 Goltz, Hardin (6), Gebhard (8), Strickland (9) and Mitterwald; Culp, Lee (7) and Josephson. Goltz. Culp, HR Braun, Manuel, Nettles, Smith.

AT FORT MYERS Cincinnati Kansas City 100 000 040 000 100 11 002 2 Gullet, Sprague (8), McGlothlin (9) and Plummer; Splittorff, Butler (6) and May. Gullett, Splittorff. AT WEST PALM BEACH Texas Atlanta 000 020 202 000 102 7 13 030 5 I Broberg, Gogolewski (5), Panther (9) and King; Freeman, Kester (6), House (9) and Didier. Gogolewski. House.

California Cleveland 000 010 000 000 0101 001-2 Wright, Allen (1) and Torborg; and Moses. W-Perry. t-Allen. Perry San Diego Chicago (N) 100 111 203 200-6 Arlin, Severinsen (7), Hardy (9) and Barton, Slocum (9); Hands, Bonham (8) and Hundley, Fernandez (4). W-Severinsen.

L-Bonham. HRs-Chicago N), Fonzone, Monday. San Diego Chicago (N) 100 000 300 013 203 9 14 200 4 11 Arlin, Severn (7), Hardy (9) and Barton, Slocum (9); Hands, Bonham (8) and Hundley, Fernandez (4). Severn. Bonham.

HR Fanzone, Monday. California Cleveland 000 010 000 000 010 1 001-2 Wright, Allen (8) and Torborg; Perry and Moses. Perry. Allen. Milwaukee Oakland 000 100 001 200 103 5 11 000 3 7 Lockwood, Bell (4), Sanders (8), Col-burn (9) and Rodriguez, Porter (6); Holtzman, Klimkowski (7) and Duncan.

Colburn. Klimkowski. HRs Milwaukee, Ratliff, Porter. Oakland, Rudi. Scores COLLEGE BASKETBALL NIT Championship Maryland 100, Niagara 49 NCAA Championship UCLA II, Florida State 74 Third Place North Carolina 10S, Louisville 91 COLLEGE BASEBALL Florida Presbyterian Saint Leo 1-7 St.

Petersburg JC S-I, Lake Sumter 0-4, second game 10 Innings Florida 17, Georgia 9 Jacksonville 13-18, Navy 0-2 Southern Illinois 7, Miami 1 Mets Boswell, Skids live up to slugging expectations at Houston, continued to star for his new team by driving in his ninth run in 11 games for the Royals. At Cocoa, 21-year-old Cesar Cedeno whacked a three-run homer, his second of the spring, as Houston belted Los Angeles 9-3. Tampa's Steve Garvey homered for the Dodgers. At Bradenton, Bob Robertson, a World Series hero at the young age of 25, hit a pair of two-run homers as the Pirates, who always have a good spring, beat the Chicago White Sox 7-5. Last year the Pirates forecast their great year by ruling the Grapefruit League; this season they are 14-7, tied with Minnesota for most Winning pitcher was Bob Johnson, one of a mob seeking a starting job, who allowed four runs in seven innings.

At West Palm Beach, speedy Lennie Randle scored from second when Jim Dris-coll's hard grounder caromed off second baseman Tony LaRussa's chest, and that led to a 7-5 Texas Ranger victory over the Atlanta Braves. Roy Foster hit two doubles for the Rangers. Cactus League The Cactus League was highlighted by two team going to extreme lengths opposite each other. The hot San Diego Padres won their seventh in a row in showing off their stepped-up attack for the first time' to the Chicago Cubs 9-6. However, the Cubs did the homer hitting by Carmen Fanzone and new slugging hope Rick Monday, his first.

Meanwhile, the California Angels lost their eighth in a row, 2-1 to Cleveland, as Buddy Bell singled in the winning run. Paul Ratliff and Daryle Porter hit ninth-inning homers to give Milwaukee a 5-3 victory over Oakland. Mets when John Milner scored on one of the Phils' five fielding errors. Three more of those errors came in the fifth inning when the Mets iced the game with four tainted runs. The Phils scored once in the eighth and twice in the ninth off reliever Ray Sadecki.

Hodges got Seaver back Saturday, but got nothing but bad news about another pitcher, relief artist Danny Frisel-la. Frisella also has had arm trouble this spring and has yet to appear in a game. He threw Thursday at Huggins-Stengel Field and did well, but tried to throw again Saturday and had to stop. "We didn't like the way he threw at all today," Hodges said. "He didn't have any stuff on the ball at all.

He said he wasn't feeling any pain, though. I'll talk to him tomorrow, and we'll wait and see him throw one more time. But time is growing short he hasn't thrown one inning yet." Time is growing short indeed. The Mets break camp five days from today, and Hodges will begin cutting his roster down to the maximum 25 in the middle of the week. If Frisella still can't throw, odds are he'll remain in St.

Petersburg toN work out his problem, and a rookie such as Buzz Capra would go north with the team. ghat's all hypothetical," Philadelphia New York (N) ab ab bl Bowa ss 0 0 0 Harrelson ss 4 0 0 0 10 10 10 10 4 3 2 0 4 12 1 1000 4 12 1 Sill 4 110 3 0 0 0 4 0 11 3 0 10 10 0 0 McCarver Cox Montanei cf Johnson lb Hutton lb Luzlnskl If Lis If Money 3b Browne rf Freed rf Doyle 2b Harmon ph Champion Selma Vukavich ph 4 0 10 Foil 3b 0 0 0 0 Garrett 3b 4 12 2 M'tlm 3D-SS 3 0 0 0 Agee cf 1 0 0 0 Sadecki 2 0 10 Milner If 0 10 0 Singleton rf 4 12 1 Boswell 2b 2 0 0 0 Kranepl lb 2 0 11 Grote 3 0 0 0 Seaver 1 0 0 0 Hehn cf 2 0 0 0 1110 10 0 0 Totals 35 4 4 Totals 39 7 12 4 Philadelphia New York (N) 000 101 001 012 4 01X 7 Bowa, Champion, Doyle, Johnson, Money. DR Philadelphia 1. LOB Philadelphia 6, New York 10. 2B Money, Garrett, HR SB A5.ee.

SF -Milner. IP ER BBSO Champion (L) 41-314210 Selma 3 2-3 4 1 1 0 2 Seaver (W) 6 3 1113 Sadecki 3 5 3 1 1 1 Time 1:59. Attendance 2,504. The stock market's booming. Prices and volume are soaring.

Everybody and his brother is sure they should be a stockbroker-so they all come rushing to fill a few openings-just when the competition is keenest. Which doesn't make much sense on at least two important counts: 1. Not everybody has what it takes to be what we call an Account Executive. 2. If you do think you can make it as a successful securities salesman, why wait till you're just another face in the crowd to find out? Here at Reynolds, we need good Account Executives for all kinds of markets in steadily growing numbers.

That's why we're holding a Special Forum On Career Opportunities With Reynolds Monday, April 3rd at 7:30 P.M. In our St. Petersburg Office 300 31st Street, North John Skillman, our National Recruiting Manager from New York will be here to tell you just how it really is to be a stockbroker. All the qualities capabilities you have to bring to a career as an Account Executive at Reynolds All the responsibilities and the frustrations; all the personal and financial rewards you can expect in r.eturn. If you like what you hear, and still honestly feel that you qualify for a lifetime career with Reynolds, you can make an appointment for a private interview with Mr.

Glenn Allen, Vice President. There's no charge for coming to the Seminar, of course. To attend, you simply mail this coupon. Or call any of our offices listed below. Times Wire Services The Younger Set several rookies making a late drive for a major-league berth had Its day in the Grapefruit League Saturday.

At Winter Haven, rookie righthander Dave Goltz, a star of the Minnesota entry in the Florida Winter Instructional League, held Boston hitless for five innings as the homer-happy Twins (21 for the spring) defeated the Red Sox 5-2. As a result, the Twins "rewarded" the 6-foot-4, 22-year-old rookie by optioning him to their AA Charlotte club after the game. He was un-scored on in 11 innings, allowing just four hits. Steve Braun, Charlie Manuel and Jim Nettles homered for the Twins, now 14-6. At Fort Myers, young Cincinnati ace (16-6 last season) Don Gullett held Kansas City's Royals to two hits in seven innings as the Reds got on the winning track 6-2.

But the whiz-kid story was Dan Driessen, another Winter League star who played for the Tampa Tarpons of the Florida State League last season. Invited from the Reds' minor-league camp for the day while some of the regulars rested, the lefthanded-hitting first baseman had four singles in five at bats. And John Mayberry, who failed to Exhibition Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Pet. .700 .543 .554 .538 .444 .438 .429 .429 .429 .400 .400 .333 .247 Minnesota Cleveland Detroit xBaltimore Boston Milwaukee Chicago Kansas City Oakland Oakland Texas xNew York 14 10 California NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. San Diege 9 2 Pittsburgh 14 7 .467 New York Atlanta .400 San Francisco 7 .583 Houston Los Angelei Montreal -M Chicago Philadelphia 7 7 .500 Cincinnati -MJ St.

Louis M1 x-Late game not included. SATURDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 4, New York (A) 1 New York (N) 7, Philadelphia 4 Detroit 4, St. Louis 1 Houston 9, Los Angeles Texas 7, Atlanta Minnesota 5, Boston 2 Cincinnati 4, Kansas City 1 Pittsburgh 7, Chicago (A) San Diego Chicago (N) 4 Milwaukee Oakland 3 Cleveland 2, California 1 San Francisco vs. Tokyo Orlons it Honolulu, night TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles vs. New York (N) it St.

Petersburg, Al Lang Field, 1:30 p.m. St. Louis vs. Cincinnati, split squad at Tampa. Houston vs.

Montreal at West Palm Beach. Cincinnati, split squad vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton. Atlanta vs. Minnesota it Orlando Philadelphia vs.

Detroit at Lakeland Texas vs. Baltimore at Miami. Boston vs. Chicago (A) at Sarasota. Kansas City vs.

New York (A) it Fort Lauderdale. Milwaukee vr Chicago (N) at Scotts- dale, Ariz. San Diego vl. Oakland Masa, Ariz. California vs.

Cleveland at Tucson, Ariz. San Francisco vs. Tokyo Lotle Orions at Honolulu. SEE THE REDS PLAY FREE! and see the exciting CINCINNATI REDS VS. KANSAS CITY ROYALS Yes, I would like to learn more about a career as a stock-i broker.

Please register me for your April 3 Forum. My wife will also attend. I can't attend your forum, but please contact me to arrange a personal appointment. FRIDAY, MARCH 31st AL LOPEZ FIELD TAMPA SUPEUVISOiiS WANTED MEN WOMEN Part-Time Fgll-Time SCCUEE YOUR FUTUH DELIVERY IS OUR BUSINESS and qualified delivery supervisors or what ntd to deliver 2nd, 3rd, and 4th class mail. PART-TIME work 8 to 10 hour por wttki Earn $400 to $600 and up per month.

Full-tim also available. MANY OPPORTUNITIES for advancement In our oxpandlng dtlivtry system. AN INVESTMENT OF $3,000 Is required. If you feel you qualify, then call us. We will exchange information; and, if mutually an appointment for a personal interview at our office will be arranged.

Call or write: Mr. Richards AMERICAN DELIVERY SYSTEMS, INC. 3253 46th Ave. N. St.

Petersburg, Fla. 33714 (813) 522-6611 Address Cliy GET your FREE TICKETS at these FRISCH'S Restaurants: Tickets may be txchinged tor box seats on day of game only. 501 N. Florida Avenue. Tampa 229-0629 9399 N.

Florida Avenue. Tampa 935-1151 1701 S. Dale Mabry, Tampa 253-0083 1849 Gulf-to-Bay Clearwater 442-3156 1271 Pasedena South. St. Petersburg 347-9706 2700 34th Street North.

St. Petersburg 527-5761 Reynolds Securities Inc. MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, INC. OTHER LEADING EXCHANGES ST. PETERSBURG 33713: 300 31st Street N.

898-8511 CLEARWATER 33516: 301 Pierce Street 446-6051 SARASOTA 33578: 16 South Palm Avenu 958-8821 TAMPA 33602: Exchange Nat'l Bank Blag. 223-5381 1.

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 Tampa Bay Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Tampa Bay Times Archive

Pages Available:
5,185,605
Years Available:
1886-2024