Walkerton Independent, Volume 82, Number 35, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 6 August 1959 — Page 2
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- WALKERTON INDEPENDENT — August 6. 1959
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1.159'S SEC /I) HALF Vv sion of Ui. 1 All-Star g. me v ■ played Mom lay end was a pretty well played game though 1 . ■ 1 olor and spirit just • mddn't hi m i b'hod. F)nm th< position in I nt m the 21" in< h sireen, it ’lid seem like a ball g me. but <h o'’ < arm the ■ la the AlhSlai game should. G BEGIN W ITH, \ GAME just doesn't seem to get off on tin right foot when p.ayed in the ( olisemm a football st idmm in disguise during the short-term stay 1 ' 'he i fodgm s. Second. so many ,l! the stars selected originally way back in late .June were missing tor one reason m another. Th.' great, exportations of the fans th - king into every corner of the hu_e Coliseum Was misleading as there was enough room for the lull attendance of many of the othei hall parks to fill the emptv seats. HOWEVER. THIS GAME WAS jl-.yed for one reason- money. A sagging players pension fund and the work ot Robin Roberts was the tacts leading - to the money ra sing game. Now the 55,0()j in the stands certainly saw a good gm. c and lot of big names, but i better, the purse strings on the player fund are now drawn tighter around the money contained ins: ie from the game. A PERSONAL OPINION ON the hances of the game next war are that it it is p ayed. many changes will be made before it is : iron an okay by the players themselves. A poll of the players w ■ soon be taken asking the opinh of the game. This could be very revealing o ne way or the other. MANY OF THE FLAYERS have already come out with verbal blasts at the second game p'"': though it was set up for thei pension fund. Some suggem ions have been flying around as sow to improve the game. One v a (hat if the seeond game were to ie played next year, put it one day behind the other game P..C make a two-game series of it that way. However probably the mos will object to the second cow,st altogether. T IE PENNANT RACES ARE dT the big thing in baseball as the two leagues both have some ?s..'l excitement going in their reSpec! ve races. The Whitt Sox are
AIR CONDITIONED REES, Plymouth. Indiana Thursday, Friday A Saturday ‘TEMPEST” In Technicolor VAN HEI LIN UIA ANO MANGANO AGNES MOOREHEAD See (he Cossack’s Baltic against Russia's Imperial Army! \lso Color Cartoon t i snn Mon., Tues., and Wed. ' •INVITATION OF LIFE” Eastman (olor IWA HR NEK, JOHN t,WIX. SANDRA DEE Ihe Story ot the Girl Who wouldn't lit the color lim- Stop Herl Also ('olor Cartoon Sunday Feature at 2:00, 4:15 0:30 and S:IS.
playing a brand of ball that has - the Windy Gity fans all in an i uproar and rightly so. .ins. how i lom.'. this magic jate-inning tomb can last i s anyone's goe, hut i wh.le it J.i. 1 ; - tney ;r. i eaby mak ing hay. FOR NO MORE HITS THAN the Sox usually git, they certain ly turn them into runs with the late rallies they have been sp ■ iai । izing in. Their pitching has been ' taxed pretty heavy in this long string of close ballgames and they must continue their fine work as Jong as the hitting is operating in low geai. Cleveland, although now a little ways behind (he Sox. continues to be an exciting club as these two have made it look at the moment as if it will be a two-club race. Cleveland has a lot more power than Chicago, a couple ot the games more colorful performers and a pretty good crop of young pitchers. They can explode for that big inning with the home run bah mv.h more so than the Sox, but don't begin to have the defense of Chicago. LN THE NATIONAL LEAGUE the ■Westerners'' continue to remain right at the lop of the heap along with the Braves. The Giants have been the leader for most of the time since they dethroned the Brayes some time back. They are a very interesting crew and as long as they don’t have to rely on second line pit’ hing they are alright. The fabulous Willie Mays is a bit. ot f this year, but it seemt like cw i y time he doos get a hit it is in the middle of a rally or drives in a run or two. the dodgers have kind of taken the sentimental favorite role from the other teams as thev . weren't expected to do much at . all this year. They continue to bring up young pitchers that help them and their combination of just so much young and so much veteran on their team has been real . good. The loss of Hodges for a . couple of weeks hurt as he was their leading heavy man again after a bad year List year. MILWAUKEE AFTER A BAD slump for a couple of weeks seems to be <>n the beam again ami are right back in the thick of the race. They lost Ala thews lor a week and a half, but they have a pretty decent bench when a little shuffling can be done and came out of it all right with Hunk Aaron playing a little third in the absence of the National league’s leading home run hitter. However it is their pitching that holds the key for them as they have the hitting, but need that good performance from their hurlers to go all I ‘ 1
; ' —v——— - - ______ K S LX ! WAELMOUNT ’ * \ 1 OR :: ; DESK TYPE J i b®® w— in TEN SPARKLING COLORS :">? i kW' ' :=- h ! V ‘ 4^® ONLY sl-00 i RI IRVAR a Drr? ' A MONTH IN i 1. pUSY AS A BEE? YOUR HOME S » — « ;; * ' ORDER A TIME-SAVING —■ - ■ -----<-7^==^=-: b I STEP-SAVING X — b ► NO EXTRA EXTENSICN-TYPf CHARGE 1 ]! TELEPHONE FOR COLOR ;; 1 ' NO ~ ';j ■ UNITED TELEPHONE COMPANY OF INDIANA, INC. Xe l i , A^^iiv^^vM^^^^^i^^^^^^vivi^^in^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^v*************************^**^*^******************************^:
(the way. Spahn just keep - rolling ia'ong and Burdetle seems to be pis go id us the opposition on mos ■occasions, giving up a few rims in a tight b 11 game an t half a 1 ii'l oad in soi i< ot the 1 iig hei scoi mg conic..i.. At any rate, as it slimds now, these five chibs will put tile tv.i i epi os< nI al ves in the World Series unless seme iniid change comes aboui. It ant to hard lor a team once in a while to gel hot and pa. s a team that ha. ,i good ! ad, but passing i.wo or three and.', these vir' innstances , i- rii'.lic' hard to do MOVIE REVIEWS From THE RIALTO Ors'in W< Ues delivers the lorg i est, uninterrupted speech in mov.e : history in Richard D Zanuek’s । “Compulsion." opening Sunday for three days at the Rialto Theatre. It is a court-room address in which the actor pleads for the lives of Chicago's infamous teen-age "thrillkillers" and runs approximately 12 , minutes long. A 1920 Stutz 'Bearcat, one of 1 , three in the United States, w.l. ! be seen in "Compulsion", Twen- , tieth Century Fox Cinema Lcope release, produced by Richard D. i Zanuek. When bought new. the car; 1 cost aout $2,700 and is today val-i - ued at $6,000. ) A minimum amount of backi ground music will be heard in "Compulsion,". The reason for this ' is to heighten the dramatic impi' t ' of the story which deals with the i tceen-age “Ihr !l-killers" of c.u---i cago who perpe rated “the crinr ■ of Hie century." > Di me Varsi drove a battered' < 1952 pi' k-up truck to work eveiv 1 day while performing in Richard ■ I). Zanuek’s "Compulsion". The । truck was registered to Tab Hunter and was borrowed by the young * actress from Hunter's agent, who ' also is Miss Varsi's agent. Diane has never met Tab. 1 i i L MF DIANE VARSI Voltaire Perkins, believed to be the only practicing lawyer in the I
Screen Actor’s Guild, has a sup porting role in "Compulsion", D riyl F Zan ink. Product ions' I'mcr.i.i (■■• < [).' drama for Twenii ’h Century Fox release Pei .kins plays the part of a judge. Movie-making is like this. Alt bough it was 100 degrees in Hollywood d iring the production <>t “Compulsion’', beads of perspira (ion had to bo applied to Orson Welles' face bv a make-up artist The sound stage thermometer read a coo] OS degrees, thanks to an effective air ”omntinning system. "Compulsion" marks the filminak’im: debut ol Producer Richard D. Z nuck He’. the son of Darryl F. Zanuek, tor whose independent company the 23-year-old newcomer made the picture Everytime Dean Stockwell and Bradford Dillman appear on the c reen in "Compulsion", the ca nera Mill be tilted slightly to suggest that something is wiong with the pan. They play Chago’.s teen-age “thrill-kilers" in this dramatization of the Meyer Levin best-seller. Orson Welles, starring in the Twentieth Century J-'ox’s "Compulsion”, had to get up every morning at 5:30 a. m. during the filming of the story of .young thrill killers in order to complete the complicated make-up job required by his role as a defense attorney
IS i HI Hf ?t jf - iw । jp ' k i • S 1 \ ■* Mi □ v SU B ; Ai f Eih“] Meiman stars in “Hynsy” one of the tiweo musicals included on the list of New York shows to be scon by patron” of the Maxinknckee Playhouse New York Theater Party Show Rus which leaves South Bend Sopt. 20th. Currently playing at the popular Culver summer theater is “Auntie Mam. ". Next week the Noel Coward comedy “Nude With \ iolin" opens and the following two'.,weeks the musicctd comedy “Bells Are Ringing” will b'3 Staged. Tickets can b. reserved by calling A'lking 2-2500 inJTulver, CEntral .‘>-5763 in South Bend or WEbster 6-2642Jh Plymouth . Curtain time is 8.30.
by the daily 9 a.m. shooting dead* line. Many people refuse to consider the future until they are sure their past is buried and forgotten.'; The right spirit is a must ini any endeavor, but some men have the idea it ha.s to conic in bottles. "What’s a hug?" "A hug is a thing of beauty entirely surrounded by a stretch of maw ulinity," RIALIO WALKERTON. INDIANA Air Conditioned Thins., Eli., Sat—Aug. 6-7-8 ELIZABETH TAYLOR MONTGOMERY ( LIFT “A PLACE IN THE SUN” 2nd Feature "(U N GIRLS” Sun., Mon., Tuess. —Aug. 9-10-11 Wt-Wr >/ DPN STOCKWELL gEWK/ OiLIMAN
