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I SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE I I ADFN as d., |
Through Monday, June 26th |] Vi tIM Friday ’tn 7PM
Singer Sings Lullaby
To Braves’ Big Bats
LOS ANGELES (UPD—lt’s a
little early to call Bill Singer a
righthanded Sandy Koufax but
tile 22-year-old hurler was the
talk of the Los Angeles Dodgers
today even though he was not
involved in the decision Tues
day night when they beat the
Atlanta Braves 3-2 in 15 innings.
Singer pitched nine innings
during which he struck out 14
men while giving up only four
hits and walking three men. Ul
timately, the win went to Bob
Miller who worked only one in
ning.
Last year Koufax and Don
Drysdale each struck out 13
men in nine-inning stints and
Koufax had 15 strikeouts in an
11 - inning game. Singer’s 14
strikeouts was tops for a Dodg
er pitcher this year.
“All I can say is that I’m aw-
Cassius Clay Hit With
SIO,OOO Fine, 5 Years
By DARRELL MACK
United Press Internati°nal
HOUSTON (UPD — Cassius
Clay, the master of the bob and
weave in the ring, stood
straight and tall Tuesday and
was hit by a federal judge with
a SIO,OOO fine and five year
prison sentence for refusing
induction into the U.S. Army.
An all-white jury deliberated
20 minutes before finding the
former heavyweight champion
guilty. U.S. Dist. Judge Joe
Ingraham then gave the maxi
mum sentence possible.
“It’s just what I thought,”
Clay said of the verdict. “It
bears out the teachings of the
Honorable Elijah Muhammad
and the mighty Allah.”
Clay has been fighting Induc
tion into the armed forces on
the grounds he is a Black
Muslim minister. He refused
induction in Houston April 28.
Plan Appeal
Hayden Covington, Clay’s
chief attorney, said he planned
to file an appeal today and
would ask a new appeal bond at
the same time. Clay remains
free on a $5,000 bond he put up
in April.
Clay, who plans to stay in
Houston for a few days, said he
had expected to get the
maximum sentence. He had
said he could not get justice In
a white man’s court and based
Exchange Bombs
Dundee, 19-2
Exchange Club banged out 14
hits Tuesday to down Dundee 19-
2 in the Griffin Little League and
Jaycees scored five runs in the
third and went on to beat Spald
ing Knitting MUI, 6-2.
Walter Jones was Exchange’s
winning pitcher. Don Sloan suf
fered Dundee’s loss.
Jones held Dundee to four
hits. He struckout five and walk
ed three. Sloan allowed 14 hits,
fanned five and walked nine.
Darrell Chapman had four hits
for Exchange, including two dou
bles. Walter Jones, David Imes
and Dave Moss had two hits and
Tommy Howie, Tony Wells, Kei
th Prewitt and Doug Evans had
one.
Keith Jones, Don Sloan, Dan
Speering and Bill Simons had
hits for Dundee.
Spalding out hit Jaycees 7-3
but came up on the short end of
a 6-2 score.
Charles Buckalew was the win
ning pitcher. Randy Pass was
the loser.
Ken Crawford, Mike Brown
and Charles Buckalew had hits
National
Root Beer Week
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I* 1
fully glad we won,” Singer said
after the marathon contest.
“It’s only the second game in
which I was involved that we
won, even though I felt I was
pitching pretty well this year.”
Denny Lemaster, the Atlanta
starter, also performed bril
liantly as he worked 13 innings.
He fanned 12 men an only one
of the two runs scored while he
was pitching was earned, al
though he gave up nine hits.
The game was tied up 2-2 in
the sixth inning and the dead
lock continued until the 15th in
ning when a bases-loaded walk
to John Roseboro forced in Lou
Johnson with the winning run
after four hours and 24 minutes
of play
In the 15th, Ron Hunt led off
with a single and Johnson, at
tempting to sacrifice, forced
him at second. Jim Lefebvre
part of his defense on the lack
of Negroes on the Louisville,
Ky., and Houston draft boards.
Judge Ingraham first ruled
the Louisville and Houston
boards were correct in classify
ing Clay 1-A.
The jury received the case at
5:50 p.m. CDT (6:50 p.m.
EDT) after both the prosecution
and defense took only 10
minutes each to sum up their
arguments.
Normally the judge then
would have conducted a pre
sentence investigation, but Clay
asked that it be waived.
“I’d appreciate it if the court
will do it now, give me my
sentence now, instead of waiting
and stalling for time,” Clay
said.
Reviews Letters
Judge Ingraham, in support
ing the draft boards’ decisions,
said in seven letters Clay wrote
to the Louisville draft board in
1966, “there was nothing saying
he was a minister. He did not
say anything about going to
preach the word of Allah or
seek converts.”
In arguing the government’s
case, Asst. U.S. Atty. Carl
Walker, a Negro, told the Jury
he believed everyone was
sincere in religious thinking,
"but the question is whether he
(Clay) violatd the law.”
’’Sincerity is not the real
issue,” Walker said. “'lhe Issue
for Jaycees.
Jeff Watkins and Butch Scott
had two hits for Spalding. Bill
Rissman, Brad Davis and Ran
dy Griffith had one.
Little League
Fathers To
Play Saturday
The annual Griffin Little Lea
gue father’s game will be play
ed Saturday night at Beck Field.
It will follow two regular Lit
tle League games.
Klwanis plays Exchange at 3
p.m. and Jaycees take on First
National at 5 p.m.
The father’s game, which pits
fathers of American League play
ers against fathers of National
Leaguers, will begin at 8 p.m.
then singled to send Johnson to
third. After two outs, Ron Fair
ly batted for Wes Parker and
was intentionally walked.
That brought up Roseboro
and Claude Raymond walked
him to end the lengthy contest.
A total of 103 men officially
went to bat in the game.
Both clubs picked up runs in
the fourth inning. Hank Aaron
tripled in the Braves’ half and
scored on Clete Boyer’s infield
grounder. For the Dodgers, Le
febvre led off with a triple and
scored on Al Ferrara’s double.
The Dodgers went ahead 2-1
in the fifth when Willie Davis
tripled and scored on Denis
Menke’s throwing error on the
relay. The Braves tied the
score in the sixth when Boyer
singled in Tito Francona who
had walked and advanced to
second on Mack Jones’ single.
is whether he refused to obey
the law. It is our law for all of
us, regardless of what motivat
ed him.”
Floyd McKissick, national
director of the Congress of
Racial Equality (CORE), said
in New York that CORE would
help Clay “in any way possible”
but “no specific action” was
planned.
“The sentence is incredible,”
McKissick said. “Black Ameri
ca will certainly question a two
day trial in which an all-white
jury, six men and six women,
took only 20 minutes to reach
this verdict against Muhammad
All (Clay’s Black Muslim
name).”
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Griffin Daily News
Wednesday, June 21, 1967
Standings |
By United Pre s s International
National League
W. L. Pct. GB
St. Louis 38 22 .633 ...
Cincinnati 40 27 .591
San Francisco 35 28 .556
Pittsburgh 33 28 .541 51,2
Chicago 33 28 .541
Atlanta 31 32 .492 BI.J
Philadelphia 29 32 .475
Los Angeles 27 36 .429 12|£
Houston 26 40 .394 15
New York 20 39 .339
Tuesd a y’s Results
Phila. 4 New York 0 (night)
Chicago 5 Pittsburgh 3 (night)
St. Louis 6 Houston 2 (night)
San Fran 5 Cincinnati 1 (night)
L.A. 3 Atla. 2 (15 inns, night)
Today’s Probable Pitchers
(■all time s EDT)
New York (Fisher 4-7) at
Philadelphia (Bunning 6-7), 8
p.m.
Chicago (Simmons 2-5) at
Pittsburgh (O’Dell 5-4), 8 p.m.
Cincinnati (Pappas 7-5) at
Houston (Dierker 6-4), 9 p.m.
St. Louis (Washbum 3-3) at
Los Angeles (Drysdale 6-6), 11
p.m.
Atlanta (Jarvis 5-2) at San
Francisco (Bolin 3-6 or Sadeckl
1-0), 11 p.m.
Thursday’s Gaines
New York at Phila. (night)
St. Louis at Los Ang. (night)
Atlanta at San Francisco (2)
(Only games scheduled)
American League
W. L. Pct GB
Chicago 36 24 .600
Detroit 35 28 .556
Cleveland 33 31 .516 5
Minnesota 32 31 .508 5’ z £
Boston 32 31 .508
Baltimore 30 32 .484 7
California 32 36 .471 8
Kansas City 31 35 .470 8
New York 28 34 .452 9
Washington 29 36 .446
Tuesday's Results
Cleveland 5 Kansas City »
(twilight)
Boston 7 New York 1 (night)
Detroit 2 California 1 (night)
Washington 4 Chicago 2 (night)
(only games scheduled)
2