The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 89, No. 217, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 19, 1982 Page: 4 of 12
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P. 4, Perry Daily Journal Tuesday, Oct. 19, 1982
It’s a documented fact that in
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By MIKE TULLY
UPI Sports Writer
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - The
Milwaukee Brewers who
Bride, Groom
Get Attention
At Series
MILWAUKEE (UPI) — The
bride in her wedding gown and
the groom in his tuxedo
received a lot of attention at
Sunday’s Game 5 of the World
Series between Milwaukee and
St. Louis, so much attention
they got a little carried away.
Network television cameras
zeroed in on them, the bride
clutching a bouquet and Bre-
wers‘ pennant as she moved
through the crowd Sunday.
County Stadium organist Frank
Charles played the - wedding
march. Fans wished the couple
good luck. Reporters crowded
around.
The couple explained to
reporter after reporter how
they had gotten married, then
left the reception to go to the
game.
There was only one hitch — it
was a fib.
Cindy Bozich, 22, said she
and her husband, Philip, 28,
actually were married Saturday
at St. Alphonsus Catholic
Church in suburban Greendale.
She said they never meant to
fool anyone. People assumed
they had just gotten married
and the couple got carried
away with all the attention.
Cindy and Philip said they
had been out all night and were
still in their wedding attire
when they decided to go to the
game. Cindy’s brother. Bill
Keskey, and his wife, Jody,
gave the couple a pair of
tickets for Sunday’s game as a
wedding present.
Things just snowballed, Cindy
said.
Two More Deer
Checked In
Two more deer were checked
in Monday at the fire station as
bow and arrow season for deer
moved into its third day.
A total of eight deer were
checked in over the weekend.
Jim Summers, route one. Or-
lando, brought in the largest
deer so far. It was a 130-pound
five point buck shot with an
arrow west of Perry. Scott
Wise, route 2, Perry, brought in
a 98-pound doe, also from west
of Perry.
16
TAX CUTS
UNDER GOV. NIGH
- Check Out the 16 Tax Cuts Under
Gov. Nigh. In addition, Gov. Nigh Twice
Used the Threat of Veto To Stop Tax
Increases.
• Income Tax - Reduced in 1979 (HB 1484)
• Handicapped Devices - Exclusion (HB 19201
• Cift Tax - Eliminated (SB 84)
Inheritance Tax - Reduced by 75% (SB 84)
> Sales Tax on Prescription Drugs - Abolished (HB 1001)
• Sales Tax on Residential Utilities - Eliminated (HB 1041)
• Civil Service Retirement - Exclusion (SB 363)
New Jobs investment - Tax Credit (HB 1925)
• Natural Cas Used in Agriculture - Tax Credit (HB 1764)
Gasoline Diesel and Special Fuel Tax Exemption
for Cities Towns and Counties (SB 564)
> Free Drivers License for Senior Citizens (SB 266)
• Bank Franchise Tax - Exemption (SB 545)
Income Tax - Reduction Again in 1982 IHB 1593)
property Tax Circuit Breaker - Tax Credit (SB 4891*
dasahol - Tax Exemption (SB 439)
y solar Energy - Tax Credit IHB 1723)
-Tax exemptions given to low income handicapped and senior citizens.
KE NIGH
You Know He Can Do
. The Job... He’s Done It!
GOOD GUY ...GOOD GOVERNOR
seldom do anything the easy
way, hope to break form
tonight and capture the World
Series with one game to spare.
Leading three games to two,
they send veteran Don Sutton
against St. Louis Cardinals’
rookie John Stuper in Game 6,
aiming to avoid a seventh and
deciding game.
"This is a little different
situation for us as we’ve been
behind the last couple of
weeks," said Milwaukee right-
fielder Charlie Moore, a .350
hitter in the Series with three
doubles. "We’re putting the
pressure on someone else and
now it’s up to them to catch
us."
With Robin Yount hitting 524
and the Milwaukee defense
producing enough plays to
relocate on Broadway, catching
the Brewers could prove
difficult. The Cardinals never-
theless believe their home field
can help generate some runs
and they believe Stuper can
prevent some.
"The pressure is something
I’m thinking about right now,
and maybe after the game I’ll
reflect on it,” Stuper said. "If
you’re out there on the mound
shaking, it can interfere with
what you do."
The weather forecast calls for
temperatures in the 50s and a
40 percent chance of showers,
but it might take a snowstorm
to stop Yount, a candidate for
both the American League and
World Series MVP Awards.
He is 11-for-21 and has
become the only player to
achieve two four-hit games in
the Series. He is within two hits
of the World Series’ record
shared by the New York
Yankees’ Bobby Richardson
and the Cardinals’ Lou Brock.
Milwaukee Manager Harvey
Kuenn is running out of ways to
describe him.
“As I’ve said before, he is the
best all-around shortstop I’ve
ever seen play," he said.
St. Louis Manager Whitey
Herzog is running out of ways
to pitch to him.
"We kept trying to get the
ball in a spot," said Herzog.
“Every time we get the ball in
the spot he hits it."
"He’s done the job defensive-
ly all year long and he
certainly has done it off en-
sively,” said Brewers’ first
baseman Cecil Cooper. "... I
don’t think he cares for all the
attention."
The attention will increase if
the Brewers win. But don’t be
surprised if they make a
struggle of it. They lost three
straight games before captur-
ing the AL East in a showdown
in Baltimore, then became the
first team ever to capture an
AL playoff after dropping the
first two games.
Now the Brewers, whose only
breather was a 10-0 rout of the
Cardinals in the opener, need
one victory in two games on the
artificial surface at Busch
Stadium for the world cham-
pionship.
The Cardinals, who left 12
runners stranded in Sunday’s 6-
4 loss, hope to leave Milwaukee
one victory short.
“We certainly can’t count
them out," said Cooper. "One
advantage we have is that
we’ve got possibly our best
pitcher going in Sutton."
Sutton failed to hold a 3-0
lead in Game 2 of the World
Series but, who knows, he may
need the pressure of a deciding
game to be at his best.
Despite the emphasis on
Yount, Milwaukee’s defense,
and the Cardinals’ home field,
the Series might ultimately
revolve around the bullpens.
The Cardinals’ Bruce Sutter,
pitching with his team trailing,
allowed two runs and may be
working on a bad knee.
"He’s just a human being,"
said Herzog. "He’s not going to
get you out every time."
And the Brewers appear
unlikely to entrust their season
to ace Rollie Fingers after his
being inactive for seven weeks.
That leaves it up to Bob
McClure, who has two saves in
this Series, and Pete Ladd.
No matter what happens,
Milwaukee should make it a
nail-biter. After all, it’s a little
late to change styles.
In the People’s Republic of
China, parents of one child get
higher pay than people with two
children, and people with two
children get higher pay than
people with three children.
SPORTS
681 Paid To See
Football Players
By RICH TOSCHES
DPI Snorts Writer
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - To
borrow an old line, either very
few people showed up at the
Coliseum to watch Monday
night’s NFL Players Associa-
tion game, or more than 90,000
people came disguised as seats.
Promoters said the attend-
ance was 5,331, but most
observers put it closer to 4,000
And of that number, only 681
paid to watch the AFC players
defeat the NFC players, 31-27
The rest attended compliments
of the promoters
The game, however, was
nationally televised by Ted
Turner’s cable network and
more than 70 commercial
stations around the country.
Despite the light turnout, the
players — on the 28th day of
the strike didn’t seem
disappointed The winners
earned $4,000 each while the
losers picked up $3,000. When
you’re out of work, every little
bit helps.
"I thought it was great," said
Chicago quarterback Vince
Evans. "The intensity wasn’t
Telegram
Makes Thorpe
Decision Final
PHOENIX, Ariz.(UPI) - It s
official.
Charlotte Thorpe, daughter of
the late Jim Thorpe, was read
a telegram Monday from the
International Olympic Commit-
tee formally announcing the
IOC decision to restore her
father’s 1912 Olympic medals
The telegram said:
"It is my great pleasure to
inform you officially that the
executive board of the IOC
meeting in Lausanne (Switzer-
land) on the 12th day of
October, 1982, decided to
restore the amateur status of
James Thorpe and award the
two medals to his family on the
occasion of the IOC meeting in
Los Angeles in January, 1983
As president of IOC, 1 shall
present the medals personally
to you. Sincerely, Juan Sama-
ranch. President IOC.
Ms. Thorpe said she expected
to receive the telegram in the
mail Tuesday. She had been
informally notified of the
board’s decision Wednesday,
Thorpe won the Pentathlon
and Decathlon at the Stockholm
Games in 1912, but his gold
medals were taken away after
it was learned he played
summer semi professional base-
ball for $2 a game.
He was 65 when he died of
cancer in 1953. Since his death
his eldest daughter carried - 1
the family campaign to have
the medals restored
Last week she said the
victory was like the end of a
"70-year marathon." She added
she was often asked why she
was fighting for something that
happened in 1912.
"I told them because of the
injustice done to the greatest
all-around athlete America ever
produced,” she said, "I wanted
to do for my father what he
couldn’t do when he was alive."
Ms. Thorpe also hopes the
IOC will return trophies pre-
sented to her father by the
King of Sweden and Czar of
Russia. The trophies are in
crates in the Olympic Museum
in Lausanne.
Schedule
For Series
By United Press International
(All Times EDT)
Milwaukee vs. St. Louis
(Milwaukee leads, 3-2)
Oct. 12 - Milwaukee 10, St.
Louis 0
Oct. 13 - St 1.
Milwaukee 4
Oct. 15 St. Louis 6,
Milwaukee 2
Oct. 16 - Milwaukee 7, St.
Louis 5
Oct. 17 - Milwaukee 6. St.
Louis 4
Oct. 19 Milwaukee at St.
Louis, 8:20 p.m.
x-Oct. 20 - Milwaukee at St.
Louis, 8:20 p.m.
x-if necessary
quite as much as a regular
game, but we all played hard
and had a good time. The only
difference was that the players
were all taking good, high,
clean shots. I appreciated
that."
As much as Evans said he
hoped the strike would end
soon, Philadelphia quarterback
Dan Pastorini said maybe it
would be better if it never
ended.
"It looks like it might go on
for a long time,” he said. "Ac-
tually, I hope it doesn’t get
settled. I’d like to continue
playing like this. I think it would
be a great thing to have a
players league. We could be
independent contractors just
like lawyers and doctors, and
just split the gate."
The biggest response of the
night from the mostly male
crowd was reserved for the
rather spectacular entrance of
a former Playboy centerfold
model clad in a revealing
dress.
After 30 to 40 members of the
crowd surrounded her and
began causing a commotion,
the woman wisely asked for,
and received, a police escort.
The crowd booed.
The players performed admi-
rably considering the circum-
stances, with little motivation
and a strong desire to avoid
injury. Some of the hardest
hitting occurred before the
game when the players met at
midfield for some handshaking
and high-five slaps in a show of
solidarity for the players’
union.
More than 100 NFL players —
virtually all of them reserves
on their own teams —
comprised the two teams.
San Diego Chargers’ backup
quarterback Ed Luther, who
was named offensive player of
the game, completed a pair of
touchdown pases, including a
spectacular 54-yard bomb to
Seattle’s Theotis Brown.
Luther’s other TD pass was a
15-yarder to Kansas City’s
Carlos Carson.
The American’s other points
were scored on a 26-yard TD
pass from Pastorini to Kansas
City’s Joe Delaney, a 29-yard
TD pass from Los Angeles
Raiders’ receiver Malcolm
Barnwell to Raiders’ teammate
Todd Christenson, and a 37-
yard field goal by Kansas
City’s Nick Lowrey.
Top-Ranked
HS Footballers:
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -
The top-ranked Oklahoma high
school football teams, with
season records:
(Previous rating in paren-
thesis)
Class 5A
1 Midwest City (1) 7-0
2. Tulsa Memorial (3) 5-2
3. Jenks (4) 7-0
4. Del City (5) 6-1
5. Enid (6) 6-1
6. Edmond (2) 5-2
7. Lawton Eisenhowr(9) 5-2
8. Ponca City (10) 5-2
9. Putnam City (7) 5-2
10. Muskogee (8) 5-2
Class 4A
1. OC Douglass (1) 7-0
2. Okmulgee (2) 7-0
3. Ardmore (3) 6-1
4. El Reno (5) 4-2
5. Woodward (6) 6-1
6. Miami (8) 6-1
7. Guthrie (4) 5-2
8. Bixby (-) 4-3
9. Choctaw (-) 5-2
10. Pryor (0 5-2
Class 3A
1. Clinton (1) 7-0
2. Newcastle (2) 6-1
3. Seminole ( 3) 740
4. Wagoner (5) 7-0
5. Stroud (6) 6-1
6 Lindsay (7) 6-1
7. Hartshorne (8) 7-0
8 Ada (4) 4-3
9 Stilwell (10) 6-1
10. Wewoka (-) 6-1
Class 2A
1. Cordell (1) 7-0
2 V an (2) 6-1
3. Okemah (5) 5-2
4. Hobart (6) 5-2
5. Konawa (7) 6-1
6. Davis (8) 6-2
7. Morris (9) 5-2
8. Purcell (4) 5-2
9 Holland Hall (10) 6-1
Perry JVs
Lost 21-6
To Enid
The Perry junior varsity trav-
eled to Enid Monday night to
lose 21-6 to the Young Plains-
men. 4.
Perry opened the scoring with
a Buddy Padilla touchdown
pass of 12 yards to Mike Dale
with seven minutes left in the
opening quarter, the extra point
was blocked.
Enid came right back with
2:25 left in the quarter to tie the
score. Perry blocked the extra
point to leave the game tied 6-6.
Enid struck again just before
half from 12 yards out and con-
verted the two point conversion
to lead 14-6.
In the third quarter, Enid
sprang for a 72-yard touchdown
run to end the scoring at 21-6.
Harvey Swan was the work-
horse for the Maroons running
sweeps and counters for good
gains.
Randy Davis played well the
first half, before being injured.
Tim Bevins kept the Maroons
out of trouble with some excel-
lent punts, as Tim Manning and
Bruce Koch played well in the
line
The Maroon JV now stand 4-2
and will play Kingfisher JV in
Perry, Nov. 1.
Washington
Cage Leader
c opyright 1982 by UPI
NEW YORK (UPI) — The
United Press International
Board of Coaches Top 20
college football ratings, with
first-place votes in parentheses
(total points based on 15 points
for first place, 14 for second.
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etc.).
1. Washington (29) (6-0) 612
2. Pittsburgh (11) (5-0) 593
3. Georgia (6-0) 538
4. So. Methodist (6-0) 454
5. Nebraska (1) (5-1) 415
6. Arkansas (5-0) 392
7. No. Carolina (5-1) 367
8. Penn State (1) (5-1) 310
9. Alabama (5-1) 304
10 UCLA (5-0-1) 268
11. West Virginia (5-1) 184
12. Louisiana Stat(4-0-1) 123
13. Notre Dame (4-1) 92
14. Florida State (5-1) 79
15. Texas (3-1) 56
16. Mi-mi (Fla.) (5-2) 53
17. Clemson (4-1-1) 43
18. Oklahoma (4-2) 41
19. Michigan (4-2) 25
20. Florida (4-2) 15
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Note: By agreement with the
American Football Coaches
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championship consideration by
the UPI Board of Coaches. The
teams currently on probation
are Arizona State, Oregon and
Southern California.
For release at 6:30 a.m. EDT
10. Beggs (3) 5-2
Class A
1. Oaks (1) 7-0
2. Cache (2) 7-0
3. Okeene (3) 7-0
4. Talihina (4) 7-0
5. Hominy (5) 7-0
6. Hollis (6) 6-1
7. Dewar (7) 6-1
8. Boise City (8) 6-0
9, Elmore City (9) 7-0
10. Weleetka (10) 5-1
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Watson, Milo W. The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 89, No. 217, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 19, 1982, newspaper, October 19, 1982; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2253578/m1/4/?q=coaster: accessed June 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.