September 26, 1960 Table Of Contents
Thoroughbred Racing
Major flat and jumping races through October
Yesterday
All three were needed when the author, a girl of 10, went on the Glidden Tour of 1911
Editorials
Baltimore Bubble
Paul Richards and his youthful Orioles made a strong run for the pennant until the Yankees destroyed them
By Roy Terrell
High Level
By Jack Tobin
Deane Beman, 22, won the National Amateur, and he was one of the older stars
By Gwilym Brown
A Brave Challenge
Racing to be the first to do 400 mph, Donald Campbell swerved off course, injuring himself and wrecking his car
By Hays Gorey
National Football League Preview
Since they no longer have the only game, the older pros of the National Football League are planning to add speed, striking power and surprises to meet the challenge of the AFL
By Tex Maule
Jim Brown, the Cleveland Browns' explosive line-plunging fullback, gained fame as a college halfback while at Syracuse. In the next four pages he reveals how that early training led to his present success
By Jim Brown
College Football
As the season opens, Alabama is bearishly strong and the Big Eight is ready for anyone
By Ray Cave
Football's Week
By Mervin Hyman
Boating
Russia and the U.S. might have more boats, but the big winner came from Denmark
Cards
Food
Suzy Volterra, the Continent's No. 1 horsewoman, serves a dessert worth all of the planning it takes
Giants
The warm glow that unites Owner Horace Stoneham and Manager-Crony Tom Sheehan (above) has helped perpetrate baseball's biggest mystery: How did San Francisco lose the pennant that couldn't be lost?
By Roy Terrell
For The Record
A roundup of the sports information of the week
Acknowledgments
Baseball's Week
By Maury Allen
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
19TH HOLE: THE READERS TAKE OVER
Pat On The Back
"The fish's son"