
September 10, 1962 Table Of Contents
Shopwalk
The best new fall sweaters are fashioned after athletic favorites
A Farewell
It was finesse that counted. But then this slugger stepped up and away went strategy—along with the ball
Soap Opera
The New York Yankees lost eight games in a week and once again changed a runaway into a pennant race, but neither Manager Ralph Houk (right) nor anyone else was taking the slump seriously
PREACHER RUSSELL PUT HIS WORST FOOT FORWARD
Sanders Russell hopped off his crutches and into the sulky, then showed the way to a field of famous drivers in The Hambletonian
By Kenneth Rudeen
Smiling Wizard
SMILING WIZARD OF THE CUP DEFENSE
Bus Mosbacher's big grin has iron and experience behind it, and he'll need both to defend the 111-year-old tradition of the cup America has never lost
Pro Football 1962
Since 1958, meticulous Paul Brown has won battles and lost wars. This may be his year
By Tex Maule
By Yale Lary
'P' IS FOR POWER, PASSES—AND PACKERS
Fishing
With shotguns, handouts and tender loving care Washington State biologists are doing wondrous things for steelhead—and fishermen
Sporting Look
IN FASHIONS TO KEEP THE WEATHER OUT
By Jo Ahern Zill
Boating
Prodded by its new owner, Yachtsman Corny Shields, America's best-known maker of motorboats introduces its first sailboat—brisk under canvas but as luxurious as a home
Golf
Upsets jolted others, but JoAnne Gunderson kept her mood as light as her hair and won the Amateur
By Gwilym S. Brown
Pinehurst
The Southern Resort of a Proper Bostonian
James Walker Tufts—of the Massachusetts Tuftses—built a New England village on 5,000 acres of Carolina desert and opened it as a health spa, never guessing that his Pinehurst would turn out to be a mecca for golfers
By Gwilym S. Brown
For The Record
A roundup of the sports information of the week
Acknowledgments
Baseball's Week
By Herman Weiskopf
19th Hole: The Readers Take Over
19TH HOLE: THE READERS TAKE OVER