Sandy Koufax Does It in 41 Games !
Exceeds Bob Feller's Strikeout Record
Last Saturday, Sandy Koufax at-
tained the remarkable new record
of striking out, in a single season,
more men than any other player in
history.
Registering his 24th victory for
THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
34-Friday, October 1, 1965
Crtury-Fa. cv...Nta
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the year, gaining a new role as
the first pitcher to attain 10 or
more strikeouts in 19 games in a
single season - last Saturday's
was his 80th game in his noteworthy
career to pitch such games - he
reached this goal:
He reached the number of
356 strikeouts in a single season,
as compared with Bob Feller's
previous all-time record of 348
in a single season, in 1946.
Koufax attained the latter in
41 games; Feller's record was set
in 48 games.
In Wednesday's game, Koufax
added to his record by winning
his 25th game-matching his
• 1963 record-and by blanking
Cincinnati with an additional 13
strikeouts. His strikeout record
for the year now is 369.
BY HERBERT G. LUFT
(Copyright, 1965, JTA, Inc.)
HOLLYWOOD-While the media
of communications- continue to
praise the Germans today as reli-
able and valuable allies, major and
independent motion picture pro-
ducers are blasting and exposing
the Germany of yesterday as nev-
er before--with an increasing num-
ber of films digging into the not-
so-glorious past of the Reich, there-
by implying that the spirit of de-
mocracy within the new Western
republic should be accepted with
a grain of salt.
Samuel Spiegel is preparing a
large-scale epic from the best-sell-
ing novel, "The Night of the Gen-
erals," by the German author Hell-
mut Kirst. The story concerns the
generals' plot to assassinate Hitler
in 1944 after "their" second World
War was bungled by his amateur-
Koufax's last five victories were ish strategy. A hunt for a Nazi
shutouts. He is the only pitcher in criminal takes us through a period
history to have pitched .four no-hit of 20 years into the Germany of
and no-run perfect games.
today and throughout contempor-
ary West Berlin. Peter O'Toole,
--METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER
who skyrocketed in Spiegel's "Law-
rence of Arabia." will portray the
THE 2is
61C4 N
central character of General Tanz,
SECRET 4r'e
j
psychotic and fanatical SS com-
^-'0F1VW
"4/2,-,
,,..
mander, in the production which
60
H
■f- 4UCCESK
goes before the cameras under
Anatole Litvak's direction next
January in Warsaw, Paris and Ber-
lin.
zee
Also released by Columbia Pic-
tures, the studio handling the Spie-
BeauliFuL GIRLS
gel epic dealing with the decline
Love foR, Fun
of the Third Reich, is Stanley
Kramer's current "Ship of Foods",
-at ■ JD muRper
depicting a sideline story during
for PRQFM1(1
the period of Hitler's rise to pow-
er.
*
*
Gottfred Reinhardt's production
of "Situation Hopeless-But Not
Serious," a picture made by Para-
mount in the Geiselgasteig Studios
of Munich, was before the cameras
when we visited the set last win-
ter. Now ready for release, "Situa-
tion Hopeless" (from the novel,
"The Hiding Place" by Robert
Shaw) recounts the adventures of
two World War II U.S. bomber
pilots (Michael Connors and Robert
Redford) downed over Germany
who spent years of imprisonment
in the custody of a dimwitted air
raid warden (Sir Alec Guinness)
who has grown too fond of his
charges to tell them the truth about
the Reich's unconditional surren-
der, even after the town is occupied
by American forces. The spoof
continues with the final "escape"
of the two GIs who see Germany re-
building, streets loaded with brand
SHIRLEY JONES
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new automobiles, well-dressed pass-
ersby, packed store windows. They
now are really convinced that
Germany has won the war, especial-
ly when they are accosted by a
formation of Hitler's dreaded SS
blackshirts. It turns out that the
soldiers are German extras in a
Hollywood movie production about
World War II. We are assured that
the Gottfried Reinhardt epic, for
which his wife Sylvia wrote the
screenplay, will not become a post-
mortum white-wash of the "good"
Nazis, but rather a sharp satire on
Germany's spirit of militarism and
a tongue-in-cheek slap at West
Germany's new democracy and its
so-called "Wirtschaftswunder" that
is swallowing up all the markets
of central Europe.
"The Train," United Artists'
contribution to the films deal-
ing with the menace of Nazism,
is already in release. The pic-
ture, photographed e n t i r e l y
in France, is an indictment of
the German Wehrmacht whose
generals looted occupied Paris
trying to ship everything valua-
ble across the border into the
"fatherland" then held impregna-
ble by Hitler's military experts.
The brilliantly conceived yarn,
directed by John Frankenheimer,
tells us of attempts of a fanatic
general to send a freight train
with rare modern paintings val-
ued at $600,000,000 to the capital
of the Reich, and the . organized
efforts of the French railroad
workers to prevent the valuable
cargo from ever reaching its de-
stination.
"Von Ryan's Express," current-
ly on the screen, is 20th Century-
Fox's answer to "The Train."
Based on the novel by David West-
heimer and produced and directed
by our own Mark Robson in Italy
with second-unit photography in
Spain, the humorous escape story,
set in 1943 after Mussolini has
fallen and the German Wehrmacht
is swarming down the boot toward
Sicily to halt the Allied advance,
centers around a group of 600
American and British prisoners-of-
war who capture a freight train
taking them to Innsbruck, Austria.
The picture pulls no punches
showing us how the unarmed
POW's are rounded up by SS
troopers, while the wounded cap-
tives are mercilessly slaughter-
ed. The Allied escapees finally
reach freedom against seemingly
imposible odds.
"Up From the Beach," another
Fox picture now in local theaters,
is a continuation of "The Longest
Day," dealing with events at the
STELLA STEVENS
HONOR BLACKMAN
JAMES BOOT}, .UONEL JEFFR1ES
LILA KEDROVA
AN INTERNATIONAL CLASSICS RELVSE
and
Sophia Loren in
Marriage Italian Style
Normandy beachhead on June 7,
1944-"D-Day plus one."
The picture deals with the fu-
tility of war, as seen from the
perspective of the infantry man
and the civilian, mere pawns in the
strategy of battle. It points up an
interesting situation on the side-
line of war, the attitudes of a GI
who happens to be Jewish when
encountering his first Nazi prison-
er.
"Operation Crossbow," pro-
duced by Carlo Ponti in the Brit-
ish Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studi-
os, evokes no such sympathy for
our former enemies. Helmut Dan-
tine and Paul Henried portray
two dedicated, utterly fanatic
German generals to the hilt, and
so does Anthony Quale in the
role of a Gestapo officer of part-
ly Anglo-Saxon descent.
The fantastic yarn deals with
the detection of the secret V-2
rocket launching site at Peenemun-
de and its final destruction by
massive air attacks. "Operation
Crossbow" makes the bold state-
ment that Hitler would have won
the war, had not a small band of
courageous men, some of them in
the British service, counteracted
his intention to blow up London
and New York City. If the German
Wehrmacht had been given six
months more time to perfect their
production of V-2 rockets, we all
would be dead today.
Warner Bros. will have their
World War II epic ready for dis-
tribution at the time this column
appears in print. "The Battle of
the Bulge" was shot on location in
Spain with the Iberian countryside,
its mountains and slopes dupli-
cating France and Belgium of yes-
teryear. As produced by Milton
Sperling, Philip Yordan and Sidney
Harmon and directed by Ken An-
nakin, "The Battle of the Bulge"
depicts the infamous deception per-
petrated by the Germans during
the last winter of World War II
when their soldiers dressed in Al-
lied uniforms cut off and massac-
red a complete army unit and left
their bodies on the frozen grounds.
Henry Fonda, Robert Ryan and
Dana Andrews portray the leads
of the epic film.
"Is Paris Burning?" which deals
with the city's liberation, is being
produced and directed by the
Frenchmen Paul Graetz and Rene
Clement.
Former Nazis, this time hiding
out in the East, are exposed in
Paramount's "The Spy Who Came in
From the Cold," already complet-
ed by Martin Ritt on location in
Europe, in which Richard Burton
portrays the good guy and Oskar
Werner and Peter Van Eyck the
bad guys.
PANAVISON'A.,r) METROCOLOR
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Wave of New Anti-Nazi Films
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Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin,
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GRAND CIRCUS
Preminger Coming Here
for the Opening of
`Bunny Lake is Missing'
"Revenge of The Gladiators"
Otto Preminger, one of the most
distinguished and highly respected
members of the motion-picture
world, is scheduled to visit Detroit
Thursday, Oct. 14th. The world-
famous film-producer and director,
credited with such exceptional
films as "Anatomy of a Murder,"
"Exodus," "Advise and Consent,"
"The Cardinal" and, most recently
"In Harm's Way,!" will be here
for one day, a few days prior to
the opening of his latest cinematic
achievement, "Bunny Lake Is
Missing." A Columbia Pictures re-
lease, "Bunny Lake" stars Laur-
ence Olivier, Noel Coward, Carol
Lynley and Keir Dullea and is
the film-adaptation of Evelyn
Piper's suspense novel about the
mysterious disappearance of a 4-
year-old girl from a nursery
school in London. "Bunny Lake Is
Missing" opens in Detroit in mid-
October at the Mercury Theatre.
Take the Family
To Dinner and a Show
George Davidson of Lafayette,
the 1965 U.S. Maccabiah Basket-
ball Team coach, has compiled a
collegiate record of 157 victories
and 84 losses during his 10 .years
at Easton, Pa.
"MARRIAGE ON THE ROCKS"
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