The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 October 1964 — Page 6

Page 6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 5 f 1964

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

THE DAILY BANNER

Ball! Ball! Who has the ball? Todd Eberle, number 33, DePauw back at the far left, thought he was stopping the Ball State Cardinal who had it, but a closer look shows it being held precariously in the right hand of the Ball State runner being descended upon by the three black shifted Tigers at the right. The Cardinals won the battle. 23-20. coming

from behind twice.

Old Gold Throws Scare Into Favored Ball State, But Lose 23-20

Says Clay Will Defeat Liston

! qualified to talk about Clay’s ! background than anyone else in I the fight game today. Cassius befriended him more than six years ago and the J more ’-e came to kr>— Surkein, the more he con' : ded in him. * “I remember Clay running into Floyd Patterson right after the 1960 Olympics which I ! worked,” he recalled. “He i told Patterson straight up and down, “Don’t get too used to that crown because I’ll be i we-ring it soon.” “Patterson just laughed but I knew Clay wasn’t kidding. He was supremely confident long before he won the Olympic light-heavyweight title in 1960. “Two years before that, he personally told me he was going to be the world heavyweight champp i - matter what. He was thinking so far ahead that he said, “the only thing that can prevent me from becoming the champion is not getting a shot at '.he title. But I guarantee you I’ll get it. I need a gimmick to get that shot and I’ll find one.” Clay, of cours \ did find one with his loquacious obnoxiousness and although it made him All-American pain in the neck, it also helped make him world champion whether the World Boxing Association recognizes the fact or not.

Scorer Named NEW YORK UPI — Louis Hatter of the Baltimore Sun has been nir.a '. chief scorer for the World Series by baseball Commissioner Foxd Frick. Tommy Holms of the New York Herald-Tribune will be game scorer when the series is at Yankee Stadium and Jack Herman of the St. Louis GlobeDispatch will handle the chores at Busch Stadium.

★ ★ SLeague Standings! ★ ★ | '.iiiiiiiimimminiiiMiimiiMir

NATIONAL LEAGUE

DePauw's University’s Tigers nearly laid powerful Ball State on the ropes in an important ICC squabble at Blackstock Stadium Saturday, losing only 23-20. in an astonishing about face from two earlier perform-

ances.

| period when he crashed in for a 1 two-point convers.on run, makj ing the count, 15-14, State. An incredible goal line stand 1 against State s tremendous runi ning game in the middle of the final stanza stalled a Card tally. Moving from its own 42 to the

Coming out^of the Da^Days ; Tiger ^ wh( „. it had a fll . sl

and goal situation. State was repelled four times, giving up the ball finally on the one-foot

line.

Coach Tom Mont said had descended on the Tiger camp after two disapointing losses, the four-touchdown underdogs did their share of shoving with the | ICC leaders and though losing In the last quarter, won an in- * estimable moral victory and a clear cut edge in the statistics. DePauw out first downed the vaunted Cardinal attack. 20-13. and had a 323 to 259 margin in

total offense.

Though still unarmed with a ! victory, DePauw heads into this week’s battle with arch rival Butler with a potent ground game, a slick short passing attack, and a defensive line that held State at bay four straight times inside the six yard line. DePauw quarterback Bruce » Mackey was as brilliant Saturday as he was flat last week. Mackey, who got back that old feeling like most of his fired up | and fed up teammates, gathered 94 yards passing on nine of 15 and notched 84 yards in 15 rushes. Teammate Bill Alcott added 75 yafds on 16 rushes. It was Mackey who plopped himself squarely into the driver’s seat early in the game. He engineered the Tigers’ first touchdown before over 4,300 homecoming fans could grasp how vicious the Tigers intended

to be.

Forcing State to punt after the opening kickoff, DePauw chewed up 67 yards—58 on the ground—in 15 plays and sent Mackey scampering for the payoff from the 18 yard line. Six minutes remained in the first quarter when Bill Shulz kicked the first of two conversions, making the score. 7-0. Stung by the Tigers’ assault which hadn't produced a first half point in t—o previous efforts, the Cards got busy after fielding a punt on the hosts’ 48. Big spurt in the five-play scoring series was talented Merv Rettenmund’s 25 yard dash to the Tiger four, where fullback Dave Reeves blasted in on the next play. Rettenmund kicked the PAT with 3:08 to play in the half. That’s where the scoring stood at the intermission, 7-7. The efforts ^f six DePauw backs put the Tigers out front once again. 14-7. midway in the third period. Penalized to its own 14 for clipping. DePauw strung together 11 productive running plays. Big gainer was fullback Bill Alcott's 21 yard dash to the State 43. Bronson Davir, Mackey and Todd Eberle lugged it to the 31 and Mackey, on the option play, then twisted through the Cardinals’ mid-section for a touchdown. Slightly more than si minutes remained in the _ third period. •» But the margin was whisked away ouickly. Ball State went yards on the very next series * with whirling dervish Jim Todd scooting for a big gainer of 24 * yard: and Rettenmund going r fo- the TD from 23 yards out. c Todd wiped out DePauw’s last lead with 2:22 left m the

it 23-14 by running over his second two-point conversion with

4:24 left in the game.

Mackey’s near-perfect passing display moments later propelled DePauw back into contention as the clock began running out. He hit Chuck Byrun and Davis for four yarders, ran with Eberle for five and 23 yards to the State 46. then threw sucessive first down passes of 12 and 19 yards. Twenty-nine seconds

Ball State Wins In Cross Country

W.

L.

Pet.

GB

St. Louis

93

69

.574

Cincinnati

92

70

.568

1

Philadelphia

92

70

.568

1

San Fran.

90

72

.556

3

Milwaukee

88

74

.543

5

Pittsburgh

80

82

.494

13

Los Angeles

80

82

.494

13

Chicago

76

86

.469

17

Houston

66

96

.407

27

New York

53

109

.327

40

AMERICAN

LEAGUE

W.

L.

Pet.

GB

New York

99

63

.611

Chicago

98

64

.605

1

Baltimore

97

65

.599

2

Detroit

85

77

.525

14

Los Angeles

82

80

.506

20

Cleveland

79

83

.488

20

Minnesota

79

83

.488

20

Boston

72

90

.444

27

Washington

62

100

.383

37

Kansas City

57

105

.352

42

an Ian Fleming novel. The Chicago Bears and the New York Giants, combatants in last year’s championship j playoff, each won only one of! their first four grmes. and the ^ once mighty Green Bay Pack- j ers dropped a pair of one-point i decisions on missed conversions; ty Paul Hornung. The Baltimore Colts, taking advantage of the early season misery of the Bears and the Packers, grabbed the Western D=vision lead wit’ a 3-1 record while the Cleveland Browns and the St. Louis Cardinals topped the Eastern sector with three victories and one tie. Hornung, who plunged over for Green Bay’s second TD just before halftime, added a 20yard field goal with less than five minutes to lay to give the P. cker’s a 23-21 lead. But the Vikings pulled it out on a 27-1

yard field goal by Fred Cox with 18 seconds remaining. Knudson Wins Fresno Open FRESNO. Calif.. UPIGeorge Knudson headed for the Sacramento Open today, $5,000 richer and jubilant over his victory over Canada teammate A1 Balding in the $35,000 Fresno PGA Open. Knudson pulled even with Balding on the 18th hole of the final round when he dropped an eight foot putt for a bridie and a 67 that gave him a fourday total of 280, eight under par. Balding parred the 18th hole for an even par 72 final round which includeed one birdie and one bog.e on the 7,181yard San Jouquin County Club course.

Mackey subsequently tried to loomed on the scoreboard when accumulate some quick work- j he whistled a TD strike to the ing room with a surprise aerial 5-7 Byrum. that barely missed. The same ; The Tigers misfired on a desstrategy on the next play found perate PAT pass and State State quarterback Frank Houk round out the rest of the ball waiting on the Tiger 27. Houk game with a pair of quartergobbled up the pitch and six back sneaks, plays later scored himself from DePauw 7 0 7 6-20 the seven vard line. Todd made i Ball State 0 7 8 8-23

An unusual five-man deadheat for first place characteriz-

TOYKO UPI—Cassius Clay ed BaH States 15-50 cross will whip Sonny Liston even country victory over DePauw easier than he did before, ac- ^ Saturday in Blackstock Stadcording to a United States j ium.

Olympic refree who called the

turn on the first fight.

Bob Surkein, a

46-year-old retired Army major

who refereed 20 years and| handg to race acrogs the Une

is here to officiate in the Olym-1 as 22 45

pics, doesn’t hem or haw nor i

beat around the bush. : The Cards also captured sixth “There isn't the slightest; ^ seventh before Ja y Walker doubt in my mind Clay will sailed across in a time of 23j31

beat Liston next month even

The Cardinals annexed first through fifth in racking up a

pi]re-smoking ^ p erf . ect score Winning time

for the quintet, which joined

easier than he did the first time,*' says Surkein. who worked nine of Clay's bouts before he turned professional. “I base my belief on two counts,” he explained. “First, Liston has gotten older and he is not going to improve at this stage of the game. “And secondly, if for any reason Clay had any doubts before their first fight, which I don't lelieve he did. he now knows Liston can be handled like anyone else.” Surkein probably is more

to take eighth for the Tigers. Directly behind Walker were Kent Ober, Dan Blaney, Steve Norris, Terry Chappell and Don

Kellogg.

DePauw will host Hanover at Blackstock tomorrow at 4:30

p. m.

Keane Retained ST. LOUIS UPI — Happy Manager John Keane's star looked bright today, a pennant in his pocket, a contract renewal expected with a “substantial increase” and most of all, a crack at the American League pennant winner New York Yankees.

Many Surprises In Pro Football The first month of the National Football League season produced more shockers than

Series Schedule ST. LOUIS UPI—The schedule for the 1964 World Series: First game—Wednesday, Oct. 7 at St. Louis, game time 1 p. m. CDT. Second game— Thursday, Oct. 8 at St. Louis, game time I p. m. CDT. Friday, Oct. 9 no game, traveling date. Third game—Saturday, Oct. 10 at New York, game time 1 p. m. EDT. Fourth game—Sunday, Oct. II at New York, game time 1 p. m. EDT. Fifth game—Monday, Oct. 12 at New York, game time 1 p. m. EDT. SPORTS (Continued on Page S)

NOW THRUTUES.

AT: 7:15-9:25

l STORr OF THE OPPOSITE SET.

YOUNG.WiLMNfi |

VIRGINIA MASKEiC PAUL ROGERS^,

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and SevBn Arts

' Productions presedation^i mJ§ s

MICHIGAN DEFENSE SINKS NAVY 21-0—Navy quarterback Roger Staubach (12) is dropped for a loss by University of Michigan end Jim Conley (82) during the first quarter of play in the Michigan-Navy game played at Ann Arbor, Mich. Coming in on the play are Michigan guards Dave Butler (77) and Dick Hahn (65). An alert and tough Michigan defense made Navy cough up the pigskin five times in the first half as the Wolverines blanked the Middies and Roger Staubach 21-0 to record their second consecutive victory.

IRISH BLAST PURDUE 34-15—Notre Dame end Phil Sheridan (83) squirms through Purdue tacklers for a few yards as teammate Joe Kantor (31) appears to be helping hi i along. Pulling Sheridan down on the play is Purdue right end Jim Long. An elated home-opener crowd of 59,611 saw the lash blast the Boilermakers 34-15.

DOWNTOWN LEAGUE W L Stoner’s Insurance 24 8 Shoemaker’s Standard 20 12 Covert’s Heating 20 12 Farm Bureau Ins. 20 12 Wills Market 18 14 Amo Milling 18 14 Hampton’s Garage 18 14 Moore’s Bar 16 16 Montgomery Ward 16 16 Bill’s Barber Shop 10 22 Slim’s Shell 8 24 A&S Junk Yard 4 28 High Team: Stoner's Insusance 2524. High Team Game: Stoner’s j Insurance 847. High Individual Series:' C. Alex, Hampton’s Garage 572. High Individual Game: C.! Alex, Hampton’s Garage 211. Over 500 Series: C. Alex, Hampton’s Garage 572; D. Atwell, Montgomery Ward 507; D. Bennington, Bill’s Barber Shop 519: B. Brentlinger, Moor’s Bar 539; H. Heavin, Moores Bar 537; J. Hurst, Wills Mark-1 et 510; E. Masten, Stoner’s Insurance 532; W. Miller, Stoner’s Insurance 529; J. Sutton, Shoemaker’s Standard 526; M. Tuttle, Stoner’s Insurance 547. j Over 200 Games: C. Alex, j Hampton’s Garage 211; H. ! Heavin. Moore’s Bar 202: E. Masten, Stoner’s Insurance 202.

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