The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 October 1964 — Page 4

Page 4 MONDAY, OCTOBER 12,1964

GREENCASTIE, INDIANA

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DePauw Tigers Outplay Butler But Use Grid Contest, 9 To 6

Ken Boyer's Grand Slam Homer Knots World s Series At 2 - All

DePauw claimed virtually \ ■ every statistical honor it could Saturday, but its failure to in- , elude the scoreboard resulted in a 9-6 Butler victory. The licking was another bitter one. coming the heels of successive 14-12. 21-18. 13-6 and 12-6 losses to the apparently invincible— for DePauw— ICC

champs.

^ePauw led in rushing. 17674. passing. 87-74. first downs, 15-8. and even watched as Tiger Fullback Bill Alcott singlehandedly outrushed Butler's

backfield.

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yard gains to the five, Mackey s eaked to the four, but then on the tense fourth and goal

Alcott gained 99 yards in 29 situation, Bronson Davis was rushes, just two plays shy of an stacked lI l 1 short on the Bl eight-year old TCC record. He two-yard line, also carried the ball more times But,er took three cracks with than half dozen backs used by 1 the then booted out to the Conch Tony Hinkle. 29-27. I Bulldogs 34 .ere Byrum Here’s more statistical frust- hroi ght it back to the 29 as the ration. DePauw pranced off 72 f> r st quarter ended. Nine plays plays to the 42 mustered by ^t 0 Alcott knifed into the end

position. But Butler made use of its chances after forcing DePauw to punt following the second half kickoff. Reserve quarterback Art D'c’- threw for 16 yards to the DePau’ 39. Th a quartet of i nning p’^vs, including a 20yarder by Joe Purichia, quarterback starter, shoved it to the Tiger six. A l^-^ard penalty sent in back to the 21 where

Butler. The difference was the zone for a 6 "° DePauw lead j Purichia steppe'-’ in moments

good milage Butler made of the u 'th 10:43 left in the first half.

breaks that came its way, plus holding DePauw twice on cru-

cial fourth down situations, once

Bill Schulz’ PAT went wide. The Tigers appeared to be in the driver’s seat again moments

on the Butler two-yard line and later when Bigler was forced again on its own 15. to punt from the BU 48. Chuck Both clubs were unable to | Byrum fumbled the ball on the move in the first quarter until, EePauw five, however and beDePauw fielded a Butler punt ^ fore he could corral it both he on its own 30 midway in the I and the ball had skittered into period. Mixing a couple of 12- j *' e end zone where two Butler

yard passes from Bruce Mackey players tackled them for a two- j was Alcott who carried 10 to Earl Liebich and Tom Cooper point safety with ven minutes times. Ironically, it was Alcott. and Alcott and Chuck Byrum’s !< ft in the half. The half ended who never lost a yard all day,

lat^r on a fourth down and 16 : tuation and ^’oped a TD pass in’o his end Steve Sadler. Bob Downham made it 9-6 with his PAT kick with 8:50 to play in

the third quarter.

DePauw gobbled up the rest of the period, grinding from its own 26 to the Butler 15 in 17 plays. Work horse in the drive that spilled into the last period

tunning, DePauw bore down two series later on DePauw’s 49. field to the Butler eight-yard Only 27 plays were run in the line !n 10 plays. [third quarter. 20 of them by Alcott hit for one and two | DePauw, the rest by the op-

who was stopped on the Tigers' desperate fouith and two bid on the Butler 15. Butler subsequently gave the

ball over on a punt on the next series and DePauw marched right back down the field for 50 yards. Big play that put the Tigers on the Bulldogs 28 with 5:59 remaining in the game was a catch-me-if-you-can pass that bounced off the hands of its intended receiver, skipped through the grasping hands of a Bull- » ->g. then fell into the arms of towering Tiger end George Tesar who snared it for a 36-yard gain. After Tesar’s circus catch, Alcott and Byrum worked the ball to the enemy 28. Frustratingly, Mackey hit Byrum on a pass, but lost eight yards on the weird development back to the but.er 36. Gambling it would get the ball back again DePauw punted out of bounds to the : Bulldog 15. The ball changed hands two more times before DePauw got back in the maddening business on its own 32 with 32 seconds to play. Mackey, who completed eight of 12 passes for 87 yards, hit Rick Jordan on the 37, then ! threw an incompleted one, and finally sailed a desperate bomb down field that was picked off by Butler’s Art Beck in a gameending interception. This Saturday DePauw opens a t - vo-game home stand, first facing once-be'-Vn Washington (Mo.), 21-0 W’nner Saturday over Valparaiso, and then St. Joseph's on Oct. 24.

DPU BU

060 0—6 027 0—9

Old Gold Freshmen Battle Indiana State Frosh Today

Seeking win number one, Defootball team today faces Indiana State College’s first year men In a 3 p. m. battle at Terre

Haute.

According to DePauw - s freshman coach, Sam Chattin, the Tigers will field their best team since 3960 when Dick Dean. Doug Weir and associates made

their DePauw clebutes. Certainly Chattin’s untest-

«''• squad will br the largest in recent campaigns. Fifty-nine candidates reported for the opening practice over three weeks ago and 44 are still aronud bidding for the highly

competitive starting spota.

Probable starting quarterback for DePauw will be a second generation Tiger, Eric liortz. all-East at Raleigh. N. C.; Lortz’ father played for the DePauw squad in the early 30’s. Other probable starters will be Joel Fischer, Clinton, and Bruce Montgomerie, South Bend (ends); Charles Colip, South Bend, and Dave Lament, j Evansville (tackles); Dan Wiggins, Bloomington, and Wayne; Carmignani. Glenview, HI.,

(guards); Jerrold Barton, May- t ' hi P er of

JIM f;n>or rfady for series

There is no more avid baseball | ping trip with his mother and

lo er in town than two-year-old I spied an inflated rubber figure Jim Ensor, a rabid fan and wor- | of his diamond hero, Berra. He

Yogi Berra. Jim is was so carried away that he

wood lit <center!; Djm Chid-1 reac, y for toda y' s start of the snatched up a baseman’s glove

series, comple' with uniform, and went into a playing routine.

Jim is the son of Mr. and Mrs. j A photographer happened to

James Ensor of Whipporwill j be in the store and snapped this Drive, Greensboro, N. C. and j picture of Jim as he acted out never misses a chance to watch his make-believe game. Needless '■ a game on television and looks to say he attracted an amused fo .vard to action on the sand- audience and was the center of 6 (Val-jlot when he is a little older. ! attention until his mother took

Recently Jim was on a shop- him from the store.

dister, Goshen (fullback); and Tim Feemester, Lake Forest, 111., and Percy Hargrove, Gary

(halfbacks).

DePauw’s other freshman s games are set for Oct. 30 (Ball

State-here), and paraiso-there >.

Nov.

Plan Workshop For Keglers A workshop conducted by officials of the American Bowling I Congress will highlight the annual Indiana State Bowling Jamboree to be held in Hartford City on Saturday and Sunday, October 17-18. Don Bergmann. a member of the ABC Rules department at Congress national headquarters in Milwaukee, and Dick MacMaster. Columbus, ABC Mid- ' west field representative, will - lead the dsicussion. All local association officers in the state have been invited to attend the event which is de- ! signed to assist local officers , in becoming more familiar with I ABC and with their own mut1 ual problems and methods of operation. More than 30 states will hold jamborees this year. On Saturday, October 17, local association presidents, secretaries and treasurers will meet with officers of the Indiana State Bowling association. On Sunday, a bowling tournament will be held starting at 9:30 a. m. This will be followed by the workshop which will be held at the 4-H building at the fairgrounds at 2:30 p. m. Bergmann and MacMaster will discuss ABC rules, services, policies and procedures and conduct a suggestion and answer period. Emphasis will be on the role of local association leaders in the American Junior Bowling Congress program which is now under joint sponsorship of ABC and the Woman’s International Bowling Congress. A dinner will be served fol- ; lowing the workshop.

New York (UPI)— Ken Boyer’s grand slam home run combined with the two-hit relief pitching of Roger Craig and Ron Taylor yesterday to give the St. Louis Cardinals a 4-3 victory over the New York Yankees and square the World Series at two games each. Boyer's homer, only the ninth bases-filled homer in World Series history, came off A1 Downing with one out in the sixth inning and wiped out a 3-0 lead which the Yankees had run up in the f.st inning against 23-year-old Ray Sadecki who did not retire a batter in his second start of tl e Series. The big blow was a screeching line drive deep into the left field stands and brought Craig his second World Series triumph. The veteran righthander, the hard-luck pusher of the majors n he lost a total of 46 games for the New York Mets in 1962 and 1963, shut out the Yankees with cn’y two hits for five innings before turning over U ’ mound to the 26-year-old, hard-throw-ing Taylor. ' long hom" run brought a crowd of 66,312 at Yankee St'd ; um roaring to ' feet and enabled 33-year-old Boyer, the Cardinal's most effective hitter during the season and the major leagues’ n s batted in Itader, to atom for the '-‘Ct that he mr 4 e only one hit in 13 previous trips to the plate during this Series He also had a costly error yesterday. The Series must now go back to St. Louis for a sixth and possibly seventh game regardless of which team wins today's fifth contest in New York. Boyer’s dramat ! ' smash climaxed an inning in which the Cardinals suddenly got in Downing — and then got a big break when the Yankees messed up a potential rallykilling force play at second base. It also placed a large question mark over the head of Yankee slugger Mickey Mantle, home run hero of the third game, who hurt two Yankee rallies — once by trying to stretch a single into a double and another time by being picked off second base. Downing, a hard - throwing 13- game winner during the season, held the Cardinals to one hit for five innings but pinch - hitter Cr"1 W a r w i c k opened the sixth with his third pinch - hit single of the Series — tying the World Series mark of three pinch hits in one classic previously shared by Bobby Brown of the 1947 Yankees and Dusty Rhodes of the 1954 New York Giants. Curt Flood followed with a single to center and Lou Brock flied out. leaving runners at first and second bases and one out. Then came the big break for the Cardinals. Dick Groat hit a medium speed grounder just to the right of second base. Bobby Richardson fielded the ball cleanly but had a difficult shovel - pass - like throw to make for the force. Shortstop Phil Linz, charging into the r~ce r‘ the runner coir ng " wn from first, also had a difficult play The two misfired—the ball trickled loose and the bases were filled.

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Tijjer Cross Country Team Splits Saturday Match

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m , i m _ ROT ER BONER-BLAST GIT E CARDS FOI RTII GAME—In a three-run Yankee first inning of the fourth World Series game at Y ankee Stadium, Phil Linz heads safely for third as Cardinal third-baseman Ken Boyer throws the ball past second baseman Dal Maxvill in a rundown. The same Boyer redeemed himself with a grand slam homer in the sixth and the Cards tied the series at two games apiece, 4-3.

A split wPh a pair of Capitol city cross country foes shoved DePauw’s season record to 4-4 Saturday in Indianapolis. The Tigers nudged Butler 2532 but lost to Indiana Central 15-49 in a set of double dual cross country contests Saturday morning at Butler University. Indiana Central's John Jarosiaski captured the four-mile run in a time of 21:02, 77 seconds ahead of DePauw's first placer. Kent Ober. The Tigers grabbed third through seventh spots in beat- •’ Butler, but dropped to finishes of 7-9-10-11-12 in falling to powerful Indiana Central. This Saturday the Tigers will

compete against Valparaiso, Wlu iton. St. Joseph’s and Wabash in an invitational affair at Wheaton College (111.)

College Scores Notre i'ame 34, Air Force 7 Purdue 28. Wisconsin 7 Iowa 21, Indiana 20 Ball State 38, St. Joseph’s 7 tier 9. DePauw 6 Evansville 20, Indiana State 14 Franklin 26. Andersor 0 Manchester 12, Hanover 7 Earlham 26. Taylor 20 Ind. Central 34. Chicago T, l. 24 Elmhurst 27, R''"* Poly 6 Washington of St. Louis 21, Valparaiso 0

PUPS TREE CUBS, 26-0 Fighting like cats and dogs, Greencastles Tiger Cublets and the Bloomington Bulldog Pups clashed headon in Pee Wee competition Saturday. Playing in the massive IU stadium, the Cublets repeatedly attempted a surging attack only to be stopped by the Pup’s solid line and swift tackles. In the above picture. Timmy Lear, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Lear, has a little trouble with one of the “swift tackles,” and is brought down on the Greencastle 10-yard line. The slightly larger Bloomington team overran the Cublets 26-0. The Cublets’ next scheduled game is at New Market October 18th. Photo by Martin Kruse

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OHIO TRIPS ILLIM IN BIG TEN SHOWDOWN 26-0— Last gasp for Illinois in the Big Ten showdown at Champaign. Wayne Paulson (21) gets by a diving tackle by Buckeye Gary Miller, returns a punt 15 yards, and then fumbled as OSU recovered with 54 seconds left. Ohio State scored in every period to take over undisputed top spit in the Big Ten and dampen Illinois' Homecoming crowd of 71,227.

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WINTERIZE SPECIAL

FIFTEENTH IN ROW—TEXAS 28: OKI.A. 7—Harold Phillips (35) dives over for a touchdown as Texas’ Longhorns racked up their 15th win in a row in downing Oklahoma at Dallas. 28-7. before a capacity Cotton Bowl crowd of 75.000. Oklahoma's Eddie McQuaters (64) makes a vain attempt to stop Phillips’ drive.

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