The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 October 1964 — Page 6

Page 6 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1964

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

THE DAILY BANNER

Bob Gibson, Tim McCarver Supply AbieTTS

Winning Game Punch For Cardinals

NEW YORK UPI — Bob Gibson and Tim McCarver, a pair < throwbacks to the old Gas House Gang days, supplied the pitching and hitting power Monday when the St. Louis Cardinals beat the New York Yankees, 5-2, and gained a 3-2 game lead in the World Series. Most dramatic of the five : ->mes of the 1964 classic so far, the 10-inning struggle was won by the Cardinals when the 22-year old McCarv®- hit a three-run homer > snap a 2-2 tie in the 10th. The Yankees, only out away *rom defeat in the ninth, had tied the score on Tom Tresh’s two-run homer. Gibson, a former Harlem Globetrotter basketball player with a k>"- boiling point, struck out 13 batte-s in his six ' teronly two strikeouts short of the single-game mark set by Los j Angeles D o o g e r, lefthanded Sandy Koufax in the 1963 series j

against New York.

Throwing blazing fast balls! and sliders with only occasional chan~e-ups, Gibs"' fanned Clete Boyer and Pitcher Mel' Stottlemyre to get out af a sec-; ond-inning jam and didn’t en- j counter trouble again until' ■ Tresh’s ninth-inning homer electrified the crowd of 65.633. Mickey Mantle opened the ninth by reaching first safely on shortstop Dick Groat's error, j Gibson struck out Elston How- I ard and retired j oe Penitone n * a savage liner back to the mound which he knocked down and recovered in time for the

play at first base.

But then Tresh. the most effective Yankee hitter during this series, hit the first pitch into the right field bleachers to

tie the score.

The Cardinals, who won the National League pennant in cliffhanger fashion, came right back to win in the 10th. Bill White walked and moved to second when Ken Boyer bunted .afely toward second. White was trapped off second by toward but made third safetly for a

stolen base.

White had to hold third as

Groat hit into a force play at second but then came McCarver to tee off on relief pitcher Pete Mikkelsen's ~ and 2 pitch and drive it well into the lower right field stands for the game-

winning blow.

wmrimrjfmg.

Gibson started the Cardinals’ j Brock singled home one run two-run fifth inning rally' anc i the other scored when against Stottlemyre with a one- White hit ^ a force out with

out single and both he and Curt Flood were safe when second baseman Bobby Richardson fumbled Floods’ grounder. Lou

the Yankees narrowly missing the inning-ending double play

at first.

NEW YORK UPI — “It’s got to look good from here. This was a big game.” A smiling Johrny Keane relaxed in the St. Louis clubhouse after the Cardinals wrestled a 5-2, 10-inning victory from the New r York Yankees, Monday to go one-up in the World Series and reflected on , just how important one hit can i | The hit, of course, was a three-run homer by Tim Mc- ! Carver in the 10th inning that broke up the gam r ' sent St. Louis home needing just one more win to take the series. ‘‘McCarver’s been a steady player for us all year t it takes just a hit like this and it can make a great big difference to his care - ” Keane said. ‘‘It just does something special for you. As a matter of fact, it did something for all of us. my career.” This last was a joking reference to the oft-repeated reports that Keane’s job as Cardinal manager was up in the air untill they pulled out the National League pennant and that he still is not certain of returning to St. Louis as skipper next season.

Pin Heads 8 10; W’orry Warts 8 10 Splits & Misses 7 11, Manhatten Belles 7 11; The Wishers 7 111 Alley Cats 6 12 Team High Series — Lucky | Strikes — 1572. Team High Single — The Goofers — 557. Ind. High Series — D. Albright — 472. Ind. High Single — J. Lease — 189. i Buis Feeds S 1 * 19 Vi Double Decker 6 22 High Team Game: 1051, Dew- ! ey’s Barber Shop. High Team Series: 2932, Cash I Concrete. 200 games and over: Garrett, 210; J. W’alker, 207; Taylor, 209; Rice, 209. 500 Series and over: Rice, 541; E. Irwin, 518; F. Brewster, 549: Schroer, 531; Crawley, 507; Langdon, 521; J. Walker, 549; Taylor, 531; England, 563; Burri^, "23; R. Morrison, 516.

DePauw Frosh Gridmen Whip Ind. State, 14-12

6 9

11 12 14

PLAYING TAG—First sacker Joe Pepitone of the New York Yankees jumps and stretches to tag the foot of Lou Brock, fleet-footed left fielder for the St. Louis Cards who had bunted in the third inning of the fifth game of the World Series, in Yankee Stadium. Brock is out.

HE BANNER

Yankees Count On Tradition

NEW YORK UPI — The New York Yankees fly to St. Louis today determined to carry on a tradition 42 years old. It's been that long since they lost two

consecutive W’orld Series.

N<">t since 1921, and '22, when John McGraw ' d the New York Giants to back-to-back victories over Miller Huggins’

Yanks, have National League teams been unable to stop the Yankees two years running. | The Los Angeles Dodgers defeated New York last year in

four straight games.

•‘We’ve been '.own before and come back,’’ freshman Manare" Yogi Ber-a said after Monday's 10 inning 5-2 St. Louis victory gave the Cardinals a

3-2 “dge in games.

*‘W r e could win two there,” ho added. The Yankees have always been able to come back in ne series, even on the road.”

Wabash Valley Council Boy Scouts of America held a Camporee this last weekend at the Fern Cliff Girl Scout Camp. There were more than 175 boys attending the two day outdoor gathering. What is a Camporee ? It is a camping fun for boys. It is many things. It's the thundering of hundreds of feet on the way to an evening campfire. It's the blue smoke from many campfires cooking hamburger. Muligan, spaghetti, ham and eggs or French toast. It's the air-splitting shout of a hundred voices giving the Boy Scout cheer. It's the ripple of wind-blown flags in the morning sun. It's catching the idea of teamwork in a patrol. It's learning to carry out an order you don't really like. It's the spirit that says, ‘‘Our gang is as good as anybody.” It’s a ‘‘Young America” learning self reliance first hand. There were ten events each troop participated in over the week-end to prove the Boy Scout knowledge and skills. Among these events were fire building with steel and stone, compass reading, rope lashing, tree identif ication, and spotting errors in a camp area set up the wrong way. By the end of the day the boys had acquired an appetite and shown here are Ronnie Slack and Jack Lundy, Troop 47, Brazil, who. even with the smoke in their eyes felt pretty proud of their culinary achievements. By the way, they had fried chicken, corn, potatoes and meat balls. Photo by Ken Nix

Winners Listed In Ford Contest Ford Motor Company’s Punt, 1 Pass and Kick Contest was; held Sunday at the Greencastle Football Field. Sixty boys ranging in ages 8 through 13 competed. The local contest was sponsored by King Morrison Foster. The winners of the contest in their age group are as follows: Age 8: 1st, John Orlosky; 2nd, Ross Nattinger; No third place. Age 9: 1st, Teddy Phillips; 2nd, Gary Lemmink; 3rd, Jerry Shonkwiler. Age 10: 1st, Danny Ross; 2nd, Neil Nevins; 3rd, Mace Hirt. Age 11: 1st, Michael Bergen; 2nd, Scott Loring; 3rd, Stephen Crawley. Age 12: 1st, John Romalia; 2nd, Ricky Bundy; 3rd, Bill Lear. Age 13: 1st, Charles Knauer; 2nd, Dennis Losin; 3rd, Alvin Stinnett, Jr. The winners received jackets, footballs, kicking goals and plaques donated by the sponsoring dealership. This is the third year for the contest and although the turnout was less than the previous year the enthusiasm remained the same. John Earnshaw, owner of King Morrison Foster Ford Co., of Greencastle, expressed his appreciation to Mike Tzouanakis. principal of the North East School, Ted Phillips. Manager oi the IGA Foodliner, Tim Grimes, coach of the Pee Wee Football team, Bo Lear, manager of the Grencastle Little League, and Ned Burkhardt for their assistance in the contest. Maurice Hurst and Louie Ellis, Jr., represented King Morrison Foster.

Texas, Ohio Top College Teams New York UI' — ^hio State vaulted into second place and the University of Texas Longhorns solidified their long dd on the top spot today in the United Press International major college football ratings. The Longhorns and third ranked Alabama were the only teams in the top 190 to maintain their position from the previous week's ratings by the 35 coaches on the UPI rating

board.

Notre Dame exchanged places with Michigan, moving up to fourth while the Wolverines slipped to fifth. Nebraska advanced from eighth to sixth and Syracuse, the only team with a defeat in the first 10, jumped from 10th to seventh. Both Nebrska and Syracuse are averaging more than 31 points scored per game as is Notre

Dame.

SPORTS (Continued on Page 6)

Club To Meet At Sr. High Greencastle Quarterback Club members will hold their second huddle of the season tomorrow at 5:15 p. m. in the senior high school cafeteria. Headlining the dinner meeting, according to program chairman Lloyd Cooper, will be coaches Jerry Chance and Tom Mont, who will recount the fortunes of the Tiger Cubs and Tigers. Films of a pair of recent games will back up the reports from the two grid mentors. Reservations for the dinner may be made by calling the Chamber of Commerce office, phone 3-4517.

PUTNAM COUNTY LEAGUE

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Buis Feeds 8^ Rus-sell’s 22 Pepsi-Cola 19 Morrison’s Tire Co 17 Fentress Motors 16 Bob’s Body Shop 14

Dewey’s Brbr. Shp. 13*2 1414

Cash Concrete 13 15 Omar Bakery Co 11 17 Over 350: D. Albright, 472; R.

Hanneman,460; K. Scott, 451; J. Lease, 445; M. Gasoway, 439; A. Covert, 436; K. Walker, 433; R. Williams, 424; E. Roach, 405; R. Black, 403; C. Rulfs, 403; |R. Garrett, 379; H. Agnew, 374; E. Justus, 374; D. Johnson, 359; M. Lewis, 358; B. Sutherlin, 352.

A gang of rambunctious DePauw freshmen, a little shy on polish in spots but long on determination and raw talent, whipped Indiana State yesterday afternoon, 14-12, in a rock-em-sock-em headknocker in ernous Memorial Stadium. It was one of DePauw's two talented quarterbacks, Dan Breckenridge from Blue Island, HI., who put the Tigers in the winning column with a pair of TD aerials, both to backfield irate Tom Miller Milwaukee. Breckinridge, who completed 10 of 23 passes for 133 yards, put DePauw ahead in the first quarter with " 10-yard flip to Hiller, then pulled the game out of the fire with less than five minutes to play with a fourth-down 16-yard pass to Miller who was standing like a lonesome end in paydirt. The winning tally \ as set up by a fumble recovery moments before by Dave Emery of Evanston. 111. Tim Feemster, halfback from T ke Forest, 111., booted both

extra points for what proved to be the winning edge. In between DePauw’s two scores, State’s Greg Raymond scored on a two-yard drive just inside the second quarter after a 55-yard drive. The t-y for extra point failed. The "veamr •"<! got out ahead early in the third quarter when their Randy Lynch picked off a Breckenridge pass on the State a 60-yard touchdown. The attempt for a two-point run failed, setting the stage for the second Breckinridge to Miller pass that erased State’s 12-1 margin. The game, which was the first inter-collegiate combat for both teams, produced 11 fumbles, five by DePauw, and four pass interceptions, two of each team. DePauw had the better end of it statistcally too. The Tigers took first downs, 16-10, passing 133-44, lost rushing 151-121 and won total offense, 254 to 195.

in Cleveland, Paul said, w^ould be willing to make “considerable sacrifice” to have the team stay. Should they decide they cannot afford to remain in Cleveland, Paul said, it is "apparent” that Seattle, Oakland or Dallas wall get the team.

Lamar Hunt of Dallas and T. E. Mercer of Fort Worth, coowners of the Dallas and Fort Worth minor league teams, took Paul and Danley on both a ground and ae ial tour of the 1.8—million population metropolitan area. (Continued on Page 9)

MONDAY AFTERNOON LADIES LEAGUE

Indians Fate To Be Decided DALLAS UPI — Friday is! the day when the 23-man board i of directors meets in Cleveland i to decide whether the 1965 American League schedule will | feature the Seattle Indians. Oklahoma Indians or Dallas Indians—or again, the Cleveland brand of braves. Gabe Paul, president of the Indians, and Board Chairman William Daley wound up their three-day, three-city tour Monday and headed home to prepare for Friday’s big decision. Whether the Indians move, Paul said Monday, is simply a question of economics. The team has been losing money for jec s and cannot afford to do so indefinitely.

Team Standings

YV

L

But there is a season ticket drive in Cleveland and. with 18

Lucky Strikes

14

4

of the 22—man board of direc-

Cloverdale Misses

12

6

tors living in Cleveland, any

Odd Balls

11

7

sort of sucess might keep the

The Goofers

10

8

Indians put for at least anoth-

Channel Rats

9

9

er season.

Happy Clovers

9

9

Those board members living

AUTOGRAPH TIME—U.S. Olympic Javelin thrower Les Tipton of Rainier, Ore., pauses at the Meiji Shrine in Tokyo to sign autographs for some Japanese children. (Cablephoto)

OLYMPIC VILLAGE DRENCHED—Caught in a steady downpour drenching Olympic Village in Tokyo, Donna de Varona, United States swimming champion, shares a raincoat with Russ Hodge, U. S. decathon star.

FELLOW WANTS TO GET AHEAD—U- S. decathlon entry Richard Emberger seems to have lost his head, but actually he's just limbering up at Olympic Village in Tokyo. Emberger is Lam Oceanside, Calif. {Cablevhotoi

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