The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 October 1964 — Page 4
Pap 4 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1964
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
THE DAILY BANNER
Cards Call On Simmons Yankees Go With Bouton
'it was invoked Tuesday to set-1 High Team Series: Torr's Res- ton 203. Cook 214. Walker 202. | tie what could have become a taurant—2304. i England 211. Douglas 208. lather ticklish problem. 'High Team Game: Torr's Res-i
taurant --- 843
High Indiv. Series: R. Saunders! STARDUST LEAGUE g33 ! Falcons 16
Hans Klein of Germany and | Gary liman of San Jose, Calif., finished with identical 54.0
times behind
4 Squares 12
Beverly Padgett, 159, 403; Bet-
High team series: No Spon-
sor 2601.
ST. LOUIS UPI—The St. Louis Cardinals send veteran Curt Simmons to the mound today in an effort to wrap up their seventh world championship in 10 tries while the New York Yankees call on bulldog Jim Bouton to “keep the World Series" alive and stretch it to its maximum limit of seven
games.
Clear, sunny weather was forecast for the 2 p.m., EDT, starting time at Busch Stadium
HE BANNER
_ „ . „ .Other Scores: Hampton 606; i
Lake ^ero re s “ f 5 r; d ,r : 5 tr D s T “ “
\ ' 554: Walker 569; Douglas 572;
i McGregor of Britain in the fi-1 “ I , ® ^ „„„ i Elmore o56; Cook 572: Shoema-
nals of the mens 100-meter i.
, ^ t . ker 5o0; Beaman 560; Cham-free-style event, but Klein was , cr . 0 „ T .* _ ,, , J , i bers d73; Sears o83; Lancaster awarded the bronze medal tor.*,. Murray 575 . Komgenl ck third place. , 59 .. Landon 5g5: Hurst 561 .
ty Atchley, —,. 405;
Mens High Scores: R. Jones, High team game: No Sponsor 205, 562; C. Crawley, 201, 545; 912. R. Gooch 224, 541; J. Rossok, High individual series: Jack 201; D. Siebenaler, 520; A. Fen- Hurst 591.
I wick 513;
The U. S. delegation argued Komgenick 201. 210. Miller 220,
liman deserved a bronze medal too because four of the judges voted for him and four for
Langdon 201. 215. Hampton 228, Saunders 202. Lancaster 205, Murray 211, 209. Rossok 204,
No. 7 Team 12 No. 8 Team 8 No. 4 Team 8 No. 6 Team 6 College Castle 4 Misfits 2 Strikes : 0
0 4 4 4
8 COMMERCIAL LEAGUE 8 October 8 10 ; w 12 No Sponsor 36 14 Hopkins-Walton 34
16
Klein and that two swimmers’ Chambers 215, Elmore 200, Suttimes were identical insofar as | tenths of a second were con- i
Women's High Scores: Barbara Ashworth, 177.466; Kate Gooch 157, 444: Wilma Pelfrey 156, 436: Sila Jones, 158, 438;
Cochran Furniture .... 34 Phillips 66 30 Angwell Curtain 30 Seven-Up 26 Greencastle Office 18 Father’s Auxiliary .... 16
High individual game: Roy Shoemaker 224. 500 series: J. Hurst 591. D. Priest 582, R. Shoemaker 553, J. Rossok 541, C. Brewster 534, B. Alexander 527, D. Lewis 524, R. Johnson 520, J. Fogle 515, B. Dean 508. B. Hampton 505, D. Flint 505, V. Inman 502. 200 games: R. Shoemaker 224. D. Priest 215, J. Fogle 209, J. Rossok 208, J. Hurst 202. 201, D. Carrington 201.
est World Series tradition of i last 16 World Series
with the Yankees favored at 6-5 : any National League team, al- dating back through the 19621 to win the game today, al- : ways seem to play well in the series with the San Francisco though the Cardinals are the series. The Yankees, of course. Giants and stand 27-29 in 11-5 choice to take the series, have dominated the World Se- World Series competition going Iannis fans cnnvincpri th*. I more than any other team! all the way back through the p7 -aseb.,, -bu, ov„ ^ ,ast, .93b of , „ cond >nd „
dramatic last-day victory in the 10 >’ ears have actually been a Beginning today, they'll have you don , t knQW how uttle National League pennant race less -than-.500 team in classic to play 1.000 baseball to take, t . mf that is cons { ( } er by upsetting the Yankees in the ; P la >’- the " Oners’ end of this World ! usua ] Iv takes two full seconds
They have lost 10 of their Series melon.
cerned.
FINA officials went into a
®' anl ” ! 35-minute huddle and decided
against awarding liman a medal because the electric timer showed Klein had finished onethousandth of a second sooner. So liman lost a medal by one-
series, were paying $50 to $75 for tickets priced at $8 each. This city seems prepared for its greatest celebration of a baseball victory since the Cardinals won their first world championship by beating the Yankees in the 1926 series. “We’re in good shape no matter who wins today," said Manager Johnny Keane of the Cardinals. ‘T feel we've won three of five games without playing our best ball. We can play better than we have." Manager Yogi Berra of the Yankees maintained the calm that characterized his approach to various crises throughout the American League season. “We've won two straight games a lot of times,” he said. “There’s no reason we can’t win today and tomorrow.” In Simmons, the Cardinals were sending to the mound a S5-year-old lefthanded whom they rescued off baseball’s scrap heap four years ago. A one-time $65,000 bonus pitcher. Simmons was cut loose by the Philadelphia Phillies in 1960 because he had a chronic sore
arm.
The Cardinals took a chance with him and almost magically he developed into a crafty, pinpoint pitcher who has won 59 games for the Cardinals over the last 4^ years and had an 16-9 record for them this sea-
son.
iSmmons. who went out for a pitch-hitter after holding the Yankees to one run in eight innings in New York's 2-1 victory last Saturday in New York, said he was confident he can check the Yankees’ home run power in small Busch Stadium. Buton, a native of Newark. N. J.. who had an 18-13 record during the AL season, was the victor in Saturday’s third game. He is the bulldog of the Yankee staff—a medium-sized right-hander without a big fast ball who fights the hitters with a variety of pitches and changing speeds. The big question seemed to be whether the Cardinals could continue the momentum of the drive that carried them to the NL flag against a Yankee team that has not played well mechanically in this series and doesn't seem to be scared. The Cardinals, with the rich-
strike a match.
;•*? i aiate! * ^ w ^ ilf *
' . ’'>• * * ■. y—y - ■ . ■ . - - „ THAT HO.'IER -This is Ken Boyer as he hit that grand slam homer in the sixth in Yankee Stadium to put the St. Louis Cardinals ahead for a 4-3 win in the World
Series game.
Clay Says Liston Is His In Nine
MIAMI UPI — When they) let Cassius Clay out of his cage in Boston. Nov. 16. the champ | j without a crown predicts “Sonny Liston will be all mine in
nine.”
“I’m going to beat Liston as bad as President Johnson is gogin to beat Barry Goldwater,” said Clay, taking advantage of a crowded press conference Tuesday to do a little political prognosticating. Clay, wearing his silverbuckled heavyweight champion’s belt around torn green trousers and a striped sport shirt, said “Sonny Liston will be mine in one minute and so many seconds of the ninth round.”
Buckeyes Are Picked To Win NEW YORK UPI — The undefeated. second-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes face their second straight highly ranked opponent this week and the oddsmakers have installed them as one touchdown favorites to down 13th-rated southern California. Last Saturday Ohio State toppled Big Ten champion Illinois in a stunning 26-0 upset and replaced them as the No. 2 team in the latest United Press International ratings behind Texas.
LYNDA BIRD JOHNSON is one of the interested spectators at the World Series in Yankee Stadium, New York. Her escort is Ken Rosen of New York. Olympic Games Host A Variety Of Timekeepers
FIRST CITIZENS BANK C LASSIC LEAGUE
TOKYO UPI — If you are looking for laughs at the Olympics, you’ll find a bellyful every day down by th«
swimming pool.
P-E-R-F-E-C-T!!
Go Charlie Go! That seemed to be the general idea October 2nd as Charlie Alex of Greencastle “bowled ’em over” to become the second person in the history of Varsity Lanes to roll the pins to the magic 300 mark. Charlie s game was a practice shot towards the real thing. Photo by Robert Hampton
A solemn army of officials march up to the poolside before each event and the only differj enc« between them and the thundering legions Cecil B. De- : Mille made famous in his multi- ' million dollar film spectacles : Is that our heroes come armed : with stop-watches instead of
; spears or rifles.
There are 24-time-keepers and eight judges for each Olympic swimming event, plus a chief referee and a number of alternates who constantly hold themselves at the ready in case some of the front line officials should falter. These men are truly dedicated. They come from all over the w'orld. pay their own way to the Olympics and take their jobs as seriously as Chief Justice Earl Warren. All this is fine. But where the laughs l come, is that they aren't always sure which swimmers finished 1 first, second or third. To help them, the Japanese have come up with an electronic timing device which is being used for the first time in Olympic history but which bears on ly partial endorsement of the International Amateur Swimning Federation FINA. FINA has the last word on swimming all over the world and its word on the Japanese timer is that its O.K. to determine the placing of the swim- ! mers but manually operated | stop-watches must decide the swimmers official times. The decision in itself is somej thing of a non sequitur. Still,
Clairmont Transfer
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Putnam Reality
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Shetrone Reality
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McMains International ..
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Coan Pharmacy
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Patterson's Shell
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Hillman’s Jewelers
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44
Team No. 1
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RUS-SELLS
North Sid* of Square
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