The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 November 1964 — Page 3
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The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Saturday, November 21, 1964
Ball State Players, Coach Of Aces Win Top Honor Of Year
CHATEAU
IONITE THRU TUES.
SAMUEL mmSTIIII'S ME nil | ROMAN EMPIRE!
Angels First In Winter Trading
The Indiana Collegiate Coni ference's current mania for doi mg the unprecedented held up | today as most valuable linei man and back and coach-of- | the-year honors were handed | out. Paul Beck. Evansville College i mentor for a decade, was elect-
mously to the ICC all-confer-ence team last week, the 5-11, 197-pound Todd was picked as back. He drew 113 votes in the special balloting. Dave Lass of Valparaiso with 55 and Bob G ! aser of Evansville with 26 were next. Lass won the coveted honor last year.
| ed the loop's outstanding coach, |
| and Ball State’s halfback Jim Th 6 " abash. Indiana, junior Todd and guard Steve Psikula established a new ICC one-game j drew player honors. : ril8 tiing record of 198 yards The coaching laurels were 1 season while racing to the 1 Beck’s first and also the first loo P’ s individual rushing champ-
ionship. He finished with 568 net yards in 74 carries for a 7.7 average. He was fourth in
I! for a.i Evansville football coach. Todd and Psikula were only the
third set of teammates in league history to monopolize play-
>. titles.
Only player named unani-
Miss Hagge Paces Women Golfers
~ LOS ANGELES UPI — The •Los Angeles Angels became the -first club to open inter-league ‘baseball trading with the mid- I
night announcement it had BILOXI, Miss. UPI — Marswapped catcher Jack Hiatt for lene Hagge of Del Bay Beach, Ithe San Francisco Giants out- Fla., held a two-stroke lead gofielder Jose Cardenal. ing into today’s second round of Hiatt. 22. joined the An els I the rieh Mary Milla. Gulf Coast lin September from their Hawaii * Invitational golf tournament, -farm club of the Pacific Coast 1 Miss Hagge finished with a 69 -League where he batted .308. _ t wo under par-Friday to
13 3 jump off to an early lead in the p a . S17.000 purse event named in
icific Coast League last season honor of local professional Mary
‘and batted .289 gettir'T 12 Mills.
-home runs and 54 runs batted | The tournament extends .in. He tied for the lead with | tVrough gunday on the 6 016 _
Cardenal. 21, played •games for Tacoma of the
'40 stolen bases. Currently Cardenal is playing winterball with
Caguas in Puerto Rico.
Bowlers To Chase
Robert Chase
CHICAGO UPI — Robert 1
y rd Broadwater Beach golf course. It is th-’ season's finale and the riches of the Ladies
r ofessional LPGA tour.
total offense and fifth in league scoring with 32 points. A junior who prepped at Hammond Clark, Psikula drew ! considerable attention last year as an outstanding guard for the ; Cards and subsequently was I named as a sophomore to allconference second team. This campaign as a bulwark for the State Line, which sculptured the holes for the league’s best rushing attack, the 232-pound six-footer was thrice recognized by his coaches as lineman of the week. Psikula got 37 votes in the lineman balloting, winning by a whisker over Edgar Freese. Indiana State Guard. 36 votes; Martin Amsler. Evansville, and -V-t Fallon, Ind ; ina State, both gu-rds who drew 35 votes, and r\ Joseph’s end. Terry Davis-
son. 27.
Beck, whose teams have won
Tiger Cubs Bow To Attica's Red I * - ' Ramblers, 83 -59, In Opener
The Ramblin’ Red Ramblers and all rebounds and rumbled last night and evaded Blotch couldn't get,
the claws of the Tiger when would.
Attica dow-ned Greencastle for; Attica’s shooting calmed a 83-59 win. down in the second half but. al-
! most in proportion, so did the Cubs. Attica hit nineteen for i forty attempts while on the
what; 22 and 9 respectively. Four
Swift I Ramblers ended in double fig-
ures with Bill Wolfe, Sheridan, ^Mdie Wolfe, and Swift nailing 32, 19. 18 and 10 respectively.
During first quarter action both teams gave point for point and the Cubs even managed to take the lead. But Attica’s superior seeming ball club began stuffing everything but the kitchen sink through the net. The Cubs were cold and stayed that way during the entire game. The tight defense Greencastle placed around Attica’s goal proved almost futile because the Ramblers began stuffing fifteen and twenty foot
shots with regularity.
other side of the floor Greencastle hit fourteen of thirty-six attempts. Coach J. G. Johnson’s j Rambler’s controlled the ball until they could either slip t 1 »-ough the Cub defense for a layup or would just decide to chance a fifteen to twenty foot shoot.
Greencastle (59) FG Chadd 4 Williams 0 e 3 Blotch 10 Covert 3 Trover 2 Hurst 4 Totals 26
It could be said that the Attica defense may not have been as good as Gic ncastle’s, but again, the Cubs seemed cold.
Elj Ron Blotch’s long arms McCracken even tried the were under the basket for the famed full court press, which the rebounds but when Attica has broken many a opponents j Smith hit eleven field goals out of back, with little result. Attica nineteen attempts during the took the lead in the first quar- ; " olfe -
first quarter, rebounds were j ter and kept it.
mighty few. Big 6’ S 1 -.” Deon Blotch and Covert were high Swift battled Blotch for any i point men for Greencastle with
Attica (83) FG Sheridan 9 Crawford 1 Wolfe, E 8 Swift 5
1
Fatten 1
B 14
Schmid 2 Martin 0 Totals 36
FT 1
Davis 0 Judy 7 Si’therlin 1 Parent 2 Rossock 6 Steele 9 C. nada 1 Totals 26
0 9 3 0 3 6 3
24
2 1 0 0 1 4 4
12
High School Scores Monrovia. 89; Belle Union. 77.
Golf Association ICC football championships but
| had to share them, was a wide
Mickey Wright, the leading | choice for coach-of-the-year
money winner on the 1964 LP- i honors.
GA circuit, was tied for second place with Shirley Englehorn with 71’*. two strokes back of
(Bob) Chase, a 31year-old Kan- j the ^ ea<ier -
sas City, Kan., headliner is the Ruth Jegsen and j oe Anne : man his rivals will chase today ! prentice finis hed Friday with j -as the World’s Invitational 73s and Betsv Rawl5 had a 74 . Bowling tournament goes into | Bimched ia Ilne wlth 75, its second day of qualifying. I Andy Cohn. Carol Mann. Chase closed out Friday’s ac- j Clifford Anne Creed. Judy Tortion by firing an 1130 series off luemke. Judy Kimball, Sybil of 217, 233, 246, 216 and 227 to j Griffin and Miss Mills. take a bare two-pin lead overj
Andy Rogoznica of Chicago.
Bainbridqe 77;
Fillmore 71
She may have been a cold night outside but the action was hot last night as the Bainbridge Pointers clinched a fast moving contest with a last quarter j rally to send their host, the Filmore Cardinals, out into the cold with a bitter defeat, 77-71. The determined Cardinals led in a first quarter rally of their own by hustling 5’-10” guard Craig Evans and jumped into a five point lead. 23-18. Second quarter action duplicated the
first as both teams fought night by walloping Roachdale furiously for the ball on the 80-54.
boards as well as the floor. Big Rog Skelton cleared the boards
Cloverdale 80; Roachdale 54 Cloverdale tucked another
victory under their belt last
Three Will Be
Big Number Sun. Three-of-a-kind may not al-. ; ■ ay*? take the poker pot, but it, ill clean house Sunday for Baltimore and C’sveland in the
National Football League.
Three victories, one by th" Baltimore Colts over Los Angeles. one by the Cle. land Browns over Green Bay and one by the Philadelphia ^agles over St. Louis, will clinch the Western Conference flag for the Colts and the Eastern champion-
ship for the Browns.
Actually, the Colts only need a triumph over the Rams to ,ra’ their first F le since 1959.
Chase, competing in his sixth world’s tournament, has never been higher than 47th but this day he was stroking well and gave hints he is determined to reach the finals.
Clay Ready In
Six Months
Voters gave Beck 111 out of a possible 126 votes, includnig first place recognition from five of the conference’s other six
head men.
Probably the most significant factor in Beck’s easy selection was his pheno enal elevation of the Aces from the ICC desk last fall to t v • co-champion-
ship this campaign.
In 1963 Evansville went 2-7 for the whole schedule and it was 1-5 in the conference. Re- | juenated this autumn .they rip- , ped through their first four opponents. outscoring them 125-27 while apparently headed for a
Derby Winner, Hoop, Jr., Dies
BOSTON UPI — An i
usually meek Cassius Clay, still | clean sweep of the league,
weak from the effects of a hernia operation, expects to fight the man he calls a big ugly
bear in six months.
again and again for the Cards as they put the fast break into action. Hustler Dave Archer did the damage on the scoring column in the second quarter with 12 points, mostly on the fast break. Not to be outdone little Bill Judy again poured
coal onto the fire by teaming Hawks with 12 up with Rossock for 14 of the while Stallcup Pointers 20 points scored in the j paced the Clovers
second quarter.
At the close of the half the Cards still led the contest by the big five point margin.
First quarter errors seemed The Browns will need cooperate turn into all-night errors for tion from the Eagles to take the Roachdale Hawks as they their first Eastern crown since failed to produce on the boards 1957. Jim Brown’ roo’ ie year, or on the score board. They would be the earliest Cloverdale quickly made their title clinchings since the NFL bid for victory in the first half e xp ; mded to a 14-game schedule and were never threatened by in 1961 and on<? of the few the opposition. y er5 . that both conference Snodgrass and Baird led the races have been decided with
points apiece three weeks still remaining in
and Hervey th€
with 19
In the third quarter action calmed to a low rumble as fouls and errors seemed to plague both teams. (If one didn't watch closely he might have taken the game for a frolicking football contest.) Both teams scored, mostly on free throws, on an even keel, the Cards managing to hold onto their slim margin of one point. The crowds roaring at the top of their voices and the boys
of their
A 37-0 mid-season loss to Western Kentucky that resulted in some key injuries took some of the steam out of the fast freight and thereafter Ball State and Butler—both tough
title bout with challenger Son- : and opportunistic— won key ny Liston was postponed last 'victories tha f forced the now
Heavyweight champion Clay, whose scheduled Nov. 16 return MONTGOMERY. Ala. UPI — The 1945 Kentucky Derby win-
ner, Hoop Jr., died at the Fred | Friday by th e emergency oper- famous five-way tie.
ation onlv 72 hours before the fight deadline. Is making a rapnid recovery at Boston City
Hospital.
W. Hooper stables here, horse was 22 years old.
The
Hoop Jr. raced only nine times in his short career. He was injured while finishing second in the Preakness following
his Derby win.
As a 3-year-old the Hooper horse won S64.850 in the Dei-by and §99.290 during his career.
However, Dr. William V. McDermott, who joined Clay Fri- 1
Coach Beck got his first ICC co-championship in 1955 in his second season after taking over the coaching reins. Bob Jauron, whose St. Joseph’s team also rec^i-ded a 5-1 record that year.
I ors.
day at his first post-operative j however, got the coaching hon-
meeting with newsmen, said the fighter would remain in the hospital until next Friday.
Mud and Snow TIRES NEW and RE-CAP ALL SIZES IN STOCK CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE 3-D TIRE CO. 209 NORTH JACKSON ST.
B : !l Jones. Indiana State coach, finished second in the balloting with 61 tallies. Valparaiso’s duo of Em Bauer and Walt Reiner were next with 48.
Fight Scheduled NEW YORK UPI —Heavyweight contenders Floyd Patterson and George Chuvalo were matched today for a 12round fight on Jan. 29 at Madison Square Garden, from where the winner officially will step up to a shot at the World Box- | ing Association WBA heavyj weight crown. Announcing the match. Garden Promoter Harry Markson declined to give additional details except that ex-champion Patterson of Marlboro, N. Y.. ! | N. Y.. and Chuvalo of Toronto ! about a week.”
playing at the top ability produced one of the finest fourth quarter tilts ever witnessed by this author. After Rog Skeleton left the tilt with foul trouble sub Bob Huber and John Glaze took over the boards for the Cardinals, but they didn’t go unopposed. Alert Larry Steele seemed to wait for the pressure to produce and produce he did by leading the big rally that: brought the Pointers home with a victory by scoring 13 points and collecting 6 rebounds. Once again the Cards big scorer Evans made his bid but after a quick six points he was I dropped from the contest with five fouls. Trying to start their own rally Coach Ron MacCammack substituted promising Rick Robinson. Robinson came through ; with 2 quick buckets but the J damage was done and the Pointers had taken another one from the Fillmore Cardinals,
77-71.
Craig Evans paced the Cards with 23 points w r hile Judy and Steele took honors for - the Pointers with 23 and 25 points respectively. B-team: Bainbridge 49, Fill-
more 36.
Fillmore FG FT PF Robinson, L 5 2 2 Robinson, R 2 0 1 Skelton 0 0 5 Bu^ten 0 0 1 Huber 2 0 1 Glaze 5 3 2 -cher 8 15 Evans 9 5 0 Woods 0 0 2 Totals 30 11 19
points apiece. Cloverdale (80) FG Sandy 4 Price 3 Jones 1 Stallcup 7 Harvey 6 Coon 3 Sutherlin 1 "Yuax 3 Morris 2 Totals SO
oachdale
i Clones I Snodgrass | Baird Hill
(54)
FG
1
...5
4 2
Myers 1 Hurt 4 Stewart 0 Wagner 2 r ott o Riggle ° Totals 19
FT 1 0 2 5 0 0 1 0 ’’0 FT 3 2 4 3 0 0 0 2 1 1 16
PF
0 1 4 0 3 1 0 3
19
regular season.
However, if the oddsmakers are right and past performances mean anything the festivities in | Baltimore and Cleveland may have to wait another week.
"irs MINE" Deon Swift (52) and Ron Blotch (55) battle for a • rebound in Friday night's game. Attica downed Greencastle 83-59. Photo by Martin Kruse ’IIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU
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Bowling
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23
Beard Leads In Cajun Tourney
FOR
COMPLETE COVERAGE
ON THE SPORTS
READ IT IN
The DAILY BANNER
LAFAYETTE. La. UPI — j Young Frank Beard of Louisville. Ky., was out in front of | th° S25.000 Cajun Classic golf tournament today, but a pair of golf's greats were right behind 1 him waging their own duel for th’ year's money winning cham-
pionship.
Beard picked up eight birdies to go with three bogeys in j j Friday’s first round over the Oakbourne Country Club course for a 33-34-67 and the lead in the tourney going into
today’s second round.
But at 68 were Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer — in a neck and neck fight for the money winning title — along with Dave Hill and Cotton Dunn a comparative unknown
from Duncan, Okla.
Both Palmer and Nicklaus have won over $111,000 in offiI cial PGA prize money this j year, with Palmer holding a
scant $319 lead.
MONDAV AFTERNOON LADIES LEAGUE November 16. 1964 Team Standings: Lucky Strikes 23 13 Cloverdale Misses 22 14 Channel Rats 20 16 Odd Balls 20 16 Happy Clovers 19 17 The Goofers 18 18 Worry Warts 18 18 Manhatten Belles 18 18 Pin Heads 17 19 Splits & Misses 15 21 Alley Cats 14 22 The Wishers 12 24
Al. Schnupel 379, H. Agnew 378. V. Hutcheson 378, R. Black 377, L. Blume 353.
Boston Patriots Are Still Alive By United Press Interactional The Boston Patriots are still alive in the American Football League’s tight eastern tilt race but they're paying a pretty stiff price.
High Team Series: Channel
Rats — 1632.
High Team Game:
Strikes — 587.
High Individual* Senes: J.
Cavi* — 557.
High Individual Game: J. Gav-
in -- 216.
Over 350: J. Cavin 557, S. Nickerson 520. K. Scott 454, R. Williams 442, D. Allbright 441, J. Lease 432, K. Gooch 427. C. Rulfs 413. M. Lewis 408, M. Cash 407, K. Walker 405, D. Wilson 395. R. Bannerman 392. M. Riley 391. D. Garrett 388,
The Pats, defending eastern champions but currently trailing the idle Buffalo Bills by
Lucky what amounts to two games,
had to play shutout football for the last three periods Friday night for a desperate 12-7 win over the Denver Broncos.
In the process, the already ailing Patriots lost two more regular players, defensive back Dick Felt and offensive tackle Bob Yates. Felt was hospitalized and finished for the season with a heel injury. Yates, with a banged up knee, may return later.
Tigers To Play Three Eastern Teams During Hardwood Season
A three-game swing through New York and Pennsylvania adds an Eastern flavor to DePauw University’s 1964-65 basketball card that was announced today by Athletic Director James Loveless. The Tigers, to be guided for
schedule. DePauw dropped a j Year’s fare in 12 home-and-78-68 decision at West Point to home games between January
Army in 1960.
The 109th and TO games with
the seventh year by coach El- J opener December 1, Illinois, mer McCall, will bump into i Wesleyan. Denison and a pain
major powers Army and CoF gate during the front end of a pre-Christmas trip and wrap it up with Gannon College in
Erie, Pa., December 21.
2 and Feb. 26.
Five lettermen plus six sopho-
Wabash College underscore the mores and two non-letter winremainder of DePauw’s non- ning juniors return for the 1964-
65 DePauw entry. DePauw last year finished with a 9-13 mark overall and went 3-9 in the ICC
for : fifth place finish.
1904-65 Schedule Dec. 1 Earlham
Dec. 4 at Wheaton
conference schedule which also includes Earlham in the home
Bainbridge
FG FT
of contests with Wheaton col-
lege.
Indiana Collegiate Confer
ence foes Butler, Valparaiso, I Dec. 5 at 111. Wesleyan Evansville. Indiana State. Ball Dee. 9 Wabash
Colgate and Gannon are first- State and St. Joseph’s will pro- iDec. 12 Denison PF j time additions to the Tiger ( vide two months of post-New j Dec. 18 at Army
Dec. 19 at Colgate Dec. 21 at Gannon Jan. 2 at Butle*Jan. 6 at Valparaiso Jan 9 at Evansville Jan. 14 Indiana State Jan. 16 Ball State Feb. 3 Evansville Feb 6 at St. Joseph's Feb. 10 at Ball State Feb. 13 Valparaiso Feb. 16 Wheaton Feb. 20 at Indiana State Feb 24 Butler Feb. 26 St. Joseph * Mar. 2 at Wabash
