The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 June 1965 — Page 4
4 Th« Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Monday, June 7,1965
White Sox Explode In 2nd For Game Winning Six Runs
34 Yank Golfers
'HmZ'rJ'li. Slow-Pitch Softball League
Major league action caught the Dodgers losing an expected one as the White Soxs exploded in the second inning and ran six runs across the plate, claim-
ing a 8-4 victory.
Invade Wales
Roachdale Coach Wayne Pearl, who coached at Ambia last year, has taken the head coaching job at Rochdale
; High School.
He replces Dan McClain, who moved to the Danville, Ind.,
school system.
Pearl, a former standout eager at Otterbein High School,
Set For Summer Activities
Summaries were: WHITE SOX AB
(8) R
H
RBI
Hall, If, cf
1
1
1
0
Smith, cf
1
0
0
0
Litchford, 2b
3
0
1
2
Sullivant, ph, If
1
0
0
0
Zeller, 3b
4
1
1
2
Klipsch, p
3
1
1
0
Burkhardt, cf, lb
0
1
0
0
Coyner, ss
2
1
1
1
Neat, c
2
1
0
0
Wokovn, lb
2
0
0
0
Fenwick, If
1
0
0
0
Hirt, rf
0
2
0
1
Harris, rf
O
0
0
0
20
8
5
6
DODGERS) (4) AB R
H
RBI
Torr, cc
2
2
1
0
Shillings, 2b. p
3
0
0
0
D. Bennsissi, 3b
3
0
0
0
M. Bennassi, cf. 2b 3
1
0
0
Gorham, If
3
1
1
1
R. Crawley, c, cf
2
0
0
0
Shoup, rj
1
0
0
0
S. Crawley, p, c
2
0
0
0
Fredrick, lb
2
0
0
0
21
4
2
1
Slow-Pitch softball, formerly known as Old-Timers, was organized for the summer. Games will be played on Tuesday nights. The first game is scheduled for 6:30 and the second game at 8:00. The players on
will teach social studies and j aa ^ years' teams have been rePORTHCAWL, Wales UPI — Spanish in addition to his coach- arranged on different teams A powerful force of 34 Ameri- infT duties. He will also coach this year. Anyone interested in
cans, including
two former the cross-country and i and a pair of run- teams for the Hawks, invaded this South
track
ners-up,
Wales town for the opening today of the 1965 British Amateur
golf championship.
The U.S. contingent had 19
Parnelli Wins MILWAUKEE UPI—Parnelli Jones, runnemp in the 500-mile
compeUtors in the first round Indianapolis race a week ago, and 14 others who drew byes won the Rex Mays Meplaving in the second round . niorial big car race here Sunday
One American, John B. Thorn
by a solid margin over second-
ence Bird, Don Monett, Doyne Priest, Bud Williams, Norman Hill, Rod Trout, Jim H. Green.
SCHEDULE
June 8—1 vs 3, 2 vs 4 June 15—4 vs 1, 3 vs 2 June 22—3 vs 4, 1 vs 2 June 29—4 vs 2, 3 vs 1 July 6 — 2 vs 3, 1 vs 4 July 13—2 vs 1, 4 vs 3 July 20—- 1 vs 3, 2 vs 4 July 27— 4 vs 1, 3 vs 2 August — 3 vs 4, 1 vs 2 1st team is home team
Charleston Gets
ton of Rochester, N.Y., will not place Joe L 60113 ^- see any action until Wednesday. was Jones’ sixth successive He drew a first round bye and major racing victory at Milhis second round opponent. Per- waukee. He won four stock car ; ry L. Byard of England, scratch- races and a big car event here : ed advancing Thornton to the i as t year,
third plateau.
Jones, Torrance, Calif., took
Bob Sweeny, a 53-year-old over the lead from A. J. Foyt Team No. 3 Lake Park, Fla., sportsman, | on the 29th lap and never trail- 1 Charles Brown, Malcom Burk, i won the British Amateur in ed thereafter. Foyt lost the lead John Garl, Jim Wood, Elbert 1937. He went to the quarter- in a pit stop for a tire change Irwin, Alva Hubble, John Berfinals last year before losing to and dropped out of the race gen, Alex Clark, Carl Torr, Bob Martin Christmas. Dick Chap- about midway through the race Schroer, Bob Gaston, Dallas : man, 54, of Palm Beach, Fla., when his engine began throwing Cline.
playing, please contact Bud Cromer, Malcom Burk, Dale Covert or Mike Tzouanakis. The roster of the teams are as fol-
lows:
Team No. 1
Ernie Hill, Bob Johnson, Bud Cromer, Mike Lewis, Dick
Saunders, Roy Shoemaker, Har- JLfmis# f old Coffman, Dale Pierce, Har-i ■■ vOlICfl
old Heavin, Tom Roach, \\ en- CHARLESTOWN. Ind. UPI— d«U Bltlcer Bill Fouty. rack 28 who coached Team No. 2 tt j ,
Harrodsburg, Ky., High School Dick Andis, Paul Giddings, . & to a five-year 91-34 won-lost
Bob Moore, Wayne Alderfer, . . . „ ^ .
^ record, was signed Saturday as
Alva Shillings, Ernie Cook. Dave bagketball coach at Charlestown
Smith, Bob Huffman, Oscar
Clements, Don York, Jack Den-
ny, Walter Keller
High School.
Longo succeeds Scotty Daugherty, who resigned after three years as Pirate coach.
won in 1951.
oil and trouble.
he developed clutch
In the minors the rallying Cubs came from behind to thump the Orioles 6-4.
ORIOLES (4)
AB
R
H
RBI
Pierce, c
3
0
0
0
Black, p
2
1
1
0
Jones, 2b
2
0
0
0
Poynter, ss
2
0
0
0
Coffman, If
1
1
0
0
Secrest, cf
1
0
0
0
Johnson, rf
0
1
0
0
Masten, lb
2
1
1
2
Hirt, 3b
2
0
0
0
15
4
2
2
CUBS
(6) AB
R
H
RBI
Williams, 3b
2
0
0
0
Friend, rf
2
0
0
0
Buechler, rf
1
0
0
0
Wallace, c
2
2
1
0
Knauer, p
1
1
0
0
Sehrupnal, If
2
1
0
0
Gray ss
2
1
0
0
Staley, lb
0
1
0
0
Gardner, 2b
1
0
0
1
Rossok. cf
0
0
0
0
Reynolds, cf
0
0
0
0
13
6
1
1
Kathy May Be Mickey's Heir LOUISVILLE. Ky. UPI —
Bluegrass Invitational winner Kathy Whitworth may be acting like Mickey Wright's heir apparent, but the long ball hitter
from Dallas has her doubts.
Lloyd Ruby, Wichita Falls, | Tex., a contender in the early 1 stages of the race with Foyt and Leonard, dropped out about i one-quarter of the way through. Roger McCluskey, Tucson, j Ariz., finished third but was penalized to sixth place in the } official standings for violating a
rule.
i Jim McElreath, Arlington. Tex., won third; Mario Andretti, Nazareth, Pa., fourth, and Mick- : ey Rupp, Mansfield, Ohio, fifth.
Miss Wright, who retires In Jones will get about $10,000 August, said Sunday she can’t $48,700 purse,
see anyone dominating the | Ladies Profesional Golf Association tour as she has—at least
not for the next couple of years. SEATTLE, Wash. UPI — Big She tied for third, six strokes Gene Rhoda, \ alparaiso, Ind., behind Miss Whitworth who Sunda y ni & ht took home the racked up her third win of the $3 00 ° to P P rize in the Seattle 1965 circuit with a 54-hole total Professional Bowlers Associa-
of 213. The leading money win- Gon Tournament here,
ner on the ladies PGA tour tfcis ^ six ' foot - 225 ’ Pounder, year. Miss Whitworth ignored a came from fourth place in a driving rainstorm on her second closing rush o\ er the final 16
two-over par 74 & ames of the tourney Sunday,
topping second place finisher Mike Limongello, Babylong, N.Y., by nearly 200 points, with a 9,452 total to Limongello’s 9,279. I
Team No. 4
Joe Taylor, Dale Covert, Mike Tzounakis, Warren Ensor, Clar-
SUPPORT YOUR /V- \ MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION
MUM
Wins Top Prize
nine to post a
and picket a first place check of
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BASEBALL LEAGUE
STANDINGS
HHS S9S
AMERICAN TRUCKING ASSOCIATIONS, XN<S
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE By United Press International Eastern Division W. L. Pot. G.B. Indianapolis 29 20 .592 Oklahoma City 28 22 .560 Denver 26 25 .510 4 Arkansas 21 27 .438 7 1 i San Diego 20 30 .400 9^ Salt Lake City 18 33 .353 12 Western Division W. L. Pet. G.B.
Portland Seattle Tacoma Vancouver Hawaii Spokane
31 20 .608 28 21 .571 2 26 23 .531 4 25 23 .521 4 , a 24 27 .471 7 21 26 .447 8
Sunday’s Results Vancouver 4 Salt Lake City 1 Spokane 13 Hawaii 7 Arkansas 5 Tacoma 4, 1st Arkansas 8 Tacoma 1. 2nd San Diego 3 Portland 0. 1st Portland 6 San Diego 2, 2nd Seattle 6 Denver 3, 1st
Seattle 7 Denver 4, 2nd Indianapolis 5, Oklahoma City 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. G.B. Los Angeles Milwaukee Cincinnati San Francisco St. Louis Houston Pittsburgh Philadelphia Chicago New York
Minnesota Chicago Cleveland Baltimore Detroit Los Angeles Boston New York Washington Kansas City
Cloverdale Lists Baseball Program Cloverdale High School has announced their completed baseball schedule for the coming summer. New teams have been listed as their opposition this year. The new opponents hope to benefit the club toward bettef competition.
June 1
Brazil vs. Clay City* ■"Cloverdale vs. Rosedale Staunton vs. Van Bureng
June S
■"Brazil vs. Cloverdale Clay City vs. Staunton* ■"Rosedale vs. Van Buren
June 8
♦Brazil vs. Rosedale ♦Clay Ctiy vs. Van Buren ♦Cloverdale vs. Staunton
June 10
: Brazil vs. Staunton* Clay City vs. Rosedale* Van Buren vs. Cloverdale
June 15
Brazil vs. Van Buren ’ *Clay City vs. Cloverdale Staunton vs. Rosedale*
June 17
♦Brazil vs. Clay City i Cloverdale vs. Rosedale* ♦Staunton vs. Van Buren
June 22
Brazil vs. Cloverdale* ♦Clay City vs. Staunton Rosedale vs. Van Buren*
June 24
Brazil vs. Rosedale* Clay City vs. Van Buren* Cloverdale vs. Staunton*
June 29
J
♦Brazil vs. Staunton ♦Clay City vs. Rosedale Van Buren vs. Cloverdale* July 1 Brazil vs. Van Buren* Clay City vs. Cloverdale *Staunton vs. Rosedale *—Home Games Games start at 5:00 unless changed by coaches. Rain dates will be set by coaches. U. S. Open Hosts 459 Top Golfers A total of 459 golfers, including Slammin’ Sammy Snead, headed for the links today in quest of the remaining 119 places in the 65th U.S. Open championship at the Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis June 17-20. The 348 professionals and 111 amateurs will be competing against each other today and Tuesday in 36 holes of stroke play at 13 sites in sectional qualifying to compete in the field for the open. All except 41 of the 459 passed local qualifying tests two weeks ago. That small group was exempt from local qualifying. The 119 survivors will join 31 players exempted from all qualifying on the basis of past performance to comprise the starting field 150.
Atlanta Crackers Regain Top Spot Ry United Prei* International The Atlanta Crackers returned to first place in the International League Sunday by sweeping a doubleheader from Buffalo while the Toronto Maple Leafs were dropping two to Jacksonville. The Crackers took advantage of cellar-dwelling Buffalo to move IVa games ahead of the Maple Leafs. Dan Schneider pitched Atlanta to a 5-3 victory in the opener while Jack Smith hurled a nifty 8-1 triumph in
the seven-mmng seconu game. Fritz Ackley stopped Torontd on five hits in the seven-inning first game as Jacksonville won 4-1. Dick Hughes turned in a route-going 3-0 performance in the nightcap, stopping the Leafs on three hits while receiving support from Larry Stubbing s two-run homer in the fiftn in« ning. I Syracuse took a pair from Columbus, winning the firsl game 5-4 in 10 innings and capturing the seven-inning nightcap 4-0 on veteran Glen Hobble's three-hitter. Rochestei beat Toledo 6-2 in the league's only single game.
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TRIPLE CROWN HAS THREE WINNERS—Hail to All, 5th in the Kentucky Derby and 3rd in the Preakness, won the $125,000 Belmont Stakes at Aqueduct in New York by a neck over the facorite, Tom Rolfe. Hail to All, jockey John Sellers up. paid $7.30, $4.10 and $3.60. Tom Rolfe paid $3.50 and $2.60 and First Family, a longshot, paid $8.80 to show. With Lucky Debonair winning the Kentucky Derby and Tom Rolfe winning the Preakness, Hail to All made it three different winners in the Triple Crown of racing.
BLONDIE
By Chick Young
| ly CORA AND I 't ■'\f CELEBRATED I ( OUR THIRTIETH, /■ WEDDING ■c - l ANNIVERSARY ^—^UAST NlGHTJ Ifh
MARRIAGE CAM BE ( A THRII-LIMG, JOYFUL X AND REWARD!NIG ^ N. ADVEMTURE ill
1 m °dl Ui Hid* Mc4|i
I
Ijllir WE HAVENl'T Jill ‘ V COME TO < l‘ , l THAT PART J XT ||
JOHNNY HAZARD By Frank Robbins
Starting topav: "t.-memoves backwaup! | 5APLV CR!PPLEP BY THE MIS GUNFIRE, JOHNNY'S JET HITS THE PRINK/
Grid League Meeting Opens OCEANPORT, N. J. UPI — American Football League AFL owners opened a closed door meeting today with expansion and participation by rookies in all-star games the chief topics for discussion. The AFL plans to expand to 10 teams by the 1966 season, and Atlanta and Philadelphia were the two cities most prominently mentioned for new franchises. Atlanta five years ago was considered a shoo-in for the eighth league franchise but lost out at the last minute when the owners decided to bring in Oakland as a rival for San Diego.
Price our tigers at your owu risk.
Coming into a Pontiac dealer's and not expecting to drivf out wifti one of our cars is a little like tweakingatiger’s tail and not expecting-to be devoured. Take our Tempests, tor instance. We not only load them with scads of standard equipment, but price them so low you’ll probably want to buy two and go into show business.
The Wide-Track Pontiac Tigers
Indians First
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. UPI — The Indianapolis Indians stood in first place of the Eastern Division of the Pacific Coast League today, on the strength of two straight victories over
Oklahoma City during the week- | 1201 BLOOMINGTON STREET
end. i
COME TO TIGER COUNTRY. SEE THE NEW BONNEVILLE, STAR CHIEF, GRAND PRIX, CATALINA, T+2, LE MANS, GTO AND TEMPEST _ AT YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER. -- - - A
FENTRESS MOTORS, INC.
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
