The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 July 1965 — Page 3
The Sportsman's Corner
l y (C. QlUpL
American League (; reencas || e Summer Junior High B-Ball 6 ^ e o!lL R ! u ^“L Teams Drop Two Games To Lebanon Squads
That wasn’t just a good day Ed Bailey had, that was a good
year.
And the 34-year-old reserve
Hanging on the wall of T. S. Deeper waters should be ex- catcher for the Chicago Cubs, Hudson of Ketona Lake, Ala- plored during midday heat. A- whose eight runs batted in and bama is a fish, weighing 4 bout dusk the bluegill will take two home runs Thursday eqpoimds, 12 ounces, 15 inches the rubber cricket or spider' ualled his season s output, modlong, with a girth of 18 inches, with such enthusiasm that at estly declined to take the cred-
it's a world record. times you ran connect on every it.
The fish is a bluegill, de- ! “ 1 never was a ^ hitter ” scribed by many as "ounce-for- Many anglers go after blue- Bailey grinned. 1 esterday,
ounce, the fightingest fish that gillls armed with tackle far too swims." I’m inclined to agree. ! heavy for the small fish, thus
never realizing its sporting
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Thursday, July 22, 1965 Indianapolis Indians May Be Transferred From Their League
they just threw the ball where
I swung.”
FIRST GAME
Greencastle
Murphy
Hecko
Boyd
Rogers
Baumunk
In Bailey’s barrage, which
qualities. The lighter outfit you fe]1 four short of Jim Bottom
Whether your weapon be a
H I ley's yeeord of 12 one mJ. flv ™d. i. . thi> SCraI>pi “ t <,, P1 '" w .n 1924. n.r, . Kfnnd worthy foe. He will take the ' slam homer, a three-run homer common garden worm or rise to If fly casting, use a long an d a run-scoring single that the fanciest dry fly. He has leader. 7 to 9 feet, tapered to almost single-handedly subdued been caught on Bass plugs, and about 1 pound test with almost the Philadelphia Phillies 10-6. even the larger Musk hardware, any dry fly or floating rubber The streaking Milwaukee
imitation, tied on a No. 12 hook. Braves moved ^ thin three
A good light-action 7 to or 8-
Greencastle Summer Junior High Basketball team met defeat twice at Lebanon. In the first game, Lebanon spurted to a quick 14 to 3 first quarter lead and built their advantage up to the final 43-27 count.
Danny Murphy led Greencastle’s | Harlan scoring with 8 points. However Nevins Gayer was high scorer for the j Deem game with 15 points. For Leb-: Lebanon anon. In the second game, Leb- Gayer anon’s sticky defense threw the Gibson Greencastle team off stride and Roberts led to their eventual 56-31 de- LaFountain feat. Craig York was Green- Oien castle’s high scorer with 6 Kern points and Brown was high Clemens point man for Lebanon with 12 j Knapp points. I Clemens
I Knapp
I Williamson
SECOND GAME
FG FT TP Greencastle 4 0 8 Harmless
4 Blue
FG FT TP 2 15
FG FT TP 5 5 15
The box scores follow:
York Hecko Lear Albright Elliott Deem Lebanon Brown Ping Goodwin Oien Brannon Sanders Garofola Hicks Arnold Lamp Dewey
2 3 1 2 0 e 1 FG 6 2 0 1 3 0 4 1 4 0 2
0 0 1 1 4 1 3 FT 0 2 3 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1
4 6 3 3 4 1 5 TP 12 6 3 3 6 1 9 2 8 1 5
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — A move was reported afoot today to return the Indianapolis Indians to the International League. The financially-troubled club has been a member of the farflung Pacific Coast League since 1964—a shift considered absurd by many baseball officials because of the huge geographical distances involved. The PCL stretches all the way from here to Hawaii, and although the jet age has dras-
tically curtailed travel time, expenses for such an undertaking have mushroomed in the last few years. The Indians were rumored ticketed back to the IL last year following a one-year stay iri the PCL but the move did not materialize. Officials of the IL will meet at Atlanta next Wednesday to consider franchise changes and the Indianapolis case was expected to come up.
Lepomis machochirus. as he is known in scientific circles is
iiiw » games of first-place Los Angabundant in most streams and *** P ° PUlar makC eles by bumping the Dodgers 5-2 farm ponds. In the nearby Cat- 18 * ^ and Cincinnati crept within 2^
aract and Mansfield impoundments, he is taken by the thous-
ands.
The beauty part of the blue-
gill is that the more you fish for him. the better the fishing.
Conservationists agree
when using sporting methods the bluegill cannot be over-
One of my favorite ’gill out- the lead with a 5-4 thumping
fits is a 7-foot light action spin- of San Francisco. Houston °
ning rod. I use 4 to 6-pound test edged St. Louis 3-2 in the only line and pobberette. with about other NL game scheduled.
4 feet of line behind the bobber and a No. 12 minnesota
Fullback Jimmy Brown S
Case To Go To Jury
OPEN AT: 6:45 SAT. SUN. FROM 2:00 Now Thru Sat.
Shown At: 7:15 — 9:30
Twins Boost Lead
The Minnesota Twins widened
t hTt Midge In USing thiS COmbina - their American League lead to tion you can fish for Bass or ^ pames by belting Bost on any other species with the same ^ while Kansas Citv drubbed
fished So in a sense when vou ° Utfit ' Wh “ 1 the blueglIls start Baltimore 9-2. New York trip- ’ ' rising, simply clip on your bob- , p., , whifp Sox a l take home your limit, 25. you ^ g 0 ^ it P^ 1 the Chica £° whlte Sox 3
are contributing
tion.
to conserva-
The bluegill travels In schools, so when you catch one you can usually catch more without moving. Fish sunken logs, openings In moss and around pilings. Edges, under bridges, and weed beds offer good fishing.
on whether Cleveland
Browns fullback Jim Brown beat a teen-age girl in his motel room last month was to be placed in the hands of a Mu-
nicipal Court jury today.
Assistant prosecutor Albert girl. Corsi’s final argument and the charge to the jury of seven women and five men by Judge
i and Washington stopped Los Blanche Krupansky was to be
In eating qualities the blue- Angeles 5-1 in other AL action, the first order of business login is also supreme. A good way Detroit and Cleveland were idle. dav j n the assault and battery
to scale these fish is with an or- Hank Aaron, who has som- trial.
dinary teaspoon. Fillet the larg- ered in each of his last four Chief defense counsel Norman er ones and leave the smaller games, clubbed a three-run Minor completed his two hours
RENSSELAER, Ind. UPI — The Chicago Bears went through a 30-minute scrimmage
i in hot, humid weather today |g% 1 ■■ ■ pa |k | and owner coach George Halas | 11^1 declared “this is the finest A .'Municipal Court jury today roo ^* e camp the Bears have acquitted football star Jim ever had. Brown on assault and battery The scrimmage wan between charges filed by an 18-year-old squads picked from the 34 play-
ers in camp, including 23 rook-
Mexican Squad Dislikes Heat
everything happens in fHE YELLOW ROLLS-ROYCE
DALLAS UPI — The fourman Mexican Davis Cup squad said it will hit the courts at
mid-afternoon again today, de- several long gains and Robin-
ies. Veterans Bill Wade, Rudy Bukioh and Larry Rakestraw al-
ternated at quarterback. Halas partieulary cited rook-
ie fullbacks Ralph Kureck from Wisconsin and Art Robinson from Los Angeles State for their performances. Kurek made
ones whole. Roll in flour or homer in the first inning and and 51 minute closing argument spite a four-hour drill in 100- son one touchdown on a 20-yard com meal and fry' until golden Rico Carty also connected in late Thursday following several degree weather Thursday that pass play from Rakestraw.
brown. Good eating!
Basketball Coaching School To Be Held At Kokomo Indiana
= •
The thirty-seventh Annual Coaches from this area who Indiana Basketball Coaching P lan to attend ore: Wayne
School will be held in Kokomo,
August 5, 6. and 7, 1965. There will be over 200 college and high school coaches enrolled from eighteen different states. Coach Henry P. “Hank’’ Iba of Oklahoma State and Ralph Miller of the University of Iowa will
be the headliners.
Coach ’’Hank” Iba was the coach of the United States Olympic Basketball team last fall in Tokyo, Japan. Hiey were i champion*. Coach Iba’s Okla-' homa State team won the Big Eight Conference championship ^ this past season. Coach Iba
Pearl of Roachdale, and Pat
Rady of Bainbridge.
San Diego Clips Indians, 6-5
the frame as the Braves touched interruptions for recesses and left them loser Bob Miller for all the sidebar conferences. heat, runs they needed to capture Minor told the jury that the; their 10th straight game. charges made by Miss Brenda Tony Cloninger won his 12th , Ayres. 18. whom Brown has adagainst eight losses although he mitted knowing on a casual bagave up a two-run homer to sis. were “ridiculous” and “mon- ; Ron Fairly in the fourth Inning strous.” and that the state had and was lifted in the eighth in failed to substantiate any of
favor of reliever Billy O'Dell. ft® case.
Miss Ayres charged Brown
took her to his room at a mo-, „ ...
Baltimore
to tel on the city's East Side the Cleveland
cursing the Texas Other veterans were to report to camp Saturday.
^iiimmiiiiiiiuiinniimiiniiiiinmiiHmiiimiiiiuiiiimimjniiiiiiiiii^ '^LEAGUE STANDINGS ★ ]!
Spahn Knocked Out
Warren Spahn, battling
’niiiimmitiimiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiimmiimmiMiimiiimimmimiiimiii AMERICAN LEAGUE PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
XV L Pet. GB By United Press International
Minnesota
hang on as an active pitcher, | nig . bt of j une 19 beat her lasted only 2*3 innings in his f orf . ed her twice to have sexual debut with the Giants, allowing intercourse with him and forced three runs and three hits but b cr to commit an “unnatural’’
reliever Frank Linzy took the sex ac j-
loss. Tony Perez tied the game Testimony of some defense with a homer in the eighth in- witnesses intimated Miss Ayres ning, then singled across the bad been on t to get money from
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — winning run in the ninth with Brown through a follow-up civTomnxy Helms drove in two the bases loaded. Jim Maloney q SU it if he were convicted,
run* with a fourth inning homer was tagged for 10 hits and was and then batted in the clincher kayoed in the ninth but manwith a double in the sixth to ged to win his 11th in 15 decilead San Diego to a 6-5 vie ton,’ sions. Pete Rose also homered
over Indianapolis Thursday for the Reds.
! Houston handed St. Louis its
The victory strengthened the fi f th straight defeat at the As-
Padres’ hold on third place in trodome as Larry Dierker. the
will present his ideas on “Bal- th# Pacific Coast League east- . Astros’ 18-year-old right-hand-anced Basketball’’ which is win- ern division and gave them a er> hurled his first complete
NOTICE
LITTLE LEAGUE MEETING TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. AT THE PUBLIC SERV ICE
ROOM.
Chicago Detroit
New York Los Angeles Washington
Boston
Kansas City
59 34 .634 54 38 .587 52 39 .571 51 39 .657 50 39 .562
4 1 a 6 7
Eastern Division VV L Pet. GB Oklahoma City 62 37 .626
47 48 .495 13
Denver San Diego Indianapolis
44 50 .468 15 ^ Arkansas 39 55 .415 20K Salt Lake City
58 41 .586 4 47 52 .475 15 43 52 .453 17 40 57 .412 21 40 59 .404 22
33 58 .363 25 29 58 .333 27
Western Division
Portland
NATIONAL LEAGUE Tacoma (xNight Gaines not Included) Vancouver XV L Pet. GB Seattle
54 45 .551 52 45 .536 51 45 .531 51 45 .531 5, 47 .520
1%
2 2 3
ning beketb&ll. Coach Ralph two-game margin Miller of the University of lo- fourth-place Indians,
wa and former Wichita coach
over the
xLos Angeles 57 39 .594 j Hawaii
Cincinnati 53 41 .564 S Spokane 36 61 .371 17% xMilwaukee 50 40 .566 4 Thursday’s Results San Francisco 49 41 .544 5 San Diego 6, Indianopolis 5 Philadelphia 47 45 .511 8 Denver 7, Arkansas 3 xSt. Louis 46 47 .495 9% Oklahoma City 5, Salt Lake 3 Pittsburgh 47 48 .495 9% Tacoma 3, Portland 2 Chicago 44 51 .463 12 1 2 Spokane 2, Seattle 0. 1st xHouston 41 49 .456 13 Spokane 3, Seattle 1, 2nd New York 30 63 .323 25% Hawaii 3, Vancouver 1
game In the majors. Dierker i limited the Cardinals to five hits
Helm*’ double drove in pitch- and struck out six to even his
will present hi* style of offense er Lacey West with the win- record at 4-4. Bob Aspromonte which he terms “Pressure Bask- ning run. West had reached broke a 1-1 tie in the sixth with etball.” These two coaches make first base on an error and a tw’O-run single off loser Bob
up a very outstanding staff. 1 moved to second on a sacrifice. Purkey 7-7.
EVERYONE HAS A CANDIDATE
Election Of Baseball Commissioner Debated
By MILTON RICKMAN UPI sports XX'riter NEW YORK UPI — The nice thing about the American and National Leagues is that they trust each other - the same way the United States and Russia do. Each league wants to make ..sure the other one doesn’t steam-roll Its own mart in as baseball's new commissioner. All you had to do was close your eyes during that “cordial, friendly” meeting at Dearborn. Mich., earlier this week and you’d swear you were in the General Assembly at the United Nations. Publicly, everything looked peachy dandy with virtually each major league owner piously proclaiming: “I don’t really have a candidate myself: I just want to do what's good for baseball.” Privately, however, it was an entirely different matter, with the American Leaguers watching the National Leaguers like hawks and vice versa. The meeting easily could have lasted two days but here again it came down to a matter of one league against the other. Topping vs. O'Malley Dan Topping of the Yankees sought to keep the meeting going for a second day but XX'alter O'Malley o' the Dodgers pressed for an adjournment ?nd the session was ended after one day. Some progress actually was made although the owners ac-
complished it by voting backwards. What they did was vote to eliminate some of the candidates and when they broke up, the list of nominees was down to 16. General manager Joe Brown of Pittsburgh, one of the candidates mentioned, asked to withdraw, following the lead of Cleveland's Gabe Paul, who had done so earlier. “I had hear’’ that some people w’ere thinking of proposing me as a candidate, so I went to John Fetzer and John Galbreath a couple of months ago and asked that my name be eliminated” Paul explained. The withdrawal of Brown and Paul leaves few so - called “baseball men” among those who are being considered as Ford Frick's successor. If you had to pick a leader among them at the moment, it would have to be Lee MacPhail. president of the Baltimore Orioles. He has the most support in the American League and there are even a few National Leaguers who, if they don’t exactly favor him. aren't that strongly opposed to him. either. Joe Cronin, the A. L. president. has made a modest come back after being way out in front two years ago and then running into a slump because of his handling of Charlie Finley and the CBS purchase of the Yankees. XlacPhail Lead* Cronin MacPhail is quite a few
strides ahead of Cronin at this stage of the race, and the only other baseball nominee drawing any consideration whatsoever are William Shea, the New York attorney who was instrumental in bringing back a National League club to this city, and Judge Robert Cannon, who represents the major league players. There weren't many laughs at that Dearborn meeting. Closest thing to it was produced by an over-enthusiastic fan, who swamped the committee with dozens of letters recommending his particular choice. The fan seems to have a lot of friends. He apparently persuaded them to do the same thing he did. The next time the owners get together they will start ballot- i ing. That’s when the real politicking starts. A will have his candidate and will try to get B to vote for him: C and D will do little caucusing of their own: E won’t listen to anyone, and F is likely to throw a monkey wrench into the proceedings by casting his vote for someone who isn’t even listed a.s a candidate. Through the entire struggle, though, you can count on one thing. The American League' will keep an eye on the Nation-1 al and the National will sleep with one eye open too. In political society, this Is what's known as the spirit of friendly cooperation. j
JAYCEES TOP GOLFERS
Winners of the Greencastle Jaycee Golf tournament posed for the camera immediately following the tourney held for junior golfers early Thursday morning at the XX'indy Hill Country Club. Top winner with a 77 was Mike Troyer (center), and second place winners who tied with an 80 were Robert Lyon (front), and Tony Harmless (back). Photo by Frank Puckett, Jr.
Rex Horriia* Georae C. Scott Shirley MacLoino Alain Delon Ingrid Bergmaa Jeanne Moreau
Starts Aug. 4
WALT DISNEY’SjLs, 4
fltorthBwfMVISTAfoMCa.*. •WftftOOTrP'tfmt Free Merchants SHOW - EVERY FRIDAY From 2:00 Over 4:30 THIS FRIDAY "WATUSI" And Cartooni
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MAPLECR0FT AUTO THEATRE R. 1., Clayton, Indiana Tonight and Sat. "THE CARPETBAGGERS" — and — "BLACK SPURS" SUN. - MON. - TUES. Doris Day — James Garner “MOVE OVER DARLING" And Ann Margaret — Tony Franciosa “THE PLEASURE SEEKERS”
RECORDS SPENCER DRIVE-IN THEATRE S. ON 43 AT 67
Now thru Sat. FIRST SHOWING OF HIS LATEST COLOR FUN HIT! ELVIS IN "TICKLE ME" Plus In Color — “MARA OF THE WILDERNESS" Extra Bonus Feature Saturday Night Sunday and Monday “SEND ME NO FLOWERS" And “CAPT. NEWMAN”
MEADOWBROOK DRIVE-IN THEATER Intersection 36 A 43 TONIGHT AND SATURDAY Ann-Margoret, Michael Parks BUS RILEY'S BACK IN TOWN (COLOR) Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis THE CADDY SUNDAY THRU WEDNESDAY Debbie Reynolds, Harve Presnell THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN (COLOR) Robert Walker, Burl Ives ENSIGN PULVER (COLOR)
I’?-
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MIDWAY DRIVE-IN Jet 40 & 43
Tonight thru Tuesday, July 27 ADMISSION $1.25 - CHILDREN 6 ta 12 50c CHILDREN UNDER 6 FREE
WAIT DISNEY'S GREATESTACHIEVEMENT!
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Greencastle, Indiana
