The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 September 1965 — Page 4

Th# Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana Monday, September 27, 1965

DePauw Tigers Swamp St. Joseph Pumas 37-13 DePauw converted four pass! In between, however, the Ti- mond junior raced it back up

City Bowling league Standings Sept. 20, 1965

FIRST CITIZENS BANK CLASSIC LEAGUE

Art Furniture

W 22

L 9-22-65 2 Waffle House

22

Double Decker

21

3 Ivor McMains

18

Buick Special

14

IQ | Old Topper

18

Jones Cons

12

12 Central National Bank

16

Torr's Restaurant

. 8

16 , Shetrone Realty

14

713 Club

8

jg I Patterson's Shell

14

Dailv Banner

6

jg Motor Freight

11

Reeves Welding

. 5

Dewey’s Barber Shop

10

Over 500 Series: L. Corbin Coans Pharmacy

8

598, G. Crawley 559,

D.

B as - Putnam Realty

8

Brackney’s Feed

3

interceptions and two St. Jo- | gers played it cagey and with seph's fumbles into scores Sat- minimum effort socked in a urday in Rensselaer to roll to a pair of quick counters of their 37-13 football victory. ! own. The scoring outburst that put ! The first of defensive back five Tigers on the scorebooks i Rick Jordan's three intercepwas DePauw’s healthiest since tions set up the initial DePauw it hammered Rochester 39-18, , score. Tom Miller had just tried

an unsuccessful 36-yard field

sett 524, M. Rader 513, V. Tay- Torr's Restaurant

eight years ago.

The victory also was De- goal from St. Joe's 36 and the 8 Pauw’s first ever at St. Jo- Pumas were headed up field 10 seph’s. It helped the winners to when quarterback Duffy Ha10 a successful ICC opener and | gist’s pass connected with Jor13 also gave them a 2-0 record at dan at the enemy 32. 11 the season’s front end for the Five stabs into the line and

16 first time since 1952. DePauw was on the one. Senior Eric reached into his 16 1 Loser now of 11 straight, St. fullback Tod Eberle mashed in men ^ a i piaybook and called for

21 Joe was considerably better for the score with 52 seconds

field 25 yards to the Tiger 49. Sophomore fullback Percy Hsfrgrove moved the ball three yards, into St. Joe space. Up until now DePauw had been tighter with passes than a Scotch admiral after twelve months at sea. Dan Breckenridge had hit one of two. And that, to the surprise of most, was all Coach Tom Mont had unveiled of last week's glittering aerial show that bagged

Alma.

But sophomore quarterback

Northwestern Leads Big 10 But Purdue is Top Rated CHICAGO UPI — North- passes, three for touchdowns, western leads the Big Ten's while thoroughly confounding

conference standings, but every- the Irish secondary,

thing else, including an almost Griese also took the Boiler-! certain top national ranking, makers on a 67-yard scoring belongs to Purdue. march to insure victory in the The Wildcats made it to the last four minutes of the game, top by winning the season's only Coach Ara Parseghian of league game thus far, a 20-0 Notre Dame called Griese s perupset over Indiana Saturday. formance “fantastic ’ and said Purdue, which got under way there 3 ust was no defense

two weeks ago bv shelling Mi- a £ ain st it.

ami of Ohio, 38-0, rallied In *' It ’ s almost ^Possible to the final four minutes to beat complete 19 of 22 passes if top-ranked Notre Dame, 25- > r ° u ' re i ust runnin S P atterns

without a defense. Even in prac- | tice you're going to have some dropped. He didn't," Parseghian

said.

lor 505. Over 200 Games: L. Corbin 224, 200, G. Crawdey 212

MONDAY COCA-COLA LEAGUE W Goofers Channel Rats 8 Pin Heads 7 Just Misses 7 Manhattan Bells 6 Lucky Strikes 6 Odd Balls 6 Splits & Misses 6 Cloveretts 5 Alley Rats 4’i Cloverdale Misses 4 Ups & Downs 4

L S’i 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 7 7 J i 8 8

2 22

High team series—Central National Bank 2227 High team game—Coan's Pharmacy 804 High series—G. Walker 659 High single game—G. Walker

247

Over 575—G. Walker 659, R. Brown 603, D. Ayre 596, J. Hurst 591, B. Alexander 585, V. Elmore 585, R. Holsapple

581.

Team High Series: Gofers

1574.

Team High Single: Lucky Strikes 587. 200 Game: C. Rulfs 212.

BASEBALL LEAGUE STANDINGS

a second down 49-yard bomb,

than the final count could tell. | left in the first period. Tom It niated with end Tom Cooper I Presumably a two touchdown Feemster booted the first of at the jo-yard line and the counderdog, the Pumas trailed | four extra points and the score captain from Sullivan w^ent in only 14-13 at halftime after res-1 stood, 7-<. standing up to make it 13-7. olutely marching 67 yards the The door of opportunity was p eems t er ra j se d it one with first time they got the ball and left unlatched a couple series =. 44 , , th fi t h lf e 5 for another .a.,y *« >«r when Jordan and anoUrerj ' ^ event , lal ' .osers ! before the half ended. j Hagist pass merged. The inUrmisaion 13 . 14

thanks to Tod Eberle’s flattening tackle on an unsuccessful two-point conversion run after the Pumas’ final TD, the hosts held a 10-6 first down edge. DePauw, turning errors quickly into scores, escaped some misfortunes of its own. Five

Brewer Wins Seattle Open

Twins Wrap it Up

By Leonard A. Granato UPI Sports Writer

er 482. Ind. High 212.

Single: C.

350 and over: B. Alexander 482, C. Rulfs 478, S. Nickerson 452, J. Lease 449, K. Walker 434, D. Albright 427, R. Williams 426, J. Hutcheson 418, A. Atkins 417, H. Wallus 412, R. Varvel 412, A. Sutherlin 406, V. Hutcheson 393, V. Schoman 391, M. Clearwater 386, E. Justus 369, A. Covert 363, G. Walker 366, C. Frazier 356. P. Ford 354, Jackie Campbell 350.

Junior High 11 Loses Game to Martinsville

Greencastle's Junior High grid-iron team journied to Martinsville last week where they lost their opener 6-45. The little Cubs caught it on the chin from the tough and experienced Artesians, but Coach Stockoff remarked that the boys showed a great deal of hustle and desire against their larger opponent.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

W.

L.

Pet.

GB

xMinnesota ..

99

58

.631

Baltimore ....

90

64

.584

7%

Chicago

91

66

.580

8

Detroit

86

71

.548

13

Cleveland ....

83

73

.532 15 1 2

New' York ....

75

83

.475 24 >4

California ....

73

85

.462

26’ 2

Washington ..

67

89

.429 31^

Boston

61

97

.386 3812

Kansas City ..

58

97

.374

40

NATIONAL LEAGUE

W.

L.

Pet.

GB

Los Angeles ..

91

64

.587

San Francisco

91

64

.587

Cincinnati ....

88

67

.568

3

Pittsburgh ....

86

71

.548

6

Milwaukee ....

83

72

.535

8

Philadelphia ..

81

74

.523

10

St. Louis

75

79

.487 15ii

Chicago

70

86

.449 2114

Houston

63

92

.406

28

Francisco with a 1-0 victory over St. Louis while the Giants bowed 3-2 to Milwaukee, the

The Minnesota Twins, who ; Phillies defeated the Mets 5-4. ^ Ist half fumbles, including two bulldozed their wav through the Pittsburgh dropped Chicago 5-3 ^ ollz hobbled f or unchap-

T ‘4. 4. , „ v. 4. teroned gains, all were recovered American League to their first and Cincinnati lost a chance to . , ®

bv the Timers

pennant, were sparked all along gain on the leaders by losing 4- *

the route by a guy who was , 2 to Houston. * r ° r a "bile it looked as if fined S300 in spring training for Versalles tripled in the fifth , ^ on t bad installed a new Fumnot hustling. inning and scored the Twins’ ble Series - Coo P er ke Pt the first The exonerated loafer is first run on a passed ball. The touchdown thrust going by fallZoilo Versalles, the Twins’ winning run w^as scored foy > n g on the Loitz-less ball at the Havanabom shortstop who Frank Quilici who led off the; Joe Then opposite end leads the league in two depart- eighth inning with a double Dick Walker saved it again on ments and is tied for the lead in went to third on a wild pitch the next P ,a ^ "'ben Lortz artwo others. and scored on Versalles’ sacri- rived within two feet of the Verscalles scored one run and fice fly. end zone without the bal1 ' Eb ' drove in the other Sunday to Jim Kaat struck out 10 bat- erle played it; strai 8 h t on his

put the Twins into the World ters and walked none in posting; 0116 .' arc * di\e.

Series with a 2-1 victory over his 17th victory against 11 de-1 Tom Millers booming kickoff

the Washington Senators. The Chicago White

starting the second half chased

j feats.

Sox Versalles’ 124 runs scored ^ on Budde back into the end

pounded the corpse of the New and 300 total bases top the zone - Budde finally corralled it York Yankees again 5-3, the league, his 44 doubles tie him anc * cu ^ ^b® stiff breeze Baltimore Orioles rallied in the with Boston’s Carl Yastrzemski blow ing at him from the south, ninth to beat the California and his 12 tripples deadlock was greeted a t the 25 by Angels 2-1, Kansas City edged him with Kansas City’s Bert a S' an S Tiger tacklers. DeBoston 2-1 and Cleveland pound- Campaneris. The Twins’ spark- Pauvv junior Ed Nicklaus was

plug has 18 home runs and 73 on to P the ba ^ an( * Bu dde runs batted in wiiile batting "ben they unstacked. Lortz imleadoff. Not bad for a man w^ho mediatelv knifed through the

center of the heavy St. Joe line for seven, and Hargrove bar-

ed Detroit 7-1, after the Tigers took the first game 2-1 in other American League games.

21.

The Boilermakers were one of four winners over inter-sec-tional rivals. Illinois defeated Southern Methodist, 42-0, Iowa beat Oregon State. 27-7, and Michigan State blanked Penn

State, 23-0.

Also on the conference’s plus side w-as Michigan's 10-7 deci-

sion over California.

4. . SEATTLE UPI— The $6,600

Then there was Ohio State.

which w f as surprised bv North (hetk for "i nnin 8 tbe Greater Carolina. 14-3, Wisconsin's 26- Seattle °P en Golf tournament; 6 loss to Southern California. was most "' elcome - and 11 was and Minnesota’s 14-13 defeat a11 the sweeter to Gay Bre ' ver by Washington State. Jr ’ because he has a good me ‘

mory.

Purdue’s Bob Griese emerged, _ u-

' Besides winning his first tour-

as the weekends hero. Griese, 1 4+ ■ , , , a , ’ ney since 1963. Sunday s tnwho once hoped to play for , . , „ -u ^ \ . 4 umph in a playoff wuth Doug

Notre Dame, did the next best Sanders atoned for R near miss thing. He completed 19 of 22 ihere . nl961whenthetourney ended in a playoff and Brewer

w’asn't in it.

‘T w r ent into the final round leading, shot a 69 and^ four guys passed me,’’ said Brewer, 33. savoring victory and remem-

bering defeat.

He could do no better than equal par 37-35-72 on the Inglewood course Sunday. Brewer and Sanders, 32. Ojai, Calif., playing in the same threesome. each birdied the 18th hole to wind up at 279. Sanders bogied the first hole of the playoff and picked up $3,800 for second place, giving him $67,532 in winnings for the year and leaving him within $125 of this year’s fifth place money winner, Bruce Devlin, who didn't play in this year's Seattle Open. Brewer’s check boosted his earnings past the

$18,000 mark.

In the National League the has no one on base the Los Angeles Dodgers moved time he comes to the plate every

into a first place tie with San; day.

New York .. 49 108 .312 43

Broncos Win

Football Scorebtmrd INDIANA FOOTBALL

College

Purdue 25, Notre Dame 21 Northwestern 20, Indiana 0 Anderson 21, Hanover 12 Taylor 7, Manchester 7 (tie) Ball State 14, Valparaiso 6 Buter 27, Indiana State 7 DePamv 37, St. Joseph's 13 Rose Poly 13, Indiana Central

Phil Clark, the Artsian's agile quarterback, led the attack for the Martinsville squad by scoring three times, once on a pass 6 interception play in the last

quarter.

Evansville 14

The rallying Cubs will travel souri 6

to Cascade tonight where they Georgetown 27, Franklin 6 will encounter the hot Cadets Washington of St. Louis 17,

at 6:30. Wabash 7

Earlham 25, Kenyon 0 Evansville 14, Kenyon 0

By United Presi International The Denver Broncos posted their first victory of the young American Football League season Friday night, grinding out 27-10 victory over the winless

Boston Patriots.

John McCormick, the Broncos young field general, engineered the revival of Denver's effective running attack, which was highlighted by a third quarter, length-of-the- j gridiron march which consumed I 10 minutes of playing time and punctured Boston hopes of an !

Eastern Division title.

All six other AFL teams face action Sunday. Twice- ]

Southeast Mis- beaten New York takes on the

potene Buwrwalo Bills, undefeated Houston visits Oakland and Kansas City is at San ; Diego. '

HEALTH CAPSULES In Michael A. Petti, M.D.

AT W’HAT AGE ARE YOU MOST LIKELY To p£VELOP GLAUCOMA ? C ( >JP

GLAUCOMA USUALLY BEGINS TO APPEAR IN YOUR F0RTIE4, WHICH l* ABOUT THE TIME * YOU GO TO YOUR EVE' POCToR FOR REAPING GLA££££. TOMORROW: LOSING HEIGHT. Health Capsule! gives helpful informaHort. • It is not intended to bo of * diagnostic notur*

MOVING TO OUR NEW HOME ON INDIANAPOLIS ROAD CLOSED WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY September 29, 30, October 1st OPEN roit NISMESS SATURDAY, OCTODEK 2 JIM HARRIS CHEV.-BUICK

INDIANAPOLIS ROAD

relied for three more to the 15. On the next play Lortz handed off to Hargrove w r ho scored. Feemster helped open the gap to 21-13 just 120 shocking seconds inside the third quarter. DePauw appeared to grow more alert, eager and aggressive as the game unfolded. That was bad for the Pumas, for they were fated to give away the football five more times in the seven last half chances they had. Defensive end Dan Hasbrook helped set up his team's fourth touchdown midway in the third quarter after another St. Joe fumble ended a threat at the Tiger 24. Hasbrook got the recovery. Content to tune up its running game, DePauw worked the ball in five plays to its owm 48. Lortz promptly zipped through the two lines, danced leftward across the field, and outraced a trio of purple shirts 52 yards to lift the score to 27-13. Feemster converted. The Pumas found a new way to be the perfect hosts on the very next series. Sophomore Zric Robertson intercepted St. Puma 37 and raced it 20 yards back down field. Six plays later Hargrove was in for another touchdown. Feemster's illegal motion, however, wiped out Hargrove’s score, putting the ball back on the sixth with a fourth down and goal situation. F eemster atoned somewdiat by kicking a 23-yard field goal j that widened the score to 31-13 ; with 60 seconds left in the third period. A pair of traded punts eased the battle uneventfully into the | final quarter. St. Joe opened the new period with a fresh quarterback, A1 Bucina. He an- ' nounced his arrival in a very unoriginal way, however, passing toward the eager hands of Tiger linebacker John Douglass at the 50. The Chicago sophomore glee- ! fully snatched the ball and pounded down to the Puma 32. Dan Breckenridge then threw to Feemster for a first dowm at the seven. Halfback Tom Miller aided the sophomore operation by going to the four. Hargrove polished it off by banging in | from the four for his second touchdow-n. Feemster’s fifth boot was slightly off to the right, but DePauw was comfortably ahead by now, 37-13 with 9:47 remaining. DePauw entertains Valparaiso here Saturday at 2:15 p.m. in , an Old Gold Day struggle.

May be Greatest Pitchers Ever

By Fred Down

Whether the Los Angeles Dodgers win or lose the National League pennant, Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax rate a secure niche among the greattest pitching combination in

baseball victory.

With 46 victories between them, the Dodger fireballers have won more games than any other two-man N. L. combination since Sal Maglie and Larry Jansen in 1951 and are virtually certain to be the biggest-win-ning combination since Bucky Walters and Paul Derringer j w'on 52 games for the 1939 Cin-

! cinnati Reds.

|

What’s even more important, however, Is that they are de- ^ livering at their peaks in the drive that his carried the Dodgers back into a frist-place tie with the San Francisco | Giants. Since Sept. 16 wdien the Dodgers started their current nine-game winning streak, Drysdale has allowed a total of three runs in three victories and I Koufax has pitched two shutouts and been involved in no-

decision start.

The Dodgers stars were never better than during the past weekend with Koufax fired a 2-0 five-hitter at the St. Louis Cardinals Saturday night and Drysdale hurled a 1-0 five-hitter against the Redbirds on Sunday. Drysdale’ victory ^ vaulted the Dodgers into a fristplace tie when the Milwaukee Braves downed the Giants 3-2. The Cincinnati Reds remained three games out of first place when they lost to the Houston

Astros 4-2.

High School Football Evansville Harrison 12 Evansville Reitz 12 Indianapolis Manual 14 Indianapolis Cathedral 7 East Chicago Roosevelt 14 Hammond 0 Richmond 21 New' Castle 7 Anderson 6 Lafayette 6 (tie) Evansville Central 30 Vincennes 13 Honey Creek 13 Veedersburg 0 Danville 14 Rockville 0 Clinton 26 West Vigo 7 Terre Haute Garfield 19 Greencastle 0 Sullivan 19 Brazil • Terre Haute Gerstmeyer 38 Terre Haute Schulte 13 Chesterton 18 Crown Point IS Huntingburg 26 Springs Valley 19 Crawfordsville 7 West Lafeyette 6 Goshen 20 Mishawaka 0 Greenwood 13 Center Grove 8 Decatur Central 38 Brownsburg 7 Greenfield 55 Centerville 0

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