The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 October 1965 — Page 7

Vigo in Homecoming

Th« Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Thursday, October 7, 1965

Tiger Cubs will Host Grant Wins for Twins; „ „ __ # __ ^ _ Ruffed Grouse Legal Game Koufax-Kaat Go Today First Time To Ind. Hunters

By Frank Puckett, Jr. Sports Editor

<irecrtca>tle

Hirt ... See ......... Hill Lancaster Huber Elliott

Dunn RE Brackney QB

Starting Line-ups

West Vigo

LE Ward .......... LT Whitsell LG Quinn C W'ilson RG Russell RT Davison

Cox Harris

Churchill LH

Farber Monnett

Favre

FB McCauster RH Graham

BLOOMINGTON, Minn UPI— a second-inning homer by first i sota s kid second baseman ; That made it 4-1 for the . p or ^ fj rs t ti me j n a q l]ar _ Minnesota's fired-up Twins baseman Don Mincher. i found himself in the record i Twins and Drysdale disgustedly I ter of a century Indiana huntmade a mockery of the Los Right-hander Jim Grant, the i book. | hurled the resinbag to the ers have an opportunity to Angeles Dodgers’ supposed su- Twins 21-game winner during, Quilici, who managed only; ground but he wasn’t out of h unt ruffed grouse. The first perior pitching yesterday by the regular season, also was a feeble .208 average for the j it yet. 1 0 f jtg hind in 28 years the seapounding out an 8-2 opening touched for 10 hits, including j Twins this year after they! Sandy Valdespino, the sec- son ^-jll open on November 10th. game World Series victory that] a second-inning homer by Ron! called him up from the minors ond rookie in Mele’s starting runn i n g thru November 24th in was chiefly engineered by Zoilo | Fairly, but that was the only in mid-summer, actually was lineup, followed with a brisk six southern Indiana counties Versalles, an impish little 158- extra base blow he allowed fooled by a Drysdale change- 330-foot double off the right # Morgan, Brown, Bartholopound blockbuster. and he was especially effective up leading off the third, but still j field wall, which brought Man- j Monroe. Jackson, and

ager Walt Alston from the Dodger dugout on the double. He talked with Don Drysdale and his catcher, John Roseboro.

After an illustrious first win during two seasons of slated grid-iron action the rallying Greencastle Tiger Cubs will vie against old rival West Vigo tomorrow night on the home battle

front.

Last year the hard-luck pig- reluctantly gave away last skinners pleaded for mercy year. when tht West Vigo host plow- Losing the first four encouned through their defensive lines ters t>f the pigskin season on for four touchdowns in four hard luck plays, the determined

and he was especially effective

Versalles, the grinning, 24- * n the clutch. 1 got his bat around on the ball year-old Cuban shortstop who For Drysdale, it was the first and drilled it between third was fined $300 by Minnesota World Series defeat of his ca- baseman Jim Gilliam and the Manager Sam Mele for his reer after two victories. Before bag for two bases.

Grant attempted to sacrifice Quilici to third and bunted the ball a few feet in front of the plate. The six-foot-six Drysdale charged in for the ball like a runaway locomotive, but slipped

“lackadaisical play” this past lie departed, the Twins had

! spring, settled matters early i shelled him for seven hits and j by crashing a 356-foot three- of their runs in 2 2 s innings, run homer into the left field Before yesterday's game beseats during a six-run third gan, with Vice President Huinning and later singled home bert Humphrey tossing out the

contest first ball, favored to

the Dodgers were on the grass and tried to throw take the series at out the Twins’ pitcher from a

quarters plus two extra point boots to hand the Cubs a sound 26-0 loss and their sixth straight defeat of the discouraging season.

Cubs engaged in a little play

his fourth run of the

in the sixth.

A record Metropolitan Stadium tux-nout of 47,797. solidly and loudly behind the Twins in their first World Series ever,

saw their heroes pummel Don The Twins roughed up Drys- i Grant out, then changed the deDrysdale and three Dodger re- dale during the third inning in ; cision to safe when the rookie

7 to 5. They w r ere made favorites chiefly on their pitching and their speed, but they show-

, ed none of either.

sitting position.

Don’s peg to Jim Lefebvre covering first w’as in time and umpire Tony Venzon called

switching tactics and belted the

Plainfield Quakers 12-6 last i second-inning

week.

Besides changing tactics the

lievers for 10 hits, including a a marmer no other National

homer by first! League club was able to all this baseman Don Mincher. season.

Dodger second baseman bled the ball for an error.

bob-

Coach Jerry Chance and his Cubs fired up Tiger Cubs say this year things are going to be the same except for one small

also switched quarter--backs. Seasoned QB Mont has experienced difficulty all season | and last Friday night was no; minor detail. The 26 points are exception, so mentor Jerry ; going to belong to the Cubs! Chance slipped hopeful Darrell Brackney into the coveted spot. Chance and his constituents Brackney took charge of the have more than speculation on scorelesB encounter like an un _ their side when they boast this derstudy of John Unitas prediction. The xisiting West V ig 0 team The Cubs haven't been beat- needs no introduction to the lo-

Right-hander Jim Grant, the Twins 21-game winner during the regular season, also was touched for 10 hits, including

Rookie Frank Quilici started the fireworks with a double inside the third base line and before the inning w r as over Minne-

Quilici took third on the play and then both he and Grant loped across the plate on Versalles’ three-run wallop into the seats.

en by any spectacular scores this year as was the case last year. They have held their opponents to a little less than nine yards per game compared to about twenty-five yards they

cal fans because of their far better victory record than the Cubs. Game time for the Tiger Cub homecoming is slated for 8:00 on the Greencastle field.

Cross Country Runners Win Three Way Meet

Greencastle’s Cross Country team, running for the second week without their leading three runners, made their team! balance etand up for victories over Plainfield and Roachdale. Jim Shonkwller ran the best race of his career as he led the pack In with a fast 10:49 time. Hill of Roachdale was second and Stockton and Hughey of j Plainfield were third and fourth. Greencastle swept the next four places to clinch the vie-« tory,. with rapidly improving John New placing fifth. Greencastle's next home meet is the Triangle Invitational Saturday at 10:00 a. m. McCracken's top runner, Mike j Blose. will be the honorary | starter of the meet. Blose is suffering from an injury he

received about two weeks ago. The Plainfield, Roachdale results follow: 1. Shonkwiler G 2. Hill R 3. Stockton P 4. Hughey P 5. New G 6. Dowty G 7. Barrett G 8. Surber G 9. Shore P 10. Lang G 11. Snodgrass R 12. Smith G 13. Kiger G 14. Kelly P 15. Jones P 16. McColough R 17. Fisher P 18. Stewart R 19. Parker R Final results: Greencastle 27; Plainfield 41, Roachdale 64.

MINNESOTA POWER—The Minnesota Twins bank heavily on these hitters in the World Series. From left, in Minneapolis: Hannon Killebrew, Tony Oliva, Zoilo Versalles.

decided against making a change and allowed his No. 1 right-hander to continue. Drysdale got Tony Oliva on a routine infield grounder but Harmon Killebmv sent a shot past short which moved Valdespino to third and, after Jimmie Hall struck out, the bases were filled on a w T alk to Mincher, who had belted his 382-foot homer into the right field bleachers an ining earlier. Two more Minnesota runs charged across when Earl Battey looped a Texas League single over Lefebvre’s head and Quilici, up for the second tim* in the inning, finished Drysdale and tied a World Series record for two hits in one inning by singling Mincher home.

quail, pheasant, Hungarian partridge and rabbit will b# zoned. Indiana's long northsouth length, with its diverse weather conditions, makes this zoning necessary in order to offer hunters in both sections of the state equal hunting opportunity during the most favorable weather conditions, and

Lawrence . . . with a daily bag yet stay within the established limit of two and possession S season lengths, limit of four. The dividing line of the north This year, the hunting of 1 and south zones is U. S. 40 east 1 of Indianapolis, and U. S. 36

vest of Indianapolis. The sea-

Halfback Du6l ;ons for Q uaiI - rabbit ’ Hungar-

ian partridge, and pheasant will

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. UPI— ; begin at 9:00 A. M. on the first Coach Johnny Pont gave left day, based upon the time obhalfbapk Reggie Woods an even served in the area that is being chance Wednesday of rooting hunted, and extend from sunout veteran John Ginter for a rise to sunset each day there-

starting assignment against after.

Minnesota Saturday.

“It isn’t that John hasn’t been playing well,” Pont said. “Raggis has been improving

with each game.”

Injured Hoosiers were back

Grouse: November 10th-24th— Morgan, Brown, Bartholomew, Monroe, Jackson, and Lawrence Counties. Daily bag limit two, possession limit

four.

at scrimmage duty except de- Rabbit: North Zone—November

MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL, Minn. UPI—Box score of the first game of the 1965 World

Series:

Los Angeles AB R

Wills, ss Gilliam, 3b .. W T . Davis, c .. Fairly, rf Johnson, If .. Lefebvre, 2b Parker, lb .... Roseboro, c .. Drysdale, p .. Crawford, ph Moon, ph LeJohn. ph .... Totals ....

Minnesota AB Versalles, ss 5 Valdespino, If 4 Oliva, rf 4 Killebrew, 3b 3 Hall, cf 3 Mincher, lb .. 3 Battey, c 4 Quilici, 2b .... 4 Grant, p 3

Totals .... 33 Los Angeles

H

2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0

10 H

2 1 0 1 1 1 1 2 1

10

4 7 3 1 3 5 1 0

27 010 000 001-

o

3 0 2 2 4 0 7 6 0 0 0 0

24

fensive end plaeekicker John Heaton and defensive guard John Jones, neither of whom will go to Minnesota. On the other hand, Dick Haneline, a linebacker with a broken finger that kept him out of the first three games, was reported ready to play. Pont said the Minnesota defense is “outstanding.” “Where Texas moved, this club just beats you to death,” he said as he sent the Hoosiers scrimaging against Gopher formations.

O A 3 2

Minnesota 016 001 OOx—8

DePauw Retooling for Aces After Second-Half Loss to Valparaiso

Anderson Player Leads Scoring

INDIANAPOLIS UPI —Anderson's Mike Mundy with 36 points is the new Indiana college football scoring leader. The 5-8 senior fullback has scored twice in each of the Ravens’ first three games to open up a 10-point lead over his closest rivals for the 1965 state college individual scoring crown.

FOR FALL EXPENSES Get It Promptly and Courteously *25 »*1000 At .. . Local Finance SEE "OK" JOYCE Open evenings By Appointment 1 WEST HANKLIN GREENCASTLE Ol 3-3113

Dick Dullaghan of Butler and Jim Todd of Ball State were tied for second place with 26 points each. Dullaghan. the first - week leader, was kept out of the St. Joseph’s game last Saturday because of Injuries while Todd scored 14 points in Ball State’s 42-13 triumph over previously un-

beaten Evansville.

The rest of the top scorers remained closely bunched. Chuck Dennison of Butler, who failed to score against St. Joe. and Evansville’s Alan Per were tied for fourth place with

24 points each.

Bill Wolski of Notre Dame was next with 20. followed by; Notre Dame kicking specialist ! Ken Ivan and Tim Fee ms ter of DePauw with 19 points apiece. Ivan has booted 4 field goals and 7 conversions while Feemster has 1 touchdown to his * credit along with 1 field goal and 10 conversions.

"T!iings went haywire in the last half,” DePauw coach Tom iMont concluded today after [ spending the last three days doing a mental play-by-play of Saturday’s 29-21 nosedive : against Valparaiso. In that disheatrening homecoming game the Tigers racked up a 21-0 lead on a 32-yard drive, a blocked punt and a fumble recovery all in four minutes, late in the second

quarter.

When the second half opened the big fat margin went boom and eventually so did the Tigers’ happy 2-0 record. This week Doc Mont is conducting a postmortem on the patient, hoping it'll be sufficiently recovered for Saturday’s 8 p.m. Dad's Day night game at Evansville. -■“As I analyze it,” Mont un-

burdened, “three things happened out there in that second half. Our general inexperience hurt us, our defense was shakey, and we got ‘down’ psy- | chologically.” Mont was most depressed by his defense. The linebackers, with an equal mixture of retrained lettermen and sophomores, couldn’t stop sophomore Jon Dimitri from hitting six of 10 in the final 30 minutes for 100 yards. One went for a TD and the others all figured in Vaplo's two early second half drives that put the Crusaders ahead 22-21. j “We played a good ball game out there on defense from tackle to tackle. They pulled some draw plays on us, but we expected that with a four-man line. They went off the corner

and over the top. They ran our own offense right into us. Our backs and linebackers became so pass conscious that they were leaving a heck of an area

to operate in.”

Valpo finished with 245 yards total offense—159 by passing and 86 by rushing. DePauw held the winner to minus three yards rushing in the first half. If there was a turning point, Mont felt it was when Valpo end Bert Bleke raced 79 yards with a kickoff just after DePauw had gone ahead, 21-0. “Psychologically after we got those 21 points we had a letdown; you'd think after they just got 21 points, they’d go after 21 more.” But it didn’t happen that way. “Everyone was waiting for someone else to

grab Bleke.”

Heads of Royalty at Work

Lebovich Named President of SWAA

MADRID UPI — The captains and the kings, the princes and the commoners, all came together today to try and sort out the problems of the inter-

land; Prince Gholam Reza Pahlevi of Iran; the Grand Duke Jean of Luxembourg and the Prince Regent FrancoisJoseph de Luzembourg; Con-

national Olympic movement in; stantin Andrianov of Prussia; their own amateurish way. j Major Silvio Magalhaes Padil-

ha of Brazil and plain Mr.

1200

They are trying to succeed John . Jewitt Garland of

where the

at the United,

pros a... —- j W- M Garland Building, 117

MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUI Xations usually fail in attem P t - West Ninth Street, Los An-

ing to keep all their members I friendly but not necessarily

united.

geles, Calif.

Re instate High School Players

DPI — Hal Lebovitz, sports editor of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, has been named pres-

ident of the Baseball Writers' Sitting around the table as Association of America. the 63rd session of the IntemaBob Addie of the Washing- tional Olympic Committee got ton Post was named the new; down to business were men vice president and Hy Hur-, like King Constantine of | witz of the Boston Globe re- Greece, a yachting gold medal,

elected secretary-treasurer. j winner; Avery Brundage, the i RICHMOND UPI — Eight Outgoing president Joe Me- 7S-year-old much-maligned mil-! Richmond High School stuGuff of the Kansas City Star lionaire president of the IOC dents, seven of them members was named to join the board of who considers the word profes-; of the football team, have been directors along with Jack sional almost obscene; Britain's j reinstated following an investiLang. Long Island Press; Cliff. Marquess of Eexeter; Gen. gation of a drinking incident. Kachline of the Sporting News Jose de Clark of Mexico; | Principal Dr. Robert Medand Bob Stevens of the San Prince Alexander de Merode of calf said the eight were Francisco Chronicle. | Belgium; Lord Killanin of Ire-1 “cleared completely,” but four

other students, including one football and one basketball player, were still under suspension for extracurricular activities pending further investiga-

tion.

The initial suspensions were announced last Thursday, just 24 hours before Richmond’s football game with Anderson, which the latter won, 16-0. For Friday night’s game with Dayton Chaminade, the Red Devils were expected to be near full strength. Reinstated were tackles Dale Gerkin and Bob Waters, guard Jim Gwin, center Bill Spring, halfback Tom Bever, defensive end Louns Caldwell, reserve quarterback John Williams and student manager Mark Skin-

ner.

Medcalf met with the players and coaching staff Monday and announced their reinstatement. He said the boys “simply made a mistake and now they've paid their penalty.”

Mont said he thought Bleke’s dash “gave them tremendous life’’ and that going to the dressing room down just two touchdowns instead of a complete whitewash made a big difference. “When Valpo came out in the second half and w-ent for a TD the first time it got the ball I think our confidence began to ebb. Then they got another the very next time and we began to panic,” he said. By the time DePauw regaini ed its composure, which it’s held pretty well with a squad 54 per cent sophomore, it was too late. Eric Lortz’ fumble on the Valpo 17 early in the fourth period squelched a possible score when DePauw trailed 22-

21.

And another one on the VU 21 with 105 seconds left kept the Tigers from a possible tie after Dimitri had winged one in to make it 29-21. DePauw- did come out of the game in good physical shape. Only the pride suffered abrasions. And. of course, the best early season record in 13 years broke. Chuck Byrum, starting right half with a bad knee, w-on’t play much at Evansville. His spot may go to sophomore Tom Miller who has averaged 4.2 in five carries. Safetymen John Butler and Bill Lehman also are scheduled for a crack at the job. As for Evansville, DePauw remembers last year’s 35-6 scorching. It knows, too, the Aces are also trying to reconstruct from last week's 42-13 affair at Ball State. “Evansville is pretty much as last year, (ouch),” Mont says. “Alan Per is one of the really good halfbacks in the conference, right behind Jim Todd. He’s a good runner. And like us, they are trying to go with a sophomore quarterback in iJoe Loge.”

Bellamy Signs BALTIMORE UPI — Walt Bellamy, Baltimore’s 6-11 center, came to terms with the bullets and planned to join the National Basketball Association Club in time for its exhibition clash with the Boston Celtics at Raleigh, N. C. Wednesday night. Bellamy, top scorer for Baltimer last season with a 24.8 average, w^as a major holdout before signing his 1965 contract for a figure believed to be higher than his 1964 salary of $30,000. He starred at Indiana University before his pro career.

10th-January 10th. South Zone—November 20thJanuary 10th. Daily bag limit five, possession limit ten. Pheasant: North Zone—November lOth-December 11th. South Zone—November 20thDecember 21st. Daily bag lisait tw-o, possession limit four. No open season in Clinton, Johnson, Shelby, Vigo and Tipton counties. Quail: North Zone—November lOth-December 20th. South Zone—November 20thDecember 31st. Daily bag limit ten, possession limit twenty after the first day. and thirty after the second day. Hungarian Partridge: North Zone—November lOth-Decem-ber 20th. South Zone—November 20thDecember 20th. Daily bag limit 5, possession limit 10. On the following State Fish and Game areas, the rabbit season will extend thru January 31st: Willow Slough. TriCounty, Pigeon River and Glen-

dale.

Bowling News By Cozy Lear Since six weeks of the 1965166 Bowling Season are past, I we have had some very good scores rolled at Varsity Lanes by the women bowlers. As you | saw in this paper, Pat Huxford j with the actual 608 series and others who have bowled in the 600 series with handicap. Some of the women bowlers bowled in summer leagues, which lasted eight weeks, but many of them will tell you they haven’t lifted a bowling ball since the season ended in May. So the summer vacation from bowling hasn’t hindered the women bowlers in this vicinity. Bantam and Junior bowling has begun at Varsity Lanes for boys and girls, ages 6 to 18. The Bantam group bowls at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday and the junior group bowls at 11:00 p.m. on Saturday. These youngsters w r ho bowl in the Bantam League will warm your heart to watch them bowl. They have enthusiasm plus when they roll that ball down the lanes. Some of them, you would think, could hardly lift the ball, but go down and watch them sometime. They get the pins down as well as the older bowlers and the excitement of these young bowlers is hilarious. In case you bowlers watched Championship Bowlers on TV last Sunday between Pat Patterson and Don Carter, you will agree we have some bowlers here who could give them a good test at bowling. They finished in the 500 bracket. I think Patterson’s series was 589 and Don Carter’s was 546. That’s professional bowling by the pros of the sport. As w'e all know they can bowl better but the ball just didn’t w r ork. Haven’t you had times like that? Don’t we all? Just keep

AJBC Bowlers

W. L.

Chet’s Fireballs 3 Joe Ellis Heating 3 Dairy Queen 3 i Nunzio’s 3 1 Add-A-Curl Beauty Shop 3 j Waffle House 2 Clearwater’s Mkt. 1 U-Shop 1 Moore’s Shoes 1 Pepsi Cola 1 High Team—2 games Waffle House—1125 Clearwater's Mkt.—1112 Chet’s Fireballs—1111 j High Team Game U-Shop-602 Add-A-Curl—587 Joe Ellis Heating—583 High Ind.—2 games Scott Orlosky—280 Brent Baker—277 Mike Orlosky—270 High Ind. Game Brent Baker—156 Scott Orlosky—150 Steve Gofer—140

HEALTH CAPSULES bv Michael A. Pelti. M.D.

IF youVe NEVER MAP RMEUMATiC FEVTR, WMAT ARF YOUR CHANCE* OF GETTING IT A* AN APULT 7

RHEUMATIC FEVER I* QUITE RARE AFTER AGE 26 IF YOU HAVEN'T MAP IT BEFORE. Tomorrow; mepicine. Health Capsules gives helpful information * f iis not mttndodto b«of 4 w»f tc n«rwr«.