The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 October 1966 — Page 4

The Daily Banner, Greeneastlc, Indiana

Monday, October 3, 1966

DePouw Tigers Upset Valpo Gridders, 31-15

A hotly protested maneuver that might have helped Valparaiso save the day, backfired instead Saturday and ignited DePauw for a major ICC upset, 31-15. The road victory cut DePauw’s winless streak at nine and set the stage for next Saturday’s Old Gold Day bout here with Evansville. The Aces had their own ICC stunner, tying heavily favored Ball State, 21-21. In a nearly perfect game, DePauw’s fluid drive mixed superb running and passing by at least five backs with a demonic defense that set up 17 Tiger points and stopped Valpo outside the Tiger 46 eight times out of 10. Valpo Coach Emory Bauer may have wished his now 1-2 club had been shiftless too, for what appeared to be a big break for the hosts misfired and provided what DePauw Coach Tom Mont in post-game ceremony called “the turning point.” This was the situation. DePauw had a 17-7 edge with 3:33 left in the third quarter. Valpo was at the Tiger 16, third and short yardage. Before the ball was snapped to quarterback Jon Dimitri the Valpo line shifted quickly. DePauw advanced on the movement, made contact and was whistled for a fiveyard penalty. Despite loud and long protestations by the Tigers, the officials placed the ball on the DePauw 11 and awarded Valpo a first down. It was ideal territory for a TD. Mont, whose teams have been drawn into the same situation by Butler, said he not only considers the shift illegal—which is enough—but also unethical. His

claim is that “it” is not a part of the opponent’s regular offense and therefore only a play to draw a penalty when short yardage is needed in a critical spot. But the officials persisted. As it turned out it didn’t matter, for at this point the embittered DePauw defense smeared the Crusaders all over their shields. On the play immediately following the penalty Dimitri w r as spilled back to the 15 by three Tigers. On the next play right end Bruce Montgomerie spilled him back to the 27. And then again on the 34 and—finally on fourth down—again on the Valparaiso 45. On Montgomerie’s final effort it appeared he brought Dimitri down by literally throwing a Crusader protector into Dimitri, bowling him over 11 yards behind the scrimmage line. Dimitri, who had lost only 30 yards rushing all season and led his team in rushing yardage, finished the day with minus 16 yards rushing in 16 carries. Te DePauw defense overall tossed the Crusaders for more yards loss (63) than they had net gain rushing (62). DePauw’s offensive unit wasn’t able to capitalize, however, on the defensive gems of Montgomerie and his teammates, so Lortz punted to the Valpo 20 just seconds inside the last quarter. On the very next play, however, Dimitri attempted to penetrate the defensive line and fumbled. Left end Dan Hasbrook was there this time and recovered for DePauw on the 13. Lortz ran it to the 10, workhorse Tony Whittlesey who had 23 carries at fullback during the day for 76 big yards, adds

Koufax Wins Deciding Game For Los Angeles

PHILADELPHIA UPI — Sandy Koufax said his arm didn’t hurt Sunday. That meant he only felt the dull ache that accompanies every pitch he throws with his amazing, arthritic left arm that is permanently bent out of shape. But it was nothing like the ache felt by the San Francisco Giants, who had the door slammed on their pennant

Tigers Look to Good Net Season

DePauw University could floor one of its best basketball teams in the last decade here this winter. Furthermore, to match that anticipated spectator enjoyment will be added spectator comfort due primarily to some new internal improvements in 50-year-old Bowman Gymnasium. When DePauw opens at home against Wabash Dec. 7 gymnasium crews will haul out 1,900

hopes by Koufax-wl\o is unbeatable most of the time but particularly in the clutch. San Francisco’s 7-3, 11-inning victory over Pittsburgh and the Los Angeles Dodgers’ 4-3 loss to Philadelphia in the first game of the doubleheader Sunday kept the Giant flickering pennant hopes alive. A Dodger loss in the second game would have meant the Giants would have gone to .Cincinnati Monday for a makeup game and a victory there would have caused a playoff. But Koufax ended everything with a 6-3, seven-hit second game triumph over the Phils boosted his record to 27-9 and gave the Dodgers their third pennant in the past four seasons. Remember, the Dodgers used to be the team noted for blowing the pennant on the last day of the season. Ironically, it’ll be 15 years Monday to the day-Oct. 3, 1951 -when Bobby Thomson hit his historic homer to seal a pennant from the Dodgers for the Giants. The Dodgers also lost on the last day in 1950 and 1962. Koufax, who got a cham-

one more, and then Dan Breckenridge hit Tom Miller for six yards for a first down at the three. Whittlesey took over here and in two dives had DePauw up, 23-7. Tim Feemster added the third of his four successful place kicks. Valparaiso, on its own 25 after the kickoff, was desperate now so Dimitri took to the air. He misfired twice, was nailed for a 10 yard loss and finally yielded to a punt that DePauw took on the Valpo 39. Two five yard gainers by Lortz and Breckenridge put the ball at the 29 and Whittlesey added another down the middle. John Sacramento, getting his first offensive test of the day, took a hand off on the next play and darted around the Crusaders’ right side for a 28-yard TD gallop. Valparaiso got its final score on the following series. With Dimitri throwing nine times, the Crusaders went 60 yards in three minutes. The clincher was a fourth and 10 heave to halfback Tom Dohrmann for 27 yards. Dimitri made it 31-15 by tossing a two-point conversion pass to tackle Steve Steele. A fumble recovery by safetyman Tom Boese on the very first play of the game helped DePauw set up its first points. Boese fell on Hal Semrock’s bobble on the 23. Mixing a pair of passes and three runs at the line, the Tigers worked down to the Valpo five where they faced a fourth and four decision. Mont elected to go for a field goal and Feemster booted a perfect strike from the 12-yard line with the game just 2:46 old. DePauw threatened again on the very next series after forcing Valpo to punt to the DePauw 34. Helped by a roughing the kicker penalty on Valpo at its own 40 when it appeared the Tigers were finished, DePauw kept the ball and moved to the Crusader two before running out of steam. Dimitri, trying to run out of the hole on the next play, fumbled and Feemster recovered at the three. On the second play Breckenridge kept the ball and scored. Feemster’s boot hade it, 10-0, with 25 seconds left in the first quarter. Valpo got its only first half points on an 84-yard drive. Dimitri hit his end Bert Bleke for a 15-yard TD pass with 74 seconds left in the first half. DePauw’s third quarter tally came on a 55-yard drive that was capped by Eric Lortz’ oneyard plunge into the endzone. Big plays in the drive, DePauw’s lognest of the year, were a 17-yard Lortz to Dick Walker pass and Lortz’ 12-yard sprint to the Valpo five. Score by quarters: DePauw 10 0 7 14 Valpo 0 7 0 8

Quarterbackers To Meet Wed. Greencastle Quarterback Clubbers, with a 4-1 high school mark to cheer about and a DePauw victory at Valparaiso to examine, will convene for a dessert smoker Wednesday evening in the Memorial Student Union Building. Kickoff time for the midseason huddle with Coaches Bob Bergman and Tom Mont is set for 7:00 upstairs in the Union. Reservations for the outing should be made by noon Wednesday with Mary Evelyn Goodhue at the Chamber of Commerce office (Phone OL 34517) or at the Union director’s office. Wednesday’s gathering of football boosters will be the last until a family dinner at the GHS cafeteria prior to the Greencastle-Brazil game. Both coaches expect to have game films to show to the Wednesday night meeters.

Valpo Cross Country Team Defeats DePauw Tigers

Valparaiso’s cross county runners nearly blitzed DePauw University Saturday, taking a 17-43 decision in upstate Indiana. The defending champions of the Indiana Collegiate Conference, the talented Crusaders snagged first through fourth in the meet and wrapped up their scoring by capturing seventh. DePauw, paced by Steve Norris’ fifth place time of 22:49,

Wheaton Soccer Team Wins, 11-0

WTheaton College’s soccer team got 33 shots at the goal Saturday in a tilt with DePauw and made 11. That kind of marksmanship plus the fact DePauw got 31 fewer shots and made none produced DePauw’s second soccer defeat of the season. The Tigers return home this coming weekend faced with tackling another established soccer power, Indiana University. The Hoosiers and Tigers will clash at Blackstock Staduim soccer field at 10 a. m., Oct. 8. No admission is charged for soccer events.

League Standings

NATIONAL LEAGUE FINAL STANDINGS W L Pel. GB Los Angeles 95 67 .586 San Francisco 93 68 .578 1V4 Pittsburgh 92 70 .568 3 Philadelphia 87 75 .537 8 Atlanta 85 77 .525 10 St. Louis 83 79 .512 12 Cincinnati 76 84 .475 18 Houston 72 90 .444 23 New York 66 85 .410 28V2 Chicago 59 103 .364 36 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 4-3. Los Angeles 3-6 San Francisco 7, Pittsburgh 3 (11

innings)

St. Louis 2, Chicago 0 Atlanta 4, Cincinnati 2 Houston 6-8, New York 1-2 AMERICAN LEAGUE FINAL STANDINGS

BOWLING NEWS PUTNAM COUNTY LEAGUE Sept. 29 W L Cash Concrete 34 14 Pepsi Cola 30 18 Dewey’s Barbers 28 20 Bob’s Body Shop 28 20 Hutchison’s Shell 26 22 Jenkin’s Standard .... 24 24 National Foods 23 25 Harper’s Trucking .... 22 26 Eiteljorge Barb. Shop 22 26 American Zinc 22 26 Puckett’s Citgo 22 26 Fentress Motors 22 26 Morrison Tire 17 31 Hampton’s Garage .... 16 32 Team high game: Bob’s Body Shop 1054. Team high series: Hampton Garage 3054. Ind. high game: Russ Chastine 241. Ind. high series: Ed Steinecker 581. Over 500: E. Steinecker 581, B. Dailey 572, J. Williams 528, J. Harper 544, W. Lydick 500, V. Elmore 562, M. Clifford 539, D. Greenlee 525, B. Pettit 517, D. Parker 510, C. Alex 506, V. Herriott 544, B. Taylor 524, J. Walker 518, J. Campbell 548, R. Murphy 512, R. Coons 539, B. Langdon 502, E. Bennington 518, F. Puckett 570, J. Kridler 510, C. Stites 518, R. Chastaine

570.

put Dan Spear in sixth, Dan Blaney in ninth, Jay Walker in eleventh, and Charles Arnold in twelfth. Valpo's Larry Christensen won the meet over the fourmile course in a time of 21:05. Roger Anderson, Dave Martin and Steve May finished 14, 32, and 38 seconds respectively behind teammate Christensen. The victory was Valparaiso’s 24th consecutive in dual competition. DePauw will host Butler and Indiana Central here Saturday at 11 a. m. A meet at Ball State is on the docket Wednes-

day.

OLYMPIC HISTORY ATHENS UPI—The Olympic Games were begun here in 776 B.C., abolished by Roman Emperor Theodosius I in 394 A.D., and revived in this city in 1896.

Paul Lowe, San Diego Charger halfback, set the American Football League season rushing record of 1,121 yards in 1965.

The average private golf club spends about $3,505 per year to maintain a single hole.

ELITE

DETROIT UPI—The Detroit Lions of the National Football League number 100 Big Ten Conference players on its team rosters over a 32-year period.

HOW IT’S DONE

NEW YORK UPI—Rapid calculation of parlay payoffs is accomplished by multiplying payoffs on the two successful horses, dividing by four and then multiplying by the num-

ber of dollars bet.

By FRANK WATSON Centred Press Sports Writer QUESTIONS 1— 'Who la Bob DevutBf f 2— The American League team baa lost the last throe World Series. True or false? S—Who Is Dave Hart? HOOSHEE? FORTY years ago, she per* formed a feat that is still re* membered. She waa the first woman to swim the Englisls Channel. She : was 19 when she did tt. ANSWERS ttaitui 7* pjiS pmr—s •WHL—3 •Rjfsaiqajl p* qoroo irwnooj pr»H—I •Oiaapa opiuyoo toaqsooH) Distributed by Centred Press

LOCAL LIVESTOCK CENTER Hogs f22.50-28.00 LIVESTOCK Hogs 7,000; barrows and gilts 25 to mostly 50 lower; 1-3, 190250 lb. 22.50-23.00; 100 head 1-2, 215-230 lb. 23.10-23.25; 2-3, 250275 lb. 22.00-22.50; sows mostly 50 lower; 1-3, 300-350 lb. 20.5021.50; 350-500 lb. 19.50-20.50; 2-3, 450-600 lb. 19.00-19.50. Cattle 2,700; calves 75; steers and heifers steady; choice steers 25.00- 25.50; good and low choice 24.00- 25.00; choice heifers 23.5024.50; good and choice 23.50; good 22.50-23.00; cows fully steady, utility and commercial 16.00- 17.50, few utility 18.00; canner and cutter 14.00-16.50.

CLOSED MON. & TUES:

WED. AND THUR. 2—ART SHOWS—2 "REPULSION" AND 'THE COLLECTOR"

FRI. f SAT. f SUN. Gr«g. Peck — Sophia Loren in "ARABESQUE"

ELKS CLUB STAG Tuesday, Oct. 4 Swiss Steak $1.25 Serving at 6:30 p.m. For Elks Only

W

L

Pet. GB

Baltimore

63

.606

Minnesota

73

.549 9

Detroit

88

74

.543 10

Chicago

79

.512 15

Cleveland

81

81

.500 17

California

82

.494 18

Kansas City ....,

74

86

.463 23

Washington

88

.447 2S'/2

Boston

90

.444 26

New York

70

89

.440 26’/a

YESTERDAY’S RESULTS AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Baltimore 6-0, Minnesota 3-1 Kansas City 7, Detroit 5 New York 2, Chicago 0 California 2, Cleveland 0 Only games scheduled

new roll-away bleachers. The pagne bath from Wes Covington latest in basketball seating ac- as he entered the dressing room

LOOK WHO’S PLAYING "QUARTERBACK!’’

commodations, the new seats replace original bleachers that were installed In Bowman when it was built. Installation of the Safeway bleachers, manufactured in Rochester, Ind., was completed this week. DePauw, with three of last year’s first five returning and a sophomore front line averaging nearly 6—614, opens its season Dec. S at Bloomington against Indiana University. The Tigers also face Air Force Academy, Colorado State University and Tulane University.

and was mobbed by the fans as he walked off the field, said, “I didn’t really tire, my arm was holding up and it wasn’t hurting at all.” Bombed for three runs in the ninth inning, Koufax explained he was trying to get by with his fast ball but had to resort to his breaking stuff to end the game.

INDIANA FOOTBALL CoUege Notre Dame 35, Northwestern 7 Purdue 35, Southern Methodist 23 Texas 35, Indiana 0 Butler 20, St. Joseph’s 7 Ball State 21, Evansville 21 tie DePauw 31, Valparaiso 15 Indiana State 25, Illinois State 6 Hanover 19, Indiana Central 0 Manchester 27, Franklin 13 Rose Poly 35, Illinois College 22 Taylor 16, Anderson 7 Wabash 35, Earlham 6 High School T.H. Wiley 26, Vincennes 7

Roachdale Wins Roachdale, making the most of three hits, defeated New Ross, 4-2, in a Big Four Conference game. Roachdale is now 4-2, 3-2 in the Conference. Roachdale's defeats have been at the hands of Darlington and Waveland. Waveland is presently the front-runners in the Conference.

NEW

Ebiugh ... 3 Needham . 3 Evans 3 Waltz 3 Elliott ... 2 Walters, 3 . 3 Crumm ... 3 Wahers, L 1 Durbin ... 3

ROSS

AR H R

ROACHDALE

AB H R

0 Collin gs 0; Doreff

0: Clam pitt

OjBlaydes

11 Snodgrass

9jCraft 2 0 D. Simpson 3 O N. Clampltt 2 l|Britton 2

New Ross 000 0011—2 6 Roachdale 003 100 0—4 3 0 Waltz, Needham, Elliott and Evans; B. Clampltt and Blaydes.

Hustle on down to Marathon and get in on the $225,000 worth of prizes. See participating Marathon dealers for the particulars. No purchase necessary. Play Quarterback and win up to $1,000plus other big prizes.

Guardian s Sale Furnishings of the hem* ef Mrs. Coral Scribner will be sold at Public Auction at the residence on North Main St., Russellville, Ind. Wednesday, Oct. 5th At 11:00 A M. Sole includes: living room chairs, sofa, coffee and lamp tables, conversation bench, spinet desk and chair, dining table, six chairs and buffet, rugs, pair of poster type twin beds, full size bed, dresser, dressing tables, wicker furniture, four chair dinette set, apt. size refrigerator, Skelgas range, lamps, pictures, nice gate-leg drop leaf table, mirrors, laundry stave, laundry tubs, window fan, stepladder, garden tools and misc. items ef kitchenware and dishes. Will also sell a 1963 Ford 4 dr. Sd. good condition. ANTIQUES China cabinet, washstand, eld violin, stand table, spool bed, couch, mirror, six fine eld cane bottom dining chairs, wash bowl, love seat, 1847 Regers silverware, castor set, Majolica pitcher, flow-blue china. Bavarian china, cut-glass, cake stand, ether pattern glass and many other articles. Sale conducted by Clapp's Auction Service C. B. ADES, Guardian Lunch will be served.

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