The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 July 1967 — Page 4

Pag« 4

The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana

Saturday, July 29, 1967

THPT’RE BOTH UONS!—Shortest and tallest of Detroit Uone now in training at Bloomfield Hills, Mich., are 5-foot 8-inch irinfew Gaxo Yepremian (left) and 6-foot 6-inch tackle ft Charley Bradshaw. Paul Hornung announces his retirement Friday

Champ track star defects to West FRANKFURT, Germany — UPI— World champion East German track star Juergen May has defected to West Germany, a West German track official said Friday. Max Danz, president of the West German Track and Field Federation, said May telephoned him Thursday night following a flight from the Communist sector. May is the current holder of the world record in the 1,000 meter run. He once held the world mile run record. Danz said no details of May’s escape were immediately available. May created a furor at the 1966 European championships in Budapest for allegedly accepting money from a West German shoefirm. He was subsequently suspended by the West German track federation although he said he returned the money. Danz said May told him he defected because the East German regime was “politically unreliable.” May said he wanted to continue his track career somewhere in the West.

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SAN DIEGO, Calif. UPI — Paul Hornung, football’s onetime golden boy and twice the National Football League’s most valuable player, anounced his retirement Friday because of damaged nerve roots in his spinal cord. The New Orleans Saints’ halfback said: “Doctors’ reports

Wabash college coach resigns CRAWFORDSVILLE, UPI Richard J. White’s resignation- as head baseball coach at Wabash College to enter private business was announced Friday. White also was assistant football and basketball coach. His baseball chorea will be taken over next spring by basketball Coach Russell Nichols. Wabash also announced it has signed Philip E. Daly, Richard T. Hoppe and James Morel for coaching jobs. Daly, a 1966 graduate of Springfield, Mass., College, will coach swimming and scocer. Hoppe, a 1961 graduate of Ohio Wesleyan, will be an assistant in basketball and football.

i indicate there could be irreparable damage to my spinal cord if I continue to play and suffer a similar injury.” Hornung, 31, will serve as an assistant backfield coach with the Saints through the exhibition season and then expects to remain with Saints owner John Mecom in some capacity. He also has a television program in New Orleans. Hornung, a Heisman Trophy winner in 1956, joined the Green Bay Packers the following year. He was named most valuable player in 1965, when he set an NFL record of 176 pqints scored. He scored 760 points during his career and also passed for five touchdowns. He was out of football in 1963 because he was suspended by the NFL commissioner for gambling on football games. He was drafted by the Saints from the Packers this season.

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Robinson disabled CINCINNATI UPI—The Cincinnati Reds placed outfielder Floyd Robinson on the disabled list Wednesday and restored outfielder Tommy Harper, sidelined since May 26, to active

duty.

Robinson reinjured his right knee Tuesday night against the Atlanta Braves while chasing a fly ball. Reds’ manager Dave j Bristol said, “Robinson has a cartilage floating around in his

knee.”

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4 10 3 *854 The bidding: North East South West Pass .4 4 Pass 4 NT Pass 5 4 Pass 6 ftp 6 NT(!) Pass 7 4 Dble Opening lead—nine of clubs. This remarkable hand occurred in the 1964 Trials. At seven of the nine tables where the hand was played, East - West bid and made six hearts for a score of 1,430 points. At the eighth table, East-West stopped at four hearts and made six for a score of 680 points. But at the ninth table, the bidding took a very strange turn and South became declarer at seven clubs doubled, going down eleven—3,200 points! Harkavy (North) passed and Erdos (East) opened wdth four clubs. By previous arrangement with his partner, this was an

FAMOUS HANDS heart suit in a relatively weak

hand.

After Russell (South) passed, Petterson (W e s t) responded four notrump (Blackwood), and. upon learning that Erdos had no aces, jumped to six hearts. Convinced that Petterson would make the slam, and hoping to uncover a profitable sac* rifice in the seven level, Harkavy now bid six notrump. This was the unusual notrump convention, announcing length in diamonds and clubs, and asking South to respond in his better

minor.

Russell obediently bid seven clubs, which was doubled by West and became the contract. Petterson made the excellent lead of a trump. Declarer finessed the queen, losing to the king, and won the jack of eiubs return in dummy with the ace. He then led the ten of spades,

which lost to the jack.

At this point West returned the queen of hearts, and if East had overtaken it with the king and drawn trumps, the defense would have collected the rest of the tricks. But East permitted the queen to win. When West then continued with the ace, declarer was able to ruff and thus

acquire a second trick.

Thanks to the slip in defense, Russell went down “only” 3,200 points—a result likely to stand for a while as a record penalty to pay for stopping the oppo-

TROOP 93, CLOVERDALE—Top row, left to right: Allen Buchanan, Kerman Goss, Richard Jones, Wayne Sutherlin, Keith Monnett, Dennis Sutherlin, Greg Sutherlin. Middle row: Gary Walker, Terry Wallace, Terry Steele, Tom Allegree, Gary Cook. Steve Young, Dana Monnett, Gary Goss. Bottom row: Danny Nickerson, Billy Henson, Danny Wallace, Gary Bowman, Stanley Buchanan, Jack Yount.

artificial bid showing a long nents from making a slam. (© 1967, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

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STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB

Indians down Oilers 6-5

INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Tulsa pitcher Leo Newton walked Bill 1 Voss with the bases loaded and two out in the last half of the 11th inning Wednesday night to give Indianapolis a 6-5 Pacific Coast League victory over the Oilers. Indianapolis had tied the score in the last of the ninth on a two-run home run by Cotton Nash. Paul Toth, the third Indianapolis pitcher, was the winner while Newton, last of four Tulsa hurlers, was charged with the ; loss.

Boros leads golf classic MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. UPI- j Julius Boros, a relaxed old pro who unwinds by fishing bass,! is shooting the greatest golf of his life.

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The husky, 47-year-old veter an held a 1-stroke lead with a 2-under-par 142 today going into the third round of the 5100,000 Minnesota Golf Classic over the rugged new Hazeltine National

Golf Course.

When Boros finished his second round Friday and learned he was the leader, he smiled and said, “That’s amazing.” The course is a new one, loaded with doglegs, water holes, woods, traps and huge rolling greens, designed especially for championship play. It has been chosen for the 1970

U. S. Open.

Only five of the pros have been able to shoot par or better for the first 36 holes of the

tournament.

Tommy Bolt, with a secondround 69. and Dudley Wysong are paired at 1-under-par 143. Lou Graham, with a record second-round 68, and Ray Floyd

had par 144s.

Boros, who has won the Phoenix Open, Florida Citrus Open and Buick Open this year and piled up $100,735 in winnings, said a 280 or 282 should win this tournament. “I know I would be glad to take a 282,” he said.

Chicago 55 41 .573 Boston 54 42 .563 Detroit 52 43 .547 California 54 47 .535 Minnesota 51 45 .531 Washington .... 49 52 .485 Cleveland 45 53 .459 Baltimore 43 53 .448 New York 42 £4 .438 Kansas City ....42 57 .424 14^

Friday’s Results

Cleveland 1, Baltimore 0, 12

innings

Minnesota 9, Boston 2 Washington 8, California 2 Detroit 7, Chicago 4 Kansas City at New York, ppd.

rain

Pro-Files

HOW MANY DOUBLEHEADERS DIO THE DEAN BOYS TEAM UP IN*2

NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB St. Louis 59 40 .596 Chicago 57 42 .576 2 Atlanta 51 45 .531 Cincinnati 53 48 .525 T San Francisco 52 49 .515 S Pittsburgh 48 49 .495 10 Philadelphia ....47 49 .490 10% Los Angeles .... 44 54 .449 14% Houston 42 59 .416 18 New York 39 57 .406 18% Friday’s Results St. Louise 9, Atlanta 1 Chicago 6, Cincinnati 2 Houston 9, Pittsburgh 3 San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 2 Los Angeles 2, New York 0

PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE

Eastern San Diego Indianapolis .... Oklahoma City Denver Phoenix Tulsa Western

Division W L Pet. GB 59 46 .562 53 49 .520 4% 56 52 .519 4% 51 55 .481 8% 50 56 .472 9% 45 60 .429 14 Division

HILLTOP TROOP NO. 97, BRICK CHAPEL—Front row, left to right: Brian Smith, Chris Kersey, Kim Kersey, Greg Sanders, Paul Sanders. Second row: Asst. Scoutmaster Mark Kloor, David Webber, Steve Sanders, Jay Clodfelter.

Mike Marshall is big (actor in tigers lineup

W L Pet. Spokane 58 48 .547 Tacoma 58 52 .527 Vancouver 55 51 .519 Portland 52 55 .486 Seattle 51 54 .486

2 3 6% 6%

EIGHT DOUBLES in 1934-35 BMiL DIZZY DE5V0 PITCHED BACK-T0-BACXGAMES. THEY WOW BOTH THREE TIMES AMD SPLIT3 TIMES AMD BLEW TWO PAIRS... SEPT. 21,1934 DIIZY THREW A THREE-HITTER AT BROOKLYN) amd Paul a mo-hitter iw the NIGHTCAP : Distribut'd by King Features Synd.caU

STILL GOING STRONG • - By Alan Mover

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Hawaii 48 58 .453 10 Friday’s Results Indianapolis 2, Phoenix 0 Tulsa 1, Oklahoma City 0 Portland 4, Hawaii 3 Tacoma 3, Seattle 0 Spokane 2, Vancouver 1

i' , Mi By FRANK WATSON Central Press Sports Writer QUESTIONS 1— Who are the Pittsburgh Phantoms? 2— How many straight wins do the National Leaguers have in the All-Star series? 3— What is the “hot corner”? HOOHEi? CALLED baseball's “Bad Boy” in thft Roaring 20's, he was a slickfielding, hardhitting infielder for the White Sox. His boasting and brawling made headlines. ANSWERS •uonreod atnsq junfj aqj,—g •Aig—X •anSw! aaDoog pmopsajoj^ reuo!}B*i oin u{ ureej v—T •(■MIHS Ona^o ein) VV :mhooh) Distributed by Central Frees

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Leston off list GOTEBORD, Sweden UPI — Boxing promoters Ingemar Johansson and Bertil Knutsson said Thursday former world heavyweight champion Sonny Liston will not be on their Aug. 20 card in Sweden. They said they could not find an opponent for Liston, who won his last four fights in Sweden. Buster Mathis, who twice defeated Joe Frazier where they were amateurs, has been match-

Mike Marshall is making believers out of American League hitters almost as fast as he made the transition from the infield to the pitching mound. The 23-year-old righthanded relief specialist, who almost gave up baseball two years ago in order to continue his education at Michigan St., chalked up his fourth save in as many appearances Friday night by holding off the Chicago White Sox as the Detroit Tigers beat the league leaders 7-4. Marshall, who has become the Tigers’ big stopper out of the bullpen this season, was originally signed as an infielder with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1961. But things didn't turn out as expected. “My inability to make the big leagues as a shortstop almost prompted me to call it quits,” said the 5-10, 185 pounder. “But I had pitched some in high school and last year I thought I’d give it a try.” Marshall won his first four games at Montgomery and finished with an 11-4 record and a 2.4 earned run average. The experiment was a success and the Tigers were the first ones to take notice. They immediately placed him on their roster during spring training and he’s been showing his stuff ever since. In other American League action, Cleveland blanked Baltimore 1-0 In 12 innings, Minnesota crushed Boston 9-2, Washington clobbered California 8-2 and Kansas City at New York was postponed by rain. In the National League, St. Louis beat Atlanta 9-1, Chicago downed Cincinnati 6-2, Houston bombed Pittsburgh 9-3, Los Angeles shut out New York 2-0 and San Francisco whipped Philadelphia 7-2. Norm Cash belted a two-run homer in the sixth inning to break a 2-2 tie and lead the Tigers to victory. They added three insurance runs in the ninth wh«i Ray Oyler doubled in-a run and Don Wert singled home two more. Tony Horton’s home run in the bottom of the 12th provided ths only run of the game as

Steve Hargan went all the way for Cleveland, scattering eight hits. Moe Drabowsky suffered his first loss in an Oriole uniform and his first setback since June 7, 1965. Harmon Killebrew hit his 30th homer of the year and drove in another run during a j seven-run Twin rally in the fourth inning that enabled Dean Chance to win his 12th game against eight losses. Chance also contributed a bunt single in the big outburst, marking his first in 78 plate appearances, as the Red Sox’ Jin Lonborg absorbed his ! fourth loss against 14 victories. Phil Ortega pitched a sixI hitter to win his seventh consecutive game and Ken McMullen knocked in two runs during a five-run seventh inning in leading the Senators to victory. Angel starter and loser, Jack Hamilton, was warned twice for throwing a spitball before he left after six innings.

Grote is fined MOO LOS ANGELES UPI —New York Met catcher Jerry Grote was $100 poorer today. Manager Wes Westrum slapped him with the fine Friday for getting himself ejected from Thursday night's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Grote, who was the only experienced catcher left at the time of his exit, also received “a stern lecture” by telephone from General Manager Bing Devine.

Field is reduced WESTBURY, N.Y. UPI — , The field for tonight’s $88,664 Realization Trot at Roosevelt Raceway was reduced to seven entries Friday when the stewards ordered Ira and Beverly Kristel’s Starlight Way out of the mile-and one sixteenth race. The stewards were dissatisfied with the 4-year-old mare’s performance in the qualifying event at Roosevelt on Wednes- j day. She broke in that race but still managed to win in 2:07 with George Sholty in the sulky.

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