The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 August 1967 — Page 5
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Prfd«y ? August 4, 1967
The Dally Banner, Oreencastle, Indiana
Pros are solid favorites in pro-all star game tonight
Page f
14 regular season games last scores of the series, last year year before downing Dallas for but were beaten in their 1963 the National League Crown and showing, 20-17. Green Bay has Kansas City in the “super- i lost twice while winning five
bowl,” were rated 14-point fa- matches.
vorites to rack up their sixth A crowd of about 75,000 was win in the all star series. expected for the match, favored The Packers tripped the stars ; by a good weather forecast, a
The Packers, who lost two of | 38-0, one of the most one-sided temperature under 80 degrees
and low humidity. The game
CHICAGO UPI—The Green Bay Packers and the 1967 College All Stars tangle tonight in Soldier Field for the 34th meeting between the pro champions and the best of the collegians, and as usual the pros were solid
favorites.
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will be telecast nationally. The Packers will have almost
the same lineup as last year ® with two notable absentees, §f|
fullback Jim Taylor and halfback Paul Homung. But the current all stars were rated a much stronger squad than the
1966 group. ^
For one thing, coach Johnny | Sauer said, his club is deeper and he will have more manpower available. Also in workouts his players have adapted readily to new techniques and showed up well in a pre-game scrimmage against the Chicago
Bears, losing 23-22.
Offensively, too, the all stars should present a more varied | attack with both Steve Spur- | rier, the Heisman trophy winner from Florida, and Purdue’s | Bob Griese at quarterback with ; such bright passing targets as Harry Jones, Bob Jones, Jack Clancy, Dave Williams, Gene Washington, and Cas Banaszek,
and Rod Sherman.
Sauer has numerous solid running backs and all should appear in the game. Among them were Clint Jones, Mel Farr, Nick Eddy, Ray McDonald and Dloyd Little. Coach Vince Lombardi of the Packers was expected to start Elijah Pitts and Donnie Anderson as his two running backs with Ben Wilson and Jim Grabowski likely to see plenty of action too. Both Anderson and Grabowski were on the 1966 all star team, Pitts is a Packer veteran, and Wilson, in his first year with Green Bay, is a veteran of the National League. Keying the Packer attack as usual will be veteran quarter-
back Bart Starr.
Three pros tied at 5 under in Western Open Tourney
Overall the pro’s have won 22 of the 33 games, lost nine and tied two.
North-South
game Saturday
ELKS RECEIVE TROPHY—The Elks Club of Greencastle received a trophy from the Greencastle Babe Ruth Organization Thursday evening at dinner in appreciation of their efforts toward the betterment of youth in the community. The Club sponsored the team that won the Babe Ruth League. Making the presentation is Lloyd Cooper (right) who is President of the League. Accepting the award Is Exalted Ruler Walter Frye, Jr. Pictured in the background is one of the batting champions of the league Ken Losin. Losin hit .500 for the
season along with Alvin Stinnett who was not present for the picture.
Boyer's 2 homers crush Cubs 10-3 Elston Howard can take total to 17, just one fi-om his ; edged Kansas City 5-3 and DeClete Boyer’s word for it, he previous single season high of troit blanked Baltimore 5-0 in won’t miss the pinstripes. 18 with the Yanks where he a game called in the top of the
was know as a good-field, no- eighth inning by rain. The Cal-
CHICAGO UPI—Labron Harris Jr., Bob Stanton of Australia and Bob Verwey of South Africa were 5-under-par leaders going into second-round play today in the 5102,000 Western Open Golf Tournament. Each shot 66 in opening play Thursday at the 6,867-yard Beverly Country Club course. Harris, son of the Oklahoma State golf coach, one-putted nine greens in a row, rolling up seven birdies. Verwey, brother - In - law to Gary Player, needed only 27 putts in touring the course, and Stanton consistently lobbed approach shots close to the pin, sinking six of them for birdies. The field of 155 golfers, including 147 pros, is to be trimmed to 75 today en route to the $20,000 first prize. Steve Oppermann, Daly City, Calif., followed the leaders Thursday with a score of 67, including a 25-foot sand-bunker shot into the cup for a deuce on the 238-yard third hole and consistently spectacular shooting. Twenty-nine players bettered par 71. Julius Boros, two-time U. S. Open champ, and Don
January, the new Professional Golfers Association top man, were tied at 68. Amateur Marty Fleckman of Port Arthur, Tex., was tied at 69 with seven pros—Miller Barber, achiever of a hole-in-one on the 125-yard 12th hole, George Archer, Doug Sanders, Johnny Pott, Homero Blancas, Randy Glover and John Schlee. Billy Casper, seeking his third straight Western title, said “bad chipping and bad putting” contributed to his 3-over-par 74. Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer, two other favorites, came in with one-over 72s.
MATCHES POSTPONED FOREST HILLS, N. Y. UPI —The opening two singles matches in the Senior Team Tennis Challenge Round between the United States and Canada were postponed one day until today because of rain. U. S. senior champion Bob Sherman of Temple City, Calif., will face Jan Nordstrom of Montraeal in the first match and Dick Sorlein of Philadelphia opposes Canadian senior champ Jim Skelton of Vancouver in the second.
Boyer obviously feels he’s lucky not to be a Yankee. Several hours after Howard was shocked when the New York Yankees traded him to the Boston Red Sox Thursday, Boyer slammed two of Atlanta’s seven homers as the Braves crushed the Chicago Cubs, 10-3. Boyer, traded away by the Yanks last winter in another phase of their rebuilding program, said, “the greatest thing that has ever happened to me was being traded, I think every player should get the chance to
move around a bit.”
He added, “I think Howard’s going to help the Red Sox a lot”
hit third baseman. Atlanta’s seven-homer outburst, which included two by Joa Torre besides Boyer’s pair, was aided by a steady wind of 18 miles an hour. It fell just one short of the record of eight for one club in a single game, a mark shared by five teams. Tito Francona, Torre and Boyer connected for homers in the first inning off Joe Niekro, the loser. Denis Menke homered in the second and Hank Aaron drove in the 1,500th run of his career with his 27th homer of the year off Curt Simmons in the third. After Torre doubled, Boyer hit his second homer. Torre wound up the barrage
ifornia-Kansas City game was rained out.
when he noted that another; with a fifth inning homer off member of the former Yankee Bill Stoneman. It was the only
National League game played
Thursday.
powerhouse had left New York,
departure of toward
The departure of
leaves Mickey Mantle as the only link to the Casey Stengel era of Yankee teams in the ’50s that produced the greatest dy-
Tourney held at Windy Hill
Twenty-eight women golfers competed in the Windy Hill “Low Gross and Net” tourney Tuesday, August 1. Winners were: A Group: Low Gross: Wink Bryant, 1st; Betty Harmless 2nd. Low Net: Vickie Terry, 1st, Mabel Vermillion 2nd. B Group: Low Gross: Hazel Winsey 1st, Tibby Eitel and Margaret Harris, tied for 2nd. Low Net: Dorothy Boyd and
2% 4% 8% 9%
t Jane Coan tied for 1st; Betty
The loss dropped the second j uiisworth and Mary Ellery tied
place Cubs six games behind j f or 2nd.
the Cards, who seem to be on : q Group: Low Gross: Nancy
^ ^ the verge of making a runaway Stevens, 1st, Dorothy Crawley,
nastv in baseball history. How- of the race ’ But the Cubs stl11 2nd -
ard wasn’t too happy, either, ! reCOgrnized the excellent i ob Low Net: Barbara Hunt, 1st, when he got the news. “I’ve manager Leo Durocher has Marilyn Hoover. 2nd.
BLOOMINGTON. UPI — The bee n here all my life and I al- done wtlh the club by S ivin S The ladies are now qualifying 76 former Hoosier high school ways felt I would finish my bim R new two *y ear contract for the Club Championship players who’ll take part in career as a Yankee,” Howard through 1969 ' vith a raise - tournament. First round of Indiana’s first North-South sa j d Elsewhere in the abbreviated qualification must be completed All-Star Football game here major league schedule, Boston i by Monday night, Aug. 7. Saturday night ran through Boyer doesn t seem to ■■ . . , -
light limbering-up drills today j miss th® Yanks at all.
in final preperations for the
clash.
The game, scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Saturday in Indiana University Stadium, is sponsored by the Indiana Boys’ Clubs and matches 38-man squads from north and south of U.S. 40. A game matching similar squads of recent high school
graduates and sponsored by the INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The state s Shrine temples is sched- Indianapolis Indians, their uled a week from Saturday hopes of gaining ground in the
ateaguea STANDINGS PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Eastern Division
W L Pet.
San Diego 62 49 .559 Oklahoma City 61 53 .535 Indianapolis .... 56 52 .519 Denver 54 58 .482 Phoenix 53 59 .473 Tulsa 48 63 .432 14
Western Division W L Pet. GB
Vancouver ........ 59 52 .532 Tacoma ............ 61 54 .530 Spokane 59 54 .522 1 Portland 58 57 .504 3 Seattle 53 58 .477 6 Hawaii 49 64 .434 11
Thursday’s Results
Oklahoma City 2, Hawaii 1, 14
Innings
San Diego 7, Indianapolis 4, 13
innings
Tulsa 6, Seattle 2 Portland 5, Spokane 2 Phoenix 9, Denver 7 Vancouver 9. Tacoma 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Chicago 59 43 .578 Boston 58 46 .558 Detroit 56 46 .549 Minnesota 54 48 .529 California 56 50 .528 Washington 52 54 .491 Cleveland 47 57 .452 13 Baltimore 46 57 .447 13^ New York 45 57 .441 14 Kansas City ....46 61 .430 15y 2
(ft Thursday’s Results Boston 5, Kansas City 8 California at New York, ppd. rain Detroit 5, Baltimore 6 Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB St. Louis 64 41 .610 Chicago 59 48 .551 6 Cincinnati 57 50 .533 8 San Francisco .. 56 50 .528 8 ] 4 Atlanta : 53 49 .520 9^ Philadelphia .... 50 51 .495 12 Pittsburgh 49 53 .480 13 H Los Angeles .... 46 57 .447 17 Houston 47 60 .439 18 New York 40 62 .392 22 ft Thursday's Results Atlanta 10, Chicago 3 Only game scheduled
DR.
J. F. CONRAD
OPTOMETRIST
SOI E. Washington St.
His two homers boosted his Indians open series tonight
night at Victory Field in Indi-
anapolis.
Both offensive starting lineups are evenly matched as far
Pacific Coast League eastern division race blasted by a pair of extra-inning losses to firstplace San Diego, open a series
as size goes but the South has ^th Hawaii in a doubleheader
a slight weight advantage on here tonight. defense, averaging 203 pounds |
to 199 for the North. On of-! fense, the North averages 206 ] pounds and the South 205. Starting quarterback for the North will be 6-2, 200-pounds Dave Shelboume of Gary Wal-; lace while Doug Huse, a 6-3, 180-pounder from Lebanon, will | be the starting signal-caller for
the South.
Rounding out the North backfield will be Tom Fleming of Fort Wayne South, Louis ■ Guenther of Tipton and Tommy 1 Walls cx South Bend Adams. Joining Huse in the South backfield will be Don Silas of Indianapolis Manuel, Larry Highbaugh of Indianapolis Washington anu Ray Churchill of Greencastle.
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