The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 September 1967 — Page 5

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Monday, beptembar 2b, 196/

lha Daily ttannar, Draancastla, Indiana

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DePauw Tigers smash St. Bak , ke1 !. b ® #t * sev c en [ Gs Twins hold lead

. , . ^ A as Cardinals beat Steelers

Joseph s Saturday, 27-0

Winner and still champ in a football game, Coach Tom Mont called “the one that got away,” were the DePauw Tigers who survived St. Joseph’s pummeling to win, 27-0, in Rensselaer Saturday.

pointed me,’' he said, “was ©urtag end of a 53-yard drive that

offensive work in the second quarter. We started playing like St. Joe.” As a result the Tigers lost the ball on an interception, a fumble, two punts and a stymied drive at midfield. The

13 plays the first time it got the ball. Fullback Bill Holton went in for the TD from the two-yard line with 5:25 left in

“I’ve never seen a ball game Tigers also were called for half in all my years of pro ball or of their infractions during that college ball that was as rough hectic 15-minute stretch,

as that one,” Mont confessed Sunday. "The game got away from the officials. I told them In the third quarter to stop the game, get the teams together, and tell them to play football.” The euggesion went unheeded. Mont said his team “was rather shocked with St. Joseph’s tactics. We were fighting for but lives. I think St. Joe realized it had nothing to lose. They were slugging, piling on, and grabbing face masks all day,”

Mont said.

The officials, one of whom ■aid after the game he dreaded being assigned to St. Joe home games, stepped off 10 infractions against the hosts and

four against DePauw.

In one of the melees, a rhubarb involving both teams near

midfield in the last half, St. Joe Miller field goal from the 24. had two players thumbed out. The kick was short, but St. Joe DePauw lost middle guard Dick was offside. That put the ball Schulte in the same hassle., on the Puma 14, one yard short Schulte said he lost his temper. 0 f a Tiger first down. Instead Despite the rough stuff that of sending a back boring into clouded DePauw’s second con- the line. Lortz cleverly handed

blossomed after a St. Joe punt, i DePauw added its third touchdown on the series that preceded Longs jaunt. That sixpointer was set up by Bill Lehman’s punt return that carried the ball to the Puma 40. The big plays in that successful drive were Longs eight yard

Amid the fisticuffs and near gallop for a first down to the ^ fisticuffs DePauw took a 7-0 27-yard line and Lortz’ 17-yard halftime lead, going 63 yards in pass to Tom Miller to the eight.

Footsore Jim Bakken s strong finishing kick has revived the gasping St. Louis Cardinals of-

fense.

Bakken, the Cards’ stronglegged placement expert, has had to shoulder much of the

as

AL

Cards

win

Bill Holton, an Indianapolis junior, scored with 4:36 to play from the one-yard line. DePauw’s defensive unit held

the first quarter. That’s the way St. Joe to 33 yards rushing and the rough and tumble game 106 passing. That made Mont stood until midway in the third a happy man. “Our whole dequarter. • fensive unit played well.” he Enter now John Long, a 8-9, 1 chirped. “Our ends contained

170 - pound sophomore from Wheaton, Md. The swift little

halfback fielded Jess Taggert’s flat punt on the DePauw 45 and sailed back down to the Puma 23. Two incomplete Eric Lortz passes and John Sacramento’s four-yard plunge moved the ball to the 19. Faced with a

their passers well, and we stopped their stuff into the line. Our three deep backs — Bill Crist, Tom Boese and Don Schulte, and corner linebacker Tony Whittlesey could hardly have been more effective.” Schulte got one of the team’s three interceptions. Long and

Fillmore's Cardinals won their first cross country meet of the season Friday when they down-

Reelsville, 23 to 32. The Cards record is now 1-4.

Wallace of Reelsville finished first with the time of 11:18 with Puckett of Fillmore right on his heels with the time of

11:21 for second place.

The next eight runners and

their time:

Kendall (F), 11:31 Pickett (F*. 11:53 Neumeister (Fl, 11:55 Rabb (R), 11:58 Gibbs (R), 12:08 Hasel (R), 12:19 Custis (F), 12:26 Chew (R), 12:28

fourth and six situation, De- Jim To msic got the others. One

Pauw elected to go for a Tom

theft by Whittlesey was erased

by a penalty.

After spending much of the week working on punt and kickoff returns, Mont felt his | team covered its five punts well, limiting St. Joe five yards per runback. Both teams had good kicking despite the gale-

Palmer s earnings reach $180,000 CLIFTON. N.J. UPI —If you think Arnold Palmer is a tiger on a golf course you should see him sweating out a victory in

the locker room.

Arnie charged in with a

offensive burden while rookie quarterback Jim Hart learns the fine points of guiding a team into the end zone and Sunday the 26-year-old placekicker left nothing to chance. He attempted a National Football League record nine | field goal tries and booted seven ! of them cleanly through the uprights for another NFL mark, supplying the Cards with enough punch to defeat the fa- : vored Pittsburgh Steelers 28-

14.

Hart completed only eight of 26 passes with one interception, although he did make a 23-yard touchdown run in the first quar-

ter.

But the St. Louis defense recovered three fumbles and intercepted three of Bill Nelson’s passes and Bakken capitalized on them. He booted field goals i of 18, 33, 29, 24, 32 and 23 ! yards, the last three in the ! fourth quarter, to surpass the record of six set by Detroit’s Garo Yepremian in 1966. The Cards threw the lead in | the Century Division into a three-way tie between themselves, the Steelers and Giants

with 1-1 records.

Johnny Unitas continued his I magnificent passing as the Baltimore Colts blasted the Philadelphia Eagles 38-6; the world champion Green Bay Packers had another scare be fore beating the Chicago Bears 13-10; the Detroit Lions routed the Cleveland Browns 31-14; the Dallas Cowboys overhauled

race comes to close Sunday

aecutive win and its ICC tri- off to John Butler. He scam- - - - .. .

umph, Mont thought the Tigers pered practically tmtouched 1U» wM* that whipped acrosa '***™*Z% *™ , the Giants 38-24; the Washing-

did a lot of things well. “The around the left end for the TD. the cornfield enclave. Jess Tag- round of the S150,000 Thunder-) enlv thing that reallv disap- Miller’s place kick made It 14-0 S^rt booted nine for an average bird Golf Classic Sunday for a ‘ j ? 4Q ipf» in thp third guar- of 37.7 for the Pumas. Lortz five-under-par 283 and then

ter ! and Sacramento averaged 32.6 had to wait for more than an

on five. hour to learn whether he had

“I thought Long s 32-yard gt. Joe generated only two won or would face a playoff. m 0 er £ ames un aypunt return was the turning semi-serious threats, one in each Arnie paced his cage like the The Los Angeles Rams

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ton Redskins overran the New Orleans Saints 30-10; and the San Francisco Forty Niners crushed the Atlanta Falcons

38-7 in

What ever happened to three innings Sunday with Boston

days of rest for starting pitch-1 leading 7-0.

ers? The Red Sox just did manage In the frantic American to hang on as the Orioles scored League pennant race which an unearned run in the seventh, comes to a close next Sunday— two more unearned runs in the barring playoffs—it leaves little eighth and four more in the time to rest for the weary arms eighth before Dan Osinski fiof contending Minnesota, Bos- nally got the last two outs, ton, Chicago and Detroit. Dalton Jones, Jerry Adair and It may just be that 20-game ; George Scott each banged out winners Jim Lonborg of the Red i four hits for Boston, with Jones

Sox and Dean Chance of the driving in five runs.

Twins will lock up in a pitching Chance was staked to seven duel to decide the Hag in next: runs in the first two innings as

Ken Boyer homered to account for the White Sox runs. The Senators, trailing the Tigers 4-2 in the ninth, rallied as Mike Epstein and Frank Coggins delivered singles. Paul Casanova drove in one run and Doug Camilli and Fred Valentine came through with single* for the victory. Earl Wilson pitches for th# Tigers tonight against th* Yankees, seeking his 23rd victory with only two days rest

Sunday’s finale even though they both won Sunday and will pitch again before next week

end.

Minnesota maintained Its half-game lead over Boston Sunday by beating the New York Yankees 9-4 as Chance coasted to his 20th triumph. Lonborg won his 21st and got a little respite as the Red Sox downed Baltimore 11-7. The White Sox stayed one

Bob Allison ht a three-run homer off Yankee loser Steve Barber and Harmon Killebrew collected three hits in three atbats, including his 41st homer. The Minnesota righthander Is expected to start against California Wednesday night and will then come back against the

Red Sox.

A nifty relief stint by veteran reliever Don McMahon helped the White Sox keep the Indians

starter Cisco Carlos in the third and didn’t allow a runner to reach first until the eighth when Rich Scheinblum and Joe Azcue led off with doubles. Gary Peters and Bob Locker in relief stopped the Cleveland rally. Don Buford batted in two runs with a single and infield out and

point of the game,” Mont said, j half. The Pumas missed a first

“He played a fine game.” It was, in fact, the Long one who added DePauw’s fourth touchdown with 1:44 left in the game. Long scored on a 38-yard run around the right side, picking up a key block from diminutive Bill Lehman. Long’s tally, directed by sophomore quarterback Ron McBiide, came at the

(Continued on Page 8)

DID YOU KNOW!

The Terre Haute Auto Club — like all AAA Clubs — is a NON-PROFIT organization. The Terre Haute Auto Club is strictly the collective association of “home town” and “home area” motorists. The Terre Haute Auto Club — within Putnam County — is YOUR Club. The Terre Haute Auto Club's affiliation with the American Automobile Association provides YOU a membership with all AAA Clubs — wherever you may travel in the United States or Canada.

YOUR

• • • •

Membership provides: Personal Accident Insurance — hospital and death benefits — payable REGARDLESS of other insurance. Personal travel guidance — maps, tour books, triptiks UNMATCHED ANYWHERE and available at all AAA Clubs. Emergency Road Service. Bail and Arrest Bond Protection. Theft Award Protection, and other benefits. AND DID YOU KNOW! As a member YOU participate with YOUR Club and YOUR Community in sponsorship of — • School Safety Patrols • Pedestrian Safety and Fair Motoring Laws • School Safety Materials • Promotion of Good Roads • High School Driver Education

AND

down at the Tiger 31 by a yard shortly before the first half ended. They got to the 26 in the last half but misfired on a

fourth and 10 pass.

The losers had the ball 68 times and threw It 41 times. They hit on 16 for 106 yards and had three intercepted. DePauw used 50 of its 72 plays to run. Consequently the Mont-sters had 150 yards rushing and 105 passing. Lortz, Dan Breckenridge and McBride — Mont’s

three quarterbacks — threw 22, WednGSclflV dt DPU

completed nine and had one in- ^

tercepted. Greencastle’s Quarter back John Sacramento and Long; emt), with a 5-1 record to chew led DePauw’s rushing. Each had on win hudd]e for the second 46 yards: Sacramento got his time Wednesday at 6:15 p.m. in seven tries: Long had two j n Memorial Student Union

rushes. Lortz picked up 32 rush-; on the D eP auw campus,

ing and 85 passing for game

hungriest tiger in the jungle wrecked the Minnesota Vikings “It was hell,” he said. 39.3 i n a game played Friday

But Billy Casper, who once j night, led Arnie by four shots, went into a spin with five bogeys on the final nine. Charley Coody missed a 15-footer on the final

green, Art Wall missed a vali-, t , , ii _ .. - oc** totals with 30,261. ant try from 25 feet and fin-

game off the pace but advanced in check. He took over from

into third place with a 3-1 victory over Cleveland and Detroit dropped to fourth, I'/j games back, by losing to Washington 5-4. In the other AL game, California nipped Kansas

City 2-1.

In the National League, St. Louis edged Atlanta 5-4; Cincinnnati tripped Chicago 3-2 in 10 innings; Pittsburgh nipped San Francisco 2-1; Philadelphia beat Los Angeles 8-1 and Houston defeated New York 4-2. Boston has only four games remaining — against Cleveland Tuesday and Wednesday nights and against Minnesota Saturday and Sunday. Minnesota and Chicago each have five games remaining while Detroit has six.

RACE AT A GLANCE W L Pet. GB TP Minnesota .... 90 67 .573 8 Boston 90 68 .570 Vt 4 Chicago 89 68 .567 1 f Detroit 88 68 .564 1% <

INDIANA FOOTBALL Notre Dame 41, California 8 Purdue 12, Texas A & M 20 Indiana 12, Kentucky 10 Ball State 39, Valparaiso 7 DePauw 27, St. Joseph’s 0 Indiana State 23, Butler 7 Franklin 40, Earlham 25 Hanover 33, Anderson 21 Taylor 21, Manchester 7 Evansville 13, Bradley 13 (tie) Chicago Illini 7, Indiana Central 6 Lakeland, Wis. 34, Rose Poly 14 Washington, (St. Louis) 17, Wabash 7

Red Sox Manager Dick Wil-

Unitas completed 21 of 34 liams said that Lonborg defipasses for two touchdowns and nitely will start against the In-

267 yards, enabling him to pass the 30,000-yard mark in career

dians Wednesday with two days rest. That’s why he lifted the 6-foot-6 righthander after six

Plaques * Engraving

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QB dub meets

(Continued on Page 8)

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League Standings

AMERICAN LEAGUE

W L Pet.

Minnesota 90 67 .573 Boston 90 68 .570 Chicago 89 68 .567 Detroit 88 68 .564 California 80 74 .519 Baltimore 73 84 .465 Cleveland 73 85 .462 Washington .... 72 84 .462 17Vi New York 67 89 .429 22 Vi Kansas City .... 60 95 .387 29

Sunday’s Results

Minnesota 9. New York 4 Boston 11, Baltimore 7 California 2. Kansas City 1 Chicago 3. Cleveland 1 Washington 5, Detroit 4

Vi

1

1V4 8 Vi

17

NATIONAL LEAGUE

W L Pet. GB

St. Louis* 98 59 .624 Tuesday. Her phone number

Contrary to previous plans for a smoker-dessert for men i only, members will temporarily stash their stogies and bring their wives and friends instead

to the dinner meeting.

Eighty members and their guests attended the opening program earlier this month when head coaches Bob Bergmann and Tom Mont. GHS and DPU mentors respectively, provided enlightenment on the state of football in the city. It will be the same battery Wednesday night with their usual flashes of oratorical brilliancy. Bergmann will step to the platform with a flashy 3-1 record and a film bid going in the WIC race. Mont will be in ‘ good shape too, having steered ; his hawks to two wins in their

first two encounters.

Futher attractions for the Wednesday affair will be game films provided by both coaches and a drawing for an undisclosed but useful door prize. Reservations for the dinner ($1.75 per person! must be called to Mrs. Mary Evelyn Goodhue not later than noon

is

/vVoNTGOMERY WARD

San Francisco 85 69 .552 11 Vs Cincinnati ’ 84 72 .538 13V4 Chicago 84 73 .535 14 Philadelphia 80 74 .519 164 Pittsburgh 77 79 .493 204 Atlanta 76 90 .487 214 Los Angelea .... 70 85 .452 27 Houston 65 91 .417 324 New York 59 96 .381 38 Sunday’s Results Houston 4. New York 2 St. Louis 5. Atlanta 4 Cincinnati 3. Chicago 2, 10 innings Pittsburgh 2. San Francisco 1 Philadelphia 3. Los Angeles 1

OL 3-4517. Memberships in the football booster club have reached 216, according to the latest count available. Proceeds for the $1 membership fee are given on alternate years to the high school for equipment or to DePauw’s scholarship program. The club also sends the high school team to a Big 10 football game each year. Persons still wishing to join the club may contact Mrs. Goodhue at the Chamber of Commerce Office.

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