The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 September 1968 — Page 4

Page 4

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Monday, September 30. 1968

I

Pip

WATCHING FROM A DISTANCE-for St. Joseph's extra point attempt is official, Herod 'Pete' Toon of Plainfield. Toon used

plenty of caution while officiating Saturday's game. Last year he received a broken leg in a sideline accident during the DePa uw-Wabash game.

DePauw Thinclads victors over Valpo

McBride, Tigers handle Pumas

THE SCORING COMBI NATION--of quarter- their seven yard scoring play that gave the back Ron McBride (13) and end Scott Ral- Tigers their final score 20-6 over I.C.C. ston (88) confer on the sidelines following foe St. Joseph's. McBride earlier broke a

6-6 tie with a 62-yard scoring jaunt.

World Series starts Wednesday By Mark Steele Sports Editor

Pro-Files

li/HATP! TCHBfZ " HAD/O VZAZS B£&£7We€H STAZTSP

Rocky Colavitc rei ieve d Moyt Wilhelm, with iwdiams traiuajg 2-o.. y/etoeD a sacrifice Fly. walked 3 amp favmed owe iw 5 iwioiwes Aye. 13,1958 a&aiajst Detroit...Rock> hugiep the Yankees to a victtrv cver. the TIGERS AU6.25.I968.AL10WIN6 A HIT AND A WALK IM 2 % I\>\)IAK3S

LESSON Beginning in Piano, Dancing, voice, also tutoring in reading, English, Mathematics, history. Call Golda Taylor, OL 3-9269

With a two meet winning string on the line, including last week’s victory at Wabash in the annual Hokum Karem meet, the DePauw University cross country team made it three in a row, by whipping Valparaiso on its home

DePauw’s Syverson

course by a score of 19-36. It was the first time in eight years thai DePauw has defeated the Crusaders in a meet at Valparaiso. The Tigers finished in five of the first six places, with Valparaiso taking second to blemish the perfect record. TheCrusaders also captured the 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th place spots. Tiger thinclad, Bill Syverson, captured meet honors by taking first place with a good time of 21:45. Tigers Lowry, Johnson, Gessler, and Barnes took the 3rd thru 6th places respectively. Scott Shafer, who has been nursing an injury the past few weeks, ran Saturday and although not finishing in the top ten, turned in a credible performance considering it was the first time in over a week that he has run four miles. The Tiger thinclads will go for number four in a row this Saturday, Oct. 5, when they travel to Indianapolis to face the Greyhounds of Indiana Central.

By VITO STELLINO UI Sports WRITER “Vince Lombardi, where have you gone? “Green Bay turns its lonely eyes to you.” Those aren’t exactly the Simon and Garfunkel lyrics but it has to be the refrain of the moment in Green Bay where Lombardi’s National Football League dynasty seems to be in the danger of crumbling. Lombardi kicked himself up. stairs at the end of last season with the cry, “the history of the Green Bay Packers is in the future.” But right now it seems to be in the past. The Packers lost their second straight game and slipped to third place in the Central Division with a 1-2 record

Opportunity knocked twice on Ron McBride’s door Saturday. The first time he couldn’t find the handle; the second time he found it and opened the portals for DePauw’s 20-6 verdict over St. Joseph’s College. The win in Blackstock Stadium helped get DePauw off to a successful ICC start. It also pushed the winners to a 2-0 season mark, giving DePauw its ninth win in its last 12 games. McBride was unable to move his team past its own 20 in the first two frustrating times it got the ball. So sophomore Roy Pottenger was brought in as a relief driver. In his three efforts he steered the Tigers to their own 48, to the Puma four where DePauw ran out of downs, and, with the help of an interception by Mark Dinwiddle, generaled the game’s first TD. Fullback Bill Holton got it with 6:18 left in the first half on a one-yard plunge. Further employment looked dim for slim Mr. McBride who is called Twiggy by his teammates. But...irony helped pitch McBride back into the battle and into contention again at quarterback. Pottenger was unable to start the second half after sustaining an injured shoulder. So McBride stood waiting in the wings while St. Joe flexed its muscles in the third quarter. The Pumas took the second half’s opening kickoff and chewed off 63 yards in 18 running plays. Workhorse Karl Maio went in for the TD with 7:36 left in the period to tie the game, 6-6. Only Jim Tomsic’s splattering of St. Joe’s PAT kick prevented the Pumas from going out front. If DePauw slacked off in the final 20 minutes against Wheaton a week ago, it rectified the trend against St. Joe. McBride perked up a sputtering offense immediately. Sparks started flying after St. Joe’s kick off. , On the first play from scrimmage McBride took the snap, ran left watching for the option pitch. He kept the ball and sliced inside the defensive end at the

Sunday when they were beaten by the Detroit Lions, 23-17. Munson Sparks Lions The brilliant passing of Bill Munson, the running of Mel Farr and three interceptions byLem Barney paced the Lions to the upset victory. Munson completed 15 of 22 passes for 194 yards and two touchdowns. Both passes went to flanker Billy Cambrell, including one with less than two minutes left in the game that snapped a 1717 tie. While the Packers were losing their second game, the Los Angeles Rams, Baltimore Colts and Dallas Cowboys—all eager to dethrone the Packers— boosted their records to 3-0. One surprising team, the New York Giants, did the same.

Tiger 40. Though bumped and snagged, he stumbled 20 more yards to the Puma 40. He got his balance and then hot-footed the final 40 with six huge St. Joe tacklers five futile steps behind him. John Sacramento’s kick was good and DePauw led, 13-6. with 7:07 left in the third quarter. St . Joe was forced to punt on the next series. DePauw took the ball on its own 11. Behind McBride’s passing and its best running of the season, the Tiger machine strung together the best sustained drive of the year. The big play in the 89-yard drive was McBride’s 35-yard toss to junior end Scott Ralston. He was finally hauled down from the rear on the St. Joe 48. An illegal procedure and Holton’s one-yard pickup put the ball back on DePauw’s 48. So McBride ripped off a 12-yard run and St. Joe helped with one of the day’s many 15-yard penalties. That put the ball at the 25. Getting some rushing and blocking like days of yore, DePauw moved on the ground. Sacramento added five. John Long bulled for 10 more to the 10, and three more to the seven. McBride cancelled another fiveyard penalty with a five-yard toss to Sacramento. On fourth and goal at the seven McBride spotted Ralston dashing across the endinto the air. Sacramento added 32 seconds left in the third quarter. Yaz sets AL record By GEORGE BUCKLEY UPI Sports Writer Carl Yastrzemski removed Elmer Flick’s name from the record books Sunday as he won the American League batting title with the lowest winning average in major league history. Yastrzemski finished the season with a .301 average and was the American League’s onjy .300 hitter. Flick had previously held the record as he won the American League title with a .306 average in 1905. Yastrzemski, who won last year’s batting title with a .326 average, was batting .303 going into Sunday’s season-closing game against the New York Yankees, but his 0 for 5 performance dropped him two points. His closest rival for batting honors was Danny Cater of Oakland, who finished at .290.

The Bainbridge Pointers dumped Roachdale 20-0 Friday in the school's first grid meeting. Mike Miller scored on touchdown runs of 25 and 12 yards and added an extra point for three scores. Halfback Gary Richard scored an extra point after Doug Summers ran a Roachdale fumble 30 yards for the final score. The victory gave coaches Don Shahan and A1 Thomas a 2-0 record in the three team league. Both Roachdale and Russellville were defeated by Bainbridge, after the two opened the season at Roachdale in a 6-6 tie. This Friday the three teams will play in a Jamboree on the Greencastle high school field.

All rosy for Rose

By AL DALY

UPI Sports Writer Pete Rose, in a race right down to the wire, won the National League batting title on the final day of the season Sunday, but he had help—a friend in the bleachers with a hot line to Chicago, and some emphatic advice from his roommate Tommy Helms. Rose, who wound up with a .335 mark to .332 for Pittsburgh’s Matty Alou, had a double in three trips as the Reds beat San Francisco, 3-0. The hustling second baseman had a buddy stationed in the bleachers getting reports via transistor radio on what Alou was doing in the Pirates game against the Cubs. The reports were encouraging, as Alou was hitless in four at bats and Rose didn’t have to press. Perhaps even more important was Helms’ advice. Before Saturday’s game, he told Rose, who had been in a two-week slump, “You're swinging like a girl. If I see you take four more cuts like you did yesterday, I’ll throw up four times.” Rose proceeded to bang out five hits in five at bats Saturday and before Sunday’s game Helms’ reminded him, “Keep swinging.”

winding up their first and last season. Next year the three schools combine forces to become the North Putnam Cougars. Score by quarters: 1 2 3 4 F Roachdale 0 0 0 0 -0 Bainbridge 7 13 0 0 -20 Decision final DETROIT (UPI) — Detroit Manager Mayo Smith has made official what could turn out to be one of the most controversial moves ever made in a world series. Smith Sunday named Mickey Stanley, his regular center fielder for most of the season, as his starting shortstop in baseball’s classic showdown against the St. Louis Cardinals starting Wednesday. “If I didn’t feel he could do the job, I sure as hell wouldn’t have made this decision,” said Smith, who season-long has avoided controversy while piloting the Tigers to their first American League title since 1945. The move has to be the most shocking player switch ever to be made in the World Series— even if it doesn’t last beyond the first game, Oct. 2—and leaves Smith wide open for target practice by baseball fans and sportswriters if the daring gamble to squeeze an extra bat into the Detroit lineup backfires.

JUNE'S Beauty Shoppe BAINBRIDGE, IND. * Appointments Tuesday thru Saturday OWNER AND OPERATOR June Sharp Phone 522-3305

Before the opening game of the series starts Wednesday at St. Louis between the Cardinals and the Detroit Tigers, let’s take a look at some of the history behind the scenes. This series will mark the 12th appearance for the Cardinals who were victors over Boston in seven games last year. The Cardinals also won over the New York Yankees in seven games in 1964. The Redbirds have notched two World Series Championships for the senior circuit in this decade and help the league to a 5-3 advantage. St. Louis has won eight of 11 series, its participated m to lead the majors in club standings with a .727 per cenfage. The Cardinals victory over Boston last year dropped the Red Sox from the top rung, to second with a .714 per centage. The Cardinals also dropped the New York Yankees from second after their win over the American League club in 1964 gave them a.689per centage mark. Here’s how they stand; Series Won Lost Pet. St. Louis 11 8 3 .727 Boston 7 5 2 .714 New York 29 20 9 .639 (A) Aitnough the American League holds the lower hand in series

low os $8.00 per week. 250 Lb. Beefside 20 Lb. Ham 20 Lb. Pork Chops 10 Lb. Pork Sausage 40 Lb. Wieners 40 Lb. Bacon 50 Lb. Fryers 10 Lb. Fish 12 Case Canned Vegetables 48 Cans Fruit 1 Case Bleach 36 Bath Soap 1 Case Detergent 5 Lb. Salt 100 Lb. Sugar 50 Lb. Flour 12 Lb. Cheese 30 Lb. Margarine

won this decade, the younger league has evened the number of games won and lost at 24 each. Detroit is in its first series since 1945 when it beat the Chicago Cubs four games to three. The Tigers have won two of seven series for a .286 per centage. Detroit is the fourth club to represent the American League in the past four years since the Yankees appeared in the first five this decade. Five of the series since 1960 have gone into seven games, two have only gone four and one took five to decide. The Tigers will try to stop St. Louis from equaling the Yankees feat of back to back series titles in 1961-62.

Winner Games 1960--Pitsburgh 7 61 — New York 5 62 -- New York 7 63-- Los Angeles 4 64 - St. Louis 7 65 - Los Angeles 7 66- -Ba Itimore 4 67- - St. Louis 7 * * *

Montreal, the Canadian « it\. was first called Ville Marie.

1 Gal Sweet Pickles 1 Gal. Dill Pickles 48 Rolls Toilet Tissue 24 Rolls Paper Towels 1 Case Dish Detergent 36 Lb. Crisco 24 Btls. Catsup 1 Lb. Pepper 1 Case Jelly 12 Boxes Macaroni 12 Boxes Spaghetti 12 Jars Peanut Butter 12 Tubes Tooth Paste 24 Lb. Dry Beans 12 Ots. Miracle Whip 1 Case Dry Cereal 144 Pkas. Kool Aid 1 GaF. Vineqar 1 Gal Mustard

after 11:00 a.m.

I

iTOtTii

your antenna TV ANTENNAS LOSE UP TO HALF THEIR STRENGTH IN 3 YEARS! It’s a fact! And in five years, they’re almost useless. But it happens so gradually, most people aren’t even aware of it. Let Wards install a new antenna for you now. Installed antennas start at only $31*88 JUST SAY "CHARGE IT” PHONE OR VISIT WARDS SERVICE DEPT. Ph. OL 3-5191 114 W. Washington

BE A| 1° 14 6E PROUD^^PLEOGE! PROU ’ DAYS TILL UNITED FUND

The Head Hunter Beauty Salon Welcomes To Our Staff LORI CANADA Graduate of the The Speedway Academy Of Hair Desiga, and DIANE SOX Vivian Woodard Cosmetic Consultant LEONA DEEM/ Manicurist CALL 0L 3-6401 FOR APPOINTMENTS Other Hair Dressers To Serve You 1 West Liberty St.-OFF The Street Parking. Shelbn Swickard and Anne Jones

IF YOU DON'T HAVE A FREEZER, YOU MAY LEASE OR BUY ONE FROM US. A NEW 15 CU. FT, GIBSON FREEZER AND THIS FOOD LESS THAN $10 PER WEEK! MIDWEST FOOD SERVICE CRAWFORDSVILLE 362-0848 Greencastle OL 3-3986

Green Bay needs help

Roachdale defeated 20-0 by Pointers

I’auia.sian means "|)t'rtuii>iii£ In the So-called white race

PART TIME BUSINESS TO BE ESTABLISH ED NO selling. Refill and collect from MA( HINLS IMS* PFNSING U.S. POSTAGE STAMPS in this area. We establish all accounts. You must have a car, references & minimum of $995.00 cash. EASILY HANDLED IN SPARE TIME TERRITORIES NOW OPEN IN ENTIRE STATE, For personal interview in this area phone 800-328-46~0, just dial anytime.

FREEZER OWNERS Our Answer To High Food Prices . . . All this food delivered to your home. Name brand, top quality, guaranteed to your satisfaction, for at

i

I

mftftmmmaaammi

-