The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 October 1968 — Page 4

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Page 4

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Friday, October 4, 1968

DePauw encounters ICC rival Valparaiso

It may look like the aerial blitz of Britain Saturday in Valparaiso where the pass primed Crusaders host DePauw in an Indiana Collegiate Conference tilt. Kickoff time for the game is 1:30 CDT with the play-by-play scheduled to be broadcast tn Greencastle by WGRE-FM. For Valpo the game opens its

home season and its ICC slate. The Crusaders have been impaled on their own spears in their two times out. Wabash did it, 14-13, scoring in the final 34 seconds two weeks ago. Ball State did it last week, 26-11, in Muncie. So far the Crusaders haven’t generated much of a running attack — an average of 112

Major FOOTBALL This Week

lloitit* 196“ TYiim Scores

< OLLKGIATK Friday. October 4

imiati L>NM Saturday. October .V 1 NTKKSEt TION A1. Kloniia Stal.—Ti-xas A A* M

Idaho-Put in< ll> Kaiisas-Ni-w Moxii o LehiKh-Wittfiilx

itteiiot-n: l.uUi.xialla Stale-Hayloi

Mit hitraii-Xavy ..._

M limt .xota- Wakf Koi

M ixst >1111-Almy Molilalia Stall -Wt-sl Tt xa> N Tt-xa.x Sl:itf-Mfin|ilii.x Slalt-

Ohio Statt-Oif|£oii

Pittshiuirh-Win A Mary . K ir* "Trill I*'Sst*'• S Palifoi nia-Miami (Klal S Mrthodi.xt-X Carolina Slat.

Stanford-Air Fort*-Syracuse-1' C 1. A

Texas Tet h-Col..ratlo State Viri: Military-Villanova .... Virginia Poly-Kaii.xa.« State

Yale-Colgate

Wash i i i|t ton Si ate-Cl ah it) At Boise. Ida.

EAST

Ivy League Brown-Pennsylvania 1 rim rton-Coluiiibia Yankee Conference Main*" Velliiolit New Maiiipshire-CuiliUftiint Other (iames

Huston Boston

Corm Uelat

Hal

1H-IS «-12

DNM DNM UNM 21-26 DNM

lltiinc 196* Team Scores

SOI TH

Southeastern Conferenee

Klorida-Miss State .......... 2-I-T

T--IX

ina t2)

Miss

Soutlirni

Kiirmaii-Tht* ('itad«‘l . .

Othrr Ciamrs

i'liattaiUMi^a-Mid Tfiiii«*ss«-*-

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Saiith Carol in. i-l I ••on

r loi'Hla-Mlss olal 1 Ktiitiuky - Auburn M ississippi-Alabai

At Jackson.

j (icur^ia T»*t h-CIt-mson th Carolina-UcoiKia DNM ;S Mississippi

nila . . . . Carolina

nth Carolina-

Mississippi-K 26-3T> i TulaiP-Tampa

20-211 Vii>:iiiia-Uavi<lson ... I Vanderbilt-Norlh C'.irtdina

SOl’THWKST

Southwest C ’onferenee

DNM Texas Cliristian-Arkansas

Other (ianies

2H-29

.{(lit

DNM DNM DNM

■ry-A

DNM Texas-Oklahoma State ... DNM ROCKY MOI NTAINS

DNM Western Athletic Conferenee

I -IS 7-21

Ill-O u-21

DNM DNM DNM

21-7

10-13

I9-n

.-Texas IKI Paso)

7-28

28-H

7-18 19-20

College-Buffalo 14-26 l-niversity-Teinple . ... 16-22

Cornell-Rutit.is

la war

irvard-*>(•« Holv Cross-Dart iiMiuth

la ware-Massachusetts

ird-Bii« kn«*H . . .

Lafavrtte-Hofstra

Rhode Islalid-S Coini.i-tiiut DNM West Virginia-Penn State 14-21 Yah -t'olnat. DNM j

Ariz«»i»a-Tex;u

\Vy»nuin>:-Arizona State

Other (iames

Montana-Utali State W. her-Boise PACIFIC COAST Athletic Association Oregon State-Washinitton

Other (iamc

California-San Jose Stat*

DNM Home

Team

o-28 I’KOFESSIONAL American Football League

Saturday, Oetolwr 5

9-9

15-13

14-20 DNM

30-6

1968

Scores

MIDWEST

Western Conference

Boffalo-Kansas City N.-w York-San Die):.i

HNM HNM

Indiana-Illiuois

Sunday, October 6

North western-Purdue l6-2a j Denv. r-Cin< innati Wisconsin-Mii-higaii State ... 7-35 I Hoiiston-Miumi

Big Eight Conference | O.ikland-Boston

Iowa State-Colorado <>-34 j National Football League

Other (iames Saturday, October 5 Carleloii-Coe 20-31 Cleveland-Pittshuruli

Day11>n-l,ouisvilie 7-29 Sundav, October 6

Kvansville-Ball State 10-31 * , lowa-Notre Dalne 6-o6 Atlanta-t.i een ha> Miami (O)-Kent State 21-1 BaJt"iior. ; Uiuuko

Ohio University-Toledo 20-14 . D. tioit Minnesota Tulsa-Southern Illinois 13-16 New lork-New Orleans West Michigan-Rowling Green 16-7 Iajs Angch s-Saii h rancisco

^vieo^rshaiiti 3 1

DNM—Did Not Meet in 1967. HNM—Have Not Met in 1968.

10-21 24-10 HNM

HNM

HNM HNM HNM HNM HNM HNM HNM

PUBLIC AUCTION of FARM PERSONAL PROPERTY As I am quitting farming and going to other work, I will sell all my farm machinery and farm personal property, located 4 miles North of Rockville, Ind., on U. S. 41, then East IVa miles, or 314 miles Southwest of Marshall, Ind., or 3Va miles Southeast of Bloomingdale, Ind., at auction, on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1968 11:00 A. M. (EST) - FARM MACHINERY — 1967—<1850 diesel Oliver tractor with 362 hrs., hydra power drive: 1966 No. 565 6 x 14 Oliver semi-mounted plow; M & W set of duals for Oliver 1850; 1953 JD 70 Gasoline tractor, good condition tire & cylinder; 1964 Minneapolis-Moline 2890 Combine with 11’ 6” platform and 2 row com head, automatic header; 1967 — 16 ft. Oliver fold up disc with dual wheels, No. 242 heavy duty sealed bearing; 1965 — 494 JD 4 row planter with insecticide herbicide and minimum tillage and harrow; 18 ft. flex harrow; 1962 No. 46 twine baler, like new, baled very little; 15 hole single disc JD Van Brunt wheat drill with fertilizer and grass seed attachment; 4 row JD rotary hoe; 1966 Clark 6 row sprayer with booms and hand guns; 1966 Kewanee 10’ cultimulcher wheel type; 1965 Oliver 107 side delivery hay rake; JD 7’ cycle mower; 1956 4 row JD cultivator; New Idea 12A manure spreader; T Int. disc; 5 row John Blue anhydrous applicator; Knight wagon on JD run ning gear with PTO; 9’ Dunham cultipacker; 16 ft. flat top wagon bed; No. 55 ABH 3 x 14 JD plow; 1955 — 227 JD 2-row mounted picker with super chute for 70; flat top wagon on Oliver gear, almost new; 1966 McCullough 250 chain saw, like new; 16’ aluminum elevator; electric sanders; electric paint spray outfit; 3 units of 2 way radios Ray-Tels Citizen Band; 2 tractor radios, like new 3 tarpaulins; Bachtold 6 hp fence row mower; pickup gas tank with pump; portable air tank; flexable grinder and sander; three-eighth inch electric drill; electric drill; gas pump; 2 cattle bunk feeders, 10’; 1 round hog feeder; 2 creep hog feeders: 1 round hog feeder; 2 units Surge milkers; long wash vat; 6 — 10 gal. milk cans; Kenmore automatic washer, good; good refrigerator; and many, many other items too numerous to mention including hand tools of all kinds. — ANTIQUE CAR — 1939 Chevrolet business coupe, in top condition. — TRUCKS — 1945 Ford \Vi T. truck with hoist grain bed and stock rack; 1955 Chevrolet \Vz T. truck with 2 speed axle, extra good motor and tires and grain bed; 1962 GMC %T. pickup, with stock rack — HAY — 300 bales of alfalfa, orchid grass & timothy hay, more or less. 250 bales of alfalfa hay, more or less. TERMS — CASH Not responsible In case of accident HAROLD MANNER, Owner Lunch will be served by United Effort Society of Bloomingdale Friends Church. HAROLD ASBURY, Auctioneer. ELEANOR ASBURY, Clerk. Marshall, Ind. JEAN SHEPHERD, Clerk. 597-2514 or 597-2244.

| OJ. THE BEST? ------ By Alan Maver

yards in two games. Halfback Larry Blankenbaker, 5-10, 181 pounds, has a good average but not many yards. He has amassed 66 yards in 10 carries for a 6.6 average. Mike Love, at 6-1, 205, is next with a 3.6 average. The bulk of Valpo’s attack then has rested on the arm of junior letterman John Mayes and sophomore Bob Lampe. Lampe started the season as Valpo’s choice at QB, but against Ball State Saturday Mayes threw 29 times and hit 15 for 180 yards. He had two intercepted. Lampe, meanwhile, threw only once and it was Intercepted. Lampe runs well. Among the favorite targets of Mayes and Lampe and two other backs who throw out of Valpo formations are 5-10 Jim Wellsand, 6-2 Kurt Krueger and 207 pound Mike Seall. Seall has 9 catches for 102 yards. Wellsand has seven for 122 and Krueger six for 115. With three tentative exceptions DePauw will be at full strength for the 18th meeting between the two schools. DePauw’s leading pass catcher Scott Ralston is still bothered by a knee injury sustained in the 20-6 win over St. Joseph’s, while quarterback Roy Pottenger, is nursing a muscle spasm in his right shoulder that sidelined him at halftime against St. Joe. Yet a third Tiger hurt against the Pumas, linebacker Bill Scaife, was reported to have suffered a mild concussion. Scaife has been working out this week and probably will play at Valpo. There is exuberance in the Tiger camp after the squad’s successful ICC opener against St. Joe. Coach Tom Mont saw his crew charge out of a 6-6 third quarter deadlock behind the running and passing of junior Ron McBride. McBride, unable to move the team in two first quarter tries, was retired to the sideline in favor of Pottenger. But Pottenger, after directing DPU to a 6-0 halftime lead, was unable to play in the second half. McBride reentered the fray. This time he ran for a 62-yard TD, completed four of six passes for 60 yards, and presided over DePauw’s third TD on an 89-yard drive. Much of this week DePauw has worked on smoothing out its offensive backfield play— getting formations corrected, rehearsing specific plays, adding a few new wrinkles, and even teaching its quarterbacks to enunciate huddle strategy better and louder. Every game is crucial, but Mont calls Saturday’s fray “really crucial.” If we can win this one then we are really out front in the ICC,” Mont said. A win would give DePauw a 2-0 league mark with its two remaining ICC games at home. Conceivably by the end of next week, DePauw could have the title wrapped up.- It plays its third game at home against Evansville Oct. 12 and finishes ICC action Nov. 2 with Butler here. Detroit could win DETROIT (UPI)—If the Detroit Tigers survived their fans, they certainly should stand a fighting chance against the St. Louis Cardinals. More than 3,000, chanting, sign-c a r r y i n g fans milled around the Tigers’ charter jet Thursday night when it arrived from St. Louis. The next three scheduled games of the World Series, tied at one game each, are to be played in Detroit. When the jet taxied into its resting place, the fans, who had been held back by police and a six-foot fence, swarmed over and around the barriers and swarmed around the plane.

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urphy lost for West Vigo clash

The Tiger Cub football team will be without the services of leading scorer Dan Murphy in tonight’s Western Indiana Conference clash at West Vigo. Murphy received a shoulder injury in the Plainfield game last week and did not practice this week. Coach Jim McCammon said

he hopes Murphy will be ready for the Schulte encounter next week. Also lost to the team is lineman Emerson Baynard. The Vikings, winless in four conference games “ are a wide open offensive team” says Cub coach McCammon. “They have a

Barry scores 51, Pacers win

«J Oy A’ i •< ^ At « Sy

Tiger soccer team beats I.U. Hoosiers

An on-again, off-again, drizzle didn’t seem to dampen the spirit or play of DePauw’s soccer team Wednesday afternoon, as it chalked up its first victory of the young 1968 season, with a surprising, 4-1, upset win over the Hoosiers of Indiana University at Boswell Field in Greencastle. The Tigers’ key men were Goalie Price Ivins, who turned away 27 Indiana shots, including a penalty shot, and Inside-Right forward, Charlie Roberts, who scored two goals and was credited with one assist. The Hoosiers didnt take long to get on the scoreboard, as they drew first blood at the 2:07 mark of the first period. Steve Jaremko headed in a perfect corner kick off the toe of Chris Horbostel to stake Indiana to a 1-0 lead. The Tigers came right back to tie the score at 1-1 at 9:54 of the opening quarter as a result of an Indiana penalty. Off an indirect penalty kick, Roberts passed to center Larry Tasha, and Tasha booted the sphere past the surprised Hoosier net minder. DePauw captured the lead for good five and half minutes later on Roberts’ first tally of the afternoon, an unassisted goal at 15:32. Right-wing Jan Hoey added the Tigers’ third goal of the afternoon with an unassisted marker coming late in the second quarter, at 19:41. The first half ended with DePauw enjoying a 3-1 lead. Indiana dominated play during the second half, but its attempts to score were repeatedly thwarted by Tiger goalie Ivins. Although Ivins was credited with 27 official saves, including a spectacular grab of a penalty kick, the Hoosiers directed some fifty shots toward the DePauw goal, an indication of their attack throughout most of the contest. 'The final goal for the Tigers came at 14:11 of the fourth period, on a breakaway goal scored by Roberts, his second score of the game. The tally was set up by a good pass from Tiger fullback Jeff Brown. DePauw, although getting four goals, managed only 15 shots on the I.U. net; however, moments of excellent offensive work, accented by quick scoring thrusts, gave the Tigers enough for the victory. DePauw now 1-1, will attemot

Vote For

Harold W. Roeschlein

Democratic Candidate For

State Representative Clay and Putnam Counties

/ Will Appreciate Your Support

to put together a sustained offense to go with its stout defense when the Tigers travel to Cedarville, Ohio, this Saturday, October 5, to play Cedarville College. Harriers run This Saturday, October 5, DePauw’s cross country team travels to Indianapolis to compete in a dual meet against the Greyhounds of Indiana Central. The Tigers will be shooting for their fourth consecutive win, their most recent a 19-44 victory over the Valparaiso Crusaders last Saturday in Valparaiso. DePauw’s thinclads are led by junior Bill Syverson, who won the Valpo meet with a winning time of 21:45.

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI)-Rick Barry made his American Basketball Association debut Thursday night with a 51-point bombardment of Indiana, but the Pacers still won the exhibition game over Oakland, 141-131. Barry, who had to sit out a year after jumping to the ABA from the National Basketball Association, threw in 17 of 35 field goal attempts and was Cub runners beat Rox Greencastle revenged an early season cross country loss to Rockville yesterday, by defeating the visiting Rox 26-29. Greencastle’s Rick Mount, winner in the opener at Rockville, again took top individual honors by leading the Cub runners to victory. Mount covered the course, 10:16, eight seconds ahead of Rockville’s Keith Fischer. Sam Hecko and Don Dowty finished fourth and fifth for Greencastle as Pat Blose, and Mike Gray finished seventli and ninth respectively to round out the top ten. Glen Trials WATKINS GLEN, N.Y, (UPI) — Twenty drivers from 12 countries begin high-speed time trials today for Sunday’s 248mile world championship Grand Prix of the United States. Race officials predict a new lap record of more than 130 miles per hour will be set as the Grand Prix drivers, joined by Indy 500 winner Bobby Unser and fellow oval track driver Mario Andretti, compete for the pole positions.

perfect in 17 tries at the free throw line. He got 23 hi points in the final period as the Oaks tried to catch the Pacers, who led at the half, 65-52. Doug Moe added 25 for Oakland, but Indiana had some big guns, as well. Fred Lewis scored 44 points, while Bob Netolicky bagged 26 and Mel Daniels added 25. The game was played before 7,889 fans, the largest crowd eger to see an ABA exhibition. The Pacers evened their exhibition mark at 1-1 while Oakland is 0-1. Members of the news media played to an 11-11 deadlock with USAC drivers in a preliminary benefit game. Proceeds went to a fund to aid race car driver Bob Hurt, who was dis. abled in a crackup this spring at the Indianapolis Motor Speed, way.

6-3, 170 pound quarterback named Don Harris that has a good arm and likes to throw.” West Vigo failed to score against conference leader Gerstmeyer last week, but did manage to hold the Black Cats to 13 points. Greencastle has beaten the Vikings the last two years, 20-7 and 12-G. “West Vigo is a young team like we are and willing to try players at different positions.” “I haven’t decided whether I’ll go with junior Rick Bundy at quarterback all the time or not.” said McCammon. I thought sophomore quarterback Mike Bergen looked awfully good passing in practice this week.”

NOTICE Dr. Shonkwiler’s Office Will Be Closed 9th thru 23rd of Oct. for Vacation

STAG Friday Night at VFW Post 1550 Annual Membership Drive Show your 1969 membership card and get in FREE or pay your dues and enter FREE. All others $1.50 pei person. Don't miss this one-FREE catfish and entertainment with dues or current membership card.

Announcing

The Arrival of SENATOR BIRCH BAYH To Preface The 11TH ANNUAL DEMOCRATIC CHICKEN BARBECUE Senator Bayh will arrive by helicopter at 2:45 Saturday Afternoon for a half-hour stay at the Putnam County Fairgrounds . ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ COUNTRY & WESTERN MUSIC By the Harry Weger Band will be provided at the Fairgrounds till BARBECUE TIME at 5:00 p.m. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ THEN HEAR GUEST SPEAKERS: + Robert L. Rock, candidate for Governor it Janies Beatty, Candidate for Lt. Governor -Ar Gene Briner, Treasurer AND MEET: ^c All Local Democratic Candidates This Saturday, Oct. 5th

Serving 5-7 p.m.

Color TV and Bicycle To Be Given Away To Ticket Holders.

PUTNAM CO. DEMOCRATIC CENTRAL COMMITTEE

Public Invited Adults $2.00 Children $1.00