Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 November 1973 — Page 1
Fair and colder tonight with lows in the upper teens to low 20s. Mostly sunny and warmer Saturday with highs in the upper 30s to low 40s.
Bruiser Taunts Crowd (Banner-Graphic Photos)
Gr«encastl«, Indiana, Friday, November 9, 1973
Volume Four Number 262
Ten Cents A Copy
GROW Looks To
rRFASY TFT I S K1WANIS Won’t Freeze To Death, Just Colder
Local Waste Recycling
"None of you will freeze to death this winter, but you will all be a little colder,” Robert L. Creasey, sales representative for Marathon Oil Co., told Greencastle Kiwanians yesterday.
Speaking on the theme: "A
country that runs on oil can’t afford to run short,” Creasey said that oil companies have been aware of an impending shortage but the public has been slow to accept the fact. “The
inevitable shortage is a new experience for our country,”
the speaker said.
“Petroleum products are being made available at record levels, but public demand is growing faster than supplies,”
Creasey said. "The energy demand has been increasing while our supply has not. With six per cent of the world's population, the U.S. consumes one-third of the world's energy and our energy needs are expected to double by 1985.” Creasey said that the current energy "crunch” has re-
Monon Bell Clash Breaks Logjam As Ancient Series Is Tied 36-36
DePauw and Wabash have played football for 83 inconclusive years, producing an absolute standoff in the ancient series, 36-36 with seven ties. That logjam of balance ought to be broken, however, Saturday when the two meet for the 80th time at 1:30 p.m. in DePauw's Blackstock Stadium.
"I think that our problem will be to guard against becoming too emotional for the game,” Tiger coach Tom Mont noted at mid-week. "Getting a team up for the Bell game isn’t hard. The trouble is you get so keyed up you make mistakes
that are costly.”
Mont cited the Tigers’ hy-
rebounded in a very admirable manner from a beating (57-0) by Indiana Central that could caused a lot of teams to windup their season with a complete disaster,” Mont said. Instead, the Little Giants have Please turn to page 2, col. 6
Adding spice to the renewal, peractivity of the last two years, of course, will be the.presen- but ^ to admlt Ws squad stiU ce of the Monon Bell, which will managed to put together a pretty
Lookint over information on the nations energy crisis are William Frisbie, right, vice-president of the Greencastle Kiwanis Club and Robert Creasy, Marathon Oil Representative, the club’s guest speaker yesterday. Creasey told the club we won’t freeze to death this winter but might get colder. (Banner-Graphic Photo)
Accident Brings Arrest
As result of a one-car accident on U.S. 36, one and onehalf miles west of Bainbridge at 8 p.m. Thursday, an Indianapolis woman was arrested by State Trooper Lanny Fields for false registration and failure to have a driver’s license. Trooper Fields reported that Shirley M, Cox, 38, 827 River Avenue, lost control of her 1968
Pontiac due to blowout of the right rear tire. The automobile left the pavement on the north side of the highway and struck a post and fence at the Jack G. Clifford home on Bainbridge, Route 1. The woman escaped injury but Trooper Fields estimated the damage at $250 to the car and $65 to Clifford’s fence.
be making its second trip to Greencastle in less than a
month.
The dandy dinger was swiped from Wabash security forces in October. It was returned though when Wabash students invaded a DePauw fraternity, threatening mayhem. A negotiated settlement sent the 350pound victory symbol back to Crawfordsville where under the settlement agreement it has presumably been kept at low
profile.
DePauw comes into the season finale seeking to end a twogame Wabash winning streak in the series. The Little Giants won 16-7 in 1971 when DePauw fumbled away the ball nine times and last year a 20-14 verdict when the Tigers committed six turnovers.
good offensive attack before hitting the deck.
Community Night Is Tonight At CHS
This time DePauw comes into the game with a 5-3 mark and a strong shot at a piece of the Indiana Collegiate Conference. Wabash has a winning record too. Coach Dick Bowman’s forces are 5-4 and have a threegame winning streak going. "We’re facing a team that has
Greencastle High School’s undefeated Tiger Cubs will be honored tonight at the Community Appreciation Night which is slated to begin at 8:30 in McAnally Center. Fans will have a chance to meet the team and receive mementoes ofthe historic season.
suited in petroleum becoming the swing fuel in a changing pattern of energy demand at the time when the nation is faced with a shortage of natural gas and declining domestic production of crude oil. "The shortage of natural gas, our cleanest fuel, came at a time when public policy required a cleaner environment. Coal and high sulfur fuel oil fell into disuse. Oil was called onto fill the gap,” he said. Through charts, the speaker showed how the supplies of gas, oil, coal and hydro-electric power have dwindled during the past 10 years. The demands for these energy sources has risen sharply while conditions which would make domestic production profitable have deteriorated. Creasey indicated that domestic supplies could be made possible, but this would be of little help in the immediate future. Three to five years or more would be needed to catch up to the demand. "Our country’s coal supply is sufficient to last 100 years,” Creasey said, "but here again it will take up to five years to develop this supply.” He predicted that energy needs of the country would double by 1985 and triple by the year 2,000. Citing the need to increase domestic oil production, CreasPlease turn to page 2, col. 2
Rev. Friederichsen Here
The burden of disposing of solid waste has become a major problem for industrial America. In attempts to alleviate the problem, recycling projects have been initiated nationwide. One such project is Greencastle’s own Recyclers of Waste (GROW; program. The following is a report on waste here in the city prepared by GROW. "Greencastle paid close to $6,000 in 1973 to dump solid waste into the county landfill. "The 9,000 city residents, each one who generates 1,800 pounds of trash annually, disposed of 16.2 million pounds, or 8,000 tons, of waste this year. "According to environmental experts, by 1988 the amount of solid waste will double,” they said. "Greencastle can foresee the burden of discarding more than 16,000 tons of waste yearly. At this rate, acreage for landfill will disappear within a few years. Greencastle will be forced to find other non-polluting methods of eliminating its residue,” GROW pointed out. GROW’s conviction is that recycling of solid waste is a paramount procedure to save land, minimize pollution, cut landfill costs to the taxpayer and preserve natural resources. In its research into the problem, GROW learned that the average volume of discarded glass amounts to ten per cent of the total waste. This year, through its collection program, GROW held down total solid waste by thirty tons of glass, and received from the recycling company $600 in payment. If every family in Greencas-
tle would deliver all used glass to one of GROW’s collection stations (located presently at A & P and Kroger), about thir-ty-eight loads would be removed from the city’s trash pile, with a savings of $494, they said. Members also learned that about forty per cent of the average family’s volume of waste consists of newspaper. Since Greencastle presently hauls about 380 yards of wasta yearly, newspaper salvaging would reduce the total by 152 twenty-cubic-yard loads and save around $1,976. When a newspaper collection program is established, which GROW anticipates will be organized soon by the Learning Center, savings in landfill, city costs and natural resources will be significant, they point out. Collection of used metal, eight per cent of the volume of all solid waste, could reduce Greencastle’s dumping yardage by thirty, cutting costs by $480, they said. The different measurements used in calculating the amount and value of our waste materials prevents an estimate of how much revenue would be received from the sale of glass at $20 per ton, newspapers at $16 per ton and metal at $10 a ton. It is apparent, however, that the revenues would be substantial. Savings in tax funds for dumping would amount to around $2,950, they noted. “Members of GROW believe that the funds saved from payment of fewer dumping fees and the income received from the sale of recyclable waste can be better spent for expenses acc-
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Rev. Paul Friederichsen, the in 1939 to go with his family Midwest representative for the to the Philippine Islands as a Association of Baptist for World missionary,” the church reEvangelism, will appear at the ported. Immanuel Baptist Church Nov. "His first assignment on the 14 through 18, the local church field, after a period of langannounced. The Reverend will uage study and orientation, was
IN INDY
Monon Dinner Held
Alumni from DePauw Unlverslty and the Crawfordsville School for Boys convened in Indianapolis Thursday (Nov. 8) for the annual DePauw • CSB Monon Bell Stag dinner. The program included a 5:30 p.m. reception and a 6:30 buffet dinner at Athenaeum Turn-
ers Restaurant.
Sharing the speaker’s platform for the annual roasting was DePauw President Dr .William Kerstetter, CSB Headmaster Thaddeus Seymour, DePauw football coach Tom Mont, CSB coach Dick Bowman, plus alumni spokesmen from the
two old rivals.
Keynoter for CSB was that veritable veteran of verbosity, that redoubtable remnant of rhetoric Professor Eric. J. Dean, recently Washington.
Professor Dean, ed CSB alumni.
DePauw countered with Indianapolis attorney Steve Cline, who in cooperation with DPU
alumni colleagues in Indianapolis, offered the diners a new twist in entertainment.
Sterling At DPU
Whirlpool Corporation executive Jay Sterling of Benton Harbor, Mich., will lecture publicly on computers in business and industry at DePauw University Tuesday (Nov. 13) at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Science and Mathematics Center. Sterling is manager of operations and planning for the Physical Distribution Division of Whirlpoolj based on Benton Har-
bor.
Responsibilities carried out by Sterling include facilitating
gave a slide the efficient movement of fin-
ished products from the pro-
Headmaster Seymour per-
formed his traditional magic , . j He wiii attempt to turn banquet olatecl
show.
12 dozen pimento cheese sandwiches provided by the CSB athletic department into 300 Big Chefs while balancing on one hand, singing the CSB school song, "A Boy Named Sue,” it was reported.
The annual Fall Sports Banquet sponsored by the Mothers Club at Greencastle HighSchool will be held Wednesday Nov.
duction line to the consumer. These activities Include freight, transportation, warehousing, protective packaging, inventory control, market forecasting and customer service. These are among the topics Sterling will deal with relative to their application to computer technology. Sterling earned the B.A. at DePauw in 1956 and attended the Northwestern University Graduate School of Commerce. He was an auditor with Arthur Andersen and Company for three years before joining Whirlpool as an internal auditor in 1959. He was named controller for the Physical Distribution Division in 1967 and assumed his present duties in 1971. Sterling’s lecture at DePauw is being sponsored by the College Science Improvement Pro-
speak at the evening services. The church is located in the USD A building on Route 43 north. Pastor is Rev. Larry Renner. Services will begin with Sunday School at 9:45, morning worship at 10:45 and evening services will begin at 7, the church announced. "Rev. Freiderichsen, missionary to the Philippines for ten years and a prisoner of the Japanese during World War n, will present his unique program here,” the church said. Pastor Renner and the members of the church invite all to share these special meeting with them. "Using the Vu-Graph projector, which is the finest visual medium in existence, he will present his original, vivid, colored slides. Through these chal-
the direction of the Doane Evangelistic Institute in the City of Iloilo, located on the Island of Panay in the central part of the Islands. "Along with training Filipino pastors and evangelists, he was able to carry .on a number of intensive and emended evangelistic tent campaigns in that teeming city of over two hundred thousand. Two evangelistic trips were made to the primitive, pagan mountain people of Panay Island to bring the Gospel to Please turn to page 2, col. 2
GTE Recycling In Second Phase
Rev. Paul Friederichsen
Phase II of General Telephone’s project on recycling old telephone directories, recently concluded in the Richmond area, has proven successful, according to E. S. Prather, project chairman. In his announcement, Prather said a total of 14,000 directories were collected by members of the Treaty Line Girl Scout Council who will receive the proceeds from the project. Collections in the Richmond area exceeded six tons of outdated directories during the
Troop 99 Re-Organized
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lenging pictures he is able to b y j he pj rs t Christian Church, present missionary principles, recgirtiy been reorganized, practices, problems, personal- new leaders are Rev, ities, and prospects. Along with Morris Finch, Institutional Repthese he also uses sound Koda- resentative, Frank Turner, chrome films to present the Committee Chairman; and Clifmissionary work in a number of ford H eise, Scoutmaster. Assisfields. Curios will also be on y n g Scoutmaster Heise are display,” the church said. Scott Pandorf and Mark McAn-
" After nearly ten years as a icll>
minister of the gospel here in A- Scoutmaster Heise is a Resmerica, Rev. Paul D. Frleder- i^ent Counselor at DePauw. His ichsen began to feel deeply the previous Scouting experiences world need of hearing the include aquatics and program message of Salvation. directorships at Scout summer "Sensing his responsibility cam p S His extensive training to this task, being then a pas- f or these positions ensures tor in Grand Rapids, Mich., he Troop 99 of a top quality pro-
applied to the Association of gram.
Baptist for World Evangelism Assistants Mark and Scott
Scout Troop 99, sponsored likewise have extensive Scout-
ing backgrounds. Mark McAn-
ich, an Eagle Scout, and Scott Pandorf, a former Scout, will
Blane Lodged In Jail
lend their expertise and experiences to the new troop. Although the personnel are new, Troop 99 is not. The predecessors of the unit left Troop 99 well endowed with tents, dining flys, cooking gear, advancement aids and assorted
collection period, Oct. 3-17. L. R. Bricker, Southeastern Division Manager and Richmond area project coordinator, said that he felt the drive was successful, expecially for the Girl Scouts who were quite anxious to participate in this effort to help curtail the mounting paper shortage. He said the directories collected during the drive will be recycled into functional insulation materials for construction. Even though the project period has expired in the Richmond area, depositories are still available and customers are still placing their old directories in the conveniently located receptacles. This was the second "Directories for Ecology” project conducted by General Telephone Company of Indiana. The first was conducted during August in Elkhart, Indiana as a pilot project to determine feasibility. The percentage of total directories and tonnage ac-
equipment. Scoutmaster Heise cummulated during the Elkhart
pilot study justified the continuation of the project. Recipient
William G. Bis no, 43, Indianapolis, was lodged in the Putnam County jail at 2:15 this morning by John Martin, Bainbridge Town Marshal. Blane was booked for driving while under the influence of intoxicants.
said, "We plan on having at least one outdoor experience every month. We will have our first campout in the near fu-
ture.”
Any young man in the sixth grade or 11 years of age may join. Those wishing to become a Scout or wanting more information may call Cliff Heise at 653-3766 or Frank Turner at 653-8276.
of the proceeds during the Elkhart phase of the project was the Elkhart Vocational Workshop of the Rehabilitation Center. In concluding his announcement, Prather said that General Telephone undertook such
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