Banner Graphic, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 November 1973 — Page 4

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Banner-Graphic, Greencastle, Indiana

Monday, November 12, 1973

DPU Gains Monon Bell With Win Over Wabash

The Monon Bell returned to Greencastle Saturday, claimed by a 28-21 DePauw football victory over Wabash. Here the reverred symbol of the 83-year-old rivalry—weigh-

NFL RESULTS

Miami 44

Baltimore 0

Dallas 23

New York Giants 10

Atlanta 44

Philadelphia 27

New York Jets 33

New England 13

Cincinnati 16

Buffalo 13

Washington 33

San Francisco 9

Green Bay 25

St. Louis 21

Minnesota 28

Detroit 7

Cleveland 23

Houston 13

Denver 30

San Diego 19

Los Angeles 29

New Orleans 7

Pittsburgh 17

Oakland 9

ing some 350-pounds-is passed from Little Giant custody to that of DePauw students. Wabash Soccermen Win Match At DePauw

Roller Derby Coming To Indy

It’s RoHqt Derby time again as the Midwest Pioneers meet the San Francisco Bombers at the Fairgrounds ColHsieum Indianapolis, on Wednesday night, November 21 at 8:00 p.m. Bud Atkinson. Sr., 35-year veteran Hall of Fame and newly appointed infield coach of the Pioneers, along with “Golden Girl” Joan Weston will be guiding the destinies of the Pioneers. Both must count heavily on the talents of Ronnie Robinson, Bob “Bald Eagle" Hein

and Larry Smith in the men’s field; plus Francine Cochu and Sherri Erich on the distaff side. “Main Man” for the Bay Bombers is veteran Charlie O’Connell, another Hall of Fame member, heavyweight Pete Boyd and Tony Roman. Roman’s wife, Carol “Peanuts” Meyer, co-captains the Bombers distaff unit along with Margie Laszlo. Other Bay Bombers include veteran Jimmy Cook, firey Delores Tucker...the leagues current M.V.P. and Rookie of the

Wabash defeated DePauw’s soccer team 3-1 before some 250 fans Saturday morning on Boswell Field. The Little Giants jumped off to a 2-0 lead before DePauw’s offensive forces could muster a score. When it came with some 25:00 minutes remaining in the match it came on a goal by Dennis Megwa. That cut the gap to 21, but the Tigers, despite at least three more excellent shots, couldn't deadlock the game. Wabash’s Dave Betz then added the clinched for the visitors by pumping a scorfe by Tiger goalie Terry Tobin with eight minutes left in the Year Chris Rowe. In a game sometimes best descrobed as “eight wheels up and eight skates down” the action promises to provide Roller Derby fans with all they want as these two arch rivals resume their own special brand of meyhem at the Coliseum.

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match. Wabash outshot the Tigers 14-9. DePauw finished the season with a 2-7-1 record, dropping its last four matches by a total of five goals. Wabash ended its season 6-2-2.

DePauw football coach Tom Mont has long maintained that DePauw football can give the fans just about everything Notre Dame can except parking problems. Saturday DePauw and Wabash gave parking problems as almost 5,000 overflowed Blackstock Stadium to see the Tigers recapture the Monon Bell with a 28-21 victory in the 80th struggle between the two old foes. It was a punctuated with almost as much sideline drama as on-the-field excitement, a veritable three ring circus with security forces making almost as many game saving catches as Bart Simpson made yards. T hough her certainly wasn’t the whole offensive show, the 190-pound Simpson was in most of the scenes as he set a new one-game DePauw rushing mark with 190 yards and became the 1 iger footballer to get over 2,000 yards in a career and over 1,000 in one-season. And DePauw needed just about everyone of them. Just when it appeared the Tigers had salted away their sixth win in nine games, Wabash came blowing back. John Paul Kelly pilfered a Wabash pass with 11:38 to play in the game and returned it to the Little Giant 36. Four plays later Sam Juarascio, picking up a key block from Neil Oslos, sprinted in from the 21 and DePauw led 28-14 with 10:08 to play, after John Jewett kicked a record-breaking 15th extra point kick. Wabash, however, came back two series later. Starting on their own 16 with 5:33 to play, the Little Giants picked up three first downs on DaVe Cogdill passes and then got the real break they needed—a DePauw pass interference in the endzone-to get in scoring position. This penalty moved the pigskin from the DePauw 21 to the Tiger cme and Cogdill smashed in on the next play with 3:58 remaining. The placement kick was good and Wabash trailed 28-21. As expected, Wabash tried the on-side kick. DePauw monentarily covered it at the Wabash 49, but fumbled and the Little Giants were breathing again. But on the very next play, Cogdill threw a perfect strike~to Tiger Jim Robich-at the DePauw 20. He raced the ball back to midfield and the Tigers gobbled up the remaining 3:40 with 10 rushing plays that shoved the ball to the Wabash 3 as the game ended. In that last drive Simpson broke his old one-game rushing mark of 170 yards and moved his one-season record in ninegames to 1,009. His former record for one season had been

747, set as a sophomore last year. His career mark w'ent to 2,112. Simpson said he went into the game hoping he would get 100 yards. But when DePauw’s rushing attack was stymied throughout the first period he said he forgot about it “because we saw we were really in a ball game.” By halftime, however, Simpson had 90 including a 21yard TD gallop in the second quarter that tied up the game 77 with 6:17 to play in the half. “People give me credit, but we really have a good line,” Simpson said. “It’s just the whole line. Neil Oslos puts his head anywhere (to block), and Reggie Simon—well. I’ve never really played behind a line like ours. Many times I’d be watching the films (of a previous game), and I’d just automatically pick up five yards because of the way our line would move out.” Wabash, after a scoreless first quarter, moved in front 7-0 when Dout Pirtle’s punt was blocked on the second play of the second period. Dave Lautz fell on it in the endzone and Bob Knowling converted for a 7-0 Wabash lead with 14:35 left in the half. DePauw, shaking off Wabash’s blitzing defense, marched down to the enemy 20, but Jewett missed a field goal from the 28. Undaunted, DePauw’s defense, which limited Wabash to 192 yards total offense for the day, held and the Tigers took over on their own 30. Juarascio and Simpson proceeded to string eight consecutive carries together, including a razzle-dazzle pitchback, and marched 70 yards. Simpson got the TD on a 21-yard run around the left side with Neil Marchese providing a key block. Jewett’s kick tied the game at 6:17 and that’s where the half ended. The Tigers narrowly escaped catastrophe early in the third quarter. Pirtle’s punt was again blocked and Wabash recovered at the Tiger 10. Three plays netted three yards and Knowling’s field goal from the 15 was wide. DePauw took over on its own 20 and went 80 yards in 11 plays. Simpson, sprung loose on a block by Oslos, dashed in for the go-ahead TD from the 14. Jewett’s kick made it 14-7, DePauw, with 3:47 left in the third quarter. Moments later DePauw was right back at the attack. Freshman Tom McShane intercepted Cogdill’s aerial and returned it 13 yards to the Wabash 43. Oslos and Simpson teamed up to get the ball to the 22. Juarascio legged it in from there with 85 seconds left in the third stanza. Jewett made it 21-7. But that margin of comfort didn’t last long. Wabash took the kickoff back to its own 31, got 15 more on a face mask penalty and 31 more on a highly disputed pass interference call. That put the ball on DePauw’s 23. After a pass lost one yard Cogdill pitched a perfect strike to Ed Jones in the endzone to make it 21-14 after Knowling’s boot. Kelly’s aerial theft early in the fourth quarter got DePauw moving again from the Wabash 36. Oslos, Simpson, and Scott Cupp rushed for 15 yards and Juarascio danced in from the 21 for that 28-14 lead with 10:08 to play. DePauw finished with a 328 to 44 advantage in rushing yardage. The Tigers carried 80 times, Wabash had 31 carries. The losers’ completed 10 of 31 passes for 148 yards and had three intercepted. Juarascio threw' five, hit one for 14 and had none intercepted. Oslos, who gained 472 yards in 128 carries this season without ever being thrown for a loss, gained 64 in 14 trips against Wabash. Juarascio carried 20 times for 58 yards. DePauw’s season record wound up 6-3. Wabash finished 5-5 as the Tigers took a 37-36 lead in the 83-year-old rivalry. This Saturday, though having completed their season, the Tigers will be eagerly watching the outcome of the Butler-In-diana Central game. A Butler loss would give DePauw a tie for the Indiana Collegiate Conference title. A Butler win would give the Tigers a second place tie with Evansville. ICC STANDINGS

Butler

3

1

.750

DePauw

3

2

.600

Evansville

3

2

.600

Ind. Central

2

2

.500

Valparaiso

2

3

.400

St. Joseph’s

1

4

.200

Wabash

0

4

. .000

While the battle for the bell was taking place on the gridiron, action like this unfolded throughout the afternoon on the sidelines. This unidentified DePauw student snatched the Wabash pennant (in his right hand) from a mass of Little Giants and raced

across the field toward the home stands. He eluded this would-be tackier and hurled the pennant into the crjwd in the stands. A melee ensued and was finally quelled by alert security forces.

BOWLING RESULTS

©i>£

SP-1082

Cash Concrete 11-6-73 Cash Concrete 66 22 Clay Co. RTC 64 24 Walton’s Masonry 54 34 Pepsi Cola 54 34 Stultz Feed & Seed 48 40 Barton Heating, Cooling Plumbing 48 40 Paris Construction 43 45 Edmonds 43 45 Women’s World Figure Salon 36 52 McMillan Carpets 34 54 1st National Bank 34 54 Bellenia Beauty Salon 33 55 Ogles’ Trucking 32 56 Stardust Hills 26 61 High team game: Clay Co. RTC 861 High team series: ClayCo. RTC 2366 High ind. game: J. Alex, 207 high ind. series: M. Tyler, 561 Series over 450: M. Tyler, 561; J. Alex, 550; B. Edmonds, 521; M. Monnett, 489; S. Cash, 475; D. Holsapple, 474; E. Pearson, 468; B. Pierce, 467; D. Gilliam, 463.

Commercial 11-8-73 team American Legion Post #58 Brewatera Shuee ft Son* Fall Oil Co. Inc. Downtown Marathon

Father's Aux. Post #1 38 50 Hopkins 32 56 Poe Oil Co. Inc. 32 56 Hlfh Team Game-Shuee ft Sons-

1025

High Team Series-Fall Oil Col

Inc.-2902

High Ind. Game-S. Crawley-234 High Ind. Series-S. Cofer-605 Series over 450 (female) 550 (male) highest to lowest. S. Cofer-605 and R. Hampton-591. Jaycee Bantams Howard Harmless Laundry 12 4 Pete Williams Cadets J2 4 Posey Patch 11 5 Huber ft Sons U 5 BftK Root Beer u $ Ottenbacher Toolft Die 10 6 RftS Farm Supply 8 8 White's Rental 7 9 Ron's Restaurant 7 9 Hopkins 6 10 Brewsters Texaco 5 11 Seyferts 5 11 K&KGulf 4 12 SutherlinsT.V. 3 14 Monday Afternoon Phipps Trucking

10-29-73

TEAM ^ L

Fashion Fitness

Cloverdale IGA „ ”*

High Team Game-B ft K Root Beer-655 High Team Series-B ft K Root Beer-1804 High ind. Game-Sharon Sheldon271 High Ind. Series-Patty Hecko-660 Series over 450 (female), 550 (male) highest to lowest: Bessie Haslet-450, Petronella Morris-458, Dorisann Albright-482, and Helen Wallus-459. LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Sharks obtained goalie Ian Wilkie from the Edmonton Oilers for cash in a World Hockey Association transaction.

G.H.S. ATHLETICS 11-12-73—11-17-73 Monday, November 12Family Night SwimmingCANCELLED; Adult Re-creation-CANCELctD Tuesday, November 13High School RecreationCANCELLED; High School, Jr. High and Elementary Swimming-CAN-CELLED; G.H.S. Basketball Preview-McAnally Center-7:00 p.m.; Scrimmage-Admission-75e Wednesday, November 14- No Athletic Events Scheduled Thursday, November 15- Adlut RecreationCANCELLED UNTIL LATE FEBRUARY

Inll

West Central Conference

Final Football Standings

Conference

Total

Cascade

6-1

8-2

Edgewood

6-1

7-3

Avon

4-2

5-5

North Putnam

3-3

3-7

Owen Valley

3-4

4-5

Monrovia

2-4

2-8

Cloverdale

2-5

2-8

South Putnam

0-6

0-9

Points T oward All-Sports T rophy

Maple Terrace Apartments

BftK Root Beer

40 Zft 44 28

Cross Country

Football

Present Total

Mac’s Building

40 32

Edgewood

6

V/>

m

Dewey's Barber Shop

34 38

Cascade

4

VA

WA

W L

Covert’s Heating

34 38

Cloverdale

8

2

10

60 28

Boutique Beauty Shop

32 40

Avon

3

6

9

54 34

Jerry’s Standard

32 40

Owen Valley

r

4

9

48 40

Indian Oaks Camp Grounds

28 44

South Putnam

n

I

8

46 42

Armstrong Racing Enterprise 24 48

! North Putnam

\

5

6

44 44

Rex Dun Shell Agent

14 58

Monrovia

2

3

5

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