Banner Graphic, Volume 17, Number 27, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 October 1986 — Page 8
A8
THE BANNERGRAPHIC, October 2,1986
Division II to vote on requirements
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Division II schools will vote on adopting stronger freshman eligibility reqirements mandated under Proposition 48 at the next NCAA convention in January, but the important action for the larger schools may come next June, according to the head of the NCAA Presidents Commission. Commission chairman John Slaughter of Maryland said Wednesday the 44-member panel decided not to sponsor a broad range of controversial proposals aimed at cutting costs and de-emphasing bigtime college sports. But Slaughter said the commission may call the schools together next June to consider the measures, which were first suggested by an ad-hoc committee of presidents representing the American Council on Education. The commission decided to sponsor one item at the NCAA convention in San Diego to force Division II schools to comply with Proposition 48, the freshman academic requirements which Division I schools adopted beginning this academic year. There are about 185 Division II schools. “That was the wish of the Division II presidents on the commission, and so we will sponsor that,” Slaughter said. Slaughter also said the influential Presidents Commission found itself generally “in harmony” with such ideas as eliminating spring football practice, trimming football and basketball scholarships and cutting coaching staffs. “I have appointed (Chancellor) Mike Heyman of Cai-Berkeley as chairman of a special committee to study these cost-cutting measures and they could be brought up at a special convention of the NCAA in June of 1987,” Slaughter told a news conference following the commission’s two-day meetings. The ACE measures tabled for further study also included basing scholarship assistance on a student’s financial need and re-distribution of television revenue. Those measures are certain to encounter strong resistance if ever brought to a vote of NCAA schools.
Avon spikes SPHS, 15-10,15-11
Jenny Merkel, Darla Parker and Kim Hood combined to serve for 17 points Tuesday, but it was not enough as the South Putnam High School volleyball team dropped a 15-10,15-11 decision to Avon. MERKEL AND PARKER both scored six points while Hood added five to lead SPHS in scoring. Micki Carpenter and Julee Hassler both
Prep notes from last week
—Terre Haute North’s Warren Cook passed for 377 yards and six touchdowns and ran for a seventh touchdown in a 50-0 victory over Northview. He completed nine of 13 passes with one interception. “It was a fine job,” said Coach Wayne Stahley, “but we don’t want any more of those interceptions.” —Junior Martin, second in the state in scoring, raised is point total to 90 with t ree touchdowns in North Vermillion’s 46-14 victory over North Central (Sullivan). —Dominic Brogan rushed for 189
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“Academics must take precedence over athletics,” Slaughter said. The commission also went on record as supporting several items which the NCAA Council has said it will present at the January convention. These include banning boosters from all recruiting activities and shortening the time football and basketball coaches can recruit. Slaughter also said the Presidents Commission may consider a rule that would tie a school’s football and basketball scholarships to its graduation rate. “We have no details whatsoever. That is why we are not prepared at this time to try to ram something through the convention in a relatively short amount of time,” Slaughter said. All legislation for the January convention must be submitted by Nov. 1. Slaughter said the Presidents Commission will meet during the January convention to decide whether to call a special convention for the following June. “We should also know the final form that these cost-containment measures will take. These would include also television revenue distribution and how it may impact on the student-athlete, ” he said. Slaughter said he will eventually appoint a committee of 7-10 persons to work with Heyman in outlining possible legislation for the special convention. “It is important to note the fact that these issues affect all of higher education,” Slaughter said. “I will complete the establishment of that committee hopefully within the next week or so. It will be looking at all the issues recommended by the ACE group. It will als be looking at the questions of length of playing seasons and the impact of long playing seasons not only on costs but on the ability of athletes to be students.” Other areas to be explored, Slaughter said, are coaches’ salaries and “distribution of televison revenue and how it might be done in a way that impacts more positively on the ability of institutions to manage their intercollegiate athletic programs.”
provided three kills. “We played poorly, that’s all there is to it,” said Eagles’ coach Rebecca Brothers, who saw her team drop its record to 7-4. “Our service reception was terrible. There are a lot of things we need to improve on. ” Next action for South is tonight at home against Tri-West.
yards and two touchdowns in Maconaquah’s 26-14 vicory over Eastbrook. —Taylor’s Titans 6-0 victory over Cass ended a 16-game losing string. “It was a great defensive effort and we hung tough and never gave up,” said Coach Steve Cusick. “There was no doubt in my mind this game was ours.”
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Baseball Major League Baseball At A Glance By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W. L. Pct. GE x-Boston 95 62 .605 New York 86 72 .544 9% Toronto 86 73 .541 10 Detroit 83 75 . 525 12% Cleveland 81 78 .509 15 Milwaukee 74 83 .471 21 Baltimore 73 86 .459 23 West Division x-California 91 67 .576 Texas 84 74 .532 7 Oakland 75 84 .472 16% Kansas City 74 85 . 465 17Ms Chicago 71 87 .449 20 Minnesota 68 90 .430 23 Seattle 67 92 .421 24% x-clinched division title Wednesday's Games Cleveland 12, Minnesota 3 Toronto 3, New York 0 Boston 11, Baltimore 7 Chicago 3, Seattle 1 Oakland 9, Texas 7 Kansas City 2, California 0 Detroit 2, Milwaukee 1 Thursday’s Games New York (Drabek 6-8) at Boston (Hurst 13-7), (n) California (Witt 18-10) at Texas (Mason 7-3), (n) Chicago (DeLeon 4-5) at Minnesota (Heaton 7-14), (n) Detroit (Morris 20-8) at Milwaukee (Vuckovich 2-3), (n) Only games scheduled Friday’s Games Seattle at Cleveland, (n) Milwaukee at Toronto, (n) Detroit at Baltimore, (n) New York at Boston, (n) California at Texas, (n) Chicago at Minnesota, (n) Kansas City at Oakland, (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W. L. Pct. GE x-New York 104 54 .658 Philadelphia 84 74 .532 20 St. Louis 79 79 .500 25 Montreal 77 80 .490 26% Chicago 68 90 .430 36 Pittsburgh 63 95 .399 41 West Division x-Houston 92 66 .582 Cincinnati 83 75 .525 9 San Francisco 81 77 .513 11 Atlanta 72 85 . 459 19% San Diego 73 86 .459 19% Los Angeles 72 87 . 453 20% x-clinched division title Wednesday’s Games Houston 5, San Francisco 0 New York 6, Montreal 4, 10 innings Chicago at Philadelphia, cancelled, rair Cincinnati 6, Atlanta 5 Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 3 San Diego 3, Los Angeles 2 Thursday’s Games Houston (Scott 18-10) at San Franciscc (Blue 10-10) New York (Gooden 16-6) at Montrea (Youmans 13-11), (n) Cincinnati (Browning 14-13) at Atlanta (Palmer 11-10), (n) Pittsburgh (Fansler 0-2) at St. Louis (Forsch 14-9), (n) Only games scheduled Friday’s Games St. Louis at Chicago Pittsburgh at New York, (n) Montreal at Philadelphia, (n) San Diego at Cincinnati, (n) Atlanta at Houston, (n) San Francisco at Los Angeles, (n) Football INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Games this week involving The Associated Press Top 10 Indiana high school football teams (All games Friday unless noted otherwise): Class 5A 1. Ft. Wayne Snider (5-0) vs FW Concordia. 2. Carmel (5-0) vs Jay Co.
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Sports scoreboard
3. Penn (5-0) vs Elkhart Central. 4. Martinsville (5-0) vs Bloomington South at Hoosier Dome. 5. Warren Central (4-1) vs 3A N 0.3 Indpls Cathedral. 6. Lake Central (5-0) at Griffith. 7. Merrillville (5-0) vs Andrean. 8. Ft. Wayne North (5-0) atFW Wayne. 9. Valparaiso (3-2) vs LaPorte. 10. Marion (4-1) at Anderson. Class 4A 1. Evansville Reitz (5-0) vs Evansville North. 2. Hobart (4-1) vs Portage. 3. Indpls Chatard (4-1) vs Indpls Scecina. 4. Ft. Wayne Dwenger (4-1) vs FW South. 5. Jasper (4-1) vs Gibson Southern. 6. Boonville (4-1) vs Princeton. 7. DeKalb (4-1) at 4A N 0.9 Bellmont. 8. S.Bend St. Joseph’s (3-2) vs Highland. 9. Bellmont (5-0) vs4A No.7DeKalb. 10. Plainfield (4-1) vs Mooresville. Class 3A 1. Wawasee (5-0) vs Warsaw. 2. Zionsville (5-0) atTri-Central. 3. Indpls Cathedral (3-2) at 5A N 0.5 Warren Central. 4. Tipton (5-0) at Wabash. 5. Indpls Roncalli (3-2) vs Indpls Washington at Hoosier Dome. 6. Western (4-1) at Taylor. 7. North Wood (4-1) at Bremen. 8. Evansville Memorial (3-2) vs Ev. Central Sat. 9. North Montgomery (5-0) vs McCutcheon. 10. Mt. Vernon (Hancock) (4-1) at Pendleton Hts. Class 2A 1. Lawrenceburg (5-0) vs East Central. 2. Tri-West (5-0) at Owen Valley. 3. Tippecanoe Valley (5-0) vs Eastern (Howard). 4. Whitko (5-0) vs N.Miami. 5. Lakeland (4-0) vs Fremont. 6. Indpls Brebeuf (5-0) idle. 7. Beech Grove (4-1) vs Wes-Del. 8. Ft. Wayne Luers (3-2) vs FW Elmhurst Sat. 9. Woodlan (5-0) vs Leo. 10. Monrovia (5-0) vs Edgewood. Class A 1. North Judson (5-0) at Winamac Sat. 2. Sheridan (5-0) vs Clinton Prairie. 3. Adams Central (5-0) vs Southern Wells. 4. Central Noble (5-0) at Garrett. 5. Springs Valley (5-0) at Wood Memorial. 6. Clarksville (4-1) at N.Harrison. 7. Linton (4-1) atN.Knox. 8. Jimtown (3-2) vs New Prairie. 9. N. Vermillion (5-0) at Covington. 10. Dugger (4-0) vs Palestine, 111., Sat. Soccer Putnam County Youth Soccer Association Sept. 27 results Under 8 Twisters 3, Rowdies 2 Twisters - Craig Williams 3 Rowdies - Adam Curtis 2 Titans 3, Tremors 2 Titans - Brian Faletic 1, Ben Tomko 1, Kris Pruitt 1 Tremors - Jason Lanie 2 Rockets 3, Strikers 0 Rockets - Michael Buchanan, 2, Cory Williams: 1 Under 10 Tornadoes 3, Dynamoes 0 Tornadoes - Andrew Davis 1, John Sims 1, Josh Richardson 1 Flyers 2, Spurs 0 Flyers - Jared Grable 1, Steve McGrath 1 Under 12 Demons 3, Blazers 3 Demons - Matt Richardson 1, Matt Stelzner 1, John Amos 1 Blazers - Derek Bremer 2, Wes Duggins 1 Sept. 28 results Under 8 Cyclones 3. Rowdies 0 Cyclones - Ryan Woods 3 Under 14 Stampeders 5, Stingers 2 Stampeders - Chris Boatman 3, Matt Amis 1, Aaron Pankratz 1 Stingers - Brent Curry 1, Jason Luken 1 Putnam United Under 12 Traveling Team Sept. 27 result Richmond 4, Putnam United 0
Sept. 28 result Putnam United 4, Bloomington 2 Mark Hiemenz, Kyle Christiansen, John Furby and Travis Heavins all scored one goal for Putnam United. Transactions FOOTBALL National Football League GREEN BAY PACKERS—Agreed to terms with Chuck Fusina, quarterback, on a one-year contract. HOUSTON OlLEßS—Signed Larry Griffin,
State high school football leaders ByTheAssociatedPress RUSHING Att Yds TD Vaughn Dunbar, FW Snider 83 947 15 Junior Martin, N.Vermillion 80 796 15 Lee Pettit, E.Central 73 766 9 Craig Pryor, Muncie North 124 734 9 Brian Storey, Merrillville 126 703 8 Steve Degenkolb, Western 110 666 11 Ricky King, Alexandria 110 661 6 Jamie Cullison, Tipp.Valley " 134 647 10 Bill Brinkman, Lawrenceburg 66 639 13 Rob Cooper, Pendleton Hts. 89 625 9 Kyle Marsh, Zionsville 82 617 7 Chris Noone, Elwood 101 615 6 PASSING C-Att Yds TD Reece Mann, Blackford 78-149 1149 14 Don Hoog, E.Central 65-122 1047 8 Jason Barnes, Northwestern 57-121 937 6 Mike Meredith, Indps Brebeuf 46-82 922 15 Warren Cook, Terre Haute N. 44-88 918 9 Jim Bear, Tri-West 65-126 895 7 Kurt Schlicher, N.Montgomery 58-107 847 13 Scott Hammersley, Lawrence N. 54-125 845 8 Jeff Rose, Brownsburg 52-115 813 5 Jeff Callahan, Bedford 63-140 811 7 Ross Hales, Elk. Memorial 52-123 790 4 Mark Hudson, Speedway 32-73 779 7 Eric Floyd, Monrovia 38-77 743 9 Felix Alcala, Madison-Grant 47-107 722 7 Mark Bates, Heritage Hills 39-81 686 6 Jon Morrell, Maconaquah 47-112 674 4 RECEIVING Rec Yds TD Steve Confer, Blackford 31 582 8 Jim Oakley, Martinsville 21 523 10 Tom Hanson, Hammond Clark 31 516 2 Henry Spillers, TH North 18 467 4 Dan Godan, Brownsburg 27 459 3 Bryan Slay, Linton 17 439 5 Jeff Weber, Speedway 14 439 3 Bryan Courtney, Indp.Brebeuf 25 435 9 Willie Wilder, Boonville 22 417 6 Jeff Sichting, Monrovia 20 401 4 Mike Hazen, N.Montgomery 22 369 3 Dan Underwood, Blackford 25 367 6 Earl Brown, Indp. Brebeuf 13 365 4 Rob Thomas, N.Montgomery 21 362 7 Scott Handion, Avon 20 361 2 Frank Sharp, W.Vigo 18 345 1 Mike Crews, Heritage Hills 15 336 2 Brad Clem, W.Vigo 20 325 2 Anthony Gray, Elk. Central 17 320 3 SCORING „ L , TD PAT 2Pt FG Pts Vaughn Dunbar, FW Snider 20 0 0 0 120 Junior Martin, N.Vermillion 15 0 0 0 90 Bill Brinkman, Lawrenceburg 13 0 2 0 82 Rob Cooper, Pendleton Hts. 12 0 1 0 74 Greg Farrell, Culver Mil. 9 19 0 0 73 Steve Degenkolb, Western 12 0 0 0 72 Jeff Hegg, Covington 8 9 0 3 66 Todd Pryor, Jay Co. 9 0 3 0 60 Jamie Cullison, Tipp.Valley 10 0 0 0 60 Troy Wynkoop, Brownsburg 10 0 0 0 60 Jimmy Oakley, Martinsville 10 0 0 0 60 Mike Mozingo, Franklin Cent. 7 12 1 1 59 Craig Pryor, Muncie North 9 0 0 0 54 Lee Pettit 1 , E.Central 9 0 0 0 54 Brian Story, Merrillville 8 0 3 0 54 Rusty Setzer, Hammond Noll 9 0 0 0 54 Brian Bragg, Sheridan 9 0 0 0 54 Torrence Terrell, Warren C. 9 0 0 0 54 Bryan Courtney, Brebeuf 9 0 0 0 54 Ron Wilcox, Salem 8 0 1 0 50
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cornerback. Placed Allen Lyday, safety, on injured reserve. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Waived Don Holmes, wide receiver. MIAMI DOLPHINS—PIaced Mike Charles, nose tackle, on injured reserve. Re-signed Mack Moore, defensive end. MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Signed Mike Stensrud, defensive tackle. Placed Mark Mullaney, defensive end, on injured reserve. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Waived Greg LaFleur, tight end, and Scott Holman, wide receiver. Signed Mike Ruether, center, and Don Holmes, wide receiver.
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