The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 November 1964 — Page 10
The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana Wednesday, November 4, 1964
Fillmore Opens Season With Victory Over Lizton Blazers
Net Banquet November 17
Putnam County basketball fans got their first real taste of action last night as the Fillmore Cardinals rolled over Lizton 66-42. The Cards outclassed the Lizton Blue Blazers in all tallies except free throws where Lizton picked up 15 of their 42 points. Coaches from all over the county viewed the first loop tilt of the season that seemed to be error plagued for the Lizton squad. Adding to the misfortune of Lizton’s smaller squad, a technical foul was called with 5:06 remaining in the second quarter against the Blue Blazers Mike Hicks. Big John Glaze collected the free throw for the Cards. Glaze also added 23 points to the Cardinal cause of which 19 were in the first quarter, while Mike Jarrett paced the Blazers with 17. Next week the East Putnam Cards tangle with Cloverdale in their first home encounter and Lizton plays host to Belle Union this coming Friday at North Salem.. Fridays schedule also includes Roachdale at Reelsville, Bainbridge at Rosedale, New Ross at Waveland, and Russellville at Linden. Summaries: Fillmore FG FT PF Skelton 2 0 0 Jackson 10 0 L. Robinson 4 0 1 Bunten 10 0 Huber 10 5 Phillips 0 0 2 Glaze ...; 9 5 3 Archer .■. 2 0 4 Craig ..... 221 Evans 4 12 Woods 0 10 R. Robinson 3 0 0 Total 29 9 18 Lizton FG FT PF Jarrett 7 3 4 Smith 3 0 1 Stout 0 7 2 Scounce 2 12 Antibus 0 0 3 Hicks 0 * ° Total 12 15 14
The public is invited to attend a banquet for the Greeneastle High School Varsity basketball team. The dinner will be held at Windy Hill Country Club, Tuesday evening, Nov. 17, at 7:00 p. m. This is your opportunity to meet this sea-
Commissioner Joe Foss, in son's Tiger Cubs,
announcing the decision, said Guest speaker for the evenj the owners decided to concen- ing will be Bob Cook, famed
trate rm strpnp-thpninsr the ex- TV Basketball announcer.
A sportsman’s fellowship will be held from 5:00 to 6:30 p. m.
proceeding the dinner.
trate on strengthening the isting eight teams in the league rather than add to the
present alignment.
Hoosier Hysteria Swings Into Gear Throughout State
By United Press International INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Indiana high school basketball, as controversial and as hotly-con-tested as politics, crowds into the sports news this week with the start of a new season and disputes over gymnasium capacities still unresolved. Calendar-wise. Monday night was the first opportunity for the small-town quintets to get in their first licks and several hundred of them will be in action by next weekend. The larger schools .however, still busy winding up the football campaign, won’t join in the basket barrage until later this month or the first week in December. Better games last night in-
The coaches were warned to mind their manners this season. If they don't, it'll be costly.
By United Press International INDIANA BASKETBALL HIGH SCHOOL Ligonier 67 Wolf Lake 60 Claypool 84 Milford 47 Topeka 75 Cromwell 64 Hoagland 77 Rock Creek 59 Alquina 90 Fayette Central 62 | Aubbeenaubbee 47 Richland Center 42 Charlestown 91 Crothersville 60 I Darlington 59 Alamo 42 Fillmore 66 Lizton 42 Gaston 65 Pennville 41 Harrison Twp. 82 Sulphur ! Springs 57 Jefferson Twp. Elkhart 67 N. Webster 65 Jefferson Twp. Grant 65 Eat-
on 54
73 Oregon-Davis 69 59 Jackson Twp. Por-
Tickets are $2.00 per person and can be obtained by calling Walter Fry Jr. (OL 3-6531) or Jack Burns (OL 3-4930).
Lacrosse Leesburg
ter 55
The new rules provide that any Lewisville 79 Mays 71
coach jumping off the bench to protest an official's decision will draw a technical foul. However, the boss will be permitted to get up and talk to substitutes on the bench, to go to the official scorer's bench, to get up to call time-outs and to ; leav his seat to talk to his player when the clock is I
stopped.
28 Race Horses Perish In Fire
LAUREL. Md. UPI
Milroy 58 Clarksburg 55 over-
time
New Ross 67 Linden 55 Russellville 62 Waveland 56 Sandcreek 75 St. Paul 64 Silver Creek 92 Henryville 46 Spencer Creek 70 Gosport 39
' Straughn 65 Arlington Rush 56
Vevay 66 Cross Plains 45 West High 66 LaPaz 52
Willamsburg 70 Fountain City
| 51.
Still Top Team In State; UPI
An in-
cludes Crothersville at Charles- vestigation was under way totown, Heneryville at Silver day to determine the cause of Creek, Plainsville at Shoals, and a fife that destroyed at least Elnora at Washington Catholic. Thoroughbreds and a barn at
Laurel Race Track
night.
Bucknell Gets Perfect Rating NEW YORK UPI —Bucknell was a unanimous choice in balloting for the Lambert Cup and received a perfect 10.0 rating today in the race for eastern small college football supre-
macy.
The Bisons knocked off Temple, 31-28, last Saturday on Bill Lerro’s three r touchdown passing
spree.
Gettysburg again was voted into second place by the board of eight sportswriters, coaches and broadcasters with an 8.9
rating.
Amherst, with a perfect 6-0
record, is third at 7.5—a comfortable margin over the 4.8 acquired by fourth place Albright. Temple, which led early in the
season, is fifth with 4.6.
Among the better Friday night contests are Salem at North Central, Corydon a t Brownstown, Silver Creek at Charlestown, Southwestern at Seottsbui’g, Bloomfield at East1 ern, Shawswick at Loogootee, VeVay at Madison. Winslow at Monroe City. Shoals at Worthington. Plainville at Switz City and Vincennes Catholic at Deck-
By United Press International
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Unbeaten but once-tied South Bend S' - Joseph’s remained the top
Tuesday candidate today for Indiana’s
high school football mythical
Wise Move By Purdue Coach United Press International LAFAYETTE. Ind. UPI — When Purdue football coach Jack Mollenkopf decided to switch Bob Hadrick from fifthstring quarterback to end, it may have been one of the wisest moves he has made. They made the change a year ago and it was an immediate hit. Hadrick developed into one of the Big Ten’s finest pass receivers—and he proved it again against Illinois. He grabbed eight passes from sophomore quarterback Bob Griese, some of them bordering on being sensational grabs, to garner United Press International Midwest “Lineman of the W'ek’’ honors. The 6’ 2” junior from South Bend, Ind., has been a standout all season. But against Illinois, which trounced the Boilermakers throughly a year ago, Hadrick was at his best. “They had two guys on him all the time and one of them was Dick Butkus,” said Mollenkopf. “And still he was able to come down with the ball. “He has beautiful moves to get into the open—he has the finest move of any college pass receiver I know." Without hesitation, Mollenkopf said Hadrick is “the greatest end since I’ve been here.”
set up the first by taking four passes from Griese for 51 yards in a 60-yard drive. But an even bigger thrill than his pass-catching, said Hadrick, was when his team took the ball into the Illinois end zone three tim.s in the first 20 minutes. “They humiliated us last year at Illinois, but I think we broke their backs when we ran up a 20-0 lead,” he said. The Illinois game was one of the toughest Hadrick has played in—“as tough as Michigan,” he said.
Tennis Star Cited For Sportsmanship
Counts His Misses Rather Than Hits NEW YORK UPI — Unlike most quarterbacks in the country, Tulsa’s Jerry Rhome finds it easier to keep track of his passing accuracy by counting the misses rather than the hits. That’s because Rhome, unlike any quarterback in the nationcollege or professional—fails to complete only three of every 10 tosses. Last week against Oklahoma State Rhome outdid himself, completing 35 of 43 passes for, 488 yards and four touchdowns. He also broke the all-time major college records for a single game in completions, passing yardage and total offense.
Prisoner Votes LEBANON UPI — T r uman Isenhour, 26, Mechanicsburg, arrested and jailed Monday on check forgery charges, was released from the county jail here Tuesday on his own recognizance to enable him to vote. '
In any sport it’s not just winning that counts, it’s how you play the game, as well. Many a time a loser has walked off a playing field with the cheers of the spectators ringing in his ears for an outstanding display of good sportsmanship in the face of tough breaks and eventual defeat. In the tennis world, such was precisely the case for Spain’s No. 1 player, Manuel Santana, in the competition at Wimbledon, England. Santana suffered an injury to his foot so painful that he could not walk the next day. He might quite naturally have been expected to drop out of the tournament. But Santana wasn’t ready to do that. He took a pain-kiiiing injection and \v r ent on to play Gene Scott. Santana took Scott in five sets. In the next round he was beaten by Christian Kuhnke. It was a sad moment for San-
Ten fire companies were re- state crown. Against Illinois, he t o o k 8 quired to bring the blaze under The Indians, with an 8-0-1 passes—a single-game school control and Laurel volunteer record, topped the next-to-last record—for 95 yards and 1
fire officials announced immediately they were investigating for possible signs of arson. The cause of the fire still had not been determined early today. State police reported that six men were in the building before
er - the fire broke out at about 10 Lafayette's defending state p. m., EST, and although one champions, with Bill Wolsieffer was missing for several hours, subbing for ailing “coach of the all eventually were accounted
open
Diablos Rate Second Place
NEW YORK UPI — The Los Angles State Diablos, a “small” college team in name only, vaulted into second plare today in the United Press International small college football ratings. Whittenberg re-
mained No. 1 for the
straight week.
Los Angeles State has enrollement of more than 19,000 students three times as many as Notre Dame, the major college leader, and larger than eight Big 10 conference universities and plays its home games in the 100,000-seat capa-
city Rose Bowl.
The Diablos, who have a perfect 5-0 record, crushed Cal Poly at Pomona 55-6 Saturday and advanced from fourth place to runnerup with six first-place votes and 214 points. Wittenberg, which stretched its unbeaten streak to 29 games with a 40-7 victory over Chio Wesleyan, received 20 first-place ballots and 278 points from the 35 coaches on the UPI rating
board.
The NCAA determines whether a college rates as “major” or "small”—not on the basis of enrollment, bot primarily on the number of major college opponents a team plays. A college must play at least half its games against major college oppsition to qualify for the higher level.
year” Marion Crawley. Nov. 21 against Attica. A campaign by the state fire
marshal’s office to whip seating capacity of high school gymnasium and other similar structors in line with the building code calling for 22 inches of exit space per 100 seats threatened to cut many thausands of seats from available
space.
However, mos f schools were engaged in the acts of adding exits as the season got under way and were expected to regain all or most of the seats lost by fire marshal recommen-
dations.
A field of 572, including fivetime state champion M u n c i e Central, was expected for the 1965 state tourney, compared
with 597 this year.
School mergers continued to chop down the field which at its peak reachf’ 787 in 1938. Muncie’s one-year suspension will be up in January and the
third I Bearcats are scheduled to re-
| join hoop warfare on the second day of the New Year. Eight new schools emerged " ->m consolidations since the : 1963-64 term. New names to remember and the former schools they comprise are Lakeland Brighton, LaGrange, Lima, Wolcottville, Prarie Heights Orland, SpringFeld Twp at | Mongo, Sa’ n Center, Blue River Moorland. Mount Sum- 1 mit Cascade, Amo, Clayton. Stilesville, Castor North and Sout 1- Caston, Eastern Han- j cock Charlottesville, Wilkinson j North Vermillion Cayuga, Newp—t. Perrsville, and Randolph Southern Lynn, Spartan-
burg.
Stincsvillc also was discontinued and joined Ellettsville in a unit now known as Edgewood. Also discontinued were Dover, Freedom. Freetown, Jefferson Twp. Tipton, Kingsbury, Madison Twp at Wakarusa, Mill C^eek, Pinnell. Rockcreek Wells, San Pierre, S i d n ey, Stillwell, Vernon, and Wallace. San Pierre was one of three teams to go through the 1963-64 season unbeaten.
for. None of the famed horses here for the annual running of the $150,000 Washington, D. C., International, Nov. 11, were involved in the fire. Several foreign Thoroughbreds, such as Anilin of Russia, already are quartered here while Kelso, the American champion, was expected to arrive today. Football Owners Vote On Ruling NEW YORK UPI — American Football League owners voted today against any expansion before the 1966 season.
United Press International coaches’ board ratings easily, grabbing 7 of 10 first-place votes for 97 points, just 3 short of a perfect score. They close out their season at I neighboring Penn Friday. The upper bracket of the UPI “Big 10” remained unchanged, with Kokomo second, Elkhart third, Bloomington fourth and South Bend Riley fifth. Kokomo received two firstplace votes and wound up with 84 points. Elkhart got 75. Bloomington 61 and Riley 56. The lower bracket spots were shifted slightly. South Bend Washington moved up from seventh to sixth, Evansville Reitz from eighth to seventh. East Chicago Washington from 11th to eighth, Indianapolis Sacred Heart from 10th to ninth, and East Chicago Roosevelt and LePorte slipped to be deadlocked for 10th place. Roosevelt, knocked from the unbeaten ranks by St. Joe last week, was sixth last week and LaPorte, loser to Elkhart, was ninth.
touchdown to give him 36 for the season and boosting him to within easy reach of the oneseason record of 43 by Bernie
Flowers in 1952.
Hadrick also appeared to be a cinch to re-w r rite Flowers’ 3year career record of 82 receptions since he aleady has 65 with 12 games to go—three this season and nine more in 1965. Besides scoring the second touchdowm gainst Illinois,
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scholastic career Tuesday night with a conversion in Huntingburg’s 7-0 victory over Jasper
for a total of 202 points.
Scouted by at least half a dozen colleges in his final high school game, Blemker kicked the extra point after John Wellemeyer scored the game's only touchdowm with five seconds to
go in the third period.
record—breaking high school football scorer, w r ound up his That left Blemker with 31 touchdowns. 14 extra points and
a safety for the season.
Santana with the Martini & Rossi Sportsmanship Trophy tana who was seeded third. Reporters flocked to Santana after the match to ask about his foot. Santana made no excuses. Instead he had nothing but the highest praise for his opponent. “Wnen you lose,” he said, “you lose. Why think up ex-
cuses?”
It was this kind of sportsmanship which won Santana the Martini & Rossi Sportsmanship Trophy which was presented to him by James B. Dickey, president of the United States Lawn Tennis Association, at the annual International Tennis Ball in New York. Seven-Up 44 36 Phillips 66 44 36 Hopkins-Walton 44 36 Cochran’s Furniture 42 38 Angwell Curtain 38 42 G’Castle Offire 34 46 Father’s Auxilliary 24 56
Ends Career
COM.MEKC IAL LEAGUE Octol»er 29, 1964 Team \v L Sutherlin’s TV & App. 50 30
High Team Series: Seven-Up— 2635. Hi"h Team Game: Seven-Up— 912. High Individual Series:— Jalk Hurst —580. High Individual Game: Jack Hurst —- 224. 500 Series: J. Hurst 580, D. Priest 569, J. Rice 553, R. Crawleyley 553. C. Brewster 548, K. Stevens 547. R. Furney 547, D. Cline 537, D. Starr 529, D. Hendricks 525, T. Swope 513, K. Justus 503, B. Hampton 503. 200 Games: . Hurst 224, D. Cline 222, D. Priest 209-201, J. Rice 205, C. Brewster 201. Triplicate: Carl Myers —152-152-152.
JASPER UPI — Half he back John Blemker, Indiana’s
PbNKsm Mmj>
iC—
YOUR THANKSGIVING IN NEW YORK " » . ' • -
It's 40 years since the very first Winter Olympic Games were held—at Chamonix, France, in 1924. In those 40 years France has become the skiing country par excellence, and has established a total of 109 winter sports and winter tourist centers.
Towering over these centers is Europe's highest summit, 15,771 feet high Mont Blanc. And whisking skiers to within a few thousand feet of this soaring summit is the world's highest tourist teleferic (cable car). And once skiers have taken the teleferic to a height of 12,605 feet, they have the choice ^ of either continuing the ride across v the gleaming glacial Vallee Blanche, or skiing down the valley itself, an exhilarating, breath-taking 12 mile
swoop. ,
.«:•
4
FRANCE
V*
Mont Blanc
c v ■1°%
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'■ ■ (
The newest wonder of France's wondrous winter wonderlands is the Mont Blanc Tunnel. The world’s longest vehicular tunnel, will in 1965 open up a 7V«-mile shortcut between France and Italy. Traffic to the French Alps will be increasing yearly as interest heightens in the next Winter Olympic Games to be held in Grenoble ra 1968.
THE GREAT LOOK BY TIMELY* CLOTHES PLATEAU® CONTEMPORARY SUITS WITH PERMANENTLY CREASED TROUSERS NOW PURE WOOL! Most popular style in America, today. Trim, executive-looking. Plateau s exclusive UMKo pure wool has a luxury look. With exclusive shape-holding Balanced Tailoring and unique "weightless feel.” Trousers are permanently creased. Distinctive colors ami patterns. See Plateau Contemporary today! From $0U.
November 26 through 29 can "
be the greatest holiday time ever if you spend it in New York City. A highlight is the famed Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade along Broadway, but this is only one of the many seasonal delights for the
whole family.
SPORTS : The exciting new Shea Stadium will be the scene of professional football fun, as the thundering New York Jets meet Kansas City in what may be one of the most thrilling gridiron treats to take place in Gotham. Madison Square Garden will feature the New York Rangers in a dazzling hockey game on November 26 for those who come early, while boxing on the 27th and New York Knicks championship basketball will follow on the 28th. On Sunday the 29th, the pros will be back — the New York Rangers, skating to thrills and spills. There’s a chance of a tip-top college football game again—like last year’s tense Notre Dame game. THEATRE: Some Broadway hits—“Any Wednesday,” "Barefoot in the Park,” "The Deputy,” “Funny Girl,” "Hello, Dolly!” and, of course, “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying.” At the re-cently-opened New York State Theatre at Lincoln Center, the Schiller Theatre of West Berlin ‘will present two plays in German :^‘Don Carlos” and^The
Captain from Koepenic.’
MUSIC: New York’s City Center will have the D’Oyly Carte Company performing favorite Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, while at Lincoln Center’s Philharmonic Hall, William Steinberg will conduct the New York Philharmonic. Carnegie Hall will echo with the Serendipity Singers on November 26; on November 28th, the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem entertain. In Town Hall on the 26th, folk music will ring to the rafters, followed on the 27th by the Amor Artis Chorale and Orchestra. Sabicas, the famed flamenco guitarist, takes over on No-
vember 28th.
GENERAL INTEREST: The Hayden Planetarium will have a “Message From Space” program. The Time-Life Building will open “The Christmas Story” lobby exhibit to the public on November 28th. The Empire State Building, Rocke- > feller Center, the Statue of Liberty, Times Square, and the United Nations are among the sightseeing attractions at the top of the visitor’s
“must” list.
FREE INFORMATION: Contact the New York Convention and Visitors Bureau, 90 East 42nd Street, New York 17, New York, for free folders on hotels, restaurants, shopping and events in New York.^
MAC’S 'On the Square for Men's Wear'
