The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 January 1965 — Page 4

4 Th« Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana Friday, January 8,1965 DePauw Tigers Will Battle Evansville Aces Saturday

How to stop the country's second leading scorer who pla^s for the nation's premier small college club are among the knotty problems facing DePauw basketball coach Elmer McCall this week McCall, whose youngish ball club has a two-game road string going, will have to come up with the answers Saturday night when the 5-5 Tigers collide with 10-0 Evansville College at 9 p. m. Greencastle time. Ironically the David and Co-

in 10 contests, administering decisive defeats regardless of how much firepow r er the enemy generates. McCall praises Evansville’s quickness, aggressiveness and speed. "And what troubles me the most, they don't give up if they miss the first shot." "In odrer to even stay close, we’ve got to cut down on their second effort. They'll overwhelm you with that pow'er.’’ By ‘that power’ McCall means 6-4 Larry Humes, 6-6 Jerry Sloan. 6-3 Herb Williams, 6-3

Sloan and Watkins. "I figure we may have some trouble getting the ball down,” McCall says, "against Evansville’s backw r all, but I’m hopeful Hogan and Schermer can hold their own. If we can get the ball down deep, then I think we’ll stay in there." The Tigers’ front wall has been averaging about 47 points per game. Morgan Everson, 6-2,

Bowling News

AUTOMOTIVE LEAGUE It was jubilantly announced after the first game in the

carries a team high of 17.7, 6-4 Automotive League Tuesday

liath battle will decide who has | Sam Watkins, and 6-2 Russ

the honor of heading the ICC pack at the end of its first week of frenzied action. Both combatants head into the Roberts Stadium struggle 2-0.

Grieger. In other words, the

whole team!

Humes heads Evansville’s offensive show with a 34.5 average. McCall calls the Madison

fonvard Stan Bahler is next with 15.4, a center Dean Rush

has sniped at a 13.4 rate. McCall is just as impressed

with the headway his own team

night that Shetrone Real Estate had w r on a game! Thunderous a p p 1 au s e reverbrated throughout the vast expanse of Varsity Lanes, and the quintet

Evansville has whacked Ball product “the best one-on-one

man down deep that we’ll ever see. He’s as good as anyone in

the country there.”

Though DePauw has been shorter than most of its op-

State 108-92 and Butler 79-71. The surprising Tigers have stopped Butler 90-88 and Val-

paraiso, 83-82.

McCall, of course, hopes the two Methodist schools will fol-

low the Biblical script when ponents. the Tigers haven’t had David the darkhorse upsets Go i f° 0 muc b trouble getting shots, liath. ' McCall hopes his diminutive So far, the Aces haven't 1 guards, 5-6 Jack Hogan, and shown themselves to be vul- j 5-9 Dan Schermer, can keep up nerable to much of anything.; the pace Saturday. They'll be They have escaped imscratched] shooting — hopefully — over

has made as he is with the Aces, from Shetrone blushingly took This was supposedly a re- f their bow-s. However, a quick building year for DePauw. But | check of the score sheets (by McCall has wielded a pair of the alleged losers, naturally) sophomores, a couple of juniors i disclosed that Charlie Hunter’s and a senior into a respectable arithmetic has suffered conentry that launched the ICC! siderably over the intervening

N. Mark 551. 200 Games: J. Hurst 201. N. Mark 203, M. Tuttle 207, R. Crawley 235, E. Irwin 203, G. Bryant 228.

TUESDAY IBM LEAGUE

(1-5-65)

campaign with a tremendous upset over Butler.

“We’ve got a group that’s

j learning. They’re pretty young

and we're having to make a lot

j of adjustments every time we ; play a ball game. I feel they a S ain -

are a determined bunch, to say ! the least. They seem to have j poise when its required.”

years, and a simple arithmetic mistake w r as discovered (in favor of the alleged losers, natually) and gloom descended upon the heads of the hapless men of Shetrone. Alas, they had lost

Local Boys To See Action In DPU-Butler Frosh Tilt

An 81-79 loss to Wabash its only encounter. DePauw University's freshman basketball team jumps back into action tomorrow’. Going its seperate way from the varsity, the first year men are slated to meet Butler’s freshmen at 6:15 p. m. in Butler Fieldhouse. The game will be the curtain raiser for the Bulldog varsity’s home scrap

with St. Joseph's. Two Greencastle players are probable starters for the Tigers. Dave York has been picked by coach Bob Harvey for one of the two spots at forward, and Ronnie York will handle a guard post opposite Harry Dunwoody. The rest of the starting unit will include John Baker at forward and Tom McGurk at center.

WGRE Will Air Cub-Cascade Tilt WGRE follows the Greencastle Tiger Cubs to Cascade High School for an aw T ay basketball game at 7:45 p. m. this evening. Skip Collins and Craig Brines w r ill be on hand to broadcast the

Nickerson ....

53

27

Jones

50>£

29i*

Knauer

50

30

Gentry

48

32

O'Hair

44

36

Maurer

43

37

Cox

42

38

Jackson

30

41

Wilson

38

42

Giltz

35

44i*

Sutherlin ....

33^

46i*

Pelfrey

32

48

Porter

29

51

Van Ness ....

241* W

55i* L

500 Series:

E. Jordan 529, L.

LEAGUE STANDINGS

Cox 509.

Moose’ No. 2

W .... 118

L 42

High Game P. Jackson 192. 400 Series and Over: D. John-

York’s Grocery

98

62 son 482, K. Scott 481, N.

Bobs Body Shop ...

64 j Knauer 480, R. Maurer 466, W.

Mallory

.... 80

80

Pelfrey 458, D. Cody 449, P.

Monon Grill

78

82

Jackson 448 C. Sutherlin 447,

Moose No. 1

78

82

C. Flint 445, W. Fredricks 442,

Mason Jewelery ...

.... 70

90

L. Mosteller 432, S. Whitley 426,

Shetrone

24

136

C. Porter 425, B. Branneman

500 Series: R. Gooch 548, K. Finchum 562, R. Hampton 523, C. Huller 522, R. Crawley 586, B. Alexander 530, M. Tuttle 536, J. Hurst 505, R. Langdon 502,

423, S. Nickerson 423, E. Gentry 420, D. Wilson 415, E. Roach 415, D. Simmions 414. B. Thompson 411,B. Payne 407, J. Kirkham 404, N. Cook 404.

play-by-play description of all the action directly from the Cascade Gymnasium. Broadcasts of the Tiger Cubs out-of-town games are provided through the courtesy of Coan Pharmacy, Simpson Stoner Insurance, Donelson’s Drug ! Store, Morrison’s Tire Company, and the Double Decker Drive-In.

Fillmore Participates In Intramural Basketball

B Team Player Killed By Car A 14-year-old boy going to a basketball tournament was Indiana's latest traffic accident

victim today.

Joseph W. Davis, 14, Laconia, a "B" team basketball player at South Central High School in Harrison County, was killed on Indiana 11 w’hen he stepped from a car driven by his mother to enter his school gym where a tourney w r as in progress. The car which hit him was driven by Ronald L. Biddle,17, Laconia, a member of the varsity team

at the same school.

For the second year in a row the students of the four upper grades of Fillmore High School have taken part in a Intramural basketball program that is held within the school. The program gives students who do not participate actively in sports for various reasons a chance to try and test their abilities as sportsmen. Last night the four teams met on the hardwood for preliminarie games. The first tilt was a fast and furious one (until the players became exhausted), between the juniors and seniors. The juniors seemed to hold their own against the upper classmen until the start of the second half when coach Bob Huber fired his team into action with his star player Wayne Tharp. Tharp connected o n seven field goals tn the second half leading the senior assualt with a total of 24 points. Hammond and Clark paced the juniors with 16 and 8 points respectively. Final score found the seniors in command 41-25. In the second game of the evening the last years champion, the glorious sophomores, were outclassed by the younger freshmen.

Local Basketball This Week Friday Greencastle at Cascade New Ross at Russellville Fillmore at Reelsville Bainbridge at Roachdale Turkey Run at Waveland Saturday Belle Union at Reelsville Russellville at Hillsboro North Salem at Ladoga Monrovia at Bainbridge

BIG STAN REBOUNDS Shown above is Stanley Ryland grabbing another rebound in last night’s action packed tilt in the Fillmore High School gymnasium. Stan is head student maanger of the Fillmore basketball team, but he seems to enjoy playing the sport too.

Football Star Married Early TALLAHASSEE, Fla. UPI —Florida State University football star Fred Biletnikoff got married four days early, thanks to his hurt knee. The flankerback pass catching flash wed classmate Jeri O'Conner Thursday — under a goalpost at the Florida State Stadium. The couple had planned to marry in Mobile, Ala., Sunday after the Senior Bowl game. But the knee injury suffered in the Gator Bowl put Biletnikoff out of the North-South clash and he decided to move up his wedding date.

Old Gold Wrestlers Blank Hanover. 32-0

Sticking four pins in the scorebook, DePauw’s varsity wrestlers shut out Hanover here last night, 82-0, to push their season record to 2-2. One hundred twenty - three pound sophomore Roger Davies started the stampede by decisioning his opponent, Larry Copeland, 9-8. Before the evening suddenly was ended by heavyweight Ralph Larsen’s quick pin of Jon Bliss in 2:51, the Tigers had racked up 15 more points on falls accomplished by Mike Maeder, Sky Huck and Pete McIntosh and decisions by John Ferguson, Tom Newman and Fred Wendelboe. Wendleboe, narrowly escaped the Panthers’ 177-pound entry, Peter Gordon. The contest ended, 2-2, on match points but Wendlehoe picked up the decision, 3-2, on riding time.

Maeder took the prize for efficiency. He downed his opponent, Joe Morder, in 42 seconds. McIntosh wrapped up Henery Hixson in 74 seconds. Summary: 123-pound Roger Davis I’D) decisioned Larry Copeland (H), 8-8. 130-pound John Ferguson CD) decisioned Joe Brogan (H), 10-0 137-Mike Maeder (D) won by fall over Joe Morder (H), :42 147-Tom Newman (D) decisioned Jerry Poate (H), 7-3 157-Sky Huck (D) won by fall over Mike Brinkman (H), 8:13 167-Peter McIntosh (D) won by fall over Henery Hixson (H), 1:14 177-Fred Wendelboe (D) decisioned Peter Gordon (H), 3-2 Hywt-Ralph Larsen (D) won by fall over Jon Bliss (H), 2:51

Evansville / DePauw Tied In ICC Basketball

By United Press International Evansville and DePauw were tied for the Indiana Collegiate Conference basketball lead Thursday, with the front running Aces from the pocket City boasting a 10-game winning streak. Evansville, the nation’s No. 1 small-college quintet, won a hard-fought tussle at Butler Wednesday night, 79-71, while DePauw shaded Valparaiso, 83-82. and Indiana State took a 96-88 ICC overtime scrap from Ball State for a 2-1 league mark. Using a sticky and aggressive defense, Evansville pulled away from Butler in the final minutes to assure Arad McCutchan of his 299th victory as a college coach. He can ring up No. 300 at home Saturday and his Aces league lead by turning back DePauw. As usual, the finesse shooting of Lary Humes and the expert feeding of Jerry Sloan and another sparkling all-round performance by Sam Watkins helped Evansville to victory. Humes hit nearly his game average by tossing in 33 points. Sloan had 20 and Watkins 17. Butler was in the ball game most of the way, but when the

Bulldogs went without a field goal for seven minutes, Evansville pulled away gradually. Butler, now 4-8 and 0-2 in the ICC, was led by Mike Chapman's 21 points.

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Has No Grudge Says IU Player MOBILE, Ala. UPI —Fullback Tom Nowatzke of Indiana said today he held no grudges against Indiana University in connection with revocation of his athletic scholarship. Nowatzke said he was bitter about the National Collegiate Athletic Association rules which forced the school to take action against him and other college players who signed pro contracts. The Michigan City, Ind., native said Indiana "has been good to me. I wouldn’t be here if not for them." "I’ve got no grudges against anybody at the school. I just don’t like the NCAA rules. I think they should be changed. But I will abide by them,” he said. Nowatzke had earlier criti-

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.M.UMTEO ARTIST*

9

cized the rule which led to hi* athletic scholarship being withdrawn when he assigned a contract to play for the Detroit Lions. He suggested a Jan. 1 rule so no player could sign before that date.

Tiger Cub - Freshmen Lose I First Game In 10 Starts

The exciting tilt was close all

the way until Skinner and

ing forward to

the dates.

Phillips

0

Woods cut loose with a combin-

Summaries:

Beamen

1

ed 18 point output in the second

Juniors (32)

FG

FT

PF

Wood

. 0

0

half for the frosh victory cause.

Fowler

0

0

3

Totals

22

1

Runnels led the sophomore

Burgess

0

1

attack with 18 points while it

St. John

0

2

was Woods and Skinner with

Carlton

0

1

Sophomores (26)

FG

FT

16 and 8 points respectively for

Ryland

0

2

Runnels

2

the frosh.

Hammond

.... 8

0

2

Goodson

0

Final score gave the fresh-

Clark

0

0

Goodson J

.. 0

0

men a hearty victory 31-26.

Totals

16

0

9

Johnston

0

Tourney dates have not been

Seniors (45)

FG

FT

PF j Everts

0

scheduled as yet, but all the

West

0

3i Johnston

0

intramural sportsmen are look-

Tharp

0

J

Everts

0

PF 3 0 1 3 1 3 1

Totals

2 8 Quarterback Retires

Freshmen (31) FG Woods 8 Davisher 1 Bryan 2 Skinner 4 Totals 15

FT 0 1 0 0 1

PF 4 3 1 5 13

Refrees for the games were Richard Woods, and David Archer. Coaches were Bob Huber, John Glaze, Greg Puckett, and Mike Robinson,

LOS ANGELES UPI — Gino Marchetti, the scourge of National Football League quarterbacks for more than a decade, is really, definitely and unequivocally retiring after Sunday’s Pro Bowl game, he says. The 38-year old Baltimore Colt defensive end made his farewell for the second time at the annual Pro Bowl luncheon Thursday.

straight after winning its first five. They dropped a 45-44 tile to Greencastle in one overtime. The two teams were tied at 40-all at the end of regulation time, and Greencastle made the most of Tuttle's inaccuracy at the free throw line to win. In the tight see-saw freshman game. Tuttle’s Kelley Cochrane was high point man again with 12 points. John Lewis added 10

for the victors.

Don Fredrick rifled 15 points, Steve Templeton 13 and Dave Cantrell netted 10 before fouling out. His boardwork was sorely missed after he went to

the sidelines.

G’castle 8th (45) FG Hecko 2 Blue 3 York 3 Clary 4 Losin 0 Albright 4

Totals 16

FT

0 4 2 4 0 3

13

PF

5 2 4 1 1 5

18

Battling from a 14-9 first pe-

I Tuttle 16 21

33 40

441 Totals

15

5 ft

riod deficit, Tuttle Junior High's

Greencastle ....

8 20

30 40

45| Tuttle 9th

(86) FG

FT PF

freshmen basketball team hand-

G’Castle 9th (35)

FG

FT

PF j Cochrane ...

2 S

ed Greencastle’s frosh their

See

1

0

1 ] Grimes

3

1 S

first loss in 10 games this sea-

B. New

.. 3

1

01 Gravett ....

1

0 0

son, a 36-35 squeaker Thursday

Norris

. 2

0

2 Dalbey

6 1

night at Crawfordsville.

Steele

. 0

0

0 j Lewis

2 3

At Greencastle in the first

J. Frye

.. 3

1

0 i Steele

0

6 •

game of the season Tuttle lost

J. New

.. 1

2

1 Hodges

1

1 1

a 54-49 decision. The victory

Monnett

. 3

0

3 Totals

15

« 11

Thursday night was the sixth

Hammond

1

0

0

in a row for the locals and

Conyers

0

1

j1 Score by

quarters:

raised their record to 6-2.

Dunn

.. 0

0

1 j Greencastle

14

20 24 35

In the eighth grade game the

Ross

1

0

2 ! Tuttle

9

19 25 36

Tattle 8th (44) FG FT PF Templeton 5 3 1 Cantrell 5 0 0 McCormick 12 0 Bennet 10 4 Fredrick 5 5 4 Linn 0 0 1 Dowell 0 0 1 Totals 17 10 11 Score by qu&rtersi

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