The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 January 1965 — Page 4

Tilt Daily Bannar, Oraancastla, Indiana Friday, January 29,1965

Freshmen Team Upsets Brazil For 13-1 Record

Gary Frobel Retains Lead In Valley Tourney

After a two week lay off, the Greencastle Junior High bas-

grade team made a game of it up to half time, only to see

Summaries:

ketball teams returned to ac- Brazil move away in the final tion this week. half of play. The 8th grade On Monday evening the score by quarters follows: 6 to Freshmen team defeated the 6, 19 to 16, 34 to 21, and 45 to28. Terre Haute Garfield “C” team Brazil the winner,

made up of sophmores, by a score of 49-35. Norris with 9 points. See with 10, Frye 8 and R. New 9, led a balanced scoring attack for the local

Freshmen team.

Last evening the local Freshmen pushed their season record

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^ Tea Tasting is an Art

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to 13 wans and 1 defeat by : downing the Brazil Freshmen, ;

54 to 26.

After a slow first quarter ended 11-10 with Greencastle on top, the game opened up.! Greencastle lead at the half 24 to 15. As usual Greencastle j played its best in the second i half. In the final period of play,' Brazil was out scored 22 to 4. The victory for Greencastle, featured good hard fought de- i fense and a strong backboard

game which helped make possi- Brazil 9th (26) ble the Freshmen’s major True, M,

weapon, the fast break. In the evenings

G'Castle 9th (54) FG Norris 3 ! See 6 1 Ross 1 j Frye 0 ; Monnett 2 Conyers 0 J. New- 0 | R. New 1 1 Dunn 2

Anderson 1

j Steele 0

York 0

Clark 2

Evans 1

Hammond 0 Edmonds 0

Totals 19

1

PF

4

FG . 0

Fritch 3

opening Jenkins 1

0 1 0 2 2 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

16 FT

1

game, Brazil s undefeated 8th Ruble 1 grade team made Greencastle Parr 1 it’s 9th victim in a row. The Albright 1

never say die Greencastle 8th

Totals

2 2 12

Oj

3 2 0 0

2 i

1 0

. 0

1 0 1 1 •> 0

17 PF

3 4

. 3 ! 2

2

16

At Least Four Assistants Will Follow Pont To I.U.

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INDIANAPOLIS UPI — No. 1rated Gary Frobel and the fa-! vorites in the quarter finals of the Wabash Valley Tourney | came out of Thursday night’s light Indiana high school basketball schedule unscratched. Frobel, which led the latest J UPI Coaches’ poll, extended its j season record to 14-1 over Hammond Tech, 98-76. It was the 12th straight win for Froebel which also used the Northwest Conference match to push its loop record to 8-0 for a com-

manding lead.

Tech’s Dan Wright hit for 25 points, tops for the game, to continue leading the conference individual scoring race. The form chart was followed letter for letter in the Wabash j Valley tourney quarter-finals 1 with a pair of overtime thrillers to enliven the evening. Switz City, the 1965 champ, squeaked by Eastern, 66-64, in an overtime contest that was won in the final two seconds on a shot by Mike Terrell. Switz City scored five points in 22 seconds in the overtime. Terre Haute State had an equally hard time with its county cousins. West Vigo, using two overtime sessions to finally win, 69-67.

Aces Up Record To 15-0, Remain No. 11n Ratings The undefeated Evansville Aces have nine games remain-1 ing on their regular-season basketball schedule and none amoung them is likely to be | tougher than the final one against Souther;; Illinois. Southern Illinois almost knocked the pround Aces off j the unbeaten path last week, finally succumbing, 81-80, on an Evansville basket in the final seconds. The Triumph pulled another one over Ball State later in the week lifted the Aces’ record to 15-0 and enabled them to maintain first place in the lat- j est Associated Press weekly small - college poll. Evansville’s remaining opponents are Valparaiso and Indiana State twice each, pin DePauw, St. Joseph’s of Indiana, Butler, Kentucky Wesleyan and Southern Illinois, the last on Febuary 27.

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Iowa Will Meet UCLA Tonight

The most important group of tea tasters is the U.S. Board of Tea Experts. The seven members, chosen from industry and government, meet once a year in February to set the standards for the tea which can be imported into the country. No tea will be admitted into the U.S. unless it meets these standards. |(

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. UPI— At least four and possibly five assistants will join newly-ap-pointed head football coach Johnny Pont in moving from Yale to Indiana. Those appointed to the Hoosier staff so far, according to athletic director Bill Orwig, are Ernie Plank. Jay Fry, Herb Fairfield and C. W. (Jake) Van Schoych. Orwig said a fifth Yale assistant, Carmen Cozza, may also be named to the I. U. staff if he is not named successor to Pont at the Ivy League school. Van Schoych Is the only one of the group that was not a member of Font’s staff at Miami of Ohio, and while he did graduate work there, he joined Pont at Yale. Plank is an end coach and has had primary responsibility for pass offense and defense on Font’s teams at Miami and Yale. He was captain of the Miami football team when Pont was in his sophomore year there. Fry was also a football standout at Miami, and later played with the Los Angeles Rams professional team before returning as an assistant to Pont in 1956. Fairfield was assistant and freshmen coach at Miami after a three-year grid career there

ending in 1958. He completed graduate work at the University of Southern Illinois before joining Font’s staff. Van Schoych is the only nonMiami graduate on the staff, although he earned a master’s degree there in 1960. He starred in four sports at Wilmington Ohio College, then coached high school teams and completed i graduate work before joining Pont in 1963.

Purdue Loses Jones Third Year On Grades

Loogootee St. John’s, defend- ; ing champ, had an easy time with Wheatland, 83-63, and I twice-runnerup Attica Slipped

by Covington, 60-50. CHICAGO UPI — Iowa, a It., • m I Ten basketball team which

In the semi-finals at Terre • ,

i,t * o * has been living at unexpected i Haute, Saturday afternoon ^

Switz City will battle Attica i and Loogootee St. John’s is | matched against Terre Haute ! State, the winners of the two games meeting that night, for 1

New Coach NEW HAVEN, Conn. UPI - Carmen Cozza today was named Yale University's new head football coach, succeeding John Pont who resigned last week.

Found Innocent INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Lt. David S. Jeter, 47, second of 22 Indianapolis policemen to b« tried on bribery charges in connection with alleged gambling protection, was found innocent Thursuay night by a Marion Criminal Court jury.

altitudes within the conference, steps out against the nation's best tonight when it meets UCLA on a neutral court. The Corn Belt basketeers

the crown.

LAFAYETTE, Ind. UP — igan at Ann Arbor last Satur-

The Purdue Boilermaker basIcetball squad suffered a severe

blow Thursday with the an-

NOTICE . A.J.B.C. Bowlers Hey kids! We are going to have our pictures taken this Saturday morning, between 10:30—11:00 at The Varsity Lanes. Be sure and be there. Pat Huxford, Coach.

day night.

The Boilermakers, at 1-3 in Big Ten Play, have received a

Liston Starts Legal Bout In Denver Court

THIS WEEKS BASKETBALL Friday Greencastle at 'Wiley North Salem at Fillmore Bainbridge at Reelsville Roachdale at Russellville Saturday Danville at Greencastle Reelsville at Waveland Bainbridge vs Belle Union (At Fillmore) Cloverdale vs Monrovia (at Reelsville)

nouncement that its 6-8 center, severe blow because Jones and Bill Jones, had become ineligi- g.g sophomore Tom Niemeyer ble for the remainder of the W ere beginning to jell with top season. j scorerg D ave Schellhause and The senior, who had played Bob Purkhiser to provide a pothe best game of his career only i tent p ur due offense.

, last Saturday night, learned

that he had failed on course i Jones was the team s leading and may be dropped from I rebounder with an average of school unless an appeal he has 10 per game. His scoring mark filed with the professor of the was 7.6 despite a knee injury course is granted. This is sel-, that hampered early-season efdom done. Officials explained forts. the appeal is the prerogative of all students, but grade altera- • ... lions are rare. Select HayS

WASHINGTON UPI — A

DENVER UPI

Former

lead the Big Ten into action this weekend, coming to the Chicago Stadium to engage the top-ranked Uclans in part of a college cage doubleheader. Loyola and Wichita meet in the

other half.

Illinois, the league's third place contender, also faces nonconference opposition. The Illini provide the first half of another j Chicago Stadium doubleheader on Saturday in a clash with

heavyweight champion Sonny Notre Dame wWle UCLA re .

Liston, whose encounters with the police have been about as successful as his last title bout

Salt Lake City, Utah, man has been picked to direct congressional relations for the Peace

Corps.

Jones, who missed half of his i sophomore and junior seasons because of academic troubles, is expected to make his last apperance for the Boilermak- j

ers Saturday against Michigan J. Andrew Hays, labor relahere. A former star on Indian- tions administrator for the apolis Crispus Attucks’ state western mining division of Kenchampionship high school team necott Copper Corp., will take in 1959, Jones scored 23 points | over his new post Feb. 1, it in a losing effort against Mich- was announced Thursday.

turns to face Loyola.

In the Big ten’s most im-

with Cassius Clay, stepped back! portant game of the weekend, into the legal ring today. j Michigan gets a chance to imIt was Liston in one corner prove its perfect conference and representatives of the Den- record to 5-0 and was favored ver district attorney’s staff in ranked No. 2 nationally, play the other. The purse at stake 1 at Purdue. was a fine of up to $1,000 and in other conference action, a jail sentence of up to one Michigan State is at Northwestyear. | ern in a televised afternoon Liston was hopeful of getting ^ ame and Wisconsin > of neither. He pleaded innocent to one victor - v in four lea ^ ,ie a charge of drunken driving, j starts, visits winless Ohio State.,

The 30-year-old boxer’s trial was to begin with the selection

of a jury of six.

The Denver fighter’s latest legal match was the result of a Christmas day "shoving” incident which kept police officers busy and ended up with Liston behind bars for four

hours.

Police said Liston was “uncooperative” after they stopped his 1965 Cadillac and questioned him. They finally put him into a police wagon and hauled him off to jail. It was the third time within the last 12 months that Liston had found himself in trouble with the law. Early last spring he was given a suspended jail sentence and fined $600 for reckless driving and carring a concealed weapon. He was fined again two weeks later after he was arrested for speeding.

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DEPAUW'S NEW TRACK CAPTAINS HOPE TO SNOW OPPOSITION Several inches of snow doesn’t stop DePauw University’s newly elected track captains from a little pre-mature muscle flexing. Whil Terry Johnston, right, works on his shot put form, Arnold Bemey gets the feel of his moth-balled javelin. Johnston, of Valparaiso, holds the school’s shot put mark and Berney, of Indianapolis, holds the second longest javelin heave on DePauw’s books.

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