The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 February 1965 — Page 6

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Th« Dally Bannar, Graencattla, Indian* Tuesday, February 2,1965

Tigers To Host No. 1 Small College Squad

Two winning streaks, one admittedly more impressive than the other, will collide here tomorrow night when Evansville, the nation's supreme small college team, comes visiting the DePauw Tigers. The Aces,w r ho probably have a valid claim to two slots on the Little All-American team in Jerry Sloan and Larry Humes, have a season-long winning string of 16 going. It goes up against DePauw’s unblemished home record of 4-0 compiled against Earlham, Wabash, Denison and Indiana St. Tipoff time for the Indiana Collegiate Conference game-of-the-night is 8 p. m. in Bowman Gymnasium. The doors will open at 6:30 p. m. An added attraction to the battle will be the guest appearance of the Bainbridge High School Band. Tomorrow’ night, reminiscent of the time the two clubs clashed in Evansville Jan. 9, both teams are riding at the top of the conference pack. The Aces, W’ho have since rapped St. Joe, 96-77, and Ball State, 117-81, narrowiy averted a major disaster last Saturday night, starving off Valparaiso. 83-78, to run their league record to 6-0. DePauw, meanwhile, has had only one chance to rebound from the 117-88 licking they took from the Aces, and that w’as a torrid, 102-94, win over Indiana State here three long weeks ago. Coach Elmer McCall desperately hopes the momentum his youngish team picked up after Christmas keeps percolating. The Tigers currently possess a 3-1 ICC reading, all in PostYule firing. The last one against Indiana State, though there were some defensive lapses, probably blended some of the Tiger s smoothest pattern play with their uncanny last half .700 shooting. McCall, to no one’s surprise, believes it wrill take a repeat of the Tigers’ near perfect Syca-

more game to make any real dent in the Aces' so far invulnerable armour. The Tiger coach said yesterday his team is in good physical shape for the ICC headliner with the exception of reserve guard Skip Collins who has the flu. Dick Putt, reserve center who missed the Indiana State game because of dropping a course, is again in good academic standings. The game not only features the conference’s two most prolific point machines, Evansville is averaging 100 points in six games and DePauw is second with 90.8. but it also claims some of the ICC’s top individual performers. The Aces actually floor five stars but the super-star accolades have to go to Humes, the loop's top scorer with a 33.8 average, and Sloan, who is eleventh in scoring, second in rebounding and possibly the league’s most gifted player overall. DePauw’ will have Stan Bahler, top field goal shooter and sixth leading scorer, and Morgan Everson, who is fifth in scoring and third in rebound- | big. The rest of the Aces’ starting unit includes 6-3 Herb Williams at forward, and 6-3 Sam Watkins and 6-2 Russ Greiger at the guards. Sloan, 6-6, starts at fonvard and Humes, 6-4, plays the center post. DePauw’s lineup, in addition to Everson and Bahler, both forwards, should be 6-4 Dean Rush opposite Humes, and Jack Hogan and Dan Schermer at the guards.

ICC STANDINGS W L Evansville 6 0 DePauw 3 1 Indiana State 3 3 Valparaiso 2 3 Ball State 2 4 St. Joseph’s 1 4 Butler 1 4

Chicago Bears Signed Gibran CHICAGO UPI — The Chicago bears today announced the signing of veteran guard Abe Gibron as offensive line coach to fill the coaching staff vacancy left by the resignation of Joe Stvdahar. Owner-Coach George Halas said that Phil Handler, who has ^ been coaching the offensive line, would replace Stydahar as * coach of the defensive line, with Gibron taking over in Handler’s place. Gibron quit as offensive line coach of the Washington Red-

skins to join the Bears. The Skins said a replacement would be named for him, although George Wilson, former head coach of the Detroit Lions who recently joined the Washington staff, would be in overall charge of the offense

CARDS’ FIRST ST. LOUIS UPI — The St. Louis Cardinals won their first National League pennant and world championship in 1926 under the leadership of manager Roger Hornsby.

Banner Ads Pay

FUTURE CATCH—Trout such as those held aloft by Chilean boy will soon be produced in ponds constructed by former slum dwellers who have formed a fishing cooperative in a desert town

with the help of U.S. churches.

It sounds like a fish story, but it’s true. In one of the driest, hottest of deserts—near the town of Calama, Chile—40 men once resigned to life as slum dwellers have set up a fishing cooperative with the aim of producing and marketing 100,000 rainbow trout a year. They have built and stocked 100 ponds each accommodating 1,000 trout. Cement for building tiie simple spring-fed ponds, and a technical advisor for the project, were provided through funds furnished in part by Protestant churches in the United States. The effort of these men to become self-sufficient through their fish business will also benefit 'Calama’s many underprivileged. •It will provide a cheap source of protein to fill the dietary void ’ created by the absence of the ' meat they cannot afford. The coop will sell trout for about onefourth the price of meat. This project is one of many eft forts aided by One Great Hour 'of Sharing, an annual appeal which will be observed is numer-

ous Protestant churches through* out America on March 28. A many faceted program to help the Calama community combat hunger, malnutrition, unemployment, illiteracy and other afflictions is supported by thirty denominations through Church World Service, their cooperative agency for overseas relief and rehabilitation. Included in the program, to which churches in other countries contribute through the World Council of Churches, are literacy classes, craft training, a day nursery, a primary school and health

clinics.

Some of Calama’s deprived are victims of a nitrate industry slump which made ghost towns of their once-prosperous communities. Others came from great distances seeking employment they did not find in a large copper mine nearby. An air of hope has begun to pervade their despair as projects such as the fish co-op are taking form, and they are able to help themselves achieve the dignity that comes with sdf-sut&cujoey-

Bowling News

TUESDAY IBM LEAGUE

January 26th, 1965

Jones Nickerson

58 ^ ... 57

29%

31

Team Standings January 25th, 1965

Knauer

... 55

33

Team

W

L

Gentry

.. 52

36

Lucky Strikes

41

22

Cox

.... 49

39

Odd Balls

36

27

Maurer

... 49

39

Cloverdale Misses

36

27

O’Hair

.. 47

41

The Goofers

35

28

Wilson

.. 41

47

Channel Rats

34

29

Jackson

... 41

47

Manhatten Belles

34

29

Sutherlin

... 37%

50%

Worry-Warts

32

31

Giltz

... 36%

51%

Splits & Misses

31

32

Pelfrey

... 36

52

Happy Clovers

28

35

Porter

.. 31

57

Alley Cats

26

37

Van Ness

... 27%

60%

Pin Heads

24

39

High Game: 222 W. Pelfrey.

The Wishers

21

42

High Series: W.

Pelfrey

552.

Team High Single:

Worry-

CLASSIC LEAGUE

January 20th 1965

Team

VV

Shetrone Real Est

113

McMains Inter

110

Central Bank

106

Putnam Realty

102

Clairmont Trans

100

Coan Pharmacy

97

Old Topper Tavern ....

94

Patterson’s Shell

87

Torr’s Restaurant

69

Coca-Cola

64

Team No. 1

58

Hillman’s Jewelers ....

56

Team

W

L

Fentress Motors ....

... 104

48

Motor Freight

... 96

56

First Citizens No. 1

.... 78

74

First Citizens No. 2

.... 68

84

Pepsi Cola

.... 56

96

Jo’s Beauty Salon ..

.... 54

98

400 r.nd Over: W. Pelfrey 522, N. Knauer 509, K. Scott 479, S. Whitley 477, E. Porter 472, D. Cody 468, L. Cox 455, E. Jordan 450, C. Flint 447, T. Earl 435, T. Kirkham 435, C. Porter 425, B. Brannerman 414, N. Cook

409, L. Jones 409.

FIRST CITIZEN’S BANK

L 63 66 70 74 76 79 82 89

High Team Series — Pat’s Shell — 2218. High Team Game — Pat’s Shell —/ 811. High Individual Series—Alex

—631.

High Individual Game —Alex

—245.

Other Scores: Rice, 557, Priest 584, Atkins 623, Douglas 561, Elmore 598, Sears 583, Kerr 561, Murray 561, Alex 229, Gooch 201, Priest 209, Hampton 204, Buis 211, Atkins 234, Elmore 225, Sears 215, Kerr 202. Parker 200, Murray 211, Mark 201, Brown 204, Mil-

ler 200.

JUNIOR-SENIOR MIXED LEAGUE January 30, 1965 Team W L Team No. 2 37 7 Team No. 4 36 9 Team No. 3 31 14 Team No. 6 30 12 Team No. 8 21 24 Team No. 10 19 25 Team No. 5 19 26 Team No. 1 18 24 Team No. 7 17 28 Team No. 9 6 39 High Team Game: Team No. 5 —829. High Team Series: Team No. 5 — 2415. High Individual Game: H. Henry — 193. High Individual Series: B. Evens — 523. Over 400 Series: J. Edmonds 405, C. Godfrey 406, A. May 435, J. Edmonds 484, J. Frye 453, H. Conyers 456, T. Boesen 481, D. Brewster 427, B. Wilbur 444, T. McCammon 426, H. Henry 474, M. Baker 411, T. Love 422, L. Mays 451, J. Allen 458, N. Jones 406, B. Evans 523. FIRST CITIZENS BANK LEAGUE Friday Night

MONDAY AFTERNOON LADIES LEAGUE

Warts — 617.

Team High Series: Lucky

Strikes — 1645.

Individual High Single: B.

Cromer — 207.

Individual High Series: B.

Cromer — 565.

200 Game: B. Cromer 207. 500 Series: B. Cromer 565, D.

Albright 516.

350 and Over: B. Cromer 565, D. Albright 516, N. Knauer 488, J. Lease 457, K. Scott 449, H. Agnew 447, C. Rulfs 434, M. Gassaway 420, M. Lewis 416, A. Covert 397, R. Black 392, V. Hutcheson 390, J. Hutcheson 385, R. Garrett 385, I. Sutherlin 381, M. Cash 376, S. Frazier 370, M. Schnurpel 368, H. Wallace 368, D. Routh 366, G. Walker 363, K. Walker 359, M. Sutherlin 357, A. Rainey 356, S. Wells 355, R. Williams 351.

High Team Series: First Citizens Bank No. 2 — 2737. High Team Game: First Citizens Bank No. 2 — 951. High Individual Series: K.

Simmons — 534.

High Individual Game: K.

Simmons — 205.

500 Series: K. Simmons—534. Series Over 425: K. Simmons 534, R. Hannerman 477, G. Porter 476, C. Justus 471, E. Godfrey 464, E. Delp 450, R. Hampton 443, K. Braden 443, G. Lancaster 439, P. Jones 438, M. Davies 432, J. Murray 430,

J. Girton 428.

ICC Race Features Individual Performances, Evansville Aces

A pair of 40-point individual performances and Evansville’s narrow 83-78 victory over Valparaiso added an unexpected flash of sparks this past weekend to the Indiana Collegiate Conference basketball race that hit the halfway point. The Aces ran their record to 6-0 in whipping Valparaiso and have a golden opportunity to extend their margin over current runnerup DePauw (3-1) Wednesday night in Greencastle. Indiana State’s Butch Wade and Ball State’s Stan Neal turned in 40-point efforts Saturday night in pacing their teams to upset wins over Butler and St. Joseph’s. Their labors, both school records, cemented Wade’s second place an I Neal’s third place in ICC scoring this week behind Larry Humes of Evansville. Humes, third in the nation, leads all ICC marksmen with a 33.8 average; Wade stands at 29.3 and Neal is next at 22.5. Though idle for three weeks, DePauw’s Stan Bahler has held on to his lead in field goal accuracy. Bahler is firing at a .692 clip on 36 of 52. Indiana State’s Fred Huckstep is nearby at 667 and Valpo’s Steve Cook has .640 for third Mike Chapman of Butler and Wade continue to pace their specialties, free throw accuracy and rebounding Chapman has converted 17 of 19 for .895 with St. Joseph’s Tom Crowley and DePau- ’s Morgan Everson running twothree with .842 and .840 Wade, held to only four rebounds against Butler, hung on to his rebound crown with a

12.2 everage. Jerry Sloan of Evansville has moved up to second with 11.8. Not only did Evansville hang on to its loop leadership .through a moderately light late January schedule, the Aces also kept up their pace (56.5 per game). ICC prestige took on added glitter in that examination lull in a pair of non-conference games with Missouri Valley Conference foes. After Butler surprised Bradley 80-74, St. Joe further deflated the MVC with its astonishing 61-59 win over Cincinnati. Valparaiso, Ball State and Indiana State claim the only team honors that eluded the Aces this week. Valpo’s Crusaders, through 2-3 in the standings, still floor the league’s best defensive game, a stingy 75.4 per outing Indiana State and St. Joseph's are tied for second at 79.3. Ball State has replaced Butler as the most accurate foul shooting club, connecting at a .757 pace. Butler slipped to second at .750. The Sycamores remain the league’s least foul inclined club 14.5 per game. While Statistics consious writers have gone to their computers to prove that the current ICC race could wind up in a six-way tie for second with a record and a 5-7 reading for everyone else, the ICC Wednesday night tries to head off that very improbable possibility. DePauw could conceivably spoil it by miraculously decking the Aces, Indiana State (3-3) will try to jump above

.500 at Valparaiso (2-3), and St. Joseph’s (2-4) will attempt to make personal amends at Rennsselaer for allowing Butler (1-4) its sole success. Saturday’s ICC slate sends Evansville to Indiana State, DePauw to St. Joseph’s, and Butler to Valparaiso. Ball State will play at Southern Illinois.

347. West led Baltimore’s Walt Bellamy in field goal percentage by a slim point—.507 to .506 -while Larry Costello of Philadelphia continued as the league’s best foul shooter with an .884 mark.

Wilt Should Shoot More And Ross Less NEW YORK UPI — Wilt Chamberlain and his Philadel-' phia 76er teammates may benefit fre i Wilt’s “new look,” but i unless he begins shooting more and passing less, there might be another league scoring leader.

ENDS TONITE JACK HAWKINS "GUNS OF BATASP* VONCASTLE OPEN AT 6:45

NOW THRU SAT. ADULT ENTERTAINMENT Wed. Thurs. At: 7:30 - 9:30

..the greatest violence that man can do woman!

Chamberlain scored only 108 j points last week along with an average of six points per game. Los Angeles’ Jerry West, who went on a scoring rampage by bucketing 197 points, moved into the No. 2 spot behind Chamberlain, according to National Basketball Association statistics released today through games of Jan. 31. West increased his average from 29.7 to 30.7 points per game while Chamberlain dropped from 37.5 to 36.6. Cincinnati’s Oscar Robertson fell to third place with a 29.7 mark on

1454 total points.

Bill Russell of Boston con-

tinued as the rebound leader' with 1291 grabs while Cincinat- SHUTOUT ARTISTS 1 ti’s Jerry Lucas, with 1082, was j LQS AN q ELES

only ten ahead of Chamberlain

for the runner-up spot.

Robertson again led in the playmaking department with 578 assists, far more than San Francisco’s Guy Rodgers with

(UPI) -

Sandy Koufax of the Dodgers Juan Marichal of the Giants and Chicago’s Larry Jackson each pitched seven shutouts during the 1964 campaign.

Wolverines Back In Top Spot NEW YORK UPI — The Michigan Wolverines, who have been in and out of first-place all season, returned to the top spot today for the third time in the United Press International major college basketball ratings, ending UCLA’s four-week reign. The Wolverines gained 18 first-place votes from the 35 coaches on the UPI rating board compared to 13 for UCLA, which dropped to second place. Michigan, idle this week, totaled 327 points to gain a 14point margin over the Bruins. Upsets rearranged the entire top 10, with the exception of Indiana, which remained 10th. UCLA had its victory streak stopped at 14 games by Iowa last Friady, Wichita was shocked by Loyola 111., Arizona upset San Francisco, and Marquette bounced St. John’s N. Y. As a result, Wichita fell from third to fifth, San Francisco j dropped from sixth to ninth and! St. John’s slipped from eighth to 11th. St. Joseph’s Pa. ran its record to 17-1 and advanced from fourth to third after routing Xavier Ohio and Centenary. The Hawks received two firstplace votes. Providence and Vanderbilt grabbed the other two ballots for the top spot. Providence, unbeaten in 14 games, squeaked by St. Bona venture, 77-76, and moved from fifth to fourth. Davidson trimmed Wake Forest and climbed to within 20 points of Wichita in sixth-place. The Wildcats, seventh last week, have won 15 in a row. Vanderbilt, the Southeastern Conference leader and owner of an 11-game win skein, soared from 11th to seventh place. The Commodores crushed Auburn 105-77 Saturday and are unbeaten in conference play. Vanderbilt’s advance pushed Duke from eighth to ninth. The Blue Devils were idle last week, but were scheduled for three games this week, including a visit to once-beaten North Carolina state, the Atlantic Coast Conference leader, Wednesday. San Francisco, No. 9, and Indiana, idle last week, completed the top 10. The ratings are based on games played through Saturday, Jan. 30.

REPEAT BY POPULAR DEMAND!

All 1960 thru 1964 Seat Covers must be Sold. NYLONS, FIBER, CLEAR PLASTICS SALE ENDS SAT., FEBRUARY 6th

TAILOR MADE and READY MADE COVERS.

RETAIL PRICES SALE PRICES

9.95 to 49.95 3.00 to 25.95

INCLUDED IN THIS SALE ARE FLOOR MATS, FLOOR CARPETS, COOL CUSHIONS. PLEASE, ALL PRICES DURING THIS SALE

PLUS INSTALLATION

GROUP NO. 1

GROUP NO. 2

GROUP NO. 3

s 3.

J 7.

J 10.

GROUP NO. 4 t«4 JM

GROUP NO 5

GROUP NO 6

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s 20to s 25

MORRISON'S TIRE and RETREADING CO. 317 North Jackson Street

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