The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 February 1965 — Page 7
7
Anderson Matmen Downed By DePauw Old Gold Wrestlers
John Ferguson, Tom Newman and Ralph Larsen turned in pins last night for DePauw University’s wrestling Tigers who w hipped Anderson College, 275, in Bowman Gymnasium. The comeback victory was DePauw's fifth dual success in seven meets. The loss evened Anderson's season mark at 3-3. The 130 pound Ferguson's pin with 1:23 elapsed in the first period pulled the Tigers to a 5-5 score after Roger Davies was surprised by the Ravens' Larry Hoker in the second period. Mike Maeder shoved the Tigers ahead for good, 8-5, in the 137-pound division by decisioning his foe Bob Post, 4-2. Tom Newman picked up the winners’ second fall a match later by pinning Chris Pence after 4:50. Co-captain Sky Huck, 157pounder, and Steve Nice, 167, added a pair of 5-3 and 4-1 decisions to hike teh margin to 19-5. Peter McIntosh weathered a late surge by his opponent Mike Mundy in the 177 pound category and escaped with a 6-5 de-
cision though he was oh the bottom when the buzzed ended the match. Heavyweight Ralph Larsen, today named DePauw's varsity athlete of the week by thi “D" association, kept his undefeated dual string intact. Warned with his adversary to stop tailing toward the end of the first period, Larsen heeded thfe admonition and quickly dropped Don Fitzgerald 34 seconds inside the second period to capture his match by a pin. Saturday the Tigers hit the road for a match at Ball State. The varsity swimming team, idle since mid-January, will be at Albion College to start a four-meet February road schedule. In other sports action this week the Tiger basketball squad goes after ICC win number four tonight at 7:30 p.m. against Ball State. The game will be played in Muncie. Saturday night Valparaiso’s Crusaders, recent conquerors of Butler and San Francisco State, arrive in Greencastle to open a two-game DePauw home stand.
BOWLING FIRST CITIZENS BA>K j. Green, 173.
Russellville Wins A Close One, 52-50
Lizton s fourth quarter rally almost caught Russellville napping on the sidelines Tuesday night but they held on to take a narrow decision 52-50. R. Richardson’s trouble with his wrist didn't bother him last night as he dropped in ten field goals to lead all scoring. Previously the injury hampered his shooting style but the scrappy player managed to pull enough tricks out of the hat to harass his opponents. Russellville grabbed onto a three point lead going into the second quarter. Lizton ran nip and tuck with the scoring and trailed by one going into the final sixteen minutes Russellville dominated the third quarter as the Bees outplayed the Blue Devils and took a 42-35 lead into the final minutes. Along with Richardson, the Russellville scoring was helped with McGaughey’s thirteen points. Jarrett and Smith led the Lizton squad with 17 and 12 points respectively. BOX SCORE Lizton (50) FG FT PF Smith 3 6 5 ; Hayes 3 10 Stout 2 2 5. Sconce 2 4 3 i Jarrett - 7 3 4 ! Roark 0 0 1 17 16 18 Russellville (52) FG FT PF, Hurst 3 0 3 McGaughey 4 5 3 J. Boiler 1 3 2 Sinnet 4 0 3 R. Richardson 10 0 3 J. Richardson 0 0 2 R. Boiler 0 0 4 Score by quarters: Lizton 14 28 35 50 Russellville .... .17 29 42 52 B game: Russellville 35, Lizton 28
week. Gannon replaced Grambling in ninth place, pushing the Louisiana quintet to 10th and shoving Pan American from 10th to 11th place. Trailing Evansville was sec-ond-place Central State of Ohio, the only other undefeated team in the rankings, third-ranked Southern Illinoia and North Dakota University. Carson - Newman remained fifth followed by Augaburg, which has lost only once in 20 games, and twice-beaten High Point. Fresno State held on to the No. 8 slot. The ratings are based on games played through Saturday, Feb. 6. Lamar Tech advanced one notch to 12th, Georgia Southern, which entered the ratings for the first time last w'eek, surged from 19th to a 13th-placa tie with Wittenberg. Philadelphia Textile rebounded from 17th to 15th and Fairmont (19-1), also a newcomer to the standings lats week, advanced from 20th to a three-way deadlock for 16th with Steubenville And Youngstown. Seattle Pacific re-entered the top 20 in a tie with St. Joseph’s (N.M.) for 19th.
Gannon Moves Into Top 10 NEW YORK UPI — Oncebeaten Gannon College of Erie, Pa., moved into the top 10 for the first time today in the United Press International small college basketball ratings. Evansville extended its nearly two-year hold on first-place in the standings by gathering all 35 votes from the coaches on the UPI rating board for the seventh time in the last eight weeks. Evansville is the only school in the history of the ratings to record a perfect score of 350 points. The ninth-ranked Gannon Golden Knights have reeled off 12 straight victories since losing their only game, a threepoint decision to 16th-ranked Steuben ville. The Golden Knights, unranked a month ago, have climbed from 16th to 14th to 11th to ninth in successive weeks. None of the top 10 team! lost a game last week, thus the first eight positions remained unchanged from the previous
LoBossun May It On Hit Way Up By United Press Internationel A couple more performance^ like Tuesday night’s and the Baltimore Clippers’ Gordon LaBossiere might be on his way up to the New York RangerA. The Rangers have been shifting personnel around quite a bit in the last week and it looks as if LaBossiere is trying to impress the major league club. The Baltimore fonvard scored three goals and added an assist Tuesday night to lead the Clippers into sole possession of third place in the American Hockey League's Eastern Division as the Quebec Aces helped out by downing the Springfield Indians, 5-3. LaBossiere tallied once in the opening period but it was his two final period scores which broke a 3-3 tie and assured Baltimore of the victory. Red Berenson scored tw'o goals to lead Quebec to its 34th victory of the season. After Springfield's Roger Cote scored the first goal of the game in the first period, the Aces came back to score four straight goals to sew up the contest. Randy Miller tallied twice for Springfield.
THIS WEEK’S SCHEDULE BASKETBALL Friday Ladoga at Roachdale Lizton at Reelsville Greencastle at Gerstmeyer Turkey Run at Fillmore Belle Union at Waveland Saturday Ladoga at Bainbridge Avon at Fillmore Belle Union at Gosport
Claasic League February S, 196* W L Shetrbne Rail Estate 121 63 Central National Bank 114 76 McMaina International 110 74 Putnam Realty 110 74 Clairmont Transfer 100 84 Coan Pharmacy 97 87 Old Topper Tavern 96 88 Patterson Shill 93 91 Coca Cola 72 112 Torr’s Restaurant §9 115 Hillman’s JSwelers 62 122 Team No. 1 60 124 Central National Bank, 2389; Old Tbpper, 2352; Torr’s Restaurant, 2304. Shetrone Real Estate, 851; Torr’s Restaurant, 843; Pat’s Shell A McMain’s, 841. L. Muray, 675; R. Hampton, 659; J. Sutton, 647. L. Murray, 258; J. Sutton, 257; W. Douglas, 255. 600 Series: J. Sutton, 613; M. Aker, 619; G. Walker, 624. Over 550: B. Alexander, 551; T. Conyers, 552; C. Kerr, 553; R. Saunders, 559; D. Brattain, 559; W. Douglas, 561; R. Beaman, 572; R. Gooch, 591; C. Alex, 595.
Over 400 Series: P. Lambert, 410; E. Shillings, 427; J. Masten, 481; A. Shinn, 427; F. Allen, 402; G. Conyers, 426; B. Alderfer, 406; P. Huxford, 448; J. Burns, 431; D. Wilson, 444.
Buis
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Wednesday, February 10, 1965 :t I Jock Nicklaus Is Rounding Tfjdkj, Director, CAINES DOG RESEARCH CEHTtR |pfQ ChdltipiOIIShip FOMI
JACKS AND JILLS' Mixed league Pin-Busters 30 DRJ’s 2914 Mack’s Appliance 271? Goofy Four 25 Sooners 23 Ding Bats 22 Buis Feeds 18 Handicappers 17 High Team Gime:
Feeds, 813.
High Team Series:
Feeds, 2363,
Women 400 and over: C. Masten, 455; R. Buis, 467; L. Godfrey, 401; L. Spurlock, 422; M. Buis, 491; J. Cavin, 486. 200 games: Jim Sharp, 212; Charles Buis, 201; John Mas-
ten, 210.
Men 500 and over: J. Masten, 1 542; M. Clifford, 519; B. Miller, 500; R. Friend, 515; C. Buis, 547; R. McCammack, 566; J. Sharp, 542; D. Garrett, 516.
AMSWHIMC A LOST P0C A0, POLICE IN DOWNEY, CALIF., FOUNT 52 STOLtN TOC* ANP THU* MPKS A WlTtSFAEAP DOCNAPPlNC RAOtar
e» ns 171? EPmoN is a pibcctory UrriMC HOTELS ANP MOTELS WHCftS DOCS CAM sw WITH THEIR OWNERS
IN 1761,Tl WAS ReCOMMENPCP THAT THE NUMBER OF HOUNDS IN A SACK *E MPT AT 40 COUPLES (fid HOUNDS) FOR "THE WESTS PORT* C 19*5 Game* Dog Research Center, N. V. C.
Allen Is Favored Gustav BubiScholz
IBM WOMEN’S THURSDAY NIGHT LEAGUE
IGA FOODLIXER Feb. 3 W Morrison's 131 A A S 108 Adler’s 100 Murphy’s Enco 93 Stoner Ins 90 Mac’s Appli. 88 Shetrone 82 Suzanne’s 76
To Retain Title
Expected To Retire
PHOENIX, Ariz. UPI — Big Jack Nicklaus, rounding into the league's hardest-working championship form, opens de- goalie, had allowed only 2.44 fense Thursday of the first of poals to be scored against him four titles he w on in 1964 when per game. He had played every the $65,000 Phoenix Open golf minute of every game for the tournament gets under way at Americans and only last week the Arizona Country Club. tied a team record with his Nicklaus will be playing in fifth shutout of the season, only his third tournament! of the year. But the old touch Len Lunde and Art Stratton is coming back - if it ever of second-place Buffalo were went away ! tied for first place in the point “I’m hitting the ball real racc with 68 apiece - Lunde also good and can't complain about ’ * d the lea S ue in S oa,s ' vith 35 anything,” said the Buckeye *' hile stratton was first in as - belter. sists with 56. In two starts this year, Jack Rochester’s Bronco Horvath finished in a tie for third in the wag tjunj in points with 63, and Bob Hope Desert Classic, pick- f earnma f e Ed Litzenberger was ing up $3,666,66; and also in a fourth with 62 . p a t Hannigan tie for third in the Bing Cros- of Buffalo was f ifth 5 g by National Pro-Amateur, win- gtan Smrke of the Amerning $3,100. icans was sixth with 56. So the money-winning king is on his way to what looks 0 am V like another big cash season. [Qggf His main competition here is expected to come from Bill Aff on J III AApOl Casper, who won the Bob Hope Fill dill IV IVIvvl
FRANKFURT, Germany
event last week and who has collected more than $27,000 al-
L
61 84 92 99
William A. Unsworth, 605 Rdige Ave., Greencastle, is
LAKE PLACID, N. Y. UPI— UPI— European light heavy-1 reauy uus year ' .... among local officers and leaders The National Figure Skating weight champion Gustav Bubi Casper, shmme ow n o a ^ ^ Indiana Un}versity varchampionships open today with Scholz elected today to retire tr ' m poun s, is pajing e Q| ub i nv it e( j t 0 the I. U.
more than 100 competitors, led as a champion rather than try most con9istent ^ ame 0 18 Bloomington teen-aged defending cham- to train down for another bout ^ e ‘ He lias finis ^ ed nin th oi
better in 17 out of the last 18
campus Saturday
(Feb. 13) for the athletic booster organization’s 10 th annual leadership conference. Speakers for the Varsity Club conference will include
Team No. 2 —
Huxford 100 6
Team No. 5 —
Shillings 87 8i 2274.
Team No. 3 — Hi Ind. Game: Lancaster, G.
Traver 84 84 199.
Team No. 1 — Hi Ind. Series: Buis, M. 529. Cooper 82 86 Over 425 Series: Buis, M. 529; Team No. 4 — Porter 500; Long 498; Huxford Sutherlin 77 91 493; Cavin 487; Lancaster 475; Team No. 6 — Beaman 467; Flint 460; Buis, L. Masten 70 98 452; Gooch 451; Hurst 445; High Individual Games: J.; Ogle 436; Murray 427; AshMaaten, 188; B. Alderfer, 180;jw r orth 426.
by
pions Scott Ethan Allen and with Italy's Giulio Rinaldi.
Peggy Fleming. tournaments while winning
Scholz, who was given until something like $70,000.
Allen, 16, of Smoky Hill, Pa., j March 31 to fight Rinaldi or he But the other stars are on
^ L?rriL t %r a tL t ^mwl 0 ^ StriPPed ° f hiS CrOWn by the hand ' t0 °- They inClUde BritiSh John Pont* new Hoosiei-7oo7-104 mens title m the four-da> European Boxing Union, an- Open champion Tony Lema ' ball coach . Bill Orwie. athletic
nounced Tuesday night that he who also won such events in director . Edwin Cadv faculty no longer can nra.ee the light 1964 as the Brack Open, the ^“r to the B^g lO S heavyweight limit of 175 Thunderbird and the Bing ence and Robert Dr0i assistant The rest of the classes were pounds. Bubi won the European Crosby; Australian Bruce athletic director.
A highlight of the day
HO event. Miss Fleming, also 16, of Hg Los Angeles, holds an edge in
Hi Team Game: Mac s Appli. the senior ladies class.
779.
Hi Team Series: Mac s Appul. considered wide open affairs crown from Rinaldi on
with no defending champions last March 4. showing. In the senior pairs.
however, Vivian and Ronnie Joseph of Colorado’s Broadmoor
Skating Club, who finished sec- DALLAS UPI —The Dallas ond in the nation last year, were Cowboys Tuesday signed Kan-
sas State's 6-foot-3, 225-pound
long
Barlou Signs
Bruce
a foul Crampton, who captured the
Bing Crosby this year, PGA p ro gr ram w -jn be a combined champion Bobby Nichols and “ awar d 3 _ welcome to Coach San Francisco Lucky Interna- p ont >. ban q ue t Saturday night.
I. U. Offers Summer Institute For Speech, Theatre Students
High school students from Putnam County with a special interest in debate, public speaking, literary interpretation, and their speech and theatra indisplay and expand their special talents this summer at Indiana University's seventh annual Indiana High School Speech and Theatre Institute July 18-31. Sponsored by the I. U. Department of Speech and Theatre, the two-week program is open to a select number of high school students. Approximately 65 teenagers attended last summer’s session. Students eligible are those who will be high school seniors in September, 1965, and who are recommended by Either their speech and theatre instructor or high school principal. Deadline for application is May 1. The institute is divided into three sections: the discussion and debate program, the public speaking and interpretation portion, and the theatre and drama program. I. U. faculty members and visiting high school teachers serve as Institute staff. In the discussion and debate section of the program, special emphasis will be placed on development of skills through classroom work, research, laboratory work, individual instruction, and televised debate. Special attention will be given to the 1965-66 high school debate and discussion questions. The public speaking and interpretation program will stress the development of speech writing, composition, organization, and style; the oral interpretatiem portion will emphasize the understanding of poetry, humorous and dramatic prose. Public performances will be given at the conclusion of the Institute. In the theatre and drama section, a “do-it-yourself’ approach will be used with students working in acting, makeup, costuming, lighting, and stagecraft. On the final two nights, they will put their efforts together for a special public performance of several plays. Also planned are side trips to L U.’s Browm County Playhouse at Nashville, and ipecial public lectures and concerts. Applications may be made to Robert C. Jeffrey, director, In-
diana Speech and Theatre High School Institute, Department of Speech and Theatre, Indiana University.
Froebel Has Meet Score 8y United Ftess Internetienat INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Gary Froebel registered a perfect score today in the UPI Indiana high school basketball coaches’ board ratings. And the Steel City came through with a 1-2 sweep when Gary Roosevelt replaced Indianapolis Washington as runnerup. Two other upstate powers, South Bend Central ind Michigan City, joined the “Big 10” for the first time this season. Froebel, 17-1 and boasting a 15-game winning streak, was No. 1 on all 18 ballots for 180 points. Roosevelt, the earlyseason leader but in third place the last tw'o weeks, climbed to second spot with 130 points. South Bend Central, winner of its last eight games, was elevated from 19th place to seventh and Michigan City from 14th to 10th. Both are members of the Northern Conference. North Sixth But Fort Wayne North, another NIHSC club which lost a crucial league game at Michigan City Saturday, 90-86, vas pushed even higher — from eighth place to sixth. East Chicago Washington also moved up, reclaiming fifth place it lost to Indianapolis Manual last week. Anderson remained fourth— the only team besides Froebel in the elite to stand fast. Five other teams were demoted. Indianapolis Washington, upset by suburban Ben Davis last weekend, slipped fr< m second to third. Manual, beat4n by city foe Tech, dropped from second to third. Elwood skidded from seventh to ninth despite its 69-65 win at Tipton to take the undisputed Central Conferenece lead, Lebanon from ninth to 13th after taking its lumps from Ben Davis and South Bend Central, and unbeaten Washington from 10th to 11th, although going into this week's program with a 15-game winning streak. Balloting was for games through last Saturday.
favored.
Bill Chappie of Los Angeles was expected to give Allen stiff competition, and Christine Hagler of the Broadmoor Club is a top contender for Miss Fleming's title. The competition at this resort center's Olympic Arena was the first of three major figure skating championships to be held in the United States this year. The others will be the North American at Rochester, N. Y„ Feb. 19-21, and the world championships at Colorado Springs, Colo., March 2-6,
running back Ron Barlow 7 , who was drafted as a 20th round future and became eligible at
midterm this year.
tional king George Archer.
Western Division Holds Monopoly
: Clubs to be recognized with 1964 “100 per cent awards” for exceeding 1963’s level in membership and contributions to the I. U. athletic scholarship fund.
ROCHESTER, N. Y. UPI -1 0 6 C ® 0 The Western Division held a NEW YORK UPI — Barry virtual monopoly on statistics Kramer has come home, released today by the The New York Knickerbock-
Sunnyside American Hockey League. ers Tuesday acquired the 6-foot
The Rochester Americans -4 former New York Univershad scored more goals—200— ity star from the San Francisco and allowed less opposition Warriors for the $1,000 waiver goals —131 — than any other price in an apparent move to team through Sunday for the bolster their attendance and fill
RANNER ADS PAY I lea ^ ues best record - the spot vacat «d by Tom HooDAnnCK HUJ tHI | Rochester's Gerry Cheevers, J weeks ago.
Fight Results NEW YORK —
Gardens— UPI— Billy Collins, 151, Nashville. Tenn., knocked out Ricky Ortiz, 148, San Juan,
P. R„ 3.
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