The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 September 1966 — Page 6

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4 The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Thursday, September 1, 1966

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GHS Cross Country Team Expects Winning Season

sileape^ STANDINGS

PACIFIC COAST LEAGCE EASTERN DIVISION

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Greencastle High School’s man Craig Barrett and junior ; w L Pct GB

58 .588

well into its early season prac- i push their way into the scoring. 1 indiais'apolis ! !!!!! 76 63 5 ° 6 4 a

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cross country team is already award winner Jon New should Tulsa 83

' | Phoenix 78

INDIANAPOLIS 76 66 .535 7!i

tice, and hopes for a winning' Two transfer students could Denver 75 66 .532 8 season are high. Twenty run- pace the Cubs this season. Sen- okhamoha city 57 86 .401 26’i

ners have reported for practice ior Jim Craig and junior Don and six lettermen return from Irwin have been running well in

last year’s 17 won-5 lost squad, pre-season drills and could be- ®^o e uve ’ r ^ ^ s Jim Shonkwiler, most valu- come consistent scorers. Char- Spokane 72 70 507 8 able runner in 1965, and Mike les Whicker, Ray Klipsch, and Hawaii^ eo .426 18'*

WESTERN DIVISION

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Troyer, holder of the freshman Ron Cook have all been workrecord, who was injured last ing hard and are all capable of year, head the returning letter taking over scoring duties for

winners. Terry Dowty and Mike the harriers.

THIS IS FUN, COACH

Contrary to popular belief, running cross country is fun. Notice the smiles on the faces of the 12 runners present. Out In front is Terry Dowty. Back, left to right: Pat Blose,

James Craig, Mike Troyer, Mike Surber, John Mishler, Charles Whicker, Don Dowty, Steve Elliott, Don Irwin, Ron Cook, and hidden is Terry Ross.

ON YOUR MARK, GET SET, AND GO! These are the six returning lettermen that Coach Dave won, 5 lost. Left to right are: Jim Shonkwiler, James Craig, McCracken hopes will Improve on last year’s record of 17 Terry Dowty, Mike Troyer, Mike Surber and Don Irwin.

Surber, senior letter winners, are expected to challenge the leaders. Injured junior letter-

Indians Defeat Tulsa Oilers, 4-3 INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The Indianapolis Indians held off a ninth inning Tulsa rally Wednesday night to defeat the Oilers, 4-3, in a Pacific Coast League game. The Tribe, eliminated Tuesday night by Tulsa from a chance at the Eastern Division pennant, scored single runs in the first three innings to take a

3-0 lead.

George Kernek hit a solo homer in the eighth inning to cut the margin to 3-1, then the Indians made it 4-1 with an eighth inning run. Two triples and a single gave Tulsa two tallies in the ninth, but Steve Jones, who went all the way for Indianapolis, got the side out with no more runs

scoring.

Jones was announced as the starting pitcher after the scheduled starter, Manly Johnston, developed arm trouble during warmups.

Sophomores Don Dowty,

Tacoma 58 83 .415 21

Indianapolis Raceway Park Kd togle Holds To Host National Drag Meet 2 ’ Stroke Lea<l

INDIANAPOLIS UPI—From; gories and entries range from lank flivvers to the most so- 1,200-horsepower dragster capphisticated creations, a record able af speeds in excess of 215 MOO of them will try their luck ; miles per hour from standing Ita the 12th annual national start over the quarter-mile dis-

BIRKDALE, England UPI— Australian Kel Nagle advanced into the second round of the $200,200 Carling Open Golf Championship today with a two stroke lead after complaints of slow play were sounded by

Fishing Slow

NAT 'L LEAGUE Nirht C .*s Not Included

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San Francisco 77 55 .583 Pittsburgh 77 55 .583 Los Angeles 74 56 .568 2

Steve Elliott, John Mishler, Pat Philadelphia 70 64 .522 8

St. Louis 67 65 . 508 10

Blose, and Mike Rogers have Cincinnati 67 65 .sos 10 been posting good times and ^anta .............. « 68 .477 14 should, with the necessary ex- New York 58 75 .436 is'i

„ - ., Chicago 46 85 .351 30ta

penence, run well for the Tiger

TODAY’S SCHEDULE PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Oklahoma City at INDIANAPOLIS 7:45 p. m. Tacoma at Portland (night) Phoenix at San Diego 'night) Hawaii at Seattle (night) Denver at Tulsa (night) Spokane at Vancouver (night) NATIONAL LEAGUE San Francisco at New York—Perry (20-4) vs. Ribant (8-6) , Houston at Philadelphia—(night) Fan' j rell (6-81 vs. Jackson (12-13) Los Angeles at Pittsburgh—(night) Subton (11-11) vs. Law (8-6) Chicago at Cincinnati (Night) Hand* (8-13) vs. Pappas (8-8' | Atlanta at St. Louis—(night) Kelly (42) vs. Carlton (2-2) AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at California—(night) Peterj son (10-8) vs. M. Lopez (5-12) or Newman (3-7) Detroit at Chicago—(night) Lolich (1S9) vs. Howard (6-4) Baltimore at Cleveland—(night) Palmj er (14-7) vs. Siebert (14-7) Only Games Scheduled

Cubs. Team roster: Craig Barrett,

Elliott, Mike Harmless, Don Irwin, Jerry Kiger, Ray Klipsch,

Jim Shonkwiler, Mike Surber. | Mike Troyer, and Charles

Whicker.

Greencastle's first meet is September 9th at Linton and | will be run at 5:00 behind the Linton school building.

AMERICAN LEAGUE x-Night Games Not Included

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xBaltimore

49

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j xDetroit

58

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| xMinnesota

63

.530

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; xCleveland

64

.519

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xChicago

65

.515

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xCalifomia

66

.500

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j xNew York

73

.451

23

xWashington ....

75

.449

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i xBoston

77

.438

25 !

xKansan City ...

.. 58

76

.433

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Quarterbackers Kickoff Sept. 14 Memberships in the Greencastle Quarterback Club, spurred by a slash in cost from $5 to $3, are going like the proverbial hotcakes, planners of the town-gown football booster club report.

YESTERDAY’S RESULTS PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE INDIANAPOLIS 4. Tulsa 3 San Diego 15. Oklahoma City 8 Phoenix 7, Denver 3 Portland 3, Seattle 1 Tacoma 11. Hawaii 2 Vancouver 2. Spokane 1 (12 innings) AMERICAN LEAGUE Minnesota 11. Boston 2 Chicago 7. Detroit 6, (1st game, 12 innings) Baltimore 5. Cleveland 1 New York at California (night) Washington 3, Kansas City 0 (1st

game)

NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh 4, Los Angeles 3 Philadelphia 10. Houston 5 San Francisco 2. New York 1 Cincinnati 7, Chicago •

Filly Sets Record

DU QUOIN, HI. UPI — Kerry

Following is the weekly fish- i Way, a big and beautiful brown ing report for Central Indiana, filly, won harness racing’s as compiled by the Indiana 1 prized Hambletonian for 3-year-Department of Natural Re- old trotters like a

...Vbur Neighbor^ a Member Five excellent reasons why you should join AAA 1. Emergency Road Service 2. Personal Travel Planning and Guidance 3. Bail and Arrest Bond Protection 4. Personal Accident Insur-

ance

5. Theft Reward Protd&ion

wiler ot Indianapolis led Hoc 10i000i 000 Americans now sier golfers in the first round . , . , of the 66th U. S. Amateur Golf Cn W thcs f S . en ? Ces ’ P' USman i( Championship here Wednesday. ^ ^ time YOU joined Tutwiler carded a two-over- ihe 10,000,000 Club?

Tutwiler Leads Amateur Golfers ARDMORE, Pa. UPI — Indi-

News of the growing mem

bership coincides with the an- “, a Am /!! U j r , C _ ham , pion f d ™

nouncement of the meeting dates for the club, which for a number of years has supported Greencastle High School and

DePauw football.

par 72 to trail the leader, Rog-

The kickoff session is slated er McManus, Hartville, Ohio, for Friday, Sept. 14, at the by three shots. Tutwiler had Memorial Student Union build- J rounds of 37 and 35. ing. The husband-wife dinner,! The current Indiana Junior being held just prior to the Tig-1 titlist, Steve Falender of Indian-

champion | er Cubs’ home opener with apolis, exploded to an 84 with

Gerstmeyer Tech, will feature rounds of 42-42. Also at 94 was

Central: White River fishing to win the first heat in the very slow with carp biting on fastest time ever recorded by a doughs. Geist Reservoir clear filly in ^ 4i. year _ old 8 t a ke,

but very low with not much j.gg 4 ,g

should.

She set the pace all the way j GHS coach Bob Bergman and Robert Fay Jr., Evansville, who

DePauw coach Tom Mont. Two more dates when Q'backers will huddle include an

tZZITteZrZfS: «*«•» competitors and cff H fishing _60in g on At Kokomo ^ she came from behtad October 5 dessert-smoker in the

dianapolis Raceway Park this ears which reach speeds of 180 Weekend. | mph and regular passenger cars More than 100,000 dragster tuned to the peak of perform-

fans from coast to coast were ance.

expected to watch the National j All top honors in the seven Hot Rod Association’s biggest major classifications will be up annual venture, which will be for grabs Monday.

IRP offiicals spent $80,000 to resurface the drag strip and for additional staging areas and meet officials predicted that the

climaxed Monday with crowning of the top fuel-eliminator

champion.

Drag racing’s biggest names

Will be here—among them Don im P™ved conditions will result (Big Daddy) Garlits, Tampa, | in t °P s P eeds of about 22 ° mph.

Jila., the AA-fuel dragster

titlist; Connie Kalitta, Mt. be the best of our 12 national ' Clemens, Mich., and Don Prud- mee *-s, said Wally Parks,

s homme, Granada Hills, Calif., president.

^ winner of last year’s top fuel

* eliminator contest. OLDEST TROPHY

j About $70,000 in cash and ,

cials promised future

would be faster.

Nagle, who lost a 1965 playoff to Gary Player for the U. S. Open crown in St. Louis, carded a five-under-par 68 Wednesday over the 7,037-yard Royal Birkshire course. The sizzling tour gave him a two-shot edge over five-time British Open champ Peter Thomason, New

rounds | and Prairie Creek Reservoir, with a closing . rush to ca p t ure j Union and a family dinner at

channel catfish taking cheese and chicken liver, bass starting to bite on rubber night crawl

carded rounds of 42-42.

NOTICE

the second and deciding heat in j the high school Friday, Oct 1:39 3 /5 Wednesday. 126, the evening of the tradi-

Her speed in the two heats, ! tional Brazil-Greencastle game. ^ , x T

ers early and late, and crappies the fastest mile clockings she Membership in the club may be fl ° m f 0I ™ an taking minnows with bluegills ever j^g t ro tted, gave her a obtained by calling the Green- ^ C x amm0a ^ biting on redworms. Some cat- wor j d record 0 f 3:58 2 /5 for two castle Chamber of Commerce ° J oores ' 1 e is sc e u e o fish and bass caught at Rac- heats by a filly> surpassing the (OL 3-4517 or stopping by the; ^ ^ ZL .A.IA

coon and Cataract Lakes. previous mark of 3:58 4/5 set Southwestern: Water very b y Elaine R °dney at Lexington,

low. Big flathead catfish boom

Notice to High School Students: Word has just been re-

at 6:30 p.m. Friday evening.

Zealand’s Bob Charles, and Pet- slowed down with not many

Kerry Way’s victory, the 11th

“Wtihout a doubt, this should er Butler and Hedley Muscroft being taken. Some average size for a fllly in the stake > £ ave

of England. I channels and flatheads being her tbe seventh biggest purse Billy Casper, the recent U.S. caught at Hindostan Falls and paid a winner in the event - Open titlist and considered the Williams Dam along with usual 5 0 0 ’ a " d bar total pre-tourney favorite, took only run of white perch. Strip pits ! a ^" iag:S _ 0f ^ e / roSS

30 putts but couldn't find the

Chamber office at 14 S. Indiana., Game tickets will be 50c at

The Quarterback Club is open the gate for students, 75c for to all who are interested in adults. The bus fare will be 50c. high school and collegiate foot- Game time at Mooresville is

AMERICAN AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION MASTER MEMBERSHIP EACH YEAR $12.50 (Plus S5.00 enrollment fee first year only) ASSOCIATE MEMBERSHIP—Additional membership within the family—each year $7.50 (No enrollment fee) TERRE HAUTE AUTO CLUB 32 S. 7th, Box 364 Terre Haute, Ind. 47801 Crawford 2338 ANNOUNCING GREENCASTLE AREA COMPLETE 24 HOUR EMERGENCY ROAD SERVICE THROUGH MURPHY'S ENCO SERVICE 710 N. Jackson — Greencastle Day Phone: OL 3-9909 After Hours: OL 3-5672 OL 3-950* Also Membership Information

■.wards will be at stake in 89

greens and wound up at even-

u.rvruvao wrxx xxo rxx. owxxso xxx oo NEW YORK UPI—Th* Old- par 73.

# classes, with actual eliminations est Trophy competed for by |

l scheduled to get under w r ay athletes on the North Ameri- j

; Saturday over IRP’s 1,320 feet can continent is the Stanley The Yale football team startt drag strip. Cup, hockey’s championship ed a fad in 1890 when its playCars will battle for honors in trophy. It was first awarded in ers grew their hair long like

furnishing only a few large- for the race was $122,540, fourth mouth bass and some redears h,ghest in Hambletonian his-

and bluegills. Best results de- ^ ory ‘

pend on fishing at just the right . 11 was the first win for a filly t ime< in the stake since Emily’s Pride

in 1958, and Kerry Way’s tri-

j seven major eliminator cate- ! 1894.

j today’s Beatles.

FOOTBALL-

SPECTIVE

By WALTER L. JOHNS Central Press Sports Editor IF THE QUARTERBACKING crew is sound, after those injuries w^hich knocked out Johnny Unites and Gary Cuozzo last year, the Baltimore Colts, world’s champs in 195859, will be one of the favorites for the Western Conference title of the NFL this year. Coach Don Shula, whose club has won 27 of their last 34 contests including a tie for the league division title last year, lists his major problems as "offensive tackle, offensive guard and punter” but the comeback of Unitas stands as the key action. Tackle George Preas and guard Alex Sandusky have retired and ticketed for the tackle fill-in is Sam Ball, the 250pound rookie from Kentucky and No. 1 draft choice. Also figured in the Colt plans Is defensive end Andy Stynehula, for whom the Colts swapped safetyman. Wendell Earris to New York. Seven starters remain from the last championship team, including Unitas, halfback Lenny Moore, and end Raymond Berry. Unitas is now only two touchdowns short of Y.A, Tittle’s pro career total of 210 i scoring throws. Bob Boyd, Alle Pro. is defensive back stand juL

Unitas Comeback Colt Win Caper?

ball in Greencastle.

BOWLING NEWS

■umph made his sire, Star's Pride, the first stallion ever to father three consecutive win-

to take third prize of

All bids must be submitted on proper

bid-form as prescribed by the State third Board of Accounts, and be accom- L,UIU panied by a ten per cent cerUfied $14,410.

check or bid-bond. I _ Carlisle, third and seventh in

The School Board reserves the right the hoofe * to reject any and all bids. tne t ' VO aea ^ S ’ g°t fourth prize - of $9,607, and Armbro Gazelle, Greencastle Community Schools, ... Beverly M. Wagoner, finishing Sixth and fourth, got Schoo! Board President^ ^ ; flfth money of $6 , 004 .

TUESDAY MORNING IBM WOMEN’S LEAGUE

August 30, 1966

W

3

Hambletonian victors. No. 8 Johnson 2 Kerry Way was rated a 7 to 2 No. 4 Cox 2

2 2

rite at 3 to 1. Polaris, picked by No. 3 Scott —.. 2 a computer to win the race, was No. 3 Storm 2 9 to 2 and Governor Armbro 5 No. 5 Hanlon 2 to 1. Hi Ind. game: D. Cody 206. But Polaris finished second in Hi Ind. series: E. Shillings

both heats for second money of 503.

$30,022, and a Swedish horse, 400 or better: E. Shilling 503; Shatter Way, was fourth and D. Cody 486; M. Freeland 475;

8:00 p.m.

NOTICE TO BIDDEKS

Notice Is hereby given that

School Board of the Greencastle com- ners and the second to sire five No. 6 Dickey

munity Schools will receive bids at Its '

regular meeting place In the Junior High Building at 4:30 p. m., Monday. September 12. 1866. of the following

item for the 1966-67 school year: choice in the morning line for No. 7 Mosteller to^Fuixhase 1 Accounting ’Equipmen” the race, with Carlisle the favo- No. 1 Jordan

for payrolls, budget records, and fund accounting. The equipment must have a typing keyboard, transistorized programming facilities, and ability to accumulate totals. The vendor Is to program the equipment

to our needs.

Specifications for the above Item to be purchased may be obtained from the Office of the Superintendent of

Schools.

K. Scott 470: R. Maurer 458; B. Douglas 452; L. Cox 443; E. Jordan 440; G. Cantone 434; L. Mosteller 423; P. Collins 418; N. Cook 416; D. Johnson 406; M. Wager 405; B. Branneman 401.

LAST TWO RACES OF THE SEASON SATURDAY NIGHT AND LABOR DAY NIGHT SATURDAY NIGHT-SEPT. 3RD Qualifications at 6 p.m. Race starts at 8 p.m. LABOR DAY NIGHT-SEPT. 5TH Qualifications at 6:30 p.m. Race starts at 8 p.m. POWDER PUFF DERBY Come pick your favorite lady driver. Refreshments — Plenty To Eat PARAGON SPEEDWAY Smoothest % mile dirt track in the Midwest. One Mile West of Paragon on old Road 67.

SAVE •'•105 ON Tl/keel tractors

above price indede* 32 io. rotary aower

BRAND NEW '66 MODELS FULL 1 YEAR WARRANTY I’enr Choice of 16 Different Models

DOUBLE BONUS Son MbmI Rtw liaudralm »<*aMe ■ Ink xvapf

Limited Supply Extra Bonus Trade-In Allowances

• ledeslry's Only Work Prow* M*matic Transmission • 42 Attachments Available • brclusive Quick Hitch for all Attachments • Cas* Iron Work Graded Engine* • Anlomollve type Center PoNt Steering • Exclusive Dial A Height Adjosh meal for Atfachmoats • Hydraulic Braking on W.AX Medals • Extra Wide Turf Saver Tires en 8-10-12 hp Models istd. eggip.) •Padded. Contoured Bucket Seel

USED TRACTOR SPECIALS 1965 Cub Cadet -- Priced to sell 1963 Cub Cadet 1965 Wheel Horse Ranger A-l Condition 2 — 6 h.p. Craftsman Tractors 1 — Used Reo Rider Mower HUMPHREY'S WHEEL HORSE

106 W. Jacob

Phone OL3-3019