The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 September 1966 — Page 4
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Greencastle Tiger Cubs Blast Gerstmeyer Black Cats, 29-14
Th« Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Saturday, September 17, 1966
Using: the straight ahead, power running of Louis Luzar, and the brillant speed of Ray- ! mond Churchill, the Tiger Cubs defense, held the Black Cats Terre Haute Gerstmeyer last 1 night at the local field, 29 to
!
Outplaying the visitors from the Terre Haute school, the fired up Cubs, using an alert defense, held the Balck Cats to a total of 107 yards rushing and a minus 2 passing, while the offensive line of the home town boys opened hole after hole for the backfield men to scoot for 383 yards rushing. Like the first two games, the Cubs received the opening kick, but this time it took four plays from scrimmage to score. Tech, aware of Churchill running the Kick-off for touchdowns against Mooresville and Linton, tried a low bounding kick away from him. A Greencastle player returned the kick-off to the Cubs’ 42. Luzar carried for 5, Churchill over right guard for 4. Luzar picked up a first down on the Black Cats’ 40. Then Churchill rambled around left end 40 yards for the first touchdown and a Greencastle TD. Norris’ kick was good and the Cubs led T to 0 with 9:42 left in the first quarter. Greencastle held Tech on their first series of downs and ! Gerstmeyer booted to the Cub 26. Then with 3:39 left in the first quarter See fumbled and Tech recovered on their 49. Jeffers gained 3 up the middle, and Ellinger swept the end for five. Mitchell over right; guard for 5 more. After a yard loss on a fumble and an incompleted pass, a screen pass over the middle carried the ball i to the Cub 10. A draw play with 1:49 left in the first quarter plus the extra point tied the score. Starting the 2nd quarter, Gerstmeyer intercepted a Cub
t i V.
pass on their own 30 and returned it to the Cub 37. The defense stiffened and Tech kicked to the Cub 34 with 8:03 left. j The Cubs put on a sustained ground drive that ate up 5 minutes and 37 seconds. ChurchiU over left end gained 9. Luzar picked up the 1st down. Luzar gained 10 in 2 tries. Monnett and Luzar teamed for another 1st down on the Black Cats’ 38. After 2 carries by Luzar, Churchill gained another 1st down on the Tech 19. Luzar went to the 14, then Churchill cracked to the 11. With a 3rd and one, Luzar got the necessary yardage to the 6. In 3 tries, Luzar scored the go ahead touchdown. The kick was good and the Tiger Cubs took the lead with 2:40 showing on the clock. Tech fumbled and Churchill recovered with 1:46 left on the visitors’ 45 yard line. On a double reverse, Churchill pick-ed-up 20 yards and Luzar carried to the 18. With one second left in the first half, Churchill scored his second touchdown from the 4 yard line. On a fake kick, Norris circled the right end for the extra point, and the Cubs went Into the dressing room with a 21 to 7 lead. Gerstmeyer wasn’t dead yet. Ellinger caught the second half kick-off on his own 15, fumbled, picked it up, and ran 85 yards j thru the Tiger Cub defense., With the second half 13 seconds ; old, Greencastle’s lead was only j
7 points.
With 45 seconds remaining in the 3rd quarter, the visitors | punted to the Cubs on their 38,' Luzar and Churchill teamed up | to carry the ball in the end zone for the fourth Cub touchdown. Luzar on sheer power gained; yardage up the middle, and when the defense keyed on him, Churchill would go wide. Luzar scored his second touchdown
SEEKING MORE GOLF GOLD-By Alan Mover l/HASOt/ ff(/PO£PH OP r//B Moppp// 60CP-P/6G/P6 BQd/PMPrfT w/T# y/P/cP /f£'5 MAK//le ti/sderttyoor POP T#£P/d //tZTPPP OP tp e w opt £ OPTV£6fi££P* (J/1PI8C/PG pMotorpy ppy off. /TPPtP opp TO Tp£ TOPS OP $20,000 ppep p£ pop TPB PfCPPT TH(JrtP£PBtP£> C£.fSS/C, PTTPBOPPPP Po/trci/\/PCd. /ppfpjepeex
Raymond Churchill on one of his patented runs. This action took place in the 3rd quarter when he was pushed out of bounds after gaining long yardage on a wide sweep. from the 3 yard line with 9:51, Staying on the ground with. tackled for no gain. Gerstmeyer left in the 4th quarter. Norris’ ; Churchill and Luzar carrying took over on it’s 4. On the first kick was wide. 1 the load, they moved the ball play with 8 seconds left. Luzar The Black Cats couldn’t move steadily down field to the Black broke thru and dumped the
Cats’ 3 yard marker. An illegal quarterback in the end zone for motion penalty made it 3rd and a safety. Final score was 29
five from the 8. Churchill was to 14.
Indians Lose The Reelsville Indians traveled to Gosport Thursday evening and were defeated by the Gosport team in a slugfest 8 to 6. Making the most of 4 doubles in their 7 hits, and three Reelsville errors, Gosport held on for their victory. Wallace of Gosport put on a one man show in banging out a triple, double, and single. Fred Hansel pitched 6 innings for Reelsville and was the losing pitcher, while Collins going all the way for Gosport for the win. Each team collected 7 hits. Reelsville now has a 0-2 record.
STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE x-Nlfht Gamti Net Incladtd
W L Pet.
xLos Anceles 86 xPlttsburxh 84 xS&n Francisco 84 xPhiladelphia 78 St. Louis 78 xAtlanta 76 xCincinnati 71 xHouston 63 xNetc York 60 Ctucaco 53 AMERICAN LEAGUE
Nicht Games Not Inclnded
.593 .575 .371 .537 .527
.517 11 .480 15
.426 24>4
.408 27
.358 34*
2*
3 8
9*
w
L
Pet. GB
Baltimore
55
.623
Detroit
65
.558 9*
Minnesota
68
.541 12
Chicago
73
,5io le*
California
73
.500 18
Cleveland
76
.490 19*
Kansas City ....
80
.463 23*
New York
66
83
.443 26*
Boston
85
.441 27
Washington
66
85
.437 27*
Wrtrilattd tv rMtars* Syndicate
the ball and with 6:20 remaining, the Cubs took over on
their 46.
Cub Cross-Country Team Runs Season Record To 9 Wins 2 Losses
WGRE To Feature Opening Football Game Via Tape
As a special highlight to the opening game of DePauw’s 1966 football season, WGRE-fm radio 91.5 here in Greencastle, has arranged to broadcast a full-length tape of Saturday’s DePauw-Ma-calester game. The game will be played at 8:00 this evening in Saint Paul, where it will be recorded live by two young broadcasters from Minneapolis. In addition to t h e play-by-play coverage, the tape will offer the regular half-time
entertainment and a special interview with the athletic directors of both schools, James Lovelace of DePauw and Ralph Lundeen of Macalester. The tape, complete in itself, back to DePauw by James Cook, who will present it to WGRE for the special broadcast at seven p. m. Sunday. The tape, complete in inself offers the only adequate substitute for seeing the game itself.
Greencastle High School’s Cross Country team upped its record to 7-2 with its victory Thursday over Danville, Cascade, and Edgewood. The final score was Greencastle 32, Cascade 79 and Edgewood 84. The meet was highlighted by one of the most thrilling individual duels in the last several years. Warthan of Edgewood shattered the course record of 10:14.5 as he ran a brilliant 9:57.5. Greencastle’s Mike Troyer, who ran a magnificent two miles, lowered his own school record a full 20 seconds as he ran a 10:04 time. Jim Shonkwiler ran a season best of 10:38 for a good fifth position. Jim Craig and Don Irwin both broke the eleven-minute barrier, running 10:49 and 10:50 respectively. Terry Dowty ran a career best time of 11:03 to round out
the Cubs’ scoring.
The next Greencastle meet is Thursday at Rockville. The Thursday results follow:
Warthan, E. Troyer, G. Rinderknecht, D. Bayse, C. Shonkwiler, G. Wingler, C. Craig, G. Irwin, G. Williamson, C.
10. T. Dowty, G.
11. Coffey, C. 12. Baker, C. 13. Paddock, D. 14. D. Dowty, G. 15. York, C. 16. Whicker, G. 17. Blose, G. 18. Surber, G. 19. Mishler, G. 20. Elliott, G.
BOWLING NEWS First-Citizens Bank Classic League 9-14-66
Port Siders
12 -
4
Putnam Realty
10 -
6
Brackney’s Feed
10 -
6
Old Topper
10 -
6
Central Ntl. Bank
10 -
6
National Foods
8 -
8
Coca-Cola
8 -
8
Waffle House
8 -
8
Torr’s Restaurant
2 -
14
Art Furniture
2 -
14
Pointers Hand Cards 4th Conf. Loss The Bainbridge Pointers dealt i B»inbridre Fillmore AB H R| AB H R the Fillmore Cardinals their 4th 1 l. steeie .4 i 3|d. Plunkett 3 o o ! N. Steele .3 1 2|Custls 1 0 0 conference loss of the season Proctor ..2 0 0|Tharp 3 0 0 , , . ' Rossok ... 3 0 0|Williainson 111 last Thursday evening at the sngiand ..3 2 oiwaiton ....2 0 0 ,. , j Hanlon ... 3 0 0|R. Cash 3 1 0 Fillmore diamond. I D. Steele .4 1 1| Robinson .0 0 0 j Martin ...4 1 0|G. Plunkett 2 0 0 Larry Steele pitched a 3-hit-\ g“^ eU .;;;;S ° 0 ? ter in gaining the victory and (Goodpaster 200 00 J jSimmons ..100 helped his own cause' with a ! clark • • • • _® home run leading off the 3rd. Totals 32 n si Totals 22 3 2 Bainbridge’s record is now 5-2. Steele and English; GoodFillmore's next home game will P aster ' l3) an<1 " al B t<>n E be Thursday when they meet Bainbridge ... 102 302 0—8 7 2 the tough Darlington nine. Fillmore 000 110 0—2 3 11
High team game — Central Ntl.
Bank 784
High team series—Central Ntl. Bank 2288 High individual game—L. Mur-
ray 257
High individual series—L. Mur-
ray 688
Over 575 — L. Murray 688, B. Hampton 614, G. Walker 608, H. Hartung 604, C. Stites 601, B. Taylor 578, D. Atwell 576.
Pacific League's Most Valuable Player Named SEATTLE, Wash. UPI—Indianapolis catcher Duane Josephson has been voted the Pacific Coast League’s most valuable player, League President Dewey Soriano announced Thursday. Josephson was selected by PCL baseball writers and
broadcasters.
In addition to outstanding defensive ability, Josephson batted .324 and drove in 77 runs. He hit 25 doubles. 11 triples and six home runs for the Indians.
YESTERDAY’S RESELTS NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 3-4. Chicago 1-0 Atlanta 7. Cincinnati 0 Houston 6, Philadelphia 4
Pittsburgh at Los Angeles fnight) New York at San Francisco (night)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Cleveland at Detroit (night) Washington 0. Kansas City • (suspended 2 1 /a innings, power failure)
Chicago 4, Baltimore 0 Minnesota 2. New York 1 Boston 5, California 4
CITY BOWLING LEAGUE Sept. 12, 1966
Double Decker 12-4 Jones Const. 10 - Daily Banner 10 - Amo Milling 10 - Buis Specials 8 - Torr’s Restaurant 6 - 713 Club 6 - Reeves Welding 2 - Over 200 — M. Rader 246,
GRID SCORES
H. S. GRID SCORES Plainfield 27, Danville 6. Cascade 6, Park School 6.
T. H. Garfield 19. Linton 13.
West Vigo 26, Sullivan 23.
6 j T. H. Schulte 21, Brazil 13,
6 Rockville 7, Clinton 6.
Mooresville 7, Greenwood 0. Crawfordsville 46, Thorntown
12.
Davies 208, R. Gooch 208. Over 500 — R. Pettit 598, R. Gooch 586, R. Skelton 558, J. Davies 555, M. Rader 554, H. Scott 522, D. Unversaw 527, J. Church 524, R. Foxx 520. C. Jackson 508, G. Crawley 506. —E. Rader, Sec. FIGHT RESULTS TOKYO UPI—Lee Suk Won, 123, South Korea, stopped Kiyohide Yutsudo, 122%, Japan.
PORTLAND, Maine UPI — Pete Riccitelli, 169, Portland, Maine, outpointed Johnny Torres, 163, New York 8.
Maplecroft Theatre R.R. 1, Clayton Charlton Hatton and Yul Brynnar FRI., SAT. AND SUN. THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
CONTINUOUS SAT. SUN. FROM 2:00 P.M.
HELD OVER! THRU TUESDAY Foot. Nights — 7:10 — 9:30
ALL SEATS $1.25
IMPORTANT! NO ONE UNDER M WILL BE ADMITTED UNLESS ACCOMPANIED BY HIS PARENT.
M CRNCST LEHMAN S PRODUCTION OP EDWARD ALBEES
i Ho Stirring 5EORGE SEGAL- SANDY DENNIS' OiractMte MKEMCM01S I ’RESENTED BY WARNER BROS. I
LAS VEGAS, Nev. UPI — Willard Wynn, 157%, Riverside, Calif., knocked out Dub Huntley, 160, Los Angeles 1.
LOS ANGELES UPI — Frankie Crawford, 122%, North Hollywood, Calif., knocked out D a v e y Contreras, 123, Los Angeles 9.
PUTNAM COUNTY LEAGUE
MEADOWBROOK DRIVE IN THEATRE Inter. U.S. 34 t State lead 43 TONIGHT & SUN. Gregory Peck, Sophia Loren ARABESQUE (COLOR) Jay A The Americant The Beau Brummelt WILD, WILD WINTER
GREENCASTLE DRIVE-IN (Formerly Midway) Jet. 40 l 43 SAT., SUN. _ Sept. 14-17-1S Admission $1.00 Carl Reiner—Eva Marie Saint Alon Arkin—Brian Keith "THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING —THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING" PLUS Gall Hire—James Coan Laura Devon in "RED LINE 7000"
NEXT WEEK "WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY' "NITE OF THE GRIZZLIE"
Cash Concrete
24 - 8
, Pepsi Cola
22-10
Harper s Trucking
22 - 10
Dewey’s Barber Shop
20 - 12
. Bob's Body Shop
20 - 12
j Hutchison's Shell
18 - 14
American Zinc
18 - 14 14 - 18
Jenkin s Standard
Fentress Motors
14-18
| Puckett's Citgo
13 - 19)
jNat’l. Food Producers
12 - 20
! Eiteljorge Barber Shop
10 - 22
1 Morrison Tire
9-23
: Hampton's Garage
8 - 24
| Team Hi Series — Bob’s Body
Shop. 2915.
i Team Hi game — Fentress Mo-
tors, 1019. Indiv. Hi Series — N.
Hoffa,
SATURDAY NIGHT IS OPERA NIGHT Buy your Series Tickets now far the 1966-47 season of the INDIANA UNIVERSITY OPERA THEATER The best entertainment bargain aver ... 6 performances for as little as $4.75 ABDUCTION FROM THE SERAGLIO - Mozart October 15, October 22, October 29 ROMEO AND JULIET - Gounod November S, November 12, November 19, December 3 ALBERT HERRING - Britten December 10, December 17, January 8, January 14 RIGOLETTO - Verdi February 11, February IS, February 25 COUNT ORY - Rossini March 4, April 8, April 15 FOUR RUFFIANS - Welf-Ferrarl April 22, April 29, May 6, May 13 Series tickets: $11.50 9.00 6.75 4.75 I.U. Ticket Office, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47401
Traveling to Macalester, Minnesota for a 7:30 contest, the Tigers will try to improve on last year's 2-6-1 record. With 22 returning lettermen and an offensive backfield that is fully game-tested, Coach Tom Mont feels he may not win the battle of the scoreboard, but his team should score some touchdowns. Back row, left to right: 74—Bill Korber; 83—Tom Miller; 79—Rock Klein; 23—John Sacramento; 00—Dan Breckenridge; 61—Steve Barr; 86—Denny Robich; 78—Ray Arvay; 70—Richard Schulte; 80-Dick Walker; 65—Warren Onken; 50—Bob Flickinger; 69—Eric Robertson; 85—Jim Tomsic; 71—Don Ward. Third row; Todd Eberle, Asst.; Tom Hosier, Asst.; Coach Tom Mont;
88—Bruce Montgomerie; 67—John Caputo; 10—Tom Kyhos; 60—Steve Cagle; 16—Dave Moore; 35—Ed Nicklaus; 94—Dan Hasbrook; 13—Tom Boese; 63— Doug McAlister; 11—Bill Crist; 66—Bill Pope; 21—Darel Lindquist; Ed Meyer, backfield; Ted Katula, defense; A1 Ferguson, asst. Second row: 77—John Adlard; 52—Bill Grossman; 37—Tony Whittlesey; 42—Rick Jordan; 53—Roger Galvin; 75—Dave Lament; 43—Bill Lehman; 15—John Butler; 20—Rich Handschuh; 54—John Douglass; 34—Tim Feemster. Front row: Mickey Cobb, trainer; 62—Mike Price; 14—Russ Stamm; 81—Pat O’Connor; 55—Bill Scaife; 33—Gary Taylor; 22—Bill Holton; 68—Larry Horning; 51—Jim Hornbacker. 0— Eric Lortz; 82—Price Ivins.
580. Indiv. Hi game — J. Harper, 236. Over 500 — J. Harper, 568; W. Tharp, 502; R. Fisher, 509; J. Hanneman, 519; J. Campbell. 501; M. Clifford, 516; D. Greenlee. 509; N. Hoffa, 580; C. Alex, 533; J. Edmonds, 509; P. Buechler, 553; B. Taylor. 518; J. Headley, 511; F. Crawley, 518; B. Langdon, 514; J. Kridler, 515; H. Sutherlin, 510.
NEWLY ORGANIZED CHRISTIAN CHURCH of GREENCASTLE will meet Sunday, Soptomber 18, 1966 at 3:00 P.M. NORTHEAST ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Speaker: Dan Sharp, Minister of Crawfordsville Woodland Neighte Chrietian Church
