The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 January 1968 — Page 4
Pag* 4
Th* Daily Banner, Greencastie, Indiana
Tuesday, January 1, 1468
Southern Cal whips Hoosiers; LSU beats Cowboys
College football's longest television day drew a multi-million national audience and featured a generous helping of USC’s “Orange Juice” Simpson romping past Indiana in the Rose Bowl, LSU finally lassoing the Wyoming Cowboys, Texas A&M upsetting Alabama and Oklahoma nipping Tennessee.
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A New Year's Day crowd of 102,946 turned out at Pasadena, t Calif., to watch Simpson score twice from within the 10-yard line as Southern California defeated Indiana 14-3 in the Rose Bowl. There was a live audience of 78,963 at the Sugar Bowi in New Orleans watching LSU surprise unbeaten Wyoming 20-13. At Dallas, an estimated 75.000 saw an aroused Aggie defense catch Alabama out of its usual Southeastern Conference surroundings and beat the Crimson Tide 20-16, and 77,993 fans were thrilled by a 1st period Oklahoma pass interception that earned the Sooners past secondranked Tennessee 26-24 In a night game at the Orange Bowl in Miami. The football bowl weekend was kicked off on Saturday when the East topped the West 16-14 despite All-America Gary Beban’s two touchdowns for the losers in the Shrine Game at San Francisco; Florida tied Penn State 17-17 in the Gator Bowl by rallying for all Its points in the second half; Dick Anderson of Colorado scored on punt returns of 69 and 62 yards in the Blue’s 22-16 victory over the Gray, and University TexasE1 Paso upset Mississippi State 14-7 in the Sun Bowl on touchdowns by Billy Stevens and Larry McHenry. Simpson was the workhorse of the Trojan attack, carrying the ball 25 times for 128 yards against Indiana, making its first Rose Bowl appearance. O. J. rammed over from the twoyard line in the first period and bulled across from eight yards out in the third quarter. The Hoosiers, predominantly a sophomore team, got on the scoreboard when Dave Kornowa kicked a 27-yard field goal. Wyoming was leading LSU 13-0 in mud-splattered Tulane Stadium when Glenn Smith, a third string tailback, came off the Tiger bench to lead a second half winning drive. Smith accounted for 74 yards on 16 carries. He caught a 39yard pass from Nelson Stokley to set up his one-yard touchdown plunge and figured In LSU’s other two touchdowns. Stokley found end Tommy Morel with scoring strikes of eight and
14 yards in the fourth quarter to finally penetrate a Wyoming defense that yielded only 38 yards In the first half. Jim Kiick scored the Cowboys’ only TD on a two-yard end sweep. Kicking specialist Jerry DePoyster booted field goals of 24 and 49 yards. Wendell Kousley shook loose on a 20-yard scoring jaunt in the third quarter for Texas A&M’s narrow victory over Alabama In the Cotton Clasic. The
Aggies, making their first Cotton appearance since 1942, allowed the Tide a 10-7 lead in the second period and then ripped back on a seven-yard scoring pass from Edd Hargett to Tommy Maxwell and Housley’s touchdown romp in which he succeeded in breaking a lastditch tackle to tally. Hargett also found Larry Stegent in the end zone with a 13-yard pass in the opening period. Quarterback Kenny Stabler
tallied both Alabama TDs on runs of three and seven yards. Steve Davis drilled a 36-yard field goal for the Tide. Bob Stephenson, a a defensive halfback, ran back an Intercepted pass 26 yards for a fourth quarter touchdown that tourned out to be Oklahoma’s winning margin. All would have gone for nil. however. If Karl Kremser had been able to connect on a 33-yard field goal attempt for
Tennessee with seven seconds left. The Sooners raced to a 19-0 halftime lead on Bob Wamack’s 107-yard run, his 20-yard scoring pass to Eddie Hinton and Steve Owens’ one-yard plunge. Tennessee rallied on Jimmy Glover’s 36-yard TD return of a Warmack interception, a fiveyard scoring slash by Charlie Fulton, Dewey Warren's oneyard keeper and Kremser's 26yard field goal.
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE The Lola Long property in Manhattan consisting of 9.6 acres with four (4) bedroom, IVa-story modern house, steam heat, good water, garage and other out buildings, seven (7) acres tillable on U.S. 40 situated in Putnam County, Indiana, more particularly described as follows: Part of the Southwest quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section 23, Township 13 North, Range 5 West, bounded os follows, to-wit: Beginning at a point 7 chains North of the Southwest corner of said Northeast quarter; thence South 7 chains to said Southwest corner; thence East with the South line of said Northeast quarter, 12 chains; thence North 9 chains to the South line of the Cumberland Road or State Road 40; thence West with the South line of said road to the place of beginning, containing 9.60 acres, more or less. The above property will be sold to the highest bidder for no less than the appraised value at 10 a.m., Sat., January 20, 1968 at the law offices of Houck and Calbert, U'i South Indiana Street, Greencastie, Indiana. Such sale will be continued from day to day thereafter until sold. Sale is subject to the approval of the Putnam Circuit Court. Terms—cash. Lewis W. Long, Administrator Houck and Calbert, Attorneys
Tigers win 2 during holiday event
DePauw University’s basketball Tigers came out with the unofficial championship of their own two-day holiday doubleheader here Friday and Saturday nights. The McCall men spanked once-beaten Ohio Wesleyan 8875 then came back 24 hours later to knock off one of the Ohio Conference’s pre - season favorites, (4-2), Denison, 89-71. The Tigers led both games all the way. These two victories, coupled with Wabash’s thrilling comeback win over Ohio Wesleyan Saturday 76-69 gave the two Hoosier club a 3-1 record in the Ohio-Indiana showdown. Wabash lost to Denison Friday night 77-71 after dropping a 3529 halftime lead. Thursday night at Terre
Haute DePauw plunges back into ICC action, tackling the nation’s number four ranked small college club, Indiana State University. Two nights later the scene shifts to Ball State In Muncie. Both games will be broadcast locally. Three Tigers made the alldoubleheader team picked by GHS Coach Dave McCracken, Banner sports editor Frank Puckett, and WXTA sports announcer Bill Eckardt. They were forwards Jim Jackson and Tom McCormick and guard Dave Browning. Jackson scored 19 and 20 points in his most consistent performances of the season and pulled off 40 rebounds, 23 of them against Denison. He also hit a fluffy .500 from the floor on 16 of 32. McCormick didn’t
get rolling until the Denison game. He had 23 points in the finale after picking up only three in the opener. Browning, gaining more poise and accuracy with each game, finished with 31 points, 17 and 14. Players making the all - 10 team from the three visiting schools were Charles Claggett and Jon Williamson from Denison, Terry Smith and Dave Moore from Wabash, and Tom Carnes, Dave McDaniel and Chip Rosser from Wesleyan. Claggett, the finest hook shooting artist to hit Bowman in many a year, was named the meet’s most valuable player. He scored 31 against Wabash and had 33 against the Tigers. Moore was named the winner of the event’s Mental Attitude Award for team leadership.
Third successive NFL title for Packers
GREEN BAY, Wis. UPI— The Green Bay Packers, hardened pros, usually observe victory with quiet smiles, a few jokes and little fanfare. But Sunday’s 21-17 victory over Dallas hardly was ordinary. Achieved with a last minute touchdown in wearying cold, the victory earned them an unprecedented third successive National Football League title and a berth in the Jan. 14 Super Bowl. What followed was emotional bedlam seldom seen here. Players cheered and pummeled each other. There were a few tears. There was prayer.
Bowling news IBM THUR. NIGHT WOMEN’S LEAGUE DEC. 28, 1967 W. L Steinbaker 90 46 Douglas 74 62 Shillings 71 65 Landes 66 70 Storm 57 79 Decker 50 86 High Team Game — Steinbaker, 905: High Team Series — Douglas, 2648. 500 Game — F. Jones 533. 400 Game — L. Jones (sub), 481; D. Cody (sub), 479; K. Simmons, 479; M. York, 477; S. Burris, 455: K. Hopkins, 451; P. Jones, 437; C. Steinbaker, 428; M. Hendrich, 428; D. Talbott. 427; Joann Sutherlin, 427; C. Dreher, 421; B. Bryan, 418; E. Shillings, 417; B. Cooper, 414; E. Roach, 414; B. Alder--fer. 409.
Vince Lombardi, the steeltough coach, darted from player to happy player in the noisy locker room, a huge grin on his face nearly frozen by 13 below zero cold. Lombardi’s warmest congratulations went to quarterback Bart Starr, who scored the winning touchdown on a one-yard sneak with 13 seconds left and guard Jerry Kramer, whose perfect block sprung Starr. Kramer, a 10-year veteran of five title teams, threw a devastating block into Dallas tackle Jethro Pugh, who had spent most of the afternoon riding herd on Starr. The climax was strikingly like last year’s game, when the Packers won 34-27 after stopping the Cowboys with first down on the Green Bay two I yard line in the waning minutes. i This time the Cowboys had to mount a goal line stand.
They did, but Starr and Kramer cracked it on third down. Just like last year, the Packers broke to a 14-0 lead, this time on touchdown passes by Starr to Boyd Dowler. But two Green Bay fumbles handed the Coyboys 10 points before halftime, and Dallas kept the momentum with a goahead touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter—a 50-yard halfback option pass from Dan Reeves to Lance Rentzel. Defense prevailed from that point until the Packers started their winning drive on their own 32 with 4:54 left. Five Starr passes and an eight-yard run by New York and Washington castoff Chuck Mercein put the ball on the Cowboy three. Donny Anderson gained two yards to the one for a first down, but was held for no gain ; on the next two plays. Then Starr took it over.
Not before In the Tigers’ now 5-3 season has their height had such an advantageous effect. DePauw outrebounded a respectably tall Wesleyan team, 59-37, and an even slightly bigger Denison squad. 64-61. DePauw’s shooting gave the hosts some unexpected cheer too during the two days of holiday firing. The club hit .523 in socking Wesleyan for the year’s best shooting on 34 of 65. It trailed off some to .418 against Denison, but even this mark was among the four best averages the erratic shooting Tigers have put together so far in their campaign. DePauw jumped out ahead of both Ohio ball clubs early In the two games. Against Wesleyan the Tigers were up 8-0 in the first four minutes before the Buckeyes got on the board. This edge subsequently jumped to 17-4 and rode on Into a 40-20 margin before Wesleyan cut It to 48-35 at halftime. Four of those first half baskets came on some uncanny shooting by sophomore reserve Mickey Schramm of DePauw. He riddled the Wesleyan zone after entering the fray with only 8:30 left in the first half. Wesleyan, who had a bad night relatively speaking after earning a .515 average into the DePauw meet, shot .392 for the game. It did manage to get to within 10 at 65-55 before DePauw spurted for a 78-60 margin that iced the affair. It best shooting flurry of the season—eight out of a dozen shots—propelled DePauw to another big breakaway lead in the Denison game Saturday. All five of the starters had buckets in this binge that put DePauw up 17-3 in just 3:30 over Denison’s zone. The visitors, with Claggett getting 11 of the 15 (Continued on Page 6)
ANOTHER REBOUND—DePauw University’s Jim Jackson (35) yanks away at another rebound in the picture abovs against Denison Saturday night. The jumping jack forward nabbed 23 rebounds in the contest and totaled 17 in a Friday night game.
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UCLA takes skein to 42
NEW YORK UPI —Victories! member bord of coaches gave by Columbia and Oklahoma Ci- UCLA a total of 348 votes. The ty in holiday tournament play I other first place vote went to
have vaulted these previously unranked major college basketball teams into the nation’s top
10 in the United Press International Board of Coaches ratings. UCLA, meanwhile, which Is
Oklahoma City. Lose Points Houston also dropped nine points from a week ago to 305
points.
UCLA easily defended Its LA Classic title last week. Houston
unbeaten in 42 straight Rames raptured the classic, -eight this season continues Vanderbllt won the Sugar Bowl in the No. 1 spot, the place It tournev and North Can)llna was voted in the pre-season rat-1 took the Far West Clasgic
ings and has maintained for
five weeks.
Kentucky played only one game last week and jumped two
Houston 13-0, Vanderbilt 9- notches by defeating Notre
Dame.
Tennessee and Utah both suffered their first losses of the season last week, the Volunteers losing In the LA Classic and Utah in the Far West Classic. Utah was rated 17th a week ago.
1 and North Carolina 7-1 remained in the second, third and fourth spots, respectively, while the rest of the top 10 under-
went a shakeup.
Kentucky Advances Kentucky 7-1, jumped from seventh to fifth; Tennessee 6-1 and Utah 10-1 tied for sixth; Oklahoma City 8-0, winner of the All-College Tournament, leaped to eight; Columbia 7-3. on the strength of its three upset triumphs en route to the Holiday Festival title, took over the No. 9 spot and Davidson 8-2 advanced to 10th. Not so fortunate In tourney
Bing still leading NBA in scoring
NEW YORK UPI —Dave Bing of Detroit, the first player to hurdle the 1,000-point mark
action were Indiana No. 5 last ^ is season, continues to enjoy week, previously eighth-ranked a comfortable lead In the NaBostony College, St. John’s No. tional Basketball Association
9 last week and previously 10th ranked Kansas. They all drop-
ped out of the top 10.
St. John’s which lost to Columbia in the Holiday Festival final, heads the second 10, followed by Duke, Wyoming. Indiana. Louisville. New Mexico, St. Bonaventure. Tulsa. Temple
and Western Kentucky. —
While UCLA keeps winning.
race. The Pistons’ second-year man scored 70 points in three games last week to boost his total to 1,045 through games played Sunday night. This left him 101 joints better than runnerup Walt Hazzard of Seattle, according to official league statistics released today. The best average in the lea-
John Wooden’s Bruins failed toj ffue belonged to Cincinnati’s Osreceive the unanimous balloting j car Robertson, however who for the No. 1 spot for the first had appeared in 11 fewer games time in a month. Being named than Bing. Robertson had 766 third on one ballot by the 35-i (Continued on Page 6)
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