The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 January 1968 — Page 4
Page 4
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Friday, January 5, i968
■ ■ AROVIOOO W tGHlWWTS
By FRANK PUCKETT Jr.. BANNER SPORTS EDITOR Sometimes it is hard to understand why the IHSAA shuffles the sectional, regional, and semi-state center locations as they do (even for a veteran sports writer who now has to cover not one but three sectional sites —Greencastle, Clay City, and Brazil), but they do have their reasons. f "^*■1 According to the group’s official bulletin k the following were used in selecting centers: B m JBB invitations filed by the principals; locations considered but not necessarily the determining factor; transportation facilities; general conditions— attitude of local authorities, floors, heating capacities of gyms and entertaining facilities; and adjustment because of reorganization and consolidation. The bulletin further comments that many schools were assigned by counties, but there were a number of exceptions which are clearly indicated—Putnam County for instance. Some changes were made to equalize the number of participating teams resulting in better balanced schedules or the use of school time. The plan arranged is to have no less than six teams and no more than 8 teams in each tourney. Last year Greencastle had eight teams, this year they have seven with the oust of Rockville.
State tumbles DePauw in ICC dash, 86-66
Nationally fifth ranked Indiana State squelched DePauw last night in Terre Haute, 8666, though the Sycamores never really had the ICC game safely put away until State pushed out of a 62-53 edge to go out of sight, 68-53, with 7:29 left.
Neither team played particu- with 30 points). remained in the half and State DePauw’s nifty guard, Dave larly well in the foul-marred | Dale Barrett, starting guard, was on top 31-15. A flurry in Browning, scored 24 points, his game that drew 4,300 to the went to the sidelines with 11 th^ final three minutes helped best effort of the year. He hit Arena. State had 24 turnovers minutes to play and his re- DePauw close the gap to 39-31 7 of 17 and had 10 of 12 at the and the Tigers had 14, but De- placement, Mickey Schramm, at halftime, but the handwriting line. Jim Jackson had 10 points; Pauw committed 21 personals fouled out five minutes later, was on the wall. The Tigers McCormick scored 12 as did
A few notes strung along the typewriter sports fans might be interested in are ... a high school shall not be considered eligible for the IHSAA sectional basketball tourney in any year unless the team known as the first team and representing the high school has played eight interscholastic games during the season before filing an entry blank . . . twelve men may be certified and in uniform . . . players benches must be placed on the same side of the floor as the scorers bench ... all Saturday games will be played at 12:30, 1:45, and 8:15 p.m. ... the assignment of game officials and their decisions will be considered final . . . schools must have their entries in by 4:00 p.m. Wednesday, February 7 . . . the first named team in each game throughout the entire tournament is always designated as the “Home Team” ... it will wear white uniforms and have a choice of bench with the exception the host team shall have choice of home bench . . . the second named team in each game shall have choice of basket and wear colored uniforms ... In the event the host team is the second team named it shall wear colored uniforms and have choice of bench only. • • • • The only proper way to start the new year would be for my OUUA board to predict a few ball games (a few more that is) correctly. This weekend the board says Greencastle will beat Cascade, Fillmore will get back on the winning road and tumble Reelsville, Bainbridge will romp over Roachdale, and Russellville should take New Ross. Saturday night action is a little hazy, but in all probabilities according to the board—the Tiger Cube will have trouble with Brazil, Fillmore will tumble Linden, Bainbridge is going to get by Fountain Central, and Waveland will knock off Roachdale. • • • • The basketball shot heard round the world—the fantastic W-footer that Indiana’s Jerry Harkness tossed in with just one second to play to beat the Dallas Chaparrals 119-118 at Dallas November 13—is headed for Robert Ripley’s “Believe It Or Not” collection. The field goal, a three pointer under ABA rules, turned an apparent two-point loss into a one-point victory for Indiana and is believed to be the longest successful shot in history of basketball according to ABA official bulletin.
It’s a new year for the county ball clubs and a full weekend Is in store. Tonight's games find Cascade coming to the Greencastle uptown gym, Fillmore hosting Reelsville, Bainbridge hosting Roachdale, and Russellville playing host to New Ross. Saturday games include Greencastle at Brazil, Fillmore at Linden, Bainbridge at Fountain Central, Whiteland at Cascade, and Roachdale at Waveland. Cloverdale doesn’t play until Tuesday when they travel to Eminence. COUNTY STANDINGS AT A GLANCE
ABA schedule full this month A busy schedule will be In store for American Basketball Association Officials as they descend on Indianapolis for the historic 1st Annual American Basketball Association All-Star Game. Monday, January 8th, will feature a day-night public relations and publicity meeting. Tuesday morning and afternoon all of the owners of the new League will meet to be interrupted only by the All-Star Luncheon, which will feature the dvnamic speaker, renowned Bob Richards. In addition to the Owner’s Meeting, there will be a January 9th work seminar and cbnic for all of the American Basketball Association referees. Additionally, it was announced that the officials for the All-Star Game will be Joe Belmont and Ronald Feiereisel.
and lost a season high three After a 2-2 tie at the outset were being outshot, .429 to .291 players in the frequent melees. State hit seven points in a row' and outrebounded 28-14. Mike O’Connell fouled out 57 and DePauw never caught up. State’s early second half lead seconds into the second half af- failing to get its first basket bobbed up and down from nine ter doing a good job of holding ’ until Tom McCormick hit with to 13 until Newsom took over State’s ace Jerry Newsom bas- i 5:15 gone. and scored 10 of 12 State points ketless for 12 minutes of the By the time the Tigers got in a four minute stretch for a first half. (Newsom finished their fourth bucket only 5:23,78-61 margin. Holiday winners tabbed as prep leaders INDIANAPOLIS UPI — Co-j win No. 10; city foe Washing- Chicago Washington’s holiday
lumbus, Lafayette and East Chicago Roosevelt, in that order. were the “Big Three” in Indiana high school basketball today — all winners of major
holiday tourneys.
Dave Browning Dick Tharp Mickey Schramm Dale Barrett Larry Down Mike O’Connell Bob Emerick
Totals
INDIANA STATE SYCAMORES FG FT
ton from 10th to eighth, and j show. Michigan City from 17th to a tie for ninth after winning East
State’s Fred Hardman. Stateguard Mike Copper scored 11. State finished with a .427 shooting average (32-75). DePauw mustered only .328 on 22
of 67. DePauw took a real Fred Hardman pounding on the boards where Rich Mason the hosts had a monsterous Jerry Newsom 60-27 margin. Jackson had nine Mike Copper and Newsom grabbed 18. Howard Humes DePauw plays at Ball State Steve Hollenbeck tomorrow' (Sat.) at 7:30 p.m. Don Weirich DePAUW TIGERS Mike Phillips
FG FT PF Rod Hervey
7 1 0 2 0 2 0
22
10
0 0 1 1 4 0
22
Scores
INDIANA BASKETBALL United Preis International COLLEGE Indiana State 86 DePauw 66 Valparaiso 103 Western Ontario 55 Concordia 68 Huntington 67 Vincennes 101 Wesley Del. 61 Kalamazoo 77 Manchester 76 Oakland City 87 Anderson 79 HIGH SCHOOL Gary Roosevelt 85 Hammond 66 Prairie Heights Tourney West Noble 61 Fremont 57 Albion 67 Prairie Heights 57 Grant County Tourney Fairmont 71 Southwood 58 Hartford City 61 Marion Bennett 60
These three unbeaten powerhouses open Phase 2 of the regular season this week with a combined record of 32-0. Columbus paced the UPI coaches’ board ratings for the third consecutive week, garnering 189 out of a possible 200 points for its best showing of the season, including 13 of 20 first-place ballots. Lafayette, with one first-place vote, remained runnerup with 160 points, and Roosevelt’s Rough Riders, fifth last w T eek, climbed to third on the strength of their triumph in the Vincennes holiday tourney. Roosevelt, with three firstplace votes, totaled 127 points in balloting for games through last Saturday. Four other quintets clung to last wreck’s berths w r hile three others improved their positions and another dropped from the elite. Unbeaten Fort Wayne Central, easy winner of Columbia City’s holiday tourney, remained fourth; state champ Evansville North sixth, Southport seventh, and Vincennes ninth. Indianapolis Shortridge climbed from eighth to fifth after taking the Goshen tourney for
GHS Grapplers beaten, 39-11 Mooresville’s grapplers down-
ed Greencastle last night 39-11 in a meet that found only three
Tiger Cubs winning matches. Tom Gorham managed a 9-6
decision over his opponent in the 95-pound class, Ted Brewer cap- : tured his match with a pin over his foe in the third period, and Terry Gruenholz, a 154-pounder, 1 won his match with a 5-4 deci-
sion.
The loss brought the Cubs record to 2-5 with the Western Indiana Conference meet coming up at Schulte. Coach Joe Fiedler commented that he thought the Cubs could sew r the meet up since they have whipped Brazil and Clinton. There are only four schools in the loop that have wrestling teams. Schulte is the host team and they have beaten Greencastle previously. The wrestling starts at 10 a.m.
W-L
Team
PGA
TP
OPGA
OTP
PCT.
9-0
CLOVERDALE
83.7
754
61.1
550
1.000
9-1
BAINBRIDGE
85.7
857
58.2
582
.900
•6-4
GREENCASTLE
72.5
725
68.6
686
.600
6-4
RUSSELLVILLE
67.3
673
64.8
648
.600
6-3
REELSVILLE
59.6
537
53.6
474
.666
5-4
FILLMORE
89.4
626
69.S
624
.555
3-6
ROACHDALE
63.5
572
66.6
599
.383
Bowling results
AUTOMOTIVE LEAGUE .
1-2-68
W
L
Moose No. 2
106
46
Y Palace
106
46
York’s Grocery ... .......
87
65
Bob’s Body Shop
78
74
Jokers ...»
68
84
Amo Milling
67
85
Moose No, 1
51
101
Shetrones
45
107
500 series: R. Beaman 570; J. Evans 537; N. Marks 538; F. Puckett 526; C. Crawley 500; G. Crawley 532; E. Masten 526; R. Cofer 510. 200 games: R. Beaman 203203.
BOWLING Tuesday Morning IBM
W.
•includes tournament action
GREENCASTLE COMMUNITY SCHOOLS Second Semester ADULT EDUCATION
PROGRAM
Registration Wed., Jan. 10, 1968 Over 170 Adults Enrolled Last Semester In 14 Classes For Continuing Their Education. The Following Classes Are Offered This Semester:
BUSINESS
Typing
Shorthand Bookkeeping TRADE-INDUSTRIAL Precision Measurements Machine Shop Small Engine Repair
HOMEMAKING
Sewing
Nurse Aid Training SELF IMPROVEMENT Driver Education Oil Painting Men's Physical Fitness Instrumental Band
Music
CLASS FOR HIGH SCHOOL CREDIT ADULTS DESIRING TO COMPLETE REQUIREMENTS POR A HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA MAY REGISTER FOR THIS CLASS. COURSES OFFERED IN ENGLISH AND MATEMATICS-OTHERS ON DEMAND.
REGISTER AT SENIOR HIGH LIBRARY 7:00 P.M., WED., JAN. 10, 1968 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CALL: High School — 3-6670 or 3-3715 Harold Stewart, Director — 3-4059
! Jordan Storm Collins Cox Maurer Mosteller Porter Hanlon
L.
100 44 90 54 80 64 72 72
J. Cavin, 433; L. Wolfe, 426; D. Brattain, 426; C. Masten, 424; C. Justus, 426; H. Hartung, 416; P. Huxford, 412; H. McCammack, 408; D. Wilson, 407; B. Bridges, 405; M. Crawley, 401.
East Chicago’s Senators were yanked from the “Big 10,” dropping from third to a tie for 17th, after losing twice in their tour-
ney.
The other first-place votes were split by Southport, Fort Wayne’s Tigers and North. Marion, winner of its tourney and loser only to Anderson and Fort Wayne Central, led the “also rans” in 11th place. The panel of experts selected 25 teams for this w’eek’s ratings. The breakdown!, with first places and total points: 1. Columbus (13) 189 2. Lafayette (1) 160 3. E. C. Roosevelt (3) 127 4. Ft. Wayne Central (1) 113 5. Indianapolis Shortridge 98 6. Evansville North (1) 91 7. Southport (1)) 71 8. Indianapolis Washington 38 9. Vincennes & Mich. City 35 11. Marion 34; 12. Shelbyville 27; 13. Evansville Reitz 15; 14. Carmel 11; 15. Hammond Noll 10; 16. Gary Roosevelt 9; 17. E. Chicago Washington, Anderson, Gary Tolleston 7; 20. Kokomo 6; 21. Goshen 3; 22. Fort Wayne Catholic, Attica 2; 24. Richmond, Rockville 1.
Jim Jackson Tom McCormick Tom McGurk
2 Ken Hass 0 Dan Chitwood 2 Totals
6 8 11 3 2 «* 1 3 1 0 0 32
0 2 8 5 4 0 2 1 0 0 f* 22
2 0 5 5 0 5 0 21
pr 4 4 3 4 3 3 1 2 6 0 n 24
EXECUTOR SALE Due to the death of the late Raymond Miles we will sell at public auction the following personal property at his farm located 1 mi. N. and 1 mi. E. of Clayton, 4 mi. S. of Danville on Rd. 39, then 1 mi. E. Saturday, Jan. 13, 1968 11:00 A M. Antique oak kitchen cupboard; Frigidaire, good condition; Gas stove; Lot of kitchen utensils; Large copper kettle; White ash kitchen table, drop leaf; 5 cone bottom chairs, real nice condition; Dining table, buffet and 6 choirs; Antique stand table; Antique wall clock 7 radios; Telephone table; Electrolux sweeper; Card table; Book shelf; 2 rugs, 10x10 and 12x12; Davenport, 2 chairs; Solid oak rocker; Knee hole desk; Occasional chair; 2 Antique gold picture frames, several antique frames; Philco TV; 2 Floor Lamps; Wall lamps; 2 Oak dressers; Antique Marble top bureau, fruit pulls; Small oak dresser; Crystal table lamp; Twin beds, mattress and springs; 5 Oak straight chairs; Step ladder; 2 Antique cupboards; Fruit jars; Double bed; Ironing board; Class churns; Stone jars, large; Several hand tools; Work table; Small tool house, 10 line posts; 4 End posts; Lot of lumber, IxA 12' poplar; 2 Cross-cut saws; 450 bu. ear corn; 5 bu. clover seed; Wire fencing, some new; Harness and collars; Buggy tongue; Lawn Mowers; Fence stretchers; Rope; Plymouth, 1950; Feed sacks; Feed chest, poplar; Hogshead; Double shovels; Wheel borrow; 10 bales straw; laundry Stove. CHARLES MILES, Executor
Jim Vaughn, Auctioneer
Not responsible for accidents Terms: Cash Lunch will be served
70 64 54 46
High Act. Game — M. Smith, 181; High Act. Series — K. Braden, 507. 500 Series — K. Braden, 507. 400 Series — L. Mark, 494; I R. Maurer. 461; E. Shillings, ! 455; E. Jordan 454; M. Smith, j 443; L. Jones, 435; J. Kirkham, 433; D. Cody 428; L. Fox, 427; M. Taylor, 420; E. Williams, 404; K. Jones, 402; M. Grable, 402.
102-50 92-52 79-73 69-83 63-89 62-82 57-95
IGA FOODLINER LEAGUE
January 8, 1968 Greencastle Salvage
Morrison’s (Incomplete)
Stoners Insurance Mack’s Apliance Mason’s Jewelry Adlers (Incomplete)
Nunzios
High Ind. Game - E. Shinn, 211; High Ind. Series -E. Shinn, 580; High Team Game - Stoners Insurance, 942; High Team Series - Stoners Insurance, 2740 400 and over - E. Shinn, 580; B. Dunn, 498; J. Lease, 497; A. Cantonwrine, 493; D. Beaman, 473; G. Lancaster, 465; C. Flint, 464; W. Pelfrey, 455; E. Murray, 454; M. Buis, 450; B. Ashworth, 447; R. McKee, 446; C. Clines, 444; L. Jones, 444; C. Lear, 444; E. Spurr, 444; L. Mark, 442; G. Porter, 436; K. Braden, 434; R. Hampton, 433;
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