The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 February 1968 — Page 3
Monday, February 19, 1968
The Daily Banner, Dreencastle, Indiana
Page 3
Tigers claw Butler; move up in ICC standings
DePauw’a basketball Tigers moved one step closer to the winner’s circle Saturday night, bouncing a good Butler ball club in Bowman gymnasium,
81-68.
The victory, coupled with Indiana State’s upset win at Evansville, left the Tigers lodged with Evansville in second at 7-3 and a half game behind 8-3 Indiana State. More sorting out will occur this week when the Tigers host Valparaiso Wednesday night. By then the race’s outcome may be even more discernible. Twen-ty-four hours earlier 5-6 Ball State will have played at Evansville and 6-5 Butler will have visited Indiana State. In registering its fifth consecutive win and stopping a fourgame Butler streak Saturday, DePauw put five of its six performers in double figures.
mick could hardly have asked for help. He got 15 from Tom' McGurk, 14 from Dale Barrett, 12 from Jim Jackson, 111
the 14-point DePauw bulge, idown court to long-legged Me-; There were very few reWith the ICC’s number 1 and' Gurk. He outraced the Butler bounds because there were very 2 shooters lowering in on the defenders for a layup and a 71- few times the ball failed to target — Doug Wininger and 61 edge. 4:41 left. It was Me- land in the bucket. The Tiger*
Mike O’Connell. stuffed in two baskets around It was nifty last half shooting Gary Cox’s free throw, then (16 for 27 or .593) that lifted Mike O'Connell, who relieved
McGurk moments before, hit a turn around jumper after Garry
from Dave Browning and five John Nell, Butler sliced the I Gurk’s turn next while the Tig- were credited with 34 and Butfrom McGurk’s replacement, the scored to 54-50. But McGurk ers kept the heat on. He pulled ler with 29. Behind McCor-
down a rebound and sent it mic'.:’s 11 we^e McGurk’s 7 and steaming down the court to Mc-j Jackson's 6. Cox had 7 for ButCormick. The Dayton Junior ler which watched its season wiggled once then turned mark slip to 11-13. around and flipped it in with The Tigers freshmen nearly
Hoyt’s single conversion. That 4:23 left. pulled off an upset in their premade it 60-52 and zippy Dale; Butler time out. When things Uminary. They lost, 83-80. after Barrett upped it to 10 by boun- g 0 t going again Nell traveled watching a 69-62 lead dissolve cing one off the rim. and Bob Schroeder fouled Jack- into a 75-69 Butler advantage.
Butler came right back and son . H e hit for a 74-62 advant-
sliced the margin to 66-62 on age and the Bulldogs never got
baskets by Cox, Nell and Win- back in the game,
inger with 6:28 left. DePauw The i ead changed hands seven called time out. Whatever, times in the first half. The Ti-
DePauw out of a 39-33 halftime margin and assured the second win of the year over the
Bulldogs.
If there was any doubt about the outcome it seemed to be dispelled wiien the Tigers came out of the halftime break. They smacked in four consecutive baskets to roar out ahead 4733. All the baskets were within eight feet of the bucket where the Tigers have killed the hopes of 12 foes in 18 games. Butler, which could hardly have performed any better than
the .500 (26-52 field goal shoot-
It was junior forward Tom ing) and .800 (16 for 20 at the McCormick again who paced line), inunediately hitched up
DePauw with 24. But McCor- its team and went to w'ork on rebound and whipped it halfway
Coach Elmer McCall told his g e rs finally went ahead for lads, most of the 2005 agreed it pood, 30-29 when McGurk hit must have been pretty concise, two free shots with 3:41 left. Jackson wheeled in under for in the midst of savoring the a layup and McGurk converted victory the fact that DePauw a free throw' after Cox missed tied a nine-year-old ICC free a chance at the line. Seconds throw mark was almost overlater McCormick pulled off a looked. By converting 21 of 22,
After Valpo here Wednesday the Tigers will entertain Indiana Central (Feb. 24), Wabash (Feb. 28) and Evansville at 2
p.m. March 2.
ICC STANDINGS W. L. GTP
JUMP BALL—Greencastle’s Pete Norris (13) and Indianapolis Howe’s Tom Marondt (15) w’ere tied up on this play during Saturday night action in the uptown gym. Howre beat the Cubs 66-61.
Weekend basketball summaries
Edgewood upended by Cubs but Howe scores final
win
AT ROACHDALE
New Market (61) FG FT
T. Mitchell 2 Merrell 8 Poynts 5 Cash 3 Hester 0 Sowder 1 Priebe 4 Thomas ...................... 1 Kelsey 0 Totals 24 Roachdale (88) FG Harvey 11
Snodgrass Smith Hutchins Craft jskelton Totals B-Game: New Roachdale 38.
3 9 . 6 . 4 , 2 .85
4 2 4 0 0 0 3 0 0
13 FT
8 3 4 3 0 0
18
I Gibson 8 4 5 PF Campbell 3 4 4 51 Heaton 3 0 3 Grisby 2 0 1 Mitchell 8 0 4 Greenwood 10 1 Totals 18 20 24 B-Game: Fillmore 37, Staun-
ton 31
Market
2 4 3 1 0 1 1 0
17 PF
3 3 4 2 1 0
13 40,
AT VAN BI REN
Fillmore (70)
FG
FT
PF
Phillips 1
2
4
Miller
5
4
4
Walton
3
2
2
Robinson
4
0
1
Williamson
4
11
3
Clark 2
4
2
Tharp
3
3
1
Totals
22
26
18
Staunton (56)
FG
FT
PF
Kumphf
1
4
5
Fogel
0
0
1
AT RUSSELLVILLE
Bainbridge (96) FG FT
Judy 6 Hanks 5 Cox 7 N. Steele 6 Miller 6 Lasley 5 English ..... 0 Totals «... 85 Russellville (70) FG Miller 5 R. Carrington .... 1 Everman 2 Simpson ........... 6 D. Carrington 9 Cushman 4 Totals 27
B-Game: Bainbridge 54, Rus-
sellville 37.
4 3 5
10
3 0 1
26
FT
2 0 1 8 4 1
16
PF
1 2 3 2 2 0 1
12
PF
3 5 0 4 5 3
20
AT GREENCASTLE Tiger Cubs (61) FG FT PF Irwin 3 0 J 1 Monnet 1 0 2 Frye 6 8 1 Norris 4 5 4 Ross 8 0 2 J. New 12 1 Totals 23 15 12
Howe (66)
By FRANK PUCKETT, JR.
Banner Sports Editor
Greencastle’s hot handed Tiger Cubs blistered the nets for better than fifty per cent of their shots Friday night and upended host Edgewood, 90-79, but visiting Indianapolis Howe cooled the McCracken coached string off a little Saturday night and won the regular sea-
Marendt 0 3 0 Throckmorton 4 2 2 Johnson 4 0 4 Robinson 0 0 0 Miller 6 13 Davis 10 0 Marshall 3 2 4 King 8 6 4 Totals 26 14 17 B-Game: Greencastle 58,
Howe 45
(Continued on Page 4)
FG FT PF | son f ina i, 66-61.
Howe and they remained in the lead until Howe rallied late in the second period. There was 1:21 showing on the clock and 6-0 senior Jim King scored a three point play that brought his team to within two, 23-25. Greencastle called time, came back onto the floor and missed their next tw r o shots and Howe capitalized with field goals to take the lead at 27-25. Norris finally got two free throw's through the hoop with 17 seconds left only to be equalled by 6-4 junior Larry Miller and
Scores
NOTICE The Office of Dr. L R. Jones Will Be Open February 22,1968
AT SHAKAMAK Cloverdale (63) FG FT Barker 0 1 Steele 4 3 Ford 9 8 McCullough 8 1 Nees 1 • 0 Staley 3 0 Coon 0 0 Brown 0 0 Nickerson 0 0 Walker 0 0 Totals 25 13
PF
4
2 !
3
3!
3 1 1 1
INDIANA BASKETBALL B.v United Press International College Indiana 98, Michigan 92 Purdue 75, Illinois 68 Notre Dame 64. Bradley 61 Indiana State 68. Evansville 58 Earlham 102, Bluffton, Ohio 89 Anderson 79, Franklin 77 Ball State 75, Kent State 66 DePauw 81, Butler 68 Hanover 78, Indiana Central 74 Taylor 114, Manchester 108 Valparaiso 91, St. Joseph’s 69 Wabash 96, Lake Forest 71 Bethel 110, Goshen 107 Grace 105, St. Francis 87 Indiana Tech 87, Oakland City 70 Purdue-Calumet 102, Milwaukee Tech
Football to films
sity of Alabama football team of 1924-25 and starred on the
20-19 in the Rose BowL
High School >« IndianapoEs Howe 66, Greencastle 61 Vincennes 95. Bloomfield 56 Indianapolis Washington 95. Hammond
71
Anderson 73, Indianapolis Shortridge
70 sional use of the press again in Ft 'tjorth £f ncc>rdU 90, Ft ' v,aynt j the fourth quarter plus the 4-5 0 Gary Froebel 88, Lebanon 72 field goal shooting of Ross and
The Cubs ended the regular season wtih a respectable 14-5 record, including a 7-1 conference mark that gave them the Western Indiana championship. They are slated to meet tough Bainbridge in the first game of their own sectional Wednesday. Edgewood turned in an identical first quarter as the Cubs when 6-1 senior Walter Clark pumped in seven points in the last fifty-two seconds, includ-
ing a 3-point play, to tie the t _ eam that defeated Washington
score at 19-19. When Greencastle took the floor at the beginning of the second period they slapped a full court press on their host and held them to 13 points, making it 42-32 at the
halftime intermission.
Edgew'ood rambled back to
within two points, 48-50,
5:00 mark but the Cubs scram- j bled to a 67-60 lead on a ten point spurt by hot-shooting Terry Ross. He hit 5-6 from the field during the stanza and ended up with 10-16 for the night. The Cubs called on the occa-
How'e went to the
room for the halftime break
with a 29-27 lead.
It was a battle from the
word go in the second half and the two teams found the score deadlocked at 35-all at the 4:44 mark. They both traded buckets from there on until the clock showed six seconds remaining in the third period and Jay Frye dropped in two free throws and gave the Cubs a
two point margin, 48-46. The game w'ent right down
to the wire in the final period with the score staying tied until Miller, the 6-4 junior, scored a 3-point play to put his team into the lead, 62-59 at the 1-12
UNIVERSITY, Ala. <UPI, _ mark . GreencaaHe calM tj MOV. cow-boy Johnny Mac out , but when th came back <* th. 1930, and 194 0f onto noor Dee Mon „, tt „ a3 j waa a halfback on th. Unlv.r-! wh i stl . a ,, r foullng How( , s
Gary Marshall who tucked away a co jple of free throw’s and made it 64-59. Howe. Monnett made up for the foul with the next bucket, but Frye tripped up and made the next vio- ^ lation that allowed Howe tw'o more charity tosses and the
DePauw matched a similar effort by Evansville against Indiana State in 1959. The only miss was DePauw’s seventh one of the evening. The shooter was McGurk who saw the errant shot clip a perfect string of 22
in the league.
To go with its .955 performance at the line, the Tigers
dressing 30 of 62 from the field.
Jaokson had 5-10, O’Connell 2-4, McGurk 4-6, McCormick 10-21, Browning 4-12, and Barrett 5-9. Behind Cox’s 18 points were Wininger with 15 and Nell with 14. Nell made six of 7, Wininger
4-9, and Cox 7-11.
Indiana State DePauw Evansville Butler Ball State Valparaiso St. Joseph’s
3 3 3 5 6 8 10
ms An IK C SER vies G. E. CAMPBELL CartifU* Haarin* Aid AudialafW COMMERCIAL HOTEL EVERT FRIDAY AFTERNOON •r Coll Th* Hotot Any Day Tot Appointment •ATTERlCS AND SERVICR FOR ANT MAKE HEARING AID OL 3-5617
The New York Mets established a National League record for
most pitchers used in a season g ame ended on Sept. 7, 1967 when AD _ ^
Schmelz became the Mets’ 25th rye had 20 P° mt5 to lead , at the pItcher a * ainst th * st - Louis 1 G reencas « a ^ scoring and Terry
Cardinals.
Ross and Pete Norris had and 13 points respectively.
Campus DOUBLE DECKER PIZZA Specials
Mon. Thru Thundoy Aftor J 00 P.M. To 11:00 P.M. Friday — Saturday Ta 12:00 P.M.
OL 3-3210
OL 34210
MOZZARELLA CHEESE
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Lorga (14") $1.70
ITALIAN STYLE SAUSAGE
.. 1.50
2.35
U.S. NO. 1 ONION
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1.95
GENUINE PEPPERONI
.. 1.50
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.. 1.50
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.. 1.50
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.. 1.50
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YOUR CHOICE, HALF and HALF ..
.. 1.60
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.. 1.80
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.. 2.10
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DELUXE (with avarything)
2.40
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Two FREE Cokas with all Pina Orders.
Closed on all University Holidays
Delivtry Chargo on all Orders in City 25c
Shakamak (48) R. Mitchell McCallan May
FG . 1 . 1 . 1
Burton 7 Redding 5 M. Mitchell 1 Totals 16 B-Game: Cloverdale won,
score available.
FT
2 4 0 6 4 0
16
1 2 4 1 1
14
on 0417 Andrean 58. Hobart 49 \ Scottsburg 78, Fioyd Central 61
Greenwood 99. Chartrand 77
pj.- Rockville 91. Cascade 70
Mooresville 76. Avon 74
5 Alexandria 84. Pendleton 66 ' Terre Haute Wiley 72. Spencer 66 Shawswick 66, Blomington University
53
Eminence 74, Reelsvitle 41 Bainbridge 96. Russellville 70 Howe Military 53, Jefferson Twp. 51 Michigan City St. Mary’s 88. Rolling
Prairie 74
Milford 71, Larwil 69 (OT) | fiimros Westview 70, Eastside 65 I _
i Woodlaa 58. Southern Wells 50
Prairie Heights 60. South Whitley 57
I Unionville 68. Worthington 50 | HeltonviHe 47, Smithville 45 ! Cass 72. Western Howard 59
j Taylor 79, Indianapolis Marshall 64
Tipton 70. Maconaquah 60
i Anderson Highland 96. Hamilton
Heights 89
Barr-Reeve 55. Plainville 53 1 Center Grove 80. Martinsville 59 Fountain Central 93. Coal Creek 66 : Indian Creek 80. New Palestine 77 <OT> Linden 66. Oxford 60 Thomton 75. North Salem 65 Brebeuf 78. Indianapolis Scecina 69 i Indiana Deaf 63. Kentucky Deaf 53 • Edinburg 61. Park 59 North Vernon 74. Indianapolis Wood 70 Indiana polls Northwest 60. Plainfield
56
| Cowan 45. Northeastern Wavne 43 Bryant 93. Daleviile 72 Dunkirk 76. Albany 74 Muncie South 74. Madison Heights 68 (OT) Chicago Carver 58. Gary Roosevelt 54 [ Lowell 98. North Newton 53
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Cloverdale, Indiana
KD ihwbwip
out-scored the host once more,
23-19.
Ross got 22. second in scorj ing for the night to Pete Norris i who dumped in 11 field goals | and six free throws for 28 i points. Frye was the only other j Tiger Cub to get into double
with 15 points.
Greencastle hit 37 of 73 tries for 51 per cent of their field goals against Edgewood, but cooled off considerably when they returned home Saturday night against Howe and connected for 23 of 68 tries for 33
per cent.
Howe didn’t shoot much better, 26 of 67 from the field, but they connected for 14 of 15 from the free throw line and made four less errors than the
Cubs.
Greencastle took the first quarter lead, 18-12, by using 1 their pressing defense against 1
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TRIBUTES TO OUR UNSUNG HEROES
"On The Lighter Side"
Presented by tbe
WHITAKER FUNERAL HOMES While making a survey ©n ■farming problems in a Southern state recently: a man came across a man who proceeded to tell another man that ha was an au-
thority on the subject . . . later, he asked one of his neighbors just why this fellow, who didn't even have a farm, considered himself an agricultural expert? . . . "Reckon," said the neighbor ... "it's because he knows enough to fell others how to farm, but is too smart to try it himself." . . . Experience is a bod teacher . . . she gives the
test first; the lesson afterwards.
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