The Mail-Journal, Volume 8, Number 26, Milford, Kosciusko County, 28 July 1971 — Page 2

2

THE MAIL-JOURNAL —Wed.. July 28, 1971

r f'ft<• If w if / run I jf gMf IMMKIj fw V A». KHTL<| ,Wfr >N( a * v Vv4<>^r^^CMw^.V7 “■' j KjmMMmbl l»»«<ji ALL STARS — Members of Milford s Little League All Stars are pictured above. In the front row. left Io right, are Ron Wuthrich. Mark Grove. Rod Peterson. Todd Grove. JasKaiser and Res Wuthrich. In the back row are Jeff \uer. D<»ug Kaiser. Dennie Lechlitner. Bobbie Sylvester. Steve Yoder and Dan Rink. Coaches are Bob Long and Phil Campbell

Plymouth Finishes First In NLC Baseball Standings

Plymouth topped the final standings in the Northern. Lakes Conference baseball competition with a record of 11 wins, two loses and a tie Wawasee finished in seventh place w ith a 4-9-1 record Players named to the first team are as follows: Pitcher — D<*ig Hunsberger. North Wood. won six and lost one; Pitcher — Kevin Weidner. Plymouth, won five, lost none, tied one. Catcher Randy Abel. NbrthWood. batting average 350; Infield — Dave Ressler. Warsaw, batting average 378; Infield Jav Elliott, batting average 387.

Football Equipment To Be Issued At WHS Any boy fishing to play football at Wawasee high school should make note of the following dales when equipment will be issued Juniors and seniors August 2 - 6 30 - 8 :30 p m Sophomores August 3 6:30 - 8:30 p.m Freshmen - August 4 - 6 30 • 8:30 p.m

Syracuse-Wawasee Rotary Club For The Little League... Presents Tuesday, August 3 ALL UN Ml cAN V A RAIN rEwBWfJEw 08 SHINE Xp WALKERS ADVANCE SALE BOX OFFICE CHILD OR $1 oo K <!’« ADULT * w ADULT<«®» ’ 3 >51.50 All Tickets Good For Any Seat In Big Top On Sale Now By Syracuse Little League At Various Spots In Town & Village

Infield — Mark Huber, Bremen, batting average .309; (kitfield — Tom Wiltrout, Warsaw, batting average .420; -Outfield — Gary Ingle, North Wood. batting average .396; Outfield — Gary Myers. Plymouth, batting average .375. Members of the second team are Bob Purtlebaugh. pitcher. Concord. Skip Fehrer, pitcher. Plymouth; Dennis Wade, catcher, Plymouth; Todd Howard. IF. Manchester; Chuck Rapp. IF, Wawasee. Larry Freyberg. IF. Rochester; Gary Hillman. IF. Plymouth; Greg Garner, OF. Manchester; John Wallace. OF, Warsaw. Gene Johnson. OF,

All physical slips will be collected when equipment is issued. If an athlete does not have a physical slip, he may obtain one by contacting coach Don Storey. The slip is to be signed by your family doctor, your parents and yourself The price of insurance is $5, mouthpieces are $1.50 and a fee of $1 will be collected for those who desire juice. This money will be collected when equipment is issued The Warriors first outing will be m a Jamboree at Nappanee. August 27 The other teams participating will be Plymouth. Lakeland and North Wood.

Concord. Honorable Mention — Donn May, Wawasee; Bob Gordon and Steve Bates, Concord; Bruce Grimm and Jim Powers, Rochester; Steve McCuen, North Wood; Tim Malott, Manchester. The final official standings were as follows: W L T Plymouth 11 2 1 NorthW’ood • 10 3 1 Concord 8 6 Rochester 77 Manchester 6 71 Warsaw 6 8 Wawasee 4 9 1 Bremen 2 12

Football Camp Continues At Wawasee Prep If practice makes perfect, the young footballers at Prep’s Football Camp should make their coaches very happy when they return home, whether to a school in Indiana, Michigan. Illinois, or Ohio. The two-a-day drills continue this week with camp ending Saturday. Besides having an intense program in the techniques of blocking, running, playing defense, hand-offs, and other related items, the boys have been learning the how to think when playing either offense or defense. They have discovered that today's football player is a thinking athlete. Daily the reaction skills improve, the speed in dashes increases, the overall understanding of the game is enjoyed. The coaches have said" many times, “a boy that is willing to work is wanting to win.” The second week of the camp has been building upon the basics of the first week. The emphasis is now on the total team concept. Football is a total team effort. Each day the practice is ended with team scrimmages. Director Phil Jones states that this year s camp has been verysuccessful The final results will be determined by the success of each boy as he returns to his own campus If effort and enthusiasm are any indication, the quality of football in the junior and senior high school will be better this fall. Mr and Mrs Robert Smith of Syracuse had as guests last week Jhe former’s nephew and wife, Mr and Mrs. Jim Relles of Sacramento. Calif. Mr. Relles' mother is the former Margaret Smith.

EXCHAXTED HILLS PLA\HOISE U Lake Wauasee J Open* July 21 I* Wea. Thru Sun end P.tn.c BuHei (J!l IS* W

Friday Mixed Doubles Wawasee Bowl 21 7 Recaps 19 9 Undecided 4 15 13 HiLo’s 13 15 Odd Balls 12 16 Fisher Well Drilling 12 16 Dearkem’s 10 18 Go-Getter’s 10 18 High team series and game: Wawasee Bowl — 2126-763 500 series. B. Gardner 501, S. Kern 513, B. Simon 541, J. Kern 571 450 series: M. Reeve 469, V. Hartsough 454. M. L. Lambert 493, K. Knisley 493 200 games: R. Hartsough 210, B. Gardner 210, J. Kern 204-200 170 games: M. Rensberger 183, M. Reeve 181, 184, V. Hartsough 171, M. L. Lambert 184. K. Knisley 193, S. Kern 177 Wawasee H. S. Cross Country Team To Meet Cross country coach Tom Rankin has called a meeting for all boys interested in running crosscountry. These boys are to meet at the Wawasee high school gym at 6:30 p.m. on July 31. Coach Rankin would like to meet each one personally, give them a doctor-parent physical slip, hand out pre-season training information and a practice schedule He is attending graduate school at Purdue university this summer and will be moving to the Lakeland area in August. Students who can’t make the July 31 meeting should call the high school or athletic director Eldon Ummel to let school officials know where to send the cross

BASKETBALL CAMP — Former head coach at Notre Dame, John Dee, discusses the up-coming camp of basketball at Wawasee Prep with Prep’s camp coaches Gene Sullivan and Tom O’Connor. A Tom Kitch Photo. Basketball Camp Starts August 1 At Prep

W’ith the sounds of football camp still fresh and vivid on the campus at Wawasee Prep’s Sports Camp, director Phil Jones will welcome a fine group of boys to the annual basketball camp. The two one week sessions will begin with registration on Sunday as ternoon. and then coaches Gene Sullivan and Tom O’Connor, formerly of Notre Dame, will direct the finest program in basketball in the Midwest. Making use of the video room, the gym. and outdoor courts, the boys will move steadily everyday from one area of the campus to the other.

FULL WEEK Thursday - Wednesday, July 29 thru August 4 WILLIAM HOLDEN RYAN O’NEAL KARL MALDEN In ‘‘WILD ROVERS” Technicolor Open Monday thru Friday 6:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 1:00 p.m.

Lakeland Women Bowlers To Hold August 2 Meeting

The Lakeland Women’s Bowling association at Syracuse will hold it’s annual fall meeting at the Wawasee Bowl on Monday night, Aug. 2, at 7 o’clock, and all members are urged to attend. Notice cards were mailed last week but due to changes of ad-

country training information. Doctor-parent physical slips may be picked up at the high school office. Milford Pony League Downs N. Webster 13-3 Last Wednesday night the Milford pony league team defeated six inning game. -Brad Sorenson was the starting and winning pitcher as he struck out two, walked three and gave up seven hits. Burchard was the losing pitcher as he struck out seven and walked 11. Milford collected nine hits with Tim Yoder rapping out three straight hits, including two singles and a double, Paul Miller hit two and John Fisher. Bob Henson. Rick Peterson and Craig Sorenson each hit one. Zurcher and McKay each collected three hits for the losers. Milford played a fine game defensively as the boys committed only two errors while North Webster errored eight times. Milford ends the regular season with a 3-9 record. Mr. and Mrs. John Replogle and family, Milford, left this week for Florida. They will be gone about two weeks.

The boys will receive instruction and scrimmage time in the usual areas of the game. Teams will be changed each day with the daily record of each boy used as a basis for determining improvement. This year the boys will come from Indiana, Ohio, Illinois. Michigan, and Georgia. The coaches will be aided by young high school stars who will work

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dresses and or marriages, some may not have been received. Each captain should contact her team members regarding this meeting. Any persons interested in this organization and ladies desiring to bowl, are cordially invited to attend the meeting.

Results Given For Ladies' Guest Day Tuesday was guest day for the 18-hole players in the Ladies Day association at Maxwelton with 50 in attendance. High place winners were: Low gross — Ester Brewster and Susie Harper, first low gross, tie with 86; Joanie Gray, second. 92; and G. Anderson, third, 102. Low net — First. K. Aker, 70; second, Joe Mosbaugh, and P. Latta, tie 73; and third, M. Houser and Nora Speicher, tie, 74. Low putts — Louise Harlan, first. 28; second, Pat Hoffer and Mary Jane Lantz, tie, 32. Member Play Winners in regular member play of Medal were: Low gross — Mavis Vanderveer, first; Betty Kline, second. Low net — Lura Stone. Low putts — Tie. Rose Mathew and Maggie Smith. Many farm accidents are caused by falls from and into moving machinery, reminds the extension safety specialist at Purdue university. Keep children off and away from farm machinery, allow no one to ride on the drawbar or towed machinery, never permit anyone to jump on or off moving equipment, and use handrails and ladders or steps on selfpropelled equipment. i

as counselors. Two boys from area teams have been selected to work this summer; Sylvester Allen of Wawasee Prep, and Jeff Hughes of Wawasee high school Boys still interested in attending one or both of the sessions should call Phil Jones, Prep Sports Camp. Syracuse. Session One (August 1-7) and Session Two (August 8-14)

Hurryin Hoosiers By J' Q- Fann

Hie week of the Quarterback. In fact, the year of the Quarterback. There is no player in the Big Ten that is as much the focal point of the coach’s worries as Greg Brown of Indiana university. Greg is the senior quarterback who has been injured twice and whose abilities are all important to I.U. The football magazines say we are 9th best. In 1967 they said tenth. The quarterback could make us a contender and that quarterback is Greg Brown. Pont has moved two men to other positions, where they are fitting well and is concentrating on Greg Brown and Ted McNulty. Greg Brown is number one. He has been told he will stay number one. John has put all the blue chips on one roll and as long as he stays healthy we will be in the race. Greg ably supported Harry Gonso in his (Greg’s) sophomore year. He looked fine in practice his junior and senior years but was injured. He did not play his junior year and gained a year of eligibility. In the spring I.U. installed a new style offense and by spring game time he was running it capably. His passing is excellent, his running good and his team leadership appears to be far better than anything we had last year. In addition he has some speed backs to keep the defenses honest and he can keep them in position for the backs to go. Ted McNulty looked good in the spring game until the second half when he changed uniforms (squads) and the football was as soggy as a wet bar of soap. The second half could give no one a decent look at any backfield man. It was a typical Bloomington rain as remembered by every J.U. grad and it never let up until just as the game was over. McNulty threw well and moved his squad well in the first half and could have picked up bushels of poise from that performance. He is definitely back-up man but you can bet they will work hard on him because of the uncertainty of Greg Brown., Our new offensive patterns do not leave such a beating to the

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quarterbacks as Harry Gonso sprint out. In addition, the size and quickness in our middle line should give the general much more ammunition and save the physical pounding he takes each Saturday. Back of these stands a walk-on with the Gonso spirit but a little short on throwing ability. Good coaching and desire may help him and he certainly can’t be counted out. Steve Masom a boy from Dixieland, runs well, handles the ball well and appears to be a leader but his throwing was not big league calibre last year. His improvement will be a factor if either of our top two boys gets hurt so he will get considerable attention from passing coach Bob Baker. LAKELAND LOCALS Miss Linda Wickersham of Barbee Lake had as Sunday afternoon guests, Misses Roberta and Joyce Terrell of Winchester. Mrs. Bertha Seivers, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Hansen, and Mrs. L. Moe and granddaughter, all from Chicago, 111., spent the week with Mr. and Mrs. James McCracken, Milford. Mrs. Hazel Kline of Milford attended a shower Saturday in the home of Mrs. Maurice Kline west of Waterford in honor of her granddaughter, Patty Kline,who will marry Steven Troyer on August 8.

The MAIL-JOURNAL Pabllshed by The M*ll-J«araal every Wednev4ay and entere4 aa Second Class matter at the Peat Office at Syracuse. Indiana 4CMI. Second class poilase paid st 10.1 E. Main Street. Syracuse, Indiana 4655* and at additional eatry offices. Subscription: S5.<M) per year In Kosciusko County; 5.V54 outside county.