Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Nov. 4, 1976, edition 1 / Page 3
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. JAMES SPRINKLE of Marshall, who bowls with the Sprinkle -Shelton Company team in the .Western North Carolina Bowling Association, was chosen on the *1376-77 All-Star team. Sprinkle, in *bnly his fourth year of bowling, _ averaged 193 for the 1975-76 season and had the distinction of bowling the highest set (755) during the season. He is pictured above, back row, right, with other bowlers chosen on the All-Star team. Lions Defeat Catawba -.v ?'' ?' ? James Miller scored two tqpchdowns and Don Estes caught a 42-yard pass for a third as Mars Hill College scored all its points in the first half and hung on to beat Catawba 19-15 in a South Atlantic Conference game Saturday at Mars Hill. liiller, a freshman, carried ttfc ball 23 times for 121 yards fat the Lions as they upset the Indians, ranked 13th in the NALA Division I. Mars Hill is noW 2-3-1 in the SAC-8 and 3-4-1 overall, while Catawba is 4-2 in the conference and 6-2 overall. Miller got the Lions on the board early in the opening period when he banged in for the touchdown from one yard oUt. Greg Frierson added the PAT for a 7-0 Lion lead. Catawba came back with a 26-yard field goal by Tom Soton to make it 7-3. Freshman quarterback Greg Hoke, in his second starting role this season for the Lions, connected with Don Eates on a 42-yard scoring strike late in the opening quarter to make it 13-3 as the conversion kick went wide. Miller extended the lead with a three-yard touchdown run.in the second quarter as the conversion kick again carried wide of the crossbars. Following intermission, Indian runningback Steve Jewell, who accounted for 83 of Catawba's 132 rushing yards, hit paydirt from four yards out to make it 19-9 as the run failed. Mars Hill failed to put points on the board and Pat Witherill, the Indian quarterback, hit Wayne Foster with a 28-yard touchdown pass. The con ?lon pass attempt failed Mars Hill held on for the CATAWBA ? MARS HILL Catawba Mart Hill First Downs 15 17 Rushing Attt-Ydg. 43 132 41 259 Passat 13 32.4 3-7 3 Passing Yardage 234 68 No. Punts Avg 5-42.1 A34.7 No. Fumbles Lost 1 1 Yards Penal lied 4 30 7 40 Catawba 3 8 0 4?IS MarsHHI 13 4 8 8?19 MH?Millar 1 run (Frierson kick) C ?Sexton FO 24 MH ? Estas 42 pass from Hoke (kick failed) MG ? Millar 3run (kick failed) C ? Jewell 4 run (run failed) C ? Foster 28 pass from Wltnerlli (pass failed) win. Mars Hill stopped the Indians when they had to, although Catawba's Witherill accounted for 234 yards passing. Fumbles and in terceptions hurt the Indians They were guilty of four in terceptions and one fumble. The Lions will have an open date this week and play at Newberry Nov. 13 to conclude their regular season. "We played an excellent team today," Mars Hill coach Claude Gibson said. "This was the best defensive per formance we have had in a longtime. "Danny Miller (freshman defensive back from Pisgah) played extremely well and got us an interception. "We played like we were capable of playing all year long," Gibson said. "In the third quarter we bogged down," he said "and we had to play conservative ball due to poor field position. Hoke came to play and gave a creditable performance.'' Army Reserve U Representative Here Monday The United States Army Reserve will have a representative at Madison High School next Monday from 9a.m.to3p.m. Anyone interested may contact SSG Paul W. Payne at the school next Monday. Unlike lions, monkeys and many other animals, cheetahs don't live in family groups. Males leave the females after mating, and mother cheetahs raise their cubs alone, reports National Geographic Work) magazine. Fall Festival At Marshall School Friday A fall festival will be held at the Marshall Elementary School this Friday. The cafeteria opens at 5:30 p.m. to serve supper. The festivities being at 6 p.m. with many games including bingo, dart throwing and fishing pond. A color television set and a mini-bike as well as other door prises will be given away. Patriots Defeated After Brilliant First Half down the field brilliantly to the Falcon's 15-yard line and on the next play, crossed the Falcon goal line only to have the touchdown nullified by an illegal procedure penalty Although the Patriots were unable to senerate another scoring threat during the first quarter, the Patriot defense played superbly to completely shut off the Falcon offense In the second quarter, Waldrop got the game's initial touchdown when he plunged over from the one-yard line. Cliff Searcy added the PAT. A few minutes later, the Patriots cranked up their offense and Steve Wood's passes started clicking, aided by a 60-yard bomb to Scotty Proffitt to the Falcon's IS. Wood faded back and threw a strike to Mike Cody for a touchdown but the PAT was wide and the Falcons led 7-6. The Patriots dominated the first half. In the second half, however, the Falcons larger squad outplayed the tiring Pats, scoring two touchdowns in the third period and added the clincher and a two-point conversion in the final quarter. "I was especially pleased with the fine efforts of all the players, especially Gene Clark, Steve Wood, Allan English, Scotty Proffitt and Mike Cody,'' Coach McFee stated. W H6A^6f$0li Fir;fDuwnt ? 14 RoshlngAtts-Ydg. 3200 37 217 Pimm 4-7-0 0-14-0 Passing Yardage M 01 No. Punts-Avg. 4 27 1 33 No. Fumbtas-Lost 3-3 0-0 Yards Panalizad 103 7S Madlsan 0 0 0 0-4 W. Hawdarson 0 7 11 0?17 Final Game Thursday The final football game of the season between the Madison Patriots and the Hendersonville Bearcats will be played at Hendersonville Thursday night instead of Friday night, it was announced this week. Kickoff will be at 8 p.m. Vegetarianism Most vegetarians fall into one of three different cate gories: (1) the lacto-ovo vegetarian. who eats no meat, fish or poultry; (2) the lacto-vegetarian, who eats no meat, fish, poultry or eggs; and, (3) the strict vegetarian, who eats no foods of animal origin what soever. MARSHALL'S WAGON TRAIN received recognition last week at the Old Timer's Days celebration at Glenwood, Tenn. The sign on "The Titanic," the top attraction at the an 0 nual two-day event, is a special welcome to the Marshall Wagon Train, which started the trek to Glenwood on Oct. 26. Complete Repair Course Bobby Griffin, Westco Telephone Company, Mar shall, has completed a course in station repair at the Con tinental Telephone System Training Center near Amherst, Va. student that completes the 10-day course is able to effectively analyse, troubles hoot and repair customer telephone equip ment, including station carrier systems. The first part of the course concentrates on the basic principles of electricity as applied to modern telephony. Before graduation, the student is able to read a circuit diagram of the customer's ? telephone line and equipment; locate and repair troubles using special testing equip ment; and locate faults in and replace AML, CM4 and CM8 carrier systems Griffin has been with the Continental System since 1972. Lewis university of Lockport, 111., won its last 12 tournament games in taking the 20th NAIA World Series baseball title. Larry Tucker To Exhibit At Mars Hill Larry Tucker, a Mars Hill alumnus, is planning an exhibition of his photographs at the college from Nov. 2 through Nov. 30. Tucker, a native of Raleigh, graduated from Mars Hill in 1960 with a major in biology. He then attended Western Carolina University where he received the master's degree in biology in 1973. He is now a high school biology teacher at Sylva Webster High School. Tucker became interested in photography while a senior at Mars Hill. His knowledge of the natural world around him coupled with expertise in the photographic realm, have combined to produce splendid forms and designs. According to Tucker, his aim is "... recording the tremen dous diversity of color and form in nature," and par ticularly in the Appalachian wilderness. The show at Mars Hill will consist of 30 color prints, ranging in size from 14 x 19 inches to 30 x 40 inches. They will primarily be of scenes from Southern Appalachia, but will also in clude works made in the Northwest on Ms trips to Alaska and Washington State. l. ? ? ..... ^ Fire Dept. Not Responsible For Damage Officials of the Marshall volunteer fire department stated this week that they will not be responsible for any damage done to any vehicle blocking entrance to the fire department on Main Street. High blood pressure, a ma jor cor ibutor to heart at tack anu jtroke, has no usual symptoms. You can have it and not know it Be in the know. Have your blood pres sure checked regularly, and follow your doctor's orders. m k w "? f t> ? I J . . -i FOR A LIKE-NEW USED CAR LOOK THESE OVER! 1974M0NTE CARLO. 35 Cu. Inch. Automatic, Power Steering, Power Brakes, Tilt Wheel, Aqua with White Vinyl Roof, Black Interior, New Tires, compare at *3,895.00 1976 HORNET, 4-Door, 6 Cylinder, Automatic, Power Steering, Factory Air, Cocoa Brown, Beige Vinyl Roof, 15,000. Like New *3,995.00 1976 AMC PACER, Automatic, Power Steering, Factory Air, White with Berry Vinyl Roof, 8,100 Miles ... $4,295.00 SAVEON 1976^MODEL i t i* I TO CHOOSE FROM I I H "M C 'if ? . M, I SOMETHING NEW I PAPA BEAR - Weight 410 Km. ? 18" x 32" Firochamber accepts up to 30" toga. WIN heat approximately 3,000 square feat MAMA BEAR - Weight S46 Lbe. -16" i 27" Fkechamtoer accepts up to 24" logs. WM heat approximately 2,000 square feat BABY0CAR Weight 245 toe. ? 14" x 21" Firechamber accepts up to 18" logs. WW heat approximately 1,200 square teat We have wood and coal cabinet model heaters in stock. I Also Seigler automatic heaters. You set the thermostat They I |HARDWARE CO. I ^fiznCand an <cSon a. , Ol? | Main St., Marshall, N.C. P.O. Box 272?704/649-2811 | Open - 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. Six Days A Week . I PACKAGE SPECIAL * MONDAY, NOV. 8, 11 A.M. to 6 P.M. /I 2 ? 5 X 7'? -iL rrn i.n Jt| , ^ , J 11 ? "'" " '' " I GROUPS AT NO EXTRA COST 3 "110 WBflM mMfice nn UAHIM ma RC" n muucn t>nnnuc? lln nrtwULiWo rce
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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Nov. 4, 1976, edition 1
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