Banner Graphic, Volume 13, Number 120, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 January 1983 — Page 8

A8

The Putnam County Banner-Graphic, January 27,1983

Sports scoreboard

-Indiana High School Basketball By The Associated Press Wednesday's Games ('.ary Roosevelt 86. E. Chic. Washington Terre Haute South 74, Terre Haute North 17 W Vigoß7, Van Buren 80 Indiana College Basketball By The Associated Press Wednesday's (.antes Ball State 58, Northern Illinois 48 Earlham6o. Hanover 54 Franklin ßs, lUPUI74 Indiana 78, North.vestern73 Indiana St-Evansville 81, Transylvania 76 Marian6o, lU-Southeast 58 Wednesday 's College Basketball Scores Bv The Associated Press EAST Eairleigh Dickinson 70. Drexel 69 Fordhamß7, Yale 69 LaSalle 78, Hofstra 62 Long Island U. 50, Siena 47 Louisville 54, Rutgers 49 Maryland 55, Holy Cross 53 Memphis St 94, lona 88 New Hampshire7o, Vermont 67 Penn St 87, Temple 79 Providence6s, Connecticut 62 Rider 64, Lehigh 57 Robert Morris 100, St. Francis, Pa. 75 St Joseph’s. Pa. 98, Massachusettsß6 St. Peter's 76. St Francis, NY 68 S.Connecticut 64, New Haven 59 Wagner 68. Army 66 W.Chester St. at Delaware, ppd W, Virginia Tech 104, Fairmont St. 87 SOI'TH Alcorn St, 116, S.Carolina St. 82 Baltimore 78, Towson St. 72 Centenary 68, Mercer 65 Davidson 57, Citadel 52 Furman 53, Appalachian St. 45 Georgetown, DC 71, Seton Hall 48 Georgia Tech 88, Francis Marion 76 James Madison 73, Navy 63 Md -Eastern Shore 80, Morgan St. 76 New Orleans 91, S.Mississippi 74 N. Carolina A&T 69. Winston-Salem St 68 N.Carolina St. 94, Duke 79 N.Carolina Wesleyan 71, Va. Wesleyan 59 Old Dominion 69, Jacksonville 64 Tennessee St 100, Clark 89 Virginia 59, Geo Washington 44 William & Mary 76, Richmond 68 MIDWEST Ball St. 58, N. Illinois 48 Bow ling Green 63, W Michigan 48 Cincinnati 73. Xavier, Ohio 58 DePaul 51, Princeton 41 Indiana 78, Northwestern 73 lowa St. 82. Colorado 78 Miami, Ohio7l, E.Michigan67 Miss. Valley 64, SW Missouri 59 Missouri 76, Kansas 63 Nebraska 59, Kansas St, 43 N.Michigan 89, Michigan Tech 75 Ohio 77, Cent Michigan 72

AMERICAN LEGION POST NO. 58 ACTIVITIES Jan. 28 - Fri. - Dining Room open 6 - 9 p.m., Dancing 9:30 p.m. - 1:30 a.m., Good Feelings Jan. 29 - Sat. - Dining Room open 6 - 9 p.m. Jan. 30 - Sun. - Post Closed Jan. 31 - Mon. - Post Open regular hours Feb. 1 - Tues. - Happy Hours 3:30 - 6 p.m., 1 2 p.m. - 1 a.m. Feb. 2 - Wed. - Bingo 7:30 p.m. .Feb. 3 - Thurs. - Happy Hours 3:30 - 6 p.m., ] 2 p.m. - 1 a.m. Feb. 4 - Fri. - Dining Room open 6 - 9 p.m. Feb. 5 - Sat. - Dining Room open 6 - 9 p.m. AMERICAN LEGION POST NO. 58 Clip and Save ■Feb. 27 - Sun. - Post Open 12:30 p.m.

SAVE AT OUR COMPLETE (pS|®) LIQUOR CENTER gSAVINGSGOODTHROUGJ^^JRDAICJANJ9J9B^^^^^ AMCHATKA f* .. D VODKA H J& B A SCOTCH 3 49 m 8 49 To ML AMARETTO TEN 01 A HIGH SARONNO O ■ A 29 41" ■ ■ ■ ten HIGH ■ 750 ML . ' Ll,er HEAVEN 0 O.J. HILL r and fc OIN M c ““ i j 79 ■_ 750 ML 750 ML ANDRE PABST IAMPAGNE BLUE RIBBON OML CASE OF 24 CANS : l 505 N. JACKSON "“"■■i WEEKDAYS SUNDAYS 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

SE Missouri St 77. Missouri-Rolla 75 SW Minnesota 92, Moorhead St 91 Toledo 98, Kent St. 61 Valley City St. 70, Dickinson St 64. 20T Wright St 69, N Kentucky 63 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 62, Texas Tech 59 Baylor 76, Texas 43 Houston 76, Rice 40 National Basketball Association At A Glance EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W I, Pci. GK Philadelphia 36 6 857 Boston 32 10 .762 4 New Jersey 27 16 628 9' Washington 18 24 429 18 New York 16 26 381 20 Central Division Milwaukee 30 15 667 Atlanta 21 21 .500 7's Detroit 22 22 . 500 7> Chicago 15 28 . 349 14 Indiana 13 28 .317 15 Cleveland 7 35 .167 21' . WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division San Antonio 27 18 .600 Kansas City 23 19 .548 2'2 Dallas 20 22 476 s>Denver 21 24 . 467 6 Utah 18 27 . 400 9 Houston 7 35 .167 18‘ 2 Pacific Division Los Angeles 33 8 805 - Portland 26 17 605 8 Phoenix 27 18 .600 8 Seattle 25 18 581 9 Golden State 18 25 419 16 San Diego 12 32 .273 22> 2 Wednesday's Games Boston 125, Washington 99 Philadelphia 113, Phoenix 102 Chicago 124, Cleveland 119 Seattle 118, Detroit 109 Dallas 125, Kansas City 115 Los Angeles 115, Milwaukee 113 Thursday 's Games San Antonio at Indiana Seattle at Washington Golden State at Houston Utah at Portland Atlanta at San Diego Friday's Games Phoenix at Boston Cleveland at Detroit New York at Chicago New Jersey at Dallas Philadelphia at Kansas City Portland at Denver Atlanta at Los Angeles Wednesday 's Sports Transactions Bv The Associated Press BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Acquired Steve Mura, pitcher, from the St Louis Cardinals in the free-agent compensation draft Traded Steve Trout and Warren Brusstar. pitchers, to the Chicago Cubs for

Randy Martz and Dick Tidrow, pitchers, and Pat Tabler and Scot Fletcher, infielders SEATTLE MARINERS-Announced that Bill Caudill, pitcher, had agreed to terms on a one-yea r contract FOOTBALL United State Football League BIRMINGHAM STALLIONS-Signed Jackie Cline, defensive tackle, to a threeyear contract HOCKEY National llockev League LOS ANGELES KlNGS—Recalled Gary Laskoski, goaitender PITTSBURGH PENGUINS—RecaIIed Steve Gatzos, right wing, and Pat Graham, left wing, from Baltimore of the American Hockey League COLLEGE RUTGERS—Named Ted Cottrell defensive coordinator; Bill Speranza associate head coach; George DeLeone coordinator of special teams and Dick Curl offensive coordinator National Hockey League At A Glance By The Associated Press Wales Conference Patrick Division W L T GF GA Pts Philadelphia 32 13 6 212 145 70 NY Isles 25 17 8 182 145 58 Washington 23 16 11 194 177 57 NY Rangers 22 21 6 186 171 50 Pittsburgh 12 30 7 152 234 31 New Jersey 10 30 11 138 208 31 Adams Division Boston 32 10 7 302 129 71 Montreal 26 14 9 229 177 61 Buffalo 24 16 9 190 158 57 Quebec 23 20 6 209 202 52 Hartford 12 32 5 159 239 29 Campbell Conference Norris Division Chicago 30 13 7 213 173 67 Minnesota 25 14 10 207 181 60 St Louis 15 27 9 180 202 39 Detroit 12 26 12 155 207 36 Toronto 11 26 10 177 212 32 Smythe Division Edmonton 28 14 10 281 209 66 Calgary 20 24 7 208 219 47 Winnipeg 20 24 5 191 207 45 Vancouver 17 23 10 181 195 44 Los Angeles 16 25 7 172 213 39 Weflnesaav's (■ames Buffalo 7. Montreal 3 Washington 6, Pittsburgh 2 Vancouver 5. Chicago 1 Toronto 6, Edmonton 6 Thursday's Games Quebec at Hartford Montreal at NY Rangers Winnipeg at Philadelphia St Louis at Minnesota Toronto at Calgary No Islanders at Los Angeles Friday's Games Chicago at Buffalo Pittsburgh at Washington

Health and financial security make golf more fun to Trevino

PHOENIX (AP) - Lee Trevino may have found a new lease on his golfing life. “I’d heard it before, but I didn’t know it until now. But it’s true. It's a lot easier to play when you've got a job,’’ Trevino said before teeing off today in the first round of the $350,000 Phoenix Open Golf Tournament. It’s also easier to play with the absence of pain

Jabbar and Lakers still best around

By I he Associated Press “We are playing as good as our team can possibly play and have been for over a month,” Milwaukee Bucks Coach Don Nelson said. That has been good enough to make the Bucks the runaway leaders in the National Basketball Association’s Central Division, but it wasn’t enough to beat the defending NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers Wednesday night. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 29 points, including six in the last four minutes, to bring the Lakers from behind and defeat Milwaukee 115-113. “It’s a super game between two divisional leaders, the type of game I was expecting,” said Lakers guard Earvin “Magic” Johnson, who had nine points and 20 assists. “We played well in the first half. They played well in the second half and the game consequently was up for grabs in the last minutes.” In other NBA games, Boston bombed Washington 125-99, Philadelphia tripped Phoenix 113-102, Chicago defeated Cleveland 124-119, Seattle beat Detroit 118-109 and Dallas stopped Kansas City 125-115. The Lakers, who led 60-54 at halftime, trailed by seven points with 4:11 remaining before scoring 11 straight points to take a 115-111 lead with one minute to play.Bucks’ center Dave Cowens scored to close

And Trevino now has (l)a job and (2» no pain. A recently signed contract with NBC as a golf commentator took care of the job and an operation on his back last year took care of the pain. The result is that he’s again playing with the flair and form that made him one of the most popular performers the game has produced. For the first time in a year, he's a legitimate title threat. “I’m playing pretty good, maybe good enough to win,” Trevino said. Last season was the poorest of Trevino’s career. Bothered by chronic back pain through most of the season, he failed to win for the first time since 1968. He won only $34,000. He missed the cut more often than he made it. He admitted, late in the year, he had considered retirement. Finally, in the fall, he had surgery to correct a pinched nerve. In his two starts following the operation, he finished 18th and 20th, two of his best tournaments of the season. In his only previous start this year, he had three rounds of 67 and tied for 12th in the Los Angeles Open, a performance that brought him to this one with a renewed sense of confidence. “The back is fine. I’ve been able to practice a lot, played 12 aut of 13 days and it held up fine.

aV '' il When ; “ALL IN THE FAMILY” —u J / y Activities " - / "X i i Come to an End V Let Us ' 'v. ' 1 Put the Leaves ,’7 r ‘ [iW - p Back on the Trees! W v N '( A- ■=■) .1 7 ; .l»: ; IS lv T ■ 1-, ,, > ' A A \ / L TIIO OCttiAmc ALL IN THE FAMILY r Village Weekend Vacation 4 it x One Night - Two Days /AA*" J ’ Asso -Ap Two Nights - Three rim hauti Indiana 47602 "X 5 99 n M.nct rott ’"L, KIDS STAY FREE /ILL SLASOHii \ All prices based on a % TA> J <3? > per couple basts plus tax 1 YIL \ (j? " j* pa f • SWIMMING•WHIRLPOOL ft fe • SAUNA .GAME ROOM .AvjT <, 1 A [ \-T • LIBERAL FOOD A f \ 1/ ALLOWANCE . PLANNED P] 0000 U S 4 1 VDim FOR THE KIDS *CALL NOW OR WRITE I IJ (f1i2)232 60fil THE HOLIDAY INN TERRE HAUTE INDIANA 1

the gap to two points and Milwaukee hand a chance to tie when the Lakers missed a shot at the 20-second mark. But Cowens missed a follow shot with two seconds left to give the Lakers the win. Jamaal Wilkes had 26 points, including the Lakers’ other five down the stretch. Bob McAdoo added 19 points for Los Angeles. Marques Johnson had 30 points for Milwaukee and Charlie Criss and Junior Bridgeman added 20 and 16 points, respectively. But what might have cost Milwaukee the game was a calf injury suffered by star guard Sidney Moncrief on Tuesday night. Moncrief played sparingly, scored only 10 points and wasn't in the game at the end. Celtics 125, Bullets 99 Kevin McHale led eight Boston players in double figures as the Celtics avenged a twopoint loss to Washington two nights earlier McHale, starting in place of flu-stricken Cedric Maxwell, had six points as the Celtics scored the first 14 points in the game. They also got the first 10 points of the second period for a 44-24 advantage. 76ers 113, Suns 102 Moses Malone had 34-points and 11 rebounds, while reserve guard Clint Richardson sparked a fourth-period rally by Philadelphia against Phoenix.

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"The back is fine,” Lee Trevino says. "It's mostly a matter of putting now.” NBC's new golf commentator feels like he is a legitimate threat to win the Phoenix Open this week. (AP wirephoto)

The 76ers trailed 83-79 going into the fourth quarter after the Suns outscored them 25-13 in the third period. Richardson had eight points in the final 12 minutes, and the 76ers never trailed again after his basket gave them a 93-91 lead. Sonics 118, Pistons 109 Gus Williams and Jack Sikma had 26 points apiece as Seattle beat Detroit to break a ninegame road losing streak. The Pistons led 46-44 before the Sonics scored 11 straight points to take the lead for good. Isiah Thomas led all scorers with 27 points for Detroit, which had won three games in a row before the loss. Mavericks 125, Kings 115 Mark Aguirre scored 35 points, including 12 in the fourth quarter as Dallas set a franchise record with its fifth straight victory. Kelvin Ransey and Jay Vincent each finished with 28 points for the Mavericks, who have won seven of their last eight games. Bulls 124, Cavaliers 119 Reggie Theus scored 27 points and Dave Corzine 21 as Chicago handed Cleveland its 35th loss in 42 games. The Bulls led at the end of each period although the Cavaliers cut a 106-93 deficit to 120-116 with 26 seconds to go. A free throw by Quintin Dailey and two by Corzine kept Chicago in front.

One goal is notenough TULSA, Ok la. (AP) Dave Silk scored two goals to lead the Tulsa Ice Oilers to a 4-1 Central Hockey League victory over In dianapolis. After yielding an early power goal to Indianapolis’ Red Laurence Wednesday, Tulsa goaltender Steve Weeks blanked the Checkers for the last 55 minutes. Silk answered Laurence's goal in less than three minutes. Ken Kuzyk then got the winnning Tulsa goal at the start of the second period. The Oilers’ Chris Renaud also scored in that period, before Silk’s second power-play goal ended the scoring in the final period. Indianapolis right wing Dave Hanson was handed a 10-minute misconduct penalty in the first period following a fight with Tulsa’s Scot Kleinendorst. It was the 10th straight loss for the Checkers.

i « Jr i '* |

DICK TIDROW

Cubs keep Jenkins in deal with Sox (c) 1983 Chicago Sun-Times CHICAGO Wednesday by the White Sox, simple and to the point. Instead, there were seven players involved and it wasn’t simple. The Sox, bypassing Cubs pitcher Ferguson Jenkins as compensation for free-agent Steve Kemp, chose right-handed pitcher Steve Mura from the Cardinals, then completed a sixplayer trade with the Cubs, obtaining starting pitcher Randy Martz <ll-10 last season), reliever Dick Tidrow (8-3, six saves) and infielders Pat Tabler (.235) and Scott Fletcher (.313 at Iowa). They gave up Steve Trout (6-9) and Warren Brusstar (2-0), thus trading starting pitchers (Trout for Martz) and relievers (Brusstar for Tidrow). Tabler was going to start for the Cubs at third base, but became available when they traded for third baseman Ron Cey a week ago Wednesday. The deal was a gamble on Cub general manager Dallas Green’s part. He saw Trout as the key. “There isn’t any question about the potential of Steve Trout,” he said. “He’s young, he has talent and he’s a left-hander. Those are tough ingredients to come by. “I don't know what Steve's troubles were with the White Sox, but there is an old cliche: ‘A change of uniforms does wonders.”' The clubs insisted there was not a sweetening of the pot by the Cubs to keep Jenkins in a Cub uniform. The Sox had intended to select Jenkins last Thursday in the compensation draft, but demurred to the Cubs and chose Rudy May of the Yankees. However, May had a no-trade clause and was supposed to be protected. He was returned to the Yankees Tuesday when a new draft was ordered. “Ferguson Jenkins had remarked about his desire to stay with the Cubs.” general manager Roland Hemond said of a newspaper article Monday. “We felt it was more beneficial to us to acquire players who wanted to come here.” The Sox had considered taking Jenkins last week when they were surprised to find his name on the Cubs' unprotected list. The 39-year-old right-hander, who led the Cubs with victories in 1982 with 14. is 22 shy of the 300-win mark.

30 USED CARS AND TRUCKS THAT MUST BE SOLD 1982 Ford EXP automatic, P.S.. air, low miles. 1982 Ford Escort the world class car, unbelievable. 1982 Ford EXP 4-speed, air, P.S., P. 8., stereo, one-owner. 1981 Dodge Omni 024 super sharp, A.T., air, AMFM, low miles. 1981 Ford Escort L station wagon, 4-speed, P.S., P.B. 1981 Ford Mustang A T., P.S., P. 6., air, stereo, one-owner. 1980 Ford Thunderbird 6-cyl. , A.T., air, stereo. 1980 Datsun 200 SX A.T., power windows, AM/FM cassette, local owner. 1980 Dodge Omni 024 4-speed, AM/FM, window louvers and more. 1980 Pontiac Trans Am T-tops, P.S., P. 8., air, AMFM. 1980 Lincoln Town Car 4-door, leather, two-tone, all you'd want in luxury. 1979 Mazda 626 Coupe 5-speed, air, AMFM. 1979 Buick Riviera power seats, door locks, windows, cruise, tilt and much more. 1978 Buick Regal Turbo Coupe, V-6, A.T., air, stereo, low miles. 1978 Buick Opel 5-speed, air, AMFM, low miles. 1978 Buick Skylark, 4-door, A.T., V-6, air, AMFM. 1978 Corvette, Anniversary Edition, removable top, A.T., air, tilt and more. 1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme V-6, A.T., air, stereo and more. 1977 Pontiac Grand Prix two-tone, one-owner, air PS P. 8., AM FM. 1977 Dodge Monaco Brougham 4-door, air, cruise PS P.B. 1977 Mercury Marquis Brougham 2-door, one-owner, tilt, cruise, air, sharp. 1977 Chevy Nova 4-door, A.T., 6-cyl., P.S. TRUCKS 1981 Ford F-100 XLT Lariat air, power windows, loaded. 1981 Ford F-150 4-spd. OD, AMFM, P.S., P. 8., only 13,000 miles. 1981 Chevy Blazer Silverado power windows, air, tilt, cruise, A T. and more. 1981 Ford F-100 AMFM, 6-cyl., 3-Speed. 1980 Toyota Landcruiser only 29,000 miles, 4-wheel drive, tough. 1980 Dodge D-150 6-cyl., A T., P.S., AMFM. 1980 Ford F-150 4x4 6-cyl., 4-spd., AMFM, only 28,000 miles. 1979 Datsun King Cab A T., low miles, great mileage. 1979 Chevy Van 1-ton chassis, 10' fiberglass box, capt. chairs, loaded, 34,000 miles. 1979 Chevy C-10 '/2-ton, 6-cyl., A.T., P.S., 2-tone. 1979 Dodge Ramcharger SE P.S., P.B.’ AMFM, air, highback seats and more. 1979 Ford F-150 P.S., P. 8., AM FM, two-tone paint. 1979 Dodge 6-cyl., A.T., camper shell, P.S. 1979 Dodge 4x4 Camper A T., P.S., P. 8., two-tone paint 1978 Jeep CJ7 V-8, clutch, P.S. 1976 Ford F-100 Explorer A T., P.S., no rust. Sharp. Used Cars & Trucks No Reasonable Offer Refused Rush-Rhodes Inc.

446-2351

Highway 40, Brazil, Ind.

STEVE TROUT

232-4988