Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 19, Decatur, Adams County, 23 January 1953 — Page 7

FRIDAY, JANUARY* 23, 1963 1 ! .. . ... ■■

[sports]

Dukes, Francis I Keep Teams In Unbeaten Class NEW YORK, UP—Walter Dukes and Clarence (Bevo) Francis, the ' r two most italked-abqut giantsin college basketball, each put another high-scoring performance in the books today to move their uQbegten. teams ahead another stride. The six-fopt, 11-inch Dukes, leadL infc qfiajor-college scorer in the nit | tion 'with a 27.8 points-per-game average, racked up 25 markers |o lead [Seton Hall, the nation’s No. 1 team, to its 19th straight triumph by a 103-85 score over Memphis M State. The amazing, six-foot, nine-inch Fraricis.'Jeading small-college schrU er with a 49.5 was /'held’’ ’ to 42 points as littlAßio Grande / College, of Ohio gained its 24th straight win of the season, 79-51, over the Cincinnati Bible Semin- ' ary. „ t- 1 ? Dukes’ 25 points gave him a new . Seton Hall single-season scoring record. He now has 526 pointsßh T> to the record ' o| 524 he set in 26 games last season. v ‘ ; z | ■ Francis was again the I target pf a zone \ defense that managed jp * hold Rio Grande to a 19-19 firsjt > period tie. But\ big Bevo ran wild with 20 points in the second per lad for a 42-27 halftime jead (punched the game. Bevo' took |7 J ’x shots and sank 20 as he ran hjs j point total to 1.188 in 24 games. £. ’ Western Kentucky, a< leading | candidate for a post-season tourfe- | ament bid, scored an impressive | 98-56 victory over Miami ojf Florida L at Coral ■ Gables, Fla., tot run its record to 13-3. The Hilltoppers, rated 18th nationally, never Were , in’danger as Art Spoelstrd led the way with 26 points. In other leading games ThurSi day night: Niagara rap its record 'tbhs-2 by beating Canlisius. 66-63; Marshall trounced Marietta, 10263; and; Indians State beat St. ■ Joseph’s (Ind.), 83-59. 1 . ’ Washington. the nation’s ihlrdVi racking team, defends its perfect, record iii the northern division oG, t t.hd’ Pacific Coast Conference in a < < leading game on tonight s sched- i ule. F [ .-In a dhicago Stadium game. the s ’ ( Oklahoma Aggies, ranked seventh t nationally, an old rivalry against pePaul, ranked ,20th. Earlier this; year, the Aggies downed* “ DePaul. [6,2-51. in Oklahoma. I The Skyline Conference has' two i

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Week's Schedule Far Adams County Basketball Teams Friday , Commodores at Ossian. Hoagland at Monmobth. Jefferson at Gray. |, Berne at Angola. •] Geneva ait Poling. — —r— --■■■■ H ~- —— important games on tap. Wyoming, league-leader with a 6-0 mgrk, meets Bfingham Young, tied for second place with 3-1. And Colorado A and Mj the other second-place squad, meets Utgh. i High School basketball South Bend Riley 60, South Bend Central 45. Wallace 66, Hammond ss. Evansville Reitz 65, Boonville 62. Aid Is Sought For Jewish Refugees West Berlin Jewish Community Appeals BERLIN UP — Th|e head of West Berlinj’k Jewish community appealed to Jews throughout the world today to aid Jewish refugees fleeing fromSoviet\Zane terror. At the same 1 time,i ;he official U- S. high commission’s Germanlanguage newspaper said Soviet Zone -Peoples Police had confiscated prayer .books in raidis on Jewish homes to hunt 'fpr| “Zioiist spies.” More than 300 Jews have fled to West Berlin from Russk n territory with thousands of other refugees in recent weeks, Heinz Galinski, chairman of the West Berlin Jewish community, said in today’s issue of the community’s weekly Der Weg:i “We call upon all Jews in the .wqrkl to aid us in giving help to those people Coming to us from East; Heflin and East Germany?’ \ •4 -1 ( -At Bonn, the West German capital, Chancellor Kcnrad Adenauer indicated today ttat his government will help [West Berlin handle influx of refugees. ;[ The Communists Thursday split tjjg Berlin Jewish community under Galinski and set up a puppet Jewish organization in (East Berlin. The Neue Zeltung saic other Jewish communities in East Germany also are being “reorgahizej.” I , . •■■ ■ : £ I -I ' [An easy way tc keep tracked from leaking ar deteriorating' iV to seal thenixv-ith cellophane tApe. ' ■ ! . K L L

Both Decatur Teams Win In Vim League Both Decatur entrants the Vim league marked up victories Thursday night in games flayed at the Hoagland gym, ® In the opener, Klenk’s walloped Hoagland, 95-59., Klenk’s all periods, 20-7, 41-21 and 63-3 J Reed led the winners with 25 pot u. fob lowed by Price with 21, : Mallard with 18 and Moses with 16 [Eminhiser was high for with 17. \ ' The Knights of Pythias team was carried into an overturn before defeating Marion, 73-6 s. The teams were tied at the half-i 33-33, and at the end of the playing period, 64-64. Conrad WAb outstanding on offense with 3woinits while Marion's scoring wni well balanced. \ Klenk’s 1 ■ FG RST TP Doan v 3 Ballardl7 18 Hoehammer — 3 S 7 Moses ... 7 16 Price 8 21 Reed 9 25 Totals ...37 8$ 95 Hoagland t’f FG FIT TP Emlnhtser •— 8 17 Girardot... 4 Jj 9 Getting * 2 4 Zelt ... 0 [ffl <0 Adams 2 ~[W 4 Kiess ? ■j® H Bultemeler 5 BT; ~*l Kaiser I> 0 - |- t Totals2B $ 59 k. o» p . : li FG PT TP B. Fuhrman 2 6 McAJhaney ‘ 6 'ra 13 Conrad 16 33 Lehman 4 [H 10 Stoppenhagen' _ r 2 >2 6 €. Fuhrman —0 "np 5 ( | ■ 'WtTt 'Totalsl 30 73 Marion FG PT TP Cain 7 > 1" Cookß ’I 17 Sills 7 | 14 Halloway6 * H Payne 1 — 0 $ ■ 3 Sharpel- 1 ’!! 3 \ —T — Totals 29 W' 68 Wr J■ i: Ask White Crossed On War Dead Grayed Congresswoman a Seek Legislation I WASHINGTON UP Ch|S|rinan Edith Nourse Rogers of' thajlliouse veterans committee said igpday she plans to introduce Jegil jliation in a second attempt to‘ (on the armed services to restore crosses on the graves of 1j3,000 war dead in Honolulu’s N jjfeional I' emorial cemetery. !r The crosses on the “Hill ttfjSecrifice” overlooking Honolulwwere torn down in September, 19!and replaced with stone marker||i; The army’s action set tiiff a wave of protests. Onq vfljttirans group said removal of the cwbsses made the cemetery look ; llfce a "cow pasture.” . i . Jli; , But the army defended; & action as an economy move amjjsaid Lt was \ standard policy ttx .have stone markers rather thanytfhite crosses in national cemetqpes. Mrs. Rogers, a Republican, said she was slacked by the army decision and pleaded for restoration of the crossffi But her bill to make thdf#rmy replace the markers was in a house interior subcommittfli last March. • 'K, Mrs. Rogers, 71-year-old |shampion of veterans’ causes* today she is considering lawfully exactly what Legislation |wpuld have the best chance of approval in the new Republican Congress. She also disclosed tha||j she plans to sound out Repiildieaw officials taking over the on chances of restoring the drosses by administrative action.

£ - ■' m at -Jr ■E» ■': fit % L ■ Wk 11 fe "* wBI'BIBMK I ! •!>• ‘ H"! * : . HARVARD PRESIDENT James > Conant reiida the Harvard Crimson at Cambridge, Mass., which toi|'students aljout his leaving to be U. S. bish commissioner for Gernn|iur. (International Soundohntnl

■ ■ 'I DECATUR DAILY DBMOORAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

REVIEW OF THE YEAR-By Alan Maver-j * 1 '* 11 1 iiiTr, 1 '■l I EJ k Ki i MA/me JOHW/ M/ZE, YAAiK t heroes ml? k x- "■ IR* ll .F i-h JMNCo . “ "[Mi f nfLE from J OF T//E ' tAURO becomes p Damager : BH i ! 7© *'/// )r\ -JwJMI \seß'eg f Mw * \ ' PR/MZEroA/STFFJR & POPPED AT 24 0V PE7A — fa/ asp / ■ 1 cipher 02 o.s.c. aAp ■•■ajif 00/0 9TA2£ aap 7e/ae> cpeef rv.-ifflSgEM FAME SP/R'TO " aaer.ca* w/lue ttJF yiWMEOaw UOCXEF 7o R/OF 300 U^ppF^At/0/VER& /MA FEAR/ REr/R£S / -,,, X — -1 i A-.i ■ _,_ -■ - , „- T ...... ~ „

Muncie Conquerors Defeated Thursday INDIANAPOLIS. UP — South Bend Bears. It appeared toda|Jr, [couldn’t stand prosperity among the elite of lndjana’3 high scholol basketball teams for long Ld.Ht Saturday Coach Elmer Mc- ( Call’*s lioyi! dipped Muncie Centrarh 33-game winning streak >ln an astounding upset. 70 to 67. Thursday night, the next time out, L’entral lost an important East NTHSC tussle to city foe 'Riley, 60 to 4v .'l, | ' Tins tossed: the race for the league jerown into'a two-way tie between them, both with 4-.1 records. Oentjral ranked seventh in this weel United Press “Big Ten.”; Rile:’,l derailed/by LaPorte last weeljv W3B grouped fti the “wellregarded" ranks. The game was dose most of the way. But with 90 peconds to .go. Rile* exploded for 11 straight poin s to ice it. Buddy Overholser with 23 points paced the winners. Ei Gary Wallace maintained its lead in the West NIKIC', winning from Hammond in over imp, to 56, for its seventh etrajrht) loop triumph. One of the tiny handful iof un-‘ J! • ■ ■ il ' beatijn trains kept its record clean. Gdldfberry made it 15 in a row in the Wapash Valley Tourney, with a» 54-52’ triumph oiver Linton. Il Was a breathtaking experience fdr Ibe Hornets. They trailed by seve i points with less than four minutes to go. but rallied when the chipU were down. Pro, Basketball li NBA Results Syhmuse 87, Fort Wayne 75. New York 11.2, Boston 89., Milwaukee 106, Philadelphia ,100 (overtime). College Basketball Indiana State S 3, Si. Joseph’s 59. , Mijsiesippi Southern 81. Evansville Camp Breckinridge 81, Oakland City p. Rid Grande .79, Cincinnati Bible Western Kentucky 98, 'Miami (F*la.J!s6. »■■ Setjfn Halj 1103, Memphis State 85. . The center Qf the Unite’d States lls Smith County,

-• <Vi ' I i Nine Cars Entered In 500-Mile Race INPIANAPOUS UP — Lteadfooted Jack McGrath was assured of a mount in. the next ,500-mile Indianapolis Motor Speedway Rape as entries jumped to nine cars. | Third in 1951, the South Pasadena. Cal., pilot was nominated to drive one. of two cars filtered by Jack Hinkle. Wichita. KajU Hinkje’s other driver was stillT to be announced. Dan M. Lejvine Cap V, Detroit, entered two Alber four-cylinder cars, to be operated by vetlerane Baub'Russo, Hammond., fndJ. and dene-Hartley, Fort Wayne, Ind. Mctlrath, making his sixth bid for the whiner’s circle, was one of the hot favorites |ast year. He finished 11th, however, when mechanical' trouble killed his chances for victory. r _X_ BOWLING SCORES MAJOR LEAGUE Team Standings W L Pts. State Gardens 41 19 56*4 Mid-western Lifers I . 31 29 44 .Adams Co. Lumber 30 30 40*' Mies Recreatibn 31 29 39*4 First state Bank 29 31 38 Clem's Hardware 28 32 38 Schaffer’s —i 25 35 33 Hoagland „U\_ 25 35 31 I 600 series: Mutschler (206, 166, 249) 621. 204 : games: Bultemeier 222; Marjjarh j2OO, 207; Barkley 205; Houser 213;i House 232; Bracey\2l4; fieihking 203; Eichhorn 204; Mies •300. 20*1. Note—State Gardens 1063 game and 2767 series established a new high game and a new high series for tlie Majoy League this season. - AMERICA LEGION LEAGUE Bulteipeier won three from Ashbauc'heri Burke Standard won. two from Gunners; Macklin won| two from Nop Coms; Tankers won two from Mies Recreation. Team Standings W . L Pts. Bultemeierss 17 J--- 5 17 Bit ike Standard_-4 2 6 Non ComA \___ 3 3 4 Tankers 3 3 3 Gunners * — 2 4 2 Mjes Recreationl 5 2 Ashbaucliers .1 >5 1 High games:' W. Schnepf 206; far. Moses 206; B. Andrews 2.07; tet Bulte neier 231; A. Miller 217; 11. Bit bench 206*; T. W.lFrauhfger 202; E. Zwick 213; M.*-Mies 203; H. Strickler 211, [ High series: E. Bultemeier 606; A. Miller 608. 1 ‘V i ■ r \ .i i j | y 7 . ' i y ' '4s standard equipment! jnew cars (fir 1953 cgrry an average of more ijtan 30 light bulbs.

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Pro Football League Talks Personnel Cui PHILADELPHIA, UP — The National Football league, its distribution of 360 college players settled in an opening day 14-hours session, moved today to the serious business of cutting playqr limits, a wide open discussion on conference ” memberships hod the schedule for season. \The pro loop was girded for battle on Commissioner Bert Bbll’s recommendation that teams i be limjted to 30 : players, and the toughie problem of what conference newcomer Baltimore will finally settle in as a league member. 'ji. The 30-player limit is ai move on the part of Bell as an economy measure for the teams, particularly those whose balances were written in red ink at the end of last season. The commissioner reasons that dropping three players wduld save each teiim roughly |15,000 a ypar. Baltimore is taking over the Dallas spot iri the National or Western Conference. Fans in Baltimore prefer the Eastern Conference. with two cracks at Ahe Washington Redskins, particularly in that} the ’Skins grabbed AllAmerican players Jack Scarbath and Dick Modzelewski. both from Maryland, in Thursday’s draft. Washington has indicated a preference tor the , Eastern conference with Baltimore as an opponent, but there -would be a reluctance by the Chicago Cardinals to move back to the West where their-op-ponents would the same as the Chicago Bears, their intra-city rivals. F The hope for A happy solution was offered by Art Rooney, owner pf \the Pittsburgh Steelers, who; indicated he would be willing to'gb into the Western division if necessary. The conferences, now known as American and National, probably 'will be changed to the Eastern and Westerin. respectively. All-American ’ players had their innings In Thursday’s draft, with Baltimore enrlchjing itaelf with Billy Vessels of Oklahoma and end Bernje Flowers of Purdue. ~ “1 ’ '■ > . • Plan Investigation Os Prison Stabbing Legislative Probe Asked After Fight SANTA FE, N. M- UP V- A legislative investigation of conditions at New Mexico state penitentiary may result from the fatal stabbing of a prisoner during a drhnken knife fight Wednesday. State Rep. Antonio 'Montoya said Thursday that he would introduce a resolution in the house of representatives calling for legislative ilsvestigation of “the deplorable conditions” at the prison. The stabbing \victim was Speight Parks. 31. who was serving two life sentences for double murder. Prison officials first thought the fight might have been staged as al cover-up for a “kangaroo court” Execution, but testimony given by two doctors Thursday at art inquest into Parks’ death exploded that theory. Dr. Andrew FerrM and Dr. M. S. Bartlett told members <>l a coroner’s jury that four prisoners they had treated for wounds received in the brawl were under the influence of Jiquor when they wei’e admitted to the hospital. Ferrett said of the convicts, Francisco Lopez and Joe .Montana, were “definitely [intoxicated.” Lrtpez and Montana were reported “still in critical condition.” Senior buand Capt'* Antonio Griego, when asked it the convicts regularly obtain liquor Inside the prison, answered, “If they -get a chance, they get it. I don’t know how.” More than a dozen prisoners participated in the fight, and the ;inguest failed to disclose the identity of the convict who stabbed Parks. —-T- — ■ V Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

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Ask Teeth In Law Against Fast Time INDIANAPOLIS, UP — The Indiana legislature was asked today to put teeth in a 1949 law making daylight saving time illegal. V Reps. Rex S. Minnick (D-Brazil) and Ernest M. Beal (D-Cyntofl) introduced a bill in the house setting penalties of $35 to SSOO tine and [lO to 30 days in jail for businesses or industries who fail to operate on central standard time the year round. y • j Four years ago, the legislature

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PAGE SEVEN

passed a bill aimed gt outlawing “fast” time. But it contained no penalties. Youth Under Arrest For Killing Mother LOUISA, Ky. UP — Fifteen-year-old Robert Howard was in jail today after shooting hi? mother to death for no apparent reason. The victim was Mr?. Sarah Howard, 43.. Corpner L. B. Young said the youth could give no reason for the shooting, although he admitted it.