Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 8 January 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Pleasant Mills . Scores Second Win Os Season j Jhe Pleasant Mills Spartans registered their second victory of the season Tuesday night, defeating the Willshire Bearcats,. 59-45. op the Pleasant Mills court. The Spartans have suffered nine defeats. Pleasant Mills held a four-point lead, 14-10, at the first quarter, built it. to seven points at the half. 24-17, and further , increased the 1 margin in the third period, 39-27. : Koger Snyder paced the Spar-! tans toThe triumph with 23 points on goals and five free throws. Dwight Brunner was the only other Spartan in double figures with 12. Caffee led Willshire with 14 tallies. • „ 'ffie’Spartans will entertain Ohio! City at the Pleasant Mills gym Sat- j urday night. Pleasant Mills FG FT TP Johnson - 4 0 8 Luginbill .. . 0 1 1' Brunner 4 4 12 Hawkins ZZ3 17 Roe 1 0 2[ Butler ...— -1-. .... 3 0 61 ICE SKATES CT? e J- W- - ALL SIZES JEL KLENKS = ll'

Public Auction, 35 — REGISTERED GUERNSEYS — 35 COMPLETE CLOSING OUT SALE As the farm has been sold and I am quitting farming I will sell the following at Public Auction 3 miles West of Berne, Indiana on Road 118 then 3 miles South or 1 mile East and 2 miles South of Linn Grove, on WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15,1958 STARTING AT TEN A, M. (Fast Time) ■ (Cattle Selling at 12:30 I*. M.) 35 — REGISTERED GUERNSEYS 35 T."IL & Bangs Tested—loo% Caifhood Vaccinated Sixteen Cows from two to six years old—One Cow seven and one Cow eleven years old—Five Heifers due with first calf” in April, May aud—Jawe—Three Heifers.. sixteen months old, Heifers, seven to eleven months old— Two September and October Heifer Calves—Herd Starting third year on D. H I. A.—A B. S. Breeding Service—Breeding dates, records given side day. Write: Ned C. Johnson. Auctioneer. Decatur, Indiana for Catalog. Sale Held Inside. DAIRY EQUIPMENT - Two Unit Surge Milker; Ten Milk Cans: Westinghouse 6 Can Cooler (side door). . TWO TRACTORS — IMPLEMENTS — MISCELLANEOUS Starting at Ten A. M, (Fast Time) 1952 John Deere B Tractor, on rubber and Cultivators; 1942 IHC A. Tractor with IHC 7 foot Semi-mounted Mower: John Deere 2 bottom 14 inch Tractor Plow l , on Rubber; IHC Tractor Disc; M. Harris 4 Sec:!l tion Spring Tooth Harrow: Cultipacker: John Deere No. 290 Corn Planter; IHC Side Delivery Rake; Woods Brothers Single Row Corn Picker; New Idea No. 12 Manure Spreader; John Deere 12 Hole Fertilizer Drill; Ottawa 34 foot Elevator with 1 H P. Elec. Motor: Papey Ensilage Cutter; IHC Corn Binder: Rubber Tire Wagon and Racli; D. Bradley Garden Tractor with Cultivators; Other Miscellaneous Items. 290 gal. Gas Tank, with pump; Air Compressor; Set of Dies. > 300 Bales Straw. . • • • - TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. H. C. BRENNEMAN, Owner Route One. Geneva, Ind. Hoy S.’ Johnsoff, Ned C. Johnson, Mel Liechty—Auctioneers E. W. Baumgartner, First Bank of Berne -Clerk Zz LUNCH-WILL BE SERVED. . I csCl ■ /K / MPk. ks BUSINESSMEN. / liWyMk /f EXECUTIVES. FAMILIES L '^» s rtßikaF4z| During certain convention periodi. eB eveileble Chicago hotel rooms are Ire* takeh. I ou c *4 b* assured of comfortable acL cownoitaon* in. .of-the-Loap, I anytime, by writing for your FREE “Preferred Guest Cird“ from the Hotel'Ham. ilton, today, the Hamilton—preferred by I the family, end business «eciHiyes.,for. L. -1 downtown convenience and courfeou, ho,I pitality at sensible, rates — guerantees I tykh advance notice) reservations anyfl °I ***• V ear ,o you, P r »f*rred I ' 8 i” IJH guest. Ask for your "Preferred Guest . - ' ■- Card." today ... at no obligation. 'L. JR.JMR, L LITTLE SQUARE * - Chicago's Newest |pn| THE NEW wteiraiit and lounge Ha HAMILTON "Preferred by guests In CHICAGO" MQTEL 20 SOUTH IN KANSAS CITY IT S THE BELLERIVE HOTEL 100% AIR-CONDITIONED * ■

Week's Schedule Os Adams County Basketball Teams Friday New,Haven at Yellow Jackets. Commodores at Hartford. Monmouth at Geneva. ' Montpelier at Adams Central. Berne at Albany. Saturday Ohio City at Pleasant Mills. Jackson 2 ... 0 0 0 Snyder .J 9 5 23 Totals 24 11 59 Willshire FG FT TP Garver .... 4 2 10 { August 40 8 ! Schaadt 30 6 i Hey 011 James 2 2 6 Caffee .-.1.... 6 2 14 Totals .......19 7 45 Officials: Bock, Buzzard. i Willshire, 34-24. Ted Kluszewski To Undergo Checkup PITTSBURGH W — Ted Kluszewski, one-time Cincinnati slugger acquired recently -by the i Pittsburg Pirates, will undergo a I complete physical examination.. I sometime next week. Kluszewski has been suffering with an ailing Lack for the last year and a half. Hart And Baker In TV Bout Tonight CHICAGO HR — Garnett "Sug-i-ar ' Hart and Larry Baker, a pair : of welterweights dissatisfied with their last outings, meet tonight in a televised 10-rounder at the Chicago Stadium. Hart, a 20-year-old Philadelphian/" ruled a slight favorite to defeat the 26-year-old New Yorker and move up a notch in the NBA ladder. The January ratings put i Hart in the No. 9 spot and Baker at No.’ 8. Trade in a good town — Decatur ■ i __ .--F

Stale Champ Bears Pile Up Lead In Poll INDIANAPOLIS <UP) — South Bend Central’s defending state | champions, more convincing every : week they can get the job done even without Sylvester Coalmon, today built up at comfortable lead in the fourth weekly United Press Indiana high school basketball coaches' poll. The once-beaten Bears polled 11 of 18 first-place nods and finished with 156 points, 8 short of their season best in the first roll call a month ago. They've been without Coalmon since he suffered a ! knee injury in Lafayette’s holi--1 day tourney last month. ’ With the season moving into the second and heaviest portion, the • elite appeared to be as well established as possible. No newcomer managed to crash into the Big 10. , although three outfits bettered their positions. ' by the South Benders, recaptured the runner-up spot with 128 points, two more than third-place Jeffersonville. Lafayette was fourth last time. Terre Haute Garfield climbed from fifth place to fourth and Indianapolis Tech from ninth to sixth aftri i ''WinSHnjf'- ? 'W&- ; 'CSl i p®KF City holiday tourney for the second straight year. .. L Indianapolis Attacks-remained 1 seventh Kokomo eighth and Mad- : ison 10th. The two Fort Wayne teams upset last Friday — Ceiitral and South—both lost prestige' but remained in the select circle. Central slipped from second place to fifth, South from sixth to ninth Fort Wayne -Concordia, its only blemish a 56-54 loss to' city rival South and last week’s conqueror of Central, climbed from nowhere to 11th place with 16 votes, pushing Muncie Central iqte a tie with Vincennes for 12th. The experts nominated only 21 teams, the smallest number of the season, among them newcomers Scottsburg and South Bend St. Joseph. r ,L Concordia 11th The standings, with first places and total points: " 1. South Bend Central <ID 156 2. Lafayette < D -’ 128 ■■*’9r’Jeffersoriville 12) 126 4. Terre Haute Garfield <2) 113 5. Fort Wayne Central -CD 102 6. Indianapolis Tech H ... -,--75 8. Kokorhp 64 3 Fort Wayne South <D 57 19. Madison- 20 11. Fort Wayne Concordia 16; F 12. Muncie Central, Vincennes 10; 14. Evansville Bosse 7; 15. Huntingburg. Gary Roosevelt 6; 17. Elwood 5: 18. Michigan City, South Bend St. Joseph, Anderson, Scottsburg 1, .zzJzim New Government Os Ben-Gurion Okayed Prime Minister Os Israel Wins Okay - JERUSALEM, Israel W ~ Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion j who resigned last Tuesday in a quarrel with members of his fiveparty coalition, today took charge of a new government made up of the same widely divergent p,ar- ( ties, ;_J Ben-Gurion won approval of his new cabinet by a 77-33_ vote in parliament Tuesday night. But ' Tie failed to win full support from his coalition's two leftist members, the Ahdut Avoda and Ma‘pam "parties. . ■ The opposition *of these two .parties led to the > resignation bf his previous government. They made public Ben-Gurion’s seeret plan to send an emissary -to West Germany to negotiate arms purchases. Mapam spokesman Jacob Hazan said.his party would stay-in the new coalition only so long as the prime minister refrained from trying to carry out in secret . .foreign policy moves which M;ipam opposed. The Ahdut Avoda's Yigal Alon warned that his party would continue to disagree with the religious grbupsV’in the coalition. Florida is the nation's fastest expanding cattle state. .-Ranchers often feed oranges and grapefruit . or wastes foun canning faetayies when grass is poor during winter months. • , n ~ ** tat. F L—"Unruly gallery, huh?” « '■ 1 ■ 4J o ' ■' "/ ' • ■ ' - , - ® - .

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA

-REVIEWOF THE YEAR-By Alan Maver-| —A. C d*' \ 7f\\ mJ- \ ' ( 'j 17/ I i % w w\ ’ fyl L \ f&OTSON \ 1 * ' VA ■ ? .71 V \7 •' /j \r — 'ibs, y z / l .< • 7 • ■■ »*« zz - F1 ■ I w' AMER/CAM LEAGUE /LAT/OAAL /At , , &AAIE. 6-52 A —sA - jr “ ALOVSA ’X LLWHOAP,W/MBLEPOfI c>> AQR JACRSOAL M f)>xtrthi*trd hn Kbtn JPAnltirt*

Kansas Handed ) i Second Defeat Without Star ; By FRED DOWN United Press Sports Writer Wilt Chamberlain's .groin injury is- supposed to be minor but it has his Kansas . teammates hurtin' all j over today for the second time in ! a week. . The Jayhhwks suffered their' ’ second straight defeat since the' . great seven-foot star was sidelined' ’ i when they bowed to OHaßetaS, * ,{64-62,. Tuesday night. The loss hurt Z Kansas' even more than last *' Thursaav’s 52-50 setbaclcby,Qkla- ’ hcr..a State because it was the ■lopener of , its Big Eight schedule: 1 I But? orft-e again, a defeat derri 6 ’ onstrated graphically just how ■ much Chamberlain does mean to ' Kansas. The figures tell the .story. Wilt v scored 30 points when Kansas beat . Oklahoma State. 63-56, Dec. ZWithout Wilt. Kansas bowed to th<f -same tcarrr by And, op Dec. 262 Chabnberiain poilreTh 41 points and grabbed -rgfr-Wbounds as Kansas. --whipped Oklahoma. 68-50. ; North Carolina’s third-ranked {Tarheels whipped William and Mary, 79-63/and Texas Tech beat ! Texas Christian in a key Southiwest Conference game, 83-70, ip {other top games Tuesday night. Rice's towering Owls made good 'on seven free throws in the last, i three minutes to edge out Southern Methodist. 78-74, in another ■ Southwest Conference ■ game at Houston. Tex. ~ { In other games, St. John's of New York remained unbeaten with j an- 87-64 triumph over Rhode Isi land .St. Peter's of New Jersey ' downed St.' Francis orNew’Ybrir 1 92-66. Richmond edged out The : Citidel 54-50 Virginia beat Vi r I ginia Tech. 80-65. LaSalle defeated ■(Muhlenberg. 67-61, and Texas ■{A&M scored a 71-50 victory over |Texas University. 1 Annual Senior Bowl t Grid Game Saturday S MOBILE, Ala. HP) — The North and South squads today resumed . workouts in brisk weather for the ,! ninth annual Senior Bowl footbaJl ; game here Saturday. I North Coach Joe Kuharick of t ilhe Washington Redskins said his . starting backfield would be quarterback Jim Ninowski Os Michigan State, his teammate Wqlt .{Kowalczyk and Mike Sommer of . George Washington at the half--back spots, and Ray Nitschke of Illinois at fullback. South Coach Paul Brown of the Cleveland Brown? countered with George Walker of Arkansas at quarterback. Dick Christy- of North Carolina State and Phil I King of Vanderbilt at halfbacks, and Jimmy Taylor .of LSU at fullback. r " ■ -"X »One County Accident Reported By Sheriff One accident was investigated by the sheiff’s department at 1:20 p.m. Tuesday when truck, by Hennan L. Patterson 52. of Berne, struck a bridge abutment, knocking 12 feet of the concrete into the Wabash river. Patterson, making a right turn onto the Linn Grove bridge off county road 38, slid into, the south abutment, sending the' concrete and railing crashing into the water below. Damage was estimated at $125 to the grain truck. State trooper Kwasneski and Deputy Charles Arnold investigated the accident.

Smith Is Signed To White Sox Contract By .UNITED PRESS Al Smith, who was booed out of Cleveland, signed his 1958 contract with the Chicago White Sox Tuesday. The versatile performer, once described as Cleveland's one-man gang, hit only .247 for the Indians last year and was the vic- ! tirn of continual heckling from j the Tribe fans. The situation got i so bad that. Smith finally asked to be traded. Smith, who. ..came to the White Sox along with pitcher Early . Wynn in exchange for outfiejder Minnie Minoso and utility infield- : er Fred Hatfield, a 284 batting average in his four seasons Oniy 29. he hadfeptayed as many as five different positions in a single year, and claims that this has robbed him of his effectiveness. Other major league signings Tuesday included pitcher Ed Roebuck of the Los Angeles Dodgers and catcher Cal Neeman, pitcher) Dave Hillman and Glen Hobje and outfielder Lee Walls, all of the Chicago Cubs. > Roebuck, used only in relief, had a 7-1 record and a 2.72 earned run average last year. Neeman. playing-Jiis first season in the majors, batted .255 last season while Walls hit a disappoint ing .237. Approve Plans For Blue Creek Bridge The state highway department and the bureau of public roads have approved the' preliminary plans tor a new reinforced concrete bridge to be erected over Blue Creek. ~~ The hew ~ bridge - wilt "be located three miles north of state road 118 and will be approximately 26 feet wide. Construction of the bridge, which is a federal aid ptopect, will be let under contract in the near future to the lowest bidder. State Trooper Will Speak To Boy Scouts Gene Rash, an officer of the Indiana state police, will address the American Legion Scout troop 63 Thursday at 7 p.m. in tjie scout room of the Youth and Community Center. Rash will speak on safety problems and procedures, and will distribute information pamphlets during the evening. All scouts are urged to attend. Plans will also be discussed for the scout basketball game in the Lincoln school-gym Jan. 14. Arrangements, .will be made for an all-night campout in the Boy Scout cabin at/Hanna-Nuttman park Fri- ’ day. Jah: 24. - ' " If you have something to sell or rooms for .rent,---rtey. a • Democrat Waht Ad— they bring results.

- ■■ ■■■ill " ">■ "■ h »" *" ■■■"■ ■!»■—... .■miliar. I. * i —.i... .11 _ AA—- . ..... ■ - L . .. ~. .. ... ..... * ... - °* A "* ’ ' ByMOrrooi* — ~ JT- »VOtV•'REMEMBER PARONUU *AH I > -CASH TH’ LAST TIME WE REAP ABOUT YOUR . n » MCICI £ TANGLED WITH HIM... BEs3EF9 «r\7£EV CANTEEN! WELLS.' > THROW!KI’ ALL THAT \ GREAT IDEA, WHUT YUH X MOMEY ALL OVER — -I- SOM ?GPFAT I WANT WITH AND BUY IN’ UP > MM fr" wOk

Jeffersonville Given Scare By Mikheil Team I INDIANAPOLIS (UP)—Powerful ! Jeffersonville and classy Terre Haute Garfield remained among the dwindling ranks of Indiana’s [major unbeaten high school bas- ! ketball teams Tuesday night- but Jeff ’got a good scare from unheralded Mitchell. - The Red Devils, ranked 3rd in the United Press coaches' poll, .held off a determined drive by Mitchell to down the game Blue Jackets, 69-67, for their 10th in a row. Garfield picked up its eighth win without a loss by disposing of Western Confereruje rival Terre Haute Gerstmeye” 66-54 The Garfield-Gerstmeyer game turned into a personal scoring duel between Garfield’s Terry Dischingen and Charlie* Hall, the only returning starter from last year’s state tourney finalists. Dischingen outsconed his nival centen, 31-29, and each took down 23 rebounds. Garfidld, ranked No. 4, held a 46-28 third-quarter lead and coasted the rest of the way. In the only other game involving a ranked team, 18th-rated South Bend St. Joseph tripped host Hammond Noll, 43-41, as I ramified in a rebound with 15 seconds remaining. St. Joe. which an XVI record, had a comfortable 29-17 halftime lead. In Southern Conference action, ; forward Jack Gander hit 22 points Ito lead Evansville Central to a 63-56 decision over city’ foe Memorial and Huntingburg clipped Jasper, 62-40, behind the 23-point production of Allen Nass. Upstate games saw Roland Davis toss in 28 as South. Bend Adams handed East Chicago Roosevelt its second loss in nine games, 85-71; Calumet roll over Gar.v Wirt, 50-29; and Hammond Morton crush Crown Point, 58-33. Porter Merriwether remained hot as he hit for 2 poin7ts to pac Evansville Lincoln" toa 69-52 lacing of city rival Reitz; Linton blasted-: Bicknell. 73-43; aqd Alexandria used balanced scoring to coast by Pendleton, 60-47, for its ninth straight since an opening loss to 17th-ranked Elwood Greensburg dropped its 12th in a row to Connersville, 69-52, in South Central Conference play. Max Brandley garnered 21 for the winners. Seymour dumped SCC foe Rushville 62-59. as forward Jim Glbver hit 28 points. It was the Liops' first loss in loop play. Bloomington had little trouble with cross-town foe University, 73-34. and little Concord Twp. showed up ‘big city’’ rival Goshen, 57-36. Bowlina Scores Womens League ■ W L PtS ' Two Brothers — 50% 3% 68% Hoagland Lumber— 39 15 53 Adams Cty. Trailer 35 19 48 Aspy Standard Serv. 33 21 45 7 Up - 32% 21% 44% Harmans Market „33 21 44 Mansfield 32 22 43 Three Kings Tavern 21 23 41 Brecht Jewelry 31 23 39% Citizens Telephone 27 27 36 Alps Brau 24 ,30 33 Kent Realty 26 28 33 Blackwells 24 30 32 Arnold Lumber 23 31 30 Treons —— 21% 32% 27% Drewrys 15 •39 19 Adams Theater .... 13 41 18 Krick- Tyndall .... 13% 40% 16% Lynch Box 11 43 13 High team series: Two Brothers 2350, Hoagland Lumber 2106,’Three Kings Tavern 2098, Adams County Trailer 2063, Aspy Standard Service 2027. 500 series; Alvina Trosin 518 (163-163-192*. High single game: Mary Scheuman 202, Isbael Bowwan 191, Alice Gage 182, Gladys Reynolds 182, Marty Mies 178, Opal Myers 178, Evelyn Getting 177, Violet Smith 177, Susan Schnepp 170. Trade in a good town — Decatur MASONIC SQUARE DANCE Saturday Night January 11th 8:30 P. M. — At ~ Masonic Hall - — — -

Bing Crosby Meet To Open Thursday PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (UP)— You can’t turn around without bumping into a golfer on the Monterey Peninsula today with the annual $50,000 Bing Crosby Pro-Ama-teur affair scheduled for the first teeoff Thursday morning. The top names in the pro circuit as well as stars of the entertainment world have moved into all the nearby hotels and guest houses |n preparation for what has become one of the most colorful tournaments in the yearly golfing trials. Frank Stranahan will be out to make it two in a row off his recent victory in the Los Angeles Open. But the millionaire golfer probably has as much use for more prize money as a sportswriter has for another deadline. As the Crosby clambake is a charity affair many of the biggest names in the entertainment and sports world — weekend hackers and fair-to-middlin' swingers included — turn out for the tournament And of course Der Bingle and his perennial sidekick, Bob Hope, will be out on the course cutting up touches to the delight of the gallery. Tuesday 101 hopefuls played a qualifying round over the Pebble Beach course with 28 of them posting scores low enough to get into the tournament. Bill Booe, a p?b from Bridgeport, Conp., who made only SIOOO in prize money last year, led the qualifiers with a 31-38-69. Hockey Results International League Fort Wayne 6, Toledo 1. Pro Basketball , Cincinnati 114, Detroit 99. St. Louis 114", New York 112. Trade in a good town — Decatur . v.

— State Bank No. 731 Published in accordance with the call made by the Federal Reserve Bank of this district pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Reserve Act and a call made by the Department of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana." REPORT O£ CONDITION OF• • — The First State Bank of Decatur of Decatur, in the State of Indiana, at the close of business — on December 31, 1957. _ • ASSETS Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve balances, and cash items-in--process' of cotlertiwi — United States Government obligations, direct and guaranteed ... 7,000.289.98 Obligations of States and political subdivisions .... 765,704,90 Other bonds, notes, and debentures 95 000 00 Corporate stocks (including $13,500.00 stock of Federal Reserve Bank) 13,500.00 Loans and discounts (including $19.02 overdrafts* 5,013,512 39 Bank premises owned $ 5,700.00 Furniture and Fixtures $23,842.18 29 542 18 Other assets 10.266.48 TOT.AL ASSETS 1. .. x $15,772.911.64 ■ LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, . and cor- ! porations .....1...... $5,432,097 89 lime deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations . 7,471.175.85 Deposits of United States Government (including postal sayings) ... 171,941.28 Deposits of States and political subdivisions 1,391.572 70 s^P°_ si l? _ of _ ; fa anks ----------- 133,871.16 Other deposits 'certified and - officers' checks, etc.'. 37.931 62 TOTAL DEPOSITS $14,638,590.50 Otfeer liabilities 92,961.22 > TOTAL LIABILITIES $14,731 55L72 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Capital* $400,000.00 Surplus ... .... 250,000.(X) Undivided profits 1....... 391,359.92 Reserves (and retirement account for preferred capital) none TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS $1,041,35992 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS $15,772,911 64 ’lncludes proceeds of $ none of debentures sold to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, $150,000.00 of debentures sold to local interests which debentures are subordinated to the rights of creditors and depositors, and 2500 shares of common stock, par SIOO.OO per share. MEMOR A ND A Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for other purposes .... $493,000.00 (a) Included in Loans and Discounts are LOANS TO AFFILIATED COMPANIES ... none ( b> Included in Other Bonds, Notes, Debentures and Corporate Stocks are OBLIGATIONS OF AFFILIATED COMPANIES none (c) First-lien trust funds.■ none (a) Loans as shown above are after deduction of reserves of 111,977 98 s lb) Securities as shown above are after deduction of reserves of £.... A ,_ none I, H. H. Krueckeberg, Cashier, of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, and that it fully and correctly represents the true state of the several matters herein contained and set forth, to the best of my knowledge and belief. Correct—Attest; H. H. KRUECKEBERG T. F. Graliker, E. W. Busche, Earl C. Fuhrman, i ■_ — ■■■ _ ' - ' ———— : Directors State of Indiana, County of Adams, ss: Sworn to and subscribed before me this 7th day of January, 1958, and 1 hereby certify that I am not an officer or director of this bank.. —. I ’(SEAL7-="’ Tjatto’GzDaily, My commission expires December 22, 1959. v

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, IS|SB

H. 5. Basketball Terre Haute Garfield 66, Terre i Haute Gerstmeyer 54. Jeffersonville 69, Mitchell 67. Brownsburg 67, Indianapolis Wood 52.-;:““ Evansville Central 63, Evansville Memorial 56. Evansville Lincoln 69. Evansville Reitz 52. , South Bend Adams 85. East Chicago Roosevelt 71. South Bend St. Joseph’s' 43, Hammond Noll 41. Concord Twp. 57, Goshen 36. Alexandria 60, Pendleton 47. Huntingburg 62, Jasper 40. Seymour 62, Rushville 59. Connersville 69, Greensburg 52. Brazil 64, Greencastle 62. College Basketball Ball State 74, Eastern Michigan 63. Wabash 78, DePauw 67. Moberly (Mo.) 91, Vincennes 85 DePaul 62, Creighton 56. Akron 81, Western Reserve 32. Oklahoma 64, Kansas 62. Texas A & M 71, Texas 50. Rice 78, SMU 74. Richmond 54, Citadel 50. North Carolina 79, William & Mary 63. San Francisco 65, Santa Clara 42. It's FUN to SQUARE I DANCE . 1 at the MOOSE EVERY FRIBAY NITE The Melody Rangers Playing This Week — MEMBERS ONLY — FLOOR SHOW and DANCE SATURDAY NITE