Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1958 — Page 7

PAGE SEVEN

Fort Wayne South Side Defeats Berne Bears To Retain Regional Crown

Fort Wayne’s Sopth Side Archers won their third consecutive regional title Saturday rflght, defeating a band of game but far out-sized Berne Bears, 68-51, in the championship game at the Fort Wayne coliseum. A The Bears, Adams Central sectional winners, moved into the final game by holding off the Howe Military Academy Cadets, 37-33, in the first afternoon game, after which South advanced by whipping the Fremont Eagles, 61-48. South, the top-ranked team in the state, and leading choice for state honors, will meet the Bluffton Tigers in the first semi-state game at 2 p.m. Saturday, also at Fort Wayne. The second tilt will match Elkhart and Kokomo, winners of their own regionals. Bluffton took the title at Marion, defeating Bryant in the afternoon, 57-46, and downing Marion in the finals, 58-44. Marion downed Huntington Twp. in the afternoon, 62-52. Close for Half The Berne Bears, under a terrific size handicap, stayed close to the Archers through the first half pf the championship game. Playing carefully and hitting well from out, the Bears were down by five points at the first quarter, 19-14, and by only four points. 28-24, at the half. But South’s superior size began to tell in the third period, and the Archers jumped to a 15-point advantage at the close of the quarter, 50-35, and stayed well in front the rest of the way. Rod Schwartz, tall Berne freshman center, suffered an ankle injury after three minutes of the second quarter of the afternoon game. dicT not get back into action in that tilt, and was not dressed for the championship contest. Seven-foot Mike McCoy paced the Archers in the final game with 22 points with Carl Stavreti adding 16 and Tom Bolyard 12. Gary Beaty as usual, led the Bears with 21 points, but Tony Yoder was the only other Bear in double figures. scoring 13. South Side hit 29 field goals in 62 attempts and Berne scored on 20 of 51. Afternoon Games . The Howe Cadets and the Bears, both more defense-minded than most prep quintets, locked in, a close, low-scoring game enef. ""“’x ' ’’*■ Quality Photo Finishings All Work Left Before 8:00 p. m. Monday Ready Wednesday - at 10 a. m. Holthouse Drug Co.

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Howe led early, scoring the first three points on a fielder by Bob Brownell and a free throw by Dave Hoyt. But Bryce Winteregg and Rod Schwartz hit to give the Bears a 4-3 lead after three minutes .of play, and Howe never regained the lead. Schwartz and Winteregg each hit again from the field and Bill Myers for Howe to leave Berne with an 8-5 margin at the end of the first quarter. The Bears held a 10-9 lead when Schwartz suffered his injury, but the Bears moved their margin to five points, 16-11, at the half. Only two fouls were called in the first half, both of them on Berne. The Cadets pulled within a single point .twice in the third quarter, but the Bears built their lead up to four points at the end of the period. 23-19, as Beaty, 'unable to find the range at all in the first half, came up with five points. The game’s tempo stepped up in the final period, with Howe finally pulling into a 27-27 tie with three minutes to play. But Beaty hit again from the field and Winteregg dropped in .two highly important free throws, and Berne again had a four-point lead with two minutes to play. Yoder's third two-pointer counteracted Hoyt's bucket and it was 33-29 Berne, with one minute to play. Beaty and Hoyt traded baskets and then, with 18 seconds to go, Jim Daily dropped in two free throws and Berne led by only two points. But Beaty, fouled with four seconds to go, canned two free throws and the Bears were home. Beaty topped all the scorers with 15 points, and Hoyt was the only other player in double figures, scoring 11. Neither team hit too well, Berne making good on 16 of 48 from the field, Howe 14 of 47. Only 17 fouls were called, eight on Berne and nine on the Cadets. South Side didn’t have top much trouble with the Fremont Eagles in the second afternoon game, the Arehers led at the first qua rtcr, 19-13, at the half, 30-19, and at the third period, 47-33. The Eagles led only Onoe. at 4-3. and had the score tied at 9-9; but the Archers th'en pulled away Fremont, however, produced the game's leading scorer as Bobby -Thomas, fine little guard, poured in 20 points. Only Rodney Wells offered much help, however, with 11 points. Fremon’t 6-9 center, Dan Kaufman, scored only four points, hitting his only fielder late in the fourth quarter. Mike McCoy scored 17 for the Archers, with Carl Stavreti hitting 14 and Tom 'Bolyard 10. South hit 24 of 68 field goal attempts. Fremont 18 of 67. Berne FG FT TP Stahly —1 0-1 2 Winteregg 3 2-3 8 Schwartz 2 0-0- 4 Beaty —6 3-5 15 Steury ....1 0-2 2 T. Yoder v - 3 0-0 6 Totals 16 5-11 37 • Howe FG FT TP Myers 2 0-4 4

Semi-State Pairings At Fort Wayne 1 Fort Wayne vs Bluffton. ; Elkhart vs Kokomo. At Evansville 1 Jeffersonville vs Princeton. ; Terre Haute Gerstmeyer vs 1 Springs Valley. At Indianapolis ’ Madison vs Anderson. Rushville vs Muncie Central. At Lafayette ■ Crawfordsville vs Lafeyette. ' East Chicago Washington vs North Judson. Collet basketball Indiana 75, Michigan State 72. Michigan 95, lowa 92. Northwestern 88, Illinois 72. Kansas 61, Kansas State 44. Cincinnati 80, Xavier (O.) 68. Bradley 88, Detroit 71. Oklahoma State 74, Wichita 50. LaSalle 75, Villanova 64. ' Syracuse 75, Connecticut 70. St. Louis 83, Houston 76. ACC Tourney Maryland 86, North Carolina 74 (final). SC Tourney West Virginia 74, William & Mary 58 (final). NCAA College Regionals Final Scores At Waltham, Mass. St. Michael’s (Vt.) 97, Adelphia 58. At New York American U. 72, Wagner 65. At Springfield, Mo. Southwest Missouri St. 73, Regis 65. At Vermillion, S. D. South Dakota U. 162, Knox 51. ~ At Grambling, La. Grambling 88, North Carolina A&T 73. — At Santa Ana, Calif Chapman 52, Fresno State 49. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. Indiana 10 4 .714 Michigan State .. 9 5 643 Purdue 9 5 .643 Ohio State ’ 8 6 .571 Northwestern 9 6 .571 lowa .. 77 .500 Michigan 6 8 .429 Illinois ... 5 9 .357 Minnesota 5 9 .357 Wisconsin 3 11 .214 Hoyt ------5 1-1 11 Brownell 3 0-0 6 Bromley2 2-2 6 Daily..--—— -1 2-2 4 Sill ----- 0 0-0 0 Ludwig 1 0-1 2 Totals 15 5-10 33 Score by quarters: — Berne 8 16 23 37 Howe 5 11 19 33 Officials: Small, Collins. South Side FG FT TP Bolyard 4 2-5 10 Howe ——— 2 4-5 8 McCoy 7 3-8 17 R. Miller 4 0-0 8 Stavreti 5 4-4 14 Meyer 2 0-0 4 L. Miller— 0 0-1 0 Vachon 0 0-10 Demetre 0 0-0 0 Simmons 0 0 0-0 0 Totals ....: 24 13-24 61 Fremont FG FT TP Wells —- 5 1-1 11 Knotek 0 0-1 1 Kaufman 1 4-5 6 Thomas 8 4-4 20 Cleckncr2 0-2 4 Patterson ?. 1 0-2 2 Bush —1 2-2 4 Barryo ~0-0 0 Lantz-L.2—- 0 0-1 0 Neutz 0 0-0 0 Totals 18 12-18 48 Score by quarters: South Side 19 30 47 61 Fremont _.1._... 13 19 33 48 Officials: McNaught, Demark. FINAL GAME South Side « FG FT TP Howe ..-- 1 6-7 8 Bolyard 5 2-6 12 j McCoyll 0-3 22 : Stavreti 8 0-2 16 R, Miller _.LO 0-0 0 VaChono 04) 0 L. Miller 0 0-0 0 Meyer 3 0-0 6 Demetre ------.. 1 2-2 4 Simmons,... 0 0-0 0 TotaLs 29 10-20 68 Berne FG FT TP Stahly 2 1-3 5 T. Yoder - 5 3-6 13 Winteregg ......p 1 2-3 4 feeaty 9 3-6 21 Steury..3 0-0 6 A. Yoder 0 0-0 0 Sprunger 0 0-0' 0 Lautzenheiser .10 0-0 0 Collier-.-.-— 0 2-2 2 Klopfenstein 0 0-0 0 Totals - 20 11-20 51 Score by quarters: i South Side .. —. 19 28 50 68 Berne 14 24 35 51 ■ Officials: Small, McNaught.

fttt DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DfcCATUR, IMDfAMA

New Men Aid World Champs In Win Sunday By FRED DOWN United Press Sports Writer That new talent the Milwaukee Braves have been shouting about all winter seems capable today of making the world champions tougher than everThe Braves chalked up their first victory of the Grapefruit League season when they beat the Detroit Tigers, 4-3, Sunday and old pro Warren Spahn was the only veteran who made a significant contribution. Instead, the headlines went to John De Merit, Earl Hersh and Bob Rush. De Merit, a $60,000 bonus outfielder who had only 29 official at-bats last season, delivered a two-run seventh-inning triple that turned out to be the game-winning blow. Hersh, rookie first baseman up from Wichita, cracked a 375foot homer and Rush, acquired in the big winter trade with the Chicago Cubs, turned in three scoreless innings in his debut. Lew Burdette Sunday rejected the Braves’ sixth salary offer after a long conference with General Manager John Quinn. Two in a Row The St. Louis Cardinals, meanwhile, made it twd in a row over the New .York Yankees, 2-1, behind the seven-hit pitching of Frank Barnes, Tom Flanigan and Billy Muffett. Catcher Hobie Landrith’s ninth-inning single knocked in the winning run for the Cardinals, who limited the Yankees to one run and 10 hts in their twogame weekend series. The Yankees, however, gained some consolidation when Deron Johnson, the summa cum laude of Casey Stengel’s speedup school this spring, mashed a pair of 400foot doubles. Johnson played left i field — where he is a long-shot candidate to open the American League season for the Yankees. San Francisco still boasted an unbeaten major league baseball history after the Giants whipped the Cleveland Indians. 5-1, for the second straight day. A double by Ray Jablonski and a homer by Daryl Spencer were the big blows for the Giants who had the Indians shut out until Gene Woodling homered off 40-year old Marv Grissom in the ninth. Don Hoak's two sacrifice flies and double sparked the Cincinnati Redlegs to a 5-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox despite tworun homers by Jim Rivera and Earl Battey George Crowe also homered for the Redlegs. Cubs Win Chuck Tanner walloped a grand slam homer off rookie Charley Beamon to lift the Chicago Cubs to a 5-4 decision over the Baltimore Orioles. Dick Drott, rookie strikeout sensation in 1957, yield, ed two runs in his three-inning assignment for the Cubs while Taylor Phillips, left-hander obtained from the Braves this winter. threw blanks for his three frames. The Los Angeles Dodgers ’ entered the victory column — 24 hours after San Francisco showed ’em how it’s done —with an 11inning. 5-4 decision over the Philadelphia Phillies. Felipe Montemayor, ex-Pittsburgh flop, singled home the winning run giving him five hits n eight tries this sprng. ' Don Newcombe started for the Dodgers and yelded one run and three hits in three innings. Johnny Podres hurled three scoreless frames. Decatur Golf Course Pro Shop Now Open The pro shop at the Decatur golf course is again open, Luke Majorki. pro manager, said today, for golfing enthusiasts interested in golfing merchandise or season tickets. 1 The golf course is too wet to be played as yet, he stated. Tha 1 course has thawed- out, but several weeks of drying weather will be necessary before it can be played. A couple of Decatur golfers played the course while frozen once a ' month all winter long. Majorki added. \ ' Githens And Agler i Lead Mies Doubles • ! Bob Githens and Otto Agler. of i Wren, Ohio, have taken over the I lead in the Mies doubles tourna- > ment. now in progress at Mies Rc- ) creation. The two bowlers, who > bowl in the Major league with the I State Gardens team, captured the I lead by rolling a fine 1740 scries . in competition a: the local alj leys Sunday afternoon. They were credited with a 230 handicap for • the scries of four games across > eight alleys. i Agler led the two by firing a hot 890 actual, with games of 253- , 204-210 and 223. Now in second ’ place in the tournament is the dou- ■ bles team of McEawen and Seb- } liechty, of Fort Recovery. Ohio, ’ who have a 1730 for the four game ■ series. Two more week-ends remain in I the annual tournament, with several openings still available on J each of the remaining days. The I tournamept will end after the 9:30 I shift March 23.

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Regional Scores

Columbus Decatur Central 60, North Vernon 43.„. Madison 44, Shelbyville 40 Madison 63, Decatur Central 58. East Chicago Valparaiso 67, Gary Froebel 52 East Chicago Washington 71, Michigan City 69 East Chicago Washington 80, Valparaiso 69. Elkhart South Bend Adams 52, Etna Green 48 Elkhart 68, Lapaz 47 Elkhart 58, South Bend Adams 57. Evansville Dale 72, Newburgh 53 Princeton 57, Evansville Central 46 - Princeton 55, Dale 53. Fort Wayne Berne 37, Howe Military 33 Fort Wayne South 61, Fremont ,48 ■- Fbrt Wayne South 68, Berne 51. GreencasUe -i Crawfordsville 70, Rockville 38 Attica 56, Bainbridge 52 Crawfordsville 85, Attica 41. Huntingburg Vincennes 65, ’Washington 49 Springs Valley 63, Dugger 54 - Springs Valley 62, Vincennes 59 (overtime). Indianapolis Indianapolis Attucks 67, Charlottesville 60

Congratulations to the Berne Bears and Coach Bill Anderson for their splendid showing in the regional tourney at Fort Wayne Saturday. The Bears played a steady, careI ful game in regional opener to climate the Howe Military Academy Cadets, who had been favored on their season mark of 20 victories and only four defeats, as compared to Berne’s 11-11 record. And the Bears played the last 21 minutes of that game without Rod Schwartz, their fine wesnman center, who suffered a, severely injured left ankle in the second quarter and saw no more action in the afternoon and none at night. —-oOo—- — the final Saturday night, it was simply a case of being far out-sized. It’s pretty rough with only one boy over six feet to combat a 7-foot giant, not-to mention 6-5 and 6-4 forwards. In Gary Beaty, the Bears had one of the tourney’s outstanding stars. The senior guard, after miserable shooting luck in the first half when he failed to score a point, came back in the second half to pot 15

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Anderson 65,.Am0 54 Anderson 51, Indianapolis Attacks 50. ■■ Jeffersonville Seymour 65, New Albany 59 Jeffersonville 77, Bedford 63 Jeffersonville 85, Seymour 67. Kokomo Kokomo 64, Noblesville 54 (overtime). Wabash 92, Peru 52 Kokomo 73, Wabash 58. Lafayette Rossville 57, Zionsville 52 Lafayette 46, Otterbein 33 Lafayette 50,2 Rossville 48. Logansport North Judson 38, Rensselaer 30 Monticello 63, Royal Center 58 North Judson 61, Monticello 44. Marion . ——— — Bluffton 57, Bryant 46 Marion 62, Huntington Twp. 52 Bluffton 58, Marion 44. Martinsville Terre Haute Gerstmeyer 98, I Linton 61 Bloomington 55, Staunton 53 Terre Haute Gerstmeyer 66, Bloomington 50. Muncie Muncie Central 63, Parker 41 Richmond 67, Knightstown 53 Muncie Central 70, Richmond 60. Rushville Rushville 55, Brooksville ’4B Vevay 71, Versailles 56 Rushville 48, Vevay 43.

1 points and spark the Bears to victory over the Cadets. And at night, Beaty dropped in 21 points against those big Archers. The Bears will lose seven of their 12-man tourney squad by graduation, including four regulars. Beaty, Bred Stahly, Bryce ' Winteregg and Tom Steury. Others I lost are the Yoder boys, Tony and Alan, and Erwin Kuntz. But Schwartz will be back next season, also Phil Sprunger, Mike Collier, Don Lautzenheiser and Dhve Klopfenstein. Berne's second team had an outstanding season, in addition to winning the county reserve tourrey, and its junior high team is undefeated in 43 straight games. Those Bears may be might hard to handjy in the coming years. Saturday's regionals came up with the usual suprises. The Bluffton Tigers, with a fine and big front line, confounded the experts by winning the Marion regional; Springs Valley, only undefeated team still in the running, copped the Huntingburg title; Anderson edged Crispus Attucks at Inianapolis; Lafayette barely survived its final game against Rossville. With the elimination of the Berne Bears, high school basketball is at end for Adams coun- ‘ ty. And so. Basketbawl sign off until next November. We wish to thank the coaches, school officials and players fans for their fine cooperation through the past many seasons, and express our hopes for a better season for all next ■ time around. So long!

Attacks Loses ; To Anderson In : Regional Final - INDIANAPOLIS (UP) — The j three-year monopoly of Indianapo- ( lis Attacks and South Bend Central in the Indiana high school , basketball tourney was broken today and the two remaining 1957 ( finalists share underdog roles in this week’s crucial semi-state ses- < sions. Step by step, season-long predictions of a “wide open" finish for the 48th annual state title appear to materialize. The possibility of a new "Fieldhouse Foursome” here March 22 gained momentum. Attacks, runner-up to' South Bend last year and “king” the two previous times, was bumped in a drama-packed upset thriller here Saturday night by Anderson, 51-50. Southpaw Norm Delph pitched two freethrows with 38 seconds left to advance the three-time , state champs into the “Sweet 16” for the first time since 1948. It 1 also was the first time in four regional m ee t in g s that they whipped Attacks, which owned an 11-game regional tourney winning ! streak and ranked eighth in the ' state in the United Press coaches 1 poll. The South Benders gave up in ' the sectionals. Jeffersonville, No. 6, won its ' own regional with an 85-67 tri- ’ umph over Seymour and will be j favored in the Evansvillesemi- ■ state- The Red Devils haven’t : made the finals since 1935. Kokomo Leads Statistics Terre Haute Gerstmeyer, easy winner at Martinsville and in the 1 finals the past two years, must 1 also take the southern route. Lafayette, the northwest repre- 1 senative in the 1957 finals, is overshadowed this time by East Chicago Washington, No. 7 in the 1 state and winner of it straight. The Calumet powerhouse ousted dangerous Michigan City in the afternoon at East Chicago, 71-69, then poured it on Valparaiso, 80-69. Lafayette, a perennial tourney power, was pressed by Rossville and it took a basket by Davt. ) Price with a minute to go to hammer out a 50-48 victory. Kokomo, No. 4 and the highest scoring team for the second straight week, needed an overtime to hurdle Noblesville, 64-54. Jimmy Rayl’s four baskets in the extra session turned the trick. Wabash fell easier in the finale, 73-58. And top-ranking Fort Wayne South breezed through its sectional with ease to set up a possible show-down clash with Kokomo in Saturday's semi-state title round at Fort Wayne. Kokomo, which netted a record 94.5 points per game in the sectionals, slipped to an average of 85 8 in six games—still good enough to lead the 16 survivors. Jeffersonville averaged 85 in five games, Gerstmeyer 75.6. 1 One Unbeaten Left Unbeaten Springs Valley and North Judson: became the last “peoples choice" hopefuls. Springs Valley, also the only first-time regional winner, won at Huntingburg with a 62-59 victory over Vincennes, the only other overtime session of the day to run its skein to 23. Etna Green and Brookville, the other perfect outfits who had won 50 games between them, were beaten at Elkhart and Rushville, ■ respectively, and Lafayette took ■ out once-defeated Otterbein in the afternoon round. North Judson avenged a regui lar-season loss to spill Monticello ■ at Logansport, 61-44, to boost.its ■ record to 22-3. 1 Other winners were Madison at Columbus. Elkhart, Princeton at , fcvansville, Crawfords vil 1 e at Greencastle, Bluffton at Marion, Muncie Central and Rushville. Kokomo also continued as the,

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most lop-sided winner, beating its opposition by an average of 33 points. North Judson copped defensive honors, holding five teams to an average of 38 points. Anderson advanced by the narrowest margin, 6.6 points a game. Princeton beat Dale 55-53 on Paul Cloln’s last-second tip-in-Steve Relm hit for Elkhart with 11 seconds left for a 58-57 win over South Bend Adame to avenge another loss. Surprise winner Bluffton whipped host Marion with a control game, 58-44. t Only four regional champions repeated—South, Muncie, Gerstmeyer and Lafayette. And the list of former state titlists left was ut to six—Muncie, Anderson, South, Crawfordsville, Lafayette, md Madison.— Indiana Beats Spartans For Big Ten Title CHICAGO (UP)—lndiana’s Big Ten basketball champs opened practice today with an aim of winning their second national cage title in eight years. The Hoosiers won the right to represent the Big Ten in Friday’s NCAA regional finals at Lexington, Ky., by beating Michigan State, 75-72, for the conference crown. The title was the third for veteran coach Branch McCracken’s teams, not to mention a share of the prize last year. McCracken's 1953 quintet defeated Louisiana State for the eastern NCAA championship and then trimmed Kansas, 69-68, for the national bauble. McCracken, in . Chicago for a meeting, took his team’s new conference honor matter-of-factly. •Tve never put a team on the nodi' that I didn't think could win,’’ he said. “The boys who went against Michigan State were sure they couldn’t lose.” McCracken had a word of praise for the Spartans who staged a 16point rally in the second half, but he said his Hoosiers had “too much desire” to win- , Bob Wilkinson, a sophomore guard, stowed away the triumph in the final minutes by sinking two free throws after a Spartan surge chipped away a comfortable Hoosier lead. Wilkinson's charity shots boosted the Hoosier lead to 74-70 with little more than a minute left. He sank a third one after the Spartans hit for a basket to produce the final score. The victory was the seventh for the Hoosiers in their last eight league games and left them with a closing record of IM. The Spartans wound up in a second place tie with Purdue, each with 9-5 marks for the campaign. The Spartans held Archie Dees, / the league's scoring champ for the second straight season, to only 14 points, but the Hoosiers’ towering center still finished with 362 points and a 25.2 average for 14 conference games. 8 Two league records were broken in the contest. Spartan center Johnny Green put a new one in the books for field goal accuracy in a season, by hitting on 107 of 199 shots for a .537 percentage, and Hoosier guard Sam Gee set a new mark by sinking 46 of 50 free throw shots—a .920 average. In other games on Saturday's closing round, Joe Ruklick scored 40 points in pacing Northwestern to an 87-72 win over Illinois for a final fourth place tie with Ohio State, and Michigan topped lowa, 95-92, to wind up in seventh place. Pro Basketbail Saturday’s Scores Boston 108, Detroit 103. Sunday’s Scores Minneapolis 107, St. Louis 99. Cincinnati 17, Boston 100700. I Syracuse 111, Detroit 900. 0 . New York 123, Philadelphia 81.