Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 5 January 1959 — Page 7
MONDAY), JANUARY S> Hit
Yellow Jackets Defeat Favored Bluffton, Win Tourney, Championship
The Decatrtr YeUow Jackets retained their holiday tourney crown Saturday night by defeating the Bluffton Tigers by a score of 68-57 in the championship game at the Bluffton gym. The Decatur quintet, picked as the underdog, entered the tourney with the poorest record of any of the four schools. By playing their two .best games of the season, both defensively and offensively, the Decatur five managed to retain their title from 1958. -'£3. . The Jackets won their chance at the 1959 title by defeating the highly favored Portland Panthers Friday night by a score of 63-49 to win their first round in the tourney play-off. Bluffton defeated Tipton in the second game by a score of 73-58, pairing the two rivals for the championship game. Jackets vs Tigers Although threatened many times throughout the game, the Jackets were never headed during any part of the game. Bob Shraluka started the scoring for Decatur by dropping in one from under with less than 10 seconds of the game under progress? • W-aSam-llKy Daniels connected for Decatur and the Jackets' led 4-0 with less than a minute gone. Wasson scored Bluffton’s first field goal after being h’eld scoreless for nearly three minutes. An exchange of baskets from both dubs with 1:52 remaining gave Decaturs-10-8 lead. Shraluka hit from' ptider, Terry Holtsberry connected* with two charity tosses, and Daniels hit a one-hand-er to give the Decatur quintet a 16-8 lead at the end of the first stanza.- ■—.. .. - ADuring the first half of the second quarter, Decatur had scored only four points, while the Tigers scored eight. Bill Bischoff connected for Decatur to start the Jackets on an 11-point drive during the last four minutes of play. Daniels dropped in a two-pointer, as did Wasson for Bluffton. Shraluka hit two charity tosses, and Daniels hit again with a one hander to give Decatur a 29-20 lead with 2:09 remaining. Daniels hit on a shot from the circle and Grove hit two foul shots for Bluffton to end out the quarter. Decatur led at half time, 31-24. Decatur oatae back aftej* the breather still full of determination in warning the 1959 title. Shraluka hit with a hook shot and Collins hit a 20-footer for Bluffton with less than a minute gone. Bluffton had cut the Decatur lead to five with 5:07 remaining. Holtsberry and Purkhiser exchanged baskets, Daniels hit two charity tosses and Steve Dellinger one with 2:26 to go in the third stanza, giving the Decatur five a 41-32 lead. After Shraluka and Bischoff each connected on field goals, Purkhiser hit a onehander and the Jackets led 45-36. Shraluka hit a lay up with 36 seconds to go to round out the third stanza and give Decatur an 11-point lead at 47-36. Both clubs finished the final eight minutes of play by each scoring 21 points. Jim Reidenbach and Shraluka hit on charity shots to boost the Jackets lead to 56-40. Bluffton cut the Decatur lead to 57-48 with 2:33 remaining. Bischoff connected. with 1:54 left, and Reidenbach and Wasson traded shots to give Decatur a 61-50 lead. With less than a minute left in the game, Bischoff hit two field goals, DanMs dropped in two charity tosses and Collins hit two field goals for Bluffton to finish out the scoring at 68-57. * f Shraluka and Daniels led both dubs in scoring with 23 and 21, respectively. Bischoff was the third Decatur player in double figures, scoring 10 points. Bluffton had two meh in double figures, Wasson with 16 and Collins with 14. * Decatux,bit 20 of 32 charity tosses, while the Tigers hit 17 of 23 attempts. The Jackets will play at the New Haven Bulldogs gym Friday night for an NEIC contest. Tipton vs Portland The Tipton Bluedevils defeated the Portland Panthers in the consolation game Saturday night by a Score of 72-70. After a close first stanza with Tipton on top by a few points, the uT Leaguer \ i 5 /''U-Vx * IQ! mJ i u 1 Tm sorry kbout that uppercut, Lefty. How about bringing back the boxing gloves?”
) Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams Tuesday.. Pleasant Mills at Willshire. Friday Hartford at Commodores. Yellow Jackets at New Haven. Geneva at Monmouth. Adams Central at Montpelier. Saturday Albany at Berne (2 p.m.) Pleasant Mills at Ohio City. - ■ ■ t - -■ ■■■ »■ ■ , ■ >■ r - two clubs were tied at the half 36-36. Tipton went into a six point lead at the end of the tiufd stanza,, 55-49, and came out on. tbp at the end of the final eight minutes of play 72-70. Tipton was called bn 23 fouls, while the Panthers were charged with 28. The Bluedevils connected on 24 of 41 attempts, and the Portland five hit 16 of 31 attempts. Tipton had four players in douI and Tom Renie, 12. Portland had five players in the double figure column: Pyle, 21; Williams, 13; Koch, 12; and Smith and Kile each with 11. Portland „ ■ FG FT TP Pyle 10 1 21 Smith ....- 5 1 11 Freyburgher 0 2 2 Koch 15 2 12 Williams 4 5 13 Shepperd—- 0 0 0 Kile——3 5 11 Bashia 0 0 0 Totals J......... 27 16 70 .■. z Tipton . ’ FG FT TP Tim Renie I.—.—— 0 0 0 Zaloudek 3 6 12 Hutto...l'— 9 3 21 Russell ‘0 0 0 Curnutt —....- 8 6 22 Pearce 135 Tom Renie 3 6 12 Totals 24 24 72 Officials: Boswell, Haley. Decatar FG FT TP Holtsberry 1 2 4 Shraluka J 8 7 23 Hill 0 0 0 Dellinger ..i... 5- 3 17 Daniels .....I. 6 9 21 Reidenbach ...1?.—... 1 1-3 Gayl-.0 0 0 Bischoff .. 5 0 10 Canales .*0 0 0 Totals 24 20 68 Bluffton Wasson —7 2 16 Collins ..,... x ......... 5 4 14 Stuck 3 2 8 Purkhiser ...2 4 8 Grovel 4 6 Durr 113 White 0 0 0 Flaningam .’..... 0 0. 0 Heller T J 10 2 Flowers 0 0 0 Totals 20 17 57 Officials: Boswell, Haley. Harold Nash Heads Limberlosl Club Harold Nash was elected president of the Limberlost archery and conservation club at the annual election meeting, held Sunday afternoon at the Decatur Youth and Community Center. Other officers are Larry Stevens, vice president; responding secretary; Mrs. Dwight Mrs. Harold Nash, reelected corWhitacre, reelected financial secretary; Al Huston, board member; Lester Mitchel, field captain, and Bob Wendel, assistant field captain. Jack Chilcote and David Mitchel were appointed to thetrophy committee. Two films, “The Art of Archery,” and "Kaibab Bucks,” from the Fred Bear Archery... Co., were shown by Junior Lake. Concluding the event, the mem* bers and families enjoyed a carryin buffet dinner. Members were reminded of the free archery school at-7 p.m. Thursday and at 9 a.m. Saturday. The public is invited to participate in the school. Announcement was also made of winners in the invitational indoor flint round shoot held recently. Winners were; first expert, Frank S>ardella; first bowman Larry Stevens; first archer, Lester Mitchel; intermediate first expert, David Mitchel; junior first expert, Dick Landrum. Pro Basketball SATURDAY’S RESULTS . New .York 108, Detroit 102, St. Louis 116, Boston 110. SUNDAY’S RESULTS New York 122, St., Louis 114. Boston 111, Cincinnati 108. Syracuse 118, Detroit 94. Minneapolis 111, Philadelphia 95.
Auburn Holds Nation's Top Winning Skein . By NORMAN MILLER United Press International Auburn’s crack basketball team owns the nation’s longest college winning streak, an honored place in the top 10, and a good chance to break Kentucky’s monopoly of the Southeastern Conference ' championship. But just as in football, Auburn has no place to go if it keeps winning, r Even if Coach Joel Eaves’ Tigers win the SEC tide, the same recruiting penalties which ruled but a football bowl berth would prevent them from playing in the NCAA basketball tournament, where they might prove their claim to national honors. With an 8-0 record for this season, Auburn seeks its 20th straight triumph tonight at home against Mississippi. Hie Tigers were the last team to beat Kentucky, winning 64-63 last Feb. 24. They meet this season at Lexington, Ky., Feb. 21. Cincinnati Faces Bradlqy Cincinnati, which held the No. 1 national rating last week before losing twice in the Dixie Classic at Raleigh, N.C., returns to the wars to play Bardley in the leading game on tonight’s schedule. The slate also includes two key Big Ten conference games pitting Michigan State at lowa and Northwestern at Michigan; an intersectional clash which finds St. Louis at Pittsburgh, and Furman at West Virginia. Kentucky, rated No. 2 last week by the United Press International Board of Coaches, ran its season record to 11-0 and its hdldover streak to 16 straight triumphs by beating Georgia Tech, 72-62, last Saturday. Coach Adolph Rupp’s defending NCAA champions play two SEC road games this Week, against Vanderbilt Tuesday night and against Louisiana State Saturdy. 1 ■ , ■ Auburn ranked Noc 10 last week, scored its 19th straight victory by beating Mississippi State, 97-66. The Tigers held Bailey Howell to 19 points after the maroons’ star had averaged around 30 points per game. The defeat was the first in nine games for Mississippi State. Form Holds True Form generally held up in last Saturday's games. Fourteen of the 20 top-ranked teams played and only three lost. The victims, in addition to Mississippi State, were Purdue and California. Purdue, 11th last week, lost at home to surprising Michigan, 82-75; California was upset by Oregon, 59-57. In other leading games, North Carolina defeated Notre Dame, 6954 in a nationally-televised meeting; St. John’s (N.Y.) beat Temple, 81-67, and St. Louis drubbed N.Y.U., 78 - 62, in a Madison Square Garden double-header; Xavier of Ohio walloped Louisville, 8666; Michigan State, ranked fourth last week, rallied to beat Indiana, 79-77; —Northwestern also came from behind to beat lowa, 80-77; Bradley beat Drake, 91-57, and Marquette defeated Detroit, 75-66. High School Basketball Milan 66, Aurora 47. Kokonio 66, Elkhart 65. East Chicago Washington; 86, Michigan City 66. Garrett Tourney Angola 67, Fremont 50. Garrett 57, Butler 56. Butler 87, Fremont 59 (consolation), \ \ Garrett 61, Angola 54. Columbia City Tourney \ Columbia City 66, Churubusco 60. Wolf Lake 60, Indianapolis Cathedral 59 (double overtime). Cathedral 63, Churubusco 54 (conSold tion ) « - r—-. V Columbia City 89, Wolf Lake 54 (final), Indianapolis Tourney Shortridge 45, Manual 43. Attacks 58, Tech 55. Shortridge 59, Attacks 45 (final). Rensselaer Tourney West Lafayette 58, Hammond Morton 53 (overtime). Rensselaer 64, Hammond Tech 49. Hammond Tech 62, Ha rum ond Morton 61 (consolation). , West -Lafayette 50, Rensselaer 45 (final). ' j Crawfordsville Tourney =*' Crawfordsville 49, Greenfield 48. Bloomington 69, Rossville 63. Rossville 82, Greenfield 39 (consolation). . • ' Crawfordsville 43, Bloomington 36 (final). —-- 1 , Columbus Tourney Columbus 67, Franklin 66. 3 - Seymour 79, Martinsville 76. , Franklin 76, Martinsville 59. Seymour 54, Columbus 53 (final.) Evansville Tourney North 52, Memorial 49. Mater Dei 62J, Lincoln 51. Memorial 71. Lincoln 47. - — Mater Dei 67, North 51 (final.)
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Ashley Cooper Quits Aussies For Pro Ranks SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) — Australia’s Ashley Cooper bolted the amateur tennis ranks today in a move that gives pro king Pancho Gonzales a glamorous new opponent find probably assures a United States victory in the next Davis Cup challenge round. United States promoter Jack Kramer announced that the 22-yeer-old Wimbledon and U.S. and Australian national champion has agreed to a thtree-yer contract which should earn him about $140,000. Kramer said Cooper would be guaranteed SIOO,OOO over the three-year period plus 20 per cent of the gate the first year and 5 per cent of the gate for each victory; r Cooper, considered the smoothest player ever developed in Australia, is scheduled to make his pro debut Tuesday night against Ecuador's Pancho Segura in the Jack Crawford Testimonial Tournament. Segura, a fabulous, bandylegged retriever, is a world-famed “spoiler.” Cooper’s move, shortly after Davis Cup teammate Mai Anderson also turned pro, breathed new life into Kramer’s 1959 professional plans but was a to Australia’s chances of regaining the Davis Cup from the United States this year—and perhaps for several years. * With Cooper and Anderson out of the picture, the United States’ controversial Peruvian star, Alex Olmedo, stands practicaly unchallenged as the world’s No. 1 amateur. And the powerful United States contingent of Olmedo, Hamilton Richardson and Barry MacKay appears far too strong for any Davis Cup challengers Australia can muster in the near future. ; . ' ~ ' The United States wrested the Davis Cup from Australia last week as Olmedo won two singles matches and teamed with Richardson to win the doubles.'Neale Fraser, who teamed with Cooper in the losing doubles cause, now appears to be the No. 1 Australian amateur. Art Wall Leading Los Angeles Open LOS ANGELES (UPD—Art Wall goes to the tee in the final round a the $35,000 Los Angeles Open Tournament today on the threshold of his greatest success. The Pocono Manor, Pa,, jpro had a one-stroke lead and his play, after a fumbling start, is improving steadily. Art shot a 3-under-par 68 Sunday to post a 54-hole total of 207— one shot in front qf the half-way leader, Doug Sanders, of Miami Beach, Fla. The rest of the field is so closely bunched that anyone of at least a dozen men still could win it all. Sanders had a miserable day on the greens and had to be content with a 73 — which is 2-over par. He had earlier rounds of 66 and 69.1 ' Next in line came Billy Maxwell, of Odessa. Tex., with a 209 on rounds of 67-70-72. At 210 were Mike Souchak, Grassingers, K.Yr National Open champion Tommy Bolt, Crystal River, Fla., and Johnny McMullin, Alameda, Calif. The 23-year-old McMullin had started the day trailing the leader by only one stroke, but skidded to a 74. Veteran Lloyd Mangrum, Apple Valley, Calif., a four-time winner of this event, was at 211, along with Howie Johnson, Glen Woodie, 111. Johnny Bulla, the first day leader from Phoenix, Ariz., was at 212. All these men were in a fine position to make a run for the top prize money of $5,300. Also in contention, each with 213 scores, were former National Open champion Jack Fleck, Northridge, Calif.; Mike Homa, Rye, N.Y.; E. J. (Dutch) Harrison, St, Louis. Mo.; Julius Boros, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Masters champion Arnold Palmer, Latrobe, Pa., and Jim Ferree, Winston Salem, N.C, \ J Big Ten Standings W L Pct. TP OP Illinois i\o 1000 81 80 Mich. State .... 1 0 1 000 79 77 Northwestern .. 1 0 1 000 80 77 Michigan 1 0 1.000 82 75 Minnesota T O 1.000 7966 Ohio State 0 1 .000 80 81 Indiana 0 1 .000 77 79 lowa 0 1 .000 77 80 Purdue : 0 1 .000 75 82 Wisconsin 0 1 .000 66 79 -V ; • / Hockey Results SATURDAY’S SCORES National League Boston 8, Detroit 2. , Montreal 5, New York 1. Chicago 2, ’Toronto 1. m International League Fort Wayne 11, Indianapolis 3. Toledo 5, Louisville 4 (overtime). SUNDAY’S SCORES : ■ International League Troy 9/Indianapolis 3. Louisville 5, Toledo 4.
tySKOWL Team Standings W L Pct. Hartford ." 8 2 .800 Adams Central —.l 3 .700 Geneva ... 6 3 .667 Berne 6 5 .545 YeUow Jackets .... 5 5 .500 Monmouth 3 7 .300 Commodores 2 8 .200 Pleasant Mills —- 2 9 .182 —oOb-— Congratulations to Coach Paul Bevrihimer and the Decatur Yellow Jackets for the holiday tourney ehampionship. -—oOo—The Yellow Jackets were the decided underdogs as tourney play ‘ Opened Friday night, but they upended the highly favored Portland Panthers in the opener, and came back Saturday to whip the Bluffton Tigers, who hod downed the Jackets on the Bluffton floor two nights before Christmas. Portland's defeat was only its second of the season, and then the Pantfiers Blue Devils in the consolation tilt Saturday. 1 —oOo*— While all county teams resume their regular schedules this week, top interest is on the pairings for the annual county tourney, which will be held at Adams Central Jan. 15, 16 and 17. Principals and coaches of the schools will meet at Geneva Tuesday evening at 6:30 o’clock for a dinner meeting, and drawing for the tourney. Pairings wiU be drawn for the county first team, second team and junior high tourneys. Loren Jones, Monmouth principal, will be manager of this year’s tourney. The Decatur Commodores won the first team title last year, and Berne copped the second team crown. All schools are asked to Sjave representatives at the meeting Tuesday. —oOo h— Seven games are on this week’s schedule, one Tuesday night, four Friday and two Saturday. In the lone game Tuesday, the Pleasant Mills Spartans will play at Willshire, O. _ o q o _ The Decatur Commodores will return to action Friday with a home game at the Decatur gym, with the top-ranking Hartford Gorillas as guests. The Yellow Jackets meet the Bulldogs at New Haven in a Northeastern Indiana conference contest. The Monmouth Eagles and Geneva Cardinals will tangle at Monmouth, and the Adams Central Greyhounds travel to Montpelier. The Berne high school Will hold its annual homecoming Saturday afternoon and evening. Feature of the homecoming will be the game between the Bears and Albany, an afternoon contest. The reserve team game will start at 2 O’clock, followed by the varsity contest. In Saturday’s other game, Pleasant Mills will play at Ohio City. , Adams Central will again be host to the other seven schools of the county in the annual Sectional tourney the last week in February. One possible change this year is in the time factor. Last year, all tourneys were operated on central standard' time. This year, however, schools desiring to operate on daylight time, which observed in Uhls bounty, may request an adjustment in the time schedule. Such requests must be made In writing to the IHSAA by Jah. 10. ifiob Shraluka, by scoring 36 points in the two holiday tourney games last week, vaulted from fifth .to second place in the individual scoring race. Don Baker, of the Decatur Commodores, still holds the lead with 224 points in 10 games.. Shraluka is second with 180 points, also jn 10 games. TWo other Jackets moved into the jWfe- SO
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1.U., Purdue Both Lose In z Loop Openers CHICAGO (UPI)-At least one of the five Big Ten basketball teams owning perfect records in conference play will be dropped from the list tonight when North- ) western meets Michigan at Ann > Arbor. r Both gbtoff to winning starts . in Saturday night’s opening round, ! the Wildcats with an 80-77 come- . from-behind victory over lowa ' and the Wolverines with an 82-75 ' upset over Purdue on the Boiler- ! makers’ court. Michigan, only one erf the five opening day winners to turn the trick in the visitors’ role, will have the home court advantage against the Wildcats. Coach Bill Rohr’s Northwestern crew also will be without the services of Phil Warren, the Wildcats’ thirdranking marksman and their second best rebounder, who turned ’ up with a fractured bone in his 1 left foot. * s Warren, a senior forward from ■ Crawfordsville, Ind., will be side- ; lined for at least a month by the > injury, a team physician said to- . day after a check of X-rays. The I foot was injured in the Notre . Dame game last week and rej injured,. against the Hawkeyes . Saturday night In tonight’s other games, Michigan State, which edged Indiana, 79-77, Saturday, travels to Iowa; Illinois, a narrow 81-80 victor over Ohio State, goes to Wisconsin; and Purdue is at Indiana. Minnesota, which won in a 79-66 romp over Wisconsin, and Ohio State were not scheduled. Three of Saturday’s winners owed their finishes to hair’sbredth margins. ■ — Illinois had the closest call, shading Ohio State, 81-80, on a lay - up shot by reserve guard Lou Landt in the final second, and Michigan State gave the afternoon TV viewers a thrill when Horace s Walker netted a 10-foot ’ jump shot i with eight seconds to go for a 79i 77 win over the Hoosiers. 1 Jim Huston of Ohio State turned in the best scoring performance, j hitting for 30 points in the Buck- > eyes-’- losing effort. The mini’s Landy, subbing for injur-ed team captain Roger Taylor, broke up a ’ Buckeye pass with about 20 secr onds left and drove downcourt to sink his game-winning shot with only a second remaining. s l All other high Scorers weye on r the winning side. Joe .Rftklick, e Northwestern hook shetr'specialist, . helped his 25-point average with ■ 29 points in his conference open- ' er. Minnesota’s senior center Ron Johnson contributed 29 points to 1 the Gophers’ rout of Wisconsin, . M.C. Burton sank 27 points for Michigan, and Bob Anderegg bagged 21 for the Spartans ’ against Indiana. 1 Bowling Scores i G. E. CLUB ALLEYS G. E. Fraternal League ! - ' W L West End Restaurant 35 16 Peterson Elevator ... 32 19 Teeple Truck Lines —27 24 I G. E. Club 27 24 r Kelly Gleaners 21 30 5 Red MenH 40 J Teeple won-2 from Peterson; Red ■ Men won 2 from G. E. Club; West - End woh 2 from Kelly. t 200 scores: G. Laurent 200-212; f L. Laurent 210; Baumgartner 207; . Selking 201; Buuck 201; Briede > 212; Macklin 203; Petrie 204; Zelt 211. 600 series: G. Laurent 605 <2OO- - top 10 for the first time, Larry Daniels and Steve Dellinger. The top 10 scorers, with games played, total points scored, and average points per game, follow: FG TP Ave. Baker, Commodores 10 224 22 4 Shraluka, Y. Jackets 10 180 18.0 Sprunger, Bernell 174 15.8' Schwatrz, Berne 11 .156 14.2 Foreman. A. Central 10 147 14.7 j Graber, .Berne 11 137 -12.5 Schaefer, Monmouth 9 135 15.0 Daniels, Y. Jackets 10 134 13.4 Dellinger, Y. Jackets 10 126 12.6 Snyder, P. Mills 11 126 11.5 s — oOo ~ _ Results one year ago this week: f New Haven 60, Yellow Jackets . 53. Hartford 74, Commodores 50. j Montpelier 65, Adams Central 55 Geneva 57. Monmouth 50. J Pleasant Mills 59, Willshire 45. 1 Ohio City 71, Pleasant Mills 32. Albany 49, Berne 46.
rREVIEWOFTHE YEAR—By Alan Maven 4— SEPTEMBER- ' 1 ÜBWYWEI6HT. W BODIB MACHEN IN JOST X <3eSBOOMOS Z* lißtWteLi jhrfWWR. isf y l 111F1 manksc, 1 * fUMBEr WEISS. *4 IM ME.WARK . I *say train) Ffpi t ■’Wgr ACCIDEW WA VW” 5 * dm* I /r r** a Milwaukee \J 7 GRAVES CUA3CH - NATIONAL - (T/’" \ LEAGUE >GIBSOn¥rrz /IL "‘Jy RORSECCW STRAIGHT wins U.S.wQMew's N&T title— GOES ---.' »ATTO SGAM-RCTRE- J < MENT FOR. SINGING 13 ItZz / -- - CAREESC ' ■■ - '' ‘ ; — : —i
Jim Orr Is Named ' Pro Grid Rookie NEW YORK (UPD-aJim Orr, an end who averaged 27.6 yards per catch for the Pittsburgh .Steelers during the past season, today was named the National Football League’s outstanding 1958 rookie in the annual United Press International poll. Orr beat out three other firstyear players by the slim margin of two votes. Halfbacks Bobby Mitchell of the Cleveland Browns and Ray Brown of the Baltimore Colts and Lou Michaels, defensive lineman and linebacker for the Los Angeles Rams, tied for second with, four votes apiece. Jim Gibbons, offensive end for the Detroit Lions; Alex Karras, defensive tackle for the Lions, and Phil King, offensive back for the New York Giants, were next with two votes apiece. End Jerry Mertens of the San Francisco FortyNiners, guard Gene Hickerson of the Browns and guard-tackle Dale Meinert of the Chicago Cardinals split the other three votes. Orr led the balloting In voting by 27 sports writers who covered the NFL games in thb 11 league cities. No rookie dominated the poll this season as Jimmy Brown of .the Browns did in 1957 when he received all except two of the votes cast. Orr, who played his college football as a halfback at Georgia, started the 1958 NFL training sea-
FREE! STARTING — January 8 at 7:00 P.M. — AND — January 10 at 9:00 A.M. The limberlost archery CLUB WILL BEGIN “FREE” LESSONS IN THE . School Os Archery ANYONE INTERESTEP IN THE | ARCHERY CLUB MAY CONTACT . . Mr. Lester Mitchel, 516 Short Street — OR — Phone 3-3397 By January 8 There will also be insurance to cover almost any accident, which sometimes occurs while persons are shooting at our indoor range. v ILiniberlost A nlierv Club
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son with the Rams. Coach Buddy Parker of the Steelers was in>. pressed by Orr’s play during an exhibition with Los Angeles shortly before the regular season began and obtained him in a deal. Parker also got quarterback • Bobby Layne and fullback Tom > Tracy from Detroit in another •j shuffle and they teamed with the ' J 19<i-pound Orr "to form a 1-2-3 of1 ; fensive punch that kept the Steel-, ! ers undefeated in their last seven , • games. > College Basketball Michigan State 79, Indiana 77. ; Michigan 82, Purdue 75. ‘ Northwestern 80, lowa 77. ■ Illinois 81, Ohio State 80. Minnesota 79, Wisconsin 66. North Carolina 69, Norte Dame 54.' Hope 94, Ball State 69. Indiana Central 87, Villa Madonna t i 75 ’- I , Vincennes 59, Marion 56 (over-i . time). Evansville 83, DePaul 61. Taylor 94, Gannon 90 (overtime), f Air Force 63, Valparaiso 49. , Illinois Normal 91, Hanover 73. j Manchester 71, kalamazooßS (overtime). ~ ~> , Bradley 91, Drake 57. i Kentucky 72, Georgia Tech 62. > Toledo 69, Utah State 61. Marquette 75, Detroit 66. ‘ • 1 Brigham Young 70, Dayton 62. f St. Louis 78, New York U. 62. > DePaul 70, Duquesne 59. ! ; Villanova 93, Penn 63. Xavier (O.) 98, Louisville 66. - Auburn 97, Mississippi State 66. . Loyola (Chicago) 113, Western - Michigan 91. Utah 95, Miami (O.) 78.
