Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 46, Decatur, Adams County, 24 February 1960 — Page 11
Y. FEBRUARY M, IM
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UPI Writer Picks Madison To Win State" Editor. N*tei Vetoes* I'M late*** .part* Miter Karl FrredrnUnl ka* brca pirkla* toarnry wteaera atar* IM*. Hr hr.l hit a wlnarr with Madliw i ( aba barb in IBM. Hr Ulrd »llh Ihr Cub. agate last rear bat they teal. Naw he’s rtdtaa ihr Madiaan band wage* agate ihl. year, aenateg aa apart ever Ihr prahlbllr rely la rated Muncie Bearcats. aaaaaav By KURT FREUDENTHAL (totted Frraa Internalteaal INDIANAPOLIS 'UP!I — They won the "state" 10 years, ago. and they figure this ought to be their turn again They just racked up their first perfect regular season, although they had a bad scare in their last scheduled game. They have one of the best shooters in the state in Harold < Buster> Briley, but their coach is quick to point out, “this is no one-man team." They're the Madison Cube, the United Press International choice to cut down the nets at Butler Fieldbopse here March 19 and take their second Indiana high school basketball crown back to the Ohio River city. Picking anybody but Muncie is like going against the New York Yankees—most years, anyway But this is a four-week “horse race." with a total field of 694— lots of room for the upset ax to swing wildly and often. Squeaks Through Finale Nevertheless, affable Madison coach Julius <Bud> Ritter grinned “you've got a lot of guts picking us," when informed of the choice. "We know Muncie has a terrific team,” said Ritter. “Our principal (Connor Salm) said Muncie has a good team, too.” Madison was good to this jockey 10 years ago under Ray Eddy, now head hardwood coach at Purdue. and picked again last year, didn't give up until the third week in the Indianapolis semi-state, bowing to eventual champion Indianapolis Attucks in overtime, 82-BQ. Madison finished the season with an 18-game winning streak, though just staggering through a 76-75 win at Lawrenceburg last Friday, and opens its sectional tourney bid against Austin at Scottsburg Wednesday night. Ritter figured that the host club and Hanover may give his boys a rough time in the first round, but he conceded the Cubs got the breaks in the sectional drawings. Ritter has a classy shooter in Briley, who averaged 30 points a game through the season, but wants it known that players like Don Firth and Larry Humes are
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Facts And Figures On Fiftieth Annual Basketball Tourney INDIANAPOUR (UPI> — Fart* »txl figure* <o tb» M*b antuMl I Indiana high »cbool ba.kHball tourney i Rite* and dates Sectional* al M center. Feb. >4-27. ragtoaate al 1* ' centers March S; semi-atAte* at four canters March 11. four-team finals at Butter Frildbouac. March IB Al stake: The state prep crown Defending champion' Indianapolis Attucks. Favorties: Muncie Central top choice by a 7 t%l vote of sportswriter* and sportscaster*. Other strong po.Mbildte* Include East Chicago Washington. Gary Roosevelt. Madison. Attucks. Jasper, Bloomington. Estimated attendance: 1.525.000 Team* participating: 694. Seating capacity of tourney gyms; 464 910. Price of admission: Sectional season ticket 8243. depending on number of sessions; $2 for regional seasons; 12 50 for semiMate seasons; 1350 for the three championship games. Most state titles: Muncie Central and Frankfort, four each. Most consecutive championships: Franklin, 3, 1920-2. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. TP OP Ohio State 11 0 1.000 1,020 722 Indiana 8 3 .727 913 808 Minnesota 8 4 .667 904 838 Northwestern 6 5 .545 721 777 Purdue 6 6 .500 909 879 Illinois 5 6 .455 877 913 Mich. State 5 7 .417 968 961 I lowa 5 7 .417 833 869 Wisconsin 3 8 .273 804 915 Michigan 9 11 -000 680 850 just as valuable. Team In Good Shpe Firth chipped in with 26 points against Lawrenceburg, 19 of them in (the first half. Humes, he said, has been “tremendous” all season. • Told that Madison shouldn t have “too much trouble in the first two weeks,” Ritter replied he suspects there’ll be “some mighty tough ones along the way.” “We’d like to have an opportunity to play Muncie.” he said. That could be a tremendous collision, especially with both unbeaten all season, and Briley matching his finesse and scoring prowess against Muncie’s great Ron Bonham. Ritter said all his boys were in good condition. The only unhapby situation, he said, is Madison got only 779 sectional tickets. “We have close to 1,800 season ticket holders," he lamented. “All the kids who want to go to Scottsburg get tickets, the rest wil have to draw for them.” There’s one consolation: The further along in the tourney trail Madison goes, the more tickets it’ll get
Fireworks Is Expected At Indianapolis By KURT FRETDKNTMAI. InHad rrtM Internaltoaal INDIANA POLIS (UP! Indlaaapolia avtni'ttete fan* will gel their money * worth In the Indiana high »cho>»l ha»krtball tournrv—Choir district contain* potentially the moat cxploalvr bunch of <x>nt«ndr>r» tor the crown in the •Into. If defending *tate champton Indiana poll* Altuck* la dethroned. It'll ha|>pen at Butter Fleldbouac bare The dutrict Include* the •talc'* only two perfect crew*— powerful Muncie Central and Madiaon—Along with Indianapolis Manual. Rushville and New Castle Muncte'* Bearcats. No. 1 throughout the »ea»on in the state, remained the team to beat, of course. The 20-game winner* were expected to breeze through their sectional before running into their first stronger opposition at New Castle next week—especially if it's against the host Trojan*. New Castle Threat? New Castle, regional host for the first time, finished 13-7 for the season and provided the last major upset by winning at highlyregarded Kokomo last Friday, 69-57. . New Castle makes its tourney debut tonight against Lewisville, whose Marion Pierce led all Hoosier prep scorers the past two seasons with a per-game average of 36.5. Attucks also opens tonight against city rival Shortridge, which beat the champ* six weeks ago. 58-57. Attucks was 15-5 for the season. Shortridge 12-6. Madison, 184), opens at Scottsburg tonight and is routed through the Columbus regional before its possible *bid for a semi-state championship. Milan, champion in 1954 and 19-2 this time, and Rushville (16-4) were expected to collide in next week's Connersville regional. At least, they figure to be the teams to beat tn the Connersville regional area. Manual at Southport The Indianapolis sectional winner can expect trouble from the first-round champ at Southport, where Manual (18-3) was favored to grab its first sectional crown since 1923. Manual spilled Attucks in the city holiday tourney last December, but lost in the title round to Indianapolis Tech Attucks has beaten Tech in their last five meetings, and the twb city rivals cannot clash until Saturday night’s sectional championship game. A loss by Attucks would not be a i surprise—although it would be an upset —for the Tigers have monopolized the Indianapolis sectional the last seven years. But should Muncie’s express be derailed, the entire state tourney would be rocked to its foundation and the title chase would become a wide-open affair. Working people under the age of 18 have an accident rate 1.5 times as great as adults, reports the U.S. Department of Labor.
THE MCATOB BMLY MMircit. MtiTVl. BOUMA
TIMELY, TOO -A Bk L-mla, Mo, tat company to featarteß this Ham aa summer taeeb wear for th* todies. la tatatnd with th* time*. H to aba ped Ilka an • tomia mushroom Eye shield protect* against sun and atomic flash, the maker say*. Top ot the hat serve* a* ■ carry-all for comb, cigarvßae, compact,et al
Bingen Team Wins Lutheran Tourney St. John's Lutheran, of Bingen, won the Lutheran grade school league tourney championship Sunday. edging Zion Lutheran of Decatur. 27-25. in the final game of the tourney. Neither team had a player to hit double figures. Schroeder scored nine- points and K. Scherer 8 for the new champions, and Fleming tallied nine and Sheets seven for Decatur. . ' Bingen FG FT TP Schroeder 4 19 Melcher 0 6 0 K. Scherer - 4 0 8 Hoile - 0 0 0 Graves 0 0 0 Scheumann 2 0 4 Schuller 1 0 0 0 Zelt 3 0 6 R. Scherer 0 0 0 Totals —l3 1 27 Decatar FG FT TP Lillich 12 4 Engle .1 0 2 Fleming .—7. 4 19 Busse — 0 0 0 Sheets — 3 17 Schultz 113 .August 0 0 0 Reinking „■ 0 0 0 Totals 10 5 25 ■ ‘ If you are under 19 and working for a living, the chances are seven to three that you will suffer one or more disabling injuries before you reach retirement age, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Half of all the cars- in the U.S. are concentrated in just eight states — California, New -York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas, Illinois, Michigan and New Jersey.
Northwestern Meet Jinx To Calumet Area INIRANAPOUB <UF!> — The tar mirth will stag* It* perennial dngflgkt brfoea Mtidlng • survlvt.r to thr Butter FieidhouM' here March It to bid tor (hr Indiana high school basketball tourney erown. Tbp cttotrnderi include Eari Chicafo W*.hln<ton and Gary Koorcvelt. Lxrth 1H for the rvtula r season; Michigan City <ls-3>. and always dangprous Lafayette (13*7). Aten not to be ignored are Gary Ftoebel, which brat dty for Roosevelt in overtime early in the season: Logansport, and Utile Bainbridge. East Chicago's w «*4 NIHSC champions are the choice in their own sectional, but the second round will be one at the toughest in the state, with the Gary and Michigan City sectional winners capable of giving the host club a rough time. I'psteters Jinxed? East Chicago has height, speed and sufficient scoring balance to earn itself a trip to the four-team state finals, but the northwestern route through Lafayette has been a Jinx for Calumet area teams tor years. None has made it to the "state” since Gary Roosevelt five years ago when the Panthers lost the title game U> Indianapolis Attacks, 97-74. East Chicago’s Senators have their Ron Divjak and Phil Dawkins. Roosevelt has a fine shooter in Mannie Newsome, Froebel has a dangerous sharpshooter in sophmore Orsten Artis, one of the hottest young finds in the far north. Michigan City lost to Roosevelt by only four points, but was trounced at East Chicago by 29. Lafayette has been in-and-out most of the season, but coach Marion Crawley has a habit of having his boys "up” when it counts the most. Besides, the Broncos—like Logansport—play in familiar surroundings the first two weeks before the semi-state on the big Purdue floor. Jeff Blue Leads Pointers Logansport represented the northwestern district in the state finals last year, but rates strictly as a darkhorse this time. Bainbridge, unbeaen last season and 20-1 this trip, may be the best small-town outfit in the district. The Putnam County champions still have high-scoring 6-5 Jeff Blue, considered one of the best in the state, and are favorites in the Greencastle regional district. Last year, Bainbridge put together a 26-game winning streak before being stopped by Logansport in Purdue's semi-state Highland, with a 19-1 record, including 11 in a row. is another small-town toughie. It plays the sectional opener at East Chicago Wednesday against Dyer. The word "taboo" was first used by South Sea Islanders to denote certain forbidden things, words or acts, according to the National Geographic Society. The U.S. Department of Agriculture reports “reasonable" success with an electronic device that measures the oil content of soybeans.
STATES pints’'TOTAL: $15.8 BILLION) : :yf SALES AND RECEIPT'S V>■ / $93 SIL \ V'TICENSLS / \ INCOME pk $23 /sl.s\ $2.8 HL M X. »IL / BIL\ / t. ..’.'r '. .".“** FEDERAL (1959 TOTAL: S6B 3 BILLION) WT PERSONAL INCOME \ <' $363 MU \ \EXOSE / COtfOtATKN / :;S\ SBS / INCOME A X \’ U -/BIL «« WlyZ# 'i i rf : i ! g^i.i«' ■" ' n u PLUCKING PROCESS their frantic aearch for njV e tax rewnua, the state and federal government sometimes duplicate efforts to clean the citizen (pcoaonal and corporate income, cigarettes and gasoline); Mewscharts show where tty yn min rn t- get the money. Mala WxbtMfc i
m BOT »covw. Kernrrt .b~t im. •'’’“kTS •bow with their two d<n flags, and their B.S.A. »ign. *•»»«. At the time scouts met uniform*. Just three years after scouting was Virtual rixive. left to right, are Harin a small frame building where Dr. Gerald Kohne now * Butler and Bryce Thomas. The Daniels J K Eady, the late Ralph Tyndall. George Sthug. Fred Buller, Eadvi ??cto. was jkenrtX old Central school. which the boy. attended. J Courtasyof *
Bowling Scores Major League W L Pts. Blue Flame 14 7 20 Oakdale Kennels ... 13 8 1® Three Kings 12 9 16 Quality Chevy-Buick 11 10 15 Beavers Oil 11 10 1® Ideal Dairy 9'i H* 13*4 Hoagland Farms ... 11 10 43 Midwestern Life Ins. 9 12 13 Petrie Oil T* IO 1 * Tocsin 7 14 7 •00 series—R. Ladd 657 (247-227-183). 200 games — R Hoggs 205, J. Murphy 202-206 J. Meyer 201. D. Burke 222, D. Hoile 212, P. Miller 203, D. Reidenbach 243. N. Koenemann 200, M. Bauermeister 209200. E. Frauhiger 216, E. Witte 234. Blue Flame won 3 from Three Kings, Oakdale Kennels won 2 from Midwestern Life Ins.. Hoagland Farms won 3 from Tocsin, Quality Chevy-Buick won 2 from Beavers Oil. Petrie Oil and Ideal Dairy won 1 and tied 1 each. Note — Lloyd Reef rolled new high 3 game series of the year, 735 pins with a 300 game. His games were 300-181-254 < 735). Merchant League W L Pts. Price Men's Wear .... 14 4 19 Painters .... I 3 Slick's Drive Inn .... 10 8 15
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Preble Restaurant ... 11 7 14 Citterns Telephone — H 7 14 Green’s Team 9 9 11 •»’’ Ball -7 11 10 Sherwin Williams .... 7 11 No. 10 Team ... 4 14 6 Krick-Tyndall 4 14 5 Slick’s won 2 from Preble Rest.. Green’s won 3 from Krick-Tyndall, Citizens Telephone won 3 from No. 10 Team. Painters won 3 from Sherwin-Williams, Price's won 3 .from Ball. High games—R. Fuelling 213, Roger Stevcng 219. M. Heare 203. J. Myers 214 r a————— Classic League W L Pts. Don’s Texaco Service 8 4 12 Peterson Grain Co. ..7 5 10 Ortho Shoe Clinic .... 6 6 Kelly Dry Cleaners ..7 5 8 West End Rest. 6 6 8 Leland Smith Ins. .... 6 6 7 Acker Cement 6 6 7 Decatur Farms . 5 77 Budget Loan Co. 5 7 6 Gerber’s Supermarket 4 8 6 High series—Don Graber 603 (169-245-189*. High games—C. Snider 203, M. Weisman 201, K. Bauserman 203, G. Baumgartner 210, H. Hoffman 200-201, A. Erxleben 211, W. Tutewiler 206-200, G. Schultz 212, J. Parent 209, R. Ladd 211, W. Marbach 206, D. Burke 204-225. W. Schlaudraff 203, W. Gallmeyer 211,
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R Lord 202. J. Beery 224, A. J. Zelt 205, H. Strickler 802. G. K. CLUB ALLEYS G.E. Fraternal League W Li West End 17 J Peterson — l4 4 Teeple ...........—' — H Red Men 7 “ Chic’s — 200 scores — Baumgartner 210, Selking 204. Hoffman 234. Appelman 204. Laurent 292, Harklesa 211. 1 Lipstick State. Lipstick steins on washable fabrics can br removed by laundering in hot water and soap. With non-washables, apply cleaning fluid and immediately press a clean white blotter over it Look at the blotter and you’ll find it has absorbed some of the lipstick. Keep repeating the routine until you can no longer see red on you! blotter. Bottle Caps If a bottle cap does not seal tightly because the cork or paper insert has been lost, wrap a piece of string around the neck of the bottle, at the bottom of the screwthreads. 'file cap will then seat on the string to make an effective seal.
