Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 53, Decatur, Adams County, 3 March 1962 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Ten Pinners Lead School Bowling Loop The “Ten Pinners” of the Decafur high school girls bowling league is the champion team of that league at the end of the first half of competition. The team, composed of Sandy Beery, Donna Bixler and Marilyn Scott, won a total of 21 games while losing only three in the first twelve weeks of play. Teams which defeated them were the -'‘Lucky Strikers,” "Big Ten,” and “Big Three.” This newly formed league is composed of girls from Decatur high school only. They bowl two games each Thursday after school at Villa Lanes, and each team receives a handicap, helping to even up each of the teams' averages. Rules for the group and all other matters of the league are handled by its officers, president, Diane DeBolt; vice president, Marilyn Scott; secretary, Charlsie Clark; treasurer, Ann Allwein, and sergeant at arms, Isabel Costello. Coaches for the league are Dick and Gwen Mies, who are assisted by Rebecca Worthman, girls* athletic director of the school. Free instructions were given to the girls in a day clinic last fall, and the league was formed soon after. Eventually, a girls’ league composed of teams from each of the county schools is planned, with several clinics being arranged in the near future. Student league members are not charged rental for bowling shoes, and bowl at a special rate. They also are presented membership cards permitting them to bowl during specified times at reduced rates. Highest game rolled during the first 12 weeks was 190, rolled by president Diane Deßolt, followed by Ruth Ann Soliday with a 184 and Gloria Harvey with a 175. Following is a list of each of the teams, in the order in which tiny finished; the names of the team members and their final averages for the first half: Ten Pinners: Sandy Beery, 111; Donna Bixler. 101; Marilyn Scott, 118. Big Ten: Diane Deßolt, 120; Ruth Ann Soliday, 98; Janet Habegger, 90. Fireballs: Jane Mills, 99; Barbara Houk, 106; Jane Tumlin, 87. Sluggers: Janet 89; Glenda Scheiderer, 85; Carolyn Long, 96. j --- te Alley Cats: Susie Smith, 108; Ann Allwein, 119; Donna Corey, 101. Tikkis: Isabel Costello, 86; Mary Ann Zwick, 118; Kitty Harding, 96. Lucky Strikers: Susie Mayclin, 111; Paula Strickler, 99; Monica Marklund, 106. Corvettes: Nancy Reynolds, 106; Sandy Tankersly, 71; Susie Reynolds, 105. Big Three: Janeen Augsburger, 84; Nan Kelly, 106; Sally Hahn, 81. Crazy Legs: Betty Long, 102: Beverly Spiegel, 101; Linda Sud-

For the MOST COMFORT IN YOUR HOME AndEaee To Your POCKETBOOK HEAT AH TH OIL BEAVERS OIL SERVICE INC.

SPORTS

duth, 99. Strikettes: Janeen Essex, 102; Marilyn Harman, 98; Sandy Affolder, 101. Spinuettes: Marlene Cowans, 96: Alice Deßolt, 86; Darlene Richards. 89. Gutter Balls: Linda Reidenbach, 99; Esther Feasel, 78; Virginia Mills, 110. Hi-ettes: Charlsie Clark, 110; Barb Conrad, 85; Sandra Hullinger, 92. Spare-O’s: Gloria Harvey 118; ■ Pam Lister, 107; Lynette Dedolph, ’ 78. Girls who have substituted in the league and their averages are as follows: Sheri Brodbeck, 83; Alice Lankenau, 119; Katie Smith, 103; Sylvia Bleeke, 104; Judy Aumann, 126; Judy Tutewiler, 130; Missy Ruby, 85; Diane Gase, 67; Barbara Addy, 62; and Sandra Cookson, 69. Below is the statistical record of the first half: W L Ten Pinners —.. 21 3 ’ Big Ten 17 7 Fireballs 17 7 Sluggers — 15% 8% Alley Cats 15 9 Tikkis 14 10 Lucky Strikersl3 11 Corvettes r ___ 12 12 Big Three 11 13 Crazy Legsll 13 I Strikettes 10% 13% I Spinuettes 10 14 Gutter Balls 9% 14% ■ • Hi-ettes „ 9 15 i Spare-O's *_ 7 17 ‘ ■ High games rolled last week in- : elude: Susie Smith, 123; Ann All- >} wein, 126-133; Sandy Affolder, 136; , t Jane Mills, 138; Barbara Houk, i 127; Gloria Harvey, 125; Susie ■ Reynolds, 142; Nan Kelly, 124-135; i Marlene Cowans, 157; Virginia II Mills, 142; Monica Marklund, 12911131; Judy Tutewiler, 121-140; Ruth ■ ' Ann Soliday, 128; Janet Habegger, j I 138; Linda Sudduth, 130; Sandy Beery, 135-121; Marilyn Scott, 122; Glenda Scheiderer, 122. BOWLING Gold Crown League W L Pts. Decatur Highlo 2 14 Hammond Market. 8 4 10 Kroger 7 5 10 Hiway Trailer 7 5 10 Adams Builders ..7 5 10 Steury Bottling 7% 5% 9% Williamson Marathon 6 6 9 Team No. 6 6 6 8 Haircut Center .... 6 6 8 Havens No. 2 6 6 8 Havens No. 16% 6% 7% Kiess Electric 7-5— 7 Volunteer Firemen 5 77 Yost 5 7 6 Parkway 66 2 10 3 King Shell ....1 11 4 High series: Faurote 519, L. ! Brunner 525, Bleeke 511, Gabert< 500. Reed 552, L. Bradtmueller j 515. High games: Reed 210, Arnold 220. Women’s Major League W L Pts. Adams Co. Trailer 15 6 21 ' Colonial Salon .... 15 6 20 1 Two Brothersll 10 15 Three Kings 6 13 10 Gene’s Mobil 7% 13% 9% Hoagland Lumber.. 6% 14% 8% High games: V. Smith 202-171, H. Bracey 190, D. Johnson 188-175, i O. Myers 178, L. Call 177, M. Koons 172, M. Mies 171, E. Gallmeyer 170. High series: V. Smith 542. Splits converted: K. Bultemeyer 5-10, P. Laurent 3-10, L. Call 5-6, S. Schnepp 3-10, M. Mies 5-10, B. Hess 3-7, M. Miller 3-10, V. Smith 3-10, J. Bedwell 3-10, Lorna Bultemeier 4-5-7, G. Buuck 3-10. College Basketball Yale 81, Dartmouth 66 . Pennsylvania 93, Cornell 90. LaSalle 88. Western Kentucky State 84 Florida State 101, Georgia 69. UCLA 69, Washington 66 . Southern Conference Tourney West Virginia 86, George Washington 73. Virginia Tech 70, VMI 66. Atlantic Coast Tourney Wake Forest 88, South Carolina 75. ' “ Clemson 77, Duke 72. Another Big Evening VILLALANES Saturday Night Enjoy Dinner in the 4 SEASONS DINING ROOM Join The Crowd During The “HAPPY HOUR** 6:30 to 7:30 P.M. in tfw 4 SEASONS LOUNGE y 2 PRICE SPECIAL OPEN BOWLING OatardiFNlipt

Regional: To Cut Tourney Field To 16 INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Indiana’s high school basketball elite, virtually intact after weathering the initial storm, set out today to stay in command as the 52nd annual state tourney reached the halfway mark with the crowning of the “Sweet Kokomo's top-rated Wildcats, the defending state champions, were top-heavy favorites to advance to next Saturday’s Fort Wayne semi-state tourney with a classy 24-1 record and a 21-game winning streak. Also heavily favored were Lafayette and unbeaten Madison at Columbus, but at least three members of the “Big 10” faced elimination—one each at Evansville, East Chicago and Indianapolis. Those three also were expected to dish up some of the toughest battles as the 64 sectional champs battled for survival. 5,069 Seats At Butler Most of the 16 tourneys were expected to be jam-packed with hardwood fans. Among the exceptions was Butler Fieldhouse here, where 5,000 seats were placed on public sale despite the fact the four-team show contains two of the top tourney hopefuls—lndianapolis Attacks and Southport—its neighbor to the South. The two were expected to elash for the regional title tonight. Five tide rounds will be televised — East Chicago, Elkhart, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, and Lafayette. ' At East Chicago, a return scrap i between the host Senators and I West NIHSC titlist Gary Froebel ! was possible. Froebel, tied with Attacks for No. 6 in the state, dealt second-ranked East Chicago its only defeat during the season, j East NIHSC antagonists Elkhart: and South Bend Central were fa- • vored to advance to the title, clash at Elkhart, with the host Blue Blazers seeking revenge for a regular-season setback. The Fort Wayne tourney was one of quite a few considered “wide open.” It was Angola vs Berne and Berne and Fort Wayne Central’s ex-champs against Ligonier in the preliminaries. Rossville Beat Brones Two-time champion Lafayette, next to Kokomo probably die hottest tide contender, was primed for revenge against Rossville, one of three teams to whip the Broncos during the season. Besides Kokomo, two other members of last year’s “Fieldhouse Four” were still battling— Logansport and Tell City. Logansport was favored in its own bailiwick, but Tell Qty, winner of die last three regionals at Evansville, mu4t convince two toughies to stay in the running—Castle and most likely Evansville Bosse, the only team to beat the Marksmen during the season. Also in. jeopardy utM the longest live regional winning streak — Muncie Central’s eight. The Bearcats, who. lost starters Bill Dtawiddie and Brian Settles as the result of a hazing incident, met strong North Central Conference foe Richmond in the second afternoon game at New Castie. Even should Muncie reach the “Sweet 16;” it would still be two titles shy of tying the all-time regional string of 11 hung up by Frankfort in 1932. Pro Basketball NBA Results Philadelphia 169, New York 147. Cincinnati 120, Detroit 112. St Louis 138, Boston 120. ABL Results Hawaii 92, San Francisco 87.

CALLFOR DECATUR READY-MIX CONCRETE FOR ALL OF YOUR FARM IMPROVEMENTS • FIRESAFE • ECONOMICAL ,• LIFE-LASTING . PHONE 3-2561 DECATUR READY-MIX CORP. E. Oak A Fornax Streete Decatur, Ind.

AS DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Five Tied For Lead In Baton Rouge Open BATON ROUGE, La. (UPDThe youngsters had a field day in the first round of the 820,000 Baton Rouge Open, but there are enough veterans on their heels to keep them jittery in today’s second round. The first day’s action ended in ® five-way traffic jam for first place with four-under-par 68’s. It was the biggest opening round deadlock in the history of the tournament. Jack Burke Jr., winner of the first Baton Rouge Open in 1952, was the only seasoned performer in the first-place scramble. He was tied with Joe Campbell, Dave Hill, Don Messengale and Jimmie . Powell. The four combined have only slightly more than six comI plete years on the tour. Seven were tied at 69. Nine carded 70’s and 10 finished with one-under par 71’s. Much of the first round was played in chilly weather. Rain fell the two preceding days but the course drained well. Cold and rfih forced the tourney to be pushed back a dajy. It will end Sunday with a 36-hole windup. Among those who turned in 69’s were Doug Sanders and Glenn Stuart. Stuart and Hill turned in the most spectacular nine-hole scores Friday. Both had five-under-par 32’s on their front nines. Defending champion Arnold Palmer and baseball-gripper Bob Rosburg headed the contingent with 70. Palmer reported here suffering from infections of both ears, but a local physician lanced them and later gave the Pennsylvania power hitter the go-ahead to compete. Doug Ford was the biggest name golfer among the ten at 71. A win here for the fast playing veteran would increase his lead in official money winnings in the modern era. The field will be cut to the top >6O pros and ties after today’s round. Bradley Must Win Tonight To Tie Cincinnati By GARY KALE United Press International Bradley will be down to its last gasp tonight when the Braves attempt to break Cincinnati’s stranglehold on the Missouri Valley Conference crown. Second-ranked Cincinnati has clinched a tie for its fifth straight MVC title and will go on unhampered to defend the NCAA championship unless Bradley beats St. Louis. A Bradley victory would set up a tie, with the seventh-ranked Braves and Bearcats battling in a one-game playoff for die . right to engage in post-season action. Bradley has been a bridesmaid to Cincinnati the past four seasons. First the team from Peoria, 111., had to contend with Oscar Robertson when the Cincinnati All-America was setting all kinds of scoring records. Yale Wins Ivy Title It was the same story after Robertson's departure to pros. The Braves fielded the bouquets but couldn't make it to the MVC altar. Now they are on the brink of a rubber match with Cincinnati. Each team has beaten the other once this season. Yale clinched a berth in the NCAA tournament By defeating Dartmouth, 81-66, Friday for the Ivy League title. Bill Madden and Steve Goulding each scored 17 points for Yale, which will play the winner of the Atlantic Coast Conference tourney in the eastern regionals.

Veterans To Be Starters For Cardinals By LEO H. PETERSEN UPI Sports Editor ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI) — Youth may be served almost I everywhere else but with the St. Louis Cardinals it will be the veterans on the firing line at the start. ■— "■ Johnny Keane, starting his first full season as a manager, emI phasizes that he will concentrate this spring “in getting the players in shape who are going to be playing for us this year.” 'He isn't discounting youth. -— “But we only have a few kids whose records indicate they may be ready,” he explains,” and I'm not going to waste my time or use up other players’ time working with kids who are a year or more away. "Maybe the youngsters will not like my system, but they can wait — just like I did.” Keane waited 30 years before he got the job he wanted — manager of the Cardinals. And he doesn’t mean to let the job slip away from him. Seeks Better Start "We just have to get off to a better start this year than we have the past few seasons,” Keane reasons. “I think the best chance we have of doing that is to play from the start the players who we know are going to be out there for us this year. "They are the ones we are going to concentrate on. “We only have a few jobs open on our club and we will watch the candidates for them closely. At the positions at which we are set, those players will be out there in almost all of our exhibition games. I want them to be ready when the season starts.” Not even the veteran Stan Musial is going to be allowed to take it easy. “Stan has always done his own pacing in spring training, but this year he is going to play in exhibition games so he will be in shape for the season’s opener,, I talked with Stan about it and he is agreeable. I pointed out there was no use saving him or our other veterans until later in the season —for then it might be too late.” McDaniel Faces Work Another player who is going to get a lot of spring work is pitcher Lindy McDaniel, head of the St.

4-H's greatest achievement... GOOD CITIZENS x JT ( nj I I I '"'sb I //I t tS-* //x. t/i ll ill vVx t / I / \\ V i I z v\ Hearty congratulations to ail 4-H members, especially our community's own. You move steadily toward becoming tomorrow's good citizens as you learn, live, serve through 4-H. We're proud of you, and stand ready to help you in every way we can. t NATIONAL 4-H CLUB WEEK, MARCH 3-10, 1962 Established 1883 MEMBER MEMBER F. D. I. C. Federal Reserve

i know..aou ArfY | yeh, \oo know... ] 1 £7" ItaTfcMtr ’to’coSfu^^) OSCAR ARE SETTIN’( SCRATCH? SPONDOOLIX! ) *** )(L -Z J ’I M ’ jj» K’ fl O-* Vv-*' iWLJBJ JlkSflh 33 Mm '

c a T A I N E I

■ | MOVIEMAKERS—Pitcher Don Drysdale, right, and outfielder Ron Fairly of Los Angeles Dodgers help make movie to instruct little leaguers at Veto Beach, Fla.

Louis bullpen corps. “He pitched only 16 innings in spring training last year,” Keane points out, “so he wasn’t ready I when the reason opened. This spring I am going to start him a lot to make sure he has enough work. If you use him only in the late innings, he isn’t going to get enough work to shapen his control." Shortstop Alex Grammas is another who will see a lot of exhibition game action. “I’m hoping that one of two kids, Gerry Buchek or Julio Gotay, will win the regular shortstop job, but right now I plan on using Alex there to open the season. ... _ .■ _ , ... .... . Veterans All Around “So we will have veterans all around, except perhaps behind the plate.” There rookie Gene Oliver, who hit .302 at Portland last year, has the inside track over veteran Carl Sawatski and 'another rookie, Jim Schaffer. Three rookie pitchers, Ray Washburn, John Anderson and Ed Bauta, also will get a lot of attention. Otherwise, it will be the veterans on the firing line from the start of the exhibition season and into the opening games of the year. If they fail to measure up, the kids will get their chance — but not until then. Hockey Results International League Omaha 8, St. Paul 5.

Four Major Teams May Switch Camps TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) — At least four of the 14 major league baseball teams training in Florida may switch their spring training sites next year, with two of thsm moving to Arizona. If present plans go through, the Milwaukee Braves will leave Bradenton for West Palm Beach, where Braves owner Lou Perini has real estate interests. West Palm Beach would build a new stadium to house the Braves just as Fort Lauderdale did for the , New York Yankees. Should the Braves move, the Pittsburgh Pirates would abandon Fort Myers and go to Bradenton. In the other moves, the National League champion Cincinnati Reds are reported ready to leave Tampa for Arizona and the Kansas City Athletics are said to be ready to leave West Palm Beach, also for Arizona. 9

OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN. 1:00 TO 6:00 P.M. PREMIER SHOWING OF NATIONAL HOMES’ SENSATIONAL CORANADO A SPACIOUS 3-BEDROOM HOME DESIGNED WITH YOU IN MIND! NO DOWN PAYMENT s 7l-43 mo a nth DON’T MISS THIS ONE -INPARKVIEW - -- ADDITION JUST FOLLOW THE OPEN HOUSE ARROWS H & M Builders, Inc. BUILDERS OF NATIONAL HOMES PHONE 3-4158

SATURDAY, MARCH 3,1962

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION Estate No. 5717 In the Adams Circuit Court of Adams County, Indiana, Notice is hereby given that Mildred D. Tribble and Frances D. Magley were on the 15th day of February, 1962, appointed: Co - Administratrix of the estate of Sarah V. Dawson, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. * Dated at Decatur, Indiana .this 15th day of February, 1962. Richard D. Lewton Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court for Adams County, Indiana. John L. DeVoss, Attorney and Counsel for personal representative. Feb. 17, 24, Mar. 3. OPEN BOWLING DAILY 1:30 P.M. til Closing Mies Recreation Uptown Lanes Phone 3-2942