Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 12 November 1962 — Page 7

Monday, November it, m 2

dMh* PORTS HEWS

Packers Whip Eagles, 49-0, Ninth In Row The Green Bay Pacfcers are gaining ever-increasing support as the greatest pro football team of all time, although one National League brain strangely reluctant to climb on the bandwagon is their own coach, Vince Lombardi. After trampling their first nine opponents of the 1962 season, the Packers are attracting favorable comparison with the Chicago Bears “monsters" of the early 1946 s and such post-war powerhouses as the Philadelphia Eagles, Detroit Lions, Cleveland Browns and Baltimore Colts. One of the strongest of Pack-er-backers is Nick Skorich of the Eagles, who suffered through "the longest and worst day of my coaching career” as Green Bay annihilated Philadelphia, 49-0, Sunday. "I think Green Bay is the greatest team of the past two decades with its depth and perfect balance in running and passing,” commented Skorich. “Their secret is great blocking and play execution. And with their depth, they can lose players like Paul Hornung and Boyd Dowler without suffering." Plays It Cautious And what does lugubrious Lombardi have to say about that? “It would be impossible to go all the way undefeated in this league. Every team is up for us. I thought the Eagles would be inspired and a lot tougher.” Ignoring Lombardi, the Packers appear headed for the first undefeated season in the NFL since the Bears went 11-0 in 1942. Counting the last regular-season game of 1961 and the championship playoff, the Packers now have won 11 in a row, and 24 of their last 28 NFL games dating back to 1960. Jim Taylor, the league’s leading rusher, scored four touchdowns and gained 141 yards in 25 carries to help hand -the Eagles their worst defeat since 1933. Taylor, with 14 touchdowns and 1,075 yards, appears headed for league records in both departments. The Packers lost the ball through an Interception on their first series of downs, but the next seven times they gained posession they scored on sustained drives of 86, 89, 85, 76, 71, 66 and 65 yards. They wound up with a total of 694 yards on offense. Battle In East '''While the Packers were piling up a league-record 37 first downs in manhandling the Eagles, the New York Giants and the Washington Redskins emerged as the two clubs who will battle it out for the Eastern Division championship. The Giants doused the hopes of the Dallas Cowboys with a 41-10 shellacking while the Redskins just about put the Cleveland Browns out of the running with a 17-9 victory. The Detroit Lions preserved their forlorn Western Division chances with a 38-24 victory over the San Francisco Forty Nincrs, while the Chicago Bears edged the Minnesota Vikings, 31-30 the Pittsburgh Steelers upset the St. Louis Cardinals, 26-17, and the Baltimore Colts defeated the Los Angeles Rams, 14-2. Monroe Methodist, Linn Grove Winners

Monroe Methodist downed Zion Lutheran of Decatur, 96-64, and the Linn Grove E.U.B. defeated the Berne Reformed, 77-53, in Adams county church league games played Thursday. Joe Hanauer led the Monroe team to victory with 33 points, and Kenny Payne tallied 26 for the winners. Jim Blecke topped the Decatur scoring with 13 points, Stu Schnepf scored 12 and Rog Pollock added 11. John Meshberger’s 26 points

led the Linn Grove scoring, while R. Beer and Fox topped Berne with 12 points each.

Quality Photo Finishings All Work Loft Before 8:00 p. m. Monday Ready Wednesday at 10 a. m. Holthouse Drug Co.

Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams TUESDAY Larwell at Commodores Berne at Pleasant Mills. FRIDAY Commodores at Woodlan. Crestview at Pleasant Mills. Monmouth at Hoagland. Hartford at Bryant. Montpelier at Geneva. Dallas Texans Beat Titans, Patriots Win By JOE SARGIS UPI Sports Writer When the Dallas Texans add the thunder of rookie Curtis McClinton to the lightning of Abner Haynes and a torrent of touchdown passes by Len Dawson they stir up a lot of stormy weather for their American Football League rivals. The Haynes - Dawson - McClinton hurricane caused quite a disturbance in New York Sunday, wiping out the Titans, 52-31, and blowing the Texans into first place in the Western Division of the AFL. The Texans’ ascent was made possible when the Boston Patriots, clinging to their Eastern Division lead, knocked off the Denver Broncos, 33-29. In two other Sunday games the Houston Oilers beat the Oakland Raiders, 28-20, and the Buffalo Bills walloped the San Diego Chargers, 40-20. The results boosted the Texans into first place in the West with a 7-2 record and dropped the Broncos (7-3) into second place. These two teams meet in a showdown next Sunday at Denver. In the East the Patriots lead with a 6-2-1 record while Houston is 6-3. Haynes gained 107 yards in 24 carries which wasn’t exactly a new feat — and Dawson threw three touchdown passes against the Titans — also to be expected. But the 102 yards in 19 carries by the 230-pound McClinton was something new for Dallas rivals to ponder. “McClinton has a great future," coach Hank Stram of the Texans lauded after the game. “There’s no telling how good he can be. He has all the natural attributes and he has the intelligence to go with his physical ability.”

Pro Foolball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division W L T Pct. PF PA New York 7 2 0 .778 255 177 Washington 5 2 2 .714 201 212 Pittsburgh 5 4 0 .556 203 259 Dallas 4 4 1 .500 255 226 Cleveland 4 4 1 .500 171 157 St. Louis 2 6 1 .250 152 225 Philadelphia .. 17 1 .125 151 235 Western Division Green Bay 9 0 01.000 292 61 Baltimore —5 4 0 .556 199 155 Chicago 5 4 0 .556 173 216 San Francisco.. 3 6 0 .333 168 241 Minnesota 2 7 0 .222 172 255 Los Angeles ... 18 0 .111 138 195 Sunday’s Results Washington 17. Cleveland 9. Green Bay 49, Philadelphia 0. Chicago 31, Minnesota 30. Pittsburgh 26, St. Louis 17. New York 41, Dallas 10. Baltimore 14, Los Angeles 2. Detroit 38, San Francisco 24. AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division W L T Pct. PF PA Boston 6 2 1 .750 264 213 Houston 6 3 0 .667 223 182 Buffalo 4 5 1 .444 246 228 New York 4 6 0 .400 202 290 Western Division Dallas 7 2 0 .778 273 173 Denver 7 3 0 .700 278 213 San Diego. 3 7 0 .300 225 292 Oakland 0 9 0 .000 142 262 Sunday’s Results Dallas— New York 31. Boston 33, Denver 29. Buffalo 40, San Diego 20. Houston 28, Oakland 20. Adams Central FFA Jlx To Pick Corn Plot The Adams Central FFA will pick the chapter’s demonstration corn plot of high population Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock, Martin Watson, vocational ag teacher at Adams Central announced today. The corn was -planted in 30-inch rows with about 31,000 plants per acre. It will be picked and weighed to show the yield per acre. , All farmers of the' area are in- t vited to attend the picking. Tire 1 plot is located one-fourth mile ( south of the Adams Central base- 1 ball diamond on the Elmer Ehr- < sam farm. ; I

Badgers Rout Wildcats, Lock Big Ten Race CHICAGO (UPI) — Wisconsin turned the passing tables on Northwestern’s highly-touted Tom Myers Saturday as Badger quarterback Ron VanderKelen tossed the Big Ten title race into confusion. VanderKelen hit on three scoring passes in Wisconsin’s 37-6 victory over the No. 1 ranked Wildcats to lock the “race for the roses” into a three-team tie between Wisconsin, Northwestern and Minnesota. Myers, the Big Ten’s tpp passer, tossed late in the game to Steve Murphy for Northwestern’s only score in their first loss of the season. The hard running of halfback Lou Holland, who snared one VanderKelen pass for a touchdown and broke away, for two others, and the alert Wisconsin defensive unit badgered Northwestern all afternoon. Wisconsin faces Illinois this weekend and then closes the season against Minnesota, while Northwestern ends its league season Saturday against Michigan State. The Gophers play Purdue this weekend before winding it up against Wisconsin. Minnesota picked, off two lowa passes Saturday and pounced on three hav-’keye bobbles to earn a 10-0 shutout. Colin Versich booted a 27-yard field goal in the second period and Hawkeye quarterback Duane Blaska capped a 44-yard drive in the final frame diving over from the four. Purdue turned Michigan State fumbles, a penalty and a pass interception into a 17-9 win over the Spartans to stay in convention one-half game behind the Big Ten leaders. Tom Bloom nabbed an errant pass for the Boilermakers and ran it back 47 yards to set up the winning score in the last quarter. Michigan quarterback Bob Chandler punched over from the one after reserve end Ben Farahee picked off an Illinois pass in the final period to give coach Bump Elliott’s Wolverines a 14-10 victory over brother Pete’s Illini. A 27-yard field goal by Ohio State’s Dick Vanraaphorst in the final eight seconds drove Indiana down to its 18th consecutive Big Ten defeat, 10-7. Ohio State broke the game open after quarterback Joe Sparma whipped the Buc’keyes into scoring position with four pass completions in the last minute of play. Halfback Paul Warfield rambled 75 yards for the Buckeye touchdown earlier, and Woody Moore, who directed the Hoosier’s attack, scored for Indiana.—-—

Pro Basketball NBA Results —„Saturday Scores -— Cincinnati 135, Detroit 124. St. Louis 97, Los Angeles 96. Sunday Scores Chicago 109, Los Angeles 105 (overtime). Boston 117, New York 98. St. Louis 117, Detroit 100. College Football Purdue 17, Michigan State 9. Ohio State 10, Indiana 7. Wisconsin 37, Northwestern 6. Minnesota 10, lowa 0. Michigan 14, Illinois 10. Notre Dame 43, Pitt 22. Ball State 42, Bradley 22. Butler 41, Evansville 0. Indiana State 16, St. Joseph's 0. Valparaiso 21, DePauw 7. Manchester 27, Hanover 21. Earlham 24, Indiana Central 0. Franklin 55, Rose Poly 0. Anderson 19, Defiance 13. Wabash 7, Heidelberg 6. Wilmington 15, Taylor 14. Miami (O.) 42, Dayton 20. Oklahoma 41, lowa State 0. Nebraska 40, Kansas 16. Bowling Green 7, Ohio U. 6. Missouri 57, Colorado 0. Syracuse 34, Navy 6. Oklahoma State 12, Army 7. Duke 10; Maryland 7. Georgia Tech 14, Florida State 14 (tie). Florida 23. Georgia 15. Fentucky 7, Vanderbilt 0. Tennessee 28. Tulane 16. Mississippi 52, Chattan(x>g:i 7. Alabama 36, Miami (Fla,. 3. Louisiana State 5, Texas Christian 0. Arkansas 28. Rice 14. Texas A & M 12, Southern Methodist 7. Texas 27, Baylor 12. Washington 27, California 0. Utah State 20, Wyoming 6. Oregon 28, Washington State 10. Air Force 17, UCLA 11. Southern California 39, Stanford 14. New York Stock Exchange Prices MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T. 112%; Central Soya 28%; du Pont 223%; Ford 43%: General Electric 71%; General Motors 53%; Gulf Oil 36%: Standard Oil Ind. 42%; Standard Oil N. J. 53%; U. S. Steel 43%.

m DtCAW* DAILY MMOCRAt, DICATUR, iUDtAHA

Team Standings W L Pct. Monmouth 2 0 1.000 Hartford .... 2 1 667 Pleasant Millsl 1 .500 Berne 0 0 .000 Commodores 0 0 .000 Geneva — 0 0 .000 Yellow Jackets —— 0 0 .000 Adams Central .... 0 2 .000 — 000 — The basketball tempo picks up in Adams county this week, as three more teams open their seasons, and with a total of seven games scheduled. — 000 — The Decatur Commodores will open their 1962-63 season Tuesday night, entertaining Larwill at the Decatur gym. The Commodores are under the guidance of a new coach this season, George Waning, who faces a rebuilding task with four" of last years starters lost by graduation. — 000 — Berne and Geneva will also open their cards this week. The Bears, deending sectional champions, start their firing against the Spartans in a Tuesday game at Pleasant Mills. The Cardinals launch their season at home Friday against the Montpelier Pacers. — 000 — The Commodores will be back in action Friday, traveling to Woodlan. Also on Friday, in addition to Montpelier at Geneva, Crestview plays at Pleasant Mills, the Monmouth Eagles meet their arch rivals at Hoagland, and the Hartford Gorillas meet the Owls at Bryant. — 000 —

The Decatur Yellow Jackets will be the last county team to open play, getting their season underway Thanksgiving Eve, Nov. 21, playing host to the Adams Central Greyhounds, who are idle this week. — 000 — The Northeastern Indiana conference race will also get underway this week, with Angola playing at Columbia City Friday night. 3 Decatur’s NEIC opener will be Saturday, Dec. 8, when Fo r t Wayne Concordia plays the Jackets at the Decatur gym. Angola and Bluffton shared the NEIC championship last season .each with 1 conference marks of seven victories and two defeats. — 000 — Results one year ago this week: Larwill 59, Commodores 49. Yellow Jackets 61, Adams Central 47. Berne 74, Winchester 42. Woodlan 45, Commodores 44. Crestview 84, Pleasant Mills 45. Montpelier 81, Geneva 63. Hoagland 79. Monmouth 52. Bryant 60; Hartford 59. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results. 130 Index: 1957 =-- 100 -Seasonally Adjusted 120 “ S" 110 ~ ioo —-——— — —— gn 11 it mh ut iln tttli i< u Kiiiilit i iiTuill 1959 1960 1961 1962 OUTPUT STEADY — Industrial production in September remained at a seasonally adjusted 119 per cent of the 1957 average for the third consecutive month. It was up from 111 per cent a year ago.

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United States Wins In Golf , International BUENOS AIRES (UPI) — Sam Snead, coming to the end of the golfing trail, did it again in the International Trophy and Canada Cup golf matches with the aid of Arnold Palmer, but the ice-slick greens of the Argentine course cost Uncle Sam the individual championship. That went to Roberto de Vicenzo of the host country, who at 39 is 11 years Snead’s junior. But the old Slammer and Palmer, golf’s richest golfer over the past four years, teamed to keep the team championship in the U.S. It was Uncle Sam’s fifth triumph in the 10 International golf tournaments which have been played and Snead has shared four of these triumphs. He won with Ben Hogan in 1956, with Palmer in 1960 and with Jimmy Demaret last year. Age Catches Up “I only wish I could have won the individual title again,” said Sam sadly, “but, you just have i to admit it — at 50 you start! coming apart at the seams.” He had won it last year with a record low of 272. Snead had a two-shot lead going into Sunday’s fourth and final round under a hot sun which seared the 6,746-yard Jockey Club Course with its concrete-like greens, but he couldn’t make it stand up. Still suffering from a painful right foot, he shot a final round 74. four over par, and it wasn’t good enough. For the balding De Vicenzo, three shots back, came home with a two-under-par 68 for a total of 276 —two t strokes better than Palmer and Peter Allis of England and three strokes better than Snead. Tries But Fails Palmer made a late charge at it, with a one-under-par 69, but he just couldn't conquer those greens, which Snead described as “putting on ice.” But that 69, coupled with Snead’s second straight over-par round, was good enough to give the U.S. the team championship with a total of 557 — three under par and two strokes better than Argentina. Allis shot a final-round 68 to tie Palmer at 278 while Snead came in at 279. Then it was Alfonso Angelini of Italy at 281, Kel Nagle of Australia and Fidel de Luca of Argentina at 283, Mario Gonzalez of Brazil with 284, Gary Player of South Africa with 285 'and Peter Thomson of Australia with 286. No team was close to the U.S. and Argentina. Australia came in third with 569 and then came England with 572 and Brazil at 584.

Hockey Results NATIONAL LEAGUE Saturday Scores Chicago 3, Montreal 1. Toronto 5, New York 3. Detroit 3, Boston 3 (tie). Sunday Scores Montreal 4, Boston 2. Toronto 5, Chicago 3. Detroit 3, New York 2. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Saturday Scores St. Paul 5, Fort Wayne 2. Omaha 5, Muskegon 2. Sunday Scores Omaha 9, Muskegon 3. Port Huron 2, St. Paul 0.

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BOWLING Women’s Major League W L Pts. Two Brothers —— 17 13 24 Adams Trailer .... 17 13 23 Three Kings . 17% 12% 22% Colonial Salon 13% 16% 19% Aspy Standard .... 13 17 16 Gene’s Mobil 12 18 15 High games: V. Smith 200-171, D. Johnson 197, M. Ladd 192, I. Bowman 191-170, A. Hoile 179-170, M. Mies 173, L. Call, P. Clark 171. High series:- V. Smith 536, A. Hoile 507. Splits converted: G. Buuck 3-10, M. Smitley 3-10, M. Scheumann 510, A. Hoile 5-10 and 3-10, G. Reynolds 4-5, V. Custer 3-10, D. Johnson 2-10, S. Schnepp 5-10, M. Ladd 5-10, B. Hess 5-7 and 4-5-7, M. Mies 4-5. Central Soya League Wonders 3 points, Rockets 1; Alley Kats 2, Highwaymen 2; Torpedos 3, Master Mixers 1; Elevator 4 .Feed Mill 0; Spares 2, Bagdads 2; Dubs 3, Go-Getters 1; Hot Shots 3, Keystones 1. High games and series: Men— P. Inniger 181-209-224 ( 614); L. Meyer 197-164 (538); J. Bayles 195-179 (528); D. Cochran 207-173-202 ( 582): J. Schlickman 195-198-182 < 585); G. Schultz Jr. 202 (521); G. Schultz 188-192-187 ( 567); J. Nussbaum 171-202 (522); B. Gase 179-171; D. Myers 205-170 ( 527); D. Abbott 180; W. Osterman 181183 ( 560); R. Carnes 179-180 (515);

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K.< Baumgartner 196-178 (527); J, Wendel 190; E. Hutker 209 ( 527); D. Bricker 502; D. Miles 203-205 (545); B. Dammeyer 173; D. Lengerich 197-207-193 (597); R. Friend 209 ( 515); C. Bluhm 191-176 ( 525); R. Canales 193-190 ( 531); R. Christen 173-189-180 ( 542); W. Bedwell 198; P. Morgan 181; R. Ross 194 (509); J. Sheets 189; H. Mauller 185; G. Rydell 182; B. Shoup 188; B. Cook 176 (503). High games and series: Women —M. Simon 171-166 (479); L. MacLean 155; P. Johnson 182; I. Bowman 180 ( 454); K. Los he 170; J. Gerber 158-171 (458); P. Whetstone 189 (458); K. Baumgartner 160; R. Price 161. Boys Hi-County League W L Pts. Alley Cats 7 2 9 Cons (PM) . 6% 2% 8% Thunderbirds (M).„ 6 3 8% Spare Masters (D)._ 5 4 8 Wholly Rollers (M). 6 3 7% Blue Angels (M) .... 5 4 7 Pussy Cats (PM) .. 5 4 6 Pin Splitters (PM)_-_ 5 4 6 Lone Eagles (M) .. 4% 4% 5% Spartans (PM) .... 2 7 3 Lucky Strikes (PM). 181 3 Aces (D) 1 8 1 High team series: Thunder Birds 1730. High series: Lynn Sheets 502. High games: Roger Burkhait 152-159, Lynn Sheets 200-165, Dick Justice 153-148, Dick Edgell 144, Ken Selking 183-140, Eugene Buuck 157-147-187, Larry Bieberich 149, R. Weiland 142-142, B.

PAGE SEVEN

Williamson 169, J. G a limey er 162145, D. E. Weiland 144, G. Ross 194-178, R. Mefferd 150-145. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. TP OP Northwestern 4 1 .800 131 84 Minnesota .... 4 1 .800 89 41 Wisconsin .... 4 1 .800 150 52 Purdue 3 1 .750 90 26 Ohio State .... 3 2 .600 103 75 Mich. State .. 2 2 .500 70 53 lowa 2 3 .400 59 102 Illinois 1 4 .200 39 137 Michigan 1 4 .200 126 126 Indiana 0 5 .000 52 106 H. S. Basketball Huntertown 53, Avilla 35. Churubusco 69, Riverdale 43. South Whitley 66, Huntington Twp. 59. Liggonier 70, LaGrange 67. Lapel 70, Yorktown 54. High School Football Evansville Reitz 13, Evansville Bosse 13 (tie). Louisville Male 14, New Albany 13 . Lafayette 33, Indianapolis Arlington 0. Louisville Manual 13, Evansville Rex Mundi 0. Culver Military 40, Danville (Ill.) Schlarman 18.