Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 303, Decatur, Adams County, 26 December 1962 — Page 7
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Ticket Sales Close Thursday For Tournament Tickets for the Bluffton holiday tournament will remain on sale until about 4 o’clock Thursday afternoon, Decatur high school athletic director Robert Worthman said this morning. Tickest are on sale at Holthouae-on-the-Highway, and are priced at ♦ 11.50 for a season ticket, good for both nights, are at $1 per session. This is the only place tickets may (SAVE 50% ■JON ROOM ACCOMMODATIONS ■; ANY WEEKEND . x ( Ihundoy Ibn, Sunday; 2-Day Mlnlnuo ) . jWITH THIS COUFQbMJFON REGISTERING COMPLETELY All CONDITIONED , * ZAOfO AND TV IN EVERY ROOM . x NO CHARGE for children under n ■ X Home of ska Mfarld - Famous 1 Chalet* * x Ample Adjacent forking " ' J RANDOLPH at LA SALLE - 'J b Aaorl W fit Loop • X Far RaMrvatkn 4 Infannotlom ■ I Vfrha BISMARCK HOTEL, Roa» ft •jl ar Chiral 4-012? J, Offer Expire* December 30, 196?
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be purchased, since school has dismissed for the holidays. The Decatur Yellow Jackets, looking to break a seven-game winless skein, open the tournament Thursday evening at 7:15 o'clock when they tangle with the Airedales of Hartford City. Bluffton, host for the tourney, and the Portland Panthers will tangle in the second game Thursday, slated to begin at approximately 8:30 p.m. Tide Match Friday The championship game will be played at 8:30 p.m. Friday, preceded by the consolation match at 7:15 p.m. Pre-tourney favorite is the boat team, the Tigers of Bluffton. The Tigers, led by 6-6 Brad Bounds, have posted the best record of the four teams in the tourney, owning a 6-2 mark thus far. The Tigers have beaten both Hartford City and Decatur this season, and the Jackets by a 64-54 score at Bluffton Friday. Team Records Although the Tigers are favored, Portland would become the top choice for tournament honors if they mahage to upset the Tigers Thursday. The Panthers have a veteran ball club, and have posted a 5-3 record thus far, with losses to Fort Wayne Concordia, Auburn and Hagerstown. Hartford City, the Yellow Jackets’ opponents, own a four win, four loss record, having beaten Montpelier, Pennville, Dunkirk and Plymouth. Only comparative scores were the 'Dales 82-53 loss to Muncie South, who beat the Yellow Jackets by an 81-65 margin. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG result#.
Holiday Meets In Spotlight For: Colleges By JOHN GRIFFIN UPI Sports Writer It’s holiday tournament time in college basketball and Stanford and Illinois, a pair of perfectrecord quintets, lead the way into a week of gay but high-pressure competition. From Los Angeles, where Stanford (7-0) is the title pick in the Los Angeles Classic, all the way across the nation to New York, where Illinois (5-0) is a co-favor-ite in the Holiday Festival Tournament, college teams will be having a fling at tinsel titles before buckling down to conference warfare next month. Among the other major tournaments starting Wednesday were the Big Eight in Kansas City, the All-College in Oklahoma City, the Far West Classic in Portland, One-, the We%t Coast AC in San Francisco, the Quaker City in Philadelphia, and the Gulf-South in Shreveport, La. Several other big tournaments start Thursday and some Friday, with almost all eff the court carnivals coming to a climax on Saturday. Top-Ranked Teams Play Before the week is over, six of the teams ranked among the top 10 in the nation by the UPI board of coaches will be tourney-tested. In addition to Stanford (ranked No. 4) and Illinois (No. 5), sec-ond-ranked Loyola of Chicago will appear in the All-College Tournament (but not until Thursday), sixth-ranked Arizona State in the Queen City Tournament at Buffalo, N.Y.*, starting Thursday, sev-enth-ranked Bowling Green in the Quaker City, and ninth-ranked Mississippi State in the Sugar Bowl starting Friday. Top-ranked Cincinnati, however, skips the tourney fuss and is slated only for a regularly scheduled
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Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams Thursday Yellow Jackets in Blufftpn tourney. ' Monmouth in Bishop Luers tourney. Friday Crestview at Commodores. 'Ydllow Jackets in Bluffton tourney. Monmouth in Bishop Luers, tourney. Saturday Berne in Columbia City tourney, game Saturday against Ohio University. Here’s how some of the big tourneys starting Wednesday stack up: * Los Angeles Classic — An afternoon doubleheader, Southern California-Colorado State and Washington-St. Louis, and a night twin bill, UCLA-Utah State and Stanford - Northwestern. Sta nford’s foe. Northwestern, has the only losing record in the field (2-5), while Stanford has a star in Renter Tom Dose, who has averaged 21.1 points per game. Favorites in, the other games are Southern Cal (No. 15 nationally with 6 0 record), and UCLA (No. 11 nationally), with WashingtonSt. Louis a toss-up. Holiday Festival — Also a daynight program. Afternoon: West Virginia-Boston College, St. Bona-venture-Holy Cross. Night: Illi-nois-Penn, NYU-Duquesne. West Virginia, loser to Kentucky in fi nals of Kentucky Invitational Saturday, has All-America candidate Rod Thorn and shares favorite’s role with Illinois. Games favorites are West Virginia, Bonnies, Illini, with NYU-Duquesne even. Quaker City — Also day-night. Afternoon: Providence - Delaware, - Villanova - Manhattan. Night: La Salle-Brigham Young, St. Joseph’s-Bowling Green. The BG Falcons (4-0), led by Nate Thurmond, are the solid title favorite with Providence (4-1), with 6-11 John Thompson and Vin Ernst, a threat. Far West — First half of first round includes lowa-Arizona, Ore-gon-Washington State, Oregon State, which has won this tourney six straight times, has football “player of the year” Terry Baker on the squad, doesn’t play until Thursday.' Big Eight — First half of firSt round includes Colorado-Kansas, loWa State-Nebraska. Colorado is the defending conference champ, but Oklahoma State, which plays Thursday, has the best record (7-1). , , • •....' All-College — First half of first round includes Crejghton-WXd-ming, Oklahoma City-Baylor. LoyOla- (7-0) plays " Thursday, has' been held under 100 points only once this -season~~and is a solid favorite. Creighton is second seeded. West Coast AC — First half of first round includes Santa ClaraUniversity of Pacific, San Jose State-Pepperdine. Gulf-South — First half of first round includes Louisiana TechWest Texas State, George Wash-ington-Centenary. Green Bay Packers Return To Training GREEN BAY, Wts. fUPD' The Green Bay Packers, frdsh. from a two-day Christmas break, resumed their training today for next Sunday’s National Football League championship game with the New York Giants. The temperature plunged to 10 below zero Christmas Eve but coach Vince Lombardi said he would give his club stiff drills despite the weather. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
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Al Sherman Repeats As Coach Os Year NEW YORK (UPI) - Al Sher, man, the ‘‘kid from Brooklyn” who guided the New York Giants’ fabulous old men’’ to another division title, today was honored as United Press Internatonal’s National Football League coach-of-the-year for the second straight season. The eves-optimistic, 39-year-old Sherman and his Giants crossed up a lot of NFL ‘‘experts” who predicted before the start of this season that the club was creaky with age and “just couldn’t win” the Eastern Division championship. ,
Sherman gave them his answer a few weeks ago after the Giants had beaten the Bears in Chicago to qualify again for the NFL’s championship playoff: “Why is it,” he laughed, “when you lose you’re considered old; but when you win, that’s considered maturity?” All along, since befojfi. the start of the season, he had predicted that the Giants’ experience would be an asset, and not a detriment. 1 Sherman now can attain the ultimate ~in his two-year head coaching career by master-mind-ing the Giants to victory over the Green Bay Packers -in next Sunday’s championship game. Sherman won the coach-of-the-year honor in a close race with Bill McPeak of the Washington Redskins. In a poll of 42 regular NFL writers three from each league city), the youthful Giants coach had 11 votes to McPeak’s 10. Tom Landry of the Dallas Cowboys was third with eight votes; Vjnee Lombardi of the Packers had six and George Wilson of the Detroit Lions five. Although the Giants won the Eastern Division title in 1961, there were few dopesters who picked them to repeat. in 1962. Charlie Conerly and Kyle Rote, two of their genuine “old pros,” had retired. And even without them, the Giants were starting to show their age. Ten of their key players had logged a combined total of 97 seasons in pro football. Could experience overcome the drawbacks of creaking bones? Sherman and the Giants proved it could. Notre Dame Football Player Is Injured CHICAGO (UPl)—Notre Dame ‘football player Don Hogan, 19,' was hurt Tuesday on his way home from church when his car rammed an overpass pillar on the city’s south-side. ■— — ——- Thofiias." Quinn, 19, a Yell6w Student, also was hurt. Both were treated at Little Company of Mary Hospital. Hogan, a first-string sophomore halfback for the Irish, suffered a possible broken hip, authorities said. Quinn complained of internal injuries.
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Aussies Sweep First Matches 7 Over Mexicans BRISBANE, Australia (UPD— Red-haired southpaws Neale Fraser and Rod Laver virtually wrapped up tennis' Davis Cup for Australia for the fourth straight year today when they swept the opening pair of singles matches in the challenge round before a crowd of about 7,500 at Milton Courts. Fraser, a former Wimbledon champion, did it the hard way in a punishing two-hour, 31-minute match that tested the stamina of his battered legs—a 7-9, 6-3, 6-4, 11-9 triumph over 26year-old An tonio Palafox. Laver, the second man in tennis history to wear the “grand slam” crown, did it the easy way as he followed Fraser with a stunning, 6-2, 6-1, 7-5, rout of young Rafael Osuna. When the two southpaws finished their work on die soggy courts, they had left little doubt that the cup symbolic, of world amateur tennis supremacy will stay here “down under” for at least another year. To win now, Mexico — the first Latin-Ameri-can nation ever to appear in a Davis Cup challenge round—must sweep all of the remaining three matches in this series, the doubles Thursday and the two singles matches on Friday. That would be perhaps the greatest upset in tennis history, and no one here was talking about it as a possibility after today's matches. Instead, speculation centered simply on whether or not the Aussies will duplicate their 5-0 sweep over Italy in last year’s challenge round. target of editorial attack in some Australian newspapers today because of reports he will turn professional immediately after the challenge round, was awesomely efficient as he demolished Osuna. Fraser was h substitute for Roy Emerson, generally ranked as the world’s best amateur behind Laver who was taken out of this assignment because of a bruised rib. * Pro Basketball NBA Results San Francisco 94, St. Louis 91. Syracuse 123, New York 111. Cincinnati 131, Detroit 120. ABL Results Pittsburgh 102. Hockey Results National League Detroit, 2, Toronto 1. Boston 6, New York 2. Montreal 6, Chicago 0. International League St. Paul 5, Fort Wayne 2. Muskegon 5, Omaha 1. Minneapolis 7, Port Huron 5.
BOWLING Classic League W L Pts. Leland Smith Ins. .28 17 42 Leasing Inc. 26 19 33% Decatur Farms ._ 26 19 32% West End Rest. j. 25 20 32 Gerber’s Supermar’t 22 23 31 Victory Bar 22 23 30 Schrock Builders .. 21 24 28 Reidenbach Equip. .20 25 26 Citizen’s Tele. Co. .19 26 . 25 Preble Gardens .... 16 29 20 High series: Jim Parent 619 (22V 206, 192), Lloyd Reef 607 (212, 194, 201), Roger Scheumann 604 ( 202, 177, 225). High games: R. Hobbs 227, C. Cook 225, 221, H. Strickler 207, E. Graber 200, C. Melcher 202, W. Gallmeyer 208, E. Anderson 216, R. Hoffman 222, D. Graber 203, T. Johnson 214, T. Fennig 222, R. Mies 215, 202, P. Smith 215, R. Ballard 211, W. Tutewiler 202. , Note: Leland Smith Ins. rolled a new high single game of 1033. Minor League W L Pts. Wolff’s Hrwe. 30 15 32 Bower’s Jewelry .. 30 15 42 Moose No. 1 . 17% 39% Walt’s 29 16 % 38 Riverview ... 29 16 37 Clem’s Hdwe. ...... 27 18 35 H. O. H. 22% 22% 33% Smith’s 26 19 33 Haugk’s 23 22 29 Drewry’s 22 23 28 Fulmer’s ..’ 22 23 27 Extract’s 19 26 27 Downtown Tex. .... 19 26 26 Haircut Center 13 32 17 Moose No. 2 12 33 15 Team No. 2i. 9 36 11 High Series: Palmer Inniger 729
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(220.265-244), J. Geimer 608 (206-244-155), H. Grey 596, H. Hoffmin 580, D. Wolff 565, T. Fennig 558, A. Schneider 558, N. Richer do 555, B. Balinger 551. High games: H. Hoffman 212, T. Pillars 215, H. Gray 211-201, R. Ross Jr. 213, A. Schneider 206-200, R. Smith Jr. 209, P. Sheets 201-204, D. Wolff 210, N. Richards 201, B. Bolinger 201, F. Stetler 202. Note: Palmer Inniger rolled a new high series, 729. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
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