Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 30, Decatur, Adams County, 5 February 1963 — Page 7

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1063

Illinois Beats I. U.; Purdue In First Win CHICAGO (UPD—Things could get rough from here on out for fourth-ranked Illinois. The Dlini, unbeaten in five Big Ten games and conquered only twice in 14 contests this season, are all alone in front of the conference today but they play five of their remaining eight games on the road. One qf those barnstorming tilts is at Bloomington, Ind., Feb. IB and if Monday night’s contest at Champaign, 111., is any criterion, the Illini may be in for a rough time. In the friendly confines of Huff Gymnasium, reputedly the worst floor in the conference for a visiting team, it was all that Illinois could do to stop invading Indiana 104-101. The Hoosiers proved it is never safe to coast. The Illini had a 15point lead with less than seven minutes remaining. Then Tom Bolyard and the Van Arsdale « twins, Tom and Dick, each contributed four Indiana points in two minutes and what had looked like an easy Illinois victory became a squeaker. Furthermore, the Hoosiers showed almost as much balance in their scoring as Illinois. The Illini had five starters in double figures. Indiana had four. And those fellows down at Lafayette, Ind., Feb. 18 might prove equally unfriendly. Purdue, the conference doormat all season with seven straight losses, served notice Monday night that the Boilermakers may have hairy ears from now on. Purdue handed visiting Michigan State, which had won three of its six conference meetings, one of its worst trouncings of the season 103-81. In their last two previous games the Boilermakers lost to Indiana

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by only one point and to second place Ohio State by only three. Michigan State controlled the backboards but three of its starters fouled out and Purdue shot .550 from the field. In the only other conference game last night another doormat, Wisconsin, which had won only once in four league tries, rallied in the final four minutes to overcome a six-point deficit and stop host Michigan 81-78. And Illinois goes to Madison, Wis., Feb. 11. Illinois, putting on one of its vaunted sprints late in the first half, took a 57-46 advantage into the intermission, but the Hoosiers came back gradually on the shooting of Tom Bolyard and Jimmy : Rayl and the rebounding of the VanArsdale twins. Bolyard, who often plays his best games away from home, led all shooters with 35 points, many of his 14 fielders from 18 to 20 feet out. Rayl added 31. The loss gave Indiana a 3-2 conference record and dropped the Hoosiers from second place to fourth behind Minnesota and Ohio State. Purdue, long overdue, was in command throughout in clipping its 8-game losing streak, seven in the Big Ten. The Boilermakers opened up a 23-5 lead and in their best-balanced shooting effort of the campaign had five players in double-figures, led by Mel Garland with 34 points and sophomore Bob Purkhiser with 23. It was 45-31 Purdue at the half and the Spartans never got close enough in the final 20 minutes to challenge. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. TP OP Illinois 5 0 1.000 463 413 Minnesota 4 2 .667 435 401 Ohio State 4 2 .667 467 476 Indiana 3 2 .600 443 432 lowa 3 3 .500 407 445 Michigan 3 3 .500 445 428 Mich. State —. 3 4 .429 511 526 Wisconsin 2 3 .400 347 353 Northwestern .. 2 4 .333 485 477 Purdue 17 .125 643 695

Cincinnati Is Victor In 36th Straight Game If luck appears to be on the side of highly rated Cincinnati, Illinois and Georgia Tech, remember it’s the “year of the rabbit.” Top-ranked Cincinnati, held to a two-point lead at halftime, defeated upset-minded Drake, 71-60, Monday night for the Bearcats’ 36th consecutive victory. Drake clicked on only 8 of 29 shots in the second half. Illinois, ranked fourth, hung on for a 104-101 triumph over Indiana in a battle for the Big Ten Conference lead, while the No. 6 Georgia Tech Engineers eked out a 5049 decision over William and Mapr. Cincinnati, which was forced into overtime before beating Drake last Thursday, had visions of a similar outing when the score was tied seven times in the first half before the ’Cats gained a 40-38 edge at intermission. Ron Bonham poured in 31 points for Cincinnati and teammate Tom Thacker scored 19 to provide the Bearcats with their seventh straight Missouri Valley Conference victory. McCoy McLemore topped Drake with 17. Blows Big Lead Illinois held a 15-point lead, 88-73, with about seven minutes remaining when Indiana caught fire to narrow the gap. The total of 205 points for both teams was tops for the Big Ten Conference this season. All five Illini starters hit in double figures, with Tai Brody scoring a high of 22 points. Tom Bolyard tallied 35 in Indiana’s losing effort. The victory left Illinois with a 5-0 conference record and dropped the Hoosiers from second to fourth place with a 3-2 mark. Georgia Tech, trailing 23-18 at the half, raised its record to 17-1 only because Dave Hunter’s 50-

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Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams TUESDAY Rockcreek at Commodores. Adams Central at Geneva. Pleasant Mills vs Madison Twp. at Bryant. FRIDAY Fremont at Commodores. Yellow Jackets at Garrett. Huntington Twp. at Monmouth. Adams Central at Auburn. Elmhurst at Berne. Ossian at Geneva. Hartford at Poling. SATURDAY Ridgeville at Geneva. Jim Taylor Named As Player Os Year Boston (UPD — Jim Taylor, Green Bay’s powerful fullback, today was selected as the top National Football League player of 1962 in the weekly Editor’s Poll. Taylor received a percentage score of 92 in the balloting by 85 of the nation's sports writers. Y. A. Tittle, the New York Giants quarterback, was second With a percentage of 86. foot shot for William and Mary at the final buzzer hit the front rim and bounced away. The Engineers hit on only 26 per cent of their shots, but John Herbert made the most of this Inaccuracy with a Tech high of 12 points. Hunter scored 16 points for W&M. Ties for Lead Mississippi State tied Georgia Tech for the Southeastern Conference lead by swamping Tulane, 91-73, in a league game. The ninth-ranked Staters, held to a 37-37 intermission tie, broke loose in the second half as Leland Mitchell led the way with a game total of 29 points. Jim Kerwin, the leading scorer in the SEC, paced Tulane with 27 points.* Fifth-ranked Arizona State had no trouble in overpowering New Mexico State, 87-62, but luck ran out on seventh-rated Colorado as it dropped a 52-49 decision to Oklahoma State.

Scheduled Rifle Match Postponed Monday night’s scheduled match between the rifle clubs of the two Decatur high schools was postponed because of the annual Boy Scout banquet held last evening. A new date for the match has not been set to date. The Hot Shots, rifle club of the Decatur Catholic high school, also has tentative matches set with two Fort Wayne clubs, and will also compete fn the state rifle competition at Culver Military Academy Saturday, March 2. The club has fired its January postal matches, and is now working on the Febraury match. The Hot Shots, finished 84th in the November and December firing in division A, open junior teams totaling 172; 54th, 66th and 75th of 94 teams in division B, non-mili-tary scholastic teams. Both of the local high school teams are sponsored by the Fraternal Order of Police of this city, and both use the range at Eddie’s Recreation on North Second street. BOWLING Classic League W L Pts. Victory Bar 8(4 (4 11(4 Leland Smith Ins.— 6 3 ® / Schrock Builder ... 6 3 8 Gerbers Super Mkt. 5 4 7 Citizens Tel Co 5 4 West End Rest 4 5 6 Decatur Farms —.3(4 5*4 4(4 Leland Smith Life— 3 6 Reidenbach Eq. Co. 2 7 Preble Gardens — 2 7 2 High series: Chuck Cook 638 (231, 211, 196); Roily Ladd 618 (193, 191, 234); Ralph Hobbs 614 (204, 225 185). High games: R. Scheumann 214, R. Hollman 212, P. Inniger 200, W. Tutewiler 203, A. Erxleben 215, D. Graber 217, M. Heare 225, P. Smith 204, R. Loyd 207. R. Andrews 201, W. Petrie 223, A. Schrock 201, W. Snyder 235. Minor League W L Pts. Riverview —— 9(4 2*4 12(4 Walt’s Standardß 4 11 Holthouse on Hiway. 6(4 5*4 10(4 Drewry’s 8 4 10 Wolff’s Hardware — 6*4 5(4 9(4 Fulmer Seat Covers. 7 5 9 Smith Dairy 7 5 9 Haugk’s 7 5 9 Moose No. 16 6 8 -Moose No. 2 . 6 6 —-8“ Clem Hardware —— 5 7 8 Downtown Texaco., 5(4 6(4 7(4 Haircut Center 6 6 7 Extract’s ......'4 9 4 Bower Jewelry 3 9 3 Team No. 2 2 10 2 ' High series: J. Markley 593, F. ■Hoffman 590, W. Schnepf 579, T. Fennig 572, H. Miller 564, J. B. Sprunger 553, N. Richard 553. High games: F. Hoffman 245, W. Schnepf 224, N. Richard 223, J. Lengerich 219, J. Markley 219, R. Stevens 221, B. Justus 218, P. Miller 212, H. Miller 203, T. Fennig 200.

His * Hers League End of Ist Half W L Pts. •Gaskill 18 9 25 Hess 17 10 23 Schmitt 16 11 22 Schnepf 16 11 22 Rich 16 11 20 Fleming 12 15 16 Chilcote 12 15 15 Hurless 10 17 14 Lutes 9 18 12 Kohne 9 18 11 High games: W o m e n—M. Schnepf 152, J. Voirol 150, W. Hurless 152, M. Ladd 151, R. Price 157-162. Men—W. Schnepf 170-171-177, B. Mutschler 184-164, J. Chilcote 160, F. Dellinger 192-213-182, B. Schmitt 174, B. Porter 165-198, L. Rich 168-162, B. Tutewfler 192-161-232, D. Baker 186-163, D. Gaskin 182. High series: W. Schnepf 518, F.' Dellinger 587, B. Porter 511, B. Tutewiler 585, D. Baker 506. Splits converted: D. Gaskill 6-7-10, M. Tutewiler 3-10, M. Kohne 3-10, twice, L. Rich 5-10. College Basketball Purdue 103, Michigan State 81. , Illinois 104, Indiana 101. Wisconsin 81, Michigan 78. Jacksonville U. 90, DePauw 61. Cincinnati 71, Drake 60. lowa State 83, Nebraska 69. Kansas State 90, Missouri 55. Florida 84, Tennessee 73. Mississippi State 91, Tulane 73. Vanderbilt 74, Alabama 73 (overtime) Georgia Tech 50, William & Mary 49, Mississippi 60, Louisiana. State 48. Oklahoma State 52, Colorado 49.

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Jack Nicklaus Beats Player In Playoff PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (UPD —Jack Nicklaus and other members of golfs “big five” left the California gold rush today heading for Arizona in the hope of striking another bonanza. The National Open king subdued Gary Player with such ease in the playoff for the Palm Springs Golf Classic championship Monday that he automatically takes on the mantle of favorite to win the Phoenix Open starting Thursday. With five tournaments under their belts, the touring professionals have watched members of the “big five” win four of them. Arnold Palmer won at Los Angeles, Player at San Diego, Billy Casper the Crosby at Pebble Beach, and then Nicklaus here. The only title to escape them was the San Francisco Lucky International, won by veteran Jackie Burke. The other member of the “big five,” Gene Littler, hasn’t won yet. But he finished off the Palm Springs event by shooting the lowest round of the tourney, a 64 —and appears ready to step into title competition in Arizona. Pocket The Purses The five men, in addition to winning four or five titles, have captured $54,023 of the $210,000 in purses offered. With nearly 100 pros on the winter tour, that leaves slim pickings for the rest of the crew. Nicklaus, who at one time had decided to skip Palm Springs because of bursitis in his hip, had been having a rough year for him on the tour before he hit the jackpot here. He had won only $2,665 in four tournaments before he picked up the first place check here Monday by firing a beautifu, six-un-der-par 65 to trounce Player by

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eight strokes. “I said earlier that it would be ridiculous for me to win here with a bad leg,” said Nicklaus. "And it still goes. I was lucky. I didn't play nearly as well here as I have in many other tournaments.” He had blown a five-stroke lead on Sunday during the fifth round of the tournament. He had been fading his tee shots so badly that he even asked advice from his wife—who doesn’t play golf. But when he got into the playoff Monday against Player, everything was precision. He birdied the first hole with a 10-foot putt and never looked back. He outdrove Player by as much as 50 yards on many holes. Just Coasts In When Gary blew out of contention by taking a triple-bogey seven on the 12th hole as he battled the palm trees, Jack just coasted in. “It’s easy when you have a sixstroke lead,” said Nicklaus. “I sank three long putts and after that I was just trying to get close.” Even with the six-shot advantage, the one-time Ohio State athlete never let up. Player, taking a trimming, continued to fight and birdied the 17th and 18th holes. But Nicklaus birdied the 17th and eagled the 18th — each with 35-foot putts. He had a final 65 against two-over-par 73 for Player. The victory was worth $9,000 to the new champion and $4,600 to the runner-up. “And we want it definitely understood,” the two men chorused split the purse. We never split the split the purse. We never have and never will.” Fro Basketball NBA Results San Francisco 108, Chicago 107.

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PAGE SEVEN

Wrestlers Close Season This Week The Decatur high school wrstling team wraps up its season this week with a pair of matches on the road, and the sectional meet Saturday. The local grapplers will open the week’s action tonight with a match at Culver, and then travel to Howe Thursday. Hie squad will be entered in the sectional at Elkhart Saturday. Coach Gary Giessler’s crew needs at least one victory in the two matches this week, which would keep them at the .500 percentage mark for the season. The Decaturites currently stand at six wins and six losses for the campaign. A sweep of this week’s pair of matches would catapult the team far above the .500 mark for the year, only the second season Decatur high has included the sport in its athletic program. Corral Unbeaten Tiny but powerful Mark Corral, the smallest wrestler on the teem in the 95-pound division, will be seeking to establish a precedent that will be hard to follow for future grapplers. After the first twelve matches. Corral remains unbeaten, one of a select few over the state to own a perfect record for the season. Corral has defeated eleven consecutive opponents. He missed the match at New Haven earlier in the season. He will undoubtedly need a supreme effort at Culver tonight, and already holds one previous decision over Howe’s 95-pounder. pounder. Two other grapplers, Dave Adams and Alan Kalver, will also be seeking to boost already fine records this week. Both Adams and Kalver have won 10 matdies with only two losses apiece, and have formed a potent three-way punch with Corral.