Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 67, Decatur, Adams County, 20 March 1963 — Page 7
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1963
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Annual OCHS Award Banquet Here March 27 The annual athletic award banquet of the Decatur Catholic high school will be held at the Knights of Columbus hall next Wednesday evening, March 27, at 6:30 o’clock. The Rev. Charles Ueber, athletic director of the school, in announcing plans for the banquet, stated that the guest speaker will be James Hinga, basketball coach at Ball State Teachers College, Muncie. Hinga was basketball coach at Fort Wayne North Side high school before going to Ball State, and is well known in this area. Coach George Waning will present the basketball and baseball awards to members of the Commodore teams, and Mayor Donald F. Gage, coach of the school’s rifle team, the Hot Shots, will present the team awards. Tickets, priced at $2, may be purchased from members of the basketball, baseball and rifle teams, cheer leaders, or at the K. of Cl hall. The sale of tickets will close Monday ,and no tickets will be sold at the door. Award Winners Awards will be presented to the following students: Basketball, varsity — Michael Baker (senior jacket), Larry Gase, Dan Lose,. Ed Kohne, Terry Myers and James Schultz. Basketball, reserves — Pat Gage, Robert Mies. David R. Lengerich. . James Jackson, David Gase, Tony Kohne, Bill Bollinger, Tom Baker, Ronald Schnepp, David E. Lengerich and John Lose . , Baseball — Michael Baker, Ed Kohne, Dan Lose, Richard Omlor, James McGill, Terry Myers, Pat Gage, Robert Mies, James Schultz and John Lose. Cross country — John Lose. Rifle team — Jerome Geimer i three-year>, Michael Kuhnle and Fred Schurger itwo years), David Braun, Steve Colchin, Alan Converset, David Geimer. Tom Foos and Mike Reynolds. Manager awards — Jerome Geimer (senior jacket) and David Geimer. Cheer leaders — Mary Kable, Martha Kable, Alice Voglewede, Lynette Baker, Teresa Heimann and Jane Schultz. Our advertisers are for your HOME TOWN — DECATUR. Patronize them.
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Biographies Os Four Coaches In Finals INDIANAPOLIS (UPD- Thumbnail biographies of the four coaches in Saturday’s Indiana high school basketball tourney finals: ..Willard Kehrt, Terre Haute Garfield Age 51, married; 2 children; graduate Shelbyville High School; higher education: Indiana University and Indiana State; played 3 years high school basketball; also high school track and baseball; 3 years basketball and baseball at IU; 28 years in coaching: 3 years at Madison, 25 years at Garfield; has won 10 sectionals, 4 regionals, two semi-state titles. ..James Powers, South Bend Central Age 38, married; 3 children; graduate South Bend Central; higher education: Indiana State; 13 years coaching at South Bend Central; 6 years freshman coach, 2 years assistant varstff, 5 years head coach: has won “3 sectionals, 2 regionals, 1 semi-state; was B-24 radio operator in Air Force during World War II with 45 missions. ..Marion Crawley, Lafayette Age 54. married; 1 child; graduate Greencastle High School; higher education: DePauw and Columbia; played football and basketball at DePauw, also 2 years baseball at DePauw; coaching experience: 7 years at Greencastle, 4 years at Washington, 21 years at Lafayette; has won 26 sectionals, including 20 in a row; 19 regionals, 12 semi-state titles, 3 state titles (2 at Washington, 1 at Lafayette); twice was runnerup in state tourney. ..Dwight (Ike) Tallman, Muncie Central Age 25; married; 2 children; graduate New Castle High School; higher education: DePauw; played 4 years basketball in high school 3 years college football and basketball; coaching experience: 1 year at Kansas, Ill.; 1 year at Cambridge City; 1 year Muncie Central ”B” team; 1 year Muncie Central varsity, succeeding John Ldngfellow in “acting” capacity. Dave Hurd Named As Assistant To Devore SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPD—Notre Dame Athletic Director Moose Krause has announced the addition of Dave Hurd as assistant football coach under Hugh Devore: Hurd had been line coach at John Carroll University the last two years.
Syracuse Nationals Win Playoff Opener By United Press International The St. Louis Hawks and the Detroit Pistons open their portion of the National Basketball Association playoffs in St. Louis tonight, and both clubs will be trying to emulate Syracuse's fast break in the league’s Eastern Division. St. Louis, which finished second in the Western Division, is favored to turn back the Pistons in their best-of-five series, largely because of the all-important home court edge. If the series is extended to the full five games, three of them will be played in St. Louis. Syracuse had a tougher fight than expected before downing the Cincinnati Royals 123-120, on its home court Tuesday night. Hal Greer scored 32 points for the Nats and veteran Dolph Schayes contributed what Coach Alex Hannum called his “finest game of the season” to make the Syracuse win possible. The game was tied 21 times before the Royals broke to an SO--72 lead early in the third period. Cincinnati nursed its advantage into the final quarter b e fore Greer and Schayes rallied the Nats ahead for good. Greer finished with a game high of 32 points and Schayes added 17 in addition to some key assists and interceptions. Oscar Robertson, who played the entire 48 minutes, paced the Royals with 29 points. Marquette And Providence In Semi-Finals NEW YORK (UPD—Ray Flynn, a protege of former pro star Bill Sharman, has advanced Providence College into the semifinals of the National Invitation Basketball Tournament against Marquette and bolstered the Friars’ chances of winning the classic for the second time in three years. “This is a better team than our team that won the NIT in 1961,” said the 6-2, 180-pound Flynn, who scored 38 points in second-seeded Providence’s 106-96 victory over Miami of Florida Tuesday night. “We're better this year,” chimed in little Vinnie Ernst, who contributed 11 assists. “We’re better balanced. Everybody can do everything.” Marquette Routs St Louis Third-seeded Marquette shot 51 per cent from the field and routed St. Louis, 84-49, In Tuesday nignt's other quarter-final game before 15,589 fans at Madison Square Garden. After Providence meets Marquette Thursday night. Villanova takes on Canisius in the other semifinal. “I used to watch Bill Sharman all the time as a ball boy with the Boston Celtics,” Flynn said. “I don't think Red Auerbach (Celtics’ coach) even knew who I was. But Sharman perfected my shooting and told me my mistakes. Since I’m not so tall he showed me how to get those quick shots off. / - “It also took a lot of hard work," he added. Jim Stone scored 26 points and grabbed 12 rebounds while Jim Thompson had 17 points and Bob Kovalski added 14 for the freewheeling Friars from Rhode Island. Glaser Scores 23 Ron Glaser, who shot 7 of 10 from the field in the first half, finished with 23 points in pacing Eddie Hickey’s Marquette team to victory. He connected on 11 of 15 field goal attempts all told. “This club is equal to any team I’ve brought into the NIT,” said Hickey, who, ironically, led St. Louis to the title in 1948 and is making his 10th appearance in the event. Bob Hornak scored 20 points and Dick Nixon tallied 18 to help the Marquette attack. Saturday’s final will be held at 4 p.m. EST and will be nationallvtelevised. ’*tt!DNNH
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Tigers Score Fifth Win In Row Tuesday By TIM MORIARTY UPI Sports Writer Manager Bob Schefflng of the Detroit Tigers claims “we’ll beat those dam-Yankees” if Al Kaline and Frank Lary shake off 1962 injuries. The Bengal boss can stop worrying about Kaline, who missed 62 games last season because of a fractured collar bone but still managed to hit .304, slug 28 home runs and knock in 94 runs. In an exhibition game against the Los Angeles Dodgers Tuesday at Lakeland, Fla., Kaline raised his spring average to .382 by collecting four singles in an 8-3 romp. It was the Tigers’ fifth victory in a row and raised their exhibition record to 7-4. Lary, though, is another matter. Hampered by a sore shoulder last season, the veteran right-hander won only two games after hi s big 1961 campaign when he posted a 23-9 record. In two outings this spring, Lary has given up 11 hits and six runs in six innings. Takes $5,000 Cut The rugged Alabaman was so concerned about his ability to bounce back that he agreed not to sign his 1963 contract until he was sure of his condition. He finally came to terms Tuesday, accepting a $5,000 cut to $35,000. “I know I haven’t pitched too good in the exhibitions but my arm hasn't hurt at all,” Lary told General Manager Jim Campbell, who said he was convinced that Frank was throwing with a free and easy motion. The Baltimore Orioles, who also have grown tired of chasing the Yankees in the American League pennant races, extended their unbeaten exhibition record to 10 games Tuesday by edging the Chicago White Sox, 4-3, at Sarasota, Fla. Luis Aparicio tripled to touch off a three-run explosion against his former White Sox teammates in the first inning. The Orioles picked up their winning run in the third on singles by Brooks Robinson and Jim Gentile and a wild pitch. Steve Barber hurled the first seven innings for Baltimore, allowing two runs and six hits while fanning six. Yankees Lose Another The Yankees, who can’t win for losing, dropped a 9-5 verdict to the Kansas City Athletics. It was the world champions’ eighth loss in 11 tuneups. Rookie Dick Green hit a pair of homers and Jose Tartabuil and Chuck Essegian added single clouts to pace the A’s to their seventh victory in 10 games. A run-scoring single by Norm Larker in the ninth inning earned the Milwaukee Braves a 7-6 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Hank Aaron hit his first spring homer for the Braves and Bob Skinner collected a single, double and triple for the Bucs. The Cincinnati Reds overcame homers by Zoilo Versalles (2) and Tony Oliva (1) in downing the Minnesota Twins, 5-4. Young Gerry Arrigo gave up all the Cincinnati runs, including a two-run homer by catcher Johnny Edwards? Veteran southpaw Curt Simmons became the first member of the St. Louis Cardinals' pitching staff to ■work six ihnings in a 7-3 victory over the New York Mets. Curt Flood hit a homer and a double while Bill White cracked a double and two singles to pace the Cards’ attack. Indians Clobber Colts The Cleveland Indians collected 18 hits but no homers in clobbering the Houston Colts, 13-3. Eight of Cleveland’s runs came off Cliff Davis in the first three innings. Pete Ramos hurled three scoreless innings for the Tribe. Ken Mcßride, hampered by pleurisy and a cracked rib last season, allowed only two hits during a six-inning stint as the Los Angeles Angels whipped the Boston Red Sox, 5-1. Lee Thomas again paced the Angels’ attack with a homer and a run-scoring single. Four Chicago Cub pitchers totaled 15 strikeout victims in a 3-2 triumph over the San Francisco Giants. Southpaw Dick Ellsworth set the pace for the Cub hurlers by fanning seven in the first three innings. Ernie Banks, who had homered in the second inning, scored the winning run on an error by the Giants’ Jose Pagan in the sixth. i 46 Nominated To Drive In 500-Mile INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — A former national champion and a rookie were the latest drivers nominated Tuesday for .the 500mile Speedway auto race, boosting the field to 46. Chuck Stevenson, Newport Beach, Calif., who finished sixth in the Memorial Day classic two years ago, will drive for Fred Gerhardt of Calif.’ The rookie, Ronnie Du man, Dearborn, Mich., will drive for Dan Levine of Detroit. If you have something to sell oi trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
BOWLINC Rural League W L Pts. Aspy Standard -. 22 8 31 Schwartz Ford .... 21 9 28 McConnells 18 12 24 Parkway 66 17 13 23 Industries I 16% 13% 22% Hammond Produce 16 14 22 Sheets Furniture ..16 14 21 Decatur - Kocher .. 15 15 21 Mcßride & Son .. 14 16 20 Weber’s Bath .... 14 16 20 Adams Builders .. 14 16 18 Millei- - Jones —— 12 18 17 Industries II 12% 17% 15% Reidenbach Equip. 10% 19% 14% Stucky Furniture .. 10 20 13 Jaycees 10% 19% 11% High games and series: R. Pollock 202 ( 538), R. Heyerly 204, V. Macke 213 ( 505), L. Fravel 215 (543), W. Bultemcier 517, V. Ratcliff 204 ( 511), R. Ewell 212, (542), L. Worden 513, L. Chrisman 214204 ( 543), M. Lautzenheiser 520, J. Davis 543, R. Williamson 514, C. Hurst 213 ( 580), W. GaUmeyer 502, M. Judt 216 ( 585). High tea mgame: Decatur-Koch-er 865. High team series: Aspy Standard 858-793-852 ( 2503). Three Os Top Ranked Teams In NCAA Meet / LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPD—Officials of the NCAA pointed with more than a little pride today to the national collegiate basketball finals coming up here this weekend, with a four-team field for the silver anniversary tournament that might be the best yet. In defending champion Cincinnati, Duke. Loyola of Chicago and Oregon State, the finals have the nation’s first, second and fourth ranking teams in the UPI ratings; while Oregon State, ranked 14th, knocked off No. 3 Arizona State to get here. All told, the four have won 100 games and lost but 12. Cincinnati comes in with a 25-1 record, Loyola at 27-2, Duke at 26-2, while Oregon State has lost more than the other three combined, a 22-7. Top Offensive Club Loyola is the nation’s top offensive club with a 92.9 per game scoring average; Cincinnati is the national defensive leader, holding its opposition to a 52.8 average; and Duke had the best shooting average in the nation this season at .517. Individually, the field will include four of the five members of this year’s UPI All-America team — Ron Bonham and Tom Thacker of Cincinnati, Art Heyman of Duke, and Jerry Harkness of Loyola. Tournament chairman B. A. Shively of the University of Kentucky pointed out one reason why the quality of the field is so high. “This is the first year,” Shively noted, “that every team eligible and invited to play in this tournament has accepted.” Shively didn’t mention by name the National Invitation Tournament which for years battled the NCAA for the top teams, but he said, “before this year some teams have accepted bids from another tournament, and in some cases we had a racial problem.” Box-Office Bonanza Mississippi State, which won the Southeastern Conference title four of the last fivfe years, accepted its berth this year for the first time after some confusion, and lost to Loyola in the MidEast regionals. The tournament has become a box-office bonanza, too. All of Freedom Hall’s 18,500 seats were sold within hours after they went on sale — weeks before any of the contestants were determined. Shively noted, “Not even Oregon State has turned back a single one of its ticket allotment. They’re coming in here in several planeloads with a pep band and the whole works.” The Oregon State delegation, in fact, was scheduled to be the first on the scene, flying in from the coast this evening in time to work out on a local college floor. The others will be in Thursday afternoon, Duke and Loyola by air, Cincinnati by bus. Loyola and Duke meet in the first game — the Eastern semifinal — Friday night, with Cincinnati opening its national title defense against Oregon State in the second game, the Western semi-final. ■ College Basketball National Invitation Marquette 84, St. Louis 49. Providence 107, Miami (Fla.) 96.
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Garfield Coach Explains Why Os Big Upset By KURT FREUDENTHAL United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — “We could have cracked under the pressures—-but we never did. The boys got themselves fired up—they wanted to win.” That’s how veteran coach Willard Kehrt explained Terre Haute Garfield’s arrival in Saturday’s Indiana high school basketball tourney finals. The Purple Eagles came through with the top upset of the whole show by derailing Evansville Bosse’s state champs for the Southern semi-state crown last weekend, 60-55. It was one of those rare games when virtually everything worked well for one team—the big reason why Kehrt refused to substitute. “They were going good and I couldn’t see changing horses in mid-stream,” he said. So now young Garfield, a team that dropped 9 of its first 12 games during the season, faces powerful South Bend Central in the afternoon preliminaries of the grand finale—and Garfield is having a ball because it came along “when it wasn’t supposed to” to lend that touch of unpredictability to the state finals. Kehrt Puzzled Even Kehrt, completing his 25th year as Garfield’s head coach, is puzzled. “I’ve never seen anything like this—not in my 28 years of coaching,’’ he said. For as the season unfolded, it looked grim, indeed, for the Eagles. “I had a harder time than ever picking a team,” recalled Kehrt. “I had two holdover starters— Skip Greenleaf and Greg Samuels—but quite a few boys had the same amount of ability.” Thus, 11 of the 12 boys Kehrt carries on the varsity have started at one time or another. Garfield won just one game in a January dry spell caused by illness, injuries and a few other problems, Kehrt said, but his boys started February “with a new outlook.” “We shot 60 per cent against Greencastle, then beat Martinsville and that gave us more confidence,” said Kehrt. “We got a bit better with every ball game.” By the middle of February—just before the start of sectional warfare—Garfield began to jell. “We found the right combination, but make no mistake about it: This club is no better than its bench,” said Kehrt. He said vft was the bench that beat Seymour, 52-51, in the afternoon round of last Saturday’s semi-state tourney at Evansville. Samuels is “Engineer” Two seniors, two juniors and one sophomore are expected to start against the taller South Benders — Greg Samuels, Jack Sanders. Charles Bensley, Jim McCallum and Frank Hamblen, of whom Bensley is the tallest at 6-4. Samuels is Kehrt’s “engineer.” He fired in seven in a row in the third period against Bosse and twice stole the ball in the fourth for easy layups. Bensley and Sanders were other standouts against Bosse. “I got 100 per cent plus effort out of them against Bosse,’’ said Kehrt proudly, “but if we’re not the underdogs against South Bend, we should be.” Kehrt figured he has a “real height problem” against the upstaters. “They’re a good ball club,” he said, “they’re liable to blow us off the floor.” And for a coach whose boys turned in the No. 1 upset of the tourney, that sounds like a bit of psychological warfare. Minister Injured As Car Hits Tree HARTFORD CITY, Ind. (UPD— The Rev. N. J. Bibbs, 62, New Castle, general superintendent of Indiana Pentecostal churches, was injured Tuesday and hospitalized here when his car crashed into a tree along Indiana 3 during a rainstorm. Doctors believed he may have been stricken ill a moment before the accident. Suffers Broken Arm Practicing For Race , BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPD— Ray T. Snapp, 20, Bedford, suffered an arm fracture Monday at theh Indiana University stadium while practicing for the “Little 500” bicycle race as a member of the Chi Phi fraternity team.
Pro Basketball NBA Playoffs Syracuse 123, Cincinnati 120 (Syracuse leads best of five series, 1-0). Only game scheduled. Hockey Results National League Detroit 5, Chicago 1. GOP Critics Are Scored By Sen. Humphrey WASHINGTON (UPI) — Assistand Senate Democratic Leader Hubert H. Humphrey said today that GOP critics who claim the administration’s test ban proposals would leave a “big hole” uncovered are just exposing a “big hole” in their logic. Humphrey was replying to a claim by Rep. Craig Hosmer, DCalif., that the test ban proposal would let Russia conduct underground nuclear tests undetected in a “big hole” embracing two and a half million square miles of the Russian interior. “If our position is as bad as Hosmer says...lf it is as weak and full of holes, then why don’t the Russians accept it?” Humphrey wondered. He called the Republican criticism “irresponsible, misleading and mischievous.” Hosmer, he said, based his contention on assumptions “which are false.” Other congressional news: AID Chairman Otto E. Passman, D-La., of the House Foreign Aid Appropriations subcommittee called for a $2.4 billion cut in President Kennedy’s aid proposals. He said this would show the world “we are no longer going to be suckers.’’ It would reduce the aid budget from $4.9 billion to $2.5 billion. TAXES: The American Farm Bureau Federation told the House Ways & Means Committee it will oppose a tax cut this year unless Congress cuts even more out of President Kennedy’s spending proposals than Republicans are talking about. The Farm Bureau said it would favor a tax cut if the lawmakers can cut $13.6 billion from Kennedy’s $107.9 spending plans. BUDGET: House Republicans Tuesday pledged to support their leaders’ attempts to cut at least $4.5 billion from President Kenrecord high $98.8 billion bofgst ' ~ GOP Leader Charles A. Halleck, Ind., told newsmen that the out-numbered Republicans will have no chance of making such cuts without Democratic help. BUTTER: A big New York butter distributor and a spokesman for 9,000 dairy farmers in New York and New Jersey proposed that consumer subsidies be used to drive down butter prices at the same time the prices are being held up by farm subsidies. The two appeared before a House agriculture subcommittee as it began a search for ways to curb dairy surpluses. GORE: Sen. Albert Gore, DTenn., promised a Senate floor
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fight against confirmation of officers of the controversial Communications Satellite Corp. Gore said he had asked Senate leaders to hold up a vote on the matter until he had time to prepare a case charging that it would be unconstitutional for the Senate to confirm officials of a “purely private operation.” Organized Crime In All Major Cities CHICAGO (UPD - Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said Tuesday organized crime has had “more success” in recent years in making contacts with public officials, labor unions and lawyers—“particularly lawyers.” “And more and more gangsters are going into ’respectable' business,” he said. Kennedy said the organized crime infestation has reached into “all major cities, not only Chicago, but Detroit, St. Louis, Kansas City. New York—with the possible exception of the West Coast, especially Los Angeles.” Do Best Job In Los Angeles, he said, police and local officials along with federal authorities have done the best job of halting racketeering. Kennedy acknowledged in response to a newsman's question that Hot Springs, Ark., was “wide open.’’ “Yes, we’re working with officials there and plan some action, probably within six months,” said Kennedy. “The slot machines in Hot Springs were shipped down from Chicago.” . The attorney general said federal officials were combatting crime under a “different concept” than previously used, largely because of the crime legislation passed by Congress a year and a half ago. Organized crime can be wiped out, he said, “but we’re not close —it will take many, many years.” He revealed that the federal government had ‘‘intensified” efforts to curb the syndicated lawlessness. Local Enforcement Answer He said the answer to organized crime primarily was honest local law enforcement. He declined to elaborate on what the “change in the center of focus” was, but he did say federal agents were paying more attention to gambling. Gambling, Kennedy said, has replaced narcotics as the big venture of the crime syndicate. QUALITY PHOTO FINISHING All Work Left on Thursday Ready the Next Day, Friday, Before Noon HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
