Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 70, Decatur, Adams County, 23 March 1963 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Decatur Golf Course To Be Opened Sunday
Luke Majorki. owner and manager of the Decatur Golf course, announced this morning that the course will be officially opened Sunday for the 1963 golf season. The pro shop at the course has been open since March 20. A varied number of events have already been scheduled for the current season, and they are as follows: Men’s City League The men’s City league will open its schedule Monday, May 6, with 10 teams entered. The league plays two nine-week halves, with the winners of each half meeting in a playoff to name the 1963 champion. Morningstar’s team is the defending champion. A sponsor’s trophy and individual trophies will be presented to the champions. A trophy will also bs given for the lower average. | This trophy was won in 1962 by' Bob McClenahan. In addition to trophies, merchandise awards will! also be presented. A meeting of I team captains to complete league arrangements will be announced at a later date. Men’s City Tourney The men’s city-tourney, which is , played in flights, will also be a feature of the 1963 season. Qualifying dates and methods of the I tourney have not been definitely! determined, with final plans to be announced later. Gordie Sowers is the defending champion. Handicap Tourneys Last year, handicap tourneys: were held once a month, starting in May. These tourneys will again! start in May, and all players in-! terested in participating must have a handicap established, to be posted and maintained in the pro shop. Each golfer is responsible for posting all scores on the handicap cards, which are provided by the course. Golf Clinics Free golf clinics will be con-1 ducted this year for women and school students. Dates and times have not been set but will appear College Basketball NCAA Tourney Semi-finals Loyola 94, Duke 75. Cincinnati 80, Oregon State 45. Hockey Results Internationa ILeague St. Paul 8, Fort Wayne 7. Minneapolis 7, Omaha 2. Port Huron 3, Muskegon 2 (overtime). -- ■''£<■, ■ ' ADAMS THEATER TONITE & SUN. Moil, Tues., Wed. Continuous Sun. from 1:15 i»I ALSO — Shorts 25c -75 c —o “Taman’s Fight for Life” Sat. Mat. 1:15; 3:15
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- in the Daily Democrat at a later , date. . Ladies League 1 As last year, there will be two ladies leagues which will play on i Tuesdays; The morning league starts at 9 o’clock, and the aftet- ■ noon league at 1 o’clock. These . leagues will start play June 4. Any ladies interested in either league are asked to contact the pro shop. Mixed Tourneys If enough interest is shown, mixed scotch twosome tourneys will be held each month. All 1962 members are asked to notify “the pro shop by Tuesday, April 30, if they wish to renew their memberships. Loyola Meets Cincinnati In NCAA Finals LOUISVILLE (UPI) — Chubby f little Johnny Egan typified the : confidence of Loyola’s racehorse ; Ramblers today as they faced to- ! night's showdown battle with deI fending champion Cincinnati for I the national collegiate basketball ' title. Egan declared “we beat a real I good team in Duke last night. ' I’d say they are number three in i the country — right behind Cin- ! cinnati.” “Os course” aided Egan with a ' smile,” there’s no question about! who is number one. We’ll prove ■ that tonight — at least I think we will.” Fast-breaking Loyola blitzed I Duke, 94-75, in one semifinal Fri- • day night and Cincinnati toyed with Oregon State 80 46 in the 1 other before an all-time tournament record crowd of 10,153. Offense, Defense Collide So the pay-off game tonight sets up the attraction of the nation’s top offensive team, the Ramblers ! from Chicago, colliding with the country’s number one defensive outfit. Loyola has jetted to an average of 92.9 points per game, while miserly Cincinnati has held opponents to a 52.6 average. Cincinnati meets Loyola at 9:35 p.m. EST following a ’clash for third place at 7:05 p.m. between Friday night’s losers. Both Loyola and Cincinnati jumped into big leads at the outset of their semifinal wins and stayed in front all the way. The Bearcats, gunning for an unprecedented third straight NCAA title, gave coach Ed Juck--ler cause for some anxiety with their ragged play in the first half. They clung to a skimpy SO--27 lead at intermission. Fouls Bother Beavers But the Beavers had shot their bolt. Three of their starters —Mel Counts, Steve Pauly ' and Frank Peters — got in foul trouble and once they left it was only a matter of how high the Bearcats would run the score. The outside shooting of the sev-en-foot Counts was about all that kept Oregon State in the game. He scored 20 points, high for the West Coast crew, before fouling out with 9:45 to play George Wilson, 6-8 center, led Cincinnati both in rebounding with 13 and in scoring with 24. Ron Bonham and Tom Thacker contributed 14 points each. Loyola, contemptuous of Duke’s 20-game winning streak, had the Blue Devils reeling behind a 4431 half time score. But the North Carolinians closed the gap 65 61 behind spirited play of All-America Art Hey-
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1 : Hawks Take Second Straight In Series By United Press International It’s two down and one to go for ; the St. Louis Hawks in their Western Division National Basketball , Association semifinal playoff series with the Detroit Pistons. The Hawks moved to within one victory of advancing into the division finals when they downed the Pistons, 122-108, Friday night. The third game of the scheduled fivegame series will be played in Detroit on Sunday. Bob Pettit poured in 42 points to lead the Hawks, who scored their first playoff victory over the Pistons on Wednesday night. The Pistons, behind by 10 points in the third period, rallied to tie the score at 79-79 at the end of the period but a 10-point spurt by StLouis clinched the game in the fourth period. The Cincinnati Royals and Syra--1 cuse Nationals play the third game of their currently tied Eastern Division series today. 1,200 Feared Dead As Volcano Erupts I DENPASAR, Indonesia (UPD— I A towering cloud of smoke hovI ered today over the peak of Bali ! island’s “sacred volcano,” Mt. Gunung Agung, as a deadly reminder of one of the worst disasters of modern times. A government spokesman said as many as 1,200 persons may have lost their lives in Sunday’s eruption of the volcano. In a cable to Jakarta, civil defense authorities said 400 persons are known dead and another 1,100 are feared to have been incinerat*ed by the lava which is said to have engulfed the villages of Pur a, Besakih. Pohnangka, Kedaimpal and Batu Ringgit. Authorities here said a swift flow of lava is believed to have destroyed the five villages. One fifth of the farmland on Bali is believed to have been destroyed, and an estimated 75,000 persons are homeless. A plume of smoke 4.000 feet high was visible from the volcano I this morning. The wind was blowing ashes southwestward, towards the lesser Sunda Islands and Australia. Thousands of acres of land and five villages lay buried beneath volcanic ash and mudslides. Martial law was in effect. The eruption Sunday morning followed a month of intermittent activity. The flow of lava down the slopes was reported to have congealed and come to a halt. Wolfe Reports For Training On Sunday Harley Wolfe will leave Decatur ’ Sunday to travel to Tucson, Ariz., ' to train with the Cleveland base- , ball organization. Wolfe has been assigned to the Burley, N. C., ’ team in the Cleveland farm sys tern. 1 man and running mate Jeff Mullins. Les Hunter, 6-7 junior from Nashville, Tenn., proved too much for Duke to cope with, however, as he took personal charge of ’“Loyola’s thrust to its final margin. Hunter ruled the back boards, pulling down 18 rebounds. He also pumped in 29 points to share high-point honors for the tournament so far with Heyman.
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Davey Moore Near Death Os Fight Injury LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Former featherweight champion Davey Moore, knocked out only twice in his professional boxing career, hovered near death in a deep coma today as the result of brain injuries in a bruising bout with Sugar Ramos. The 29-year-old Moore, who had held the 126-pound title for almost four years and appeared invincible to some, lost his title—and as it turned out endangered his life —Thursday night when Ramos, 21-year-old Cuban refugee, scored a 10th round kayo. Moore, a veteran of 64 bouts, was draped on the ropes as the fight ended at Dodger Baseball Stadium. He went to his dressing room under his own power, talked lucidly about “a bad night” to sports writers and then collapsed 40 minutes later. Moore's Chances “Poor” Unconscious, he was taken to White Memorial Hospital where Dr. Philip Vogel, after a preliminary examination, said: “His chances are poor.” Still unconscious, Moore lasted the night and an 11 a.m., medical bulletin Friday said this was an encouraging sign. Another bulletin—issued at 4 p.m. Friday—said, however, his condition worsened and his chances of survival were “poorer ” Moore suffered “massive bruises” on the brain from the beating he took, the hospital said, and : surgery was not feasible because of the wide area of damage. A medical bulletin issued at 8 p.m., said a team of three neurological specialists had examined Moore. They succeeded in keeping his temperature stationary by cooling methods, including ice packing. - Moore’s pulse has “elevated, and the blood pressure decreased slightly,” the bulletin stated. There was no mention of possible surgery, indicating Moore’s condition remained so critical an operation was not planned. Wife Suffering Shock Moore’s wife, Geraldine, mother of their five young children, was at his bedside Friday morning but then she too was admitted as a patient for treatment of shock and fatigue. Mrs. Moore did not witness the fight but came here from her Columbus, Ohio, home to be with her husband. Moore's collapse was the signal for California Gov. Edmund G. Brown and several legislators to reiterate a proposal to outlaw boxing. In addition to Ramos, two other new champions were crowned Thursday night. Another Cuban exile, Luis Rodriguez, scored a 15-round unanimous decision over ’ Emile Griffith to win the welter--1 weight crown. Roberto Cruz of the Philippines kayoed Battling Torres of Mexico in the first round to take the vacant junior welterweight title. Pm Basketball NBA Palyoffs St. Louis 122, Detroit 10 B(St. Louis leads bet of five series, 2-0). It you have something tc sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
m.i !■ '■■n « > mnAw Snead, Harney Tied For Lead In Doral Open MIAMI (UPI) — Slamming Sammy Snead, at the half century mark matching golfs best swing against a “barking dog,” trod gingerly out into the third round of the $50,000 Doral Open golf championship today seeking his 113th tournament triumph. Bothered by a bad foot, the slammer from the West Virginia hills still shot a three-under-par 69 in the second round to tie 33-year-old Paul Harney for the lead. “That old foot was barkin’ bad on the back nine,” Snead grunted. “But maybe old Sam can keep it rollin’ for two more rounds.” Harney Shoots Par Harney, despite the fact he had not played in six weeks and was “on vacation”, added an even par 72 to his first round 68 to match Snead's 140 total. That put them one shot ahead of former U.S. Open champ Gene Littler, who could have made it a three-way tie except that he three-putted the final green for a bogey and a one-under-par 71 that gave him 141. But the three of them were looking back over their shoulders at moaning Arnold Palmer. 'Die Pennsylvania strongman shot his second straight one-under-par 71 despite a cranky putter. "I just can’t get ’em to drop,” Palmer said disgustedly. “Man I have been missing those five and six footers you ought to put in the hole. I always feel that if they start dropping I'll really get I rolling. But sometimes they don’t start dropping in time.” Kroll Matches Palmer Palmer’s 142 was matched by little Ted Kroll, the veteran tee tourist who never seems to worry about anything. Defending champion Billy Cas-' per couldn’t be counted out at the halfway mark. He shot a 71 for 144. That put him four strokes off the pace, with single rounds remaining today and Sunday, in a tie with former PGA champion Chick Harbert and chunky, aggressive Phil Rodgers. . From there on the field was well bunched, with highly regarded Gary Player carding a secondround 74 for a 145 and Jack Nicklaus his second straight 73 for a 146. Driver's License Ordered Suspended Roger L. Bixler, 811 N. Third St., has had his driver’s license suspended for a period of two months, according to the latest driver suspension list issued by the bureau of motor vehicles. The suspension, concerning the point system, runs from Feb. 28 through April 28. If you have something to sell at trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
100 FREE CHICKEN DINNERS to the individual or group responsible for enticing to DECATUR new industry with an employ of 100 persons or more. (THINK what a healthy economic growth DECATUR could enjoy as a result of the establishment of ONE new industry.) After discussing this problem with the short and the tall, the big and the small, the intelligent and the not-so; all concurred that a REWARD of this magnitude must be offered to get this much-needed job done. REMEMBER 100 FREE CHICKEN DINNERS I ! Fairway Restaurant
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Television Rights Signed For Olympics NEW YORK (UPI) — Dr. Henrich Drimmel, president of the Austrian Winter Olympic Committee, Friday signed a contract with the American Broadcasting Co. for worldwide television rights to the ninth Winter Olympic Games at Innsbruck during January and February, 1964. Schwartz Ford Sales Staff Gain Awards Two members of the staff of Schwartz Ford Company, Inc., Decatur Ford dealership, will be presented Ford Motor Company's 300500 club award at a banquet to be held at the Murat Temple, Indianapolis, on Saturday, March 30. William P. Benton, Indianapolis district sales manager, said 300500 club membership awards are presented for excellent retail performance. The Ford 300-500 club was founded in 1950 to recognize the performance of outstanding Ford salesmen throughout the country. Benton added that the average 300-500 club member sold nearly $400,000 worth of automotive merchandise in qualifying for national honors. The salesmen are Miss Margaret A. Holthouse and Frank Lybarger. Three Teen-Agers Die In Accident By United Press International Three teen-age girls, two of them sisters, were killed in two accidents Friday night, raising Indiana’s traffic death toll for the year to at least 208 compared with 200 a year ago. Annette Battin, 17 ,and her sister, Sarah, 15, Whiteland, were killed in a head-on collision of two cars on Indiana 135 two miles west of Whitland. Sarah’s twin, Sally, was injured critically. Becky K. Bothwell, 15, R. R. 5, Marion, burned to death in the fiery wreckage of a car in which ' she was riding which was struck frim the rear by another car. All four cars involved in the two accidents were driven by youths 17 to 20 years old. Tie three Battin girls, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Battin of Whiteland, were in a car driven by Larry Pringle, 18, Whiteland, when it collided with a cat operated by Steve Brown, 20, Morgantown. Brown also was hurt. He and Sally Battin were taken to Johnson County Memorial Hospital at Franklin. Police said Brown was driving north on the highway and Pringle was driving east on a county road when the cars collided at the intersection. The Bothwell girl was riding with Gary Gaunt, 17, Gas City, on Indiana 15 two miles south of Marion. Police said Lonny Bowman, 20, Fairmont, tried to pass another car and smashed into . the rear of the Gaunt car. The girl was trapped in the rear of the car and burned to death before rescuers could reach her. Two other young persons riding in the car were injured. Gaunt was treated for shock at Marion General Hospital.
BOWLING County Church League W L Pts. Mennonite No. 6 .. 21 Vi 8% 29% Monroe Methodist 14 18% 11 Vi 25% Pleasant Dale 19 11 24 Decatur Christian 10 17 13 22 St. Luke E&RI2 - 16 . 14 22 St. Luke E & R 15 - 14Vfe 15% 19Vi DecatuF’Church of Christ—--.— 14 16 19 Monroe Methodist 714 16 19 Decatur Christian 916 14 19 St. Patil Missionary 13 17 18 Decatur Methodist .13 17 17 Mennonite No. 16 .. 12 18 16 Geneva E.U.B. .... HVfc |B% 16% Decatur Lutheran . 9 21 12 Monroe Methodist 8 9 21 11 High team series: Mennonite No. 6 1879, Decatur Church of Christ 1768, St. Luke E > R No. 12 1788. High series: Bill Emick 556, Leonard Funk 543, Ernie Lehman 541. High team games: Mennonite No. 6 667, St. Luke E & R No. 15 656, Decatur Church of Christ 645. High games: Ernie Lehman 232, Bill Emick 232, Leonard Funk 211, Larry Parr 210. — Central Soya League Torpedos 4 points. Spares 0; Feed Mill 4, Hot Shots 0; Highwaymen 4, Bagdads 0; Rockets 3, Elevator 1; Keystones 3, Dubs 1; Go-Getters 2, Alley Kats 2; Master Mixers 2, Wonders 2. High games and series: MenBricker 174, L. Sheets 186, Hamblen 191 (511), G. Schultz 212 (545), W. Bedwell 188, P. Morgan 170 (506), L. Bowman 202, R. Ross 190, Mauller 172, K. Baumgartner 177 ( 500), Wendel 184, Lindset 216, Hoffman 178-177 ( 502), Nussbaum 177, Gase 186, J. Lengerich 179, R. Canales 177, Shoup 172, Cook 201 (528), Walchle 184, Nash 187-178-190 (555), Harvey 171, Abbott 188, L. Meyer 177-188-188 (551), J. Shakley 178, Cochran 209 (504), Schlickman 179-173 (519). High games: Women — R. Gase 156, Simons 161-157, Schnepp 169, P. Johnson 163, I. Bowman 179. Coffee League W L PtsSaucerettes - 16 8 22 Cream 16 8 21 Dunkers — 15 9 21 Drips 15 9 19 Sugar 12% 11% 19 Cupsl4 10 18 Warmersl4 10 17% Perks 10% 13% 16% Sippers 11% 12% 14%
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- SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1963
tasters n 18 1< Ifistant ..’.... 10 1J 1J Caffeinelo% 13% 13% Spoons 7 17 “ Cubes .... —— 5 19 6 High games: L. Gehrig 184-154-156, I. Schuster 177, M. Reef 174157, P. Dick 172, L. Bodie 170-160, J. Ewell 170, J. Voglewede 167162, J. Knape 163-155, B. Drake 163, R. Christen 160, L. Stuckey 157, D. Johnson 157, C. Miller 155, J. Koos 155, R. Barkley 153, M. Schrock 152. EDDIE’S RECREATION Ma A Pa Mixed Doubles W L Pts. Davidson Bros. TV .40 32 54 Shaffer Restaurant 40 32 53 Ideal Dairy Bar 33 39 47 Eddie's Recreation -31 41 38 High games: Women — Merle Lovellette 142, Edith Kling 137, Jean Pickford 143-141-203. Men — Stan Kling 187, Wayne Fraugiher 191, Eddie Reed 184-180. High series: Women — Merle Lovellette 409, Jean Pickford 487Men — Eddie Reed 506. Splits converted: Jean Pickford 3-10, Fred Pickford 5-7, Betty Feasel 4-5. Wnfflyll Ssr JUGGLER VEIN — Shortstop Luis Aparicio, recently acquired by Baltimore from the Chicago White Sox, shows his skill by juggling six balls at the Orioles’ spring training camp in Miami, Fla.
