Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 72, Decatur, Adams County, 26 March 1963 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Dutch Struck Will Speak At D-Club Banquet frays® IJL- \ s /ft ///TJEr’ * H f JT" '■ If ■ /?, Kt/ ,'S HaF .* *< f?Raymond F. Struck Raymond F. (Dutch) Struck, professor of physical education and athletic director at Hanover College, will be the featured speaker at the annual D-club banquet Friday .April 5, it was announced this morning by Decatur high school athletic director Bob Worthman. The annual banquet, sponsored by the Decatur high school letterman's club, will be held at the Youth and Community Center, beginning at 6:30 p. m. Jim Cowens, president of the, Booster club, said this morning that cards have been sent to each 1 member, and they should be returned immediately for reservations for the banquet. Booster club members who are planning to attend, and who return their cards, will be mailed their ticket. Tickets for wives may be purchased at Holthouse-on-the-Highway. The banquet is open to the public, and tickets for the public may also be purchased at the Holthouse store on 13th street. Tickets are priced at $2. Awards Given One of the features of the banquet will be the awarding of the Booster club’s three trophies for the past basketball season. Trophies are awarded for most valuable player, most rebounds, and most assists and break-up plays. In addition, the various coaches will be introduced, and the Booster club will hold an election of officers for the coming year, with balloting held at the banquet. Struck, a veteran coach, has been athletic director and professor of physical education at Hanover College since 1946. He is a graduate of Centralia, 111., township high school and has received an A.B. degree from DePauw IT., and M.S. degree from Indiana U., and a R. PE. from Indiana U. While in high school. Struck received three letters in football, three in baseball, and two in basketball. He was named all-state in basketball in his senior season. Mishawaka Coach Before coming to Hanover, Struck was a teacher of health education, head basketball and baseball coach and assistant football coach at Mishawaka- high school, from 1937 to 1942, nd from 1945 through 1946. He spent three years with the U. S. Navy from 1942 through 1945, where he was chief athletic specialist. Struck also taught and coached football, basketball and track at Wabash high school from 1927 to 1937, and previous to that was employed as teacher and coach at Hall township high school, Spring Valley, 111. He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa, phi Epsilon Kappa, the Indiana association for health, physical education and recreation, and the American association for Wallpaper We Invite You To See Our New Spring Patterns. Wallpaper stays fresh longer, covers cracks and blemishes, conceals architectural defects. Make your decorating dollars s-t-r-e-t-c-h with beautiful low cost wallpaper. KOHNE DRUG STORE (We give Holden Red Stamps)

Hoagland Gymnasts Seventh In State The Hoagland gymnastic team placed seventh in the fourth annual Indiana state high school gymnastics meet held at Indiana University Saturday, scoring 16’:> points. There were 14 teams in the meet. Clarksville won “ie championi ship with 170 5/6 points. Other I team leaders were Crown Point, 70; Concord, 69; Indianapolis ; Washington. 36%; Indianapolis Broad Ripple, 22; Indianapolis Warren Central, 20 5/6. Gary Coker led Hoagland with a fifth place in floor exercise, 10th in trampoline. 10th in side horse and third in still rings. Other members of the Hoagland team, coach- | ed by Verrill Rider, are Ron Mil- . i ler. Larry Davies, John Driver, Forrest Shelburne, Bill Melcher, Roger Wietfeldt, and Joe Fisher. Crawfordsville Net Coach Quits Post CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. (UPD — 'Dick Baumgartner resigned Monday after six years as basketball coach at Crawfordsville High i School. ! During that period, his teams compiled a 105-50 record. His 1958 1 team lost to Fort Wayne South in the title game of the state tourney, but Crawfordsville’s Dick Haslam was the Trester Medal winner. Haslam later starred at Butler University. $lO Million Libel Suit Is Filed By Butts ATLANTA (UPD—Former University of Georgia athletic director Wally Butts charged in a $lO million libel suit Monday that the “sophisticated muckraking” of the* Saturday Evening Post has ruined his 35-year football coaching career. Butts accused the magazine of “wilfully, maliciously and falsely” publishing an article concerning him in the March 23 issue of the Post. The article, entitled “The Story of a College Football Fix,” said an Atlanta insurance man, George Burnett, accidentally overheard a long distance telephone conversation in which ' Butts gave valuable information ' to Alabama Coach Paul (Bear)' Bryant before the 1962 GeorgiaAlabama game. Both Butts and ■ Bryant dented the accusation. 1 Atlanta attorney Pierre How--1 ard said Monday that Burnett re- ■ zeived $5,000 from the Post for 1 information in the article. 1 In a libel suit filed in federal district court here. Butts asked • $5 million in general damages . and $5 million in punitive dam- ■ ages from the Curtis Publishing Co., which publishes the Post I “Plaintiff’s career as a memt ber of the football coaching pro- > session has been ruined and destroyed by this scurrilous and con- ‘ emptible defamation,” the suit ! aid. I tl. health, physical education and recreation. He is also a member of the InIdiana intercollegiate coaches association and was listed in “Who’s -Who in American Education.” lohnny Klippstein Sold To Phillies CLEARWATER, Fla. (UPD — Veteran righthander Johnny Klippstein has been "bought by the Phialdelphia Phillies for an undisclosed sum from Cincinnati. Phillie manager Gene Mauch indicated the 35-year old Klippstein would continue to be used as a middleinning relief pitcher. Skating Parties Put fan in Fund Raising HAPPY HOURS Rolling Rink PHONE 3-8309

Joe Adcock, i Gus Triandos l Stars Monday By DICK JOYCE DPI Sports Writer ; Joe Adcock and Gus Triandos—- ; long ball ciouters who suffered ; disappointing seasons in 1962 —ap- ■ pear to have gained a new lease 1 on life with a change of uniforms, i Adcock, acquired by Cleveland I from the Milwaukee Braves, hit . a pair of three-run homers in . leading the Indians to an 11-3 exhibition victory over the Houston , Colts Monday. Triandos, obtained from the Baltimore Orioles, walloped a homer and drove home four runs in the Detroit Tigers’ 17-3 triumph over the Washington Senators. The 34-year-old Adcock, a hardhitting National League first ' baseman for 13 seasons, slipped I to a .248 batting average last year, far below his lifetime .282 i mark. However, Joe belted 29 homers and drove in 78 runs in 1962 so Cleveland Manager Birdie Tebbetts, who managed Milwau--1 kee last year, thought enough of 1 Adcock to take him along to ■ Cleveland. Triandos, who spent most of I the last 4% seasons trying to : catch Hoyt Wilhelm's elusive knuckleballs, got into only 66 games last season, hitting .159, because of an injured hand—the result of a Wilhelm pitch. The 32-year-old Triandos. who has three times tied the major league record of four passed balls in a game, was never happier when traded and may take the No. 1 backstop job over Mike Roarke and rookie Bill Freehan. Another disappointment last year, third baseman Bubba Phillips, who batted only .258 for Cleveland, rapped five hits for Detroit Monday as the Tigers pounded out 17 hits while Phil Regan and Dick Egan held the Senators to four hits. In other games, the Chicago Cubs raked Bob Belinsky and whipped the Los Angeles Angels, 7-4: Jim Hickman's 11 th inning homer earned the New York Mets a 4-3 victory over the Braves; the St. Louis Cardinals edged the Chicago White Sox, 4-3; the Kansas City Athletics routed the Cincinnati Reds, 11-4; ’ the New York Yankees tripped 1 the Los Angeles Dodgers, 5-2; ' Paul Brown pitched a six-hit, 2-0 victory for the Philadelphia Phillies over the Minnesota Twins; 1 the Baltimore Orioles nipped the 1 Pittsburgh Pirates, 5-4, and the 1 Boston Red Sox stopped the San ‘ Francisco Giants, 4-2. Ernie Banks hit a homer and two doubles and Ron Santo hit a homer to help the Cubs to vic- ' troy. Belinsky, who hadn’t al- " lowed an earned run in 13 previous exhibition innings. was ‘ reached for four runs and eight 1 hits. ' 5 Hickman's homer travelled 425 ' feet and came with two out in ’ the Uth inning to offset five early errors by the Mets. The Braves ’ had staked southpaw Warren ’ Spahn, who worked six scoreless innings, to a 3-0 lead before an • error helped the Mets catch up--1 Carl Sawatski's two run double in the ninth inning pulled out the Cardinal win, erasing Dave Nich- - olson’s 450-foot, two-run homer j for the White Sox. George Alusik of the A’s rapped out four singles and knocked in four runs as ’ Cincinnati pitchers gave up 16 * hits. . The Yankees beat the Dodgers for the first time in three games this spring behind the pitching of Bud Daley and Skinny Brown, who held Dodger batters hitless for 5 1-3 innings. The world . champions touched Don Drysdale . for nine hits in six innings. ; Brown, sidelined by illness . most of last season, struck out . seven and worked out of a bases- . loaded, one-out jam in the ninth I to become the first Phillie to go . nine innings. Rookie Richie Allen contributed a homer. Rookie Bob Savarine continued to wield a hot bat for the Orioles, banging out four hits to give him 17 in 32 at-bats this spring. Frank Malzone delivered a basesfilled double to lead the Red Sox attack. Jack Sanford of the Giants permitted only an unearned run in five innings before Don Larsen came on and s offered the loss. Bob Cerv Released By New York Mets ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPD —Veteran outfielder Bob Cerv was without a job today following his .dismissal-by the New.’ York Mets. The former American League slugger, who , was trying to catch on with the Mets, was advised Monday that he would not be given a contract.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Three Starters To Return To Muncie Team By KURT FREUDENTHAL United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD— Muncie Central is king again in Indiana high school basketball for a record fifth time and it’s all over but the shouting and the vow of “wait until next year” from the vanquished. But mighty Muncie isn’t going to be down and coach Ike Tailman, right now Muncie’s No. 1 citizen, won't be easy to beat next time. Muncie loses its two top players, 6-6 Mike Rolf and 5-11 playmaker Rick Jones, the top scorer in last Saturday’s tourney finals, but starters Glinder Torain, Andy Higgins and Billy Ray will be back, along with 6-5 Dave Baker. Torain also stands 6-5 and Higgins 63. It may be a couple of years before the Bearcats feel the impact of a third high school— Muncie South—which competed in the state tourney this year for the first time. South will take some of the potential hardwood stars who otherwise would go to Central. Burris also shares in the talent distribution. 4 Starters Back Injury-plagued Lafayette is better off than any of the four tourney finalists, personnel-wise. The Bronchos lose Chuck Scheumann | through graduation, but among

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those returning are Denny Brady and Wayne Jacobson. Terre Haute Garfield’s surprise finalists are not in too bad a shape, either, although Trester medal winner Greg Samuels is a senior and Jack Sanders also will be graduated. Coach Willard Kehrt will be back with Jim McCallum, Frank Hamblen, Chuck Bensley, Frank Bell and Bob Poynter, of whom Bensley is the tallest at 6-4. Runnerup South Bend Central, however, must rebuild. The Bears lose three of five starters—6-9 Dewitt Menyard, 6-4 Mike Otolski and 6-2 Curt Crittenden, their captain and floor general. Russell, Wade Depart Two fine guards, Jimmy Ward and Mike Warren, will return. Columbus, the only major unbeaten in the four-week shoot and ranked No. 1, must replace Allstate candidates Bill Russell and Charles Wade. Indianapolis Ripple, which like Columbus forced Muncie to play its best before losing in the semistate, loses classy Bill Brown and several other key players, and East Chicago Washington, overtime loser to Lafayette in the semi-state, will miss 6-8 Rich Mason, speedster Bernie Rivers, Joe Zych and Willie Askew. There will be plenty of drasticpersonnel changes in the deep south, too. Evansville Bosse’s 1962 state champs, upset by Garfield in the semi-state, will operate without Jerry Southwood, Gene Lockyear and Ken Rakow. Many other stars —some unsung because their teams didn’t succeed in the state tourney—will also depart, some of them sure I to gain hardwood fame in the collegiate world.

BOWLING MINOR LEAGUE W L Pts. Fulmer Seat Covers ?1 12 29 Bower Jewelry .21 12 27 Riverview 19)4 13)4 2614 Downtown Texaco - 20% 12% 26% Holthouse on Hiway 16% 12% 25% Moose 213% 14% 25% Drewrys 19 14 25 Clem Hardwarelß 15 25 Wolff’s Hardware .. 15% 17% 22% Smith Dairy 16 17 21 Haircut Center .... 17 16 21 Moose 1 15 18 20 Haugks 16 17 20 Walt's Standard .... 11 19 18 Extracts 10% 22% 13% Team 2 6 27 6 High series: B. Mutschler 556, A. Schneider 566, A. Brown 570, W. Meyers 575, W. Frauhiger 594, H. Miller 594, W. Call 556. High games: T. Fennig 221, D. Dick 225, A. Schneider 225, K. Bauserman 223. J. Trentadue 223, R. Smith, Jr., 203, A. Bowen 209, W. Myers 206-202, W. Frauhiger 231, D. Clay 205, H. Miller 218, J. Harkless 201, B. Bolinger 211, L. Grabner 201, B. Ross 200, W. Call 211, L. Stevens 209. LADS & LASSIES W L Pts. Argyles 28 14 38 Kilts ?.—... 27 15 38 Heathers .... 23 19 31 Hopscotchers 21 21 30 Highlanders 20 22 26 Clansmen 19 23 24 Scotsmen 16 26 20

Bagpipers 14 28 17 High games: Men — T. Gage 191-188 ( 551), D. Selking 199-181-(505), J. Colgan 197, B. Huston 179, C. Stuckey 187. Women — A. Selking 190, M. Gage 162-159, N. Kerschner 167, R. Gage 158, L, Stuckey 155. Splits converted: B. Terhune 2-7-10, L. Huston 3-10 and 5-6, D. Schafer 5-10. L. Stuckey 3-10. EDDIE’S RECREATION Come Double League W L Pts. Feasel Hay Service 15 6 20 Ruby Style Center .12 9 17 Decatur Dry Clean. 10% 10% 13% Team 3 4% 16% 5% High series: Women — Helen Elliott 414. High games: Men — Kenny Terrell 167-166-154, Carl Elliott 151, Ed Feasel 160, Mert Wolfe 153. Women — Helen Elliott 161-137, Wilma Bischoff 147. Saturday Early Birds W L Road Runners 15 9 , Pin Smashers 15 9 Buzzards 14 10 Alley Cats 12% 11% Vultures ... 12 12 Eagles 10 14 Falcons 9% 14% Four Fingers 8 16 High team series: Four Fingers 1324. High series; Ronnie Schnepp 445. High games: Paul Hodge 139, Ernie Feasel 171, Ronnie Schnepp 166-145-134, George LaTurner 159, Don Bassett 156, Kerry Butger 154-142, Paul Mankey 150-131, Paul

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TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1963

Hockey Playoffs To Begin This Evening By United Press International The Toronto Maple Leafs are 7-5 favorites to retain the Stanley Cup in the National Hockey League playoffs that open tonight on two fronts. The Maple Leafs, who won the NHL pennant for the first time in 15 years, entertain the oncemighty Montreal Canadiens and the Chicago Black Hawks host the Detroit Red Wings in the semifinal openers. The Black Hawks were tabbed at 3-1 in the cup odds, the Canadiens are no better than third choices at 4-1, and the Red Wings are the 7-1 outsiders. It marked the first time in eight years that the Canadiens weren't quoted as the pre-playoff favorites. Hobbled by injuries to defensemen Tom Johnson and Lou Fontinato, they finished third during the regular season, two points . back of the Black Hawks and two ahead of the Red Wings. Oddsmakers pegged the Ma- , pie Leafs at 8% to 2 favorites for their opening game against Mont- , real. During the regular season, Toronto lost only 3 of 14 games to the Canadiens. > Hodge 140-135, Jim McKinnin 134, , Tom Hunter 131, Terry Smitley 131, Kenny Davis 130, Terry MeyI ers 130.