Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 307, Decatur, Adams County, 31 December 1963 — Page 7

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1963

BOWLING Minor League W L Pts. Bower Jewelry 33% 14% 45% Holthouse on ’ Hiway 32 16 43 Fulmer Seat Covers 29% 18% 41% Riverview ..• 30 18 39 Wolff Hardware .. 29 19 93 Clem Hardware.-.=-27 21 35 Walt’s Standard .. 26 22 34 Moose No. 1 24 24 34 ’ Smith Dairy 25 23 33 Haugks , 23 25 32 Haircut Center .. 24 24 31 Drewrys —, 22 26 31 Downtown T taco 22 26 28 Moose No. 2 17 31 20 Extract’s I_. 11 37 15 Zoss Chevrolet ..9 39 11 High series — Dan Emenhiser 601 (186-185-230), K. Bauserman 598, R. Smith, Jr., 597, M. 560, W. Schnepf 559. High games — G. Thatcher 250 R. Smith, Jr., 210-221, J. Cochran 233, W. Schnepf 225, R. Colclasure 224, J. Bebout 220, B. Gase 207, P. Wilkinson 203, A. Bowen 214, D. Frane 209, K. Bauserman 202, L. Shilling 201. Note — Grady Thatcher rolled a new high game of 250.' Women’s Suburban W L Pts Hammond Bros. 37 14 50 Blackstone 34% 16% 47% Kelly Cleaners ... 34% 16% 46% Preble Gardens .. 31 20 43 Pure Sealed Milk 26 25 37 Beavers Oil 24% 26% 35% Mirror Inn 28 23 35. Bill’s Barn 27 24 35 Duo Marine ... 24 27 32 Home Dairy 24% 26% 31% VFW 23% 27% 31% Happy Humpty .. 23% 27% 29% ASCS 19 32 27 Zoss CheVt-Buick 18 33 23 Evans Smiles 18 33 22 Quarter Horse .... 15 36 18 High games — M. Simmerman 154, E. Laker 154-145-149 ( 448), P. Dick 176, B. Schneider 146, V. Merriman 163-154, P. Lister 147, J. Kreischer 157, L. Girardot 181-150, L. Bodie 150, C. Birch 147, J. Reidenbach 148, T. Davis 171, C. Brown 149, S. Ross 146, B. Feasel 164, M. Lovellette 153172, E. Peters 156. K. Pageler 159169-145 (473), J. Colclasure 165-155, C. Pierce 162-166-159 (487), H. Thorton 155, B. Ainsworth 182, M. Gaffer 156-153. High team series — Beavers Oil 2362, Kelly Cleaners 2372, ASCS 2319. Splits converted — B. Schneider 5-6-10, C. Pierce 3-10, J. Colclasure 310, K. Pageler 5-7-9, E. Peters 5-6, S. Ross 5-8-10, M. Gaffer 3-10, E. Soliday 3-10, M. Ladd 5-10, B. Butler 4-5-7. Note — Reta Thorton rolled a ladder series of 106-107-108. D. H. S. Girls W L Pts. Alley Cats 18 3 24 Gutter Balls .... 16 5 22 Hot Shots 15 6 20 Rolettes Sugar Chax 11 10 14 Three D’s .- 11 10 13 Holy Rollers 10 11 13 Lemon Three. 9 9 12 Magic Three.. 9 12 11 Beggars .... 8 13 11 Hillbillies °.. 4 14 5 JD’s 0 21 0 High games — Sally Schnepf 134, Sheri Ross 130, C h a r 1 s i e Clark 128, Sally Walters t 129, Diane August 188, Janet Rambo 134. Judy Lenhart 177, Linda Reidenbach 133, Susie Reynolds 123, Sheri- Ross 144-124. Splits converted — Susie Reynolds 5-7, Deedra Murray 6-7.

MASONIC Pubic Installation 4 of Officers Saturday, January 4, 1964 7:30 P. M. Robert S. Workinger W. M.

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Bowl Games On New Years Day For Grid Fans By FRED DOWN UPI Sports Writer An estimated 360,000 football fans gre expected to ring out the old year and ring in the new year today and Wednesday at five major bowl games — one of which mayadetermine 1963’s No. 1 team. The a two-day football binge begins in El Paso, Tex., today with Oregon opposing Southern Methodist in the Sun Bowl before a crowd of 30,000. Then, with a bleary-eyed nar tional TV. audience spinning the dials on New Year’s Day, the bowl menu will be continued with four choice morsels: —The Rose Bowl at Pasadena, Calif., with Illinois (7-1-1) facing Washington (6-4) before a crowd of 100,000. —The Orange Bowl at Miami, Fla., where Nebraska (9-1) will face Auburn (9-1) with a turnout of 72,000 anticipated. —The Sugar Bowl Orleans, La., with Mississippi (7-0-2) facing Alabama (7-2) before a crowd of about 82,000. —Cotton Bowl at Dallas, Tex., where Texas (10-0) takes on Navy (9-1) before some 75,000 fans. °

The “Big One” All five bowls have' attractive pairings but the “big one” is in th£ Cotton Bowl where Texas, nationally first ranked at the close of the regular season and boasting one of the strongest defenses in many years, will face nationally second ranked Navy and Its, unpredictable Heisman player of the year award-winning Roger Staubach. This classic match of sound defense and careful ball-control-ling offense against varied and surprising offense will enable the winner to claim the national championship. Texas coaches concede the brilliance of Staubach but have emphasized the quality of the rest of Navy’s squad during pre-game maneuvers. At the same time Navy Coach Wayne Hardin has repeatedly emphasized the strength-in-depth of the Texas squad. The oddsmakers have made Texas a -timid one-point choice. ' Fullback Junior Coffey’s recovery from injury has lifted ’Washington’s Rose Bowl hopes against a typical Big Ten foe—talent in depth-laden Illinois. The Big Ten representative has been installed as a 6%-point favorite. Illinois is reported in perfect condition. Mississippi Favored Quarterbacks Perry Lee Dunn and Jim Weatherly plus fullback Bucky Randall give Mississippi a seven-point edge in the Sugar Bowl, according to the odds-makers. The big question mark for Alabama is injured fullback Mike Fracchia. Auburn is giving away height and weight to Nebraska but has been installed a 1%-point choice on the strength of its speed and resourcefulness. Auburn Coach Shug Jordan, discarding the caution characteristic of his trade, has predicted his Tigers will "tvin “because we’ve gotten every team we’ve played.” Oregon (7-3) is a three-point choice over SMU (4-6) primarily becausfr,of an offense led by quarterback Bob Berry, who passed for 16 touchdowns and gained a total of 1,733 yards rushing and passing this season. Despite a sub-. 500 record-, SMU has been steeled in big time competition and has encountered such other passing stars as Staubach, Don Trull of Baylor and Terry Isaacson of the Air Force this season. New York StockExchange Price MIDDAY PRICES A. T. & T., 139; Central Sova, 27%; DuPont, 239%; Ford, 50%; General Electric, 87%; General Motors, 79%; Gulf Oil, 47; Standard Oil Ind., 64%; Standard Oil N. J., 75; U. S. Steel, 53.

I SPORTS

Kentucky Wins Over Loyola In Sugar Bowl By JOE GERGEN UPI Sports Writer Prospects offered po hope of a settlement today for a wildcat strike which hit four of the nation’s college holiday basketball tournaments Monday night when Kentucky, Davidson, Villanova-, and Kansas State walked off the, court with impressive victories. Unbeaten Kentucky, the top cat of the college basketball world, mauled Loyola of New Orleans, 86-64, in the opening round of the Sugar Bowl Tournament. Cotton .Nash scored 28 . jibints as the No. 1 ranked Wildcats clawed their way to victory number nine. Kentucky, which had to fight from behind in the first half, will meet ninth-ranked Duke tonight for the title. The Blue Devils, with Jeff Mullins scoring 23, had to battle from a 40-31 halftime deficit to defeat defending champion Auburn. Davidson Downs Penn Davidson, No. 7 in the country, drubbed 90-73, in the first round of the Charlotte Invitational. The Wildcats from North Carolina shot 58.6 from the. field, slightly better than their tops-in-the-nation percentage of 57.5. In the other semifinal pairing, Princeton stunned Texas, 84-71, as Bill Bradley tossed in 46 points in a frantic one-man show. Bradley* one tiger who is worth his weight in wildcats, almost singlehandedly destroyed the Longhorns by pumping in 17 points in a seven-minute span late in the first half. Bradley hit 14 of 15 from the foul line for the ™Tigers, who meet Davidson -tonight fcfr the championship. Villanova pounced on * bigger Minnesota for a 77-73 victory and the Philadelphia Wildcats first Holiday Festival tournament title. .Villanova (No. 10) never had won a game in two previous appearances in the New York tourney, but the Wildcats zipped throhgh three straight opponents to boost their record to 9-1. Jones Wins MVP Wally Jones, a 6-fbot-2 backcourtman who played like a cat on a . hot tin roof, scored 31 points and played a brilliant floor game to capture- the festival MVP award. Utah finished third by beating St. Joseph’s 83-78, while Providence won fifth place honors by downing St. John’s, 72-67. Kansas State (No. 14) Collared Oklahoma State, 58-55, to capture its seventh Big Eight Conference basketball tournament. Willie Murrell, the high scorer for the tournament, scored 16 points for the Wildcats who played the entire game without substitution. Missouri closed with a rush to beat Kansas, 63-61, for third place in the tournament while Oklahoma edged lowa State for fifth, 82-79 and Colorado beat Nebraska, 80-58, for seventh. LaSalle Wins Tourney Meanwhile, LaSalle College kept the Quaker City title within Philadelphia for the third consecutive year by knocking 16th-r a nked St. Bonaventure from the unbeaten ranks with an 83-80 triumph. Frank Corace tallied 28 points for the Explorers to win the MVP trophy and ephance the tournament’s ‘deputation as a graveyard for undefeated teams. Earlier in the tourney, Loyola (Ill.), which finished third by tripping Temple, 74-65 had suffered its first defeat of the season. Drake placed third by trouncing Georgetown (D.C.) 89-61. Oregon State (No. 8) brushed past Brigham Young, 68-58, to win the Far West Classic and stretch its record to 9-1. In the consolation rounds, Oregon up-set--''Colorado State for third plafce,''-65-59, arid’ Seattle downed Louisiana State, 92-84, for fourth place. Texas Western Wins ? Texas Western walked off with first place in the Sun Bowl Tournament with a 63-52 victory over Denver. The 15thranked Miners held Denver scoreless for seven minutes of the second half to build up a big lead. Baylor captured third place by squeezing past-Clem-son, 73-71. In other games, Arizona State dropped previously unbeaten Stanford, 61-60, on Joe Caldwell’s tip-in at t|he filial buzzer; Bradley bounced Arizona, 67-59; Purdue plastered Dartmouth, 101-53; Navy beat Georgia, 5752: Louisville Sashed Ohio U., 69-61; Virginia Tech .vanquished -George tyashington, &J-76; Bowlihg Green defeated Wittenberg, 67-58; Toledo thumped Penn State, 81-65; and Xavier surprised Tulsa, 83-71.

m DECATUB DALY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, PfoUNA

Week's Schedule Os Adams County Basketball Teams Friday Ohio City at Commodores. Yellow Jackets at New Haven.' Monmouth at Geneva. Elmhurst at Adams Central. Saturday Monmouth at Fort Wayne Luers. Berne at Auburn. Geneva at Montpelier. Probes Incidents Os Muncie's Bearcats INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — IHSAA Commissioner Phil N. Eskew said today he is investigating incidents involving Muncie Central’s Bearcats, Indiana’s high school basketball champions. In effect, he said flatly if the reports are substantiated by evidence, Muncie could be asked tc sit out a few weeks of competition. Eskfew said he launched his investigation following reports of brawls at the Muncie-Anderson game of the Frankfort holiday tourney last weekend. ’ Preliminary reports indicated that Anderson’s 76-69 victory for the tourney crown set off several incidents involving both, players and fans inside and outside the gymnasium. Eskew said he was “getting tired” of hearing reports involving Muncie and thus decided to launch the investigation, s He said if evidence shows un-sportsman-like conduct on the part of Muncie caused the brawls, perhaps the Bearcats would like to sit out a few vy/eks- of competition — maybe Iwiger. •TEskew said the HSAA has 597 other basketball teams that 'Would like to play without inci-’ dents. Written reports from the four schools in the tourtiey—Muncie, Anderson, Marion and Frankfort —were asked to be submitted to the IHSAA, Eskew said. He said all reports would be submitted to the next IHSAA Board of Control meeting here Jan. 14. Furthermore, Eskew said he also asked the two officials who worked the Muncie — - Anderson game, Wendell Baker and Jimmy Dimitroff, to make written reports.

Tittle Unlikely To Play In Bowl Game NEW YORK (UPD— Y. A. Tittle of the New York Giants, who suffered a knee injury in Sunday’s 14-10 National Football league title loss to the Chicago Bears, ■is expected today ta withdraw from the league’s annual Pro Bowl game scheduled at Los Angeles for Jan. 12. Youth Strangled To Death By Tractor JASPER, Ind. (UPI) — Michael Wehr, 13, was strangled Monday when a farm tractor rolled backward and pinnetd him against a manure spreader on> which he was making an adjustment on the family farm southwest of Ireland. Pro Basketball NBA STANDINGS Eastern Division - W L Pct. Boston 25 5 .833 Cincinnati 24 13 .649 Philadelphia 16 if .485 New York 10 28 .263 Western Division W L Pct. Los Angeles 22 13 .629 St. Louis 21 17 .553 San Francisco .... 17 16 .515 Baltimore — 11 22 .333 Detroit 8 23 .258 Monday’s Reunite Detroit 114, San Francisco 112 (overtime).

.. CELEBRATE NEW YEAR’S EVE Tonight at EDDIE’S RECREATION Bowl The Year but and The New Year In. Bring the Entire Family and All of Your Friends For An Evening of Entertainment

Women Sweepstakes Sponsored By Bank The First State Bank will again sponsor the Decatur women’s bowling association’s polio sweep- ' Stakes for 1963-64, according to an announcement by Mrs. Isabel Bowman, president of the association. The sweepstakes is on a handicap basig_ and women bowlers may enter as many times as they Wish during the month of January. League secretaries, will have entry blanks, and each bowler should pay 50 cents and sign the blank before rolling the third frame. Last year, the association had 566 entries, with the tourney won by Mrs. Leonida Hutker with a 136 average. The trophy is donated by the bank, plus matching the polio share of the entry.'Members are urged'" to enter every time they bowl. Announcement was also made of new high series scores rolled by association members, Marty Reef with a 590 on game of 179-193-219, and Vi Smith with a 582. The Reef series was bowled with the Sauccrettes team in the Coffee league. College Basketball Purdue 101, Dartmouth 53. Xavier (O.) 83, Tulsa 71. " Toledo 81, Penn State 65. Navy 57. Georgia 52. Bradley 67, Arizona 59. Louisville 69, Ohio U. 61. Arizona State 61, Stanford 60. Big Eight Tourney Kansas State 58, Oklahoma State 55 (final). Colorado 80, Nebraska 58 (consolation). Oklahoma 82, lowa State 79 (consolation). Missouri 63, Kansas 61 (consolation.) Far West Classic Oregon State 68. Brigham Young 58 (final'. lowa 74, Washington State 66. (consolation). Oregon 65', Colorado State 59 (consolation). , Seattle 92, Louisiana State 84 (consolation.) * Holiday Festival Villanova 77, Minnesota 73 (final). Providence 72. St. John’s (N.Y.) 67 (consolation). Utah 83, St. Joseph’s (Pa.) 78 (consolation). Quaker City Tourney LaSalle 83, St. Bonaventure 80 (final)-. Loyola (Ill.) 74, Temple 65 ” (consolation). Drake 89, Georgetown (D.C.) 61. Charlotte Tourney Davidson 90, Pennsylvania 73. Princeton 84, Texas 71. , Sugar Bowl Tourney Kentucky 86. Lovola (La.) 64. Duke 84. Auburu W.

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.jL ; I K J P< Iwi |T SA '•*’’ Pw gj x - \i IS' ■ ■bmiii wfeil ROUTER — Ron Clarke crosses the finish line after shattering two world records in Melbourne. The 26-year-old Australian covered six miles in 27:17,6, 10.00 C meters in 28:15.6. Russia Far Behind In U. N. Payments WASHINGTON (UPD — The Soviet Union and some of its satellites will be so far behind in their United Nations’ dues by Wednesday that they will face loss of their voting rights. But the issue will not come to an actual test until the U.N. begins its next meeting, U.S. officials ■ said. This session is ’scheduled for next fall, but it could come any time earlier if an emergency meeting is called because of some international crisis. By then—possibly at the last minute—a U.S. spokesman predicted, the Soviets will probably find away to straighten out their financial arrears. The U.N. charter stipulates that when a country falls more than two years behind in assessed payments, -it loses its voting rights. In the past, the Russians have kept just ahead of this provision by putting in—often at the last moment — sufficient payments to non-controversial U.N. activities while not? paying for peace-keeping operations such as the Congo, which Kremlin op-o-poses.

Bowling Tournament To Open February 1 The Decatur bowling association will hold its annual city tourney Feb. 1,2, 8,9, 15 and 16, according to an announcement tpday by Ted Eyanson, association secretary and tourney manager. This season, the teaift..,events will be held at Villa Lanes Feb. 1 and 2,. and the doubles and singles will be held at Emick’s Bowl in Berne. Team schedules will be Feb. 1 at 3:30, 6:15 and 9 p. m., and Feb. 2 at 1 and 3:30 p. m. Time schedules for doubles and singles at Berne will be 2,4, 6 and 8 p. m. on Feb. 8; 2 and 4 p. m. Feb. 9; 2,4, 6 and 8 p. m. Feb. 15, and 2 and 4 p. m. Feb. 16. Entry blanks may be obtained

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PAGE SEVEN

any time after Jan. 1 at any of the three bowling establishments in the county, Villa Lanes and Eddie’s Recreation Jin Decatur, and Emick’s in Berne, or from Eyanson. « Last season’s winners were: actual team. Villa Lanes, 2804; team handicap, Lengerich Awnings, 3034; doubles, actual, R. Ballard-B. Tutewiler 1174; doubles, handicap, D. Graber-R. Eyanson; singles, actual, F. Hoffman 638; singles, handicap, R. Ballard 688; all events, actual, R. Ballard 1775; all events, handicap, R. Eyanson 1954. ■ “ V. F. W. New Year's Eve Round and Square Dance. Music and Favors. V. F. W. Decatur Post. 307 It " STOP that cough with our own Cough Syrup Kohne Drug Store