Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 35, Decatur, Adams County, 11 February 1964 — Page 7

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1964

| SPORTS |

Buckeyes Beat lllini, I. U. Loses To lowa CHICAGO (UPD—Michigan’s Big Ten basketball lead was no better than one game over Ohio State today but Buckeye center Gary Bradds was having no trouble at all defending his individual scoring championship. Ohio State moved a half-game closer to the pace - setting Wolverines with Monday night’s 110-92 romp over Illinois. Bradds pumped in, 49 points, breaking his own home court scoring record and boosting his league season total to 312 points in eight games. This gave Bradds an average of 39 points per game and a whopping margin over his two closest competitors for marksmanship honors. It also gave Bradds a big lead over his 1963 championship average of 30.9 for 14 games. Dave Schellhase of Purdue and Cazzie Russell of Michigan, a pair of sharpshooting sophomores, and Northwestern’s Rick Lopossa were Bradd’s closest pursuers but none posed any danger for Bradds. Schellhase was averaging 28 points, Lopossa 27 and Russell 26 with their teams heading into the second half of the 14-game conference schedule. In Monday night’s only other game, lowa broke a five-game losing streak when three Hawkeyes hit for double figures in an 85-72 victory over Indiana. The outcome left lowa i n ninth place and Indiana in last place, just where they were before the game started. Dave Roach paced the Hawkeyes with 22 points. Teammates Ed Bastian had 18 and Jimmy Rodgers 17. Northwestern plays at Wisconsin in tonight’s only game. lowa, winning from Indiana the second time this season, pulled away in the final 10 minutes to leave the Hoosiers in the Big Ten cellar with a 1-6 record although the VanArsdale twins, Tom, and Dick, combined for 50 points between them. Ton} Jed 'gll scorers Jvith points and Dave Roach paced lowa with 23. The lead changed seven times and the score was tied 11 times before lowa pulled ahead for good on Ed Bastian’s hook shot. lowa led at the half, 34-32, and the- closest the Hoosiers came in the final half was to within one point at 46-45 with 14:36 to go. But when Dick VanArsdale picked up his fourth 'personal foul and was benched for five minutes, the Hawkeyes pulled ahead by 6-7 points and gradually extended their margin. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. Pts. OP Michigan 71 .875 688 597 Ohio State.. 6 2 .750 741 700 Minnesota .. 5 3 .625 678 659 Northwestern 4 3 .571 548 524 Illinois 3 3 .500 517 516 Purdue 3 4 .429 608 610 Mich. State.. 3 6 .333 724 772 Wisconsin .. 2 4 .333 490 530 lowa 2 4 . 333 431 478 Indiana 1 6 .143 597 621

I• • > FIGHT HYPOKINESIA* I . • . ■’ i \■' . ——-t l . , • I . •.... '. : _ •Hypokinesia—that's the medical term for soft, weak, flabby muscles. Its cause: lack of exercise. And it's a threat to many youngsters. Those who spend long, inactive hours watching television. Those who don't participate in sports. Those who ride when'they should walk. Those who have every modern comfort. The physical decline of American youth must be stopped. Parents should.insist on nothing less than 15 minutes • of vigorous activity every day at school—for every boy and every girl. Contact your school officials. For information about a basic program used successfully by many schools, send for the free leaflet offered the President's HgMT Council on Physical Fitness, Washington 25, D. C. Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising Council and the Newspaper Advertising Executives Association.

Leaders Listed In Doubles And Singles Leaders in doubles and singles events after the first weekend in the annual Decatur bowling tourney were announced today. Leaders in doubles are B. Sprunger and T. Lehman, in handicap with a 1298, and also in actual pins with a 1215, and in high single game of 444. In the singles, H. Krueckeberg is the leader with a 680 in handicap and 623 actual. The high single game of 236 was rolled by T. Eyanson. The schedule for next weekend at Emick’s Bowl in Berne follows: Saturday 2 p. m.—Huston-R. Gaskill, R. Mies-J. Meyer, R. Ladd-B. Tutewiler. 4 p. m.—F. Faurote-D. Johnson, C. Henkenius-W. Snyder, D. Kable-R. Colclasure, R. Myers-B. Emick, Hart-BTuhm, H. MeyersE. Luginbfll, R. Baker-F. Lengerich. 6 p. m.—F. Baker-A. Myers, D. Bollenbacher - P. Butcher, D. Maitlen-H. Maitlen, C. Hite-M. Heare, M. Wiseman-E. Schindler, I. Heare-W. Shepherd, T. ButlerE. Ewell, C. Clark-J. McGill. Bp. m.— R. Hoffman-partner, R. Shaw-D. Koos, K. BausermanT. Pillars, R. H6bbs-A. Buuck, R. Scheumann-C. Cook, E. Baker-A. Bowen, P. Heare-Ron Meyers. Sunday 2p. m.—K. Hoffman-B. Schindler, P. Sprunger-J. Hart, P. Bleeke-G. Hooper, C. Conrad-J. Crosby, L. Rich-G. Hoblet, J. Fawbush-R. Archer, C. Porter-P. Murphy, R. Ashbaucher - R. Smith. 4 p. m. — H. Hoffman - A. Schneider, C. Stuckey-J. Cochran, E. Vondereau-J. Kable, C. Baker-D. Sheets, R. Macklin-J. Macklin, L. Stevens-D. Graber, H. Banning, N. Steury, R, Worth-man-J. Cowens. Bane! Resigns At Fort Wayne Central FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPD— Herb Banet, who piloted Fort Wayne Central to the Indiana high school basketball tourney finals four years ago, announced his resignation Monday, effective at the end of this season. In 18 years as a hardwood coach, Banet’s teams won 6 city titles, 6 sectionals, 3 regional and the semi-state in 1960 when they lost to eventual state champion East Chicago Washington in the afternoon round of the state finals. Banet, head coach of the Tigers since 1946, said he will continue as a teacher. He also will become treasurer of the Fort Wayne Community Schools Credit Union. Banet also previously coached football at Central but concentrated on basketball since the 1952 campaign. With two games to go, his last team has a 12-6 record.

Drake Scores Upset Victory Over Wichita By JOE GERGEN UPI Sport* Writer There’s a certain amount of “lowa stubborn” on the Drake University basketball team, a fact which helps to explain why the Bulldogs never seem to know when they’re beaten. Take Monday night, for example. Drake trailed sixthranked Wichita 63-60 with but 45 seconds remaining in the game. But the Bulldogs pulled it out on two free throws by Gene West and a 20-foot jump shot at the final buzzer by captain Bill Foster to nip the Wheatshockers, 64-63. What’s even more surprising is that the win left Drake alone in first place in the Missouri Valley Conference although the Bulldogs were ticketed for the lower echelon in all pre-season predictions. Drake, which finished last in the MVC last year, has posted an amazing 15-4 record to date despite the absence of any individual stars. OSU Crushes Illinois The lack of a star is not the problem at Ohio State where All-America Gary Bradds almost singlehandedly crushed Illinois, 119-92, with a 49-point performance. In other feature games, second-ranked Kentucky stibdued grudging Mississippi State, 65-59, and fifth-ranked Duke overpowered Virginia, 80-59, for their 27th consecutive Atlantic Coast Conference win. Bradds drilled 17 field goals and added 15 free throws in 16 attempts to break his own home court scoring record and shatter 40 points for the fifth consecutive game. The amazing 6-foot-8 center now has scored 226 points in those last five contests and has lifted the defending champion Buckeyes into strong contention in the Big Ten race, one full game behind Michigan. Kentucky took over undisputed possession of first place in the Southeastern Conference after fighting off the tenacious Bulldogs. The Wildcats trailed throughout the first half and much of the second half. State’s slowdown tactics and defense held Cotton Nash to 13 points, his lowest total of the season, but Ted Deeken scored 19 for Kentucky. Mullins Leads Duke Duke harassed befuddled Virginia into 22 errors and Jeff Mullins scored 25 points in the Blue Devils romp. Duke, which is 10-0 in the ACC, raced off to a 40-25 halftime lead, and never was threatened for the rest of the game. Nebraska, in the midst of a poor season, nipped Oklahoma State, 54-53, and knocked the Cowboys into a first-place tie in the Big Eight with idle Kansas State. Charley Jones scored 14 points for Nebraska, which hit 51 per cent of its shots in slicing the Cowboys’ conference mark to 5-2. Week's Schedule Os Adams County Basketball Teams Wednesday Monmouth at Huntington Catholic. Friday Harlan at Commodores. Montpelier at Monmouth. Adams Central at Bluffton. Monroe Central at Geneva. Berne at Winchester. Saturday Huntertown at Yellow Jackets. Fort Wayne Concordia at Berne. BOX CANDY FOR VALENTINE’S DAY! Turtles Lady Wayne And Many Other Brand Names ALL PRICES! We also have a nice assortment of Coty, Evening in Paris Perfumes, Colognes and Sets ALL PRICES! KOHNE DRUB STORE

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Divide Twin Bill Willi Bryant Teams The Decatur Catholic freshmen rallied in the second half to defeat Bryant, 37-31, after St. Joseph was edged by the Bryant junior high by a 37-35 score, in a pair of games played in the Catholic gym Monday. The two frosh teams were tied 5-5 after one period and Bryant held a 19-15 halftime .lead. The quintet, however, rallied in the third period and grabbed a 2725 advantage entering the final period, and held on for the victory. Dan Kable’s 15 tallies led all scorers, and Bergman was high for Bryant with eight. Bryant edged the St. Joe team in a nip and tuck battle. The visitors held a 7-5 first period lead, but Decatur grabbed a 17-16 halftime lead. Bryant regained the lead at 26-25 after three quarters, and held the lead in the final stanza. John Boch’s 10 tallies l°d St. Joe. and Campbell led Prvant with 10. St. Joe FG FT TP Baker 5 2 12 Cook —3 0 6 Caciano 14 6 Boch, 4 2 10 T. Schultz „i • • • HalikowskiOil Totals 13 9 35 Bryant FG FT TP Moore 2 2 6 Ninde i- 3 17 Campbell 4 2 10 Starr 4 0 8 Craig 0 11 Swieterman 2 15 Totals 15 7 37 Decatur FG FT TP McGill 0 3 3 Briones 0 0 0 Lengerich 2 0 4 Kable 5 5 15 Hackmpn 1 3 5 Schultz-1 0 2 Litchfield 1 2 4’ MiUer ... 113 Alberding Oil Peterson 0 0 .0 Totalsll 15 37 Bryant FG FT TP Hoy 0 2 2 Fiferlo 2 Houser — 2 3 7 MiUer — 0 3 3 Bergman — 2 4 8 Hoffman 1 4 6 Schultz . 113 MB Totals —. 7 17 31 Monmouth Graders *■ I Win Toumey Honors A talented band of sth and 6th graders from Monmouth copped the annual sth and 6th grade tournament Monday afternoon, as they whipped Northwest B by a 32-14 score in the Decatur high school gymnasium. » The Monmouth, team had swept through the regular season unbeaten to win that title, and then added the tourney crown Monday to win possession of the beautiful traveling trophy awarded each year through the Decatur Industries. The Monmouth lads built up a huge 17-0 lead at half time and • coasted home for the victory. Northwest B came to life in the second half with 14 tallies but were unable to cut into the Monmouth lead. Rex Journay, son of local biology teacher William.. Journay, led all scorers as the tall center tallied 11 points. He received help from five other Monmouth players who hit the scoring column, including Luginbill, who tallied seven points. Bill Schnepf and Bedwell were tops for Northwest with five points each. Northwest B FG FT TP Kelly —- 0 0 0 Roopo 11 Birch 0 0 0 Bedwell 2 15 Schnepf — 2 1 5 Barkley 0 0 0 Jaurigui 11 3 Franz ’ 0 0 0 Burger— 0 0 0 Snyder 0 0 0 Gerig 0 0 0 Rash 0 0 0 Reed .... 0 0 0 Totals 5 4 14 Monmouth FG FT TP Brown 12 4 Luginbill .... —1 5 7 Journay .... 5 1 11 Burger ....2 0 4 Geyer 2 0 4 Durr 0 0 0 Roahrig 0 0 0 Garwood ...0 0 0 Adams 10 2 Caffee .. 0 o'o Strahm 0 0 0 DeLong» 0 0 0 Totals .... 12 8 32 Adams County NFO To Meet Thursday The Adams county NFO will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Pleasant Mills school. Charles Shively, manager of the Adams county Production Credit Assn., will present a 'Short film on farm credit. All farmers are invited to attend.

New Castle's Gym Capacity Cut By State INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—New Castle’s gymnasium, billed as the largest high school facility of its kind, lost more than 1,300 seats from its 9,325 capacity Monday in the latest state fire marshal is afe t y inspection move. Two other North Central Conference schools, Marion and Muncie Central, previously were told they could not fill their structures to capacity for the state basketball tourney which opens late this month and there were indications that similar measures will cut down seating capacity at Butler Fieldhouse here. New Castle lost 1,345 seats, according to William Workman, chief inspector for the state fire marshal, in keeping with a code of the Administrative Building Council requiring 22 inches of exit space for each 100 persons seating in a public building. Every gymnasium being used for the 64 sectional tourneys is being inspected as a Safety measure. Fire regulations are being enforced more rigid than in the past as the result of the State Fairgrounds Coliseum disaster last Oct. 31, which killed 74 persons and injured another 400. Workman said following an inspection of the 14,943-seat Butler Fieldhouse, site for the state tourney finals, that no decision on the seating capacity there would be made until after a meeting with the building council. He would not speculate by how much the fieldhouse seating would be reduced. At Marion, meanwhile, a reinspection of the Memorial Coliseum gave new hope for 400 more sectional tourney fans. *lbe state fire marshal’s office had cut the maximum number of spectators the huge gymnasium could hold from 6,500 to 4,700 earlier this year in a strict interpretation of a state law which demands 22 inches of exit space for every 100 t , seats. Deputy Inspector John Barrett of Portalnd inspected the Marion Coliseum for |he second time Monday and re-measured exits and then boosted the maximum seating to 5,100. Other cutbacks in seating at tourney sites is expected to keep the tourney from setting any attendance record this year. Nearly 1.5 million Hoo--1 siers watch the tourney at various sites each year. National League To Keep New Umpires CINCINNATI (UPI) — Umpires John Kibler and Bill Williams have been retained by the National League, President Warren Giles announced. Williams was called up from the International League last Auguest and Kibler joined the NL staff in September.

■ 11 — ■ * '» J- r THE DEPENDABLES: SUCCESS CARS OF '64 The fuel is regular. The performance is premium. I Premium performance doesn’t cost a nickle extra in a '64 Dodge, three series. Each is a low-priced car. And each is backed by a long, Because under that handseme hood lurks the largest standard engine strong 5-year/50,000-mile warranty* You could easily pay more in the low-price field (318 cu. in. V 8). It doesn’t cost you extra at for such a fine automobile, but why should you? See your Dependable the gas pump, either! Regular grade fuel suits it just fine. Dodge Dealer instead! Dodge is as luxurious as it is lively. The Polara 2 ; door hardtop above, for instance, features i rich saddle-grain vinyl interior, a - ’ ... . ... J poratlon Authorized Dealer's place of businass without charge for such part* or tabor: anpin. comfort-providing flip-down center armrest, foam seat padding, and “Jtch).' n »rq e ue conve?te**ddve shaft,*unirorsaf joints, rear axle and thick wall-to-wall carpeting-all standard equipment. Yet it’s priced SX XTforToXtfg right with comparable models of Ford and Chevrolet. S’X In all there are twenty-two Dodge models to choose from. In receipt of such evidence and your car’s mileage. Simple enough for such important protection. S 4 Dodge @1 DODGE DIVISION CHRYSLER eMv MOTORS CORPORATION PHIL L. MACKLIN CO. ■ 107 SOUTH FIRST ST. DECATUR, IND. PHONE 3-2504 r SEE “THE 808 HOPE SHOW,” NBC-TV. CHECK YOUR LOCAL LISTING. - J

I " * rt/’■■"■ JftiAai- r ‘ "Ww' ' 3 | 7 ;I |. Wta 71i 5 i ■ i ' '‘ Hr I' >RLI 'Wil I•? ■ ,- <. >V 4H wJr*X- z r?ry 4L JHrxvl kJ w 27w i j*jL MrnßSMr” \' b BtU , I if iX«S - jWrS Li 4 STH & 6TH CHAMPS— Monmouth's sth and 6th grade regular season champs added the tournament title to their laurels Monday afternoon by defeating Northwest B in the championship game. Team members are shown with the traveling trophy they received, and coach Bob Banks is shown on the right in the rear raw.—(Photo by Cole)

Plan Parents' Night At Saturday's Game “Parents’ Night” ceremonies will be held by the Deeatur high school Booster club Saturday evening before the Decatur Yellow Jackets game with Huntertown in the local gymnasium. Plans for the “Parents’ Night,” the first time such an affair has been held during basketball, were announced this morning by Booster club president Fred Isch. Parents of boys on the basketball team will be brought to the west end of the gymnasium prior to the start of the contest Saturday evening, and will then be introduced, along with their sons to the crowd at the game. Similar ceremonies have been held by the Booster club for the football and wrestling teams, and have proven quite successful. While not any tpe of outstanding ceremony,' it has been Wetli received by Decatur fans. Results Received Os Postal Matches Results of the December postal matches of the National Rifle Association have been received by the D. C. H. S. Hotshots, who compete in the four-month junior matches. Team ‘No. 1 of the Hotshots finished 76th, with a score of 1730, out of 199 teams in division A, open junior teams; and team No. 2 was 49th of 96 teams in division B, non-military scholastic teams. College Basketball lowa 82, Indiana 75. Ohio State 110, Illinois 92. Butler 76, Wabash 67. lowa State 83, Missouri 79. Drake 64, Wichita 63. Nebraska 54, Oklahoma State 53.

Maico Hearing Service Center To be held: Rice Hotel, Decatur Indiana Time: 1:00 to 4:00 p. m. Friday, February 14, 1964 By: Mr. John Kenwood, a certified hearing aid audiologist front Maico, 217 W. Wayne St., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Visit him for a demonstration of the newest in a complete range of hearing aids. Supplies and repairs for all makes of hearing aids are available. +] Falstaff wins at refreshment time ■> r „ \ V M( 1 \ Any food time it Falttaff timt . ® AMERICA'S PREMIUM QUALITY BEER MMVAU OOOWtM tV. •••»•. •#. _"***""*"^"*ZZZZZZZZZZZ ****_ZZZZE3IZ ZZZZZZZZZZZZ-ZZL=^Z—i-—-

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