Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 53, Decatur, Adams County, 3 March 1964 — Page 7

TUESDAY. MARC* >. 19M

SPORTS 1

UCLA Scores 25th Straight Victory Monday By GARY KALE UPI Sports Writer Zero hour is approaching for > UCLA. Coach Johnny Wooden’s Uclans today were on the crest of creating the nation’s first major college basketball unbeaten record since Ohio State in 1961. They ripped California, 87-57, Monday night to post a 25-0 mark with one game remaining. The Bruins meet Southern California Friday night in the regular season windup. But Wooden is wary of a ’6l parallel whereby Ohio . State State went unbeaten until the finals of the NCAA championships and then lost to Cincinnati in overtime. Kansas State clinched the Big Eight title with a 63-59 overtime victory against Oklahoma State and Wichita forced Drake into a playoff for the Missouri Valley Conference berth in the NCAA classic by beating North Texas State, 90-83. The deadlocked MVC schools meet at Lawrence, Kan., Friday to decide the title. Easy Win All-America Walt Hazzard and fellow guard Gail Goodrich, the spearheads in top-ranked UCLA’s drive for the national collegiate championship, handled California with ease. Hazzard scored 18 points and assisted on many others while Goodrich netted a game high of 23. Kansas State clinched its seventh conference championship in the last nine years as it outscored Oklahoma State 9-5 in the overtime session. James King enabled the Cowboys to enter the extra period with a last minute basket in regulation play that tied the score at 54all, but Kansas State took it from there with three field goafs afid three free throws. Dave Stallworth, Wichita’s All-America, tallied 34 points against North Texas State to capture the, 'Missouri Valley scoring title. A key Stallworth basket with the score tied at 64-all enabled the Wheatshockers to draw away for good. Garland Bailey led the losing Texans with 30 points. OSU On Top Ohio State took over first place in the tight Big Teri Conference race as Gary Bradds broke out of a two-game scoring slump with 34 points in the Buckeyes’ 86-74 win over Illinois. The Bucks have one game left, against Michigan State Saturday. Michigan, a half-game back, plays lowa Saturday and “ Purdue on Monday. NCAA-bound Kentucky suffered a pre-tourney loss when St. Louis beat the Wildcats, 67-60. Kentucky Coach Adolph Rupp had feared this letdown after his ’Cats clinched the Southeastern Conference title last Saturday. Cotton Nash fell short in his bid to overtake Alex Groza as the all-time Kentucky high scorer when he was held to 15 points. The 6-foot-5 All America needed 22 points to surpass Groza’s career total of 1,734 points. Rich Naes tallied 21 points for- - Louis as the Billikens hand-J* ed Kentucky its first home court - loss of the season. I College Basketball 1 lowa 81, Purdue 74. j Minnesota 105, Wisconsin 96. » Ohio State 86, Illinois 74. ' * Indiana Central 117, Oakland City 79. S Manchester 104, Indiana Tech'S n. -— —— —f Wheaton 89, Valparaiso 77. 4 Wichita 90, North Texas States 83. 3 Kansas State 63, Oklahoma State 59. Karsas 73, Colorado 71. St. Louis 67, Kentucky 60. Oklahoma 82. Nebraska 76. UCLA 87, California 57. > Stanford 81, Washington State ' 55. i'

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BOWLING Guys A Dolls League W L Pts. Braun’s Meats 10 2 13 Dick’s TV Service-.— 8 4 11 Bauman Upholstering 8 4 11 Myers Gulf 6 6 9 Farm Bureau Ins. — 6 6 7' E. D. Schrock 5 77 Betty’s Beauty 4 8 5 Paul Myers Sales— 1 11 1 High series: Men—B. Bolinger 168-215-199 ( 582), D. Sheets 183-178-142 (503), E. Schrock 169-171-180 (520), R. Eweß 152-166-211 (529,) G. Heckman 174-197-166 (537). Women—E. Getting 137-110-203 (450). High games: Men —J. Allen 186, D. Sheets 183. Women—E. Getting 203, P. Schrock 182, E. Bolinger 159. Splits converted: B. Kershner 3- H. Getting 3-10, G. Foos 310, E. Getting 3-10, D. Sheets 310, S. Ross 5-6. T. V. Guides W L Pts. Hillbillies 14 7 20 Defenders —— 15 6 20 Ripcords 14 7 19 Caseys 10 11 14 Virginians 10 11 13 Checkmates T 7 14 9 Medics 8 13 9 Laramies 6 15 8 High team series: Defenders 1927, Ripcords 1688. High games and series: H. McDonald 184-176-166 (526), B. Drake 169-176-157 (502), D. Johnson 164-144-162 (470), E. Hite 184-143-141 (468), D. Halthouse 147-167-149 (463), J. Voglewede 155-135-173 (463), J. Hesher 132-154-160 (4461, A. Colchin 130-173-143 (446), M. Mies 156-146-139 (441), R Teeple 121-121-176 (418), H. Bracey 104-154-150 (408), J. Workinger 134-134-139 (407), M. Schultz 136, R. Macklin 143, M. Parrish 146, H. Emenhiser 159. Splits converted: M. Heiman 2-4-5-10, M. Schultz 5-10, J. Workinger 4-5, 2r7 and 5-6-10, M. Parrish 3-10, twice, H. McDonald 310 twice, M. Mies 5-6 and 6-7-10, M. Schirack 3-10, A. Heare 5-6, B. Drake 3-10 and 3-7-10, B. Teeple 5-10. Minor League W " L Pts. Fulmer Seat £ev. 17 4 24 Walt’s Standard — 15 6 20 Bower Jewelryl4 7 19 Riverview 14 7 18 Downtown Texaco 13 8 18 Moose No. 112 9 16 Holthouse on Hiwy 11 10 15 Wolff's Hardware. 11 10 15 Smith Dairy 11 10 15 Extract’s r - 11 10 14 Drewry’s 9 12 11 Clem Hardware „ 8 13 11 Moose No. 2 7% 13% 9% Haugk’s 6 15 9 Haircut Center 6% 14% 7% Zoss Chevrolet.. 2 19 2 High series: Larry Stevens 607 (226-191-189), T. Fennig 593, H. Hoffman 589, C. Stucky 572, A. Schneider 571, N. Richards 568, R. Coclasure 563, G. Ainsworth 556, D. Koos 555, C. Marbach 550, D. Clay 550. High games: T. Fennig 201-204, D. Koos 202-210, H. Hoffman 225, W. Frauhiger 222, D. Sheets 214, B. Stephenson 212, C. Stetler 207, R. Smith, Jr. 206, R. Colclasure 206, B. Ross 202, C. Marbach 202. Coffee League W L Pts. Drips 14 7 20 Sippers 15 6 19 Perks — 14 7 19 Sugar 12 9 17 Warmers 11 10 14 Cream 11 10 14 — Coasters .1 9 12 14 Caffeine - 10 11 13 Saucerettes ' 10 11 13 Cubes 10 11 12% Dunkers 9 12 12 Spoons 8 13 11 Instant 8 13 10% Cups — 6 15 7 t High games: P. Dick 190-157, ■Betty Butler 180, M. Geisler 177- : 160, J. Pickford 171, R. Barkley i 165, C. Bassett 165, M. Gephart 1161, J. Anderson 160, M. VonGun- ’ ten 159, L. Affolder 159, V. Hami mond 158, S. Mutschler 157-156, ;W. Hirschy 157-152, P. Kolter 157, ’L. Mac Lean 157, H. Myers 156, iR. Baxter 155, J. Corah 154, M. iNash 154, C. Schafer 153, G. Reef : 152, P. Botjer 152. ■ Splits converted: R. Baxter 2-7, ' W. Terhune 4-7-10 & 4-5, P. Kolj ter 3-10, W. Rafert, 5-7, M. J. Burness 5-6-10, M. Gephart 5-7, M. Nash 2-5-10 & 5-6-10, E. Bultemeier 3-10, M. Hoffman 4-8-10, M. Geisler 68, L. Sutckey 3-10, M. D. Cochran 4-5, S. Mutschler 5-6, Betty Butler 5-6-10,'P. Dick 4- M. K. Gage 3-10, A. Baker : 5-8-10.

Walt Alston Drills Dodgers On Hit, Run By FRED DOWN UFI Sports Writer Two-time National League batting champion Tommy Davis of the Los Angeles Dodgers must feel today like a Hollywood movie star who is asked to recite “Gunga Din’ before getting a part. Tommy’s game is to hit the ball and let others run but in the great tradition of the daffyness Dodgers Manager Walt Alston has him doing the "hitting and running’ this spring. Davis, Ron Fairly and John Roseboro practiced the hit-and-run and bunting Monday as Alston sent the world champions through a two-and-a-half-hour workout on fundamentals. The fundamental stressed most was the ancient art of the hit-and-run—and Davis, who led the NL the last two seasons with averages of .346 and .326 respectively—was forced to practice as much as the others. There’s a method to Alston’s spring madness, however, because the Dodgers are concerned over the fact that 1963 run production fell off 198 runs ffom 1962 to a mere 640. Alston apparently believes the Dodgers will have to rely upon speed and hit-and-run tactics more than ever in 1964 — as opposed to the home run punch of their chief rivals. Manager Johnny Peslqy 1 named 20-game winner - Bill Monbouquette to open the Cactus League season for the Boston Red Sox against the Chicago Cubs next Saturday and 1 also expressed delight at the smooth-stroking of American L League batting champion Carl Yastrzemski during Monday’s workout. On other fronts: Catcher Joe Torre became a holdout when he failed to sign before the Milwaukee Braves’ opening workout . . . outfielder Johnny Weekly hit three pitches over the left field fence during the Houston Colts’ workout . . . Johnny Keane said he expected Charley James and Carl Warwick to flank Curt Flood as regular St. Louis Cardinal outfielders this year . . . James has the task of replacing Stan Musial. Outfielder Joe Christopher signed with the New York Mets and versatile utility man Phil Linz reached terms with the New .York Yankees . . . Manag- V er Gene Mauch of the Phialdelphia Phillies said he is pleased by the way his pitchers are coming along at Clearwater, Fla. pressed in workout at second base in Chicago Cub camp still somewhat stunned by the airplane crash death of secondbaseman Ken Hubbs. Eaddy hit .279 at Salt Lake City last s6ason . . . Manager Alvin Dark of the San Francisco Giants expressed satisfaction over the way Willie McCovey, Willie Mays and Orlndo Cepeda hit "the long ball’ during Monday’s betting drill at Casa Grande, Ariz.

Big Ten Standings W L Pct Pts OP Ohio State 11 2 .846 1163 1060 Michigan 10 2 .833 1054 915 Minnesota 9 4 .692 1112 1060 Mich. State 7 6 .530 1130 1122 Purdue 6 6 .500 1034 1021 Northwsn 6 6 .500 960 936 Illinois 4 8 .333 1007 1031 Indiana 4 8 .333 1065 1034 lowa 3 9 .250 904 1023 Wisconsin 2 11 .154 1128 1189

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188 DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

I Results Received Os Postal Matches Results have been received by the Hotshots, rifle club of the Decatur Catholic high school, of postal matches sponsored by the National Rifle Assn. The local No. 1 team finished 154th of 198 teams in the division A-open junior teams, with a 1730 score. The No. 2 team was 77th in a field of 96 teams in division B-non-military scholastic teams, with a score of 931. No Television Os Pro Games Fridays NEW YORK (UPI) — Chalk up a victory for the high scMools over die mighty football pros. After some three weeks of speculation and criticism, the National Football League bowed to popular opinion Monday and announced that it will not televise any Friday night games on a nationwide basis this year. The NFL has maintained that it never planned to do so in the first place but the possibility arose because of its scheduling difficulties created by the late start of the World Series this year. Most pro football teams rely on major league baseball clubs to supply them with playing fields. Friday night televised football by the pros was criticized because that night traditionally has been left open for high school and college football competition. Indiana Central And Manchester Winners By United Press International Indiana Central and Manchester, Hoosier College Confer.ence rivals, went over the century mark Monday night to qualify for the District 21 basketball tourney finals. Champion Indiana Central rolled over Oakland City, 117-79, at Indianapolis while Manchester dumped Indiana Tech in Fort Wayne, 104-77. The district playoff finals will be played at Indiana Central Wednesday night, with the winner advancing to the national finals at Kansas City. Half a dozen Indiana Central players, led by Tom Moran’s 29 points, hit in double figures, After a fairly close half, Indiana Central leading 46-39,. toe Greyhounds pumped in 71 points in the final 20 minutes to turn the game into a rout. Pat Arnold led the losers with 18 points. Manchester jumped into a 6-0 lead and was never headed against Indiana Tech. Sophomore Stan Weller led the Spartans with 33 points while Dave Hickman was high for Tech with 15. ■ . ” Purdue, meanwhile, dropped back to the .500 mark in Big Ten play, losing at lowa, 81-74. The victory snapped the Hawkeyes five-game losing streak. Purdue, led by Dave Schellhase with 22 points, broke in front 9-2 but lowa caught up at 13-13 and the lead see-sawed until the Hawks took the final lead on a jump shot by Dave Roach with about 13 minutes to play. Elsewhere, Valparaiso lost at Wheaton, 89-77.

Wittenberg Guard Is Tops In Conference WESTERVILLE, Ohio (UPI) — Wittenberg’s Bill Fisher, 6-1 senior guard from New Castle, Ind., was named the Ohio Conference’s best all-around basketr ball player. Monday. Fisher is the fifth Wittenberg player to receive the loop’s Gregory Award in the past seven years.

| Buckeyes Beat Illinois, Half Game In Front CHICAGO (UPI) — Ohio State was back at the top today and the Big Ten basketball standings had that old familiar look. The Buckeyes have won or shared the Big Ten championship for the past four seasons and Monday night moved a half-game nearer than their closest pursuer to a fifth consecutive title. Monday night’s 86-74 victory over Illinois gave Ohio State an 11-2 record with only one game to go. Michigan, idle Monday night, remained a half - game off the pace and had two games left to play. Gary Bradds, the Buckeyes All-America center, broke out of a two-game scoring slump with 34 points. He needs to bag only 20 more in the season finale against Michigan State Saturday night to break Robin Freeman’s 1956 team record of 723 points in a season. ’ Bradds, who was held to 12 and 15 points in his last two games, had little trouble in eluding the defensing of Illinois ’ Skip Thoren and sank 14 out of 25 shots from the field. As a team the Buckeyes finished with a 51 per cent shooting average, succeeding on 36 of 70 shots. lowa scored its first victory in six league games by beating Purdue, 81-74. It was the first good news for the Hawkeyes since they defeated Indiana three weeks ago and it came only four days after coach Sharm Scheuerman announced he was through after this season. In the only other game, Minnesota handed Wisconsin its seventh consecutive Big Ten setback, 105-96. Despite the loss, it was the highest score the Badgers had been able to run up in their last 13 games. , Former Notre Dame End To Join Chiefs KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — The Kansas City Chiefs professional football club Monday said • they have signed former Notre' Dame end Leo Seiler as a free agent. Chief general manager JackStedman said the 6-3, 200-pounder will report to the Chiefs’ training camp July 19 at Liberty, Mo. Seiler attended Notre Dame from 1959 through 1961. Judge Scores Loud Statement Made By Hoffa CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (UPI) Teamsters President James R. Hoffa was sharply reprimanded today by Federal Judge Frank Wilson for “extremely loud” corridor statements. Before today’s session began in Hoffa’s jury tampering trial the Teamsters president loudly renewed his attack that the gdvernment was Tike the Gestapo in spying on him. Hi s charges were made in a hallway near Wilson’s courtroom. When Wilson took his place on the bench, he said he had heard Hoffa in the hallways outside his courtroom, despite closed doors. "Something has to be done to protect the jury” from noise, Wilson said. The jury had not entered the room at the time. “Let’s discontinue these extremely loud arguments both inside and outside the court,” Wilson told Hoffa and his attorneys who remained seated at the defense table. Hoffa nodded acknowledgement. A final round of arguments was scheduled today before the trial, now in its seventh week, goes to a 12-member jury. Hoffa and five others are on trial here on charges of trying to fix a Nashville, Tenn., federal jury which heard conspiracy charges against Hoffa in 1962. Special government prosecutor John J. Hooker, Sr., was scheduled to wind up the governments’ case today, charging the husky labor leader as the "quarterback’ of the alleged jury rigging. A Hoffa attorney, Harry Berke' of Chattanooga. was scheduled to have the last word in defense summation.

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Loyola Advances To Eighth In Ratings NEW YORK (UPI) — Loyola of Chicago, prepping for defense of its NCAA title, made the., only major gain today in the United Press International major college basketball ratings. UCLA, on the threshold of its first national basketball title, continued to hold down first place with 33 No. 1 votes from the 35 coaches on the UPI rating board. The coaches will name the UPI champion next week. Kentucky and Michigan, competitors for the runnerup spot since UCLA grabbed first place nine weeks ago, continued their fight with Kentucky getting a two-point edge for second. The Wildcats received the other two first-place ballots to bold second and keep Michigan third. Loyola, 11th a month ago, has gained a notch each of the last three weeks and replaced Davidson in eighth today. The Ramblers currently are riding a five-game winning surge. The remainder of the top 10 teams held their positions from last week. Duke maintained its grip on fourth-place after winning the Atlantic Coast Conference regular season crown, and Oregon State (25-3) held fifth. Wichita and Villahova ranked sixth and seventh, respectively. Davidson, upset in the Southern Conference tournament by VMI after winning the regular season title, skidded to ninth. Twice-beaten Texas Western rated 10th. The ratings were based on games played through Saturday Feb. 29. Mason Rudolph Is Winner At New Orleans NEW ORLEANS (UPl)—Mason Rudolph, carrying the biggest check of his career; headed for the Pensacola,. Fla., Open today after one of the maddest scrambles ever in the Greater New Orleans Invitational golf tournament history. Rudolph, a native of Clarksville, Tenn., playing out of Lehigh Acres, Fla., blew a fourstroke lead Monday, but came back with a 30-foot putt to win the $7,500 first prize by one stroke in the $50,000 tournament. He led from start to finish. It was the first time anyone had led all four rounds of a Professional Golfers Association (PGA) tournament since - last October, when Rudolph did it at Fresno, Calif. —Jack Nicklaus, Glenn Stuart, Juan Rodriguez and Paul Bondeson took turns tying Rudolph in the frantic last round. But he beat them off one by one in spite of his worst round of the tournament, a 75. He finally broke up the game with a 30-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole. Seconds later, Stuart. of Grand Rapids, Mich., blew a three-footer on the 18th hole and Rudolph had his third victory in six years on the PGA tour. Stuart, Nicklaus and Rodriguez woh $3,400 each for their second-place tie. Nicklaus now leads in 1964 official winnings with $12,100. Rodriguez is second with $lO.900 and Rudolph third with $lO,500. Arnold Palmer, last year’s top money winner, is fourth $9,500. Palmer won $’1,500 here after finishing with a 70 Monday. Rudolphs 68-70-70-75—283 was the highest winning score since the New Orleans tournament was resumed in 1958. The 1962 and 1963 champion, Bo Wininger, finished the third round four over par and was disqualified Monday when he showed up late for his tee off.

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Liberty Center Is Smallest In Regional Field By KURT FREUDENTHAL United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — If you lost yoUr “horse” in last week’s Indiana high school basketball tourney and are looking for a “little one” to cheer for, how about Liberty Center, a school with an enrollment of 70? The Wells County school, located about seven miles southwest of Bluffton, is the smallest alive among the 64 sectional champions It has just 30 boys and most of them turned out for basketball last fall. Liberty Center won its sectional, at Bluffton, for the first time in 20 years, but coach Richard E. Butt wasn’t surprised. “We had a 16-4 season record and figured we had a good chance,” he said. Butt, who played basketball at Huntington High School and was graduated from Manchester College six years ago, was home Monday nursing a flu bug, but figured he would be back in school shortly. Coach Optimistic ‘l’m looking forward to the Marion regional,” he said. “I think we can beat Swayzee,” his team’s afternoon foe next Saturday. Butt has been a varsity coach for five years. This is his first sectional triumph. His current club includes six veterans headed by center Dick Harris at nearly 6 feet 5 inches. Liberty Center is the only survivor with an enrollment of less than 100. But four other schools have enrollments of less than 200, five have fewer than 300 students and a dozen have less than 500. A third of the field— 21— have enrollments in excess of 1,000. Holton, winner at Milan and which faces an uphill struggle in the Connersville regional, is the second smallest with an enrollment of 105. Williamsport, repeat sectional champ at Covington, has 112; first-time winner Clarksburg, at Greensburg, has 132 students and Needmore, another brandnew sectional champ at Bedford, has 158. Tech is Largest Williamsport is routed • through the Greencastle r e’g ion al, Clarksburg through Columbus, and Needmore through Jeffersonville. While Liberty Center is the smallest entry left, Indianapolis Tech with an enrollment of 4,692, is the largest. Rounding out the top six, according to enrollment, are Kokomo 3,365, Elkhart 3,170, Michigan City 2,917, Columbus 2,895 and Richmond 2,870. sectional champs aren’t exactly tiny. Pioneer, for instance, the Logansport champion formed from Lucerne and Royal Center, has 381 pupils. z North Knox, molded from Bicknell, Bruceville, Freelandville, Oaktown and Vigo, has 736. Thus, describing some of the second-round newcomers as “small-town” is deceiving. Fact is, some of them have a good chance to ring up at least two more victories and advance to the “Sweet Sixteen” in the semi-state tourneys. Pro Basketball Eastern Division W. L. Pts. Boston 52 19 .732 Cincinnati 50 22 .694 Philadelphia 30 39 .435 New York 20 52 .278 Western Division ■ ■ _ W. L. Pts. San Francisco 43 29 .597 St. Louis 40 31 .563 Los Angeles 37 35 .514 Baltimore 29 40 420 Detroit IS 52 .257 Monday’s Results St. Louis 111, San Francisco 102.

PAGE SEVEN

fl ■ / -MH V /I Vz u Ed Kohne

Levicki Award Is Presented To Ed Kohne Ed Kohne, four-year veteran of the Decatur Catholic high school basketball team, was awarded the John Levicki memorial award Monday evening at the fourth annual Fort Wayne-South Bend diocesan all-star basketball banquet in Warsaw. The first player to ever be named to the all-star squad three times, Kohne became the first player from the local school to receive the Levicki award. The award is given on the basis of basketball ability, scholastic standing and mental attitude, in honor of John Levicki, former Fort Wayne Central Catholic high school basketball coach who died of cancer in 1960. Levicki was coach of the Fort Wayne club when it won the national Catholic championship in 1939 and 1940. Coaches, athletic directors and principals of the Catholic schools in the diocese were present, as were officials of the sponsoring Our Sunday Visitor. Four-Year Vet Kohne, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kohne, of 304 Adams St., was a member of the Commodore varsity for four seasons, being a regular most of the time. In the past season, his senior campaign, the six-foot forward and guard scored 280 points for an average of 14 per contest. Kohne and two other Commodore performers, Dan Lose and Terry Meyers, were named to the 12-player honor squad. Also named were Jim Krouse, Mike Flood, and Steve Bird, of Central Catholic; Phil Miller, of Fort Wayne Bishop Luers; Terry Flynn and Tom Fink, of Huntington Catholic and Mike Canfield, Al VanHuffel, and Ken Hass, of South Bend St. Joseph . Squad Trophies Each inember of the all-star team received a trophy at the banquet held to honor the squad. The Levicki award was presented to the Decatur star by Msgr. Joseph R. Crowley, Our Sunday Visitor editor. Bishop Leo A. Pursley was the guest speaker and addressed the group on the value of athletics and discussed the growing number of Catholic teams in the South Bend-Fort Wayne area.

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