Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 9 March 1964 — Page 7
MONDAY, MARCH S, IM4
Indianapolis Howe Surprise Prep Quintet By KURT FREUDENTHAL United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPl)—What next, Indianapolis Howe? The hustling Hornets from the east-side — unranked, underrated but as high as a kitekept the Indiana high school basketball tourney in an uproar today by barging into the “Sweet Sixteen" for the first time with another upset triumph. They yanked three-time state champ Anderson, the No. 6 team in the state, with a rousing 68-64 victory before a record crowd of nearly 15,000 in Butler Fieldhouse Saturday night, leading from start to finish. A week earlier, Howe showed heavily - favored Indianapolis Washington, the No. 5 team, the exit in the Southport sectional. Howe frittered away a 14point lead in the final period but managed to hang on for first-time regional laurels along with Evansville Rex Mundi, Gary Tolleston and Muncie South. Now, Howe has the dubious distinction of smacking into high-flying and unbeaten Columbus in the opener of the local semi-state tourney Saturday. Columbus 25-0 Columbus, No. 1 and boasting a 25-game winning streak, continued its record pace by smashing Franklin Saturday night, 117-70—the most points ever scored by one team in the regionals. It was the ninth time this season that the Bulldogs hit 100 points or more, giving them a per game average of 99.6 points ih five tourney games, another record. Columbus also increased its average winning margin to an amazing 40.8 points—an indication that coach Bill Stearman’s South Central Confetence champs thoroughly outclassed their backyard opposition in the first two rounds of the monthlong grind. The presence of Springs Valley, unbeaten in the 1958 state finals and surprise winner at ' Huntingburg, and Martinsville in addition to Howe also was a clear indication that none of the top favorites for the vacated by Muncie Central without firing a shot is a “shoo-in.” Both Springs Valley and Martinsville, which derailed 1963 tourney finalist Terre Haute Garfield, 50-44, check in with overall records of 12-14. Howe was beaten seven times but came on strong toward the end of the season. Nine Overtimes Lafayette, No. 2 in the state, is the only tourney finalist from last year still pitching. The Bronchos, playing without ailing star guard Denny Brady, bested North White, 89-75, and thefr , 85.6 point offensive average is second only to Columbus. Only two other UPI “Big 10’ members advanced. Huntington’s eighth-rated co-champions in the Central Conference made it four in a row for Marion regional honors, 58-33 over Sway-
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Scinistots Pairings INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Pair-! ings for Saturday’s Indiana highE school basketball semi • state E tourneys: At Evansville — Springs Valley | vs Seymour, Martinsvillle vs~ Evansville Rex Mundi. At Fort Wayne — Kokomo vs Huntington, Garrrett vs Elkhart. At Indianapolis — Indianapolis Howe vs Columbus, Muncie South vs Rushville. At Lafayette — Greencastle vs Valparaiso, Lafayette vs Gary Tolleston. BOWLING I Classic League W L Pts. Leland Smith Ins. 16 8 22 j Gerber Supmkt. .. 15 9 .19 Two Brothers .... 13 11 18 Preble Garden .... 13 11 18 Reidenbach Equip. 13 11 17 A. Schrock, Builder 12 12 16 Hammond’s Mkt. ..11 13 14 Citizens Tele. .... 10 14 14 Leland Smith Life 9 15 13 Decatur Farms .... 8 16 9 High series — Bob Lord 638, (236, 180, 222). Roily Ladd 630, (203, 209, 218), Elmer Graber 600, (166, 214, 220). High games — B. Ross 254, A. Buuck 201, J. Harkless 206, J. Loshe 205, H. Miller 222, E. Schindler 218, H. Scheuman 200, P. Wilkinson 222, P. Bleeke 201, J. Meyer 212, W. Tutewiler 214. Women’s Major League * W L Pts Two Brothers .... 20 4 28 - Adams Trailer .... 15 9 19 Sheets Furniture .. 12 12 15 Three Kings 10 14 14 I Aspy Standard 8 16 11 z Colonial Salon 7 17 9 - High games — V. Smith (192180), L. Call (185), A. Gage (178), J. Bedwell (175), P. Clark (173), S. Hoffman (174), L. Bultemeier (170). High series — V. Smith (522). Splits converted—R. Gage (510), P. Laurent (5-7), G. Reynolds (4-5), M. Hockemeyer (3-10), W. Schroeder (5-6), M. Scheumann (5-10). zee, and Elkhart’s Northern _ Conference titlists, No. 9, ousted" 1963 tourney runnerup South ; Bend Central, 73-65. Swayzee was no match for once-beaten Huntington after outlasting Liberty Center in a record nine overtimes, 65-61. Rex Mundi became the first parochial ’school to reach the “Sweet S i x t e e n”, leading Princeton all the way, 85-61. Tolleston dowrted dangerous Michigan City at East Chicago, 93-83, and Muncie South survived a 30-point, last period assault by Richmond for an 80-79 win at New Castle. Only five regional champs repeated — Columbus, Greencastle, Seymour at Jeffersonville, Lafayette and Huntington. - Lafayette, Martinsville and Kokomo are the only former state champs left. Tech Loses Garrett’s tall Railroaders gained the third round by the slimmest winning margin—B.3 points per game. Huntington emerged as the defensive leader by holding five rivals to an average of just 41.2 points. It’s all over for the small entries. Springs Valley with 423 students is the smallest left. Garrett is next with 523. Anderson took out fourthrated Indianapolis Tech, 75-65, before being chopped down by Howe. Tech lost its five starters on personal fouls and the Indians iced it from the free throw stripe. Gary Froebel’s Northwest Conference ch amps, who bumped powerful city foe Roosevelt, the No. 3 team, in the sectionals, were licked by Michigan City in the afternoon, 106-87, but the Red Devils also couldn’t stand prosperity. Tolleston spurted to a 15-0 lead at night and made it stand up. Valparaiso is the only other far-northern club to make it, but it took a pair of free throws by Tom Copper to convince newcomer Pioneer at Logansport, 64-62.
Tourney Notes
By Bob Shraluka “I’m proud of all the boys,” said a dejected, but far from disheartened, Vernon Zurcher, Adams Central coach, in the dressing room after his Jets had been ousted from I.H.S.A.A. tourney play by the Ashley Aces Saturday afternoon. “Zerk,” as t#e affable mentor is known, praised his boys for battling all the way, and was bemoaning that horrendous first quarter which cost his club a crack at Garrett in the night game. He agreed that a couple of bad breaks kept his dub from pulling the victory out of the tire, and said he thought the turning point of the contest was when a basket by Roger Schnepp was disallowed late in the game as the sophomore center was called for traveling. 4 “We were down by three, and that would have made it one,” Zurcher said. Schnepp had taken a pass at the top of the free throw circle and spun past two Ashley players to flip the ball through the hoop. The officials, however, said he had taken illegal steps in reaching his destination. Great Shooting The first year Adams Central coach said he didn’t think his club played poor defense in the first period, but that Ashley just came up with some phenomenal shooting. He was quite right, too, as the Aces took 17 shots in that initial stanza and hit nine of them, including several long “bombs.” “That number 45 sure hurt uS. Usually he doesn’t shoot too much,” Zurcher explained. He was referring to Ashley guard Steve Grill who hit seven of ten shots from the field dunring the contest. Grill got only one bucket in nine attempts in the night game. He made mention of the fine game Gary Clouse played in winding up his high school career, and commented about the great job Don Egley had done .on Ashley’s 6-5 center Jack Baumgartner, who was held to just four field goals. Zurcher was already looking forward to next season, saying “We’ll be back next year.” And well they might. Egley, Clouse, Bill Hirschy, Mike Leyse and Steve Lehman .pick up diplomats this spring, but sparkplug Tony Ehrsam, tall Art Ringger, sophomore Schnepp, diminutive Steve Smith, plus several others from the tournament team are back and some good players on the reserve team move up. It probably won’t take Adams Central 15 years to win another sectional title. — O — The Fort Wayne regional wasn’t any different than the Adams Central sectional. None of the three games were decided until “the last man was out.” The only real difference in the two tourneys was that the Flying Jets weren’t champions, but for a couple of bad breaks, they could have added another title to the sectional trophy. — O — Coach Vernon Zurcher’s boys performed quite well, especially for three periods. It was that poor first quarter that kept them from moving into the night game. — O — Ashley had a red-hot initial period, and the Jets were stone-cold. For the final three periods the Adams county entry outscored the Angola winners, 47-41. Coach Zurcher will be first to admit it takes four good quarters to win most ball games, however, but still he and his Jets are to be congratulated for never quitting and almost pulling a victory out Big Ten Standings W L Pct. Pts OP Michigan .... 11 2 .846 1123 976 Ohio State .. 11 3 .786 1243 1141 Minnesota „ 10 4 .714 1202 1139 Mich. State . 8 6 .571 1211 1202 Purdue 7 6 .538 1110 1097 Northwsn .... 6 7 .462 1030 1012 Illinois ...... 5 8 . 385 1104 1104 Indiana “.. 4 9 .308 1124 1124 lowa 3 10 .231 965 1092 Wisconsin .... 2 12 .143 1101 1286 Driver Is Arrested Following Accident Frederick V. Beitler, 17, route 6» Decatur, was charged with reekless driving following a twocar accident Sunday afternoon, the only city accident during the weekend. Beitler was, arrested after his auto struck a -car operated by Carl H. Conrad, 33, of 903 N. ilth St., at the intersection of Winchester and Patterson streets at 3:52 p.m. Both autos were northbound on Winchester and as Conrad attempted a left turn onto “’Patterson, his auto was struck on the left rear by the Beitler car. Beitler said he applied the brakes of his vehicle but that they pulled his car into, the left line and into the Cons ad car. Damages were estimated at $250 to the Conrad auto and $l5O to the Beitler car.
TEE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
of the fire. — O — The Aces hit nine of 17 shots in the first stanza, a .539 percentage, and finished the game with 22 of 55, for an even .400 mark. The Flying Jets, after a slowmoving four of 16 in the first period, a .250 shooting percentage, finished the contest with 22 buckets in 69 tries, for a .310 percentage. The Jets’ best shooting period was in the second eight-min-ute bracket, when they hit seven of 18 from the field. - O — The second game Saturday saw even greater shooting, as Garrett hit 24 of 57 attempts for a mark of .421, and Fbrt Wayne Central scored 28 times on 63 tries for a .444 percentage in a losing effort. The two teams in the night game cooled off somewhat from their afternoon shooting, as the Railroaders shot at a .393 clip, 24 of 61, while Ashley connected 24 times in 67 attempts for a .358 percentage. - O — Big Gary Clouse, playing his best game of the four in tourney play, was the top shooter for the Jets, canning five of 12 shots from the field. Bill Hirschy hit five of 16, and Art Ringger scored three times in five efforts, all in the second quarter. Other shooting figures for the Jets, Don Egley, three of 17; Roger Schnepp, two of six; Tony Ehrsam, two of nine; Mike Leyse, one of three; Steve Lehman, one for one. — O — Guard Steve Grill was outstanding for the winning Aces, potting seven fielders in just ten shots. Big Jack Baumgardner hit fou* of 10 from the field and Jim Reinoehl scored qn four of 13 shots from the field. Larry Biggerstaff connected six times in 18 shots and John Hamman scored once in four shots. — O — Adams Central ‘ outrebounded Ashley by a margin of 38 to 29, with Clouse and Egley doing fine jobs off the backboards. Clouse hauled down 14 rebounds, including eight offensively, and Egley grabbed eight. Roger Schnepp grabbed six and Tbny Ehrsam five. Baumgardner led Ashley with 11, Grill got seven rebounds and’Hamman five. — O — Reinoehl, with 12 points against Adams Central and 24 in the title gapie was the meet’s top scorer of Garrett, all six feet, 10 inches of him, finished with 34 points, including 20 in the evening. In two games, Bavis shot an even .500 from the field, getting 16 buckets in 32 attempts, most of them a few feet away from the bucket. — O — Five Jet seniors finished their high school careers Saturday afternoon. Don Egley, Bill Hirschy, Gary Clouse, Mike Leyse and Steve Lehman can always look back on that first sectional title they helped win for their* school. — O — The Jets had some real tough luck in the closing second of their game. In a span of 20 seconds, from 48 seconds remaining in the game, to 28 remaining, they had two shots go in the bucket and squirt out, and a third shot from right under the bucket rolled off. Die score was 59-55 Ashley at the time, and if any one of the three would have gone in, the outcome could have been different., — O — Ashley cooled off in a hurry after that hot first period. The Aces missed their first five shots in the second stanza, Grill finally breaking the drought with a onehander. Hie little guard hit the first shot he took in the contest, and the first one he missed was a lay-in that rolled off midway in the second quarter. — O — Die regional meet was assured of a new champion as the field was 100 per cent changed from last year. The 1963 entrants' were Berne, Albion, Fort Wayne Concordia and Angola. Garrett became only the third school to win the title in the past five years, however, as Berne copped the crown in 1961 and 1963, and Central of Fort Wayne was winner in- 1960 and 1962. Some 7,592 witnessed the afternoon session and another 5.925 saw the night game, for a total of 13,517 for the two sessions. , ’ , — O — There were many outstanding individual performances, but how’s; this for an all-tourney squad: Bavis, Warstler and Mitchell of Garrett, Baumgardner, Steve Grill and Reinoehl of Ashley, Eugene Wash and Jim Whitt of Central and Clouse and Egley of the Aces. - 0 — SHORT SHOTS—The Railroaders not. only have the two tallest players in the state in Bavis and Jim Heitz, both 6-10, but probably one of the shortest, 5-3 Tony Foar ... the Jets hit 11 of 12 from the free throw line and Ashley 12 of 13 in the first half of their game . . . the Jet coach retained his title of “most, acrobatic” . . . after that poor first period, the Jets scored 22 points in the second quarter. ~ &
Wwi Congratulations to the Flying Jets for their fine showing Saturday. — 000 — The Adams Central Flying Jets, champions of their own sectional for the first time, staged a great comeback after a slow start in Saturday’s Fort Wayne regional tourney, and nearly caught the Ashley Aces, who had raced to a long first-quarter lead. — 000 — Coach Vem Zurcher and his boys put up a fine fight after that discouraging first period and with a little luck in the closing minutes could have pulled the ball game but of the fire. — 000 — All three games in the tourney developed into hard-fought battles after the eventual winners had taken what appeared to be substantial leads in early going. — 000 —. Attendance at the two sessions appeared to be the best in several years at the regional level. The official afternoon attendance was announced at 7.592, and the final session drew 5,925. — 000 — IHSAA officials may have to return to “sudden death" play in overtime tourney games following that marathon at Marion Saturday afternoon. Swayzee and Liberty Center struggled through nine overtime sessions before Swayzee emerged the winner. Neither team scored in the first five extra periods of three minutes each. Each scored two points in the sixth overtime, then went scoreless in the seventh extra period, tallied five each in the eighth, and Swayzee finally won in the ninth with six points to two. — 000 — Garrett’s Railroaders, winners of their first regional title in 24 years, will meet the tough Elkhart Blue Blazer?'in the second semi-state game at Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon. The Kokomo Wildcats will meet the Huntington Vikings in the first game at 12:30 p.m. — 000 — With the elimination of the Adams Central Jets, (basketel, ball U wound up for/Adams i<. county for the 1963-64 season, t And Basketbawl winds up again today until next November. College Basketball Purdue 76, Northwestern 73. Minnesota 90, Indiana 89. Michigan 69, lowa 61. Michigan State 81, Ohio State 80. Illinois 97, Wisconsin 73. Kansas 58, Oklahoma State 46. Marquette 98, Xavier (O.) 95. Kansas State 88, Missiouri 68. DePaul 79, Dayton 73. Ohio U. 82, Toledo 76 (overtime.) Bradley 74, St. Louis 70. St. John’s (N. Y.) 71, New York U. 51. Canisius 87, St. Bonaventure 74. Bowling Green 106, Marshall 72. Duke 80, Wake Forest 59 Colorado 90, lowa State 70. ACC Tourney (final) . Pro Basketball Saturday’s Scores Cincinnati 104, Baltimore 101. Boston 112, Detroit 94. -Philadelphia 130, New York 115. San Francisco 120, Los Angeles 118. Sunday’s Scores New York 140, Philadelphia 108. Boston 128, Detroit 118. St. Louis 135, Baltimore 117.
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Garrett Railroaders Win Regional Crown; Jets Are Eliminated By Aces, 62-57
By Pete Reynolds The Garrett Railroaders copped the Fort Wayne regional crown Saturday, the first for the school in 24 years, by edging the Ashley Aces, 62-59, after an overtime session in the final battle at the Allen county coliseum Saturday night. Adams Central’s Jets, who won the local sectional for the first time the previous week, got away to a slow start in the regional opener Saturday afternoon, battled back but were finally eliminated by Ashley, 62-57. Garrett won its way to the finals by holding off a late surge by the Fort Wayne Central Tigers, 76-72, in the second afternoon tilt. The Railroaders now advance to the semi-state tourney at Fort Wayne next Saturday, meeting the Elkhart Blue Blazers in the second contest at 1:45 p.m. The first game will match the Kokomo Wildcats against the Huntington Vikings, winners at Marion. Win In Overtime Garrett got away to a fast start in the championship battle, piling up a 20-11 lead in the first quarter. But the Aces fought back and moved into a 30-30 tie at the half-time intermission. The Railroaders carried a fivepoint advantage, 46-41, into the final period, but Ashley knotted the score at 57-57 with) seven seconds to play on a jump shot by Jim Reinoehl. The Railroaders took the lead in the overtime when 6-10 Chuck Bavis dropped in an easy shot, but Reinoehl evened the count at 59-59 with 1:40 of the extra session to go. Jim White made one of two free throws with a minute left for a 60-59 Garrett lead. Larry Biggerstaff’s shot with eight seconds left missed and on an ensuing jump ball, Ken Mitchell was fouled and dropped in both foul tosses for the final threepoint margin. Reinoehl topped all the final game scorers with! 24 points, Jack Baumgardner added. 16 and Biggerstaff 11 for the Aces. Bavis led the Railroaders with 20 markers, White and Larry Warstler each scored 11 and Mitchell 10. Each team scored 24 field goals, with Garrett hitting 14 of 26 free throws. Ashley 11 of 22. Flying Jets Ousted A slow start proved fatal to the Adams Central Flying Jets in the regional opener, although they battled back to within two points of the Aces in the closing minutes of the game before bowing by the 62-57 final score. The Aces built up a 21-10 bulge at the end of the first quarter, principally on the hot hand of Steve Grill, who potted four buckets in the period. Ashley twice boosted its margin to 14 points in the second quarter, the last time at 38-24 with 1:09 of the half remaining. Art Ringger’s third basket of the period made it 38-26, and then in the last 33 seconds, with the one and one foul situation prevailing. Don Egley, Bill Hinschy and Gary Clouse each dropepd in two free throws and Ashley’s lead had melted to six, 38-32 at the half. During the first two periods, the Aces converted 12 of 13 free throws, the Jets 10 of 11. Ashley held a seven-point advantage with less than a minute to play in the third stanza, but Clause dropped in a free throw and then a field goal and the
Jets trailed by only four, 49-45, going into the final eight-minute bracket. The Jets finally got within two points at 54-52 with 2:54 left, but the Aces built their margin back to five at 57-52. Tony Ehrsam dropped in a free throw and then Clouse grabbed a rebound and stuffed it back in and Ashley’s lead was only 57-55 with 1:10 to go. But Steve Grill cooly converted two free throws and Reinoehl one for another fivepoint margin. Steve Lehman hit a fielder with 12 seconds to go but Baumgartner potted a last second shot for the Aces and the final 62-57 victory. Steve Grill led all the scorers with 19 points, with Biggerstaff tallying 15, Baumgartner 14 and Reinoehl 12. Gary Clouse topped the Jets with 14 markers, Hirschy counted 12 and Egley 10. Each team hit 22 times from the field, with Ashley converting 18 of 25 foul tosses, Adams Central 13 of 18, as 16 fouls were called on the Jets, 13 on the Aces. Tigers Eliminated Garrett, like Ashley, in the opener, rolled to a big first quarter advantage over the Fort Wayne Central Tigers in the second tilt. Hitting 10 of 17 shots, the Railroaders built up a 25-13 lead in the first period, and, were still on top by 11 points at the main intermission, 46-35. Garrett’s lead was still nine points 62-53 at the end of the third period, but Central went into a pressing defense, and almost got the job deme on the Railroaders. Two consecutive field goals by Bob Hopson cut Garrett’s lead to 70-67, and a short time later Hopson was wide open underneath for a bucket that tied the score at 71-71 with 2:30 remaining. Hopson was fouled on the tying shot but missed Hockey Results NATIONAL LEAGUE Saturday’s Scores New York 3, Montreal 2. Toronto 4, Detroit ~ Sunday’s Results Chicago 4, Toronto 3. Montreal 0, New York 0 (tie). Detroit 5, Boston 3. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Saturday’s Scons Toledo 7, Muskegon 3. Port Huron 5, Chatam 2. Des Moines 3, Windsor 0. Sunday’s Scores Fort Wayne 8, Chatham 1. Port Huron 4, Muskegon 1. Des Moines 4, Windsor 1, Jefferson-Jackson Dinner Tickets Here Tickets' are now available for the annual Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner in Indianapolis April 25, Dr. Harry H. Hebble, Democratic county chairman, announced today. Sen. Ted Kennedy will be the main speaker, Dr. Hebble stated, and tickets will sell at $25 for regular tickets, and SIOO for double tickets, with names {Tinted in the booklet. Adams county hopes to sell $625 worth of tickets, he added, and Mrs. Edith Beer, at the Decatur license bureau office, has been named ticket sales chairman. The program will be held at the manufacturers building at the state fairgrounds.
PAGE SEVEN
the free throw. Two free throws each by Hathaway and Mitchell put the Railroaders out of reach. Both teams showed finely balanced scoring. Warstler topped Garrett with 17, followed by Mitchell with 16, Bavis and Hathaway with 14 each and White with 11. Whitt led Central with 15, Wash had 14 before fouling out,, and Hopson and Underwood each had 10. Central outscored Garrett from the field, 28 to 24, but the Railroaders dropped in 28 of 37 free throws to 16 of 24 by the Tigers. Ashley FG FT TP Biggerstaff 6 3-4 15 Hamman 10-12 Baumgartner 4 6-7 14 Reinoehl4 4-6 13 S. Grill 1 5-7 19 W. McClish 0 0-0 0 TOTALS j 22 18-25 62 0 Adams Central FG FT TP Egley 3 4-6 10 Clouse 5 4-5 14 Schnepp 2 1-1 5 Hirschy - 5 2-2 12 Ehrsam 2 2-4 6 Lehman 1 04) 2 Ringger 3 0-0 6 Leyse , 10-0 2 TOTALS 22 13-18 57 Score by quarters: Ashley 21/38/49/62 Adams Central 10/32/45/57 Officials: Sheets, Cox Garrett FG FT TP White 2 7-8 11 Mitchells 6-9 16 Bavisa 6 2-4 14 Heitz 2 0-0.4 Hathaway 3 8-10 14 Warstler 6 5-6 17 TOTALS 24 28-37 76 Fort Wayne Central FG FT TP Underwood 3 4-5 10 Williams ■_*_ 10-0 2 Whitt 5 5-6 15 Banks , 4 0-18 Wash 6 2-5 14 Hopson 5 0-1 10 Tielker 2 1-1 5 Moore 0 0-0. 0 Stevenson 12-3 4 Cress 1 2-2 4 TOTALS 28 16-24 72 Score by quarters: Garrett/v 25/46/62/76 Central Officials: Laird, Powers CHAMPIONSHIP Garrett FG FT TP White —— 5 1-4 11 Mitchell „ 2 6-10 10 Bavis 10 0-1 20 Heitz 1 1-1 3 Hathaway 3 1-4 7 Warstler 3 5-6 11 TOTALS — 24 14-26 62 Ashley FG FT TP Biggerstaff 4 3-6 11 Hamman 1 0-3 2 Baumgardner --6 4-7 16 Reinoehl 11 2-3 24 S. Grill 12-3 4 J. Grill 1 0-0 2 TOTALS 24 11-22 59 Score by quarters: Garrett 20/30/46/57-62 Ashley 11/30/41/57-59 Sohl.
