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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 23

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Louisville, Kentucky
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23
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THE BASEBALL, p. 4 WORLD OF SPORTS BASKETBALL, pp. 1, 2, 3, 16 SECTION 2 IANUAKT I 1 9S2 REPORT, p. 1 SPORTSMAN, p. 5 features; p.

5 RACING, p. 4 CLASSIFIED ADS, pp. 8 to 13 Illinois, Kansas Suffer 1st Losses Louisvi He Whips A two minute mark as Big Bob Peterson and Sub Herb Gerecke traded points. Ron Feiereisel followed up in the wild final minute by' netting three more crucial free throws that de- Lovola For 15th ob ket in the first Quarter, caught fire the hook shots of center Gene Dyker to register one of the major upsets of the season. Dyker, who led all scorers with 21, pumped in 14 points in the second quarter after Illinois had coasted to a 26-12 lead.

Rv half- siocu uiiijr a slim 32-31 margin. iJeraui, DOOKing lis IDin Win in 19 starts, finally tied the score midway the third and from there on it was a terrific. struggle during which the count was tied tt- i i i a pii five timps and the lpart rhanppH t- x- 11VC Lulled. The polished Illmi at times ap- peared to be swept off the boards by the pressing, hard-driving Blue Demons who did a masterly job Of Controlling rebounds. t-it- 00 1 1 DePaul piled into a- 65-63 lead with three minutes remaining in the game on shots by Stan Hoov- er, Dan Lecos and Bill Schyman.

But Illinois tied it 65-65 at the Then a reserve DePaul center, Russ Johnson, hit a free toss and Lineups HI. (65). fg.ft.pf. DePaul (69) fg.ft.pf. Demoras 3 2 5 Lecos ...428 C.

Foler 2 3 2 Schyman 3 5 4 a 1 A 1 A nuuuci i uuf isuii i Gerecke 1 12 Dyker 8 5 4 rrscon 1 Bredar 6 2 3 Lamkin 202 llVSiat 000 Totals I24 17 21 Totals 25 19 is Illinois 20 12 19 1465 DePaul 11 20 19 1969 Kansas fg.ft.pf. Kan. St. fg.ft.pf. Davenport 0 0 1 Gibson 2 1 4 I Kenney 1 6 3 Schuyler 0 0 1 eKefy iz Ko1trna cZ i Lovellette c-13 5 3 Carby 3 2 3 Born 0 0 1 Upson 112.

Hougiand gt 5 1 5 iverson g. 535 1 wiison 7 1 1 stauffer 000 Totals 23 is 26 Touu .292325 SEES, II 11 llfi Lochmueller and Noble Lead Cardinals Before 19,174 Fans By TOMMY FITZGERALD, Courier-Journaf Staff Writer Chicago, Jan. 26. University of Louisville got over one of its major basketball hurdles here tonight, but it looked at any moment as if the Cardinals were going to get a foot caught going over. HiH'f niav ihpir ht in only two points, now following Olympic Visitor In Helsinki May Pay $17 A Day for Food Fortune for Good Apartment If you are planning a little jaunt to the Olympic Games in Helsinki this summer you might start another piggy bank, you'll need a lot of moolah, says Ted Srnits, general sports for the Associated Press.

Ted, who visited Helsinki to arrange accommodations for his staff, was in Louisville yesterday for the Kentucky Press Association contention. The budget for coverage has had to be revised upward, he said, because of the unusual cost of food and scarcity of good lodging. His survey indicates that it will cost as much as $17 a day per person for meals in the Helsinki restaurants. The food is good and plentiful and restaurants clean and modern, but the prices, ouch! Ham and eggs, toast and coffee, $3.50, for instance. There are very few hotels in Helsinki, a town of about 250,000, and all of thenvhave been" taken over completely by the official Olympic family.

Tourists will be put up in homes at a very reasonable rate of from $3 to $8 a day. But if it's privacy you want you'll have to rent an apartment, and that, brother, is costly Smits has found a very comfortable apartment to be used by eight of his staff. The cost He gets it for three months, but no refund for leaving at the end of three weeks. beating Loyola of Chicago 80-73 hofnro 19174 fans here in Chi- cago Stadium, the largest crowd a Louisville team ever has played before. They were poor in shooting, missing, many easy shots, and lacked surrendering many offensive rebounds.

But even one of their inferior performances was good enough to beat the Ramblers, thanks to the shooting of Bob Lochmueller and Chuck Nobie. in the first couple of minutes Lochmueller got 21 points and cf the final period, two goals by Noble gathered 20. Noble col- Noble, a tip-in and a spectacular lected eight of his points at criti- long one, boosted Louisville's lead cal points in the final period to to six points at 69-63. repulse a Loyola threat. Louisville was without Nabef Led at Rest Stops He ut on Persn: als a minute and 25 seconds after Louisville led 24-21 at the end the start of the period, of the first quarter, 47-39 at the With 5:20 to go, Noble took half and 65-62 going into the charge again and got a three-final chapter.

Loyola never led point crip and followed with a after gaining a 28-27 lead early The Russians solved their food and housing problem quite simply. They will fly back and forth morning and night, and bring their vittles with them. i Most contestants and Spectators will fly. A special tourist rate of approximately $680 round- trip has been announced. The Associated Press will have a staff of about 35 on the grounds, but will fly in only two or three men from this country.

A special 24-hour leased wire will carry the news from Helsinki to London. From London a Ted Smits year-around leased wire will relay it to America This will make news bulletins come to Louisville in a matter of 'No Interference and i 1 JTf i f. lr.Bi -riP 4 If A i 4 Mow Rebuttal "Don- Idden, who was quoted in the. Report recently on a comparison of British and American sports, took in too much territory," writes M. R.

Holtzman, Louisville. "No Englishman who has seen our best brand of basketball cided the game. Illinois earlier had beaten De Paul 70-61. The Kansas-Kansas State game wasn't much of a contest after the first half. The lead changed hands 17 times in the first half before Kansas State got -ahead 32-30 with 3:30 remaining before the intermission.

The half ended 40-36 with K. S. on top. The great shooting of Clyde Lovellette, who scored 31 points, 18 of them in the first half, kept Kansas fairly well in the game before the roof fell in. Kansas State boosted a 46-42 lead early in the third quarter to 17 points, 63-46, before Kansas could make any sort of a recovery.

Dick Knostman, Kansas State center, looped in 27 points for the Wildcats. Courier-Journal Photo by Charley Pence ina. feeder, tied it up at 6-6. Manual CI i.l 1 1 1 lnnaiea a ieaa oi iu-o in iuui mutes and then went olf like a rocket. Morris Thacker.

Neal Skeeters and Grawemeyer punched out nine points in three minutes for a 19-8 advantage. The Reds led 21-11 alter the lirst period. Cuba failed to gain on Manual jn the first four minutes of the second chapter but fielders by jjm Webb and Floyd knocked the spread down to 30-23 with 3:30 to go. Manual boosted it to 34-25 in the next 90 seconds and finished jn the half in front 39-28. Cuba's biggest threat had passed.

Th closer than ten points to the confident Man ual club in the third quarter. The Reds at one point owned an 18-point margin and they were securely on top 58-41 entering the final "round. The regulars kicked it to 62-41 early in the fourth before the Red reserves arrived. The second-stringers tallieu only six points in the final six minutes while Cuba was picking up 17. would compare it with the innocuous net ball Victory bv outnvan a uliS stretch Louisville's lead to four 'markers A free by Sigwards and i lung uy iiuiiuaviici anavcu difference to one point at 63-62.

Then Lochmueller hit one from the side of the basket to send Louisville into the final period with a three-point 65-62 advantage. Louisville was missing easy shots again and wasn't getting any offensive rebounds. Boh Lochmueller free to bulge Louisville into a 10-point lead. A free by Loch, puffed it to 11 points. Bufr the Ramblers began slashing again and got within five points at 77-72 with three and a half left.

At this point, Louisville lost Brown on fouls. Now the Cards began freezing the ball. Loyola began fouling them to get it. Louisville kept de- ciining rees and taking the ball During this action. Loyola lost Sigwards and its Sullivan on personals.

Louisville's Sullivan broka through for a crip to make it 79-72. A minute was left. Louisville lost another man on fouls, its third one, as Noble went out. Beam followed with half a minute remaining. Egan hit the free to make the count 79-73.

but Potts got that one back just seconds before the game ended. Tennessee Turns Back Georgia Tech Knoxville, Jan. 26 Oocenter Herbie Neff and Capt. Tommy Bartlett led Tennessee to a 69-56 victory Georgia Tech in a loosely played Southeastern Conference basketball game here tonight. Neff, who has led the Vols to wins in "three of their last four games, scored 18 points, one more than the pint-sized Bartlett amassed.

The loss kept Tech winless in S.E.C. play. They have dropped five conference tilts. Tennessee has a 3-4 loop mark. Tennessee was never behind.

Tech tied it up only twice at 5-5 and 9-9. Capt. Teeter Umstead scored 17 points for Tech and forward Pete Silas added 11. The Yellow- jackets played without their bi center. Bill Cline, who Was left I 1 Atlanta With a leg in.iur.

umwiuwmi pjMiii)itirnniiriiiiiinirroi iiiinrurm urn mi i iTinrmrr' ov'i v- 4sr game. Most of them know as little ball as we know over here about from the stadium seconds. No Blocking' about basket- I'M Hush Poland cricket. As for they would after they were rugby, it is a hard, tough game and there are no time-outs and no substitutions. But there is no interference, consequently none of the devastating blocking.

There is less laass contact with power plays concentrated on one position. No forward passing. "But the greatest boon of all to the "rugger" player is the soft turf he plays on. The grass on some of the "pitches" is so lush you could walk in it and not see your ankles. Boys used to Maxwell Field, the infield at Parkway Field and even duPont Stadium at Thanksgiving time would find such a field so soft and inviting probably lie down and take a nap By The Associated Press Illinois and Kansas, ranked first and second among the nation's basketball teams in the Associated Press poll last week, suffered their first defeats last night.

DePaul of Chicago upset the high-flying Big Ten leaders by 69-65 in the Chicago Stadium. Kansas State, in -its own back yard at Manhattan, avenged an earlier overtime loss to Kansas by a convincing margin 81-64. Dyker Sparks Rally The Illinois loss was its first in 12 starts; Kansas' setback was its first in 14 starts. The upset of these two basketball leaders left only three major teams with a perfect slate. They are Iowa with 12-0, Duquesne with 11-0 and St.

Bonaventure with 12-0. An overflow crowd of 19,000 at Chicago went wild as scrappy DePaul, able to hit only one bas U. Edges ama 71-67 In Wild Game 54 Fouls Called As 7 Players Are Ousted Tuscaloosa, Jan. 26 (AP) Kentucky won a wild cage battle 71r67 from Alabama in which 54 fouls were called and seven players sent from the game tonight. There wasn't enough room to squeeze a thick piece of paper between the two teams' scores until little more than three minutes of play remained.

Then with Alabama closing the gap to 66-64, Wildcat guard Bob- I by Watson hit a layup and Frank Ramsey a free throw to give the Southeastern Conference leaders breathing room. Wildcats Freeze Ball They froze the ball most of the little time on the clock. Tide hopes of upsetting the invaders dimmed when center Paul Sullivan was waved off the court with Kentucky leading 53-51 and 15 seconds left in the third period. Other Alabama players who fouled out were Sammy Moore, Jim Grant, and Dave Putman. Putman left the game after colliding with Skippy Whitaker.

The Kentucky forward bounced into the backboard so hard he was knocked unconscious briefly. Kentucky Loses 3 Men Sullivan led his team with 21 points in spite of missing the last quarter, and worked cleverly beneath the basket. Watson was the night's high man with 26 points. Kentucky lost Lou Tsioropou-los, Whitaker, and Bill Evans on fouls. Kentucky fsft pf.

Alabama fg ft.pf. Whitaker 4 0 5 Moore f-c 2 2 5 Ts'poulos 2 2 5 Ivey 5 6 0 Evans 0 15 Scott 0 0 3 Hagan 3 5 4 Sullivan 9 3 5 EamsfV 5 3 4 Norman 2 1 1 Watson .981 Sch cier 9. 553 Li'ville f-g 3 0 4 Riddle 1 3 Rose 0 0 0, Grant f-c 0 1 5 Putman 0 0 1 Pannell 0 0 0 Totals 26 19 28 Totals 24 19 26 Kentucky 18 1 20 1771 Alabama 13 21 18 1567 Free throws missed: Kentucky Whitaker. Tsioropoulos 2. Hagan A.

Linville. Alabama Moore. Ivey 2. Sullivan 3. Schneider.

2. Riddle. Grant. Auburn SwaniPS Georgia miuurn Dwamis 8 Auburn, Jan. 26 (P) Auburn handed luckless Georgia its 15th loss of the season tonight, 65-51.

The Bulldogs have won only one game this season, while the Tigers now have an 11-6 record. Auburn led 32-23 at halftime and nipped any Bulldog dreams of a second-half comeback by whipping in 14 points before the dazed Georgians could get un-limbered in the third period. Bubber Farish, Tiger forward who was high-point man for the night with 14, sparked the 27- point third-quarter offensive. the fourth period, mostly against Auburn reserves, but looked sharpest in the second. Then Zippy Morocco, lightning- fast Bulldog guard, set the pace and tallied seven of his 13 points for the night.

Wesley an Biiinis Berea Jan. 26 (P) Kentucky Wesleyan maintained a safe margin throughout to trounce Berea in a K.I.A.C. basketball tilt here tonight. The taller Wesleyan club controlled the rebounds and led 26-11. 50-31, and 62-38 at the quarter stops.

Berea managed early ties at 2-2 and 4-4 but couldn't do any damage to ithe strong Wesleyan club thereafter. Oakland City 86. Rio Grande 84. Georgetown 74, Pitt 59. Maryland State 78, Geneva 64.

Western Michigan 65. Ohio U. 60. Georgia Tchrs. 67.

Erskine 56. Paris Island Marines 64, Florida State 62. Piedmont 61, Newberry 54. Clark Ga.) 76, South Carolina State 54. Tri-State 62, Concordia (Ind.) 51.

Defiance 87, Indiana Tech 63. Hanover 96. Manchester 67. Taylor 83, Earlham 63. Anderson 68, Chase 61.

West Chester (Pa.) 75, Drexel 67. North Central 73. Chicago 57. Concordia of St. Louis 69, Illinois College 08.

Carthage fill.) 54. Augustana fill.) 45. Eastern Illinois State 85, Western Illinois State 61. Morningside 93. Iowa Teachers 63.

Knox Grinne!) 63. Cornell 79. Coe 69. St. Ambrose Iowa) 56.

Loras 54. Dubuque 56, Penn I Iowa I 53. Simpson 75, Wartburg 69. Parsons 68, Fort Leonard Wood' 65. Macalester (Minn.) 67.

James Millikin (111.) 54. Nor th Dakota 58. South Dakota State 49. Concordia (Minn.) 63, North Dakota State 53. Continued on Page 2, Column 2 TO THE VICTOR Manual's Phil "Cookie" Grawemeyer (right) received the game ball from W.

F. Coslow, supervisor of secondary education, after the Reds beat Cuba 70-58 in the final of the Louisville Invitational tournament last night at the Male Gym. Grawemeyer holds the championship trophy. "Cookie" set a tournament record with 29 points. tackled.

It like falling on gooper feathers (fuzz from peaches.) It's that damp English climate." Pro on Wheels one of the best golf instructors never sets foot on a golf course. Buddy Fry, 27, who has a pro shop in Oakland, has been paralyzed from the waist down since he was 15. Despite this handicap he has learned to teach golf and has many very satisfied clients. "A pro can't do the hitting for. his pupil," says Buddy.

Manual RiBs Cuba 70-58 1 Meet Invitationa "I tell 'em and they do it." He teaches from a motorized wheelchair and takes his pupils over the full course. Come Again! Tampa University plays these whoppers in order, in Kentucky and Ohio. Wow! Western, Jan. 28, Eastern Feb. 4, Xavier Feb.

5, Western Feb. 7, and Louisville Feb. 9. He Declines All Free Throws! New -Wrinkle Here's a new development in in the second quarter, but they got within a point of Louisville just before the third quarter ended. They kept threatening until a spurt by Noble put Louisville into a 10-point lead about midway of the final whirl.

It was the 15th victory against only two losses for Louisville. The defeat was the sixth in 14 games for Ramblers, whose best men tonight were Billy Sullivan and "left-handed shooting Nick Kladis. Sullivan made 20 points and Kladis got 16 in this game punctuated by 61 fouls. Louisville lost four men on personals and Yoyola was deprived of two. In the first game of the double-header DePaul upset previously unbeaten Illinois, the No.

1 team in the nation, 69-65. Ahead at Half 47-39 The Cardinals jerked loose from the Ramblers in the last five minutes of the first half to lead by eight points at intermission 47-39. The first eight minutes of the first quarter Louisville couldn't easy shots and were throwing the ball away. They led 7-3 at the end of three minutes, but trailed 8-7 with five and a half gone. Only four field goals had been made so far, two by each club.

In the last 2 minutes and 15 seconds of the quarter, play speeded up and shooting improved. Consecutive goals by Naber, Brown and Petersen moved Louisville into a 13-8 lead. 3 Straight Goals Noble made three straight goals near the end of the period to keep the Cards ahead and send them into the second quarter in front 24-21. Louisville lost the lead at 28-27 and was tied twice at 29-29 and 31-31 before free throws by Lochmueller and Beam and a long shot by Noble gave them a 35-31 edge. Led by Lochmueller, Louisville spurted into an 11-point lead at 46-35, but the Ramblers whacked it to eight in the last minute of the half.

In the first six minutes of the third whirl, the Ramblers whittled Louisville's margin to two points to trail only 57-55. With two minutes left in the period, Loyola still was behind T.ovola (73 fg ft.pf. Lou. SO) fgft pf, Kladis fl 4 4 Brown 3 4 5 Buxbaum 0 13 Beam 2 15 Egan 0 1 2 Lochmueller 6 9 4 Sullivan 1 0 5 Able 1 1 3 Sigwards 4 5 5 Bussak 0 0 0 Clark 0 0 0 Peterson 10 2 Hanrahan 2 Noble jt 9 2 5 Hutmacher 3 5 4 Cox .010 Maracich 2 7 4 W. Sullivan 3 1 2 Collins 8 0 0 1 Nabor 4 3 5 Totals 25 23 30 Totals 29 22 31 Louisville 24 23 18 15 Loyola 21 18 23 1173 Free 4.

Buxbaum. Sullivan 2. Sigwards. Hutma-h- er 2. Maraich.

Louisville Brown 2. Peter- son. Declined: Louisville Lovola 3 a half-time lead of 40-32 for the Thoroughbreds. Murray riow has a record of seven victories against two de- feats in O.V.C. play while East- ern has a 6-2 mark.

Western Kentucky leads the loop with six wins and no defeats. Traiisy Tips Bellarmine Lexington, Jan. 26. Bel-larmine's 16 missed free throws spelled the Knights doom here tonight as Transylvania held on in the last quarter to edge the nilhts 57-55 for its first victory of the season. The two teams were level in field goals with 20 apiece.

Transy accumulated 17 free throws, Bellarmine 15. Transy muffed nine free-throw opportunities. Transy was ahead bv 14 points with 6:30 to play. The Knights outpointed the Pioneers in the final quarter 18-7 but were too far behind. Transy led 14-9- at the end the first quarter and lengthened its margin to 31-22 at intermission.

The Pioneers owned a 50-37 bulge entering the final stanza. ace Over offensive basketball thought up by Ray Tatterson, i coach at Wayland Academy in Wisconsin. It is based on the rule which permits a team fouled against to decline free throws and put the ball in play from out of bounds. At present it is common. practice for teams to take advantage of this option in the.

closing minutes or seconds of a game to protect a slim lead by retaining possession of the ball or to attempt to make up a deficit at a time when one point from a free throw would be valueless. Patterson has changed this. He has his Wayland team decline all free throws from the opening tip to the closing whistle. The result is. -that his boys are able to control the ball more of the time during a game and thus avail themselves of the opportunity of scoring more two-point field goals.

Although he has had the new wrinkle under study for several weeks, Patterson used it in actual play for the first time on January 12 in Wayland's game against Milwaukee University School in Milwaukee. Wayland won 50-42. Elaborate statistics kept on the game and compared with past experience for the team this season indicate a loss for Patterson's boys had they played their normal game. Answers The Yanks, Tigers and Indians paid the highest average salary in Organized Baseball last year. Their average was $15,000.

The Red Sox were next with $13,000 and the Giants next with $12,000. (For Russell Fredericksburg, New managers in the Southern Association this spring will be Al Vincent at Birmingham, Cal Ermer at Chattanooga, Willis Hudlin at Little Rock, Ed Head at Mobile, Hugh Poland at Nashville and Danny Murtaugh at New Orleans. (For J. B. Kentucky's sports budget is not as big as most Big Ten schools.

Ohio State, for instance, took in $1,561,000 from sports in 1950-51. (For Nancy Danville). id Murray Purcell, Besliear To 79-65 Victory carious after Grawemeyer and -uras ivioueu Dom picsea up i A A 1 a 1 1 1 three fouls in the first half, was assessed his fourth early in the third quarter but managed to finish out the game. However, his contribution to Manual's control of the boards was severely limited in the lat- ter stages. Floyd bagged two quick goals on Grawemeyer in the first minute or so and it seemed to pique the classy Crimson pivotman.

He rang up nine points in the first quarter, nine in the second, nine in the third and two in the fourth. Floyd and Crittenden played spectacularly out me cuos motK Primwn in I.UU1UH na 41 till, tllik'Utt shooting or polish. Manual aeraed 4i.5&per cent with 27 goals in 65 shots. The Bruins fashioned 30.7 per cent on 68 tosses. Norman Franklin, on a Jack Bumiaster Guides Manual to 17th win All-Tourney Ihil Grawemeyer (Manual) Howard Crittenden (Cuba) Charles FloVcT '(Cuba) Neal Skeeters (Manual) Dave Kuhn (Male) Don Shaw (Campbellsville) Doyal Karr (Lily) Curtis Moffett (Manual) Carl McCord (Holmes) Harold Pike (Campbellsville) Thacker Moffett 2 4 1 McClure 2 2 4 4 3 4 8 3 4 6 6 2 5 13 Webb 12 5 Floyd Gra meyer Skeeters 4 5 3 Crittenden Franklin 2 0 2 Warren a 3 2 3 Roessler 0 0 2 Roberts 0 0 0 Jones 2 1 1 Pollack 0 0 0 Cousins 0 0 0 Simpson 0 0 1 Gasjin 0 0 2 WMtehouse .001 Totals 27 16 19 Totala 21 18 18 Manual 21 18 19 1270 Cuba 11 17 13 1758 Free throws missed: Manual (6 Thacker, Moffett.

Grawemeyer. Skeeters. Roessler, Jones. Cuba (61 Floyd 3, Warren 3 Officials: Ben Edelen and John Eastern By JOHNNY CAflRICO TKo narahlp nf thf man trv- ing to Stop a Iiooa Wltn a broom must have occurred to coach Jack Story last fnit v. a veritable flood of point-mak ing.

the crimsons arownea Cuba 70-58 in the final of the fifth annual Louisville Invitational at the Male Gym. Jack Burmaster's hard-fighting, sharp-shooting Crimsons lit into the Cubs from the opening toss-up. Except for a few shaky moments in the second quarter, 11 1 A MA -f jf Hie AL'US no Sign 'i i ting Cuba avenge a loss Manual inflicted at Lexington two weeks ag- The tournament victory was ine second siraiem iur ine ncus in the scholastic classic. Until Dale Barnstable steered the Crim- sons to a triumph last year, -Manual naan i won a game uie A glory. on the gemi.iai gmeM ig on Pagp 2.

Other pictures are un Pageg 2 and 8. Invitational. Now they have won six in a row. The success upped the Crimson's stainless season mark to 17 consecutive victories. The past Invitational records aren't worth the paper they're written on.

Phil Grawemeyer, Manual's great center and the best performer here since Gene Rhodes, personally will fill a page or so in the new edition. "Cookie" tossed in 29 points in the finale that shattered marks all over the place. It marked a new individual high in tournament "play and, of course, set a new standard for the final. His total of 70 points in three tournament games erased the 61 posted 111C picviuys lllgll 411 Hid final was 21 by Flaget's Bob Houk in 1950. Manual Averages 41.5 Grawemeyer smashed his own individual record.

He rapped 26 in the semi-finals against Lily, one more than the sum tabbed by LUDa L-naries uooaie loya asrainst Male and bv the Cubs' it i i.r:v.i.i-.t nuwd i unuu-e ti iLieiiueu against Campbellsvule in the afternoon semis. The 128 points registered by Manual and Cuba cracked a game total for the third time in the meet. Cuba and Male first fractured it and then Manual and Covington Holmes upped it to 121 Friday night. Manual's position became pre- Leo Tierney continued to burn the nets for the Knights with 22 points on eight fielders and six free tosses. John Sellman played an aggressive game it center and contributed 11.

John Habig con- tributed nine. Bellarmine smothered the Pioneers' sparkplug guard Russ Summay with only four points but Stan Hadley broke away for 14. Charlie Walters followed with 12. Transv C57) f.ft pf Beltmmine fS3 LcCompte 1 4 3 Tierney -864 lewis 5 1 5 Mani 2 5 Cox 2 5 Gipp'rlrh 2 OS Ostium 0 GutKsell ft Hadlev 6 2 5 Sellman 5 1 2 Carr 0 0 1 Kelly, I 1 Walters 4 4 5 Weber 0 0 5 Summay 1 2 5 Crush 3 2 4 Wrd .14 2 Peters 0 0 0 Totals 20 17 31 Totals 20 15 2 Transv 14 31 50 57 P.eUarrr.ine 9 23 3755 Bouling Green U. "Wins Bowling Green, Ohio, Jan.

26 (JP) Jim Gerber of Akron poured in 27 points tonight to lead Bowling Green to a 76-60 basketball victory over Western Ontario of London. Bowlmg Green led all the way and was never pressed. Center Douglas McNichol was high-point man for the visitors with 17 points. Murray, Jan. 26 (AP) Murray State College defeated Eastern 79-65 tonight to move into second place in the Ohio Valley Conference basketball standings.

The victory also avenged loss by Murray to Eastern earlier in the season. Bennie Purcell supplied Murray's punch as he poured 27 points through the net to lead the scoring. His teammate, Garrett Beshear, added 22, while Jim Baechtold was high-point-man for the losers with 18 Eastren, held scoreless for the first three minutes of the game, was no match for Murray's aggressiveness which resulted in Eastei Tolson Mulcahy Stevent BinRham Baechtold i Geyer Bales Culbertson Kearna Hoi brook Totals ft pf. Murray ,5 0 3 Clark 3 4 1 Beshear 1 2 3 Mtke 2 3 3 Deweese 6 2 3 Glpe 3 0 4 Jeffrey 2 0 5 Purcell 10 3 Lampley 2 0 5 0 0 1 27 11 31 Totala fs ft pf 1 4 3 8 6 2 4 2 2 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 9 4 13 5 27 25 17 Score by quarters: Eastern 11 21 17 16 Murray 21 19 21 1879 Free throws missed; Eastern Baechtold 3. Bingham.

Bales 2, Mutcahy. Stevens. Holbrook: Murray Clark 4. Beshear 3, Mikez Purcell 5, Lampley, Deweese 3. Duke 90.

Wake Forest 69. Tulane 71. L.S.U. 66. Clemson 66, The Citadel 63.

East St. John's 54. Temple 44. Penn 72. Bainbridge Navy 62.

Navy 69. V.M.I. 54. St Joseph's 54, La Salle 53. Seton Hall 68, Villanova 66.

Dartmouth 60, Army 55. Siena 61, Manhattan 58. Niagara 75. New York A C. 47.

St. Bonaventure 76. Youngstown (Ohio) 50. Colgate 76, Connecticut 54 Southwest Houston 52, Texas A. and M.

44. Far West Wyoming 55. Utah 36. Washington 67, Washington State 43. Montana 54, Colorado A.

M. 51. Brigham Young 72. New Mexico 49. Oklahoma City 66, T.C.U.

41. Regis 59, Denver 57. St. Mary's 51. Oregon 45.

Other Colleges High Point 67. Appalachian 63. Elon 90. Catawba 68 Ohio Northern 83, Griffin 48. Each indicates one overtime.

Kentucky Colleges Kentucky 71, Alabama 67. U. of L. 80. Loyola Chicago 73, Union 85.

Georgetown 82. Kentucky Wesleyan 80. Berea 48. Murray 79. Eastern 65.

Transylvania 57. Bellarmine 55. midwest Michigan State 56, Purdue 47. Bowling Green 76. Western Ontario 60.

Minnesota 74, Northwestern 56. Cincinnati 56, Toledo 54. DePaul 69, Illinois 65. Kansas State 81. Kansas 64.

Notre Dame 72. Canisius 59. St. Louis 48. Oklahoma- A.

M. 40. Nebraska 82. South Dakota 59. Bradley 64.

Tulsa 58. Evansville 83. Ball State 53. Butler 51, Valparaiso 49 Drake 65, Wichita 63. South N.

Carolina State 58, North Carolina 53. Virginia Tech 90. Virginia 62. Auburn 65, Georgia 51. Tennessee 69, Georgia Tech 59.

West Virginia 69. Bethany 42. Marshall 59, Tennessee Tech 56..

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