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The Times from Hammond, Indiana • Page 33

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The Timesi
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Hammond, Indiana
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Morton Wins; Noll Scares St. Joe THE HAMMOND TIMES Formerly Lala County Times SPORTS Wednesday, January 8, 1958 Page D-l TIMEOUT! ByJeffKeate And still champion! The Guatemalan Giant!" SPECULATING By JOHN WHITAKER in SPORTS Hammond Rotarians are on a temporary sport Heard Lou Gordon, the former Illinois and Chicago Cardinal Tuesday and will be regaled by witty Jimmy Dykes, Cinci coach and former Sox manager, at their Jan. 21 Vic Molodet, an Ail- American at North Carolina State, can't break into the starting lineup with the Akron Goodyears of the National Industrial But will see plenty of action if the Goodyears come to E. C. Washington gym for an exhibition game in The former Senator ace is averaging 8.3 points per Harry Allison, the Crown Point coach whose cagers took a 58-33 pounding from Morton in the opener of Tuesday's twin bill at the Civic Center, hurried his kids to the bus with a "threat" there'd be practice later in the night at the Johnny Jordan of Notre Dame took a good-natured needling from Father Joyce after marrying Mrs.

Eileen Simon over the Mrs. Simon has five sons and two daughters, enough to comprise a basketball team and two writers say Indiana has no prep team remotely close to Attucks of 1955, 1956 or the South Bend Central team which won 'em all last That's why it's so sad for the Calumet to be "down" at this I Adams Ends Rider Streak, 85-71 Eagles Nip Roosevelfs String at 7 SOUTH BEND South Bend Adams, which lost an NIHSC football playoff to East Chicago Roosevelt three years ago, Tuesday night got some revenge with an 85-71 dusting which snapped a 7-game Rough Rider winning streak. The Eagles, shooting at a .500 clip, netted 32 baskets to 29 for Roosevelt and added 21 points at the free throw line compared to Roosevelt's 13. BY HALFTIME Adams had an 18-point 49-31 lead. But Roosevelt, which had overcome 10-point deficits against Mishawaka and LaPorte and rallied to win, didn't quit.

Twice, once in the third and again in the fourth 'quarter, the Rough Riders cut the edge to seven points before succumbing to Eagle shooting pressure which brought Adams its final 14-point margin. Leading the Adams attack was hook-shooting Roland Davis with 28 points, 24 of them on 12 baskets. Right behind with 23 points was Gene Phillips, junior who won all- state football honors as a fullback and who played against Roosevelt two years ago in that playoff as a freshman. Roosevelt had plenty of balance with Mike Ard's 21 points leading the parade. Second was Jim Hicks with 18 while Rich Jemenko and Nap Goshay connected for 10 each.

ROOSEVELT'S only other loss was to Elkhart, 69-50, in the season's opener. The Rough Riders meet Gary Lew Wallace Friday at Memorial Auditorium before facing E. C. Washington on the Roosevelt court Tuesday night. Adams has been a disappointment to South Bend basketball fol- owers.

The Eagles were expected field a strong crew this year and may have found themselves with Tuesday night's victory. They now hold a 7-3 record. DICK FOKBES of the Cinci Enquirer quotes Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati University's All-American sophomore from Attacks, as saying he enrolled there for two reasons (1) He liked the co-op educational plan (7 weeks of school and then 7 weeks of work) and (2) the Cinci schedule which calls for road games in such places as Texas, Iowa, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Peoria and Madison Square Gardent, N.Y. Robertson, who's moving up fast on Wilt The Stilt Chamberlain for player of the year honors, plays against Seton Hall in the Garden tomorrow night.

It'll be interesting to see what Gotham scribes say about Hoosicrland's all-time top player. Vince Boryla, the E. C. Washington contribution to pro basketball (he coaches the N.Y. Knicks) rates Temple's Guy Rogers as the closest thing to the Celtics' Bob Cousy as an all-around eager.

Fans who saw the Temple Ace in NCAA action last March in Evanston will agree with Vince that Rogers is some punkins. Pretty soon they'll be calling him Frustrated Frank Leahy unless newspaper and TV interviewers edit their questions for the for mer Notre Dame coach. First it was Leahy being quoted to the effect that he'd like the athletic Basketball Results HIGH SCHOOL BrownsburK 67. Indianapolis Wood 52. Jeffersomille 69.

Mitchell 67 Terre Haute Garfteld 66, Terre Haute Gerstmeyer 51. Ce morial tral 63, Evansville Me- Evansville Lincoln 69. a Relt3 82. South Bend Adams S5. East Chicago Roosevelt 71.

Soutti Bend St. Joseph 43. Hammond Noll 41. Calumet 50, Gary Wirt 29. Hammond Morton 58.

crown Point 33 Concord Twp. 57, Goshen 36. Alexandria 60. Pendteton 47. Huntlngburg 62.

Jasper 40. Seymour 62, Ruslivllle 59. Llnton 73. Blcknell 43. 69, Greensburg 52 Bloomlngton 73, Bloomlngton 34 Brazil 64.

Greencastle 62. Clinton 64, Glenn 58. Bugger 62. Midland 52 Terre Haute Schulte 52. Concannon 41 Hutsonvillc.

III. 74. Sullivan 43. Attica 68. Flora 66.

Bloomtleld 55, North Central (SuIInan) 46 Holland 76. Wmslow 55. Vincennes Catholic 55, Loogootee 47. COLLEGE Indiana Ball State 74. Eastern Michigan 63.

Wabash 78. DePauw 67. Moberly, Mo. 91. Vincennes S5.

Knit St. John's 87. Rhode Island 64. St. Peter's (NJ) 92, St.

Francn 66. Massachusetts SI, WilllJtms 75 UpsRia 87. Howard (DO 70. Franklin Mar. 84.

Leh. Valley 71. Copper Union 5S. Y. Maritime 54.

Bridgeport 95. Amer. Intemation. 75. Lasalle 67.

Muhlenberk 61. Bethany Shepheid St. 71 St Joseph's 75 Mlllersv. Tchr 6S Phil Tex. 1.

77. Teh. 74. West Virginia Wes SP Geneva 71. Trinity vs Coast Guard can.

South Catholic U. 67. Baltimore 60. Elizabeth City B4, Shaw 53. Richmond 54.

Citadel 50. Tenn Wesleyan 78, Emorv 69 Virginia SO. Virginia Tech 65. Mercer 57. Oglethorpe 53 Carolina AiT 73.

Virginia SI 67. N. Carolina 79, William Mary 63. Trov St. S4, KinB's Coll.

65. Louisiana Coll 80, Ouachita 74. Gullford vs. Atlantic-Christ, ppd. West.

Carolina vs. Catawbe. ppd Elon vs. Appalachian, ppd. Mlducst Ball St.

74. Eastern Mich. 63. Akron SI, Western Reserve 32 S. Dakota St.

50 Augustana 45. DePau! 6-. Crelghton 56 Bethel Coll. 95. Friends U.

66 Moorhead Tchrs. 85. Dakota Wes SI. Hamline 70. McAlester 63 Culver-Stock.

73. Wll Penn 53. Southwest Oklahoma 64. Kansas 62. Kardin-Slmmons 62.

W. Tex. St. 57. Texas 71.

Texas 50. Rice 78. SMU 74 Texas Tech 83, Texas Christian 70. Texas Wesleyan 76. Dallas U.

3S. AbllUM Christian 50, llcilurry 19. director's job at Texas AM, even if he couldn't pass a physical for the coaching job. Now, via Bob Elson, Leahy's on record as saying "he'd have to give "serious consideration" to any offer to take over as general manager of either of the Chicago pro football clubs. Eddie Bush's $7,000 breach of contract suit against Woodmar C.C.

is in the third day of trial before Circuit Judge G. L. Burns and a jury in Valparaiso. Result seems to hinge on whether Bush actually had a contract that extended through 1955 when connections were severed in late 1954 Athletic Director Ivy Williamson of Wisconsin worries about attendance declines in both fcot- ball and basketball The Badgers have a fieldhouse that can handle 13,000 but Notre Dame drew only 5,000 and Illinois, usually a big draw in Madison, attracted less than 7,000 Williamson also feels a 10-game football schedule may be necessary to keep the trump coming in oldtime BISHOP NOLL'S Karl Huffine and Eddie Hudson regret the argument which ensued after officials had disallowed a Sheridan basket that would have been decisive in the first overtime of a double' overtime game won Saturday night by the Warriors in the Civic Center The Noll athletic director and basketball coach treasure the intersectional meetings with Sheridan and are hopeful a hairline official decision will not disturb relations. Sheridan's one of those typica downstate communities i maintains oldtime interest in its Hlck! James A roahay Jamsa Petty E.

C. Roosevelt S. B. Adams 22 19 65 85 schoolboy cagers More than 300 fans came here Saturday by special train and most of 'em home with a sour taste con- corning a ruling over which Nol had no control. E.

C. Roon'It (71) S. B. (RK) 41 Phillips 6 0 31 Davis 5 Bradley 0 0 A I Rugged Board Work Mike Wroblewski, 6-8 St. Joseph center at left, and Phil Kerth (No.

32), Crown Point forward, grab rebounds in separate games at the Civic Center Tuesday night. Wroblewski sank a late jump shot to down Noll, 43-41, after Morton had disposed of Crown Point, 58-33. Noll players below Wroblewski in left shot are (from left) Phil Rice (22), Dan Adzia (31) and Martin Cieslak (33). Morton players watching Kerth from left are John Rosek (13), Dick Lee and Ed Chick (14). (Hammond Times Photos) 29 13 TntaU 11 N.

Judsoii Rips Lowell, 63-32 LOWELI--A tall North Judson basketball team made Lowell its ninth victim in 10 games here Tuesday night, 63-32, and in so doing dropped the Red Devils below .500 (5-6). Gene Bogash and Aaron Minix, a pair of 6-4 forwards, led the onslaught with 14 points apiece. Paul Schuyler's outsized Devils went cold at the home hoops and were faced with a 30-12 deficit by half time. John Percy reached double figures for Lowell with 11 points. Calumet Wins No.

10, 50-29 GARY--Opponents are becoming more cautious against Calumet and they're raising havoc with the Warriors' 70-point scoring average. But Calumet's 50-29 victory over Gary Wirt at Memorial Auditorium Tuesday night was just as decisive as the other conquests in the Warriors' 10-game string. The 69-56 opening-game loss to Gary Roose- vent remains the lone blot on their record. Only one of their last 10 opponents has come closer than 20 points and that was a 70-58 win over Crown Point. Ron Sink, a junior who has forged his way into the all-senior lineup, paced the balanced attack with 14 points.

He was closely followed by Dave Kirklin (11) and Russ Marvel (10), THE WARRIORS' shooting average dipped to .333 for the night but their hustling zone defense harried thp slower Troopers and left them with a .217 percentage. Calumet made only nine fouls and the frigid Troopers converted just three of nine tosses. Calumet will seek No. 11 when Griffith calls next Tuesday. Wirt, favorite in the Calumet Conference race, fell to 5-3 with the defeat.

North Judson (63) Bogash Minix Podell 6 2 2 1 2 2 3 0 1 2 2 2 2 1 0 2 1 Lane Armstrong Marlowe Lewan'akl 0 2 1 Underwood Gldley Grant Totals North Judson 13 Lowell (31) 13 22 30 44--63 12 19--32 Reserve game: North Judson 33, Lowell Wabash Tops DePauw CRAWrORDSVILLE, Ind. (AP) --DePauw lost to Wabash Tuesday night, 78-67, but still leads the 95- game basketball series with the Little Giants, 52 games to 42. They tied in 19S4 after a scorer's error. High scorers Tuesday night were Tom Bennett of Wabash with 21 and Bing Davis of DePauw with 19. Calumet (50) Ink marvel Sponholtz Lucas Totals Calumet Gary Wirt 21 Eiod'skt I Sargent 41 Pierce Tomerlln 11 Stlmson Miller Thompson 19 12 Totals i (29) 5 0 4 2 3 1 0 Kansas Drops Second, 64-62 Loneski Gets 27 for Losers (TIMES WIRES) tie Tommy Kearns, who poured i 23 points.

Pete Brennan, the to NEW YORK--Disappointed Kansans could rewrite Rodgers straight in west Coast athletic con and Hammerstein today and moan, "Ooooklahoma, where the ference play by downing Sant rMowa i fis rn 49 wins go whistling down the Two state of Oklahoma teams, with a large assist from an in- Clara handily, 65 to 42. fection that drove Wilt Chamberlain from the lineup, have seriously dented hopes held by the University of Kansas for a national championship. Kansas had won ten in a row until Chamberlain, the Mount Everest of basketball, was scaled down to size New Year's Day. Then Oklahoma State beat the Jayhawks, 52 to 50, in overtime and Tuesday i Oklahoma handed Kansas its second straight loss, 64 to 62. In both defeats, Kansas saw late leads disappear.

South Bend Giants Take 4341 Duel Morton bombarded a listless Crown Point basketball team, 58-33, in the first game of a Civic Center doubleheader Tues- lay i but it was up to Bishop Noll to shake the small crowd out of its doldrums. The young, improving Warriors made another hair-raising rally against a tall, all-senior South Send St. Joseph club and lost, 4341, after having victory within their St. Joe, boasting powerful backboard strength in 6-8 Mike Wrob- ewski and 6-5 Pat McKenzie, carried a 10-1 record into the contest. Wroblewski, high scorer with 14 oints, hit his lone basket of the second half to clinch the win with 17 seconds left.

Although i arrival was slowed due to the snowstorm, the Indians broke ahead, 12-9, at the quarter and widened the margin to 24-11 before Noll came to life. WROBLEWSKI controlled boards and scored 12 points as St. Joe carried a 29-17 lead into dressing room. The deceptive Warriors played along, some 10 points in arrears, until the final frame. Then sophomore southpaws Martin Cieslak and Dan Adzia hit consecutive one- handers and senior substitute Jerry Walter took over to lead the surga which tied the the score, 41-41, with 3:45 left.

But Noll failed to score the remainder of the way despite threo one-and-one" trips to the free throw line and two 15-foot jumpers. St Joe went just as cold until Wroblewski pulled the game out with 17 seconds left on a jumper from the free throw line. Noll made up its height deficit with a tight zone defense which helped hold St. Joe to a .250 shooting percentage. St.

Joe attempted a man-to-man and found itself outmaneuvered on a number of occa- St. John's, ranked 18th and on sions But ans superior height was the telling factor THE SECOND-ranked Jayhawks led Oklahoma at halftime, 32 to 30, but despite a 27-pornt performance by Ron Loneski, Chamberlain's replacement at center, the Sooners came from behind to win. Oklahoma, sparked by Gene Hudson's 14 points, held off a desperate Kansas rally to nail down the victory at Norman, Okla. The Soon- ers now are 8-and-2. Fourth-ranked North Carolina, 0 1 0 1 13 3 15 26 36 50 17 22 21 Reserve game: Wirt, 31; Calumet, 27.

FENGER SPLASHERS RIP FRACTIONAL High School, runnerup in the Chicago city swimming meet, makeshift Thornton in Calumet City defeated Fractional unit Tuesday, 60-26. Meteor Coach Ed Fedosky was minus five regulars due to ineligi- bilities and illness. Lone TF winner was Capt. Bill Mason in the butterfly breastsroke. The Fenger frosh-soph team also won, 66-20.

Fractional will travel to Bloom Thursday prior to entering the 12- team invitational at Brookfield Saturday. which beat Kansas and Chamberlain for the NCAA championship last season, scored victory No. 10 the few major unbeaten teams jleft in the country, chalked up its eighth triumph by battering Rhode Island, 87 to 64. 6-6 TEXAS CAGER NETS 75 POINTS BIG SPRING, Tex. AP) -Jan Loudermilk racked up 75 points Tuesday night in leading Big Spring High School to a 109-53 victory over Odessa Ector High School.

The 17-year-old star, 6-6 and weighing 215-dropped in 31 field goals and 13 free throws. He scored 46 points in the last half. It ran his 19-game total this season to 469, not far short of the 530 he tallied last season. Big Spring has 9 more games to play. in 11 starts by whipping William scorer of the Atlantic Coast Conference, followed with 20.

San Francisco racked up its llth win in 12 starts and its second and Mary, 79 to 63. The Tar Heels were led by lit- Bears Win 11 of 18 First Place Ballots By KURT FEEUDENTHAL INDIANAPOLIS (UP)--South Bend Central's defending state champions, more convincing every week they can get the job done even without Sylvester, Coalmon, today built up a comfortable lead in the fourth weekly United Press Indiana high school basketball coaches' poll. The once-beaten Bears polled 11 of 18 first-place nods and finished with 156 points, 8 short of their season best in the first roll call a month ago. They've been without Coalmon since he suffered a knee injury in Lafayette's holiday tourney last month. ONE OF THE big surprises of evening was sprung in Lubbock, where Texas Tech, a newcomer to the Southwest Conference, whipped Texas Christian, 83 to 70.

TCU, ranked 17th in the nation, thus lost its second game in 12 outings. The Horned Frogs had seen co-favorites with Rice to win the conference title. Tech, now 9- and-2, beat Rice Saturday. The Owls got back on the winning track by defeating defending champion Southern Methodist, 78 to 74. Texas AM battered Texas, 71 to 50.

Other major scores across the country included Akron 81, Western Reserve 32; Catholic U. 67, Baltimore 60; St. Peter's 92, St. Francis of Brooklyn 66; Richmond 54; The Citadel 50; Massachusetts 89, Williams 75; Hardin-Simmons 62, West Texas State 57; Virginia 80, Virginia Tech 65; LaSalle 67, Muhlenberg 61. Gncy Writers Honor Hoak As Redleg MVP CINCINNATI, O.

(INS) Don Hoak, Cincinnati Redlegs third baseman, was honored Tuesday night as his team's most valuable player during the 1957 season by the Cincinnati chapter of the Baseball Writers' Association. Hoak, a Chicago Cubs and Brooklyn Dodgers' castoff, batted .290 for the Redlegs last season and clouted 19 homers. Wroblewski and McKenzie com- ined for 27 points, most of them rom point-blank range. Noll fell to 3-8 with the loss. Ben Bethel, senior forward, naintained his average with 19 oints as Morton romped over Irown Point.

Hub fans could not recall when their favorites were held to as few as 33 points. "I guess we need some practice," said Hub Coach Harry Allison after the game. So Allison boarded his players and returned to the Crown Point Gym for a "post-game practice session." BETHEL WORKED his way for nine points in the first four minutes as Morton burst ahead in the battle of zone defenses. Crown Point was frigid throughout, hitting only 13 of 63 shot! while Morton, paced by Bethel'i nine for 20, canned 26 of 68. Morton (58) FIRST GAME Wiggins Lee Rosek Jeneske 2 1 4 0 2 2 3 1 3 0 3 0 0 Costln- i Crown Point (33) Hoyt Lisa Qj Lundgrca Collins Gremel 6 3 3 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 Totals 13 1 10 .17 27 Totals 26 Morton Crown Point 12 19 25--3S Reserve game: Morton 29, Bishop Noll 25.

S.B. SI. Joieph (43) Stelnhotfer 0 0 1 Wroblewski 6 2 Matron 3 0 Weinberg 3 2 Gerencher 0 0 0 SECOND GAME WITH THE season moving into the second and heaviest portion, the elite appeared to be as well established as possible. No newcomer managed to crash into the BARATTO WORKS NEW LINEUP FOR LAFAYETTE Two Washington Players Indefinitely Suspended' By LOREN TATE (Times Sports Writer) East Chicago Washington and its whirling dervish coach, Johnnie Baratto, have a flair for hitting the headlines. First of all, the sideline- stomping Baratto has turned out more individual stars than any other coach in the Calumet Area.

Last year Washington completed its nearly $2,000,000 athletic plant but the cage season ended on a dull note as the Senators lost their first game in the home sectional after an ineligible player caused forfeiture of eight regular-season games. This year the Senators, faced with a star-studded schedule, are bubbling over with lean, tall underclassmen who (with rebounding help from senior Norm Upshaw) are considered at least co-favorites for sectional WASHINGTON lost a rugged intersectional battle at Terre Haute Gerstmeyer (67-60) Friday but Baratto found the two-day trip more costly than he anticipated. His guard corps, already considered the team's weak link, has been trimmed by two with the "indefinite suspensions" of Dennis fayette Saturday and could find the short trip across town to Roosevelt too rough next Tuesday. But Baratto and his Senators will never fail to make things interesting. TULEJA WALTER Kale and Walt Tyndorf for breaking training rules.

Baratto indicated one or both "might be back" before sectional time but added that decision would not be made for another couple weeks. Since Kale, a senior, was a regular and Tyndorf, a sophomore who arrived with his family from Poland in 1949, was a top reserve, Baratto is busy trying to find a new back-court combination for Lafayette Jefferson Saturday. As matters stand 6-12 senior Jerry Eskoff may have to switch back from forward again although Baratto prefers to keep him up front as a sub for his big trio, Upshaw, Pete Auksel and Ron Divjak. Santos Jimenez, the little junior from Reynosa, Mexico, will remain at the other guard with classmate John Dow also contending for starting berth, Washington may lose at La- ness in order to crack the Bees' lineup. of Whiting among the BAY STRABAVY rates himself fifth TIDBITS.

Coach George Hammond Tech Bereolos reports lineman Pat Tuleja rated an "A 1 for his freshman football work at the University of Washington (Seattle) and also the Pacific Coast Conference "Open Classification" wrestling title at 190 pounds recently. Bereolos. disappointed by six straight losses with seven senior cagers, feels several of his boys are working too hard at outside jobs to give their best. Sophomore Stan Bafia has been moved into the starting lineup and junior Wayne Jenkins may get the call if the Tigers don't snap "We can't stand still," says Bereolos. Bob Duax, who posted a 63-37 record at Bishop Noll during the 1940s, has two Hammond graduates as freshman members of his St.

Ambrose (Davenport, la.) basketball team. They're Tony Urbanczyk of Tech and Bob Granack of Hammond High. guards at St. Joe and hopes for a shot at a starting berth next year. Allan Adzia of Noll is a member of the Pumas' first freshman basketball team.

Billy Walter, Thornton Fractional's 5-9 jump-shooter, a home from Upper Iowa (Fayette) for the holidays and reported the Peacocks unbeaten in their pre-Christmas tests. Walter was the lone freshman to make the varsity last year and finished No. 3 in scoring with 255 points. He's the only sophomore on an all-senior quintet this year and Is scoring in double figures. Jerry Donaldson is one of six Hoosiers on the Louisiana State freshman basketball squad and says they think nothing of knocking off Jay McCreary's varsity in practice.

The rumor mill has Donaldson marrying a Hammond lass next summer. Morton's Ted Guzek has a career record of 1,185 points at Butler and needs 64 more to snap the all- time Bulldog record established by Big 10, although three outfits bet- their positions. Lafayette, beaten only by the South Benders, recaptured the runner-up spot with. 128 points, more than third-place Jeffer- sonvjlle. Lafayette was fourth last time.

a Garfield from fifth place to fourth and Indianapolis Tech from ninth to sixth after winning the Capital Sty holiday tourney for the second straight year. Indianapolis Attucks remained seventh, Kokomo eighth, and Madison 10th. The two Fort Wayne teams upset last Friday Central and South--both lost prestige but remained in the select circle. Central slipped from second place to fifth, South from sixth to ninth. Harold (Swede) Carlson of Tech I Ralph (Buckshot) O'Brien.

The and Ed Herbert of Gary Mann officiated St. Ambrose's 87-84 win over St. Joseph Sunday. The report from Duax is that Urbanczyk will have to show more aggressive- ruary. cracked ankle he suffered in the loss to Fresno State last week may halt him short of the record.

Guzek has hopes of returning in Feb- FORT WAYNE Concordia, its only blemish a 56-54 lossMo city rival South and last week's conqueror of Central, climbed from nowhere to llth place with 16 votes pushing -Muncie Central into a tie with Vincennes for 12th. The experts nominated only 21 teams, the smallest number of the among them newcomers Scottsburg and South Bend St Joseph. The standings, with first places and total points: 1. South Bend Cent. (11).

.156 2. Lafayette (1) 128 3. Jeffersonville (2) 126 4. Terre Haute G'field (2) .113 5. Fort Wayne Cent.

6. Indianapolis Tech 83 7. Indianapolis Attucks 75 8. Kokomo 64 9. Fort Wayne South 57 10.

Madison 20 11. Fort Wayne Concordia 16 12. Muncie Central, Vincennes 10 14. Evansville Bosse 15. Hunt ingburg, Gary Roosevelt 17.

El wood 18. Michigan Gity, South Bend St. Joseph, Anderson, Seotta burg 1. (Continued from Page One) NOLI. (41) 3 1 4 2 0 1 1 2 3 2 0 1 1 2 4 3 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 Total IT 14 South Bend St.

Joseph 12 29 36--U Bishop Noll 17 28--41 Adzia Cieslak Dougherty Rice Vincent Walter Snyder Dublak Noll Mixup Noll players appear headed in three directions at the Civic Center Tuesday night as 6-8 Mike Wroblewski (No. 35), South Bend St. Joseph pivobnan, passes ball to a teammate. Warrior players from left are Dan Adzia (31), Jim Dougherty (41) and Bill Vincent (24). St.

Joe won, 43-41. (Hammond Times Photo)' NEWSPAPER!.

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