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Herald and Review from Decatur, Illinois • Page 11
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Herald and Review from Decatur, Illinois • Page 11

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Herald and Reviewi
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Decatur, Illinois
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CATUR HERALD CLASSIFIED OBITUARIES DECATUR, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1975 Pages I I to 20 DE Eisenhower Plays Christian Choice nanimous Regiona MSU Wins On Furlow's 40-Footer East Lansing, Mich. (AP) Terry Furlow's arching 40 -foot shot with three seconds to go gave Michigan State an 84-82 victory over Purdue Monday night in Big Ten basketball. The suspense filled game saw Furlow collect a game -high 27 points as MSU came back from a 51-39 haltime deficit. With 19 seconds to go MSU led, 82-80, but Purdue stole the ball and Bruce Parkinson tied it with a six foot jumper. MSU immediately called a timeot.

MSU whipped the ball on the inbounds pass to Furlow, who heaved it in. Purdue couldn't get off a final shot. MSU increased its record to 10-7 in the Big Ten and 17-8 over-all. The Boilermakers are 10-7 in the conference, 15-10 for the season. PURDUE (82) Jordan 9 0-1 18, Walls 12 0-0 24, Garretf Michigan Edges Illinois Ann Arbor, Mich.

(AP) Joe Johnson sank an 18-foot jumper with one second to go Monday night to give Michigan Big Ten basketball victory over Illinois. Second place Michigan with the inside track at gaining an NCAA playoff at-large berth, was lucky to come away with a victory against Illinois, loser of eight of the previous nine games. The game see-sawed in the second half, and with the score knotted at 75, Michigan gained control with 90 seconds remaining. Michigan stalled and called timeout with 56 seconds to go, then called another with nine seconds remaining to set up a final shot which proved to be the jumper by Johnson. It raised Michigan's conference record to 11-6, and 18-7 over-all.

Last-place Illinois fell to 4-13 in the league, 8-17 for the season. Mike Washington and Nate Williams combined for 12 of Illinois' last 14 points. ILLINOIS (75) Schmidt 10 7-9 27, Washington 6 6-6 18, jjjiuiii inn tims mi 1 jmwmmwww .4 rv Vandalia, 13-14, while in the other bracket of the Vandalia sectional, Nokomis risks its perfect record against Lebanon, 22-5, tonight. Breese Mater Dei, dropped to Class A after reaching the Class AA semifinals last year, is a strong favorite to capture the Pinckneyville sectional despite an 11-16 record. Mater Dei opens against Chester, 18-9, while Cairo, 18-9, and Waterloo, 18-7, play Wednesday.

At Danville, Watseka rates as the favorite, receiving 15 votes to Oakwood's four. At Bushnell, ROVA is favored with 17 votes to Sherrard's two. Games Tonight AT SHELBYVILLE 7:30 Mount Pulaski )25-l) vs. Morrisonville (22-5) AT TUSCOLA 7:30 Monticello (25-1) vs. Hume Shiloh (22-5) AT BRIDGEPORT 7:30 Carmi (19-6) vs.

Teutopolis (25- 1) AT VANDALIA 7:30 Nokomis (26-0) vs. Lebanon (22- 5) AT MOMENCE Chicago Christion (26-1) vs. New Lenox Providence (15-12) AT WENONA Streator Woodland (15-10) vs. Toluca (17-9) AT DANVILLE SCHLARMAN Ookwood (25-3) vs. Watseka (20-7) AT NORRIS CITY Wayne City (24-2) vs.

Vienna (23-2) AT PINCKNEYVILLE Cairo (18-9) vs. Waterloo (18-7) AT CARLINVILLE Pittsfield (12-14) vs. Plosa Southwestern (20-6) AT LEWISTOWN Beardstown (18-7) vs. Cuba (17-7) AT BUSHNELL Farmington (11-15) vs. Bushnell (16-12) AT PORT BYRON Riverdale vs.

Galena AT MAPLE PARK Mount Morris (22-2) vs. Marengo (23- 4) AT SOMONAUK Amboy (17-6) vs. Ottawa Marquette 022- 5) Du Quoin 'Cinderella' Lakeview in Aiming for a seventh straight ampionship, Eisenhower faces Lakeview tonight in the Mount Zion large school regional basketball tournament. MacArthur plays Stephen Decatur at 7 o'clock to open the program. Eisenhower vs.

Lakeview follows. Seeded No. 1, Eisenhower has a 19-6 record as compared to Lakeview's 11-12. Eisenhower beat Lakeview 79-62 in the Decatur Thanksgiving Classic and did it again 84-54 Jan. 3.

MacArthur, 12-13, has beaten Stephen 2-20, twice 4941 and 75-55. Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Mount Zion, 20-4, seeded No. 2, plays the MacArthur Stephen Decatur winner. The championship game will be Friday Exotic Diet Helps Frazier Stay Healthy New York (AP) Walt Frazier says he can't understand how fellow pro basketball players like Bill Walton, Neal Walk and Caldwell Jones can exist normally on strictly vegetarian diets.

"I love vegetables," says Frazier, "but I've got to eat meat. I don't see how those guys can get along without it. You've got to have your animal protein, that animal fat in your body." Frazier, the All-Star New York Knicks player, is on his own health kick following his recent reading of the book, "The Secrets of Health and Beauty," which he now carries in his traveling bag. His diet includes such exotic foods as a honey and molasses mixture, apple cherry juice, wheat germ and cod liver oil. He also has added such vitamins as Vitamin kelp and lecithin to his previous doses of Vitamin C.

"Players have become more concerned with what is good for their bodies," he said. "They have to be because the season is so grueling." The National Basketball Association's 82 game regular season began in early October and doesn't end until the first week in April. And, of course, there is the pre season training and exhibitions, plus playoff games for 10 of the 18 teams, that could extend the season until the last week in May. "I don't see how some of those players can take it without meat," said the Knicks' captain. "Some of them have lost so much weight and are so skinny they walk around all hunched up.

It's unnatural to lose a lot of weight. Almost all those guys look weak." Frazier says he develops his own diet "by reading books and deciding what's good for me. I don't consult a nutritionist. I try to relate to all the things I read about. If they're easy to coordinate into my diet, then I'll try them.

"But I'm not so gullible as to think that if I take all those vitamins I'm going to be Superman tomorrow. Some guys try something for a week and if they don't see results, they give it up right away. You've got to give it a chance." society. It is attempting to change its image. One of its moves has been to pretty up its lexicon.

"When you think of alleys, you think of torn cats and derelicts," Levine said. "And, of course, gutters have a distasteful connotation. Se we have dropped these terms from our lexicon." In recent years, bowling has grown into one of the world's most popular participant sports with 30 million devotees in the United States and now it seeks to become a prime spectator attraction. The $3 million PBA tour hits major cities, with the $1.5 million winter segment shown on national television. Living room spectators don't hear much about "alleys" and Chicago Christian, top-ranked at the regular season's close, is the only unanimous favorite in the Associated Press ratings for small school sectional basketball tourney play starting tonight at 16 sites.

Chicago Christian, beaten only by Aurora Central Catholic, is in the Momence sectional and faces New Lenox Providence, 15-12, tonight. Le-mont, 24-3, plays Dwight, 21-5, Wednesday at Momence. The championship game will be Friday night. Teutopolis, No. 3 in the AP's final regular season poll, No.

9 Mount Morris, No. 11 Quincy Catholic Boys and No. 12 Mount Pulaski missed a clean sweep by one vote in the balloting by a panel of 19 writers and broadcasters. Teutopolis is in the Bridgeport sectional, Mount Morris in Maple Park sectional, Quincy Catholic Boys in the Lewistown sectional and Mount Pulaski in the Shelbyville sectional. Teutopolis, 25-1, plays Carmi, 19-6, tonight at 7:30.

Mount Pulaski, 25-1, goes against Morrisonville, 22-5, tonight at 7:30. At Tuscola, Monticello, 25-1, was established as the favorite, receiving 10 votes as compared to four for Villa Grove, three for Bethany and one for Hume Shiloh. Monticello opposes Shiloh, 22-5, tonight at 7:30. A Monticello victory will equal the school record of 26 straight set in 1966. The voting presaged tough scraps in at least five sectionals.

At Normal, Bloomington Central Catholic was picked 10-9 over Normal U. High with the two tabbed to collide in the championship game. No. 8 Vienna was rated 11-8 over No. 16 Eldorado at Norris City-Omaha.

At Carlinville, Concord Triopia got eight first-place votes against five for Chatham Glenwood. The Port Byron sectional was rated a tossup, with Galena and Fulton each getting seven ballots to win. At Somonauk, Ottawa Marquette was given nine first-place votes compared with five each for Timothy Christian and Aurora Central Catholic. In all, 11 ranked teams gained the sectional round, but at least two are destined to fall during the week. The Vandalia sectional includes No.

2 Venice, a 16-3 choice over No. 5 Nokomis (26-0). In the first round of the Wenona sectional, a Western (26-0), No. 4 in the regular season AP poll, tangles with No. 13 Princeville with Buda Western picked to win 15-2.

No. 2 Venice, 25-2, has an apparently easy opener against There are going to be disappointments because Monticello This is the most successful Teutopolis team since the 1949 outfit led by John Nieman and Gene Runde rolled to a 28-0 regular season record, then was riddled by Effingham 65-40 in the Flora regional tournament semifinals. It is about time for Teutopolis to shed its sectional tournament jitters. This is the eighth regional championship. But in the past Teutopolis has come up empty-handed each time in the sectional.

A year ago Teutopolis bowed out to Lawrenceville, the eventual state champion, 53-51 in the Bridgeport sectional final. Other agonizing misses were in 1971 and in 1960. The 1971 team, featuring Leon Gobczynski, was bombed by Paris 95-78 in the Paris sectional after winning 25 games. The 1960 team, also a 25-game winner, fell to Windsor 80-69 in the Mattoon sectional. Yes, Teutopolis is overdue.

I'm sure Mark Kreke, Bart Funneman, Bill Zerrusen, Dennis Deters and Mike Worman the Teutopplis starters will agree. Effingham and Effingham St. Anthony, the main Teutopolis rivals, have had teams in the "Sweet 16." Teutopolis, despite a heritage of success nurtured by former Coach J.H. Griffin and enhanced by present Coach Lawrence Carie, is still at 7:30 p.m. with the winner advancing to the Kintner Gym sectional tournament next week.

Other regional games tonight include: At Lincoln 7:30 Springfield Southeast (19-5) vs. Lincoln (7-14) At Mattoon 7:30 Mattoon (13-9) vs. Newton (3-19) At Hillsboro 7:00 Wood River vs. Hillsboro (7-16) 8:30 Jerseyville (8-15) vs. Bethalto At Normal 7:30 Bloomington (21-4) vs.

Clinton (2-19) At Centra I ia 7:30 Centralia (19-6) vs. Greenville (13-11) At Olney 7:30 Lawrenceville (21-4) vs. Mount Carmel (7-17) Large School Regionals AT NEW TRIER WEST Glenbrook North 77, Glenbrook South 68 Loyola Academy 69, Highland Park 42 AT LIBERTYVILLE Deerfield 57, Stevenson 53 AT OAK LAWN St. Rita 56, Reavis 51 AT NILES WEST Nites East 60, Luther North 53 Niles West 70, Nlles North 39 AT FOREST VIEW Hersey 54, Maine North 44 AT THORNRIDGE St. Francis De Sales 62, Thornton Fractional South 59 AT PALATINE Conant 52, Hoffman Estates 36 AT RICH SOUTH Marian Catholic 81, Rich Central 66 AT QUIGLEY SOUTH Leo 96, Luther South 64 AT MUNDELEIN Mundelein 62, Lake Zurich 55 AT BRADLEY Kankakee Eostridge 82, Hercher 77 Bradley 74, Morris 64 SIU Halts Creighton's Streak 53-47 Carbondale Southern Illinois University's basketball team ended the season in rousing fashion Monday night, snapping Creighton's 14 game winning streak 5347.

Creighton is No. 13 in the Associated Press poll. SIU snapped a 43-43 tie on Corky Abrams' basket and remained ahead to register a 16th straight home victory. Joe Meriweather grabbed a season high 21 rebounds and Mike Glenn hit 8 of 11 shots as SIU improved its record to 18-8. Creighton has a 20-5 record.

Creighton (47) Smith 2-1 5, Heeke 1-0 2, Brookins 7-0 14, Butler 4-1 9, Anderson 3-5 11, Scrutchens 0-0 0, Groves 1-0 2, Apke 2-0 4. Totals 20-7 Southern Illinois (53) Abrams 5-2 12, Riccl 1-1 3, Meriweather 4-8 16, Hines 0-0 0, Glenn 8-0 16, Hughlett 2-0 4, Nixon 0-0 0, Boynton 1-0 2, McKelvey -0-0 0. Totals 21-11 Creighton 23 2447 Southern Illinois 29 2453 A 8,045 BETHANY TICKETS More than 200 tickets for the Bethany High School vs. Villa Grove sectional basketball tournament game Wednesday night at Tuscola will be on sale today from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

in the Bethany principal's office. BASEBALL SIGNUP Northtown Boys Baseball signup will be Saturday, March 7, and Saturday, March 14, from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at Mound School. The cost is $10 a family.

Bring one parent when registering. With Fancy but are treated instead to a rich language which can be interpreted only by addicts of the sport. They hear that the competitors are "playing the track." "Every lane has a groove to the pocket," Levine said. "Bowlers try to find this track. When they do the track is overused and develops subtleties that affect the roll of the ball.

"This sometimes opens the way for left handers. Rolling from the other angle, the lefties have a glass smooth path to the pocket. That's why you see so many left handers among the leaders." A southpaw, Early Anthony of Tacoma, was the PBA's leading money winner in 1974 with more than $99,000. He Carmichael 0 0-0 0, Williams 9 0-0 18, Tucker 4 2-4 11 Adams 1 0-0 2, Matthews 0 0-0 0. Totals 30 15-19.

MICHIGAN (77) Britt 9 04) 19, Robinson 3 9-10 15, Kupec 6 7-8-19, Johnson 3 3-4 9, Grode 7 0-2 14, Baxter 0 2-2 2, White 0 0-0 6, Schinnerer 0 0-0 0. Totals 28 21-26. Halftime: Illinois 36, Michigan 35. Fouled out: None. Total fouls: Illinois 21, Michigan 19.

Minnesota Defeats sconsin Minneapolis, Minn. (AP) Freshman Mark Olberding scored 25 points and sophomore Mark Landsberger added 21 to carry Minnesota to a 65-58 Big Ten basketball victory over Wisconsin Monday night. Minnesota, 11-6 in the Big Ten and 18-7 over-all, took command from the outset, but needed a late spurt sparked by Landsberger to withstand a Wisconsin charge. Bruce McCauley brought Wisconsin back from a 14 -point deficit with some deadly outside shooting. Wisconsin closed the deficit to 55-49 but Olberding prevented a Minnesota collapse with two successive baseline jump shots.

Minnesota limited Wisconsin to three McCauley field goals and a free throw by Dale Koehler in the first 13 minutes to open a 16-7 lead. McCauley scored 15 of his 21 points in the second half. Landsberger pulled down 13 rebounds, Dennis Shaffer 10 and Olberding 8 for Minnesota. WISCONSIN (58): McCoy 3 0-0 6, Pearson 3 1-1 7, Koehler 5 2-4 12, McCauley 10 1-1 21, Colbert 0 0-0 0, Johnson 0 0-0 0, Paterlck 0 0-0 0, Folk 1 0-0 2, Luchsinger 5 0-0 10. MINNESOTA (65): Landsberger 10 1-1 21, Olberding 8 9-11 25.

Nelson 3 0-0 6, Saunders 0 0-0 0, Shaffer 2 3-6 7, Winey 2 0-0 4, Gilcud 0 2-2 2, Sims 0 04) 0. Totals: 25 15-20. Halftime: Minnesota 29, Wisconsin 16. Total fouls Wisconsin 19, Minnesota 10. Technical foul Landsberger.

A 17,102. BIG TEN STANDINGS CONFERENCE ALL GAMES 17 Pet. 0 1.000 28 Pet. Indiana Michigan 1.000 .720 .720 .680 .600 11 11 10 10 8 6 4 4 4 .647 18 .647 18 .588 17 Minnesota Michigan State Purdue Ohio State Iowa Illinois Wisconsin Northwestern .588 15 10 .471 14 13 .353 9 16 .235 8 17 .235 7 18 .235 6 16 .519 .360 .320 .280 .273 Wi MONT ICELLO'S David Chumbley shoots against Argenta Oreana in the small school regional basketball tournament game at Argenta. 7 3-4 17, Parker 5 0-0 10, Parkinson 4 2-2 10, Scheffler 0 0-0 0, Thomas 0 3-4 3, Sat-terfield 0 0-0 0.

Totals 37 8-11. MICHIGAN STATE (84) Furlow 13 1-3 27, McGill 0 0-0 0, Hair- ston 6 2-5 14, Davis 6 1-2 13, Glover 10 1-2 21, Tropf 1 2-2 4, White 0 4-4 4, Wilson 1-2 1. Totals 36 12-20. Halftime: Purdue 51, MSU 39. Fouled out: None.

Total fouls: Purdue 22, MSU 17. Iowa Wins In 2 Overtimes Iowa City, Iowa (AP) Iowa capitalized on foul problems by Big Ten rival Northwestern in double overtime Monday to take a 65-58 victory. Northwestern put the game into overtime on a 20 foot jump shot by Billy McKinney that brought the score to 48-43 with eight seconds to go in regulation play. Northwestern controlled the first overtime and had a four point lead with two minutes to go but Iowa's Dan Frost tipped in an errant Scott Thompson jump shot with one second left to take it to 56-56 and into the second overtime. Iowa then outscored Northwestern 9-2 with six'; straight free throws by Bruce King.

IOWA (65) Frost 4 4-9 12, Mays 2 0-1 4, Haberecht 2 6-9 10, Moore 6 3-3 15, Thompson 6 2-2 14, King 2 6-6 10, John Hairston 0 0-0 0. Totals 22 21-33. NORTHWESTERN (58) Williams 6 0-2 12, Wells 2 2-6 Wallace 0 2-2 2, McKinney 10 2-2 22, Teasley 3 0-0 6, Hildebrand 1 0-0 2, Svete 2 1-2 5, Fields 1 1-3 3. Totals 25 8-17. Halftime: Northwestern 21, Iowa 20.

Fouled out: Wallace, Teasley. Total fouls: Iowa 15, Northwestern 25. Technical: Northwestern bench. 10,452. College Basketball Michigan 77, Illinois 75 Michigan State 84, Purdue 82 Minnesota 65, Wisconsin 58 Iowa 65, Northwestern 58 (2 OT) Cincinnati Xavier 77, St.

Joseph's, Ind. 72 Syracuse 88, Fordham 73 Akron 87, Marshall 61 S. Carolina 93, Villanova 70 Stetson 99, Tulane 74 Chattanooga 94, Georgia State 74 Northern III. 62, Kent State 60 Jacksonville 81, S. Alabama 75 Auburn 117, Va.

Commonwealth 72 Western III. 73, Wis-Milwaukee 64 Bradley 78, St. Louis 75 (OT) Southern III. 53, Creighton 47 NAIA PLAYOFFS District 21 Seifinals Franklin 71, Hanover 58 Tri-State 71, Anderson 68 GIRLS BASKETBALL Lakeview 43, Mount Zion 18 Lakeview JV 45, Mount Zion JV23 MacArthur 45, Normal 37 Normal UV 24, MacArthur 15 Arthur 30, Atwood Hammond 22 Villa Grove 32, Cerro Gordo 28 Cerro Gordo JV 32, Villa Grove JV 18 Language also leads this year. A "cranker" is a bowler with a sweeping hook.

One of the best is Mike Roth of New York who recently missed a perfect game by a single pin on television. When you throw a perfect strike, bowlers say you "throw a truck" or "rip the rack." A straight shot is a "fudge" or "cream puff" not for calorie counters. The most graphic names belong to splits, the bowler's nightmare. There's the "baby split," 3-10, not hard; the "sleeper," 2-8 or 3-9; the 'Cincinnati," 8-10, and the "double pinochle," 4-6, or the 7-10, almost impossible. But the worst of all fates is the "Greek church" leaving the 4-6, 7-8-9, sitting like people in pews, all praying.

Small School 'Big Six' Storms to 150-5 Record Entry Du Quoin is the "Cinderella" team in the small school basketball playoffs. In the regional tournament championship game at Du Quoin, Johnston City took a 62-61 lead with six seconds to go when Keil Peebles made two free throws. But DuQuoin won 63-63. Tony Day was fouled with no time showing on the clock. Bench officials ruled the foul occurred before the last tick of the clock.

Day then made two free throws. It was DuQuoins' third victory of the week. It entered the tournament with a 6-15 record and seeded No. 3. Peebles, off form because of a bout with the flu, connected on only 5 of 28 shots but made 13 free throws for 23 points.

It's the fourth straight regional championship for DuQuoin, which faces Eldorado Wednesday night in the Norris City sectional. Also in the upset category was Chester's 91-89 overtime conquest of No. 10 ranked Sparta. It's the first regional championship for Chester (18-9), which faces Breese Mater Dei Wednesday night in the Pinckneyville sectional. Paul Rogers, Sparta's 6 foot 8 standout, fouled out with 1:19 minutes to go in the fourth quarter.

Sparta is coached by Jack Blickensderfer, who led Cerro Gordo to the Elite Eight in. 1973 and last March. Chester was seeded No. 3 in the regional. Frosh-Soph Tournaments APOLLO CONFERENCE At Mt.

Zion Paris 75, plonshlp) Newton 61, Mount Zion 72 (cham- At Newton Robinson 55 AT NEOGA Herlck 74, (3rd) Cowden Stewardson Strasburg 62 Teutopolis 6, St. Elmo 45 Games Wednesday Night 6:30 Altamont vs. Cowden Her-rlck 8:00 Teutopolis vs. Neoga AT FARINA Clay City 80, Farina LaGrove 60 Louisville 85, Noble 62 Games Tonight 6:30 Farina LaGrove vs. Noble (3rd) 8:00 Clay City vs.

Louisville (championship) AT BETHANY Saturday Blue Mound 68, Flndlay 42 llliopolls 62, Nlantlc Harrlstown 58 Bethany 57, Macon 53 Maroo-Forsyth 68, Lovington 66 Monday Blue Mound 57, llllopolis 56 Bethany 66, Maroa Forsyth 57 Games Tonight 6:30 llliopolls vs. Maroa Forsyth (3rd) 8:00 Blue Mound vs. Bethany (championship) NHL SCORE Montreal 4, California 2 Herald and Review Photo The Argenta player is Dwayne Hupp. Monticello won 79-54. Monticello faces Hume Shiloh tonight in the Tuscola sectional tournament.

Once Over Lightly 0. and Bethany are in the Tuscola sectional and Blue Mound and Mount Pulaski are in the Shelbyville sectional. And Nokomis is the underdog to Venice in the Vandalia sectional. Teutopolis, No. 3 in The Associated Press final' rankings, rates as the most solid choice for advancement among the "Big Six." THIS IS the fifth regional tournament championship team for Teutopolis High School basketball Coach Lawrence Carie.

The only Teutopolis loss in 26 games was to Mount Zion in overtime in the Effingham Heartland Classic in 2 Bowling Goes 'Society' By ob Fallstrom Herald Sports Editor Ten of the dozen teams in the Decatur Herald small school basketball rankings advanced to sectional tournament competition. The rankings thus wer right-on. The losers Effingham St. Anthony, No. 6, and Fairfield, No.

12 bowed to ranked teams in the regional tournament final. St Anthony was whipped by Teutopolis. Fairfield lost to Carmi. Leading the sectional charge were undefeated Nokomis, ranked No. Teutopolis, No.

Mount Pulaski, No. Carmi, No. Blue Mound, No. 5. Also moving on were Stewardson-Strasburg, No.

Bethany, No. Monticello, No. Bridgeport, No. 10, and Morrisonville, No. 11.

It is surely a vintage season. When have we had a group of winners like Nokomis, Teutopolis, Mount Pulaski, Blue Mound, Bethany, Monticello? The "Big Six" has piled up 150 victories against merely 5 defeats. Blue Mound lost once to Bethany. Bethany lost once to Blue Mound. Teutopolis and Monticello lost once to large school teams.

Mount Pulaski lost once by two points. Monticello has won 25 in a row. What a premier group. Too bad each can't attain "Sweet 16" prestige. Garden City, N.Y.

(AP) "These alleys look mighty fast," someone said. "The scoring should be high." Jerry Levine shuddered. "Please," corrected the public relations director of the Professional Bowlers Association tour, "not alleys. We have no such thing as alleys in bowling. Those are lanes." "We always called them alleys," the offender persisted.

"That strip between gutters is an alley." "Gutters did you say gutters?" Levine said, his face reddening. "We haven't had gutters for years. Please refer to them as channels." Bowling, which grew up in the dingy neighborhoods with pool halls and betting parlors, has moved uptown and gone.

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