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The Winona Daily News from Winona, Minnesota • 14

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Winona, Minnesota
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14
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1 Secomidl fc dairy's Lses FACE IOWA TEAM TONIGHT Campbell Blames Defense for State Loss St. Ambrose Foe Tonight WEST DePERE. Wis. (Special) A fast and aggressive St. Nor-bert's team outscored St.

Mary's 'J clash with the Pointers. Iowa State will field a club that is big and aggressive. Campbell states, In a meeting between the two teams last season Iowa State took an Bfi-t7 decision from the Warriors In all likelihood Winona State will be starting the same five that opened against Steuns Point. the reason we lost this game is because (loetz i Gerry hail trouble hitting in the first half. We know the kid can shoot, he just had an off night.

If he'd have been hitting we'd of won by 10." The Warriors play host to State- College of Iowa at 8 p.m. toniqht in a game that figures to he every bit as tough as the jS "l.T ft fcw 2H-23 from the field here Sunday afternoon and the result was a 71-58 victory. The Redmen blew 14 chances at the tree throw line, many of them in 1-1 situations, in absorbing defeat No. 2 against one victory. TONIGHT ST.

Mary's winds up iVA Ken Stellpflug, who led the Warriors with points Saturday, will be at one forward sH)t along with Dick Papenfuss. Gerry GocU and Alien Winder will man the guard slots with L.vle Papenfuss at center. Although Campbell platooned his second unit made up of James. John Lautigar, Chuck Weisbrod, Rob Lictzau and Jim Yinar Saturday, he may substitute individually tonight. The second unit noticeably lacks the scoring punch of the starting five although they rebounded well.

The game tonight and the contest Saturday, when the Warriors travel to Plattevillc, will be the last non-conference tune-ups as St Cloud will play here Dec. 15 in Stale's first league test. Although Stevens Point spoiled the coaching debut of Winona State Basketball Coach Bob Campbell, the Warrior head mentor was far from displeased as he replayed the game in his office Saturday night. "We learned a lot of things tonight. The boys got some good lessons taught them." Campbell said.

"Defense was the place where we fell down. They got too many dog shots in the second half." After consulting the rebounding charts, Campbell's face wore a big smile: "Look at this we only gave them six offensive rebounds all night, that's really something. Lyle and Dick Papenfuss and Stellpflug Kcn' really did a job for us on the boards." Campbell continued, "I'd say UJitwtuL (Daily TIsuva. the brief road trip at Davenport, Iowa, against St. Ambrose.

Terry Conrad, former Cotter athlete and an all-state selection in last year's State Catholic Tournament, got the Red men off to a fast 5-2 lead. Conrad, playing his first game as a starter, hit on two jump shots and a tree throw in the first two minutes. St. Norbert's retaliated with 11 Pag 14 Monday, December 4, 1961 Bob Jensen 20, Art Davis '50) and for, DePaul Elgin Dorsey (right and M. C.

Thompson 'partially hidden. (AP Photofax) HAND TUSSLE The ball didn't have a chance Saturday night as these Minnesota and DePaul basketball players battle for possession on a rebound. Grabbing for the Gophers are mi iimmm') f'1 Floyd Heavy BEAT LOS ANGELES 42-21 Pick Ton. ght i I sn vhf I y- IhiBfntiaimiViitf fftfil 'V ifflfi-irtTtf fiffimirfTMnifiMiTWTi straight points to take a 13-5 lead and from there was in command all the way. ST.

NORBERT'S, playing a tight zone detense, capitalized on several miscues by the Redmen to go in front 21-7 with 7:11 remaining in the first half. St. Mary's moved back 28-20 behind Mike Stallings, who scored 16 points, and Marty Lillig, who finished with U. The Norbert's defense prevailed, however, to shut out the Red-men over the last four minutes of the half and open up a lead of 40-42. Lillig hit two jumpers a.

the out.iet of the second halt but St. Norbert's again moved away to lead 50-28. THE CLOSEST the Redmen could come in the second half was 57-47 with seven minutes remaining, but Stu Jansen, Mike Wis-neski and John Patterson hit successive layups to put St. Norbert's out of reach. Jim Paprocki was the leading flrppn K'niflhl c'Arnr uith 91 niintc Tarkenton Comes of Age as Vikings Hit Biggest Total MINNEAPOLIS i.f The minis- ings with the biggest scoring bulge rolled up yards through the ter's son trom Georgia reached of their initial season.

i air and chipped in 10 moro on maturity here Sunday in the the ground when receivers Jerry company of two National Football ln h'1 9'ory the (j uavc Middleton League greats and a rehabilitated smoothly muscled a enton available, youngster. pushed praise onto the shoulders g()()d aM rj By MURRAY ROSE TORONTO (AP Heavy- Height champion Floyd Patterson is a prohibitive 10-0 favorite to hand strong and rough Tom Mc- Keeley the first defeat of his brief career in their 15-round ti arenas will see the other city's fight on four-sided movie screens. The doubleheader also will be shown in about 150 theaters and arenas in the United States and Canada, and may be seen in 150,000 homes via community antenna television systems. There will be no radio broadcast in the United States. McNeeley may collect about $125,000.

Patterson could earn around $300,000. tle fight tonight at Maple Leaf Gardens. There was every indication of LUCK OF IRISH? Tom McNeeley, (above who meets heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson Monday night in Toronto, hopes the luck of the Irish is with him. McNeeley is the first Irish-American to fieht for the heavyweight title since Jim Braddock lost to Joe Louis on an eight-round KO 24 years ago. said 1'arkenlon whose brilliance has buried veteran George Shaw.

a quick and explosive battle in I ran Jarkenton, 21-year old uiuimhi, um freshman quarterback from the P'' Hugh (the King" McElhenny University of Georgia, unleashed and rookie fullback Ray Hayes of Buk Hugh the old pro, and don't a nk(H tli.il i Central Siaie, UK13. passing forget Van Brocklin." Canada's first world heavyweight championship contest. McNeeley, a 6 2, 200-pound for buried the Los Angeles Rams 42-21 Tarkenton, in completing 21 of 30 passes for four touchdowns, mer Michigan State tackle, pre Dave Heisig had 15, Jansen 11 and and provided the Minnesota Vik-Wisneski 10 for the winners. I dicted he would win by a knock out "within six rounds." St. Mary's shot 43 percent, count Packers Wrap Up Western Title With 2Q-17 Victory "I'm going after him," said Gopher Cagers, Memphis State ing on 23 of 54 attempts, but the tight Green Knight zone didn't give the Redmen many shots.

Tom Ruddy grabbed 11 rebounds and Mike Stallings nine for St. Mary's. REDSKINS PICK SYRACUSE' DAVIS CHICAGO iP) The Washing-ton Redskins, leading off the National Football League draft today, chose Heisrflan Trophy winner Ernie Davis of Syracuse, first Negro player ever selected by the 'Skins. St. Mary's (58) St.

Norbert's (71 iiiiMeef Tonight 3 0 I i to ft pf tp Stalling! 4 4 JU Burkt Conrad 7 11 Wagerin Burgman 0 0 1 0 Hung Hal 1 Rankin McNeeley. "He won't have to go looking for me." "I think McNeeley might be the kind of a fighter who will gamble and try to take over the fight," said Patterson. "If he does, it could be up and down like the last (Ingemar) Johansson fight with nobody giving up. So I'll gamble in the first round if he's willing." Patterson declined to make any predictions, but he said, "I will be 100 per cent better than I was in the last fight with Ingemar last March." In that fight, his third with Johansson. Patterson rallied from By MIKE RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer The Green Bay Packers stole showdown struggle with New York, clinching their second consecutive Western Conference crown in the National Football League and forcing the Giants and Philadelphia Eagles into a two-week test of strength for the East to clinch it for the Eagles, then wound up the scoring with a 42-yard TD run in the final quarter.

Sonny Jurgensen passed for two Philadelphia scores while Bobby Layne pitched three TD aerials for the Steelers '5-7), who fell behind at the outset when two interceptions of Rudy Bukich passes were turned into Philadelphia touchdowns. fensive struggle until Whittendon stole the ball from Webster. The Giants had one more chance, rolling into Packers' territory behind Tittle's passing until Bob Gaiters fumbled on a double reverse and Willie Davis recovered on the Green Bay 27 with two minutes to go. The Packers ran out the clock. Tim Brown sped f6 yards with a punt return in the third quarter Van Brocklin had no trouble in pegging Tarkenton's performance.

"He's arrived," said the former Philadelphia L'agles' star quarterback. "He's got the intellect, the daring and the willingness to gamble for the big play. "Guess I'll have to give him a $3 raise next season." This was the second time thii season Tarkenton had thrown four TD's. McElhenny, wtio amassed more than 10,000 yards, shrugged off his achievement in praising Tarkenton and Hayes. "I'll be around next season all right," said the 10-yard veteran halfback.

"But the way these guys are going I might be back on the third team." He figured Tarkenton is the best rookie quarterback of the year and could be named rookie of the year, "although there's a lot of competition." McElhenny. used sparingly after being "cooled" on one play, carried his lifetime mark to 10,018 Ruddy 3 1 I Smits a 0 0 Lillig 1 3 11 S.Jamtn 4 3 4 It Williams 4 0 3 1 Patterson 10 0 1 Hughes 0 0 0 0 Wisneski 0 4 10 B. Jansen 3 0 0 4 Gagermeir 0 0 0 0 T. Stallings 0 3 11 Sain 0 0 0 0 Clarkin 0 0 0 0 Paprocki 0 3 1 11 ern title. 17 Teams Close Play Undefeated Totals II IS 10 71 14 3458 40 31-71 Totals 11 11 IS SI ST.

MARY'S ST. NORBERT'S Led by Jim Taylor and Paul Hornung, the Packers edged the Giants 20-17 Sunday, wrapping up the Western title with a 10-2 rec MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The exodus that occurred at the wind-up of Minnesota's basketball opener with DePaul might have been indicative of the score. The Gophers lost their game 66-56 but the outpouring resulted from a loudspeaker summons to attend a pep rally lor the Rose Bowl bound football team set for 10 p.m. Saturday. The Gophers can even their mark here tonight, against Memphis State.

DePaul. capitalizing on ragged play by the Gophers, overcame a jSf. Cloud Sets I School Mark 107-89 Win Harmony Trips Mabel 71-48 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Seventeen college football teams completed their regular seasons without a loss or tie, an Associated Press check showed today. two first-round knockdowns and kayoed the husky Swede in the sixth. The Patterson-McNeeley title fight will be the second half of a closed-circuit television double-header.

The opening bout will match Sonny Liston, the reinstated No. 1 contender from Philadelphia, and stocky Albert Westphal of Hamburg, Germany, in a ten-rounder at Philadelphia's Conven SKIPPERS CRUISE TO 9TH STRAIGHT FRESNO, Calif. The Minneapolis St. Paul Skippers made it three in a row over the Fresno Bombers with a 24-18 victory in their National Bowling League match here Sunday night. It also was the ninth straight win for the Skippers, a league record.

Jim St. John of the Skippers had the high game, 242, and the high series, 467. Alabama, which made Auburn aias- 's ay worK could nave HARMONY, Minn. (Special) 32-30 halftime deficit and went i its 10th victim 34-0 Saturday, and bPen cvcn mo, lf. a 5l-ya punt ord and leaving New York and the defending league champion Eagles in a tie for the top spot in the Eastern sector with two games remaining.

Both New York and Philadelphia have 9-3 records. The Packers won it as Taylcr scored twice on runs of 14 and 3 yards the last the clincher in the fourth quarter and Hornung brought his league-leading point total to 143 with a pair of field goals and two conversions. Altogether, Taylor ran for 186 yards, second ahead on seven straight points by er Wv.m,cw poste(1 its Rutgers, which closed out a 9-0 'r a touchdown had not Minnesota colleges opened their sTht basketball triumph Sat nrHav mrrM rnnninn Iahnl 71. ueen caiieu nacK necause oi a roughing.the-kicker penalty. joe neuter.

sate a week ago. were the only Reuter went to work with the major colleges on the list. tirst full weekend of basketball 48 in a came. ixmuiAi in." uiui'iwi Tu nK.i.,mf;0J for I The decision brought Van Brock- Harmonv built a 25-9 first pen-1 one of two gift throws and fol-, in onto the field and TEN GAMES tion Hall. Spectators at the two Two Unbeaten In Midget Play PT 18 OP 11 a club record, I The key play was made by competition Saturday and came out on the short end with out state opponents.

But there were some flashes of power from the home teams, St. Cloud State set a new floor record as 14 members of the oa edge ana strctcnea it to 39- mweu who uuee siraiu oasKeis. 21 at the intermission. Minnesota failed to come back. Bill Wickett scored 20 points Emniett Bryant and Dick Cook for Harmony and hauled in 27 re- topped DePaul scoring with lfi bounds.

Jim Jensen added 15 and and 14 points, respectively. Eric Leo Bigalt added 13. At one time Magdanz and Tom McGrann had Harmony had an 18-1 lead. 16 apiece lor the Gophers. Davis Usgaard scored 20 for Alabama NINE GAMES Rulqers Florida AIM Washington Let Packers defensive back Jesse Whittenton, who stole the ball 14 490 197 MIDGET LEAGUE his shoving of an official lost Min nesota another five yards in penalty.

But he perked up when locker-room questioning jumped to Hayes, who left the bench after two weeks and had his greatest day as a Viking. "Just ego I guess," said Van Brocklin "He told me he was tired of playing two games a week one a scrimmage, and he proved it." W. Bub'a I I 101 15 46 tl li 41 58 lie II 65 55 1 0 tiki TV Signal 1 UCT game Duluth Branch squad nit tne scoring column in Mabel. the Huskies' 107-89 victory over 1 Harmony won the Stout of Wisconsin. Hamline bieez- 44-24.

ed to a 74-54 victory over Eau McKinley, Legion Fives Triumph PEE WEE LEAGUE W. L. McKinley 1 0 Paint Depot 1 1 Amer Legion 1 0 JayBees 0 1 Winona Hotel 1 I Coca-Cola 0 3 Six Triumphs Northern (S.D.) State 357 Llnfleld (Ore.) 34 Pittsburg (Kan.) State Ottawa (Kan.) 18 Whittler 15 Freino State 156 Parsoni (Iowa) 151 Butler 131 Baldwin-Wallace 104 EIGHT GAMES MMIikln (III.) 105 Wheaton (III.) 117 Mayvllla (N.D.) State 107 Albion ISA from Alex Webster on the Giants' 30 in the final quarter. The Pack-! ers, trailing 17-13. took advantage of the grab.

Taylor finally going i in for the winning touchdown from the 3. I The Eagles brought their record I to 9-3 by blitzing the Pittsburgh Steelers 35-24, and have the ad-1 vantage of playing at home against the Giants next Sunday in a battle that could determine Green Ray's opponent in the Dec. 31 championship playoff. SMU Seeking New Coach DULUTH, Minn. 'AP) University of Minnesota Duluth's hockey team, whose prowess, brought it a fee-lance schedule this Claire State.

Gene Anfinsson paced five St. Cloud mates into double figures with his 15 points. High scorer, however, was Fred Seggelink of the losers with 30. Hamline's Pipers portraved 71 37 47 55 SKATE CHAMPIONS ROCKTON. III.

iD Winner Elks and TV Signal rolled to their second wins in Midget League basketball action at Lin-coin School Saturday. Elks blasted Bub's 42-21 while TV Signal was crushing UCT 44-24. Tony Kreuzer and Gary Curran with 15 and 12 points respectively-led Elks. Dennis Durran had 11 and Bill Tews nine for Bub's. Wayne Larson dropped 20 points year, rolled to its second straight were selected in six events Fri- day night in the Upper Great I Lakes sub-sectional figure skating victory over Fort William, Ont McKinley beat JayBees 1410, American Legion downed Paint Depot 13-10 and Winona Hotels DALLAS, Tex.

(AP) Southern MILWAUKEE WINS MILWAUKEE A their usual Joe Hutton-coached University starts look- 3-2, Saturday night finesse, with Billv Nelson hitting ins for a new head football coach Junior uiiiit Unnnip Inhncnn omi vii-uh ukiiii u. mi- iiiun.e (UlllCt Jun.oi nj, Ronnie Johnson ha)f ra University of Wis- i was won hv Mrs SrnHv li.H anH 20 points and Bryan Jensen 18 tt r'i 1 ti'ii mcc ir i nnrt h.irk(H hv an nrtminis. I tired i i. 1 i ti ron ana oacKea dv an aaminis- uxiay. ronsm-Mi wankpp a kt.m rtnrv I Frank Greiczck.

both of Milwau for TV Signal and Todd Spencer contributed 13 to the UCT total. kee Not to be counted out, however, squeaked past Coca-Cola 1817 in are the Cleveland Browns, one a double overtime thriller in Pee game back of the leaders with an Wee action at Lincoln School Sat- 8-4 record after beating Dallas urday. 38-17. The Browns meet Chicago McKinley, led by Scott Feath- next, then close out at New York erstone's e'ight points, trailed by State UUVeiSlty dumped (On- uu. ump Minrmirli inincl i -yif! i i amonc the bis names.

him in the scoring denailment. got oy eemuni Male r.ii Uhllp thn Plftlfic cira n.trnit inn (Virrti, rwirinlc versuy Jefferson Topples Phelps; W-K Bows n.v. uii ui 1l UK" UHI 111 llliir 'i I ii'i'J H'lc Thn inir. L. L.IJ Mt US JOlIll, WIS DO YOUR Ottll HlOna a chnf fnr Minnpcntn til-u-intf in hie aner live years vvnen nis ieuii w.n State 83-74.

Augustana measured ursi game. finished the season at Fort Worth Ltviio iiivvcu imu stxunu luu lit III tiiii'i: avinric? in un; place in the West, beating the fourth period to chalk up win Bars 16-15 while the San Fran- No. 2. Dave Smelser with four Cisco 49ers were losing to Balti- was high for JayBees. LIGHTWEIGHT 1 0 1 0 0 0 Phelps Waihlngton-K Mankato State 68-60.

Wheaton, III, defeated Macalestcr 72-61, Gustavus Ado'phus whipped a weak Texas Lutheran team 77-49, and St Norbert eased by St. Mary's, 71-38. In the Midwest Conference. Jefferson Central Cold Central Blue WITH OUR MEY Saturday, playing a 23-28 tie with Texas Christian. Meek hadn't won enough games to get big enough crowds out to pay expenses and the athletic department was deeply in the red.

Matty Bell, the athletic direc- i mores tons zu-u. m. lows ex- American Legion held Paint tended Washington's winless Depot scoreless in the last quar- streak to 22 games with a 33-24 tor to gain its victory. Steve Stre- 44-8. win and Minnesota whipped Los 0n with seven was high for the were Angeles 42-21.

winners. Bob Greden had six for Jefferson crushed Phelps while the Central Golds a new- Gary Mell scored 29 points to tor. was instructed to find lead Monmouth to a 73-54 upset coach. The Giants built a 17-13 lead at Paint Depot, halftime as quarterback Y. A.

Mark Paterson single-handedly of pre-season favorite St Olaf: St. He said he was interested lime piunged a yard tor a touch- took care of Winona Hotels scor- irouncing 4 9 in first round action of the lightweight division the junior high school basketball league Saturday. Larry Nuszlak and John Reszka had nine points each for Jefferson and Pat Hopf eight. Make the season more enjoyable for your family and friends, and for yourself as well. With a Shopper's Loan from HFC, you buy just the right gifts to please everyone on your list make better buys shop at any store you wish and avoid a mailbox full of bills.

Simply repay Saturday's Result! COULEE- Trempealeau 47, Bangor 3i. Gale-Ettrick 71, Melrose 44 Onalaska 56, West Salem 41. Mindoro 53, Ho. men 47. MINNESOTA NON-CONFERENCE' Harmony 71, Mabel 41.

down. Bob Gaiters went two for as he racked up US of its 18 Norbert eased past St. Mary's of newspaper reports that Doak another and Pat Summerall points. The deciding margin Winona 71-38; Coe came from be- Walker, who is in business at kicked a 41-yard field goal. The came in the second overtime 'as hind to edge Lawrence 36-53; Denver, and Kyle Rote, who plays Packers scored on Hornung field Paterson dropped a field goal tough Grinnell put down Ripon 83- football with the professional New Dave btreng fired in 20 points; goals of 23 and 25 yards and a while Coca-Cola was counting on 81.

and Cornell cruised to a 78-60 York Giants, might be interested for Central Gold and Jim Heinlen 14-yard ramble by Taylor MM one low a single tree inrow Pan victory over Beloit search of its in the iob Ixit he hadn ta ked eight. Then it ettled down to de- had eight for Coca-Cola. third straight conference crown, with them. Both played for SMU. ArG3 BdSkctbdll WORK BEGINS FOR ROSE BOWL monthly amount after this expensive season is over.

Stop in today for helpful.courteous money service. Cili MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS YmO 11 i Prtmh pttmh ri pmti $100 5.71 7.11 iOO 11.49 1123 36 61 .100 17.LM 54 92 500 27.l HI 48.75 fXl.7-1 600 33.08 41 38 W.m 108 48 Stephens: 'Plan to Do Better Than Last Year' 'arwwiui imiuJi tT(i at tm mowtv in Stephens "I talked to Bob Deegan round of the American Football MINNEAPOLIS fAP) When i weekend as a husband at home, Sandy Stephens and Minnesota I the old question popped up asain larly for me." said Stephen, credited with being one of the most improied players in the Big Ten. caught fire midway in the Big Ten 0USEH0LD FINANCE Monday's Schedule LOCAL ST. MARY'S COLLEGE It SI. Ambrose.

Davenport, Iowa. State College at Iowa at WINONA STATE. Tuesday's Schedule MINNESOTA NON-CONFERENCE Canton at Preston. Peterson at Lanesboro. Spring Grove at Harmony.

Elk ton at Chatfield. Sprmq Valley at Rose Creek. Wykolt at Leroy. Caledonia Loretto at New Albm. lo.

Gilmaiton at Rollirgstone Holy Trinity. WISCONSIN NON-CONFERENCE Taylor at Cothrane-FC. Mondovl at Augusta. Ourand at Elm wood. Arcadia at Blair.

Ctoppewa Falls McDonnel it Chippewa Falls. Faircnild at Grjnton. Pepm at Arkaniaw Aitoooe at leva Strum. Fall Creek at Osseo Alma Center at Neiliville. today as the Gophers began to prep for UCLA in the bowl.

The chuckle was still there, and League draft at Dallas Saturday. The UCLA idle for a week, start working out today for their New Year's day meeting with Minnesota. and Bobby Bell and they're all set We pian to do a lot better than last year." Stephens said the team likely would meet with Coach Murray Warmath today and find out when they will leave. In contrast to the noisy eruu- Stephens shyly admitted "she 52 E. Third 8-2941 liked tofiave me around." But then tion of student parades and pep-a serious note entered the Union- The Bruins will practice in football season, the Gopher quarterback was asked if taking a wife had anything to do with it.

"I don't know." he chuckled, and then went out to carve himself the title of All-Big Ten quarterback and bring Minnesota its second straight Rose Bowl bid. Afttf spending his first full HOUIS 9 30 to 30 MONDAY htm FilOAf sweat suits this week, spending'; much of their time on limbering- town. Pa, youths voice. forma! notice 'of its s'econd bowl The enior quarterback will "Our biggest ambition is making I bid. the players assumed more have added reason for turninc in up exercises, toacn biu tsarnes i up for last year's 17-7 defeat to somber attitudes his best.

He was chosen by the expects to start heavier drills next ALL HFC OFFICES OPEN SATURDAY MORNINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS ndsmngion in me Dowi, particu-i ready to go, said New York Titans in the first i week.

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