Article clipped from Mitchell Daily Republic

Page TwelveTHE DAILY REPUBLIC, Mitchell, S. D., Thursday, Nov. 12, 1959Southern Gains 28-7Over DWU As Season EndsBy JERKY TIPPENS Daily Republic Sports EditorSouthern's powerful Pointers hammered out a touchdown a quarter to down the Dakota Wesleyan Tigers 28-7 at Kernel Stadium Wednesday afternoon in the season's closing game for both teams.The win was the seventh straight for Coach Jack Martin’s Pointers after they lost their first two games. They are a solid second in the South Dakota Intercollegiate conference with a 7-1 mark losing only to unbeaten Huron. They could still tie Huron for the crown should Northern knock off the Scalpers Saturday.Coach Don Pinhey’s Tigers, in their first year under their new coach, completed their best season in three years. The Bengals posted an SDIC record of 3-4-1 and an overall mark of 3-5-1.Although veterans Doug Flynn, Harold Koch, Norm Andersh and Walt Nedved along with kicking specialist Joe Pal closed their college careers, the rest of the Tigers are due to return next season. Most of them are freshmen. So. with one! year of building behind them, the Tigers anticipate better football fortunes ahead.Southern is harder hit by graduation. They will lose Randy Klatt. Dave Bride, Laddie Carda. Ervin Ptak. Marv Walz, Ken Hoff. Max Kreinbuhl. Ernie Hladlk, Dennis Sudbeck and Jerry Wlngen, some of the men who have made the Pointers perennial contenders. But the Springfield team, too, will have a number of promising gridders back, including several freshmen who were outstanding high school gridders last fall.Three of the underclassmen, quarterback Jan Mitchell (son of SSTC basketball coach Floyd Mitchell!, halfback Duane Bierle, both sophomores, and freshman fullback Jerry Ruff, played key roles in the; Pointer success Wednesday,COMPLETED—Dakota Wesleyan’# Jerry Hoffman falb to the ground but holds the ball after making a difficult catch of a pass. Southern’s Dave Bride (14) and Gary Merkwan move up. Wesleyan’# Steve Dale (65) Is seen at right. The Pointers gained a 28-7 victory Wednesday,(Republic Photo by Wilson)Harold Johnson Stops Ray In10; Plays Drums For LivingRoughest Horse Race This YearBy CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN Associated press Sports Writer'CHICAGO (APi — Harold John-And Jt was a sophomore * fresh-son, one of the greatest fighting| man passing combinatinon that machines in the business, returned i produced Wesleyanrs touchdown in to Philadelphia today and his $60; the fourth quarter. Cherrel Thayer!a week job in a jazz combo,connected with Dick Whitman. Thej lt;*j don,j _ej. enougj1 fights to live! Associated Press Sports WriterTigers have been held scoreless so rve got a five-piece combo.” LAUREL. Md. (AP)-—It took anonly by Huron. ,h tnn.rnnkine tisht hcavv- ^ternational incident to give BaldWalz recovered a Wesleyan fum- ^,$££*8onny Ra? in Eagle his American name and itRaid Eagle Wins International InMary Hastings it Lead will become sports editor of THE DAILY REPUBLIC Nov, 30 succeeding Jerry Tippens who ha* resigned, effective Nov. 27, to become a partner In fee operation of the Salem Special, weekly newspaper.Tippens, 28, sports editor of the Republic for three years, and Don Waugh, 31, advertising salesman for the Sioux Falls Argus •* Leader, have purchased the Special from Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ryan and will published their first edition Dec. 3.Hastings, 27, has been sports editor of the Lead Daily Call since his graduation from South Dakota State College in June, 1958. He majored in printing and journalism. An Army veteran with service in Germany, Hastings is a native of Bruce and a graduate of BruceHigh School.A 1952 graduate of Dakota Wesleyan University, Tippens was a member of the Republic’s staff for three years while a student. He served with the Army In Korea and became news editor of the Pierre Capital - Journal following bis discharge in 1954. Later he was on the publicity and journalism staff of Ohio Wesleyan University. Starting in September, 1955, he was sports editor of the Rapid City Journal for 15 months before returning to the Republic.Waugh, a native of Howard, Is an alumnus of the University of South Dakota. He is a former printer and later advertising manager for the Madison Daily Leader and has been with the Sioux Falls newspaper for 18 months. He is an Army veteran,Mrs. Tippens and Mrs. Waugh, both Dakota Wesleyan graduates, are former employes of the Republic.Henley Within 9Points Of SettingAnother Record*'ALeonDlt;D(AssocijNow : catch a man V. Wildcat day.He’s year w finest h turned ■ quarterAny t haveKANSAS CITY (AP) — Gary Campbell of Whittier (Calif) Col- to keep lege has increased his average Ten leaed on t previouBy GEORGE BOWEN _______ _______ ___________________about 50 yards a game since mid-. .. „ , . .. ,, season and retains the total of*.,------might well have raced under the fense leadership in National Assn.jCoachname of Nasser, Capt. Han-y F. 0j Inter-collegiate AthletiC foot-;praiseble on the Tiger 38 in the opeuing,^6,1^1;Chicago^StacUum took an international horse race Guggenheim, owner of the Cain ba]j statistics. I Theminutes of play and the Martin- v/ednesdav night to mak® him world famous. !Roy J^able, originally called the campbejj pasan average of j passedmen rolled to their first touchdown., «,„ao niaM Bald Eagle, an American-bred rugged bay colt after Egypt s 22*5 4 yards a game for a total of-;scoredHacking out four yards a crack. '■ ‘We get about three night club 4. oW galned world-wide ac----Ruff and Carda picked up a first dates a week. It pays; each of us cIaim Wednesday when he beatdown on the 26. Mitchell was tossed;from $50 to $60. I play the the equine prides 0{ elght Qthfor a loss of six yards, but then drums, nations in the roughly ridden* ^ arrived in England forcompleted a 14 - yard pass to- The nationally televised bout $100,000 Washington D.C, Interna*1 ws 2 * J'ear ' debut, his nameCarda and Ruff banged out another with Ray was his first fight in six tional -was chansed.four and it was first and 10 on the months and only his tlth in four, But’for the Suez Canal closing' Bald Ea®5e won the Eighth In-14. The Tigers nearly held. Theiyears. He won them all. *■----“—1 **.....11,1ttrL„E0ded ftVe yards 0n For a fellow who sees such lit-'Then Mitchell took to the air a- ile ring aCtiWI’ the 31*year*oldPremier. fense yardage of 1,585 this season.! at 4-3 Ij £ however, never ralt;r^iHe was instrumental in vaulting onr*runder the name of Nasser. By the Whittler to fche team o{fense Jeadthis week with 442.1 yards a game and the team passing lead with 193.3 yards a game.^sssnsn wingen^s *m* R*“ Tu“^ew CampaignSaw.. 'zbs-jszA “ !s Launched Tosion record for the afternoon.' I knocked him down m the®**to aeqt cacies 1 off an“He’s dered :Garney Henley of Huron (S.D.) said aiternational by a comfortable 2 Vi lengths over France’s Midnight Sun while other contestants behind him knocked each other fortbe single season record ofa with 'one game to play.The jockeys on horses from Ven-j Jlm st Clair Ieads NAIA pass.cracked the NAIA scoring record with his 34 points over four seasons. He is within nine points of150booted the point for a 7-0 first fourth with a right but couldn’t #1 » f»________il.quarter lead. iget at him to keep him there,” HffflciSIIezwela and Australia to|ted each,ers with a 163lt;g aVerage and his other from their seats about half- teamma|e at the University ofway through the race.California at Santa Barbara, FredSoviet jockey Nikolai Nasibov, Tunniciiffe, is the No. 2 receiverup on Garnir, rode most of the way with a bloody nose and said,State t-Dame, cellent inspiral Daug after ISaturdE“He’s ner, pi naturalwith 34 catches for 690 yards, made Willie Richardson of Jackson said. fMiss) State leads receivers withpound tackle blasted his way to the!I held back too long thinking I.math as Minnesota football coachThpvwdn“nnt have brains”;88;3 y?,rds a lame: 49 before he was brought down, had to pace myself—I didn’t push!was 011 full throttle today, backediGarnir finished fifth,With Thayer doing most of the until the 10th,;by a reported businessman’s fund-1 Arnerica-S ace jockey of 28!Wisclt;plays s er BiU fche Ba Term who wi ors forAfter an exchange of punts and said afterward. “I think I could Interceptions, the Tigers threaten-; have got him any time like I did1 By JIM KLOBUCHARed. Able Vogel grabbed a Southern'in the Idst round. But not having! MINNEAPOLIS (AP — A newl rhis Ls* not~a~race~lt Ts~ more pass on his own 15 and the 210-ifought for so long I was skeptical, campaign to oust Murray War-^g a footbalJ game'. they rideLeading rusher is Bobby Fowler of the University of Tennesseerunning and passini, the Tigers ™ T didn't accomplish anything'raising drive to pay off the last1 Vp^e“llHd?ne ^exnerience Eddieiat 148,2 /a«dL afought their way to the Southern but a good work out. All I can do two years of his contract. Arcaro considered himself hicky^?”1®; Younf of. Betha?ythree, but the Pointers held and Ls 5jt around, play the drums ancl! Several Minneapolis business ', havine avoided the banging- ’ p punter Wlth a 44-9took over. wait for a fight. I’d like to meet men acknowledged they had been aroilnd average. lAui-daThey immediately launched the Archie Moore again for the title asked to contribute $1,000 each.1 ,lt;Tt. ' . rm„,wt I’ve ever1 Lenoir Rhyne ,of College ofdrive that brought them their sec- 1 Moore, losing on the cards, kay- Warmath refused comment on pn and t.vp ridden in a few 0f Hic}?oryi N- C., unbeaten in seven fee iniond touchdown. Bierle's 23 - yard'oed Johnson in the 14th five years whether he would accept a pay-,^ ’.. said Arcaro who finishedjSames, was rated first this week run got them away from their own ago) but all my contacts with off. He referred one reporter toif0urth 0n France’s Mi Carina. if,0,110, ?aieend zone and they hammered out Moore have no results.” his repeated public and private; The Qther us entry and the Western Illinois, East Texas State,short yardage to reach midfield.1 Johnson. 175, now has a 62-8 statements that he would never wig! '0 Mrs Herbert!1Southern Connecticut. Presbyte-IHolJantBierle broke away on a 22-yard record. Ray. who weighed in at resign under duress. 'Herff’s Tudor Era came in third.|2an )ui.siana Te®f al)dgallop and a Mitchell to Wingen ]74, is 20-0-5. But it was not clear whether [Said Eaele SaoS the scrim- Huron- Wesl Chester Teach-pass carried to the Tiger II. ; j^ay wbo made the mistake of'he would regard a cash settlement I m„EtnK uy hreaking second and ers and William Jewel are tied; *ufLh.“ lhcJln.* [°J. six yards' trying to box with Johnson, called;as an act of resignation. thL untn with aS h?lftion. H tion aias douperioders look the kickoff on their own-35. Bierle's 13 . yard run was followed minutes later by Ruff’s 40* i yard drive to the Tiger six. On the-next play Ruff again scored with 1Winnipeg Wins, ,v ,V ZZ men 1 just sat sun on mm, ;1B . ■* . , w..aisuddenly collapsed after three ycaza said and Bald Eagle reeled|W|wlv Tanh *• ul|M straight victories. The Gophers io{f the miles in 2 minutes, 28|*f*flABV AUVII *9 VY IIIplunged to their worst wbB'tostjggcQnds, previous fastest In-10:14 ,rtl ln the period' Firs! Game InNeither team got a major threat going until the fourth quarter. Klattmierccwcd a pa.s.s o„ U,e southern. ^3119^3^ FiflaiSmark, 1-8, in school history ^st'temational was England’s Wilwynjflwpgii* 111 If ill Ctwo:2:30 4-5, in the 1952 inaugural. The WfCl IfflKvIV All.AAiyear and have won onlygames in seven this season. ’track was enlarged to one mile Warmath, fee Gopher coach frorn seven-eighths this year sothe time comparison is Insignificant.since 1954. has two years remaining on his contract. His salary is______28 to open the period. A 55 • yard!IfOIKMHilll A HHXIi) tin the neighborhood of $17,000 an-1 ^ jjjg second choice. Bald pass from Mitchell to Sudbeck set jnually. but he receives consider-iEagle returned $9.20, $5.20 andup the score on the Wesleyan two. EDMONTON lt;AP — Quarter-■ ably more than that through out- 53 jn the $2 bettng windows., Bierle tried the line once, but it back Kenny Ploen sparked a -sldo activities including a weekly,Hj5 jfew Yorjj owner, former U.S.held. Then Gary Merkwan dashed crashing first-half ground game to:totovisi°n show,across with 12:48 left in play. lead the Winnipeg Blue Bombers Thayer’s passing arm in the wan- to a 19-11 victory over the Edmon-One longtime leader In the eam-i^ooo. paign to remove Warmath said;'ambassador to Cuba, collectedIng minutes of the game gave Wes- Ion Eskimos Wednesday in the he understood a formal decision Seyan it's touchdown, The Tigers first game of the Western Inter-to raise money to buy off theBssdlfi's Oldrestarted on their own 30. Thayer fir- Provincial Football Union finals, coach’s contract was taken at ¥4M4 v€(\ 15 yards to Koch. Then he toss- The second game of the best-of- meeting Wednesday. |H Wf _eel 11 yards to freshman end Jerry three series will be played in Win*; Charles Pyle, a local business-1 V9CCAC 1 P3f|l I y Hoffman who turned in outstanding nipeg Saturday. 'man, said he had been contacted1*game, A H - yard pass to Kocht Two convened touchdowns, a and asked to contribute $1,000. the third completion and third first field goal and a single point on ai “That's all I know about it. hedown m as many plays, put the punt gave Winnipeg, defending na-isaid. “I told them I was willingball on the Southern 30. donal champions, an 18-0 first-half'to go along,11a he passing attack bogged down lead. The Eskimos, with Jackie The move to build a war chest40-0 VictoryRAPID CITY w — South DakotaTech eked out a 20-19 victory over Black Hills Teachers college in a game marked by fumbles in the cold and snow flurries Wednesday afternoon.The win gave Tech possession of the Homestake Trophy exchangedmomentarily. After two incomple- Parker, Mississippi state graduate to have Warmath removed appar-tions. Thayer tossed a short pass directing the attack, came back|entl.v gained impetus over the to Whitman who picked up his in- with 11 points in the second half'weekend with the circulation of re-terference perfectly and went the but Winnipeg got another single; ports that the coach had hinted he last 20 yards on foot. Pal’s per- point late in the game to sew it nrrw a r.nntracfc settle-fect kick made the final score 28-7. up. “ ' acceptSl‘bstituted considerably Ploen. Winnipeg quarterback! Ir (t ls strictly a matter Of cash, in the final period. .two seasons ago, moved back to'nnp conrep said Warmath nrob-Scoring by quarters: 'that position from his halfback;^ wnSd be relSS to settleSOUTHERN 7 7 7 7-28 spot when Jim Van Pelt, former|^relv or a flat wo vears’ salWESLEYAN O o 0 7- 7 University of Michigan quarter, ^61/MADISON W — Passing of Ken Oldre played a big part in a 40-0 victory by General Beadle over Yankton college in a South Dakota intereoUeg i a t e conference game here Wednesday.Oldre threw three touchdownbetween the two South Dakota Intercollegiate conference riv a 1 s. Back Hflls won the trophy three years ago and the two teams tied the next two seasons.Tech scored first after an exchange of fumbles early in the game after they took over on the Yellow jackets 12 on a fumble. John Evans went over from the one yard line three plays later, Jim Koffman’s kick was no good.Black Hills tied it when fullback Gene Christensen went over from the 3, capping a 60-yard drive. Jerry Simmons’ kick was wide.The Yellowjackets scored twice in the second period. Carl Aisen-brey intercepted a Tech pass andAI:tlxaepasses and connected with RichSTAT,ST.CS suffered a shoulder separation lately ^First downs Yards rushing Yards passing Yards lost Net yardage gained Passes attempted Passes completed Intercepted by PuntsPunt yardage Punt average Fumbles lost Yards penalizedDWU SSTC in the season.91168258III11835451753*[25I122343!145115!3638'Z0520MacKay, F ranks)weep Into Finals0! Jap TourneyWarmath himself, however, has ; given no indication that he will [agree to sell the balance of hi*'contract,! Ike Armstrong. Minnesota athletic director, said he wasn’t aware of any organized campaign to buy Warmath’s contract. Ann-strong. too, has been the object of various ouster drives the past couple of years.Anderson for a point after touchdown.The win gave the Trojans a 6-2-1 season mark in the conference, Yankton college plays its final game Saturday against South Da-went 45 yards to score. Simmons’try for the extra point failed after a bad pass from center.Black Hills then intercepted a Tech fumble on the Yellowjacket 41 and seven plays later Jerry’ Simmons went the last 12 yards tokota Tech. Oldre connected* with score. Simmons' kick was good, Ron Marsh for a 44- yard touch- Tecb ran fe® kickoff back toTOKYO (AP) — America’s dou-; Lester Malkerson, a member ofdown play in the first quarter and followed it iater in the same period with a 10 - yard pass play to Arlo Sorheim.Jerry Manthey broke loose for a 46 • yard run in the second quartertheir own 30. On the next play, Evans broke loose' for a 70-yard scoring run. Koffman’s kick wasj good to make it 19-13 at the half. The winning touchdpwn camewith ten minutes left in the thirdlt;semifinal rounds of the doubles athletic regime, said re was sure! After a scoreless third period,Minnoannlie iTatch to thc. Japan's National;the school would have no objee-!Oldre connected with Manthey forI*£lXiiaC7uiJUijLd MiJtVt ;Tennis Championship loday. ; tion if Warmath decided to accept1 a so . yard touchdown play. Thetn eivp th* Troians a 9A-n luari iperiod. Reece Palmer capped a 63-Later Ui £e SuM, ciiSuijJfc ‘•gfjintercepted a Yankton pass on!10 tle h f iGreyhounds 27 yard line and ran,* *,“* Xdurlne]the game and lost all six, while;Black Hills recovered one of its26-four fumbles./i/vi t nAATin iff
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Mitchell Daily Republic

Mitchell, South Dakota, US

Thu, Nov 12, 1959

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