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2-4-1969
Winona Daily News
Winona Daily News
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Plane s Crew Talks Youth Nixon Hopes to Improve Out of Hiiack MIAMI (AP) — A knife-wield- me he was worried about the ing Cuban hijacked a jet airlin- draft." (AP) Withmay coupled with a Chinese proposalRed RelationsWASHINGTON chance the Peking regime relations with Communist er with 93 persons to Bis native - De- ChinaChi- sibly other countries* The four persons who left the island Monday. But the passen- spite the hard line he laid down be shifting its policy from a which, some officials here con- na. He Immediately declared In ljihe Warsaw meeting, tbera gers and crew of a second huge hijacked Eastern Airlines plane on Red China policy last week, high degree of isolation to a sidered hopeful that the two opposition to admitting—the' fore, "U.S. Ambassador Walter jet were spared a similar detour in Cuba were "dressed well President Nixon plans to start a more flexible position. countries make an agreement country to the United Nations Stoessel Jr. probably will be au- enough," pilot Capt, Jack Moore when their pilot decided a long- ( new diplomatic probe later this The very limited hope held by "on the five principles for under present circumstances. thorized to suggest aan lowering of haired youth lackec. the nerve to of Miami said. month into the possibility of im- some experts is based on the peaceful coexistence." He also said he saw no prospect travel barriers^nd easing of carry out his skyjack threat. Capt. Moore said the passen- proving U.S.-Peking relations. fact that Communist China it- The principles include respect of any change in U.S. policy limitations on/other means of The youth, Michael Peparo, ger list carried the names of the Nixon is considering propos- self proposed last November for territorial integrity, non- "until some changes occur on communication. 18, of Cold Spring, N.Y,, and a quartet, two men and two wom- PILOT . . . Pilot Harry ing to the Chinese regime that that the next round of diplomat- aggression, noninterference, their side." The Nixon administration's girl companion, Tamsin Fitzger- en, as "J. Babin, W. Hernandez, L. Davis talked to' reporters as a first step the two countries ic talks with the United States equality and living together in basic poficy in this situation i_ ald, 18, of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Mrs. W. Hernandez and Miss in Newark, N J., airport relax travel and communica- should be held Feb. 20—a month peace:. The United States and Despite this public posture, said to be one of readiness for . China, were arrested when National Hernandez." He said the men Monday night after he had : tions barrievs somewhat. Eas- after the Nixon administration have held unofficial meet- the President and his advisers "friendly relations," with any Airlines New York-to-Miami were Cubans "about 40, one ing of the U.S. embargo on took office. ings for several years in War- are reported actively interested country willing to reciprocate. about six feet tall with receding talked a youth aboard his trade wilh the Chinesemainland The date, which the State De- saw, Poland. in finding out whether the flight landed here. Both were National Airlines plane out are far more charged with air hair. The other a little shorter, might follow eventually. partment accepted by agree- Pre sident Nixon was asked at Chinese may in fact be at a But the issues piracy and kid- (AP complicated than that. The naping and held without bond. maybe five feet ten and ap- of an attempted hijack. Some State departm ent offi- ment with President-elect Nix- his news conference a week ago point of exploring new relations proaching the chubby side. " Photofax ) cials believe there is an outside on's advisers at the tim e, was about his "plans" for improving with the United States and pos- United States has itself been an Airline officials said Peparo issue of bitter controversy be- was carrying a knife and a can tween Red China and the Soviet of mosquito repellent when he Union, and any move Washing- forced his way into the cockpit ton makes is bound to be re- of the flight carrying 73 persons. garded suspiciously in Moscow Sirhan to Take urit • Sec y Council Again =¦*• Capt. Harry Davis, the pilot, is well as Peking. said Peparo told him he was eli- Thus at a time when Nixon gible for the draft in about six liopes to get active and success- months and didn't want to go Witness Stand ful cooperation with Moscow in into the army. Peparo said he Discusses Middle East making peace in the Middle preferred a simple life of hard (AP) East and in limiting deployment work, in Cvba^ft necessary, WASHINGTON — An- with the explosive Mideast situ- ure trip, Press Secretary Ron- other meeting of the National ation,, he found room today in ald L. Ziegler said. of nuclear missiles, lie is not Davis said. For First Time likely to go out of his way to up- Security Council—fifth since his crowded schedule for a mo- Going along for "some foreign The flight engineer, Harry L. LOS ANG-ELES (AP ) - The President Nixon took office- rale-boosting- tri p to another set the Soviets by maMng over- . Hendrickson, said Peparo gave policy meetings": will be Dr. tures to Red China. defense arranged to call Sirhan kept the administration spot- Cabimet department—this time Henry A. Kissinger way to tears several times while Bishara Sirhan , the Presi- Yet there are pressures on the to the witness light on Middle East tensions to- labor . dent's special assistant for na- talking with the crew. Davis stand for the first time today— ¦ ' President from Congress to at told officers he day. — Nixrori planned similar trips tional security affairs , "doubted the to talk -about his family 's low in- The meetings Of top intelli- the rest of the week to the Post least explore the possibility of boy had the nerve" to carry out come but not the murder Nixon took up probl ems of the opening up contracts with main- •: his threat. of Sen. gence, diplomatic and military Office and Commerce depart- Robert F. Kennedy for which he city at a meeting ot his urban land China after 20 years ol He said the crew convinced aides assumed an added dimen- ments, plus a meeting with Re- is on trial. sion with confirmation Monday publican congressional leaders affairs council Monday. Then he near total separation. Peparo they would need more spent an hour and <_0 minutes fuel to make the tri Defense attorney Grant B. that Nixon was thinking of an Wednesday, another news Throughout this time the cen- p to Havana ^ visiting at the Housing and Ur- and he agreed to land in Miami. Cooper wants to quash the mur- early spring visit to Western conference Thursday to be tele- tral dispute between Washing- der indictment Europe. cast live from the White House, ban Development and Agricul- After they were on the ground brough t against ture departments. ton and Peking has been over Peparo agreed to gh-e up the the 24-year-old Jordanian on Although the Arab-Isra eli con- and a. Cabinet meeting Friday. the Chinese Nationalist Govern- plan entirely, Davis said. grounds the grand jury's mem- flict, got top billing at today's The White House also an- Nixon stressed to top officials ment of President Chiang Kai- Peparo wore a mustache, bers were highly educ ated with session, other areas of foreign nounced Monday the President in both agencies^that the suc- shek on the island of Formosa. shoulder-length hair, blue jeans, above-average income and policy, including perhaps dis- plans this weekend to make his cess of the administration de- The United States has pro- desert boots and a pullover: didn't represent a cross-section cussion of the proposed trip first trip to his Key Biscayne, pends on their leadership and on posed that the main land sweater. Miss Fitzgerald wore of population. abroad and relations with Red Fla., vacation spot since he the "competence acid dedica- Chinese renounce the use of boots and a flowered dress and Sirhan's tiny, grey-haired China, were on the agenda. moved into the White House. tion" of the thousands of career force in seeking settlement of carried a flute in a small black mother, Mary, 55, also was Despite Nixon's preoccupation But 5t won't be entirely a pleas- government employes. the issue. ;. case. ' . called to testify about the fami- In Poughkeepsie, the girl's ly's economic conditions. Sirhan mother told newsmen her was jobless when arrested. His WEATHER daughter "went to New York mother works as a housekeeper. . FEDERAL FORECAST with her friend Mickey on the 8 The defense subpoenaed all Michigan State o'clock train this morning. She 133 of the county's Superior WINONA AND VICINITY - said she was going to take a Court judges to explain how Fair ' to partly cloudy tonight flute lesson and then do some they pick grand jurors. errands. I sort of thought she Three and Wednesday with warming testified in person, saying it was was putting me on but...." trend continuing. Low tonight ¦¦www ww atw«.--- .»MM»wwwwwMMK^swww«g«wwo^^ isasmfixtXmrwiamiGat-:¦:.:.•¦•:. -. :.vv) difficult to find low-imcome ju- President Heads _38. Mrs. John Fitzgerald said her rors because of the hardship in 0-8; high Wednesday 30- Gut- CANDID VIEW' OF MR. CANDID .. , Mr. Candid Cam- look Thursday: Temperatures daughter and Mickey had been era, ftllen S-iint, ties his tie while dealing U.S. Customs leaving work. seeing each other "fox about six above normal. Monday at the Miami International Airport. Mr. Fnnt and After the defense motion Is months. Mickey lost his 2S (stu- disposed of by Superior Court LOCAL WEATHER his faniily were passengers on the hijacked Eastern Airlines Foreign Aid dent) deferment when the terra Judge Herbert V. Walker, a Official observations for the ended in January—he was at- plane that was flown to Havana, Cuba. The passengers were jury of eight men and four wom- 24 hours ending at 12 m. today: WASHINGTON (AP) - The Gov. G. Mennen Williams was tending Dutchess Community returned to Miami by a charter flight late Monday night. en, already seated to hear the Maximum, 22; minimum, -14; Nixon administration has picked reportedly to take his place- College here—and Tamsin told (AP Photofax) trial. noon, 22; precipitation, none. John A. Hannah, president of could delay a "fulltime role in the federal government" until Michigan State University and spring or later. architect of its pioneer adven- Administration sources in tures in helping underdeveloped Washington confirmed Hannah's 2 Arab Boys countries, to guide the nation's selection after announcement of embattled foreign aid program. two other high level appoint- Peace Ta lks: Tqn gl^Sp Hannah, staunch Republican lH ments. EDUCATION CHIEF . . . and long-time friend of Presi- By WILLIAM L. RYAN end to the U.S. aggression." Ja-mes E. Allen talks with dent Nixon, was expected to Dr. Jamesl!.. Allen Jr., New Special Correspondent Thus South Vietnam in effect demands Killed by White York State commissioner of Ed- that its adversar- newsmen outside the submit his resignation to the " PARIS (AP) — The latest exposition of South Vietnam's ies concede in " advance that they are aggressors, and North House Monday after Presi- DemocraJ[e«controlled MSU ucation for the past 13 years, i- was named to the dual jobs of case by Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky illustrates just how % Vietnam and the Viet Cong in effect demand that the Ameri- dent Nixon named him to board-tJT regents tonight. tangled the issues and far apart the sides are in the Vietnam cans concede in advance ,they are the aggressors. U.S. commissioner off education Hand Grenade be commissioner of educa- But he indicated in a state- and assistant secretary of peace talks. This does not prevent Americans here from expressing tion. He presently holds that As the four delegations prepare for another session Thurs- confidence that in the ment released in Detroit Mon- health, education and welfare. long pull something positive will re- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS po st with New York State. day, the prediction , generally, is that the road ahead is long, sult from the talks. But day night that problems of Rita Hauser, 34-year-old law- the operative word is "long." Two Arab boys were killed (A_P ) tough and strewn with obstacles which at this time seem Ky said his government has made concessions and is will- Photofax succession—former Michigan yer, linguist and striking beau- insurmountable. Each side, says the next move is up to the ing to make more. He did not spell out just what the con- and 10 other persons were ty, was named to the U.S. dele- other. Neither shows an inclination to move away from stated cessions have been or might be. wounded Monday by a hand gre- gation to the United Nations ¦ ... . . - positions. - But Xy rejected any notion that political matters can be nade thrown at an Israeli mili- FULBRIGHT: with rank of ambassador. Ky said in an impromptu news conference Monday that discussed in Paris, at least until military matters aie dealt tary vehicle a few minutes after Mrs. Hauser, cochairman of the first thing that must be discussed is, "How to end the with. And Hanoi NLF insist New Yorkers for Nixon during and the that military and political Israeli Defense Minister Moshe war of aggression by communist North Vietnam against South matters must be dealt with as a whole, simultaneously, with the campaign, will be the U.S. Vietnam ." emphasis on the political. This involves the demand that the Dayan drove past on a. tour of representative to tfiie Human The North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong's National Lib- NLF be lecognized as the decisive factor i_) the South''s politi- Gaza, the Israeli army report- Must Make Rights Commission and Eco- Nixon nomic and Social Council. eration Front say the first order of business must be, "An . cal future. . . ed . Selection of the 66-year-old The Arab refugee center has Hannah to head the Agency for Vodk a — Tha t' s It been the scene of several bitter Case fdr Treaty International Development , puts confrontations between Arabs a tough , n o-nonsense business- Russia claims to have a tration officials have told him and the Israeli occupying force W ASHINGTON Ml - Sen. man-educator in chafge of an , new tranquilizer that re- Fulbright says the Nixon they hope President Nixon will Report 1 500 to 3, J. W. 000 agency whose basic mission during the past two weeks. Day- lieves sadness, timidity and administration will have to decide this week -whether he faces almost certain change. tensions. Arnold Glasow an and several of his top mili- make its own case if it expects wants action on the treaty now . Increasingly disgruntled Con- thought they always had tary officials were making an the Senate to approve the nu- . However, administration gresses have slashed away at that one, called vodika .... unannounced tour of the area. clcitr nonprollferation treaty. sources indicated prior to the in- the 22-year-old program so N. Viets Inside DMZ The only hand - me - down In Cairo today the semiofficial "Uf Ihe administration wants terview with Fulbright that Nix- much in recent years that Presi- SAIGON (AP) - U.S. intelli- supplies through the zone into Cambodian border. The troops item chi ldren appreciate is newspaper Ai Ahrnm reported this treaty, it will have to make on hnd decided to recommend dent Lyndon B. Johnson asked gence reports say there arc Laos and then down the Ho Chi said they encountered no resist- money It's obvious, that Yasser Arafat , official -its -own case lor it ," Fulbright , this week that the Senate pro- only $2.7 billion for it in his final from 1,500 to 3,000 North Viet- Minh Trail to support North ance during the operation but says the cynic , that girls spokesman for the Al Fatah the Arkansas Democrat who ceed toward early approval of budget. namese troops inside thc demili- Vietnamese and Viet Cong found numerous enemy fortifi- are attracted by simple guerrilla organization has been hcnids the Senate Foreign Rela- the treaty. The Foreign Relations com- tarized Zone betwcom North and troops fighting in South Viet- cations which had been things, like boys We elected chief of the Palestine tion s Committee said. South Vietnam it was learned nam. hear tha t a Las Vegas wed- "Ut won't he enough just to mittee approved the treaty dur- smashed, apparently by air or Liberation Organization. ing the last Congress, hut it wns today. U.S. headquarters announced artillery strikes. ding chapel has a sign Arafat succeei. . lawyc Yahia say thnt President Johnson and Fire Damages an Army UH1 helicopter was reading "Are You Fit to Be Secretary of State (Dean) Rusk not called up for a floor vote. The U.S. Command would not South Vietnamese spokesmen Hammouda as head of the coali- The delay wa.s caused in large comment on enemy strength in shot down Sunday while on an Tied?" tion of Palestinian organiza- Tnacle the case. assault mission in the Mekong said tho area was hit last weke- measure by Nixon 's reluctance thc six-mile-wide strip that end by U.S. B52 bombers. An tions. He vowed to escalate ""Wc will wnnt the new ndmin- to see it ratified when the mem- Hayfield School stretches 40 miles across Viet- Delta 70 miles south of Saigon. guerrilla activities against Is- Tjie American military spokesman istr ation to make known its atti- ory of the Soviet Union 's inva- HAYFIELD, Minn . (AP) - nam. But it wns learned from aircraft was destroyed, but rael until they become "an all- there were ho casudltics It was said several waves of B52s at- £ahLWUAotL tude toward Ihe treaty," .said sion of Czechoslovaki a wns Fire struck the ..ayfield Ele- other reliable sources that Intel- . troop out liberation war en compass- who supports the fresh. Nixon said during his the 2,340th American helicopter tacked North Vietnamese Fill bright , mentary School today, halting ligence places three to six North concentrations in the area Jan. (For more laughs see ing the whole of our occupied pac t. campaign he was concerned Vietnamese battnli-ons of 500 lost in the war. classes for 400 pup ils who had 17 and again Jan. 2(1. Earl Wilson on Pn;ge 4A) Palestinian homeland." Fulbright said high adminis- about some of its provisions , numerous snow vacations dur- men each in the zone, most of Spokesmen for the Saigon them in the northern half. ing January. government said South Viet- Hayfield and Bloomingto President Nixon snid at Ids namese infantrynien have found Prairie firemen [ou^lit con- first news conference last week the bodies of 200 North Viet- trol the blaze. About two hours that one of the top American namese soldiers in an area of Just Why Does Anyone Want to Live Here? afler thc fire was discovered at the Central Highlands where priorities at the ff-aris peace MINNEAPOLIS Wl - The anybody would want to live terms of unwilling shut-ins, " bearing the brunt" of tl . i.s nielli a week's work by V a.m., flumes were shooting out talks would be restoration of the U.S. B52 bombers struck three Texan landed In Minnesota up here?" blocked roads, closed smow treasure, but distress hundreds of men and equip, of the roof of the two-story zone to the demilitarized status times in recent weeks. c alls point to the sou'.h- ment , building . A brief report said most of the 25 These are fighting wordsr and short tempers, prescribed in tho 3954 Geneva one night when it was western part of the state , In one southwestern coun- The lire was discovered be- agreement. But Ihe communist bodies were decomposed and below zero and the snow- to skiers, snowmobile buffs, Up north in the pine for- a region of small cities ami ty .section, kid.s •? went to fore faculty and pupils were clad In the green uniforms arrived. side at the conference has re- banks along the runways Chamber of Commerce sec- est country, where heavy farms, as being particu lar- school only four off li) sched- Firemen and volunteers cur- fused to discuss this , saying it is of North Vietnamese regulars, were high enough to hide retaries , and the tourists snow Is more of a way of ly hard hit, uled days in January. but there was no indication, ried school records , books and a U.S, trick to perpetuate Amer- a plane. who swarm Minnesota 's 10,- life, the year's total has al- In Murray County, which A g r o u p of National ol her equipment from the build- ican forces in Vietnam. when thc soldiers were killed. During his brief visit , It 000 lak-cs in the summer- ready topped 100 inches. Is one -of tlie hardest-hit , Guardsmen were 2-1 hours The U.S. Command said it late reporting for arctic ing as firemen fought tho Sources said that Gen. Creigh- got warm enough for tho time. In tbe twin cilici of Min- a. .snowmobile-plane rescue flames was checking Into the report. 54 been formed , training maneuvers . Snow- . Th<> fire , discovered hy ton W. Abrnms, commander ol snow to turn to sleet. Then Hut this winter , they're neapolis and St. Paul , limit has a janitor docs not Tho bodies were found by a , inches through January Farmers nre advised hy ra- bound along the way. , .apparentl y started In U.S. forces In Vietnam , it turned cold and began harder to answer Snow the boiler room. consider the enemy troops in- battalion of tho 42nd South Viet- snowing again. has gra bbed (lie entire ..late was a new record, and most (flio how to make distress In one town , a winter serious threat at namese regiment sweeping the "Tell me, he nsked as of Minnesot a in a sustained of it is stilf around , signs in the snow. festival called "Operation Hayfield Is in southwestern side the zone a " Dodge Counly, abuut 20 miles point, But the North Viet- jungles 25 miles west of Pleiku he headed back South , "can hnimperlock that .nay well It's i dangerous to speak But the wind pushing the Snowflake " was postponed, this .r .ei-s.s of siiowflakes north ol Austin , Minn. namese have been moving war city and about 15 miles from the you think of ono reason be without prec edent in of any piece of Minnesota (ilecp snow van undo in one I' . serious trouble. He has iio snow mobiles, no one Is really Isolated traU_/. Bu.. nu»_>i 'i scoop for his to for any extend ed period any- ^ors have been quick tend more in the snow bfelt . Still, with THE SCENERY: A MON OTONOUS WHITE hun theirs. ¦ ¦ . . I.— i- i , ... i i .1 i— . -—. i i — .... ¦ — ¦¦ ! ¦'¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ -¦' ¦ ¦ ¦ - m i , :— no telephone and with a half- the neigh- On one occasion , dig out " bors v/ho live three-fourths of a mile of lane to and no mile across the fields, from his assurance the county and town- farr brought their own tractors ship plows will have a path open and dug him out. They are the the rest of the -way to the high- Nice Place to Visit? You Must Be Kidding way, Sankey has problems and Eggink brothers, Leonard, Tony By LEW HUDSON extending for rnilcs across the covered with 30 inches of drifted was off to California for three more milking at one time in the managed to get out to pick up and Joe. worries. Lack of communication ; is his prime concern. Wortliington Globe valley below. This winler, how I sno\.. , \ weeks. "I should have stayed," third week of January. Then, some fuel, eggs and the mail. Sankey was making a deter ever, it extends only as far as ; With two months of winter i Sankey said, ''only the weather the milk tanker managed to get Since then, everything has been mined effort to escape Satuday. "If someone gets sick or LAKE WILSON , Minn. (AP ) - the first massive snowdrift j left , Sankey is pretty disgusted, was lousy there too." in to drain them. closed. The egg supply was running *ow hurt," he said , "I just don't It's a nice place to visit, but which has lock ed in the family. ! and he hasn't been marooned As if they didn 't have enough Each time Sankey digs out, as was oUgar and several other have any way to get help. I you wouldn 't want to live there. Part of the time he was gone, nearly as long as many farmer. I a neighbor boy, Jake Stoel, trouble, th e elder Sankey and the snow banks along his half- staples. It was doubtful he could guess we're on our own." At least, not this time of year. Sankey 's honi c is two miles in the region, ' his wife had one period of nine mile long lane gets just that make it since the wind was ris- guess we're on our own." Les Sankey's Buffalo Ridge | milked Sar.key s 1° cows and from : the nearest highway, one Sankey, his wife Loreen , and did the chores. Mos t of the hours when the electricity was much higher and the next tirte ing and drifts filling as rapidly j 'F or Sankey and others like farm is one of the most scenic mile from^Jic- nearest county their 2-year-old daughter Bren- out. Repair crews came in by the snow drifts in it is just that as they could be cut. him, it's going to be a very long in all of southwestern Minnesota time, he had to come in and out j road , and one-half mile from the da , first felt the lash of winter on horseback. snowmobile and fixed things. much deeper and harder to re- With the development of snow- 1 winter. but for Sankey and his family, closest public Toad of any sort. | Dec. 22 when the first heavy The younger Sankey returned move. the scenery is getting just plain He has no telep hone , although ' snow came. They managed to On Jan. 14 , Sankey' s father, home Jan. 25. To get to the monotonous , . he!.has ' been trying with no suc- get out three days later only to John Sankey of Edgerton, ar- house, it was necessary to use Last Saturday, Sankey spent The f armstead is located near cess to convince the phone com- | have the roads drift shut rived to relieve Stoel. They got a tractor with a snow sQOop on all morning working with a trac- the summit of Buffalo Ridge, pany it should string a wire out j Christmas night. It was New in with the help of neighbors the front to chop through the tor and hydrate scoop and the highest point of land in the his way. The closest telephone Year's Day before they man- but were unable to get out. drifts. couldn't clear more than two- NERVE DEAFNESS southwestern region- of the is two miles by road or three- aged to get out again j The bulk milk storage tanks Two days later the feed thirds of the driveway. By noon, winds were up to 30 miles an state. In the summer the view fourths of a mile if you cut During this calm spell they j can hold eight days' supply and truck managed to get in and ,,,4r.om his front door is superb, across fields Which now are decided to take a vacation. It I there was just room for one two days after that, Sankey hour and the show was coming back faster than he could dig it out. Using a ski plane, a newsman dropped in on the family and found them comfortable , though Consumer' Credit Bill' Given Hearing weary of winter. Sanlcey's par- ents were still with him , snow- you now. Hv_ry hejrlnj teu Is ST. PAUL (AP -A 154-page servative who's chairman of the Kirchner said it the frui- to air their views. And the , different. We hav» » hearing aid _ __r was With that Braucher made a bound. ' t0mCorrw» lnIn Phfwr_i,0 ¦ VlrltmWrrt bill to revamp Minnesota's con- Commerce Committee; indicat- tion of three to four years re- chairman was slightly agitated to help every correetlble k)^ See * V" "* five-minute delivery on what he "As soon as we can," the el- If the HlrMle Ber will help you. j——•-•?———...—* *~.~~, sumer credit codes received its ed he thought the bill had been search on the national level and that Braucher 's testimony ap- considered merits of the bill, der Sankey said, "we're heading • tea • , , , . , JOHNSRUD initial committee hearing Mon: amply discussed in subcommit- termed the code not so much a parently would be c* .nulative to stressing that it contained bal- j HEARING | for Arizona. " He's a retired MODEL OF NEW : AID CENTER day, with the bill's chief spon - tee. statutory measure as a philoso- what had already been said at ance for consumer and lenders ! farmer. MI NIATURE HEARING Sen. C. R. Hansen i 329 Main St. 5 sor delivering a lengthy ex- , Austin Lib- phy of good consumer credit subcommittee hearings. alike. ¦ ' ¦ ' planation , eral, then hint-ed he would sub- practice. . But Leiseth promptly passed, Then he: told "We listen to the radio and AID GIVEN . :;!• . La Crosse, Wis. i the committee A most unique free watch a lot of TV," Mrs. Sankey offer of ip»- ! ¦ ¦ J Sen. William Kirchner , Rich- mit a bill whi ch also confornrfs After his engthy presentation , explaining the professor was and particularly the chairman, cial Interert. to thoje who hMr but ¦ ¦ ¦ - ' ! ¦— J¦ field Conservative spoke for to proposals adopted by the the senator started to introduce due shortly for a university "I apologize for being so long- said. They particularly pay at- do not undereland worte, hai lust J uiur tention to the weather broad- been announced by Motorola Dahl- ¦ S some 35 to 40 minutes, reciting National Conference of Commis- Prof. Robert Braucher , Harvard class. And Davies likewise gave winded." berg. A true life non-operatlna I ¦ many of the points made in the sioners on Uniform State Laws. Law School teacher on leave to his time to the professor, telling Bergerud , impressed with casts. "They . sound like a model, actual »lze replica of the | ' '- ' " his smallest DBhlbero ever made, will ¦ ADDRESt » Among other : things , the the University of Minnesota. Bergerud, broken record," Sankey said. be given away free ¦ Uniform Consumer Credit Code "I don 't know Profes- brevity, advised him , "We fo onyone < ¦ drawn up by a national- con- Kirchner bill would require that But Bergerud protested that sor Braucher to be long-winded. might hire you out of Harvard On Buffalo Ridge, as they do- answering this advertisement. • ' .' . - ¦ ' ! Wear-test IT In the privacy o* your J —= rr..- -^- ference . It ' s the model for the lenders spell o? ut to. a borrower Kirchner 's co-sponsors of the I'm impressed that he's short- or Yale or wherever you are." elsewhere in the farm belt, own home ^.Itheut cost ar oblige- • CITY STATB •_ tion of any kind. Kirchner bill. esact terms of a .loan including bill , Sens. Robert Leiseth, De- winded." With that, he adjourned , the neighbors stick together , and ! j ^ ' "IT'S.YOUM.FgK TO KKBP* how much money . it would cost troit Lakes and John T. Davies, "I' m glad you're that im- session on the. . . hour, as help one another. Were it not L..... ^ ^ ....J Sen. AH Bergerud, Ed^na Con- in interest and fees. Minneapolis , deserved a chance pressed ," replied Bergerud. scheduled. for this, Sanky would be in Guard Dog Makes Minneapolis Man Certain Master Dies in Plane Crash SCOTT, Ark. (AP)— A 45- Gets Celebration year-old suburban Minneapolis businessman vvas one of four NEW YORK (AP) - ' Air persons killed Sunday when Forco Sgt. Thomas J. Caputo is their light plane crashed and celebrating his second wedding bnrned in a pecan grove near anniversary at his Bronx home this central Arkansas commun- ^^______H ___•. : __B ____R______r ' ^*- with his wife, Veronica, thanks is ." " ' ' ' " to Fritzie, his guard dog, who Lawrence Sc hultz , Minnetonka died in South Vietnam so bis was superinte ndent.- . ' of a con- master might live. ^ struction firm involved in Ar- Caputo, 21. with shrapnel kansas RRW development. wounds of both arms and his right leg, told Monday how he bunker, Fritzie caught the scent and Fritzie were on their last of intruders an d both hit the dirt mission together in a jungle as a flare went up and four ene- near Phan Sang. my soldiers opened fire. Caputo Fritzie had been reassiped to returned the ftre with a subma- e new handler when communist chine gun, a bullet striking one raiders attacked and the Air Red soldier w5io had explosives Force security unit was ordered strapped to his body. into action . Knowing the new Caputo fell bleeding and Frit- dog handler was still green, Ca- zie shielded his master, taking puto said, he volunteered. slugs which killed the 100-pound As dog and man passed a dog. ¦ ¦ v ^Br ' f ^kaw *m m\mmr* - ' . .^¦^¦» B ^mikw^m ^^^^^^^^^^ ^» ^^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ^^ ¦ mmm ¦ NOTICE! MEDICAL ASSISTANCE ^^^H^^^B ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ' ' X^ - - - * ^""^ - B ¦ ______¦ • . . mm _«¦__.mms ' __n__r - mrwmm.«__ i______> ¦ ______; "¦ ¦ ¦ CLIENTS ARE WELCOME HERE - - - ' * ' BH - Wm mW^ mm &. m Intr J
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Republicans North Central Plan Detailed Elect McCauley Proposals for changes in air- a combined station at La Crosse passengers boarded North Cen- require North Central to pro- line service for the city were airport. . --<-— tral propeller-driven planes at vide service, according to the heard but not actSd upon by the certificate's terms, he said. City Council Monday night. IN ADDITION, said Del Winona while 73 persons from As Chairman The council heard representa- Drumm, airlines public rela- the Winona station area board- DRUMM TOLD the council tions manager M. J. McCauley, a physics in- tives of North Central Airlines , North Central ed at La Crosse. From Jan. 1 to North Central would cooperate structor at Winona suggest that Winona be elimi- would help the city find and 15, 1969, -99 passengers boarded with a third-level carrier on a State Col- maintain an air commuter lege, was elected Winona Coun- nated as a North Central sta- at Winona and 55 Winona area non-contractual basis. It would ty Republican County tion and that it be served by service with direct connections residents boarded at La Crosse, guarantee the same group and chairman to such points for a two-year term Monday according to Harty's charts. family fares provided on its night. as the Twin r-——— For the past two years, the own equipment but would not Cities, M . i 1- | CifV Winona station has averaged sign a formal agreement with Other officers elected : Mrs. Did Schedule waukee and! v Donald Hittner, about 13 boardings per day, the local carrier because it then chairwoman; Chicago. Us- ff_.,_ •! Harty said. According to his Frank Utecht, vice chairman; L,OlinCII would be forced by union agree- ing smaller ^ figures, the airline actually ments to pay trunk airline Mrs. Ray J. Brooks, vice chair- planes, such woman; Change Spur needs 66 per day to get over scales to pilots, he said, EH$worth Simon, rural a third-level service could the break-even point. vice chairman; Mrs. Dale J. continue to use Max Conrad Drumm advised the council The resultant deficits are to search actively for a local- Hawk, St. Charles, rural vice Field and provide frequent, con- made up by federal airline sub- chairwoman; Mrs. R. F. For- Load Drop? venient connections with region- service carrier and to invite ap- Scarcely mentioned at Mon- sidies. If Winona is eliminated plicants to demonstrate sythe, secretary; Robert Shoup, al destinations, said Drumm. as a North Central stop, their day night's discussion of air an an- equipment to officials here be- treasurer, and Harold Doerer, Such an arrangement would nual subsidy of about $90,000 additional representative state service . proposals was the fact adequately meet the city's to- fore deciding on which to au- that substantial schedule would be eliminated, Hartytold central committee. tal air transportation need, the council. thorize. He also told the coun changes were made Oct. 27, Drumm said, since long-dis- cil North Central would consid- ABOUT 135 — 74 of whom 1968, by North Central Airlines THE AIRLINE therefore will er limousine service from Wi- at its Winona station. tance jet service would be pro- were seated as delegates — at- vided by North Central at the ask for CAB authority to com- nona to the La Crosse airport. tended. A 9:40 p.m. flight to the Twin bine the Winona station with La REPUBLICANS LISTEN . . . Three prin- left, Attorney General Douglas Head; Mrs. Cities was discontinued combined La Crosse-Winona sta- Councilman Gaylord Fox ask- Robert Olson was appointed , as was tion. He Crosse and set up more flights cipals at the Winona County Republican Donald Hittner, chairwoman, and Robert an 8:40 a.m. flight to Chicago. said the company cur- ed whether North Central would temporary chairman by retir- rently is applying for new di- there, Harty said. The airline ing chairman convention listen to a delegate speak. From Shoup, chairman* (Daily News photo) Instead, an evening flight from consider improving its present Shoup and was rect routes to several major would remain certified to serve service if no commuter airline later endorsed by the delegates Chicago now terminates here at 11:45 p.m. and the same eastern seaboard cities. Winona through La Crosse, ac- was chosen. Drumm replied as permanent convention chair- After regional airline station cording to this plan. man. Shoup gave a plane departs for Chicago at that it would not be feasible to brief "State 5:10 a.m. Departure time for consolidation hearings in 1964, Councilman Dan Trainor ask- take additional planes of the County out of " message, re- the evening flight to Chicago Winona was allowed by the Civ- ed whether replacing present paying metropolitan markets to minding delegates that although was changed from 5:30 to 6; 40 il Aeronautics Board to retain service with a third-level car- suppl the county GOP Grime Growing Fast, y addiional flights here. had lost the p.m. an independent station, recalled rier would have negative ef , two races for legislative seats Following is a list of board- Jon Karty, assistant vice pres- fects on the city's effort to at- DRUMM pointed to an ar- by narrow margins, that the ings for each month of 1968, ident for traffic and sales. The tract industrial prospects. rangement at Mankato as an seats plus an additional Senate showing a sharp drop beginning CAB reserved the option of re- Drumm replied that such car- example of what can be done. eeat would be up for election in Attorney General Says in November when the new examining the matter once bet- riers operate under the same North Central has obtained per- 1970. formation of narcotics unit; 12 schedule became effective. The ter surface connections could standards of maintenance and mission from the CAB to dis- Shoup reminded Minnesota Attorney General a new state crime information district and system operated by computer new investigators to provide as- Civil Aeronautics Board stand- be made between Winona and safety as truck airlines. The continue service there; mean- state convention Douglas M. Head told some 135 ard for continued service is a delegates of Inn and tied in with the FBI in- sistance to local enforcement the La Crosse field, he said. combination of services usually while, a commuter line pro- the state GOP Republicans at Holiday minimum of 180 per month. convention in Ro- Monday night that major crime formation system. agencies; 80 additional highway works out to be superior to pre- vides three round trips daily to chester Sept. 19-20. The district January ...... 292 THIS improvement has now vious arrangements, he said. in the state has risen more Head also pointed to the new patrolmen and a $90 million occurred, with the opening of various points. As part of the convention date has not yet been the fifth criminal division in the attorney increase for the Department of February ...... 298 What financial obligation arrangement, North Central set. than 15 percent for March 2S4 a new Interstate 90 bridge, Har- year in a row. general's office and a new Corrections, mainly for rehabil- would Winona incur in such a would be required to resume its Mrs. Hittner, who succeeded April 241 ty noted, and its effects now are consolidation, wondered City He said crime was increasing school for county and city pros- itation. being seen in boardings at Wi- service to Mankato should the Mrs. George Garber as county May ...... 311 Manager Carroll J. Fry. He wmmuter line fail to provide 13 percent faster than the ecuters as steps forward in the He called for citizen action June ...... 360 nona and La Crosse. chairwoman in mid-term, told population growth and that fight against crime programs and community de- suggested th at Winona might the minimum of three flights of plans to institute July ...... 320 Passenger boardings at Wino- a precinct rural crime is up substantially velopment agencies to "get at na kept pace through 1967 but be better off if the. North Cen- daily, he explained. card system. . HEAD listed a number of August ...... 345 tral certificate were to lapse —17 percent in 1968. the causcis of crime." September ...... fell behind in 1968 when North , Mayor Norman E. Indall said items which he said the Le- 335 leaving the city free to look tor the council would act later on JERRY Papenfuss, chairman "Freedom has developed only October ...... 379 Central began operating jet MANY of the recommenda- Vander administration was ask- another major carrier. the proposal. He read a letter for .the $100 a plate dinner Feb. tions of the governor's com- ing the legislature for this ses- as law has been developed and November ...... 197 service at La Crosse, Harty re- enforced;" he said. ported. In December 1968, '210 There would be no financial from the Winona Area Indus- 14 in Minneapolis, called for mission on crime have been or sion. They include: A new po- December ...... 242 obligation imposed on Winona more ticket sales to , trial Development Association that affair will be presented to the legis- lice academy, organized and op- HE TOLD the Republicans Drumm replied . While the cer- urging the retention of air serv- and said that the money raised lature this year, he noted. erated along the lines of the tificate is in force Winona can this year they must stay "geared up" , ice here. will go into the 1970 Minnesota was cited as one of FBI Academy in Washington; for the elections of 1970 to hold campaign coffers. the few states with a manda- an expanded crime information their gains of 1966 and 1968 in Convention Sidelights Appointed by Shoup to chair tory police training program system; expanded police train- the state offices and to gaiin the various convention commit- which was passed by the last ing programs; a new division One familiar face missing decliried to inject any names, legislative superiority at the na- either DFL or GOP into the tees were: Mrs. Archie Gr. Lack- legislature. Also in operation is to fight "organized crime": tional level. from the podium at Monday , ore, credentials; William Mann night's GOP convention was that race for the IT.S. Senate which and Jerry Papenfuss Head pointed out that four is "up for grabs" in 1970. Head j Sears SAVE $50 , nomina- years ago the GOP was con- of John Breitlow, the "Mr. tions; William P. Theurer and did say that he believes Gov. I sidered a "dead duck" but that Chairman Mrs. Loren Torgerson, resolu- " of many previous LeVander will be a candidate ______Delegates Reject the party had enjoyed an Republican conclaves. John is for re-election "from all indi- «E S SSWK®S S_M tions, and S. A. "Jim" Sawyer, amazing resurgence since then ^ Sear*: Al I - rules. enrolled in graduate school at cations." and that it was highly important • -¦ •¦ V. ; that no letdown come at this the University of Minnesota. ^*^>§\ in-the Ear Aid time. One Resolution Loyal League of 'n TA I Hearing lt Important. Our Legislator Asks The 38-year-old attorney gen- In his brief speech accepting 1* it * \ _. _ J ¦ . Only one of 10 resolutions Imported agricultural products ',, ; ?1 / most popular model it com- eral listed some of the accomp- the county chairmanship for the la v-4«_J__i*#x ac Va be required to meet qualifica- Yiddish to Pa rty s^g7 j p t . , # weighs only of Grasshopper as introduced to the Winona Coun- lishments of the LeVander ad- next two years, M. J. McCauley tions set forth by the Pure ministration in its two years an ounce. FHs entirely In the ty GOP convention was reject- Food and Drug Act; discour- quoted extensively and exclu- NEW YORK (AP)-The Loy- Actual Size Nebraska Insect ed Monday night. since taking office. He cited the sively from the speeches and smaller than a penny '! Mr wlth na ex,ra eord* or agement of corporations from "tax problem al League of tbe Yiddish Sons of 1 _ farm oper- " as an example writings of Sen. Barry Gold- announced it will hold lighter than a dime lubes. Come to Sean dorin8 LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) Ne- The defeated resolution call- deliberately using- of "meeting a problem head-on Eria has I sa,a ave braska has a state fossil, a state ed for the amending of the ation losses to offset taxable water, the 1964 GOP presidential its' eighth annual St. Patrick's §mwrnm3^mmmsmm lhls and * ' state constitution to make the income from non-farming and taking the case to the peo- standard-bearer 15; rock, a state flower, a state ple." This proved to be the right . Day-Purim banquet March bird, a state tree and a state offices of state treasurer, audi- sources, and development of Tlie organization consists of Come in . . v for a FREE Hearing Test tor, secretary of state and at- programs to give farmers thing to do, he said, and was Douglas Head son. It also has a state* senator evidently responsible for some , Minnesota Jews born in Ireland, and is ... See Seat ' s New Line of Hearing Aids from Oma&a named George torney general appointive by greater control of distribution attorney general and keynote seeking a college girl as queen the governor. They are now of products they produce. of the gains made by Conserva- convention speaker Syas that says few people know tives in the legislature. , had of this year's festival. about them or could care less. elected. • That non-agricultural items nothing but praise for Lt. ¦ " But Syas introduced a meas- Resolutions passed by the in the U.S. Department of Ag- HE SAID the reorganized and Gov. James Goetz. In the Richard Broberg, Consultant ure in the legislature Monday, convention included: riculture budget be separated revitalized Department of Eco- 1966 convention fight for en- So rry Folks, You to be known as the "Bug Bill," • Lowering of the voting age from¦ agricultural items. nomic Development has beeii dorsement for the No. 2 slot Will be of Sears — Winona in Minnesota to 19. ¦ '•' That Governor LeVander Might Try Dogs led that would make the red-legged responsible for the 22 percent on the LeVander ticket, On Thursday, February 6th-— 1 to 5 grasshopper also known as e Repeal of legislation and be encouraged to implement state; Goetz had the votes ahd ) p.m. regulations establishing mini- his proposal for a study of the increase in tourism in the EUGENE, Ore. (AP —.If you "melanoplus femur-rubrom," (i.e. fair trade effect the decline of private He said that economic growth Head did not. Head was Le- have any thoughts of flying to Next Visit Will Be Thursday, February 13th the state insect. mum prices Vander's first choice as a laws) on Equor. schools will have on the state. is running higher than the na- Eugene, forget it. Syas said he Ijhfroduced the tional average as is income. running mate. mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmt Changing laws so that non- Reorganization of the leg- ' The airport will be closed un- bill as a protest against the fact • • Head concluded that every * ' • * til three feet of snow melt. partisan organizations could islature to meet current needs; AT SEARS nn ~ i rii that he thought the state was offer or give rides to voters annual sessions; reduction in single seat in the legislature Head declined to comment City officials gave up on CHOP getting into too much unimpor- on election day. number of members; realistic is vital to control the Congress whether he would be a candi- trying to clear the runways aft- AND SAVE OCaro | 57-59 E. Third St. ant legislation. because it is the state legisla- date for re-election but said er someone figured it would o Correct and clarify the compensation, additional cleri- gtKBS, ROEBUCK AND C
The court-martial deliberated " ' M one hour on tlie sentencing. ...+:••^'¦ZZi&i&f ^^^^^^i .^CT'' " < x ^^^3WPj*yiBnSCT "- - ^^^ Jl^f^mf^lf^^W^^^^.'' J$$ir Asked what she'll do after her Navy tour ends, she said , "I'm u M f'^'^yr^y-!^! ^^^^^^^m^^^l^st4^^^^ ^Lt^*- **'"!^i£_ij2^ Jk going to become a civilian V______l_l\ T) i^i^^^^^l^______i_i__i______.^^^il^______l_^_i__i_i£ -^' xffi!!]M&£ffltfMWnBaa\\\ j$r INCOMBOTHE TAX + J MEASURE UP nurse." FEDERAL £ ¦ HH tj Ut BLOCK help *ou chop It JJ A Stanford University gradu- H down to tlzel We'll pur our- AND ^ ate, she is married to a Stanford ¦ ¦ your jboei—and do fl ^^ te\vci in STATE *^e^^^_____ Medical student. B your tax return a« II It ware ¦ ¦ H our «wn. Our lerv-ic* k quick , ¦¦ UffllflUM I ^1 I I ' convenient and Inexpensive, 4 |^T ^ WkW ^a^W Archbishop of Cologne ui for H Try UJUU ^H __F(JP Resignation Accepted ¦ ¦¦¦-¦- - OUARANTEB v. i w u,. M , ¦ ¦ . i 1 r j (AP) H Via fluaran.i - .accurate preparation of eviry tax return, If COLOGNE , Germany - H we make any arron that co»t you any penalty or Interest, Pope Paul VI Monday accepted I I we will pay the penally or Intersil. _-__ thc resignation of Joseph Cardi- nal Frings, archbishop of Co- logne, who becomes 112 years old ^ ^ «¦« 0 this Thursday and i.s nearly J [Btl/DC^lI^ - blind despite operations to Service wifh Ovor 3000 Offkei The place youVe got to go to see whate going on-your Ford Dealer! Save at his Pop-Option Sale! I I Amorica't L»roe-»» Tax remove cata racts. The archbishop's office said tlint the cardinal's resignation I [ 161 EAST THIRD ST. | becomes effective Feb. 2,1 and his successor will be Bishop Jo- OWL MOTOR COMPANY Sun. t e.m. le 3 p.m. Til. I J0I7 Winona, Minn. E Weekdeyi f ».m. le 1 p.m. - Set. * sef Hoeffner, named by Pope 4th & Johnion _!______¦__ Wmmmtamm NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY _ Paul as coadjutor ln December. iiWSBBm mmM •^^ ¦tv Ms^^^MW'^xyw ''' ^ATT^'x'^^P mT Kujak-Spittler '-^^^i X^j^^^ut ^twt ^^ mlM 'yii 7 X ' 7f7 n '"1'^^ ' ^^'^muo M ^^^i ^rt^ a g« Nuptials Read At Pine Creek TREMPEALEAU , Wis. (Spe- l _ CICIIY MOWNSTONl cial ) — Miss Mary Kujak , At taai .Wtar daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jo- Baking brisket of beef with a seph Kujak , Trempealeau , and barbecue sauce may be as new Roger Spittler , son of Mr. and Page 8 Tuesday, February 4. 3969 -M to you as it was to us. But now Mrs. Jay Spittler, Trempea- that we've tried this dish, the leau , exchanged mar- recipe has won a place among riage vows Jan. 25 at Sacred our favorite beef brisket re- Heart Catholfc Church, Pine cipes. Creek , with the Rev. Augustine Advertisement J Stilik officiating. We chose straight-cut beef ^Organists ' were Mrs. Edwin brisket for this recipe, and it's a Grant, Winon*, and Nancy good cut to get to know. This is Lince, Dodge, Wis. the cut of brisket that has a lay- Uh cfl-trdwcEn Ccmjumif er of fat on top with plenty of FOR HER marriage, the lean meat underneath. It takes _£^T£^^^H_____^^ aiu bride chose a gown of chantilly to several simple modes of prep- ' ^ rl ^Womtn lace with a chapel length train aration and it's easy to slice >- _f\fc^H y^fL ^istynfo g trimmed with sequins. Her and serve. bridal veil of silk illusion was To offer with the brisket you secured by a p illbox crown trim- can choose noodles, rice or po- cf?oeHtitt% \-~^> .^PjKyfls/f/^^^*"t med with sequins and pearls tatoes. _A__>'^*S7j__-______E__*»^'' ,'— arid she carried a bouquet of BARBECUED BEEF ^^ lnvCU red roses. BRISKET C^rKk^SmM^^ Miss Cindy Carstensen, (Trem- 1 cup catchup «^%j^a^^_ /^ y^ pealeau, was rn aid of honor and ^^ 1 cup water to hwUto bridesmaids were Miss Kathy 1 tablespoon instant minced //0Mmn \&[- ^kJ$j \ Lilla , Osseo; Mrs. David Kujak, (King Studio) Mr. and Mrs, Roger Spittler onion cHahhiJ \}a.ihionk Dodge, and Mrs. Paul Van Der 2 tablespoons cider vinegar [ r Rw V £twbiy Schaff , Manhattan, Kan. They 1 tablespoon bottled white horse- were gowned identically in floor was Kent Sacia , Stevens Point, attired in an aqua two piece , A /j cua.ks.cLin. ' ¦ radish . - ; ; EDWARDIAN LOOK . . . A new look in men's fashion length sapphire blue "velvet Wis . ; . . blue dress. 1 tablespoon prepared mustard Sn.ch.anii.nocSbtuig and dresses with white lace cufflets. A reception and breakfast /A^y \/
Rings set with Jade Onyx , Cultured ^ y \' Ossie was born in 1912 in Liv- j . A § ^ J$xZ : ^ . erpool , I Pearls, Simulated Opals * ¦ y ^ii^tr the youngest of six chil- and Cameos. V, .X l&&9$tilt>jfea Mxlk&^l dren. On the same day Alice | | Birthstones , Mother Rings and Diamond ^ ? was born in Southern Rhod esia, ^I^^^G»PwH»i^^P^ tli e daughter of a mining en- gineer. To escape wartime Dinner Rings and Wedding " '¦ mt Menu Planner at ] . B^da. ^i^^^^^^S^ V ;t' S bojpbing, 0?,sie WQS cv^cuijtcd ^ ^illllll " '^BN'*' ^ y^i J W M r gl-OMr to 0,.w_)ldtwjpt) e, Lancashire. W ' J T_l I I/O . '-. | | All In Genuine Sterling Silver or 10K *A $ Jxffi ' 'Ay 1 s/^ life. ' > ' ^mmm. M M. ®* ^\ ("Tint's whore I got my mme. I Gold filled settings In Florentine or /ftf -^W " y /Ky J4_^SS^ I My real name's Raymond,") Take « ^ plain stylcs- ' ' ; while Alice was brought up "by ^t k. • At x / ¦ i l l l plffi ll i i l f !
MONEY- '. FOR 1T«£ HEAKT . . . Among Sorem, general chairman; Dr. A. W. Fenske, those attending the kickoff dinner for the who discussed heart disease; Jack Benson, Winona County Heart Fund campaign were, president of the county life underwriters as- from left, Loyel Hoseck, treasurer; William sociation, and Charles Kubicek, publicity Goetz Opens very Wissman Jr., county co-chairman ; Stanley chairman. (Daily News photo) Heart Fund State Aid Rises Campaign Here The honorary chairman of For County Roads the 1969 state Heart Fund ¦ drive, Lt. Gov. James B. _ _ ¦ ' ¦ A total of $47,316,647 in county all increase of 4.5 percent to Goetz, told the Winona Associ- ' WB D _H \m H ^9m^ ^^^m^F HI' state aid for county state high- ation of Life Underwriters ^B^^ counties does not apply to each Monday morning at the Happy way funds for 1969 has been ap- county. portioned by the Minnesota Chef Restaurant of his deep Appropriations for 1968 were: interest in research for heart ^^a^^^^^m^m^mmimmmmmmmi m^^^^aaammamammmmmmmmm mmmmmimmam ^mammm ^^ Highway Department. diseases and This amount based on reve- Fillmore, $764 ,896; Houston, of his hopes for the state reaching its quota - ¦«; _ ' ' " " ' nues from the first half of the $590,965; Olmsted, $598,709; Wa- § X X Xfy^mamX- V ifrn i mm innitm " , !, miff tX in i ii iliin ' ui i maj^MtM _Um_ RUMPELST1LTSKIN . . . during the upcoming drive. fiscal year compares with $45,- basha, $555,387, and VVinona , Dr. Arnold Fenske also spoke __ 244,948 in 1968. "We'll spin a web to vic- ^M # _ $646,581. at the drive's kicb-off break- __^^ M ______¦_! More than $4 million has been tory." This freshman class 'XX-XiI *: ^^^H^i^^. ______Also appropriated was $15,- fast when it was announced xXM MB ______¦ apportioned for municipal al- production won first prize that business solicitations and ¦ ______B lotment of county state aid 121,277 for municipal state aid in show sculpture in con- a house-to-house canvass will ______^ ___¦mmr^m ______- ___¦! - ^B______¦ ^______HH ______^B^______H while the counties' regular state streets an increase of $833,502 nection with the winter begin Feb. 17 and continue ______¦ ¦ H aid apportionment totals $43 from 1968. WINONA will receive carnival at Whitehall (Wis.) through Feb. 23, which is Heart ¦¦ ^M ' million. ^__^__^_^__^__^_ __¦ ______¦ ______$171,716 — $24,015 from mainte- High School. The senior Sunday. F^^^______rm H Apportionment for area coun- ______^^______¦ - ^______. ______r ^______H ______H ^______H i ¦ ______¦______¦ class won second and the Stanley Sorem is general ______¦ ^____ ¦¦ ____H ____¦_B ^______H^______H ties include : Fillmore, $796,116; nance and $1-47,701 for construc- chairman for the Heart Fund ______¦______¦H ______rmmv ______H l^H______¦ ^______tion. Winona received $165 junior class third. All sculp- ______r ______¦ ______^^^^__H Houston, $603,437; Olmsted, ,874 drive; William Wissman Jr. HB ' _ _W- * - . H in 1968. ture was in bright colors. ^^______¦H - ______¦fl^^^H - ______mm *^^™ ^^^^ -^"" _¦______¦|^^H -¦ $659,635; Wabasha, $571,090, and Robert Clements, co-chair- ___¦' .______r r ¦" ¦ ^>W.______¦ and Winona, $657,278. The over- /Winona is one of 32 counties (Kathleen Knudtson. (photo),;.; men for the county; Mrs. So- ______. mmm ¦ ______T ¦^9______r ' to benefit financially from pro- rem, city chairwoman, and mmmmw_fl r¦ WmmW visions of the "Turnback Law" William F. White, advanced WL^aaaaaaaaaaW A ^a^m-¦ ' -^^"^ ^ Preston Postmaster passed by the 1965 Legislative gifts chairman. ^^^_^_^_^F ^_^__W ' session. The total state 1969 Probe Alleged In telling of the various types PRESTON, trunk highway turnback fund of heart disorders, Dr. Fenske mWA ^-mmmmmmk^ Minn. — New for maintenance — $700 per Kickbacks Taken said approximately 600,000 per- ' ______r ______P^____B ^01 postmaster at mile of former truck highways sons die of these disorders each ______r _fl_r lH -#P Preston is Nor- in the county —is $206,556. Wi- Bv Probate Judqe year. He said Americans have ¦ man Mil ne, nona will receive $1,377. the highest rate of coronary Jr Mm B ' ' ¦- ' Preston, Rt. 1, In addition to the annual HASTINGS, Minn. ^-Alle- diseases. whose appoint- maintenance allowance, includ- gations that Dakota County's Outlining prevention of heart _S_ HL______f ment by form- ed in the state aid . apportion- probate judge received kick- disease Dr. Fenske suggested ' _fl___rV WBmwmmw er President a more moderate diet, reduce ^H_r yMmmmw ¦¦ ment $1,755,919 has been set backs from three public officials S L yndon . B. aside to the county turnback or stop smoking, exercise and earn Johnson was account. This fund can only he he appointed to appraise a $10 physical checkups. y| the confirmed re- used on approved county state million estate are being investi- He also explained the use of ^^ cently by the the four heart monitors cur- II IB — Milne aid turnback construction pro- gated by a 17-member grand rently in use at Community Me- Senate. jects. •i jury. . morial Hospital and tofd of the m most interest The prob -. was launched after value of the machines in the M IT •y>i\ ' ,\ VTO;' - Durand Debaters Pork Producers u report by State Public Exam- treatment of the heart patient. ^^ -;:; ^ ' DURAND, Wis. — The Du- iner Robert Whitaker alleged i v • ' "i>* -y *\%^nM$% \ *j&?* *mM for your rand High School varsity de- To Be Organized that Judge Francis L. Bartholet Cerebral Palsy bate team tuned up for the sec- received $6,600 for his 1966 cam- tional debate tournament by LEWISTON, Minn. — Swine Of Minnea polis — — participating in the St. Olaf producers, livestock truckers, paign from three men the judge — ^- ^ money: invitational tournament last and hog buyers have been in- appointed to appraise the estate. weekend. At the end of the two- vited to attend a Winona Coun- County Atty. J. Jerome Kluck Gets $140,870 day event, Durand emerged ty Pork Producers meeting said as many as 15 witnesses WASHINGTON (AP) - The with an 8-2 record and cap- Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Ag- may be called. The grand jury Health, Education and Welfare ricultural Department of Lew- convened Monday and sessions ~ tured the third place trophy. Department (HEW) ~~ has ap- — Next debate will be the sec- iston High School. are expected to continue most proved a > $140,870 grant to Uni- r Purpose is to organize a of the week. | tional tournament Saturday at ted Cerebral Palsy of Greater Eau Claire Memorial High Winona County Pork Produc- Minneapolis, Inc., to expand a earn School. er 's Association. The county workshop to provide 50 new DAILY INTEREST ON SAVINGS PLUS n association would support and Call This a Pro test workshops in Minneapolis. work with the state and na- By 'Old Man Winter' Congressional sources for Min- Start with only $1001 Add to tional association . Twenty-two nesota also announced the U.S. i it — any amount, any tim», Just Who Is 5€tiT counties were organized in CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) — Icy Water Pollution Control Admin- Jf anY way (by mail, in person ,through drive-ups). Inter- Minnesota in 1968. roads gave 52 men a one-day re- istration , _\ This Fellow has approved a $37 620 est Don Paulson, field secretary prieve from Army induction. grant to the Village of Flood- / paid each calendar quarter. After money hat been Marvin Laird ? of the Minnesota Swine Pro- Charter buses that were wood, Minn., for construction of deposited -for 90 days, withdrawals may be made dur- ducer's will help organize a scheduled to- take the inductees a waste stabilization pond and STEVENS POINT, Wis. Wi - county association. Paulson has from Camden to Newark never related facilities. Total cost of ing the first 10 days of any calendar quarter or on 90 There was a shortage of suc- said , "The pork industry is at showed up. the project is $127,400. _ cess Monday in an effort to the crossroads — we must im- ' »¦- .« track down Marvin Laird who, prove the consumer's image of per annum * *— announcements said would cam- pork , or resign ourselves to a paign for the congressional seat declining demand for pork in vacated when Melvin It . Laird the years to come." became secretary of defense. Letters had arrived in the mail, saying Marvin Laird is 51, 4 County Officials was raised near KcKalb, 111., To Attend State was a New York attorney and planned to move to Stevens Association Meetings Point to bid for the 7th Con- earn gressional District post . Four Winona County officials OF Ody J. Fish , state GOP chair- w ill attend meetings of their TIME CERTIFICATES DEPOSIT man, said no Marvin Laird state associations this week at could be found on Republican the St . Paul Hilton Hotel. Mrs. Teresa Curbow, county /¦H Interest begins immediately from date of deposit. Start lists." If there is, he hasn 't treasurer , will leave today to made himself known to us," attend an executive meeting of * with $1,000. Interest payable quarterly ... by check, Fish said. the treasurers' group. She is by credit to another account, or left in to be compounded. Sources i:n New York said the the association secretary. 5^ address provided in the an- Others attending the sessions Vou may withdraw at any maturity or upon 90 days nouncement turned out to be will be Al Wiczek , county audi- wri,,en that of the Museum of Natural tor; Joseph C. Page, clerk of no,ice- History. court, and Ilollie Tust , regis- per annum ¦ , , i ter of deeds. They will leave Snowfall in Idaho 's moun- Wednesday, The meetings will tains ranges from 40 to 100 end Friday. SCHOLARSHIP WINNER . . . Everett Marcou , master of Inches annually. Wapahasa Lodge 14, AF&AM, Wabasha, Minn., presented a $50 essay scholarship to Robert Burkhardt. In the background Sigma Tau Gamma is Tom Ed gerton. Get complete details on these two very Elects Pressnall Robert, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Burkhardt , will PHOTO compete for $1,500 in scholarships given by the Minnesota interesting savings plans at . . w TMJlSww ____I . _tf.tV. As New President grand lodge. Kathy Curdue, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Curdue, was named alternate and also will compete for the Donald Pressnalf , physical state scholarships. (Wehrenberg Studio) education major from Ran- COPY dolph, Minn ., is the new presi- f J dent of Beta Xi Chapter , Sigma fe*«* «Cf€3 Tau Gamma, at Winona State College. Presnall, a junior , and other .MERCHANTS [^vicy officers were recently elected. Also named : Kit Grier, Eden NATIONAL BANK Prairie, Minn., junior execu- WIMONA COUNTY ti ve vice president; Ilichard Member Fod«rol Deposit Insurant* Corporation Wagner, Wykoff , junior, vice ABSTRACT CO., INC. [(resident for membership; Wii- THIRD & LAFAYETTE STS. PHONE 8-5161 S35 Junction St. iam Niemczyk, St. Paul, jun- ior, vice president for educo> tion, and Kenneth Mogren, PHONE 8-2987 Winona, junior, vice president for management. L J TUESDAY Galesville Man Schweickarf Charged With Steelworkers' The Daily Record FEBRUARY 4, 1969 Grocery Burglary Community Wi nona Funerals Two-State Deaths Melting Weather A* Can't Waif WHITEHALL, Wis. (Special) President to Memorial Hospital Mr*. Jenni* Lukanewski Kimberly A. Davit — Gary Osley, 24, Galesville, Vlsttng hours: Medical and surgical Funeral services for Mrs. Jen- CANTON, Minn. (Special) — appeared before Trempealeau patients: 2 to 4 and 7 to 1:30 p.m. (Mo nie Lukaszewski, formerly of Kimberly Ann Davis, three Due Wednesday children under 12.) died Saturday evening For 'Walk' County Judge A. Lf Twesme Get Challenge Maternrsy patients: S to 3:30 and 7 to 816 E. Sth St., who died Sunday days, One of the best weather of- of 30-38 can be expected. 8:30 p.Vn. (Adults only.) at St. Marys Hospital, Roches- CAPE KENNEDY (AP here Monday afternoon on a PITTSBURGH (AP) at St Anne Hospice, will be , Fla. ) - A ferings held out to Winona Skies, meanwhile, will con- RestrlctBons on visitors art still In ef- Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. at Wat- ter. \. — The next American to walk in charge of breaking into Irvine struggle for control of tie Unit- area residents'in a month was tinue fair; through Wednesday fect : because of the high Incidence of kowski Funeral Home and at upper respiratory Infections. Visitors She was Born prematurely space plans to switch on a tele- Klein's supermarket at Gales- ed Steelworkers Union, the na- served up today — fair skies, and temperatures Thursday will are 10 at St. Stanislaus Catholic Mich- limited *> members ot the Immediate Thursday to Mr. and Mrs. vision camera, slip out of golden ville Saturday night and taking tion's third-largest, comes to an warmer temperatures and, best hold a little above normal. family -* a husband or wife, father or Church, the Rev. Ronald Gru- ael Davis, Canton. ' mother. , slippers on the front $80 from the cash till. end next Tuesday. of all, little likelihood of any A snowstorm crawled toward bisch officiating. Burial will be Survivors are: Her parents; porch of his more snow for at least a day WISCONSIN today, 24 hours in St Floren Hegge, Whitehall, was President L W. Abel, who won MONDAY . Mary's Cemetery. one sister, Christine, 2; pater- orbiting Apollo 9 spacecraft and or so. after officials said the state Friends may call at the fu- appointed as his attorney and the job four years ar^ with a ADMISSIONS nal grandmother, Mrs. Mildred show earthlings below how- as- bond was fixed at $1,000. He A break in the cold wave that already has enough snow ac- Oscaor Guenzler, Alma, neral home today after 2 p.m. Davis, Cresco, Iowa, and pater- tronauts would return to promise to give the members cumulation to trigger the worst Wis. Rosary will be recited at 8. their will be arraigned Thursday at moved into the area during the Darran Jonsgaard, Winona nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. mother ship in an emergency. 2 p.m. He was arrested after more voice, is being challenged weekend came this morning spring floods in the state's his- Rt. S. - Orvel Olson, Mabei. One sister by a lawyer from his headquar- when the mercury, which drop- tory. "As far as going EVA (extra- investigation by Gary Redsten Debbie Ann Stock, 220 W. has died. ters staff ped to 14 below from Monday's The storm flowing out of Can- Municipal Court vehicular activity)," said civil- and Scqtt Hotchkiss, Galesville , Emil E. Narick. 2nd St. Mengis Funeral Home, Mabel, police,- and Darryl McBride, frigid high of 7 above, reversed ada, however, was described by Mrs, Anna Erion, Utica, WINONA is in charge of arrangements. ian astronaut Russell L. Trempealeau County traffic of- Narick contends that if Abel its course and headed back to the Weather Bureau as a Minn. Richard W. Loucks, 20, 503 W. Schweickart, "I' m looking for- ficer. wins, there is a strong chance more normal seasonal ranges. "northwest clipper," having Neil Hester Jr., Fountain Sth St., was found guilty of a Robert J. Hartung ward to it. I feel it's the great- he will retire and become head fluffy snow with little moistur* ARKANSAW, Wis. (Special) - TEMPERATURES were on content. City, tVis. charge of making an unsafe est view in the world." of the AFL—CIO, replacing change of course after a short Robert J. Hartung, 48, died sud- the rise through the morning Nevertheless, even a light Chr istopher¦ tarras, 370 E. George Meany, who is 574. reading of 22 at noon 5th St ¦ •:• - trial. Judge John D. McGill fin- denly at his home in rural Ar- Discussing what is planned and a snowfall helps emphasize a . He lived with The steelworkers, with 1.2 today with the prospect of an wanning Chesrter Lilla ed the youth $20. He was ar- kansaw Saturday. during America issued Monday by riv- , 465 Hamilton 's first attempt Sentence Men is the largest afternoon high somewhere in er watchers: St.. rested by the Highway Patrol at a brother. to transfer an astronaut million members, Wisconsin can ex- from the mid- or upper 20's. pect considerably more snow in 8:15 a.m. Dec. 19 on Highway He was born here Sept. 13, one spaceship to ia the AFL—CIO since Walter Mrs. Frank Kinzie Jr., 516 another, Although it will be cold again February and March, aggravat- Lake 'St. 61. Paul Brewer, assistant coun- 1920, to Mr. and Mrs. George Schweickart told a news confer- Reuther took his autoworkers ty attorney, appeared for the Hartung and spent his lifetime out. Spokesmen for Abel say he tonight — somewhere between ing a potential flood situation. DISCHARGES ence late Monday that, "physi- Guilty of Bruce state. The defendant was not in this community. He never cally, will serve out his term if elect- zero and 8 above — the gen- Bishop, administrator Mis. Richard Johnson and the primary challenge is ed. eral warming trend will con- of the Division of Emergency represented by counsel. married. to the hand muscles and arm baby, Minnesota City. Five brothers, Narick says if he wins, he will tinue Wednesday when a high Government, conferred with James Porter, 115 W. Sarnia A charge of parking in a Survivors are: muscles. I don't expect to get Gov. Warren Joseph, Prescott, Ariz.; Bern- Card Cheating re-examine the union's affili- P. Knowles about St. snow emergency zone against out of breath, but I expect my what he called ripe flood con- June M. Dobberphul 1780 Krae- ard, Lindsay, Calif.; Roland, arm muscles to LOS ANGELES (AP) - Sen- ation with the AFHDIO. If the a Daaiiel Lettner, Fountain , get tired." relationship is not beneficial, he dition concealed in frozen snow City, "Wis. mer Dr., was dismissed. She Esther, Alaska; Michael, Ar- The red-haired, freckled as- tences ranging up to six years and Daniel, Red Wing, in federal says he will consider "other in the watersheds of the Missis- Guataf Albrecht, Winona Rt. was arrested at 12:31 a.m. Jan. kansaw, tronaut plans to spend two prison were given County Nurses sippi, Minn., and two sisters, Mrs. Monday to four men convicted alignments." St. Croix, Chippewa and 3. 30 at 1780 Kraemer Dr. hours, outside the spacecraft Wisconsin rivers. Curtis (Marie) Hoch, Mondovi, in December of conspiring to There have been rumors, Jolin Anderson, Peterson, FORFEITUBES: during the 10-day flight of Apol- some of them published, that Bishop and Margaret, Eau Claire. His lo 9 cheat at cards at the Friars said cities which could Minn. Larry M. Reick, 18, Alma, , an earth-orbital mission Reuther is backing Narick. Nar- Get Cost of be hard hit Hairofd Anderson, Lewiston parents and one brother, Janies, scheduled Club. Show business personali- by a rapid spring , Wis., $15, stop light violation, to blast off Feb. 28. ick denies it. A spokesman for melt include Wausau Portage Minn.. have died. With him will ties were among notables who , , 7:15 a.m. Friday, Highway 61- be Air Force Lt. Reuther disclaimed any knowl- Eau Claire, La Crosse, Prairie Liatnne Martin, 267% E. King Pa- Funeral services will be' Wed- Cols. James A. McDivitt and testified to losses totaling more ; 14, arrest by the Highway than edge of it. Living Raises du Chien and Cassville. St. trol. nesday at 10 a.m. at St. Joseph David R. Scott. $400,000 in games rigged by In an interview, Narick re- Joseph Kulas, 569 E. Front electronic signals to players The staff of the Winona JOSEPH Strob, meteorologist Catholic Church, Arkansaw, the It will be' the first manned ferred to Reuther as an exam- County Public Health Nursing St. * . Robert J. Niebur, 18, Cannon Rev. John Pritzl officiating. from observers manning a ceil- with the Weather Bureau in Falls, Minn., $15, stop sign vi- flight of a lunar module (Lem), ple of the kind of leader the Service was granted the $25 a " Kevin Mulyck, 857 E. San- Burial will be in the church ing peephole. steelworkers need and the auto- Minneapolis, said the current olation, 5:18 p.m. Thursday, the bug-shaped craft that will month cost of living increase Wisconsin born St. cemetery. Maurice B. Friedman, 52, was workers union as the kind of un- snow cover — from Mrrs. Sharon Oldendorf , La- East 2nd and Franklin streets. ferry future astronauts from an sentenced to six years given other county employes 2 inches at Friends may call at Rhiel Apollo ship in and fined ion that the steelworkers should officials at the January Madison to 9 inches moilfe, Minn. F. Wilbright 18 1164 moon orbit to the $100,000; Benjamin ¦ ' and in the north — could jiroduca Lynn , , Funeral Home, Durand, begin- lunar surface. And if all goes Teitelbaum; be. : session of the board, retroac- Mrs. Conrad Schewe, 477 W. 5th St., $15 driving without 53, four years and $75,000 fine; ¦ ¦ flooding worse than the inunda- , ning today. The Rosary will be perfectly on Apollo 9, it could be One of Narick's platform tive to Jan. ! , ' ' ¦ ¦ . Colleigeview. a valid license, 9 p.m. Sunday, Johnny Rosselli, 62, five years, tion of 1965. said at 8 tonight. the last flight before a landing promises would allow locals to by the Winona i — .. - BIRTHS West 5th and Gould streets. $55,000, and Manuel '"Ricky" strike over local issues, one of "This is definitely a serious Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Vonde- is attempted. ^ County Board LOUDTy situation, PARKING ~TN A SNOW Mrs. Ray Speltz Jacobs, 48, four years, $5,000. the important differences be- this morning. " Strub said. "The po- roher 215 N. Baker St., a ($10 LEWISTON, Minn. — Mrs. In orbit, Scott is to pilot the U.S. District Judge William P. tween the steelworkers and the tential is there for higher water daughter EMERGENCY ZONE The group . fine): Ray Speltz, 68, died Monday Apollo 9 command ship to a Gray denied proba tion pleas, autoworkers in contract bar- was not an- L Board"'** than hi 1965." Mc. and Mrs. Kent Drugan, evening of a heart attack while but stayed the sentences and gaining. The danger -would be resolved, Terry Kay Eickhora, Pipe- linkup with the Lena, which is to eluded in the Trempealeau, Wis., a daugh- en route to the West Coast. ride into space aboard the same fines for five days to permit ap- Narick's campaign has increase awarded the county he said , if the spring thaw is ter. stone, Minn., 1:39 a jn. Jan. 25, Jacobs Funeral Home here peals to be filed. stressed his advocacy of greater gradual, or if warm days alter- East 4th and Walnut streets. Saturn 5 booster rocket. employes. has charge of arrangements On the third day, Singer Tony Martin and shoe union democracy and rank-and- Chairman Len J. Merchlewitz nate with freezing days. Ronald C. Hawley, 1172 Gil- inconap_ete. McDivitt BIRTH ELSEWHERE which are and Schweickart will crawl magnate Harry Karl, husband file participation—an issue said that it was the intent In the meantime, he said, it more Ave., 12.11 a.m. Friday, reminiscent of Abel' through a connecting tunnel into of actress Debbie Reynolds, s own cam- of the board to give everyone wouldn't hurt for threatened BLOOMINGTON, Minn. - West 3rd and Main streets. Mrs. Ethel Duell were among those who testified paign, partly along those lines, communities to prepare for the and TREMPEALEAU, Wis. - the Lem and check out systems a cost of living increase, in Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Kiral, a J. G. Flanary, West 3rd to losing large sums. in 1965. January but that the nursing worst—just in. case. ' for the space ¦ ¦ " walk on the follow- ' ¦' ' Mrs. Ethel Duell 64 ¦ , , a lifetime ¦ dau ghter Monday. Grandpar- 12:20 a.m. Friday, ¦ ¦ ¦ Huff streets, . area resident, died Monday ing day. As the incumbent, Abel is con- staff was omitted through mis- . . ents are Mr. and Mrs. John West 3rd and Main streets. understanding. The increase Breza, 1450 Gilmore Ave., and CALEDONIA morning at a Madison, Wis., sidered the favorite. All 29 of hospital following an illness of Rule Pollution the powerful district directors was set for all persons employ- Mr. and Mrs. Durward Kiral, CALEDONIA, Minn. (Special) ed by the county on Jan. 1. 644 Clarks Lane, Winona. —Disposition of December and several months. are backing him. The directors Subdivision January cases before Judge El- The former Ethel Grover, Report Must Be were split when he upset David THE SALARIES with the in- she was born April 10, 1904, in Child on Sled J; McDonald four years ago. In TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS mer M. Anderson in Houston creases are: Susan Stelner, su- County municipal and juvenile the Town of Gate to Mr. and Made Public addition, Abel controls most, if pervisor $725; Mrs. Shirley Plat OK Mrs. John Grover. She was not all, of the staff representa- > Gets Catrmel Kay Aldinger, Winona court : Struck by MINNEAPOLIS (AP)-The Holtan, $585; Mrs. Catherine Final approval of the plat for Rt. 3, 4. Robert E. Deters, Caledon- married to Charles Duell in Car tives—field representatives on Ross,, $625; Mrs. Faye Gilje, 1936. He died Dec. 9, 1961. WHITEHALL,. Wis. (Special) Minnesota Pollution Control the union payroll who are an Pleasant VaUey Terrace No. 3 Meirlene Ann Kostuck, 363 E. ia, operating a motor vehicle Agency interim report on radio- $615, and Mrs. Bernadette Pa- was voted unanimously by the Survivors are: Two sons, — A Shetland pony was killed important link between the local gel, secretary, $425. Howard St., 5, with illegal plates, fined $15, active pollution in the state unions and headquarters. City Council Monday night. Jeff Gunderson, 806 W. Broad- and operating an unregistered Charles and David, Trenipea- and a 6-year-old boy injured in A sixth member of the staff , accidents investigated must be made public according Narick is running on a The 29-lofc subdivision lies way,. 6. vehicle, $10, arrests by Robert leau; two daughters, Mrs. Dale by Mau- Mrs. Ellen Kent, started work- just (Virginia) Ebersold, rice Scow, Whitehall, Trempea- to an order filed by a Hennepin shoestring. His headquarters is outside the city's easterly F. Richards. Trempea- ing With the nursing service limits at the leau, and Mrs. John (Diana) leau County traffic officer. County district judge. in his basement. He helps stuff Monday. Donald E. Corn Jr., Hokah, his campaign mail when he is in junction of ... ¦¦ , Weather arrested by the Highway Pa- Salwey, Minnesota City, Minn.; David J. Grulkowski, son of Judge Badalich, the agency's In other action the board ap- chief staff officer, town. In many districts he has CSAH 17 aaid tral on a charge of careless 5 grandchildren and three sis- Mrs. Dorothy Grulkowski, In- contends re- proved $1,000 for extra clerk QtV OTHER TEMPERATURES ters, Mrs. Robert Mossberg lease of the report would be no formal organization. He is hire jointly by the auditor's and driving, was found not guilty. dependence, received a bruise counting on the vote of the dis- William S. .r By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joel E. Boone, Caledonia, and Mrs. Amy Kopp, Gales- on his left hip when struck by illegal since the ageiicy's consul- treasurer's office. — High Low Pr. ville, and Mrs. Gertrude Ber- tant stipulated in his contract contented and expects to win The Board approved payment C hristensen, } LOUDCH | ; speeding, $15, arrested by Wil- the car driven by Jerome R. with it. owner of the Alba ny, snow ...... 34 17 .26 gerson, Hibbing, Minn. Kreibich that any "interim report be kept of the claims by two townships liam Betz, Caledonia police. , 42, Independence, land, said lie will move im- Albu querque, clear . 47 20 .. Mike Toomey, Brownsville, Funeral services will be Fri- Monday at 4:45 p.m. confidential (for agency use from the county poor fund. The Atlanta, clear ...... 61 29 .. day at , 2 p.m. at Trempealeau only) " amounts were $261.8? to Sara- mediately to seek annexation drunk and disorderly, $25, Rich- David was sliding on his sled . of the property Bismarck, clear .... 30 10 ards. Federated Church, the Rev. The court order, filed by Honolulu Beauty toga and $918.97 to St. Charles. by the city. He from the family driveway on said his first move would be Boise, cloudy ...... 40 23 .. La Crescent juvenile, driving Wesley Schirmer officiating. County Trunk Q at Indepen- Judge Thomas Tallakson, con- These amounts are 75 percent Boston, cloudy ..... 37 26 .67 Burial will be in Trempealeau Wins Contest - of the amount spent over one to ask the Winona County left of center, arrested by Jer- dence when struck. Piled snow tains a provision for a 20-day Board Buffalo, snow 42 16 .03 La Crescent chief Cemetery. , pending an mill levied by tbe township. Ac- of Commissioners to in- - ry T. Olson, on both sides of the driveway stay of commitment stitute proceedings today. Chicago, clear ...... 29 15 . of police, $10. Friends may call at Smith prevented the child from seeing appeal. Singing Did It tion on the city of Winona re- Cincinnati, clear ... 44 18 .01 La Crescent juvenile arrest- Mortuary, Galesville, Thursday lief bill of $68,457.74 was tabled City approval was given un- , the car and Kreibich from see- HONOLULU (AP) -La La der laws which extend Cleveland, snow .....45 20 .11 ed by La Crosse police for in- from 7 to 9 p.m. and at the until next month, when funds the city's church Friday after 12:30 p.m ing David in time to stop. Dav- Tai, a 19-year-old Chinese beau- planning jurisdiction to two Denver, clear 53 22 .. toxicants in a vehicle carrying . id was taken to Tri-County Pass fhe Envelopes would be available to pay the ty, is Honolulu's 1969 Narcissus entire amount. The total relief miles beyond its limits. Neces- Des, Moines, clear .. 26 17 minors, and drinking alcoholic Memorial Hospital, Whitehall , Queen-on the strength of her Detroit, cloudy ..... 33 11 .. Two-State Funerals • Mrs. Howard Keller , 358 Col- paid by the city this past year sary improvements, such as beverages, transferred to the for examination. singing, naturally. Fort Worth, clear .. 58 27 .. legeview, chairman of the 1D69 was $104,569. The one mill lev- water and sewer mains, are to Caledonia court and fined $25. Albert E. Hampe The pony was struck by a Music comes naturally to La Helena, clear 39 1 Houston minor consuming al- March of Dimes drive, urged ied by the city brought the total be supplied by the city and as- 1967 International tractor and La, and to her other melodically sessed against the benefited Honolulu, M 79 68 .. coholic beverages, $25 fine, ar- WABASHA, Minn. (Special) - today, ._ city residents to continue pass- to $91,736.99 and the county trailer at 4 a.m. 1 named sisters: Do Do, Re Re, share is the $68,457. property. Indianapolis, clear . 32 14 .. rest by Highway Patrol. Funeral services for Albert E. mil.s west of Eleva on U. S. ing the envelopes for contribu- Si Si and ¦ tions around their respective Mi Mi, Fa Fa, So So, Jacksonville, clear . 75 37 .24 George M. Marl in, La Cres- Hampe, Theilman , will be Wed- 10. The Lyon Moving & Storage Octavia. ALSO TABLED was the re- Greece almost doubled its Juneau, cloudy .... . 22 12 .06 cent, speeding, $20, arrest by nesday at 10:3O a..n. at St. Jo- serni from Simi, Calif., was blocks so that the January Robert Tai, former Chinese quest from Hiawatha Land, grain production from 1952 to Ka nsas City, clear .39 27 D. L. Swedberg. seph's Catholic Church, Theil- traveling east when it struck drive may be completed. En- ambassador to the United Na- tourist promotion program cen- 1959. Los Angeles, cloudy 74 50 .. Caledonia juvenile, illegal man, the Rev. Bernard Kerri- the pony, which was standing velopes are to be returned to tions, named his daughters for tered in Rochester for $1,228 Louisville clear ... 46 23 parking, $5, Betz. the block captain. , gan officiating. Burial will be in the road. ¦ the notes of the musical scale 3 cents per capita in the coun- Memphis, clear .... 47 30 Rodney L. Egland, Houston, in St. Peter and Paul's Ceme- Thomas Bateman, also of and his son, Roy Uranium and ty. Miami, cloudy ..... 81 54 .. careless driving, $35, Highway tery, Conception. Simi, had to have a mechanic Employment in sales occupa- Rex Satellite, for important The board approved an exten- Ho Job Too Large Mihwaukee, cloudy .23 5 .. Patrol. Pallbearers will be Lloyd from an Eleva garage repair tions is expected to rise by 25 events during the years they sion of one year of employment or Small... MpIs.-St.P., clear .. 5 -8 ., Too* Meyer, Philip Rademachcr, Syl- tha air hoses on the trailer be- Eer cent to six million persons were born. for John F. Jensen, deputy sher- New Orleans, cloudy 66 42 vester McGrath, Julius Mischke, fore he could proceed. Scow y 1975, according to a survey . Miss Tai sang a Chinese song iff. Jensen will be 65 in July, New York, clear ... 38 24 .45 Alfred Evers and George Wil- didn't learn who owned the by the Bureau of Labor Statis- and then went into a jazz dance and county employment policy QI JA. City, clear ... 52 26 .. No Protest son. pony. tics. routine in the talent contest. requires that the county board Omaha, clear 31 14 Friends may call at the Ab- act annually on continuation of Philadelphia , clear , 41 24 .06 bott-Wise Funeral Home, "Waba- his employment until age 70. Phoenix, cloudy .... 72 42 sha , this afternoon and evening. A physical examination is also Pittsburgh snow ... 50 15 .04 To Elimination required for the extension. , The parish Rosary will be at 8 ____! Ptlnd , Me., cloudy .. 32 23 1.10 tonight. A memorial ls being Prize-Winning Atlanta Ptl-tuJ , Ore., cloudy . 47 36 arranged. Rapid City, clear ... 48 15 Of Bus Service CD Communications Plumbing and heating In- Richmond, clear ... 52 28 .. No formal protest was raised Neil Joseph Burke Chief fo Conduct St. Louis, clear 4(1 29 .. Monday night by the City Coun- WITOKA , Minn. — Funeral stallation! tiiat are in good Salt Lk. City, fog ... 32 1 .. cil to the proposed elimination Publisher McGill Dead Radio Operator Class services for Neil Joseph Burke, order villi add to the com- Winona nation are far richer for his life San Fran ., cloudy .. 55 43 .. of bus service between Witoka , who died Monday at his ATLANTA , Ga. (AP) - Ralph writer and reporter for the civil defense stations and Rochester. the and poorer for his passing. " R. A. Kolter , fort and health of your Seattle, cloud y 47 41 .04 railroad home, will be Thursday at 10 Emerson McGill , the Pulitzer Nashville Banner. He joined communications chief of staff peti- McGill became widely known family. C-all us to repair Tarnpa , cloudy 73 46 The council reviewed a a.m. at the Cathedral of the Price-winning publisher of the Constitution as sports editor in and Winona County emergency tion filed by Jefferson Trans- his syndicated column , Washington, clear ..46 26 .01 Sacred Heart , the Rt. Rev. Atlanta Constitution , died Mon- 1929. throuRh coordinator of communications, your plumbing and heating Winnipeg, cloudy . . . -1 -16 portation Co, with the Slate II J Ditlman officiating. day night of a heart attack. He He was named executive edi- in which he championed civil Msgr. . . will conduct a communications for lop ef-flclency. Public Service Commission for Burial will bo in St, Mary's would have been 71 Wednesday. tor in 1938 and became editor in rights . meeting for radio op- first mark as operators' discontinuance. Thc petition Cemetery . McGill rose from life in a 1 942. McGill made his erators of Class D citizens' was filed may call at Watkow- In a front page editorial in to- a sports writer , coining the Man Given Term Friends small Tennessee farm commu- radio service Wednesday at 7:30 HO y PLUMBING Dec. 11, 1968, I ~ phrase "strong legs run that W ill ski Funeral Home Wednesday nity to become the South's most day's edition , tho Constitution p.m. In thc courtroom of City * HEATING For Tire Theft and stated City from 2 to 5 p.m. nnd at thf vocal white advocate of civil said: "Ralph McGill was the weak legs may walk ," a slogan Hall. Phono S«B. -2237 — If no Shriners in their that the com- church after 7 p.m. Rosary will rights. Constitution. And the Constitu- still used by The announcement was made answer call 8689-2.21 Stephen Richard Strelow, 407 had m- all-star football games for the pany Council be recited at the Cathedral tion is Ralph McGill. .. by Roy Evett, civil defense di- ^______fl Clinifield St., was given a 90- comes ot l 1 Wednesday at « p.m. lie wns stricken as he was "Ralph McGill spoke as (he benefit of crippled children 's rector for the city and county. day county jail sentence in about 32 to 36 leaving a private birthday party home-bred conscience of the hospitals. Gnodvicw justice of the peace cenUi per mile while costs were in his honor at thc home of a South in an era of the emancipa- His editorials argued against court Monday after pleading (13 cents per mile. Wachowiak Heads friend , John B. Lawhorn . He tion of the spirt : The final un- Ku Klux Klan-type violence and guilty to n charge of theft. The service will be allowed tc wns pronounced dead at Holy shackling, tbe paying of the fi- for freedom of equality for all THE ANNUAL MEETING Justice Lewis Albert assessed end Feb. 15, according to a Local 246 of ITU Family Hospital. nal judgment . men. the jail sentence plus $5 court commission order dated Jan. 27, McGill, who became publisher "All mankind indeed was his Friends and acquaintances of the. coslis after the youth admitted Parties planning to object tc Joseph Wachowiak , Daily and of the Constitution in 1960 after family... expressed deep regret nt Mc- taking seven automobile tires tho discontinuance have until Sunday News compositor, hns 31 years with the newspaper , re- "We nnd our South and our Gill's death . from thc Nelson Tire Co. dur- March 17 to file briefs , the or- been named new president ol ceived thc Pulitzer Prize in 195(1 Utica Co-operative Creamery Co. ing tho night of Jan. 11. Ar- der continued. If no objections Local 246, International Typo- for editorial writing. The Pulitz- Tlie .mntiiil mooting of the Utica Co-operative Crc.imery Co. Winona Coun- to his ¦Allt 0_____|IA ' NATIONAL rest wa.s made by nre filed , there will be no com- graphical Union. er committee pointed lkft Ife tt. I I will he held at ttie Golfview , Ilii.shfor.l, Minn., on Saturday, ty sheriff's office. mission hearing and thc order The new secretary-treasurer "long, courageous nnd effective ¦ will become permanent. is Robert Wessin, Winona Print- editorial leadership." jointne wniteltP /-Jg^jL February 22 , !!> .;!). This curly date i.s as authorized by GUM STORY CONNECTED Councilman Barry Nelson ing Co,, replacing tho late Ken- He was awarded the Medal ol the minutes of the past annual meeting. \Sn will sUirt nt In Mondav^yory about a 16- moved thnt the city file an ob- neth McCrcndy. Charles Hage- Freedom in 1904 , for what Fres 1:30 P.M. lor the purpose (if electing three directors for youth acci- jection but the motion got only dorn, Watkins Products, Inc., ident Johnson described as ycaivold Winonn tlucii-year terms , and any other business thai may properly denfly wounding himself in the his vote nnd was declared lost was re-clcctcd vice president; making "man's world safer, his leg with a handgun, the Dally by Mayor Norman E. Indall. Carl Kurth , Daily and Sunday physical body more durable, his come before this meeting. the Tho service was begun March News, wns elected recording mind broader and his dignity News incorrectly listed Lunch will b« jervetl. motijer of Thomas Pellowsk i ns 1, I960. Its certificate restrict- secretary succeeding Edwin important ." 10 miles from Mrs. Victoria J , Pellowski. ed tho bus company to hauling Mnli.szew_. ld, Winonn Printing McGill , born community ol Raymond Dorn, Socretary-Troasurer Thomas' parents aro Mr. and of passengers between Roches- and William Bnye, Daily and the little farm WINONA DENTAL SOCIETY Mrs. David Pellowski, 627 W. ter and the Burlington nnd Mil - Sunday News, wns re-elected Soddy, Tenn. , began his newspa- 4th 6t. waukee stations in Winona. sergcant-nt-arms. per career in 1922 as a sports DECLINE COMMEN T Players Group CLUB OFFICIALS Will Boycott Lombardi Says He's Spring Drills NEW YORK (AP). - The Associatio n was taking a stand Quitting Green Bay Baseball Players Association is against such individual action. tightening the screws in it_ con- "We've told thern;' Miller GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP ) — of the Redskins' stock. "I haven't the . slightest idea tinuing battle over pensions said, "tha i: it would not be wise Vince Lombard!, eager for a That would help satisfy an about Otto," Lombardi said. with the club owners and the to put out their own expenses taste of ownership in a pro foot- ambition by the NFL's most Redskins official withheld for- , the Packers spectre of a major league strike and we don 't want to appear ea- ball club, said Monday he is spectacular coach to own a part mal comment while quitting the Green Bay Packers of the organization he directs, a discussed whether to free; Lom- looms largei and larger. ger." contract that First, the Players Association _ to apply his fabled coaching role deprived him under Green bard! from a Miller .aid lhat most players ar- an expiration date urged its members not sign 's spurs to the sluggish Washing- Bay's Community ownership didn't have to have followed the Association 1974. their 1969 contracts until the dis- recommendation that they not ton Redskins. rangements. until Officials of the two National Redskins' President Edv?ard "This is not an ordinary mat- pute was settled. Then , on Mon- sign their contracts. Bennett Williams holds five per said Dominic Olejniczak, day, the Association announced Football League clubs withheld ter," "There arc very, very few es- immediate confirmation that cent of his club's stock. The ma- president of Green Bay Packers plans to boycott spring -who have training tablished players the Packer general manager jority is held by long-time o^n- Inc. "After all, there is only one unless the pension question is signed ," lie said. "A. conserva- was becoming executive vice er George Marshall, and is ad- Lombardi." resolved . tive estimate would be that 90 president and chief coach of the ministered under a court trust Lombardi said there wa,s "no Faced with the possibility of per cent have not s igned , and Redskins, and that he would get by Williams. ill feeling'' between hint and unsigned contracts and spring the figur e probably would be ownership of a portion of the Lombardi, who had often said Green Bay influencing his deci- training caimps populated only higher," club. being Green Bay coach and gen- sion to abandon the club after 10 by minor leaguers, the owners Many clubs claim to have While the Packers' executive eral manager simultaneously years as general manager and could console themselves with signed contracts on hand but board was scheduling another was too time consuming, was nine as coach, during whkh ha the fact t_iat shoul d a strike say they have agreed not to re- meeting today to review Lora- hestitant Monday to speculate piloted the team to an unprece- come, it won't include pickets lease the names of the players bardi's announcement, reports on the future of Otto Graham, dented five NHL championships around their ball parks. who have signed until the dis- circulated in Washington that he Washington's coach and general in only seven years. "No, I don't think pickets pute wilh the Players Associa- would get at least five per cent manager. ¦ "It's been a great 10 years," would be necessary," said Mar- tion is settled, he said, but adding: "Like any- Yin Miller, executive director of Miller explained tiiat at -'.he one else, you always hope to the Players Association. "I center of the dispute are the own something." don't think players can be re- players' rights to radio and tele- The Packers are a non-profit placed if they walk out." vision revenue. The Playrs As- organization in which no one Miller presided over a four- sociation contends the owners gets ownership. lour meeting attended by some want to shut the pension plan off Lombardi said there had been 125 players Monday. At the con- from broadcast income "even no discussion with Green Bay as clusion of the session, the play- though the two matters have to his successor as general ^man- ers issued a resolution support- been directly tied for the last 22 ager. "I've asked for my re- ing their negotiators and saying years." X:X . lease from the Green Bay Pack- they would not sign contracts or The owners have offered to in- ers," he said. "There's always a report to camp until "the nego- crease their total ye arly contri- possibility a snag could devel- tiations are satisfactorily con- bution to the fund by $1 million, op." cluded." million an- On the other hand , he said aft- boosting it to $5.1 ' DAYS OF DESTINY . ..these pictures York, Lombardi answers questions by tele- Among the players at thc nually. er Monday's meeting with Pack- "Vince ; The picture at meeting -were World Series The current plan provides a show the beginning and end of Lom- phone after taking the job. er executives, "Everything is office stars Bob Gibson ani Mickey to; of $643 per month at age 65 bardi's Green Bay career. In the top photo, lower left shows Lombardi leaving his fine. There's no problem with Lombardi and his wife are greeted b Packer ¦after asking the Packer executive commit- the board. I've just got a con- Lolich as well as Brooks Robin- for a flayer in the majors ' five y ¦ "¦ ¦ ¦: son, Ernie Banks, Jim Running, 288 per month at President Dominic Olejniczak on his arrival tee to release him from his contract. (AP tract." • . years and $1, The contract with Greert Bay, Maury Wills, Joe Torre and 65 for a 10-year player. in the Wisconsin city. At lower right, in New Photofax) Rusty Staub. unless waived, barred him from g The decision to coaching another club durin boycott the s lifetime. training camps came just lo CAN MOV E WITHIN HALF GAME OF MIAC LEAD the pact' days before the Chicago White Washington, which hasn't had Sox are scheduled to open the a winning team since 1955, is in m. jor's first camp site and less a situation that could tempt a than one coach with the Lombardi tem- month before the tradi- perament for winning. tional March l opening date. Some players have indicated Redmen "The challenge is not in main- that they would pay their own H^ taining, but¦ in creating," he ¦; ' way to their club' Things are looking pretty men return home Feb. 19 to this year in St. Paul. Asked if "They get pretty fair scor- said. . - • s training sites ing and rebounding from their and work out on their own rosy for St. Mary's basketball play host to Macalester and Howie Schultz' team had im- One of his best-known expres- (3-7) proved since then, Wiltgen re- three guys in front. Their big should the pension dispute drag team aft present, Following travel to Gustavus and sions: "Winning isn't every- Concordia before closing the plied : problem has been at the guard on. But Miller said the Players Saturday night's 67-57 win over 1 thing; it's the only thing." St. John 's and St. Tliomas' vic- season against St. Thomas Feb. "I dont know if they've im- spots, which explains why Green Bay was a giant on the tory over erstwhile league 27. A win tonight would put St; proved or not. I think their they're a pretty deliberate pro football circuit in the 1920s, leader, Macalester, the Red- Mary's only a half game out lineup is as it was earlier in type team," said Wiltgen. • and again in the 1930s. Lombar- men are only a game out of of the lead. the year so I assume they're St. Mary's. will start its us- di arrived at the Lake Michigan Hawk JV Rips first place. "The schedule looks pretty about the same. Actually, I ual lineup of Joe Keenan and port in 1959 after the Packers The Toms lead the race good, that's true, but you don't fear Hamline as much as Tim Balakas at forwards, Mike finished a 1-10-1 season. Halloran at center and Bob with a 7-2 mark while Macal- have to remember just about I fear a letdown on our part. They would never have anoth- Mayo JV 46-36 ester is second at 6-2. St. anybody can get knocked off We've had some tough games Soucek and Jim Long in the er season that bad—until the Winona High's Junior Var- Mary's, St. Johns and Concor- on the road iri this league! I'm recently and, obviously, this backcourt. 1968-69 season, after Lombard! sity pushed its season record dia are all tied for third with not looking forward to playing one looks a little easier." Keenan, a sophomore, got 24 EXIT MR. LOMBARDI . . . Green Bay Packer general berned over the coaching task tp Hamline is led by 6-6 center against St. John's Saturday and to 8-4 with a 46-36 conquest of 6-3 records. either Duluth or Augsburg on manager and former coach , Vince Lombardi, waits with hat Phil Bengtson, an assistant who s; Right now, D ave. Poison and 6-3 forwards is averaging over 21 points a the Rochester Mayo JV Mon- Moreover, tlie c h e d u 1 e their own floor. and coat in hand for an elevator after telling the Packer helped him develop Green Bay's though , all we're concerned Terry Ruhsam and Dale Al- game for the season. His 23.3 day. seems to favor the Redmen. executive committee he has accepted position as coach and The Hawks They host Hamline (4-6) in a about is the Hamline game," berts. Ali are averaging in dou- average in conference games is (Continued on Page 13> held Mayo to ' general manager of the Washington Redskins. (AP Photofax) only nine points in the two 7:30 game tonight and then said St. Mary's coach Ken ble figures. The guards will second best in the league. He s LOMBARDI , mid- probably be either 6-0 Dave averaged over 25 points a dle quarters as they built a have road games with UM-Du- Wiltgen Monday. XX 40-20 lead, allowing coach Gordy luth (0-9) Saturday and Augs The Redmen own a 64-46 vic- Sajevic, 6-2 Karl Dickman or game in the last four confer- 6-2 Bob Bigelow. ence games. Addington to clear the . bench burg (3-6) Feb. 12. The Red- tory over the Pipers earlier in the last quarter. Gary Bauer hit. 13 points and Gary Mueller 10 for Winona. Winona J.V. {46) Mayo J.V. (U) <9 flpftp f9 flpftp Gllbe-rtjon 3 itl Wilson 0 oi 0 Smifh oi I J Bernei 1011 Purdue Gains Mueller 4 S 310 Lutz 0 0 10 Anderson 0 0 10 Babtock 1 l 5 « Ferguson 3 117 Johnson 13 3* Hurlburt 0 10 1 Gastineau 4 1 I 14 Bauer ( 1 IU Cot* 4 0 11 R.KoeMer 0 0 0 0 Kor ' 0 0 0 0 Kenney ; 303 Caif 0010 S.Koehler 0 0 1 0 In Cage Poll Tot»ls 15 .!» __ Totali u 11 11 4* By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS switch of several places. The WINONA J.V. 11 13 15 j__»4 MAYO J, V. 11 3 4 The Purdue Boilermakers Wildcats slipped from fourth to U-34 climbed into the Top Ten and sixth while Kentucky and St. four other teams in the group John's of New York each rushed Schallenkamp Leads gained ground today in The As- up one position, to fourth and sociated Press' major-college fifth, respectively. Shortv' s 13-0 Win basketball poll. 1. UCLA (30) 16-0 600 Unbeaten Shorty 's, with Steve Meanwhile, UCLA maintained 2. North Ca rcjina 141 522 Sure Boeser having to kick out only its unanimous grip on first place 3. Santa Clara 17-0 441 eight shots, smashed Oasis 13-0 after lifting its unbeaten record 4. Kentucky 14-2 417 Monday night in a makeup game to 16-0 with victories over Cali- 5. St. John 's, N.Y. 13-2 322 of the City Hockey League. fornia and Stanford. All 30 on 6. Davidson 15-2 255 Schallenkamp had five goals the national panel of sports 7. LaSalle 16-1 247 and Bob Goldstrand three for writers and broadcasters voted 8. Villanova 15-2 236 Shorty 's, while Bob McDonough the Bruins No. 1. They have 9. Purdue U-3 178 ^^p had four assists. held that position all season. 10. Illinois 13-2 154 Purdue, 14th a week ago, ad- 11. Tulsa 16-2 139 tS^^^^ vanced five places to ninth as a 12. Ohio State 12-3 96 REDMEN '6' TO \ I13S MOMENT OF TRUTH . . . Canadian George Chuvalo, result of its 95-85 overtime con- 13. Kansas 15-3 84 , quest of 12ih-ranked Ohio State 14. Columbia 15-1 58 l cut and bloodied faces the boxing glove of Buster Mathis in UJLl2_y» HOS T ST. JOHN'S \ the loth round o£ last night' s 12-round heavyweight fight in in Big Ten Conference upset, 15. Duquesne 12-2 54 St , Mary 's hockey team , New York's Madison Square Garden, Mathis, outweighing The Buckeyes remained in the 16. New Mexico St. 16-2 53 same spot. 17. Marquette 14-3 36 tied for the MIAC lead with | Chuvalo 232 to 208, came on strong after the fifth round to defending cliannpion Gus- j Davidson 's unexpected 76-61 18. New Mexico 13-6 , 25 chop out a unanimous decision over his opponent. (AP Photo- setback by another Big Ten 19. Dayton 15-3 19 tavus Adolphus, can take j fax) sole possession of the lead team , Iowa , also resulted in a 20. Colorado 14-3 16 today when thc Redmen host St. Thomas at 7 p.m. St, . Mary 's stands 9-2 in FOR LAST YEAR'S LOSS TO AQUINAS conference play while St. Thomas is 1-1. The Redmen defeated the Toms 0-1 early in January. Gustavus plays _ lacalestor Wednesday night and SI. Ramblers Can Make Amends John 's Thursday. lloth Liit- t M:USOII La ('rosso a breather ," agreed Ramb- ter. 'We'll have to approach games arc in St. Paul. Aqunni s handed Cotter ils ler coach John Nett. "We That lineup compares fav- this one just like we'd ap- haven 't seen them play, but most humiliating defeat of orably, size-wise, with Cot- proach every other game," I know they'll be tough be- concluded Nett. FEB. tlie basketball season. To- cause they have practically ter's fi-0 Lou Bisek and Mth nigh t at St. Stan's at 8 their entire team hack." 5-10 Tom Browne at guards, 0^afr o'clcxk the Ramblers get a Joining Petry and Cahill fi-4 Tom Riska and 6-4 Steve Go To Gobeil for chance to make amends — in the Aquinas lineup will Stockhausen at forwards and but it won't he easy. probably be C-0 Bob Burg fi-6 Mike Conway at center. A year ago, in La Crosse , at the other guard , 6-3 Tom "We know they like to Peters at a forward and Aquinas smashed the Rninh- run and like to stick with , _m H^hfl dff TpT*Mk ^MHW' ' lers 77-37 cn ro ute to a 21- 6-6 Dave Olson, thc only a zone defense," continued Wa^S^r Buy a bottle of Seagram s 7 Crown /•- &*J_W§{ 4 season record junior on the leann , at cen- . Nett. The Ramblers haven't . S«ff tubrlco . Ing and you can be sure of three things: /"Tw T SO CIGARS This year coach Dave faced a zone defense since /M0^^_M-m. s^ •Xtf&>^ GIFT- Bruhn 's squad appears on * early in Ihe season , and BEARINGS j>>TPtD its way to improving that • COTTER• Nett commented , "I imag- BAR STOCK*CORES < ^ ^ scas-on mark , Currently the (8-7) ine it will give us a little O FO FT PF TP Avj. SAE 660 Blufjolds are 14-2. Thc team SIOLkhtllltn .... 15 4| 33 17 IBI )]_ trouble, but wc seemed to Risk* U U JV 11 Ml »7 pick pretty well Cast Bronze Finished leaders of this year's team them apart , 7 Crown ... thc tin-risky whiskey. \^ are also famil Conway IJ j; 10 it 144 U early In the year." Bearings and Bars X^SS_\wF mm^k iar to the Blwk II 41 11 M 117 7.1 Say Seagram's and Be Sure. Ramblers. They are 6-4 Bob Brownt IS 41 11 17 101 1.1 Thc game may well turn FROM OUR TWIN CITY STOCK ^ ^SMP - (Si GIVE^^x i tfr Pctry and fi-0 Jim CahiU Speck ? J 3 I M 1.7 into a battle of defenses Rkturdion 1) 7 O 14 14 I.I •—Ji— who> hit IS and 17 points , O'Brien 4 1 1 1 i 1.0 rather than a run-and shont ; C. E.GOBEIL COMPANY ^y Hoeppner 1 1 3 7 0.1 Kmo * 2329 University respectively, ' i Ave. S.E. in. Inst year s Meier 4 0 O 1 0 0.0 affair . Cotter is averaging ~£$r game. Rlkti/i ., 4 0 0 0 0 O.O 47.7 points-per-game on de- K "tieapolij, Minn. !: ._ _ EDWARD Willi.mion 1 0 0 0 0 O.O SCI BMIII Distillers Coi.i£> .iny. N.Y.C. Blended Whiskey. B6 Proof , o5% Grain Neutral pirits, Mitrtia 'a Urgttt Stlllng "It's a n onconfcrcnce fense, while Aquinas has a S *_feilfj Clgil Totllt 15 3.. 1*0 1.7 711 tl.t (612) 3C1-5T75 game, but it isn't much of Opporitnll 11 3(1 140 in 704 47.7 51.3 mark. BUT PLAYERS, FANS ADMIT LIT TLE CHANCE OF CHANGING HIS MIND Isn't Easy Bidding Lombardi Farewell GREEN BAY, Wis. lfl — It League, Lombardi disclosed his winning teams, admitted "When he retired as coach, Lombardi had been a head- isn't easy for the state which Monday he would like to start their hard-driving -Boss had he said the job of coach and ache for other NFL clubs for worshipped Vincent Thomas over again with the Washington shown signs of wanting to re- general manager was too big and one fan of the Min- Redskins. years, Lombardi for 10 years to bid turn to coaching after a year for one man. But 3 think he Gov. Warren P. Knowles, a devoted exclusively to being contradicted himself," Dowler nesota Vikings expressed a farewell. But knowing Lombar- frequent figure at Packer general manager. added. feeling of relief. di as they do, fans and players games, said Wisconsin owes a "I could see during this past Defensive captain Willie Da- "I'm a Viking fan and I was admitted Monday there would debt to the man who rescued season how anxious he was to vis said lombardi's departure quite pfeased to know he was be little hope of changing his the Packers from the losing get back into coaching," Starr as general manager probably leaving and not going back to mind. column and gave this northern said. "He had the itchy feel- won't disturb the Packers for his coaching responsibilities" "He came to Green Bay and community a big - city reputa- ing. " very long. with the Packers, said Jon Kerl got the Packers out of the hole tion. Defensive tackle Ron Kostel- "Had he left the team as of St. Paul, Minn ., who was and satisfied his ego," said Jim "Through Tiis skill and ef- nik described him as "really coach, his loss would have been visiting in Milwaukee. Powell, 20, a Milwaukee dance fort," Knowles said, "he made antsy to get back into coach- much greater," Davis said. Richard Bertrand of Green instructor. "Now he wants to the Packers synonymous with ing." Mrs. Gordon Marquardt of Bay said his town owes thanks do the same thing in Washing- excellence, and he turned the Flanker Boyd DowJer said Milwaukee was among the to Lombard!. ton. You have to have a lot of attention of the nation toward Lombardi "is too young and has countless Packer fans who "He's done an awful lot for years respect for a man like that." Wisconsin." too much to offer. He probably would regret the loss of Lom- Green Bay in the last 10 " At 55, after 10 years of mak- Green Bay players, sueh as felt a little lost this season as bardi. Bertrand said , "and what he's ing the Green Bay Packers the quarterback . Bart Starr, whom far as his Contribution to the "I want him to stay," she done for the team he's done for best" of the National Football Lombardi hand-picked to steer team itself was concerned." said. "Heck, he's a legend," the town." 70 30-PLUS EFFOR TS FRIDAY LOMBARDI (Continued From Page 12) defensive reputation. As the Packers dropped to a 6-7-1 season, rumors broke out that he was being offered jobs with other clubs-Philadelphia, Year of the Scorer in Area New Orleans, Boston, Atlanta. Nineteen-Sixty-Nme will have to go to Harmony's Ariyn Sik- Norsemen to an 84-52 win oyer ior center, meshed 42 to round The former member of Ford- to go down as the year of the kirik. Sikkink set a . school and Alma Center. The 54-point spree out what may go down as the scorer in area basketball. ham's storied Seven Blocks of Maple Leaf Conference record brought Rasmuson's season av- wildest scoring night in area Last Friday night was a case and became the top single game history. Granite acknowledged he might ih poipt. Six players scored be- erage back to an even 30 points- like to return to the East, and scorer in the . state of Minne- For the record, the over-look- negotiat- tween 30 and 37 points — but sota this year when he poured per-game. ed half dozen were: Terry there was talk he was they were scarcely noticed. Curt Brownell, another . jun- ing with a former employer, the through 59 points in his team's Highum of Peterson with 37, Giants. Overshadowing the half-dozen 102-47 win over Leroy. ior, also got into the act. Dave Walker of Arkansaw with New York 30-point efforts were a pair of Next in line came Whitehall's Brownell, a 6-1 star from Pe- 33, Larry Ebert of Alma , with He often skid he wouldn't 50-point-plus performances and 6-6 junior sensation, Ralph Ras- pin , rammed home 48 points for 31, and Steve Baures of Coch- leave Green Bay during a losing two more of over 40. muson. Rasmuson hit career another career high while Jim rane-Fountain City, Randy season. Yet, he said, he would a * have to consider any good offer. Top billings, of course, had high 54 points to spark the Malone of Wabasha, a 6-8 sen- Schultz of Gilmanton . and Ly- man Johnson of Zumbrota with In his absence, the Packers 30 each. would be hard-put to duplicate the glory of the last decade : [FOR SIXTH SPOT Walker's 33-point mark wasn't BULLET-IN . . . Baltimore's Kevin Lough- fouled Loughery and the Bullet guard got his enough to keep his torrid area five NFL titles, two consecutive Super Bowl crowns. ery drives for a layup as Chicago's Jerry two points at the free throw line in Monday's Golden Brand leading pace on an even keel . The Lombardi period became Sloan leaps in an attempt to block the shot NBA game against the Bulls. (AP Photofax) Walker leads this week's race as teammate Barry Clemens looks on. Sloan with a 34.6 standard. Rasmuson Green .Bay's Golden Era under hung to his No. 2 spot ahd his policies of a hard running at- Takes Third in irlene Trimmer closed the gap, while, also mov- tack coupled with a keen pass- ing up fast, Schultz pushed his ing game, to which he assigned average to 27.6 for a ace quarterback Bart Starr as comfort- the chief engineer. City Tourney able hold on the No. 3 spot. Kansas, Minus White, Because of the big weekend The Redskins finished the 1968 With over half of the teams Slams 607 Set there were some changes in season with a 5-9 record. They already finished , R u p p e r Vs If Irlene Trimmer had her 521; Carol Ives, 516; Tess conference scoring races. Ma- scored 249 points and allowed opponents 358. Grocery of the Westgate Na- druthers, she would "druther" Young, 514; Betty Englerth, lone once again tops the Cen- tional League holds on to the have bowled a 607 in the wom- 514 ; Leona Lublnski, 513; -Rosie tennial in his topsy-turvy battle Washington is crying for a No. 1 spot in the Winona Men's en's city secretary smashed one Von Ruden, 505; Orlane Kittle, Lombaxdi-style running game. Records 1 OOOth Win ¦ with . Elgin's Fred Lorentson. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ciated Press poll, not only gave night minus one man, Olympic City Bowling Tournament at which opens in less than two 505, and Yvonne Carpenter, 50O. The lead has changed hands The Capital Division club aver- Hal-Rod Lanes. weeks. aged only 83.1 yards a game on The number 12 was an Orange the gridders an arithmetic les- star Jo Jo White, and came The only men's 600 came out between the two every two son but a study in contrast, as away with a 64-48 triumph to be- The closest any team could Instead, however, the wom- of the Monday League at the weeks. the ground, and no Washington Bowl nightmare for the Kansas come to Ruppert ' en' city secretary smashed one running back was listed among well. come the second college team to s Monday night s Winona Athletic Club where Johnson football team but 1,000 turned was a third-place effort by Monday night , built around a , Zumbrota's 6-5 cen- the loop's top 15. A 'twelfth man on the field reach 1,000 wins. Gene Coraero blasted 619 for ter, took oyer for Steve Svig- Two of the nation's Top Ten Golden Brand Foods of the pair of 221 games, in the Pin First National Bank. Paul Mal- Quarterback Sonny Jurgenson out just grand for their basket- cost Kansas an Orange Bowl City League.at Hal-Rod. Led by Topplers League at Westgate gum of Kenyon in the Hiawatha gave Washington a better look- ball counterparts. . victory against Penn State, but teams were in action Monday iszewski had a 236 for the same Valley. Johnson's current 22.8 action night and one of them was Ken- Jon Kosidowski's 623, Golden Bowl. , team, while Jim Fitzgerald also ing passing game. His team av- And the Jayhawk cagers, the cagers went into mark tops Dean Fiegel of Kas- against Monday tucky, which reached the 1.000 Brand powered 2,942, 18 pins She recorded her second na- had a 236 for Quillin's IGA, eraged 177.5 yards in the air. ranked 13th in the latest Asso- Oklahoma State shy of the tournament tional honor count of the season son-Mantorville by four-tenths milestone last month. The leading sparking the team to 1,056—- The Packers, Lombardi said, Wildcats made it total It did, however, take over and the lith of the year for point. Sviggum has dropped all fourth-ranked 2,885. Ches Pozanc had a 602. the way to 19.5. "will be in fine shape" in the fu- 1,005 with a 105-93 Southeastern the scratch¦ lead with a 2,800 the local gals while helping her ture. ¦ " WESTGATE : Lyle Jacobson Brownell took the Conference victory over Au- count. - .; Watkins Cosmetics team to 2,- laced 599 for Jerry's Auto Sales, lead from "They've got a good coach, a Besides Kosidowski' 706. The series ties her for sixth Greg Bearden among the inde- 1 burn. s effort, and Ray McNally had 248 for good organization,' he said. Third-rated Santa Clara John Walski had a 593, Bob in the Top Ten this season. Ir- pendent and fringe schools, ' Frickson's Auctioneers in the "The Packers will be around a It s Big Ralph trailed at halftime for the first Kosidowski a 540, Cy Cyert a lene's earlier national total was while Sikkink charged to the Community League. Team hon- long time after Vince Lombardi time this season but rallied to 537 and Mike Cyert a 507. a 605 on Nov. 18. . fore in the Maple Leaf with his is gone." ors went to Blumentritt's Store 20.8 mark taking turn back upstart San Francisco Right behind Golden Brand is In addition, Hamernik's spank- with 1,032 and Benson s Feed , over the lead , ' from Ted Turbenson of Spring State 72-59 f or an 18-8 reocrd. the A&D Bootery team of the ed 925 in the same circuit, while Mill with 2,934. same league. A&D totaled 2 500s were recorded by: Esther Valley. In other key games** 15th- ,- In the Ladies League Circle Against Field ranked Duquesne downed Fair- 936 for fourth with Cal Hopf Pozanc, 535; Betty Schoonover, TOP TEN G Ranch took group laurels O pts; Avg. field 85-75 and No. 20 Colorado getting a 591 Harvey Kane 568 Tonight's Dairyland Confer- 5-9 guard Rick Frueh is aver- , , with 903—2,611. Peggy Jacobson Dave Walker, Arkamaw ... 8 277 34.6 Trojans Break nipped Missouri 80-79 in over- Ralph Rasmuson, Whitehall IS 3M 3O.0 aging 12 points an outing, as Al Smith 248—563, Ron Fitch had 190—503 for ence battle between league 554 and Ev Mueller 476. Midland Co-op, Randy Schultz, Gilmanton .. 12 331 27.6 is 6-0 forward Greg Laugen- time. while Mary Serwa tagged 511 Bob K _ lly, Mabel-Canton .. 10 24. 24.9 leading Whitehall and second The country's two top scorers The new fifth place team Sports Curt Brownell, Pepin .. 12 28. 23.« berg. Kevin Johnson , a 6-0 is City for Ken's Hardware. Marcy An- place Osseo - Fairchild will be Jones & Kroeger of the VFW Lyman johnion, Zumbrofa .. 22 251 22.8 Tie for Tlhird guard, has an 11 point aver- had somewhat similar games. derson dumped 505. Dean Fiegel, Ka _ son-Ma nt. M 313 22.4 a classic confrontation pitting Pete Maravich the leader, made circuit at Hal-Rod with a 2,918 Terry Highum, Peterson .;.. 13 28. 22.0 age. Dan Srhith, a 6-0 forward, handicap count. Terry Risser Calendar Fern Girtler paced Curley's Greg Bearden, Lewiston ...12 260 21.7 a great high school eager is the other starter while 6-0 14 of 33 shots and 31 points in Dick Hansen, Taylor 10 211 21.1 Louisiana State's 95-71 romp shot 557, Rick Curran 544, TUESDAY Floor Shop to 903—2,665 in the against a well balanced, depth Bob Krueger, 6-0, Jim Mulvan- over Mississippi State Runner- Steve Gerlach 450, Joe Ives 449 _ASKETBA_ _- Alley Gaters circuit with her CENTENNIAL In Area Poll laden team. ey and 5-6 Tom Burns are top . and Pete Kaehler 408. The team Hamllne at St. Mary'i, 7:30 p.m. 207-514. Jean Plait had 515 for a Pti. Avg. reserves. up Calvin Murphy of Niagara La Crosse Aquinas at Cblttr. I p.m. Curley's Floor Shop, and Janice Jim Malone, Wabasha ...... 12 2._ JC.s Gale-Ettrick couldn't stand Whitehall's Ralph Rasmuson. shot 13-for-38 and 33 points but was aided by 510 pins handi- HOCKEY- Fred Lorentson, Elgin 13 26. 20.3 prosperity, 54-point perform- Obviously, the Chiefs have St. Thomai al St. Mary'i, 7 p.m. Drazkowski had an equal total but Rushford con- coming off a the Purple Eagles lost to De- cap. Dale Klrkhofl, Mazeppa .... 11 16. 1-4.9 tinued its climb toward the top ance against Alma Center Fri- to win to have any sort of WEDNESDAY for Economy Plumbing. Jane Bill Gergen, Randolph ? 121 14.2 chance at the conference title. Paul 83-74. In seventh place is Blanche's Stan Bismarck, Pari. Deaf 7 tl 13.1 in the Winona Daily News area day, is one of the area's best Tavern with a WRESTLINO- Sherman socked a 510. Rick Gorgon, Randolph .... t 122 13.3 "We're happy we achieved 2,905 behind Mankato at Winona State, 7:10 p.m. basketball ratings this week. individuals while Osseo-Fair- Other Dairyland games to- George Thilmany's 565. John ATHLETIC CLUB: Judy Ver- Ron Kurth, Elgin 13 174 13.4 night have Augusta (1-8) at Ele- the 1,000-victory mark, regard- . FRIDAY di ck stung 189—492 in the Go. Dale Holm, Goodhue 11 140 12.7 Gale-Ettrick, which moved up child , experienced but small, is Pozanc socked 544 , Roy Bell and BASKETBALL- John Ernst, Elgin 13 15. 12.0 a prime example of what con- va-Strum (4-5) , Cochrane-FC less of Kentucky's claim," said Getters loop, Mike Mac Namara, Goodhue 12 140 1 1.7 to fifth , its highe-st rank of the Joe Lewinski 524 each and Austin Pacelli at Colter, I p.m. while Steve's for a basket- (3-6) at Independence (3-6) and Kansas. Coach Ted Owens, not- St , Cloud at Winona State , 7:30 p.m. season, last week, was an up- solidation can do Chris Weifenbach 504. Lounge waxed 836—2,425. COULEE Blair ( 6-3) at Alma Center ing that Kentucky went back Winona High at owatonna, HAL-ROD: Shelly Halliday G PH. Avg. set victim of Arcadia , 62-58 Fri- ball program. Individually, Kosidowski's 623 WRESTLINQ- Bob Olsdahl, Gale-Ettrick 12 251 20.9 The 6-6 Rasmuson, only a (2-7). into ancient newspaper files to Owalonna al Winona High, 7:30 p.m. paced Royal Rollers to 663— Dan Hauser, Holmen 14 272 1M day night. The result saw the unearth three previously over- was the top series, while Louie SWIMMING- junior, is averaging 30 points Maple Leaf Conference lead- 1,266 in the Pa rk Rec Jr. Girls Bob Stilgerwald, Bangor ...13 226 17.4 Redmen drop back two spots fo looked triumphs. "It is a signifi- Wera had a 267 game, Mel Austin at Winona High, «:30 p.m. Brian Slcrn, Melrose-Mindoro 13 325 17.3 a game this year and dumped ers, Spring Valley and Chat Winona State at La Cross, (No. Michi- circuit with her 154, Becky Steve Anderson, West Salem 14 238 17.0 seventh. cant milestone and makes ua Christopherson a 257 and Roger ' in 33 in the Norsmen's 68-59 face tough league battles gan). Schossow dumped 291 for Knock Tom Reedy, Arcadia .. .. 14 221 15.» field , Biltgen a 254. Other 600s were HOCKEY— Rushford, meanwhile, aveng- proud of Kansas' winning bas- Outs. Tom Gulli-kjon, Onalaska 14 21) 15.4 triumph over the Chiefs Dec. tonig ht. The Wolves play at recorded by Biltgen , 613; Chris- St. Mary's al Notre Dame. Tlm Gulllckson, Onalaska 14 212 15.1 ed its only loss of the campaign 7 at Whitehall. tough Lanesboro (4-4) while ketball tradition." topherson SATURDAY Gary Beckfr , Trempealeau 13 191 14.B by smashing 10th ranked Spring Phil Harmon, a 6 foot-4 sen- , 611; Vince Suchomel, Marshall Anderson, G-Ettrlck » 135 13.9 Outside of Big Ralph , the third place Preston (5-3) is at BASKETBALL- Grove 89-64 for its ninth ior, took over for Wh ite, who 613; Dick Seeling, 607; Wera , UM-Morrls it VVinona Stale, 7:30 p.m. DAIRYLAND rest of the Norse are just a Chatfield. 610; Bob Ives, 606; Hugh Or- St . Mary'i at UM-Dululh. O Pti, A-vg. straight win. The triumph en- bunch, of guys named Sheld- used up his eligibility. But Ow- Cotter at Minneapolis Da La Salle Ralph Rasmuson In th,e Root River, improv- phan , 604, and Dave Ruppert , . , Whitehall 13 390 3O.0 abled the Trojans to break a don (Hanson ) , Ken (Thoreson ) , ens switched from a White-di- WRESTLING- Pearl Powers Les Olterson, Blair 13 t.5 16.7 ing Caledonia (5-2) is at league three-guard 603. Brent Malhson, third-place tie with Osseo-Fair- rected attack to a Stowarlvllle «t Winona High, 7i30 p.m. Blair 13 176 16.0 Orlan (Hagen), Roger (Berg) leading Rushford (7-1) in the Bill Bonow had a . 57ft error- Winona Stale at South Dakota stata. Bill Skroch, Independence .. 13 201 15.2 child , dumping (he chieftains to (Nordhagen) all of offense. SWIMMING— Lloyd Rlphenburg, E.-Strum 11 159 J4.5 and Brian three game less, . fourth. top game of a "You don't replace someone Bemldfl at Winona Sta te, l p.m. Dave BrommerIch, C-FC .. a 111 13.9 whom have had their moments slate . A total of 96 teams have Winona High at Dloomlnglon Kennedy Kim Nelson, Eieva-Strun .. 13 175 13.5 Spring Grove, which fell out and are pretty fair athletes in like Jo Jo White," he said. "We bowled with 76 more to com- Invitational. Bullets Win Oil Hart , Alma Center ... 13 170 13.1 of the rankings for the first great Traditional none onference just hope we're mature enough HOCKEY- Rick Frueh, Osseo-Fairchild 13 157 _3.1 their own right. None are games have St. Charles (8-5 ) pete. SI, Mary'i al Notra Dame. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Randy Abrahamson, Oiseo-F. . 3 1_ 7 717.1 time this season , and Gale-Et- but they 're extremely that we can adjust. " scorers, Lewiston and Mondovi (9-5) Team Standings The Pearl was dull for most of HIAWATHA VALLEY trick weren't the only rated adept at getting the ball to at Kentucky blew an 11-point 1. ¦ O PIS. Avg. Rupperls Oro„ National, WO ... 19_0 (he game but lie shone in the teams to lose- la st week. at N'o. 1 Durand (11-1). lead and overcame a 42-point 2. Norms Electric, Hiawatha , WO 2949 Pro Basketball Lyman Johnson, Zumbrota 11 251 22.8 Rasmuson, who seldom misses. 3. Golden Brand Food- third quarter—and so did the Dean Fleoel, Kasion-Mnnlor. 14 J1J 22.4 hit, TUESDAY'S GAMES spree by Auburn's John Men- city, HR 2942 NBA Sixth-rated Kenyon dropped Against Alma Center, he 22 •4 . A. D. Bootery, City, HR 2938 Baltimore Bullets. Steve Sviggum, Kenyon .... 14 273 19.5 29 field goals and 10 of If. LOCAl. SCHOOLS— gelt. The Wildcats had their 5. Jonoi a Kroeger, VFW, HR .... 2918 Monday 's Results Jim Glover, St. Charles . 13 a« 19.3 its second game in three starts. of La Cro.se Aqulnai at Cottar. t. Wine House, classic, WO .14 Dalllmore 132, Chicago HI. Earl "The Pearl" Monroe L. Kellar, Kasson-Mantorville 14 237 17.9 The Vikings, who still managed free throws , besides hauling in Harnllna at St. Mary 'i. troubles until the final 12 min- 7. Blanche's Tavern, VFW, HR .... 2905 Seattle 114 , Los Angeles 107. scored only a total of three Terry Kleffer, Lake city .. 11 176 16.0 MAPLE LEAF- utes when they broke away Only games scheduled. to hang onto the Hiawatha 16 rebounds. 8. Hot Fish Shop, Classic, WO .... 2890 points in the first, second and Todd Prink, Cannon Falls .. 13 207 15.9 Spring Valley at Laneiboro. (rom a 64-64 tic. Dan Issel 9. Poaranc Truck.no, Classic, WO .. 2881 Today 's Games Pal Otrry, Stewartville .. .. 14 221 13.8 Valley Conference lead despite The Norse arc a perfect 8-0 Prcaton al Chatfield. 10. Dales Standard, classic, WO ... 2874 Atlanta at New York. fourth quarters Monday night S. Hyllenjjrcn, cannon Falls 13 118 14.3 the chain of events, are now in thc Dairyland and 11-2 over Grand Meadow al Harmony. scored 36 points , Mike Pratt 22 Milwaukee at Chicago. INDEPENDENTS & OTIIEItS Leroy-Ojirandor at Wykofl. and Mike Casey 20 for Ken- Philadelphia al Phoenix. but he threw in 12 in thc third to teetering on the edge of falling all. ROOT RIVER- Seattle at San Francisco. / 0 Pit. Avg. spark a game-breaking rally as Curt-Drownell, Pepin ...11 216 2J.8 Osseo-Fairchild , meanwhile , Caledonla at RuihlorO. tucky. Harvard, B.U. Post Cincinnati vi. Detroit at Houston. out of the ratings. They arc Greg Bearden, Lewiston .... 12 2(0 21.7 Mabel-Canton at La Craicent, San Olego vi. Boiton at Houston, the Bullets defeated Chicago has the better season record Santa Clara , behind 39-34 at Ken Harmon, Durand U 2)9 currently 10th , Peterson at Houston. Beanpot Puck Wins Only games scheduled. 19.9 1I.2-122, Dal Parr, Mondovi 14 J(J 18,7 (12-1) , hut is only second best HIAWATHA VALt-E . — the intermission , rallied behind Wednesday'! Oamtt Meanwhile , ninth rated Elgin BOSTON (A?) - Harvard Mike Krlalk, Durand 12 224 Plainview al Lakt Cily. Chicago at Detroit. In the third period , tiie Bullets 18.7 in (he Dairyland. A situation Rud Ogden , who scored 16 of his Fom Dauer , Durand 12 is_ 13.3 ran afoul of defense-minded DAIR YLAND- nnd Boston University , thc de- New YOrk al Milwaukee. rnmedy on their Auqujta al Eleva-Strum. 20 points in the .second half ns who increased (heir lead over Doan Nunloch, Lewiston .. 13 170 14.2 they hope to Cincinnati at San Diego, Randolph and was beaten 45-41. Coctirano FC at Independence fending champion , posted open: idle Philadelphia (o games Dick Hansen, Dover-Eyota 14 1(4 11.9 tonight. tho Broncos overlook Snn Fran- Philadelphia at Seattle, 2',£ homo floor Blair al Alma Center Oreg Smith, Dover-Eyota 15 1»0 12.7 Randolph , although only 6-3 this ing—round victories in tlie 17th Boston at Baltimore. While Rasmuson is White- 0»sto DICK TRACY By Chester Gould BEETLE BAILEY By Wort Walker BLONDIE By Chick Young LI'L ABNER By Al Capp ¦ » ¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ *——¦——- ' ^— ^" " '. ^— " — . THE FLINTSTONES By Hanna-Barbera BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Lasswell STEVE CANYON By Milton Canniff APARTMENT 3-G By Alex Kotzky WE^WANT ~^_S^_s_____^__M^^_Krc^Tr^_^____^__r ^____n^H_fl^ ... 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