Iowa, OSC Coaches Plead
Lack Of Reserve Strength
PASADENA. Calif. - Rival
Rote Bowl coachet Tommy Pro
thro of Oregon State and Forett
Evashevtki of Iowa pleaded lack
01 reserve strength rnday and
played cautious about heavy eon-!
tact work.
The businesslike but affable ! stringert Carl Maxwell and Chuck
Hawkeye headman from lowa!Rch, ends, and tackle Terry
City said he hat four or possibly I Salisbury.
iuu uuik men wno. are ley
players. He cannot risk injury to
any 01 uiero,
8 Exposure Roll
39
ONLY
In by 2 p.m. today finished
at 2 p.m. tomorrow. Shorp,
clear, quality work and mount
ed in convenient album.
FULLERTON
REXALL DRUGS
127 North Jackson
FILM
TURKEY SHOOT
SUNDAY DECEMBER 23 FROM 10 A.M.
Roseburg Rod & Gun Club
AT WINCHESTER
All Shooter and Spectators Welcome
Camet For Non-Shooter
SHOP HERMAN S
M 'TIL 9 P.M.
K Billfolds
dj Voluet to 10.00
Vl PRICE
518 S.I. Jackson St.
HARRY'S AT IT AGAIN!!
Auction to be held at Roseburg Auction Barn
tin nnn new and used furniture must
)1U,UUUbe sold regardless of price
CHROME SETS
LIVING ROOM
BEDROOM
MATT I JUS
Itemt i mrtj ntion. Miny gift itews.
AUCTION TO M HCtD AT ROSEBURG AUCTION BARN
1297 N. E. Crindvi.w
Hjrry H(n nJ Virgil Munion. Auetiont,
Prothro, the nun from Oregon,
said hit problem it not to much
regulars at -players to practice
gainst."
Oregon State't 40-man squad is
now. at least temporary, reduced
iin w nm u.th ...... . .v .j
Evashevski said it would be
hard to replace center Don Suchy,
end Frank Gilliam, quarterback
Ken Ploen and tackle Alex Kar
ris. He also added Frank Bloom
quist, guard, to this list.
Neither coach is exactly happy
with the training outlook as mat
ters stand. But as Prothro ob
served, no coach is satisfied a
week or 10 days before a big
game.
Oregon State. Prothro an
nounced is moving its practice
sessions from Santa Monica City
College to Spaulding Field at
UCLA next Monday, primarily be
cause the UCLA field provides
more privacy. Prothro called it
"indoors."
UCLA's field is also something
of an alma mater for the one
time Duke University star, since
he was an assistant coach at
UCLA from 1949 until he went to
Oregon State as head coach in
1955.
:has begun at Seattle University.
Hummed ud one! It was the O'Brien Age that lift-
Evashevski
sentiment handily with the com-
mem: .status in nasKeiball. the schools
"We know whaf Oregon State'"1'"', ,nd boosters as loud and
probably will, do. but not when iVe fightm' sure 'tha't Elsn" Bay
they will do it. j 0r't the boy to keep the Chiefs in
The Hawkeye coach concluded j the national spotlight for the next
with: "I'd be very happy right j couple-three seasons.
now to settle for another one point1 L""e -"'hn c''"".
Iowa victory." i ,
He referred to Iowa't 14-13 win i i i D J
over Oregon State Oct. 6, which! ' l0-J UetetiSe bOOSted
now sett up the first Rose Bowl
replay of a regular season game. I
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SATURDAY
TIES
Re9. 1.50 & 2.00
69e
ORchard 3-7026
SPECIAL
AUCTION
SUNDAY-1 P.M.
LAMPS
CEDAR CHESTS
IAHGIS
BEPKIGIRATOBS
HAWKEYE BACKFIELD LOOSENS UP The Iowa Hawkeyes have begun drills at East
Los Angeles City College for their New Years Day Rose Bowl game with Oregon
State. Shown is the bockfield at kicking practice. From left: Bill Happel, rhb (40!; Ken
Ploen, qb (11); Fred Harris, fb (35); and Don Dobrino, rhb (20).
Baylor Reign Starts At Seattle University
By JACK HEWINS
Associated Press Sports Writer
SEATTLE UP The Bavlor era
ed the Chieftains to major college
B rArirli Trim DrnthrA
PASADENA, Calif, off All
it not war and grimncis on tho
Rosa Bowl front this yaar.
Ortgon Start's coach. Tommy
Prothro, was catling into tho
prtss room from Santa Monica
with a loud tpoakar t (aphonic
roport of tho day't activititt at
tportt writtrt ask ad th ques
tions. Without bonofit of identifica
tion, Iowa't coach, Forost Eva
shevski, took ovor the phone and
in mock tariousness inquired:
"Tommy, what type of deftnse
aro you going to usa?"
Obviously rocogniiing Evy't
voico, and without a pause, Pro
thro just as sariousty rap tied:
"Wo will use an 114 dtfanso."
FURILLO RECOVERS
READING, Pa. ( Carl
Furillo, Brooklyn Dodgers out
fielder, is out of the hospital, 10
days after an emergency opera
tion for appendicitis. But his doc
tor cautioned him Friday to take
it easy for at least two months.
The 34-year-old veteran tirst
complained of pain in his right
side in July. Eventually, a rup
tured appendix became ab
secessed. Surgery was performed
on Dec. 4.
BASKETBALL
TONIGHT
ROSEBURG
GRANTS PASS
Attend the Game, If Not
Listen to KRXL
8:00 P.M.
KRXL
WASHERS
DITI8S
VKTUBES
CHAIII
-t m . ' r - , aw r
is.
newiy installed as head coacn, nas
been making a valiant but futile
effort to toft pedal this one-man-1
gang talk. He insists he regards
the talented F.lgin as just another
member of the team.
Castellani, former assistant i
coach at Notre Dame, was
brought in when Al Brichtman re
signed at, the end of last season.
It was Brightman who took the
school into national prominence
with the fabulous O'Brien twins,
Johnny and Eddie. And he left
Castellani the legacy named Bay
lor. Young as the season Is. opposing
coacnes nave Deen caning Baylor inornton Humphries) and even
"i small (he's SS Bill Russell" some from the state of Washing
or "another Sihugo Green." But ton. Ever since the O'Briens came
to the Chieftain fans he't like no- out of South Amboy, N.J.. th
body but Baylor, 225 poundt of i school has ranged far afield for
poetry in muscle.
Baylor came west from Sping
arn High School in Washington.
DC. to enroll at the College of
Idaho in 1934. That winter he led
the Pacific Northwest collegiate
scorers with 825 points. Then de
emphasis set in at College of
Idaho and coach Sam Vokcs
bowed out. So did Elgin.
He enrolled at Seattle U. i year
ago but because of the transfer
was ineligible for one year under
NCAA rules. So he hooked on with
a Seattle AAU team and averaged
33 9 points per game over an 18
game schedule. He was clicking
off a mere 26 per outing early
this season, with the S.U. family
conuaing: "nail until he
gets
warmed up.
LaMviiam is a nervous, s-toot San Francisco and split a pair
9-inch lion on the court and quiet. with Santa Clara. Tuesday night
as a mouse away from the action, thev whipped Hawaii. Thev were
Softly and with pride he points to 'ranked 20th in the first Associated
supporting cast headed by 6-7
A 6S .
1. n : p
v:
h s r- ill . tit
w It: .
1 1
-U1IW
HERO WORSHIP Little 8-year-old Louis looks.in awe
at Dean Derby, University of Washington halfback, who
visited with youngsters at the Stumers Hospital for
Crippled Children in San Francisco. Dean will use his
strong legs to run with the West team against the East
so that little ones like Louis may some day walk again.
The East-West classic will be played in San Francisco's
Kczar Stadium Dec. 29.
1 Oil' :,4;ri(lh SAWDUST 8
.iowo.0uur I
S J7 nVf PEELER CORE
I J-lpjnj New UJccu- I
J .-i$f. 1 .: WOOD I sawoustI H mixed sizes A
ff , -.tjejun. i ir i i I, -J L.jl GREEN OR DRY S
O TT$ BLOWER l SERVICE I n
fP j&Qftr't ,fTtDiinrfl!Tll sO;
dt t - n . rii'ir rw inn ft ri pv u
DIAL OSBORN 9-8741
5J v:
'Dick stncklin, a Huntington
1 Beach. Calif., senior. Good re-
bounding and a fine assortment I
I of shots brought Stncklin up to
his final year with a total of 1709
points for three seasons (including
the frosh) at S.U. ,
Three sophomores round out the
current starting five. One is Fran
cis Saunders. Baylor's cousin and
a Spingarn product. Rico Parent!
of Plainftdd. N.J.. is at the other
guard and Bill Wall of Freehold,
N J . at forward.
Seattle hac nlavprc frnm Vw I
York City (guard Mike Assante)Nrw Orleans Loyola 87
and Apaiarhicola. Fla., (forward
talent
The same is true for the sched
ule. Last year the team traveled
11.000 miles. So far this year It
has visited Idaho and California
and will hop to Oklahoma and
Denver ere the season ends. One
jaunt includes the All-College tour
ney Dec. 27-29 at Oklahoma City.
Its tough tilts in the home coun
try will be against Portland V.
and Gonzaga of Spokane. Both
these traditional opponents are
well stocked with talent and out
of their three-way competition is
likely to come one representative
to the regional NCAA tourney next
March.
The Chiefs nnened uifh thro
! straight victories this year, then
dropped one to the University of
Press poll of the season.
1
k at a m
College Scores
COLLEGt BASKETBALL
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TOURNAMENTS
QUANTICO INVITATIONAL
Quantico Marinea 84. ML St.
Mary 69 (championship)
Belmont Abbey 75, Hampden-Syd-
ney 72 (for 3rd). I
St. Michaels (Vt.) 72, Wabash 68,for Coach Ralph Dysons potent
, . ,M ... i
Moravian 100, Tampa 68 (for 7th ,
PARRIS ISLAND INVITATIONAL
Semifinal)!
West Virginia Tech 107,
!
r arris
Frkin. 7S Helton 71 (overtimed !
Rollins 84. Piedmont 58
Atlantic Christian 71, East Caro
lina 68
CATHOLIC TOURNIY
St. Josephs (lnd.) 89 Lewis 78
(championship)
St. Mary's (Minn.) 66, St. Am
brose (Iowa) 59 (for third)
EAST
I ialle HI Knrlh Carolina State 76
North Carolina 64, NYU 59
Vtllanova 79, Indiana 8
Iona 64, St. Bonaventure 6
Rochester 84, Toronto 68
SOUTH
Stanford 73, Centenary ST
Wake Forest 73. Alabama 50
South Carolina 90, Georgia Tech
83
Tulane 78, Southwestern (Mem
Dhts) 58
Memphis State 70. Spring Hill 62
Kentucky Wesleyan 71, New Mex-
ico 66
Houston
74
MIDWEST
Bradley 74, Wisconsin 62
Minnesota 80. Kansas State 72
Tulsa 7S. Detroit 74
Chicago Loyola, 89, North Dakota
72
Oklahoma City 91, San Jose State
74
St. Francis (Pa.) 83, St. Norbert
75.
SOUTHWEST
Nebraska 67. Texas Tech 66
Texas Christian 81, Abilene Chris
tian 41
Texas Western 78, Colorado A&M
61
FAR WEST
California 74, Ariiona Slate
(Tempe) 61
Idaho 69, Eastern Washington it
Colorado College 60, Kearney
(Neb.) S8
Santa Clara 58. San Francisco
Olympic Club 50
Pacific Lutneran x, ttniin
Washington 47
Hospital Grounds Us
Offered For Playground
SALEM UH The state Board
of Control decided Thursday to
let the city of Salem use part of
the state hospital land for a play
ground. The board previously had re
jected the proposal.
The board said Wednesday,
however, that it is the only land
in the area that could be used as
a playground, and that the state
has no use for it.
The land will be leased to the
eity for $1 a year, but the state
could cancel the lease on 90 days
notice.
The board also approved new
prison regulation under which
prisoners will be able to receive
30 lettert t month, and to write
15 letters a month.
William Ryan, board secretary,
said the regulation it more lenient
than those of other prisons.
II explained that a limit had
to he imposed to ease the burden
of the penitentiary mail censors.
Game Fish & Hatcheries
Supervisor Is Assigned
PORTLAND OB Lewit R. Gar
lick, supervisor of the game fish
and hatcheries branch of the Port
land regional office since lft'iO, hat
been assigned to the Washington,
D. C. office of the Fish and Wild
lite Service for an indefinite pe
riod. Garlick's assignment will begin
Jan. 7.
Roseburg Stores
J T0NITE
Tell Your Store You
Sow It In The Newspaper
OAK WOOD (Dry) J
PLANER ENDS (Dry) 3
SLAB (Green Only)
as- j arr
Fri., Dec. 21, 19S&Tne NewtHeriew, Roseburg, Ore. T
Sutherlin Claims
Third Mat Victory
Sutherlin s veteran-laden grap-i
nlinif team harrilv worked ud a '
sweat in its match aeamst the vik.
uuie Douglas Trojan crew Thurs-
dav merit with a lnniriei ai-ii
victory.
It wu the third rMltrntv t',nl
maimen. iney also uea me strong
Roseburg grappling team earlier1
in the season.
Sutherlin lost no time in build-
I ing up its terrific margin, posting ;
n!n win io the opening ten bouts,
T, ..
fe,w when D""1"" Coach Glenn
Score Four Pint
tour pins by Bulldog wrestlers;
featured the onslaught. Collecting
pins were Laytnn rerguson over
Dave Hagness. John Mustion over
Cart Martin. Jim Seal over llarlev
Carter and Tom Fennell over
Butch Munn.
Decisions went to host grapplers
Gary Madreil and Alvin Barnes
who won over Tom Richards and
Ray Witt.
Douglas matmen chalked ud its
points with two decisions and one
pin, including the final two match
es. Decisions were won by Mar
vin Nickels over Stan Schricker
and Darrell Hill over Rod Para
zoo. The lone Trojan pin came in
the heavyweight bout. Hugged
Gary Albertus pinned freshman
Bill Nelson in 1:58 of the opening
round.
Levity Reigns
One exhibition match between
Heavyweights Dick Ray and Bull
dog Roger Barrick had the fans in
near stitches. The two lads put on
a fine exhibition that would put
many of the toD TV hum, in
shame. Barrick eventually won the
nara-earnea victory Dy downing
his opponent in the second round,
although giving away better than
50 pounds.
Another exciting bout took place
during the Nickel-Schricker battle.
won by the former, but not until
he was forced to go all out and fi
nally won on a 9-8 count.
The new facilities have been completed
and we're ready to go! Come one, Come
all . . , to Roseburg's new Bowling Alley!
O 16 ALLEYS
O AUTOMATIC PINSETTERS
STARTS SAT. NIGHT
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT: League
bowling starts Wed. Jan. 2.'
ROSEBURG BOWL
2400 Diamond Lake Blvd. Ph. OR 2-3601
WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING
gGive Real Family Fun! 3
8 An exciting, new 1957
iicnniinv niiTDnjinni
mtnuuiu
UwmudValkii
9
State champion Jerry Peres did
nnt uraal
iVartitv r..,r..
Sutherlin al.'Dattetti it
nniinH.. rk...i Tu..:.!.. t
forfeit - ij oy
lf rutitnA- n
dec. Tom Richards (D) -J
ill pounds: Alvin Barnes (S)
dec. Ray Witt (D) SH).
128 pounds: Lavton Fereuson f!:)
pinned Daved Hagnest (D) 1 57
second round.
IZi pounds: Marvin Nickels (D)
dec. Stan Schncker (S) 9-8.
133 pounds: John Mustion (S)
pinned Carl Martin (D) 1:48 first
round.
138 pounds: Bob Lindstead (S)
by forfeiL
143 pounds: Jim Seat (S) pinned
Harley Carter (D) 1:09 second
round.
154 pounds: Tom Fennell (S)
pinned Butter Bunn (D) 1:01 sec
ond round.
165 pounds: Danny Walker (S) by
forfeit.
175 pounds: Darrell Hill (D) dee.
Rod Parazoo (SI 2-0.
Heavyweight: Gary Albertus (D)
pinned Bill Nelson (S) 1:58 first
round.
SISLER HIRED
PITTSBURGH George Sit
ler, 63-year-old member of Base
ball's Hall of Fame whose hitting
feat have become a legend in hit
lifetime, has taken a full-time job
of trying to improve the hitting of
the Pittsburgh Pirates.
General Manager Joe L. Brown
yesterday appointed Sisler to the
rather unique post of "special ad
viser" to Field Manager Bobby
Bragan.
JAKE LEICHT
INSURANCE ACENCY
Oregon Ltd.
"If It Is Insurance Wa Sail It"
Room 223 Pacific lldf.
OR 2-3621
uuiDumu
for Christmas! 3
This Year, Make$
It A Family Gift . . . jS
a new 19S1 Mercury out- ff
board that insures yean of S
boating thrills and fun for Z
every member of the family. Sff
Twelve models, 6 to 60 h p. 3
to best suit your boating Jjl
pleasures and pocketbook.
liw oown payments, easy
monthly terms. See the col
orful new models todayl
New 80 hp
8 cylinder
Mark 75
Marathon
8
i
J(4
Smooth load - moving power
that's eay to handle, too! One
tingle control takes rare of
everything.. Simpler. Safer.
Naturally, this ta the tattrtt
outboard motor
in America!
" ialr alHi i lalrti i
CORNER OAK AND JACKSON Dial OR 3 6628
O
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