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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1958)
o o UCLA, Cougar Mentor Set To Surprise Foes y TW ASSOCIATED PRESS University of Oregon football players had rather a grim time of it Monday as they got this week's practices under way. Saturday's defeat by Washing ton State still was depressing them as they met with coaches for group sessions before going on the field and in a squad meeting after the practice. On the field, Will Reeve re placed Joe Schaffeld at guard in the 35-minute dummy scrimmage. Schaffeld, troubled with a hip in jury since the Oklahoma game, suffered a knee wrench against WSC. He is a doubtful starter against California Saturday at Berkeley. Jim Luide, running a temperature, was sent home and Tom Keel took his place at first unit tackle. The sky looked considerably brighter over at Corvallis. Grimm Mason, elusive tailback who has been out with injuries for two weeks, seemed ready for this weekend's game with Washington at Portland. Fuliliack Bob Stin nette's ankle injury, suffered against Idaho, appeared less seri ous than first thoucht. Of the Idaho game, Coach Tom my Prothro said, "... I was en couraged." Two Coast Conference coaches one trying to stay in the Rose Bowl race and the other just try ing to stay alive without seniors indicate they'll spring something new this weekend. Jim Sutherland ran his Washing ton State Cougars through some new formations Monday and said he hoped to get them back in the habit of scoring touchdowns in clusters. The Cougars opened the season with the reputation of a high-scoring team but weak on defense. In their last two games, however, the Cougars have scored only two touchdowns while the de fense has shut out the opposition. WSC Coach Ready Sutherland said he hopes to deal out a few surprises when WSC meets Southern California in a critical game at Spokane Satur day. The Cougars, with a 3-1 con ference record, rank with Cali fornia as a leading Rose Bowl contender. UCLA Coach Bill Barnes, whose Bruins. are ineligible for the Rose Bowl, said he plans to add more streamlining to his "Horse-'N'-Buggy" single wing offense. Barnes embellished the old sys tem with a flanker last week and it helped the Bruins to a 20-0 vic tory over Washington. But Barnes figures UCLA's next opponent, Stanford, will have de fensed the flanker pretty well, so he's decided to "add a few new wrinkles to go with what we have." Seniors Out I Some younger hands will have I to help fashion the wringlcs be cause uli.a lost a nait dozen seniors after the Washington game. They were limited to five games by PCC penalties. Southern California was hit by similar penalties but the Trojans have some good news to compen sate for the loss of seniors. Their No. 1 quarterback, Willie Wood, returned to practice Monday and probably will be ready to play against Washington State. Wood missed three games because of a shoulder injury. Also back with the Trojans was co-capt. Monte Clark, idle Saturday because of a badly bruised instep. Tribe Pastes Cactus Jack Curtice devoted much of a two-hour drill at Stan ford to passing. Observers said the Indian throwers got fine pro tection. At Seattle, the Washington Hus kies concentrated on defensive as signments. Coach Jim Owens said they reacted slowly last week against UCLA. Owens said he plans to mount a "go-go tvpe offense against Oregon Slate Sat urday. Bears Rest The California Bears, who as sumed a prominent position in the Rose Bowl run with a 14-12 victory over USC Saturday, took Monday off. It was their first weekday rest in weeks and Coach Pete Elliott said they earned it He also said they needed it. Four Bears came out of the Southern Cal game with assorted afflictions. Underdog Teams Plot To Club Top-Rated Squads From Perches By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS How secure did one of those fabled Western gunslingers feel with a few notches on his shootin; aim? Ask any of the top football teams. Someone is always waiting to gain a "rep" by knocking them off. This is not a spontaneous thing. A team begins its plotting over the weekend with scouting reports and movies, then goes into the operations stage with the first practice session. Let's look in on the practice fields of teams playing some of the nation's top teams this week. Pitt Combats Fumbles At Pittsburgh, where top-ranked Army meets Pitt Saturday, Pan ther Coach Johnny Michelosen is trying to stop a siege of fumble- itis that has hampered a Pitt at tack. He is also sharpening up a passing attack led by Ivan Toncic and Bill Kaliden to exploit a weakness the Cadets showed In beating Virginia last Saturday. Wisconsin Coach Milt Bruhn, looking toward Ohio Slate (No. 2) Saturday, expects tackles Dan Lannhear and Jim Heinecke to be off the injury list. The first two teams worked only lightly after being beaten by Iowa Saturday for their first loss. The Rice Owls, playing fourth rated Texas Saturday night, worked only lightly and watched films of last year's Texas game. Guard Charley Knight, on the in jured list, was pronounced avail able for the game. Terps Prep For Auburn Maryland Coach Tommy Mont made wholesale changes in his second and third teams as he strived to get some depth for his game with fifth-ranked Auburn. Winless Arkansas, playing sixth- ranked Mississippi, studied films of its loss to Texas while Coach Frank B r o y 1 e s moved Glenn Throckmorton info the right tackle spot replacing Eddie Walker, who moved to right guard. Northwestern's (No. 8) first stringers exercised lightly, then were excused as they began prep ping for seventh-rated Iowa. The Hawkeyes ran through a signal drill, while Kansas State went through a long drill, without con tact work, to correct glaring er rors in its 32-8 loss to Missouri. K-State plays ninth-rartked Okla homa. South Carolina has a Thursday date with Clemson (No. 10) and went throughout its final heavy contact work, emphasizing pass defense against Clemson quarter back Harvey White. Senator Morse Renews Call For Special Session WASHINGTON' (AP) Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore) Monday re newed his call for a special ses sion of Congress to deal with the Far East crisis. "It has been clear ever since January 1955 when the Congress made the great mistake of adopt ing the Eisenhower Formosa reso lution, that American support of Chiang on the Quemoys and Mat sus would increase the possibility of war in Asia," said Merse in a statement. "The American people should demand that the President of the United States call a special ses sion of Congress for a thorough review and eonsideration of (Sec retary of State) Dulles' stumbling brinkmanship in Asia. "The United States should make clear to the world that we do not intend to support with American blood Chiang's Chinese civil war aspirations. We should make clear to Red Russia and Red China that we do intend to defend Formosa until the United Nations finally determines the international law status of Formosa. s 'A i - , -,,3 1 u C 5 !'V i if? ft, Slj I - V '; - l! ! 1 f$ Ik" e ALL SIZES Gary Sobleski, left, all 4 feet and 11 inches and 95 pounds of him, and 6-3. 235-pound Pole Gibbons are team mates on the St. Francis High School football team of Petos key, Mich. Coach Hugh Wilson calls Sobleski his secret weapon Man Gnpples With Burglar, Breaks Furniture LA GRANDE (AP) Roy Nei derer was awakened hy a noise at 3 a.m. today, opened his eyes and saw a prowler in the bed room. Neiderer stood up in bed, made a leap across the room and grap pled wilh Die startled burglar. "I'll kill ya!" yelled the prowler. Mrs. Neiderer screamed. The Niederder children. Collette, 12, and Shari, 9, woke up and screamed. Neiderer and the prowler wrest led and banned away when they could get a free hand and smashed into (he furniture. Suddenly the prowler broke free. fled to the front room and Nei derer tackled him again. Again they wrestled and smashed furniture. Again the man broke away and again Neiderer pursued, making the tackle in the utility room. This time thry broke through the screen door. Neiderer lost his grip and the burglar melted into the darkness. Later Niederer surveyed the house and said some things were well busted up. He wasn't though, despite giving away some 2.) pounds at his estimate. However, he was severely bruised Neiderer, 40, weighs 180 pounds and is 5 feet 11 inches tall. He is a cable splicer for West Coast Telephone Co. He said he had a pistol in the room but couldn't get to it. His adversary kept trying to get into a pocket, but whether for a gun or knife he couldn't say. Missing was $50 worth of jewel ry, apparently pocketed before Niederer woke up. Tues. Oct. 21, 1958 Tha News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 7 Who's To Blame For High Cost Of Living Is Being Debated With More Heat Arixonia Covernor Keeps Date For Political Talk TUCSON, Ariz, i Arizona Gov. Ernest McFarland, Democra tic candidate for the U.S. Senate, believes in keeping his appoint ments if at all possible. Sunday night, en route from Phoenix to Tucson, a light plane in which the governor was a pas senger ran out of gasoline and made an emergency landing on I bumpy central Arizona cow pas ture, some 80 miles southeast of Phoenix. The governor, Mrs. McFarland and the pilot, Rusty Gibbons, were not injured. The plane was not damaged. Arrangements were made for more fuel, Gibbons made a take off across the pasture and the gov ernor arrived in time to preside at dedication ceremonies for a new National Guard building. Why is the daily newspaper like an all-around athlete? ; - ITS AGILE . 7 - ITS QUICK j IT'S VERSATILE j w'K, , ' i T J", . ', It - . A i :: 7 A. u ' v. . r i ...- ;,. ; A ' ! , ,e - l . 1 4 li " & ""'',-' . 1 v, ' C; '"! By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK (AP) The ques tion of who's to blame for the high cost of living is being de bated with more heat today. Businessmen are bringing up the ticklish natter of what they term labor's responsibility for, and indifference to, inflation. Labor is just as loud in denun ciation of business pricing prac tices. Part of the urgency of the de bate today is the growing belief that living costs will rise even higher some months from now as inflationary psychology spreads from Wall Street to main street. A group of leading industrialists have placed before the Commerce Department's 80-man Business Ad visory Council, meeting in Hot Springs, Va., the charge against labor. ' The council's Labor Policy Com mittee says that "compulsory membership yields a monopoly of tne laDor market and is the source of the economic power of union officials." It fears that labor's political power may lead the next Congress to follow union officials' "ideolo gies and proposals which result in inflation, concentration of pow er in central government, damage to progress and withering of free dom." Increased wages negotiated this year are boosting the costs of do ing business, the industrialists hold, and making further price hikes likely. Another group, studying U. S. monetary policies at a meeting of the American assembly at Ar den House, also has taken a stab at placing the blame for the rise in the cost of living in the last two years. It said that both business and labor share in the blame, and did nothing to halt inflation, hut helped instead to spread it through their complacency. In their final report the 60 rep resentatives of business, finance, government and education assert ed that monetary policy alone couldn't ward off the growing threat of further inflation. The report asked: "Does up ward push on prices by powerful labor unions, big business, and subsidized agriculture cause the price level to rise even in the face of unemployment? Does emphasis on full employment and rapid economic growth require accept ance of creeping inflation?" Some of the participants thought they saw increasing evidence that business and union leaders are at taining greater understanding of their basic interest in a sound dollar. Others could see no such signs at all. And the final report con tented itself with the plus hope that business and union leaders would see the necessity for work ing toward price stability. The declaration is binding on none of the participants. ' Most of the 60 participants agreed that further inflation is so far mostly in the minds of slock traders, bpt fear of its spreading was shared by all. one om ANSWER: IT'S SO VERSATILE! Advertisers invest more money in the daily newspaper than in any other medium because it can do so many things so well. Among its many accomplishments for advertisers, the daily news paper can announce new products, promote deals, adver tise prices, challenge competition, bolster sick markets and tell a complete product story. With the newspaper advertiser can apply selling pressure whenever and scries wnerever tney wisn. ii s tne penect answer to their needs. Khruschev Takes Stern Measure Against Tipplers LONDON ( AP ) Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, himself noted for his tippling at diplomatic re ceptions, has warned Russians the government is planning a crack down on drunks and moonshiners. "We must proclaim the sternest struggle against drunkenness and put an end to this evil," he told a group of farmers at the village of Malinovka near Kursk last Fri day. Moscow radio broadcast the speech today. "Drunkenness Is antisocial and profoundly alien to our order and times." he said. "One cannot shut one's eyes to the fact that in our society there still are drunkards, thieves and swindlers. "Drunkenness sans mans' health. The drunkard disfigures family life and damages society. Khrushchev said the Soviet gov ernment is working out a hill to provide sterner action against drunkards and "those who con tribute to drunkenness." One law will limit restaurant customers to one glass of vodka or other spirits. "If there arc people who like their five tots, they will have to go to live restaurants, Knrusn chev told the farmers. "They will sober up as they go from one to the other." Today's insurance problems answered by ROY O. YOUNG & Son QUESTION: What does a Contract Bond guarantee? ANSWER: That the bond ed contractor will fulfill ell provision end specifications of e contract. m rtf M Hnirmi trallia f mt wit Cm la ertta is. H fiat Ni It (ittHt tlvtl It MlifltiH It HI tirt! Roy 0. Young & Son Pacific Bldg. OR 3-6671 if 'if 2I V ' i BACK ON TOP The goddess of victory svalts her turn as rhariot is hoisted atop Berlin's Brandenburg Gate to replace quadrira landmark ruined In the last iar. ' "-""X 7 Wr. ; 7, - ' ft- il nnM mo TiiDArrri Tiii unusual ear of corn was grown WfMnrwrvivi-nrfww , , especially lor corncob pipes. Its grown for the long cob lalher than for the grain. Holding the ear is William Odom. director of research and plant breeding at the Missouri Farm ers Association's experimental nursery in Marshall, Mo. SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEWS-REVIEW DELIVERED DAILY TO 11,500 DOUGLAS COUNTY HOMES Q :Why is Old Stagg Kentucky's Top Bourbon? I I TOP BOllRlollli if 'ywir''' ft al.E- A ! a fit ' u : Because in all 2,652,638 barrels sold, its fine quality never varied, j-u-, Code 151C Cod. 15IB DI5T. BY THE GEO. T. STAGG CO., FRANKFURT, KY. 86 PROOF hi A ROSE IS A HEEL A walk down the garden path Is a must for a girl who acquires this new shoe from Rome. 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