The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, April 01, 1960, Page 9, Image 9

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    l
Waddling Along With The Webfo'ot
Oregon Favored In Track,
Oldtime Cage Season Set,
Frosh Open At Willamette
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu
gene (Special) Oregon's powerful
track and field squad, rated by
many as possibly the best in the
chool's history, will be the favor
ites to win the third annual North
ern Division Relays at Hayward
Field Saturday.
Coach Bill Bowerman's Crew,
which has not been defeated in
six years of Northern Division
competition, has won the event
both years it has been run and
will depend on good balance
throughout most of the events to
win its third straight.
Oregon State, which made a
strong showing in Arizona, is rated
as the top contender for second
spot while dark horse Washington
State, bolstered by a fine group
of sophomores, and Washington of
fer stiff competition to the Bea
vers. Idaho in its first year under
Coach Bill Sorsby, the former Ore
gon hurdler, has entered a full
squad for the first time in several
years and may cut in for some
unexpected points. .
Several of the individual events
on the program, which gets under
way at 1:30 p.m. after 10:30 a.m.
trials in the 100, high hurdles and
field events, are expected to fea
ture excellent early season compe
tition. In the 100 Oregon's Roscoe Cook,
co-holder of the world record,
meets Amos Marsh of the Beavers,
Don Maw of WSU and Bob Saun
ders of Washington along with Jim
Puckett of the Ducks. The high
hurdles rematch WSU's Spike Arlt
and Oregon's Dave Edstrom in
another of the fine duals.
Dick Miller of the Ducks and
Frank Wyatt and Ray Hatton of
Idaho will be evenly matched in
a strong two-mile field and the
low hurdles rematch Edstrom and
Arlt.
The relay races, the 440, 880,
mile, distance medley, and two
mile, will also produce some ex
cellent teams with Oregon's dis
tance medley crew of John Mack
(440), Sig Ohlemann (880), George
Larson (1320) and Dyrol Burleson
more than apt to break a record.
In the field events the javelin
will feature a half dozen throwers
over 220, led by WSU's Dick Ru
benser, the discus has Duck Jerry
Stubblefield and Husky Tony An
gell, the broad jump features
OSC's Darrell Horn, and the pole
vault matches WSU's Wayne Wil
son and Jack Fanning against
Oregon's Phil Paquin.
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu
gene (Special) The popular North
ern Division basketball schedules
of years past will return in many
respects in the 1961 season, it
was announced here today by
Leo Harris, Oregon athletic direc
tor and spokesman for the direc
tors at Oregon State, Washington
State, and Idaho.
Harris said the four teams would
play each other four times each
season, as in past years, and most
of the series would be two-night
stands. The 1961 slate which was
drawn up among the four schools
set 12 games among the schools,
and most will add a two-game se
ries with Washington, the fifth
member of the Northern Division
and now a member "Big Five."
Harris also pointed out this was
not the formation of a new league.
"You need six teams for recogni
tion as a league by the NCAA,"
he said, "and four is obviously not
enough. We decided our fans had
enjoyed the competition among our
schools in years gone by, and we
felt this was a step in the right
direction toward bringing about
better basketball schedules for our
respective teams."
All of the former Northern Di
vision and PCC teams operated as
basketball independents in the eyes
of the NCAA during the past sea-
Sports In Brief
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GOLF
WILMINGTON, N. C. Tom
Nieporte shot an 8-under-par 64
for a 3 stroke lead in the first
round of the Azalea open.
HOCKEY
CHICAGO Montreal's Canadl
ens went into the finals of the
Stanley Cup playoffs with a 2-0
victory over the Chicago Black
hawks for a 4-0 sweep of the best-of-7
series.
BASKETBALL
DENVER The NAIA Small
College All -Stars upset NCAA
champion Ohio State, 76-69, Akron
defeated the Armed Forces All
Stars, 82-76, NCAA University All
Stars downed Bartlesville (Okla)
96-79 and Peoria's AAU champions
nipped the NCAA All-Stars 91-89
in the opening round of the Olym
pic trials.
RACING
NEW YORK Trainer Hirsch
Jacobs failed for the third con
secutive day to saddle his 3,000th
winner at Aqueduct where Amber
Morn ($9.10) won the top event in
muddy going.
son and three, California, Oregon
ana soutnern California, were
chosen for western at-large berths
in the western regional playoff.
The 1960-61 schedule among the
ex-ND schools follows:
Dec. 9 WSU at Idaho; Dec. 10
Idaho at wsu, osu at Washing
ton. Jan. 6-7 Oregon at Idaho: Jan.
13-14 OSC at WSU; Jan. 20 Idaho
at OSC, WSU at Oregon; Jan. 21
Idaho at Oregon, WSU at OSC;
Jan. 27 Washington at Oregon;
Jan. 28 Washington at OSC, WSU
at Idaho.
Feb. 3 Oregon at OSC; Feb. 4
OSC at Idaho. Oregon at Washing
ton; Feb. 18 OSC at Idaho; Feb. 21
OSC at Oregon; Feb. 10 Idaho at
Oregon WSU at OSC; Feb. 11 WSU
at Oregon, Idaho at OSC; Feb. 17
Idaho at WSU; Feb. 25 Washing
ton at WSU.
March 3-4 Oregon at WSU
March 10 OSC at Oregon; March
11 uregon at usu.
Other games on the 1960-61 sched
ules for the four schools will be
announced later by the individual
schools.
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu
gene (Special) A 16-man University
of Oregon freshman track squad
will open its 1960 season next Sat
urday at the Willamette Relays in
Salem, head coach Bill Bowerman
announced here Thursday.
The well balanced contingent will
be led by Mike Murray, former
Medford shot put ace, John Burns,
Crater's fine javelin thrower and
high jumper, Ron Sniedow, one of
the nation's top prep discus throw
ers last year and a top football
prospect from San Rafael, Calif.;
and three outstanding South Burn
aby, B.C. stars, miler Vic Reeve,
weight man Dave Steen, and sprint
er Harry Jerome.
In addition to this group, the
Ducklings will have Keith Forman
the former Cleveland of Portland
mile star, and Bill Turner, a prom
ising sprinter from Eagle Point.
The Ducklings will enter Reeve
in the Statesman Mile, use Reeve,
Clark Santee and Bob Goodenough
in the distance medley, use the
same foursome in the two-mile re
lay, use Jerome, Turner, Dustin
Griffin and Don Peak in the 440
yd relay, and enter Jerome and
Griffith in the open 100-yard dash.
In the field events Murray and
Steen will be in the shot and Steen
will double in the discus, along
with Sneidow and Bill Kcimbeck,
Burns will handle the javelin alone
and team with Bill Youngman in
the high jump.
Tiger Choice
In TV Battle
BOSTON (AP) Dick Tiger,
the British Empire middleweight
king, rules an 8-to-S favorite over
Argentina's Victor Zalazar for
their 10-round nationally televised
fight tonight.
Tiger, Nigerian who is entering
the ring for the eighth time in
six months all for video con
sumption and Zalazar, meet at
the Boston Arena.
Tiger is ranked the No. 8 chal
lenger by the National Boxing
Assn. and No. 7 by Ring Maga
zine. He has a 22-9-2 record in
cluding 10 knockouts. Ace Arm
strong, Joe Giardello and Holly
Mims have been among his re
cent victims while he has a draw
with Rory Calhoun.
Unranked Zalazar has 15 knock
outs among his 29 pro starts. He
is the third straight Argentinian
to appear on the Friday night TV
fight series following Eduardo
Lausse and Frederico Thompson
He recently beat Yama Bahama on
the TV circuit.
Matchmaker Teddy Brenner who
has seen the two Datlie in buu-
man's Gym in New York says
Zalazar never has taken the worst
of it from Tiger.
"From experience Zalazar has
learned not to go head hunting,"
Brenner said. "He's become a real
eood bodv ouncher."
The bout (NBC-TV, 10 p.m.) will
be conducted under the Massachu
setts 10-point scoring system. The
winner of a round gets 10 points,
the loser nine or less.
k 7k. .. m
loco Chevrolet
fiesoLtonisunmal
Thursday, April 7 Through Monday, April 1 1
...v
r
o L
new displays
Each new Featurama display Is a FUN way of
looking at the '60 Chevrolet See the new
Corvair Unipack display. It gives you the
action-packed inside story on the newest
power team in America.
new tun
Make sure you operate the wonderful Truck
Selector at Featurama. You'll marvel at the
spectacular Impala lilt Body Display a
Chevrolet body separates from the chassis to
reveal Chevrolet's remarkable engineering
features in a fully animated fashion.
HANSEN
MOTOR CO.
Corner of Oak and Stephens
Siebern Stars For K's
While Yanks Again Lose
BOWLING
LADIES HAJOE CLASSIC LEAQL'B
W L
Wintton Drugs 33 17
Wagon Wheel 32'4 19(i
Roy Ac Rem 29 23
Foirhaven Beauty Salon 27 23
Ken Bailey Ins. 17 33
Kmidtsons Jewelers 14V4 37 It
Results: Roy Ac Rens 3, Knudtsons
Jewelers 1; Wagon Wheel 3, Fatrhsven
Beauty Salon 1; Winston Drugs 3, Ken
Rnllev Insurance 1.
High series: Anita Nichols 191-196-178
367, Roy ac Rens.
High game: Anita Nichols 19B.
other hlffh scores: Mary Circle 196.
Florence Neiseth 186. Laverne Weaver
186, Sally Moreno 190, Flo Ann Mc
Donald 18S.
- METROPOLITAN LEAGUE
EXHIBITION BASEBALL
Thursday Results
Detroit 5, New York 2
St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 5
Milwaukee 7, Washington 6
Baltimore 5, Kansas City 4
Cleveland 11, San Francisco 10
Chicago (N) 4, Boston 3
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Norm Siebern became so sun-
iiinniH in the New York Yankees
outfield his batting began to fade.
Now the 26-vear-old left-handed
hitter is on first base for the Kan
sas City Athletics, and he's hit
ting a rosy .373 with team-leading
spring totals of 4 home runs and
on RRT
Manager Bob Elliott put Norm
on first for the first time Thurs
day and the ex-Yankee responded
with homer, a double and three
r,,ne hotter! in as the A's defeated
the Baltimore Orioles 5-4 at West
Palm Beach.
When New York Manager Casey
Stengel let Norm out of the dog
house late in the '59 season, Sie
bern played the final two games
at first, fielding. 1.000.
But his work m Yankee Stadl
,' tronrherous left field was
moihinr ulse Norm played
134 games in 1958, his first year as
a regular, and carried a .300 bat
ting average into the : World Series.
Then Milwaukee fly balls, aided by
high winds ana a ue mB
began dropping all over left field,
xtn-.. ...no hnnrhpd.
t -t ..... no hnned things Would
be different, but his outficlding be
came so unsure that his hitting
Minted suit. Stengel finally
henched him.
Then the Yankees traded Sie
bern, Don Larsen, Hank Bauer and i
Marv Throneberry to the AS toi.
Kent Hadley, Joe DeMestri and i
Roger Maris, the left fielder they j
Norm promised he would hit;
again once he was away from the
Yanks. Ii he continues, and he
can play the bag, it will cost
Throneberry a job that had been
virtually handed to him by the i
A's who had a coUcction of four
unimpressive first basemen last
e-2!lUin hnmprerl for the Yank-!
ees Thursday, as did Tony Kubck,
but that was all for New York as
the Detroit Tigers tore into Mark
w
19'4
20 '4
16'4 28'4
13' 20',
Gllteyi Trailer Sup.
Latham Dlstrib.
City Cleaners
Pacific Plywood
Specialized Parti
Hurds Flying A 13
Results: Gilleys Trailer Supply 3, La
tham utstrlDutors u: city Cleaners
Hurds Flying A 1; Factllo Plywood 3,
Specialized Farts o.
High series: Morry Burkhart 202-193-219616.
Gilleys Trailer SuddW.
High game: Bruce GUley 262, GlUeya
Trailer supply.
Other high scores: Thel Allen 316,
Joe Star 206, Warren Nlckleson 313,
nen weaver mi.
MERCHANTS LEAGUE
W L
Todd Bldg. Co. No. I
; Doug, fainting Co.
I Ed Sines Chevron
Vets Hospital
I Melrose store
Todd Bldg. Co. No. 1
Roseburg Neon
Moose Lodge
Results: Vets Hospital 2. Melrose
Store 1; Todd Building Co. No. One 3.
Douglas Painting Co. 1; Roseburg Neon
2. Ed Sines Triangle Chevron 1: Todd
Building Co. No. Two 2, Moose Lodge 1.
High series: Jack Cummins 224-191-
178993, Melroae Store.
High game: Glenn Walthall 230, Doug,
las Painting Co.
Other high scores: Bill Jones 208.
SPORTSMAN'S LEAGUE
W L
Winston Chain Saw 23 13
Plywood Service 21 13
State Police 20 16
City Police 19 17
Pacific Ply. 18 18
Sheriff 16 20
So. Ore. Battery 144 21 '4
Dales Cafe 12V4 234
Results: Winston Chain Saw 2,
rts.
221 13'4 .11 '4
21 15 .10
21 15 28
31 13 28
16Uj 19'4 21 '4
18 18 20
15 21 19
10 26 M
rts.
31
28
28
26
24
19
18U
1714
Ply
wood Service 1; City Police 1, So. Ore.
Battery 2: Bute Police 2. Dales Cafe 1:
Pacific Plywood 2, Douglaa Co. Sher
iff 1.
High series: Bob Book 223-134-222
o,w. so. ore. Hattery.
High game: Book 223.
Fri., April 1, 1960 The News-Review, Roseburg, Ore. 9
Slats Gill Back On Line
Freeman for four first inning runs
in a 5-2 victory at Lakeland.
In other Florida camre. the St.
Louis Cardinals moved to the top
of the exhibition standings with a
7-5 triumph over the Pittsburgh
I'irates at bt. Petersburg, and the
Milwaukee Braves cdued the
Washington Senators 7-6 at Orlan
do. In Arizona, the Chicago Cubs
shaded the Boston Red Sox 4 3 at
Mesa, and the Cleveland Indians
rallied to whip the San Francisco
Giants 11-10 at Tucson.
Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Los
Angeles and the Chicago White Sox
were not scheduled.
The White Sox' 12-8 exhibition
record still tops the American
League, but St. Louis now leads
the majors with 12-5.
Boyer Homers
Ken Boyer homered and singled
for the Cardinals, but four Pitts
burgh errors, good for three un
earned runs in the eighth, did the
big damage.
Russ Nixon, the catcher who
didn't want to go back to the In
dians, singled home the tie-breaker
against the Giants. Nixon had
to return to Cleveland when Sam
my White of Boston quit baseball
and the deal in which they were
involved was voided.
The Cubs won their seventh
straight with Ernie Banks and
rookie outfielder Lou Johnson con
tinuing their sharp hitting. Tom
Sturdivant pitched seven shutout
innings for the Red Sox but was
shelled in the ninth.
CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) -Slats
Gill will resume his basketball
coaching career.
The well known Oregon State
College cage coach suffered a
heart attack Jan. 11 and an as
sistant, Paul Valonti, tutored the
team through much of last season.
A college doctor Thursday said
Gill now "is as good as .ever
physically."
Gill was in a Seattle hospital
three weeks and then returned to
his home here to recuperate.
Gill, 58, has coached basketball
at Oregon State 32 years. His
teams have won 514 games and
lost 362.
ROSEBURG BOWL OFFERS
FREE Bowling Instruction
BEGINNERS AND ADVANCED .
, WITH
LORRAINE SHISLER
On of th Itoding bowling instructor of tht
Pacific NW auisted by 4 ortifitd bowling
imtructurt from Roieburg.
EVERY TUES. & FRI. MORNING
During April, starting APRIL 5 8 SESSIONS IN ALL
Beginners, 10-11 A.M. Advanced Clinic, 11-12 Noon
EVERYONE WELCOME FREE COFFEE
No restrictions! Come to any session you desire.
LEARN AMERICA'S FASTEST GROWING SPORT!
Arlo Jacklin, Manager
2400 Diamond Lake Blvd. Phone OR 2-3601
Diamond Play Opening
Postponed At Eugene
EUGENE (AP) - The Uni
versity of Oregon baseball team
will have to wait at least until
Saturday to open its season.
Rain Thursday forced postpone
ment of a scheduled doublehcad
er with Linfield College at Mc
Minnville. Then groundskeepers took a
look at the university field here
and postponed until Monday a
game scheduled for today with
the University of Portland.
If the university field, drenched
by five days of rain, dries suffi
ciently, Oregon will be host to
Lewis and Clark in a Saturday
doubleheader.
Portland Open Slated
PORTLAND (AP) A $27,000
Portland Open Golf Tournament
was announced today, to be held
Sept. 20-25.
It will be the second consecutive
year for Portland as a stop on the
professional golfing circuit.
Other high scores: Al Joelson 300, Jones 2U1.
Hon Frashour 203, Ernie Kramb 308,
Ken Gum 203.
CAFITAIj LEAIiUE
W I Pts.
Bob It Denes No. 1 27 35
Pape Cat 23 13 32
Paul Amanns rir. A 17 IB 24Vi
Bob Smith Fly. A la H 23
Melrose Dairy 17 IB 23
Timber Boom 17 IB 23
Umpqua Concrete 13 23 16',
Suburban Gaa 12 24 IS
Resu ts: Bob at Genes no. two 2.
Paul Amanns Fly. A 1: Bob Smith Fly.
A 3, Suburban Gas 0; Melrose llairy 2,
Umpqua Concrete 1; Pape Cats 3, Tim
ber Room 0.
Hlch series: Frank Carl 1SS-202-US
13. Bob Smith Fly. A.
High fame: Frank carl 228.
Other hlah scores: Whited Dan 21B.
Dsle Dtinlap 20, Hal Mobley 202, Frank
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1956 CHEVROLET
Delroy coupe, two-tone green
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1958 CHEVROLET
V8 Biicayno two-door l e d a n,
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1955 CHEVROLET
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1956 RAMBLER
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1958 CHEVROLET
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