Jaycee Net Tournament
Gets Under Way Friday
Hopefuls battling for the 193 and 10 a.m., finals at 1 p.m. Sun-
championships of the Roseburg
Javcee Tennis Tournament will
kick off the competition Friday.
The opening matches Friday will
begin with action in the boys 12-and-under
division at 2 p.m. at the
Stewart Park courts. Other play
Friday includes boys novice divi
sion at 3:30 and the first round
of the mens singles at 6:30.
First round doubles matches will
be launched at 8:30 a.m. Saturday,
and the first rounds in the other
classifications will be completed.
Competition in all the divisions of
the tourneywi 11 continue Saturday
with the finals in all classes
to be played Sunday afternoon.
First and second place finishers
in the eight divisions of junior com
petition will qualify for the state
Jaycee tournament which is sched
uled for Roseburg June 29-30. Tro
phies will be awarded to all cham
pions in the city tournament. .
A real battle for the crown in
the mens singles is expected to take
place with four top seeded players
entered in the tournament. Defend
ing champion Don Lowe will be
back to participate, with top com
petition expected to came from
Doug Green, Howard Sohn and Don
Bodeen.
Sherry Sevall ranks high among
the girls, with Mike Hoffman and
Brian Phillips rating as the favor
ites among the younger boys.
All schedules for this year's tour
nament will be posted in the Stew
art Park bulletin board. Any ques
tions concerning scheduling should
be directed to OR 2-4441.
The scheduling for the Roseburg
Jaycee Tennis Tournament is as
follows:
MENS SINGLES
6:30 p.m. Friday Don Lowe,
bye. Don Akre vs. Tom Gardiner.
Howard Sohn Vs. Richard Maro
aok. Eugene Thornely vs. Ken Mil
ler. Don Bodeen bye. Bob Norton
vs. Bill Lasswell. Doug Green bye.
Mike Murphy vs. Tom Garrison.
Second round to be played at 10
a.m. Saturday, semifinals at 2 p.m.
Saturday and finals at 2 p.m. Sun
day. MENS DOUBLES
8:30 a.m. Saturday Don Lowe
and Doug Green vs. Bill Lasswell
and Eugene Thornlcy. Mike Mur
phy and Bob Norton vs. Rick Wil
son and Larry Wilson. Tom Garri
son and Howard Sohn vs. Ken Mil
ler and Don Akre. Mike Hoffman
and Bob McKee vs. Tom Gardiner
and Walker Gardiner.
Second round to be played at
8:30 p.m. Saturday, finals at 3:30
p.m. Sunday,
BOYS 12-AND-UNDER
2 p.m. Friday Frank Edwards
vs. Eddie Ohman. John Zuber vs.
Randy Garrison.' Jim Sevall vs.
Bean. Tommy Hill vs. Jim Gar
diner. Second round Saturday it 8:30
day.
BOYS NOVICE
3:30 D.m. Friday Larry Rand
vs. Jim Thorn. Walker Gardiner
vs. Mark Sohn. Todd Barnes vs
Tom Gardiner. Jim Harris vs. Rick
Wilson.
Second round Saturday at 3:30
p.m., finals at 2 p.m. Sunday,
JUNIOR BOYS NOVICE
8 P.m. Friday Roger llelliwell
vs. Gary Gum. Spike Moore vs,
fiarv Patterson.
2 p.m. Saturday Bob McKee
vs. winner of Moore - Patterson
match. Don Mulkcy vs. winner of
Hclliwell-Gum match.
Finals at 2 p.m. Sunday.
BOYS OPEN
2 p.m. Sunday Mike Hoffman
vs. Brian Phillips, umaisj
WOMENS SINGLES
2 p.m. Friday Shirley Sties vs
Donna Talus. Sherry Sevall vs,
winner of LeBeau-Hetrick match
Martha Hetrick vs. Michelle Le
Beau (to be arranged).
Finals at 2 p.m. Sunday.
WOMENS DOUBLES '
3:30 o.m. Saturday Sherry Se
vall and Michelle Lebeau bye. Shir
ley Sties and Riggs vs. Casebeer
and Severson.
Finals 1:30 p.m. Sunday.
GIRLS NOVICE
2 p.m. Sunday Patty Nevue
vs. Mary Roles, (finals)
JUNIOR GIRLS OPEN
1 p.m. Sunday Martha Het
rick vs. Michelle LeBeau.
MIXED DOUBLES
8:00 D.m. Friday Sherry Se
vall and Mike Hoffman vs. Michelle
LeBeau and Spike Moore. Shirley
Sties and Don Bodeen vs. Martha
Hetrick and Paul Brothers.
Arizona Nips
Missouri, 6-4
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -Arizona
had the downhill pull today in
the NCAA national baseball tour
nament semifinals.
The Wildcats ride into tonight's
game against Texas as the only
team to survive the first three
rounds in the battle for the colle
giate diamond championship with
out a loss.
Missouri, the pre-tourney lavor
ite, felt the sting of Arizona
power Wednesday night and has
its back to the wall in its colli
sion tonight with Southern Cali
fornia. The loser of that game
goes home.
Back-to-back homers by Jim
Sovcik and Bob Maxwell helped
propel Arizona to a 6-4 win over
Missouri Wednesday night. In los
ers', bracket competition, Texas
ousted Pcnn State 6-4 in 10 in
nings and Southern Cal survived
a ninth Inning threat to boot
Florida State 4-3.
. :i , r r-C't.' r i
aU' 7"wT a
u
JHr, W
HIGH THROW to the plate sails over the head of Houston catcher John Bateman as
Tommy Davis slides home with a run for the Los Angeles Dodgers in the seventh inning.
The Dodgers dumped the Colts, 9-1, to regain first place in tile tight Nationol League
pennant chase. (UPI Telephoto)
Hogan, Snead
Rated As Best
RYE. N.Y. (UPI) Ben Hogan
and Sam Snead. golfdom's best
known gaffers, are certain to at
tract the largest galleries today
when 138 pros and amateurs tee
off in the opening round of the
$100,000 Thunderbird Classic.
Hogan, who at SO is one year
younger than Snead, will be com
peting in his first major tourna
ment since the 1902 Masters. The
little Texan has been practicing
for almost a week on the West
chester Country Club's champion
ship west course for bis latest
comeback.
In a tuneup round last Sunday,
Honan admitted he was "still a
little rusty," but still managed to
turn in a respectable two-over-par
72 on the 6,550-yard course
with its narrow fairways and
tricky greens.
Snead. who plans to use this
tournament as a final tuneup for
another bid at the National Open
crown that has eluded him
throughout his career, stole the
show in Wednesday's pro-am
benefit with a three-under-par 67.
The West Virginian pocketed
$775 for his individual pro tri
umph but he s more interested in
the $25,000 prize that will go to
the Thunderbird winner following
Sunday s final round.
Snead was bracketed with Jul
ius Boros, Jack Nicklaus and Ar
nold Palmer as the leading con
tenders for this rich 72-hole clas
lie.
8 The Newt-Review, Roseburg, Or. Thur., J una 13, 1963
Roseburg Seeks Revenge
On Rough Central Point 9
The Roseburg' American Legion
Juniors will step out of Doug-Lane
League play tonight when they
seek revenge against the invading
Central Point Cheney Studs.
Lockwood Motors and the Chen
ey Studs will square off in a jingle
nine-inning encounter at Legion
Field at 8 tonight. Friday the local
crew will head for North Bend for
a single game at 7:30 p.m., then
will return home Sunday for a
twin-bill against the Marshfield Le
gion team. Sunday's doubleheader
is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m.
Roseburg managed to pick up
its first sweep of a doublebill Tues
day before the home fans when
it dumped Willamette 6-2 and 7-0
in a pair of league counters. The
double victory Tuesday raised
Lockwood Motors record to 6-4 for
In The Majors
Major League Standings
By United Prtss International
American League
W L Pet. GB
New York
Chicago
Baltimore
Minnesota
Boston
Kansas City
Cleveland
Los Anfieles
Detroit
Washington
30 22 .577 t
34 25 .576
32 26 .552 1
30 26 .536 2
27 25 .519 3
29 27 .518 3
26 26 .500 4
29 33 .468 5Vi
24 31 .436 Vh
20 40 .333 14
O'Tcole Records 11th Win
For Reds; LA Bock On Top
ri-l'iiiii-i'nrtfifi'iiiii'ii!? - t in iimnTin fti fni 1 -
n
ARIZONA'S Ron Theobold is greeted by jubilant teammates os he crosses the plote after
belting the second homer In a row in the third inning of the NCAA College World Series.
The Wildcats upset favored Missouri, 6-4, to advance os the only undefeated team in
the tourney. (UPI Telephoto)
Tartabull's Single Gives Bevos
4-3 Triumph In PCL Contest
By United Press International
Cincinnati's Jim O'Toole, who
a year ago was just emerging
from an early season slump that
doomed his 20-victory chances, is
setting a pace this year that may
make him the National League's
most successful lefty in 28 years.
The 27-year-old southpaw scored
his 11th victory and fifth shutout
of the season Wednesday night as
he pitched the Reds to a 3-0 win
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
With a start like that O'Toole
is in position to reach the 25-win
mark for the season a total no
National League left-hander has
achieved since Carl Hubbell won
26 games for the Giants in 1936.
Only a year ago O'Toole was
bogged down at 4-7 and even a
strong finish earned him no more
than a 16-13 mark for the season.
O'Toole and Jim Alaloney (9-2)
have kept the Reds "alive" and
still hopeful that they can im
prove their current fifth-place
standing if Joey Jay and Bob
Purkcy round into form.
Rap Pirate Pitching
The hatchetmen for the Reds
Wednesday night were Vada Pin-
son and Frank Robinson, who
have been making mincemeat of
Pirate pitching all season. Each
had two hits, scored a run and
drove in a run. Pinson is hitting
.405 in 10 games against Pitts
burgh pitching this season while
Robinson's average is .486 with
six homers and 13 runs batted in.
The San Francisco Giants beat
the Chicago Cubs 3-1, the Los An
geles Dodgers routed the Houston
Colts 9 1, the Philadelphia Phil
lies defeated the St. Louis Cardi
nals 6-2, and the Milwaukee
Braves romped over the New
York Mcts 90 in other NL ac
tivity.
In the American League, the
New York Yankees nipped the
Baltimore Orioles 3-2, the Cleve
land Indians outsluggcd the De
troit Tigers 12-6, the Boston Red
Sox beat the Washington Sen
ators 5-3, the Los Angeles Angels
won 5-0, after a 3-1 loss to the
Chicago White Sox, and the Min
nesota Twins bounced back from
a 12-4 shellacking to bop the Kan
sas City Athletics 8-1.
Strikes Out 14
Bob Bolin pitched a four-hitter
and struck out 14 batters to win
his third game for the Giants
Willie McCovey drove in all San
Francisco's runs for the second
straight game when he clouted a
pair of homers off Bob Buhl,
whose record was squared at 5-5,
Johnny Podres scattered 10 hits
to win his fourth game for the
Dodgers behind a 13-hit attack
that included four hits by Maury
Wills and three by Tommy Davis.
Wills also stole his 15th base of
the season as the Dodgers dealt
Don Nottebart his fourth defeat
against five victories.
Art Mahaffey went 6 2-3 innings
to win his third game as the
Phillies knocked out Ron Taylor
and Bobby Shantz with separate
three-run rallies.
Hank Aaron hit his 18th homer
of the season and drove in five
runs to make it a breeze for Lew
Burdette to win his sixth game.
It was the 10th consecutive vic
tory the Braves scored over the
hapless Mets at Milwaukee.
WAn.Amu. P..,, Iti
Kansas City 12 Minnesota 4, 1st
Minn. 8 K. City 1, 2nd, night
Chicago 3 L. Angeles 1, 1st
L. Angeles 5 Chicago 0, 2nd, night
Boston 5 Washington 3, night
N Vnrtf !t Rail 9 in In nlaltt
Cleveland 12 Detroit 6, night
inurtaay-s Probable Pitchers
Cleveland at Detroit Kralick
(5-5) or McDowell (3-4) vs Rp.
gan (2-5). ,
Washington at Boston Duck
worth (2-3) vs. Karley (1-2) or
Baltimore at New York (night)
Barber (9-5) vs. Ford (8-3).
Kansas City at Minnesota
(night) Rakow (6-3) vs. Perry
(4-4).
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Baltimore at Boston, night
Detroit at New York, night
Wash, at Cleveland, 2, twi-night
Kansas City at Chicago, night
L. Angeles at Minnesota, night
National League
W L Pet. GB
Los Angeles
St. Louis
San Francisco
Chicago
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
Milwaukee
Hnnstnn
New York
Spokane Hurler.
Joins LA Staff
LOS 'ANGELES (UPI) Jon
Nicholas Willhitc, a 6 ft. 2 in.,!
190-pound southpaw, joins the Los !
Angeles Dodgers pitching staff to
day and will start against the
Chicago Cubs Sunday in one of
the games of a doubleheader.
Willhitc was purchased from
the Spokane, Wash., club, a
Dodger farm in the Pacific Coast
League, where he had a 7-3 record.
The Dodgers will have to let a
player go to make room for Will
hite and they may feend lefty
Pete Richert, 0-1, to Spokane.
33 25 .569
34 26 .567
34 26 .567
32 28 .533 2
30 27 .526 214
28 30 .483 5
28 30 .483 5
27 31 .466 6
26 34 .433 8
95 9 379 11U.
Wednesday's Results
Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh 0, night
M ilu'nnlrna Q Man, Vni-t A ninM
Philadelphia 6 St. Louis 2, night
San Francisco 3 Chicago'' 1, night
Los Angeles 9 Houston 1, night
inuruiy i rnwaoie pitchers
C.hipaon at Can T?annicn trn.-
" - i miiuaiv Jills'
worth (8-4) vs. O'Dell (8-2).
New York at Milwaukee Craig
(2-9) vs. Spalin (8-3).
Pittchnrph at rinjtinnnf: n:rtut
McBean (6-1) vs. Purkey (1-3).
illusion ai los Angeles (night)
Bruce (3-3) vs. Koufax (8-3).
Priri.u'. ft...
New York at Cincinnati, night
Philadelphia at Milwaukee, night
Pittsburgh at St. Louis, night
Houston at San Francisco, night
Chicago at Los Angeles, night
the season.
The local nine will have a chance
to avenge three of the four losses
in the next two days. Central Point
squeezed out 7-6 and 4-3 triumphs
in a pair of games played early
in the season at Camp White, and
the Cheney Studs are currently tied
for second place in the Southern
Division of Area IV play.
After topping North Bend 9-0,
Roseburg ended on the wrong end
of a 5-3 score in the second game
of an earlier twin-bill. North Bend
and Marshfield both play in the
coastal division of Area IV.
Ron Westbrooks, flashy left-hander
from Myrtle Creek, will be on
the hill to start tonight's game.
Westbrooks suffered his lone loss
of the season at the hands of the
Cheney Studs when he came in
for an inning and two-thirds of re
lief work and was charged with
a single unearned run. The classy
southpaw evened his record by
tossing a three-hit shutout at North
Bend. In working eight and two
thirds innings for the season, West
brooks has been charged with one
run, four hits, has walked two bat
ters and has recorded 10 strikeouts.
Westbrooks is scheduled to go
the first five innings, with Darrell
Cellers set to come on for the final
four frames. Cellers has seen ac
tion only once, working four in
nings against Corvallis. In his lone
appearance the Glide right-hander
blanked the Corvallis nine with no
hits, one walk and six strikeouts.
Friday at North Bend the pitch
ing chores will be shared by Jerry
Boucock and Jon Burnham. Bou
cock, tossing from the right side,
has a 0-1 record. He has worked
six innings, striking out four, walk-
Excellent Salmon
Fishing Predicted
PORTLAND (UPI) Oregon
fishing prospects for this week,
end, compiled by the State Game
Commission:
Northwest: Fair to good results
expected in Necanicum, Nehalem,
Lewis and Clark, Youngs and Ne
halem North Fork Rivers; Alsea
and Siletz good for cutthroat;
Clackamas River recently stock
ed; Detroit Reservoir fair to
good; Salmon fishing excellent at
Depoe Bay.
Southwest: Salmon angling slow
on Rogue River; very good over
Coos Bay bar and Winchester
Bay. Trout angling good in Chetco
River, fair to good in Fish Lake,
Howard Prairie, Hyatt Reservoir
and Willow Creek. Diamond Lake
good to excellent.
Central: Lower Deschutes River
fair to good; Olallie Lake good;
rnneville Reservoir fair; Ochoco
Crooked River below and above
Prineville Reservoir good; Cove
and Warm" Springs areas fair to
good. Elk Lake good for kokanee;
Big Cultus improving: Wickiun.
North Twin, South Twin fair to
good. Upper Deschutes River
good; Klamath River good to ex
cellent; Lake of the Woods fair.
Northeast: Olive Lake good for
kokanee; upper John Day River
fair; McKay Creek producing
large trout; Wallowa River good
between Wallowa and Joseph;
Wallowa Lake excellent.
ing four, giving up seven hits and
four runs. Burnham was. charged
with a loss against North Bend
and he had pitched seven and one
third innings and being charged
with eight runs, 10 hits, 10 walks
and 10 strikeouts.
Behind the plate the Lockwood
Motors crew will have veteran Jim
Beamer and Mike Markham han
dling the catching chores. Beam
er, the No. 1 backstop, is pounding
the ball at a .360 clip with nine
hits in 25 at bats, including one
home run. The rugged catcher has
driven in seven runs.
The probable starting infield to
night includes Dave Sevall at first
base, Lance Casebeer at second,
Artie McDonald at short and either
Boucock or Bob Kinyon at third.
McDonald, plagued by an injury,
is pounding the ball at a .428 pace
with six hits in 14 appearances,
Boucock has a .444 average with
four hits for nine at bats, Case
beer is hitting .217. with five hits
for 23 trips to the plate and Sevall
has a healthy .286 average with
four hits for 14 times at the plate.
The outfield for Lockwood Motors
will find Mike Blomberg in left,
Bob Manning in center and Tom
Morrison in right. Blomberg leads
the team in RBIs with 10 and is
hitting .280. Manning tops the crew
in the home run department with
two, but has been having trouble
at the plate and he carries a so-so
.214 average. Morrison has four hits
in 28 at bats for a .143 average.
Central Point boasts a strong
veteran team with better than av
erage pitching. The Cheney Studs
will be led by short-stop Lou Al
varez, third baseman Pat Pepper,
second baseman Mike Glines and
catcher Darrell Summerfield. Oth
er probable starters include ' Bob
Stroll, first base; Dave Twedell,
center field; Willie Jones, left
field; and John Weiser, right
field. Wayne Clay and Larry Pep
per head the Central Point mound
staff, along with B Corliss of
Eagle Point and Neal llis of Butte
Falls.
SPORTSMAN'S
DIGESTS
KEEP HOOKS SHARP
-rs
STROKE HOOK
CVERV FISHERMAN SHOULD CAR
RY A HOOK-SHARPENING STONE
TO KEEP HOOKS NEEDLE -SHARP
AT ALL TIMES HE WILL MISS
FEWER STRIKES, AND FLY FISH
ERMEN CAN SETA HOOK EASIER
WITH LESS RISK OF BREAKING
A LEADER'S DELICATE TIPPET,
Above, shows use of stone
ON OUTSIDE OP HOOK'S POINT
(MOST USEFUL ON SMALL HOOKS,
ESPECIALLY HOLLOW-POINTS). SO
EASY AND HONE LIGHTLY!
END -Vi -j.
HOLLOW
POINT
SPEAR
POINT
Hone cwj inside points,
USING STONE'S SURFACE INDI
CATED. HONE LISHTUY AND DO
NOT REDUCE BARBS .
United Preu International
Someone must havo told the
San Diego Padres and Dallas
Fort Worth Rangers that home
runs were going out of style and
to get 'cm while the getting's
good.
Eight homers accounted for S
of the 11 runs scored Wednesday
ninht In the Tcxans' 7-4 win over
the Padres. Dallas-Fort Worth
iced it in the seventh with bases
empty blasts by Sandy Valdes
pino and Pedro Oliva plus a two
run shot by Ray Jablonski, his
14th.
KisfUhpn n iitvnn.mn Innlnit
helped Spokane la a 126 win over
skidding Seattle. Jose Tartabull's
bases-loaded single with two out
in ine last ot ttie ninth gave
Pnrllinit A.t Wet,,-, , T-
coma. Salt Ijkc City scored three
runs In the seventh to nip Denver
oi ana Hawaii did likewise in
beating Oklahoma City 7-5.
Kan nipffft lnt Hnllaa L'n.l
Worth each hit four circuit smash
es. Padre starter and loser Dave
Sisler (3-5) was tagged for three
' the homers. Oliva hit two, one
off Sisler and the other off re-
y- San D i go produced
WW, Art Bytyuk,'. uth Denm
Johnson's UMh and No. 2 for
Clilco Ruii.
Winning pitcher Lee Stange (7
1) gave up all four Padre homers
before being relieved bv Don Wil-
iining in inc sevenin. n was ine
fifth loss in a row for San Diego.
Spokane went into the eighth in
ning trailing 65 but came out of
Yiuii a ui irao anil inc Dan-
DflmA Tu-nU-ii In.li.H. ..... t- il..
. .ntv mi, ina won iu lilt-
plate to maul relief pitcher John
jiy mm nil tvuisian. ren Howe
ui olivine picKPti up nis fourth
Win tvilhmit IH Mlul 11:11
Tuttle's two-run homer for Seattle
in me nun tied the score at 5 3
and the Rainiers went one run
ahead in the seventh.
Tarlabull, who desperatrlv
wants a quick return to the
majors with Kansas City, scored
i;lck STn .i,h ,hf winning run.
Don Cilc s homer for Tacoma In
the seventh had tied the score
Other bases-empty homers were
hit by Portland's Bill Kern and
lacomas Jerry Robinson.
H was the second victory in a
row for Portland under its newlv
appointed manager Danny Carne-
Ktlt TlrM hnA T .
" irnver Ace
Chi Chi Olivo bis fourth defeat of
ine season, iir nas live wins A
double by Jim Stewart opened
the Bees' three-run seventh. This
w as followed by a w alk to F.llis
Burton, Bill Oil s two-run double
and Hill Cowan's single off Oil
vo's glove.
Cowan, one of the top hitters in
the league with a ,3:0ihis aver
age, also doubled home Salt
Lake's two other runs in the sec
ond. Lee Tate socked a solo
homer for Denver.
The Hawaii Oklahoma Cily
score was tied 3-3 until the Is
landers lowered the boom on re
lief pitchers fiordy Jones and
Dave (ierard in the seventh. Ken
Hunt singled across one run and
came home on a double bv Herb
Plows. Then Ron Samford sin
gled to score Ples. Dave Ro
ImtIs clubbed a two-ran for the
89er in the eighth. Ace reliefer
Bob Duliba got the victory.
LUBERFINER
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