B B' SS g c s c 3 C3 3 SS E s c x s 3 3 T- 11 1 1 i" n .j .1 r'.r iS'i'Vl JtldlHrtt'C Ti lr 3 . ;y . Jr 'WHOOPS' BOY MEETS ICE This is one of the hazards to be faced by the youngsters and 'oldsters who take ad vantage of the ice skating on pond in Pioneer Park. Here is little Mike Sater, 10, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oarcy Sater if 905 Fourth Street in La Grande. Mike is down but he seems to be enjoying it. The city Fire Department is spraying' the pond at night and the city may provide lights. (Observer Photo by De Boie) Halfway Lead. Joseph (For B tourney Berth By Un twl Pr lirtniatiMl Orcxon'i class B high achool basketball (earns were let today (r showdown battles Ihit weekend which will decide the eight entries in next week's state tournament a! Baker. The tourney runs March 10-11-12 at the eastern Oregon city. Pilot Hock, the defending state champion, laces a battle in dis trict 7 with seven otbei contend ers in a tourney at Pendleton this weekend. Halfway holds an edge over Joseth so far for a district 8 be-th. Powers and Yoiculla of district 4, two of the nest in the state, clash at Oakland Friday. If I'ow era wins it's in, if not the same two teams meet again Saturday. . Knappa rid Portland Christian play off for a dist.ict 1 berth; SI Paul, Perrydalc, Jefferson and Santiam meet in a playoff for the dirtrirt 2 spoi: an eight-team tour acy will be held at No'th Eugene this weekend for the district S berth with Alsea and McKenzie among the top contenders. St.' Mary's of Medfnrj plays Malin in a best of-three series fo: the district S title, aid eiftht-te;im tourney will be held at The Dulles fcr district 6 with Sherman and Wheeler top contenders. Scores By Un'lad Press International Cellt Basketball Results CAST' Rutgers 85 Lehigh 70 Maine 70 Colby 67 St.Joscph's (Pa.) 78 Lafayette 66 Syracuse 73 Niagara 69 St Francis Pa 98 Stcuhenville 69 Holy Cross 86 Boston Coll. 78 " Providence 80 Rhode Island 49 Worcester 85 Miridlebury 68 Fai field 108 BrirtKepcrt 94 ' SOUTH Western Ky. 83 East Tenn. 69 Wofforo vs. Appalachian, iPr-), inclement weather! Tula.ne 64 lOiiisiann SI. 54 MIDWEST Loyola 'III.' Htt John Carroll 75 Dayton 75 Detroit 69 Iowa St. 61 Drake 57 Marietta 74 Ohio V. 66 SOUTHWEST S. M. V. 93 Arkansas 82 WEST Idaho 72 Portland 40 Portland St. 3 Southern Ore. 37 , Dlitrict 1 NAIA West. Wash. 82. Pacific Lutheran 78 . District 2 NAIA Final Willamette 70, Linfield 64 National Basketball Association Bost?n 133 Philadelphia 119 ' Minneapolis 123 New York 113 Detroit 118 St. Louis 100 i Only games scheduled i 'American Hockey Leaeue Kochrsler I Buffalo I Cleveland 3 Hershey 2 ' I Only games scheduled) Famed Dance BantLGf ' "Grand Ole Oprf " Badio and Television Artists Starting' Friday, Mirch 4, ind very nlt - (except Sunday) from 9 P.M. til' 2 A.M. Modem,' Wcitern Classical, Western and . Old Time music at its very best. The Meet 1 " v:." .4f. jViarriette Vinf TrSn Ifr. Wk!n I""!" " t ' IT V IZ. Ljnfjeld, 70,64 SALEM lUPII-Wiriametta held a ticket to Kansas Citv and Port land State claimed the "unoffi cial" Oregon ' Collegiate Confer enc basketball title today. Willamette defeated Linfield 70- 64 In the District NAIA final and Portland State -defeated Southern Oregon 39-37 In a defensive strug gle. ' - ' Eddie Crossenbacher, WiHam ette't ace guard. - again was- the man at the throttle as the Boar cats proved their right to the1 Northwest Conference' champion ship; Crossenbacher salted away 20 points for game scoring honors. ' His chief rival for 1 Northwest Conference-most valuable player honors. Jackie Biley, hit 1 for Linfield. Ron PhilKps also had 16 for he lose s. Willamette shot .383 compared tAMS for Linfield Willamette thjjin a berth in the national Mnt tourney in Kansas Cily. . Portland StatWJhich tied SOC for the OCC tiU(. used a twisting lump shot by H- Torgersbn with four seconds to iluy to squeal by Stulhern Oregon m a consolatioa game. -( , , - SOC led 18-10 at the half Don Powell hit 14 fat PSC and Go-dy Carrixan 10 fof(OC. State Pre Walton League The regular monthly meeting of the Union County chapter of the Izaak Wilon League of Am erica will be held this earning Wednesday, March 9, at the Came Commission Building In La Grande. The meeting will be gin at 8 p.m. During the course of the busi ness meeting the league will dis cuss projects for the coming year which will be of vital Interest tntU spcrtsmen and conservationists alike All interested people arc urged and welcome to attend the meeting.- The feature of the evening will be the presence of Luhr Jensen, who is the State President of the laak Waltcn League of America, Inc.- Mr. Jensen-")! a "notitfnally known figure m the president of the Luhr Jenson and Sons com pany of Hood River, which makes and manufactures fishing lures. During evenusg, Mr. Jensen will present a inogram of tinn ing films basijUfon his fishing experiences throughout the Wes tern states. ' He is well remembered for his outstanding program at the in stallation of officers at the Un ion county Lcaguo Initiation last year. THE faffiEL Presents NIGHT r r- - 1 ' f; 'i - 3 -. r: FIGHT RESULTS MIAMI URACH UPIl Luis Rod.'iguei, H914. Camaguey. Cu bba. outpointed ' Chico Vejar I541, Stamford, Conn. MOi ' Oseai Robertson T 1""' fft f.' W i ..as . .. A- Sir - Ay ILvJsa-' HS-'tfiW.,-. .V. v .. JJlt DON'T SPENP A VACATION... KEEP IT WITH GLASSPAR! . ...... .16' CITATION Aye, Sir, step aboard and you're embarked on the most ' ! relaxing year-round fun! The money you'd spend on ' vacation aecommoditions alone provides the down pay "ment on this new deluxe runabout. Comfort, safety, ' easy htndlin with exclusive Glasspar hull design, double bottom flotation; and full keel that assures a more ttable splash-free ride. Seats crew of six. Maintenance-free fiber glass construction. And remenv ' ber.'. . a Glasspar goes steady with any motor. Come in , and tea it for yourself. ' ' . Let us show you why wise boaters are , going GLASSPAR. Better design by far. SEE- THEM AT THE BOAT SHOW, COMMUNITY CENTER,' MARCH 3, 4 A .5 ' IN BAKER?" - ART GUGLER'S GUN SIIOP . ; . . " 3110 10th St.. Baker EVINRUDE GLASSPAR Sales Service GLASSPAR FranchUed Dealer for Baker, Union & Wallowa Counties. Observer, la Grande, Ore., Robertson Tops Press All-American Team With Huge Number Of Votes NEW VORK 'LTD Oscar Itob- erttoi of Cincinnati, highest scor tr h ccllcse b-iHkthall history. was th(son oi the United Presj International J.1 All-America, team today for tho third strait!'" year. He was eiecte-J by a ma -unanimous vole. Jerry West of West Vi: ginia. Jeny J.ucns of. Ohio, State. Dar rail Irnhofi of Calili rnia and 'ion jiith tf Si. Honavcnttire were the other playcis honored by ai all tme IhIi eieclora'.e rf 338 v;. itirs and : adio-TV hron Ira: tot s from roast-toeoa.t. Of the 338 to'.crs. 336 ma'Jc tbo mating 6-5 Robcrtso I their first team choice,' one picked him for refond team, and ancther exer cited the democratic privilege of ignoring the Cincinnati phenom on his ballot. 1 " Record Pcrctnlaas Robertson thus appeared on a it cord 99.8 per ev. of the votes ' ' 'swi.srssvi Jerry West Thurs., March 3, 1960 Paga 3 cast. The 21-year old senior, rated a cinch to become professional bas ketball's next new, star. (he second nltyer eve' is only to be clcctt I three times to the I'I'I All-America team since its incep tion in 1947. The first collegian so hororcd was Torn Gola of LaSalle f Lm 1953 to lira. ' ' West, the (-3 tttckcourt sharp shrotcr who led West Virginia to the Southern Conference champi onship ad ai. NCAA berth, was selected on the team for the sec old year in a row. He was a fii st cr second team choice of 95 J per cent of the voters. Lucas' name appeared on 93.2 ;e: cent of the ballots: Imhoff on 75.3 per cent and Stith 03 57.6.. Three Dominate Tun Never before have three play ers dominated a UPI All-America ballot as did Robertson, West and Lucas this season. Robc-tso-1, West and Imhoff arc seniors: Stith is a junior' and Lucas only a' sophomore. The 6-9 Ohio State center is the fourth scphomo.e ever to win this honor, following such famed collegians as Gola, Wilt .Chamberlain and Robertson.. -i Vandals Roar To -72-40 Win Over Ice-Cold Pilots MOSCOW. Idaho a PI I- Idaho flexed defensive muscles Wednes day night, against frigid Portland as Joe King and Ken Maren led the Vandals to a 72-40 basketball runaway victory. . '' ; Caught in a defensive net from the opening minutes,- Portland managed only four field goals in tlie first half. . - None of the Pilots hit double figures. Captain Jim Altenhofen was high for the losers with seven points. They fired only 15-per-cent from the Moor. Try Mwdwl'&M's, Ice Cream Flavor jf - J I I r'----.. .'--' v'- .i.'. I I-;! I r-"'- - II , New Scotch Toffee Ice Cream makes you want to taste and taste and taste! The toffee is made the old-fashioned way, with real butter. The ice cream is studded with toasted pecans , . . then blended in an ice cream of rich, buttery butterscotch. te'.Crean 1- 1 " K and I Data? ?ics I " Are Made From I Milk ana Craam Proluea By OUiSTXMDIKG Lc Grande Get Qsyeg? In First found ut Tourney ruitiLAnu iLn inree more teams qualified Tuesday night for the slate class A I high school baskUall tournament in Eugene starting Mneti Hk-" - Albany, ' Sl Helens and Lake Oswego wol ga-nes to assure therrtlvr of btrths it the tour. nameai. rour ocrins rcmoinea- in be filled.il -J . ' ' -' Cleveland clinched a tie for the Portlund title with a 67-46 win over Washingtfti. ' Three ' teams are tied for second place. '" 'Two of the remaining four berths to be filled are in Port land, South Eugene plays Spring field Friday night for - another ard Jesuit cr Park ose will fill the final spot. First round pairings March 15 include: - . s Mnrshfield vs. David Douglas. Albany vs. Portland champ. - La Oi anile vs. Osweo . ' - Klamath Falls vs Sandy. Bravei-toa vs. Snringneld or South Eugene. ' '. South Salem vs. Portland runner-up. '- '.'- i - . ' St. Helens vs. Hermistcn. Medfo-.d vs. Jesuit or Parkrose. EOC Matmeri Set First Competition J Easterri" Oregon College ' starts on the trail to eventual intercol legiate wrestling competition this weekend, when they host the Whitman Missionaries from Walla Walla in a series of abbreviat ed matches. The competition will begin at 1 p.m. in the college coliseum. - Coach Archie Dunsmoor, in announcing the matches, stated only that the Saturday competi tion would be -confined to prac tice matches -and would not be sanctioned in intercollegiate com petition. - The Mountaineers will wrestle in a return series with Whitman cn March 12. ta Walla Walla - A spokesman for the . college said that ' matches were being lined up with other schools in the Northwest and that possibly East cm Oregon might be ready for actual intercollegiate competition next year with a full slate of matches. This will depend, how ever, on interest and how well the wrestling program had developed under the guidance of coach Dunsmoor. . The members of the Eastern Oregon wrestling squad are, Rog- 1507 Jefferson NCA Tournament Namps three ore; Nine Berths Open . By TIM MORIARTY !" o?l Staff Writer ' , Wcs era Kentucky. St. Joseph's i Pa and the Air Force AcanYmy foinou the liretip for the NCAA basketball tournament 'today, leaving nine be-ths l.i th? 2V team lield unfilled. -- W stern Ke-ilucky rlinchcJ the Ohio Valley Ccnference title hv whipping East Tennessee, 83-69. Wednesday night nt Howling Green. Ky. It enroot the Hilltop pers an automatic berth in the NCAA Mideast regional opposite Miami i Fin.) at Lexington next week. St. Juscfh's, led by Jack Egan's 22 points, won the MiidlP-Atlantic Conference crown by ouiclassing l.ufnyotto, 78-66, at Easloi, Pa. This did not assu e St. Joe's ai auto.natic berth in the.. "NCAA shindg, but c mfcrenc J r-off iciiiis are expected to nanw the Hawks as the league's repwonlntivcs to day. -.'.' - , Falcons Face tnPaul The Air Force Academy accept ed an "at large" berth In the Midwest ' regionals Wednesday night. The Falcons, who lost their first five games this season and then bounced back to win. II of Five NW Players Get Mention - " NEW YORK'ilW-Five play ers from the Pacific Northwest including Chuck Rask of Oregon received honorable mention today on the 1960 United Press Interna tional all "- American basketball team. - . r - - The others receiving honorable mention included Dill Hanson of Washington, Don Ogorck of Se attle, Flank Burgess of Gonzaga and Larry Chanay of Montana State, .'.' . . er Jensen, Portland; Daryl Corey, Atantield: Tom Patterson, Forest Grove; Gene Holt, Umatilla; Scott Bannister, Weston: Sid Hiatt, Vale: and Jim Neece of Prinevllle. r ' Your Bear Bet In INTERIOR PAINTS IS ' PITTSBURGH - Miller's. Cabinet Shop Oreenweed and Jefferson Nw I the Month! 3E SURE TO GET ENOUGH AT YOUR GRO CER'S TO LAST YOUR FAMILy'tHE WEEKEND! GET 2 HALF GALLOONS . . . IT'S THAT GOOD! MEADOW DISTRIBUTORS LA GRANDE iheir next 15 oultings, will meet DePaul in a first round game at a site and date to be announced later this week. - ' - ., Rega:-ling the nine open NCAA berths, six arc reserved for the chum-lions of undecided confer, tnco races. These Include tho Ivy League. Yankee,' Big Kijsht, Mis fcuri Valley; Skyline and West Coast ecifcre.nces.' i Th'j Atlantic Coast Conference btitn will be awarded to the winner of its annual post-season plnvoff tournament this weekend, while the two remaining i "at larg" -teams in the -Far West rcc:als will be announced Sun day; "'. Far West Bids One of the Far West bids will go to either Oregon or Oregon State and the other will go either to Southern. California or UCLA. Utah State, although it still has a slim chance of overhauling I'lah in the Skyline Conference race, vi.lually conceded the title to tl.e Redskins Wednesday by accepting a cond.tional bid to the National Invitation Tournament.-. . .,. The remaining two berths in the 1 2-1 earn NIT field are expected to be offered to LaSalle and Bradley. . . . Pairings for first round games in the NIT were announced Wednesday night. Villanova will meet Detroit and Providence faces Memphis State irr the opening doublehcadcr next Thursday at UaHium KnunM f ! n. Him NOW THRU SAT. Feature Time 7:07 IflKIIIWEtlSIIIflHJ!! i Nmim!ii.iiMniirT Plus :3S VINCE COWARDS GOLD WO 3-5714 V 1