Linfield Snares 91-85
Victory Over Bearcats
Machamer's 32
Points Provide
Margin in Game
Beaver Guard Looks for Payoff Hole in Trojan Series
Leader
NW Loop Baseball Chieftains
Book Portland Meeting Today
Northwest League president Jim Fleishman calls hit flock
together today at Portland, chiefly to count the nones of thme who
Intend Uridine lea mi In the 1137 pennant rare. The annual talea
( financial woe have thia winter trickled from Wenatrhee, Spokane
and Trl-Clty, but all three ttnpi are scheduled to be present and
likely will have plana lor a '57 operation ready to aubmlt.
Salem Kenatori rhlef George Paulus, Walter Zoael, Bill Beveni,
Clayton Foreman and Al Llghiner will repreaent the local outfit
at the pow wow, which arta nail at t:3o a.m. at the Benson Hotel.
Adoption of the league baseball, submission of trhedule re
strictions, a report on the Minor ; leagues Convention In Florida
la it month and other odd and enda will rome before the group
today also.
The operating committee of the Senators will meet, here, at the
Marlon Hotel on next Tuesday morning, eight o'clock, to resume
IU aearrh for both general and player managers, and to hear a
report en loday'i Portland conclave.
Boys Teams
Spark Play
In Tourney
By BOB SCHWARTZ
Statesman Sports Writer '
The big news at the Oregon
Stale Bowling meet yesterday was
the rolling of the 48 junior teams
In their own tournament. The boys
were in command from 9 a m.
until 5 p m when the men once
again look over.
High junior team was the Rick
Ini Lumber Company of Cottage
Grove v ith a 2810 series which in
cluded 594 pins handicap. The
champs were led by Pat Rickard
with a 657 series which was high
handicap series of the day. Pat's
a 135 average bowler so had 102
pins to work with.
Wayne Roberts, of Portland, had
a scratch 559 for high in that de
partment. High game was 222
rolled by Harlan Bridenbauch.
also a Portland boy. and high
handicap game was 243 by Chuck
Howards of Beaverton.
Evergreen Hijh No. 2, of Van
couver, grabbed second spot and
the Beaverton VFW Gutter Can,
third. Fourth was Local 63 from
Portland and fifth and sixth went
to a couple of Vancouver teams,
Trappers Specials and Gutterdus
ters. In the men's team action, a few
top spots fell. Columbia Bowl of
Portland moved into 3rd spot in
class "A" with 2720. Other class
"A" spots gained were by Collins
and Wilmes Cigar Co., Portland,
4th place with 2703; Eastside
Bowl, Portland, 5th with 2687, and
Parkrose Bowl, Portland, 7th with
2671.
Nothing happened in class "B",
but Robin's Burgers No. 2 of Port
land took over second in "C" with
2334. Bank of Oregon, from Wood
teams plus professionals still in
(Coat, page It, col. 4)
i..- .lJ Mm.li J afaf .d
ED FURGOL
Tied for lead in pro-am
Lead Shared
In Golf Meet
McMINNVILI.E, Jan. 12 (Spec
inl Linlield, defeated by Willam
ette at Salem Friday night, turn
ed the tables on the visiting Bear
cats here tonight to take a 91-65
Northwest Conference basketball
victory. The game, close most of
the way, saw the Linfield club
maintain a small lead throughout
the second half.
Willamette won the NWC opener
between the two in a close 71-69
contest.
It was Bill Machamer who nro-
vided the main trouble for the
Bearcats. The 6-1 Wildcat sank 32
points on II field goals and 10 free
throws. He easily topped the
night's scorers. Even at that the
Linfield flash fouled out with
nearly eight minutes remaining.
Bearcat! Lose Lead
Willamette took the earlv lead
but lost it with about five minutes
remaining in the first half and
from there on Linfield never let
the Bearcats get closer than a few
points. It was 44-42 for Linfield at
halftime. . .
Willamette was hurt earlv in
the second half when Vic Backlund
and Neil Causbie fouled out. The
Bearcat - also lost Don Hoy later
in the game on fouls.
Little Jack Riley. 5-7 euard f..l.
lowed teammate Machamer i.
scoring. He had 18. Willamette's
Causbie was next high with 15.
Free Throw Experts
Linfield's shooting percentage
was a creditable .428 off 30 field
goals made on 70 attempts. Wil
lamette sank 23 of 74 attempts for
a .312 percentage. On the free
throw line Willamette was much
more accurate and nearly piled up
as many points there as from the
field The Bearcats made good on
39 of 45 attempts, compared to
Linfield's 31 of 42 tries.
Kebounds favored Willamette
siih crfs -
I i , Vr; "V ix I .- '-.: I
-.t t-:e --. .rvi -.v. , . T; V
11 mi- ninii-mi m nit ..muiM, i.,.,a , , . , .v-. 1.., 11.. . .? ..J t ,j
Beavers Wallop
Trojans, 67-54
Gam bee Tops Scorers With 24, Leads
Oregon Staters in Rally for Victory
CORVALLIS. Jan 12 (fi Tall Dave Gambee ran up 24 lints as
Oregon State bounced back from its upset by Southern Calif rnia last
night to ai'teat the Trojans tonight, 67-M.
Gambcc, the 6-7 forward who spent most of last n: ,ht on the
bench,
Cal Bears Dump
Oregon 71 to 57
For 5th Straight
was among the starters to
night and played a vital role in
Oregon Slate flurries near the end
of each half.
The scoring flurries finished off
Southern California, which now
has a 1-3 record in Coast Confer
ence play. Oregon State has a 2-1
record
Gambee Leads Rally
Southern California pulled up
from an 11-point deficit in the sec
ond half to trail only 55-51, but
r.gtnri "I Idaho 49.
CORVALIJS, Jan. 12 Oregon State's Ken Nanson, with ball,
peers for the basket In this action during; the weekend
PCC series with the Southern Cal Trojans here. The Beav
ers' Don Pino comes up to help screen for his teammate.
The Trojans' b.-nv Roger (24), Monte Gonzales (111 and
Chuck Keilly (12) await developments. OSC lost Friday
night's mix, 55-49, and then came back to win tonight, 67-54.
(Photo by Ilise Studio, Corvallis).
S)reson$tatc$mati
UN
PEBBLE BEACH. Calif , Jan.
12 Former V. S Open cham
pion Ed Furgol and Canada's Stan
t I L ...1. J J , .
LCunaiu oauiea wina ana rain io- tt c, ,,,. n . ,, - -
day to share the second round lead wimettft C'leCUng 16
ai i-u wuii inuni ui uic si.uica
carded in Bing Crosbys national "'uametie asy (si Linfield
pro-amateur golf tournament.
Furgol, playing the Monterey
Peninsula course, shot a 71 to
match the one-under-par score he
Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sun., Jan. 13, '57 (Sec. IV)-21
G F p T
Backlund 17 5 11 Koffnrd
Ho.v 4 5 411 Mchmr
Cauuhl, 5 5 6 15 Harmi
Taylor 3 0 4 6 Rrown
GroKten. J 4 2 S Biley
had vesterdav at touffher Cvnress: i,'m.p"n ' ? ?" Mrsh.ll
7 - - ---- -- -,r .iKciman j a
ruim. walanab
T .-n-A r d r !J"n"s
had a 74 at Cypress today to go
with his 68, at Monterey.
Final round in the 54-hole event
will be played tomorrow at Peb
ble Beach.
Where brisk winds bothered the
golfers yesterday, especially at the
less-protected Cypress, there was
some rain today.
Tomorrow's final round will
have the leading 40 pro-amateur
(Coat, page tt. col. I)
Hartley
1 10 Huehev
1 0 0 2 Hueffins
0 H 3 9 Woodi
0 0 10
G r P T
0 0 2 0
11 10 5 32
3 7 5 13
1 4 3 B
1 4 4 it
0 0 0 0
1 4 1
3 0 3
Pro-Bowl Rates
West Over East
Total! 13 39 2D SS Totali 31191
Free throws mmrd: Willamette S.
binfirid II. Halftime acore: Linfield
By BOB MYERS
LOS ANGELES. Jan. 12 I The seventh annual Pro-Bowl football
game comes off tomorrow in Memorial Coliseum with 32 hand-picked
4 a 3 17 stars from the Eastern Conference of the National League knocking
heads with a similar array from the Western Conference. I
The East-West series now stands
SOC Wallops
OCE, 75-54
f7Sk .,-&lhl.lm. I
Action by the National Collegiate Athletic Association
during its recent meeting at St. Louis, refusing to go along
with the Pacific Coast Conference in the lifting of other-than-football
restrictions at Washington, UCLA and South
ern Cal, came as a rather
shocking surprise. Most ev
eryone figured that so long
as the PCC saw fit to issue
pardons to the non-football
squads at those schools in
volved, the NCAA would
surely do the s a m e. It
didn't, and Washington,
UCLA and Southern Cal
are right back where they
were when the conference
first assessed the penal
ties. . ,
In accord with the about-
face registered by the PAUL LOWE
Coast Conference over a Another Dave Mann?
week ago, non-football teams at the three schools are now
eligible to win championships. But what good is this if
they cannot advance to the playoffs, which are all gov
erned by the NCAA? ...
NCAA Coud Be Very Tough With Rebels
There is a lesson to be learned in the latest develop
ment by the NCAA, one that we warned as being existant
months ago whn the PCC athletic explosion came about
and associates of the restricted schools began threatening
secession. The, NCAA is powerful enough to forbid any
member from competing in any sport with another, if it
deems any irregularities in the rules are strong enough
to culture such action. And just about every college in the
land, large and small alike, belongs to the NCAA. Conse
quently, were two or three of the PCC members to with
draw from the conference because they didn't like the
penalties inflicted by their own league chiefs, they might
find themselves all by their lonesomes in their big sta
diums, with no one to play. The NCAA could forbid its
membership from competing with such rebels . . .
And my, my! Wouldn't such a development as that
make those Los Angeles sportswriters a sad lot! Not that
they already aren't ...
OSC Fearful Lowe Is Gone for Good
Down around Oregon State they're fearful they've seen
the last of brilliant footballer Paul Lowe. That Is, unless
he shows up next Friday night for the campus banquet
honoring the Rose Bowl learn ... As for getting back Into
school, from which he was recently punted, the swift tall
back would have to attend a junior college and bring op
his grades. OSC athletic men don't think he'll do that. A
nice guy who appreciates things, they say, but too irre
sponsible. Thus Lowe becomes a parallel for Dave Mann, another
outstanding Negro athlete from California who played bril
liantly as a sophomore on the 1951 team at Corvallis, and
then left. Mann never returned and has since become a
successful professional with the Chicago Cards. Such may
be Lowe's future, as he does have the playing ability.
He, Was a Problem All During Season
Lowe created a problem at Corvallis all during the past
(Cant, ft tt, cot 1)
Or(oa Colleslata Conference
W L Pet. w L Pet.
?i-5 ' 1 -7MPSC 1 1 J33
lEOCE 3 1 .750 OCI 0 3 .000
OTI 1 J .500
Saturday nirht reiulti: A South
ern Ore Jon 75. Oregon College 54:
al Eastern Oregon 73. Oregon Tech
71; at Portland State M, Seattle Pa
cific BS (non-league).
.ASHLAND. Jan. 12 W South
ern Oregon staved in the Oregon
Collegiate Conference basketball
race by trouncing Oregon College
of Education tonight, 75-54.
Southern Oregon now is dead
locked with Eastern Oregon atop
the standings.
Bill Hollingsworth led the vic
tors with 24 points.
ocr. ()
Woolaey (PI
Andrit-h 4)
Young (11)
Glrod (11)
Miller ifl)
(75) SOC
T (24) Holllngiw'th
r (71 owlnga
c dm Oltva
G (71 Batei
G (10) Crandall
Subi: OCE Adaml 2. Caola 2 Hnv
i, Kergron 1. SOC Kenney S, Foiuit
Top Waterfowl
Film Due Salem
Salem area sportsmen will be
given the opportunity Tuesday
night of viewing what is considered
the most outstanding waterfowl
film ever produced by Edgar M.
Queeny whose "Prairie Wings"
originally held the honors in water
fowl conservation films.
The new film. "Mike" is the
story of a black Labrador re
triever "companion of man, con
servator of birds" told in a simple
straight forward manner amid thea
quiet background of his kennel and
the splendor of the flooded timber
of Arkansas' Grand Prairie.
One watches in color, Mike's
early life, his training, his first
days in the marsh, and finally his
"graduation" to the expert re
triever class.
"Mike" will bring warmth to the
hearts of all who see it the wild
fowler, conservationist, dog fan
cier, sportsman, and those who
enjoy outstanding photography. The
picture will start at S p.m. at
the Izaak Walton Clubhouse located
at South Cottage and Bcllevue.
There is no admission and the
public is cordially invited.
Pioneers Topple
Coyotes, 66-56 ,
CALDWELL. Idaho. Jan. 12 (-
Lewis and Clark College led all
the way Saturday night to take
the second of a two-game basket
ball series with College of Idaho,
66-56.
With the victory the visitors
from Portland, Ore., made up for
an upset loss to the Coyotes Fri
day, S7-52. It was College of Ida
ho's opening Pacific Northwest
Conference bid.
High point man was forward
Joe Johnson of Lewis and Clark,
with 18 points. His teammati'
Duane Brady, a guard, had 14
as did College of Idaho's high
man, guard Don Moors.
OREGON PREP RESULTS
Eugene 44, Corvallli 45 '
Siletz 59. Falla City 32
. Valsetz 77, Eddwllle 51
Ontario 41, Nyva 29 .
Washougal. Wafti.. 42. Wy'Eait J7
Pacific FriHh m. Seaside 52
Redmond 43. Bend 38
Madrai 50, Lakeview 41
Nnrth Bend 57. Reediport 55
Dlllard 4V. Mvrtie Point 45
MrKenzle 57. Marrnla 50 i overtime)
Canyonvllle 42, Weitflr 39
Concordia (Portland) 43, Gaiton SI
Pendleton 72. HaKer 4(1
Knappa 58, Neahkahnie 3t
Astoria 71, Marshfleld 65
Waldport 44. Bandon 40
Culver S2. John, Day 44
Condon 60, Sherman 57
Myrtle Creek 53, Coquillt 25
COLLEGE RESULTS
Oregon Stata 87. USC 54
Californal 71, Oregon 57
Washington 71, Idaho 49
UCLA S3, WSC 82
Linfield 91, Willamette 85
Southern Oregon 75. OCE 54
Lewia Clark 68, Colleg of
Idaho 56
Kastern Oregon 73. Oregon Tech 71
uonzaga 71. Portland u. 87
Portland State 86, Seattle Pacific 59
Whitworth 86. Weat. Waahtnaton 72
Colorado Stata 78, Colorado Col
lege oo
Adama (Colo.) Stata JOS. St. Jo
aeph'a INM) 91
Nevada 88, San Francleco Stata 84
Santa Clara 74. Cniro State 57
San Franrliro 88, Frmno State M
Oregon Fronh 71, Clark J.C. 61
Pacific Lutheran 80, Buchan Bak-
era 83
Whitworth 88, Weatern Waihlng
72 Idaho State 88, Montana State 53
Weatern (Colo.) State 84, Colorado
Mlnea 55
Texas Weitern 93. Arizona 69
San Jone State 62. Pepperdlne 42
San Diego State 84, Los Angelea
Stata 73
Eastern Washington 65, University
of British Columbia 42
Purdue 70, Indiana 64
Kanaas 51. Kansas Stata 48
Iowa 89, Minnesota 86
Princeton 74. Cornell 54
North Carolina 102. Virginia 90
Svracune 87. Boston U. 69
Wake Forest 75. South Carolina 71
Georgia Tech 80, Mississippi State
77
Penn 65, Harvard 83
Michigan 64, Northwestern 83
Notre Damt 90, Loyola (Chicago)
76
Western Kentucky 91, Eastern
Kentucky 71
(Coat, page tt. col. ()
Taylor Suggests
More Money Made
In Horse Racing
SACRAMENTO, Calif.. Jan. 12
W Football Coach Chuck Tay
lor, pleading for integrity In col
lege sports, told a Stanford aldmni
conference tonight:
'If Stanford were merely inter
ested in making money from
sports, I would suggest we buy
the best race horse available and
run it under the Stanford colors.
,ve'd make more money with less
trouble. But that is not what we're
trying to do."
Taylor asserted footbail could be
maintained on a high level of in
tegrity If the college presidents and
faculty cooperated. Re specified
his-Hipeech was his own Impres
sions and carried no university
sanction.
"I believe the problem for col
leges is to forget about the other
schools, and control their
sport on a high level. If other
schools persist in doing something
you can't sanction, then it is your
privilege Dot to schedule them."
at 3-3, and the West, banking on
the field generalship of its three
quarterbacks, Ed Brown of the
Chicago Bears, Bobby Layne of
the Detroit Lions and Tobin Rote
of the Green Bay Packers, is a
slight favorite.
But the Western Conference
Bears were favored over the
East's New York Giants in the
recent NFL championship game
and look " what happened. The
Bears got de-hided.
And here is a strong nucleus of
that same giant machine quarter
back Charlie Conerly, halfback
Frank Gifford, end Kyle Rote and
such defensive standouts as Andy
Robustelli, Emlen Tunnell and
285-pound Roosevelt Grier.
No Game Television
Kickoff time is 1 p.m. There
will be" no television.
The weather has been unsettled
but if it turns good a turnout of
45.000 or more is anticipated.
The players collect flOO apiece
for the winning team, the losers
$500 in a game sanctioned by the
National Football League and
sponsored by the Los Angeles
Newspaper Publishers Assn.
The coaches do the player se
lecting. In this case they were
the NFL championship rivals, Jim
Lee Howell of the Giants and
Paddy Driscoll of the Bears.
The game has produced its quota
of thrills and stars. The "player
of the game awards" have gone
to Otto Graham, Deacon Dan
Towler, Chuck Bednarik, Don Doll,
Billy Wilson and last year to half
back Ollie Matson of the Chicago
Cardinals.
Starling Backflelds
Bednarik, of .the Philadelphia
Eagles; Wilson, pass receiving
artist of the San Francisco 49ers.
and Matson are on deck again for
the 1957 struggle.
Starting lineups in a tilt of this
kind bear no significance.' One
player is just as good ss another.
But Howell will lead off with a
starting backfield of Conerly, Gif
ford, Matson and Pittsburgh's
Fran Rogel.
The West startinf backfield lists
Brown, halfbacks Hugh McElhcnny
of the 49er4 and Kenny Moore of
Baltimore and the Bears Rick
Casares at fullback.
Pass snatchers for the West in
clude ends Harlon Hill of the
Bears, Billy Howton of Green Bay
and Wilson, and for the East Dar
rcl Brewster of the Cleveland
Browns, Elbie Nickel of the Steel-
crs and the Giants' Kyle Rote.
The East won the game last
year. The score, 31-30, is proof it
was a thriller.
Swink Gets Grid
Award for Being
'Decoy' at TCU
BOSTON', Jan. 12 ir Jim
Swink. the "Marked Man" of
college football In 19541. tonight
accepted the 11th annual Swede
Nelson award for sportsman
ship on behalf of his Texas
Christian teammates.
The TCU senior halfback was
chosen by the selecting com
mittee for his conduct in the
games against Texas AiM and
Alabama as well as for his
spirit of self-sacrifice aver the
entire season.
Olhol (Abe) Martin, Swlnk's
roach, was among the honored
guests as was Nelson, the
former Harvard lineman and
perennial booster for the spon
soring Gridiron Club of Boston.
Swink, All-America In 19S5
as the nation's most eicUing
rlimai runner, assumed the
role of decoy la 'it. His ef
forts carried on the Horned
Frogs to a 28-27 Cattoa Bowl
triumph aver Syracase and
landed him a third team All
America berth.
Gonzaga Top
Pilots 71-67
SPOKANE, Wash.. Jan. 12 UD
Gontaga shifted its lineup for the
second half and stormed back to
hand Portland University a 71-67
basketball upset tonight.
It was only the fourth loss in 13
games for Portland, one of the Idaho 4)
strongest independent teams on the
West coast this season.
With Gonzaga trailing by six
points at intermission, replace
ment forward Chuck Redmon
promptly hit on three hook shots to
tie the game at 35-35 early in the
second half. He hit on another and
added two free throws to give the
Bulldogs about the margin they
needed in the frantic final minutes.
Idaho Bows
To Huskies
Bv JACK IIKWINS
SEATTLE. Jan. 12 .f - Wash
ington's Huskies twisted a tight
clamp on the Idaho Vandals to
night and rang up a 71-49 basket
ball win, their fourth in four Pa
cific Coast Conference starts
Idaho led just twice when the
game was very voung. Jerry Jor-
genson, who topped the visiting
Vandals with 13 points, hit
opening basket after a fumbly
; two minutes, Wa.-hington tied it
j up at 2-2 and Gary McEwen con
nected for Idaho to make it 4-2
land that was the last time the
j Idahnans still w inlcss after four
confer'-nre starts saw the top of
the scoring column.
Kruno Ruin hit two free throws
fur Washington, Johnny Tuft
poured home a long nne-hander
and Washington was off and run
ning. Idaho puzzled the Huskies at
first with a tight zone defense but
excellent shooting solved that
problem and by halftime Wash
ington was in front, 34-19.
Clem Parberry, filing in for the
ailing Coach Harlan Hodges of
Idaho, substituted frequently in an
effort to find a combination that
could check the Washington at
tack. He never succeeded.
Idaho lost Bill Wilson, starting
guard, on fouls midway in the
second half but was trailing by
17 points at the time. Before the
game ended, Washington's scoring
ace, Bruno Botn, went out on fouls
also but he had stuffed in 19 points
to take shooting honors for the
evening.
n i -r l' i I r- - . . i . i .. ... .
sir. i,ir. L.r. i , vain , jan iz i,r 'nanur rmtr ,-,.v.
California druhhrd Oregon's i s n i mm Stanford i j jj
Ducks 71-.-.7 to cop its fifth slraighti fhA J " j "'" J J 0
., , . , , , , 1 ' l-A 4 0 1 (Km Idaho 0 4 ,0n0
Pacific (oast Conference basket- use j i ,vk) wsc 0 4 ooo
ball victory tonight before 6. 3O0 2 5110
(. Saturdays remits at Oreaon Stata
IB" I'sr M at California 71. Oreaon
imc uoi ks were uname in nene- 1 n-i wasnmaton state ;
trate Cal s pressing defense and
after 12 minutes Oregon was out
of the running. .then Gambee broke loose for two
At halftime it was 30-17, Bears la.vins and his teammates added
Bears (iain Bin lead ,rrc throws to put Oregon State
The Ducks didn't score a field ut danger
goal in the firt five minutes of I The same thing had happened
the second half. In that period the! in lh- f'i"s' half. From a 19-19
Bears shot ahead 3S-2I. deadlock, Gamboe and company
California forward Larry Friend j wpnt n" sPr'' that gave them
led the scoring with in points, in-'13 Points while Southern California
eluding eight field goals from all rn,lld Krl h"' two. Oregon State
over the court. Oregon forward ,P1 al the half. 34-25.
Owlir Frnnklin scored 17, most Southern California lost forward
of thdii in the second half on lay-, Ken Pearson after only l'i min
ii slmls I utes of play. He suffered an inch-
Huffy Scores It long gash over his right eye and
Oregon center Hal Duffy con- 'doctors had to take four siitches.
tnhuted 14 pnmls He came back after 10 minutes.
Victory kept California 5-0 in a'bllt scored only five points for the
tie with Wahincton 441 and I'CLAi "'Sht.
4-0 for the PCC leadership Oregon Fouls Take Trojans
has lost two straight, the first I Southern California aln w
Phil Dve and Dannv Rnners nn
fouls late in the game. Dye was
his team's high scorer with 18
points and Rogers next with 11.
The one break that Southern
California received could not over
come all that That break came
in a melee under the Southern
California basket, when an uniden
tified Oregon State player acciden
tally tipped in the ball for a field
goal.
For the game Oregon State sank
20 of 52 shots for 39 per cent,
and Southern California 18 of 58
for 31 per cent.
The box:
t'C (M) (7) osc.
ctpt or-PT
Pearson.f 1 3 4 8 Allord.f 2 3 4 7
Dye f S S IS Gambe.f 8 8 2 24
Sterkel.r 1 1 .1 J r.ohle.r 3 4 2 10
Roger. a 4 S 811 Hnninf 9 a 9 a
Cnnrlea.f 3 117 Nnson.f 3 4 1 It
neniy.1 a n 3 a Piqo.l 113 3
Mount, f 8 0 0 0 Moss.e 0 8 0 8
Miller. 0 8 18
Adran.f 18 8 1
Harness 8 SOS
Totala is lsi 82 Totals sonisitT
In addition PSC credited with
field loal tipped In by unidentined
Oreaon State ttlaver.
Southern California ?S S4
Oreaon State 34 U 8T
Officials: Llfhtner and Kolb.
also to California, 53-46 last night.
Oreion (57)
G r P T
riakln t 7 3 4 17 Trlnd f
(7tl Cal.
g r p t
8 3 4 1!)
2 (I Mrlnth 0 2 12
2 3 Grout.f 0 10 1
3 14 Dillon f 0 0 0 n
1 4 MrKen.f 110 3
2 9 Cappf 10 3 2
0 s A.pun.c 2 2 18
1 2 Hiflrrr 13 2 4
0 2 String c 0 3 0 3
1 o Arilaaa.a 0 1 l l
1 0 Kbnsn ( S 111
tlui'h 1 I 0 S
Dm?. 0 0 2 0
Smpsn.K 0 0 2 0
Brtlnn.a 1 0 n 2
Total 17 2.1 17 57 Total 25 21 30 71
Moore f 0 0
Rnqulo f 0 3
Duffy .c 3 4
Vorgn r 0 4
Tin hrt r 1 7
tf Kuvndl.ff 3 0
M Hllf (1 2
1 Uriel (I 0
Vlntne.1 0 0
mi Wahlfirtnfi
GFPT G F P T
Joransn 5 3 0 1.1 Smart 2 2 18
Rranom 2 2 3 8 stadv 10 2 2
Kansas Wins,
Wilt Hits 30
LAWRENCE, Kan.. Jan. 12 W-
Wilt Chamberlain scored 30 points
as the Kansas basketball team de
feated Kansas State 51-45 tonight
after trailing 36 minutes. Kansas
now has a season record of 12
victories and no losses.
Surroz Motors Dumps
OCE Jayvees, 80-47
, MONMOUTH. Jan. 12 (Special)
Surroz Motors of Salem defeated
the Oregon College jayvees, 80-47,
in a game here tonight. The Salem
City League team was led by
Bob Hazel who dunked 24 points.
Jerry McCallister had 20 for
Surroz and Elton Gregory and Roy
Smith had 12 each for the OCE
quint.
Surros led at halftime, 41-18.
OCr JV (47)
waiaer 4
own l'irr' ,'"
Smith (12) .
Dennett IS)
(Ml) Surros
F 1241 Hnrel
F (41 Cnodins
C (10) McElravy
0 (12) Pltaer
G (201 MfCalMater
Reserves icorinc: Rurros MrMan
ua 10. OCE Shark 1, PtliaU 4,
Uravti 4, Maria U a.
PSC Viks Nab Win
PORTLAND, Jan. 12 up Little
Jim Perkm led an "iron man"
Portland State lineup to a 66-59
basketball win over Seattle Pacific
tonight
MrEwan 3 0 18
Coleman 2 8 4 4
Wilson 2 0 S 4
Dammo 3 2 t 8
Thomm 12 4 0
Prestel 18 12
Veselv 0 (I 1 0
Sather 10 0 2
Srhafer (10 0 2
Total 20 9 21149
Bom
Dorland
Pareau
Tuft
Greer
Smith
Crews
s n s n
5 7 2 15
t 7 211
110 3
2 0 2 4
0 10 1
0 0 0 0
Sunltsrh 4 2 0 10
Coasten 0 0 0 0
Totals 21 29 14 71
t-lechnical. foul on Idaho hent-h
Idaho . .... 19 3049
Waahlnston 34 37- 71
Eugene's Axemen
Nip Corvallis '5'.
CORVALLIS. Jan. 12 (Special )
Eugene's Axemen were pushed to
the limit tonight but finally man
aged to nip the Corvallis Spartans.
46-45, in a non-league basketball
Rame. Charley Warren, Kugene s
all-stater, was the game's high
scorer with 1? points.
Bruce Fleming topped Corvallis
scorers with 14.
Eugene held a 26-17 lead at half-
time.
Eugene also won the JV mix,
53-41.
turene (44)
Goldarhmid 15)
Lawrence ( 10)
Bruins Drub
WSC, 83-62
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 12 t -I'CLA
won its 31st consecutive Pa
cific Coast Conference basketball
game tonight by defeating Wash
ington State College, 83-62. It was
the seventh straight win for the
Bruins ever the Cougars, too.
I'CLA won last night's game, 87
5. The Bruins got away to a 19-9
lead in the first eight minutes and
then rushed on to a 41-30 margin
at halftime. UCLA roared on to a
60-37 advantage in the second half
and coach Johnny Wooden then
yanked his regulars tot a rest and
sent them back when Washington
Slate had pulled up to 63-49.
Larry Beck, Washington Stale's
excellent shotmaker, was slow to
get started, and after the first 13
minutes he had only two points,
hut at that point he began to find
the range and wound up as the
scoring leader for the Cougars
with 22 points. He bagged six of
the Cougars' rebounds. Washing
ton State collected 22 of 32 free
throw tries.
UCLA's shooting from the field
was 29 baskets of 61 tries for a
.3(17 percentage, and Washington
State had 20 of 61 tries for .328.
WSC (S2) (SM ITL
CTPT GFPT
Reek 8 8 4 22 Rnfer a 3 9 0 IS
Axehton t 0 1 2 Halstrn 8 3 0 15
Ronhaar 14 18 Hurke T 0 ft 14
Rank I 8 3 10 Torenea 8 3 0 15
Kennedy 3 1 3 S Ranlon till
C.alhralth 8 8 0 0 I'ndrhlll 113 4
Spanner 3 8 2 8 Hlltrhtns 1 8 1 2
Steele 112 3 Crahtree 13 3 5
Olson 1 2 2 4 Arrher 8 12 1
Rearh 8 0 0 0 Johnson 0 8 18
Rosa 1 2 0 4 Fhlrn 3 13 5
Harrison 1 0 031
Totals' 20 22 18 82 Totals 75 29 19 83
Washington State 30 32
UCLA . 41 4383
Eastern Oregon
Nips Tech 73-71
LA GRANDE. Jan. 12 un - Dick
Quinn hit a jump shoH with sis
seconds to go to give Eastern
Oregon a 73-71 baksetball victory
over Oregon Tech tonight.
Oregon Tech led most of the
game, but EOC caught the visi
tors from Klamath Palls midway
through the final period. The
teams fought nip and tuck down
to the final I uzzer when Quinn hit
his game-winning basket.
Earl Smith led Eastern Oregon
with 27 points and Jerry Fasteen
had 26 for OTI. Eastern Oregon
now leads the Oregon Collegiate
Conference race with a 3-1 record.
fast. Ore. (71)
Raxter 1 71
Smith (27)
Wrst (121
Howard ) 14)
Quinn (1
(71) Ore. Tees)
T (281 Fasteen
r (4) Wllllama
C (10) MeCutrheon
G (Si Rhine
G (lOI.FIsrhee
Contracts to Bind
Non-Pro-Players
The Portlanders used only five coo'Vai
WICHITA. Kan., Jan. 12 Of -
Players jumping contracts in non
pro baseball this year will be sus-
men in downing the visitors. Per-coei9i
kin scored 23 points,
led at halftime. 39-31.
(45) Corvallis
T i5i Hunter
T (8) VrCutrheon
c (41 Yoiinse " i ponded from competition perman
g (io Guiierite ently, the National Baseball Con
Portland i"fM "VV.n" gress ruled today.
man 2.
2.
State Sets Proposed
Fishing Regulations
PORTLAND, Jan. 12 W The
Oregon Game Commission today
tentatively set sports fishing regu
lations for the state. There is
little change from last year's
rules. '
A second public hearing on the
proposed regulations will be held
here Jan. 25 and the commission
will a announce final regulations
after that.
Trout season is scheduled to
open April 27 and to close Oct.
31 in all fishing zones. A separate
season for high Cascade lakes
from May 25 to Oct. 6 will be
continued.
Bag Limit Changes
fish per day and eight in posses
sion for Tenmile Lakes and Ten
mile Creek.
Minimum length limits for east
ern brook trout were dropped in
all Northeast Oregon areas.
Other proposed changes in regu
lations would:
Reinstate radius closures on the
Lake Creek outlet and the mouths
of Silent and Short creeks in the
Diamond Lake region.
Would Close Metollus
Close the Metolius to all salmon
fishing.
Increase the hag limit at Mud
Lake near ' Bend to 30 trout per
day and 60 in possession. The lake
is to be poisoned, with rotenone
The only changes in bag limits next fall to remove trash fish.
In the proposed regulations would Add Lake of the Woods to the
fishermen to 2s shad per
raise the Umpqua spring
limit
day,
Chinook limit Irom one
per week, and allow a
to two
special
silver salmon bag limit of four Fish Lake (Jackson County)
list of lakes with April 27 open
ings. Others are Odell, Suttle,
Wickiup Reservoir, Detroit Reser
voir, Fish Lake (Linn County) and
Congress president Ray Dumont
said the ruling will affect an esti
mated lOO.OOt) players expected to
sign the uniform contracts which
bind them to play for a specific
sandlot or non-pro club for one
year unless released.
Diirint; the post 20 years In
which such contracts have been
used, the penalty lor a signed
player transferring to another
club without release has been a
two-year suspension. Teams sign
ing such contract jumpers have
been blacklisted indefinitely.
Non-pro teams are not required
to sign their players to contracts.
Suhs: Eastern Oreaon O'Connell
2. Oreiron Tech Frost 8, Francia J.
Dora 8, Allesslo 2. .
UW Still Looking
For Grid Coach
SEATTLE. Jan. 12 W George
Briggs. athletic director at the
University of Washington, re
turned to Seattle tonight and re
ported he had made progress but
had nothing to announce in his
search for a new Husky football
coach.
Briggs said he had talked to a
number of coaches at the NCAA
convention in St. Louis, including
much-mentioned Pete Elliott of
Nebraska. He wouldn't say where
Elliolt now stands in the list of
probables.
Dons Take Cage Tilt
SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 12 -A
pesky Fresno State team gave
San Francisco plenty of trouble
tonight before the Dons' overall
strength prevailed with a 68-56
California Basketball Assn. victory.
It was the defending champion
USF's second CBA victory against
one loss and Fresno State's third
league defeat.
Playing without Capt. Carl Boldt,
who was suspended for the rest of
the season yesterday by Coach
Phil Woolpcrt, the Dons led by
only a narrow margin until the last
few minutes,
"It the extra load at
your Job ttftca aa
hard emistntj bad
ache and aoalaa yoa
Bred all the Uma T
Many kara banact4
by weans a Coaxa
Support
10.00
CAPITAL PUT. STORE
Wa bive k'K" Omii uip