Blond Paul Ready lo Roll GUARD PAUL SOWERS will be ready to bucket some counters against Washington’s Huskies when the two teams meet this Friday and Saturday in Eugene. The blond junior took second high honors for Oregon in the LIU series by tallying 2G points. Ducks Await Huskies Louis Batters Foe In Exhibition Match ORLANDO, Fla., Jan. 31 (AP) — Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis knocked out Dixie Lee Oliver, vete ran Negro fighter from St. Peters burg, Fla., in the fourth round of their exhibition bout here last night. Oliver, who weighed 222 pounds, was out for more than 10 minutes and was carried from the ring in a stretcher. He was taken to a hos pital for examination. Louis felled Oliver with a left hook to the chin one minute and 30 seconds after the last round started. There was no padding under the canvas and Oliver's head struck the floor when he fell. Managers Wanted Aspiring baseball managers among freshman and sophomore men should contact baseball Coach Don Kirsch as soon as possible, in order that arrangements may be made for a meeting. Experience in scoring is desirable, but not requir ed Kirsch said. Did you ever wonder how many fig leaves Eve tried on before she said, “I’ll take this one." rtnytliintj Can cMafifxen in OnbiamusuU, but.... Phi Delts Chalk Up 50-0Win 3:50 Crt. 40 Beta Theta Pi A vs Nestor hall A 3:50 Crt. 43 Cherney hull A vs Phi Kappa Psi A 4:35 Crt. 40 Campbell club A vs French hall A 4:35 Crt. 43 Sigma hall A vs Sigma Chi A 5:15 Crt. 40 Sigma Alpha Mu A vs Agates A 5:15 Crt. 43 Merrick hall A vs Lambda Chi Alpha A By John Barton * In one of the most amazing games in the history of Oregon in tramurals, Phi Delta Theta beat Sederstrom hall yesterday by a score of 50-0. Tint's right, we said 50 to nothing. The high riding Phi Delts did ev erything in the book to turn in by far the hottest performance of the season. In the other games of the day, which were completely overshad owed by the stunning Phi Delt-Sed erstrom game, Pi Kappa Phi edg ed past Omega hall 15-14. and Min tiirn hall dumped Delta Upsilon by , a 23-14 count. Only Two Fouls The outlandish Sedestrom de feat was also one of the cleanest games of the year. Only two fouls were called, both on the hapless losers, and the Phi Delts pulled out two points from them, half from a i vo-shot foul, and ane one from a ope-gifter called on the floor. The overwhelming defeat of the hajlmen by the Phi Delts was due :ir part to the amazing offense us ed by the winners, and partially to their superb defensive play. Only i.l the fourth quarter did the Seder atrpm team get the ball close enough to the basket to shoot with any hope of success, and then they failed to find their eye for a score. Taggesell Hits 14 High for the Phi Delts was Bob Taggesell with 14, closely followed by Brad Fullerton with 12, Jim Boyd with 10, and Lou Uiban with eight. As a perfect start to the perfect win, the Phi Delts collected their first basket of the game within one second after the tipoff and before t e ball touched the floor, with a combination of Taggesell to Urban to Fullerton to basket. The winners operated from a fast break, from a double-post set-up They Die Hard Sederstrom liall reported to the Emerald last night that their team plans to put in a rigorous two weeks of practice, at the end of which time they are going to challenge Phi Delta Theta to a re-match game, strictly off the intramural record. offense, and with just plain uncan ny shooting from the floor. The Sederstrom quint (there were five of them) were without the ability to cope with the winners, but kept up a steady trying defense, and fi nally got in some fairly close shots at the basket before the game end ed. P. Kapp-Omega In the Pi Kapp-Omega game, plenty of running and little point getting was the order of the after noon, with the Pi Kapps finally scraping over by one point. The two teams were never wide ly separated and the score was knotted at 10-all going into the fourth period. Howard Anderson of Omega was high with seven mark ers. Tom, Van Zandt Lead Little Joe Tom and Dave Van Zeldt again led their Minturn hall teammates to victory in their game with Delta Upsilon by a 23-14 count. The fray was fairly close un til the final quarter, when the hall men opened up with their tricky ball handling and sparkling shoot ing, although they led the race at (Please turn to page five) CHANGE From a Slow Boat to A Show Boat. May we ex plain—that our entire plant is located here—on the campus. That is why we are able to give you not only the best SER\ ICK but the FAS BEST in CLEANING (24 hours), PRESSING (S minutes), and ALTERATIONS. This eliminates lost articles and facilitates speedy service. 1"* Cv"* ^y m ! INSTANT PRESSING/ Oregon Springs Back From Blackbird Tilts | Oregon's Webtoots forgot about the heart-breaking twin losses to LIU and started heavy work yesterday for the coining series with Washington's Huskies. Both quints suffered clean sweeps over the weekend, Washington losing to Oregon State while the W'ebfoots were nipped twice by Long Island. John Warren was well pleased by the showing of his team I against the highly-rated Blackbirds, the Ducks giving the New. | Yorkers a tough battle both nights. j “If the bovs keep up that style of ball, we’ll be tough for the rest of the season,” Warren stated, "But remember we went into a slump at Seattle after two fine games with Idaho. We might do the same thing again.” The Ducks, after downing Idaho in a display of power, was unable to hit consistently in Seattle the next weekend, and lost two straight to Art McLarney’s Huskies. Saturday night was a repetiton of the wild first game except that the Blackbirds took over early in the second half and never relinquished the lead, stalling out the final five minutes to gain the verdict, 55-53. The game started as a cat-and dog affair, until Oregon pulled away to the longest advantage either team held in the game, 18-10. But LIU rallied to close the gap to 30-29 at half. Lou Lipman, the floor leader for the New York five, potted two buckets following intermission to give the winners a lead they never relinquished. From there, they pulled away to their biggest lead of the night, 47-40. With six minutes left, Wiley bucketed a field goal, and at the same time committed his fifth per sonal foul. His two-pointer closed the gap to 53-52. A minute later, Herb Scherer, 6 foot 6-inch LIU forward, hit the last field goal of the game for a 55-52 margin, and the Blackbirds stalled from there on out. Dick Un is' gifter was the lone tally for the last five minutes and made the final score 55-53. Washington also ran into had ' luck over the weekend, dropping two hard-fought tilts to Oregon State in Corvallis. Both nights the home town Beavers had too much for the Huskies. The sweep gave the Aggies a three-out-of-four i margin over Washington this year. I This weekend will bring Oregon | and Washington together for the fourth and fifth games of the year. During the PCC meet in San Fran cisco, the Webfoots nipped the Huskies 63-62, but ran out of gas when they journeyed to Seattle last month and dropped both tilts. The Huskies will come to town led by the premonenal Sammy White, a top-notch forward. Aiding and assisting White will be Captain Bill Vandenburgh, probably the steadiest man in the visitors lineup. Long Island, Oregon’s opponent Friday and Saturday, is continuing on their invasion of the West, meet ing Santa Clara tonight in the Cow Palace. Tomorrow night they will be in Salt Lake City, tangling with Vadel Peterson’s Utah quint. Following those games, the Blackbirds move to Stillwater, Okla., for a game with the Oklaho ma Aggies, and then to St. Louis to meet the number one team in the nation, St. Louis University. Sports authorities have called this trip one of the toughest ever made in col lege basketball. Order of 0 to Meet There will be an Order of the “O” meeting this noon at the DU house, according to Roger Wiley, presi dent. Preparations for Dad’s Day; will be made. Ice Skating TONIGHT—8 P.M. Special Price to University of Oregon Students (40c) SESSIONS: Nightly—8 P.M. —also— Sat. & Sun Matinees— 2:30 P. M. Oregon Hockey League ICE HOCKEY 8 p.m. Every Sunday Eugene Ice Arena 1850 W. 6th Phone 4957 TRIPLETS might come as a SHOCK but everyone knows about the Good Food and Fine Service At jbel'k 9nn Across from Sigma Xu