Ducks, Cougars Split Series Sowers Paces Oregon; Conley Pots 39 Points (continued from page one) Ailing Paul Sowers came off the bench Friday night to score 15 points, and rally the Oregon Webfoots to a spine-tingling 51-48 basketball victory over highly-touted Washington State at Mc Arthur Court. It was Oregon’s conference opener, and the second loss in three loop starts for the Cougars. His back laced in a corset to pre vent aggravation of the injury which has kept hi niout of action since the second Stanford game, ,-Bowers never passed or set up plays more brilliantly than in the first WSC game. Gene Conley, easy moving Coug ar pivot man, tossed in 21 points for the top scoring performance of the evening. WSC Guard Ted Tap pe meshed 9 counters for Cougai runner-up honors. Eddie Gayda, much publicized Washington Stater, accounted for only six of his team’s points, four of those coming from the free throw line. Gayda’s shooting seems to have been limited, his main role be ing to feed the ball in to Conley, the G foot, 7 inch sophomore who pot ted 11 of his 21 points in the second half. Little Bob Lavey, who dunked .> points during the tilt, took a mas terful pass from Sowers and pop ped a layin with 2 minutes 45 sec onds remaining to play. This knotted the game at 48-48. the eleventh and last tie of the night, and set the stage for Dale Warburg's game-clinching gift toss on a foul by Cougar starting for ward Bob Gambold. Fifteen seconds laler, Gambold fouled Lavey, and the little scooter missed his free throw. Then for one minute and fifteen seconds, the Ig loo crowd went wild as the Ducks froze the ball. A Cougar tie-up, a mid-court jump, and a long, long pass from Powers resulted in an anti-climatic layin by Jack Keller, deadeye Web foot guard. Oregon held a 28-23 lead at half time. In the second game, Oregon trad ed the cool-working Cougars by only 27-24 at the half, and a "pat ened" one-hander by Sowers, with less than three minutes gone in the second period, knotted the score at 30-30. The Ducks tied again at 34 34 on a layin b yMel Krause, but that was the last time they were within easy sniffing distance of the Cougars. Two buckets by Conley, one by F.d Gayda, and four consecutive personal fouls by Oregon, which re sulted in five points for the Ifiill ,miui visitors, piled up an 11 point WSC bulge with slightly less than five minutes remaining. Washington State coasted in f.-om that point for a final score of C4-46. ' The Webfoots, who lost 18 bas ketball games last season, have i ow dropped to in 13 times out. •irheir Northern Division record flands at one and one. OSC Hard Hit The tragic death of Football Captain-elect Stan McGuire in a toboggan-auto accident on a snowy Corvallis street Tuesday night leaves a hole in the 1950 Oregon State football team that will be hard to replace. After a brilliant campaign as a junior the past season, McGuire \ as considered a sure-fire bet for all-America honors next fall. He tanked 13th in the nation in con \ ersion kicks for 1919 with 29 out of 33 for a high .879 average. DALE WARBERG, rugged Ore gon forward who “found him self” during the Washington State series. ’Herald SPORTS Qawi/Ue iA> a Qa^fUf-le- ££><*••• EyeWitness Unravels Tale Of Cal Woe; Bucks Gave Celeri Bums Rush at Bowl By TOM KING Ohio State came up with a super charged outfit last New Year’s Day, which is precisely why the Big Ten whacked out its fourth Rose Bowl triumph in a row and why California’s not-so-golden Bears went under 17-14. Now, there’s a 'big gulf of opinion ’twixt whether Cal lost the game tor Ohio State won it. That off-angle field goal that Jimmy Hague boot ed eertainl ylielped matters from a Wesley Fesler standpoint. But many sideline wiseacres fig ure Bob Celeri pulled a skull by gambling in his own territory and giving the Buckeyes the break that spelled the difference. Well, Celeri did gamble. Too, it didn’t pa yoff. But—wasn’t the gamble itself that actually cost the Cals the ball game. It was a combi nation bad pass from center and a case of dropsy by Celeri that did that. If that kick had been gotten off, then the game in all probability would have gone into the books as a 14-14 tie. A legitimate gripe against the California way of doing things in those very last moments is that just prior to the end of the game the Bears had the Buckeyes deep in their own territory. Deep ? On their 3 yard line, in fact. But OSU quickly got out of that hole through a booming kick and the failure of Cal Passes. Soon, things did a complete switcheroo, and Cal was standing with their, not Ohio State’s collective backs to Frosh Smack Astoria For45-25 Hoop Victory; Batter Cottage Grove Don Kirsch’s basketball Duck lings ran over two more high school rivals during- the weekend to boost their victory skein to eight straight. Friday night, Astoria’s cagers succumbed by a 45-25 count, and Saturday saw the Cottage Grove team buried under a 70-20 score. The Frosh offense was bolstered by the reappearance on Saturday of C> foot 7 inch Chester Noe who netted 13 points in a free scoring affair. Employing a two platoon attack, Astoria attempted to make a ball game of it. After the Frosh went ahead 4-0 on Court Barclay’s two-handed set and Hank Bonneman’s hook shot, Astoria retaliated by ringing the bell for siv straight points. The Ducklings came back to take a shaky 11-7 edge at the end of the first quarter. At half time the game’s out come was still questionable as the Oregons went to the dressing room with a 21-12 bulge. In the third period. Guard Nick Schmer fired four quick baskets to boost his team to a 33-20 edge and put the contest out of Astoria's reach. Schmer’s 11 points, and nine by Center Bonneman led the local scoring, while two As*torians, Pav lat and Jacobsen produced their club's best effort with six count ers apiece. On Saturday night, height and superior marksmanship destroy ed a fighting Cottage Grove quint. Scoring almost at will, the Frosli led 14-4 at the quar ter, 88-S) at the half, and then continued to pull away. Four men broke double figures with Noe, who recently had his eligibility restored, leading the basket getters with 13 points. the goal. So strategically speaking, Cal must be charged with having been outfoxed. Some age-old psychology may have been a determining factor in this classic—and that’s exactly what it was. Fro mthe very begin ning Celeri found himself fearfully rushed on his punts. He was barely getting them off. Then suddenly— boom lone was blocked and OSU converted' it into six points. Cal had failed to shift its blockers to plug the gap that was allowing the Buckeyes to get into the “alley.” This process continued throug liot the afternoon. And when, in that last moment, Celeri had to kick from under the shadows of his own goal post, it is entirely pos sible that he—plus the rest of the ball club—were a bit shaky about their chances of getting off a punt. Seconds later Hague booted his 3-pointer. On the whole, Ohio State domi nated play and deserved the win, They ripped one-half of the Cali fornia defensive line to shreds. We say one- half because OSU ran over the Cal left side all afternoon through Roy Muehlberger, chifely Again and again and again Jerrj Krall and Curly Morrison battered at that left side; very seldom did they hit the other side. It was onlj through the efforts of Les Richter a whale of a linebacker, that the Bears were able to have any suc cess whatever in halting the OSU I frontal attack on that highly vul nerable fnalk. Ohio State scouters apparently had spotted a weakness and exploited it completely. Random impressions . . . Jacl Linninger, Ohio State’s fine center was a veritable tiger on defens* (Please turn to page eight) Light up a Pipeful of HEINE’S BLEND The Smoking Tobacco with ar LL.D* DEGREE! Ladies Love Dearly! riElNE S Btc-Ndi] .alarum! PIPE TdBACCO : SUTL1FI > OtACCO CO, 43 fr.mont, 3. F, Coli*. Beavers Prep For Oregon Tilts; Full House Seen After breaking even against title favored Washington State in the northern division openers here Tuesday and Wednesday, Oregon State’s basketball team has set tled down to preparing for the first meeting of the season with arch rival Oregon at Corvallis Friday night. Advance ticket sales indicate the first capacity crowd in mam moth new Gill coliseum's short history will be on hand for the initial clash of the Beavers and Ducks. This means the largest crowd ever to witness a basketball game in the state of Oregon, up wards of 10,000 fans, will fill the massive plant. The opening series between the powerful Cougars and defending. J champion Beavers was one of the'j closest and most hotly contested" pair of league games seen here in years. Washington State put down a last minute Orange rally the first night to win a defensive battle, 42-38; and Slats Gill’s men came back the second evening to reverse the procedure, 54-53, in a; speed-packed thriller. Oregon State was way off on its shooting the first game, con necting on only 10 out of 47 shots for an anemic .213 average while the deliberate Cougars were mak close to a .500 average, ing 13 out of only 28 shots for SAVE MONEY MONEY BY OUR CASH AND CARRY SERVICE • COEDS—GET YOUR FORMALS READY FOR YOUR “BIG” DATES CAMPUS LOCATION 1420 ONYX .43 E. 13th .4-3013