Ducks Win First; Vandals Next Foe (continued from page 1) Montana opened the scoring early in the second period as right halfback Bob Byrne plunged over from the one to wind up a 61 yard march. Kingsford, a one man gang who was in the \\ eb foots’ hair all afternoon, accounted for 42 of the yards on passes and picked up 6 more on the ground. Don Gerlinger added the extra point from placement. The Webfoots, aroused as they saw’defeat staring them in the face for the third straight Saturday, roared back to knot the count in just three plays after end Monte Brethauer returned the kickoff to the Oregon 43. Hal Cuffel went through the middle for three yards, Hal Dunham was trapped for an eight yard loss while attempting to pass, and then Stelle unleashed a perfect strike to Carey who had gotten behind two Montana de fenders on the Grizzlies’ 45. Once under way, the Ducks wast ed little time in taking the lead. After an exchange of punts put the ball on the Montana 38 as a result of a 20 yard runback by Stelle, Carey rambled for 13 yards in two plays to the 25. Two passes were incomplete and a completion from Jim Calderwood to Cuffel lost four to set up Stelle’s fourth down pass to end Jake Williams, who took the ball in the end zone after it had been deflected into the air off the hands of a Montana defender. Oregon’s last score came in the third period after a drive of 53 yards. Carey engineered the march as he lugged the ball four times for a gain of 36 yards. Chuck Miss feldt capped the drive with a seven yard plunge off tackle into pay dirt. Oregon's last scoring threat went awry when guard Chet Daniels, who converted after all throe touch downs, narrowly missed a field goal attempt from the 25 yard line. Montana rolled for the game’s last score in the waning moments of tire third quarter after guard Gordon Stewart recovered Calder wood’s fumble on the Oregon 28. .A pair of passes by Kingsford put the ball on the 18, from which point lie personally escorted it into the end zone after being unable to find a receiver on another pass play. The Ducks will start prepara tions today for this Saturday’s game against the high-scoring Ida ho Vandals which will be played at Moscow. Close Scores Mark IM Tilts Sherry Ross Hall nipped Phi Sig ma Kappa by the thin margin of one-half yard Friday in what will probably go down as the tightest game of the 1950 intramural sea son. The game ended in a scoreless tie with first downs knotted at two each. The ball was then placed on the 50 yard line, from which spot each side had four downs, the team with most yardage to be the win ner. Sherry Ross tried first, losing three and a half yards, but won when the Phi Sigs lost four. In another tight cattle, Kappa Sigma beat Sigma Alpha Mu 13-6 on a pair of touchdown passes from A1 Neish to Chet Noe. Jerry Barde raced 65 yards for the Sammies lone score. Pi Kappa Alpha nosed out Lambda Chi Alpha by the same score. Phi Kappa Psi staged a track meet in downing Yeomen 43-0 while Reta Theta Pi ground out a 34-0 vic ory over Campbell Club. Three games were awarded on forfeits, Alpha Tau Omega winning over Hunter Hall, Stan Ray over French Hall, and Phi Kappa Sigma over Alpha Hall. PCC Standings W L T Pet. Stanford . California . Washington . UCLA . USC. Wash. State . Oregon State .... Oregon . Idaho . 1 0 0 1.000 1 0 0 1.000 1 0 0 1.000 2 10 .667 0 0 1 .000 0 11 .000 0 1 0 .000 0 2 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 Washington, Cal, Stanford Win To Stay in Rose Bowl Chase By Associated Press The Pacific Coast’s foremost Rose Bowl contenders, Stanford, Washington, and California, survived as anticipated over the weekend, hut the Monday morning autopsy looks somewhat foreboding. Stanford, still untested against grade-A opposition, knocked off Oregon State Saturday, 21-0. The score seems conv incing enough. But the Indians did the job via the air. Their running attack was conspicuously absent. Oregon State outgair.od Stanford, 27S yards to 2G3 and booted the game with nine fumbles. Washington shaded UCLA, 21-20, in a game that could have gone either way and almost did. The Huskies beat off UCLA's ground thrusts at their goal, but had con siderable trouble with the Bruin passing attack. California overpowered Pennsyl vania, 14-7, in the only major inter sectional contest. But if Coach Pap py Waldorf has a passer under wraps at Berkeley, he certainly didn't expose the guy against Penn. The Golden Bears tried 11 passes, completed only one. Johnny Olzew nki, a sophomore, and Jim Mona chino were the power in the Cali fornia steamroller, between them toey passed 273 yards. What does all this portend? Only that the Pacific Coast conference lias yet to display a triple threat squad comparable to the stuff the midwest turns out. It could also mean that no team will conic through the season unscathed. Then there's the USC Trojan's and that 20-20 affair against Wash ington State. Outplayed for three quarters, the Trojans somehow pul led themselves up by the bootstraps in the final period to escape with a tie. Thus the Washington State hoodoo remains in force; USC has yet to win at Pullman. The Trojans collide with Califor nia this Saturday at Los Angeles in the top conference game of the week. The Golden Bears will take the field as the solid ravorite in that one, but USC Coach Jeff Cravath has been known to pull aces out of his sleeve before. Frosh To Vie With Subs In Drill Today By Phil Johnson Coach Jim Aiken hopes that he will discover another Bob Carey when his Oregon varsity reserves scrimmage against Bill Bower man’s Frosh eleven at 4:45 this afternoon. Carey was sensational in last Monday’s Frosh-Varsity reserves scrimmage as he scored all three of the Varsity touchdowns. As a result, he started at right half for Oregon in the Montana game, hauled in a pass and ran 45 yards to score, and contributed to the other two Duck touchdown drives. Backfield starters for the Var sity in the 45-minute scrimmage will be Hal Dunham, quarter back; Don Sloan, left half; Emile Holoman, right half; and Carl Ervin or Ron Lyman at fullback. The Varsity line will include Left End Dick Salter, Left Tackle Len Diederichs, Left Guard Del Clemens, Cent er John Adams, Right Guard Gerry Moshofsky, Right Tackle Jerry Shaw, and Right End Sam Nicolopulos. The Frosh will alternate two teams in the scrimmage. One squad will consist of Barney Hol land, quarterback; Jack Morris, left half; Bobby Marra, right half; Howard Hostetler, fullback; Don Hedgepeth, left end; Terry Pick nell, left tackle; Howard Allman, left guard; Dave Lowe, center; Jack Southworth, right guard; Darold Farr, right tackle; and Frank Krause, right end. The other Duckling lineup will feature John Spreen or John Davis at quarterback; Don Gunnell, left half; Cece Hodges, right half; Bob Krasneski, fullback; Ed Taylor, left end; Rex Winters, left tackle; Dewey Sceales, left guard; Max Kendig, center; Roger Webster, right guard; Mutphy Grzeszkie wicz, right tackle; and Gerald Cach or Ted Anderson at right end. The date of the scheduled Frosli battle with the Willamette Uni versity Jayvees has been changed from next Saturday, October 14, to the previous day, October 13. TODAY’S 1M SCHEDULE 3:50 IM Field—Nestor vs Cherney Field I—Pi K Phi vs. Sigma Nu Field 3—Philadelphia House vs. Sherry Ross Field 3—Delts vs. Phi Kaps 4:45 IM Field—Minturn vs. Yeomen Field 1— DUs vs. Stan Ray Phi Betes CvGLeND J/uuyiant PIPE TOBACCO SUTIIFF TOBACCO CO 650 Fifth St $ F Calif HEINE $ TOBACCO CO Mon.Hon. Ohio Pictured above is Diels Daugherty, stellar Webfoot end who is hav ing a great season at end for Jim Aiken’s eleven. Teaming up on the right side of the line with tackle Bob Anderson and guard Ray Lung, Daugherty helped to break open the holes in Montana’s de fense through which Oregon backs rambled for long gains. This is Daugherty’s second season as a regular, but his first with the offen sive platoon. Gaels Drubbed LOS ANGELES UB—St. Mary’s Gaels, who pulled a major surprise by holding Georgia to a 7-7 tie 10 days ago, were soundly thrashed by Loyola University today, 48 to 0, marking the first Loyola win over the Gaels in evelen tries. BOOK SALE Starts Monday, Oct. 9th Fiction Non-Fiction Children's Books From 39c to 98c TRADE BOOK DEPT. U of O CO-OP STORE