tDuc6*7icic6& - Sp 'Pcteuo* Bmcnld Sports Wife* .^**»***± They'll be stowing away the moleskins again this week after the least successful grid season in Oregon history. But before the 1950 campaign is written off as a total disaster—a 100 percent catastroscope as Jimmy Durante might say—let’s glance past those nine losses for a minute or two and take a final look at the bright spots before the curtain rings down. Sure, there were mis takes ; there were losses to teams which should have been beaten, but without plunging into pathos here are some of the things which it won’t hurt to remember. There was the fine play of the individual stars like Ray Lung, Earl Stelle, Dick Daugherty, Tommy Edwards, Dick Patrick, Monte Brethauer, and Hal Dunham. Week in and week, out, Lung was on the bottom of the piles more often than the low man on the totem pole. He and Stelle, Patrick, and Daugherty at times seemed to be carrying the whole defensive burden. Stelle did everything for Oregon but carry the water bucket, and prob ably would have done that had he been asked. In a day of spe cialists, he stood out in all departments. Brethauer hung up a U&w Webfoot pass catching record as he blossomed into a poten tially great wingman, while the Dunham-Edwards combination proved the most explosive punch the Ducks manufactured all year. Something Wasn't Lost And we won’t soon forget Jim Aiken and his coaching staff which never gave up on its team. Jim hung up an enviable mark in his first three seasons at the helm of the Webfoots, and it is a tribute to this record that the wolves who all too often start to howl at the first sign of adversity have been conspiciously silent this fall. This corner takes its hat off to a guy who not once of fered an alibi for a losing effort though the temptation at times must have been strong. Last but not least, there was something the Ducks had which you don’t often,find in a losing team. Call it spirit, call it will-to win, call it starry-eyed sophomorism, or what you will, this ball club had it when the campaign opened and it had it when it closed. At times it even looked as though the Ducks were stub bing their toes trying too hard. What More Could You Want? We don’t claim that the above includes all the noteworthy ac complishments of the 1950 Ducks, but they are a few items some body might like to recall ten years from now when the memory of those losses has dimmed. And after all, with all the teapot tem pests -around Oregon this fall, who’s had time to worry about football? What with deferred living and, if you’ll pardon the ex pression, beer probes, Hallowe’en merry-making and Howe Field hostilities, even Van Brocklin would have had a tough time stay ing in the center ring. Turning our attention elsewhere, let’s take a gander at how the big bowl chase came out this year. Cal, yaawwnn, sewed up its third straight PCC title by tying Stanford, and at this writing is the best bet to carry the faded conference colors into the Rose Etowl. This time, though, Pappy’s Bears are in the unenviable po sition of having everything to lose and nothing to gain as they go into the pit against thrice-beaten Michigan on New Year’s Day. A Rose by Any Other Name—? The Wolverines barely stayed within shouting distance of first place in the Big Nine until Saturday when they combined forces with Mother Nature to upset Ohio State while Illinois obligingly lost to Northwestern. Michigan’s overall record this season is only fifth best in the Big Nine, being topped by Illinois, Ohio State, Wisconsin and Northwestern, but its conference mark of 4-1-1 stacks up as the best in the circuit. A Cal win over this Michigan team would have all the efifect of Joe Louis in his prime belting out a tank town bum. But if the Bears lose, they’ll start calling the annual tilt the Schmoes Bowl, and renew the cry for the PCC to find itself a new playmate. One more note on bowls before winding this up. Lewis and Clark up in Portland has set its sights on two bowl games in one season. Not satisfied with polishing off San Francisco State (don’t confuse with USF) in Medford’s Pear Bowl, the Pioneers are aiming for a bid to play in Honolulu’s Pineapple Bowl. If they succeed in getting to Hawaii, next season they’ll probably be known as the Carmen Mirandas of football. Asklepiads Tap Six New Members Monday Six new members were tapped ISacnday noon by Asklepiads, pre medical honorary. The new members are Albert Brauer, James Harber, Hugh Kaf ton, Herbert Spady, Ralph E. Thompson, and Forrest Tohpam, These men may be recognized by the traditional bone suspended from their necks. Initiation of those tapped will be held next Tuesday. UOfString[Guariet To Present Show The University String Quartet will perform at 4 p.m. Sunday in the SU ballroom, giving its second appearance of the school year here on campus. Numbers to be presented are Beethoven’s Quartet, Opus 74 in E flat, sometimes called the Harp Quartet, and Mozart’s Quintet in G minor, K. No. 516. The latter will be assisted by Larry .Maves, violinist and freshman in music. The regular members of the quartet are George Boughton, as sistant professor of violin; Mary Kapp Allton, sceond violin; Ed mund Cykler, associate professor of music (viola); and Milton Die terich, assistant professor of music, violoncello. SU Doughnuts Rise Inflation has hit the lowly doughnut! Coffee-drinkers who take their cup with a sinker or two will be confronted with an 8-cent variety of the latter when they order them at the Student Union soda bar starting today. According to SU Director Dick Williams, doughnuts have taken a jump up the price ladder due to the recent wage equalization authorized for state employees. The wage raises, he said, are costing the SU an additional $1,000 a month. The raise in price of dough nuts is a partial offset of the increased costs, Williams said. With doughnuts costing the SU 8 and 8/4 cents apiece it was con sidered necessary to elevate the cost of one from 5 cents to 8 cents or two for 15 cents. Dec. Grads Should Register For Job Aid December graduates who are not yet registered with the gradu ate placement service and who wish help in obtaining jobs after graduation, should register irrl mediately with the office, Mrs. Marian Scheckler, placement sec retary, announced Monday. 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