T>uc6 *7’tac6& ■—■i. SiU (fwmey The Heavers arc coming, the game'hi m si^ht; the Heavers arc coinin', oh what a fi^lit- but perhaps it i better that we should stick to prose and simply say that the annual vendetta between the two arch rivals m the Willamette valley will get off to a flying start Friday when the local Ducks travel to Gill Coliseum in Corvallis and match baskets with Coach Slats Gill’s OSC Heavers. % The thoHjjht of Gill Cob curp tako ns back to the Friday nipht of March last, when the Ducks, paced by “Yo-yo" Jim l.oseutoff, Curt Barclay, and Hob l’eterson boomed into the spacious new hoop plant for their third jpamc with the Heavers. The Webfoots were fresli from a K2-75 victory over the Wash iiif^tun Huskies, later N D champions, and they had to v. in against the Beavers to have a chance for a tie against tin- men from Seattle. The game started slowly, with the deliberate tactics of ^ the Beavers setting the pace | for a usually fast-break happy clan of Oregon hoopsters. Par enthetically. we might mention that they scored 52 points in the first half of that Washing ton game, so they usually had no trouble finding the most direct route to the basket. But this was not to be their night. They blew an early lead and went into the final minutes SLATS GILL trailing, although they narrowed the margin to 41-39 just be fore the finish. It was then that one of the more memorable incidents of the 1951 season took place. There have been various versions of v/hy it happened, but we would say that it was just plain built up tension of a tight and crucial game. Big Bob Peterson was attemptinn to intercept a Beaver throw-in from the sidelines with seconds remaining, when the riding of a fan frayed his nerves to the point of breaking, and he headed for that fan with blood i bis eye. They were soon separated, however, and Duck Coach John Warren escorted an angry Peterson off the floor. But it did not end there. Peterson showed himself sincerely sorry as he publicly apologized the next night at McArthur Court, and the Ducks rolled to a 67-42 triumph over the Beavers. Pete May Get Riding do not be overly surprised if you hear Peterson get a very thorough riding Friday night at Corvallis. This time, how ever, he should undoubtedly take it in bis stride. Whatever else this coming weekend series with the Beavers will show, it will be the first time that freshman mentor Bill Borcher locks horns with the old pro of northwest basketball, Amory T. “Slats" Gill. Gill first came to Corvallis in the fall of 1920 as a highly touted prep star from Salem high, and has been on the campus ever since, except for a one-year absence immediately after his graduation. He took the OSC head post in 1928, and since then his teams have been Northern Division champions six times. They have won the l’CC title three times: in 1933, 1947, and 1949. The feelings of the Corvallis school regarding their veteran mentor could have been no more fittingly shown than when they named their 10,500 capacity basketball plant after him. Most honors of this type come posthumously, but Slats Gill is very much alive. Borcher Wants Jazz Combo Back Turning from Gill to Borcher, the Oregon coach was telling us Tuesday that he and his players enjoyed the swing music played by the small volunteer pep band several games back at McArthur court. They also appreciate the larger band which has performed for the last few contests, but feel that the jazzy repretoire of the smaller outfit is more effective in relieving the tension. So they wish to ask if there is some way they can get the more syncopated combo back in action. Is there? Women Bowlers Roll High Games The regular afternoon games of the girls’ howling league, sponsor 'd by the Student Union, were played off Tuesday with eight teams howling. Gamma Fhl Beta was high for total number of pins, having bowl ed SKI, BOB, and 8-18. Their oppo nents, Delta Gamma, did not show up, so the Gumma Fill’s won all four points. Kappa Alpha Theta won all three of their games to amass a total of 1976 (859, 662, and 655; to Carson 4’s 1783 (577, 578, and 028). Delta Zeta took three points from Zeta Tau Alpha. The DZ’s had 564, 596, and 704 to the ZTA’a 641, 523, and 580. Alpha Delta PI also won three out of four points from Hendricks •CY 654, 491, and 561 to Hend rick’s 471, 540, and 537. Tuesday Night Bowling Scores in intramural bowling action Tuesday night: -Sigma Chi 4, Sigma Alpha Ep silon 0 Theta Chi 3, Hunter hall 1 Gamma hall 4 ,lambda Chi AI plia 0 Nestor hall 3, Sigma Nu 1 High Series: Hoppe of Theta Chi, 541 Macdonald of Sigma Chi, 530 Decides Gorillas Can't Compete With Men NEW HAVEN, Conn. «J.R) — Gorillas can't keep up with this modern age. A retired Yale professor, Robert M. Yerkes, predicts that within the next 100 years the popular zoo animal will be extinct. Gorillas have “no chance of sur vival in competition with man,” says Yerkes. "The animals, either must be protected in their natural habitat or bred successfully in cap tivity. Otherwise they won’t be around any more." Billiard Finals Slated to Begin The final qualifying rounds for the men’s billiard tournament wifi' be held Wednesday and Thursday nights. Each player must have tap.' rounds in these final rounds, arf#' he may play them either or botfc nights. The contestants for the national telephonic tournamerfC will be picked from these round**' and the highest scores from the. preliminary rounds. All men who have entered the tournament are asked to come t*" these final rounds, Wednesday ant’ Thursday night. IM Track Schedule Intramural track action will re-* sume today after being cancelle**' conflict with basketball playoffs. Monday and Tuesday because oT1' Sederstrom hall will meet Chemey hall, and Lambda Chi Alpha wil* meet Beta Theta Pi. Both cinder contests will start at 4 p.m. Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No. 35.. THE LARGEMOUTH BASS / I'm a sucker fora left hook! /Always a sucker for attractive bait, our aquatic brother went off the deep end and got caught on the quick-trick cigarette hook! But he wormed his way out when he suddenly realized that cigarette mildness can't be tossed off reel lightly. Millions of smokers have found, too, there's only one true test of cigarette mildness. It's the sensible test— the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments! Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your “T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste), you’ll see why ... After all the Mildness Tests...