Frosh Quintet Humbles Clark, Oregon Tech Forward Kent Dorwin and Cen ter Gary McManus handled the heavy end of the scoring for the University of Oregon Frosh as they defeated Clark College (Van couver, Wash.) 72-69 and the Ore gon Tech junior varsity, 70-55 last weekend in McArthur court. Dorwin, a slim, 6-2, 170 pound Oakland, Calif., lad, recorded 21 points Friday night as the Webfoots warded toff a desper ate Penguin upsurge xo collect the win. Dick James and Bob Hazel scored 14 and 13 points apiece for the winners. The quarter scores favored the Ducklings, 21-15; 36-27, and 56-45. Paced by reserve Center Mc Manus, who scored 14 times, the Webfoot juniors raced to a meth odical win over the Klamath Falls five, building up their lead grad ually. Oregon led at the quarters, 18-15; 31-28; and 51-47. The los ers fell apart in the final quarter, scoring but eight times. ND Big Five Houbregs, Wash . 55 30 136 NOE, Ore... 22 25 69 WEGNER, Ore. 14 31 59 Mullins, WSC . 22 11 58 HOLLAND, Ore. 18 20 56 KV/AX to Begin (Continued from page three) with a special guest soloist. 9:30—Kwaxworks — Harry Sas low taking over the disc jockey reins for an hour of music. 10:30—Emerald of the Air—To morrow morning’s Emerald to night. 10:35—Softly Now — Music in the softer vein for late evening lis tening. Ducks Scuttle Cougars Twice FRIDAY OPENER Webfoots Rout Tail-enders, 74-49 Staters Stone Cold in First Half By John Whitty Emerald Sporttwriler Bouncing back after two successive beatings at the hands-of the Washington Huskies last week, Oregon's surprising bas ketball quintet completely blanketed the visiting Washing ton State college Cougars in the first contest of a two-game series at McArthur Court Friday night, downing the visitors by a 74-49 count. It was during the first half that the Webfoots exhibited their su periority over the men from the Palouse hills to the greatest ex tent. The Washington Staters were unable to make even one point per minute in the first two periods, with the halftime total of the vis itors amounting to only 15 count ers on four field goals and seven gift tosses. Noe Leads Off Big Chet Noe opened the scoring for the contest with a tip-in after approximately a half-minute of play, and from that point on, it was definitely Oregon’s game. At the end of the first stanza, Oregon led by a score of 17-5, and WSC coach Jack Friel, a veteran of 25 years in the Northern Division, sent in his second platoon in hopes that the jinx could be broken. Rather than improving, the situation went from bad to worse for the Cougars, and at one point in the second quarter the Ducks held a lead of 35-7. The unexciting tilt continued un til at the end of the half the score stood Oregon 40, Washing ton State 15. In the first half, the Cougars hit only four field goals in 32 at tempts for a poor shooting average ^aieYw fefi/dfcout ihoBloB w / w-w Everybody Saves with Greyhound’s 6-RIDE FAMILY BOOK! (Effective November 1,1952) Students, businessmen, housewives, nurses, week-end visitors... everybody can use Greyhound’s 6-Ride Book and savel You can buy a 6-Ride Book between any two given points in Oregon with truly big savings. Any member of the family can use it in either direction. Tickets good for 30 days. HERE'S JUST ONE TYPICAL EXAMPLE: 6 One-Way Tickets Cost (Including t^.ai tax) . , . $20.04 6-Ride Family Book Costs (No federal tax) • • • • . $15 35 YOU SAVE • • • • $4.69 GREYHOUND PCC Standings NORTHERN DIVISION Washington . 4 0 1.000 OREGON . 2 2 .500 Oregon State . 1 1 .500 Idaho .. 1 2 .333 Washington State . 1 4 .200 RESULTS FRIDAY Washington State, 49, OREGON 74 Idaho 64, Washington 76 RESULTS SATURDAY Washington State 61, OREGON 75 Idaho 58, Washington 82 SOUTHERN DIVISION Southern California. . 3 1 .750 California . 3 1 .750 UCLA . 1 3 .250 Stanford . 1 3 .250 RESULTS FRIDAY Stanford 54, California 68 Southern California 65, UCLA 54 RESULTS SATURDAY California 60, Stanford 76 Southern California 62, UCLA 72 of .125, while the Webfoots con nected on 12 out of 32 tries at the hoop for a better than average .428 shooting mark. The Ducks nabbed 29 rebounds to 14 for the . visitors in the first 20 minutes of ! play. Ducks Hold Edge The last half of the tilt was even, less interesting than the first, for the Webfoot cagers maintained their 25 point lead, while the Coug ars also began to hit the hemp fairly regularly, thus erasing the novelty provided by their inability to score earlier in the contest. One aspect of the game which aided the Ducks in their victory was the number of free throws missed by Washington State. The mediocre average of .406, as contrasted with the creditable .667 percentage recorded by the Ducks. Twelve' of the fourteen players used by Oregon hoop coach Bill Borcher during the course of the game entered the scoring column, with 6-foot, 7-inch Chet Noe col lecting 19 points to gain scoring honors for the evening. He was fol lowed in the total points column by junior guard Ken Wegner with 14 and forward Ed Halberg, whose five field goals netted him a total of 10 points. Webloots Rebound Perhaps the whole story of the game can be known by a look at the rebound statistics. Oregon cleared 57 from the boards to 33 for the Cougars. This coupled with the low shooting percentages made by the visitors provided the mar gin of victory for the home quin tet. WASH. STATE fg ft tp Swanson, f 2 1 5 Mullins, f 2 0 4 Rehrler, c 5 4 14 Bennink, g 1 2 4 Klock, g 3 2 8 White, f 0 0 0 Underw’d, f 0 2 2 Myron, c 0 0 0 Roberts, c 113 Garton, g 10 2 Morgan, g 2 1 5 Peterson, g 1 0 2 TOTALS 18 13 49 OREGON fg ft tp Farnam, f 113 Halberg, f 5 0 10 Noe, c 5 9 19 Holland, g 2 4 8 Wegner, g 4 6 14 Johnson, f 0 0 0 Byler, f 0 11 Mickey, f Oil Stout, f 0 0 0 Bonnem’n, cl 2 4 Hawes, g 3 3 9 Covey, g 10 2 Page, g 0 2 2 Green, g 0 11 TOTALS 22 30 74 An eight-round knock out gave 128-pound Terry McGovern the world’s feather weight crown 53 years ago. He kayoed George Dix on. AUTO RADIOS—New and used for all cars. Eugene Radio Co., 7 th & Charnel ton. Ph. 4-8722. 3-12 KEN WEGNER Third in Northern Division Mural Cage, Handball Play Starts Today I n t r a-m u r a 1 basketball and handball get underway this after noon in the physical education building. Three cage games are scheduled on court 40 and Pi Kappa Alpha and the Counselors initiate the only slated handball action. Opening round basketball is on tap for League 1 teams in the A division. Delta Tau Delta, runner ups to Nestor last year, faces Kappa Sigma at 3:50; Pi Kappa Phi meets Sigma Alpha Epsilon at 4:35; and Beta Theta Pi faces Tau Kappa Epsilon at 5:15. Following is the breakdown for the remainder of the A teams: League 2 Alpha Tau Omega, Lambda Chi Alpha, Pi Kappa Al pha, Chi Psi and Sigma Phi Ep silon. League 3—Phi Gamma Del ta, Sigma Chi, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Sigma Kappa and Phi Kappa Sigma. League 4 — Sigma Nu, Theta Chi, Phi Delta Theta, Delta Upsilon and Sigma Alpha Mu. League 5 Hale Kane, Barrister Inn, Gamma hall, Alpha hall, Susan Campbell and Sigma hall. League 6—Nestor hall, Merrick hall, Sherry Ross, French hall and Stitzer hall. League 7- Campbell club, Philadelphia house, Yeomen, Counselors and Leagle Eagles. Here is the B league grouping: League 1 Phi Delta Theta, Beta Theta Pi, Theta Chi, Lambda Chi Alpha and Phi Kappa Psi. League 2—Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Nu and Alpha Tau Omega. League 3—Phi Gamma Delta, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Mu. League 4—Hale Kane, Susan Campbell, Sigma hall, Gamma hall, and Chi Psi. League 5— French hall, Merrick hall, Stitzer hall, Nestor hall and Sherry Ross. League 6—Campbell Club, Phil adelphia House, Conselors, Phi Kappa Sigma and Pi Kappa Al pha. Classifieds FOR RENT—Room and board or board alone. See Mrs. Kile at 874 E. 13th. Ph. 4-0422. 1-16 FOR SALE: Will sell equity in ’49 Dodge convertible. Must sac rifice. Call Cliff Owen—3-2114 LOST: Wrist watch on 13th St. near Emerald Hall on Thurs day. Reward. Ph. 3-1091. 1-14 FOR SALE: Underwood noiseless standard! typewriter, excellent condition, $55. Mr. James, ext. 587. 243 Comm. -14 FOR RENT: Large sleeping room for 1 woman. $25. 671 E. 16th. Ph. 5-6576. 1-14 SATURDAY Borcher Quint Triumphs, 75-61 By Larry Lavelle Emerald Sport, Editor Treating t h e Washington State college Cougars as if they were long-lost cousins— and unwelcome ones at that— the University of Oregon Wcbfoots clipped the visitors 75-61 Saturday night in Mc Arthur court to vault into a second place tie in the North ern division PCC standings. A couple of Oregon's picket men, Chet Noe and Ed Halberg, had a head on the offensive bucket with a pair of plus 500 shooting aver ages for the night’s work. Noe at tempted 13 and hit seven times for a .538 percentage and Halberg found the range for a .667 bark— six for nine. Noe and Halberg were the game's high-point men with 21 and 14 points respectively. Cougars Hold Up The Webfoots were slow to ig nite and the Cougars made a game of it until the early part of the second quarter when the score was even at 20-20. Keith Farnam led . off with a charity toss but the Cougars came right back on the strength of Pete Mullins’ 20-foot cast from the left side stripe and followed up with four more points for a surprising 6-1 edge. Barney Holland swished a long set shot from behind a screen and the Ducks gradually pared the lead until Noe dropped through a couple of free throws at the end of the period. Oregon led, 17-16. A free toss by Mullins and Center Bill Rehder’s lay in knot ted the issue at 20-20 whereupon the Ducks broke the game apart Holland drove through for a lay up and dropped In a set shot; Noe hit with a close in shot; Heiberg deposited a free throw; and Noe right armed a 10 foot hook to put the Webfoots out In 4 front, 29-20 at the 3:04 mark of the second quarter. Oregon in creased its edge by three and the halftime reading was 38-26. Noe and Halberg each hit the hoop for seven points in the third period and Cougar Coach Jack Friel unsuccessfully juggled his lineup but the build-up continued and Oregon had a 59-42 cushion at the three-quarter mark. A Big Lead . Midway in the final stanza Big Hank Bonneman, who had a night for himself especially in the re bounding department, came through with a follow shot which gave the Webfoots their biggest working margin of the evening— 74-49. Washington State’s first pla toon handled the ball a bit bet ter than the night before, setting up their plays well, but they were just as far off their shoot ing sticks as they had been Fri day, hitting a meagre .344 from the floor and 17 of 25 freetosses. The Webfoots teamed for a .410 field mark and cashed in with 25 for 33 attempted free throws. Farnam, with 10 rebounds, topped that department; and Rehder, with 12 points, led the WSC tossers. WASH. STATE fg ft tp Mullins, f 4 3 11 Swanson, f 0 0 0 Reluler. c 5 2 12 Bennink, g 0 1 1 Klock, g 4 3 11 White, f 0 0 0 Underw’d, f 1 0 2 Myron, c 10 2 Morgan, g 2 3 7 Carton, g 3 5 11 Peterson, c 2 0 4 OREGON fg ft tp Farnam, f 1 4 6 Halberg, f 6 2 14 Noe, c 7 7 21 Holland, g 4 5 13 Wegner, g 3 5 11 Stout, f 10 2 Johnson, f 0 0 0 Byler, f 0 0 0 Mickey, f 0 0 0 Bonnem’n, c 2 0 4 Page, g 0 2 2 Hawes, g 10 2 Covey, g 0 0 0 Green, g 0 0 0 TOTALS 22 17 61 TOTALS 25 25 75