Bowerman Aide to Harris; Still Track Boss Bill Bowerman, University of Oregon varsity track coach, was named assistant athletic director in charge of the expanded grants in-aid program, it was announced Saturday by Leo Harris, athletic director. Bowerman will remain as head track coach, but the department has relieved him of his duties as freshman football coach. Harris said the frosh coaching position was still being discussed and there would be no announcement until a decision has been reached. The new grants-in-aid program, sponsored by the administration, athletic department and alumni or ganizations, will raise the number of tuitions from less than 60 to more than 100. Bowerman, a former Oregon football and track letterman, is a 1935 graduate of the university. PiKA Five Drops Lambda Chi, 31-28 PiKAs (31) (38) Lambda Chi Husted, 8 .F.8, Ranson Stingley, 7 .F.. 0, Mauer Dunn, 12 .C. 6, Kremmell Gilkey, 2 .G... 11, Woodword Patrick, 2 .G.3, Merryman Subs—PiKAs—Chadwick. Sigs (34) (25) Phi Psis Phillips, 16 .F.6, Harding Johnson, 2 .F. 10, Haney Hedgepeth, 3 .C. 4, Hall Slover, 4 .G.5, Ball Hodges, 6 .G -. 0, Kleinsmlth Subs: Sigs—Griffith, Pollock 3, Dripps. Phi Delta Theta beat Susan Campbell Hall in handball Friday afternoon, 3 to 0. BARBERSHOP QUARTET CONTEST MARCH 7 Oregon Divides Cage Series ^ _ ♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦ CLASSY CASEY r San Francisco Rally Halls Ducks; Jones Leads Hilltoppers' Attack By Rick Tarr Emerald Sportjwriter All but three Oregon cagers extended their three-day layoff through Friday night’s game with the University of San Francisco. The result was a 61-57 win for the rejuvenated Dons before 4,000 McArthur court fans. Thanks to those three men. Bob Hawes, Ed Halberg, and Barney Hoi land with 17, 13, and 12 points re spectively, Oregon stayed in the nip-ana-tuck ballgame which saw the lead change hands 20 times. The rest of the Webfoots were, ice cold. At the Throttle On the other hand, the San Franciscans spread their points around for a fine team victory. K. C. Jones, the smooth little sopho more forward, was high man for the Dons with 12 points. There were four runners-up to Jones with nine points apiece. After an even first half that ended at 27-25 with Oregon on the short end, USF flashed a hot 4.8 shooting average in the sec ond half to quell the efforts of the aforementioned three Ducks. Oddly enough, both teams had identical field goal percentages with 22 for 64 attempts and a .344 overall game average. With six minutes left to play in the game, Oregon got its biggest lead of the night at 54-47 which was also the largest margin that ever separated the two teams. But from then to the final buzzer the best the Webfoots could do was three points on a free throw by Ken Wegner and a set shot by Bob Hawes. Meanwhile five Dons kept hammering away to put together 14 points and their sixth straight win. Phil Vukicevich, the cool vet eran guard led the way in those final fatal six minutes with five points. SHELLUBRICATION Broadway-Hilyard Shell Service East Broadway at Hilyard PCC Standings NORTHERN DIVISION Washington . 8 0 1.000 Oregon .3 3 ,5oo Idaho ... .34 .453 Oregon State .3 4 .333 Washington State . 1 6 .143 RESULTS FRIDAY Oregon State 49, Idaho (>5 Washington 75, Washington State 41 RESULTS SATURDAY Oregon State 59, Idaho 55 Washington On, Washington State 48 Hawes Takes Honors Hawes was high point man for the game with 17 points collected on eight field goals and one free throw. He had a hot .571 average collected mostly on deadly set shots. K. C. Jones displayed flawless ball-handling for the Dons and also registered a .571 shooting percent age. But to call Jones the star for USF would be unfair to Frank Evangelho, Vukicevich, Keith Walker, and Jerry Mullen whose timely buckets kept Oregon off balance throughout. USF OREGON fg ft tp fg ft tp Mullen, f 5 3 9 Noe. f 2 3 9 Jones, f 4 4 12 Halherg. f 5 3 13 Jenson, f 2 1 5 Bon-*man, c 0 0 <> Vuki’vich g, 3 3 9 Holland, g 6 0 13 Lawson, g 0 2 2 Wegner, g 1 5 7 Walker, g 4 19 S^ut, f Oil Evan’ho, c 4 1 9 Farnam, f 0 0 0 Bush, g 2 2 6 Hawes, g 8 1 17 Covey, g Oil Totals 22 17 61 Totals 22 13 57 GARRY McMurry eJtUSUfSHf HOT DOGS.15c DELUXE HAMBURGERS .... 25c SHAKES.large 18c giant 25c DUKES 2 GO WILLAMETTE AT 10th Also SOFT CONES .5c - 10c - 15c POPCORN— 5c-10c GIANT TAKE HOME 25c ICE CREAM—(Our Own) Bulk Pack .49c Qt. Hand Pack .59c Qt. Half Gallon . 89c OPEN 12 NOON TO 11:00 P.M. 12:30 P.M. WEEKENDS KEN WEGNER Faces Duck Attack 'Swede', Rooks Slash Ducklings By Norm Steen Emerald Sportswriter Oregon State's powerful Rooks, again led by their towering seven foot center Wade "Swede” Hal brook, took a decisive 64-42 de cision over the Ducklings Friday night at McArthur court. The win extended Oregon State's two year winning streak to 24 straight games and the+r 10th consecutive win of the current season. Hulbrook paced the Kooks with 27 points on 11 fieldgoals and five three throws. This brings his season’s total to 250 points and an average of 25 points an encounter. The Ducklings were in the game for only the first quarter. They held a 10-9 first period advantage but a series of bad passes and a number of missed shots in the second period put the Rooks in front 30-20 at the half. The Rooks built up a 42-25 lead midway into the third frame but the agile rebounding of Kent Dorwin and Max An derson and a scries of quick buckets reduced Oregon State’s lead to 11 points at the end of the third quarter. Shortly after the start of the final frame the Rooks lost the services of the big Halbrook on his fifth personal foul. From then on there was a steady flow of sub stitutes from both benches. The Rooks had previously de feated the Ducklings 67-56. Lineups: Oregon State (64) (42) Oregon Carrol, 0 .F. 7, Dorwin Paulus. 14 .F.. 9, Porter Halbrook, 27 .C. 8, Anderson Crimmins, 3 .G. 3, Keller Moya, 9 .G. 1, Hazel OSC subs: Wilson 7, Btgnbch, Stevens 1, Cooley 1, Stolsig 2. Oregon subs: Schlosstein 1, Fos ter 7, McManus 1, Richter 0, James 4, Robinson 1, Weatherford. SPORTS FARE Mon. Jan. 26 3:50 Court 40 Phi Sigma Kappa A vs. Phi Kappa Sigma A 4:35 Court 40 Theta Chi A vs. Phi Delta Theta A 5:15 Court 40 Delta Upsilon A vs. Sigma Alpha Mu A Delta Tau Delta meets Gamma hall in handball today at 4 p.m. BREEZE Webfoots Nip Portland, 74-60 PORTLAND Coach Bill Bor cher’s University of Oregon Web foots toyed with tile Portland uni versity Pilots for the first half of . a non-conference game here Satur day night, then went on to defeat i them handily, 7-1-60. Bucks Take Lead Forward Ed Halberg set the pat- * tern for the game with a layup on . Chet Noe's top-off in the opening j two seconds of play. The Ducks never trailed during the course of * the game, although the count was : tieil at 2-2 and 13-13. After the , Pilots had knotted the game for I the last time, Halberg ripped through a pair of buckets and * Guard Bob Hawes and Chet Noe, center, followed up with four more points to give the Ducks a 21-13 quarter bulge. < The Pilots closed tile gap to 23-20 with less than five minutes a remaining in the second quarter, hut again It was llalherg and Barney Holland who widened the 1 distance with set shots. The Webfoots led at halftime, 34-26. Portland failed to threaten dur ing the second half and trailed 52 38 with ten minutes to play. Andy , Johnson, star Pilot forward, was cut from the squad prior to game time for insubordination, and his < loss hurt deeply. Megs Tops Scoring Guard Kenny Wegner set the scoring pace for both clubs with IS points. Teammates Halberg and Hawes followed with 14 and 11 points, respectively. Ron Mar shall's 13 points was high for the Pilots. Bob Hazel led the Oregon frosh to a 70-66 victory over the Pilot babes in the preliminary. PORTLAND OREGON I'arnam, f Ijallx-rg, f i .Voc. c Wcgnrr, g Holland, g Hnncnm, c I’age, g \ otals fg ft tp 1 1 3 8 1 17 .1 3 9 6 6 18 l 9 11 0 0 II 6 2 14 1 0 2 26 22 74 Hergmn, f M ar shall, Mayfield, Hum nil, g K roh n, f Trtnich, f llartcl, g Ilnkhsc, g Totals fg it tp 2 1 5 f 3 7 13 c 5 2 ! 2 •i 2 2 3 0 6 4 1 9 3 3 9 2 0 I 0 0 I 22 16 50 Hale Kane Quintet Trims Sigma Hall In Friday Action After a close first half, Hale Kane’s “A" basketball team pulled away from a spirited Sigma Hall quint to win 31 to 27 in intra mural action last Friday. Hale Kane (31) (27) Sigma Frolen, 4 .F. 0, Gtibrud Fung, 3 .F. 1, Hal! Oyama, 0 .C 0, Wisniewski Tom, 7 .G 12, Duncan Takano, 10 .G. 8, Kirkwood Subs—Hale Kane, O’Brien, 7; Sigma Hall; One, 2; and Hinkson, 4, Alpha (22) (25) S. Campbell Neyews, 0 .F 3, Dougherty Peterson, 4 .F. 9, Briggs Ruecker, 18 .C. 3, Jolly Lieberman, 0 .G 0, Starkel Wall, 0 .G 6, Montgomery Subs: Susan Campbell- Neifert, 4. Chi Psi (27) (8) Sig Eps Morris, 8 .F . 0, Rippey Clemens, 4 .F. 2, Gray Wrightson, 2 .C . 0, Buegli Stoneroad, 6.G. 2, Oppliger Dunbar, 7 .G. 2, Olsen Subs: Sig Eps—Bradley, 2. IM Track Starts French hall and Stitzer open the intra-mural indoor track season at 4:55 p.m. today in the unfinished section of the gymnasium.