Webfoots Take Pair Couaars Wegner, Hawes Pace Friday Duck Triumph Led by the clutch shooting of Ken Wegner and Bob Hawes, Ore gon came on with a rush in the second half to down the hard fighting Washington State college Cougars 75-73 Friday night in the first of a two-game ND basketball set. Wegner was high for the Ducks with 18 points, including eight out of ten from the field and two free throws, and Hawes chipped in with seven points in the deciding quar ter. But topping all scorers was Cougar Ron Bennink, a 6T junior from Linden, Wash., who counted 25 points. Paced by Bennink, Jack Friers eagers hopped to a 30-23 lead. Wegner hit for five for Oregon, but Bennink, who totaled 18 points in the first half, Bob Klock, and A1 Perry all scored from way out side to boost the Cougars to 37 32. Jerry Ross deuced twice tor Oregon as the half closed 45-38 in favor of WSC. At the start of the second half Max Anderson, Ed Halberg and Wegner stuffed in baskets before Perry scored from 20 feet for WSC. Free throws by Barney Hol land, Wegner, Anderson, a tip in by Ross and a two-hand set by Howard Page finally tied the score at 55-all with a 1:00 left in the third quarter. .Bob Stout layed in another bas-1 ket for Oregon, but the Cougars led at the quarter's end on a doub leton by Rehder and singleton by Captain Bob Swanson. Page hit on another set to be gin the fourth quarter and Hal berg added a free throw to give Oregon its first lead since the opening minutes. Bennink and j Perry put in gifters for a 60-all tie, but Bob Hawes, who went into the game very late in the third ] period, found the range on a 35- j foot one-hander to give Oregon a lead it never relinquished. Wegner added two on a jump,; Hawes scored two more fielders and a free throw, and Anderson contributed a charity toss for a 70-65 Duck lead. Bennink and Rehder put in bas kets for WSC, but Wegner count ed a lay-in and Holland a free throw and the Ducks went into a freeze with 2:42 left with the score 73-71. The stall lasted till 0:45 when Swanson intercepted a pass and soloed in for the cripple and a 73-all tie. Here the clutch shooting Wegner came back to sink another layin and give the game to tbe Ducks. Bennink and Perry shot for the Cougars In the closing seconds but failed to con nect. Final shooting averages were .547 for Oregon on a phenomena] 29 for 53 and .360 for WSC on 27 for 75. The Cougars shot only eight for 34 in the second half. The high-scoring Bennink hit nine field goals but took 25 shots and exactly equaled the overall Washington State average of .360. Rehder added 14 to the WSC cause and Perry chipped in with 11. The entire Webfoot team shot at a good pace. Halberg hit four for nine, Page four for seven, An derson two for five, Wegner eight for ten, Holland four for ten, Ross three for five, Stout one for two, and Hawes three for five. Lineups: Oregon (75) Wash. Slate (73) Ig (t pf tp fg (t pf tp Halherg, f 4 2 2 10 Bennink. f 9 7 3 25 Wegner, f 8 2 4 18 Perry, f 4 3 4 1 1 Anderson, c 2 5 2 9 Kehder, c 4 6 3 14 Eagc, g 4 13 9 Klock, g 2 13 5 Holland, g 4 5 4 13 Swanson, g 3 2 1 8 Hawes, g 3 13 7Mken, ( 0 0 3 0 Ross, g 3 117 Lodge, ( 0 0 0 0 Stout, I 1 0 2 2 Met'ants, c 2 0 3 4 •-Hanks, g 2 0 0 4 TOTALS 29 17 21 75 Foisy, g 10 0 2 TOTALS 27 19 20 73 ORECOX 18 20 19 18 75 WASH. STATE 20 25 13 15 73 Houses Reminded To Pay Insurance Men’s living organizations parti cipating in intramural ball have been reminded by the office of student affairs to obtain their ac cident insurance, if they have not done so already. Cost of the insurance is $3 per term, and organizations wishing coverage are urged to pay $6, which will provide for the rest of the school year. Checks should be made payable to the Intramural Accident Reimbursement fund. KWAX to Feature Request Program Student requests will be featur ed on the KWAX Thursday even ing program beginning next Thursday according to the SU ra dio publicity committee. A request box for this purpose will be placed in the SU lobby, and the Committee asked those making requests to mention a rea son for it. font(/#e ft? SELL IT THRU THE WANTADS Four cents a word for the first insertion, 2 cents e word thereafter. • Place them at the S.U. Main Desk —or— • Call university extension 219 in the afternoon —or— • Come to the Emerald Shack in the afternoon IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE Oregon Daily Emerald PCC Standings NORTHERN DIVISION OREGON 3WiLP7S0 Oregon Stale 3 Idaho 2 Washington State ' 1 Washington 1 SATURDAY RESULTS OREGON, 65, at WSC, 56 OSC, 54, at Washington, 51 SOUTHERN DIVISION W L Pet. .750 .500 .250 .250 California a USC 2 Stanford i UCLA , SATURDAY RESULTS Stanford, 50, at California, 56 UCLA, 81, at USC, 63 1.000 .500 .250 .250 Hale Kane Bops TKE Hale Kane trampled Tau Kappa Epsilon, 45-16; and French hall edged Sherry Ross, 33-32, in ‘A’ intramural basketball last Friday. Phi Delta Theta beat ATO, 21-16; Phi Kappa PsT defeated Sigma Al pha Epsilon, 24-13; Sigma Chi ran over Beta Theta Pi, 27-16; and Theta Chi dropped Phi Gamma Delta, 35-13, in ‘B’ competition. Emery Barnes, elongated Hale Kane center took high point hon ors for the day with a 17 point spurt. Phi Psi's Bill Haney and Sherry Ross's Jack Heacock tied for runner-up honors with 13 ATO B’ (16) Pheister, 0 Hamilton, 4 Kilkenny, 4 Du Bosch. 3 Moriart/f 0 F F c G G (21) Phi Deit *B* 2, Heath 2, Holt 4. Mar let t 3. William*; 6, Mundle Subs — ATO: Boehme, Page, Doroen ighim; Phi Delt: Schlosstein, 2; Albright 2; Bourn#, Van Leuven, Stiner. Sherry A’ (32) Sherrel, 6 Halvorson, 6 Heacock, 13 Williams, 0. Harris, 7 F F C G G (33J French W 12, Bell 6, Pingree 7, Plumb 3, Keck 5. Patterson Sub# — Sherry Ross: Brown; Savio, Volonte ; Beck ; Jensen. Hale Kane ‘A’ (45) (16) Teke ‘A’ Johnson, 10 F 8, Gubrud O’Brien, OF 3, Allen Barnes, 17 C 0, Pearson Mathias, 6 G 3, Yamanaka \\ atanabe, 8 (» ]f James Subs — Hale Kane: Schmidt, 2; Coley; Prichard, 2; Tekes: Tucker; Smith; Easton, 1 ; Bonstad. - (13) SAE *B' F 2, Rapp F 5, Talbot C 2, Lewis G 4, Withington G 0, Porter : Cass; Oldham; SAE: Anstett ; Hail; McEachern. Beta *B! (16) (27) Sigma Chi 'B! Adams, 8 F 4, Reinhart Xordling, 5 F 4, Hedgepeth i c 2, Webei Reiser, 2 G 6, Hinkson Martin, 0 G 3, Sloar Subs — Beta : Davis; Sigma Chi: Green ly, 6; Patera; Griff; Lundy. Phi P#i B’ (24) Kuhes, 7 Baker, 0 White, 0 Bill Haney. 13 Bob Haney, 4 Suijs — Phi P~ Fiji B’ (13) Green, 0 Rossman, 0 Lally, 1 Lloyd, 0 Steorns, 2 F F C G G (35) Theta Chi ‘B 3, Murray 7, J one; 9, Hamiltox 3, yarboi 4. Phillip! Subs — Fiji: Mecklem, 2; Kellogg, 3 Brinton, 4; Huff, 1 ; Theta Chi: Guinn, 4 Lenz, 2; West, 1; Hutchinson, 2; Xaapi. SPORTS FARE MONDAY, JAN. 18 BASKETBALL 3:50. Court 40, Sigma Phi Epsilon B vs Delta Tau Delta B. 4:35, Court 40, Phi Kappa Sigma B vs Chi Psi B 1:15, Court 40, French hall B vs Merrick hall B HANDBALL 4:00. Court 42, 44, 46, Merrick hall vs Sigma Phi Epsilon Senate GPA High The ASUO senate grade average for the 28 student members was 3.206, according to the figuring of ASUO Pres. Tom Wrightson. This is considerably above the campus average of 2.5173 or the highest living organization grade average of 2.90 made by Orides, organiza tion for off-campus women. Over half of the senate members, 17 made above a 3 point. Classifieds LOST—Lady Elgin gold wrist j watch with engraving Tuesday ( evening near Library or Ger linger. | One Bedroom furnished duplex for' rent. Suitable for faculty couple j or graduate student. Phone! 4-8525. tf‘ Oregon Ties tor First With Win on Saturday University of Oregon finds itself in a pleasant position af ter two weeks of Northern Di vision basketball action. The Ducks are tied with Oregon State for the league lead, and have just completed a two game sweep of a dangerous invasion in to the Inland Empire. The 65-56 victory over Washing ton State Saturday night marked the sixth straight victory over the Cougars during the last two years. The Ducks now return home to the Willamette valley where they prepare for Washington’s Huskies who gave Oregon State two bad nights before finally falling to the Beavers by three and 12 point margins. The Oregon squad, which barely squeaked past the Cougars Friday night, was much improved in their second encounter, while the WSC performances fell off. Anderson Shines Max Anderson, Coach Bill Bor cher’s prize sophomore in the pivot slot, had one of his best nights, garnering 15 points. Eleven of these came from the free throw stripe where Big Max connected on 11 out of 13 attempts. Ed Halberg, pogo-stick forward, captured high point honors, how ever, with a 20 point output. Driv ing Kenny Wegner completed Ore gon's “Big 3’’, amassing an even 10 markers. Coach Jack Friel’s home lads started like a ball of fire, and held the lead until Barney Holland can ned a hook shot late in the first canto. The score switched back and forth five more times before Oregon finally took over for good. Fast Break Smoother The Ducks' fast break was smoother, and their ball handling was more accurate in the easy tri umph. Oregon lost a chance to gain un disputed possession of first place in the division when Oregon State ■ .fought off a late rally by Univer sity of Washington in Seattle, tf> ^in, 54-51. ; OSCs Wade "Swede” Halbrook, failed to hit double figures for the first time this year. The 7 3” giant was covered by a blanket ot Huskies all night and managed only one field goal over the whola distance. Oregon