■ Webfoot Nine Entrains Today for Seven Day Northern Trek Meet Records May Fall As Prep Stars Gather for Sta te Tilt Boh Leslie of Klamath Falls Threatens Century Mark; Spotted Eagle, Anderson May Win A world's record may be endangered when 217 high school track men gather on Hayward field Friday afternoon at 1 to open the eighth annual Oregon high school track and field meet. When Bob Leslie, Klamath Falls sprinter, goes to the marks in the century, spectators may see a new state record of 0:9.6 hung up in the 100 yard dash. Such a performance by a prepper was unheard of until Leslie broke the tape at the Klamath Falls meet last Saturday. Leslie is co-holder of the state record at present in the fast time of 0:9.6. He shares the 1 217 Prep Trackmen Open Eighth Annual State Meet distinction with Bobby Grayson, 1 having equalled the Stanford foot ball star's record in last year’s meet. Spotted Eagle, Chemawa Indian > school star, may provide another of the meet thrills. The fleet footed Indian turned a mark of 2:01.4 in the half mile event of the Salem meet last Saturday. This is one tenth of a second faster than Sam McGaughey’s state meet mark set in 1933. Several of the preppers have a fine chance to win the 880 if their qualifying times can be used as an indication. Weight will mean little if Stan ley Anderson of Roosevelt high continues to disregard gravity in the shot put and discus tosses. In qualifying Saturday Anderson flip ped the metal ball 51 feet 3 inches. Peters of Lincoln high threw 50 feet 1% inches last year to estab lish a state record. Anderson also tossed the discus over the horizon to a distance of 132, 2 feet 8% inches beyond Brack’s meet record. Parade Opens Meet A colorful touch will be added to the opening ceremonies when the 217 entrants parade around Hayward field in true Olympic style prior to the start of the first preliminary qualifying race Friday. Plans for the gala opening were announced last night by Colonel Bill Hayward, director of the meet, and Don Thomas, Portland, student chairman. Detail of Olympic games opening, witnessed many times by Hayward, will be followed closely. Queen Mary to Rule The entire group of prep ath letes, divided into state district and high school sections, will march onto Hayward field promptly at 1 o’clock, led by an honor color guard from the university ROTC. The marchers, with each district and school designated by a ban ner. and with meet officials in cluded, will parade by the east grandstand before Queen Mary Morse and her court, the rulers of 1 the recent Junior weekend celebra tion. The color guard will fall out and take places in front of the queen's stand and as each unit of the par ade passes the marchers will sa lute. The procession will circle the track and then deploy into the in field to stand at attention while the (Please turn to page four) r Conference Golf Title Tournament Slated for May 25 Match W ill Be Played at Eugene Club The golfing championship of the northwest conference will be set tled Saturday, May 25, when teams from Montana, Idaho, Washington, Washington State, Oregon State, and the University of Oregon, meet in medal play on the Eugene contry club course. The Oregon divoters are qualifying this week. Each school will enter a four man team in the 36-hole champion ship tournament. The northwest team championship will go to the winning team, while the low in dividual score will bring its maker the northwest championship. As but a four man team can be entered from each school, Coach Thomas Stoddard has prescribed 72 holes of medal play for each of the six men who have made up the squad tlirouhgout the season, with the low four to enter the northwest meet. Sid Milligan, Jack Mulder, Ed Labbe, Leonard Anderson, Robert Thomas, and Ford Young will play 72 holes each on the country club fairways before next Thursday in the fight for team berths. Dormitory Coeds Thump ADPi, 24-6 Alpha Delta Pi lost to the Hen dricks hall baseball nine yesterday, 24-6. The millrace coed team was outplayed from the first of the game. Ruth Howes was umpire. The batteries were: Hendricks hall, Margaret Hines and Louisa Parry: Alpha Delta Pi, Aileen Demerit and Iris Franzen. Baseball games scheduled for to day are Alpha Phi vs. Omicron Pi at 4 p. m. and Orides vs. Pi Beta Phi at 6:30 p. m. Oakridge Club Visits The women's club of Oakridge visited the art museum yesterday afternoon. They are studying Ja pan in their club meetings. Frosh Coach Emphasizes j Bat Practice Duck Babes Continuing Heavy Slugging Millard Probable Starter For Rook Tilt; Goodwin Will Caleb Undismayed by the prediction of George Scott, the Oregon State Rooks baseball coach that “if our pitchers hold out we'll win three of the four games with the Ore gon Frosh,” Coach Ed Kelley sent h i s suddenly vicious sluggers through a well-balanced workout of hitting and fielding last night. With last year’s three victories in mind, which the Frosh won by such overwhelming scores that the fourth encounter was never played, Coach Kelley laid heavy stress on batting practice, bunting, and base running. Babes Slug Well Reveling in their newly-found power at the plate, the Ducklings continued to joyfully plaster the ball to the far extremes of the low er field. The team which found the offerings of Earl Bucknum and Herb Foulk for three home runs on the varsity field Thursday again came through with heavy work from the batter s positions. Bud Goodin, Coach Kelley’s foot ball find who has shown so well in the backstop position, was appar ently a sure-starter for Friday’s opening contest. With the catch ing duties disposed of, Coach Kel ley turned his attention to the none-too-strong hurling staff. Millard May Hurl Bob Millard, who has been kept on the trot between the mound and the pastures, has looked well in practice and will probably start Friday's game. The well-built portsider has pitched little in the warm-up games and has shown streaks of wildness in practice tilts. It will probably be southpaw against southpaw Friday, as Coach Scott will probably start Dean Johnston, his star moundsman. Wynne Hook Star With Long John Wynne on first at the top of his form at the. plate. Herman Gaglia and Fred Lewis fielding around the keystone sack and Joe Gray keeping cool on the hot corner, Coach Scott has a fine infield combination. Wynne and Gray are a part of the Rooks’ heavy artillery. Lester Weaver, Ike Wintermute, and Lloyd Patterson make up Coach Scott's pasture patrol. Rog er Morey will round out the team behind the plate. Cambridge Rows to live If ill in a Row wrj v » te». wc swa*** '■" - - - ,' ■' : .<*. ..... I While .500,000 persons crowded the hanks of the Thames at Putney, England, the Cambrige oars men scored their twelfth consecutive victory over their historic Oxford l niversity rivals. The Cambridge crew is shown •< right crossing the finish line four lengths in the lend of their heavier opponents. The vinners took the lead at the start and never were headed dtiling the race. Sport Circuits By Mattingly Warnings, Guesses, Consolations Squirt From Scribe's Pen While the Webfoot ball players take to the road in an attempt to wrest first place in the northwest conference from t h e Beavers, Coach Bill Hayward's thinclads will cavort about the field in prep aration for Oregon's annual track and field civil war with the gang from Corvallis. After a disappointing showing at Pullman, the Ducks have once again settled back into form—but rather than print a post-mortem, we would like to say a word of warning. Y\ itli the NCCAA meet before their eyes as the final objective of the season aiul for many of the veterans the final meet of their career, the tendency to overlook Oregon State may appear,—possi bly this played some factor in the Cougar defeat. N* *5* Coach Hayward has some fine material coming up next year to console him for the loss of some of his brightest stars from this year's squad. George Varoff, a freshman pole vaulter may be seen any afternoon ascending and des cending from the near-stratosphere with the aid of a slim bamboo pole. Varoff has no respect for the high er altitudes and is one of the finest vaulting prospects seen in the northwest for many moons. While Varoff soars gracefully about the clouds, “Squeak” Lloyd, a transfer, confines his excursion to mere hops 34 feet along the ground. With these two men and several of this year’s luminaries on Hayward’s list we can almost start the “big next year” predictions which so often fall short—or flat. * * * When the Ducks meet the Rooks Friday and Saturday anything may be expected. Last year the Frosh won lopsided victories over their hottest rivals—this year Coach George Scott comes to the front with the assertion that his Rooks will win three of four if his pitch ing staff comes through. C’oaeh Ed Kelley on the Frosh end of the question answered mere ly (hat the Rooks might do just that — but failed to look convinc ing. The whole question seems to re volve around the pitching staffs of the respective squads. There are more “ifs” in both mound squads than there are bats in their bat bags. Since the Frosh have sud denly come to life at the plate and have begun to plaster the apples to the far extremities of the field, a slugfest may result when the teams clash - for the Rooks are al so strong in this department. Roberts, Newton Win Contests in Tennis Tourney Horseshoes and Tennis Are Slow in Starling Karl Boushey, director of the in tramural sports, announced yester day that those participating in the all-campus tennis and horseshoes contest should telephone or person ally contact their opponents in those matches, because time for the playing of the matches is get ting short and the result will be that no chamion will be recognized. Those who have played their games and consequently advanced a bracket are: F. Deeds and It. Kidder in horseshoe:; and Teltoft, Clark, Roberts, and Robbin:; in tennis. Those games left to play in ten nis are Johnson-Goff and Chaney Hutchinson. Those games left in horseshoes are Decd.s-Kidder in thf second bracket and Miller-Clari and Mason Ketch in the firsi bracket. Oh, He Flows Through the Air Above is A'rne Idndgren shown in action. Lindgren, star Duck broad jumper, lias been turning in some fine performances this year and is one of Coach Bill Hayward’s mainstays. Timnrji'.ifLicirjanirmmniriinrrurimnc.mmnmfjirirjm r Six Gaines in Week Face Second-Place Ducks on Road Trip Trailing the pennant-bound Ore gon State Beavers by one full game, Bill Reinhart's Webfoots take the northbound baseball trail today to play the northern divi sion’s toughest schedule in an at tempt to annex the second con secutive championship for Oregon. Opening in Seattle F r i d a y against Tubby Craves, slipping Huskies, the Ducks face a two game series with each of the three northern teams in seven days. Playing Washington this weekend, the Oregon squad spends Sunday, its only day of rest, traveling to Pullman where Washington State will entertain Monday and Tues day. Without rest the Ducks then shift to Moscow to finish the gruel ling road trip opposing Rich Fox's heckling Vandals on Wednesday and Thursday. Hurling Chief Worry Oregon’s success during the seven-day seige on enemy baseball camps depends largely upon the ef fectiveness of Coach Reinhart's hurling stuff. All season Coach Reinhart’s pet worry has been the chucking corps, which until Cece Inman twirled a sparkling three hit game to handcuff the Wash ington batsmen in the final game here last week, had been unable Upturn in victories in any series after Don McFadden, mainstay righthander, had sewed up the openers. That Coach Reinhart is still wor ried about the pitching department is evidenced by the attention he has given his moundsmen in practice this week. Johnny Lewis, regular third baseman, has been delegated to hurling duty this week, while Ralph Amato has been -brought in from left field to take care of the hot corner. Lewis, a twirler in his younger days, is slated to start in his usual position but will be ready to step into the box in a relief role in case the regular pitchers run into too much trouble. Receiving Staff Crippled Though concentration upon the hurling problem has occupied Coach Reinhart’s attention this week, the receiving staff is in none too good condition to face the crucial test in the north. Indications at present point to ward the heavy duty falling to Mickey Vail, veteran catcher, as Johnny Thomas, this year's sopho more find, is still handicapped by a broken thumb. If Thomas’ fractured digit per mits him to assume routine duties, Coach Reinhart’s worries in this department are over, otherwise the danger of injury to Vail will be a constant threat. Finances Limit Squad Financial conditions which pre vent a large squad from making the trip will place a further burden on Coach Bill’s shoulders, as no utility infielder will be available in case of injury. With only 15 men on the traveling squad the Web foots will carry but four infielders: Harry McCall on first, Ray Kock teamed with Joe Gordon around the keystone sack, and Lewis at third. In addition to McFadden and In man, Herb Foulk, Ron Gemmell and Earl Bucknum will be avail able for service on the hill. The outer pastures will be pa trolled by Maury Van Vliet, Andy Hurney, Wes Clausen, and Amato, who will be in the gardens unless an emergency causes him to be shifted to the infield. The progressive merchant no longer thinks merely of a certain volume of business to achieve, a definite profit upon his investment, or the fame of leading in his line in the trade of the community. * He has come to realize that the buyer is entitled to know the truth about the goods which are offered for sale, that fa?r prices and substantial values, with honest statements in advertising, bring the best good to both buyer and seller. l Patronize Emerald advertisers.