Webfoots Nip Huskies. 57-56 WEEKEND SCHEDULE (Registration: Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in Johnson hall; from 11:00 to 2:00 p.m. in Eugene hotel lobby; from 2:00 to 5 :00 p.m. in Johnson hall). Saturday, February 2 10:00 Exec utive Committee Meeting. Office of Presi dent, Johnson hajl. 12;:00 Noon. Annual Dads Day luncheon, Eugene hotel. Mr. Gene Vandeneynde, president of Oregon . Dads presiding. Address, 4 “Where Do we Go-from Here?” by Mr. Edward C. Sammons. 2:30 p.m. Annual business meeting of Oregon Dads. Election of offi cers. Guild theater, Johnson hall. After business meeting. Open house on the cam pus. Dads are especially invited to visit the Uni versity library, the mu seum of natural history in Condon hall, the physical education buildings, the student health service and various departments which will be open for inspection. 6:00 p.m. Dinner with sons i - ' and daughters at living organizations. 8:00 p.m. Varsity basketball game, University of Oregon vs. University of Washington, McArthur court. Sunday, February 3 8:30 a.m. Ureakfast meeting of old and new members of the Oregon Dads e x e c u tive committee. Eugene hotel 11:00 a.m. Special Dads’ Day services in Eugene churches. 1:00 p.m. Dinner with sons and daughters. 4:00 p.m. University Vespers. Music auditorium. Hamilton, Wilkins Spark Ducks In Torrid Struggle By FRED BECKWITH Oregon’s basketball artists painted a spectacular master piece last night when they defeated the Washington Huskies, 57-56 before 5,000 patrons of the casaba art. The contest, the third in the series between the Ducks and Huskies, held all the proportions of a walkaway in its opening stages. Captain Bob Hamilton touched off a scoring conflagration when be connected with a set shot from some thirty feet out only twenty seconds after the affair had started. Durable Dick Wilkins, whose 20 points enabled him to capture the high point scoring honors for the evening, added a set shot from twenty feet out after Hamilton’s opener, and the onslaught began. It was Oregon 12 and Washington 2, six minutes into the game. So effective was the Hobsonmen’s offensive and defen sive tactics that the Seattle scrappers were forced to take five timeouts in the first half. Huskies Challenge With ten minutes remaining in the game, the nature of the contest abruptly changed. The uncanny eye of Washing ton’s Eathorne aided in gradually cutting the gap to the point where the Ducks were barely able to stave off a possible defeat. Spectators were of the opinion that it was the 1945 quintet performing for the lemon and green and not the locals of this year’s up-and-down fame. Oregon couldn’t seem to miss in a first half that saw them head for the dressing room \yith a 36-18 lead. < Please turn to pane four) Flanked by Ed Al ien, ASUO president, and Signe Eklund, AWS president,, / crowd of student!^ mass at tbe famous wroughtiron Oat's Gates at the edge of the Old Campus to portray O r e g o n’s spirit of welcome for visiting fathers. The. gates were constructed l>y the Oregon Dads eli i> and the VVPA; they were, dedicated Feis ruary 8, 1941, when over 3500 dads wew invited to the cam pus to see Oregon play OSC, the Guild theater present Shakespeare’s ‘Tam ing of the Shrew,' and John Cava naugh, ASUO presi dent, campaign for a student union.