Duck Frosh Drop Baby Bevos 5-4,1-0; Local Baseballers Slate OSC Tonight * i-1 -4 4 4 -4 -4 ★ ^ ★ * * -n -n w Kirsch's Squad Under Lights At 8:15 in Civic Stadium Tilt The first night game in the history of Northern Division base ball will get underway at 8:15 tonight, when the University of Oregon Wcbfoots meet the Oregon State nine at the Civic Stadium. Students will be admitted on their student body cards. It will be the first meeting of the season of the squads. Oregon State is currently residing in fourth place in the con fcrence, with a record ot three victories against four defeats. The Webfoots are in second place, and the only hopes for an Oregon pen nant lie in sweeping the four-game series with Oregon State that con cludes the season for both. Starting pitcher for Oregon will probably be DeWayne “Swede” Johnson, the converted football player, who boasts the best mound record of any Webfoot hurler Johnson has won three games, a gainst no defeats, pitching a one bitter for his first victory. John son is a left-hander. Opposing Johnson will likely be Chuck Sauvain, another portsider, top hurler for the beavers last spring, and again leading his team mates this season. Sauvain set down the Washington Huskies in bis latest start, 5-1, in handy fash ion, allowing only five well-scat tered hits. Dick Bartle, still batting a tre mendous .400 after a bad time with pitchers in the Inland Empire in vasion, will be on first base for the Ducks, Walt Kirsch will be at sec ond, and A1 Cohen at shortstop. Coach Don Kirsch must decide be tween Don Kimball and Kay Strat ton, both of whom have seen an equal amount of action this spring', at third base. Bill Burgher will catch. John Kovenz will handle the left field duties, Hal Zurcher is set for center, but Don Dibble, regular right fielder, will be out of the lineup because of an injury he suf | fered on the road trip The choice | will be between Pat Wohlers and ' Norm Henwood. All of the Oregon pitchers have had at least a week’s rest, so Kirsch will have plenty of material to fall back on for this first con test. The Ducks meet Oregon State again Monday at Corvallis. Oregon Hurdler Recalls Record-Tying Prep Time By DICK MASK Every state prep track meet til ings back fond memories to Jack Doyle, Oregon’s number-one hur dler this year. One reason is that lie tied the state high hurdle mark in 1946. By that time, this feat of winning blue ribbons in the state classic was old stuff to Jack, who had won four out of four, previous to his record-tying effort. Jack had been gunning for the record all through his prep career and would have broken it easily had lie not hit two hurdles which slowed him down considerably. “When they announced the time, 14.9, I was disappointed at first, but afterward I was glad I tied the tiling,” Jack said. While Jack attended Hillsboro high he competed in football, plac ing on the TVY all-star team, and also played basketball. “Everything is different between running hurdles in high school and college. The low hurdles are two yards farther apart and the highs are three feet higher.” declared Doyle. “I have to alternate feet going over the lows now, where I jumped off the same foot in high school.” The 19-year-old, who would be the last to be satisfied with himself, rates several Northern Division hurdlers as much better than him self. He includes WSC’s Fran Pols foot, Washington’s Burke, Mon ‘ tana’s Dan Yovetich, and Idaho’s Taylor. What makes it tough is that all are just sophomores ex cept Yovetich, defending Northern Division champ, who is a junior. Granted that they arc better hurdlers than Doyle now, give the Hillsboro sharpie time and Oregon may have a sure winner in the | hurdles. Winner or not, likeable Jack will always be an excellent ex ample of giving it the “old college try.” Cougars Lose To Huskies 5-4l PULLMAN, Wash., May 15— (UP)—The University of Wash ington squeezed out a narrow 5 4 victory here yesterday to hand Washington State its third de feat of the current Northern Di vision baseball season. Strong-armed Mss Soriano went all the way for the Huskies, holding Buck Bailey’s Cougars to a scant five hits. His mates clobbered two Washington State pitchers for 13 blngles Golfers Hit Ags Today At Corvallis By KEN JOHNSON Oregon’s golf, team will write finis to Northern Division play this afternoon when the Ducks meet OSC at Corvallis. The last match between the old rivals ended in a decisive 20-7 vic tory for Oregon on the Eugene Country club course. Only one defeat has marred the Webfoots’ season record and that was a three-pointer to Washington, division leaders. Oregon's golf that day was not as good as it has been and the Duck linksters may yet come through with the goods in the Northern Division playoffs May 22. Ducks Favored Today’s match should cause the Webfoots no trouble. They have been playing top-notch golf all sea son compared to OSC’s unimpres sive record. The Beavers have sev eral inexperienced golfers on the squad who have blown up when the going got tough. „ Although the other OSC boys may be ruled out as ineffective, Ralph Dichter, the Beaver first man, has shown himself to be hard to beat. Stafford had a tight match all the way with Dichter and beat him only by firing a string of bird ies when the chips were down. Playoffs Due Following the final match, Milli gan’s fairway experts will continue to qualify for positions on the four man Northern Division playoff team. Almost sure to make that team will be Stafford and Provost, while the other two positions will be fought for by A1 Riebel, Rod Taylor, A1 Crosbie, Bruce Fischer, Bob Sederstrom, and John Prince. Any one of these boys is capable of making the team, and it will be just a matter of who happens to shoot the best golf next week. Prospects look good for Oregon’s playoff chances. The Duck divot eers have been close to par all year and a par-shooting team is tough to beat. Add to that the fact that better weather means better golf and you have the possibility that the Webfoots will be shooting par and sub-par golf before the season is over. Save the easy, automatic way -with U.S.Savings Bonds ft Municipal Klectric and Water Utilities V 1116 Willamette r ^ r " - Webfoot Freshmen Take Two Overtime Games From Rooks By SAM FIDMAN Barney Koch's Oregon Frosh baseball team made it three out of four over the Oregon State Rooks yesterday afternoon, as they ground out two extra-inning victories, 5-4 and 1-0. Several hundred spectators looked on at lower Howe field as the Ducklings’ Lyle Rogers and Aggie Bud Berg exchanged five and six hit pitching performances respectively. Both went the route, but Brad Fullerton’d long fly ball in the eighth inning, scoring Peewee Welch, broke a four-four deadlock and produced the Duck win. The Kochmen ran up three scores in the second inning on no hits, to take the lead but the Hooks came back in the next stanzas, with Bill Schoonover re placing Hanns in the ninth as one man was out and two country cousins were roosting on the base paths. No Rook was able to reach second base against Schoonover, as he held them hitless The first nine innings for the Starting Lineups OREGON osc Bartie . lb.Christenson Iiirsch .2b. Richards Cohen .88.Harper Kimball or Stratton .3b.Andersbn Kovenz .-.If. Gustafson Zurcher .®f.K°I>ler Wohlers or Henwood .rf. Mack Burgher .®. Roelandt Johnson .P. Sauvaln stanza with three runs of their own Oregon added one more tally in the fourth on singles by Rogers and Bill Hays, scoring catcher Ken Bennett who had walked. In their half of the fourth, the Rooks pumped in one run as Dale Gra ham doubled and came home on an error. The Aggies went down in one two-three order in the first half of the overtime frame, but the Ducklings produced the clincher as Welch lined a single to left and took second on a passed ball by Bobo Clingman. He went to third on first baseman Don Peterson’s timely sacrifice, and roared home on Fullerton’s hefty smash to deep center field. In the nightcap, Big Jim Hanns gained his first win of the season as he limited the frantic Rooks to three safeties in nine and one third innings. The fray went ten Frosh can be summed up by Bob Bonebrake’s single in the fourth, and Chuck Humble’s hard hit double in the ninth. For the Rooks, the entire game produced a double in the fifth, and a one base hit in both the seventh and eighth inn ings. Schoonover Doubles In the last of the tenth, after Hays and Catcher Eddie Artzt had fanned, right hander Schoonover laced a double to right field, and scored on Welch’s solidly hit single to deep center field. The Ducks might have put the Rooks out of their misery in the ninth when Bonebrake drew a walk and went to second on another passed ball by Clingman. The Duckling third sacker took too long a lead off base, and after evading a three player “pickle” momentarily, was tagged out as he tried to reach (Please turn to page seven) “I merely stepped out for some Dentyne Chewing Gum!” “It wasn’t the confinement that was getting me down, Guard—it was doing without Dentyne Chewing Gum. Boy, how I missed Dentyne s keen, long-lasting flavor. Helped ^ keep my teeth nice and white, too!” JEs ^ Dentyne Gum—Made Only by Adams |jj