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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1951)
Pacific Auto Supply 57 West 10th. Eugene ll,70 Main, Springfield Ruby Glass Blue Dot Tail Light Lens “Where Your Dollar Goes Farther” Two OSC Games Will End Season Ji,„ Haim* is scheduled to start on the mound for Coach Don Kirsch’s Oregon Ducks when they haale the Oregon State Hea ver diamond nine at 3 p.m. Friday on Howe Field. 'l'he Ducks will close the F>51 season Saturdav atternoon when they complete tlicir four-game series with (>SC ;,t 2 p.m. on k ole man Field at Corvallis. , . , Hanns hurled for the Wehtoot- last Saturday when they routed the Beavers 10-- on rto\>t Field. He held the Aggies to five I hits, one of the lowest totals of I the season. Oregon collected 10 safe blows from three OSC hurlers i in that game. CO-OP MEMBERS Your refund will be paid in cash start ing Monday, June 4th. Please call at the U of O CO-OP STORE WOW!—I JUST HAD A DELICIOUS TASTY, AND SCRUMPTUOUS BURGER AT THE JUMBO BAR-B-Q 873 13th H. SAVE...on Trips Home! j ...on Vacation Co GREYHOUND CHICK THESE LOW FARES ALBANY. S 95 BEND. 3-50 COOS BAY . 3.50 CORVALLIS.85 GRANTS PASS 2.95 KLAMATH FALLS 3.40 LOS ANGELES 13.10 MEDFORD 3.40 « PORTLAND . 2.40 SEATTLE . 5.40 SPOKANE. 9.85 SAN FRANCISCO. 9.00 TACOMA. 4.90 PENDLETON. 6.30 YAKIMA . 7.40 BOISE . 10.05 Plus Federal Tax CHECK THESE LOW FARES! K. W. NYE, Agent <?87 Pearl St. Ph. 4-6205 Oregon State avenged Saturday's loss by overwhelming the Ducks 10-2 Monday at Corvalls. Major factors were 13 Beaver hits and 0 Oregon infield errors. The Staters also took two non conference. pre-season victories over the Oregon nine. OSC seized a 10-4 triumph on Howe Field and an 18-3 win at Corvallis. Starters Coach Kirsh tentatively plans to start Phil Setteca.se at first base Friday, providing that he re covers sufficiently from his Injury suffered Monday at Corvallis; Da r.vie Nelson at second; Kay Coley at short; and Joe Tom or Nick Schmer at third base. The starting outfield will prob ably Include Left Fielder Niyval Kitchey, Center Fielder Jim Live say, and Kight Fielder Earl Averlll, Jr! Averlll holds first place in Nor thern Division batting standings, including Monday's games. Aver ill has 21 hits in 50 league appear ances at the plate for a .420 aver age. Livesay holds second place in the N.D. with a .385 percentage, 20 hits in 52 times at bat. Other Ducks among the top 14 in the circuit include Joe Tom, in 8th place with .340: Nelson, in 12th place with .318: and Kitchey, in 14th place with .308. • SPORTS STAFF Kodger Eddy Phil Johnson Bill Gurney Jim Mendenhall Urgent Plea Made Any male University of Oregon student who is interested should see Emerald Sports Editor Phil John son first thing Fall term. Those not interested may see Sports Staffer Rodger Eddy or Don Dewey. Announcement Made “Any students interested in form ing a mumbldypeg team to compete in competition with other Northern Division schools next year are urged to forget about it immediatelv or sooner,” stated Rodger Eddy when queried Wednesday night. Duck Trackmen Prime For PCC Meet in LA Oregon's varsiU tinder squad "ill hold a hea\ \ workout to day in preparation l«>r tins weekend > I’kC champion hip meet at I,os Angeles. In a hard workout 1 tiesda\. distance man Ja< k 1 lull Ions tin n ed in an outstanding performance. He ran a three-quarter mile, in 3 minutes and 2 seconds. Webfoot Two-Miler Fred Turner also gave appearances ot being in top form. The ITosh track squad will finish it' sea-on this Iriday when it meets the Oregon State Kooks in tor\allis. A win o\ei the ltab\ Heavers would give the I hicklings the mythical frosh track title for the Northern Division. __ Frosh Diamondmen End Year Over Weekend; Sport Six-Won Six-Lost Record Coach Hal Zurcher's freshman baseball team finishes it- sea son with two tilt- this weekend against the (>regon State Kooks. Frida v the two clubs meet in Corvallis, arid Saturday at Howe 1'ioltl in Kugene. Sis of the eight scheduled games between the two teams have been played, with the powerful Kook nine win ning all of them. The frosh have an even .500 record so far with six triumphs matching the -i\ losses to the Kooks, in twelve games played in a fourteen game season. 'flic Kook series results have been as follows: ! On April 20 at Eugene, the kooks sw'ept a doubleheader 8-2, and 9-3. At Corvallis on May 11, the OSC men triumphed 5-4 and 5-2 in an other doubleheader. Two more single games have be°n played: one on May 10 which the Kooks took I 10-7, and another last Friday, in : which the Rooks ek;J out a 1-2 vic ! tory. Six Wins I In the season opener on April 0, i the Freshmen pounded out a con vincing 15-3 victory over Klamath Falls High at Eugene. On April 11 they traveled to Monmouth to down the Oregon College of Education varsity 9-7 in an eleven inning game. A wild ten-inning contest on Apnl 21 saw the frosh squeeze past the State Penitentiary team at Sa lem, 16-15. Oregon College of Education came to Eugene for a return game I “CK5+AK + A + TLY + i -TON +^vOT+Y -X + -LL + G + -EPS + ICK = ¥• WHO SAID WHAT? Above tebus quotes a former U.S. President. Who! What did he say! Fill in the squares. If ^ you want to check your solution ask the business manager of this, your paper! ! May 1 and was defeated 12-4. On May 3 the Duckling* tamed Corval 7-6 win over the Linfield JVs on May 10 rounded out the nix frosh wins. Leading frosh hitter with two guinea to go is husky ex-Eugene High star Don Seigmund. He has garnered 15 hits in 35 times at bat . for a rousing .429 average. A power hitter, the outfielder leads the club in runs batted in with 17, and was tied with Bill Bottler for home run ; leadership with two. Bottler Doubles I'p Bottler, one of the state's top prep pitchers at Roosevelt High last season, also saw action in the out field. Besides son^ effective hurl : ing, and play in the outfield, he has compiled a runner-up .375 batting average, including the two hornyf runs. Dick Stearns, little “holler guy" of the infield at second base, short stop, or third, tapered off from his phenomenal early-season hitting, but still sports a neat .333 on 15 for 45. Most of his hits were of the punch variety, as he chokes his bat and is not a free .winger. Fourth in current standings is I Ron Phillips, outfielder, and forni I erly of Roosevelt High. He has 17 for 54, and .315, which includes 14 | runs batted in. Phillips was also a | power hitter with a homer, three I doubles and a triple. On the mound, right handers Gene Lewis and Don Delaney have been the most effective. Lewis has a 2-1 record and Delaney a 2-0 mark. Al though Lewis' earned run average is lower, the exact figure is not compiled as yet. For potential varsity men, Zur- f cher named several athletes, cm- , phasizing that it was hard to do this with any accuracy. He named Seigmund and Phillips in the out field, Stearns and Vince Tadei, a shortshop who hit well in the last two OSC games, for infield pros pects. 'w Bill Bottler and Gene Lewis dre' II mound mention, while Don Hedge peth and Cecil Hodges are receivers with possible varsity futures. Other men may also develop and prove themselves candidates text year, Zurcher stated. ; lis High by a 12-5 margin. A close Moumlmeu