It's no wonder that there is so much indoor track in the Hast; no wonder at least to those who attended the 18th an nual running' of the Ilayward relays here last I-riday and Saturday. Unlike baseball games, track meets seem to have estab lished a habit of making their appointed rounds despite snow, sleet, hail or what-have-you, a category which must include those blasts of cold rain winds which come from the south. Fortunately for the more than 1000 prep track men who descended on the campus last weekend for the two-day, four class Hayward relays, the University just happened to have a spare track which they pressed into service for the occa sion. Events Held Inside Using tlie physical education cinders and holding high jump, pole vault and broad jump competition in the unfin ished area of theLinen’r€|r \ m alleviated the Strain on the main Hayward field track, but the wind blew just as hard on the west side of the stands across the P.E. area. Despite the hardly ^favorable weather, the high school ath letes turned in several good performances. Topping most ef forts was the record breaking Class A shot put relay team from St. Helens. Led by. state champ Duane Marshall, who heaved the 12-foot hall S5' 7’4”. nearly 10 feet over the old mark and 10 inches over the Metropolitan division record held by two present Oregon aces, F.d Bingham and Jack Moad. and lack Brophv. set when all three were at Medford in 1953. Bob Amble broke the A discus mark for Albany with a 149-foot heave, and Redmond’s Earl Smith pole vaulted 12' 3” to top the old A mark by three inches in the other two record-topping efforts. Metropolitan Records Stay No standards were surpassed in the Metropolitan division, but several outstanding performances were seen. Eldon Fran cis, Medford sophomore, took the javelin with a 171’ 10” throw, more than seven feet off the mark Bingham set in 1953, but over 11 feet ahead of his nearest rival. Eugene's 440-yard relay quartet of Bob Anderson, Pete King, Bob Gabriel and Bob Brown raced away with its heat and copped the relay win in 44.9, only .5 of a second away from a mark jointly owned by a Grant team of 1946 and a Washington of Portland foursome of 1949. Mark Robbins, the mile flash from Roseburg, anchored his distance medley team to a win in the Metro division, coming from 13 yards behind two other men. Unofficially, Robbins was timed in 4:33 for his four laps of the events. Medford Takes Third In team scoring it was the same old story. Medford's Black Tornado were successful in taking top honors for the eleventh time out of 14 tries, the third straight time since the Metropolitan class was set up for schools of over 1000 students. Marshfield repeated its victory in Class A for the third ' time also, but, like the Medford cindermen, had to win the last event, the mile relay, to do it. The Black Tornado took both final events, the shutttle hurdles and the mile relay, to insure its victory. Friday’s action saw two newcomers to the winners’ circle. Duck track coach Bill Bowerman presented the C trophy to the Mt. Shasta, Calif., team, only out-state school entered in the Friday action. Central (Monmouth-Independence) took the B action. Golfers Defeat Huskies, 17-10 In First Meet Sophomore Don Bick shot a four-under-par 68 to lend Ore gon’s defending Northern divi sion champion golfers to a 17-10 victory over Washington Satur day. Bick, playing in the number five spot, collected three points from opponent A1 Newman, who can! a 76 over the sloppy Eugene country dub layout. Only other individual sweep was recorded by number-one man and captain, Neil Dwyer, whose par 72 bested Bill RoWe's 75. Bick and number-two man Barry Ott picked up three more points in the best ball bracket. Dwyer and Bob Norquist got 2 points and Bob Takano and Jus ! tin Smith snared 1'2 more in best ball play. Ott took a half a point with a 71, Takano got one point with a ; 73, Norquist fired a 74 to pick up 1 >•; points, and Howard Zen ger's 81 was good for another 1'2 | in individual action. The loss to Oregon gave the Washington divoters a split rec ord for the weekend after defeat ing OSC Friday. Next outing for the Duck divoters is the north ern California collegiate invita tional tourney at Santa Cruz next weekend. Results: Rc«t Hall Dwyer and Norquist, a. (69) 2. Rowe and Matllowc, \V» (70) J; Ott and Hick, 0, (69) 3, Perry and Ttiommm. W, (/_*>) •»; Takano and Smith. 0, (70) 15*. Mcl-achlm and Newman, W, (70) It),. Individual Dwyer. 0, (72) 3, Rowe (75) 0; Ott. 0, (71) I*err>, W, (70) 25*; Takano. 0. (73) 1. McLatdslan. \V, (71) 2; Norquitct, 0. (74) 15*. Matdowe. \V, (74) Il-; .Hick, o, (68) 3. Newman. \V, (76) 0; eritfrr. t\ (81) 1 \V, (S3) 1 5*. Eugene High Gome Slated by Frosh Oregon's Frosh baseball team will face an inexperienced but hustling Eugene high school nine Tuesday as it tries to open its : rain-stymied season on Howe field at 3 p.m. The Axemen have no starters back, but the junior dominated squad has shown plenty of fire in pre-league ac tion. Frosh Coach Bob Basich will open with his ace lefthander, Don Lane, with Ron Whittaker and Don Delbon also scheduled to see action. Duckling pitchers got a heavy workout Friday and Basich noted improvement in his top reserve hands, John McCall and Jim Sittser. McCall is working on form while Sittser is concentrat ing on control. IM Schedule Monday Softball 3:50 Tau Kappa Epsilon vs. Lambda Chi Alpha, north field. Phi Gamma Delta vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, south field. Chi Psi vs. Phi Kappa Sig ma, upper field. 4:55 Sigma Alpha Mu vs. Kap pa Sigma, north field. Nestor hall vs. French hall, south field. Cherney hall vs. Straub Frosh, upper field. Tennis 4:00 Campbell club vs. Hunter hall, courts 4, 5, 6. Golf Nestor hall vs. Gamma hall, Oakway. Babe Ruth, who twice made $80,000 during one session for the New York Yankees, earned about $1,425,000 in baseball during his 23-year career. STILL UNDEFEATED It By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Brooklyn Dodgers, who have not lost a giyne, ran their winning streak to six games Sun day while the hapless Pittsburgh Pirates and Baltimore Orioles continued victory-less, each los ing No. 5 in a row. The Brooks were the cause of the Pirates extending their rec Standings PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Sacramento .8 Portland 6 San Diego ... 8 Seattle Los Angeles San Francisco Hollywood Ookland .087 .545 l'.i .M3 1«i .500 2 .500 2 .462 2', .429 3 .417 3 Sunday's Results Los Angeles 5-3, San Diego 4-2 Seattle 10-1. Hollywood 5-2 Oakland-Sacraroento, rain Portland-San Francisco, rain NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn ... Philadelphia Chicago Milwaukee . St. Louis .. New York Cincinnati ... Pittsburgh 6 0 1.000 4 1 .800 14 4 2 .667 2 3 2 .600 2 >4 3 2 .600 2 4 1 5 .167 5 1 5 .167 5 0 5 .000 5>s Sunday's Results Brooklyn 10-3. Pittsburgh 3-2 Philadelphia 4-4, New York 2-2 Cincinnati 6-1, Milwaukee 5-10 St. Louis 5-14, Chicago 6-1. AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston Cleveland New York Chicago Detroit . Washington 2 Kansas City 1 Baltimore . 0 .833 .667 1 .600 1 4 .600 1 4 .500 2 .500 2 .200 34 .000 4 4 Sunday’s Results Chicago 3-2. Cleveland 1-4 Boston 14-12, Baltimore 5-9 Detroit 16, Kansas City 0 Washington 7. New York 3 ord In reverse. Walt Alston's club whipped the Bum in u double header 10-3 and 3-2. It took the Orioles nix hours and 17 minutes to loae a pair to the Boston Red Sox 14-5 and 12-9 In the lain and cold of Boston's Fenway park. The twin triumphs sent the Sox Into first place In the American league with a 5-1 mark. Three of the other four double headers finished In standoffs. Only the Philadelphia Phillies managed to come up with two victories. They clipped the world champion New York Olants twice by identical 4-2 counts. The Giants' record now shows but one victory in six starts. The Cincinnati Redlegs finally won their first game of the cam paign, a 8-5 decision over the Milwaukee Braves in the night cop of a doubleheader after dropping No. 5 in a row 10-1. St. Louis and Chicago split, the Cubs taking the opener 6-5 and the Cards the second game 14-1. The Chicago White Sox overcame the Cleveland Indians 3-1 in the opener, but the Tribe came back to take the night cap 4-2.