Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 21, 1958, Page Five, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Ducks down Huskies;
Lane victor in 9-2 win
Nl> STANDINGS
<'lllll
OKKGON
OS(!
\VS( •
\\ IlsIllllglOIl
Idaho
W l4 I»ct. (iK
0 3 .750
H 4 .667 1
8 4 .IW7 I
3 10 .23! fli/2
3 10 .231 «i/2
From A I* reports
Don Lane of the University of
Oregon held Washington to seven
hits Tuesday as the Ducks whip
ped the Huskies 9 2 to move clos
er to their fifth Northern Division
title in the last six years.
The Webfoots blasted 13 hits
off two Washington hurlers to
rack up their second victory in
as many days off the Huskies
Monday. Oregon tripped Wash
ington 10-7.
Don Klrsch’s crew now has a
9-3 record with four weekend
games against second-place
Oregon State which currently
has an 8-4 mark. Washington
State is even with tlie Beavers
at 8-4.
It was lime’s second impres
sive pitching performance on the
nigged load trip. He hurled a
no-hit, no-run game against Ida
ho last week His Northern Di
vision pitching record now stands
at 4-0.
Oregon opened fast with two
runs in the first and added two
more in the third off the Husky
starter. Washington came back
with a single run off Lane in the
third, but the Ducks scored two
more in the fifth and eighth in
nings to build an untouchable
lead.
Tiie Webfoots and the Huskies
tallied one run apiece in their
ninth and eighth innings respec
tively.
Thus, Oregon ended its road
trip with four wins In s'*
starts. Its victories were over
Idaho and Washington, twice
each, but the Ducks dropped
both games against the im
proving W8C nine.
Friday, Oregon meets Oregon
!M Schedule
Wednesday, May 20
Softball
(Semifinals)
4:00 Phi Delta Theta vs. Tau
Kappa Eplilon, Upper
Field,
State at Corvallis In a double
header; then the two squads move
to Howe Field for a season-end
ing twin bill. The series will de
cide the winner of the NC title,
now up in the air between the
Ducks, Beavers und Cougars.
The ND v/inner will host the
Southern Division winner the
following weekend.
Line score;
Oregon 202 020 021— 9 IS 1
Wash. 001000 010— 2 7 S*
lane and Olson; Malnar,
Jacobson (8) and Morrow.
Intramural track
starts tomorrow
Intramural track preliminaries
and field events will be held this
Thursday and running events will
get under way May 27, both be
ginning at 4 :30. Finals will be
held on May 29 at 4:30.
All entries should be returned !
to Coach Bill Bowerman at the
athletic department by Wednes
day afternoon.
The same events will be run
this year as last. Anyone wish
ing more details may see Bower
man.
Don’t Let Freedom'
Be Cut “OFF THE AIR”!
Your Truth Dollars Ara Needed Todayl
Cun you imagine it: A policeman’s wary eye
following you wherever you go . . . your
neighbor’s ear anxiously pressed to your door,
listening for the slightest slip of your tongue
. . . a loud-speaker “serenading” you all day
with warnings, instructions, propaganda lies?
70,000,000 people behind the Iron Curtain
will t>e buried under this avalanche of oppres
sion unless you holp. For, word of freedom
can only come to them one way: over the
radio, from stations like those of Radio Free
Europe. Every day, every hour, the 29 super
powered transmitters of this freedom net
work are at work, overpowering “jamming”
from Red stations, slashing through Red lies,
renewing hope that freedom will some day
return to the peoples behind the Iron Curtain.
Why your help Is needed
But Radio Free Europe needs your help to
stay on the air. It is a private organization
supported by the American people. Your
dollars are needed to help operate transmit
ters, pay for equipment, supplies, announcers
and political analysts. Don’t let freedom be
cut on the air ! r reedom is not tree!
Tour dollars are needed to keep Radio
Free Europe on the air 1
SEND YOUR TRUTH DOLLARS TO
CRUSADE FREEDOM
CARE OF LOCAL POSTMASTER
The Oregon Daily
EMERALD
Tk* Orffa Mfy
e EMERALD
SPORTS
*/*, *
KAY NORTON', San Jose State’s crack sprinter, and coach Bud
Winter view sequence of pictures, showing Kay’s style on the
cinders. Norton, 20, 6'2” 180-pound Negro junior is America’s top
prospect for running the first 9.2 hundred yard dash according to
the experts. lie expects to meet top competition in Olympian
Bobby Morrow and Duke’s Dave Sime during a heavy June run
ning season—.June 7 at S inger, Calif.; June 18-14 NCAA at Berke
ley and the A At' meet at Bakersfield June 20-21.
r
All the lettermen
eat at Dick'n Jim's
'cause here they can
DUNK as they please
at dick-n-jim’s
EL PROMO DRIVE IN
1689 Willamette