Ducks shine at Indoor
ANNUAL PHI PJ
LL- FRATERNITY
PORTLAND — Oregon's Kathy Hayes
tied the women's collegiate 3,000
meter Indoor mark and the Duck
weight crew put their names up in the
spotlight at the Portland Indoor Invita
tional Track Meet Saturday afternoon.
Hayes ran a superb 3,000 against a
field that included Margaret Groos,
running unattached. Hayes shadowed
Groos for the first half of the race
before pulling out and cruising in to tie
the collegiate mark of 9:11 set by Joan
Hansen of the University of
Washington.
Hayes was named the meet's
outstanding competitor, Joining Fran
cie Larrieu and Debbie Heald as the on
ly women to be honored with the
award.
The biggest race of the evening was
the mile run where Doug Padilla out
leaned West Germany’s Thomas Wess
inghage to take the tape in 4:01.8.
Wessinghage finished in 4:01.9. Padilla
and Wessinghage distanced
themselves from a crowded field of 13
in the eighth lap before Padilla out
kicked the West German around the
back stretch.
Oregon’s shot putters grabbed their
own laurels during the meet. Dean
Crouser let go with a 67-foot heave to
claim first in the men's division, while
Quenna Beasley tossed the shot a half
inch over 48 feet to lay claim to the
women’s title. Crouser had been
shooting for 68 feet before the meet.
In the 500-meter race, Oregon run
ners finished 2-3-4, behind Calvin Ken
non, unattached, who glided to a 57.5
mark. Don Ward led the Ducks at se
cond with a 58.2 showing. He was
followed closely by Brad Coleman at
58.4 and Parrish Nixon at 58.5.
The women's showing in the
60-meter hurdles was nearly as im
pressive. Kay Garnett won the race in
8.06 seconds. Lexie Miller-Beck was
fifth at 8.43 and Lisa Nicholson ended
up sixth at 8.56. Former Duck Kris
Costello, running for the Oregon Track
Club finished third in 8.23.
Another former Duck, David Mack,
pushed Santa Monica Track Club team
mate Jeff West to a 2:07.5 mark in the
the 1,000 by finishing second in 2:07.7.
Both times were under the 2:08.7 meet
record held by Randy Wilson of
Athletics West.
Bruins Keep grip on oai
From Associated Proas reports
Where California and UCLA are con
cerned, you can forget that “on any
given day” cliche coaches tend to
throw around. The Golden Bears would
just like to beat UCLA in any given
year.
With Kenny Fields scoring 18 points
on perfect 9-for-9 shooting and adding
a game-high eight rebounds, 10th
ranked UCLA extended its domination
of California to 48 consecutive games
with a 70-60 victory Saturday. The
Bears haven't beaten UCLA since Feb.
24,1961.
“This is definitely one of the better
Cal teams in a while,” said UCLA
Coach Larry Farmer. “I thought we
played good defense, that was a key
for us.”
Seventh-ranked Arkansas also kept a
streak going, downing Texas Christian
64-56 for its 25th straight victory over
the Horned Frogs. Darrell Walker
scored 24 points and had six steals for
the winners, while hounding TCU ace
Darrell Browder into seven turnovers.
In Sunday action, Ralph Sampson
sank 11 of 12 foul shots in the second
half and finished with 21 points, 10 re
bounds and five blocked shots to lead
fifth-ranked Virginia to a 68-53 victory
over No. 12 Missouri.
Sixth-ranked St. John’s broke open a
close game Sunday with less than
seven minutes remaining and beat
■ I
DePaul 64-52 behind Chris Muliin’s 19
points.
Elsewhere Saturday, it was pick-on
the-officials time, with TCU’s Jim Kill
ingsworth and second-ranked In
diana’s Bobby Knight leading the way.
“I might as well say it. That was the
worst-officiated game I've ever seen. I
don’t think they knew what they were
doing, and I don’t think they cared,”
Killingsworth said. “But I hate to go in
and cry about the officiating because
Arkansas has a very fine basketball
team and they probably would have
beaten us anyway.”
Even a 74-65 triumph over North
western that enabled Indiana to maintain
the Big Ten lead didn't soothe Knight's
disposition.
“The officiating in the Big Ten has
been the worst In my 12 years since
I’ve been in Indiana,” he said. "It has
deteriorated to the point that our of
ficiating is the worst conference in the
country.”
The weekend’s — and the week's —
biggest loser was third-ranked North
Carolina, which dropped three games
in a row for the first time since 1970,
the latest a 70-63 setback at the hands
of North Carolina State.
Other Top Twenty losers included
No.13 Memphis State, No.14
Georgetown, No.16 Jowa, No.18
Boston College and No. 19 Oklahoma.
MEETINGS
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wsicoms.
IFC masts today at 4:30 p.m. In Am. 337 EMU. Agon
da Includos Woman's ASA Sorvico. Solar anargy Into
ctr . ASUO Tool library, GALA, ESCAPE Public Is l»v
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Photo by Bob Baker
Smokin’ him good
Kerry Dugan delivers a crunch
ing blow to Tim Smith in a
middleweight division match at
the fourth-annual Phi Kappa Psi
Smoker at the Eugene National
Guard Armory Friday night.
Dugan knocked Smith down
once during the match, and went
on to win the decision.
Proceeds from the all-fraternity
boxing event were donated to the
University's Museum of Natural
History.
Salazar wins cross-country run
EDWARDSVILLE, III. (AP) — Alberto
Salazar pulled away from twotime
world champion Craig Virgin over the
final two miles to finish a winner by 17
seconds Sunday in U.S. qualifying for
naxt month’s world cross-country
championships.
Salazar, running in 70-degree
temperatures, covered the
12,000-meter course on the Southern II
linoi$ University campus in 36:33.149.
Virgin, a resident of nearby Lebanon,
III., finished second in 36:50.059.
The top nine finishers in the event,
sponsored by The Athletes Congress,
will make up the U.S. team for next
month s world event at Gateshead,
England.
Salazar was the defending meet
champion.
LECTURES
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"Representing Hm Dynamic* of a Static Form” today
at 4 pm In Rm 140 Straub
MISCELLANEOUS
George Rabat aaaay contaat — The Philosophy
Oapt tnvttaa ail Unlvaralty undergroduste and
graduate student* to tubmit essays Bait
undergraduate and gradual* aaaay will receive 1290
Paper may ba submitted In any area of philosophy
Maximum length la 20 pages typed, doubiaapacad. n
English Paper* must ba submitted no I alar than 4:30
p m on Frt, April 29, to the PhHoeophy Dept, Rm 330
PtC
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SSe^S Tvjr
signing up soon For more Information can J
by Berke Breathed
McWilliams, 414 Friendly. ««064 or evenings 607 0039
Summer Job Information Owl o! slate camps and
resorts. Come lo Student Employment. t5th & Agate,
Mon -Fit 9 a m 12 p m and 1 p.mp.m
Juniors Mortar Board, a national honor society, le
accepting applications, it you neve a cumulative GPA
ot 3 2 or above, and it you have leadership or service
experience, till out an information sheet which are
available In the main library or In suite 4. EMU
Deadline is March 11
4th Annual EMU Cratl Ctr. Family Album Show will
take place ail next week in Rm 187 EMU
reyvftwWyy rwMf ^MvWMt e M ™ UtfWItf^ mr • SS .
reviews tor at> psychology majors with 90 or more
hours Stop In anytime between 930-3:30
INTERVIEWS
Sign up begins on Wed. at 7.30 am. at Susan Camp
a_n U *11 4_, as- a-as-4-Mf n ,iraT. ■
ww« ®ev Bw ■
Feb. 3t — Carnation (For No 1, Mktg Mgmt
Development Program — Prefer Sp, So grads —
Bachelor's — Marketing, No 2 Sales Mgmt. Trainee —
Prefer Sp, 8u grads — Bachelor's — Bus preferred)
Feb. 29 — Peace Corps — Croup Meeting. 4-5 pm,
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Match 13 — Peace Corps Interviews (For Peace
Corps Volunteer — W, Sp, So grads * B/M/PhD — AH
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Sign up immediately H interested In Interviewing
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B/M/PhD — CIS Math/Bus w/strong interest/back
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Bachelor’s — General Business).
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Science)
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