10 Wednesday, April 2.1975 University Dally Kansan Sports Writer y KEVINKNOCKEMU! Ron MacDonald, freshman shortstop, blasted a two-run-homer in the sixth innning to break a 5-1 tie, and the University of Kansas went on to defeat Emporia Kansas State College 7-5 in the first game of Tuesday's baseball doubleheader. Gary Marshall pitched a five-hitter and held the 'Hawks to one run in the second game to give Emporia State a 4-1 win and a sult of the doubleheader. "The first game was the first time this year that we didn't have to depend on our pitching to win a game," Floyd Temple, KU Coach, said. In the first game the 'Hawks banged out nine hits and scored seven runs in their season. The Hawks scored one run in each of the two intime and jungle explosions for three first basemen. MacDonald, who was four for six in the doubleheader, singled to open the third inning. Kurt Kroff walked, and John Turner doubled, scoring MacDonald. Morhly Bobbs singled scoring Knopf Right field Pat Doyle. MacDonald scored with a sacrifice fly scores Hobbs. Temple said he was pleased with the biting of freshmen MacDonald and Hobbs. *MacDonald is a real aggressive hitter who watches the ball and gets on to top of it.* MacDonald, who is the 'Hawks' leading hitter, said his success depended on making good connection with the ball and hitting it where the other team wasn't ready for it. Rob Allander (22) started the game for the 'Hawks and gave up two runs on two hits in three innings. Nate Thruhoff, who relieved Allinder, surped a shaky three-run fourth inning and got his first win of the year. Thruhoffer said it was good to get a win under his belt after four consecutive losses under his belt and four consecutive losses. The second game settled down to a pitcher's duel between KU's Mike Love and the hornets' Gary Marshall. Love (0.2) pitched well, striking out three and allowing only one hit in four innings. Nevertheless, Love saw his best pitching effect of the season down the drain. "I had my curve breaking good and my team's offense we needed the win for the team," Love said. Emporia State scored four runs in the ninth inning off the losing pitcher, Rob Strand, Strand, who relieved Love, saw his first hit in the second, provided the big hit with a three-run homer. ★★ First Game Emperor State 023 300 0 5 7 0 W-Late Nathanthroffer (1-4) L-Kevin Marshall Second Game Emperor State 000 004 0 4 5 1 KO 000 001 1 1 5 1 W-Gary Marshall Jason Marshall UCLA tops last poll The short, balding man drives his battered gray pickup truck to the southeast corner of Memorial Stadium, near the home of the Cardinals' track team, and gives his daily orders. Rv The Associated Press Sports Writer points. Maryland, 24-5, was a distant fifth with 525. Syracuse, 23-9, surprise winner of the NCAA East region, placed sixth in the poll with a first-place vote and 443 points. She was seventh in Carolina State, 22-6, was seventh with 403. Rigors of running attract woman Eight or 10 men jump in the back of the pickup, driven by Beb Timmons, and try to make themselves comfortable on an ancient mattress long used to soften the bumps of the 15-minute ride. But the group this day is incomplete. By KEN STONE Soon the absent member, Heidi Wallace, jumps down the Campanile hill, greets the riders in the truck and hops in. As the riders climb the ramp, the riders crack jokes and curse the weather. UCLA, which made coach John Wooden's farewell to college basketball a memorable one by beating Kentucky 92-85 for the NCAA championship, is the No. 1 team in the nation, according to the final Associated Press poll of the 1974-75 season. Four to six miles from campus, Timmons, KU's men and women's track coach, stops the truck, yells to the back, and watches as Wallace, a distance runner on the KU men's track team, gives goodbye to her friends on the KU men's track team and begins her afternoon run. Wallace enjoys her afternoon run. In an era when some athletes have begun to doubt their ability to play well, fun, and when scholarship athletes are sometimes treated as workers for a university athletic corporation, Heidi Wallace feels that they are different. She looks at her by car running. "I think track is graceful," the Tonganoxie freshman said recently. "Track is an individual thing with me. I like to work with people." He added that everybody else, like I to push myself." And Wallace has been pushing. At an indoor quadrangular meet with Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, Southwest Missouri State University on March 5 in Lawrence, Walley recorded her best time in the 80-80 yard run, a .231.0. Admittedly, a 2.310 half mile isn't an olympian performance. Last weekend, at the Kansas girls state track championships in Allen Field House, three girls from 1A and 2A high schools ran faster. First place in that meet was a 2.195. A courageous front runner, Wallace has experimented with an exhaustingly fast first 220 yards, sometimes leaving her foot behind and she had she run the first 220 in 31 seconds. Trailing Kentucky, 26-5, in the balloting and Indiana, which finished the regular season undefeated but lost 92-90 to Kentucky in the NCAA Mideast regionalists. The Hoosiers collected $2\frac{1}{2}$ first-place votes and 787 points. "It's a thinking event. It has a little more strategy to it," said Wallace, who ran the 106, 220, 440, 880 and relay events in her first year of track competition last year. But Wallace, who admits to holding six "not so great" 'school records at Tonganone High School, would be satisfied with a modest 2:24 by the end of the year. That is her goal. And that time represents the qualifying standard for the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women's national track championships. After running her first quarter-mile in 65 seconds, Wallace said, she confronted that woman. For now, Wallace is content to try to improve her time, travel with the 10 other women on the team and learn more about her event. The half-mile run, she said, is her favorite event because it requires strategy. "That's when I make my decision whether or not to quit," she said. Like a typical mule runner, who must find a way to maintain momentum and concentration during the third lap, Wallace doesn't imply that she'd consider stepping into the water or having fun moments when a runner decides whether the pain and fatigue are worth the effort. But the vote wasn't unanimous. The University of Kansas rugby team won the Big Eight title by defeating the University of Missouri 9-0 at Columbia on Saturday. UCLA, which finished its season with a 28-13 success in surplus NCAA State, Carolina, Texas and New York. The Bruins, winners of the collegiate championship in 10 of the past 12 years, received 45% of 49 first-place votes from a nationwide panel of sportswriters and broadcasters. UCLA's total of 969 points gave the Bruins first place by a wide margin in runner-up Kentucky, which included 830 students in the balloting announced Tuesday. resignation of women's track coach Lorraine Davis for health reasons, said recently that Wallace had the strength of a horse to push to the pain inherent in distance running. Ruggers win Big 8 Timmons, Wallace's tutor since the Fourth in the voting Louisville 28-3, third in the NCAA tournament with 762 KU had beaten Oklahoma 14-4 and Colorado 8-0 to reach the finals. "She's good about tough hard and pushing." Timmons said. "She's really serious. She wants to do well. And she's a running athlete. She wants the team to do well." The only regret Wallace has concerning the KU team is track team this year is the least exciting of all. After the first half had ended without either team scoring, Bill McGillivary kicked a field goal and Paul Miller scored on a break-a-way run. "We have a good team quality-wise, but we need more depth," Wallace said. She said she knew there were many more women on campus who were interested and engaged in the job. This summer, Wallace will travel to California, where she plans to work and attend a graduate school. "I've been running all year and I hate to lose it in a few months," she said. And true to the ideals of the dedicated runner, Wallace said she planned to keep on running. NEW YORKER italian sandwiches PIZZA 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST. Now Featuring The LUNCHEON SIZE PIZZA $1.00 Meat or Garden Toppings 20' each Luncheon size served from 11-4 Daily Serving Recommendations—One Hungry Guy or Two Thin Chicks or One Big Chick or Two Thin Men "The Original Thick Crust Pizza From New York" What bothers you most about auto repair shops? Is it the length of time it takes to fix your car? Or is it the quality of service? When you take your car to Don's Auto Service you don't have to worry about either of these problems. Our expert mechanics will have your car fixed in no time at all and running in tip top shape. For fast, efficient and complete auto repair service, drive to --- Don's Auto Service The K.U. Commission on the Status of Women Spring Symposium Presents MARTHA KEYS Congresswoman, Kansas' 2nd District 842-0753 Thursday, April 3 900 New Jersey 7:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium (Funded by Student Activity Fees) --- Introducing ZOBOZ INTERNATIONAL CAFE 944 Massachusetts Sandwiches For Starters SANDWICHES Reg. B.Q. Beef 1.55 1.65 Ham 1.60 1.75 Chicken 1.45 1.55 Zooburger 1.50 with cheese 1.60 1.70 Meat Ball Grinder 1.75 Lunch Specials Spaghetti with meat sauce ___ 1.60 " " meat balls ___ 1.65 Chef's Salad ___ 1.15 B.Q. Ribs with potato salad ___ 2.85 Beverages Coffee ___ .25 Milk ___ .25 Beer: Coke ___ .25 pitcher ___ 1.75 Sprite ___ .25 draught ___ .35 Mr. Picco ___ .25 French Onion Soup "cup" ___.95 Dinner Salad ___.65 Potato Salad ___.65 Sauteed Mushrooms ___.75 Garlic Bread ___.60 Bread Basket ___.35 Hunger Fixers all fixers served with salad potato or potato salad. Quiche Lorraine 2.95 French Onion Soup "bowl" 1.75 Brochette of Beef 3.75 Spaghetti with meat sauce 2.75 meat balls 2.85 Zoboz Lasagne 3.50 Chicken Cacciatore 3.25 Barbecued Ribs 4.25 H.C. Strip 4.95 Ham 3.85 ½ Chicken, jointed-B.Q. 2.75 In the End Hot Fudge Sundae or Apple Pie ___.75