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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1963)
BOOK DISCOUNT SERVICE k P.O. Box 32033. Los Angeles, California ••cor* cos.* ‘nj -3-t - . • • *•»•«* TEAM fight... fight... fight give em... the ax the ax the ax ...hold that line fight... fight... fight... ...YEA TEAM whew pause *<•*> > *> ' •*>* take a break... things go better with Coke TrtAOC'MAKK £ Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: Ducks Fall Before Husky Onslaught By BOB HAGIST Emerald Sports Writer The cold-shooting Oregon Ducks were defeated 63-52 by a second half surge of the Washington Hus kies at McArthur Court Friday night. The Huskies, who held a one point edge at the half 26-25. grad ually pulled away from the Ducks in the second half. Steve Wilson, a 6-7 junior forward led the way. scoring 16 of his game-high 21 points in the second half. Steve Jones led Oregon with 15 points. Both teams were as cold as the weather in the first half. Oregon hit 9-30 from the field for .300 while Washington had 9 25 for a .360 mark. The Huskies shot a hot 587 in the second half while the Ducks could manage only .385. For the game Oregon shot 339 on 19 56 and Washington had a .471 mark on 24-51. The hrst hall was marked by deliberate play and neither team was ahead by more than six points. The score was tied three times and the lead changed hands three times. The Huskies were ahead at the half 26-25. mostly on the shooting of Ed Corell who hit for 12 points. The Huskies started strong and with 13:13 left in the first half led 11-5. The Ducks worked their way back and took the lead on Eliott Gleason's jumper from the right of the key with 8:17 to play. Washington then went ahead and Oregon fought-back to tie the score at 22-all with 3:40 left. Ore gon gained the lead on the free throw shooting of Glenn Moore, Jones, and Gleason, but a three point play by Corell with :38 left gave the Huskies their 26-25 half time margin. Jones popped in two quick fielders just after the start of the second half to give the Ducks a short lived three point advantage at 29-26. Charley Hart then came up with a three point play for the Huskies to tie the score with 18:11 left. Both teams went cold for the next few minutes, but then big Wilson "started to hit and in the short space of 5:U9 he stuffed in 12 points. With 10:53 left on the clock the Huskier had opened up I a ten point lead at 44-34. Oregon fought hack, hut could | never get closer than eight points,! although they kept the crowd ex-1 cited with their hustle and effort. Jerry Anderson scored seven j points in the last seven minutes as he led a vain attempt by the Ducks to pull the game out. Wilson had 21 for Washington while Corell finished with 16 and Dale Easley hit for 13 before foul ing out. jones was the only Webfoot to; hit in double figures as the rest had difficulty in finding the hoop. Anderson finished with nine while Moore hit for eight. Jim Johnson and Gleason each got seven Washington led in rebounds 41 31 and hit 15-18 at the free throw line for a .833 mark. Oregon had 14 20 for .700 at the free throw line. Washington (63) fg Corell. f 6 Wilson, f 8 Easley, g 5 Hart, g 3 Paul, g 0 Lee. f 1 Peeples, c 0 Flowers, g 1 Sharp, g 0 TOTALS 24 Oregon <52) ft reb pf tp 4 12 2 16 5 11 2 21 3 4 5 13 2 7 4 8 0 110 1113 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 110 15 41 16 63 fg ft reb pf tp Jones, f 5 5 8 4 15 Johnson, f 32528 Moore, c 2 3 11 3 7 Mack, g 2 2 2 2 6 Gleason, g 3 112 7 Anderson, f 4 1 13 9, Yates, g OOOOO TOTALS 19 14 31 16 52 IM Schedule Monday, Jan. 28 Basketball 3:50 Court 40 Stallord A vs. Shel don A 4:35 Court 40 Alpha A vs Mor ton A 5:15 Court 40 Beta Theta Pi A vs. Alpha Tau Omega A Handball 4:00 Sigma Chi vs. Adams EMPLOYMENT — SPECIAL AGENCY U. S. GOVERNMENT A special representative will interview seniors and graduate stu dents on the University of Oregon campus on January 28, 29, and 30, 1963. A variety of academic disciplines are needed in positions for employment in the U. S. and abroad. Of particular interest are students obtaining degrees in the following fields: Accounting Area Studies Economics Foreign Languages Geography History International Relations Journalism .Law Mathematics Physics Political Science Erik the Red had no choice-but Vitalis with V-7 will keep your hair neat all day without grease. Naturally. V-7 is the greaseless grooming discovery. Vitalis® with V-7® fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness, keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Try Vitalis today! JOHN MACK, Oregon defensive specialist, steals the ball from Husks Ron I'aul (No. 15). Washington posted a 63-52 victory over the Duck* Friday night. I’hoto by Sands Grapplers Beat SOC 24-6 In Recording Triumph Oregon’s wrestling Uurk ' sto-m-d to their fourth c?*• ai meet victory of the season as they over whelmed Southern Oregon Col lege 24-6 before a soarse c-o-vd in .Mae Court Sat'irda' afternoon Conch Mike Reut‘-r’s charges ai lowed th" visiting Raid-rs a mwe two deci.-ions in chalking up th win Dennis Radford dronp'-d a clos“ 2-1 decisio; to l ong Smith Frosh Record 96-82 Win Oregon’s frosh basketball team pulled away from a 4747 half time tie and went on to rack up a 9^-82 victory over Gideon Stolz AAU of Salem at McArthur Court Friday night The win boosted the Duckling’s \ season record to six wins against a single loss Jim Barnett, 63 guard from Riverside, Cal., tanked 29 points to lead the Ducklings, while 6-0 guard Dave Kafoury added anoth ei 22 points to the winners’ ef forts, most on long one-handers. Despite the scoring proficiency of these two freshmen, high point hones went to Dave Hollings worth oi Gideon Stolz The center tallied 44 points, 28 of them in the first half. Oregon coach Don Kir sc h tabbed Hollingsworth as a “pretty good operator.” The big center, aided his team in leaning oy as many as ten points in the first half before Barnett hit a few to tie it up at intermission. Kirsch added that 6-0 guard Rick Potter, who is out of action with a knee injury, is still a “defi nite question mark.’’ He said that Potter hasn’t worked out with the team since he was injured two weeks ago. The coach is hope ful that Potter will be able to practice this week. The Ducklings host Sweet Home AAU Friday and tangle with the University of Portland Frosb Saturday at Portland. Both games are slated to begin at 8 p m. The Oregon quintet was or iginally scheduled to play Port land last Saturday, but the game was postponed because of con flict with the track meet. Scoring .Summary OREGON FROSH (96)—Franz 9, Jennings 16, Broekmeyer 4, Barnett 29, Kafoury 22, Powell 4, Nicholas 1, Coombs 2, MacGib bon, DeMers 6, Printz 1, Chase 2. GIDEON STOLZ (82)— Gaviola 9, Brack 4, Hollingsworth 44, Nel son 6, Sato 13, Hellbush 6, John son. Want to really get results?— Use Emerald Classified Ads— Phone DI 2-1411, Ext. 1818. anti .John roio was Beaten t> -a ny George Moses Heavyweight Terry O'Sullivan executed an ops-t when h whipped previously unbeaten Jim Crush 5 2 The win gives the Puck« a 4 2 record, identical to that of SOC, who came into this meet with a * 1 record behind th<»m. Captain Dong Muck remained the only unbeaten wrestler on the -quad as he posted a third round :>in over Jerry Hull Muck's match held the small crowd in .suspense After getting his op oonent into a pinning combina tion it took slightly over a full minute to get the shoulders to the mat for the required two seconds Muck's mn was the third straight recorded during the af ternoon Before him Monrad Bjor ge had recorded a second round pin over Trenton Douglas and Charlie Warren also had walked oft the mats with a pin to his credit, this one over SOC’s John DePlace in 6 18 of the third round. Results with Oregon wrestler named first: 123 pounds—Dennis Radford dec by Doug Smith, 2-1. 130 pounds—Dave White dec Gary Holmes, 83. 137 pounds — Monrad Bjorge pinned Trenton Douglas (0:18) 147 pounds — Charlie Warren pinned John DePlace (6:52) 157 pounds—Doug Muck pinned Jerry Hull (8:24) 167 pounds—John Polo dec by t>eorge Moses, H .i 177 pounds — Bob Keeney dec Glen Moses, 5-0. Hvywt. — Terry O'Sullivan dec Jim Grush, 5-2. Before the varsity tussle, Ore gon’s strong frosh wrestlers tri umphed over Cascade College of Portland 23-10 This win coupled with four straight dual meet wins gives Cec Eaves' grapplers a 5-0 record this season Given a 15 point advantage be fore the actual matches got under way, due to three forfeits—all in the first three weight divisions— the Frosh were never headed as they rolled to the win. Results with Oregon wrestler named first: 123 pounds—Alan Sasaki won by forfeit. 130 pounds—Ron Hostetler won by forfeit. 137 pounds—Dick Wilson won by forfeit. 147 pounds—John Malpass pinned Mike Snodgrass (5:35) 157 pounds—Bob Mitchell dec Don Wiles, 9-4. 1G7 pounds—Dave Youngbluth pinned by Jerry Jensen (4:27) 177 pounds—Bob Blucher pinned by Bob Pyle (3:22) Ifvywt.—Ancer Haggerty pinned Ilerm Gartner (7:54)