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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1963)
Ducks Seek WSU Sweep UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SCORING (20 games) Flayer g fga fg Steve Jones, f 20 258 108 Glenn Moore, c 19 205 80 Jim Johnson, f 20 228 90 Jerry Anderson, f 20 174 56 Elliott Gleason, g 20 152 53 Bob Yates g 17 75 20 John Mack, g 16 34 12 Larry Cooley, f 13 20 5 Fat Loy, g 14 21 5 Tom Tuttle, g 11 17 5 Ron Hanson, f 10 12 4 Sandy Nosier, g 6 4 3 TOTALS 20 1202 490 Opponents 20 1251 503 fta ft pet. reb pf tp avg. 95 74 779 157 54 290 14 5 90 08 094 158 51 240 12 0 85 57 ,071 158 59 237 11.9 75 42 ,500 105 54 152 7.6 30 24 .007 54 30 130 6 5 14 8 571 30 24 48 2.8 11 6.545 43 18 30 1.9 11 7 630 8 10 17 1.3 II 0 545 15 9 16 1.1 3 1 .333 4 10 1110 7 2 .280 10 2 10 1.0 2 2 1 000 0 4 8 1.3 448 297 .683 881 331 1189 59 5 418 270 .000 974 357 1288 64 3 pet. 419 .325 404 .310 349 207 .853 192 238 294 .333 720 354 402 OREGON FRESHMAN SCORING (13 dime*) Player R Jim Barnett, gf 13 Dave Kafoury, g 13 Bill Jennings, f 13 John Franz, f 9 Gene Brock meyer, c 13 Hick I’otter, g 10 Mason Powell, c 13 Dave Printz, r 12 Hoyt DeMers, R 11 Dick Nicholas, f 13 Dave Chase, g 11 Carroll Coombs, f 12 Totals 13 Opixments 13 fta ft pf tp avg. 101 75 27 287 22 1 25 15 31 147 11 3 27 18 30 134 10 3 28 16 28 92 10 2 49 23 29 79 6 1 30 20 26 76 7 6 11 7 17 39 3.0 18 12 15 38 3 2 5 2 8 36 33 H 3 16 29 2.2 8 5 6 17 1 5 14 7 11 17 1.4 323 204 248 994 76.5 321 201 249 823 63 5 fR 106 66 53 38 28 28 16 13 17 13 6 5 395 312 Wil!!e ftltiys Join; S\\ FKANCISCO (UP!) Wil lie Mays ha1- joined a select circle of only thre< other players in the history of besebnil, he har> lv come a ‘'hundred grander,” 'I h»- inromparabl • center field«r has signed ;■ coni-act railing for more than 100 thousand dollars with the San Francisco (Hants, thus moving into the same salary bracket once dominated by Joe DiMagvin, Ted V.' iliams and Stan Mii-sial DiMeglio and Williams, the first of the hundred grand er*" ar:- >n retirement wliile the aging M*e ial no longer commands that wage Vl< K PRi; dDilVT Chari e s Feeney of the (Hants said Mays ‘‘is in a good bracket” and added "that sh'iut a" when asked if it was inside* the hundred grand range Mays is 31 and i.s heading into his !3th season as a Giant Last year was one of his finest, 49 home runs, and a hatting average of 304 whil« driving in 1 >4 runs Hundred Granders On Sept. 12, J9<>2. he fainted dwriru a game at Cincinn.-'i and was sidelined a few’ days Rut he returned to spark tn»* ( iants to th< pennant in a playoff with the I.o--: Angeles Dodgers. AFTER THE ~a>on !.-• under went a thorough physical exami nation and pronounced in m ch better shape than other m u his age SPORTi STAFF Th<* Emerald sjHjrts staff will tar-'t Thursday at 5 p.m. for a short meeting at the newspaper office. IM Schedule Thursday 3:5<i Court 4!) Douglas A vs Clark A 4 3f Court 40 Hean A vs Deadv A 5:1* Courts') Kappa Sigma A vs Sigma Nu A NEED A GOOD USED TV? i T V. WAREHOUSE Dl 3-3411 • 775 Monroe A? low As 14« Oregon's Ducks will b- going after a sweep of the s’aso i srie when they tangle with Washing ton State’s Cougars in two gam 21; at Mac Court this weekend. STEVE PELKO’S Webfoots will b out to improve o.i an 8-12 rec ord when they face Marv Harsh •nan’s invaders WSU, with on more game to olay l» fore taking on the Ducks, currently is .sport ing a 5 and 15 marl: Oregon has already beaten the I Cougars three tim-s this year. The D"aks b at WSU 07-57 at the Far West Classic, and dumped them twice more in a senes at Pullman, 60-51 anJ 58 44. Outside shooting is the main strength of the Cougarwho have been suffering from inexperience •hits far this season. Si< foot one inch junior guards fiyron Vadset and Jim Walton do mo-,t of the scoring for WSU. Other starters arc 6’3” I ale Ford and 6’7” A1 Thompson at forwards, and 6’3” Ted Werner at eent-r. WE*tr Elt and Ford are both sophomores, giving the Cougars a starting line up com- o«ed of two sophomores, two juniors, and on senior Thompson is the only sen ior on the opining quint. Ford should be f; miliar to Web foot fans- he was the sorting quarterback for VVSt when Ore gon’s football team scored a 23-10 win over the Cougars in the 1962 home-tom in; game. Although W.- U has only totaled fve wins in twenty games this year, they do have on.- claim to lam-. Harshman’s troons scored an unset over Idaho—with Gus Johnson in the line-up! On the sti -ngth of that one game. .he Cougars must b* regarded a» a capable team. OREGON >s exp ctod to open this weekend s contes's with the same line-on that started against Oregon State las: week Thai quint wo iJd include S'5" Steve Jones and Jim John on at forwards, 6’7” Gl-n.i .Moore at rente;, and (>'2' Elliott Cleason and '-'11” Bob Yates at guards JO.' K 1 conun les to lead th • Ducks in seeing with a 14.5 ppg average. The G'5” forward’s aver age took a bad drop with last weekend's gam s, as OSU's Steve Pauly cU mped a tight lid on his scoring touch, holding him to a tola) of five noints in two gam s Friday night’s gam? will fea tur>. a special halftim- attraction The Cheney Stud Courteers. from Tacoma. Washington will be in o vn to oerfo,-m The Courteers, composed of Tacoma youngsters srom 11 to !5. do a 11 handling • nd d 'ibblin, routine much like that o: th^ Miml m (-lob’trotters The one lotion that’s cool, exciting -brisk as an ocean breeze! The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-be alive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... and wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion, 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax. SHU LTON &U Ofiice the shave lotion men recommend to other men I Web foot Ruggers Tackle OSU Team The University ol Oregon rug gcrr fare the strong and improved tr-gon State niggers in the sec ond game of the Devine Cup com petition this Saturday afternoon at 1:30 on the Varsity practice field The Devine C"d was donated in honor of the first president of the Oregon Rugby Club, Barry De vine Devine was resoon si ble for giving rugby its start in Oregon The cup is a prize well worth having, it stands three feet high and is very attractive. The De vine Cup comnetition consists of a best two out of three series. The Oregon ruggers will be aided by the turn o it of three Webfoot gridiron standouts. Bob Berry, Bill Swain, and Jim Joesph son have all joined the ranks of the Oregon rugby team. Although the Webfoot ruggers dropped a pair to Western Wash ington and the Victoria Reps, the series marked the standout per formance of three Duck ruggers. Dave Bottimiiler, Ed Eiprotiva. and Ben Brown all turn'd in out standing efforts against the two northern clubs. After suffering an earlier 9-5 lose to the Ducks, the Oregon State ruggers have been improv ing with every game, and have added some new strength to their club. The first Devine cun game, which was played in C irvallis. was a hard fought ag-cssive bat tle, and the added Ore on State personal could sp<*l the difference between victory and defeat. With Oregon taking two losses on the road, the Webfoot niggers will be 0”t to get back into the AAU Quints face Fresh Hoopsfers Oregon's frosh hoopsters will play preliminary games before both varsity contests against YVSU this weekend Starting time will be six o’clock. Don Kirsch’s Ducklings, now with a 10-3 record, will face Gen eral Sales Friday, and Priestly Oil Saturday. Both of these teams are Portland-based AAU squads. Priestly being an early season vic tim of the Frosh. Jim Barnett, the 6’ 3” flash from Riverside, California, will once again lead the Ducklings in to competition. Barnett, a guard who was shifted to forward when iohn Franz became ill, leads the Ducks in point production with a 22.1 average per game. Barnett’s probable starting mates will be 6’ 0 Dave Kafoury and Kick Potter at guards, 6’ 9” Gene Brockmeyer at center, and C 5” Bill Jennings at the other forward. Kirsch’s troops will be out to continue their winning ways. OSl"S underdog Rooks jolted the Frosh in the first game of last lings came back to score a win Saturday. The Frosh now have a ten wins and three losses record. GERMANY... for study’s sake Das Deutsche Jahr at the Uni* versity of Freiburg. Maximum immersion in a great university under renowned professors. For juniors only. Includes diverse curricula in history, political sci ence. philosophy and language; tutorials, intensive German, res idence with German families or in student homes, field study, ocean passages. Cost $2,125. Two years of college German and B average required. Other programs in Paris and Vienna. For more information on all programs, write (giving name of your college and year in school) to: The Institute of European Studies Admissions Office 35 E. Wacker Drive • Chicago 1, III. win column and to maintain their dominance of the Beavers. The Ducks boast big, strong forwards, and a swift backfield. Fans can be assured of some spectatcular tack ling and exciting break aways by the swift backs. A-l TAPERS AT hak£im men's weak 124 W. Broadway mw I guess I'll Have to Hide! All / did was wear my new A-1 RACERS to school. You'd think / was a star, the way the girls mob me. I'm not conceited ...I know they're RACERS fans! At your favorite campus shop Get Your A-l TAPERS at the MEN'S SHOP laon march* rw*s*lls 175 W. Broadway Dl 5-0111