Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 13, 1963, Page Five, Image 5

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    Barnett, DeSylvia
Receive Awards
Football All American Steve
Barnett anti sophomore quarter
back Terry DeSylvia were pre
STEVE BARNETT
Outstanding Senior Athlete
Lu Bain Shines
In Scrimmage
Sparkling running by veteran
halfback Lu Itain was the out
standing point in the final scrim
mage session Saturday, as the
Oregon Ducks ended three weeks
of spring practice. As has been
the case with almost all the prac
tice sessions and scrimmages this
spring, the rain fell
The sloppy footing of the up
per practice field and changing
defenses combined to halt most
oi tile offensive thrusts Neither
could slow up the former Van
couver High School athlete dur
ing the hour and a half session,
though
As he has <tone in the previous
two scrimmages, Bain ran. passed,
and received in bnllian fashion
It was Bain’s nifty and powerful
running which enabled the first
unit to score the only two touch
downs of the afternoon
The touchdowns came on a 15
yard pass from quarterback Doug
Post to end Rich Schwab and a
20-yard option sprint by fullback
Tim Casey after Bam and half
back Larry Hill had put the first
unit in • scoring territory with
their determined ground efforts.
Alumni Point for
First Spring Win
Oregon's football alumni will
be gunning for its first victory
since 1960 when it tangles with
Coach Len Casanova's Webfoot
varsity Saturday in the fourth
annual University of Oregon
spring grid clash at Hayward
field.
George Shaw will serve as coach
for the Duck alums for a second
straight year A bevy of players
who performed for the Ducks is
expected to answer the alumni
call.
Amonc the early consenters for
alum duty are the roHowing
Dave Grosz, Ron Ve.-es, . ack
Crabtree, Dick Arhuckle, Jim
Shanlcy, Ben Brown, Leroy
Ph'-lns, Herman McKinney, Joe
Sutton, Bruce Snyder, Duane Ca
gill, Dave Powell, Norm Chap
man, Rich Dixon, Don Wouda,
Spike Hillstrom, Joe Schalfeld,
Mickey Ording, Ed Thornes, Den
nis Prozinski, Roanous Cochrane,
Al Weigel, Dave Uivll, Tom
Keele, Cal Tichenor, Jim Linden,
Riley Mattson, Ron Snidow, Ron
Anderson.
Tickets for the Eugene ap
pearance of the 1963 World
Series of pro tennis are still on
sale at four Eugene locations.
Reserved seat tickets for the
appearance, priced at $3 and
$2, will be available at Mac
Court, Warren’s Hardware,
Wicklund's Sporting Goods, and
Mattox Pipe Shop.
sentcd with awards Saturday
night at the All-Campus Sing at
MacArthur Court.
Barnett was presented the Em
erald Athletic Award, sponsored
jointly hy the Oregon Daily Em
erald and the Oregon athletic de
partment It is awarded to an
! Oregon student on tin- basis of
I achievement in athletics, schol
arship and citizenship The vot
| ing this year yas the closest since
I the first year the award was pre
! sented
There were fifteen nominations
for the award. Basis for nomina
lion is that the athlete has accu
mulative grade point average of
2 5 or more
Twice All-American
Barnett has compiled a dis
tinguished collegiate career in all
fields while at Oregon He was
an All Coast selection for three
years of varsity football and an
All-American choice his junior
and senior years He was a parti
cipant in the East West Shrine
Football Game and the Hula
Howl Barnett will also compete
this summer in the Coaches’ A)l
] American Game at Buffalo. N Y
I Barnett also earned a letter in
wrestling in his junior year
DeSylvia received the Doyle
Higdon Trophy, which is present
od to the outstanding sophomore
on the basts of achievement in
athletics, scholarship and citizen
ship
The Higdon Trophy is named
in memory of a former Oregon
football guard and javelin star
who was killed during the sum
mer between his sophomore and
ninior years.
Murphy Belts Homer
Ducks Lose Second
PULLMAN, WASH,—Oregon’s
baseball nine dropped its second
game in a row to Washington
State Saturday, 8-5, and got oust
ed from the number one spot in
the Northern Division as well.
Going into Friday’s contest
with the Cougars, the Oregonians
were tied for first with Oregon
State, but losing the two-game
series pushed the Ducks a full
game behind OSU. Washington
Slate holds down third place, 2xk
game; behind the Beavers,
Oregon continues its road trip
today, as it travels to Moscow to
clash with the University of Ida
ho In the only previous meeting
between the two schools, hosting
Oregon edged past the Vandals,
3-2
With its two wins over the
Ducks last weekend, Washington
State avenged the two losses dealt
it by Oregon late in April, and
gave the Webfoots a 20-4 record
for the season. The visitors only
previous losses were to Portland
State,
Three homers were hit during
Saturday’s contest—two by the
C'ottgars The third was 385 foot
effort by leftfieldcr H. D. Murphy
who leads the Oregon team in
hitting.
WSU pitchers Bob Stephens
and Steve Bell held the Webfoots
to four hits—singles by Jeff Al
ien and Arba Ager, a double by
Cal Dean and Murphy’s four bag
ger.
The Cougars jumped to a 3-0
lead after three innings, but Ore
gon closed the gap in the fourth
on Murphy’s blast which also
scored Dean
But, the Cougars came back
H. D. MURPHY
Bangs Second Homer
with a run in the bottom of the
fourth, then saw the margin re
duced to one run again, when
Dean doubled and scored on a
two base error.
Jansen walked two to lead off
the seventh, setting the stage for
a three-run homer by shortstop
Craig Heimbigner. The Cougars
added a run in the eighth on a
solo home run by Tom Seidel,
which cleared the 385 foot mark.
The Ducks, with the help of a
pair of WSU errors, came back
with two runs in the ninth, but
the rally fell three runs short.
Sand> Nosier walked, two errors
brought him in, and Jeff Allen
singled in the final run.
Oregon
Livingston, cf
Allen, 2b
Dean, rf
b-Leininger, rf
Murphy, If
Pettengill, 3b
Porter, ss
Nosier, lb
Jensen, c
Ager, p
a-Banderas
Jansen, p
c-IIardin
Totals
H-B R BI O-A E
0- 5 1-0 4-0 0
1- 5 0-1 3-2 0
12 2-0 0-0 0
0-2 OO 0-0 0
14 1-2 0-0 0
0-3 0-0 2-1 0
0-3 00 0-1 2
0- 3 0-0 8-2 0
0-2 1-0 6-1 1
1- 2 OO 1-2 0
0-1 0-0 0-0 0
0-0 0-0 0-1 0
0-1 OO 0-0 0
4 33 5-3 24-10 3
a-Grounded out for Ager in
7th; b-struck out for Dean in 8th;
c-grounded out for Jansen in 9th.
wsu
Seidel, 3b
Schreck, If
Fry . If
Wise, cf
Pate, rf
Olerud, c
Heimbigner, ss
Rossman, 2b
Langhans, lb
Endsley, lb
Stephens, p
Bell, p
Totals
Oregon
WSU
Pitcher
Ager (4-2)
Jansen
x-Stepnens
Bell
H B RBI
1-3 3-1
»P
6
2
5 +
4
0- A E
1- 1 1
14 10 0-0 0
0-1 0-0 0-0 0
24 1-2 5-0 0
1-2 2-1 0-0 0
04 0-0 4-0 0
2-4 14 1-3 1
0-3 0-0 4-3 3
0-4 00 llO 0
OO 0-0 1-0 0
0-2 OO 0-2 0
0-2 OO OO 0
7-33 8-8 27-9 5
000 201 002—5
210 100 31x—8
r h so bb
ab
23
10
19
14
5
1
1
1
x-Faced 3 batters in 6th.
HR—Murphy, Seidel, Heimbig
ner. 2B—Dean. SH—Porter. SB—
Wise 2. LOB—Oregon 8, WSU 7.
WP — Bell. Umpires — Curtis,
Plate; Pederson, bases. Time —
2:20. Attendance—1,800.
Tastes
Great
because
the
tobaccos
are!
t . Mi , ■ • '%/*
21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE
20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!
Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended
mild... made to taste even milder through
the longer length of Chesterfield King.
CHESTERFIELD KING
TOBACCOS TOO MILD TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS
FOR A
GENtLER. f
SMOOTHER i
TASTE
ENJOY THE
LONGER
LENGTH OF
CHESTERFIELD
KING
ORDINARY CIGARETTES
CHESTERFIELD KING
The smoke of a Cheslerfield King
mellows and softens as it flows
through longer length... becomes
smooth and gentle to your taste.