Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 12, 1983, Section B, Page 5, Image 17

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International Fraternity, will be meeting
with men who are interested in becoming
founding members of a new Fraternity
chapter at the University of Oregon
campus.
The two Fraternity representatives will be
at Century Room B in the Erb Memorial
Union, Monday, October 10 through Fri
day, October 14 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00
p.m. They will be there to answer any
question or to provide information about
Lambda Chi Alpha. You may also contact
Bob or Tom at The Greentree Inn at
485-2727.
Top-ranked Cornhuskers lose
votes to rampaging Longhorns
From Associated Press reports
The Texas Longhorns, the na
tions second-ranked college
football team for the fourth week
in a row, have started to close
ground on Nebraska.
Nebraska was not a
unanimous choice Tuesday as
the nation’s No. 1 team. The Cor
nhuskers' close 14-10 call
against unranked Oklahoma
State cost them five first-place
votes in this week’s Associated
Press poll and also left them five
points short of being a
unanimous pick for what would
have been the third week in a
row.
Nebraska, which has been No.
1 in every poll this season,
received 55 of 60 first-place
votes and 1,195 of a possible
1,200 points from a nationwide
panel of sports writers and
sportscasters. The other five
first-place ballots, along with
1,144 points, went to Texas,
which defeated Oklahoma 28-16
and dropped the Sooners from
eighth place to 15th.
Although this week’s Top
Twenty consists of the same 20
teams as last week, there was
considerable shuffling, with
Alabama dropping from third
place to 11th after falling to
Penn State 34-28. North
Carolina, a 30-10 winner over
Wake Forest, rose from fourth to
third with 1,014 points and West
Virginia, which was idle, climbed
from fifth to fourth with 983
points.
Auburn, seventh a week ago,
jumped to fifth with 866 points
following a 49-21 rout of
previously unbeaten Kentucky.
Ohio State downed Purdue 33-22
and remained in sixth place with
861 points.
Florida moved up from ninth
to seventh with 836 points by
whipping Vanderbilt 29-10.
Georgia cracked the Top Ten for
the first time this season, troun
cing Mississippi 36-11 and
vaulting from 11th to eighth with
725 points.
Arizona went up from 10th to
ninth with 702 points by
crushing Colorado State 52-21
and Miami of Florida jumped
from 12th to 10th with a 42-14
rout of Louisville, good for 600
points.
The Second Ten consists of
Alabama, Southern Methodist,
Michigan, Iowa, Oklahoma,
Maryland, Washington, Arizona
State, Illinois and Brigham
Young.
Last week, it was Georgia,
Miami, SMU, Michigan, Iowa,
Maryland and Washington tied
for 16th, then Arizona State, Il
linois and BYU.
Oilers name interim coach
HOUSTON (AP) Chuck
Studley, who became defensive
coordinator of the Houston
Oilers in January, stepped up a
notch to interim head coach
Tuesday, replacing Ed Biles,
who resigned Monday in the
midst of a 13-game losing
streak.
“I didn’t look up the word
‘interim’ but I think it means
temporary,” Studley said in his
first meeting with the media. “If
we continue to play incon
sistently, it’s adios (goodbye) at
the end of the season."
Studley, getting his first pro
head coaching experience,
enters the job fully aware of the
task that lies ahead in breaking
the losing streak and the team’s
0-6 record this season.
“Right now I’m wearing two
hats,” Studley said. “I’m still the
defensive coordinator and I
know what that involves plus I
have the duties of the head
coach and at this point I’m not
sure what that involves."
Oiler General Manager Ladd
Herzeg saio Studley and offen
sive coordinator Kay Dalton
were considered for the job.
“It was an extremely difficult
decision for me and one that I
wrestled with most of last
night,” Herzeg said. "I felt both
Chuck and Kay Dalton had
superb qualificiations and both
were highly qualified to be suc
cessful head coaches in the
NFL.”
The Oilers will try to break
their losing string Sunday
against the Minnesota Vikings.
In naming Studley, Oiler
management followed the same
path as when they named Biles
to replace Bum Phillips, who
was fired in January 1981. Biles
had been defensive coordinator
under Phillips.
Biles’ resignation came Mon
day following a 26-14 loss to the
Denver Broncos on Sunday.
Biles was booed lustily during
the game when his picture was
flashed on a huge screen in the
Astrodome.
The Oilers have not won a
game since Sept. 19, 1982 when
they defeated Seattle 23-21.
Nets shelve all-star player
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) New Jersey Nets guard
Michael Ray Richardson, who
last week admitted he had suc
cumbed again to a cocaine
dependency, was waived Tues
day by the National Basketball
Association team.
Richardson, a three-time All
Star, was released because he
did not obey an NBA order to
report to a New York treatment
program Monday or Tuesday,
said Nets Executive Vice Presi
dent Lewis Schaftel.
After a three-day unexcused
absence from the Nets training
camp last week, NBA officials
announced that Richardson had
asked for assistance and had
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been ' directed to begin im
mediate treatment.
Under an NBA drug policy
adopted Sept. 28, athletes may
be subject to permanent
dismissal from the league for in
volvement with drugs. The
policy includes an amnesty
period through Dec. 31.
When Richardson did not
report to the Life Extension In
stitute, a New York counseling
service with which the NBA
became affiliated in 1981, Schaf
fel said he and team owner Joe
Taub decided to waive him.
“After unsuccessfully trying
to help Michael Ray Richardson
overcome his problem, the New
Jersey Nets have reluctantly
concluded that they can no
longer assist him and according
ly he has been waived,” the team
said in a statement.
If Richardson is not picked up
by another team, the Nets will
have to pay his guaranteed con
tract for a reported $475,000
annually.