SPORTS Gifts that spin real fast. Jof>n Barleycorn Must O' Trad'C the p°u<£ peggaua Oe B>a« •Y- » , The Righteous Brothers Greatest Hits T T T \rnr kijitd K-Wl \W r. uf\ < ^vihUikj disc DISC JOCKEY l Gateway Mall 746-6373 Mr .*i i rp< Vrt-* MjMrKjrtl Ammcjn l'prrti jnd OftCCMf Duck teams finish fifth at NCAAs By Jake Berg fmecakl Spoils fteportec junior i’iil Mailer was the only Dm k lo place in the top 25 runners at Monday's NCAA cross country championships as both the Oregon men's and women's teams took fifth at Knox ville. Tenn Crossing the finish line in l(>th plac e*. Haller completed the 10.000-meter course in a time of 29:54 The only returner from Oregon’s NCAA runners-up squad. Haller led Oregon with to a fifth place total of 201 points The Oregon ju nior c aptured all-Americ an honors for the sec - ond year in a row by running to ltith in tin* in dividual standings, a notch above his 17th place performance of a year ago Colin Dalton, canning off a bout of tendinitis in his knee that kept him out of the Region VIII meet, was second on the Oregon team after running III 2t> to place 47th Other Oregon finishers included junior Shannon l.emora. who came in two seconds lieliind Dalton for r>()th; freshman Andy Maris at 71st in :t() 44; and sophomore (’olden Bax ter's 110th place run of :tl 19. which capped the Duc ks' scoring Second-ranked Arkansas upset top-ranked and defending c hampion Iowa State* by win ning its fourth men's team title in the last sev en years I’lac mg two competitors in the top HI finishers, the Razorbacks recorded t>8 points to •M> for the Cyc tones Notre Dame finished third with In) points, whim lexas was nun wun 192 points. Iowa State's Jonah Koech ran 29:05 for the men's individual title, and Montana State s Shannon Butler snared the runner-up trophy with a second-place time of 29:11 As the only school to finish in the top five teams without an individual to finish as one of the first 25 runners. Oregon's fourth-ranked women's squad leveled a balanced offense at the national field for fifth place in the final standings. Villanova ran away with the team title and also snarer) the individual crown with Sonia O'Sullivan leading the way for the Wildcats Seniors Stephanie Wessell and l.iz Wilson showed their consistency as the Ducks' best runners by finishing in the 26th and 32nd places, respectively. Clocking in at a time of 16 56. Wessell bettered her run from last year’s NCAA meet by placing 32 spots better than 1989. and Wilson completed Monday's run in 17:02. Adding to Oregon's 221-point total were Lucy Nusrala in 64th place with a time of 17:2t>. sophomore Nicole Woodward's 66th standing in a time of 17:27 and junior l.isa Karnopp's run of 17:44 for 102nd. All of Oregon's women runners except for Wessell and Wilson were running at the NCAA meet for the first time. Musgrave honored with awards Quarterback Bill Musgrave wan two awards at Sunday's football awards banquet to lead the long list of award winners Musgrave won the Hoffman Award, presented annually to the team's most outstanding player, and also took home the Klmer Sahlstrom which re wards a senior with the highest grade point average and has also shown exemplary attitude. Musgrave, from Grand Junc tion. Colo . missed the better part of two games but still threw for 2.21 ‘I yards and 14 touchdowns Although Mus grave's numbers weren't as high as they were a year ago, the Ducks were 7-2 in games Musgrave started and finished, including a perfect 7-0 mark at home In tlic classroom. Musgrave, a finance major, had a 3.5 grade point average entering fall term and will graduate this term Musgrave has also won two scholarships totaling $15,000 from the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. Senior strong safety Rory Dairy won the Will Gonyea Award as the team's most in spirational player. Dairy, a senior from Comp ton. Calif , is a two-year starter for the Ducks and was the team's defensive captain this season. Dairy is fourth on the team with t>7 tackles this sea son and also has one intercep tion. Freshman tailbac k Sean Harwell, who probably had the PANCE _ 2020 W. Burnside /-\V fSb?/ Portland K^Jv OS^ 224-2115 <& Thanksgiving Day Party on the 22nd See you at the Kingston! BE THERE! biggest impact of any newcom er in Oregon football history, won the Leonard J. Casanova Award — named after the for mer Duck football coach as the team's top first-year player. Burwell, from Canoga Hark. Calif , has already broken the school record for most all-pur pose yards in a season with 1,539 yards, breaking the for mer record held by Tony Cher ry. Me also has 949 rushing yards, sixth-best in school his tory. and can add to those to tals in the Freedom Howl against Colorado State Dec. 29. Burwell also caught 2H pass es for 2Ht> yards, returned 11 kickoffs for 304 yards and scored eight touchdowns. Two first-year starters, junior tight end |uff Thomason and sophomore free safety Eric Cas tle. shared the Clarke Award as the team's most improved play er. Thomason, from Balboa. Is land, Calif , was having a tre Turn to AWARDS. Page 9 Holiday Travel? Latraic Sludtaf an# Faculty Farsi u Atla. South Padfc Africm, Caribbean an# Latin America! HWAILFASS ...from *1** ■RIT1UJLPASS ...from *13* Youth Hot tot Mmmbtnhlpt Onty ttS-OOt C«l tor a from IMI Studant Trival Catalog Cound Ikavel 715 S.W. Morrison #600 Portland, OR 97205 503-811-1900