Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 26, 1991, Page 8, Image 8

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    Football players honored for athletics, academics
Junior fna* safety Lrii Castle
was presented the Hoffman
Award for being the loam's
most outstanding player Sun
day nlgiit at the Oregon football
bampiet
Castle, who was soie< led
through a team vote, is the first
non-senior to win the award
Mine m elver Lew Humes won
111 I OH i ( ns! le is the third do
fenslve hat k to win the Hoff
man In the Ins! five seasons
Castle was one of the Dm ks
team leaders in larklns this
year He also set .1 s< hool re
cord (or interceptions returned
(or tom hdowns with two
Outside hneh.ok.er \nds
( o n n e r ss o n I h e h I rn e r
Snhlstrom Aw aril (or being the
senior w ith the highest iir adern
it grade point average and lias
ing air■ exemplary attitude Con
ner ha* « t in Oi’A, he started
.ill 11 games fills year
Other ret I [lion Is Inr I tided
strong safety Oh.nl Cola, who
won the Leonard I Casanova
Award for the top first-year
player, tight end Jeff Thorna
sun who garnered the Hob Off!
i er Award lor playing in spite
of iniiiry defonsivi end K..rn• ..
Handlson who earnei) the
Clarke Award lor most im
proved player, and offensive
1,K kle Todd (Adesen,Who won
1 he Will (lonyea Award for
most inspirational plnver
In other Oregon football
news 11 Due k football plovers
were named to the Pacific-10
( onferenr e All Academe team
Oregon had I he maximum
number of players on the team
and was equaled only bv Stnn
fonl
-ty
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ALMANAC OF
JHEJDEAD
By Leslie Marmon Silko
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Southwest, and the places ot the
old ones, the native peoples ot the
Americas, in an earlier time that is
both real and supra real
In its ambition and its range ot character and culture
Almanac is fiction on the grand scale: a kind of
weaving, or mosaic, of ideas and lives, fate and
history, passion, oppression, conquest, and return
In the manner of some of the great novels of the
nineteenth century, Leslie Silko re creates, through
the lives and dreams, the struggles and hopes of her
many characters, a kind of moral history of the
Americas, told from the point of view of the
conquered, not the conquerors
Leslie Marmon Silko the acclaimed author of
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On offense. wide receiver
Ronnie Harris and lineman Mini
Bowie made the firs! learn, and
named to the first team defens*'
were Oregon linebacker Joe
Larwrll and cornorba* k Jeff
Sherman, the only freshman
named to the first team de
fense
Oregon had seven honorable
mentions, including tight end
0 H Habits. Iinetia* ker Andy
Conner, linebacker Doug Doug
lass. (jiiiirterbac k Doug Mils
grave linebacker Byron K<x k
well, defensi ve end M .1 r k
Slvmen and punter Tommy
Thompson
To make the a'll-iu adi'tni*
team, a player must have a
minimum (,1'A of 1 0 and lie ei
ther a starter or significant sub
stitute.
Wrestlers
place sixth
at tourney
The Oregon wrestling team
finished sixth Sunday night in
the Mat Town Classic at the
Thomas l ield House in L01 k
Haven. Hu
The Ducks scored ti'i !>
points, and Wisconsin look lirsl
with lift 5 points Host Lock
H.c.'-n was third with 'li. Syru
1 us. took fairlh with 84 u and
Old Dominion was fifth with
7H
The tourney's outstanding
wrestler was ISH pounder Troy
Sunderland of Httnn State, who
placed second with <)ti 2 S
points
Light Oregon wrestlers
plait'd in the 14-team classit
including two third-place fin
ishes
We showed w- have good
balance in our 11 nee p with
eight placets in seven weights,
hut we also don't have many
superstars, Oregon coach Ron
Lillies said
Do. VuH.ik tin top seed in
the impound (hiss, lost his
semifinal match 12 10 to Old
'. 1 1 it i!;, o n !. 1 i: k Shaw I he
On-yon senior later lost in the
fifth-place consolation match
in-- ruse ,,i xoee injury lie Mil
let ed in tin- semifinal, and he
pi.II ed sixth i he extent of the
iiiiurs ts not known
Lresbmaii Cory Sonnen lost
Ins semifinal match, too, hut
the 1(4-pounder bounced hue k
to claim third place in a win
over Lock Haven's S t e v *;
Muhlbur h larrett Cl.irk also
won the consolation chumpion
ship for third place in the 121>
pound c utegory
Senior Darren (iustufson and
freshman Chris Anderson were
fourth at 158 and heavyweight
i lussifica!ions, respectively
Freshman Jason Muggy and sr
nior Scott Myers were sixth at
142 and It#). resptx lively
"I was pleased with our
freshmen, especially Muggy,
Sonnon and Scott Buzzard, und
the way they competed." Fin
ley said "Custafson got back to
his form, anti Anderson
showed a lot of promise at
heavyweight "
In the 1 54-pound class, Ore
gon's Pat Hirai lost in the win
ner s bruc.ket quarterfinals and
in ihe consolation quarterfinals,
but the sophomore's perfor
mance was good enough for
eighth place