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 FRKE DELIVERY: 484-279}) y.■ imiiiinum * nkr $ Order) I ()ne ('ou|K»n |H*r ('ustomer TRACK TOWN PIZZA Not With om other o{!«*r ALMANAC OF JHEJDEAD By Leslie Marmon Silko Imarutc ot the Deed is a richly ambitious novel about people caught between two cultures and two times ttie modern day 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 Ceremony and Storyteller, lives in Tucson. Arizona Hardcover $25 00 UO BOOKSTORE 13th & Kincaid M-F 7:30-6 Sat. 10:00-6 *:A“’ iany,Hd U«rfc0.i». No^omf'i't . >> 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 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