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Statesman Journal from Salem, Oregon • Page 36
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Statesman Journal from Salem, Oregon • Page 36

Publication:
Statesman Journali
Location:
Salem, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
36
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6D, Statesman-Journal, Salem, Tuesday, January 1, 1985 1984. Oregon women down Utah; OSU women split Continued Irom Pace ID. Continued from Page ID. colleges Halfume-Orrgim 3d. Ulan 34 Rebuunda-Oregon 39 (Neumann 36 year, attempted to return to action from an injury sustained in the Giusti Tournament, However, she played just 11 minutes against Cal Poly-Pomona and did not see action against San Diego State.

OREGON STATE Dallugc 44 l-l Arburkle 6-182-4 14; Molhemhed 2-7 2-4 Raspberry 10-246-7 26; Young 04040; KikuchiO-1040; Ellis Ml 3-4 la. Totals 27-73. 14-20 tM SAN DIEGO STATE-Arceneoux 24 2-2 Duncan 3-D 1-37; Wallai T6-I22-6 14; Tolt-r 10-172-322; Overion 1-4 1-2 Harvey 1-22-24; Bauer 1-9042; Rice 2-3 3-4 Perce-symki 0-1 1-2 1. Total! 26-98, 14-24, 06, Halllime-OrvKun Stale 30, San Oiegn Si. 27.

Rebounds -Oregon Slate (Arbuckle II), San Diego Si. 46. Duck matmen lose to FSU FRESNO, Calif. Rick O'Shea was the lone winner for Oregon as the Duck wrestlers lost 45-3 to Fresno State Monday. but played "better defense" in the second half to win handily, according to coach Tim Collins.

Western had four players in double figures. Gary Williamson and Dave Bickham led the way with 23 and 22 points respectively, while Larry Wilson added 18 and Jeff Davis 10. I The Warriors improved to 6-4 despite the fact that they have yet to play a home game this season. WESTERN BAPTIST-Willianwon 23, Bickham 22, Wilson 18, Davit 10, F.vans 1, Mueller 2, Mendaiona Snelhen. FG 36.

FT 12-20 ALASKA-JUNEAU Hansen 26, Jordan 17, Eaiaw Miller 8. Wilson 4, Brown 2, Willard I. Fti 28. FT 14-22. Hatltime-Western Baptist 39, Alaska-Juneau 34 Rebounds-Western Baptial 36, Alaska-Juneau 34.

Fouled out Mendatona. SALT LAKE CITY Heather McDuffie and Sue Brown made key free throws in the closing moments Monday to preserve Oregon's 66-61 win over Utah in a women's college basketball game. The Ducks held a two-point lead with two seconds remaining when McDuffie sank a technical foul shot after the Lady Utes had called two many time-outs. Sue Brown then iced the game away with two shots when she was fouled after recieving Oregon's inbounds pass. OREGON-Tfnnanl 104-4 Rot 140-03, Bruwn 5-7 (HMO.

McDulfie 7-10 1-1 IS: SartuwhiieM040, S. Brown I-JM7; Neumann t-1164 la; PtlraunKlH)0; Drouet. Totals 25-4. 16-19. eg.

ITAH-SlHM 7 22 1-2 13; Lee 2-2 Martin 1-1 0-0 Clinton 1-1 12 Handy 5-11 3-4 13; Rouen 24 3-7 Wrigh! 6-16 12; Holiwarth 1-2 1 Sanderson. Total! 2M, 11-19. 61 FRESNO STATE 41, OREGON I I IS-Saenl. FSU, Hawthorne 4: 16; IM-Armislead, FSU.d JarnMI 74, U4-on, FSU. p.

Curliaa I It; 142 -lsmay, FSU.d Rosa, tech fall, 4 42; 130-Hlchburg, FSU, d. Huchanadel, tech (all, 196-Carranlion, FSU.p BuellerJ 14; LlllleM; 177 Bilyeu, FSU.d Harter 7-4; IW-Young. FSU.d. Thoma-on 7-9; hwl-Mal, FSU, Huchanadel 410. Anderson wins two titles HONOLULU Heidi Anderson claimed two individual championships balance beam and floor exercise Saturday night in the Aloha Gym-Fest individual finals.

Warriors post 84-70 win JUNEAU, Alaska Western Baptist closed out 1984 on a good note by defeating Alaska-Juneau 84-70 in a men's NAIA basketball game. The Warriors led 39-34 at halftime, OSU women lose, win SAN DIEGO Oregon State's women's basketball team rebounded from Sunday's 61-54 loss at Cal Poly-Pomona by defeating No. 12 San Diego State 68-66 Monday. Freshman Monica Raspberry, who led all scorers with 26 points, made 6 of 6 free throws in the final 1 16 to aid OSU, 8-4. Raspberry scored 20 of her points in the second half.

Juli Coleman, OSU'stopscorer this v. en. tut -o-peea control 'u revertinn i annul CI -mXZ Yi It I SSf "in UUWN ROD a rs i i i. mi iiiiM- FANS WIRPrt nnwvFRTlBLt 1 FOR OPTIONAL FLUSH nun ING miYtighT J-TWL DEC0R4TIVI FIXTURES "STOVE ilch I 'Both rant I R5PB Ci Z2Zr I R5AH gKy I USEWiru.nu,.. I Ul i FL.J"m I fill CTT1 nil- k.

1 I 'IV- -JJglass DOOR Ml I R5B OR R6B ALL BROWN SET QffgS 111 I II I II II I II IMHIIUni REG. $499.95 SS-'-Xa SU ST0ME jumbo REQ. UD $49.88 brick lined conuo: GALVANIZED I i lliliilll" UV lei I IRAL.I pcTset IB 1 All MOBILE GARBAGE aft HOME HANGS li, LIKE A In Uicture I 1 1 I f147WP-x I II I 8lRC 39. CAN 51 ATOITTTOVE am POL REG. $8.99 REG.

$599.95 CLEARANCE I Mil ATLAS'JL, 4 ciearanco 7J $3.99 with class A EHiiK and POLISHED UNFINISHED, BRASS PINE WALL Benched QB Joe Ferguson and the Buffalo Bills (2-14). Ex-coaches Ron Meyer, Monte Clark, Les Steckel and Sam Rutig-liano. The Dallas Cowboys, out of the playoffs for the first time in 10 years. Jim Brown, who threatened to end his retirement when his career rushing record was challenged. Baltimore's NFL fans.

Leonard Tose of Philadelphia (almost Phoenix). Mike Rozier: Heisman Trophy to USFL flop. The USFL, hanging on by a thread. PRO BASKETBALL The winners The Boston Celtics (15th world championship) and Larry Bird (MVP of the regular season AND the playoffs). The Houston Rockets (with draft choice Akeem Olajuwon) and Chicago Bulls (with rookie Michael Jordan).

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who scored his point to break Wilt Chamberlain's NBA career scoring record. TV ratings (seventh game of the Celtics-Lakers championship series was the most-watched TV show in June). Henry Rojas.a.ka.The Gorilla, who signed to a four-year contract worth $230,000 to continue as mascot of the Phoenix Suns. The losers John Drew and John Lucas, banished from the NBA for drug abuse. The Portland Trail Blazers so far (for drafting Sam Bowie).

The Indiana Pacers and the Cleveland Cavaliers. BOXING The winners Mark Breland and the eight other U.S. fighters who won Olympic gold medals. Thomas Hearns, who sent Roberto Duran into retirement with a second-round knockout and signed to fight Marvelous Marvin Hagler on April 15 (they'll divide $10.5 million). Larry Holmes, who won his only fight of the year (vs.

Bonecrusher Smith) to make his pro record 45-0. Greg Page and Pinklon Thomas, who won titles in upsets. Gerry Cooney, who embarked on a comeback in a woefully weak heavyweight division. Sugar Ray Leonard, Roberto Duran and Alexis Arguello, who retired with sound minds and bodies. The losers Promoter Don King, indicted for tax fraud and conspiracy.

Light-heavyweight champion Michael Spinks, who couldn't get a lucrative fight for lack of a worthy opponent. Boom Boom Mancini, an upset loser to Livingstone Bramble. COLLEGE FOOTBALL The winners Brigham Young: 13-0 record, the only unbeaten Division I-A team, ranked No. 1 at least for now. Boston College quarterback Doug Flutie, who capped one of college football's most spectacular careers (11,317 total yards offense) with his most spectacular play, a last-second TD bomb to beat Miami, 47-45.

Texas Christian: One of the great form reversals, going from 1-8-2 in 1983 to 8-3 in 1984 to earn the school's first bowl bid since 1965. Syracuse: 6-5, including a shocking upset over top-ranked Nebraska. Washington State's Rueben Mayes (NCAA record 357 yards rushing in one game). The losers Coach Charley Pell (fired) and the University of Florida (denied the Southeastern Conference championship and a trip to the Orange Bowl for breaking NCAA rules). Auburn, Miami, Nebraska, Texas, Washington and Nebraska all ranked No.

1 before suffering upset losses. Auburn's Bo Jackson and Navy's Napoleon McCallum, who had potential Heisman Trophy seasons ruined by injuries. TENNIS The winners Martina Navratilova, who ran her winning streak to 74 matches before being upset by Helena Sukova in the semifinals of the Australian Open. John McEnroe, who won Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.

The losers U.S. 1, Sweden 4 in the Davis Cup. McEnroe, suspended 21 days for gross misbehavior during a match in Stockholm. Vitas Gerulaitis, who revived the Battle of the Sexes by offering to bet his house that Navratilova couldn't beat the lOOth-ranked male pro. Chris Evert Lloyd confused the issue by saying Martina would lose to the top man.

Navratilova and her banker couldn't care less. GOLF The winners Champions Ben Crenshaw (Masters), Fuzzy Zoeller (U.S. Open), Seve Ballesteros (British Open) and Lee Trevino (PGA). Jack Nicklaus, who sank an eight-foot putt worth $240,000 on TV's Skins Game. Kathy Whitworth, who became professional golf's all-time winner by making the Rochester International her 85th LPGA victory.

Juli Inkster, the first LPGA rookie to win two major championships. The losers Golf fans in 35 percent of the country who missed Nicklaus' $240,000 putt because NBC cut away to NFL '84. HOCKEY The winners The Stanley Cup champion Edmonton Oilers and Wayne Gretzky (87 goals and 118 assists). Team Canada in the Canada Cup. Buffalo Sabres Rookie of the Year Tom Barrasso.

The losers The New York Islanders' thwarted in their bid for a fifth consecutive Stanley Cup. HORSE RACING The winners Swale, winner of the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes. Slew O' Gold, Fit to Fight and John Henry. The Breeder's Cup: seven races for $10 million. The losers Probably the Maktoum Brothers, who paid a record $6 million for broodmare, Princeless Fame, in foal to Seattle Slew.

Swale, who died eight days after winning the Belmont Stakes. OTHER SPORTS The winaers The four VS. gold medalists at the Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia: Phil Mahre, Debbie Armstrong, Scott Hamilton and Bill Johnson. Brent Musburger million per year). Edwin Moses: Sullivan Award.

Billiards champions Steve Mizerak and Jean Balukas. tndy 509 champion Rick Mean and Grand Prix champion Niki Lauda. Top money winners Terry Labonte (NASCAR), Mario Andretti (CART), Tom Watson (PGA), Betsy KitlgjrfJLfGA), Mark Roth (PBA), Slew O' Geld. (thoroughbred), and On The Road Again (harness racing). Sportsman of the Year Peter Ueberroth (The Sporting News); Cart Lewis (European Associated Press); and Edwin Moses (Sports Illustrated); and Sportswoman of the Year Mary Lou Retton (Sports Illustrated).

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1985 S3 MM 9 WITH COUPON 5X WITH 4,4 coupon Ck MM 1IM ol V. EPS JAM S. IMS in a VI EE Cssh sluc 1IS0 Ta .17.1 aw.a.4h MM MM Bk MM as-sass ti-iT. i it ii i i nils trJ Mm (-t-JfJ rw rl5 to help you with your home I till I 1 I 1 1 'V yWj2 HX PROJECTS! i HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTER Copyright 1985 PAY 'N PAK STORES. INC.

SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH JAN. 5. 1985 0UI POLICY: "Each af thast advertiietf items is raguKad ts bs rudily availaM tor saM ft ar belew th advertised erica ia each Pay Pak stem Kstsd aicapt at specificaHy Mtad i. this id. Suggested list ericas i rira hut ara aravidad far arici SUNDAY 10 A.M.

TO 5 P.M. 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. SATURDAY 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

cemnaritan snapping pvrpeses snh Soma Kami i NO SALES TO to finish "nderstanT- 1 this ad may net reflect red-ctiens tram everyday ericas, DEALERS hat It represem aa swwanomy censamer." ea 2945 LIBERTY RD. S. 581-9771.

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