SPORTS rHoto It* vtn rtMlun lunior Matt l.aBountv Hacks lJCLA quarterback Tommy Maddox in the closing set.onds ot Satur day's contest, a 28-24 victory for the Ducks as toe Farweel (511 and Marcus Woods close in. riMMo n» t ru f » «m Senior quarterback Bill Mustirave ended his canter at Aut/en stadium with a 19-1 home record, the best in Oregon history. Seniors happy with victory in last home game of season By Paul Morgan Emerald Sports Reporter Oregon’s 28-2-1 victory over UCLA Saturday is not the last game of the season, but the se niors on this year's squad hid a fond farewell to Autzen Stadi um and the fans that helped the Ducks post an undefeated home record. "We're never going to hear that kind of crowd noise tie hind us again." senior split end Joe Reitzug said. "The peo ple here are great fans and that was apparent today." The Ducks ended their home season with a 7-0 record, and will start next season with a nine-game home winning streak Oregon is 21-7 at home since 1‘iHti, when many of this year’s seniors were first don ning Duck uniforms "We expect to win in this stadium." senior tackle Todd Kaanapu said. "This win is fantastic 1 couldn't ask for it to end a better way As senior offensive guard Andy Sunia walked down the breezewav toward the Oregon lot kerrooin. tears welled m his eyes. "It feels great to know that I can look hack in 10 years and say I never lost here as a se nior." he explained later. "It’s a great honor.” liut sentimental emotions about the last game at Autzen were not totally apparent in the faces of all Oregon seniors. Quarterback Bill Musgrave, who finished with a 19-1 home record in games he started and finished and was perhaps the driving force behind Oregon's success over the last three years, was as calm and busi nesslike as usual. "I'm kind of thinking aliout California right now.” he said, alluding to Oregon's contest next weekend at Cal. However. Musgrave did take a quick moment to reflect on his last home game. "Well, when we were walk ing out for the coin toss Rory Dairy turned to me and said 'You know it’s really hitting me that this is our last game here.' Then I said. 'I know, don't say it.' Hut he was right, you know, and it was hitting me right then too that this was the last time out there in front of a full stadium." And how about after the name? "We couldn't just sit out there and enjoy it." Musgrave said. "It was a tough game and we really had to battle. We’re all pretty much shaking inside right now. because when you battle like that il takes a while to recover." The same cannot he said for the Oregon fans, though, who gave the senior quarterback a standing ovation when his name was announced before the game. Musgrave was shghtlv off on Ins passing all day ■ and admitted after the game that he "didn't feel that (treat, even in warm-ups." But lie came thruu({h like he has so many times for the Ducks on the game-winning drive with time Turn to SENIORS, Page 14 Hill I! THAN HIIIA I TNI TO tOOITC • U C N A MMATIVt TMAM FATIMA AIM — W t M M I f MANOCl A “There was no better person to write such a narrative than Fatima Meer” ■Winnie Mandela i FATIMA MEER WILL BE SIGNING HER BOOK HIGHER THAN HOPE The Authorized Biography of Nelson Mandela FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9 12:30-1:30 P.M. AT THE UO BOOKSTORE SECOND FLOOR ^ | elson Mandela is the most important po IVI litical prisoner of our time. Yet although | his name and message are well known, tne man behind them is not. He has been kept from the South African public and the world for a quarter of a century. This is a dramatic and in timate biography, which draws on letters and reminiscences from Mandela himself and from his close family. Fatima Meer, a friend of Man dela’s for many years and a professor of soci ology, has provided a meticulously researched and passionately written account of a man who, more than almost anyone, can claim to have made African history. 13th & Kmcaid M F 7 30 6 00 SAT 10 00 6 00 346 4331 Pairi* 11