999 without crashes or injuries Jfsdbmrt not DUIs and MIPS J® not having our friends die not destroying it B&OO Office of Student Life University of Oregon It's about iOuQyD alcohol or not drinking at all ■ '»«« ■ . ■ -.. -i.-j-i—:—• * v v'—L_ Blazers beat Jazz; want LA* By Landon Hall The Associated Press PORTLAND, Ore. — The Utah Jazz can flail and fume, but they just can’t push the Portland Trail Blazers around anymore. Arvydas Sabonis and Rasheed Wallace each scored 17 points as Portland withstood a tumultuous fourth quarter to beat Utah 101 92 Sunday, the Blazers’ 11th straight victory. “You know what’s going to happen with Utah: There’s going to be a lot of pushing and shov ing, a lot of flopping,” Portland’s Detlef Schrempf said. “We let them get back a little closer than we wanted, but we got the W.” Steve Smith added 16 points and Damon Stoudamire had 15 for the Blazers, who have won 17 of 18 overall and 16 straight at home. As the final seconds ticked off, the sellout crowd chanted “Beat L.A.!” The Blazers play host to the Los Angeles Lakers on Tues day in a showdown between the teams with the league’s best records. “This was the perfect way for us to get focused on the Laker game,” Stoudamire said. “This should be a carryover to the Tues day night game. We’re just going to let it all ride on Tuesday.” Counting last year’s playoff se ries win, the Blazers have beaten the Jazz nine out of the last 10 times at the Rose Garden. Port land leads the season series 2-1, and the play one more time — April 10 at Utah, where the Blaz ers have lost 12 of their last 13. Karl Malone and Bryon Russell scored 23 points each to lead Utah. But it was Malone’s physi cal play in the fourth quarter that stirred up the Blazers and started the Jazz unraveling. Utah closed to 82-79 on a dunk by Greg Ostertag with 7:58 to go, but after a turnover Malone got tangled up with Portland’s Bonzi Wells and threw him to the floor. Wells jumped up and bumped Malone in the chest, and the two were quickly separated. “That was a tryout for the WWF, that takedown,” Blazers coach Mike Dunleavy said of Malone’s move. Both were assessed a technical foul, and the Blazers got a jumper from Greg Anthony and a put back by Wallace to take an 86-79 lead with 5:31 left. A short time later, Ostertag was ejected after a tussle with Smith. Ostertag thought he was fouled by Smith, and the two glared at each other. They exchanged words, then Ostertag grabbed onto Smith. Teammates, coaches and officials immediately jumped in, and the two were separated after Smith had his hands around Ostertag’s face and neck. “We just hooked up. He didn’t want to let it go,” Smith said. “He gave me a stare, so I started laugh ing.” Ostertag had gotten a technical in the second quarter for angrily bouncing the ball, and his second earned him an automatic ejec tion. Smith’s jumper with four min utes left made it a 10-point lead, but he fell backwards over John Stockton and was helped off the court with a slightly sprained left foot. Portland, leading the NBA in field goal shooting, shot nearly 49 percent.