Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 01, 2000, Page 10, Image 10

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    Golfers swingin> in Hawaii
■ Oregon women’s golf plays
two rounds well on the first
day of the Rainbow Wahine •
Fall Classic
By Peter Hockaday
Oregon Daily Emerald
After a day at the Rainbow
Wahine Fall Golf Classic, the Ore
gon women’s golf team is figuring
out that experience pays off.
After two rounds at the Hawaii
hosted tournament, the Ducks are
in seventh place and six strokes
out of sixth.
Oregon shares seventh place
with Idaho and San Jose State, but
the Ducks are three strokes ahead
of lOth-place Long Beach State.
Oregon hasn’t finished higher
than eighth at a tournament yet
this season.
The Ducks were tied with San
Francisco for fourth place after the
first 18-hole round, in which they
shot a 309, their second-lowesl
single round or the year. But then
Oregon shot a 319 through the
second round to drop to seventh.
Individually, senior Jerilyn
White paced the Ducks through
two rounds with a 155, good
enough for 20th. Junior Cathy
Cho, who attended Hawaii for two
years before coming to Oregon,
shot a 157 and placed 29th.
Seniors Julia Smith, Dawn
Berry and Claire Hunter also
placed for the Ducks. Smith
placed 37th, Berry was 50th and
Hunter finished 54th.
White had the second-best score
of the morning’s round, a two
over-par 74. It was the Salem na
tive’s best first-round score of the
season.
Oregon head coach Shannon
Rouillard took the most experi
enced lineup possible to Hawaii
this week, stocking the team with
four seniors and a junior.
Cho and White have played in
every tournament this season,
Hunter has played in all but one
{ C Oregon head coach
Shannon Rouillard took
the most experienced
lineup possible to Hawaii
this week, stocking
the team with four seniors
and a junior. yy
tournament, and Berry and Smith
have three tournaments’ worth of
experience together.
Noticeably missing from the
Ducks’ lineup this week is fresh
man Katharina Schallenberg. The
newcomer has played in every
tournament so far this season and
has the lowest stroke average to
date.
The Ducks will finish play at
the Rainbow Wahine Fall Classic
today with one 18-hole round. It
will be the golfers’ last round of
the fall, and they will resume play
again in February.
Injured Blazers drop
opener to Los Angeles
By Landon Hall
The Associated Press
PORTLAND— Shaquille O’Neal
was his old overpowering self, and
Isaiah Rider showed he might be a
new man.
O’Neal had 36 points and 11 re
bounds, and Rider showed up his
old teammates in the fourth quar
ter as the Lakers began defense of
their title by holding off the Port
land Trail Blazers 96-86 Tuesday
night.
Rasheed Wallace scored 26
points to lead the Blazers, and
Steve Smith had 22.
Portland’s Scottie Pippen
sprained his left ankle in the first
quarter and didn’t return.
In the most eagerly anticipated of
the 13 opening-night NBA games,
the teams failed to live up to the
drama of their last meeting, when
the Blazers blew a 15-point fourth
quarter lead in Game 7 of the West
ern Conference finals last June and
lost 89-84.
Smith s layup got the Blazers
within 72-71 with 9:17 remaining,
but the Lakers ran off six straight
points. Rider, signed by the Lakers
for the minimum of $700,000 after
being waived by Atlanta last sea
son, elevated on a 13-foot jumper
to give Los Angeles a 78-71 lead.
Rider nailed a 3-pointer to make
it 85-77 with 3:32 left, and his
trash-talking to ex-teammate Bonzi
Wells got him a technical. Rider,
booed by the sellout crowd before
the game, smiled broadly at fans af
ter he stole the ball from Greg An
thony and got an easy dunk.
The Blazers, who bulked up by
adding Shawn Kemp and Dale
Davis specifically with the idea of
stopping O’Neal, got little produc
tion at either end of the floor from
their big men. Kemp had four
points on 2-of-9 shooting and com
mitted four fouls in just 12 min
utes; Davis had two points on 1-of
4 shooting and had five fouls to go
with six rebounds.
Call (541) 346 4343
or stop by Room 300 Erb Memorial Union
to place your ad today.
P.O. Box 3159 Eugene, OR 97403
E-mail: classads@oregon.uoregon.edu
On-line edition: www.dailyemerald.com
WALLY ON THE INTERNET
partypics.com
PASSWORD: UOGREEKS
095 PERSONALS
Eugene’s Coolest Party Line!!!
Dial: 74-Party
Ads * Jokes * Stories & More!
Free Call! *18+ *Try it NOW!!!
Found 10/30, 20th & Alder. 2 large
dogs. Shepherd/Rotti mixed, tan, un
neutered male. 683-6103.
FOUND: Gorgeous scarf. Found the
night of 10/27 at 13th & Alder. Call
686-8119 to describe.
VOTE
Drop your ballot in the
World’s Biggest Ballot Box
follow signs to drop location on EMU concourse
Horoscope by Linda C. Black
skills and acquire some new ones. The more
you learn, the more confident you'll become.
Worries lead to action in November. You have
enough money to make a big change in Decem
ber. Experience is your best teacher in January.
Dreams may seem to fall apart in February. In
late May and June, the outcome's not as expect
ed; it's tetter. Destiny calls you in July, and new
skills lead to great new friends around Septem
To get the advantage, check the day's rating; 10
is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) —Today is a 5 —
Hold your cards close to your chest. Somebody
would love to know your strategy, but that's not
a great idea. Truth is you might not even have
one. Maybe you should. Give it some thought.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7
— Once you and your partner reach an agree
ment, the job's more than halfway done. The
other person's finding something hard to say.
Ask questions, or you might not discover what
GEMINI (May 21 -June 21)—Today is a 4 —
The less said at work, the tetter. Even messages
will get garbled. Check all correspondence for
typos before sending them out. If you tear or
read something that doesn't seem right, call the
CANCER (June 22-July 22)—Today is a 7 —
You and a loved one have big plans, but more
money's required. If your first attempt to find it
doesn't work, try again. The idea that eventually
pays off is one you've used before. Use your ex
perience and be assertive.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)—Today is a 6—You
do the work, but are you getting the money? Do
the people who sign the checks know how
tough this job is? They'll only know if you tell
them, but don’t complain. Think of another way
to let them know, and more riches could be
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)—Today is a 7 —
If you're having a hard time getting your mean
uig across, relax, i ne otner person might be
having a hard time listening! A loved one with
lots of experience can be a big help now. He or
she can take a more direct route than you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Today is a 5 —
Something you're worrying about may come to
pass. No need fighting it; be assertive instead.
Buy what you need to solve a problem at home.
You already know what it is, so make the deci
sion and take action. You'll feel better later.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7
—You're a lot stronger than you think you are.
You'll get help from a friend just when you need
it most, too. Be sure to let the person, who's
waiting for the thumbs-up from you, know
when to move.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today
is a 6 —You might make a good deal if you can
keep your mouth shut. Saying the wrong thing's
the best way to get into trouble with an edgy
perfectionist. Concentrate on doing the job
that's in front of you, the way it's always been
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) —Today is
an 8 — You've got influential friends in the
right places. One might even owe you a favor.
Don’t ask for money. That's about the only thing
they won't provide. One might set you up with a
good blind date, though, if you're interested.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 6
— Don't believe everything you hear, even
from an influential older person. Keep your ex
pectations low so you won't be disappointed if
what you’re being offered turns out to be more
illusion than reality. Do the homework to get
the real thing.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)—Today isa7 —
Somebody's trying to tell you something. Fig
uring it out is today's assignment. Something’s
in the way, like emotions or anger. Ignore that
if you can, and what you finally learn could be
valuable. The exercise is good for you, too.
105 TYPING/RESUME SERVICES
At 344-0759, ROBIN is GRAD
SCHOOL APPROVED. 20-year the
sis/dissertation background. Term
papers. Full resume service. Editing.
Laser pr. ON CAMPUS!
Belly dancing classes offered.
All ages welcome. If interested
call Sienna at 434-6129
Calculus homework?
Get any derivitive...each step...
explained...automatically, 24/7.
www.calc101.com FREE!
ENGLISH TUTOR
Private/group lessons, paper editing.
Reasonable rates. Cynthia 334-6231
Wednesday Is New Comic Day
at Emerald City Comics.
770 E. 13th. 345-2568.
1?0 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Awesome set of 16” wheels and per
formance tires. 4 mo. old. $650/offer
484-9688
“Give Me Five!*
Run your “FOR SALE” ad (items
under $1,000) for 5 days, if the
item(s) doesn’t sell, call us at
346-4343 and we’ll run your ad
again for another 5 days FREE!
Student/Private Party Ads Only«No Refunds ^
2 Civil War tickets for sale. Call
998-3409 or 870-0899 (cell), leave
message.
130 CARS/TRUCKS
‘89 blue Mazda 626, 5-dr, manual,
radio/cassette, 148k, great mpg,
new brakes, $2000 obo, 434-1887.
GRE / GMAT test prep
To register, call 346 3226 Workshop includes
or stop by the ALS office: materials, instruction and
at 68 plc access to CBT practice exams
Can't come up with
anything better than a
card and balloons?
Try a Display Classified
Birthday Greeting.
% OFF
Minimum size 1x2.
Offer good one time only.
Expires: 12/04/00
Oregon Daily Emerald
Suite 300 EMU • 346-4343
1
Q
I_i
J
130 CARS/TRUCKS
1985 HONDA ACCORD. 5-speed,
Runs shockingly well. $1900
Call 338-4902 (leave message)
'88 Honda CRX SI, 2-seater, red,
Needs nothing. 118,000 miles.
$4000 firm. Call 431-1115.
135 MOTORCYCLES/SCOOTERS
2 Suzuki FA50’s. 1987. Driven about
200 miles each. Excellent condition.
$400 each. Call 688-8105.
BACKTO SCHOOL COMPUTERS
HP-200 w/monitor, $295. 600-$695,
733-$995. Also laptops, printers,
monitors internet ready. 744-9195.
www.ComputeForLess.com
IBM Think Pad lap top computer.
Assorted software. $800.
689-8418, Kristin
150 TV & SOUND SYSTEMS
CASH! We Buy, Sell & Service VHS
VCR's & Stereos. Thompson Elec
tronics, 1122 Oak, 343-9273
RELAX from studies.
Enjoy learning guitar, piano, bass.
All styles. John Sharkey. 342-9543.
Used snowboard For Sale.
145 Morrow w/bindings. $120.
434-1747
175 WANTED
Need extra money? Sell me your
Duck tickets. PG (503) 788-7087
190 OPPORTUNITIES
SEEKING VOLUNTEER
The Oregon Daily Emerald, the in
dependent student newspaper at
the University of Oregon, is seek
ing a volunteer to serve on its
Board of Directors.
The Board meets monthly (except
during December, July and Au
gust) to oversee broad policy is
sues including financial, legal and
personnel matters. It does not get
involved in day-to-day operations,
and it is not involved in content de
cisions. m
This three-year term is open to
any community member, including
a student, faculty member, or em
ployee of the University of Oregon.
To express your interest in the po
sition, please send a cover letter
and one-page resume to:
OREGON DAILY EMERALD
Board Search Committee
P.O.Box 3159
Eugene, OR 97403
Deadline for applications is
Wednesday, November 8,2000.
The Oregon Daily Emerald is an
equal opportunity employer com
mitted to culturally diverse work
place.
205 HELP WANTED
Appointment setters for carpet
cleaning. PT, $20/appt. Hours 10
2pm or 4-8pm. Avg. 10-20 weekly.
689-5402.
Assist disabled man, $10/hr. 1-2 hrs
mornings. Strength & height a plus.
344-3800.
Find (QQqJL stuff in the ODE
Classifieds
To register, call 346-3226
or stop by the ALS office:
at 68 PLC