November 15,16,17 8 PM Arena Theatre 104 Villard No Late Seating/ No Exceptions Original One Act Plays FREE PHONES! A few doors from the UO Bookstore 1 year contract • No roaming and long distance within united States'.' . ‘ Some restrictions apply. Subjeet to phone avaiIIability; fl+ Wireless 841 E.13th Ave. COME IN AND CALL YOUR § FRIENDS § Heading out of town for the holidays? D©oDtt w@rry We buy texts throughout the year at both stores 768 East 1 3th Ave. 345-1651 525 Willamette St. 343-4717 please recycle this paper! Adam Jones Emerald Oregon linebacker Kevin Mitchell, pictured in front of the Casanova Center, wants to be a K-9 cop when he graduates. Just like a game ■Kevin Mitchell has tackled tougher stuff in his life than Oregon’s football opponents By Eric Martin Oregon Daily Emerald T n 1997, Oregon linebacker Kevin Mitchell and his friend, Gerrard Fame, arrived at Fame’s JL Santa Ana, Calif., home as a man leapt over a fence carrying a VCR under his arm. Faine ran inside to call the police, certain his VCR had been stolen, while Mitchell took off in pursuit. Mitchell chased the burglar down an alley, through a strip mall and across an intersection as sports sedans and SUVs rushed by. He tackled the man on the far side of the street and wres tled to hold him down for five min utes until police responded to the scene. It was a little after 7:30 p.m. “The police were saying to the man, ‘You let a high school kid catch you?’” recalls Mitchell’s mother, Betsy. “Kevin was 17 years old at the time. It turns out (the bur glar) was a third-strike case, and they put him away for a long time. ” Many Pacific-10 Conference wide receivers and running backs could share in the burglar’s pain. Mitchell has put vicious hits on them as a sec ond-year linebacker for the Ducks. But his instinct to see justice served comes from a life spent with family friends who serve in the Los Angeles Police Department and the Orange County Sheriffs Department. His mother works in the training academy of the sheriff’s department, and Mitchell would listen to presen tations on gangs > cults and drugs while he waited for rides home. He says those early experiences fueled his desire to work in law en forcement when he finishes school. “It’s an eye-opener,” Mitchell said of the tribulations police officers deal with on a daily basis. “I knew these things were out there, but it’s an eye-opener.” But Mitchell doesn’t look like av erage cop material. He sports a goat ee and has four tattoos, including a multi-colored number on his left arm that reads, “Trust No One.” In side the tattoo are the names of his parents and other family members. He says he got the tattoo because he’s seen a harsher side of life. One that is dangerous. Unpredictable. Those who have known him say his intensity and desire to succeed will take him as far as he’s willing to work in whatever career he choos es to pursue. “There’s not a lot of compromis ing about the young man,” says Bruce Rollinson, head football coach at Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, Calif., where Mitchell at tended and played. “There’s not a lot of acceptance for less than per fection. He joked with the best of them, don’t get me wrong. But that kind of leadership permeated on this defense. He led them.” Mitchell says Mater Dei — a pre dominantly Catholic school of 2,200 students—was hard to adjust to, especially since he was not raised Catholic. “I got sent to the office a lot,” Mitchell says. “It would be because I forgot to shave, and my facial hair was too long. “But it would only be this long,” he says, rubbing a hand across the stubble on his cheeks. “Basically, I had to conform.” Motivational speeches from Rollinson didn’t hurt, either. “Yeah,” Rollinson says. “I can re member saying, ‘Look son, you’re not a bad kid. It’s just a different set of standards here, and you’ve got to live up to them. It’s just like a game. And the rules of this game are you get your shirt tucked in and get to class on time.’” Mitchell’s experiences have taught him to be himself, because living up to another person’s expec tations can’t make him happy. “I’m gonna wear my jeans and my steel-toed boots,” Mitchell says. “That’s just my style. ” Eric Martin is a higher education reporterfor the Oregon Daily Emerald. He can be reached at ericmartin@dailyemerald.com. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY %ers GIFT SHOW 'Pacific Northwest tHattd- Crafted Sirt and Gfijts Featuring nature-inspired glass bowls, beadwork, slate clocks, cedar baskets, and other hand-crafted items! Friday, November 16, noon-7:00 p.m. and Saturday, November 17, noon-5:00 p.m. Museum of Natural History ■ 1680 East 15th Avenue near Agate Street ■ naturaUhistory.uoregon.edu ■ (541) 346-1809 PRL SERVES V.'NKJARS ' St ARK ' FRUIT > PLANTS LAVENDER GARLIC NURSERY SQUASH PLANTS PEARS PRESERVES MUSHROOMS JAMS r Frit your pantry with the bounty of the county «f find that perfect gift from a local farm at the HOLIDAY FARMERS' MARKET in the Exhibit Hall of the Lane County Fairgrounds Starting November 17th & 18th OPEN 10 am - 6 pm Come find the Holiday Formers' Market in HARVEST HALL featuring the finest selection of locally grown products and farm crafts for all your holiday gift giving and dinner tables! ALSO OPEN Thanksgiving Weekend, November 23rd, 24* A 25*; AND December l*& 2* 8* A 9*f 15* A 16* and 2122^, 23* A 24* * FUSE ADMISSION * FREE PARKING * FREE MUSIC FOR MORE INFORMATION or PRODUCT AVAILA&ILTY, CALL (541) 431-4923 APPLES ' WREATHS JAMS PICK LINOS HONEYS NURSERY MUSHROOMS WREATHS CRANBERRIES ■ LOTIONS OILS fRUIT PLANTS Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. The unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. NEWSROOM — (541)346-5511 Editor in chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing editor Michael J. Kieckner Student Activities: Beata Mostafavi, editor. 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