YOU WANT TO CHANGE THINGS. Application Deadline: February 21st Open House Erb Memorial Union • Rogue Room Tuesday, January 29 12:30-2:00 p.m. food provided TEACH FOR AMERICA IS THE NATIONAL CORPS THAT CALLS UPON OUTSTANDING AND DIVERSE RECENT COLLEGE GRADUATES TO COMMIT TWO YEARS TO TEACH IN URBAN AND RURAL PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND BECOME LIFELONG LEADERS IN ENSURING THAT ALL OF OUR NATION’S CHILDREN HAVE AN EQUAL CHANCE IN LIFE. No previous education coursework required. Full teacher salary and benefits. TEACHFORAMERICA www.teachforamerica.org ■ Women continued from page 5A Arizona, at 2,112, is fourth, fol lowed by UCLA, Oregon State, Ari zona State and USC. California is ninth at 894 fans per game, while Washington State at tracts a measly 403 fans per game at Friel Court. Cal is 1-8 in conference play, Washington State is 0-11. Is it a coincidence that these two squads are at the bottom of the bar rel in conference play? Probably not. Stanford and Ore gon have traditionally attracted the largest crowds and have been the most successful in recent years. California and Washington State have not gotten the masses’ atten tion and haven’t played on the court that well, either. Stanford dominates Stanford is running away with the Pac-10 title. The Cardinal, 10-0 in league play (20-1 overall), leads in nearly every statistical Pac-10 category. At 81.4 points per game, Stan ford paces the conference by sev en points in that category, yet al lows its opponents just 61.8 points per game. That figure places the Cardinal at third in the conference. The No. 1 and No. 2 squads in that category? California is first at 58 points al lowed per game, while Arizona State closely follows them at 61.2. The Stanford red has closely re sembled a stoplight this season. Not many teams have been able to make a dent in the Cardinal’s armor and only a few squads have finished the game within 10 points of Stanford. Stanford’s only loss came to then-No. 2 Tennessee, 68-62, al most two months ago. After a 76-62 loss to the No. 3 Cardinal last week, Arizona head coach Joan Bonvicini had nothing but praise for Stanford. “This is Stanford’s best team in five or six years,” she told the Asso ciated Press. “Who knows what will happen down the road? “Stanford has so many weapons and if you make a mistake, they can convert. It’s not only the starters. They have people coming off the bench doing things. They have a shot to do damage in the tournament because they have good depth.” If there was a chink in Stanford’s armor, it would have to be the team’s depth in the backcourt. They can play with most teams in the conference but do not often domi nate; however, they were good enough to contain Edniesha Curry and Shaquala Williams when the Ducks visited Palo Alto, Calif., ear lier this month. But if a team messes with the Stanford frontcourt, they’re bound to get burned. Nicole Powell and Lindsey Yamasaki are top players in the conference, and are key to the Cardinal’s success. In fact, Yamasaki was so good last week against the Arizona schools, she was named the Pac-10 Player of the Week. The Oregon City, Ore., native averaged 24.5 points per game, including 27 points against Arizona State. E-mail sports reporter Hank Hager at hankhager@dailyemerald.com. Phi Delta Theta The Standard for Brotherhood “There are those who join organizations, and then there are those who start them. ” Do you have what it takes to be a Founding Father? FIND OUT. 013339 IF INTERESTED, please contact Jason Julian at jason@phideltatheta.org or (541) 342-2873, or visit our web page at www.geocities.com/PDTatOregon/