Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, June 05, 2002, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    2002
UO Summer
Session Classes Begin
June 24.
Book Your Summer in Oregon
Pick up your free summer catalog today in the Summer Session office, 333
Oregon Hall, or at the UO Bookstore. You can speed your way toward
graduation by taking required courses during summer.
University of Oregon Summer Session
http://uosummer.uoregon.edu/
r
/f' M' M' r i ' M' M' M' "I"1 '»
k. /(' / / /|V /|\ /1 v /|V /j\ /)' /)'
t
r Customer Service / Sales
f
l 50+ Years in Business
r No Experience Necessary,Training Provided
J $ 13" 1450 Base-Appt. (Depending on location)
t
Flexible Hours, FT & PT Openings Available
Some Internships & Scholarships Available
Conditions Apply
No Door to Door or Telephone Sales
Fun Work Environment - All Majors May Apply
/iPPLy New rcc weer starting ai iit finals
Seattle.(206) 362-1751 Yakima.(509) 469-3520
Tacoma.(253) 983-0170 Bellevue.(425) 883-3189
Everett.(425) 438-8878 Kitsap Co.(360) 692-7550
Kent/Fed. Way.(253) 840-0109 Bellingham.(360) 756-1911
Wenatchee.(509) 662-5435 Vancouver.(360) 573-1868
Olympia.(360) 2364)944 Portland.(503) 771-9931
Beaverton.(503) 892-5737 Eugene.(541) 302-3042
Bend.(541) 382-4555
www.werKferstticlents.com \
going overseas? catch the Oregon daily emerald
on the world wide web: www.dailyemerald.com
South Korea revels
in World Cup win
By Filip Bondy
New York Daily News
SEOUL, South Korea — The fans
gathered at Asian Stadium in Busan,
at Millennium Park in Seoul, turning
an entire country into a red sea of na
tional jerseys. And when South Ko
rea produced its historic 2-0 victory
over Poland on Tuesday in Busan,
the drums never stopped beating.
A lifetime of World Cup frustra
tion ended in a night of celebration,
after Guus Hiddink’s South Koreans
rode the wave of emotion to a con
vincing win. Downtown Seoul be
came a giant, joyful traffic snarl.
“This is our greatest day in sports,”
said Kim Jung, a teacher celebrating
in the makeshift parade. “We said we
would win, and then we did. ”
The South Koreans, good enough
every four years to qualify from the
weak Asian zone, had been 0-10-4 in
World Cup matches. The 15th was
the charm. They totally dominated
the hapless Poles.
Both goals were wonderful shots,
coming off pretty plays. Hwang
Sun-hong scored on a left-footed
volley in the 26th minute, from a
well-timed left-footed pass by Lee
Eul-yong. The ball curled inside the
left post, giving Poland’s respected
goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek no chance.
Yoo Sang-chul’s goal in the 53rd
minute was from a hard shot out
side the top of the box. Until this
match, the greatest moment in
South Korean soccer history had
come in 1994 at the Cotton Bowl,
20% OFF:
BLACK & WHITE
PROCESSING
3 x 5 - only $4.80
4 x 6 - only $5.59
Please allow 5- / 0 working days.
35mm film, glossy only.
Prices are for 24 exp
It
where the team came back from a
two-goal deficit in the final five
minutes to tie Spain.
The unexpectedly easy victory
suddenly put South Korea in excel
lent position to advance from Group
D into the second round. The South
Koreans next face the United States
on Monday, a match that could as
sure their success. They own a 3-1-1
edge against the Americans, but the
two teams have never met at the
World Cup.
The victory Tuesday guaranteed
the continued hero worship of Hid
dink, the famous Dutch coach who
is celebrated everywhere on local
television and on billboards. Inside
the stadium, fans draped a banner
that pleaded: “Hiddink: Make Our
Dreams Come True.”
The South Koreans succeeded,
performing at a level that only had
been expected from their own
diehard supporters. This was exact
ly what U.S. coach Bruce Arena
meant, when he had said he was
happy to avoid the Koreans in their
opening match.
Poland next faces a difficult
match against Portugal. First-round
elimination awaits them, but not for
the revelers in Seoul. By late last
night, “Pomp and Circumstance”
blared from TV sets and stereos.
The South Koreans had finally
graduated.
©2002, New York Daily News. Distributed by
Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services.
EXCITING OUTDOOR
SUMMER JOR
far Rick
Fighting Wildfires!
No exp. needed
Training Provided
Apply now!
10am-4pm
(541)746-7528
1322 N. 30th » Springfield
Be cool...
Make a better world.
RECYCLE!
Tl
ZSIHO
Oregon Research Institute
and the
UO Psychology Department
and the
Center on Diversity and Community
sponsor:
The Summer Public Health Research
Videoconference On Minority Health
June 17-21, 2002
(10:30 to 1:30 sessions each day)
UO Instructional Services
Knight Library, 1501 Kincaid-Studio A
For FREE registration contact Karen B. at (541) 484-2123,
karenb@ori.org, www.ori.org