Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 11, 2002, Page 6, Image 6

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Civil War
Student Ticket ■ ■
Lottery Information m. WI
Civil War Student Ticket Lottery - November 13
Lottery Sign-Ups - November 11-12
Casanova Center Ticket Office
A lottery for student tickets for the UO-OSU game in
Corvallis will be held on November 13. UO students
must sign up in person for the lottery only at the
Casanova Center Ticket Office on MONDAY,
NOVEMBER 11 and TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12.
UO student ID is required.
Winning lottery ID numbers will be posted at the Cas
Center Ticket Office and the EMU Ticket Office on
Thursday, November 14.
Lottery winners will have the opportunity to purchase a
maximum of two student tickets. Students must
present student ID to pick up and purchase tickets.
Tickets cost $30 each and can only be picked up and
paid for at the Cas Center Ticket Office. Tickets must
be paid for by Wednesday, November 20 or the tickets
will be released.
Casanova Center Ticket Office hours M-F, 9am-5pm.
For more info, please call the
Duck Ticket Office at 346-4461.
Advertise. Get Results.
Oregon Daily Emerald 346-3712
-^— -*
‘It hurts’: WSU ends streak
against frustrated Ducks
The Cougars shut down
Onterrio Smith and the Oregon
offense, 32-21, in Pullman
Adam Jude
Senior Sports Reporter
PULLMAN, Wash. —Appropriate
ly, a guy named Green buried the
Ducks at Martin Stadium on Satur
day. A guy named Gesser didn’t help
Oregon’s chances, either.
Wary of Washington State’s Heis
man candidate, senior quarterback
Jason Gesser, the Ducks forgot about
the Cougars’ running back, Jermaine
Green. Gesser threw for 277 yards
and four touchdowns while Green
gained 180 yards on 25 carries as the
No. 3 Cougars (9-1 overall, 6-0 Pacif
ic-10 Conference) ended a four-game
losing skid to the Ducks with a 32-21
win in front of37,600 fans.
Offensively, the No. 23 Ducks (7-3,
3-3) totaled just 252 yards, their lowest
output of the season, including a dis
mal two-yard effort in the third quar
ter. Onterrio Smith, who snuck up on
the Cougars for a school-record 285
yards here last year, took the brunt of
the WSU beating Saturday, as he end
ed up with a season-low 64 yards on 25
carries and two nagging injuries.
“This is very difficult to take,” said
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Oregon quarterback Jason Fife, who
was 16-of-35 for 192 yards with one
touchdown and one interception.
“The (Oregon) defense did every
thing it needed to. The offense was
just ineffective today. A lot of that in
effectiveness falls on me.”
For three quarters, the Oregon de
fense seemed to do it all — including
the offense. Junior comerback Steven
Moore, on a blitz in the first quarter,
swiped the ball out of Gesser’s hands
and ran 12 yards the other way for
Oregon’s first touchdown. On the sec
ond play of the second half junior line
backer Kevin Mitchell intercepted a
Gesser pass and returned it 20 yards
for a score to give Oregon a 21 -17 lead.
“Our defense played with great
character,” Oregon head coach Mike
Bellotti said. “They scored two
touchdowns and gave us a chance to
win the game.”
But Oregon’s defensive 11 could
only play like 22 for so long. After hold
ing the Cougars to just a field goal in
three straight possessions that started
in Oregon territory in the third quar
ter, the Duck “D” bent in the end.
Washington State 6-foot-6 receiver
Mike Bush beat freshman comer Mar
ques Binns for a jump ball in the end
zone to give the Cougars a 26-21 lead
with 8:56 left. Less than a minute later,
Binns was again beat — this time by
Devard Darling for a 46-yard score —
though that play was a bit out of the or
dinary. Binns made a nice play to tip
the ball, but it bounced up and fell into
Darling’s hands.
“This is very frustrating,” said sen
ior receiver Jason Willis, who had his
first career touchdown catch in 87
career receptions, which turned out
to be Oregon’s only offensive score.
“This is the first time I’ve lost to WSU.
It hurts. It hurts a lot.”
With two games remaining — the
home finale Saturday against Wash
ington and the Civil War in Corvallis
— the Ducks stand in fifth place in
the Pac-10, and are projected to go to
the Las Vegas Bowl on Dec. 25.
Smith, who sat out of the Stanford
game last week with a minor knee in
jury, was poked in the eye during
Oregon’s first drive Saturday. As he
was escorted off the field, Cougar fans
cheered. He also injured his foot in
the second quarter, and took just
three handoffs in the second half.
“That was without class,” Bellotti
said of WSU fans’ cheerful reaction to
Smith’s first-quarter injury. “This is the
only stadium where I’ve heard some
one cheer when a player got hurt. ”
Contact the senior sports reporter
at adamjude@dailyemerald.com.
Basketball
continued from page 5
parts of their game. They wanted to
dominate defensively, control the re
bounding and run the basketball.
Based on the statistical sheet, Ore
gon accomplished its goals.
“Obviously, the competition wasn’t
great, but we achieved all of our goals,”
Williams said. “This game wasn’t nec
essarily about our competition, but
the goals we set for ourselves. ”
Even though the game doesn’t
count in the standings or team
records, the 100 points scored repre
sents Oregon’s highest point total
since the 1998-99 campaign when the
Ducks dropped 106 against UCLA.
“We were up by 50, so we had to
look forward to something,”
Williams said. “I guess 100 points
was that.”
Kraayeveld made the team’s first
point of the season with a layup at
the 15-second mark, then followed
that up with a carbon-copy play just
a minute later.
Less than 30 seconds later, sen
ior Alissa Edwards began Oregon’s
night from beyond the arc with her
first 3-pointer of the year, making
the score 7-0.
Fittingly, Kraayeveld scored the
Ducks’ final points on its 20-0 run
with 14:59 left in the first stanza.
Horsholm’s Bess Greenberg ended
Oregon’s domination with a jumper
at 14:37, but it hardly mattered there
on out as the Ducks ended the half
with a 58-19 lead.
Contact the sports reporter
at hankhager@dailyemerald.com.
Soccer
continued from page 5
close so many times,” senior forward
Amanda Orand said. “It was a very
emotional game for us; it was at night,
and it was our last game. We wanted
to go out strong and had a lot of op
portunities. It just didn’t fall our way.”
Oregon ends the season at 2-14-2
overall and 1-7-1 in the Pacific-10
Conference. For Orand and Peters,
along with seniors Sarah Denner,
Lindsey Peterson and Robi Thayer, it
was the last time the five Ducks would
step on the field of battle for Oregon.
“It’s like it has kind of hit me but
it hasn’t totally hit me yet,” Peters
said. “It’s the last time that I’ll ever
step on the field in an Oregon uni
form, and it’s kind of sad and upset
ting, but even though our record
doesn’t show it, we played hard this
season, and it’s a great team.”
Contact the sports reporter
at jessethomas@dailyemerald.com.
Classifieds
To place an ad, call (541) 3464343 or stop by Room 300 Erb Memorial Union
E-mail: classads@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www.dailyemerald.com
Room 300, Erb Memorial Union, PO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403
100 LOST & FOUND
Black, short-hair, neutered male cat
found at Westmoreland on Nov. 2nd.
Call 484-6733.
105 TYPING/RESUME SERVICES,
At 344-0759, ROBIN is GRAD
SCHOOL APPROVED. 30-year the
sis/dissertation background. Term
papers. Full resume service. Editing.
Laser pr. ON CAMPUS!
120 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
LOVE BEER?
Click here! www.BrewFast.com
Home brewing and kegglng equip
ment. New and used. Have fun and
save money too! 915-9572
Vintage hide-a-bed couch, great
shape, you haul, $50; 70’s stereo +
turntable, works great, $30; Ladies,
Murray spectra 10 speed bike, $30.
461-1836.
Emerald City Comics
Your store for comics, games,
Anime. 770 E. 13th 345-2568.
130 CARS/TRUCKS/CYCLES
‘83 Oldsmobile Firenza. Runs well
but needs some work. Approximate
ly 100,000 mi. $600 obo. 461-6034.
1976 4x4 Blazer Chalet. Runs
great. New tires, exhaust & brakes.
Pop-top camper. $3600. 344-8629.
140 BICYCLES
New Mongoose Rogue free style
BMX bike. Gyro, pegs, upgrades.
$175 offer. 344-8629 or 729-3399.
175 WANTED
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work. Need female models, 18-30.
Send photo and phone number to:
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The Oregon Daily Emerald assumes no
liability for ad content or response. Ads are
screened for illegal content and mail order
ads must provide a sample of item for sale.
Otherwise, ads that appear too good to be
true, probably are.
Respond at your own risk.
205 HELP WANTED
Now hiring - ASUO Rental Infor
mation Webmaster. $7/ hour. Job
description and application available
in ASUO Executive Office, Suite 4,
EMU. Deadline: November 20, 5
pm. An Affirmative Action Equal Op
portunity American with Disabilities
Act Employer (AA/EDE/ADA).
PT $14.95/hr. possible. Prepare
mailings, flexible hours. No selling.
Only serious apply. 626-821-4035.
Bartenders needed. No experience
necessary. Make up to $300 a day.
Call 1-866-291-1884 ext. U223
Is Aries due for
a pay raise?
HOROSCOPE.
ODE. CLASSIFIEDS
!05 HELP WANTED
Graphic designer wanted
The Oregon Daily Emerald seeks a
motivated, creative student to join its
staff as graphic designer. Qualified
applicants will: be currently enrolled
University of Oregon students, have
familiarity with QuarkExpress, Pho
toshop, and Illustrator/ Freehand,
and have some experience with
newspaper design. As a salaried
employee, hours will vary, but the
applicant must be available to work
about 15 hours per week.
We are an equal opportunity em
ployer and encourage everyone to
apply. Applications can be picked up
at the Emerald office, EMU, suite
300. Include a resume a five exam
ples of your work. Applications are
due by 5 p.m., Friday, Nov. 15.
Movie Extras -Models Needed
No exp. necessary. Earn up to $150
$450/day, 1-900-814-0277 ext. 923