Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 27, 2004, Page 10, Image 10

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    SPORTS BRIEFS
Stanford beats Beavers
to stay undefeated
STANFORD, Calif. — Stanford's
march to history continued Thurs
day with the passion of a team
Fighting for an NCAA tournament
bid, not one that has seemingly
locked up the No. 1 seed in the
West.
With a balanced attack, swarm
ing defense and sizzling shooting
from point guard Chris Hernan
dez, the top-ranked Cardinal pum
meled Oregon State, 73-47, at
Maples Pavilion to remain unde
feated.
Stanford is three games from be
coming the first Pacific-10 Conference
team since UCLA in 1973 — the
famed "Walton Gang" — to complete
a perfect regular season.
"After accomplishing our first goal,
to win the Pac-10, we set another: to
go undefeated for the regular season,"
forward Josh Childress said. "That's
something that can be accom
plished."
The lopsided affair allowed Coach
Mike Montgomery to rest his starters
for much of the second half. It also
gave Stanford fans a look at promis
ing freshman forward Fred Washing
ton, who scored a season-high 11
points in 13 minutes.
But not all the news was good for
the Cardinal (24-0, 15-0).
An MRI exam revealed forward
Justin Davis' left knee is not healing
quickly enough for him to play next
week in Washington. Davis, out since
Jan. 29, is now hoping to return for
the Pac-10 tournament, which begins
March 11.
That means he'll have just one week
to prepare for the NCAAs.
"I'm going to have to bust my butt
in practice to get back to where I was,"
said Davis, who has a partially torn
ligament and bruised bone.
The MRI results were the only inter
ruption in an otherwise delightful
stretch for the Cardinal.
Childress awoke Thursday to dis
cover he's one of 20 finalists for the
Naismith Award, given to the nation's
top player. In addition, Hernandez
learned he's one of 16 finalists for the
inaugural Bob Cousy Point Guard
Award.
— Jon Wilner
Knight Ridder Newspapers
If you want a
good job when
you graduate,
you need a
great job
now.
NOW HIRING!
The Oregon Daily Emerald seeks University
students to join its staff beginning spring term.
The Emerald seeks a city/state politics
reporter, a business/science/technology
reporter, a sports reporter, a commentary
columnist and a graphic designer.
ALL POSITIONS ARE PAID. Applicants must
P be enrolled at the University during time of
f employment. Ideal reporting candidates will be
journalism majors who have completed more
than just the prerequisites, or individuals with
previous newspaper experience. Reporting
candidates should possess good interviewing
skills, have tight writing and a drive for accuracy,
and have the ability to work under deadline. The
ideal design candidate will be fluent in Quark,
Photoshop, Illustrator and FreeHand. Columnist
applicants must be well-versed in opinion writing
and have a broad knowledge base.
TO APPLY:
Please submit no more than five clips, a resume
and an application to the Emerald by 5 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 27. Work samples will not be
returned.
I Oregon Daily Emerald
The Oregon Daily Emerald is an equal opportunity employer committed to cultural diversity.
hREftflN IHIlYFMFMm
your independent student newspaper
Ducks travel to Texas
The No. 17 Oregon women's soft
ball team has a weekend of second
looks ahead of it at the Texas A&M
hosted Aggie Invitational.
The Ducks face Penn State and
Southern Mississippi for the first
time this season in two games Fri
day morning. Oregon then gets a
second look at both teams with
another game against each on
Saturday.
Sunday, the Ducks play their final
game of the tournament against No.
23 Texas A&M. The Aggies beat Ore
gon, 8-3, when the squads met two
weeks ago in the Phoenix Fiesta Bowl
Tournament.
"It's how well we adjust to them
and they adjust to us," Oregon head
coach Kathy Arendsen said. "What I
like with our ballclub is that we're
able to give different looks. It's a
chance for us to flaunt that we have
an excellent pitching staff whereas
most other teams have one main
pitcher and maybe a second one
that's decent."
In Friday and Saturday's Camp
Sam’s Place
Come join the fun at Sam’s
Breakfast specials
Lottery
Karaoke Saturdays
Sunday NASCAR
Happy Hour specials
Tew owners!
Open 7am - 2:30 Mon. - Sat.
Sunday 7am - midnight
825 Wilson St.
(North off West 11th)
484-4455
Advertise in the ODE classifieds
346-4343
bell/Cartier Classic, the Ducks
played three games before rain
caused the cancellation of their final
two tournament games. Oregon
won its three games, increasing the
squad's winning streak to five con
secutive games. The Ducks were led
by catcher Jenn Poore. The senior
went 4 for 10, hitting her second
home run of the season.
"We have to keep that momentum
going this weekend against three de
cent balldubs," Arendsen said.
Penn State is 0-5 this season, while
Southern Mississippi is 5-7 and Texas
A&M is 8-7.
Freshman outfielder Suzie Barnes
sprained her right ankle in a play at
home plate in the 3-0 win against
Sacramento State. She will miss the
Aggie Invitational and possibly the
following tournament or two,
Axendsen said.
The Ducks have one more tourna
ment, the Speedline Invitational, be
fore opening their home season with
a double header against Team Cana
da on March 10.
— Mindi Rice
Write for
tke Oregon
EmeralcL
For more
information about
freelancing call
346-5511.
% 1
Christian Science
ORGANIZATION
g Meets weekly in EMU
R Learn & discuss healing
344-5693
—.
Campus Ministry
Grace Lutheran Church
18th & Hilyard
(just west of campus)
Sundays at Grace
Worship services:
8:30 am & 11:00 am
Student Fellowship Hour:
10:00 am
Thursdays:
ESL 5:30, Free Weekly
Student Dinners: 6 pm
Bible Study: 7 pm
oContact Dave at 343-4844
| or david@glchurch.org
| www.glchurch.org
Fellowship of the
Living Word
“Where excitement hugs truth”
Sundays at 10 AM
| Agate Hall, 18,h& Agate
a Worship, Fellowship and Food
St. Mark’s Christian
Methodist Episcopal Church
Oldest Black Church in Eugene
Welcomes All Races
“St. Marks is a church where
everybody is somebody,
and Christ is All.”
Services: Sunday-school 10 AM
Worship Hour 11 AM
l Wednesday - Bible Study 7 PM
• Located at 1167 Sam R Rd. (off W. 11 th)
l683-2588
r.N.e>5
Friday Night Bible Study
6:30 - 7:30 p.m. BS 7:30 p.m. - ? Hangtime
EJVICR.IA &APTI5T OJlROJ
| 3071 River Rd. 688-2915
£ www.rivierabaptist.com
Central ftesbyterian Church
We Welcome You
o 8:30 & 11:00 AM worship
S www.centralpresbychurch.net
2 555 I. 15th Ave. • 345-8724
Christians at U of O
Dinners, Wednesdays
6:00 - 7:30 PM
1851 Onyx St.
Christiansatuofo@hotmail.com
015047961
Oregon Hillel:
The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life
SHALOM! Kabbalat Shabbat
(Welcoming the day of rest) services
and dinner Fridays at 6:00 p.m.
1059 Hilyard, 343-8920
Check our website for a full listing
of events: www.oregonhillel.org
Come and See! ^
Episcopal Canterbury Fellowship
1329 E. 19th
ecm@oregon.uoregon.edu
686-9972
2 www.uoecm.org
8 Student Fellowship and Dinner
2_Thursdays 5:30_
If you like books by:
Gary Zukav, Deepak Chopra & Wayne Dyer —
you'll love us!
Spiritual Growth Center
Sunday 8:30 am & 10:30 am
390 Vernal St., Eugene • Coburg Rd. <© Rustic St. (turn @ Blockbuster Video)
4850035 • www.sgceugene.org
Let them know about your
programs with an ad here.
Call 346-4343.
015047701
St Thomas Monti
NEWMAN CENTER
Feathers fiffled?
Duck into Newman.
St. Thomas More Newman center...
Catholic Campus Ministry
Social Connections
coffeehouses
Student Dinners
Sports Events
Faith Community
Engaging Masses
Meaningful Retreats
Guest Speakers
Societal Commitment
Alternative Spring Break
Charity Fundraisers
Social Service Projects
V:
Midweek Social & Student
Mass Wednesdays 9:00pm
Sunday Student mass 7:S0
1850 Emerald Street (south of Hayward Field) • 346-4468
Visit our Web site at newmanctr-uoregon.org
or send us an e-mail to newman@newmanctr-uoregon.org