Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 14, 2005, Page 14A, Image 14

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    IN BRIEF
Subpoenas issued to further
MLB steroids investigation
WASHINGTON — Major League
Baseball plans to hand over some of
the records subpoenaed by the con
gressional committee investigating
steroids in the sport by Monday’s
due date.
“We’re producing documents by the
deadline,” Rob Manfred, executive vice
president for labor relations in the com
missioner’s office, said Sunday night.
Asked whether baseball is giving
the Government Reform Committee
everything it wanted, Manfred said:
“Thirty-five years of documents in
three days? Everything that was
humanly possible. ”
The congressional committee gave
baseball officials until Monday to
produce documents about their new
drug-testing program, including
results — with the names of players
removed. The committee subpoe
naed seven active or former players
and four baseball executives to testify
at its hearing Thursday.
The head of the panel predicted
Sunday that the full House easily
would pass a contempt of Congress
resolution if the subpoenaed players
don’t show. Subpoenaed for Thurs
day’s session are former stars Mark
McGwire and Jose Canseco, and cur
rent players Sammy Sosa, Rafael
Palmeiro, Curt Schilling, Frank
Thomas and Jason Giambi — whose
younger brother, Jeremy, told a news
paper he used steroids.
Government Reform Committee
chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., told NBC’s
“Meet the Press” that one or more of
the players called to testify could be ex
cused from appearing, though he did
not specify who that might be.
Davis said his panel would vote to
find players who fail to appear Thurs
day in contempt, and said he thinks
the House would approve such a res
olution by a large margin. The last
contempt of Congress prosecution
was in 1983.
“These people are not above the
law,” Davis told NBC.
He was asked why Barry Bonds
wasn’t invited to the hearing.
“There are a lot of reasons why peo
ple are on or off the list, including the
BALCO investigation in San Francisco,
but including the fact that we didn’t
want to make this about one player,”
Davis said.
Bonds reportedly testified to a grand
jury in 2003 that he used a clear sub
stance and a cream given to him by a
trainer charged in the BALCO steroid
distribution case, but the San Francisco
slugger also reportedly said he didn’t
know they were steroids.
The ranking Democrat on the
House panel, Henry WaxmanO of
California, said on “Meet the Press”
that Bonds could be summoned for a
future hearing.
— The Associated Press
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1
Lacrosse: Midfielder Jen May scores hat trick
Continued from page 13A
Oregon has seen similar early
leads disappear against Stanford,
Denver and UC Davis in
previous games.
“We just have to put together a
60-minute game,” freshman mid
fielder Jen May said. “It’s going to
happen, and it’s going to be big.”
The Ducks seemed overmatched
by the defending Patriot League
champions at halftime, trailing
7-2. Oregon was 0 of 5 on free
position shots in the first half,
shut down by Red Raider goalkeeper
Sue Bielamowicz, the Patriot
League’s returning defensive player
of the year.
But the young Ducks refused to
go down quietly against a Colgate
team that made it to last year’s
NCAA tournament. Oregon allowed
two quick Red Raider scores at the
start of the second half to drop
down 9-2, but then put together a
late offensive rally. Beginning with
freshman attacker Erin Gaebe’s
fourth goal of the season at the
22:51 mark, the Ducks scored five
goals to Colgate’s two within a six
minute period to make the score
11-7 with less than 17 minutes left
in the game.
“They held their own in the
second half,” Oregon head
coach Jen Larsen said. “They
really fought some of (Colgate’s)
offensive motion.”
After a Colgate time-out, the Red
Raiders put the game out of
reach when junior midfielder
Katie McVeigh scored her third
and fourth goals of the game at
the 14:57 and 9:56 marks,
putting Oregon down 13-7 with
just under 10 minutes to play.
May and freshman midfielder
Theresa Waldron added late
scores for the Ducks, but so did
Colgate, making the final score
15-9, Red Raiders.
Larsen seemed pleased with her
team’s effort against a Colgate team
that lost only one player after last
season’s 13-7 campaign.
“I’m proud of them today,” the
first-year head coach said. “The first
half, holding them scoreless for
15 minutes, that’s awesome.”
Despite the Ducks giving up a
goal with one second remaining in
the game, which gave Colgate eight
goals in the half to Oregon’s seven,
Larsen was particularly pleased
with her team’s play in the latter
part of the game.
“We tied them in the second
half,” she said. “We’re winning
some halves.”
After taking an early 1-0 lead
with freshman attacker Jana
Bradley’s ninth goal of the season,
the Ducks allowed a 7-0 Red Raider
run that proved insurmountable.
Oregon, which went on a
33-minute scoring drought last
week against UC Davis, again found
difficulty finding the back of the net
after taking an early lead. May, who
had a hat trick, scored her first goal
of the day with 1:31 left in the first
half, making the score 7-2, Colgate.
The Davidsonville, Md., native’s
score came 26 minutes after the
Ducks’ first point.
“It’s hard to come back when
you’re down five or six goals at half
time,” May said. “But we played
(with) them.”
Freshman Jenny Browne said in
the future the team will work on
communication and leadership to
help prevent the large scoring
deficits the Ducks have consistently
had to battle back from. But she re
mained confident in her team de
spite its 0-5 season start.
“I am really proud of us,” said
Browne, who scored her first goal of
the season in the game.
May was equally optimistic,
despite another loss.
“We want to be able to put a win
up there, but we’re making huge,
huge steps every week of practice,”
she said.
May’s three goals led the Ducks,
and Bradley added her team-leading
ninth and tenth goals of the season
in the loss. Junior midfielders
McVeigh and Kelly Winning of
Colgate led all players with four
scores apiece.
“When we do win, it’s going
to be huge, and we’re going
to thrive off that for a long time,”
May said.
Tennis: Bak battles back to secure Duck victory
Continued from page 13A
set) and stepped up more too.”
Oregon’s Monica Hoz de Vila and
Davina Mendiburu took the final two
losses for the Ducks in three-set
tiebreakers. Hoz de Vila, 19, saw her
record fall to 3-3 as she was upended
by Berg, 2-6, 7-5, (10-4). Mendiburu,
22, lost in the final match of the day to
Christine Kansky, 2-6, 7-5, (10-8).
Mendiburu’s singles record now
stands at 8-5.
The Ducks will host Brigham
Young March 19 at noon at the Stu
dent Tennis Center. Pacific-10 Confer
ence play gets back on track on
March 22 when the women travel up
to Seattle to face Washington.
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AUTOMOTIVE
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The Other Coast
by Adrian Raeside