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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1983)
HAIRCUTTING TO PLEASE YOU • Donna Stewart • Sue Paris • Christy Reutin HAIR FAIRE 1410 Orchard *342-2165 We carry wedding dresses Now accepting spring & summer consignments ► 50 East 25th • Jusr off Willamette 485-6601 7~n tr-a pt: i A n A rr It’s the Mission’s feititluHatf, Celebration,! Stop by the Mission and help them celebrate their 4th Birthday. Enjoy a special beef and bean chimichanga smothered with guacamole. sour cream. for Ollly grated cheese and tomato. Served with rice, beans, chips and a soft drink mention this ad and receive a bottle of champagne for only $2.96 Til I •wmi 11 JWI 11 Sw? This Saturday Oregon vs. Washington Coed Track Meet Field Events at Noon Track Events at 1 p.m. UO Students $1.25 High School & Grade School $1.50 General Admission $3.00 Cruzin’ despite the rain By Doug Levy Of the Emerald As he paused for a break from his afternoon workout, Joaquim Cruz took a took up at the gray skies of Eugene — rain, which had been pelting down so hard a few minutes earlier, began to let up, and Cruz began to smile. “The one thing I don’t like about this place is the weather,” says Cruz, a native of Brasilia, Brazil. Added Luiz Alberto De Oliveira, Cruz’ per sonal coach, “I’ve never seen rain like that before.” Otherwise, Cruz says he is happy to be at Oregon. And you can bet the Ducks are glad to have Cruz. Cruz is expected to give Oregon a world-class touch in the 800 meters this spring. With a mark of 1:44.3 in 1981, he set a world junior record, and he ran a solid 1:46.95 last year despite a June operation to remove a bone spur from his right foot. Thanks to the lofty potential of Cruz, Oregon coach Bill Dellinger needn’t worry about the exodus of David Mack, the talented but turbulent 1982 NCAA 800 champ. But Dellinger is worried that track fans may expect a little too much of Cruz, who has on ly been training three months since his operation. "I don’t expect him to set any records, and I hope the fans don’t either,” says Dell inger. “This place is a new ex perience for him, and there’s a lot of pressure on him. I just hope he doesn’t feel the pressure.” "It doesn’t bother me," says Cruz of the constant attention he has received from fans and the media alike. “It’s funny, because when I first got here I didn’t think anyone would know who I was.” Cruz is an extremely friendly man, quick to smile, and he speaks excellent English con sidering he has only been in the United States 15 months. Thus it seems a special in justice that he had such a bat tle to get into the University. Cruz was allowed to enter school by petition after failing his English equivalency test Blazers dive PHOENIX, Artz. (AP) - Maurice Lucas scored 14 of his 21 points in the third period as the Phoenix Suns rallied to beat the Portland Trail Blazers, 106-89, Thurs day night in a National Basketbeil Association game. five times, but he maintains that he failed only because he was not given enough time to read. Standing next to him and listening to him, it is easy to believe what he says. “He is a very nice young man, and he speaks excellent English," says Delling^i, who is angry about the hassles Cruz went through to get into school. Nevertheless, Cruz is here to stay now, and he is confi dent he can have a good year at Oregon. “My three major goals, if my foot stays healthy, are the NCAA, the World Cup and the America Games. I think I can run very well this year.” So, it seems, do several track magazines that have predicted Cruz to win the NCAA 800 meters this spring. The bold predictions anger Cruz, who states that he is still not in top shape. . __ I JAI.C 446 E. 13th • 342-3339 dTimSlr 25% OFF Any Poster Purchase •Present this ad with purchase •Expires 4/8/83 ‘‘Those magazines, they look at 1:44.3, and they figure I can always run that fast. They don’t think about how I feel now." But that’s not to say Cruz is short on confidence. “I can do it. I know I can do it,” he repeats. Cruz came to the U S. 15 months ago to fulfill a lifelong dream of competing in America Originally, he felt he would be in the States as a basketball player, but he soon realized that track was his forte. Before coming to Eugene, Cruz and his coach had gone to Brigham Young University in Utah, where he discovered the cold weather limited his workouts. ‘‘I couldn’t run hard because it was too cold there,” he says, “and then we heard that Eugene was a good place for track.” Spring Specials network Perms Includes haircut flr style. Long hair extra *20°° Reg. $40 00 Haircuts $700 M Reg. $1 1.00 Call Bev or Cheryl Offer expires May I. 1983 20 W. 25th 342-7661