DON'T GET CAUGHT... with ad that extra baggage. Make money before summer by advertising in the )une 4 issue of the ODE. Its your last chance before summer to cash in.. $1.50 for 15 words Regular rates apply for additional word Plate your ad by 1 p.m. |une 1 at one of our many locations: f(X) tMU, UO Bookstore Stamp Counter, or the fMU Main Desk. Art is also available. Domino’s Pizza Honors Competitive Coupons!! Whatever the offer. Domino's Pizza will accept your coupon! Domino s Pizza accepts all pizza competitor's coupons Any coupon lor a large or medium pizza is worth $2 00 olf our large, 16 Domino s Pizza Any coupon lor a small pizza is worth $1 00 off our 12 Domino s Pizza So save your pizza coupons and order Dominos Pizza tonight1 Come on and cash in on a hot. custom-made pizza delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less—or it s ABSOLUTELY FREE" GUARANTEED" WE GUARANTEE IT Offer not valid if improper address or phone number is given or it the customer is not home when pizza is delivered DOMINO’S PIZZA DELIVERS™ FREE. Call us. 683-7325 1609 East 19th Ave 485-5675 2260 W 18th Ave SAVE 33% - 75% Assorted summer & fall sportswear from the closeout of one of our Portland stores. • Cathy Hardwick • TWCC • Regatta Sport • Intuitions • First Glance • Norton MacNaughton MISC. SALE ITEMS Reg to $50 NOW $5 to $20 Photo by Michael Clapp A graphite Prince tennis racket will set the buyer back $210, while the Prince Classic goes for $55. New racket sizes, materials beckon recreational players An estimated 1,000 Universi ty students are dusting off their rackets, buying tennis balls at the bookstore for $1.99, skipping classes and crowding the courts. But some players may discover a few surprises — warped racket heads, cracked frames, outdated junior models or patchy grips. The following is a guide to help recreational tennis players select the best racket for their money. The first step in choosing a racket is to know the three basic materials: wood, tradi tional but least popular metal, which has been on the tennis market for 10 years; and graphite, soaring in sales for three years now, according to Randy Cuddeback, Willow Creek Racquet Club president. Unlike the wood rackets that get scraped or broken on the court, metal rackets are durable and give the player ad ditional power, Cuddeback says. But they also vibrate tremendously, he says, and this is where the graphite made of "space age” material has the advantage. Graphite has the feel of a wood racket that many players desire but weighs much less. The reduced weight combined with graphite's better shock absorption puts less strain on the arm and that may help ten MMdM PMUdt! aesmMUT Featuring fine SZECHUAN & CANTONESE Dining Buffet: 11:00 a.m 8.00 p.m , Mon Thurs. 11 00 am -3:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat Dinner: l 4 30 pm 10:00 pm . Sun. Thurs. & 00 p.m. 10:30 p.m . Fti. & Sat. nis elbow or arthritis, he says. “Graphite rackets are quicker and easier to maneuver at the net,” he says. But Steve Brouillard, owner of Mr. Tennis, says a graphite racket is not necessarily lighter than a metal racket. He says buyers should con sider two important words before they make a final deci sion: stiffness — how much a racket bends when the ball hits the head; and balance — how much the racket head weighs. By Melissa Martin The stiffer the racket, the quicker the ball comes off the strings, he says. ‘‘A baseline player might prefer more weight in the head,’’ Cuddeback says. Brouillard agrees and adds that a server and vollyer might go with a lighter head. Brouillard says the bottom line is for a tennis player to try as many of the 150 rackets on the market today as possible. His store has 80 demos available for buyers to try for a month. “We charge a $20 fee if they decide not to buy a racket,” he says. But for Cuddeback, just as important is knowing head sizes. These include: conven tional, such as a standard wood racket or a Head Profes sional; oversize, such as the Prince series; and midsize, such as a Kennix Silver Ace. “The trend now is toward the midsize,” Brouillard says. Among midsize users are Billie Jean King and Martina Navratilova — both go with Yonnex — and John McEnroe, who uses a Dunlop, according to Brouillard. But the oversize is a slightly new phenomenon, Cuddeback says, developed and patented by Howard Head. Kennex manufacturers the Prince line for the inventor, who has a monopoly on racket head sizes between 85 and 130 square inches. All manufacturers who pro duce rackets that fall in this range must pay royalties to Head, a Wilson representative in Chicago says. “You have to buy a more ex pensive racket for the money,” Cuddeback says of Wilson. And Brouillard considers Wilson more of a G.l. Joe’s or Fred Meyer type of a racket. But University women’s ten nis coach Nancy Osborne, who uses the Wilson Ultra — a regular head graphite — says Wilson has been around a lot longer than Prince. “It gives me a lot of control. It’s a little bit stiffer in the Continued on Page 8B Cash For Textbooks Mon. • Fri. Smith Family Bookstore 768 E. 13th 1 Block From Campus 345-1651