University Computing FREE Short Courses Check the posted schedules at: 5outh Entrance Lobby Documents Room (205) Computing Center Tune-ups* Brakes* Fuel Injection 19X7 Franklin Btrd. *Or. 974*1 48S-8XU Longest WaUcing-On-Hands tn 1900, Johann Hurimger ot Austria walked on his hands from Vienna to Paris in 55 daily 10-hour stints, covering a distance ot 871 mites. AT&T long distonce wins hands down whon it comes to Immediate credit for incomplete calls and wrong numbers. onil distance Longest Bicycle Race The longest one-day “massed start" race is the 551-620 km (342-365 miles) Bordeaux-Pans event In 1981 Herman van Springel averaged 47186 km/hr (29.32 mph) covering 5845 km (3624 miles) in 13 hi 35 min 18 sec. AT&T long distance lets the good times roll for you. too —with discounts ot up to 60% every day. Nobody can match AT&T tor savings and service: • 40% discounts evenings, 60% discounts nights and weekends. • Immediate credit lor incomplete calls and wrong numbers. • Calls from anywhere to anywhere, anytime. • 24-hour operator assistance. • Quality that sounds as close as next ctoot It's a winning combination. Why settle for less? For details on exciting new plans—ideal for students— visit the display in the University of Oregon Bookstore, Inc. USC, Washington, favored to win By Brent De La Paz Of the Emerald Many questions lurk around the gridiron fields of the Pacific-10 Conference this season, but none are more perplexing than which school will advance to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1. Will this be the year of the Bruin as UCLA seeks its third straight Rose Bowl appearance? Or will the Huskies finally get the Cougars off their backs? Or could the Sun Devils use eight games at home to back into the title? Or will USC finally find a Trojan horse to lead them back to the Roses? Football is a game of inches — and predictions are a game of guesses, so this Emerald fearless forecaster will try to make a Pac-10 pigskin prophecy. Four teams stand above the rest, ASU, UCLA, USC and Washington, but there are darkhorses and spoilers everywhere. 1. USC Forget 1983 because USC has found a tailback in the likes of --2 heralded freshman runner Ryan Knight. The offensive line isjthe key to the Trojans' offense with Beaverton’s James FitzPatricfc leading the way. Although quarterback Sean Salisbury is out for awhile, the Trojans should make up for last year’s debacle in Los Angeles. The defense will be anchored by everybody’s All-America candidate, linebacker Jack Del Rio. Del Rio will feast every Saturday on young inexperienced Pac-10 quarter backs. Del Rio’s dinner will USC’s salvation. 2. WASHINGTON the Huskies don’t rebuild, they just reload was the coining phrase coming out of Seattle last season. Coach Don James was short on ammunition against Washington State last year, but the Huskies are better than ever for 1984. Split-end Danny Greene and wide receiver Mark Pattison are quality players. The only pro blem is James needs a quarter back. The Huskie defense is tough with linebacker Tim Meamber and safety Jim 1 Rodgers from Aloha. The Huskies are a good bet to go bowling again, but confusion at quarterback will prove their undoing — plus a victory over WSU remains to be seen. 3. UCLA Coming off a convincing 45-9 rout of Illinois in the Rose Bowl, coach Terry Donahue's club will go for an encore season. UCLA quarterback Steve Bono has the tools to make the Bruins winners. Donahue can let tailback Dan ny Andrews run wild behind a good offensive line that is for tified by All-America tackle candidate Dual Love. Defensively. UCLA is return ing six defensive starters in cluding highly touted linebacker Neal Dellocono. The Bruins’ season should hinge on their confence finale against use. 4. ARIZONA STATE Things are getting quite hot in Tempe for coach Darryl Rogers and his Sun Devil squad because all the pre-season hoopla of being a contender is turning sour as the Devils lost two of their first three. ASU’s offense will center around tailback Darryl Clack and the NCAA’s most prolific kicker, Luis Zendejas. The quarterback situation is iffy with greenhorn Jeff Van Raaphorst at the helm. Defense will be the Devil’s main forte this season as ASU returns all of their starting defensive unit. Sophomore safe ty David Fulcher is a strong All America candidate. Rogers' team is good, but all the pre season hype will not get them to Pasadena. 5. OREGON Optimism is abundant in Duckville for the upcoming season because of many reasons, but the main force behind this thinking is the talent of one indvidual — Lew Barnes. The Ducks had a real question mark at quarterback, but sophomore Chris Miller has put all fears to rest. Miller can run as well as throw — giving Brooks an ingredient missing since the days of Reggie Ogbum. Besides Barnes and Miller, the Ducks have a bevy of talented running backs. The Ducks’ defensive line is thin, but the secondary and linebacking units are deep with people. Brooks’ special teams should decide the outcome of a few games and — Oregon’s chances. 6. ARIZONA Many think 1984 will be a rebuilding year for a Wildcat team hit hard by graduation. The Cats have talent in a lot of places, but all hopes will rest in the hands of new Arizona quarterback Alfred Jenkins. Jenkins will throw to reliable receiver Jay Dobyns. The rushing game will be in the hands of tailback Vance Johnson. The “D” in Tucson is more stable. Last year, Arizona led the Pac-10 in rushhng defense with the presence of 286-pound noseguard Joe Drake who returns. The kicking chores will be handled by another Zendejas kicking prodigy, Max. If Arizona’s offense gets untrack ed, look for the Wildcats to cause some trouble. 7. WASHINGTON STATE Coach Jim Walden’s Washington State Cougars are a Continued on Page 17