Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 24, 1986, Page 12, Image 11

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    Huskies beat Ducks
in pool at PacWest
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By |eff I.utzky
111 I hr KmvtaUI
Before the PacWest Invite
tional. Oregon swimming head
coach Dan Cole said the Univer
sity of Washington probably
would win. with his Ducks
challenging for second.
Cole turned out to tie right on
the money as Washington won
libth the men's and women's
competitions. The Huskies won
the women's side ahead of
Oregon T.315-987. • On. • the .
mail's side.. Washington, beat
the University of California at .
San Diegq i.224 5-95i; and
(Jregoiv finished third with 919
, •’ The women jumped ahead of
Washington,280-2?a on the first •;
dav.while the men were stuck
. in Jhird behind .Washington and
•ucsd..\ .
‘.‘it was encouraging:’to .see
p uar • w'o-tji e n • a.3i e a'd.. o-f •
Washington after one. day,"
, said' assistant. coach , Jamie.
Hetzel.
() n t h e s e<: o n d d a y-. .
Washington leapfrogged over
Oregdn on the women's side to
take a HU-fi30 lead, while the
men moved' into second by a
• glim margin over UC.SI).
’ Oregon's second-day lead of
599-598 over IJCSD for second
place didn't last long as the men
faltered on the third day.
On the, women's, side, two
• -school records fell as the
flOO-yard freestyle team of
senior Btfbette Hriinduge. junior
Gwen Rondel, and sophomores
' The Oregon din'i tennis
team ran its record to 4-0 nn the
season with a 0-3 thrashing of
Sonoma State'.University Friday
afternoon oir the Oregon courts.
. The. Ducks wort; led by
Cal wav Who won his fourth
singles match of the season
.against no .defeats, C.alway then
teamed,with fiilf.Grant to help
GeeC.ee Wharton and Patricia
l.orys lowered a mark they s«t
earlier In the year by three
seconds to 7:47.at*.
Also, the 200-yard freestyle
relay team of sophomore
Kristen Read, freshmen Heather
Hockett and Linda Mason anti
Wharton lowered the school
mark.by almost one second to
1:30.53
But those swims werja ntrt the
only two that vyere; oncoJuraginR
to Hefzel, \
' "The .men swam a great v
40tVyard freestyle relay.":'-' ,• •
. Ilei^el saidfc.'Sleve'Ntt hols was
right, aroitntj -NCAA' cuts and . •;
(freshman) Mike Peltry went
-Under one mi rude for the 'first
H im e^in »l liLB tt': v a rtl, ,
-brdaststrofce, which is.-kind df a- >'■
"'milestone*':‘ ? .
,.-l|eti.ol also pointed 'to the'per
• fnrmunres of Mason and Rt»eth*l.
oiv th«* women's side, and'-salt!
of Rrredel s performance in the V
' 1,050 yard freestyle She .wtfl-;. ;
only 15 seconds off of what she
needs to Qualify for NCAA's. •
Moscow .is at. 3,0tK)Teet. which
is just below the,level needed
for the NCAA .with, the time ad
justed. The altitude realiv.hurts
in the long distance events
The Ducks appear to be ready
for the conference champion
ships now. according to Hetzel
"We'il bit* ready.” Hetzel
said "They scared through 24
places at die Par Wests and we
just don't have that kind of
depth. "
Tennis team unbeaten
seal the team's victory with a
*>-2. 7 (t decision over Sonotna's
ken Christian and Allan
YVebster.
Oregon will, return to the
courts March Hth when they
face the Idaho. Vandals In a
home .mulch scheduled for
11:30 a m.
j^UQrBookstore—■
Book Views
The Barracks Thief and Selected Stories
by Tobias Wolf!
In.the prize winning title story (a novella) three young army
recruits arrive simultaneously at boot camp To the other
' Sdiaiir* and to each other they are outsiders—cautious*
evasive, introverted. All three seek acceptance Each wants to
.’ belong This theme of alienation is familiar to devoted Wolff
readers.
• Wolff's characters crave transformation—a new job,
social status, peer acceptance, a new self image They move
against the social grain, either by choice or by nature, yet reach
for unattainable ideals And from this ordeal hope evolves into
awakening
In "The Barracks Thief' a shared Incident charges the
potential for a friendship-bond between the three recruits
Wolff's style (both first and third person) allows all three to
command the story's focus revealing an intense emotional and
physical make up The drama erupts when one of the three
soldiers turns to stealing and this action will pave the distinct
and separate paths each of them will take after boot camp
Along with the novella "The Barracks Thief and Selected
Stories” includes six stories from Wolff's admirable firsl col
lection, "In The Garden Of North American Martyrs" (Ecco
Press).
Wolff's stories are ventures Into realism, into poignant
moments of confusion and confession. Wolff employs a clean
writing style and never leaves the reader assuming a conclu
sion. Smooth transitions and an enticing, simple narrative com
bine to create an urgence lor more of Mr Wolff's insightful
offerings
—Reviewed by Kerry Paul May
Available In the General Book Dept.
$6.95 paperback
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