Tennis: Wygonowska swept in No. 1 singles ■ Continued from Page 13 the country. Hopefully, our girls will learn from these experiences and become better because of it. Some of the scores may not show it, but these were all pretty close matches.” Nagy defeated Oregon’s Andrea Petrovic, a junior from Frankfurt, Germany, in a match that featured nearly as much talk as it did ten nis. With the players doing much of the judging themselves, tempers flared repeatedly between the Eu ropeans in the opening sets before an official took over and let the players concentrate on the third set. Nagy stormed out to a 5-1 lead in the third, but with the decided ly partisan home crowd rooting her on, Petrovic clawed back to within one game before Nagy took the match, 6-2,3-6,6-4. The No. 1 singles match also featured its share of bilingual ban ter between Polish natives Alina Wygonowska of Oregon and Pa trycja Gajdzik of Washington State. Wygonowska took leads of 2-0 and 4-3 in the opening set, then played her best tennis of the match to force a tiebreaker after Gajdzik took a 6-5 advantage. With her energy expended, Wygonowska dropped the tiebreaker 7-1, then the match, 7 6,6-3. Sports Brief Kergroach defeats top-ranked Kudrnac In what Oregon men’s ten* nis head coach Chris Russell called ‘‘the biggest win in Oregon tennis history," ju nior Erwan Kergroach beat the nation’s No. 1 men’s play er Saturday at the Gaucho Classic in Santa Barbara, Calif. Kergroach, ranked 87th, knocked off Oklahoma State’s Pavel Kudrnac 6-3,6-1 to im prove his season record to 18 5. “He did something extreme ly exciting,” Russell said, “mainly in the fact that he dominated the guy.” The win was the first time an Oregon men’s tennis player has ever beaten a player ranked No. 1, Russell said. As a team, the Ducks lost 4-2 to the Cowboys to finish up the three-day Gaucho Classic with a 1-2 record. Textbooks 35-50% off list price Bring j vur textbook information to Smith Family Bookstore • Author • Title • Hdition We 'll help you find used copies that will save you money! Always buying: • texts • paperbacks • Clifts Notes • current magazines Smith Family Rookst or c' One block from campus 1 8 ^'tMQfibove Rainbow Optics) . 13th • (541) 345-1651 APRIL 3,1998 9:30 A.M. - 4:00 P.M. Free to the public INSIDE PERSPECTIVES Minority LawDay UNIVERSITY o/OREGON SCHOOL OF LAW FOR INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION CALL HOLLY PARRISH (541) 346-1558 “Would you like fries with that?” Become an agent at The Quiet Company “Six figures. I kid you not.” 02858) Our top 1 500 agents make well over $100,000 a year. Out of the 100 top agents, 70 of them joined Northwestern Mutual Life at the age of 25 or younger. Unlike most companies, you don’t start at the bottom. You are an individual with a limitless earning potential. With M|"n-fUmj|/octprTi Northwestern Mutual Life you can start l ' YriEpri I helping people plan their futures, not ii^UlUcll Llt<0@ their dinners. For more information, The Ouiet Comoanv® call Vlasta Duffy at (503) 223-7335. www.N^rthwcstcmMutu'ai.com °1997 The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., Milwaukee, WI Recycle • Recycle • Recycle • Recycle