10% OFF ALL REGULAR PRICED CLOTHING* EVERY DAY Purchase any North Face Goretex /{' Jacket from Berg's and get a North Face Vest FREE!' A $69 value. Hours Mon-Sat 10-6 •Excluding snowboard clothing. * ’While supplies Last. 13th & Lawrence • Eugene • 633-1300 Cam Adventure™ Camp Adventure™ is a non-profit, youth services program. In recent years, UO students have travelled to over 100 program sites in 16 countries, including: Korea. Japan. England. Turkey, Kuwait, the Netherlands. Hong Kong. Belgium, Germany, Bahrain, People's Republic of China. Italy. Russia, and the United States. Camp Adventure™ is currently taking applications for Summer 1999. Positions available as Day Camp Counselors and Aquatics Instructors. Contact Jennifer Edgar at Camp Adventure™ Headquarters 1-800-252-2118 www.campadventure.com • 1223 W. 22nd. St., Cedar Falls, IA 50614-0156 • • (319) 273-5960 • Fas (319) 273-2058 • University Theatre Presents GUYS AND DQLLS STTCXIQNV SAGO A Robinson Theatre Production Nov., 6, 7,12,13,14, 20,21 8pm AND DOLLS 6UifS AND DOL Benefit Matinee Sunday, Nov. 15 -2 pm Center for Community Counseling Celebrating Their 20th Year GUYS AND DOL UT Box Office: 346-4191 EMU Tickets: 346-4363 THEATRE Continued from Page 5 their half of the field. Kelvin Eafon reportedly gave a rousing pregame speech that brought goose bumps to the arms of Wildcats quarterback Keith Smith, and Eafon and Smith proceeded to have the best game of their ca reer: Smith completed eight of his 10 passes, and Ea fon scored three touchdowns. The Ducks did their traditional pregame psyche job — grouping into a circle and then jumping to gether while chanting some guttural phrase. Arizona did the same. The difference was Oregon did it in the corner of its end zone, in front of its fans. A nice touch saluting the hometown fans who had made the trip, but not the best psyche job. The Wildcats, on the other hand, did their version of the group hug at the 50-yard line. The bottom line is, Arizona showed it was more hyped up before the game, then went out and proved it. For Oregon to win the fourth of five straight diffi cult games on Saturday, the Ducks must do the same. Oregon women golfers finish fourth The invitation to play in the Rolex Match Play Team Champi onships at Vero Beach, Fla., was an honor for the Oregon women’s golf team. Before the tournament, head coach Renee Baumgartner said that she wanted the team to just “have fun.” She didn’t want the team to worry about winning be cause the outcome of the tourna ment would not affect their sea son. And throughout the three-day tournament, the Ducks did have fun; especially on the last day, when they finished ahead of half the country’s premier teams. No. 6 Oregon won four out of five matches to edge No. 4 Texas on Monday afternoon and finish in fourth place. The Ducks’ victories came from performances by Pam Sowden, Claire Hunter, Karen Bristow and Dawn Berry. Oregon won all of its matches on Sunday to beat Furman and advance to the fourth-place brack et against Texas. Southern California beat Ore gon last Saturday in the first round of the tournament to elimi nate the Ducks from champi onship contention. No. 1 Duke won the tourna ment, beating USC by a score of 3 2. No. 2 Arizona finished third af ter beating No. 5 Louisiana State 4-1. The tournament ended the Ducks’ fall season. Play will re sume Feb. 8-10 when the Ducks travel to the Regional Challenge in Palos Verdes, California. Sports brief Four men’s tennis players advance to second-day competition Four Oregon men’s tennis players advanced to the second day of competition in the 1TA Regional Championship in Moraga, Calif., last weekend. Only junior Guillermo Carter reached the quarter-finals Monday. In the fourth round, Carter beat Eric Kortland from Sacramento State, 6-4,6-4, after he won by the same score against Washington’s Jeff Either in the third round the day before. Freshman Bertrand Devillers also reached the fourth round by beating Matt Hibbard, of Saint Mary’s College, 6-3,4-6,6-2. He was then eliminated by Sacramento State’s Eric Kortland, 6-4,6-4. Other Ducks in action were senior Carlos Navarro, who fell to Washington’s Andy Posavac, 6-1, 6-1, and freshman Thomas Schneiter who lost in three sets, 5-7, 7-5,6-4. THE FUTURE IS IN YUUR HANDS! Graduate School & Career Fair 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. • EMU Ballroom r November 4 Employers Only Active Voice Corporation Aerotek AmeriCorps American Protective Services Andersen Consulting Arrow Electronics Black and Decker/DeWalt Cintas Corporation Combined Insurance Company of America Edward Jones E & J Gallo Winery Enterprise Rent-A-Car Federal Bureau of Investigation First Investors Corporation Franklin Templeton Group Fred Meyer Great-West Employee Benefit Sales Hertz Equipment Rental Corporation Impact Innovations Group JCPenney John Hancock Financial Services Kaplan Educational Centers Ltd. Lane Transit District Lanier Worldwide, Inc. Lithia Automotive Group Macy's West MassMutual Mervyn's California Northwestern Mutual Life/Baird Securities Norwest Financial Services Office Depot, Inc. Old Spaghetti Factory Olde Discount Corporation Oregon Services to Children & Families Oregon State Police PacifiCare Pacific Office Automation Premium Management Corp/Guardian Prudential Preferred Financial Services Safeco Corporation Sears, Roebuck and Company Sherwin-Williams Teach for America Trilogy Software, Inc. United Parcel Service U.S. Army U.S. Marine Corps US West Valicert Walgreens Wallace Wal-Mart Stores Weyerhaeuser Company Yellowstone National Park Lodges j i i f \ f Sponsored by the Career Center & Office of Academic Advising & Student Services http://uocareer.uoregon.edu