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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1998)
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Group Discounts! I Adventure and Relaxation! Wildlife viewing, hiking awesome rainforest, great photo opps. Neon butterflies, monkeys, birds, bizarre insects, colorful treefrogs, native peoples, beautiful sunsets...all in safety and comfort with a friendly, trained Zoologist! OrPPKiTr.^PV<5 WWW.greentracks.com cd| 1.800-9- Monkey “34 years of Quality Service” Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi German Auto Service • MERCEDES • BMW • VOLKSWAGEN • 342-2912 • 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 Want to escape those winter blues? (,£v<Jva<«. Vice jfzojtiz. Buy your railpass Prices go up in i 99^SH ¥/” : , I Think Holidays. Book now. Travel Council GEE: Council on International Educational Exchange 877 1/2 East 13th Street, Eugene [54l]-344-2263 222 East 13th Street, EMU Building, Univ. of Oregon, Eugene [541 ]-344-2263 www.councit travel.com Soccer Continued from Page 1 goals. “(That was] tremendously ex citing with the crowd and new field and everything," Steffen said. Other highlights included a 3 0 win over Oregon State on Oct. 9 that kept the Ducks undefeated at 3-0 all-time in the Civil War, and Oregon’s first conference sweep, which came with consecutive home victories against the Ari zona schools on Oct. 30 and Nov. 1. Senior midfielder Melissa Sherman is the lone Duck whose eligibility has expired. She trans ferred from Portland State after her freshman year in 1995 and served as a co-captain throughout her tenure at Oregon. The Ducks’ heart returns next SHERMAN season in the form of the 16 member junior class, which consists most ly of players who have been with Ore gon since its jump to a varsi ty sport in 1996. Forward Erin Anderson, who is the program’s all-time leading scorer with 38 points, and goalkeeper Amanda Fox, who has defended the Ducks’ goal in every game, are included in that class. Three sophomores and seven freshmen are also slated to re turn next season. With nearly all of his team coming back, Steffen expects his team to continue progressing to ward a first NCAA Tournament appearance. “Our ultimate goal is to get into the playoffs, and I think we’re getting a better under standing of what we need to do to get there,” Steffen said. Oregon’s greed will not sub side until that goal is scored. Sports briefs Oregon crew Four top-10 finishes in the Head of the Lake Regatta in Seattle last weekend proves the Oregon men and women Club Sports crew teams can likely compete with any school in the country. Competing against national powers Washington, Seattle Pacif ic and Puget Sound on Saturday, the Ducks scored top 10 finishes for all four of their varsity boats. The lightweight men finished sec ond behind Washington State with a time of 17 minutes, 37 seconds, while the lightweight women fin ished third in their race with a time of 20:08, only one minute behind Lake Union Crew, which won the race with a time of 19:08. The open-weight men and women also finished strong, the men netting a lOth-place finish in a time of 19.51, and the women finished ninth with a time of 48:40. Men's soccer During a downpour at South Bank field Thursday afternoon, the Oregon men s Club Sports soccer team tied Lane Communi ty College 3-3 in the typical fash ion of a crosstown rivalry. The Ducks, who improved their season record to 8-1-3, were led by goals from Olaf Wolf and Taka Osawa. The contest against Lane was the second-to-last test for the team as it tries to prepare itself for the national champi onships next week in Georgia. Ice hockey Washington and Western Wash ington were simply no match for the high-powered Oregon offense last weekend as the Ducks cruised to 1-0 and 5-3 victories over the Huskies Friday and 10-3 victory at Western on Saturday. The Ducks’ 1-0 victory was the result of a forfeit by Washington, who provided only one official for the game. The Huskies must have wished they had pulled the same maneuver on Saturday, ratherthan have to face an Oregon team that has swept them two years in a row. “Both teams just didn’t match up skill-wise,” second-year Ore gon coach Geoff Norman said. “We were able to score when we needed to this weekend. ” at Clancy Thurber's Pub (Downstairs at the Collier House) On the u of 0 Campus 15 Ave. and university St. with Gil Herrera and Friends 7:00 to 9:00 pm Thursday: Pete Christie » No Cover, All Ages welcome, Smoke-free Hlcrobrews, wine & Meals Check out Rhythm & Reviews in the Emerald every Friday ler the latest in local entertainment! Cash for books Everyday. Always buying all kinds of books, including texts, paperbacks, Cliffs Notes, current magazines... Smith Family Bookstore 7(>8 Fast l.ith • 3 *3-1651 1 Block from Campus Virtual Office Systems Inc. In Partnership with The University of Oregon Bookstore 2387 Westllth Ph. 343-8633 Open Mon-Sat 11-6 The “Power User* Pentium II® 300 • Genuine Intel LX board • U9 Revolution 4MB AGP • 5.1 G Western Digital • 64 MB SDRAM • Yamaha 3D Sound • 36XCD, 56K V.90 •17" .28 SVGA Monitor • Ergo Mouse, Keyboard • Win 98 on CD installed • I Yr. Parts, 2 Yrs Labor $1199.99 Quality Custom VOS Systems: We build them... We back them... We service them... ...all local! The “Power Player HMD KB AMD K6-2 3D 333 CPU #9 Revolution AGP 4 MB 5.1G Western Digital 32 MB SDRAM Yamaha 3D Sound 32XCD, 56K V.90 15”.28 SVGA Monitor Ergo Mouse, Keyboard Win 98 on CD installed 1 Yr. Parts, 2 Yrs Labor $999.99 VOS Inc. Systems are also available at the U of O Bookstore. Parts available only at VOS Inc. Prices good though 10 30 08. AMD. k(>. AMD logo and 3DNo\v! arc trademarks of AMD. Inc. Memory prices relied cash discount. Go Ducks!