Equestrian Continued from Page 1 The team is supported by Club Sports and funded partially through the University. Much of its funding comes from fund rais ing and donations, Robinson said. Receiving the donations and the funding helps the team compete and travel, but in such an individ ual sport, caring for a horse, pay ing for lessons and buying the needed gear adds up for each rid er. Franklin said. In the English style of riding, a helmet, an undershirt, britches and tall boots may all add up to thousands of dollars, Franklin said. In the Western style, the usu al cowboy attire is needed to com plete the show. “It’s nice to be on a team be cause if you don't have the stuff you need, there’s usually someone else on the team you can borrow it from,” Franklin said. To keep the team's expenses down and because the University doesn’t own its own horses or bam, the team has established af filiations with a few barns that teach English and Western riding in the Eugene-Springfield area. The team’s “home” barn is at Day Star Farms in Pleasant Hill, where their trainer gives lessons on how to ride in the different styles. “Many of the members come out and practice there, but there are a few that have their own train ers at other barns,” Robinson said. The love for riding is seen in the arena and in the way riders relate to the horses, said Lori Forge, a Day Star Farms trainer. “The ones that rise to a really top level are the ones that have a real love for horses,” she said. The same love keeps students involved in the team itself, Robin son said. “There are people who join be cause they just want to ride, so I af filiate them with a barn,” she said. "There are others that join because they’re just in to win, but they don't last long. True horse lovers just keep on riding. They know they want to keep riding. They got to ride — it’s such an integral part of their lives.” Equestrian team co-coordinator Megan Robinson and a horse jump an obstacle during a competition last spring. Courtesy ffboto Student teams test their brains in College Bowl competition The four teams that place the highest will go on to the finals on Thursday By James Scripps Oregon Daily Emerald Do you know how many steps lead up to the Lincoln memorial? Maybe you know what that red dot on Jupiter is called. To most of us these questions only matter when you are watch ing Jeopardy or playing Trivial Pursuit, but for 24 student teams competing in the College Bowl, these are the types of questions that mean the difference between advancing to the next round or going home early. The College Bowl, a collegiate tournament that hails from as far back as the 1950s, pits four-mem ber teams against each other in a game-show format. Teams listen to trivia questions read by moder ators and have to buzz in and give the correct response to win points. The number of participants in this year’s competition is better than in years past, College Bowl coordinator Laura Wallace said, “This is the fourth year that I have been involved with the competi tion, and this first time that I have seen all 24 team slots fdled. This year we hope to have 10 teams in the regional competition.” Out of 24 teams, four advanced to the College Bowl campus fi nals, which will be held Thurs day in the EMU Ballroom. The winning team will represent the University in the regional tourna ment, hosted by the University on Feb. 19-20 of next year. Depending on how the team performs in February, they may have the opportunity to advance to the finals, which will be held at the University of Florida in April. The last time a University team advanced that far was in 1993. After her team’s first-round vic tory, ASUO senator Selena Brew ington, a member of “The Grrrls,” was brimming with excitement. “If I win a trophy, I’m giving it to my mom,” she said. The tournament’s format favors competitors who are able to think quickly. A moderator reads a question to both teams. The team member who buzzes in first answers that question and, if the question is answered correctly, the team is given a bonus question. If a team member answers the first ques tion incorrectly, the bonus ques tion goes to the other team. Each correctly answered question adds to the team’s point total. Business student Willie Bronsh vag, a member of team Pi Kapp (Pi Kappa Phi), reeled from a first round loss. “We got beaten pretty bad, something like 170 to 5," he said. "It seems like something more for the history , English and science majors. But I like the free T-shirt. It’ll push laundry back a day.” The College Bowl is held each year and is sponsored locally by the EMU, the Athletic Depart ment and Coke. “It has always been really big on the East Coast, but this year has been bigger than usual for us,” Wallace said. “We are pretty ex cited that students are getting in volved.” _-J l/ium Goss /Emerald Competition was stiff at the first round of this year’s College Bowl. OSU anti-gravity research could help Mars astronauts in the future The Associated Press CORVALLIS — Gravity’s still the law around these parts, but standing in chest waders with the nozzle of an industrial vac uum cleaner stuffed down his back, Tyson Harty felt light on his feet. The Oregon State University graduate student was demonstrating the latest in anti-gravity wear: Mars pants. The space slacks, developed by OSU re searchers, will help astronauts learn to walk in the low gravity they’ll face on Mars. Researchers created the trousers at the NASA Ames Research Center in California, where scientists have been studying how to send humans to Mars in 2011. One of the challenges is helping astro nauts walk while feeling 38 percent of the Earth’s gravity. The space explorers will feel lighter, and scientists suspect they’ll have difficulty balancing themselves, walk ing and even grasping objects. “Their issues are, ‘What do I do when I step out of the spaceship and I’m on this different world?’” said Gene Korienek, di rector of the Biological Control Lab in OSU’s College of Health and Human Perfor mance and who is overseeing the project. The invention could also help accident or stroke victims who need therapy but can’t support their weight. OSU scientists will use the waders to find out how Martian gravity affects the as tronauts’ balance. Moon astronauts encountered gravity that is about 16 percent of Earth’s, but they left after only a few hours. Mars astronauts will have to endure low gravity for a much longer time because the planet is about 47 million miles from Earth at its closest point. The astronauts will land on Mars at its closest point in orbit and will have to wait 500 days until the two planets are that close again to leave. The pants simulate Martian gravity with air pressure. Air from a vacuum is forced into the pants, which are sealed at the waist. The air puts pressure on the lower part of the body and pushes the center of gravity up. “We’re creating a high-pressure envelope from the waist down,” Korienek said. The Mars pants are still in the prototype stage. The pants reduce the ground reaction force, or the pressure of the person on the ground, by about 20 pounds by supporting part of the body weight on a high-pressure cushion of air. Korienek said that while the pants don't bring on an actual weight loss, a person would register 20 pounds less if he or she stood on a scale. Scientists hope to develop a mobile mod el within the next two months, perhaps with a backpack air compressor. Besides the pants, OSU scientists also have been experimenting with robotic arms. By simulating human limbs, researchers are hoping to develop arms for amputees. By using a series of computer chips, design ers hope the arms can make precise move ments such as picking up a cup of coffee or switching a remote control. The same tech nology could be used on the space shuttle to create a new arm that would make pre cise movements to help construct the inter national space station. Yugoslav government takes over radio stations, confiscates newspapers The Associated Press BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — In an ongoing purge of Serbia’s inde pendent media, the government Tuesday took control of a popular radio station, and police im pounded all 100,000 copies of a leading daily newspaper. Radio Index, a student-run Bel grade station, was first shut down last month for allegedly broad casting without a license. On Tuesday, the Belgrade university board, complying with govern ment demands, announced it was replacing the station’s team of edi tors, B-92 radio reported. The station’s editor in chief, Nenad Cekic, who already faces criminal charges, protested the board’s decision, and Radio Index later issued a statement rejecting it. Cekic said the state-run body had given up any editorial control over the radio a long time ago. Earlier, police raided the head quarters of the Dnevni Telegraf (Daily Telegraph) and confiscated its Tuesday edition. The action came after the daily failed to pay a fine of $120,000 to the state for allegedly breaching a restrictive media law. Despite the crackdown, the owner of Dnevni Telegraf vowed to keep publishing. The moves against the two me dia outlets, both known for their criticism of President Slobodan Milosevic’s autocratic regime, are the latest in a series of crack downs against Serbia’s fledgling independent media following the adoption of the restrictive infor mation law last month.