Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 25, 2000, Page 10, Image 10

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    Oregon tennis takes break
from hectic Pac-10 schedule
■ The men’s and women’s
tennis teams look to keep
momentum up against
West Coast schools
By Robbie McCallum
for the Emerald
As the month-long homestand
winds down for the Oregon
women’s tennis team, the men
make their first home appearance
of the season Sunday.
Both Oregon squads are heavily
favored in this weekend’s match
es. The No. 33 women take a
breather this weekend, playing
only one match against St. Mary’s
on Sunday. The No. 52 men also
play St. Mary’s, catching the Gaels
on a road trip to the Northwest. On
Saturday, Loyola Marymount, an
other West Coast Conference team,
comes to town.
Today, the men take on St.
Mary’s (2-6) at the Mountain Park
Recreation Center in Portland.
The home opener for the Ducks is
tomorrow at the Eugene Swim
and Tennis Club against Loyola
Marymount (0-6).
Oregon connection
The St. Mary’s men’s team has a
strong tie to Oregon tennis. The
Gaels’ coach
Michael Way
man signed
three Oregoni
ans last, year:
Josh Farley of
Wilsonville and
Deryk Inn and
Pat Fletchall of
Medford. This will provide Ore
gon’s Jason Menke, a Beaverton
native, some familiar competition.
Snubbed
Despite major upsets of nation
ally ranked opponents, senior cap
tains Guillermo Carter and Alina
Wygonowska were left off
Wednesday’s Intercollegiate Ten
nis Association rankings. Carter
upended Stanford’s 6th ranked
Geoff Abrams and then No. 30
Robert Kendrick of Pepperdine on
consecutive weekends.
Carter and freshman Leslie
Eisinga also knocked off the top
ranked doubles team of Abrams
and Alex Kim, 8-6.
Wygonowska sports a 13-8
record after an upset of No. 14
Alison Bradshv v of Arizona
State. A week earlier, Bradshaw
pulled off quite an upset of her
own, defeating San Diego’s top
ranked singles player.
Add rankings
Following impressive showings
against top-ranked teams, both the
men’s and women’s teams moved
up in the ITA teams polls this
week. The women went 2-1 last
weekend, highlighted by a hard
fought win against then No. 21
Arizona. The women earned their
highest ranking of the season at
No. 33. The men moved up in the
rankings eight places to claim the
53rd spot.
Emerald
Sophomore Sarah Colistro and the Ducks are favored to win their weekend match.
The road-show continues for softball in the Southwest
■ The softball team
hopes to take down
some tough competition
By Matt O’Neill
Oregon Daily Emerald
The Oregon softball team con
tinues its quest to reach the College
World Series with a stop in Las
Cruces, NM, over the weekend.
The team will take part in the New
Mexico State Tournament which
runs today through Sunday. .
The Ducks (7-3) face some seri
ous talent at the tournament, in
cluding a very good Florida team,
followed by Wichita State and
host New Mexico State. Oregon
will also see a familiar opponent
in Pacific-10 Conference foe No.
12 California. Head coach Rick
Gamez is well aware of the quality
of the other teams and he feels that
his team is ready.
“The competition is going to be
very good,” Gamez said. “We’ll
open up with Florida, who is 11-1
and is off to a great start, then we’ll
face Cal, who is 12-0 and off to
great start. So we’ll have to come
out and play aggressively on both
defense and offense.”
Gamez hopes his team continues
its recent power surge. The Ducks
have produced 74 runs in 10 games
and are batting a gaudy .348.
Junior Triawn Custer and senior
Jill Robinson have been two of the
bigger sparks for the Ducks’ offen
sive fire power. Custer sports a
.500 batting average with two
home runs and eight RBIs, while
Robinson began the season by go
ing 7 for 13 with two home runs.
Pitching will also be key to the
Ducks’success. Gamez, however,
is looking for a third quality
starter. He would like to see senior
Danielle Haag regain her form
from last season.
“We’ve got to get Danielle back
on track,” Gamez said. “We’re go
ing to need three pitchers to be
successful in this league.”
Call (541) 346-4343
or stop by Room 300, Erb Memorial Union
to place your ad today.
P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403
E-mail: classads@oregon. uoregon.edu
On-line edition: www.dailyemerald.com
085 GREEK ANNOUNCEMENTS
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Congratulations Colleen and Faith
on your engagements!
TTF, Your Sisters
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095 PERSONALS
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^JSuite 300 EMU • 346-4343j
105TYPING/RESUME SERVICES
At 344-0759, ROBIN is GRAD
SCHOOL APPROVED. 20-year
thesis/dissertation background.
Term papers. Full resume service.
Editing. Laser pr. ON CAMPUS!
EDITOR
Books, articles & dissertations.
681-9004
120 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
“Give Me Five!**
Run your “FOR SALE” ad (items
under $1,000) for 5 days. If the
item(s) doesn’t sell, call us at
346-4343 and we'll run your ad
again for another 5 days FREE!
Student/Private Party Ads Only«No Refunds ^
Emerald City Comics
Your store for comics, games,
Anime. 770 E. 13th 345-2568
125 FURNITURE/APPLIANCES
Former UO student must sell nice
furniture. CHEAP. Bed set, couch
es and desks. Please call 949-497
2886 or 949-280-8830.
New Mini Fridge
not needed anymore $90 obo.
Barbie 338-3142
Winter Work-Study Positions Available
A Programming Assistant position is now available.
This position like all positions at The Break, work at
Lhe front desk and coordinate another aspect of the
operation of our facility. Stop by The Break or call
346-4378 for more info. ,„,r —i. —
Application deadline
is Fri., Feb. 25th, 4pm
4pm HSREM
145 COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS
PowerMac G3/400 graphic design
system with 21" ColorSync monitor.
$2300. Epson Stylus 3000 inkjet
printer, $700.942-7981.
150TV & SOUND SYSTEMS
CASH! We Buy, Sell & Service
VHS VCR's & Stereos. Thompson
Electronics, 1122 Oak, 343-9293
155INSTRUMENTS/MUS-IC EQUIP.
TROMBONE FOR SALE
silver, used, prof, model
bach stradt 16 -- 346-8333
165 SPORTS EQUIPMENT
Snowboard, Boots & Bindings. 155
K2 Dart, Step-In Bindings. Brand
New! All for $275. 543-0803
175 WANTED
Wanted: 19 Overweight students
needed. We pay you to lose weight!
Call: 888-643-9284
175 WAITED
WEB PRODUCTION ASSISTANT
sought by largest nonprofit ed-tech
organization. Start as soon as
March 20th. 8-10 hrs/week. E-mail
or fax resume, phone number, and
samples of work by March 8th. Du
ties: page formatting, graphic optir
mization, Perl script editing. Soft
ware used: Word, HomePage,
Dreamweaver, Photoshop, DeBa
belizer, Outlook. Applicant must be
self-motivated and able to work in a
team environment. Work-study re
quired. Summer and fall-term avail
ability desired, webmaster@iste.org,
fax: 541.302.3781, phone:
541.338.4060, Web: www.iste.org.
No walk-ins.
180 TRAVEL & LODGING
MEXICO SPRING BREAK 2000.
South Padre Island, Acapulco,
Cancun from $399. Round trip air
fare. 7 nights hotel, 14 free meals,
night life you won't be able to tell
your mom about! Leisure Tours.
Call now for details 1-800-584-7533.
180 TRAVEL & LODGING
PRIVACY - Rockaway Beach, 1
bdrm furnished cabin, across from
beach, quiet atmosphere, includes
all utils, paid, $450/mo, $175/wk.
tcroman.com or 503-355-2229 Tim.
Aspiring Writers
Inform, Expose
Provoke, Explain
Tell, Ask, Vent, Change
An online college community
email us: earn ©maincampus com
$25 per article!
190 OPPORTUNITIES
Apprenticing Astrologer is offering
free natal chart readings. To make
appointment call Bright 338-7511.
200 WORK STUDY POSITIONS
WORK STUDY
Teacher's Assistant in an accredit
ed alternative school. for at-risk
youth. Teach math and reading
skills in tutorial and small groups.
Up to 20 hours per week. Strong
math (algebra) skills a must. May
assist students with Pre-employ
ment skills training as welt. Call
Cheryl at the Looking Glass Job
Center - 302-2554. Some negotia
tion on salary, must be work study
eligible.
Jobs in Campus Recycling!
Campus Recycling Now hiring work
study/ tech fee funded students for
positions beginning now.
Contact Campus Recycling at 346
1529. Leave message with a mail
ing address and phone number to
obtain application.
m mmm
CRU
Campus Crusade for Christ
Wednesdays 8:30pm
Education 276
Call 345-5799
__
i/j- Sunday Worship First
I United Methodist Church
1376 Olive St.
8:45 contemporary
11:05 traditional
College Students are Welcome!
Student Ministry at
The Koinonia Center
14th & Kincaid.
Thursday, 7pm
Presbyterians &
1st Congregational-UCC
Collegiate Christian
Fellowship
Sunday Mornings @ 11:00 a.m.
in the gym at First Baptist Church
868 High Street
. 345-0341
(Shuttle service also available)
NEWMAN CENTER
Catholic Campus Ministry
St. Thomas More University Parish
Mass Mon-Fri *5:15
Wed • 9 pm (Student Mass)
Sat • 5pm Vigil
Sun • 9, 1 lam, 7:30pm
346-4468