Don’t Get Trapped In A Small Apartment • Free Month Rent • 1 & 2 Bedrooms • Quiet & Large • Gas Fireplace Now taking Summer & Fall Reservations Air Conditioning Laundry Hookups Free Cable Balcony/Deck J i II *jafC til tjtiii Two Courses -- One Low Price Nine Holes Eighteen Holes $10 $1^ 91 Village Drive, Cottage Grove " 942-8730 (18 min. South of Eugene on 1-5) Rentals Available Restaurant Mon-Fri With Student ID Quick play 36 challenging holes of golf 2000 Cal Young Rd. • 484-1927 (5 min from campus-off Coburg Rd.) NCAAs await tennis teams ■The Ducks have steep challenges in store for them in the first round of the NCAA tournament By Robbie McCallum for the Emerald They survived two teammates leaving the team. They made it through a mid-season slump. They are young but they have ex perience. Tomorrow, the up-and down women’s tennis season comes down to one match. Oregon (8-14 overall) earned the last NCAA wild-card bid, making it the second-straight year the team has reached postseason. The No. 51 Ducks take on No. 36 Mississippi State tomorrow in the first round in Tempe, Ariz., where they’ll have to deal with 90-de gree conditions. “We’re very excited to go there and play,” head coach Jack Griffin said. “We’re happy that we’re cre ating a tradition of making the tournament every year.” After earning one of the biggest victories in school history against Arizona, sophomore Sarah Col istro and freshman Amy Juppen latz left. The Ducks lost nine of their next ten games, falling be hind in the ever-tough Pacific-10 conference. But the NCAA was impressed enough by Oregon’s schedule to give it a tournament berth. “We went through some adver sity and lost a couple players and still managed to squeak in,” Grif fin said. “We’ll take advantage of it.” Mississippi had a similar sea 005763 Mght this way.*, to one of the best jobs on campus. Get paid to design ads for your award-winning daily newspaper. Pick up an application and job description at 300 EMU. Application deadline is TODAY at 5 p.m. The Oregon Daily Emerald is an equal opportunity employer committed to a culturally diverse workplace. Emerald Catharine Kendall Emerald Alina Wygonowska leads the Ducks into a first-round match with Mississippi State. son to Oregon. After winning six of their first seven non-conference matches, the Bulldogs hit the Southeastern Conference sched ule and lost seven of their last eight matches. Mississippi State “is a very tough team, real match-competi tive,” Griffin said. “It’s really go ing to come down to who wants it more.” With eight players all getting significant playing time, the Bull dogs (10-11) have a deep lineup. This should give Oregon trouble in doubles play, which has been a problem for the Ducks all season. The only ranked Bulldog is No. 93 junior Amelie Detriviere, who leads a workhorse team with a so il record. Linda Mattsson also has an impressive record at 21-6. The Ducks will need output from their top two players, No. 76 senior Alina Wygonowska and No. 72 freshman Monika Geiczys. Wygonowska was recently named to the Pac-10 honorable mention team. Should the Ducks defeat Mis sissippi State, they will face the winner of the Arizona State-Army match on Sunday. Oregon lost to Pac-10 rival Arizona State earlier this season, 7-2, and they have never faced Army. The Oregon men have a much tougher task ahead of them. The Ducks also barely qualified for the NCAAs on a wild card bid. They travel to Fresno, Calif, tomorrow for first-round action. Oregon received a tough draw in No. 14 Fresno State. The Bull dogs were the Western Athletic Conference Champions with a 24 CC It's really going to come down to who wants it more. jack Griffin 3 record. No. 32 Peter Luczak leads the Fresno State attack, fol lowed by No. 43 Olivier Lejeune and No. 87 Rob Cheyne. The No. 21 doubles team of Andy Scoteanu and Cheyne will pro vide a challenge for Oregon’s No. 24 Guillermo Carter and Leslie Eisinga. Fresno State “is a very solid team,” head coach Chris Russell said. “They’ve played consistent ly and hard all season'. But it’s not like we haven’t seen this level of play before." If Oregon advances past Fresno State, it plays the winner of the Southern California-Pacific match.