Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 15, 2000, Page 12, Image 12

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    009430
NOTICE:
Financial Aid
Counselors
appointment
schedule change
Beynnin? Monday, May 15 and until June 30, counselors in the Office of Student Financial Aid
will be available for drop-in appointments in the afternoons only. Office staff will continue to
be available to assist students from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM.
This change is bem<j made so the counselors can complete, necessary evaluation and updating
of financial aid applications for students enrolling this summer and next fall. A dramatic
increase in applications (25 percent more scholarship applications and io7. more financial aid
applications) coupled with unexpected staff vacancies make this step necessary.
Your patience and understanding is appreciated.
Pick up an Emerald at 33
campus & community locations.
Golf
continued from page 10
made it.
Besides’ the Bruins, Oregon
State, Washington, Washington
State and California also ended
their seasons. Oregon State will
host the NCAA Championships,
despite finishing last at West Re
gional.
On the flip side, some surpris
ing teams played well at the West
Regionals. No. 11 San Jose State
finished second, No. 27 Nebraska
finished tied for ninth, and, of
course, the No. 26 Ducks shocked
everyone but themselves by fin
ishing seventh.
“I’ve always believed in this
team,” Baumgartner said. “A lot
of teams that were expected to go
didn’t handle the pressure well,
and boy, did we handle it well.”
She# should be proud. The
Ducks recovered from disappoint
ing finishes at the Ping/Arizona
State Invitational and the Oregon
hosted Pac-10 Championships.
The NCAA Championships
will be held at the Crosswater Re
sort Golf Course in Sunriver.
Decathlon
continued from page 9
Olympic Trial standard of 7,900.
Competition of the 10-event con
test started at noon on Saturday.
“I’m happy with my score, it’s
about a 120-second PR,” Hart
said. “I was pleased because Ed
trained me all the way through
Wednesday. We didn’t really take
a break for this.
“It showed through the high
jump, long jump and hurdles, but
I came up big in a couple other
events.”
Oregon’s Santiago Lorenzo fin
ished in second place with an
other personal-best score of
7,649. The native of Argentina
also fell just short of his country’s
Olympic standard.
“I’m so happy. After the first
day, I wasn’t very pleased,”
Lorenzo said. “But the hurdles
came out very well, and I did my
best three throws ever.”
Oregon’s Billy Pappas finished
fourth with 7,184 points behind
Washington’s Jacob Predmore,
who finished with 7,298. Doug
Sells finished ninth with 6,615
points. Both Pappas and Sells
also had personal bests.
“Overall, I’m very pleased and
very proud of these guys,” Ore
gon decathlon coach Bill Lawson
said. “Oregon just scored 13
points toward the Pac-10 title.”
Lorenzo was just 48 points be
hind Hart after outscoring him
704 to 667 in the discus throw
with a mark of 137-8. However,
Hart’s blistering*performance in
the pole vault earned the Golden
Bear 1,035 points. Hart never
looked back after that.
Lorenzo put the nails in his
second-place finish with a field
best 193-4 throw in the javelin.
“His overall strength and con
ditioning have yet to improve,”
Lawson said. “I fully expect San
tiago to be an 8,000-point decath
lete before he graduates. I don’t
know if he can make a serious
run at Oregon’s record, but I
think he’s going to be a player in
the NCAAs to come. You don’t
want to put too much pressure
(( Overall, I’m very
pleased and very proud
of these guys. yy
Bill Lawson
Oregon decathlon coach
on the guy.”
Pappas was in close contention
for second place throughout both
days of competition, but lost the
most ground on Predmore in Sat
urday’s high jump. He scored a
670 in that event by clearing 6-0
3/4, about four inches less than
what he cleared at the Texas De
cathlon in Austin last March.
The 110-meter hurdles was
Pappas’ strong point of the meet.
He finished second with a score
of 840 in that event.
Sells’ ninth-place finish didn’t
give Pac-10 points to Oregon, but
it was a learning experience for
the ffeshman. Low scores in the
final two events — the javelin
and the 1,500 — prevented him
from making a run at eighth
place.
This Summer, Make
a Sound Investment
in Your Future
Get Down to Business This Summer. Register Now!
Six Courses, One Minor in
Business Administration:
A Sound Investment in Your Future
BA 101 Introduction to Business
BA 215 Accounting: Language of Business
BA 315 Economy, Industry, and Competitive Analysis
BA 316 Management: Creating Value through People
BA 317 Marketing: Creating Value for Customers
BA 318 Finance: Creating Value through Capital
All six courses are offered this summer. Enjoy small class sizes
and the possibility of taking several courses in one term.
For course information, check the summer session class schedule or DUCK WEB.
For program information, contact Ron Severson, business administration minor director,
at 346-3258 or <baminor@lcbmail.uoregon.edu>.
2000 University of Oregon
Summer Session
http://uosummer.uoregon.edu/
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541 343-2300
PUBLIC LECTURE SERIES
The New Europe at the Millennium
The Northern Dimension:
How the European Union, the Baltic
States, Russia, and the United States
Shape Security and Cooperation in
Northern Europe
Kari Mottola
Special Adviser, Security Policy,
Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland
Monday, May 15
7:30 p.m.
Knight Library Browsing Room
reception to follow
This lecture is sponsored by the Carlton Raymond and Wilberta
Ripley Savage Endowment for in International Relations and Peace.
For more information, call 346-1521.
University of Oregon