Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 09, 2001, Page 10A, Image 10

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    I
Sat. March to »J4Hr
ALL GREEKS COME OUT AND WATCH THE WOMEN'S
CIVIL WAR GAME MARCH 10 @ 1:00.BRING YOUR
STUDENT ID AND WEAR YOUR LETTERS TO THE
DOOR AND CHEER ON THE WOMEN IN THEIR LAST GAME
take a break
at the break
12 pool tables video arcade
table tennis
air hockey big screen tv
emu ground floor
095 PERSONALS
Dial: 74-Party
Ads * Jokes * Stories & More!
Free Call! *18+ *Try it NOW!!!
Found keys in EMU Ampitheater
Tuesday, March 6. Call 345-6470 to
identify. _
105 TYPING/RESUME SERVICES
At 344-0759, ROBIN is GRAD
SCHOOL APPROVED. 20-year the
sis/dissertation background. Term
papers. Full resume service. Editing.
User pr. ON CAMPUSt
Horoscope by Linda C. Black
TODAY'S BIRTHDAY (March 9). A disap
pointment this year leads to something better.
Give up an old objective in March, and relax
into more security in April. Your noblest adver
sary is right in May, so learn and don't snuggle.
Achieve a dream at home in June, and come up
with a new one in July. The money you send to
a partner in September can help you find a
treasure in December. Don't disregard your
worries in February; use them to spur your
imagination.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating; 10
is die easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)—Today is a5 —
It may look like the job will never get done, but
it will. There's a lot of hassling before it's fin
ished, though. This weekend's excellent for fun
and games, but stick to business now.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8
— Be the wise observer — the more ridiculous
the others get, the better you look. When they
finally ask you to untangle the mess, tell them
the obvious solution.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21)—Today is a 5 —
There’s something that's overdue now. It’s not
mediing for the boss, but it still takes top pri
. ity. Make sure a loved one knows that.
\NCER (June 22-July 22)—Today is a 7 —
ings may be jammed up at work, but you can
>d a way around the problem. A friend gives
;>u the clue. Take a new route to get where you
want to go.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 5—Ask
your sweetheart to wait a little longer before
taking on a major expense. This also applies to
a child who wants something expensive. Pro
vide an extra service to boost your income first
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)—Today isa6 —
You're running into arguments all day long, but
you'll succeed in the end. Somebody from far
away provides exactly what you need at exactly
the right moment. Contact them in plenty of
time, so they can.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct 22)—Today is a 5 — If
you're having trouble finishing an assignment,
step back and take care of something else
you've promised. That will clear your mind.
When you go back to the first dilemma, it may
have fixed itself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 7
— Work closely with a partner to solve a deli
cate issue. Your male may come up with a win
ning idea and a friend will be a big help, too.
Don't try to clean up the mess yourself.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today
is a 5 — An older person, possibly one you're
arguing with, is more in touch with reality than
you are. Don't feel like you have to have the fi
nal word.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is
a 9 —While everybody else is trying to figure
out where to go, you may have already won the
race, or whatever s at stake. You can see the big
picture, so move on out.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)—Today is a 5
— So many worthy causes, so little time and
money. You want to save the world, but jobs
need doing at home. They'll take all your re
sources this week. Tell the others they'll have to
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 5
— Don't try to figure it all out; there is a logi
cal answer, but your partner may find it before
you do. It's not a good day to ask for a raise. Pay
attention, so you can be in the right place at the
right time.
5pm Vigil
NEWMAN CENTER
Catholic Campus Ministry
St. Thomas More University Parish
Mu* Mon-Fri • 5:15
Wed • 9 pm (Student Mass)
I NCAAs await UO
■ Katie Crabb and Jason
Boness will represent Oregon
at the NCAA Indoor
Championships this weekend
By Robbie McCallum
Oregon Daily Emerald
While sunny skies and spring
like weather have lured most of the
Oregon track and
field athletes out
doors, two Ducks
will compete
once more in
doors.
Senior Katie
Crabb and red
shirt sophomore Jason Boness com
pete today through Saturday at the
NCAA Indoor Track and Field
Championships in Fayetteville,
Ark.
Crabb, a seven-time NCAA quali
fier in cross country and track and
field, is seeded eighth in the
women’s mile in a field of 16 run
ners. Crabb’s personal best mile
time of4 minutes, 42 seconds ranks
her fourth on the all-time Oregon
record book and is the Ducks’ fastest
mile time in 13 years.
Last season, Crabb placed sev
enth in the 1,500 meters at the
Sports brief
Softball to finish preseason in
California tourney
The No. 24 Oregon softball team
is in Sunnyvale, Calif., today for
the National Invitational Softball
Tournament, the team’s final
NCAA Outdoor Championships,
earning her All-American status.
Crabb’s preliminary race is
scheduled for 6:15 p.m. today (CT),
with the final scheduled for 6:05
p.m. Saturday.
Boness owns the eleventh-best
mark nationally in the high jump
with a season-best 7 feet, 2 and 1/4
inches. Boness, a two-time All
American in outdoor track, won the
Mountain Pacific Championships
on Feb. 24 to qualify.
Boness competes at 4:15 p.m. Sat
urday.
Three other Ducks earned NCAA
provisional marks this winter but
will not compete in Fayetteville.
Sophomore Jason Hartmann was
invited to compete in the 5,000 me
ters after earning a No. 15 seeding,
but declined so he could focus on
his outdoor debut next weekend at
Hayward Field. The All-American
ran a 14:05 at the Iowa State Classic
on Feb. 9.
Seniors Rian Ingram and Holly
Speight each earned provisional
marks in the men’s shot put and
women’s pole vault, respectively,
but were not invited to the champi
onship meet.
The outdoor track and field sea
son begins March 17 at the Oregon
Preview at Hayward Field.
warmup before the regular season
begins March 26.
The 13-team tournament begins
with pool play today before break
ing into brackets on Saturday. The
Ducks (16-13 overall) will face Vir
ginia Tech, Miami-Ohio and Long
Beach State today.
Call (541)3464343
or stop by Room 300 Erb Memorial Union
to place your ad today.
P.0. Box 3159 Eugene, OR 97403
E-mail: classads@oregon.uoregon.edu
On-line edition: www.dailyemerald.com
120 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Emerald City Comics
Your store for comics, games,
Anime. 770 E. 13th 345-2568
130 CARS/TRUCKS
91 Camaro 3.1 L Power everything.
Looks good, runs good. $3500 obo,
MUST SELL. Call 349-1497
1979 Volvo 4-dr, 4-spd, leather, AM
FM/cassette, well maintained, looks
& runs great, $2195.346-1026.
1997 Toyota Tercel CE. 50K, great
condition. Dark blue, tinted windows,
ps, Kenwood CD, well-maintained.
$7000/obo. 513-4600
145 COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS
Mac G4, dual 450 processor,
384MB, $1799; Mac G3/266, 128MB
RAM, USB port, $599. Apple vision
17in monitor, $200; Epson 600 print
er, $100; Umax 1200S scanner,
$50. US Robotics 56k modem, $50.
Call 503-363-9518.
150 TV & SOUND SYSTEMS
CASH! We Buy, Sell & Service VHS
VCR's & Stereos. Thompson Elec
tronics, 1122 Oak, 343-9273
155 INSTRUMENTS/MUSIC EQUIP.
Limited openings. Guitar, keyboards,
bass lessons. JOHN SHARKEY. 1/9
pm M-F. 342-9543.
178 CHILD CARE
Part-time work. Start June or Sept.
Childcare. Approx. 8 hrs/week. Flex
ible hours. Janie 465-1389.
180 TRAVEL & LODGING
Mexico/Florida. Spring Break
Last minute - no problem. We still
have room. Call now.
Leisure Tours. 1 -800-584-7533.
185 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Established, profitable local parent
ing publication for sale. Excellent cli
ent base, super potential, freedom to
work your own hours. Owner mov
ing, must sell. $18,000/offer. Call
684-0214
190 OPPORTUNITIES
Peer Health Education Program
is seeking UO undergrads interested
in a practicum type experience.
Learn more about sexual health,
food issues, exercise and drugs on
campus. Educate other students and
earn upper division credit for making
a difference on campus. Students
are enrolling now for spi. n term by
contacting Annie at 346-28*»3.
$$ Get Paid For Your Opinions! $$
Earn $15-$125 and more/ survey!
www.money4opinions.com
Eugene web development company
needs intern, paid position, to assist
in web and graphic design, basic
HTML editing. 10 hrs/wk.
www.resourceful.net/intern.cfm
CRU
Campus Crusade for Christ
Wednesdays 8:30pm
Education 276
Call 345-5799
http://gladstone.uoregoa.edu/-asuoccc/
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)
.-"7—i
. '.J y^ v\ *• ^
Campus Ministry at
Central Lutheran Church
Welcomes you!
Sunday Eucahrist:
8:15 & 10:45AM; 6:30PM