Crabb earns All-American honors in last race ■ Crabb and Boness both finish ninth at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships. By Robbie McCallum Oregon Daily Emerald It was a bittersweet ending to a storied track and field career. Senior Katie Crabb, who ended her career at Oregon at the NCAA Indoor Championships Saturday in Fayettville, Ark., was in position to run a personal best, score points and walk away from the oval satisfied. A mid-race collision put an end to all of that. “Coming in I was excited to have one last opportunity, but it didn’t unfold like I would have hoped,” Crabb said. “But that’s the way things go sometimes, and you can’t always prevent collisions.” Crabb was positioned in fifth place in the women’s mile, when halfway through the race she collid ed with two runners, causing her to roll her ankle. The redshirt-senior maintained pace until the final 200 meter lap, when the pain became too much for Crabb. The Chico, Calif., native placed ninth in a time of four minutes, 46 seconds, good enough for All American honors. “I’m really proud of Katie,” women’s track and field coach Tom Heinonen said. “I thought she raced really well in the championship set ting. Overall, she’s had a great time at Oregon and we’ll just never know what she could have been able to do [Saturday] because she didn’t have a fair run.” “The race got off to a good start,” Crabb said. “And then when it slowed, I remained patient, thinking I could make a move in the second half. Just before that was going to hap pen, I rolled [the ankle]. I tried to hang on and not think about it, but it just wasn’t there at the end. ” Arkansas’ Tracy Robertson won the race in a time of 4:39. Redshirt sophomore Jason Boness had a more successful out ing in Fayetville. The transfer from Northern Iowa placed ninth in the men’s high jump with a leap of six feet, 11-and-three-quarter inches. Boness’ height tied him for sev enth place with Adrian Shears of Norfolk State and Michael Ponikvar of Stanford, but was awarded ninth due to more misses. Boness earned his fourth All-American honors, his second as a Duck. Weber State’s Charles Clinger won the competition with a leap of 7-5. The entire Oregon track and field team takes to the outdoors this Sat urday for the season-opening Ore gon Preview at Hawyard Field. NCAA continued from page 1 Lindsey Dion said Sunday. “I thought we had blown the opportunity to go to the NCAA Tournament, and the decision was out of our hands. But J.ow and behold, we got in.” Dion said there was no formal team gathering, but that the Ducks did play “phone tag” after the an nouncement. If the Ducks advance from the first round, they will face the win ner of the Utah-Fairfield contest. Oregon lost to Utah, 63-48, in the preseason. The two-time defending Pac-10 champion Ducks were plagued by injuries and illness throughout the season, which at one point included a five-game losing streak. But Satur day’s victory capped off a four-game winning streak ending the season on a higher note. The Ducks finished the season fourth in the conference standings. “I feel like we’re playing really good basketball right now,” junior guard Jamie Craighead said after Saturday’s game. “There is no pres sure on us.” A week ago, the Civil War prepa ration was overshadowed by a team meeting with Oregon Athletic Di rector Bill Moos. Eight Oregon players met with Moos March 4 to discuss the team’s relationship with Runge and to ask that the eight-year coach be fired after the season. Moos and Runge have yet to discuss the issue and will not meet until the conclusion of the season. “It’s been a surreal experience this week,” Runge said after Saturday’s game. “It’s not easy. My major con cern is to make sure that they had a chance to go to the tournament.” Leading up to the Civil War con test, Runge forbade the team from speaking with the media. “This week was very emotional, and coach finally said that we needed to focus on the game,” Craighead said. “And I think we’ve done a good job of not focusing on [the meeting].” Three other Pac-10 teams — co conference champions Stanford, Washington and Arizona State — earned automatic bids to the NCAA Tournament. Stanford is the 10th seed and Washington is sixth in the West Regional, while the slumping Sun Devils are the 11th seed in the Mideast. Call (541) 346 4343 or stop by Room 300 Erb Memorial Union to place your ad today. P.O. 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Four easy ways to place an ad in the Oregon Daily Emerald Classifieds: 1) Stop by Suite 300 EMU, M-F 8a.m.-5p.m. 2) Visit our website: www.dailyemerald.com 3) Call 346-4343, M-F 8a.m.-5p.m. 4) Fax 346-5578 Buzz Coffeehouse emu ground floor fresh-made garden salad s2.95 095 PERSONALS SPRING BREAK SPECIAL - Lose up to 30 lbs in 30 days. Safe, all natural products. Ask about our per lb rebate! 1-800-410-3680. Eugene’s Coolest Party Line!!! Dial: 74-Party Ads * Jokes * Stories & More! Free Call! *18+ *Try it NOW!!! Jeed a f.Birthday Giftr*-$r Place an Emerald > Al Birthday Greeting! VJj 346-4343 100 LOST & FOUND 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. Laser pr. ON CAMPUS! 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 Monday Is Magic: Arena Night at Emerald City Comics. 770 E. 13th. 345-2568. 120 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Margot from Mt. Olympus says “The Gods smiled on the C.H. and gave us lots of clothes.” The Clothes Horse Buy, Sell, Trade 720 E. 13th • 345-5099 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. Need to sen your favorite ■WHEELS? 3 lines, 5 days Only $15 Let the Oregon Daily Emerald Classifieds help you sell your cycle. Bring us a picture and we’ll put it in your ad for FREE! Offer expires June 11, 2001 346-4343 Oregon Daily Emerald 130 CARS/TRUCKS 1997 Toyota Tercel CE. 50K, great condition. Dark blue, tinted windows, ps, Kenwood CD, well-maintained. $7000/obo. 513-4600 H5 COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS 700MHz Pill, 256MB, 20GB, DVD w TVout CDRW, 19” Sony, HP932C Printer, HPSJ5370 Scanner. $1700. 731-6500. 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. Compaq 1692 Laptop, 466MHz K6 2, 12.1” TFT, 6xDVD, 6GB, 64MB. $1100.541731-7317. HorOSCOpC by Linda C. Black • Be your own boss. • Work you can be passionate about. • A new career in )ust a year. • Flexible houre. Enroll How! 587 hour Massage Training program. Located in the heart of downtown Eugene. Established 1989. Call 541-687-8101 ef * tedy Therapies 1250 Chomeifon Street Eugene Ok 77401 TODAY'S BIRTHDAY (March 12). Travel and romance beckon, and the romance comes first, maybe soon. Your boss (or new boss) pro vides new benefits in April. Polish your skills in May. Rely on close family in June for the ob jectivity you lack. You're on the path to success in July, but don't lug excess baggage. A pas sionate pleasure cruise is possible in October, but only with planning. Be back on time in De cember to assume new responsibilities. Goals can be met in February. To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 6 —You and your friends would like to continue your weekend activities, but that's not a great idea. Even if you're financially independent, be impractical at your own peril. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — Proceed with caution. If you're negotiating a deal, work with a partner. Let your teammate make the proposal and take the initial resist ance. Then come in later and cinch it. GEMINI (May 21-June 21)—Today is a 6 — ‘t on the good side of a person who wants to ■Urol everything. Don’t argue, even if it ans biting your tongue. Don't expound on or beliefs, either. Let your actions speak for vNCER (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 7 - Don't let a sensuous, good-looking con per ■ on get into your pockets. Your heart's one ■ling, but your money's another. Don't let your pouse or your kids go shopping with your credit cards. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 7 — A roommate or partner has something planned for your home and won't be dissuaded, even if it won't work. Save your breath and let them learn the hard way. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)—Today is a 6 — Working late could interfere with a neighbor hood get-together. Schedule family time for to morrow night instead. Once a tough job is out of the way, you'll be more likely to relax. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct 22) — Today is a 6 — Take on an extra job for extra money. You've spent it before you've made it, but don't fret. Do something to showcase your creativity that will also allow you to pay for a loved one's educa SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — You may have to put the kibosh on some body else's hopes and dreams. A roommate or child has lofty goals that won't work out — not if you have to pay for them, anyway. Don't hes itate to lay down the law. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —Today is a 6—You're learning quickly, but everything you need to know isn't found in books. Listen at keyholes. You like to tell the truth, but you do it too quickly. Wait until you get the whole sto •y CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)—Today is a 7 — If a newfound friend offers you a great deal, be wary. There could be more bells and whistles than substance. Don't make any agree ments. Wait until late tomorrow when ail the facts are in. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)—Today is a 6 —The person you're trying to convince seems not to be listening or understanding, or both, but they may be getting more than you realize. Don't gel snotty. You still have a chance of making the sale. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 6 — Making travel plans and long-distance con nections could be difficult. You may get through tomorrow, but it won't be easy. Don’t rash to conclusions, either. Your information may be incomplete. ^ Want a cool computer? Find one in the ODE Classifieds, Section 145. Call 346-4343 to advertise.