Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 20, 2001, Page 10A, Image 10

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    011615
©TARGET
Training
& F i t n e s s
vmmmm
Natural
SELECT
The Training and Fitness Challenge is a one day CROSS
TRAINING competition open to all students. There will
be two divisions - Men's and Women's. Each team will
consist of 2 competitors who will compete in 5 events
to win a trip to the National Championships in Los
Angeles. AH participants compete in these events:
Who can make it to the top
in the fastest time?
SAB Obstacle Course
Your Speed, Agility, Quickness
are put to the test
mm
Team relay (2 x 3/4 mi)
Basic fitness lm!s
Sit n reach, sit-ups, and more...
All participants receive a FREE
T-shirt, product samples, and
more. Champions will receive
an expehse paid trip to
•compete at the National
Championships in L A.. Prize
package includes-travel to and
. from nationals, 3 nights
lodging, IdcaHransportation.
and a team adventore day.
Event Date: Saturday, April 21st
Cost: FREE!
More Info: Drop by 102 Esslinger or call 346-4113
Men’s golf aims to recover
■After a stumble in the desert, Oregon hopes to right itself in
its final tourney before the Pac-10 Championships
By Jeff Smith
Oregon Daily Emerald
The month of April has brought
two extremes for the No. 23 Ore
gon men’s golf team.
On April 3, the Ducks dominat
ed the Western Intercollegiate and
won their first tournament of the
season — beating out second-place
Washington by 17 strokes.
On April 14, however, Oregon
stubbed its toe and finished tied
for 19th at the Thunderbird Invita
tional — its lowest finish of the
season.
Reason for concern? Nah, just a
“hiccup,” according to head coach
Steve Nosier.
• “I was tremendously disap
pointed in how poorly we played,
but I don’t think it’s an indication
'of the overall ability of this team,”
Nosier said.
Which brings the Ducks to this
weekend’s U.S. Intercollegiate in
the Bay Area at the Stanford Golf
Course.
The tournament will be Ore
gon’s last tune-up for the April 27
29 Pacific-10 Conference Champi
onships in every way, shape and
form. The Ducks will not only
compete in the same city and on
the same 6,786-yard, par-71 course
that the Pac-lOs will use, but the
field for this weekend also in
cludes every Pac-10 team.
Of those 10, No. 4 Arizona State,
No. 6 Southern California and No.
18 Arizona join Oregon as the only
teams ranked in this week’s top 25.
The Ducks remained in the top 25
for the second 'Straight week de
spite their poor showing last week
in Tempe, Ariz.
“I feel our team matches up very
well with the Stanford Golf
Course, probably better than the
Karsten Course at Arizona State,”
Nosier said. “That’s not to make an
excuse for what happened last
weekend.”
The six-man team that will try to
get the Ducks back on track in
cludes senior Matt Genovese, jun
iors Aaron Byers and Brandon
Harnden, sophomores John Ellis
and Chris Carnahan and redshirt
freshman Mike Sica.
“We’ve got some talent on this
team, and I think we’re still in
great shape at the present time,”
said Nosier, who has led the Ducks
to five NCAA West Regionals in
his eight seasons at Oregon.
Last year, Oregon ended up in
fourth place at the U.S. Intercolle
giate with a score of 878. Oregon’s
only win at this tournament came
in 1993.
Action will bhgin Saturday with
36 holes and will conclude Sun
day with the final 18 holes.
Recruits
continued from page 7 A
cause of academic problems, she
was unable to enroll as a Wildcat.
In two years at Southern Idaho,
Martin tallied 796 kills and 439
blocks- while leading the team to its
seventh national championship in
eight years! She was named the Na
tional Junior College Athletic Assor
ciation Player of the Year last season
in addition to garnering MVP honors
in the conference, region and nation
al tournament in 2000. ~
“Our number-one priority was
to improve the physicality of our
roster,” Ferreira said. “I feel like
teams. had their way at the net
with us last season. But Stephanie
will be able to go eyeball-to-eye
ball with any blocker in the con
ference/’
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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
recycle*• recycle • recycle
craftCl
'enter,u(
346-4361
°re9on,edu
Woodcut Prints
Saturday, April 21-May 12
12:00-4:00pm $50.00
Stone Carving
Sat, April 21, May 5 & 19
10:30am-4:30pm $50.00
Therapeutic Pillouis
Sunday, April 22 & 29
5:00-7:30pm $20.00
Aufyoce
^hb/g/n
.\10^0'
346-4361
Horoscope by Linda C. Black
TODAY S BIRTHDAY (April 20). You're
getting stronger this year, and you're more will
ing to take action. The real secret of your suc
cess, however, is your great compassion. Pon
der long and hard before launching a new
endeavor in April. You'll benefit from the con
cern you show others in May. In June, abun
dance is your reward for having done the
homework. Leam from a wise older woman in
July. August is for fun, and September is about
service. By December you'll be ready to let off
some steam, and the farther from home the bet
ter. In February, join folks who share your be
liefs, and change things for the better.
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: IQ
is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) —Today is an 8
— You're becoming impatient, but don't rush
forward. You need to head in the right direc
tion. Once you're sure, proceed at full speed.
Your enthusiasm spurs your whole team to vic
TAURIIS (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6
— If you're due to receive extra money, make
sure you get it. Early in the day, make time for
a dear friend. Later on, you may get a new as
signment that demands your full attention.
Make sure you're compensated well for those
efforts, too.
GEMINI (May 21-June21)—Today is a 6—
This isn't a good time to delegate. You can do
the job better yourself — and faster. You have
the experience the others lack, so don't waste
time (theirs) or money (yours). Don't procrasti
nate, deviate, speculate or even contemplate.
Just do it.
CANCER (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 7
— A person who's been impossible is about to
mellow out — but just a little, and just enough
to have a sense of humor again. Don't hold a
grudge. It's not worth the effort. Accept the
apology even if it isn't made with words.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 7 — An
early date with your sweetheart may have to be
postponed. Why not set it up for after work in
stead? By then the hassles will be history. Take
off on a weekend trip tonight, if you can. That
would be perfect.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)—Today is a 6 —
.There's plenty of mess to clean up. You didn't
make this problem,(so why should you care?
Well, because you're good at cleaning up mess
es. It's a gift. And they can’t figure out how to
clean it up. so it's your show.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct 22) — Tqday is a 6 —
Continued collaboration is an excellent plan.
You be the brains, and someone else can stand
up and make the presentation — or the argu
ment. This other person might start to J6ok
pretty darned good to you, and vice versa.
Consider it a fringe benefit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)— Today is a 6
— With support from the one you love, things
are starting to look possible again. Maybe not
easy, but possible. Remember this lesson. No
more trying to do it all by yourself. Family:
That's where you get your power.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today
is a 7 —A recent setback could have you hus
tling to patch up leaks. Life is going to be a lot
more fun soon, and not just because it's Friday.
However, you're going to have to continue
working over the weekend. It's more fun, but
it's not all fun yet.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is
a 7 — Somebody else's impatience could al
most get you to lose your temper. You're actu
ally quite an outspoken character, as this fool
is about to find out. But be cool. It's more ef
fective.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 7
— Don't let a silly rejection knock you off your
stride. You’re a long-distcnce runner, remem
ber? You're in this for the long haul. Commit
ted. Determined. Besides, here's a hint: You
will succeed.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 7
— Continue to stand up for yourself, even if
you're scared. It's not heroism if you're not
scared. Today is unlikely to be boring, but it's
likely to be good for you.
090 BIRTHDAYS
Happy
Birthday
Midge!
Love, Mom, Dar Tim,
Tracy, Shelley a. irynn.
thect6gstorfe.com
«•' 11 -"-fecte - 9 4 8 - :c L O G
095 PERSONALS
Eugene’s Coolest Party Line!!!
Dial: 74-Party
Ads * Jokes * Stories & More!
Free Call! *18+ Try it NOW!!!
100 LOST & FOUND
Shedrain umbrella found at 14th &
Kincaid bus shelter on 4/18. Call to
identify. 998-3409.
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
Japanese Animation: Largest rental
selection in town at Emerald City
Comics. 770 E. 13th. 345-2568.
”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
91 Camaro 3.1 L Power everything.
Looks good, runs good. $3500 obo,
MUST SELL. Call 349-1497
82 VW SCIROCCO
Green, 143k miles, $600 obo.
687-7087.
130 CARS/TRUCKS
1997 Toyota Tercel CE.
50K, great condition. Dark blue, tinted
windows, ps, Kenwood CD, well
maintained. $700CVobo. 513-4600
‘95 Acura Integra GS-R. Leather,
V-Tec, CD, alarm. I worked for
Acura & have lots of dealer
extras! $12,500.513-6920.
2000 Toshiba Laptop, 1695CDT, un
der warranty, 64MB, Win 98, Lotus
Suite, 56k modern, $1400. 344-0768
150 TV & SOUND SYSTEMS
CASH! We Buy, Sell & Service VHS
VCR's & Stereos. Thompson Elec
tronics, 1122 Oak, 343-9273 .....
Tfiznk Spring,!
165 SPORTS EQUIPMENT
Salomon xscream skis
195cm-’00 like new
$450. 684-4553
ATTENTION RECENT GRADS;
Great opportunity to spend 1 year on
east coast. Join Connecticut tamily
with 2 great boys, ages 5 & 6 Be
come part of family, enjoy activities,
meals, vacations. Must be responsi
ble, honest, mature, a great driver
and of course, love children. Have a
great sense of humor, high energy
and patient all rolled in one! Call l i
sa at 203-459-1170.
200 WORK STUDY POSITION!
NOW HIRING WORK STUDY ONI Y
(no tech fee). Office assistant for
Honors College professor. Office as
sistant for Honors College. Paid of
fice experience desirable. $8.50 per
hour, flexible hours. Apply with Jan
ice at 320 Chapman Hall (6- 261 d
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
CRU
Campus Crusade for Christ
Wednesdays 8:30pm
Education 276
Call 345-5799
http://gladstone.uoregon.edu/-asuoccc/
Call 346-4343 to list your
services here.
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)
' ' ' "
Campus Ministry at
Central Lutheran Church
Welcomes you!
Sunday Eucahrist:
8:15 & 10:45AM; 6:30PM
Monday Evening Bible Study:
8:15PM in the church library
18th & Potter *345-0395
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