Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 11, 2001, Page 12, Image 12

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EVOLUTION
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IN THEATRES EVERYWHERE THIS JUNE
FIND THINGS IN ODE CLASSIFIEDS (ROOMMATES, TICKETS, STUFF
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Oregon kicks off
conference meet
■ Ducks travel down
to Berkeley for the Pac-10
Championships a week
before the expanded meet
By Robbie McCallum
and Peter Hockaday
Oregon Daily Emerald
A shot put, a discus, a javelin, a
pole vault pole, athletic tape for
marking starting
points, throwing
flats, sprinting
spikes and a emer
ald green and
lemon yellow sin
glet. Five Oregon
decathlete/heptathletes gathered this
list of implements Wednesday for
this weekend’s trip to the Pacific-10
Conference Multi-events Champi
onships in Berkeley, Calif.
After months
of training, the
Ducks will be
put to the test
against the con
ference’s eight
other schools
and their mul
ti-event crew.
Junior Santia
go Lorenzo
leads the de
cathletes into
action. The all-American and two
time Pac-10 runner-up has already
qualified for the
NCAA Champi
onships and
will look for his
first conference
crown Saturday
and Sunday.
“It’s been a
good season so
far,” Lorenzo
said. “The
main goal is to
win and score
points for the team. Other than that
I’d like to PR but the main goal is to
win.”
The Buenos Aires, Argentina na
tive has the best mark in the Pac-10
and the fourth best nationally with
7,726 points.
“This is a quiz for the big exam
which is the NCAAs,” he said. “Even
tually I’d like to break 8,000 points.”
Junior Billy Pappas and sopho
more Jason Slye will also compete
and are expected to score major
points for the Ducks.
Slye won the Baldy Castillo De
cathlon in Tempe, Ariz. on March
23 with 6,677 points. Pappas was a
NCAA provisional qualifier last
season and placed fourth overall.
Kenyon, Sullivan compete
on women’s side
Junior Jenny Kenyon and fresh
man Ann Sullivan will represent
the Oregon women’s track and
field team at the Pac-10 heptathlon
this weekend.
“This is the biggest meet of the
year for them,” Oregon head coach
Tom Heinonen said.
The two athletes will try to “set
the tone” for the expanded Pac-10
meet next weekend, according to
Kenyon.
“It’s sort of like dominoes,” Sul
livan said.. “If we do well, that
gives the rest of the team a boost
for next weekend.”
Sullivan and Kenyon will com
pete in the 100 hurdles, shot put
and high jump Saturday, and the
200, javelin, long jump and 800
Sunday. The 800 will be the last
event of the meet, and Kenyon is
apprehensive enough about the
800 to call the event “scary.”
Both Kenyon and Sullivan ex
pect top-notch competition at the
meet. The heptathletes will com
pete with some of the best in the
country, including UCLA’s
Michelle Perry, the top-ranked
heptathlete in the country.
“I don’t really pay attention to
the competition,” Sullivan said. “I
concentrate on the times.”
montana.su mmeh co m
The University of
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MISSOULA
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20th-Century
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Brian Whaley, 10:00 a.m.,
MUWH/ENG 394/CRN 41641
CENTURY
VX...
2001 SUMMER SESSION • JUNE 25-AUGUST 17
Register by telephone now. Pick up a free summer
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It has all the information you need to know about
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SCheck
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JUNE 25-AUGUST 17
diversity of Oregon