“37 years of Quality Service’ Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi German Auto Service 342-2912 • 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 We ship your stuff home! Take advantage of our Student Discounts Furniture, computers, stereos, TV's Insured, custom packing — UPS, Ocean Freight, Motor Freight vrTH ca*e 344-3106 2705 Willamette St. (convenient parking) Bucks swat Hornets away By Arnie Stapleton The Associated Press MILWAUKEE — Ervin Johnson has gone from MIA to MVP in George Karl’s eyes. The coach and center didn’t get along when they were in Seattle, where Karl questioned Johnson’s guts and gumption, suggesting the raw big man might not be cut out for the rigors of the NBA. In Milwaukee, they’ve found bliss together, and never more so than on Sunday, when the Bucks advanced to the Eastern Confer ence finals for the first time sinc^e 1986 and Karl called Jdhnsdn his most valuable player, j I i points and Ray Allen ha$ 28, matching their career playoff highs, and Sam Cassell added 17 as the Bucks beat the Charlotte Hornets 104-95 in Game 7. “Glenn and Ray were very ...” Karl said, pausing to give credit where he thought it was really due. “Ervin Johnson probably is in my mind the MVP of the series.” “He was so good at the dirty work and in the interior, in the paint,” Karl said. “He and Scotty Glenn Robinson 29 [Williams] and Jason Caffey, all my big guys did a great job. Even though the ‘Big Three’ are expect ing most of the reward, I really think Ervin was fantastic.” Johnson had 11 rebounds and four blocks as Milwaukee tied a franchise playoff record with 13 { { / just thank God that he united me and George back together. Ervin Johnson Milwaukee Bucks center^ j blocked shots, including at least one by all five starters. After moving into the starting lineup in Game 5, Johnson pulled down 41 rebounds and blocked 12 shots. He also helped frustrate El den Campbell and Jamal Mash burn. “I know Glenn Robinson and Ray Allen and Sam Cassell are great shooters, but Scott Williams and Ervin Johnson were probably MVPs,” Mashburn concurred. “They sacrificed so much to get those guys open. They’re like two P.J. Browns out there. I got sick and tired of seeing Ervin Johnson.” So did Karl when he was in Seattle. “I just thank God that he united me and George back together,” Johnson said. “A lot of people were saying a lot of negative things about that when we got back to gether, how our relationship was going to be. I’m just so glad that we worked things out. “We got married again, and hopefully it’s for life.” The rest of the Bucks and their fans sure hope so. While Johnson was patrolling the paint the way Karl had plead ed for him to do in their younger days, Robinson and Allen took turns stifling Mashburn, who missed 18-of-25 shots and finished with 21 points. Cassell tied a playoff career high with 13 assists as the Bucks over came Baron Davis’ career-high 29 points. The Bucks hit 33 of 35 free throws — including all 20 in the fourth quarter — compared to the Hornets’17-of-28. Golf continued from page 7 native, who played in the Masters earlier this year and will play alongside Tiger Woods in the up coming U.S. Open, struggled in Corvallis to finish tied-for-38th with a 223. The Suit Devils weren’t hurting, though, as Matt Jones won the in dividual title with a 208 and Jin Park ended up in third with a 211. Other Pacific-10 Conference teams that qualified for the NCAAs include Arizona (2nd, 867), host Oregon State (tied-for-6th, 881), Stanford (tied-for-sixth, 881), UCLA (tied-for-sixth, 881) and Washington (10th, 883). As for the Ducks, they say they are frustrated about not playing up to their talent level, but take solace in the fact that they will only lose Genovese from their roster for next season. “We only have one senior in this group so we have four guys coming back,” Nosier said. “Hopefully this was a less-than-enjoyable experi ence for them, so it will help focus us for next year and put things back to-square one.” With the men’s golf team’s depar ture, only the Oregon men’s and women’s track and field teams re main in action from the school’s 15 varsity sports. Make it Happen! Be a Peer Health Educator Fall Term ELTA 407 Teach Classmates about Health Issues Important to You Strengthen Your Resume Through Experience Help Initiate and Design the Activities for the Class Earn 6 Upper Division Credits Call Annie at 346-2843 or Register Online http://healthed.uoregon.edu U NIVERSI r Y HEALTH CENTER We’re a matter of degrees ^