013401 Student Lunch Special 00 1-Topping Slice & 20 oz Drink Tues-Fri 11:30am-4pm with Student ID offer expires 3/15/02 790 E 14th Ave * 344-4471 5 REAfONS TO STUDY IN AALBORG# DENMARK 1. Learning at Aalborg is practical. Working in small groups, students use their knowledge to create innovative solutions to real-world problems. Aalborg sponsored internships in Denmark and other European countries are also possible 2. On the UO program at Aalborg University, most students spend about the same amount (including on airfare) as they would here at the UO. In a direct-exchange program between the UO and Aalborg University, UO students are charged no tuition by Aalborg. A UO study abroad fee (currently $400 per term) applies. 3. Aalborg offers entire semester programs in English. (We hear the Danish classes are pretty good, too!) 4. Students can use their UO financial aid awards toward expenses in Aalborg. 5. Students earn UO credit for courses taken at Aalborg. Application forms and program information available at the Office of International Programs, 330 Oregon Hall Or contact program coordinator Roger Adkins, 346-0518, radkins @ Oregon. uoregon.edu 2 Hurry! Application deadline g is Friday, March 15! I THE TRADITION CONTINUES UNIVERSITY OF OREGON @ Regal Cinemas Cinema World -1807 Valley River Way 7:00 PM Wednesday, February 20, 2002 FREE ADMISSION while passes Iasi* * Passes available at Regal Cinemas Cinema World, beginning Wednesday prior. Passes required. Seating is limited and not guaranteed. Please arrive early. Presented in association with Regal Cinemas Cinema World. Thomas Patterson Emerald Oregon freshman Ester Bak, along with senior Janice Nyland, defeated an Arizona doubles team Sunday. Oregon tennis plays well in doubles but falls twice ■The Ducks win just one of 12 singles matches over the weekend in losses to No. 7 ASU and No: 44 Arizona By Peter Martini for the Emerald After twice putting themselves in position to win, the Oregon women’s tennis team lost two matches during the weekend. The Ducks lost 6-1 to No. 7 Ari zona State and 5-2 to No. 44 Ari zona as they opened the Pacific-10 Conference schedule. “We played pretty well,” head coach Jack Griffin said. “Both of these teams are very good, and at the end of the year, they’ll both be in the top 20.” Against Arizona on Sunday, Ore gon won two out of three doubles matches and jumped to a 1-0 lead before singles play. Oregon freshman Ester Bak and senior Janice Nyland won a back and-forth match, 9-7, over Maja Mlakar and Debbie Larocque of the Wildcats. Junior Monika Gieczys and senior Vickie Gun narsson easily won their doubles match, 8-2. “We played very tough in dou bles,” Nyland said. “And we put ourselves in a good position to beat this team.” The 1-0 lead quickly vanished for the Ducks in singles. Nyland lost her match to Mlakar 6-2, 6-2 and Bak lost her match 7-5, 6-3 to Marie-Pier Pouliot of the Wild cats. Oregon was then down 2-1. Gunnarsson won her match over Diane Hollands 6-3, 6-4 to even the score, 2-2. “I was hitting the ball well and was getting a lot of depth,” Gun narsson said. “I was being aggres sive, and I made most of my shots to put her away.” The Ducks looked to be in good position to win with the score tied at two and leading one set to none in each of the next three singles matches. Oregon only needed to win two of them. But the Ducks failed to capitalize on the opportunity, losing all three. “Our biggest problem today was the unforced errors,” assistant coach Nils Schyllander said. “We gave them too many free points, and the good teams will take advantage of them and make you pay.” Oregon did play well in doubles, WOMEN’S TENNIS the matches that hurt them two weeks ago in Southern California. “I am pleased that we were able to win the doubles point against two very good teams,” Griffin said. “Our doubles game is there,” Ny land said. “Now we need to work on our singles, which is traditional ly our strength.” Gunnarsson’s win on Sunday was the only singles victory for the Ducks during the weekend. Against Arizona State on Friday, sopho mores Davina Mendiburu and Courtney Nagle won their doubles match, 8-2, and Bak and Nyland won 8-6 to take the doubles point and a 1-0 lead. The Ducks then lost all six sin gles matches in straight sets. Oregon’s record is now 6-3 overall and 0-2 in the Pac-10. The Ducks host Nevada at 5 p.m. Thursday. “I’m happy with our effort this weekend,” Schyllander said. “We put ourselves in position to beat two very good teams. If we contin ue to play with this intensity, espe cially in doubles, and clean up our errors, then we’ll be able to beat teams of this caliber.” Peter Martini is a freelance reporter for the Emerald. Basketball continued from page 5 Court on Feb. 7. It’s a Stanford team that has no foreseeable end. They’ve already clinched the No. 1 seed in Pac-10 Tournament, and barring an upset, will most likely host a regional se ries in the NCAA version. “Finally, I feel this is our year,” Bethany Donaphin told the Stanford Daily. “Our team is so excited and we get along so well. The chemistry is better than its ever been. We kind of expected it (the conference cham pionship) but it’s still so sweet.” Bracket Baby As most know, MacArthur Court will host the first ever women’s Pac-10 Tournament, beginning March 1. In the past, the team with the best overall record automatically won the conference’s title and automat ic entry into the NCAA Tourna ment. With the addition of the tour nament, the team that goes all the way gets the bid, while the teams with the best regular season records fall in behind. If the tournament started today, Arizona and Washington State would face off in the first game of the tournament, starting Friday, fol lowed by UCLA and California. The winner of UCLA-Cal would take on Stanford the next day, with Arizona State taking on the winner between the Wildcats and Cougars. Washington would take on Ore gon State in the game featuring seeds three and six, with USC and Oregon finishing up Saturday night at 8:15 p.m. Whatever the result, the inaugural Pac-10 Tournament is shaping up to be an intense weekend of action. E-mail sports reporter Hank Hager at hankhager@dailyemerald.com.