^TRAVEL CUTS See the world your way 1430 S.W. Park Ave. Portland, OR 97201 503-274-2323 800-592-CUTS (2887) portland@travelcuts.com London $384 Tokyo $560 Paris $417 Bangkok $643 Madrid $468 Hong Kong $572 Amsterdam $471 Mexico City $382 Athens $586 Rio De Janeiro $715 Fares are roundtrip from Portland. Restrictions apply. Taxes not included. Fares subject to change. Book and pay in full for any Contiki Holidays South Pacific or European land tour & airfare by March 14th and receive $50 off. Call for details. www.travelcuts.com A world-class experience! Peace Corps Are you ready to make a difference? Find out how you can put your skills to work building a future for people halfway around the world...and, for yourself. Check out Peace Corps at one of the events below. Information Table EMU (Erb Memorial Union) March 12-13, 2003 10:00am - 4:00pm both days Women in Peace Corps: 1961-2003 EMU International Lounge March 13, 2003 6:00pm - 7:30pm Peace Corps will interview applicants on the UO campus on Tuesday, April 22, 2003. Contact Peace Corps Campus Representative Robert Richardson at (541) 346-6026 or via pcorps@darkwing.uoregon.edu for more information or to schedule an interview. www.peacecorps.gov (800) 424-8580 - Option 1 r u FOR BOOKS UO Bookstore Main March 12-22 Regualr Store Hours UNIVERSITY OF OREGON BOOKSTORE EMU Lobby and Duck Shop at Autzen March 17-21 Monday - Thursday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Friday 10 a.m. -4 p.m. Sony Ericsson T68 $100 - *50 Sony Ericsson Rebate -*50 Instant Rebate FREE! Panasonic 320 FREE! i AT&T Local Plan 500 Anytime Minutes Unlimited Nights & Weekends Free Long Distance $39.99/month sr A few doors from the UO Bookstore fi+ UJireless 841 E.13th Ave. • 465-8877 Adam Amato Emerald Luke Ridnour adds to his Pac-10 Player of the Year award with a position on the All Pac-10 squad. Ridnour continued from page 1 won the award, said he was just frus trated he wasn’t allowed to vote for his star because coaches can’t vote for their players. But the rest of the Pac-10 coaches took care of that problem for him. “Obviously, my vote would be for Luke Ridnour, but I couldn’t vote for him,” Kent said. “He’s put us in the position we’re in today, and he’s just been on a tear in the last few games.” Ridnour joins the illustrious com pany of Brandon and Ron Lee in Oregon’s Player of the Year club. Lee won the award in 1976, his senior year. Brandon won the award after his sophomore year. It’s the second Player of the Year award, sort of, for Ridnour. He was the first Duck ever to win the Pac-10 Freshman of the Year award two years ago. Ridnour also was named to last season’s All Pac-10 Team. “It’s kind of hard for me to believe, but it’s a tribute to my team first of "It's kind of hard for me to believe, but it's a tribute to my team first of all" Luke Ridnour Oregon guard all,” Ridnour said. “There’s a lot of good players in the league that had really good years with teams that have done better than we have.” Luke Jackson joined Ridnour on this year’s 10-member All Pac-10 squad. It was the first such award for Jackson and ensured the Ducks would have two members on the conference team for the second straight season. Jackson was the only Pac-10 play er to rank in the top 10 in scoring, rebounding and assists. He was sixth in rebounds and seventh in scoring and assists. Contact the sports editor atpeterhockaday@dailyemerald.com. Mahmuljin continued from page 1 Mahmuljin said with the steady voice of someone who has seen too much at too young an age. Her brother, Vedad, joined her in Zagreb one year later. While Mahmuljin was staying with her aunt, her parents were taken to Serbian-run concentration camps. Her mother, a schoolteacher, was placed at the largest and most lethal camp, Omarska. Two lines of guards and a minefield encircled the camp at all times. Only one man ever escaped from Omarska, and he was recap tured shortly after. Along with thou sands of other Bosnian Muslims, Mah muljin’s mother was killed during her imprisonment. Mahmuljin never had a chance to tell her mother goodbye. “They just came and took her from home,” Mahmuljin said. “They come to the house and either kill you or take you to the camps. The Serbs had an ideology of making a ‘Great Serbia’; they hated everyone who was not Serbian.” Mahmuljin’s father was separated from his wife and taken to a differ ent camp where he was detained for weeks. Upon his release, he joined Mahmuljin and her brother in Za greb. Neither Mahmuljin nor the other members of her family know much about her mother’s death, and Mahmuljin said she hopes she nev er learns the details of what hap pened at Omarska. “We don’t know when she was murdered,” Mahmuljin said. “We don’t know where the grave is — nothing about her.” Changes at home After her father arrived in Zagreb, he lived with Mahmuljin’s uncle. Mah muljin and her father remained in Croatia for five years. Her brother left Zagreb in 1993 and traveled to Turkey with a group of Bosnian students. A year later he immigrated to the United States as a refugee; he was only 17. Mahmuljin and her father moved to Bihac, Bosnia, in the summer of 1995 after the war so she could at tend high school and he could re sume his dental practice. Mahmuljin would have stayed in Croatia, but she was not a citizen, and therefore could not attend school. “In Bihac, we didn’t have any rel atives,” she said. “We didn’t know anyone. After the war everything was destroyed. It was hard to adjust to the situation.” Mahmuljin did adjust to life in Bi hac. She finished high school while living in a tiny one-bedroom apart ment, above her father’s dental office, with her father and her grandmother. In January 2001, Mahmuljin’s father was diagnosed with lung cancer. Acting on the advice of his son, he sought treatment in the United States. “He was there for three months to get medical treatment,” Mah muljin said. “He was doing very good. He came back to Bihac and started working again right away. Everything seemed very good. But then they found the cancer had spread to his brain.” Mahmuljin’s father returned to the United States for a second round of treatment. Mahmuljin came to America during the summer to visit her brother. Her father’s treatment did not work and his health started failing. She was at his side when cancer took his life in fall 2001. “My father was a dentist. We had a plan to buy a house and for me to have my own dentist office there,” she said with a voice drawn taught with emotion. “I had already passed the exam for dental school in Sarajevo, but the disease de stroyed the whole plan we had for my future.” Life in the states After her father died, Mahmuljin had no reason to return to Bosnia. She stayed in Seattle with her brother and his wife. She was deter mined to continue with her own life and her own education. Mahmuljin attended community college in Seattle for a year, then ap plied for and received a scholarship from the International Cultural Ser vice Program to attend the Universi ty. In the fall, she began her college career, majoring in computer science. Mahmuljin said she found a sense of the Bosnian community in Seat tle. She made new friends there and met her boyfriend. The move to Eu gene resulted in another separation from her loved ones — another readjustment to a new life. “Here, you walk down the street, and someone you don’t know is walking toward you, and they are basically going to smile or say hello. In Bosnia that would not happen,” Mahmuljin said. “I have a chance to meet different people. In Bosnia, you don’t have that chance.” Mahmuljin, the girl who watched her dreams fall apart in Bosnia, is now a woman and University student working to create a new life. She tries not to look too far into the future, tries not to worry about what will happen after graduation when her student visa expires. She is not afraid. “For now, I’m going to concen trate on my studies and do my best,” Mahmuljin said. “School is very important; it’s always in the first place.” But Mahmuljin is looking ahead to what her life may bring. “I want to graduate, to have a family — two kids,” she said. “I hope it would be better, my life in the future, than in my childhood.” Contact the reporter at aimeerudin@dailyemerald.com.