000671/ -poppi’/ 'The Land East" Traditional V Greek & Indian Food > Lunch Monday through Saturday Dinner 7 Nights a Week 992 Willamette Eugene, Or 97401 343-9661 A NEW VAUDEVILLE devised by UP students & faculty THIS SHIP foSls SOMETHING NEW FOR THE PUBLIC MAY 30,32 & JUNE 5,6,7«8PM*JUNE 1-2PM EXCLUSIVELY IN THE MAGNIFICENT THEATER tI~ JkV EMU 346-4363 Mult Center 682-5000 THEATkE UT Ticket Office NigM ot Show 346-419" Come work for us. The Oregon Daily Emerald is always looking for young writers who want to learn and grow at a real newspaper. _For information on how to freelance for the Emerald, call346-5511. 016608 ready te stu \mportaht. open around the clock for your Current UO student, faculty, or staff ID REQUIRED to be in or enter the library during the following hours: For more information, visit http://Iibweb.uoregon.edu/news/stories/24-7.htm or call 346-3054. Mon-Fri: 1 am - 8 am Fri: 7 pm - Sat 11 am Sat: 7 pm-Sun 11 am munity College! Take care of your Humanities or lanauaae reauirpmpntc m£ #*L It Classe t For more inf< 503-491-6421 ___ ^ • U, ■ « ef:t?J^^5i^*€OMMUNITY COLLEGE or visit www.mhcc.edu J w)0„ SE stark street. oes„am. or 97030 imnmtmhooD Adam Amato Emerald Oregon runners Laura Harmon (13) and Magdalena Sandoval (35) will make the trip to Stanford for regionals this weekend, Harmon in the 1,500 and Sandoval in the5,000. Women's continued from page 7 Roslyn Lundeen and Elisa Crumley enter the meet seeded fifth and eighth, respectively. “My body is starting to peak, and the training is starting to wind down, and I’m excited for region als,” Lundeen said. The two have faced adversity and injury all season long, and neither one has been able to crest the 160 foot mark and reach full potential. “It’s been a constant uphill climb so far this year,” Lundeen said. “It’s been a shift, and we’re definitely get ting to that time of the season where it’s time to just go for it.” On the track, senior Eri Mac donald paces the Ducks with a top-three ranking in the 800 me ters. The three-time Pac-10 scorer was .04 seconds from an NCAA in vite last season and looks to not be denied this time. “It’s definitely something I can do to get in the top five; I just have to get myself in the race and run it,” Macdonald said. “If she’s ever gonna do it, this is the time,” Oregon head coach Tom Heinonen said. “Eri on paper can make it. In reality, she got to race better than she has in the past five years.” Heinonen’s other distance run ners will compete in the 5,000 me ters, scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Red shirt senior Carrie Zografos is wrapping up her Duck career while redshirt sophomore Magdalena San doval and freshman Nicole Feest are just getting started. “Magdalena and Nicole had such horrible experiences in the 10,000 meters (at Pac-lOs) that they’re both going to try and pace the race early and race it late,” Heinonen said. Oregon’s other all-stars, seniors Mary Etter, Amanda Brown and Jor dan Sauvage, will begin to wrap up their careers as Ducks. Etter ranks highest at fifth and will look to make her fourth-straight NCAA Champi onships appearance. The action begins at noon today with the women’s javelin and con cludes Saturday evening as the Ducks make their final statements to go to nationals. Contact the sports reporter at jessethomas@dailyemerald.com. Men's continued from page 7 Woods and Flaherty are two of 13 Oregon athletes or relay teams ranked between sixth and 15th in the west region heading into this week end’s meet. Seven Ducks, including Parker, are ranked in the top five of their event and nine are ranked 16th or worse. That 6-15 group will be key for Oregon this weekend. Short-hurdler Terry Ellis, who sits at sixth heading into today’s 110 meter hurdle prelims, described the 6-15 predicament best. “I like being the underdog,” Ellis said. “That’s a position I’d like to be in. I know if I have to beat one per son, I’m going to beat one person.” Then, of course, there are those Ducks who don’t have to worry about hitting top five because they’re almost guaranteed to be there. Senior Adam Kriz has a firm hold of the West lead in the ham mer, freshman Eric Mitchum came in fast and has only gotten faster in the 110 hurdles; he sits second in the region. In the javelin, Adam Jenkins has been solid all year, and John Stiegeler is primed for a big mark. And Foluso Akinradewo is ranked fifth in the triple jump but has been one of the most consis tent Ducks all season. Still, if the Ducks want to make a splash at the NCAA Championships, they’ll have to jump into the pond full-on at the West Regionals. “Before Pac-lOs it was really about team unity, bonding, scrap ping for every single point you can get,” Woods said. “Now it’s about getting yourself into NCAAs. Now the score takes on the individual factor; take care of yourself, let the chips fall where they may. “When you get to the national meets, people will lay down, and people will come out of nowhere.” The Ducks are hoping those ath letes who “come out of nowhere” are all wearing the green and yellow of Oregon. Contact the sports editor atpeterhockaday@dailyemerald.com. f WjGvtU^ w Run your for sale item in the ODE classifieds for five days (items under $1,000)... if you don't sell it, we'll run it 5 more days for free!