Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, June 04, 2003, Page 12, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    D. (4x6/ 5x7) -
$6 17/$8.48
p. (4x6/5x7)
$10.23/$12.56
35mm G-41 ;col(3i: fi’ith. --Please
jllow-M rkir lay lor 4.«.f
aid 3-5 vyorki'og.days, foi1.5x7;
FUJICOLOR
■ JUNE 2-8
$2.00 OFF
PREMIUM
PROCESSING:
PHOTO
SPECIALS
]
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
BOOKSTORE
www.uobookstore.com
r
Agents
continued from page 9
required to formally disclose to
student-athletes the possible
consequences, including the loss
of eligibility, of entering into ath
letic contracts,” Frohnmayer and
Moos penned in a letter to
Wyden. “We appreciate any effort
that helps protect students’ abil
ity to compete and complete
their college education.”
Oregon State Athletic Director
Bob De Garolis, who also voiced
his support for the bill, pointed to
some specific acts of agent med
dling that may have been avoid
ed if SPARTA had been around.
He pointed out recent scandals at
Michigan and his own university
without going into specifics.
“Regrettably it is not uncom
mon to follow stories in the media
how student-athletes, and often
their families, have been victim
ized by sports agents and their rep
resentatives,” De Garolis said.
Among other details, SPARTA
would require agents to notify uni
versities within 72 hours when
signing a contract with a student
athlete. It would be enforced under
the Federal Trade Commission Act
as “an unfair or deceptive act or
practice.” The maximum fine for
such an act is $11,000, payable by
the sports agent.
“While the student-athlete and
the athlete’s institution face signif
icant penalties as a result of an
agents’ conduct, often the agent is
not held accountable for his ac
tions,” Brand said.
Oregon currently has some of
the strongest laws in the country
regarding agent conduct. The
laws vary from state to state,
while 17 states have no laws. If
passed, SPARTA would bring
stringent regulations to the
whole country.
Contact the sports editor
atpeterhockaday@dailyemerald.com.
ot a story idea?
jive us a call.
Oregon Daily Emerald
346-5511
Your Summer
Check out the September Experience Program
September 2-12, 2003
• Short on group requirements?
• Looking for a unique way to wrap up your summer?
• Want to get ahead in your course of study?
• Excited to get back in the swing of classes?
• Does $500 for 4 credits sound like a deal to you?
If you answered “yes” to any of these questions, you need
to find out more about the September Experience
Program. Resident and nonresident students take one
course for 4 credits in nine days for just $500. All are
group satisfying! Classes meet from 8:00 a.m. to 11:50 a.m.
Monday - Friday. We have the courses you want, the
courses you need, and the courses you should take.
Courses are included in Summer 03 DuckHunt.
Course No. Course Title
ANTH 110 Intro Cultural Anthropology
ANTH 170 Intro to Human Origins
GEOG 206 Geography of Oregon
HIST 192 Japan Past & Present
HIST 382 Latin America 1910-Present
INTL 240 Perspectives on
International Development
PSY 330 Thinking
PSY 375 Development
SOC 301 American Society
Instructor
Fulton, K.
Nelson, G.
Power, M.
Hanes, J.
Aguirre, C.
CRN Boom_
42479 360 Condon
42480 203 Condon
42481 106 Condon
42483 373 McKenzie
42482 112 McKenzie
Verdu-Cano, C. 42484
Arrow, H. 42485
Measelle, J. 42486
Dreiling, M. 42488
112 Eslinger
154 Straub
216 Allen
123 McKenzie
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SUMMER SESSION
SEPTEMBER EXPERIENCE PROGRAM
Register using DuckWeb <http://duckweb.uoregon.edu/>. Visit our Summer Session
web site, <http://uosummer.uoregon.edu/SepExp.html>; call us, 346-3475, or send
us email, <septexp@darkwing.uoregon.edu.>
Track
continued from page 9
the season,” Feest said. “You can’t
get better competition anywhere
else in the United States than out
here. I have a lot to learn and a long
way to go before I become as suc
cessful as the top-notch girls.”
As Zografos parts ways and Feest
finishes her rookie year, Oregon
will say goodbye to the veterans as
the younger crowd learns to deal
with the demands and competition
of the Pac-10.
Seniors Eri Macdonald and
Janette Davis finished their track
careers in the 800 and 400 meters,
respectively. Redshirt sophomores
Magdalena Sandoval and Laura Har
mon have merely reached the
halfway point.
Super Swedish trio
In last weekend’s first-ever NCAA
West Regional, UCLA’s Lena Nilsson
dared to go where few other women
have gone.
Nilsson doubled in the 800 and
1,500 meters and won both in the
same day. She easily ran to victory
in the 800 and edged Swedish coun
terpart Johanna Nilsson in the 1,500
meters by only .01 of a second.
Lena Nilsson’s 4:24.48 was the
fastest time of the day over indoor
mile champion Johanna Nilsson,
who finished in 4:24.49, although
they ran in different heats.
Lena Nilsson and Johanna Nils
son have no relation yet both are na
tives of Sweden. To top off the trio,
Then & now
continued from page 9
Bay. His heart was racing at 270-to
280 beats per minute, and he under
went surgery during the following
week to remedy the cause of the ir
regular heartbeat.
“I’m completely fine,” Harrington
told The Associated Press in March.
“There’s no medication. There’s noth
ing. It’s something that is in the past.
To be honest, I haven’t thought about
it since I started working out about a
week after that surgery. It’s something
that’s behind me and I’m moving on.”
Another Oregon quarterback
leading his team is Tony Graziani of
the Los Angeles Avengers in the Are
na Football League.
Graziani has led the Avengers to
two postseasons, but the team has
lost in the first round each time.
Back in the NFL, Reuben
Droughns is in Denver and Peter Sir
mon plays in Tennessee.
Three Ducks emerged from the
team in 1998 and remain in the NFL
as well. Davis Sanchez joins Peele in
San Diego while Josh Bidwell has
Summer
An in-depth analysis of
various facets of German
Cinema, drawing on classic
films from Fritz Lang to
Wim Wenders. We'll look at
8 movies and see what, as
cultural documents, they
reveal of German history,
society and "Zeitgeist"
from the 1920s till today.
Conducted in English.
“What I fear most is dn overdose of image.
I fear losing the ability to discriminate
between the good and the ugly."
. Wim Wenders
Department of Germanic Languages & Literatures
1250 University of Oregon, Eugene, 97403
Telephone (541)346 4051 Fax (541) 346 4126
http: darkwing.uoregon.edu aerscan
Johanna Nilsson’s older sister, Ida
Nilsson took third in the 3,000-me
ter steeplechase.
Each member of the Nilsson trio
has received an invitation to the
NCAA Championships.
Johanna Nilsson is ranked first in
the 1,500 meters at 4:10.72 followed
by Bruin rival Lena Nilsson with a
best of 4:13.21. Ida Nilsson holds
down third in the 3,000-meter stee
plechase at 9:48.62 — only two sec
onds out of the top spot.
No limits
Redshirt senior Becky Holliday
set a new collegiate record, school
record, personal record and also
moved to fourth in the world this
season when she cleared 14 feet, 8
inches at the regional event.
But you know that.
What you don’t know is that Holli
day could have attempted to go
higher but bowed out from fatigue
after the pole vault competition last
ed more than five hours.
“I’ve never quit an event on a
make, but I thought that was a good
way to go today considering how
tired I was,” Holliday said after Fri
day’s competition.
Holliday has improved her best by
nearly eight inches since last season
and four inches over her previous
14-4 personal best.
As she consistently improves,
only the NCAA Championships will
show again if she has a limit.
Contact the sports reporter
at jessethomas@dailyemerald.com.
seen playing time in Green Bay. Jed
Weaver plays in San Francisco.
Patrick Johnson from 1997 and
Mol den from 1995 both play with
Washington.
While football season appears
long gone, the GFL is just beginning
its preseason.
Four former Ducks have extend
ed their playing days by playing in
the GFL. Quarterback Jason Maas
plays for the Edmonton Eskimos,
while Steve Hardin is a Lion in
British Columbia.
Kenny Wheaton and Michael
Fletcher both play for the Toronto
Argonauts.
Toronto and British Columbia
opened their preseasons on Tuesday
night. Edmonton’s first game is
Thursday.
Oregon’s success on the football
field since the mid-1990s can be
seen on the professional field as
well. The three Ducks drafted in
April — George Wrighster, Onterrio
Smith and Howry — are the next in
line to continue Oregon’s tradition.
Contact the sports reporter
at mindirice@dailyemerald.com.
AilUlAAArAtt
Summer 2003
GER 223
Germany:
A Multicultural
Society
4 credits
(Ml 41955,
' 2-:m\ Minim
154 S1H,
.limn Z-ird - .Inlij lfiih,
Saskia Hinii
Satisfies Arts & Letters and
' Multicultural IB Requirement.
GER 223 examines complexities of the
increasingly multi-ethnic German Society
through the writings, of African.'Turkish, and
Jewish Germans as well as contemporary films
oh the topic. This course introduces students to
the political and social challenges faced by
post-unification Germany. We will consider
socioeconomic political, and cultural issues of
minority populations. As we study the various
groups we will investigate the ways in which
they havethelped to redefine what counts as
"German1 today