Simple affordable solutions. 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. Q16722 GflurseNo. Course Title Instructor CBM Room ANTH 110 Intro Cultural Anthropology ANTH170 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 Fulton, K. 42479 360 Condon Nelson, G. 42480 203 Condon Power, M. 42481 106 Condon Hanes, J. 42483 373 McKenzie Aguirre, C. 42482 112 McKenzie Verdu-Cano, C. 42484 112 Eslinger Arrow, H. 42485 154 Straub Measelle,J. 42486 216 Allen Dreiling, M. 42488 123 McKenzie UNIVERSITY OF OREGON SUMMER SESSION SEPTEMBER EXPERIENCE PROGRAM Register using DuckWeb . Visit our Summer Session web site, ; coll us, 346-3475, or send us email, going overseas? catch the Oregon daily emerald on the world wide weh: www.dailyemerald.com Adam Amato Emerald Niki McEwen will make her seventh appearance at the NCAA Championships. Women's continued from page 19 Becky Holliday, senior Mary Etter and sophomores Roslyn Lundeen and Elisa Crumley have all tasted national-caliber competition before. Whereas seniors Jordan Sauvage and Amanda Brown, along with An drus, make their national debuts in Oregon head coach Tom Heinonen’s final season. The senior pole vault duo enters the meet with Oregon’s highest seedings. After tying for third in the NCAA West Regional, McEwen en ters in the fourth position. Holliday, who took the Pacific-10 Conference Championship crown and regional crown, leads the nation. Holliday has bettered herself in every national appearance; in 2002 she finished seventh and third in the outdoor and indoor competitions, and in this season’s indoor nation als, the Sparks, Nev., native took the runner-up spot. So what’s next for Holliday? “It kind of seems like I’m just go ing up the ladder,” Holliday said, after setting a new collegiate record at regionals. “Seventh, third, second — I guess the only other place to go is first.” In the throws, Etter makes her fourth NCAA appearance in the discus as Sauvage hopes to makes a good first impression in the ham mer throw. Etter finished eighth in 2000 and 2002. The Everett, Wash., native is coming off a win at regionals and en ters nationals ranked 11th with a personal best of 179 feet, 7 inches. Sauvage moved up three places from her pre-meet seeding in re gionals to earn the fifth and final spot in the hammer throw (183-11). The North Bend, Wash., native’s school record of 191-4, set April 3, places her 24th nationally. “She just fought her way into the final,” Heinonen said. The sophomore All-American javelin duo make their second straight NCAA appearance after fin ishing top 12 in 2002. Lundeen and Crumley have faced injury all sea son but enter 17th (159-8) and 25th (157-11) after finishing fourth and third at regionals, respectively. Brown couldn’t be more excited about her first NCAA appearance after a runner-up finish in the triple jump at regionals. After clearing 39-10 in the prelims at Stanford, Brown was lucky to make it to the final, where she felt she had to redeem herself. Knowing it could be her last meet as a Duck, Brown came into the fi nals and ripped a jump of 41-5 to finish second. “They put 41-5 up and (coach Mark Stream) started jumping around, and I was like all excited,” Brown said. “I walked back, and I was trying to look cool so other peo ple wouldn’t think that was really good for me.” But it was good for Brown, a 7 1/2 inch personal-best good. The Eugene native ranks 26th among the competitors and hopes to catch school record holder Sara Howell (42-6). “I’m shooting for a school record,” said Brown, who is current ly second all-time at Oregon. “I just want to get a PR and go out happy.” Among Oregon’s eight competi tors, the leadership reigns as the vet erans have nine All-America honors and 14 combined NCAA appear ances. Competition beings at 10 a.m. Wednesday with Etter kicking things off in the discus ring. The competition ceases Saturday evening where Oregon will again see what numbers and performances they pull out this season. Contact the sports reporter at jessethomas@dailyemerald.com.