2 WORKSHOPS FOR • conscious relaxation • concentration • heart meditation • breathing exercises • mantras and music OpBM* sat Mat, $ 3-5pm OpticwB: Sen. IVlllfa 7 10-nOOn Amazon Center *7wo Hityard Street Taught by Nandita Polissar — meditator and instructor for 30 years; vegetarian restaurant . 800-3034305 A Robinson Theatre Production Feb 27, 28 March 4, 5, 6, 12, 13 at 8:00 pm Sunday Matinee: March 7, 2:00 pm Proceeds benefit White Bird Clinic •*<(£ 444 E.3RD • 484-191J • NON-SAT ll:30AM TO CLOSE South end of Ferry St. Bridge ALL DAY EVEAY DAY.' Rio de Janeiro $715 Tokyo $547 Hong Kong $489 Bangkok $609 Bali $719 Sydney $984 Delhi $1029 Los Angeles $175 New York $280 Frankfurt $310 London $358 Paris $358 Mexico City $383 Lima $618 Fares are roundtrip from Portland. Restrictions apply. Taxes not Included. Fares subject to change. Eurailpass issued On-The-Spot 1430 S.W. Park Ave. niRAVELCUIS See the world your way Portland, OR 97201 503-274-2323 800-592-CUTS (2887) portland@travelcuts.com ASK US ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE FLEXIBLE FARES www.travelcuts.com CUSTODIAL* CARPENTRY • PAINTING positions available beginning June 12 wage range $7.05 to $8.05 per hour application deadline march 31 at 5 p.m. must meet minimum age and student status requirements preference given to", UO students applications available at the University Housing Office or online www.housing.uoregon.edu EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity ^ ^ UNIVERSITY. (IF OREGON SPORTS BRIEF Oregon men's golf finishes 16th in 17-team field The Oregon men's golf team bat tled a tough course and an even tougher field at the Cleveland Golf In tercollegiate Invitational on Tuesday. Despite seeing marked improve ment from most of the squad, the Ducks could do little to improve on their standings from Monday, finishing the tournament in 16th on the 6,815-yard, par-71 North Ranch Country Club in Westlake Village, Calif. Sophomore Justin St. Clair con tinued to lead the Ducks by firing the most consistent rounds of the tournament. St. Clair bettered his first-round position by five spots af ter shooting a 72-75-74-221, good for an 8-over par and a tie for 32nd with Stanford's Brandon Lawson. His final round 74 did not come eas ily, though, as St. Clair double-bo gied Nos. 3 and 18, but was able to birdie Nos. 4, 14, and 15. The rest of the Ducks did not fair as well as St. Clair. Sophomore Gregg LaVoie, who fired an opening round 72, struggled to maintain his mo mentum and eventually fell into a tie for 56th after firing second and third round 77s to finish with a 13-over 226. Senior Mike Sica made the biggest jump on the leaderboard on Tuesday. Sica rebounded from his opening round 81 by firing a 71-75 to finish with a 227, good for a tie for 58th. Senior Jimmy White finished in tie for 80th with a 235, while freshman Matt Ma finished in 84th with a 238. Oregon finished the tournament with a 49-over 901, finishing 55 strokes behind tournament winner Texas. The Longhorns secured the title by finishing with a five-under 847, fifteen strokes ahead of tournament host USC, which finished with a 10 over 862. TCU and BYU finished tied for third at 872, while California rounded out the top five with a team score of 874. Arizona State, national No. 3 UCLA, Tennessee, Stanford and Al abama round out the top ten. Individually, Texas' Matthew Rosenfeld led the field with a 5-under 208. Rosenfeld held the lead for the entire breadth of the tournament, holding off fellow Longhorns Jason Llartwick and Jeff Bell, who finished in a tie for second with Cal's Peter Tomasulo at 4-under 209. Arizona State's Chez Reavie finished in fifth with a 1-under 212. The Ducks will next look to re group and gain some positive mo mentum when they return home and host the Duck Invitational March 22 23 in Eugene. — Brian Smith STRUGGLES continued from page 5 entering the tournament is that all of its conference struggles came on the road. HP Pavilion in San Jose, Calif., is only a 30-minute drive from Stanford and could art as a sec ond home court. Statistical leaders Arizona and Stanford emerged as the Pac- 10's top offensive teams dur ing conference play. The Wildcats (73.8) and Cardinal (73.2) were the only teams to average more than 70 points per Pac-10 contest, each holding more than a four-point advantage over third-place UCLA Oregon and Washington State were the only teams to average less than 60 points per game, each averaging 59.4. UCLA finished as the top rebound ing team during conference play, aver aging 37.9 per game. The Bruins held a slight advantage over Washington (37.8), Arizona (37.7) and Southern California (37.7) This is a great win. I can't really describe my emotions right now. I am just taking it all in. We had the determination that we knew we were winning this game and we just finished it." Bianca McCall Washington State forward Oregon (32.9) and California (32.6) finished at the bottom of the conference in rebounding. Individually, Washington's Giu liana Mendiola finished as the confer ence's leading scorer. Last season's Pac-10 Player of the Year averaged 21.1 points per conference game. Powell finished second at 20.2 points per conference game, followed by Ari zona's Dee-Dee Wheeler (18.8) and UCLA's Noelle Quinn (18.1). Oregon's Brandi Davis was 13th at 11.8 points per Pac-10 game. Joy in The Palouse Washington State closed out its Pac-10 schedule Saturday with a 75 72 win over Arizona State. It was only the 10th conference victory for the Cougars in the past five years. Bianca McCall led the way for Washington State with 18 points. "This is a great win," McCall said after the game. "I can't really de scribe my emotions right now. I am just taking it all in. We had the de termination that we knew we were winning this game and we just finished it." Contact the sports reporter * * atjonroetman@dailyemerald.com. RICE continued from page 5 most consistent starters, including four juniors and freshman Eleanor Haring, are all returning. Then again, it may be no contest. If she fully recovers, Kraayeveld could pick up where she left off last season. The Bellevue, Wash., native led the Ducks in points (17.2), re bounds per game (8.6) and blocked shots (16) before the injury. Oregon was also 5-0. In the KingCo Conference of the greater Seattle area, basketball is king. Kraayeveld transferred to Lake Washington High School after two seasons at Bellevue Christian. Jump ing from a 1A school to the big 4A scene, she found herself on a larger stage immediately. Now, Kraayeveld is on a large stage every day. In Oregon, where the struggling Ducks sUll have one of the highest average attendance levels in the Pacific-10 Conference, Kraayeveld will lead a potentially dangerous Ore gon squad into next season. UnUl then, she will be on the side lines. But she's just glad she can be on the court. Contact the senior sports reporter at mindirice@dailyemerald.com. Her opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. FOCUS continued from page 5 The rub? Thirty-one of those points have come in the second half of games, in cluding a then-season-high 16 against California last week. To top it off, he's shared the wealth nine times and has turned the ball over twice in the second half. "Aaron's a good player," Jackson said. "I think sitting out for so long 018148 LAZAR’S BAZAR IS CLOSING OUT Closing down the following departments: • Snowboards Dept. • Pipes & Waterpipes Dept. (Buy 1, Get 2 Free) • Clothing Dept.4 LAZAR’S BAZAR 57 W. BROADWAY *687-0139 All other departments will never go out of business. made him look at different things in his game and maybe understand the game a little bit better. He's been play ing pretty good so maybe he can keep that going." Contact the sports editor at hankhager@dailyemerald.com. STOREWIDE /-V write for the Oregon Daily Emerald For more information about freelancing call 346-5511. \_J.