17057, toora \mm Restaurant and Lounge Authentic Chinese Cuisine Fresh, Quality Ingredients 947 Franklin Blvd. (near UO) • 343-4480 Individual, Family Style, Banquets to 100, Take Out Tues.-Thurs. 11-10:30, Fri. 11-11 Sat. 12-11, Sun. 11:30-10 014968 ARE YOUR WEEKENDS MISSING SOMETHING? + + + + Join us on Sundays for worship services featuring Holy Communion. We have traditional services on Sunday mornings and Marty Haugen services on Sunday evenings. Sundays 8:15, 10:45 am & 6:30 pm Student/Young Adult Bible Study Sundays 7:15 pm Central Lutheran Church Corner of 18th £k Potter • 345.0395 www.welcometocentral.org All are welcome. i UNIVERSITY OF OREGON LIBRARIES Wednesday, June 2 Knight Library Browsing Room 10:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m.* * From 10 a.m. to noon, the sale will be open to members of the UO community only; current university ID required. SPORTS BRIEFS Duck tennis players get academic praise Six Oregon tennis players were honored by the Pacific-10 Conference on Friday for their academic efforts this year. Juniors Sven Swinnen and Manuel Kost were named to the second team to pace the Oregon men. Swinnen earned a 3.36 grade point average in pre-business administration, and Kost was named to the team because of a 3.40 in business administration. Four women were named. Juniors Ester Bak and Daria Panova also were named to the second team. Bak is an accounting major and earned a 3.57 GPA, while Panova, an economics major, carried a 3.38. Sophomore Anna Leksinska and senior Courtney Nagle earned Pac-10 honorable mention praise. Oregon golfers earn five The Oregon golfers weren't far be hind their tennis counterparts on Fri day, taking home five Pac-10 academ ic honors. Sweden native Therese Wenslow placed as one of six members on the Pac-10's first-team all-academic. Wenslow, who took home a CoSIDA Academic All-District VIII At-Large second team nomination on Thurs day, earned a 4.02 GPA — the highest among players on the first two teams — in business administration. Senior Katie Cunningham, junior Jamie Seefiried and sophomore Michelle Timpani all earned honor able mention honors. Seefried's men tion marks the third season in a row that the Spokane, Wash., native has earned an honorable mention bid. California senior Sarah Huarte, who won the national championship last week, was named to the honor able mention squad. Redshirt freshman Dustin Pe warchuk was the lone nominee for the men, taking a second-team men tion after posting a 3.77 GPA in pre business administration. To be eligible for a Pac-10 academic award, a student-athlete must have at least a 3.0 GPA and be a starter or sig nificant contributor. — Hank Hager HAGER continued from page 7 anything but. However, all of the fans of Pacific-10 Conference teams should be thankful this time of year. Remember the 1990s? For those who have forgotten what happened then, look no further than the black and gold of Colorado. Back then, the Pac-10 considered ex panding to 12 teams. They flirted with the idea of adding Colorado and Texas to the lineup, which most likely would have split the conference into two divi sions. But Colorado and Texas turned down the offers, instead becoming in stitutions in the Big 12. Back then, it may have been a sign that the Pac-10 was down on its laurels, a forgotten piece of the major college puzzle. But now, if anything, there should be signs of relief coming from the Pac-10 offices in Walnut Creek, Calif. Texas was and is pivotal. The Long horns would have helped open up the Texas market stretching the conference further east from its farthest point in Tucson, Ariz. Texas is a national power in football and baseball — hey, it could have made Fifth Annual Oregon Quarterly Northwest Perspectives Essay Contest Reading • pi 7 p.m. Thursday, June 3, 2004 -- FREE Gerlinger Alumni Lounge 1468 University Street, University of Oregon Opening remarks by contest judge Brian Doyle, editor of Portland Magazine and author of Leaping: Revelations and Epiphanies. Readings by this year’s winners. Open Category: Michele Taylor, Melissa Hart and Martha Gies Student Category: Emily Moore and Susan Pesznecker the Pac-10 an actual 10-team confer ence in baseball — and is climbing up the ranks in Oregon, mirroring the fashion in which Oregon has done. But then there's Colorado. A number of women came forward with allegations of rape and sexual as sault in the last couple of months. Play ers were allegedly taken to strip clubs during the time they were recruited. Sex was allegedly offered to these same re cruits, some of which played integral roles on Buffalo teams that prior to this year, challenged for conference titles. Had Colorado migrated to the Pac 10, the conference could have been right in the thick of things. Granted, the Big 12 has been left rel atively untouched since the whole or deal started a few months ago, and there's no reason why the conference should be indicted in that whole mess. Member institutions provide a sort of living advertisement for their confer ences, but realistically, no leagues can govern enough to ensure no major inci dents happen. In other words, it's up to the pro grams themselves to maintain a level of decency and dignity. But there's nothing in the mess that should make anyone think positive thoughts. Would Colorado have brought na tional attention to the Pac-10 on the football field? Sure The Buffaloes, after all, played Oregon in the 2001 Fiesta Bowl. They got trounced, but still pro vided one of the feel-good team stories of the year. Would Colorado have helped the Pac-10 get more notice in the Denver area? Sure. Any inroads into a major metropolitan area is never a bad thing. Would Colorado have provided the Pac-10 with more headaches than it's worth? Based on what's happened in the most recent months, without a doubt. The Pac-10 is kind of like the quiet kid who never comes out and plays; it believes it's got the talent and the teams to do well. Its teams may not always be national powers, may not challenge for national championships in the major • sports and may not be tops when it comes to tradition. But each program within is part of, a major academic university and gen erally acts in the best interests of its students and its athletes. I'll take that any day. Contact the sports editor at hankhager@dailyemerald.com. His opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. SERIES continued from page 7 takes that had occurred in Wednesday's 10-1 loss to No. 1 Colorado State. The Ducks knew they needed to score more runs and improve their defensive game if they wanted to capture their first-ever win at the NCBA World Series. Again, Oregon faltered in the first in ning. Pitcher Jordan Shaw gave up a three-run home run to Central Michi gan's Jacy Uamois. 1 larnois' 425-foot we needed." After Oregon's losses to both Col-’ orado State and Central Michigan, Ficek said Oregon's "inexperience and nerves" might have played a factor in both games. "We spent a lot of time and energy trying to get here, and we couldn't re cover fast enough to be ready in time for the World Series," Ficek said. Even though Oregon will go home without a win after their debut, Loomis said the team will be better The biggest thing is that we now know what we need to do differently.... In the past, teams needed two or three or even four tries before they won a game. A lot of teams have gone 0-2 and then have come back and won a national championship." Jon Loomis Oregon catcher home run gave Central Michigan a commanding 4-0 first-inning lead. 'The first inning and the home run took the wind out of our sails," catcher Jon Loomis said. From then on, the Ducks could not find their offensive and pitching threats that carried them past the 2003 NCBA National Champions, Weber State, in the Northern Pacific Regional Tournament last month. Even with hits from Loomis, first baseman Jeffrey Douglas and right fielder Brad Ficek that put two runs on the board in the second inning, Oregon never came within two runs of Central Michigan. Despite the Ducks' three-run rally late in the seventh and final inning, Central Michigan's pitchers got the best of Oregon, Douglas said. "We didn't do a good job of taking pitches," Douglas said. "We let him play his game and we didn't get the hhs < prepared for next season. Although the team's goal was to make a decent showing in Bradenton, Fla., Loomis said it is important to keep in mind that most championship teams have struggled in past years before they ex perience success at the World Series. "The biggest thing is that we now know what we need to do differently," Loomis said. "In the past, teams need ed two or three or even four tries be fore they won a game. A lot of teams have gone 0-2 and then have come back and won a national champi onship." Colorado State — Oregon's first round opponent — beat North Car olina State in the championship game Monday, 8-1, and was crowned the 2004 NCBA National Champions. Kirsten Mcpwen is a freelance reporter WttafErrfefcM " " " '■ AAV ' '*