JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================q" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?4m=[ـrB8 Z+C\zӊ$4jAXS]ڄH"u^|RWqzv?RI&Yoڡ7f/VD7L2PA/Flwm>W>Bd8UIerdUuPmfr܈d֡j /zB嶗DJii1Y$'Gyjk /.ZJVwyHo" |nA0?֮cǟKiɥ hVF$'ֵnTyR8¡#sV4+jRH bq?Jظ%=?|iVt+ ֮I(-&Q[\XOhnIH!(mv$?0<@A99XKC#[hxu$E˱; .#&>5:_yZK?çZ5a7O״<4BIa?Nj&"0rZ:^Y$;H+5j׺R,$ND`g jGaMۢb[8=CI,\8&[q g5Wvi&w, 3V:݅= 3ao?%ѧX6F$H7܉w[:Uݬw:ebE\e:Riiyyve;{f5+rS9QJ6  W>AQor'cX_qj|y qzizتӕ{/la?depl\j|#,Xl 2=>}QZmw:e4qѫН )M nkX,`9deIսINRkXP Pn. nI)F[hƝD]-8yŃr^DlQx d Wӵ!3v3`V#dEp>!z&u{MSeFpE-8 {n=W ,:mHaP ERID:E=D&F[;L cn{u\ j5ؾtIr,*:sc|'Ҍlv# C4!Հ+kIf񍌡d`P soZ|ټC gN'5 {hˆ5UGU(jEy @#[}2ۢP7Ͻiɐ~⫘MMXf7ܤRַ);ĺx7+9hE%H\^Ջ)'B~vptW-7(N HUj)jF[c$Ӏ@E$ ?旧 ["uL)jo-YF=sRǴIsv/iWp#]J|čS(duIwqepѲ6qqX٢d Oz"SJR5A{5DY? .{-˰y#s}6!&8?J\"n%I 5VnUkiV@Uf?)nxVMsX p {=|KK$1`7wErE̅NNӞmֲ'ִ8uF]0zzO,ifݱAm5{P-mKO<`Ui{4ĭzsFڑcaaᛏK(ǡ"=Qwzvz%I̞Hᘀ9ϧ=+xsHIUb<+ǝiˬZ~+%@jbY`87>U7\-R#nHV|I+9{b8ZTw3$&0Tmm  FMr~H + -`I0r[xy'1''.-Q?һoMn{[o@TFmR1 ]уjG=j.U=U9qVT2DZm[ʓ)ҁ[=J9#awpۚ*l]'IB&NxQֱ'n4V(L:]yɷ=R~K^Bakg\\Uf\fH;{:i4Iޖ 6|s[ERL;FU%9zm J0@?Z^9pgnF3²Vv[6 [= ^Kpst6[ryɥ!w-Vjrєur1p}}.l*|_[FE0?Z󫛉b5]+ېX͹da Z_2m}2 ǰV#5-V6eb߸X8>RУu u#<N*T63R uI{K M)-DSR5_$#qWj[ \\q p]\DJr0q֨>.LYSVV}5ds`=i9M$:-1 ڬ,,/̾k9%} X)dt-8["8at[p3zVV qڕ41,4إ-.FтNk챽gc:sI:y' lTZ;N]JLݑGx5b B1-7YKFBcoaiԶ'sZE.Ve-n. XdJ[Rh?Q\TxjބX (qJFF/HYn"p3UU^0#0q]fTBBNM$ SׂEzCEF䁌mY26a=sZzyuw$~8bxkR# TmD(Gz)HJ$3zQKqǚj1({ M;( &A/{Ef6㢊+xl#ked. <br>One of the most highly recruited student athletes, Williams decided to major in public policy and management at the University of Southern California. The Trojan s track tradition spans 102 years and includes 29 NCAA National Championship titles (including two indoor titles). The school has also produced 61 world records, 87 Olympians, 40 Olympic gold medals and 16 inductees into the U.S. National Track and Field Hall of Fame.<br>Despite taking on the intense program of study that is necessary to excel at a school with such a strong academic program, Williams continued her winning ways out of the starting blocks. In her freshman year she won the NCAA title in the 100 meters, then duplicated the same feat the following year. In her junior year she won her third title and became the only athlete, male or female, to accomplish the feat. In the process, she also broke the school record with a best of 11.04 and has posted a wind-assisted best of 10.96. <br>Should she repeat again as NCAA champion in her senior year, Williams will not only break the record with four titles, she will establish a permanent place in track history because she will be the first to achieve a record that can never be broken, only tied. <br>In addition to winning her prestigious individual sprint title this year, Williams contributed points that played a key role in the Trojans bid for their first Women s NCAA National Outdoor Championship. Last year the team finished just behind LSU, but there were question marks about the team s strength since they lost the PAC-10 title to archrival UCLA. There was considerable pressure on Williams to win, but win she did with a wind-aided 11.05, the fastest collegiate time of the year. The victory wasn t easy, however, as she was only .05 seconds ahead of UCLA s Shakedia Jones, who had beaten her early in a dual meet against UCLA. So it was not only Williams who had reason to smile after this event, but also her teammates, the institution and the loyal USC fans.  Last year we had the championships in our hands and let it slip away, says Williams.  We knew we were capable of winning, and so all during practice this year everybody focused on what they needed to do. Everybody did their best and we came out on top! <br>Immediately after her victory, Williams said in an interview that appeared in the August 2001 issue of Track and Field News that the most important reason for her excitement was not winning the individual medal, but  the fact that the points went towards the team and just brought us the victory. . . . That s