Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 11, 1981, Page 2, Image 2

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McKay's Open Pantry Delicatessen
I960 Franklin Blvd. — Eugene, Oregon — OPEN 9 am to 8 pm Daily
FEATURING — Hot or cold
Broasted Chicken - by the bucket 31 varieties Imported and
or the piece Domestic cheese
Party trays made to order 35 varieties lunch meat and
sausages
Full line salad bar
Hot food to go
Fresh home-made pizza
Fresh bagels and pocket bread
San Francisco style sour dough
bread
Imported or
Domestic foods
with old
fashioned
sendee —
5 & H Green
Fresh sandwiches made daily Stamps, Too!
Could you use an extra
$100.00 a month
this term?
There are lots of ways for a student to earn extra
money But most employers require regular hours
And even if your class schedule happens to fit your
employer s need, midterms and finals often don't If
you're healthy and reliable, in two to four hours a
week, being paid on the spot, you can earn up to
$100 00 cash a month I Easily on a flexible
schedule to accommodate you Become a
blood/plasma donor Once or twice a week, visit the
nearby Hyland Donor Center Donating plasma is
simple and safe In fact, the donation process,
called "plasmapheresis." removes from blood the
only element it needs — the plasma Other whole
blood elements, the red cells, are returned to you
Want to know more? Need that cash now?
For appointment or information call 683-3953
NEW HOURS: 7:30-7:30
HYLAND PLASMA
DONOR CENTER
1001 WILLAMETTE ST.
TELEPHONE: 683-3953
Organize
a Plasma Donor Program
In your club or group and receive
up to $90.00 a month for each
member plus bonuses.
»-J
Recycle this paper
daily emerald
The Oregon Daily Emerald is published Monday through
Friday, except during exam week and vacations, by the Oregon
Daily Emerald Publishing Co at the University ot Oregon,
Eugene Oregon 97403
The Oregon Daily Emerald operates independently of the
University with offices on the third floor of the Erb Memorial
Union and is a member of the Associated Press
News and Editorial 686-5511
Display Advertising and Business 686-3712
Classified Advertising 686-4343
Production 686-4381
Circulation 686-5511
Editor
Managing Editor
News Editor
Assistant News Editor
Photo Editor
Graphics Editor
Ken Sands
Sally Hodgkinson
Glenn Boettcher
Jeff Baker
Steve Dykes
Sioux Anderson
Editorial Page Editor
Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Entertainment Editor
Associate Editors
ASUO
Community
Departments and Schools
Environment
Features
Politics
State Systems
Night Editor
General Stall
Advertising Director
Ad Services
Classified Advertising
Controller
Production Manager
Mark Matassa
Tamara Swenson
Jody Murray
Erzsi De'ak
Paul Telles
Richard Wagoner
Marian Green
Leslie Farris
Jim Gersbach
Mike Rust
Bill Manny
Doug Fick
Darlene Gore
Ann Peterson
Sally Oljar
Jean Ownbey
Sandra McMullen
Oregon undergoes
housing sprawl
Oregon, like much of the rest of the nation, experienced
"household sprawl" during the last decade.
Oregon's population grew 26 percent during the 1970s, but the
number of housing units grew by 45 percent — from 745,000 to 1.08
million — during the same period, according to Karen Seidel,
research associate with the University Bureau of Governmental
Research and Service.
As a result, Oregonians are spread out in more but smaller
households. Seidel, whose current research focuses on the 1980
census data, said she estimates Oregon’s average household size
"decreased by approximately 12 percent from 1970 to 1980, from
2.94 to 2.59 persons per household.
"This implies that if Oregon had had no population growth at all
in the past 10 years, almost 100,000 housing units would have been
added to the inventory just to meet the demands of the 1970
population," she said in a paper prepared for presentation at the
1980 Census User Conference.
Seidel said the significant difference between the population
and housing growth rates occurred in every county in Oregon.
“The disparity between population and housing growth in the
past decade becomes more newsworthy if we contrast it to the
preceding decades During the ’40s, '50s and '60s, the rate of
housing growth in Oregon was always about two percentage points
higher than the population growth rate,” Seidel says. For example,
between 1960 and 1970, the population grew 18 percent, housing
20 percent. Between 1970 and 1980, however, the difference was
19 percentage points.
Seidel attributed the decline in size of households in Oregon to
well-known social, economic and lifestyle factors "such as the baby
boom, postponed marriages and childbearing, more elderly people
maintaining separate households."
Family households are down from eight in 10 to seven in 10 in a
decade. Fewer than four in 10 households are families with children
living at home.
briefs_
SPEAKERS
Solar home builder Jan Owens will speak
on Solar Applications in Roseburg, Ore
gon" tonight at 7:30 pm at the Central
Presbyterian Church, 1475 Ferry St.
MEETINGS
MEChA will meet tonight at 5 p m in Room
16D EMU Cinco de Mayo will be discussed
The Jewish Student Union will meet to
night at 5:30 p.m in Suite 5 EMU All are
welcome For more information call Bill or
Sheila at ext 4366.
The Undergraduate Economics Associa
tion will meet today at 3:30 p.m. in Room 410
PLC
The Society ot Professional Journalists
will hold its March business meeting tonight
at 7 p.m. in Room 301B Allen Hall All
members and prospective members are
invited to attend.
The Gay People’s Alliance will hold a
coflee house tonight at 7:30 p m Call
686-3360 for location.
NOTICES
Car pools will leave the EMU and the
Grower's Market tonight at 5:30 p m. to
attend Henry Kissinger s speech at Linfield
College
The Eugene branch of the American
Association of University Women is oflering
a $1,000 fellowship for the 1981-82 school
year It will be awarded to a woman with a
bachelor s degree who currently is enrolled
in or who has been accepted into a Univer
sity graduate program and can demon
strate some financial need The recipient
must be a full-time student taking a minimum
of nine hours per term for three consecutive
terms
Applications are available from Maxine
Chism, 136 Westbrook Way, Eugene, Ore
97405 344-3117. Applications postmarked
after April 24, 1981, will not be awarded
rTTTTTTTTTTTTTTI
PHOTO SPECIAL!
n m n n i i i » i
■ 13th & Kincaid
Mon-Fri 8:15-5:30
BOOKSTORE Sat 10:00-2:00
Sale ends
Saturday, March 14.
Textbooks 686-3520 • General Books 686-3510
Supplies 686-4331