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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1987)
110 Rookstore— PERSONALS CHEAP DATES s3.00 & UNDER All 1987 Calendars in the General Book department now priced at $3.00 & under. • Appointment Books _ rv _ i i i ni_ w L^diit;uuur\^ emu ricmiitMi> • Decorator Wall Calendars Be first to choose from a great selection. • All sales are final • General Book Calendars only • Limited to stock on hand UO BOOKSTORE I till 6 * I". ,|, | v i ; if", hi ■ AT 10 H) A (HI •>86 4)31 Tape duplication instant cassette copies! Quality stereo or rponaural duplication Check the prices today at your Bookstore. I IQ R^okstore— FREE Pepsi Glass I1 ONE CALORIE DIET PEPSI with two 6 Packs. • 12 oz cans • Limited to stock on hand • PEPSI Products only 6 Packs 1.49 PLUS DEP. 13lh & Kincaid M F 7 30 5 30 SAT 10 00 4 00 646 4331 Photo by Al Lazo Called the founder of the love movement by some, Ken Kesey Is pictured here at the 1986 Oregon Country Fair reciting a story. Counterculture Con"nuetl lrom l>a?e 4 But people did choose jobs where they felt they could con tinue to contribute to society. Whalen says The counterculture didn’t produce “stock brokers and us ed car salesmen and high paid executives,” he says, “they tend to be people who are pro fessors, writers, nurses, doc tors. lawyers — people who are trying to pursue some voca tion, but typically with some social responsibility “ People also found they could enter government on the local level and stay accountable to their beliefs, Whalen says, r referring to Wooten and Rust On that level, politicians can avoid the image-conscious, bland politics that characterize the national arena, he says But the counterculture peo ple weren’t the only ones who made accommodations. "Someone once said in the ’60s that being a radical in America was like trying to punch your way out of a paper bag," Whalen says, "that every thrust was met not with repres sion but rather with some form of absorption.” Accordingly, society at large swallowed up many of the movement’s values. So many. 1 b I UUhNTo... Earn $10 while you study [■ Your blood plasma is desperately needed to save lives and for 4 research. Get paid $10 per dona f tion under medical supervision. I Safe Easy. New Donors: I Bring this ad in tor $5 extra. EUGENE PLASMA 484-2241 » 1071 Olive St. COMING TO EUGENE Lane County Convention Center SWAP MEET & • Presented by SWAP & SHOP ASSOCIATION OF THE NORTHWEST MARCH 21 & 22 Sat 10am-7am Sun 10am-5pm It’s a Gift Show, Trade Fair, Flea Market Antique Show, Arts & Crafts Festival and Bazaar —ALL ROLLED INTO ONE— FREE PARKING • HOURLY DOOR PRIZES LOTS OF EXHIBITORS • GREAT BARGAINS! For Space Information: 345-7295 in fact, that some take issue with the term “counterculture" — in many ways, the move ment no longer counters the mainstream, but is part of it. The granola once prepared in homes and sold from bins, Rust points out, is now mass produced and sold in boxes. Society has adopted the idea that fresh vegetables are healthy, that war is abhorrent, and that children need nurtur ing, he adds. Bulk foods are available at most any grocery store, Schrager points out. And being healthy has become exceedingly popular, Wooten says. “People are spending hun dreds of thousands of dollars to work out and eat well and be vegetarians and all that stuff the people of the so-called counterculture were ridiculed for," she says. Eugene, especially, enfolded the counterculture. That so many of the institu tions established during the counterculture’s heyday re main strong attests to that. In addition, it was the community as a whole that elected Wooten and Rust. And, Conner adds, there are bike paths and parks here because the people want them here. But there are those who say they never considered themselves the counterculture in the first place. “I always liked Kesey’s state ment that ‘We’re not the counterculture, were the culture,’ ” Rust says. “The other guys are the counter culture The ones who want to have nuclear war or at least the ones who are compelling us to prepare for nuclear war — eating too much red meat, harvesting our resources faster than they can be replenished, consuming all the oil, dominating Third World coun tries, discriminating against blacks and women (and) gays. “Kesey turns the question around and says ‘I’d rather choose to be on the side of culture and progress. And to me, the backward elements of our society ought to be thought of as the counterculture.’