_ - Oregon Daily. Emerald Momla\ . lanuary 8. I‘190 KiiKcnc. ()n*n<>n Volume '»I. \nmbtT 72 I'ltitlo lit Mm k ^ Ini l)aiid Cusano join* the l it ton parti hi hugging Sola Schulenberg. an \thlrtii Department employee. alter Oregon's itnne-from-behind J7-J4 h i/) at the Iro/en Independence lion I in Shreveport, l a Duck fans rise up and capture Louisiana hearts Team wins bowl game with 27-24 victory By Mark Ylen Emerald Graphics Editor In Ihr midst ol ■in arctic ( lull Miming in from Tulsa and the rest ot the Midwest Dm k gridiron enthusiasts witnessed an event th.it took 20 years in coming More than 5.000 fans tolerated the sub freezing temperatures as the Dmks defeated the Tulsa Golden Hurricane 27-24 on Dei 11> When it was all over and head coach Ki< h Brooks had been paraded onto the field on the shoulders of the team, the squad turned around and saluted the fans for their support l his overwhelming support astounded the citizens ot Shreveport Bossier. I.a and it con verted many of them into Dm k fans In fact, the majority of Louisianans were not about to support the Golden Hurricane, who hadn't won in the state in over 20 years "We re Duck fans," said Sharron Crosbv _Reporter’s Notebook of Bossier Gity "We know a t ouple ot people who are from (Jregon." Three ot Grosbv s i hit (Iren go to neighboring Louisiana l ei h whii h earlier in the vear had rallied from a 17-0 deli cit to defeat Tulsa 14 11 In addition, employees at a loi al inanufai luring firm w till a brain h ottu e in I’ortland en joyed the game with tii kets courtesy ol the I’ortland offii e They too liei ame Dm k fans yyearing Dm k hats and bloyy mg on quai kers as they partied in front ol their corporate lent at the pregame tailgate party All were impressed al the amount ol sup port that the Oregon iimtmgent was able to muster up The influx ol Oregonians began earlier in Photo b» \l«*rk > Irn lor Krit/uii provided Ihr Ducks with six catches for 12(1 yards and nnr Inin hdmt n in the name. Ihr IkjvvI week. .1 mi l>\ week s end, tlir Shrrvr port airport s.m six i liartei planes bringing in players. boosters I in- Mayors of Kugene and Springfield, and (lie man hing band l or many of these travelers the road to Shreveport was longei then expel ted Pile fog covering Malilon Sweet Airport forced fans on the first leg of the journey to divert to Salem or Portland Respective flights left flours late, making the ti ip all the more barrow mg 'let the tog's fun did not keep the Hum ol Weblools from showing then spirit Time aftei tune as the planes tom bed their tires on the tarmai in Shreveport tile I )iu k light song lilted the plane The rousing Oregon spirit was prevalent during mam howl sponsored events through out the days leading up to the i oiliest ( In the eve ol the Independent e Howl a pep rally, held foi the benelil of tails ol both teams turned out to he a private pai l\ with the Oregon man lung hand and mils squads blast Turn to Independente. Page 24 A matter of checkbooks and textbooks By Polly C .implied I morale! Reporter Yes. il s that time again l ime lu go to the Bookstore and take out i her kbooks t redit < ards or tens ami twenties and buy a load ol books that are expet ted to en hame vour eduialion.il experi ent e for the next tel m Manx w ill t omplain ot the tost. It is iindeniahle that textbook prices are expensive and on the rise and the price increases are being It'll bv students at universi ties all at rtiss the nation These sk\ rot keting and usu allv retpiireti costs of education are a result of changing factors within the competition structure til the textbook industrv. said I nil Williams, general manager ol the i hiiversit v Bookstore The emergence of large publish ing companies, the development ol popular new books and the t rea lion ol a used book market are a few ol the business t hanges that are at letting textbook prices William; said. "In general, book publishing i not too In< rative." Williams said The sui t ess ol textbook sales re lies on the ipialitv ol the publisher book said |errv Bauman sales rep Photo fov h.llr lotrtl Allison Kussrl ol the Bookstore pro cs texts in preparation lor this week s student rush. resentative lor Allen it net Hat on Pub lishers " Textbooks are not net essarily In cralive. but tliev are a t (insistent money maker bet ause of the t aptive audience." Hautuan s.tid "Hut the audience will only buy the hook it it is good in the first place "Kvery student involved in bin inil books has alwavs felt that books were loo expensive.'' said (.cut’ Warren, liuokstorr service manager tor John Wile\ and Sons Publishing Co “It's a perennial problem Pricing prmlut lion t lists Building a textbook requires a number ol spet iali/.ed skills and equipment, anti those costs also go Turn to Costs, Page 18 -'V* Text writing \ not profitable By Denise Cliftun Emerald Assm iate tdilor It will happen in .1! least .'ill glasses this lei in. Students w ill go In hliv the honk tin .1 i nurse mid disi.over the iiuthoi ill the le\l .mil the professor nf the 1 l.iss .lie line .mil tile s.mie And while the\ ere uniting in iiiteriiiin.i lil\ long lines el the Huiikstore. students ma\ have sum. troubling questions; flow inui h ut the $j"i or inure' thin p«n lor the average book will go In their professor's It nami.il benefit? How lii.h ere professuis getting Irom requiring as mam as too stu dents to buy their hooks:' Although professors who use then own hooks lor their i lasses ,11 know ledge that these are legitimate questions, thev laugh at the notion that thev gel rich from requir ing then hooks as tests I 1^1 e lignred out that I'd do heltei working at Ml Donald's in terms ul the nnniher oi hours I spent on the honk, said ps\i hnlng\ professor Daniel Kimble who Turn lo Writing, Page IK