Storage, Truck & Trailer Rentals Boh McNutt 4400 Franklin Blvd Kugcne. OR 97403 • (503) 726-6051 r-“j I GRADUATES! ! We Salute You I Congratulations - Your Day Has Come ! PORTRAITS by Design | helps you celebrate. t Present this coupon for a complimentary por ? trait session and receive a gift of a color 5x7 ! portrait No strings I POPTP A ITS 683-6679 | I V71\ 1 r\/>I I •J 18th & Willamette 1 Next to Foto Flash i . ij i L_J NORTH BANK R1 STAl RAM iv l.Ol N(JK, 22 CLUB ROAD (On the bike poth overlooking the river) Gift Certificates A groat gift ido.i for (iraduation1 |< I si K\ \ I IO\s \( ( I P I I I) I'llDM .VI.V.sh22 / EMPOWER THE j FEMININE 5 I through inspiring images < from Jane Ins Design J SPIRIT HEALER Sterling Silver ! FLYING ELEPHANTS 1001 Willamette Downtown Eugene 343-0150 Hrs.: Mon-Sat 10-6 Graduation Drozdiak takes long road home I was able to enjoy the best ■*T)i both wr.rids hr- 5,ays A! the time. Bill Drozdiax was talking about being able to compete both on the court as a University basketball player and in the intellectual realms of political science and economics during his University years But he could |ust as easily have been describing his globetrotting career after graduation as an international correspondent in Europe and the United States expen enctng the best of those worlds After graduating from the University in 1971 Drozdiak's adventures ranged from driv mg down basketball courts in countries around Europe to dodging artillery shells in Iraq, from reporting on the 50th an niversary of Hitlers rise to leader of the Third Reich to covering the U S State De partment in Washington And next week, he will bring his 19 years of interna tional observations to the Uni versity Drozdiak foreign desk editor for The Woshington Post and soon to be chief of European coverage, will speak at this year s graduation com mencemeni June 10 In a telephone interview last week (rom Wainscott. N Y . where he was vacation mg, Drozdiak. 40, gave a glimpse of what he will tell graduates, their families and friends "It is important for America to stay involved in Europe To retreat into isolationism or even a Pacific Rim mode of thinking would be a bad devel opment and also historically dangerous, he said 'The striking thing about developments in Eastern Eu rope is that even with a U S budget deficit and financial leverage being pretty small, many leaders of Eastern Euro pean revolutions, like Lech Walesa in Poland and Vaclav Havel in Czechoslovakia, of ten cite the U S Constitution and the Bill of Rights as inspi rations for their causes he said The United States could contribute with other coun tries toward a grandiose Mar shall Plan for the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe that would be a major contribution toward the future of world peace.' he said These opinions and many of Drozdiak's other insights into European politics have developed during his nearly two decades of reporting for Time magazine and The Wash mgton Post in cities through out Europe and the Middle East An academic athlete But Drozdiak's interests in politics and international af fairs predate his European ex periences. In fact, they began to take root in Eugene when Drozdiak was a 20-year-old University student A full tuition scholarship to play as a guard on the Umver sity's basketball team lured Drozdiak from his hometown in San Jose. Calif in 1968 He received his bachelor's de gree at the University in politi cal science and economics in 1971 bteve tseiko. men neaa basketball coach, remembers the 6 foot 5 Drozdiak as "a top student with quite a sense of humor" and a deadly shot. Bill was one of the best outside shooters I've coached in 26 years of coaching. Belko said "If we would have had the three point shot then, he would have feasted on it.” Indeed Drozdiaks shot was good He still stands as the University's second- best ca reer free throw shooter, aver aging 83 5 percent And he ranks 15th on the University's list for career points But Drozdiak s talents were apparent off the court as well Political science professor James Klonoski remembers him as a Rhodes scholarship finalist who "wasn’t just a good basketball player — he Bill Drozdiak was a good student After Drozdiak graduated from the University, he re ceived an NCAA fellowship to study in Europe. While study ing European politics and eco nomics at the Institute of Eu ropean Studies in Brussels. Belgium, he began to play the European basketball circuit Two years later, Drozdiak con tinued his studies at the Col lege of Europe in Bruges. Bel gium. Drozdiak described his sev en-year European basketball career as a paradox He said it was easier than the American professional scene, yet espe cially demanding on American athletes. "The game in Europe is much more wide open, chaot ic, even anarchic in a way, he said "It was far less struc tured. so you had to play all over the court That's what made it quite good "The playing schedule in Europe is far less demanding than the pros in the U S — 30 to 35 games a year and only on weekends But American players were supposed to be the dominant force on the team, and if you don't score the points, you won't be play ing for long " Typical war stories Drozdiak said he eventually "drifted" into |ournalism T urn to Dro/diak, Pant- 5B 3c— d J NATURAL FOODS Celebrate with Champagne Over 50 Bubblies in stock C for your V. Special Occasions. Take home a taste of Oregon . from our C Outstanding Selection of i Oregon Wines Sundance Natural Foods 24th & Hilyard Open Daily 8am • 11pm 343-9142