Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, July 09, 1991, Page 4 and 5, Image 4

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V_)
CASANOVA
Continued from Page 1
miid Staff morale is in
tremeiy high right now
Ui w <>ni from having the
worst facilities in the Pat 10
up to the best in the Par
10."
Maybe the happiest per
son is wrestling coach Kan
l inley, who not only got a
new oflic e as dul all other
coat lies and department per
sonnel. but also received a
new praclic* area and lock
erronm
The new wrestling
room has enough
floor room for 2
w resiling mills; in llie
piisl, barely one mat
would f11 into the old
practice area i n
Ksslingrir Hall
The old prai tiro
r oo m the si/ e o f
Ksslinger was one of
I ho smallest in the
nation," Finley said
ll was a dangerous
plat e because people
were falling on lop of people
all the time "
Not only does the wres
(ling room provide more
spac e. it is also completely
enclosed, allowing room
temperature inside to be set
as high as needed to help
w restlers lose weight
When he arrived at Ore
gon in tou t. Ilyrne qua kly
realized something would
have to he done to improve
the Athletic Department's
ancient facilities
We had to lessen how in
efficient we were by being
spread across the board,"
Byrne said
That ineffic lent y could be
seen almost everywhere
There w as only one ofBc e
each for <111 ol the women's
sports, although most of
those teams have at least
three com lies
Things were |ust as bad in
Mac tamrt Football coach
Huh Brooks had his own of
fice but eight assistants
shared three offices
There was also only one
office for men's true k. wres
tling. golf and tennis, Don
Monson’s basketball staff
eat h had tiny individual of
Tices Other personnel in the
department suffered the
same fate Now all coaches
.md administrators have
their own individual spat o
"i! whs just so cramped."
Finley said When we had
all three coaches and a re
cruit in tile offi( e, one of tile
roaches would have to stand
out in tile hall just so tile re
t rmt could have .1 place to
sit down That's how trad it
was
It wasn't [list the on-cam
pus far ilities that were bad
At Aut/.en. the football
lor kerrooms were so small
that Oregon, or its opponent,
"We re going to miss being (at
Mac Court) and seeing a lot of
people — other faculty, other
students, and we 'll miss that. I
think we 'll need to make more
of an effort to get over there. ”
— Ron Finley
couimi 1 tinvi’ us mu u\mi
dri'ss in iinr room The
weight iiKim wus also minis
cult) compared with other
schools' far:i 1 it ion.
The firs! part ol the Cas
iinov.] Center, a new football
lockerrixitn and now weigh!
room on tho ground floor,
was completed last summer
A now opponents football
loekerrexim will ho complet
otl hv August, as will a wom
en's lot kerroom
Also brand new lo Oregon
athletics will he a new treat
ment center and video area.
The treatment center, on
the first floor, will have new
whirlpools that turn immerse
four athletes in the pool at a
time X ra\ equipment will
also lx> in the ( enter, another
first for the department
By me, in (a< t. estimates
that the improvements w ill
decrease injured athletes' re
habilitation periods from
"40 to 60 percent."
There are also conferent e
rooms throughout the facili
ty. a cafeteria that i an seat
450 and will he Used as a
football training table and a
Hall of Champions that will
honor previous outstanding
Oregon teams and individu
al players
Finley and Casanova give
Byrne a lot of the ( redit for
upgrading Oregon's athletic
facilities.
"Hill Byrne has done a
fantastic job." I'mlev said
"I’d have to give him an A •
on this "
"Hill Byrne has just done
a tremendous job," ( is
anova added "lie's always
working, day-in .md day
out He goes all over the
state, always finding people
and meeting people that .ire
business merchants and in
terested in Oregon sports
"He's just done a great,
great job."
The Casanova
Center is realIv the
"House that Foot
ball Built."
Most of the motl
ey lor the i enter has
and will come from
football gate re
ceipts, including
nearly 5750,000 a
year from the leas
ing of skyboxes and
one skvsuile, plus ticket
sales on those luxury seuts
Clearly, the recent success
ol the Duck lootball team is
a huge reason why the cen
ter is almost complete.
"We re in the upper et he
Ion of the I 'at ■ 10 now and
we obviously want to stay
there," Byrne said, "livery
time we take the held we
ran compete with anybody
in the country and that
wasn’t the case when I t ame
here.”
While the Casanova Cen
ter might have been built tie
cause of football sui cess, it’s
not just the football team
that is benefiting Besides
the new individual offices,
the new weight room is also
a tremendous addition lor
all teams.
"To be a serious athlete
and to make it us an athlete,
you need that time and that
equipment in the weight
room," sail! Gregory.
For the first time ever, the
Athletic Department is off
campus
Does that mean there
could be an alienation be
tween the rest of rumpus
and the Athletic Depart
ment? How will coaches
meet with their athletes dur
ing the day when they're not
Photo by J+tf
The video room at the Casanova Center tlolt) allows
coaches to call up tapes ot past games without
leaving their own offices The center s weight room
Ibelow) will be a big asset to Duck athletes
at practice? Won't running
back-and-forth from the Cas
anova (Winter to campus be a
hassle?
Those are all important
questions Hyrne and others
have to deal with, but it
seems they’re prepared to
handle those problems
One approach Byrne has
suggested for staying in
touch with campus life is
having as many people with
in itu- Athletic Department
servo on various faculty
com mitloos
Byrne would also like to
see faculty committees and
other University groups use
some of tilt! conference
rooms in the Casanova (kin
ter whenever possible.
"We want to encourage
groups to come over hero
and ust! it so wo can contin
ue to tie ourselves in." ho
sit id.
Byrne and others also be
lieve that the positive reac
tions the Casanova Center
generates will help not only
the Athletic Department but
the entire University
"I think we're all proud
when any new building
comes up, whether it's a sci
ence building or something
for intercollegiate athletics,"
Cregorv said
Assistant men's Imsketball
i o u t h M i k e i’ e t o r s e n .
though, believes there won't
txt much ol a problurn being
off campus
"in football, they've had
to do it forever, going to Mac
Court to Autzcn and buck,"
he said "it's such a minor
inconvenience for us that's
it's really not a factor con
sidering all of the pluses
VOLUNTEERS
Continued from Page 1
into a truck in her hometown of Astoria in July
1988 Paramedics initially gave tier up for dead, in
the depths of a lengthy coma resulting from serious
brain damage sustained in the an ident, insurance
companies dropped her seemingly hopeless i ase
Today Kichardson is more alert, more active and
less dependent on medication than ever
After the accident, Kichardson had to fie led
through a stomach tube because stie was unable to
swallow Through therapy. Kichardson is now able
to cat again
Although the success ot any therapy for brain inju
ries is difficult to gauge, Richardson's family believes
the patterning is working
"Of course we still hope and pray for her total re
covery." said Sue Kichardson, Charlotte's mother
At the same time, we still realize she's certainly
never going to lie Char again Wo just hope that she
will he able to come back and live some sort of
meaningful life Whore there's life them's hope," she
said.
That hope is fostered by the multitudes of volun
teers whose commitment is critical to Richardson's
therapy and recovery.
Once or twice n day, five volunteers move Richard
son through a pattern of crawling. While one volun
teer moves her head from side-to-side, the others ma
nipulate her rigid amis and legs to mimic one of the
most basic forms of human movement, (lie memory
of which is often lost by the brain-damaged and for
eign to bed ridden bodies.
Charles Webb, Richardson's former boyfriend, was
introduced to patterning in 1989 when he visited a
woman named Florence Scott in Woodbum. Them.
Scott transformed a used-car showroom into a place
where she transforms the lives of head-injured indi
viduals through patterning therapy, which she pro
vides free of charge
"Kloronce told me to get a table and get (Charlotte)
moving," Webb said
Inspired by "some incredible stones about people
who the insurance companies had forgotten," Webb
followed Scott's advice and initiated a rigorous re
cruiting campaign, which involved leaving fliers on
doorsteps, advertising In local newspapers and
speaking to University classes and student and com
munity organizations.
Webb's efforts paid off with commitments from
four sororities — Chi Omegu, Gamma Phi, Delta Delta
Delta und I’i Phi — and a number of individuals who
agreed to volunteer their time to his cause. Webb es
timated that University students comprise tit) percent
of the volunteers.
Webb said few of the volunteers knew the "Char"
tie met at the Janet Smith student cooperative who,
A >
until thrui! years ago, was studying Russian and
Spanish and "dreaming of writing mm good novel to
rnuko just enough money to raise a child on her own
someday.”
Dina Tragoser, a 20-year-old Russian major, has
worked with Richardson for a year and a half.
The volunteers are drawn to Richardson lor vari
mis reasons Trageser’s reason; She is "willing and
able." Clayton Buurkle, a Ti year-old sociology-psy
chology major at the University, said the opportunity
to work with Richardson ullows him “to fuel things
that you don't feel In everyday life "
"The volunteers are such fantastic people," said
Sue Richardson "They're just all so special to he
willing to do this without even knowing Char It's
just so wonderful It really moves us "
Anyone interested in volunteering their time to
Charlotte Richardson's therapy can call 484-01H5.
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