KAMPUS
^ 343-7654 ^
851 E. 13th
Proudly
Serving You
for 70 Years!
Haircuts only $9.00
No appointment needed
Monday-Friday'8am-5:30pm
Summer/
is over! V
V Look for the Emerald daily
' beginning September 28.
Pnao by jmn P*a*y
Keith Rtcherd teals through e collection ol scrapbooks put together by students from the 1800a to 1930s.
WELCOME I STUDENTS!
See us for the finest in photo finishing!
• Printed trom negatives
• Reg $1 99
ttttt
Prints From
Sudes
• R»g 69c
2 $5
mFOR >3
8X10S
• Printed from negatives
• Reg $3 99 each
890 E. 13th
Across From
1) of O Bookstors
342-3456
Mon-Fri 10am-6pm
Saturday lOam-Spm
Episcopal Campus Miuiztviw
Wuzt
1329 East 19th Avenue
on 19th between Emerald and Onyx
Welcome to the U of O come join us:
EPISCOPAL CAMPUS MINISTRIES
Worship, Bible study, speakers, music, fun, food, retreats, social ministry,
counseling - open to all students, staff and faculty.
OPEN HOUSE
EVERY
THURSDAY
STAFF
Thursday Sept. 24th 3 to 5 pm ICE CREAM SUNDAES
and meet old friends and new. Picnic to follow.
Beginning October 1st at 5:30pm Eucharist, supper and program
at the ECM House.
The Rev. Bryce McProud; Ann Kloeppel, Lay Chaplain 686-9972
ARCHIVES
Continued from Page 21A
the pnst? They wore the platos
students ate from when Hen
dricks Hail, now a building of
offices, was a dormitory.
Another shelf, full of clean
ing supplies — Windex, metal
polish and the like — gives evi
dence to the keeper of the Uni
versity's memories, Archivist
Keith Richard.
On a recent afternoon he sits
at a wooden table in the room,
now alive with chatter, helping
two Japanese men find informa
tion on a 1900 graduate.
One of the men is a professor
from Japan's Waseda University
who is writing an autobiogra
phy, it turns out, on the gradu
ate who later became Japan's
Foreign Minister.
It is Richard's job to help
people find information from
the ordinary-looking files that
contain extraordinary facts
Ho keeps track of all the rec
ords required by law. He has
files for every faculty and staff
person and student who has set
fool on the University since It
opened in 1876.
He can show you the receipts
from the building of Ueady
Hall, the oldest building on
campus, or help you find pic
tures of University life from
among the 250.000 negatives
available.
But he makes it clear to dis
tinguish himself from a librari
an.
"In an archive you go
through the archivtat," he said,
so the public doesn't get to pe
ruse through the material. "The
archivist brings it to you."
In his 22 years as archivist
he's seen a lot of interesting
material. But he admits it's
stuff that wouldn't intrigue ev
eryone.
"The history — not every
body would put up with It." he
said. "This is a living institu
tion. It's raw history."
But Richard is much more
than a retriever of facts — he's
a part of the archives.
He could be one of the flies
himself. It could be labeled:
"Richard. Archivist and Histo
rian. Human medium between
tho people who came before
and those who are now here.”
It's hard to imagine anyone
who knows more about the
University than Richard. He
can drop obscure facts like a
Tom to ADCMVES. Paps 33A