136 E. 1 ith • (near Willamette) 342-3358 Must be 21 or Over Friday ^.i’ $3 Oswald Five-0 Marshal Plan Runimeyer Saturday a,*.i io Two ikowt im iw Htgkt!!! The Billy Tipton Memorial Saxophone Quartet HOOpm $5 Neros Rome Siliva Tree II 00 p m $3 Sunday apmu $3 Peler Wilde The Hairy Mommas 9 011 p m Music Starts at 10pm Mon-Sat Music starts at 8pm Sundays /—poppi V— _y4narl-olia. ! I •Th« land East* ,-, TrcdMtonsI p *' Grttk b kndtin food Winter Hours Mon-Thur* 1130-9-30 Frl & Sat 1130-1000 Sua 500-4000 992 Willamette Eugene. Or 97401 343-9661 PAPER DUE? FIND SOMEONE TO TYPE IT IN THE ODE CLASSIFIEDS FUTONS STARTING AT ROCK SOFT FUTON EUGENE 1122 Alder St. 686-5069 OPEN M I 11-6 p m Sal 11-5 p.m.. Sun l2-4p.m Cooking With A Social Conscience Nurturing your health while supporting the earth •Jan's Salsa •Marinara Sauce •3 Bean, Black Bean & Chili Dip Ail made with organically grown tomatoes & beans 1% $alM tor Ecology 6 Hungor Projocl* AVAILABLE IN THE EMU JADE PALACE CANTONESE & SZECHUAN CUISINE Professional Wok Cooking Extensive Menu Superb Quality - No M.S.G. ★ Huge Portions ★ CNo Extra Charge i Charge 906 W. 7th • 344-9523 • Closed Monday The Vet’s Club has ambiance with lots of historic character and is The Vet's Club Lounge, located at Photo tty Anthony Fom#> 1626 Willamette St., otters a mixed crowd and relaxed atmosphere. Home for all Kinds By D. Lee Williams For ttv Oregon O&ty f meraid It'S ten-something Saturday night and my friend's just jammed from our table at The Vet's Club to the bar for 7&7's. In a nearby corner stands a fairly hot hip pie-chick with long curly hair and a glass full of orange juice and probably vodka. She's debating with a hippie girlfriend if she should bike to her ex-boyfriend's, hike home and crash or saunter over and snuff out the frattv guy in khaki shorts — who's been staring her down for quite a while — by pointing to his crotch and saying. "Excuse me — are those Bugle Boy pee spots you're wearing?” She opts for the snuff, but the band breaks into something rowdy, corner couples crowd the dance floor and my view of the hippie-chick’s dude-snuff is bloc ked My friend mazes back from the bar, sticks me my drink, catches the remaining hippie-chick in our corner, tells me he's going to ask her to dance, and I say, "Wrong." He asks. "Why wrong?" and 1 say, "You don’t want to." I suck rny 7 and add, "Just trust me." This is a rocky exception at The Vet's Club, not the rule. Just a minor conflict, it is the only chaos in an otherwise calm mix of cliques at the lounge, located in The Veteran's Memorial Building at 1626 Willamette St. The building itself is split into a restaurant and a lounge. The lounge — open from 11 a m. to 2 a.m. — holds the music, booze and action. And the action is unpretentious, non segregationist drinking. Tfu Vat's is a democratic mix of all twenty-something demographics, with certain, loyal cliques of interest. Here, hippie is cool, gay is OK. grunge filters in and fiat is The Vet’s Club Is a democratic mix of all twenty-something demographics, with certain, loyal cliques of interest. Here, hippie is cool, gay is OK, grunge filters in and frat is tolerated. You see the macho and the meek, the pretty and the plain, smell Polo and patchouli, feel revulsion and lust. tolerated. You see the mm ho and the meek, the pretty and the plain, smell Polo and patc houli, fee! revulsion and lust. There are a few scattered elderlies, probably regulars, probably vets On this night, a gray guy in bifoc als and a Gulf War cap was indic ative of the lounge as a lush-melting pot; not only was he capped in a patriotic fiat but. oddly enough, shoed in a c ounter-c ulture pair of Blrkenstocks as well (Authentic ones, too — 1 followed him to the restroom and verified the trademark under the stall.) The club's best feature is its design, particularly a wall separating the lounge proper from the dunnnfloor/stoge area This addition sets The Vet's apart from other live-bond bars — Taylor s and Good Times — where you're forced to face the music: even if you just want to sit. tune-out. talk with friends and get loaded. The interior design is unforced ambianc e and total comfort. Colors are basic: block and blurry-eyed, bloodshot red. Smoky-red leather pads the long bar on one side and plumps big booths all around. Blac k veins poke out from the dark-as-dirt wood walls (hal ve soaked up a half-century of war stories and a million bar tales. The entranc e hull holds a plaque hon oring Lane County's female veterans, while badges and medals deck the lounge's main wall as proof of the prin uiplos for which our fathers fought There's a barelv-alive jukebox in a dead fireplai e next to a makeshift stage It may look cheap 'n* cheesy. but b\ no means is The Vet s a dive It s your grandfather's basement. The wait staff is as fast, accurate and attentive as the wait people at Sixth Street Grill (the best in town, despite their snobbery), but could benefit from better hygiene. Bathrooms are handit apped-ai c essi bln and huge. Big enough for one to feel comfortable retching in without disturb ing the stall next door. The Vet's Club Lounge is for honest drinkers, and the booze is moderately priced The establishment is not a jnem her of the poser's club union, headed locally by the Cuidu s Scandnl's-At The Kow l oon and Coconut-|oe's triumvi rate There's only a thin stretch of mirror above the bar area, too Mostly out of sight, this almost fulfills my law that says no drinking establishment should ever have a mirror in plain sight In the lexicon of drink similes where The Oregon Klectrii Station is like the classic martini; Ihgh Street (Utfe the simple bottle of Bud. and Club Arena at Perry's a Sc reaming Orgasm The Vets Club is a Long Island Ic ed-Tea a rowdy mix of a lot of different ingredi ents that, somehow, goes down pretty smooth and sits pretty well EXHIBIT Continued (rom Page 5 awareness of the prevalent^' of sexual abuse by bringing the issue out into the open Ixeumse "so many people want to close their eyes and deny that it's happening," said Nancy Frvv, artistic director at Maurle Kerns. A•««» w *» •***«**»**r»• r t**tsn cm %*it **.m % Mk/vitl K* iil.ift. <0 K«« |>p. g*X K? K> T* Nightly MX)i»T Sum mm ; »*> v i Vltl(K< V \l»* M> \v* \HI» V% INS* II T VIM \ I »V I lOVARDSJND N*jhlly * tt> •>#< W,»i 1 iK* iidy (*•>*! fHIfVfc The*'*IJ %'US i t> "BUOYANT. MISCHIEVOUS THE LIVING END MNAi WII.K1 Nightly • M Till CRYING GAME 44S r»3k r» Sun Mil 700 r Tht moil K(ofi#M»d I movi ol w» fiu? ■J mimv ■'•■•lit •>«» 1 MIRANDA RICHARDSON _STEPHEN REA JATfc UAVII/dUN fHE CRYING GAME A T Ul »'«»"* LMt” »W*J HARVEY KEITEL IS THE 3^ aprio mm sum Ksrusatsism mo 8 PM APR 18 JAMES COTTON BLUES TRIO 8 P.M. £MM3 1 A COMING ATTRACTIONS it 4/22 THE DICKIES ♦ 4/29 CURTIS SALGADO TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: THE MILL CAMP, TlCKETMASTER FACE THE MUSIC, CD WORLD, HOUSE OF RECORDS, EMUjMAlN DESK FOR TICKET INFO CALL 747-0577