Oregon Daily MONDAY, JANUARY 3,1994 EUGENE, OREGON VOLUME 95. ISSUE 68 Don’t drop that box! -3 MORGAN SMmVKX l mm eta S+nior Nicole Chlcoine, left, a Paycology major, moves furniture from the Delta Gamma House with roomate Christian Lowe, a senior In Economics, and her dad Glenn Lowe. UNIVERSITY Rural town runs dorm giving kids a new life Education: Students in trouble find support at boarding school in secluded Cental Oregon MITCHELL (AP) — Jaime Mclaiwhorn. 1H, needed a change of scene. Her grades wore in the gutter and her friends were drifting toward drugs, alcohol and trou ble. When she heard about a public board ing school in this Central Oregon town, she thought she might find support here for starting over, far from the temptations of her old school in a Portland suburb First, however, she hud to find Mitchell. After a 200-mile drive into the lonely sagebrush hills of Oregon's high desert. Jaime and her mother went straight through town without realizing it "It looked like a tittle ghost town,” Joinie recalled. "I said, 'Where are the hangouts' Where’s the pizza parlor' Where’s the 7 Eleven?’ " Mitchell, population tHf>. has none of those things. Indeed. Mitchell has not much of anything — and that’s pro* isely the point of an unusual experiment in pub lic education taking place here. Turn to DORMS. Page 6 GOOD MORNING ► SEATTLE (AP) — II would cost S136.700 to truck 33 many as 60 sea lions Irom the Ballard Locks to their br^feding grounds on the Channel Islands of Southern California — before this winter's run of steelhead trout arrives at the locks The sea lions are lurking at the locks, presumably waiting for this year’s annual winter run The proposal has been endorsed by a committee of biologists Irom the National Marine Fisheries Service, the state Department of Wildlife and members of Trout Unlimited, the Muckleshoot Tribe and the Washington Environmental Council. At least some of the sea lions would return to Seattle and have to be hauled home a second time. H I G 55 45° Oi ► HELENA, Mont. (AP) — A frantic search for a seven- year-old Canadian boy buried in an avalanche ended sadly Saturday with the discovery 01 his body. The death of Miles Merrill brought the death toll to five. The boy's body was found at 1 p.m., about 24 hours after he and six others were caught by the avalanche during a snowmobiling outing on Friday. Miles and three other victims were from Cardston, Alberta, just north of the border. ►SEATTLE (AP) — The Marlboro Man is riding out of the Kingdome on New Year's Day. run out of town by an ordinance that bans tobacco advertising from all county buildings — including the Seattle Mariners' ball park. The 55-foot ad over left field, depicting a cigarette smoking cowpoke, was being covered with flat black paint Saturday by the Foley Sign Co. Knight Library undergoes changes Renovation: Six CD players and DAT player added to new Douglass Room By John Fleischli Fot the Oregon Ddtfy EmeraKS During the winter break, the knight Library went through some changes that patrons returning to the library may bi> surprised to find If you hud tried using the library during the break, you would have found that it was closed so staff could move about one million volumes of books into new parts of the library and so several offices and depart ments could lie relocated. Students, staff and a handful of movers were busy shelving books, moving furniture, buffing and wax ing floors and removing gum from the undersides of tables. About 8.200 hours of labor were involved in the project, which result ed in the move of the Special Col lections materials to improved storage urvas m the new addition l ne Acqui sition. Catalog, Preservation and Binding, and Systems departments also moved from temporary quarters to the renovated Meyer Technical Services Center on the main floor. The Knight Library has gone through several major changes in its history. The latest wave of change is known as the Expansion and Ren ovation Project and began in Apr. 1992. Turn to KNIGHT. Page 8 1 Promoter builds Hawaii-style party site in Monroe Paradise: Builder plans to rent 21-acre expanse for weddings and private parties MONROE. Wish. (AP) — Between the sprawling gravel pits and the stately penitentiary. Pete Wood is building himself a pseudo-Disneyland with a tropical twist. There’s no Matterhorn, Space Mountain, or any oth er thrilling rides for that matter. But there are water falls, fountains and streams, banana trees and black weeping locusts. At the canter of this madcap. 21-acre. Hawailan-atyle marvel is a structure Wood calls the Hums Hums bar, crafted of woven coconut palms and surrounded by carvings of aamlnude maidens and Tiki torches. Close by la a 10-acra artificial lake that Wood Is slow ly filling with the aid of four larga hoses. Wood esti mates it will be full In another 125 days. Wood even Installed a pips along the top of the five tiered flagstone terrace to shoot out a cooling mist. It's the kind of contraption you might find in fancy out door eateries in such desert towns as Palm Springs, Calif., and Phoenix. But in Monroe? “People are going to love it. They're Just going to love it," a beaming Wood said the other day as he fed dried hunks of breed to a squealing flock of gulls that circled low over his lake. “If it works, it could be a masterpiece." said Dick Fredlund. Monro a city planner. “Once people know about it. they'll come from miles around.” said Kenneth Robinson, publisher of the Mon roe Monitor, the city’s weekly newspaper. “Peter is a largely undiscovered legend around there. People are amazed when they see what be does.” Wood, the giddy — some say wacky — visionary some days calls his creation 'Tate’s Party Pit." Other Turn to TROPICAL, Page 8