^ Middle Eastern *rd Sum }4 i *02 4 corned t>> (n-iu mwjr inert inclmlmf **Tvc Setccttirr plant (check youi live I I WUNDERLANDCf 5th STREET A PUBLIC MARKET ] jcmt :mm pm* 683-8464 VIOEO Foames -VIDEO ADVENTURE ^UaLUT RtV*R REAM I i ioIm •*_» Mm MPA BMf POAPX IM P ♦VVVVV¥VVV¥V¥¥V» Newly Appointed PEACE CORPS DIRECTOR Carol Bellamy Wednesday, January 12 Directions tor the vu s IJniv of Oregon ERB Memorial Union Fir Room 4 pm-5pm DORM Continued from Page 1 Mitchell has turned its public high school into a boarding school, taking in students from afar and giving them a taste of rural life, some old-fashioned dis cipline, and a chance to stay out of trouble. "There isn't much to do in Mitchell, and we try to make studying a priority," said Michael Carroll, the school superinten dent who's also principal, ath letic director. Spanish teacher and a substitute bus driver Students like )nime, who pay only a $75 monthly dormitory foe, see Mitchell's boarding school as a ( heap alternative to private school. Townspeople see it as a way to save their high school from closing for lack of students County population has been shrinking for years. When Carroll arrived in 1975. Mitchell had 40 students in grades 9-12. Now there are 29. not (.minting dorm students, and in four years there may lie only 15. Thai’s not enough to support a high si hool, Carroll said Many students already endure long bus rides in from ranches; if Mitchell's high school i losed, tliev would have to attend other s< boots at least 45 minutes away. The hoarding school prevents that, for even student enrolled, Miti hell School District gets $4,500 from the state By adding dorm students to keep enrollment steady. the high si hool can pay its four teat hers and maintain its programs NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL Oregon West Fitness Is the place to work out! I .... I Oregon West fitness i—— t Best Hours Best Prices ★ 7 Days a week 6am-11 pm 485-1624 S3 r“-■—H NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL I • $35 Per month for 1 6 months I • NO Initiation Fee I • Pay by the Month | Expires 1/24/94 I OKI CON Wl S'I i 1475 Franklin Blvd. | Across from Campus ■ 485-1624 1 The dorm — Ihree singlewide trailers stut:k together near the football field — opened in Sep tember 1992. Its 14 beds, half for girls, half for boys, have been filled since February, with a wait ing list of 25. For some new students, the culture shock is severe. From the school's hillside perch, a potholed road passes 50 or so houses before dropping down to Mitchell's business dis trict two stores, a gas station, throe cafes and a post office That's about it Outside town, cattle and sheep roam the volleys: logging roads climb into the forested hills. Mitchell is a place where they play country western music at school dances, a place where kids can walk the streets at night, provided they watch for deer hounding by. It's also a place where people are expected to pull their own weight. "Kids leant to get lost in the big schools." said Dennis Dalton, math and science teacher. "There's no way to get lost here. Everybody is noticed." Mitchell is not running a n-form school — a record of vio lence is the one automatic dis qualifier for applicants — but (iis< iplinu is stricter than at most public schools. If a lioy and girl are caught kiss ing in the hall, they may have to stand three! feet apart the rest of tlie day. If students say "shut up" in Mr. Misener's c lass, they'll !>e writing "shut up" 1,000 times. Dorm students must do 30 minutes of homework each night I>efore lights go out at 10:15 p in. For every D, an extra half-hour of homework is required; for every F. one hour. Mitchell is not for everyone. Half of last year's dorm residents did not return tins fall. And set - en have been kicked out since the program liegun, four for drinking, one for smoking, one for sneak ing off with her boyfriend for a weekend, and one for smuggling a marijuana bung in. "If they don't want to !m> here, then we don’t wont them." (air roll said "We re set up for the kid who wants to come here, wants to do well, and wants to get along." Those who stay seem to thrive, despite bouts ot homesickness. Nearly all have improved their grades, and most participate in school activities and sports In Mitchell, everyone makes the team. |o Ann Reynolds, 18, arrived lost year after drifting in and out of classes in Astoria, on the Ore gon Coast. Her absences there weren't noticed, she said. "Nobody even cared I didn't do my work. 1 got deeper in a hole, and I couldn't get out." Now, her Ds have turned into Bs. She is student council sec retary. and she's taking extra classes so she can graduate next spring. Heather Sullivan. 14. came this fall. Mitchell saved her from a Portland high school where, she says, "there are drugs all over the place, and if you narc on some body, you're dead.” Her tough shell — "I wasn't going to let anybody get close to me" — soon dissolved in the dormitory's cramped quarters. The dorm is like any house hold with a teen-ager, times 14. There are shrieks when the phone rings, arguments over the shower, laughter and shouting and kids running by constantly. Boys are on one side, girls on the other, separated by a dining area and TV room, where they park themselves on Montezuma's Revenge, a green velvet couch as* ugly as it is comfortable. Dorm life revolves around Mar garet McDaniel, 44. a divorced mother hired to live there. The kids call her Mom, and she's always home when they got out of school, baking cookies, bro kering arguments, bugging them to do their homework. For some students, she provides a sense of security they never got at home. "A lot of them come from bro ken families." she said. "A lot of them have plain old been hurt out there They can cover it up, but there's that sadness. All you can do is love them." DANCE SHOES BALLET • JAZZ • TAP FOLK • MODERN CAPEZIO • BLOCH • FREED • CHACOTT LEO'S TIGHTS TOPS CAPEZIO • DANSKIN • DANCE FRANCE MARIKA • BAR1SHNIKOV • and MORE! Hours: Monday - Saturday 9:30-5:30 Sundays 12:00-5:00 41 W. Broadway Eugene Downtown Mall 686-2671 I