SUBSHOP 1225 ■ ALDER I 345-2434 WINNING GIFT 4 Here is a holiday gift that will be a sure winner - with the hottest new Shimano components and great looks too! n SALE! U.S. MADE RALEIGH M60 MOUNTAIN BIKE ONLY $399.00 Check out the full red hot Raleigh line of cross, road and mountain bikes, many models made right here in the Northwest. DA I II 'C BICYCLE SHOP • 2480Aider • 342-6155 rMUL O BICYCLE WAY Of LIFE ♦ 152 W. 5th • 344-4105 It’s Time to Register for Winter... Peer Health Advising EDPM 407 CRN 21192 9:30amT 1:00am Tues. & Thurs. Get experience in y Coordinating events y Public speaking y Writing articles for the Well Now y Facilitating workshops Call Joanne Frank or Annie Dochanhl at 346-2728 for an interview appointment and to properly enroll. UO Student Health Center Health Education Program KNIGHT Continued from Page 1 This latest (Itangl) to the library is the biggest one yet and is being done "to organize the building in .1 more, logical way, said Andrew Honamici. University librarian for administrative services. "There is also the need to inte grate the three separate ports of the building into one func tioning library." he said. This will make it easier for patrons to find what they are looking for than in the past Even tually, people will be able to get from one part of the library to another without having to leave the building. "The old part of the library is where all the changes will be on erring this term." Honamici said. Basically, everything that was being stored there will Im moved to the new side of the library until renovations are completed. The Knight Library, once called tie* Main library, is named after the Knight family Phil Knight, an eminent graduate of the Uni versity and current president and CI O of Nike Inc... has been a major contributor to the library during the years. The current Expansion and Renovation Pro GROUND FLOOR: Instruc tional Media Center MAIN FLOOR Documents and public affairs, micro films, reserve reading room, current periodicals reading room, McK night Juveniiie Collection and curriculium collection and the Adaptive Technology Lab. SECOND FLOOR: Refrence department, news paper reading room and inter library loan, THIRD FLOOR: Oversized books. Dewey 800-900,Ubrary of Congress A-L. FLOORS FOUR AND FIVE: Music Services, Ubrary of Con gress M-Z, Dewey 0-700. East Aslan Collection, special col lections reading rooms, library admistration and library per sonnel services. !<•< t at the library is being paid for through gifts and grants that total $27 4 million from individuals such os Knight, several corpora tions and the state. The expansion phase of the project was completed at the end of 1992. Since then, the contrac tor for the renovation, S.D. Dea con Inc., and the library staff have linen working on the renovation phase of the project, which is being carried out in two stages In the first stage of the renovation phase, which was completed dur ing the break, many changes were carried out that users of the library should be aware of One of the highlights of the fin ished renovation is the new Dou glass Room. Leslie Bennett, head of music services, said six new compact disi players, a DAT player and 30 listening booths iiave been added These booths are connected to the equipment via remote control and thereby give students 'more control over what they listen to than before." Bennett said. The Douglass Room now has about 2.000 CDs. Students can not browse through these, how ever; they must know what CDs they want ahead of time. Patrons of the library must still use the temporary main entrance to the library on the east side of the new addition near the ceme tery. The main entrance and the main and ground floors were originally scheduled to have been completed by now. but shipping delays by construction material suppliers and site conditions dis covered during the renovation process have caused the three month delay. TROPICAL Continued from Page 1 days. lie calls il "A Northwest Polynesia." A (igar stu!> of a man with n penchant for Pol ish sheep dogs. art anu Hawaiian trinkets and self promotion. Wood said the time has come to give the i iti/.ens of Monroe a place to blow off steam. We've got car rai es. bowling, animal shows and tractor pulls here Hut there s nowhere around here when1 people can party.'' Wood said as he fiddled with the pump that pushes 250 gallons a minute over Ins 35-foot waterfall. There are a number of stories about Wood that still make the rounds hero, but none as outlandishly amusing as the one about bis chicken problem. Some years ago. back before this 52-year-old raconteur become a prominent developer here. Wood was hawking chickens on Lake Washing ton from a 100-foot barge during a Seafoir weekend. A big storm blew in and most everyone left, leav ing Wood with -too unsold chickens. A few days later, the barge stank so badly that no one would come near Wood's chit ken hoop. So he dts ided to dump the thawing flock into the lake When confronted b> local authorities. Wood, believe it or not, said the chii kens had drowned and that lie vs as deeply sorry because he consid ered them pets Wood was charged w ith "disturbing Lake Wash ington." and proset utors recommended a 60-day jail term and a $20,000 fine. Hut Wood got a saws lawyer who argued there was no actual low on the hooks forbidding the dumping oft hit kens in n Washington lake, and Wood got a feather-lightlyje of $100 That was DIM and Won't! devisflrt^h l another scheme. Wood left town briefly lor Juneau. Alaska, where he had grown up. and started peddling fish sauce. Of course, he railed it "Pete s Kish Sauce.” Wood sold enough to buy a plane ticket to Hawaii. There he convinced the locals that roast pig tast ed great if slathered in "Pete’s Hawaiian Sauce," which, of course, was identical to "Pete's Fish Sauce.” It was in Hawaii that the real estate bug bit Wood. After completing a few projects, Wood moved back to Kirkland to continue his development dalliances. Five years ago, he headed to Monroe. "I came here to get rich." Wood said as he cheer fully rumbled in his Ford van over once-virgin land now being transformed into housing tracts. Wood said he came here with "zero money,” but managed to persuade a bank to lend him the mon ey to buy a gravel pit. Wood parlayed his profit from selling gravel into property acquisitions and now owns 500 acres in and near Monroe. "The legend is that Pete doesn’t use (ash. He just barters and trades." Robinson said. Wood smiled at Robinson's suggestion, and with a wink and chuckle he cracked, "Gravel has been very, very good to nte.” A couple of years ago. Wood bought the parcel ho is transforming into "Pete's Party Pit" for $4 mil lion from a Snohomish County development com pany. Wood doesn’t plan to make it available to the gen eral public, preferring instead to rent it out fur $5T)0 to $1,50(1 a day for private parties, weddings and receptions beginning next spring. So far, Wood has done little to promote it. and few residents are even aware ol the so-called par adise in their midst. "1 haven't started bustling it," Wood said "I fig ure people will hear about it word of mouth." Wood also envisions a 78,000-square-foot hotel adjacent to the party pit. and perhaps someday the construction of five restaurants, office buildings and trendy boutiques along the lake. "I don't think it can miss." # si ■4. use These Gnat Money Saving coupons! We Print Better Pictures! 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