| Fall Ac»ivities TRIM Oltice 0 0311 ’or details 102 Esslinger Phone # 6-4113 SAVE $$$ ON TEXTBOOKS! • One block from campus. • Same low prices. • Expanded floor space. Bring Your Textbook Information / Author / Title / Edition We'll help you save $$$ Sell some of last year's textbooks and help pay for this term's books Smith Family Bookstore font Mtu k fruni t tit \ f h> "-I In t n i 7hS 1 ,ist 1 ^th • (70,4) '47-1 f>7 I l C)ivi;on '•>740] On Campos Desktop Publishing and Darkroom Services -> 346-4381 Author explores nature (AI’J • Writer Harry ! yipez explains the different e between his fiction end non-fiction in musit al terms. "An essay ends with a major chord A shorl sto ry ends on a minor chord," Lopez said in an inter view. "It's another way of saying an essay ends on the page A short story ends somewhere in the reader's mind " Lopez is best known for his non-fiction work in natural history He won the National Book Award in l'iHfi for An tu Dreams, which grew out of Ins earlier book. Of Wolves and Men. But throughout his life, he also has written fic tion His latest offering is a collection of short sto ries. Field Nnh's The book completes the trilogy started in ltififi by Desert .Votes, followed by River Notes in 1«»7u glu-nil hi-- iitc. a tone list one* has been Her man Melville's Main Dirk, the classic story of Allah's quest to kill the great white whale. "It seems to me the quintessential work of Amer ican literature, because it brings together elements of the extraordinary physical landscape that so per meates everything in American life- with the big questions, like what is the relationship hot ween an individual and God." Lopez, said. Youths claim abuse from ranch (>l N Ml’LA (AH jasonlI.it ley was only 12 years old when hr arrived at 1ho () K Bovs' Ranch, i group foster hotnt’ for troubled youth Hu was initiated into thu vio lent o of the plat v Ins first night white he was taking a shower Teenagers threw n blanket over Hatley’s head, and he was hit and (nun hod while others urinated on him and threw fetes at him Hatlev said they drugged hint outside and left him naked on the roof When he told staff niemtiers about the altiti k they told hint the ram h operated under “the law of the jungle," and he would have to fend for himself. When the boys found out he had told the staff, he was bent en again, lie said. Hatley, now 2t. and 14 oth er youths from the home suc t essfulh brought a lawsuit against the home, whit h the state dosed last week The set tlement Thursday has reached to $8.5 million and could increase to more than S21 mil lion. The suit claimed sexual abuse was rampant at the O K Boys’ Ranch for troubled youth from 1985 through 1993. it said the state and the Olympia kiwanis Club, whit h operated the foster home, knew of the abuse and did nothing to stop it The settlement included S-t 175 million from the state. S t million from the Kiwanis Club of Olympia and $! 4(> mil lion from a ranch insurer. The boys sought nearly $12 5 million from two addi tional insurance agencies, said )o< k Connelly, one of the attor »»\ s for the youths. The state Department of Sim ud and Health Services has launched an investigation into the !«>vs' ranch So lar, a region al administrator for the deport ment's children's division has been lin-d "It's v erv regrettable and should not have happened," said fsdlhv Sp«Ull». spukcs woman for the department. We want to make sure it nev er happens again." Staff memimrs lot older boys discipline younger residents, Hatley anil other youths said in documents filed with the case in Thurston County Superior Court " These bo\s were taught to react with violence and anger at all threatening stimuli." said Richard Kelley, one of Hatley's attorneys. "This was Lord of the Flips gone berserk ” A few times, staff members put boxing gloves on the boys, ordered a light and wagered cigarettes on the outcome, Hal les said Currently. Hatley in serving a sentem e at Thurston County Jail for s iolating probation and a no-contact order protecting a former girlfriend. Police officers aren’t wanted in Falls City FALLS CITY (API — Residents in Falls City fig ure they don't need any help fighting crime. The town of 830 people does not him- a police department or a contract with the County sheriffs office for full-time law enforcement And most residents like it that way. In the Sept. 20 elet tion, voters rejected propos als to hire a full-time city police officer or con tract with the Polk County sheriffs office. They cit ed two reasons money and a lack of crime. Both hallo! measures would have required SlHfi.000 over three years. The owner of a Shi),000 house would have paid more than $210 in extra tax es annually during that period. "Who can afford it?" resident Hazel Frink asked. "We get along fine this way." Moreover, residents said Falls City is a nice, qui et town with no serious crime issues for a full-time officer to address. "It's just a typical small town," James Yurkiovich said. "I don 't see that we have that much of a prob lem. If things got loo crazy out here. 1 think a lot of residents would take care of it themselves " l ulls City dot's have 111 1 service and the sheriffs department does respond to calls, even though it lakes deputies am where from a half an hour to two hours to do so. City officials and Polk County Sheriff Ray Steele doesn't like it "1 ( an't say that Falls City has more crime than any other place." he said. "Hut they do have crime out there and they nets! to have the ability to address that crime in a timely fashion.” Polk County does not keep statistics on crime in Falls City or the number of ( alls it responds to there Hut Steele said his deputies respond to an average of two to three calls a day from the city, ranging from burglary and domestic disputes to speeding and barking dogs There are only a few incorporated cities in Ore gon that lack a regular law enforcement service. But |erry Freshour, deputy director of the State Hoard on Public Safety Standards and Training, said the state does not keep track of which ones they are Oregon law does not require cities to have their own law enforcement services