Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 14, 1994, Page 6A, Image 6

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t atholu (2um.h on Sunday aJ 6 4S p m
at 1BS0 f morale! St For mow triform*
IKm. call 14) mil
VISIT EUGENE S NATURAL
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•Locally and Organically
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•Largest Micro-Brew
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Friday, Nov. 4,1994 6:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 5,1994 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
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19
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Sponsored by Planned Parenthood
of South Western Oregon and
H of () Student Health Services
UO Stuilent Health Center
Health education Program
■ COMMUNITY
Voters to decide library’s fate
Lla Salctccia
Oregon Itofy ImmUU
Question What building is
lot ated on tin* edge of downtown,
has office* in a basement, and
sounds like a busy department
store?
Answer The Eugene Public.
Library.
SupportOT* of t its Ballot
Measure 2II-OH know IM answer
to the above, and are trying to
convince voters to approve
S26.1 :u.hou of i its bonds m
order to move the FPL from its
current site on the inlervs lion of
West J3th Avenue and Olive
Street to West loth Avenue
between Charnelton and Olive
streets, in tile old Sears building
The Soars building was
purchased as a future library site
In the city in Mini after a vote
passed Last May voters turned
down a lihrarv bond measure
Iss ause it included in its pot kage
funding for public, safety
When asked why tiles turned
down the pat kage, most voters
told the Library Yes' politic al
action committee thin wanted a
measure focusing on the library
only.
Measure 20-08's sole question
is whether the city shall issue
general obligation bonds (or the
new library and for the purchase
of capital items Die measure, if
passed, will authorize the lamds
to finance construction at the
Sears site
While l.ihmrv Services Dirts tor
Carol Hildebrand ail Is the Sears
building a "big. sturdy reinforced
WH SON CMHT.WM
Senior Ted Miller (left) shows Barbara Miller how to connect to ' Glad
stone" at the new "Internet Access" computers In the library.
concrete tank." the measure's
opponents say it’s an eyesore
"The Sears building is ugly and
15 years older than our present
librarywrites Arthur K. Shapiro,
whouills the effort to relocate the
library "trying to make a silk
purse out of a sow's ear."
Shapiro heads a PAC tailed No
Unfair Tax Schemes (NUTS). Its
main objection to the measure
is tiiat it' will put undue tax
pressure on Eugene’s
homeowners and renters. They
also object to the paid parking
proposed for the site If the new
library is approved, patrons will
park across the street (10th
Avenue) The first hour will be
validated by the library, and
consecutive time will l>e charged
by the going rate, said
Hildebrand
The Library Yes! committed
maintains they're giving voters
w hat they. ant with the Seat s
site. The LPl. is the third-busiest
library in the state. Library
officials say services are tapped
at the current site.
Hrian VVnnty, < hairman of the
PAC Citizens for a Great Library,
agrees that Eugene is in sons need
of a new library, but is opposed
to tiie site and the parking
situation. Although the Sears
building is close to u bus transit
station (Eugene Station), the
Intuition is not convenient for foot
or hike access, Wants said.
Wantv, a Political Science
majorat the University, said that
although voters approved the site
m 1991. they are having second
thoughts because of the way
library plans are proceeding.
Bequest will fund museum archives
Joan M. Bond
for me Oeptw O+b f merino
A plaque honoring alumnus Joseph Allen Holaday
for his SI20.000 bequest to the Lane County
Historic al Museum was unveiled Wednesday at
Harris Hail in the lane County Building
Commissioner Jerry Rust read a resolution of
appreciation and presented the plaque to Ethan
Newman, president of I-ane County Historical
Sot lets , and Kd Stelfox, museum director About
20 people attended the < eremons
The plaque was placed in the Lane County
Historical Museum The bequest establishes the
first endowment ever for the Eugene museum The
endowment is living held in trust for the museum
by the Lane County Historical Sot iety Holaday
spec ified that the gift was to he made not only m
his name, but also In the name of Gladys Chase
Holaday, who preceded her husband in death
Holaday also donated a manuscript collection to
the museum archives
The endowment carries w ith it few restrictions
on its use Holaday wants the manusi ripts he
donated to lie accessible to the public. The museum
plans to use the endowment to buy a computer for
the museum archives. Stelfox said the museum
would use a database program to catalog the rest of
tins archives' material The archives collections
would lx- cataloged to make it easier to find specific
subjects and manuscripts.
"As it is now, it can’t be used," Stelfox said of the
lloladay collection, "and one of his wishes was to
have it used."
Horn in 1905 in Deer Creek, Oregon, lloladay
attended sc hool in Pendleton, graduating in 1925.
He graduated from the University in 1929. He taught
at Oregon schools until World War II. when he
entered the military.
After completing his tour of duty, he started his
own business, lloladay Nursery, whore he
spec mlized in rare- shrubs and trees Ho and Gladys
Chase w ere; married in 1950. He was especially
interested in history , horticulture, the environment,
and energy issues
lloladay died on September 21. 1992 in Kugene
at the age of HtS.
§*•*£«*
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