Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 22, 1994, Image 1

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    Oregon Daily
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1994
EUGENE. OREGON
VOLUME 96. ISSUE 61
Chilly camp-out pays off in tickets
Sales: An estimated
2,000 Rose Bowl vouch
ers have been sold to
students
Abe Estimada
Ernorffcl
When freshman |ason Hender
son woke up In his sleeping bag
at 5:30 a.m Monday outside of
Autzen Stadium, he found out
fairlv quickly that three pairs of
pants, two long-sleeve shirts, a
wool sweater, two pairs of socks
and n Jacket with an inner lining
were not enough to keep him
warm
Henderson looked up at the
stadium reader board: TKMPKR
ATt IRK 29 DfXIREES. I ienderson
was huddled with two friends,
each with sleeping bags and just
as bundled up as he was On top
of the threesome were two blan
kets for extra protei turn Still,
Henderson shivered.
"It was freezing. We froze our
asses off," he said. Henderson
and his party were part of the
long line of an estimated 3,000
students who surrounded the sta
dium Sunday and Monday wait
ing to buy Rose Bowl tickets at
the Casanova Center.
Henderson and his friends
waited 15 hours for their S-tH tick
ets to Pasadena. By 5 p.m Mon
day night. Jim Jaeger, director of
operations for the Athletic
Department, guessed that 2.000
student tickets had been sold
from tfie time the ticket office
opened at the Casanova Center,
The University has allotted 6,000
tickets for students
“It's been a steady stream since
9 a.m. this morning," Jaeger said
"We didn’t even have enough
time to bring (the number of tick
ets we sold) up on the comput
er."
The ticket office was supposed
to close at 5 pm Monday . but
Jaeger said the office would
remain open until the line dis
appeared or uutii all the tickets
were sold. The doors to the tick
Turn to TICKETS, Paq**3A
UAN«
Rebecca Roeblg tries to keep tier spirits high as trie mercury falls The smell of roses was the only thing that
could have persuaded over 1,000 students to brave the cold In hopes of getting tickets to the Rose Bowl.
University
has plan
for more
technology
Information: A
committee will help
decide direction of
computer resources
Tiffany Smith
The University will In*
very different in four years
tun au.se of the information
technology filtering into
the c ore of the institution.
a< i circling to John Moseley.
provost and vie n president
of at adernit affairs
"I don't think we've over
seen this inuc h done in sty
weeks." Moseley said of the
iinplententAtion of the edu
cational its Imologv that the
tec hnology resource fee is
funding
With a total budget of
St 75 million for educ ation
tec hnologv, the Universt
ly's hope is "to maximize
access to the largest num
ber of students," Moseley
said
A set of princ iples devel
oped by the Kduc utionnl
Tec hnology (Coordinating
Committee has set the plan
in motion T he < omnuttee
will guide the University
through the next five years
and up the on-ramp of the
information *u|cerhighwav
"Our idea is not that
we re trying to create a
c omputerized ifniversity
said Art Farley, chairman
of the committee T he goal
is to "enhance the interac
tion we have with stu
dents
Farley said the primary
foc us for the first year is to
Turn to FEE, Page 4A
■ GOOD MORNING
> CHILOQUIN, Ore (AP) —
Cowboys have been rounding up
80 buffalo that strayed from a
ranch, but not before some fell
prey to rustlers
As many as 10 of the buffalo,
valued at $2,000 apiece, may
have been killed and butchered,
said Hal Atkinson, who manages
harvest of the herd for the Bay Y
Ranch
"Shooting one of these ani
mals amounts to grand theft." he
added "If somebody wanted to
do something like that, they'd
have to contact me They would
•p^ve to pay for the privilege of
aging that, and then salvage the
animal,”
TfttjWfalo strayed through a
broken fence last week and have
been causing a commotion in
this small town m northern Kla
math County
"People are unhappy with
them," said state police Sgt.
Glenn Smith "One lady called in
from her home along Highway
62 and said she had two cows
and two calves in her yard
She was swearing she was
going to shoot one and put it in
her freezer if somebody didn't
come get them.
"She was advised they were
private property and that it’s
against the law Then she hung
up "
Cowboys had 41 buffalo head
ed into a corral on Sunday at the
Chiloquin Ranger Station, but
the animals bolted before the
gate was shut.
Leon "Skeeter" Barrows ot the
Bay Y Ranch said all but about
15 of the buffalo had been
rounded up as of Monday.
“It will be easy to gel the
stragglers, because theytl want
to get back with the bunch," he
said
Celebrate Thanksgiving with stories
Nature: Excerpts will be read at
Mount Pisgah Arboretum
Suzanne Marta
Ooyon !M*>y f mettHd
"The Broken Ground"
hy Wendall Berry
The opening out and out
Body yielding body:
The naturalist writings of Wendell Berry are |iist
some of those that will in? shared in a Thanksgiv
ing ‘ elebratian at the Mount Pisgah Arboretum
Visitor (enter from to to 11 30 am on Thursday
Storyteller Daniel Kay will read excerpts from
naturalist writers like Phoreau. Longfellow and
Whitman with students and community members
in this third annual event.
"it's a chance for people to get together and
share in the relationship between art and nature."
Ray said.
Rav an at live volunteer for the Talking Books
program, started coordinating naturalist readings
for the Clackamas Community College Environ
mental Learning Center in
The breaking through which the new mines,
Pen hing above its shadow on the piling up;
“It's a time to express thankfulness about nature
and our environment." said Fran Rosenthal, odu
i ational coordinator at the arboretum.
"Thanksgiving with the Naturalists" was started
by Rosenthal and Ray.
“The art of reading together is being lost in our
television culture." Roy said.
Darkened broken old husks of itself
“The naturalist wrote about the dance between
the natural world and the artistic world," Ray said.
Students are encouraged to bring materials ihev
want to read or have read by Ray
"It’s going to tie very informal," Rosenthal said.
Mount Pisgah is a tttt acre arboretum, whit h
offers seven miles of groomed hiking trails through
meadows, woods and tilting the Willamette River
"It's really beautiful this time of year." Rosenthal
said “The air is crisp and there are leaves every
where. "
Mount Pisgah is approximately six miles from
the University campus For more information, call
747-3817.