ODE to a Century ©regon?lR£nttr*U> In their own words • • • Continued from Page 6C Don Fair 1947-8 “1 remember the famous printing press fire and how we still got the paper out the next morning.” Dawn E. Garcia 1979-81 “Cutting classes for a day with ODE photog rapher Steve Dykes so we could report on the Rajneesh and his crazy commune in Antelope, Ore. We drove from the lush green of Eugene across the state to the dry eastern desert. We in terviewed confused converts dressed all in red as well as frustrated natives of Antelope. Real journalism!” Janet Sanderson Goetze 1960-64 “I can’t forget Nov. 22, 1963, when we had to throw out our Homecoming copy and write as sassination stories and sudden changes in cam pus schedules.” Joseph A. Haran Jr. 1973 “During the early 1970s an Emerald editor in chief told me: ‘I'd never hire any bastard veter an!’ Trendy campus, anti-war sentiment tended to translate into anti-veteran actions... Like many other ex-Gls on campus, I learned to keep my working class background and ex periences of military service in the Republic of Vietnam ‘in the closet’ whenever I was convers ing with students exuding such middle class val ues.” Tom Henderson 1984-5 “Being called ‘smug’ and ‘abusive’ during an interview with folk singer Joan Baez. (That was pretty much the end of my crush on her.)” Stan Horton 1967-69 “Featured on front page of Emerald with fin gers crossed, looking at teletype as first numbers of first Vietnam draft were announced. (I was lucky — 347.)” Graham Kislingbury 1974-5 “A number of us were working at the Emer ald on that Thursday night in May 1975 we Steve Prefontaine beat some visiting Finnish runners in a race at Hayward Field. We were happy that Pre had won again. Our sports guys got the sto ry in the paper, and we all went home. “A friend called me at 6:30 the next morning to say that Pre had been killed in a car wreck following a post-meet party. I didn’t go to class that day. I bicycled over to Alton Baker Park and spent hours there thinking about this wonderful guy whose life had tragically ended at age 24.” Pat Malach 1989-93 “Fielding a campaign from a member of the American Socialist Workers (Nazi) party who felt we had defamed the Nazis by comparing the Oregon Citizens Alliance to them.” Tonie Nathan 1969-71 “In 1972 I campaigned nationally as the Liber tarian Party vice presidential candidate and won the first electoral vote for a woman.” Lou Parker 1958-61 “Flying with UO football team and coach Len Casanova to 1958 Rose Bowl to photograph game and pre-game events at Disneyland, etc. for ODE.” Dan Pfaff 1958-61 “That I didn't give in while editor when on two separate occasions college deans tried to get me to 1) fire a columnist whose opinions the dean did not like; 2) promise not to publish any thing negative about the dean’s college.” Marcus Prater 1982-83 “Working my ass off for 10 hours on a story, writing a 15-inch story at $1 an inch (that’s $1.50 an hour) and actually loving it.” Bob Robinson 1953-54 “The time I got a call from then-track coach Bill Bowerman after I criticized his use of an in jured athlete in a dual meet. He didn’t think a writer from the school paper was knowledge able enough to make that critique.’’ Patricia TVeece 1956-60 “It now seems impossibly quaint that after covering a Browsing Room lecture or other late-night event and writing it up at the Emer ald, as a freshman woman I was provided with a male escort to see me safely back to my room.” Milly Wilson Wohler 1939-43 “My first interview as a freshman was with Wayne Morse, then law school dean. I was frightened. He was kind. The story turned out OK.” — Compiled from 1998Alumni Directory Courtesy Martin Meadows A little-known example ot the Emerald's versatile uses — filling a dorm room before the occupant returns from winter break in 1952. Counesy Erich Boekelheide Ken Sands, editor 1980-81, at the Vida Bam parly in 1980. Courtesy Sandi Daller Kathryn Barton and Jennifer Archer take a break from production work in 1991. Courtesy,' I Aura Morris Stuck Laura Morris (left) and Pepper Allen examine the Slayton Mail the week before they were to assist in producing it in the mid-1950s.