Original One Act Plays £2Ay IMG SJfALLOT by Alexander Pawlowski November 15,16,17 8 PM Arena Theatre 104 Vi Hard No Late Seating/ No Exceptions ODE Classifieds 346-4343 75 Foot long Sub Expires 11/25/01 SUBSHOP 1225 ALDER 345-2434 Not valid with any other discounts or coupons MON-FRI 10AM-10PM • SAT 11AM-9PM • SUN 12PM^ “38 years of Quality Service” Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • Audi German Auto Service 342-2912 • 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 Custom Tattoos State Licensed Student Discount Call For Appointment Exotic Body Piercing Hospital Sterilization Walk Ins Welcome 143© FEAR Is ST. EUGENE, OR. (541)434-5611 City manager announces resignation ■ uty Council says it may wait until 2003 to appoint a new person to the position By Brook Reinhard Oregon Daily Emerald After 26 years of working in dif ferent government jobs, Eugene City Manager Jim Johnson is ready to try something new. Johnson, city manager since 1998, announced his resignation at a press conference Friday at City Hall. His announcement comes within days of a similar announce ment by Eugene Police Chief Jim Hill. Johnson will continue serving Eugene until the end of February. “It’s been an honor and a privi lege to work in this job,” Johnson said. “If I’ve had any success at all (it’s because) I’ve worked with some awfully good people.” Elected officials praised John son’s work, ethics and integrity. “He keeps employee morale very high,” City Councilor Scott Meisner said. “I trust him implicitly.” Eugene Mayor Jim Torrey also spoke highly of the manager. “You can talk to him about is sues,” Torrey said. “Once he makes a commitment, he lives by it.” Johnson said that he’s been' thinking about resigning for some time and feels this is the best point in his life to do it. “It’s a time in my life rather than a time in the job,” he said. Johnson has recommended that Torrey appoint Jim Carlson as in terim city manager until the City Council can hire a new manager. He further suggested that the cur rent City Council wait until 2003 to appoint a new manager, as four seats will be up for re-election next year. Meisner said that there’s a cer tain advantage to having a new council hire the city manager. He added that if he were a candidate for city manager, “I’d want to be hired by a council that would be there for a while.” Torrey agreed that waiting to se lect a new manager would result in a better choice. “I do not want the council to rush out and select a new city man ager,” Torrey said. While Friday’s press conference focused on Johnson, he used most of his time to talk about his em ployees. Working with teams, car rying out group projects and en couraging staff to leave a legacy were all focuses of Johnson’s an nouncement. He also repeatedly acknowledged the importance of city staff in general. “The average person out there in the community,” Johnson said, “probably doesn’t understand the quality of city employees.” Brook Reinhard is a community reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald. He can be reached atbrookreinhard@dailyemerald.com. Kesey continued from page 1 hospital — found himself the object of national acclaim. But his fame came with a price. Between 1965 and 1967, Kesey was arrested several times for possession of marijuana, and his ranch in La Honda, Calif., became a routine tar get for local police looking to curb the growth of the counterculture movement that Kesey was helping to shape. In 1968, after touring the country and pulling off all manner of mad stunts with his band of Merry Pranksters — as chronicled in such books as Tom Wolfe’s “Electric Kool Aid Acid Test” and Hunter S. Thompson’s “Hell’s Angels” — Ke sey returned to Oregon. With his wife Faye, he bought a farm in Pleas ant Hill, settled into the community and raised four children. In 1987, Kesey returned to the University to work as an instructor in the Master of Fine Arts creative writing program. By June of 1988, he and 13 graduate students in his class had completed the novel “Caverns,” which was published in 1989 under the pseudonym O. U. Levon. George Wickes, emeritus profes sor of English, who first met Kesey in the mid 1970s, said that his time as a teacher typified the way Kesey dealt with his status as a University alumnus. “Kesey always had an ambiguous relationship with the University,” Wickes said. “He didn’t have much to do with the University in the last few years, but I can still remember some of the hoo-hahs he put on. ” The 1990s were a time of re newed creativity for Kesey. He pub lished “The Further Inquiry,” a screenplay, in 1990; two children’s books, “Little Tricker the Squirrel meets Big Double the Bear” in 1990 and “The Sea Lion” in 1991; and two novels, “Sailor Song” and “Last Go Round” — the latter with author Ken Babbs — in 1992 and 1994, re spectively. In 1997, he suffered a small stroke, but continued his in volvement in the community. On Halloween 2000, Kesey and the Merry Pranksters headlined a Green Party benefit in Agate Hall. Wickes, who worked as an advisor to the University’s literary magazine, the Northwest Review, in 1977, called Kesey a “great showman.” But he was quick to add that, in his opin ion, Kesey will be remembered more for his landmark early novels than for his free-wheeling days as a prankster. “He kind of personified the ’60s — which was mostly Tom Wolfe’s doing,” Wickes said. “But in the long run, I think he’ll be remem bered most for ‘Cuckoo’s Nest.’ It’s one of the great books of the second half of the 20th century, and I think it will continue to be taught in liter ature courses.” For her part, Sun shine Kesey said she hopes the mes sage behind the novels is what people remember about her father. “He beat the drum of freedom, pretty much all the time,” she said. “His message was to be as big as you have it in you to be. ” Leon Tovey is a higher education reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald. He can be reached at leontovey@dailyemerald.com. North Campus 579 E. Broadway 686-1166 South Campus 2870 E. Willamette STUDENT ID SPECIALS • Show Your Student ID • Order by Number X-LARGE 1-TOPPING The Big New Yorker MEDIUM 3-TOPPING Pan, Thin ’N Crispy or Hand Tossed STICKS N WINGS 10 Breadsticks, 10 Wings X-LARGE 3-TOPPING The Big New Yorker 2 MEDIUM 1-TOPPINGS Pan, Thin ’N Crispy or Hand Tossed STICKS N WINGS 10 Breadsticks, 20 Wings .$899 _$899 _$899 $1099 $1099 $1099 2 FREE Cans of Soda with Any Above Order! Delivery charges may apply Get results with Oregon Daily Emerald Classifieds! 346-4343