lane
communilg
• college
4000 E. 30th Ave.

Eugene, OR 97405

Photo by Dennis Taehibana

Student ·protests
possible •. 'bloodbath~·

edilo1ial1»01inion1»lelle1,
1 ~ o l l e g e P,ess SeNi<e

~ '

To the editor:
Well, pack your bags, Uncle Sam's going to do it again. Th'e republic that speaks
freedom incarcerates its young men (and
maybe you ladies) to kill and be killed ,
because God is or. our side. The young
fighting the old 's war.
Did you fill your gas tank today? Who
knows, one of these days you might wake
up and find you can't fill up. Woo, then it's
time for war. Maybe we can fill our tanks
with blood, save all that fuel to ship the army overseas. That's basically the trade
we'd be making anyway.
Of all who read this, some will say, 'This
guy's a jerk.' Others -won't give a damn,
and still others will try and change the
course of the bloodbath to come.
To the people who think 1·ma jerk, I can
only hope that you' re right on the front line
of battle. To those who don't give a damn, I
guess it doesn't matter, but you just might
have a rude awakening . To you who care,
pick up your pens : Keep writing till •the
ink·s dry. Tell your congressmen, senators
and president that there are alternatives to
war and death .
To coin an old phrase: ··Hell no , we
won ·t go .·· Yell It out loud if you believe It.
Joseph E. Bradwell
LCC student

,,y

,.. _,.

Emplo yee angere d ·_
at CIC closure •

---:;__.
. ·, .-::::~>--

Patriotic Ame rica ns fight ·a cold war
•'Take that for America, you dirty Commie rats!'' •·over here!
Over here! / Oh, the Reds are coming, I See them coming I Over
here!"
Forgive my patriotic fervor this morning, but the experts have
declared Cold War II and my little family is ail fired up by the heat of
impending battle. As a grizzled veteran of Cold War I -- or •'THE
Cold War," as my generation refers to it -- I've been doing my best
to whip the younger members into shape.
It hasn't been easy. In fact, when I told my son Mordred at the
breakfast table that he would have to enlist for the duration, he folded his arms and managed to say, "Hell, no, won 't... " before I
could clap my hand over his mouth.
"You don't understand, Mordred," I said, glancing nervously at
the drawn shades. "In a cold war, everybody is automatically
enlisted. As patriotic Americans, it's our job to ferret out the secret
Communists among our neighbors.
"And if you can 't nail a neighbor, nail a friend."
I could tell from Mordred's expression that the thought of winding
up in the front lines of cold war left him queasy. I patted him sympathetically on the shoulder. "Don't worry, you'll be okay, -kid," I
said gruffly. "Just keep your head down, have faith in John Wayne
and wear saddle shoes and a necktie whenever possible.'·

• • •

Like any raw recruit, Mordred was puzzled by the need for saddle
shoes and neckties. ··You·ve got to remember the whole purpose of
a cold war, kid, '' I explained. •'While you' re trying your darndest to
nail your friends and neighbors, they're trying their darndest to nail
you .
''So your main duty is to prove constantly that you aren't a Communist. And if there's one thing everyone knows, it's U1at Communists never wear neckties or saddle shoes.''
When Mordred smugly noted that Brezhnev and Kosygin wore
neckties, I came close to losing my temper.
"Who cares what Russian Communists wear?" I cried. "In a
cold war , it's American against American!"
That sobered him and I was able to give him the benefit of m'y
years of experience in the trenches during Cold War I:
1 -- Shave every day. Karl Marx and Fidel Castro have a lot in
C.

United Way or has the words ·'Anti-Communist'' in the title.
3 -- Never read any newspaper or magazine with a circulation of
less than 100,000.
4 -- Don 't go to college.
5 -- Don 't sign ...
•·could I ask a question?' ' Mordred interrupted.
"Only if it's who lost China, " I said. •'No, wait. That was the
question you could ask in Cold War I. And while the Chinese don't
wear saddle shoes, they may have become agrarian reformers
again . So maybe ... "
•'No, I was going to ask why I couldn 't go to college,'' said Mordred.
"Because during a cold war," I explained, "colleges teach only
sex, drugs and treason."
•'What if I majored in sex, minored in drugs and cut all my
treason classes?" Mordred pleaded. "If I don't go to college, I
can't get into the State Department."
The State Department! In a cold war? Did he wish to automatically become a card-carrying party member or at best a com-symp or
parlor pink and disgrace his family? Well, I gave him a tongue
lashing he' II never forget.

• • •

I think it did him a world of good. After breakfast, he went out and
told all the neighbors his mother Glynda had voted for George
McGovern, whoever he was. (I've always been a Nixon man
myself.)
Poor Glynda. She was otherwise a good wife and I'll miss her.
But as I explained to Mordred, ··As patriotic Americans, we can't
be too careful with whom we associate if we wish to win the cold
war and preserve our cherished heritage of individual freedom. '·

J1 i.

2 - Don't join any organization unless it is a member of the

(C) Chronicle Publishing Co. , 1980

To the editor:
To me it is not a question of winning or
losing,· but rather one of the Career Information Center functioning again. My
energy was channeled to the Counseling
Department while CIC was shut down.
I believe it is an administrative task to
locate an appropriate location for all parties
concerned. ··No one owns any space'' has
been echoed several times, but do you
believe it? Soon it will be business as usual
for Cf C, and that 's when I get down to
brass tacks .
Lyla E. Phoenix
Student Service Associate

to,ch

EDITOR: Sarah JenkinSASSOCIATE EDITOR: Heidi Swillinger
FEATURES EDITOR: Charlotte Hall
NEWS EDITOR: Lucy White
PHOTO EDITOR: Dennis Tachibana
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR: Carla Schwartz
SPORTS EDITOR: Dale Parkera
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Carolyn Parson
ASSOCIATE FEATURES EDITOR: Donna Mitchell
ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDll:OR: Deborah Keogh
ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR: Dave Lemke
STAFF REPORTERS: Deborah Allbritton, Kathy Mor- :
row
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: Michael Bertotti, E. Samson Nisser, Pam Vladyka, Wes Paz
ADVERTISING DESIGN: Robin Smith
ADVERTISING SALES: Sharman Hicks, Larry Miller,
Jeanine Baker, Jean Burbridge
PRODUCTION: Marie Minger, Thelma Foster, Steve .
Sauceda, Neil Harnish
COPYSETTING: Marry McFadden

The TORCH is published on Thursdays,
September through June.
News stories are compressed, concise reports, intended to be as objective as possible.
Some may appear with a by-line to indicate the
reporter responsible.
News features, because of broader scope,
may contain some judgements on the part of
the writer. They are identified with a ''feature''
by-line.
"Forums" are intended to be essays
contributed by TORCH readers. They should be
limited to 750 words.
"Letters to the Editor" are intended as short
commentaries on stories appearing in The
TORCH . The editor reserves the right to edit
for libel or length.
Editorials are signed by the newspaper staff
wnter and express only his/her opinion.
. All correspondence must be typed and
signed by the writer. Mail or bring all
correspo.ndence to: The TORCH, Room 205,
Center Building, 4000 E. 30th Ave., Eugene,
Oregon 97405. Phone 747-4501, ext. 2654.

Feb . 14 - a

, 19~

The TORCH

Page 3

Board allocates $15,000 for short range space study
by Sarah Jenkins
of The TORCH
" I'm disappointed, " Catherine Lauris declared . " But if
(the ASLCC) is willing to go along, I can 't keep fighting the
battle. ' '
The Center Building 's second floor space war has ended.
Board member Lauris announced her defeat during the LCC
Board of Education meeting Feb. 13; a student union
representative read a statement of conditional surrender.
And the college prepared to attack on a new front with
$15,000 appropriated by the board for a "short-range
space design study. ''
The college's plans to ·'reshuffl e" the ASL CC and the
Career Information Center (CIC) were the subject of a
special board meeting called two weeks ago. The ASLCC offices were to be moved to the fourth fl oor of the Center
Building, the CIC was to be moved to the old ASL CC offices
on the second floor, and instructors displaced on the fourth
floor were to be assigned office space in the Industrial
Technology Building.
At that meeting, the board asked the administrators to
" re-examine " the proposed moves and report back during
the Feb. 13 meeting.
··After a full week of meetings, '· LCC President Eldon
Schafer reported to the board, •·the best solution we could

find , at least temporarily, (for the ASLCC offices) was still
the fourth floor. "
And while the ASLCC officers are " going along, " as
Lauris said , they are not enthusiastic . In his statement.
ASLCC Publicity Director Myron Pylon said that although the
" ASLCC is still fundamentally opposed to the move . .. we
will make the best of what we view as a bad move.· '
For Pylon , " making the best " of it included some conditions which will cost the board money. Although Pylon did
not have any firm estimates, Lauris and her fellow board
members agreed to pay any relocation costs out of the
board ·s budget.
Board member Les Hendrickson was as upset as Lauris
about the re-shuffling, although he cited different reasons.
•'This is an administrative matter, '· Hendrickson said.
•'The board had no business holding a special meeting on
it. '' He had previously voiced his objections to •'the board
meddling in administration" and had refused to attend the
special meeting two weeks ago.
"But," he added, ''if I was involved in it, my sympathies
are with the folks being bumped . It sets up a chain of bad
karma .'·
Art Tegger, the president of the LCC Education Association and a Language Arts instructor, repeated his charge
from the special meeting that there was no staff or student
representation on the committee which allocates campus
space .

Ask Evelyn-she knows
Story by Audre Keller
Photos by Deborah Keogh

mo,e
I

Reactions of 85 LCC students to a pro-.
prosed draft reg1strat1on range f ram a
••quaI1f1ed yes · to an emphaticStory on pa ge 4
•·no ··

•
1

••1 have set up new guidelines which insure input from
those people or departments affected, '' responded Gerald
Rasmussen , dean of instruction and the chairman of the
facilities management committee . ··But we in broad administrative roles are better, in my opinion, at making objective decisions for the good of the college as a whole. '·
Board member Larry Perry objected , saying, " Input
should come from people being affected , or else they feel
like pawns being moved around ."
"And ," added Tegger, "a lot of people have had token
input. "
Perry tried unsuccessfully to initiate board action which
would require faculty, classified and student representation
on the committee.
On a related issue, the board approved a $15,000 appropriation to study "short-range" expansion possibilities.
Some suggestions included building a mezzanine-level floor
over the Center Building second floor concourse or
redesigning space in the Forum and Health Buildings .
Schafer told the board that a " long-range " study would
cost approximately $40,000, but the board preferred spending the lesser amount of money, at present, to find more
immediate solutions. •'This is an emergency, '· Lauris told
the administrators and her fellow board members, " and we
really haven 't been too creative in coping with it. "

• • 1·ve been to three different departments an d they sent me back to the first
one .··
A work-study student needs something
from the files.
The phone rings .
Another student needs to have a stack of
posters approved and stamped to be put up
on the bulletin boards .
The phone rings.
.. My financial aid check didn 't come ... I
need a loan to get my books , where do I
go? ..
··Who do I see to get a petition started ..
.We want to set up a •No Nukes · table in
the cafeteria, who do I see? "
The phone rings .
··Ask Evelyn. ··
The paperwork on her desk piles up
while she handles a never-ending deluge of
student questions and problems.
Evelyn Tennis has been the administrative assistant to LCC' s director of
Student Activities and Auxiliary Services
for six years. So she knows the office well.
But Evelyn has also worked for LCC
since· 'day one ·· -- June 1, 1964, to be exact , a month before the official opening of
the college. She knows the origins of many
programs and policies.
The main offices were housed in the old
4-J School District Building at 200 N.
Monroe St . in Eugene , and the college
transfer classes were held in the old
Georgia-Pacific Building on the hill behind
what is now Mark ·s Old Mill Department
Store in Spring field .
LCC wasn ·t tried yet, wasn't a known
community institution. All that summer,
Evelyn worked in the old cramped office
getting materials and paperwork ready to
start in September, and all the time, .. I
kept having this fear -- like a hostess
throwing a great, big party -- that maybe
no one would come, there won 't be any
students, we·ve got this college going and
nobody 's going to come.
··it was like leisurely getting read y to
take a shower -- then having Niagara Falls
descend on you.· ·
Her office didn 't have the supplies, the
staff, or the space to cope with the situation that first fall. "We just didn't know if
we would make it through the first two or
three days intact or not. .but we did."

Former student Joyce Torrence 11as
written a book to help children develop
a healthy concept of death .
Story on page 5

>>

.

And she states emphatically, ··It was probably one of the most rewarding thin gs I've
ever been involved In, in my wh ole life.··
No administrators worked in the Springfield office -- just Evelyn -- •'deali ng
with everybody. The department people ,
the students , the teachers -- so rt of like the
school secretary is thought of in a grade
school .··
The equipment was antiquated -- ••1eft
over from the Eugene Vocational-Technical
School and donated from every other
place .·· An enormous volume of paper
work pressed her patience with an obsolete, clunking hand-operated ditto
machine to do it on . .. It was just incredible,' 'she remembers.
Dr. Dale Parnell, LCC 's first president ,
was going to help in the office on opening
day, and Evelyn got a brilliant idea. She
had been asking for an electric ditto
machine , but without success. So she
thought, "When Dr. Parnell comes , I'll bring that old ditto machine in and run it in
his ear .
.. That's precisely what I did . I kept
cranking up that old ditto machine every so
often . He 'd be trying to talk to the
students, talk on the phone , to the
teachers , and finaly he said, ·Can 't we
turn that damn thing off? ·
"And I said, ·No , Dr. , Parnell , we have
all this work to get out and I've asked and
asked for an electric machine , but they
keep saying no so I just have to do with
what I have .. . •
.. He said, •Hand me the phone! ·
"The next day I had a nice (quiet) electric ditto machine .'·
In Evelyn's private life, there were no Dr .
Parnells to help her. She was raising six
children -- four boys and two girls , from
grade school age to high school -- by
herself.
Those years were rough financially as
well as emotionally. Like all single parents,
she had periods of doubt and guilt about
not doing the right things, not making the
right decisions ... I did the best I could at
the time with what I had to work with ..
.and with my limited resources within my
self at that point. .. ••
She knows that very different social attitudes existed towards women in those
continued on page 9

.

Beneath the mild-mannered exterior of
finance student Harold Neveau lurks a
promising amateur boxer .
Story and photos on pa ges 6&7

Page 4 The TORCH

Feb. 14 - . .. 1980

52 percent oppose draft in LCC survey
by Marianne Jenkins
for The TORCH

"What do you think of the (proposed) registration for the draft?"
The TORCH asked this question to a randomly-selected group of 85 LCC students by
telephone Feb . 2 and 3.
To compile the list of students to be queried in an unscientific survey , the newspaper went
through the 303 pages of the Student Register , making a list of the name and telephone
number of the student listed at the top of every other page, selecting those with local
numbers only.
Fifty-two percent of the 85 students questioned said they, were opposed to President
Carter 's decision to reactivate registration for the draft: 41 percent -said they accepted
Carter's decision; almost everyone qualified their responses in some way : and 8 percent had
not yet made up their minds.
Some were opposed to the draft registration in principle. Most felt. however. they would
accept registration if it were necessary to our national interests, but were against its use in
the current international situation.
A second question put to students was: "Assuming that the government does reinstate
the draft and you are called up would you serve in the military?"
Sixty percent of the students asked said ··yes,·· they would serve if called. The
general feeling that emerged was, .. If your government needs you, you have to go.· :
However. 40 percent said "no ·· (they would not serve); many qualified their answers by
explaining that if they felt our own country were being directly threatened they would certainly defend it. but they did not want to fight for oil in the Middle East.
There were some differences between the attitudes of men and women . While men were
divided 50-50 on the issue of registration itself. 58 percent said they would serve if called.
Only 40 percent of the women satd they approved of reg1strat1on . but 60 percent replied yes,
they would serve if called .
A more detailed breakdown by age follows :
Over 35 •
Under 26
27-35
50%
41%
59%
Accepts registration
40
52
35
Opposes registration
10
7
6
Undecided
61
95
59
Yes, would serve if called
39
5
41
No, would not serve if called

Following are some of the comments which were made by some of the students surveyed:
• ··It depends on the sItuatIon. If 1t was necessary to our national interests, yes I would
go .•
• ··I am opposed to the idea of the draft -- it's too pol1t1cal ...
• .. I would be wtllrng to fight. but not for 011. •
• ••1can see where the draft 1s needed again . The government needs to have firm numbers
to rely on -- but 1t should be fair.· ·

• ••1 had hoped we had grown up enough as a nation that there would be no more war -that we could find another way. ··
• --we already have an army (All Volunteer Force) . Let them do the fighting : That's what
they ·re there tor .·
• .. If someone actually attacked the US I would take my gun in hand and run to the
fighting ...
• .. No, not to fight in someplace far off ... ,
• ··I don t want to die to bolster the economy -- there must be a better way to solve our problems.· ·
. • .. My gut-level leelrng 1s ·yes. · I support President Carter's dec1s1on -- but my liberal-self •
is turning over in the grave. I must confess. I don t understand It (my feelings) myself. ..
• ••1don ·1 like the tl10ught. I have both a son and a daug111er of draft age . But 1f I were called. I would go, and I would expect both ol my ch1Idren to do the same .··
• ··People wllo want to fight should go tight. There will be enough of them t tor a war) 1f 11' s
needed. ·
•

·we only have one country to live 111 and 11 s tile oest 111 the world .·

Experience the best teacher for 2,000 CNE students
by Val Smuts
for The TORCH
Even though the county job market is
sagging, the enrollment in Cooperative
Work Experience will present no problems
in the CWE Department, says Department
Head Bob Way . Way says he has many
positions for CWE students.
•·once an employer becomes a part of
our program ... Way adds. "he (sic)
always comes back . Last year we had 800
different employers involved ... and, we are
adding new job sites all the time .··
Total CWE enrollment this year will be
around 2,000, an increase of 200 students
over last year.
With 35 staff members, ··Lane ·s CWE
Department is the fifth largest community
college program in the United States, "
says Way . And . he adds , .. Seventy percent of the students in Supervised Field
Experience will probably secure permanent
jobs in those SFE areas ,·· he adds .
Two programs that have almost 100 per-

cent placement. according to Way . are
Dental Assisting and Medica l Office
Assisting .
Now that Spectra Physi cs (an electronics
industry) has moved to Eugene . Way feels
that other electronics firms will follow . This
ties in nicely with Lane ·s fledgling preelectronics courses ,
engineering and
which will require SFE credits for graduation . .. We al ready have 23 vocational programs that require SFE . • adds Way .
After 10 years in existence . LCC- s
Cooperative Work Experience/ Supervised
Field Experience (CWE / SFEJ program con tinues to be a popular training ground for
students.
Way says the concept of CWE includes
three parties forming a cooperative :
• A student who desires on-the-Job train ing in his/her chosen field :
• An employer who 1s willing to help the
student with his/her educationa l and
career goals :
• A coordinator to get the student and
employer together .

In most cases there 1s no monetary exchange . It Is simply a student trading labor
tor SFE credits .
Formerly . CWE/ SFE was included in the
Community Education Department . Last
yea·r. due to its widespread acceptance.
CWE was made a separate department.
Way 1s also pleased that nearly half of
the CWE students are 111 the liberal arts . He
feels the work experience program 1s particularly valuable to those students with
five or more years of education to com plete .
Peggy Marston . coordinator tor
Language Arts, . feels It 1s important that
students realize CWE Is an educational
department. The coordinators function :
according to Marston . 1s to place students
in Jobs that will enhance t11e1r educational
and career goals .
Kathy Miller. one of Marston ·s students .
says . " SFE has given a better focus .. to
her goals . MIiier, an adm1nistrat1ve analyst
for the District Court. believes . ·11 1t
weren •t for Peggy Ma rston and lier en -

thusiasm tor SFE . I would not have been
able to experience the system first-hand .
The next step , • adds Miller ... Is doing a
Job-search through CWE to pinpoint
spec1f1c agencies .
Miller has shown such qua11tIes of
leadership, says Marston , that she Is being
trained as an administrator at the court .
and Is currently writing an orientation
manual to explain the District Court system
to Junior high and high school students in
Lane County.
The student interested in SFE has a certain amount ot soul-searching to do before
he/she can expect to be placed in a Job . If
Hie student's goals are not clearly defined ,
the coordinator can help that student to
become oriented toward a particular
career. The student must then enroll in
classes pertaining to that career area . After
the decision 1s made and classes chosen .
the student and coordinator review Job
poss1b1l1t1es ancf beg111 to cont act
employers . explains Way .
One important tact to remember. sa ys
Way. 1s that If the studen t rea lizes. alter
starting SFE , that It Is not an area in which
he / she Is happy . the process can th en be
started again in another career area.
Th e success that Lane s CWE/ SFE enJoys, according to Way. Is directly attrib uted to the support o1 admInistratIon
and facuity.
.. A lot of colleges ... can·t accept the fact
that there Is educational vaiue 111 supervised field experience . Our faculty at Lane
kn ows that instruction takes place in tl1e
field as well as in tne classroom ,· he
adds .

FREE!
Three Musical Concerts
Presented by the Department of Performing Arts
Lane Community College

February 21

Percussion Ensemble
Chamber Choir
Woodwind Ensembles

February 25

French Music for Flute and Piano
Barbara Myrick and Larry Clabby

February 28

Vocal Jazz Ensemble and Jazz Band
All Concerts at 8:00 p.m. in the L. C.C. Theatre

SALE
Th rough February
25% OFF ON
CLOT HING WEEKLY
SPECIALS
on fabric , Notions,
and Trims

2.'t•HHl~Mac:

~·······
·····················
Typewriter Rentals
El ectric Typewriter Ren tals
$10 and up
STUDE NT RATES

~~:,:~d

~
.
................................
•

Eugene, Oregon 97 402
503-687-9704
•

Feb. 14 - §, 1980 The TORCH

Page 5

.Experience with death explored in children's book
Feature by Donna Mitchell
of The TORCH
It was late. The darkened corridors of
the nursing home were quiet. But from
the room of an elderly Yugoslavian
patient came the muffled sounds of
someone crying in pain and fear.
Nurses · aid Joyce Torrence knew there
wasn ·t much she could do for the man -he was dying of cancer and his pain
could no longer be controlled by
medication -- but she went into his room
to hold his hand and ease his loneliness
with her presence.
In broken English , the patient poured
out his fears to Her. He asked God to
take away his pain, and he asked Joyce
Torrance to help him die.
Finally, she recalls. ""he asked me to
hold him. He cried, and I cried with him.
It was very special. ··
The patient died later that night, but
Torrance believes she helped make it
easier for him to die . And "l felt he
taught me a lot about what people
need, .. she muses. ""People shouldn't
have to die that way, alone, and in
fear ...
Torren ce·s fi rst experience with death
was followed by others. And. eventually.
the several experiences helped her shape
a book for children. about dying .
• A lot of people In nursing homes die .
and a lot of them die being real afraid.·
she says .. •• 1 discovered l could be very
good at easing the fear. ··
Torrence learned to help dying patients
-- open the channels and pour out what"s
there .· She observed that once people
worked through their anger and host1l1ty ,
they could go on to deal with their fear.
Joyce Torrence and her husband
Chuck. both graduates of nursing
programs at LCC, believe the way our
society views death and dying creates a
fear of death .
Society . they say . .. puts death In a
cJOset. Nobody knows what It loo'ks iIke
to die . Not knowing what to expect -that s where It starts. ··
It used to be that death happened in
the family , at home. expiains Chuck .
.. Children weren ·t shooed away . they
were a part of what was happening. ·
Now. he says ... A person who Is dying
comes to the hospital and Is •Iocked up ·
in an Intensive Care Unit where only the
adult members are allowed to enter, and
then only for five minutes every hour .
Nobody really gets to be with the dying
patient except the nurse and the doctor .
We ·d like to contend that" s wrong. ··
Because death has been removed from
the home and nobody talks about It. say
tne two nurses . children no longer have
any experience with It. ··Children need to
know about death and see that It •s an
everyday process. so that they don· t
grow up to be adults who have very real
fears about 11. •• says Joyce.
.. Or no rea l conception at all. which I
thinK can be worse, · adds Chuck .
Al the same time Joyce was helping
patients in the nursing home face their
own deaths. she was forced to deal with
death on a more personal level . Her
grandmother. to whom she was very
cIose . became 111._
•1 started realizing grandm0thers don t
live forever ... Joyce says ... Mine was in
her 80s and i proJected that she would
be around to see Chuck and I married.
which she was. Then I assumed she
wou ld IIve to see her great-grand.daughter
born . which she did. I also expected tier
to see her great-granddaughter graduate
from high school. That" s awfully hard to
do with someone who ·s in her 80s ...
Joyce ·s grandmother painfully suffered
through her last years with heart disease
and arthritis. She told once Joyce. " You
don· t want to see me live forever. ·· Joyce
remembers . .. She taught me to let go ,
and that it was okay to love someone and
let go at the same time.· ·

'It alvvays hurts before it heals'

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The book Is divided into three very
simple stones . In the first , a young girl
and her mother find a dead bird , and as
they bury It under a tree they discuss its
death and the death of the girl ·s
grandmother . " Love doesn 't get buried
because we keep memories of that love
and the times we shared and those
memories never die ,·· the girl 's mother
tells her.
In the second story, a neighbor helps a
boy whose brother has just died to talk
about his anger and his loneliness . It 's
alright to be angry and sad, she tells
him. ··It's like when you get a bad cut, ··
the neighbor tells him . ••11 always hurts
,
before it heals. ·
The third story is a discussion between
a boy and his father following the funeral
of the boy's uncle. It repeats the points
made in the first two stories and adds
that most people believe in some form of
life after death ... God is kind of like a
warm embrace ,·' says the father . ··and
death is like being held and loved
forever .··
What she tries to express in her book,
says Joyce Torrence , is that .. death
happens, and that 's okay . It's a part of
nature, a part of life ."
Perhaps the foreward to her book says
it best :
To everything there is a season,
and a time for every purpose under
heaven.
. A time to be born, and a time to die ,
A time to weep and a time to laugh.
A time to mourn, and a time to be glad ,
and in these -A time for growing.

·.

,

r"'

Happy Valent!nes

' .

Day_ ·

from The TORCH

-~~5=).,c4=

Illustration by Linda Sherman from " A Time For Growing " (c) 1979

Those experiences with her
grandmother -- and with her patients in
the nursing home -- impelled Joyce to do
a Iot of reading about death . And she and
Chuck accumulated an extensive library
of books by such author1t1es on death
and dying as Elizabeth Kubler-Ross and
Mansell Patterson .
When Tile Torrences dis-cussed their
studies with their minister , David
Albright, of St. Paul s Center in
Springfield , He asked them to do a
seminar on death and dying for church
members . The seminar was so
successful that Albright asked 1f the
Torrences would consider writing a book ,
covering the material discussed at the
seminar . Albright" s church has set up a
small fund to publish books that might be
of benefit to the community .
• We told him we weren ·t interested. ··
recalls Joyce . .. Chuck was Just finishing
up his RN program at Lane, and I was
working at the nursing home and getting
ready to go into the LPN program .··
But several months later Joyce
approached Albright with the idea of
doing a children 's book about death.
Eliminating the fears surrounding death,
she feels . ··Should start with children.
Most people don ·1 have a healthy concept
of death, and you need to start when
they ·re young. .. ,
Albright was enthusIastIc about tt1e
idea.
The result Is a book for pre-school
children cailed A T11ne tor Growing.
written by Joyce and illustrated by Linda
Sherman. who works in LCC •s Printing
and Graphics Department.
The book may be purchased directly
from St. Pau I Center, or from local outlets
such as Just For Kids. Valley River Center.

Ah, yesssss .....

It's the

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Plus your choice of a pitcher of beer, half liter of wine or
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Got a birthday coming up?
Remember to come in on your birthday -for a
725 West 1st

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Open every day by 5 pm

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484-1919

r-----------------------------------------------------------1
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faster than

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Harold Neveau is soft spoken, mild mannered. An LCC banking and finance student. But
behind his wire-rimmed glasses and beneath his conservative exterior lives a seemingly incongruous alter ego.
Neveau, at 165 pounds, is one of the Northwest's top-ranked Golden Gloves boxers and
runner-up in the Amateur Athletic Union tournament held in Eugene this last month.
•'ff I hadn't lost that final match of the tournament, ·· Neveau explains, •'/ 'd be rated the
number-three fighter (in his weight division) west of the Mississippi. ••
. His split-decision defeat came at the hands of Sameul Love. who normally fights out of Ft.
Lewis. Wash. Love was in Eugene representing the Army boxing team .
The loss was not altogether unexpected, explains Neveau. •'I Just wasn 't in shape: Lack of
training cost me the match _.,·
Two weeks ago in Seattle Neveau dropped another bout. This one the hard way. Ahead on
points with only one round left. and feeling sure he 'd won the bout. Naveau was surprised by
a left hook to the face that flashed by his gloves and suddenly bro11gh't blood pouring from his
nose.
The fight was stopped. but the bleeding continued. ··It took three hours for the blood to
stop pouring·· he recalls . ··and half a gallon of Black Velvet to stop the pain . ··He had a badly
broken nose.
Undaunted by his misfortunes of late. Neveau is anxious to return to the ring. •'Just as
soon as the Doc says ·go. • I '// be right back out there. •• he declares.
Neveau has been approached by scouts from professional camps and may be turntng pro
soon. He 's still undecided Just when he ·11 make the trans1t1on. but has been an amateur now
for over 10 years and feels the pro circuit is the next logical step for his career.
Meanwhile. back on the LCC campus . it ·s back to the books . on with the glasses and
school clothes, and a return to the comparative anonyminity of !lis alter ego: Neveau. the
quiet. unobtrusive business student.

Story by Dale Parkero
Photos by Denn is Tach ibana

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Page 8 The TORCH

Feb. 14 -

fl, 1980

Restaurant serves up food \Nith flair
for 70 hou rs... I won ·t serve-··il1flsn ot
marinated at least 60 hours ,·· he says .
Amir is also a stickler about the
, vegetables he serves . .. (We use) fresh
food ; not frozen. " His wife Mery
confides th-at the only food she eats from
a can is tuna fish. ··He does all the
cooking. Why do you think I married
him? "
Atmosphere is a key word at Amir's -somewhere between chic and quaint.
White tablecloths, plants hung from the
ceiling in macramed hangers , and roses
placed in cut-glass vases create a mood
tfiat is common -in finer restaurants .· Yet
a tape of Iranian music drones through
the stereo system, sounding rather out of
place.
The 17 years of experience, degrees in
catering management and French cuisine ,
and years of traveling have all
contributed to Amir's well-rounded menu .
Selections currently consist of Roast
Duck Ala Charon , Lamb Shish Kabob ,
Steak Au Poire A' La Charon , Cheloo
Kabob Bargg and Beef Stroganoff . Friday
specials are Trout , Seafood Kabob ,
Curried Chicken Mandarin , and Chicken
Ala Roman .
Before Amir and Mery came to America
three and a half years ago, they had a
restaurant in Tehran . •·very fancy ,· ·
Amir smiles proudly . After years of
traveling and working as a chef in Paris,
Rome, Tehran and San Francisco , the
Feiz1s now want to settle in Eugene
permanently.
• •1 never want to leave Eugene ,'· says
A17:ir -- even though he 1s often faced

Review by Carla Schwartz
of The TORCH

Outside , on a downtown street ,
passersby can see the flashing light and
glimpse the clean white tablecloths
inside . But without entering , it 's
impossible to get the entire picture . The
" Amir's '· sign doesn 't mention the hours
of hard work and dedication that go into
running a restaurant.

Amir Feizi

The menu· s cover is simple and
understated, like the small restauran t
itself. Yet the smallest print on the page
seems to make the strongest impression .
Dead center yet still unobtrusive reads
" Ch ef A. Feizi -- Personal chef of the
•
Royal Family of Iran. ·'
Amir Feizi is understandably hesitant to
discuss his former position in Iran , but
chats openly about his three-month-old
restaurant at 46 E. 11th Ave. in Eugene.
He buys only the best meats, he tells a
table of querying ladies, .. all the way from
Idaho .·· Amir prides himself on the
quality of his food. All beef is marinated

TAURA N"'

ii!!

- - -~ ~ ~ ~!!lll!ll!Jl!!l!!!!!!!!!l!!l!!!I!!!!-!!!!!!!!!
Seventeen yearsof experience lie behind the gourmet offerings served on the sparkling ;hite
Photos by Dennis Tachibana
tablecloths at Amirs.
with 17-hour work days that include
cooking , dishwashing and food
preparation . ••1 feel better when I do 1t

flROUND ·TOWN·

- . - - - - - - - - - - -.....- -~---'-""'·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...------------"-!""----.....

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jSTEREO WORKSHOP1

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CLUBS-

CONCERTS-

Barney Cable's
375 E. 7th , Eugene 342-8333
Feb. 16 Workman-Curtis

low cost licensed
* repaitwork
* recycled, stereos

by myself. _I have to make sure none of
my customers go out this door
unhappy ...

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Community Center for the Performing
Arts
291 W. 8th, Eugene 687-2746
Feb . 14 Yussef Lateef
Feb . 16 Dumi and the Minonzi
Marimba Band
Feb. 17 Radar Angels w/Lon Guitarsky

The Loft
1350 Alder, Eugene 686-2931 ••
Feb. 14 The Bluebird 's Blues .
Feb. 15 Kent Regal and Allan Griffiths
Feb . 16 Just Friends
Feb. 17 Dan Murray
Feb. 18-20 Open Stage
Perry's
959 Pearl, Eugene 683-2360
Feb. 15-16 Larry Natwick Trio
w/Nancy King and Sonny King
Feb. 17-18, 20 Bob Dorough and Bill
Takas

u of o Cultural Forum

EM~ Ballroom, Eugene 686-4373
Feb. 17 Elizabeth Cotten , Mike
Seeger, Sukay

THEl-lTRE

/

Very Little Theatre
2350 Hilyard, Eugene 344-7751
Feb. 14-16 "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way To The Forum "

EXHIBITS"
Open Gallery
445 High St. , Eugene
Feb. 14-17 Group Exhibit
Visions and Perceptions
1524 Willamette, Eugene 683-4604
Feb. 14-March 1 Prints by Nicola
Simbari, Juan Ro{Tlero and Al var

Oregon Gallery
Museum of Art, U of O 683-4269
U of O School of Music
Feb. 14-March 2 Photographs by
Feb. 15 Jeff Bradetich, Musical
I
Sharon Fox
Smorgasbord
I
Mon. - Sat 9 - 6
Feb . 16 Susan Cohen
PacificComm Gallery
Feb. 17 Bruce Patterson, Early
Inn
ForreSf
•
741-1597
1233 M St
1
132 E. Broadway, Eugene 485-3373
Keyboard Festival
Emerald Valley Golf Course, Creswell
Feb. 14-29 Carolyn Nuessle Orum
Symphony
Eugene
19-20
Feb.
Trio
Boreland
Joe
Feb. 14-March 1
d 11
·th th"
----.
----scoun
-L10
t wt
1s.a. J I. ...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
%-di

Buy. Sell Trade.

It
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·1

Wild Iris

Announces its new
Mid-week Miser Meals!
An international specialty served
_ each Wednesday, 6-9 pm
A vegetarian or non-vegetarian

entre, with salad & bread, $3.25.
Also, daily specials on hearty
homemade soups.

As always, we serve homemade pastries and our special house coffee.
New Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-3 Sunday Brunch 10-3

1161

Lincoln

343 - 0366

I

l

Freshmen'pass the buck
WASHINGTON , D.C. (CPS) -- The Class of
1984 -- this year's college freshmen -- is
more interested in making money than •
prior classes, the annual UCLA-American
Council on Education survey has found.
UCLA 's Alexander Astin, who conducted
the survey , concluded that freshmen are
more materialistic because 63 percent of
the f90 ,000 students questioned said
.. being very well-off financially " was one
of their most important goals. Sixty percent
of the Class of 1983 rated the financial goal
as important in last year 's survey.
Not coincidentally , the number of
freshmen planning business careers also
increased slightly . Nearly three-quarters of

the freshmen seek recognition as ··an
authority in my .field. ''
Among the other attitudinal trends
discovered by the pol I:
• Fewer students than last year thought
high school was " too easy."
• Fewer freshmen entered college with a
3.5 or higher grade point average.
• Fewer than half the, freshman class of
1. 7 million favors legalizing marijuana,
while the 53 percent who favor legalizing
abortion is down from last year 's 57 percent.
• Nearly half the freshman class favors
legal sanctions against homosexual relationships.

Feb. 14 - II, 1980 The TORCH

Once upon a -time
- by Dale Parkera
of The TORCH

Valentine ·s day. A lovers· tradition or martyr" s memorial?
Origins of the holiday vary from source to source.
Be it the last communication of a condemned prisioner to
his wife, the commemoration of two Roman priests
decapitated for practicing their faith, or medieval fol kl ore
linking the date to the onset of the mating season for birds.
it is observed throughout the world on Feb.I4 by the giving
of love tokens to one· s sweetheart.
Romance and youth have been inextricably associated
wit h the holiday since at least the time of the Roman Empire.
Medieval Roman youth yearly on Feb.I4 and 15 celebrated in
a ··Feast of Lupercalia. •• The ,ritual involved the drawing of
names to determine which suitor Pan. the God of marriage,
had decided for unmarried people. An exchange of gifts then
took place between the chosen partners. This was followed
by a day-long romantic interlude and feasting .
This was all an important beginning for courtship because
lit was always hoped that the alliances formed at the festival
would last on into the year and eventually lead to marriage.
LupercalIa was considered a pagan holiday by the Christians of the time. but in 496 A.O. the Catholic Church oft1c1aiiy declared Feb.I4 a Christian holiday -- In effect, absorbing the pagan tradition. Despite having been given a
Christian meaning, much of the sentimentality of t.he pagan
ritual remams with us yet today.
The Pope formally named the new holiday after Saint
Valentine .who is believed to have been one of two Priests in
1

Page 9

• • •

third century Rome, both having the surname Valentine.
Both Priests were beheaded for either aiding persecuted
Christians or for converting a Roman family to Christianity
depending on the account. The remains of St. Valentine, the
patron saint of young lovers,. are today buried in the church
he once presided over in Rome.
In about 1380 the famous English author Geoffery Chaucer
penned the oldest extant r,eference to Valentines day in
literature . Chaucer's " Parliment of Fowls" alludes to Valentine's Day being the day when ' ·every foul cometh ther to
chese his make. ··
•
In the poem . the goddess Nature has given a female Eagle
her choice of three eagle suitors for her mate. When she (the
eagle) is unable to decide the goddess gives her a one year
postponement. On this same day (Feb .I4) every year all the
birds gather in Nature ·s garden. where legend has it the
flowers are always in bloom. to chose a mate .
There is also a commonly retold tale, with no discernable .
origin, that, once upon a time, long ago and far away, there
lived a man named Valentine. Mr. (as opposed to Father)
Valentine was imprisoned under penalty of death . His last
smuggled out message was to his wife . declaring his love
for her, and signed .. Your Valentine .. . This is the story
most of us today grew up believing to be the true Valentine ·s
Day story. It's authenticity can ·t be verified however since
11' s source seems to have been lost over the years.
Whatever the objective reality behind St. Valentine ·s day ,
It remains close to the hearts of romantics of all ages in a
very subJectrve and indiviciual way.

Ask Evelyn -------------------------,-----------c_on_ti_nu_ed_f_ro_m_p_ag_e......_3
years when ··It you d1dn·t get married ,
yo.u •re a fa1Iure -- automatically . I·m so
glad to see women break out of that .··
The d1fflcuit1es of raising a family alone
were doubly hard because ··we women
were taught that you d1dn ·t talk about your
problems . So you felt like you were the only one in the world that had this terrible
failure .
··it·s so wonderful now that people support each other . They have a lot of
resources to go to get help through these
things and adJust the family.
•·of course .· she admits , speaking of
her generation . •• 1f you are trained never
to tell anybody your problems . they
(counseIors and / or peersJ sure as hell
ca n t help you with them .·
When Evelyn and her children get
together now . •·we look back and we think
prooaoIy those were the best years in the
fa rn 1iy. The memories we con Jure up are
the memories from those 10 years when we
were alone . There were a lot of seriousproblem memories : there are a lot of happy
times . ri dicu lous things .
in 1972. the youn gest son . Joe , was the
Iast to Ieave home. Evelyn found herself
alone.
••1 co uld hear myself brea th in g. and
cIothes rustling. All of the su dden there
was no pnonograph, no radi o. no TV .
nothing happened . . .no people in an d out.
My whole being had been geared to that
ramIIy sItuatIon. so I foolishly clung. looking bacKwards instead of 'Where do I go
from nere?
Then Evelyn discovered that ··being
aIone nad so many compensations -- doing
what you wanted to do . eating when you
wanted to eat. I let go of the regimen of
ram11y I1fe and respons1b1l1t1es and I found
that It was kind of super. ··
At tt1e time. she was working for thenAssociate Dean of lt1struct1on Geraid
Rasmussen , and while she liked the Job .
she felt It was too far away from the
action • of the college . Once. in a moment
of frustratIon . she told the dean ... A bomb
could fall on this college . .. and two weeks
Iater the admInistratIve offices would still
oe doing policy statements and processing
paperwork oefore tney reaIIzed. •Gee.
something· s wrong. .there s nobody out
there.

To get closer to the students she went to
work in the Financial Aid Office , and when
the Job with Student Activ1t1es opened up,
she submitted her applIcatIon. With the Job
came involvement with students -- an extended family group , perhaps .
··IIove being with the students . They ·re
maddening. exh1lerating. refreshing , needful -- they" re everything that human beings
are ... and day by day. it all goes on by my
desk . and I Just love 1t.
•It's kind of a renewal of what life is
about. ·

daily basis return her affection and
respect. Alan Pierce . the current student
union (ASLCC) cultural director. says the
first time he met Evelyn he had arrived
from Salem at 5 a.m. to attend a conference at LCC . He waited on campus until
people came to work at 7 a.m. He was supposed to catch another bus for Heceta
House on the coast. but had no idea where
to go .
.. The very first person I ran into was
Evelyn ,·· he remembers . ••1explained who
I was . why I was here and (asked)where
was the bus? She made all these phone
•••••••••••••••••••
calls. found out where I was supposed to
be and personally directed me . I·ve been in
Evelyn has her bad days . Jay Jones .
love with her ever since. ··
director of Student Act1v1ties , descrtbes
Last term . the ASLCC officers hung a
them as .. quiet. .. rather like she ·s looking
large blue and white sign over her desk
inward . . .and she doesn t transfer It out
proclaiming •·we appreciate you Evelyn
on someone else . She deals with It
Week" . They felt , explains Pierce . " that
herself .· ·
nobody appreciated all the things she does
Which IS the way she has dealt With
to help . She 'l l do anything, she 's not preother troubles In her I1fe -- encountering - Judiced in any way , and if there is a crisis.
and solving problems fo r herself .
. .she Just takes ca re of it. We wouldn ·t
The students with whom she deals on a know what to do without her .

Debi Lance, ASLCC president , says the
··incredible thing about Evelyn is that she
always has time ...
··She·11 fight to any length for what she
feels the students ought to have . (But) she
never takes people ·s dignity away. ·· Lance
explains .
··she 's very diplomatic. She 's very
political , and she gets things done . .
.Students coming in here learn very quickly. I·II say . •Ask Evie, because she
knows. · "
~~~,.q-,~1:.

Check the

MAK

Love Lines

in the _
TORCH .-.: ..

WE'VE CUT THE
PRICES
OF RECORDS
AND TAPES!

LCC BOOKSTORE 3rd FLOOR CENTER

,, .

•

.,!,

~.

.. I .. •

\.. , ,..

0

., ,

.

1953 1966 Un, ted Fe• tu ,t Syndic a te Inc

Page 10 The TORCH

Feb. 14 -

t,.

1980

Class learns
to officiate
hoop games
by Logan Harris
for The TORCH

The whistle blows. ··Foul on two-four,
on the back . He' II shoot one-and-one.··
As much as this may sound like a
basketball game , there are no players -only referees. It's a new class established
by the Physical Education Department tagged .. Sports Officiating 207."
The initial push for the two-credit class
was led by full-time LCC Instructor Steve
Wolf. A former South Eugene sports standout and certified basketball official, Wolf
explains that the course ··is designed to introduce beginning basketball referees to
proper officiating techniques.··
Since the term began , the students have
officiated practice games, received

1

f

veteran
tips from
valuable
referees
of officials.
performance
the visiting
evaluated
and
at local high school and college games. The
students evaluate general game conduct.
mechanics (actions and signals) , and rules
and judgement to gain an officiating
perspective of the game . ·' It makes you
look at basketball in a different way , .. said
one student.
Stressing fitness , confidence , and
mechanics to his enrollment of 32 , Wolf
lists three goals he thinks are important to
achieve .

~•· .···.•·. · .·
•\
:
./

• The first goal is to provide a
knowledgeable pool of officials for such
community programs as LCC intramurals.
the Eugene Sports Program , city and
church league basketball , and the Lane
County Summer Basketball League .

•'These programs are hungry for officials, .. says Wolf, " By filtering these
people throughout the community, the area
sports programs , on the whole , will
become much stronger .·

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• The second goal is for the students lo
realize the importance of proper game
management and how it relates to learning
proper behavior patterns .
According to Wolf , the hardest thing to
learn for b·eginning referees 1s .. to have
confidence . Especially where the off1c1al
must make the judgement call .· · He says.
··Being intimidated 1s about the worst pro-

EXPERT
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Before the referee can begin otf1c1ating al
the high school or college level . s/ he must
obtain an Oregon State Athletic Assoc1at1on
license by passing a standardized test

c1ans to write what they thought life on
campus would be ,n 1980 . Eu rick collected
the essays 1n a modest paperback called
Campus 1980 , which stands today as a

A

lli~W

(DAU'~QJ~
U'@U@U'A

• The last main qoal 1s to expand from a
program only dealing in basketball officiating to a program offering expertise in
volleyball. baseball . soccer , and football
officiating. Wolf feels that with these goals
attained, the off 1c1al . the part1c1pant. the
administrator . and the fans w,11 all benefit.

through ott1c1ating clinics . ··Before this
class . there was no way to get good train1ng prior to the test ,·· says Wolf.
Though he believes the new course 1s a
success . Wolf has one disappointment.
.. There are no women enrolled. I ve real ly
tried to encourage women to pursue their
basketball interests through this course .
W1tl1 the r1s111g popularity of women ·s
sports . I th111k 1t would really enhance the
program 1f we could filter these people 1n . ••
Wolf also noted that off1c1at1ng sk1 ils can
also serve as a financial aid to anyone ·s
budget. point111g out that AAA high schools
pay $30 per game for a licensed off1c1al.

Book predicts the futu_re: 'Campus 1980'
(CPS) -- In 1964 , Alvin Eurich , then and
now the president of a consulting service
called the Academy for Educational
Development , asked 16 eminent academi-

~~[9~[e(D[e~

blem for beginners . We try to stress assertiveness and authority . •

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testament to just how hard 1t is to predict
the future . Some of lhe speculations in the
book . quoted here verbatim :
• The Student Mood, 1980 -- The college
generation of the 1950s was the last
··quiet' · one we will see in a long time .
(Alvin Eurich)
• Curricula in 1980 --Secondary schools
will have enriched their general-education
effort, and students will come to college
with a firm command of American and
English literature, American government
and 1nternat1onal affairs . . . Vocational
training will gradually cease being a major
preoccupation of undergraduate schools .
(Lewis Mayhew, a professor at Stanford
•
then and now)
• The Draft in 1980 -- (The war in Vietnam) will have quieted down ... owing to
the efforts of a Republican president who
argued that war was fine, but too expensive, and that in any case the boys should
be brought home. (Nevertheless) a revolu. tionary situation will continue. . .This
means that some kind of draft. .. will probably still be in effect (the late Nevitt Sanford of Stanford)
• The Economy in 1980 -- The price level
of goods and services will average out to
levels existing in the fall of 1967. (Tickton
of the Academy for Educational Development)

Feb. 14 - II, 1980 The TORCH

Page 11

Titans lose ground in basketball playoffs
Titan Men lose by
•time keeper's
decision 72-74 •
Stories by Dave Lemke
· of The TORCH

Lane 's Ben Herr captured the rebound and
handed-off to Reuter who dropped the ball
in from two feet out as the buzzer sounded
the end of over time. The game would apparently go into extra periods with the
game tied at 74- 74
But the officials said they couldn 't hear
the final buzzer over the noise of the cowd
and weren 't sure that the ' last shot had
gone in before time had run out.
The decision was left up to the hometown time-keeper who ruled Reuter's shot
had not left the Titan 's hand before the
buzzer, handing SWOCC the victory.
Zarnekee was the game's high scorer
with 29 points , Reuter finished with 15 for
the night( officially), and Mader chipped in
14. SWOCC ' s only player in double figures
was Brabham with 19.

A decision by a local time keeper cost the
LCC Titans a certain victory over leagueleading Southwestern Oregon (SWOCC) in
Coos Bay last weekend.
In overtime action Lane lost, 74-72.
Lane rallied from a four-point deficit to
forge ahead 68-66 when Titan Mike Larson .
Coming off the disputed overtime loss on
teamed-up with Jerry Zarnekee for a back
Friday, the LCC men's team walked to an
door play with only 34 seconds remaining
in regulation play .
easy 75-6fJin over the Umpqua CC .
Zarnekee •s !av-in was ruled goalTim~ermen :Saturday night.
__
.
tending, giving Lane an automatic two
Kurt, Reuter came·off the bench to score :I
points , and he was fouled in the act of
21 points and Jerry Zarnekee connected on
shooting , setting up a three-point play op7 of 7 from the floor to lead the Lane Titans
portunity .The SWOCC Lakers called time
who never trailed in the contest..
out in an attempt to break the Titan
Lan·e puHed away from Umpqua in the
momentum : Their strategy paid off . When
last two minutes of the first half when
action continued Zarnekee missed the freeReuter scored a pair of buckets. Kirk
throw that could have cl inched the game ;it
Mader followed by firing a howitzer from
was his first miss in eight attempts.
SWOCC returned the ball down court and
the corner just as the buzzer sounded , putmissed three inside shots . While in
ting the Titans ahead 33-25 at th~ ~alt.
possession of the billl they called another
LCC conunued its tough pIay in me next
time out with just 14 seconds showing on
quarter, beating UCC 14-4 , and putting the
the clock. •
•
game on ice.
When play resumed , Kirk Mader was
"
UCC 's late rally could get them no closer
whistled for trying to strip the bal l out of
than the final score as Lane posted its
the hands of Laker Joe Nichols. Nichols hit
eighth win aginst six defeats.
both ends of his one-and-one foul shots
Besides Reuter's game high of 21
with now just seven seconds remaining ,
sending the game into overtime , the game
points , Zarnekee contributed 16, while
tied at 68 all .
Mader and Mike Larson each tossed in 10.
In overtime play SWOCC immediately
took the lead on a rebound basket. Lan·e·s
Kurt Reuter answered with two points of
his own and the score was tied 70- 70 .
SWOCC 's Sam Scott fired in a 10-footer
to put the Lakers back up by two , only to
have Mader hit a field goal from the charity
stripe. With only one minute of overtime
left the score was tied again , at 72-72.
The Lakers then , on an att~mpted blocked shot , drew a foul from Lane 's Ken JefUnbeaten Umpqua Community College 's
feries who quickly converted it to a twoworn.ens team used 6-9 free throw shooting
point SWOCC lead.
to ourscore the LCC Titans 12-2 to open the
With 13 seconds of overtime left
Zarnekee was set up for the last shot. He
~econd half and break open the close conmissed from 15 feet in heavy traffic but
test. The game ended in a 92-79

Undefeated UCC
upsets Titan
Women •92- 79

LCC Titan Kurt Reuter (34) attempts a lay-in during the game against UCC.
Photo by Dennis Tachibana.
whitewashing of the host Titans.
poured in all 13 of her points during a
Lane had held a two-point lead, 24-22,
stretch that saw the Titans come from
twelve minutes into the game when Lori
62-47 deficTf to trail 78~72 before ucc-ratDrew took a pass from Loi Brumley for a
tled off 10 straight points to seal the viclay-in and completed a three-point play
tory.
after being fouled. UCC then scored the
Davidson and Daugherty each gunned in
next eight points to grab a 30-24 lead. But
24 points for the Timberwomen , 13-0,
Lane cashed in on four Timberwomen tur- - while Alice Williams dropped in 20 for the
novers in 60 seconds to go ahead 32-30 on
Titans , who fell to 6-6. Lori Drew hit the
Alice Williams · short jumper from the right
nets for 16, and Loi Brumley popped in 14 .
baseline. Ann Daughtery erased that lead
with a jumper , and Diane Davidson put
ROBERTSON'S DRUG
Umpqua on top for good with a fast break
lay in , 34-32 .
Your prescription is
The Titans made a final run at the
our main ·concern.
visitors midway through the second half ,
cutting the gap to six points with 5:40 re- . 243-7715 30th & Hilqard_,
maining in the contest. Teresa Black

N

LCC INTRAMURAL ACTIVITYS

*

POWER WEIGHT LIFTING CONTEST

Men's and Women's competition
Wednesday Feb.20, in room 125 Health
and PE.
EVENTS: Squats, b_ench press, and
dead lift.

Sign-up and weigh is at 2:30 pm with
competition beginning at 3 p.m.
Medals will be awarded to 1st-place
finishers in each •class and a special
award to the lifter with the best ratio of
body weight to weight lifted.

* BADMINTON TOURNAMENT SUNDAY

SUNDAY FEB.17, IO a.m., Gym 202
Drop in activity MWF 12-:1 p.m., UH 7-10
p.m., Gym 202
•

Drop-in activity UH 11:30-1 p. m., UH 7-IO
p.m., Gym 203
No open gym this Sunday only.

Bing Escudero
speaks on ·
"Realizing our Potential Powers"
Bing Escudero will discuss the powerful laws of nature in all of
us. Come see how the dynamic qualities of our inner natures
emerge through relaxation and meditation.

February 15
Friends Meeting

7:30 p.m.

227 4 Onyx St.

'Peaturing....

Cflulk_'Foods-Grains. Flours.
Oils. Nuts & Seeds. Honey.
Dried Fruits. {jeeses. &ans
c5}1cidophilus Dairy Products
CJ-lerbs. ~ices. c;y;tamins
FRESH BAGELS
Organically Grc;>wn
Produce & Fruits
Hours: Monday-Friday 9-7·
Sat1:1rday 10-6

141N. 3rd St.

SPRINGFIELD
747-1532

Page 12 The TORCH

Feb. 14 - 'Ill. 1980

omnium-gathe,um

Sin~le parent's group

Draft speakers slated

Corne learn about the d1 aft and ur dll
registration Thursday. Feb.14. a! noon m·
Forum 308 on the LCC campus. Included
in the discussion will be: Dave F1danque.
legislative aide to Congressman Jim
Weaver; Russ Linebarger, of University
Veterans; and Peg Peoples, of the Colalition Opposmg Registration and the Draft.
For more information call 726-9245.

Heart kit to help

A single parent rap group ,s lleid every
Monday frorn noon to 1 p.m. 111 ttie 1ounge
area located rn t11e basement 01 tt1e Center
Building . D1scuss1011'.::i center on oe1ng cJ
student c1no d pci1 en1. and se,ect111g
pr1or111es. F-or more 111101111<;1t1on. call
Carolyn al 726-220~. or 3~ '.:>- 7160

Legal advise given
Free classes and d1scuss10ns on various
legal problems areas w,11 again be offered
by Peopie •s Law School . Interested persons are welcome to attend any or ali of the
sessions. to be held Wednesday evenmgs
from 7 to 9 p.m. at Lincoln Community
School. located at 12tl1 - and Jefferson
streets ,n Eu_gene.

The Oregon Heart Assoc1at1on (OHA) has
announced the availab1l1ty of ,ts free
··Healthy Heart Kit.· · designed to help
Oregonians reduce the risk of heart disease
and stroke .
Accord mg to OHA President Or . 0 W.
B01court. the k1! contains the latest sc1en.t1fic facts about heart disease and ways 10
develop a ••1ow risk • lifestyle wh1cl1 can
help prevent heart attack and stroke.
Contact the OHA for your ••Healt11y Hec1rt
Kit .. at 1500 S.W. 12th Ave .. Portland.
Ore .. or phone 226-2575 .

Wednesday . Feb . 20, the topic will concern tenant rights. Part1c1pants will
discuss ev1ct1on. what to do If the roof
leaks. what happens to safety deposits .
and how to comp lam to the landlord.

Report on Cambodia
Don Luce. a spec1al1st on Southeast
Asia. who recently spent t1 ve weeks 111
Vietnam and Camood1a. will report on his
trip. Thursday . Feb.14. ·1ns1de Camood1a _; will be the topic of a 12:30 talk by
Luce to be held 111 the Forum Room of the
Erb Memorial Urn on at the U ot O. He will
focus on the pollt1cal dynamics of the s1tuat1on as they affect the people of Cambodia.
Co-sponsors for the speech are Clergy and
Laity Concerned (CALC). the Asian
American Alliance . the U of O departments
of Asian and EthlllC Studies. tile ASUO
F-ood-Op, and the ·EMU Cultural Forum .
Luce will' speak again at 8 p.m. at t11e
Wesley Center . 1236 K1nca1d St. 111
Eugene. His eve,ng talK 1s entitled
•·1ndoch1na : The Pol1t1cs of Hunger. • Luce
w,11 report on food d1str1but1on 111 Cambod1d
and w111 address the ro1e ot rel1g1ous and
volunldry agencies as well as 111e 101e oi
qovernments of Vietnam. Cambodia. and
tile U.S.

Forum to·be held
Tl1e lnternat1011al Re1at1ons forum. sµonsored by the League of Women Voters ot
Central Lane County w111 oe i1eld c11 111e

Valley River Inn. Eugene. on Friday,
Feb .21. from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m . Trade.
energy and the dollar will be discussed.
Liston Hills (former president and chairman of the board ot the Arabian-American
011 Company -- Aramco) and Dennis Goodman (an economist with U.S. Bancorp) w1li
address the forum 1n the morning and take
part in panel d1scuss1on 111 the afternoon.
League members wi ll moderate_the sessions.
Reservations tor the forum snouia oe
made by ma111ng a $5.25 check to lnternat,onal Relations Forum , Maryan Dixon .
1795 W. 34th Ave .. Eugene . OR 97405.
The price mcludes morning coffee ana a
buffet lunch . Early reservations are encouraged. as seating 1s l1m1ted. For ada1 t1onal 1nformat1on. call the League of
Women Voters. 343-7917. or June Dornns.
485-7273.

Jazz band to play

Peoples Actively Appealing for Cannabis
Equality (PEACE) presents In Times L1Ke
T111s We Need PEACE. • featur111g tne
Smokey Val ley Strmg Band • and Jazz by
Steve Cohen. beg1nn1ng at 7:30 p.m. on
Saturday. Feb.16. at tne EMU Room 167.
on tt1e U 01 0 campus. For more inforrna11011 call 686-16t)0.

la,,ifi e

Lon: I ve had enough of your nonsense Leave me alone -· I II gel
Colleen afte1 you' -· Brady

Gibson SG $250 Ampeg V-2 Head. $400 (Sunn amp $150) . Steve
343-7048 9·10 pm .

Needs home. Male black terrie r House broken. gooa wdttnaoq qoon
with chi ldren . loves to play Had shots 48 '.) 4')01 exr 24 7'i dS~ lo,
Jewel

Bose 501 Speakers Open . spacious sound. very clean M1111 cond1 t1on $300 Firm 484-9735

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One-year-old black and white kitten. My roorndlts rlre dlle1q1t ona
she needs d gooa home. Very rovabIe J4t 1812 Idlte1 '.1 301

- - - - - - - - - · - --

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Nice Oak Chest of drawers . Call and make offer 998-6195

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6-week old labrador and golden retriever mix puppies . Good meeo fo1
house dog or walch dog 34'.)·0081

King Size BAFFLED Water Bed mattress . new condition . S75 . Toll
Free 896-3252 eves
Turntable Beogram 4002 $42!:> Tempest lab series one-speakers
$85 each Ph 747 1176

I

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We have evolved beyond War! Stop the madness and leed !he worI0 1

- --·-

Laurie: You don I seem enlhused . or even amused. but maybe you
Will be at THE NEWS •• Roadie

Panasonic stereo system $100 Sony casette recorder $65 . Technics
receiver $125 . Miscellaneous receivers $40-$70. Stereo Workshop
Mon -Sal . 9-6 . 741 - 1597 .

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Tony: Get your act together Moscow Is arouna the corner - p1 dClire
!hose 12oz curls -- Rog s·P1erre

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Wilson T-2DOO Tennis Racket Excellent condItIon . 4-4/ 3 heavy $20
Nice old wall mirror • $25 688_· 7096 - Jay

Brady : Will you stop 10011119 around and marry Colleen · you know you
wan! to • General R.J

Gotta Fender Rhodes piano w11h amp Wan1 1t? Reasonable terms.
Hurry up . 686-8875

J.R .: You little J·F1dqil - You need a date with Roseann F.or Pdul F
• R J Himself

A.K.C. Golden Retriever Pup . 12 weeks old . Has first shots excellent pedigree . $75 Call 484 -0677

Let's Carpool to Jefferson Starship in Corvallis • March 2nd . • Darren
93:i -3844

Two sets of downhill skis and poles . One pair of boots Very
reasonable . 689-5153 .

Colene : Will you 1Ive with us we II behave ourselves -- Janos

Roomate Wanted looking for roomate 10 fill vacancy in small 3 bdrm .
house in Central Eugene 687-0685 .
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED . $80 plus one -half utI1il1es . Call Mike al
747-5801 eves .

in

the same lhI11q A
II

llldl bad

ss

Roomate wanted : $80 plus one-half ut11itIes Non-smoker Phone
741-2807
Still Looking for place in Corvallis this summer. Any inlo. a1 all about
Corvallis helplul Call and shoot breeze 687-9423 ext. 1.

Colene: Why don t we meet someplace . You look excellenl -· tnc B

-

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Eric 8.: Gradua11on was great. rnaybe we can do ,t aga111 sorne1Irne . ••
JL

Mr . King: Who dre you lry1nq to tool. Sldbie?? NO WAY'" -· me

Poor Little Kitten has lost her mittens . They are of sentimental value.
Lost in center building Beige colored Reward - call 726-9249

Rusa : We love you and we re proud of wl1a1 you re do111q
rr1ends

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You,

Goober: We ve been prating to, tile Iaundryrnan. - T11e loweI pea
pies women adnmers
Parties

Enk B: I ve come 10 YOUR table Ion~ enough Don i you thlll• 11 s
your turn 7 Oee

lor

GUITAR LESSONS ... Private ins.Jruclion in contemporary acoustic
guitar styles of Leo Kottke . Chet Atkins . Jerry Reed James Taylor.
Bonnie Ra1l1. etc . Beginners. 1n1errned1a1e. advanced Phone .
688-4783

Jogging for Smokers . A support group for smo~ who want 10 quit
Leave message for Nancy Ware at 726-2204 or counseling

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Books & Booze • Support Education and Discussion groups !or
studenls concerned abou1 a dnnk111g problem in1erfering with school
Wed 2.30 pm. Thur . 2 p.m Sci Bldg Rm . 133.

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Parents Without Partners are now meeting at Westm1111sler
P'._::'.?Y!:~an _Chu:h· 777 ~obur~ Rd_ C~II 747-86_62_: __

X

X

X

X

Donna : fhanks for !he great time Wednesday 1119111 Let s ao
·-- Mike

ii

dgd111

I hope ya all are satisfied . I a1n t got my black book' -- Boo
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Beautiful Mutants : Love each other Later we ger !oge111er and kIlr a11
11,e normal people

H

Sarah J. : Screw the pape1 • Trendsette, oe aamned • Let, l1ave
burger • Down at the Pad . -- Michael

<l

Cindy K.: Thanks for sharing your tune afld energy wI111 me
M1rhaeI
Athletics . H. and P.E. front office Staff. Your taltnteo 11ardwork1114 .
M,ke A
_and oeaut1fuI' T11anks tor your supporl

SERIOUSLY 111terested in 1orr111nQ d p,ano 1urnng and repair course'
CaH Pau1 at 726 8373 .
CAMPBELL 'S SOUP!!!

Scott : Roses are red. vI0Ie1s are 0Iue . you are so sweet that s wt1y 1
love you
Cherries Jubilee: We were 1us1 waI1111g to, tne· rigllt 111ne Happy
Valen1111e s' -· Love. 1t1e Gang
Flo: HdDPY Valentines Ody to you Love. A new louna l11end
T.B.B.: So Cute. Does this ring a tJeli? Happy Valen11ne s Day' -- Love
OJ

Darlene : We love you and support you' Hes com rng lor us soon' ••
Ka111 and Julie

-

Bob and John : lsn t It grear to know Jesus? We rove you' -- Conme
and Winter

Barbie-doll and Sarah: You are bright moments
you for your fr1endsh1p •· Love. C,ndy -

happening'

Thank

Roses are red . violets are blue. the Mult1-cuIturaI Center needs sup·
por! from mInori1Ies or Just a place to be you
Dina : Frienas need friends 1f only 10 know lhdt someone cares dnd
llOlcts them close in their thoughts -- Honey Dawn
Carmine : Thanks for bemg tt1ere when I needed someone 10 talk to.
someone who care, . • Donovan
Pamela Anne: Happy Valen1111e s Day Groundhog' See you In June
lave and Pr dyers - Dale
Chris : Wl1en I feel us touch ana look at an expression I ve known
before. tmaybe 1n Anc,enl Greece1 tllought becomes love We become
one . My IO'le. CM
Mary Baynes: lt1ank you for !he support and encouragement' I love
you' •• Kathy W1nte1
Connie o·Grady . R.N.: I.ave you' Happy tieart aay walking w,111
Jesus' Your co-,unner . Kath

Jerrilee: Hope we can get logether sometime Happy Valent111es
Elm1rd

rota one . •

"To anyone who will listen ": lne only obstatle Is our own sell. One
person CAiii change Ihe wo11a .. Or. len

;M;

"

:>

_..

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Jeffy G.: Where dIa your upper 11p go. 1crave 1or t11at fine tur again -Darrel
Woodpecker: ! love you' Thanks for your patience •• Your little Rat
coon
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G.F.: You made Valentines Evening very excitable . en1oyable and
erotic' - xoxox E.O.

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Sharon: Lets get together and have a very happy Valent111e s Day

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Peace on Earth . Good will for all . Persons al the world - Love be with
you all year long
Jim: You make the cold days warm . and me 100 -· V

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KELLY MARIE : I wish you hugs. kisses and love forever' 11 1am so
very. very tllessed ._ Happy varent111es D~y ·- rove . Your Mom _
Eric B: Here· s hoping tha1 your Valentine s Day Is full of happy
thoughts and memories. -- your ·room1e

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Ken: Happy Valentine s Day to you' Have a good one on me' -- Mary

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Sara T.: Kelly and I wIs11 you (and Cra1g1 a very happy Valent111e s
Day. Lets gel IOgether soon . what do you say? -- F-nends

Larry: I have fallen ,n Iove with you all over again . Happy Vdlenune s
Day 1 •• Janice

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Eric N.: H1 the1e slranger 1onq lime no SPt' Why don t ya q,ve rne a
l'JII . you got my numtie, • l ove-1 esl1e

.i

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Harald 1c1, Liebe Di en. mein mann' -· Brenda

Jesus wants to be your Valentine . He has abundance !or you . Res·
pond to I11s love'

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Johnny Won-Ton: A cheerie Luv Ody 2 yew. -- oe mine. Harriet the
Spv

The King: You f111,1lly 111.iae ,, . see you .it Mosrol'. w,111
M.iybe 7

Pammy Anne : I en yeors late, I 111 st11I wIsn111g we had stayea
iogeiher Forever fr,enas Dare

Eric B.: Even though you may be crude. I s1111 lIk~ ya 1 Stay sweet -Leslie

-

Single Parents : We Ie re<1dy when you re re,1dy . For more 111formd _.
tion . rail PW P at 74 7 860,

caterp1lle1 on you, 1,p or rnontll old IUl/ 1 ·- Yd know·,

Scott: I 11 always love you. loday and every day Happy VaIen11ne s
Day •• E1a111e

•'Z' • - It s been an exce11en1 year • try another?? Happy VaIen1111e s
Day Lover -· sign. Liltle Lady •
- - - -· To all the Ladies on the TORCH . Happy Valentines Day -- Tach
- - -· - - - -- -- To Dennis : The same to you also. Happy Va1ent111e ·s Day ' ''

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Happy V-Oay -· Jan O . Jerri Lee. 811!. Lynny. Bridn. LOIS. Scot1 ana
expecIa1Iy lracy M •• Love. Ann

d

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Ron: It s to bad we had to spill up - Greta

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Vicki: rhe Counseling Department wants to wIs11 you Ille bes: of
every1h111g anct muct1 happ111ess

Tony: IS llldl

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Connie: Happy Valentrne s _D_ay_ --_S_c_ot_t _ _ _ _ _ __

Mindy : Let yoursell be Love to you sister aear -- Mike

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To the women who called about my kiHen on medication. lhey re
vItar111ns and she s lle;ilthy now. Call 1f still 111teresled. 342 781?
after!:> 30

occasions

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Linda Yapp: Heart' Heart' Heart' Hean' Heart' Heart ' ·- All ouI love .
Ka111 and Julie

P.J.. Hope someday you find sumeone you love enough lo stay ana
work things out wI111 Thanks for spec,aI t,mes' •• ~r,ends loreve,

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Michelle. Keep In touch' Tell Dan loge! IOSI If Ile doesn I like ii
Dale

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Need Housemate? Flexible. reliable 30 s broadcasting studen1 seeks
home to share by March . Bob 342-4390 eves .

-

Mary: Song of neart s desire . meIody of m,ne . your verses never tire.
-- Be m_y Ydl_ent Ill~ -

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Cindy . Mark and Wayne: Happy V Day' Love ya I01s: •• Connie

Renee : Sorry lor the bad Joke - d1dn I think you d take
•
Once dgain . Sorry -• 2 practical Iokers

Roomate Wanted: Female wanled to share cozy home . Wood paneled .
1wo bedrooms . $100 includes ut11111es . Ph 343 -9761.

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My love flows out to all beings in the cosmos - Happy Valentine ·s Day

Hende : Mr . GuatamaIa11. wnere Is Marybeth· - I heard wIckI -wa1c11IIs
swI111111111g wcles around her •· R.J

Vicki: guess we all have to go sometime -· The Hulk

To the orgasm addict. Available and interesled
certain male ·- S D K

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-

Rea Eo ·

Woman who wants skin : You won t find him in me paper

IOve

Brady and Hende: Oregon Is the pldce to be· see you ,n July •• R.J. _

Heidi. Lookmq forwdrd 10 developrng more pit tu,es • tile 1oe1111flrd
M1chaeI
11011 1s l_un ano so are you

a· wide , 1969 Mountaineer Camper In good condI1Ion $900 or offer
Jeep Pickup canopy with cargo door $200 or offer 726 -1586 after 5
pm

I

Cathy . Jerre and Leslie: En1oy V-aay
R,r~

dllcf

remember. I love you aii ·-

Dave H.: Let s be friends' Hellos qet boring after a while . -· Me'

-

-

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Dear Sweet Michael: Thank you for being someone ve,y special w1ih
Ine love you. •- C,111dy

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To David : If 11 Isn I tove ... lt s something better -- Sandy

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Mildred Wrong: It s s1111 you and rne agamst t11e world . Happy vaIen -·
1111e s •• Love . Mona Right
My precious Robin & Trina : I arn aouble blessed' Love you oath Hap
PY Valent111e s Day -- Morn

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To Clint on Valentine 's Day: 3 little words for you . Get Los! CREEP'"
• Long Suflerrng
Steven J.: Hap111ess Is rovmg you Va lent int. you are my suns11,ne
A wJrrn tuuy
PRINCE : I l!'e, a bwn1n4 1Iame ... 1e1I me thal you feel the same ·· Jae
Richard F.: Roses a,e Ied v1oleb a1e Olue No1111nq s going to stop
fllt. bt>C'dUJe_1_:Vant_ you -· You~s Tr~ly
K.B.:

H ana

A can t wail to meet - Love ya ounche s -- Purrrrr

To Johnny Sneak ·um and Three lingered Charlie: Some Game ••
Refuye
Seah: Here ,s thal ~exy message you wantea I s1111 Ius1 !or you,
Body . Mike
K.D.E.: Love conquers all. I love you -· M.L E

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To all pretty white snakes: Happy Valen1111e s -· Slir~ w,II,ams
Cruston : Have a Happy Valentrne s. Wish we could get together I a
!Ike to get 10 know ybu better •• signed. B L

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Dan W.: 11 s more t11an half my pIeasu1e -• ME 1
Little Steve: All running and no draw,ng w,11 not an an1s1 make Hap py V-Day -· signed. Twit
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To Everyone: May your Vale11t111e s D.iy be filled with love and respect
·vou are important. too. Take care al yourself
!or your fellow man
and be 11appy11