lane
communitg
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4000 E. 30th Ave.

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Eugene,

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97 405

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credit scandaL
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going otJt

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Photo by Dennis Tachibana

Gasoline conservation
solution to military

editorial1»09inion1»lette,,
HEARD 1KE UffiT? M.03CCIN h\lGKl NOl BE
A PROPER OlYMP\C SltE ANY MORE - &ECA~
OF 1ME iO'llEt TREATMEN1 OF ~--~
Af.~iT~!

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~LPAJ!L
College Press Service

Re-building Marine pride -- sort of
"Good news, men," Captain Buck Ace told the men of 'A'
Company as the assault landing ship USS Alamo steamed out
of Pearl Harbor. " The president is sending us and 1,800
other Marines to the Arabian Sea to prove to the world that
America can , too, defend the Persian Gulf from any Soviet
threat. Question s?' '
" Yes sir," said Private Oliver Drah, 378-18-4454. " What
Soviet threat? "
" Glad you asked that, soldier, " said Cartain Ace. " A m,rn
fights better if he knows what he' s up against. Well , the Rmsians have 90,000 troops in Afghanist,rn ,ind another coupi<_,
of hundred thousand massed ,ilong the lr,rnic1n bordt r. But I
guess sending 1,800 Marines in there tells you sonwthing
about our president."
" He' s out of his cotton-picking mind( ' suggested Drc1h.
0

•

•

"Dc1mn it , Drab, do you w,int to liv(-' torever( ' d<.-'mandl'd
the cc1pt,1in .
" Fr,rnkly, sir, I don 't know ," said the privatl' thoughttully.
" It might get boring sooner or lc1ter, but I'd be willing to giw
it c1 try tor c1 coupll' of hundr<.'d yct1rs ."

•

•

•

" I don t think thl' presidPnt's right, " Privc1te Drc1b sc1id l,1tcr
to hi~ tril'nd , CorpcHt1I P,irt7, c1s they leam'd on t!w rail ,
"sending us out to light for od c1gd1nst all odds. ·'
"It's the Americ111 w,1y, Ol1v<'r ,· sc1irl Corporc1I Pc1rt1 , ~pit ting owr the sirlc. " Only I d r,1thpr do it in c1 gc1s l11w h,ick
home. "

•

"Damn it, no, Drab, " snapped the Captain. " It shows our
president knows one Marine can lick a hundred Russians.
Doesn't that make your chest swell with pride?' '
"I figure it' s more like two hundred Russians,·· st1id Priv.1te
Drab.
"Then you can be twice as proud , private. And ii worse
comes to worse, the under-secretary of defense ht1s told
Congress he could have a for-ce of 25,000 soldiers in th<.-' area
within a month . But I know you Marines wouldn ' t w,rnt to
have to call on 25,000 dogfac<:>s to help you fight ,1 lousy couple of hundred thousand Commie rats."
"No sir," agreed Drab. ' 'I'd sure hate to be in ,1 spot like
that."
" So , with luck, men , the Persian Gulf will takP its pl,Ke in
the annals of the Corps along with the halls of Monte?Lm1,1
and the shores of Tripoli ," said the captain .
" Excu se me, sir," said Drab. " But how come th e president
wants to fight the Russians owr th e Persian Gull?
" I wa s looking on th e mc1 p cind there 's a lot ot gulfs
around , if he wa nts c1 gulf. Th(, re's th e Tonkin Cult ,mo th e
Gul f of M exico and th e Gult ot .. . ,,
"Oi l, D rab," sa id th e capt c1 in . " O il. If the Russia n.., cut oft
our flow ot oi l fro m thp P<>rsic1n C ul f, we'l l be tigl~ting tlwm
on the beaches ot f loridc1. Hm•v'd you like thc1t, sold1<'r('
"Oh, that would !w gre,1t, ... ir. I w,1.., in Tc1ll,il1c1..,..,<'<' om<'
and thme girls in their bikini..,, \vow'. J hen I could g<'l honw
on a couplP ci,1y..,' ldwrty ,ind I r<',1d wc•r<' lh<'rc,·s onl\' U)(J()
Soviet troops in Cubti, ..,o .. .'
•

le) Chronicle• IJubl1shing Co. I Y80

•

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To the editor:
I hear many people stating that we
young people have a responsibility to
serve in the military. They maintain
that we should sacrifice several years
of our lives to protect our nation and
that the military is a good way to do it.
But I say this is a "cop-out" on their
behalf. They want others to sacrifice in
order to help America, but they don't
want to stop their wasteful habits
which hurt America worse than
anything else possibly could.
Our biggest enemy isn't the Russians, but rather those who waste fuel
and other valuable resources. Each
time we waste fuel, we hurt America
because the trade deficit increases, inflation goes up, and our reliance on
foreign oil is maintained . . •
Fuel waste is hurting our economy
and our power worldwide. Without a
strong economy which is self-reliant,
we can't possibly rema'in strong
militarily or economically.
Why should young people be forced
to sacrifice while the general population maintains their selfish habits? It' s
everybody's responsibility to make
America strong! A giant military isn' t
the answer to solving all our problems.
People must conserve fuel so we don' t
have to worry about Mid-East oi I
anymore. Let' s all help conserve. Also
let's all oppose the draft and all
government officials who support it.
Lori Parkman
LCC student

J\l\others and fathers in
military combat roles? •
To the editor:
It is extremely unfortunate that a national debate that should center on
defense budget, inflationism and the
Unites States' ability and determination to resist oil-slick moral aggressions
is instead rapidly becoming bogged
down in an emotional discu ssion of
whether men and women should be
registered and perhaps drafted .
Related to all this controversy is the
ultimate question as to whether
mothers should be assigned to combat
..roles.
The United States' military peoplepower shortages are currently, as
always, occuring in combat-arm s
billets. There is but one purpose for
the draft, and that is to meet these
critical shortages in the most efficient
and destructive manner. Therefore, I
immodestly propose a new and improved "real question." Should the
United States assign mothers and
fathers as a family unit to combcit
roles?
I favor this as a national policy, ,in9
am firmly opposed to using mothersonly in combat. No civilized nation
continued on page 4

The TORC H " p u bli,hPd on Thur,d,1y, . SPptt>rn lwr
th rough )u ni'.
New, ,tori l', Ml'< ornprl',wd, tontisl' rpport,. 1ntt•nd1·rl
to lw ,1' obwcll\t' ,is po"ibl1•. Sonw m,1t ,1pp1•,1r with ,1
byl1n,• <o 111d1< .,t,· tlw rPport,•r rc>spon,ihl,•.
~l}\v.., fP<.1lur(•..,, b(•c ·t1u..,t.1 01 broddt.}r '.-><.Opl', n1'-1} <ontt11n
,onw 1udg1•nwnh on t lw p.1rt 01 th1· ,vr,tt'r. Th1·y .irt• 1clt•n
t1 tll•d w ith .i tl'.1tur1• bylin1•.
~orum,· ,rn• 1ntl'nd1·d to IH' pss.iy, 1 ontnbutl'd hy
lORC II r1·,1ck". llwy ,hould I><• l11111tt>cl to 7i0 worcls.
Ll'lln, to thl' ~d,tor ,1r1• 1nl!'nd1•d ,1, ,hort 1 01111m•n
t,rn1·, on ,tom·, ,1pp,·.1r1ng 111 r lw l( JR( 11 l lw 1•d11or
n•,1•r, l'' tlw rn\ht to ,•clit tor ldil'I or l1•ngth.
~d,ton.il, .lfl' ,1g1wd by till' ll(''"f'•lPPr ,1,111 ,, ritt•r .ind
exprt.•..,.., only h1,. h(:r op1111on
,\II ( orn,,pond1•nt t· 111u,1 '11• tV)ll'd ,ind "gnl'cl bv th ..
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f<,iom 20i ( t>nt, r Hu1ld111g .rnoo I HJth A,( '. l ug,•1w.
( JI\ 'J--IU-, Pholl<' ,.J, -!'111I ,,,1, !hi.J

Feb. 21 - ¥, 1980

The TORCH

Page 3

LCC coach admits giving unearned credit
Stories by Dale Parkera
of The TORCH
"I did it," admits Dale Bates, LCC's
director of athletics. "I falsified dates
(on attendance records) to help out a
student. It was not the right thing to do
and it won't happen in the future. You
can be damn sure of that."

Larry Romine
investigator in

credit ·scandal

The college administration may now
turn its attention to other members of
the Health and Physical Education
Department now that Coach Dale
Bates' involvement in a single, 1978
bogus credit situation is public.
The class records of at least three
other PE instructor-coaches are now
under scrutiny for possible policy
iv-iolations, according to Larry Romine,
the diret:tor of College and Community Relations.
LCC President Eldon Schafer appointed Romine a "special investigator " for cases of alleged
falsification of records, dual student
enrollment, or failure to maintain
records of student work and grades.
A memorandum from the presi-

Bates told the TORCH last week that
on Sept. 6, 1978 -- just one day before
the end of LCC's summer term -- Joe
Schaffeld, a defensive line coach for
the University of Oregon, brought
football player Derrick Dale to LCC.
Bates said that "Dale indicated that
he needed one credit to preserve his
eligibility" to participate in the U of

O's first game of the season, three days
away. Bates said Schaffeld asked if
"there was any way Dale could
receiye PE credit." After assessing
Dale's summer training for the coming
football season, Bates remembers telling Dale, "I think I can help you."
Bates' involvement came to light
when Dale was found to have been

dent's office directs Romine to give
special attention to, all independant
study classes, and to be on the lookout for any. student-athle'te' s transcript
that might. inidcate improper or
dubious credits. Romine told the
TORCH his investigation into possible
abuses of the college's grading an
enrollment system "is just now getting
under way," but that already he has
tagged the transcripts of" a great many
students" as "suspicious." Most of
these will t~rn out to be perfertly normal, he believes. But he emphasizes it
isn't students he's looking for.
"I don't intend to go c1fter a single
student. It's the guy who put them up
to this receiving credit without earning
it I want!"
So far, in Romine' s probe into the
Health and PE Department, at least
three staff members are being <1sked to
explain why some of their students c1ppear to be receiving credit for two or
more classes taught at the same hour
on the same days.
Romine would not identity the three

PE faculty members he has talked to,
but did say the focus of his interest is
student-athletes currently enrolled this
term. "Of the two students I've interviewed so far," he disclosed, "neither
was able to explain their double
enrollment."
Grace Cameron, director of Student
Records, told the TORCH, "The
system does allow for che,1ting, lying
and swindling." As she puts it, "If an
instructor were to go through and fill
out JII the proper forms granting credit
for work never performed, there
would be almost no chance .1nyone
would ever c.1tch him."
The only way to verify student's attendance, according to Cameron, is to
"talk to the other studenb who were
in the class and see if they remember
him.''
President Schafer concurs. "Our
system is set up to allow both the student and faculty some flexibility. We
expect our people to be reasonably
honorable and ethical, crnd if anybody
continued on page 5

one of several University of Oregon
athletes who received bogus credits
from Los Angeles Valley College in
order to maintain their eligibility to
participate in intercollegiate athletics.
A check of Dale's transcript also
revealed the LCC transfer credit: In
disclosing to the Eugene RegisterGuard his involvement in the credit
scandal, Dale implicated Schaffeld and
Bates.
In an official letter of explanation
submitted to LCC President Eldon
Schafer last week, Bates outlined in
detail how he by-passed established
college procedures. He said because
the LCC summer term was ending the
day after his talk with the U of 0
coach, he "took Dale to the Office of
Admissions and (Dale) enrolled in the
class." And because the U of O football season was opening the next day
and Dale could not legally play
without an official transcript verifying
he had already completed the onecredit course, Bates says he personally
"walked the independent study form
through the Student Records Office."
(In further violation of LCC rules and
regulations, Bates' letter discloses
"Bob Radcliff, chairman of the Health
and PE Department, was not available
for his [required] signature so I pushed
it through Student Records myself.")
Dale was given credit for PE 248 (an
independent study jogging course)
and received a "B " for the term, even
though independent study grades are
continued on page 5

Lane teacher speaks with hands, heart
Feature by Heidi Swillinger
ofTheTORCH
The bedroom where Florence and
Leonard Beaman lie sleeping is
darkened. When the alarm clock
goes off, instead of a bell or buzzer,
a bright light flashes steadily. Leonard
reaches up to turn on the overhead
light and the goes back to sleep
--"just fifteen more minutes."
When he gets up at last, it will be
to go to work at Joe Romania
Cheverolet, where he has been a
"body and fender man" for the last
39 years.
Florence will work in the evening.
She teaches night classes in sign
language at LCC. She i~ at home with
her subject -- she has been partially
deaf since she was a baby. She
describes Leonard as "stone deaf."
He can neither read lips nor speak.
With the help of a hearing aid,
Florence can hear some sounds, if
they're loud enough. She can also lip
read, with about 25 percent
accurc1Cy , if a person speaks slowly
and ennunciates clearly.
In their 37 yecHS of mcHrlclge, the
Beam.ms have had two children,
Marianne and )usanne. Both have
normal hearing abilities. When they
were babies, Leonard devised c1
nwchanism tht1t l1ttc1ched. to tlw crib.
When the hc1by moved . the m,1ttrp...,...,
hit agc.1inst c1 piece of metal thc1t
,1et1v,1ted a light In the Beamc1n's
bedroom. Throughout the night, they

mo,e
I

"Only cl
stop the
rein-;tclte
<,pet1kers

would take turns checking to make
sure the baby was safe and dry.
When the girls began to speak,
Florence asked friends and neighbors
to correct them if they
mispronounced words.
Neither daughter learned much
sign language until she was in her
twenties. Because Florence was only
partially deaf, 'it was easier to relay
messages to their father through her.
Susanne explains that when they
were growing up, the use of sign
language "was considered taboo ... it
wasn't shown the respect it is now ..
.It wasn ' t known that sign I,rnguage is
a lcrnguage in itself, with ib own
grammar and syntax and rules."
Marianne says she regrets not
having been forced to lec1rn sign
earlier in lite. "It kept our
conversations with him to a
minimum, " she says, referring to her
father.
She says that whenever she and
Sus,rnne plc.1yed " ten wishes, " they
always wished first that their parents
could hear. But she says, "There
were ab,o times when it was nice that
they couldn ' t hear, like when we
were yelling c1nd tighting. If we got
rec1lly loud , my mother would turn'
her hearing c1id oft. Th,1t ' s how we
knew when she'd re<1lly hc1d it. "
"It' <, trup ," sc1ys Florence. "They'd
get so loud sometimes ... it's not
c1lwc1y<, ',() h.1d to bP declf. "
continued on page 8

lc1rge hue t1nd cry • will
government'..., .itlt'mpt to
the dr.ift, ,lCcording to
c1t LCC lc1st WP<'k .

Page 5

>>

Auto cross. Whether it' s ,1 chance
to get " legally crc1zy'' or an outlet
tor " psychotic" tendpncies, the
drivers love it.
Pages 6 & 7

>>

fhe Olympic boycott is forcing
three Eugene athletes to decide
which means more: Pzitriotism or
running.
Page 11

P,1ge 4

The TORCH

Letters

Feb. 2 l - ,II, 1980

continued from page 2

kl-------------------------------------,
When the student
union made the sign
with that question,
they didn't expect
the answer to be
"reshuffling."
After a conditional surrender to
the college administration, the ASLCC
has moved to the
fourth floor of the
Center Building.
The old ASLCC
offices, on the
second floor, are
being remodeled for
the Career Information Service.
"We're only in
semi-operation,"
explains ASLCC
Cultural Director
Alan Pierce.
"Without phones -which won't be
installed for another
week -- it's a little
hard to do our
work.''
°The CJS is moving
into its new quarters
today, and hope to
be "plugged in" by
the end of the
week.

. has ever used mothers-only in combat,
tllld I believe that it is based on sound
rea.soning. I am deeply concerned
about the potential effects of such
policy change on the family which is
the cornerstone of our civilization.

a

As a supporter of the Equal Rights
Amendment, I fervently believe that
the opportunity of family raising
should be equally available to both
mothers and fathers. When two people commit themselves to a family,
both members should be available to
love, honor and cherish that commitment. Therefore the logical assumption is the United States should assign
family units to combat billets.
Admittedly the use of families in
combat would present many problems
at first. The physical make-up of
families is different, creating training
problems. Children are a factor, and
diapers would be numerous.
However, all these things could be
overcome with education and
discipline. After all, the military exists
for social degeneration, and with the
help of disposable diapers, I'm sure
they would find a way.
A family combat army unit is
justified by providing for the common
defense of the world with maximum
efficiency and minimum cost. Just imagine, when father is out on patrol,
mother can keep the C-rods warm and
junior can spit-shine the garbage can.
l n the face of enemy fire, there would
be no other unit c1s cc1pc.1ble as the
family, with fc1ther at • the trigger,
mother feeding the ammo, and junior
calling out range -- " A little higher and
to the left, pa. " After c1 hard day in the
field our littlp family unit could relax in
th e tempor,iry beginning-family dwelling (threp person tent) ,ind tc1ke comfort in knowing th,1t tlwy hc1d struck
another ht1rd blow for thp oil rich
economy ot the tr('C corpor~1te world.
The military is c1 uniquely dec,10('nl
institution. F,1mily security must lw tlw
finc1I cHbitpr of our rnilitary policiPs.

Kent Miller
LCC student

OSPIRG provides help
To the editor:
OSPIRG is the Oregon Student
Public Interest Research Group, c1 nonpartisan student directeci anci stud<.>nt
funded organization. OSPIRC w,1..,
st,1rted in 1971 by comsumer ,idvoc.ite
Ralph Nader to involve stucients in
research, c1dvoec1cy, anci puhl1e Pduc,1 tion on environmentc1I, consunwr, ,ind

hum,rn rights issues. Tlw "public interest " covers c1 full r,rnge of problems
from consumer frc1ud to he,1lth c1rl',
from

nlclnclging

W,lll'r

resources to

disniminc1tion.
OSPIR.C is fundt>d from two sources:
School support ,ind rPs<.>,1rch grt1nts.
School tunding is l'ither by clwck-011
or stuch•nt govprnnwnt c1lloc.ition.
With the clwck-011 systPm, ,ls is u:-,cd
,it LCC, ,1 studPnt who wislws to m,1y
c lw c k OS PI R. C on t he st u d <' n t
sch('dule torm userl c1t registrc1tion.
rlw ,1mount billed is usu,1lly $1.
fhe loc,1I bo,ircl ell LCC, ch with
other loc,1I boc1rds, is the ht>,irl of the
organization. They represent both
OSPIRG on campus crnd its liaisons
with the stc1te boc1rrl.
At LCC tlw 1m•spnt loc.il ho,ircl ton sists of 0Phbil' Avl'rill, ch,1irmc1n ; ]1111
Pilon, coordin,1tor; ,ind 1\nnlll,HI('
Wright, .issist.1nt c h,1irrnc1n. I hl'r<' ,rn'
wvPrc1I opt>nings t um,ntly on tlw LC C
locil bo,ird. Studl'llls wt1nting m<m' Inform,1t1on on th<.'S<.' op( nIngs or lld\ Ing
,lily othPr qul'sliorh dt',1l1ng \'\'1th
OSPIR.C rn,1y cont,ict ,tny ot tlw !()( c1I
1

Gofer's group to meet
To the editor:
Welconw to Gofer's Changing
Gears~
Coll<'gv ,.., not 1ust tor tlw studt>nt
who h,h cl pr('dett>rrni1wd go,1I ,ind d
d1rcc. t c1Im. It 1-. t1lso tor tlw stud<'llh
who dPstrt' to chc1ng< ' the d1rpct1on ot
tlw1r l1v<'s.
Gofer's Changing Gears Is ,in inll'rvst gro(,p ot wonwn ,1nd nwn who
,Ht' st•rious .ibout mc1king open (,H('t•r
options work. I h(• c1gend,1 tor tlw nt•cir
luturl' inclucks tlw 1ollowing: Cuvst
spl'clk<'r", public ',('rv,n· prowcts, t1nd
tlw ...,h,rnng 01 t·xpn,enn':-, .
'· 1)(•,ding vv,th I !t1rc1ssnwnt on th('
Job
,..., tlw topic 01 ,in upcoming

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.

Buy - Sell - Trade

Mon. - Sat 9 - 6 741-1597
1233 M St Springfield
10% discount with this ad

Debbie Averill
OSPI RG chairman

Wild Iris

* low cost licensed
repairwork
* recycled stereos

STEREO
WORKSHOP

board members c1t their office, loec1ted
in the Student Rt'source Center (SRO,
st'conci floor of the Center Building, or
c,1II 747-450 l, ext. 2342.

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

spt'ech by Jane Degidio on Thursdc1y,.
feb. 28. )arw i~ with the Stc1tt' Appr('nticeship Council.
Gofer's Changing Gears meets ,n the
Apprenticeship Building, room 205.
Met•li ng~ cHe held on rotating
Wed n es d c1 y
<l n d T h u r cL1 y s -W('clne~d<iys on the tirst cind third
Wl'l'ks ot thp month, f hursrlt1ys on tlw
S.t'cond ,ind ~ourth WP(·+,.
)top by rn'xl Thurscfay, tlw 28th. It
could !w ju:-,t wh~11 you ' rp looking tor.

M. J. Buck
LCC student

Special thanks to writer
To the editor
A ',l){'Cl,ll thcinb to Log,in Ht1ms clllci
tlw ( I ( )~CH ! '.-,port-. Oepcirtment , tor
tlwir intpre-.;t1ng ,1~d explc1nc1tory story
t,tlPd , Class Learns to Officiate Hoop
Games (I-Ph. 14-20, 1980) . Sport" otticic1ting 207 i-, ottl'recl by the He,ilth
,rnd PE lkpt1rtnwnt tis ,1 community
"<'rvtn' to promote thP prolPss1onc1i1sm
01 t1thl<.'li<. ott1uc1tIng. J lw f OR.CH
...,hould hl' cornmt•ndt•d Ior ttw,r t'Ttort
Ill promoting th,..., sort 01 COfllf1lUlllly
dl tt\ Ity .
1

Steve Woh
HSC Stafi

Options for Living
A symposium on growth
and change ... a new application of
tools for your professional
and personal life.

March 7 & 8
call Rolan Nelson, M.S.W.,
485-6155

Feb. 21 -

, 1980 The TORCH

Page 5

LCC panel protests possible 'oil 'War'.
by Donna Mitchell
of The TORCH
"I'm afraid," said Russ Linebarger. "I've not been
this afraid since 10 years ago in the jungles of Vietnam."
Linebarger, of tne U of O Veterans' Association
spoke to about 50 students gathered at LCC on Feb:
14 to discuss the draft and draft registration.
The meeting, sponsored by "concerned individuals
at Lane," featured Linebarger; Dave Fidanque,
legislative aide for Oregon Congressman Jim Weaver;
and Peg Peoples, of the Coalition Opposing Registration and the Draft (CORD).
Linebarger's fear is that "draft registration for 19and 20-year-olds is not the end, only ·the beginning"
of a move by congress to draft Americans to fight a
war for oil in the Persian Gulf.
If there is a "clear arid present danger, we will
fight," he said, but added that his group does not
• believe America is currently in danger.
Linebarger believes '!only a large hu·e and cryll will

stop the government's attempt to reinstate the draft,
and recommends sending a message to the president
that "we are willing to curtail oil use" rather than fight
a war for oil.
"National pride doesn't mean a tinker's damn
when your friends are lying face down, dead, on
foreign soil, and Shell Oil trucks are still rolling, still
making 112 percent profit," Linebarger said.
Dave Fidanque said he believes the controversy
over regist~ation of women is merely d
"smokescreen" and that he and Weaver question
"not ·whether women should be registered, but
whether anyone should be registered."
Fidanque rebutted the government's contention
that a peacetime draft is needed to hasten mobilization of troops in the event of war. "If the nation is truly threatened," he asserted, "the country would
mobilize." He pointed to World War II, when 29
million men volunteered to fight in the two months
following Pearl Harbor.
Referring to the situation in the Persian Gulf, Fidanque said, "Rattling th_e sabers of war may provoke the

kind of war we' re trying to prevent. " He compared
President Carter to a "loose cannon rolling around on
the deck of a ship,· trying to look strong in an election
year."
Rather than send a message to ·the Russians that
"the Middle East is our Achilles' heel and we are willing to fight for oil," we need to cut back on oil consumption and start seeking alternative energy
sources, Fidanque emphasized.
Peg Peoples of CORD agreed, adding, "Carter
wants to send a message to the Russians. CORD wants
to send a message to C~rter, and the Russians as well.
The message is that Cord is against war, against the
draft, against registration."
Peoples explained that the proposed draft affects
not only 19- and 20-year-olds, but all Americans, and
urged that those against war and the draft write to
their congressmen.
In closing, Fidanque emphasized that protest over
the proposed draft registration can be effective. "If we
hold together," he stressed, "we can stilJ stop this action."

• Unearned credit
usually on a pass or no-pass basis.
Bates concedes that he never once
saw Dale jog, and that the initial
meeting in which arrangements were
made for Dale to register for the class
was the only time he ever saw the student.
The athlete paid tuition money and
got college credit without ever receiving eyen one hour of instruction or
supervision. And, "Yes," Bates does
feel this was "cheating," and says he
now "regrets the incident."
As Bates recalls, "We sat down· in
my ofrice and filled out an Independent Study Contract in which Dale
agreed to run even more hours before
and after football practice and furnish
me with J log of times Jnd distances
he' d been running."
Bates says it was Schaffeld who
returned to his office a few days later
with "records of when Dale was supposed to h<we run earlier in the sumnwr.
fhe only running log available now
Is the one Dale and l:3atEs have admittt>d they t<1ls1fied. And there is no
t1vc1ilc1bk_, recorci of a written contract.
Dc1lt> says he doesn ' t remember sIgnIng any contrc1ct.
President Scht1ter told The TORCH
this week that " Some form of otf1cic1I
rt>primand will be forthcoming soon, "
t)ut ht> refuserl to predict the form
Bates' reprimanci might take: He said
" It could be c.1s st>rious as terminc.1t1on,
probation, or c.1ny number of lesser
reprimand~ ... And hl' <1dded that thl'
college 's investIgc1tIon Is still In progress, making further comment on the
topic I nc1ppropric1te.

continued from page 3
Schafer has ruled out one form of
reprimand -- the use of a fine. Last
week the U of O announced it was fining some of its coaches approximately

Dale Bates
$1,500 each for their involwment in
obtJining trt1udulent credits for
student-a th letl'S.
"I must admit I wc.1s shocked when I
sc.1w tht1t the president of the university
was tining coaches, " s,~ys Scht1fer. "It

Larry Romine
\.Vlrnh to chet1t thl' ..,v-.tcm ,rncl ( ht'<lt
thP ..,tudcnt-. I su..,P<'l t 1t ' -. pch-.1hlc.
Schait>r told tht• I ORCH hp will ht.'
" looking to closc> loop-hole~ t h,11 rnay
l' xIst thdt ,1ilow tor that kind ot thing. "
Pondering Co<1< h l),ilt' 8t1te< letter
or expl<rnation , ~ch,ltl'r ..,t1id ,, I think
he -did ,1 ic1vor. And fw never ',hould
h,1ve done It. I cc.1n unclt•r',tt1nd how It
nt1ppent.,d, hut I think thert> I~ no rt1t1ont1lt> to -.upport it. "
LCC', inwstIgc1tIon ot tfw H<'t1lth
,rnc1 Pt Uept1rtnwnt 1--, <.'\PP< tt•d to
conuud<' on or ,1round Mt1rch I.
Dl'pt>nd1ng on whtit l 011Llus1ons ,H<'
rt:•c.1ch<.'<l lit th<1t tInw thl' invPstigt1lion

was certainly a new development. I've
never dreamed it was legally possible.
I don't see how I could do that at this
level.''
In retrospect, Bates doesn't think his
"judgemental errors" in this matter
will affect his abilities as an administrator, and resents his name being tied to the bogus credit scandal investigation. "I don't know about any
other cases, no matter what you've
heard from the media. They've given
me a hell of a shot, and I feel (it is)
undeserved at times. My only involvement was with Derrick Dale, ,:ind_I feel
badly about that."
Bates told the TORCH, "I'm certainly not a bad person. I've erred and I've
used poor judgment, but when
you ' re in education you ' re in it to help

the
1pagettI
wa,ehou,e
THE GREAT
LATE
SPAGEI II

continued from page 3
hP <.'xtencll'd to other cl<.'p,Htnwnts. In Romine ' -. opinion , wh,1tpvpr
elst> comes out ot ,ill this sonw policy
cht1nges ,1rp certi,ltl to ~w torthcom111g.
llldY

Alrt>,1rly !wing discusserl for possible
implinwntl1tion -.pring t<>rm ,Hl' vc1ri,1tIon) on .i pl,rn to modify LCC's lnde1wndt1nt Study Progr,1m. RominP
...,,1ys tht.> lP,1lth lrnd Pf: l)pp.irtmPnt
m,1y end up lo'.->ing 1h option to grlllll
111dP1wnrl,rnt ..,tt1dy <1 ltog<'llwr.
rh<>n' ht1vl' h('<'ll n< 1 ... p<.'c11Ic
cht1ngl'" rn.idt• ch Y<'l, hut coll(•gp .idmIni-.tr,1tor.., t1rt> looking mto \\'t1ys to,
as Romine, put.... it, ·'tightpn the screws
on control:-- .

the students. I feel I was being a kind
and humane person. It was a
humanistic thing, my going out on a
limb for a kid to maybe keep him in
school so he could make something of
himself."
President Schafer, ~ho is a member
of two national commitees determining college standards, said last week
that gLving an athlete credit in this
manner is "a gimmick" and
"absolutely wrong."
Larry Romine, director of the College and Community Relations Office
and the "special investigator" assigned by the president to check possible
abuses of the system, warns, "A lot
more LCC people may turn out to be
guilty of similar breachs of ethics
before the investigation is over."

FEED

Every Tuesday and Thursday from 8:30 til
closing. All the spagetti you can eat. (plus a
pitcher of beer, soft drink, or half carafe of
wine per person)

3.95

Special Student Discount
75' off on all dinners SUNDAY night
(with a current student body card)
c;ot a birthday coming up? Come in the day before,
the day after. or the day of your birthday for a free dinner.
725 West 1st

Open every day by 5 pm

484-1919

• •

---

"It's one of the few places you can go and legally get crazy in
your car."
Don Loewenthal. a U of O student, did just that as an entrant in the "Icebreaker"
auto cross held at LCC last Sunday . The event was sponsored by Via Curris, a local
Porsche auto club. Held in the campus' northeast parking lot, the previous night's rain
added a spicy touch of danger to the day's activities.
In auto cross racing. drivers try to "beat the clock .. on two timed laps around a track
studded with cones placed in a pattern of sharp turns and curves . Hitting a cone , or
pylon. adds seconds to the total time .
The " cross" was open to anyone over 18 who had the $5 .50 entry fee to spare . All
cars were checked by club workers. who determined whether or not the entries were
in safe mechanical condition . Seat belts and crash helmets were mandatory .
Most people agreed that the danger involved is minimal, with top speeds being only
55-60 miles per hour. The course could even be considered "good driver's training, "
according to Bonnie Mueller . 27. an X -ray technician at Sacred Heart. It requires skill
and concentration. she said. to manuever the cars. correct them when they go into
•
slid es and dodge obstacles .

"You can make it a dangerous sport.
.if you do domething stupid ... said Allan
Beglau. a 32-year -old mechanic. He stressed the importance of "knowing your car".
One man. however. was taking no chances -- his crash helmet was reportedly inscribed with not only his name. but also his blood type .
Although some people consider car racing an unnecessary waste of gas. David
Hoselitz. a local mechanic. contends that "a properly tuned car gets better mileage ...
E}es1des. he says. "Everyone needs their release . Some people get psychotic and go
out and kill someone: others go racing on Sundays ...
Coming from as far away as Seattle and Klamath Falls. there was a wide range in
age and occupations among participants. But they echoed each other's sentiments
when asked why thev do it .
··J like to drive fast ... said one man.
" Ifs a release. It gets the adrenalin going ... said LCC student Graham Fulk."! like to
dnve to the absolute limit.··

Story by Heidi Swillinger
Photos by Dennis Tachibana

P(1ge 8

The TORCH

Feb. 21 - -,,,, 1980

Hands, heart

continued from page 3
Leonard watches a soundless TV,
rolling his eyes in annoyance when
the commercials come on.
Florence explains that in the
spring they will be getting a special
adaptor unit for the television which
will show certain programs with
captions. For the present, they watch
a lot of football and basketball or

Herself a mother of two now,
Marianne says she can appreciate her
mother's reaction to the age-old
bickering that occurs betweer.
siblings.
Marianne, 33, now lives in
Sacramento and is an administrative
analyist. Susanne, 27, lives in
Roseberg and works with hearing
impaired children.
Remembering her parents'
relationship, Marianne says, "They
got along beautifully. I never saw
them fight. Either they didn't do it or
I just didn't notice."
.
The Beamans· both laugh at their
daughter's observation. After a rapid
conversation in sign, Florence speaks
for her husband .•"He says to say that
we did fight -- after the children went
to bed!"

•

•

•

Florence speaks often of her family
Instead of the traditional notes and
reminders, photographs of her
children and grandchildren are
arranged on the refrigerator door.
Many of the pictures that decorate
the walls were made by her
daughters.
A few pieces of stained glass hang
at the windows, reflecting their
colours onto the carpet. Florence
made them herself but says,
regretfully, "I don't have much time
for that these days."
She manages, however, to make
time for travel. Even as a child, when
she would take the train from the
deaf school in Boulder, Mont. to
Missoula, her home town, she loved
to travel. Then, because her father
was an engineer for the Northern
Pacific Railroad, she used to get free
passes to ride the train. Her father
encouraged her to become
independant. "He wanted me to
know how to take care of myself. .
.to handle any problems that came
up," she says.
In the living room of their home,

,

sent with the aid of an old Western
Union telegram machine. The caller
must have either a similar set up or a
standard teletype machine (TTY) or
communication would be impossible.
They can call long distance but
Leonard complains with a wry grin
that "it's slower to type than to talk,
so it costs more money."

,,r

. ..
. ·.·.'
...

):~

I

...

;

'M JUST IGNDRINlrYDU

.c

j

·c

f

0

>-

.c

£

i

Q.

The Seamans' sense of humor is reflected in their quiet household.
In all her years of teaching,
programs with lots ot action.
Other adaptations have been made
Florence has reached a lot of people.
throughout their home. The ringing
Her students describe her dS
of the doorbell and the telephone is
"inspiring," "amazing," and
announced through lights that go on
"extraordinary."
in certain parts of the house.
Although she says, "I never
When the Beaman's want to make
dreamed I' d be a tedcher," when the
a phone call, they dial the number
Dean of Students at the Oregon State
an'"d place the receiver on a device
School for the Deaf in Salem
contacted her 15 years ago, she
called a coupler. If the line is busy, a
agreed to become the first formal
small light on the coupler flashes
sign language teacher in Eugene.
rapidly. When the per~on on the
The beginning years of her career
other end has answered, the light
were spent teaching in the Eugene
blinks steadilv. The actual message is
Hearing dnd Speech Center. She also
went to private homes to teach smdll
groups and families sign language.
Sometimes they woulcl go to a
restaurant ~rnd practice over dinner
"but people stare so much ," says
Star Trek, by Gene Roddenberry. (Pocket, $2.50.) Further
Flo_rence. She understands the
adventures of TV spaceship, U .S.S. Enterprise.
natural curiosity that might prompt a
czisual gl,rnce or two but downright
~taring, es1wcially when she's with d
Mommie Dearest, by Christina Crawford. (Berkley,
small group of people, makes her
$2.75.) Life with mother: actre,ss Joan Crawford.
feel ,innoyecl ,rnd selt-conscious.
In 1970, a vocational rehabilitation
The Mr. Bill Show, by Walter Williams. (Running Press,
counselor in Salem got in touch ·with
$4.95~} Story of TV puppet from "Saturday Night Live."
Florence dnd arranged tor her to
begin !<:>aching night classes in sign
How to Eat Like a Child, by Delia Ephron. (Ballantine,
langu,igp Jt LCC.
Florence is pleased thc.1t so many oi
$3.95.)
And
other
lessons
in
not
being
grown-up.
I
her studenh are teachers and parents
or friends of a deaf or hearing
The World According to Garp, by John Irving. (Pocket,
impaired person. She feels that it is
$2.75.) Adventures of a son of a famous, feminist mother.
of critical importdnce that family
members be able to use sign

C,Qmpu1 Pape,ba~k l)e1t1eller1

1.

2.
3.

! 4.
5.

6. Chesapeake, by James Michener. (Fawcett, $3.95.)
Multi-family saga along Maryland's Eastern Shore: fiction.

7. Mary Ellen's Best of Helpful Hints, by Mary Ellen
Pinkham and Pearl Higginbotham. (Warner, $3.95.)
Solving household problems.
8. Ashes in the Wind, by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss. (Avon,
$4.95.) Southern belle vs. Yankee doctor: fiction.
9. Evergreen, by Belva Plain. (Dell, $2. 75.) Jewish immigrant woman climbs from poverty on lower Manhattan.
10. In Search of History, by Theodore H. White. (Warner,
$5.95;) Personal adventures of a famous journalist.
Compiled by The Chronicle of Higher Education from information
supplied by college stores throughout the country. February 4, 1980.

language. "It should be a deaf child's
right to be able to see language," she
says. So often, deaf people are
isolated because family members in
particular don;t learn sign.
It angers her that people associate
deafness with mental retardation,
Deaf people are just as intelligent as
hearing people, she says. But a
hearing person's English, with its
particular rules and grammar, is a
foreign language to a deaf person.
In one of Florence's many books
on the subject of sign language, this
analogy is _given:
Suppose for example, you were in a
sound proof, glass booth, equipped
only with a pad and pencil. Outside
the booth is yo.ur instructor, who
speaks reads and writes only
Japanese. How long would it take .you
to learn )~paneset How well would •
you learn itt (Ameslan, an
Introduction to American Sign
Language -- Louie J. Fant Jr.)
Florence, like so many deaf or
hearing impaired people1 has a slight
speech impairment. She cannot hear
herself and therefore cannot perfect
her own speech. Some deaf people
refuse to use their voices, for fear of
ridicule. Florence herself is
sometimes shy about speaking. "I
mispronounce words sometimes ..
.but the o·nly way to get better is if
someone tells me. When people
don't understand what I'm saying I'd
rather they ask. If they really want to
know, they do."
Florence communicates not only
with her voice dnd her hands but
also with the expressions on her face.
"A deaf child learns at an early age
to work with vjsual cues-- body
languc.1ge, expressions and emotions,
and they become experts at judging
non-verbal communication," she
says. Hearing people need to be
aware of how much they
communicate non-verbally.

•

•

•

A cat wanders into the Beaman 's
living room and jumps up onto the
card table. Florence introduc~s
Charcoal_, saying, "She jumps up
here whenever she wants to be
loved. " Florence crosses her fists
over her heart, the sign for love.
'' She seems to know that I can't hedr
her meow, " she says, as she strokes
the purring cat.
"There's nothing special about

me, " Florence once said.

In her home, she gestures to her
husband and says, "We' re Just like •
he,1ring people. We have the same
tights, the same problems .. .We do
everything except hear."

KLCC seeks to raise $152,163
to modernize its equipment
by Eric Sloat
for The TORCH
By th<..• middle 01 this yedr, KLCC will
know it it c<1n comnwnce on ,i
$152, 1G3, two-ye,ir pl<rn to modl'rni/t'
ih i<Kilitie', <rnd '.:,tr<..•ngtlwn ih -.ign<1i.
At tht1t time tlw st,ition will find out it
p.irt ot the mon('Y, $1 14, 122 , will
conw In th<. torm ot ~1 gr<rnt trom the
N,1tion,il I el<..•communicdtions lntorm,1tion Administr,1tion. Th<.' rpm,1ining
$38,041 would lw paid by the st,1tion,
u-,ing tunas trom r.idiothon'.:,. As p,irt ot
1

tfw proposal the s<1ldr1<.'S 01 thl' KLCC
<..'ngine(\rs, who·\ \viii msldll the new
. ·pquipnwnt, \,vould: count d'.:, p,1rt 01
KLCCs ohl1g.ition . •
Tlw m..11ority 01 tlw mom•y will go
tmvc1rds improving KLCC ibelt by buying lll'\V <.'quIpnwnt " th,11 Is up to ~nutt
with tod,1y's technology. '· Another
priority is getting the st,1tion -.. s1gnc1i to
outlying <Hl'<b which do not now currently receive it. ro (1lll'viate tht1t prohl<..>m KLCC will propos<.> th,1t
tr,insl,1tors lw constructPd in tho-.<.'
c1reas to pick up the station ·~ '.:,lgn,1i.

Disco rocks out
by Carla Schwartz
of The TORCH

It's called DOR -- Dance Oriented
Rock. It combines the atmosphere of
a disco with the beat of rock and
roll. And radio station KZEL-FM has
brought it to Eugene.
Every Wednesd~y night at
O'Callahan's, 440 Coburg Rd.,
Eugene, KZEL disc-jockeys take over
the turn-tables at the disco and stage
what they call "Rock Night." "So far
it's been pretty successful," says
Greg Lee, the station's promotions
director. "The first three nights there
were lines around the building. It's
129t just a novelty any more."

she could become tlustered.
One fan knocks on the door of the
booth. Disc-jockey Nancy Walton
answers. "Some people are really
nice," says Walton. "Others are
really rude."
"No requests," says the fan.
"You're doing a good job.'
"Thank you!" answers Walton,
both surprised and appreciative.
Rock Night gives KZEL's listening
audience a chance to see and meet
the people behind the voices on the
radio. "KZEL is a real radio station,"
says Greg Lee. "We' re not rock stars,
we' re real people. People who have
been listening to the station for nine
years have never seen Chris Kovarik

'It combines the atmosphere of a disco
with the beat of rock and roll.'
According to Lee, the idea for Rock
Night came about when Program
Director Chris Kovarik visited X's, a
rock club, in -San Fra_ncisco. X' s is run
"by people who got fired from
KSAN, " a bay area FM station, says
Kovarik. But here in Eugene, the idea
has become so popular, KZEL has
received requests from other local
club-owners to do rock nights.
For Kovarik, spinning records for a
live audience is a unique, often
frustrating experience. " It' s harder to
pick music that people will dance
to," she explains. "People will listen
longer than they will dance. "
She pulls an album from its sleeve
and prepares it for play, dancing all
the while. " It's a totally different trip
from working on the radio.
"KZEL has 2,000 records," says
Kovarik. " We have 100 with us. " It
is a well-rehearsed line she uses
many times throughout the evening.
Yet with a capacity crowd, the
influence of alcohol and the
vulnerability of dealing with a live
audience, it is understandable that

or Peyton Mays (music director)."
Lee finds it encouraging to get out
and meet the audience. But
sometimes it's not that easy.
"Could you play some rock and
roll? " requests a fan. •
"I have been," replies Kovarik
defensively. "What's rock to you?"
"You know," he persists. "Rock
and roll."
"Well, I thought I did but
apparently I don't," sc1ys Kovarik JS
she closes the door. She shakes her
head in frustration and c1dds,
"Tonight it's been more a hassle ..
.usually it's fun."
At quarter to twelve, O 'Callahan's
regular disc-jockey walks in, eager to
take over for the remainder of the
evening. Kovarik steadies the needle
over the next record.
Psycho Killer by Talking Heads.
"How's your night been?" he c1sks.
She utters a four-letter word
. "Yeah, it's.a lot different from
working in a radio station."
"Yeah," answers Kovarik, "(There)
you can just hang up on them. "

AROUND TOWN
TH€~TR€
U of 0
Robinson Theatre, Villard Hall
Feb. 22-23 ; 28-29 "Streamers"
Oregon Repertory Theatre
99 W. 10th, 485-1946
Feb. 21-March 8 " Of Mice and
Men"
Eugene Opera
South Eugene High School
Die Fledermaus
Community Center for the Performing Arts
291 W. 8th, Eugene 687-2746
Feb. 22-24 DancEugene
Dance Works
1231 Olive St., Eugene
.
Feb. 24 Wendy Perron and Susan
Rethorst

U of O Music School
Bec1II Hc1II, Eugene
Feb. 2 I Composition Recital
Feb. 22 Jazz Lab Band and the
Studio Orchestra

LCC Department of Performing
Arts
Feb. 21 Chamber Choir, Woodwind Ensemble ,ind Percussion
Ensemble

EXHIBIT~
Opus 5
2469 Hilyard St., Eugt.'ne 484-1710
Feb. 21-29 Mich,1el Keenc1n,
stonew,He ,ind porct.1l,1in
PacificComm Gallery
132 E. Bro,1rlw,1y, Suite 420, Eugene

485-3373

Feb. 21-29 C1rolyn Nuessle Orum

Oregon Gallery
U of O Must'um of Art
f Ph . .!. I -Mc1rch 2 Photographs by
Shc1ron f-ox
Visions and Perceptions
1524 Will,inwtte, Suitt' 101, Eugene
683-4604
Feb. 2 I-March I Lithogr,1phs ,ind
Serigr,1phs by Simb,Hi, Romero ,rnd
Alv,H

Maude Kerns Art Center
)(Jill Ec1st 1.) th Aw. , Eugene
345-1,71
f-ch. 22-24 SilvPr Light Workshop
O'Callahan's in Eugene is the site of a musical experiment -- DJnce Oriented
Rock.
Photo by Deborah Keogh

CLUB~
Tavern on the Green
1375 Irving Rd., Eugene 689-9595
Feb. 21-24 The News
Feb. 25 Johnny Ethridge
Feb. 26-27 Headline
Black Forest
2657 Willamette, Eugene 344-0816
Feb. 22-23 Salt and Pepper
Feb. 27 The Hoochie Koochie
Band

B.J. Kelly's
1475 Franklin Blvd.,
683-4686
Feb. 21 City Limits
Feb. 22-23 Colour
Feb. 27 David's Buick

Eugene

Eugene Quality Inn
222 E. Broadway, Eugene 344-1461
Feb. 20-23 The Limelight Brigade
Feb. 24-25 Peter Boe
Feb. 26-27 Windcastle

Duffy's
801 E. 13th, Eugene 344-3615
Feb. 22-23 Hot Whacks
Taylor's
894 E. 13th, Eugene 687-0600
Feb. 22-23 The Party Kings

lino's
3995 Main St., Spfd. 746-6669
Feb. 22-23 Ziller
Forrest Inn
Emerald Valley
Creswell
Feb. 21-March
Trio

Golf

Course,

Joe Boreland

The Loft
1350 Alder, Eugene 686-2931
Feb. 21 James Thornbury
Feb. 22 Smokey Valley String
B~rnd
Feb. 23 In Cahoots
Feb. 24 Bluegrass Jam
Feb. 25 New Writers Series
Feb. 26-27 Open Stage

Perry's
959 Pearl, Eugene 683-2360
Feb. 22-23 Glider
Barney Cable's
375 E. 7th Ave., Eugene 342-8333
Feb. 23 Charles Dowd

€TC.
U of 0
EMU Bc1llroom, Eugene
Feb. 22 Square Dance

Pl1ge 10

The TORCH, Feb. 2 I -

If., 1980

Senate bill passage threatens everyone
1

by Marianne Jenkins
for The TORCH

"The Criminal Reform Act of 1979,''
also known as Senate Bill 1722, is a
440-page bill which updates and
revises the federal criminal code. It is
due to be voted on by the U.S. Senate
the second week in March.
The Lane County Committee Opposing Repressive Legislation
(LCCORL) is a group of local citizens
who are working to make people
aware of the ramifications of Senate
Bill 1722 .
According to members of LCCORL
very few people are even aware of the
existence of SB 1722 let alone the consequences it would have on their lives
as American citizens.
"If passed in its present form," states
Michael Williams, an LCCORL
member, "SB 1722 would erode 0t•r
(each citizen's) rights as guaranteed
under the Bill of Rights."
Frank Wilbnson, executive director
of the National Committee Against
Repressive Legislation, said in a
speech last November in Eugene that
90 percent of this bill is good: It
eliminates many out-of-date laws and
statuatory redundancies contained in
the federal criminal code. However,
the other 10 percent includes proposals that would hamper a citizen ' s
right to free speech.
Estelle Field, an <-1ctive LCCORL
member, points out thJt the bill til...,o
usurps stJte' s rights.
"Trc1ditionc1lly, criminal ju'.:>licc h<h
alway'.:> been primarily the re'.:,pon-.ihility oi the stc1tes," she cxplciin...,. "Und('r
SB 1722 whole Vc1SI ,ire<1'.:, <Hl' lt1k<•n
over by fed<.>ral c1uthority." The Nc1-

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tional Conierence ot State Legi'.:>lators
shares this concern stating that the bill
expands federJI jurisdiction at the expense of the state laws c1nd "lays the
foundation for a national police
force," Field alleges.
SB 1722 tries to do too much dt one
time -- to update and revise 62 years
and 3000 federal laws in one massive
bill, claim LCCORL members. And as a
result the meanings and definition in it
are vague, overgeneralized and incomplete. Key qualifying words have
been overlooked or omitted.
Members of LCCORL claim the omnibus form of the bill is the undl'rlying
factor responsible for much of the ferc1n
feel
they
~ather ,
vor.

business with a strike or causing loss of
business by picketing or boycotting).
"The language is so vague," explains Jim Esselstyne , another
member, "that technically you could
be arrested for violation of
'obstructing a government function by
physical interference' -- if you stop a
mailman. It sounds silly, but this is indicative of the excessive leeway allowed in the interpretations of the law that
are left to the discretion of the courts
and prosecuting attorneys."
"One of the most difficult things to
convince people of is that this (bill)
threatens everyone," says Field, ''not
just political radicals."
Disbelief is the biggest obstacle LCCORL encounters. "People simply do
not believe that our government
would even consider passing a bill that
contains so many violations ot our
basic rights, " declares Field. " It ju'.:>!
could not happen in this country. People c1re appalled. "

economic lo'.:>s (by closing down a
"inc rementa I" (step-by-step) ,1µproach to solving criminal justice and
citizen right' s problems is the only
feasible way of dealing with such a
massive issue.
The bill is inundated with what Field
calls "basket phrases, catch-all words
and definitions." She explains, "Laws
that are substantiated ( 1) this way, (2)
this way, (3) this way, (4) and othervvise."
. For example, a labor union strike
could be construed as blackmail by
definition in SB 1722. Blackmail is expanded to include obtc1ining rroperty
of another (wc.1ges, pension pl,rn, etc.)
by threatening to subject a person or

ACLU cites 'violations of rights'
According to a Jan. 15 American
Civil Liberties newsletter article,
Senate Bill 1722 contains many new
criminal offenses which, if adopted
into law, would violate civil liberties
and threaten First Amendment rights.
Under the npw corle, you could h<.>
suhject to drr<.''.:>I tor:
• fking prp-,ent di tlw pl,rnning or
org,rni/cllion ot d rJpmonslrcltion or
r<1lly thclt '"could'" lwconw d cfaturbt1ncp 01 cl govprnnwnt !unction or
. influenct> cl Judicicll procPeding -evpn it thp cJpmon-.trc1tion nt•vpr
t.ikPs plclc t'.
• bprP-.-.ing c1ny torm ot oppo'.:,ition to r<'-.1-.t or dr-.olwy c1 court order,
including .111 <1rtic IP 111 ,1 npw-,pc1p<:r
or ti '-l)PL'C h c1t .i nwet1ng thtit might
oppo<,p ,1 court -, .1ction.

1

• Driving a trienrl to the site of c.1
demonstrc1tion if it is established you
knew tlw demonstrJtion might
pm'.:>ibly ob'.:>truct normal operations
c1t the '.:,ilP ot c1 nuck•<1r or other
energy producing plc1nt.
• Picketing an induction or recruitment Center or counselling people
on their right to apply for conscient1ou'.:, ohwc tor '.:,t<1tus.
• Writing or '.:>J)l'clking .igclin"t c1 w,H
or conditions on <1 milit,1ry it1'.:,l,1llc1tion it thosl' c1c lion-. t1rP inlt'rprt'ted
by miliLHy .iuthority cl'- ••inciting in-.uhord1n.ition. ' •
• HPing .i nwmlwr ot <111 org,ini/,1t1on will( h p.irt1c 1p.itcs in ,rny 1IIPg<1I
.it lion it you do not pt1rl1c. ip,lh' 111 or
h,n<' c1nv knov, l<>dgt' ot th(' ,1c t1on.
< )rg.1ni/t1!1on-. ,m' <11-.o lwld 11.ihle tor
,ill d( !!Oil'-. 01 111d1\'1duc1I llH'llllwr-..

LCCORL would like to see people
get together against SB 17 22, -- urging
c1 kind ot " people's movement." It
urges people to write letters -- not JU':it
to congressional representJtives, but
<1lso to the editor'.:> of l<Ycal new~pc1per'.:>
,rnd their triencb in other cHecl'.:> to
mc1ke cl'.:> mc1ny people .is pos'.:,ibk,
aw,m' ot tlw high stake'.:, involwd.
"The ti me to stop it i'.:, bet ore 11 h,1ppens ,'' concludes held.
I-or further intormc1tion concPrnmg
~H 17 22 or the c1ctiv1t1e'.:> or LCCORL .
pho1w the group ,it 485-1755. LC CORL nw<.'h on thp tir~t ,ind tt11rd
l m'sd,1y ot the month at 1--+14 K1n(c11(l.
I lw1r noon meeting" .ire 01wn to t1w
public.

1

Board decision 'discombobulates' instructor
Forum by Jerome Garger
Language Arts instructor

An Open Letter to the Board:
~('V<;r;11 w<'t'k" c1go I .itt<:nd<·d .i
i.il nwdrng grc1nt<·d hy tlw l ( (
Ho,ircl ot tduc .it ion to disc u-.-. tlw propo-.ed -.h1tt1ng cihout ot < lt1-.-.roonh .incl
otticc-. 111 tlw ( <'lll('r Kuild1ng. i"-t'<H llw
end or tlw m<•<•l1ng, c1fl<•r lc•ngthy
cl1-.c u ... -.1on. ho,ird nwmlH'r L.irrv IJ<,rry
lllO\<'d to n·c on-.1d<•r 1h,1t d<•t 1... 1011
th1" l1m<• with r<•prl''><'lllt1t1on tor
..,,ud<•nh. l<'d<. lwr ... , .ind ... 1.111 11hc·
group-. d1rt•c tlv ,1tt<'< tl'd by 1lw ,,\d m1n1-.1r,111on d<'< 1... 1onJ. 1lw motion .
IH>\-V<'\'l'r , \\cl'> d<·ll'<Jll•d ~-2.
I \\'cl" -.t un1wd, t lc1hlwrgd ... t< ·cl,
di"< omhol>ult1t<•d. In 111y 1111nd .... ut h .i
\'OI<' \ 101,llc•.., !ht• mo"t li.1..,1< pr1111 1p11 ·
of 1.i,r ,rncl 1•11<'< 11\<' m.in.igt•rnt•nl. 111
t'""<'ll< t', 1I ... ,1y.., th.it th<' ,Hlnw1, ... tr.1t1CJ11
111.ikt'" tlw dc·c 1-.1011 ... ,llld 11npl1t'" rh,11
thc·y ,lrt' IH•yond t rrtrc ,... rn .. c·1tht•1 Ii\
tht•rr "ulHHd111.ilt•.., or IJy th(' ho.iql.
I t .in, l1m,·c·\t'r, not lw!p qLH'"t1tJ11
111g th<· qu,1l1ty of '-,('\ 1·r,1I I('< c·nl 1\!I
111111, ... rr,111, (' cl<·< 1... 1on..,_

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ITEM: I wo or my tc•liow L1ngu,1g('
;\rt... lt'dt ht•r" ,irrrvt•d di LC<.. onp cL1y to
11nd th.it tlwrr pt•r.,on.il .ind prot<.
""Hldl IH•lo11g1ng ... h,1d, without l1d\,lll< t' notru•, IH't•n rt•movt>cl trorn
1lw1r ot11c ('"- '.)uc h int on-,1clvrdlt• .ind
d, ... h1•,1rt<•n111g LJ<.,<' or .idm1n1..,lr.1l1\t'
JH>w1•r <t•1lt11nly nt•c•d.., to IH' (JU<'._,t,on 1·<1.
ITEM: Rt>< C'ntlv from .ott-cirnpu-. I
I ,i!lt•d !ht• lll,1117 '-.\\'II( hhocircl lwrc• di
I ( C I h1· phorw r.ing bl> l1llll''-., .ind on
,1n l',1rl1<•1 uc <,h1on . ..i 1J t111w ... IH·t<Hl' 11
,,.,1.., ,1n ... ,,1·r1·cl. Wlwn I rn,rn,1gl'd to g1 •I
through on !ht•..,(' ,llld olh1•r oc t d'-.IOll..,,
I w.i ... lrt•qut•ntiy !old lhdl tlw dvp<1rt
1111•nL1I or '-,('I\ It<· lint'" w1•rt• l>Lhy. I
111·\t'I ht1<l proi>l<·rn.., ot th,-. -.ort wht>n
flh' old t1•lt•pl1onc• ..,\'..,lt•111 \\'d" 1n
()JH'r.1l1011. I .1111 1101 t r1l1t 11111g our
d1•d11 .il<•d . t•ttrc rvnt ... ,\1l( hlJo,ird
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th,-, nc '\\ . 1•,1 H •n ... l\ v, 1rn11r1 J\ t•d 1mt •:
,ind I \\<>11d1·1 wh.it 1n1pn•..,,1011 1a•c1p1<·
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ITEM: '.)1•, <•r ,ii ... , uc l1 •nh, t rn•nd ... , ,lllcl
n1·1ghl>CJ1.., ,ill I ,IIH' ( ounl\ l.i,p.iy1·1...
11c1,1· 111d1c.it1•d to 111c• Ill.it th<· .tel
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p,irk111g !oh c,11 lilt• ,outh,,1, ... 1 c•clg<· 1JI
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p.,r,,111g tt1.1t t1lr<'<Hl\' <'\1 ... i... 1n !oh <.'<hi
,11 1111• i\•11orr11111g ,\rh lh11ld111g.
lll:M: l,\001 tlw IH'..,l ot ,l 11umhl'r1JI
111,11g111.tl I i,1..,-,100111, d\dildi>ll' lo
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\1i·d 1; i 'roduc l11,n.._ -,tuclro. I 11t•
:, H
1

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1

num<•rou.., < lc1..,q,.., t,1ught thc•rl', W<' ,Hl'
111,truclc •d , will l>v lwrrl<•d 011 to two
long, n,urow, 1n<1d(:'quc1te cl,1'.:,~room'.:>
!wing built in thP PE: Builrl1ng, wh(:'re
Olli ell'-,( ll ...... ,on ... ( ,Ill lit• punc. lucllt>(l I)')'
!ht· ... ound ... trorn tlw IJ.ittrng c.,igt• .
I t'<lt h<•r" who..,v c. lc1..,sv.., .in• .itrvc. tt •d
,,·(•rt' not t on..,ultc•d hut 1r1tomwcl th.it
til1• 11l<!\<' would t.1kt• pl.Ht' po ...... ,1>1v
l>vtort• tlw t'nd or llw < urrt•nl qut1rtvr.
"-.m, don I get nH • wrong . I .ipJJl"l '< 1.111• l< ', l< nrng ll<'r<' .ind kllO\\ Ill.it
tc·t11 h1ng 101>" .irl' 11.ird lo <1mw I)\ . I
.tl'-O 1,n<J\\ th.it l<'dt l1t•r, c1rc· c.innt·d
.11ou11<I hvrl' trn 111 ... ulJorcJ 1n.it1011 , -,o
I ,, ,,11 to cit·< l.irl' l,umhly .incl pu1J11t 1v
111.it I .1111 wl'il .iw.11 t' 01 mv ..,u!Jord,n.it<'
JHNlrcrn. 1\nd , lld\'11\~ olltt' ht'<'ll .111
dlilllllli ... 11,Jl()r _ I ( dll ... yn1pc1llli/(' 10
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'-,()111(' cit>( r....1011 ... : l ll( ', l'-,\,' II(''-, Ill( ' ill 'd(.,I
,lll<i .ii i 111.it
th,1! w1•,ir.., 1111• t ro\\ll
..,lull.
At c1 cert.iin point, though, '.:>Onwont'
rnu-.t -.1w.ik up ,1gc1rn'.:,I ch,c1-;1on'.:> ot th,..,
-.orl m,id<· by .i '.:>horhighkci,
boy <1rllw.ivyh,inckd , goorl ol
rn1111<,lr<1l1on th,1t 1.., rc1p1rlly de-.troy1ng
th<.' rnor,1lc 01 ..,,udPnb, tc1culty , <rnd
..,1,111 lwr<' .it LCC ()np 11nt1I c. omnwnt :
hoc1rd m<:>rnlwr-. '>t'l'rll lo
~OllH'
c1utom,1l1tt1lly dpJJrovt•, to ruhhPr
..,Limp ,1dm1n1-.tr.1l1vP cl<•c1s1on"
r<·g,mllE'"" ot tlwrr quc1lity. I urgp the.,P
t>o,Hd nwmtH•r" to c. h.ingt' tht 1r \ 1<'W"
ot tht·1r purpo"v or to re..,rgn their JH>..,,11011) to llld kt· morn tor tho)t' more
wrlirng to tulr,11 tlw1r rv..,pons1lirl1l1l'.., to
tlw ... tud< •nh , t.1urlty, .incl ~tdlt ot tl1,..,
..,c_ hool .ind to th<' t,ixpc1yt•r._, ot th1"
< OllllllUlllly.
lh.irik 'tou .
1

'· • Feb. 21 -ii, 1980 The TORCH

Page 11

Boycott poseS threat to Olympic hopefuls
by Howard Berkes
ofTheTORCH

pa 'tri-o-tism, n.: love for or devotion to one's
country
run 'ner, adj.: one who runs
Patriotism. Running. For three Eugene athletes,
these two words have taken on a new meaning as a
threatened Olympic boycott approaches.
"Current events have made me and a lot of other
people in this country a lot more aware of being
patriotk," says Rudy Chapa, a University of Oregon
distance runner now on leave to train for Olympic
competition. "Any time there are acts of aggression
against this country, you are made more aware of being an American."
Chapa is among hundreds of Olympic hopefuls who
face a possible cancellation of US participation in the
- 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. President Carter
has said he wants the Olympics moved, postponed,
or cancelled if Sov·iet troops are still in Afghanistan on
• Feb. 20.
The Soviet incursion into Afghanistan and tension in
Iran is of great concern to Jeff Wells, a marathon runner competing with the Eugene-based Athletics West
track club.
When Wells finished the grueling, 26-mile NikeOregon Track Club marathon last year, he was stridefor-stride with Athletics West teammate Tony Sandoval. With identical times, Wells and Sandoval
finished first.
"I'm not overly _patriotic," admits Wells. "But with
American hostages being held (in lrant I feel an injustice has been done to Americans. A war (with the
Soviet Union) is even a possibility. That's enhanced
my patriotic emotions."
Sandoval says his patriotic feelings are sometimes
more evident when he's competing. "When I go
overseas to compete, I feel a deep sense of pride
knowing that I' m an American. But, I become even
stronger in my patriotism in a situation like the world
is in now. " explains Sandoval.
And it is that current world situation that threatens
the participation of Sandoval, Wells and Chapa in
these next Olympic Games.
"The Olympics is far and away the biggest event in
track and field," maintains Wells. "And, interna-

countless hours to the Olympic Games., But that
doesn't override moral things. Making the Olympic
team is not as important as the invasion of a nation
and the agression that's involved in that."
As the president's Jan. 22 State of the Union address
blared from the television in the next room, there was
an occasional burst of applause and cheering. But
Rudy Chapa' s thoughts were more than just a room
away.
"An Olympic boycott is not something that should
just be up to the president," Chapa says. "He should
hear from the athletes. If I were to be polled now, I'd
,
, vote against it."
"But," Chapa continues, "the Olympic Games
aren't everything for me. A boycott of the games
wouldn't be a tremendous crush for me because
there are other things. The games are not the reason
I'm running."
"I'm running to try to improve every year and to
1
•
challenge myself, to see how far I can go."
Tony Sandoval leans a,gainst a heavy, overstuffed
chair, his long, thin legs stretching out before him.
_ "Jeff Wells and I were doing some altitude training in
New Mexico last summer," he says. "We were running down a canyon alongside .a stream and through
some meadows. Jeff and I were really enjoying that,
and I said to him, 'Sometimes I wish there wasn't any
Olympics we had to train for, so there wouldn't be all
the worries and anxieties and problems that you
come up with wh~n training for the Olympics.' "
"I'm not an 'all runner,'" Sandoval explains. "I like
to think of myself as a 'pure runner.' I run for the enjoyment of running. I really like competition and get a
lot out of it."
•
Jeff Wells echoes his training partner's sentiments.
"I'm a runner. And I enjoy running very much. And
I would be training whether or not there would be an
Olympics this August."
,.
And there may not be an Olympics this August.
Even though athletes can still be athletes without an
Olympics, Rudy Chapa is thinking ahead to 1984.
" It's frightening to think of the United States
boycotting in 1980, because the Soviets and the
satellite countries would then not come to the 1984
Olympics in Los Angeles."
"A boycott now, " Chapa says quietly, " could
.
mean an end to the games in this decade."
'The games are not the reason I'm running,' says
And for Rudy Chapa, Jeff Wells and Tony Sandoval,
,_O lympic hopeful Rudy Chapa. TORCH staff photo . .\.. this Olympic decade is the last for their athletic lives.
tionally, it' s the biggest sporting event there is. l3ut, I
tend to be inclined favorably toward the boycott
possibility because some statement of outrage needs
to be made -- in a non-violent way -- to the Soviet
Union."
Sandoval agrees. "We've trained and devoted

'Teleconferencing' -- students taught via telephone
by Linda Peterson
for The TORCH

Looking for answers to the pressures
that inflation and high transportation
costs put on students, LCC Media Services' Director James Brock is researching " teleconferencing," -- the use of
special telephone system by groups
separated from an instructor and
classroom.
One LCC class has already used the
teleconference concept, and the
necessary equipment.
Teleconferencing enables three or
more people to interact -- to carry on a
dialogue th rough an electronic
medium that carries audio, video, or
text signals -- or, combinations of them.
The system is two-way, rather than
"broadcast."
"The concept basically is to operate
a class on campus in the traditional
way," Brock continued, but "in a conference room with microphones, a
speaker, and all the paraphernalia that
goes with it... (Registered) students go
to various listening centers," (which
could be the city library, a church,
nursing homes,) and take th e course .
Th ey wo uldn ' t have to travel as fa r.
" The best exa mple in the nati o n,"
Brock says, " is at the U nive rsity ot
Wisconsin , Mc1cJi..,on. It' <, c1b'->ol utely c1
show-case proJect , the st,rnd,Hcl of th e
nation. Tht'Y have 205 li stenin g
c_enter.., throughout the c., t,1tP , havi ng

150 course offerings coming from the
admitted. I found myself talking to the
Madison campus, with 35,000
students in the room when I was supstudents taking classes.
posed to be talking on the phone, and
The LCC class, using teleconference
on the phone when I was supposedly
techniques, met last winter term, actalking to the students. But those
cording to Carl Horstrup, LCC coor(quirks) worked out quickly."
dinator. The pilot project was
"I r~n an innovative department,"
"Apprenticeship Related Training for
Brock continued, "but I'm a little bit
Brick Layers." Only a few students,
conservative. We can hoke something
(two in Bend, three in Coos Bay, and - together," he said, "and make some
eight at LCC), wanted to take the
course, so the Oregon State Department of Education gave LCC a $500
vocational grant to develop this lowenrollment program.
The college rented equipment from
Pacific Northwest Bell, with an open
mike and receivers placed in the three
different locations where the groups of
students met. The grant covered the
cost of permanent jack installation and
payment for phone time. International
Masonry Training Manuals were purchased for the curriculum. In effect,
each student followed the instructor's remarks about the material in the
manuals, and discussed related
material.
" It's akwc1rd to start with ," Horstrup

Y~u~:e~c~:!~~•s
our main concern.

_B,

243-7715 30th & Hilt1ard

kind of delivery system and do ;11
kinds of things with it...(but that way)
we may waste government's money
and student's time ... l won't be a part
of that. "
Brock concluded, "Teleconfer- •
encing is possible, feasible, and reasonable, but before LCC does anything
with it, we need to find out, does it fit
us?"

Page 12

The TORCH

Feb. 21 - /W, 1980

omnium-gathe,um

Art exhibit slated

Two free musicals

Artist panel discussion

Two free musical concerts will be
presented this month by the Perform ing Arts Department. Monday, Feb.
25, two members of the LCC music
faculty -- Barbara Myrick on flute and
Larry Clabby on piano -- will present a
program of French music. On Thu rsday, Feb. 28, jazz performed by the
LCC Vocal Jazz Ensemble and the Jazz
Band will be featured.

A panel discussion focusing on the
concerns of professional artists is
scheduled for Saturday, Feb.23, from 1
to 6 p.m. in room 177 of Lawrence
Hall on the U of O campus. The panel
is composed of five Portland area artists: Carolyn Cole, mixed media
painter and arts coordinator; Barry
Johnson, sculptor and art technician;
Jim Minden, printmaker, painter and
arts administrator; Laura Ross-Paul,
painter and art educator; and Tad
Savinar, sculptor and exhibition
preparator. Some of the topics to be
covered are: Studio space, art community involvement, dealing with
galleries, preparation of portfolios,
slides, taxes, general business practices and career developm ent.
Audience parti cipation is encouraged .throughout the di scu ss ion.
Everyon e attendin g will rec eive an Artists Resource Pack et. Registration will
be $5 at th e door for the ge neral
public, and $3 .50 for students with
1.0. Coffee will be provided during the
se ssion. Th e discussion is sponsored
by the Oregon Chapter of Arti sts Equity Association, a national organization
of professionals working in the visual
arts.
These events are also supported by
the U of 0, OSU and Portland State
University. For further information,
contact Jim Minden at 1-232-1707, or
Barry Johnson, at l-285-8809.

Working women films
Th e Latin American Film Series will
be presenting two films about women ,
to be shown Saturday, Feb.23, at 2
p.m. at Cinem a 7, and Wednesday,
Feb. 27, at 7:30 p .m . at 177 Lawrence
Hall on the U of O campus.
Acc ording to p romotional materi al,
One Way or Another examin es th e ef-.
fects of "outd ated tradition and
bel iefs, such as individuali sm and rampant se xi sm, " on the peopl e in J
changin g society. The "Double Day"
is an analysis of the condition of working women in Latin America.
Admi ssion is $2 per person. The film
series is spon sored by the U of 0
Rom ance Department and by the
Eugene Committee for a Free Chile.

Disability informational
workshop scheduled
LCC staff and faculty will be given
the opportunity Wednesday, Feb. 27,
to recei ve instruction in how to deal
with the special needs of physically
handi ca pped students.
LCC coun selor Bjo Ashwill, who will
ho st the d isa bil ity i nformationa I
work shop, says she hopes " to help instru ctors rea lize that there is no great
ba rri er to teachin g a handi capped student.
" In stru ctors should fee l at ease to
prac ti se th eir experti se, with out being
uncom fortabl e beca use a stud ent has
a disability," she add s.
The wo rk sho p w ill be held in th e
LCC Boa rd Room from 8:3 0 a.m. to
12:30 p.m . Regis trati o n fo rm s and inquiries shoul d be d irec ted to Bjo
Ashwi ll, Ce nter 221, ext.2239.

Shakespearean play
tickets now available
Ti ckets for th e 1980 season at th e
Oregon Sh akes pearea n Festival in
Ashland are currently on sale.
Pl ay s in c luded in thi s year 's
sch edule includ e Shakes peare' s •As
You Like It and Coriohrnu~, Jean
Anouilh 's Ring Round th e Mo on,
Ph illip Barry' s Th e Philadelphia Story,
John Steinbeck 's Of Mice and Men ,
and Sean O'Casey's Juno and th e
Pa ycock. These productions will be
staged in the indoor Angus Bowm er
Theatre.
At the Black Swan Theatre will be
Seascape by Edward Albee, Sizwe Bansi is Dead by Athol Fugard, John Kani
and Winston Ntshona, and Lone Star
by James McClure.
Shakespeare' s Merr y Wives of Windsor, Richard II, and Love'~ Labour'~
Lost will be performed on the
Elizabethan Stage.
For further information, call the
Festival Box Office at (503)482-4331.

-LCC Libra'ry sale

Recent oil paintings by Frank Okada
will be exhibited at the LCC art gallery
beginning Feb.19 and continuing
through March 7. Okada is a professor
of art at the U of 0. His work has been
displayed in - one-man shows in
Eugene, Portland and Seattle.
Gallery hours are Monday through
Thursday, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The gallery is
located in the Math and Art Building
on the LCC campus .

The LCC Library will hold its biggest
book sale to date Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Feb. 27 through
Feb.29. On the first day, hardbound
books will cost $1, and paperbacks 50
cents; on the second day, hardbound
books will cost 50 cents and paperbacks 25 cents; and on the third day,
hardbound books will cost 25 cents,
and paperbacks 10 cents. The book
sale will be held in the library mezzanine .

Blood pressure clinic

Solid waste to be topic

A free blood pressure clinic is
scheduled for Thursday, Feb.28, at the
Chapter House, 150 E.1 Bth Ave .,
Eugene, from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. Take a
few minutes and have your blood
pressure checked.

Financial Aid focus
The LCC Financial Aid Office, on the
second floor of the Center Building, is
now distributing financial aid applications for the 1980-81 school year.
Students planning to attend college
next fall should pick up an application
for aid as soon as possible. One application form is used to apply for all
grants, loans, and college work-study
funds.
Financial aic;l officers are available to
answer any questions. The office is
open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday
and Tuesday, and from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m. Wednesday through Friday.

The Eugene Public Library is sponsoring a program on solid waste
management on Saturday, Feb.23, at 2
p.m. in the Library Lecture Room.
Speakers will include Ben Masengil ,
program supervisor for Lane County' s
Solid Waste Management Divi sion, ·
and Jerry Galvin, a member of Garbagio's Recycling Service Cooperative.
For more information , conta ct SJnd y •
Carrick at 687-5450.

Play to be presented
Friday, Feb.29, at 7:30 p.m., an excerpt from the play, " Raisin in the
Sun," and dancing and poetry focusing on Black History Month, will be
presented in the LCC Theater Lab
Cultural Show. For more information,
contact Bridgette Jackson of the LCC
Black Student Union, at 342-4501.

ied,
cla,,if
••••••••••••••••••••••
,e y.Io••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
C rI ••••••••••••••••••••••
I

Q

76 Formula Firebird . htl'llt>n t tond1t1o n . Yl'llow. 1/A
R.id 1.il, w ith 111.ig, . ?4b- l .!84 lwtwf:'pn 4 lO .ind 7. M ,tkt' 011,•r.
1963 Plymouth Valiant. Auto. tr,rn, .. po¼t·r , tpprrng, r,,di,il~.
$3 7 ~. C ,11 l45 -b'IO<J .
'5 1 Chevy½ ton body pa,ts. 411 Clw,y .l 4 ton . <'ngr m · p.irts H.indm.,cl ,•, opy ol ,, M,rrtin. ',. 'r ,11ri $18, l44-2 l[)<)

JIM'S HONDA
The Alternative Hondacar Service
:>p<'t 1,1lr11ng in mobile tune-ups. All work 8U.lr,rn t,·t>d.
484- 4556 .

(;r,•.11 orl ,111d
' 72 Buick Sk ylark 7 1.000 mrlt>,. $ I bOO
mrl,•,tgt•. lx< dl,•nl mt•rh,1ul. n,·" tirl',. C.r,11g 41l"i -4808

fo, ,ale
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Stereo Equipment D}na co . 400 ,,,111 1)0\\l'r ,1mplt11l'r L1,1l1
C1, ,1n hq.;h -p<"" 'r S i2 ;
,1cl.ip1t•d to pr<•, .. nt ,y,tt•m
-2h- l lhb
0

Associated Stud ents of LCC hold st'n,llt• mt l'tmg, _l up,
( ,1 11 ,.,1_ 2 l lO 1or 11110.
0

-

to q u it
1

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s;o

or h, ,1 011,·r
0

- --- --

Recycled Stereos : Rt •t l'tvt•r, . turnt,1h l,·,. ,p,•.ikt•r, t.ip, ·
I tRl( J \\.'( )1{1<,',I I( )I' 12 l l \1. ,1
111,1< h,11,•, \ ·"""" pn, ,.,_
',prr111.;l1t•ld Mlln • ',,11 11 b 7-11 I ; 11, . 1111
'79 SCHWINN 10 Spel'd Run ,1110111 I r.inH• \\1th ,,11,11,
d,•r,11IIN gr.iii on, . 1,•ndpr, ligh ts. ,111d 1•,1r,,,_ 1-1 ,. ,8() I
A hand -mad e copy of a MARTIN. I'- \ ,11rt1
,,., .. \,k ':> 18, ( ,111 Hrll l4..\ 2 lll'I

mu , t lw,1r ,1nd

l l \l\ l ' lllt", ..... 11.w 111 r

~lt>l1t'\

lllt•t•l1nl.t h,1-..

--

0

Will pa y ca sh for J large Tee Pee . ( om p lt·t, • w,th lin,•r ( .ill
[),111 72h-ll4b I.

-

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HYDRAULIC JACK: l-, ton . (onl,H I. '->,1111:,m .it I IH'
pl ('d"'·

-

g,ati,
-·--

1(

>RC 11

-

Lah - Shepard - Dane mix. l v, •,r r, olcl. ',p,11,·d 1,•111,rl< - n,•,·d,
1·,1rd ,ind ,111t•, f l(,n_ ( ,111 -IH, !2 !2.

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My one-year old black and whitt• kitten net•d, a good home .
Wt', .inntJI k<'<'P lwr , t·ry Im ,11>1,· .ind pl ,1y1ul l..\2 -71112 .1 11, ,,
,: lll.

hou,inCJ

Roomate wanted: Female w,mted to sh.ire rn,y home. Wood
paneled, two bedroom,. $100 includes utilitie,. Ph.
i:!.J.:2Z.bJ.

d, ,1 111•, \\1t h m,1 1h1 , .,~,11 l ! •1 1,
, u t1li t1t •,. ,\, .1 11,, iil,· M ,ir , h 1-1 . -18-1 1 1-1 - 1 11 ~7'1

Kuo1H&1h• \\Jnkd .

511, p lu,
1\u gu-., tdl.

~. i, , l1 1

K,l\

Attr,1ctive man in mid 20 ' , , rl'd h,11r, hlut· <'V<''. h il . I hU lh,.
look ing to , h.irt· go od trnw, . rnt luclrng ,,,, wrth lt·m,1ll',. l ,di
l.ik,· l-14 2 lll'l.

)C'ff: )ou .in· woncl,•nul!! I Im<· you - lr.it\ .

---- -------,111

vou ,,,111 !

'l our r,1-

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H,1yden: 11,t)'dl' n t,l,111d \\ ,II hf' ,un k \\llh P,11 ·, rnl t, ·n ,Hill
~hr,l .. r
- - --- - - - Help! Need Good Strong Be,mtiful Man to Im ,, Ill<'. \Vrrt,• m, ,
through I lw I ( >Rl 11. -- I onl'i\ Im L<>\C '
---- --· - - -- Brenda: I h ,ng, \\Ill ill' too l\\ 1th you r m,1g, .in cl trn·, l ,1k,· 111t·
Kh11
tor .i rrcl t·.
To Jimmy Carter: 11 .. 11 no

l\t ' 1,011

I go!

- -

MMge, Ed a~d Tim : I'm ¼riling to ,1d11111 you ' r<> righ t: L11rlorn 1,1n-. ,H P ..,upPr •or

11 ·, t ,ill -

Attention: l h,· towPI people h,,w gonP b,H k 11110 h1d1ng ••
, _ _ _ _ __
h ,_•_K_rn_g_
111,,vJ,,, tort•, t•r •· _T_
Erena : I 11 1u,t think 01 tht' trnw, h,•1ort' wht' n
l.iugh. - RU)d
H arl ey: You , .i y you c M

l '.

\Voocl1 l>ukl'

Du you think Wl' drdn ' t 1

u, Pci to
-

Ru:,,1

D,1cl
Ru),1

looking for a nic e Oriental girl tor qur<'I tun ,111d possrbll'
111,im.ig<' l,111 6/l~-9423 .. Fr.ink
Steve Stewart 'I ou rt' going to h,1v<• to ,top ,k11ng tho,,.
l1ndy
,lop ,•, ,o mu< h'

-

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Rocky Smith: f'rt",to tr,h Wh.ill' log, ,rncl Moo,<• ,urprt/l' tor
drnm•r tonight ,11 Hrdy, •· IJ,,I<•
Cind y: I t•n1oy your tm•nd,h1p thorough!~ 'lou kt•t•p nw ,,111<'
ll,Hbtt• l)oll
I hopt•
Frank: rlwri•,

,,n

Ill\ ,,.1lh . I nl•t•d

,1

pnprgy, rrsrs ,111d your 1.ikrng too m,11w 01
nt>w

t l htrgl' - -

Hc.1rl,
in

,1, .i lt•.itun·

111

your

Linda : I would lrkt· to mt•et you . try to hl' ,, lone ,on1Pt1nw ,o
Tony "
'"' t.1n 1,11k. •
Travi s: Pr< k,•d up ,m y girl, .ii th!'
t t•rrwd tm •nd,

<IN

o l.iil'ly 1

••

)1g1wcl . , on-

Cl,rncy: :--.. ,u· 1,111 l,1,1_)<1 l urd,1y Night. .. 'lou lookt•d 1u,1 Irk,•
Rudolph. -- ·~h.,tt<• r<'d .

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Eri( 8 .: Om· look ,, t you . A',l) I Kr-..~W .. . -- Col,•n, •

-· -

Kinky Bl : 'I our, urh b lon d h,m turn, Ill<' o n . '-< ·,•ti t" t,1lk.
-'Y"• IO tilt• l dll'l l'rl,1

Cepeda: I IH',ir you ,rn• 111.rrm •d. Do you tool ,,round w ith
" nglt • I\ om< •n 1 • , ,giwd . U onn.i
D. Linley: 'I our , , ·ry, ul t•. I ,,l,o lw, ,r you ,,r,• ,, , tu d ... S1gn ,•d .
~,l nti \

.J f\\

Mike: ~hym•ss 1, ,1 nohl,• < h,ir.i, lt' rl't1c. I cl likt• to ,p,•,1k ,, t
,oon . .. c;1gglt•..,

\-\l'

Christen : I' ll .ilw,1y, lw thPrt' wh<·n yo u rwed nw .

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To the ones who are in the South End of the Cafeteria:
t OO L 11 ll ~MO l\ l 'sC.!!!!!!!
Pl l
--··--

tPlhPr

Ch.irlotle H .: I l ow .iboul w rrt rng nw
LO\ l'Lill' 1 .. [).,,,.

Kt•nt: )ou r,•.1111 ,H<'., s\\'l'l'lht•.rrt' • M IR

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Orga sm Addilt, : ()urt compl ,1111i og .ibout !wing um,llisl1t>d
( )thn, 01 u, don ' t h,l\<' !host• prohlt'l1l s: , rgnpd pl<',l>Pr not

HAPPY BIRTHDAY KEITH !!!!!

NOTKE : l)u,• to l,1< k 01 1111l'r<''I • nt•xt hrcl,ty, ,\ p,tthy l iuh
ht•t.•n t ,1n<. t•llt>d

--

Kevin: Would likl' to mt>t't you ,ind b ru,h your br,ud . ..
Mysl<"ry ,1nd lntrigut>cl.

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11,d

Jeff: 'l ou n •,tllv ,1rt• ., ,up, •r 1rn•ncl . (
(Jllt'ib.ill p.irt1wr

War is the moral equivalant of an Energy Crisis.
Indian Men : I no longe r liw .it tlw pl,Ke you\ e bet>n c<1ll1ng.
:, TOP t,1ll1ng. You ' rt' bugging lhP people there. -· Dt>h1

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Hal : l)o you think you t oulcl <om<· m ,-r .ind wt• t oulcl ,h,ire .i

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Mark: Th.ink you to r tlw Red Rost'. It w,1, ,wet•!. .. Lovt' B.

Kevin : I would lrke to ,ee you w ith yo u r br,11d. •- Love, St>crt't
•
Ad m,rp r

PROMOTING WAR AS A SOLUTION rs no ,olut1on
,,d dl',tru< t1on ( on,pr,p Ir, l's - 11ght dr,111.

Elaine: 'lour ,ut h .i Lm, •- Cocl ~h .m • your dl',1rl', \\1th 111<'
I rt•d 11111,ton,•.

NEED HONDA 350cc ENGINE . 11 you h,l\t ' ont · 111 good
\\Ork1ng, ond1t 1on . pl , .1,1•, onl,H t M1kt• ,\ rn o lcl . l-1 l -7 4 l I 111
,11 "ork 7 2h -22 Ii

flowe r bud , . ·- Ro,y

Roggy: 'lou ·rl' .i lo,Pr . - Big Gun

------------

If you see Kay, lt •II lwr I lo\t' lwr

,l

W e need a strong military hut - thP cir.lit would lw , osthLt' h 11ght thl' dr,1tt"'_'!_' _ __

Babe: ii \Ou '"'"' ,iny morl' \\oncl, •rtul . I think I cl DIL

...,,l',lk lwl\\t 't·n u-, .

- - - - - - --

; 2h -220-l

I'd rather farm th.in trghl.

Wantl'd: \ \ ,islwr ,ind or I Jr1,•1. Mu,t h,· 111 c:ood \\mk1ng con
d1t1on . hi-lb 8 1/lh ,lllt'r, HI

-

\\ d rt' ,11

PE AC E NOW! PEACE NOW! PEACE NOW! PEACE NOW! No DrJft Regi,tr.ition.

wanled
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'\..tnl \

l111g.

me11age1

Sewin-g Machines . ( ,ill ,rnd .,,k prr< t ·, .ind I\ pt • 01 mod, •I, .
'J'/8-(,I 'I,
H ammered Du lc imer Kit , ~hi. l , nrt y, 1,·
',,111<\ 14! 1022 .

J .J .

" FAMILIES and CONSCIEN C E: Surviving the DrJft " M ,ir< h
2 - .,J p.m. ( l'nlr,11 Prt•,hvtt'rr,111 ( hur, h 14-, Po11t,•r,on C ,11
4114 170 7 tor 11110.
- -~-- - - - - -loggin g fo r Smokers - ·\ , up port group Im , muk, ·1, I\ ho\\ .int
(()l/ll ... l

IS like a Rose: When you o pen up.

Ping: I'm ,o lucky to h.ive you. I' ll ,, lw.iy, bt> your, . •• Love .
D1g11

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Guitar: Fender Teleca~te r. (,oml , ond111on , , ,1st' rn, lud,•d
lOO or iJ.,,t otter. 411..\ 111 10 ikt·t·p c .illing1.

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meelin91

.

.

.

RESUMES -- DISSERTATIONS. Express service . C.ou nwl rng,
Pd1t1ng, ,ind typ ing 01 Re,unw, . D is,t'rl,1t1tJn, ,ind tl'rm p.ipn,.
4115-4<J24.

1978 Su zuki GS 550, 4, \'I. DC >HC ''" ,·IIPnt, ond 1t1on x tr,1,.
$14<Ji or l)(',I '\lln 7 p .m. 72h-.S220.

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ct I

1,1

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BARB, Stay away from me . I'm an .i-hole. Frank

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