,,•

·;
Lane
Community,
·coll ege •••
,'"4qoo E. 30th _Ave ... Eugene, OR 97405·-

Page 2 No\49mber-'20 · Pon

t , 4, 1980 The TORCH

Editorials:«» .Letter§ ,~<» ~ln l~n s

Ch.ild for sale

.}::.it

\ll

·~Yd
~:1-·

"Has he had all his shots?
FOR SALE-- Male,e/Jild,. 21. Good
cond. • Full equip: Low malnt. · asked Fred."You bet," I said. "And
;$50,QOO. Firm. . .
Let.me make_one thing perfect- needless to say, .he's completely
ly ~lear: .1. did ' _ not place that ho·usebroken. • t· suppose you .
q jn •the paper .simply know that •alone occupies the
•ctatsHied a_
because my..·.~·n. ·_tt4ordreq~ put parents' first two years."
"Can y9u imagine . some
me :ori h<>ld. T -wllt admit that
Infant drooling all over
·squawling
, nothiAg:.make{~ .:man feel more
I
rugs, pulling the
Flokati'
our
son·
his
oyei Jh~.:h)~t;';.tb~,r~nen
leaves off our Ficus arid knocking .im ·21f-hQJC,..
puts ll_
, , 8,uff~{ll~JlQt~vengefuJ.person . over our hi-fi?'·r demanded Fred
It Oyw~s' ."'S~pfyi~, a····.matter of of Felicia.
"Speaking of . hi-fjs," 1. said
e~~omJ~~\ --~~d s~~ _no ~eason
u)ave
··:wJt_~ .the _.rponey. yo_
~lyly,
_
cur·:
th1s
advantage·•of'
tal<e.
not. to
re.nt"~~f!l J~ult C~iJ~ sales that • on·orthod·onti~s_· ~.1.9~~. ·,you ·could :
buy a Bang arid orufsen.''
• is.swee))ang the country. •
:' 'Wow_t.-'' $ald.:fted .. '..' And: you
tive
. As I .tpld~-the .first:,prospec
·bliyers to cai"r;-1·.fred :a:rid Feficia. mentioned 'lo·w maintenance' In
Jri~bee·: .- "M,9rd.,r.~d.'s really a your ad.
chase'' rights by ending ·. the
ways to change your methods of
"That'-s· rig~t." r said. "He's
steal at ·only ,$50,000. I've got
University of Oregon School of
and
gratification,
sexual
receiving
fully grown so you won't have to
.m6re ,th,n·t~aqi-r~him.' •.
creation of lying, cheating·,
La'l{s
your
for
places
storage
alternate
a
times
three
shoes
··1 don't f<notr'' · said Felicia buy .him new
stealing "adversary '. system
unwanted opinions.
To the Editor:
. du~o1Jsly. ··Fye·• 'it~~ys sort of year. An.d when it comes to
lawyers: "Burdens of proof"
in
lost
get
things
Since so otten
There is an alarming practice
hOP,t:d, Fred, ~haf we could have a feeding him, believe me, you'd
confuse the search ·tor trut~ with
of
once
list
a
visit
to
including
come
am
I
could
he
translation,
think
.
cb1ld o.t out own.. ·'
growing daily in this country: that
semantic game-handicap con:
used
terms
the
of
definitions
·~···Are you ·out of your skull?" a week. But he won't."
who
busy-bodies
of meddling
fully
cepts; "Rules of evidence" are
was
•'You also said he
Busy-body: an officious or insaid Fred. •Wou read that article
presume upon ttiemselves· to give
assume
"I
inconsistently riddled with excepsald·Fred.
equipped,"
in Parent). cn~azine ·that said
unasked and unwelcome obser- quisitive person -- a meddler.
car,
a
; ··Motions'' technicalities
wardrobe,
tions
a
means
that
intrucres
4,000
who
one
$heWout$25
!<t,
Meddler:
have
_we'd
vations and advjce to their fellow
issue determinations;
block
imperor
unnecessarily
-to raise a' new.iqf~n\t? }he age of and a room ·some place?"
oneself
people
the
man ... in this case,
"Certainly, .,.I said. "And.he's
"Court rules " hinder citizen's
tinently .
18. Heck. Felieia-:- ·"that's ten
who choose to smoke.
~ls~~-.. ha_d . piano, t~n~is , bo~Jipg
. ;:,.,
··Maseratis·: .1 ,
I see a dangerous precedent in _: lmpertin~nt: _undv.ly.conc~r~ed ., use of court~ and 99 per.cent of
e -0Mhinking put out by the in affairs other than one's own. • :~o~tly .·. ca~e : appeals •deaj, ·,with
1he typ_
__ 1.~~~o~s. ,,1uou i9p't
.,.... ,,1 ·,·:·l ·~~-! .. ~'.t, ; '..- , ..-.......
·officious: . offering of 'Mientrcin
challenging '· rules of evidence, ' '
be
II
I
lmportan~.
,~
·last
ttitnk,fhe
Cancer' Society in their
•
,
American
•
·~
;.~ i¥:, ... .-.-.<:....
unwelcome,
is
that
other technicaliti es;
and
advice
or
from
bills
the
all
you
show
And that?ttoesn t include the glad to
• sign up sheet for the Smokeout . .
' ·violations,' ' rather than case
.They ask you to '· get as many unasked for and offensive.
• . cqsfot:a college education," I ad- the body shop." . .
merits!
Militant: combative ; ag''That settles It,'' said Fred.
signatures as you ·can; either
-_ ded helpft1Uy. "Bf1998, wi th th e
Let's prohibit judges from usactive.
gressively
learn
people
to
or
going
quit,
smokers who will
.:'. current .rate _of •inflation, that "No kid of mine is
common--law 'doctrines" to
attack
to
ing
disposed
Aggressive:
friends
Maserati."
smoking
my
in
their
get
drive
will
to
who
another
to
least
, •.; ,should cbme at
code-law mandates and
to
change
disposed
or encroach;
to quit. '' Not only are they (;on~•But, Fred," protested. Felicia.
$10Q;OOO: The ·only reason I can
produce findings of
to
they
order
indifference
with
dominate
doning meddling, they are mak)et yoy have Mordred at such a · "You don't have a Maserati."
. of . law on all
conclusions
&
fact
hap.
Fr~d.
said
rights
have,"
other's
to
will
"I
obligation"
lot
ing it a "moral
hat ki9s were a
' lo~ price is-t_
issues.
Keller
"after
Audre
hands,
his
rubbing
pily
thing
of
sort
this
s.'day:"
once
meddle.
c~eap~n--~f
Demand the 1981 Oregon
I've saved a third of a million
gets .started where Will they draw
---abolish O.R.S.
Legislature
full-grown
a
buying
dollars by
the line?
and this
Nine
Chapter
- son .''
Reich
Maybe we should have a Na- Fourt
hypocritically insane Oregon State
•••••
tional -Meddler's Day, • where
Bar Association Fourth ·Reich·!
everyone could stic~ their nose in
John M.. Reed
the.-Editor:
To
and
.
business
s
else.'
someone
Felicia g·a~e it one last try: "I
of
suspension
year
Bar's
The
lifeto
as
advice
of
sorts
all
give
it,
doing
everybody's
khow
foo.d bad
lawyer Glenn
style; religion, •treatment of Klamath forFalls
she said, "but I've
Fred,
Is
"money
saying
Ramirez
·tt
t d to hear th e Pl er- . spouse . and children, ·and
aIways wane
king" in court and Oregon
• •feet aroun d th e anything else of a strictly perEDITOR: Heidi Swillinger
f
t
tt
my
o
er
pa
Brown
ENlERTAINMEHT EDITOR: Sarah
r o th e Edttor:
Lent saying·.he "had to do
Justice
house an d• • •, ,
sonal nature.
~EWS .FEATURES EDITOR : Kent Gubrud
,
For ttie second time this week I
walked
h~
as
SPORfS EOITOR; 'Oaniel Holden
before"
me
with
1, for one, am tired of smugly
"But that's the beauty of it,STAFE R~RTERS: George Wag,., Mara Math '
out of the house wit'l_out
walked
Couna
at
me
hearing
from
away
holier-than·puritan
,
officious
:
PHOTO EDITOR: Lisa Jones
Felicia," safd Fred. "Mordred
lunch: A fresh
.ASSIST,\NT PHOTO EDITOR: Derek Himeda
brown-bag
my
thou, aggressive and militant cil on Court Procedures public
Yfill be getting m,arrled soon·. So
PHOTOGRAPHER: Ailen' Debold
cubes of fresh
egg,
hard-boiled
abuse
tyrannical
exhibits
meeting
non-smokers making rude and
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jan Brown
we'll be grandparents with none
AO DESIGN: Marie Minger •
and a crisp
•
cheese
cheddar
tradestate
a
QY
•
powers
of
_
regarding
remarks
unwarranted
of the headaches and drudgery of
RECEPTIONIST: Yolanda ~rgl
cost, 49
Total
apple.
Newton
with
drunk
onopoly
association-m
I
as
long
As
habits.
• ' COPYSETT'ER: Chris Abram~
personal
my
yet,
best
And,
.
raising children
•tooRDINATOR: Donna Mitct\ell
•
cents.
.
police-powec
al
don't blow my smoke in your unconstitution
he'll have to pay for thern!
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Jiff Saint
Bofh days I bought and attemp. Telephone ·1-800-452.:7afa for
face, don't blow you_r damn opiPRODUCl't()N : Ruth ~hll~ . l)Jn Esperanza.
that convinced Felicia and
WeH,
GRAPHICS: Pat Forsberg
·to: eat·what is passed off as
ted
Legislative
1980
"July
your
mine!
in
nions
miss
I'll
check.
Fred's·
1 pocketed
CALENOAR; Paula Case
,prepared" food in the
"freshly
the
on
Report
Sunset
OISHU8UTION: Alan CoK '
If I feel the need for:medical in- • Research
Mordred. ~e was a good son in ·
.
cafeteria
LCC
!"
Association
Bar
State
Oregon
my
of
state
the
to
•
t·
• .IOn ~S
forma
Qidput.rne$2 80 f
ys,·e.ven if.he
' ' '
manywa·
·
.
'
•
•
•
or a
The ,TORCH is a stuelent·~na~ newspaper.
·paying .
of
_
rck
s
·
I'm
Oregon
1981
your
Demand
feel
I
someone
to
go
will
1
·
,
heaith·
_
!
.
·getto
gratifying
it's
·on 'hold': But
publisnedonThul'10aY$, SePlemberthroughJune. .
lettuce
brown
includes
thaf
lunch
S.
R.
O.
abolish
Legislature
•
·,s qualified to give it.
:: •
ITl·y,hw~sjmerit. back. . . . .
News'staries il:e compressed , concise reports ,
f
1-\ tt'
• • th.e •r.,,o
t N.me ' S uncons,t'tUt·,ona II'i h"dd
Ch aper
•
•
• ••
om O a
•
I en ···at
Intended to be as fair and balanced as possible .
As long as I don't .ask you to ,.
have the heart to tell
·!'didn't
Somef!Yyappearwith. abytin,toindicalet he
. vague ' ' practice of law'' restri¢~ prepareij s.alaq. • 'm ~ick of payFred and Felicia _about Mordred's
reportet'-responsible.
buy ,my .cigarettes, what business . .tions that violate anti-trust laws ing $1.ZO. of .thattotal for a lone
News.1eatures, btcause. ol the'ir broader scope ,
plans.- Ifs,true he's going to get . of yours is it how mu.ch I smoke
may contain some judgments on -tM--part of the
out to be
t ·t~rns
veal r-o_~~t.Y,'_1._th_a_
the.
under pretext of protecting
•
.
young people
·d·• Lt'ke most
m·arr·,e
.
.
·· byline .
Wfittf. Thlyare l08ntllled With a ··teature
or what it costs me? •
•
.
" Forij!Yfs" •.,.,. ~ys contributed by TORCH
public health safety or 2/3. fne<tbatter:·
.. bl h b't1
tb
It
in these incredibly expensive
·
rea~nd are aimed at broad issues lacing
welfare .' \ · Henkes ·V. Fisher 400
,
•. may no . e·an env,a e a
rnembersofthecommunity .Jhey.shouldbe limiled
McDonalds,, serves more apchoose
1
it,
chose
1
mine,
times, however, he 's already sav~ but it is
.
.•
to Tso.words . .
petizing .food than the present
985 (1911) & 15 USC 15 '
to continue it, and: ·Unless 1 . {US
ing up to buy a full-grown child of
t·[CC
" Letws 10 111a ·Ed1tor" are intenoed as short
'
1 7)
comme9Jaries--. stories appearing in ·Th.e TORCH
management a . .
specifically ask for your views on
his own. r"l
The editor reserves the right to edit for libel or
I urge all who·are as fed up as I
Enact law mandating " Oregon
the subject, please have the coml~~~~um·Gatherum ·· serves as a public an·
with this rip-off to write letam
the
restrict
not
shall
tribunals
own
your
mind
to
courtesy
mon
/
nouncementforum. Activities related to LCC will be
practice of law notwithstanding ters complain ' boycott picket or
business .
gi~~ :r::~dence must be typed and signed by
trary statl!tes, common laws whatever it take~ to stop the robcon
undue
receive
I
time
The next
the writer. Deadlines are the ,Tuesoay prior to
I
bery t.~a~ takes ~l~ce !iY.e da~~ a
.
ru!e~ ."
and
shall
I
,
subject
remarks on the
: ~~~H. ~:it2~;i~:~rc:~~~~:;.d ~~~ -'~
.4~~... ~~Nt~Cij.-.....:.
•:N.e~.~.1~.t~~
~ft!f!J~.
1.0regor:r_.pp
Maxm:11ze
:
pro,bable
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11

1lE.

LE.VERl"'

t

ti

. Tbe
TORCH

Smokers right

h·

LCC

ti

11

,

tL

11

' I

I

I

1

I

I.:1uv rayc v

Board defends election m ai l-o ut
by Sarah Brown
of The TORCH

need for a clarification of the law.
According to Bishoff, there is no
specific law spelling out wh·at
local · governments and - school
districts can do. Still, the attorne~
general cautioned in a 1970 statement that any information sent
must be " factual and complete ,"
which Bishoff interprets to mean
not slanted to sway the outcome ."
Ed. Cooper, chairman of the
LCG Board of Education, and LCC
President Eldon Schafer cite other

Did the LCC Board of Education
overstep the boundaries of public
trust by using taxpayer moni_es to
print and mail out 118,000
political information flyers?
An editorial bv Don Bishoff of
the Eugene Register-Guard that .
ran Nov. 18 claims it did.
Bishoff alleges that the $7 ,000
spent on the mailout during the
two weeks preceeding the elec-

1 1

made a mountain out of a
molehill.
" I don 't think $7,000 is a
molehill, refutes Bishoff, " and I
think there is a serious question
of legality.· '
According to Larry Romine,
director of LCC College/Community relations,. the flyer cost
the college .$2,901.60 to print,
$3,776.00 to mail an·d an aqditionai $430.70 for data processing.
That's a. sum equivalent to half
11

Facts ·about Lane Community Colleg e tax base:

• Reduces uncertain ty for students & taxpayers
Pro\·ides financ:i,d st,diilil\ for p l,111n i n),( : p rns 1:nt le\·~ f or
I 1!ar onl~ .
,\ \·1Jicls 11st: ol st;,ff on hud~r:I rt'\ isions rather t h a n ins t r11c:tio11.
• Lim its Growth
Eslirnalecl tax r.ir, i for next two \'ears al or below this year , lowe
st in 13 years .
Tax i ncrease belo\\' ave r a,IH! of 1,ast 7 ye ar s.
•
• U tilizes slate tax relief
Entirt! lax has1 i eligi hlt! for. 11p tu :in • ; homeown er/ r e nler
t ax rel i ef.
Avoids po_
ssi hi l iry of rnp 1:atlld fdecti on s f or 2 years, co uld save up to $75.U0O.
Co11t. per stu d ent s1!co nd low est· i n st.li e.
• AnlireJ continued ·job training

"Just because someone hasn't
blown the whistle before, doesn't
mean it shouldn't be blown
now,' ' says Bishoff. ' ' 1- tried to
make ilclear in the ediWial that I
believe the board acted in good
faith and on the advice of an attorney.''

Import ed Clothin.1&

Andre a's Desian s

15'Yo OFF

·~kiiii=dS

He emphasizes that his purpose was not to suggest that legal
action be take_
n against the LCC
board .

Cloth Md~~

2#1 l-li\lJllNf

1 wrote it to serve two functions ," he explains . "One , to
keep the board from making
similar mistakes in the future .
Two, to open this issue up to
public discussion. Maybe that
way, more definitive legislation
could be enacted. "

eugme ,Ont9" h97i0,

'

~'b>~

.

community college political
of an LCC instructor' s annual
publications as the precedent for
salary, says Bishoff. And while he
the board 's action , although they
doesn't object to the nature of the
·concede that legislation on tt1e
board's political postcard, he
matter,is " fuzzy , at best.
does object to the source of its
" If the legislature wishes to re- fin.ancing ,
•
wrJte tn~ ·.law so thaf it becomes •. • fri the September election ,
ino're clear ," says Schafer, ·" that
the board asked for private conwould be helpful.
tributions from the public to fund
Basically , Cooper says , the
the mailing of election informaeditor ial was unnecessarily
tion ," says Bishoff. He maintains
harsh .
that type of financing leaves the
Referring to the mailout, he
board free to present only one
adds , " There was nothing in the
side of the issue .
publication that I could interpret
He suggests another option
as being other than informative . It
could have been to give a
was not slanted in the total ·;• qualified opponent equal space to
towards influencing one side of a
vote. "
Cooper says , "I think that the
worst thin€] the board could be
accused of is some carelessness
in wording ," addi'n{J· that, in
essence ; the Register -Guard
11

•~

345-1324

Need a light?
Hove ·a TORCH.

iJ'
:l.

~-,
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11

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11

Skis

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Hours: l Oa.m. to 6 p'. m.
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reg. $4.32 yd.
Solid polyester satin florals
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Corduroy
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Satin Solids
reg. 2.00 yd.
Granny prints
reg. $1 .75-2. 75 yd.
Laces, Trims, Ribbons
Butterlck &Folkwear
Patterns

list reasons for not approving the
proposed measure .

This postcard, mailed to local voters, by the LCC board, led the Register-Guard to question
the appropriatenes~ of using public money to finance "a one-sided political statement."

11

Nov:28,29,30

1

Wt! wouldn ' t he askin),! at a ti m t: li ke th is
if it wernn I i m pflrlanl f, rr th e Collti ,l,!ti. th e
Communi t\ ,ind Y< ll ' Volt! ~ov1m1l,e r .J

tion were not in the interests of all
taxpayers , but were represen tative only of those who favored
the proposed LCC tax base .
And that action , claims Bishoff,
borders on illegality .
• Ed ~H.arn:is , ~-Eu_g~ne ~-tt~rriey
who provided ; the ·regal counsel
for LCC 's postcards , disagrees.
He says that although the area is
" difficult to define,"' the test for
the legality of such a publication
is " that it puts out the facts and
does not urge a yes or a no vote.
Bishoff maintains the postcard
does urge a yes vote , by the
omission of vital tax and budget
information , and by the inclusion
of the last paragragh , which
states , " We wouldn 't be asking
at a time like this if it weren 't important for the College , the Com .munity, and YOU ."
The real issue seems to be the

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Every Sunday

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9:30 't1rc1oslng

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Sexual revolution raises Americans' expectations
by Kent Gubru.d
of The TORCH
Editor's note: This is the second
article in a three part series examining sexual attittudes in
America.
Flooded with messages dealing
with sex, many Americans today
expect a lot more from their sexual encounters, say LCC Human
Sexuality Instructors Fran
Th_omas and 1-tar~Jt~bQrman.
They beliQve ·.', p('opl? have
become overly conce(Oed ·with the
performance . aspeet.~·.. 6t·physical
relationships, and with trying to
meet those expe~,a\ii>n! .
And thts -CQ(icero . b causing
new sexu_aijty -P.{bb{ems.
In hisJx,ol<, Sexu_al BeRavior in
the ·· 1 o i f'.~MOrton) H~nt outlines
some areas wh.ere.-" attention is
,
focused on·· sex ' in ''America:
•Explic1t ··: (1escfjptjons .·.' oF·se~
acts in .'.•popnlar:'\:md respected
.
literature-.
•Society's · increased •acceptance of nudity in movies, television, and magazines.
•More willingness of the public
to discuss sexual preferences and
.problems .
•Reduction of various restrictive sex laws in some states suchas Oregon's elimination of the
sodomy law between two consenting adults.
Because of the attention and
the emphasis oi¾' less _·restrictive
mores, many people .tiave"become
.
less inhibited abou) se~But th~y _als,o efpp,ct .a" !ot .IJl~~e
from their- rse~al entounters,
says Bernie Zilbergeld in his book
Male Sexuality.
Some people wonder what
they' re missing when "the earth
doesn't move, bells don't ring,
trumpets don't blow -- and when
it's all over, they still have to walk
the dog and pay the oills, •• he
says .
I

Americans have a '' very
problems to take grip, and allowThey wonder if some and so big you can barely .get
ocused sense of sexualiorgasm-f
them through the doorway ." The ed old ones to remain .
" gimmick, partner, position or
Hoberman .
says
'
ty,'
inte
inaccura
But it's not only
characters are always ready to
practice" wouldn't bring sex up
to orgasm ,
up
leads
g
Everythin
'·
sexual
causing
is
which
have sex, which usually goes on formation
to their expectations . But unforthings that
the
all
and
O,
big
the
problems today, says instructor
for fantastic lengths of time .
tunately, he feels, their expectaconsidered
are
it
to
up
lead
Hoberman. Valid sexual facts may
These exaggerations of sexual
tions are the source of the pro'
'
ry.
seconda
ability are also perpetuated by so- lead to frustration or dysfunction
blem .
Thomas believes people need to
called dirty jokes, he says: A if an individual doesn't have the
Because sexual knowledge is
more attention to other
pay
woman tells the man she has emotional framework to handle
not inherent and first hand obserof sex, such as touching
aspects
.
correctly
on
b~en dating that she·would never _ the inf~rmati
vation is extremely uncommon,
• For · instance, Alfred Kinsey and being intimate, instead of
marry anyone unless he had
says Zilbergeld, many people rely
at the orgasm as the only
twelve inches. To whit;h he repQfted -in his 1948 study of the looking
upon ·indirect methods to learn
sex, the ultimate sign
for
.
reason
some
that
replies- that· he refuses to cut off . sexual male and female
about sex · -- books 1 movies,
and fulftllment.
on
satisfacti
of
multiple
of
capabl~
were
~omen
four inches, even tor her.
magazines, e,c.
someone is nonbecause
"Just
feel
men
many
Because
.
orga~m~
_
tell
or
·
While people donTlisten
rces of information
These · sou_
an they
• me_
doesn't
e.. • r~spons1ble for the o~tcom~ of a orgasmic
these jokes to learn anything , th_
may, however, present sexual
. says .
she
''
sex,
enjoy
•
,-sorne
don't
says_
he
underlying distorted messages sexual ·encounter,
models ·who are exaggerated in
-.
often "get through to us whether . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - physique and sexual ability. Such
we realize it or not'' because of
unreal.istic models, says sexuality
instructpr Thomas, can cause • "our basic insecurity about sex
__;;:,,:__· .. .,
and our . sensitivity to anything
dissatisfaction or dysfunction
sexual."
(inability to perform or enjoy sex)
, , _ 1. -itJ-~
~ --.
Thomas believes this holds true _ .\ ::-..
for people who . expec1 ~o .
. _•
~
:;;,::..,-,
..
_
·.
·:
;.
-~
~·,
.
•
•
••
~
S
,
_-.
. . ·~:
reproduc_e· t~es~ .. ~exu~I f~ats.. • _ for oth~r :·_sex_ual model~ -- i,y~/~ • .. .
~; •., .
!
'
"
"'
:~
~
'1
·--~·(~~,.">
_
,
_
,
_
.
..
rw
~-~
·•.
-<-·
~s~nly aw~r,e.~~f th~JPJ".- : ~
!1_e\!e ;-'... not nee.~_
. An~-~mant ~opl~.•.,qq ._be_
:
•
•
, t,
if .. - ,, ,
-" . _.,;. •. :--,.ff
. _: , <.·' , .. ,._.- .:: ~ 1:...
i-·~· .,
thes'e mo9els of sex~al_1ty .. ar~ , .t~ye~c.~. on us J
) l ( { ~· • • -"~· •.
:::~·:;._:
:.:.,.,:.\
y
•
..
.
"(:}-.
::
1S.':~i
d1stort1C>1
sexv~t
·
the
Be~1pe~·
.
/
••
•
.
.
realistic.. • .
Jl (
• ••
perpetuated by the media · and'"'
Here is an excerpt from Harold
many
also
are
there
or,
sex-hum
Robbins's .. The Betsy, which
"self-styled experts" offering indemonstrates this e>_<aggerated
accurate advice, she says .
sexuality .
For example , David Reu0en
Robbins is one of the best· sellM.D. - says in " Every_thing You •.~
ing fiction writers alive today. His
-------__,.
'-------------Graphic from " Sex and Personality" by H. J. Eysenck
in many
found res,
are drugsto
works
Always· Wanted To Know . About
and
libraries,
Sex,· ' (one of his many sex
. bookstores.
Those (enjoyment and orgasm)
books) that . Coca-Cola is ' 'the
become worried if they cannot
best douche available .'' It is ef- reproduce these laboratory
are two different things and that's
She began to climax almost
claims,
he
,
control
birth
fective
something people don't apbefore, he was fully inside her.
results in their partners.
drink
ed
carbonat
the
preciate . ••
because
sexual
one
with
them,
stop
And this concern
Then.she couldn't
into
squirted
if
sperm
the
all
kills
Haberman feels this emphasis
as
other
ere
the
after
everywh
nearly
rapidly
is
nce
coming
performa
the vagina under pressure .
on-the orgasm and sexual perforhe slammed ,into her with the
in .this culture . .
OP.I~ ~1 to
force aUhe giantJbody press she- • . But-douching- is-not.an effecHve
·."_J~st_. pick u8 :. :~9Y: ~P~Y1 ._pf,::. ,CT]aoc.e_.,rJN¥ 1 ~alts~1 ; ~~
says
;
l
coqtrol.,.·•
·emotiona
~irth
t>r
qf:...
ph'y~r<!al
-met.'1~d;
,.-.
devdfqp
factory.
or
is
~
.
i(1
Playboy,
~o,/(iQg1
or
~eerr
Cosmopolitian,
1 h~cJ.
Thomas, and Coca-Cola does not
.Somehow she became confused,
Penthouse,'· says Hoberman . problems -- and lessen their enkill sperm.
the man and the machine they
" There 's all sorts of information Joyment of sex .
s
American
while
,
ently
The skill that would help the
Consequ
on how to be a great lover. And
were one and the same and the
by
reduced
people get more out of their
been
most
have
s
read
they
inhibition
she
because
p_~ople expect
strength was something else
says Haberman, "has
lives,
insex
the
be
n,
should
revolutio
they
sexual
articles
the
these
• had never known before.
do with techniques or
to
nothing
crease of inaccurate sexual weat lovers _and expect to be
In many movies, books, etc.
or reading books,''
logy
methodo
as
' 'truths'' from sources such
Ju~9ed_ by !heir partners .
which deal with sex, men only
learning to improve
involves
but
or
has
s"
whether
on
"expert
the
Judged
Be1~g
the media or
have three sizes of penises says
-- communication
hips
relations
a
makes
and
lover
myths
good
a
sexual
re
you
new
d
e
not
enabl.
Zilbergeld -- ''large, gigantic,
not to comlearning
and
-skills
.
lot, ?f people nervous.
or othersexually
yourself,
pare
often
this
U~fortunately, what
.
person
another
against
wise,
~all
we
what
does 1s. pr~duce
dysfunction -- people don't en Joy
In the book The New Sexual
sex, males don't get erections,
Revolution , • Lester Kirkendall •
females don 't lubricate, both
zes this idea.
summari
'·'
sex~s don 't have orgasms.
prime purpose of educa''The
while
time,
At the same
human sexuality is to
for
tion
the
of
part
certainly
are
orgasms
sexual experience, Haberman enable people to relate more probelieves many people's solitary foundly, intimately, a·nd lovinggoal in having sex is to have ly' ' -- not to teach performance
tips.
orgasms -- the ·more the better .

HE ARMY OFFER

Q: Whi ch Airline ·offers the lowe st fares?

A: C~Jl University Travel

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The TOftCH Novem~r 2Q D • - f 1 •

Drop your guard
for a minute.
Even though you're
in a two-year college
right now, there.are
many aspects of the
Anny you might find very attractive.
Maybe even irresistible.
See for yourself.

,r 1NO ,...5

Afewyearsirithe • . ••
Anny can help you get not only the
money for tuitioo,
but also the maturity
•to use it wmely.
• •
It's true. If you join the Anny •
•The Army has a program in . .-~ -..
with two years of college, you can
which money you save for college .
start two pay grades higher. Instead
is matched two-for-one by the
of being an E-1 with an empty sleeve, governmerit.-Then, if you qqalify,
IIITC IIHUIIIIIPI
you can come in as E-3 with stripes. , generous bonuses are added to that.
_H you're thinking of eventually
It means about $60_more a month .
-So 2 years ·of service can get
,,: going t.o-irfour-year college;·it's-' not
•.iri- your paycheck~ And a·lottnote o~ • you up m, ·S?,"400 ·for college.;'3 y ~ -... •(
too early to start thinking about an
portunity in the long run. Since you'll up to $12,100, and 4 years up to
ROTC scholarship.
be literally wearing your education
$14,100. In addition, bonuses up to
There -are 2-year ·a nd even I-year on your sleeve, your talents won't.go
$3,000 are ·available for certain-4ROTC scholarships available.
unnoticed by your superiors. •.
year enlistments in selected skills.
They cover tuition, books, and
And starting out right can really
Add in all the experien<;e and
lab fees. Plus $100 a month living
h~lp you make the most of the Army. . maturity you- can get, and you can
allowance. Naturally, they're very
1• •
_
see now the Army can send you back
competitive. Because besides helping
to college a richer person in more
•
you towards your bachelor's degree,
RII r11111•
_
ways than one. ·
.. . .
an ROTC scholarship helps you
Yo_u-can get a $1~500 bonus just
We hope these Army op~r- -. • -•.,,_.
_towards the_gold bars of an Anny
_for enli~ting in some Arn;iy Reserve
turtities have intrigued you as well •., -·
Officer. It's -worth looking into. .
units., Or :up to $2,000 in educational as surprised you.
_
ben~fits.
.
.. : ,,
Because there is indeed a lot
'You also get paid for'your I ••
·, the Army can·offer a brig}:it J)erson
With two years of college under
·
Resecve
duty.
It
comes
out_
to
about
like you~
•
your belt, you can get prderential
$1,000
a
year
for
16
hours
a
month
.
•
For
more
information,
send the
consideration for Warrant Officer
and two weeks annual training.
.coupc;m_-below.
F_light-Training.
• And there's~ special
J • •
•
··, • • •
If you pass all the tests and
program that lets you fit
.--------••
. qualify, you'll go through 40 weeks
your
Army
Reserve
active
of rigorous and valuable training.
duty around your school.
ships, D (2WO) Warrant Officer Flight Training,
You'll earn the distinctive bars of
d:.1e.
D (2ST) Stripes ·to
(2SS) Army Reserve •
Bonuses, D (2PC) Army Educational Benefits.
a warrant officer and the silver Wlllgs Sche w
It's something to conof an Anny aviator. You'll ];lave at
sider. Because even if you •
NAME
•
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•
• ••• •
least 175 h9urs of flight instruction,·
went to a two-year college
40 hours with a flight simulator, 4
because it was less cicpenADDRESS
' .• •
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weeks night qualification, and
sive than a four~year col__;_.-~-----==----==-----enough classroom work in aerody·lege,
you
know
by
now
that
cm .
STATE
m
namics, meteorology arid aerial
it still isn't cheap.
--___,....,=~~--------1
navigation to last a lifetime.
SCHOOL A~DING
The result is a rewarding,
AIIIAIICE
DATE OF BIRTH
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Send to: BRIGHT OPPORTIJNITIES, P.O. BOX 1776
as an Anny helicopter pilot.
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•

.J'J!'UWORK

-. nas·&A CIIOPM:ii •

v,,

I lliiiEI FROIITIE l'IIRT

What you've learned in college
• has already earned you a promotion
in the Army~

C(l

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I THIS ISTHE
MT. VERNON, N.Y._10550

1I

If you're thinking you
ARIIIIV
might even go furth~r with ,
•
__
•
I
. _y o~ ~~llege education, the
Note: To insure receipt of infOffllJtion requested, all blanks must be c o m ~
Aririy can help there, too. - - - - - - - - - . -

:,,Page 6 November 20 ·. Dua L

Second Nat
Uaed.Bike a • _
• buy-sell-trade .

1, 1980 The TORCH

KLCC raises $20 003 Hon:e Ee means more
· • .

. ,

by Yolanda Sergi
of The TORCH

Speci_a lizing in .-

ecycled bicycles.
used wheels
& parts

1

' ·• - · than to cook and sew
to the station

who contribute
by Dale Mccan
receive a monthly program guide
for The TORCH
and "the best radio around," she
After seyen .. days, two hours
adds:
•
"At a time like this , (of recesand twenty m'inutes, the
According to Ing, the station ,. ·sion and high unemployment),
Radiothon was over and KLCC . which . airs 19 hours a day, . people have mor~ concern for the
was $20,003 ahead of the·game.
·receives · funding from various · • quality of life,,·,. ~ays Frances
" ... high energy on ·both erids
sources : 40 percent from Lane
Clark, LCC Home Econpmics in·
of the line," is how Development
Community College,' 25 percent structor. "They feel more in conDirector G'ina Ing :describes ,the
from the Corporation for Public trol if they can do ·things for
ratest of the station's tund-_raising
Broadcasting, 25 percent from
themselves such as cooking
efforts.
listeners and 1O percent from
nutritional meals, sewing ·their
With a target of $20,000 -and a area busihesses .
~own ·clothes ar,d providing more
crew of about ·75 volunteers sh,ir•
A 'recent ·grant,. secured by Ing
structered care for fheir
ing the. job . of . taking ph_one-in • • from the National Telecom- children."
_•
·pledges , the .' ' News ...and gif that
munications and Information AdThough many people ~ee home
jazz" radio station ·began its
ministration , . provides · matching
economics as cooking and sewsemi-ann.ual pitch for . listener
funds of. $3 for. each $1 donateQ _, ing, ·those aspect~ • are not the
donations Monday, Nov. 10.
by a iistener.
•
•
.main focus .
'
'' We've reached th_e half·'vYay
ma_rk," stated Ne"!'s,Dlr,e'ctor Iris
'Dudman on Friday.· afternoon ..
That. put the total ahead of where '
.
it was ·at the same point during
stinks."
. - by Paula Case
the ·May.Radiothon, s_h~-added .
. The American Cancer Society
of The TORCH
Volunteer Kathy Jones says
plans
to follow up on the Smoke
some local organizations • and
This Thursday, November 2.0,
Out'
I
with quit-smoking clinics·.
.businesses donate ·•' premiums' ·
will 'mark the fourth anniversary l'hese sessions are scheduled to
as encouragement for listeners to
of the_American -Cancer Society's begin Tuesday, December 2. The
pledge funds . Jogging shorts , •
'' Great American Smoke Out''.
classes will be held from 7 p.m. theater Hckets, ~tchings, dinVolunteers·
for
the
·
Cancer
8:30
p.m. at 200 N: Monroe St.
ners, ten pounds of granola and
Society will be traveling to local in Eugene .
tickets to a wine-tasting were
colleges, high-schools and junior
York says that the cancer
among premiums offered. Usualhighs to promote the ' Smof{e society's theory is 'If someone
ly, the pledge required is equal to
Out'··. From 11 :30 a.m. - 1:30 can quit for 24 hours they can
the va~ue of th~ premium, Jones
p.m. there · will be a booth in the quit a day at a time for the rest of
says.
LCC cafeteria to ecou rage • their lives" .
The largest pledge received is
smokBrs to kick the habit . Also on
The 'Smoke Out' will start at
for $100, while the average
hand will be a skunk advertising 12 a.m., November 20 and end at
pledg·e was $20, says Ing. People
the society's theme -- "smoking 12 a.m., November 21 .

Put upyo-µ r smokes

fe=-'J.p;.jP:J P:.-fe:;;;;rl'!

~f~M ~---

"For intense;· unusual theatrical experiencea, nothing else in town compares ~ith the Midnight Mafia ." Willamette Valley Observer

NO_
O_N

By T•"•nce McNally
Nov. 7, 8, 14, 15, 21, 22 Midnight ·
Nov. 19-22 9 P.M.
2.~Jo, all performancH

Oregon Repertory Theatre
99 W, .10 Ave., Eugene

CALL ·485-1946

•.

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··focus on Careers,'' a home
economics journal, states that
home economics draws from
many disciplines •· sociology,
psychology,
business,
economics, chemistry, art,-· and
combines the knowledge gained
from these disciplines into a practical form that is applicable to
everyday life. For example,
several energy-saving tips are
discussed in classes of decision
making, .cooking. and interior
decorating.

The journal ·says that home
economics is based on family life
and the relationships,, within. It
deals with the rares of ihdi\Jiduals
in the family ; management of personal and family resources in providing food, clothing , shelter and
emotional support for each indiv id uaI; and the interrelationship in individuals,
families and communities .
Several c;lasses covering family
life are offered by the LCC Home
Economics Department. They include: Adolescent-Parent Relationships,
Contemporary
American Family , Partner Relationships , and Single Parent Experience .
For more information on these
classes , a course outline is
available through the Home
Economics Department in the
Health Building, Room 107.

t

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'f'

. Neil Simon 's

SEEMSIJKEODks

COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A RAY STARK Production CHEVY CHASE GOLDIE HAWN CHARLES GRODIN
IN "NEIL SIMON'S SEEMS LIKE OLD TIMES" A JAY SANDRICH FILM ROBERT GUILLAUME
Music by MARVIN.· HAMLISCH Executive ProducerROGER M. ROTHSTEIN Production Designed by GENE CALLAHAN
PG PUOOAUUIDAJICESUGGEST£D~ Director of- Photography DAVID M. _WALSH Written by NEIL SIMON r,omRASTAR
1011EtUTEIIIAl1UYUT1f1u1TMLEFOIC11ILIIIH Produced by_RAY STARK Directed by JAY SANDRICH
c•-COL-PCTUl'QN DUlr•u~

A

'' : ,. 'I

•-

The TORCH November 20 - Bscsmbu 1, 19.Bff Page 7. •

I

·oemonstrClt9.rs ·protestMoral Maiority
by Mara Math
of The TO'RCH
If you are pro-ERA, along with
58 percent of the other Americans
interviewed recently by the Gallup
Poll, or if you believe that abortion
should be legal under certain (53
percent) to all (25 percent) circumstances, you may be puzzled
to learn that you have been labeled a member of the "I mmoral
Minority. ''
The Moral Majority was founded •in August of 1979 by TV
evangelist Jerry Falwell, whose
0lct Time Gospel Hour, broadcast
lrom his Sunday services, is carried on 304 stations in the U.S .
and on 69 abroad , ' ' 100 stations
more than Lawrence We_lk,"
Falwell says . .
Falwell's show reaches an
estimated 18 •million viewers
weekly , a considerable congregation. The Moral Majority claims to
have registered over 3 million
new voters , many of them in
churches. It is these voters who
helped defeat such well-known
liberals as George McGovern ,
Birch Bayn and Frank Church in
the last election. These voters
also helped elect Ronald Reagan.
·'I know you cannot endorse
me, " Reagan told Falwell on one
show, '' But I want you to know
that I endorse you. ''
The Moral Majority has
400,000 national members including 72;000 -ministers. In· Its
first year , it garnered over $1. 5
million in contributions, and this
has reportedly risen· to $1 million
per week now.
The Moral Majority, now a
registered 1obbyist group, is
responsible for the introduction of
the Family Protection Act in Con~
gress last May. Some of the areas
this bin covers are welfare, including an amendment to disqualify college students from food
stamp programs; education, including a stipulation to withhold
federal - funds for •'textbooks
which tend to deny the role differences between the sexes;' '
and domestic relations, including
a requirement for V.D. , .abortion
and birth-control clinics to notify
parents before treating minors;
and an anti-gay rights section .
'' Amer-icans have been
powerless to stop the pornography, homosexuality and
godless humanism which is corrupting our families, our schools
and our communities, '' reads one
of- the Medford-based Moral Majority's .statements.
While the lobbying group met in
Springfield Tuesday evening to
discuss strategy for promoting its
views in Lane County and for
" sweeping " the state of Oregon,
C.U.F.F. (Coalition United For
Freedom) held a counter-rally on
the Eugene Mall.
Several speakers pointed out
that the Moral ·Majority's interpretation of Christianity is not the
only possible one. "It's not our
mighty weapons that make this
country strong ," said Unitarian
Reverend Pete Pet~rson . "It· s
our founding principles of individual freed om , justice . and
compassion .' '
Glen Gibbons of the Citizen's
Party emphasized, " We are· ·not
-here in an anti-Christian position .

I was raised in an evangelical
church, and .I know that the Moral
Majority's program is not derived
from the church -- it's derived
from hatred and fear . ' '
'' A lot of you. Christian·s must
be feeling betrayed by the Moral
Majority 's perversion of Christian
ideals, '' began University
Veteran Dave Isenberg.
•'Wherever one sees religion mixing with militarism, we get

Service is challenging the taxexempt status of private Christian
schools on the basis of racial exclusion . In a New York Times interview, Falwell _strategist Paul
Weyrich responded to the charge
that the Moral Majority is '' a lilywhite club." ''I'm not going to
kid you that we have minorities
coming out of our ears," Weyrich
said. ''This is not a minority
movement. '-'

The Moral Majority is
Ellen Bevington, local tr~nspor ..
tation planner and -gay rights ac- unabashedly pro~tapitalist, and .
tivist, spoke to the concern with pro-corporate business.' Falwell's
freedom of speech . I see a show raises $1 million a week ,
growing danger in wrapping all and gives money to the Moral Mapolitical issues in a cloak _of jority; the Moral Majority lends
morality. The Moral Majority is money, undeclared, to the show .
making fl a sin 'to disagree! A Falwell says, ·-Materlai wealth is
strength of our community should God's ·way of blessing people ~ho
be to see our differences as ·ad- put Him first;','
vantages rather •than disadvan' 'I 'm here to speak to yo0: as a
tages . The Moral Majority offers godless homosexua~ '.' said Carol
simple sol.utions to complex pro- Queen , the . rany'. s •concluding
blems . Although I feel that their speaker, "and\.1_ don 't • know
doctrines are harmful to teach to which I'm proudest of. T-hose of
children, I support their right to us living In the .belly of'the beast
freedom of religion.
have done a fot-0fwork in the past
_'' I personally ,'' said Bev- ten years, contrary tfr the opi ington, • am working very hard to
nions of all the commentators
accept the Moral Majority, tb be talking about the Me Decade. A
tolerant of their provincialism . I
great danger for us is losing our
support their right to be -- but
sense of how interconn~cted our
they begrudge me the very air l
struggles are.
•
breathe as a gay person. ''
·'The·thing we must agree on is
The. Moral Majority's economic that we have a common enemy -stance was severely criticized by because the Moral Majority k~ow
several speakers. "The Moral
who the enemy is: us! Anti-nuke
Majority is nothing but a activists, lesbians and gay men ,
cheerleading squad for the four · pro-choice people and unionists .
greatest terrorists: the US
.. They are united against us .
government, the Ku Klux Kran,
They agree that at the very l~st
the police department and the
we must be shut up, and the next
armed forces,'' asserted Collegen
generation wHI not have th~ opp- /
Gragen of the African People 's tions we hav,e worke<t'so hard for. -'
Solidarity Committee. ··Profits The right wing is prepared to ~se /
abroad are being cut. by armed
every ugly trick in the book . t9
resistance, so big business has to
divide us ._ We h~ve .. 1~ hahig
turn to home for those profits,
together now.·· ~Queen surnm,ed
• cutting food stamps, unemployup. " or they will hang us
ment and abortion' funding ."
separately.''
Women
Aga·inst
War
C.U.F .F. is only one week old ,
_-.•:·'. spokesperson Denise Scaffidi
but has strong -·prani• for :the
also referred to the Moral Ma1·ori- _future · to form an even broader
Photo by Michelle ·L, Walker
ty's ties to big business, saying,
and larger coaltion. The organizaAfriendly admonition to the "Moral Majority."
''The next slep of big business is
tional meeting for this new coaligenocidal and religious wars, as
tion will be held Thursday. Nov
All rally speakers were con- to implement a new war, to conin the Crusades and the lnquisicerned with the possible curtail- vince us th at we are in danger·· 20 at Harris Hall at 7:30 p.m.
•
because their profits are in
·uon." ·("The Moral Majortiy
ment of freedom of speech that danger. Sacrifices will be asked, • (8th and Oak Streets)
·'I think the Moral Ma;ority is
would _make Jesus throw up,"
seems probable if the Moral Ma.
f . . h
d.
commented one demonstrator.)
jority is successful. And the sacr11ices O civ 11 ng ts an m our
dangerous,''. onf •demonstrator
''What do the Ku Klux Klan, the l~ Moral Majority does seem to be economic standard of living. Big
said, explaining her presence at
headed for success. The Heritage business has a new consumer the rally. ''I'm astonished at how
American Nazi Party, and the
Foundation, a right-wing think· item which will -not give you a well-organized and· how wellMoral Majority have in ··comtank, recently ,advised .Roanld cleaner toilet bowl or whiter teeth.
financed they are . . They' re ·a
mo n?, , Isenberg
s k ed ., Reagan directly along Moral Ma- Millions of dollars are set aside to
threat to people •.- and even to the
(''Everyt~ing!''.tt)e c)ro~Tdhof 4_oo,, , ~· jority lines, .recommending that advertise this new itefll: the Moral
liveUhood of people -- :'who they
shouted m _un_1son , . ___ !!Y -t _:-, < . ,·
• ..
- 1
·Majority.''
don't like. People like me."
preach patriotism_. free._':~l~:-~:-'-}:~,:. ;t~~ food sta~p~, we are, . } ..•.
prise, private property1 ·ar1d.'.'r~oilitfl _:,.edu_~t10~ f~n~~. eliminate Egval _:-_~: :~_; •....
··.:..
... ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~ ~ " '
separation."
•
_· :,· -... >-OPP0,r.tunity hm~gs,_ deploy-_Jhe
...
The charge of radsm is not. new
~eutro_n bomb, mcr~~se military
to ,the Moral Majority, which is
spending -- and reactivate the In- ·
opposed to sanctions · against
quisitors of the McCarth~ Era, the
apartheid countries such as . House Un-American Activities
Rhodesia. The Internal Revenue
Committee.
11

11

•
1

A&!Ir,, LEGAL &EQVICE&
Free legal services
for registered·LCC students

µz

-

.,_..Jl.S!C4

20 -: t • •
8.. November
Pa~
~i ·,,:-. ,,., .... ~.
•-; ~-... ..
·" \
'

1, 1980 The T~··

N

ARO UND 1l •

ra-ur$day

Valley River Twin Cinema
"It's My Tum " .and " The Electric
Horseman " · 6:15 and 8:30,p.m.
" La Cage Aux Folles" 6:15 and 8:00
•
p.m.

Movies • .• •.

Cinema 7 .. '.
Atrillm' Building _ ,
·•t'Age~o·or··: 1:~·p.ir).
1
"f fet-fake.. ; 9:30 p:m: ·-;- • •
• l

, • ·••~!,,., .~

.,

.
Bijoµ .
492 E.•13th Ave .
'· Meeting With Remarkable Men' . •. 7 and
9:30,p,m.

•1

NatiofQI _ . :,-f•··, . -.~.
969 Y{,ttamette st: ,- £. • . . .
•
· • c," .'.·--'-r. •:·~·
" Divine uadnes
''",..
.
•
<~,.
7:30. and'9:3<t.P..m.
,.,, .
..
"~

•'

.. .

McDonald
1010 Willamette:~
"Stunt' Man' ~ ·-'
·7 aJld ·g:~ . P~i..

Cinema World
;, Ordinary ·People_'_' 7 and 9:35 p.m.
"Fade To Black" •7:40 and ~:50 p.m.
" The Emp\re Strikes ~cf ·. 7 and_9:30
•
p.m.
" Gloria" • :7:05 and 9:35 p;m.

•.

"f

.. ! •

,,, . :
_. _
. .... . .,~

Music

.',::· ,;·: •. :·· ·
FJ~ Ms·.~
630 Main '${- . • t ;,, \ _.•.~ ,

BJ Kelly's
1475 franklin Blvd.
.. Celebrate" •· rock n• roll
8:30_p:m·. ·_2-)1 .m.

):~itn. '

'·'The;~~~~~>
"The·Exorcist.. ·•. ~:39 _p.m.

•
•
..
Cm,q,a World
··orqi~ry Peopfe'' • 7 and 9:35·p.m.
"Fade'.lff_Blatl<' :..~:7:40 an<f9:50 p.m .
" The Empire $\Qkn..a.k:~'·~"7.--and 9: 30
p.m. •• :_·,. •· ... ~. .
"G1oriah••~

,?:~ p.~:

Valley River Twin Cinema
"It's My Turn" and ,'.The Electric
Horseman " • 6: 15 and.8; 15 p.m .
" la ·Cage ~ -f:olles•• ' • 6; 15 and 8:00
,'·., •
p.m.
Bijou

492 E. 13th Ave. ·

.. Meeting With Remarkable Men' •
7 and 9~30 p.m.

The~tre

Oregon Repertory Theatre
99 W. 10th St.
" Noon" •·comedy ·
9 p.m. • $2.50 Admission

The Place

Treeh'lU~ .1
1769 FrariJ<lin, Blvd .
Jeff Levy piano
9 p.m. 7 midnight .
Tavern OI\. the Green
1375 Irving Rd .
" The D'Coy( '
9 p.m. • 1 a.n'l.
University of Oregon
Bean Con~rt Hall
hoir
90 voice ·contemporary c_
8 p.m. • free of c~ar~e.·
University of Oregon J •
••Musical Smorgasbord ··
Room 198 ••. 12:30 p.m ...

Theatre
OJegon· Repertory Theatre
.
99 W. 10th St'. '
" Noon "
9 p.m. $2.50·
Lane Commu!lity College
''The Man Who ~me to Dinner "
8 p.m·. - $3 admission '

.:Frl~ay

Movies

Cinema 7
Atrium Building
" The Apple War" • 7:30 p.m.
" The Last Wave " - 9:30 p.m.
National
969 Willamette St.
" Divine Madness"
7:30 and 9:30 p.m
Mayflower
788 E. 11th.
'T~ Elephant Man'·
7 and 9:30 p.m.

McDonald
1010 Willamette St..
' "Stunt Man"
7 and 9:30 p.m.
• Fine Arts Theatre ,
630 Main St, Springfield
'·'Th_e·•Shfntn_g.'._' : •1;30 _p..~. ·
·: The Exorcist' 1 - 9;-30_P.:,-.

The Place
160 S. Park St.
"Greg Tripp and the Hotz "
.
•
9 p.m. - 2 a.m.

I

BJ Ke"y's
1475 Frar\klin Blvo.
"Cektbrett" •••rock ·n· rptl
9·:30 p.m'. : 2a.m.

9:30 p..m . .' 1:30 a.m.

,
Treehouse
1769 Franklin Blvd.
Buddy Ungson • piano

. Tavern on the Green
1375 Irving Rd.
"The Lightning Brothers"
9 p.m. • 1 a.m.

Music

~fnt~ •""'fne' M'oa-.·,,~' ••

Black Forest
2657 Willamette
"Three Point Landing " •• ·rock
9:30 p.m . . 1:30 a.m.

,:- •••••

Sheldon's. little.Theatre
2455 Willakenzi.e Rd.
"The Crying · Princess and the Golaen
Goose··
7:30 p.m. • $2 Admission

Satur~ay,

Movies

Cinema 7
Atrium Building
" The Apple War" • 7:30 p.m.
"The Last Wave " • 9:30 p.m.
Mayflower
788 E. 11th.
••The ·Elephant Man '·
7:30 and 9:45 p.m.
National
969 Willamette St .
" Divine Madness ..
6,8 and 10 p.m.
McDonald
1O1OWillamette St .
" Stunt Man "
7 and 9:30 p.m.
Fine Arts Theatre
630 Main St.
" The Shining " • 7:30 p.m.
" The Exorcist " • 9:30 p.m.

Cinema World
"Ordinary People" • 7 and 9:35 p.m.
" Fade. To Black " - 7:40 and 9:50 p.m.
" Ti'le Empire Strikes ~ck " - 7 and 9:30
p'. m.
" Gloria" • 7:05 and _9:~5 p.m .

BJ

Kelly's
1475 Franklin Blvd .
" Celebrate" •• rock n' roll
8:30 ·p.m . • 2 a.m.
Black· Forest
2657 Willamette
." Three Point Landing " -· rock
9:30 p.m. • 1:30 a.m.

Bijou
492 E. 13th Ave
•:..Meeting With Remarkable Men '·
7 and 9:30 p.m.

Theatre

Su~y

,t

Mov~.

Cinema 7
Artium Building
"The Apple War" • 2 p.m.
"The Last Wave" • 4 p.m.

National
··Divine Madness ' ·
1:30. 3:30. 5:30 . 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
Fine Arts Theatre
630 Main ·St. , Springfield
" The Shining·· • 7:30 p.m.
"The Exorcist " • 9:30 p.m.
Cinema World
" Ordinary People " • ? and 9:35. p.m.
" Fade To Black " • 7:40 and 9:50 p.m.
" The Empire ·strikes Back " • 7 and 9:30
p.m.
·'Gloria'· • 7:05 and 9:35 p.m.
Valley River Twin Cinema
" It's My Turn" and " The Electric
Horseman" • 6:15 and 8:30 p.m .
" La Cage Aux Folles " - 6:15 and 8:00
p.m.
Bijou
492 E 13th Ave .
" Randora 's Box " • 7 p.m.
"The Three Penny Opera " • 9 p.m.

Music

Valley River Twin Cinema
"It's My Turn" - and " The Electric
Horseman" • 6: 15 and 8:30 p.m.
" la Cage AU)( Folles " • 6:15 and 8:00
p.m.

Treehouse Restaurant
David Case •· classical guitar
Pam Birrell •• flute .
10 a.m. • 1 p.m .

Bijou
49~ E. 13th Ave.
"Meeting with Remarkable Men " • 7 and
•
9:30 p.m.. ,
··End of August at the Hotel Ozone· · • 7
p.m.
$2.50 adults

Movies •

Monday
Cinema 7
Atrium Building
"The Apple War" • 7:30 p.m.
"The Last Wave·' • 9:30 p.m.
Mayflower
'' Jh~ ·El~ph;mt Man" •
. 7:30 and 9:45 p.m.

a.m .

Duffy 's
801 E. 13th Ave.
"Hot Wax"
9 p.m. - 1 a.m.

The Place
160 S. Par-k
··Bosworth Brothers ··
9:30 p.m. • 1:30 a.m.

p .m.

Mayflower
••The Elephant Man' •
7: 30 and 9:4~ p.m.
National
··Divine Madness··
7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
Fine Arts Theatre
630 Main St. , Springfield
"The Shining " • 7:30 p.m.
•'The Exorcist'· - 9:30 p.m.

Treehouse
1,769 Franklin Blvd .
Jeff Levy •· piano
9 p.m. - 12 a.m.

Tavern on the Green
1375 Irving Rd.
··The Lightning Brothers··
9 p.m. • .1 a.m.

McDonald Theatre
1010 Willamette St.
" Stunt Man "
2:15,•4:40,7 and 9:30 p.m.
$3. 75 admlssion

9 :30

Lost Dutchman
535 Main St.. Springfield
" Sunnyside"
2: 15
p .m.
9:15

Cinema 7 •.
.
Atrium Building
" The Apple War " • 7:30 p.m.
" The Last Wave" • 8:45 p.m.

Musk

BJ Kelly's
•·Celebrate··
9:30 • 2 a.m.

Sheldon·s little Theatre
2455 Willakenzie Rd .
•'The Crying Princess and the Galdon
Goose' '
10 a.m. and 2 p.m. • $2 Admission

•

BJ Kellfs
1475 Franklin Blvd.
··Celebrate··
8:30 p.m. • 2 a.m.

Music

Oregon Repertory ·Theatre
''Noon'.' •• comedy
Curtain at midnigh~ • $2.50 admission.

Universtiy of Oregon
Beall Concert Hall
Oregon Windwood Quintet.
4 p.m. Free of Charge

Tavern on the Green
1375 Irving Rd. - '
••The ·lightning ·Brothers·'
9 P-111· • 1 1 a.m.

Valley River Twin Cinema
" It's My Turn" • and " The Electric
Horseman"· 6:15 and 8:30 p.m."La Cage Aux Folles" • 6:15 and 8:00
p.m.

The Place
160 S. Park
' 'Greg Tripp and the Hotz '·
9:30 p.m. • 1:30 a.m.

Cinema World
"Ordinary People" 7 and 9:35 p.m.
" Fade to Black" • 7:40 and 9:50 p.m.
"The Empire Strikes Back " - 7 and 9:30
p.m .
"Gloria" • 7:05 and 9:35 Pfl·

Music

Movies

Fine Arts Theatre
630 Main St. , Springfield
"The Shining··· 7:30 p.m .
"The Exorcist" • 9:30 p.m .

Treehouse
1769 Franklin Blvd .
• Buddy·Ungson •• piano
8 p.m. - midnight

Mayflower
" The Elephant Man "
and.
2:45,5,7:15

Wednesday

National
" Divine 'Madness"
7:30 and 9:30 p.m.

University of Oregon
Beal.I Concert Hall
Portland Baritone Richard Poppino will
perform a guest artist recital .
8 p.m. • Free of charge.

University of Oregon
Beall Concert Hall
Charles Dowd •• percussion
Victor Steinhardt •· piano
Faculty series
8 p.m. • Free of·Charge

Tuesday

Movies

Cinema 7
Atrium Building
'' The Apple War' ' • 7:30 p.m.
•'The Last Wave·· ?- 9,30 p.m.
Mayflower
"The Elephant Man "
7:30 and 9:4~ p.tn .
National
" Divine Madness "
7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
Fine Arts Theatre
630 Main St. , Springfield
" The Shining " • 7:30 p.m.
" The Exorcist " • 9:30 p.m.
Valley River Twin Cinema
"It's ,My Turn" and " The Electric
Horseman " • 6:15 and 8:30 p.m.
"La Cage Aux Foiles " • 6:15 and 8:00
,
p.m.
Cinema World
" Ordinary People " • 7 and 9:35 p.m.
" Gloria" • 7:05 and 9:35 p.m .
" Th·e Empire Strikes Back" ; 7 and 9:30
p.m.
"Fade to Black" • 7:40 and 9:50 p.m.

Music

BJ Kelly's
1475 Franklin Blvd.
"Celebrate"
8:30 p.m.-2:30 p.m.
Treehouse
• 1769 Franklin Blvd.
Jeff Levy •· piano
9 p.m. - 12 a.m .
University of Oregon
Beall Concert Hall
Jazz concert •· with University of Oregon
•
jazz bands.
8 p.m, - Free of charge. • •:. : : .

The Place
160 S. Park
.. Mary Lee Rush and the Edge"
9 p.m. • 2 a.m.

Galleries
Maude Kerns Art Center
15th and Villard
Claudia Mueller free lance photographer
show runs through November 23
Champagne. entertainment and first pick
of the fabulous home made Christmans
gifts. • November 28, 6 - 10 p.m. $2 Ad·
mission
Gallery hours: Mon-Sat, 10 a.m. • 5 p.m. •
The House that Jack Built
488 Willamette St.
Porcelain doll display by Blanche Marcum.
Gallery Hours: 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday
through Saturday.
Husfliden Gallery
1616 1/2 West 11th St.
Tole and decorative painting, oil and water
colors. by Husfliden Gallery teachers.
Gallery Hours: 9:.30 a.m.·4:30 p.m. Mon·
day through Saturday.
Visions and Perceptions Gallery of Art
•
1524..Willamette St .
" Fabulous., -J_t)ings '.' •.. Sqskets. pottery,
prints, '-drt¼wlrigs, bqx~s; )rt weaiaQI~ :.,
·•
., ,• ••
--- ,.
.
and more.
November 4 through Oecember24.
Universtiy of Oregon • Natural History
Museum
' ·Oregon's Past ·' • Display of prehistoric
landscapes an~ Indian heirlpoms.
"Return of the Manchu Court" - through
Jan . 25
Gallery Ho~rs: 10 a.m. • 3 P-!11• Monday
through Saturday.
Opus 5
2469 Hilyard Sf .
Quilts by Libby Clark
Through November 30
Gallery Hours: 11 a.m . - 5 p.m.
Saturday .
through
Monday
Gallery 141
University of Oregon • Lawrence Hall
Jan Peterson and Laurie Childers •·
Jewelry . metal-smithing , ceramics .
Through November 26
Ten year retrospective of University print
• making. Students coordinator: Ken Paul.
•
November 20.
Gallery Hours: 12 p.m. • 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
Lane Community College
Exhibit of contemporary painting and
calligraphy from the Rebulic of China,
November 1O• 26
Gallery Hours: 8 a.m. • 10 p.m. Monday
through Thursday. 8 a.m. • 5 P:m. on
Fridays.

Compllld by Paula.Case
•Of lhl Torcll

The

P' H-.• ·,, , · • •

·• '11 ,

\ •, 1 .

,··, r

.)

TORCH 'November 20 }_bsili:::ti.' +,

O ~µ t,·

1980 'Page 9J

REVIEWS

- _ _ _...;...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
rheatre~
t Man Who Came to Dinner
: Theatre
·hough light and entertaining,
storyline of LCC's latest
atrical endeavor has lost some
it's impact through the years.
~ritten in the late thirties,
he Man Who Came to Dinner'·
a comedy. In its time, it was
joubtedly very chic and timely
lts humor.
t's the story ot a.radio c_elebrione Sheridan Whiteside, con~d )n the home of a small town
;tess after slipping on her
eshold after dinner. When his
:retary, Maggie, falls in love
h the local news editor, she of; her resignation after twelve
rs of managing every aspect of
iteside' s Ute.
lesperate to keep her,
iteside conspires to break off
romance with the help of a
gustingly tacky actress named
raine. Conspiracy , Whiteside
le, _has all the makings of
tos and comedy.
Jnfortu nately, a great deal of
nedic impact is lost on an ·aunce of the early eighties.
lirected by Stan Elberson,
: 's production of this comedy
ndard is, overall, a very good
!, due mostly to the talents of
yne Ballantyne as Sheridan

Whiteside, and Terry Lorang as
Maggie.
Ballantyne's timing is simply
spotless. He dominates the stage
with his energy and wit, until you
find yourself rriaking excuses for
Whitesides's child_ish behavior. It
can't be helped, Ballantyne's
"Sherry, darling" completely
captures the audience with his
soft-hearted gruffness.
Lorang, who played the role of
Amy in LCC's last production
"Where's Charley?" has shown
her versatility in the portrayal of
Whiteside's secretaray, Maggie.
As played by Lorang, Maggie is
being
without
tolerant
'· martyrish,'' efficient, classy
and spunky. Her bantering
scenes with Ballantyne are what
gives the show its energy. And
though I was a little disappointed
to watch her strength deteriorate
into stereotypical female blubbering on occasion , that has much
more to do with a 1930' s script
than with Lo rang' s interpretation
of Maggie.
Matt Sarles. plays Lorang 's love
interest, a smalltown newspaperman named Burt Jefferson. He's
cute, almost pulling off the part of
'' budding genius writer.''
Sarles is functional and even
likable in his role but fails to

generate the romantic spark neccessary to convince us that he
loves Maggie.
Sue Schroeder as the devious
and manipulative Lorraine
Shelton has overstepped her
capacity as an actress. Lorra!ne
is supposedly a voluptuous, but
tacky schemer. Schroeder
manages ''tacky schemer'' quite
nicely, but misses the boat when
it comes to voluptuous. Part of
this is the costume designer's
fault for not taking advantage of
Schroeder's model-like figure
and designing accordingly. Instead, Schroeder is paraded
around in costumes meant to
show ·off a body a-la-Monroe.
However, all the fault does not
lie with costuming. With the right
touch, Lorraine could be "the
bitch we love to hate'' instead of
a shallow caricature of the part.
Set and costume design is
great, effectively setting the
period and mood. It's obvious
that no detail was overlooked
when it came to the set, from the
rich colors to the floor to the furniture. And I was impressed
especially by Lorang' s tasteful
wardrobe.
The pace in this three act play
is brisk and entertaining until the
beginning of the third act. At that

"The Man Who Came to Dinner."
point I felt the audience becoming
a bit impatient for the inevitable
conclusion.
If it sounds like the production
was unsuccessful in its endeavor
to be funny, that's not really true.
Aside from those few touchy
spots, I laughed myself. silly. It's
an amusing work, embroidered
rather nicely by the solid supporting performances of a large cast,
consisting mostly of LCC

llusic-----------rds
, Roches

rhree women lean seductively
1inst a wall, each with one
1d placed strategiGally on her
. One is running delicate
1ers through her hair. A
reotypical pose for women to
ke.
)n the flip side is another posi, The Roches see women tak-

students, or former LCC
students .
Even if you· re a theatrical
perfectionist (and certainly if
you' re not) this entertaining LCC
production is worth the price .
And Ballantyne's Whjteside !snot
•
•
to be missed.

''The Man Who Came to Dinon the album -- "I'm so glad I am
ner" continues this weekend,
gie rolls along, the guitar and
through Nov. 22. by Sarah Brown
one." They've taken some flack
vocals combine to make the
in their time, but now that they' re
sound of a sinking ship. ''Come
making albums they write anover here from the Red China t 1 • t e • ~ • t u r e - - - - - - - - -....
thems for the self-proclaimed
.
•
Sea, moved into the sovereign
weirdos of the world to unite .
state of Suffern.'' The ship is
with great refinement underlying
Shibumi
Three of the ten numbers on
si(l.king al.ong with their dreams.
commonplace appearances. It is a
:A lighter subject is discussed Trevanian
this collection deal with attitudes.
statement so correct that it does
in "Bobby's Song." One sister Ballantine Books
Evidently The Roches expect that
not have to be bold, so·potgnant it
has a crush on Bobby and wants
some people automatically want
does not have to -be pretty, so true ·
Does the word ''shibumi'' remind
to convince the others that he is
to put them down, since they
it does not have to be real. .. And
you of the bass note syllables you
in love with her, too. Of course
gleefully admit their non in the personality of man, it is ..
can never quite make out in the
they are not impressed , telling
conformny in "My Sick Mind"
.authority without domination ."
background of those fifties rock
her th at she's drunk. The scene
and "Nurds. In "The Death of
This foreign concept and scene
and roll hits? You picture the tall,
is laughable, like three silly girls
Suzzy Roche," they go into further detail. Written from the view
sets a fascinating story in motion;
skinny guy with the deep voice
boasting to each other about love
of a social ene,ny in the launbeginning a novel which bears
leaning into his mike to mumble
affairs that don't .exiS t • "When
dromat, the following description
the same word for its title, Trevawhenever the
"shibumi-oomi
you weren't looking. • •we kiss9f Suzzy is given.:.
lead singer's falsetto pauses .. nian 's "Shibumi.
,ed. "
She's got stinky, crusty
Nicholai Hel, the young boy
Well , think again. In fact, try to .
All of the material here is writthat
sox IU nd.erwear
who strives to achieve that
conjure an image that is the
ten by the sisters themselves,
shocks/She's such a pig/I'd like
supreme degree of individual
precise opposite of fifties rock
with the exception of a traditional
to stick a turd in her mailbox.·
refinement, becomes, surprisingand roll.
Irish piece and one other by Cole
Suzzy wrote this song . An adly, the world's most highly paid
Porter. They share in the writing
Imagine you are looking at a assasin. And somehow this uniof music and lyrics, combining
mission of guilt?
. small , rectangular room that is
Musically the sisters sing vocal
que character manages to merge
furnished only with thick floor
talents in various ways.
his soul-shattering profession
harmonies that Crosby Stills Nash
The closing number, ''This
th
with that goal of self-perfection . A
mats. A soft light glows rough
Feminine Position ,'' concerns
and Young would drool over.
genius , a mystic, a master of sen its paper-paned walls. In one carsad
Some of the ·tunes are folksy, _·pregnancy. It ' s not a terribly
ner a single spray of cherry
f ·
.
sual pleasure, athletic courage,
tune , th oug h the emo tions o 1t
some are silly and frivolous , one
language and culture , Hel is finalblossoms curves gracefully away
are tired and worry worn , like the
is acapella. Once in awhile the
pitted against his most stagger1y
scent
Its
vase.
simple
a
from
man
The
.
involved
woman
whole thing will go off key , but
th e quiet air. You are
opponent in the climactic bating
permeates
women
deserted
has
responsible
that 's a little trick that the sisters
tie of his career . His opponent?
in Japan .
before , and she sounds as though
use to express themselves . .
The monolithic center of interna·
In the center of the room an
it may happen again ·
In ·'One Season ,'' they use
tional corporate and governmental ,
this technique to give the impresIn this age when· several elderly man sits facing a young
sion of a woman who is under
power and corruption . His secret
boy . Between them is ·a " Go "
women artists are taking the Pat
heavy stress and leaning towards
weapon? Shibumi.
gameboard. They have been
Benatar, Susie au·atro " I'm a
going insane . She's in a relation This bestselling thriller mirrors
si len tly battling for four hours to
tough bitch " , st ance , it is
ship that's binding and sufthe paradoxical nature of its hero ,
see how well the boy has learned
refreshing to hear a female group
focating. She needs time to think
b:endi ng refinement and violence ,
his lessons from the master.
that uses a min imum of elecand room to breathe . The sound
These lessons , however, concerh ins1gt1t and rage . The result is an
tronics. It 's a darin g move to ri sk
prod uced is rem iniscent of
engrossing , flamboya nt, yet
more than simple mastery of the
losing audien ce members that are
plywood in the rain, warping out
tigl1tly controlled tale. Trevagameof " Go. " Theboy islearnsp oi led by the constant
nian •s novel measures up Jq, it~ -ti~
of shape .
ing how to attain " shibumi," the
.back grou nd noise of ampli fied intie . And it' s not ~ikii¥•ta- leave you·
ulti mate Japanese standa rd of
Bein_g cle'v'.~r .is .,one way (hey
stru ments.
The Roch es do it with 'loice:by • human excellence:. " Shibumi, " :· thi nking of Sha·-lfla~na . ·by iJodt ,
entertain . As " The Boat People,·:
• ' ,·
• • • • • ' • • the master explains , ··has to db •Kilcup
a moving folk tale written by Mag~ Jeff Saint
11

11

11

1: Up against the wall , hands
3rhead , feet back and spread
n.
)ne took at that cover and the
me ques_tion comes to
3ryone 's mind . . .
ti.re they really sisters?
fhe Roches are Suzzy , Maggie
d Terre. They really are sisters ,
esently from New York .
ey·ve been around for a few
m, singing backup vocals for
non and Garfunkle , and . they
ow some famous people .
bert Fripp (King Crimson ) proced their first album and they
;o performed once on Saturday
ght Live .
So who are ttrey. calling;,nurds?
1emselves -- it' s·the ' first thing

1

Page 10 November 20 - Deu111,_u 1, 1980 The TORCH

.

Prisoners face .re-entry crisis

vention crippled the wearer, and
the "Oregon limp" gained
notoriety with·its use . The Oregon
Boot is still used today internaWho benefits from prison?
wagon master, ~ho guided tionally and in parts of the deep
The
That was one question asked at
the ploneers, was responsible for South, Paulson says .
the criminal justice meeting held
According to literature made
upholding the. rules the group
Tuesday, Nov. 18 ~t St. Mary's
available by Sponsors, the U.S .
adopted. Flogging was a common
_Episcopal• .Churc~ . Sponsors,
has the highest number of
punishment , -since people who
In~ .. ~n.· _orgahiµtion that helps
committed a crime such as steal- prisoners in the Western world ,
prisoners ·r.es\,Jme their lives upon
ing a cow coul9 cause the deaths
led by the USSR and South Africa
-rel ease ·from·· jail, hosted the
of an entire family.
worldwide.
event.
A June 1979 issue of ArchitecPaulson recalled days ~hen
for Justice reported that conture
After a potluck dinner the au- Oregon criminals were kept in
is planned for 726 new
struction
dience had• the choice of atten- ball-and-chains and • wore · black
and federal prisons
state
local,
ding one of . t~o sessions . and white striped prison garb .
186,000 more
hold
would
that
"Alternatives to prjson" 'included They were forced to do hard labor
cost is
estimated
The
prisoners.
a filmstrip and comments from in the streets of Portland, where
facinflation
an
plus
billion,
7
.
$5
people familiar with the local children were known to throw
tor.
justice sys.tern. "The history of stones at them. Hangings were a
Between the years 1971 and
justice in Oregon '' was presented social event .
federal criminal justice
1976
by Laurel Paulson , _. who has
spending increased 87 .1 percent.
a
when
history
made
Oregon
res.earched the subject.
prisons were built in
warden invented a new device to More federal the past ten years
in
U.S.
the
keep · prisoners from escaping. than were built in the entire
Paulson described the pattern
of events that ·Ied to formation of The · 'Oregon Boot' t was a 3 to 25 history prior to that period.
pound piece of iron that went over
Oregon's present criminal justice
In 1979 construction of an
shoe of the prisoner. This in~ average state prison with 400
the
system. The first ~ystem was
beds cost $14 .5 million . A state
prisoner costs taxpayers between
1
$10 - 26,000 a year.
Fifty-seven percent of the fiv~
million people put in jail each year
aren 't convicted _of crimes , but
are awaiting trial. Nearly one
quarter of the jail population is
made up of public "inebriates ."
Two of three youths (under 18) in
jail are being held for offenses -such as truancy and leaving
parents -- that are not crimes for
adults.
Although money is allocated for
housing those prisoners , not
enough is being done to help
rehabilitate them, says Sponsors.
According to the President's
Commission on Law Enforcement
and the Administration of Justice ,
''The conditions in which they
(prisoners) live are the poorest
by Jeff Saint
of -The TORCH

formed by the members of wagon
trains as they traveled to Oregon
Territory in the mid 1800's.

1

Ma tto x ·outdoor Ou tfit ter s
28th Anniversary Sale

Outstanding b_uys for the fall season and Christmas in functional, good look·
ing clothing.
Now
Reg .

Selected Wool Pants
Black Ice Gort ex Parkas
North Face Gortex Anorak
Patagonia Canvas Jackets
Selected Kelty Packs
Robbins 100% Wool Hats

-

I

130.00
99 .50
75.00
11.95

Kelty Soft Luggage
Knut and Kri ut Wool scarves
Knut and Knut Wool mittens
Sierra Designs 60/ 40 Parka (The Original)._
Lord Jeff Sweaters
Selected Car'ibou Packs
Woolrich Blanket Jackets
One Style Flannel Shirts (XS Womens)
Chamois Shirts (XS Womens)
North Face Slight Irregular Down Vests
Rag Socks (Irregulars)

14 .95
11 .95
105.00
35.00
45.00

14.95

17.50
62.50
5.00

40% Off
109.00
79 .50
59 ..95
30% Off
2.00

with any purchase

25% Off
9.95
8.95
89.50
21.95
25% Off
34.95
3.00
4.95
48.50
3.95

Wool Sweaters, Shirts, Cord knickers, Down jackets, Tents, Polarguard
sleeping bags and muGh ~ore.

S7 W. $roadway
686-2 332

Nov. 21st through 26th
Opvn ·Sundays 12~s

Instructors put
lectures on

vide o ·tape

possible preparation for their successful re-en.try into society, and
often reinforces in them a pattern _
of destructiveness. ·' •
by George Wagner
•There are some alternatives to
of The TORCH
prisons , suggests Sponsors.
Some of those mentioned include :
What do you do when your in1) Decriminalization of .victimless
touches on an interesting
structor
crimes such as prostitution,
class but then goes off
in
subject
gambling , marijuana use, public
direction?
another
in
vagran.drunkenous ... loitering,
2)
behavior.
to pursue the
dissolute
attempt
and
you
Do
cy, idle
fleeting reference and end up getIssuance of citations for court appearances 3) Restitution/ repay- ting behind , or do you stick with
ment for damage or property loss. the instructor's program so you
4) Sentencing to volunteer ser- can make your grade?
vice in community. 5) Fines.
Perhaps you can do both .
Alternatives that reduce time Milton Madden , an LCC US
spent in prison include weekend
history instructor , has developed
sentences , shorter sentences,
a system which he says fully
( and a combination of jail time and utilizes both the structured class
probation.
overview of history and also
Alternatives for early release in- caters to the individual interests
clude furloughs, pre-release of students .
guidance centers, increased use
Last summer Madden made 30
of parole , abolitions of parole
altogether or parole houses where video tapes. They vary in length
parolees who lose jobs or housing from 18 to 28 minutes, but each
can try to re-estab lish includes a lecture , diagrams and
30 to 75 slides. Madden says he
themselves .
''The re-entry crisis of ex- also hopes to make a study guide
prisoners is a little known facet of to accompany each tape .
the criminal justice system ,''
Madden ·s plan is to create a 3
wrote Paulson and Steve Wade in hour survey course which meets
the Feb . 1979 issue of "Frying for two days each week and perPan .·' ''The process of arrest , mits TV viewing on the third day,
trial and imprisonment is the most when each student may select
brutal attack on the human video taped topics of his/her
psyche there is. There is an im- choice from Madden ·s recorded
planted sense of worthlessness library. After viewing the .tape,
which makes the prisoner unsure the student takes a test on the
of how s/ he will fit into society." material.
An article in the Oregon Daily
Madden sees no end to the
Emerald quoted an ex-prisoner as
lectures he or other inhistory
saying '' Most guys spend $4 .30
structors could tape. He could
of their gate money ($100 the cover history topics which time
state gives rel eased prisoners) on would never permit a survey
a bus ticket to Eugene and find course to touch upon: he cites
themselves standing on the cor- The Articles of Confederation ,
ner . of Pearl and Eighth with
Virginia Plan, The Compromise on
$95. 70 and no place to stay or
Slavery, Hamilton 's Financial
work -- just enough to buy a
Plan , The Era of Good Feelings ,
Saturday Night Special. "
D. Rockefeller Biography ,
J.
Sponsors, Inc. is a non-profit
, and The
agency that works to provide that Japanese Relocation
a few exjust
as
,
Coach
Stage
bridge from prison back into the
will put
he
•
tapes
of
amples
conbe
may
They
.
community
.
together
tacted at 690 Tyler, Eugene , OR
Madden has • invited other
97 402 503) 485-834 l.
teachers to participate and share
their expertise . Dave Croft , who
teaches History of Western
Civilization at LCC will lecture on
Utopias; Bill Beal , political ·
science·teacher, will tape lectures
on certain Revolutionary Warr;battles and Paul Malm, an LCC
political science instructor, will
tape his discussions on the Electoral College.
Madden hopes to complete
enough tapes by next fall to initiate the classes. But he's· found
it takes 5 to 1O hours to organize
a short lecture and more time to
tape, edit , and insert the slides
and other material.
(I)~ ~~
For the project, Madden obtained a grant from the college which
covered the purchase of the first
45 tapes. Madden volunteered
the labor during his spare time .
Because of the tests and guides
will accompany the tapes,
which
EXPER T
hopes to have video tape
Madden
WORKMANSHIP
machines installed in the Social
Science Department so that
students may view tapes where
the testing area is lo.cated .
2045 Franklin Blvd.
He sees no reason why the
E\Jgene , Oregel') 97 403
tapes could not be available to thE
.'
34·2~291·2 ••
·•
public · for self interest' "and· tin·
provement .
I

(

r;ril ·

~Ji

W(t~CDLt~

AWCO~

U©~~iJA

4

...... .

, nu I un\ln nuv"moar ~u •

J•ss,951,_...-.,, l

t'agB 11

Wfl'q backs the fed era I reserye _
syste.tn? •
by George Wagner

af ThlTORCH

Too many politicians are
elected on the strength of their
promises rather than on the
strength of their principles.
So it was in 1912: Woodrow
Wilson ran for president against
Howard Taft on a popular platform
in which he declared a moral war
, , again~t international banking.
Once Wilson was elected he
sent .through Congress the
Federal Reserve Act which passed on Dec. 22 , 1913. This Act
was heralded as a great protector
of the national economy· which
would ·prevent broad fluctuations
within 'the ·market.
•
In actuality the Federal R·eserve
Act was the embodiment . of
everything Wilson publiCally campaigned against.
The federal ·Reserve Act surrendered the control and obligations for the national economy to a
group • of 12 privately owned
banks comprising the Federal.
Reserve Systeni(hereafter referred to as the Fed). Why did
Wilson do this? •

posed the Al~rich Bill. Because of
his affiliation with the Republican
Party (which much of the public
. associated with big business) the
• bill was soundly defeated.
When Wilson was elected •he
pushed·through a new version of
the bill which he called the
Federal Reserve Act. .Both Aldrich
• and Vanderlip openly opposed
this new version, which made the
public feel more at ease, but
Vanderlip wrote in the Post article
cited above, - '' although the
Aldrich Federal Reserve Plan was
defeated when it bore the name
Aldrich, never .the less its essen. tial points were all containf]d in
the. plan, that was fi nally
adopted. ' '
•
Congressional conservatives
such as Charles Lindbergh· Sr.
and Henry Cabot Lodge Sr. , opposed the Wilson Act. They were
quoted in the Congressional
Record as saying the Fed would
give banks an open door to create
inflation whenever they wished .

Once private banks controlled
the economy they could predict or
create inflations or recessions by
altering the flow of cash in the
marketplace.
Money talks . It determines the
If they chose to tip off certain
size of a government and the programs a government canilnitlate . individuals as to when the
Through the Fed, banks offered ': ctianges in cash flow were ·coming those individuals could
the U.S. government borrowing
privleges which gave the govern- always know when it was most
profitable to buy or sell without
ment unlimited growing potential.
ever
loosing an Investment.
By borrowing money the government was not limited as it was
ALL THAT GLITTERS ...
when it could only spend tax
revenues. This initiated the debt
The Fed rs run by a board of .
economy which has since
seven members who are chosen 1
dominated government policy.
by • the president • to serve •a
HOW THE FED BEGAN
_14-year term. Once chosen.they
• After .the Panic . of 1907 the are given a free hand to act in the
Senate appointed Senator Nelson capacity of a private business .
Aldrich to head the National
The first Chairman of the Fed .
Monetary Commission . He was to
(appointed by anti-banker
Wilson) was Paul Warburg.
study various economic systems
During the First part of World
and propose -one that would
war II Warburg served as the
stablize the American economy.
chairman of the Fed while his
, Aldrich studied the central
brother Max was running the
banking systems of Europe and family banks in Germany.
became closely. acquainted with
Benjamin Strong was the first
rriany major European banking
chairman of the Federal Reserve
families.
Bank of New York,(most powerful
One acquaintance , Paul War- ·of .the 1.2 Fed Banks).
burg of Germany's M.N .Warburg
The Federal Reserve Ban·k of
and Co. Bank ,· moved to the ·u.S.
New York - acts as the transfer
to a~sist hi!ll.
. . agent for official gold transactions
In 191 d they met with a .small
group of bankers : ' Frank
Vanderlip , . presid~nt .of
Rockefeller's ·National City Bank ;
Henry Davidson of J.P. Morgan
and Co. ; Piatt. Andrews , ·asst.
secretary. of . state; and Be~j~min
Strong of 'Morgan. Bank·.and Trust
Co.
_ •
•
In reflecting . on this ~eeting
Vanderlip wrote . in the: Feb . .9,
i93~ Saturd~y -~~en'fng Post:
ii I do not le.el ;( is any' exaggeration to speak of our secret e,xpedition . to Jekyr Island (off ·the
coast of Georg(af as the occasion
of the actual conc.eption of ~~at
even(u~lly became the Fecleral
Reserve System. ''
. , ~ft,er,-,) hi.~__!TieeH~~. i Ald_ri~h
.went. back.to Congres.s• and pro-

with foreign governments and in·
ternational institutes,' ' said
George Kaufman in his book
Money and the Financial System.
During the 1920s and 30s the
Fed began to ship billions of
dollars worth of gold to Europe.
·
· By selling off official U.'S. QOld
the Fed locked the U.S. into a
permanent • fiat currency
(currency not backed by anything
and consequently not subject to
limitations on the amount
printed).
Louis McFadden (R-Pa.) chair. man of the _Committee on Banking
and Currency, ·stated in the Congressional Record (June
10,1932) that .Europe's , major
•banks were " .getting the currency of the Federal Reserve Banks.
-- exchanging that currency for
gold and transmitting the gold to
the foreign confederates .''
The sale of gold was an important step in creating_ the new
elastic economic currency.
The Preamble of the Federal
Reserve Act says it is ' ' an Act to
provide for the establishment of
Federal Reserve Banks to furnish
an elastic currency, to afford
means of rediscounting commercial paper, to ~stablish a more ettective supervision of banting in
the United States, and tor other
purposes.' '
.
ln order for th~ currency to
become " elastic " it had to be
weaned from its gold backing.
In 1933 , F.D.R. pushed a bill
through Congress making it iilegal for Americans to own gold.
Citizens were ordered to surrender their gold to the Federal
Reserve Banks (not to the U.S .
treasury) at a price of $20.67 an
ounce. ·After the deadline F.D.R.
raised the value of the gold-to $35
• an ounce .
.
• Then the Fed traded the gold to
the U.S. Treasury for special

$100,000 gold tertificates. Each
certifidte says ··This is to certify
that there is on deposit in the
Treasury of the United States one
hundred thousand dollars in gold
b
,4
d
payable ·to earer on ueman as
authorized by law.' '
The inference.is that the banks
• own this gold but they have left it
with the Treasury so the taxpayers can pay the storage costs.
Congressman McFadden told
• Congress, "Long before.we wake
up from our dreams of prosperity
through an inflated curr~nc_y, our
gold which could have kept us
from catastrophe will have
vanished, and no rate of interest
will tempt.it to return ."
Once F.D.R . had confiscated
. citizen gold he took the U.S. off
the gold standard . This solidified
our elastic currency and the
government : has been spending
borrowed money every since .
WHERE HAS IT LED US
The effect of this in world
markets was riot felt 'until the national debt became immniense .
Until the 1960's the dollar was
still considered to be a .strong
currency and a value ratio of $35
to one ounce of gold was maintained .
As the national· debt increased
EuFOpear) nations b~gan exchanging U.S. currency for the gold still
1eft in the U.S. Treasury. Consequently, in the 1960s two-thirds
of our remaining gold supply was
drained off. Then in 1911 Nixon
stopped •shipments of gold and
devaluated the dollar in the exchange market to $42 to an ounce
of gold ratio.
This devaluation caused a
panic in world markets which
caused the dollar to be devalued
by several hundred percent.
When gold went up in value, the
dollar slipped in value, because it

required more dollars to buy·the
same amount of gold.
The Arneri<;an dollar flas been
stretched beyond recognition.
The spending patterns which
-Wilson and F.O.R. started have
not solved America's· economic
woes. The interest rate .on the
U.S. debt _
today amounts to about
$600 per second and Is the third
highest .expense in the Federal
Budget.
•
Senator Howard Ruff states
that the U.S. has a ·published
debt, of $650 billloo but actually
has sonie $6 trlnlon In liabilities.
Senate Documents .written in
the -15th Congress , 1939, (on the
subject of National Economy and
Banking· Systems) qQote former
Presi~ent : Wilson as saying; 1'A
great industrial nation is controlled by Its system of credit ...we
have come·to be . one of the worst
ruled, one of. the most completely
controlled governments in the
civilized world no longer a
government by conviction · or a
vote of the majority, but a government by the opinion and duress of
a small group of dominant men."
What exactly Wilson intended
by this statement is anybody' s
guess. He was·~·public champion
for speaking' against the very
things h~ qulet!Y. succeeded in br·inging.-, - ~:)f1fi ls.,: .,$ilver
tongue captti~e~ the•gofdert .heart
of America.
'
He promised us the moon but
has left us ·an·eco"omy_where it is
questionable if we even have a
piece of cheese that isn't owed to
somebody.

Your prescription is
our mai~ concern. .

343-n·1s'

30th & Hi/ ard

You've S!Ot··somethlng
up

sle eve !.. .:

'yOLlr'

11

•

•

,,

j

it·s called •p asma.,
•Arid we'll pay you •
'-tP ·-to tfS.oo a.month ·
.fov-. it. ~se pla~
ls a. pr-ec.:,ous 1-iuman
re~v ce . I.t- can save
laves.

eug:ene pta~"la
1 'l1

01::~-~'i.:rie~~ . ··.~,,;.;-•·::i.f
•

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...

• .....

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•

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•

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_:_omnlum--Gatherum
....

.

.
·,
\,
•
~olid~y ~tress discussed

Members of the Women 's Poetry Workshop of LCC
will end the fall semester with . a poetry reading
upstairs at Aunt Lucy Divine' s, a restaurant at 13 and
Alder Sts. "on Wednesc;iay , Dec. 3 at 7:30 p.m.
At the tonclu$ion of the prograr11 , women from the
community will be invited to the mfcrophone to share
their poetry with the audience . A $1 donation for the
poetry reading is requested .
The class entitled Women Writing , meets at the
Downtown Mall ·and will continue through the winter
quarter at LCC Adult Ed . Department.
If interested in .the class , please contact Ellen
Greenlaw at 342-4223 or Kathryn Hunt at'343- 1060.

the
,, f• flelp in Dealing W!th ·Cri~is f.nd Stress Durin~
H91jdays ,'' a panel dlSCUSSIOA lead by University of
OregQn EducatiQOat Ps.yphotogvrofessor ~arty Aker ,
open to LCC f\tudents and staff Friday, Nov .
will
21. in>'Studio A Qf the Mass Communication Dept.
The discussion begins at II a.m. and will span just
one hour.
Because the December. holid_ay season is otten a
time ·when people have abnormal stress in their family
and personal lives, th_e Lane County Mental Health
Association has assembled this_panel of county social
service representatives who can relate specific sug·
gestions on handling stress, and ·also explain how
their agencies work .-· in case people need them in an
emergency. 'This saO).e panel presented information at
Harris "Hall this week , and has agreed to bring their
·remarks to LGC Friday.
• The panel members represent such offices as
Women Space, Lane CoJ.Jnty' Crisis Intervention Refer ral Team . Whitebird , Looking Glas·s, Ch ildren's Service~ Division, Lane C.ouncil Council on Alcohol , and
the U of..0 Crisis Clinic .
For furtherinformation, contact Pete Peterson in the
Mass · Communication Department (ext . 24 77) , or
Marge Wynia in Coun_seling, (ext. ·_ 2457) .

control the world ' s energy! Everyone particfpates by
turning the dials on the Dept. of Energy 's interactive
Energy Environment Simulato r. The workshops take
place on Saturdays at noon and 4 p.m., and Sundays
at noon . Admission is:. adults $2 , students 75 cents ,
seniors $1 , and children under six are free .

Please be advised that the admissions deadline for
the Respiratory Therapy program has been changed
from July 24 to June 1, 1981. If you have any questions , contact Doug White at ext. 2617 .

Muscular Dystrophy, Cresw~II Airport. and the .LCC
Intramural Department are co-sponsoring a coe d
volleyball tournament for the Muscular Dystrophy
Association on Nov. 22 . from 9 a.m. to 6 pm here at
Lane. An extra added attraction will be a tu'rkey raffle .
. Tickets are 50 cents . All proceeds go to MDA.

.Women 's Ctr. mini-mystery

Clue no . 1: Two people walk into a bar and Ofder a
scotch and soda .
Clue no .• 2: One person sips their drink ; the other
drinks theirs and leaves .
One dies, Why ?
A prize will be awarded for the first four correct
answers . brought to the Women 's Awareness Center.
Last weeks winners :
. 1st prize • Michael Markwell - Library
2nd prize • April King • Community member
3rd & 4th prize - co-op_ effort • Jody Kilcup & Juli e
Leonard ._ Bookstore . •

ADC mothers at LCC are trying_ \o reactivate the Aid
to Dependen·t Children mqthers group that disbanded
about three yeirs ago. The g·roup wishes to encourage
their long term goals
other ADC motners -to· achieve _
wilh th.e support of the ·gr-oup, to help mothers meet
emergencies, and to work· together to become effective lobbyists for lpw ~ncome people.
If interest ed , a sign up sheet is available in the
Women's Awareness Center, or call Susan Taylor at
746:2809 for more information .

Ski club to meet
Th ere will be a meeting for the ski club today in the
board room of the Administration builaing from 3 t.o 4
p.m. Come one 1 Come all!

Last lecture tonite

The expansion of the universe is the topic of Edwin
Ebbighausen ' s astrono·my lecture tonight at the
Planetarium in Alton Baker Park .
The lecture , the last in a series of four .astronomy
lectures by Ebbighausen, begins at 8 p.m . Admission
is free .

Senior center holds bazaar

•.

house
. Open
..
\.·-:

The Health Occupations Department at LCC is ha\/·
ing- an Qpen-tiou..se Menday ,- Oec . 1, from 9 to 11
a.m.. to."provide information about- six career areas:
re.spiratory • tnerapy, practical nursing , associate
degree nursing, dental a~sisling., dental hygiene , and
medi~I office '1ssisJing . Instructors and counselors
will be ava~able-to.answer questions. Classrooms and
_ • '
labs wrll be open . ' •
Also on Decemoer 1, application packets will be
available for people·who wish to en.ter one of LCC •s six
programs next fal l, All six . progra111s have limited

Homemade mincemeat, jams, baked goods , wood crafts , quilts, plants and Christmas crafts will be on
sale at the Campbell Senior Center's annual holiday
bazaar Saturday, Nov . 22 . from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Lunch will be served from 11 :JO a.m. to 1 p.m.
with sandwiches. hot dogs , chili and pie on sale.
The center is located at 155 High Sr. The bazaar is
the center's only fundraising event each year.

:~td f'f!~ vai-~ -~ . . • ,

"rht of)en~house'wiff bti held in the\ealth Building
sted -in health career inand is open to anyone· intere_
•
formation .

in Portland at the turn-of- the century. The negatives
are from the Library 's Angelus collection .
From Dec. 2 through 19, the Angelus photographs
and work from several other collections will be
displayed in the main floor lounge of the U of 0
Library .

Change in deadline

Volleyba_ll tournament

ADC group forming

~

·.

·wom~n's poetry

•

\

.

ijl/ol!, 20-

Energy workshops
The Wl11amette Science & Techholqgy Center
features hands-on energy workshops every Saturday
and Sunday . Would you like to be an energy czar?
Learn about our use of energy and get a chance to

Movie today

The film, Bonnie and Clyde, will be presented today
at 11 a.m : and 3 p.m. 1n Forum 309 . Adm ission is $1 .

Bake sale
Mouth-watering treats donated by such companies
as Humble Bagel and Monster Cookie , as well as
home baked goodies, will be offered at a Eugene Switchboard bake sale to be held on. Nov. 24, from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m on t~e second floor of the Cente r
t \.
Building .
The sale is a fund-raising event for Eugene Switchboard , an information and referra l agency wh ich
helps with lost and found pets , finds rides and housing , o"ffers a public message service , and is involved
with the community. energy bank .

Photos on display

Selected historical photographs from the U of O
Library's special coll ections are on display and
available for purchase through Monday , Dec . 1 at
Gerlach ·s Camera Center near campus .
Made from glass plate negatives , many of the
photographs depict agriculture, shipping and city Hie

U of O 'Bandorama'
Dixieland , jazz and marching band music will be
featured when the U of O Fighting Duck Marching
Band and selected ensembles rally their talents for a
' 'Bandorama " fund- raising show at 7:30 p.m. Fri·
day , Dec . 5, at McArthur Court.
Tickets , available at the door, are $7 .50 for
families, $3 .50 for adult~ and $1.50 for students and
senior citizens. A luxury weekend for two at a nearby
inn is the featured door prize.

Astronomy & Jesus Christ
Astronomical events surrounding the birth of Jesus
Christ are the topic of a specia l program running
through Christmas at the planetarium in Alton Baker
Park .
The SO-minute program is called Star of Wonder,
and was produced by the planetarium·s staff.
Public showings of the program are scheduled for
11 a.m. on Saturday and 1 p.m. on Sunday through
November 30 . From December 1 until Christmas.
showings on Saturday will be at 1 p.m . and 3 p.m. on
Sunday .
Admission is $2 for adults, $1 for seniors and 75
cents for students . The price includes admission to
the Willamette Science and Technology Center who is
sponsoring the program .

University bills 'C.andida'
A George Bernard Shaw comedy that ends with a
twist opens Friday , Dec . 5, at the University of
Oregon 's Robinson Theatre .
Candida will be staged at 8 p.m. Dec. 5 to 6 and
Dec . 10 through 13 at the theater in Villard Hall .
Reserved-seat tickets are $4·.50 for the general
public, $2.75 for u of O students and senior citizens ,
and $3 ,50 for other students .
To order tickets , call the box o1fice at 686·4J91
from noon to 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
The show, written in 1895, pivots on a triangular
relationship between a love-struck poet , Marchbanks ;
.
a parson, Morell; and his wife, Candid~ .
When Marctit2anks become's infatuated w'i1h Candida , MDfell is at first amused , then angered . The
suprise ending comes when Candida is asked to
choose between the two men.

~
---------------s
d
ie
if
s
s
Cla

bigs, •
'11 IMW, 1116111, to,IIOO "'·· L""1r#lsttr, /owrs, Kr,us,r
'emt blrs.' C""9lt ...,_ "'t effer ovtr S-4200. Firat $4500.
•
m-MM - uum .
Cllewollt 3t1 -,tn,, lln...,,_ d, IDCllld1s rt-built Roches/,r
-~ , jetarb, ,,.. 12f10. Alu f-SfJHd Tr,ns. to Ht Ch1rrtJl1t.
•
~ - 741; 1131, ~ - .,

It Ker
1961 ,,.,,_- S,- ./'ra.- liua, {/Md. Radials , $295. SN
l11'1111' at Fflllll~ 111111 Hilprll. 617-1461 No. 15.
or IMst .
1969 Toyota ci,,i.;, 4 dr, aulals auwmalk, Z!I mpg. $760
••
Oler. 617-1461 ~ : 15. •

NJ .... '"" ""' l#J l

Sil of 4
683-715'.

c,rs , Toyori c,uc,. $150.

Trish_.
'14 flfllhl W,p Altlomllc. l\ldlals. Asking $1 ,700. Call
&83-6080.
.
19?2 CJ,nf Novi. 6qt, 3-J-,,.U oo tlN floor. Excellent COAdltlon
52,000 lriplll ~le~., 8olcl ~pg. $1600. 746--0421.

Needs
1951 Ctw~. sllort .,,,,,., P. U. Just bHI of trade, no title.
A restorable
1t1fQ11 ••d body work. •New tires, chrome wheels. or
.
T11111
Tom
clanlc, 8ou II b..tlffar ·owv $380. 726-8600.
low
1611 HoJ#ll Acurd. #utclab.Kk.5•Speed, gold/tan, beautiful,
. ilust sel. $5395. Tom, 484-63118 .
llllls. Supat ~

IVI$ .

MG Mldg,t for SIii. •1912, gllOd condltiOII . St 750. Call Lauri,,
!4~•1114.
morw
1118 Traas An,, lolMI. Auing $5900. 30,000 miles. Ask for
lnlD. US-246!,.

offer.
1974 Alfi R011J10 &TV, Rffflllt ,n(IIM. AM-FM AC. Make
342-6484 ,,,., 5 p.m. ·

wa nt ed

Roam for rant - greM ·'°"llon!/1 Prlv1t11 room with bath. On 5 acres

,·

$135 plui
• poallillnld at tbt Md el Seavey Loep, 2 _mills from LCC.
tdil. 7H• 77&t
.
FAMILY HOOSE PMtnN6 LC~ father and sons. Family busineaa
.,
Ntat', last, 11111 lriNdly. Elclllut_ LCC Stiff rtferencaa . Outside
rall per •
IIOlllla •· uve IIWlf S200. H111111 lnllrlors - vary reasonable
blflrt fuU schedule! 1198-1427. local c,U, Clip 111d
C,il reo111.

11111. •

•

from ·1r1. Low c,a,r ill II II.us, ,111,.s ind colors. Adopt a pet
Agency. 687-DOGS .
LO$t ,.t? FOllnd p,t? C1I 11111 rls/1 Trl•Ag,ncy , 687-DOGS . btlWHn
12 ind 1 p.,a.

FH·
FREE CLASSIFIEDS FOR LCC STUDENTS, FAcui TY.ind STAFF.
tun words. Non-commtrcill. Comt'n get',111. They're llol!I!
America;
OVERSEAS JOBS-Summer/year round. Europe . . S.
FrH lnAustralla, Asia. AU fields. $500 -1200 month'V, Sighlsteing .
92625.
fo,maUon. Wrtte; IJC, Box 52 , OR2, Corona Del Mar, C11H.,
LOST: WALLET SIZED PICTURES THAT ARE IRREPLACEABLE.
tura in to securtty or phone Karen, 681-0298 .

temlll
Room,t. w1nt"1 to. shlr, buuttful 2 br. 1pt. Non-smoking
' pr,f1rr,d._Co11vtnlent locatlon. 683•7392 .
$128
Room,,. ne1dld ta shlr, sp,clous 2 br ,pt. In S. Eugine area.
plus u#I. Call GIi after 4:30, 485-4953 .

T•4, TX,
W1nt1d, lnexp,nslvo lenses for ol<Hr Nikon. Any kind, even
that's
1d1ptall mount ltnses tor other calllffls. Whit have you
cheap?? Bob. 343-9411, keep trying .

se rv ice s

•• HI-fl equipment repair ··
CAR SrEREO SERVICE CENTER
.
Monday-Saturday, 10 to 6. 126 N. 28th SpringHeld . 741-1597
method
Women's c/lnlc: Pap test, birth control information and
available. ~CC Sludellt Health Service. By appointment.

PEACE OF MfND IS A CLEAN FLUE Alexander ' s Chimney Sweeping.
Discounts te LCC students . 747-0425 .
NEUTER
STOP 1nlm1I ovrr population . Call the LOW COST SPAY
CLINIC AT 687-3643.
required
FREE THANKSGIVING DINNER -· at the Eugene Mission after
1542 W.
attendance of 11 :30 a.m. services, Thursday, No,. 27 .
First.
Site
FREE THANKS61VI DINNER ·: at Ille Senior Citizens Nutrition
OPEN TO
in Sprin_glleld at Water and CSfs. 11·3 Thanksgiving Day.
•
_AU.
before
TURKEY PROVIDED FREE. Bri~ . a Sidi ~•h. Wednesday
on
Thanksgiving, 1 p.m. for people 55 or over 11 Kaus man Center
996 Jlffaraon, 687-5331 .
y noon
FOIi PEOPLE 55 OR OVER, Thanksgiving dinner Wednesda
50
before Thlnllsglvl1t9. Turkey provided, bring a side dish. Donation
•
.
681-5318
811111,
or 75 cants. C1111pbeH Center•· Skinner
Church,
TURKEY FREI, ~d11g I side dlsll to Metropelltan Community
TO All.
1236 Killcaid 11 12 noon Tlalnksgivlng Day 11 noon. -0.PEN
Chlpe! 11 •·"!· 485-3665 _P.
RECYCLED STEREOS BUY •• SELL •• TRADE. STEREO WORKSHO
Mond1y-S1turd1y 10..6. 126 N. 28th, Springfield . 741-1597.
Monitor
SMALL IS BEAUTIFUL. O.A.S. Y.S. PRISM-1 Mln/1turized
Sp,1ker. lncredlble sound .Tiny, warrantied . 484-6888, anytime.

TORCH
$ELL CARS, RENT HOUSES, SEND LOVE'N STUFF!, FREE
,AYINS CASH for,f gold, silver, dllmOltd:s , coins . BREIDE GOLDE~·
81v~. , •1 ·,, , C!il.,Si~le~s . Fl~er -:V'!°d~ IOf LC~. ~~•o~• ·
CHANBE IM.747...4654 11~~-~, • .~~eek . 1216, Mohawk_

down
Down s/tep/ng big. Hlgfl.Ttch . Custom Design. World's finest
. Ultra light. Feathered friends Lite-Tern. Tom 484-6888 anytime.
.
HAND-KNITTED, WOOL , SCANDIA DESIGN APRES-SKI SWEATER
Twelve_111nut hues. Sized 38-40. $185. See YoYo II TORCH.

D-2
YARD SALE - Infant's and children's , oil drum. 4750 FrankUn,
(Eugen, Mobile VHlage), Saturday, 11•4, 747·7049.

ind c,r sltr,o comP/01111,r, s,n,ul, ttchnics ind m,ny other HI-I/
pon,nts. Prl'81 too low to quot,. Jeff, 686-9907 , days.
1-12 ft.
LIVE CHRISTMAS TREES. Pin,, Doug/ls ind Gr,nd /Ir.
15.
Rough cedar pll_nters 1vallable. WI deliver. 687-1461 No. _

Vlctoriln styled ind tlbll. Oregon 1111d1. $15. Lltliln1, 683-564B.
AskStereo system. BSR tumtlbll, M1r1ritz rwcelv,r 1Rd spt1k1rs.
•
ing $250. Call 683-8349.
On, 10-spnd bike. $75. Spirit 27, thl R1llllgh, m1d1 In England.

683-6598 .
Needs
Osc/1/oscop, for sat,. Sylvania tube type. Five inch scr11a.
No. 15.
tinkering. $80 or best offer. Trades ~nsidered . 687-1461 .
call
10-sp,ed bike• $50. Less thin I yNr old. I need the money.
Jake , 342-2834.
Vlritar
lenses, 135mm, f 3.5 S105. 50mm, f -1.8, S60, 24mm
(Olympus mount), $60. 683-7141 .
ind two
Four tires used for 400 miles. GR 70-15. Two Goodyear
•
Fireston'II. Must sell. Asking $100 for 111ch two. '85-2462 .

11/ four.
195-14 " whltew1/I F/r1ston11 r,d/11 tires. S20 e,ch. $75 for
Exc11//11nt condition. 484-28B9 1ft,r 3 p.m.

messages
to mt! Waiting patlently.
J. Jordan: If you'r, av1il1bli, prore·lt _
Puddi11: / lore you truly. I love you wholly. M1rllyn Pe1rl.

Bazlet?
, Lyn B.: Happy to mike new friends Ukt you. You're I gem!
•
SW
Rlchlrd: Another time . Rachi/ ~chel.R1chll
s shots Fre, mill, bllck and whit, Sprlng,r Sp,nltl 7 monttls old. Ha_
ind 1/cens,. Good with chlldrwn.688•5580.
to you
E1g/1s ,ts, ind _fly . In Novel'!'ber Iha _world especially belongs
•
-- know and 1111. Native Sco,pion .
rry'a lo,
Barbie: Remember me? We're celebrating Friday nite. Ha_
happy hour, dancing afterwards . CaH me •· Cindy.
Today Is my
{)e,r PrlSldent o,v,, I hippy, b1llt11d•birthd1y wish ,
day . Enjoy the pie. Cindy .
than S5
Get rich quick: Box 5350, Eugene, 97405. Dp11ot send more
per envelope .
Call
Attention 1t1 loose, t111nag, . women! Party Saturday ~lght.
484-3182 for mot• iolo. ..• ,. • • .

Wirt 1111/ag In /or,? s.o.
Cd
I'd /lkl to 111#1 SOIIJIIIOM wltll I dfC.nt l'fnll Flofd collllctloll.

Vic: W/1111' WI$ I whln you

m,, Al, nB-6585.

Al,
cut,, ltUlthy, hippy, /II black, Ml/IX lltttH. NII(/$"° ""· Frw.
7~6-6515.
Wllt1 t
Mommy: Whfn wll.,, ltlw ,nougt, I.«/ tout? Lucy, Lucy!
Cllt 'afford ehUdclre lftd !Old, toe. M1111my.
ffldly 7
T1m,rpy, I nek1nd frt1, Taco 811 OIi 7th near JlffersOII
p.m. 11/21/110. Otllarwlse, d111 't bolll1r 111t ever.
FOR
IHECK THE WOMEN'S AWARENESS CENTER BULLETIN BOARD
GS.
THE LATEST JDS POSSIBILITIES OR COMMUNITY HAPPENIN

• •·
A good cup ol con11, , w1rm 1tm,,phl r, ind I w1lcomltt0
c,nt,r
Wo1Mn 's
,.,.
Who his , ref,r111e1 fill, ref11r11t urvlc.i, ind glv•s p,nollll
port? The Women's Awareness Center.
P,ull ind Bonni, , you c,n Invite ,,,. over for thlt dintNr 1nytJ1N.

,,,.,,.ss

LD'II, Din.

clpm-Attncliv, COUJ'M wlshfs 1ttr,ctlv11 fem,t, for re/ltionshlp. Ne
f:
tes. Cell for conversation . 741-4-482 .
quick.
DD: You drin m, up 1 ,,,,,_ ,,,,, flM f111thlmJ frilnd. Quick,
MN.
I 11111a
Mys,.rlous AM r,dio p,rson,/lty .: It's only rock-11-roll; did
" AM playlbt?' ' Ain't loDkln' for love , Jeff Saint.
lo . .t.
(J.S,6; Short, SWHt. brownlsh-b/011d, ,nd p,tl,. I'd kw•
lad
Just dire. Srtlk from 11-1, ID,.,.,~ , It doM. Lor, to wllk
•
alw1ys do. Solly odds I'll piss b)'. you. Movt Two.
Cake.
Short
to Cuddles: Yeu hive I hickey on your??

.C,rl •• I found I bllnket In my box. Did you' put It tlNr,? Z,n.
Z1nnil -- Promises, promises. Still waiting. Cari.
Nut t/m,, C1rl, nut time. Zin.

Buutiful f11m,1t p1rtntrs, betwHn 11·25. ,,.,,. r,ply. Blrry.
IMS
Shy loving Polymorph, 26, SNkl Ubtr,tld woin,n for frl,nds/tlp
pusiblt room,t1. Call Bob , 746-4261.

Cllr,, The Women's Aw1rwn,ss c,11,.r Ills ur. cltlldara
r,1ources . r,u people to b{fng more ldus. Ftllllna.
- SJIICI
Sllnbo: KHp on cooking - um,dly ttley'Ubl Clllillll tor us
'
lnvtder.

to. MatJerry, don 't b, scar,d ta ask 1111 for lea cream, si.'d io¥I
chmaker.
Wl 'I IN
WE:: I'd pick you up 1nytl1M. Lil's neap, ind run 1w1y.
LG
young ind tog1thllr.... Happy Birthday Love. (Finally!) AU yeurs,

work II
Told YI I would/ Next titrN, 100 ol e6'hl After ,u, ya Wlnl)I
off, dontcha? Big S!•·
Ill
Get lnvowed in studlnt govemm,nt. M11tlngs hald In boardroom
financial buHdlng. 1 p.m. Tuesdays. MC
1na
BO •• Roses"' "'1, rlollts 1rw blue, your body Is warm through
.through .. RW