Lane
Community .
College •
4000 E. 30th Ave. Eugene, OR -97405
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Photo by Bonnie ·Nicholas

__l_s_<<}_~-=L=-=e=-=t- =-te.:=. :r·=-=s=--·_<<_>>__:O~P-lnlons
- - ~·E_d_l_t_o~r_la
Brave Flu Victim
suffers in sil0nce

Edito~ for continuing the high
standard of quality set by last
I RE~vLV E T O
I REiPLV E
year's Editor. The Torch has
DVMP ON f\l..L. Of=
TC QUIT
grown steadily in quality since its
ycu 50 HARD
~MOklN G. (!REz,O LVE.
inception in 1965 and the degree
Yov' LL THI NK
DcWN
LI2-cvT
of professionalism expected of
I REi>CLVE. ..._ ON MY LA§T YEAR WA'f)
0
writers makes it easily the finest
being
try
sympathy,
yoo·want
If
saying
not
am
·
I
flu.
.
the·
t ··have
A Pl CN IC .
community college newspaper in
O To TREAT MY - DR1NKlN6.
this, for ,God's .sake, because I a Sweetly Suffering Flu Victim.
all.
them
read
I've
and
state_,
the
K\ lJ§ BETTER. ....,_,_.-...,,
want your ·.sympathy. ·~ am simply This requires retiring to bed
0
My latest and as it turns out,
0
wearing a permanent weak smile
stating an obvious fact so that you
been
has
Lane
at
last contribution
0
won't get too close and catch it and expressing thanks for the hot
• 1981 •
tions DirecCommunica
ASLCC
as
sqeezed
freshly
and
bottles
water
me?
like
yourself. Isn't that just
t ,la~...
tor, a job I leave with many proorange juice this gets you. UnforAlways thinking of others even
I I LJ
:
;
•
jects unfinished, but with every
tu nately, this technique requires
wnen I'm aNreath'.s...
indication that a capable replace'
'
Oh, .not that I .feel bad, mind a great deal of energy and I'm
will be chosen who will see
ment
flu
the
from
exhausted
too
much
you. In_ facJ, .when i stagger out to
those projects through to complethe kitctfen in my -rumpled to go through a charade like that.
tion. I have been an extremely
is
A perfectly viable alternative
bathrobe , unshaven·, blearyvocal and at times exacerbating
MereVjctim.
Flu
Grouchy
eyed.· co,ughing and gasping for to be a
representative of student inly snarl things like, "You mean
air, and my dear wife, Glynda, interests, lobbying hard for key
quires_ how I'm feeling, I in- there isn't a single damned
issues and winning no popularity
Kleenex in the house!'' This has
variably repiy, "Fine, just fine."
awards in the process, especially
"Don't you.feel any pain?" she two advantages: (1)you can vent
with our student body president ,
your ire without fear of retribution
asks soJicitousty .
Dave Anderson, who has been an
" Only when ·I breathe," I res- for, after . all, you· re sick and
tenacious lobbyist for his .
equally
pond manfully. Then I' II cough (2)your loved ones will leave you
of view.
point
own
On examining the procedure I religion. From conversation with
rackingly, and dab my lips. with a alone to die in peace. ··
the infrequent senate find _that students are given extra the Nursing Programs CoorDespite
Lastly, there are the Hiber- fights and clashes of will on an
hankerchief in order to examine it
preference exfor blood flecks.. Not yet? I' II be nating Flu Victims . These are occasional issue, I would like to 1points in this modified lottery by - dinator I find this
minorities to
encourage
to
ists
simp.
ts
who
souls
requiremen
misguided
certain
poor,
''·fulfilling
darned.
being
of
publicly
record
the
on
go
I can not
What
a
with
One of these requirements for ex- enter the program.
As you can probably tell. I am a ly retire to their rooms
of and
supportive
extremely
ale
ginger
to enwant
warm
of
you
if
is
quart
large
understand
tra points (for an Associate
living example --_.albeit, a barely
our Student
endorsing
strongly
to
only
nurscrackers
the
soda
into
of
box
a
minorities
and
courage
to
is
Program)
Flu
Nursing
Brave
Degree
example -- of the
1 living
Body President , and each of the
emerge 48 hours later completely
have a minimum High School GPA ing program , why are not males
Victim .
cabinet members and senators
included in that minority status?
of 3. 5 or average GED scores of
There are many ways to have cured . But what's the point of
the students this year .
serving
earn
't
doesn
it
if
flu
the
having
Males are certainly a minority in
63 and above ; however, a high
the flu . And as the odds are quite
worked closely with them for
I've
ador
sympathy
,
fear
any
you
nursing community , and I
the
concollege GPA is not even
good that· you'll have it yourself
eight months now since my apmiration?
you should actively enthink
so?
is
this
give
why
to
want
wonder
sidered . I
this season, you may
pointment last spring, and can
their participation in the
•
•
courage
•
the
•
of
•
area
another
at
look
s
·
Let
.
advance
some
matter
the
they are having
• .. ' ,.., 1o t· .;. . -~ .
••.
,,
•
Well, I hope •I lfave been: of assure students looked
program
comone
When
lottery.
modified
by
after
their interests
I think serious scrutiny should
facing some small help in making your
·t:ti-: __ ' :\ -.. ,:oriff.Y.
leaders they can trust to see the pletes 20 credit hours of preflu
the
with
bout
forthcoming
given to these -- and possible
at
be
of
GPA
a
with
courses
nursing
courage.
e
over
• 'f'1tf\'}tus-wltfi,~edibl
job done right. Any ·conflict
.
enjoyable
and
rewarding
-- areas. of the modified lotmore
other
include
must
(which
3.25
least
arises
that
never
procedures
~ould
or
icti,n~
V
i
issues
. .lft0~!~~-~u
12l;
so that system might
Writing
:
system
surtery
following
should
•
I
If
the
return,
in
ask
I
All
lQJniHo our.lo.ved ones how much
is settled before coming up to a
122;
,
121
Bi
fair, encourage the
more
hysiology
become
don't
Anatomy/P
you
that
is
night,
the
vive
betide
woe
But
•
.
' ·.~ - wir·are suffering
vote, resulting in the collective
225;
positively, and
FN
more
Nutrition
student
111;
Speech
tell me about it.
them rt they don't find out!
decision of 14 individuals with
a lower attrition
for
or
make
225;
FL
nt
possibly
Developme
Child
and
_ This, of course, requires a
minds of their own, and with uniprograms.
nursing
215)
the
Psy
from
t
rat~
Developmen
Human
and
stoicism
.
·of
·btend
delicate
que backgrounds and approach
well prove
may
scrutiny
in
nts
i
Objective
po_
extra
get
will
person
that
·dramatics. · One ·· of my • better
to every proposal. I highly recominvolveveryone
to
us
advantageo
question
I
lottery.
modified
bed
of
the
out
totter
:to
is
techniques
mend to .students that they attend
I ed.
criteria.
these
of
fairness
the
toward the medicine cabinet for
senate meetings, serve on comNoel Rea
:
cough syrup.
agree with the concept- of giving
mittees , and let your represenstupre-nursing
a
''Let (1l8 get it for you,'· says (Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co . 1981)
to
extra points
tatives on campus know your dent, but I wonder if it is right to
•
Glynda.
.thoughts on how you want your
"No, no," I say. "I can do it
tell a pre-nursing student that he
money spent.
.weak,
' myseif .. l _jus~ f~J,a trifle
or she can not have the extra
My reason for leaving is that
that'~ aiL'\ Af'triis -polnt,, if I'm
points because that student has To the Editor:
after receiving two degrees there
To the Editor:
lucky, J.'ll; crumpte. to; the floor,
taken every one of .the renot
How shall we touch one another
classes left
I am leaving LCC after having _just aren't ~nough
c~i_~.Q:_.~'·PQ·n.T,. get too close .to
courses. For . e~mpl.e, I ·when the Oregonian: the Register
quired
e in my
to m_
value
of
.
are
that
·me!_rm-su..re:l can probably crawl acquired a great many friends
chosen field for me to remain a am a pre-nursing student and will Guard; the Emerald:··and broad. among the staff and students,
ba~ j to·be.(S •(ln' ~Y - D\\'.n.~•
full time student, and the fact that have (at the end of this quarter) cast media ''engin·eer pubiic opie Brave Flu·Victims are not so and would like to avail myself of
W_
one cannot remain a student 63 credit hours, but since I don't nion by blocking "the First
have • Fundamentals of ·speech A~endment goal of achieving the·
e9ocentric_·~ to·.dijsire sympathy .. this forum to say goodbye to them
forev~r. My time has come, and
111 , I do not qualify for the -extra widest possible dissemination of
wantJs_,yo.ur ric_f'lly deserv- all and to voice some opinions on . I'm off to Los Angeles to seek my
A!I
matters.
I would ·think my 12 credit
interest
points.
student
the
being
for
•
ed·· admiration
informattori from diverse and an-.
fortune and/or a career
As a former Torchie I'd like to whichever comes first.
h1:>Urs of psychology would better. tagonistic sources"? (436 U.S . .
•'
gallant Christian martyrs that we
commend this year's staff and .
prepare me for nursing than 775)
•
are.
Its been fun, gonna miss ya all! •
Speech 111. Wouldn 't it be
would
A case in point is an Emerald
Dale Parkera
more fair if a pre-nursing student editor .telling me she killed
The TORCH is a student-managed newspaper ,
were to enroll in a course or two coverage of my legal COMPLAINT
published oo ThUrsdays, September through June.
which might be directly beneficial against lawyer-legislators unNews stories are compressed , concise reports,
intended to be as fair and balanced as possible.
as constitutionally serving · in two
(such
nursing
for
O
the
Some may appear with a byline to illdicate
Anatomy/Physiology Bi 121 , 122 branches of government (3
'
reporter responsible .
News_features. because of their broader scope,
To the Editor; Eldon G. Schafer, and Nutrition FN 225) and leave Oregon Constitution 1) -because
may contain some Judgments on the part of the
P_resident LCC,· Members of the the remaining credit hours to be (a) it was not a university concern
writer. They are identified with a " feature " byUne.
" Forums " .ire essays contributed by TORCH
LCC Boar'd of Education; John satisfied by work required for and (b) my personal vendetta!
EDITOR : Hekli Swllllnger
readers and are aimed at br_oad issues lacing
C
PHOTO EDITOR: Lisa Jones
members of the community. They should be limited
graduation but could ~e chosen
arter, Dean of Students;
She apparently disagrees with
.
.
ENTE~TAINMENT EDITOR: $arah Brown
to750words .
OcHealth
Head
ASSITANT PHOTO EDITOR: Derek Himeda
White,
the student so one's schedule the concept of constitutional
by
Douglas
" Letters to the Editor " are inle.nd.ed as short
STAFF REPORTERS: George Wagner, Mara Math,
commentaries on stories appearing in The TORCH .
cupatlons;· Anne O'Brien, Coor- will best suit the individual?
Sandra Edgemtn . Fred Boyer , Jell Saint . Chris
supremacy (6 U.S. Constitution
The editor rese~es the right to edit for libel or
Abramson • program:
di na tOf NUrSIOQ
Another area of the modified par 2) and remembers a March 7,
•
length ,
anpublic
a
as
serves
"
Nicholas
Bonnie
Omnium·Gatherum
"
STAFF PHOTOGRAHER:
Once again it's time for all lottery with which I have misgiv- 1978 Emerald . story about
GRAPHICS : Miehael Scully
nouncemenlforum . Activitiesrelated to LCC will be
• St Uden tS to play ings is that you award extra
CALENDAR: Paula C.ise
potent'
.
priority
given
lawyers/insurers/public officials
,a I nursing
All correspondence must be typed and signed by
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Jan Brown
luck with your points if an applicant qualifies for
of
game
the
to
prior
Tuesday
the
AD DESIGN : Ruth Schetlbach , Bill'Hogan
obstructing my Oregon
are
the writer . Oeadlines
RECEPTIONIST: Yolanda Sergi
. modified lottery. Shouldn't ac" ethnic minority status. To my Workers ' Compensation restorapublicalion . Mail ·or bring all correspondence to:
'COPYSE.TTER~.Chr'ls Abr~on '
The TORCH , Roori\ 20'5 Center BOildirlg.' .400Q E: '
it is illegal to bias the tion Petition _
knowledge
of
result
a
be
truly
e
·::.ceptanc
,
d_rive ard . recent:
30th Ave . Eugene ,, Of 97401.• Phon&MJ-4501
'COORDINATOR : Donna Mitchell
•PRODUCTioiti MANAG~R; Jeff Saini"
'.' .scholastic abilities and ac - choosing •of someone for. a ·-pro..• •:,:,:,:,:.·.··
: '.:
ext. 2654 ••
. Continued on Page 11 •
ce, .s.e.x, Q.( .
gram_- Qe.c?~·s~ •,Q.f r~_
- - '·, .•·p~r,nplishments rather than luck?
---""----------------~~~
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Nu rs e I tt e ry

TORCH

11

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Trut h-se eker

Good bye LCC

- The

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The TORCH January 22 - a, 1981 Page

M ai ns tr ea m in g: al l pe op le togethe1
by Sandra Edgemon
of The TORCH

How would you feel if you
entered a classroom where the instructor spoke in sign language
and you were the only one who
couldn't understand?
How would you feel in a
classroom where books had to be
read with your fingers?
How would you feel in a
classroom where there were no
chairs because the rest of. the
students were in wheelchairs?
A disabled student faces such
situations every day.
·' Mainstreaming is the concept
of keeping all people together ,
using the same services at the
same time ," says BJo Ashwill ,
LCC counselor for the physically
disabled . Due to the 1973
Rehabilitation Act, Mainstreaming
is becoming more prevalent in the
nation 's educational systems .
There are presently 1,000
disabled LCC students on .campus, with limitations that range
from mild to severe -- anything
thirty are in wheelchairs, ten have
from a bad knee injury to a hearhearing impairments and six have
ing impairment. Of the severely
visua1 impairments.
disabled students, approximately
' ' Mainstr~aming is working out

pretty well at Lane, " says
Ashwill. "It 's real scary for
disabled students to attend public
schools .· Before mainstreaming,

students were in special education schools, or were home being
tutored. They weren't r~ady for
the big world and likewise the big

'' Your health is your respona
sibility," he says. " And people
need to learn to apply basic consumer prinqiples when choosing
a doctor.· '
He adds . that people need to
'' choose a doctor they can work
with . Doctors are used to dealing
with people who don't take an active role in their own health care .
You need to stress to your physician that you do care about learning new techniques lor staying
healthy.' '
There are some basic principles
in health responsibility, Kemper
adds : Treating medication with
suspicion and respect and not accepting treatment you don't
understand can go a long way

toward building self-involvement
in a basic health approach , he explains .
Kemper also stresses a positive
mentat ·attitude, whtch incluttes
learning methods of self relaxation , ' ' a kind of non-mystical
transcendental meditation, combined with visualization technique·s."
The savings during a fiscal year
for an average person after completing a workshop can amount to·
as much as $100 per year,
Kemper estimates .
This· is especially significant for
senior citizens, says Kemper. If
the programs can bring down the
cost of Medicare , Healthwise will
be able to work with other agen-

5

world wasn't ready for them. ''
LCC offers some special ser
vices for disabled students, in
eluding interpreters for the dea1
mobWty aids, notetakers anc
readers. Curbs have been cut
ramps have been built to parkini
lots, threshholds have beer
lowered on doors throughou
campus, towel dispensers hav£
been lowered in the bathrooms
automatic door op~rs tlavE
been installed in the Center anc
Administration Buildings . Then
is also an elevator in the Center
Building, specifically for the USE
of disabled students . Wheelchairs
are supposed to have first priori ty.
Two of the _latest additions at
LCC are the new ramp in the PE
building and a lowered counter in
Student Records .
The Voice of ·umited· Abilities
Association, an on-campus club,
offers a variety of activities for all
students .
An emergency fund loan is
planned for 1981 .
Ashwill, whose motto is '' If you
can believe you can do it, you can
do it," plans to focus on the attitudinal barriers, as well as continual expansion of the architectural barriers .

Lecturer em ph as ize s me dic al self-responsibilit}
by Sarah Brown
of The TORCH

How many Americans run to a
doctor whenever they get a cold
or a minor injury? And how many
people take whatever treatment is
offered without questioning or ful ly understanding the ailment or
the cure?
These are questions posed by
Healthwise, a non-profit corporation founded in 1975 to promote
health self-responsibility through
education and family participa tion .
In a two hour lecture held Jan .
21 at LCC by Don Kemper, internationally known health consul·
tant and author of the
"Healthwise Handbook ," these

and other health issues were
discussed .
Kemper is a member of the five
person staff of Healthwise, based
in Boise, Idaho . Staff ·members
aim their successful pilot project
at families with small children and
senior citizens . The program consists of ten two hour workshOps .
Topics covered include how to
gi·ve home physical exams , keep
health records, and deal with
everyday ailments (such as ;abdominal problems, back and
headaches, upper respiratory
problems , injuries , emergencies
and nutrition).
Kemper emphasizes preventative health and de-emphasizes
medication. He is also a firm advocate of "doctor shopping."

cies to educate senior citizens in
preventative health care .
Healthwise is working hand in
hand witb the health alliance of
Lane County, by-offering a series
of public discussions sponsored
by the Lane • County Medical
Society, LCC , and Lane County's
five hospitals .
The series will continue in Cottage Grove on Feb . 4, Feb. 18,
and March 4. It will also be held
in Eugene on April 29 , May 13,
and May 27. Discussion topics include ' ' Ho·w to Take Care of
Yourself," "Nutrition" and " The
Power of Positive Stress.''
For more information , contact
Karen Douglas at Cottage Grove
Hospital, 942-3355 .

German
AUTO SERV ,CE

with

Adrienne Tort
A Fundra iser for the Nat ional, Women's Stud ies Associa tion

~,r1
~J.7
~l~ '.D~ t)
[l)AU ~~
AlJICOa

Hosted by :
WOMEN 'S STUDIES OF U. OF ORE
& L.C.C .. WOMEN"S CENT ER LCC. SWS
JAN 30. 198 1
8 PM
E M .U BA L L ROOM

uco~cou~

TI CKETS SOL O AT WOM EN "S STUDIES
& CE NTER . BOOK & TEA SHOP .
HOUSE OF RECORDS
SG 50

o

EXPERT

Wheelchair Accessible
0 ASL Interpre
ted
0

WORK MANS HIP

No Alcohol

A Non-pro fit
Organization

----

\Illa

-

-. ~

l'

2045 Franklin Blvd.
Eugene, Oregon 97403

342-29
12
..____
___
_..,i

Page 4 January 22

-0-: 1981

The TORCH

.

Protesters rally against Ne\N Right
by Mara Math
of The ,TORCH

things to get worse,'· she con Nuclear Power.'' And in the
To judge by the crowd's reac~ were women; taking a leaf from
cluded, "we've got to start movchants: "Indian lands/Indian nation -- a standing ovation -- the feminist cultural events , the Peoing right now. ' '
tions/ Sovereignty I Not reservaple ' s Inauguration prov ided
LCC Language Arts Instructor • most moving speech was Anne childcare, wheelchair accessibiliIn contrast to Ronald and Nan- tions,'' ·'A woman's body is her
Harbaugh's,
collectively written
Chinosole spoke on behalf of the
cy Reagan's tour of- the nine own/Church and State, leave us
by the Women 's Coalition . After ty , and superb interpretation for
Friends
of
Myra
Willard
.
Willard
lavish Inaugural Balls held alone," and "Shell no, we won't
introducing herself as an -older the hearing-impaired by Janet
is the black female Affirmative
simultaneously in the Capitol -- go for Texaco! "
lesbian activist for whom ' 'the Zibelli.
Action Officer at the U of O who
Nancy wearing a mink of 100
"Let's Get Back to the Basic,"
Musical breaks were provided
brought a class action suit· Women's Movement is the fTIOSt by Grupo Raiz , the International
skins over her $10,000 beaded read the stage banner which
important thing in my life, ' ' Har- Solidarity Singers and Richard
against the University· for
dress -- a very different kind of showed a crystalline river and
discrimination .
• inauguration took place Saturday green meadows under blue skies.
baugh read a statement from the Crandall. Other speakers includ·'Atiyeh_has just started a proat the Lane County fairgrounds.
ed Shyam Sundar from Proutist
Ethnic Women's Alliance proUnder this banner, People's InToe People ' s Inauguration auguration member Krissy Keefer
""',..."""""'~""!"""'"......~""'-"'~!!l""'!!'l'!"'1!'1
March and Rally was organized to read a new pledge of allegiance :
oppose the New Right , US in''We do joyfully inaugurate a new
tervention in other countrys' af- era of liberation, a future free
fairs , the draft, and.government 's from hunger, exploitation , and
benign neglect of the Klan and war, free to develop humanity,·
police brutality . The rally was economic , political and social
held to promote " a better vision,
justice , and cooperation among
a better world.''
nations , free to develop the
" We know that the problem is creative potential of the planet. In
not Ronald Reagan ,'' said Oma Ii the People we trust.' '
Yeshitela of 1he African People 's
With several scheduled
Socialist Party " The problem is speakers and entertainers , the
the system that produced Ronald rally grew overlong , and the
Reagan .··
crowd which had swelled to 600
Signs like ' ' Bring the Wa r began to drift away toward the
Home" and the chant " The peo- end of the second hour. Several
ple united/will never be of the speeches were drawn out ,
defeated ' ' gave the march a imprecise, and high ly rhetorical.
nostalgic flavor for many of the The most direct action suggested
300 marchers who demonstrated during the rally was put. forth by
during the 70 ' s.
Juan Renya of the Leonard Peltier
Coalition was the primary Defense Committee . " Instead of
strength of this rally . Many demonstrating in frorit of nuclear
issues were interrelated, as the plants , we should be shutting
. pos_ters seemed to indicate: ·down the uranium mines .' '
" Dykes Against· Nukes; " "Jobs
Several speakers suggested • cess whereby making verbal
testing Reagafl 's anti-affirmative International , who diagrammed
Not Jails;,.. and ·" Mutants for taking a legislative approach.
racial slurs is a felony ,''
action stand .
the rise of the New Right as being
"There's a myth perpetuated by
" Your freedom ends where my the merger of ultra-conservatives
Chinosole informed the crowd .
the upper class," said Felice
nose begins ," she continued . with Christian fundamentalists ; .
•'This kind of racism you could
SecondN
Nirenstein of the Clients ' Council,
•Tm not just talking about rape Touraj , of the Iranian Student
call
the
uncouth
kind
.
Believe
me,
Uaed&ike
''that being . poor means being
in the streets , but rape of the Association ; and Alan Si_porin ,
I
want
it
stopped,
because
if
sobuy-sell-t
powerless
" .th.
meone' II yell ' nigger!' at me in mind by psychiatrists. I'm talking coordinator of Coalition Opposir,g
true,' ' '. · .,..,- •. gnd
.........." · at' s•· not
~itfzirfgi rt
broad dpylight, what will he do at about the •state surgically in- Registration and the Draft .
vading a woman 's body, altering
Nirenstein then detailed the
night? But we also have to deal
ecycieci° ~lcycl
Yeshitela quoted from a study
women
to fit the needs of the
success
of
the
Council
(an
with
the
white-collar
racism here
used wheels
economy rather than vice versa . done by the Trilateral Commission
alliance of welfare recipients,
in Oregon. Will Atiyeh also ad& parts
dress that?' '
I'm
talking about enforced that said the US is suffering from
welfare workers , client advocates
Terry
Yaffe
"democratic distemper ."
presented
a
sterilization
as a genocidal proand legal aid workers) in restorcollectively-written speech from
1712 WUlamette
cedure . Twenty-five percent of all
ing some of the funds and some
'' Newly mobilized strata must
· 343-5362
the Jewish Study Group . ' ' It is Native American women and forty
of the rights recently cut by Gov.
be
returned to passivity, '' ' he
important for us as _Jews not to percent of Puerto Rican women
Vic Atiyeh. ''We can't wait for
quoted the study as saying .
give up the struggle in our cities
between 20 and 49 have •been
"Newly mobilized strata, " inand countries, thinking that we
sterilized, and twice as many cluded many of the rally pardon't have to struggle any more , black as white women . I'm talk- ticipants: welfare recipients, peowe can just go take refuge in
ing about men deciding for
ple of color, lesbians and gay men
Israel. The US Government does women whether women should
and the physically challenged .
not support Israel because it have to nurture unwantedPerhaps the best indication of
cares about Jews; it needs Israel
fetuses . If this new anti-abortion
just how inclusive and faramendment passes, a fetus will
to prop up its interests ."
reaching this coalition intends to
Yaffe said the Group's research . have more rights than any
be
came in Siporin 's speech. He
.showed that Israel sends military woman, since the ERA has not
pointed out that contrary to the
been
passed!
'
'
Harbaugh
con
aid and channels US funds to
government 's public statements ,
cluded with a reminder for women
South Africa , El Salvadore -and
more
than a million eligible young
to
put
themselves
and their own
Chile, and trains military police
men
have
refused to register for
cause
first,
because
"we
won't
for these dictatorships as well.
the draft. He exhorted the probe free until we free ourselves!"
"To come out against Zionism is
testors to ··bring the truth to the
Feminist input was visible not
not to give up the fight against
Am,erican people .''
anti-Semitism , '' Yaffe said . only in the speeches but also in
'' What it means is to struggle the structure of the demonstraThe righteousness of the antiBulk Foods - Grains, Flours, Oils,
more positively for an end to tion . Half of the speakers and
war movement rang out again ,
racism and anti-Semitism. ' '
nearly all of the security workers
but missing was the often grating
Nu'8 & Seeds, Dried fruits, Beans,
self-righteousness of those days.
' 'We must go out and speak to
, Herbs, Spices, Vitamins, Cheeses,
our neighbors," Siporin said ,
-;Acidophilus Dairy Products
'' and we must not only speak to
our neighbors, but listen to
Under new management
Organically· ·Growla
them .' '
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Studies contra dict
colleg e stude nt
suicide figure s
(CPS) •• Suicide among college
students is not at the relatively
high rates that most experts
previously thought, according to
a recent study.
Two researchers, Allen J.
Schwartz and Clifford B. Reifler,
now assert that the incidence of
suicide is significantly lower''
among college students than
among non-student 20-to-24
year-olds.
1 1

The researchers ' findings contradict most previous studres,
which showed the suicide rate
·among students to be anywhere
from 11 to 50 times higher than
among others of the same age
group. -Schwartz and several student health officials , however,
concede that suicide rates are difficult to measure and that even
this study may be slanted by
under-reporting.
There are so many ways people can commit suicide and not
have it detected , ' • points out Dr.
Randolph Catlin, director of Har~
vard's psychiatric clinic. "Some
ways are obvious, and ·sonie ways
are completely hidden .''
" It's not hard to know if
some~ody takes a gun and shoots
himself,'' says Yale psychiatrist
Robert Arnstein, '' but if he falls
off a cliff, he may have been just a
bad rock climber."
Schwartz, a psychiatrist at the
University of Rochester, adds that
insurance restrictions -- companies qon '! pay in suicide cases
~- and religious or famify stigmas idit:;·.. =/
against self-destruction may also
cause under-reporting of suicide.
Yet Schwartz and Reifler
believe their study -- it showed a
suicide rate of seven in 100,000·
among all 20-to-24. year-olds -- is
more accurate than the previous
research .
Scwartz claims earlier studies
were flawed by a " non-random
sampling of time ." The studies ,
he says , tend to occur just after
an abnormal number of suicides
happen .
Campus suicides , in fact , do
tend to come in bunches. A
University of New Mexico
research project into suicide
began early in 1980 ·after two
uNM Hospital staffers killed
themselves ·within five months of
each other. In a ten-week period
during spring , 1980. there were
five suicides at the University of
Florida .
Schwartz also attributes prior
.notions of high college suicide
rates to the kinds of campuses
studied . Those notions came from
" information coming from
schools like Harvard , Berkeley
and Yale , where the rates are
higher.· '
But Arnstein says suicide is uncommon at Yale ("We have one
about every other ·year " ), while
Harvard's Catlin doesn't .know
the figures . •'These are not
figures schools tend tQ. publish. ' '
In claiming that
student suicide rates aren 't really different from those .of other people
of the - ·same age group,·"
Schwartz is consistent with a
,:growing_ SUS8iqi~rt!1at stressf~I
.academI.c., presstJr.es. may·.not qe
.:as emotionalfy . ~isfiguririg as .'
•previouslY. tho_µgbt- .
\, ••

The TORCH January 22 - 8, 1981 ·PagP. 5

'Alcoholism For Employees' program heldby Fred Boyer
of The TORCH

'' Alcoholism is not a habit -it· s a disease,· ' Serenity
Lane's Jerry liebersbach told
about 20 LCC management
and supervisory personnel attending an open program called
'Alcoholis m
For
Employees '' sponsored by the
LCC Staff Development Department.
The meeting, held January
21, in room 247 of the Math
Building , was far from the
usual '' Alcohol Problem'· type
of meeting.
Step by step, in clear, concise terms and aided by profuse slide illustrations and
1

chalkboa rd ··- diagrams ,
Liebersbach showed the making of an alcoholic -- physically, mentally, and genetically.
And he showed
why
alcoholism is a disease __. how
it affects the liver, the heart;
the brain. He explained why
some
people
become
alcoholics, and others -- living
the same life-style -- don't.
'' Seventy-five percent of
alcoholics are nice people,
working for a living," said
Lieberman, '' not habitues of
skid row . Less than 1 percent
are on the streets .
"Good business leaders today know that some of their
best people have a drinking
problem , and because they

want, need, and care tor these
employees, and don't want
them to lose their jobs, they
~re making every effort to
understand the -problem and
assist their employees in dealing with it.
··But the issue is sensitive, ; ' said Liebersbach.
•'Menagement knows that an
employee's private life is his
own, that it -is confidential,
that they have no right to 'butt
in.'
••One of the biggest problems,· ' liebersbach said ,
is the fact that many
alcoholics have learned to
'live' with their disease by denying its existence, not realiz1

•

ing, or accepting;·the fact that
his/her work ·performance Is
being adversely affected.''
Speaking of women ,
Liebersbach brought out some ,
interesting statistics: In recent
years, for -every 5 male
alcoholics·there was 1 female
alcoholic. Now, for evfjry 5
male alcoholics there are three
female alcoholics. The reason
for this is still uncertain. In the
over-all population, one of
every ten people is an
alcoholic.
The LCC Staff Development
Dept. is pfanning several more
seminars on alcoholism to be
presided over by Liebersbach
-· they are as yet unschedul·
ed .

1 1

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R O O D aA C H

JUST WHEN YOU ·THOUGHT IT WAS-SAFE
. TO GO BACK IN THE WAT ER-Y OU CAN_'T GET TO IT.
m fIDS.5 ~~NTS A~ llN RI] ~w N(J m IICKE™AN RUl£TOj "W IIACH"
- STAARNi M/JO ITTfMAN •MAfMNA Hill •fflN f»\XOO. STEFAN (IR/lS(}i. [lfil 'r1l.NJ 45 LI.llJOO
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... -• Starts ·F riday, Janua ,Y 23 at• theatr e n••~·YO~ •
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AROUND ti ·

-Thursday

M(;>vies

Cinema 7 -- Atrium Building: "The
Canterbury Tales"; 7:30 and 9:50
Mayflower ·---788 E. 11tt\; "The Mirror
Crack'd; 7:20 and 9:30
Nationar -- 969 Willamette St. ; ··Nine to
Five " ; 7 and 9: 15
McDonald- -- 1O1O Willamette St .: " A
Change of Seasons"; 7: 30 and 9:30 .
Fine •Arts Theatre -· 630 Main St. :
··Electric Horseman'' and ··Gloria··: 7:30
and 9:30.
Cinema World -- Valley River Center:
" Seems like old Times" - 7:30 and 9:40 :
'" Flash Gordon " - 7:10 and 9:20 :
.. Mountain Family Robinson " - 7 and 9:
··Jazz Singer" -"7:10 and 9:20.
•
Valley River Twin Cinema -· ' ' Bye Bye
Brazil " - 6:15 and 8:15; "'Middle Age·d
Crazy " and " First Family" - 6: 15 and
8:30
Bijou -- 492 E. 13th .; ··singing in the
Rain" , " All Star Bloopers from 1936 ••.
··Ronald Reagan Funnies "; 7 and 9:30
U of O -- 177. Lawrence - " I Claudius Ill
and IV" ; 8:00

Mu$k ·

BJ KeII y ' s
14·7 5 Fr a n k I i n
Blvd.: "Wheatfield" ; 9: 30 - 2 . : Cover
Varies
The Place -- -1_60 $ . Park; "Robert Cray
Band "; 9:.30 - 1:30
Treehouse -~ 1769 f ra'nklin Blvd ; Buddy
Ungson -- Guitar; 9 ..,. midnight
Duffy's - 801 • E. 13th Ave; ··Hot
Whacks"; 9 • 1
Perry's -- 959 Pearl St.; "Runnin Free";
9 -1
U of O - The Dorian Wind Quartet performs chamber music by Mozart . Rauel .
Carter and Beethoven. ; 8 p. m.: Beall Hall
- " Musical Smorgasbord"; 12:30 p.m.:
Room 198 .

Theatre

Oregon Repertory _T ~tre - 99 , West
10th. ; .. Misalltance .. ; :Curtain at 8 -p. m. :
. TJcftets .. $4-$6 .
,
v-.,,..,Tlltltre .- 2350_ffJlyard: "The
Or\J~l<afd ": .8 p_.m.; s.r ,

:Friday

'Movies

Cinema
7
Building ; '.·The Canterbury Tales " : 7:30
and 9:30
Mayflower - 788 E. 11th.; "The Mirror
Crack 'd"; 7:20 and 9·:30
"'cOonald - 1O1O Willa~tte St. : • ••A
Change of Seasons"; 7:30 a'nd 9:30
Fjne Arts Thutni - _630 M,.a_
in St. . Springfield ; •"Electric Horseman" and
" Gloria·· - 7:30 and 9:30.
Cinema Wortd - ••Seems Like Old Times ·•
7:35 and 9:35; " Flash Gordon " 7:30 and
9AO ; .. Mountain Family Robinson .. 7
and 9 : " The Jazz Singer " - 7: 10 and
9:20
Valley River Twin Cinema - ··Bye Bye
• Brazil" . - 6: 15 and 8: 15: ·: Middle Aged
Crazy " and "First Family " - 6: 15 and
8:30
Biiou -- 492:::. 13th Ave .; ··singrng In I ne
Rain ", All Star Bloopers from 1936 •·,
" Ronald Reagan Snorts''.; 7 and 9:30

National -- 969 Willamette St. ; " Nine to
Five " ; 6, 8 and 10
U of O -- 150 Geology: " Time After
Time "; 7 and 9:15; 177 Lawrence ;
" Black Orpheus··; 7 and 9:15; 180 PLC ;
" Watership Down "; 7 and 9;

Music
BJ Kelly's
1475 Franklin
Blvd .;"Wheatfield" -- rock n' roll : 9:30 •
1:30.
Black Forest -- 2657 Willamette ;'-' Salt and
Pepper "; 9:30 - 1:30
Duffy's-- 801 E. 13th : " Hot Whacks ": 9
. 2
•
Treehouse -- 1769 Franklin Blvd .: Buddy
Ungson - piano
The Place -- 160 S. Park St .: ··Robert
Cray Band " : 9 - 2
Tavern on the Green -- 1375 Irving Rd .;
"D'Coy "; 9 - 1
Community Center for Performing Arts -291 W. 8th : ··c1audia Schmidt and Just
Friends'· -- Northwestern folk singers: $4
in advance , $5 at door; 8 p.m.

Dance
U of 0, Robinson Theatre -· Villard Hall;
Modern dance , ballet and classical dance
from India; $4 .50 general public . $2 . 75 U
of Ostudents and $3 .50 other students : 8
p.m .
Lane Community College -- 4000 E. 30th .;
Dance featuring the band "~xit" ; $1 for
one or $1 .50 for two ; 8:30 - 12 a.m.

Theatre

Oregon Repertory Theatre •- 99 W. 10th .;
" Misalliance " ; $4-$6 ; curtain at 8 p.m.
Also "God ": Midnight Mafia ; $2 .50.
Community Center for Performing Arts -291 W. 8th .; "Claudia Schmidt and Just
Friends .. - Northwestern folk singers: $4
advance . $5 at the door; 8 p.m.

Saturday
"' . . ,. r - ...
......._

Movies •

Cinema 7 -- Atnum ; "The Canterbury
Tales ": 7:30 and 9:50
Mayflower -- 788 E. 11 ;"The Mirror
Crack'd" ; 7:20 and 9:30
National •• .969 Willamette: ··Nine to
Five" ; 6,· 8, and 10
McDonald - 1010 Willamette ; "A Change
of Seasons "; 7:30 and 9:30
Fine Arts - 630 Main Sprinfield: ••El~ctric
Horseman ·· and ·'Gloria "; 7:30and 9:30.
Valley River Twin Cinema -- ··Bye Bye
Brazil " - 6 and 8:30
" Middle Aged Crazy" and " first Family"
-6 :15and8:30
Cinema World -- ··Seems Like Old
Times " ;7:35 and 9:35 ; '" Flash Gordon" :
7:30 and 9:40 : " Mountain Family Robinson"; 7 and 9 : ~·Jazz Singer "; 7:10 and
9:20
Bijou -- 492 E. 13 Ave .; " Singing in the
Rain .. , " Alf Star Blooper of 1936".
··Ronald Reagan Shorts·'; 7 and 9: 30 :
" Fleischer Cartoon Festival"; .11 a.m.
University of Oregon -- 180 PLC ; "Harold
and Maude· ·: 7 and 9:15; 123 Science :
" Death in Venice" ; 7 and 9.
Vietnam Area -Survivors Inc -- Cinema 7 Atrium Bldg ; " The Best Years of Ou r
Lives ··: midnig ht ; $2 .50 .

Music

BJ Kelly 's -· 1475 Franklin Blvd .; " The
Noiz Boiz "~ 8:30 - 2
Black Forest -· 2657 Willamette ; " Salt
and Pepper "; 9:30 - 1:30
The Place-· 160 S. Park : "Robert Cray
Band " ; 9:30 - 1:30
Treehouse -· 1769 Franklin Blvd .: Buddy
Ungson - piano; 8 to midnight
Duffy 's-· 801 E. 13 Ave .: " Hot
Whacks "; 9 - 2 - $1.50 cover
Tavern on the Green -- 1375 Irving Rd .:
" D'Coy "; 9:30 - 1:30
Perry's -- 959 Pearl ; " Runnin Free ": 9 •
1

EMU cultural forum -- Gerlinger Alumi
Lounge: Folksingers U. Utah Phillips and
Priscilla Herdman perform : $3.75 public .
$3 .50 U of O students ; 8 p.m.

Theatre
Oregon Repertory Theatre •· 99 W. 10 St .:
" Misalliance ": C-urtain at 8 p.m.;
Tickets: $4 • $6; Also " God "; Midnight
Mafia ; $2 .50 ..

Sunday

Movies

Cinema 7 -- Atrium Building : " The
Canterbury Tales" ; 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
McDonald Theatre -- 101 O Willamette St. :
" A Change of Seasons" ; 2:15 . 4:40,7
and 9:30
Mayflower -- 788 E. 11th .; " The Mirror
Crack 'd" : 2:45.5.7: 15 and 9:30
National -- 969 Willamette St.; " Nine to
Five"; 1:30. 3:30. 5:30. 7:30 and 9:30
Fine Arts Theatre -- 630 Main ' St. , Sprin gfield : " Electri c Horseman" and
" Gloria " 7:30 and 9:30
cinema World -· ··Seems Like Old
Times ··: 7 and 9:35 : " Flash Gordon" :
7:40 and 9:50 : "M ountain Family Robinson ··: 7 and 9:30 : " The Jazz Singer ":
7:05 and 9:35
Valley River Twin Cinema -· ··Bye Bye
Brazil " ; pJ~ ~n.d a:3Q ; ·• First Family "
and " Mtddle Aged Crazy" : 6: 15 and 8 :30
Bijou -- 492 E 13th Ave .: "Singing In the
Rain··, .. Ronald Reagan Funnies" . All
Star Bloops from 1936 •·; 7 and 9:30 ; also
··Fleischer Cartoon Festival .. 2

Music

University of Oregon -- Organist John
Hofland Performs a degree recital; 8 p.m . ;
Beall Hall: free
Aunt-Lucy Divine's -- 13th and Alder; Fred
Raulston- Vibest Percuss ionist ; Recording
Artist plays 100 percussion instruments
from all over the world ; $2.00 Cover.at the
door : Shows : 7:30 and 9:30

Theatre

Oregon Repertory Theatre -· 99 West
10th .; " Misalliance ": curtain at 8 p.m.;
Tickets : $4 - $6

Monday
Movies

Cinema 7 -- Atrium Building : " The
Canterbury Tales"; 7:30 and 9:30
Mayflower -- 788 E. 11th .; " The Mirror
Cracked "; 7:20 and 9:30

National -- 969 Willamette ; '' Nine to
Five ": 7 and 9:15
Fine Arts Theatre -- 630 Main St. . Springfield; ··Electric Horseman ·' and
" Gloria ";
7: 30
and
9 : 15
Cinema World -- '· Seems like Old Times '·
- 7 and 9:35 ; "Flash Gordon " - 7:30 and
9: 40 : " Mountain Family Robinson " - 7
and 9 p.m.; '' The Jazz Singer " - 7:05
and 9:35 .
Valley River Twin Cinema -- ·' Bye Bye
Brazil" - 6: 15 and 8:30
" First Family " and " Middle Aged Crazy "
• 6: t5 and 8:30
McDonald -- 1010 Willamette St ; " A
Change of Seasons" -7:30 and 9:30
Bijou -- 492 E. 13th Ave :•" Singing in the
Rain ", " All Star Bloopers from 1936" .
" Ronald Reagan Shorts ": 7 and 9:30

Music

The Place -- 160 S. Park : " Robert Cray
Band .··
Black Forest -- 2657 W. 11th; " J.T
Meier and the Burning Fire ": 9:30 - 1.
Aupt Lucy Divine's -· 13th and Alder ;
••B'rad Garber- Folk Singer' ·
Tavern on the Green -- '' Disco J1vin '
Johnny Etheridge '': 50 's and 60 's music
·with 5o ·s and 5o ·s prices ; Beer 25 cents
$1 for well drinks
Gifts given away
_
Homefried Truck Stop -- 13th and Alder
St .: Carl Woidek and Dave Mitchell perform jazz from 8 a.m. - 11 a.m. : Benefit
breakfast for the Performing Arts Dance
Program.
U of O -- Chamber choir performs
Spanish·, Renaissance. Mendelssohn and
1the " Champagne Suite" ; 8 p.m.; free of
°''-charge .
•

Tuesday

Movies

Cinema 7 -- Atrium Building ; •'The
Canterbury Tales"- 7:30 and 9:30
Mayflower -- 788 E. 11th ; "The Mirror
Crack'd" : 7:20 and 9:30
National •- 969 .Willamette;. ··Nine to
Five"; 7 and 9:15
Fine Arts Theatre -- 630 Main St.. Springfield; ••Elec'tric Horseman ' · and
"Gloria " ; 7:30 and 9:30
Valley River Twin Cinema -- ··Bye Bye
Brazil "; 6: 15 and 8:30 ; "First Family "
and "Middle Aged Crazy "; 6:15 and 8:30
Cinema World -- ··Seems Like Old Times ··
- 7:35 and 9:35 ; "The Jazz Singer " 7;10 and 9:20; " Mountain Family Robin·
son" - 7 and 9 p.m.; "Flash Gordon " 7:30 and 9:40
Bijou -- 492 E. 13th ; " Singing in the
Rain ". "All Star Bloopers from 1936" .
··Ronald Reagan Shorts " ; 7 and 9:30

Music

The Place -- 160 S. Park ; ··Robert Cray
Band" ; 9:30 - 2.
Aunt Lucy Divine 's -- 13th and Alder ;
··Cecelia Ostrow-Silvery originals ·'
U of O -- Margar"et Lakey, organ , will play
a free student recital ; 12: 30 p.m.; Beall
Hall

Mayflower •· 788 E. 11th .; ' 'The M(rror
Crack'd " ; 7:20 and 9:30
National -- 969 Willamette' St. ; ·' Nine to
Five "; 7 and 9:15
Fine Arts . Theatre -- 630 Main St. , Springfield ; ··Elect ric Horseman ·· and
" Gloria "; 7 and 9:30
•
McDonald -- 101 OWillamette ; " A Change
of Season "; 7:30 and 9:30
Valley River Twin -- "Bye Bye Brazil" ·
6:15 and 8:30 ; " First Family " and
" Middle Aged Crazy" : 6:15 and 8:15
Bijou -- 492 E. 13th .; " Singing in the
Rain ", " All Star Bloopers from 1936" .
" Ronald Reagan Funnies " ; 7 and 9:30

Music.

U of O -- (:ompos1t1on student Michael
Golden performs a degree recital : 8 p.m.,
Beall Hall

Theatre

Oregon Repertory Theatre -- 99 West
10th ., " Misalliance ": Curtain at 8 p.m.:
Tickets : $4 - $6

Galleries

Maude Kerns Art Center -· 15th and
Villard ; Animal ink drawing by Margaret
Goodwill along with live exotic birds from
the Plant and Bird Works of Eugene,
through January 31 .; Photographs by
Nancy Jones . through January 29. ;
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 .
Husfllden Gallery -· 1616 1/2 West 11th
St.; Tole and decorative painting. oil and
water colors , by Husfliden Gallery
teachers .; Gallery Hours : 9:30 a.rn .-4 :30
p.m. Monday through Saturday .
Visions and Perceptions Gallery of Art -1524 Willamette St .; Serigraphs by Nancy
Denision and Jim ~outwell.. ,, tJirnugh
January 31 .
Universtly of Oregon Natural History
Museum -- Chinese Jade carvings.· Through February 8.; Kay Buckner.
Eugene painter. displays her work
through February 8.; James Burns.
photographer , displays his work through
January 25 .; Gallery Hours : 10 a.m. - 3
p.m. Monday· through Saturday.
Opus 5· -- 2469 Hilyard St. ; - Raku and
stoneware by Ron Weil through January
28 .; Gallery Hours : 11 a.m. - 5 p.m .;
Monday
throu gh
Saturday .
Lane Community CoHege -- Art Depart·
ment : Mixed Media sculptures by Mike
Walsh . Through January 28 .: Gallery
Hours : 8 a.m. • 10 p.m. Monday throu gh
Thursday . 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. on Fridays.
Oregon Repertory Theatre -- 99 West
10th. : Tapestries by Mina Degifis: Gallery
Hours : 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Monday through
Friday.

Wednesday

Movies

Cinema 7 -· Atrium Building ; " The
Canterbury Tales ; 7:30 and 9:30

" Around Town ·· is compiled by Paula
Case . All calendar . events must be
delivered to the TORCH office by Monday afternoon at 4 p.m. for publication
the following Thursday . No notices will
be accepted after deadline .

Is

poetry
1

Pulitzer Prize winning
poet W.S. Merwin wilt
read his work on the
Lane Community Col•
lege Campus from
11:30-1:00 Thursday
Jan. 29. Admission is
free!
LCC Forum
Room.

Building

The TORCH January 22 -•. 1981 Page i7

REVIEWS

-M u si c- -- -- -- -- -- :- -- -- - Li te ra
tu re --- --- -The album is essentially a colwhole thing, like he 's playfully

Catholic Boy
The Jim Carroll Band
" When the city drops into the
night/before the darkness there
is one moment of light/when
everything seems clear /the other
side, it seems so near. "
It's guys like this that try to
oive death a qood reputation .
-Jim Carroll is a poet. He is also
a published author of at least two
books . He has spent the last
decade or so· working on his
literary efforts, but then he decided to have his writings put to
music . Hard rock music.
It may sound like a familiar
tale , but this one is different. For
one thing, this album is probably
the most definite statement to be
made .in this decade ,.. young as it
may be .
They claim he knows Patty
Smith (Crow, a cut from •this
album, has been said to be about
her.) Allen Lanier, of Blue Oyster
Cult Fame is featured on the production and Carroll has been pictured in at least one major rock ·
scribe jamming with Keith
... .
Richards . For a newcomer he is
certainly rubbing elbows in exclusive company.
I

lection of statement/ demands
from the 29 year old ex-hippie exheroin addict from New York City.
The Carroll band (Him on vocals ,
two guitarists, bassist and drummer, strictly meat and potatoes
stuff) ·underlines and accentuates
his every uttering with the loyalty
and qlind enthusiasm of bikers in
a fray .
He presents a spiteful ,
pessimistic vision of life. Tales of
suicide, murder , distrust of
romance, disbelief in love and
other crea_tions of pure cynicism
cover the bulk of the collection .
He gets right to the point in
··People Who Died ,'' listing a
host of untimely departures.
Hanging , OD , on drugs and
Draino, bullets in Vietnam ,
leukemia, hepatitis . ... even the
classic rub-out of a fink by an
angry bike niob . " They were all
my friends and they DIED '· he
yelps as the band winds up and
lets fly a Johnny B. Goode riff th~t
celebrates· the passing of those
who've made it to the other side .
The band creates the
background for his nihilistic
messages, like in "City drops into the Night" when Bobby Keys'
saxophone slams into the vocals
and gives the lyric some body to
fall back on. Guitar chords hammer out licks that range from the
coarseness of sandpaper to a
finely' honed steel" razor-.
..
With songs of that nature so
abundant, it seems curious that
the cover shot pictures Jimmy
standing with ma and pa Carrol .
He seems rather smug about the

Fat is a Feminist Issue
After identifying what it is
trying to convince skeptical
Susie
Orbach
womeri are trying to substitute
parents that '' It 's OK to let the
Browsing throug h any with food , they can learn how to
kids listen to this album , even if
b~okstore in the country, a per- give those missing elements to
the advertised cut is People Who
Died . Don 't worry, I'm basically a son can find an abundance of themselves.
Orbach· singles out obsession
books. on dieting, being fat , being
homebody at •heart. '' Whatever
thin , calorie counters and sure- with food and weight as a prothe intentions, it 's a pretty cover
fire ways to look like Cheryl Tiegs blem , regardless of the form it
with lots of bright colors in hues
takes. A woman who is externally
in 25 easy lessons.
that you usually only see on peoThe subject of fat is dealt with thin may be that way only
ple· s tongues after they've been
in a number of ways . Fat as a because she has herself on a
eating raw Kool-aid .
disease , fat as a psychological af- strict diet regimen , and still lives
It's too late to fall in love with
fliction, fat as something you just in constant fear of being fat . She
Sharon Tatel worshipping devils
have to learn to live with .
and strangers in bed I time to
is using food as a source of
Fat is a Feminist Issue deals reward and punishment.
think about getting by without
with women who are fat, and the
that need to go out and find soOrbach say_
s, " Our approach
social conditioning that helps has been to see compulsive
meone to rely on . Another
make (and keep) them that way . eating as both a symptom -and a
message-- She gets her sleep
through tubes in her arm ,
Susie Orbach , co-founder of problem in itself. It is a symptom
nothing is true, she said, it's all
the London Women's Therapy in the sense that the compulsive
permit ted . You ' d better Center and a specialist on comeater does not know how to cope
remember you 're all alone. Kind
pulsive eating, does not rant and
with whatever underlies this
of sounds like a frustrated Romeo
rave about cultural inequalities . behaviour and turns to food . On
the other hand. the compulsive
that has climbed up the wrong
In this book , she gives us rational
-eating syndrome is so highly
balcony once too often .
theories on female obesity , and
developed and painfully absorbHe polishes off the collection
case histories to -back them up.
with the title cut , running religous
ing that it has to be addressed as
'' i=at is not about food.' ' she
philosophy over the coals . I was a
the problem, too.
Catholic boy, redeemed through says in the preface. "Fat is about
As a pers-on who has fought the
pain, not through joy. But now protection, sex, mothering,
battle of the proverbial bulge for
I'm a Catholic man, I put my strength , assertion and love. Fat
most of my adult life,(and consetongue to the tracks whenever I is a response to the way you are
quently
preoccupied myself with
seen by your
d, your
can. I made a resolution to purify mother, your husban
food and the non-eating thereof,)
boss -- and
my soul-- I got baptism, I got yourself.' '
I found this . book to be a
commµnion, penance, I g9t con~
refreshi
ng source of.information .
The
fir-ma-tion . I got allies in Heaven causes,book is not just theories on
It
is
not
merely an accumulation
however. It is also a selfand comrades in Heil.~
of clinical facts, but a wellhelp book in the truest sense.
Sources right here in River City After women
written, clear and hlJma~ ·ap;
are encouraged to
indicate that his performance examine the
proach "Jo the .~n;>blef!l _9{ femal~
reasons for comhere last week vias ·nothing short • pulsive
suoo.
, ~,r.i..and. ~eque nt
e1ating, they are also enobesrty: , ,; -~of spectacular . Just in time to courage
.• '·
< ;~ d to accept themselves as
For an·y woman who" has~found
balance the realities of a right they are. They
are e"ncouraged to
herself in the rat race of gaining
wing administration, the arrival of discover
what it is they are trying
weight , losing weight, and hating
such a character was probably into hide behind the fat (fear of sexherself because- of her body form,
evitable . by Jeff Saint
uality, suppression of anger, fear
this is recommended reading.
of being thin and the stereotyped
It could very well change ·your
female behavior accompanying
eating habits -- not to mention
that body fO:rm) .
your life. By Sarah Brown
imagination and a touch of
cleverness in place of this steady
diet of banality?
Four dollars is a lot to spend to
find out the faces are changed,
Let us match YOUR interests and values with other • ·_.
but the ideas are the same .
singles in THIS area.
And while it's fair to say that
Write:
Contact Friendship Directory
'· First family '' is not really
317
W. Broadway, Suite 112
awfully awfut, it's not really
Eugene 97401
awfully good either. I'd rate it
somewhere in the upper hoPhone: 343-8463 10-6 p.m. ·Mon-Fri
hums. By Chris Abramson
' A,.

M ov ie s- -- -- -- -+ -- -- -- First Family
Valley River Twin

'· First Family,' •. starring Gilda
Radner , Bob Newhart , and
Madeline Kahn is easily the best
and the worst movie of 1981 .
It's the best primarily because
it's the only one I've seen . And it
is successful in making the chief
executive and those closest to
him look like complete fools
through the diversified antics of
Newhart as the President , Kahn
as First Lady and Radner as their
28-year-old virgin daughter.
But if someone comes out with
a German version of the life of Mr.
Rogers with Chinese sub-titles ,
then '' First Family' ' wil l be in a
toss-up for bland movie of the
decade.
Written and directed by Buck
Henry, (Saturday Night Live), the
film consists of fragmented sketches loosely ~onnected by a
theme of "We' II do just about
anything to preserve the bigger
and bette'r image of the good ole
U.S.A."
It's the story of a typically inept
politician who bungles his way into office and then has nothing
more significant to do than throw
masque rade parties.
But as an alterhative to the old
fashioned idea of having a plot or
direction, we are thrilled by the
nymphomania of Gloria Link

(Portrayed by Rad ner, who for the
sake of newness--now that every
star has had graphic Technicolor
·sex with every other star--has a
sexual relationship with a statue.)
Despite this, there are some
laughable scenes. For example :
Secret Service men trying to prevent daughter Gloria from executing her sexual fantasies; a
revealing mother-daughter' conversation between Radner and
Kahn in which Gloria states (with
willful abandon) that she wants
!111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
'· . . .my clothes torn from my
body." Kahn almost lets her
mask of aloofness drop when she
admits that " we still do 'it' when
we have the time .'·
Newhart is in true deadpan
form as an administrator who is
mainly concerned with the superficial interests of his country .
We never see the general
§ begin s
Thars day.§
population or hear their feedback
Jariaar
y
Z
Z
§
except in one scene where a smiling puppe tized Newhart
7-9 p.m. 241 Math-Art
(manipulated from below by the
=
=
5 Learn Cell flnlmetlon- ancl e
President himself) is riding
§ animat ion stand;
E
throught the streets in a motorClay-me1tlon.. • - cat oat=
cade. Suddenly, out of nowhere,
§ animation; editing and spllc• E
a citizen appears and shoots the
55 Ing.
§
a
d.ummy's head off.
a
5
Stadents wlll prodac• a 5
Boring. Granted there are a few
5 .soand-color ccutoon by the §
scant moments of honest enjoy§ end of -the term •
§
ment, but for the most part, the
Regist ration Is at t_he
dialogue is t_he equivalent of an . § ,Downto
wn C~nter ., / • , ._ §
~pe genital display.
= -( ' -·-\, .,~..,
_..
1
=
§
,· -, ,.,
, . §
Is 1t too much to hope tor some ·
genuine humor, just a smid91n of • 'filttffJIIHHIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIUlflll-lUln~
•

IFilm

-NEW FOR SINGLES

I.

I Animation I

ITechnlque

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i

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I

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4

•

•

HEATFIELD

Wed . 21s t- ·Fri. 2-3rcl
First Anniversary CelebratiOR

Happ y Hour

NOIZ BOIZ

Wed-Fri, 4-7 p.m.
Sat. 24th

Big Scr~n - Super Bowl Sunday
Free Pool Weekdays 2-5 e--~ ~·!

•

-Page 8 January 22 - tt; 1981 The TORCH

Poet to Visit LCC campus
Pulitzer prize winning poet, W.
S. Merwin, will make an appearance at LCC on Thursday,
January 29 at 11 a.m. He will
read from his books of poetry and
hold an informal question and
answer discussion with •his audience in room 308 , Forum
building. Admission is free.
:Merwin is a poet who is not only -widely re.cognised .for his own
'work , but for his widespread influence on American poetry in
general.
His language experiments
have influenced such accomplished poets as Olga Broumas ,
University of Oregon . graduate
and recent winner of the Yale
University Younger Poets
Award , (a distinction earned
earlier by Merwin himself).

Merwin 's experimental works
are in free verse, beginning with
his fifth published book, "The
Moving Target" (1963), and in
prose-poetry, much of which has
appeared in "The New Yorker"
magazine and in his book, "The
Miner's Pale Children."
In addition to his own original
works , Merwin has published
many translations bf Spanish and
French poems. He won the
P.E.N . Prize for translations in
1968.
For those who cannot attend
the reading at LCC, Merwin will
give a reading at the U of O campus on the same . evening at 8
p.m . in Geology 150 (across from
EMU.) Admission, at the door is
$1.

OR'1oll I ZATI ON/

CONTACT PE~SON
, TElEPHONE

I IISTITUTIOII

CAST(AA ORECON
STATE COlllC[
• L• Gundc, OR 97850
[ASTERN IIASH I NC TON
UNIVCRSI.TY
Cheney, \IA 9900~

GOIIZAGA UNI VHS I TV
50~ E . Boone Ave .
Spokane , WA 99202

between the harpoon cannon
and the target whales on occasion .
Doug Mulhall, Greenpeace
Vancouver spokesperson ,
contacted the Soviet press
secretary at the Paris em-

The largest mind ever to
roam our planet may soon be
free to swim in peace .
·Conflicting reports from the
Soviet Union have led the
Greenpeace Foundatidn to announce that the major eco-war
of the decade may be over.
The Russian news agency
TASS announced a cessation
of Russian, whaling activities
amid the clamour of the ind hostage
auguration an_
release. Diplomatic;.. sources
.
-from Moscow have.yet to confirm. the anr:i~un~ement , but bassy, who confirmed the
_So~tet ·empp~t~~ IP..~ nn ao d TASS release~ Mull\atP.,said,
ltie-.news •''The stotfis' front page in the
·~~:..,; <
•
.
b.Ig +curopean
-f • rerease.but
newspapers,
.
•.. •·.: ••.
•
6
. ·: •.. _r~~np~c~. ~n mt~rn~tional we've yet to get anything
• ec~logic~~ •organization , ~as diplomatic out of Moscow.··
But he added ··By this time
act,ve~y-opposed , the Russian
. v,h~ling industry since 1974 -- tomorrow. .we should know for
m~mbers putting themselves sure .''

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Consortium seeks global unity
by George Wagner
of The TORCH

On the other hand, LCC has
recently joined an organization ,
, t The Pacific Northwest I nternaThe -modern world of 20 years -t ional /Int erc uIt ural Edu.cation
ago is gon·e. We live in a unique
Consortium, which is attempting
time unprecedented in ac- to deal with this problem , accorcomplishments .
ding to Ron Mitchell) social
Knowledge actually doubles sc!ence department chairman .
By creating. cooperative comevery six years and the effect of
t~is is change : Change in voca- munity college programs as well
tion, travel , material usages and as programs with foreign coun., needs·, and international •relation- tri~s. the consortium hopes to
sh ipa . . Nations have become bndge some educational bardependent on one another .
riers . The idea is to help regions
While nations are becoming in- and nations become acquainted
terdependent many schools and with foreign values . and difcolleges still teach isolationism or ferences .
Mitchell, curator for consortium
other ideals which are abrasive or
activities at LCC , hopes to put up
create inflexible attitudes.
a bulletin board designed to
distribute information on foreign
studies , student exchange , and
inexpensive foreign travel.
Consortium programs will be
the
coordinated among
members , so students from many
schools can unite to form
overseas programs .
The largest percentage of
schools participating in the consortium are community colleges
because they deal with .a larger

s995

cross-section of the population .
LCC became a member in July,
1980.
The consortium 's constitution
requires a membership fee of
$400 annually and a written explanation " detailing the nature of
the institution· s committment to
international and intercultural
education .'
The recent CDina Week Act ,
show exhibit in the LCC library is
an outgrowth of these goals, as is
the. International Cooperative
Work Experience program, which
seeks to ~ind jobs overseas for
students from the 12 community
colleges who are consortium
members .
As the consortium grows, opportunity for inter-college activtties -- such as group travel -will increase, Mitchell believes .
Mordechai Rozanski , chairman
of the consortium, says , '' Our
goal ultimately is to c-reate global- ·
ly competent citizens .''
Li sted above is a schedule of
tile studies abroad planned for
1981 .
For more intormation on · the
consortium, contact Ron Mitchell ,
extension 2430.
I

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The TORCH January 22 - a, 1981 Page f

SPORTS

Men drop to second place standin g

Titan me n an d vvomen dro p the ba/J
by Terry Rhoads
of The TORCH

by Terry Rhoads
of The TORCH

After struggling early in the
game, the LCC women's basketball team fought back to take a
four point lead in the second half,
but saw it slip away with poor
shooting and careless ball handling and the result was a 72-66
loss to visting Umpqua Wednesday night.
The defeat knocked the Titan
Women out of a share of second
place and into a three way tie for
third with Mt . Hood and
Chemeketa, all with 3-2 league
records .
" We beat ourselves ," said
disappointed Sue Thompson ,
Lane 's coach . ·" we played in
spurts , had too many turnovers
and just lost it all at the. line.' '
The sharp shooting Timberwomen , while knocking down 64
percent of their shots from the
field , hit just 14 of 27 attempts
from the foul line for the game.
OK, until you compare the Titans
stats ; a cold 39 percent from the
field and only six of nine from the
foul line.
Behind 37-35 at halftime, LCC
was finding some success with a
full court press and was getting
its best game of the season from
sophomore Colleen Schreiber ( 12
points) and teammate Pam Drew,

a

Your pracription is
our main concern.

.. a.c~n1s

•:·:·::·,: '· ·30t1;:(l··H i/ •

a freshman who added eight.
The Titans finally awoke in the
second half when, down 41-37,
they ran off eight straight pojpts.
Four of those came from Wlnow
Williams , including the final two
of the streak when Drew stole a
pass and hit a streaking Williams
for the layup. After a timeout the
Timberwomen settled down to out
score LCC ten to two and take a
51-47 lead .
Both teams traded buckets until LCC made what would be its
final move. Dena Allen's two free
throws with 5:37 left in the game
tied the score at 55-55, but from
then on it got sour for the Titans .
Umpqua's Tammy King , who
finished with 19 points, tossed in
two freethrows to put the vistors
ahead for good . Then teammate
Debbie Pearson (1Opoints) hit an
outside -bomb . Allen answered
with a quiet baseline jumper for

LCC, then Umpqua's Paula
Polliette drove home six straight
points and suddenly LCC was
down 65-59.
The Titans could only draw as
close as 67-64 with 1:40 left on
Allen's rebound bucket. Then
King hit a jumper and Polliette
followed with three free throws.
LCC , last in the league in rebounding averaging only 29 a
game, showed little improvement
as they were dominated by the
taller Timberwomen 46-32 .
All this left Thompson a little
mixed up .
••Umpqua is an outstanding
team ," she said . "That's why
the loss hurts so bad. It showed
we could play bad and almost
beat a good team. "
But she adds, next time these
two teams meet , expect her team•
to play good , something they
almost did last night.
•

Happy Place
Child Development
Center

Located at 3315 Alder St., Eugene.
Has openings in enrollmtmts for six
weeks to six year old children. Halfday schedules now available in both
infant, toddler and older child programs. We are Federally and State
Licensed.

NearlCC.
For more info.
please call : .

• • •.•.•.•.• • • 485-0439

In the second half, the Titan s
jumped out to a fast 36-32 lead
behind two Brouchet jumpers.
Turnovers , those fumbles , in- The Timbermen •came clawing
terceptions and steals of basket- back to ·tie it at 36 apiece and
ball, plagued the LCC men· s from then on it would be a dog
basketball team Wednesday night fight.
as they fell out of a tie for first
With under eight minutes to
place with a 74-69 • defeat to
play,
Brouchet hit two freethrows
visting Umpqua.
to give LCC a 59-56 lead . UmpThe loss dropped the Titans inqua's Gregg Hale answered with
to sole postion of second place a short jumper to bring
the
and out of a three way tie for first
Timbermen within one. On their
with Chemeketa and Mt. Hood at
n~xt possession ,. Lane went back
4-1.
into the four corners .
" We weren't ready to play ,"
Again the plan went astray.
said a frustrated LCC coach Dale
The Timbermen used. a Hale
Bates , who blamed the loss on jumper, Mark Nickel 's rebound
turnovers and a lack of executing bucket , two freethrows from Hale
and a long bomb from Harp to
the defense .
" We just beat ourselves, " he take a 65-59 lead with 2:29 left in
said . '' Also we weren't ready to the game.
Lane's Larry Towery, who
play ,- not like they were ."
finished with 12 points , hit two to
Despite the Titan's miscues, 16
bring the Titans with 65-61 , but
first half turnovers, the score was
tied at halftime 32-32 . After jum- the closest the Timbermen would
ping out to a 14-7 lead 14:43 into allow after that was 71-67 with
the game, LCC found itself strug- • : 11 seconds left.
gling until they revealed for the
The final stals gave the edge to
first time this season, the four neither team, LCC shot 26 of 58
corners offense .
for 44 percent whif-e the
,\head .;t9:-.t(4 Bates wanted the Tfmbf!rm&A- shot--25 of 52 for 4B
offense to pull the Timberman out percent ·&lffi'!Qm-had f3sfeafs
of their zone defense and open up and Umpqua grabbed only one
the middle for a quick drive or more rebound than Lane, 36-35,
but Bates pointed to the Titans 25
pass .
It never happened and both turnovers (24 for Umpqua) as the
teams continued to struggle out biggest factor .
As for the league race , Bates
the first half.
feels
the Titans are far from dead.
Lane· s 6-3 forward Greg
''We've
got a long ways to go, a
Brouchet, a third team alllot
of
basketball
still to be played,
confarence pick last year_
, led the
Titan first half scoring with 11 of but it should be better than this.''
This weekend, the men and
his 21 game high points. Teamwomen
will traver to Blue Mounmate Marvin Walker, a quick
tain
for
a
Friday night game, then
5-11 point guard, tossed in seven
first half points. but would to Mt. Hood for a Saturday night
contest. Bad news mounted on
become a non-factor in the sethe men's team when it was
cond half when he was shutout .
determined Towery, a sophomore
At the other end of the court,
Umpqua·s Dale Kern was using
who is second on the team in
his 6-2 height to score eight
scoring with 15. 7 points perpoints as did teammate Rodger game, will . miss this weekend
Sele.
with a pulled hamstring .

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Page 10 January 22 - afl, 1981 The TORCH

Sto-c k market: ho\N to -bear the bull
by George Wagner
of The TORCH

BULL!· No, thjs is not a beer
commercial ... I'm not cursing ..
.and I'm not writing about
animals. Bull is an economic term
which 1mplies an upswing in the
economy. Most likely it is.derived
from the idea that a bull will toss
its victim .up into the air.
Every night on the six o'clock
news the public is given a whole
series of economic terms which
may be as meaningful as a textbook written ·in · lncan
hieroglyphs. If · terms such as
stocks and ·b.onds., Dow Jones,
the stock market, Security and
Exchange Commission, etc ...
make you feel that way this article
may be of some interest·to you.
Its purpos~ is to give a general
description of the whats and
hows of the marketplace.
SECURITIES
The key to understanding the
terms above is to k~ow what
securities are and. how they are
used.
Securities are sold by
businesses and governments to
individuals or institutions. There
are two major types : stocks and
bonds. When an investor buys
bonds the money involved is be·
mg loaned to the group that
issues the bond. When a per.?On

•t•· p.;ttfaf,~--f~ti~:i~~ss:
that issuad 'the_stock. •
The preference t.or one or t~e
ot_fie_r Is deter,pined_by the profits
desired and the risk~ the ~uyer is
willing to assume, • •
There ·ar.e four kinds of risks to
consjder: •. 1r :rbe firm you buy
stock from· could go broke-- this
means .a stockholder could lose
everything, but , a bondhplder
wo.ukf probably · get something
back, 2)'ff the firm you buy bonds
from setts too·many bonds it may
be t.inabte·to pay the i_
nterest on

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Give the perfect symbol
of love ... A Ke·epsake
diamond .. . guaranteed
now and forever. •
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and ·corporation bonds. Moody's
has 9 ratings ranging from C
(worst) to AAA (best). The rates
are based on financial status and
ability to repay.
STOCKS
Stocks represent a - partial
ownership in a business. There
are two major kinds--preferred
stock and common stock.
Preferred stocks are very
BONDS
similar to bonds because they are
In the bond market there are
not considered a part of a
two
major
categories- business· s liabilities.
Government · and · Corporate
One benefit of preferred stock
bonds.
is that it has first claim on assets
Government bonds, particularly
if the company goes broke. Also
U.S. Treasury Issue, usually do
shareholders receive dividends
not have interest rat~s. they have
before any dividends are issued
maturity rates. A $10,000 bond
may be sold for $9800 and take 6 for common stock.
• There are different types of
months to mature.
preferred stock:
State and local governments
•Cumulative preferred stock--this
sell bonds to raise money for
obligates the company to pay
education, hospitals, roads etc.
dividends even when they are not
Some are designed to be paid
back in proportions with interest
issued otherwise--the dividends
payments on the unpaid balance.
are allowed to accumulate over a
Others pay interest on the whole
set period of time before being
bond until maturity. On governpaid
ment bonds the interest profits
•Participating Prefered Stock-holder is eligible to be·paid addiare often tax free.
There is a much wider variety ' tional dividends the company may
pay
• of corporate bonds :
Convertible Preferred Stock--can
•Equipment Trust bonos--backed
be converted to common stock in
by specific equipment
another company
• Mortgage Bonds··backed by all
or part of. a busij,e~s .rn~! ~s1at,e. _ Redeerriable or Callable Pref erred
There.can be first , second, and · Stock-·-company can elect to buy
back at a future time .
third mortgage bonds--which
Preferred stocks enable the
determine the priority of claims
holder
to protect investments by
should the company go broke
having
first claim on assets but
•Collateral Trust Bonds--backed
they do not enable the holder to
by securities which the business
make the profits which a common
may have ln other companies
•Convertible Bonds--can be conshareholder can. The preferred
verted into shares of common
stocks have a fixed profit in the
stock
•
form of dividends. By contrast ,
•Callable Bonds--can be called in
common shares increase in value
and payed off at any time
when the business increases in
The profits are altered by
value.
changes in the conditions of the
Holders of common stock are
given one vote per share within
economy~and the availability of
funds to·business. Profits usually · the company. The number of
sh~res neld determines the inare greater in long term loans and
fluence which can be exerted in
the interest is com_mensurate with
company policy.
.the risks involved.
The shareholder makes his
Moody's ·investors Service and
money by sharing in the after-tax
Standard and Poor' s Corporation
earnings of the company. The
list the risks of 'both government
all the bonds and consequently go
broke,3)the political trends and
national moods may ·change the
market value of securities 4)1f the
cost ·of living goes up the purchasing power of the dollar will go
down, thus money which has
been locked into fixed interest
rates may not be able to ·grow at
the same pace as the economy .

he TO~CH is looking
for two employees:

* Work-stucf
y cerUfied position in distribution
* Advertising
sales person commission basis

watcheeandglfta
Student Accounia welcomed

......,.......,,,,,,...,,.,..

Car necessary for both positions (gas reimbursement)

'[)Ott.6, Jewelers

Contact •Heidi Swillinger or
Pete Peterson at the TORCH
- Rm. 205 Center

Keepsake

(A)mer

1Alll1 IMI CUTU

SECURITIES MARKET
The purchasing., and selling of

purchasers with a complete statement of all Information concerning
the financing and operating_of the ,
company. SEC requires that
businesses disclose the status of
their companies to prospective investors .
INDICATORS
Market indicators provide investors with further insight into
market conditions.
The most famous indicator is
the Dow Jones. Dow is comprised
of 65 of the leading stocks listed

these stocks and bonds takes
place in security markets .
The largest market is the New
York Stock Exchange. In a given
day 50,000 transactions may be
negotiated . The value in stocks
which they negotiate ·is close to
$800 billion . ·
In the mid-1970' s there were 9
stock exchanges: Cincinnati ,
M
t i·
Sp k
I t
American, Boston, Midwest, New
York, Pacific, and Philadelphia,
but the latter 6 merged under the
lnter-:market -·Trading .··System
(ITS) . The ITS consists of a nationwide computer network .
The merger was forced by Congress in an attempt to create ail
environment where competition·
between .the exchanges could be
fostered. To date, the New York
Stock Exchange still do'minates .The . stock ' . exchanges are
regulated by the federal government through the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) and
on a state level through the
securities commissions . The
regulations they implement are
called "blue sky laws." The SEC
requires all businesses selling
stocks to the public to provide

in the NYSE: 30 industrial, 20
transportation and 15 utility.
Usually, the Industrial average is
the only one that is given on the
news . Dow is not the most accurate indicator, but is most frequently quoted because it is the
oldest continuous measurement
of stock price activities.
Two
other indicators which are used
widely are the Standard and
Poor's Index of 500 stocks (Sand
P 500) and the New York Stock
Exchange which indexes 1500
stocks .
Most money managers use S
and P 500 because it is a broader
indicator than Dow, which is
limited .to industry. "Also Dow is
heavily composed of blue chip
stocks • and consequently may
give a distorted picture of the
shape of the economy.
And if you think now that
you've heard more economic
terms than you ~an bear, there is
the bear market. Bear is a word
indicating a downward swing in
the economy. It is probably derived from the image of a bear clubbing its victim to the ground.
Now you can bear the bull with
the best of them . •

common shareholder is the last
one to receive payment but is entitled to all that is left. If the company is growing it may mean big
money, if it is declining it may
me~n no money.
If a sto~k has a record of steady
and consistent : dividend
payments over a long . period of
time it is called a blue chip
stock " .
11

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Graphic oy Michael Scul ly

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January 22 -w, 1981 Page 11
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Ar e LCC food service costs too high?

Editor's note: This week 's Forum
was submitted by J. R.
Schmacher.
Here's a fact about Food Service at LCC : The students get
clipped for nearly $45,000 a year
more than necessary. That's fifty
thousand dollars each year over
and above the costs of purchasing, preparing and serving food
on campus.
By law the Food Service operation cannot make a profit -- and
on paper it doesn't. But it is making money, which is siphoned off
the top of the balance sheet (and
from the students' pockets) by
two private companies and one
public institution .
There are lots of figures involve_d. Looked at individually,
nothing much seems amiss. But if
you start adding totals and ask
where the money goes and why,
some ~urious discrepancies appear. It breaks down like this:
•$12,000 every year goes
directly into the LCC General
Fund .
•$18 ,000 last year went to Man- ,
nings, Inc. of San Francisco.
•$15,000 (approximately) went
to the GEM Vending Company of
Eugene last year.
Starting at the top, the LCC administration is the first one ·with ·
its finger in the pie. The $12,000
( $1 GG{}~
pef...., ......_.,. month)
' ' administr ative ··overhead
charge'' which Food Service pays
to the college is a type of levy applied to only one other department
on campus: the bookstore. No
other departments have to pay a
special
fee
to
cover
"maintenance.and heating." Oddly enough , these are the only
two departments which have daily
income from the student body and
are services most students simply
must utilize at one time .or
another. ·
It's almost as if someone said :

"Well, since these departments
will be pulling in extra cash from
the students, why not suck some
of it into the General Fund? "
Of course, this means students
pay higher prices than necessary
for books and food, but that
doesn't appear to matter. Let's
just call it a "hidden tuition
cost."
Jack Carter, Dean of Students,
seems to feel we should be
grateful the administration isn't
charging a "commercial rate ' for
the space these two services occupy. He-is of the opinion that by
"only" charging $1000 per
month, that LCC is sort of underwriting Food Service, a little.
It's an interesting theory, but I
don't buy it. Does the administration really have the right to charge
the students an extra $12,000 a
year to eat? I've never even seen
an elementary school that didn't
boast a cafeteria, much . less a
community college. Maybe I'm
naive, but I always thought it was
part of the operation, something
that came with the territory,
covered by general administrative
costs .
I can't find any justice in being
forceo to pay additional dollars
over my tuition costs to have a
cafeteria on campus , especially
when the nearest commercial
eateries are miles-away. In fact, it
souunds mo·re reasonable that
LCC should pick up at least .part
of the tab. if only in the way of
providing adequate student services .Still, perhaps the finer points of
bureaucratic policy making
escape me, so let's concentrate
on some cold hard busti,ess
facts :
•
Mannings·, Inc. of San Francisco, a national food service contractor, takes a straight percentage of the gross profits from LCC
Food Service Department every

Letters

year . It came to about $18,000
last year.
For what, exactly? The college
pays .the salary of Food .Service
Manager Bob Tegge, not Mannings (although Mannings covers a
part of his fringe benefits) . And
Food Service pays its own
employees and departmental bills
out of money from the cash
registers..
According to Dean Carter, we
pay Mannings for their
"expertise" in management and
their discount buying power as a
national contractor (theoretically
allowing the department to buy
for less) . But a~ccording to Bob
Tegge : ' 'ActuaHy, all we buy from
Mannings is soap ."
$18,00q for soap?
"Well, I also get a double discount from the local purveyors
who bid on our food orders, ' says
Tegge, '' Because I represent
both an educational institution
and a national contractor. ' '
That almost makes sense, until
you stop to consider the fact that
LCC, as part of the State System
of Higher Education, can participate in a state-wide government bidding and buying process
and get food cheaper than it does
now, even with this mystic
''double discount'' privilege
Mannings is supposed to provide.
•'I've checked on it and there •·s
the possibility we could save a
few cents, " Tegge admits. "And
by a few cents I mean very few
dollars. But to do that you've got
to order a .given amount and
you 've got to take that or at the
end of the year. they deliver it
anyway.' '
The bottom line is that LCC called in Mannings ·many years ago
to reorganize the food service as a
' 'self-sufficient'' operation instead of a college-operated
department that wa·s. · losing •
money -- for some reason. We're

Continued from Page 2 :

closure of my injury claim without
its corrupted . course; I call upon
benefit of de-nova judicial review,
the spirit . of Thomas Paine to
which was followed by a U.S.
unblock our media as a s~eker of
Supreme Court refusal to review
truth an·d protector of justice.
violations of said civil rights.
John M. Reed
It is lawyers abuse of power,
not my " vendetta," at issue
here!
How can you ignore lawyers
unconstit utionally
being To the Editor:
. With nothing to do, I sat down
legislators ; when their Oregon
State Bar Association monopoly, to read· my first ever music
review, (Jeff Saint's hatchet job
ORS Chapter 9, violates the Seron
B-52's new album' "Wild
man anti-trust laws and is now
subject to legislative sunset Planet") , and thought it was
great until a certain derogatory
review?
remark
paralleling ' ' acid freaks' '
How can you ignore lawyers
with
B-52
filled my optic scanuse of the Courts as political
retribution weapons against ners.
(a)public participation; (b)laws in
It's no fair paying women less
effect as of date of contract;
money than men, catching more
(c)circuit and appellant court fiSh ·thc1n an Indian, or making
review of administrative orders;
jokes about a certain Polish
(d)oral argument and (e)findings
Catholic.
of fact and conclusion of law
Hey, everyone else got their
demands .
As a 48 year old Un1versity of rights and a modicum·of respect ,
Oregon School of Business. in- what about us?
surance major graduate with a
For years we ' ·acid freaks ''
story to tell that could ·only help have been hounded by police,
o!hers.because my .case has run over zealously prosecuted , in: . .
.......-~- ... ..- .., . • .' • . ...., ,,,.,.,t........

Prosecuted

.tt i •

....

carcerated for excessively long
terms.. and portrayed as mindless
blots on the social landscape.
So wipe your n·ose on someone
elses' sleeve, ours is all used up.
Excuse me, my rocket to mars
leaves in five .
Brig Crystal

Num ber 666
To the Editor:
Students of Christ have been
concerned for centuries about the
mark of the beast' and the
number 666 which signifies the
devil incarnate. A local street
poet, Nightwing, imbued me with
information he considered relevant to this Biblical prophesy. He
advise-d me to count the letters in
Ronald Wilson Reagan's name.
Six, six, six. hummmm?
The good news is, when the
end is near, Christ will come to
earth incarnate and save us all.
One Benjamin Creme says He arrived July 19, 1977.
.,...
Don Sinclair
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still paying for that reorganization
today, although Mannings has
virtually nothing to do with Food
9ervice • anymore. It's merely
become a habit to pay the yearly
toll.
If Bob Tegge were ordering
through the statewide bid
system, he could avoid the weekly inflationary jumps in raw food

cheese burger at any Bob' :
restaurant for 60 cents ·and the·
cost $1.05 at LCC, and the bag o
potato chips the cafeteria ·charge
30 cents for still only costs ,
quarter in th~ vending machines)
But where does it say that· s hov
it's got to be? (Especially in ;
non·profit operation.) What lav
states prices can-'t be lower thar

Graphic by Michael Scully

prices by buying in bulk on a the _norm, if possible? And it is
yearly: basis. This would require , possible. :
more pre-planning on the part of
··p~st{~~;ae ·aJF:~ "f~ a management, but it would mean tion and the stmple fact ,remains
lower overall food costs .
that there is at least .$45,000 a
It would also, incidentally, cut year in cream being skimmed off
out Mannings and their 'double the students eating on campus. I
discount" and save us about don't reaUy belteve it'. s an' intentional rip-off, but it is happening.
$18,000 a year.
There are alternatives which
Since we're talking about saving money, -why doesn't LCC per- would allow .that $45,000 (at
mit the Food Service Department least) to remain: in. the food Serto run the vending machine con- vice coffers ---and give Bob Tegge
cession, instead of allowing a •chance to lower some prices.
another outside outfit, the GEM
I'm not even talking about the
Vending Company. to take away college und.~rwriting Food Ser.$15,000 a year in profits from the vice; I'm ,just protesting,indefencampus.
sible , su~harges and wasteful
policy decisions:
Dean Carter ma.ntains that the
I'm not sure what ·can be done
initial capital outlay to purchase
our own vending machines is pro- to change tti& way things are run
hibitive (about $75,000 to replace -- we're a[I. f~Jing so helpless
these days. 8tit we do have a stuthe machines currently on camdent governmehf. M~ybe the
pus, which are GEM's property) .
A$LCC. should $lOP debating pinBut suppose LCC took the last ball machines :~nd start·worrying
two year's "administrative about . ~()~ many' st.uden~$-_··~ n
overhead" charge on Food Ser- afford to .eai wet L
-- • .
vice ($24,000) and added it .to
Perh'aps the college ~4mtnlstrawhat LCC plays Mannings for tion could. ta,ke.Jl ~'.l!PPfl:ltself to
soap for a couple of years (say, ·clear out some- of the cobwebs
35,000?). That's one way of and • re~evaluate • Its policies in
gathering most of the funds (not . light of student welfare as opposto mention that the machines ed to mer~· management convewould start paying tor themselves nience.
from the moment they were inPerha'p·s you would care to prostalled) .
test with the •power of your
The final argument which ad- pocketbook.
ministration and management
And I think there's a chance
makes in defense of their current
that, somewhere in the vast maze
set-up is a song-and-dance to the of the Oregon
State
Educaeffect of: ' ' If you compare food tional System, thereliigh~r
must.be socosts at LCC to other cafeterias meone whose responsibility it
is
around town, our prices don 't to watchdog this sort of thing.
look out of line to the general Perhaps a copy of this editorial
trend .' '
would interest him.
.,
No doubt this. is pretty much
As for myself, I-intend to brown
true . (athough you can . get . .a ·bag it frQCll,{10,W. 00 ..
1

It

Page·12 January·22 ·- -:Jlt,, 1981 The TORCH

-OIDnium-Gatherum-----------------------Dance tomorrow

Tomorrow night , Jan: 23 , there will be a dance ,
held in the l CC cafeteria from 8:30 p.m. to 12:3.0
a. m., featuring the rock and roll music of Exit. Tickets
are $1 for one person or $1 .50 per couple . They are ·
being sold in advaru:~ in the cafeteria or can be purchased at the door: lhere will be door prizes at this
event sponsored by ~he ASLCC ~tudent Forum .

-~ Observe migration
One _of tjie world 's largest and most magnificent
, creatunJ&i$ now migrating along the Oregon coast the whatt/ lhe gray wflales may be observed along
our c~S(f}OW through May. Their migration from the
Arctic's.: 'aeting Sea to .Baja, Mexico is the longest
migraU~~ny ma~l,on earth . Any high vantage
point 9n ,tilt coast wu, svt,ice ·10 observe the grays .
For m..ot.t' information call Greenpeace at 687-8121
or _stop ~fj~r office al 55 West 13 Sf. (across from
the pu~I$U~~ary) : , ·-·,:--~ .
"

Slid~ show

?;>·.

Greenpeace iS:holcting.,a·volunteer meeting on Tues. day, Jan. .- 27·•; at , 7;30 lo ·the Eugene public library
upstairs. A sU~e.show ,on·Harbour seals and a Harp
seal film wifLbe shown.: The public i.s invited . For '
~ore inror~tiori pteas~.cal! Greenpeace at 687-8121 .
\,

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A \vprks~ap on how _
to get: those high-paying jobs
you.nev~t ~~ advertised wiil be held Saturday, Jan .
2:4 . from-ta.m. to..4 p,m. at.the Eugene Holiday Inn ,
225 .Cobur.g :Road .
The workshop will be cqnducted by Sharon Bine; a
woman who has consisteritlf-Won out over hundreds
al candidates compefing fQr -high-level management
jobs.
_·
. Bine stresses that people can get the jobs they want
if ttl_
ey go about getting them the right way . even with
·the depressed economy. But they' re not going to find
ihem in the wanl ads , according to her. Tips to uncover the 80 percent of all jobs that aren ·t advert ised
are ah important part of her workshop .
Methods·for writing a resume that gets results and
suggested responses to most asked job interview
questions are other key workshop topics . Bin e also
~lk_s a~,t h9w to negotiate sala ries and benefits .
• .,To pre-itQlster tor the workshop. call Bi ne at
. . lei>
... tuJl!~-: .
.... WO!'~~ap.tee 11~c1.u q~.
-~ t ~,._;·
• ,, . .,. _ , . . . -up co(fSutratlon.
.;;
•.;r;/:J~';,
",.,·,~{'{ ·~trr•' . ~- :, •

.:~~:;:-;:3:(~:f

••rietii.rfum

Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence. .
This multimedia program looks at both theory and
fact about the nature of extra-terrestrial Intelligence .
NASA photographs , orignal sketches , star projection s
on the 40 foot dome and electronic music help to ii·
lust rate both . scientific and fictitious views of our
search to learn ifwe are unique in the Universe .
The show began on Jan . 17 and will be presented at
1 and 3 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays through
March . Special presentations may also be arranged
for school and .other groups.
WISTEC is located at the Southwest corner of the
Autze·n Stadium parking lot in Alton Baker Park .
Science Center hour are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday
through Friday; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m . Saturday , and 12
p.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday. Admission is $2 for adults ,
$.75 .for children and students-. $1 for seniors, and
children under 6 are free, but not admitted to the .
planetarium.

.Feminist conference set_
•A three-day conference designed to·. further ·the
development of feminist theory. research .and community work is scheduled to begin Friday, Jan . 30 at
the U of 0.
•
Feminist Theory and Action : A Northwest Con~
ference is jointly sponsored by the Oregon chapter of
Sociologists ·for. Women . in $octet and .the U of 0
Center for the Sociological Study of Women . Speakers
•will examine the position of women in societ and link
feminist theory with things that happen to women in
everyday life , according to Kay McDade, a graduate
fellow in sociology and a conference coordinator .
Keynote speaker (or the event will be Dorothy
Smith , a ·Canadian sociologist wtio was recently
selected to serve on a women's issues panel for Ms .
Magazine. Also scheduled is a concert featuring
feminist singer I-ICIiy Near. Panel discussions, small
group workshops and dialogues to discuss issues
confronting women are planned .
Registration will run-from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday , Jan .
30. in the EMU and again at 8 a.m . Saturday . The
cost is $1 O for students and low income individuals
and $15 tor all others .
Housing in private homes and childcare se rvices in
the EMU will be provided free of charge during the
conference . Food services are available in the EMU
and at nearby restau rants . In addition , regional car·
pooling will be coordinated
f or further 1nformat1on, con tact Kay McDade or
Betky McGovern af SWS Conference , Dept. of
__ !Ology, u of o. Eugenft. Orel 9740~;
• , ••

osu visitation "

show

Representatives from Oregon State University will
·:;~;.1 (,,.- ~~ ~ i-~~ce. ~ _. Technology has begun -a be on hand to answer questions on Mpnday, Jan . 26 ,
-· ~~?"" .-new:~gf~ion~ attM - Planetari11f1'1 •entilted The • from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the cafeteria .
~ •t

'•·

•• •

'

Blood pressure clinic

The Lane County Chapter of the American Naional
Red Cross will hold its monthly free blood pressure
clinic from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Thursday , Jan . 29 at the
Chapter House , 150 East 18 , in Eugene . The clinic is
held the last Thursday of every month .

Tuesday, Jan . 27 at 7: 30 p.m. on the U of Ocampus.
Geology 150 . Admission is free.
Also, Rambling in Ne w Zealand, a slide preseRta·
tion of a three month adventure of bicycling and hik·
ing in New Zealand . will be shown Wednesday, Feb. 4
at 7:30 p.m. in Lawrence Hall , Room 107 on the U.of
O campus . Admission is free .
For more information , call 686-4365 .

Coping with depression

People'-s Law School

A series of cold frame workshops co-sponsored by
the Sprin.gfield ~om~ity Garden and the Willamette
Community Design Center will be offered to . Spr·
ingfield residents for free .
Thursday , Feb . 12, 7 to 9 p.m. will be a classroom
session discussing different cold frame designs.
Saturday , Feb. 21, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. will be a con·
structjon session to build your own cold frame .
The thi rd session will cover growing conditions and
use of cold frames Thu rsday , March 12 , from 7 to 9
p.m.
Pre -registra tion is requ ired. Call the Willamette
Community Design Center at 34 5-24 27.

• On Wednesday , Jan . 28 , the- People 's Law School
will begin its ninth year of teaching people about the
legal system . From 7 to 9 p.m. every Wednesday
night through March 18, classes will be presented on
a variety of topics in an informal lecture-discussion
format .
The classes are held at the Lincoln Community
School, 12 and JefferS'on , Eugene. Classes require no
preparation and are free .
The School is sponsored by the Student Bar
Association of the University of Oregon Law School
and the Lane County Legal Aid Service, Inc . The
classes are taught by law students and combine lee·
tures with discussion and questions.
•The classes are designed to help people understand
various legal problem areas . •'The classes offered are
in direct response to requests from former students, "
according to Joe .Wajsman , second-year law student
and program coordinator .. "Overwhelming demand
has brought about a new class on Small Busine,sses
and revived a former class on Consumer Rights ."
' 'The program has been successful because the
topics are kept relevant to the changing concerns of
the community ," states Sue Heinl , staff coordinator
at Legal Aid .
The People ' s Law Sc hool is a free community .service ·tha.t helps to demystify the law through practical
presentation of relevant topics . " It's rewarding
knowing you can help some people understand that
the legal system is not some awesome thing that th.ey
can 't have any comprehension of," relates a former
teacher.
Following is a list of this winter 's classes :
Understanding the Legal System - Jan . 28
Being a tenant - Feb. 4
Consumer Rights - Feb . 11
Buying and Selling Your Own Home - Feb. 18
Criminal Law - Feb . 25
Unpaid Bills • March 4
Small Bus inesses • March II
Individual Income Tax - March 18
For further information about the People 's Law
School, contact Joe Wajsman at 344·6049 or Sue
Heinl at 342-6056.

Adventure films

Poetry reading

" Depression : What Can I do About it?"' will be the
subject of a lecture at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, February
3 in the auditorium of Sacred Heart General Hospital.
The guest speaker will be Dr. Pau l Wilson ,
psychiatrist on Sacred Heart's Medical Staff for 15
years. He has also served as Chief of Psychiatry Section and Medical Director' oNhe Johnson Unit He will
discuss the different •kincts •of. depre~sion, how to
recogniz.e the .symptoms . ways to cope effectively on
your . own , and the 11se of medication . The · free
seminar is the first in the. hospital's 1981 Interface
health education series . For_more information call ,
686-6868 . -

Pruning workshop
A renovative pruning. workshop is being sponsored
by the Eugene Parks·and Recreation Department community gardens prClgram. l't will take place at the River
House, 301 N. Adams St. , on Saturday, Jan . 31 . from
-noon to 4 p.m. The workshop is open to any member
_of the general public interested in bringing old
overgrown trees back into production. If possible bring pruning saws and snippers for the hand-on prun·
ing demonstration in an old filbert orchard . Register at
the River House or call 687-5329 . The cost is $3 .50 .

Cold frame workshops _

The University of Oregon Outdoor Program and
Anderson 's Campus Store will present the awardwinning lilm , El Capitan, a stunning film of a three-·
day ascent of Yosemite Valley 's famed granite wall , _

Pulitzer Prize winning poet W.S. Merwin will read
his work on the LCC campus from 11 :30 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. on Thursday, Jan . 29. Admission Is free! The
reading will take place .in Forum 308,

,:~: : :~{!t:tassifieds---------------------------------.,-.. :"."'fc":•'·· - .

,

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...
,

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REt~.
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1,-a.·lillt

IIAnJIE

COUIU WANTS TD RENT lldtt.
• dlir"'81n flat kl Euge111. Qar,ge and gardln
bl IX1rNlllf reasonable. Yolanda, 485-6948 ,.,.,.

.: -~eii. '" ".~

·

A bot blnjo m,k,r, hot pMty. &ti wltfl Ult modern sound rock and
roll. NOil BOIZ 613-1379,
BICYCLE REPAIR -- Economlcll - ExP,MIICld - GuanntNd. MIit UI
at our 11Qn, Caftttrll, notn to InI dally.

CHILD CARE OP,nl"f.

ROOIII for OIII moni on way to LCC.Call htly,
747-0826 or atop lly II 33261 Bloomberg Rd .

cars.

PAYIHt;ASH fll' II fllld, IN; diamonds, coins . BREIDE GOLD EXIIIC.74Hll4 .,_. dlya • wuk. 1216 Mollawk Blvd.

FOIi L~ '1UDENTS, FACULTY,1nd STAFF. FIi•

-«. . ... ..._c_
QEE

_,_._C11111'n get'tm. Tbey'rt IIOtlll •

TN 11Jn11·•1 ,_ __.. • ·,allioos 1nillbli. Adwrtlslllf Uln

,_,_ • •.,,..,,.•.,.,..,..Cir IIICl$Ury for botll positions (gas
,llalM!l"l1 .. 111). CNllc,t 1"'411 Swllllager or Pelt l'wltnon at IN
~
-. , . 205 Ct•. ·747-450!, ... 2651.

,..-...-

"54141.:

wlll Cllrlalla• wtman. $130, utHltlts lnciu.i.

, r_,,.·~ ·~ . If,._.... IDIDI If knew 1nyo111 who Wlntl It
811 ~t( ...., . . . . 1M • I CII. ·Trish, 113-5080.
~~;".""•
S •

1,,,,.n. 1117

h "

"'°· Dowlltlwn Eu111•.

• "'

ill(d:·Jtd.,ltd_. ..,.,;: Geld VGict ler rtdt neceaury. Agl
n-u.~ 1 ·• 341-tAM. •
.
, ,_, . ......, riff lfd/or ,,,,,,t CIIHU 4yr, old ,on, ti•
""· f11;,-,n.

'•~

• •

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.

itl4 ,,,,,_,.,,t' ff Ttlf!OII lor Anatomy and Phys/doff

dw, . .. ~tu. CII 117-111111' IN IDI In class, MWF.

I

f

1914 Dodo, Dirt, ,utomatle. good and clun. Air, radllla, cruise con-

trol. $1600. Call 782-2120 or menage 613-7052.

•

Jt.El.1¥1•f . . wall to INiy a 1111d clltat knnr 11 working c;endltlon'.
344-71IO'lftl.
"-'ta. 6 cyt.. 3-apd,, gral condition. 53 ,000 ml. $1300 or
'7Z
"'". 146-0421. -

•

STEREO

•
services

WOIKSHOI' - Kl-Ji ct111p1nt11t repair. Also c,r stereo in• s1111'11tloas ··11111 'ttpalr. M..... Slt. ·10-6. 126 N. 28th, Springtitld,
741-1597. '

&rut condition. $200 Ill' bnt otter.

1914 Pinto wagon. Must s.r/ Automatic,

btll offtr. 683-6080.

radials. 25 mpg. $1100 er

for sale

RECYCLED STEREOS IUY •• SELL - TlfADE; STEREO WORKSHOP.
•• Mot1d1y-S,turd1y 10-I. 126 N, 21th, Sprlngfllld. 141-1591.
SMALL IS BEAUTIFUL , 0,A.S. Y.S. l'RISM-1 Mlfflaturlnd Monitor

messages

SHELL - Hippy Birthday Sp,elal "9rson. Sandy.

T,,. TORCH h,s two work study positions 1111IIIIHI: Ad111rtlslng ui.1
p,rson & distribution man,g,r. Cir IIICISSlry lor both positions.

Spahr. lncrtcllbll 1111nd.Tlny, warrantltd. 414-1111, 1nyt11111.

SELL CA/fS, lfE#T HOUSES, SEND LOVE'# STUFF!

CllsaHlus. FlflNn llf"'S fDr LCC Persona.

FREE TORCH

Ilk for Larry.

'13 Datsun, I'. V. .111Hlllt 1ngl111. New cllltcll; brakes, llffl, Ille:. ,
1ys11111 •114 ~•rlotcl iprlngs . $1000 llrm. 135-2120.
'

Custom •t. bars, more. _$4500 tr bllt. 181-64&4.

Luowlg drum,, doflllll 11111, 4 tem,, 3 cylll'111s, tt,ron,, .,,,,.,
stlt:kl, blgh /lat. $450/tfftr 181-1464.
1114 tttt'I Tfl'IWII. Exi:«IMI •.,.,.k whkll /or carp,n,-,, ,..,,,.,,
cntr1pm011. &Nd alllpe. l300 flt ? CIII 343-~.
IIC HO bell-drtw ,.,,,_table. Sllure cartrldg1. Wwka gnat. $50.
PlltM 414-11141.

w,rnr ski coat, pownr /Jorn dnlgn, dk. brown on t,n, s1z, m,dlum.
140 . PhDIII 414-0948 .

passions hut.

slogan l,w1 -laflrno 's 11,t blc/111111, back_
on,.
Pretty girls, Ill's sp,nd tbl ttlglll ttg,ther. Wt wtrt born to bt wild.
Noiz Bolz, 683-8570.

Fm.

•

-

1yr. old m1i., black hn/an t:at. Long /Jllr. ·Must Hnd agbOd

llomt for lllm. C1H 728·&175.

TV: I'm lnt1r,st1d. (GM) NHd mor, Info.
LISI: I IIWI you wry 111IICh.,fflppy 1nn/111rury, Hon,y. Lo11,,
Bob.
JB, congratulltlon1 on your 111g1gam,ntlll DP
ftAVE YOU HUGGED A RECORD COLLECTOR TODAY? .
Mothlr: m1ybl It's your,,,.,,, LS

Deir

W, n11d wom,,, ttnnls pliy,n!

PIN11 come out. Comt to Yll'CA
Tun . or Thurs. IYIS'. at 9:30 !or practlct er contact D011 Wlaon,
Ctnltr ·Bldg., Rm. 444.Lyffn: Bushll1s Mith would bt I bore wlUlout

·1

friend Nici '/Oil,

Forr,,t.

•

Ricki: I llon, c1nnot bring you hom, but God ind I c,n. Lon o,,.,,,'
E. I lo111 you.' bt's do Hl(lllff. Raoul.
•PEARL: WL YVVMI "r. Blnnlls and lrl1nd.
G1org1: When, when and how many times? Robin
HELP! I lost on, b,autlful brown ,ngor, glove /,st week. Please
r11turn to security offlcit.

KS (Jiu, Lldy), miss you, Ill's o,t too,tNr Ind do UNMtbltlg dtl

Ind CrlZ'f, Sandy and Kerry.

BIii: Hope lhtrt art nt uplollon1. Your big ala. Poor tasi. host,s1, It's rNly poor 16111 ID go to M1xlu wtthNI tbl
11nlloly duo,

drums of w,r
JtlC~tos bllt,
od,s to IJlorl

Ru111 1100d. CIH

°"

Mrs. Mitzi • Liaw part of your hurt
u,, l'Nrl. Lur RD
M0t1t,: SIii hlW ,,,, books It '/OIi ,,,,,, them. CII sontd• }11$1 ,.
11/k. K1rry.

Bry1n

'61 Intl. 1-p,c-c,nopy, VB, 314 ton. New 4-Splld.

188-6414. $600/blst offer.

Topcon 35mm, "m111. 105 mm, 200 m,n, ,,_,,,,UV fllllr,, i.111
h«HI. en,. _1150 or but offer. 688-1414.
'11 BMIII R100fl. L11ttm11,,.r. lower,, knuurs. 20,000 ml.

•

N1klmichl-500 CISllttl d,ck,

Phone 484-0948.

(gas rtlmbur111111nt) Contact Heidi Swllllngtr or Pett P11tnon ~I tllt
TORCH , room iD5 Center. 747-4501, u. 2656.

Patt-. .lM ...,,. ·• c.,.;,, NHS your cJau schtllui. to loc11t '/OIi

ltlM .~ IICJ. lf'S _frNI

$68. PflDIII .U44194B.

Has 400 •nolne, 4-speid, air, power
brakn , llnltcl gllaa Ind II In good condition. $4,495. Call Hl-2129.

1971 Ford 3/4 ton truck.

Klngs/z1w1t1""'11111th hHttr. U111r. Aakillg StOO?? CaA 728-6175,

tlntllllMt S,,.1t1. $1211 ,aita ltllllea. Ken. 183-73112.

• Mia '1 fish/on 1uld1 1111111, jlck1t, almost"'"· Sin 31 (t111dltl.,J,

'ISi Ford R1nchlro, runs gr,1t. New tnnsmlaalon. $150 w/.palnt jell.
S750 w/1. NegDflablt. 485-6620.

apt. l127mo, lacllln,
•.,.., 11111 Pf'M,.· tt..,aour p/u#. 613-6080.
WMf. t, .... ,,,,. 1 _,,,,,., lurn/1hMI •pt. 5th lffd Lincoln

, Ft_,, ,_,,. .,.,,IH It dalt 1 •rtlOm

HNr, fluty IMMr r,clc, SIMI tuN. $150 • best tfftr. Allt ltf 81ry
• 111n 111H11g1. 345-n75.

Robm Hd Tri•.

/IIISSIOfS

Tl': W1'1r1'1 my TV? It's past Cllrialllll. RH
SH Whit llapp,ns wllln WI don't""' ffll1dl'I, llll'lt? I.,,, r-.
Low, Cindy
HI T1rr,I Wll1t 1n yo,, doing ,..din, iNsu,u1 You 'r, too bllql T
It/Ming ol y,u, Cindy.
No Blggll -- 1111d btlp dtlng yeur lullClry7 Or la It jual 1 1111111 111,d?
LSD

SL • lnllnt.11nc1 N'/ bt lfl llfeclirt IDOi wltt, sem, - but II ltntl
.. cold Ind ,., can't build • fl1IIIClsMp Ill la. SI
DlnlM Bink -- NNd my pad(tt tir ywr Saturday lllgbf? CIIDI
lfllA7 LSD

BEORSE: Y1u 'r, ntln/ng •r 11/llltltllll, S/fNd • SEIJIISE
Kimbra: OIi wllM I night! It wll hi ...._, Fllhg 1111 allCI ,,._.

ovw . KJ

f'ARE#TS: Thi Wom,n'• ,,,,,., un loclt.

Come•• eur Parent' s FIii.

you

la

Ill

••rpucy.

Paull I , Lil's hi~ MOlfllr "blthl'OOIII ta1t ••. C.. 1111. Katri111 II.
RAUL, HI. ,,__,lffblr tlll tin o,, tlll ll#at:111 W1111't It 111117 lillappy.

Kltrlnl.

• IILf: I LOrE

YOU. f'-24.

ERNIE/ I LOVE EM. I kw11111, I Ir# tftlHI "OOOl!-Fltwlnll" Ptlclly

KJnel Love ya - AB

TO ALL TOlfCHIES: Tll1nk1 tor yo,,r Upplft. I UUlda't Ill'# 1111dl It
wltlloat '/OIi 11. Pl11/a.
Sllp/Jlnll J. You ,,. 1111 ebj«t II my n,J,.,, YSA
MARY-MU#CHKl#-MOORE: A blckey I day w1n't kNp IN away .
LDV1,

Dan.

Th1r1's, ch1nu PEACE 111111 com, In your 111,. ,.,,,u buy on,,
HAPPY9-MONTH BIRTHDAY TO HEIDI. XXXXXXXXX. On, to, NClr
month and Xi to grow oa. Nan,: