Lane
Community
College
Vol. 22, No. 15 February 11, 1982 • 5

4000 E. 30th Ave. Eugene, OR 97405

J 1', 1982

Acrylic 'haze' vented into CDC

Children evacuated in fume scare
by Larry Swanson
of the TORCH

Workers evacuated 18
children -- several of them
complaining of stomach
pains, drowsiness and
nausea -- from LCC's Child
Development Center last
Friday morning, according
to Marci Temple, head
teacher in the center.
Fumes emanating from
the dental lab upstairs from
the center, Temple says,
forced teachers and
assistants to move the
children to a room in the
Physical
Education
Building and then to send
the children home early.
Bill Mansell, assistant to
the dean of administrative
services, says he noticed "a
strong acrylic smell" when
he visited the building Friday. He says the same smell
was in the dental lab when
he visited it.
.He contacted toxicological experts at the
State Accident Insurance
Fund (SAIF) Corp. offices
in Salem Friday, he says.
Investigators from SAIF
performed tests Monday,
according to Mansell, and
will forward results to LCC
sometime next week.

The apparent source of
the fumes, says Mansell, is
an acrylic polymer used by
students in a dental
materials class. The
polymer is used in the
manufacture of false teeth
and other dental prosthetics. Two substances are
combined to make the
polymer.
One of the substances is a
resin that has caused tissue
irritation in humans exposed to 125 parts per million
of the substance. The Occupational Safety and
Health Act has established
a safety threshold of 100
parts per million for human
exposure and the Department of Transportation requires a flammable liquid
label on the product, according to the Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical
Substances 1979.
Measurements of the
amount of substance in the
air will not be available until SAIF forwards the
results of their tests.
The other substance, a
monomer -- or substance
that can be chemically
bound with a polymer -- has
caused cancer in laboratory
animals, according to the
Sqme publication.
Douglas White, head of

Larger state budget deficit

could spell LCC disaster
by Ron Kelley
of the TORCH
from AP reports

Oregon lawmakers decided
to go home before balancing
the state's budget after they
learned of a possible additional $150 million deficit on
Feb. 9.
And LCC President Eldon
Schafer said deeper cuts
beyond 10 percent in LCC's
budget would be "a disaster.
It's hard to look at that."

the Health Occupations
department, says dental
assisting students have been
using the acrylic polymer
without ill effects "for at
least nine years."
But Temple and other
workers in the Child
Development Center say
they think the fumes which
created a "haze" in the
center caused the symptoms
their charges exhibited.
"I felt like I was gonna'
throw up, and I did,'' says
five-year old Julie Roach.
Temple says Julie vomited,
was restless and fell asleep
shortly after the fumes
became noticeable in the
/
center.
Several other children
have been sick since Friday,
says Temple, and many of
them have been to their
family doctors. All of the
sick children's symptoms
have disappeared a short
time after leaving LCC,
says Temple.
White says the polymer is
used in most dental offices
without special precautions.
Local dental technicians
confirm this.
One brand of the product
carries a warning to "avoid
inhalationor ingestion" and
that the substance can cause
skin inflammation.

A reading session in the CDC

Summer session shortened
by Ron Kelley
of the TORCH

The summer session will be
This added deficit raises the
shorter, academic probation
total expected deficit . from .,. will be stiffer and the Adult
$242 million to nearly $400 • Basic Education/High School
million at a time when
Completion (ABE/HSC)
legislators had almost reached
faculty have a new union cona compromise on how to
tract.
balance the budget.
Although the LCC Board of
House legislators were close
Education dealt with these
to erasing the final $23
issues Feb. 10 in moments, the
million, presumably with an
decisions
will dramatically imincome tax increase proposal,
pact
students
and faculty here.
when the news came. House
LCC
President
Eldon
members have been deadlockSchaf
er
informed
the
board
ed for more than three weeks.
that he supported discontinuTurn to BUDGET, page 4
ing the 12 week class sessions

but will keep those running 4
and 8 weeks.
And college officials said
that LCC will save in faculty,
maintenance and repair costs.
In addition, administrators
will be asked to carry teaching
loads and existing faculty
work loads will be made more
•
equitable.
He said he originally wanted
the board to vote on his
recommendation but realized
that it was within his jurisdiction to initiate the action
without board involvement.
"You don't have to vote on
this," he said. "My staff

recommended it unanimously
and I'll go along with that.''
Some board members expressed fear that a shorter
summer session would harm
part-time faculty and
classified staff (employees
other than administrators and
teachers).
'' I worry.
.that poor
economic classes in our institution will suffer the most.
It's not the full-time faculty
that will take it in the neck.
It's the part-time faculty that
will,'' said board member Les
Hendrickson.
Turn to BOARD, page 4

~=-:~----: ~ = ~ ~ ~ ~·~-~3= ·-:::·~
\.

(I:m:

native American governltlI ments and tribal laws last
:mmm week. See story, page 3.
1

Eugene? A panel and guests .
discussed this topic last
week. See story, page S.

the chaotic performing arts
environment. See story'
pages 6 & 7.

band, is well worth the price
of a cover charge. See story'
page 8.

~

basketball team fell prey to
foul woes and loSt last
weekend. See story, page 9.

~{llil

Imm~

Wlm:

Page 2 February ' 11, 1982' - E

!!!/., 1982 The TORCH .

FREE FOR ALL

l.

OEA parent organizat~on

LCCEA affects di/ of us

Editor's note: This week's Forum was
submitted by LCC Education Association President John Kocher. Kocher
teaches criminology in the Social
Sciences Department. Forums submitted should address topics of interest to
LCC students and staff and be 750
words or less.
Even though many students aren't
aware of the Lane Community College
Education Association, each of them is
affected by that organization; it is the
union which represents their instructors.
A sample teacher contract reprinted
by the Oregon Education Association
(OEA) from the "good old days" of
1922 included bans against such ·things
as "dressing in bright colors" and forbade "loitering in downtown ice cream
stores." Women teachers were required by this contract "to wear at
least two petticoats."
Society has changed in 60 years and
so, certainly, has the teaching profession. Educators have joined together
into associations which not only
negotiate contracts with school administrations (petticoats are now optional) but do much more.
Nearly 300 faculty members at LCC

are represented by the LCcEA, "Which
is a bargaining unit of the OEA, its
parent organization. The Association
here at LCC is one of the oldest community college associations and with
other units receives expert help from
OEA in the areas of organizing,
bargaining and, if necessary, arbitrating disputes.
LCCEA enjoys excellent labor relations at LCC, and in October the
Association members ratified a new
contract that clearly outlines the
responsibilities of both the Association
and the College Administration. By so
doing everyone can set about the central task of providing the best education possible for the students here.
Besides bargaining contracts and arbitrating disputes on behalf of its
members, the state-wide and local
Associations are involved in many
other activities. OEA has a political action arm, People Interested in Education (PIE) to which Association
members may belong. PIE is concerned with legislation and elections which
involve education in Oregon.
In addition, OEA sponsors .
workshops and conferences and provides members with opportunities for
professional growth. These kinds of

~QU~RE
DEA\.!

NtW

r~\R

DEAL! ·Oe~~l

act1v1t1es by LCC educators benefit
everyone at LCC, even the students.
The organizational structure is simple. The members at LCC elect their
officers each year. This year they are
John Kocher, President; Mike Rose,
Vice-President; Sharon Moore,
Secretary; and Joe Searl, Treasurer.
,The President and officers appoint
Association Committees which deal
with membership, bargaining and
grievances. The President also appoints members to represent the
Association on college committees
which work in areas of concern including affirmative action, instructional goals and priorities, and professional development.

r01.c:

Because there is so much going on,
LCCEA publishes a newsletter called
the SEAN, A Summary of Education
Association News, which keeps
members informed of current happenings.
It all sounds like a great deal of activity, and it is, but teachers here are
typical of dedicated professionals in
that they are willing to share their ideas
and their energy for the benefit of their
profession, of education, and thus, of
students.
It may also be noted that members
frequently wear bright colors and that
more than one member has been seen
loitering in a downtown ice cream
store.

-Letters~-;............._------------------------------Rust running
!'o The Editor:

. Oregon is in trouble. We
rank third highest in the nation in unemployment and our
mills continue to close. Budge_t
deficits threaten our quality of
life .
I am running for governor
to propose a practical
economic recovery program. I
will stress self-reliance and our
abilities to prosper in spite of
Federal policies.
I propose the establishment
of a State Bank to make funds
available, at low interest, to
small business, and to keep
Oregon money in Oregon. We

must use our resources wisely.
Conservation and weatherization prog~ams in home and industry will save energy and
make jobs.
We must enact plant closure
legislation. We rriust end raw
log exports and sell finished
lumber products, thus bringing money and employment
back to Oregon.
There are many ways in
which
the
traditional
resourcefulness of Oregonians
can be focused. Fresh revenue
can come from the development of renewable energy
sources. I pledge to explore
and study all sane alternatives
to our current nuclear energy
problems. Reforms must be
made. Federal and state
policies have exploited the

.......................................................

-!
The
i TORCH
•
•
••

The TORCH is a student-managed
newspaper, published on Thursdays,
September through June.
News stories are compressed, concise
reports, intended to be as fair and balanced as possible. Some may appear with a
byline to indicate the reporter responsible.
News features, because of their broader
scope, may contain some judgments on
the part of the writer. They are identified
with a "feature" byline.
"Forums" are essays contributed by
TORCH readers and are aimed at broad
issues facing members of the community.
They should be limited to 750 words.
"Letters lO the Editor" are intended as
short commentaries on stories appearing
in The TORCH. The editor reserves the
right to edit for libel or length.
"Omnium-Gatherum" serves as a
public announcement forum. Activities
related to LCC will be given priority.
All correspondence must be typed and
signed by the writer . Deadlines are the
Monday prior to publication. Mail or bring all correspondence to: The TORCH,
Room 205 Center Building, 4000 E. 30th '
Ave. Eugene, Or 97401. Phone 747-4501,
:
ext. 2654.

EDITOR: Ron Kelley
ASSOC IA TE EDITOR: Larry Swanson
FEATURES EDITOR: Jeff Keating
INFORMATION EDITOR: Paula Case
PHOTO EDITOR: Bonnie Nicholas

STAFF REPORTERS: Connie Boggs,
David Bowers, Vickie Crill, Susan
Crosman, Diane Davis, Belinda Gomez,
Terry Rhoads, Marty Schwarzbauer.
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: Nancy
Adkins, Michael Bailey, Paul Caporale,
Barbara Gates, Andrew Hanhardt, Warren Henry, Lisa Jones, Rebecca Pardo,
Gene White.
PRODUCTION ADVISOR: Lesa Carmean
PRODUCTION: Cathy B., Paula Case,
Vickie Crill, Eileen Dimer, Caryn Jacobson, Lisa Jones, Jeff Keating, Barbara
Leighton, Bonnie Nicholas, Larry Swanson, Tim Swillinger, Gene White.
CARTOONIST AND GRAPHIC ARTISTS: Marvin Denmark, William
DiMarco, Bill Lee.
INFORMATION ASSISTANT: Becky
Mach
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jan
Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT: Caryn
Jacobson
COPYSETTER: Linda Johns
RECEPTIONIST: Linda Reynolds
DISTRIBUTION: Tim Olson

e

........................................................

people and resources of our
·beautiful state. We need a
change in leadership and a
change in economic policy. I
will work for these changes to
gain prosperity for the people
of Oregon.

By the way, have you noticed how my letters don't take a
denigrating tone toward the
person I'm responding to? I
just do my best to make my
poi~ts. I think it's the 1:1ost effe:tiv~ way to wnte an
editonal lett~r • .
Jerry Rust .
~ nd I th mk it should be
pomted out th at th ere was a
case where a virgin W?man appa~e ntly . got. pregnant from
To The Editor:
gomg swimmmg.
I must defend my honor
.
. .
that was so besmirched by
Lmdsey KIiiian
~onnie Ni_cholas in her letter
•
Ill the last issue of the TORCH
Early
My letter of two weeks ago
was in response to a letter writTo The Editor:
ten by a woman that I felt was
Every morning I sit in the
unfairly getting down on peocafeteria, amidst the aromic
ple who are against abortion.
fragrances of hot coffee and
It had absolutely nothing to do
cigarettes. I sit quietly at my
with the idea that says men
table and attempt to breathe
and women should share the
life into a new day.
responsibility for sex and
However, there is a minor
pregnancy, etc.
upset in this peaceful setting.
Of course the decision to
The problem begins at 8:30
engage in sex is a mutual one. I a.m. A group of students
agree the responsibilities
come into the cafeteria with
.should be likewise.
their piano and the American
But my point was this: I Flag, and proceed to undidn't believe that the woman
faithfully sing to everyone.
who wrote that letter had the They have you stand, and
right to castigate people who
'sing along with Mitch,' so to
don't believe in abortion, that speak.
i_nstead she sh?1;tld realize that
They sing the tune '' Lift
1t was her decision to have sex Every Voice And Sing.'' What
in the first place, and no one symbolic significance does this
made her do it. I was speaking tune offer to the honor of our
to her.
.
flag and country? Don't get
If a man were to wnte a let- me wrong, I'm an American,
ter with a similar point of proud of my country, and of
view.,my attitude would be ex- the American way of life.
actly the same towards him,
However, if students want to
i.e., it was his decision to have entertain us under these condisex in the first place, etc.
tions why don't they -do it

Heated debate

n se rs

honorably?
With the turbulent times
this country is going through,
at least what we the people
should have is respect for our
flag. A definite symbol of our
country's heritage. And if
notice is made to the flag the
group of mention should do it
with "couth and respect."
People don't make human
sacrifices for peace and
mankind to the words of "Lift
Every Voice And Sing,'' by
James Wilton Johnson and
Rosamond Jo~nson. People
of this country need to hear
what our forefathers created
and fought for to achieve:
Freedom and independence in
this country. This is the reason
for the "Star Spangled Banner," our National_ An~hem,
and no s01_1g or tune is gomg to
replace this.
Ho~ can the fellow stu~ents
of this campus accept this? I
can't. We need glory to the
flag and our country, no matter what the economic stress
factors are. And definitely not
from the lyrics from that
clouded set of lyrics in "Lift
Every Voice And. . . '' This 1s
inadequate to the students. We
don't need religious based
themes to substitute for the
lyrics of our National Anthem.
Where are the true
Ame~icans, have they beco~e
plast1x-vogues to a plastic
economy?
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY ...
WHERE ARE YOU?

Matthew West

The TORCH February 11, 1982 .. ~HMiiiliiiiiimlP~, 1982 Page 3
~ ;: , ·

: ········ ... · . . ... .

' ···· 11

On the Wire

I;

by Diane Davis

:; ;, : :, ,:,

of the TORCH

!llllllllllllJI

from AP wire reports

Spending up -- Programs out

WASHINGTON D.C. -- Medicaid, legal aid, child
nutrition, welfare and food stamps are on the list of
programs President Reagan wants cut this year.
Congressional passage of the President's request,
would result in elimination of two children's aid programs -- a summer feeding program and one to provide
milk. Also in danger of cutbacks are programs for the
disabled, blind and aged. Abolition of the Legal Services Corporation and stiffened food stamp and welfare
eligibility are also possible.
Health and Human Services secretary Richard
Schweiker calls the reductions "rather modest," while a
spokesman for the Food, Research and Action Center
called the slashing "a direct attack on the working
poor. ' '
These cuts were sent to Congress along with a $33.1
billion increase in defense spending -- a record
peacetime military budget.
• Flighty gimmicks increase ridership

NEW YORK -- While airline tragedies are increasing, so
is the war among airlines to increase ridership.
New York Air's "Valentine Sweetheart" plan, requiring, same weekday reservations and presentation of a
store-bought valentine card at the gate, lets couples fly
for the price of one.
Pan Am, who scoffed at the flighty tactics,
distributed coupons to passengers last month entitling
holders to a free ticket to 13 foreign cities.
A Republic Airlines plan permits any child between
ages 2 and 16 to fly anywhere in the US. The deal, backed by Ralston Purina, requires five proof-of-purchase
box top seals from "Chex" or "Honey Bran" cereal.
But the child must be accompanied by a fare-paying
adult.
Western Airlines' $100 round trip ticket to Hawaii
has even different requirements. Anyone paying a fullfare on a round trip of 400 miles or more is eligible.
Inmates freed to fish

FLORIDA --A Brevard County Sheriff, Jake Miller,
says he can save taxpayers $15,000 a year by letting out
a few prisoners each week -- to fish.
Miller says a cheaper way to feed the county inmates
is to release minor offenders to fish for abundant mullet
in the nearby Indian River.
Of course, the eligible inmates (those serving less than
five years) would be required to return with their catch.
Woman named to Supreme Court

SALEM -- Betty Roberts broke Oregon's 124 year-old
all-male history Monday by taking her seat on the
Supreme Court.
Appointed by Gov. Victor Atiyeh, Roberts replaces
Thomas Torgue who served since 1969. She broke tradition in 1977 when former Gov. Straub appointed her to
the Court of Appeals.
The 58 year-old judge must be elected in May to complete the six-year term on the seven-member court.
Age determines birth control availability

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Congress is debating a bill
that would require distributors of contraceptive drugs
and devices to notify parents of recipients under age 18.
Henry Waxman, D-Calif., says he intended the bill to
promote parental-adolescent communication. But it is
being so badly mistranslated that it will "defeat the purpose of the program." Waxman says "mandating"
parental consent of preventative methods for sexually
active teenagers will force them to turn to ineffective
alternatives, resulting in more pregnancies.
Jeremiah Denton, R-Ala., supports the bill on the
grounds that parents do have the right to know if their
children are using birth control. Denton urges counseling services to encourage sexual abstinence.
Unless rejected by a vote in Congress, this bill will
take effect within 60 days.

:/}{

Symposium explores tribal
government and low
by David Bowers
of the TORCH

''The 1980s will tell whether
Indian law will proceed sue.:.
" said
cessfully or perish.
Sam Deloria.
Deloria, who is the Director
of the American Indian Law
Center at the University of
New Mexico, was the keynote
speaker at Tribal Governments in Transition: Coming
Full Circle, a U of O symposium held Feb. 5 & 6.
The symposium was a
gathering of chiefs and
representatives of US Native
American tribes and US Indian law scholars. All expressed concern for the destiny of
Native Americans.
The symposium was divided
into two major topics: One on
traditional tribal governments
and the other on the publication 9f the Cohen Treatise
Revision, a document on In·dian law.
Although much was said
about tribal governments, the
main current surfacing
throughout the two days concerned the fate of Native
Americans.
Fortification of Indian law
and self-determination for Indian people were offered as
solutions for what many considered to be needs for survival.
"Indian people have no
rights. Today we have one
foot on a banana peel and one
foot in the middle of nowhere.
We are sitting on the edge of
extinction," said John
the Eastern
Mohawk,
representative of the Seneca
Nation.
Mohawk, who is the editor
of Akwesasne Notes, a national Indian newspaper, was
joined by Albert Smith (and
others) in an emotional panel
discussion Feb.5.
Smith, the Southwest Navajo representative, criticized
loss of Native American treaty
lands to caucasians: ''Maybe
the white man will continue to
pursue space exploration and
his fascination with the stars
will cause him to leave this
planet. Then we can have our
land back."
Smith and Mohawk focused
on concrete solutions to the
by
caused
problems
''assimilation into a white
man's society." Mohawk
stressed the need for young
Native Americans to have a

Indian performs at symposium.

"to
education
sound
redevelop into a selfrespecting, self-supporting
people,'' without losing insight into the teachings of their
elders.
He said that use of such
technologies as those involved
with greenhouse, horticulture
and wind power was needed to
develop self-determination.
Meanwhile, the abuses of
Indian Law and the need to
better interpret the _Law were
considered by experts to be
crucial to Native American
survival in the 1980s.
Charles Wilkinson, U of 0
law professor, cited the
history of the original Cohen
Treatise of 1942 as a prime example of the manipulation of
Indian Law by the US government and corporations.
He said this treatise was a
fair and solid foundation for
the administration of Native
American rights.
US corporation's pursuit of
mineral rights on Indian land
led to the 1958 revision of this
document on Indian Law
which Wilkinson said
"gutted"it.

Photo by Gene White

Although the Congress updated the treatise to be more
responsive to Native American
needs in 1968, it wasn't until
1975 that Sam Deloria was
asked to complete the revision
process.
Wilkinson said that this
Feb. 6 marked the official
unveiling of the 1982 Cohen
Treatise, an important step for
Indian Law. He added that the
revision should be available
for court use by April.
Rennard Strickland, the
editor of the revision, said the
Cohen Revision is potentially
the strongest published document of Indian Law, and its
fate rests in the hands of US
lawmakers.
He said it will either
strengthen Indian Law or
become the "puppet princess"
of US corporations and the
government in the 1980s.
Deloria perhaps best summed up the sentiments of the
symposium speakers when he
said, "the supposed need to
civilize and assimilate
American Indians" into
American society needs to be
overcome in the 1980s if they
are to survive.

Page 4 February 11, 1982 - ~ ·SU:§21:'!, 1982 The TORCH

Board approves ABE/HSC contract
by Lorene Sheer
for the TORCH

After nearly one year of negotiations, 37 instructors in the Adult Basic
Education/High School Completion
(ABE/HSC) program now have a new
contract.
The LCC Board of Education voted
unanimously Feb. 10 to accept the twoyear contract that 95 percent of union
members ratified last week. The contract is retroactive to last September.
Over 3500 students participate in the
program annually, according to Dick
Earl, ABE/HSC progr,a m coordinator.
ABE/HSC instructors will receive a
nine percent retroactive pay increase
for 1.981-82. And the college will pay
for Public Employment and Retirement System (PERS) fees the second
year instead of increased wages.
Hank Douda, LCC's director of

employee relations, says the contract
represents a ''notable a,n d costly',
change in the increased number of paid
hours for HSC instructors.
But Susan Monteith, chairperson for
the union's negotiation team, says the
increase represents paid office hours
for these instructors.
Douda says ''the contract overall is
not a great departure-"from7e"vious
contracts." But Monteith says "it's
much stronger than before."
The contract provides that the college pay increased insurance benefits of
up to $50 the first year and $55 the second year, and a dental insurance option has been added. The Oregon
Education Association (OEA),
representing the ABE/HSC instructors, will now be the carrier.
In addition, any "top of the scale"
employee will receive three percent

longevity pay after three years of
teaching experience. Some improvements in evaluation procedures
have been made, a non-discrimination
article was added, and standard college
holidays will now be paid.
Douda says the total cost of the
changes in the contract is expected to
be between $11,800 and $12,200 in the
first year. The cost to the college in the
second year will be approximately
$8,600. But employees will actually
receive $10,600 worth of benefits
because the PERS money is tax-free.
A major weakness of the contract, in
Monteith's view, was that no improvements were made to protect job
security.
According to Douda, ''This was a
hot issue at the table and there were

two reasons why we (the administration) didn't move on it. The program is
shrinking with high school districts
making larger efforts to retain
students. And the state budget deficit
will mean fewer students and less
money for the college."
But Douda's reasons correspond to
why the union is concerned about
seniority rights and job protection,
says Monteith. And Earl said more
than 50,000 people in Lane County
without high school diplomas are
potential candidates for the program.
Even though the contract is settled, •
an area of controversy remains. The
LCC administration opposes the effort
of ABE/HSC to merge with the credit
faculty into the same bargaining unit,
says Douda. The issue is before the
Employee Relations Board in Salem
for a ruling.

BOARD continued from page I - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - BUDGET continued from page I
And Gail Currin, president
of LCC's Employees Federation, said that the administrative recommendations
"say nothing about the impact. .. but that doesn't mean
there won't be an impact."
Gerald Rasmussen, dean of
instruction, admitted that the
changes will affect part-time
faculty and classified
employees more than other
employed groups. And board
member Larry Perry requested
a written report of just how
those employees would be affected if the board is called on
to take official action .
He said students that will be
most affected are those who
use the cheaper summer sessions to make up for class defi..PitfaJls To Avoid/ Am
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The board also ratified the
37 member ABE/HSC's new
contract after negotiations
that lasted nearly a year.
The two-year agreement will
give the faculty a 9 percent
wage hike (retroactive to
September) for this year and
no increase for the second
year. Instead the college will
pay for Public Employee
Retirement System (PERS)
fees beginning that year.
The total benefits include
health care, a three percent
longevity pay for teachers in
their third year and a dental
care option.
The contract specifies an
11.8 to 12.2 percent increase,
but because of the introduction of pay steps the actual
cost to the college the first year
will be about 11.4 percent.
That cost may drop as low
as 5 .6 percent the second year
because of the pay steps and
because the college will pay
PERS fees instead of higher
wages.
Hank Douda, LCC' s director of employee relations, said
the cost may range as high as
$27,000 per year for the new
contract, but that it was too
difficult to give an actual
dollar amount.
In other action the board
awarded Automatic Cigarette
Service $16,101 to install and
maintain 4 electronic video
games in the gymnasium lobby
to keep the others there company.
Revenue for the games will
support the traveling fund of
students in the Performing
Arts and the Athletic Departments.

ciencies and to gain skills that
will increase job-related pay.
In other action Perry lost his
bid to stop a proposal to make
academic sanctions against
students stiffer.
"I am in favor of supporting excellence but opposed to
punitive action against lack of
excellence," he said. "We're
not a university . . . We don't
have the same type of
students.,'
The college will expel
students for a year who don't
respond to basic skills counseling and other support services
following two terms of active
probation.
Students are placed on probation if their Grade Point
Average falls below 2.00
(depending on the credit load)
or if they complete less than
half of their fourth-week
enrollment.
Jack Carter, the colleges
dean of students, said that
LCC needed a stronger way to
reach the student who
habitually doesn't respond to
counseling. He supported an
academic standard for LCC.
He said that students also have
an appeal system.
''There's a considerable
amount of pressure already,"
Perry said because poor
academic performance may
result in a loss of credit
without reimburseqient of fees
paid and a loss of financial
aid .

See related story this page

Atiyeh
warned
that
"rumors and speculation"
needed to be put into perspective. He said the new deficit
radically ranges from a low of
$5 million to a high of $150
million.
At LCC's Board of Education meeting Feb. 10, Schafer
said the "range the governor
gave us left all of us kind of
shocked that we could be
working with a budget process
with that kind of gap."
But board member Charlene
Curry said that for the
legislators, ''the name of the
game is economic development and no one is denying the
role that education plays in
that. I think education will be
the last on the list they'll cut."
The legislators plan to
return on Feb. 16 when
analysts have a better idea of
the state's grim economic picture. Atiyeh said he hopes to

have the official revenue
forecast from the governor's
Council on Economic
Development by that date.
Meanwhile, Schafer said in
an interview that LCC's
"future is really in their
hands. We're ready to respond
with a 5 percent and even a 10
percent cut, but if it gets
deeper. . . we'll have to begin
all over again."
At 5 percent, he said, LCC
would lose about $620,000 in
state money without dramatic
shifts in programs offered.
But at 10 percent, LCC would
lose $1,250,000 in state money
which would in turn force a
drop in tuition revenue by
$350,000.
But Schafer said it is useless
to speculate about how much
the new deficit is and what the
legislators will do about · it.
"We're just in a holding pattern at this point."

Vocational awards presented
by Paula Case
of the TORCH
Vocational Week was highlighted at LCC Feb. 10 with an
open house in which three awards were presented to outstanding
vocational teachers of the year.
The first a·
;was presented to S.W. Groesbeck, a member
of the Flight
4ning Advisory Committee.
Groesbeck wasn't present at the ceremony because he was flying. Flight Technology Department students and staff have
flown a record 100 flights in the last two days.
Gerald Rasmussen, dean of instruction and host of the award
ceremony, says Groesbeck has given a "faithful and effective 11
years as a member and sometimes chairman of the advisory
committee.''
The second award was presented to Margie Holland, student
services coordinator of re-entry workshops for women students.
Harvey Kelm received the third award. He is an instructor in
the Agricultural Industrial Equipment Technology Training program.

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The TORCH February 11,, 1982 '" RR-.••mn1:i;JlifftJ, 1982 Page 5

•

Forum probes Lane County racism
whites) are all here, and we're
going to stay here.''
Pacheco said that special
programs will not solve
racism. He said society had to
be transformed completely
and that the only answer is ''to
make a new world."
The forum on racism was
sponsored by the Eugene
chapter of Clergy And Laity
Concerned ·(CALC) and was
the first installement of a fourpart series on racism in Lane
County.
The seminars meet from 6-7
p.m. following a 5 p.m.
keynote address, at the First
Congregational Church, 23rd
& Harris, Eugene. For more
information, call 485-1755.

by Marty Schwarzbauer
of the TORCH

'' Asking -- Is there racism in
Eugene?" said Manuel
Pacheco,. "is like asking -Does th·e blood circulate
through the upper torso of the
human body?
"It's a very silly question.
Racism in Eugene is in no way
different than racism in
Selma, Alabama. If we had a
larger minority community,
there would be the same problems."
Pacheco, director of the
High School Equivalency Program at the University of
Oregon, was one of four panel
members speaking to a
_predominantly white audience •
about racism in Lane County
at a forum Feb. 4.
The panel focused less on
solutions to racism in Lane
County than on identifying
that it exists here.
Panelist Maria Tenorio
from the Indian Child Welfare
Project said that racism isn't
an isolated problem and that
"it's all pervasive. It's
something we've dealt with for
several hundred years."
She said the fact that there
are no "people of color" on

••••••••••••••••

Patricia Creal, Kent Gorham, Manuel Pacheco, and Maria Tenorio

either the Eugene city council
or the Lane County Board of
Commissioners was an example of what she called subtle
racism.
Charmaine Coleman, a
black 4-J teacher and an audience member, responded,
saying '' I find that there is a

Aussie films shown
by John Mitchell
for the TORCH

LCC and the U of O are offering credits to students willing to spend a weekend at the
movies.
On the weekend of Feb.
19-21, Cinema 7 will be showing the Australian Film
Retrospective (see TORCH
stories, Feb. 11 issue). The
weekend of films are presented
by the National Film Archives
of the National Library of
Australia, LCC, U of O and
KLCC radio.
Students at LCC can enroll
in either Humanities 102,
Language Arts 2419 or Social
Science 2427 and receive one
hour of college transfer credit
for attending the 20-hour
retrospective. U of O students
can enroll in TCF 199 for the
one hour of credit.
Cinema 7 will admit all interested persons for any of the
Australian shows regardless of
student status.
The three-day program
begins Feb. 19 at 7 p.m. The
first segment will feature
Three in One, a 1955 film dealing with organized labor in
Australia. The second segment
that night starts at 9:30 p.m.
and features two films about
the Australian outback -- Back
· and Beyond, made in 1955 and
A Girl of the Bush, a silent

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film made in 1921.
On Feb. 20 at 7 p.m. the
feature film will be Gedda, the
first Technicolor Australian
film. It tells the story of an
aborigine girl adopted by
white farmers. The 9:30 p.m.
session that night will feature
two contrasting films -- The'
Cheaters, a 1930 film about
high society in Sydney and Orphan of the Wilderness, a
story about a kangaroo.
On Feb. 21, the 1927 silent
epic For the Term of His
Natural Life will be shown,
which depicts the British penal
system and the way the British
settled Australia. A panel
discussion about the films in
the retrospective will follow
this segment.
The last segment will be held
Feb. 21 at 7:30 p.m. The main
feature will be 40,000
Horsemen, a 1940 film about
the Australian army's battles
in the Middle East during
World War I.
Two or three short subjects
will accompany all of the
feature films.
Students can register at
LCC or U of 0. The cost for
students is $1 per credit hour.
For non-students it is $3 for
each segment.
For Australian film buffs,
Cinema 7 will be giving away
kangaroo stickpins to the first
50 people at each showing.

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lot of racism, a lot of plain
naive-ism -- people here are
living in a wonderland." She
described a "kind of very subtle patronizing" from area
white people. She said because
"people don't really have an
opportunity to mix,'' racial
imbalance results.
Panelist Patricia Creal,
director of the LCC
Multicultural Center added
that "what we need to do is
educate each other that racism
is still on the move ... we must
do what we can to erase racism
from our vocabulary and our
hearts ."

"Pitfalls To Avoid/ Am
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And panelist Misa Joo, a
4-J teacher and a member of
the City of Eugene Minority
Commission, agreed: "The
word 'different' means to me
that white people aren't, and
the rest of us are."

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An . unidentified young
white woman in the audience
questioned Eugenean attitudes: "I'm tired of living in
Eugene, where the truth is
squashed in favor of
mellowness
and
nonviolence."
But Joo countered with
"Eugene • is richly diverse
because we (minorities and

representative will be on
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Backstage, and
under the stage, ·
sewing up the show
For weeks she and her workers live in an artificially lit
cavern 36 steep steps below the Performing Arts
Theatre. Metal pins usually protrude from their
mouths; ribbons of plastic, marked in one-eight inch increments, encircle their necks. They hunch over their
work, concentrating on exacting tools and buzzing
machinery.
The laborers are one unit of LCC's theatre workstudy force. The costume shop is their habitat, Nancy
Julian their talented and driving taskmaster.

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And few -- if any -- LCC theatre patrons know exactly what goes on in the underground costume labyrinth.

Story by Dianna Larsen
Photos by Nancy Adkins

.......
-~

-

A cloud of hairspray filters into the shop from the dressing
rooms next door; actors and actresses dash in and out complaining of hats that won't stay on and bodices that need more stuffing. Dancers' feet thunder overhead. The orchestra erupts just a
few feet away.
Nancy crams down her dinner, a hardboiled egg with
mustard. "No wonder my stomach aches," she moans. It's
another dress rehersal and another 12-hour day at her half-time
job.
Last October Ed Ragozzino, the Performing Arts Department
chairman, hired Nancy Julian as LCC's first professioinal staff
costume. designer. The position was described to her as halftime, which seemed an ideal situation while she completed work
on her master of fine arts thesis at the U of 0.
But the reality of the task set in quickly. She discovered the
state of disorganization at her new post just four weeks before
the opening of Bui/shot Crummond. She had to streamline the
shop's physical set-up ("It was clean and well-lit, although cluttered and cramped") and organize a new crew of six work-study
students with widely varied degrees of sewing talents.
At the end of four weeks they had produced the costumes.
And immediately began to work even longer and harder for the
·extravaganza, Hello, Dolly, with a cast of about 60, nearly every
member needing more than one costume.
But Nancy Julian seems to thrive in the chaotic environment
of theatre-related work. She manages to impose a sense of order
on the costume shop amid what might appear as total disarray to
a casual visitor.
A patchwork of colorful bits of fabric and trim covers every
surface in the shop. Large cardboard boxes, overflowing with
scraps from current projects, are just as organized in Nancy's
mind as the neatly marked cupboards and drawers.
But she can't accumulate everything a staged show might
need, so beyond the formal organization of the boxes of
bowlers, bloomers and spats, in Nancy's mind is a peculiar cartography developed over years of costuming shows that helps
her find the bizarre and difficult pieces of apparel. She
remembers flower shops, craft suppliers and fabric stores as
landmarks on her mental map. She can recall the place in
Spokane with two pink feather boas, and the store in Boseman
that carries a monstrous pair of women's high-heeled sandals for
the times ~he has to fit a male cast member who has to mimic
female. She did it once. "That was tricky," she says. "You try
to find something nice in a women's size 13 or 14."
As she flicks the switch of the automatic wardrobe rack, she
is brushed by an orderly row of military uniforms, then by acres
of billowing skirts -- peasant girls' calicos, princess's satins with
lace. She pulls a few from their hangers, thinking that with some
modifications thev may be suitable for LCC's next production,
The Miracle Worker, scheduled to open April 15. But she'll rely
on her knowledge of design and costume history to fashion new
numbers for much of the show.
Experimenting with a bunch of white flowers on a huge green

a

hat, Nancy muses "I'd much rather be acting." Worrying about
one character and her problems would be a lot less arduous than
worrying about details of all the characters, she says. Yet her
choice of a favorite character to portray would be Medea from
Greek mythology, a challenging role for an actress. She simply
shrugs her shoulders.
Accepted at the Webber-Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art
in London, she did study acting in I 978-79. And acting is still
her first love. But she recognized the scarcity of employment opportunities for actors in the marketplace and concentrated half
of her education on the more stable field of costuming. "I only
had to wait on tables once," she boasts.
r As she speaks her hands are in constant motion -- trimming,
pinning, measuring and matching. She encourages employees to
maintain the same level of productivity with a large handmade
sign that reads ''Talk and Sew, Ladies!!!!''
Using cherries, feathers, bows and blossoms she artistically
transforms an ordinary straw hat into an elaborate 19th century
ensemble. A few more touches, and another of more than 30
hats is finished for one scene in Hello, Dolly.
Then another begins. She winds 25 yards of fuchsia and green
netting around a doughnut-shaped ring of cardboard. At the
same time she tolerantly corrects one employee's technical error,
and calmly greets an anxious cast member with a promise to
alter a costume -- all the while sustaining a high level of concentration and activity. And, of course, creating one more hat.
"My idea of pig heaven would be to give me the Four Season
craft shop and D'C Florists and let me make hats for an eternity," she fantasizes.
Six thousand delighted audience members saw her hats -- and
coats, trousers, bodices and dresses -- she and her crew had
assembled for Hello, Dolly performers. Viewing the show with
the rest of the theatre patrons on opening night was difficult for

•

her -- '' knowing some things weren't finished, and that more
trim was intended for a dress, or that someone's wearing the
wrong pants for a particular jacket. It can make me very nervous
because I'm aware of evervthing."
She commiserates with all crews working behind the scenes in
the theatre, from make-up and lighting, to promotion, sound,
and scenery. '' I don't think an audience understands what kind
of commitment of time and energy is necessary to a production,
or what would have to be done to get all those little pieces to
move together at the same time."
But she has to add, "I'm not sure they should," -- although
"an educated audience can tell the difference."
While her name appears only incidentally in programs and
reviews, Nancy Julian's efforts don't go unnoteiced by Ragozzino, who says "She's a real professional and amazingly fast.
The task of costuming Dolly was infinitely more complex than
we'd expected. And although some costumes were rented or borrowed, the costumes Nancy made were the most stunning additions to the production.''
From acting to working in box offices, Nancy estimates she's
been associated with as many as 120 theatre productions. Between shows she admits, "I fall apart and vegetate."
But right now the director of The Miracle Worker wants her
to research costuming for the cast. Dolly's costumes must be inventoried, cleaned and returned or stored. Remnants of extgravagant gowns need to be digested into the shop's colorcoded cabinets and she thinks things would run more smoothly
if she rearranged the work area.
Theatre work has become a way of life for Nancy Julian.
There will always be the challenge of another show. Bui/shot
Crummond was her first at LCC, Hello, Dolly was next. After
Miracle Worker will come The Fantastiks and sew on and sew on
and sew on ........ .

' Page 8 February 11, 1982 - ~~~,,,,, 1982 The TORCH

ENT ERT AINM ENT

Hundreds flock to Salem concert

Quarterf /ash - Oregon's own rock
byPa~aCa~
~llieTORCH

The headliner was Loverboy
but Quarter/lash is Oregon's
own -- and it showed Feb. 5 in
a concert at the Salem Armory.
Rindy Ross' singing and her
outrageous saxophone playing
added the extra touch that
makes Quarter/lash so
dynamic. Marv Ross added an
equal
part
with
his
songwriting, to which Rindy
attributes the band's almost
instant success.
Any
member of a
Quarter/lash audience realizes
that Oregon has rubbed off on
the group. They are not a glitter band -- no flashy clothes,
no extra fancy equipment and
no conceit.
Loverboy, on the other
hand, relyed heavily on lights
and lasers. They are a show
band -- which adds a touch of
excitement to any concert.
The two together created a
mixture of flashy showmanship and down to earth
originality.
Every band has a gimmick
to attract attention. Halfway
through the concert Rindy
pulled out her Polaroid from
behind the drums and took
pictures of the band members
-- including herself. She then
tossed the prints into an audience that dove on them in a
mad frenzy.
loverboy has an opposite
type of gimmick. During a
song, ghostly-looking green
lasers bathed an awed crowd
in an ever-growing flood of
light, creating images that
were almost holographic.
Mike Reno, loverboy's lead
singer, projects a sexual excitement on the stage that obviously has its roots in
theatrical training.
Wearing skin tight black
pants, a black t-shirt and a
glittery red belt, Reno projects
sensuality in every action. His
back to the audience, he
moves his body suggestively.
The crowd screams. They
love it.
Loverboy's songs also fit
the arrogance and sexuality
Reno exudes. Their two big
singles -- "The Kid Is Hot
Tonight" and "Turn Me
Loose'' -- both have a loveem-and-leave-em attitude.
Both band images are commendable. The intriguing
Loverboy light show and the
humanistic,
simple

Rindy Ross (above) of
Quarterf[ash appeals to an enthusiastic concert crowd. Dave
Bruell (right) of Secrets keeps
people dancing at a local bar.

Photo by Lisa Jones

Quarter/lash approach is a
combination both relaxing and
rewarding.
What made the concert one
of the best in Oregon is the
fact that it was held in the
Salem Armory.
Rindy wanted to have the
concert between Eugene and
Portland and, perhaps without
knowing it, chose a dynamic
building for any concert.
Anyone who has seen a conce~t in the Seattle Kingdome or
the Portland Coliseum knows
the frustration of finding
seats, not being able to see the
band and being squashed
among throngs of people.
At the armory none of these
problems exists. Every seat
had a good view of the stage,
the aco"ustics were clear and
loud, and being thrashed
about was not a concern. It
was a pleasure to sit back and
relax -- to actually enjoy the
concert and be comfortable at
the same time.

Local bars sharing Secrets
by Paula Case •
of the TORCH

Lately, Eugene has been inundated with new bar bands,
which makes it hard to get excited about a new name after
so many disappointments.
But Secrets is a group well
worth the price of a cover
charge.
Good old rock and roll -Beatles and Rock Pile among
others -- is the format Secrets
adheres to, along with 51 percent original tunes, "majority
stockholder," as Dave Bruell
(bass/vocals) calls it. .
Other members of the fourmonth old band are Vince
O'Connor (keyboard/vocals),
Michael Souther (lead
guitar/vocals), and Duke Pippitt (drums).
According to Secrets,
songwriting is what eventually
makes any band a success.
Souther, one of the chief
songwriters, explains that

songwriting can be difficult
but "the best songs I've ever
written have all come very
easily." Adds O'Connor,
"We're only limited by
Michael's imagination.''
"Feelings into time and
space," is Souther's discription of songwriting, '' A good
song has meaning . . . makes
you feel good."
Contrary to popular belief,
members in any band don't
relate well to each other every
minute of every day. "It's like
being married," says Souther
about Secrets. But Bruell
adds, "(communication) is of
maximum importance."

crowd reaction. He explained
that if the people aren't out
dancing he feels let down.
He also added that he is
nervous before appearing on
stage. "It's not like nervous,
it's more like suicidal," says
Bruell. He explains that if he
has nothing to do a few hours
before a set, nervousness sets
in, but 30 seconds before the
show he's ready to go.

Why does Secrets enjoy
playing for an audience? "It
feels really good. It's like a
high," says Bruell. "Reaction
from the crowd is what we
play for."

The band has some flaws -feedback from amplifiers and
minor voice cracking -- but the
basics are there. Potentially
Secrets may be one of
Eugene's best acts.
On the surface, Secrets
seems to be a band 1n the
business for pure enjoyment.
But it goes deeper than that.
They want to be the best band 1
in the country. In the world,
even.

Playing is not always fun.
"Sometimes it's a burden,
work," says Bruell about

"If you're gonna shoot for
anything, shoot for number
one," says Bruell.

The· TORCH February 11; 1982 -1iP-11iiiA:;::5

1982 Page 9

SPORTS
Late drive fails as

LCC falters, 62-60
by Larry Swanson
of the TORCH

A soaring dunk by 6'2''
Mike Cooper with 15 seconds
to play pulled the Titans to
within two, but Darren Rice's
15-foot jumper at the buzzer
caromed off the rim as LCC
dropped an OCCAA contest
to Clackamas Community
College, 62-60, Feb. 6 in the
LCC gym.
The loss dropped the Titans
to 4-8 in conference play,
11-12 overall.
Rice, a 6'3" forward from
North Eugene High School,
and Gilbert Crummie, a 6'5"
forward from Gardena,
Calif., were the only Titans to
score in double figures on the
night with 22 and 13 points
respectively. Crummie yanked
down 12 rebounds in the losing effort.

Dawn Bredesen drives to the hoop on a Titan fast break

Fouls plague Lane women in cage loss
by Vincent Aguilera
for the TORCH

LCC's women's basketball
visiting
played
team
Clackamas evenly last Saturday night, but the Cougars'
height advantage and Titan
foul troubles proved too much
to overcome as Lane dropped
a tough 78-69 decision.
Head coach Sue Thompson
felt her team played a good
game and was pleased with her
squad's fast break. She cited
Clackamas' height and rebounding and Titan foul woes
as the main difference in the
game.
"We played them tough and
kept it pretty close,'' said
Thompson, "but unfortunately we got called a lot for it. We

were more passive on defense
in the second half due to the
fouls. They just took advantage of it."
The key statistic was the
Cougars' 18 of 26 performance from the free throw line
compared to the Titans' one of
four showing at the charity
stripe. "That's been our undoing all season," said Thompson. "We play them equally
on the floor but give it away
on free throws."
The loss dropped Lane to
4-8 in league play and dimmed
their playoff aspirations.
Thompson, however, remained optimistic: "What it means
now is that we don't just have
to win all our games but will
have to count on a few of the
others to lose.'

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* Ricky Glaspey *(Kirkpatrick)
of

2660 Oak st. Eugene

343-4813

i.~e

'"{urning

p0

.

'-0,

Equally optimistic was
talented sophomore Dena
Allen, who led Lane scorers
with 18 points, many from
long range. "We're going to
make them (the playoffs)
yet,'' she said, ''even if it has
to go down to the last one.''
The Titans will be on the
road for back-to-back contests
with Blue Mountain and Mt.
Hood on Feb. 12 & 13. They
will return for their final home
appearance of the season Feb.
17 versus Umpqua.

The Titans trailed at the
half, 29-25. They picked away
at the Cougar lead, and with
2:53 left in the game, LCC
pulled ahead, 56-55, when Ken
Jefferies stole the ball from a
Clackamas opponent and raced down the court for an easy
lay-up.
Tom Welle's field goal put
Clackamas up, 57-56, but
Crummie countered with a
tum-around jump shot to give
the Titans their last lead of the
evening.
Crummie fouled Welle as he
hit a short jumper with I: 10 to
play. After a Titan time out,
Welle completed the threepoint play to extend the
Cougar's lead.
The Cougar's Rex Thomas
then hit both ends of a one and
one opportunity. Cooper
thrilled the crowd with his
dunk, Rice missed his last
minute shot and the game was
·
history.
Earlier in the week, the
Titans lost to Southwestern

Oregon Community College in
Coos Bay, 71-65. In that
game, Rice led Titan scorers
with 12 points and ·crummie
pulled down seven rebounds to
for the sixteenth time this
season.
This weekend, if past
records mean anything, the
Titans should split their conference games. LCC will face
the Blue Mountain Community College Timberwolves, a
team they hold a 16-1 advantage over since 1973, and the
Mt. Hood Community College
Saints, the conference leaders
with a 12-0 record.
The last time the Titans and
Timberwolves met, Lane outshot Blue Mountain 55 percent
to 47 percent and outmuscled
the Timberwolves to win the
rebounding battle, 34-30.
Crummie had 18 points and
forward Jim Lassen pulled
down eight rebounds as the
Titans prevailed, 80-68.
The Saints beat the Titans,
73-56, Jan. 23. With three
players averaging over 15
points _per game and Rob Otis'
crashing the boards at a 10.5
per game clip, Mt. Hood
should give Lane another
tough game.
The Titans will be on the
road for both contests. LCC's
final home game will be Feb.
17 when the Titans take on
Umpqua Community College
at 8 p.m.

"Pitfalls To Avoid/ Am
I Doing This Right?"
Will answer your Financial Aid questions.
-Available in the Bookstore-

Jf\lmEiiWOCKY

r==

Ct\RD~ • GIFT~===..
For Valentine's we have
over 300 designs of
Imported and Domestic
cards, varying in
sentiment from ·the
sublime to the ridiculous
...
1308 Hilyard
Eugene

4

• • • 484-0530

Across from the Dairy Queen ".,,.

....__

• - . - , ~-

In SECONDS we print an AWESOME IMAGE
of you' We can use your own photo too!
These images can be transferred to T-shirts ,
Calendars Aprons Totebags . Pillowcases .
Puzzles . Posters & Night Shirts

CLONE YOUR LOVER,
PET OR MOTHER!
. . Bring $2 and mention this ad
"'llllf GRAPHICALLY YOURS
343-4343
1128 Alder

Page 10 February 11, 1982 -- fl5li5;a g ±1, 1982 The TQR CH

- Sports Notes

Men's Basketball

by Jeff Keating
and Larry Swanson
of the TORCH

The men's squad had trouble both at home and on the
road last week as they fell to
SWOCC 71-65 in Coos Bay
and dropped a 62-60 thriller to
Clackamas in the Lane gym.

Athlete of the Week

Dawn Bredesen scored 33
points in two women's basketball games last week to earn
Athlete of the Week honors
for the second time in three
week s.

Darrin Rice led the LCC
scoring attack in both games
with 12 and 22 points respectively. Gilbert Crnmmie was
the high rebounder with seven
caroms in the SWOCC game
and 12 versus Clackamas.

Bredesen 's 17 points, seven
steals, three assists, and six rebounds sparked the Titan
women to a 84-64 win over
Southwest Oregon Community College Feb. 3. She also had
16 points and six assists in a
78-69 loss to Clackamas Feb.
6.

The men are now 4-8 in conference play. They will face a
third place Blue Mountain
squad in Pendleton on Feb. 12
and then travel to Gresham to
square off with the leagueleading Mt. Hood Saints, who
are 12-0 in conference action.

"She has extreme quickness
and good hands," says Titan
coach Sue Thompson.

"Pitfalls To Avoid/ Am
I Doing This Right?"
What more can 1say? It's
a good buy!
-Available in the Bookstore-

Wrestling
Photo by Bonnie Nicholas

Dawn Bredesen, Athlete of the Week

German
Auro SERVICE

The LCC wrestlers are idle
this week as they prepare for
the OCCAA Championships
in Coos Bay Feb. 12 & 13.

TAILORED
WEDDING RANDS

'The Titan squad closed out
the dual season with a 35-9
loss to conference favorite Mt.
Hood. Ron Holbrook (Fr.,
Enterprise) had an outstanding 150 lb. match as he
outscored his Mt. Hood opponent 10-0. Holbrook's season
record is 12-9.
Mt. Hood is favored to take
the team title, with Clackamas
a close second and Lane third.
SWOCC, Linn-Benton, and
Umpqua will round out the
championship comp etition.
Basketball Polls

Oregon State University
vaulted from tenth to sixth
place in this week's Associated
Press basketball poll, while the
Virginia Cavaliers took first
place from Missouri when the
Tigers lost to Nebraska, 67-51.
The Washington Huskies
snuck into the top twenty for
the first time this year, nabbing nineteenth in the new poll.
In the women's poll ,
Oregon advanced from fourteenth to twelfth, while Louisiana Tech held a narrow lead
over Southern Cal for the
number one spot.
Baseball

'..

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J.ltJ 'J
t Jl .!4 -tll> l ii
J)~JiJ!h-J

;)

~~J)J

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\ •.•

4,,,ff,.~ I\~

FOR
HER

For him a s11m style
tailored band of gold ... for
her a matching feminine
band stie 'II love to wear .

'J J.J1 J.)'J~

)

s24 ga
s49 gs

~RGEIT

Student accounts 1rc /co111e

1

1

IIIJ1 , .t~

Valerltine's Day
is for lovers ...... .

So is

PLANNED
PARENTHOOD
We offer confidential, professional health
care for women and men.
All birth control methods and supplies at low cost:
Pill , diaphragm, I. U. D., foam, diaphragm jelly,
Encare, condoms, basal body thermometers
• Pregnancy tests •Yearly gynecological exams•
Treatment for vaginal or bladder infections•Breast
exams-Pap smear•Test for anemia and diabetes
• Blood pressure check•Veneral disease test and
treatment.Counseling and referrals on adoption
abortion, birth control, sterilization
• infertility •
you can visit us at 134 E. 13th
or call us with your questions:
344-9411 or 344-1611

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2045 Franklin Blvd .
Eugene, Oregon 97 403
342-2912

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Daily 10 lo 9 Sal 10 lo 6
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DOWNTOWN
Oa11y 9 JO I
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JO

THE PAPER CAPER
We have
heart shaped
helium balloons
for your sweetie
and
Valentine's gifts
& cards
galore
410 E. 11th A VE.
Eugene

The New York Mets have
signed slugger George' F~ter
to a five-year, $10 million contract. The Mets gave up catcher Alex Trevino and pitchers
Jim Kern and Greg Harris to
acquire the hard-hitting outfielder from the Cincinnati
Reds.
Boxing Snafu

World Boxing Council
President Jose Sulaiman has
put Mexican authorities in a
quandry. Sulaiman was arrested Feb. 9 on charges of trying to smuggle $200 million
worth of archaeological
treasures out of Mexico .
The Mexican attorney
general's office has been given
the case, and authorities say a
decision on whether Sulaiman
remains in jail is forthcoming.

-Aroond , ~_____________

......_1_9_82-P-ag_e_n
·l_~-19_8_2_--P--wi-•-JJl
r_h_e_T_O_R_C_H_F-eb_r_u-ar_y_l_

•
music

18, Brent Weaver will present a
master's degree recital at 8 p.m., in
Beall Concert Hall. All events are free
unless otherwise indicated. For more
information please phone The Oregon
School of Music, 686-3764.

University of Oregon -- The 6th Annual Oregon Blues Festival, will be '
held on Feb. 11 and 12. On Feb. 11, .
The Paul Delay Band and The Mighty ! O'Callahans -- 440 Coburg Rd.,
Flyers with Rod Piazza. Headlining · 343-1221, Sequel, Feb. 11,12,. & 13,
the event for Feb. 11, will be Albert
The Burners, Feb. 16 - 17. Bands start
Collins and the Icebreakers. On Feb.
at 9:30. Cover charge varies.
12, Little Charlie and the Nightcats,
and Pee Wee Crayton. Headlining the
The Lone Star -- (formerly The Place)
event for Feb. 12, will be Clarence
160 S. Park, 484-7458, Eastbound and
Gatemouth Brown. The Feb. 12, perDown, Feb. 11 - 18. The band starts at
formance includes a film by Les
Blank, Accordin' to Lightnin' , 9:30. Cover charge varies.
Hopkins. Performances will be held in
the EMU Ballroom. Doors open each
BJ Kelly's -- 1475 Franklin Blvd.,
night at 7:30 p.m. Festival tickets
683-4686, Outtakes, Feb. 11, The
(both nights) are $10 for U of 0
Gregg Tripp Band, ·Feb. 12 & 13,
students and $13 for the general
Johnny and The Distractions, Feb. 14,
public. Single tickets are $6 for U of 0
Blues Jam, Feb. 15, The Now, Feb.
students and $7. 50 for the general
16, The Flesh Tones, Feb. 17. Cover
public. Tickets are available at the
charge varies. Bands start at 8:30.
EMU Main Desk, Earthriver Records
on the mall, Everybody's Records, or
by mail order. For more information
550 E . 13th,
Max's Tavern
phone 686-4373. On Feb. 11, A
485-6731, Cyclones, will perform on
musical smorgasbord concert will be
Feb. 13. On Feb. 15, Un-announced
performed by Dan Brugh, piano and
bands, Rocket-A-Billy.
Gwen Ingram, trumpeter, at 12:30
p.m ., in Room 198. Also, on Feb. 11,
Community Center For the PerformThe Oregon Wind Ensemble will pering Arts -- 291 W. 8th, 687-2746, On
form at 8 p.m., in Beall Concert Hall.
Feb. 11, an informal gathering spot
On Feb. 12, The University of Oregon
for comedy and music enthusiasts will
Chamber Choir, will perform at 8
perform at 8:30 p.m. Admission is
p.m., in Beall Concert Hall. On Feb.
$1.50. On Feb. 12, The CCPA is an13, Shabda Kahn will sing at 8 p.m., at
nouncing a gala potluck and party for
the Gerlinger Lounge (15th and
all people interested and involved in
University). Tickets are $3.50 'at the
helping to save the W.O.W. Hall. The
door. For more information phone
potluck starts at 7:15 . On Feb. 13,
485-0979, On Feb. 14, A Faculty ArDumi and the Mararie Marimba
tists Series concert titled, Banchetto
Band, will perform at 8:30. Admission
Musicale, will be presented by Richard
Trombley, at 4 p.m. in Beall Concert
will be $3 at the door.
Hall. Admission will be by season
Hookers Inn -- 2165 W. 11th,
ticket or $2 at the door. Students and
485-4044, The Paul DeLay Band, Feb.
senior citizens with identification, and
10 - 13. The band starts at 9:00. Cover
children under 12 will be admitted
varies.
free. On Feb. 16, The University of
Oregon Brass Choir and an ensemble
of early brass instuments and percusTreehouse -- 1769 Franklin Blvd.,
sion will perform at 8 p.m., in Beall
485-3444, Tom Birkenhead, solo
Concert Hall. On Feb. 17, David
guitar, Feb. 11, 5:30 p.m ., Chip
Golden will present his senior recital at
Smith, Feb. 11 , 8 p.m. Linda Jacobs,
and Margret Vitus will play a flute
8 p.m., in Beall Concert Hall. On Feb.
18, A musical smorgasbord will be
duet on Feb. 14, 11 a.m. - 1 p.m.
presented by Dan Brugh, piano, Scott
Stickley, trumpet, Gwen Ingram,
Gatehouse Tavern -- 3260 Gateway,
726-0311, The Now, will play on Feb.
flugelhorn, David Chartrey, Alan
Phillips, James Meyer, a trumpet trio,
12 - 13, starting at 9:30 p.m. Admisat 12:30, in Room 198. Also, on Feb.
sion will be $1.50.

Duffy's -- 801 E. 13th, 344-3615, The
Rock Band, Feb. 12 - 13. The band
starts at 9:30. Cover charge is $2.50.

Bijou -- 492 E. 13th, 686-2458, My
Fair Lady, 7:30 only, Sunday Matinee
at 3:30.

Old Taylor's Tavern -- 894 E. 13th,
344-1222, Los Xp/orers, Feb. 11 - 13.
Band starts at 9:30. Cover charge
$1.50.

Fine Arts -- 630 Main St., 747-2201,
Heart Beeps, and Flash Gordon, Feb.
12 - 18. Zoot Suit, and Xanadu, Feb.
11. Call for show times.
Cinema 7 -- W. 10th and Olive,
687-0733, Phantom India, Part I, 7:00
p.m., Part II, 9:50 p.m., Feb. 1 I. Tell
Me a Riddle, 7:30 and 9:30, and Dear
Rose, Feb. 12 - 18. Sunday matinee at
2 p.m.

dance
University of Oregon -- Bill Evans'
Dance Company, will perform on
Feb. 19 and 20, at 8 p.m., in the
Dougherty Dance Theatre. Each performance is a separate program of
diverse styles, with music that ranges
from jazz to classical. Ticket prices are
$5 for U of O students, and $6 for the
general public and are available at .the
EMU Main Desk and at Backstage
Dancewear.
Community Center for the Performing Arts -- 291 W. 8th, 687-2746, Contra Dance, will be held on Feb. 14, at 7
p.m. Admission will be $2.

theatre
University of Oregon -- Villard Hall
Theatre, The Pocket Playhouse production presents Getting Out. The
production will start on Feb. 12, 13,
17 - 20, curtain time for all performances will be 8 p.m. General admission tickets are $4.50 for the general
public, $2. 75 for U of O students and
$3 .50 for other students. For reservations and information, call the University Theatre box office at 686-4191
from noon to 4 p.m. Monday through
Saturday.

•
movies

West 11th Walk-in -- W. 11th and
Seneca, 342-4142, Modern Problems,
9:00 and Silent Movies, 7:15 They All
Laughed, 7:15 and 9:30. Feb. 12 - 18.

969 Willamette St.,
National
344-3431, Night Crossing, 7:30 and
9:30.
Oakway Cinema -- Oakway Mall,
342-5351, Heart Beeps, and, Flash
Gordon, Feb. 11. Super Fuzz, and
Take This Job and Shove It, Feb. 12 18. Call for show times.
Valley River Twin Cinema -- 1077
Valley River Dr., 686-8633, Absence
of Malice, 7:00 and 9:15 ., Whose Life
is it Anyway?, 7:00 and 9: 15, Feb.
I I .Making Love, Feb. 12 - 18.
Springfield Quad -- Springfield Mall,
726-9073, Private Lessons, 6: 10, 7:55
and 9:15., Raiders of the Lost Ark,
5:30,7:30 and 9:30., Arthur, 5:30,
7:30, 9:30. Cinderella, 6:30 and 9:00,
and, Tale of Two Critters, 8:00 and
10:15, Reds, 6:00, 8:00, and 10:00.
Cinema World -- Valley River Center,
342-6536, True Confessions, 7:30 and,
Time Bandits, 6:00 and 9:30, On
Golden Pond, 5:45, 7:45, and 9:45,
Cannery Row, 6:00 and 8:00,
Cinderella, 6:30 and 9:00, and Tale of
Two Crillers, 5:45, 8:00, and 10: 15,
Chariots of Fire, 5:45, 8:00, and
10:00.

9:00 p.m., on Feb. 13. Admission will
be charged for both movies.

galleries
University of Oregon -- Danzig /939:
Treasures of a Destroyed Community,
will be shown in the Art Museum, Jan.
12 - March 7. Admission will be $1 . 50 •
for adults, $. 75 for U of O students.
Tours will be given for $3 per person
including_Danzig show admission. For
tour reservation information, call the
museum at 686-3027. New to the exhibit is a 28-minute documentary film
which traces the history of the Jews of
Danzig (now Gdansk, P_oland) from
the 17th century to the Nazi era. The
free showing begins every half-hour
from 12:30 to 4 p.m. in the Murray
Warner gallery on the mezzanine
upstairs. Also, in the Japenese gallery
on the second floor, 30 ·_ 35 permanant
prints will be displayed through March
15 . In the Photography at Oregon
gallery, Claudia Wolz, black and
white photographs. Admission is free.
The musuem open from noon to 5
p.m. daily except Mondays and
holidays.
Graphically Yours -- rt 28 Alder St.,
343-4343, Through February, VideoComputer Prints, of traditional
African masks and sc ulpture. Hours
are: Monday - Friday, 10:30 a.m . 5:30 p.m. Showings also by appoint ment.
Maude Kerns Art Center -- 19IO E.
15th Ave., 345-1571, Margaret V.J.
Via, paintings, drawings, constructions, and collages, in the Henry Korn
Gallery. Michael Besh, Black and
White photographs, in the
Photography Gallery. Ken Paul,
Monoprint collages in the Rental Sales Gallery . Gallery hours are
Tuesdays thru Saturdays, IO a.m. - 5
p.m.

NOTICE

McDonald -- 1010 Willamette St.,
344-4343, The French Lieutenant's
Woman, 7:30.

University of Oregon -- Superman II,
will be shown on--Feb. 12, at 7:00 and
9:30 p.m., in Room 180 of the Prince
Lucien Campbell Building. Heaven
Can Wait, will be shown in Room 150,
of the Geology Building, at 7:00 and

Two bedrooms in upstairs of three bedroom house.
$ JOO a month, many extras. Ca/1485-6741.

Dad - Happy
cessful!Tim.

Christian female to share two bedroom trailer in
Springfield. $/15/month, includes all utilities. Call
716-1405.

Cliff - I Luv U, Sweetcheeks, Thanx 4 Barney, L.isa.

Congrats to Sue for a job well done! -- Usa.

Scruffy-- You were indeed a dandy dog!

Empl~yment under Democratic administrations
only goes up becuase they always get us into a war.

All items for Around Town must be
delivered to the TORCH office by Friday at five. Nothing will be accepted
after deadline.

-Classifie ds-------- -------wanted

Four ,'rub cabs for 1971 Mazda R-1()(}, reasonable
price, prefer original. Call 683-8158.
Housemates needed. Near Hendricks park. Single
person $140/$ 185, couple $130. Call Audrey at
683-4157 or 716-0164.

Brand new cannondale sleeping bags. long size.
$115 each, regular price $140. leave message for
Vickie at the TORCH.

15 pound bow, $15. Fencing foil, mask and glove,
$50 or best offer. Call 687-0713.
lamp lights, $JO; paintings, $75: speakers, $JO:
1-man raft, $10: Call 485-6505.
I babysit in my Junction City home. Extremely low
rates, babys welcome. Call 998-1115.

Roommate wanted or I'll have to move. $101.50 a
month plus half utilities. Two bedroom house close
in Springfield. Quiet street, large yard. Call
716-5187.

71 Tamarack llx60. Two bedrooms, adult park,
good condtition, best offer. $65()(). Call 716-1405.

OVERSEAS JOBS: Summer/year round. Europe,
S. Amer., Austraila, Asia. Al/fields. $5(}()to$/l00
monthly. Sightseeing. Free info. Write /JC Box
51-OR-l Corona Del Mar, CA . 91615.

Nisiki 10 speed, 16 inch. $150 or offer. Call Mike at
686-8310.

for sale
UNITY SCHOOL has openings in preschool and
kindergarten. Certified, nutritious meals. Sliding
scale fees. Mon - Fri, 7:30 a.m. - 6 p.m. Harlow
Rd. area. No religious affiliation. 15 percent discount 011 first months childcare with this ad.
484-0107.
Schwinn Continental JO-speed. Needs minor work.
$45. Call 686-1653 after 6 p.m.
Brand new Jensen car stereo components, never used. T-415 deck, A-60 main amp 50 watts biamp circuitry. Sacrifices S150. Firebird or Camero rear
window louvers, perfect, complete 76 or newer. $60
or best offer. Call 341-5088.
Nikon wom lens, Nikon enlarger, timer, Nikon
enlarging lens. Call Dixon at 689-6815 before 9
,
p.m.
Two silver foxes. They are not pets. For commercial purposes. Call Robert at 688-3571 weeknights
6-10 p.m. and all weekend.
80 Yamaha 650 Special 2. $1700. Call Robert at
688-3571.
Stereo set, $50; sewing machine, $15; new couch,
$75; 3 spd. women's bike, $50. Call Maria at
746-3597.
Portable typewriter with case. Good condition. $10
or best offer. Call 688-1174.

Large ski boots. $50. Size 7-7 half. brand new with
bindings. Call 716-1405.

Household appliances. Kitchen Aide, portable toploade electric dishwasher, large capacity, excellent
condition. Sacrifice $69.50. Call 688-5076.

autos

•
services
Typing: reasonable rates. Student will type your
"papers." Call Barbara at 747-9296.
Hauling and moving and delivery. Me and my good
ol' Ford pickup for hire at reasonable rates. Call
Gary at 345-7175.
LCC student desires housekeeping work. Mature,
experienced, reliable, excellent references. Wages
open. Call Tanya at 485-4047.
Valentines Day is for lovers. So is Planned Parenthood. Call Mon. - Fri. 344-9411.
Babysitting in my home. Reasonable rates, ex•
perienced, references. For more information Call
Cathy at 343-0150.

68 Cadillac, good shape, clean. $6()() or will trade.
Call 741-1711 after 4 p.m.
58 VW bus. Runs good, 40 horse engine, good
tires, straight body. $6()() firm. Call 741-0475.

messages

81 Toyota Corolla l-door Delux. Red, 5 speed,
mags, $5500, offer. Call Damon at 716-7411.

KAM - VD is 365 days a year, but Happy VD
always!!

77 Celica GT LB. Excellent condition, low miles.
$48()(). Call 747-5771 after 5 p.m.

K.B., Happy Valentine's Day, ME

71 Fiat ll8 4-door. Two new tires, good
tape/stereo, runs good. $750. Call 747-4188.
66 Mustang 189. AT, PS, disc brakes, very good
condition. $/8()(). Call 746-8899.
69 International Travelall.
747-3518.

Best offer. Call

for rent
Wanted: Mature, responsible, roommate. 13rd anc.
Jefferson. $84 monthly plus utilities. No pets or
tobacco, fireplace. Phone 687-1557 or 345-5650
and ask for Vince.

Brent - Happy 14th Birthday, Stay loose.
Mark and Jeff -- Happy Valentines day! -- Love
Sherri.

Valentine's Day, Stay Suc-

Unda -- Eat snake poop. -- Paul C.
The Oregon bodybuilding championships are six
weeks away! Get the pump in Portland! -- Birdman, 345-4895.
Julie -- Thanks for being there. You're a great
friend. -- Sherri.
Dianomite -- I love you. Your humble narrator. -Alex.
Karen -- We voted you number one dipstick of
Oregon. Enjoy the number one honor. -- LAJ & D.
You know... / think we're all bozo's on this bus. -FSTF.
If you've got a Doberman, Dalmation or Great
Dane you'd like to give away call June at 747-6051.
Hey Leah -- Don't let Ken get you down, watch out
for plates, call me. - Po-Po.
To the guy who sits in the center in the blue and tan
coat and tan shoes, smile at me cutie. -- Pam.
lesbian ladies -- I love you. Happy Valentines Day.
Bonnie -- Forget it. -- SuperPhotoFlo.
f don't want much: I only want trust and you know
it don't come easy. --

W.E. -- Yes, / love you no matter what. -- A.B.
Financial Aid questions? Read: "Pitfalls to
Avoid/Am I Doing This Right?" Available at the
bookstore.
Never take advantage of a love. --

Come to the Karate Club meeting Sunday Feb. 14,
room 105 PE.

I carry a TORCH for a great bunch of people on
the staff. Happy Valentines Day Scorchies! BurnBurn-Burn!!

Thanks everyone for such a special birthday. / love
you too. -- Lori Bell.

Paula -- You 're a sweet wonderful person! -Anoyomus.

To the Weavers - Happy VD! You're wonderful!
Lots of Love!!!!
To the Machs - Happy white and cold Valentine's
Day!! You're terrific!!!!
To the Millers - Will you be our valentine?
Mom and Frank, Happy VD! Hope it's everything
you'd wish for?

He's no fun, he fell right over. -- FSTF.
To all you skaters -- Have a happy valentines! -- A
skater.
Annie and Andy forever.
Mr. Mullin -- Happy Valentines! P.S. I tease back!
- Sherri.
To whoever turned in my watch, thank you!

Jo/tin Joe -- May you do squats until platz steps
down! -- Bird.

HE -- A red rose to my eternal red rose. -- SHE.
Even Kilroy left. (Oregon) Qre ·s-a/1-gon. -Bible study every Tuesday, 12-/ in Ilea/th 146.
II. Mam.inita -- Leon Patillo! Thanx for the recom-

medation, I'm crazy about him! (someone else
too .... ) •- C. Umbel/.
TTT -- You're my best pen pal. Not a bad pan,
either. •• KAJJ,A.
Jimmy and Molly -- Congratulations on yo11r first
year together. Have a memorable weekend. -Jerry.
Pooh -- I love you! -- Sherri.
J.C. -- Thanx again for yo11r warm heart. Smiles
beside endless trials. -- D.J.
Holly-- What's this about you and Ripo? ls it true?

--L.

Mark -- Will you be my valentine? -- Sherri.
Heather -- From what I've sen in the cafeteria on
Thursday, you're very attractive in blue. -- H.R.
Rhonda -- Let's talk about Illinois over lunch/
Wear patchouli and a smile. Stay happy. -- Larry,
Guy with 7l Chevelle, call me. 686-ll7/.
Kay Hilton -- Where are you? Call me ok?
746-2703. -- Sherri Hiestand.
Who is anoyomus? -- Paula.
Torchies -- Happy Valentines Day. -- 1. Ed.
Heidi-- JMYQAB. Figure that one out/ Miss you.
--Paula.
Ron -- You deserve a break today. Celebrate VD
with Lambrusco and ice...... and, thanks. -- an
editor.
All classified advertising 15 words or under are
free for LCC students.
Leave name and phone number and place ads in
envelope outside TORCH office by , Friday at 5
p.m.

- Omniom

Page 12· February 11, 1982 - jffiif~, 1982 The TORCH

Coast bicycle tour

A women's bicycle tour down the Oregon
coast is offered March 5 & 6 by Eugene Parks
and Recreation Department's outdoor program.
The tour is geared to the inexperienced cyclist
and includes instruction in basic bicycle repair
and safe riding techniques. A pre-trip meeting
Feb. 25 will cover equipment needs, meal planning and packing a bicycle. Fee is $20. Sign up at
the River House, 301 N. Adams, or call
687-5329.

Used books solicited
Donations of all types of books are being accepted by the LCC library. The books will be
sold at a sale during the Spring Term. The sale
will be sponsored by LCC Friends of the Library.
Call Mary Cudney or Kathy Wiederholt at
747-4501, ext. 2355 to make arrangements to
have them picked up. Or bring your booh to the
library reference desk.

Writing lecture given
Ldw,n Bingham will discuss "Pacific Northwest Writing: Reaching for Regional Identity"
at 8 p.m. on f-eb. 17.
The '>peaker is an author, a history professor
a! the U or 0, and has been seen by many audience'> as the narrator of the hi-,torical drama,
"rhe Northwe.,t Woman."
The lecture i., free and will be held at Gcrlingcr
Hall Alumni Lounge on University Street.

Cash flow lecture upcoming
Small business owners in rural areas outside
Eugene/Springfield have an opportunity in
hbruary and March to pick up some valuable informat ion about money, inventory and
marketing.
/fow to Survive the Cash Now Crunch is a free
seminar planned by the Rural Small Business
Re:-.ource Center of LCC. Seminars are set for
Oakridge, Collage Grove, Junction City and
Veneta.

Gatherom

The practical seminar will cover sources of
capital, early warnings about cash shortage,
credit collections, inventory control 'and planning, marketing and sales promotion.
For more information on the seminar phone
Mark Phelps or Carol Campbell at 484-2126, ext.
595.

Skills demonstrated
LCC will host a Girl Scouts all-day event on •
Sat., Feb. 20 in the cafeteria.
Fifty troops from six counties will attend to
share special interests, display skills and activities. Admission is- free and open to the public.

Life drawing sessions
The Warehouse Artists Studio is spomoring
life drawing sessiom on Wednesday evening~
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at 385 Lawrence Street.
Artists will pay $1.50 to cover the cost of the
model.
For more information, contact Steve Lafler,
343-2306.

Creative thought taught
Gary V. Koyen, Ph.D. of Koyen and
Associates, a training and consulting firm in
Eugene will speak at the Science of the Mind
Center, Feb. 14 at 9:30 and 11:00.
Dr. Koyen teaches in seminars dealing with
personal effectiveness, self awareness and prosperity. For information, call 484-1930.

Editor to speak
Thomas Winship, editor of the Boston Globe
will discuss his efforts to promote better and
more readable writing both at his newspaper and
in American journalism generally at a free public
lecture given on Feb. 12 at 12:30 p.m. in the Erb
Memorial Ballroom.
The lecture is part of the 62nd Oregon Press
Conference and is co-sponsored by the U of 0

School of Journalism and the Oregon Newspaper
Publishers Association.

Tutoring workshop
The next 12 hour workshop for training
volunteer tutors of English speaking non-readers
will be held Feb. 20 & 27.
Sessions will be held in room 128 at LCC's
Downtown Center from 8:45 to 3:45 each day. If
interested, call Vivian Truesdall, 344-4061, or the
Literacy Council office, 344-0051 from I 0-2
p.m ..

Widowed services program
The Widowed Services Program at the University of Oregon is conducting a Confidence Clinic
for Widowed Persons, men and women, beginning at 9 a.m. on Mon., Feb. 15, 1982.
For details, call 686-4220.

Food workshop
A four-session, free workshop on "Food for
Under $2 a Day" will be given on hidays from
10 - 11:30 a.m ..
Topics include: "Using Herbs and Spices"
(Feb. 12), "Lo\.\--Cost Snacks" (Feb. 19),
"Vegetarian Cooking" (Feb. 26), and ''Making
Your Own Convenience Foods" (March 5).
The workshops will be held at Ebbert
Memorial Methodist Chruch, 532 'C' Street,
Springfield. For details, contact Beth Naylor,
747-4501, ext. 2533.

LCC mobile classroom
People in Harrisburg, Veneta, Walterville and
Oakridge can still sign up for classes on The Bus,
LCC's mobile classroom
The Bus offers adult education, vocational
and college credit courses. Most classes are selfpaced open entry, open exit programs.
Through the end of winter term, March. 19,
the Bus will visit communities from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.

The sites are: Mon., Harrisburg by the city
park; Tues., Walterville at the McKenzie Food
Liner; Wed., Oakridge at .ne Postal Phar~acy;
and Thurs., Veneta at Harold's Market.
For information, visit the Bus in you community or call Linda Myers, special training programs at 747-4501, ext. 2496.

LCC child care openings
LCC's off campus Child Development Center
has openings for children aged 3 to 5. The cenrer,
located at 3411 Willamette St., offers part and
full time day care.
Cost for the center is $1 .05 per hour. The
center has three qualified, professional staff, as
well as a teaching associate who supervises lab
students in training.
For more information about the center call
Dawn Werlinger at LCC, 747-4501, ext. 2524, or
at the center at 343-0122.

University auditions
University Theatre is holding auditions for it's
two spring productions You Can't Take it H ah
You and The Boy Friend.
Auditions for the first play will be held f-eb. 13
from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. and Feb. 14 from noon to
5 p.m. in the Arena Theatre.
Auditions for the second play will be held Feb.
20 at 11 a.m. in Robinson Theatre.
An accompanist will be provided or participants may bring their own. Ten women and
ten men will be cast.
For more information call the University
Theatre box office at 686-4191, Monday through
Saturday, noon to 4 p.m.

ALS meets

The Association of Legal Student (ALS) is
holding their first organizational meeting on
Feb. 12 at 8 a.m. in room 201 of the Business
Building at LCC.
Membership in ALS will benefit those students
intrested in the legal field by sponsoring
speakers, seminars and workshops. If interested,
but cannot attend this meeting, please contact
Cathy Grant in the business department of LCC,
747-4501.

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