Lane
Community
Colle3e
Vol. 22, No. 17 February 25, 1982 - I\

4000 E. 30th Ave. Eugene, OR 97405

J, 1982

Bookstore pricing
mystery unraveled
by Leslie L. Lucas
for the TORCH

Board race in tensifies as last-minute
candidates ba lloon ballot ta ll y to 17
by Jeff Keating
of the TORCH

A last-minute influx of
candidates and the decision
of a present board member
to not run for re-election
promise to make this year's
LCC Board election an interesting contest.
As of 4:30 p.m., Feb. 24,
four applications had been
received for Catherine
Lauris' Zone 5 position.
Lauris had been undecided
about a re-election bid until
Feb. 21, when she told the
TORCH that she would not

run again.
Applications for Les
Hendrie kson' s at-large
board seat were still pouring in before the 5 p.m. filing deadline, Feb. 24. Most
of the applications were
received just before the
deadline.
Hendrickson left the
board in early February,
citing his desire to spend
more time with his family
and work responsibilites as
the reasons for his resignation.
Four candidates will
compete for the Zone 5

position. They are Mary
Unruh, Mel Jackson, D.
Edward Cook and Ken
Larsen.
The 13 at-large candidates are C. Peter
Sorensen, R. Severt
Johnson, Robert C.
Bowser,
Richard J.
Loudon, Wilford A.
Rosenow, Joel S. Kaplan,
Richard D. Weinman, John
R. Teising, Ralph Latham,
Edd Middaugh, Gloria J.
Locklear, Edward M. Reinman and Christopher
Roop.
The election is March 30.

,

Students who buy textbooks
at the LCC Bookstore are paying more than they would for
the same texts at the University of Oregon Bookstore.
A TORCH survey last week
revealed the price discrepancy
to be present in every case
where the same texts were carried by both bookstores.
For example, chemistry
students pay $31.45 for the
text Organic Chemistry by
T. W. Graham Solomons at
the LCC Bookstore, while the
same book is available at the U
of O for $26.26.
Similarly, Ken Metzler's
Newsgathering, a required text
for journalism students, is
priced at $16.20. The U of 0
sells it for $10.64.
''Our policy on textbook
pricing at the U of O is to take
an 11 percent discount right
off the top (of the publisher's
list price),'' explains U of 0
textbook manager Otto
Henrickson. In this way, the
bookstore, which is a nonprofit organization, can in effect "give the excess funds
back to the students where it
will do them the most good.''
Markups of up to 50 percent
on sales of supplies and novelty items at the U of 0
"generate the income which
allows textbook sales to lose
money," explains the U of 0

manager. These sales co ,
as much as 40 percent
business at the store on ,_ t
Kincaid.
But across town, the
Bookstore, which is a 1
profit entity owned by the 1. lege district, adheres -to
,,
publisher's list price for t·
tbooks. In addition, a 10 to •
cent handling charge is adde
to offset transportation costs.
At LCC, textbook sales
make up nearly 80 percent of
the bookstore business and
"are a losing proposition,"
says LCC Bookstore manager
Georgia Henrickson (who is
married to U of O textbo
manager Otto l;lenrickson).
She believes the sales volume
on supplies and novelties,
which could be used to offset
textbook sales losses, is low
because many students are
commuters who don't stay on
campus to shop.
But some LCC bookstore
monies are returned to student
consumers. In addition to expenditures for rent and
maintenance, the bookstore
contributed $15,678 last year
to the college's general fund
which supports other programs, an outlay required by
LCC policy.
"Our total profit margin
was just under two percent last
year,'' Henrickson says,
''which is as close as you dare
come to breaking even.''

Senate rejects House budget balancing plan
by Larry Swanson
of the TORCH

"Optimism" was the watchword in Salem and at LCC
as the week of Feb. 22 began,
but by Tuesday only the LCC
Administration Building could
claim an optomistic atmosphere.
A bipartisan House group -known as the "Mallory
group" for the motel they first
met at in Portland -- assembled a package last week that

L
::::,;,;:;::-:-·

j{:J{

~I:r::}

• Jerry Rust pledges to
'attract new, clean industry'
to Oregon ·r elected gover

stirred hopes of an early end to
the state's month-old special
legislative session.
Gov. Vic Atiyeh called the
session to close a gap now
estimated at $337 million in
the state's budget. Two weeks
ago, legislators had nearly
erased a projected $237
million deficit when the Executive Department released
its quarterly revenue forecast.
That forecast predicted an additional $ 100 million shortfall
for the biennium ending June
30, 198-3.

• Catherine Lauris ends
her LCC Board career but
t h
• • d t·
S

The new forecast resurrected plans to ·modify the
state's property tax relief program and renewed talk of income tax surcharges and
deeper cuts in state agency
budgets.
The hopes raised by the
bipartisan group's effort were
heightened Monday night
when the House passed the
package. Those hopes were
dashed Tuesday, though,
when the Senate rejected a 3.9
percent income tax surcharge
and sent the rest of the

• Ceramic Traditions are
now on display in the LCC
JIeg. Stt~og,~~

package to . various Senate
committees.
Meanwhile, optimism reigns
in the LCC Administration
Building.
LCC Pres. Eldon Schafer
says a lower-than-expected
faculty pay raise could
"eliminate the necessity for
major adjustments" caused by
the Legislature's budget cutting.
Faculty pay raises are tied to
Portland's annual consumer

• Anti-abortion legislation could be a dangerous
reversal for women. See
analysis, page 8.

price index. The LCC Education Association's union contract calls for annual pay
raises one percentage point
less than the Portland CPI for
the preceding year.
Schafer says funds for a 10
percent hike were set aside for
this year. However, Portland's
1981 CPI could be as low as 5
or 6 percent. Estimates of the
savings to LCC range as high
as $1 million, more than
enough to offset cuts now being considered by lawmakers.

• Is there a method to U
of O basketball coach Jim
Haney's madness? See
sports analysis, page 9.

Page 2 February 25, 1982 -.Jil

!t, 1982 The TORCH

FREE FOR ALL

-Letters
Innocent victims

To the Editor:

Forked Tongue indeed! I
recommend Mark Clements
(letter of Feb. 18th) attend a
grade school class in human
reproduction and find out he
or any other male can achieve
a state of cognizance and
realize the capability to his fertility and rid himself of this
fabricated "hapless" condition.
Perhaps if he gives all the
responsibility for fertility to
the woman, then she should
also have all the rights.
Alas, if these so said males
possess none of the control
(and does he imply they inherit
no craving?) then they must be
innocent victims of the whole
life affair.
But thank goodness, there
are many intelligent men in
this world who are able to
function as intelligent and caring human beings, and need
not use ignorance (contrived
or true) as an excuse for passing all blame, spouting
bigotry, or making sick jokes.
Beth Elliker

Pro-choice
To the Editor:

I know most of your readers
are going to moan and groan
when they realize they are
about to read another letter
concerning abortion, but the
recent wave of anti-abortion
letters compells me to write.
The abortion issue is admittedly a highly emotional one
and seemingly a philosophical
one (when does life begin,
etc.), but I feel one factor is
often overlooked when
discussing the issue of abortion: woman's sexuality. Take
myself, for example. I am a
32-year-old woman, single,

,...

The

TORCH?

.._

The TORCH is a student-managed
newspaper, published on Thursdays,
September through June.
News stories are compressed, concise
report~, 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 to the Editor" are intended as
short commentaries on stories appearing
in The TORCH. The editor reserves the
right to edit for libel or length.
"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 10: The TORCH,
Room 205 Center Building, 4000 E. 30th
Ave. Eugene, Or 97401. Phone 747-4501,
ext. 2654.

whose work entails a great
deal of traveling, who has no
time in her life for children (or
a husband for that matter).
Now here comes the shocking part: I love sex and I make
love when I please and with
whomever I please (if, of
course, the person I'm attracted to is willing). I take the
pill as a precaution against
pregnancy although twice I
have become pregnant and
twice I have had the fetus
aborted. The only qualms I
felt having the abortion was
that the procedure was costing
me time and money, neither of
which I have a great deal of.
Anyway, to put it mildly, I
am the type of woman that
many men (and women) find
incredibly threatening. I simply do not fit the stereotype of
WOMAN, i.e., submissive,
passive, motherly. In fact, I
have many so-called male
characteristics, independent,
assertive, and "horny."
It is this fear of a woman
with an uninhibited sexuality
which prompts many people, I
believe, to be anti-abortion,
when they are, in fact, antisexuality, the type of sexuality
described above. As more and
more young women are saying
no-thank-you to stereotypes of
what a woman's sexuality
should be like, more and more
people are screaming antiabortion slogans (although the
reader must be reminded that
the majority of people in this
country still support the idea
of a woman's right to choose
to have an abortion or not).
And of course in times of insecurity such as the present,
many people find comfort in
roles, thus a more intense antiabortion outcry.
I can only retort by saying
that I know change is hard,
but this is my body and I have
a right to express my sexuality
in the manner I have chosen.
Thank you.

Back to basics
To the Editor:

Dearest Mark Clements:
Go back to sixth grade!
While you're there take the
basic sex education class and
do your homework this time.
I agree that the choice to a
relationship lies with both parties, but how can you say that
women are the only fertile parties involved? According to
my sixth grade sex ed., men
are also fertile. To make
things simpler for you, women
produce an egg and men produce millions of sperm each
month.
Both women and men have
no choice in the matter of egg
and sperm production, since
either release is a physical process and not a mental one.
Therefore, since it takes both
an egg and a sperm to
reproduce, you can't declare,
"the issue of fertility lies with
the lady only."
You say you're a hapless
male who doesn't know if his
partner is fertile. Why not ask
her? I'm sure she could easily
tell you.
I agree that men should
have some say as to the termination of the life he created,
but if he wants some say in this
matter then he should also
share the responsibility of
birth control. I for one feel
that if a man isn't responsible
enough to ask pertinent questions about his partners birth
control, then he isn't responsible enough to share in the decision to terminate the pregnancy.
The Bible may allude to the
fem ale being created with a
craving for the male, but I've
yet to see a male without an
equ~J or greater craving for a
female.
Debra Barnum

Jean Marie

-,

EOll OR: Ron Kelley
ASSOCIATE FDITOR: Larry Swall'.vn
rEATURE:S EDITOR: Jeff Ke.i:,ng
lNI--ORMATION EDITOR: Paula Case
PHOTO EDITOR: Bonnie Nkholas
STAH REPORTERS: David Bowers,
Susan Crosman, Diane Davis, Belinda
Gome7, Terry Rhoads, Marty Schwarzbauer, Mike Sims
STAI-I- PHOTOGRAPHERS: Nancy
Adkin,, Michael Hailey, Paul Caporale,
Andre" Hanhardt, Lisa Jones, Gene
White
PROOUCTION ADVISOR: Lesa Carmean
PRODUCTION: Paula Case, Eileen
Dimer. Caryn Jacobson, Lisa Jones, Jeff
Keating, Barbara Littman, Bonnie
Nicholas, Mike Sims. Larry Swanson.
Tim Swillingcr, Gene White
CARTOONIST AND GRAPHIC ARTISTS: Marvin Denmark, William
DiMarco, Bill Lee
INFORMA flON ASSISTANT: Becky
Mach
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jan
Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT: Caryn
Jacobson
COPYSETTER: Linda Johns
RECEPTIONIST: Linda Reynolds
DISTRIBUTION: Tim Olson

Population trend
To the Editor:
Americans have been barraged with gloom and doom
propaganda from population
reduction advocates. Rarely is
the public exposed to opposing
ideas since the liberal
establishment types in the
media and in educ'ation
generally endorse measures to
persuade Americans not to
raise children.

.......

Actually, many respected
scientists and scholars contend
that current population reduction trends are, in reality,
harmful for America. After
extensive research, Jullian
of
(Professor
Simon
Economics, University of 11-

linois) feels our economy will
stagnate unless current birth
trends are replaced with a rise
in the number of children being born.
Herman Kahn, director of
the Hudson Institute, a
thinktank based in New York,
discounts the dismal forecasts
of population pessimists. At
an international conference
held in Bonn, West Germany,
he predicted by the year 2175,
Earth will eaily support 10
billion people.
He is confident we have
enough resources to insure a
prosperous future for centuries to come. He has stated,
'' I defy you to name one product of which we are now running out for which there is no
substitute." (Parade, Sept. 13,
1981.)
Many predict with our present technology, Earth could
easily feed from 35-50 billion
people, and this doesn't include aqua farming or even
any massive programs to
reclaim our great deserts.
(Population, Resources, and
the Future: Non-Malthusian
Perspectives, by Bahr, Chadwick & Thomas.)
I feel population reduction
advocates should devote their
energies toward building a better future rather than trying to
lay guilt trips on Americans
who love kids and desire to
raise more than one or two
children.
Lori Parkman

The better life
To the Editor:

When I read the letter by
Miss Christian Gunther entitled '' Oppressed people will
resist," in the TORCH a few
days ago, my only response
was one of uncontrollable
laughter.
When Miss Gunther said
that I received my information, half truths, and distorted
the
through
oprn1ons
'' American mass media,'' I
knew that Miss Gunther had
not read any current
newspapers, or even listened
to any television news broadcast •
I have no disagreement that
the fascist military (based on
representation by a power
elite) is still committing
atrocities throughout El
Salvador. I do not support the
actions of the Left or Right,
nor do I know anyone who
does.
I support the centerist
Civilian Junta under President
Jose Napoleon Duarte. (The
only person to win a free election in the history of El
Salvador.)

I must admit that I was surprised by the new revelation
stated in th~ article by Miss
Gunther. Miss Gunther said,
'' Marxist-Leninist teaches
them ... God given rights." I
and Roman Catholics in Central America are happy to
know that Marxist-Leninist
governments no longer base
their doctrines on atheistic
beliefs.
Something else that Miss
Gunther said should be examined further. ''The
dynamics of the MarxistLeninist movement in El
Salvador is a mass movement
of desperately poor peasants
demanding only an equitable
share of the land in the nation.'' There are two problems
with this misconception.
• Why is it true that the
"poor peasants" refused to
engage in the fall offensive
preceding the election of
Reagan with the Salvadoran
rebels.
• It is the objective of the
Civilian Junta to distribute the
"oligarchies' " large land
holdings to the ''poor
peasants."
What Miss Gunther said
about Cuba and Nicaragua
was a surprising revelation.
"For the people of Cuba and
Nicaragua, the difference has
been astounding," she said. I
should say it has been astounding. The two governments of
Cuba and Nicaragua are good
examples of why MarxistLenninist governments do not
produce an economic order
that can support a population.
When the revolutionaries took
power from Somoza in
Nicaragua, they promised free
elections in 1981. The government of Nicaragua did not
follow through with the promised elections.
The "better life" Miss Gunther speaks of is evident in
Cuba today. The Cuban boat
people, who are forced out of
their own land must be the example that Miss Gunther
refers to.
Amnesty International
stated in their Report on
Human Rights that the current
Marxist government in
Nicaragua is ". . just as oppressive as the government
under Somoza.''
Marxist-Lenninist governments do not produce a social
system that provides equal opportunity, or a good life for
anyone. It simply does not
work as a human system. I
hope that Miss Gunther closely examines the "dynamics of
Marxist-Leninist governments," sometime in the
future. Miss Gunther will have
a rude awakening.
Ron Munion

The TORCH February 25, _ 82 - f I

Rust'·s reasons for running

from AP wire service reports

Reagan attempts to avoid 'new Cubas'

Jerry Rust, vying for governor

Instead of using helicopter
spraying to halt the growth of
undesirable vegetation, Rust
says Oregon should ''put people to work" using chain saws
and other heavy equipment to
cut down the vegetation, thus
creating jobs.
Rust also calls for six-month
to one-year advance notices
from plants planning to leave
the area. This would give
employees a chance to buy the
mills, keeping them open
reducing
and
longer
unemployment.
Rust says his supporters include students, environmentalists, small businesses,
veterans, forest workers and
senior citizens. "I am supportive of their programs,'' he
said, and added that if there
must be cuts in state budgets,
he'd call for reductions in the
property tax relief program
because it "isn't fair to cut
higher education and not
touch it (property tax relief)."
When asked what he has
done as County Commissioner, Rust noted that ''there
has been a reduction in the size
of county government without

Photo courtesy of Rust Headquarters

significant reduction of services to the public.
'' I have brought the issue of
renewable energy and conservation to the front, implemented land use planning
at the local level and made corrections in the criminal justice
system.'' He also serves as
chairman of the LCOG (Lane
Council of Governments)
energy committee.
"Everything I've done I've
tried to create employment for
the people of the county,
mindful of the government's
duty to assist the private sector
in creating jobs."
He is confident about his
chances of winning the governor's office, saying "I have a
good record in government,
good fiscal demonstrated
ability and a good campaign
organization.''
Rust is a graduate of the
University of Oregon with a
degree in political science. He
served two years in the Peace
Corps in India and returned to
Eugene to help found
Hoedads, a tree-planters'
cooperative, before gaining a
seat on the Lane County Commission in 1976.

Collective continues growth
by Diana Robbins
for the TORCH

Ten years ago an old
Mercedes sedan and four people with common feminist
beliefs began the Starflower
Company. Today the business
has grown into an important
wholesale food company.
Even under the present
conditions,
economic
Starflower continues to make
money -- approximately $3.5
million annually, although a
spokesperson, Hayfield, states
that the situation has taught
them to become more cost efficient.
Starflower is a worker owncontrolled,
and
ed
democratically managed
feminist collective, says
Hayfield. A short time ago,
Starflower members took an
LCC class in small business

On the Wire
Compiled by Diane Davis
of the TORCH

by Cynthia Whitfield
for the TORCH

'' I want Oregon to attract
new, clean industry. If we continue to limit our higher
education system, we will
forfeit our chance to attract
it," says Jerry Rust,
Democratic candidate for
governor of Oregon.
He adds that businesses
don't want to locate in a community with no commitment
to its higher education.
Rust, 38, is one of four candidates in a race for governor
that includes two other
Democrats -- Senator Ted
Kulongoski and Multnomah
County Executive Don Clark
-- and Governor Vic Atiyeh.
The gubernatorial election
will be held May 18, and Rust,
a five-year office holder on the
Lane County Board of Commissioners, was eager to
describe his campaign platform in a TORCH interview.
He is working on an
economic recovery plan that
includes a ''progressive income tax" that would collect
progressively larger amounts
from higher salaries. For example, instead of a flat 10 percent tax on both a salary of
$20,000 and a salary of
$50,000, the larger salary, in
Rust's opinion, should be taxed at perhaps 20 percent.
Although he has not yet
worked out the exact percentages on specific salaries, Rust
estimates that this progressive
tax would create $160 million
in additional revenue -- half of
the state's current $337 million
deficit.
He calls for creating a
natural resource base with the
goal of making Oregon the
"renewable energy capital of
the country," eliminating
nuclear energy and utilizing
hydroelectric, solar, geothermal, methylane and decaying
vegetation as alternative
energy resources.

3, 1982 Page 3

operations to upgrade their
same manner. Starflower
understanding of small
Botanical deals with nonbusiness practices.
foods and has 7 members,
The main operational difwhile Starflower Food handles
ference between Starflower
the edibles and has 30
and other non-collective commembers.
panies is that all members help .
The business's work is
make decisions and have equal
into six main labor
divided
power, says Hayfield. Deciwarehousing, truck-teams
sions are made by taking the
booksales/computer,
ing,
consensus minus 15 percent.
keeping, purchasing, and
When Starflower began, it
managing. All work is handled
dealt strictly with bulk herbs,
by the 30 members and 16
but it now handles many 100 hour work days are not unpercent whole natural organic
common, says Hayfield, a
foods and products. Grains
five-year member.
and beans, cheese and tofu,
The main buyers of
juices and dried fruits are only
Starflower products are
a sampling of the many foods
natural food stores, co-op
they carry. A complete list of
stores, foo_d buying clubs,
their products is available in
restaurants and bakeries.
catalogs at its office at 885
Starflower also supplies bread,
McKinley Street.
tofu and snack items. It
Starflower is organized into
transports its products as far
two separate companies,
south as San Francisco, north
although both are run in the

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Less than one week after
Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo offered to
mediate peace communications among the US, El
Salvador and Nicaragua, President Reagan launched a
massive financial aid program to prevent the rise of
'new Cubas.'
Reagan announced that the US ''will do whatever is
prudent and necessary to ensure the peace and security
of the Caribbean area.'' The administration insists that
US troops will "absolutely not" be involved.
Reagan is seeking $60 million in military equipment
and $350 million in emergency assistance for our "third
border.'' Other provisions would eliminate taxes on imports except for textile and apparel products, which will
be given favorable treatment. The US will also encourage financial investment into Central America by
giving tax breaks.
Reagan says those "nations under economic seige"
must be aided by the richer US.
Three-quarters of Congressmen questioned by an
Associated Press survey say that public sentiment from
the voters back home is opposing the aid. The
lawmakers say their constituents don't want to get involved.
Watt 'reverses' ecological policy

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Interior Secretary
Watt, in a sudden administration reversal, has proposed
two "moratoriums" prohibiting gas drilling and mining
on 80 million acres of US wilderness until the year 2000.
Watt says his proposal to close the wilderness areas
will be accompanied by a "release" provision, setting
shorter time deadlines for Congress to add 30 million
acres to wilderness status. At that time those lands
would lose wilderness protection altogether and become
available for exploitation.
James Monteith, director of the Oregon Wilderness
Coalition, said Watt's plan is "a great ploy. He knew he
couldn't get Congress to extend the Wilderness Act
deadlines, so he is creating this impression that he is
establishing a moratorium.'' Gordon Roberts,
spokesman for the Wilderness Society, calls the program "a lie." Under the current deadlines, provisions
to mine Rock Mesa in the Three Sisters Wilderness area
are valid.
Surviving on $75,000 a month

LOS ANGELES, Calif. -- What may be the largest
divorce settlement in history is before a Los Angeles
judge.
Sheika Dena Al Fassi is suing her Saudi Arabian husband for half of his $6 billion estate. She has been
awarded $75,000 a month in support until the case is
resolved.
The royal couple's lifestyle made the judge gasp. Mrs.
Fassi says the couple spent $2 million a month for personal expenses that included trips to Paris and purchases of 12 to 15 $20,000 evening gowns. It was common practice for the couple to occupy three floors of the
finest hotels while traveling.

to the Dalles, east to Boise,
and west to the coast. It also
ships commerically to Alaska
and Hawaii.
The group members range
in age from 21 to 46 with an
average age of 32. The group
is presently all fem ale but
doesn't discourage men as
members as long as the men
have the same feminist beliefs,
says Hayfield.
Starflower is now helping
with an experiment by a co-op
bank, which helps finance
other co-ops. Starflower is
working together with other
in
warehouses
co-op
Washington -- C.C. Grains

and Community Produce -- to
give the most help possible to
themselves, each other, the
customers and the community.
Starflower continues to expand. In their most recent
catalog 100 new products were
added.
Several members have appeared on panels for the
women studies courses here at
LCC. And Hayfield has given
news reports on the KLCC
radio show '' As the Woman
Turns.''
LCC has not yet purchased
any products from Starflower,
but, says Hayfield, ''They
should.''

Page 4 February 25, '1982 -

hLJF\

1982 The TORCH

LCC Board member stepping down· ofter' t 2 yea·rs

Closing one door, openin g others
by Jeff Keating
of the TORCH

"No door ever closes but
another one's always opening," says Catherine Lauris.
"You just have to have the wit
to see it."
She does not wear an
elaborate uniform, ushering to
the needs of passersby at an
expensive hotel. Her portals
are of a different, less tangible
form; entrances and exits
designed for the civic-minded.
Catherine Lauris has been
opening doors to a life of community service, one of which
led her to a seat on the LCC
Board in 1970. This year
Lauris will finally close that
LCC door as she steps down to
let another take her place.
She is not without other
paths to follow, however.
"I believe in the public
arena of decision-making,''
she says, settling herself comfortably into the well-retained
softness of her living room
couch. "Government is there
to help people.''

Educating within a structure

"I believe

•

1n

the public arena of

decision-m aking. Governme nt
is there to help people."
She also started to form
some of her own solutions.
''The letters I saw (at the
Bureau) from leaders in city
governments taught me that I

:J L

''They were all wonderful,
very polite, good manners,''
she says, then laughs. ''They
just happened to have a different philosophy of govern-

i.J

'~

"No one trusts anybody
anymore, or is willing to use
their own judgment about
things. And I think that's very
sad." She worries that government officials are too often
concerned with numbers and
forms and not the people
behind the shuffle of paper.

She was not, remarkably, a
student politician. After
graduating with honors from
the University of Oregon in
1940, equipped with a degree
in English Literature, Lauris
realized much later -- after
stints as a clerk in the university's English composition office and as administrative
assistant to the dean in the U
of O's School of Education -that she preferred politics.
It was during her later position with the U of O's Bureau
of Municipal Research and
Government Affairs that she
became familiar with the problems of municipal government and how decisions on a
local level affected the community.

''They were all so nice
through it all," she says. "I
felt for so long like the pretty
little girl. Then my ideas
started to work and they finally began to look upon me as a
colleague."
Her long-awaited respect on
the council was a private victory in a social struggle known
as the "battle of the minds."

During her council stay, her
mind was far from idle. She
served as president three different years, served on the
boards of several conferences
for mentally retarded children,
served on the first Governor's
Council on Aging, served on
Sacred Heart Hospital's advisory board, and served on
the County Parks Advisory
Board.

Her support of governmental establishments is coupled
with an equally firm belief in
people.

Realizing a political dream

responsibility

"That's what the ERA is all
about,'' she says of another
one of her interests. "Being
treated with respect for your
mind."

Lauris is an avid participant
in public organizations, and
has been for a long time. "I
suppose since I'd been in the
eighth grade that I wanted to
be an official."

Lauris' view is not unique or
particularly insightful. Her
words and the words of
thousands of other people are
remarkably similar. The difference between Lauris and
those people is that she consistently follows through with
what she says.

creasing CIVIC
for the arts.

But all of the activity began
to wear thin in 1968. ''Things
begin to get repetitious. You
get burned out and start to
think that you have all the
right answers and nobody
knows anything but you.''
Catherine Lauris taking a breather

could do as well as they in the
public arena," she says.
An opening on the 1956
Eugene City Council prompted her to run for election
against five men, an unprecedented decision at that
time -- no woman had ever
been on the council.
Even more unprecedented
was the result of that election.
She won.
"It always used to be that it
(the council) was kind of a
closed little corporation, an
old boys' club," she explains.
"When they knew they were
going to give up their job, or
move away, they appointed
somebody else. Then the incumbent was always there."

Although she won the seat
as fairly as any male opponent, she recalls, the men on
the council were less than
respectful of her political
points of view.

Photo by Nancy Adkins

ment than I do."
the
Suzi,
Stroking
"ancient" black cat resting
peacefully on her lap, Lauris
explains the difference.
''Government is designed to
prevent hardship, pain, poverty and to do just what the
Constitution says, 'promote
the general welfare.' The
Eugene City Council had the
funny idea that it was there to
make the rich get richer.''
Lauris spent 12 years on the
Council. And although the
high points in her tenure came
at the expense of fighting
other council members "like
cats and dogs,'' she says they
were well worth it.
Lauris' liberal policies and
outlook frequently clashed
· with the more conservative
makeup of the council. These
clashes developed while working on the new City Hall, improving city sanitation, and in-

After 12 years, Lauris decided to take a well-deserved
break. She resigned from the
City Council and decided to
take a hiatus of undetermined
length.
She retired to the white twostory home that she shares
with Gus, her husband of 42
years. Nestled between
massive apartment complexes,
the view from the living room
window served as a daily
reminder of Lauris' responsibilities as U of O catalog
editor during that time.
But two years later the call
of public service worked its
way to her home. Her new
public duty was a seat on the
LCC Board. "Somebody out
there resigned," she says, and
'' after tossing a lot of names
around somebody came up
with mine.'' Since then she has
been a key figure in most of
LCC's major decisions.
The new board spot opened
up another door for Lauris:
The struggle to educate individuals.

"Education is a right that
every member of a democracy
has," she states firmly, the
reflected light from her glasses
seeming to intensify her point.
"It's right there in the Constitution, and it's up to us to
make sure it happens."
She eases into the topic of
student's rights, and recalls a
time when Lane students
wanted to write their own
bylaws.
"I must admit," she says,
"I was against the idea at first.
I said 'wait a minute, your
rights are guaranteed in the
Constitution,' but they showed me that that wasn't the way
it was."
She was instrumental in
writing Media Commission
guidelines that guard against
prior censorship of student
publications, and she believes
they were a major step in extending student rights.
"They'd been bandying it
back and forth for a long
time,'' she says of the censorship dilemma. '' I decided to
take a stab at it during a
meeting and wrote one little
paragraph that simply said
there would be no prior censorship of student publications.''
Then she smiles a trifle selfconsciously. "They (the
students) stood up and
cheered.''
the
that
feels
She
characteristics of those same
bylaws are reflected in LCC as
a whole. "It's a splendid
school in every way. They -the faculty, the teaching faculty -- have done untold things
. who have
for people.
wanted to feel better about
themselves, who have wanted
to know things."
Yet Lauris is fully cognizant
of the constant need for improvement. "I think it (LCC)
tries too hard to be like a
university sometimes. It's easy
to lose people in those situations.
"Yet, within all of that
structure, we have done
tremendous things out there.''
From the myriad organizations in which she still actively
participates -- Oregon Repertory Theatre Board, CALC
(Clergy And Laity Concerned)
Advisory Board and the Arboretum Board -- to the simple
joys of working on her scrapbook and re-learning the piano
that glows darkly in one corner of the living room, she is
nothing if not involved.
"I'm sure I'll stop
sometime," she says, "but it'll
be hard. There is a great
satisfaction in finishing a job
that has taken a long time.
There are still a lot of things I
want to do.
"I'd like to die with my
boots on."

LCC instructor speaks on 'Dual Vision' of Africa, the West

Black \Nritings explore f'No 'Norlds
by David Bowers

of the TORCH

I went to my room. I
turned on my radio and
waited for the news about the
war which never seems to
come but is always here.
Then it starts: sharp, rapid
sounds flickering through the
night. I raise up on one
elbow. Is it serious or just
another skirmish? I turn off
the radio just in case. I wait.
Silence. Then again more tiny
explosions, growing louder
and louder until I am sure
they are fighting in the street
below. Then there is a long
belching sound as deeply felt
as a gusty wind. The war has
started!
Chinosole, part-time instructor at LCC and doctoral
candidate in comparative
literature at the U of 0, wrote
the preceding description of
Angola's civil war. Her article,
Surviving Angola's War, appeared in a 1976 Washington
Post.
Chinosole (pronounced
Cheen O Sol' Ay with all
vowels long) will be giving an
''Black
lecture,
LCC
Literature: Dual Vision of
America," at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 308 of the Forum
Building, March 1.
The lecture will emphasize
the wntmgs of black
Americans describing experiences of their dual vision
in both Africa and Western
countries. Chinosole will draw
from her past experiences
along with writings such as
Tar Baby, a contemporary
novel by Toni Morrison, and
Equiano 's Travels, the
autobiography of a slave.
Friends of LCC Library will

,..

Photo by Nancy Adkins

LCC instructor Chinosole

sponsor the lecture with a
grant from the Oregon Com-·
mittee for the Humanities,
says LCC librarian Kathleen
•
Wiederholt.
Chinosole adds the benefit
of a distinct and interesting
background to her lecture,
says Wiederholt.
Born in Harlem, Chinosole
attended elementary school in
the Bronx and high school in
Virginia. She obtained an MA
in English Education at the
University of Wisconsin in
1968.
She taught at Xavier
University in New Orleans.
And at San Francisco State
College she administered ''The
Third World Council'' and
taught classes in black
literature.

In 1971, Chinosole moved
to Zambia, Africa (known as
Northern Rhodesia when it
was a British protectorate), to
teach at a teachers' training
college. While in Zambia, she
met and married Samuel
Chitunda, commander-inchief of Angola's UNITA (the
National Union for the Total
Independence of Angola) who
were fighting to gain independence from Portugal.
When he died of a stroke in
1974, Chinosole left Zambia
to live with his parents in
Luso, Angola, which was by
then liberated from Portugal.
She became the area coordinator of English language
teaching.
While she was in Angola,
three separate factions in a bid

Weapons analyzed at UO_conference

Lane County residents will
have an unprecedented opportunity to delve into the muddy
issue of national security Feb.
25-27 at the Northwest National Security Conference.
The conference, sponsored
by the Associated Students of
the University of Oregon, will
bring both supporters and
critics of Reagan administration policies together for seven
~eminars.

Participants include Peter
Jones, an active participant in
the European Nuclear Disarmament Movement, and Ray
Cline of the Georgetown
Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former
deputy director for Intelligence of the Central Intelligence Agency. They will
join two other panelists in
Assessing the Soviet Threat, a
discussion of Soviet global intentions.

The Turning Point

* Carol Hubbard*
Haircuts-$8.00
Perms--$28.00

Contemporary Hair Stylist for men & women

For appointment call

343-4813

2660 Oak street
Eugene

Endorsements for the conference have come from such
widely differing viewpoints as
those of US Senator Mark
Hatfield and Congressman
Jim Weaver.
The cost for all seven conference events is $12 and $2
for entrance to single events.
Tickets are available at the
EMU main desk at the University of Oregon or may be purchased at each event on a first
..,.
come, first served basis.
CRATER LAKE LODGE

• representative will be on
your campus, February
12 & 26, interviewing for
summer seasonal resort
positions. Contact your
job placement office for
application and interview appointment. "An
Equal Opportunity
Employer.''

for power waged a civil war.
Besides the Chinese backed
UNITA, the other two factions were the FNLA (the National Front for the Liberation
of Angola) and the RussianCub an backed MPLA
(Popular Movement for the
Liberation of Angola).
Chinosole was captured by
the MPLA.
She was jailed and then
placed under surveillance. She
maintained a neutral PanAfrican stance when interrogated by her captors. At one
point, she was denounced by a
white woman who had married an MPLA commander as
a CIA agent and a Black Panther. The minister of state had
her beaten and -- because his
wife intervened in her behalf -thrown back into prison .
One night a guard in the interrogation room ordered her
to disrobe so that he could
beat her. Fearing rape she
bolted from the room and into
the prisoners' area. When she
pointedly asked the guard who
wanted to beat her, "But,
comrade, why do you want me
to take off my clothes?'' the
prisoners started an uproar.
incident,
After this
prisoners were released more
rapidly. Chinosole, with only
the set of clothes she was wearing and a small typewriter in
hand, was turned over to the
US consulate in Luanda,
Angola. She was to be
deported to the US and
authorities at the consulate
planned to have her surrender
her passport during a stopover
at Portugal in lieu of payment
for the flight.
Since her home and belongings were in neighboring Zambia, she requested that the
consulate official send her
there.
''When he told me not to
worry, that I could return to
the US and receive welfare
'just like the rest of you (black
people) do,' " says Chinosole,
"it helped to confirm the decision I had already made -- to
stay in Africa.''
When she arrived in Portugal, she joined with relatives
there who helped her return to
Zambia. But unfortunately,
unemployment forced her to
return to New York in 1976
where she became the staff
writer at the UN Office of
Public Information.
When her short-term con-

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Learning Attitudes
Motivation

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References Available

tract with the General
Assembly expired in 1977, she
moved to Eugene where she
began teaching English composition at LCC. And in 1978
she began teaching black
literature classes at the U of O.
Now, Chinosole is involved
with the "Friends of Myra
Willard," a community legalsupport group which works to
prevent sex and race
discriminiation in higher
education. She is a caucus
member of McKenzie River
Gathering, a foundation that
loans to social action groups.
And she is teaching her first
LCC black literature course
spring term.
Chinosole says her past experiences helped her develop a
fresh perspective on black
literature: "I see racism
through colonialism as a
worldwide problem. This
helped parallel my studies of
colonized Africans and slaves
in the Deep South in the U.S.
Equia no 's Travels is a perfect
example of this."
She says she has also gained
a new perspective of U.S.
foreign policy. She saw the
U.S. from the outside, looking
in. She saw the U.S. at work as
a superpower, often suporting
oppressive, reactionary
governments such as Portugal's policies in Angola.
During Angola's struggle
for independence, Chinosole
says a few whites fought
alongside blacks. Although
the number of whites was
small, '' It was important for
me to have had that observation, because it is the exception to the rule that lends to
new possibilities in the
future."
Chinosole plans, soon, to
continue her work in her new
home in Africa. But until then
LCC students and others have
the opportunity to benefit
from her vast experiences in
two continents. And students
can explore with her on
March 1, Black Literature:
Dual Vision of America.

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Ceramic
Traditions,
an exhibit featuring
the works of several
Western American
ceramists,
is currently on
display
at the LCC Art
Gallery,
first floor of the
Math and Arts
Building.

makingtra

Sand a

The show opened Feb. 22 and
will be on campus until March 12.
Viewing hours are 8 a. m. to 10
p.m., Monday through Thursday,
and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday.
Traditions features the works of
19 artists who have made
significant contributions to the
development of ceramic art in the
Western US.
Stoneware and pieces fashioned
from porcelain and blown glass
are represented. Individual works
range from simple, functional
items such as platters and jugs, to
ornamental and abstract sculpture.
And the ceramists represented
at the exhibit span several
generations and include
immigrants from Europe and Asia

who melded techniq
their homelands witl
and Western styles.
pioneers in techniqu
and firing ceramic S(
explorers of the poti
personal expression
Exhibitor Daniel F
his craft, "Of all ma
ceramics deals most
earth, water, air anc
elements which the
considered the esse
world." Prominent 1
Rhodes' rendering i
man's head, the rigl
grotesquely distorte1
Peter Voulkos, a,
exhibitor, is regarde
pacesetter in the ab

Artist: Betty Fenes

Artist: Paul Soldner

raditions in

1

,

and

Reducing the idea to
basic
terms, Voulkos says
simply
"I work with clay.
I go for people's
heads
and clay is a tool.
just like a pencil is
an instrument ... I
peal with people all the time and
(clay) is my vehicle."
Ceramic Traditions is just one of
several traveling art exhibitions
made available through the
University of Oregon Museum of
Art. Funds provided by the
Oregon Arts Commission, the
National Endowment For The
Arts, Friends of the (UO)
Museum, and other agencies
helped make the collection and
exhibition of Traditions possible.
A pictoral souvenir catalog is
available for $3.50, with a 40
percent discount for orders of five
or more copies. For more
information, contact Harold Hoy
in Room 108 of the Math & Arts
Building.

Clay

techniques learned in
mds with American
1 styles. All have been
echniques of glazing
~ramie sculpture, and
the potential for
Jression in clay.
Daniel Rhodes says of
ff all man's arts,
als most directly with
·, air and fire -- those
1ich the ancients
he essentials of our
minent at the exhibit is
dering in stone of a
, the right half
distorted.
lkos, another
regarded as an early
the abstract

expressionist
approach
to clay as an
employable
form of sculpture.

Photos by Andrew Hanhardt
Story by Mike Sims

.""'
ilf"t;,1

"

~··

Artist: Daniel Rhodes

-

Page ·8 Fehruary 25, 1982 -

lt', 1982 The TORCH

Amendment will make abortion a murder offense

Women's basic rights threatened
Analysis by Paula Case
of the TORCH

What we call "morals" is simply
blind obedience to words of command.
-- Havelock Ellis.
Anti-abortion amendments passed
by Congress in 1982 will revert us
dangerously to a time when women's
reproductive rights were denied and
their health continually threatened.
It will revert us to a time -- when
women victimized by rape and incest,
pregnant women endangered by health
problems, and women killed by selfperformed abortion -- had no federal
protection.
It will be a time when our hallowed
Congress will legislate morality and
sexuality -- not with a common law,
but with a constitutional amendment.
In 1973 The US Supreme
Court ruled that states can't
prevent a woman from having
an abortion during the first six
months of pregnancy -- until
the fetus is capable of
"meaningful" life outside the
womb.
The Human Life Amendment (HLA), authored by Sen.
Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and submitted by Sen. Orrin Hatch,
R-Utah, will be voted on
March 2. Last week the
TORCH reported the vote
would be Feb. 23, but the
Senate Judiciary Committee
changed the date.

Widoff says Leahy was the only one
on the subcommittee that would have
voted against Hatch's amendment. He
votes a consistent pro-choice position.

She says Leahy has said that amendments are documents which are supposed to reflect a consensus. However,
he said, in this case, Congress is trying
to create a consensus.
• The second step is the Senate
Judiciary Committee. Consisting of 18
senators, (5 were on the subcommittee), the committee needs a majority
vote to pass the amendment. This is the
committee which will render a decision
on March 2.
• If the Senate Judiciary Committe
passes the amendment it will move on
to the full Congress for debate and
vote.

Sue Ellen Lowrey, National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL)
lobbyist, said in an Oregonian interview, "Some of these politicians are
tired of being beaten over the head on
this. They always look for a way to
please both sides. This gives it to them.
They can throw one to the pro-choice
side (voting against the Helms bill) and
then turn around and throw one to the
anti-abortion side (voting for the
Hatch amendment)."
Some facts

• In a recent letter-to-the-editor to
the Eugene Register-Guard, Polly Sue
Starr, a resident of Eugene, publicized
Dr. George Ryan's testimony before a
Senate Judiciary Committee hearing
on the amendment.

Last November, the senators decided
to ''free'' Senate Majority Leader
Howard H. Baker, Jr., R-Tenn., from
his pledge to provide time for a
''free-standing -debate'' on the issue
before adjournment. The Oregonian
reported Congress would tackle abortion
sometime
in
1982.
This gave Hatch and Helms
time to gather their antiabortion forces and make it
harder for the other side to
fight the issue.

But because Hatch moved
the issue through so quickly,
it's possible he timed the vote
knowing Leahy wouldn't be
there.
And because anti-abortion
forces have grown so strong,
pro-choice congressional
members are afraid these
measures will pass.

Off with thefetlers
That chafe and restrain!
Off with the chain!
-- Richard Hovey.

The HLS

The HLS must follow three
legislative steps before they become
law. So far one of these steps has been
completed.
A subcommittee, consisting of five
senators, passed Hatch's amendment
with a 4-0 vote. Widoff, Health
Educator of Eugene Planned Parenthood, says the fifth member, Patrick
Leahy, D-Vt., was not present.

Two things are apparent: 1) Hatch
and Helms pulled a fast one on Congress and the American public with an
ingeneous tactic in 1981.

Some pro-abortion congressional members believe they
don't stand a chance of winning the abortion skirmishes in
the subcommittees. Perhaps,
Leahy was absent for this
reason.

HLA in its strictest form
outlaws abortion making it a
first degree murder offense.
Birth control devices that interfere with the implantation
of a fertilized egg would be illegal. These include some
forms of the pill and the IUD.
It is not clear if use of these
contraceptives would also constitute a first degree murder
offense.
Incest and rape victims
could not legally abort and
women in physical danger
from pregnancy would have
no recourse.

Legislative steps

Fast moves

2) One month later, Hatch,
in an unprecedented move,
called for a vote on his HLS
only one hour after subcommittee hearings on the issue
had ended. This is the 4-0 vote
taken while Senator Leahy was
absent.

TheHLA

Hatch also submitted the Human
Life Statute (HLS) which gives the 50
state legislatures power to set abortion
policy within their own jurisdictions,
thus superseding the 1973 Supreme
Court decision.
Hatch introduced the HLS because
he thinks it unlikely that Congress will
approve the Helms statute. He likes
Helms' statute, but he fears that
because its strictures are too pervasive,
it will not pass.

plications are perferations and lacerations of the uterine wall, and infections
throughout the body. These can all
result in death.

If the HLS is approved following
these legislative steps, the right and
power to set abortion policy will pass
from federal control to the state
legislatures.
Two factions

Congress is divided into two
disputing anti-abortion factions -- the
absolutists and the gradualists.

Absolutists support Helms' strict
"total ban" on all abortions in the
United States, whether paid with
private or public funds. They support
the HLA.
Gradulists support Hatch's less
restrictive approach in hopes of winning a victory in Congress. They support
the HLS.
Pro-choice forces worry that Hatch' s strategy is correct.

Ryan revealed that 700,000 unwanted babies will be born if the
amendments pass. That would involve
$40 million of the taxpayers money
every year.
Ryan also stated, Starr said, that
over 10 million women use the IUD
and the forms of the pill that the
amendment would outlaw. So these
women will be forced to find alter- ·
native methods of birth control.

Ways to help

Planned Parenthood has organized a
letter writing campaign to senators.
Writing material and information are
available at their offices at 134 E. 13th
Ave. They urge all interested persons
who can't get to the office to write
senators on their own.
The form should be adressed as
follows: The Honorable (senators
name), United States Senate,
Washington D.C. 20510.

• Leading doctors say the risk of
death in pregnancy and childbirth is
nine times greater than in an early
abortion (which is considered one of
the safest operations most frequently
performed on American women.)

NARAL holds political skills
workshops to provide knowledge and
practical training pro-choice individuals can put to use in this year's
campaigning.

• Medical complications of illegally
obtained or self-performed abortions,
which were prevalent before the 1973
Supreme Court decision, would occur
if the amendment passes. Some com-

Eugene's next workshop will be Feb.
25 at 7 p.m. in the McNutt Room,
Eugene City Hall, 777 Pearl St. Admittance is free. More workshops are
planned.

The TORCH Febm.ar.y,25, 1982 - r I

L

j,

1982 Page 9

SPORTS

Coaching his way out of a iob
Haney has shown that even
in a conference comprised of
teams of equal caliber, his
squad still loses. He constarted
s is tent l y
cheerleader/ guard Fred
Cofield ahead of hard-playing
senior Barry Walker before
Walker's dismissal. He uses
zone defenses against teams
that shoot well from the
perimeter and refuses to sufficiently develop a stall offense.

Sports Analysis
by Jeff Keating
of the TORCH

When the names of coaches
who will live in infamy arise in
conversation, Ohio State's
football coach, Woody Hayes,
and Indiana University's
basketball coach, Bob.b y
Knight, bring back many controversial memories.
In Eugene, another infamous coach is in the making. He is a man of good intentions with few tools to carry
those intentions out. His
coaching is at the core of a
problem that has left the
Oregon Ducks basketball team
with an unimpressive 4-10
Pac-10 record and a slim
chance of reaching .500 for the
season.

One can only conclude that
Jim isn't doing something
right. The soft-spoken former
assistant coach (under legendary Dick Harter) is a wellread, intelligent individual
who, for the most part, seems
to have a genuine compassion
for people and for the integrity
of basketball.
But it's as though Haney's
errors are part of his strategy.
It seems to go something like
this:

He is Jim Haney.
Jim Haney. The name brings with it an aura of quiet
assurance, a tingle of confidence and authority. And
well it should -- Haney inspires
such feelings off the court.
On the court, however, Jim
Haney's name isn't carrying
much weight. Ostracized by
groups ranging from the
Oregon Alumni Association to
high school basketball afficianados, he is mired, perhaps
irrevocably, in a wave of
dislike so intense that it filled a
Sunday morning sports page
in the Register-Guard.
But

there

is

a

curious

UO basketball coach Jim Haney

Photo courtesy of UO Athletic Department•·

Jim Haney is not very well
equipped to coach a basketball
team.

lead into a dismal season. The
Ducks' opening victories over
Arizona and Arizona State left
them perched atop the conference at 2-0, brimming with
confidence and certain they
were on par with most of the
teams in the league.

Haney has parlayed a good
start and a two-week Pac-10

But suddenly things went
"afowl" in Duckland.

regularity behind this losing
trend, and it takes a trained
eye to pick out the earmarks of
-- sorry, Jim -- incompetent
coaching.

LCC cagers fall in season finale
by Vince Aquilera
for the TORCH

Cold first half shooting and
second half foul trouble proved too much to overcome for
the LCC women's basketball
team as it dropped its season
finale to Chemeketa, 64-54,
Feb. 20.
Lane finished with a 5-11
league mark and seventh in the
OCCAA. They were 5-16
overall.
"In the first half, Lane beat
Lane," said head coach Sue
Thompson, referring to her
team's sub-par performance.
"We were just making far
too many turnovers. At one
point we had five straight -although I felt unjust -travelling calls. But shooting
was very poor, especially at
the free throw line (6 of 18).
Fortunately, we cleaned up
our act in the second half."
Lane did just that, overcoming a 42-26 deficit to pull
within two, 51-49. with 11
minutes remaining. Jennifer
Mannila, (12 points) Wendy

McDaniel, (12 points, 14 rebounds) and Dawn Bredesen
(14 points) led the comeback
drive.
But Bredesen collected her
fifth foul and was soon
followed to the bench by Carla
Johnson and Dena Allen. The
trio has represented over 50
percent of Lane's scoring offense this year and, without
them in the lineup, Chemeketa
was able to outscore the Titans
the rest of the way.
"We were sluggish in the
early going," analyzed
Bredesen afterward. "We
weren't running our offense
very well. In the second half
we started running on them
and played good pressure
defense, forcing them to turn
it over a lot. But our fouls
really hurt us."
Thompson was not totally
displeased with her team's
play, however. "Wendy and
Jennifer had their finest games
of the year, and our press was
very good. The kids never gave
up."
The contest marked the end

of four players' careers at
Lane: Terrisa Burk, Dana
Berry, Johnson and Allen. For
Allen it was an unfitting end to
a brilliant career as a Titan,
fouling out with just six
points. She did, however,
manage to establish a new
school career scoring record of
550 points to go along with the
season scoring mark of 292
points she set last year.

• Get off to a great start.
The fans will love it, the alumni will love it, the players will
love it. Build confidence on
the team and in the school.
Get everybody fired up.
• Sabotage the success. Start
making substitutions at inappropriate times in the game,
alienate team members with
reduced playing time -- just
screw up in general. Technical
fouls help, too. Get a lot of
those. Forget about defense,
it's too much of a bother.
Bench Jerome Williams if he

gets in a slump to lower team
morale.
• Kick a hard-playing, gutsy
senior off of the team for
honest remarks to the press.
Explain that "the good of the
team'' was at stake. Alienate
the public with cliched,
rhetorical observations about
team play and "beefing up our
defense and concentration.''
Bare soul to media, look for
(and receive) criticism from
everywhere.
• Win a big game against,
say, former Pac-1_0 co-leader
Washington, an 11-3 team out
of nowhere. Use previous
press slurs as a springboard
for comments like "the guys
really wanted this one" and
"we had to win this one for
the team.'' Prove that this
Oregon squad was just a fluke
and that it wasn't the
coaching. Put some fears to
rest.
• Resurrect fears. Lose the
final games of the season and
bring the world crashing down
around the ears. Neatly fill out
a resignation at season's end
and present to lone supporter
Rick Bay, U of O athletic
director. Get a new job.
Pretty simple. Jim Haney is
not ready to be a basketball
coach in the Pac-10.
Being a nice guy won't
necessarily make one a good
coach. Jim Haney's coaching
may be proving the old adage
that "nice guys finish last."

Support TORCH Advertisers
Tell them you saw it in the TORCH

CAMPUS MINISTRY
Center Bldg. 125 ext.2814

BIBLE STUDIES
Tue: 12-1 Health 276 - Faith Center

Tue: 11 :30 Cafeteria

(mtn v cir ~1 t v)

(Chn-,t lill1 1\ ,11owsh1p )

Thurs: 11-12:30 Health ] 04

( H l' '>l ( Jrcl! IC >I))
(Ccllll[)U'> M1111 s tr y)

MASS
Every day 12-1 Forum 310
during Lent

CAMPUS MINISTERS
Dan Johnson Thurs: 11 :30-1 :30
Tom Rooney Every day
Dick Beswick Thurs: 11-12:30
Norm Metzler Fri: 11 -2
Jim Dieringer Every day
Alice Kinburg To be announced

• Page IO February 25, 1982 - Mill 3, 1982 The TORCH

Via Currus, a local sports car
club, brought • roaring engines
and smoking tires to the northeast parking lot on the LCC
campus last Saturday.
Drivers negotiated a twisting
course in Datsuns, Porsches,
Fords, go-carts and a Lotus Elan.
Via Currus members and spectators braved chilly winds to
watch talented amatuer drivers
test their skills and compete for
trophies.

Photo by Larry Swanson

-Sports Notesby Jeff Keating
of the TORCH

month's NJCAA National
Wrestling Championships to
be held Mar. 4, 5 and 6 in
Worthington, Minn.

Athletes of the Week

Johnston won the consolaBill Johnston (Fr., Sprtion division in his weight class
ingfield) and Chris Strain (Fr.,
Gold Beach) earned dual ·. by pinning his opponent. His
first loss, which sent him into
Athlete of the Week honors as
both captured berths in next the consolation bracket, was

"Pilot pens!
You have to
hold onto
·themwlth
1wohands!'
-Rodney Dangerfield

"Get your claws off
my Pilot pen. I don't get
no respect!"

at the hands of Northern
Idaho College's Tim Harris,
177 lb. class winner and eventual Outstanding Wrestler for
the tournament.
Both wrestlers placed third
in their respective weight
classes at last week's Region
18 Championships in Oregon
City.
Strain's hard-fought 5-4 loss
in the first round to an eventual finalist resulted in his
domination of the consolation
ranks and a third place finish
in the 190 pound division. His
final round victory by pin ex-

Second Nature
Used Bikes
buy-sell-trade

Specializing in
recycled bikes,

used w h e e l ~

& parts

tended his season pin record to
10, placing him third on
LCC's all-time list.

Women's Basketball
The Titan women ended
their season on a disappointing note, falling to secondplace Umpqua and to thirdplace Chemeketa in the final
week of the season.
Dena Allen, LCC's new
career scoring leader with 550
points, led Lane scorers with
14 points in the 94-62 loss to
Umpqua. Dawn Bredesen
scored 14 points in the 64-54
Chemeketa setback and finished second in team scoring with
227 points. She also led the
team in free throws with a 79
percent mark.

ROBERTSON'S DRUG
Your prescription is .
our main concern .

1712 Willamette

343-5362

"People have
a hunger for
my Pilot Fineliner because they're always
fishing for a fine point pen
that writes through carbons. And
Pilot charges only 79c for it.
People get their hands on it and
forget it's my pen. So I don't get no respect! I don't make out any better
with my Pilot Razor Point. II writes whip-cream smooth
with an extra fine line, its metal collar helps keep
the point from going squish-so people
love it. For only 89c they
should buy their own penand show some respect for my
property."

[PILOT]

fine point mar1<er pens
People take to a Pilot like its their own.

343-7715
30th & Hilyard

Rainbow
Optics
Present this Ad and receive

s

0.00

Men's Basketball
The Lane men had their
lowest conference finish since
Dale Bates assumed the head
coaching reins nine years ago,
splitting their final two games
and closing out the season at
12-15.
The Titans topped Umpqua,
77-58, as Jim Lassen pumped
in 19 points to lead the Lane
barrage. Gilbert Crummie
hauled down 7 rebounds in the
same contest.
Crummie also topped LCC.
scorers with 15 in the 73-66
loss to conference co-leader
Chemeketa. He also crashed
the boards for 8 caroms in the
loss to the Chiefs.
Crummie (Soph., Serra HS,
Gardena, Calif.) was the
team's leading scorer with 353
points for the season. Darren
Rice (Fr., North Eugene) led
the team in scoring average
with 15.2 points per game.
Crummie also lead all rebounders with 187 for a 6.9
average.

SERVICE

Own Lab On Premises

STYLE

Over 1,000 frames on display

SENSITIVE

To Your Needs

OFF ON PRESCRIPTION
EYEWEAR (Frame & Lenses)
(Offer expires Morch 31 1982
Only one coupon per person)

766 E. 13th ST. • l BLOCK FROM U OF O •

343-3333

-Aro und Tow·n·
•
mus1e-

The Lone Star -- (formerly The Place)
160 S. Park, 484-7458, Cristie Lidde/
Band, Feb. 25 - March 4. The bands
start at 9:30. Cover charge varies.

BJ Kelly's -- 1475 Franklin Blvd.,
683-4686, Mason-Dixon, Feb.25. The
Cowboys and Daddy-0, Feb. 26 & 27.
Wheatfield, will play to support
Greenpeace on Feb. 28 at 8 p.m. For
more information call Greenpeace at
687-8121. The Ralph Shine Blues
Band, March I. Color, March 2. Ten
Dragon, March 3. Cover charge
varies. Bands start at 8:30 unless
otherwise indicated.
550 E. 13th,
Max's Tavern
485-6731, Bob Jones, Feb. 25. Los
Xplorers will perform on Feb. 27 - 28.
440 Coburg Rd.,
O'Callahans
343-1221, The Rock Band, Feb. 25 28. Bands start at 9:30. Cover charge
varies.
Duffy's -- 801 E. 13th, 344-3615, Hot
Wax , Feb . 26 - 27 . The band starts at
9:30. Cover charge is $2.50.
Treehouse -- 1769 Franklin Blvd.,
485-3444, Chip Smith, Feb. 26, 8 p.m.
Phy llis Cweig, and Margret Vitus will
play a flute duet on Feb. 28, 11 a.m. I p.m. Margaret Vitus and Linda
Jacobs will play flute duet on Mar. I,
at 7 p.m.
Gatehouse Tavern -- 3260 Gateway,
726-0311, Who Knows, Feb. 26 - 27 .
Bands start at 9:30 p .m. Admission
will be $1 .50.

2165 W. I Ith,
Hookers Inn
485-4044, Sweetbriar, Feb. 26 - 27.
Jon Bennetr March 3. The band starts
at 9:00. Cover varies.

University of Oregon -- On Feb. 25,
Denise Angco and Karen Mitts will
play clarinet. Student composer Dan
Brough will accompany them in a
Musical Smorgasbord concert at 12:30
p.m. in Room 198. Also on Feb. 25
four jazz combos will play at 8 p.m. in
Beall Concert Hall.

On Feb. 26, clarinetist Byron Mele
will present a doctoral degree recital at
8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.
On Feb. 27, Composition students'
works will be performed in a recital at
8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.
On Feb. 28, U of O music professor
Exine Bailey, soprano, will present a
Faculty Artists Series concert at 4 p.m.
in Beall Concert Hall. Admission is by
season ticket or $2 at the door.
Students and senior citizens with identification and children under 12 will be
admitted free. Also on Sunday, Dave
DeWolje, French Horn, will perform
at 4 p.m. in the Gerlinger Hall Alumni
Lounge. On Sunday evening at 8 p .m .,
Julia Harlow will present a recital in
Room 198. Also on Sunday evening,
the University of Oregon Percussion
Ensemble I will perform in Beall Concert Hall.
On March 1, Organist Margaret
Lakey will present a student recital at
12:30 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.
On March 2, The University of
Oregon Sinfonietta conducted by
Wayne Bennett and a chamber group
conducted by Peter Bergquist will perform at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.
On March 3, U of O professors Bernard Williams, viola, and Victor
Steinhardt, piano, will present a
Faculty Artists Series concert at 8 p .m.
in Beall Concert Hall. Admission is by
season ticket or $2 at the door.
Students and senior citizens with identi fcation and children under 12 will be
admitted free. All events are free
unless otherwise indicated. For more
information phone 686-3134.

- Clas sified s
wanted

<n fRSf.A S

JOBS: Summer/ year round. f:urope,
\". Amer., .4ustraila, .4sia. All fields. 5500 to 5110()
month/_1•. Sight.feeing. Free info. Write /JC Box
51-OH-l Corona /Jel Mar, CA. 91615.
\,fa1ching /ote bag and carry on l I" Pullman lugKaf!e. Cheap. Ca/1484-1889 after 6 p.m.
\,fetal flute in exchanf!e for trombome or trumpet.
Call anytime at 741-0180.

--------

l sed north face teflf, v1-_· 14, O/ll or Wesrwind.
Call 741-1804 and ask for Sean.
l:ngine and transmfrsion jiJr 1974 l)afsun 610
11 agon. ( all 746-3168.
/)101 • motorcycle parts. Call 741-llll after 3 p.m.

n1/lete ate males. Recreation f11dlitie1: Tenni1,
pool. Call 688-0211 e1·e11i11g.\.
Roommate wanted: l.ook at the .\tudent He.1ource
Center flousinx board on tht' lnd _f1oor of the
Center Huildinf!.

for sale
l'entt1x K 1000 lS mm camera with lenJ. S140 or
best offer. /'hone 746-090/.
14 karat _l'elloll' gold, 10 pt. diamond enxagement
ret. Ve1·er been ll'orn. 1/alf price for 5.100. Call
688-8836.
f>iano . .\"eeds some work. S100. Call 746-.1596 and
ask for Karen.

•
s
serv1ee

Small Soundesixn stereo. A '1,f/ FM radio, f!re111 ji,r
!,.ids. 540. Call 746-.1168.

Planned Parenthood offers professional medical
care: PAP smears, birth control pills, diaphragms,
ll'IJ"s, condoms, foams. 344-9411.

78 Yamaha 65(), low mileage and excellent conition. Call 716-83/l e,·enings.

~an will do tree trimming and yard cleaning.
Reasonable rates. Call 937-1511 and ask for
1/arold.
I K'ill babJ'Sif in your home or mine. Pleasant Hill
area or Springfield. Call 937-1512 and leave a
message.
Child care t'n my home. Part to full time. Variable
hours. No Sundays. /\'eed lmm. Chalet Apartments
in Springfield. Call 746-090/.
Typing: Student will do your papers -- reasonable
rates. Call Barbara at 747-9196.
l '.VITY SCHOOi. has openings in preschool and
kindergarten. Certified, nutritious meals. Sliding
fcale fees . Mon - Fri, 7:30 a.m. - 6 p.m. liar/ow
Rd. aua. Vo religious affiliation. 15 percent diswunt on first months childcare with this ad.
-ll/4-0107.

for rent

Wanted: Mature, responsible, roommate. 13rd and
Jefferson. S84 monthly plus utilities. ,Vo pets or
tobacco, fireplace. Phone 687-1557 or 345-5650
and ask for Vince.
Share comfortable view home. fireplace, with two
quiet male students. ,Vear 14th and Agate. Small
bedroom plus private bath. 5100 rnonrhlJ'. Call
Paul at 344-8118.
Roommate wanted: Large apartment on CountrJ'
Club Rd. Fireplace, pool. SI lO a month, utilities
included. Call Sht1wn at 343-0343.
1/ousemate wanted: Female non-smoker to share
cute fK"O bedroom house on bus line. Call Karen at
688-1114.
House to share, S115 plus utilities. 1747 W. 13th
(In quiet ally). Workshop, bike path, near bus line.
Call Tracy at 687-0193.
.Viet three bedroom mobile home. Fully furnished,

Sweet b/ack / hroK·n female hunnJ', l0t·es auenrion,
53. Call 746-3268.

One pair /:poke 9()() cross country skis, l /0 cm K'ith
size 9 and u half Adidas competition shoe with bindings. Will consider trades. Call Settn at 741-1804.
Audim·ox model CoS(Sa Coaxial/lush mount and
door speakers. S14. Call Cujf at 747-9846.
Downhill skis. flexel competition 100 cm, skis with
l.ook Nel'ada bindings. S115. Call 341-1160.
GR 70-15 outlined while /euer radials. Four for $80
or $15 each. Call 484-1889 after 6 p.m.
Tll'in matresses, box springs, 515 each, chairs 53,
studio couch $35. Call 747-4618 e1·enings and mornings.
Waterbed crib matress. Fits standard siu crib. l.ike
neK-. 550. Cull 741-/949 ei-enings.
1776 1:·ncyclopeida Briranica set $50, lamps 55.
quality paintings S30, speakers S5 and 530. Call
485-6505.
Se1·en exotic ways to cook at rabbit. Sl. Marf!Of,
Jl/0 Alder, f:ugene, 97405.
Scott stereo amplifier. 550. Ca/1683-4317 e,·enings.
fantastic cojfee liquer recipe. 51. Keith, 961 1-:.
18th., Eugene, 97403.
A uention music students! Conn electric band miniOrf!anl synthesiser. Uke new. 5375. Call 343-9565.
Atari 400 computer. Basic language, educational
cartridge, casseue, extras. 5350. Call 3n-9565.
Two A uec lansing 511 B horns with Oriuers, S400.
15" guitar speaker. S/00. Call Doug at 485-1359.
Refridgeraror. Works excellent. 550/best offer.
Call 343-0418 after 6:30 p.m.

I

Churchill High School Auditorium -West 18th and Bailey Hill Road, G. S.
Sachdev, will perform with the Indian
bamboo flute, the bansuri, on Feb. 26
at 8 p.m. Tickets will be $4 at the
door. Contact Jalilah at 345-1221 or
Zamyat at 342-6328.
The Community Center for the Performing Arts -- 8th and Lincoln, The
Robert Cray Band, will perform on
Feb. 28, to benefit the salvation of the
Center. Doors open at 9 p.m. Admission will be $3.50.

dance
Community Center for the Performing Arts -- 291 W. 8th, 687-2746. On
Feb. 26, the Radar Angels' present a
Mardi Gras Masquerade Spectacular.
Featured in the event is the Rhinestone
Review, J. Althea, and Ku Kru Du.
It's a full night of Mardi Gras
madness for $4.50 in advance or in
costume, $5.50 day of show uncostumed. Tickets are available in advance at the EMU Cultural Forum and
the CCPA and at the door. For more
information call the CCPA at
687-2746 or 343-8250.

•
movies

University of Oregon -- Blow Out will
be shown Feb. 26 at 7:00 and 9:15
p.m. in Room 180 of the Prince Lucien Campbell Building. The last Picture Show will be shown in Room 150
of the Geology Building at 7:00 and
9: 15 p.m. on Feb. 28. Admission will
be charged for both movies. For more
information phone 686-3730 or
686-4365.

The Black Film Festival will take
place Feb. 26 & 27 at 7:00 in the
Forum building, Room 308.

68 ( he,-y. 6 CJ'lincler, 3 speed, rum 11'1!11, 1·ery re.-ent
t1111e-11p, good mpK, good bral,,es, 1-eb. 84 /(If!\.
5.150. Cti/1 ',IJ5-l541.
56 /Jodf!e l'ickup. 'S.175 / ojfer. ( 111/ .145-9()55.
67 Couf!ar. txc-ellem condition, 189 engine, rum
good, Jtraight body. For details call Nl-8155 and
ask for John.
7.1 l'rmtiac (;rand Am. urea/ condition, sharp
/ooki11f!. /lest offer, mil 747-1481 ajier 8 p.m.

messag es
Stephen -- I cannot com·e1• in one lifetime all the
lm•e I feel for you. -- Yours.

-------

1.ema_r and Jill -- When are you two f!oinK to learn
w play the game? -- Crau Hay.
Shawni -- I hope that you liked the Valentines J>ay
card. I loi•e you. -- FRII.
Rocky Balboa's getting closer... He's "gonna ear
lightning and crap thunder!"

l I I I I I

theatre
Lane Community College -- 4000 E.
30th Ave. The ASLCC and Lane
Community College extends a warm
and cordial invitation to students and
the community to come view our
Black History Festival.
The film festival is being given to
promote cultural awareness of Black
History Month. The film series is one
that salutes Black People's struggle
and achievements through out
American Society.

Villard
University of Oregon
Hall,Robinson Theatre, the University
presents the production Peer Gynt.
The play opens Feb. 26 & 27, and is
also performed March 3 - 6. Tickets
are $4.50 for the general public, $2. 75
for U of O students and senior
citizens, 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.
Oregon Repertory Theatre -- 222 E.
Broadway, 485-1946, American Bu}~
falo, will be presented Feb. 25 - 28 and
Mar. 3 at 8 p.m. On Feb. 28, a 2:00
p.m . matinee will be shown. Admission will be $3.50 - $7.00, with reserved seating. On Mar. 1 - 2, Tijuana
Sunser and Islands a stage reading will
be presented at 8 p.m.
For more information and reservations, call the ORT box office, Monday and Tuesday, noon - 5 p.m.,
Wednesday - Sunday, noon - 8 p.m. at
485-1946.

Your ·•tz" with J>TK!!!

My wee nath-e wmpandium uesed to pray ro the
DeVeenatine. -- fSTf·.

IC

t

I

p.m. Admission will be a $1. Community Children's Theatre is sponsored by the Cultural Arts Program of
the Eugene Parks and Recreation
Department.

galleri es
Maude Kerns Art Center -- I9 IO East
15th Avenue, Margaret V. J. Via,
paintings, drawings, constuctions and
collages in the Main gallery. Michael
Besh, black and white photographs in
the photography gallery. Ken Paul,
monoprint collages will be featured in
the Rental-Sales gallery. Gallery
hours: Tuesdays through Saturdays,
IO a.m. - 5 p.m.
Graphically Yours -- 1128 Alder St.,
343-4343, Through February, VideoComputer Prints of traditional
African masks and sculplllre. Hours
are Monday - Friday, I0:30 a.m. - 5:30
p.m. Showings also by appointment.
Springfield Musuem -- 225 Nonh 5th,
726-6838 or 726-3759, Springfield
Mu!>cum, Main St. Upstairs gallery,
i-1: arm /i..femories, a handmade quilt
show, with samples of quilts from
1839 to 1982. Gallery hours: 11 a.111. 5 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday .
Lane Communit} College -- 4000 bst
30th Ave., Art and Applied Design
Department, Cerami£' Ttad1tio11s, will
be -,hown from l-eb . 25 - Mar. 12.
(iailcry hours: Mondav through
I hur\day 8 a.m. - 10 p. n;., hiday 8
a .m. - 5 p.m.
NOTICE

Sheldon Community Cenler -- 2445
Willakenzie Road, The Community
Children's Theatre presents
Rump/estiltskin on Feb. 27 & 28 at 2

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

/11 11·h11111 it ma.r concern -- I 11m 11/ire and e, ell and
li1·i11K 11t I ( (. -- I' I A.

I i111/11

Frnn -- Sun, 11111, 11111 11nd re-111\'aAening, rebirth
11ml wme erm1111t mounutin mem11rie1. H here are
)'OU :' ··

(in .

-·

I h11nA s

/rJr

the reJ11te! -- 1'1111/a.

/OH( ///1-S: Only""" more term ajter thi1 !
K.Jl. : Tr11ck:' I tl,m"t k11ow of it. Please
per.rnn. -- Jinx.

11d1·i1e

ClijjiJrd /11111ny -- /Jon ·r e,·er Jiirget the KO(J(/ time1 .
-- Jleal'er face.
ITT -- Fanta1ie1 se/d11m become realities. l\4y
dreams of _rou go umhauered withollf acquaintance. -· Kaila.
Jinx -- lla1·e we l.'l'er met:' If not, when:' -- KB.

ro '1,fike Sims -- Is there life after junk:> Is 1e1·en
up? -- The doctor.
Jinx -- This is taking too long through the TOHCIJ,
lea1·e messages 1111 my truck. -- Kil.

1/11.-ah -- I lm·e you to11! -- l'ault,

free

'\eutered male Red Point Siame.1e, blue eye.I, long
hair. ery friendly and ajfectio1111te. Cu/1686-157()
ajier 5:30 p.m.
•1/1 clanijied 11d1·erti1inK 15 w11rd1 or uncler are
free ji1r I. CC students.
l.ea1•e name and phone 1111mber anti plau 11d1 in
e111•e/11pe outside TORCH office by Friday at 5
p. m .

T11 the Roberts family -- Cigareues out of the nose
look much befter than our of the ears. /'1•e goffen
many compliments! -- /Jrooke Sheilds /011k alike.

TAILORED
WEDDING RANDS

German
Auro

SERVICE

Wake up liffle Susie, wake up!
TR -- Happy belated 19th. /Jon 't say nobody has
ei·er sent you a message. -- Cooch.
Rebecca Pardo -- Happy birthday to a ,·ery sepcia/
person. l.111•e y11u. -- M, /J, C. and B.
Ahh ... my bony boy, at rimes 11/ dexterity like
this ... -- HTF.
Black car -- Srop licking my face and paws. -- Col.
Smudge.
Bear -- Mr. Key, Meatloaf and friends wish you a
purrrject birthday. love -- Bogie's buddies.
Beautiful people are lonely too. Merril 689-7706.
Shmerbs -- your finally legal, hope you had a good
18th. -- Your pad pal.
Vore for Ron Edelman. Worst instructor of the
year. -- anonymous.
Bear -- Happy birthday. You don't look a ,lay
grumpier. -- Jackson, Sus, and the kids.

~RGEIT

FOR
HER
FOR
HIM

S}9.98
s29.98

For him a slim style
tailored band of gold ... for
her a matching fem,n,ne
band s~1e'II love to wear .

YJ

lltJJ
tJJ!~ !:J!JJJ!ii
l)~JiJ!JtJ
~!L!>J

'J !)J !)'J~

Srudenl ucco1111t\ 1,·l'lcome

EXPERT
\\' 0 RK .\1 A l\'SH IP

Dad-- You're wonderful, sweet, fantastic, far-our,
and groovy. Bur I bet you knew that already. -Bonnie.
"Blanch/ill" -- Keep up the diet and training. The
trophies are well worth it! -- Birdman.
Do some pushups papo maybe
FSTF.

if'//

go away. --

autos

Hey purple freak-o and red. Don 'r get sneaker wet
in the shower. -- J, R, & L.

65 VW Bus, 197/ engine, sunroof. runs good. Must
see! $600. Call 747-8511.

Go sightseeing with Dr. Tushbaum ... visit the
Velvet Jones school of technology. Sign up now.

2045 Franklin Blvd .

"Watch our for PTK!"
VALLEY RIVER CENTER
Dally 10 10 9 Sat 10 to 6
SuncJay 12 to 5

in

/Ja, ·id. /1101.irrt ji,rwartl to .\at. -- /,ela.

/Jr. Tushbiwm - ho! ho! ho!
Jinx -- I t/11 /il,.e w riile . . . . (hone\). -- KIi.

/Jon 't fall for ad1·ertising lies. Cigareues are nor
only unatrractit-e -- rheJ· stink!
Alex 1/aig feels that he know K'hat's best _fiJr
Americans beuer than Americans do! This is
wrong!

ft

DOWNTOWN

Oa,iy 9 30

10

Fr, 9 )Q!n 7

Eugene, Oregon 97 403
30

342-2912

Page 12 February 25, 1982 - MIEl ls, 1982 The TORCH •

- Omnium • Gatherum-- -- - - - ,,

Legal topics discussed

"Legal Rights of Women in Marriage and
Divorce'' will be discussed at the March 2
Women's Brown Bag Talk.
Pat Vallerand and Mary Porter Leistner, attorneys in Eugene will present the program at
11 :30 a.m. in the Boardroom of the Administration Bldg.
For more information call 747-4501, ext. 2353.

LCC child care openings
LCC's off campus Child Development Center
has opening:,, for children aged 3 to 5. The center,
located at 3411 Willamette St., offers part and
full time day care.
Cost for the center 1~ $1.05 per hour. The
center has three qualified, professional staff, as
\\ell as a teaching as'>ociate \\ ho super\'ises lab
qudent\ in training.
J·or more information about the center call
Da\\11 Werlinger at LCC, 747-4501, ext. 2524, or
at the center at 343-0 I 22.

Science speakers scheduled
A panel di<,cussion on Women in Science
Career:,, will be held Feb. 25 at I p.m. in Room
122. Science Bldg.
Ciul.!st speakers include: Julia Follansbee, archacologi'>t; Charlotte Schellman, biochemist;
and Rhoda Love, ecologist.

Women athletes needed
The LCC Track and Field team needs women
intere:-.ted in participating in javelin, shot put,
and discm.
If interested, contact Lyndell Wilken,
726-2215 or 484-4920.

Learn crime prevention
"Protecting your Home and Property" is the
topic of the March 10 I CC Women's Brown Bag
Talk.

Marsha Morgan, crime prevention specialist
with the Lane County Sheriff's office, will speak
at noon on Wednesday in the boardroom of the
Administration Bldg. For more information call
747-4501, ext. 2353.

Planet alignment discussed
Dr. William Suggs, ESD planetarium director,
will focus attention on the alignment of the
planets which will occur on March IO, 1982.
The lecture-demonstration will take place on
March 5 at 8 p.m. at the Plantarium/Science
Center in Alton Baker Park.
Admission will be $1. For further information,
call Lane ESD Planetarium at 683-4675.

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

Black literature probed
Chinasole, an LCC imtructor and doctoral
candidate at the University of Oregon will explore black literature's dual vi<,ion of America in
a lecture on March I.
The talk \,\,ill begin at 7:30 in room 308 of the
Forum Bldg.

Benefit dance performance
Nicola and Tim Foster will be joined by the
Creative Institute Dancers in a dazzling program
of dance, ranging from semi-classical to jazz,
soul, rock, and tap. Proceeds from the $3 ticket
sales will benefit the LCC Music Scholarshiop
Fund.
The concert is scheduled for March 12 ;md n
at 8 p.m. in the LCC Theatre/Main Stage.

Career talks scheduled

On March I from 2:30 to 4 p.m. there will be a
filmstrip shown entitled '' Jobs for tbe 80s:
Where the Opportunities Are," in the Career Information Center Media Room.
Phyllis Ryan will present '' Local and National
Labor Market Trends" March 2 from 2:30 to
4:30 p.m.
This talk will be a repeat of a Feb. 2 lecture.
Catherine Mater, an engineer, will discuss opportunities and outlook in engineering and what
it's like being a woman in the field. This presentation will be in 219 Center on March 4 from 2:30
to 4 p.m.
A filmstrip about business and office careers
will be shown in the Media Room on March 9
from 2:30 to 3 p.m.

Panel analyzes Poland
A panel discussion on "The Polish Crisis" will
begin at 7:30 p.m. on March 2 in the Erb
Memorial Union, Room 167.
Participants will include Joseph Fiszman, U of
0 political science professor; Jean Ja.wvick, a U
of O student who recently attended Jagiellonian
University in Krakow, Poland; George
Mahowsk1, a history department graduate
teaching fellow; Steve Reynolds, U of O religiou'>
studies professor; and Ron Wixman, U of 0
geography professor.

National security discussed
National security will be the topic discussed by
leading authorities Feb. 25-27 at the U of 0.
Nuclear warfare, the draft, military spending
and the Soviet threat will be assessed by panels
and debaters. For more information call the
Associated Students of the University of Oregon
at 686-3724.

Overseas experience offered
The Council on International Educational Exchange (CIEE) is offering US youth the unusual
opportunity to participak in international work
camps in Scandinavia, Germany, Belgium,

Holland, Switzerland, Czechoslovakia, Poland
and Mexico.
Work camps often combine manual and social
tasks while working on a developmental project
that benefits the local comunity. The situation
enables young people to live and work together
with their counterparts from all over the world.
For more information on the program, contact
CIEE, 205 E 42nd St., New York, NY 10017, or
312 Sutter St., San Francisco, CA 94108.

Native workshop scheduled
The second of a three-part series of workshops
on native traditions of the Pacific Northwest for
area youths is scheduled for Sat. Feb. 27 at the U
of O Museum of Natural History.
The museum and' Eugene School District 4J
Natil'es program are co-sponsoring the event
which is open to 4th through 12th graders in the
Eugene, Springfield and Bethel school disticts.
Demonstrations will include tracking, drumming, basketweaving, jewelry making and
storytelling. To pre-register or for further information, contact the U of O Museum of Natural
History at 686-3024 from IO a.m. to 3 p.m. or
Twila Souers, District 4J Natives Program coordinator at 687-3489.
•

U of O catalog available

The 1982 University of Oregon Summer Session catalog is now available on the UO campus
or through the mail.
Persons interested in obtaining a free copy of
the catalog should write to 1982 Summer Session, 333 Oregon Hall, U of 0, Eugene, 97403,
or call 686-3475. Registration begins June 21.

Volunteer fair planned
The Voluntary Action Center and Valley River
Center announce a volunteer fair to be held on
Apri l 24 , at Valley River Center. It will provide a
chance for citizens who seek volunteer activities
to inform themselves of some which are available
in the the community.
P art of Lane County's eighth annual celebration of National Volunteer Week, April 18-24
the fair will feature a special ceremoney to hono,
JO outstanding local volunteers.

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