ADC rule to force school dropouts by Ron Kelley of the TORCH Many of LCC's 400 to 500 parents on welfare may not be able to attend school as planned next term. A new interpretation of federal cuts in the Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) program will force recipients into job programs and possibly out of school. "It makes it difficult for people on public benefits based on need to go to college,'' says Pat Giles of the regional 400-500 LCC student parents may be affected office of the Adult and Family Services Division (AFSD) in Salem. The interpretation, received in February, is actually a clarification of sections of the Omnibus Reconciliation Act, which passed last August and went into effect Oct. 1. Two federal stipulations are at the root of this complex issue: • The law requires that ADC parents with children three years and older must register with the Jobs Program which is administered by the WIN program. Before, only parents with dependent children six years or older had to register. This. new requirement has been in force since last October. '' A parent or caretaker relative of a child under three must personally provide the full-time care of the child with only brief and infrequent absences." • But another clause seemed too vague and too strict to AFSD state officials in its intent if enforced as worded. This is why they requested the federal clarification which they re~eived last month. Officials here say the federal government states that college attendence is considered to be a regular absence and a situation in which the parent is not personally providing the care. The clause reads as follows: The officials also say that even if the ADC parent pays for child care as well as their schooling, they may be forced out of school if it interferes with their Jobs Program. The combination of these two clauses will force all parents who are students to register with the WIN program. Judie Johnson, specialist for the ADC program in Salem, says that because of the Department of Health and Turn to WELFARE, page 3 Lane Community College Vol. 22, No. 18 March 4, 1982 - t t 4000 E. 30th Ave. Eugene, OR 97405 927,00 fail to register CORD protest rally planned Draft deadl"ine ineffective; by Jeff Keating · of the TORCH The grace period for nearly one million draft-eligible men who refused to register with Selective Service agencies ended March 1. US Attorney General William French Smith vows to prosecute those who don't register in time. Penalties include maximums of 5 years in prison and/ or a $10,000 fine. But two representatives of the Coalition Opposing Registration and the Draft (CORD) stated in a press conference March 2 that the government's latest measures to force compliance will be no more effective than past efforts. Marion Malcolm and Jamie Lewontin, at the press conference at Interfaith Campus Center, 1414 Kincaid St., observed that even the latest draft deadline, Feb. 28, has been largely ignored by some 927,000 potential registrants. "The Selective Service I tt:? 1 1 !! !:!:!:!; :::' didn't expect this," said Lewontin of the large number of non-registrants. HThe grace period is over and people still aren't registering.'' Since non-registration is a federal felony, the federal authorities think they have the problem solved, said Lewontin. But the numbers tell a different story, he added. "With each passing week, there are 5,000 to 10,000 new felons in this country. The federal government can't prosecute a million peop~e, so they'll have to find a different way." One step the government might take, said Malcolm, is selective prosecution, taking several non-registrants to court and using them as examples to intimidate others into registering. Congressional legislation that would deprive alleged non-registrants of federal jobs, student loans and entitlements may be used as another pressure tactic. If this proposed • bill becomes law, young men applying for finan- cial aid at US colleges would be required to sign a statement saying they had registered for the draft. Each step the federal government takes is another sign that they are preparing to reinstate the draft, Malcolm says. ''The government knows the only way they can support an unpopular war is to start the draft.'' A strong indication of a coming draft is a nationwide mock call-up of 1,000 Army reservists scheduled for March 20. CORD feels that such simulated inductions are a prelude to the draft itself. To manifest opposition to the draft, CORD is organizing a demonstration March 11 at noon in front of the Federal Building. They are calling for a halt to mock mobilizations, no prosecution of registration refusers and an end to draft registration. "They must be nervous," said Lewontin of draft authorities. "If I was in the Justice Department, I'd be worried." I, 1982 State budget balanced by Larry Swanson of the TORCH The longest special legislative session in Oregon's history ended March 1. However, lawmakers are already predicting another special session before the end of the year. Legislators cut state spending by $136 million and increased state revenues by $194 million to put the state's fragile finances back on an even keel. Pres. Eldon Schafer says he won't know the total cuts to LCC's budget for "one or two weeks" but estimates the figure to be around $775,000. "lt's going to be very difficult," says Schafer. Deans are now preparing "decision packages," but even when those are completed and the school's budget known, "it may be only a temporary thing," says Schafer. Schafer says it now looks as if LCC has found only a "short-range solution" to the school's budget woes. Two other important factors in assessing the school's budget -- faculty pay raises and property tax collection -are also up in the air. The faculty union's contract calls for annual pay hikes one percentage point lower than the Portland consumer price index. Bill Berry, dean of administrative services, says funds for a 10 percent raise were set aside in this year's budget. Based on unofficial reports that put the Portland CPI at 7.7 percent, the school would save $215,000 this year. LCC relies on property taxes for about 50 percent of its revenue. Property tax collection rates are lower than usual this year -- down to about 82 percent. When this year's budget was planned, administrators projected a collection rate of 89 percent. And in the midst of this dismal budget picture, LCC administrators must plan the school's 1982-83 budget. "We'll just use the best information that we have available," says Berry. • A strong letter writing campaign may save your instructor • LCC Chinosole explored Dual • Heated debates dominated last week's National • Holly Near will perform at an anti-nuclear benefit in ::;;~i-al aid. See Editorial, . i.is~:=:i:~Y~ ~":~:r;_ March ~e:~ng ~~n!:~;,c:~: ~e ~:;;~:ag:e;'. week. See • Lane Dance Theatre's spring concert promises to :~i:i~/~::l~~!r;:e;~;; t .\::I{! 11:j:j:! Page 2 •March 4, 1982 - • . , 1982 The TORCH FRE E FOR ALL Letters to senators may save federal monies Editorial by Jeff Keating of the TORCH The killing edge of the Reagan Administration's budget-cutting axe will reduce financial aid for up to half of all students enrolled in the nation's colleges. . If Congress passes Reagan's 1982-83 budget, financial aid funds -- which Congress approved last December will be reduced by $590 million. Clipping wings Reagan's plan includes a 40 percent reduction in Pell (Basic) grants, elimination of National Direct Student Loan and Supplemental Grant funds and a 27 percent reduction in College Work-S~u~y monies. means that "If he says there'll be more money for students, there will be more money for students,'' says Peter DeFazio, an aide to Rep. Jim Weaver, D-Ore. Hatfield's post gives Oregon college students a unique opportunity to determine their fate. More than simple petitioning or demonstration is needed. Students must take bolder steps to prevent passage of this part of the new budget. Financial aid experts say all postsecondary education issues will go into committee this week and members will present proposals to Congress by the end of March. A letter campaign is under way to stop passage of the Reagan cuts. Not every student is able to attend ral1ies, so a barrage of letters at this point is crucial and will be highly effec- The dramatic cuts will have a disastrous effect on most of the nation's already-suffering colleges. For example, if Reagan's 1983-84 budget meets with approval, $2 billion will be slashed from the amount that was available during the 1981-82 academic year. And the number of students who will be affected by the cuts ranges from 10 percent at some state community colleges to 50 percent at some larger schools, including Portland State University. Writing away the wrong Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., is the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, the body which decides where federal budget monies will be directed. His post in the committee tive as a lobbying device. The concise, specific, personal examples evident in the letters will be hard-hitting and meaningful. Writing before the Reagan budget axe takes its toll could prevent unnecessary grief. Congressmen do listen to the voters and your letter will make a difference . College students should write their preferred representatives -- especially Sen. Hatfield -- before March 31 to urge a "no" vote. The Honorable Mark 0. Hatfield United States Senate 463 Russell Senate Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 The Honorable Jim Weaver House of Representatives 1226 Longworth House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515 -Letters------~---------TORCH great To the Editor: (A not-to-be-aborted issue.) The 1981-82 academic year is leaping its course at what appears to be a dizzying pace. There are more students; more financial problems for students, staff and the college; more pressures on everyone. But with all this, we would be greatly remiss if we did not recognize the excellent contribution you and your staff are making to college life this year with the TORCH. There have been some mediocre years for the TORCH and some good. The paper this year has been outstanding. Each issue is filled with articles of interest to the students and to the entire college community. Some fine investigative reporting is being done and the issues are presented in a professional and balanced manner. We are being presented with journalism of a high level. The TORCH is truly in- ,.. ... THE TORCH EDITOR : Ron Kelley ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Larry Swanson FEATURES EDITOR: Jeff Keating INFORMATION EDITOR : Paula Case PHOTO EDITOR : Bonnie Nicholas STAFF REPORTERS : David Bowers, Susan Crosman, Diane Davis, Belinda Gomez, Terry Rhoads, Mart y Schwarzbauer, Mike Sims STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS : Nancy Adkin s, Michael Bailey, Paul Caporale, Andrew Hanhardt, Lisa Jones, Gene White PRODUCTION MANAGER : Tim Swillinger PRODUCTION ADVISOR : Lesa Carmean PRODUCTION : Paula Case, Eileen Dimer, Caryn Jacobson, Lisa Jones, Jeff Keating, Barbara Li11man , Bonnie Nicholas, Mike Sims, 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 teresting and well written. Students and staff who have dealt with the TORCH people (there are many of these for the TORCH staff appears anywhere and everywhere that something is happening) have found them to be delightful as individuals and definitely informed and proficient in their work. Thank you for your efforts and your accomplishments! Three more than satisfied staff members, Jerry Sirois Susan Fjerkenstad Evelyn Tennis Gay is sinfu·I To the Editor: Jeff Keating's movie review (TORCH, Feb. 18) on Making Love, a movie about a homosexual, caught my attention. Homosexuality has been gaining acceptance in our society and I would like to make known some of the implications of this. Jeff says in the title of his --, COPYSETTER : Linda Johns RECEPTIONIST: Linda Reynolds DISTRIBUTION: Tim Olson The TORCH i, a student -managed nc\\spapcr, published on Thursdays, September through June . News ,1oric, are ..:ompressed, concise report s. int ended to he as fair and balanced as po,"blc . Some may appear with a byline to mdica1c the reporter responsihk . News feature s. bcs:ausc of their broader ,cope, may contain some judgment s on the part o f the wri1cr . They ar c identified with a "feature" byline . "l-orurm" are essays contributed by TORCH reader s and are aimed at broad issues facing members of 1he communit y. They should be limited 10 750 words. "Le11ers 10 1he Ediror·· are intended as short ..:ommenraries on stories appearing in The TORCH . The editor reserves 1he right 10 edit for libel or length . "Omnium Garherum" serves as a puhlic announcement forum . Actisities related 10 LCC will be given priority. All correspondence must be typed and ~igncd by the writer. Deadlines arc 1he Monday prior 10 publication . Mail or bring all correspondence to: The TORCH, Room 205 Center Building, 4000 E. 30th Ave . Eugene, Or 97401. Phone 747-4501, eXI. 2654. ....4 review that Making Love is breaking new ground. I disagree. Homosexuality is not something new. It's old ground, travelled several thousand years ago by some people who no doubt felt that "it's a person's right if they want to be a homosexual or not." Accepting homosexuality was the last stage in the moral decay of Sodom and Gomorrah and because of it God destroyed them with fire and brimstone. (See Genesis 19: 1-25). Now people are trying to make homosexuality acceptable here in America. But homosexuality is sin and those who take part in it are breaking God's law. (Leviticus 18:22-25, 20:13, Romans 1 :24-27). Acceptance of homosexuality by many people in our culture today shows that we are deteriorating morally. Leaving God's standards behind, we are choosing for ourelves what is right and wrong. We have been deceived by the lie that the serpent told Eve in the garden: "You shall be as Gods, knowing (deciding for yourselves) good and If your class is on___,. evii." God will judge America for homosexuality as he did Sodom and Gomorrah and every other nation that turned away from his principles. And take notice, ProEcologists: God says that because of homosexuality even the land is defiled. (Genesis 18:22-25) Mark Wagner Real issues To the Editor: I feel that the efforts antiabortionists are playing are diversionary tactics on the American people: l. The economy is in shambles -- the deficits are higher than ever before. If the powers that be keep everyone's mind on unborn, unwanted babies, then who will care if there's no food to feed the children that are already here! 2. If the government wants to fight a war in El Salvador, then there have to be lots of unwanted 18-year-old men who are unemployed. What better way than to ban abortion and thus increase the number of adults the wars can kill? 3. The war in El Salvador is escalating. Remember the footage of helicopters over the jungles? Those are not reruns we are seeing on TV's 6 p.m. news. The daily death count is back! I don't want me or my brothers to die in El Salvador. Let's pay attention to the real issues facing us today -not the stuff Washington wants us to think about. Think! Tim Olson Risk of death To the Editor: • In last week's TORCH, Paula Case's article stated, "Leading doctors say the risk of death in pregnancy and childbirth is nine times greater than in an early abortion ... '' Not for the child, it isn't. Chris Anton M, W, F ,MW ,MF, WF ,MWF ,MUWHF ,MUW!l ,MWHF ,MUHF ,MUWF U,H,UH,UWHF and starts at J. 0700 .H 07 30 vour exam dav and time will be on F, 0700-0900 F 0800 or 0830 vour exam day and time will be on M, 0800-1000 u, 0800-1000 0900 or 0930 your exam day and time will b~ on W, 0800-1000 H. 0800-1000 1000 your exam day and time will be on M, 1000-1200 u, 1000-1200 H OT 1030 w; 0900-1100 1100 or 1130 vour exam dav and time will be on 1200 or 1230 your exam day and time will be on M, 1200-1400 U, 1200-1400 1300 or 1330 your exam dav and time will be on W, 1200-1400 H 1400 your exam dav and time will be on M. 1400-1600 u, 1400-1600 OT 1430 1000-1200 1000-1200 1200-1400 1500 or 1530 vour exam dav and time will be on W, 1400-1600 H, 1400-1600 1600 or 1630 your exam day and time will be on M. 1600-1800 u, 1600-1800 1700 or 1730 your exam day and time-will be on W, 1600-1800 H, 1600-1800 1800 or LATER Evening classes, those that meet 1800 or later, will have their final exams during FINAL EXAM WEEK at their rer,ulJrly scheduled class time. I Th~ TORCH March 4, 1982 - ~ , 1982 ·Page-.3 Multiple visions of America by Susan Crosman of the TORCH The trickster shrewdly outwits his adversary in an American Negro tale, "The Wonderful Story of TarBaby. " This struggle for victory between the rabbit and the fox symbolizes the negro slave who succeeds in proving himself smarter than his master. In silence, he rejoices. But Black America is no longer silent. Chinosole spoke out Monday night, March 1, in room 308 of the Forum Building when she said the Tar Baby fable is one which exemplifies "our ambivalent relationship with our identity as black people." The LCC language arts instructor said that among the many American subcultures, one culture -- that controlled by white people -- dominates. Whoever is on the "inside" or the "outside" of that culture is the result of who has the power. Chinosole's dynamic personality captivated her listeners with her presentation, Black literature: Dual Perspective in America. "The problem is that it's not that simple,'' Chinosole said in reference to the title. "The relationship between black and white America is more multiple. Multiple visions of America is a much better way to think of it." Black authors must be able to reach the white culture as well as their black culture. The author of Equia no 's Travels illustrates his adeptness at using many voices. his in Equiano, autobiography, changed his name as his experience as a slave within the dominant culture changed, Chinosole said. "He had so many sides to his personality. He would in fact express himself in many voices." cept of multiple visions by focusing on Tar Baby, a contemporary novel by Toni Morrison and Equiano's Travels, an autobiography of a slave. The two pieces of literature were chosen by Chinosole for contrast. They differ in terms of chronology, genre and the author's sex. Despite these differences, both are popular with white and black audiences, explore adjacent societies of black and white cultures and exemplify the concepts of multi-voices, marginality and invisibility employed by black authors. These concepts were Chinosole said nearly 2,000 carefully developed as slave autobiographies exist. Chinosole's lecture progress"Some of them represent ed. "The problem of being finest • marginal and being invisible the of some autobiographies in the English affects your self-concept and Language." But Equiano 's your image of others," she exTravels set the pace for those plained. Marginality is the into follow. between relationship of the black and white communities. Tar Baby is more tradiAnd invisibility is when a tionally written, but is also exsubculture is simply not seen pressed in many voices. Toni by the dominant forces in a Morrison relies more on society. dialect to reveal many sides of black women as ''very strong, "The concept of invisibility unconventional characters." is not one that is exclusive to the black communities ... But "She is a highly respected blacks lay claim to invisibility black woman writer. .. an inthat whites can not." spiration because she manages to talk about black women .. Because of conflicting in. in a very complex way and terests among the dominant manages to use fable in and subordinant cultures, she modern fiction as well,'' said, "When our writers write, Chinosole said. they are especially concerned Chinosole explored this conwith their audience." WELFARE, continued from page 1 - - - - - - - - - - - Human Services' interpretation of the clause, "We cannot allow absences as a result of college attendence. "Before, they (ADC parents) could prepare themselves (with college education) to enter the job market. Now ... because of the (requirement), they must also stay at home to care for that child.'' And Francis Howard, LCC's financial aid director, says that state officials told her that students must spend at least part of each day in their job search. Johnson says that counties such as Lane and Multnomah will be hard hit because of the high student populations. Those students who have reported to the agency that they are attending an institution of higher learning are now being notified by mail. Others will be notified during their regularly scheduled review appointments. Rirh Cook, branch manager of the West Eugene AFSD Branch, says his office is in a bind. "It's not the state or the public's responsibility to put people through school. The federal and state governmment's attitude is that any job is better than no job ... But we know damn well there's no job waiting out there for them." Cook adds, "We're not going to kick them (student ADC parents) out of a self-financed training program.'' He says the law allows students to finish their last term of a training program if the program will yield them a job. Other flexible programs will enable some parents to comply with the intent of the federal regulations and to remain as He students, says Cook. says the fact that parents are students triggers the new clause and requires them to register with the WIN Jobs Program. It does not mean they necessarily must quit school. To remain a student, the ADC parent must, however, cooperate with the Jobs Program. And if the schooling conflicts with the Jobs Program or if a job of any kind becomes available, the parent must comply. If the students can't or won't comply, the portion of the welfare grant that covers the adult will be sanctioned, say AFSD sources. The portion of the grant covering the child, however, will not be closed. Howard says a parent with one child receives a grant of $281 per month not including food stamp allotments. Using AFSD formulas, she says, the parent portion of this grant is $200 and the child portion is $81. Besides the loss of the $200, a major portion of the food stamp allotment will be lost. Cook says that WIN will first screen registrants to determine if they should be "mandatory participants" of the Jobs Program. If they are not, they may be able to continue their schooling without interruption. Workers at WIN will develop individual "action plans'' for each mandatory participant. The parent's employment, reading and basic vocational skills will be assessed. And job seeking skills will be taught. Cook says that money for child care, work clothes, gas and moving expenses is available for job seekers. But Cook stresses, "If they can't get a job, we aren't going to force them to leave school.'' Johnson says that she was "hoping that it (the new federal interpretation) would not be as stringent as it is. . We're able to do less and less On the Wire Compiled by Diane Davis of the TORCH from AP wire service reports Senate passes anti-busing measure WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Senate passed an antibusing amendment this week by a 57-37 margin. If approved by the House, the amendment would prohibit federal judges from ordering the busing of public school students more than 10 miles or 15 minutes from their home to achieve desegregation. David Brink, president of the American Bar Association, says the anti-busing move represents ''a first step to serious damage to our Constitution ... next it could be our freedom of speech and our freedom of religion.'' A series of conservative proposals that limit federal courts from ruling on such issues as school prayer and abortion are also pending in Congress. Venus 13 makes soft landing VENUS SOL SYSTEM -- An unmanned Soviet space probe ~ade a successful soft landing on Venus this week, establishing contact with the Earth's nearest planetary neighbor. After a four-month flight, the mother spacecraft, Venus 13 which was launched on Oct. 30, 1981, dropped a d~scent module carrying sophisticated testing • equipment. The Soviet news agency Tass says the probe has already scooped up soil samples and transmitted I ~7 minutes of color photographs and data that will "significantly widen the information" about Earth's neighbor. The probe is an effort to determine what elements exist on the dense 500 degree (Farenheit) cloud-covered planet. Watt held in contempt WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Secretary of the Interior James Watt is being held in contempt. of Congres') for his refusal to allow three Congressional committees to examine his financial files. Watt, whose controversial land management policy was recently announced, faces charges brought against him by the General Accounting Office of misappropriating taxpayer funds. Last December, Watt declined to use a $5,000 entertainment allowance for two social parties which totaled $8069. Instead, claims the GAO, Watt used a $50,000 "cooperating association fund" to pay for the parties. The cooperating association fund is a tax subsidi;:cd fund meant for National Park Service matters. The GAO claims that Watt broke the law by dipping into the association coffers. Paraphernalia ruling upheld WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Supreme Court March 3 upheld a law which is designed to restrict the sale of drug paraphernalia and eliminate so-called "head shops" in this country. By an 8-0 vote, the high court ruled that Hoffman Estates, Ill., did not unfairly extend the limitations of its authority by requiring a license to sell items designed for use with illegal drugs. The 1978 law also bars sales to minors and requires stores to keep a log of purchasers' (for the ADC parent) and yet there really isn't something around to pick up the slack." And Pat Giles says, ''There is a new philosophy abroad. It says that public benefits should be used as a kind of insurance to prevent catastrophe and not as a way to make a living or as a way to even make things better. ''This may be a reflection of Congressional constituents saying 'If I can't send my kids to college, how come someone on welfare can.' '' Johnson says parents may request a grievance hearing but that hearing officers must base their findings on the federal intent. "I don't know what a person (who wants to protest the decision) can do, except to challenge the federal government." Corinne Poorman of the Client's Council, an advocacy group for clients receiving public assistance, says that her group and Lane County Legal Aid Services is studying the problem. Parents who want to contact Client's Council may call 689-0294 or write to 367 Hwy. 99 N. St., Eugene, Ore. For additional information call your welfare worker. Page 4 Match 4~ 1982 - ·toeasa: 1982 The TORCH ' National Security Conference. by Larry Swanson and Paul Hansen of the TORCH It would only take 350 nuclear warheads to destroy the United States or the Soviet Union. But the US and the Soviet Union have about 50,000 nuclear weapons between them. Should the US respond to this situation with the largest peacetime military build-up in history? Or should the US and the Soviet Union work toward nuclear disarmament and an end to the arms race? Proponents and critics of the Reagan administration's national security policy wrestled with these questions at the Northwest National Security Conference on the University of Oregon campus Feb. 25-27. The conference, sponsored by the Associated Students of the U of 0, brought antinuclear activists and Reagan administration supporters together for seven seminars. Seminar topics ranged from arms assistance for Third World countries to the US response to arms escalation. Summaries of six of the seminars follow. Assessing the Soviet threat The fo rmer deputy director of the CIA and the fo under and director of the Institute for Defense and Disarmament Studies disagreed sharply in their seminar Assessing the Soviet Threat. Speaking before an audience of 750 Feb. 26, Ray Cline, ex-CIA deputy director for intelligence, said the world's 50,000 nuclear weapons "are there to deter World War III" and that the existence of nuclear weapons "doesn't necessarily make a holocaust." Disarmament expert Randall Forsberg disagreed. "We'd be much safer if we stopped the nuclear arms race. It's a futile race and a very dangerous one." Both panelists agreed that compet1t10n for resources plays a large role in US-Soviet relations, but disagreed on the possible outcome of that competition. Cline sees the next l O years as "the decade that (control of world resources) will be decided." He said Soviet military build-up is a response to the coming resource battle. But Forsberg said protecting Soviet territory, occupying Eastern Europe and supporting pro-Moscow governments are Soviet priorities. Although "the Soviet Union is gradually moving into an expansionist mode ," she said , "the basic numbers haven't changed in 20 years." where global arms sales were debated. The US would be ''unable to conduct a rational foreign policy'' without arms sales, said Leslie Brown, a US foreign service officer. He said he applauded President Reagan when he "dumped prohibitions, dumped the ceilings (set by Carter). . .and stated that arms sales are essential to our security.'' Arms for the Third World One area where the numbers may change is in the realm of National Security Assistance -the topic of a Feb . 27 seminar Second Nature Used Bikes buy-sell-trade Specializing in recycled bikes, used whe e l ~ & parts 1712 Willamette 343-5362 But Michael Klare, author of Exporting Repression: US Support for Authoritarianism in Latin America, disagreed. '' Arms transfers,'' said Klare, ''rarely contribute to US security in the short or long run." He said Reagan security assistance policy is "opening the floodgates of arms sales to the Third World." Klare said the current global • • recession is the only reason arms sales haven't yet increased. And he sees the 1980s and 90s as a period of conventional arms proliferation in the Third World. Nuclear history lesson Robert Cocklin, a retired US Army general, gave an historical tour of the development and impact of our Disarm the nuclear powers Commentary by Larry Swanson of the TORCH ''The major 'window of vulnerability' we have is between the ears of our leaders." With this statement, Edwin Brown Firmage, a law professor at the University of Utah, summed up the state of the nuclear arms race. Firmage was one of several who spoke at the Northwest National Security Conference at the University of Oregon Feb. 25-27. Although he was referring specifically to US leadership -- and especially to Ronald Reagan's belief that the US has a "window of vulnerability'' open to Soviet attack -- he could just as easily have been speaking of the leadership in any country with nuclear weapons. As many speakers from both sides of the poli tical spectrum said during the course of the three-day con fer ence, any nation with nuclear arms cannot be trusted. Peace activists, retired military officers and defense industry moguls agreed, not surprisingly, that nuclear war is not in the best interests of this planet. Their views on how to prevent a nuclear holocaust, however, were as divergent as their political affiliations. Defenders of the Reagan administration justified nuclear proliferation with the standard "red menace" and "Soviet expansionism" arguments. Proponents of disarmament argued that the mere existence of nuclear weapons presents an intolerable threat to everyone on Earth. I agree with the latter group. If anything became clear at the conference it is that the nuclear arms race must be stopped -- now. The Soviet Union and the US have enough nuclear weapons to destroy each other many times over. Even if the Soviet Union launched a "first strike" and destroyed 90 percent of this country's weapons, the US would still be able to destroy the Soviet Union. And even if the US was left with only one Poseidon submarine, it could kill 30 million Soviet citizens with its 160 nuclear warheads. And that scenario assumes that the Soviet Union would initiate a first strike -- a surprise attack intended to knock out intercontinental ballistic missiles and long-range bombers before they could be used. But the Soviet Union has repeatedly renounced the first use of nuclear weapons. The US has not. The development of incredibly accurate nuclear weapons delivery systems has given Reagan administration officials the idea that the US could fight a limited nuclear war in Europe or defeat the Russians in an all-out war. This is absurd. President Kennedy once defined the winner of a nuclear war as " that side which lives 30 minutes longer than the other." Is 30 minutes of world domination worth sacrificing 5,000 years of civilization? I don't think so. We can create another 5,000 years o f civilization if we disarm the nuclear powers. But how to disarm them? I agree with an approach advanced by nine-year peace activist Terry Provance: That the US take three steps toward ending the nuclear arms race, two of which require Soviet cooperation: • The US must agree to renounce the first use of nuclear weapons. • Both nations must declare a freeze on the development, testing and deployment of nuclear arms . • Both nations must begin proportionate reductions in their nuclear stockpiles. As Provance also said, ''The best way to stop the a rms race is to stop it." Support TORCH Advertisers Rainbow Optics Present t his Ad and receive s 0.00 Tell them you saw it in the TORCH SERVICE Own Lab On Premises STYLE Over 1,000 frames on d isplay SENSITIVE To Your Needs OFF ON PRESCRIPTION EYEWEAR (Frame & Lenses) (Offer expires Morch 31. 1982 Only one crupcx, oer person) 766 E. 13th ST. • l BLOCK FROM U OF O • 343-3333 Now open under new ownership Get a free transfer with the purchase of any t-shirt (with this od) Silkscreening now available 1040 Willamette (on the downtown moll) 683-4999 • • .Proliferation or disarmament? foreign policy since World War II. Cocklin said the US has never had an ongoing doctrine but rather a melange of actions and reactions to Soviet moves around the globe. Lawrence Shoup, an author and political commentator, saw the history and evolution of US national security strategy in a somewhat different light. Citing a number of studies, Shoup maintained that long term overall policy, both global and tactical, is normally made in little-known private organizations such as the Council on . Foreign Relations and the American Enterprise Institute. He said these and other "think tanks" are controlled by and for corporate leaders and the upper class of our society. The origins of our national policy are the interests of the corporate class, Shoup said. The draft The Military Manpower seminar presented three divergent points of view -those of General Cocklin, Barry Lynn, president of the anti-draft organization Draft Action, and Charles Moskos, a professor of military sociology. General Cocklin supported draft registration, citing numerous government statistics that show the US behind the Soviets in manpower. He proposed a draft that would offer no deferments for students, women or married people. Lynn opposed a draft of any kind and cited examples from the Vietnam war on abuses and unequal options for the less fortunate in our society. And Moskos made a statement which was received unfavorably by the audience. He said that only people who had served in the military should be eligible for financial aid at state institutions. Photo by Andrew Hanhardt Charles Schwartz, a speaker at the Northwest National Security Conjerenee Military economics Frank Trager, a former professor at the National War College, and James Cypher, a professor of economics at California State University at Fresno, debated the Economics of Military Spending Feb. 26. In the seminar, debaters developed two radically different reasons for vast buildups of US defenses. Cypher maintained that US leaders were afraid of slipping back into a depression after World War II. He said they viewed military spending as a way to solve the chronic problem of overproduction in a capitalistic society. German TOMS 10 Pool Tables Foos Ball Tables & Air Hockey 40 Pin Ball & Video Games Donkey Kong. ,Frogger Pac-Man & more Burger Basket · Special Includes Fries (fresh cut potatoes) Y'J .UtJ 'J tJl~ tll>liJ l)~JiJJ.J~ ~!)JJJ . 'J !)J !)'J~ f~XPERT \\ .0 R K .\I A.\' Sil IP Plus FREE med. Pepsi $2.95 Corner 4th & Main Springfield 747-9294 US-USSR strategic policies Five panelists debated, at times heatedly, Nuclear War Deterrence and World Response to VS-USSR Strategic Policies in the final seminar of the conference Feb. 27. "The current direction we are heading,'' said Edwin Brown Firmage, law professor at the University of Utah, "is for unmitigated disaster." Firmage said US failure to denounce the first use of nuclear weapons, as the Soviets have done, is "the height of immorality and stupidity." But William J. Taylor Jr., director of Political-Military Studies at the Georgetown Center for Strategic and International Studies, defended the Reagan administration's decision to beef up the defense budget. He said the only way to get the Soviet Union to negotiate for arms control is through a show of strength. "I don't think we can sweet talk them into it. We've got to pressure them into it." But Trager said that America is protecting the core values of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. While AU"rO SERVICE POOL&GAMES the defense component of the budget is indeed high -- an estimated $190 billion -- it is necessary to catch up with the Russians, he said. Terry Provance, a peace activist for the past nine years, said US deterrence policy "is not stopping nuclear war and the nuclear weapons race." The US, he said, doesn't accept a balance of power and wants superiority. He noted that the US refused to sign SALT II, refused to sign a "no first strike pledge'' and refused to reduce arms production historically. He said the US seeks nuclear superiority. History, he said, shows the US ahead of the Soviet Union in all but one major breakthrough in nuclear arms development. Provance accused the US of being "morally bankrupt" on the nuclear arms issue and called for "the abolishment of all nuclear weapons on this globe." John Draim, an aerospace engineer and defense analyst, defended the Reagan administration's goal of deterrence through strength, but thinks the sea-basing of the MX is the course to take to gain bargaining leverage . with the Soviet Union. Peter Jones, a British journalist, provided a European perspective to the debate. "The plan for fighting and winning a nuclear war,'' he said, "will happen on my continent -- the continent of Europe." He accused the US and the Soviet Union of risking war in Europe through ''crisis mismanagement" and at one point shouted to· Taylor and Draim, "I want to know when you are going to break out of this vicious circle." 2045 Franklin Blvd . Eugene, Oregon 97 403 342-2912 Folklore is people speaking for themselves Arts, Science, Philosophy generated and preserved by the oral tradition American Ethnic Folklore gives students a chance to examine the lore of various ethnic groups in the United States, especially Blacks, Chicanos, Native Americans, Angelos and whatever other groups are represented by students in the class. Auditors and audits encouraged. (fills the Arts and Letters requirement) American Ethnic Folklore seq. 785 MWF, 0900-1000 Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relatively Speaking Relati1,dy Speaking Rela,r - ••'- Sp_eakin.g Relatively speaking, Albert Einstein was one of the greatest physicists of all time. Apart from his creation of the special and the general theories of relativity, he made great contributions in fields ranging from statistical mechanics to philosophy. An unusual tribute to Einstein is being paid in the form of a touring exhibit that displays practical applications of his work, photographs taken by his friends, and excerpts from his letters and other writings. The exhibit is currently appearing at the Koinonia Club Building, 1236 Kincaid St., Eugene. Einstein, whose accomplishments in mathematics belied a childhood dislike of the subject, was born in Germany in 1879 and became a noted physicist in Sweden before emigrating to the US in 1932. A 1921 Nobel Prize winner for his work in physics, he became _an adviser to three US presidents and a favorite speaker at US colleges. His position at the Princeton, N.J., Institute for Advanced Study allowed him to live out his life teaching, his first- love. Photographs of Einstein at home and while lecturing -- showing his wild, snow-white hair framing an intense, lined face -- convey his own intensity, sense of freedom and imaginative thought. And the manuscript facsimiles, diagrams, and interpretive texts add glimpses of his personal life, his character, his relationship to his friends and work and other commitments. recreate the great scientific and Clippings and documents philosophical controversies surrounding his work. Of special interest because of the current debate on nuclear prolifera ti on are the papers that help trace Einstein's developing pacifism and his work in the nuclear disarmament movement. Created by the American Institute of Physics' Center for the History of Physics, the exhibit is sponsored by the Eugene Council for Human Rights in Latin America. The exhibit remains open, without charge, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays through March 15. Einstein's theory of relativity was instrumental in the creation of the world's first atomic bomb Story by Jeff Keating ''Concern for man himself must always constitute the chief objective of all technological effort -- concern for the big, unsolved problems of how to organize human work and the distribution of commodities in such a manner as to assure that the results of our scientific thinking may be a blessing to mankind, and not a curse.'' Photos courtesy of The American Institute of Physics • Page 8 Marc_h 4, 1982 - A;.15'..d:, 1982 The TORCH · ENTERT AINMEN T Music of conscience by Jeff Keating of the TORCH l Photo by Paula Case Pickin' on the stairs by Paula Case of the TORCH Classical guitar music filters through the North stairwell facing the lawn as Ray Hensley finger-picks his Seville guitar. Hensley, in his third year at LCC, plays his guitar music in the stairwell so he doesn't have to compete with other students for the practice rooms in the Performing Arts Building. He also plays there because "1 like lookin' out the window, and it sounds good echoing through the stairs.'' LCC students can hear Hensley play from 9 to 10 a.m. and from noon to 5:45 p.m. unless "I'm playing the piano in Performing Arts." Nuclear reactors may be the source tomorrow, but they're powering the Navy today. If you've got the qualifications, you can be trained in nuclear And serve as a Mechanical Operator, Electrical technology. Operator, or Reactor Control Operator. For more information, call: 1-800-452-5554 ·Parliland lare1:isian lnslirumenli During Term Holly Near, internationally recognized musician and performer, will appear at South Eugene High School March 10 in a concert f undraiser for · Citizens Action for Lasting Security, an anti-nuclear weapons group. Holly Near with Adrienne Torf and Carrie Borton will begin at 8 p.m. in the South Eugene gym. Tickets are $6 plus a 30-cent carrying charge and are available at Everybody's Records, Earth Records, Mother Kali's and the EMU main desk at the U of 0. Near's songs are passionate epithets to many issues: Antiwar and anti-nuclear power songs, songs decrying repressive governments and love songs honoring the lover's strength rather than heartbreak or loneliness. She has appeared in international and national tours including Free the Army in 1971, On Tour for a Nuclear Free Photo counesy of Redwood Records Future in 1979 and On Tour for National Women's Studies Holly Near will perform at an anti-nuclear fundraiser March IO in 1981. She has also performlatest release, Fire in the Rain. ed in a wide-ranging variety of shadowed by her material," colleges and clubs, from Stan- says Paul Grein of the Los Her newest LP marks a change ford University to the Angeles Times. "Her radiant in material, switching from a Troubadour Club in Los personality and crafty sense of more cause-oriented repertoire humor give the set an uplif- to easygoing, pop-based tunes. Angeles. ''Once or Twice,'' the release Near's Eugene stop is part ting, affirmative spirit." from Fire and Rain, has of a 13-city Northwest tour And Larry Kelp of the that will take her from the Salt Oakland Tribune says, ''Near shown remarkable success in Lake in Utah to the capital of possesses one of the most pure FM radio markets across the Washington State, Olympia. country. and moving voices in pop Music critics and reviewers music. It's hard not to laugh Near's Northwest swing is nationwide have hailed her as and cry at various times passionate about her many because Near's delivery is that part of an ongoing series of· live concert sessions that are causes without seeming angry moving." being taped for possible use on conor embittered during her Near has released five a future album. · Tentatively cert presentations. ''The key to the success of albums during her career, in- scheduled for release next fall, the album hopes to capture Near's show is that she has the cluding Hang In There, Live, ImAm, I All Know Can You Near's stage enthusiasm and vocal and skills performance range to keep from being over- agine My Surprise and her put it in album form. r· ·~· e'i~ck·t;:;:~~::~1 811 W. 6th Eugene 683-9540 E Repair t:a. RECEIVE 25 % OFF any MARS drafting supplies Year-round 10% discount o.n drafting supplies (exclu~ing sale items) Spring Term e1• I EJ ', "~ > ;r \" // ~, - ::,.> ...J-.. ... ,: . ---- \ ~ ~ ·i \ ~'---- ~- • r1~-. -~ 09i J i I \~' Instructor : Chinosole Sequence 784 3 credits ['>ii•~ UH El ' a ~ a L m vide a wide sampling of Black writing in America; also to allow the student considerable freedom of direction in pursuing an independent program of reading. Auditors are encouraged . 1 a 1000-1130 Black American Literature is designed to pro - ,:'.::Is Arts :.~ d letter:•.:;quire~.:~i) I H•H ~l:ll· f m m ,aJ The TORCH March' 4, 1982 - ~ ' 1982 Page 9 • Dance Theatre to perform benefit concert at LCC Lane Dance Theatre will perform a Winter Studio Concert in the LCC Auxiliary Gym, PE 101, on March 11 at 4 p.m. The program, the group's second at LCC this school year, is designed to raise funds for their annual Spring Concert. A $1 donation is requested to help the company meet their spring expenditures. Lane Dance Theatre's existence dates back to the fall of 1980 when a group of seven dancers under the choreographic direction of Mary Seereiter brought a dance entitled ''The Scene'' to life. The group -- now a company -- has grown, and the original "scenes" they create on stage have also expanded to encompass dances with messages, varied moods, dynamics and design. The company, including five original members -Denise Dirks, Beth Ann Huston, Ann Kepert, Delia Seifert and Julie Zsigmond -now has 22 members. They range in career goals • from music, art and theatre to economics and foreign affairs. Seereiter directs and choreographs for the company, utilizing each individual's uniqueness to develop original works. The group must work together as a whole and this cooperative, supportive atmosphere of Lane Dance Theatre adds a sparkling freshness to their presentation. The entire company will perform in a new piece choreographed by Seereiter which explores relationships between men and women in historical and contemporary views. The dance will be set to a musical collage by Carl Woideck. The concert also includes two new dances choreographed by Bernice Courtney: "The Chill Air,'' a quartet with a solo created for Seereiter, and "Trio," a dance inspired by the strengths of women, which premiered in the 1981 Lane Dance Theatre Spring Concert. The company will also perform an improvisation structured by Mary Johnson and "Kinetic Kanvas," a dance motivated by a brightly colored oil painting and choreographed by Seereiter. The Winter Concert is a presentation of several new works in progress. The audience has the opportunity to see these works during an ongoing choreographic process, and can discover the final development of the dances in Lane Dance Theatre performs an original work the company's Spring Concert, to be held March 4 and 5 in the Performing Arts Theatre. Donations of any amount will be accepted for the production costs of the upcoming Spring Concert. For more information contact Mary Seereiter at 747-4501, ext. 2545. CAMPUS MINISTRY Center Bldg. 125 ext.2814 BIBLE STUDIES Tue: 12-1 Health 276 - Faith Center . Tue: 11 :30 Cafeteria (inter -varsity) (Christian Fellowship) Thurs: 11-12:30 Health 104 (Re~torat1on) (Campus Ministry) 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 In celebration of Women's History week The Women's program presents the following activities: Monday March 8 A Luncheon to celebrate International Women's Day. Honoring Margie Holland who received the vocational educators award. LCC Boardroom - 11:30 - 1:00 p.m. Tuesday, March 9 "The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter." A film where 5 women talk about working in defense plants in WWII, against a background of old newsreels, advertisements, government propaganda films. LCC Boardroom, 11:30 - 1:00 p.m. Wedensday, March 10 Information table in the cafeteria with books, brochures and articles on women's history.11:30 - 1:00 p.m. "Protecting Your Home & Property" Marcia Morgan, LCC Boardroom, noon Thursday, March 11 Open House in the Women's Awareness Center. Come for free coffee and refreshments to Center Bldg. Room 217, 10:30 - 12:00 p.m. SPRING TERM ............................. HFilms About Town" Film as Literature ENG 197 No Prerequisites Required INSTRUCTORS: Susan Bennett Jack Powell Class Times: Mon. -Wed . -Fri. 10:30 to 11 :30 Tues.-Thurs. 10:30 to 1:00 Tues. Eves 7:30 to 10:30 SEQ.: 717 778 779 Student's will view films at local theatres from such titles as the following: ABSENCE OF MALICE ATLANTIC CITY THE FRENCH LT'S WOMEN ON GOLDEN POND PRINCE OF THE CITY RAGTIME RAIDER'S OF THE LOST ARK REDS ROLLOVER TRUE CONFESSIONS In addition the following films will be shown via videotape for enrichment from 3:00 to 5:00 each Wed., Thu.rs., Fri. IN-LAWS ODD COUPLE SAME TIME NEXT YEAR CHINATOWN PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM CHINA SYNDROME LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR THE GODFATHER MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS FOUL PLAY Fills Arts and Letters Requirement . No Jee charged No Textbook Required Page 10•Ma-reh 4, 1982 - Jltjllla:, 1982 The TORCH · Karate club kick··s ·into ·action by Larry Swanson of the TORCH Karate devotees at LCC now have an inexpensive and safe place to practice their favorite martial art -- the LCC Karate Club. Photo by Larry Swanson LCC's new karate club has something for everybody -Sports Notes have been named co-athletes of the week. Wallerstedt and H ughy used their power to write themselves into the LCC in- Athletes of the Week Toni Wallerstedt and Mike H ughy both collected power lifting records last week and For three dollars a month, roughly one-tenth the cost of joining most local martial arts clubs, any LCC student interested in karate may join the club. The club meets every Sunday in the auxiliary gym tramural record books. Wallerstedt, a 132-pounder, made a clean sweep in her weight class, collecting first place in the squat (175 from noon until 4 p.m. Although most of the club's 40 members have had some karate training, club president Dennis Cruz says, "Anybody can join. By the time they leave, they'll learn something.'' That "something" includes basic blocks, kicks and punches and an introduction to the discipline and concentration karate offers. Club members come from pounds), bench press (100 pounds), tied with Allison Healy for the dead lift title (210 pounds), and collected the overall title (485 pounds). several different karate backgrounds. That, says Cruz, is the purpose of the club. "We have a variety of people to help one another learn karate." And club members will learn to practice karate safely. "My main concern is safety," says Cruz. He says sparring sessions are conducted only after the club's advisor, LCC karate instructor Wes Chamberlain, says a member is ready. All of her wins were new LCC records. Hughy, a 165-pounder, also broke into the record books, winning the dead lift competition with a 460 pound effort. His lift also placed him in the top ten weight rato lifting (2.20). Volleyball Ed Jacobson, the coach of the LCC women's volleyball team the past two seasons, finding it harder and harder to work full-time and coach parttime, turned in his resignation to Athletic Director Sue Thompson Feb. 26. Success abounded in his two years of coaching. In his first season, LCC rolled to a 14-4 OCCAA conference record and third place overall. This year the program really took off, as the Titans went undefeated in league play (18-0), won the NJCAA Region 18 championship and then collected ninth at the national tournament, finishing with a 29-7 overall record. Jacobson was named the Region 18 Coach of the Year. Basketball Q) "-., Pj I Although the LCC men's basketball team had a disappointing 12-15 record this season, three individual Titan players have picked up postseason honors from the OCCAA. Freshman standouts Darren Rice and Mike Cooper have both been selected to the OCCAA' s third team all-league squad, while sophomore teammate Gilbert Crummie received honorable mention. Rice, a 6-2 forward who prepped at North Eugene High School, was the Titan's leading scorer this season with a 15 .2 average. Despite missing the first nine games of the season, Rice ended up tenth in the conference in assists with 56, averaging 3 .5 a game. Cooper, a 6-1 point guard from Crenshaw High School in Los Angeles, Calif., averaged 11.8 points per game this season. He started all 27 Titan games, and averaged 4 rebounds and 2.5 assists a contest. by Terry Rhoads The TORCH March 4 - ~ ' 1982 Page 11 -Around T o w n - - - - - - - - - - - theatre University of Oregon -- Villard Hall, Robinson Theatre, the University presents the production Peer Gyn1. The performances are March 4 - 6. Tickets are $4.50 for the general public, $2.75 for U of O students and senior citizens, and $3.50 for other st udents. For reservations and information, call the University Theatre box office at 686-4191 from noon to 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday. A comedy performed entirely • in German is scheduled to open Monday, March 8, at the University of Oregon's Pocket Playhouse in Villard Hall. Das Konzert by -Hermann Bahr will also run at 8 p.m. March 9 - JO with a 2 p.m. matinee scheduled for March 9. The performances are free. For more in formation call 686-405 l. Oregon Repertory Theatre -- 222 E. Broadway, 485-1946, American Buffalo will be presented March 4 - 7 at 8 p.m. On March 7, a 2:00 p.m. matinee will be shown. Admission will be $3.50 - $7, with reserved seating. For more information and reservations, call the ORT box office, Monday and Tuesday, noon - 5 p.m. and Wednesday - Sunday, noon - 8 p.m. at 485-1946. • movies Springfield Cinema -- 2005 Olympic, 726-9073, Amateur, 6:30, Great White, 6:30, Arthur, 6:00, 7:50, and 9:40, Raiders of the Lost Ark, 5:30, 7:30, and 9:30. Fine Arts -- 630 Main St., 747-2201, Neighbors and Cheap Detective, March 5 - 10. Oakway Cinema -- Oakway Mall, 342-5351, Absence of Malice. March 5 - 10. National -- 969 Willamette, 344-3431, Night Crossing, 7:30 and 9·30, March 5 - 10. Mayflower -- 788 E. I Ith, 345-1022, Ca/igulia 7:40 and 9:30, March 5 - 10. McDonald 1010 Willamette, 344-4343, Boogens, 7:40, March 5-10. Cinema World -- Valley River Center, 342-6536, Chariots of Fire, 5:40, 7:50 and 9:55. On Golden Pond, 5:45, 7:45 and 9:45. Cannery Row, 5:30, 7:35 and 9:40. Shoot the Moon, 6:30 and 9:20. wanted II ill hur lurxe 11·1111den derk in a/1111111 1111,1 1/wpe. ( OIi/ii('/ Jim Ill 941-8884. I ,1111 lool..inl( for a used wheelhilrrow to buy. l'letl\e call ( 111111ie at .N.1-()504. • serv1ees l'lartned l'are111hood has a prexnancy te.11 that is 98 percent uaurate. Call for appoi111men1, .144-94 11. FUl'A \/( ·1R: Reading room open '1-1011. - 1-ri., 7:30 - 9 p.m. Hooh, tapeJ, film. 1122 Alder, .14.1-1657. Free diet am/ n111ririon coumelint: 11·i1h ,pecia/ empl1111iJ 011 rnje 11ml rapid ll'eil(hl los!> and het1/th. ( all llarhara lit 747-51/4(). Piano /enom: fly half hour or hour. Also Fre11ch tutorinx. ( all Joh11 111 .14.1-J 106. I H'ill type lerm pt1pen, le/fen. re.1·11111e\"' for SI a pal(e. ( 111/ l.i11i/a 111 7./7-450/, ex!. 1655. free IIIX prep11ra1io11 help iJ 111'Uilt1hle. ( ome to the .\/1/del/l Hewura ( enter. \1ard1 I I ancl 25 from 7 10 llp.m. l \ I r r SC/100/ ha1 11p~11ir/l(' in pre1t·hoo/ am/ l,,i11dergar1e11. ( er1ij1ed. 11u1ri1io11.1 me11/1 . .\litli11x 1cale fee1. \1011 • f"ri. 7:31) a.m. - 6 p.111. llarlow Hd. area. \o relixio111 a_fli/imion. 15 percent discount 011 }int months childcare with thi.1 ad. 411-1-(JIIJ7. for rent U anted: ',.fllfure, re~ponsihle. roommate. 23rd am/ Je/lers,m. S84 monthly phi!> utilitie1. \o pell or whaccn. /irep/aa. Phone 687-H57 or .145-565() anti {1,I,, j,ir I 'i11ce. HrJllll/f/1(1/e wa111ecl: Comfor111hle cou11try lit-inx 1111 / 1111 ( reek Road in /)ex/er. H 011d heat. 1a1ma, xarden. S97 plus half 111i/ities. Call 937-3155 e1·e11i11x.1 or 34.1-5,Ml daytimes. \l'el,,inl( mmmer roommate /II 1h11re 2 bedroom 1011·11h11/l\e. Fxcellelll loc111io11. 1·er_1· low re11t. For /ii/her information call .4nclrea 111 48./-48/f,. H1111111mate wu111ed: T"'o bedroom apar1me111 half 11 h/(J(·/,, from l of 0. SI lO plus 111ilirie1. ( illl 'Hike Ill fi86-l/.120. l/11u1e11w/e!> neecletl. Bewl/i)i1/ home near Ilene/rick'\ !'ark. H ·asher, dryer, ""'" heclmom. Rent 11el(oliilhle. Call 716-0164 or 683-4157. Roommate ..-,mtecl: /louse ro 1hare. S/f)(J/ monrh p/111 hu~/' ulililies. 1747 U •. 13th. (In quiet alley/. It 11rl.!>lwp, nice yard, !>toraxe, car port. 1111 hu.1 and hil,,epatlB. ( all Tracy at 687-(1193. \1a/e roommale needed for nice .1 bedroom 11111hilehome. Call e,·eni111:s \1011 al 688-0212. for sale Hefriclgerator. Works excellent. S50/he.\"/ offer. Call 343-0418 a/re, 6:.10 p.111. Max's Tavern 550 E. 13th, 485-6731, Los Xplorers, March 6. O'Callahans 440 Coburg Rd., 343-1221, The Boswonh Brothers, March 4 - 6. Kick, March 9 - 11. Bands start at 9:30. Cover charge varies. Duffy's -- 801 E. 13th, 344-3615, Hot Wax, March 5 - 6. The band starts at 9:30. Cover charge is $2.50. The Community Center for the Performing Arts -- 8th and Lincoln, Los Xplorers, will perform on March 12 at 9:30 p.m. Admission will be $2.50. Doors open at 9 p.m. BJ Kelly's -- 1475 Franklin Blvd ., 683-4686, Los Xplorers, March 4. University of Oregon -- On March 4, The University of Oregon Percussion Ensemble II will present a musical smorgasbord at 12:30 p.m. in Room 198. Also on Thursday, organist, John Nunes, will present a student recital at 12:30 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. On March S, The University of Oregon Contemporary Chorus will • perform humorous songs and Broadway rhythm numbers at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. On March 6, Doctoral candidate Jean Cansler will present an organ recital at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. On March 7, The University of Oregon Symphonic Band will perform a concert at 4 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. Also on Sunday, organist Jon Holland will present a doctoral recital S!udent 4rmHr1111!( _flute. ,·uy xoml ,.,,,,,/ition. ~/15. Cull I i,11/a 111 485-5l/35. fi.1 f,,rtf ft1/co11 waxo11. \e11· clu!ch. lir11J..e.1. r11111 xood. \400. .1-15-0'lfHJ t1/ier '.J p .m. or 1n•e~c•11d.1. ( a11on (!I 17 35mm 11·if/1 ./111.1/t. \611. Call f>l/7-l/()63 11/ier 3 p.111. 6.1 l'~rmotl/h lfrfredere. hc•ixe. '!,250 or he11 offer. ( 11/1 716-'.J'.J/f, /or more i11_/11rma1ion. F.\<·elle111 <'1111di1io11 <'011,·h. g/1111 ('11('/./{/i/ tahle. 1111 tique 1e..-in,: m11,·hi11e 1111d ll't1II l11ms:i111:. ( 11/1 M/.1-fd/l for more injorma1i1111. l'11rti11,: 0111 ll'i//1 I II h111 (7!). I em/en. h11111per1. 1e,11,. d111Jr1. tra111i1xle. 111/ hocly 1'llrt1. ( u/1 Hid1 ,11 7./7-757H. Valley River Twin -- 1077 Valley River Dr.,686-8633, Whose Life Is It Anyway? and Absence of Malice, 7:00 and 9:00. Making Love, 8: 15. West 11th Walk-in -- 808 S. Seneca, 342-4142, The Border, 7:30 and 9:20. TA PS, 7 :00 and 9: 15 . Vice Squad and l:.'ye Fur un l:.)e, 7: 15 and 9:00. • mus1e The Lone Star -- (formerly The Place) 160 S. Park, 484-7458, Kristie Lyndell Band, March 4 - March 6. The bands start at 9:30. No cover charge. -Classifieds OJ l ·. HSl:'1 .\ - JO/I.\: .\ummerlyear round. F11rope. \. lmer .. l11,m1ilu. 4Jia. 4/l_/1el,/r. S5fJOto ,1100 1110111hb. Wgh11eei11,:. Free inf,,. JI rite IJ( lll>x 'i].OH-l ( orona Oel ._far. ( A. 9161.'i. Plastic Americans, March 5 - 6. The Burners, March 8. Robert Cray Band March 10. Cover charge varies. Bands start at 8:30 unless otherwise indicated. Queen 1i~e •rnterhed Jr/lme. \SO. ( all 716-'il\lfi. l ndennwcl l ·ii'e m1tm/(// 1_r1,c•11·riter in xre111 co111/iri1111. llw comp/ere 1,,i11x-1i~e w11tl.'rhed with /loor frame. \111/,,e offer. Cull 7-17-5.JWJ. \'mall H cuhic /001 _/ree~er. Ideal for \/1111/1 _!11mi/_1·. Sl./0. See 1111017 \fo111er_r /.11. J-uxene. t /\int: 1i~e 11·a1erhed, new heater, (rame, 1e1 of 1heel\". l ·xcelle111 1l111pe. \lf)(J. ( 1111 .Joel 111 7-17-l lfJl. \loped: 7H J npt1. Greal 1/wpe, !(JO mp!(. \275. ( "" fony at 485-6793. One do~en fre1h font: 11emmetl red r111e1 he11ut!J11lly boxecl. Only HO a do~e11 i11d1uli11x delfrer_r. ( all fill,V-5fJ7fi _fiir more i11j1Jrm111i1111. ltari .J()(J comJmter. (\11111 x11111e m11d1i11e). /la1i<' /11111:uuge. Ctl\.\ t'lle. exm1.1. -'35IJ. ( 11/1 .143-1/565. I eh-el chair. )d5fJ 11ell', 1e/lJ,,r \H5 . .\"11-i,-1•/.1. harrel h/lcl,,. Call /'(I( or John 111 34.1-3/06. 64 111 \qmtreh(lc/,,. R011xh hotly, m111:h l'IIXi11e. \I 75 or he11 olJer. <all /'(If 111 fil/H - }l 7-1. messages Found in U ·est parking /01, friendly yotml( tabby. J can ·1 keep ii. Call l'eggy at 485-(1607. l/rem/11 •• fol,,e '!If to the xre111 11·hitt' 11or1h, you //11\l'r. -- llrml. fo all my in1trut·ton •• l had heller !(el 1111 ···I. " .. \lachia, ·e/li. l>r. ftl\hht111111 -- lleu·ure! ) 111111d, in -· Or. \ch111p1111111. 1'1111111h11 650 1pedal l. '/7(H). ( all 6Hl/-.15 72. I.J. 3./1-.l(J.lt, e1·e11- ( 11ud1, ,·h11ir. 111/1Jmt111 ji,r 1111/y \75. (far/// tone colon). ( u/1 716-5906 after t, p.111. car lfereo 1r11em: l'imll'er ·I \11/ · \1 l'ion eer h11111;er. Four d/lrion 1pe11J..en. \.17.'i ,,, he\/ ,!f.ler. ( all /'1111/ 111 fi-16-()755. l'ioneer ('/111e11e. l'ure ll'ltiu l'er1i1111 t·t1/. H,,,:i\lered. ( all .1-1.1-.106.1 ci/ter fi p.m. I ir1ixh1 11·,md11m·e 5511, headho11rd 1111d fr11111e \ lfJ. ( 111/ 7-16-IH54. autos 75 Vom. S/395. Call 746-1854. Ciel ll 515 rebate on 63 Che1·y pick11p. 5415 cash or 111011e,1_·. Call Bill at 68.1-8/34. 76 ( "lteref/e. /(u11.1 good. ,·ery clean. 51M)(J. Call 74fi-51.U. 111e1 n,ur • /'t>\(,'{llli. IJe,· l1111e •• He 1,,,,,,,.. 11·hy XIIIIJ(. <all ht1i·e Cr11t11/ ( 11rri11Kl1JII /ool,, -a/il,,e -· II here are nm? \lal,,e 1111 11pp11i111me111 here next ..-eek. . .• J>r. ('111111 mini orxan " 'irh 1ynthe1i~er. Come1 ll'itlt 1pe11l,,en am/ 11a11d. .,,,,11 ,ell. \.l'ifl. Call .14.l-'15fi5. /9 i11ch ll / 11 te/e1·i1io11. \40. i11.~1. 011 rn11 ·, ,:o 11/ier... -- /'he Uiw11 -· JI hen ,tic/ yo11 c/epro 1emle11cie1 1t11r1? .. lle,,.are the it~iuh hird and 1hm1 the /rumiou1 hamlennl/ldt! f/.e11 !her 1q11u1h th,,,. /il,,e h11,:1J. /"mid ·· So 1lti1 l,,arma ,·111.fl ret1lh 11 ·or4 ,! \11 ,:lt,c/ .. / .. H. )'Oil _/tJtlllc/ IJ/1( ! 1'1111/a •· I'd /m·e 10 he y1111r neit:hlmr. f lope won . •• l .i11da. /l111chie /loy •· I lore you, hmr 'i \ia,:ra, "'rite 101111! -- l .i11d11 Hey110/ils. South Eugene High School Auditorium -- 19th and Ferry, As its final presentation for the 1981-82 concert season, The Eugene & University Music Association presents the world famous classical piano duo of Richard & John Conti-Guglia. The ContiGuglias will be heard in concert on March 11 at 8 p.m. in the South Eugene High School Auditorium. Ticket prices for the concert are $8 reserved, $6.50 adults; general admis- \/itch·· ) '1111'n, the II/fl und grec/1 11i1lt pi/111.,·1. I ne, er J..11eu· you u·t1re F./. -- I ( t \ . .let/< . •• JI e m•ed to tip wme 1uc/1 1mnni111e. \ee 11111••• /'./· . IJ111 ·icl •• It 11·111 /'./. with c1111dleli,11l11!! -· I'll\ . I 00411111 /or \011/l'lllll' wh11 t/11 1110J1ed1. ( all -l,V4-4fJ'l6. lt111 Hod·· I/ope• .1 ou wul your Ii/<' 111,:etlter. •• l'f. lll'lt' ft1111111y -- .\/'. l,,11m,·/ed111• 11/ 1/011ll'i/e hare II h11J>/J)' I Jo,·t1 _11111 ,·err ,nuch. I/ope it\" lu1_1·. .\h1111·11i •· l 1111 11re 11/lrnn 011 111_1 111i11d . •• I HI/. I\ !hi, the ire(•/,, /lilly 11/adth•r ll'ill 11riJ..e 1111011,.,,- 11111111/lfffinx ho111eholcl? 1/11 llct. I( rie11 ·i11x 1111r11oxmJ1h.1 1111i1_/ie1 1e.11111I /111/, d11e1 ..-,11d1i11,: people,,,,, /iwd tln11i11/\h h1111xer. I 1•rry Hhmule1 •• 0/ 111/ !he /"OH( I Ill·.\ 1/u, , ·11/e\t.'-- Ill. 11111 hull i, H1111 II -- JI ell /1111x time 110 1ee. 1/o"· i1 !he ,:n1 fl/llllflill!I hll\ille11? •• ) IJ/1 old hay h11cl,,i11x huc/tly. H lto1•1 ·er •• Ona a /101er 11111 a/11·11y1 "ltmer. -· dirl. Hew11rcl: r..-o ,i/,·n ri11,:1 Im! \1011. in 1:.1111 hy um•, ·e11 han. l'le111t' mil 7-17-6092. 1·,·e xo1 xo11c/ie1 /or 111/e. II a1d1 _/,,r me. -- I' rl\·. II a/do \111epic4er -- l ·rom 011e c/1111rl,,1111h to 111101her. I 011 ·re a real ho,er, )(•ah. II\! /'fl\ .. Oh the rn1111/e1! l/11H' they thrilled 11u•! rrecoure ,,,_.. certUh'ille alu·a_n. -- /Ion . /\11 •• I had hoped r,111 l,,11e11· .,-1,o I II'{/\! //(II three _rean 1/iflpecl hr? ~I 1101. you l.110"· 11·here lo rea(·h me.•· HF. Kl>K ·· 1/app_r lltul hir1hd11,1· c/11tl!! ,. / o,·e Alaylo/1. 1-riday 12:(J(J all me 6 '.] ", / l'i lb, 11rip /i11· co1111•1r. 1111/ jloor ce111er. \o acne pleu,e. /Jarrel l.y1111 / .onx •• H hal/11 ho1er! 1/app_r hir1h1111_r11·ay. t1a, (,II.I -· I\ thi, H-1·1m1plex the 11111·11·er w i11cre111nl me1110ry:' f)epre11ion? Poor drc11/111io11:' /111/dinx:' II ri11l,,/e1? Spring Term A literary approach 10 1he Bible that explore5 li1erary .form, ufl(/ f.enre, therein, biblical allusions, and modern li1era1Ure in which hib/icul 111.fluence, of pallern, theme, motij; and 1he like. (fills Arts and Le/lers requirement) Lane Community College -- 4000 E. 30th, LCC Theatre, Main Stage, A Benefit Dance Concert for the Music Scholarship Fund will be held on March 12 & 13 at 8 p.m. Danceworks -- 1231 Olive St. The Don Latarski Group(formerly Lon Guitarsky) and Wha1sisna111e will perform on March 5th at 9:30 p.111. The evening is billed as a dance and there will be ample seating for those who wish to listen. Admission is $3 at the door; door will open at 9 p.m. Lane Community College -- 4000 E. 30th, The Lane Dunce Theatre will perform an informal studio concert March 11, 1982 at 4 p.m. in the Auxiliary Gym, PE IOI, at Lane Community College. $1 donation is requested. J.or more information phone Mary Seereiter at LCC ext. 2545 . NOTICE All items for Around Town must be delivered to the TORCH office by Friday at five. Nothing will be accepted after deadline. /Joh \(. -- ) 1111 hn,l..t• tlrt ,,/ernru,. 110,, h/01111 //1(• //oor. (,om/ day. ,•h;' - /Jouc . 1 1 011 ' n• ( '"'"'.I' IJ 11//11111/J •. ( (llll/flt(l//111i11111. /o, ·e 1·11. -· \IC1n/11111•//1111 ·. \ha11·111 - / 'II 11/11·a.n II/ 111_1' /ol'I', - ) 011 ~••t 1\111/tt /<111/<1111'1 111111/c/ /on• , 1111. ) 1111 ·,,. 1111 11111/. 1111' \lath,• 1111r <111</ ht• Ill I I I/( if ut• u,-rt· w.·q11ai11lt!d!.' -- I I I. <""'"" l1<•,1rt I NII. lh,111/..1 /or th,• 111<'11"~•· anti 111111 IH. '"" .-an \Olllt'. -· \(/1 ""'" 11i •· I 1111 ar<' the Jl(I/ . I I I 1111111.' <it cl<' /111 <' 11/ 1111 /1/1·. I 11111, , 1111. \till 11111/(lermx 11hc11.' / \11):KL' \I \11/1/l'(I/I/(' 111,I 11111.' \1111 ht• we'd /11111111('/ht•r . I f'llct. -· l ·1111 h,11 ·1• the , ( ' rt A. /Je11. •• \11<11,·11i - I 1hi11J.. I'"" /1u1111/ 0111 1/,11// II'<' do:• I HI/. a/111111 ti\! II hat \lit/11u•/ <,111</ 111 ,ee r1111 hmJ... 11\ ,1/111111 11111e.' IIC11/,,e1h11/I II h1,ri11,: "11'10111_11111! I U. /\i111 /Jerr -- ••lfere\ /111,l,,inx l'tml •• llt111141 Jiir !he hux """ the /lo..-er. -- I inda. l'erry ll11milto11 •· lle11·are! fla flu fla llt1 Ila .. I-mm !he /e11.\I expeaecl. dance Community Center for the Performing Arts -- 291 W. 8th, 687-2746. On March 6, Contra-Dance with the Oregon Country Dance Orchestra will be taught. Cost will be $2.50. For more information call the CCPA at 687-2746 or 343-8250. 111 .11111 l.11/... • lla11- d11II. ( 11/i11,1r1 < /uh J ia l're,iclent •• f/o,r n111 w hot 1111111111/ 1p/1111er? •· ./111e· Jame1 -- rh,111/,,1 _li,r tlll' hi,:lt. -· ( ;,"'"· sion, $5 students, $4 children under 16, seniors, $4.50. For more information call 484-7242. /)(•11. '\-lm11 1111d l>ac/ •• Thanl,,s /or all the 11111p11r1, help. .s:11iclll11ce 1111</ lo,·e. I really do /111 ·e yo11! .. I i11d<1. ''THE BIBLE AND LITERATURE'' MWF 0900 Center 476 Instructor: Delta Sanderson Seq. 786 at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. On Sunday evening, composition student Richard Ross will present a graduate qualifying recital at 8 p.m. in Room 198. The EMU Cultural Forum is proud to present jazz saxophone innovator Ornelle Coleman and his band Prime Time in their only Oregon appearance on Sunday evening at 8 p.m. for one show in the EMU Ballroom on the University of Oregon campus. Tickets are $6.50 for U of 0 students and $7 .50 for general public. They can be purchased at the EMU Main Desk, Everybody's Records in Eugene, and Earth River (Diana's) on the Mall in Eugene. Call 686-4373 for more information On March 8, The University Chorale and the Oregon Wind Ensemble will perform at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. On March 9, The University of Oregon Jazz Lab Band I and I I will perform at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. General admission will be $2 with a $1 charge for students and senior citizens at the door. On March 10, violinist Carolyn Carver will present a doctoral recital at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. yo11 ,lo it f1111111r11 •• /'h1111I,, \ }or /(II/ llil(hl. 1 ·11 \l't' _I Oil 11111111r,Olt'. I hi1 time 1111 qu1111/11tle1. •· Oirt. Aim li<'rr -- 1·111 011 the ··111111ide /ool,,inf( ;,,·· •· H1111c/11II. Hwul_r-pie •• II hy did11 ·1 r,111 l,,110,·k .' I H'1111/cl h111·e 11pe11e1/ the dom. •· I l,,inl,,y hi1ch. llappy hirt/11/ay -I/IC. I lm ·r _ro11. Uuttt/111/ -- / '111 1101 tt It ttl c111111H1n•. Ne111!'111her, .I 1111 (ll!l'l<'fl:' -· \q11irrt•fr. /''rt'\ -- e,·er 011 /1111 H't'fl. ( e 111,, \e\tt'\f /ooltin.t! er,•/(l\ht 11·c· ·re ·an u·e touch 1he111 "'""''""".> 1 \ J /11,lmir \11/,11/,,111 · I 1mt'ly llt'ar/1 ( /11h lll('lllhN1hip drh·t• h,•xi1111i111,: \oon! /Jt•tuil\ to fo/lo ••·. J<e-.·arcl o.JJ,~rt•tl /or \1111\hine and u·ar111th. 111/ort.'c/ po11c•recl 1111cl/mli11!( /1111! •· I I I. I I -· I rn11 ·1 wait /or 1111r ore1•l,,1•11c/ 1111 the c111111. I hope ii rai111. •• /)(, . \./arc11, -- } 011 're I,, 1111" . I ,11·e ya. -- tht• H lit!\/ 111,nf 11111t.ho " " ' " I)(, ,( /\ II. /\II •· .li11.u ln•ller m,11·<' /C11/ Where can you find: ,n• or",. ,..,//. •• I>,\ /\. I II th<' ff11h1'rl1 ./t1111ily -- I 111i11 ,-,m! /'II h,• th,•re \0011. •- l 1aula. \te11/en -- rime,,, party! I t11/ i1111<• -- I . Ft!. /or 1J111• 11111111/t! 1-rl'e J)(l/1\. /Joht·r111a11 1111.J? l'icl,, 11111n ,,,,,.._ ( all \lctrlf!lll' Ill <J.l'i-!.l'II. Ill d1111i/i1•c/ 111lrerti1i11x /'i 11111'1/1 ,,, 11111/er are /re,· /i,r I ( ( 1t11tle11l1. I e111 ·(• 1111111e and pl11111e 1111111h(•r 1111,/ t•le1,,· ,ttl, in e111 ·d111w 111111iile /(}/(( II 11//in· hr I ml,11 111 ' (1,111. What is: • The mark <~l Cain? • A "Judas"? • ., I ,cape Y,oat? I ,n • a "doubting Thomas"? •forbidden fruit? •filthy Lucre? What is the source of: •un eye for un eye? •u 1rnU in sheeps c!Olhing? •1he salt q/ 1he eanh? • The Lillie Foxes? • Green Pastures? • Measure for Measure? • !he fu1 <d the fund? • /he mo/ <d all evil? •a fly in 1he ointme111? • East of Eden? • Generation of Vipers? • Giants in the Earth? Page 12 March 4, 1982 - ~ ' 1982 The TORCH -001niu01 Gatheru01------Dance theatre performs Lane Dance Theatre will perform an informal tudio concert March 11 at 4 p.m. in the auxiliary gym, P.E. 101 at LCC. A $1 donation is requested. Rent subsidies available Elderly and handicapped persons who rent a one-bedroom apartment in Lane County may qualify for a new rent program. Anplications and further information may be obtained at the Housing Authority offices, 177 Day Island Rd., Eugene; telephone number 1s 342-6081. The event will be held at the Eugene Public Library on Tuesday March 9, at 7:30 p.m. Admission is free. For more information call 687-8121. Cope with fatal illness Transitions will be presenting a free public presemation on the psychological issues related to cancer and cardiac patients. Transitions is a center that provides counseling to individuals with life-threatening illness and their families and friends. The event will be held at the Eugene Public Library on March 8 from 7 to 9 p.m. For details, call 343-1937. Learn crime prevention "Protecting Your Home and Property" is the topic of the March 10 LCC 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. Pcr<,om intcn'.\ted in learning how to teach h1gli'>h to spcal--crs of other language'> are in \ ited to a laubach method worbhop on March 5, 6, and 13. Held at the LCC downtown center, the co)t of the \\-Ori--~hor, is $6. Applications arc available from Agnes Best at 345-7815. N apalese slide show Accounting scholarships worth $500 each will be awarded to 10 students this year by the Scholarship Foundation of the Oregon Associa1ion of Public Accountants (OAPA). Raymond Cass, foundation chairperson, said ~cholarship application forms must be completed and returned to him by April I, 1982. Applications may be obtained by writing to Cass at 1117 S.E. 9th St., Albany, OR 97321, and by enclosing a self-addressed, stamped emelopc. l·d\\ in Hernhaum \\-ill present a slide/ lecture entitled "Hidden Valleys of the Himalayas in I ibctan Art and Mythology" on March 4 at 8 Latin American lecture Journalist to speak Nid Riua of Amnesty International will be speaking at Eugene Council on Human Rights in Latin America on March 9. The talk will begin at 7:30 at 1236 Kincaid St. George Black, a British freelance journalist and consultant to the Nicaraguan Ministry of Education, will speak at Emerald Baptist Church, 19th anq Patterson on March 5. Author of articles and books about Central American politics, his talk will begin at 7:30. For details, call Kirk Lambert or Mary Price, CALC office, 485-1755. Illegal whaling discussed Greenpeace is sponsoring a film and talk entit led, "Pirate Whaling," an account of illegal Japanese whaling based on research done by Greenpeace lni.:!r.n:iti -:::nal. Polish crisis talk Nicholas Andrews, former Deputy Chief of Mission at the American Embassy in Warsaw, Poland. will give a lecture on the Polish crisis, titled "Trouble in Workers' Paradise" at 12:30 p.m. in the Erb Memorial Union's Forum Room on M,m'. JO. Nicola and Tim Foster will be joined by the Creative Institute Dancers in a dazzling program of dance, ranging from semi-classical to jan, soul, rock and tap. Proceeds from the $3 ticket sales will benefit the LCC Music Scholarshiop Fund. The Concert is scheduled for March 12 and 13 at R p.m. in the LCC Theatre/ Main Stage. Dr. William Suggs, ESD planetarium director, will focus attention on the alignment of the planets which will occur on March 10, 1982. The lecture-demonstration will take place on March 5 at 8 p.m. at the Planetarium/Science Center in Alton Baker Park. Admission will be $1. For further information, call Lane ESD Planetarium at 683-4675. Scholarships available The tree e\cnt will focw, on myths and hidden ~actuaries of the Tibetan people which re'>emblc the fictional Shangri-La. It will be held in Gcrlingcr Lounge on the University of Oregon campm. l·or more information, call the EMU cultural forum at 686-4373. Benefit dance performance Planet alignment lecture Learn to tutor foreigners run . members regarding program topics, speakers, field, trips, etc. Charter members will receive a reduction in fees which include monthly subscription to "OM," a trade magazine. Inquire at the MicroComputer lab in Health 201 for further information. Instructor of the Year award voting opens El Salvador class offered Nominees for the LCC Instructor of the Year A ward are now being accepted by the Office of Instruction. All LCC instructors both full and part-time who have taught here for one year or more are eligible for the award. LCC students and staff members may submit nominations. Nomination forms are available at departmental offices and the Office of Instruction. Deadline for nominations is Thursday, March 18, at 4 p.m. The award recipient is selected from those nominated by a committee appointed by Dean of Instruction Gerald Rasmussen. The award is to be presented at the May 12 meeting of the LCC Board. Last year's winner was Jim Evans of the Business Department. Social Science 199 (Tues. and Thurs. at I I :30 a.m.) spring quarter will focus on US policy toward El Salvador. For more information please contact Dave Croft in the Social Science Department or Jc,omc Garger in the Language Arh Department. DPSA seeks members The newly formed Data Processing Student Asrnciat1on seeks . input from pr9spect1ve ,m ::, a, 0 0 3, 3 -- ~ ):, ;t:f · c:: 0- a c.., ~-'< . ::J 0 Q. co CG co r .J (niiJ fnnJ c:::::::t (Q 't) Cs ))