Lane
Community
Collese
Vol. 22, No . 21 April 15, 1982 - April 21, 1982

4000 E. 30th Ave. Eugene, OR 97405

Stormy weather
predicted for LCC
budget future
by Larry Swanson
of the TORCH

In years past, Oregon's
community colleges could ride
out the storms of the state's
economy in the safety of the
academic harbor.
Community colleges, along
with the State System of
Higher Education, were
isolated from the rise and fall
of the state's eco~omy by a
breakwater of steady state
support and, in the case of
community colleges, a reliable
property tax collection rate.
But Oregon's latest
economic hurricane has shattered the breakwater. And for
next year's LCC students that
means limited enrollment,
fewer instructors, a smaller
support staff and cutbacks in a
variety of services.
And
for
LCC
administrators it means a projected $1. l million shortfall
for the 1982-83 school year.
Three major factors combined to put LCC administrators on fragile fiscal
footing_ as they prepare next
year's budget.

• The Legislature cut LCC's
1982-83 state funding by
$779,000 at its special budgetbalancing session which ended
March 1. _
• Property tax collection
rates have fallen as more Lane
County residents have felt the
pinch of Oregon's depressed
economy.
• And college administrators
have predicted higher
operating expenses next year.
State funding and property
taxes make up about 70 percent of LCC's operating
budget. Tuition provides
about 20 percent. The remaining 10 percent comes from a
variety of sources, including
grants and interest earned on
investments. ,
As the first step toward closing the $1. 1 million gap, LCC
administrators prepared a list
of possible cuts in next year's
budget. This list was based on
"decision
packages"
presented by the managements
of all sectors of the college.
Bert Dotson, assistant to
LCC Pres. Eldon Shafer,
outlined prior to the April 14
LCC Board of Education

Photo by Larry Swanson

LCC spinning and weaving students' curriculum expanded April 9 to include the whol
process -- from lamb to loom. Quasar, a lamb owned by one of the students, strutted his
stuff in the Math and Arts Building exhibit hall and then strolled through the spinning and
weaving classroom, apparently oblivious to the fate that awaits him when his fleece reaches
cutting length later this spring.

meeting how this list of
"decision packages" would
affect sections of the college if
it is adopted as it now reads.
The school would serve about
1500 fewer students, reduce
several services and dip into
the reserved contingency funds
used for emergencies.
And at the LCC Board
meeting it was discovered that
between 75 to 85 employees

would lose their jobs.
Shafer told the board that
another remedy to offset the
shortfall would involve
reopening settled union contracts to freeze or defer wage
increases. This would result in
a $1.6 million savings for the
college. Union representatives
at the meeting strongly opposed the freeze.
Board member Larry Perry

suggested another alternative
involving extra earned interest
and contingency fund money
that could generate as much as
$300,000.
The board postponed until
its May 12 meeting decisions
about how to offset the shortfall. Discussions between the
administration and union officials are hoped to produce
suitable alternatives.

LCC union leaders oppose wage freeze move
by Ron Kelley
of the TORCH

Renegotiated agreement plan gets cold shoulder

''These figl!res change
everytime I talk to these people (administration officials)," Kocher told board
members. "The last time I

talked with these people we
were talking about 6 people (to
be laid off) ... Now we're talking about 75 to 85 people. I
think we're playing a numbers
game, and I don't like it."
And Currin added, "All of
a sudden it all gets changed
around, and we're told what
we're all going to save if we
(employees) don't take wage
increases."
She said that classified
employees would be the
hardest hit in the administration's proposed layoffs (26 to
31 of those to be cut). She
hinted that the college had

• Is there justice for mentally ill patients? A fourpart series concludes on

• An LCC appearance by
local dancers may be the
last of its kind for quite ·

• An entire generation
will miss John Beluhsi's
unique brand of humor. See

page 5.

awhile. See story. page 8. ·.......

the LCC Education AssociaUnion leaders angrily option (faculty) and the LCC
Employees
Federation
posed LCC Pr~sident Eldon
Shafer's suggestion that they
(classified, non-faculty)
give up or defer promised
agreed to a 5 .5 percent hold in
wages, fewer students could
wage increases at the LCC
Board of Education meeting enroll and the quality of services would suffer.
April 14.
Shafer
proposed
renegotiating
union
In addition, he said 75 to 85
employees
would lose their
agreements as a means to
balance a projected $I. I . jobs.
million shortfall for fiscal
The two unions' contracts
1982-83. Wage freezes would
now call for 6.7 percent wage
generate $1.6 million in savincreases, which are I percent
ings yielding a $500,000
less than the Portland Consurplus.
sumer Price Index.
Shafer claimed that unless
John Kocher, president of

~::]:!i i! • Student
Service
tI~:l:l Associates are changing the
~I!i l meaning of 'counselor.' See

the LCCEA, said there will be
a time when his association
will "accept a cut (in wages) ..
.but that time is not right
now.''
He and Gail Currin, presi. dent of LCCEF, angrily accused the administration of game
playing. Kocher and Currin
claimed they weren't informed
by the administration of the
severity of the job cuts.

1.:. ···· ,<.ysuxmr<r<C:.,,.n;::A:."">:.,Jr<JPi +eJ~fl':'f\bFSiflfifir...
ory. page 4.

:,G~:/~Z"

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singled
out
classified
employees to gain .leverage in
new contract negotiations
which begin next week.
Shafer said that no programs or departmental activities would suffer if the 5.5
percent roll-back in wages was
accepted by the unions. He
also asked union officials to
consider, as an alternative to a
complete freeze, a four and a
half month delay before implementing employee raises.
"During this recession
unusual
measures
are
necessary," Shafer said. "Its
time we showed the communiTurn to WAGES, page 3

• LCC's baseball team is
making a strong run at this
year's OCCAA champion-

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Page 2 April 15,' 1982 - A-m'fl ~t-, 1982 The TORCH

FREE FOR .ALL

No sense in building more··a-rms

"The first witness before
the committee today will be
the Secretary of Poverty,
Casper burger.
Wyne
Welcome, Mr. Secretary.''

''Thank you, Senator. As
you know, I'm here to answer
any questions you may have
about our budget request for
$1.6 trillion over the next six
years to rebuild the nation's
poverty defense system."
"Well, Mr. Secretary, some
folks are saying $1.6 trillion 1s
a lot of money."
"That's true, Senator. But I
must warn the committee that
America today is facing a window of vulnerability. Unless
we act vigorously and
courageously, our country,
our institutions, our very way
of life will be consumed in a
poverty holocaust."
• d OW
f 'T h"1S
0 f
W In
~ ulnerability . . . "
'

,I

"The facts are, Senator,
that the Russians have been
spending twice the percentage
of their gross national product
as we have on poverty
defenses. Futhermore, poverty
is proliferating throughout the
world. Unless we once again
become strong and secure and
achieve at least poverty parity
with the enemy, we are courting disaster."

• • •
"And how do you propose
spending this $1.6 trillion, Mr.
Secretary?''

"First of all, our poverty experts at the Hexagon have
determined that we need at
least 10,000 MX randomly
rotating school cafeterias to
replace the old stationary
Minuteman II fast-food lunchers."
'' R~ndomly rotating?''
"That's not definate, yet.
We're also considering installing them deep underground,
aboard ·aircraft or on all the
ships at sea. But I'm confident
that once we build them, we'll
find some place to put them."
''I'm sure you will, Mr.
Secretary. Now about this
item for 6,000 new M-1 school
buses at $2.5 million per bus ..
"
"Yes, that was originally
$25,000 per bus, but we had a
few cost overruns. I will say,
however, that they'll be the
finest school buses in action
anywhere. And the same holds
true for the $1.1 million highspeed bulldozer that will accompany each bus to push it
uphill as their transmissions
are quite delicate. But we
think the tanker trucks that
will go along to refuel the
buses and bulldozers should
come in much cheaper.»
"I suppose you have to cut
corners somewhere, Mr.
Secretary. ''
"Yes, we're quite cost conscious at the Hexagon these
days. For example, the $40
billion we've budgeted for our
new B-1 gilt-edged certificates
to replace our present obsolete
food stamps should suffice until the new 'Stealth' gold credit

#121..kJL-

CPS

WE'VE GOT TO . -P

B\i-E.
iKE

au~~,
-

~,m

I

0

t
l

s
'§

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-

_I

"&'ToP COMP\.MN\NG
cards come on line in the
mid-1990s.''
"Stealth credit cards?"
'' Being invisible, we feel
they may be the ultimate antipoverty weapon. Then, to save
money, we're taking four old
huge New Deal povertyfighting programs out of
mothballs, the NRA, the
AAA, the CCC and the
WPA."
No one remembers. But we
should be able to modernize
them for a couple of billion
apiece and have the only four
New Deal programs in the

iWr.J.\.OW- 'TM\& \S r0R YOUR OWN GOOC!''
world. Then, too, we
desperately need to replace our
outmoded Social Security
System with a new longerrange Pershing I I pension
plan; we must contract for at
least l 00,000 heat-seeking
Sidewinder IV missives to seek
heat for heat seekers; and we
have to at least quadruple our
chemical warfare research to
develop new weapons in the
unending battle against
disease. It's a matter of national survival.''
"I'm sure no one would
question your budget requirements, Mr. Secretary.

But it will mean cutting back
on nuclear arms and some
folks feel there's no sense
building a stronger system if
we don't have the arms to defend it."
"Well, Senator, over at the
Hexagon we say there's no
sense building more nuclear
arms if we don't have a system
to defend."

(Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. 1982)

Prof slams Argentine .governm·e nt
The Argentine invasion of
the Falkland/Malvinas Islands
on April 2 was a move by the
military government to deflect
attention from mounting
domestic problems, a University of Oregon expert on 20th

,

"

century Argentine history
says.
David Tamarin, visiting
assistant professor of Latin
American History, said the
sudden attack occurred only
three days after the first mass

The TORCH
EDITOR: Ron Kelley
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Jeff Keating
INFORMATION EDITOR: Paula Case
PHOTO EDITOR: Andrew Hanhardt
STAFF REPORTERS: Da\id Bowm,
David Brown, Susan Crosman, Belinda
Terry Rhoads, Marty Schwar1bauer, Mike Sim,, Larry Swanson
STAH PHOTOGRAPHERS: Michael
Bailey, Monte Meu, Larry Swanson,
Marty S,:hwarzbauer, Geno: White
PRODUCTION MANAuER: Timothy
Swillinger
PRODUCTION ADVISOR: Lesa Carmean
PRODUCTION: Paula Case, Lauri Geo:r.
Caryn Jacobson, Jeff Keating, Bonnie
Nicholas, Linda Reynolds, Mike Sim,,
Tim Swillinger, Gene White.
CARTOONIST AND GRAPHIC ARTISTS: Marvin Denmark, William
OiMarco, Joyce Heuman, Bill Lee
INFORMATION ASSISTANT: Bedy
Mach
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Jan
Brown
ADVERTISING ASSIST ANTS: Caryn
Jacobson, Krista Barker
COPYSETTER: Linda Johns
RECEPTIONIST: Linda Reynolds

...

DISTRIBUTION: Mike Sim,

The TORCH is a student-managed
newspaper, published on Thur~days,
September thr-0ugh June.
News stories are compressed, concise
reports, intendo:d 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 to: The TORCH.
Room 205 Center Building, 4000 E. 30th
Ave. Eugene, Or 97401. Phone 747-4501,
ext. 2654.

....

demonstrations against the
ruling junta since the military
coup in 1976. He believes the
attack was orchestrated to rally the people around a strong
nationalistic cause in hopes of
stemming growing internal
dissension.
"By seizing the Malvinas
Islands, the government was
consciously attempting to
deflect public attention, at
least temporarily, from the
domestic, political and
economic crisis, and to rally
the masses around the blue
and white colors of the Argentine flag,'' he said.
Tamarin, who spent a year
in Argentina on a Fulbright
fellowship in 1973, said he
believes the government's actions will ultimately backfire,
but at the present moment, the
closer British warships come
to the Falklands, the stronger
Argentine national sentiment
grows.
"The Falkland/Malvinas
issue is merely symbolic of a

very long-standing and important component of Argentine
nationalism that has traditionally identified Britain's
domination over the Argentine
economy during the last century and first three decades of
this century as the cause of
Argentina's uneven and
dependent development," he
said.
Tamarin explained that the
most important symbol of this
domination was Britain's
ownership of the railroads and
control of Argentina's meat
and agricultural exports. The
British were accorded certain
privileges in Argentina's
economy, he said, such as
guaranteed returns on the
railroads and a host of other
privileges in exchange for
maintaining a favorable level
of exports to Britain.
"It should be pointed out
that prior to World War I the
Argentine people considered
themselves an informal part of
the British empire, but after

the war and the depression,
Britain started to evoke the
imperial
of
doctrine
preference and began to concern themselves more with
Canada and Australia than
with Argentina.''
Today, Argentina is the
world's leader in runaway inflation at more than 120 percent. According to the Latin
America Weekly Report, a
news digest published in London, real wages in the last
quarter of 1981 fell 19 .2 percent and the industrial gross
domestic product was down
11.4 percent from the same
period last year.
The current military regime
has proven to be unsuccessful
in solving the country's
economic problems and, according to Tamarin, "an increasing factionalism is growing within the military government and the civilian society
against the line being pursued
by President Leopoldo
Galtieri. ''

The TORCH April 15, 1982 - At)ril 21, 1982 Page 3

On the Wire
Compiled by Larry Swanson
of the TORCH
from AP wire service reports

Falkland Islands blockaded

SOUTH ATLANTIC -- A spokesman for Argentina's
coast guard says that two Argentine gunboats have run
the British blockade around the Falkland Islands.
In London, the British Parliament held an emergency
meeting today to discuss the issue. Foreign Secretary
Francis Pym said Argentina severely miscalculated the
international repercussions of invading the British colony.
The Argentines maintain that they have simply
retaken territory that belongs to them.
Portland says 'no' to nuclear weapons

PORTLAND -- The city council ;\pril 14 endorsed a
congressional resolution that calls for a freeze on production and deployment of nuclear weapons.
-Portland became the largest US city to endorse a
nuclear arms freeze by a four to one vote. Mayor Frank
Ivancie said he wouldn't endorse the resolution because
he doesn't feel the council has enough information
about nuclear arms.
The Portland resolution also endorses public participation in Ground Zero Week, a series of events
scheduled around the country next week aimed at
educating the public on nuclear weapons.
The congressional resolution is sponsored by Senators
Mark Hatfield of Oregon and Edward Kennedy of
Massachusetts.

Military equipment sales decision irks Peking

New ideas for old clothes
by Paula Case
of the TORCH

Approximately 500 items of
clothing for children, men and
women are available free for
LCC students and staff at the
"Clothing Exchange."
A newly formed coalition
held their grand opening April
12 and 13. Marna Crawford,
Campus Ministry assistant,
says that many attending were
surprised to discover the
amount and variety of items
available.
The coalition, formed at the
end of winter term, wants to
help students and others
defray rising costs of living.
The coalition includes Campus
Ministry, Student Activities,
the Student Resource Center,
the Women's Awareness
Center and the LCC
Employees Federation.
Although the Ca'mpus
Ministry originated the idea,
other coalition members joined to aid with the operating
costs of the exchange. Since
Campus Ministry is a religious
institution, it was not eligible
to have work-study positions
or receive any other financial
help from LCC. By forming
the coalition, an assistant
could be hired and money
could be raised on campus.
Crawford also says she is
pleased "to get other involvement. If we all work together,
that's better."
Rev. Jim Dieringer of Campus Ministry is encouraged
about the exchange. But he is
concerned that "the word exchange turns people away."
Dieringer wants to make it
clear that people do not have
"to give clothes to get
clothes." The exchange is free
and not limited to LCC
students and staff.

Pho10 by Andrew Hanhardt

Racks of used clothing provide a wide selection

Dieringer encourages
anyone who has clothes they
never wear to contribute them
to the exchange. People who
contribute will receive a
receipt for tax deduction purposes. Clothes are accepted in
any form. He only asks that
they are clean.
The clothing exchange will
sponsor several unusual events
during the term. Basque
dancers from Idaho will perform, and the exchange will
host dances, barbeques,
backgammon tournaments
and a 272-mile Motorcycle
Poker Run.

Campus Ministry hopes to
raise enough money to hire
another staff member next
term to keep the clothing exchange running smoothly.
The clothing exchange is
located in Room 301 of the
Health and PE Building. The
hours of operation are M, W,
F from 9 to 11 a.m. and T, TH
from IO a.m. to 2 p.m. Information can be obtained by
calling 747-4501, ext. 2814.
Dieringer hopes the clothing
exchange will also be open one
day a week during the summer
term.

LCC student profile changing

WAGES

,n111111uc<l from pag..- I

ty ... we wiil provide increased
services at a time when its
most needed."

posal were new to him and
that he needed time to respond.

However, Kocher said, in a
prepared letter to the board,
''In 1980-81 LCC pay was
lower
than
SWOCC,
Chemeketa, Clatsop and
Clackamas (colleges)." And
he contrasted the union's 6. 7
percent increase to an expected
7.4 percent increase in Social
Security checks in July.
When board member
Catherine Lauris asked
Kocher for an alternative to
the administration's proposal,
he said the figures in the pro-

But in his prepared letter he
supported voter approval of a
new tax base in November to
ward off what may be a $4.5
million deficit in 1983-84 and
to preserve jobs and services.
The discussion was tabled
until the next board meeting
May 12.
In other action the board
welcomed the newly elected
board members, Mary Unruh
and Robert Bowser, who will
begin their terms in July.

Students enrolled in credit
classes at Lane Community
College have changed
statistically over the last 10
years.
Average age is up from 23 to
26, attendance by women is up
I l O percent, and the minority
student population is slightly
larger in number. More
students attend part time,
fewer full time, and the
average course load is slightly
lighter.
The changes are noted in a
report from LCC's Productivity Center. It focuses on
students enrolled in credit programs from 1971-72 through
1980-81.
Highlights include:
• More women than men attend LCC. The opposite was
true in 1971-72, when the student population was 58.4 percent male -and 41.4 percent
female. In l 980-81, women accounted for 53 percent of

LCC's students.
• Students in the 62-andover age group grew from
eight in 1971-72 to 118, for a
1,375 percent increase.
• In 1971-72, credit students
2,1-and-under made up 53 .4
percent of the LCC student
population. That decreased to
38.6 percent in 1980-81. The
18-21 age group still provides
more students than any other
-- 34.9 percent. Next was the
22-25 age group, with 18.8
percent, followed by the 26-29
group with 14.4 percent.
• Sixty-three percent more
full-time students attended
LCC in 1980-81 than in
1971-72.
• Although a majority of
students carry full-time loads,
it's a slimmer majority than in
1971-72. In that year, 71'.9 percent of LCC's credit students
attended full time. That
declined to 57 .6 percent in
1980-81.

• The average course load in
1971-72 was 11.8 credits; in
1980-81, it was 10. 7 credits.
More students are taking 1 to 3
credits -- up 229.8 percent over
the IO years, and 4 to 6 credits
-- up l 12.4 percent. At the
other extreme. students taking
more than 20 credits have
grown 127 .3 percent. Students
in the middle credit load
ranges have grown more
moderately in number than
those at either end of the scale.
The number of students
with permanent addresses in
Lane County made up 85 percent of the 1971-72 student
population; this same group
made up 78. l percent of the
1980-81 student body.
Non-Oregonians grew from
2.1 percent of the total student
population in 1971-72 to 4.6
percent in 1980-81. And
Oregonians from outside Lane
County grew from 12.8 percent of the population to 17.3
percent.

Page 4 April 15, 1982 - Api:il 21-,, 1982 The TORCH

Student associates·: act' Os h91p·e rs
by David Brown
of the TORCH

· "I didn't want to talk to
anybody,"
remembers
Toshiya Yamada, "especially
not people in Counseling,
because my English wasn't too
good." That isolation made
school very boring, says
Yamada.
This year though, as a Student Service Associate,
Yamada gives other students
the support he needed.
Tim Blood of Counseling
says, "I see them (associates)
as twenty individual extensions of the Counseling
Department." He says
associates refer students to a
variety of LCC services while
on the bus, in the cafeteria, or
in class, which counselors

often cannot do.
"They (associates) can often
do things that do not require a
counselor, but do require
somebody with good communication skills and a
knowledge of the campus
facilities,'' says Blood. "They
are best described as paraprofessionals."
And Blood adds that returning students have a chance to
apply for 10 to 12 openings for
next year's associate staff.
Applicants need to have
"flexibility, a genuine interest
in helping other people, a
good familiarity with the LCC
campus, and the ability to
work with an enjoyably
diverse student population,"
Blood says.
Interested persons should
apply at the counseling desk

near the second floor lobby of
the Center Building by the
April 30 deadline.
Like most students,
associates begin the term at
registration. But, unlike most
students, they don red t-shirts
that boldly state '' Ask Me''
and are ready to assist registering students with LCC procedures.
Says associate Beth Hurd,
"I've gotten students (at
registration) that have been
crying. And you have to kind
of bring them back into
realities and work with them."
After
registration,
associates devote much of
their time to the Career Information Center, their home
base. At the CIC they perform
tasks including assisting

college when it was founded in
1965 and currently teaches in
the college's Energy Management Technician and Residential Energy Analyst programs,
which he helped to develop.

bachelor's degree from Pacific
Lutheran
(Parkland,
Washington); a master's from
Syracuse
University,
(Syracuse, New Yark), and a
PhD from Cornell University
(Ithaca, N. Y .).

students, up-dating resource
bibliographies and posting
posters, says Phyllis Ryan,
CIC director.
Ryan is openly impressed by
their creativity. "We try to
come up with different things
each term,'' she explains.
"We're going to have an information booth in the
cafeteria this term."
But associates also extend
their services to aid counselors
on special projects, assist in
Human Development classes,
and help international
students adapt comfortably to
North American society, says
Hurd.
This term Hurd is taking
notes for a disabled student in
a class- in which Hurd was also
interested. The added bonus,

Hurd says, is "I get paid for
going to class.''
New associates will begin
training in LCC's Heceta
House facilities near the
Heceta lighthouse on the coast
during the first weekend
following finals week -- June
12 and 13.
At Heceta House associates
will focus on building teamwork, understanding differences in other's values and
developing communications
skills.
Then, after a summer
break, associates will reunite
on August 30 to learn how
LCC services and procedures
work. This training extends
through September and includes on-the-job experience
with new _student ori_entation
classes and registration.

Gubrud honored as this year's top instructor

Allan Gubrud has been
named LCC's Outstanding Instructor of the Year for 1982.
Gubrud is a science instructor at LCC. He came to the

TOMS

POOL&GAMES
10 Pool Tables
Foos Ball Tables
& Air Hockey
40 Pin Ball
& Video Games
Donkey Kong, ,Frogger
Pac -Man & more

Gubrud was selected for the
award from
nominees
representing all instructional
divisions of the college. He
will receive a plaque at the
May 12 meeting of the LCC
Board of Education.
Gubrud graduated from
University High (Eugene) in
1952 and, from 1956 to 1965,
taught science and math in the
4-J district. He has a

{fresh cut potatoes)

Plus FREE med. Pepsi

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Springfield
747-9294

Gubrud is a member of
LCC's Energy Management
Task Force and in 1980 obtained funding from the State

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Burger Basket
• Special
Includes Fries

In 1976, he was awarded a
$137,400 grant by the National
Science Foundation to develop
audio-visual science learning
modules which are now used
in some of LCC programs.

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of Oregon to develop a twoyear Energy Management
Technician Program and a
one-year Residential Energy
Analyst Program at LCC. To
date, he has obtained some
$237,000 in grants to support
these programs.
Gubrud was nominated for
the Instructor - of the Year
Award by colleagues and
students. In nominating him, a
colleague wrote, "He has consistently gone beyond the call
of duty to provide excellent instruction and innovative
courses for students in the
Energy Management Program. He volunteered his time
to write grants, organize
workshops, and help students
individually. His classes are up
to the minute with current information in a constantly
changing field."

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A student wrote, ''Dr.
Gubrud gives 150 percent of
himself in his effort as an
educator. He is dedicated to a
student's learning ... "
LCC's Outstanding Instructor award was first given in
1976. Any LCC staff member
or student ·is eligible to
nominate an instructor. The
final selection is made by a
committee appointed by the
dean of instruction and includes previous winners, LCC
students and administrators.
Past winners have been
Sheila Juba, Language Arts,
1976-77; Leland Halberg,
Mathematics, and Jay
Marston, Science, 1978-79;
Freeman Rowe, Science,
1979-80; and Jim Evans,
Business, 1980-8 J.
Other finalists for this
year's award were Susan
Cooley, Health and P.E.;
Richard Eno, Business; Velma
lesser, Business; Milt Madden, Social Science; and
Albert Rowe, Welding.

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ASLCC Student Government?

Pick up information packets at Student Activities
or room 4 79 Center Bldg.

POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
PRESIDENT
VICE PRESIDENT
TREASURER
CULTURAL DIRECTOR
and nine SENA TOR/AL positions
Deadline for filing 4pm April 15th

******

The TORCH April 15, 1982 - hpril iH, 1982 Page 5

Medical justice for the mentally ill
Feature

by Susan Crosman

of the TORCH

"One time they locked me
in security for about a half
hour because I was asking for
too many things. I was
asking for bobby pins and a
comb and shampoo and they
got tired of me asking for
stuff.
"/ had to go to the
bathroom at the time. But
they wouldn't let me out so I
went on the floor. They said
that if I didn't clean it up,
they would lock me up
longer. I cleaned it up. "
''Justice,'' repeats Leslie
Terry, a former mentally ill
patient. "I just want to see

that aren't tolerated by society.
Few know 't hat during the
"moral treatment" era in the
early 19th century many patients were hospitalized and
successfully restored to an active community life.
The patients then received
more one-on-one attention in
enhome-type
foster
vironments. The state institutions that were built following
the "moral treatment" ·era
were not accompanied by visionary administrators. And
by the end of the century, lack
of funding, overcrowding and
understaffing tarnished the
magical image that mental
hospitals could make the sick
• well again.
Instead mental hospitals

tions, estimates between 20 to
25 percent of the jail population is mentally ill or severely
depressed.
"A lot of these people who
are mentally ill and in jail are
here inappropriately,'' says
DeHeer, because many patients wind up on the streets
with no resources.
"The police know they're
mentally ill, but they have an
obligation to protect the people," says DeHeer. "There's
no place the police can take
them ... so they take them to
jail and charge them with a
crime. We could reduce our
population of mentally ill people . . . if there was an alternative."

to open the mental health
emergency unit. "Our objective is to avoid the criminal
justice system and stay with
civil services and place the
mentally ill into the community support system."
According to the National
Mental Health Association,
"More people are admitted to
hospitals because of mental
disorders than for any other illness. . .Mental illness costs
America over $10 billion
dollars annually. . . ''
Gagnon explains that
hospitalization is more expensive than community health
programs. And Gagnon
believes that Lane County's
communtiy support system for
the mentally ill is one of the
most effective systems in the
state.

Ragsdale,
Norma
psychotherapist at LCMHD,
adds that LCMHD's goal for
the mentally ill is to prevent
or, at least, reduce hospitalization.
"The therapists who work
with the chronically mentally
ill are specialized case
managers. A case manager
doesn't only do the therapy
and arrange for the medications with the psychiatrist and
monitor those. A case
manager also is very active in
the community arranging the
proper housing, structured
daytime activities, specialized
funding assistance and
employment needs."
Ragsdale explains that one
patient may need a living
situation where he's literally
almost hand held all day long
-- taught too wash and bathe
himself, cook for himself or
shop for himself. Another patient may be able to live in an
apartment independently.

Editor's Note: Medical Justice for the
Mentally J11 is the fourth and final
story in a four-par/ series by TORCH
repor/er Sue Crosman. The first story
was an accounl of LCC s1uden1 Carol
lee Fletcher's 4-year boul with mental
illness. The second installment dealt
with the myths of mental illness. The
third story in the series examined how
professionals deal with mentally ill patients.

'--J

justice done in terms of how
the patients in mental
hospitals are treated.
"I think that more compassion and understanding for
people would help more than
locking them up and pushing
them away," says Terry.
Terry was evacuated from
India in 1976 because of a mental disorder which suddenly
developed while she was a
senior in high school. She has
been given a vadety of
diagnoses and has spent time
in several mental hospitals.
Her last visit was in January,
1981. For Terry, her experiences were real, frightening and dehumanizing.
The hospital is classified as
a protective type of treatment.
But many believe it actually
serves to isolate from the
general community the
disturbed people who are
unable to adapt to social
norms and who have lifestyles

were thought of as jails from
feared
which it was
"madmen" may escape. To
enter was dreadful and
dehumanizing.
The criticism of improper
hospitalization of the mentally
ill prompted a recent move
away from the hospitals and
toward community support.
This movement gained
momentum in the 1960s.
The deemphasis of institutions had reduced the number
of patients in the hospitals,
but severe problems r~mained.
Although some community
health programs were
established during the last two
decades, they weren't
developed well enough to handle the needs of the mentally ill
population.
One result of the sweep
away from hospitalization is
that many of the mentally ill
end up in jail. Dean DeHeer,
senior mental health specialist
at Lane County Adult Correc-

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.

Presently, the mentally ill
that wind up in jail either go to
prison, the state hospital or
back on the streets.
"There's a mental health
emergency unit that was
developed along with the jail.
Its not operating. It hasn't
been funded,'' says DeHeer of
one alternative that would
help reduce the jail population.
But when it comes to funding, "There's no such thing
as enough," says Lester
Gagnon, program manager at
the Lane County Mental .
Health Division (LCMHD).
Eighty percent of funding for
LCMHD comes from the
state. And the availability of
funds ranks the level of services that LCMHD can provide.
Gagnon says funds are being redistributed in an effort

ty."

Support has been recognized as an essential need for the
prngress of the mentally ilsome
l. "Unfortunately
families just get so totally
burnt out that they essentially
reject their family members
who are mentally ill. And
sometimes for their own
is
that
preservation,
necessary,'' says Ragsdale.
SAM, an acronym for Save
A Mind, is one of the many
groups organized to support
the mentally ill. SAM is for the
parents, spouses and relatives
of people with schizophrenia
and major affective disorders.
''These groups are growing
up all over the country and
particularv in Oregon, but I
think SAM is one of the
best organized. This particular
group of people has become
very knowledgeable about
mental illness and they're also
good advocates politically for
more services for the mentally
ill," says Ragsdale .
She also explains that SAM
is "supportive to each other
because if you're the parents
of an adult mentally ill person
who still needs the kind of support that a child would need to
function, its a tremendous
strain. If you at least know
some others who are going
through it, its a lot of help."
Nancy Terry knows the difficulties of having a mentally
ill child. She is Leslie Terry's
mother and currently the
president of SAM.
Leslie is working and enrolled at the U of 0. "I'm more
worried about money more
than anything. And my math
class," she says, but Nancy
still has worries of her own
concerning her daughter's well
being.
SAM has given people like
the Terry's the crucial community support they need to
survive and to educate a society that is eager to learn but
surrounded by the myths of
mental illness.

C:>._

f

''The more support systems
out there in those settings that
we can get for a given patient
the less likely he is to have
another psychotic episode requiring hospitalizattion,''
Ragsdale says.
Support systems throughout
the community help to
monitor patients so that "if
things start to slip a little and
an adjustment of medication is
needed, or a little more support in terms of therapy is
needed, we can do it.
"And I think research supports the fact that the length
of a breakdown or the length
of dysfunctional behavior is
briefer if the client can be
treated in his own communi-

Work ing a Mirac le behind the s

A

fter several _we~ks of piecemeal rehearsals and myriad preparations by
props and hghtmg crew members, the tension- filled final week
before opening night of The Miracle Worker begins. It's a complete runthrough of the drama, the first for director Stan Elberson and his cast and crew.
One hour before curtain time (a misnomer in this case, since no main curtain will
be used), everyone involved with production of The Miracle Worker has arrived at
the LCC Theatre. Pre-play preparations are underway with a vengeance.
The women's dressing room in the basement of the Performing Arts Building,
directly below the stage, fills with gradeschool-age girls who don late 19th centuryvintage costumes. In a room several feet away, costume designer Nancy Julian is
in charge of creating, fitting and issuing costumes for the 20 members of the cast.
"Tonight's run-through is usually referred to as a 'first dress,' Julian explains.
"Tonight, though, that's not quite true since we're still integrating costumes into
rehearsals and many cast members" (all the men, in fact) "won't be costumed."
But Julian says it's a good thing the women's costumes have been completed in
time. "They're rather constricting, what with corsets and such, and the women will
be able to get used to moving about and performing easily in them."
Onstage, crew members Fran Skotchdopole and John Bilinowich scuttle about
making the stage ready for the drama. They consult a meticulously detailed listing
of props and locations where each is to be found at the time of its use in the
production: even a hairbrush must be placed where its user can automatically take
it up at the appointed moment.
Members of the cast filter onto the stage while Skotchdopole and Bilinowich
work. Kendra Sackett and Terri Lorang, who portray the lead roles of Helen Keller
and her teacher Annie Sullivan, sit on the Keller front porch set, reviewing their
lines and discussing, no doubt, the complex interaction between their two
characters which is the overriding focus of the play.
Stan Boyd, a 17-year veteran of the Eugene stage, walks across the floor
pursuing a script in which his lines as Captain Keller, Helen's father, have been
underlined and annotated.
Lights in the theatre turn on and off at odd intervals. Technical Director David
Sherman is supervising a lighting crew of three at work in an enclosed booth which
commands a bird's eye view of the stage and the magic Sherman and company
will create from the light board.
Tonight the lighting crew will program light cues into a computer which
automatically calls for each special lighting effect during the show. No curtains are
used, so the lighting is especially crucial in setting the mood for each scene and
also assists in between, when players enter and exit and the action shifts from one
portion of the set to another. Sherman has carefully studied the Miracle Worker
script and has created lighting effects which accent the story line sensitively.
To the right of the light board, sound technician Mike Maas is ready to insert
sound effects into the production, effects ranging from a train whistle to the cries of
an infant. An integral part of the play is a series of audio "flashbacks" which Annie
Sullivan experiences as she recalls her childhood in an asylum.

Photos by Michael Bailey
Maas helped produce the effects in the Mass Communication Department audio
production studios several days ago. Like his counterparts at the lighting controls,
he too has a thorough set of cues from which to work.
After a short cast meeting conducted by Director Stan Elberson. the run-through
is ready. Backstage, Skotchdopole and Bilinowich continue their work
uninterrupted as the opening scene depicting the birth and early childhood of
Helen Keller is enacted.
During these first scenes onstage, Skotchdopole prepares food in a microwave
oven for the meals which the Keller family will eat during the play. Most of the
chow. however, will wind up strewn about the dining room set as a result of
Annie's hard-fought efforts to teach Helen proper eating habits, and Helen's
stubborn resistance to her teachings.
According to Skotchdopole, "The Kellers actually eat little food -- but we have to
prepare a lot for effect." The Kellers won't eat two items on Fran's table, however:
Mealtime props include a roast ham and roast beef fashioned from plaster.
Meanwhile, the children in the cast await their cues in the wings, off-stage right.
To pass the time, Kendra Sackett gives her fellow actresses lessons in the sign
language which helped Annie Sullivan open the doors of speech and
understanding for Helen Keller.
Elberson watches from a seat just below the light booth. When he observes a
facet of the play in need of modification or correction, he makes a verbal note of it
into a cassette recorder rather than interrupt the actors. Later, during a brief cast
meeting following the run-through, Elberson will play back these taped observations
and discuss them with the cast.
Rather than assume an authoritarian posture as director, Elberson seems to
prefer and in fact revel in two-way communication with his players. He happily
accepts any suggestions from cast members and incorporates them into the Miracle
Worker. "There's a lot of vibrant energy in this special group," Elberson says of the
cast.
The vibrance of Stan Boyd has been a welcome sight for local theatre-goers for
many years. The soft-spoken physician is a veteran of LCC and Very Little Theatre

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Story by Mike Sims
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productions and has appeared in plays ranging from the stark Enemy Of The
People to the exuberant The Music Man. "As a doctor, I have to keep my
emotions bottled up, and acting is a great way to let off steam.
Boyd has ample opportunity. He's the blustering, posturing Captain Keller, a
Civil War veteran. "He and Annie Sullivan are real antagonists. The Captain isn't a
bit happy with her methods or approach in dealing with his daughter. This, with a
bit of fatherly guilt concerning Helen's affliction, tends to make Captain Keller a bit
defensive. It's a meaty, emotionally demanding role."
Equally demanding is the part of Annie Sullivan, Captain Keller's near
adversary. Terri Lorang carries off the task with aplomb and a bit of humor. "I'm
bruised," she says following the run-through, referring to the many scuffles and
scrapes in which she and Helen engage during the almost two-hour drama.
Lorang has appeared in many recent local plays, including Wh~re 's Charley?,
The Man Who Came To Dinner, and Grease at LCC. She has also performed with
the Very Little Theatre and UO's Carnival Theatre.
Lo rang spent some time prior to rehearsals researching the life of Helen Keller,
particularly her relationship with Annie Sullivan. "Helen wrote a book called
Teacher which was really useful," Lorang comments. She also discussed the lives
of Helen and Annie with her co-actress, Kendra Sackett.
Ten-year-old Kendra makes her first appearance on the LCC stage after
appearing in several plays at Edgewood Element~ry School, where she is a fifthgrader. According to her stage "father," Stan Boyd, she is "a real tiger at her
knowledge and portrayal of the role and a real professional onstage -- very
dedicated and personally a very delightful child."
Kendra studied The Miracle Worker and other literature on Helen Keller with her
mother and sister before the tryouts and after rehearsals had begun. Elberson
noted that Kendra made several suggestions -- based on her research as well as her
keen perceptiveness -- which were incorporated into the play.
"I'd like to keep on acting," she says. And, dreaming a little when someone
reminds her that Patty Duke Astin played Annie in the 1979 television version of
The Miracle Worker, after portraying Helen Keller in the 1962 movie, Kendra
adds, "That'd be something, wouldn't it?"

''

'

Page·s April 15, 1982 - Al'.,__r_ll...,21,-,'"1'982 The TORCH

ENTERT AINMEN T
Dance :w orks worth saving
reason to keep Dance Works
going.

by David Lane
and Jeff Keating
of the TORCH

The brightly-clad dancers
rolled, dragged, bowed,
leaped and ran for an enthusiastic hour of enjoyable
interpretive dance.

As the eight dancers warmed up, the audience gathered
on the red wrestling mat
beyond the Auxiliary Gym
door. A strategically located
pickle jar slowly filled with
dollar donations as people filed in.

Not even the brightly lit
gym, with its basketball
hoops, gymnastic equipment
and climbing equipment could
detract from the performance
given by the dancers.

Prcoarations finally over,
the music began, serving as a
harmonic prelude to a unique
performance of gymnastic
modern dance.

The group's performance
included "Arena," a piece
choreographed by Oslund,
Alita Alessi and Karen
Nelson, and ''Rebound,''
choreographed by Oslund,
which dealt with the use of
gravity, weight and momentum.

Oslund and Company and
Joint Forces gave a dazzling
performance April 13.
And what made this performance different -- though no
less professional -- from many
others of its type was a persistent undercurrent of quiet
desperation, a simple request
for a helping hand from one of
Eugene's oft-overlooked
Dance
cultural outlets
Works Studio.
Originally established as a
dance outlet for the Eugene
area, Dance Works' complexion has changed over the years
so that it now functions as a
civic cultural center which
"encompasses a lot of areas,"
says Mary Oslund, who directs
Oslund and Company/Dance.
But the studio, which has
housed groups ranging from
M

Photo by Charles True

dance companies to experimental theatre troupes
since 1978, is having financial
difficulties.

"general outreach to the community," says Oslund.
LCC was the site for one of
a series of "Alternative
Spaces" concerts funded in
part by a purchase from the ci- •
ty of Eugene with Room Tax
funds. The free performance
also served to promote community awareness of the
studio's fundraising efforts.
Hence, the pickle jar.

Dance Works owes back
rent for April-July I 981 -- rent
which the studio's landlord
has requested within one
month. To raise the money,
the studio is telephoning
businesses, performing benefit
concerts and conducting

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Can 1.:omfortably a1.:1.:omodate
up to 300 people

And the dance companies'
performance at Lane, April
13, could only serve as another

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$200 per night, no additional
charges

''There is a need for people
to know what's going on,"
says Oslund. She noted that
Dance Works sponsors many
individual and group performers from all over the
country who appear in Eugene
and ''we wouldn't be able to
do that" if the studio closed.

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Oslund and Company is a
group of six dancers with extensive training in various
dance and movement forms.
Joint Forces has also studied,
taught and performed
throughout the US and recently completed a tour of the
West Coast.
Both groups' modern dance
forms have been influenced by
"contact improvisation," says
Joint Forces member Alessi.
The next performance will
be a benefit for Dance Works
at the Dance Works studio,
123 I Olive St., Eugene, on
April 23 at 8 p.m.

....._...,._.......,.,._..,,,,_..,..._..~.......~,,_..~~----.._,..~~~.,_..,..,

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Participate in making
decisions concerning you
and your campus.

r.-

Attend -1Jlj .
The
ASLCC STUDENT
GOVERNMENT ,
Meetings.
Tuesdays at 1pm
in the Boardroom

See how Senate meetings work. Join us

I and give your valuable input.
I
i

I-

April meetings: 6th, 13th, 20th, and 27th.

!

I
II
I
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Ii

The TORCH April 15, 1?8~ - Af,ri~ ..21 , 1Q82 .~age 9

- Music Notes
by Marty Schwarzbauer
of the TORCH

• The Bees, a Eugene band
now residing in San Jose,
Calif., is making its second
tour of Oregon since moving
to the Bay Area a year and a
half ago . Making its first tour
stop at O'Callahans April 13,
it will return to BJ Kellys April
22-24 after stops in Corvallis,
Salem, Blue River and
Portland.

• Singer-keyboardist John
Adkins made his last appearance with The Outtakes at
Max's Tavern recently. The remaining members plan to continue as a trio. Watch for
scheduling.
• The Midnight Orchestra, a
new local band, made its first
full appearance last week at BJ
Kelly's. And the band is to
open for nationally known
Stoneground at BJ's on April

Ph oto by Bunnie Nil:ho las

Phil "Golden Boy" Wagner and Tony Sardini of the Bees.

20. With some top-notch local
players, this is one group to
watch for.
• Oregon's big chartmakers,
Quarterflash, became one of

the nation's top concert draws
last month, grossing $64,000
with three sellout shows in
three nights in Oklahoma and
Kansas on March 9, 10 and 11.
Quarterflash headlined all

three shows with the Tommy Fri., April 16: Merle Haggard,
Tutone opening. The group's
Portland Civic Auditorium
debut album peaked on the Fri., April 16: Los Xplorers
Billboard album charts at No. • and Neo Boys, CCP A, Eugene
10 and is down to No. 15 this
Sat., April 17: Dave Brubeck
week. The second single off with the Eugene Symphony,
the album, "Find Another Lane County Fairgrounds ExFool," is now at No. 24 in hibit Hall
sales and No. 12 in airplay.
Tues., April 20: Stoneground
• Johnny and the Distracwith The Midnight Orchestra,
tions is at a less impressive No.
BJ Kelly's
152 on the album sales charts
Wed., April 21: Girls School,
but No. 20 in airplay. The
Portland Paramount
single "Complicated Now" is
Thurs., April 22: Black Sabat 25 in airplay, though it
bath and The Outlaws,
hasn't yet cracked the Hot 100
Portland Coliseum
in sales. Johnny and the D's
Thurs., April 22: Jimmy Bufwill be touring the East Coast
fet, Portland Paramount
later this month.
Sat., April 24: Tina Turner
• Concert calendar:
and Shock, Euphoria,
Portland and Mon .. Avril 26 ,
Thurs., April 15: Angel City,
"Emerald Valley Forrest Inn.
Portland Paramount and Fri.,
Thurs., April 29: Jerry Jeff
April 16 Lane County
Walker, Salem Armory
Fairgrounds Performance
Thurs., April 29: Emmylou
Hall.
Harri's, Portland Ci vie
Fri., April 16: Robert Cray
Auditorium
CCP A, Eugene

Belushi humor will be missed by a generation
by Mike Sims
of the TORCH

The band struck up ~he closing theme -- that song one
always somehow associates
with saying goodbye, bittersweet and regretful. The
guest host and the cast were
assembled center stage in their
customary 12:58 a.m. display
of togetherness. Tonight's was
particularly touching, for two
members of the troupe would
not return. On this spring
night in 1979, Dan Aykroyd
and John Belushi had made
their last appearance on
"Saturday Night Live. "
The camera zoomed infor a
closeup and caught Belushi,
America's Animal, in tears.

into a straight man to
maniacal Dan Aykroyd in
Neighbors.
• Sensed that a major turning point in John Belushi's
professional and personal lives
was at hand.
A recent Rolling Stone profile of Belushi talked at length
with the star about just such a
pivotal period in his life.
Ironically, such press often
becomes the "kiss of death"
for many celebrities, as it was
for Monroe and Lennon.
Ironic, too, that a man once
pictured in an SNL film as an
octogenarian decorating the
graves of his fellow "Not
Ready For Prime Time
Players" would be the first to
go.

Eugene touched John
Belushi immensely. He spoke
often of a happy, relaxing,
congenial relationship with the
community and its people.
Eugene took Belushi to its
heart, as he took Eugene to
his.
He took something else with
him when he left -- an embryo
of an idea that became The
Blues Brothers. Belushi heard
a local performance by The
Robert Cray Band and
befriended vocalist/harmonica player Curtis Salgado.
These associations inspired
him to create the popular
song-and-dance duet with Dan
Aykroyd. The Blues Brothers'
first album was dedicated to
Salgado, and a character in the
; movie The Blues Brothers
: was named for him.

His brand of comedy did
The Eugene Connection
not have the social, cultural,
Goodbye to The Eyebrow
or political impact that the
John Belushi's Eugene conmusic of Presley and Lennon
He
created
modern
nection is local history. He
lent to the Fifties and Sixties.
American folklore. Samurai.
took it by storm in the fall of
But John Belushi and his con- , 1977 when National LamGreek Pete, the Chee'burger
tribution to American pop
Man. Bluto. Wild Bill Kelso.
poon's Animal House was
culture belong to our generaJoliet Jake Blues.
filmed on the University of
tion just as surely as Elvis and
He reduced grown men to
Oregon campus.
John Lennon were part of
theirs.
It's virtually impossible to
travel this country and not
results of the
find a person who hasn't at
one time (choose at least one):
• Seen
the
Samurai
something-or-other frantically
(for support of the clothing exchange)
chop out a solution to any difficulty,
• Embellished a sob story or
angry tirade with a hearty
1st. Michael Guthy
''BUT NO-0-0-0-0! ! ! '',
• Laughed in disgusted
2nd. Kathy Money
delight as Bluto inhales a plate
3rd. Tracey Schaaf
of Jello, crams a whole burger
into his craw, then sprays his
Booby Prize Mary Cudney
campus adversaries with a
well-chewed egg,
• Watched Joliet Jake electrify a packed concert hall
with cartwheels, handsprings
and a lusty rendition of
"Sweet Home Chicago,"
We're here for you • Seen the animal/slob
Belushi evolve 'into a romantic
lead with • Blair Brown in
iQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ~
Continental Divide, then

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Tire Rotation

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6cyl.-Reg.$19.50
4cyl.-Reg.$19.00
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jelly with just a raise of The r Truman Capote with equal
credibility. His portrayals of
Eyebrow.
Marlon Brando and Liz
He was an impressionist. He
Taylor are video legend.
impersonated Henry KissPart of a legend that ended
too soon.
inger, Captain Kirk, and

Give your local Army Reserve unit a weekend
a month and a couple of summers during college,
and they'll give you over $12,000 for college. Up to
$4,000 in college aid is yours just for joining most
units. Plus over $2,200 for two summer training
periods. And another $6,000 for serving a weekend a month plus two weeks a year. Interested?
For more information call any of the numbers listed
below. Or stop by.

Ll

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687-64'31
l l Wi l 1 d ,n e c. c. e S c

.

Page 10 ,April 15, 1982 - .i\f,_ril 21, 1982 The TORCH

SPORTS

Experience is key to baseball wins
by Terry Rhoads
of the TORCH
Playing in a conference
LCC baseball coach Bob
Foster claims is the "strongest
in the nation," he predicts that
the Lane men should be the
best team in the league this
season.
But before fiction becomes
fact, the Titans (2-1 in OCCAA, 3-4 overall) must face
two nationally-ranked teams
and a few more opponents
ready to sidetrack their championship drive.
Linn-Benton (Albany) and
Umpqua (Roseburg), ranked
seventh and thirteenth in the
NJCCA poll, are considered
favorites to win the conference
title and subsequent berth in
the Region 18 playoffs.
While the coaches and the
pollsters make their predict ions, the answers are still
twenty-one league games
away.
But what makes the Titans,
19-15-1 and fourth in the OCCAA last year, so confident?
"Experience!" answers
Foster. '"We return our whole
out field, four pitchers and two
infielders from last year's
team. We're stronger up the
middle (catcher, second
baseman, shortstop, centcrfield) than any other team in
the league."
Backing up his claim has
been the outstanding play of a
group of players. The infield,
often shaky last year, has been
shored up with the addition of
shortstop Pete ~cker and seApplications are now
available for the position of
1982-83 Oregon Daily
Emerald editor. Applicants
should have knowledge of
newspaper journalism and
of the University of Oregon.
Term of office is June 8,
1982 through June 7. 1983.
1
Monthly salary begins May
1. 1982. Editor must be
enrolled for at least 6 credits
during three of four terms at
the University of Oregon
while in office. Position requires work Sunday through
Friday and a minimum of
35-40 hours per week.
Applications are available in
the Oregon Daily Emerald
offices and must be returned
to the ODE Board of Directors, 300 EMU. P.O. Box
3159, Eugene, Or 97403
before 5p.m . April 22nd.
The Emerald is an Equal
Opportunity / Affirmative
Action employer that
operates under the team
management concept.
Women, minorities and the
handicapped are encourag , ed to apply .

,
cond baseman Keith Winterbottom.
'' Acker has been very steady
on defense,,, said Foster of the
freshman from Springfield
who has only two errors in five
games.
Winterbottom, a sophomore from North Eugene,
has shined in the infield and
has been even more impressive
at the plate, where he's hitting
a sizzling .419.
But the slugger of the squad
is centerfielder Doug Priaulx,
also a sophomore from North
Eugene.
"He's been our leading hitter, .500 in league play and
.342 overall," says Foster.
Priaulx, a major college and
pro draft prospect, hasn't
been a slouch in the outfield
either, as his improving defensive play prompted a move to
ccntcrfield from right field.
Another hot bat for the
Titans is that of third baseman
Scott Swagerty, a freshman
from Medford, who's hitting
.333.
But hitting is a touchy subject for the Titans of late. During a pre-season trip to
California, the coaches fell
good about the team's hitting
although the squad dropped
three of their four contests.
But that feeling has begun to
slip away during the past three
games despite the fact that the
team won two of those contests .
"I think we should be hitting close to .300," says
Foster, who blames the slow
start on dismal spring wcat her
which has meant rainouts and
indoor practices.

"A lot of the guys are hitting below what they should,"
adds infield coach Steve Wolf,
"but they'll come along. They
just haven't seen the pitching.
But then the whole league is
pretty much in the same
boat.''
Foster and the Titans hope
to keep the rest of the league in
that boat all spring with the
help of a fine group of pitchers. The OCCAA abounds
with hitters, and Foster
predicts that it will be the pitchers who determine the succe~~ or failure of each team.
He noted that one OCCAA
squad has realized the problems of having a pitching

- Sports, Notes·
by Monte Metz
of the TORCH

Athlete of the Week

LCC's Ken Jefferies copped
Athlete of the Week honors
this week with an outstanding
effort versus Linn-Benton in
OCCAA baseball action.
The 5' 11 ", 165-pound
sophomore s·lugger from
Churchill High did a number
on the visiting squad when he
drilled a triple which helped
Lane to 4-0 victory.
Jefferies also played solidly
on defense and ended the
game with an impressive twohit, two-RBI batting mark.
Titan tracksters No. 1
LCC's track team battled

German
Auro

LEAVE
A MESSAGE

r nlRJENDS
Iii,

MESSAGE
BOARD
Student

squad which lacks depth. Blue
Mountain, among the preseason favorites to win the
OCCAA title, used their two
best pitchers in a doubleheader
against LCC and split the
games. Their next opponent,
Chemeketa, promptly took
advantage of their weaker
"third man" and bombed the
Blue Mountain squad 11-1.
Umpqua returns four pitchers from last year's OCCAA
runner-up team, while LinnBenton, sixth in the nation
after wining the OCCAA and
Region 18 titles last year, has a
similar group.
The Titans counter with
seven good hurlers, says

SERVICE

women had a total of 55.
LCC's combined point total
of 166 topped second place
Clark's 58, third place OSU's
50 (OSU had no men's division representation at the
meet), fourth place Umpqua
with 34 points and fifth place
Blue Mountain with 32. Here
are some of the meet results:
Women's Track

\f
.,

Photo by Andrew Hanhardt

Ken Jefferies
OSU, Clark, Umpqua and
Blue Mountain and won both
the men's and women's divisions in an April 10 meet at
LCC. The men's squad had a
total of 111 points and the

TAILORED
W~NDS

t'J
lltJ 'ii
tJl~ !:l.!Jlii

S}9.98
s29.98

~RGEIT

~i;

.!J~JiJJJt-J
~JJJ)J

For him a sl,m style
tailored band o f gold
tor
her a matching feminine
band she ' ll love to wear

~1 !)J !)~J~

_'){(1(/('flf (/("("/J/11/(\ 11 "('/("(I/I/( '

1':.\PJ~RT

\\"()RK .\ IA.\.SII IP

2nd Floor

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

Foster. "Each of them could
start, with Bruce Hays and
Jim Watson our aces."
Jeff Nokleby, a sophomore,
will also be a mound leader
and is coming off a strong win
over Blue Mountain.
Rounding out the staff,
which Foster claims is the best
in the OCCAA, are Andy
Black, Mark Knowles, Jerry
Lay and Leif Herick.
''The pitchers have been
throwing hard, but all of them
have good sliders and curve~
as well," says Foster, who
adds that the team's lack of a
southpaw hurler isn ' t a
drawback.

VALLEY RIVER CENTER

1
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DOWNTOWN
Dd

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•

\•

LCC standouts Saturday included Diana Hill, who won
the discus with a 120'8-l/2
toss, and Jill Haugen, who
won the 400 meters with .an astounding 1:02.39 clocking.
In the 100 meter, LCC took
first and third with Mary
Ficker (12.86) and Anne Jennings (13.64) running.
In the 800 meter, Judy Beck
grabbed first place with a
2:27 .34 clocking and Lori
Brumley's 1:06.83 effort captured first in the 400 meter intermediate hurdles. Mary
Ficker took another first with
a run of 26.81 in the 200 m.
Men's Track
Lane eliminated their opponents in the hammer, as
they swept first, second, third
and fourth places. Lane's·first
place man was Steve Kroeker
with a throw of I 39'6".
Darren Rice took first in the
triple jump with a 44' l" leap,
and Kevin Morris and Ken
Harry did the old one-two in
the steeplechase, grabbing first
and second.
John Hoppe, Tim Beatty,
Willie Mooney, and Mike
Hedlind combined to give
Lane first place in the 400 m
relay with a time of 43.99.
Lane's men went one, two,
three in the 5000 m. Joel Bake
(15:37), Bob Barker (16:03)
and Mike Webster (16: 10)
easily took honors.

Around TOWli
- mos1e
•

University of Oregon •• On April IS, Gwen Ingram
violin, and Robert Carter alto saxaphone will present a Musical Smorgasbord concert at 12:30 a.m.
in Room 198. Also on Thursday, Rober, J. Moore,
oboe will perform in a Faculty Artist Series concert
at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. Admission will be
by season ticket or $2 at the door. Students and
senior citizens with identification, and children
under 12 will be admitted free.
On April 16, Trumpeter David Chartrey will present a student recital at 2 p.m. in Gerlinger Hall
Alumni Lounge.
On April 17, Da,•id Golden organ will perform his
senior recital at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.
On April 18, Organist Margaret Lakey will present
a master 's degree recital at 4 p.m . in Beall Concert
Hall. Also on Sunday, pianist Kang Ok Lee will
give a student recital at 8 p.m. in Room 198.
On April 19, The Universiry Symphony Orchestra
and four student soloists will perform a concerto
concert at 8 p.m . in Beall Concert Hall.
On April 20, The Early Musick Players will present
an evening of instrumental music on April 14
through 17 centuries at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert
Hall . Admission for this Faculty Artist Series Concert will be by season ticket or $2 at the door.
Students and senior citizens with identification and
children under 12 will be admitted free.
On April 21, Heidi Lehwalder, internationally
known harpist from New York, will perform at 8
p.m. in Beall Conert Hall. Admission to the event,
which is sponsored by the Committee for Musical
Arts, will be $4.50 for general admission and S3.50
for students and senior citzens.
On April 22, The Shorecrest High School Band
from Seattle will present a Musical Smorgasbord
Concert at 12:30 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall. Also
on Thursday, student composer James Krowka will
present a master's degree recital of six original
compositions at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.

Jo Ftderigo's -- 259 E. 5th Ave., 343-8488, Nancy
King and Steve Christofferson will perform on
April IS. Mario Bresanufli and Forrest Mover will
perform on April 16 and 17. The Dick Blake Trio
will have a jam session on April 18 and 19. John
Workman and Phil Curtis will perform on April 20
and 21 . Emmett Williams and Forrest Moyer will
perform on April 22. All performances start at 8:30
•
p.m.

,~.~
' 3'-->-

,.._
t.,f

~Yt-~~
'...:....k-.k

,V

'1 ,

11

, .-,........--._

•

Skis: Hexe/ competition, 100 cm, ll'ith t.,mk
,\e,·add bindinxs. S/10. ('all .141-1160.
Kini( she fl}() bed: Complt'te K'ith frame and
heater. Nell' nell'. A mere S/00. Call Hill (If
flllJ-4.116.
:z.i •• l'11ch (German bike). Hent ba,·k rim but ea1y w
.11r"iKhten. c,,me by and scope it mu. 580. Call Hill
ar fiR.1-4Jl6.
Mundo/in: I/and crafted locally. S/60 K'ith rn.re or
trade Ji,r classic xuitar. Call l.i11da at 9.f7-.1155.
II fr .. rwin tlement l'HO flt>urescent /c,mp for
xm1<·inK yt1ur fal'tlrite marijuana indoon. A .,kinx
570. Call /'au/ ut 741-12.tl.
Sony stereo poll'tr "mplifier, .U K'Olts HMS per
channel. Sl()(J firm. Call /'au/ at 741-UJI.
/9" H/U' te/e,·ision in excellent ,·,inclition. .\4().
( 'ull ,i·eninxs ar .f42-.lfJ46.
4cmutic xuitar pickup, 145 Ill>, exc:ellent mndition. 560. Call 6//J-5065.

•
services

Wheatfield, April 15 through 17. Clo11dburs1, April
19. The Midnighr Orchestra with Stone Ground,
April 20. Craig C11m11hers, April 21. The Bees
(.formerly Toni Sardini and the Waste Band) April
22.

Hooker's Inn -- 2165 W. 11 th,485-4044, Ron Lloyd
April 15 through I 7. Exstatic April 21 through 22.
Treehoust -- 1769 Franklin Blvd. , 485-3444, Chip
Smirh In the Lounge on April 16. Buddy Ungson In
1he Lounge on April 17. Both performances start at
9 p.m. Murgrer Virus and Phyllis Cweig will play a
flute duet in the Dining Room at 11 a.m. on April
18. The same performance will be repeated on
April 19 at 7 p.m.

I

dance

Salurday Markel -- is an open-aire crafts and food
fair that happens every Saturday, April til
Christmas, from 10 a.m. until 5 p. m. It is located
across the street from the new Hilton Hotel on Oak
Street, between 7th and 8th . Featured as the entertainment for April 17, Jusr Friends will perform
electric intheir usual celtic mu ic and also add
stuments with a new sound they're calling Irish Fup.m.
I
at
starts
entertainment
sion. The
Lane County Fairgrounds -- 13th and Madison,
Auditorium, The Lane Community Gospel will
present a concert on April 18 at 7:30 p.m. Admission will be a S2.50 donation .
The Lone Star -- 160 S. Park, 484-7458, Lana
Romance, will perform Monday through Saturday
at 9:15 p.m.
O'Callahan's -- 440 Coburg Rd .. 343-1221, Mr.
Nice Guy, April 15 through 17. Guardian, April 20

through 22.

Duffy's--801 E. IJth,344-3615, Hor Wax, April 16
and 17.
BJ Kelly's -- 147.5 Franklin Blvd,, 683-4686,

-Classifieds
for sale

The TORCH April 15,''1982 - A,p1il· 21~· i982 Page 11

7~wp, AM - II truck, sport ll'hee/.1, 11111.11 .1ell .w11n.

<·ull 61/11-46119.

for rent
.Vke 3 bedmt1m ht111se. H'eH Ama:on, bll.lline,
yard, rnble, furnished. Hedr,wms S/25/'f,5(1
deposit. Call 484-4041 after 4 p.m.
Room in 3 bee/mom h11u.1e. .\IJIJ. lla.1 free:er,
fireplace. Snwkerslmeut tater.1 t1k. Call 343-11061.
Room in ni<'e 11/tler hrmst M"ith /M'tl others.
S6lll m11nth um/ one-third utilities. /8th""'' Jejfer.rnn. Cull .t4.f-4fi5fJ.

wanted

Orexon ( ·,,untr.r f 'uir is currently acceptint. upplicatillm ji,r music and tntertuinment. Form.f c11·ail"hft
.111·itchh11ard 795 H'illumette or Orext1n Cmmtry
1·a ir. l'.0. H11x 2972. f.'11,:ene. 97./()l. lntert.1ted
parties are ad,·ised ftl "'"' nt1..-.. 4pplirntion.1 d11.1 r
April !IJ.

seri·i<-e., us.mciute. .4pplic"ti11n fmm ,·,mnselinfl ,tepurtment 11r Tim
Ht,wtl.
JI ·or/,. next year 11.1 a student

t '.fed full f<u:e mt11t1rQ·cle helmet (I/ reu.mnuhle
priu 11r.fi1r trade. Call l'aul 741-ll.ll.

United Lulheran Church -- 22nd and Washington,
The Mary Miller Dance Company will present its
second spring con,ert April 15 through 17 at 8 p.m .
Tickets for the concert are available at the door for
$3 for adults and $2 for seniors, students and
children. Series tickets purchased for the March
concert are good for the admission to one of the
April performances.

theatre

Lane Community College -- 4000 E. 30th Ave.,
The Miracle Worker"\\ill be presented on April D
through 17 and April 22 through 24. The performance will be presented on the Mainstage at 8 p .m.
Tickets will be $4 at the door or by season tickets.
Oregon Repertory Theatre •• 222 E. Broadway,
485-1946, Koo/aid Kaberet plays for children of all
ages every Saturday in April, at 11 a.rn. and I p.m.
Tickets are SJ for adults, S1.50 for children with
general admission seating. On the Edge an evening
of comedy, will be shown on April 16 and 17 at
11 :30 p.m. Performances at 9 p.rn. are on April 21
through 24. Tickets will be $3.50 with general admission seating.
For more information and reservations, call the
ORT box office, Monday and Tuesday, 12 to 5
p.m. and Wednesday 1hrough Sunday, 12 to 8 p.m.
at 485-1946.

University of Oregon -- You Can't Take It With
You, by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, will
run April 15 through 17 at the theatre located in
Villard Hall. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tickets are
$4.50 for the general public, $2.50 for U of O student and senior citizens and $3.50 for other
studen1s.
For reservations and information call the Universi1y Thea1re box office at 686-4191, 12 to 4 p.m.
Monday through Saturday.

•
movies

Opus S -- 2469 Hilyard.484-1710, Lo11e Slreisinger
will be the artist feature for the month of April.
The gallery is open Monday though Saturday 11
a.m. 10 5:30 p.m .

Cinema World -- Valley River Cenler. Chariots of
Fire, 7:25 and 9:35 p.m. On Golden Pond, 7:45 and
9:45 p.m. Quest For Fire, 6, 8 and 10 p.m. Reds.
7:45 and 9:45 p.m.

Lane Community College -- 4000 E. 30th Ave.,
Lane County ceramic artist Chris Gum will show
his work in 1he LCC Art Gallery. The show is
,,hedulcd to run April 15 through the 21. Gallery
hour, are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., Monday through
Thursday, and 8 a.rn. to 5 p.m. on Friday. The
gallery is located in the Math & Arts Building on
campus. Admission is free .

7:25 and 9:45 p.m.

Bijou -- 492 E. 13th. Lili Marleen. 7 and 9:30 p.m .
Valley River Twin -- 1077 Valley River Drive. E1•i/
Under the S11n, 7: 15 and Rich"rd Prvor Lfre on
S11nse1 Strip, 9:30 p.m. Vicwrl Victori~. 6:30 and 9
p.m.
West 11th Walk-In -- West 11th and Seneca. /
011gh1 To Be In Piaures, 9:20 and Ni11e To Ffre,
7:30 p.m. Missin11. 7 and 9:15 p.m. Silent Ruge,
7:IS and 9:15 p,m.
McDonald-- 1010 Willamette. Deathtrap, 7:15 and
9:30 p.m.
Maynowtr -- 788 E. I Ith. Cut People, 9:40 and
American Werewolf in London, 7:55.
National-- 969 Willamette. Personal Best, 7: 15 and
9:30 p.m.

galleries
Projrct Space Gallery - 39 E. 10th St. James Ulrich
and Byurcl Pidgeon will exhibit oil paintings and

I ',t .\/ill n1111·c-. -· Tru(I",

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M'holt' ditiloxm• i., xreur ! /)on 't .,wp. -· l'aulll.

.im·l.11/"r i.,·_i11.l/ t111 inapt enclear11r ro hc-.fi1uti1110. -JI/.

l .11.l'I: sifrer //) bra,·elet. I.tit '.1· •~l sentimenlill m/11e.
nehhie e11xm1·e,t 11n mp. /'lease ,·ull fll/.f-54-111.
<,et them M'hile ther·rc- ,•11/tf ... !

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\f"tt •· h111r irrern,·t1ble pr11pemit_r for hei11x

llt1hy -- I kn11H· I lnture at time.\• thllt'.1 m.r .11_1·/e.
/1111 f /111•, lint/ ,·11re./i1r y1111 .m11m1 mm·h that I don't
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c·1uf1/le.1 /'1·e x,11! H'hen ll'i/11<·e meet?-· Tru,·.r.
/'TT-- Well Jhen, K.4 ,\ '.'iA.'i. .4riwnu. \ 'e"' lf11mp\hire, Tf.', 'l, ,\ 'f:S.'if.'f.' ...... H'hut\ the c/iffere11u:~

NOTICE

All items for Around Town mus1 be delivered to
the TORCH office by Friday at five. Nothing will
be accepted after deadline.

l',111/ll -- Thanh for heinx a super per.111n and ii best
frieml I mufti p11.1sihl.1· hC/l·e! -- l .indu.
(;utita n11.1 l'f'nw.1 e11 alxun diu en al,:u11 l11!(llr en
t1lxun tiempo. -· <·u pltlin Purple.
I i11dll -- ,lit111 the 11b111·e ml'.l'.llll(e. -· I. 1-:,1.

ITT -- At /11.11! ll/e.u ed .mm-hine rc-ix11ecl tmllly. -lit1ila.

l'-1 J •· I /m·e you ,·ery mu,·h! -- JI>('.

ht to marry you, lm·e .1·1111.

Arlists' Union -- 985 Willamette Street, As part of
its April show, Li11ht Connections Artists' Union is
sponsoring a slide presentation by the exhibiting artists on April 22. at 7 p.m. in the gallery. The public
is invited. No admi\sion will be charged. For more
information call 342-7620, 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.

l>r. T1ulrbm1111 -- llt1M' uh11111 (1(/rerw,·hmme:>

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l'lell.,e rewrn my blue P"''k ll'hic-h 1t'(l.1 .1111/en in the
l'er/im11inx -1rtJ I 11hby. ,\11 q11ewiom.

If I hud one M'i.,h it

1,ane County Public Service Building -- 125 E. 8th,
The Solid Waste Program of the Lane County
Public Services Division will ho,t a colorful art
display about recycling and ,olid waste management during 1he month of April. Created by the
Department of Environmental Quality Solid Waste
Division and Oregon artist Diane Schatz, the
display contains information about local recycling
opportunities and used motor oil recycling. The
display will be shown from April 15 through May

S\/1 .. r;,. ,felixhtji,I 1t1 see .1·1111 ,ma lll(llin. e1·e11
1lu111,:h it makes me mther reel. •· SI'.

J'r, y1111r ,turk h"ir "ntl red jadet .1-ittinx ne11r tip
,·orner of library, 1ite.ftluy'.1 ,:one.

/)1111'n:' ' ·""'· J'tlll S(I_I':' f'tur not! I'll help
you xet it up! -- 11.°"i/C/.

Maude Ktrns -· 1910 E. 15th St., Barbara Kensler
will present Variations on a Window in the main
gallery. Hall Anderson will present photographs in
the photography gallery. Rogene Volkman will present A Colorful Ourlook, in the rental/sales
gallery. Gallery hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday
through Saturday. Open till 8 p.m. Tuesday
through Thursday.

Springfield Quad -- Springfield Mall. Robin Hood,
6, 8 and 9:55 p.m. ,4 little Sex, 7:40 and 9:40 p.m.
Some Kind of Hero, o, 7:55 and 9:45 p.m. Porky's,

flt1hby Hellr •• I lm·e y,m rind I c·tmfcln 't lfre M'ithout
y1111. I rnn't "'"it! -- Anxie.

l't1tril'ill \lurie Sc·ott Ti.1.mt' -- ) '1111 're II doll. x11.w1 -·
/'hi/.

photography respecttvely from April 15 through
17. Gallery Hours : Tuesday through Saturday, 12
to 5 p.m.
For more information call James Ulrich a1
345-2101.

n,erem -- '·""J' l .11pinsky 11'011/cl /111·e .1·1111r .1mile. I
11111. •• f.(lrry.

1/11

Jimmie< ·ox.,•· f'orxet Smokey, ,m"mho. mrc-du/., .
f·r,1111 noK' on .fC//(1(/.1• .1u11n11.1 (Int/ the libr11ry, -.\'ers.
S11e-:rn -· U'i,hi111( .rm, xm11/ tu,·k lint/ tle.1eri·e,f
pu.uux, on yo11 ,·11mp.,. <;i,·e it to rm hllh.r! -- Jun ,C
C'l1Te.
llln--1R •• I/eh, heh, .1·ah, .mh. "bmlltle(r, .mu
het,·h-u, .mu knoll' 1<·hut I mean, clefinutel.r. it'i'
1,11,. Thur·., the hottllm line. -· Jt1n-l>e.
Iii! \1rfr Te quiem • lluico,·heu.

/'/'/' -- l>efinutel.1·. y,111 n"me the time ,inti place,
ll'e'II h,• there. -- .'i11m .~ C'h"rli.
Tm/ti -- ,..o, thl' fir.I/ time in my life- I ,·un
htlllr ltlll/erM,mtf. -· I intlll.

.\UJ'

/Jr. Sc·htupmlln -· The ll11nters Thomp.mn ether
dub i1 .formi11x. It\ .1prin,:timc- frt'.,h! -- l>r.
l'tuhh,111m .
l'tlf •· IJ/e exi.11.1 ,m the outside trm. />lease try it.
ji,r .1·1111r.,elf. -- l.indu.

fo tire Hobert., family •· ( ·,mxrutul"ti11n.1· 1111 the
1111n,minl( ud,/ltion. -· l'"ulu.
l\.fil,.e Sim.f •· I thouxht
l'111t/(I,

J'IIII

1/e.,ene,I a m,.,.,,axe! •·

.-111 da.u-ifitcl mfrertilc-ment.1 of fi/t<'en ,.,,mJs or

"'e free .for I< ·c •.1111,lent.1.
l>eacllinr l, frida.r at 5 p.m.
,·eptecl "fter de,ulline.

ll'.1·1

'l,11

11d., ll'ill hr a,·-

/.,mkinx Ji,r " med bt1uk? TryinK 1,1 sell one?
Check the Student Htsr1un·e Center text exchanit
hoar,/.

Rt.1·taur(ln/ U t1rktrs: J1exihle day.f anti h11urs ft>I'
minimum M'axe. Must be Ill. Cullext. lll/211r1:11me
by Sludent 1-.'mloyment Ser1·ice.1·.

Cleanliness. spaciousness and the
sounds of KLCC make Mr.

The SH< · noM· offers neM' seri·ices. Try ,,u, mexsaxe
b11ard, M'e "Is,, offer housin •· information and
rtferral. Are yt111 confustd abour ll'here you are?
Try the SH< · w find out M'here you classrs are.

f.'tfuc"titlnal Suits: interpret wmpultlri:ed eneriy
"udits, explain en,ru· pmd11cts 1t1 ,·u.w,,mer.1.
U "Xe, mllraxr and ,·omminion. Come to Student
f.'mployment Seri-ice ,,r call ext. 111/1.

to wash your clothes.

l'l"nned l'arentht1od offers professional me<lirnl
c'Ufe: l'.41' sme"rs, birth control pills, diaphmms,
fl 'f)'s, wndoms, foams. 344-9411.
c;,md 111' ford pickup Ji1r haulinx, mm·inx t1ntl
tlelfrery. He"st1nuble rateJ. Call Gary at .!45-7175.
Interior painter. Free t'stimates. ('all (,ary ut
.!45-7275.
\e,.. b111 1ched11/e.1 "re no,.. a mi/able (I/ tht St11clent
Rern11rce Center.
Otnlal x-"'.l'l Jaken at I.< C Oenta/ ( lini<- by clenrul
uuiHinK :.tudent. Charxe S6. ( ·011 .144-9()/5 t!lter f,
p.m. The.1· can ht' sent to your de,11i.H.

autos
.\'f(ltion Waxon. l>od,:e 1'11/ara, 19611. Only needs
rtpair on transmission. S/JO. Call 345-1461.
71 Che,·y lmpa/" K'ith rebuilt en,:ine. Huns ,:1111d.
S700 ,,, hest offer. Call 688-5400.
fl] 'Wercury meteor •· a classic •· xood tires and
brakts, exterior in mint condition. S200. Call
MIJ-4.t/6.
l'ick up bed trailer: lonKlll'ide box (only ll'ith
susptnsionJ. Call Hill at 68.f-4.llfi.

7.t Oatsun 6/IJ, 4dr.. 4sp.. .4Mlf"l,t, clean, straiKht,
rum xood, must sell! Sil(}(} or offer. Call Jody at
Jl2-l.'i58.
f)il'tlrce pendinK -· must sell 77 Ford 4x4 short"·ide. Four speed, super four ll'hteler. 5475(). l 'all
716-0.~fi.f after .I p. m.
Buy of u lifetime. 7/J Mach I Wustanx. 51500.

Cleanjeans a better place

.\ 'ext .4 . . CC president .\eek.\ ,·iu. l'refercthly
hrixht. llrtim/(lfe (Ind p1111·er mild. ln.mnity e1.1en1-ial. / . ('(11·e l<e,·in u me.ua,:e ll'ith 1.\'/.C( he.fore .I
p.m. wtlay!
--

- - 4

U ttntetl: blender and blln,io le.1.rnm. ( '" II 345-(J4fi8.

messages
Pc,u/u •• H hat uhout mine:' -- l<uila.
To 'Wil.e the lihrurian -- )'ou're the 1><·eete1t 111·it I
I.now. -· I i.,a .4.
Iii.' HltJmlie how is your han,:11,·er? -- <ienrrudw.
l 'S Ol T Of U S 41 VA l>OR ! f'lmd human ne,•c/1
4pril 14, /(J:.l(J a.m. at /Jth "ncl l<i11wi,I.
Hally lit mum (I/ /etler"/ b11ildinx.

11111 11'UT.

Second Nature
Used Bikes
buy-sell-trade

Specializing in
recycled bikes.

.... ')I

8AM-11PM
EVERYDAY

240 East 17th
Between High & Pearl

ASLCC Legal Services Committee

used w h e e l s ~
&parts

is seeking persons to serve on the committee. Experience or knowledge
regarding the legal field would be helpful. The committee shall administer
the Legal Se~vices Program as designated in the Legal Services contract.

1712 Willamette

All interested individuals can contact Student Government at EXT. 2330

343-5362

M'e

Page 12 April 15, 1982 - A:f,r;:il ~1982 The TORCH

-Om nio m Ga the rom
Lecture helps museum

women as volunteer'> for cabin counselors o'f at
least 15 years old.
Applications are available at the Easter Seal
School, 3575 Donald. Interview<, will begin April
19. For more information call 344-2247.

A lecture discussion at the University of
Oregon titled "100 Years after Darwin -- Why
Darwinism?" will be held April 15 at the
Geology Building, room I 50.
A panel representing the various points of view
of biology, chemistry and physics, and creationism will comprise the program.
Tickets are $3 and are available at the door.
The program starts at 7:30 p.m.
The museum is also selling 'chances'
to win a weekend for two in Portland incluctmg
dinner, hotel, brunch and two tickets to the
Blazers game. The chances cost $ I and are
available at the Museum of Natural Hi<;tory in
the Science complex or by mail.
The museum i'> slated for clo<,ure June 30 due
to budget cuts. For more information, call
686-5130.

Free films can be viewed April 19 through 21
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. as part of the Earthweck/Sun Day celebration.
"As if People Mattered," "Energy and
Morality," "Lovins On the Sort Path," and
"Power to Change" will be shown in room 167
of the EMU at the U of 0.
The events are co-spon'>ored by the U of 0
Solar Energy Center and the Willamette Valley
Solar Energy Assn. Call 686-3696 for information.

Volunteers needed

'Dance Works' events

ASLCC senator Connie Nelms is looking for
persom intere<,ted in helping with the health fair
in May.
Volunteers arc needed for substitutes for manning booths and to fill baloons.
For more information call ASLCC or the Student Health Center.

"Danc'in out" i'> a different place to dance to
a variety of recorded mu<,ic including new wave,
\Olli, rock, reggae and more. "Danc'in out will
happen at Dance Works, 1231 Olive St. April 16,
30 and May 14 and 28.
Adnfr,-,ion i.., $2 at the door. Mu.,ic goe'> on
from 8 p.m. 10 I a.m. Come <,upport Dance
Work..,, music and movement.
l·or more information call 344-9817.

Counselors needed
The l:::a'>ter Seal school is taking application<,
for counse!or'> for Camp Easter Seal.
The school needs six men and six women of at
least 20 year<, of age or older to as<,i<;t at the camp
for physically handicapped children, located
near l.akc.,idc on the Central Oregon Coa'>t.
Parks and Recreation and camping e.xpcricnce
i'> desired but not necessary. Coumclor.., will
receive room and board and $700 for the time
span of June 14 to Augml 28.
The school al<,o need<, a registered nur,e. The
nur-,e i., offered $1300 and room and board.
The camp is also looking for 12 men and 12

Films feature solar energy

Law School symposium
Oregon court reform will be the t..eynotc topic
in an Arril 17 speech pre'>e11ted at 9a.m. by Arno
Denecke, chief justice of the Oregon Supreme
(.·ourt.
One major topic of the ... ympmium will be the
procedure for <,electing the chief _ju..,ticc !'or the
'>late Supreme Court. On May 18, Orego111am
will \Otc on a ballot mea,urc which \Vottld g.iH·
the governor the authority to appoint the chicl
ju,ticc. l he ju,ticc, currently ,clcL'l a d11cf
JU\ticc from among. thei1 rant..">.

Other topics of panel discussions will be administrative and fiscal control of circuit court<,
and consolidation of circuit and district courts.
For information, contact Jim Edmunson or
John Karpinski at the Student Bar Ass,ociation
office, 686-3871.

Eugene and a SI to $3 suggested donation is encouraged.
For more information or child care call Page
al 345-2022.

Folk Festival Auditions

First Step and the Coalition Opposing
Registration and the Draft is providing a service
to inform the public on how the federal tax
dollars are being spent. The main post office is
the location. The hours are anytime between 9
a.m. and midnight on April 15.
The <,ame evening, CORD is having a general
meeting concerning the current status os draft
registration enforcement and to discuss local
support for draft resi<,ters. The meeting will be at
8 p.m. in Room 104 of the City Hall.
Call 484-7222 or 485-4611 for more information.

The University of Oregon's EMl.J Cultural
Forum is now accepting audition material for the
Twelfth Annual Willamette Valley 1-olk 1-estival.
Thi'> year, the festival will be held on the
weekend of May 2 I, 22, and 23.
This vear. the Cultural f-orum is trying 10
broaden the scope of the festival to include
wider range of 1radmonal forms. Musicians,
poet<,, '>torytellers, dancers, and othe_r performer, from all folk and ethnic traditions are
encouraged to submit audition material.
Ca..,.,ette tapes and other material'> should be
clearly labeled and identified, and mu\! be
received by April 23. Include name, number of
people, and imtrumentation of group, along
with the addre'>s and phone number of a contact
pcr'>on. Call 686-4373 for more information.

Fun Run registration nears
Arri! 17 is the last day 10 pre-register for the
Spring Hing Fun Run which will be April 25. The
entry fee i'> $5.50 for early registrant<., and $7 for
day-of-race registrants.
Each entrant will receive a <,pecially-designed
runner..,' cap a, well as a racket containing merchant,' coupons. f-or more information, call
Guy Di 1orrice, 484-1515 or 343-0081.

Relaxation for men
Coun.,clor Alan Carosio will present and
<.Ji.,cu,, relaxation technique<,, creative vi<,ualiLation, and coping with frustration and depre,sion
on April 21 from 7 to 9:30 p.m.
The program will be held at 358 West 10th in

CORD hold meeting

Career talks scheduled
The Career lnfomation Center announces upcoming career talk<,: City Manager Steve Burkett
of Springfield will <,peak on April 15 from 2:30 to
3:30 p.m.
Li, Cawood, Public Relation-, Practitioner,
will discuss her work and opronunitic., in the
field on April 22 from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m.
All career talk., arc held in room 420 or the
Center building.. I-or more information phone
747-4501, extension 2297.

Poet visits LCC
Award-winning poet John Haines will v1s11
LCC on April 22. His reading is scheduled at I
p.m. in room 308 of the Forum Building.
Haines will also appear at the U of Oat 8 p.m.
April 21 in Straub Hall, room 146.
Both events are free to the public. The LCC
language art<, department is ~ponsoring appearance here while the U of O Creative Writing
Program j<, <;ponsoring hi~ vi-;it there.

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