Lane
Community
College
4000 E. 30th Ave. Eugene, OR 97405

Vol. 22, No. 22 April 22, 1982 - l.,ril 18, 1982

Louris resigns from board
by Ron Kelley
of the TORCH

Long-time LCC Board member Catherine Lauris tendered her
resignation at the April 14 board meeting in a sealed envelope
which was mistakenly laid aside until after the meeting

LCC Board member
Catherine Lauris slipped
Board Chairman Ed Cooper a
letter of resignation at the last
board meeting -- but he slipped it into his pocket.
"He probably stuck it into
his pocket (instead of announcing her resignation) thinking
it was an invitation to dinner
or a party," says Lauris.
Cooper says the letter was in
a sealed envelope and he
assumed Lauris meant for him
to read it after the meeting on
April 14. He says had he
known its contents he would
have announced her resignation to board members.
Lauris was to step down
from her Zone 5 board position on June 30 and Mary
Unruh, who was ·recently
elected to fill Lauris's position, is slated to begin in July.
Lauris says "Mary Unruh is
ready to fill my position,'' but
that now she doesn't know if
or when someone can be appointed to fill her premature
vacancy.

Campaigns underway, balloting begins May 4

ASLCC elections approach
by Mike Sims
of the TORCH

Elections for ASLCC president, vice-president, treasurer
and cultural director, and for
nine positions in the ASLCC
Senate, will be held May 4 and

5.

Seventeen candidates filed
for election to ASLCC offices
for the 1982-83 school year.
Campaigning began Monday,
April 19, and will continue
through May 3.
Four two-person tickets will
appear on the ballot for
ASLCC president and vicepresident, respectively:
Melissa Dahl and Leora Riley,
Paquita Garatea and Kelly
McLaughlin, Kevin Hayden

and Steve Krier and Ron Munion and Jerry Lasley.
Presidential candidates Dahl
and Munion are currently
members of the ASLCC
Senate.

Running for treasurer are
Barry Brown, June Ellison,
Karl Mulder and Edwin Alan
Philips.
Rose Sheboro Akatsa,
Grant Caster, Vicky Johnson
and Celeste Marie Pawol will
be vying for ASLCC cultural
director.
Rick . Montoya is the sole
candidate for a position on the
ASLCC Senate, leaving eight
positions still open with no
candidates. ASLCC treasurer
David Anderson stated that
write-in votes for senator will

• -, ,-~-- -·-·re~P-ftQl!Z-f@-lfl~1il • Students interested in • An LCC student tests
~@ii

overseas study may still
f.~ have a chance to 'see the
; world.' See story, page 3.

himself and nature by climbing Mt. McKinley. See
story, page 4. •

Unruh says "I do feel that
I'm ready to step in right
now," and, "I assume that if
there's a vacancy, I'm the
logical person to fill that
vacancy, but (if there isn't a
vacancy) I'm on the (LCC)
budget committee and already
active . . . "
Cooper -says he will not call
for a special meeting to fill
Lauris's position: "It's only
natural that we'd appoint
Mary Unruh. But two people
were elected. (Robert Bowser
was elected to the-at large
position.) We're (Cooper and
LCC Pres. Eldon Schafer) not
really sure it would be fair to
appoint one and leave the
other one hanging.''
The board will consider
Lauris' resignation at the
May 12 board meetmg, ana
although board members may
decide otherwise, Cooper says,
Unruh and Bowser will begin
as scheduled in July.
A further-complication, say
several board members and
Schafer, - involves the continued ·absence of at-large
representative Les Hendrickson. He has missed board
meetings and related budget
meetings for the past two
months.
Hendrickson is also slated
to step down from his position

June 30 when Bowser will
assume his duties.
With Lauris and Hendrickson absent, the board is
reduced from seven to five
members. Cooper says "it
takes a majority (four) of the
board members to consummate an action." He says that
with only five members present it is conceivable that as
few as two members could
block a vote. And it may be
difficult to get a quorum to
conduct business.
Bert Dotson, the president's
assistant, says that Hendrickson•s absence "creates a
void,' ' because he ''is no
longer there to speak for that
segment" of voters he was
elected to represent.
Dotson says that in a
telephone conversation with
Schafer, Hendrickson said he
wasn't going to submit a
resignation. Dotson says that
Hendrickson implied. that he
would not be coming to the
two remaining board meetings
this school year or to any of
the budget meetings. A
resignation could lead to an
earlier seating of Bowser.
Dotson did say that Hendrickson offered to come to a
board meeting if a quorum
was needed to make decisions.
Hendrickson was not available
for comment.

be encouraged. Anderson also
announced that recruiting for
new senators will begin immediately after the 1982-83 officers are seated if the upcoming election does not yield nine
new senators.

The TORCH has prepared a
series of questions pertaini_ng
to student issues which will aid
the paper in endorsing candidates for ASLCC offices.
_ All candidates are requested
to fill out the questionnaire,
which may be obtained, from
Phyllis Braun in the ASLCC
offices, room 479 in the
Center building. Completed
questionnaries are due in the
TORCH office, room 205 of
the Center Building, no later
than 5 p.m on April 26 .

,·

.

.~ l - ~••?J[""-,;·:zrrz1

• Student Health's vision
• LCC's Reading Fair
and hearing services strugpromises to be an ingle to keep their objectives · . teresting day of literary ex• alive. See story, page S.
• ploration. See story, page S.

• My Dinner with Andre (!ft]
allows us to see our en- ~\ft!
, vironment as it really is. See
' story, page 9.
•

IJ

Page 2 April 22, 1982 - A tJFil lk-t982 The TORCH

FREE FOR ALL

-Letters------------Paean Munion

i'o The Editor:

Students need excellence in
their elected representatives.
This is why I endorse the candidacy of Ron Munion.
I served as a student
representative in ASLCC for
two years: one year with President Debi Lance and one year
with Dave Anderson. Both
were effective leaders and
served the students to the best
of their abilities. Ron is also of
high caliber.
Ron possesses many important attributes which qualify
him for the job of ASLCC
president. He is articulate and
informed on issues affecting
LCC students. He always
researches all sides of topics
before making decisions.
Ron is intelligent and, above
all, not afraid to take on difficult tasks. In fact, he is willing to dedicate himself 100
percent to accomplishing
goals. In my association with
Ron, I've found his motives
for seeking office are solely to
benefit students of LCC -they are not based on selfish
interests.
A vote for Ron would be a
vote for responsible leadership. I urge students to elect
Ron Munion as their next
ASLCC president.
Mike Cross

Go out, multiply
To The Editor:

first will be sooner or later
crowded out of existence by
the second.
'' And again, the stationary
population is avoiding the full
blast of natural competition,
and, following a universal
biological law, it will gradualiy
degenerate.
"It is impossible to believe
that a degenerating small
population can survive in the
long run in a strongly competitive world, or that it can
have the force to compel the
rest of the world to degenerate
with it."
Commenting on West Germany's cultural demise (a
combination of extremely low
birthrates and massive immigration of primarily
Turkish Moslems -- who oppose birth control) Professor
Harold Rasch has stated, "By
the year 2000 there will be only
one German state left -- the
GDR (East Germany)." Darwin's prediction coming true?
British scholar Colin G.
Clark has stated, "It is with
population growth that
vigorous civilizations are
associated,'' and that population decline and stagnation
will accelerate the decay of a
particular state or nationality.
He recently addressed college students stating, ''Now I
put to you what you must
regard as your primary duty ..
. bear and bring up children.
What is needed is population,
and only you can provide it."
Should we, as a nation, continue our course towards
genetic extinction? The choice
is up to you.
Ed Crockett

I think Senator Hatfield is
overlooking the negative consequences of population control in America or he wouldn't
be sponsoring S-1771.

To The Editor:

Charles Galton Darwin
wrote in The Next Million
Years that, "Any country
which limits its population
becomes
thereby
less
numerous than one which
refuses to do so, and so the

LCC is an excellent school
offering a wide variety of
courses, but one extremely
vital course is lacking.
Creative Restroom Writing.
It could be a 1-3 variable
credit course and offered in

Graffiti nixed

The TORCH

EDITOR: Ron Kelley

ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Jeff Keating
INFORMATION EDITOR: Paula Case
PHOTO EDITOR: Andrew Hanhardt
STAFF REPORTERS: David Bowers, David
Brown, Susan Crosman, Paul Hansen, Monte
Metz, Kelli Ray, Tt:rry Rhoads, Marty
Schwarzbauer, Mike Sims, Larry Swanson,
Cynthia Whitfield
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS : Michael
Bailey, Monte Metz, Bonnie Nicholas, Larry
Swanson, Marty Schwarzbauer, Gene White PRODUCTION MANAGER: Tim Swillinger
PRODUCTION ADVISOR: Lesa Carmean
PRODUCTION: Krista Barker, Paula Case,
Lauri Geer, Caryn Jacobson, Jeff Keating,
Kelli Ray, Linda Reynolds, Mike Sims, Tim
Swillinger, Gene White
CARTOONIST AND GRAPHIC ARTISTS:
Marvin Denmark, William DiMarco, Joyce
Heuman, Bill Lee
INFORMA TJON ASSIST ANT: Becky Mach
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jan Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS : Caryn
Jacobson, Krista Barker
COPYSETTER: Linda Johns
RECEPTIONIST: Linda Reynolds
DISTRIBUTION: Tim Olsen

The TORCH is a student-managed
newspaper, published on Thursdays,
September through June.
News stories are compressed, concise
reports, intended to be as fair and balanced as
possible. Some may appear with a byline to indicate the reporter responsible.
News features, because of their broader
scope, may contain some judgments on the
part of the writer. They are identified with a
"feature" byline.
"Forums" are essays contributed by
TORCH readers and are aimed at broad issues
facing members of the community. They
should be limited to 750 words.
"Letters 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 announcemen! 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.

C\

@Fa~~~()l'111.
College Press Service \

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every building on campus.
Many students are of the
mistaken belief that it is being
offered this term, and they are
striving- hard for A's.
I wish to express my app re ci at ion to campus
Maintenance for painting
women's restroom 122.
Creative Restroom Writing is
one form of education I can
live without. Thanks again.
Sarah Bower

Restore aid
To The Editor:

I'd like to commend Ron
Kelley on his recent article:
'' Reaganomics: Bludgeoning
Liberal Programs." It was a
thorough look at the effects of
Reagan's budget axe.
I have also fallen victim to
that axe. I was a carpenter until high interest rates forced me
to look for another occupation.
I then became a psychiatric
aide at a state mental hospital,
where conditions included:
poor sanitation, disease,
physical and mental abuse, improper drug control, malpractice, drug overdose, and
suspected
cases
of
manslaughter -- and I'm talking about what the staff did to
the patients!
•
Complaints were sent to
HEW, but did little good;
however, without the regulations in effect, conditions
would have been worse.
(According to long time staff,
they were worse in the Sixties,
before current regulations existed.) And now, the budget
cuts will eliminate some of
those regulations.

----------

After a two year stint there,
my vocal opposition to those
conditions forced me to look
for a better job. I returned to
carpentry for a while, then be
came a Welfa~e Assistance

Worker.

After a year there, budget
cuts forced me to "bump" into a lower position, as a
Medicheck aide. I also returned to college as a night student, to try to better my future
job prospects.
Welfare regulations designed to "get rid of waste and
fraud," had a different effect.
Some waste was cut, but the
bulk of the cuts affected those
trying to better themselves:
· those marginally working, col1e g e students, working
mothers who qualified for
child care only, and state
employees.
Indigents, such as railroad
transients, and the perpetually
lazy were the least affected.
Instead of pushing outreach
and service, as had been done
previously, management made
our motto: "Find a way to
disqualify 'em!''
As for fraud, there was no
reduction. At a statesponsored training session titled ''Quality Control and Investigations," I asked one of
Salem's top investigators if
statistics were kept comparing
client fraud to provider fraud
(Providers refer to doctors,
dentist and others in the
medical professions.) He
replied: "In the entire United
States, a study done last year
(1979) indicated that client
fraud had cumulatively passed
the one billion dollar mark,
and the provider fraud had
passed the nine billion dollar
mark.''

None of the newspapers and
none of the new regulations
addressed the true problem:
the rich continue getting richer
on the welfare program, too.
At the end of February, this
year, I was finally laid off. My
family is surviving on financial
aid now, and I hear Mr.
Reagan wants to cut that back
severely, as well. Every means
of support I have had, from
work to school to public
benefits, has now been
drastically affected by fat cat
politics. Yet I will survive in
spite of them, because I'm a
scrappy fighter. But others
won't fare as well.
Reagan is attacking the
poor, the elderly, women,
minorities, college students,
the environment, civil rights,
and the health and safety of
the world. He supports the
rich, Big Business, and the
warniakers.
When a plan was offered to
let us all pay the costs for the
Three Mile Island shutdown,
Paul Tsongas (D-Mass.) stated
that big business is in favor of
free enterprise on prot1ts, out
always wanted to "socialize
the losses."
Again, my compliments to
Ron Kelley. He could have added a moral to the story:
Reagan used to make monkeys
out of his supporting actors;
now he wants to make
monkeys out of the rest of us.
- "" ~

I won't stand still for it. I'll
fight till every penny of financial aid is restored. And I urge
every student here to join with
me to restore all "people"
programs.

Kevin A. Hayden

The TORCH April 22, 1982 - Al3fil ~8, 1982 Page 3

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

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University of Colorado students sweet on Reagan?

BOULDER, Colo. -- Students at the University of Colorado are sending Pres. Reagan 10,173 jelly beans,
which, as you may recall, are his favorite candy.
Each bean represents a student at Colorado whose
financial aid is now threatened by Reagan budget cuts.

/

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Middle East cease-fire ends with Israeli bombing

BEIRUT -- The nine-month-old truce in Southern
Lebanon ended April 21 when Israeli jets blasted
Palestinian strongholds south of Beirut.
Israel says the attack was in response to several recent
attacks on Israelis, including an Israeli soldier who was
killed by an anti-tank mine in Southern Lebanon.
During the attack, Israli jets downed two Syrian
MIGs in dogfights. Syria says one Israeli plane was hit,
but the Israelis say all of their planes returned safely to
base.
Lebanese sources say first estimates are that at least
19 Palestinians were killed and more than 40 others
wounded.

Jobs abroad through ICE
t~pic of upcoming pr9gram

OPEC minister predicts oil demand to rise
VIENNA -- An OPEC oil minister is predicting that the
oil cartel will stick to its $34-per-barrel benchmark
price. There's been speculation that OPEC might abandon it because of the world oil glut.
But Humberto Berti, Venezuela's oil minister, says
the worst is over for the cartel -- the worldwide oil glut
has peaked and prices will stop falling.

by Paula Case
of the TORCH

GNP drops as recession continues

.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Commerce Department
reported April 21 that the gross national product declined at an annual rate of nearly four percent during the
first quarter of the year. Inventories were reduced
sharply, and economists say that may set the stage for
production increases and a recovery from the recession.
However, the head of the President's Council of
Economic Advisers warned that the economy may continue to decline before any recovery sets in. Murray
Weidenbaum said the economy will continue "marking
time" until interest rates fall.
•
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--¼

J]li .boycott sponsored by the United Black Front emptied

Jtf: many of the city's classrooms.

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The boycott was the first of a series planned by the

!)fl Front to protest Portland School Board's refusal to

1111 locate Harriet Tubman Middle School at Eliot School
i ::\~\\ll near Memorial Coliseum, as the -board promised in its

l t~=-~e-~:~d::r~~a:~;n:;:n:L_,,BMME%JJ:W.!;

"Beach closure urged
by David Brown
of the TORCH

Citizens for "Untreaded"
Beaches submitted over 1500
signatures to Oregon State
Parks and Recreation Division
of the Department of
Transportation requesting the
closure of three Oregon
beaches to all vehicles, says
Wendell Woods, committee
member.
Vehicle entries on Oregon
beaches, says Woods, infringe
on the activities of pedestrian
recreationalists and the environment itself. He claims
that cars, dune-buggies, and

other motorized vehicles en• danger public safety, complicate enforcement of existing
regulations and disturb
wildlife sanctuaries, including
the feeding grounds of the
bald eagle and the nesting
habitat of the snowy plover.
Woods urges Lane County
residents to attend the public
hearing at the Eugene City
Council chambers, 777 Pearl,
on Tuesday, April 27 at 7: 30
p.m.
For more information call
the Oregon Wilderness Coalition at 344-0675 or the U of 0
Survival Center at 485-6021.

Switzerland, Belgium,
France, Germany and the
Canary Islands are possible
destinations for summer
employment through LCC's
International Cooperative Experience (ICE) program.
In a day-long program
scheduled for April 23, Dr.
Gunter Seefeldt, field coordinator for ICE European job
sites, will tell LCC students
how to get a job in these countries, and how to prepare for
the differences in working
conditions, language and
culture.
Seefeldt, a French and German instructor at Foothill Col'. lege in Los Altos, Calif., has
' spent the last 10 years of his
"free
time"

coordinating students' work
experience.
According to Peggy
Marston, LCC's ICE coordinator, Seefeldt is ''a bright,
energetic man." He usually
finds jobs for and coordinates
work experience with 250
American and 100 European
students in one year. He visits
students individually twice on
campus before their departure, and once at the job site.
Seefeldt, from Switzerland
himself, "loves doing those
types of negotiations," says
Marston.
Students interested in the
ICE program must:
• Be at least 18 years old~
• Have completed one year
of the applicable foreign
language.
• Have completed one year

of work prior to departure.
• Prepare a one to two-page
letter indicating areas of interest in Europe and workstudy objectives.
Students are also encouraged to prepare a current resume
of education and work
history.
A 1uncheon at the April session will be held from 12:30
p.m. to 1:30 p.m .. At 2:30
former ICE students will be introduced. A reception for
Seefeldt will begin at 3:30,
followed by an ICE seminar
from 5 to 7 p.m. A no-host
dinner will be served from 7:30
to 10 p.m. All events are in the
Center Building.
For additional information
on the program contact Peggy
Marston at 747-4501, ext.
2423.

Overseas study programs
available to LCC students
.

by Paul Morris
for the TORCH

Although LCC doesn't have
an overseas study program,
students might still have the
opportunity to study in a
foreign country, according to
Ronald Mitchell, Social
Science Department Chairman.
Although LCC is affiliated
with the Pacific Northwest International Intercultural
Education
Consortium
(PNIIEC), it is not offering
any study programs abroad at
this time. Lack of instructor
interest compounded by a
depressed Lane County
economy represent the absence
of any LCC program.
He adds that the Interna-

tional Cooperative Experience
program does offer work experience but not study experience.
Mitchell states, however,
that interested students "can
go to other programs."
Oregon State University and
Linn-Benton Community College are the closest institutions
to Eugene that offer PNIIEC
programs overseas.
The PNIIEC was established in 1979 to promote educational opportunities abroad
and has a membership of over
30 academic and nonacademic
institutions in the Pacific Northwest. The consortium also
has affiliate and associate
members in California and
Colorado.
Five overall programs con-

stitute PNIIEC. They include
internationalizing curriculum,
community
outreach,
technical training, programs
abroad and international activities.
Cost and the time of year
trips are planned vary. Expenses range from $1500 to
$7800 for tuition, travel and
lodging.
Mitchell· adds that LCC offers "plenty of coursework"
related to overseas studies.
Adoption of any program, he
says, would not be difficult for
students.
Students wishing to obtain
more information about the
PNIIEC and its programs can
contact the Social Science
Department, ext. 2430.

P~ge 4 April 22, 1982 - ~tit 28,-1982 The TORCH

LCC climber dares Mt. McKinley

Challengin g nature's 1.imits
It works out to 150 pounds
per man, and must be pulled
up the mountain on four-foot
plastic tobaggans as the party
progresses foot by foot over
the three week ascent and descent. At the point where the
supplies cannot be towed the
men will shuttle it back and
forth between camps.

by N.U. Stu
for the TORCH

He doesn't worry about the
risks.
"I worry about being
physically capable of keeping
up. (I ask myself) 'Am I good
enough and strong enough?' ,,
Peter Cadigan, a 42-year old
LCC construction technology
student, began climbing
mountains three years ago as
part of a class at Ft.
Steilacoom Community College in Tacoma. He and his
three Washington State partners left Friday, April 16 on a
three-week trek up Mt.
McKinley, the 20,000 foot
peak in Alaska that rises above
all other mountains in North
America.
'' Physical conditiomng cannot be underrated. I've been

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But equipment alone won't
guarantee the success of the
climb. Planning and organization have been important from
the start, says Cadigan. The
group selected an expedition
leader to delegate responsibilities, someone to keep
track of what's going on and
who's doing what.
"You have to trust each
· other,,, he says with intensity.
"You have to know each other
know each other, s
weaknesses and streng.ths. You
have to be able to depend on
one another and basically get
along. You can be holed up in
Photo by La,rry Swanson
a tent for two or three days
with somebody and if you
Prospective Mt. McKinley conqueror Peter Cadigan
don't get along, your chances
doing a lot of running and
he'll carry and use on his of surviving are slim.,,
quest.
weightlifting, and have also
. If any one of the men is
done a number of conditionTents, stoves, utensils. Ice unable to • proceed, says
ing pre-climbs" at Mt. Rainier
axes, and snow saws for form- Cadigan, a Vietnam veteran,
and Mt. Hood, says Cadigan,
ing igloos and snow caves. then the mission will cease and
who grew a beard for the occamarking the sick or disabled member
ropes,
Fuel,
sion -- ''partly role-playing
"wands" to mark routes and will be removed from the
and part practical, to protect
hazards. Radios and PIEPS -- mountain.
my skin from the elements ...
small electronic signalling
and to catch a lot of soup."
Those kinds of questions
devices worn around the neck
for emergency locating ef- have already been discussed
He's perfected climbing
forts. Dehydrated foods. and resolved in six months of
techniques, using a lot of permeetings and phone calls.
sonal and team equipment Medical supplies.

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Even the meals were planned
by consensus so that no one
will have to eat a food he isn't
fond of. "Basically, it's a lot
of dried foods, a lot of raisins,
apricots, that sort of thing,''
and some canned foods, and a
dried foil-wrapped stew sold
by Kraft that simply requires
heating in warm water.
"Food becomes not only
something for nourishment,
but for survival. You may
have no appetite and just want
to crawl into your bag at the
end of the day. But you've got
to force yourself to eat and
take liquids -- a minimum of
two quarts of liquid per day.,'
Hypothermia. Frostbite. Illness. Avalanches. Crevasses.
'' I recognize the possibility
some of us may not return
from this trip, or we might
return minus a few toes or
fingers.
"If something is going to
happen, it's going to happen.
Not to be blase about it. . . "
he says, but when risks exist
"you're a little bit more aware
and thankful for what you do
have."
What Cadigan wants is ''the
sense of adventure, sense of
challenge. n Comparing it to
other forms of competition, he
says that after t~e agony, after
reaching the top, the memory
of the strain quickly fades.
It's the process he enjoys as
much as the completion -preparing, organizaing, worryi_ng about keeping up, wanting 'to "be pait .of -the trusting
team, thinking and using his
skills and strength.

"I can remember climbing
Mt. Rainier, stopping, looking
around. It's awesome. Gee,
I'm not very big. I don't matter very much. It's almost
unimaginable: . . " But, he
adds, he also gains an exhilaration "knowing you can
conquer that huge structure,
you can get to the top.,,

T&TTexaco

. t'J
.U~J 'J
J1! .u -tl! .!)1! ii
J)~JiJ!JtJ
~!JJ)J
'J J.J1 J.J'J~
EXPf~RT
WORK .\ IA.\'.~ HIP

!formerly Ram ·s College Texaco)

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April Specials!
Lube-Oil-Filters

Reg. $16.95
Special $14.95

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Special $5.00

Tune-up plus parts

8 cyl.-Reg. $20. 00
6cyl.-Reg.$19.50
4cyl.-Reg.$19.00
Pack Wheel Bearings

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

Tire Rotation

Reg.-$11.00
Special $8.50

Special $11.95
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Welding & Mechanic
Work
$20.00 per hour

Diesel's on Gasoline Alley

The TORCH April 22, 1982 - AtJril 38, J982 Page 5

Marcher s will protest US policy in El Salvador
by Jeff Keating
of the TORCH

Thousands of marchers are
expected to take to the streets
of Eugene April 24 to protest
US involvement in El Salvador
and to express support for the
leftist struggle in that country.
Sponsored by the April 24
Coalition, the march will
culminate in a downtown rally
featuring speakers from national and international
organizations which support
the FDR, a coalition representing Salvadoran strata ranging
from peasants to professionals.
Included in the rally will be
a representative from the FDR
and representatives from
church organizations working
in El Salvador.
Four unifying goals form
the basis for the Coalition's efforts:
• US out of El Salvador. No
military or economic aid to the
military regime.
• Support the FDR, the

Photo by Gene White

Thousands of Eugeneans participated in last year's march

Reading Fair to
present variety
·of activities
by Jeff Keating
of the TORCH

Science fiction authors ;Kate
Wilhelm and Damon Knight
will be just two of the guests at ·
the LCC Study S'9)ls Center's
r
first Re~~ing Fair.April' 23.
to
Scheduled from 9:30 a.~.
3 p.m., the Fair will present a
variety of activities, ranging
from panels on literature by
nationally-known and area
authorities to displays by local
bookstores.
Wilhelm and Knight will
head a four-member panel on
science fiction, with authors
John Varley and Jeff Simmons rounding out the group.

''The Reading Fair is an effort to encourage people to
read,'' says Study Skills
Center department head Pat
John. "Many students don't
choose to read if they don't
have to."
She adds that although there
were no real problems scheduling speakers of Knight's and
Wilhelm's caliber, she did encounter a few financial snags
while organizing the Fair.
"We couldn't get money
from LCC's Development
Fund," she says. School administrators controlling Fund
allocations were reluctant to
back an unproven project, she
says, so she hopes the Fair
''will be good enough this year
to fund next year.
"Most of the people for
whom this conference is
directed have never even heard
of most of the people who'll

:ASLCC aids vision program

by David Brown
of the TORCH
"It •is really gratifying to
have students stop ·by with
their new glasses and say
'Hey! The world's in focus,' "
Sandra
says
oe here," says John. "It'll be
u dent
St_
of
director
Ing,
.
for
a whole new ·experience
•
- Health.
-them."
The expected turnout for .
the· Fair is-"about 100~" says
John with · a laugh, ·" cause
that's the number of chairs·we
have: But," she adds quickly, ...
"if more people show up it'll
be great.
"Almost everyone has been
very supportive all the way
through," she adds. "I think
it's going to be a success."
Four presentations will
make up the bulk of the
Linda
Fair.
Reading
Danielson and Barre Toelken
will present a folklore and
literature presentation hosted
by Adeline Romoser at 9:30
a.m ..
The folklore will be followed by a panel on the creative
process, with Eugene RegisterGuard entertainment editor
Fred Crafts heading a group
which includes Dean Baker,
Don Bischoff, Barbara
Mossburg and playwright
Alan Boze. The panel will be
moderated by Frank Rossini.
An LCC drama presentation is scheduled for noon,
and the science fiction panel,
hosted by Delta Sanderson
and Vicki Reed, will follow at
1 p.m.
The bookstore displays and
a writing instrument display
will be in progress throughout
the day. Door prizes will also
be awarded during the Fair.
All Reading Fair Activities
will be held in the Study Skills
Center, 4th floor Center Bldg.
For more information contact
Pat John at ext. 2439.

coalition of organizations
At-home policies are also a
which represents the people of concern of the Coalition. CutEl Salvador in their struggle backs in social services such as
against the military dictator- child care and education are
ship.
indicative of the US's stress on
• No US military interven- military buildup and, the
tion in Central America.
Coalition believes, reflect a
• Reallocate military spen- marked change in priorities by
ding toward securing full •the Reagan Administration.
employment and basic social
The march begins at 10 a.m.
services in the US.
on the University of Oregon
The Coalition believes that , campus. The marchers will
heightened violence in El work their way downtown to
Salvador and US government the rally, where several onesupport of the military regime minute speeches by area group
is a cause for awareness and representatives will complereflects a change in domestic ment the program.
and world policy by the United
The San Francisco Mime
States.
Troupe will perform their
"Factwino Meets the Moral
Statistics supplied by the
Legal Aid Office of the Ar- Majority,"a benefit show, at
chdiocese of El Salvador sup- the Lane County Conference
port the Coalition's view. AcCenter Theater, 13th and
cording to Legal Aid Office
Madison, at 8 p.m. Tickets are
figures, 35,000 people have
$5.25 in advance and $6 at the
been killed in El Salvador door.
since October of 1979. TwoFor more information, call
thirds of these people were
reportedly victims of 485-1755 or 485-4248, or visit
government-backed death the Coalition's headquarters,
1236 Kincaid, Eugene.
squads and security forces.

For many of these students,
vision problems weren't apparent until they tried reading
college blackboards, says Ing.

Since the beginning of last
fall term Student Health's Vision and Hearing program
tested 106 people's vision and
16 people's hearing according
to Ing' s r.ecords.
But the program was almost
discontinued when the
Development Fund denied
Student Health's request for
spring and summer funding of
the program, she says.
Lyle Swetland, director of
the Development Fund, explained that "It was disturbing
to our trustees that it (funding
of Vision and Hearing) was
going on continually.'' The
Development Fund he~ps pro-

grams over financial .hurdles,
but does not have a policy of
"year-in-year-out" support,
says Swetland. .
So Ing appeared at a M~rch
30 ASLCC Senate meeting
asking for $140 to help support Vision .and H~aring's spring and summer: budget, says
Almond Hillard, ASLC.C
communications director.
Hillard · · moved that the
meeting go-into emergency session in order to come to an immediate decision. And
ASLCC established a budget
to supply the needed funding,
she says. ASLCC will also
make a strong recommendation to the next student
government that they continue
the $300 funding for the
1982-83 year.

"We (the student government) felt pretty good about
allocating the money because
we are concerned a·bout
students and we are more than
willing to put student derived
money towards a good cause
for students," says Hillard.

!

The money pays a U of 0

Speech and Hearing Center
student to spend two hours
each week giving free vision
and hearing tests at the Student Health Center, says Ing. .
She explains that students can •
obtain further help_with hear- ..
ing problems at .the U of 0
. ~peech and Hearing Center.
And students with .vision ps;-oblems discuss various options . ! .
with her.
These options. cover •
pointers in shopping for
glasses, referrals to doctors
and financial assistance -- in .
extreme cases -- through an offer froni the Lion's Club, says
Ing.

But the Lion's Club had to
cut back some of their
assistance because of the
economy, she continues.
In better financial times,
says Ing, there will be room in
Student Health's regular
budget for V & H. "But right
now, there are a number of cut
lists in the college's budgets,
and we don't know how far
down these lists we will have to
go."

I

i
[ Ap:::::::
acc;:::~:::~~~82
OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY

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ff

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1s4.3424

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or write: School of Pharmacy, Oregon ll
IT
State University,
===:J]
Cor~allis, Oregon 97331

Bye ~bf~, Eugene
•

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. )~.--.\ ~·./ \.~

. :__

.,·

:· -; ~: .·.·_ii,!.arty Swanson
. •. •• •. ! ·of*TORCH

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"Ground Zero Week,, op~ed in Eugene -- and across the nation -- April 18
with a warning that we '•atlow'·ours.el-ves to think about the unthinkable.''
"Ground Zero Week" organf.zers.say discussions on the effects of nuclear war
and what can be done to pr~n( it will be the focus of the week of April 18-25.
In Eugene the week begatf witifthe placement of a "Ground Zero" marker at
the Federal Building in dowi\t~<Eusene.
"Ground zero" is a term- -f ~'.~ ~area directly beneath a nuclear blast.
Dr. James Walker, a Eug~,J!Qctor and a member of Physician$ Concerned
about Nuclear War, told acfowc$-0f about 70 at the placement ceremony that
"we must allow ourselves tQ'thikik about the unthtinkable. ''
And the "unthinkable,". be
includes several consequenc~ 'beyond the
. ,. ,
obvious effects of heat and r~tion from a nuclear explosion. •. •::~ .. •. •
''Medical response would·lita}most nonexistent: in the afterina.ttlof a nuclear .••
attack," he said, since most hos6ital:f~e located in urban areas ~~ch w:Outd_.. be .,
destroyed in the event of sucl)-'an attack. • •
. /. •
••
He said a nuclear ·war~ w0t1Ut:~reYiv6'" diseases ''you only read aboµt;. in histotybooks" and would lead io widespread starvation arid mainuu;ition·.. ;.- •. .;: _·; •
Damage to the Earth'~-fr~ife ozone layer, .he said, could in<:rease exposure to.
ultraviolet light, causing blindness ''in all unprotected mammalian species, on •
Earth."
,.;;
•
•
••· •
Mike Harris, a "Ground Zero Week'' organizer, then took spectators on a
verbal tour of a post-nuclear war Eugene.
"Most of what we think of as Eugene would be totally devastated," he said.
Eugene is one of over 500 communities across the country observing "Ground
Zero Week." "Earth Week," a U of O sponsored celebration of the Earth's
beauty and the need to protect it, will also be observed this week.
A schedule of the remainder of the week's activities:
• Thursday, April 22 -- At 2:30 p.m., Wesley Marks will lecture on "The
Oceans: Our Last Resource" in 180 Prince Lucien Campbell Hall at the U of 0.
At 4:30 p.m., a convocation on the options for the prevention of nuclear war will
be held in Geology 150 at the U of O. At 8 p.m., journalism professor -Carl
Grossman will discuss his book, "Cover-up: What You Are Not Supposed to
Know about Nuclear Power,'' at the Lane County Fairgrounds Convention
Center.
• Friday, April 23 -- From 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., "Earth Week" sponsors a cleanup of the millrace beginning at the bridge on Alder Street.
• Saturday, April 24 -- At 8 p.m., KOAC-TV, Channel 7, will air "Thinking
Twice About Nuclear War," a one-hour documentary on the arms race.
• Sunday, April 25 -- At 1 p.m., the "Ground Zero" marker will be removed
from the Federal Building in a brief ceremony. From 2 p.m. to 5 p.m., The week
concludes with a film , slide .show and discussion at Harris Hall.

ND
SNUFF seeks L~
by Cynthia Whitfield
of the TORCH

EE
APRIL 18-2-5
1982

Although Ground Zero Week is an intensive, short-term
effort to gain support in the movement to halt the nuclear
arms race, there are several on-going groups devoted
primarily to the cause. The university-based group SNUFF
(Students for a Nuclear-Free Future) is calling for the creation of a sister group at LCC.
''There is a growing concern about the nuclear build-up
and the possibility of nuclear catastrophe,'' says Onno deJ ong, a member of the group. "We want to mobilize
everyone concerned at LCC about nuclear weapons into affirmative action for a nuclear freeze."
He says that SNUFF is also affiliated with CALS
(Citizens for a Lasting Security), a statewide organization
devoted to the same cause. The freeze campaign is a movement calling for mutal US - USSR freeze on the testing,
production and deployment of nuclear weapons and of
missiles and new aircraft designed to deliver the weapons.
Both organizations are involved with promoting US Rep.
Jim Weaver's proposed freeze initiative. The campaign to
get the issue on ballot will be announced next week. The initiative is also supported by US Rep. Les Aucoin, D-Ore.,
and will require about 55,000 signatures from registered
voters before it can get on the ballot. Popular support for
the freeze is growing, and according to a recent Gallup poll,
72 percent of Americans support a nuclear freeze.

Altha
doctrine
wishing
retailiat'
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The dir
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SNUF
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WITHOUT WORLD DISARMAMfllt..

... Wffa,.'. •
Will lfAW • ,..:, .

GRANDCHILDRftti':;/'
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Charts courtesy of

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Photo by
Andrew Hanhardt

Nuclear War Would Cause Unprecedented Deaths
AMERICAN DEATHS

*= 200.000 people

IN PAST WARS

IN A NUCLEAR WAR*

uuuutt~uuuu~ui~uttu~~~~u,u,uuu~,u

HUHHUU~uuittUHHHHU~U*UU*UUU~U

ks,LCC chapter

Civi/War

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~1

WWI

t-term
uclear
:voted
~UFF
: crea'ld-up
~ode>bilize
to afCALS
zation
tnove~sting,
nd of
pons.
~Rep.
ign to
'he in-Ore.,
stered
,rt for
i> poll,

Although in the past the US and USSR have relied on the
doctrine of mutual assured destruction -- neither country
wishing to strike first because of fear of automatic nuclear
retailiation -- CALS says that both countries have begun
developing accurate weapons which could theoretically
knock out the opponent's ability to retaliate.
CALS interprets the August, 1980 Presidential Directive
59 as an official acknowledgment of first strike strategy.
The directive orders US missiles to target Soviet missile
silos instead of cities. Although seeming to be a "humane"
policy, it could mean that the US is prepared to initiate
nuclear war because such missile silos would be empty if the
US were merely responding to an initial Soviet attack.
SNUFF urges LCC students to sign the initiative and to
attend a forthcoming May 15th rally at Alton Baker Park.
There will be three speakers including Weaver, state
representative Mary Burrows and Pat Haden, quarterback
for the L.A. Rams. For further information about the rally, contact CALS at 343-8548.
SNUFF member Onno deJong will speak at LCC Monday April 26, at 3 p.m. The room will be announced. The
highly acclaimed film "The Last Epidemic" wil~ be shown.
Suggestions on the organization of the LCC sister group
will be given along with informational literature.
"I think there's a lot of potential at Lane for students
who feel the way we do," says deJong, "and we want io
organize those people."

nnnn1n1:n1nnu:n1m:n111ui
utnttr11u
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Korea _ _ t
WWII

Vietnam----

1,161,000

•estimate by US National Securrty Council

140,000,000

SOVIET DEATHS .

t = 200,000

IN PAST WARS

WW II

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31,700,000

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1918

IN A NUCLEAR WAR

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people

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********************************************
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113,000,000

*estimate by US National Security Council

Page 8 April 22, 1982 - Asr,1il 2g;-1982 The TORCH

ENTERT AINMEN T

S.F. troupe fights Moral Majority
by Jeff Keating
of the TORCH
The San Francisco Mime
"Obie"
Troupe,
(Off-Broadway) award winners for their critically acclaimed work, will be in
Eugene to give two performances of Factwino Meets the
Moral Majority April 23 and
24.
The shows will begin at 8
p.m. in the Lane County Conference Center Theatre, 13th
and Madison streets.
"Faster than a speeding
data-bank, more powerful
than a word processor . able to
leap rightwing logic in a single
bound ... up in the sky, it's a

bird, it's a plane, it's Factperson!"
Thus describes the leftwing
superhero created in 1980 by
the San Francisco Mime
Troupe to combat the forces
of tlie so-called Moral Majority.
Originally incarnated in the
form of a waitress, Factperson
has this season taken on the
guise of Sedro F. Woolley
(yes, it's also the name of a
tiny town in Washington
State), a Sixth Avenue San
Francisco drunk who opens
closed minds and invades
Moral Majority meetings as
Factwino to make people
think about The Issues and
The Answers.
Factwino would be invinci-

Applications· for the Position of

1982-83

DENALI EDITOR
now being accepted and can _be obtained at the
DENALI office room 479F Center Bldg., _the
ASLCC room 479 •Center Building, or at the
TORCH of/ice room 205 Center Bldg.

Job Description

Editor of Denali, LCC's literary/arts magazine, _
will design the.structure of the 1982-83 Denali staff
and the production schedule~ The editor can expect
to work at least 20 hours per week. ·Editor will give
a one year commitment with a salary of $4.25/hour
if eligible for work-study through Finacial Aid.
·s FE credits are available.

Responsibilities

Editor will have control of the hiring and managing
of staff and will have final word on all matters ac_cording to LCC Media Commission guidelines.
He/she must have a concrete understanding of the
technical skills of magazine production. Editor will
be in charge of budgeting of funds and assessing
staff progress. Editor is encouraged to enroll in the
course: "Media and the Law."

Requirements

A background in literature and art is very much encouraged. Editor must have excellent management
and public relation skills. He/she must know
layout and design techniques, writing and editing
skills, and budgeting practices. Editor must have
working knowledge of printing and advertising
techniques. Writing 121 is required.

Deadline for Application
May 7, 1982

ble if not for the power of Armageddon Man, who's two
heads, Business and War, play
havoc with Factwino's efforts.
A singing, dancing character,
Armageddon's actions belie
his words: "Enough partying," he says. "There's a
planet to suck dry.''
The goal of the Mime
Troupe is to increase
awareness of important social
issues by using an accepted
medium -- theatre. Through
humor, music and good fun,
the San Francisco Mime
Troupe delivers a biting
criticism of the ways that people and governments abuse
people.
Established in 1959, the S.F.
Mime Troupe has worked to
make a truly popular theater.
At home in San Francisco,
they have set up in the parks
each summer, bringing with
each new season a new vehicle
for a social message, be it
melodrama, thriller or musical
comedy.
Since 1966, the troupe has
also played in hundreds of
cities across the United States,
in half a · dozen European
countries, in Canada, Mexico
and Cuba.
Will Factwino overcome Armaggedon Man's evils? Or will
• he succumb to the two-headed

monster? The answer will have
to wait until next season (the
play has no definite ending),
but for the time being Factwino Meets the Moral Majority promises to be an entertain.ing .evening.
The •troupe's Eugene appearance is sponsored by the
Northwest Coalition for Altern3:tives to •Pesticides (NCAP)

and the April 24th Coalition.
Tickets for the performances can be purchased in
advance for $5 .25 or $6 at the
door. Advance tickets a.re
available at Everybody's
Records, Mother Kali's Books
and the EMU Main Desk at
the U of 0. For more irtforma-:tion contact Linda Reymers at
•
344~5044. -

Larry Bell, ASLCC Cultural
Director and member of the
Lane Community Gospel
Singers, performed at the
Lane County Fairgrounds on
April 18.
he's
says
Bell
"heartbroken" because 150
people attended and very few
of them were LCC students.
He is concerned about the
"lack of support" given by
LCC students.
"It's my concern because I
know in the future the next
cultural director will have the
same problem;'' says Bell. He
.wants students to know they
can propose activities or talk
about scheduled and past
events.
The next event Bell is
organizing will feature a MidEastern dance which includes
belly dancing. It will be held in
the student Forum in rooms
308 and 309 on May 14.
For futher information on
programs or to discuss upcoming events phone Bell at
747-4501, ext. 2332.

The present editor of Denali will be happy to discuss the job
with prospective editors and can be contacted at ext. 2330.
Photo by Paul Caporale

The TORCH April 22, 1982 - Apsi! 28. )982 Page 9

In Review

My Dinner With Andre:
by Ron Kelley
of the TORCH

Her voice cut through the
usual din of the softly lit bar:
"But Wally likes electric
blankets. What's wrong with
that?"
The other two women and
three men responded with even
higher voices. One man's fist
bolted toward the table only to
alight open handed on a pile of
home spun hats and scarves.
My friend and I watched
their conversation from a corner table. We laughed as we
launched into a quieter twohour version -- we were all
discussing the same film.
The film is My Dinner With
Andre. And movies like On
Golden Pond, Chariots of Fire
and Reds don't come cJose to
matching this film's penetration of the onion layers that
keep us from seeing who we
are and from seeing our environment as it is.
We have heard much about
how My Dinner With Andre is

us the illusion of spontaneous,
casual conversation. And as
we listen to the two men talking, we grow to need their conversation more than their
resolutions.
Wally Shawn, playwright
and actor, (plays: Marie and
Bruce, The Hotel Play Films:
Manhattan, Starting Over)
plays himself. Andre Gregory,
ex-director of the Manhattan
Project Theatre Company,
also plays himself.
Malle distilled bits and
pieces from several months of
dinner conversations between
Wally and Andre to form the
final product. As the movie
progresses the empahasis
shifts: We identify with these
people because we think they
are simply portraying
themselves, not lying to us.
Wally, whose dress is
disheveled, captivates us with
his piqued nervousness while
he listens to Andre's recounting of "weird" journeys
quests for reality.
At first the movie focuses .

Habits reinforce 'a world of
sleeping people'
a movie about two men, Wally on Andre's adventures. He is
Shawn, 38, and Andre the focal point -- the beginning
Gregory, 47, having a three and, we think, the end of the
hour conv-ersation over din- film.
We travel with Andre's
ner. But we hear little about
how in the confluence of these gliding voice to a Polish forest
two men's lifestyles we can see -. with 40 women and men who
worlds within and without do not speak English performing improvisational feats.
ourselves colliding.
Next we're in the Sahara
Director Louis Malle reveals
that true theater exists "off desert with Andre and a
the stage" in .every day events. Japanese Buddhist priest,
He makes his point by making eating sand in the throes of
a film of two people convers- desperation as they explore
•
death, death, death.
ing over dinner.
Then on to Findhorn,
Part of the conversation
evolves around how theater is Scotland, where we dance,
sing to the plants.
abstract from life -- how talk andthere's
a lot of amaz"Wally,
theater is only a mirror.
. ing things going on there,''
But we can't as movie Andre says.
And finally, Andre reveals
viewers escape the paradox
that we need a well edited, well his latest encounter with
executed film by Malle to give mystical death. We arrive at

Montauk, Long Island. Group
leaders run a naked and blindfolded Andre through country
fields to an empty cabin where
they sponge him with oils.
They then lead him to a grave
site and ritually bury him
alive.
Andre's message is that people create · or accept approaches to living based on
habits. The habits reinforce "a
world of sleeping people."
Wally portrays the nervous
listener beautifully. We can
see him aching silently to make
sense out of what Andre is telling him.
Suddenly -- perhaps it is the
wine that loosens his tongue -Wally counters Andre and Andre's soliloquy fades.
I feel like kissing Wally's
balding head as he talks of being born and raised in New
York City, of the cigar store
around the corner, of how he
either writes a good play or he
doesn't, and of going home to
his wife Debbie.
New York is New York.
Life is life.
He talks of being as mystical
as the next guy. Take the fortune in fortune cookies for example: ''There's something in
it that makes me read it. .. and
I instinctively interpret it as if
it really were an omen of the
future. But in my conscious
opinion, which . is so fundamental to my whole view of
life, this is simply something
that was written in the cookie
factory several years ago and
in no way refers to me."
But when Wally states
matter-of-factly, "All I'm interested in is my cup of coffee
and my (New York) Times," it
becomes evident that Wally is
oblivious to the world around
him.·
And when he tries to use
"the scientific principle" to
dismiss everything of merit iii
Andre's challenge of complacency, we discover that
Wally is hiding behind borrowed, tired concepts.

TOMS ·

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

;

Clothing Exchange

;

;

P.E. 301
HOURS: Tues. & Thurs.

;

10am-2pm

g

Sponsored by·

Womens' Center
Student Resource Center

Burger Basket
· Special

Campus Ministry

Includes Fries

(fresh cut potatoes)

Plus FREE med . Pepsi

-

Let's compare the two
men's points of view. Andre
has essentially built a structure
to escape a life of structures or
what he calls "a world of
sleeping people.'' Andre
reifies the search for meaning.
If he were to actually discover
the answers he seeks, he would

alley and storefront.
But many of the "flower
children" of the late 1920s in
Germany became willing servants in Hitler's Youth when
he appealed to their idealistic
·yearnings for a new enlightened age.
And many people drank

''A II I'm interested in is my cup
of co//ee and my Times''
.risk losing his newly found
religion.
Wally simply lives. By not
questioning, he can taste and
feel life immediately around
him. He has achieved in his innocence a portion of what Andre desperately seeks.
William Blake, in his 18th
century mystical poems, wrote
of innocence lost and of innocence regained through experience.
Andre's beauty is that he
sees the need for us to push
our limits beyond habit.
Wally's beauty lies in his
ability to tap life's juices flowing from each familiar brick,

their coffees and read their
papers as Hitler's troops marched by.
Yet we can't refute the
characters in My Dinner With
Andre. Too much is at stake.
Too much of each of them is a
part of us. And too much can
be learned from the melding of
the life of quest with the life of
acceptance.
Nor should we totally embrace either Andre or Wally.
A glance toward the noisy
table in the bar verifies that
Andre's "sleeping people" are
very much engaged in a lively
discussion about My Dinner
With Andre.

.Applieations
now being accepted for

1982-83
TORCH EDITOR
Basic Responsibility

The Editor has complete control of editorial content of the ·
newspaper, and is expected to adhere to Media Commission
guidelines and the Oregon Code of Ethics for Journalism.

Basic Requirements

The Editor of the TGRCH is appointed by the Media Commission
during Spring Term and will serve Fall, Winter, and Spring Terms
of the following academic year. The Editor sh.ould have journalistic ability, training and experience. He/she should have
previous service on a high school, college or professional
newspaper staff in such capacities as will give him/her an adequate understanding of the operations of a newspaper. The
Editor must be capable of organizing and directing a staff and of
relating well to other people. The Editor and major staff members
must be officially registered students and carry at least five (5)
hours, not to be inclusive of journalism Supervised Field Experience (SFE) credit , during each term . The Editor must maintain at least a 2.00 GPA.
The Editor will receive a monthly salary .

Deadline: Friday Noon
May 7~ 1982

Student Activities
Multi-cultural Center

g

Obtain applicatioris--which include questions requiring
written (essay) responses- -from Pete Peterson , Faculty
Adviser, room 205 , Center Building, or from DENALI
room 4 79F , Center Building .

CAMPUS MINISTRY

;

Leave completed application with Mr . Peterson in 205
Center Building.

$2.95

Corner 4th & Main
Springfield
747-9294

g

Peels back the
on ion Iayers

We're here for you

-

~QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ Q

Page IO April 22, '1982 - A:ptil 28, 1'82 The TORCH

1

-Sports Notes

1

- - - - - - - - - -

Women's Track

by Monte Metz
of the TORCH
Athlete of the Week

LCC trackster Mary
Ficker, whose efforts at the
Mt. Hood Relays April 17th
helped the Titan women to a
fourth-place overall finish, has
been chosen as the Athlete of
the Week.
Picker's 12.2 clockings in
the 100 sprint medley and her
share of the 400m relay helped
the women thinclads to
fourth-place finishes in both
events. She also ran a key leg
in the team's second-place
800m relay.
Ficker also has two firstplace finishes to her credit this •
season. She grabbed blueribbon honors April 10 in the
100m sprint and the 200m
events in a meet held at LCC.
Track

Many fine individual and
team performances were logg-

I,

(

Mary Ficker

Photo by Monte Metz

ed by the Titans at the April 17
Mt. Hood relays.
The Lane women took
fourth place with 56 points to
front-runner Bellevue (Wash.)
Community College's 76.5. In
the men's division Lane took
fifth place, scoring 32 points
to leader Bellevue's 109.

Lane took fourth place in
the 100 sprint medley with a
1 :56.62 to first place
Bellevue's 48.49. Lane's Mary
Ficker had a strong 12.2 leg.
In the 100m hurdles, Anne
Jennings took fifth place
(15.53) to first place Cheryl
Mariani (15.41) of Mt. Hood.
Jennings is coming back
strong after a bout with
sickness and finished just 12
one-hundreths of a second
behind the front-runner.
Lane took a second fourthplace berth in the 400m relay
with a 50.87 effort to firstplace Bellevue's 48.49 mark.
Picker's strong 12.2 was a key
to the Titans solid finish.
The Titans grabbed second
in the 800m with a 1:47.53 effort to Bellevue's 1:44.33. The
women also took a second
runner-up spot in the distance
medley with a 13:05.50 race.
Although LCC did not place
in the 1600m relay, the women
spikers did have a strong third-

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

HAIRLINE EXPRESS

$3.00off on HAIRCUTS
20 W. 25th st.

offer good until May 15th

place finish in the 3200m
relay, as Lane's Loi Brumley
had a nice 2:23 leg over her
800 meters of the race.
Individual performances
were also a key to the women's
strong showing.
Diane Hill took first place in
the discus with a toss of
137'9", her best mark of the
season. In the high jump, Lori
Brumley's 5'0" was good for
second place.
In the javelin, Cindy Ballard
threw a personal best
130' 1 1/2", which gave LCC a
fourth in the tough field.
Diane Hill grabbed fifth place
honors in the shotput with ·a
34'1/4" toss to first-place
Tanya Washington (BCC),
who had a 40' 11 '' effort.
Men's Track

In the hammer throw, Lane
took fourth thanks to Steve
Kroeker's 128'5" throw.
SWOCC's Steve Baysinger
took first with a . 151 '10"
throw.
Mike Bain took fifth place
in the discus event with a personal best 141 '4" throw. Karl
Berg (Mt. Hood) grabbed first
with a toss of 155'8". In the
high jump, LCC took sixth
place with Kyle Stribling's
6'2" leap. COCC's Kelly
Cyrus took first with a 6'6"
jump.
The javelin competition saw
Lane grab both the fourth and
fifth slots with Mike Keizur's
194'4" and Steve Kroeker's

192'4" seizing two places. The
long jump competiton provided Kyle Stribling with a personal best 21 '11 ', good for
sixth place to BCC's Mike
Howe, who took first with a
jump of 24'7 1/2".
Sterling Shaw captured sixth
place for Lane in the 110m
hurdles with a 15.81 mark.
Lane also took sixth in the
400m relay with a 43.84 to
BCC's 41.92 first place finish.
In the 3200m relay, Lane
took fourth with a 7:59.95,
just seconds behind first-place
BCC's 7:48.45 finish. In 6400
relay action, LCC took their
only first place of the meet,
finishing with a 17:14.22
clocking, just five seconds off
of the old school record.
Lane also finished fifth in
the distance medley with a
time of 10:38.51.
Titan Sports Schedules

Baseball
Sat.,April 24, 1 p.m.: Versus
Umpqua in Eugene.
Tues.,April 27, 1 p.m.: Versus
Chemeketa in Salem.
Fri., April 30, 1 p.m.: Versus
Eastern Oregon State in
La Grande.
Tennis
Thurs., April 22, 2:30 p.m.:
Men and women versus LinnBenton in Eugene.
Fri., April 23, 1 p.m.: Women
versus Concordia in Portland.

342-7661

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

INTRODUCTION TO
PASCAL PROGRAMMING
Tues. 7pm-10pm
April 20 - June 1
( Make up for first class, Sunday April 25th, 7:30pm )
- ··?;;;,~Y';:;, ---....:._

Pascal is a structured programming
language likely to become "the"
programming language of the BO's
for micro-computers

A

-=~T EIGHTH AVENUE
97401

COMPUTERS ~OR IIUGtNESS , HOME & EDUCATION

-~

and get 2nd· one of equal
or lesser value for 1/ 2 price

Reservations and information
EUGENE , OREGON

PROBABLY THE BEST
HOT DOGS IN THE WORLD

(Mention THE TORCH)

An Apple Pascal System will be
available in THE COMPUTER
STORE on a sign-up practice basis

-

lOVflRIETIES
ALL BEEF- NITRATE FREE

uy any 1/4 pounder

- ,.,,,

,IIIJ:li]

onely Hot Dog

343-1434

offer good: Mon. - Sat. 11 am - 5pm
except May 1. 1982

Ask about our

CATERING SERVICE

342-8513

767 Willamette St. in the Smeede Bldg.

across from the Saturday Market.

The TORCH April 22, 1982 - Apt it 28, 1982 Page 11

-Around Town
•
mus1e

University of Oregon •· On April 22,

The

Shorecrest High School Band from Seattle will pre-

sent 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. A wind sextet will also per·
form a divertimento.
On April 24, Sandra Oi will give a flute and piccolo
recital at 4 o.m. in Room 198.
On April 25 The Lewis and Clark Game/an Orchestra and puppeteer Kathy Foley will present an
afternoon of Javanese theatre beginning at 2 p.m.
in Beall Concert Hall. Tickets will be S3 for the
general public and $2 for students and senior
citizens at the door for this concert sponsored by
the U of O Committee for the Musical Arts. Also
on Sunday, trumpeter Scott Stickley will perform
at 4 p.m. in Gerlinger Hall Alumni Lounge.
On April 27, The Eastern Washington University
Ragtime Marimba Ensemble will perform at 12:30
p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.
On April 29, A student quartet will perform a
Mozart piece at 12:30 p.m. in Room 198. Also on
Thursday, cellist James Pelley will perform a doctoral degree recital at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall.
On Thursday Evening, trombonist Steve Martinich
will perform at 8 p.m. in Gerlinger Hall Alumni
Lounge.
Jo Ftderlgo's .. 259 E. 5th Ave., 343-8488, Emmett

Williams and Forrest'Moyer will perform on April
22, 23, and 24. The Andre' St. James Trio will have
a jam session on April 25 and 26. Mario Bresanutti
and Kevin Dietz will perform on April 27 and 28.
All performances start at 8:30.

Friends Meeting House •· 2274 Onyx, Women and
Adventure: Memoirs of a long distance hiker. Jean

Ella will be presenting an inspirational visualmusical interpretation of her two 2500 mile hikes
along the Pacific Crest and Continental Divide
Trails. This unique show will be held on April 23 at
8 p.m. Admission is $2.

Community Center For the Performing Arts
(W .0. W. Hall)Sth and Lincoln, Grupo Raiz a

Chilean folk ensemble will be in concert April 30 at
8 p.m . This performance, their third in Eugene, is

75 KaH'asaki 500, black lacquer, excellent condition, I I, 000 miles, S550. Call Oa,·e at 341-5486.
Honda CB .'50. Mint condition, recently rebuilt
engine. Must see and ride. Call 741-0/62 e,·enings.
l .odge pt>les for tipi: A set of /9 poles (striped and
cured) that are 14 feet long. Saves J'OU hassles and
helps me out! S75. Call Hill at 683-4316.
King size 1110 bed: wmplete H'ith frame and
heater. l .ike nn·. A mere S/00. Call Hill at
68.f-43/6.
l.f" l'11ch (&erman bike). 1-.'xcellent hill climber,
come by and scope it out. 570. Call ·nm at
68.1-4316.

BJ Kelly's •• 1475 Franklin Blvd., 683-4686, The
Bees, and The Others, April 22. Gregg Tripp, and
The Bees, April 23 through 24.
Hooker's Inn -- 2165 W. l lth,485-4044, Exstatic,
April 22. The Rock Band, April 23 through 24.
X-Ray, April 25 through 29.
Treebouse -- 1769 Franklin Blvd., 485-3444, Chip
Smith In the Lounge on April 22. Buddy Ungson In

the Lounge on April 23. Both performances start at
9 p.m. Margret Vitus and Phyllis Cweig will play a
flute duet in the Dining Room at 11 a.m. on April
24. The same performance will be repeated on
April 25 at 7 p.m.
Saturday 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 from the Hilton Hotel on Oak Street bel
• ween 7th and 8th. Featured as the entertainment
for April 24 will be The Whiskey Creek String
Band. The entertainment begins at I p.m:
University of Oregon -· The University of Oregon
Symphonic Wind Ensemble under the direction of

Wayne Bennett will present a concert April 23, to
help raise funds for its two-week performance tour
of Japan during May. The concert will begin at
7:30 in Beall Concert Hall in the School of Music.
Tickets, available at the door, are $5 for the general
public and S2 for U of O students and senior
citizens. On the same program the Emerald Dixieland Jazz Band and jazz pianist Edward Kammerer will perform.

•
services

Planned Parenthood has a pregnanq test th"t is 91/
percent accurate. Call for appointment, 344-9411. •
,Veed help getting out of bed? Willamette H'ake-up
ser,·ice. S/5/mo. ffre da.1•s/H'eek. Call 4114-1145.
Interior painter. Free estimates. Call Gary at
.U5-7175.
/\'eed w move? Need w haul that stuff /ti the
dump:> Gary has reasonable rates at 345-717.~.
l>elireries too!

for rent
wanted

Vega parts: front end parts, shortrned drfre lines,
cl,mrs, hatches, much morr. Call 687-96.H, e,·en•
ings.

Mandolin: Hand crafted /oca/lJ'. S/60 with case or
trade for classic guitar. Call Undo at 937-3155.

In home sale of energ_l' pr1xluc1s. Must read t'omp11tori:e1/ energy audits. &uara111eed 11·uge. l'llrt
time. See Student 1-.'mployment Serr1_·,·e
_._ _ __

650 t'amaha speda/, ~9 Vette ful(r drened.
Beautiful. Askin!( SIR()(),,, trade for mini-pickup.
Cllll 747-8851 after 10 p.m.

He..-arcl for in./i1rmlltion on item.~ stolen from VW
rnn on campm 4-11-11}. Contact Socio/og_l' 1lepC1rt•
mm/. 747-4501, ext. 1417.

7R Ka..-asaki KLlOO, neH' battery and tune-up. Only 8,000 mi/rs. .4sking 5615. Call 1-:rik at 344-6589.

Votes from .m,dents ,·111tcerned abo11t finllncia/ C1id
<'11tbads. llayden/Krier will com·in,·e Washington
to re.ftore .limcling.

Sears Kenmore llel11'J' l>uty 80 ..-asher, immaculate
condition, mol'inx and must sell. S/99. Call
61/3-3ll9.
17" l.otus to11ring bike, /ightH'eight, like ne"·· m11st
sell. S/50 or best offer. Call 344-1109.
•
Hawk K-1 skis H'ith Soloman bindings, /60's.
Brand ne..-, ne,·er been used. 5150 or best o}ler.
Call llonnie at 746-6.199.
For sale or trade: 450 llond" CH. Showroom condition. S800 or trade for economy car. C"II
935-4.JOI.
Cross country skis. Call Gary al 345-7175.
ramah" 400 special. /980, likt' ne..-, on(1· has 1,()5()
miles. S/300. Ca/1484-1966.
Gibson Imperial 'Wark et Master refrigerator. &rear
L'llnclition. S.U. See in refrigeration lab, e/eetmnics
building. Ask for Jim G.
Calculator T.I 58-( ll'ith math chip, extra
rechargeable batlery and instruction books. S90.
Call 935-1145 after 5 p.m.
THS-80 pocket computer ..-ith rnssette inter/au
and instruction book. S/00. Call 935-l/45 Cl/ter 5
p.m.

-

485-1946, Koo/aid Kaberet plays for children of all
ages every Saturday in April at 11 a.m. and I p.m.
Tickets are $3 for adults, $1.50 for children with
general admission seating. On the Edge, an evening
of comedy, will be shown on April 23 and 24 at
11 :30 p.m. Performances at 9 p.m. are on April 22
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 through Sunday, 12 to 8 p.m.
at 485-1946.
University of Oregon -- Benjamin Dizzy, a one••

man show about the achievements of the former
British prime minister and his disillusionment with
his own life, will also run April 24, April 28
through 28 and May I. Curtain time is 8 p.m. in the
Universtiy of Oregon's Pocket Playhouse theatre,
located on the first floor of Villard Hall. General
admission tickets are $4.50 for the public, $2. 75 for
U of O students and senior citzens and $3 .50 for
other students.
For reservations and information call the University Theatre box office at 686-4191, 12 to 4 p.m.
Monday through Saturday.

•

DlOVtes
Springfield Quad -· Springfield Mall. Robin Hood,
6:30 and 9:45 The Muppet Caper, 8 p.m. A Force
of One. 9:20 and The Octagon, 5:40 and Good
Guys Wear Black, 7:40 p.m . Some Kind of Hero,
6, 7:55 and 9:45 p.m. Porky's, 7:25 and 9:45 p.m.

69 J>atsun SW .HO. Nuns cmd /m1hfair. 'HOO cash.
( 'all .'45-4.UO ajier 6 p.m.
71 Barracuda. Mags, air shocks, headers, mallorJ'
ixnitit>n, gcH>d shape, 343-11/61,

messages

------·-----------

l'ickup bed truiler: /.onxl..-itfe hox. Ct1II Hill at
683-4316.

autos

Toyota Ce/icu GT 75. 53,()()() miles, runs and looks
great. Askinx Sl9.W or trade j,,r mini-pickup. Call
747-81/51 after /0 p.m.
77 Ford 4x4 short box, 13,000 miles, ne..- tires, neH'
paint, 4 speed. !4500. Call 716-0563.
Must sell! 69 P/rmouth, slant 6, new brakes. Make
o./fer! Call Cat ·a, 344-5201, e,·enings.
6J Che,·. II, rebuilt engine, 6 C)'I. .'\'ew tires. HOO
firm . .Veecls rear ..-heel bearing. Call 683-3145.

7.1 Toyota pickup in excellent condition. Hally
wheels, AM/FM radio, asking S/950. Call
34.1-1739.
77 Oatsun l80z l pl11s 1. Ught blue, RWL radial-,,
50,()()() miles, excellent condition. AM/ FM. Cull
61/7-8767 or 687-1454.

68 Pontiac Catalina. All nell': Battery, starter,
water pump, electrical system . New registration.
Must sell. 5150. Call Bonnie at 746-6399.

Ticket to Heaven, 6, 8, and 10 p.m. Victor / Victoria, 6:30 and 9 p.m.

West 11th Walk-In •· West 11th and Seneca.

J>epe. Cuan/lls horus mas:>
Alan•· )'ou're tfoin good!• re,1p! mop! rm1p!
J. Te am11 amigo. C.
Joi sat chit aK·cmdu! Thanx •· <iMJ.
• l.inda H. •· You're the best! Cudd(r hear I lm·e
)'OIi, •·Jim/),

If you jimncl a l'horthund dictionarJ• pleuse return
w Heth 1·iu the b11sine.u department. It is a
neussary book; my budget mnnt>t afford anothtr
11ne.
llappJ' birthday Bonnie April 15. •- Anxelll.
Paula •· Much oblixed. Thursdays lire u high point
in my week. Thtmks. •· Kaila.
Kaila -- )'our H'elc11me. It's my job! -- ·1•"ula.
Ami,:os. Yo estny triste y .nn quiero clecir Aclios.
Con mucho carino por todos. CC.

-----

&utiru and Hlt>ndie .1·ee you later in Mexico. ••
AG/JT.
John aml J>11ug •· Wt''// drop 11ur drawers if you
drop y1111n.....

Jon Carroll •· We're a// the beams of one bix
builtlin,:, he/pin,: to ho/cl er,1"h other up; thanx ji,r
your .mpport •· l'amAnne.

Joe Mllrtini •· llow's J'IIUr wife? llow's your mom:'
1/ow'.1· your 1/ox:> llow's your TV set:> llow lire
you?-· who:>
Mis.f ( '/aim/ and mishap mn 't tell•· l 'h, uh, I, I, I
rrrreally tthhink J'.l'J't>U 're ppprretty .... /wan•
n"j1ipm_1•/wi~i11stlike_1·1111.

---------

Jejfery -- I lm·e y11u! lle<·kie.

----

---------

through Saturday. Open till 8 p.m . Tuesday
through Thursday.
Condon/ Magnet Arts Elementary School -- 1787

Agate, The Universitiy of Oregon Children's Choir
will kick off Eugene's first Imagination Celebration with a concert on April 23 at I p.m . Admission
is free.

Deathwish II, 7: 15 and 9 p.m. Somewhere in Time,
7:30 and 9:30. Missing, 7 and 9: 15 p.m. Silent
Rage, 1:15 and 9:15 p.m.

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

Maynower •- 788 E. 11th. Cat People, 9:40 and
American Werewolf in lo~don, 1:55.

• Lane County Public Service Building •· 125 E. 8th,

National-- 969 Willamette. Personal Best, 1:J5 and

9:30 p.m.

Oakway Cinema -· Oakway Mall, Clash of the
Titans, 9:45 and The lord of the Rings, 7:15.

Fine Arts-· 644 Main St., Arthur, 1: 15 and Oh God

Book II, 9:30.

danee
South Eugene High School .• 18th and Ferry. The

Eugene Ballet Company presents Seven Deadly
Sins and a performance of Adagio For Strings and
also The Red Pony. The performances will be April
24 at 8 p.m. and April 25 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $9,
$7.25, $4.50 with student and senior citizen rates
available. For more information call 687-0020.

galleries
Maude Kerns -- 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 Outlook in the rental/sales
gallery. Gallery hours: 10 a.m . to S p.m. Tuesday

I lm·ey,111. SHP.

The Solid Waste Program of the Lane County
Public Services Division will host a colorful art
display about recycling and solid waste management during the 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
3.

Artists' Union -- 985 Willamette Street, As part of
its April show, light 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 admission will be charged. For more
. information call 342-7620, 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Lane Community College •· 4000 E. 30th Ave.,

Paul Schaap, sculptor, and Walt Stevens, painter,

are the featured artists from April 23 through May
14. The exhibit is shown in the Math & Arts
Building located on campus. A reception will be
held on April 23, from 8 to 10 p.m. The gallery
hours are: Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 10
p.m. and Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

NOTICE

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

---------------

Oonny •• From cmnputers, ll'hen can ll'e meet
again:>

I /airbag - Smile beer nite is wmin!l- •· Oog Breath.

Sum & Charlie -· Fir,·t hot, sunny clay, we'll
,·elebmte ll'ith K'ine wolers! •· TTT.

/)on gato •· Son tu.1· perfumenes los que te
.mlibellan . •• Captllin l'urple.

Traq •• I ltlpe yo11 are better. Misl·ed you on the
trip 111 R11.1eh~,r~·- ·_· _T":_T_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Spermll'ha/e •• /)a./>a-Heer-Heer. •· Whatftlayametm l)ean.

Antonit> el tixre ••
Mamat'ita.

So reef that el'tm my toes are pink. t'ou:>

--~- --------

, ••, mundo rena felit in no existisa amhirion, t>dio,
egoirr1111 y renn,reJ·. -· J11an.

/)ear /'en l'al •• I can't refute your rh.rme 14•as ,·ute,
,me more time! •· Kllila.
lie.I' prez are .1·11u going tc> be 1-.'/. on you hirhtlay? -·
Shimme_1·.
,Van,·y •• I/lippy 10th birthday ,m Sct11mlllJ'.
1-'rienils a/lt'UJ'S •· Maria.
Sim.1· •• You bring the monkey, I'll brinx the H'et
Q•tips. l.et'.t compare. RSV/'. •· Ape Man.
To the president of PTI(. llappy birthd".I'·
C West •• Mazzi's 1t•a.f great. llo..- hm11 the Iii/ton
next week?•· H & I> Mckenzie.
Hl!rnahe •• Y eu guey que! po que:> po que? •· Top
Cat.
Hkk H -· One day s1111n your cllly 14•i// <'ome anti
ll'e'/1 all ha1·e the last luu,:h!!

Kllilu •• Thank y1111! It's quill' lln offer. •• TTT,
Julie Ste..-art -· l>on't try
you reall.1· like me.

Hick •• U'hen are 11·e going Ill Cati}: •· 1-uttie.

l'hil -· Ym1 ure not .w htul .,·our.fe/f. I .rure h"cl fun
on l '.·a.wer. -· />MS Tissue.

- ..,.._

--------

Kllilll •· Your messllges are .w ll'itty. Are you the

.mme in person:' •· Obbie.

<·aptain
t/011

l'urple •· Yo11 hu,·e a hole in J'ou tight.,;
't rntch pneunmniu. -· Grande Perro.

Mmn mu/ frank •· 1/app.1· .\;,ring!

Kel(1· •· The best i,· yet 1,1 get here!!

Prenguman •· We pay for an hour let 'l hll1·e an
hour. I ..-ant my moneys ll'Orth.
/Ji"nomite •• Your 1/umble Narrawr 11·ant.t you Ji,r
life. -- Alex.

-------

Mon ami l'atrick •• I ..-ish to return to />A YS·
JIASQl'I-.' .w on. -- Tim.
1TT is reuc/y

w retire.

TTT •• .\'o, rm nm satij1ed, I H'Unt more. •• /'{l(IJ'.

To the Miller., •• /)o I hu1•e a surprise ji,r you!
TOH('/1/1-.'.\' •· l"'PPJ' Sprinx! llappy .111nshine!
/1.'8 •• The ll'orld is ll S((ll(e. Y,111r act is hard Ill
j,,11,, ..-,
l'C -· Your hmpitality mal.:es
he11rub/e.

Clean Ii ness. spaciousness and the
sounds of KLCC make Mr.

Cleanjeans a better place
to wash your clothes.

Repeat: ll'ith blackest moss / the floll'er potsl ll'ere
thickly cr11stedl nne and all.

58 VU' Baja. New paint, rebuilt 1ransaxle, extra
parts, needs some assembly. $600 or best ojfer.
Call 344-1/036.

I must sell all my belongings, chairs, tuble.1, lamps,
more. If interested call Bonnie at 746-6399.
Tammy•· Y11u mean e,·erything in the ll'orld to me.

han,:,,..er quite

411 dll.1.tifietf lltfrertisemeflfs of fifteen 14•11rtls or
le.~, ar, free jt,r I. CC .t llulent.,.
l)eadline fa fritlay at 5 p.m. :Vo lllls ll'ill ht llf·
,·eptetl C1jier tleac/line.

Tim •• <iet ll'ell! And get outtu here, ll'ill J'll? •· l'A.

73 Hickman Montesa m11111rcyc/e: 150 cc, low
riding time and is in primo condition. Best ojfer.
Call Rill at 61/3-4316.

II

/led,y •- 'limit, •· !'1111/ll.

Cinc/J' -- Thil is earth 1peaking tremble in anticipation of the Rose festh'al ll'hich Cindy;> -- Cinc/yHoneO/ll.

Ian •• .\'oll' that 11'1' Ji110/ly knoll' your name, come
on 111•er "ncl jind 0111 ours! ([.uJI, /mt).

a,·,>id me; I kn11H' that

Female seeks male 1,1 clis,·uss /lei/tin, OMNI,
met'hllnin, trees, Anihony, Kermit. Respond 11·ith
cul.-· Kemo.

Paul-· Okay, happy belated birthday! •• I ..

Call

It>

l'hil H"by •· I ..-,mt your body amt your bronze,
let\ go out. l.111·e, •· l'unkie.
lnternlltionlll •· I cfo like ll'hat rour orxani:ation
cl11e.1·for me •· Albumen.

8AM-11PM

EVERYDAY

•·

I.A •• Anti probllhly the gayest. •• MT/..

To the U ·eu,·er.1· •· fou lllld heuuty to /ij'e!

--------··-----

Andrei!'•· Welcome aboard. -· PA.

76 Fiat 118 wagon. /.()11· miles.
344-3552 days; 345-4816 el'enings.

14•achando.

l!Slt>J'

Mark •· U 'hat happened It> that super fantastic
giguntic smile:> I miss it! /)11 yo11 need some
,·h1x:11/ate:> (tee-hee). -· J.

Sims •· A joh H'ell clone. -· l'A

noons.

Yo

&ar.r Martin-· &et an idea anti groll' one!! l .m·e
uncl ki.ues •· SQUI&.

My thllnks RMI/ for your giji of /orin,:, your
positil-eness line/ sharing. Always. •· l)Tf/.

Annie Weenie -- Remember Polyunna positil-ism.
Hut it 'II rellllJ' be all rixhr in the end .. .

S/495.

Valley River Twin •- 1077 Valley River Drive.

I.J'tlia Vazque._ morals •· I /m•e you ,·erJ' much. ••
Juan.

74 Pinw. Good mechanical condition, body '1
rusted, radial tires. 5500. Call Sean at 741-1804
ajier 10 p.m.

'Wol'ing sale: I ha1·e a number of items I must sell!
Very inexpensfre. Call 344-J 171 in the /u,e ajier-

call for times.

TTT •· Temptation ..-us 11111 ,rreat; I n111/d11 't resil'I.
1-i>rgil'e me:••· Kllila.

--- - -·------------

71 Chevy Impala with rebuilt engine. Huns good.
S700 or best offer. Call 688-5400 after 6 p.m.

Cinema World -- Valley River Center. Chariots of
Fire, 7:45 and 9: 15 p.m. On Golden Pond, 7:45 and
9:45 p.m. Quest For Fire, 6, 8 and 10 p.m. Reds,

l.ady Witter 11f l'lr •- 'l'"our [,wed ones are ,·ontinually thinking of y,111. •· Sir Cafrin of l.mlxely.

/Jr..'ichtupman •• The Illinois enema bcmclit is into
:iu•,,n encrusted tweezers!! .... "/.ombie 14•oof" -·
/Jr. Tushbaum.

/t:itchen help •· pi::a. O,·er Ill, prepare dough and
necessllry ingrediants. .\'eat "Jlpeurana" must. See
the I.CC Student 1-:mp/o_l'ment Seri·h'e.

•

!

Oregon Repertory Theatre •· 222 E. Broadway,

Tia •· lla,·e a beautiful and /,wely baby. •· T11n_1·.

IJuplex It> -~hare. S/15 plus half utilities. Garclt'n,
guruge, firepluu, dishlt'llSht'r, 1 betlroomJ;. Ct,//
Tim at 716-1 l.~9.

CH radio: Iii &ain. 4() channel H'ith antenna and
,·1>-11x, S50. U usher and dryer. S50/pair. Cull Tom
(It 485-06(}7.

through 24. The performance will be presented on
the mainstage at 8 p.m. Tickets will be S4 at the
door.

76 llonda Cfric llau·hback. 56,(){)(J miles, 4 .speed,
30 mpg, mags, TI A.\', 716-741 I.

Black Hussian Wolferang. Good homt, needs lllts
of mom, /0 months old, big do,r, ISO pounds of
dox food free K'ith dog. Call 689-9163.

XC ski boots, 50mm bindings, size 9-/0. Call Tom
lit 485-0607.

Lane Community College .. 4000 E. 30th Ave.

The Miracle Worker will be presented on April 22

April 16 and 17.

Bees!! Beehfres S45 /ti Sl/5. &ood shape, rtadJ' to
make hone_!'. Call Jerry at .6R7-/81/7.

June bus pass. SI I. Call Bonnie at 746..(1399.

theatre

Duffy's .• 801 E. 13th,344-3615, Hot Whacks,

Room for ,·hril'tian men in houu H'ith three others.
Quiet,· ,·entrol io,·ation. S/15. Call Brian at
4114-4589.

JC l'enny large capacity electric dryer still under
H'arranty, immaculate condition, mm·ing, must
sell. S/99. Call 683-3119.

(formerly Leather and Lace), is currently appearing
Friday through Sunday, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m.

O'Callahan's •- 440 Coburg Rd., 343-1221, Guardian, April 22. Maxx, April 23 through 24.
Bosworth Brothers, April 27 through 29.

-Classifieds
for sale

Asia Garden -· 44 E. 7th, Country Cookin'

parr of the Celebration of International Solidarity .
C',ildcare is provided and is wheelchair accessible.
1 ickets, available in advance, are $4 to $6 on a
! idinR scale. For more information call 485-4248 .
t )rmation call 485-4248.
l'he Lone Star .. 160 S. Park, 484-7458, Sweet
Briar will perform Monday through Saturday at
9:30 p.m.

240 East 17th
Between High & Pearl

- Omniom

Page 12 April 22, 1982 - 1'rp ·1 .2S,1l>82 The TORCH

Fair planned at LCC

Reading, writing and drama will be promoted
by a fair to be held at LCC on April 23.
The fair. which will take olace in the Study
Skills Learning Center on the fourth floor of the
Center Bldg., will include presentations on the
creative process, folklore and literature.
The day's schedule includes a presentation on
folklore and literature at 9:30 a.m. led by Linda
Danielson, an LCC instructor, and Barre
Toelken, a folklorist and University of Oregon
professor.
At 11 a.m. a panel will discuss the creative process. Panel member include author Dean Baker,
U of O professor Barbara Mossberg, LCC instructor and playwright Alan Boye, and Fred
Crafts and Don Bishoff of the Eugene Register..
Guard.
At noon, LCC student Nancy Boyett will perform a 15-minute piece from Bertolt Brecht's
"The Jewish Wife." At 1 p.m. there will be a
panel to discuss science fiction.
The event, sponsored by the Study Skills
Center is free. For more information, call
747-4501, ext. 2439.

LCC art exhibit
LCC will hold an art exhibit in the Art and Applied design building featuring sculpture and
paintings.
Paul Schaap, sculptor ·and teachers aide for
the art department has been sculpting for five
years. He specializes in common metal abstract
figures.
A reception for the exhibit will be held on
April 23, from 8 to IO p.m. The exhibit continues
through May 14.
Gallery hours are Monday through Thursday,
8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Career talks scheduled
The Career lnfomation Center announces upcoming career talks: Liz Cawood, Public Relations Practitioner, will discuss her work and op-

Gather om

portunities in the field on April 22 from 2:30 to
3:30 p.m.
Learn what a naturopathic physician does and
how to beome one on April 29. Stephen Messer,
ND, will speak and show slides.
All career talks are held in room 420 of the
Center building. For more information phone
747-4501, ext. 2297.

Career exploration class
Industrial Orientation offers students the opportunity to explore a variety of vocational
trades in one term.
"Hands on" format provides students with experience in using tools and completing projects in
the shop or lab area.
The class is offered in two-week mini-courses
and students may choose to take just one or two
mini-courses or take the entire sequence. Class
meets MWF from 12 to 4 p.m.
For complete schedule and/or more information about the class, contact Special Training
Programs, 747-4501, ext. 2496.

Veterans work cooperative
Any veteran interested in working to establish
a Veterans Labor Pool Cooperative owned and
operated by Lane County Veterans, please contact either Bob Galvan or Mark DArienzo at
686-5576 or write us care of CVETS, 1479 Moss,
Eugene 97403.

Imagination explored
The mental processes of the human brain is the
focus of a special exhibit at the Willamette
Science and Technology Center starting April 24.
The subject will be explored through films,
computer graphics, three-dimensional mazes,
games and exhibits.
WISTEC is open Tuesday through Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday noon to 5
p.m. During the week of April 25, special reduced admi.ssion for students grades I -I 2 will be 25

April 22, 1982

Lane
Community
Cpllese

TORCH

cents, adults $2, college students $1.50, senior
citizens $1 and children under 6 years admitted
free.
For more information about WISTEC's programs during the Imagination Celebration, call
484-9027.

the Continental Divide Trail is presented on three
screens to comprise. a visual-musical event. A
1976 Canada-to-Mexico adventure on the Pacific
Crest Trail is also documented in slides.
For more information, call Cynthia Stockwell
at 342-6500.

Legal clinic offered

Mental health conference

A free clinic on writing a will will be offered on
April 28. Local attorney Howard Speer will
speak and answer questions beginning at 7:30
p.m. The clinic will be held at the Eugene Sports
Program office, 2190 Polk St., Eugene.
Reservations are required and may be obtained
by calling the ESP office, 683-2373.

Lane County Mental Health Advisory Board's
Spring Conference will be held April 22 and 23 at
the Eugene Hilton.
Keynote speaker Dr. Charels Windle from the
National Institute of Mental Health will be
speaking on "Power and Contribution of
Volunteer Boards." His workshop will include a
slide/tape presentation.
For further information, contact Alice Dugan
at 343-2174.

ESL tutors sought
Volunteer English tutors are needed for
refugees and foreign students. The location and
time are flexible. Tutoring takes one hour a
week.
For more information, call English as a Second Language, 484-2126, ext. 582, or come to
the LCC Downtown Center, 1059 Willamette
Street.

Dramatic reading
Dylan Thomas' "Under Milkwood" will be
presented April 23 and 24 at 8 p.m. at Aunt
Lucy's Wine Loft. Admission is $3. Reserved
seating is advised for this reading which is performed by Al Strobel, Chris Boyd, Macquie McClure and Bill Reid.

Wilderness slide show
Jean Ella will be showing her slide show productions documenting two border to border
hikes on April 23 at the Friends Meeting House,
2274 Onyx, at 8 p.m.
The slide show of her 1978 women's hike of

Pizza party for Whitebird
Whitebird Clinic will be holding a benefit pizza and beer night on April 25, daylight savings
day, at Blair Island, 3rd and Blair.
The benefit is to help Whitebird through
Reaganomics, which threatens to cut their present budget by 25 percent.
Whitebird currently provides 24 hour 7
day/week crisis intervention services, low cost
legal services, and the only remaining low-cost
medical clinic in the county.
For more information, call 342-8255 any time
of any day.

Host families needed
Local families are needed to host 100 foreign
students in the University of Oregon's English
Institute program.
Friendship families help students adjust to life
in Eugene by making them their guest on
outings. Families will house Saudi American
male students in their homes and receive a stipend for room and board.
For more information, call Susan Moran at

686-3945.

Former LCC student Lori Gates' hand-crafted replica of
William Shakespeare's Fortune Theatre will be formally
presented to the LCC library Friday, April 23 at noon.
Gates and Language Arts instructor Karen LattSdowne
will make brief remarks about Gates' creation and the
history behind it. According to Lansdowne, Ga.tes' model
was based on plans for the Festival Theatre at the Oregon
Shakespearean Festival in
Ashland. The replica is constructed from balsa wood
and one-eighth inch pine
.,
strips and took eight months to build.

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