Lane
Community
Colle3e
Vol. 23, No. 6 October 28 - Nateiitl

'The Pacesetter of Oregon College Newspapers'··

3, 1982

Child center moved to Dunn School
by Mike Sims

building.

Dean of Instruction Gerald
Rasmussen announced Oct. 22
that parent requests to move
youngsters from the Child
Development Center (CDC) to
a similar facility in the former
Dunn School building would
be accomodated by the LCC
administration.
Rasmussen's announcement
resulted in the cancellation of
an ASLCC boycott of the
Health Building. The boycott
was scheduled to begin Oct.
25.
The administration's action
capped a week of unrest
following the LCC Board of
Education's refusal to close
the Health Building at their
Oct. 13 meeting. The closure
was requested by LCCEA
Pres. Mike Rose after several
students and faculty members
had complained of maladies
ranging from simple nausea to
neurological dysfunctions.
These ailments allegedly
resulted from the presence of
chemical fumes in the

Appropriation of ASLCC
funds for the removal of CDC
students from the on-campus
center to Dunn was also
averted by the administrative
action. The ASLCC Senate
had approved funds for the
proposed move in a special
session earlier Thursday.
According to Communications Director Paul Hansen,
the administration consulted
the board before making the .
decision. The board said that
since there was no need to find
money outside of the existing
LCC budget for the move, approval for the allocation could
be made within the admm1stration. Hansen also
stated that the board may appropriate additional funds for
the CDC at a later date.
ASLCC Pres. Paqu1ta
Garatea praised Rasmussen
and the administration for
their "sincere and open willingness to address valid student concerns'' regarding the
current Health Building/CDC
fumes controversy.

TORCH Associate Editor

Only freshly-vacuumed carpet remains behind in the LCC center

Garatea also thanked the
Senate for their time and
energy in helping solve the
problem and Dean Rasmussen
"for his conscious effort to see

that the children were moved.''
Linda Riepe, coordinator of
the Early Childhood Development program, said Oct. 26
that all (approximately 34) of

Photo by Andrew Hanhardt

the children in the CDC had
been moved to Dunn. "There
isn't a stick of furniture in the
center," Riepe said. "The oncampus center has been closed."

Women's Studies Program axed
Analysis
by Cathy Benjamin

TORCH Staff Writer

On Wednesday, Oct. 13,
Women's Studies Program instructor Kate Barry was given
notice that she would be laid
off and the program terminated.

in Women's Studies, Women's
Bodies, Women's Selfs; Introduction to Women's
Studies; and Introduction to
American Working Women.
The Social Science department may continue one lnt rod u ct ion to Women's
Studies class winter term with
Barry as the instructor.

The notice, signed by LCC
Pres. Eldon Schafer, cited low
enrollment in one of the
classes and budget cuts in the
Social Science department as
the reason for the termination
of the Women's Studies Program and Barry's layoff after
the fall term.

Uncertainty surrounds
Barry's termination process,
since she had been a "full-time
contractual staff member'' for
seven years at LCC. The termination will reduce her status
to "part-time term-by-term instructor.''

The Women's Program currently consists of three classes
which Barry instructs: Topics

What this means to the
women and men attending
LCC, according to Barry, is

• Bob Ecker reviews the
rock 'n' rollin' Stray Cats
new LP and finds it a winner. See review, page 8.

• Reviews of two new
movies -- Jinxed and My
Favorite Year -- appear in
Entertainment, page 8.

"Lane will no longer offer an
institutional commitment to
participate in the sequence of
classes that focus on the lives
of women.'' She added, ''This
is the only program of its kind
that explores the images of
working women in our culture
and the stereotyping of
women. It gives a feminist
perspective.''

"This kind of cut
perpetuate$ the_ oppression of women. ''
Barry's notice and the termination of the Women's
Studies Program have created
waves of anger that go
throughout the entire
Women's Program network at

On The

Inside

• Dos and don'ts for
Halloween are listed on
page 4.

LCC.
Cheryl Camillo, a student in
the Introduction to Women's
Studies class, was angered by
the program's elimination.
"Women's studies is so important, because it uncovers the
importance of women's roles
in history," she says. "This
kind of cut perpetuates the oppression of women and makes
the statement that women's
history is insignificant and
unimportant."

tire program cuts would occur
in other departments, and added '' I missed out on the other
part of our history that was
never taught because historical
studies are based on a patriarchal perspective which depicts
men's history. I have a right to
that full knowledge."

According to Bryan Moore,
one of two male students in
the Women's Studies class,
''This is the perfect example of
how Lane's different departments will deteriorate if essential programs are eliminated as
a whole.''
Moore also wondered if en-

Both students and Berry
seemed to agree on the importance of the Women's Studies
Program. Because studies of
the history of women have
never been introduced into the
school system until this program was initiated, and with
the entire program being cut,
it sadly reflects the views of a
patriarchal society that sees
the role of the woman as
secondary and unimportant.

• An analysis of the
academic and financial
"damage" to LCC if
Measure 3 passes is on page

• A special election section gives the TORCH's
view of the issues and the
answers. Pages 6 & 7.

3.

Page 2 October 28 - :Ni

w!iil: si",

1982 The TORCH

FREE FOR ALL
The candidates: Picking .and Choosing in '82
by Jeff Keating

ed session Oct. 22, they generally
reflect the feelings of the entire
TORCH staff.

TORCH Editor

The TORCH has endorsed candidates and given opinions on the major ballot measures in a special section,
Election '82, on pages 6 and 7 of this
week's issue.
The endorsements were made by an
editorial board consisting of myself,
Associate Editor Mike Sims, Photo
Editor Andrew Hanhardt and Production Coordinator Janelle Hartman.
Although the endorsements and
measure decisions were made in a dos-

Even a passing glance at the election
section indicates that we lean toward
the Democrats. This is a logical onesidedness: Democrats are, by and
large, far more concerned with the
sanctity of higher education than
Republicans. Many GOPers feel that
the quality of all levels of education
can be sacrificed as another
"cost-cutting" measure.
Of course, these are sweeping
generalizations. Many Demofrats

especially those interested in forming a
conservative state Senate coalition with
Republicans -- could care less about
higher education. And many
Republicans -- including our "split
decision" (see pages 6 and 7) for House
District 41 candidate Mary Burrows -are greatly concerned about the future
of education in general and higher ed
specifically.
The possibility of a conservative
ideological majority in the Senate concerned the TORCH staff, as did the
possibility of a Republican majority in
the House. The House Democrats cur-

rently hold a slim six-seat majority
over the GOP.
If the Democrats relinquish this majority, there will be a Republicancontrolled House and a Democratic
Senate -- possibly controlled by that
conservative coalition. The TORCH
editorial board foresees problems -and not just with education matters -if such a scenario becomes reality.
So for the most part, the TORCH
has leaned toward the Democrats, and
for our readers we have but one piece
of advice: Choose wisely and choose
the best representation, but keep
education --your education -- in mind.

Changing the. 60s liberal's image
•

h)' Arthur Hoppe
nd,,,ned Columnist

Ah, how the young radicals
of the '60s have changed! And
how proud they are of it. In . .
deed, Tom Hayden, now a
candidate for the California
legislature, is running a whole
series of television commercials to tell the voters about
the all-new him.
His campaign manager says
they portray Hayden, his wife,
Jane Fonda, and their son,
Troy, as "a typical Santa
Monica family." That's
typical.
Tom: l 'm home, dear. How
was your day?
Jane: (executing a squatting
back flip and planting a kiss
on his cheek) Typical, darling.
I car pooled our son, Troy (a
relation) to school, picked up

the cleaning, got a marvelous
bargain on rutabaga at
Safeway, and chained myself
to the Diablo Canyon nuclear
reactor for two hours.
Tom: (frowning) I wish you
hadn't. Couldn't you have
chained yourself instead to the
First National Bank in order
to protect its refusal to go
along with a 12 percent prime
rate?
Jane: Sorry, dear. I thought
you were campaigning against
the coming holocaust made inevitable by the greedy
purveyors of nuclear power.
Tom: That was my last campaign. This time, I'm campaigning in favor of stricter
monitoring of nuclear waste
disposal.
Jane: That's nice. Oh,
here's our typical son, Troy.
Troy: Hi, Mom. Hi, Dad.

Boy, what a day I had in
school! I caught the kid next
to me saying, ''Thank God for
milk and graham crackers.''
So I said, ''Take this for the
Constitution, you Fascist
pig!" And I belted him one.

same, but they are certainly
not the same person or
anywhere near it. They simply
do similar things and say and
wear similar items, but this is
necessary to set up a rapport
with others in their culture so
they can communicate effectively. One of the keys to communication is good rapport.
But when they go home,
they will eat different meals
and do different things, which
is what makes up their uniquely individual beings. We all
need to speak the same
language so we can share
ourselves, but we all wear our
hair the way we like it. That
comes from inside of us.
I take comfort in knowing
many people and feeling like
it's a small world, and there's
a certain amount of
"sameness" that is necessary
to feel like I fit in. But I also
take comfort in knowing I can
deviate at any time. That is the
freedom of being human. Fear
not, Jeff!

A cry for help

-Letters
Smallness
is not an evil

To the Editor:

This letter is in regard to
your three-part editorial on
the potential ''smallness of
America." You wanted feedback -- h.ere it is.
I can't say I understand
what you are worried about.
You suggest that the people of
the United States are doing
things like each other
monkey see, monkey do,
right? In some context this is
true, but not in such a way
that differs from any other
society.
The whole point of culture
is to share similar styles of
dress, symbols, norms, and
values which give it strength.
Every society has in it people
who follow the rituals of that
society, and that may include
knowing who cuts your
neighbor's grass. Mr. X and
Mr. Y may look and act the

Timothy Swillinger

Tom: Look son, I know
boys will be boys. But I'd
prefer you'd devote your time
to passing around those
leaflets I gave you spelling out
my strong stand on an •issue of
grave concern
to all
Americans.
Troy: Yeah, I know, Dad.
But the kids just aren't too
keen on seeking alternative
sources of energy.
Tom: Well, perhaps you
and Mom would rather picket
the Glutco Oil Company headquarters?
Troy: Gosh, Dad, you mean

To the Editor:

My name is Richard
Holmes. My wife Lisa Ann
Gutknecht and my nine-month
old son Thaddeus disappeared
from the vicinity of 'D' and
Mill streets in Springfield, at
approximately 9:30 a.m.,
Tuesday, Oct. 18, 1982. They
have been missing ever since.
A missing persons report
has been filed in Springfield
and has been distributed
statewide. I have contacted
family from California to
Kentucky in trying to locate
her, all to no avail. She has not
been heard from. I have questioned busdrivers, neighbors,
friends, instructors, acquaintances, anyone even remotely
familiar with us, to no avail.
She had no money, took no
clothes, leaving me a note only
to meet her at LCC library to
pick up Thaddeus before her

to protest capitalist exploitation of the working man in
order to advance your Camp a ig n
for
Economic
Democracy?
Tom: No, I mean to protest
possible off-shore drilling in
the Santa Monica channel in
order to advance my Campaign to Protect Our Fragile
Environment. Then on Sunday perhaps we could go for a
nice family drive in the country.
Troy: Which country? What
about El Salvador? I 'II bet
Mom could make a great
speech from rebel headquarters.
Tom: (shuddering) I was
thinking more along the lines
of a voter registration drive.
Jane: (chinning herself on
the chandelier) I can't come,
drat it. I'm delivering an anti-

11 :30 a.m. class. She didn't arrive. She hasn't been seen.
Lisa is approximately 5' 2"
tall with long sandy brown
hair worn in a braided ponytail in the back. She has blue
eyes and a predominant space
between her two front upper
teeth. She was wearing a green
pair of denim bell bottoms, a
brown and white horizontally
striped blouse, with an orange
jacket, trimmed with tan corduroy. Shoes were dark brown
suede with soft soles. Thaddeus, carried about in a blue
denim Snuggli II baby pack,
was wearing either a heavy
blue thermal jumpsuit or a
heavy yellow thermal jumpsuit. He has brilliant bluebrown eyes with a head full of
dark brown hair. A recent
surgical scar is present on his
abdomen.
Please, help me to locate
anyone who may have an idea
of their whereabouts. I can be
contacted at either 686-0708 or
687-9792 after 8 p.m.
Richard Holmes

diet pill lecture to the Vietnamese boat people. But as
your typical little housewife, is
there anything else I can do?
Tom: Well, you might give
my campaign another
$150,000 and join the D.A. R.
Troy: Gee, Dad, I thought
we were a family of activists.
Tom: We are, son. But
we're now a typical family of
moderate activists. And if
we're going to get me elected,
we'd better not forget it.
Troy: (glumly) That's
typical.

The
TORCH
EDITOR: Jeff Keating
ASSOC IA TE EDITOR: Mike Sims
PHOTO EDITOR: Andrew Hanhardt
STAFF WRITERS: Jennifer Dawn
Anderson, Cathy Benjamin, Bob Ecker,
Janelle Hartman, Dale Sinner, Cynthia
Whitfield, Marti Wyman
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: Michael
Bailey, Gary Breedlove, Eileen Dimer,
Mike Newby
STAFF ARTIST: Jason Anderson
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR:
Janelle Hartman
PRODUCTION: Cathy Benjamin,
Shawnita Enger, Andrew Hanhardt,
Sharon Johnson, Mike Newby, Mike
Sims
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jan
Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT: Amy
Steffenson
COPYSETTER: Chris Gann
RECEPTIONISTS: Sheila Hoff, Lucy
Hopkins
DISTRIBUTION: Tim Olsen
ADVISER: Pete Peterson
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 po5sible. Some may appear with a
byline to indicate the reporter responsible.
News features, because of their broader
scope, may contain some judgements on
the part of the writer. They are also identified with a 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 10 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
Mondays prior to publication. Mail or bring all correspondence to: The TORCH,
Room 205, Center Building, 4000 E. 30th
Ave., Eugene, OR 97405. Phone
747-4501, ext. 2656.

The TORCH October 28 - bl8 t11fflbc S, 1982 Page 3

No. 3 will cause 35% ·staff layoff
Analysis ·
by Elizabeth Steffenson
for the TORCH

staff
Administrative
members at LCC are working
to inform the public, students
and fell ow employees of the
type of budget they expect to
have if Ballot Measure 3
passes on Nov. 2.
If approved by voters,
Measure 3 would limit property taxes to 1.5 percent of true
cash -value as assessed July 1,
1979.
As early as last March 4,

LCC Pres. Eldon Schafer advised his managerial staff to
prepare a decision package
totalling 10 percent of the college's General Fund Commitment for the next fiscal year.
On Sept. 22 the entire LCC
staff heard at its first meeting
in the Performing Arts
Theater that Measure 3
passage would cause a loss of
(Full-Time
FTE
2000
Equivalents) students and
would result in a 35 to 40 percent personnel layoff, according to Larry Romine, direct~r of college and community

ESL seeks tutoring

for foreign students
One hundred twenty-five
foreign students need tutors in
the English As A Second
Language (ESL) program, according to ESL coordinator
Sherrie Ferlaak.
85
Approximately
volunteers currently help in
the program, which is comprised of some 73 international students. Most of these
are Asian and Hispanic. 52 Indochinese refugee students are
also enrolled in the program.
Training workshops are
scheduled for Nov. 2 and 4
from 7 to 9 p.m. The first
workshop will include a slide
show about ESL and a
demonstration lesson given in
Lao to the participants. "You
feel what it's like to know absolutely nothing in a
language," Ferlaak says.
In the second session, ESL
teachers will demonstrate
methods and ideas for tutors
to use with their students.
Volunteers should be fluent
in English and have the time (a
minimum of one hour per
week) and interest to spend
with a foreign student, Ferlaak
says.
ESL provides instruction in
spoken and written English for
foreign students and nonEnglish speaking immigrants.
Funding comes from the LCC

relations. Romine advised the
ASLCC student senate of the
same information.
The Daily, LCC's staff
newsletter edited by Romine,
has kept the staff informed on
the impact this measure would
have. The effect of the passage
would probably hit no later
than winter term. Some 4000
to 8000 individual students
would be unable to enroll,
Romine says.
Dean of Business Operations William Berry, speaking
for the college, has been
available to the media and

-Cafeteria
rumors nixed

Adult Basic Education pro- by Karla Scharr
for the TORCH
gram and federal grants.
The program employs four
instructors who teach classes
Recent campus rumors conranging from basic speech and cerning rises in food prices,
grammar to more advanced evening closure and personnel
skills. cutbacks in the LCC cafeteria
conversational
Howev'"er, Ferlaak says, are unfounded, according to
decreases in funds have led to LCC Food Service manager
the elimination of some upper- Bob Tegge.
level classes in order to continue instruction for the
Tegge says the only change
"neediest," students: those taking place will be a cutback
with_low-level English skills.
of one worker between the
'' As the program gets hours of 7:30 a.m. and 10:15
smaller we have to cut from a.m.
the top, "explains Ferlaak.
For a foreign student, a
A night instructor heard the
tutor may offer more than
rumor and was concerned
language improvement skills.
about what his students would
Ferlaak says, "Sometimes it's
do during break period if the
just a matter of developing . snack bar, as the rumor went,
rapport with an American per- were closed during evening
son and learning survival skills
hours. He took the informa-:..
in the community.''
tion to Jack Carter, dean of
Those skills, she says, in- students, who in turn conclude banking, shopping and tacted Tegge for "the bottom
learning one's way through line."
town.
Tegge stated that he had no
Beck Loughary, who cooridea where or how the rumor
dinates the volunteer program,
encourages potential tutors started and was concerned that
because "there's more to learn no one came to him sooner.
than there is to teach.'' She
The cutback of one worker
says budget cuts increase the
need for volunteers as they will cause no major impact on
'' are the only chance for these snackbar employees or LCC
people (ESL students) to have students since the menu and
hours will remain the same.
good contai::ts.''

such local groups as the Lane
Economic Forum.
Education Association
(LCCEA) President Mike
Rose has used his free time to
give information about
Measure 3 and motivate
students and public to carefully examine the bill. Rose has
stated that its passage would
create further economic hardships for our state by stopping
bonding programs which fund
economic development.
Also at stake Nov. 2 is
LCC's proposed tax base increase. The LCC Board Sept.

9 approved a measure that will
ask voters for a $12.5 million
tax base for 1983-84. That request exceeds the planned
1983-84 budget of $10.59
million by approximately 18
percent.
And as President Schafer
stated in his March 4
memorandum, LCC must continue to remain a comprehensive community college and
find ways to save those
students who wish to attend.
Ballot Measure 3 would
jeopardize this intent.

I0~ "th;~Wire
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nz

~o~~i~i!!~ce~~o~ike Sims

Bristol-Myers Co. pulled Excedrin capsules off store
shelves in Colorado Oct. 26 after an Aurora man was
hospitalized with mercuric chloride poisoning.
Thus the popular headache remedy joins a growing
family of consumer products -- ranging from fresh fruit
to milk to eye drops to laxatives -- which have been
tampered with after manufacture and processing.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner
Arthur Hull Hayes, Jr. observed Oct. 27, "None (of the
tamperings) have been found to be the result of problems or contamination at the manufacturer's plants .. .-

1

t~1I:~~~t~Eff

Five Massachusetts towns have gone one step further by
banning the popular Halloween ritual.
In Waco, Texas, Baylor University officials said Oct.
26 they were considering disciplinary action against a
student and former student who marketed a poisontesting kit for over-the-counter medication.
Meanwhile, in Chicago where seven people died @rn
earlier this month from cyanide-poisoned Extra rMf
· Strength Tylenol capsules, police are searching for a r,jj
fa=
i=·.·=',.__:;,r_ ,·:_~,=.·;_=:,_:~, :_· woman who gave a false name after turning in a bottle f.<fp
of tainted capsules.

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draft.

Dr. Michael G. Herz, the second of the two
new doctors in Student Health, is this week's
face on file.
Herz comes to LCC with a bachelor's degree
from the University of Oregon and a medical
degree from the UO Health Sciences Center in
Portland. He most recently worked in the Kern
Medical Center in Bakersfield, Calif., as a resident in obstetrics and gynecology.
Herz says he enjoys working with LCC
students and staff members in the the Student
Health Center and that he is looking forward to
new experiences on campus.

Early Halloween 'prank' injures three teachers

~h~~t~;:

1
su~r~~:!o~-i~}~:0s ~~~•~;
ped a blasting cap under a closed faculty lounge door.
The students, ages 16 and 17, were detained and
charged with reckless endangering, possession of stolen
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small
pri:~t~;~i/~j~:!~nf ~:uttie:~~~~:
puncture wounds and the third complained of ringing
ears. Ten teachers were in the lounge when the incident

iVccurred'.i ll!l!lllli"'*'1f¥'J1~ 1?;"!.::~,i;

~age1i4!(:)dolfor 28 -'t-i: 11 I

3, 1982 The' TOR€H

Safety guidelines for HaUoween
by Marti Wyman

TORCH Staff Writer

A boy dressed for Halloween as a soldier, carrying
a plastic model sub-machine gun, was accosted by a
man who -said, "You think it,s funny, huh?,, and
shot and killed the child.
Two brothers were shot by a passing motorist who
saw the youngsters uprooting political signs as a
. Halloween prank. The boys were later treated for abdominal and leg wounds.
A man dressed as a vampire accidentally stabbed
himself in the heart with a knife and died.
Cartoon stickers were found to be laced with LSD.
Gruesome? Yes. And because of past incidents
such as these, along with the recent Tylenol-cyanide
scare, this year's Halloween activities will be under
much tighter supervision. At least local law enforcement agencies and community schools hope so.
The Eugene Police Department offers the following Halloween safety tips:

Motorists

• Drivers should be extra careful, as excited
children often become careless and may run into
pathways of motor vehicles.

• Insist treats be brought home prior to sampling.
• Instruct your children on the Maltese cross window sign, an indicator that trick-or-treaters should
not disturb occupants.

Parents

Costumes

• Clothing should be light in color, short in length
to prevent tripping, and made from flame resistant
materials.
• Everyday shoes are much safer than high heels or
poorly fitting "costume" shoes.
• Make-up is much safer than a mask, which may
obscure vision.
• Reflective strips, patches, or paint increase
visibility after dark.
• Bags for collecting treats should be small enough
so they won't block vision or cause tripping.

• Young children should be accompanied by an
adult or reponsible older child.
• Be aware of your children's plans including a
predetermined route of travel.
• Know who your children's companions will be
and what supervision there will be.
• Set a reasonable time for your children to be
home and insist that it is kept.
• Review these safety rules for walking with your
children:
Cross only at corners, never between parked cars.
Look in ~11 directions before crossing the street.
Watch for and obey all traffic lights a~d signs.
Walk, never run, across streets.
Use sidewalks, not the street, for walking.
Wait on the curb, not in the street, until the street
is clear to cross.

The University of Oregon Drug Information
Center suggests that people try to give tamper-proof
treats such as peanuts, raisins and sealed candy. They
say the best way to try to detect foul play in candy is
to look for things like pin holes in wrappers, a
chemical smell or broken wrappers.

SHS busiest

on Mon·d ays
by Kerry Harris
for the TORCH

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If you plan a visit to the Student Health Services (SHS)
clinic on a Monday, plan to
wait a while.
Mondays are busiest
because students becoming ill
oyer the weekend drop in for
examinations, acccording to
SHS Director Sandra Ing.
On the average the SHS
staff sees 70 students per day.
On a busy day this figure may
climb to as high as 110, according to Ing.
Many SHS services are provided free and are available to
LCC credit students as well as
to Adult Basic Education and
High School Completion
students. All services are confidential -- all student medical
records are secured and
available only to the SHS
staff. And Ing requests student cooperation at the reception window in giving other
persons privacy.
The staff at Student Health
includes five part-time doctors, two nurse practitioners,
and a medical technologist.
Health Service hours are 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Thursday, and 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday. Student
Health Services is located in
room 126 in the Center
Building.

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I} Exposures SI . 99
N £xposurt•s SJ. 99
.f6 Exposures 55. 99

EXPIRES 12121182

(110 limil)
wi1h coupon

The TOR~H October 28 -~ocmbur!, 1982 Page' 5

Job picture shifting
There is both bad news and
good news for today's college
students in a new report by the
Labor Department.
The bad news: Between now
and 1990, the supply of college
graduates will continue to
outrun the supply of jobs requiring a college degree.
The good news: Degree
holders will be in strong demand in select fields, including
systems analysis, computer
programming and engineering.
Also, says the Labor
Department, college graduates
in the 1980s "still have an advantage over other workers.
They are more likely to be
employed and to hold the
highest-paying professional
and managerial jobs."
Generally speaking, job opportunities are expanding the
fastest in fields requiring
specialized college or noncollege training. In this
category are scientists,

lawyers, architects, actuaries,
medical workers and technicians of many kinds.
Trends to watch. The survey
finds the job picture shifting in
a variety of ways. The labor
force will continue to grow,
but at a slower rate. Jobs in
service industries will increase
by 20 to 27 percent. Fields
such as finance, insurance and
real estate will grow more
rapidly.

Meanwhile, the number of
farmers required to feed the
nation will keep declining. The
growth of government
employment will slow or end.
More and more unskilled and
semiskilled workers will be
replaced by machines.
Overall,
white-collar
workers now represent about
half the total labor force, up
from 43 percent in 1960, and
are expected to continue to
gain. Blue-collar joqs are increasing slowly in numbers but
are shrinking as a percentage
of the work force.

Up in arms against

"The
use
of
new
technology,'' the survey
states,
''has created,
eliminated or changed the
nature of hundreds of
thousands of jobs." Population growth, meanwhile, '' has
spurred the need for workers
to provide more housing,
medical care, education and
other s·ervices and goods.''
The study, entitled the
1982-83 Occupational Outlook
Handbook or BLS Bulletin
2200,can be ordered by sending a check for $9, payable to
Superintendent of Documents,
to the U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.
20402.

Ballot Measure 3
The Associated Students of Lane Community
College (ASLCC) student government members are
sponsoring a campus wide "Arm Up Against 3"
movement on Monday, Nov. 1 and Tuesday, Nov.
2, Election Da_X.
The "Arm Up" effort will encourage students,
staff and faculty to wear white armbands on the
two days to symbolize LCC and individual opposition to Ballot Measure 3. The measure would, if
passed, drastically reduce funding to state colleges
and universities and virtually cut LCC's student
population in half. Some estimates peg the property tax's damage to school funding at as much as 40
percent.
The TORCH also strongly opposes Ballot
Measure 3. An explanation of the measure and of
all pertinent election information appears in a
special section on pages 6 and 7.

Peace Week
Poetry Contest

First Prize $75
Second Prize $50
Third Prize $25

Variety of media
graces art show
by Julia Bodyfelt

TOR C H Staff Writer

Artists of the Blackfish
Gallery in Portland are
displaying their work at Lane
Community College in a threeand-a-half week exhibition
which began Saturday, Oct.
23, in the LCC Gallery.
According to Howard Hoy,
LCC art instructor and gallery
director, Black fish is a
cooperative gallery of 29
Oregon artists located in
Portland's Old Town. Its
members work in a wide variety of media, ranging from
painting to sculpture and
ceramics. Many of these forms
of media will be represented in
the LCC exhibition.
The purpose of the LCC
gallery is to provide a

"professional, educational
gallery so that (LCC) students
have the opportunity to view
works from other regions,"
says Hoy.
The LCC gallery is located
on the main campus in the
Math and Art Building.
Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 10
p.m., Monday through Thursday and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
Friday.
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'
Editor's note: The following endorsements were made by the TORCH
Editorial Board in a closed session Oct. 22. The board took into consideration candidates' opinions and policies regarding education, the economy
and social programs, to name a few. The ballot measure information,
which was compiled by TORCH staffer Tim Olsen, was discussed and a
simple vote taken. The TORCH hopes this special section will serve as a
guide for LCC voters on election day, Nov. 2.

Kulongoski for Governor
Kulongoski is the TORCH's candidate for governor, not only with
regard to LCC voters but for the general public as well. He brings a keen
knowledge of the governor's role and a basic "progressive" philosophy to
an office that has been sorely lacking, at best, in progresive thinking.
Although Atiyeh constituents say the governor's programs haven't "had
a chance" to begin, and that Oregon's economy is the result of the nation's
economy (which is partially true), present evidence clearly shows that
nothing's going to change. Atiyeh is using a shield of "experience" to fend
off political attackers who have found his weaknesses to be a lack of innovative planning, progressive thinking and accessibility.
Kulongoski, aside from being the more dynamic of the two, believes
Oregon industry can be better improved from the inside out. He wants to
combine a stronger emphasis on Oregon business with some of the progress
Atiyeh made in attracting outside industry.
Kulongoski is also an extremely strong supporter of education, especially higher education. During the 1982 campaign, Kulongoski has frequently
cited Oregon's $S9 million cut in educational funding as one of Atiyeh's
political detriments and is quick to note that the funding reduction has
placed Oregon in the 50th spot out of the 50 states in education monies.
Frankly, that's pretty ugly.
The TORCH does not consider Paul Cleveland to be a valid candidate.
As with most Libertarians, Cleveland condones laissez-faire economics, individual freedom and greatly reduced government. None of these objectives is inherently bad, just unrealistic.
Vote for Ted Kulongoski on Nov. 2.

(Ballot questions are not as they appear on the
actual ballots. They have been simplified.)

Should property tax bases be increased proportionate to the
amount of new construction in the taxing area each year?

No. This measure increases the property tax base and reduces
the control and the ability of voters to scrutinize whether or not
new construction really increases the demands on services. It also
increases bureacracy by tying up assessor time.
Should the amount of time the governor has to sign bills after the
close of a legislative session be extended from 20 days to 30 days?
No. This measure, although certainly needed with regard to
time extension for the governor, has one major flaw: It could, in
some instances, allow the governor and legislators to "sit" on a
bill until the deadline for referendums -- voter signatures against
a bill -- passes. The law could then go into effect unchallenged
and without the approval of the voters.

s,

7

;.:::::;•;;:::
House District 43

Po"ioo, of •~< E•g<~. ,ortioo, or •n•= Lm (iocl,dios Elmfr,JV""''• J,octi,

0o::.:~;•:ver incumbent Repub

House ~:::t~ampbell.

Weaver for Congress
Jim Weaver has an exemplary political record. Although a liberal on
social issues, he has combined a humanistic stance with a practical approach to federal budget-cutting. He is one of the most sensitive legislators
working for us in Washington, D.C.
Ross Anthony is a politically inexperienced economics professor who
has made potshots at Weaver the basis for a campaign that really contains
no philosophical differences from Weaver's. His accusations that Weaver
voted for a bill giving Congress a "tax break" completely sidesteps the fact
that the "break" was attached as a rider to a bill aiding mine workers suffering from black lung. Weaver had previously voted against a bill designed purely for financial breaks for Congress.
In the final analysis, it's Weaver that we have and Weaver that we
should keep.

\.

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

Florence and coastal Lane County

1ncum bent Max Rijken, Newport Democrat, over Newpo1

torney Jeff Ouderkirk (Republican).

Senate District 20

South and portion of west Eugene, River Road/Santa Clara, Bethel/Danebo

Democratic State Rep.Margie Hendriksen (Dist. 40) over incumbent State
George Wingard (Republican).
Senate District 21

Northeast Eugene, Springfield, Coburg

Incumbent Democrat Ed Fadeley over UO student Mike Cross (Republican).
Senate District 22

Rural Lane County (Cottage Grove, Junction City, Mapleton, Oakridge), portion of northern Douglas County, portion of west E

Former Lane County District Attorney (1959-66) William Frye (Democrat)
child care center owner Jonathan Bates (Republican).
First Congressional District
Northwestern Oregon

The TORCH made no endorsement for the House District 44 race, pitting incumbent Democrat Peggy Jolin of Cottage Grove against former Springfield mayor
(1961-65) B.J. Rogers (Republican, currently living in Dexter) and Laura Stine of
Cottage Grove (Citizen's Party). District 44 serves southeast Lane County and a
portion of northern Douglas County, and contains the cities of Cottage Grove,
Oakridge and Drain.
Also, no endorsement was made in the following races:
House District 38: Chuck Bennett, Gates Democrat, versus Cedric Hayden, Fall
Creek Republican.
Senate District 14: Joe Davis, Silverton Republican, versus Steve Starkovich,
Canby Democrat.
The winners of these two races will represent what have come to be known as the
"helicopter districts," legislative anomalies created during reapportionment in
1981. The districts stretch along the western slope of the Cascade Mountains from
Highway 58 north to Clackamas County. The Mohawk and McKenzie River valleys,
Pleasant Hill, and a portion of southeast Springfield lie within these districts.

Incumbent Democrat Les AuCoin over retired Georgia-Pacific vice-president
Moshofsky (Republican).
Second Congressional District
Eastern and portion of southwestern Oregon

Vale rancher Larryann Willis over state Senate Minority Leader Bob Smith of E
(Republican).
Third Congressional District
East Multnomah County

Incumbent Democrat Ron Wyden over telephone company employee Tom Pb
Fifth Congressional District

Clackamas and Marion counties, portions of Linn, Benton, and Polk counties

State Senator Ruth McFarland of Boring (Democrat), over incumbent S
District Congressman Denny Smith of Salem (Republican).

A comprehensive look at the candidates,

••
rnd reduces
ether or not
ices. It also
ills after the
to 30 days?

h regard to
It could, in
"sit" on a
ures against
nchallenged

Should Oregon drivers have a self-service option on gasoline?

Should property tax values be rolled back to 1979 levels and
assessed at one and one-half percent, not to exceed increases of
more than two percent per year?

'J}ear on the
ip lified.)

nate to the
year?

the issues and the TORCH's choices
No. Self-service gas could eliminate up to 3000 jobs and be a·
hazard to elderly and the physically handicapped drivers.
Should Oregon be on record as supporting a nuclear freeze?

No. The TORCH cannot urge you to vote against this measure
strongly enough.
Measure 3 would prohibit the sale of bonds for highways,
power development, forest rehabilitation and reforestation,
pollution control, water projects (irrigation and drainage),
veterans welfare, higher education, elderly multi-family housing
and small energy projects.
Since state school funding depends largely on the sale of such
bonds, Oregon's educational system is at the mercy of the voters.
As in most areas of the country, any time a voter sees ''tax cut,''
which would work in conjunction with the reduced bond sales,
he/ she votes for it. But the ramifications of Measure 3 could
eliminate up to 40 percent of funding to schools and drastically
reduce enrollment.
On a local level, Measure 3 will cut $3.9 million from LCC's
budget, $10.5 million from Eugene's city budget, $3.1 million
from Springfield's budget, $9. 7 million from Eugene School
District 4-J's budget and $3.3 million from Springfield School
District 19.
VOTE NO ON 3.

Yes. Measure 5 would simply require that Oregon's governor
write the president a letter which says that the state of Oregon
supports a nuclear freeze.
Should the Land Conservation and Development Commission be
eliminated and land use and planning control be given over to
local jurisdictions?

No. By combining a knowledge of Oregon's economic weak
spots and strong points with a concern for the state's natural
beauty, the LCDC has carefully -- and efficiently -- controlled
what goes on in land growth and planning.
Should a ceiling be placed on the amount of rent that can be
charged to mobile home owners for their rented property space?

No. Rent control -- and 7 is rent control -- jeopardizes the free
enterprise system. Landlords should charge what they please.

House District 39

• Governor: Ted Kulongoski

Incumbent House Majority Leader Grattan Kerans (Democrat) over Republican
Jerry Riley, minister, River Road Church of Christ.

• U.S. Congress, Fourth District: Jim Weaver

River Road/Santa Clara, Bethel/Danebo, west Eugene

ing Elmira/Veneta, Junction City,

mmbent Republican

• State Labor Commissioner: Mary 'Wendy' Roberts

House District 40

South Eugene

t, over Newport at-

UO public affairs professor Carl Hosticka (Democrat) over ,Republican analystconsultant Robert O'Reilly and LCC financial aid officer Laurel Paulson (Citizen's
Party) .

cumbent State Sen.

___'
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4

Junction Cit_

'

J

Veneta •

•

38

.....- -

43

-,,...

(Republican).

·c

~,

'-i._

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County, portion of west Eugene

ye (Democrat) over

RepreeentatlYe
Dl9trlct

4

38
38

'40

41
42
43
44

c vice-president Bill

•Senatorial
Oiatrtct
2
14

20
20 .

21
21
22
22

Btu, River

__

• Cottage Grove

.,

--

• Oakridge

I

44

I
I

L-----,

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• House District 4: Max Rijken
• House District 38: No preference.
• House District 39: Grattan Kerans
• House District 40: Carl Hosticka
• House District 41: No preference.
• House District 42: Larry Hill
• House District 43: Sharon Murphy
• House District 44: No preference.
• Senate District 14: No preference.
• Senate District 20: Margie Hendriksen
• Senate District 21: Ed Fadeley.
• Senate District 22: William Frye.
• Measure 1: No

Bob Smith of Burns

ployee Tom Phelan.

House District 41

• Measure 2: No

Incumbent Republican Mary McCauley Burrows versus UO economics professor
Mike Grove (Democrat). The TORCH had a split of opinion on this race, with two
endorsing Burrows and two abstaining. Burrows' record of service was noted and
praised but reservations were held regarding her party affiliation.

• Measure 3: No

Northeast Eugene, Coburg

• Measure 4: No
• Measure 5: Yes
• Measure 6: No

incumbent Second

House District 42

Springfield

Mill worker Larry Hill (Democrat) over incumbent Republican Vern Meyer.

Measure 7: No

• LCCTax Base: Yes

<\,~~V

~o

Ao

Page 8 October 28 .. Mwends1ei 3, '1982 The 'TORCH

ENTERTAINMENT

Mid/er, O'Toole in film flops
Reviews by Jeff Keating

But if someone new to the
Midler magic saw Jinxed and
made an opinion about Midler
solely from it, they wouldn't
come away with an overly
complimentary impression.

TORCH Editor

Jinxed

Frankly, Bette Midler can
do better than this.
From her stirring on-stage
. performances as a singer and
nightclub entertainer to her
Academy Award-nominated
role as a Janis Joplin replica in
The Rose, Midler has ignited
America's audiences and
garnered critical acclaim. Her
goofy, overstated, very special
brands of humor, song and
drama have become as much
of an American staple as, well,
McDonalds.

Jinxed is an attempt at
murder/robbery/comedy that
runs aground, at best. In a
plotline typical of this genre,
Midler offs her husband and
steals valuable jewels with the
aid of a young thief (Ken
Wahl) and a black cat.

And, naturally, the plot
takes enough twists and turns
to confuse even the best of cartographers.

i

rc0 PY GEnTER
euuEfif - -

-FA:. L~W :OS~ O~SE~ • (

PRINTING AND PHOTOCOPYING

Theses, Dissertations, Books,
and Class Packets copied and
bound.

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You are invited to come discuss
economic and social justice in the 1980's
w~:

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ROSS ANTHONY

I

Candidate for 4th congressional district

I

=

I=

Friday, October 29th

i
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10:00 - 11:30 a.m. at table in cafeteria

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Paid for by the Ross Anthony For Congress Committee

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A~LCL LEGAL ~EQVICE~
'"''({({((

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Free legal services
for registered LCC students
Services include
•Routine Legal matters
(uncontested divorce,
name changes, wills, etc.)
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• Advocacy (tenants nghts, ~:r.:,
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:;: Legal Service

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Attorney Available
Tuesday through Friday, by appointment, on the
2nd floor of the Center Building. Phone ext. 2340 .

....,

But Jinxed fails miserably.
This type of movie went out
with the 40s and 50s, when it
was a new and original
cinematic concept. The direction is mediocre, the dialogue
terrible, and many of the jokes
and puns forced.
The blame doesn't really lie
with Midler. She is perhaps the
only thing about the movie
that doesn't fall on its face.
She brings spunk, vitality and
high energy to a role that reads
like it was written for a moribund housewife.
Wahl, on the other hand, is
terrible. Coming off of a stirring performance as a swinging
single-type cop in 1981 's Fort
Apache: The Bronx with Paul
Newman and Edward Asner,
he gives a lifeless performance
as the male part of this
murder/theft pair. He has all
of the expression of a cigar
store Indian with an
equivalent dose of bad lines.

He, like Midler, is probably
better than his material but
falls flat . .
It's a less than funny waste
of time. Skip it.
My Favorite Year

This film suffers from the
same basic plight as Jinxed.
Although the plot is a bit less
twisted and the humor a bit
more on-target, it also fails as
a comedy but succeeds as a
showcase for Peter O'Toole.
O'Toole plays a "big"
Hollywood star in the 50s
who, as a result of aging and
loss of mass appeal, is having
trouble finding work.
To add to his problems, he's
also managed to build quite a
reputation for coming to his
infrequent acting jobs
plastered beyond comprehesion. And most film producers
don't want to take a risk on
him.

TV at that time (remember,
this is the 50s) was but a babe
in the technological woods,
however, and in an effort to
boost sagging ratings, a
desperate TV producer hires
O'Toole in the hopes that his
appearance on the show will
help.
That's it. The whole plot.
It's simple.
But like Midler, O'Toole brings life to a character that was
written for someone living in
two dimensions. His mood swings and characterizations are
a simple joy, and the myriad
ways he finds to avoid being
followed by the young writer
who is hired to follow him are
delightful.
But aside from O'Toole,
this film falls flat. It gets a big
"Don't bother" from this corner.

Bobby sox, hops, Edsels:
Stray Cats bring 'em back
Review by Bob Ecker

TORCH Staff Writer

Since the horrible evening
John Lennon was killed outside the Dakota Apartment
Building in New York City, it
seems that people have
reverted back to the music of
old. Radio stations have
altered their formats to include 1950s and 1960s "oldies
but goldies" tunes. Many rock
groups of today have added
that "older" sound.
One such group is the Stray
Cats. They have redefined the
scope of 50s and early 60s
rockabilly. Their music turns
the clock back to times of such
events as dqcktails and bobbysocks at the hop, sodas at
the local teenage hangout and
Saturday-night at the drive-in.

CASH
for

STEREOS
home or auto, entire
systems or components
working or not

r

"

1409 Main

St .

Rock This Town and Stray
Cat Street. Group members do
skits to their own songs and
show a flair for acting in front
of the camera. Built for Speed
and Rev It Up and Go, which
are on the album, are along
the same lines: Songs dealing
with cars and "getting it on."
The album's heaviest tracks
are Little Miss Prissy and
Rumble in Brighton. The
guitar work is mean, forceful,
and prepares the listener for
the second side, which begins
with Runaway Boys.
The only ballad, and a beauty at that, is Lonely Summer
Nights. This is definitely one
song that would make
"Inspiration Point" just exactly what it means. Jeanie,
Jeanie, Jeanie and three other
cuts conclude what could be
an "album of the year" candidate.
But whether or not this
album wins awards matters little. Those who listen will be
saying, "These 'Cats' is bad!"
Thanks 10 Everybody's Records. Tapes, and
Video for their cooperation and assistance.

BE NOSEY!
Check out our classified

stereo
workshop
741-1597

The band's instruments are
compromised of a guitar,
floor bass and snare drums.
The Strays themselves are
Brian Setzer, Slim Jim Phantom, and Lee Rocker. Setzer is
the Cats artistic writer.
Coupled with snappy lyrics
and a beat you can move to,
the Stray Cats have opened the
minds of those who thought
music had changed too much
for their tastes.
Adults in their 30s and 40s
have found out that today's
music is not all that it's
pumped up to be. This "older
generation" finds solitude and
mutual acquaintance with the
sounds of the Stray Cats. They
might also identify with the
Stray Cat insignia, a black and
white cartoon character cat
complete with deer skin hat
and 50s hair style.
The album contains a dozen
songs, each capable of driving
you off your seat. If you've
had a chance to gander at
MTV, a video music TV channel, you might have caught

ads regularly.
J

Spfld .

Deadline: Friday 5:00

I

Eugene authors celebrate
release of new paperback

Photo by Gary Breedlove

As consistently ~s the swallows return to Capistrano, so do
David Joyce's Introduction to Visual Arts· egg-dropping experimenters. Defenseless chicken embryos gave their all as
students fashioned carriers -- in the hope that the eggs
wouldn't break -- and dropped them from the Math and Arts
building balcony Oct. 25.
-

Eugene -- A screenplay by
science fiction writer John
Varley, a short story by an
eight-year-old girl and the first
story Ken Kesey ever published are among the works included in The Anthology of
Eugene Writers No. 1, according to its editor, James D.
Brown.
Published by Northwest
Review Books, an adjunct of
Northwest Review, the anthology will be available
beginning Nov. 7 at Eugene
area bookstores or by mail
from Northwest Review,
University of Oregon, 369
Prince Lucien Campbell,
Eugene, 97403. Northwest
. Review is a literary magazine
currently in its 25th year of
continuous publication at the
university.
Some 68 local poets and
prose writers are included in
the 186-page paperback. Only
I 000 copies of the anthology
have been printed, but Brown

feels confident that there will poetry editor, Maxine Scates.
be a second printing. He says Brown said many very good
that the public's response so writers were not included in
the anthology due to space
far has been tremendous.
limitations.,
but added that he
Writers of all ages and
.
hopes
to
someday
see a second
backgrounds are included in
the anthology. Among the anthology of Eugene writers.
Publication of the anbetter-known names are
thology
was made possible
science fiction writers Damon
through
a
purchase by the City
Knight and his wife Kate
Wilhelm, poets Ingrid Wendt of Eugene Department of
and John Salisbury and Olym- Parks and Recreation with
pic marathon runner Kenny Room Tax funds. The cost of
Moore, who writes for Sports the anthology is $6.95 in
bookstores or postpaid by
Illustrated magazine.
"By no means are all these mail.
writers from the university or
An informal reception with
those who make their living by music and refreshments will be
writing,'' says Brown. First- held on Sunday, Nov. 7 to
time authors are equally well honor the authors in the anrepresented, including eight- thology. Sponsored by the
year-old Iris Victoria Hinds, a Cultural Arts Section of
student at Eastside Elementary Eugene's Parks and RecreaSchool in Eugene, who wrote tion Department and the UO
her story as a Christmas pre- Northwest Review of Books,
sent to her friends.
the free public event will be
More than 800 writers sub- held at 7 p.m. in the lobby of
mitted works which were read the Hult Center for the Perforby Brown and the anthology's ming Arts in Eugene.

,

Wood stoves create warmth,
pollution & fire hazards
by Will Doolittle
for the TORCH

Wood burning stoves can produce more than
a cozy living room. When improperly used,
they are also major contributors to house fires
as well as to air pollution, according to both a
local woodstove dealer and an official of a
Lane County pollution control agency.
Tom Lichty, co-owner of Larson-Thomas &
Co., Eugene woodstove retailers, maintains
that most woodstove-related house fires result
from poor woodstove education and misleading
advertising-claims.
And Marty Douglass of the Lane Regional
Air Pollution Authority cites studies that place
woodstoves high on the list of air pollution sources in this area.
Both agree, however, that through informed
usage the dual dangers of fire and pollution can
be minimized.
According to Lichty, the most common
stove-caused blazes are flue fires, which result
from the overheating of uncleaned, creosotecaked chimneys. This volatile creosote buildup,
though normal, should be removed from the
flue whenever it exceeds one-quarter inch in
thickness. The creosote accumulation can
rapidly accelerate to dangerous levels through
some common operator errors, Lichty says.
• Low Air Drafting
Attempting to maintain a low fire by cutting
down the air draft is playing with fire in more
ways than one, Lichty explains. It takes sixty
parts of air to burn up one part of the gas that
wood releases in burning. When the air supply
is insufficient to burn it up, the gas goes up the
flue and condenses in the chimney as creosote.
• Oversized Stoves
Sometimes people buy a stove that is too
large for their needs and try to compensate by
burning low fires. "There is no such thing as
too small" when it comes to wood stoves,
Lichty maintains.
• All-Night Burning
Many people, Lichty says, are "encouraged
by unrealistic advertising'' to try to burn their
stoves all night on one load of wood, a practice
he discourages.

• "Wet" \\'ood
Using wet or green wood also results in increased creosote buildup because the generally
lower burning temperatures for these woods inhibit complete combustion of gases. But Lichty
says the woodburning public is becoming more
aware of the need to use seasoned wood.
Other safety factors that Lichty emphasizes
are the proper placement of both stove and
chimney away from combustible materials, and
the proper installation of the right kind of
chimneys. He is particularly concerned with the
"extensive use" of unmodified fireplace flues
to vent fireplace inserts and woodstoves, which
must be vented differently and which, he
describes as "different animals" from
fireplaces.

Woodburning stoves are not only a source of
house fire, they are also a source of air pollution. Of the pollutants affecting the Willamette
Valley, ''woodstoves are one more we have to
deal with," says LRAPA's Marty Douglass.
Douglass states that the Eugene-Springfield
area is currently in violation of federal standards for the level of particulate matter in the
air and that a 1978 study estimated that
woodstoves represented the fourth largest
source of particulate emissions in this area.
In addition, says Douglass, wintertime carbon monoxide levels in residential areas are
comparable to those in downtown Eugene. This
was confirmed following a LRAP A study conducted in the south University area in January
and February of this year. Woodstoves are the
possible culprits, says Douglass.
But neither his agency nor the Oregon
Department of Environmental Quality can control or regulate woodstoves, Douglass says, and
their "main object is not to take people's stoves
away, but to minimize pollutants."
To this end the LRAPA is currently conducting a survey of 1,000 households in the area to
determine the number of woodburning units
and how tbe units are operated. Using the information collected, Douglass' agency plans to
launch an· education program in December, at
the beginning of the peak wood burning season,
which will identify _woodstoves as pollutants
and point out steps to minimize the problems.

C

"Something to-:
Sing About"

I James Cagney'& Evelyn Dawn
N
Abbott & Costello
E "Africa Screams"
M
admission $2.00
-A~~:~,:~
I EVERYDAY7PM-1lpm

~~~·T;~;

x rated --$3 00

C

Anette Haven
I
"Sometime
N
E
M Sweet Susan"
A HARRY REEMS

II

& SHAWN HARRIS

• ••.•.•.•••• ; •••. $1.00 off with student I.D.

BALLADEER. MUSIC
Third floor mcuani;ic. 5th S1rcct Public Market

FEATURING FINE NEW&USED STRINGED
'INSTRUMENTS
.

mircz ·Dauphin ·Sakurai •Kohno
Guild-Washburn· Y.1maha

0110111119
343-8043

buy • sel I· trade· custom orders

•

I

•

Page 10 October 28 - Neocn:bar S-, 1982 The TORCH

SP-O RTS·
Cross Country teams won't go to national meets

.

Cc;>mpeting without a goal

by Emmanuel Okpere
for the TORCH

If there is anything the LCC
cross country teams are not
happy about, it is the idea of
not going to the NJCAA national meet this year.
Pres. Eldon Schafer has
decided to not allow LCC
teams to compete in nationals
since other OCCAA teams are
financially strapped and
unable to raise the funds for a
nationals trip.
Harland Yriarte, men's
cross country coach, said "It
hurts when you train or com-

pete without a goal."
Yriarte said in the past the
team had raised money for
their trips to the nationals
through garage sales, bake
sales and bottle sales.
'' And I don't think it's fair
to forbid us from going to the
nationals with the money we
raised, money we worked
for," he stated.
"We worked for the money
we use to sponsor ourselves to
the _nationals. I see no reason
why we should be deprived of
our rights," Yriarte says.
He also stated that there are
n~ injuries on the team so far

Join the TORCH staff
Positions are open for volunteer staff writers, photographers and production personnel. See TORCH editor Jeff Keating in Center room
205D for an interview or simply come to the TORCH staff meetings
Mondays at 3 p.m.

The Pacesetter of Oregon College Newspapers
Needs You!

14 Kt. Gold Diamond

SOLITAIRE

s1aa

14 kt. gold ring with a full cut
sparkling diamond. Another
exclusive from Harry Ritchie.
Student's Accounts Invited

VALLEY RIVER CENTER

Dally 10 to 9. Sat . 10 to 6
Sunday 12 to 5

S'AWs

DOWNTOWN

Daily 9-30 to 5:30
Frl. 9:30 lo 7

==- --

2657 Willamette

THE CRE:~K BAND
Blue Grass& Folk Rock
Friday Oct. 29th
9:30- 1:30
No Cover

BIG SUE & Uncle "T"

Blue Grass& Folk Rock
Saturday Oct. 30th
9:30-1:30
No cover

Sunday Oct. Jlst
Benefit/or Vets Center

Halloween
Costume Dance
Music, Door Prizes,
Best Costume Prize,
Raffels
___

-- --·- - = --.~
__

- -- - ~ ,

__,....

..

--

ana the runners are performing very well. He also stated
that the 1982 team is stronger
than last year's unit.
Budget cuts - have affected
the team in that they lack
several items ofequipment, including shirts and practice
items. The 1982 cross country
budget is down $1100 from
last year.
Meanwhile, the team has
continued its training. They
run 75 to 85 miles a week.
Two major competitions
loom for Yriarte's runners.
The OCCAA championship
meet will be held at

Southwestern Oregon C.C. in Titans have never beaten.
Coos Bay Nov. 6.
Wilken also confirmed that
The Oregon-Washington LCC Pres. Eldon Schafer prochampionships will be held hibited her team from comNov. 20 in Tacoma. Accor- peting in the NJ CAA meet.
ding to Yriarte, this meet will "We can send our teams to the
be a tight race between LCC, nationals, but other schools in
Clackamas and Southern the (Willamette) valley can't,"
Idaho. "But we'll try our best Wilken explained. "They (the
to excel," Yriarte said.
administration) decided to
Equally optimistic about her even things up.''
team's chances is women's
Wilken expressed concross country coach Lyndell fidence in her team's chances
Wilken.
of winning the OCCAA and
One of this season's regional championships. She
highlights, according to added, however, that the
Wilken, was her team's victory Titans face still regional comover Mt. Hood -- a team the - petition from Spokane C.C.

Run For Your Lungs Oct. 31
by Jennifer Dawn Anderson

TORCH Staff Writer

A special run entitled Run
for Your Lungs, to benefit the
Oregon Lung Association and
co-sponsored by Nike and
McDonalds, takes place Sunday Oct. 31 at 9:30 a.m.
Two courses are offered: a
6.2 mile and 3 .1 mile. Both
begin and end at E. 13th and
Kincaid. Participants should
arrive at the starting site by 9
a.m. There is a registration fee
of $7. All participants receive
a t-shirt, and a "Be Our
Guest''
coupon
from
McDonalds.
According to ASLCC Sen.
Laura Powell, two free lunches in the Renaissance Room
will be awarded by the ASLCC
to the winner. Powell also announced that a prize will be
awarded to the Oregon college
with the most number of
pledges secured.
Prizes will be awarded to the
top three winners in each division, as well as to the average
runner and best costumed runner. Runners are encouraged
to wear costumes in honor of
Halloween.
The prize that goes to the

average runner in the 3.1 mile
race is three days and two
nights at Sunriver Resort near
Bend. The prize to the average
runner in the 6.2 mile run is
three nights and four days at
Salishan Lodge in Gleneden
Beach. Prizes are donated by

the establishments.
Registration blanks are
available at Nike of Eugene,
McDonalds, the LCC Student
Resource Center and the
Oregon Lung Association office. For additional information, call 343-5864.

Cagers begin practice
by Jennifer Dawn Anderson

TORCH Staff Writer

LCC men's and women's
basketball teams began practicing for the 1982-83 season
Oct. 18.
"We're looking very
good,'' says women'·s coach
Sue Thompson, adding that
her team members appear to
be in excellent condition and
are highly skilled. The team
recently completed a three
week conditioning class to
prepare for competition.
Thompson cited these
"Titans to watch": Kelly
Franklin, Jennifer Mannila,
Cheryl -Timeus and Dawn
Bredesen.

Thompson admits the
Titans have a tough schedule,
but adds, ''The key players are
very helpful to us. They're
very strong players that show a
lot of leadership and experience."
Men's coach Dale Bates is
cautiously optimistic about his
team's prospects. "We may
have some difficulty because
we are not exceptionally big.
However, we do have the
quickness, depth and shooting
ability.''
Bates made his first cut on
Oct. 22 and plans the second
on Oct. 28.
Both teams will begin competition in the latter part of
November.

Denali
is looking _for an editor
The Media Commission met Oct. 26 and set the deadline for receiving
applications for the Denali editorship on Thursday, Nov. 4 at 5 p.m.
Applications are available in the ASLCC offices, Center room 479.

Support LCC's literary arts magazine

The TORCH October 28 -

Movies

, 7:30.

Spririgfield Cinemas -- Springfield

Valley River Twin Cinema -- I077

Valley River Way. Jinxed, 7:00, 9:00.
Mv Favorite Year, 7:00, 8:45.
Cinema World -- Valley River Center.
An Officer And A Genlleman, 6:30,
9:30. The Wall, 7:55, 9:45. Road Warrior, 6:20, 10:00. Blade Runner, 8:00.
West 11th Tri-Cinema -- W. 11th and
Seneca. Monsignor, 7 :00, 9: 15. The
World According To Carp, 8:30,
Young Doctors In Love, 8:00. Sex
With A Smile, 7: 15. Satan's Mistress,
8:45.
Oakway Cinema -- Oakway Mall,
Coburg Rd. Annie, 7:30. Popeye,

Mall. Halloween Ill, 6:20, 8: 10 and
9:55. First Blood, 6:15, 8:00, 9:40.
Night Shift, 6:00, 9:30. The Best Unle
Whorehouse In Texas, 6:30, 9: 15.
Fine Arts -- 630 Main, Spring fiel d.
Clash OJ The Titans, 7:30. Beast
Master, 9:45.
National -- 979 Willamette. Tempest,
2:30, 7:30. Poltergeist, 5:00, 9:30.
McDonald -- 1010 Willamette. £. T.:
The Extraterres1ria/, 7: 15 and 9:30.
Cinema 7 -- Atrium Bldg., 10th and
Olive. / Love You, 7:30, 9:30.
Bijou -- 492 E. 13th. Diva, 7:15.
KZEL Radio presents Rocky Horror
Pic!Ure Show Oct. 29 and 30, mid-

-Classifieds
SERVICES

Au10 Repair done al my home, com•enien1 10
freewa_1· be1ween LCC and Eugene by 9 years proJess1011a/.. \1os1 1•eh1c/es. Call Harry 485-6296.
TYPIST--experienC"ed. Any project, large or small.
Edi11ng 111•ai/ah/e. Brandy 484-6044.
TYPl!vG -- your beH choice for all [_>ping need5 Word Wise U ord Process,n - Dwne Donobedian,
726-240 1.
TYPING SER VICE-- Term papers, manusaip1s.
Pick-up and deln•ery /0 LCC avai/ah /e. Bar/Jara
Ma1hewson, 998-2797.
Coleman Repuirs--Le wis Hill,
-47-4656.

5385

F

Srreet

RELAX wi1h u s wedtsh mussage. Soo1hin!! and
Cenrerin!{, Stare I.teemed. 2 .for $25 no11 1hru
'\01•e111her. Call Bmm Holle 343--6490.
Or~am;,in!{ , olunler coopera11 1·e D,n Care /<Jr
, ht!dren vi LCC ,111den1s. 461-2361 46/-0724.
Ii rllin!! >111den11 hm·111~ pro blems w11h an ass1gn1ne111 :1 II c £'an help. Come /0 1hc Wr11er's PlaC"e.
Cel/ler 445. he1wee11 9 and 3 dot!_, .

Dr. Tushbm1111 's- Halloween prescrip1ion •· Sha/..e
_1·01ir Wung Dang Goodie all ni!!ht /01111,.1
Leida. Ira, Sh11111<km11g a11d Smeg11111 -- Whop Bop
Baloo Bop B'H'ap Bam Boom! Sol T\' Da11ci11'!
T11shba11m- -Aeep up 1he good work.' SC"h111u<·k11111/i.

- - - -- - - - - - - - - - Micheal Allen -· Please say }'E:.S!

T. C. - Go/ a prohlem? fix ii . If you rnn '1 , gel ml <!I

found -- IV speed tnke. Call and idenu/ ,. he1 "'eell 5
a11d 8 p.111. Cheryl 484-5560.
Lo11 -- red .folder. 1e<·w1d jloor Cen1er 811ild11t/i.
Hid1erm no1e1 . Pleu1e re111m 10 Los/ a11d I 011nd.
He,mrt! ol/ered.

FOR S.4/.E

The ".4ma;,in!! free-Heal .\1achi11e. " .4 /ireplace
m sen 10 reduce your heating cost. Call Larry
935-23 76.

Car1er --

/'1 •e /!.Of

111.r eres on YOU!

A·e11 -- .·lre all 1he 11or1es 1r11e :>

I lm ·e •·ou Hooh1e.1 }'011 mean e1•err1hi11~ 10 111e.1 I ·111
clud 1·011r 1111ne.1 A"i111 IJ.
O ..H .D. -- Tlwnk1Jor "OSCAR

f.'I;

SILA. .. I lol'i' ii

Haqel 2 -- Thank, for 1101h111~ . }'our
hudtlr .

11m11111111~

C·uner -- ff e can 011/r he good Jnenc/1 11111i/ _i 1J11
learn (Ii dee,, 11 llf}.1 s. ,\1.

EY -- Spa1. why you cock-a-roach my watch? You
<wine! -- J-Bird

Dan Follis -- Since you 're 1101 doing any1hing right
now, why don '1 you come home and play QB? -Ex-Kno1hole Gang member.
.'vlartha -- Next time sign your message. I'm looking
forward to a romannc evening of sexual gymnas11cs
•• Bob.
Mikey?!

lour 13 ' · appliance C"ro111e ,J '-"Ii Mag 11·heel1. $150
or be11 <!f./Pr. 343-9798.
Pu11111.~ Iron, le/I or ri~/11. ,·in_.,/ gnp. Good C'Olldi11011. 510. Jo.-1nn, 343 -0465 A,liemoon or t.1·en111g.
JlC ~-'i3 amplt/ier. per/eel cond,11011 51100.
fl1111ch1 111m1ahle u11d La11dcraj1ed 1peaker1, $200.
Phone 895-2824 (Cre1,re/l).
.\'01e11·or1h1· telephone 560. Girls 20" hike $25.00.
Call .Wike U'Ue/l 111 Pm11111.~ t..11. 23 73.
Panuso111c .11ereo Includes .4 .\1 F,W radw, 8-lrack,
/6 ' ' speakers . 5100 or bes1 o[ler. 4f/4- 7043 .
"Tra1hr1~e" 1leepi11g bag. II arm 10 minus 16
degrees 1111d 111 11e11· condi11011. 575 call 343-4607.
•• It oolrtC'h •• gouse do11·11 coal . .Hedium, durk h/ue.
grea1 1/wpe 550. Call 343-4607.

4-/3 ' · If /111,rn/l S1eul helled 11res 50 perce111 1read
ll'ear $65, f I R.\f, t.i·e.s. 93 7-2817.
Quart canning Jars and qutl1ed jelly glasw.1. Call
342-2206 el'l'fllllgS.
Sony TC440 Reel 10 Heel w11h auto rel'erse. b1dirernonal record111/i. 998'.3/52 e1·e11111gs $125.
Frank/111 wood5101·e, could he used
560 or 1rade. Cull Carla 726-8338.

01

011er1 usk111g

ut.· wash 111ad1111e w11h 1111n1 lwske1 550. C·all
688-1884 <!/fer 5pm .

------------- ---Rurng110I sk11 with /J111d1ng1. hrake1: and po/e1.
0reat 1ha11e. $50. 344-3207.
for Sale- -,\01e111her fa.11

pa11.

3./4-320 7.

.4 l 'TO.\

/978 Trans .4111. 4 speed. loll' miles, excelle111 c1md111011, s1her 11·11h red velour 1111erior, chrome applianff mag, and radwls. $4,500 or be11, poss,hle
1rade. Cull /-942-0048 Evenmgs.
72 f-ord Pickup 302 Enx., clean $1400. Call Rex
./unmerman .\luth II .\1 A 13 l.dg L V 111ess.

Music

B.J. Kelly's -- 1475 Franklin Blvd .

Thurs ., Andy Jus1 and The Defenders.
Fri., Rock Band.
Duffy's -- 801 E. 13th. Thurs., Fri.,
and Sat., Nu Shooz. Sun., Rock
Band.
Max's -- 550 E. 13th. Sat., The
Cyclones. Sun., costume party with
The Cyclones.
O'Callahan's
440 Coburg Rd.
Thurs. through Sun., Rapid Transit.

Mom, Thanks for all the concern and words of advice. I Love Ya. The Redhead.
Karen -- It's 1101 always enough 10 say " hey. " I'd
like 10 know you belier, wha1 shall/ do? My hear/
is bleeding. P.S. Tuesday or Thursdaylok. -· M.A .
Sieve - You were right!! Drummers do have belier
licks - Bonnie.
Bon - I wan/ a 2nd edition EZ-shin, how about
y ou? Nammer.

All classified advemsements of fifteen words or
less are free 10 LCC Sil/dents. Deadline is Friday al
5 p.m. No ads will be accepled after deadline.

Designworks, 1877 Willametle. New
works on paper including those by
R.C. Gorman, Jerry Schum, Rene
Carcan, Marcel, Doug West and
others. Tues. through Sat. JO a.m. to 6
p.m. and by appointment.
Outright Graphics -- 291

Dr.Hank Janpol -· Are your neurons exploding?
Did you have a split-brain operation? P.S. I'm jusl
playing wilh your head. Don 't mind me -- S1uden1.
How many signed up for ROTC Friday? Score:
ASLCC-2, ROTC-0, Ron-0.
Expecling beneficial eff ecls from Reaganomics is
like leaving the landing lights on for Amelia
Earhart.
Mel: Have you found anyone 1h01 measures up?

U of O Graduate Studem /Utoring Math and
Physics. Call Bahram at 485-1819.
Kirsten -- Who are you, Who, Who, Who, Who ••
Paula
ASLCC sponsoring panel discussion on ballol
measure No. 5. Monday, Oc1. 25. Forum 308. I
p.m . to2:30p.m. Four speakers, two pro, two con.
Con1ac1 Mike Sussman, ext. 2473 or ASLCC office.

BC6P •· I used 10 be amused, now / 'm just pleased!
-- P-24

Mel: Ha, ha, ha. Love the U of 0 .

Andy?!

Dental assistant with dancing daughter •• coffee?
342-6049 late. Man al 13th Street burger stand
/ 01/7
Shawni •· I sure miss re<./ 11mes wi1h you. Hope you
are well.

Who am us anyway? FSTF.

Johnna - Where are thosefoo1ball players now? Go
gel em'! Nanner.
Use your grades 10 1he fullest. Signed P . T.K.
Vic - I'm free as a hawk, knowing that where ever
we are, we're one. Babe.
Wmch for EZ, we're invading. P. T.K.

Norma L. - I found out about lhe 01her man, our
engagement is off!! Your ex-love Kent.

Oh, he's no fun. He fell right over .

Where is Factw1110 when we need him? Did the
fumes get him, too 1

Sol T. -- The cesspools are ready to study whenever
,·ou 're ready! -- Zelda

used w h e e l s ~
&parts

OlO f-RIE:ND~

1712 Willamette
343-5362

Backgammon Winners
Intermediate:
1st. Place: Al Mulkharrey
2nd. Place: K. Ron Ballesteros
3rd. Place: Evelyn Tennis
Consolation: Gary Halstead

P-24 - She's a Who-er! - BC6P.

recycled bikes.

Congratulations

g

Thank you LinJ Lee Kiang 10 curl my hair. Love
Julianne.

CO,VGRA TULA T/0:VS - To Paquito Garatea on
an excellent musical prese111ation: Caracqs! Signed,
"Give Us More!"

g
g

~QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ~

Vic - I love gelling woke up long distance like 1h01.
Do ii again some1ime. Babe.

buy-sell-trade

1128 ALDER [NE~R 11TH]
OIEN 1(),JO TO 5•30 • SPECIN. LAH
HOURS Till 9•00 ffl.ll>"Y r, SATURD~Y
8HQP.E H~LLOWHN CL~ED ~UNMYS
J.45•1,41,4

p.m.

(Barney!)

Specializing in

C~TUM€) & MA)i<)

Lane Community College -- 4000 E.
30th. Artists from the Blackfish
Gallery of Portland will display works
in the Art Building galley through
Nov. 17 . Mon.-Thurs. 8 a.m. to JO

Wrestling! lmeres1ed? S1ar1ing a club. Call Rob
Hixon al 746-6274.

Second Nature
Used Bikes

Housemate ll'Ollted for restored cou111 ry house in
Creswell. Gas and wood heat, wood jloon.
grcenho111e, "'ood shop . On 1wo acres, six 1111/es
.from LCC. $150. Ca/1895-3207.

E. 5th.

Building
160 E.
Broadway. Pastels, acrylics, watercolors, and wall hangings by Marilyn
Stauber on display through Oct. 31.
Mon .-Fri. 10 a.m . to 5 p.m.
Quackenbush

Cafe1eria -- I 'm sure 1he Healih Depar1men1 would
like to know what happened to the goat.

• Those of you who have children in the Child
Development Center may wish to take note that the administration, with a little help from your friends, have
decided to move all children whose parents wish them to
be moved from the Health Building.
• If you're looking for information on the 30th Ave.
shuttle bus, then we've got some bad news for you. LTD
is involved in union negotiations and will not be making
any moves toward the shuttle for a while.
• Don't forget the Peace Week poetry contest, with
$75 for first prize, $50 for second and $25 for third.
Poems or essays of 500 words or less with the theme of
peace will be accepted. Entries must be submitted to the
ASLCC offices (Center room 479) no later than Monday, Nov. 8.
• There will be an excellent juggling trio called Passing
Fancy playing in the cafeteria soon. Cultural Director
Celeste Pawol says they are one of the few juggling trios
in the nation.
• Please, please, please don't forget to vote. Many of
the election measures will be close. Measures 3, 5, and 6
are of particular importance. Vote as if your life
depended on it. It just may!
• The next Senate meeting will take place in the LCC
Boardroom on Nov. I. We'" probably be spending
some of your money, so corr.. md be heard .

U .J.\'Tf-_-lJ

Used A11wharp, an older one for be!!11111ing s1ude111. Wa111 10 pay $40 or less if possihle. Mary at
message phone 345-5594.

Mall, Coburg Rd. Limi1ed edition
nature, wildlife, and sce nic
photograph)- by Paul Rosenfeld .
Through Oct. 31. Mon.-Sat. JO a.m.
to 6 p.m.

Ongoing exhibit of art posters by
Boulanger, Delacroix , Picasso,
Chagall, Hundertwa sser, Shurr,
Vailevsky, and R.C. Gorman.
Mon.-Sat. 10:30 a.m. to 5:30.

BC6P -- The sun ,s shining, the flowers are popping
and 1he cherry 1rees are prevafen1. This is winter -p.24

From the ASLCC

\111s1 Sell--66 lalwn, 5700. Call 484-5560 or lea1•e
messa/ie /or Cati ,n If omen '.s ( e111er.

fi ork S1ut~1· s1uden1s needed in Cen1er Lab. /4
hour. See Jack room 423 Center Bldg.

Burrowing Owl, Suite 15-F, Oakway

unlq 3, 1982 Pc;tge 11

Every1hing you know 1s wrong. FSTF-11.

.\1/ust sell-- Enlisted in Army. /979 Datsun PtC"kup
excellent condirion. $900 or /Jes1 offer 746-5187
Tun.

01l:."HSEAS JOBS--Summer year ru ond. Europe,
S. rlmer., ,411s1ralia, Asia. All fie lds. $500-5/200
mon1hly. Sigh t 5eeing. Free 111fo. Wme f.l C Box
52-0r2 Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.

Galleries

AL KIDDY - Relaxa{lon can occur 1his weekend.
You 're so cute! Take care Terrance Williams.

Hrand lie\\' ladies h/a;,er-c111 lea1!ter JUC'/..el . I paid
S/35.01.1. f'II H'li Jor $60. Cull -26-8/ 78
l.unge XL. /0/JO ,Ai hou1.1 $100.00. JBL L-40
l011dl/ll'Ok<' rl 5130. Hexcel ( OIIIJ>elll/On do11·n /11//
skis 11·uh look nevada hmdings 595. Call Dal'I' 01
686-2603 or 342-2160.

Fire, 1: 15 , 5:25, 9:30. Deathtrap,
3:25, 7: 15.

i1.1 R11c11·hea1 .1

Orpha<·111
II here ,ire rnu no11· 1h01 11·e rea//r need
1·011 :1 C'hem \111de111111.

I OST,( fOl \/J

night.

Mayflower, 788 E. 11th. Chario1s OJ

N6

g Beginners:
1st. Place: K. Ron Ballesteros
g

2nd. Place: Gary Halstead
3rd. Evelyn Tennis
Honorable Mention: Mary Cudney

g

Campus Ministry
We're Here For You

Peace
Corps

8P!ng a Peace Corps volunteer means taking what you
know , sharing it with others, and learning about life In
another country, another culture .

Developing nations want to grow more food to fl'ed their
people
Improve schools nnd expand public education
provide adequate shelter and clean drinking water
lnc;ure good health ure and baslC' nutrition . . . build roads
and transportation systems .
The person who becomes a Peace Corps volunteer must
have a strong committment to helping other people He or
she must be willing to learn their language ... appreciate
their culture
and live modestly among them .

If this sounds like you, we'd like to show you the many
opportunities beginning soon In 60 developing nations. You
can apply now for any
openings beginning in
Info : Table: LCC Downtown Center
the next 12 months .

The

toughest
job you'll
ever love

Nov. 1. 10 - 3

Info. Table: U of O EMU Lobby, Nov.
1-4 , 9 - 3
Film Seminar: Forum Ro om. Wed .
Nov. 3. 3 -4:30

Interview by Appo intment : CAREER
PLANNING & PLACEMENT , 246
Susan Campbell Hall , U of O

Cam-

pus, Wed . Nov . 3 . Thurs. Nov . 4
Call PEACE CORPS. on The U of
Campus. 686 - 3235

0

Page 12 October 28 - ~ie c be 3, 1982 The TORCH

-Om nium Ga the rum ---- --Drug talks slated

Minority law day

SRC activities

Five photographers show

A free presentation entitled Drug Alert for
Parents is offerect by Sacred Heart General
Hospital's Adolescent CareUnit, 1255 Hilyard
St., Eugene, Thursday, Oct. 28 at 7:30 p.m., in
the hospital's auditorium.
The program will help parents identify influences on young people that lead to alcohol
and drug abuse and to organize community
parent groups to combat the problem ..

The University of Oregon School of Law and
the Minority Law Student's Association will host
a Minority Law Day on Saturday, Oct. 30, beginning at 10 a.m. in Room 221 of the Law School.
The program will cover admissions, financial
aid, and affirmative action, as well as the role of
minorities in the law school and career
possibilites. Speakers include Dean Derrick Bell,
Assistant Dean Peggy Nagae, Director of Admissions Marilyn Bradetick, and Academic Support
Program Director Bert Fukumoto.
Persons interested in attending should notify
the Law School Admissions Office (Room 201,
Law School, 686-3846) by 5 p.m., Wednesday,
Oct.27.

The first meeting of the Recycling Advisory
Committee was held Oct. 22. The meeting was
well attended by representatives from several
areas and departments on campus. Thanks are
due to all who attended the meeting and for the
suggestions they made for developing and enhancing the recycling effort at LCC.
The next meeting of the SRC Recycling Advisory Committee is Nov. 3 at IO a.m. in the
LCC boardroom. All interested are invited to attend.
The SRC is also compiling a directory of local
day care centers. If you need day care or have
certified day care available, notify Staci Canida
in the SRC between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m Monday
through Wednesday. If Staci is not available,
leave a message.

An exhibition of new work by five Lane County photographers will be on display during
November at the Artists' Union Gallery located
at 985 Willamette Street.
An opening reception to give the public an
oportunity to meet the artists and see their work
will be held at the Artists' Union Gallery on
Saturday, Nov. 6, from 7:30 to 10 p.m. The Five
Photographers show runs continuously through
Nov. 27. Regular gallery hours are noon to 5
p.m., Tuesday through Saturday.

Magical strings
The Community Center for the Performing
Arts will present a concert of Celtic and original
music by Magical Strings, Saturday, Oct. 30 at
the WOW Hall, 8th and Lincoln St., Eugene.
Opening the show for Magical Strings will be
Eugenean Sura John, direct from the World's
Fair. Doors open at 8:30 p.m. and showtime is at
9 p.m. Tickets are $3.50 in advance and $4 at the
door.
The following day, Sunday, Oct. 31, Magical
Strings will hold workshops on Irish and Celtic
harp at 10:30 a.m., and on the hammered
dulcimer at 12:30 p.m. Cost for each workshop is
$10 and preregistration is requested. Call the
WOW Hall at 687-2746 for information and
registration ..

Human rights forum
Rights: Civil-Human will be the topic of
Clergy and Laity Concerned's Peace and Justice
Forum on Thursday, Nov. 4, in the Emerald
Baptist Church, 19th and Patterson, Eugene.
Chinosole, who lived in Southern Africa for
six years and is the president of Friends of Myra
Willard, will discuss how civil rights cases relate
to the broader struggle for human rights.
Free child care and special children's program
will be provided. A 6 p.m. soup supper will be
followed by the 7 p.m. program. For more information call Darelle Baker, CALC, at 485-1755.

Benefit Dance
The Friends of Extension will host a benefit
dance featuring The Oregon Country Band to
keep the Lane County Extension Office open,
Oct. 29, from 9 to 1 p.m., at the Lane County
Fairgrounds Auditorium.
Advanced ticket
prices are $3.50 for singles, $5 for couples,
tickets at the door will be $4 for singles and $6
for couples. Ticket locations: The Emporium
(Eugene, Springfield, and Florence), Dexter
Hardware (Dexter), Denim Pony (Pleasant Hill),
Laneco (Junction City), JCO Feeds (Eugene),
Lane County Feeds (Eugene), Cinch and Saddle
(Eugene), Burch's Market (Crow), Sounds &
Silence (Veneta), Lorane Family Store (Lorane),
Old Mill Farm Store (Cottage Grove),Elmir·a
Feed (Elmira).

People's law school
Labor law is the subject of this week's class of
the People's Law School. The session will cover
worker's rights as union or non-union members.
The class is free, and will be held Nov. 3, from 7
to 9 p.m., at Patterson Community School, 1510
W. 15th, Eugene. For more information contact
Sue at 342-6056 .. '

Run series held

Disabled group forms
The Disabled Women's Support Group is forming now. If you have concerns about being a
disabled woman or have a friend who has concerns, please attend a meeting at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 2 in Center room 420.
Call Bjo Ashwill, Counseling department, ext.
2239, for more information.

The Sri Chinmoy Running Club will be offering three 3-mile runs at the Amazon Community
Center on Oct. 30, Nov. 6 and Nov. 13.
The runs will be called '' Sri Chimnoy Three
Times the Fun Run" and will begin at 5 p.m. on
each day.
The entry fee is $1.50 per race or $3 for the
series. Time splits and aid stations will be given
at each mile .. Refreshments and awards will be
given at the finish. For more information call
• 688-6406.

The Student Advocacy group, an organization
aimed at helping L.CC become more accessible
for disabled students, is forming now. For more
information, contact Bjo Ash will in the Counseling department, Center room 221.

Garage sailing

Spooky storytelling

A fund-raising garage sale for Hosanna
Children's Center will be held Nov. 4, 5 and 6 in
the basement of the Big Y Farmer's Market at
2175 W. 7th Ave., Eugene.
Donations for the sale may be brought to the
market Nov. 1, 2 or 3 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Help is needed to set up and sell. For more information contact Sandra Shepherd at 746-3840 or
Kathy Gentry at 746-7385.

The Eugene Storyteller's Association present
Ghosts, Goblins and Other Horrible Things: A
Program of Tales for Halloween on Saturday,
Oct. 30 from 2-3 p.m. in the Eugene Public
Library.
All ages are welcome, but the Association asks
that young children be accompanied by an adult.
There is no charge for admission. For further information, call Godfrey Warner at 484-0758.

Student advocacy

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