Lane
Comm unity
Colleg e
Vol. 19 No. 10 December 1, 1983 - Aan•••Y 4, HU•

Season's Greetings

Students, instructors invited to explore ceriters' resources
by Chris Gann

TORCH Editor

The Job Skills Lab and the
Career Information Center
will co-host an open house
Dec. 2 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Connie Mesquita, Job Skills
Lab instructor, says she hopes
LCC students and instructors
will drop in at both places during the open house to see what
the two areas can offer

students who are beginning to
•
search for jobs.
Jean Conklin, career information specialist, says visitors
at the CIC, 203 Center, will
have access to the Career Information System computer
during the open house. In the
Job Skills Lab, 304 Forum,
Mesquita will be showing a
videotape on job interviewing,
and a slide show on resume
writing.

Families also included

New dental plan
offered to students
by Jim Ogden
for the TORCH

A non-profit health care
organization is selling a dental
insurance plan to LCC
students.
DENTIPLAN, with headqauarters in Eugene, is making
its brochures available
through the ASLCC during
Winter Term registration,
ting services provided to
tho-.: "'-~10 buy DENTIPLAN.
ugh the ASLCC is not
sucs1,1 ;z.l ng or backing the
ac :. n any way, ASL CC
President Bryan Moore says
the studu1 t government is promoting the plan because it ".
. . adds to the long list of serces that th e ASLCC" solicits
on behalf of Lane students.
DENTIP L.AN is available
tc· any LC( student regardless

of the number of credit hours
he or she is carrying, and
membership lasts 12 months.
The costs for memberships
vary -- $36.50 per year for the
student only; $73 for a student
and one dependent; and $99
for a student and two or more
dependents.

li('

. -,

the Inside

FMLN
1'. ury,
relix
r_e pre~n(dive, talks to
TORCH reporter Kevin
Harrington about the turmoil in El Salvador, page 3.
Oregon products, available
at local retailers, are
featured on page 6.
TORCH giftwrap, pages 8
and 9.
The Titan women's basketball team is off to a successful start, see story, page
13.

Eligible dependents include
the subscriber's spouse;
children from birth to age 19,
and 19 to 23 if they are fulltime students and primarily
supported by the subscriber;
children above the age of 23
who are incapable of selfsupporting employment due to
mental or physical handicap.
''This may make dental services available to students who
may have been unable to afford it in the past,'' says
Moore.
Representatives of DENTIPLAN, an Oregon nonprofit organization, approached Moore in late August and
proposed the idea. Moore
stresses, however, that the
ASLCC is merely promoting
the individual dental plan and
is not subsidizing it in any
way.
"We had a bit of a hassle
with the (LCC) administration
in the beginning," explains
Moore. "They thought we
were purchasing a group
policy plan, which would be
against college policy since
other health care plans are
already under contract. By
metely promoting this individual plan, we are in compliance with those policies.''

Teeth

continued on page 4

According to Mesquita, the
CIC and the JSL make it
easier to decide on career
fields and/ or complete career
training and begin to looking
for work.

skills for interviewing. Both
facilities have resources that
can help instructors make the
''world of work more relevant
to students" and enhance instuctional programs she says.

Conklin says students can
research careers and hiring
trends in the CIC and then use
the JSL for polishing writing
skills for resumes and cover
letters, and communication

Mesquita says students who
begin working on job search
skills during Winter Term
have a "jump" on others who
wait until the end of their
training to begin career

research, skill assessment, and
resume development. The
earlier students start the process, the less likely it is that
they will have to take
"survival kinds of jobs" until
they find a job they have trained for she says. A few of Mesquita' s students began the job
search process early last
Winter Term and had landed
jobs by June.

'Crisis' conferen ce proves successful
by Jim Ogden

TORCH Staff Writer

Nationally known speakers, . workshops and
films highlighted the "Crisis in Central
America" conference Nov. 17-19.
The Associated Students of the University of
Oregon (ASUO) organized the educational conference that focused on the current turmoil in
Central America. The conference examined the
actual state of the Central ~rican:~2&8.d
what the source of theJ"~enf.iict·,a,id;iJ)osSIWe
-.. . .
,
solutions might be.
ASLCC co-sponsored the conference by contributing $100, and by helping ·to organize the
event. ASLCC President Bryan Moore explains
that ASLCC co-sponsored the event to "show
that we are supporting community education.
That is important because when we ask for the
community's support in return, it will be
there."
A series of educational workshops held during the three-day conference was designed to
educate citizens on current events, to provide a
historical synopsis, and to discuss the effects of
US intervention in the troubled region.
A group of eight nationally-known panelists
added their insights into this controversial subject. Seven of these panelists represented C~ntral American support groups and/or governments. One panel member represented the US
State Department and the Reagan Administration.
El Salvador -- another,Vief Nam?
In a workshop presented by the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP), the two-tract
US policy of "ballots and bullets" were
presented by two RCP members, Jo Ogden (no
relation to reporter) and a woman introduced
only as Julie.
The rapid-fire presentation cond'1.cted by the
two women, centered on the r ~ of the US and
the Soviet Union in El Salvador.
According to Ogden, while 'the .Reagan Administration would like US citiz~ to, ~ve
that it is bringing democracy to El.S alv~,
recent elections in that country were a "farce>''
Citizens were literally forced at gunemnt<ttrthe
••
polls, she said.
Ogden depicted the US as believjna •·:( bat
itid
military and political stratagies are r ~~
go hand-in-hand. The US has used
forces to disarm the masses and
''negotiations'' with the rivalling f ~ ;tp-bring the opposition into the governiiil;P!~.,.
By disarming the masses, she said, thetJSoooled off the situation temporarily, but at ''the expense of the masses."

In contrast the Soviets, according to Ogden,
are using the convictions of the masses as a
"lever" to catapult into a position of power,
preparing to serve Soviet interests in the area.
Thus the Soviets want to get into political position in the US' back yard, so that when "the
povv~ is put up for grabs the USSR will be .
ready".
Og(lc;n believes that the two (US and USSR)
.. ·. yi.n.. g" for position for World
b. . . .. ¥ W°. e·. "j.oclc
W.ar -lU.
·-·.(Ogden sti-essed that the goal for the people of
that region should be to sever all ties to
CCunperi,alistic forces, of both American and
Soviet," and to bring about their own systems.
e.

- What can be done
Local solidarity
.,_
In one workshop, representavies from several
human rights organizations urged conferencegoers to get involved in action to alleviate the
plight of Central American people.
Members of the Committee in Solidarity with
Central , American People (CISCAP), the
Eugene Council for Human Rights in Latin
America (ECHRLA), the Latin America Support Committee (LASC), and Clergy and Laity
Concerned (CALC), explained their programs
~d how citizens may get involved.
These panelists stressed that in order to bring
about a US foreign policy of non-intervention,
the US public must first be educated about the

m:oblems.

;n ~ groups maintain that the US media is
notrepresenting the Central American situation
accurately to the basically isolated and
uneducated American public.
The way out of this problem is to put on
more of these educational presentations and to
urgemore people to get involved, they said.
The panelists explained that citizens can get
in_yqlved, . in several different ways. The most
basic and effective way to become involved is to
start a letter writing campaign to Congressional
represeJ)tatives and to the President himself,
urging'anon-intervention foreign policy.
·atso volunteer their time to one of
They
the$e Qrganizations in the form of office work,
door7~oor canvasing, and fund raising for
foocL•(J, JD.edical supplies.
~rence stimulates thought
thi.r,¢c;>ftsen$US of conference attendees was
best pui;l nto'- words by U of O student Mike
Connol\Ji 0 \Vbat the US is doing in Central
Americadoes~trep resent what the people of
that area W&Jlt-or ·. need," he said. "I'm also
very skeptical •.a bout what the Reagan Administration and media are relaying to us."

can

Page 2. December 1, 1983 - jaAt1a1 y 4, 19&4 The TORCH

The TORCH staff, those pictured above as well as those not present Wednesday night, wish ·Lee students and staff happy holidays.

Letters

Execution
abortion style
To the Editor:

There's no .doubt in my mind that
Oregon voters will approve reinstitution of the death penalty next
year. But how shall executions be performed? I have, let's say, a modest
proposal.
Let's scrap orthodox techniques of
execution i.e. gas chambers, electric
chairs, etc. Too quick and much too
humane. My proposal:
First, we strap murderers to a table
and lower them into a chamber of concentrated salt solutions and acids.
Second, the executioner should
make sure the prisoner is allowed to
swallow ample amounts of the solution yet take great pains to insure that
the subject is brought up so they can
breathe enough to stay alive, for
awhile.
If properly done, death will take at
least an hour -- maybe more. It will
take this long to burn the subjects skin
completely off -- thus exposing the •
subcutaneous layers. The subject will
then be successfully terminated due to
acute hypophosphiteria or salt poisoning, with development of widespread
vascular edema, congestion, hemmorage and shock resulting in death.
Executioners should be chosen who
don't have weak stomachs and should
be paid large sums of money to perform the task.
Some might claim this would be unconstitutional and barbaric treatment
for murderers. I think not. After all,

the Supreme Court (by a 6-3 margin)
says it's legal to kill innocent babies
still in the womb with saline abortions.
The treatment I've just described, and
what a prisoner would experience, is
exactly what countless infants go
through in hospitals and abortion
"clinics" around the country.
Since the treatment is so effective on
little babies, then why not use it on
hardened criminals as weJl?
Michael Cross

Bus strike harms
nation
To the Editor:

Greyhound Corporation should immediately fire all striking employees
who refuse to work, regardless of excuses. Greyhound is responsible for
the largest transportation system in
America, and many people have
grown dependent on buses. It is socially irresponsible for the Amalgamated
Transit Union to try and force
Greyhound to stop providing this service to the nation. The buses must be
kept moving, or people will suffer.
In addition, union bus drivers are
overpaid at $15 an hour. Most
unemployed Americans would jump
at the chance of making that much
money, considering the high
unemployment. It is absurd to refuse
to work when job conditions are so
favorable, even with a 7 .8 percent pay
cut. It makes more sense to work for a
little less pay than to starve or become
a social parasite on welfare.

As for passenger safety, the ATU
has a weak argument. There is no
evidence that non-union drivers are
unsafe or inferior to union drivers. If
union drivers were really concerned
about safety, they wouldn't have
thrnwn bricks and rocks at passing
buses, endangering the lives of
passengers. I question the double-talk
of union officials.
Unions started out with good intentions - improving working conditions.
Lately though, they have done more
harm than good for the nation as a
whole. They have devastated heavy industry, nearly bankrupt Chrysler,
Lockheed, and now International
Harvester. They have caused inflation
through wage hikes exceeding cost of
living increases. They brainwash their
members into thinking free enterp"rise
is wrong and that they are right. They
have destroyed the incentive to work.
Greyhound should therefore have no
qualms about firing every striking
employee - free enterprise can better
determine who our bus drivers are.
Meanwhile, unions must start to question their goals. They must learn to
help America as a whole and not just
themselves at the expense of others.
High pay is nice, but if workers still
won't work, I say fire the whole lot of
them and get some real American who
will work.
Brandon Shepard
Junior, U of 0

Sharing is Caring
To the Editor:
Campus Ministry and Associated

Students are co-sponsoring a ''Sharing
is Caring" food drive. Between now
and the end of the term, we will be
coordinating an LCC community effort to collect food goods for needy
people and families during the holiday
season.
People living in poverty are no
longer a fringe element of our community or society. On the contrary,
the poverty level has risen drastically
just over the past few years alone. The
most saddening factor is that even
though the resources do exist to
eradicate these problems, basic human
needs are neglected while resources are
placed into growing military insanity.
We, ourselves, must work together
to alleviate the heavy burden many
people experience in this area. In a
common effort, we can ensure that
people who are in hardship can also
appreciate the blessings and festive
times of the holiday season.
Caring for others is the first step in
making our prayers for joy and peace
in the world become a reality. Please
give generously when you see food
bins around campus. Your contributions will enable others to share this vision of hope and peace.
Bryan Moore
ASLCC President

h"rsf I'll just shake
, -t-he snow Joose - - -

!~

'·

k
r

r"__,,,.--

--

Use the TORCH gift wrap
in the centerfold for all
your holiday wrapping
needs. It's free!

The

TORCH
EDITOR: Chris Gann
ASSOC/A TE EDITOR: Will Doolittle
PHOTO EDITOR: Mike Newby
SPORTS EDITOR: Dennis Monen
STAFF WRITERS: Talbot Bielefeldt,
Jim Ogden
RESEARCH: Kevin Harrington
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: Tina
VanOrden, Dmnis Monen, Ned Moller,
Troy Humes
PRODUCTION ADJ//SOR:
Dorothy Wearne
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR:
Sharon Johnson
PRODUCTION: Judith S. Gau., Mike
Green, Zeke Pryka, Colleen Rosen, Chris
Woods, Brett Newell, Kathryn Cameron,
Saki Anderson,
DISTRIBUTION MANAGER:
Sally Be/singer
RECEPTIONISTS: Renee Kersher,
Wanda McKernan, Darlene Grimes
TYPESETTING: Shawn/ta Enger, Debbie Brown, Saki Anderson, Jackie Barry
ADVERTISING MANAGER:
Jan Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT:
Shawn/ta Enger
ADVERTISING SALES: Celeste Pawol
ADJ/ISER: Pete Peterson

The TORCH, a member of the
American Scholastic Press Association, is
a student-managed newspaper published
on Thursdays, September through June.
News stories are compressed, concise
reports Intended to be as fair and balanc•
ed as possible. They 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. They should be limited to
250 words. The editor reserves the right to
edit for libel or length. Deadline: Monday, 5 p.m.
"Omnium•Gatherum" serves as a
public announcement forum. Activities
related to LCC will be given priority.
Deadline: Friday, 5 p.m.
AU correspondence must be typed and
signed by the writer. Mail or bring all cor•
respondence to: The TORCH, Room 205,
Center Building, 4000 E. 30th Ave,
Eugene, OR, 97405. Phone 747-1501, ext.
2655.

The TORCH December 1, 1983 -JaAUi.tr, 4, 19&4' Page 3·

The Torch interviews FMLN spokesman

El Salvador's power elite revealed

Feature by Kevin Harrington
TORCH Staff Writer

In October, 1979, the younger
military officers of El Salvador, sensing the winds of change in Central
America, staged a military coup
against Salvadoran ' dictator Carlos
Humberto Romero, installing a
civilian-military junta which promised
broad reforms in his place.
Within a few months, all the
civilians (with the exception of future
president Napoleon Duarte) resigned
from the junta. They charged they had
no real power and were being used to
legitimize what was still a military dictatorship. The ensuing assassinations
of the archbishop of San Salvador and
of the most popular leftist leader in the
country induced the political opposition to go underground and take to
guerilla warfare.
Rated one of the five most
malnourished countries in the world,
El Salvador has a very rich elite known
as the oligarchy, or "Fourteen
families." Since 1980, the Reagan administration has pumped over one
billion dollars into El Salvador to keep
it from becoming uanother
Nicaragua. " Despite all this aid, U.S.
military analysts admit that the war is
going badly for the government.
Felix Kury, a U.S. citizen born in
San Francisco but raised in El
Salvador, works as a spokesman for
the Democratic Revolutionary Front
(FDR) and the Military Front for National Liberation (FMLN), the political
and military arms respectively, of the
rebel movement in El Salvador. He
spoke to the TORCH after his talk at
LCC on Nov. 18.
TORCH: Whose will does the
Salvadoran government represent?
Kury: In El Salvador the oligarchy,
the Fourteen families, have had control

of the land since the 1800s.
TORCH: Is it literally fourteen
families?
Kury: It's a little bit more than fourteen now, but they became famous as
being the Fourteen. About five percent
of the population holds most of the
arable land. They own the banks, the
private industry, and at times they feel
like they own the Salvadoran people,
too (laughter). These families have
control over the army, so basically the
army is there to preserve the status quo
for the oligarchy.
TORCH: How about the rebels?
Where do most of their arms come
from?
Kury: Last year over one million
dollars was collected by (fundraising)
campaigns in Europe. But aside from
that, our most important source of
arms now is the Salvadoran army. In
our confrontations with the army we
capture a lot of weapons. The biggest
supplier of arms to the rebels right now
is the Reagan administration.
TORCH: Let's talk about the elections held last year in El Salvador. You
said that these were, in effect, a big
propaganda show for the benefit of
U.S. public opinion, that your candidates couldn't participate because of
fear of death squad reprisals. Why do
people vote in these elections if there's
no real choice?
Kury: Basically, in El Salvador you
have an I.D. card you are required to
carry, like a driver's license. This I.D.
card is stamped when you vote, and the
number right next to the stamp is the
same number on the ballot box where
you voted, so it's a very clear form of
controlling the population.
TORCH: Making it difficult to fake
the stamp as well ...
Kury: Right. They know exactly how
you voted, and if you don't have that
stamp you are considered to be a

subversive.

TORCH: Professor Joseph Stevens

of the University of Chicago told me
that anyone caught with an unstamped
card by Salvadoran security forces,
after the elections, was liable to be
found floating in the Pacific Ocean
three days later. Is it that bad?
Kury: It's that bad. There have been
hundreds of people killed in the last
few weeks.
TORCH: Didn't you say there were
287 people killed by death squads in
one week this month?
Kury: Yes.
TORCH: Where is the repression
worst?
Kury: In the city. Over 20 university
professors have disappeared in recent
months. They spoke of favoring
negotiations with the guerillas, and
that makes you a subversive.
TORCH: How's the war going
militarily?
Kury: On the military front we are
definitely winning the war. Military
analysts from the area and from the
U.S. command center in Panama have
stated that they are losing ground.
TORCH: You mean recently, since
the pacification program?
Kury: Yes. The pacification program
has been a total failure. The offensive
that began in September has proven
that the FMLN is not just bands of
guerillas, that it is an army now, with
large units capable of confronting the
enemy in large numbers and in different parts of the country at different
times. We feel that the army and the
Salvadoran government will collapse in
the first few months of 1984, in the
next few months.
TORCH: Regardless of whether
there's an invasion by Guatemalan
troops?
Kury: We are more worried about a
U.S. invasion. If no one intervenes and

they let us fight it out, the Salvadoran
army will collapse in the next few months.
TORCH: You sai!l the army is made
up almost entirely of draftees. How do
they get these conscripts from poor
families to fight for the cause of defending the oligarchy?
Kury: They are told that the guerillas
will kill them, that the guerillas are not
Salvadorans. But when they are captured in battle they discover that the
guerilla commanders participate in battles, which is not the case with the army
because the soldiers are sent to the
forefront while the commanders stay
back in the garrison, and they realize
that the guerillas respect life. As
prisoners they are released to the red
cross. They realize that they shouldn't
fight to the death because their lives
will be respected, so they ...
TORCH: They give up easily.
Kury: Yes. Some decide to join us.
TORCH: And the ones that go back,
do they rejoin the army?
Kury: Yes. Theyrejoin the army, but
not everyone trusts them when they go
back.
TORCH: So that's a way of subverting the morale of the army by releasing these people back to them?
Kury: Yes, exactly. This policy is
working for us. We respect the lives of
these people. The soldiers are not
necessarily our enemies. They're forced to do what they do. They don't have
any choice. Our aim is not to kill every
soldier in El Salvador, because they're
as poor as we are. It is important that
they know this, and they are beginning
to realize it. That's why the army is at
the point of collapsing.
TORCH: It appears that you have to
go now. Thanks for so much of your
time.
Kury: Thank you.

US policy toward Sandinistas counter
to Dasie American ideals and interests
Forum by Lorene Scheer

I just returned from Nicaragua with
eight other Oregon women. We were
the second fact-finding delegation
sponsored by the Women's Commission of Nicaragua (AMNLAE) and the
Eugene Council for Human Rights in
Latin America (ECHRLA).
We saw dozens of official and unofficial, pro and anti-Sandinista
representatives from every part of
society. I think this was because two
of our members were State Senators
Margie Hendrickson, D-Eugene, and
Jeanette Hamby, R-Hillsboro, and
because the Sandinista government is
urgently trying to inform the US
public by offering us a chance to "see
for ourselves." We were all impressed
with the directness and honesty of the
people we met (with the exception of
the US ambassador). In addition,
because I could speak Spanish, I did a
lot of exploring on my own.
People in our group came from very
different backgrounds and with different views of the world -- a factory
worker and union activist (myself), a
co-owner of a logging company, a
business woman, a doctor, a professor, a social worker, a volunteer in
church and mental health work, and
the two state Senators.
Yet we came, each in our own way,
to a common conclusion: The
American people should protest the
US government policy of 1) aiding the
anti-government "contras" and 2) imposing a trade embargo against
Nicaragua. This policy is sabatoging
the progress of the Nicaraguan people,
and is counter to the ideals and in-

terests of most American people.
We had the privilege of seeing the
reality behind what for most people is
only abstract discussion. I'd like to
share a few insights about some of the
more controversial issues.

Marxism
The stereotypes of Marxists and
Marxism common in the US simply
don't apply.
First, the leading ideology of the
Sandinistas has roots in both Marxism
and Christianity. Commandante
Borge, the sole surviving founder of
the Sandinista Front for National
Liberation (SFLN) told us, ''We are
influenced by many philosophies -Marx, Lenin, Sandino, and Christianity. They don't call us Christians,
though this philosophy has a lot of influence."
Second, the Sandinistas came to
power fighting Somoza and the
Nicaragua Communist Party. The
Secretary of the Council of State (the
legislative body) said, "The Communist Party is not part of the Council
of State so far because at the beginning of the triumph of the revolution,
they were actually in opposition -politically and even militarily.
Third, the Sandinista's do not want
to be dominated in the Soviet Bloc.
Borge (and many others): "We did not
fight for 20 years to get out of being a
US satellite in order to become a
Soviet satellite."
Popular Support

The common sentiment among
most people was that life was difficult.
Many people were open about their

criticisms of the Sandinista Government. But at the same time, no one we
spoke to thought things were better
under Somoza, and almost everyone
felt the Sandinistas were trying hard,
were open to criticism, and were committed to correcting errors they made.
As one man said, "We have more
freedom now than in 46 years under
Somoza.''
The Opposition

The estimates we got for the
popular support for opposition to the
Sandinistas ranged from 5 to 91 percent. While these numbers were
disputed, there was close agreement
on why there is an opposition. The
anti-Somoza revolution was accomplished by the joint action of people from all social classes who had a
common interest in overthrowing
Somoza.
With Somoza gone, there is competition among these interests. The
Sandinistas are generally recognized to
be the party of the workers and
peasants, which is also supported by
some big business owners and middle
class professionals and merchants.
There are a group of parties which
are generally recognized as defending
the interests of upper class and middle
class people, and these parties oppose
the Sandinistas. They do so even to the
extent of condoning an invasion of
Nicaragua.
After the revolution, in 1979, a
Council of State was established which
gave the opposition 11 out of 33 seats.
One person (since resigned) representing upper class interests was on the
four-person junta.

Also, a variety of popular organizations were promoted and grew. The
government enlarged the Council of
State to include representatives from
these organizations (like AMNLAE).
The number went from 33 to 47 to 51,
with the opposition's 11 seats becoming a smaller minority. This action,
what the US Ambassador refers to as
"workers' and peasants' power," is
the strongest grievance the opposition
leaders expressed to us.
These frank discussions with all
sides showed clearly how the issue
isn't directly about democracy, but
about power. The opposition favors
the "democracy" by which the whole
people has traditionally given up
power to the upper class. And the Sandinistas favor the "democracy" that
will allow the vast majority to run
their country.
US Intervention

I saw US intervention everywhere.
Just walking around I saw school
buses broken down for want of madein-USA spare parts, an ice factory based almost entirely on refrigeration
equipment (built in New Jersey) that
will have to be completely replaced (by
Bulgaria) when it starts to break
down, a milk factory where plastic
bags are used, in place of made-inUSA washers, to connect pipes
together. We saw the bombed out oil
tanks at Corinto, the product of USfinanced "contra" attacks.
We also met people whose relatives
had just been killed on the border by
the "contras." In this country where
almost every family has had a member
killed by Somoza, and now by the

"contra" forces, here is the all too
common story of one woman:
My sonfoughtfrom when he was 12
years old to 17. He was studying
psychology and journalism. . . They
tortured him, gouged his eyes out, cut
his testicles off. They completely
destroyed him and brought him back
to his neighborhood. This happened
just one month before the triumph of
the revolution. . .I'm proud now
because he lives on in the revolution;
in services to the poor, in equality, in
healthcare for the people, in Christianity . .. Our leaders are men of conscience. . . We are people of peace,
love, and work. . . I'm 60, and I'm
ready to continue struggling. We're all
ready to take up where our children
Jell . . .Do you know what our war is?
Yesterday, we sent 37 battalions of
our youth to harvest coffee with guns
in their hands to face the "contras".
This is our war, to lift ourselves from
poverty and misery . . .
I can't possibly tell you the many
things we saw and heard, but if you'd
like to know more, you should come
to the slide shows we'll be giving in the
weeks ahead.

Page 4 December 1, 1983 - }aR 11 acy 1, 190:4 The TORCH

Thrift stores provide jobs, services Tragic drowning /eaves
"everything must be indoes under a contract with the
spected, cleaned, pressed, and Dexter family in need
state Vocational Rehabilition
by Frank Nearing
for the TORCH

What separates one thrift
and gift operation from
another? Perhaps two
distinguishing marks might be:
First, the mission or goal of
the organization, and second,
the marketing style of a particular operation.
H.C. McDonald, manager
of St. Vincent de Paul says
that six percent of St. Vincent's revenue, over and
beyond overhead, goes to
"works of charity." These he
describes as, ''providing
necessities to the less fortunate."
His most pressing problem,
he says, is "garbage." He explains that it costs his salvage
operation $1,200 monthly to
take other people's discards to
the landfill. On the other
hand, a large share of company expenses go to the community. The 1982 annual
report lists $284,966 for
''wage costs of workers in
workshop."
Michael Dubbs, director of
Goodwill Industries of Lane
County, describes his
organization's contribution to
the public in terms of the jobs
it provides. On an average day
50 people work on the Goodwill assembly line. Dubbs says
Goodwill is committed to
''training and employing handicapped people,'' which it

Teeth

program. According to
Dubbs, Goodwill's 1982
payroll was $600,000.
His greatest challenge as
manager, says Dubbs, is to
maintain "a cost-effective
operation and education, and
educate the public about our
on-going job." During the
past year it has established
eight "attended" collection
sites where donors bring their
usable discards. He says this
centralized collection system is
"more economical. The savings on gas consumption by
the trucks and the handling of
goods are very worthwhile.''
The Thrift and Gift Shop at
2839 Willamette has its own
distinguishing features. Sponsored by the Junior League,
this nation-wide, non-profit
organization has as its goal,
according to manager Lona
Feldman, "helping people in
the community. . . We have
volunteers and we have
money; we initiate projects,
get them going and then hand
them over to responsible people in the community.'' She
cites the Eugene Speech and
Hearing Clinic and the Relief
Nursery as two agencies which
the Junior League helped
establish in Eugene.
The Thrift Shop accepts
goods on an "consignment only basis." She stresses that,

continued from page I

A membership buys five
free services: Office visits; all
x-rays; oral examinations and
diagnosis; prophylaxis (teeth
cleaning and polishing); and
preventive dental education.
DENTIPLAN lists 62 other
services for subscribers with
discounted prices ranging
from $7 (for topical fluoride),
to $295 (for complete dentures).

Members may choose t"rom
any available dental clinic
participating in the program.
A list of these dental facilities
is printed in the DENTIPLAN
brochure.
"We are offering the plan to
many schools in the state,''
says Glenn Dyer, a representative from DENTIPLAN.
"LCC is the first to take advantage of this program."

(J)[r1J00(t ~(J)~1100Wct~11
Linda Danielson
ENG 214
1200-1300 MW F
In this course you will learn
what has been written in our
home region, the Northwest.
Here, life and geography and
climate have inspired a great
deal of literature.
This course will explore the
work of Pacific Northwest
writers from pioneer days to
present times, with emphasis
on modern Oregon writers.
Come and explore the heritage
of our region with us.

in style.''
The shop is staffed entirely
by volunteers. When the consignment is sold 70 percent of
the money returns to the
owner of the goods while
management retains 30 percent. The Junior League's annual report notes that in fiscal
year 1982-83 gross receipts
were $115,112; $92,341 was
returned to the donors and the
Junior League netted $22,771.
The Thrift Shop is no longer
the main fund-raiser for the
Junior League, however.
Feldman says that the League
published a cookbook called
"Taste of Oregon" in 1979
and that it ''makes money
hand over foot."
She emphasizes the strong
contribution of League
volunteers, pointing out, ''The
only one who gets paid here is
the custodian." But she says it
is difficult to get enough
volunteers to do the work.
The store is closed during
the summer months but during
the remainder of the year it is
open each weekday from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.

Terry Strong
dies fn
car accident
A former instructor in
LCC's Health Occupations
Department was killed in a
traffic accident in southern
Africa, Nov. 18.
Terry Strong, 41, worked as
an assistant professor and program coordinator from 1968
to 1975.
At the time of her death,
Strong was working as a Peace
Corps volunteer in Thaba
Tseka, Lesotho, a country
geographically surrounded by
South Africa. The accident occurred while visiting friends in
Maseru, the capital city.
While living in Oregon,
Strong was, at various times,
president of both the Portland
and Oregon dental assistants'
societies, an evaluator for the
American Dental Association
Accreditation Team, a freelance manuscript editor, and a
researcher for the Eugene
School District.
She was also an active
volunteer in the Lane County
Mental Health Association,
Planned Parenthood, and the
National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL).
When she joined the Peace
Corps she was working on a
master's degree in sociology at
the University of Oregon.
A memorial service for
Strong is scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 3, at 1:30 p.m. in the
Unitarian Church, 477 E. 40th
Ave., Eugene.
'
Her parents ask that contributions in her memory be
made to Planned Parenthood
or NARAL.

An LCC student is one of
two men presumed drowned
Nov. 11 in the Willamette
River. Scott Barr, 25, a student in LCC's Respiratory
Therapy program, and Mark
Hill Jr., 27, plunged into the
water near Harrisburg after
their aluminum driftboat
struck a log and capsized.
They had been hunting.
Barr is survived by his wife
Valerie Barr, 24, and daughter
Jessica, 4, and son Eric, 4
months old. Trust accounts

for each child have been
established at Centennial Bank
in Springfield. Jessica is nearly
deaf and has cerebral palsy.
Eric has Downs' Syndrome
and a heart defect that will require surgery.
Scott Barr was attending
LCC through the payment of
former employer, the
Weyerhaeuser Corp. He was
receiving disability pay for leg
injuries that forced a career
change.

Of Interest •••

• KLCC station manager Jon Schwartz has been appointed to the Advisory
Board for National Jazz Performance. The group is forming a consortium of
radio stations to produce jazz performance programming. Programs will be
produced by participating National Public Radio stations and offered by
satellite to 282 member stations. The National Endowment for the Arts has
given it a matching grant of $50,000. The group's first effort will be a live
New Year's Eve concert from New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles.
KLCC will be active not only in helping shape policy for the consortium but
also (possibly) in offering a concert for broadcast.
• Jean Names, Small Business Management instructor, was selected Nov.
16 to be Consumer at Large on the City of Eugene Business Development
Fund Loan Advisory Committee.
• Gail Currin, student service specialist at the Downtown Center and longtime LCC Employees Federation leader, serves on the 14-member American
Federation of Teachers Paraprofessional/School-Related Personnel Committee. The national group works to encourage development and recognition
of the paraprofessional role in schools.
• As of Nov. 2 donations to the Richard Newell Memorial Scholarship
Fund totaled $1,825. Checks are still being accepted and may be forwarded to
the Development Fund, Administration 209. The principle will be invested
and the interest used for an annual scholarship(s).
• Weyerhaeuser Foundation has donated $3,000 to LCC to fund three
$1,000 scholarships to second-year electronics and/ or machine technology
students.
• An article in November's Oregon Business magazine identifies LCC's
Business Assistance Center as a program worthy of an ''A.'' LCC' s BAC gets
a mention along with a variety of programs -- drama, foreign language, civics
-- at schools around the state.
• Retiring from LCC in December are: Kenneth R. Anderson, Laura M.
Gauderman, Henry Naessens, Frances 0. Howard, Paul Malm, Walter Van
Orden and Angelino Pacheco.
• Robert C. Bowser, LCC Board of Education member, has been appointed by President Schafer to the Development Fund Board of Trustees.
Bowser is a Eugene construction engineer.
• Denny Guehler was re-elected to the Community Center for the Performing Arts board of directors. Guehler is an actor for Oregon Repetory
Theatre, Mainstage Theatre, and the LCC Theatre.
• Language arts instructor Ted Ramoser will leave LCC in January to
become a UniServ consultant for the Oregon Education Assoication in Central Oregon. Ramoser has been an instructor at LCC for 14 years. He says his
new job with the OEA will entail working on passage of local budget levies,
bargaining teacher contracts, and educational program development.
• Richard Null, a member of the Science faculty since 1971, has been appointed staff representative on the LCC Development Fund board of trustees
by President Eldon G. Schafer. Null succeeds Doug White of Health Occupations. The new trustee teaches life science and environmental technology.
• Members of the Management Employees Group elect representatives to
the Management Steering Committee to propose changes in the management
working agreement. The 1983-84 committee includes: Julie AspinwallLamberts, President's Complex; Carol Beckley, Administrative Services;
John Bernham, chairperson, Student Services; Terry Hagberg, vice chairperson, Instruction; Sandy Ing, recorder, Student Services; Ron Mitchell, Instruction; Darlene Turpin, Administrative Services; and Ed Ragozzino, past
chairperson and ex-officio member.
• President Eldon G. Schafer has reappointed Hazel Smith, Math; Jim
Dunne, Mass Communication; and Dave Roof, Counseling, to the Academic
Council. According to Admissions Director Bob Marshall, the nine member
council (which includes two students) considers changes in and application of
regulations related to grades, registration and academic requirements.
• A nursing textbook coming out this fall from Prentice Hall is authored by
former LCC instructor Jane Onstad Lamb, now living in Ashland. Contributing authors include current LCC faculty Suzanne Canale, Janice
Brown, Glenna Clemens and Susan Ulrich. In her written acknowledgement
for "Laboratory Tests for Clinical Nursing," Lamb gives thanks and dedication to several people and "to Lane Community College Department of Nursing Education, Eugene, Oregon, for helpful suggestions, books, and faculty
time."
• LCC student Tony Hernandez, Springfield, has been elected president of
the newly formed Oregon Council of Phi Theta Kappa, a national scholastic
association for community college students. Hernandez and LCC chapter
president Johnna Harms, ' Springfield, were instrumental in developing the
state council. According to faculty advisor Mitch Stepanovich, Oregon Phi
Theta Kappas are the first to form a statewide policy-making body. To be a
member of Phi Theta Kappa, students must earn a 3.5 or better grade point
average.

• In October, LCC President Eldon Schafer announced that a Springfield
resident who wishes to remain anonymous has established a unitrust which,
after the donor's death, will bring an unrestricted gift to LCC. The money
presently is invested and earning more than 15 percent annually, part of
which goes to the donor and part to the trust. If the gift were paid today,
LCC would get about $100,000."

The TORCH December 1, 1983- JaF1tJa19 4, 1984 Page 5

Potters Rusty Key, Chris Gum, Bruce Wild, Jeff Adams and Andy Fry
displayed and sold their stoneware, earthenware, and porcelain work yesterday in
the cafeteria in the tenth annual Art Department pottery sale. The artists, who are

LCC students and instructors, give 20 percent of the proceeds from the sale to the
department for repair and maintenance of equipment. Prices range from $1 to
$3S. The pottery sale continues today.

Local sales offer a variety of handcrafted goods
by Kim McGovern
for the TORCH

If you don't want to fight
department store traffic this
season, consider browsing at
the several arts and crafts fairs
held in the Eugene-Springfield
area.
• On the LCC Campus the
annual Pottery Sale began
Wednesday, Nov. 30, and continues Dec. 1. Located
in the cafeteria, the sale
features work by ceramics instructor Bruce Wild, and the
work of ceramics aides and
students in the Art Department.
• The University of Oregon
Christmas Craft Fair is being
held Dec. 1 as well, from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m., and also on
Dec. 2 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
in Room 167 of the Erb
Memorial Union. There is no
admission fee.
Market's
• Saturday
"Christmas in the Park" will

run for eight days between
Dec. 3 and Dec. 10 in Eugene's
park blocks at 8th and Oak
Streets -- where the trees and
fountains are located. Covered
walkways will be erected for
shoppers and the entire market
will be well-lighted at night.
Because all goods sold are
hand-made, "When you buy
something here, you can see
and talk with the person who

Music and entertainment
will abound from two stages,
say market organizers. The St.
Mark's Choir and the University of Oregon Children's
Choir will perform, as will
rock and jazz groups, and
comedian/magician Rev.
Chumleigh who is being sponsored by the Humble Bagel
Company.
The Christmas Market will

also feature craft demonstrations daily at 11 a. m. The
market will be open from
10.a.m. to 8 p.m.

• The Old Oregon Christmas
Fair is in its 13th year at the
Lane County fairgrounds. It
will run Dec. 10 to Dec. 24,
and feature handmade crafts
and daily music and entertainment. Hours are Monday to

Saturday, 10 a.m.to 9 p.m.,
and Sunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The Fair closes Christmas Eve
at 6 p.m. No admission is
charged.
• The annual Christmas Sale
and Festival at Maude Kerns
Art Center is being held now

through Dec. 43 at 15th and
Villard Streets. (See related
story, page 6)

made It,'' says Saturday
Market director Ilene English.
"That makes it special."

Copies 3¢
SELF SER VICE
any quantity!

KRAZY KATS.._.:l-'f~

Print & Copy

1219 Alder

ON U of O CAMPUS
phone 344-KATS

BRIGHTEN YOUR WINTER!
In one of our Group Guitar or Group
Piano classes, you can learn to play in
less time than you may think!
This winter we're also introducing a very
special workshop called ...

Preview: Eugene Symphony
Enjoy a behind-the-scenes preview of each
Symphony concert (Classical Series) this
winter. Listen to live excerpts of the music,
and to comments on it by the conductor
himself, William McGlaughlin!
Meets Wednesday evenings.

PERFORMING ARTS
DEPARTMENT

J~

Rent a television,
with an option to buy

by Cheryl Gorham
for the TORCH

If you're shopping for a
television set, why not consider renting one, or purchasing one on a rent-to-own plan?
A number of dealers in the
Eugene-Springfield area have
rental plans to suit your needs.
Curtis Mathis Home Entertainment Center, the company
that boasts ''The Most Expensive Sets in America" is actually one of the more
reasonably priced television
dealers. Located at 2050
Olympic, Springfield, the
store rents color television sets
only -- $15 by the week with no
deposit, providing you have
identification to ptove your
present address.

If you prefer to rent by the
month, the store offers a rentto-own plan. It requires a written contract that specifies a
21-day minmum rental period
before a purchase is possible.
And anytime after 21 days, the
set can be returned and the
contract terminated.
Deka Electronics, at 390 W.
12th, Eugene, rents black and
white televisions for $18.50 by
the month, with a $20 deposit,
and color television for $30 a
month, with a $50 deposit. A
Deka Electronics employee
says the prices are so low
because the sets are ''very used.''
If your're interested in renting by the week, Franklin
Blvd. Rent All, 4340 Franklin

Page 6 December 1, 1983- j.anw-ary *4, 1901 The TORCH

Blvd., has black and white
televisions for $6 a week, and
a monthly rate of $15 with a
$25 deposit. The store also
rents color televisions by the
week for $12.50, and by the
month for $30, with a $50
deposit.
National Video, has opened
a new shop at 1600 N. 18th
St., Springfield. This store
carries video recorders and
playback units. They do have
one television for rent by the
day for $9.95, but renters are
required to leave a $500
deposit or their Visa, Master
card or Check Guarantee card
along with their driver's
license number providing they
have one of these cards.

Why not buy Oregon-m ade items?
by Francis Mohajerin

for the TORCH

Maybe a home-grown gift
from Oregon will please those
on your shopping list -- and
help the state economy, too.

Oregon has many stategrown foods and other items
that can make great gifts. The
Oregon Sampler, in the old
Quackenbush Building on
East Broadway, dedicates its
entire inventory to Oregon

PRINTERS: DATASOUTH, TI, OKIDATA, DEC
VDT's: TELEVIDEO, LEAR SIEGLER, ADDS
MICROS: APPLE, FRANKLIN, COMMODORE
MODEMS: MULTI-TECH, DATEC, VENTEL
LETTER QUALITY: RICOH, NEC, QUME
STORAGE DEVICES: CORVUS
15 % to 25 % off list on all new equipment

CALL US TODAY AND SAVE!!!!

IJ~T'1 2 SYtiTEf:lS,
~~C.
746-2370

40101A McKenzie Hwy. Springfield, OR 97489

specialties -- woolens, smoked
salmon, myrtlewood products,
candies, nuts, photo books,
historical books, toys, and
Oregon wines and beers to
name a few.
Other vendors in town carry
state and local merchandise -including the Fifth Street
Public Market, the Saturday
Market, Made in Oregon, not
to mention the several crafts
and arts fairs and Christmas
Bazaars at local churches and
retirment homes.

by Nick Koch

Thought about a holiday
gift? How about a bottle of
white Pinot Noir or an Estate
Bottled White Riesling or a
Blanc des Blanc? Local retail
merchants have wines from
Oregon's 33 wineries, comparable to most European and
California vintners, for sale.
Roger Rutan of Grape and
Grain says the Oregon Riesl-

Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Monday thru Saturday
845 Willamette, Eugene, OR

for Women
&Men

(503) 343-7155

SPECIALJZED SERVICES
Make-up artistry
Manicures
Waxing
Swedish massage

Make-up lessons
Facials
Pedicures
H,mdes1gn

by Nick Garman
for the TORCH

The LCC Food Service management is presenting its annual Christmas Buffet on Thursday, Dec. 8, from 5-7 p.m. in
the cafeteria.
The entrees, prepared by Renaissance Room head chef Guy
Plaa and first-year Food Service students, include: Shrimp
Pasta with Dill sauce, Pizza Rustica, Beef Burgundy, Halibut
in Champagne Sauce, Swedish Loin of Pork and Buche de
Noel. These will be available along with Rice and Vegetables,
Au Gratin Potatoes, Mandarin Orange Salad, Jamaican Fruit
Cake, and New York Style Cheesecake. Beverages will also be
served and there will be a Wine Bar ($1 per glass) which will
include appetizers.
Tickets for the buffet, which cost $7 per person or $3.50
per child, must be purchased by Tuesday, Dec. 6. Each ticket
is good for one person only and can be obtained at the booth
just outside of the Renaissance Room, located at the west end
of the cafeteria, or room 107 of the Health building. For further information call 747-4501, ext. 2697.

Annual X-mas art-sale
by Debbie Brown

for the Torch

Hand-made items by over 300 local artists and craftspeople
are featured this month at the Maude Kerns Art Center's annual Christmas Sale and Festival, co-sponsored by KUGN
radio.
The station will report special events during the festivities.
Maude Kerns and KUGN will also offer visitors the opportunity to win a special edition print by an area artist.
The festival opened Nov. 18, with a special gala preview,
and runs through Dec. 23.
Planned festivities include Greens Days, Dec. 3 and 4 -featuring wreaths, swags, and other greenery. Children's Activity Day, Dec. 10, offers free art and crafts workshops for
children. Special entertainment for the whole family will be
provided.
The gallery, located at 1910 E. 15th, is open from 10 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. daily. No admission will be charged for the sale
and festival. For more information, contact Leslie Copland
Smid, 345-1571.

Wine -- a tasteful choice for holiday giving
for the TORCH

The
Centre

Have a feast at LCC

Glamour photography
Complete makeovers
Gift certificates

ings are similar to German
wines and are fruitier and
softer than California wines.
Slightly dry, with a full body
and flavor, the Riesling wines
are pleasantly fruity without
being sweet, and they go well
with turkey.
Another choice for holiday
giving says Rutan is the Pinot
Noir, a medium bodied, full
flavored, tasty red wine which
is compatable with turkey
also.
The Willamette Valley and
Southern Oregon are the major wine grape growing zones.
Oregon's soil and cool growing climate, give the wines
distinct and unique per-

sonalities.
Pinot Noir, White Riesling,
Chardonnay and Gerwurtzgminer are the main wines
produced in this region.
If you're interested in finding out more about Oregon
wines, two wineries are located
in Lane County. The Hinman
Vineyards, established in
1979, is located in the foothills
of the Oregon Coast range and
is only 25 minutes from
Eugene.
The
Alpine
Vineyards, established in
1976, is located in the coast
range southwest of Corvallis.
Both vineyards offer several
types of wines and conduct
tours by appointment only.

Tonight
Comedy Night
$3 cover
5 professional
Comedians from
nd and Seattle areas

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The TORCH December 1, 1983- J.aa11ary 4, 1Q8 t Page 7

It's S0000 simple to wrap your own

EdiIor'snoIe: This "guide"I0 wrapping wasprovidedbyformer(/978-79) TORCH editor
Steve Myers, curnnrly a nporier for rhe Medford Mail-Tribune. The srep-by-srep rrearise
originally appeared in the 1978 TORCH Christmas supplemenl .

___,,________u .

Pages 8 and 9 of this Christmas issue have been provided as an
alternative to the over-priced wrapping paper available at retail
department stores.
Following the military belief that "no matter how simple a procedure, it can be explained in writing," here are directions in five (5)
easy steps for using the TORCH wrapping paper.

cc.

a

Supplies need to complete wrapping:

A) Official TORCH wrapping paper
B) Tape (transparent, masking, adhesive, electrical, recording, or
whatever's handy)
C) Trim for tying (ribbon, string, yarn, rope or chain is appropriate)
D) Scissors (TORCH staff members recommend the type with
rounded tips)
E) Object to be wrapped (ideally it should be smaller than the wrapping paper for ease of wrapping)

d

A) Begin by placing present to be wrapped in the center of the wrapping paper. Fold side A over object and tape to object. Then fold
side B over the object and over side A. Pull taut and tape down.
B) Tape open ended side C with corners A and C corresponding.
Run fingers along top of object and down toward open ended side C
and down side of object, creating a crease along upper edge of object being wrapped. Take new corner nearest corner C on open ended side C and fold that edge over parallel to object. Repeat for op-

posite corner nearest corner. This should form a trian~le.
Fold up and/or over object being wrapped. Tape.
(Repeat step B on opposite side D substituting corners C for corner
B and corner A for corner D. If you can't locate any of the corresponding corners, substitute corner E.)
C) Ribbon tying. Obtain ribbon. Cut a sufficient amount of ribbon

for the object. Lay ribbon along a preferably flat. hard surface.
Place wrapped object upside down on top of ribbon to be used.
Take end A of ribbon and lift it over the bottom of the object and
parallel to side B. Lift end B of the ribbon up over the bottom of the
wrapped object and lay it down where end A once laid. Pull taut.
Holding each end of the ribbon in hand A and hand B in center of
wrapped object, quickly flip the object around so the side in front of
you is not in front of you anymore and the side that was facing the
other side is now the side in front of you. This effectively creates a
twist in the ribbon. Now flip the package over on end and the rest of
the way over so the right side now faces upward. Take end B and
place it over the top of the wrapped object and down parallel to end
A. Pick up end A and place it over the package and down where end
B previously was and where end A originally was. This creates a
cross in the package. Take-end A and slip it under the cross formed
by the ribbon then pull both ends A and B taut. Tie bow and trim
off excess of end A and end B. (If ribbon tying seems difficult for
you, it is permissable to use chin A or foot Bin addition to hand A
and hand B.)
D) Your finished product could look like this!!
(Maybe over-priced wrapping paper isn't such a bad alternative.)

Music, drama
Choose a health-minded gift
highlight church
Christmas celebration
by Mary Karls

for the TORCH

by Dennis Monen
TORCH Sports Editor

In honor of Christ's birthday, some churches in the
Eugene/Springfield area are
preparing special programs for
the public to share.
• At the corner of 18th and
Hillyard, Eugene, Grace
Lutheran Church will display
a living nativity scene on Dec.
19, 20 and 21 from 6:30 to
8:30 p.m. Pastor Craig Marquardt says that the church,
located at 710 E. 17th, will be
open to the public during these
times and church members will
be serving coffee, hot
chocolate and cookies to
visitors.
• On Dec. 18 at 10 a.m., The
Free Methodist Church at
1295 W. 18th in Eugene will
feature a program entitled
"Miracle at the Inn."
• The First Church of the
Nazarines, at 1721 'E' Street
in Springfield, is preparing its
second annual Singing
Christmas Tree Choir for performances on Dec. 17, 18, and
19. A 30-person choir will sing
Christmas songs accented by a
sound-sensitive light system.
There will be two performances on Dec. 18 -- one at
10:30 a.m. and the other at 7
p.m. -- and one on Dec. 17 and
19 at 7 p.m.
• St. Alice's Catholic
Church at 1520 'F' Street in
Springfield will hold a
Christmas Eve Family Mass at
5:30 p.m. Father Brennan also
announces an 11:15 p.m. service and a Midnight Mass on
Christmas Eve. On Sunday,
Dec. 4, the LCC Chamber
Choir will sing at St. Alice's
8:30 a.m. Mass.

• On Dec. 18, Calvary Temple at 1116 Centenniel Blvd. in
Springfield will sponsor a
musical program by the Sunday School children. Armeda
Dukes, director of the event,
says "everyone is invited."
• The Salvation Army
deliver Christmas baskets to
low-income and persons, and
families of the unemployed.
These baskets will be delivered
from Dec. 21 to Dec. 23. On
Dec. 16, The Salvation Army
will host a Christmas party for
its clients. The Salvation Army
will also sponsor a "toys for
joys shop." For the location
of this shop or any additional
information, contact the
Salvation Army at 343-3328.
• Barean Baptist Church at
1210 Chambers in Eugene will
present a puppet show entitled
"The Littlest Shepherd."

This year when you choose
gifts for your family and
friends, consider giving
something that will be enjoyable and also provide longterm benefits by promoting
good health.
Pick a gift that is enjoyable
but usually considered too
much of a luxury to be included in the monthly budget. Try
to keep the gift appropriate to
the interests of the receiver.
Giving a health club membership to someone because you
think he or she should tone
_those flabby muscles, is not
likely to be well-received.
When brainstorming for gift
ideas, remember that anything
which reduces stress or promotes good mental health, has
a beneficial effect on overall
health. Therefore, everything
from piano lessons to a
weekend at the coast qualifies
as a health-promoting present,
depending on individual
needs. Below are a few ideas to

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trigger your imagination:
• Membership to the YMCA, a health club or spa
• A gift certificate for a body
massage, or a bottle of
massage oil and a promise of a
massage from you
• Registration in an aerobic
dance class, ski lessons or yoga
class

• A coupon redeemable for
childcare or dinner preparation when a ''mental health
break" is needed
• A gift certificate to one of
the local hot tubs
• A subscription to a
magazine concerned with wellbeing. Medical Self-Care,
Prevention, Health, Runner's
World and Triathlon are just a
few of the health-oriented
publications available

• A cassette tape of relaxa-:tion exercises or soothing
music to help reduce stress
• The Anatomy Coloring
Book and a set of colored
markers

• One of the many excellent
books relating to health -- 14
Days to a Wellness Lifestyle,
Anatomy of an Illness,
Medical Self-Care-Access to
Health Tools, and The
Holistic Health Lifebook are
just a sample of what is
available, found at local
bookstores.
While choosing gifts, consider giving yourself a gift of
health too. It will be money
well-spent as an investment
towards a healthy and happy
new year.

WINTER TERM 1984

ENG216 MON2-5 WED2-3

Page 10 December 1, 1983--ta,ma, 5 171984 The TORCH

Humor & horror will be ·b est-sellers this season
by Holly Halverson

for the Torch

Horror, history, humor,
health and helpful hints all
describe local bookstores' expected best-sellers for the
Christmas season.
Employees at Waldenbooks, Just for Kids, The
Book Lounge, and Kingsway

Bookstore give these responses
when asked what books were
anticipated best sellers.
New Fiction

Pet Sematary, a story so terrifying that author Stephen
King ''was for a time unwilling
to finish writing it,''. according
to the book jacket; $15.95.

James Michener's Poland, a
combination of fact and fiction covering eight periods of
important history in that
country; $17.95.
New Non-Fiction, Opinion

Motherhood: The Second
Oldest Profession, a new
release by columnist Erma
Bombeck ($12.95); The Body

From The Police to Pavarotti,
stores have recordings in demand
by Lori Miller
for the TORCH

A rich musical menu awaits
LCC shoppers entering the
holiday shopping weeks.
For the music lovers on your
list, here are some suggestions
for a la carte selections.
• Rare Earth Records, 160
E. Broadway in downtown
Eugene, has new releases and
older music. Albums sell from
$2.99 to $6.99, with new
releases sold for $5.99 the first
few weeks after the relesase.
Linda Reaves, in charge of
ordering merchandise at Rare
Earth, feels the following
albums will be popular as
Christmas gifts. Duran Duran
-- 7, and the Ragged Tiger;
Talking Heads -- Speaking in
Tongues; Soundtrack from
Flashdance; Billy Idol -- Rebel
Yell; and the soundtrack from
Yentl by Barbara Streisand

among others. These all sell
for $5.99 to $6.99. Rare Earth
also has rock T-Shirts for
$5.99, satin rock hats for $9,
along with buttons, posters,
patches, window decals, and
picture discs. Picture discs are
45 rpms with the artist's picture imprinted on the threads.
• Mr. Mike's Records &
Tapes at 223 W. 7th, Eugene
deals in new and used records.
Employees recommend Quiet
Riot -- Metal Health; U2 -Live Under a Blood Red Sky;
Lionel Ritchie -- Can't Slow
Down; and The Police -- Synchronicity. The prices may
vary from $5 .99 to $6.49 for
new releases.
• The House of Records,
located at 258 E. 13th Ave.,
Eugene,
offers
these
Christmas suggestions for $7.
Rolling Stones -- Under Cover
of the Night; Infidels -- Bob

The TORCH has an opening for a Photo Assistant.
Strong darkroom and basic photography
knowledge is recommended. Work/ study option
available. If interested, contact Mike Newby,
Center 205A.

If It's Worth Giving
It's Worth Engraving

30% off all engraving
NORTHWEST ENGRAVING STUDIO
Specializing in • Custom Illustration
1480 W. 11th 343-2096
Extended hours 10 am - 6 pm
Dec. 18 thru Dec. 23

Dylan; Bonnie Tyler -- Faster
than the Speed of Night. And
for country music lovers,
Hank Williams Jr. albums are
in stock right now.
• For classical music fans,
the perfect Christmas album
could be at The Musical Offering, 808 Charnelton, Eugene.
Richard Meyn suggests the
following albums for
Christmas: George Frederic
Handel's -- The Messiah
($19.50); Luciano Pavarotti -0 Holy Night, ($10. 75);
Johann Pachebel's Canon in
D ($9.75).
Suggestions for jazz include
George Winston's Winter
($9.75); and The Singers
Unlimited -- Chirstmas
($8.95).
• Everybody's Records
located at 40 East 5th St.,
Eugene, offers the following
suggestions: The Romantics -In Heat; Jackson Browne -Lawyers in Love; David Bowie
-- Let's Dance; and Emmy
Lou Harris -- White Shoes for
country music fans.

Copies 3
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phone 344-KATS

DETECTIVE FICTION
Ann Marie Prengaman
ENG 121
1000-1130 UH
Do you need something to fill those rainy winter evenings? Join
us for Detective Fiction in Language Arts. Come see if the
butler really did the murder??? We'll read all about the famous
. WHODUNIT? detectives--Sherlock Holmes, Father Brown,
Hercule Piroit, Perry Mason, Lew Archer, and Sam Spade,
and, then we'll watch them on film.
Come watch DEATH ON THE NILE, THE BIG SLEEP,
CHINATOWN, PERRY MASON, and SHERLOCK HOLMES
with us. For three credits, mystery, and fun, grab your spyglass
and join us in CEN 9, in the basement of the Center Building.

Winter Terni

For the business-minded

Peter Nesbit's Megatrends,
($15.50); Robert H. Waterman Jr.'s In Search of Excellence, ($19.95).
Kids' Favorites

Bookstore employees say
the classics such as the Little
House series by Laura Ingalls
Wilder,
and
Margery
Williams' The Velveteen Rabbit are gift standards for
children. Little House in the
Big Woods and its sequels are
sold by the individaul volume
($2.95), or in a set of nine
($24.95); Velveteen Rabbit is
offered with a variety of illustrations, printing papers
and bindings, so costs vary.
Beverly Cleary, creator of
favorite characters like
Ramona the Pest, Judy Blume
(popular among adolescents
for Deenie and others) and
Shel Silverstein (The Giving
Tree and Where the Sidewalk
Ends) are all children's
favorites.
Specialty items include popup books, which vary in price

11

and style, and revolving picture books, which sell for
around $8.95. Maurice Sendak's award-winning Where
the Wild Things Are ($10.95)
should be in demand also.
Religion, Thought

New books by Pastor
Charles Swindoll, evangelist
Billy Graham, singer /writer
Joyce
Landorf,
and
psychologist/lecturer James
Dobson, all best-selling
authors year-round are among
those calculated to sell strongly for the holdiays.
Swindoll offers two books,
one on coping with daily stress
-- Growing Strong in the
Seasons of Life ($12.95), and
one on taking off social
masks, Dropping Your Guard,
($10.95); Graham discusses
Biblical prophecy in Approaching Hoojbeats of the
Four Horsemen of the
Apocalypse ($11.95).
He Began With Eve by Landorf weaves fact and fiction to
produce portraits of eight
women from The Bible
($9.95); while Dobson gives
another book for family life
called Love Must Be Tough
($10.95).

'Trivial Pursuit' fastest

selling game this year

by Debbie Brown

for the TORCH

A TORCH survey of local
game stores reveals the new
games, and the old favorites,
that are selling this holiday
season.
For Adults

SELF SER VICE
any quantity!

ON U of O CAMPUS

Principal, an exercise program
by actress Victoria Principal,
($16.95).

The newest and best selling
game that everyone:s talking
about is Trivial Pursuit. "It's
without a doubt the handsdown, biggest game. It makes
you think,'' says Alan Agerter
of Eugene Toy and Hobby.
Another popular trivia game is
Time Magazine. Both use
question-and-answer formats.
For actual or would-be
farmers, there's last year's hit,
The Fanning Game. Based on
the plan for Monopoly, and
developed by a man in
Washington state, it revolves
around a farmer with a job in
town whose object is to get rid
of the job and be a farmer
pure and simple, according to
Diane Loos of Endgames.
For mystery buffs, there's
Clue, or 221 Baker Street, or
Decipher. Decipher involves
piecing together a jigsaw puzzle mystery, breaking a code,
and possibly winning $200,000
in cold, hard cash.
Other popular games include Kensington and Pente,
two-person strategy games;
Rummy Tiles; and Upstairs,
which is three-dimensional
scrabble. Popular old
favorites of course are
Monopoly, Risk., Life, Scrabble, and chess.
All of these games sell for

$10 to $30 and are available at
King Norman's Kingdom of
Toys at Valley River Center;
Eugene Toy and Hobby, 32 E.
11th;
Endgames,
979
Willamette; and Parlour
Games, Ltd., Fifth Street
Public Market.
Just For Kids

Eugene Toy and Hobby,
and King Norman's also carry
games for young children
which sell for $5 or less -memory games which don't require reading skills. Favorites
are Candy Land, Hi-ho Cherrio, Uncle Wiggly, Q-bert,
Strawberry Shortcake, Smurf, •
and Star Wars.
School Daze, 1008 Harlow
Rd., carries children's games
with a difference -- they're
educational as well as fun.
Something new to consider
for 3 to 12-year-olds is Star II,
an electronic learning aide for
letters and numbers. "It's real
good, a definite hit,'' says Rod
Gingery of School Daze, who
says the basic game sells for
$39.95, and can be made more
sophisticated with the addition
of "packets."
Baseball fans may like
Scott's Baseball Game,
developed by a man in Salem,
and new on the market just six
weeks ago. Players draw different cards to play.
Other noteworthy learning
aides carried by School Daze
include Sesame Street's Light
and Learn (ages 2-4), Quiz-mo
for math and phonics (6 years
and up); Mr. Mighty Mind
(3-7 years); and Mr. Super
Mind (7 to 12 years).

The TORCH December 1, 1983 - January 21, 11£)8 4 Page 11

Rent a computer for dead week--or,holidays
by Mary Jean Kelso
for the TORCH

Do you need a computer to
finish your term project?
If you're one of those people who can't afford a personal computer, maybe renting one is the answer.
If you own a computer, but
not a printer, renting a printer
or some printing time is also
possible.
Computers and related
equipment can be rented on a
monthly basis, according to
Tim Cling, owner of Bit-ByBit computer company in
Eugene. Cling also has the
equipment available on a oneweek and two-week basis. In
addition, he offers a special
discount to students who need
the
computer
and/ or
peripherals for the entire
school year.

Both A pie Ile and IBM PC
computers are in stock at the
Centennial Loop store, as are
extra disk drives, interfaces,
cables, and micromodems.
Dot Matrix and letter quality
printers and a variety of software also are in stock.
The fee to rent a computer
for the remainder of the
school year is $120 per month
for the Apple Ile, plus $20 to
$30 for each piece of software.
The monthly rental fees for a
printer interface with cable are
$15 per month, and for a
printer, $40 (for dot matrix),
and $60 (for letter quality).
The entire package is approximately $220 per month. The
charge to use the equipment at
the store is $5 an hour.
If a person signs a rental
agreement he/she also has the
option of applying 75 percent
of all on-time rental payments

towards the purchase of the
equipment, should he/she
decide to buy.
"I often rent computers to
people whose own computer is
in the repair shop,'' Cling
says.
He says his business includes hooking up other people's computers into a printer
at the store and printing the
data they have input.
Cling got his start in the
computer business when he
moved to the Eugene area
from San Francisco.
"I worked in the financial
district there. I had studied
computers in college, so I put
the two together," he says.
By starting Bit-By-Bit in
Eugene, he says, he was able
to blend his two interests and
provide a service that this area
was lacking.

SATURDAY MARKET
UNDER COVER!

Home Video for the Winter Break .

Christmas Market in the Park
8 Days until 8 p.m.-Dec. 3-10

Photo by Ti11a Van Orden

Featuring unique, quality crafts at
affordable prices s old directly b y
their creators !

Are relatives and friends visiting this holiday? Do you have to entertain them? Or, perhaps, you
have to give a party and need and interesting diversion? National Video in the Sheldon Plaza
rents the populr Atari 2600 and lntellivision hardware to connect to home television sets for
$7 .95 a day. For a higher price, a Vetes component with its own screen is available. Game
cassettes rent for $1.95 for one, or $2.95 for two per day. National Video stocks all the favorites
including Pac Man, Missile Command, and Space Invaders. National Video's phone number is
683-1477, and is located at 1520 Coburg Rd.
by Tim McCormick

STUDY
JOURNALISM

•NEWSWRITING I
&NEWS LAB
M,W,F 11-Noon
Mass Comm: J216, JllS

• PUBLICATION
DESIGN
AND
PRODUCTION
U & H: 1-2:30, or 2:30-4
Mass Comm: 2433

Second Nature
Used Bikes
buy-sell-trade

Specializing in
recycled bikes ,

In the Park Blocks,
8th and Oak Streets,
Downtown Eugene

''Come laugh with us''
Film as Literature ENG. 196
Buster Keaton's "The General"
The Marx Brothers' "Room Service"
Charlie Chaplin's "The Great Dictator"
Jack Benny's 'To Be Or Not To Be"
Kathryn Hepburn in "Bringing Up Baby"
Clark Gable in "It Happened One Night"
Mel Brooks' "Young Frankenstein"
Woody Allen's "Annie Hall"
Blake Edwards' "Breakfast at Tiffany's"
Blake Edwards' "JO"
817
818

Jack Powell,
Susan Dunne,
Susan Dunne,

MWF
MWF

1000-1100
1100-1200
1930-2230

used w h e e l ~
& parts

819

1712 Willamette

This course meets the Arts and Letters/Humanities Course
requirements for Oregon State Colleges and Universities.

343-5362

u

WINTER TERM

Page 12 December 1, 1983-taneary 1,198 4 The TORCH

'Video rentals on '83 Christmas list
by Larry Bissonnette
for the TORCH

If you let your fingers do the
walking while looking for a
video home movie to rent or
buy, you will find fewer
outlets listed than are
available. And some of those
listed in the February, 1983,
Yellow Pages are already out
of business.
The home video entertainment industry is booming and
volatile. The video specialty
store is in the forefront of industry growth in the decade of
the eighties, according to Ray
Lucero, northwest regional
director of franchising
development for National
Video, Incorporated. The key
to business profit growth, he
says, lies in the rental of prerecorded, full-length movies in
either the cassette or disk format, with the cassette far
ahead at the moment.

''Operators of our video
store franchises -- over 140 in
the United States and Canada
-- indicate that the average
customer rents four movies
per week," he said.
The large growth in prerecorded movie rentals is a
of the
result
direct
technological advancement,
and increased importation_and
sale, of video cassette
recorders (VCR's) and video
disk players, says Lucero.
Video equipment sales are increasing rapidly and most
shops that offer full-length
movies for rent also offer
equipment on which to play
them. Some stores also offer
the video camera for sale or
rent for home video production.
Other establishments, particularly video game parlors,
rent full-length movies as a
sideline, but usually do not

carry equipment.
Video specialty stores offer
frequent specials to promote
rentals during slow periods.
Sunday and mid-week night
specials are typical. ''Two for
the price of one'' is a standard
option at most stores on
Tuesdays and Wednesdays
says Randy Jansen, owneroperator of the first National
Video Franchise in Eugene.
Another promotion last
August offered a month-long
Sunday night special (after 4
p.m.) of "all the movies you
like -- up to six for $3.99."
Movies available for rent or
sale range from the general audience, G-rating of most
Disney releases to the
X-ratings of hard core pornography.
Video accessories of all
types are available for sale at
video specialty stores. If there

C:

>,

.r,
0

0
.c
C.

Curtis Mathis Home Enteris a video buff on your
Christmas list, the December tainment Center in the Spr1983 issue of Video magazine ingfield Mall offers a VHS
provides loads of suggestions . VCR at $7.95 for 24 hours,
for holiday gift giving at prices and one full-length movie for
from under $10, to the Seiko $2 a day. Curtis Mathis does
Wrist TV (just like Dick not carry Beta machines or
Tracy's) at only $495.
films.

Cross-country and down hill innovations

Snow's here -- so is ne~ improve d ski gear
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'~11':

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While .Volunteerin g

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_ Looking Glass

Ashlane Apartments
Adult
Student
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1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments
Available Now!

1 Bedroom ... $135.50
2 Bedroom ... $16°2.50
3 Bedroom ... $180.50
Reservations for the remaining apartments are now being processed through
the managers office at...

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Springfield, Oregon
747-5411

one design. Nordica, for instance, makes a $265 boot called the Trident that holds its
More comfort in downhill
foot in place by
wearer's
ski equipment, more control
an inflatable air
of
means
from cross country gear -pump on the
small
A
bladder.
these are the features being
allows the
boot
the
of
front
emphasized this year by area
into the
air
more
push
to
skier
ski shops.
bladder for a firmer fit.
Cross country skiers can ex- .
Nordica also makes a Model
pect more control from a new 790 at the same price, in which
boot design by Salomon, ac- the air bladder is replaced by a
cording to Dale Berg's Ski pressure plate that can be
Shop. Unlike traditional light screwed down to hold the foot
cross country boots, in which
a soft sole is pinned to a rigid in place. Finally, the $250
toe binding on the ski, Nordica Model 950 fastens
Salomon soles are made of a with the traditional thick
straps and buckles
hard plastic material clamped plastic padded liner.
around a
to a flexible binding.
"It comes down to which
Control is further enhanced fits best," says manager Jack
by a centering ridge on the bin- Sweet at Anderson's Sporting
ding that fits into a groove on Goods.
the boot sole.
Some downhill skis will be
Salomon soles are now used easier to ride and turn this
on boots by several other com- season, •because of carbon
panies. The least expensive fiber layers sandwiched in with
models in Eugene ar-e Jalas or the traditional wood, foam,
Heierling boots for $59.95 at metal and plastic ski materials.
The carbon fiber skis are
Mogul Mouse and Anderson's. The most expensive is springy but "damp," that is,
the Salomon model 70 for they do not vibrate as much as
conventional skis. ''You know
$109.95 at Berg's.
The massive plastic boots what they're going to do,"
used for downhill skiing now says salesman Bill Sanford at
come in a variety of fitting and Berg's Ski Shop. "They're not
buckling systems. Some as hard on your body.''
Racing skis generally do not
manufacturers use more than

by Talbot Bielefeldt
:rORCH Sta ff Wri ter

use the new fiber layers.
Racers, the salespeople say,
want their skis to be fast, not
comfortable. "The racer's
bodies are designed to take
that resistance,'' says Sanford.
Jeff Carter, manager of the
Mogul Mouse Ski Shop, said
that at the highest racing
speeds, the carbon fiber is not
damp enough, and other
materials, such as synthetic
rubber, are used to reduce
vibration.
Carbon fiber adds to the
price of a ski. Carter says that
the increase may be as little as
$30 on a factory-built ski, or
hundreds of dollars on a
$600-plus custom-made product. The most expensive ski
the TORCH found in Eugene
was a $555 handmade La
Croix Kevlar Carbon at Ullr
Sport Shop.
Ski dealers are quick to
point out that there are no
really bad skis on the market.
"If you go with the top end of
everybody's line, they're all
good," says Jack Sweet.
Complete downhill ski
packages -- including skis,
boots, poles, bindings and
shop work -- run from about
$230 to $900 in Eugene. Cross
country equipment is about
half the price of downhill gear.

The TORCH December 1, 1983 -121: :a: 5 I, P.:J84 Page 13

S~orts

Holiday tournaments planned at LCC, U of 0

by Steve Lively

for the TORCH

Four and eight-team basketball tournaments will entertain
fans during the Winter Break.
At LCC there is one tournament before and one after
Christmas -- free of charge to
LCC students with a photoID.

• On Dec. 16 and 17 the
LCC women's team will host
the Lane Invitational, with
LCC, Linn-Benton, Mt.
Hood, and Umpqua community college women competing. On both days games
begin at 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.
• The LCC men's team hosts
a Lane Invitational on Dec.

27-28 among LCC, LinnBenton, Gray's Harbor, and
Mt. Hood. Game times are 7
and 9 p.m.
Besides the free admission
for LCC ID card holders,
tickets are $2 for community
members, and $1.50 for
students without a photo ID.
• The U of O men's team

will play in the annual Far
West Classic in Portland. The
tournament begins on Tuesday, Dec. 27, and concludes
on Friday, Dec. 30. The firstround games are Oregon v.
Cornell; Gonzaga v. Robert
Morris; Oregon State v. Boise
State; and Washington State
v. the University of Portland.

Tickets for the classic are
$10 for first-round games, $1 I
for second-round games, and
$12 for the final round. A
single pass for the entire tournament can be purchased for
$43. More information about
the tournament can be obtained by contacting the U of 0
ticket office at 686-4461.

Duck season tickets make gifts for Duck fanatics
USC, Washington, Washington State, and Oregon State. Non-conference home
games include the Athletes in Action, Puget Sound, Wichita State, and Notre
Dame.
If you're puzzled about what to give that basketball fan on your holiday shoppThe price of a season ticket is $117. Individual game tickets are also available.
ing list, an Oregon Duck basketball season ticket could be the answer.
A reserved seat for a single game is $9, an adult general admission seat is $4.50,
There are 13 home games on Oregon's schedule this year. Oregon will be and a youth general admission seat is $2.50. For more information concerning
hosting Pac-IO opponents Arizona, Arizona State, California, Stanford, UCLA, basketball tickets, call the U of O ticket office at 686-4461.
by Steve Lively

for the TORCH

Titans
•
win one,
lose one
by Nick Garman
for the TORCH

The LCC volleyball team
finished its league season
with a Nov. 18 win over LinnBenton at home and a Nov. 19
loss to unbeaten Mt. Hood in
Gresham.
.The Linn-Benton match was
icing on the cake for the
Titans, as they had already
secured a second-place finish
in the league by defeating
Chemeketa Nov. 16. After
blowing out Linn-Benton,
15-4, in the first game, Coach
Cheryl Brown substituted freely and the players responded
by taking the last two games,
15-11 and 16-14.
Freshman setter Kelly Arms
started the second game with
an ace serve and Lane quickly
got off to a 9-1 lead. After
Linn-Benton tightened up the
contest, Sue Schreiber's ace
serve ended the game. In the
third game Lane had trouble
getting motivated and LinnBenton jumped out to an 8-1
advantage, only to have the
Titans roar back and net nine
of the next ten points. Lane
fell behind again, 12-10, and
Brown took a time-out to
regroup her players.
"I told them they didn't
deserve to be a second-place
team the way they were playing. We had slowed to their
level and I told them to pick it
up!" Brown explained. LinnBenton scored once more
before Lane heeded Brown's
advice. A dunk shot by Patty
Beuhler broke a 13-10
stalemate and sent the Titans
on the way to their eighth win
in 11 matches.
Laura Sweeney, who Brown
terms as her best overall
player, paced the Titans with
nine kills on the night and

Arms led the team with 11
assists. Though Brown wasn't
entirely pleased with the LinnBenton match, it appeared her
team was ready for leagueleading Mt. Hood.
Unfortunately for the
Titans, the trip to Gresham
was not a pleasant one. Bus
problems caused Lane to be
late for the scheduled 2 p.m.
match and from then on things
went downhill. "(Because of
arriving late) the girls weren't
properly warmed-up and as a
result, they didn't play up to
par," Brown said. The result
was a 5-15 loss.
Things were looking up in
game two as Lane led most, of
the way. Mt. Hood finally
knotted the score at 11-11 and
went on to post a 15-11 victory. After playing Mt. Hood
close in the early going of the
third game, LCC ran into
trouble and lost 8-15. "The
girls looked like defeat had set
in. We lost the momentum and
Mt. Hood outplayed us,''
Brown said.
Lane travels to Vancouver,
WA to compete in the
Regional Tourney, Dec. 1-3.

Players show depth and coordination

B-ball women win first two

by Nick Garman
for the TORCH

Tr.e mendous depth and
team-oriented play were
shown as the LCC's women's
basketball team rolled out of
the starting blocks and rolled
over their first two opponents
of the season last weekend at
home .
At half-time, Nov. 25, LCC
had a six point lead over Umpqua Community College,
25-19. The team went on to
take their home opener 52-44.
Shari Rose led the Titans
with 14 points, ten of those in
the first half. Konnie Denk
had eight points, Bridget Dahl
added seven, and three others
scored six. However, things
didn't go as smoothly as the
score might indicate.
Lane committed 19 fouls,
turned the ball over 36 times,

The Sharing is Caring Program will start Nov.
28th and will run until Dec. 12th. If you or someone you know needs assistance with their
Christmas dinner, please contact Campus
Ministry office ext. 2814, Evelyn Tennis Student
Activities ext 2336 or Jerry Sirois Counseling
ext.2329. The information which is needed will
be name, address and number in family.
Cans for donations will be located through out
the campus.

CAMPUS MINISTRY
Congradulations to Claudia Chaney for winning
the lunch for two at the Clothing Exchange Open
House.

Mass will be held Dec. 8th. in Math Bid. 249
from 12 to 1.

shot only 34. 7 percent (25-72)
from the floor and 11 percent
from the freethrow line. The
Titans did, however, outrebound Umpqua 55-28, including 19 offensive rebounds.
Denk led with nine boards
while Liz Turner, Michele
Raffington, and Sam Prentice
had eight apiece.
Charlotte Givens led Umpqua with 20 points (hitting
10-19 from the floor) while
Leslie Knight and Theresa
Canevari added nine each for
the Timberwomen.

• • •

halftime, where LCC led
37-19. Michele Raffington and
Shari Rose each had six at the
half as the Titan's controlled a
smaller Tacoma team offensively and defensively. Denk
finished the game with 20
points and freshman Liz
Turner added 10, all in the second half as LCC posted a
63-45 win.
"We played much better
against Tacoma,'' commented
Coach Sue Thompson.
"Excellent team play and team
defense were shown. It was
also one of our best shooting
nights ever.''

The Nov. 26 game against
Tacoma Community College
showed an improved, more
refined Lane team.
Konnie Denk battered
Tacoma's defense for Lane's
first eight points and had 14 by

Lane will compete in the
Linn-Benton Invitational Dec.
2-3. They open the tournament
with
perennial
powerhouse Clark Community College (from Washington)
at 6 p.m. Friday night.

okstore
has what
you need
for that

special
someone
on your
shopping list.

s are available
t sizes.

,..

.

.'

,, '
.

Page 14 December 1, 1983 -ta, idary 21, 1~84 The TORCH

.- ' ,

~omnium G a t h e r u m - ~
Marimba music

The Community Center for the Performing Arts, is proud to
host an evening of Marimba music with Balafon on Friday,
Dec. 9 at the W.O.W. Hall, 8th and Lincoln in Eugene. Doors
open at 9 p.m . and the show starts at 9:30. Cost is $3 at the
door. All ages are welcome. Adult refreshment downstairs with
I.D . The W.O.W. Hall is wheelchair accessible.

Christmas Bazaar

Friends of Extension will be having a Christmas Bazaar,
Dec . 2 & 3 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Dec. 4 from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. Home-baked holiday foods, jams, jellies, knitted and embroidered items, house plants and handcrafted Christmas
decorations will be featured .
All proceeds will go to the support of Lane County Extension Service .
The sale will be held at the Extension Auditorium, 950 W.
13th, Eugene. For more information, call 687-4243 .

An historical exhibit of the performing arts in Eugene,
Oregon will be on display in the Community Room at the Hult
Center for the Performing Arts, Nov. 30 - Feb. 5.

University Theatre
" Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, " the first local production of a
Tennessee Williams play since his death earlier this year, opens
Thursday, Dec. I, at the U of 0.
The University Theatre production will also run Dec. 2-3 and
8-10 at Robinson Theatre adjacent to Villard Hall . Curtain
time is 8 p.m. for all performances. Reserved seat tickets are $5
for the general public, $4 for students and senior citizens and
$3 .25 for UO students.
For reservations and more information, call the University
Theatre box office at 6864191.

Joyride
Lane Transit District will operate a rhristmas JOYRIDE, a
special shopping shuttle, in the downtown Eugene area during
the holiday shopping season . The JOYRIDE will travel a continuous loop serving the U of 0, 5th Street Public Market, 5th
Avenue shops and the Eugene Downtown Mall. Buses will
serve each location every thirty minutes, increasing to fifteen
minute intervals between II :30 and I :30. The JOYRIDE will
operate Nov. 21 to Dec. 31 , excluding Thanksgiving and
Christmas, and is free to all riders .

Champagne reception
Opus 5 Gallery and the Oregon Repertory Theatre will be
hosting a champagne reception for jeweler Hannah Goldrich
on Friday, Dec. 2, beginning at 7 p.m . The gallery is located at
23 E. 28th .
Proceeds from the sale of champagne will benefit the Oregon
Repertory Theatre. ORT has just finished the first play of it's
1983-84 season and will open "Christmas Carol" on Dec. 15th
in the Soreng Theatre at the Hult.
For more information contact Sherry McCurdy at 485-8535 .

Hotline

Arc you a woman in crisis, needing a referral, or just wanting to talk with another woman about your difficulty? Call the
Womyn's Hotline 8 p.m. - 8 a.m. 7 nights a week at 344-1227.

The Womens' Center and the Counseling Department are
sponsoring a Support Group meeting every Wed. from 2 to 3
p.m . in Rm . 220 of the Center Building.
If you have something that's been bothering you, drop by.
You'll find out you're not alone.
Relaxation techniques. will also be shown.
For more information contact Izetta Hunter at the Womens'
Awareness Center, ext. 2298.

Summer employment
A limited supply of applications for summer employment at
Yellowstone National Park are available in the Student
Employment Service. When the supply is exhausted information will be distributed for individual contacts.

A silent auction of photographic prints will be held from
Nov. 30 through Dec. 11 by the Photography at Oregon
Gallery at the U of 0 .
The prints, displayed in the south mezzanine of the Museum
of Art, are black-and-white, color and hand-tinted
photographs by many locally and nationally known
photographers .
Prospective buyers may write their bids in a book in the
gallery and may change their bids at any time. At I p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11, a final verbal bidding session will be held in the
Gerlinger Hall Alumni Lounge, 15th and University streets.
For more information, call the museum at 686-3027 .

Computer expo
host a Computer Expo that will focus on home and educational
applications, computer hardware and software. Programs for
graphics, personal finance and educational uses will be among
the hands-on displays brought to WISTEC by local computer
dealers and user groups.

DENALI contest
DENALI, LCC's literary-arts publication, is accepting applications for an art/ photography and short story contest. The
competition is open to students and non-professionals. A $25
first prize and $15 second prize will be awarded in both
categories . The deadline is Dec. 12. Entries will be featured in a
show at the Warehouse Artist Studios. For more details, call
747-4501, ext. 2830. Bring or send submissions to the Denali
Office, 479 Center Building, LCC, 4000 E. 30th Ave., Eugene,
OR 97405.

Christmas gifts
Galaxy Corner, the museum gift shop at the Willamette
Science and Technology Center, has reduced all items in stock
by 20 percent for holiday shoppers. The gift shop carries
science items, books, star maps, games, puzzles and more.
Galaxy Corner is operated by the Assistance League of
Eugene. It is located at WISTEC, next to Autzen Stadium and
is open Tuesday-Sunday from 12-5 p.m. For more information
call 484-9027 .

LCC Christmas concert
Our annual Christmas Concert will be held in the Performing Arts Department Theater on Friday, December 9, at 8:00
p.m. This concert is free and will feature the LCC Concert
Choir, directed by Dan Sachs, and the Baroque Orchestra,
directed by Nathan Cammack, performing festive music of the
season.

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College board applicants
Persons interested in appointment to the Lane Community
College Board of Education to represent west Lane County
have until Monday, Dec. 12, to apply .
Candidates are asked to indicate interest and qualifications
in a letter to the board. It is to arrive at the office of Larry J .
Warford, assistant to the LCC president, no later than 5 p.m.
on Dec. 12.
Warford's address is LCC, 4000 E. 30th Ave ., Eugene
97405 . His office is in Room 213, Administration Building, on
the main campus.

repalr-alterotlan·
fine custvm clothing

.~

Music School events

The Vermeer String Quartet will perform at 8 p.m. in Beall
Concert Hall as part of the U of O Chamber Music Series .
Single ticket sales will begin Nov. 28 at the School of Music
Community Relations Office for $6 and $4, depending on seat
location. For more information, call 686-5678 .
The annual holiday sing-along performance of Handel's
"Messiah" is set for 4 p.m., Sunday, Dec. 4 in the Hult Center
for the Performing Arts' Silva Concert Hall. Admission is
$3 .50, with discounts for groups of 25 or more. For more information, call 686-5678; for ticket information, call the Hult
Center box office, 687-5000.
A holiday concert featuring all five UO choral groups is
scheduled for 8 p.m . in Beall Concert Hall, Tuesday, Dec. 6.
Don Addison, a UO graduate in music, will give a special lecture demonstration on African music at 8 p.m. in Room 198,
Wednesday, Dec. 7.
The Oregon Wind Ensemble, directed by Wayne Bennett,
will perform at 8 p.m. in Beall Concert Hall, Thursday, Dec. 8.
Also Thursday, at 12:30 p.m . in Room 198, the music
school's choral room, student musicians will present a Musical
Smorgasbord concert.

Silent auction

Performing arts display

--

Women's support group

6,3 ~- 13 \?\.
~\J.C.~M. o,. 9740
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ackstage

Women's theatre
On December 8, 9 and 10, the U of O Ethnic Studies Program will present a play in Women's Theater called " Keep
Tightly Closed in a Cool Dry Place," by Megan Terry.
The play was written originally for three men, but the roles
in this production will be played by women and there will be a
different cast each night.
All plays will be performed at the U of O in the EMU basement Forum Room at 8 p.m. Admission is free. Call 344-6175
for more information . This is an impressive adult theater program .

Holidays at the planetarium
Astronomical events surrounding the birth of Jesus Christ
are the topic of a special program running thfough Christmas
at the Willamette Science and Technology Center
The program, is called "Star of Wonder" and includes such
verified astronomical events surrounding Jesus' birth as: The
appearance of Halley's Comet, in 12 B.C.; the appearance of a
nova star, visible day and night for two years; a conjunction of
planets in the constellation Pisces in seven and six B.C., an occurence of five times in 10 months. Normally such an occurrence happens five times in 8,000 years.
The SO-minute show is accompanied by seasonal music and
art. Public showings will be offered December 3, 4, 10, II,
16-18, 20-23; all shows are at 3 p.m. Call the Lane ESD
Planetarium at 683-4675 to reserve a time and to receive fee information.
There will 11lso be a special live star show at 3 p.m., Dec.
27-30. "The Old Year Passes" will look at how the night sky
relates to calendars in cultures around the world.
Admission for the public programs is $2 for adults, SI for
senior citizens and college students, S.75 for children, free to
children under 6.

Cultural planning
On December 5 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. the Arts Council will
hold the second of our series of Artist Forums at Far West
Federal Community Room, Broadway and Oak. The forum,
entitled "Getting Involved in the Cultural Plan," will feature
Mary Winston, member of the City's task team for the cultural
plan and coordinator for Specialized Senior Centers, Outdoors
and Cultural Arts for Eugene Parks and Recreation. Ms.
Winston will discuss the process being used by the City for the
development of the Cultural Plan. She will be highlighting the
ways in which artists, arts organizations, and the public can bring ideas, concerns, and dreams into the planning process.
The Forum is an Arts Council membership event. A small
fee will be charged to non-members to cover the costs of the
Forum.

Old Oregon Christmas Fair
Come to the 13th annual Old Oregon Christmas Fair, Dec.
l0-24, at the Lane County Fairgrounds. The Fair features the
finest original, handmade crafts in the Northwest. Along with
the wide variety of crafts, the Fair features food and free entertainment.
It will be open Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m .-9 p.m., Sunday,
10 a.m.-6 p.m . and closes Christmas Eve at 6 p.m. Admission
is free .

dancewear & theatrical

EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED
•
•
•
•

Leotards
Tights
Dance Shoes (expertly fit)
Warm ups

Classical concert

The Oregon Mozart Players, under the direction of Robert
Hurwitz, will present a concert on Friday, Dec. 2 at 7:30 p.m.,
in the Soreng Theatre, Hult Center for the Performing Arts.
Tickets for the Dec. 2 concert, at $8.50 and $5 .50, are
available at the Hult Center ticket office (687-5000) and at The
Musical Offering, 808 Charnelton (345-6197).

Anaglyph
Webster's defines anaglyph as a "sculptured, chased, or embossed ornament worked in low relief. " Tom Wilson, an instructor at Rogue Community College, will display his show,
"People, Places and Things/ An Anaglyph" at LCC through
Dec. 8. His painted wood sculptures will be in the Art/ Applied
Design Department gallery, located on the first floor of the
Math/ Art Building . Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. , Monday through Thursday, and 8 to 5 on Fridays . Admission 1s
free.

Basketball volunteers

You've always wanted to coach a youth basketball team,
right? Now is your chance. The Eugene Sports Program is now
recruiting coaches for the upcoming basketball season . Teams
will be formed for boys and girls in grades 3-8. Practice begins
the week of Dec. 5 and the season lasts for about 10 weeks. If
you enjoy working with kids and have 6-10 hours a week to
volunteer, come and join the ESP coaching staff. Training is
provided. For more information please call 683-2373 .

Holiday festival
St. Alice Roman Catholic Church, 1520 F. St., Springfield,
will conduct its fifth annual bazaar, "Festival de Noel, " on
Dec. 2, 3, 4. A Springfield community musical program is
slated for Friday evening at 7 p.m. follo)Ved by refreshments
and the viewing of a religious art display.
On Saturday the booths will be open from 9 a.m . to 9 p.m.
Luncheon will be served from II :30 a.m . to 2 p.m.
On Sunday there will be a Blueberry Pancake Breakfast served from 9 a .m. to I p.m. Drawings will be held at I p.m. for
prizes.

Central America Youth Tour

Student representatives from four Central American countries will be in Eugene Friday, Dec. 2. There will be a presentation in the LCC Boardroom at 11 a.m.
Later that day there will be a reception at the Latin American
Center, 1236 Kincaid, at 3:30 p.m . There will be a presentation, film and discussion. For more information, call the
Eugene Council on Human Rights in Latin America at
484-5867 or ASLCC ext. 2330.

YMCA sponsoring ski trips
The Eugene Family YMCA is sponsoring ski trips to the
Willamette Pass area. Called Ski Days at the Y, this new program includes trips, transportation and lessons. Instructors are
from the local community and the Willamette Pass.
Trips on Dec. 3 and 10 will emphasize cross country skiing;
trips on Dec. 17 and Jan. 28 will emphasize downhill skiing.
Cross country lessons cost $5 and downhill lessons cost
$7 .50. Transportation costs are $5 per day. Lift tickets are
available at a discount--$IO for adults and $6 for children .
For more information, contact Raejean Larson at
686-YMCA.

OSPIRG hosting AT&T symposium
The Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group
(OSPIRG) is presenting a symposium entitled "Phone Service:
A Right or a Privilege?" on the effects of the break-up of
AT&T .
The symposium will be held Saturday, Dec. 3, from 12 to 4
p.m. at the U of O campus in the Erb Memorial Union, Room
IOI.

"Lively Arts" at the Hult
An historical exhibit entitled "A Century of the Lively Arts:
Music. Dance . Theater. An Historical Exhibit of the Performing Arts, Eugene, Oregon" is on display at the Hult Center
from Nov. 30 to Feb. 5. The exhibit is free and will be on
display in Studio II, lower level of the Hult Center, from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Saturday.

************
* Recycle *
** paper
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**
*
*************
14 Kt. Diamond
Pendant or Earrings

Reg. $100 value
Your Choice

•

• , zgaa

49ea

Lovely
" 14 Kt. Oold diamond buttercup earr1ngs or matching pendant
with 14 Kt. Gold serpentine "S"
chain.

~

I-·•·

• CAPEZIO • DANSKIN • FLEXATARD
• CARUSHKA • BARELY LEGAL
• GYMKIN • TICKETS
• STAR STYLED

If',.

Diamonds for the lady of your hea rt.
Diamond earrings In beautiful 14
Kt. Gold 4-prong settings.

Student'• Account• Invited

YAUIY lllftll CINTIII

0 ..., 10 10 • . Set 10 10
SuftclayU10S

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The TORCH December1,

,

'9~ Page15

•

Area merchants offer" old-time dietary delights
by Susan Nagle
for the TORCH

Christmas is a holiday that
brings us a variety of foods.
Would you like to try
something different this year?
How about Danish J ulekake
or Buche de Noel?
These and many other traditional ethnic foods are
available in specialty shops
and delicatessens in Eugene
this month.
Christensen's Danish
Pastries sells many different
traditional breads, cakes and
cookies for holiday time, says
Ms. Christensen, owner of the
shop. Danish Julekake is a
bread made of yeast raised
sweet dough with fruit and
nuts. It has a thin layer of icing and is like a coffee cake,
says Christensen. It sells for
about $1. 80 a loaf. She says
the store sells lots of
Christmas cookies -- peber-

nodder (a spice cookie) and klinger, a thin pastry twisted,
tied in a knot, deep fried and
covered with sugar -- as well as
Danish kringle, another
popular treat,. Kringle is made
in a pretzel shape and filled
with assorted fruits such as
prune, apricot or almond
paste, and sells for $1.85.
A traditional Danish
Christmas is celebrated on
Christmas Eve, typically with
a goose stuffed with apples.
For dessert there is rice pudding made with rice, milk,
sugar and chopped almonds.
The Metropol Bakery bakes
Buche de Noel, a traditional
French cake baked in the form
of a yulelog. Metropol
Manager Teresa Enrico says it
is a sponge cake with different
types of fillings, chocolate
frosting and meringue decorations. Enrico says it is a very
long cake, about 1 1/2 feet,

and makes a beautiful center
piece for holiday parties. It
sells for approximately $25.
The Metropol also makes a
Dublin Porter cake, "a traditional Irish cake similar to
fruit cake, it is made with port
ale, raisins and candied fruit.
The beer gives it a molasses
taste," says Enrico. This sells
for $13.50.
Ron Jenson, owner of
Scargenti's, makes Italian
Christmas cookies, which will
sell for $1.99 a dozen.
Panettone, a special Italian
Christmas cake, is an extremely light, brown crusted,
domelike golden cake filled
with candied fruit that Jenson
imports for about $16.
In Italy, lasagna is traditionally served for Christmas
Eve dinner, says Jenson.
Scargenti's sells homemade

Classifieds

-Services-PEN MA TES INC. $2 one mate, $5
three mates. Send For free questionaire. PO Box 3367, Flagstaff, Ai.
86003.
MASSAGE SPECIAL Dec. 1-19.
1.5-2 hours massage. Sliding scale
$6-$12. Nonsexual only! Gift certificates. Nan Cohen 342-7098.

FOOT MASSAGE (Reflexology). For
runners, diabetics, or others with circu I at ion problems. Raymond
342-2540.
BE A FLIGHT ATTENDANT! For
addresses of top airlines and
'Application Request Letter' send $3
to PO Box 1451, Eugene, Ore. 97402.

--For Sale-18" COLOR TV, Model 1979, very
good condition. 747-0277. $120.
ARBOR-12 STRING GUITAR, excellent condition, $150 or best offer.
Call 687-9458, ask for Cyndi.
UNSCRAMBLE YOUR TV! I have a
few Jerrold descrambling chips left.
Watch free movies. Jim 747-8558.
Tl PROGRAMMABLE
CALCULATOR. 50 program steps,8
funcmemories, scientific
tions.Includes wall adapter, case,
rechargeable battery pack, programmers, pad and book. $20.00 747-9014.
A TARI COMPUTER OWNERS:
Add a printer to your system. Atari
825 printer, like new, $225 or ? Cable
included, requires interface. 747-9014.
SONY TURNTABLE, works good,
almost a new cartridge. $50. Call
461-2792 after 6 PM, ask for James.
CLIMBING GEAR, Galibier Super
Guide Boots, scuba fins, Army Field
Manual. 746-6162.
BIONIC LEGS-Scott MX boots. $200
new - sacrifice $50. Red and white MX
pants, 29"x31" waist -$30. Chest and
shoulder pads - $10. All in good
shape. 345-4174.
MOVING SALE - Small couch $5,
large 6 drawer chest $10, Playboy and
Penthouse magazines . 50. Lots more,
must sell. 345-4174

SAY WHAT YOU WANT!
Customl:,.ed bumper stickers.
747-4656.
NORD/CA DOWNHILL SKI
BOOTS, Size 10112. Must sell! $50.
Jeff at 342-8233 after 5 PM.
HEXCEL COMPETITION SKIS, 200
cm with Look Nevada bindings, $70.
Need cash! 747-1142.
BARRECRAFTERS SKI RACK, used twice, holds 4 pairs, locks, $40.
689-6149.

MA TH I BOOK - $12.50. 741-1803
Debbie.

BOYS THREE PIECE SUIT. Tan
with white short sleeved shirt and knitted brown tie. Brand new from JC
Penneys - $74.86. Will sell for $50.
Call Shawnita at ext. 2655 or
726-8218.
GULBRANSEN THEATRUM
3218W ORGAN. Immaculate condition, walking bass, synthesizer, twin
/eslies - $2000. See at 6701 Aster Ct.,
Springfield. 746-4494.
IBENAZ BASS AND UNIVOX
AMP. Both In very good condition.
Best offer over $200. Keith 935-7297.
CHRISTMAS
BEAUTIFUL
WREATHES hand crafted by art student. $6. Great gift idea! 683-4285. 72

WOMEN'S 3-SPEED WITH ALLOY
27" wheels and bars. Rebuilt. Also,
Burley trailer with alloy wheels. Sell
separate, together, or trade /or color
tv, queen-size Futon or??? Call Colin
at 689-5421. Insist on leaving message
if someone else answers.

-Automotive-

INTERESTED IN SAVING $$$$?
Buy one get one free value Checks.
Save up to 112 on dining, entertainment, and lodging. Call 688-9531 and
leave name and phone number.

FOUR llx15 TIRES AND WHEELS,
6 hole Chevy -$250. 746-5697.

RANDON NEE
ROSSIGNOL
METAL-EDGE XC SKIS, used I
season, 75mm bindings. 210 cm. $95.
683-0643.
MEMOTECH 64K RAM for
Timex/Sinclair 1000 for $80 or best
offer. Comes with software such as
Frogger, Z80 assembler, and more!
Randy 345-1091.
WOMEN'S COMPLETE SKI OUTFIT. Downhill skis, 7 112 boots,
poles, goggles - $50. Blueaura,
ASLCC, x2330.
BMX BICYCLE. All alloy-legal for
racing, extra rims. Must see. Call
726-9916.
WARDS HEAVY DUTY DRYER $50. 461-2792 after 5 PM - ask for
James.
3
S/GNA TURE
GRADO
PHONOGRAPH CARTRIDGE.
Originally $750, now $125. 74 West
19th Ave., Eugene.
BOYS 5 SPEED SCHWINN, 24",
great condition - $50. 342-4548 after 4
PM.
---------, --72 FIAT 124 SW - engine in good
shape, needs other work. $500/offer.
3635 E. Amazon.
MECHANIC - Engine rebuilding,
brakes, I ront-ends, cars, diesel, gas.
Very reasonable. Tim 726-0709.

73 VW SUPER BEETLE, New
radials, excellent condition. $1850 or
trade. 746-6162.

74 FIAT 128, 4 door, 4 speed, runs
great, $1500 or best offer. 343-l175.
CARB FOR EARLY 235 Chevy Standard 6 cylinder. Good condition. $10.
345-4174.
74 VW 412 - Needs work. I don't
want it! $JOO. 485-8257.
70 OPEL WAGON, 4 speed, 1900 cc
-$450 firm. 746-5697.
71 CHEVELLE - clean and dependable, 4 door, 6 cyl., automatic, low
miles, very good condition. Only
$1050. 484-5943 or 726-7014.
77 LT CAMARO - very sporty, excellent shape, red and white, loaded.
Asking $4,500. 687-1/65.
65 GMC SUBURBAN, excellent condition, power steering, auto trans $1350. 683-4151 or 688-6225.
FIAT 124 SW - engine in good shape,
needs other work. $500/offer. 3635 E.
Amazon.
MECHANIC - Engine rebuilding,
brakes, front-ends, cars, diesel, gas.
Very reasonable. Tim 726-0709.

-For RentROOMMATE WANTED for 2
bedroom house on Hilyard. $122.50
plus utilities. 34/-5109 - keep trying.
SHARE A HOUSE IN THE TREES.
Huge bedroom, quiet - $1()() month.
484-2679.

lasagna by the pan. For $14.99
you can get a large pan to
serve 8-10 people, or you can
feed about three people for
$3.69, he says. Jenson also ·
sells his homemade sauce, and
a variety of cheeses and
noodles to fix your own
lasagna.
In addition, Scargenti's carries amaretto dough for
cookies, and almond paste,
and a wide variety of packaged
items for making marzipan
candy.
Tamales are a traditional
Mexican Christmas dinner
says Carmen Martinez, who
with her husband runs El
Patio and Luminaries Mexican
Tamales are
Restaurant.
corn husks filled with dough
and meat -- which can be pork,
beef or chicken -- then baked
said Martinez. El Patio sells
tamales by the dozen for
$10.50.

Need a French pate, or
maybe truffles and cognac for
entertaining? The Kiva will be
selling these for the holidays.
"We will be selling many different varieties of foods for
the holidays,'' says Steve VanBrasch, cheese buyer for the
Kiva. "We have had up to 125
varieties of cheese in our
cases," said VanBrasch.

-Help Wanted-

TO THE GANG AT MK - Merry
Christmas!

JOBS OVERSEAS MIF (lncludind

Australia, South Pacific, Europe,
Africa, Alaska, Cruise Ships,
Airlines). All occupations, temporary
and full time.$20,000 to $60,000. Call
now! 206-736-5103 ext. 145.

--Wanted-WANTED TO RENT: Garage or shop
with sleeping loft or apartment. prefer
private bath but could share, like lots
of work space and light, prefer Southeast Eugene. Colin - 689-5421.
NEED CHILD CARE FOR 5 112 year
old, 6 PM to JO PM weekdays. Needed now until Dec. 16th. 689-7317
before2 PM.
WANTED FOR EMERALD CONQUEST GAMING CONVENTION
1984 - Potential gaming masters!
Please contact Scott 461-2330.

- Lost & FoundFOUND IN LCC PARKING LOT- a
young Siamese mix cat wearing a flea
collar. If the cat is yours or you'd like
to have it, please call 688-3478.

--Free-FREE TO GOOD HOME - Female
Manx kitten, gray with white paws.
689-6096.
RUNNING CLUB - All areas of
Eugene/Springfield. Call Nan 341-7098
FREE TO LOVING PERSON
Young, male, ruffie-haired Guinea
Pig. Comes with small cage. 683-4285.
BLACK AND SIL VER GERMAN
SHEPHERD - Neutered male, needs
good home, some obedience training.
343-50/J.

German Smoked Meats carries a traditional Swedish
potato sausage for the
holidays, it sells for $3.99 a lb.
says Ms. Palmer, owner of the
shop.
They also carry a variety of
holiday cooking needs such as
cookie ingredients for traditional Christmas cookies, she
says. "We have Swedish
lingonberries, marzipan, baking wafers, and a large selection of meats and cheeses," .
says Mrs. Palmer.

HA VE I TOLD YOU LATELY that I
love you?
MERRY CHRISTMAS, PA UL.
MAC - Whipper was going to do this
but I beat her to it. Oinkers.
TO THE CUTE SR<J DIRECTOR:
We love your new shoes! From your
SA's.
CHRIS, Thanks for being there when
I needed you and for understanding.
Love ya, Tammie.
FAWN AND RHEA - Hello, you
spinning sisters! Keep on smiling! Lotsa love, Kelli.
DAWN - You better start going to
Dad's AA meetings-Cal Jr. HaHaHa
WHIPPER, Two weeks have gone by.
Read on!
SWEET PEA - Come play in my
garden!
WHIPPER, Ken's always at the top of
my list. Forget Mr. Ed! Oinkers
CLYDE, How do you like my new undies? The Twins.
HILLARY, Chin up, like Wilber says,
and don't let a wet-back dampen your
spirits!
HELP US HELP YOU! Please don't
throw garbage in the recycling barrels!
Thanks, SRC Recycling.KA REN,
You are a good Mom, holiday spirit or
not. Thanks /or Thanksgiving. Love

K.

FOOLS IN THE FRONT ROW Please don't ask stupid questions that
take up class time. Ask them after
class. THE CLASS.
J. STOLL, Where have you been?
How did your physical go? I'm worried! Call me! L. Childs.
LJ, Hang in there. We love you. Smith
and Wesson and the Anderson Clan.
CINDY - Campus Ministries staff,
counseling desk staff and associates Thank you for being special. M and

M.

-Messages--

SLOAN - Nice meeting you at the
Holiday Inn on Nov.19! Do it again?
HR.

SWEETHEART - I love you so much
it's ridiculous! Sweetheart.

POOTER, I may be a brat but I ain't
spoiled... Besides, I've always been a
good sport (when I play). Dewberry.
BOB, Um-uh, okay, um-uh, Don't
ask stupid questions sarcastically. Upper right half of media class.
APOLLO, I love you. Thank you/or
being so wonder/ul! Your sunshine.

ONE SLIGHTLY USED LITTLE
BROTHER with crawdad complex.
House trained, bongs out. All offers
considered.
JUST BECAUSE THE RAINBOW
FADES I am no less exalted.

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Season's Greetings
From LCC Artists
& Writers
A black and white photogram of a fern and the bloom
of Queen Anne's Lace graces
the cover of a greeting card
offered as a gift to LCC
students and staff by the LCC
Literary/ Arts Club
publishers
of Denali
magazine.
LCC student Peggy Miesen
created this first-place winner
of Dena/i's fall art and
literature contest.
Editor Patti McDonald says
that during the week of Dec.
S-9, club members will
distribute 1,000 cards at the
Student Resource Center, se-cond floor Center Building,
theDenalioffice, 479F Center,
and at the Denali bake sale
Dec. 9.
She also announced last
week that Stephen Keating
won first place for literature,
while Jane Doperoy and
Roger Holly won second place
honors for art, and Thomas
A very and William Burrows
placed second in literature.