Lane Community College

4000 E. 30th Avenue

An Independent Student Newspaper

March 7..S, 1985

Repair, equipment, among
needs to be met by levy

He would establish new funding base

Dale Parnell looks back

by Gary Breedlove

by Jackie Barry

TORCH Editor

TORCH Staff Writer

Establishing a dedicated
funding base is just one of the
changes LCC's first president,
Dale Parnell, would make if
he were doing everything over
again.
Parnell, who served from
1965 to 1968, recollected
stories and made his analyses
as he spoke to some 300 guests
at the college's 20th birthday
celebration, on March 1.
A dedicated funding base,
he said, might have made the
college's operation more
stable. He compared the current task of acquiring money
for the funding base as ''the
annual mating ritual between
the schools and the voters.
Everybody knows what the
result will be, but you still
have to go through the ritual."
If he were doing it all again,
Parnell said he might make
several other decisions differently.
• He would establish a high
school-college connection that
would serve the ''middle quartiles" (middle ranges) of the ·
Parnell--<cont. on

Eugene, Oregon 97405

page 3>

Dale Parnell speaks to guests at 20th birthday party, outlining
changes he would have made if he could do it again.

Shall Lane Community College levy $510,000 per year for
three years outside of its tax
base, increasing its net tax
rate?
Voters will be asked this
question on Tuesday, March
26 when LCC will seek voter
approval for a serial levy.
Funds are designated for
equipment to revise program
curriculum and for facility
upgrade and modifications.
The levy would cost seven
cents per thousand dollars of
assessed value or $4.20 per
year for a $60,000 home.
The Electronics Department
is slated to receive some of the
money to purchase equipment.
"We've got some of the oldest
equipment around,'' says
Electronics student Steve
Kent. "We don't even have
equipment that will measure
micro-amps (used for computer testing).''
When the Northwest
£ Association of Schools and
~ Colleges gave its Accreditation
a: Report this fall, it stated ''This

ASLCC knocks Feds' budget

Mail-in to protest Reagan financial aid cuts

by Allan Smolker

TORCH Staff Writer

Eighty eight thousand
postcards will be mailed by
Oregon students to Senators
Packwood and Hatfield, and
Representative Weaver to protest the proposed Reagan Administration financial aid
budget cuts, according to
ASLCC Senator Ellen
Radcliffe.
Radcliffe, who attended a
recent student leadership conference at Lewis and Clark
College, says the conference
was called to organize the
mail-in campaign.
Lee Weinstein, who worked
as an aid to Rep. Ron Wyden
and helped organize the conference, told the students a
postcard campaign would be
an effective way to lobby the
US Congress, says Radcliffe.
According to Radcliffe,
Weinstein (who says he was
responsible for a lot of
Wyden's mail) told approximately 70 student government
representatives that colored

postcards are effective because
they are easy to recognize and
count.
He told the students, the
postards (which will be yellow)
have the power to influence
congress.
Radcliffe says she would not
discourage people from
writing personal letters, but
the yellow postcards will show
numbers more efficiently.
Also, she says this lobbying
effort could be the key to helping 50 percent of Oregon's
students stay in school.
Reagan plan threatens
financial aid

Diane Tsukamaki, a Lewis
and Clark financial aid person
told the Leadership Conference, students with families
who have incomes over
$25,000 would lose National
Direct Student Loans,
Workstudy, and Supplementary Educational Opportunity
Grants; while, students with
parents who earn $32,500
would be ineligible for federal
subsidy. These students would
be ineligible for aid whether

they are supported by their
parents or not.
Tsukami says 50 percent of
Oregon's students could be
forced out of school if the
Reagan budget passes the US
Congress. And the most aid
the needy could get, would be
$4000 per student per year.
"What about working
parents? I was talking to a
woman who is now on $6000
of financial aid. She is
single ... has a child (and) will
not get that much money
anywhere else, ever again."
Radcliffe says the poor will
be locked into poverty and the
welfare system. The short term
expense may be greater, but
educated people work and pay
taxes while people on welfare
are a drain until they are
buried.
People who have not finished high school or do not have
a GED will be denied aid
under the Reagan plan, she
states.
"I have a 36 year old friend
who has not graduated high

school. If the Reagan budget is
approved (she will be locked
into the welfare system), if she
does not finish high school
next year,'' says Radcliffe.
4000 yellow post cards to be
sent by ASLCC

All of Oregon's colleges will
participate in the postcard
campaign, Radcliffe says.
At its March 5 meeting,
LCC's Student Senate approved a resolution allocating $48
to pay for its share of the post
card campaign. There will be
one printing and LCC will get
approximately 4000 cards.
Cards will be available at
the LCC Student Resource
Center and other locations on
campus. To insure that all the
post cards get mailed, ASLCC
will keep the cards after they
are signed by students. And
students will be asked for the
six cent cost of the mailing.
"We don't want cards to be
used as book marks or be
found a year or two from now.
And six cents is not much to
spend to help insure your
education," Radcliffe says.

department needs an infusion
of new ideas and attitudes."
The department subsequently
changed leaders and is in the
process of modernizing its
program.
Roofs and parking lots will
receive attention if the serial
levy passes, also.
Health Tech and Business
buildings probably have the
worst leakage problems according to Bill Berry, vice president of Administrative Services. He says that if the levy
passes, "We'll probably get
one of them (fixed)."
The west parking lot is on
the repair agenda, also.
"We're not trying to solve
the whole problem," states
Berry. "We just want to continue to chip away."
Berry says some projects
will be taken care of whether
the levy passes or not. He said
the two aforementioned roofs
were patched and need permanent repair within two or three
years or structural damage will
occur. "We're not going to let
that happen," he stated.

Vote

March 26

LCC serial levy

Page 2 March 7-- 1985 The Torch

:r:::::~,:::L'-!a'88:::i::~1::ii=1:I:~iiT&:::::::1:::1:i~t::.::i=-

1

Ante up to fix and update LCC -- it's worth it

Editorial by Jackie Barry

TORCH Editor

Property owners will be asked to ante up for an LCC serial
levy at the end of this month,
myself included.
My tax bill will increase by
$3 or $4 per year for three
years -- a small price to pay to
an institution that rescued me

from the graveyard shift at a
donut shop. I'm already working in my field, on and off
campus.
LCC hasn't changed its funding base since 1980, although
it has tried on a few occasions.
But LCC continues to function, providing some middle
ground:
educational

::;'~i:ti~i::~:::~==:;;:::=
Marines
off campus

To the Torch:
U. S. Marine recruiters are
scheduled to visit LCC on
March 7 and 14. I a!TI deeply
opposed to the presence of official representatives of the U.
S. military on campus. Here
are a few of the reasons.
U.S. involvement in the war
in central America is wrong.
U.S. support is responsible for
propping up the brutally
r~pressive El Salvadoran
regime. Every day American
manufactured bombs are
dropped on the civilian
population in rebel controlled
areas. American military
"advisors" are the strategists
behind this campaign to bomb
the Salvadoran people into
submission.
In his book "Witness to
War," Dr. Charles Clements,
an American physician who
recently spent a year in El
Salvador tending to the victims of the bombings, reports
that the Salvadoran government is using napalm and
phosphorous against the
peasants in the countryside.
There is little doubt that these
chemicals are supplied by the
U.S.; their sole use is to burn
human beings to death.
In Nicaragua, the U.S.
government has chosen to support the contras, a marauding
band of terrorists comprised
mostly of the remnants of
Somoza's bloody National
Guard. Mark Cook, "Alert"
magazine's correspondent in
Nicaragua, reported the
testimony of Ramon Meneses,
a badly wounded survivor of
the Dec. 4 "Telcor Massacre:"
"First the contras opened
fire on the truck, then they
came aboard and bayoneted
the wounded. Then they
poured diesel fuel on the truck
and set it afire, burning alive
anyone they missed. All the
victims were civilians. There
was a mother with a small
child."
On Jan. 21 the Washington
Post Weekly reported, ''The
Nicaraguan insurgents, in particular, appear to have a policy
of killing government officials
or sympathizers regardless of
whether they are armed." The
Post also reported that the

contras killed two infants,
ages 5 months and 13 months.
These are Ronald Reagan's
"Freedom Fighters."
Opposition to U.S. State
sponsored terrorism in Central
America is desperately urgent.
One great lesson of Vietnam is
that the people can make a difference. The Marine recruiters
will be attempting to sign up
students as the possibility of a
U.S. invasion increases daily.
Take the time to express
outrage at the Reagan
Regime's policies: Marines off
campus!

Richard Wiener

Well done
Torchies
To the Torch:
The ASLCC warmly congratulates you for an outstanding display at the college's
20th birthday party last Friday. If you are having some
difficulty deciding how to
spend your $250 award, we're
always looking for new
revenue sources!!

Editor's note: Ho ho ho.
We would also like to take
this time to thank Allan
Smolker and your editorial
board for the amount of
coverage we've received this
term. A very large part of student government's effectiveness stems from our exposure to LCC students. With
the ASLCC general election
happening next term, it is important for students to be
aware of student government's
potential at LCC.
The ASLCC Senate joins
the Torch in supporting the .
March 26 LCC serial levy. We
encourage all LCC students to
vote YES to pass our levy and
stave off the serious seven percent budget cuts planned for
next year. This type of election
usually generates a light turnout and if the 7,000 plus student body votes yes . . . we
alone could pass our levy!
Lane Community College is
an outstanding institution with
national recognition and judging from the many excellent
displays last Friday, we have a
lot to be proud of! Once
again, our congratulations on
your first place award.
The ASLCC Senate
Cindy Weeldreyer, president

Something more than a high
school and something less than
a university.
And some students at LCC
already have four-year
degrees. Their four-year
degrees left them lacking in
marketable skills, in some
cases. An LCC education is
filling in the holes. Some hole
filling programs on campus include Data Processing, Electronics, and Speech and Mass
Communications.
LCC also trains people in
jobs important to the community which aren't offered

anywhere else. For example,
it's the only school in the area
that teaches auto repair and
bodywork, as well as dental
hygiene and assisting.
Funds from this levy are
slated to do a number of basic
things. One roof will probably
get repaired, that huge hole in
the west parking lot will be
history, and the Electronics
Department will be able to
purchase much needed equipment.
Electronics is a growing
field. Students graduating

VOTE on March 26

from this program can probably look forward to employment when they graduate. The
Torch pays from $50 to $100
an hour to electronics repair
personnel for maintenance
and repair.
This money won't solve
LCC's budget worries by a
long shot -- but it will help.
At some future date the tax
system might be restructured
for the better or maybe people
will just have more money in
general. But right now, it's
time to vote yes to pay a little
bit more.

VOTE on March 26

Surplus food will return
Approximately half of
the LCC student body is
eligible to receive the free
federal surplus food
distributed periodically on
the LCC campus. January
distribution served only
1,855 of these students
primarily because of lack of
volunteer effort.
The Student Resource
Center (SRC) is coordinating the next distribution scheduled for April 3

and would like volunteers
to assist in the program. If
the distribution is well staffed and organized more food
will be made available for
distribution.
Seven volunteers per
hour are needed to administer the program which
will run from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m.
Proof of residency is required to receive the food.
Anyone eligible for finan-

Mixed faculty group
to file suit against LCC
by Monte Muirhead

TORCH Staff Writer

More than 30 LCC faculty
members have signed a petition, currently being processed
in a lawsuit against the college,
which demands equal pay with
other faculty members.
The petition was originallly
distributed to 95 employees involved in several different college faculty bargaining units -the High School Completion
(HSC) Department, English as
a Second Language (ESL)
Program, the Adult Basic
Education (ABE) Department,
athletic trainers, the staff in
the Nursing Program, and
various part-time faculty
members. Because of the
several acronyms for these
groups, they are referred to as
the "alphabet group."
"I assume that they're (the
alphabet group) going to (file
lawsuit) in the next few
weeks," says Jack Hunter,
higher education consultant to
the Oregon Education
Association (OEA) in
Portland, which is representing the Alphabet group. The
LCC Education Association
(LCCEA) is an affiliate of the
OEA as well as the National
Education Association.
Hunter states that the cause
for the legal action stems from

alleged sexual discrimination,
which he says is identical to a
case that LCC was involved in
last year.
Referring to the current
case, Hunter says ''The affected faculty members are
predominantly female," alleging that '' Lane is the only
place that discriminated
against these particular classes
of female faculty members.''
Dixie Maurer-Clemons,
president of the LCCEA, the
union of LCC full-time faculty
members, says in the past LCC
has been responsive in handling such cases out of court.
She says that LCC '' separates
the people (faculty) from the
legal action,'' that LCC has
always been able to resolve internal differences in the past
without legal action being
taken.
However, Hunter feels legal
steps need to be taken in this
situation because there's an
"obligation to correct the problem."
Hunter says the law firm of
Kulongowski, Durham,
Drummond, & Columbo of
Portland is representing the
LCC alphabet faculty. He says
the firm is continuing research
into the case by reviewing
similar cases which will help
decide whether the suit will be
taken to state or federal court.

cial aid or the various forms
of public assistance (food
stamps, welfare) may
receive surplus food. Maximum monthly income for
one person can be $540 with
the income level increasing
by $188 for each additional
household member.
Persons interested in
volunteering should sign-up
in the SRC by the library
before the end of winter
term.

The

TORCH

EDITOR: Jackie Barry
ASSOC/A TE EDITOR: Ellen Platt
SPORTS EDITOR: Ron Gu/Iberg
PHOTO EDITOR: Gary Breedlove
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: David
Stein, Darren Richards, Starla Roberts,
Andy Pratt
STAFF WRITERS: Margaret Beckett,
Ann Van Camp, Darren Foss, Allan
Smolker, Kevin Harrington, Cindy
Weeldreyer, Richard Ho, Sharen
Hulegaard, Lisa Zimmerman, Brad
Jeske, Monte Muirhead
RESEARCH ASSISTANT: John Egan
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR:
Ellen Platt
PRODUCTION: Christine Woods, Mary
Jo Dieringer, Darren Richards, Da"en
Foss, Val Brown, Sherry Colden, Tom
Avery, Zeke Pryka, Sharon Hulegaard
DISTRIBUTION:
Cathy Nemeth, Darren Foss
RECEPTIONIST: Cathy Nemeth
FILE CLERK: Sherry Colden
ADVERTISING MANAGER:
Jan Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT:
Shawnita Enger
PRODUCTION AD VISER:
Dorothy Wearne
FACULTY ADVISER: Pete Peterson
The TORCH, a member of t!ze
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 balanced as possible. They appear with a byline
to indicate the reporter responsible.
News features, because of their broader
scope, may contain some judgments on
the part of the writer. They are also iden•
ti/ied 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 r.ommentaries on stories appearing
in the TORCH. They should be limited to
150 words. The editor reserves the right to
edit for libel or length. Deadline: Monday, /0a.m.
''Omnium-Gatherum'' serves as a
public announcement forum. Activities
related to LCC will be given priority.
Deadline: Friday JO a.m.
All correspondence must be typed and
signed by the writer. Mail or bring all cor•
respondence to: The TORCH, Room 105,
Center Building, 4000 E. 30th Ave.
Eugene, OR, 97405. Phone 747-4501, ext.

1655.

The Torch March 7_., 1985 Page 3

Parnell sees bright future for LCC
by Gary Breedlove

TORCH Staff Writer

'' LCC is a good testimony
that some parts of government

Re-fief for

Ethiopia

Heart of Oregon's Pledge
to Ethiopia (HOPE) and
Public Health International
(PHI) are jointly sponsoring three concerts Sunday,
March 10 in the Hult Center
with all proceeds going to
Oxfam, America for Ethiopian Famine Relief.
The event will begin with
an ecumenical invocation at
9 a.m. and will be followed
by three and four ho.or concerts and a radiothon with
performances by more than
two dozen performance
groups providing jazz,
ballet, bluegrass and rock,
as well as dance and a performance by the Clown
Company.
. Hult Center employees
are donating their labor for
the event and the Eugene
Hilton is donating lodging
and food for the out-oftown performers.
Tickets for each concert
are $12.50 general seating
and are available at the
Hult Center and Hult'
Center outlets. For more information call 687-5000 or
485-3404.

keep their promise,'' said Dale
Parnell, LCC's first president
on a return trip to LCC last
Thursday to help the college
celebrate its 20th birthday.
Parnell was LCC president
for 3 1/2 years, from
1965-1968. He had been
Superintendent of Springfield
Schools, and left the LCC post
when selected by then-Gov.
Tom McCall as the State
Superintendent of Public Instruction. He is now president
of the American Association
of Community and Junior
Colleges.
In an interview with the
TORCH last Thursday,
Parnell said from the moment
he was chosen LCC president
he and his staff "hit the
ground running. We had a
monumental task in selling the
concept of a community college to the voters.''
Support for the new college
Parnell
mixed,
was
recollected: The whole idea
been
have
could
"sandbagged" 12 times over
but was instead supported by
school
County
Lane
superintendents and by the U
of O President, Arthur Flemming.
Even though the voters had
agreed to the concept of a
community college, it was just
a notion. And Parnell gave
special credit to his staff -- and
especially to his assistant Burt
Dotson, who did a great deal
of organizing and planning --

in helping persuade voters
about the need of a community college near a major university. Through Dotson's efforts, county voters approved
a tax levy by a margin of 7 to I
to build the college campus.
Parnell said once LCC was
begun, its success depended on
the college keeping its promise, the "opportunity with
excellence" envisioned by the
first board of education.

Parnell maintains the vision
is shared by LCC Pres. Eldon

Schafer, and is the reason the
college is so successful today.
When Schafer was chosen
president in 1970, the qualities
that made him an obvious
choice were his ability to lead
and his wisdom. At. that time
in the college's history it needed the stability Schafer provid'
ed, remarked Parnell.

He also added that the improvements LCC has made in
its academic and vocational
programs, and in placement
testing, account for the high

President Schafer presents Dale Parnell with a plaque of appreciation during March 1 birthday party.

Scholarships available for minorities
by Joe W. Templeton
for the TORCH

Over 150 scholarships from
national, non-profit organizations are available for minority students in graduate and
undergraduate study and the
list is growing longer.
Multicultural Center (MCC)
work study student Nancy
Lewis compiled the list this
term. Both she and MCC
Director Kent Gorham strongly urge minority students with
a 3.0 GPA or higher to visit
the MCC Rm. 409 Center
Building in the coming weeks
and to apply for these scholarships.
Lewis says "since the application • process can be intimidating" she and the MCC
staff will be happy to help
students in securing faculty
references, writing cover letters and completing the
necessary forms.
The lists of scholarships,
which Lewis says ''will be
more complete spring term,"
are divided up by discipline
(field study) then separated into ethnic groups of Asiatic,
black, Hispanic, native
American; then further divided into graduate and
undergraduate studies.
The following organizations .
have application deadlines in
March and April for the
_1985-1986 school year:

Hole
• Woods
Oceanographic Institution
traineeships in oceanography
for undergraduates. Students
must apply at least two months before the anticipated starting date. Applicants for the
summer internship program at
Woods Hole Field Research
and Study must apply now.
• American Institute of Architects : Deadline April 2.

• Indian Fellowship Program for undergraduates in
business administration,
engineering, natural resources
or related tlelds: Deadline ·
April 5.
• Indian Health Service
scholarships for students planning a career in health
sciences: Deadline April 2.
• American Indian Law
Center-Pre Law Summer In-

stitute Scholarship: Deadline
March 15.
• Bureau of Indian Affairs
Scholarship: Deadline March
15.
• The Japanese American
Citizens League Scholarship:
Deadline March 15.
A complete list is available
at the MCC room 409 Center
building.

Private monies available

Deadlines are quickly approaching for summer and
fall financial aid, according
to The Scholarship Bank.
Students with financial
needs should begin investigating some of the
more than 25,000 private
aid sources, says Steve
Danz, director of the
Scholarship Bank. These
funds are available to
students with interests in a
number of fields, and many
do not depend on
demonstrated financial
need, as do state and
federal funds.
For example, students
with an interest in business,
law, and accounting can
receive a stipend from the
Student
Exceptional
Fellowship Fund, and apply

to the parent corporation
for full time work following
graduation.
The Scholarship Bank is
the largest private scholarship bank in the country for
and
undergraduate ·
graduate grants and loans.
The computer can help you
find sources designed just
for you, based on your major, occupational goal,
geographic desires, type of
aid requested (scholarships,
loans, summer work), and
special skills and hobbies.
According to the direccomputer
the
tor,
guarantees each student at
least fifty sources of aid. It
has been estimated that
each package of aid
represents approximately
$20,000 in potential money

for college. Private aid
comes from America's
largest foundations, corporations, unions, and
private donors and totals
approximately 500 million
dollars, or one fourth of all
available aid. Thus, it is an
extremely valuable addition
to private and state monies
available.
As an example of the
depth of the search, •the
bank reports one student
found thirty six sources for
the most unusual major of
"deep sea diver."
Students wishing to use
the search should send a
stamped, self addressed
envelope to the Scholarship
Bank, 10100 Santa Monica
No. 2600, Los Angeles,
California, 90067.

quality of education here.

Now, even with the shrinking budget and declining
enrollment, the college has a
bright future, said the past
president. He predicted
recruitment in the high schools
will relieve the enrollment problem, and that with the 1987
retirement of the original construction bond, the college will
be debt-free and free to expand.

Parnell -<cont. from page t>
high school population by
establishing a Tech-Prep
Associate Degree.
He maintained such a program would help young people
develop the competencies that
are math and science-based,
and would teach the students
how to deal with information ,
supplied by the high tech
society we live in today.
This would be accomplished, he said., by the community
college relating the needs of
real life with the theoretical,
therefore being the bridge to
serve the community.
• Without elaborating, he
said he would develop a
human resource development
strategy.
Parnell said society should
mine the human resources as
assiduously as it mines oil,
gas, gold, and silver because
. ''that is the gold and silver of
the future.''
• He would establish a closer
partnership between business
and the community college.
He would get the college minigrants to work with large
businesses and unions -- as
well as with small businesses
and high schools.
This concept is already
working, he explained. A recent Sears Foundation grant -tbe largest grant ever given to
the American Association of
Community and Junior Colleges -- to establish a National
Partnership Development
Fund.
• Parnell would change the
unintended "bad signal''
given to high school students
that LCC's ''open door
policy'' means they could do
anything they wanted in high
school and still make it in the
community college.
As a consequence, he stated
many students short-changed
themselves in preparing for
college because of the
misinterpretation.
• To compensate for the
misinterpretation, Parnell said
he would stress the exit requirements, telling students
what it takes to graduate from
LCC, and not simply how easy
it might seem to enroll. This
would put extra emphasis on
the associate and certificate
degrees which stress quality.
• Parnell's final change
would be to tell the Board of
Education to think bigger -- to
establish a football team.
After all, OSU does need a
competitor.''

Page 4 March 7-1/1, 1985 The Torch

Winquist begins to improve Electronics Dept
Analysis by John Egan

TORCH Staff Writer

"This department needs an
infusion of new ideas and attitudes,,, read the criticism last
month by the Northwest
Association of Schools and
Colleges (NASC) in its October on-campus evaluation of
LCC's Electronics Department.
Shortly after the NASC
visit, Electronics Department
Chairman Darwin Mccarroll
resigned and John Winquist
was named acting chairman.
Winquist has already started
to make his presence felt. The
fonl)er counselor and CWE
coordinator immediately
began a drive to upgrade and
improve the Electronics
Department curriculum. Backing Winquist is Associate
Dean of Instruction Jim
Piercey, and the entire Applied Technology Division.
Early in Febru~ry Winquist
gave a short description of the
department's plans to a group
of LCC staff members. Again
on Feb. 21, he expanded his
recommendations before the
staff committee of the Electronics Department, which,
along with the Lane County
Emerging Technology Task
Force, is helping Winquist
draft a proposal for improvements.
Winquist emphasizes the
need for overall improvement
in curriculum, equipment, and
instruction of the department.

He lists specific recomendations for each of its four programs. Those recomendations
included the following:
• Installing 10-15 new Computer Aided Design (CAD)
stations in the Technical
Design/Manufacturing Program;
• Adding hydraulic and
pneumatic equipment to the
Electro/Mechanical Program;
• Providing a computer
engineering option for the
Electronic Engineering
Technical program;
• And hiring a permanent
staff for the Electronic Service
Technician program.
But the first hurdle is improving the department's
financial condition. "We've
been out of money so long that
we've given up planning,"
said Winquist, who estimates
the total cost of the new program at between $500,000 to
$600,000 over a two to three
year period.
''There needs to be a
realization that quality
technical programs are more
expensive to operate,'' he added, "and that the Electronics
Department cannot afford to
be operated ·at lower than the
Fulltime Equivalent Student
college average.
At press time, on March 7,
to increase awareness of
LCC's technology plans, Winquist was to speak with the
Lane County Emerging
Technology Task Force for

final endorsement of the
working draft of recommendations for the department
programs. He will send the
draft to various industries
within the region.
The next steps will be to
meet with Vice President of
Instruction Gerald Rasmussen
and President Schafer.
Schafer will decide whether or
not the Electronics Department should apply for any
state and federal Equipment
Improvement Grants. Accor-

by Allan Smolker

they took archives, burned
books, and gutted buildings.

ASLCC Treasurer Robyn
Braverman recently returned
from an educational tour of El
Salvador and its National
University. The tour was sponsored by the United States Student Association (USSA) and
the Committee in Solidarity
with The People of El
Salvador (CJSPES). This is the
fifth part in a series of articles
describing what she saw.

And she says the government of El Salvador has done
nothing to rebuild the school._

TORCH Staff Writer

A little more than four years
ago the Salvadoran military
was ordered to occupy the National University (NUES). According to Robyn Braverman,
who spoke to people who were
there during the occupation,

Plus consumers concerned about chemical food
preservatives, and students wanting an introduction to
science major courses but who are reluctant to try
them.
Look for Sequence No. 1262 in the LCC Spring term schedule.
Monday and Wednesday 7:00--10:00 p.m. Science Room 122 taught by Charley
•
Bentz, LCC Chemistry Wizard.
For more information, call LCC Science at ext. 2446.

A literary approach to the Bible that explore.s /i1eru1:r ./<>nm all(/ genre.\
therein, biblical allusions, and modem literature 111 11·hich hih/ical i1!/l11e11ces
of pallem, theme, motij; and the like.
(fills A rts and Letters requiremenl)

Not much has changed -"During the time that we were
(in El Salvador) members of
the faculty (were) threatened .
(and) three women
(students were) raped by the
National Guard ... People are
still being murdered by the
Right Wing Death Squads
which still roam the streets.''
help from the government

• Applicants to Health OccJpations programs,
• Health Education and Physical Education Programs,
• . Environmental Technology programs,
• Elementary-Secondary Education programs,
• any program requiring a science elective,

MWF 0900 M & A 248
Instructor: Delta Sanderson
Seq. 883

Braverman says the
buildings are still ruins and the
students lack •books and supplies. "Students have xerox
copies of the books the professors smuggled out during
the occupation. And the
NUES at Santa Ana campus
have 700 students sharing four
microscopes," she says.

The university can't expect

Who needs this course, anyway?!!!

Spring Term

Piercey said Atiyeh wants
LCC to have more of an impact in the development of the
technological industry within
the area.
Then, in the immediate
future, is the Marc.ti 26 Serial
Levy. If the $510,000, threeyear levy request gets voter approval, Piercy says it would
enable the Electronics Department to ask for an initial
Ideas---<cont. on

page 11>

Educational aid needed for
South American Universities

EVENING CHEMISTRY 101

''THE BIBLE AND LITERATURE''

ding to Dean Piercey, the
department plans to apply for
"every grant we can recognize
that has the potential for any
funding."
Governor Atiyeh and the
State Lottery may also be factors in the department's new
programs: Atiyeh recently told
Piercey that he is making the
development of high-tech programs at the state's community colleges a priority, so the
department expects to apply
for lottery proceeds.

She says because Duarte's
government considers education subversive, it is unlikely
the government will fund the
university. And if the far right
wing Arina Party wins the
elections to be held this
month, Braverman says there
is no chance the university will
be funded.
Student life wiil become
more dangerous, she says,
because Arina, which has
been linked to the death
squads by the U.S. State
Department and the Catholic
Church, judges freedom of expression to be subversive, she
says.
Destruction documented

Braverman says, "(We) ...
went down so we could document the destruction of the
university'' ... and to develop

What is:
• The mark of Cain?
• A " Judas "?
• A scape goat ?

• a "doubting Thomas"?
•forbidden fruit?
• Ji/thy Lucre?

Where can you find:

What is the source of:

•an eye .J<>r an eye ?
•a ll'o(( in sheeps clothin~ ?
•the salt,~( 1he earth?

• The Lillie Foxes?
• Green Pastures?
• Measure for Measure?

• the fat <~l the land?
• the root <d all e1·il'!
•a Pr in the ointment'!

•East of Eden?
• Generation of Vipers?
• Giants in the Earth?

a material aid campaign.

They met with student
representatives and faculty,
even obtaining a list of the
things needed by every functioning university department.
Braverman takes action

Braverman says members ot
her delegation plan to appeal
to the U.S. university community to help the universities
in South America.
"We really want to focus on
students, because it is important for students to understand the plight of other
students,'' she says. So a funding campaign is just getting
underway.
She says the USSA El
Salvador delegation is going to
organize the effort through
USSA, the Central American
Student Tour (CAST), the National Network In Solidarity
With the People In Nicaragua
and Guatemala and other student organizations.
She is working on a fund
raising letter to be sent to
Associated Student governments around the country,
hoping each university or
region will pick their own fund
raising project.
She says the people she is
working with will raise money
for a microscope for the National University of El
Salvador, but the Educational
Aid Campaign will be an effort to help all of the universities in Central America.
Braverman is also working
with CAST to bring students
from Central America to the
United States.

K0i50
means HEARTBEAT

Experience it!

ftt

Eugene's Hult Center
March 15, 8 p.m .
$8 .50
Tickets: $10.50,
$6.50,

$4 .00

For ticket information phone
687-5000
or your local ticket outlet.

The Torch March 741., 1985 Page 5

WAC helps disabled 'flow through' into society
Feature by Sharen Hulegaard

TORCH Staff Writer

A young woman, her dark
hair cut in a soft pixie-like
haircut, looks up from her
work as we approach. Her
eyes are lovely. The young
woman goes back to her work,
which today is moistening
envelopes with a sponge, sealing them, and stacking them
neatly beside her.
Many of the Work Activity
Center's (WAC) clients were
born with a disability or suffered an injury at birth, but
this young woman's story is
different. She was president of
her high school graduating
class in a small nearby community. She was bright,
beautiful, had been elected
" Queen" of some local
festival, had a job in Eugene,
and was engaged to be married.
And then, on her way home
from work one night, she had
an automobile accident that
incurred such extensive brain
and neurological damage the
prognosis was that she would
be "no more than a
vegetable,'' hooked to a
machine. Since then she has
slowly moved from machine
and bed, to wheelchair, and
now to a walker.
Howard Bird, director of
the Work Activity Center,
who is taking me on this tour,
describes her as "a real
sweetheart ... she has a warm,
sweet personality, really wants
to learn, and will try any task
offered to her." And, he
describes how she occasionally
has flashbacks she
remembers briefly who she
was and how things have
changed, looks at him and
asks the painful question ''Oh
God, why am I here'!"
We wander through the
large building at 1149
Willamette St. that used to
house J afco, and is now the

delight. The WAC staff has
worked with her and trained
her to the point of being
capable of outside employment.
Bird also describes as a
"major triumph" the WAC's
recent success at bidding in the
competitive market and' securing a contract to maintain the
rest areas south of Eugene.
Dubbed "the 1-5 project,"
this contract involves four to
five WAC clients who go out
daily in the new van the center
was able to purchase for this
project,
and
learn
maintenance procedures as
well as how to test the water in
the rest areas daily for chlorine
content.
;;:l
]
Howard Bird has been with
~ LCC for 17 years. He created
j the Study Skills Center, then
; served as an Adult Basic Ed.
~ Coordinator. He took over as
~ director of the WAC three
The Downtown Center houses the Work Activity Center's
years ago.
Downtown Deli where clients learn food service.
His staff now consists of
quated cash register, which Ardice Mick, a Clerk III
tionship with.
We then move back to the • has finally begun to break, will employee who does the
be replaced with a new state- secretarial receptionist duties,
area where clients are working
of-the-arts
register.
on recycling, contracted to the
and 4.5 FTE who are specially
The deli serves students of trained aides and who work
WAC by Northwest Resource
LCC's Downtown Center as directly with the clients on a
Recycling.
•
well as drop-in community daily basis. Each client has a
Many
work
from
patrons and has expanded its very individualized program
wheelchairs, some are up movhours
so it's now open in the
ing around, but these clients
and form of therapy.
evenings from 5 to 9 p.m.
are generally the ones that are
When the Center began 10
Monday through Thursday as
the most severely disabled and
well as its daytime hours of years ago it had about six
are currently unable to handle
clients. It- now has 32 and a
8:15 a.m. to 3 p.m. five days a
work outside of the WAC.
waiting list of 44. The wait is
From the headquarters of week.
generally two years from the
the WAC, we walk down the
The young woman working
time an individual is referred
street to LCC's Downtown
the deli counter tells me proto the program.
Center, descend a flight of
udly of a new job she's just
One client, an exception to
steps, and are at the most
gotten and will start next
the
WAC's thrust to have
visable of the program's client
month. It's at a local credit
operated businesses, the
union, doing micro-filming. clients '' flow through'' and
Downtown Deli. Seven WAC
"I'm going to have an office take a position in the comclients work here, preparing
of my own,'' she said with munity, is called "Gramma."
food, learning to do table setups, and waiting on
customers. The deli business
has grown, says Bird, from
making about $22.00 a day to
"it not being unusual to have a
$300.00 day."
new home of the WAC. Bird
points out the machine that
clients operate to fill and heatseal bags of nuts for Wild
Time Nuts of Springfield - one
of the many firms or agencies
the WAC has a contract rela-

And, as the deli grows, so
does the program. A recent
purchase, paid for by the proceeds of the deli's increased
business, is a deli case, in
which a variety of items are
displayed. And soon, the anti-

.

":.A..

C

D

~

She has been with the program
since it began and is now in her
70's. Several years ago when
the staff met and decided it
was time for "Gramma" to
move out of the program and
create a space for someone
else, Bird says she was
devastated by the news. When
he asked her if she understood
why she was being retired she
said, "Yes, because I'm
retarded." Bird, and the staff,
realized at that time that if
"Gramma" were removed
from the program she would
lose her impetus for life,
might, in fact, die. Bird made
the decision that the space
created by "Gramma's"
removal was certainly not
worth the cost (of her life), so
"Gramma" will be allowed to
remain until her physical condition dictates that she must
enter a nursing home, or until
she dies.
The WAC is "funded out of
the Lane County Mental
Health Dept. which gets the
money originally from the
State Dept. of Human
Resources," states Bird.
WAC, in turn, generates 60
FTE (Full Time Equivalent
employees) a year, which
translates into revenue for
LCC "something in excess of
$60,000 from the State Dept.
of Education," he explains.
In a brochure explaining
WAC it is described as a
"cooperative public venture
involving LCC and the Oregon
Division
of
Human
Resources.'' Its purpose is
stated as existing ''to provide
training to developmentally
disabled individuals referred

WAC -

~

·

.

(cont. on page 10)

~

~

Introduction to A1nerican Folklore
Folklore in our lives
• Did you know that folk medical practices are being followed by more and more people , including some !-iealth
professionals?
• That folklore affects the way you perceive time and relate to other people?
• That folk cultures exist throughout the United States , and you probably belong to several?

Read- Listen -Exchange
•
•
•

Read an autobiography of a Sioux holy man , stories from a northern black community, folk healing practices
in southern Illinois .
Listen to records of traditional music sung and played in this country's various ethnic cultures .
Listen to each other • talk about your own folklore .

Spring Term 1984 Eng. 219 Instructor, L. Danielson
~

Q

»

Page 6 March 7-- 1985 The Torch

Breaking in a new era: The United Sta
Breakers (cont. from the cover)

mold.
Following the impressive
victory, Breakers Coach Dick
Coury and his players were
ecstatic with the crowd's
response.
"They (Portland fans) just
don't give themselves enough
credit," said Coury. "I've
always felt Portland was a bigleague city but it hasn't realized it because it doesn't have a
football team. They've put
themselves down compared to
Seattle. I hope this football
team will do away with that
feelingt:''
Kicker Tim Mazzetti summed up the cause of the
Portland fans' relentless frenzy of cheers. "Portland gets
dogged a lot. It gets skipped
over a lot. It's caught between
San Francisco and Seattle."
Saturday night's cheering was
a venting of years of frustration that made Mt. St. Helens'
venting seem like 'ol faithful.
Folks, I've attended (the
now defunct) Timbers games,
and Blazer games, and, in my
mind, Portlanders have never
done "The Wave" quite like
Saturday. It gave me
goosepimples as I stood on the
sidelines and looked up to the
stands of prehistoric Civic
Stadium, and actually realized
the coziness of the ecstatic
25,323.

Despite all the controversy
over the credibility of
dilapidated, small Civic, it actually seemed fitting for Saturday's debut.
One unidentified Breaker
commented in the locker room
after the game, ''In the Superdome 25,000 fans didn't seem
like anything, but tonight it
seemed like more than that. It
was loud."
One man who appeared
more ecstatic than the 25,323
was Portland attorney Stephen
Janik.

" I decided we
needed a new team
m town ... tonight
it was worth it ...
just look at these
fans, they deserve it.'
After leaving my spot in the
press box that hovers over the
crowd -- so I could get a better
view from the field -- I approached Janik, who was standing on a bridge suspended
over the fans. Suddenly "The
Wave'' rolled underneath us
and Janik smiled at me, hit the
railing and said, "Damnit!
That's fantastic!"
Janik was the main impetus
behind Breakers owner Joe
Canizaro's descision to bring
his franchise to Portland

Spring Term Film as Literature

Plus, Rtteod local shomings of such f iJms as :

• Amadeus • Passage to India •

•The Killing Fiel~s • The River•
• Places in the Heart•
•Recent greats
P•1u•s•:■

"On Golden Pond ..

"Chariots of Fire

11

~

Seq. No. 877, 878, 879, Instructors: J. Powell, S.
Dunne. ENG. 147 (fulfills new U of O cluster requirements).

(Canizaro decided to move his
team from New Orleans after
the USFL decided to move to a
fall season in 1986, and he
didn't want to compete with
the National Football
League's New Orleans Saints).
'' I decided we needed a
team in town and worked in
August of '84 to bring them
here," said Janik. "But back
in September and October I
was wondering, 'am I crazy
for trying to make this happen? But tonight it was worth
it ... just look at these fans,
they deserve it'. "
Saturday's game outcome
couldn't have been written any
better. The Express drew first
blood with a Tony Zendejas
field goal. Then the Breakers
scored a touchdown after
quarterback Doug Woodward
handed off to ex-Oregon Duck
fullback Vince Williams, who
quickly pitched the ball back
to Woodward, who threw a
pass in the end zone to wide
receiver Frank Lockett. The
crowd rose to its feet and
screamed -- incited by the fantastic display of fireworks
hovering above the stadium
Breakers
both
after
touchdowns.
The Express went into the
locker room at halftime with a
10-7 lead after quarterback
Steve Young scrambled past
two Breakers and dived into
the end zone.
The second half was all
Breakers. The most heralded
Breaker to date -- Buford Jordan -- rushed into the end zone
on the first play of the fourth
quarter to put the Breakers up
for good, 14-10. Fireworks
went off, the crowd rose onceagain, and it seemed like
Portland just became "Super
Bowl City.''
The ending was story book.
Express QB Young, scrambled, threw a pass that was
caught at the four-yard-line
with one second left. Time ran
out and the Breakers and fans
rushed onto the field.
At a time when the divorce
rate strikes nearly one-half of
all marriages, the Portland
Breakers - Portland fans' marriage seems sewn. Now their
longevity is up to the rest of
the USFL newlyweds.

Portland's swarming defense stopped L.A.'s running

Accept USFL
Commentary by Ron Gullberg

TORCH Spons Editor

After witnessing Saturday's
Portland Breakers USFL
game, I declare there is no
"credibility" problem in the
new league. Period.
Sportswriters have no basis
for questioning a team in
Portland, or the quality of
USFL players. Period.
And 25,000 fans declared,
"This is fun." Period.
Since the league's inception
in 1983, its quality of play has
improved markedly each
season. The USFL now owns
the rights to the last three
Heisman Trophy winners:
Herschel Walker, Mike
Rozier, and the most
celebrated, Doug Flutie.
Other notable acquisitions
since '83 include:
Gamblers
• Houston
quarterback Jim Kelly. Kelly
threw for 44 touchdowns last
season
Kelly is being compared to
the National Football League

-~CXJ~oo:S
Cvt,ENE • s ~ IV,47V~4 L.

rt,()cs

~~€$ r~U./?.4N r/

~9 Wt'llAnle l..~ e..
( htxr

OPE).J:

/lr1r~~~ ..5m11bN_)
7HRIA '1p,.. - c.Jf>>~t> 7ilES/

'TD ??IE

8"1M

Live 1'111..S" every nilc ..

,.

MZ'4AZ>$

(,t; THE

'

NI/

1<1 TU-IS

oR~t>,v MAIJ.

It's fun

Miami Dolphin's Dan Marino.
Two years ago, a person
would be lynched for that
comparison.
• The Baltimore Stars,
perhaps the best-managed and
most successful football team
anywhere over the past three
seasons (a compiled record of
35-7-1), were last year's USFL
champs and hold the rights to
all-star quarterback Chuck
Fusina and running back
Kelvin Bryant.
• The Birmingham Stallions
house two former NFL
players: Buffalo Bills' all-pro
running back Joe Cribbs, and
Pittsburgh Steelers' quarterback Cliff Stoudt.
• It would be a crime to mention quarterbacks Doug Flutie
and Jim Kelly without announcing the Los Angeles Express' Steve Young.
In my mind, Young is the
league's premier scrambling
quarterback. In Saturday's
game against Portland Young
rushed for 110 yards and one
touchdown -- remember, he is
a quarterback.
Most importantly, the
sportsmedia should give the
USFL a break.
During the preseason, sportswriters repeatedly compared
Flutie to a savior who alone
will keep the new league
afloat. KVAL's Walt Fox
went so far as to announce the .
USFL game scores under the
graphic, USFLUTIE. It's all
gone too far. I say, that's too
much pressure to place on a
22-year-old rookie.
Hey, let's let them play and
we'll sit back and enjoy.
Believe me, the USFL is credible, fun.

The The Torch March 7-JI, 1985 Page 7

?USFI.

ls Football League comes to Portland

Port/anders get (a) Jordan aftera/1
by John Egan

TORCH Sports Writer

~, holding running back Kevin Nelson to 12 yards.

In a world of massive ego's
and staggering salaries,
Portland's newest hero gave
credit to his adoring fans and
even complimented his opponents. It was a breath of
fresh air.
He's Buford Jordan.
Portlanders lost one Jordan
in the NBA college basketball
draft last season -- Michael
Jordan, whom the Blazers
skipped over, choosing Sam
Bowie instead.
But the USFL Portland
Breakers have unveiled Buford
Jordan.
Buford is just as distinctive
looking. He wears a vertical,
! rectangular patch of hair that
~
~ only reaches a couple of inches
~ up the back of his shaved
13 head. He appears to be a
.
~
~ modern-day Samurai Warner.
l And, in the place of injured
Breakers' superstar Marcus

Dupree, Buford Jordan
as
Saturday
emerged
Portland's game-breaker.
All he did Saturday was
rush for 110 yards on 17 carries and score the winning
touchdown.
"I did what I had to do," he
said during a post-game press
conference, when asked about
the added responsibility
created by Dupree's injury.
But, actually, Jordan had
nothing to prove. Often
overlooked is the fact that it
was Jordan, not Dupree, who
finished fourth in the USFL' s
total rushing stats last season,
while gaining an impressive six
yards-per-carry. Yet, it was
still Dupree, and his sevendigit contract, who received
most of the pre-season attention.
Even before the start of
Saturday night's game, I had
this feeling that the evening
was destined to belong to Jordan.

Chants of "Buu-Buu" filled
dilapidated Civic Stadium
from the moment Jordan was
introduced. "It felt great,"
said Jordan at the conference.
But he admitted he originally
mistook the "Buu's" for
boos.

Unlike many of today's
sports-studs, Jordan was cordial and gave equal time to all
the media -- he even let me
take him aside for a personal
interview.
The Breakers obviously
hope that Jordan will at least
equal his production of last
season, when only Joe Cribbs,
Kelvin Bryant, and Herschel
Walker -- great company -gained more yards rushing. In
that, his rookie season, Jordan
rushed for 198 yards against
Jacksonville for the third best
output in USFL history. He
was voted the Breakers' most
valuable player by his teammates.

Fans, Needham: We were just having fun'

Dignitaries kick-off home opener

by John Egan

TORCH Sports Writer

At some point, between the
time the skydiver landed on
the middle of Civic Stadium's
field with the game ball, and
when Portland Mayor Bud
(Whoop! Whoop!) Clark
stood on the sidelines, greeting
the Breakers players with his
usual enthusiasm -- camera in
hand -- I got the feeling this
evening was going to be
something big.
Throughout the game, the
crowd seemed to be on a collective emotional high, and
? when Portland contained the
Express on its final, failing,
~ drive of the game, for a 14-10
~ Breaker victory, the at-0' mosphere at Civic Stadium
j was like that of a state high
championship.
Q.; school
Portland Mayor Bud Clark kicks off Breakers' home season.
"With the right amount of
effort, this could be a great
The Breakers' home opener LA Express.''
Following Fr. Powers, the
success,'' said fan Ron Mitattracted a few Oregon
chell, who lives just a few
dignitaries. Among the most three political figures each
blocks from Civic. "We'll try
notable were: Governer Vic kicked a football. Breakers
to come again soon, and as
Atiyeh, Portland Mayor Bud kicker Tim Mazzetti had
Clark, Portland City Commis- nothing to worry about.
many times as we can."
sioner Mildred Schwab and
Another fan, who remained
After the match, a cheerful
Archbishop Cornelius Power.
unidentified, was already buySchwab said, "This is faning tickets at halftime for the
Before the game, Fr. Power tastic.'' And agreed that the
March 16 game. '' I think this
inspired the fans with his fiery
arrival of the Breakers would
is great," he said. "We (he
invocation. "There's no fans
be good for the city's image,
and his family) will probably
like Portland fans . . . Please as well as improve its overall
be here for every game."
help the Breakers trounce the economic picture.

What did the Breakers think
of the crowd? "That was a
noisy 25,000 fans," said
linebacker Ben Needham.

BIJOU

I

I
I
I

I
I
I

492 E. 13th. 686-2458

"A TOTAL DELIGHT... COMPLETELY
CAPTIVATING, REFRESHINGLY DIFFERENT.
Rex Reed , NEW YORK POST

****"GET READY FOR THE MOST ORIGINAL
MOVIE IN YEARS! William Wolf, GANNETT NEWSPAPERS

1'HE CiOV.f MUST BE

i

I
I

In the locker room,
Needham was all smiles. "We
were just having fun," he said.
He wasn't the only one.

.
-

a

o

C

··u"•

•

•

·o·A'-.•-~~•I•~

t·, ~··

~·•·

~-

l:•,·

Cl1984 BY TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX

~O

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q

Sun . - Thurs. 6:25 & 8:45 p.m.
Fri. - Sat. 7:15 & 9:35 p.m.
Sat. & Sun. Bargain Matinee 4 p .m.
Miser Monday $2.50
CALL FOR LATENITE SHOWTIMES
This film was made by an Independent production company (based In South
A&lca) whose only sin Is working In a country ruled by an authoritarian regime that
most of us find very repugnant. Jamie Uys, the producer / director/writer Is In NO
WAY PRO-APARTHEID. The film was made as tribute to the Kalahari peoples. If
you choose to deny yourself the experience of this unique motion picture It's your
loss. • But don't pretend that by doing so you are In any way fighting Apartheid.

-----------------------TACO
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WITH THIS COUPON BUY ONE

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good with any other offer . Cash redemption
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2621 Willamette • 343-3270

Page 8 March 7-ft, 1985 The Torch

;:~=:~~ra::'f~:=~~1.:i~~==~~1:i:~~::~::i:~~::~~=:=~r::.:.:i!r:
Dark horse cagers capture third in NWAACC
by Darren Foss

TORCH Staff Writer

LCC's men's basketball
team completed a successful
season by taking third place in
the Northwest Athletic
Association of Community
Colleges (NWAACC) Championship Tournament in
Yakima, WA last weekend.
Lane upset a well-balanced
Tacoma Titans (21-3) squad
62-60, in the quarterfinals
match on Thrusday, Feb. 28.
LCC led all the way and was
able to build a five point lead
at halftime, 31-26.
In the second half, Lane
kept its intensity, but could
never shake Tacoma. The
Titans hung tough to the end,
cutting Lane's seven-point

lead to just one, at 57-56, with
5: 14 to play. Then the LCC
Titans finally put away the
Tacoma Titans, and advanced
to the semifinals, by hitting
key baskets down the stretch.
Sophomore Kevin Bloom
led Lane's offense, scoring 19
points, hitting eight of 11 from
the field and three of four free
throws. Jerome Johnson added 16 points and eight rebounds, while Rick Kay scored
12 and pulled down five rebounds.
A dramatic blow hit LCC's
offense when Kevin Leonard
sustained a hairline fracture to
his ankle with under two
minutes to play in the game.
He was forced to sit out the
semifinal game.
LCC Coach Dale Bates
commented on the victory.
"We had some pretty good individual performances, but I

was disappointed to win by
only two points. We had done
our homework and were
prepared to win.''
Friday March 1, Lane faced
the defending NW AACC
champions, Skagit Valley Cardinals (22-6). LCC had beaten
them once during preseason,
however, this time the Cardinals came away with the victory, 85-74.
The Titans missed the
presence of team captain
Kevin Leonard. In his
absence, Lane's offense sputtered, hitting only 31 of 71
shots from the field for the
game, and trailed by as much
as 18 points. Skagit Valley
dominated most of the first
half and led by seven at
halftime, 37-30.
"We made a couple good
runs at them in the second half
as they built the lead to 12, but

CCC C IJ J J J

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Practical Culture
In German

Do you plan to travel to
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Here's a chance to
prepare yourself: Learn
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Seq.No.901
Two Transfer Credits
Center Building 4 7 6

SPRING TERM

Instructor
Karla Schultz
Tues. 7 :30-9:30 p.m.
Cen.476
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i

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~

INFORMATION

LCC's Men's Volleyball Team
will scrimmage the University
of Oregon at LCC's gym 202,
tonight at 8 p.m. No admission charged.
Attention Runners and
Coaches: This Saturday,
March 9, LCC, Athletics West
and Runner's World magazine
are co-sponsoring Training

and Strategies: Running your
best
I 0-K.
A
video
teleconference produced by
the University of Massachusettes at Boston.
The live-via-satellite program features a team of the
nation's most eminent running

DIRECTORY

authorities. They will present
the latest information on:
Running styh~ assessment;
training techniques, running
tactics, and new concepts.
Registration begins at 7:30
a.m., and the conference commences at 8:30 a.m. The cost is
$15. For more information
call LCC's Dr. Fred Loveys at
726-2215.
Attention Bowlers: PBA
bowler and University of
Oregon varsity bowling coach
Lou Bellisimo will be teaching
three spring term bowling
classes at LCC.
The class times are: 3 p.m.

"'~~~~~(!)

~~(!)~~

LCC

Science
Department

can help you design a
program 1n:
Pre-Professional Engineering
for: OSU - PSU - UP
Pre-Technical Engineering
for Hands-on Engineers.
Course and Transfer Information
Brochures
747-4501 ext 2446

we cut it to seven a couple
times. Then when we stopped
playing defense they ran up
another string of points on us
and we went cold on offense ..
. we had a hard time stopping
their quick point guards,'' said
Bates.
Fouls were the key to the
game as LCC was called for 30
to Skagit's 13. LCC was
outscored at the free throw
line 21-12.
Jerome Johnson had a
game-high 29 points. Kay added 13 points and pulled down
15 rebound~, while Pat Bodine
and Bloom scored 10 points
each. The loss snapped the
Titans four game win streak
and dropped them into the
Consolation Finals for third
place on Saturday.
LCC played its final game
of the season -- and third game
in three days -- against
Intramural Basketball
Standings

(Through March 4)
Mon.-Wed. Lg.
Wins Losses
7
Staff Plus
0
5
3
Beige Bros.
4
3
Six Pack
5
Fearsome Five 2
6
2
Gun 4x2
5
1
Electric Sex
Tue.-Th. Lg.

Sudden Impact
Hooters
Terminators
A-Team
Cutters

9
8
5
3
1

2
2
4
8
10

Intramural Basketball
League Playoff dates will
be March 11-14.

to 6 p.m. Class dates to choose
from will be Tuesday (at
Southtown Bowl), Wednesday
(at Emerald Lanes) or Thursday (at U of O Lanes).
For more sign-up information, call the Athletics Dept. at
726-2215.

Spokane,and won another
close game, 77-75 -- on a last
second layin by Eric Laakso.
The Titans controlled the
tempo and led at halftime by
seven, 43-36. LCC built its
lead to 17, 59-42, with 13:32 to
play.
LCC then planned to stall
the rest of the game, but the
plan backfired as Spokane
came back to outscore LCC
33-16, tying the game at 75-75
with 12 seconds left.
LCC called time out with
eight seconds to play and set
up the final play for Laakso.
Laakso, starting in place of
Leonard, took the in-bound
pass and drove the length of
the court for the winning
layup with two seconds left as
Lane held on for the victory
and the third place trophy.
"It was just poor ballhandling," said Coach Bates,
on why the stall didn't work.
"We passed up some shots off
the spread, and turned the ball
over a lot."
Johnson led the Titans' offense, pouring in 24 points and
collecting 12 rebounds. He
was selected as NWAACC alltournament player, while
player of the game Laakso
finished with 17 points and
three assists.
"Our freshmen did a good
job overall, I was really proud
of them .. .it was a good way to
end the year. Third in the Northwest isn't bad, but I'm not
convinced we were the third
best team there. But, with our
captain and offensive leader
(Leonard) gone, I think we
played probably as well and
accomplished as much as we
could expect."
LCC ended the season with
an impressive record of 22-9
overall (for its third straight
20-win season).
"I'm happy with the season
overall, it's been a long, hard
year. This was my mountain
team, as we had a lot of ups
and downs, peaks and valleys.
We'll be a team to reckon with
next year," said Bates.

The Torch March 7-l!f., 1985 Page 9

Gift from the Gods, Lane & C. Rider do it for people
but not for viewers
R~view by Jackie Barry

TORCH Editor

"The Gods Must Be Crazy"
is a cute movie using slapstick
routines. Produced, directed
and written by Jamie Uys and
filmed in South Africa, the
film is now showing at the Bijou Theatre.
Perhaps he or she took on
too many jobs because that's
the best I can say about this
film. It's not, in my opinion, a
worthless film. But technically
it is quite boring. Its· production values remind me of the
old silent films -- long
segments, unoriginal camera
angles, bland lighting, even extensive use of fast motion as in
the Keystone Cops genre.
The movie begins •with a
profile of the Bush people and
how their simple desert existence contrasts with the lives
of city dwellers whose
"children are sentenced to 10
to 15 years of schooling" in
order to survive in the complicated environment.
The Bush people receive a
gift from the Gods. It initially
entertains them, saves them
lots of time, but causes dissent
-- because there is only one
and everyone wants it. The
family leader decides the Gods
were absentminded (and/or
crazy) when they sent the gift
-- a Coke bottle tossed from an
airplane.
The story also includes a
pretty school teacher, a microbiologist doing his doctoral
thesis on manure, and a band
of terrorists. Their paths cross
• in the end.
Pretty cute, huh?
The Bijou Theatre sells out
most performances of this film
and, despite my affection for
the Bijou, I can't understand
why. Besides the oldfashioned technical values, the
acting is terrible, the script
seemed like a beginner's effort
and the photography was boring.

14 kt. DIAMOND •
SOLITAIRE

Perhaps the presence of
anti-apartheid demonstrators
in front of the theater is
goading people to attend. I
one
by
asked
was
demonstrator not to attend the
film because the money would
contribute to the South
African economy. He had no
knowledge of who specifically
benefited from the film but
assured me that if anyone 'in
South Africa benefited, the
apartheid forces in South
Africa would • be aided. I
found this impossible to
swallow and maybe other
viewers felt the same way.

Student's Accounts Invited

YMLIY IIIYIII CINTIII

e

DOWNTOWN

oa,1y t 30 10 s 30
Fro 9 30 10 7

which seems to be what
draws the audience into
each piece.

C. Rider Dance Co. and
Lane Dance Theatre plan to
perform together again in a
Spring concert in June
1985.
On March 14, 1985, the
dance students at LCC will
display material covered
throughout the term in an
"Open Show" in the Auxilary gym - P.E. 101 at 3
p.m.
For more information
contact Mary Seereiter at
LCC Health & P.E. Dept.

Warner Bros. and Twentieth Century Fox present
MATTHEW BRODERICK
RUTGER HAUER • MICHELLE PFEIFFER
ALAUREN SHULER PRODUCTION
ARICHARD DONNER FILM
"LADYHAWKE" LEO McKERN • JOHN WOOD Story by EDWARD KHMARA Screenplay by EDWARD KHMARA and MICHAEL THOMAS
and TOM MANKIEWICZ Music Composed and Conducted by ANDREW POWELL Photography by VITTORIO STORARO
Consultant TOM MANKIEWICZ Executive Producer HARVEY BERNHARD Produced by RICHARD DONNER an9 LAUREN SHULE~
RELEASED BY WARNER BROS.
DONNER
• tedbYRICHARD -----,
01rec
AWARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY
PG-13 =.:-:.=..::-cio:..GM~
11

. . , . _ .. , ...

c-..

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Read the Signet Paperback â–¡01 D0lJIY STEAED le

FREE SCREENING
MONDAY, MARCH 11
8:00 PM

Oa,11 10 to t . Set 1J 10
Sunday 12 to S

pulse transversing dancers
through a rhythmic ritual.
Two other pieces, also by
Seereitet, include a contemporary dance combined
with light improvization,
and an energiz.ed collage of
modern jazz.
LDT's guest artists, C.
Rider Dance Co., also
directed by Seereiter, evolved . from former LDT
•members in 1983, and remains a contributing force
to the students as educators
and performers. Propelled
by the vitality of life,
Seereiter and her dancers
have always made their
main focus "people,"

MATTHEW BRODERICK IN
ARICHARD DONNER FILM

s.......,..,

14 kt. gold ring with a full cut
sparkling diamond. Another
exclusive from Harry Ritchie.

Lane Dance Theatre and
guest performers C. Rider
Dance Co., will present a
studio concert March 12, at"'
3 p.m. in the LCC auxilary
. gym - P.E. 101.
Lane Dance Theatre is
the resident dance company
at LCC, and an extension
of the Dance Performance
class. The company will
perform dances completed
during the winter term as
group
and
solo
choreography. The entire
group will perform a new
piece choreographed by
Mary Seereiter, "Harmony
in Modern Forms." The
dance initiates as an im-

c

1985 wilTB 1-os ' •ietti Ctmry Fo, Au R,;,s 1estneo

IN c;ft Ferro THF ATAf S

THE MAYFLOWE~ THEATER

788 E. 11TH
sponsored by
EMU CULTURAL FORUM
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE
Tickets available at EMU Main Desk, EMU Recreation
Center and "Face the Music" beginning Thurs., Mar. 7.

Page 10 March 7-9, 1985 The Torch

0 mn I.um-Ga th erum------------LCC Library Gallery

Quality Child Care

The public is invited to the LCC Library Gallery. No admission is charged, the gallery is open during the academic year,
but is closed during between-term breaks. Gallery hours are 8
a.m .- 10 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m .- 5 p.m.
on Fridays.
During Feb. 20 - March 15, Eleanor Jared's fantasy drawings will be displayed, and from March 25 - April 19 Chinese
brush paintings by Kathy Hoy will be featured .

Child care enrollment is now available at the LCC Child
Development Centers, both on- and off-campus. We accept
children ages 3-5 years and cost is $1.05 per hour, per child.
For more information, contact the following lr,cations: Oncampus : Health Building 115, phone 747-4501, ext. 2524. Offcampus: Fox Hollow School, 5055 Mahalo, phone 343-0127.

KLCC's Latino Music

Photography Show at New Zone

KLCC 89-FM will present the two remaining one-hour programs during KLCC's Latino Music program "Ahora Si," on
Sunday, March 10 and 17.
"New Song" is extremely popular in Lalin American and
Europe, and enjoys a growing following in the U.S. "Voices
and Visions" features live performances from the recent Third
International Fesitval of New Song in Quito, Ecquador, which
brought together more than 100 musicians from 20 countries of
1he Americas.

Student Body Elections
ASLCC announces student body elections for the 1985-86
school year will be held durinl! spring term . There will be more
information beginning next term, stay tuned .

The New Zone Gallery is exhibiting a Photography Show
beginning March 2 and continuing through the 28 . The opening
Reception will be Saturday March 2 at 7:30 p.m. The gallery is
located at 411 High St. in Eugene.

KLCC 89-FM will present a special Women Composers Concert to commemorate International Women' s Day on March 8
at I :30 p.m. As has been KLCC 's custom, all announcing positions during March 8, International Women's Day, from ~ignon to sign-off will be filled by KLCC women announcers.

Men Against Rape

LCC' s Adult Ed Clownology class will hold a graduation
performance on Wednesday, March 13 on lhe LCC main campus. Students will perform and local dignitaries may be in attendance. For time and place contact instructor Steve Jones at
345-9292.

Antique Show and Sale
The 37th annual Antique Show and Sale, sponsored by
Evangeline Star Club of Eugene, will be held March 9 and JO in
the Auditorium Building at the Lane County Fairgrounds, 796
W. 13th St., Eugene. Times are as follows : 10 a.m.-9 p.m.,
Saturday; I I a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday. Admission is $1 per day.
For more information call 747-3513.

Soroptimist International
Rose Sale - 1985

If you 're a man interested in stopping rape and violence
against women , come to the EMU entry rooms at 7:15 every
Wednesday night. For more info call 687-1276, ask for Phil.

Volunteer Tutors Needed

The English as a second language program is seeking
volunteer tutors to help refugees and foreign students adjust to
a new language and culture. Tutoring is done on an informal
one-to-one basis and requires an interest in people and a desire
to help . No prior teaching experience is necessary. Time and
location are flexible. For more information call 484-2126 Ext.
582 or come to the LCC Downtown Center at 1059 Willamette
St.

Authorization Renewal
The "Aircraft Mechanics" program will host the FAA's An•nual, Inspectors Authorization Renewal. The seminar will be
on Thursday, March 21, in LCC's Forum Building, between 8
a.m. and 4 p.m. It will include vendors from the aviation industry, as well as the FAA. Visitors from outside the industry
are welcome to attend .

Soroptimist International of Eugene, a service club for
business and professional women, is sponsoring its 1985 Rose
Sale. One dozen long stem roses can be purchased and
delivered in the Eugene/Springfield area for $12. Sales period:
March I - April 5. Rose delivery dates are Friday, April 12, and
Saturday, April 13. This is a fundraiser for Womenspace, Lane
County Relief Nursery, and the McNair House. Call 687-0827
for more information.

International Issues Forums
The ASLCC and the Social Science Dept. will be sponsoring
the second in a series of four "International Issues Forums" on
March 13 . The topic is "Star Wars: Will the Arms Race Spread
to the Heavens?" This event will be held in the Boardroom of
the Administration Building, and will last from noon to I p.m.
Bring your lunch and discuss an important issue. Contact Joe
Kremers at ext. 2434 or the student government offices at ext.
2330 for more information.

DENTIPLAN
Prepaid Dental Plans
Sponsored by ASLCC

For People
Who Want To
Save MONEY

No charge for: visit, exam diagnosis, X
rays or teeth cleaning. Other services at

Mt. Hood National Forest needs
volunteers
The Mt. Hood National Forest, near Portland, is looking for
volunteers to work during the 1985 field season. A normal field
season is from May through October. Volunteering is a great
opportunity to gain professional training and experience in
your career discipline. The Forest Service can provide housing
and pay mileage for the use of personal vehicles on the job.
Volunteers are selected and trained for their job the same as
paid employees and have medical protection while on the job.
For applications, contact : College Placement Office, or Linda
Slimp at the Mt. Hood National Forest 2955 NW Division St.,
Gresham, Or. 97030.

Peer Advisor from U of 0

Clown graduation

Women Composers Concert

()mnium.(;â– 1llu-11m

"â– DI

Plnw submit tDlrin lo
in lht formal in "hicb ,ou
lbtm lo •p~ar. Prioril) ..-111 bt 11h·tn lo
~1 â–  1N1 t>tntJ. â–  "141 talrin "ill IN cbown on a finl-comt bui, . TORCH Nlilon rrwnt lht riabl 10 NIii for ltn11h.

A peer advisor will be here from the U of O Dept. of Human
Services, Thursday March 7. There will be a presentation between 2 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Drop in anytime. For more information call 686-3803.

Move Muscle 1985
All health conscious people are invited to participate in the
Muscular Dystrophy Association's "Move Muscle 1985" program. Anyone who exercises is encouraged to pick-up an entry
blank at participating fitness clubs. They simply recruit sponsors to make a pledged for every day they work out. All proceeds benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Assoc.

International Women's Da)
Celebration
On Saturday, March 9, the Rape Crisis Network will be
sponsoring the International Women's Day Celebration in
Eugene. The festivities begin with a performance in the EMU
Forum Room at 1:30 p.m. with "Chicana." This is a
choreopoem celebration women who have written poetry
politically under the name Chicana.
At 3 p.m . there will be a Cultural Celebration featuring
native American dancers and drummers, Filipino poetry, and
other fine local talent. There will also be information booths,
ethnic food, an auction and another performance of
"Chicana" at 8 p.m. For more information call 485-6702.

Reagan and supper

"The Reagan Budget: A Narrow View of the Future," is tht
topic of the Peace and Justice Forum on Thursday, March 7 at
7 p .m ., Cynthia Wooten will be the speaker. Prior to the
speech a low cost soup and bread supper will be served at 6
p.m. at the Central Presbyterian Church, the cost is $1.50 for
adults, and 75 cents for children. A special children's program
and free child care are offered during the forum time from 7 to
8:30 p.m. Clergy and Laity Concerned is sponsoring this free
event, for more info call 485-1755.

Job Skills Lab
The Job Skills Lab has new hours and other changes. Dropin hours for job search activities are now from 1-5 p.m.
Mon.-Fri. only. The Job Skills Lab is located in the Dislocated
Worker Resource Room, Apprenticeship Annex. For Interview
Practice appointments, there is a sign up sheet on the bulletin
board at the Job Skills Lab. in the library, room 238B.

Jewish Identity and
Contemporary Issues
The Temple Beth Israel Committee on Adult Education announces the second and third lectures in a series of five, all to
be held on Wednesdays, at 8 i,.m. , at the temple Beth Israel,
2550 Portland St., Eugene. On March 13 -- How Do Jews
Teach Their Children?-- is the focus of this lecture, given by
Dr. Bibian Olum, Professor of Counseling Psychology, U of
0 . On April 3 -- Ethnotherapy: A Search for Self-- is the topic
of this lecture, delivered by Dr. Jerry Diller, Psychologist,
formerly of the Wright Institute, Berkeley, California. Tickets
are available at the door, or by calling 343-6296.

Wildflower Walks
Beginning Thursday, March 7, and continuing through June
13, David Wagner, UO Herbariuin director, will lead informal
walks which leave from the north end of the Willamette River
Footbridge, near Autzen Stadium . All people interested in participating in these free walks can call 686-3033 for more information.

Adaptive Art Sessions Planned
A three day session for art, education , counseling and
psychology majors and professionals will be offered at LCC's
Cottage Grove center on three consecutive Saturdays in March.
Each session will focus on different special population : Emotionally disabled adults and children (March 2); mentally
disabled (March 9); and physically disabled (March 16). The
sessions are from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. with a break for lunch . The
cost is $16. The instructor is Leigh Files, who has advanced
degrees in creative arts education and special education!. To
preregister, call 1- 942-5033 .

Career Explanation
A new course in career planning called Career Exploration,
will be offered spring term . It's a middle ground course for
students who've already taken Career Planning. For more information contact Trisha Hahn, ext. 2493.

Blood, Blood, and More Blood
Over 95 percent of Americans reaching age 72 will need
blood, or one of the products derived from blood, in their
lifetime. Give blood for someone who is in need . Call 484-911 I
for an appointment.

Final exam schedule flexible
• Students having more than
two exams in one day may request a rescheduling of one exam at a different time.
Students should contact their
instructors to make this arrangement.
• Those classes which meet
at 6 p.m., or later, will have

their final exams during finals
week at their regularly
scheduled class time. If instructors need a longer period
of time to give their final, they
should contact the Scheduling
Clerk (ext. 378) in order to
avoid room conflicts with
Community Education or
other evening classes.

WOMEN
WRITER)

Reduced Rates
A

,.

,.

Individuals
Couples
Families

LCC

$39.00
$78.00
$106.00

Pick up free brochure at
Student
Resource
Center.
800-522-2601
Sylvia Plath, Sappho, Nikki Giovannie, Aphra
Behn, Margaret Cavendish, Gwendolyn
Brooks, Anne Sexton, Kate Chopin, Collette,
the Bronte sisters, Flannery O'Conner, Carson
McCullers, Virginia Woolf, Diane Wakoski
LANGUAGE ARTS Seq. 885 SPRING 1985

• Faculty members will keep
office hours each day during
final exam week. These office
hours will be given to students
prior to final exam week. Final
exams should not be given
prior to final exam week.

WAC -(cont. from page 5)

by state and local agencies ..
to address the training needs
of clients in the following
areas of skill development: Independent living, social
development, recreational,
self-care, and vocational work
experience (sheltered employment).
The WAC sells services to
various public and· private
agencies - services that range
from collating and assembling
publications (especially for City of Eugene), labeling and
sorting brochures for mailing,
packing nuts and bolts, and
boxing air fresheners.
And in all the production
areas, the WAC staff has
found innovative new ways to
speed up processes, fill contracts quickly, and as a result
enable the clients to make
more money.
Besides helping people with
varying disabilities, helping
them "flow through" into the
community in some functional
capacity, Bird says, ''my goal,
and the goal of my staff, is to
develop this program to the
point that it is selfsustaining. ''

The Torch

March 7-a, 1985 Page 11

:::;;:===~===~;,::iii::::=~=:::;;~=~::.::~~==i::s,E=
I

iE@l@T!R~ 11

1972 PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA Good condition, runs well. $900.
746-5939.
1968 DODGE STATIONWAGON.
Runs good, P.S., AM/FM Cassette
Deck. $375 or best offer. See at 1950
Hilyard, No. 5, Eugene.
1966 Datsun 4-door sedan. Low miles,
original, mint condition. Must see!
Asking $1,650, call Steve at 345-9736.
1972 VW BUS - Excellent condition
throughout. Fold down camper bed
seat. Runs excellent. $1200. 683-6501.
1974 RANGER LTD - 302, 3 speed,
shortbed, canopy, almost new tires.
Body ruff. Drive daily.485-7404.
1978 AMC CONCORD - 76,000
miles, vinyl top, aluminum wheels.
Excellent and superior condition.
746-6678.
1976 MATADOR - 2 door. Strong and
economical. 18-20 mpg. Automatic runs great! Compare at twice the
price. Asking $975. Art. 342-7098.
1973 SUPER BEETLE - new radials,
new AM/FM cassette. Factory
sunroof, 26 mpg. 689-6426.
1968 CADILLAC - all or parts. 472
engine, rebuilt turbo. 400 transmission. 741-1711.
1972 FORD WAGON V-8 Everything works. Clean, good tires,
runs great! Asking $700 obo. Call Art
at 342-7098.
1971 TOYOTA CORONA - runs
great, clean. No dents, great mpg.
$900. 726-0405.
1965 CHEVY NOVA - 6 cylinder
auto-trans. Runs well. Need some
work. $250 firm. 683-7406.
YAMAHA 125 ENDURO - Rebuilt
engine, windshield. $200. 689-1620.
Ask for Phil/ or leave message.
1965 VW BUG - excellent condition.
$2000 negotiable. 345-9436.
1975 DATSUN B210 - Excellent condition. New brakes, tires. $1200 obo.
344-5646 or 485-5/96.
WOW! /973 BLUE DATSUN P.U. New Maaco paint, chrome wheels,
awesome stereo. $950. Bill Higgins.
345-0414.
1977 HUSGVARNA 250 CR - Good
condition. $400. Eves. 345-5786.
Tom.
TOYOTA CELICA - Excellent condition. Very nice, nice price. Runs great.
345-9141.

1971 VW CAMPER VAN - Excellent
condition engine and body. Sleeps 4.
$2300. 683-8887.
1977 HONDA CIVIC - Good tires,
new battery. Under 10,000 mi. on new
engine. Asking $2300. 485-6659.
STURDY 1/2 ton FORD PICKUP Runs, needs work. Kurt Harlan.
344-5484.
1970 MUSTANG 302 PS - New front
suspension. Goodyear radials, runs
great. 344-9393 mid-afternoons.
1971 Datsun 510 Wagon - New
clutch & front brakes. Needs work runs ok. $275. Parting 1974 Honda
Civic - New clutch, valves, front end
damage can't drive. $250 offer. No
phone. Stop by 3035 Alder after 6
p.m. Leave message.
HONDA GOLD WING 1000 - Low
mi. Decked out nice. Excellent condition. 345-9141.
CLEAN 1972 DODGE COLT - 1979
engine, 25 mpg., new radials. Runs
great, AM-FM cassette. $1250.
343-3144.
/977 PLYMOUTH VOLAR£ TWO
DOOR - 72,000 miles. $1500.
747-8342.

BARGAIN AIRFARE - One way to
Denver, Chicago, Florida. $150
negotiable. Good 4-16 to 5-6.
345-7643. Evenings 345-7275.
SKIS - K-2 shorts 150 cm. Very Nice.
Nice price with bindings and poles.
345-9141.

JEWELRY, COLOGNE, FURNITURE, SMALL APPLIANCES,
TOOLS, CARS AND PARTS,
FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS. 250
Bushnell - daily.

BURTON
BACK HILL
SNOWBOARD - Used twice, asking
for $75. 747-1262 after 3 p.m.
VIOLIN - Full-size. Very nice instrument. Good orchestral tone. $200 or
offer. 484-6513.
MARTIN CLASSICAL GUITAR Model 28G with hard case. $500.
344-4938.
JO SPEED BICYCLES - For large and
small adults. Good condition. $75-60.
485-1815 evenings.
BEAUTIFUL BLACK WALNUT
DINING SET - Seats four. Chairs are
caned backs with arms. $200.
942-1648.
HAND MADE A USTRALJAN
SHEEP SKIN WATER BED
QUILTS, PILLOWS, AND RUGS Multi colors, really beautiful!
726-1363.
HAMER SPECIAL - Rosewood
fingerboard, PAF's case and strap.
$350. Charles 746-1178.
AKC
GOLDEN
COCKER
SPANIELS - Papers, 6 month old.
$50. Contact Jim Southmayd at
Agricultural Shop. Ext. 2386.
PLANE TICKET- Eugene to Chicago
or Providence. May 23. Best offer.
Creswell 1-895-2905.
OSBORNE PORTABLE COMPUTER - All software and phone
modem. $600. Firm. 345-9436.
TRACKMASTER 60 DRAFTING
MACHINE - Can handle up to "E"
prints. Good condition. Make offer.
741-1711.
304 INTERNATIONAL HEADS New valves, guides, shaved. Asking
$60. 461-2633 after 5 p.m.
PROFESSIONAL QUALITY KING
TROMBONE - Silver. In great shape.
$500 OBO. Paid over $800. 747-8599.
5' 6" BURMESE PYTHON - Needs
new home. Healthy and comes with
cage. 344-2070. After 5 p.m. call
484-6060.
SKIERS ROSSIGNOL STS 195cm
SKIS - Salmon 727 bindings, Scott
poles, $125. 345-5786 eves. Tom.
COMMODORE VJC-20 COMPUTER - With data cassette. $100 or
best offer. Call Darren 746-1799.

SPlRlTUALL Y
ORIENTED
VEGETARIAN - To share nice home
in Eugene. Three bedroom/2 bath.
$120 plus utilities. 345-0042.

HOUSEMATE WANTED - To share
spacious 3-bedroom country home.
Pleasant Hill area. Private bath.
Responsible adult. $125 plus share
utilities. 345-6245.

DIRECT INTERVENTION STAFF
needed for intensive training home for
severely handicapped adults. Teach
data-based self-help and social skills in
the home and in the community.
Knowledge or experience with
behavior management preferred.
Shifts needed: 7-3 weekends, 7-10 am
and 7-1/ pm weekdays. Apply 1893
Alder at Alvord-Taylor Houses, Inc.,
9-3 weekdays or call 686-2669 at John
Collier House.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $15,000 $50,000/yr possible. All occupations.
Call 805-687-6000 Ext. R-6150 to find
out how.
WISH RIDE FROM PLEASANT
HILLSHOPPINGAREA - Will share
car gas cost or? 746-2840. Robert Patterson.
VOLUNTEERS ARE NEEDED FOR
COMMODITY FOOD DISTRIBUTION - Wednesday, April 3. See Pat
at the Student Resource Center.
RIVER GUIDES WANTED - Summer 'Paddle raft' and 'Rowing' guides
wanted. Faculty and staff preferred.
Must have previous extensive rafting
experience. No fishing guides or inexperienced rafters. NO phone calls.
Send resume to 1935 Hayes St.
Eugene, Oregon 97405.
POUND AND SAW INSTRUCTOR
WANTED - Westmoreland Community Center is accepting applications effective February 28, through
April 5, 1985. Hourly salary is $7.
Teach basic use of hand tools for
woodworking to children 6-12 years
old on Saturdays April 20 - June 8.
For more information please contact
Deborah Thiessen at 687-5316.
DANCE INSTRUCTOR WANTED Westmoreland Community Center is
accepting applications effective
February 28, through April 5, 1985.
Hourly salary is $7. Contact Deborah
Thiessen or Dale Bergey at 687-5316.

SANYO STEREO - With loud
speakers. $220. Micro Cassette with 6
tapes. $120. Zenith Russian Camera.
$130. Call Al at 344-4627.
15 SPEED TOURING BIKE - Excellent condition, 23" frame.
"Volscycle". $200. 343-0041 eves.

1920's TO LA TE 1950's car or truck
for restoration project. Condition not
important. 683-6501.

BEAUTIFUL WEDDING DRESS With buttons, bows, and lace. Size 8.
Veil included. $125.

POP-UP TENT - Pull along trailer.
Any condition, rotted, moldy, etc. ok.
Must be cheap! 683-6501.

COURT TYPING MACHINE Comes with stand. $200. 688-2114.
Linda.

RIDERS CALIFORNIA BOUND Going to Santa Barbara for Spring
Break. For information call Jerry
461-2920.
AVAILABLE PROPERTY - Needed
to set up the Stepping Stone Lodge.
Must be 1 to 15 acres of land that
either has an existing structure or is
suitable for building, located within
the 4J School District, sewer and
water connection or acceptable well
and septic system, and a residential,
mixed residential or suburban setting
that offers privacy. Anyone knowing
of such property, please call Alan
Evans at 683-2160 or 485-3881.

I

~1111111

2 Bl!..JJROOM HOME - Near buses,
with porch and garden. $135 plus 112.
Ken 687-0559.
WANTED:
RESPONSIBLE
HOUSEMATE - To share a 4
bedroom house with 3 friends. Small
carpeted upstairs bedroom adjoining
study area. Close to Amazon Park.
$120 plus 1/4 utilities. No tobacco
please. 343-1388.

GAY AND LESBIAN
DANCE

March 8th.
9 to Midnight
$1. 50 Admission
Laure/wood Golf
Course
2700 Columbia St.

Call GALA for more
information at 686-3360

BAND TO PLAY BACKUP - For
taping two songs. Pay neg. 747-8342.

ltO.SE ih~[jfq\~N~il
•:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:•:•:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-

FOUND in LCC parking lot: One 5
month old, red point Siamese male,
very friendly. To claim, call the
Science Dept., ext. 2446, and leave a
messagl!.

LOST WHITE CONTACT CASE contacts inside. If found, call
935-1253. Ask for Patrick. Reward.
$75 REWARD FOR INFO - Leading
to return of stolen 1978 Yamaha
motorcycle. Yellow 400 Endoro.
345-0042.

li ~i â– Iâ–  !

ii

LOSE 10-29 POUNDS PER MONTH
- on the newest, all natural weight loss
program. 895-4637.
MOVING/HAULING? - Large or
small jobs, experienced, reasonable
rates, free estimates. John 343-6797.
After 5 p.m.
YARDWORK - Mowing, edging,
trimming, hauling, weeding, rototilling, eaves, clean-ups, free estimates.
John 343-6797. After 5 p.m.
ARE DRUGS A PROBLEM - in your

life? For help call:
Anonymous 341-6070

Narcotics

SINGER FOR WEDDINGS, ETC. •
Female student, 5 years training,
references. Reasonable rates.
746-6678.
HOLISTIC COUNSELING - Teeth,
body work, gestalt, rebirthing. Uplift
yourself! Low fees, references.
Richard. 343-2052 or 342-5472.
TYPING SER VICES - fast, efficient,
and reliable. Pick up & delivery at
LCC. Call 1-942-8268 or message
1-942-8441.
EXPERIENCED MECHANIC - all
makes and models. Very reasonable
rates. Call J.D. after 5 p. m. 345-6444.

Ideas --- <cont. rrom page 4)
$150,000 to provide the
generation of CAD equipment, and the means to
upgrade some of its existing
equipment as well.
Winquist says he hopes to
change the name of the department, since he the staff feel
that the current title limits the
program to electronics, while
the department is much more
diverse -- including drafting
and other engineering

Your

CHOICES
make the
difference

BIRTH CONTROL
PREGNANCY TESTS
PAP SMEARS
6.50
to 7.50
Oiaghragm Jelly $4.00
Condoms
$.25 ea.
Sponge
$1.00
Birth Control Pills

PRI VATE • PROFESSIONAL
CON VENIENT

CARPOOL AND RIDE INFORMATION - See bulletin board next to
library. Second floor Center Building
or SRC.
VOICE YOUR OPINION - On
Eugene's Economy. Fill out a survey
at the Student Resource Center.
KIDS JUST WANNA HA VE FUN!
$1 per hour. My Westmoreland apt.
Ask for Michelle 485-6045.
A. SIL VERTHORNE - How does
your name look in print? A Friend.
PA UL R. - Long time no see. Come
handcuff me. Linda.
L.D.P.L. - Need tushy and thigh
massage. Please advise on reservation
procedure. Unique.
DO YOU HA VE QUESTIONS About abortion, crisis pregnancies, or
other related subjects? For confidential advice call the Eugene Pregnancy
Hotline at 345-0400.
BARTON - What happened to lunch
last Wednesday? Do we try again?
TO 345-7545 - We know who you are.
Why are you publishing your unlisted
telephone number?
BEV, KENT, A ND BJO - Thanks for
trusting me to be the vessel through
which your messages flowed. S.H.
JIM - I miss you. Let's get together
during break! Gertrude O'Ma/ley.
MASS COMMUNICATION CL UB
MEETIN G - Tuesday, March 12, at 2
p.m. M&A 246. Help us get started.
"MG " - You 're transmestic. "Al".

technology in addition to electronics .
Other priorities include hiring a permanent department
chair, improving communication with colleges such as
Oregon State University,
Portland State University,
Oregon
Institute
of
Technology, and the University of Portland, and gradually
upgrading both the entrance
and graduation standards
within the program.

WePayTo
HelpYou!
There is no other way.
We need plasma and we will
pay to get it.
Without plasma we could
not make the life saving products you need.
Learn more about why we
pay. Contact:
Hyland Plasma Center

40 EAST 10th
EUGENE, OR 97401

(503) 683-3953
New donors bring this ad on your
first donation and receive $5 .00 in
addition to our regular donor fee .

ROBERTSON'S DRUGS
Phone 343-7715
3035 S. Hilyard St.
YOUR PRESCRIPTION
OUR MAIN CONCERN

Make an Important Contribution
Give Life • Give Plasma

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Final Exam schedule: March 18-22
M,W,F,MW,MF,WF,MWF,MUWHF,MUWH,MWHF,MUHF,MUWF

U,H,UH,UWHF

0700 or 0730

your exam day and time will be on F, 0700-0850

F, 0900-1050

0800 or 0830

your exam day and time will be on M, 0800-0950

0900 or 0930

your exam day and time will be on W, 0800-0950

H, 0800-0950

1000 or 1030

your exam day and time will be on M, 1000-1150

u,

1100orll30

your exam day and time will be on W, I000-1150

H, 1000-1150

1200 or 1230

your exam day and time will be on M, 1200-1350

u,

1300 or 1330

your exam day and time will be on W, 1200-1350

H, 1200-1350

1400 or 1430

your exam day and time will be on M, 1400-1 550

u,

1500 or 1530

your exam day and time will be on W, 1400-1550

H, 1400-1550

1600 or 1630

your exam day and time will be on M, 1600-1750

U, 1600-1750

1700 or 1730

your exam day and time will be on W, 1600-17 50

If your class is on :
and starts at
TT

1800 or LATER

-

'

u,

0800--0950

1000-1150

1200-1350

1400-1550

H, 1600-1750

Evening classes, those that meet at 1800 or later, will have final exams
during FINAL EXAM WEEK at the regularly scheduled class time.

This is the last issue of The Torch for this term. We will see you again the first week of April, have a great break.