The TORCH November 22, 1985 Page I

Board endorses " A Call To End The Threat Of War"

LCC budget shortfall looks less threatening

by Karen Irmsher

TORCH Editor

LCC's Board of Education
heard a less threatening budget
shortfall projection at its
November meeting than in October. At the same meeting,
held Wed esday Nov. 20, the

Vol. 21, No. 9

board unanimously endorsed
While this is still a serious pro'' A Call to End the Threat of • blem, the situation is an imWar."
provement over the projected
shortfall of $421,510 reported
Vice President of Ad- last month. At the October
ministrative Services Bill Berry meeting Berry said that the
said that he now projects a large shortfall might require
revenue shortfall of $93,000 involuntary lay-offs in the sprfor the 1985-86 school year.
ing.

The improved budget picture is due to a larger than expected cash carryover from
last year, and increased enrollment totals for the fall. The
recently completed 1984-85
financial audit revealed the
amount of the cash carryover.
And final fall enrollment
figures resulted in a projected
7,760 full-time students for the
year, up from the 7,650 projected in October.
But Berry warned that the
picture could change again_
when the college receives the
first of three trimesters of property tax receipts later this
month. And it could change
again when winter enrollment
figures are tallied. Although
the newly projected shortfall is
less severe, Berry said the
possibility of lay-offs still exists and that the planning process for determining where to
make cuts is still in progress.
In another board action, the
board unanimously endorsed
"The Delhi Declaration of the
Five Continent Peace Initiative," also called "A Call
to End the Threat of War.''

November 22, 1985

Greg Harpole selected as
Business Instructor of the Year
by Marilyn Meyer

TORCH Staff Writer

"It only takes one person to
start the process that will make
a difference,'' says Greg Harpole, LCC director of office
administration programs for
the Business Department.
And Harpole has made a
difference during his 15-year
career. His selection as 1985-86
Business Instructor of the
Year by the Oregon Business
Educators' Association
(OBEA) gives recognition to
his many achievements.

According to Margaret
Stamps, who chaired the
OBEA selection committee
this year, Harpole is a ''doer.''
Stamps emphasizes the importance of Harpole's research
work through Oregon State
University which "affects
teachers and in turn affects
high school and community
college students throughout
the state.''
Harpole actively participates in nine professional
organizations, four civic committees, and 29 LCC school or
department committees. He's

been involved in developing 10
LCC courses and 10 curriculums, and has worked on
LCC' s new articulation program.

In fact, OBEA Secretary
Judy Bender calls Harpole a
"role model" for students and
peers alike: "He's not afraid
to take the lead. You know
that if you're on a committee
with him, you'll get a fair deal.
He's very effective."
Students like him, too.
Former student Chris Reck
says: "He's a wonderful
teacher, and great to be
around. I have a lot of respect
for him. He really cares about
his students." Another former
student, Elva Philp, says Harpole influenced her life by giving her a solid foundation for
her accounting career. Philp
points out that the effects of
Harpole' s influence reach outside of LCC: "People in the
business community call on
him for help when they are setting up accounting systems."
LCC Board M·ember, Bill
Manley says, "I knew Greg
before he was a staff member .

. . he was an innovator then . .
. and very bright. It was a
pleasure to work with him
both then -- and now.''

for the TORCH

Will Lane Community College students soon be using a
computer to locate an apartment, find a babysitter, or
hitch a ride to school?
These would be just three of
the direct benefits to students
if the ASLCC votes to purchase a computer in the next
few weeks, according to Randy Scovel, <;hairperson of the
ASLCC Computer Committee.
Scovel says he is working
hard to persuade the three

hold-backs of the nine
member Senate who refuse to
spend $3,000 on a computer
until its value can be
demonstrated. He wants a
decision before committing
the funds, although money for
a computer was allocated in
the budget planning process
for this year.
The computer in question is
a state-of-the-art Amiga Computer. Scovel says it can run 50
small programs simultaneously, clearly a new innovation
for personal computers.
He argues its main advan-

The initiative was issued in
January of 1985 by the
Presidents of Argentina, Mexico, and the United Republic
of Tanzania, along with the
Prime Ministers of India,
Sweden and Greece. It has
since been endorsed by the
Pope, the Secretary-General
of the UN, over 125 members
of the US Congress, Physicians for Social Responsibility, and by 79 Nobel Laureates,
according to a leaflet
distributed by Eugene Attorney Rick Cleveland.
Cleveland, a speaker from
the group, Beyond War,
presented the proposal. He
said that the city of Springfield
had also endorsed the initiative.

Topnotch badminton
exhibition to feature
world class player
by Michael Spilman

TORCH Staff Writer

~

~
.D

ci5

£
'~
_ _ _...,..f
Greg Harpole, Business Instructor of the Year.
In his free time, Harpole enjoys woodworking, espetially
building furniture for his
home and toys for his sons,
Devin and Erick. His wife,
Jan, is a secretary for St.
Peters Religious Education in
Eugene.

"We would like to change
the image of the sport" says
Kenny Wong, head coach of
the U of O Badminton Team
which he started in 1980.
"People see badminton as a
backyard sport." However,
notes Wong, it is a very
demanding, disciplined game,
and an exhibition would
quickly reveal this.
A topnotch badminton exhibition will be presented by
Kenny Wong and Yao Ximing
in the LCC gymnasium on
Monday, Nov. 25, 7:30-10
p.m. Admission is free.
Ximing was a key member
of the Chinese National Badminton Team from 1980-1983.
He . won the World Cup
Doubles Championship in

ASLCC deliberates value of computer purchase
by Tom Ruggiero,

It
urges
"people,
parliaments, and governments
the world over to lend forceful
support" to finding "a
remedy to the existing situation where hundreds of
billions of dollars are spent on
nuclear arms'' while twothirds of the world lives in
poverty and often misery.

tage will be to save the ASLCC
12 to 16 hours a week in·completing tasks now performed
by senators manually. Scovel
identifies typesetting, graphic
production, word processing,
and budget processing tasks.
He also asserts the computer
could replace bulletin boards
now being used to display
housing and rides information
at the Student Resource
Center.
Scovel blames ''peoples'
fears of computers" for the
Senate's delay in voting to
purchase the computer, and
admits he'd "hate to see

ASLCC remain a computer illiterate organization.''
Martin Lewis, Student
Resource Center director,
argues, ''Students must
believe that the computer is
serving them directly, and not
bought for the convenience of
the Senate.''
Lewis cautions patience
and says the ASLCC needs
more research on purchasing
the computer, maintaining this
formula: "Its value of services
to students must be greater
than the cost of the computer.''

1983-85 and has been playing
badminton for 22 years. He
came to the U.S. last June,
1985.
Wong says Ximing is a
"world class player." In fact,
Ximing was ranked in the top
three in doubles team play between 1980-82. At present,
Ximing is a member of the U
of O Badminton Team which,
according to Wong, is ''the
best team in the Northwest."
Wong, who's been playing
badminton for 15 years, won
the U.S. National Collegiate
Doubles Championship in
1978 and possesses numerous
championship titles from contests on the West Coast. In
1973-74 he was on the Hong
Kong Junior Team. And now,
both Wong and Ximing are
sharing their immense experience with Eugene and the
U of 0.
The U of O Badminton
Club, in consort with LCC,
will host the exhibition in
order to give local badminton
lovers a chance to polish their
techniques and increase public
awareness of the sport.
A workshop for nonuniversity students will also be conducted Sunday, Nov. 24, at
LCC from noon - 5 p.m. A
$15 fee will be charged.
For more information call
Eden Lai, chairman of the U
of O Badminton Club, at
485-8041, or Kenny Wong at
686-9488.

Page 2 November 22, 1985 The TORCH

ALL
Forum: Government still fighting 'Indian Wars'
FREE

Submitted by
Guy D. Burton

Arizona. Near Big Mountain,
which rises above the mesa,
the crew was to build a barbed
wire fence across the desert.
So, here's yet another article
describing continuing injustice
But soon after their arrival,
occurring to people far, far • they were confronted by
away, and yet another Eugene
Pauline Whitesinger, a
activist telling you to give a
43-year-old Navajo widow and
damn.
mother, who ordered them off
This guest editorial is about
her land. When the foreman
the forced relocation of
responded with an obscene
thousands
of
Native
remark, she knocked him to
Americans from their
the ground and drove the crew
ancestral homes. And I am
away by hitting them with
saying, "this is about OUR
sticks and throwing dirt at
lives.-" Because when the
them.
Pauline Whitesinger's acUnited States government
tion marked a turning point in
treats US citizens with
the Navajo people's struggle
violence, denying them dignity
to hold onto the land they
and respect, it causes repercussions which ultimately affect 1 have inhabited for over 4000
years. The fence is being built
us all. So here's the scene.
as ·a result of the Navajo-Hopi
On a fall day in 1977, a
Land Settlement Act passed by
government construction crew
Congress in 1974, supposedly
set out for a remote part of
Black Mesa, at the heart of the
to settle a widely publicized,
Navajo Reservation in
but fabricated, "land

Time
•
to give
thanks
by Karen Irmsher

+.-

In the process, over 10,000
dispute." In actuality, according to many people of both self-sufficient rural Native
tribes the two peoples have no American sheepherders and
farmers -- mostly Navajos -quarrel.
The real dispute is between are being uprooted, deprived
the traditional people of both of their livelihood, and made
The removal of the
tribes
and
the
pro- landless.
people is necessary before the
development tribal councils. energy companies can take the
The tribal councils are allied
with energy interests which are minerals.
intent on getting hold of the
Most of us think that the
multi-billion dollar resources "Indian Wars" are long past.
high quality coal and The days when the White Man
uranium -- found on the land stole land, violated treaties,
that the Hopi and Navajo
deceived the Native People
Tribes have held in common.
After staging a fake range and destroyed the native
culture, were s_upposedly
war, the energy speculators documented as past history by
successfully lobbied Congress TV shows like "Wagon
to devise a "divide and con- Train,'' ''The Wild, Wild
quer" solution to the West," and "F Troop." Now
"dispute" -- split the territory, we think that we don't treat
build a-fence along the parti- Indians that way anymore,
tion line, and force the Nava- and we breathe a collective
jos on the Hopi side, and the sigh of relief and compasHopis on the Navajo side, to sionately recompensate the
survivors of a great nation for
relocate.

Memoricll tree dedicated
to past president Schafer
Commentary by Cindy Weeldreyer _
TORCH Staff Writer

Irm~:~Pie
.. change. But I digress.

I'm thankful for LCC. A
year ago (not to mention all
I like it that we have a
the years before that) I was
special time of the year to be
just another graying hippie
thankful, although I also find
wondering what to do when I
a great deal for which to give
grew up. I spent the evenings
waiting for the cats (3 of them)
thanks on a regular basis.
to rearrange their sleeping
For the past week, I've been
positions so I could watch.
intensely thankful that my
During the days, I watched the
home, family, and town aren't
chickens. For lack of a more
buried under 15 feet of mud.
definitive plan, I started takIt's something for which I'd
ing classes.
never before considered being
I was looking for the right
thankful, unlike airplane
something-to-do -- something
crashes, cyclones, earthquakes
and death by starvation.
so interesting I would fail to
I'm glad, too, that we've
notice that enough time had
nearly made it through
passed so I could legitimately
another year with neither an
eat another meal. That was
accidental nor a purposeful
fall of 1984. My brain was so
nuclear war. As a high school
shocked by the stimulation I
student, I didn't think there
could hardly sleep, but I still
was much chance I'd live to be
had no direction, and never
an adult. When I became an
missed a meal.
adult (by legal definition) I
Winter term I tried jourdidn't think I'd ever see 30.
nalism and immediately knew
I'd found my niche. Still, I
Divine intervention is the only
never forget mealtime, but
possible explanation for the
now I'm often too busy to eat.
continued existance of a planet
Maybe that's as close as I'll
with the capacity to destroy its
ever get.
human population 12 times
I'm thankful Chuck and Di
over.
This is especially amazing . have repacked their 45 royal
trunks of fashion's finest, and
given the past month's posturreturned from whence they
ing and rhetoric that both the
came. And I'm even more
USSR and the USA appear to
thankful they don't live here.
think necessary before trying
to talk to each other.
And of course I'm thankful
Maybe Nancy and Raisa can
for all the obvious things: a
settle things over tea, while no
great TORCH staff, enough
one is watching. Then they can
food, a roof over my head,
go home and cajole their
enough dry firewood for the
husbands into acting like
winter, and wool socks. I wish
reasonable human beings for a
it could be so for all people.
TORCH Editor

FOR

For 15 minutes last Monday, Nov. 18, people crowded into
the Board Room to remember LCC Pres. Emeritus Eldon
Schafer and to dedicate a species of one of the world's oldest
trees to his memory.
Last April at another campus ceremony, President Schafer
told many of the same people he was a fighter and would overcome cancer again. When I presented him with a "tree certificate'' during that retirement ceremony, I believed he would
live to see the tree planted. Fate intervened last August and the
student government tree gift instead became a memorial.
During the ceremony, his wife Lucy commented how pleased
Eldon was with the student gift and how much he loved the trees
on the LCC campus.
Later this term a plaque will formally mark the memorial tree,
which is planted on the northeast corner of the west lawn near
the Business Building. The six to seven year old gingko biloba
tree was planted about a month ago.
This little tree is almost the same age as LCC was when Eldon
Schafer became president. We can watch its growth over the
years as it reaches its fullest potential with the nurturing LCC
has to offer, in the same way Eldon Schafer watched thousands
of LCC students reach their fullest potential.
student clubs. The SAC is
NOT an ASLCC committee. It
is a campuswide committee
designed to meet at least once
a term to address students'
needs and concerns. ASLCC's
involvement is simply to help
organize a SAC each fall and
assist with SAC publicity. The
SAC elects its own chairperson
and determines its meeting
time and agenda. The SAC
quarterly report is submitted
Dear Editor,
Low cost child care, instruc- to ASLCC and is then passed
tor evaluations after each on to the LCC Administration
course, financial aid, and im- and the LCC Board of Educaproving the transfer process to tion.
The ASLCC's third and
four-year schools are just a
perhaps
final attempt to
few of the many issues that
could be addressed by the Stu- organize a SAC this year will
dent Advisory Committee be a meeting on Friday, Dec. 6
(SAC). Unfortunately, the from 2-4 p.m. in Center 480.
1985-86 SAC has yet to be • Don't let a good idea like SAC
die before it's even born. It's
organized.
Since all student senate posi- up to you!
tions are at-large positions,
LCC needs the SAC to provide
Cindy Weeldreyer
ASLCC Communications
direct student representations
from all LCC departments and • Director

Saving SAC
students'

responsibility

our past sins.
But it is clear that the Indian
Wars have never ended. The
struggle for dignity and selfdetermination continues, and
Big Mountain is just the most
recent incident.
Why is it that forced relocation is a tactic that the powerful resort to only when people
of color are the protagonists?
Isn't this just an example of
institutionalized racism identical to South Africa's
establishment of tribal
homelands?
Fundamentally, Big Mountain means an opportunity for
a government and its citizens
to learn to respect a people
whose whole way of perceiving
their journey of life is different than our own.
There will be an opportunity
to learn more about the Big
Mountain issue, when Dennis
Jennings, a Native American
who sits on the International
Indian Treaty Council and
who recently returned from
Big Mountain, speaks at
Clergy and Laity Concerned' s
Monthly Forum, Thursday,
Dec. 5, 6 p.m., at Central
Presbyterian Church, 15th and
Ferry St., Eugene.

'ffiRCH
EDITOR: Karen Jrmsher
ASSOC/A TE EDITOR:
Lisa Zimmerman
FEA TUR£ fDITOR: Ann Van Camp
SPORTS EDITOR: Darren Foss
PHOTO EDITOR: David Stein
ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR:
Jeff Haun
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ann Van
Camp, Vince Ramirez, Glennis
Pohlmann, Bob Wolfe, JRT
STAFF WRITERS: Hilary Anthony,
Mary Hunt, Brian A/vstad, Kelli Ray,
Cindy Wee/dreyer, Michael Spilman
PRODUCTION COORDJNA TOR:
Val Brown
PRODUCTION: Darren Foss, Phyllis
Mastin, Andrew Newberry, Mike
Spilman, Kim Buchanan, Rob Boehm,
Vince Ramirez, Mickey Packer, Eric
Swanson, Rosalie Epstein, Kelli Ray
DISTRIBUTION: Ann Van Camp,
Vince Ramirez
GRAPHIC ARTISTS: Val Brown, Sam
Polvado, Nik Skoog
RECEPTIONISTS: Cathy Nemeth, Judy
Springer
ADVERTISING ADVISOR:
Jan Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT:
Mark Zentner
PRODUCTION ADVISOR:
Dorothy Wearne
NEWS AND EDITORIAL ADVISOR:
Pete Peterson
The Torch is a student-managed
newspaper published on Fridays,
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 identified
with a special 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, invasion of privacy, length,
and appropriate language. Deadline:
Monday, JO a.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 correspondence to: The TORCH, Room 205,
Center Building, 4000 E. 30th Ave.
Eugene, OR, 97405. Phone 747-4501, ext.
2655.

The TORCH November 22, 1985 Page 3

Superwoman
mJ"th frazzles
women

FOOD

THOUG HT

by Kelli J. Ray

TORCH Staff Writer

Women who think they can
breeze through a life, gracefully balancing both a career and
kids, should think again.
That's the consensus of
three guest speakers who
spoke at the second noon-hour
brown -bag talk sponsored by
the Woman's Program. The
panel discussion titled
"Superwoman vs. the Rest of
Us," took place in P. E.
Room 205.
Over 50 people listened as
three panelists shared experiences on the ways women
juggle careers, families, and
self-esteem.
Wanda Kaye, a local certified public accounta.nt
(CPA), has had lots of experience juggling roles and activities. She says the
''superwoman'' syndrome
cost her a husband, a
daughter, and her self-esteem.
A few years ago, the conflicting roles got out of hand.
Kaye had to take her CPA
test, had just landed a new job
during the tax season, and was
continuing her education, all
at the same time.
At home, her daughter
made an early entry into "the
terrible teens,'' her husband
was going through a mid-life
crisis, and the whole family
was also remodeling the
house.
"I decided to put the family
on hold for a while," she says
with a wistful smile. '' 'Just
wait until after the tax season,'
I told them . . .but the end of
tax season didn't mean the
work let up."
The result, says Kaye, was
devastating. "In the space of
six months, I went through a
change in home, a change in
husband, a change in job, and
a change in daughter.
"Now I'm learning to
delegate," she says. She no
longer stays long hours at
work, and doesn't put family
second. "In terms of family,"
Kaye says, "commitment is
very important, ahd quality
time is very important.''
The second speaker, Junitta
Graham Martinez said, ''I've
always worked, since I was 5
years old. My family owned a
dry cleaning business, and
see Superwoman, page 4

There will be no
classes at LCC on
November 28, and 29, for
the
Thanksgiving
weekend.
"Over the
river and through the
woods to Grandmother's
house you go .... "

,, II! II! II!,,,,

FOR

C:

; Submitted by Beth Naylor, R.D., and Loretta Plaa, R.D.

e

:acU

LCC Nutrition Instructor

ll..

"'
Question: I don't like to drink milk. How else can I get the
·§ calcium I need?
0>You belong to quite a large club of non-milk-drinking adults.
~ Below are some suggestions that may help increase your calcium
o intake.
.c:
ll..
The calcium RDA of 800 mg may be too low and some
Last year, Betty Svarverud (left) and other Mechanics Depart- authorities are recommending 1000 mg a day and higher for
ment staff helped students (1. tor.) Michael N. Warriner, Roger women after menopause.
Wade, Fred Combie, and Greg Slater win scholarships.
The best way to meet your calcium needs is from food, since
food often presents nutrients in combinations that are beneficial
to the body. For example, the lactose (milk sugar) in milk aids
calcium absorption.
Cl)

Few apply for scholarships

by Susan Thompson

for the TORCH

LCC' s Financial Aid Office
has received information
about four scholarships so far
this year, yet if past performances are repeated, few
students will apply, says
Dorothy Nutting, financial aid
officer.
Better distribution of information would result in more
student applications, says Nutting. "It's something I've been
interested in all along, but
haven't had time to promote."
Although two deadlines
have already passed, the
Financial Aid Office has application forms .and information for two others:
• The Elks's Club Scholarship, for mature students requiring training or retraining
for a career. It offers $1,000
for one year. Deadline: Nov.
25.
• The Truman Scholarship,
for those studying government
and polic/ It offers $5,000 a
year for the student's junior
and senior years, with the
possibility of funding for two
years of graduate school.
Deadline: Dec. 1.
Students can also obtain
scholarships from sources
other than those listed with the
Financial Aid Office. LCC's
Board of Education supplies
ASLCC officers and one student from each of the 23 area
high schools with tuition
scholarships each year. And
Nutting says her office records
indicate that last year, 72
students secured their own
scholarships through other
donors, for a total of 55
scholarships valued at
$38,000.

Curtis
lllllllllllllllllllMathes

The Financial Aid Office
has a virtually untapped
potential, says Nutting.
Presently, she sends scholarship information to the LCC
department most likely to be
interested, and the department, in turn, is expected to
inform prospective candidates.
Nutting praises Mechanics
Department Secretary Betty
Svarverud for her. and her
department members' promotion of scholarship applications. As a result, four
mechanics students won
scholarships this year.
'' Last year was the first year
we've coordinated anything
for student scholarships, "says
Svarverud. "And it was fun."
And she adds, the students appreciated the help.
The Mechanics Department's success may be the exception at LCC, however.
Often the information doesn't
reach students in the departments, or the information
doesn't seem to apply.
Sometimes, says Nutting,
scholarship announcements
are broad-based, covering
several majors at LCC.
And donors place different
emphasis on GPA, financial
need, and field of study, says
Nutting.
One way to better inform
students, says Nutting, is to
release information through
the TORCH, as did last year's
Multi-Cultural Center Director Kent Gorham in promoting ethnic minority
scholarship applications.
And another possibility,
suggests Nutting, is to reserve
space on new or already existing bulletin boards.

• DAIRY PRODUCTS
Snack on cheese. If worried abut the fat and calories, try mozzarella cheese made with part skim milk.,Sprinkle parmesan •
cheese on popcorn.
Add yogurt to fruit salads, baked potatoes or tuna. Plain, 1
cup has 415 mg. calcium.
Put nonfat dry milk in muffins, breads, meatloaf or
casseroles.
·• NON DAIRY PRODUCTS
GOOD SOURCES -- Canned salmon or sardines (when the
soft bones are mashed into the fish and eaten.)
Collards, turnip greens, unhulled sesame seeds (ground in a
blender to increase digestability), blackstrap molasses and tofu
(processed with calcium).
FAIR SOURCES -- Spinach, broccoli, almonds, chard, corn
tortillas, oranges, beans, (kidney, lima, navy and soy).
• SUPPLEMENTS
When I surveyed last spring, the least expensive kind was the
store brand of calcium carbonate that has 600 mg of calcium per
tablet. It was called Calcium 600 in the two stores I checked.
Comparing costs of 1,000 mg of calcium among dif~ere~t
brands, the one just mentioned was 6 cents, Tums (which 1s
calcium carbonate) was 11 cents, Caltrate 600 was 19 cents, and
Lilly's Calcium Gluconate was $1.37 per 1000 mg.
.
. For more information, you might like to read a thoro~gh article called "Getting Enough Calcium." You may find It at the
LCC Library by asking Kathy Wiederholt for'the October, 1985
issue of the newsletter "Happenings."

Campus Ministry
Room 125 Center Bldg .
Office hours: 8:30 am. - 4:30 pm .

Stop by and ,see us
~Something is !always
going on.

In

Santa Clara Square

HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

Rent to Own the Best!
•
•

4 Yr. Warranty
No Credit Needed

•
•

V. C. R.
Stereo

•

TV

...for as little as

$5. 95 per wk.

Call Today!

461-2555

18th & Willamette St.

484-6116

Mas.le, Chargf! and v,sa welcome

Page 4 November 22, 1985 The TORCH

Superwoman,
everybody worked." And she
continued to work throughout
her marriage in which she bore
six children.
"Six children mean a lot of
·bills," she says. "It didn't
matter if we had $1,500 in the
bank -- one of the children
would fall and need exactly
$1,500 for dental bills." To
help pay those bills, Martinez
worked the night shift as a
waitress, and didn't get to bed
until 3 a.m. She says the only
way she was able to wake up at
7 a.m. every morning was by
drinking lots of water before
she went to bed, so that nature
would call and wake her up.
Although she had a live-in
housekeeper, the burden of
conflicting roles still weighed
heavily on her. She was constantly fighting exhaustion
and stress.
Now that the kids are
grown, she says she's taught
her husband that "real men
not only eat quiche, but they
can also iron their own clothes
... and cook their own
meals."
Martinez says that "coming
back to school is as much fun
as earning $100 a night in tips.
Homework beats the pants off
housework!" She adds, "I
would never go through 'super
mom' again, and if anyone ...
is thinking about it, they
should come see me first!"

ON

CAMPUS
"Teahouse" production a success

from page 3 - - - - - -

And if a woman has plans
for a career, she should hire a
hous'ekeeper, says Martinez.
"I don't think Iacocca got .
where he is by doing laundry!"
The final speaker, LCC
Counselor Marje Wynia, compares her experience to that of
a Vietnam veteran. Like
soldiers. she says, women have
followed unquestionably what
they were supposed to do.
While raising her three .
children, Wynia says she spent ,
20 years "actually believing in
superwomen.'' And like the
war veteran, she's still waiting
for the thank-you notes.
'' I believed that I had to do
it all," she says. "I couldn't
hire help; that would enslave
another woman." But now, "I
have delayed stress syndrome.
I'm processing what happened," she says.
Recently, she says, ''my
grown daughter asked me a
startling question. 'Is there
any way to raise (good, strong,
moral) children without them
consuming the mother in the
process?' "
'' I really wonder if being
superwoman will help us to actualize our own potential,"
says Wynia. She feels women
have to make a choice. Should
we be "doing something that
will endure, or will they eat it
by five?"
1

Review by Lisa Zimmerman

TORCH Associate Editor

"All right, all right! I
haven't got a chance. I guess
Uncle Sam is going into the
teahouse business," sighs
young Captain Fis by.
He was sent to Americanize
an Okinawan village but, instead, ends up striving to help
its people retain the village's
inherent beauty and simplicity.
Captain Fishy comes to this
realization halfway through
the LCC production of
''Teahouse of the August
Moon" which opened a sixperformance run Friday, Nov.
15.
From the beginning, the
odds are against Fis by, who
through a comedy of errors
has been shuffled from army
department to army department. Finally, he is put in
charge of making a thriving
democratic city out of a tiny
Okinawan village where
cricket cages and straw hats
are the major industries.
Mark Langlie, as Fishy,
plays the leading role in this
performance of John Patrick's
1954 Pulitzer Prize-winning
comedy about the American
occupation of Okinawa.
Although every member of

Curtis
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMathes

for all your

GRAPHIC
ART
SUPPLIES

HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

Why Pay More to Rent a Movie?

Ask for our

... when Curtis Mathis has over 800
movie titles, and you can rent
any two for $3. 50 .. . any day of the week/

PURPLE
BONUS CARD!

Receive $10 in
merchandise with $100
in purchases.

also ... V.C.R. Rental only $5.00
.. .any day of the week//

142 W . 8th Ave .
Eugene

Free Membership

Santa C-lara Square

Next To The Bon

461-2555

345-4001

Players (from left to right) Mark Langlie, Ben Taite/,
Conley make "Teahouse" an enjoyable performance.
the cast contributes to making
her profession. Azuma had
the performance thoroughly
one ankle bandaged Friday
enjoyable, Langlie stands out
night, and seemed to be favoras the actor who sets the pace ing it. Yet, the graceful aura of
for this production. He leaves
her Asian style was never afjust enough time for the aufected from the time she stepdience to enjoy the humor of ped daintily on the scene as a
each incident before smoothly
"gift" to Fisby, to her
moving onto the next. Ninetygraceful dance at the teahouse
nine percent of comedy is timopening ceremonies.
ing: Either you have it or you
There were the inevitable
don't -- and Langlie had it Fri- first-night flaws -- some missday night.
ed cues and mumbled lines,
Ben Taitel is effective as
and a phone that rang after
Col. Wainwright Purdy III,
cue. But the cast of over two
Fisby's over-zealous superior
dozen actors refused to allow
who spends most of his time
these errors to disrupt the conleading up to, or delivering the
tinuity of the performance.
line, ''What in the name of ocThe characters weren't held up
cupation is going on?"
by the mistakes and so, neither
Joe Pang is Sakini, Fisby's
was the audience.
interpreter and the narrator of
Members of the cast, many
the action. Pang's lines are of whom are Oriental, either
funny: just reading them spoke or mimicked Japanese.
would bring a smile to And Nancy Julian's credible
anyone's face. But Pang's costuming (military uniforms,
delivery goes beyond the runnvillagers' work
ing monologue to give his lines tattered
richly colored
clothes,
a private, humorous touch of
with Skip
together
kimonos),
oriental wisdom he shares with
sets
attractive
Hubbard's
the audience, and the August
(ranging from a simple thatchMoon .
ed hut, to the delicate beauty
Haruko Azuma is Lotus of the teahouse) create an air
Blossom, a geisha who needs a of Oriental authenticity.
teahouse in which to practice
Teahouse is directed by Stan
Elberson and he, along with
the players, should be com-.
THE
ii- ra â–  I 1r""~~ a~" - â–  a
mended for giving a performance that was not just an enjoyable comedy, but an inYour
teresting and charming one at
Convenient
that.
Alternative
There will be subsequent
performances Friday and
To The
Saturday nights, Nov. 22-23.
Post Office

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

-~ ZA

I

342-3366

174 E. BROADWAY/ EUGENE

ZONE - BEER - WINE - ESPRESSO - SALADS - SANDWI

AEGON

BANQUET F
0 L D T O W N P I Z Z A C 0.

EUGENE

174 E. Broadway
342-3366
000 TOWARD

LARGE

PIZZA

.-sh Value 1 / 20rh of One Cenr

~

~

-,-

--- _

,

- --

ONE IUCK PER PIZZA
Expires •

12-13-85

~----

- /

~1~-~ - t~~

~ LEONA_R~~_E_A V I N C I ~ - -- 14\

TITAN BU

•
•
•
•

gift wrapping
shipping
packaging
private
mail boxes

OPEN:
MON-FRI 10-6
·10-3
SAT

VALLEY RIVER WAY
Eugene, OR
485-8665

(across from El Toritos)

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

HAPPY
THANKSGIVING!!!
Love, the TORCH Staff.
(P.S. Incidentally, we're
taking the week off, so
there will be no TORCH
the week of the Nov. 25.)

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

-

The TORCH November 22, 1985 Page 5
~

I
J •E Strateg1cy·;t Pl · ·•·
ia Financial Aid k. . .
nd~>tliey
1

• • Usf .. Valeri
••

. . •.

dent

,,pro ftl

, and
ges of
comper-

f'

bull

C
bina
son.'

·Students work it out in

Vocational Rehabilitation-------"This CWE program isn't
like other CWE programs,''
says Dixie Maurer-Clemons,
coordinator of the vocational
rehabilitation career CWE
program.
In order for someone to
meet the entry requirements of
this particular CWE program
the student must have an onthe-job injury that renders the
student unable to perform at
the old job, and thus requires
he or she be retrained for
employment in a new career.
Because these students
aren't used to disabilities they
tend to push themselves too
hard, sometimes resulting in
reinj ury, says MaurerClemons.

To get started, a new student takes a kind of aptitude
test to determine the areas in
which he or she would work
well. By state law, the person
must be allowed to take 18
CWE credits per year, or 6
credits a term.
''To help students out I try
to do two things," says
Maurer-Clemons. "I try to see
that students set goals on the
job an~d in class, and work to
meet those goals."
Because only about 1/3 of
her CWE students have ever
been on a college campus, it's
important that the students
become familiar and confortable with LCC. "Becoming
an 'adult learner' means the

student is learning to keep up
with educating himself," says
Maurer-Clemons.
It
sometimes also means learning
how to evaluate one's own
values as well as the values of
others, since people needing
rehabilitation are often unable
to perform routine tasks that
they once took for granted.
This type of change in one's
life often means values must
be evaluated and reassessed.
H·owever, the success rate is
very good. "We have a 93 percent placement rate in fulltime jobs and new life styles,"
says Maurer-Clemons.

Tara Cross, beat reporter
'

Broadcasting------------Future video production
and radio broadcasting
students may be curious about
how CWE programs can be
useful to them .
CWE Coordinator Mike
Hopkinson places audio interns in local radio stations,
while more options exist for
video interns. Besides TV stations, video interns can work
at the LCC Media Services
Center, where documentaries,
interview footage, and instructional materials are produced
for various departments of the
college.
Broadcasting and Visual
Design students may earn a
maximum of 18 CWE credits
toward a degree, says Hopkinson. This varies with each major, as video majors are required to take two supervised

field experience (SFE) credits,
with an optional addition of
four as electives. Audio majors are required to take seven,
but the department has yet to
determine a maximum, says
Hopkinson.
But before becoming an unpaid intern, a student must
meet three prerequisites, says
Hopkinson: take four production classes; earn a grade of
'C' or above in each of those
four classes; and pursue an internship that is major-related.
Specific experience could also
be required if the CWE job
demands it, says Hopkinson.
CWE gives a student direction, says Hopkinson. By ap- •
plying academics to the job,
learning has more meaning,
and helps to pin-point
students' objectives more
specifically. Internships also

help with the students' transition from school to the workworld, and 60 percent of the
students stay on as permanent
employees.
Employers also have incentives for participating in
CWE, says Hopkinson, yet
not as many as would be expected. CWE does not provide
free labor. Employers must instruct, supervise, and evaluate
interns who are sometimes, as
Hopkinson says, "more in the
way than productive.''
Despite losing time and effort, employers· work with
CWE students because of their
interest in assisting education,
in sampling potential
employees, and in giving
students a chance to get ahead,
says Hopkinson.

Su Thompson, beat reporter

CWE

Students build skills, self confidence,
and work histories. They can
earn a paycheck, too.

Social Sciences-----"Vital personal and professional contacts" is one of the many
benefits students receive from CWE says CWE Coordinator Joe
Kremer of the Social Science Department.
Kremer says he screens each applicant to ensure the student is
academically proficient, is a skilled writer, has a good previous
work record, and is able to work independently. He then matches the student's skills to a specific work program, usually
working for a city, county, or state government or public administration, he says.
And "Being coordinator for the CWE program," Kremer
adds, "is a great job for an instuctor; we get to see people really
take off."
For instance, this fall term Kremer introduced John
LeMasson to his CWE supervisor -- Lane County Commissioner
Jerry Rust soon after LeMasson entered the CWE program.
LeMasson says Rust asked him to choose from among three
Lane County projects, and he picked the job of assessing recreational facilities and historical sites in Lane County to determaine
their tourism value.
LeMasson and a co-worker, Charlene McLeen (who is working toward a master's degree at the U of 0, are investigating the
tourist potential of Foley's Hotsprings (near the McKenzie
Bridge), as well as Lane County's 22 covered bridges.
He and McLeen periodically meet with Rust for debriefing
sessions and to correlate data for the McKenzie Economic Committee, LeMasson says.
He admits he experiences occasional frustration while learning
the ''bureaucratic ropes,'' and working independently means
"living without constant feedback from an instructor."
But LeMasson contends that his primary motivation is to
"educate people about the beauty in Lane County, particularly
the McKenzie tourist route, and hopefully attract tourists driving through to Expo '86, Vancouver's World's Fair, to stop and
visit.''
According to Kremer, the CWE program is a method of getting students "out of the book factory and into the real world."
Providing work experience in a student's academic major
while he is still attending school can help that student determine
if he has made the right choice, as well as build a marketable
resume, says Kremer.
The student earns one college credit for every 36 hours spent
working under the supervision of an expert in his field, says
Kremer.

Tom Ruggiero, beat reporter

Page 6 November 22, 1985 The TORCH

Try it out t
Food Services What do the Grand Canyon, the Oregon Coast,
Death Valley, and Crater Lake
Lodge have in common? Tlie
answer: Former LCC Food
Services students.
After completing the Food
Services program, "Students
are almost always placed in
jobs,'' says Food Service
CWE Coordinator Tricia
Hahn.
A student majoring in the
Food Service program can
receive one credit for every 36
hours of CWE work. First,
they're required to have 15
CWE credits in cooking or 8
CWE credits in management.
Then, they start out in entrylevel jobs and work their way
up while gaining experience,
says Hahn.
There are several benefits to
students working in a CWE
position. They are able to apply class experience to their
work situation, and have an
opportunity to gain a
reference from the CWE
employer for their resume.
Depending on the evaluation
of the student's work, the
CWE coordinator may also be
used as a reference.
The CWE coordinator visits
the job site and can offer encouragement and counseling,
but the student is still the
employee. "It is a real job,"
says Hahn. Placement opportunities vary for students~
depending on skills and class
schedules, and one common
problem for CWE students is
the difficulty in balancing
both school and work, admits
Hahn.
However, the benefits
usually outweigh the difficulties. For example, Food
Services student Rachel
Garger asked the management
at Cafe Central if she could
work on a volunteer basis
because she had no previous
experience. They were so impressed with her initiative that
they hired her as a prep cook.

Lois Grammon
beat reporter

>,
.0
0

'

0
·.c:

Doyle Akin is a mechanic at Holiday Marine Boatshop.

p,.

0

0

.c:
p,.

Sandy Zimmerman works at Star/lower Natural Foods through
the Business Department's CWE.

Agricultural/Industrial - - Students in the Agricultural
and Industrial Equipment
CWE program may work in
small engine or boat motor
repair shops, in agricultural
machine dealerships, on large
farms, dairies, or ranches, according to summer coordinator Harvey Kelm.
Kelm says, "training in
agricultural equipment makes
very versatile graduates.'' This
training includes experience
with engines, hydraulics and
motors. The students work
with agricultural equipment
from seed drills to harvesting
combines.
The trend in this program is
for students to combine their
studies with work, meeting
their required five credits in
CWE during the fall, winter,
and spring, rather than the
formerly popular summer

term. Joe Freeman coordinates placements during the
school year.
As the only agricultural
equipment repair program in ·
Oregon, LCC's graduates are
in demand across the state.
Most of these graduates will
have to relocate to find work,
according to Kelm, as Eugene
is the extreme southern tip of
the farm community in
Western Oregon.
Insuring that the CWE
placement is a learning experience, the coordinator visits
work sites regularly: "We'll
pull a student if we find he is
not getting a chance to do
anything except clean parts,''
says Kelm. But the bulk of the
placements benefit students-providing both experience and
pay in their chosen field.
Hilary Anthony
beat reporter

]ournali
Denise A
Government
biweekly ''Grape~
Abrams
KPNW's news
She feels d
professiori
But, her CW
Abrams plans t
Students interes1

Flight Technolog J~------The Flight Tech program has a 90 percent job placement rate
for its graduates, and is booked to capacity for at least five
years, says Bob Way, department chairman of CWE, and CWE
coordinator for Flight Technology.
He helps prepare Flight Tech students for jobs by placing
them in work experience sites. "We have students working in the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) tower, and for the
Weather Bureau," says Way, "but most of the placement opportunities we handle involve private companies that rent
airplanes, and are looking for pilots." •
According to Way, the only prerequisite for placement-is that
the student must be in the advanced flight technology program.
And when placed, he/she is limited to 18 CWE credits.
The biggest success Way encounters, is when a student lands a
permanent job with the company he/she has been working with
through the CWE program. "The experience is used to the advantage of the student," says Way.
But there are occasional problems with the placements.
Sometimes students are assigned to different types of work
than CWE coordinators expected when arrangements were first
made. When this happens, the employers are contacted and
reminded to make sure the students are doing the correct job.
Or sometimes it's a problem with the student not being comfortable with the type of work he/she is doing. In that case, a
more suitable job will be given.
Wayne Magaway
beat reporter

Julie Hein gets nursing experience at Sacred Heart In~

The TORCH November 22, 1985 Page 7

through

CWE

Early Childhood Development"Students enrolled in the
Early Childhood Education
(ECE) program find the CWE
•plan a valuable experience and
learn a great deal from their
placements,'' says Frances
Clark, the ECE CWE coordinator.
Students can receive up to
28 credits in CWE, 18 in lab
skills and 10 for community
work. ''This is an exceptional
amount for ECE students, but
a necessity to fully understand
the field and all that it involves," says Clark.
The supervisor visits each
job site during the term to

evaluate student performance.
Students write follow-up
reports and meet once a week
to discuss their problems and
accomplishments. If, at the
end of one year, students do
not wish to continue they can
receive a one-year certificate
of completion for their training.
The placement opportunities and success associated
with the ECE program are
"tremendous," says Clark,
and CWE greatly benefits each
person it involves.
Kerri Huston
beat reporter

Respiratory Therap)"_- - - Many respiratory therapy
students face a big problem.
They can't get a job in their
field unless they have experience, and they can't get experience without a job. LCC
runs one of only two
respiratory therapy programs
in Oregon (Mount Hood Community College runs the
other), and neatly solves this
catch-22 with the help of
CWE.
Doug White, CWE coordinator for the Respiratory·
Therapy Program, says CWE
offers students many rewards,
but that the greatest is that of
providing a smoother transi-

>,

..c
0

0

..c:

>ugh

ll..

Kelly Loughey clowns around for children from The Clown Company.

irnalism
Denise Abrams, a mass communications major, works in the ASLCC Student
overnment Office on the top floor of the Center Building, editing the ASLCC's
ly "Grapevine" newsletter. Her work nets three hours of CWE credit under the
supervision of journalism instructor Pete Peterson.
Abrams notes that she has gained previous journalism experience working in
llW's news department, and has also logged some hours at LCC's campus radio
station, KLCC-FM.
She feels that her CWE experience has given her personal success, increased her
professionalism, and furthered her interest in mass communications, as well as
improved her writing and publicity skills.
lit, her CWE post has a negative side too. She's the only person working on the
"GV," which limits her information-gathering capabilitfos.
ims plans to continue her studies at a four-year university, her plans for a mass
communications career firmly entrenched.
~nts interested in Journalism CWE should contact Pete Peterson for Journalism
CWE information at 205 Center (TORCH office), ext. 2655.

tion between the classroom
setting and that of the
workplace.
Participants are usually
placed in local area hospitals,
where they try to accomplish
two goals: ''One, find out
more about the occupation,
and two, relate what they've
learned in the Respiratory
Therapy Program to their experience in the hospital."
If you are a student in the
Respiratory Therapy Program
who would like more information about placement opportunities, contact Doug White,
ext. 2617.
Kelli Ray
beat reporter

Doug Howard
beat reporter

p erfOrm ing Arts

~

0

~

..c

0
r:Q
>,

..c
0

0

..c:

t Heart Intensive Care Unit.

ll..

Patrick Torelle, coordinator
of the Performing Arts CWE
program oversees 15 CWE
students in theatre and music
activities. Performing Arts
majors are placed in a variety
of job situations, depending
on the concentration of study.
Placement opportunities include working in a music
store, helping in the LCC box
office, making costumes and
props for the production set,
helping backstage in the LCC
theatre productions, and being

Steve Mansker edits video for KVAL 's news programs.

a clown for parties and
celebrations.
Torelle says students participating in the CWE programs go through ''normal adjustments" in each job and
''they learn how to deal with
added responsibilities and
stress.''
When asked about the .
amount of follow-up supervision after job placement,
Torelle says "it's hard to say:
some of these students I see on
a daily basis." Each student is

required to keep a journal,
and Torelle meets twice a term
with each to evaluate the situation. He also checks in
regularly with each student's
employer.
Torelle thinks the CWE programs are a good opportunity
for students who have never
had a job or work experience.
" ... It's also a great advantage
for students to have a gobetween man to settle any problems that may arise," during
his/her first experience.
Kristin Soto
beat, reporter

Page 8 November 22, 19.85 The TORCH

Marked for assassination, Salvadoran students
tell of their ,university's struggle to survive
by Karen Irmsher

TORCH Editor

Two Salvadoran students
who visited LCC last week
stand a good chance of being
tortured and/ or murdered
when they return to El
Salvador this week.
On July 12, the names of
both students, along with
those of nine other members
of the University of El
Salvador community, appeared on a death squad hit
list published in a major
newspaper.
Rufino Antonio Quezada,

- person ,who is not of the more than a justification,"
moneyed class. And the U of
said Quezad~_.
ES is the only institution that
In 1982 some of the
opens its doors to the children
students, faculty and adof the common people, he
minis tr a ti on held secret
claimed.
meetings and made plans to
begin "Study in Exile." They
''The object of these visits is
began meeting in private
to construct a series of sister
relationships
between . homes and rented buildings,
and demanding that the
American colleges and the
government return their camUniversity of El Salvador (U
pus to them. Quezada said
of ES) in which students,
that
the
subsequent
faculty and staff will support
demilitarization
of
the univerwhat we are trying to do,"
sity in May of 1984 was due to
said Rosales, a fourth year
both domestic and internamedical student who has spent
tional pressure.
two years in jail due to his stu-

•Salvadoran student leaders Rufino Antonio Quezada and Jose rodolfo Rosales -- death squad
targets.
president of the General
Association of Salvadoran
University Students (AGEUS),
and Jose Rodolfo Rosales,
vice president, have spent the
past six weeks visiting colleges
and universities throughout
the United States. Quezada
spoke to approximately 40
LCC students last Wednesday,
Nov. 13, in Center 478.
Rosales spoke the day before
at a noon-hour press conference and reception at the
Black Angus Restaurant.
He said that the fundamental base of the work of their
university is to educate professionals who will help in the
development of the country.
But under the current government, a college education is
considered subversive for a

dent organizing.
From June of 1980 until
May of 1984 the Salvadoran
military occupied and
destroyed much of the university. During that time, more
than 715 students were
assassinated, more than 300
''disappeared," and an
undetermined number were
captured. This military invasion was ordered by Napoleon
Duarte, El Salvador's current
president, just nine days
before he took office, said
Quezada, an agronomy
(scientific agriculture) student.
''The government said the
University was a center of
subversion and it was
necessary to murder the
students · and professors. But
people knew this was nothing

~e
~'Ci~e 'd'<.''

o~~-" ~,;;.~ ~e~
. ~~'(Yo~
~ '3-~

e~

\O<.

~o~

OJ,, Dcihltn4 .. ·

do ~1t' my
Shopplfli1 c,f
,Ouch of CJz,ss !1.
I

Touch of Class Clothing

Mon.-Fri. I 0:00-5:30 / Sat. I 0:00-5:00

2650 Willamette • 34 3-0095

Cash Paid for Clot/ting

But the campus was returned in lamentable condition, he
said. Buildings were partly
destroyed; books, and equipment were stolen or destroyed.
Only 20 microscopes are left
of the 500 that once served the
science departments and
medical school. The most conservative estimates place the
•
.

Let's
ask
the
comet

Dear Annabanana,
I'm having an argument
with my instructor. She says
the comet coming through is
Halley's (hal-eez), l say it's
Halley's (hail-eez). For
heaven's sake, it's not like
tom-aye-toe,
tom-ahhtoe ... this is a guy's name! So
which is it? I've got a $5 bet
riding on this one!
Sincerely,
Always Up-to-Date

Dear Up T.D.,
Well, you've been right for
a number of years, but your
instructor .is right this year.
Sorry about the five bucks.
And according to British
author Nigel Calder (would
you like to bet on the several
ways his name might be pronounced?), the controversy
over Halley's name isn't new.
But it's getting more attention
this 27th passing because more
broadcast news people have
see Comet, page 10

Thanksgiving
Sale

:
•

cost of reconstruction at $30
to $40 million, says a printed
hand-out distributed by the
touring Salvadorans. And the
government will neither take
responsibility for the damage
nor resume funding its operation, as required by the
Salvadoran constitution, according to Quezada.
Over 22,000 students are
now enrolled in this university,
some in buildings without
walls, rooms without desks.
Few textbooks are available
and it is not uncommon for
300 students to share one
book, said Quezada.
Before the occupation the
university had a student
population of 30,000.
According to Quezada, the
university community also
serves a broader function. In a
country where criticism of the
government is violently
repressed, the university is the
only large institution which is
still attempting to plan,
prepare, and speak for the
long term needs of the common people.
Rosales said-that the formation of strong bonds with
university student and professional organizations in the US
gives the U of ES greater
credibility with the Duarte
government, especially since
that government receives a
great deal of financial support
from the U.S.
U of O student and former
ASLCC President Bryan
Moore announced at the LCC
talk that the ASLCC last year
declared itself a sister college
to the U of ES for this reason.

,,,,,--

Open 8-11 daily
at 24th & Hilyard

UN'~ ••
NATUR
FO

343-9142

Chestnuts -- Local, Organic

reg. $2.79/Ib.

Sale $1.99/lb.

Just slit and bake at 3 75 degrees for 20 min.

Natural Stuffing Mix, holiday special only $1.49
Knuden's Natural Apple Juice, reg. S4.29 Sale $2.99

Holiday Wines

Fetzer Sundial Chardonnay

reg.

'"'A Best Buy--a fresh, clean, rich Chardonnay"

ss.2s Sale $5.95

Knudsen-Erath 1979 Reserve Chardonnay
reg. s1.5o Sale $5.50
Mount Elise Wash. Gamay Beaujolais
reg. S4.75 Sale $3.95

The TORCH November 22, 1985 Page 9

SPORTS

Spikers end season with win
by Darren Foss

TORCH Sports Editor

The Titans volleyball team
closed out their hard-luck
season on the positive side by
upsetting the playoff bound
Chemeketa Chiefs in three
straight games, 15-6, 16-14,
15-9 at home last Saturday,
Nov. 16.
"We played one of our best
matches of the year considering the caliber of what
Chemeketa's been all year.
They're a strong tea~ with the
third best record in the league.
They gave us one good game
(game two) out of the three,''
commented Coach Steve
Tornblom on the team's
season-ending win.

including two sweeps last
week. One by the league
leading Southwestern Oregon
(SWOCC) Lakers on Wednesday, Nov. 13, at Coos Bay,

"It was nice for the girls to
win the last game of the
season, against a good team,
and in three straight games,"
said a pleased Tornblom.

The win gave Lane a final •
record of 10-19-3 overall and
2-10 (seventh place) in
NWAACC Region IV play.
Ironically, the Titans two
league victories came at both
ends of the league season, the
beginning and the end, with a
frustrating losing skid inbetween.
The win snapped the Titans
IO-league match losing streak,

and the other to the Umpqua
Timberwomen on Friday
night, Nov. 15, at home.
Ignoring league play, the
team's non-league record
wasn't bad. They finished only
one game below .500 with an
8-9-3 win-loss-tie record.

~J~ . . . . . .

::~:

190
85 110
JOO 130
110

l>OUlll

OUIIM

New at
788 West 7th Ave.

(Between Monroe & Madison)
Featuring

Chef K., Hing Tom
23 years experience with
Hunan & Szechwan
Cuisine
Hot & Spicy Dishes
from the •
Heartland of China.
Also, Vegetarian Dishes
Phone 343-7658

~me.ftdiiii.s

~

r---------•
WANTED:
343-5311

I
I
I Delivery Driver I
II • Car
II
I •Insurance . 1~
]1
I Must
~ p{ n":/ l1
I be over 18 l;~~ )I
TRACK

I

1
1

TowN

Af,,1'~erson ':~.z.~.~

--------1809 Franklin Blvd.

I

.II

Tornblom went back to the
5-1 offense -- which let Faye
Moniz set the whole game instead of splitting time with
Carla May, who played allaround. Sue Schreiber was
back in the starting line-up,
fully recovered from her wrist
injury.
According to Tornblom
Moniz had one of her best
matches of the season collecting 4 kills on 6 attempts as a
setter, 23 assists, and climbed
the golden ladder for a
personal-best 5 stuff blocks
and 3 ace serves for an excellent all-around game.
Other statistical leaders included Schreiber who led the
team in kills with 12 while contributing 4 stuff blocks, 14
digs and had a perfect 12 for
12 serving night as she looked
good in the back row. As a
team the Titans had a seasonhigh 14 stuff blocks against a
taller Chemeketa team. Joan
Haffner had a good serving
night connecting on 22 of 24
with 3 aces.
"One of the most pleasing
things all year was to end up
with one of our best blocking
games," commented Tornblom. "We were confident
and pretty cocky about it all
match."
Tornblom gave every girl on
the team a chance to play in
the final match, and in the
process the Titans won, which
made the match that much
sweeter after a pretty sour
season.
Even though the team had a
losing season Coach Tornblom was impressed with the
women who never gave up, remained optomistic, stuck with
it to the end and gave a lot to
the program.

Intramural three-on-three
hoop title goes to _S taff Plus
by Darren Foss

sistant in the second half to
win by 16.

TORCH Sports Editor

The LCC Intramural Program is going strong this year
A new three-on-three men's
under the leadership of Bob
intramural cross court league
Foster. So far, during the Fall
started up last Monday, Nov.
term, the department has had
18, according to Foster, and
both golf and bowling touranother 70 students are getting
naments and half a tennis _ an opportunity to play. ''We
tournament (which is yet to be
have the same amount of
finished due to rain), and an
teams, some new teams came
intramural half court threein, (and) some old teams dropped out," commented Foster.
on-three basketball league.
The basketball league consisted of 14 teams -- eight playing on Monday and Wednesday and an alternate six teams
playing on Tuesday and
Thursday. Each team had five
players giving 70 LCC
students and/ or staff members
a chance to show their stuff.
Last week the league held its
Championship Game with a
team made up of intramural
office staff members, calling
themselves Staff Plus,
defeated Sudden Impact in a
high scoring battle, 112-96.
Staff Plus held an 11 point
halftime lead, then stayed con-

Other upcoming events include Wednesday, Nov. 27,
the Intramural Department
will be getting into the
Thanksgiving spirit by sponsoring "The Turkey Trot" in
which runners must predict
what their time will be on a
secret course to be named the
day of the run. The people
whose guesses are closest to
their actual time will win a
turkey. "Last year the department had nine turkeys for
prizes. It will probably be near
that many again this year,''
commented Foster. "We're
expecting a pretty good tur- .
nout for that."

Foss' Football Forecast
Saturday, Nov. 23:
Favorite
Point Spread
Underdog
OREGON··········
by 14 over·············
Oregon State
Sunday, Nov. 24:
Miami ••••••••••••• by 14 over· • • • • • • • • • • • BUFFALO
San Diego• •••••••• by 10 over.···: .······HOUSTON
L. A. RAMS•••.-•• by 7 over • • • • .. • •• • • • Green Bay
DALLAS • • • • • • • • ··by 3 over • • • • • • • • • • • • Philadelphia

Last Week's Record
W- L- T- Pct.
3- 2- 0- .600

Overall Record
W- L- T- Pct.
24- 16- 0- .600

Home teams in CAPS.
II,.

• MaJor Brand Gasoline at a
Discount Price
• Most locations open 24
hours
• Mastercard & Visa
Accepted
• Check cashing Program
• Fu II service
• A leader in the
community for over
25 years!

Sunny saves!
PLUsSunn~
ffl§: MARKET
BASKET

convenience
grocery stores at
many locations!

,
•

·Page

io -N~~e~ber '22, 1985 Th~ TORC°:iI

TORCH
-'t\\\

th~

Photo Contest

i

I

L
~

ASSIGNMENT THEME: "Holiday Hams"
DEADLINE: Dec. 2
ENTRY RULES:

l

{

; ,~

1. •Amateur photographers only, one entry per week
2 . Entry must illustrate "The Assignment Theme"
3. Entries must be Black and White only
a. Prints must be 8 x 10 size
b. Submit NO negatives
c. Photographer retains ownership

h·"'-'·"''_•.r.PF!s

·

-~

V~;;_<~•'.,>;.:C~l,~,x:c~:.'.t~'.i⇒

4. Submit entry to the TORCH office (CEN
by deadline for each assignment. No exceptions.

~

:::!

?

·rr('('ll

t'VCl"e,

~ilrn. St''f'v 1,· c·

lactts

dot
dotson's

~~ /

l"fAI'DRUGAND
STORE
::,-â– 

C4MERACEHTER

Comet,-,rom

.,,,.,.,
"""

Photo Contest: David Renfro 's prize winning entry .

::::U:ME',T ~ COLORCHIIOME

pages

dealt with it. (And they've
decided it's Halley (rhyming
with alley). Your instructor no
doubt heard it straight from
Tom Brokaw.
In his book, ''The Comet Is
Coming," Calder says that
Halley (rhyming with alley) is
obviously correct "for anyone
accustomed to the peculiarities
of English spelling." (Of
course I'm reading Calder's
explanation, not hearing him
say it outloud. So I wonder if
the British aren't smugly confusing the issue even more
when they literally say
"alley," dropping the H's as
they do over there.)
Calder goes on to say Halley
(rhyming with bailey) is
"often preferred by those who
grew up with the pop group
known as Bill Haley and the
Comets." (Notice the slight
difference in Bill's name,
however.) And here's a little
trivia; Feb. 9, when the comet

makes its closest approach to
the sun, will be the fifth anniversary of the death of Bill
Haley. Remember, he's one of
rock music's founding fathers.
And we do know the comet is
made up of lots of rock.
One of Halley's biographers
apparently favored Halley
(rhyming with bawley), "on
the grounds that the
astronomer's name was
sometimes spelt (sic) Hawley;
but then it was also spelt
Hayley or Hally, on occasion.''
Calder did what any good
research author would do -- he
had his assistants telephone 16
Halleys living in London to
ask them what they called
themselves. He reports "three
deciined to say, but every one
of the remainder admitted to
Halley (rhyming with alley)."
BaseJ on that bit of British
research, one could feel confident this year's pronunciation
is accurate. But, depending on
your age, you might want to
make another bet with your in-

structor for the comet's 28th
pronunciation in the year
2061. By then British research
may uncover some Hungarian
influence, and you know how
Zja Zja would say it:
"Hawh-ley, dawhling, Hawhley."
Of course your winnings
won't be as significant as they
would have been this year. Inflation, like pronunciation,
tends to change things.

~:fl~~~

111!ilii

Vancouver
Washington •

St. Louis
Missouri

•

Ontario
C~lifornia

-,

790 E 14TH

Find out if you qualify for our 12-week training
and a career in the Airline/Travel industry.
Join over 2500 Graduates placed with more
than 90 Airlines

INTERNATIONAl AIR ACADEMY

\

THE BEANERY

OPEN

If,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

0
-~ ,
1

1

1

Great Selection ...
, Great Prices
1

1

~

1

1

1

1

1

1

1

1

1

1

1

1

~

9AM-10PM S,S

Where Airline C"reers Begin!

KLCC 89FM successfully concluded its Fall Radiothon
Sunday, Nov. 17, at 5:30 p.m. after nine days of on-air fundraising. 1185 people pledged an average of $31.30 for a total
of $45,095 in pledged contributions for KLCC. Over $8,000
was received by KLCC in advance of the Radiothon in
pledges from renewing members, thus eliminating almost two
days of on-air appeals. Over $2,000 in additional renewals arrived in the mail during the Radiothon netting even more funding for KLCC operations.

,,, ,,.I?,,,

7AM-10PM M-F

Airline interviews are scheduled on campus
during your training program!

KLCCupdate

(If you'd like to have An- ·
nabanana -- that's pronounced
''awnna-bawnawna '' -There will be no classes at LCC on November 28, and
answer your question, submit
29, for the Thanksgiving weekend.
it to The TORCH of/ice
uover the river and through the woods to Grandbefore 5 p.m. Tuesdays. If mother's house you go .... "
you'd like to give A nnabanana
a bad time about the replies,
there's no deadline.)

~

TUESDAY-NOVEMBER 19
EUGENE HILTON
66 E. 6th Ave.
EUGENE,0R
7:00P.M.

power.

343-1312

11 ·6 Mon-Sat

1

specializ_ing in cur~en t
and designer fashions
1 in natural fibers.

I I I I I I

Buy,ng Jnd cons,gn,ng by Aopo,nt ment

720½ E. 13th

lb€'t wern Excels,or S DG
nen,nd LO<JOS llooi ',I

35mm
~@D@CF

·- - -

Prints and Slides from the same roll
Kodak MP film ... Eastman Kodak's professional motion
picture (MP) film now adapted for still use in 35mm
cameras by Seattle FilmWorks. lts micro-fine grain and
rich color saturation meet the exacting standards of the
movie industry. With wide exposure latitude, you don't
have to be a pro to get great everyday shots or capture
special effects. Shoot in low or bright light from 200 ASA
up to 1200 ASA. Get prints or slides, or both, from the
same roll. Enjoy the very latest in photographic
technology with substantial savings.
0

t984 Seattle FilmWorks

Kodak 5247 is a registered trademark of the Eastman Kodak Company.

2623

r------------------INTRODUCTORY OFFER
D Rush me two 20-exposure rolls of your leading
KODAK MP film-Kodak 5247® (200 ASA) . Enclosed
is $2.00. I'd like to be able to get color prints or slides (or
both) from the same roll and experier.ce the remarkable
versatility of this professional quality film .

NAME _ _ _ ___ ___________
ADDRESS _______________
CITY ________ STATE __ ZIP ___

Limit of 2 rolls per customer.

Mail to: Seattle FilmWorks
500 Third Avenue West, P.O. Box C-34056
Seattle, WA 98124

The TORCH November 22, 1985 Page 11

C L A S S I .F I E D S

AUfOS
1971 BUICK RIVIERA. Rebuilt
motor, Aamco transmission, ne,.:
radiator, master brake cylinder,
carpet. Invested $3,000, sell /01
$1,000. 959 Cloverleaf Loop Spfd. !
to 9 p.m.
SUZUKI GSJOOO Cafe, very custom,
too much to list. $1,100 - 461-2362.
YAMAHA 250 YZ dirt bike, very
fast. $325, call 461-2362.
1955 HARLEY DA VIDSON K-H
Sportster, runs good. $1,200, call
Paul, 461-2362.

PARTNERSHIP OPPORTUNITY in
nursery and bark-o-mulch business.
No experience necessary. Interest in
plants and machinery a plus. Call Bill
Davis, 895-4723.

WORK AND PLAY IN THE
BEAUTIFUL BLACK HILLS OF
SOUTH DAKOTA. Employment opportunity from May 1 to Oct. 31, /986
in food and beverage operation. The
Historic Ruby House, at the floor of
Mt. Rushmore, in Keystone, SD.
Guaranteed monthly salary with room
and board paid, plus possible help
with traveling expenses. For detailed
information and application form
write to The Ruby House, Box 163,
Keystone, SD 57751.

FORSALE

1970 VOL VO 145 SEDAN, runs excellent, body in good shape. Owner
leaving state. $750, 683-6501.

26' TRAVEL TRAILER ('59 Fleetwing) tandem axle. $800 OBO Call
Dave, 344-0402.

CLASSIC '51 FORD, runs. $800. Call
after 6 p.m., Dan, 485-1360.

CHEAPER THAN RENTING 1970
Broadmore 11XJ6 with tipout two
bedroom, two baths. $6,000 terms.
One mile from LCC, 747-6369.

1971 VW CAMPER, pop-top, radials,
stereo, lots of recent work. Must sell!
342-4686.
1970 CHEVY side-step pickup. Runs
great. AM/FM cassette. $1200 OBO
344-9364. Devin
BARGAIN. /976 Maverick 2 door,
silver with blue strip, sharp, clean.
$1100 or offer. 683-3029 or 344-0258.
1970 BMW 2002. Beige with tan interior. Great shape. 344-9363, evenings.
1968 KARMANN GHIA. New battery, muffler, needs body and paint.
Runs great! Offers. 688-8121, mornings.
1978 KZ KA WASAKI, very good running condition. $700 or best offer.
Call 747-4346 daytime; after 4 p.m.
call 716-2095.
1965 CHEVY BELAIR, $300. Call
before 9 p.m. 746-9801. After 9 p.m. .
726-1141.

OPPOKilJNilID
NEW REPUBLICAN CLUB! Come
and be a part of us -- we 're meeting on
Wednesdays at 2 p.m., Rm. 410. For
more info contact J. Strait, 343-0351.
You can make the difference.
BRING Recycling, Eugene's oldest
non-profit recycler (est. 1971), is
seeking members for its volunteer
Board of Directors. Commitment Is
small, rewards are great. Qualifications: care about recycling and the environment. For Information call Tom
or Joyce at BRING, 746-3023.
GOVERNMENT JOBS $16,040 -$59,230/yr. Now hiring. Call
805-687-6()()(), ext. R-6150 for cu"ent
federal list.

PITBULL PUPS. Make great pets
and or guard dogs, 7 weeks. Only one
male. 689-2445.
GOLF CL UBS
747-4287.

and cart.

$50.

WHIRLPOOL WASHER completely
rebuilt, $115. Kenmore dryer, $100,
both for $100. Call Jim at 726-9349.
RCA COLOR VIDEO camera for sale
or trade for computer. $375. 836-2424
or 849-2577.
NEW NEVER USED double hide-abed. Cost $600, sell $250. Jan Simmons, Art Dept, Mon-Wed.

MULTI-COLORED AMERICAN
PIT BULL pups, $49.95 or make off er. 6 weeks, 345- 7684, Mark.
COLOR TV'S, large selection w/warranty, $49 and up. Deka Electronics,
390 W. 12th, 342-1488.
A TTENTJON ALL SKIERS! Check
out this package: 1 pair (205'') Hart
Honey Comb Skis w/Geze Bindings.
Ski poles included, $165. 1 pair racer
3/ Dyna/it Boots, size 10-10112, $150.
Call 746-1614.

SERVICES
MOVING? Maybe I can help. $5 moving, $10 driving my truck. Call Paul at
461-2362.
DROP BOX AT WOMEN'S
CENTER, for non-perishable food
items, for Campus Ministries. CEN
217.

CHIL.D CARE Responsible day care
on LCC area farm. Full-time only.
746-8096

KING-SIZE FLOATATION WATER
BED, mattress and liner, only $100.
Call 747-5011 between 5 p.m. and 9
p.m.

CARPET SHAMPOOING. Cheapest
rates, highest quality. Call Paul,
461-2362.

AKA-YORKIE MALE, 9 weeks on
Christmas day. Great stocking stuffer,
$350. 746-5090.

EVER WANT to experience the thrill
of flying? Share aircraft rental and
we'll go! Paul, 461-2362.
HA ULJNG - Furniture, appliances,
dump runs, etc. Strong and reliable.
Reasonable rates. Call Zach, evenings
and weekends, 741-1401.

THE BEANERY
2465 HILYARD

A & MORE · 1N e
SO. HILYARD
~
CENTER

1r-,
ALL-\NN RHOS.

& BluEs
CORNER
J•u & BluES, RlGGAl
& Gospd R1co11ds

Records, Tapes, CD's & Accessories
111 TIii FifT11p1&al Buildi11G

Rates for 2 people

VIU~O
Screen

SOUTHERN CROSS
HUNGAROTON
HONGKONG

TELARC
&MORE

HIiyard Street
'2475
345-1153

OPEN I 0-10 EVERYDAY

•

DARREN AND MIKE, whoever said
women were gabby never met you two
on a Thursday night. Don't talk so
much! Remember the TORCH. The
Phantom
BUNCHECK BOY, how about dancing in the sheets?
RHEA ATHENA, How does it/eel to
be lucky number 9? Mom
Darren, Thanks for the Pepsi. Next
time, be careful how you bet!
Citizens- The Torch staff requests that
you stay home on November 28, and
29, as mass turkey and pig murders
will be taking place, as well as the
human arteries.

FORRENT
LARGE 4 BEDROOM, appliances,
furnished or unfurnished, newly
remodeled, on the busline, MORE,
$395. 683-3029.

a gentle method
for
transformation
and
self-reali1J1tion

I offer individual. groups and
water rebirthings

Call Karuna Evans

PRESENTS

9
r

f

CHOICES
make the
difference.

CONVENIENT

l{ZAM

, ...

DAYS

95tMOVIES
(except new releasl'~
& acluh)

MONDAYS & TUESDAYS

Your

PRIVATE • PROFESSIONAL

1·100 Main St. Springfield

VARESE SARABANDE
HARMONIA MUNDI

THERE once was a girl named Valerie
who was trying to count every calorie.
Said her boss in disgust, "if you lose
half your bust, then by God, you will
lose half you salary." A
troublemaker.

BIRTH
6.50 to
CONTROL PILLS
7.50
DIAPHRAGM
,JELLY
$4.00
CONDOMS
S.25 ea.
$1.00
SPONGE

card.
Special group rates on weekdays

Jllver-

DOES ANYONE else have trouble
with aliens constantly rea"anging
things?

BIRTH CONTROL
PREGNANCY TESTS
PAP SMEARS

Fihlt & Pu11l • EuGl"'I
686-8742

STUDENT DISCOUNT

CLASSICAL. OPIIRA A •1&.11
MUSIC ON COMPACT DISCS

DECONGO, Uh-hi. I was wonderin'
if you wanted to go drag the gut. Edwardo

485•3881

Mon-Thurs. evenings S1 off rental with student body

~

MOON UNIT, I'd like to fuel your
space with my rocket. We'll blast off.
Jetboy

Rebirthing

FRESH ALLANN BROS.
GOURMET COFFEE,
TEA, ACCESSORIES

New Hours
Sun-Thurs 12 - 2a.m. $9/hour
Fri & Sat. 12 - 4a.m. $10/hour

343-7715
30th & Hilyard

LOWPRICB
catering to Discriminating
Record Collectors
Located inside BRADFORD'S on the Mall
150 w. Broadway
Ml·!NIOO

HAPPY BIRTHDAY KOREY, I love
you! Mom

Springfield Spa's
Private Hot Tub Rentals

ROBERTSON'S DRUG

Musique Gour111et

TROUBLEMAKER, it must be the
Michum I'm using, because it sure
ain't love. Val

QUALITY TYPING and editing.
Guaranteed error-free. Choose
typestyle. Free spelling checks, rush
orders. 345-9293.

FLOPPY DISKS, used on most computers. Cost $2.50, now $2. Call Curtis, 461-0849.

DG
BIS
EMI
DECCA
PHILIPS
CHANDOS
HYPERION

FREE TO GOOD HOME, Norwegian
elkhound, 1 year, good with kids. Call
747-6369.
$40 FREE MERCHANDISE of your
choice. Christmas gifts/decorations.
Call now! 343-7278, evenings.

WANTED: ONE USED RAJNEESH to replace the one I just lost.
Signed, Drifting Into Hues of Blue

CHILD CARE, 5 minutes from LCC.
Mornings only. Experienced preschool teacher and mother. 747-0612.

2566 Willamette St. • Eugene. OR 97405 • 343-5684

FREE

HAVE YOUR TERM PAPERS, etc.
done on the computer! Quality print.
Student and teacher discount. Bring
them to: The Floppy Disc (Word Processors), 331-A W. 10th, Eugene, or
phone: 345-6930.

IMPORTED FROM GERMANY.
AM/FM, short wave stereo with turntable. $50 or best offer. Karen,
747-6369.

Your prescription is
our main concern.

ROOMMATE -- FEMALE, 5 min.
away, own room, lots of storage, rent
$111.50, utilities $30-$50, 747-8607,
Mareta.
LCC'S LIBRARY needs volunteers. If
interested, please contact Joyce Kofford in the Library office, X2120.

FRENCH FRIED VE GETABLE
parts make a fine /east for vegetarian
Thanksgiving revelers.

EXPERT MECHANIC, experienced
in all makes, models. Offers low cost
repairs. Call J.D. . after 5 p.m.,
345-6444.

23 C.F. AMANA upright freer.er for
$300. 959 Cloverleaf Loop, Spfld. 5-9
p.m.
HOOD FOR 5 GALLON FISH
TANK. $15 or make offer. Call Curtis, 461-0849.
REMOTE CONTROL STEREO.
Tum-table, cassette, AM/FM, like
new. Moving, must sell. $125. Evenings, 345-1795

RIDERS NEEDED from Drain area,
Mon, Wed, and Fri. 8-12. Call
836-2414, or 849-2577.

THE U. OF 0. OUTDOOR PROGRAM has a list of procedures and information Jor obtaining river permits
for the 1986 Whitewater season. Interested? Drop by the Outdoor Program (on the ground level of the
EMU) or send a SASE to: Outdoor
Program, U of 0, EMU, Eugene, OR
97403.

RABBITS, two does and a buck, includes cages and JOO lbs of food.
Make offer. 747-6369.

YASHICA 35 MM CAMERA, like
new, $75. Call after 5:00, ask for Dan
or Nicole. 485-3524.

WAN1ID

•

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

.~

~

a.

~

-~

Q.

tn tU

! Q,.
0 ;I:
u~
~z:

~

....

u

tn

=~
s~
s=
Ort,

CC

~-=
==
tU C

.;;i ·-

:I:

~

a.

tU

;I:

<

~

~

~

t ~I~
~

OMNIUMS
Sculpture Exhibition

Indian Business Development

National Hospice Month

Single Mary to Play W.O.W.

Th Oregon Invitational Small Sculpture Exhibition will be
held from Nov. 18 through Dec. 13 with a reception on Friday,
Nov. 22, 7-10 p.m. This exhibition of small works by 28
sculptors residing in Eugene will be held at the Art Department
Gallery of L.C.C. Gallery hours are Mon-Thurs from 8 a.m.
through 10 p.m . and on Fridays from 8 a.m.- ~ p.m.

The Oregon Commission on Indian Services in cooperation
with the State Department of Economic Development, the
State Department of Agriculture, and the Oregon State World
Trade Council will host a 3-day conference on Indian Business
Development on Nov. 20-22, at the State Capitol Building in
Salem. For more info. contact the Commission on Indian Services, 454 State Capitol, Salem, 97310, 378-5481.

To celebrate National Hospice Month, the public is invited
to a community coffee open house on Tuesday, Nov. 19,
from 7-8:30 p.m. The event will take place in the Sacred Heart
Board Room where Hospice volunteers and coordinators will
be available to answer questions.
Sacred Heart will also be holding its annual "Celebration of
Remembrance" service on Tuesday, Nov. 26 from 3-4 p.m. in
the Chapel at Sacred Heart. It will be a time of remembrance
and sharing for Hospice volunteers, nurses, families, and
friends of former patients.

The Community Center for the Performing Arts will be
hosting Single Mary on Saturday, Nov . 30at the W.O.W. Hall,
8th & Lincoln. Opening for Single Mary will be The Fugitives
with mid-sixties style rock and roll.
Admission is S3 at the door. For more information, call
687-2746.

Hookey Ski Club

White Bird Expands Service

The Eugene YMCA Hookey Ski Club's special rate ski trips
to Mount Bachelor begin January 8 and will continue, on
Wednesdays only, through May I. Season tickets are available
now for skiers 21 years and older on a first paid basis. Single
trip tickets can be bought during the week preceding the trip as
long as space is available. The coach leaves at 7 a.m. and
returns by 7:15 p.m . For more information, call the YMCA or
Virginia at 686-1222.

White Bird Medical Clinic is expanding its low cost medical
services by extending hours and adding a new physician. Beginning November 14 the clinic will be open Monday-Friday 1-5
p.m. and Thursday evening 5:40-9 p.m. Dr. Gary Glasser, an
internist with a specialty in Geriatrics, will be seeing clients
Monday afternoons. For more information, or to make an appointment, call 484-4800.

Mt. Hood Ski Resort

African Entertainment at W .0. W.

The EMU Cultural Forum and 95 KZAM will be sponsoring
"Folk-jazz" with Windham Hill recording artist Alex
Degrassi. He will perform on Saturday, Nov. 23 at 8:00 p.m.
in the EMU Ballroom. Tickets are S6 UO students and S8
general public in advance and S9 general public on the day of
show.

The Community ·Center for the Performing Arts will be
hosting an evening of African dance, storytelling and music
with African duo TLO-TLO and the Eugene Marimba Band,
Shumba, on Friday, Nov. 22 at the W.O.W. Hall located at 8 &
Lincoln . The show is scheduled to begin at 9:30 p.m . and a.dmission at the door is S3.50. For more information, call
687-2746.

Volunteer workers are needed to do telephone reception and
crisis counseling at the Lane County Council on Alcoholism.
Volunteers will have the opportunity to gain experience in office practice and learn crisis counseling skills. For information, call 484-1713 .

To kick off the season, Mt. Hood Meadows Ski Resort is offering season opener prices.
Sundowner (evenings,
Weds.-Sat.) Dec. 4-7; Dec. 11 -14; and Dec. 18-21. Lifts,
lessons and rentals are Sl2. (Minimum of 25 people) Bus is
SI I/person. (minimum of 35 people).
Weekends Dec. 7-8; Dec. 14-15; lifts, lessons and rentals are
S22 (minimum of 25 people) Bus.is Sl2/person (minimum of 40
people).
Ni,aweek (M-F) Dec. 4 and S; Dec. 9-13 . Lifts, lessons, rentals Sl7.50 (minimum of 25 people) Bus is 11.50/ person
(minimum of 37 people).

Art Museum Feature Artists
Kacey and David Joyce of Eugene are professional artists
whose work will be displayed in separate exhibits Nov . 24
through Jan. S at the University of Oregon Museum of Art.
The Museum is open free to the public from noon to 5 p.m .
Wednesdays through Sundays, except holidays but will be closed Nov. 28 through Dec. 3 for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Whale Watch
Lane County Audubon society will sponsor a whale watching trip from Newport on Saturday, Dec. 7. The three hour
trip aboard a chartered boat will enable passengers to watch the
southern migration of the California Gray Whale. Cost of the
trip is SIS per person . Departure time is 9 a.m . Call Kit Larsen
at 344-9574 if you are interested.

Museum of Natural History

"Unearth Holiday Treasures," the 1986 Willamette Valley
Nature Calendar, pen-and-ink egg decorating and North West
Coast Indian masks will be featured during the Holiday Open
House Sunday, Dec. I, at the U of O Museum of Natural
History.

Flu Vaccine
Student Health Services is offering flu vaccines for staff and
students. The cost is S5. The vaccine is available from 8:00.
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 to 3:00 p.m. on Friday. The vaccine is recommended for healthy persons over 65 who have
serious, chronic medical problems. However, the vaccine is
available for persons who do not meet these guidelines. If you
have questions, please call Student Health at ext. 2665.

UO Art Gallery
Works in a variety of media will be shown by three U of 0
fine arts students Nov. 25-27 in Gallery 141.
The gallery is free to the public and open from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. M-F but will be closed Nov. 28-29 for the Thanksgiving
holiday. For more information, contact Mary Dole, gallery
director, 686-3610.

Human Services Planning Board
The Lane County Board of Commissioners has established
the Human Services Planning Boara to help make reccomendations to the Board of Commissioners on Community Health
and Social Services. Deadline for board positions is Friday
November 22, 1985. Applications can be picked up at the Plaza
Level of the Public Service Building at 125 East 8th Ave., or
call 687-4203.

Advisory Committee
The Lane County Board of Commissioners is seeking applications from citizens interested in serving on the
Metropolitan Area Planning Advisory Committee. Applications are available in the Board of Commissioners' Office
located on the Plaza Level of the Public Service Building at 125
East 8th Avenue in Eugene. For more information, call
687-4103 .

New Zone Gallery "Free For All"
The New Zone Gallery presents its second annual "Free For
All" call for entries. The exhibition will take place Dec. 7-28
and will exhibit all works submitted. A S2 handling fee will be
charged per work and the exhibition is open to artists of all
ages and works. Hand deliver works to the New Zone Gallery,
411 High St. between 12-5 p.m ., Dec. 2-3. For more information, call 485-2278 .

Windham Hill artist at EMU

Volunteers Needed

Christmas Sale & Festival
Artists and craftspersons are invited to submit items for jury
for the Maude Kerns Art Center's 17th Annual Christmas Sale
and Festival December 2 & 3, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. at the Maude
Kerns Art Center, 1910 E. 15th Ave., Eugene, OR. Sales dates
will be December 6-22. For more information please call
345-1571.

Holiday Happenings
The Hult Center for the Performing Arts presents Shari
Lewis' Holiday Happenings on Sunday, Dec. 8 at 7 p.m . in the
Silva Concert Hall. Tickets.are SS ., SIO and Sl2.50 and are on
sale at the Hult Center and all Hult Center ticket outlets.
Phone orders 678-5000.

UO Jazz Lab Band
UO Jazz Lab Blftlds one and two will be featured in one concert at 8 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 22 in Beall Concert Hall.
Tickets are S2.S0 for general admission and SI .SO for students
and seniors. All tickets are sold at the door.

Arthur Flemming to be Honored
Arthur Flemming, former president of the U of O and
former chair of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, will be
honored at the annual E.B. MacNaughton Awards Brunch of
the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon in recognition of
his long and unremitting devotion to the defense of human
rights and civil liberties.
Scheduled for Sunday, Nov . 17, form 11 a.m. to I p.m., at
the Eugene Hilton. Tickets are available at tlie Eugene ACLU
office, 1756 Willamette, Suite 2, or by phone, 345-6162,
through Wednesday, Nov. 13, for S2S, which is tax deductable.

Art Museum Shows Photography
The work of New York City photographer Barbara Morgan
will be on view Nov . 20 through Dec. 29 at the University of
Oregon Museum of Art's Photography at Oregon Gallery. The
museum is open and free to the public from noon to S p.m.
Wednesdays through Sundays. The museum will be closed
Nov. 28-Dec. I for Thanksgiving.

Wayne Bennett at Beall
Wayne Bennett, clarinet soloist and UO director of bands,
will give a concert as part of the 1985-86 Faculty Artist Series at
4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 24 at Beall Concert Hall. Tickets, sold
at the door, are S3 general admission, SI students and seniors,
and free to UO stude~ts with I.D.

UO Gospel Ensemble
The University Gospel Ensemble will perform at 8 p.m . in
Beall Concert Hall on Thursday, Nov. 21. Admission is free.

Snow White
The Community Children's Theatre performs "Snow White
and the Seven Dwarfs" performed 'to music and dance under
the direction of Celeste Bennett. Performances will take place
on November 16, 17, 23, and 24, at Sheldon Community Centr, 2445 Willakenzie Road.
Admission is SI.SO per person and S5.00 for families. The
play is sponsored by the Eugene Parks and Recreation Department Cultural Arts Section. For more information, contact
Celeste Bennett at 686-1574.

Episcopal Bishop to be Consecrated
The man who will become the eighth Episcopal bishop of
Oregon will be consecrated Bishop Coadjutor of the Diocese of
Oregon at noon on Saturday, Nov. 30 at the Earl Chiles Center
at the University of Portland. For more information, call
228-7971. •

5th Pearl Merchants
5th Pearl merchants are sponsoring a Toy Tree, located in
the 5th Pearl shops, for needy children in Eugene. The public is
asked to take an ornament, purchase a gift, wrap it and place it
under the tree. The greatest need is toys for ages 1-2 and 10-12.
All toys will be turned over to The Salvation Army for distribution through their Family Services Christmas Center.

Christmas Shopping by Bus
Once again LTD is offering decorated Joy Ride Buses on the
No. I Downtown Shuttle route, from Nov. 24 to Dec. 28. The
fare is 30 cents for adults, and 15 cents for seniors, children age
five to 11, and reduced fare patrons. On weekends, the fare on
the JoyRide Bus is IS cents for all riders.