The TORCH March 7 ,. 1986 Page 1

'Contract ratified
by Lisa Zimmerman

TORCH Associate Editor

It took over a year of
negotiations, mediation and
factfinding to reach an agreement, but last Thursday the
LCC faculty '' overwhelmingly'' ratified a contract
with the College.

March 7, 1986

VOL.2l~N0.19

Board candidates air views

by Kelli J. Ray

Bowser has been a member
of the Eugene Area Chamber
of Commerce, on the Land
Four candidates are runnUse Planning Committee for
ing for election to two seats
half a year, and a member of
on LCC' s seven member
the Valley River Rotary Club
Board of Education.
for half a year, as well. He is
One candidate, Mary
E2 also a newly-elected member
Unruh, currently represents
,-;:, of the Junior Achievement
the South Eugene district
.o0 Board of Directors, has been
and is running unopposed.
o a member of the LCC FounThe other three candidates
t: dation Board of Directors for
are running for the '' at
three years, a member of the
Martin Lewis
large," or all-district seat.
Oregon State Vocational
as well as president of the
Education Planning CommitLCC
College Republicans.
Mary Unruh is 33 years old
tee for four years, and a
and married. She majored in Now, in 1985/86, Lewis is
member of the American
home economics at Colorado director of the Student
Cons~lting Engineering
Resource Center, a member
Committee.
State University.
Bowser has been a member
Employed as a financial of the ASLCC Executive
of LCC' s Board of Education
consultant, she is in her Cabinet, ASLCC Represenfor the past four years. His
seventh year with Shearson tative to the Board of Educaviews on various issues are
Lehman Brothers. She tion, a member of the Evenas follows:
became interested in politics ing Program Advisory ComSee Bowser, page 8
"at the early age of 18, when mittee, Campus Ministry exI became a Democratic ecutive board member, and
Precinct
Committee chairman for the LCC Media
woman.'' She is involved in Commission.
Gordon Wahto is 48 years
the Oregon Community Colold,
married, and has three
His opinions on several
lege Association (OCCA), current issues are as follows:
children. He earned a
bachelor of arts in El),glish
which she describes as the
from Pacific Lutheran
"lobbying arm" for com• Natiohal financial aid
University, and a master's
munity colleges at the cuts: "For every dollar the
degree in English from the U
legislative level, and is cur- government spends on
of O. He has taught college
rently the only nominee for education it gets 10 times
English, freshmen literature
president-elect of that that amount back. (Once
and technical writing in the
educated),
a
citizen
will
get
a
organization.
Midwest, and now works as
higher paying job and pay
an orthopedic technician for
more in taxes. We need to do
Sacred Heart Hospital.
more in terms of financial
His stand on some of the
aid, especially for families, or
current issues is as follows:
female heads of households.
• National financial aids
The cuts need to be changed
cuts: "I'm definitely opposE-- on the state level. The board
~ needs to lobby.''
ed to them.''
>-.
TORCH Staff Writer

•••••

.a
0

]
Mary Unruh
Unruh has been a member
of the LCC Board of Education for the past four years.
Her stands on several current
issues are as follows:
• National financial aid
cuts: "I think the Reagan administration is making a terrible mistake. To cut people
out of college is to cut out the
people who make decisions
in this country. We're cutting
back on the effectiveness of
our society as a whole.''
See Unruh, page 8

ll.

•••••

•••••

Martin Lewis is 24 years
old and a sophomore at LCC
taking
undergraduate
courses leading to a major in
religious studies.
In the school year 1984/85,
Lewis was a member of the
ASLCC Judiciary _Committee

Bob Bowser

Gordon Wahto
• Gramm-Rudman: ''I oppose it. Nothing personal is
taken into account. It is cutting without any heart."
• School administration
under President Turner:
''Well, all I can say is the
honey:moon is over. It will be
hard for him to fill Schafer's
shoes. Let him try it for a
while, and we'll see."
• LCC budget cuts: "Every
strong educational institution should take care of three
things: 1. career education,
2. transfer students, and 3.
See Wahto, page 8

''That's not a strike threat,
though," said John, "we fully expect to reach an agreement on workload before
that time."

Spring cutbacks have
"minimal impact"
by Lois Grammon

TORCH Staff Writer

Despite rumors and
speculation by students and
instructors alike, next Fall
Term's class offerings and
faculty will be about the
same as Fall Term, 1985.
According to Gerald
Rasmussen, vice president of
the LCC Office of Instruction, although staff reductions are planned, they are
being implemented in a
variety of ways, and '' as few
people as possible will be
hurt."
The cuts will have minimal
impact on the spring
schedule, according to
Rasmussen, who adds that
"very few changes will occur
that were not planned a long
time ago," and that "there
are no involuntary layoffs
planned.''

LCC President Richard
Turner projects a $550,000
shortfall in the 1985-86
budget, and has asked all
departments to restrict spending, for a savings of up to
$600,000. The 1985-86 budget
was based on a projected
enrollment of 8,000 Full Time
E-- Equivalent (FfE) students;
~ however, enrollment figures
E are closer to 7,700 FTE accor-

See Lewis, page 8

Robert Bowser is 43 years
old, married, and has three
children. He earned a
bachelor's degree in
mechanical engineering from
Purdue University, a
master's degree in English
from Stanford University,
and a master's degree in
business adminstration from
Portland State University.
He is the president of AE
Associates, a Eugene
engineering firm.

The decision was announced after a faculty ballot vote
last Thursday, March 6. The
contract now goes to the LCC
Board of Education for
ratification, at their next official meeting scheduled for
Wednesday, March 12.

The present agreement
leaves one issue, workload,
still on the bargaining table.
According to Steve John,
head of fhe faculty bargaining team, the present contract agreement states the
college may not change faculty workload until Dec. 19,
1986. If an agreement is not
reached by that date, faculty
can strike after giving the college ten day's notice.

ding to Rasmussen.
''This is a reduction of 250
(FTE) which, at an average
rate of 25 students per
teacher, would affect 10 Full
Time Equivalent teachers,''
Rasmussen says. Needed
staff decreases will come
through
retirements,
resignations, unpaid leave,
and part-time position
layoffs. By the end of the current academic year, eleven
faculty members .will have
either resigned or retired.
Some of those positions will
be filled, possibly by part
timers.
An additional three to four
FfE faculty positions must be
eliminated before Fall Term

begins. ''There are clearly
some reductions in part-time
teachers, but I can>t tell you
what the number or percentage is," Rasmussen says,
adding that ''by the time Fall
Term starts, it is possible that
very few involuntary layoffs
will occur.''

According to Rasmussen,
all but one of the layoffs will
be partial reductions-of-loads
for the teachers, who will
continue to teach on a reduced level.
Rasmussen says a tentative
schedule for next year will be
completed by March 15, and
the administration will know
then how many instructors
will be needed. Plans are based on a projected FTE of
7,750 next year.
Some sections and
teaching assignments will be
combined, rather than
eliminated.
, ''There isn't a great deal of difference -- where there
once were eight sections of a
class, there might be six or
seven next fall,'' says
Rasmussen. Although 100
class sections will be reduced, course options will remain open to allow for evening, Monday-WednesdayFri day, and TuesdayThursday classes. The
average enrollment goal for
each class is 25 students, but
''classes in new programs
and courses such as electronics, which are going
through comprehensive revisions, may remain small,"
Rasmussen says.
Courses which are unable
to accomodate the number
of students who wish to
enroll may be allowed to increase the sections offered,
according to Rasmussen,
who says "we'll go up as
well as down.''
And, Rasmussen adds, if
there is an increase in enrollment, any cuts made may be
reversed.

Page 2 March 7, 1986 The TORCH

FREE

FOR ALL

and maintain the quality of
are occurring at LCC.
educational opportunity
Well, students, awake!
Your destiny is by choice, not available here at LCC.
Remember, Martin Lewis
chance. Take a moment to
notice that a scholar named for LCC Board will be a giant
Dear Editor,
Rasmussen .who helped step in the right direction.
Lane Community College shape the success story of
MoMcNally
by Karen Irmsher
day, and transportation
is unique. A harmonious LCC has suddenly decided to
LCCstudent
fORCH Editor
won't be a problem.
blend of faculty, administra- retire and pursue other intion, and curriculum design- terests ! What is causing all
Lane County's first countyed
to meet the needs of Lane this?
Localities with mail-in
wide mailed ballot election
students exists and
Hey! Two positions on the
County
will officially take place ballot experience report that
has
been
carefully
created
LCC
Board will soon be
Dear Editor,
March 25. But most voters most voters mark and mail
the
past
twenty-plus
decided
by
voters
who
over
It's that time again to elect
should receive their ballots their ballots within two days
years.
bother to mail in their ballots.
another member to the Board
of receiving them. The
by Monday, March 10.
Yes, times change. Enroll- Who should you vote for?
of LCC. Now is our chance as
TORCH recommends its
ment may increase or drop,
I for one recommend a students to elect one of our
Two seats on LCC' s Board readers do the same.
necessitating minor ad- stu'dent nam~d Martin Lewis . own who would properly
of Education will be a part of
Other positions up for elec- ministrative and faculty ad- who wants to maintain the
represent the needs of the
this experiment. It will be intion indude seats on the just~e~ts to meet budget magnetic cohesiveness college and the concerns of
teresting to see if more peoboards of the Eugene and restnchons. But, does that
h. h
d t
· t t LCC
ple will vote when they don't
the students.
w ic ~se O exis a
•
Bethel school districts, and of mean a severe storm
need to take time out to go
Martin Lewis has been ac? D
Something recently has been
the Lane Educational Service thereat ens the sys. t em.
o st·rrrmg
•
bl
w
somewhere else. Maybe less
tively
involved in matters of
up pro ems.
e
District. The Eugene Water & we need radical ad- need student input into the great importance to LCC.
will vote because filling out a
Electric Board is also asking ministrative policy changes system to help calm the This year he is the director of
form on the kitchen table will
for approval of the sale of $25 that "rock the boat" and pre- waters.
hardly seem worth doing.
the Student Resource
million in revenue bonds, vent its smooth passage
The whole act will be less
Get back to a cooperative Center, which keeps you,
and the Willakenzie Rural through semi-rough waters?
dramatic.
atmosphere between ad- the student, informed.
Fire Protection District proSuddenly, non-monetary ministration, faculty, and
Considering the current
On the other hand, it sure
poses annexing a large area , factors of such importance to students. Surely communica- state of LCC, this election is
will be easier to fit into a busy
south of Springfield.
faculty members as to drive tion between all factions of vital importance. Don't
them to the brink of a strike could solve any problems you think it is time that you
·-:take the difference?
Vote for Martin Lewis. By
voting for him, you' re voting
turn turgid and threatening this time of little towns like Drain and Brownsville, for yourself.
by Karen Irmsher
year.
forever altering the ambience, not to
TORCH Editor
.
Jerri-Lyn Strait
Since the prevailing moods of the mention the young women.
Member Phi Theta Kappa
other three seasons -- the heady
The Pentagon will put its top scienI was a river-deprived child.
hopefulness of spring, the free and easy tists to the task of developing a process
One of the reasons I live in the River relaxed delight of summer, and the high for concentrating oppression, and its 'liC"
Road area is so I can go look at the river energy briskness of fall -- are much top engineers will be assigned to design
any time of the night or day, especially lighter, they can simply dissipate into delivery systems. (Land-based, seathis time of year.
the atmosphere. But winter simply based, stationary and mobile.)
I like to stand beside it, warm, dry,
can't.
The basic flaw in this thinking is that
stationary and awe-struck while all that
As soon as the Department of Enwe'd
be bombarding them with concenchanneled power surges past, just two vironmental Quality gets wind of
EDITOR: Konn lnnsher
trate
of
US winter oppression, probably
ASSOCIATE EDITOR:
inches from my toes.
what's really behind spring floods,
1,
Lisa Zimfflffmlln
Most people think its swollen, brown we're in for a whole new spate of pretty mild stuff by comparison to what
FEATURE EDITOR: Ann Von C11mp
they're
used
to.
Also,
if
we
didn't
use
it,
SPORTS
EDITOR:
Dorrtn
Foss
state has to do with heavy rains, melted regulatory paperwork. People will have
PHOTO EDITOR: Dnill Stein
snow, mud, and the like, but I've to sign up for winter oppression dump or while we were waiting to use it, we'd
ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR:
have big, potentially dangerous
Jeff H1111n
figured out what's really going on.
dates.
STMF PHOTOGRAPHERS: A1111 V1111
For months millions of people, go
C11mp, Glfflllis P,mlm11,m, Bob Wolfe,
And since federal paperwork takes so stockpilesouifding up at various sites in
/RT, Domi11iq,,e Sq,sn,
about their daily business, shoulders long to process, people will have to file the US, and allied countries -- attractive
STMF WRITERS: Bri1111 Al'Dstllll, Kelli
hunched-up, brows furrowed, and a year ahead of time and dumping times targets for terrorists, and a whole new
Roy, Michael Spilmo11, Tom Ruggiero,
set
of
dumpsite
hazards.
Lois Grommolf, Jomes Tlloxtolf, Stn,e
spirits sludgy with winter. For weeks at will be assigned. This means some peoClulpmil"
News of this proposed new secret
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR: Vol
a time, no matter how habitually ple will be required to unload theirs as
Brow,,
sanguine their personalities, they are early as January, possibly endangering weapon will, naturally, be leaked to the
PRODUCTION: Dlm"nt Foss, Phyllis
Mastin, Drew Newberry, Michael
Russians. Their natural resources for
forced to confront such questions as: Is their lives with premature frivolity and
Spilman, Kim BuchoJ1011, Kelli Roy,
this weapon are clearly superior. With
there really any good reason for getting exposure to the elements, while we'll
Robin Kam, Toro Cross, Greg Williams,
Darryl Abr
the length and severity of winters they
up today? Hasn't "being alive" been a see an increase in hunched backs,
DISTRIBUTION: Vina Ramirez,
endure, not to mention the quantity of
bit overvalued? Why bother?
Michael Spilman, Ann Von Comp
suicides and broken homes in the May/GRAPHIC ARTISTS: Vol Brown, Som
landmass effected, if they can learn to
Then along come a few stray patches June group.
Polvodo, Mork Zentner
RECEPTIONIST:
Judy Springer
concentrate
the
run-off,
they'll
easily
of blue sky. Teasing shafts of warm
Chiropractors, psychiatrists and
ADVERTISING ADVISOR: fan Brown
us
in
this
new
weapons
race.
out-pace
sunlight escape through the cloud lawyers will love it.
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT: Greg
William
Pentagon thinkers will quickly see
cover, gently warming besweatered
Then it won't be long till the DepartAD SALES: Mork Zentner
PRODUC110N ADVISOR:
which side has the fastest shoes in this
shoulders. When people start shucking ment of Defense gets into the act. If the
Dorothy Wearne
new race (though not before billions of
off the layers of protective coverings oppression of the Russian winter can be
NEWS AND EDITORIAL ADVISOR:
Pete
Peterson
they've built up for months, joyfully ex- extended by a full year, Pentagon
dollars have been spent}, and they'll
posing their limbs to the elements, the thinkers will reason, most of the
have to spend billions more to come up
The TORCH is a shulent-monoged
heavy gray oppression of winter turns population will probably just do
newspaper published on Fridays,
with an expensive new anti-oppression
September through June. News stories
to a brown ooze and sloughs off.
themselves in.
defense system.
ore compressed, concise reports intended
It's so heavy it can't get out of the area
to be as fair and balanced as possible.
Massive military-run collecting/refinAnd so on.
They appear with o byline to indicate
without recourse to the drainage ing installations will spring up all over
Maybe I should have just kept this to
the reporter responsible. News features,
systems, so it's no wonder the rivers the US, near rivers in formerly sleepy
because of their broader scope, may conmyself.

Lane's first mail-in
ballot set for March 25

Martin Lewis

More support
for Lewis

Swollen brown rivers .not what they seem

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tain some judgements 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, and the writer
should include a phone number. The
editor reserves the right to edit for libel,
invasion of privacy, length, and appropriate language. Deadline: Monday
10 a.m.
"Omniums" serve as a public announcement forum. Activites related to
LCC will be given priority. Deadline:
Monday, 10 o.m.
All correspondence must be typed and
signed by the writer. Mail or bring all
correspondence to: The TORCH, Room
205, Center Building, 4()()() E. 30th Ave.
Eugene, OR, 97405. Phone 747-4501,
ext.2655.

The TORCH March 7, 1986 Page 5

Photo journalism
at LCC
~,.,.~es

Bob Prokop teaches the craft of capturing America on film. In 1968 he worked
primarily in 35mm format; today he
favors 16mm film and video.

0

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p,..

by Ann Van Camp

TORCH Feature Editor

0

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0

Social statements, issues, and concerns are the heart and soul of photo journalism.

At a time when class cut-backs are a
reality, new classes can still emerge.
One such class is photojournalism.
According to instructor Bob Prokop,
the class is presently classified as a
"workshop" but will be reclassified as a
transferable art class before the end of
Spring Term. The class is being offered
in response to numerous inquiries from
students for additional photography
classes at LCC.
"They wanted something to flesh out
the photography offerings. All we've
had was beginning and intermediate
photography classes, and those are
primarily illustrative in nature."
Prokop has been teaching in the Mass
Communication department for seven
and a half years. He's taught everything
from slide/tape to video to 16mm film.
• •"Photojournalism will integrate with
LCC's journalism offerings to offer a little flavor from the journalism field for
students who go on, either here or to
the U of O ."
The course focuses on how to
photograph issues and social concerns.
Prokop says he's also interested in
developing marketable channels for the
students' work coming out of the class.
''I hope to incorporate more of a twoway dialogue with The TORCH.
Students who are interested in news
will find that photojournalism increases
their background in the still medium.''
The prerequiste for photojournalism
is beginning photography, and the class
is designed to accommodate students
from all departments on campus.

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Chicago,

1968: National Guard troops prepare to protect delegates to the Democratic Presidential Convention.

Page 4 March 7, 1986 The TORCH

Spielberg, Hollywood's boy uxmder, doos it' again ••••
by Kelli J. Ray

TORCH Staff Writer

Action, conflict, sentiment,
and a message. These are
some of the key elements in a
good movie, and ''The Color
Purple" has them all. •
Directed by Steven
Spielberg, the movie is a:o
adaptation of Alice Walker's
Pulitzer prize-winning novel
of the same name. Spielberg,
well-known for actionpacked, emotion-indu cing
motion pictures such as ''E.
T., The Extra-Terrestrial,"
''Poltergeist,'' and ''Raiders
of the Lost Ark,'' has finally
tackled the production of a
"serious" film.
Spielberg's portrayal of the
life of Celie, an abused, oppressed black woman, is
deeply moving, sometimes
. humorous, and always fastpaced. Set in rural Georgia in
the early nineteen hundreds,
the two and three-quarter
hour film spans the first twothirds of Celie's life with a
series of letters from Celie to
God, Celie to her sister Nettie, and Nettie to Celie.
In the color spectrum, purple represents the human
spirit; the depth and growth

of the soul. ''The Color Purple" does the same. This
superb film's essence is that
a little hope and a little love
can pull a person through
anything. Celie's personal
growth against nearly impossible odds is uplifting and
satisfying.
Whoopi Goldberg was an
excellent choice to play Celie.
In a brilliant film debut, her
unsurpassed acting ability
shows in every scene.
She looks duly humbled
after a slap from one of the
men in her life, and she
smiles mischievously • after
her husband's father p,ulps
down his spit-laced 'cold
drink.~' In one of her greatest
moments, she looks furiously fiesty when she finally
· makes her break for independence in the allimpqrtant dinner table scene
near the end of the movie.
Her supporting actors and
actresses are also well-cast.
Margaret Avery plays Shug
Avery, her best friend and •
lover, as well as Mister's
lover. Danny Glover is
Mister, Celie's common-law
husband, and Oprah Winfrey is Sophia, Celie's fiery,

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Whoopi Goldberg, who makes her film debut in the Bros. ''The Color Purple,'' bringing to the screen
starring role of Celie, confirs with producer and Alice Walker's powerful Pulitzer Prize-winning
director Steven Spielberg during filming of Warner novel.
blues numbers that showcase church, plow through the
buxom daughter-in-law.
pews, and demolish the enCo-producer Quincy Jones Shug's voice and character.
tire structure.
crosscutting
uses
Spielberg
the
to
richness
musical
adds
film's appeal with jazzy to tie Celie's experiences to
But there is one complaint.
those of her sister Nettie, Spielberg puts too little emwhile Celie reads Nettie's let- phasis on Celie's growth and
ters from Africa. With one development while under
letter, Celie is transported to Shug's care as she is
Africa's scorching summer transformed into a more conlandscape only to be •jerked fident, well-balanced and
back to her slavish existence secure person in Memphis.
when Mister, silhouetted One minute, she's cowering
against the same hot sun, and insecure, then wham!
demands that she fetch him a She owns a pants shop filled
drink.
with all her own designs,
Another letter whisks Celie and is confidently telling her
from her sedate Georgia step-son that '' one size fits
church to Nettie's African all."
chapel. Celie glances up to
Symbolically, throughout
see a bulldozer slam through the movie Celie covers her
the chancel of Nettie's smile with her hand so it
won't be noticed. First Nettie, then Shug (the two
women who love her) con2465 HILYARD
sistently pull Celie's hand
from her face so her
away
FRESH ALLANN BROS.
through.
shows
smile
GOURMET COFFEE,
By the end of the film, she
TEA, ACCESSORIES
smile alone. She has
can
~ & MORE 0
above being "poor,
risen
e
ffcf'- ('Q"
e
ugly, and a woman"
N
black,
I
self-actualization.
own
her
to
SO. HILYARD
is well worth
process
The
CENTER
·~
watching,

THE BEANERY

1r-,
"-1..U.NN HIIOS

SPRIN G TERM

THE FLAMINGO KID
BREAKING AWAY
THE GRADUATE
ALICE DOSEN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE
SUMMER WISHES, WINTER DREAMS
I NEVER SANG FOR MY FATHER
TEN
WILD STRAWBERRIES
TELL ME A RIDDLE
'

'

ENGLIS H 195, 196, 197

Meets the cluster requirement at University of Oregon

CAMPUS MINISTRY
Restoration Gunpus Ministry (Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship):
Bible Study Wednesday 2-3 M/A 246

Episcopal Gunpus Ministry:
Bible Study & Free Lunch Wednesday 12-1:30 MIA 253

&ptist Student Union:
Free Lunch Thursday 12-1
Bible Study Thuflrlay I: 15 -2

Schedule for~ During Lent (2 rooms this year):
PE 205
February 12,13,1
March 3,4,5,6,7,I0,11,12,13,14
Mass will begin at 12:IO daily

6:

Powerful teaching tool at LCC
by Kelli J. Ray

TORCH Staff Writer

Wouldn't learning be
easier if students had immediate feedback and the

per side, the possibilities are
mind boggling.
Because the images are
read by laser beam, maximum access time between
one image and another is

Interactive video helps students learn.
teacher's undivided attention? This will soon be a reality for many students at LCC.
The "teacher" will be a
combination of hard and
software called interactive
video. Five microcomputers
paired with videodiscs will
enable students to learn at
their own pace, have the
machine's undivided attention while learning, and
receive immediate feedback
on their assignments.
And according to Jim
Ellison, dean for Liberal Arts
and Telecommunications,
"the hardware is already
here."
LCC is one of 10 US colleges chosen as a test site for
this innovative teaching tool,
and is the regional site in the
Pacific Northwest, according
to Ann Barrett, department
coordinator for Media Productions.
With the hardware hooked
up, what remains is staff
training. "This summer we'll
have a test run with selected
students, and by fall it
should be ready'' for
students to use regularly,
Ellison reports.
Interactive technology is
considered extremely power.:.
ful because the machine
works with students of
various skill levels to call up
instant photographic images
-- charts and graphs, illustrations, or even an instructor
are just a few examples :_and
since the videodisc can store
. 54,000 high quality im~ges

three seconds. This immediate feedback cuts learning time in half. "It's probably the most powerful
educational tool we've ever
had," Ellison states.

Called ''Project Leader,''
this effort will also provide
the college with videodisc
programs on mechanical,
electronic and electrical
technologies.
Barrett, who is also the
committee chairman of the
newly-formed Advisory
Committee to Project Leader,
says that the National Education Training Corporation
(NETC) and Sony Corporation joined hands to provide
approximately $100,000 in
equipment and staff training.
In exchange for the equipment and software, LCC will
be a source of information
regionally for other colleges.
The college will also work
with Sony and NETC to
enable educators to assess
the effettiveness of this
teaching tool.
Two committees have been
set up to make sure the college gets the most out of its
new project, Barrett says.
"The first committee, called
the Advisory Committee to
Project Leader, is dealing
with the day-to-day things
that may come up.'' According to Barrett, that committee is already fully formed .
"We call the second committee the Growth and
Development Committee,
and right now that group is
open" to new members. Barrett adds that the second
group will function as a
brainstorming committee for
long-term goals. ''It will
answer questions like,
'Where do we want to be in
five years?' "Barrett reports.
Anyone interested in joining can contact Barrett at ext.
2366.

Paint shop needs cars
by David Renfro

TORCH Staff Writer

LCC' s auto paint shop
needs cars to paint. "We
need cars that need small
paint jobs, such as a door or a
John
says
fender,''
Haurigan, paint shop instructor
''If a person wants some
paint work done inexpensively, and does not mind
waitmg a week or so tor the
job, then they should come
see me," Haurigan said.
Each job is a graded student project, supervised by
an instructor. Therefore, a
person who brings in a car
for painting must be
prepared to wait.

Any make or color vehicle
is fine, but no custom work,
such as pinstriping, is possible. Some of the work done
in the past has ranged from
motorcycle tanks to motor
homes. The shop can paint
whole cars but there is a very
long waiting list.
''I try to run the program
like a real working shop.
People have been pleased
with work we've done in the
past," says Haurigan.
Anyone interested in having work done should bring
the vehicle to John Haurigan
at the Machine Technology
Building,Room126,between
2:00 and 3:30 Monday
through Wednesday of any
week. No phone calls, requests Haurigan.

TOM

HEGER

for 4] SCHOOL BOARD
299 Blazer • Eugene • 97404
P1dll for by the Com•sittee to Elect Tom Heger,
~ School District,Jewel Bell, Trea.surer .

The TORCH March 7, 1986 Page 5

No more finals

Dear Annabanana,
I get so stressd out during
final's week. Just the
thought of those tests ties
my stomach up in knots. I
know I'm not the only one
who feels this way; what can
I do?
Signed,
Knot kidd~ng

Dear Knot,
Part of the stress in our
lives is due to our response
to certain stimuli; stress during final' s week is due, in my
opinion, to the jargon.
Take, for example, the very
word "FINAL": just thinkin~
the word sends shivers o1
wincing pain up and down
even the most seasoned
backbones . Now put that
word together with several of
its clones, "FINAL,"
" FINAL," and "FINAL":
those words can disintegrate
good bones.
Then take a look at the
calendar and discover it's
"FINAL'S WEEK"! You're
right: suddenly we have a
campus full of stressed-out
students, breaking backs and
necks to survive the
"terminal objective" of each
course. And, of course, terminal is what final's week is
all about, right?
"Terminal" should be
stricken from the English
language. It's a word we
associate with cancer and
hemorrhoids, and maybe
with computors. But it makes
studying for "that last big
one" sound so final.
Most of the stress comes
from the fact that the "Final"
system makes academic
bulimics out of students.

They binge before the test,
and then they purge it into a
two-hour time-slot. Stuff that
took 11 weeks to teach must
be quickly forgotten to make
enough room for the next
batch.
So what can be done about
this terrible condition? How
about modifying the jargon?
For instance, how about
changing FINAL to BEGINNING?
Beginnings could be designed to let students share what
they've learned -- a sort of
"show-and-tell" time given
at the end of each course.
Students could talk about
what they've gained from
the class and how they'll
begin using it once the class
is over.
Beginnings wouldn't be the
crux of the course's grade.
Beginnings would happen
because students are proud
of the work they've completed all term, and because
they're pleased with what
they've learned.
Beginnings wouldn't be ·
even remotely stressful.
They wouldn't be high-tech,
and nor would they require
students to crack books.
About the only thing they
might crack is a smile on a
student's face -- a smile of
confidence.
And wouldn't that be a
change: smiling faces during
Beginning's Week!
!l"

Make a Good Impression
Learn:

How to make oral messages more persuasive and influential.
How to put together a sound case for
your product or point of view.
How to analyze your customers or au-

dience to discover what messages will
most likely reach them.

Why we are inclined to believe what
we believe on any given issue, and why
we act or do not act consistently with
our beliefs.

So if you are a Business Management,
Advertising, Broadcast, Writing, or
Communication student, register Spring term for SPEECH 113.

PERSUASIVE
SPEAKING

Register early, limited enrollment

Page 6 March 7, 1986 The TORCH

OMNIUMS
OREGON NOW

VOCAL JAZZ & JAZZ

CONFERENCE
Oregon NOW (National Organization for
Women) will hold its Eighth Annual Conference
on Saturday, March 8 and Sunday March 9 at
Linn-Benton Community College in Albany.
Judy Goldsmith, past national NOW President,
will be the keynote speaker for the Conference.
Call Linda Klinge, 928-2526.

EUGENE BALLET
RE-STAGES FIREBIRD
On March 8 and 9, 1986, the Eugene Ballet
Company, the area's resident, professional ballet
company, will present its production of THE
FIREBIRD, with music by world-renown composer, Igor Stravinsky. In addition to performances on Saturday March 8 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, March 9 at 2:30 p.m., the company is
presenting two performances for students on
March 6. This is sponsored by the Young Audiences of Oregon, Inc. based in Portland. Call
Charmane Landing, 485-3992.

LAUGHING MATTERS
The Creative Consortium and High Wetshoe
presents "Laughing Matters" a workshop on the
use of humor and laughter in your daily life with
Marianne Ray, counselor and consultant from
Seattle, Wash. The workshop will take place on
Saturday, March 8, from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Studio
at 1470 East 20th, Eugene. Cost is $30. There is a
discount of 30 percent for those who register by
March 1. Limited enrollment. Call Gwen Curran
at 686-2650.

BAND
LCC's Performing Arts Department will
feature the Vocal Jazz Ensemble and the Jazz
Band on Thursday, March 13 at 8 p.m . in the
main theater. Admission is free .

FAMILY ALBUM SHOW

WOMEN'S TRACK TEAM
NEEDS SPRINTERS &
JUMPERS

IRISH FESTIVAl

It can be difficult for parents to assure their
children get the most nutritious diet. Such things
as sugar in breakfast cereals, food allergies, food
costs and changing eating habits complicate the
issue. That's why the Kidsfood Faire is planned
for Saturday, March 15, from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at
Eugene's First United Methodist Church, 1376
Olive Street.
The event will feature food tasting, activities
for children, recipes and films. Displays and people to answer questions are planned in such
areas as: breast feeding, solid food for infants,
calcium for nonmilk drinkers.

WEEKLY SPRING

WRITE FOR RESULTS!

WILDFLOWER WALKS
BEGIN MARCH 6

"Write for results: ad copy that sells!" is a
workshop for small business owners and
managers being sponsored by the LCC Business
Assistance Center on two Tuesday evenings,
March 11 and 18, from 7 to 10 p.m . at the LCC
Downtown Center, 1059 Willamette, Eugene.
Call Debra Carroll, 726-2255.

ACTOR NEEDED

Judy Fjell will bring her personal warmth and
spontaneous wit to the stage at Linn-Benton
Community College, Albany, Oregon at 8 p.m.
Saturday, March 8th, in a high-energy concert of
humor and politics. For ticket information call
Yvonne Burger, 327-2846.

LCC Performing Arts needs an actor to play
Vincentio in Shakespeare's "The Taming of the
Shrew," directed by Patrick Torelle. A small but
meaty part. Call Torelle for more information:
726-2209, weekdays .

SYMPHONIC BAND
LCC's Performing Arts Department will
feature two student concerts on Tuesday, March
11 at 8 p.m. in the main theater. Admission is
free.

The 1986 Irish Festival will kick off with a
special event planned for Friday, March 14, at
the Red Lion Motor Inn and conclude Sunday
with a traditional St. Patrick's Day Dinner sponsored by St. Alice's Catholic Church in Springfield. Call Murphy for more information,
747-4586.

JUDY FJELL TO PERFORM

and

The Women's Track Team is interested in finding more sprinters and jumpers for the 1986
season. If you are interested, contact Lyndell
Wilken at 726-2215 or leave a message at the
Physical Education desk: 747-4501, ext. 2545.

The EMU craft center's seventh annual Family
Album Show will be open for public viewing
March 8-16. The excellent, eclectic exhibit of art
and crafts will be in room 167 of the Erb
Memorial Union on the U of O campus. There
will be a public reception Friday evening, March
7 from 6-8 p.m . The show may be viewed from
11-5 Monday - Friday and 1-4 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday through March 16. For more information
call the Craft Center at 686-4361.

The 10th annual series of wildflower walks offered by U of O Herbarium director David
Wagner will begin March 6 and continue every
Thursday through June 12 at Alton Baker Park in
Eugene. "The walks are leisurely and informal,"
said Wagner. "We go out from noon to 1 p .m.
rain or shine." A detailed booklet describing the
spring walks is available from the museum. Call
Wagner at 686-3033.

LCC's CHAMBER CHOIR

TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL
CELEBRATES FEAST OF
PURIM
A children's carnival sponsored by Temple
Beth Israel in celebration of the Jewish feast of
Purim will be held Sunday, March 16 from 3-5:30
p.m. at Temple Beth Israel, 2550 Portland St. in
Eugene.
The carnival will feature games, booths,
refreshments and entertainment. One free activity ticket will be offered to every child in costume.
For more information, call the Temple office at
485-7218.

VITAMIN SALE

KIDSFOOD FAIRE

AMERICAN THEATRE
As part of the Fulbright Program, United
States Information Agency (USIA) is sponsoring
again this year a project on American Theater.
The playwrights, actors, critics, academicians,
and technicians in set, lighting, and costume
design -- whose achievements are recognized in
their own countries. USIA has asked the
Academy for Educational Development (AED), a
private, non-profit institution, to arrange the
30-day project for these distinguished visitors.
Visitors from Cameroon, Egypt, Fiji, New
Zealand, the United Kingdom, and Zambia will
be in Eugene March 14- 19. Coordinated by LCC
Performing Arts Head Ed Ragozzino, local participating organizations include LCC Theatre,
University Theatre, Very Little Theatre, On the
Edge, the Eugene Festival of Musical Theatre,
and the Hult Center.
For more information, contact Dick Reid,
726-2209.

SCULPTURE EXHIBIT
"Lead Head," a sculpture exhibit, at LCC's
Art Department Gallery runs from Monday, Feb.
24 - Friday, March 14. Gallery hours: 8 a.m. - 10
p.m., Monday through Thursday; 8 a .m. - 5
p.m., Friday. Free admission. Open to public.
Featured artists are Robert Gibney and Frank
Fox, both members of the New Zone Gallery.
Call LCC at 747-4501, ext. 2409.

Stress Fighters:

Nature's Life Chewable ''C'', 300 mg, 100 tabs
honey-sweetened, best quality sug.ret. $7.50 sale $4.95
Nature's Life ''Hi-B-50,
50 tabs, ....................... sug.ret. $4.25 sale $2.50
•100 tabs .............. ~ug.ret. $6.95
sale $4.25
Nature's Life Cal-Mag-Zinc,
100 tabs, ......... _......... sug.ret. $4.25 sale $2.75
250 tabs ................... sug.ret. $9.45
sale $5.75

For Memory & Concentration:

FREE LECTURE
The public is invited to a free lecture/demonstration at noon on Wednesday,
March 12, with Bill Evans -- nationally acclaimed
dancer, master teacher and choreographer. The
event will be held in the main gym at Lane Community College. While in town, Evans also will
lead workshops at LCC during the week of
March 11 and will give a solo performance at the
WOW Hall on March 13. For more information,
call LCC at 726-2215.

FUNRUN
March 13- "Spring Has Sprung Fun Run."
Three person team competition for this medley
of 440, 880, and 1 mile distances. Predict your
overall team time. Prizes for winning teams.
Come to the Intramural Office for more information and to sign up.

POWER LIFT
Friday March 14, at 4 p.m. in PE 123. For Men
and Women, sign up and weigh in, the deadline
is at noon in the Inramural Office on March 14.

NINE DAYS WONDER
The Community Center for the Performing
Arts proudly host Nine Days' Wonder in a
benefit for the 1986 WOW It's Ours fundraiser on
Friday, March 7, at the WOW Hall, 8th and Lincoln in Eugene. For more information call
687-2746.

PUMP BOYS AND
DINETTES
Mainstage Cabaret and Jim Roberts present
PUMP BOYS AND DINETTES, a Country Music
Review directed by Melina Neal, during the
month of March. Call 683-4368 for ticket information.

PAINTINGS ON DISPLAY
Drawings and paintings by two U of O fine arts
students will be on view March 3-7 in Gallery 141
on campus. Scott Smith and Gerald Snyder,
both candidates for bachelor of fine arts degrees
in painting, will show drawings and oil paintings
of still-lifes, landscapes and figures . Call Mary
Dole, 686-3610.

26570WILLAMETTE03440DB 16
Kegs To Go

• Sunday 5pm Open Pool Tournament
7pm Free Pool - closing
• Monday 8pm Open Singles Dart Tournament
• Tuesday Hot Dog Night - Dart League
• Saturday 8pm Ping-Pong Tournament
• Friday 7 :30pm Blind Draw Doubles Darts

BIG SCREEN TV
& SATELLITE DISH

Pizza .Italian Food-availible from our
service window of Pizza Pete's Italian Kitchen

THEâ–¡BLACKâ–¡FDRESTâ–¡TAVERN

WOMEN
WRITER)

Brain Power Packs
7 day supply
sug.ret. $5.95 sale $3.95
-- 25 day supply
sug.ret. 20.95

sale $14.95
Sundance offers
a comprehensive selection
of vitamins and supplements
at discount prices.

u

Sylvia Plath, Nikki Giovanni, Margaret Cavendish, Anne Sexton, Collette, Flannery
O'Connor, Virginia Woolf, Sappho, Aphra
Behn, Gwendolyn Brooks, Kate Chopin, Bronte
Sisters, Carson McCullers, Diane Wakoski, Zora
Neal Hurston, Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison,
Alice Walker
MWF 1200-1300 M&A 245

Open 8-11 daily at 24th & Hilyard

343-9142

Instructor Joyce Salisbury

LANGUAGE ARTS Seq. 880 SPRING 1986

The TORCH March 7, 1986 Page 7

DJ enjoys playing music by and for women
''It's so funny to listen to
comedy about
menstruation,'' she says.
Although many of the
topics in women's music
have universal appeal, some
are specifically from a
woman's perspective, for
instance: alternative
relationships, violence,
work environment,
motherhood and
environmental issues.

Enid Lefton, who hosts KLCC's Monday night
Women's Music show, says there's never enough
time to play all the songs she'd like to play. "It

was my childhood fantasy to be a disc jockey, '' she
says. "It's my favorite thing to do!"

by Karen Irmsher
he eases a lever
down the control panel,
gradually weaving a rich
tapestry of women's voices
onto the airwaves.
As the music fades, her
low easy voice announces,
"It's exactly 9:30. My name
is Enid and you' re listening
to Women's Music."
While many people may
not even be aware that the
genre "women's music"
exists, Enid Lefton knows
from the calls she's received
in the five years she's been
hosting the Monday night
show on KLCC, that a lot of
people are listening.
''Most of the praise I get
is from women who call to
say they really appreciate
me being there -- that they
can turn on their radio
Monday nights and hear

~

music that touches them,''
she says. She's received
calls from as far away as
Estacada -- a woman
standing watch in a fire
tower -- as well as calls from
loyal male listeners.
So just what is women's
music?
"I don',t know what it is,"
says Lefton. "I think
everyone has to make their
own definition." She is not
without her own criteria,
however. For her, the music
must either 'speak to a
woman's experience, and/or
be created primarily by
women.''
Most of the music Lefton
plays on her show is
produced by the small but
growing women's music
industry -- music that's not
being played or accepted in
more mainstream shows.

"You're not going to hear
lesbian love songs on KZEL
(a popular, basically hard
rock local station)," notes
Lefton.
Along with feminist songs
she sprinkles her show with
old "girl groups" like the
Chiffons, or the Supremes -or really shakes up her
listeners by_ playing
something like ''I Enjoy
B.e ing a Girl,'' a song from
the musical ''Flower Drum
Song."
After she plays a song
about women in traditional
roles, she usually balances it
with a more modern
statement by someone like
Annie Lennox (of the
Eurythmics) or Aretha
Franklin.
She often gets requests for
humor and likes to slip
some in from time to time.

/ ///:fe~11Jo J /
~P~e / f?iltfe?
///

//

/

Learn how to express the ways this
Spring Term in Sheila Juba's Poetry

/

/

class/~

__...._~ / /

/

/

/

'/

Jma?_inalt~e / /
/ / U}fiilen? 243

Offered through Language Arts

Seq. 851/MWF 10am. /

/

"Women's music focuses on
caring for the world and
people," she says.
According to Lefton, the
women's music industry
was started by musically
talented women who were
frustrated at their attempts
to break into the maledominated recording
industry -- the only
opportunities were for sexy
singers.
Also, as the women's
movement grew in strength,
and support for "women's
issues'' became widespread,
many wanted to put their
concerns to music but found
little support for ·womanoriented subject matter.
She cites the founding of
Olivia Records in 1973, 13
years ago, as the birth of

the women's music
industry. Since that time the
industry as a whole has
blossomed. The Ladyslipper
Tenth Anniversary Catalog
of Records and Tapes by
Women (1986) lists albums
and tapes by nearly a
thousand solo performers
and groups on hundreds of
labels.
Names on some of the
labels flaunt their feminist
politics -- Sisters Unlimited,
Musica Femina, Radical
Rose, and Ova. But most of
the catalog entries
emphasize the particular
genre of music rather than
feminist politics. Types of
music include: comedy,
classical, punk, new wave,
rock, reggae, soul, rhythm
and blues, gospel, jazz,
blues, country, folk, and
international.
KLCC' s record collection
exhibits the same mix. One
four-foot-long shelf contains
approximately 300 redtagged album~, signaling
women's music. Recurnng
names include: Holly Near,
Meg Christian, Kay
Gardner, Chris Williamson,
Margie Adam, Teresa Trull
and Barbara Higbee, as well
as more mainstream female
See Music, page 8

If you have any background in the

German language, you can enroll in
German Spring term.
Spring term will be the 3rd part of first and
second year German, so some background
work will be necessary to begin at this time.
German I 10:00-11:00 Monday-Thursday
German II 12:00-1:00 Monday-Thursday
Center 476 5 credits
1 hour of tutoring lab required weekly
JOHN RICE
Office Center 455

SILVIA SPITTA
Office Center 455

German
is a passport into.

international business
the financial world
careers in the new technologies
the sciences and medicine
expanded cultural horizons
unlocking our own culture and heri~age
art and music, both old and new

Page 8 March 7, 1986 The TORCH

Music, from page 1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ . Bowser,

singers such as Laura Nyro,
Bette Midier, Melissa
Manchester and Joan
Armatrading.
In addition, red-flagged
albums are scattered
throughout the rest of
KLCC' s ample collections -Ella Fitzgerald, Billie
Holiday, Alice Coltrane,
Buffy St. Marie, Joan Baez,
and Emmylou Harris, to
name a few.
Lefton says she's seen a
change in women's music,
just as there's been a
change in the women's
movement. She thinks the
music has gained subtlety
and sophistication as the
women's movement has lost
some of its anger, and as
women have gained skills
and strength.
And in recent years, she's
noticed male names
beginning to crop up in the
listings of credits on album
covers. In the formative
years, there were none.
''For awhile,'' she says,
"women were going out

there saying'' we can do it
ourselves and we're going
to do it ourselves." Now,
some women have evolved
to a point of confidence
where they can perform
with men without feeling
overpowered.
While Lefton would like
to see feminist artists more

accepted by the mainstream,
she's not hoping for total
integration. "I think there
will always be a place for
women's music because
women have special things
to say, and ways of
expressing themselves as
women.''

lVew admin. change.s
by Karen Irmsher

TORCH Editor

President Turner has
proposed an alternate plan
for administrative changes.
He says he came up with the
new pror.osal because he
thougftt ' too much negative
attention had been focused
on the new 'super-dean.'"
His new plan, he believes,
mai~tains the strengths of
the old plan, but eliminates
most of the objections.
Under the new proposal,
department heads would
report directly to the - vice

Going away for Spring
break or commutin g to
school?

Ride Share
is available now. Take advantage of this opportunit y
while it lasts.

345-7 600
SOMETIMES IT TAKES
NARMY TO PAY BACK
YOUR COLLEGE LOAN.
Paying back your college loan can be a long,
uphill battle. But the Army's Loan Repayment
Program makes it easy.
Each year you serve as a soldier, the Army will
reduce your college debt by 1/3 or $1,500, whichever
amount is greater. So after serving just 3 years, your
college loan will be completely paid off.
You're eligible for this program with a National
Direct Student Loan or a Guaranteed Student Loan
or a Federally Insured Student Loan made after
October 1, 1975. And the loan can't be in default.
And just because you've left college, don't think
you'll stop learning in the Army. Our skill training
offers a wealth of valuable high-tech, career,oriented
skills. Call your local Army Recruiter to find out more
SSG Bruce Leas

687-643 I

ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAM•·

president for instruction. The
previously proposed new
Dean of Arts, Sciences and
Technologies, would be
eliminated, bringing the
number of deans back down
to three. Provision is also
made to add a lower paid
staff administrator when the
specific need is determined
by the new vice president.
The president asked instructional department heads
to consider this alternative
proposal at a meeting Feb.
18, requesting them to
discuss it with their staff and
give him feedback.
A week later Turner told
the TORCH he had received
13 departmental responses,
along with several others,
and that '' the general
responses have been supportive of the alternative plan."
He said he wanted to allow
the board to comment on the
proposal before making a
final decision.
Changes would not go into
effect until July 1.

Coffee§

CJc~&&

~~

frompage1 _ _ _ _ _ __

• National financial aid
cuts: "I'm opposed to the
cuts because they cause ·
students not to be able to go
to LCC. Logically, it would
be nice to increase financial
aid."
• Gramm-Rudman: "The
deficit that this country has is
overwhelming. The GrammRudman bill is kind of a
knee-jerk reaction. I would
be in favor of it over-all, but
I'm not sure I agree with its

Lewis, frompagel _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
• Gramm-Rudman: "I oppose the education cuts
under Gramm-Rudman. I
think education should have
been immune, like social
security. All this shows is
that Congress is refusing to
take responsibility for balancbudget.
the
ing
• School administration
under President Turner: "I'd
like to see him succeed. I
think he should have waited
to make so many changes. I
wouldn't rate his job performance as excellent, but he's
still new. I think he needs to
listen more before he makes

Unruh,

changes. He needs to look at
why LCC is so innovative."
• LCC budget cuts: "!think
the college is taking the
wrong approach to budget
cuts. When you cut the programs, you cut the students,
and you have even less
money. If we could eliminate
the deans and their staffs, we
would save $250,000. Before
cutting the programs, we
need to look at the administration real hard. The
community sees LCC as topheavy. We've got too many
chiefs and not enough Indians.~,

from page 1 - - - - - - - - -

• Gramm-Rudman: "It's
not the panacea that it's
cracked up to be. It puts too
much power in the executive

MARCH SPECIAL

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$5.80/lb. (reg. $6.30/lb.)

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means."
• School administration
under President Turner:
"I'm very supportive of Dr.
Turner.''
• LCC budget cuts: "We
need to look very closely at
what the various projections
mean. We have a legal requirement to balance the
budget. Our_revenue is not
going up. We have to continue to tighten our belts, but
not by laying people off."

Nationwide Scholarship Network
POB 738 Springfield, OR 97477

branch, and I don't think it's
going to be effective. At best,
it masks the problem. If it's
up to Ronnie, we know
where the cuts are going to
be -- education and social services.''
• School administration
under President Turner:
"I'm really in close touch
with the president, faculty
members, and staff, and I
think the situation is finally
coming around to a resolution. Any time you have a
new executive officer, there's
a natural process of building
trust. He's (Turner) got different management styles
than Eldon (former LCC
president Eldon Schafer).
He needs to be in better communication with people. I
feel that it's a learning experience for him. It's a matter of him adjusting his style
to ours."
• LCC budget cuts: "If
we're short funds, we need
to look at the students and
decide what's most important to them, and what's
least effective to them. We're
going to have to, as a board,
make serious decisions on
whether to cut whole programs instead of diluting
everything. The key is maintaining quality.''

Wahto,

frompage1
-like
programs,
community
weight loss programs, etc. I
think we should start at the
bottom, with the community
programs to be the first to be
cut. We can always go back
and re-evaluate it."

The TORCH March 7, 1986 Page 9

SP OR TS

Tita n men succumb to Washington colleges
by Darren Foss

TORCH Sports Editor

The Titan Men's Basketball
team's otherwise successful
season came to a disappointing end last Friday, Feb. 28,
at the NWAACC Championship Tournamen t in Walla
Walla, WA., when it lost
both tournament games.
Lane entered the final eight
double-elim ination tourney
ranked fifth in the Northwest, but had its work cut
out~ taking on th e numberone ranked team, Columbia
Basin from Pasco, Wash. on
Thursday night, Feb. 27.
''I was very disappointe d
with our performance . . . .
We didn't get the job done,"
comments Titan Head Coach
Dale Bates.
Columbia Basin 76, Lane 70,
The Titans gave the Hawks
all they could handle, but
came up six points short, losing 76-70.
Columbia Basin opened
the first half playing nearperfect basketball on both of-

a hard time getting anything
fense and defense. Lane had
started and went in at
halftime trailing · by eight,
31-23.
The Titans then came alive
in the second half, their intense defense forcing CBCC
to turn the ball over. Lane
was back in the game, tying
at 61, and again at 65-65, but
was still unable to take the
lead. LCC scored 47 points in
the second half, but it wasn't
enough. They still came up
six points short.
Bates says, "We came out .
of the blocks slow, had problems scoring and playing
'D.' We were forced out of
our game plan and had to
play half-court trap and full
court man-to-man defense
just to get back into the
game."
Fouls were also a key to the
game. Lane was called for
almost twice as many as
CBCC, 27-14. This difference
allowed the Hawks to score
14 more points from the freethrow line, which was more
than enough to give them the
victory. In the process,

Lane's top two scorers,
Jerome Johnson with 24
points, and Bruce Carter
with 10, fouled out taking
away some of Lane's fire
power down the stretch.
Johnson also led the team
in rebounds with nine, while
Jeff Todd added eight, and
Carter seven for the game.
The loss dropped Lane into
a consolation bracket matchup against the defending
cfiampion Edmonds Tritons
from Lynnwood, Wash. on
Friday afternoon, Feb. 28.
Edmonds 95, Lane 92,
The Titans were caught in a
wild run-and-sh oot game
from the opening tip, but
after the smoke had clea·r ed
Edmonds came away with
the hard-fough t victory,
95-92.
The first 20 minutes were
fairly evenly played with
Lane trailing at the break by
three, 43-40.
However, the Tritons came
out with the momentum in
the second half, building
their lead to as high as
18-points with 12 minutes to

Bellisimoto be inducted
into Bowling Hall of Fame

teach the game to others. He 10 of those years he also
says he has learned by ex- coached the women's team.
The men's team became a
perience.
LCC Bowling Instructor
powerhous e in the
Then, in 1925, his family regular winning the Oregon
Lou Bellisimo will be
nation,
He
honored next week by being moved to California.
Intercolleg iate Championstate
the
throughout
bowled
ship 18 of the 22 years
inducted into the American
1925 and 1936. His
Bowling Congresses ' (ABC) between score of 200 in 1928 Bellisimo was there. His best
average
Professional Bowling Hall of won him the Highest team was in 1963-64 which
•
Fame.
lost only one match to Earl
Average of the Year Title.
The induction ceremony Most pro bowlers today Anthony' s team from
will take place Thursday,
average around. 220, but ac- Tacoma, WA.
March 13, in Las Vegas, NV.
He also had some imcording to Bellisimo, '' a 200
Only two pro bowlers a year in those days was like 220 to- pressive personal bowling
are voted into the Hall of day. The lane conditions achievemen ts as a bowler in
Fame. This year, along with were much, much tougher,
Oregon.
Bellisimo; Earl Anthony, the
tolike
weren't
pins
the
• He won the first three
and
leader of the Professional
can match Eugene-Sp ringfield Match
they
where
day
Bowlers Association (PBA)
Game Champions hip Titles
them all to one weight.''
win list, with ·50 PBA
a , from 1959-61.
became
Bellisimo
titles, will also be inducted.
of the ABC in 1936
• Was a member of the
Bellisimo yVill become the member
bowling Eugene-Springfield All Star
California
local
after
first Oregon bowler elected
Bowling Team five years in a
associations finally decided
into the Hall.
would
he
row, from 1958-1963.
Otherwise
join.
to
''I was suprised when they
• He completed his bowlsooner.
joined
have
sent me the letter saying I
'' Grana Slam,'' rolling a
ing
proback
a
He developed
was selected this year. I was
bowling 290, 298, 299 and a perfect
his
in
early
blem
beginning to think they had career which caused him to
300 game which was ABC
forgotten me. I am honored use a 13 or 14 pound ball insanctioned. He first rolled
to be inducted the same year stead of the heaviest 16
the 290 in Los Angeles in
as Earl Anthony. We have pound ball. Despite this
1940, then a 298 at North
been buddies for years. In disadvantag e, he was still
Bend Lane in 1967, and a 299
my books, he's the best left- able to keep a 190 average.
at Timber Bowl in Springfield
handed bowler ever," says
Then in 1948, he decided to
in 1951. He finally rolle<l a
Bellisimo, also a lefty.
move to Oregon with his
perfect 300 at the Oregon
Bellisimo, who has taught wife, Anni. He first began inState Bowling Tournamen t in
over 40,000 students at the U structing bowling in 1949 at
Pendleton in 1972 at the age
of O, and about 4,000 at LCC the U of O, where he taught
of 66. This made him one of
so far, is known for his bowl- for 23 years (1949-1972), and
the oldest bowlers to roll a
ing instructional ability.
became a Senior Bowling Inperfect game.
stuctor despite only having
Bellisimo' s Background
He finally had to retire
He was introduced to an eighth grade education.
bowling in 1980 at the
from
''I was in the right place at
bowling as a teenager in
74 due to persisting
of
age
Johnsonbur g, PA in 1921, the right time,'' says _back problems which even
taking turns setting pins to Bellisimo of his opportunity .
two surgeries could not
During this time he also
pay for his bowling. But he
solve. Through teaching he
never had any formal train- coached the U of O's varsity
still keeps in contact witfi the
for
game.
_
and
team,
bowling
men's
.
ing on how to bowl -- or to _

play. When Coach Bates
responded by substituting
players off the bench, the
new blood rallied Lane back
into the game. Once again,
though, the Titans came up
short, losing by a heartbreaking three points.
"Our defense was lacking
in both games -- it was obvious the second night when
we scored 92 points, and
lost. That shouldn't happen,'' comments Coach
Bates.
Johnson, playing in his
final game as a Titan, closed
out his two years at Lane
with style -- scoring a schoolrecord 42 points while ripping down 12 rebounds.
Johnson's hot hand connected on 17 of 26 shots from
the field, and ripped the net
8 of 11 times from the freethrow stripe.
He was followed in scoring
key
other
two
by
and
Laakso
Eric
:
. sophomores
Todd, who put in 13 points
each against Edmonds.
The losses sent the Titans
home early and dropped
their fin~l record to 22-7.

Ironically, this record is better than last year's 21-9 mark,
which placed Lane third in
the Northwest.
"We had to play comefrom-behind ball in both
games and came close -- but
no cigar," adds Bates.
Overall, the season has
been a success for the Titan
men. They tallied the third
best record in Lane history,
tied for the NWAACC
Region IV Southern Division
Co-Championship, and won
three pre-season tournament
titles: the Tip-Off Tourney in
Coos Bay, the Linn-Benton
Invitational in Albany, and
their own Lane Invitational
at home.
''This is the most talented
team I've ever put together,
but not my best team. They
weren't tough in the clutch
and didn't play well
together. They never reached
their full potential,'' comments Bates.
Overall, we had a respectable season, 22-7, but I felt
with these players, if they'd
really worked hard, they
would've placed."
11

by Darren Foss

TORCH Sports Editor

0

0

..
..,...liiiiio,;j_ _ _ _ _ _....,..ii;;,..W......ililllllllii~ iii--------.

At 79, Lou Bellisimo still enjoys teaching bowling.

After leaving the U of O in
1972, he came to Lane. Now
into his 14th year, at the age
of 79, he has taught over
4,000 LCC students the fine
arts of bowling.
His instruction workshops,
which teach other instructors
how to teach bowling, have
taken him all over the world
-- to Saudi Arabia, Alaska,
California, Texas, and New
York just to name a few.
• Bellisimo has also written
a buok, "The Bowler's
Manual,'' first printed in
1965. It is still on the market,
now into its fourth edition,
and has become the numberone rated bowling instuction
book on the market. The first
three editions alone sold over
200,000 copies.
Lou and Armi have been
married for 46 years now and
have four children and nine
grandchildr en. ''The sale of
my book helped me put my
girls through college," comments Bellisimo.
Bellisimo' s trademark as an
instructor is his insistence on

good form. He doesn't care
about score and doesn't
grade on score. "If the student uses good form, and
practices, eventually he or
she will bowl higher scores.''
While at the U of 0
Be_llisimo was accused of giving too many A's. "Dean
Esslinger, the dean of the
Physical Education Department at the time, said I
should grade on a curve. But
you can't grade on a curve in
a bowling class. If they all
bowl with good form, they
all deserve A's.
"I want them in balance,
showing good leverage,
follow through, and good
hand position, '' says
Bellisimo of his students.
Following his Hall of Fame
ceremony
induction
Bellisimo will return to Lane
for the Spring Term and continue to teach bowlers the
correct way to bowl. Now
LCC students have a chance
to •1earn from a Hall of
Farner, and possibly become
Hall of Famers themselves.

..c:

P-.

Page 10 March 7, 1986 The TORCH

Where to smoke: That is the question
bv Michael Spilman

TC:fRCH Staff Writer

Should smoking be banned
in the main lobby of the
Center Building?
Well, just as LCC' s
Facilities Management Committee (FMC) was planning
to make a Feb. 27 decision on
whether or not the Center
Concourse (CC) area should
be changed from a smoking
to a non-smoking area, it
received a petition from lobby users favoring the CC' s
status as a smoking area.
The student- and staffcirculated petition carried 100
signatures and was accompanied by several written requests, says Evelyn Tennis,
administrative assistant of
Student Activities. Tennis

listed what she understood
to be the thoughts and concerns that led to the petition:

• People stopping for a
quick break in between
classes would not have time
to go downstairs and smoke
in the cafeteria.
• In all kinds of weather,
people who smoke in the CC
area would have to go outside.
• The majority of the school
is already non-smoking, and
• Many students smoke in
the lobby whtle they cto their
homework because they find
the cafeteria too noisy.
According to Paul Colvin,
director of Campus Services
and chairman of the FMC,

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Many students, faculty and
other employees work or
relax in the CC during each
school day, and Colvin says
he's heard complaints about
cigarette smoke in the area.
He reports that some people who use the CC have expressed concerns over too
much cigarette smoke in the
Financial Aid area and too
much smoke around the
Library entrances.
Therefore Martin Lewis,
director of the Student
Resource Center (SRC), says
he believes that if the CC
area is to be made into a nosmoking zone, the college
should
provide
an
'' alternative space; one
which is nicer than the
Center Building.''
Lewis also suggested a
filtering system for the CC
area. But most of all, he is
concerned about the unfolding of another pressure-

BEAT REPORTER

~pring germ
Eng 203

The subject of rape will be
explored in an upcoming
series of articles by three
TORCH reporters.
During the next two
weeks, three reporters,
together with Kate Berry,
Women's Center coordinator, will distribute

9' -~"

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Linda Wad dell, director of
Financial Aid, would like to
see the area become a nosmoking zone. Cigarette
smoke '' encroaches all over
the place," says Waddell,
noting that many offices in
Financial Aid have no ceilings or doors to keep smoke
out. She adds that people
who work with the copy
machine near the east entrance of the library have to
breathe both cigarette and
photocopier fumes.
"I think smokers need
somewhere inside to smoke,
but not necessarily the concourse area," says Judy Hill,
Financial Aid secretary. _
'' Smoke gets into computer systems," adds
another Financial Aid
employee, suggesting that
damage could be done over a
period of time.
One woman from the
Counseling department said
she thinks there ''has to be a
place to smoke," and that
there should be such a place
on every floor.
"I feel like it violates my

"

survey forms to women on
campus. Additional copies of
the survey will be distributed
through instructors to their
classes, and to women by
mail. Interested women can
also fill out forms, available
in the TORCH office, or the
Women's Center. All information gathered will be completely anonymous.

"

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type issue on campus at a
time when enough tension
already exists.

space," says another person
from the Counseling department, referring to when she
enters the CC near the
photocopier. But she says
she doesn't know where to
suggest people go to smoke.

Ona Bake, a Student Advisory Committee representative from the Art Department, talked about selfsurvival.
"There are times when I
cannot use the SRC (located
in the CC) due to cigarette
smoke." She explains that
cigarette smoke causes her
extreme "difficulties" in
breathing and that her desire
is "to survive, not to harass
people who smoke.''
Colvin says the committee
may decide to do nothing
about the issue when they
meet again on March 27, ana
that it will continue to accept
responses from students and
staff at least until that date.
Smokers appear to ''have the
edge," at this point, he
reports.
Ideas and suggestions
should be written and
delivered to LCC' s Campus
Services building on the northeast corner of the campus.

Article ~xplores subject of
rape attitudes, prevention
by Ramona Munsell

(limited area)

-

the committee proposed to
make half the CC area nonsmoking and the other half
smoking. However, says
Colvin, there is one problem
-- no one involved wants
their half of the CC to be the
smoking area.

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PD&PI: A basic class in paste-up. No prerequisites.
Design and produce your own letterhead
Learn about basic printing methods
Learn to read a layout
Learn to use Editing and Proofing Marks
Spec type and develop formats
Work with transfer lettering, screen-tint film,
border tapes
• Design a Newsletter
•
•
•
•
•
•

PD&PII: Magazine, newspaper, and advertising
design. PD&PI required.
PD&P I Seq 1430 UH 1130-1300. Seq 1431 UH
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PD&P II Seq 1432 UH 1430-1600.
=If

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The three reporters, Kelli
Ray, Lois Grammon, and
Mike Spilman, plan to write
articles focusing on women's
attitudes concerning rape,
dealing with the actual experience of being raped, and
with the help available on
campus for _victims of rape or
assault.
Ray plans to write two articles dealing with the actual
experience of rape, and the
aftereffects. Any woman
who is willing to share her
experience can contact Ray
by leaving a note in her box
in the TORCH office.
Grammon will center her
stories on the help available
at LCC for victims of assault
and sexual harassment, and
on the redefinition of rape.
Grammon says people need
to be made aware of changes
the definition of rape, particularly the "date rape" on
"acquaintance rape" situation.
''Most people think of rape
as a violent attack,'' says
Grammon. "I'd like to find
out how many people agree
with that view.''
Spµman will look at where
most rapes occur in the community. He will focus on
security on the LCC campus
and in the Eugene/Springfield area.
The stories are scheduled
for TORCH publication during the first or second week
of Spring Term.

The TORCH March 7, 1986 Page 11

-AUTOSn SUZUKI 500 T very dependable,

$300. 485-8626.

70 Volksbus. 20,000 miles on motor.
Needs helicoil & generator. Very
good interior. $550/offer. 935-2707.
74 Plymouth 318, engine $150 o.b.o.
Contact Richard Strempel, Aviation
Dept. 8-5 p.m.
55 International Pickup. Excellent
condition. $1200. 747-9794.
55 GMC house bus, raised roof with
lofts. 35' VB Auto $4,500 o.b.o.
343-3768.
73 Volkswagen bus. Good condition.
Rear seat makes into camper bed.
$2000. Call 686-0794.
74 ORANGE VW BUG for sale. Excellent running condition. $1450 or
best offer. 344-5751 Ask for Donna.
65 BUICK SPECIAL only 42k mi! A
keeper must sacrifice. Tim 345-1964.
77 DATSUN B-210 runs great - clean.
Must sell - steal at $1000. Call
746-5197 evenings.
70 SUZUKI 500 T with faring. Very
dependable $275 also 67 Volvo 12is
$175 485-8626.

SUZUKI 750 wlwindjammer, $1000.
Call for more information. 935-7345.
76 DT YAMAHA 400 new tires,

engine $350. 683-1601 - Jake.

62 GMC Pick-up $400. '75 Honda
motorcycle (rebuilt) $500. 688-9112.
WANT' TO BUY: Pay $500 for best
Datsun offered. (Might consider
other small car.) 746-5756, evenings
best.
CHEVY 6 cy. engine wanted. Must
run good. Call 747-8653.
PRE-70 CHEVY p.u. body wanted.
Motor not important. Call 747-8653.

-fORSALE-

CLASSIFIEDS
1984 Comp III Nordica ski boots,
size 8-8 V2, excellent shape $70.
687-8448 - Mark.
STEREO disc movie machine with 40
movies, $600 Richard, 747-8894 after
7p.m.
CUSTOM CANOPY 3/4 finished, insulated, wired sound, lights. Fits
small pickups, Ranchero. 746-9875.
$300, negotiable.

-SERVICES- â–  HELP WANTED â–  -MESSAGES-

AUTO REPAIR by experienced
mechanic. All makes/models, at
reasonable prices. Call J.D. evenings, 345-6444.
MATII TUTOR $4/hr please call
683-4237.
MOVING/HAULING. Need a hand?
Have truck will haul, reasonable.
John 342-3281.

SNUGGLEBEAR - With you how
sweet you are, how can I resist Wanna get married?? Love, Snugglebunny.

VALLEY POOL TABLE 4'x8' solid
slate $200. Ask for Richard
Strampel, Aviation Dept. 8-5 p.m.

WOMEN'S CLINIC - Annual exam,
pap, birth control, and pregnancy
testing by appt. Student Health Services.

DON'T MISS OUT! learn about the
IBM PC microcomputer and commonly and highly used type of software: Database (sets of records).
Class meets Saturday 8:00-1300
March 15, 22 1986. Details and
signup: Business Department
Secretaries or call 726-2221. Space is
limited. Dont wait.

TEAC A-1340 four track reel-to-reel
$95 and TEAC cassette deck $40. Tim
345-1964.

QUALITY TYPING and EDITING
for sharp, clean final drafts. Skillful
editing improves your writing.
345-9293.

IWATA HP-3 Airbrush (new) compressor and paints incl. Tim
345-1964.
NEED 13 TIRES & RIMS for Pinto or
Opel, need Opel for parts 69-73 for ·
' free willing to haul away. Frank,
741-0019.

GARDENING: mowing, edging,
trimming, hauling, rototilling,
weeding, fertilizing, clean-ups.
Reasonable. John 342-3281;
344-0119. FREE ESTIMATES.

LOOKING FOR TRAIN for Dodge
314 ton 4x4 power wagon. Call Frank
741-0019 Need Help.

SMALL ENGINE REPAIR. Garden
tractors, tillers my specialty. Pick
up and delivery service. 10 percent
senior, student discount. 747-8328
Richard.

3 WAIT, 3 CHANNEL walkie
talkies. $60 each, new. Best offer.
747-1514, Mark.

MASSAGE FOR RELAXATION Swedish, acupressure, energy balancing. Nonsexual only! $10 per hour.
Nan Cohen 484-9314.

MY GIRL OPTED OUT, Kenmore
washer, dryer combo, excellent condition, brown. Call 343-4985 Evenings.

TYPING - resumes, term papers,
research papers. $1 per page. Work
done on 100 percent recycled paper.

NAN 484-9314.

OLYMPUS OM-1 with lens and
camera bag. $250 or best offer. Call
Jim, 746-3715.

AITENTION STUDENTS: Safe,
natural herbal stimulant available
now! Money back guarantee.
$11.95/month. Cheryl 726-6945.

VIOLIN $125. Sunn Amplifier $150.
Call Susan at 688-9112.
GREAT BUY 11 plus compatible
Fr'anklin 1000 w/2drives, software,
manuals. $600, Gregg 683-5467,
before 8 p. m.

-WORDPROCESSING - Term papers,
resumes, disk storage, spell check included, quality service, Right Write
343-2162.
weddings,
pets and model portfolios. Quality,
professional low cost. 688-1504.
SPRING PORTRAITS,

WINDSURFER - only used 3 summers. Very good condition.
Desperate to sell before spring.
484-0563, or 485-6877 ans. service.

PORTABLE B&W TV - $20 call
942-0657.

ROBERTSON'S DRUG

evenings.

DIGITAL COMPUTER 256K, dual
drives,
printer,
software
(Wordperfect), multiplan, R Base
4000, more. Desperate - 484-0696, or
485-6877 ans. service.

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TUTORING of all English skills.
Call 688-5152.

Your prescription is
our main concern.

B

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34S-1153

OPEN 10-10 EVERYDAY

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TYPING. Term papers, resumes, etc.
Spell check included. JoAnn at /AC
INK Word Processing, 747-7158.

TYPIST will type term papers,
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page. Call 935-1253.

Eugene based river outfitter needs
mature river guides. Rafting skills
preferred but will consider apprenticeships. Good group and people
skills required. Write:

you again. Missed you since our
graduation! Love, your secret admirer.

QUEEN SIZED WATERBED. Excellent condition. $95. 747-1611 after
4p.m.

IOPPORTUNITIESI

SOLIGOR ZOOM, macro 85mm 300. Fits Minolta camera. Call
836-2424 - 849-2577.

OUTDOOR GROUP LEADERS

KEVIN STACEY: It's terrific seeing;

BESSELER 23C photographic
enlarger with b/w chemicals, paper.
The whole set-up $400. 344-1731.

WATERBED good condition, padded
rails. Heater, frame and mattress.
Best offer, 747-6906, Dan or Nicole.

TWIN MATTRESS and boxsprings,
good condition $80 or best offer, call
evenings 343-2492.

ARE YOU A TYPIST? The TORCH is
looking for more typesetters. We
train you on our machines. Inquire at
205 Center anytime between 8:30
a. m. and 5:00 p. m.

Fridays open for me. Your secret admirer.

TELEVISIONS, 17" color $59, 9"
B&W, 485-1815, early mornings or

FIREWOOD - $55 per cord. Fir split
and delivered 689-9216 after 6:30
p.m.

BETIY, I don't know what you
heard, but I am innocent. Who is
Babbs anyway? Foss

EARN EXTRA INCOME - stuffing
envelopes. Send self-addressed
stamped envelope to: Spectrum
WRITING TUTOR. Flexible. Composition, style, grammar. Native & . Enterprises, 1965 Patterson, Suite
No. 5, Eugene 97405.
foreign writers tutored. Sliding
scale. By application. 345-9293.

c-64 COMPATIBLE Okidata
printer, brand new in the box. Includes interface $125. Phone:
747-0043.

NEED A HAND with overnight
guests? Full size hide-a-bed couch earthtone. 485-3541 $175.

DRIVER AND CLASS NOTE TAKER
to transport disabled person to
school. 942-5129.

ai;

Details at Campus Travel Center - EMU

687-8456

JULY LCC will lead a five-day trip to
EXPO 86 in British Columbia.
Technologies from throughout the
world will be featured. LCC's
package tour will include transportation, lodging for four nights, an
EXPO 86 PASS, and tours of the
Olympia Brewery, the Seattle Space
Needle, and downtown Vancouver,
B. C. The costs range from $220 for
double accomodations to $275 for
four in a room. For more information
call LCC Adult Education at
726-2252. Space is limited.

-LOST ~ f'OUND â– 
LOST maroon vinyl organizer.
Without it, life is chaos! No questions asked. Reward. Rhonda
726-8343.

rReeGERBILs - young and healthy, free
fun pets easy to care for, take little
space, 689-8057 evenings.

RED DOBY-DANE male, obedient,
good with kids, needs lots of love;
message number 726-2985.
10 WEEK OLD HUSKY/BLACK
LAB. Female. Free. Call 343-6376.
Thanks, Nancy.

GO NAVY RESERVE!
17-34 year-olds who qualify for the Naval
Reserve's Sea-Air-Mariner (SAM) Program
earn a steady Income and the new Reserve
GI Bill, while having the best part-time job
In town! Call .lack: 342-7605

Rebirthing
a gentle method
for
transformation
and
self-reali111tion

I offer individual, groups and
water rebirtfiings

Call Karuna Evans
485-3881

HOWARD - Hawaii or die, at least
it's worth a try. Lovely.

Let's please get along. I love you so
much. No more fighting for good!
Lov, Face.
TORCH STAFF: Congratulations on
our awards in L.A. Keep up the good
work. Rob.
GREGG, with all our ups & downs,
ins & outs, your jokes and general
obnoxious behavior... I'd marry you
again in a minute!!
CAN YOU TYPE? If so, come into the
TORCH office, 205 Center and inquire about typesetting. Work/study
positions available.
ROB R: I'm glad you liked the
message - how about a massage!!
Your secret admirer.

THE BEANERY
790 E 14TH

-OPEN

7 AM-10PM M-F
9AM-10PM S,S
for all your

GRAPHIC
ART
SUPPLIES
Ask for our

PURPLE
BONUS CARD!
Receive $10 in
merchandise with $100
in purchases.
142 W. 8th Ave.
Eugene
Next To The Bon

345-4001

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final Exam Schedule: Winter Term
'

M,W,F,.M W,MF,WF,MWF,MUWHF,MUWH,MWHF,MUHF,M_U WF

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 ex~ day and time will be on M, 0800-0950

u, 0800-0950

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

H, 0800-0950

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

u,

1100 or 1130

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

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, 1400-1550

u,

1500 or 1530

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

H, 1400-1550

If,()() or 1630

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

u,

1700 or 1730

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

H, 1600-1750

If your class is on :
and starts at

0900 or 0930
1000 or 1030

1800 or LATER

-

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

1000-1150

1200-1350

1400-1550

1600-1750

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