Lane
Community
College

Japanese pilot whirlybirds
page 4
MCC open house,
poster contest
page 3

25th Anniversary

November 17, 1989

Eugene, Oregon

Vol. 25 No. 9

Cross country takes third
µige 6

Final candidates selected
for LCC president
by Devan Wilson
Torch News Editor

The LCC Board of Education
announced three finalists for
the position of LCC president,
Friday, Nov. 17.
The board will continue to
interview Gerard Berger, vice
president of Chemeketa Community College in Salem; Jerry
Moskus, executive vice president of educational services,
Des Moines Area Community
College, Des Moines, Iowa; and
A. LeRoy Strausner, vice president for support services and
dean of students, Casper College, Casper, Wyo., for the
presidency.
Strausner was the last of the
seven semi-finalists to visit the
campus, Nov. 14.
His visit followed a predetermined schedule for all candidates, which included an
open interview session for LCC
staff and students.
Strausner holds a bachelor's
degree in social science, a

master's in psychology/ counseling, and a doctorate in counseling. He has been at Casper since
1965, beginning as a
psychology/ sociology instructor.
Strausner told the group he is
interested in the LCC presidency position because of a level of
respect that LCC has achieved
nationally.
"I didn't want to leave
Casper for just anywhere,'' he
•
said.
• Management

Strausner said he has a
reputation as a ''problem
solver.'' He functions best with
verbal, ''eyeball-to-eyeball''
communication. If bad decisions are made he says the college must swallow the fact and
move to make corrections
Strausner said he has an
"open door policy" with
students, and that they should
have access to administrators.
Turn to Candidates, page 7 •

Donations sought
by Dawn Hoffnet

photo by Erin Naillon

Four cast members in the Mainstage Theatre production The 1940 's Radio Hour: Christmas Broadcast practice a scene from the play. The musical comedy features tunes from the swing era. The
women singing are: (left to right) Nicole Henderson, Julie Chouinard, Jami Teran, and Maya
Thomas.

Torch Staff Writer

Many people will go through this holiday season
without shelter. food. and in the case of children, toys.
But, due to the efforts of groups like OSPIRG. Phi
Theta Kappa. and the ASLCC, each student and .staff
member can help reduce the number of people suffering.
'There are 20 million people who are hungry in the
USA and the problem is getting worse,'~ says Ivan
Frishberg, ASLCC treasurer. •'We need donations for
Food for Lane County and the -Eugene Opponunity
Shelter/' he says.
According to Frishberg, the Eugene Opportunity
Shelter will open in December., and while it has the space,
it has no supplies.
Frishberg says OSPIRG is in the process of collecting
donations of food, blankets, bedding supplies, toiletries,
clothes and kitchen supplies to be given to the shelter.
Tables were set up in the Center Building on Nov. 15,
16, and J7 to collect these supplies~ according to
Frishberg, And, until Nov. 24, supplies for the Opportunity Shelter may be left at the ASLCC offices. the SRC 1
or any of the ASLCC food drive collection barrels on campus and around town.
To add to the plight of the homeless and hungry, Food
for Lane County will receive less federal food reserves this
winter, says Fred Thorp, ASLCC senator and chair of the
ASLCC/Phi Theta Kappa food drive.
''Any food donated now goes directly to Women's
Space,'' says Thorp. ASLCC and Phi Theta Kappa.are of~
fering prizes to students who donate canned goods. For
every four cans of food donated, students will receive one
ticket for a chance at prizes.
Prizes are:
• 1st, a $50 Gift Certificate at the LCC Bookstore
• 2nd. a $20 Gift Certificate for dinners at the
Turn to Donations, page 5
1

Pickup stolen from parking lot
Third vehicle theft since last May
by Devan Wilson
Torch News Editor

A Chevrolet pickup truck stolen from the
southwest gravel parking lot was the third incident of vehicle theft on campus since last spring.
LCC student Jay Neal says his blue, 1970
"beater" pickup was stolen Nov. 1, between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. The vehicle must
have been ''hot-wired,'' Neal says, since he took
the keys with him after parking. The vehicle did
not have a working door lock.
Last May, a 1974 Mercury Capri, belonging to
former LCC student Rebecca Stambaugh, was
stolen from the south parking lot. This fall, one
other vehi<;:le, in addition to Neal's pickup, has
also been stolen.
In accordance with Campus Security policies,
Department Head Paul Chase declined to release
the name of the owner of the other vehicle. Chase
did say that the vehicle was an older Datsun, and
that the theft was of a "joy ride nature." The
Datsun was recovered, according to Chase,
ironically, with considerably more gas than when
stolen.
Chase says he feels the three incidents are not
related.
Neal says when he was unable to_ find his
pickup, he experienced confusion. He retraced his
steps to determine if in fact he had parked in that

particular lot.
''It never occured to me in the first few
moments (that the vehicle had been stolen)," he
says. "Why would anyone steal a beater?
"I think they must have been shocked to find
out (the truck) only ran on seven cylinders,'' he
adds.
Neal has received no word of the truck's
whereabouts from the County Sheriff's office.
"I pretty much expect that I'll never see it
again," he says.
The theft has of course presented complications
for Neal, who is married and has two children.
''Our (family's) life revolves around having two
vehicles. ' '
On the day of the theft, Neal's wife was out of
town with the family's other vehicle, leaving him
with the responsibility of taking his children to
and from school.
Neal has since replaced the vehicle, but was
forced to go into debt to do so.
If the vehicle is recovered it may present other
complications as well, such as storage and towing
fees, he says. If the vehicle is located outside of
the area, Neal says he will have to travel to
retrieve his truck.
If anyone remembers seeing someone tampering with Neal's pickup, Chase asks that they
report that information to Campus Security.

EDITO RIALS
•
Eugene?
zn
racism
for
shield
a
become
Has fear
And the crowd fearlessly spoke with that same
in return, giving King no less than three stan•
power
Torch Editor
before his speech was done, In the enovations
ding
Eugenean.
a
be
to
Ten months ago, I was proud
ASLCC, in conjunction with minority awareness tire first portion of the extravaganza before King
groups and the City of Eugene, sponsored the se- spoke. before the bomb threat, the applause came
only from politeness.
cond Martin Luther King Celebration.
But fear was not vanquished from Eugene that
Last year's event outdid the.first one with the Rev.
Ralph Abernathy as the guest speaker. It was wintry night, and its mask of racism only obscured
superior, not by having Martin Luther King the III as from view for a brief while. For, in the guise of prothe featured speaker, nor by premiering for the first tecting its citizenry from gang warfare, a youth has
time in public parts of an oratorio written by a been refused the chance to beat the odds.
Robbie Don Robinson has little enough chance to
Eugeanean and dedicated to the memory of King
but by how many people refused to be intimidated escape the calling of his peers (gang life) and Lane
County Circuit Judge Edwin Allen, along with the
by fear.
Inspired, no doubt, by the public attention in- frightened vigilantte consortium . of 'the 4-J school
creased racism was receiving, somebody called in a board, administrators, and concerned parents have
.
'.·
bomb threat to the Hult Center; causing the virtually sealed .his fate.
him onto
kick
so
school
in
him
want
don't
"We
building to be evacuated and people told to go on
what
And
saying.
are
essencet
in
they,
streets''
the
take
not
did
It
why.
explanation
home without an
long for the rumors of the bomb threat to spread, can Robinson do on the .streets? Be frustrated into
and many people began to congregate outside the giving up and do what he is acrused ot run with a
Hult refusing to leave and singing songs of protest gang.
Is this banning of a youth an attempt to stop
and salvation.
Before long. the crowd was asked back inside to gangs and the resultant crime and violence and
.
hear the son of the slain civil rights leader speak. fill* drugs, or a veiled form of racism?
been
has
County
Lane
source1
the
on
'
Depending
And
ing the Hult to near three quarters capacity.
.maj9I
nation's
the
of
one
years
of
number
a
an
for
to
defiance
by
fueled
power
a
with
did,
he
speak
centers of rp.ethamphetamine. productiog. Willi&act of oppression, with a power to dispell feat.

by Michael Oinogrosso

i

nying Robinson an education here abolish that
reputation?
For years, the young white people of the area have
ganged together for bad as well as good, yet, I don't
see in the paper where white boys are having injunc•
tions £led against them.
South Eugene High itself is fraught with a subtler
kind of racism, the cold shoulder (see The RegisterGuard, Sunday, Nov. 12, City-Region, page one).
And students talking in racial overtones must have
adult examples for inspiration, indicating the problem runs deeper than high school campuses.
It is easy to say t but far more difficult to prove,
that we have a progressive attitude in this city, an at'."
citude free from the bonds of racism.
The proof requites initiative from each of us. The
initiative to reach a hand out to that black, 1atinoi or
native American and say, uHey, what a great day.
How ya doinT'
If people feel included; they will work to protect
that camaraderie, not teat it down . .If Robinson were
to have been accepte<l by the school and students, he
might not have turned perfect in a day I but .he
would have been able to work on it.
When Martin Luther King Jr's daughter~ Yolon'.'"
da, speaks in the Hult Center during this year's MLK
Celep_ration will she. talk about the abomination of
apartheid iq South 4frica or ~P Eugene?

Thanksg iving is the time to throw away stereotyping , forever
commentary by Bob Parker
Torch Staff Writer

For many Americans the symbols associated with Thanksgiving are deeply ingrained in our
consciousness. Turkeys, pumpkins, Pilgrims, and football are
images which often spring to
mind at this time of year.
And then there are native
Americans. Picture the first
Thanksgiving: Indians in war
bonnets riding their horses to
the feast, their teepees standing
on a hill in the background.
The image raises an interesting question: How did
people living in what is now the
Dakotas and Montana wind up

at a dinner party on the shore of
Massachusetts Bay in 1620?
The answer, of course, is that
there were no plains dwellers at
the feast and horses had yet to
be introduced this land. Such
descriptions result from
stereotyping all native
Americans as one culture and is
tantamount to calling a Dutchman, Russian.
Before 1492 there were no Indians in the Americas, but no
less than 400 sovereign nations
-- each with its own language
and culture. Christopher Columbus, navigational whiz that
he was, mistook Cuba for India.
He called the people he met

''Indians,'' a label which has remained to this day.
As wave after wave of European immigrants arrived in the
"New World" the word
"Indian" came to mean many
things. To some it evoked images of the "noble savage," to
others it meant something less
than human. Some saw only
heathen souls waiting to be
"saved." A few even thought
that native Americans were the
lose tribe of Israel.
Whatever the word may have
meant to the individual, one
definition was almost universal
to whites. "Indian" meant "in
the way.'' The values of the

whites were firmly rooted in
Euro-Christianity and one of
the tenets of this belief system
was that God wanted humans to
conquer and subdue nature.
Since God hated nature and
since native Americans lived in
such harmony with it, then it
stood to reason that God hated
Indians. By objectifying native
Americans and simplifying the
complexities of their many
cultures to one convenient
pigeon hole it became easy for
whites to simply push entire nations aside, and even plow them
under. All in the name of God,
of course.
Such genocide is the ultimate

manifestation of racial
stereotypes. The out-and-out
killing stopped about 100 years
ago but the stereotype is still
very much alive and painful for
many.
What are some examples of
this stereotyping?
Ever heard the song, "Ten
Little Indians?'' For years this
song has been used to teach our
kids to count, adding the cute
red tikes until they tally up to
ten. And once the ''Ten Little
Indians'' have been counted
and collected in one place, what
do we do next? We count
backwards eliminating them
Turn to Thanksgiving, page 3

the center are very friendly.
In ending, I just would like to
say farewell to all the employees
of Hyland Plasma Center. You
will be missed by me and
countless others.

that should be listened to
carefully before being analyzed.
Last summer I was helping
some treehuggers do some construction. As we hoisted the
plywood, they discussed how
they would like to thwart the
lumber industry in Oregon.
Trendy yuppies live high on
the wealth-chain. The guilt
associated with their greed is absolved by expounding an
idealism that professes to be
light years ahead of the WWII
generation.
Unfortunately, trumpets of
'' Save the Planet'' evaporate
from the mansions of the
mighty plus the hovels of the
might-be's and fall like
diabolical acid rain on homeless
exploited
and
people
ecosystems.
Yes, the' '90s are looming as a
brave new decade. "Yuppies"
will likely incorporate green
ideals into· bursting itineraries.
Therefore "Yuppies" will
evolve into ''Guppies.'' But if
talk is not transcended into action, pretty soon we' 11 all smell
like dead little fish.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Farewell Hyland
To the Editor:
This letter is dedicated to the
employees of Hyland Plasma
Center, who. have done a
wonderful job of providing
their services for all of the
donors of Lane County.

It's a shame that their lease
was not renewed because of certain incidents. Hopefully, in
the future, Hyland Plasma will
return.
• I've been here for three years
and I dido' t know where to go
for some extra spending money
until one day someone told me
about Hyland Plasma Center.

Michael Omogrosso
Editor
Devan Wilson
News Editor
Darien Waggoner
Production Manager
Mary Browning
Art & Entertainment Editor
Con· Haines
Advertising Assistant
Gerry Getty
Advertising Secretary
Pete Peterson
News & Editorial Advisor
Dorothy Weame
Production Advisor
Jan Brown
Advertising Advisor
Staff Photographers: Erin Naillon, Beryl Morrison, Cindy
Richards, Jennifer Jones, Mike Primrose, Thatcher
Thrombley

Torch

I've been going ever since. But
that's going to change now that
they will be closing to donors in
two weeks.
It takes less than two hours to
donate plasma which can save
lives and help in other ways.
Also, you can only donate twice
weekly, not several times a
week. Tl\e people that work at

Sports Editor
Photo Editor
Asst. Photo Editor

Paul Morgan
Deborah Pickett
Chad Boutin

Staff Writers: Coleen Ebert, Carl Mottle, Bob Parker, Don
Standeford, Megan Guske, Michelle Bowers, john Unger,
Dawn Hoffner
Production Staff: Krystal Sisson, Patncia BumJws, Tyonia
Ball, Megan Guske, (jerry Getty, Dennis Eaton, Tomoko
Kuroda, Jeanette Nadeau, Alan Curtis
Receptionists: Laura Tea, Stacie Blackhurst
Springfield News
Printer

The Torch is a student-managed newspapei: published on Fridays, September through May. News stories are compress•
ed, concise repons 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 judgements on the part of the writer. They
·are identified with a special byline.
Columns and commentaries are published with a byline and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Torch.
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. Deadline: Monday, noon.
Letters to the Editor are intended as short commentaries on stories appearing in the Torch or current issues that may
concern the local community. Letters should be limited to 250 words, include phone number and address. Deadline:
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The editor reserves the right to edit Forums and Letters to Editor for spelling, grammar, libel, invasion of privacy,
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All correspondence must be typed and signed by the writer. Mail or bring all correspondence to: the Torch, Room 205
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. P~gc 2

.tipvemb~f .17,, J989

T,h_e To,rph .

Heiko S. VanHalen
LCC Student

Qµestion raised
To the Editor:
Bob Parker's editorial
("Taking a Stand," Nov 3)
about what an environmentalist
is, raised a good question. But it
didn't answer it.
Parker implied that people
have a choice of being a true en•
vironmentalist -- which means
being like him -- or of being a
corporate plunderer who veils
his/her greed with promises of
kindness and gentleness, like
George Bush.
Nature heeds no such
simplistic dualities. The planet
we depend on doesn't divide
life into gearhead versus
treehugger mentality. Haplessly, some people's minds do. But
the genetic diversity of life that
the planet exudes is a symphony

1

John Unger
LCC Student

Thanksgiving __

co_n_ti_nu_e_d_f_ro_m_p_ag_e_2_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

one by one. This probably gives
the song a painful ring of truth
for many native Americans.
Another stereotype confronted by native Americans is
the Indian of countless
Hollywood westerns.
Twyla Souers, director of the
4:J school district NATIVES
program, tells of a native
American man who once went
to speak to a group of children.
The kids refused to believe that
this man was really a native
American because he was wearing slacks and a shirt rather than
feathers and war paint.
These children had no concept of native Americans as part
of the everyday, modern world.
Sadly, many generations have
come into adulthood without
having such beliefs challenged.
Much of white America has no
idea that native Americans are
doctors, teachers, loggers,
public officials, miners, lawyers,

writers, artists, computer programmers, auto mechanics ...
in sho.n, just as human and just
as capable as anyone else.
What harm does all this do?
Imagine the pain felt by native
American children upon hearing the ancestors for whom they
were taught respect described as
vicious savages. Imagine how
these children must feel living
in a society which celebrates the
cultural diversity of its immigrants, but lumps the myraid
of native American cultures into
one convenient category.
What can be done about
this? The answer is at once simple and complex -- the answer is
education.
You would be hard pressed to
find people more willing to
share their culture with others.
Put aside your preconceptions
about native Americans and
learn about them on their
terms, from the point of view as

human beings. Go to a pow
wow and dance in the Friendship Dance.
And don't just study native
Americans. Learn about the
Cherokee, the Seminole, the
Iriquois, the Abnacky, the
Apache, the Lakota. Find out
the similarities and differences
between these diverse cultures.
Keep in mind that most
native Americans don't want
white people to fly into fits of
guilt. Acknowledging the past
is important, but don't get so
wrapped up in crying over the
past that you miss the future.
Above all don't feel guilty
about celebrating Thanksgiving. It is appropriate to be
thankful for what we have.
Many cultures have similar
holidays, including several
native American thanks giving
ceremonies held during the
year, like the famous Bean
Dane('. of the Hopi.
Please remember the words of

all part of the Multi-Cultural
Center's Open House on Nov.
29. Most of the activities will be
on the fourth floor of the
Center Building including
opening ceremonies with the
Director of the MCC, Connie
Mesquita and ASLCC President, Andy Harris at 10 a.m.
African-American and AsianAmerican storytelling follows at

r-------1

11 p.m.
Musical entertainment will be
presented in the cafeteria with
the Ya-Po-Ah Terrace Kitchen
Band and two kinds of
dulcimers, hammer and mountain. At 12:30 p.m. there will
be a video of traditional Soviet
folk dances, also in the
cafeteria. Check posters for
events and times.

COUPON

'/J ~

ae

WHERE IS CIVIL
RIGHTS HEADING?
Y (Q) 1LJ TIE IL IL 1LJ §
o

ENTER THE THIRD
ANNUAL MARTIN LUTHER KING ESSAY CONTEST. $125.00 TO FIRST
PLACE, AND YOUR CHANCE TO
SHINE IN THE HULT CENTER.
1,000 WORD LIMIT. DEADLINE IS
DECEMBER 15, 5:00 IN CEN. 479.

1•--------,
$24 •95 I

I Computerized engine analysis
I with complete safety and
I winterization inspection.
regularly
I (includes brake adjustment•)
I
* most cars
• 11,r. t , ~ t:. 11. ~ea~~

1-f""

Editor's Note: The LCC Native
Amen·can Club is in the midst

of reorganiztion according to
member Jay Moran. He invites
all students to come to the
club's meetings to learn and
promote native American
culture. The meetings are held
each Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. in
room 410, next to the MultiCultural Center on the fourth
floor of the Center Building,

USE IT FOR A CLASS.

MCC poster contest deadline Nov. 22
The Multi-Cultural Center
(MCC) is bustling with cultural
opportunities for students the
rest of this month. ASLCC and
the MCC are sponsoring a
poster contest and MCC open
house.
The Cultural Heritage Poster
Contest is open to staff and
students of Lane. The purpose is
to create awareness in one's own
cultural heritage through artistic expression. Posters should
display one's migrations to this
area through themes of family
values, backgrounds, origin, or
religion. Prizes are a one term
tuition scholarship, a $100 book
and supplies voucher from the
LCC Bookstore, and lunch for
two in the Renaissance Room.
Particular information is
available in the MCC. The
deadline is Wed. Nov. 22, 3
p.m.
Refreshments, crafts, art
displays, and entertainment are

a 14-year-old native American
girl who was interviewed for this
article. Upon being asked if.her
family, as native Americans, did
anything special to observe the
holiday she smiled broadly and
replied simply, "We eat!"

$32.00

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The Torch

November 17, 1989

Page 3

Helicopter flight training program benefits Japanese students
e_y Barbara Littman
Torch Staff Writer

When Terry Hagberg, hands
you his card, odds are fifty-fifty
you won't be able to read it -unless you are fluent in
Japanese.
Hagberg is chairman of
LCC's Flight Technology
Department. His card, printed
in Japanese on one side and
English on the other, is a sign of
his department's success in
securing contracts to train
Japanese helicopter pilots.
In the year and a half the
department has offered flight

Pacific Rim cities for these
lucrative contracts. Hagberg
credits his department's success
to a combination of smart
marketing and desirable locale.
During the year of negotiations that preceded the contractual agreement, Hagberg and
the department staff have given
Kawada representatives a taste
of the program. When a quick
trip to the main campus was required for a meeting, did
everyone tumble into the back
seat of an old station wagon?
"No," reports Hagberg with a
by
went
''we
smile.
helicopter. ' '
He says Eugene itself was also
a big draw. Executives recognized that in Eugene their students
could have a high quality living
JEWELERS
experience without the freeway
-~
~~
REALLY QUITE
NOT AT ALL. IT WAS
hassles, crime and costly housDON'T YOU THINK

instruction to Japanese nationals from its Mahlon Sweet
Airport facility, Flight Tech has
trained approximately 65 pilots.
Participants, ranging from
teenagers planning aviation
careers to business people with
corporate transportation needs,
spend an average of $30,000
(plus room and board), four
and a half months, and 12
hours a day in LCC's accelerated
program before going home to
take certification exams at the
Japanese Aviation Ministry -the equivalent of our FAA.
. "Helicopter training inJapan
is costly and inconvenient,''

PRESENTED BY

says Hagberg. Space af!d zoning
restrictions mean that trainees
may have to commute three to
four hours to reach a helicopter
flight area, and once there, may
spend only short periods in the
air. For a country developing
helicopters as a major transportation system, these restrictions
also mean fewer trained pilots.
Japanese corporations, like
Kawada Industries, Inc., the
Japanese conglomerate with
which Flight Technology contracts, are looking for qualified
training sites in the United
States for their students.
Competition is stiff among

lt...:IJ&

THE FAMILY, JEWELS ~~
I SAW IT IN A MOVIE
ONCE. WHEN SHE
FINDS IT IN HER
DRINK, l'M GOING
TO ASK HER TO
GO OUT WITH ME.

THAT'S A LITTLE
EXTRAVAGANT,
CONSIDERING SHE
DOESN'T EVEN KNOW
YOU EXIST?

AFFORDABLE. I GOT IT ON SALE AT
HARRY RITCHIE'S JEWELERS.
I JUST WATCHED THE PAPERS, AND
WHEN IT WENT ON SALE, I WAS THE
FIRST ONE IN THE STORE. I EVEN
OPENED MY OWN ACCOUNT. HERE
SHE COMES ... NOT A WORD NOW.

ing offered by other competitors, such as Seattle and San
Francisco.
The Japanese connection has
also been an important factor in
Flight Tech's expansion. From
one helicopter four years ago,
the program now boasts eight
crafts, including three jet
helicopters carrying a hefty price
tag of a half-million to one
million dollars each.
New office facilities have just
been completed, and a new
hangar will be ready for use by
the end of the month.
You can get a first-hand look
at the new facilities at the
department's open house,
Wednesday, Dec. 6, at the airport from 3 to 7 p.m. Aircraft
and hangar tours will be conducted during that time.

Clarify and correct
• LCC student Patricia C. Brown was inadvertantly ommited from the Spring 1989 President's List, which appeared
in the Nov. 10 issue of The Torch.
• An article regarding the Nov. 6 ASLCC Senate meeting
which included the October budget review of Campus Support Funds, published in the Nov. 10 issue of The Torch,
presented some facts that were inaccurate and misleading.
The article noted that ASLCC spent part of the funds on the
purchase of pencils, when in fact the pencils were purchased
from a campus supplies fund. The article also failed to repon
that $4,500, nearly half of the Campus Support Funds
budgeted for fall term, was spent to hire Harvey Bond as Sexually Transmitted Disease and Substance Abuse Prevention
Coordinator.

~

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'D /91-19 Apple Comp11ter. !11c Apple, !be Apple i<~o. and .llacilltosb are rl1{isterl'{/ tmdemarks (lf Apple Compute,: Inc

Page 4

November 17, 1989

The Torch

~--~- .... -.:❖:-

•

.· . . .

•••••••• _,_,•.

:=,.

LCC Main Campus Bookstore
and
OTC Downtown Center

'Barrelling Niagra Falls' among new courses proposed next term
Dear Dr. Decorum:
I know there are budget problems caused by the increased
enrollment at LCC, but will a
great many classes be cancelled
as a result? I hope not.
Mario Brothers

cancelled, there are actually formed process.
Dr.D
classes which will be added. I'll
list some of the proposed . • Skate your Way to Regularity
courses below. Be advised to
• Guilt without Sex
register early for classes and
• Self-Actualization
Through Auto Repair
communicate your academic in• Optional Body Functions
tentions to instructors and
Peace of Mind

Ask Dr. Decorum
by Carl Mottle
Dear Mario:
Although a number of classes
with very low enrollment will be

departmental personnel so
future class planning by departments can be an even more in-

• The Primal Scream as an
Accounting Technique
• Native Foreign Languages
- The Argot of Administrators
• Biofeedback and How to Stop It
• How to Overcome Self -- Doubt
Through Pretense and Ostentation
• Philosophical Analysis and Other
Alternative Realities
• Creative Tooth Decay

Overcoming
Whine Your Way to Alienation
Make $100 in Real Estate
Tapdance your way to Social
Ridicule
• Sinus Drainage at Home
• Welding and the Sex Drive
- A Causal Connection
• Freudian Aviation
• English Composition
- A Medical Analysis
• High Fiber Sex

•
•
•
•

Donations _c_o_nt_in_u_ed_f_ro_m_pa_g_e

. 10:00 am Opening ceremonies in the Social Science
Lobby area.
11 :00 am-12:00 pm Storytellers Yvonne Young and
Paulette Ansari will dazzle the imagination in the social
science area.
11:30 am Micheal Omogrosso with Hammer Dulcimer in
the Cafeteria.
12:00 pm The Ya-Po-Ah Terrace Kitchen Band in the
cafeteria.
1:00 pm Glenn Faulkenberg with Hammer Dulcimer, in
the cafeteria.

_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Renaissance Room
• 3rd, a $10 Copy Key at Printing and Graphics
Thorp won a one-term tuition waiver last year for his
donation of canned food.
' 'ASLCC would have liked to
have done that again this year,
but we don't have the same
amount of money available, ' '
says Thorp.
"Last year there wasn't much
campus support,'' he says.
'' ASLCC would like this year to
be different. We want to see
enough food donated to feed
300 to 400 families. ''
Thorp is also involved with
Toys for Tots, a National
Reserves campaign that collects
new and used toys to be
distributed to families for
Christmas.
''This year we can only accept
new toys or toys that are not
broken or damaged,'' says
Thorp. "Due to time constraints and lack of volunteers
there will be no people to repair
broken toys.''
Any donations of toys or food
can be dropped off at the Student Resource Center, the
ASLCC office, CEN 4 79, the
Women's Center, CEN 213, or
the Multi-Cultural Center, CEN
409.

All food donations need to be
in by the Dec. 22, and toys
donated after Dec. 18 will need
to be taken to the National
Reserves, 1520 W.13th,
Eugene.
If students have no way to
donate goods, Frishberg suggests, ''. . . volunteering at the
Eugene Opportunity Shelter -painting, doing child care, and
helping the process of organization at OSPIRG or ASLCC. ''
OSPIRG will sponsor a panel
discussion, Nov. 21, at noon, in
the LCC Boardroom, to discuss
the issues and answer questions
about the homeless and hungry
of America.
State Sen. Larry Hill, Ellen
Knepper, assistant director of
Food for Lane County, and
Jerome Garger, peace studies
and English instructor at LCC, •
will also be present.
encourages
Frishberg
students to ask Hill how they
can get involved.
'' Students can help on many
levels: writing letters,
volunteering and making
changes,'' Frishberg adds.
' 'Students have the ability and
the voting power to make
change by becoming involved in
the local, state or national level.
''Here at LCC, we have 7,000
potential voters -- there is the

• New Age Statistics -- Alpha State
Math
• Barrelling Niagra Falls
- Supervised Field Experience
• The Political Scientist as Comedian
• Journalism, Truth, and Profit
Motive - Blending the Mutually
Exclusive
• Virginity as a National Treasure
• Money Can Make You Rich

possibility for powerful changes
to happen.
' 'The needs of the hungry
and homeless are increasing, ' '
he says. "Think about the
issues. Do something and be
aware of the problems facing
people in this area . The
holidays are a time to rejoice
and give to those not as fortunate as ourselves."

THE· FAMILY, JEWELS

. :_ _ _ _ _
~ ' - ~ - J E ~ _•••
• ONE WEDNESDAY YOUR FATHER AND I WENT ON A PICNIC TOGETHER,
I WORE HIS FAVORITE YELLOW SUMMER DRESS. THEN ON THURSDAY
I WORE JEANS BECAUSE WE WENT HORSEBACK RIDING. ON FRIDAY
I WENT TO HARRY RITCHIE'S AND OPENED AN ACCOUNT OF MY OWN
AND BOUGHT A SMALL NECKLACE.

WELL, THINGS WERE ALOT DIFFERENT WHEN
YOUR FATHER AND I WERE DATING. BUT IT
ONLY TOOK ME FOUR DAYS TO LAND HIM
ONCE I SET MY MIND TO IT.

Here's To A NU U!

*
**
**
**

Wheatland

Create a new image with:
Nexxus, Paul Mitchell,
Sebastian, and Afro products.
Ma~e-up.
A Full Service Salon.
Perms-Extensions-Weaves.
One of a kind Designer Clothes.
Designer Jewelry.
Plus, Hundreds of wigs in
various colors & styles to suit
your needs.

Organic Pastry
Flour

'#'~

~

~ Local Spring
Nectar Honey

<n

Hours
Mon.-Sat.
10am-5pm

Visit our new
location at

345-1749

1235

Willamette

75¢

reg. 89¢/lb

Echo Springs

Cranberry Sau.ces

Whipping Cream

Nalural or JeUJed. Sauce

Ng.'-39$1.79
also from Knudsen's ...

THENuu •~

23¢/lb

Sparkling
Juices

reg. 1.65/lb

Golden Temple

Cranberry or Tangerine

Golden Granola

$2.59

Margarine .

&r

Grape, Cherry, strawberry,

Ng.1.59/lb
Al pr1cee good 1tv°"""

Sundance Natural Foods

24TH & HILYARD

$1.25

Vanilla Extract

$1.29
~ OI ._....

89¢

Natural Food store

$1.79

Ng.2.19

A f ~ . nan-alchahaUc beut!rage

Ng. 2.99/qt

reg. 1.35/pt

Organic Choice
Date Pieces

reg. 10.69/lb

aJPP1181 lost.

OPE1'

The Torch

8AM -

l

lP11

$8. 99
343-9142

November 17, 1989

Page 5

SPORTS

Titan men finish third
at Conference meet
by Thatcher Trombley
Torch Sports Writer

The Titan Men's Cross Country team finished third in the conference meet. The runners are (left to
right) George Ulrich, Scott Loughney' and Joe Kimzey.
photo by Thatcher Trombley

LCC student George Ulrich
finished third at the Northwest
Athletic Association of Community Colleges' Cross Country
Championships in Seattle,
enabling the Titans to take
third place in the team race.
Ulrich, who finished third at
the Region IV meet two weeks
ago, led for the first two miles
of the race. He completed the
course with a time of 28:56. The
Titans finished with a score of
79 points.
Tim Beudall of Clackamas
(26: 10) took the individual
honors while leading his team

Drugs hurt athletes, athletics

WANTED

commentary by Drew Carter

VOLUNTEERS TO HELP IN
PAPER RECYCLING
CONT ACT: JIM DIERINGER

CAMPUS
CENTER 242
OR CALL, EXT. 2850

SKILCC
At" WILLAMETTE PASS"

for the Torch
In today's sports world controversy rages
over drug and steriod abuse.
The death of college basketball star Len Bias
from a cocaine overdose rocked the sports
world. Here was a gifted athlete who was in
seemingly perfect health. Having just been
drafted by the Boston Celtics, his future looked bright .. But Bias chose to use cocaine, a
decision which ultimately killed him.
Many people in America, especially young
people, look up to athletes. These sports
figures need to be positive role models for the
youth of America. They must be aware of the
influence they have on kids and not use drugs.
And if any athlete, whether college or pro, is
caught using banned drugs, they should be
severely punished.
The National Football League claims it is
cracking down on steroid use. In a time when
players are getting bigger and stronger every

-~
II

·

Winter Term 1990
Two sessions to choose from:
Jan. 4- F~b. 1
t:,

The LCC volleyball team
finished out the season with a
win and a loss to finish in fifth
u','x~.

BB~t
Free Pregnancy Testing

"We Care"
Eugene Medical Building
132 E. Broadway, Rm·720

Eugene, OR 97401

Beginning • Intermediate • Advanced

Lessons
Lift Tickets
All Equipment
Chartered Transportation
College Credit .

See Winter Term Schedule for details or call Dwane Miller
or Bob Creed in the LCC Department of Health & P.E.
747-4501 ext. 2545
Page 6

November 17, 1989

The Torch

day, it is hard to believe that only 13 NFL
players are using steroids.
A local example of appropiate punishment
was the expulsion of Willamette High School
student Gregg Pierce for allegedly selling
steroids on campus.
Pierce, however, is now playing football at
the College of the Siskiyous.
Another example of appropriate punishment was the two-year ban from competition
of Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson for steroid
use. Johnson was also stripped of his Olympic
gold medal and world record -- harsh but effective.
Some people think that steroids and other
drugs can enhance performance , but, besides
being illegal, it's morally wrong to use them to
gain an edge. Sporting organizations should
make the punishment so severe that athletes
will think twice before using any illegal
substance.
Then sports will truly be clean.

Volleyball team ends season with loss

Feb. 8 - Mar. 8

•
•
•
•
•

to a second place finish with 38
points. Carl Buena of Highline
(26: 11) finished second overall,
but his team managed to edge
Clackamas with 37 points for
the team title.
''It was a four person race for
third place," explained Ulrich.
''I was just able to out-kick the
other runners in the last quarter
mile.''
Those four runners finished
within 12 seconds of each other.
''I was expecting more from
Highline and Clackamas,'' said
Head Coach Kevin Meyers.
''We were starting to peak at
the championships, while the
other teams' performances were
starting to decline. ''

Phone 687-8651

.•

place ~n the Southern Division.
The win came Nov. 10
against Umpqua in Roseburg .
The loss came Nov. 11 when
the Titans lost to Chemeketa
15-2 , 15 -13 , 15 -6, in Salem .
The Titans were shorthanded over the weekend
because of illness and injury,
and had only six players against
Chemeketa .
Sophomore Wendy Coleman
was named to the first team AllNWAACC Southern Division.

.•

.-------------------------~-~----.
= "fHlE 1.0WR.liDlER.S =
•
=

EUGENE'S OWN. -· ~
WHEELCHAIR BALL
CLUB~

FREE
WILL BEDAZZLE THE FINE
STUDENTS OF LCC AT 7:00 pm
WED., NOV 29, IN THE GYM

•

=
=

••
••
••
••.
.
•..
••
•

~------------------------------~

C a n d i d a t e s _c_on_ti_nu_e_d_fr_o_m_p_ag_e_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

mittee, in a continuing evaluation of the
candidates, will be visiting individual
campus'.

• Participatory management

Strausner said students should be involved in the management of the college. He said at Casper students serve on
all standing committees, and that
students have been involved rn
establishing campus suppon groups.

According to Sue Colvin, director of
Personnel Services, included in the
visiting group are: ASLCC President Andy Harris, representing students; Pat
Dickover of Computer Services,
representing classified staff, Linda Riepe
of Health Occupations, representing
faculty, and instructor Jim Ellison,
representing campus management.
Which board members will be involved
in the visits has yet to be determined.

• Humanities

Strausner said humanities should be
pan of any educational foundation. A
comprehensive Community College
should provide all components to a
liberal education, and should deal with
the traditions of culture, he said.
"(A community college) has to provide those experiences,'' he said.

Gerard Berger

• Influences

When asked what event is his life has
effected him the most, Strausner replied,
''Marrying my wife.'' He said he came
from a ''devalued educational enviroment.'' After earning an associate of arts

C LA SSIFIE D S
CLASSIFIEDS ADS are free to LCC
students and staff, 15 word maximum,
and will be printed on a space available
basis. All other ads are 15 cents per word
per issue. The Torch reserves the right
not to run an ad.

degree, Strausner quit college and began
working in the oil fields of Wyoming. By
age 21 he was a foreman, but his wife
motivated him to return to school and
continue his education. Strausner said

his boss also told him to return to college.
Presidential Search:
The final round

Members of the board and search com-

FREE KITTEN . Three months old, uses
litter box, silver & black & fluffy.
686-1778.

FOR SALE iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;
AVON PRODUCTS. Christmas catalogs
are here. Call 746-3815.

ATTENTION-HIRING! Government
jobs-your area. $17 ,840-$69,485. Call
1-602-838-8885 ext. Rl2165. •

TURBO XT with everything. Hard
drive, softwares, floppy drive, monitor,
keyboard. Only $850. 485-4651.

BE A NANNY. Renowned agency has
the perfect job for you in Connecticut.
Loving families, top salaries,
room I board, airfare paid. One year
stay. Care for Kids, P. 0. Box 27,
06853
CT
Rowayton,
(203)852-8111. •

COMPUTERS: XT COMPATIBLES,
AT's, 386's. Cheap. Best prices. Call
Raul Renz, 688-0289.

PSA's ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
STUDENTS AGAINST ANIMAL
Abuse will meet every Tues., 4 p.m.,
SRC.

BICYCLEs ~~~~woMEN 's 3-SPEED bicycle.
Reasonable. Good condition. 344-0686.
RALEIGH 19" MEN'S 12 speed touring
bike. Helmet included. $200 OBO. Call
Dee, 726-8608.

OPPORTUNITIES ----~
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS meets
Monday and Friday, 12 noon, SCI 122.
Open meeting. All are welcome.

PAID POSITIONS - Vocal soloists,
groups & accompanist needed by the
Religious Science Church. For info.,
call Fay, ext. 2858 or 345-4183.

ATTENTION-GOVE RNMENT
HOMES from $1 (U-repair). Delinquent tax property. Reposessions. Call
1-602-838-8885 ext. GH12165. •
NBA ACTION: Highlight video of the
superstars. Magic, Jordan, Bird, Dr. J,
Barkley, etc. Paul,345-6777.

OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-$2000 mo.
Summer, year round, all countries, all
fields. Free info. Write IJC, PO Box
52-ORO~, Corona Def Mar, CA 92625.

ENTERTAINMENT '90 books available
now! Save SO percent on almost
everything - dining, movies, and more.
Call 485-5867.

TYPING iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;_

HIRING- work in your home doing simple assembly work . $4-$7 per hour.
687-1327.

$20 DISCOVERY FLIGHTS are now
available as holiday stocking stuffers.
Nancy, 485-5892.

MESSAGES ...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

SMALL LENS, GOLDTONED frame
Ray Ban gold sunglasses with hard shell
case. $25. Nancy, 485-5892.

MID-TERM SPECIAL: All term papers
typed, delivered, only $1 a page.
Guaranteed, fast, and accurate!
686-2324.

LARGE LENS, GOLDTONE frane Ray
Ban gold sunglasses with hard shell case.
$30. Nancy, 485-5892.
SAN MARCO SKI BOOTS, size 8 1/2
ladies, red & white. $40. 345-4803.

LCC KARATE CLUB meets Fridays. 7-9
p .m ., PE 101. More info, Wes,
746-0940 or Steve, 343-2846.

SKI BOOTS, O/H, brand new, used 2
hours due to knee injury. Dynafit, 7
mens. $SO. 459-4928.

CHESS ANYONE? Call or leave
message at SCR for David Holmes, ext.
2342, or home: 741-1901.

KING SIZE WA TERBED with new
waveless mattress, bookcase headboard,
new landlord won't allow. $175.
484-1821.

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE Dec. 6 &
7, 10 a.m. -4 p.m., First Christian
Church, 1166 Oak, Eugene .

CONTELLO ACCORDIAN. Excellent
condition, complete with instruction
books, case. 726-7399 after S.

DENALI STAFF & VOLUNTEERS:
Thank you, thank you, thank you,
thank you! Della & Terry.

SIX FOOT CHRISTMAS TREE, flocked, almost real looking, $20. Pictures,
call Teresa Fulmer, 746-3104 evenings.

DENALI CONTRIBUTORS: Submissions can be picked up at CEN 4790.
Thanks for sharing your talent.

PENTAX K-1000 35mm SLR camera
w/S0mm F2 lens. Excellent condition,
$120. Nancy Martin, Ext 2204, or
689-2905.

FREE
SNIFFLES? SNEEZES? WHEEZES?
Coughs? Sound familiar?? Student
Health can help. CEN 127.

WANrfE D
We buy stereos. VCR's
& sound equipment.

STEREO
WORKSHOP
1621 E. 19th.

344-3212

''I'm very optimistic and pleased that
so many people from the community
and campus have been involved," he
says.

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiii iii.iiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiii

HELP WANTED

THE MESSAGE SECTION of the Torch
is for friendly, educational, personal or
humorous messages . This is not intended as a place for people to publicly
ridicule, malign or degrade any person
or group of people. Questionable ads
will not be run.

Jim Pitney, vice chair of the board,
says he thinks the search is progressing
well.

SPRING BREAK GETAWAY: The
Yucatan! $1080-1188. Air, hotels, BID,
etc. l / l 5 /90 deadline. Lorna Funnell,
ext.2906 .

TYPING, 75 cents per page. Fast, accurate, professional. 726-1988 .

Need extra X-mas money? Need an
after school job?

We've got the job for you!
Ideal for homemakers and
students. Call existing customer
names to set family portrait
appoi!}tments. Flexible hours,
will train. Guaranteed hourly rate
paid weekly.

Call Parkway Studios

485-1181

Ask for Mr. Talley
Mon-Fri 5-9pm

.

One ticket for Alaska Airlines from
Eugene to Ontario, (LA) Calif. on Nov.
23 . Extra charge to change to date, expires on Dec. 13. Leave message at
937-2826.

WANTED
RUGBY PLAYERS! LCC R.F.C. is now
seeking athletes. Contact Ben at the
SRC for info.
DEAR BIRTHMOTHER: We long to
provide a loving home and a lifetime of
caring for your newborn. We have been
looking forward to being parents for
many years . We want to share our love
and lives with a child. As our child's birthmother, your gift to the child is the
gift of life. Let us help each other.
Please call us collect at 617-259-1242.
GOODWILL RECYCLES: plastics,
glass, cardboard, textiles, tin cans, at 15
locations. For info, call 345-1801.

AUTOS
ATTENTION-GOVERNMENT SEIZED vehicles from $100. Fords,
Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevys. Surplus
Buyers Guide. 1-602-838-8885 ext.
Al2165 . •
AUDI 5000 DIESEL. '80, less than 5000
miles . Rebuild. Excellent . $2600. Call
746-9525.
SUPER BEETLE PARTS. 1972. no
engine, front end damaged . Devan,
686-8648 or ext.265 7.
1978 PLYMOUTH VALORE . In great
shape . Newly rebuilt engine. $800
OBO. Must sell! 688-7010.
1985 CHEVY ASTRO cargo van. Excellent condition, runs good. $4800,
negotiable. 998-1878, Robert Thompson.

Men against rape and

GOOD CLOTHING, TOYS, and bedding. Before Dec. 4. First Christian
Church, 1166 Oak St., Eugene.
344-1425 .

sexism will be holding a
meeting every Wednesday
at 6:30 pm in the EMU

CHEST OF ORA WERS OR DRESSER.
Need badly. 344-6994, or Mary, Ext.
2241.

(Check dally echedule for mcetlne place.)

Buiding.

Coupon Specials- -----•
-------(Good with Kathy, Betty, & Maria)
I
hp1ru 12-10

I• •ILLLJSIONSu~~~0111

I

Stoff: Don Driggars. Sheila Boker. Gloria Boker. Barbaro Bowman. Mory O:lmeron, Betty McNelll, Morla E-11.
Kathy Boone Spener

Long a colored hair slightly mae. (perm includes
II p ERMS concifioner.
cut. & syle)
I HAIRCUTS (includes riampoo"ood condtioner)

I LOOP ROD-SPIRALS
I M€l~S
-===-----

-

$6.00
Reg. $13$39.95

345-1810

PAUL MITCHELL®

•

$24.95
Reg. $47-

(starting at)

J§Q.t~ line of Nexxus and Poul Mitchel ~uc:11.

JJ
*
**
**

DOUBLE TAKE FASHIONS
... buys, consigns or trades men's &
women's clothing for resale. We take
all sizes that are in style. They need
to be in near-to-new condition with
no stains and no mending to be done.
Call for info or appointment.

, 842 Pearl St. • 485-4605 ~

1311 Uncal'!+,!'llam•tt• Towers Ilda. ■

-----~-----â– 

r

Professional

Appointment
Secretaries

TRANSPORTATION

PLANNED
PARENTHOOD
* Convenient *

FULL
COLOR
Laser Copies

Affordable
• Large copies up to llx17

• 50-400% enlargement or
reduction.

Pap/Pelvic Exam
Infection Checks
Birth Control
Pegnancy Testing
Counseling

• Color copies from 35mm
slides, negatives, or 3-D
objects.

Open 7Days

kinko•s

134 East Thirteenth Avenue, Eugene

Great copies. Great people.

344-9411

860 E. 13th
344-7894
The Torch

44 W. 10th
344-3555

November 17, 1989

Page 7

ART & ENTERTAINMENT

'RidiO:llqu1/ sef,q.:open Nov:

Highlights

b. Y Ma.·.·.t. y·• ... K·.·.·
....

....

.

•·.

Torch
. ·. •·.

E ·n
. •.• ..t ·~·.·.·.i'Ja
.. •

.

.,.

.......

•.· '·.·•.
Q' . . •. · .•.·•.·.······ .

·.·

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.....

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Before you get snowed under with work this year, get an IBM
Personal System/2 .® Choose from five different packages of hard~are and software-now at special low student prices. Each
syste1!1 comes with easy-to-use softwar; loade~ and ready to go;::::/@~
~'-~'_.
Whats more, when you buy your PS/2,® you will get a mouse t<> J-tipnm-t+.::;: : r·
d
t •
II f
::'!~lllmibc>•::'~>.. l
.:f :~ :::.
d 3 5 • h di L tt h Id
pa , a • , -me
s1<.e ,e o er, ai_i a powers r~p-a re.e •./~: : :.':;.;,. ,. . . ·.,.~i jilt'A,~.••%1:.~.
·.'..::~.
~
. ~.
And thats not all. You re also entitled to a special low . .. · •·:~'!-*:;t~i::~ ~ - - ~ ~
.'??t :>.
• on the pnoo:rGY®
· too.
. ~ ,. . .~,"·t~. -;r_.,,. . .~~~-.~......
..,.,.;-, .: ;;.
pnce
n:
'l
service,
AW..J::i.i:i~& : iJ::i::i·§,~~--~ ~~~,,.,. A
• ,,
And aside from all this, three of the most popular ,: .~ ., •
IBM Proprinters are available at special low prices:tc
Don't get left out in the cold! Offer ends February 15, 1990. Come in today.

• Folk mus1e1an Claudia
Schmidt will perfrom at the U
of O campus, Wednesday, Nov.
29. Formerly a regular on Garrison Keillor's Prairie Home
Companion , Schmidt will appear in the Fir Room of the
EMU at 8 p.m. Tickets are
available at the EMU Main Desk
and at Balladeer Music.

TM

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

How'reyougoingtodoit?

: H~llLEQUIN
:
1091 Ollve St. Eugene 683-5903

PS/2 it!

♦

Mon.•Sat. 11-6 Reliable Mall
Order 1·800·234·2359 •

♦

Beads, Jewelry, 8
Art and Artifacts
♦ Expert Custom e
♦ Beadwork,
♦ Restringing
♦ and Repair
♦ Oregon's Finest
♦ Selection of
♦ Beading Supplies

e -.JJ •

♦

For more information stop by the LCC Bookstore and talk with Jeff
Fernandes, IBM Collegiate Rep. M-W-F 9:30 - 11:30am Tu-Th 12
noon-1:00pm.

♦

♦

♦

Formerly Banyan Tree Beads

------ ------ ------------~~-·-

- - - - .!)

v

~

♦

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦

Page 8

November 17, 1989

•••

*This offer is limited to qualified students, faculty and staff who order an IBM PS/2 Model 8530·E21 , 8550-031 . 8555 -061 or 8570 -E61 through February 15. 1990 The
preconfigured IBM PS/ 2 Model 8525-001 is available through December 31 , 1989 only. Orders are subject to availability. Prices are subject to change and IBM
may withdraw the promotion at any time without written notice,
•
®IBM. Personal System/2 and PS/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. PRODIGY 1s a registered service mark and trademark
of Prodigy Services Company, a partnership of IBM and Sears.
'" Proprinter is a trademark of International Business Machines Corporation.© IBM Corp. 1989.

The Torch

...•.·.•..•

\ tl~ The~ire.; and :We' Eugene Festival of

Up to your ears?
Dig yourself out with a
deal on an IBM PS/2.

• The Cascade Chorus will be
presenting ''The Magic of
Christmas' ' at the Silva Concert
Hall, Dec. 9, beginning at 8
p.m . The evening will include
the Greater Eugene Sweet
Adelines, the Willamette Christian Center Choir, the Eugene
Cham her Singers, and the
Churchill High School Lancmgers.

♦

•··•·

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director·.<jer,g,
Seifert
Hft's
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. ~~e. ~ttsi.p ~i.U I:>~..d~teq bY in${';:'-!'~ • •. . ~eeke1;1~~ .~ev.,·.3~.:
2' 8t 9~
R~om.,of the HptelAstor if ~ewt;pd~ •• ·•· · F~f J~;S Gte~~V{ood . .~~ Seeteiicr;) 15, .~~d 1.6• 9utt~lfi:ttme ~il\, ~e 8 p;n)'.
City onI)ec . .21, . 1Q421 f~~tu~~st~t;/$Â¥;;
~~tP:.,~£;.~t ~~~ ~~f-e _program.~ .is.\ ··'/ . f1c!e~ .al'~ ,~ m<;l ·lllay·· b: . ·• ~urchased
ing rnusi~ w~ich cap~v!ted t;J-ie t(a; ~e
;~~ · ·•·•< di~feQt~P~ft~ ·';i~nies .:M;c.< ;:~ · • from /.the •LGC . Bpx ~ce oy. c~ling
stgey revolves around t.he <>!-stage ·anc;I
ait~cts I1ghtU1g ·.•· and . scene: design.
726-2202, 'Qr from ~e iju~~ Centetf?t
backstage antics of the C.1St and crew of
Kathryn Linn is costiup.e d~igner ~..anq
the Perf9rgiing . . Atts and .Marketplace
the radio show.
Skip Hubbai:d. is Technical I5irector. • • Books in the 5th Street Public Market.

• The Saturday Market will be
moving indoors for the
holidays. The annual Holiday
Market will be opening at the
Lane County Fairgrounds, Friday, Nov. 24. The market will
be open at the fairgrounds every
Saturday and Sunday from
Thanksgiving weekend to
Christmas Eve, 10 a.m. to 6
p.m.

♦

&
.·.·.•.·. 1 •.·..'......'.·.

the musical. se!i iq

• LCC instructors David Joyce
and Susie Morrill will be two of
the prominent artists from
throughout the U.S . participating in the 14th annual
Photography at Oregon Auction , Saturday, Nov. 18 .
The auction, to be held in the
Alumni Lounge of Gerlinger
Hall, will benefit photography
exhibits, lectures , and
workshops at the U of 0
Museum of Art. It begins at 5
p.m. and is open to the public.
Refreshments will be served.

♦

... .

t~:~~y~~t~~,:::~:~~~~ s{t ~:~ .· ~~

• KLCC will be presenting a
one-hour radio documentary examining the problem of
homelessness in America on
Thanksgiving Day. The
documentary will air during
Alan Siporin's Live Wire, at
6:30p.m., Nov . 23 .

♦

.

.•··.·.·•.•.·•·. e•.·•·•,·•·•,.·.r \. ..·. · •·
•· · ..1.'f•.·..."'
.· · · •· · ·• · / . . ·• ·•· · · . · ·• •· • :•
·. The .~us~cal~i~~!.!: Tl,,~. 1~0\~adf_o·.
Hour~· C.h,istmlif Bi~(4tl•. wi.U op~n Ht

• Dan White's name was
mistakenly excluded from the
list, appearing in last week's
Torch, of LCC instructors
chosen to exhibit their work in
the Third Biennial Sculpture Invitational. The invitational is
being hosted by the Maude
Kern's Art Center, and will be
displayed through Nov. 26.

♦

a· t. •h
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·• ·. u.·. ro•·.w. nin
. . ·.~
v
,·.·. •·••
··· · ·..

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