Lane Community College E January 15, 1993 Eugene, Oregon Volume 28, Issue 11 Proposed budget cuts announced MLK celebration January 18 â– PRIMARY CARE: Will LCC lose it~ unique health service? BY LARRY HAFfL associate editor BY SONJA TAYLOR editor The elimination of Student Health Services, except for emergency care, was one of the proposed budget cuts announced by LCC's Executive Cabinet on Dec. 16, 1992. Since LCC provides a more comprehensive student health service than other community colleges in Oregon and because of the budget cu ts forced on LCC by a shortage in state funding, the executive cabinet recommended that the college no longer fund primary health care. Basic emergency care, as well as referral services will still be provided through the Student Heal th Services department. Other proposed cuts that wiJI make up the $1.1 million total are: •Budget adjustments and reallocations - moving selected fee revenues (such as surplus revenue from the Bookstore and The Martin Luther King, Jr. holidayonMonday,Jan. 18, will be marked with educational sessions beginning at 9 a.m. in UO's Erb Memorial Union, a civil rights march to the Hult Center beginning in the courlyard of the EMU and the west parking lot of South Eugene High School at noon followed by an afternoon program of speeches and entertainment at the Hult Center. The day will end with a special presentation at the Hult Center starting at 7:30 p.m. Featured at the special presentation will be Mary Frances Berry, a prominent black educator; Essex Hemphill, poet laureate of Black America; Sojourner Truth Theatre with music, theatre and dance; and Cassclbcrry-DuPree, a duo with guitar and guiro. All of these activities are free and open to the public. LTD is also providing free bus rides to those who have a coupon. Coupons are - available at the Student Resource Center in the lobby of the Center Building in PHOTO BY KIM McCI\ULEY Back to school at last The Southern Willamette Valley recently experienced a streak of bad weather. The LCC campus was closed for several days due to freezing rain, snow, and hazardous road conditions. Above, students return to find the main campus transformed into a winter wonderland. See related story on page 6. Turn to BUDGET CUTS page 6 Turn to KING page 8 Recall of ASLCC President Bill Hollingsworth sought by students tried several times to get an:swers to the questions about Hollingsworth 's actions but Hollingsworth refused to talk about them, becoming loud and abusive instead. Once the recall petition was . started, Hollingsworth repeatedly tried to interfere with Wanty' s collection of signatures. Twice Hollingsworth's actions forced Wanty to call Security and have Hollingswonh removed from the area where Wanty was trying to collect signatures. "Hollingsworth came up to report on events at the last USSA conference; and exceeding his On Tuesday, Jan. 5, Brian authority in representations Wanty and a group of supporters made to the Community Colleges submitted a petition for the recall of Oregon Student Association of ASLCC President and Commissions. Wanty said the primary Hollingsworth to Vice President of Student Services Linda motivation behind the petition is an objection to Hollingsworth's Fossen. The petition, containing 665 authoritarian approach to the job signatures, asks that a special of ASLCC President. "He has election be held to recall shown a willingness to cut corHollingsworth because of ners and use intimidation and Hollingsworth's actions in call- confrontation when it suits his ing •ASLCC Senate meetings purposes," says Wanty. "Stucontrary to Oregon Public dents deserve to have their conMeetings laws; his actions re- cerns heard and re-sponded to lated to LCC membership in the • without fear of intimidation." According to Wanty, prior United States Student Association; alleged distortions in his to starting the recall petition he BY LARRY HAFfL associate editor PHOTO BY WOODY Vice President of Student Services Linda Fossen accepts the petition to recall Bill Hollingsworth from Brian Wanty. •• -< .· .• . ._ . OpitiioQpolL .. f····~•u••··~······ .................... ·~·page 2 Letters to the Edit0r.... ~.·.~~.~······~·················•·Page 2 • New fo9d s~tviceinanage:r.. ~~ ..:~~-.. ~ ... ~,.~:·······Page 3 • ~pilman exhibih~ ••• ~.~-···••ou••······················· page 4 Titan toupiament........ ~ .......... ~ .. ~ ...... ~ ......... ~pages· Clas~Jfied.~..u.h.• j.;.~.~ • .;~········· •• ~ •••••• ~u~ .. ~-···~ ...page 7 . . Turn to RECALL EFFORT page7 . . · !I! lmportant !!! .·. .• • .·-- :-: •• .. ·:,:-:-.:-:·:::_::::-.-.· ·•Because ofthe<recent schoo.1closure :< . . \ ...due to ,weather'.conditions,-.. ::;:-:>::: . . . . ' . ••·• L~:r:~~,~~lot:t~:i~~::::: :<· OPINION 2 ~ i :(i :fl&~11~1n,~(~~~~i~, ·t :.:.yJJ•:.:. : uaen <: s··•:•··. : 17. t:•: qr· ea • rt ·, ·:·.:••.:•t:•<.··:·:· •. ••::•L •• J ·••· •.:· •.... , ,..... s·: · :•:::. ·•.:.·.•· ... •••.••.• :~ .'..:.·,.· Letters to the Editor •Who is S.A.F.E.? .. · .· .. e1:vt&es :::. ·. Furthermore; money allocated by . Although students will stiH •receive emergency care from Student <this year's Senate would riot be stable Jundirig. That money could be Health Services, after this year · ·reallocated by next year's.Senate. In • primary health care will not be ••order to acquire adequate staff, SHS available. needs to have a solid, contfriuing Because of Measure 5 arid the funding base. resulting budgetcuts, funding for What these committees need to Student Health's primary·services has been cut. LCC students will no longer do is get student input. The Senate does not operate in a vacuum, it be able to visit a doctor or nurse on campus for free, receive low cost birth should find out what students want. The matter at least deserves a control supplies or have reduced cost lab tests for several different illnesses. vote of the student body. An emerAccording to Sandy Ing; Director gency election could be held to decide of Student Health, the cost to maintain this issue and allow time for planning and hiring of staff. Another option is this service would be $6.so:$8 per student per term. This is much less than the $57 per term that U of 0 students pay for their primary care " ... the cost to center. It is also less than the $35 maintain this (Sudent minimum cost for each visit to a private physician. An LCC student Health's primary care) would have to use Student Health just once in four terms to equal·the cost of would be $6.50-$8 per just one visit to a private physician. student per term." The ASLCC Senate is investigating different funding options which would allow Student Health Services to continue. It has appointed two to put this issue before student v0ters special committees charged with on the Spring election ballot. To put finding a way to keep SHS open. The an ammendment on the ballot Student Health Committee wm look requires the signatures of just 100 for ways to continue primary health members of the student body. This care on campus and the Priorities and year approximately 73 students a day Services Commiucc wilJ review have visited Student Health and 80-90 current ASLCC services and expendi- percent of these students are primary tures to look for possible ways to cut health care patients. Judging from the current budget and shift money these statistics, it would not be hard to over toSHS. acquire the 100 signatures necessary. The ASLCC Senate docs not Perhaps students don't want to have the funds to support the continpay the fee and if that is the case, ued operation of primary care on primary care will be eliminated. campus. ASLCC student fees are $12 Perhaps they would be happy to pay per student per term. Of that money, only $8 a term for primary health $2 per student per term is allocated to care. 'If that is the case, SHS would OSPIRG and $5 is allocated to the have a solid, permanent funding base. Childcare Co-op. If the Senate gave The students need to be more the remaining $5 per student per term agressive and demand that they are to Student Health they would not only serviced, even if it means another be unable to fund other student student fce. If ASLCC and the activities and clubs, but that money students themselves don't get on the probably wouldn't be enough to cover ball and start accomplishing something, everyone will lose out. SHS's need~. The TORCH Staff Ed 1tor ••.••••••. ·····························~······ SoNJJ\ TJ\ YLOR As.sociatc Editor ............................... LARRY I IMTL Managing Editor .. ........................ ......... ERIC ]AMF..S Production Manager ...... .................. STEVE VOCEL Photo Editor .......... ..........., ........ .J\RTHUR MASON A&E Editor .................................. LUKE 5TRAHITT A Sports Editor ........................... DONALD SMALLEY Asst. Prod. Manager ............... JOANN LAPLANTE Asst.Photo Edito r .................. .... MICHAEL Wooo Advl:'rtising Assistant .......... ... HAROLD WRIGHT Distribution ManagN ............. BRANDON DODGE Classified Ads Manager ................ SARAI I FABBRI Cartoonist .................................... AARON JAMISON Photograph(•r ................. ........ MATTHEW AUXIER Staff writers ................................................................ , ARIE:--:E I IOl:CI.Ai\'D MIKE C<X)DWIN Do~ REY:..:orns BRAD WA!<IU:..'· K1\1 McCAUI.FY CAl~Y I 1Af\:JL1( Prod.id .on stJlf.. Bl!At-.:Do:-.: Donrn SARAI! FABBRI SniVh Nurn,R ....,.. ....... . K1•N l·l1:--:\1A'.\1 Scorr Cou:-.rrs Doucl!ERTEY CIIAD News, Editorial & Production Advisor .................. . ......... ....... ... . ....... . DoROTI IY W EAR:-.:E Advertising Advisor ........................... JAN BROWN Printer ................................... Sr1~1:--:cFiRD NEWS January 15, 1993 The Torch is a student managed newspaper, published on Fridays, Sep~ ternber through May . News stories arc compressed, concise reports intended to be as fair as possible. They appear with a byline to indicate the reporter responsible. Editorials arc the opinion of the Torch Editorial Board. Forums arc essays contributed by Torch readers and arc aimed at broad issues facing the community. They should be limited to 750 words. Deadline: Monday, noon. Letters to the editor arc intended as short commentaries on stories appearing in the Torch or current issues that may concern the community. Letters should be limited to 250 words and include the author's phorw number und address. Dcadlim' \londav, noon. fhL' editor rc,;;ervcs Hw nght to' cJit forum, and letters to thC' editor for grammJr, spell mg, hbd, mvasion of pr:vt1cy, l~ngth and nppropn..itC' languagr. Al: corrc spondc1Kl' mu..,t be typeJ anJ 5igncd b) the writer ..Mail or bnng .:ill corrcspon • dcncc to th{' Torch, Room 20=i Center Buildmg, 4000 E 30th Ave., EugL'nc, OR 97405. Phone 747-4501 L'Xt. 2014 To the Editor: SAFE - Who are you? Upon reading the first publication by the Students for Academic Freedom and Expression I am concerned that liberties have been taken to omit key details. This is a student club, correct? Why isn't the list of the chairman, the editor, etc. included in this publication? The unnamed P.O. Box that this socalled LCC student club is contracted through is just a bit unnerving considering the it is a PRIVATE off-campus box. SAFE like every other student club on campus should be no different in having a CAMPUS mailbox. Shouldn't students have the right to be reading their correspondence? I certainly wouldn't feel "safe" in divulging contact with "unknown parties" especially when it concerns my academic freedom as a Lane student. Eight ASLCC senators make up the ten charter members of SAFE. They have been trained in proper campus courtesie-s and it's surprising that these reasonable specifics are not included. Whether this is mer cl ya delinquency on the part of the club leaders or a true act of concealment I think at its present state SAFE should be considered nothing more than an abuse of student club freedom! -Jesse Remer Anti - freeze kills To the Editor: Oregon legislators recently mandated the use of bittering agents in anti-freeze. For half a cent, anti-freeze (a tasty poison) can be made so bitter children can't drink it. It's important. Anti-freeze kills. Please write to the Poison Prevention Task Force, OHSU, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd., Portland, 97201. -Edi th Harrison Visit to homeless enlightening To all Humanity: My wife and I visited the homeless people living under the bridge on Coburg Road across from Armitage Park. We talked with one man who is a Vietnam Veteran, is well educated and has two degrees in law; his wife is also a college graduate. THESE PEOPLE ARE IN MUD WITH ONLY A FLIMSY PLASTIC COVER AND AN OIL DRUM TO BURN WOOD FOR THEIR HEAT! These people are not alcoholics or drug users; they are good decent people. Can we turn our backs on them while tending to the needs of other countries? Can we sleep well knowing there are unfortunate people living so close to us that do not have a bed or enough food to keep body and soul together. Come on everyone let us do something to help and it will benefit them but mostly yourself and if you have never helped anyone, you need to try it for it would be the best high you will ever achieve. Get in your vehicle, go there, meet these people, then I bet you will want to help. And all you people that get publicity and money for helping people, where are you? • -Tom & Jo Green Opinion Poll One of the proposed 1993-1994 budgets cuts is Student Health. If given the choice, what do you think should be cut? "Not the Health Services, that's for sure. The selfhelp classes maybe. Or maybe some of the psychology classes because we're overwhelmed with those." Michelle Dillon Business "For me it's hard to say. I don't use that (Health) Service. It's my first year here so I really don't know. Robbie Nevin "It would be hard for me to decide because you're going to offend somebody one way or another. .. " Cassandra Wheeler undecided Pre Vet Medicine "I don't have much opinion about that." "... If you go to cut a budget cut every course a little bit." Lee Wainin "Less money should go into Physical Education and more money should go into Health Services.. Chad Carlson Political Science Ichiji Watanabie General Studies Journalism News January15, 1993 3 New manager changes image of Foodservices BY ERIC JAMES managing editor "The customer is number one!" Well, at LCC - "the student is number one," according to new Foodservice Manager, Jim Wychules. "Customer satisfaction," says Wychules. "Without the students, teachers and my staff wouldn't have a reason for being here. Wychules, who came to LCC from Shasta College in Redding, Calif., says some of the challenges here are similar to ones he faced at Shasta College. He wants to startoutmaking small improvements in the Foodservices. "I'm not going to change everything all at once, because people wouldn't appreciate the individual changes quite as much. "My first change was to upgrade the coffee 100 percent. We now have a premium fresh ground coffee that we grind everyday," says Wychules. He has made changes not only in food quality but also in prices and portions, and lowered prices on certain items in order to sell more. "We lowered the price of fries. The cajun fries are now the same price as the regular fries. "It's not that the cajun fries aren't more expensive, they do cost considerably more," says Wychules "but I'm out to change the image of this operation. 11 "I want people to leave here saying 'that's probably one of the best decisions I made all day."' "There could be a new daily special, beverage product, sandwich brought on line, or wild-eyed cowboy out in the quad cooking up a bunch of ribs and chicken. I will be doing just that too. Wychules' philosophy: I want students to feel that they made a good decision to come here. They will be treated with a friendly smile and fair amount of portions at a reasonable price. And we will try to serve them something that's not necessarily what they might prepare at home. Some additional changes Wychules plans to initiate are: •Pasta/salad bar, which will change to a pasta/ salad/potato bar; • •More true vegetarian items on the menu such as entrees and soups; • Espresso carts will be located around LCC and will be student run. Applications are available in Wychules' office; •Possible fresh stir fry meals and vegetables will be added to the menu; PHOTO BY WOODY • Adding vending machines around the campus in Foodservices Manager James Wychules comhigh traffic areas. "People come check us out!" says Wychules, bines fun with work as he laughs with Kerri "Watch for the new changes." Houghton, Pantry Supervisor 11 11 Student's death prompts motion for $1000 donation BY LARRY HAFTL associate editor At approximately 5 a.m. Jan. 1 LCC student Aden J.D. Wood died in an apartment complex fire and, i_n response to his death, the ASLCC Senate is considering a motion to donate as much as $1000 to the Red Cross. Wood was the only fatality in the fire. Because it may be a case of arson, Eugene Police are investigating the case as a possible homicide incident. No arrests have been made as yet. At the Jan. 5 ASLCC Senate meeting President Bill Hollingsworth made a motion that the ASLCC make a donation to the emergency fund set up by the Red Cross. Hollingsworth's original suggestion was $100 but $1000 was proposed in further discussion. Because the motion involved over $50, it had to be tabled and will be brought up again at the Jan. 19 Senate meeting for a vote. Ron Lyda, director of Disaster Services for the American Red Cross in Eugene, told The Torch that they have an ongoing emergency fund used to assist the victims of fires. He said that there were seven families displaced by that apartment complex fire and that his office is giving them emerg~ncy assistance in replacing some of the clothes, bedding and furniture lost in the fire. Lyda said that Wood's family had sufficient insurance to cover funeral costs so any contributions would be used to help the other families displaced by the fire. Don't Have Time to Waste ... ...............Let ....Us...Do...the ....Worrying .... for You Living in U of O Housing Living Off-Campus ✓ Variety of Balanced, Cooked Meals Less Variety /Shopping & Cooking ✓ Dishes Washed for You Washing Dishes ✓ Community Atmosphere Living Alone ✓ Easy Access to Study Areas, Finding a Place To Study ✓ Utilities Furnished Utilities often not Furnished ✓ 35¢ Washers / Free Dryers 75¢ Washers /75¢ Dryers ✓ Free Local Phone Service $18.16 Monthly Phone Service ✓ $355/month for rent, food & utilities $480/month for rent, food & utilities (cost based on remainder of academic year contract) What your Student Government is doing for you: " To compel a man to furnish funds for the propagation of ideas he disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical." -Thomas Jefferson Martin Luther King ESSAY contest, the winners of the top three essays will receive a tuition waiver of 12 credits. For more information contact Connie Mesquita, Cultural Director, ext.2335 All essays and art for potential exhibit must be turned in by January 15, 1993. Need to use a typewriter? Take advantage of the free use of a typewriter provided by ASLCC in Study Skills Center 481 (Beginning winter term). Students are needed to attend a Conference on Student Success to be held Feb. 24, 25 and 26th at Portland Red Lion Inn. Registration and travel will be paid by ASLCC. Contact Evelyn Nagy, ext. 2947. FREE LEGAL SERVICES provided by ASLCC in the second floor Cen. Bldg.,Rm. 202, ext. 2340 (cost furnished by Financial Aid Office for 1992-93) AS1LCC Campu§ Caliemidlaur Live at the U of 0 only $11.85 per day for all the amenities listed above! Spaces are going fast! Live where the living is good! Take advantage of this offer, call University Housing at 346-4277 ====-:.-:.-:_ U niversity Housing ____ _ 1595 E. 15th 346-4277 _ _ __ - - - - - • Eugene, Oregon 97403 - - - - - • " FIGHT POLITICAL CORRECTNESS!" Join S.A.F.E. Club, contact Jeff Fernandes at ext. 2330. ASLCC Senate Meeting Tuesday January 19th, 1993 in Admin. Boardroom 216. ARTS 4 & ENTERTAINMENT January 15, 1993 .Onomatopo eia's tribal utopia spreads BYLUKESTRAHOTA as Americans. We've been left with no heritage, so in the CD we deAs the lights becided to combine gin to dim, the shapes different heriof five performers tages and walk onto the ethnicities to stage. As the influence the group begins to sound," says settle itself curimember ous audience A . 1 1 en members move Beausoleil. closer to the With an stage, perhaps array of to feel the electribal, Indian, tric vibrations industrial, from the many and many amplifiers or to get other sounds a better view of the both acoustic "instruments" and amplified, cluttered throughOnomatopoeia's out the stage. trade mark of Up front is a "beauty 110 gallon barrel dt:enched with with chain draped dark overtones" over the top. To its Onomatopoeia members (clockwise) Vince sound is still left stands a grand- Armirze (with camera), Arlan Schwarzbauer, Allen there. sized harp which Beausoeill, Karine Barricklow and Robert Wretch. " E v e n sets it off from the though this CD bar-b-que grills, giant springs, is more up-beat than our prevarious drums, wind instru- what its name means - a vious recordings, the dark word made by a sound. And ments and effect pedals, all of side is still present because which are entwined in a knot sound is what the five mem- it's a major part ofour sound," of electrical cords. The harp bers of Onomatopoeia use says member Karine. itself presents a hint of en- best. Barricklow. For over three years the chantment among the stranRegardless of how dark gling, almost claustrophobic group has produced sound, they ma{ sound, the group's 1yrics, and a following like no usage o tribal rhythms and . stage. As a woman begins other band in Eugene. Re- sounds were good enough for strumming the harp, setting cently the group has pro- Sun Twins, a restaurant in the listener up for a soft dream duced one more thing - a CD Hawaii, to ask the group to state, a flood of guitar feed- entitled "Ethnic Utopia." record a song to be used for back and drums chokes the Released by Eugene's 13 the restaurant's radio comroom, awakening the listener, Records, the CD embodies mercial. "I think that was the only signaling this is no dream, Onomatopoeia's idea that as this is Onomatopoeia. humans, "We're ·all part of song they heard from us, but it's nice to know we can pull A Eugene-based group, the same tribe." off playing both up-beat and Onomatopoeia, is exactly "W,e can't trace our roots darker sounding music," says member Arlan Schwarzbauer. To celebrate the group's new CD, Onomatopeia has • ·. Membersh~is eel scheduled something special Validated mam • • .to the for anyone who wants to go U.S.S. b sior ,nlils you andcheckoutwhatthisgroup to full access to the 885 and is all about. guaranteed anonymity. • On Sat. Jan 16, OnomatoDiscuuions: poeia will host a free CD re• gay1ssues • Siar Trak lease show, in which they will • Comr.t-5 perform songs off the new • fem11ism CD and more. The show starts : ~ily(& Moret) at 9 p.m. and will be held at 30 E. Broadway between Oak and Broadway. ~~~2.:00•lsi:, 24 hours, Established~ember 3, 1992 !Ml©OC@mi~~@ TI'fru@@fr®li' An independent Gay/Lesbian /Bisexual Bulletin Board System. arts & entertainment editor ~-"' :· : ~ LCC art instructor Craig Spilman reviels in this untitled work the image of the house, a reoccurring theme through his current exhibit at Lane. Instructor inspired by color and themes BY LUKE STRAHOT A arts & entertainment editor Craig Spilman's first oil paintings in over 20 years along with prints and pencil drawings are currently on display inside the Art Department Gallery at Lane and will run through Jan 22. The LCC art instructor says he's beginning to feel comfortable with the imagery in his paintings, but still considers himself a beginner. "For a while, I thought, if you wanted to make something pretty, you painted. If you wanted to say something about a subject, you painted or printed. I know that's not how it works, but that was my hangup," says Spilman. Now Spilman finds painting most enjoyable due to the amount of exploration with color, something he hasn't used much in the past with drawing and print making . Although the mediums used to create Spilman's images vary,·one thing that makes a majority of his work the same is his reoccurring images. In his show at Lane, the image is that of the house. After viewing pictures of different homes taken during the depression and dust bowl years, the image of the home came to be a nostalgic symbol, something both attractive and frightening to Spilman. ''To me, when I look at the~ pictures of simple boxed houses which very much look like the ones in my work, I get a feeling of loneliness, seeing the houses built out in the middle of nowhere. I want to know what went on inside them. They represent a record of a life which can tell a great story," he says. As an instructor of beginning drawing and print making, Spilman hopes the exhibit will allow his students to s~e more than the instructor in him. Spilman says many of the pieces he shows are abstracted images of what he thinks. This, he says, will show students where he is in terms of his own relationship with the reality in his mind and his surroundings, rather than whe~e he is when he is teaching a class. Got a computer with a modem? . ~ ~·::%~ 343-1591 E.xccilsior I . ,-~~~,;J( VIAfl.VP f·.. a ,o,:,o:._.-:,._.._ • • '/5d- '18d Fri. 5 & 7 ---~EJ-W~~ _r1-CE"1TER ·- - - 633 East 11th-Avenue 342-S940 Medicaid/Insurance I99¢ for Everyone Down town Springfield 630 Main St. 747-8349 J' • • ·s ~ 8X R of Euarene :=: ~: Free Pregnancy Testing ::: •• "We Care" ~l V McKenzie Theater • • B ~ t : : :XX :~ I ._. ~:~ " Sat. 7 & 9:15 Sun. 5 - 7 & 9: 15 Mon. 5 &-7 ':ific V Eugene Medical Building @ 132 E. Broadway, Rm. 720 ::: Eugene, OR 97401 t 687-8651 .-. -.-•• --·•·- =·•·-·= --------·- --·- -â– - -â– - ~: -·- - ..- ~• SPRINGFIELD SCIENTIFIC SUPPLIES Scales Chemicals Lab Equipment 9-6 Mon.- Fri. • 10-5 Sat. 726-9176 1124 Main St. SPORTS January 15, 1993 5 Titans 3rd in Bates Tourname nt BY DONALD SMALLEY Sports Editor " We will be a very immature team at the start of the season." That was what Head Coach Jim Boutin said of his men's basketball team before the Titan's season started. But with four freshmen in the starting lineup, LCC opened league play with a 90-68 victory over Southwestern Oregon. Over the winter break, the Titans played in the NWAACC Cross-Over Tournament and hosted the Dale J. Bates tournament where they were beaten for the first time. "I think it was beneficial to have a loss in the Dale J. Bates Tournament," Boutin said. "It . justifies our work ethic." That lone defeat came at the hands of Centralia Community College, 69-62, in the opening game of the holiday tournament Dec. 28 at LCC. Yakima had to pay the price the next night when the Titans cruised to an easy 8353, to capture third place. After wmning the CrossOver Tournameqt in Walla Walla, Wash. by defeating Olympic 59-49, Columbia Basin 59-48, and Treasure Valley in the championship game 72-63, LCC increased their winning streak to 10 by cruising past Northwest Christian College, 100-74. "Our defensive pressure is PHOTO BY MATTHEW AUXIER very good," Boutin says~ And Allen Demianiuk drives by Centralia defenders dur- the statistics back him up. Through 13 games, LCC's ing the opening game at the Dale J. Bates Holiday opponents have committed 65 Tournament. more turnovers. The Titans are forcing 19.2 turnovers, ·and holding their opponents shooting to 38 percent. LCC, meanwhile arc committing 14.2 turnovers and is shooting 45 percent from the field. Sophomore Ty Overby is the leading scorer on the Learn with 13.5 points a game and the 6'10" Klosterman is pulling down 7.7 boards a game. The Titans defeated Chemeketa in Salem on Jan. 6, 75-60 and then were defeated by Umpqua Community College Dlacount Subscription Savice /or New Comics Coslt Paid/or Old Co•lcs ond Gomes. 65-57 on Jan. 13 in Roseburg. no E. 1Jth • CS03l 34>2568 Lane faces top ranked Othcr Location: Nosulgia Collectibles S27 Willamette St. (5001 -&M-9202 Clackamas Community College at home on Saturday, Jan. 16 at 8pm. PHOTO BY MATTHEW AUXIER Titan guard Jill Peterson sneaks away for a lay up in a victory over Linr1-Benton CC. Lady Titans ready for league play The team won seven in a row to start out the season before A highly pressurized de- falling to Clark College 73-54. fense and a controlled up-tempo The Lady Titans have a three offense has allowed the LCC . game winning streak going into Lady Titans to enter the league play with victories over NW AACC league season with a Bellevue 87-41, Linn-Benton 77-48 and the LCC Alumni team 10-1 record. The defense has held its op- 89-70. ponents to a lowly shooting perAlthough LCC defeated centage of 30.5 percent and has Linn-Benton by 29, Loos said forced 26.2 turnovers a game, the game was a lot tighter than but LCC is committing 20 turn- the score indicates. overs and is shooting 42.2 per"Even though we beat Linncent. Benton handily," said Loos, "Our team is ready for the "they can be tough and they will league season," Coach Dave continue to improve." Loos says. "We will not change After 11 games, the team anything that we have done. nee~s to work on their restill Since we 're the defending according to Loos. bounding, champion, the other teams will inconsistent in the are "We play extra hard against us beLoos says. area," rebounding cause they want to beat the top with turnovers forcing by "But dog." our defense will offset out lack of size." BY DONALD SMALLEY Sports Editor Pheasant Park Apartments ~ OREST VILLAGE ,r-_ _ Apartments...- NO\V RENTING AND TAKING APPLICATIONS! Quiet,Quiet,Quiet • Beautifully landscaped grounds • Laundry facilities • Playground • Tanning salon • New recreation room • And more! l 2 3 BEDROOM as low as S.E. EUGENE Enjoy the beauty of woods & wildlife in super floor plans 2 BEDROOM. 1 1/2 BATH $495.00 & $515.00 PER MONTH •SWIMMING POOL • WEIGHT ROOM •BUS TO CAMPUS CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMATION STOP BY 475 LINDALE N. SPRINGFIELD •SAUNAS 747-5411 687-1318 ·, ) .- .' . j ORJGl:'- .-U. MEXICA."X FOODS - FRESH. FIT. N' FAMOUS TM GouRMET MEXICAN Fooo •Fun Cantina Atmosphere • Family Dining • Super Salsas eFast Friendly Service ' •arui Famous Nachos "HEY AMIGO!" "We don't fool em , we feed em." 11 t h & City View • 485 -6595 NEWS 6 January 15, 1993 ASLCC Senate term new of start signal lines e Bookstor proposes By-law BY MICHAEL GOODWIN staff writer The long lines and endless waiting are about as much fun as having a root canal, but they are an inevitable part of the process of buying books and supplies at LCC. Ross to According Dickinson, bookstore employee and LCC student, "People are stressed out, but patient. They're making the best of the situation." Bookstore Manager "Shelly Dutton suggests that to speed up the process: students should make sure that they have their Credi tLine application filled out and have a validated student body card before they purchase their books. "If possible, avoid using CreditLinc altogether to purchase books because the process can take up to four times as long as using cash, check or .credit card." . "More people than ever before are using CreditLine to purchase books," says Dutton. ''This adds to the crowded conditions because verification of eligibility for CreditLine is now processed at the bookstore instead of at financial services." Dutton says that the main problem lies with space. "We are going to try and re-model the front, adding one more register for CreditLine students, and eventually modify the credit verification system so that students using CreditLine can go directly through the checkstand without waiting." Budget cuts: Ii': Continued from page 1 financial services fees) from restricted use to unrestricted use and general control. •Revenue enhancements a suggested increase in the '93-94 tuition rate of $1 per credit hour, as well as an increase in tuition for non-credit classes. •Program/function reduc•tions - a total of 14 positions were proposed to be eliminated, approximately half of which are currently vacant. One position in each of the following are among the proposed eliminations: counseling, management in Ins ti tu tional Adv_ancement, the third shift operator in Computer Services staffing, management in Investment and Support Services, physical education faculty and business faculty. College President Jerry Moskus emphasized that these proposed cuts are based on Gov. Roberts' proposed budget. If her budget is accepted, the college faces an- other $2 million in cuts next year. If her budget is not accepted even more cuts may be necessary. Moskus said, "I see some definite threats to student access." He said that the college may have to limit student enrollment, "We are already turning people away by the unavailability of classes." Hearings have been scheduled so that the executive cabinet can get feedback from students and staff regarding the budget cut recommendations. The dates for the hearings are, Tuesday, Jan. 19 from 3 - 5. p.m. in the Board Room of the Adminisand Building tration Wednesday Feb. 3 from 9 - 10 a.m. in Forum room 309. All students are welcome to attend. All proposals will be presented to the Boa~d of Education at its Jan. 25 meeting. Students will see changes implemented at the beginning of the '93-94 school year. amendments BY LARRY HAFTL associate editor Darin Thornhill, a Visual Production & Design major, tries to locate textbooks he needs in the bookstore. Winter weather forces longest closure in years HY MICHAEL GOODWIN staff writer AND DON SELF for The Torch Snow, ice and freezing temperatures forced the recent closure of the LCC campus for safety reasons. Hazardous driving conditions combined with limited classroom accessibilty due to ice and snow in parking lots and walkways forced LCC president Jerry Moskus to close the school from Jan. 7 - Jan. 12. This was the longest sustained closure in more than a decade. The decision came after Moskus conferred with Paul Colvin, Director of Student Services, and others. A layer of black ice coated the parking lots and walkways before the 2nd snowfall, which made walking and driving extremely hazardous. "Luckily, to my knowledge, no one has been injured," says Colvin, "Education is important but not as important as the health and safety of the students." The U of O remained open COME TO THE OREGON OUTDOORS live and ;work this summer at Incredible Crater Lake National Park or the Oregon Caves National Monument in Southern Oregon. CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK Renowned for its amazingly blue lake and spectacular mountain scenery. Crater Lake is a great place for hiking. camping. fishing, and other outdoor activities. Crater Lake Lodge Company operates lodging. restaurants. gift shops. a campground . and boat tours for the park visitor. OREGON CAVES NATIONAL MONUMENT The Oregon Caves is the largest marble cave in Oregon and is located in the scenic Siskiyou Mountains. Hiking, scenic photography, spelunking. and cave restoration are some of the activities available . The Oregon caves Company provides guided cave tours. lodging. food services, gift sales and child care services to visitors. Summer Job applications are available at the LCC Job Placement Office. Interviews will be held on January 19. sign up at the Job -Placementt Office. AN EQUAL OPPORTUINlY EMPLOYER ......,"-.._.-;-:.,..-..v.,,,._v_v...._v.,.;,,._v~,-,,,_, during this time but at least six faculty m'embers and numerous students have sustained injuries requiring medical treatment because of weather related accidents says U of O security officer Kay Coots. Grounds crews worked all weekend and LCC hired a contractor to clean the parking lots so classes could resume Wednesday. Although some recent decisions - such as the decision to close school at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 12 - were made later in the day, according to Director of Security Paul Chase the decision to close campus is usually made by 6 a.m. Chase contacts the public relations department to pass on the information to the media. Security personnel are notified to contact all persons on the notification list beginning with the switchboard operator, who starts a tape with the campus closing announcement. The decision to close does not necessarily affect the outlying facilities in Cottage Grove or Florence. Chase says the college has an obligation to keep the campus open if at all possible with a delay in starting time preferable to closure. At the Jan. 5 ASLCC Senate meeting, Senator Dave Swift introduced a set of more than 65 proposed changes to the current ASLCC By-laws. Proposed changes include: • Change ASLCC membership in CCOSAC from mandatory to optional. • Prohibit the Communications Director and Student Resource Director from voting on Senate matters. • Redefine the functions of Treasurer, Secretary, Communications Director and Student Resource Director. • Create a Judici.ary Committee with the power to review and deny initiative and recall petitions before they are submitted to Student Services. • Create a permanent Campus Support Committee to review all funding requests. • Increase the required minimum cumulative GPA all Senate members must maintain from 2.0 to 2.75. • Eliminate staff from consideration as Senate Advisor. • Allow the Senate to pay the Senate Advisor. • Prohibit sponsoring any amplified music events. • Increase election polling from two days to three. The Senate will hold public hearings on the proposed changes on Tuesday, Jan. 19, at 3:30 p.m. in the Administration Board Room. In other business, Senator Al Schermerhorn read an open memo from the Senate stating that petition signatures must be Continued from page 4 gathered only at a Student Activities assigned table and that "Brian Wanty must produce a sworn, notarized affidavit" concerning how and where signatures were gathered on his recently submitted recall petition. The memo goes on to say that if Wanty does not submit such an affidavit the petitions he submitted to Student Services "will be declared invalid." Turn to BY-LAWS page 7 ,.✓.- 1<!,str'tlatums ~ctptttf ......../ ;; 'By ca([ine 74 7-450 l,q_t.2697 ~ 'M.onaay tf..r"".ili 'Tfuusaay _;:. ~ '-='--v .. 9 a.m.- 2p.m. _ ...,..v .Nightly 5:10 ($3), 7:15, 9:20 Sun Mat 3:00 ~~-,..._v;:v' "WONDERFUL, MAGICAL, MARVELOUS! One of the beat filma thia year. Two very enthuaiaatic thumbe up." Week of January 19-21 ·-1..&E•RT 'llpsy 'Daisy Mock..tail Cream Onwn Soup ef !House Safad/Cfwice ef 'Dressings Cli~en. 'Basquaise, 1{,ict Seafootf Crepu 'J<!nai.ssanc.e 'Brazo tfe (jitano HELD OVER! Nightly 7:25 ONLY Fli~\in ~~ COMING: CRYING GAME .(."' Lunch seroed: Tuesday, -v"" Wednesday & Thursday ~ ; ~ "'""''V"V.:;:- Jrom 11:30a.m. to 1:15 p.m. $ ~ v"'..,/' /"V,._....,.,,.._,~..,..,,..~ 'NllC.t to tlil. 1Jdi, in tlil. ?/9rthl.ast Corrur of tlil. Cafeteria r-/fflJdN,~, 'A DELICIOUSLY CHARMING COMEDY! AWMD W1NNE11 ANTHONY HO ~ v"".,.."'-~-",,...;_,.:::..:,.,-._"v' LO OVER! Nightly 5:20 ($3) 9: Sun Mat3:15 ** WONDERFULLY HUMOR ~ rnr EFFICIENCY · ~~~rtltrs1RESERI 0 OFTHE OHICA ---~:.=.;.·_-~- tx.vERT January 15, 1993 CLASSIFIED 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, paid in advance. The TORCH reserves the right to not run an ad. All ads MUST have a verifiable name and phone number. Deadline for Classi.fied ads is 5 p.m. Friday for publication in the following Friday's issue. AUTOS 1972 FORD VAN - $800. Has new tires, runs well, heater, bed. Evenings 342-3426. 1974 AUDI FOX. Good for work or school transportation. Only $495. 746-0940, ask for Autumn. 1985 TURBO MITSUBISHI Starion, sport coupe, 5-speed, black, great condition. $4100. Paul, 683-4425. 1969 DODGE POLARA 2HT. Hauls butt. Good mechanical condition. $650 OBO, 688-5265. 1966 DODGE MONACO 2.HT. 440 motor. Fast, good condition. $850. 688-5265. CLASSIFIEDS 1978 CHEVY 4x4. 350, 1/2 ton, short bed, automatic trans. Good, solid truck. S2800. 942-9296. 1980MAZDAGLC WAGON. Needs some work. $700. 942-9282. OLDER 30 FT MOTORHOM E, $2900 OBO. Call 741-2195. CYCLES & SCOOTERS BUY & SELL GUITARS Galore!! Musical Instruments (0utcs to tubas, accordions to zithers) photo equipment accessories, new Montana Dreadnought Folk guitars Sl 75, free tambourine with $10 purchase 361 West 5th.• GIFTS OF RECOVERY & personal growth at The "REC" Room, 99 W Bdwy, Eugene - 344-3982. 1971 KAWASAKI 250cc off road dirt bike. Runs well, looks good, $325. 746-0690. PHASE S/F RPG ON SALE: Eugene Toy & Hobby and Escape Books. NIKADO Production Company. 3455574. 52CM ROAD BIKE. Good condition. Basso frame, SunTour components, Columbus SL tubing. $495 OBO, 683-9148. NEW TYPEWRITER (Cannon), antique sewing machine. Low $ or payment plan. Call 343-5220. TRANSPORT.A TION TIRE CHAINS, $10. 345-6855, Ward. NEED A RIDE FROM ROSEBURG toLCC. Tuesdays, Thursdays weekly. Will help pay gas. Laura Bruton, 6723526. FOR SALE PEAVEY F-800 B 400 watt Bass head w/Kustom 2x15" EV speaker box. $550 OBO. 485-7524 days. 7 FREE FREE LUNCH AT NOON; Bible study from 1:00-1 :50, every Thursday in HE 105. Sponsored by Baptist Student Union. HELP WANTED SPRING TERM LCC CE "Handyman" instructor. Call Naomi or Loma at 726-2252 for application information. NEED 5 POSITIVELY motivated people to help staff training and marketing office. 744-2807. NEED EXTRA CASH? Salespeople wanted. Unlimited income. Part/full time. No experience necessary. 7442807. LOOKING FOR SOMEONE to ski with. Call between 3 and 6 weekdays, 741-7915. EARN $60 DAILY assembling beautiful stuffed animals. No experience required. No selling. Send stamped, self-addressed envelope: Americrafts, Box 44065-A, Rio Rancho, NM 87 I 74.• STUDENT NEEDS PRINTER for (old) KA YPRO computer. Call 4857187. NEED EXTRA CASH?? Exciting Job opportunity available. Flexible hours. No experience, training provided, WANTED learn while you earn. Call Robert Chang 683-9489 ext. 50.• SERVICES AUTO DETAILING. Interior and exterior detailing, hand waxing, upholstery cleaning. $35 interior, $35 exterior. Call 686-2744. FOR RENT CHRISTIAN MALE, 26, needs Christian roommate. Gateway, busline. $225+. Darryl, 744-1120. QUAD NEAR CAMPUS - need somebody to take over lease. For more info call 998-8755. 1 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE. Dishwasher, new carpet, near UO. Available now, $415/month. 6864402. • EDUCATION CLASS: INTRODUCTION TO ZEN meditation. Jan 14th, 2 p.m. - 3 p.m. Ext. 2850. PRIVATE VIOLIN lessons, $16/hr; $8/1/2 hr- Kevin Lefohn, 683 -5597. By-laws RECALL EFFORT: Continued from page 6 Committees formed: • Student Health, chaired by Vice President John Mitchell, charged with finding ways to continue student health services in the face of impending budget cuts. • Priori ties and Services, chaired by Senator Chris Browning, charged with reviewing all ASLCC services and expenditures with" the objective of finding sufficient funding for student health services. The Senate also. discussed a possible cdntribution tq the fund set up by the Red Cross to help pay funeral expenses for Aden Wood, an LCC student who died in an apartment fire Jan. 1. The Senate also approved $3674 in funding for Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration. Continued from page 1 ·me and shouted that students had to hear his side of the story before signing the petition and that I was telling lies. I went to Student Activities and Barbara Delansky called Security. Bill followed me and continued to intimidate me. He threatened that he would 'shadow me,"' says Wanty. This confrontation was confirmed by Student Activities Director Barbara Delansky and Director of Security Paul Chase. Chase stated that no citations were issued. A meeting was held between Hollingsworth, Security, Delansky, Senate Faculty Advisor Greg Delf and Vice President of Student Services Linda Fossen to discuss the situation. A second incident occurred on Dec. 16 and again Security was called. A second meeting was held, then a third involving a lawyer representing Hollingsworth. Wanty was able g:,:~1-,i•t,~~ e are here r ou! ext. 2814 2nd floor stairwell south side of Center Bldg. to collect the needed signatures before the mediation resulted in any final decisions. Fossen is currently having the signatures verified and has determined that 500 is the number required to validate. If the petition is validthcn the ASLCC •Senate will be directed to hold a special election to determine, by popular vote, if Bill Hollingsworth is to remain President of the ASLCC. If Hollingsworth loses the election he would be removed from office and John Mitchell, current ASLCC Vice President would become President. ___________,_.c_aI---)-YB __·e_;lt..... \y.... /}a ..... 'J..... :f:7::.;4 __.... :,1__ •) __ j_61_ · _ _ _) Distributors Needed Immedi~tiiyDue To Great Demand News 8 January 15, 1993 Offinium·Gatherum \ _::;·/>?~ANNE FRANK SHOWS. .·The LCC Pe.iformiilg Arts production of"The Diary of Anne Frank" in the Blue Door Theater on Jan. 29, 30, Feb. 5, 6 at 8 p.m. and Sunday performances on Jan. 31' and Feb. 7 ~t 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. are sold out. Students are encouraged to attend the "Anne Frank in the World: 1929-1945" international exhibit at the First United Methodist Church at 13th and Olive throughout January . INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES The Council on International Educational Exchange has catalogs on opportunities in Costa Rica, France, Japan,Russiaand Spain. For more information about catalogs, contact Julie Baker at 747-4501 ext. 2199. 4· ,---.,.,,,.,,»â–,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,rn-······· PTK INSTALLATION The installation of new Phi Theta Kappa members will be held at 7 p.m. in the Board Room at LCC on Jan. 29. President Moskus and Vice President of Student Services Linda Fossen wi11 attend and announce available scholarships. A. DEAN MCKENZIE SHOW The Friends of the Eugene Public Library will present a slide lecture given by A. Dean McKenzie on "The Meaning of Russian icons," Sunday, Jan. 17, in the Lecture Room of the Eugene Public Library from 2 - 4 p.m. McKenzie is a professor emeritus from the UO where he taught in the Art History Department from 1974-1990. He received his Ph.D. in Medieval Art from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University in 1965 and has a distinguished career as a professor, lecturer, writer and tour leader. PHOTO BY WOODY Sounds of thunder shake LCC FREE CPR COURSE If you heard the screaming term, and it was time to hear the thunder or felt an earthquake on engins, which develops 3500 campus around 10 a.m on Dec. pounds of thrust, run. 11 , you can rest easy. It wasn't The plane is a T-39A an act of nature, but rather a test Sabreliner which was donated for the Aviation Main.tenance to the school's Aviation Tech. Technology class. The class had program by the U.S. Air Force, been working on the two Pratt & according to instructor Phi II FosWhitney J60 engines during the ter. A free American Heart Association CPR course will be provided by Occupational Injury Management Systems (OIMS) on Saturday, Jan. 16, to promote CPR training in our community. The course will run from l - 4 p.m. and will include information 9n heart disease, · heart attacks, and how to deal with adult respiratory and cardiac emergencies. . The course is free of charge. Seating is limited and pre-registration is required. Call OIMS at 344-9833 to register or for additional information. EUGENE SYMPHONY GUILD The Eugene Symphony Guild will sponsor the fourth in the '92 - '93 series of eight Concert Previews on Jan. 20, at noon in Studio I of the Hult Center. Conductor Marin Alsop will discuss works to be performed and introduce guest clarinetist Sharon Kam. Featured in the Jan. 21 concert will be the Copland Clarinet Concerto, the witty Barber "School for Scandal" and monumental Brahms Symphony #1. • Call the Hult Center for more information at 687-5000~ KING: Continued from page 1 addition to LTD Customer Service, EMU Main Desk Store and U.S. Banks. The Monday conference is a climax to six days of celebration and events held at various UO locations and the Hult Center. No events were held at LCC. LCC has no on-campus events advertised for students but will hold an inservice program for staff stressing "Unity Through Diversity" on Monday. LCC students are invited to attend any of the open events at the UO and Hult Center. The Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration was originally started in the early 1980s by Rico Perez, an LCC stu- WRITING CONTEST The Writing Center, English Department and Office of Institutional Advancement are co-sponsoring a Writing Contest in connection with April is Community College Month. The theme is My Light Bulb Experience with Learning. Describe when, why and how the light bulb went on for you, about the importance of learning, and the value of an education. Tie in this lifechanging moment to your experiences at LCC. The essays should be approximately 500 words, typed or word-processed, doubled-spaced. There wiU be $300 worth of prizes with the top prize being $100. Pick~upentryforms at the Writing Center across from Center 451. Deadline for submissions is February 1. Open to all LCC students. II 11 OPEN MIKE AT TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL At the Temple Beth Israel, 2550 Portland St. one block west of Willarrieue, Jan. 20, from 7 :30-9:30 p.m. there will be an town hall meeting concerning discrimination and harassment. This open mike will be moderated by Rabbi Myron Kin berg with opening remarks by Alic.e Kinbcrg. All are invited to speak and refreshments and childcare are available. Sponsors include: Community Against Hate, CALC, SOS, Eugene Human Rights Commission, Lane County Affirmative Action and Human Rights Commission, Sponsors Inc., and Homeless.Action Coalition. • ·•· . . •·· ..·. < .· . ·. :·. . . ••.•· . . :-_,: . ., .. ML:1(:C~L~BR~~ION JANU~RY 1~ •\< -. .. . •· CelebrateMartm Luther KmgJr's buthday by <attendmg 1!1e M~K.C?.~-er~ :. , ence at the EMU Ballroom on.the uocampus/Th~ day ~gms :w1tq o.p~n10g · remaric~byPresi?enttv1yi~sBr~nd.1'?eJeatureffsj>,ea1ce(~t.tpe conf'~r~n~':fi\f < .: be Essex Hemplltll and there will also.~ a ~cene fro111 ''.P•~ry of Anp~,fr~iilc< •:• : :· < ...The festivities continue with ariMpK;}r. ijuinan RigllJsMar¢hJr,<>rn uo.:: ·and'SoAth Erg~rye·mg~ s~~oolto th~)JpltC~11t¢.r •. ~11ter!aiI1riientan<1...~1Â¥akers~··< foll<?~•~g,the 11.1ar.ch.,at_th~ 1-Iult Center. 1r,c~ude: ~oJourner'J'ruth Theat~faJ}ssex, -• He;-t;;'}a~C~;C~~;~~~~~:;~;faniLives tin Jii~nee" Program ;tiliiflu It ·.. ~e11terat7:30 P·ITI· w1th~eawred sp~ak~r. Mary5ranq~ ~erry,and ap~arances . • by Essex Hemphdl,. SoJourner Truth<Theater~>~nd Casse!berry-Dupn~e~ The . :day'sevent~a~efr~~or..c ~~rge,notic1c~tsiequit~d;Doo rs:openat6:45p.ni. :For more 1riformat1on~•call 346-~11~·:· .. .•. .,.. :: .:,::: : ,:·•:•. '',: <:>•::>••:: •.-::/:\ .:·.\ .: //>: •.:::.::}•:,:<><• dent and then ASLCC Cultural Director, as an ASLCC sponsored event. Over the last decade interest and activities at the UO have increased while the same have dwindled at LCC . The ASLCC Senate is funding an invitation-only reception at the Hult Center Monday night. The Senate is also sponsoring an essay contest, with scholarshi ps as prizes, and an art show, but no other on-campus events or speakers have as yet been announced. A calendar of all events being held through Jan. 18 is available in at the Student Resources Center in the lobby area of the Center Building. ·-----------------------· : LCC FOOD SERVICES NOW OPENING: I I ._______ -----~ : I • I I I I I I I I ·• ·· ·: T:H .. :· E ··: , • ....:...J. ..:.. : ; I : ~----• -----~ I I e· AR.· ..::: ..: :...·.:· .•... f ·::. ..... : s .. : o ·.. F ·: I : ., ./ :_:. I : L·· c ·· : c :· • , . • I I I : • : ,.,.·: :__ .: • I Introducing: • . . . . - The SP U d Bar with 1ntroductry pnce of $1 _The Tropic a I Fruit Bar (Hey, 86 that cold with . . ' lots of V1tam1n C) - And the all new past a/ sa Iad Bar I Ha pp y Hours: Monday-Friday, 11:30-1 p.m. in the LCC I I cafeteria located in the Center Building I . . 1 1 I I 1I I . I I Bring this ad I_n for 25¢ off any beverage. This offer expires 1-22-93. One coupon per customer. I • I I - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I •