Backstage Bandle is devoted to Center I smiled as politely as I could and decided this was shaping up to be an ordeal. Ten minutes later I was following Bandle's assistant, Ltsa Chase, through the corridors of the Hult Center's elaborate office network. Bandle's office is expansive and cluttered. She was perched behind the desk, a robust, energetic person whom I liked at once. "Sit down, sit down,' she gestured. I detec ted a slight southern drawl. Luke Bandle came to Eugene from Washington, D.C. in the summer of 1980, ter be the direc tor of programming and marketing for the Hult Center. Her late husband was an Oregonian and she has relatives in Oakridge who convinc ed her to at least talk to the performing arts center planners. "I really wasn't sure about c oming out here. I love Washington,'' she says. "But I’m delighted. This center is fantastic," she says. "The planners had a lot of insight to develop a performing arts center, a conference center and a hotel in the same area." Her job responsibilities include searc hing lor artists, negotiations with agents, promotion, marketing, ticket pricing, editing "On Stage" magazine and actual produc tion of advertising. Currently she is booking entertainers tor the 84-85 season I'd heard the stories about Luke Bandle1 sleeping nights at the Hult Center, Luke Bandle sleeping a tew hours at the Hilton, Luke Bandle living in that nice office of hers where a congratulatory letter from the President of the United States shares the wallspace with celebrity photos and lots of colorful graphic prints. She didn t deny the rumors. "It you don't plan to spend at least 12 hours a day on something like this in the first two years ot operation, you’re going to tail," she says. "You have to be there." Actually Handle's days were filled with lb-20 workday hours during the first tew months that the Hult Center was open. It takes that kind ol dedication to launch a center like* this, especially in depressed economic times," she* says. "It's a lot of work/' says Handle. "But I love my job." Our conversation was frequently interrupted by several emergencies. For example, the stage hands wanted a dinner break. However the tec hnic lans c (aimed the stage wouldn't be ready for the Jane Pcrwell show it the hands left. Bandle made some calls. Or, a reporter on one line needed some information about the champagne dinner celebrating the Hult Center's first year, while* Bandle s son needed transporta tion to the* dentist's office on another line. She worked it all out Knowing Bandle is a widow, I wondered how she* managed her hetty career and her family alone. I asked. "I have four children. My late husband and I were always both workaholics. I don't think the children suf fered," she says. Most of her compulsive energy is incused on her job rather than her children, she* says. "That's healthy tor them," she says, adding that she doesn't hover over her children "like some mothers are inclined to do " Does Luke Bandle ever have free time for herself? "I took one Sunday off once,” she says with a wide grin Bandle holds a degree in music and plays the piano She also reads "everything from trade magazines to cereal boxes.” She raises cals and roses. Her job gives her the opportunity to travel a lot When in New York City, she make a point to see plays. Mostly though, she works. ”1 thoroughly love* my |<>b. It s like washing a tar The end result is there. You can really see what you’ve done. And that’s neat ” I asked her it she had advice tor students starting their own careers. “Pick something you want to do. Don't be afraid of i hange either.” she ottered. She added that too many people are miserable in their jobs. "Don’t let tear motivate you.” Luke Bandle obviously hasn’t. Kim Carlson jazzer Continued from page 1B packaged — a style, he says, which does not allow players to “screw around much," that is, "exercise thematic variation." Reviewers label his music fu sion, cinematic/pop and most often, accessible — implying both commercially viable and less esthetically complex, or painful, depending on your orientation. Siegel is by no means deaf to that charge, if it is indeed taken as such. “The idiom I write in is a com bination, a fusing of different styles," he says.That fusion is of an eclectic musical background, from classical and jazz melody to driving rock'n'roll, providing a broad base for appreciation. More than anything, Siegel's style suggests unity, and to that degree, it is somewhat classically romantic, sentimental. He admits it. Deep down, he says he's a “romantic, sentimental kinda guy," and there is nothing preten tious or maudlin in the admission. Siegel will be missed. Anyone lucky enough to have seen his show will preserve the vicarious vanity of having been there when he used to play in town, in the lit tle bars like )o Federigo's and the Electric Station. Earth River Records 61 Tapes Oregon's Best Selection of Records and Tapes All Major Releases and Top Hits ALWAYS OH SALE Thousands of Imports 2 Locations: Campus 762 E 13th 342 2088 Buys and Sells Used Records Downtown Mall 62 W Broadway 343 8418 We have what you want1 'Cathedral' Continued from page 2B Most of these characters avoid confrontations that might jolt them out of the haze, until something too big to avoid forces its way into their awareness. In "A Small, Good Thing," winner of first place in the 1983 O. Henry Prize Stories Collection, that event is the death by hit-and-run of a small boy on his birthday, and the crass attitude of the baker who demands that the parents pay for a cake ordered that day. Such ac cidental events in Carver's stories bring people together in unex pected ways, with powerful consequences. Heroes here are as rare as in real life, and Carver isn't afraid to make his narrator biased and in sensitive. The narrator of the title story, last in the collection, hates the idea that his wife's blind friend will visit them. Blind people give him the creeps. To the nar rator, a cathedral is just “something you watch a show about on late-night T.V.," until the blind man is able to make him ex perience what a cathedral can be. The book is pulled together as a whole when the blind man proves greater than the demands of everyday life. Ron Netherton-Johnson fill Architecture Books On Sole •ARCHITECTURAL CLASSICS • Site Design & Construction Detail • regularly $2695 • NOW $21.56 • • A Pattern Language - Alexander • regularly $45.00 NOW $3600 • •Architectural Graphic Standards* regulariy $99.95 • NOW $79.96 • T Portland Gay Mens Chorus Presents “Design For October” Featuring Special Guest Artist David Smith, Pianist Featuring Classics by Casals, Schumann, DeBussey, Wagner, Brahms Huh Center • Soreng Theatre 2 p.m. • October 16th All Tickets cost *6.00 and are available at Hult Center Ticket Outlets Also in Portland 8 p.m. • October 22nd Westminster Presbyterian Church N.E. 17th & Schuyler