ARNOLD’S Home of "Make your own Sandwich' Sandwich Shoppe WANT VARIETY IN YOUR SANDWICH? Have a different one each day - You can't live long enough to get a duplicate Made only with what you want on them because you make it yourself! Guess the cost • Get it FREE 1461 E. 19th (near Agate) ARCADIAN FARMS NW Lessons • Training • Sales • Clinics Huntseat • Jumping • Dressage • Western Combined Training (Eventing) (an Olympic Sport) Sneak out at lunch or at the and of the day and ex perience an alternative to other exerclee programs In our new arena. Fully enclosed, covered, mercury vapor lighting and located directly on the city limits. (Our close In location wilt save you time S gas.) Kim Novak — Hoad Trtirm Tool* Baker — Trainor/Sam Vlgr Rot* A. Johnaon — But Mgr. 484-5360 2405 Bailey Hill Road. Eugene (13 Stock* toulh olthtW 11th Fnd toayari —UO Bookstore== Film & Photo Processing ★ One Day Service In by 4 pm — back by NOON the next day (C 41) if Guaranteed Lowest Prices We ll match or beat the price of any local photo coupon if Low, Low Film Prices Stock up for the Holidays Film & Photo Processing 12, 24, 36, or Oise Developing & Printing • C 41 P*oc#** no i?*> »MwOik • 5t»n j»r<1 S'.** p'*«»«■ • QtO&'.y prim* 5 0*1' eelf* 12 Eip 2.29 24 £«p 3.99 ise>p 2.79 Qk>«ey only 36f»P 9.99 • From your tavern color nag rtMT or* OlOWy • 041 Procan 110 1» i» 4 Dac ui rragalrsn or*y • Citnaay jura «t aac* a>tra • OtM npancmgonnagatrva • From your tavonla odor MB or nagaava ana aua only • 041 Pracan no 1» 0 i» only • Mana man omy no mm $2.99 • C-41 Pwki MO. »35 & Ok w* nagafiv«t only • GftOMy on* i2t» W.M 24 Cjp M.M 36 f jp n,14,«rM • Koa»c/»om» a fcmcnrom* • 110. 126. or 135 an only 20 tap $2.19 24 **.00 Mian »e*> $3.19 • O dMMnaxi an n*gMN« • Fram you" lavontt caKX M a "wga'N* on* *n> only • 041 Proem* no 126 135,6 D«C MM Only • Man* ftnan or*y no mar $1.19 liu.ifan teed lowest once We- II match any coupon Your store since 1920 13th A Kmcfttd M F 7*304 30 SAT 10-004 00 •004331 Continued from Page 1 tion that has been conspicuous ly successful in achieving the goals of the $45 million Cam paign for Reed.” said Reed Col lege President Paul Bragdon. "Larry's participation and leadership in this fund-raising effort cannot be overstated." large’s move to the Universi ty will be a homecoming. He received his master's degree in history and his doctorate in education from the University in the early 1970s. He also worked several years at the University in various student affairs positions. He has worked as vice presi dent for administration at Willamette University in .Salem, where he served as acting presi dent in 1978. In 1976. Urge served as special assistant to the Deputy Commissioner for Postsecondary Education for the U.S. Office of Education. Urge has been at Reed for five years, and he currently is serving as a member of the Na tional Educational Fundraising Committee for the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. "I am very pleased to have a man of Dr. l-arge’s caliber join our administrative team." said University President Paul Olum. "Larry's record at Reed in organizing successful capital campaigns and developing strong public and alumni rela tions programs is very im pressive. We are confident that lorry's leadership will greatly strengthen the University of Oregon in these same areas." Continued from Page 1 Bui Oregon and many other stales have ignored the justice Department's ruling by adop ting rules of their own. There are no anti-discrimination laws that cover sexual preference, but in Oregon and in 20 other states the law does prohibit discrimination against the han dicapped — a group that in cludes people with AIDS. The law also protects people with AIDS-related complex, a variety of illnesses that sometimes precedes AIDS, and those who test positive for the AIDS virus because they could be perceived as handicapped However, a present U.S. Supreme Court case involving contagious diseases could drastically change this defini tion of discrimination. With a nationwide debate over AIDS as the backdrop, the court must decide whether all federal aid recipients, including public schools, are barred from discriminating against people with contagious diseases Clay-rights activists say the case could significantly alter the debate over AIDS, although the case involves tuberculosis. The justices are expected to reach a decision by |uly. Although Oregon has had few documented cases of discrimination, many AIDS ac tivists say the attitude toward those with AIDS is the most common — and the most damaging — kind of discrimination. "It wasn't until AIDS started moving into the non-gay, non IV (intravenous) drug-user population that people started getting worried about it. There's no regard for the fact that it's been killing thousands of people.” said Scott Seibert, chairman of the Mid-Valley Ac tion Committee, an AIDS awareness group headquartered in Eugene. AIDS, a blood-borne disease that destroys the body's im mune system, primarily has af fected gay and bisexual men, prostitutes and intravenous drug users. The disease, discovered in 1981. is uniform ly fatal and has killed about 18,000 people so far and in fected another 1.5 million. In I.ane County, 12 people have been diagnosed with AIDS, and seven of those have died. Seibert said the gut-level fear people have about AIDS is simply a reaction to a perceived threat, and the outcome is in creasing discrimination. "If people would understand only one thing, that the only way you get it is through the blood and through unsafe sex practices, then a lot of this discrimination would disap pear." he said. Unsafe sex practices include Whatever the assignment. Pilot has the formula for writing comfort and precision PBofs Better Bail Point Pen. in medium and fine points. lets you breeze throurfi long note-taking sessions. Infect, we're made writer’s fatigue a thing of the past! This crystal barreled veteran of the campus has a risbed finger grip for continuous comfort and is perfectly balanced for effortless writing. Best of all. youH never throw it out because it’s reliable. The perfect teammate to the Better Ball Point Pen is Pilot’s Penriber 0.5mm mechanical pencil. It has a continuous lead feed system and a cushion tip that helps eliminate the frustration at lead break**. The Pendber's jumbo eraser does the job cleanly while the ribbed (pip offers the same comfort as the Better Ball Point Pen. Pick up the Pilot Team at your campus bookstore today . . .The Better Ball Point Pen and The Penciber. PILOT J. unprotected anal intercourse and having more than one sex partner. AIDS patients report being discriminated against in almost every sector, including medical treatment. Dentists all over Oregon are being warned by state officials to stop discriminatory practices, which include charging AIDS patients up to $95 extra for sterilization fees. But more often, a person with AIDS is blacklisted by friends and abandoned by family members who cannot deal with the disease. The executive director of Shanti in Oregon, an AIDS sup port organization, said he has seen firsthand what happens to someone dying of AIDS who is shunned by friends and family. The Rev. Ken Storer’s first ex perience through Shanti with a man dying of AIDS showed him the horrifying reality surroun ding the disease — the man died in a back corner room in his parents’ house, his family so frightened of the disease that they would only approach him while wearing protective covering. “He died all curled up, ter rified, not of death but of the terrible isolation," Storer said. A more recent experience proved to him what a difference support can make — a Lane County man died of AIDS in September, surrounded by friends and family members who loved him. who would take him out or just sit with him. “The only time he was alone was when he really wanted to be,” Storer said. “Even with the enormous amount of education we've done, people still have a lot of fears about contracting the disease." he said. The AIDS scare has elicited an array of responses, ranging from suggestions of quarantin ing those with AIDS to public education about AIDS for Turn to AIDS, Page 28 _^y BMBM m bkrPMLldff CHINESE ™ RESTAURANT Oriental Buffet Lunch Downstairs C Try Our Dinner Upstairs Hours: Downstairs M Th 11 00 7:00 F Sa 11 00 4 3C Closed Sundays Hours: Upstairs Su Th 4 30 10 00 F Sa 5:00 10:30 1275 Alder Street • 683-8086