Oregon Daily Emerald Life after a heart attack See Page 7 Wednesday, February 18, 1987 Eugene, Oregon Volume 88, Number 102 Two Eugene men have filed a complaint against a newspaper ad paid for by the city of Eugene. They claim the ad, a portion of which appears above, is not balanced. Irate citizens protest airport ads, ask for 'balanced' look at issues By Dennis Fernandes ()f the Emerald Two local residents have requested that the city of Eugene withdraw informative advertisements for the airport improvement bond, alleging that “several issues are not given balanced treatment.” Richard Gold and Fergus McLean, both of Eugene, complained about the ad in a letter to Barbara Bellamy, the city’s director of informa tion. The ad appeared in the Register Guard's Feb. 15 edition and will continue every other Sunday until the March 31 election. Gold and McLean believe the ad should cease running until "such balanced treatment of these key issues is accomplished.” The two men leveled their attack on the city’s Turn to Airport, Page 4 Bill would cancel plans for statewide semester system By Chris Norred Of the Kmrrald The State Board of Higher Education will not continue with plans to adopt the semester system at state colleges and universities if a bill being Legislative issues drafted in the Oregon House of Representatives passes the state Legislature. The bill is sponsored by Rep. Darlene Hooley, D-West Linn, and would require state colleges and universities to maintain the current quarter system, rather than changing to semesters in 1990 as the State Board decided in )anuary. The bill does not apply to the Oregon Health Sciences Univer sity or the University l.aw School. Hooley said she is introduc ing the bill because of concerns about the cost of changing to semesters and because the State Board did not coordinate the change with other segments of Turn to Semester, Page 4 Dix starts search for funds to finance track renovation By Randy Elliott Of I hr Kmcrtld State Rep. David Dix, D Kugene. announced Tuesday in Eugene that Wednesday even ing will mark the beginning of his attempts to establish financ ing for a proposed bond measure in the Oregon State Legislature The measure, if passed, would fund the Hayward Field renovation project. The proposed bill, sponsored by Dix. would allow the State System of Higher Education to issue $2 million worth of in dustrial development bonds as a moans of financing the renova tion project, but does not specify how the bonds would be financed. “Before we can issue those bonds we have to prove to the people who are going to buy them that we have a way of pay ing them off." Dix said. Last week, Dix {imposed in creasing ticket prices for athletic events as one possible means of financing the bond measure, but some University administrators are opposed to that idea. Turn to Dix, Page 4 Disorder causes victims to act in irrational manner Counselors can treat psychological problem By Karen Creighton (X Hm EawraM Lady Macbeth, with her excessive hand washing, may have suffered from an anxiety disorder that still traps some people in obsessive thoughts and com pulsive behaviors. Most students are familiar with occa sional thoughts that won*t go away or with the feeling that they need to duck and double-check something important, but theee aren't the kind of debilitating obsessions and compulsions that plague people with obsessive-compulsive disorders. Obsessive-compulsive disorder is one of the rarest of the behavior disorders, occurring In about .05 percent of the population, according to the text. "Ab normal Psychology." by Gerald C. Davison and John M. Neale. It is also one of the hardest disorders to treat, they said. A person suffering from obsessions experiences irrational, recurring thoughts that feel uncontrollable and in terfere with the person’s normal func tioning. the text said. Obsessions may include doubts. Graphic by iwrtinr Rath thoughts, impulses, fears or images, all of them uncontrollable. One lawyer suf fering from an obsessive impulse had a powerful urge both to drink from an ink pot and to strangle his apparently belov ed son, the text said. A compulsion is an irresistible urge to repeat a ritual act again and again, even though it is excessive or has no apparent purpose. The sufferer fears dire conse quences if the act is not performed, as in the case of a woman who washed her hands 500 times a day to ajleviate her fear of germs, according to Davison and Neale. Compulsions also may involve magical rituals. One woman chewed each mouthful of food too times and had her husband shake a teakettle and frozen vegetables over her head, all to remove germs. Obsessive-compulsive disorders fre quently strain family and social rela tionships because of bizarre behaviors that are hard to live with, the authors said. There is a distinction between com pulsive disorders and addictions, said Ed Lichtenstein, a University psychology professor. Eating disorders, drug and alcohol addictions, and smok ing fall into the category of addictions and excessive appetites, he said. Self-esteem is frequently a major issue with compulsive eating, smoking and drinking, said Tom Boerman. a Whitebird crisis counselor. Boerman thinks of these as self destructive rather than compulsive behaviors and tries to discover why the person is feeling self-destructive. "It usually doesn’t take very long Turn to Disorder, Page 3