—--Oregon Daily- - Emerald Tuesday. May 16. Kugene. Oregon Volume *10, Number 1 .">."■> _Inside_ ■ Soviet to visit, Page 3 ■ IFC news. Page 4 ■ Streetwise. Page 5 ■ AIDS care fundraiser, Page 9 Blondie December Holt lip-syncs to music while other members of the Delta Delhi Delta so rority dance onstage during an airband competition in the KMl' ballroom Monday night. The contest, which included members from most of the (beef houses on cam pus. kicked off "Greek Week. ” Photo by James Marks News producer tells of S. African injustice By Mu had Drummond f trier.ild \ssodate Iditor l lic tori imI ini>!r.ition ol South Afrit .i s hl.it ks to so called honit'lituiis «.is iiIhiuI ilir i losi'st thing to \,i/i Or many" .is David Oilier a pro tint er tor ( IIS s on Minutes would ever v\.ml to gut Hut gutting i lose to tlif real stoiu's developing m South At in ,i is mm .1 Urn uli1.ill task Olhnr. who hns produced several features tor t MS \>ms on South Afrit.i. told .111 .null dll i* ot .iImnit .Mil) Monthly night lh.it press reslrit lions have made it nearly impossible to cover that enunlrv's soi nil upheavals and life ot lire coin moil hl.it k under lire repressive Apartheid sy stem "The interesting thing is the South Afrii an government has really won this (media restru lion) war." Ollier said "There's a very limited number ot stories you t an get avvav w I III "(The government) has made it olfi't lively impossible for for eign reporters to cover the story in South Africa." he said "Now you've got to get thrown out of the i ountrv to broadcast a story which they're unhappy Hiiv id (icllicr about Moreover South \fru aits perhaps art' niori' uninformed about events iu tliru own i ouii tr\ hei ause ul press restru lions. (ielber added Instead of running stories on abuses of the Apartheid svslein (ielber said the popul.ii e is ex posed to pap news stories, sin h as eight-minute features on whether to tax paperhai k hooks Turn lo Gclber, P.tge 7 Barber gets unique view of changing campus By Greg Hough Emerald Reporter There are a million stories in the Kmerald City — and Ed Mayars can probably tell about half of them. Sitting in one of three barber chairs at his business, the kampus Barber Shop on lt.'>l E 13th Ave . Mavars spent part of a morning reminiscing about nearly 30 years of cutting hair in the heart of the University area On a mirror behind the chairs is placed a sign that Mayors and his cutting < rew find hu morously apt: "Cows may come and cows may go, but the hull in this place goes on forever ." "1 have the best clientele in the world." Mayors said. "Very rarely do you get someone in here who gives you trouble." The business opened in 1022. only the set ond to set up shop on what became known .is Campus Row to generations ot students By the time its founder, tile late l.eo Ileffenbai her. hand ed over the reins of ownership to Mavars in l'H.-f the shop had established itself as a historic el ret erence point for generations of alumni Twenty-eight years after Mavars began to work for Deffenbacher. he says he's looking to ward selling his lease ot tin- shop in the next two or three years "I in not planning on breaking Leo's re cord." he said. Mavars said the shop has cut the hair of all Universitv presidents since 1922 lie said he should ask incoming President Myles Brand "to come in at least once, 'cause I'd hate to break tra dition." Mavars recalls giving a crew cut to then-in terim President Charles lohnson only days before his death in an automobile accident in June lfitifi "He told me he was under a lot of pressure." said Mayars, recalling the days when Johnson led a school rife with student protest over the Viet nam War. The presidents who’ve come to kampus Bar bcr Shop were "kind of quiet, most of them." Mayars said. "Now (William) Boyd, he talked a lot. He was from back east, but I know he liked to gel mil <11x1 camp <1 id "I don't think ho ever got a dm er's license lin’d always lived where there was