Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 29, 1989, Image 1

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    __Oregon Daily_ ■_
Emerald
_Inside_
■ Pugene festival events, Page ;t
■ Youth group gives jobs. Pago "»
■ Knoore! section guide. Page 7
■ Student Senate report. Page l "i
I riday. September .-‘i. 19HU
Kugune. ( )reg<m
Volume ‘I I, Number
Sidewalk serenade
S,i xophonist It rooks drown say s hr likes to play for the puhlii u hen
ever the moot! overtakes him. These passers-by walking down tilth
Avenue n ere hu k\ enough to find lirown "in the mood" Thursday
I’liolo hv Martin Thiel
Cuts bring few changes
But students find
many classes full
B\ C hris Bouncll
Fmcralri Assot iali“ Hlitor
The lirst week of ( lasses at Oregon s
three largest universities h.is produi ed
nu surprises in terms of the ettei ! sum
iner budget i uts have had on students
Kilueatois at the t'niversity Oregon
State I'inversitv and t’ortlund State I ni
vers It V said the ctftN Is on students tune
been minim.d
I don't Ihink students will notice too
main changes ’ said (iraliam Spanier.
vi< e president tin finant e and admiius
(ration at ()SI' We tried to miunui/e
the ( uts and i hanges so the\ would not
have am etfei ts on the students
(won at the I 'mversitv where oltu ia 1 s
are experiencing trouble ottering
enough upper division i nurses, the i on
seijueui es of budget reductions have not
vet been tell
"I think most ni ns do not connci I the
problems we re having in some ionises
with the budget ints." said Norman
Wessells I niversitv provost and vu e
president Ini ai ailemii utfairs
All three si hools were ton ed to i ut 2
pen cnl from their budgets to bind
raises in tecultv salaries when the l.egis
lature failed to appropriate enough
monev to fund the pa\ me leases
The I'niversitv. w hich has to i ut
$2 1*1 million over the PtHfl-'M bienni
urn eliininated tat to 70 i lasses and ini
plemeuled a selm live admissions pro
i ess to limit enrollment
Moreover 22 vacant tacultv and ser
vu e positions were left untilled and two
\1\ l«‘s Hr ami
hum tenured hu tills members were ills
missed
Although llir inis .in sexiti* the ii'
suits ut tins summer's budget trimming
will nut tie tell tin smile time, suit! I in
versits President Mvles Iti.iiul
t ile ke\ is going til tie III tile nest
three bieiinhi " Hr,mil said "This is the
i ritii at |ieriml in terms ul the well being
ut llie t 'irisersily
Until Hr,mil and Wessells said the
great demand Inr ll|i|ier division i lasses
is a diret t result iif livu years nf ret ord
enrollments at the I hm ei sil\
Bet ause i lasses were so large in the
last lew years we re seeing a bulge ul
students i riming through the system.
Hr,mil said
(urn to ( ills, f’.i20
Sahalie's closes after rent increase
B> Janis Joseph
Emerald Reporter
!o |hr lament nf mam people In
the Kugene contmuniU Sahalie
Natural I nods eii I 1 tth Ave .
( luseil its doors to business Sept
1
.Sahalie s, which had occupied
the corner of I tth anil I’alterson
for the past five years, was fori ed
into i Insure after the store's lease
payments increased to the point
that Dana (lardner. Sahalie's own
er, dei ided it was not in her inter
est to stay there
When Cardner signed the origi
nnl lease agreement in 1984 with
Sacred Heart C.eneral Hospital, the
owner of the property, the lease
stated exactly what the rent would
be for the next ten years The rent
from 1984 to 1989 was fixed, and
after Sept 1989. the rent would
increase, said Tom Iaiwry, assis
Photo In Hill Hamr*
Sahalie \alural hoods. 595 K. 15th Ave., has none out of business alter beinn unable
to pay the rent increase required by the buildiny's owner. Sacred Heart Hospital.
tant administrator tor the hospital
“Kor us. it was a matter ot having a
tenant that didn’t want to pay the fair
and going rate,'' I .awry said
Prior to the rent increase, the hospital
conducted a survey to determine wheth
er or not the increase was fair. I hey
studied comparable space in the area
and found their rate was reasonable
While the rate was comparable to the
area. Gardner was not able to pay She
closed the store and sold all of her
equipment and inventory
Gardner tried to find a buyer for the
business prior to the rent increase, but
was unsuccessful She attributed the
failure to the increase in rent.
Gardner has no plans to reopen the
store.
The closure of the store has also af
fected the tenants who occupy the top
floor of the building The tenants claim
that the apartments are a safety hazard
and that they have not been able to get
the hospital to fix the problems
"The apartments are basically falling
in around us." said Mary Krummel, a
tenant of the building
krummel said now that Sahalie's is
gone. she is afraid that Sat red Heart
will want them out. She has tried to get
Sacred Heart to sign a lease agreement
so the tenants have some sort of assur
ant e that they will he able to stay in the
building So far. they have been unsuc
cessful in their efforts
"We don't know what is going to
happen to the building, and our lawyer
has told us that basically we don't have
Turn to Sahalie's, Page 1b
Three cited
in sex crime
H\ Stephanie Iloll.mil
l mtT.ilti Reporter
Three people with prostitution
citations lire to appear in court
next week in .1 1 use in which
young nmn were enticed with
rush to have sex with .1 woman
while her hush-i 1 id took pictures
and tape tei nrdings ot the ,11 Is
A 14 year old woman identify
mg herself ,is Nam \ S told male
students who were on the I mvei
s 11\ campus two weeks .1)40 that
they 1 oiild he p-ut ol .1 nationwide
medic.il research projei I "evulu.it
ing the sexual potential of the mu
lure female." according to letters
she distributed
The typewritten letters began
"Meet Nam y S " and stated that a
doctor was (.undue.ting an experi
ment to dot ument the sexual re
spouse of females based on the
number of orgasms achieved by pi
ther the man or woman in a two
hour period
The woman told the men on
campus that participants 111 the
project would receive $10 in cash
for each orgasm achieved by either
person Shu said she and a dm tor
would fie at a room in the Kugene
Turn to Crime, Page 16