Anything for a laugh (Until Evans, a freshman in pre-telecommunications, does his iguana imitation for ABC's America's Funniest People. A erew from the show was at the University Friday auditioning people for a chance to appear on the nationally televised program. Photo by Eric Evans NAVY ENGINEERING AN INVESTMENT IN YOUR FUTURE Student Benefits • Karn $13,8(X) a war lor up to two wars while still a student to use any way you choose • Additional S4.IXX) bonus paid when you enter program • No drills, uniforms or summer obligations while in s< (tool Training After College • 16 weeks at Officer Candidate School and commissioning as a Navy officer • Six months of graduate level engineering education in Orlando, Florida • Six months ot hands-on engineering training at a prototype trainer in Idaho. New York or Connecticut The Navy Engineer • Starting pay of up to $27.(XX) with potential increases to more than $55,(XX) after five sears • Continued professional growth and an opporumitv loi Nav\ paid graduate school • Opportunitv foi world travel • Outstanding marketability Engineering, math, physics and chemistrv majots with at least a 3.0 CPA and hav ing completed one year ol calculus and one veai of calculus-based physics are eligible. We are convinced this is the THE BEST PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITY .WAHABI F TC) A (:()l I ,EGE STUDENT TODAY Navy engineering representatives will be on campus: November 13, 10:30-2pm, Student Union Building, or call 1-800-543-7287. NAVY OFFICER £s South African activist to discuss apartheid By Catherine Hawley Emerald Associate Editor Nomonde Ngubo. a South Af rit an labor activist, will discuss the role of women workers in the light against apartheid at a let ture today sponsored by the I-atin American Support Com mittee anti other student groups Women are playing a pivotal role in South Africa's labor movement and in the move ment for liberation from white oppression, \gubo sail) Sunday in a phone interview However. South African women have an added respon sibility to free themselves from male oppression Ngubo said, adding that like their counter parts in the United States, South African women fill mul tiple roles of worker, wife and mother Ngubo saitl she is also inter ested in educating the rest of the world about the events tak ing place in South Africa; she has l>een working as a liaison to American mint-workers, teach ing them almut the effects of apartheid on the black South Africans who also work in the mines "Despite the release of Nel son Mandela, the situation of apartheid is mostly unchanged. in terms of people getting to vote and things like that." Ngubo said Ngubo helped organize the Council of Unions of South Af rica. established in 1'iHl to pro mote blai k leadership within that country's trade union movement. She was also in volved in the formation of the National Union of Mineworkers in HI82. In 1081 Ngubo came to the United States to continue her studies in industrial and labor relations She is serving .is spe cial international representative lor the United Mineworkers of A merit a Her speaking tour is spon sored by the Third World Women’s Project of the Insti tute for Policv Studies in Wash ington. I)C Her talk titled "Women. Culture and Organizing.” will be given today at 4 It) p in in Room 100 Willamette. Other groups sponsoring Ngubo's appearance on campus include the ASIJO, the Black Student Union and the Wom en's Center "One big focus of LASC late ly is to bring in third world women speakers and allow them to speak ... because they are not heard very often." said Amanda Weber of LASC. Willamette students rally to protest campus racism SALEM (Al‘| A rally to de plore racism at Willamette Uni versity drew hundreds of stu dents and faculty. Friday’s rally was part of a day-long condemnation of rac ism on campus. Most profes sors discussed racism at the be ginning of their classes Friday. The events followed by a week the posting of hate mes sages on the door of a black stu dent's dormitory room. Vice President Frank Meyer said Willamette officials had no idea who posted tin- racial slurs An investigation is con tinuing. he said "We come to condemn this and all acts of bigotry and at the same time contemplate our own complicity in a societal web of prejudice that permits these acts," Charles Wallace, Willamette's chaplain, said. Some speakers at the rally also mentioned another recent racial incident at the universi ty. in which two students posi t'd racist signs as a joke. Meyer said the students were not suspended because officials determined that they did not understand that their actions were racially insensitive During the speeches. Lisa Johnson, a Willamette senior, handed out handwritten mes sages urging faculty to do more than denounce racism. She urged the university to hire minority faculty members and to encourage more minor ity students to enroll at the uni versity. Willamette has no black pro lessors. )ohnson said She also noted that the school offers no courses in black history OPEN 24 HOURS Kinko's Copies • Binding • Laser Design • Gourmet Espresso • Coffee 860 E. 13th 344-7894 44 W. 10th 544-5555 I Coupons in the Emerald save you money. Check every page, every day. It pays.