Blinded by the light Welder Jim Lrness puts the final touches on a medal frame that supports the Asirth floor addition to Knight library. By mid-1993 and $97 A rr. in later the library u,7/ be almost twice its current sue of 132,000 square feet Photo by John Stoops ESCAPE program survives cutbacks By Kirsten Lucas i mm aid Reporter Wtirn the Measure 5 ax full ist spring, the LSCAI’l-.' field 1 lii’s program staff cringed. LStiAl’lTs demise seemed in evitable In tin' program's staff as death sentences worn haiiif • i down to tin' two depart its through which LSi'AI’L-.' . Iters upper division i red its for voiitnicer work However, KSCAI’L returned tins fall for its 22rul year at the ' niversity staffed with a new . lor and students who are re determined than ever to keep the program alive. We've been here for a long tune, sirs e ltiti'i, and I honestly would not he dedicating my last year here to the program if 1 didn't think it was going to he around," said LSCAI'h director Teresa Miller, a senior in economics. Determination is crucial at t:. . point. A-. a result of Mims f< and the state-wide higher . r.sun budget cuts that fol low, d, i.S( .Al'b lost three staff .turns and lias a relatively at life expectancy unless : v can find alternatives to of eg credit through the Kduca •: and Human Services de j aiTments, which will ho d out over the next two years. Aside from affecting hS• ( Al’L's ability to grant credit. ' elimination of the School of . duration is hound to have une effect no the pool of vol unteers available. Allhough the total number of vi lunteers has not decreased nific.mtly this term, the cumber of education majors i olunteering to work in the public m bools has decreased Hid is expected to decline ns the department is ph.ised out, aid PSCAPP's Public School V diint'-er Coordinator Amber Brand I he closure (of the School ! Education) will Imvo u drn e!lei t.' said [to Allan, l-.S 1 API.public si bool's division head. I am hoping there will he some sort of . Initiative to pul pressure on the State Hoard ol Higher Education to reassess prn a ilies and perhaps put mon i y back into education instead of programs like military sci ence " Miller also deeply regrets the ■ s ol the School ol (.education, .enough 1 MCAPE's future is now her Immediate i out ern "Now that we re done with registration," Miller said, "(I S CAi’K's) future is high on my agenda KS(lAl'll i urrentlv has time options, Miller said it can find new depnrtmonls to offer credit for the volunteer work that KS ('APE coordinates, it i an -aa how integrate into t areer PI.in ning and PI.11 eluent Sei v it: or it can become u ilepartint nt itself. Hut one way or amither, Mill er is confident that ESCAPE will survive because it serves it vital (unction in the coinmuni ty and because it offers stu dents an opportunity to get in volved outside the classroom while earning credit -it the same time "I believe that students need to he able to get credit for the work that they're volunteering I urn to ESCAPE, Page 4 Football weekend | Recovering from an up set loss to Utah, the Ducks will take on the Trojans of USC, who ulsu hope to redeem them 1 i_» - ^suivns alter losses id Memphis St. ami Arizona St. See supplement, pages 1-8B Return of beer_ The EMU Boor Garden returns to day. bringing back a favorite combi nation of many students: free food and cheap beer See story, Page 16 Director hired_._ Thu University's Genter for the Study of Women in Society has brought Sandra Morgen on board as its now director. See 'Higher Education Update,' Page 6 Soviet aid declines, Cubans’ market uncertain By Dan Eisler Emerald Contributor The depths of Cuba's economic cri sis threatens ils existence as .1 social ist experiment in the developing world, a speaker told u University crowd Thursday morning. As a result, the crisis imperils the improved living conditions for Cuban citizens that experiment has provid ed, said Medea Benjamin, executive director of Global Exchange, an or ganization that arranges grass-roots c itizen exchanges with developing countries. The average person in Cuba lives better than the rest of Latin Amerii a, (but) that’s slowly Ixtginning to fade away," Benjamin said in a lecture sponsored by the sociology depart ment. "They're hanging on by a thread.” Following tin! collapse of Commu nist governments in Eastern Europe and the decline of the Soviet Union's Turn toCUBA Page 4 C’U/>\ I. by A/wl'rt Medea fien/.imm, executive director ol Global Exchange, discussed the recent economic dilemmas lacing Cuba since the collapse ol communism in Eastern Europe and the weakening ol the Soviet Union 's central government.