Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 27, 1991, Page 4, Image 4

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    More LTD buses for USC game
As a result of Lane Transit
District's record first-game
iius ridorship for tin- Sopl. 7
Oregon/Washing!on Stat<•
foolbiill game, LTD will arid
five additional buses to its
University Sports Shuttle
Meet for this Saturday's DSC.
game at Autzen Stadium.
The University Sports
Shuttle service will begin
approximately 2 hours
fore game lime. Faro Is 75
i cuts ouch way.
I’.ins who drive to the
game are encouraged to
i ’line early to avoid the traf
fii snarls that (x.curred be
fore the WSIJ game The sta
dium parking lot will open
at 1 p m In addition, people
who drive to the stadium urn
em ouraged to park close to
gether to maximize parking
availability
1. I'D buses w ill transport
fans to the H pm game from
the following locations
I ugene
South L‘ u g i' n c H t g h
School.
i-.iirgrou nils.
Lugano downtown station.
Valley River Inn
River Road transit station.
Springfield
(Gateway Mall station.
S|iringfield Reel Lion
Springfield downtown sta
tion.
( entennia! (atntor.
Continued trom Page 1
for b<•< ause they wouldn’t have
the limn otherwise It's hard
enough working, taking < lasses
and trying to volunteer some
place," Miller said.
Miller said ESCAPE volun
teers collectively put in about
.'tfi.OOO hours of work into the
community last year
"With the threat of that dis
appearing, the support that we
had in the community was
overwhelming," Miller said.
Last spring, L SC A PE rallied
community support for their
cause through the local media
BREWED HERE!
Steelhe.ul features four distinctively different Ivors brewed on the premises.
♦ A WIDE VARIETY OF GREAT PUB FOOD INCLUDING THE BEST
PIZZA IN TOWN ♦ CD MUSIC ♦ SATELLITE DUCK FOOTBALL AND
MANY OTHER SPORTS ♦ OUTSIDE SEATING ♦ OPEN SUN THURS
11:30 A M. TO MIDNIGHT FRI-SAT 11:30 A M. TO 1:00 A.M.
Steelhead Brewery & Cafe
AT STATION SQUARE
199 LAST 51H AVLNUE EUGENE. 686 BREW
... I / II I
neuumpN
C6NT6R
ST. THOMAS MORE UNIVERSITY PARISH
CATHOLIC NEWMAN CENTER
IS50 Emerald Street
Eugene, Oregon 97403
343-7021
MASS SCHEDULE:
SPECIAL HAPPENINGS:
V 131131 I STL’PY s held on every Monday, September 30 at
7:30 p.m.
\m Inquiry Class is held cvcrv Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
A STt PENT MASS is celebrated cvcrv Wednesday at *J:00 p.m.
\ MEN’S Sl’PPORT GROl’P will meet every Thurviav at
7:00 p.m.
WEI COMING PIN NT R at Chelsea Mouse on Eriday,
September 27 at 7:00 p.m. Come to meet new people anJ renew
vour friendships.
The Rite of Christian Initiation tor Adults ' : . sc who are
seriously interested to become a Catholic Christian is held every
s day it 6 1 p m starting Sunday, September 2T.
Get aw av weekend PARABl E WEE KEN P RETREAT w .1 be
• v\tobcr ! S-2C a: St Benedict’s Lodge. McKeruie Bridge S gn
: . v v h'en ill students. Cost $ >0 00
•'unj.r. .\' i m.. i I .j m N ? ,•
s C pm Evening Prayer P'ikmedbs Ma»>
k\ ERY WEDNESDAY: STUDENT MASS AT 9:00 I'M.
" ■ elll ■! Re • : .!• M ■ . \\ N.
FnJ.n 4 >0 to ; 00 ; m
S.iturJ.n .it 4 >0 p m. or h\
appointment
v'tti.e li'urs Monday thru Fridas > V Noon
I 00 4 >0 p m
STAFF:
Fr. Albert Felue P.ne, O P . Pastor
Ft. 1 't Pimentel, O P
sr Janet Rvan, SN1M
t >cne Ohersmner N. Chris Ferv, Peer Ministers
Natuv Nelson, See ret a rv
Ciene Oberstnner, Chelsea House M>>r.
Student' are united to come and *tud\» read or ju*t relax «n the centerN lounge
It in open from v V o m. to 1 1:00 p.nv
GET INVOLVED IN THE CATHOLIC NEWMAN COMMUNITY
NOT l ... ■ utvtr. »: , i r , i • c 11.' .*;: . • Me \c.tr
(.Tic.k Newman Center'* Sunday Bulletin and the Ft a! 0 ME. RAM " tor wha: * happening at trie v i-.v
For more information call the Center at 343-7021/346-4468
The C at hoik Par oh -er\ :ng the L ni\ersitv of Oregon 'ltue IJI v
by sending oul press .
about the program and it's ,:l
certain future.
"I think that it's mostly be
cause of community support
that we're still here. I think KS
CAI’h is going to be here for an
other 20 years," Miller said
"Volunteerism in and of itself
is growing across the country
and there are a lot of universi
ties...that are making it part of
their curriculum."
CUBA
Continued from Page 1
contra! government, Cuba faces
extreme uncertainty about its
future, Benjamin said.
For example, Soviet wheat
shipments to Cuba have be
come unreliable and sporadic,
and Soviet oil exports — 90
percent of Cuba’s oil supplies
— have been continually cut
back, Benjamin said.
As a result, the Cuban gov
ernment has imposed rationing
of both goods, and others are in
short supply, said Benjamin,
who lived in Cuba from 1979 to
1983, and most recently visited
the country in July.
"The stores are pretty emp
ty,’’ she said. ‘‘You can’t find
basics like soap.”
Meat is absent in the markets
and people are eating only one
meal a day, she said.
The crisis stems from turmoil
in Cuba's trading arrangements
with Kastern Kurope and the
Soviet Union, and the continu
ing economic blockade against
Cuba by the United States exac
erbates thi! situation, Benjamin
said.
The IJ.S. blockade, which be
gan in 1959, forced Cuba to
find other trading partners, pre
dominantly in the Soviet bloc,
Benjamin said.
"It tried to diversify trade,
and did well in the ’70s, until
the debt c risis,” Benjamin said.
Cuba’s mounting debts to
other lending nations forced it
to lean even more heavily on
the Soviet bloc, particularly the
Soviet Union, which accounted
for 75 percent of Cuba’s foreign
trade, Benjamin said.
Without trade agreements
with the Soviet bloc, Cuba is at
the mercy of the U S. blockade,
which prohibits even humani
tarian or medical assistance —
something even Iraq receives
from the United States, Benja
min said.
And without access to insu
lin, or film for X-ruy photos,
Cuba's uniquo medical-care
system is endangered, sho said.
Nonetheless, "your child has
a liettor chance of living if it's
born in Havana than in Wash
ington, D C.," Benjamin said.
Moreover, tho average life ex
pectancy for Cubans is 76
years, as opposed to 75 years
for the United States.
Cuba has an "amazing” sys
tem of free, round-the-clock,
accessible health tare, provided
largely by a system of neighbor
hood doctors, Benjamin said
"Our own government could
learn from tho Cuban health
care system," she said. "There
are many things wo could learn
from Cuba if we only lot Cuba
bo Cuba, to do its own thing."
Howover, continuing pres
sure from the United Slates
continues to fuel that country's
woes, Benjamin said.
"The rolo of U.S. policy has
been to destroy the revolution.'
starting after Castro came to
power in 1959, Benjamin said.
As an example. Congress re
cently approved the Mack
Turn to CUBA,Page 5