Oregon Daily WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1992 EUGENE. OREGON VOLUME 93, ISSUE 163 Craftsman making beautiful music □ Local carpenter earns extra money making ancient instruments By Lisa Millegan Emerald Associate Editor Gary Smith would like to talk to you if you think you can't play a musical instrument. The Gresvvell man knows of one that he says ovon the least talented cun master — the dulcimer, an in strument that looks like a skinny guitar. The Biblical instrument's name comes from the Greek words "dul ca melos,” which means ‘sweet song." Smith, a carpenter who makes dulcimers to supplement his in come, said he was first attracted to the instrument because it is so user-friendly. The 45-yoar-oid said ho was sur prised how quickly he learned to play the dulcimer when he first came in contact with one at a com mune about 20 years ago. "I had never seen it before, but within a hulf-an-hour, I was mak ing music on the thing.” he said. ‘‘They’re that easy to play.” Part of what makes the dulcimer so easy is that its musical range is very small, Smith said. The four stringed instrument only contains the notes for one major scale; it doesn't have any sharps or flats to alter its tone. Smith made his first dulcimer using dimensions ire had written down from a friend’s instrument. The finished product had some problems, but It was playable and ne gave it to a woman ho was "madly in love with." In the past 20 years, the former California resident has made and sold more than a hundred of the instruments. Smith said his dulci mers are now all over the world, including Turkey und Australia Since moving to Eugene three years ago, he has sold 30. in the past, ho has hawked his dulcimers to music stores. Now, he mainly markets his cralt at the Saturday Market, between Eighth Avenue and Oak Street. So far. Smith hasn't encoun tered any competition from local craftsmen in the area. Smith is reluctant to publish how much he sells his dulcimers for, but ho said other craftsmen typically charge from S175-S500 for the instruments. To make a dulcimer. Smith first chooses the wood, but not the pro cut type. "Sometimes 1 even start with the troe," ho said. Although he has made the in struments out of walnut und cher ry wood, ho said ho prefers red wood because he thinks it allows for better resonance. After choosing the wihkI, Smith cuts it Into different sizes. Ho uses molds to bond the wood into the proper shapes Smith thun glues tho pieces to gether and holds them in a frame — known as a |lg — to dry. Turn to DULCIMER. Page 4 ©y v »M MMQir Cre swell carpenter Cary Smith plays one of the dulcimers he makes and sells to people as tar away as Turkey and Australia. Smith, who has been making dulcimers lor about 20 years, says seen those who think they can’t master a musi cal instrument can play one of them Cafe closes for summer j Fewer customers in the summer compounds the fi nancial problems facing EMU Food Service By Daralyn Trappe f n-ec jM Associate Editor The EMU fountain Court Cafe will Ik* closed for the summer in iin effort by budding managers to offset flrianr lal losses within the University's food Ser vin’ program I rank Cellner. interim director ol the L'MU. said summer is traditionally a much slower time for food service on campus, when enrollment drops dra matically and fewer faculty and stall members are present fewer customers in the summer com pounds the (inane ial problems lor the food Service program, which also in cludes (he fishbowl Dell, the Skylight Refectory, the* Hrec/ewav Cafe and mo bile IochI vans food Service as a whole is showing ahout a $1-1,000 deficit to date lor the fiscal year, which ends June 11!. t.eltner said, and summer months are tradition ally tlu* worst Other revenue producing organiza tions within the EMU, sue ti as the Kec relation denier and the Main Desk, pick up the financial slack in the budget gen erated by f ood Service, Cellner said Adding lo the linanc ial problem is a I perc e nt sure barge implemented by the University administration last year oil riel profits from all campus auxiliary Turn to CAFE, Page 4 Rape survivors often encounter traumatic aftermath j Balancing sensitivity and the need to gather evidence can be difficult in rape cases By Colleen Pohhg Emerald Reporter One of the hardest things Hayley Darker will proba bly ever face in her life was the return to the dorm basement where the horrifying rape happened. Barker was there to give police detailed Information about what and where each violent act occurred. And this was less than an hour after she had been raped there. Barker, the 18-year-old freshman dorm resident who wus raped last January in the Hamilton Complex base ment, has sinco withdrawn from the University and is living with her parents in Salem. Burker is attending Chemekela Community College and doesn't plan to return to the University. Survivors of rape usually experience different pro cesses after the assault, depending on the circum stances Medical and legal procedures and dealings with the police differ for each survivor In Barker's case, a male officer arrived at her dorm room after she asked her roommate to call the police She said tho initial questioning, which lasted about 25 minutes, was difficult because she had to tell the officer specific details and was still in shock. A male police officer is usually the first person a rape survivor encounters immediately after the utlock, al though the Eugene police department does its besl to have a female officer respond to tho call, said Bov Col lins. EPD community education specialist. Barker said she believes it would have been much easier for her had the officer been a female, because fol lowing such a traumatic experience. it's difTicult for a rape survivor lo irusi men "(Tho police) were pretty apologetic," she said “They said that it was too bad, hut they needed lo ask me questions because my mind was still fresh " The hardest part, however, was returning to the very room she had been raped in “I'm not even sure if I've accepted it now. hut (lo re turn to the basement room) right after it happened was very hard," Barker said. Tim Birr, lil’D public information officer, said police usually lake thu survivor hack to the place she was raped to gather as much evidence as possible. “It's a difficult balancing act between being sympa thetic to the survivor and having to gather as much evi dence as possible for the case," Itirr said. Collins said the goals of the officer and the survivor often clash, because the officer wants to catch the sus pect while the survivor just wants to get back control of her life “This is the point where the survivor starts to tiuck down," Collins said. “They start feeling uncomfortable with tho questioning " Collins said in recent years, the police academy in Salem requires the trainees to go through six months of "intense sensitivity training." The officers learn about "victim dynamics," giving them a sense of how a victim will usually feel after the crime and why they might lie hysterical or in shock After the initial questioning, an fcil’l) officer drove Barker to the hospital whore she consented to a “rape kit,” and tests for sexually transmitted diseases and HIV A rape kit is a detailed collection of evidence that could include semen, saliva, blood, pubic hair and any thing else found on the victim's body. Barker said thu hospital exams were terrifying, main ly because a male doctor administered them. At IB, she had never had a standard pelvic exam hefore. ‘It affects your beliefs, who you can trust, your personal relationships. It really opens your eyes up to how scary this world is Hayley Barker, Rape survivor "Tho nurses were all female but the doctor who did most of the pelvic exam was u man," Barker said "It was really humiliating, and I already felt violated enough." Heather (oilman, who was raped on a camping trip at Cougar Hot Springs last June, was also enraged to find that a male doctor was administering the pelvic exam at the hospital After surviving a rape, she said, the last thing she wanted was another man to touch her "He (.ante right in and just opened up my legs," Gill niiin said. "I kept screaming. 'What the hell is a male doctor doing here?’ " At Sacred Heart General Hospital, tho 10 emergency room physicians are all male However, the hospital has hired a female physician who will start in the sum mer, said Beverly Mayhow. a hospital community rela tions spokeswoman "We take (rape) very seriously," Mayhow said. "The fact that we don’t have a female doctor yet isn't an indi cation of our level of concern.” McKonzie-WIIIametto Hospital In Springfield has a total of seven emergency room physicians, one of Turn to RAPE. Page 4