ROLLER BLADE RENTALS $400 *10** ANDERSON S 1M W. 8th Eug»n« » 484-7344 Create your own if FULL COLOR T-SHIRTS PHOTOS*ARTWORK micm QUAimr iMMii A NUIC CIf T Mnto*s the copy onurr ROLLER BLADE EXPERIENCE We Rent RGlIerblade In-Line Skates bv the Hour or Day. Sera's /hi DULCIMER Continued from Page 1 Then comes machine sanding and hours and hours of hand sanding. Fi nally, Smith applies a lac quer to bis finished dulci mer. The entire process usually takes him 20-30 hours, Smith said he likes to work on six at a time "I con wank out three a week if I wont to," he wild. Even though Smith doesn't know any profes sional dulcimer makers in the area, ho knows where to find his fellow craftsmen when he noeds to. Once a year, the Instru ment makers from around the West Coast hold a kind of dulcimer convention, ti tled Pacific Rim Kindred Gathering. Held In a differ ent location each year, the event includes workshops and demonstrations. Smith said he'll probably make and play the dulcimer for the rest of his life. *T live an earthy lifestyle." Smith said. "It’s a real quiet, personal instrument." J FOR INVITATIONS BROCHURES FLYERS POST r R - RESUMES AND M O R E l e t T t n pi nit Graphics (46 4(81 SUm SOOt: MU i 0% off' anythin© AT UM IN THE STORE Regular I or sale * Price | | POSTERS ! CONVERSE "DR. MARTENS 57 W. Broadway and 957 Willamette Downtown Mall VANS I VISION I LA GEAR ® PREPARE FOR THE FALL MCAT, LSAT,GRE or GMAT Kaplan’s prep courses have helped more students score their highest than all other courses combined! Classes begin in Eugene in June Early Registration and Student Discounts Call Now: 345*7496 E STANLEY H. KAPLAN cw Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances RAPE Conlinued from Page 1 whom is u woman. When Barker arrived sil Stirred Heart. a nurse railed an advoratr from Victim's Services Pro gram. a support service operated through the dis trict attorney's office. Local hospitals call either Victim’s Services or Sexual Assault Support Services as a standard procedure, unless the survivor draw not wont to have an advocate present Victim's Services deals mom on the legal side of things, whereas SASS Is in a support role for any rape survivor but has no legal affiliation. The advocate usually stays with the survivor throughout the questioning at the hospital and doesn’t leave her side until assured the woman has someone she can trust to stay with that night. Barker said the advocate was helpful and that she was comforted having her there She said the woman called her in Salem a few days following the rape to see how she was doing "We stay with the survivor in an emotional support role." said lirin Collier, SASS assistant direr tor "We can stay with her through every thing. il that's what she wants - through the medical exams, the questioning and anything else.” Barker said that although the entire process, from the Investigation to the medical procedures, was difficult, it was worth it. "It's painful and humiliating," she said, "but there’s some satisfaction in knowing you're OK. at least physically, and you might he able to make a difference." Barker said that although she had decided to re port the rape and go through the medical and in vestigative processes, she felt the procedures dragged on. "The rape advocate was there to help, hut ev erything else was jusl taking too long," she said "I just wunted to take a shower and get away from the dorms " The suspect. Tt-year-old University freshman Michael Patrick Ryan, shot himself in the head af ter leading Texas police on a 60-mile chase six days after the rape Although she visits a counselor once a week, Barker said she still sees Ryan's face and remem bers the rape frequently. "It s utmost worse than death botauso you have to gel through it somehow," she said, "It affects your lieliels, who you can trust, your personal re lationships It really opens your eyes up to how scary this world is " Liiwurd L Poole, a displaced logger from Springfield, received u 15-year prison sentence for the rape of Oilman at Cougar Hot Springs In I960. Poole served u short jail sentence for raping four other women (oilman, who graduated from a New York uni versity lust May and was visiting the West for the first time, was camping with a friend a mile from Cougar Hot Springs when tin? rape occurred Poole, who had been camping three tent spaces a wav. threatened (oilman with a butcher knife and said ho would kill her if she didn't follow him into the woods Afterwards. Cillman ran to the forest ranger’s trailer and reported the uttuck. Police arrested Poole in the woods nearby 24 hours later. Four hours after reporting the crime, Cillman found herself In the hospital, consenting to u "rope kit" along with tests for S'lUs, HIV and pregnancy. ‘Every male Is a potential rapist Every male Is custom tailored to rape through the media, through child-rearing and through the power Imbalance — Heather Gillman, Rape survivor Besides requiring stitches around her vagina from the knife cuts. Giilman's physical health was normal. All of the tost results came out nega tive. Gillman went all the way through the legal pro cess to put Poole behind iwrs, and said she was pretty satisfied with the system. She didn't en counter much sexism, but she said she wasn't go ing to tolerate any. "I'm a hard-ass," she said. "I’ve been a fominist since I was seven years old. and I wasn't going to tolerate any sexism." Gillman said she got what she wanted from the legal system bocuuse she was prepurod for it. She had worked in a rape crisis counseling center for three years prior to her rape. Gillmun also said other personal factors that "looked good" contributed to the success of the trial. "My mother's a doctor, I'm white and I know the lingo," she said. "I had my expectations filled because I was angry and I felt my powor as a woman. I didn't feel like a little girl." Although she hud a relatively positive experi ence with the legal process, Gillman said she could see the potential for a woman who wasn't us familiar with the system to got "the short end of the stick. "I was educated enough to ask the right ques tions,'' she said "I know what I had legal access to." If Poole hadn't both sodomized and taken Gill man off the road she was walking on prior to the attack, he would have only received a five-year sentence. He was sentenced to five years each for rupo, sodomy and kidnapping. Gillman said she is disturbed by the amount of local men she has encountered that don't seem to be concerned about rape. Men in Eugene are so concerned about racism and the environment,” Gillman said. "Why do those things take priority over rape?” Gillman said it is crucial for people to recog nize rape as a male problem, not a female one. "Every male is u potential rapist," she said. "Every male is custom-tailored to rape through the media, through child-rearing and through the power imbalance." With Barker the legal proceedings ended, for the most part, when Ryan shot himself in the head. "I was glad he was no longer a threat to me, but I also felt bud that i had to go on suffering through this and he got off the hrxjk." she said. Barker only had a brief encounter with the legal system that included an uppearunce in front of the grand jury shortly after the attack. However, Barker hus since hired a Eugene at torney for "investigatory purposes." Neither the lawyer nor Barker would say whether they plan legal action against the University or Ryan's es tate CAFE Continued from Page 1 program*. It Is essentially an overhead charge for programs lhal take advantage of space and payroll services at the Uni versity. The money generated Is be ing used to finance the Univer sity's “Strategic Plan." an out line of goals for improving stu dent life and quality of educa tion. (Programs and depart ments make proposals for funds.) The surcharge for the Foun tain Court Cafe was about SI4.000 this year Geltner said he has mixed feelings about the surcharge and its effect. "It hurts our department, but I've watched president after president shelve strategic plans because there was no way to fund them," Geltner said. "(I’residunt Mylus Brand) has found a way to do it "Our lives would be easier if we didn't have to pay it," he added, "but we're in un aca demic institution and we need to sup{K>rt thu long-term goals of the University." After a review of options, Cellner said the liMU adminis tration decided about two weeks ago that closing the Fountain Court Cafe for the summer was the best way to make up lost revenue with the least amount of harm to em ployees. Four classified employees will have their 12-month jobs reduced to nine-month posi tions. Cellner said, and no stu dent jobs are expected to be lost Those affected were offered the option of displacing anoth er FMU employee with less se niorily, but so fur none have ax pressud an intent to exercise their "bumping rights,” Gellner said “It was a difficult decision to make, but on paper, we couldn't make it happen any other way,” Gellner said. "Wo didn't identify people to lay off, but an area that is not making money.” Gellner said the Fountain Court decision is part of a long term goal that the EMU be less reliant on Incidental foes — S1,BH2.«H4 was allocated by the 1FC to the EMU for next year — and to make the EMU more fi nancially viable. The Skylight Refectory und the Fishbowl Dell will likely of fer some of the food now avail able at the Fountain Court, Gellner said. For example, the salad bar will probably move to the Skylight. Looking for a good deal? Read section 130 in the classifieds.