"900 IDS. Of Fresh Potatoes Says BUBBA’S PLACE Has The Best Fries Around.” Thai's rich! Imagine . 900 lbs. ol fitsh potatoes Ami lhat's just in ihe average weekend Thai doesn'i even include the french fries we serve up during the week! Fresh fries, skin ami all. In regular or ( ajun style. Mila's met Tie Place Bubba’s Place 1249 Alder Street iflr.toss Ifom :>acwl Head on Akh-i) 344-1960 OPEN LATE EVERYDAY RIGHT ©N TARGET Portland man creates Oregon think tank SALEM (A!*) — After giving it some thought. Stove Buckstein decided that Oregon noedod a think tank So he created the Cascade Policy Institute, a Portland based group that bill* itself as a "non-profit, non-partisan pub lic policy research organiza tion." The institute. m its second year of operation, seeks to edu cate and promote its philoso phy Buckstein roughly de scribed that as seeking private sector solutions to public prob lems. "We have conservatives, Lib ertarians, people who call themselves liberals and neo-lib erals," Buckstein said. "Our mission is to explore voluntary market-oriented answers to Or egon's public policy ques tions" Buckstein is a former Port land stockbroker who ran for state treasurer as the Liberturi an Party nominee in 1UHH He also led an unsuccessful effort to pass a statewide "school choice" initiative measure on the 1«9G general election bal lot. But Cascade doesn’t endorse political candidates or lake po sitions on legislation, Buckstein said. Cascade lias issued policy pa pers on various subjer ts. most LSAT GRE lest Your Best! Classes forming now for December exams. Visit our new EUGENE CENTER call 345-4420 I KAPLAN i SttKUrti I he world'* leading 3 u'M nrep orgjiu/Jiiun. Buy 2 Used Records or Tapes and Get One 9* or SI.50 off any Compact Disc •(Iree uted recced or tape of equal or k-Mrr value) (One coupon per customer per day) Expires 9/8/92 I. Happy'Trails ■ I 485^5351 365 E. 13th I _J "30 years of Quality Service” Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen Audi • Datsun • Toyota -GERMAN - AUTO SERVICE, INC. 2025 Franklin Btvd. Eugene. Oregon,97402 342-2912 recently on analysis of the of* forts of tho property tax limit imposed by Measure 5 Skepticism of government Is a Cascade theme Tho Measure 5 report, for ex ample. says Oregon’* problem isn't taxes but high government spending Buckstein said the institute has suggesteil turning over tho Portlnnd-ama auto omission in spection system to private shops and shifting audits of state agencies from the state to private firms Some lawmakers and politi cal observers said they were aware of the organization's mailings hut not much else about the group. "I've seen their material, hut I guess their credibility has yet to l>e established I don't know much ai>out them.” said House Speaker Larry Campbell, R-Ku geno Buckstein said nearly all of Cascade’s budget comes from Individual donations and from foundations The institute qual ifies as a tax-exempt public charity, so contributions are tax deductible. The institute was formed in January 1991. and last year's budget was $57,000. Better fund-raising efforts should put 1992 revenue at morn than SI50,000. Buc kstein said Mo declined to identify do nors Ho said the institute has no allegiances to businesses and gets little of its money from corporations of any size {'.nscade's directors are Duckstein. William lidy, a Northwest Natural Gas Go. ac countant, and Corvallis busi nessman David Gore Cascade doesn't do contract research work for other organi zations, Duckstein said, or do projects with the idea of mak ing money directly from them Most the institute's papers hnvo been distributed free to public officials, the news media and other interested citl/.ons The group charged $5 for the full Measure 5 report, a larger than usual effort. Cascade has recruited about a dozen present and retired col lege professors and others to write its papers They ore cho sen for expertise in their sub jects. Duckstein said The author of the Measure 5 study, Vernon White, is a for mer research director for Ore gon Tax Research. That's a longtime Oregon lax analysis organization Duckstein said the institute shouldn't be viewed as a pro business group. "We are a free market group. There's a difference," he said. "Wo ure for market! and indi The think tank movement believes it’s more important to change people's minds than to change people's votes.' — Steve Buckstem, creator of the Cascade Policy Institute victual freedom but not for sup porting the kind of protection ism a lot of businesses advo cate.'’ Richard Butrick, president of Associated Oregon Industries, the stale's largest business lob bying group, said he’s heard lit tle of the institute. However, Butrick said terms such us "free market" often are used casually anci don't mean much unless an organization’s political agenda is defined. Buckstein said Cascade's goal is long-range influence on (tub lie policy. The tax-exempt status forbids supporting candidates, and Buckstein said little lobbying on issues is planned. Harvard writers’ work hasn’t changed (AP) — Despite the high stakes, many former Harvard Lampoon staffers say their workdays 119 remarkably simi lar to their student days. "All these comedy writing places, it's uma/.lng how colle giate they are," said Kurt An derson, editor In chief of Spy magazine. "The way those guys dress, the staying up all night, the bad food It’s like the old dining hall 20 years later " Unlike the humorists, the hu mor has evolved. "We came along at a time when for a variety of reasons the country was extremely well prepared for a more cutting hu mor, more direct and sophisti cated than it had been," says Henry Beard, '<>7, one of the founders of National Lampoon "It had a lot to do with the war. and the presence of Richard Nixon, one of the major sources of satin; this country has ever produced "Now we have The Simp sons Then you could not dream of having something on television like that " In today’s comedy, ’’the cul ture is constantly being mined and remined. Brand names are at the center of every joke. Be cause of television and mass media, we have a shared mass culture. Johnny says ‘Dolly Par ton' and everybody knows. Be fore (World War 11). few things were totally universal.” Because of their high rate of media literacy, today's audi ences are also more tolerant of "surrealism, dream-like stuff that doesn't make pure sense," says Mark O'Donnell, who has written for Saturday Night Live. among others. "You see it on Letlerman. in the works of Da vid Lynch, on shows like Northern Exposure. Twenty years ago, people would have said. 'Huh?' " At the same time, today’s hu mor is "not os rebellious as 20 years ago,” says Stuve Young, who writes for Late Night With David Letterman "In the early days of Har vard's comedic ascendency, there was an angry edge to ev erything. Now, there's more of a delight in absurdity, like The Simpsons, pricking at stupid Idiotic things of everyday life." SERVICE Continued from Page 7 A rul«s», Legal Services will not help a student if the adverse party is another student, professor or rep resontatlve of the University Rut U*gal Sendees will do an expungement of all misdemeanor and class C felonies, which means the record of the crime will bo sealed This is good for some people. Miller said, who maybe did something years ago that they now regret “Especially when you worn 1H or 19 and did something stupid," she said. By getting an expungement, she said, it means that if you are asked on an application if you have a criminal record, you can legally say no. Two attorneys are on stuff— one who works al most exclusively on landlord Issues Also helping is one legal assistant and several law students who research issues Legal Services also will refer students to anoth er lawyer, if for example, the student needs per sonal Injury representation. The office is on the third floor of the EMU and is open regular business hours. To make an ap pointment call 340-4273. "We've had some fender bender uccidonts and things that we’ve f>oen able to get settlements for." Miller said "We’ve had a lot of people say, ’Oh, thank you so much.’ " she said. However, she warns that students need to real ize their case may take awhile. Legal Services won’t give advice over the phone and will spend considerable time looking the case over carefully. "A lot of people think their question will only take five or 10 minutes and it’s not,” she said. : SUMMER’S HERE! Let J-Mar Biologicals help with next year’s tuition. By donating plasma, you earn $30*# for your first two donations and help save a life at the same time. Call 683-9430 for more information. l‘X)l W. 8th Avc, Eiugene . N( >\\ ()l'l N