Effects of measure pushing some workers to retire saijjw (At I - Hroniss seldom stop ringing these days at the Public Employees Retirement System offices Prodded by Ballot Measure 8, thousands of public: employees must decide by year's end whether to retire sooner than then had planned or lose benefits once they do leave work Usually, about 3.000 public employees in Oregon retire each year. This year. 3.000 had retired through October Another 1.100 notified 1’KR.N in November they will retire. On# of them is Dan Simmons. 5.1. dire* tor of the Stale Lottery Simmons has 30 years’ experi ence In state government ami could have retired last summer But he said he had no plan to until he received his pension information from J’KRS and saw he would lost’ several hundred dollars n month in benefits if he did not quit now "That's the only reason I’m doing it," he said The measure narrowly passed by voters Nov 8 requires employ iass to pay 5 pensnl of their salary into the petition system, a lien efit employers have bean paving Another provision of the mea sure is more critit al to immedi ate retirement decisions for many employees, savs David Hailey, f’KRS deputy director The measure ends the practice of using one-half the value of unused sick leave to increase pension benefits, which sub stantially iiu roases (tensions for many workers An attorney general's opinion is that employees who continue working will not he able to count past or future sick leave < redds toward their pensions Robert Stalick, superintendent of the Greeter Albany S< hool I>is tru t. is among public officials who chose to retire at the end of this month Stahl k, 57, sevs he would lose about S5tK) a month in pension benefits if he kept working He has ,14 years' experience in pub lii school systems in Oregon and had figured on Miring at the end of the !«K» or tU'Hi m hool years He said he didn't enjoy being forced into it by the voters "The part I don't like is it would be nice to be able to i boost* When it's either retire now or lost* $500 a month later, that's not a really gocxl choice." Hailey's l»*st guess is that 2.(KK) to 4,000 more public workers Hum normal will retire by the end of the year "This is not rocket science This is not a normal year." he said. I’KKS c overs 170.000 working and 61.000 retired state and loc al government employees, includ ing teachers About 13,000 employees were eligible to retin* this your with full benefits, Bni ley said Sunglasses company beats Army in lawsuit MINT, Wnsh (At1) A sun glasses manufiicturcr has won n six-year legal battle against the U.S Aron over use of the com pany's design for protective eve wear. Gargoyles Inc. said the Army approached it in 1982. looking for wrap-around eye protection for soldiers, but then took Gar goyles' design and bought thou sands of similar spectacles from a competitor. The company's wrap-around glasses have appeared in Clint Hast wood movies and the movie Terminator, company < hairmnn Dennis Burns said. Gargoyles sued the govern ment in 1988. claiming patent infringement The company says the Army approached it in 1982. looking for wrap-around eye protection for soldiers. Gargoyles says it developed and field-tested eyewear that can withstand a .22-caliber bul let fired from 10 feet and a 12 gauge shotgun blast from 15 yards. Its design was presented to the Army in 1985. In 1986. the Army awarded a contract to American Optical The Army later bought several hundred thousand pairs of pru tective spectacles, similar to those designed by Gargoyles, from Amerii an Optical Gargoyles sued, claiming the glasses were manufactured ille gally without a license from Gar goyles The Army initially won a favorable ruling in the U S. Court of Federal Claims, but the U.S Court of Appeals sent the case back and told the lower court to reconsider several claims in the lawsuit. Judge l,awrence S. Margolis ruled Sept. 30 that the glasses bought by the Army infringed on Gargoyles patents in two areas, and that the Army failed to prove its claim that the patent wasn't valid A hearing to set damages is scheduled for February The sum Gargoyles will seek hasn't been determined. Burns said Attorneys who handled the case for the government could not lie reached for comment Thursday afternoon. Gargoyles, a privately owned company, sells its glasses for suggested retail prices ranging from $65 to $165. Burns said All contain the same prolix ttve technology that would make them useful for the military, he said. i Say good-bye to cab fare and long term parking tees with LTD YOUR PASSPORT TO ADVENTURE Catch a free lift to the airport via the Eugene station. Buses are free with your UO student I D. So you can take flights anywhere anytime—all term long. Buses fly off campus every ten minutes, with downtown departures to the airport three times a day LID buses take off from the Eugene Station (Section G) and head for the airport at 5:57 am, 7:30 am & 2:30 pm weekdays only 687-5555 (VOICE) or 687-4265 (TTY)