lANE

COMMUNITY COllEGE

THE
3rd Year, No. 12

200 North Monroe

1.,....., 0,...,. 97402

---

Stereocasting
by Feb. 10

Stereo lovers will have to wait just a little
longer for stereo on KLCC.
Last week, KLCC radio news reported
that stereo broadcasting was a certainty
in the near future. The newscasts also
stated that equipment necessary for stereo
operation had arrived and was being installed.
On Saturday, Jan. 20, James Brock, assistant professor of electronics, and advanced students in Radio Broadcasting and
and
Television, completed installation
testing of the new equipment.
LCC applied to the Federal Communications Commission for a building permit last
December.
"The next step," said Roger Houglum, electronics division head, "is to make application to the FCC for modification of
KLCC's station license to reflect the equipment changes that have taken place."
Action on the application will require
several weeks, making the earliest possible date for stereo programming no sooner than Feb. IO.
The Federal Communications Commission requires a station to modify its license
prior to the start of stereo broadcasting
on a regular schedule. --Jerry Foster

Focus plans
•

•

const1tut1on
• •
rev1s1on

Focus Club will meet at 7:15 p.m.,
Tuesday, Jan. 30 at the Faculty House
on the Springfield Campus.
The Bible discussion will be led by
Dan Eyk and is based on Romans, Chapter 13.
Bob Bailey was appointed chairman of
a committee to revise the club constitution. Other committee members are: Bill
Jordan, Bonnie Black, Peggy Patton, Linda
Young, Lucinda Young, and Gordon Wehner,
advisor. The committee will meet at the
Faculty House at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan.
30. - -Alameda Randall

See president
Monday, 3- 5
Dr. Dale Parnell, president, reminds
students that he has open office hours on
Monday afternoon from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Anyone who wishes to see him may do
so at this time without an appointment.

PAT
JACOBS

DOUG

BENNETT

~anuary 25, 1968

Senators named
•
to Iii/ vacancies

Thursday the Student Senate appointed
four new members to fill vacant seats.
Two of these were sophomore representatives; Pat Jacobs from the Home Economics Division and Terry Nousen from
the Electronics Division.
The others were Doug Bennett, Electronics, and Bill Denniston, from Language Arts.
Doug Bennett was also appointed Publicity Manager for Student Activities. Bob
Bailey was appointed by Focus to represent
that club in the senate.

Student dies
in bathtub

A 21-year-old LCC student apparently
drowned Thursday night. The body of Robert
Gene Beck was found early Friday in the
bathtub of his apartment at 1275 Patterson
St., Eugene. Medical examiners said that

Titan staff
•
taking pies
Don't be surprised if sometime in the
next few weeks a flashbulb explodes in
your face. It's only a friendly Titan photographer collecting more shots for The
Titan.
Work is progressing rapidly as The
Titan staff tries to meet their Feb. 1
deadline; IO pages have been completed
and 25 more, some of them division layouts, must be finished in the next week.
So far 50 annuals have been sold in advance sales. An anticipated 400 copies
will be printed. --Mike Graf

Choir can eels
Florence trip.
"If you've got the money, we've got the
time," was LCC's answer to Siuslaw High
School.
After accepting an invitation to appear
at Siuslaw High School on Jan. 24 1 the LCC
choir and band had to cancel.
Robert Norman, LCC choir and band
director, stated that "our bus is not big
enough to transport both groups," A request for funds to rent another bus was
denied by the administration and student
senate.
Siuslaw High School also declined to
finance the trip; reason: lack of funds.-Andy Gianopoulos

LITTLE
MAN

ON

ROBERT
BECK

Beck was an epileptic and that this may
have been a contributing factor in his
death.
Beck was a third year auto mechanics
Funeral arrangements
student at LCC.
will be announced by Poole-Larsen Funeral Home. --Mike Graf

Snack Shack
shutting down
The snack shack on the Eugene campus
will be closed for two weeks starting next
Monday, Jan. 29.
Monday, Feb. 12, the cafeteria will reopen, utilizing MDT A fry cook trainees.
The reason the food services building will
be closed is due to training inexperienced
students.
"Additional items will be added to the
menu when we reopen Feb. 12," said Merlin
Ames, LCC 1 s food services director. Among
these new items are: soup, beef stroganoff and lobster thermador. --Jerry Foster

Exhibit moving
to Springfield
There's something for everyone at the
Paperback Exhibit! This exhibit will be at
the Eugene campus until tomorrow, Jan. 26.
Starting Monday, Jan. 29, the exhibit will
move to the Springfield campus. Hours will
be daily from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. to 8:30p.m. Monday
through Thursday. --Barbara Thompson

Focus to sponsor
CAMPUS garage sale

11

Wot.JLV YOU MIND Rf PEATtN&- THE LAST ;wo o R TH Rec
SENT£NCE51 TH~'( DIDN'T GfEM 1VIY\AKE .,-YlUC.H 7f:NS£, 11

A garage sale sponsored by the Focus
Club will be held on Saturday, Feb. IO.
The place will be announced later.
Bob Bailey led members in a discussion
on the question, "Do you dishonor God?"
when they met Tuesday, Jan. 23, at the
home of Linda and Lucinda Young.
Refreshments were served. --Alameda
Randall

Gary McNabb, sophomore senator from
Business Education, announced that unless
more senators show up, business cannot be
conducted.
This statement was made due to the fact
that the Senate meeting was held up for 40
minutes while waiting for a quoru:n.
McNabb protested the appointment of Ric
Little to the Student Senate to represent the
Business Education department. The reason
for the protest was that McNabb was the
elected representative for that department, ·
but was absent at the last meeting due to
a flat tire.
He pointed out several constitutional
discrepancies in the appointment, and Little
was then unseated with apologies to him
and to McNabb.
The Student Senate also gave tentative
approval of a Charter for the Christian
Science Organization, a club for students
of that faith.
The approval was granted dependent upon a few minor changes in the group's
constitution.
other business conducted at that meeting was the decision to postpone the selection of members to the Phi Theta Kappa •
because the grades had not all been recorded.
Just before the meeting adjourned, a constitution was submitted for a Ba'hai Fellowship to be formed on campus. After
studying this document, the senators will
act on it at the next senate meeting. --Bill
Denniston

ASB positions
up for grabs
Do you want to run for a student body
office at Lane Community College? Now
is the time to pick up your petition. Where?
Just ask any counselor.
Your qualifications must be: (1) that
you're a full-time student at LCC (nine
hours); (2) you have an accumulative GPA
of 2.00 before and during your stay in office.
As someone said a few years ago, "It's
not what your college does for you, but
what you do for your college." If you don't
run for office, who will ?

Nurses plan

rummage sale
-

The Practical Nursing Class will hold a
rummage sale on Saturday, Jan. 27 from
7 a.m. to 5 p.m. in a store at 7th and Willamette St., Eugene (near the Heilig theatre).
Funds raised from the sale will be used
toward the purchase of class pins.--Alameda Randall

LOOK

What's
Cookin'
THURSDAY, Jan. 25--Torch staff, 3 p.m.,
Torch office.
MONDAY, Jan. 29--KLCC broadcasting,
7:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday
TUESDAY, Jan. 30--President's Cabinet
9 a.m., KLCC studio, Focus Club, 7:15
p.m. , Springfield Faculty House
WEDNESDAY, Jan. 31--Staff Association
meeting; Division meetings; Flying Titar1s,
7 p. m., Room 19, Eugei,e campus.--Demetria Juarez

Ca mp aig ni ng · st ar ts Feb. l
THE TORCH, Jan. 25, 1968, Page 2 .

office. A full-time student is defined
as one who is registered for nine (9)
or more credit hours.

It's that time of year again, when the
whispers of '' Who do you· think will run
for Presiden t," and "Who do you think will
win the election," can be. heard echoing
through the halls of LCC. It won't be long
until the elections for student body officers
for the 1968-69 school year will be held. If
you have an interest in your school and would
like to participate in your student government next year, just follow the simple outline below.
1.

A candidate for office must be a fulltime student and have an accumulated
minimum grade point average of 2.00.
He shall maintain this grade point
_average throughout his tenure in

2.

I.

A candidate shall have completed two
academic terms prior to his proposed
tenure in office and shall have been
in attendance not less than one academic term prior to his nomination. To
achieve sophomore standing, he must
have 36 hours.

File a petition.
A. Petitions are available at either of the
' counseling centers on the Eugene campus.
B. Petitions must be signed by fifty

CPC wan ts sug ges tion s

Finally the Campus Planning Committee
has done something--they've asked us for
help. The committee entertained the idea
of naming some part of the new campus
after the students who turned in (to the
committee) the best suggestion for an overall, inclusive theme. However, all Committee decisions must pass through the Board
of Education for approval--which eliminates
that idea.

THE

T6RCH

Published Thursdays during the school
year, except during vacation periods and
exam weeks, by students at Lane Comm~nity College, 200 N. Monroe St., Eugw
ene, Oregon, 97402. Opinions are those
of the writers and not necessarily those
of the Board of Education or staff.
Publisher............. ............. . Media Board
Editor ............. ............. . Charlotte Reece
Advertising Manager ............. . Joann Gibbs
Sports Editor ............. ......... John Moore
Sports Assistant ............. ... Gene Cogburn
Production ............. ...........Susan Howard
Kathy Pipkins
Darkroom Technician ........... Greg Morse
Circulatio n Manager .............Steve Busby
Press Run by............. .. Springfield News

So here is what they're doing: the CPC
is asking us for suggestions on naming the
new campus. You have your own ideas
and they're undoubtedly as good as any the
CPC has come up with all school year,
besides you can win an evening out on the
town with your girl friend (or boyfriend,
husband or wife) as guests of two CPC
members plus $15. The second prize is the
same as the first prize minus the $15.
The committee feels that a central theme
should be maintained in the buildings'
names, which will provide unity in the different campus areas and functions.
A central theme, and likewise, the names
of specific buildings should refelct the area
students served by LCC.
and age of
If you think buildings should be named
for their uses, then put it down on a form
and turn it in to the main office on any
of the main campuses.
For an example use a human body for
a theme. Each organ is an active, working
part that performs its own function much
like the buildings on the new campus. The
value of a theme is unity; a binding tie for
a segregated student body. You can name
just a few buildings or all of them, tieing
them, of course, into your theme. An interesting theme is local Indian legend and
names, but Southwestern Oregon Community
College uses that one.
Names must be into the Campus Planning Committee by Feb. 9, 1968. Turn your
ideas in to the main office on each campus.--Je rry Foster

C.

II.

A.

$150

(50) full-time students.
Petitions must be returned to either
counseling center (Eugene campus)
by Wednesday, Feb. 28, at noon.

Complete a candidate questionnaire.
Attached to each petition is a candidate questionnaire which will be used
for a Torch news story, if it is returned by Feb. 19 to The Torch office
on the Bethel campus.

up to
2 YEARS

TO PAY

R56 Willamette

LC~ STUD~NTS!
Bowl with ·your.

III. Campaign at your discretion.
A. Campaigning may begin after Feb. 1.

Frle_ndl

IV. Voting
A. All members are eligible to vote.
All elections shall be by secret
B.
ballot.
C. All voting shall be done at polling
places presided over by members of
the student senate.
Positions open will be president, first
vice-president, second vice-president, recording secretary, corresponding secretary
and treasurer . Senators from each curricular division will also be elected.
The elections will be held on March 1.
So, if you have the interest and desire
to be a leader in your student government
during our first year on the new campus,
then I urge you to petition for an office,
campaign for that office, and if elected,
to serve in that office to the best of your
ability. Most important though, I urge
each of you to vote for the candidate of
your choice on March 1. Good luck, and
may the best man or lady win.

at ·

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Page 3, Jan. 25, 1968, THE TORCH

L.C.C. PRESENTS

FEATURING

• A SEMt·FORMAL FUNCTION
AMOUNTING TO f4'2!> COUPLE
ON THE TENTH OF FEBRUARY
FROM. NINE"' TO "TWELVE P.M.
• AT THE COUNTY FAIRGROUtJDS

I

THE TORCH, Jan. 25, 1968, Page 4

Thurston, Beave rs win
•
openi ng round game s
By

COGBURN

GENE

Lane Community College's intramural
basketball season got off to a somewhat
lopsided start Monday night as the offensive
outputs of three competing teams could
bearly equal the output of the fourth, as
Thurston hit for 88 points in a 61 point victory over South Lane, 88-27.
In the opening game's action the Springfield Beavers out-bungled Bethel for a 3627 victory.
In Wednesday night's action, North Eugene
met Sheldon, and the Freshly Brewed Coffee
of Springfield met South Eugene. Due to the
deadline policy of this paper, scores and
accounts of these games will not be printed
until next week.

Thurston 88
South Lane 27

Thurston's intramural basketball team
ripped off 18 straight points at the game's
beginning and then went on to rip South
Lane, 88-27, in the secomd game of the
opening night's action in the intramural
basketball schedule Monday night at Springfield High. Led by center Roger Poe's 33
points, all of Thurston's five starters hit
in double figures as Thurston's offense was
much too much for South Lane.
After gaining the 18-0 lead in the first
five minutes of the game, Thurston went on
to lead 29-5 at the quarter break. After
Terry Patterson gave South Lane its first
points at 18-2. Thurston scored nine more
straight points, before South Lane could hit
again. Thurston sported a balanced scoring
attack in that first quarter, as Poe hit for
10 points, while Mike Fullerton was getting

Basketb all games
next week
Monday, Jan. 29:
Court 1
7:15 p.m. Thurston vs. Springfield Beavers
8:30 p.m. Bethel vs. North Eugene
Court 2
7:15 p.m.
8:30 p.m.

South Lane vs. South Eugene
Sheldon vs. Springfield FBC's

Wednesday, Jan. 31:
Court 1
7:15 p.m.
8:30 p.m.

Springfield FBC's vs. Bethel
North Eugene vs. Thurston
Court 2

7:15 p.m. South Lane vs. Springfield Beavers
8:30 p.m. South Eugene vs. Sheldon

ODD MART

A quiet, female roonnnate is
needed to share an apartment
near the Eugene Campus. Call
343-6325 and ask for Janet.
Need an apartment or a roommate before Feb. 1? For $65
per month you can share a twobedroom apartme~t two blocks
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p.m. ann qsk for Pam.
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seven, and Jim Purscelley and Don Miles
were getting six apiece.
Anything after the opening quarter's 29
point output would have been more or less
icing on the cake, but Thurston about
matched it again, as they moved to a
50-13 halftime lead. Poe and Purscelley
led the second quarter scorers.
The second half found the Colts striving
for the 100 point mark but falling short.
A 16-point third quarter gave Thurston 66
points with eight minutes left, but they
could not increase their pace and finished
with the 88 point total.
Besides Poe's 33 total points, the other
Colts who gained the scoring column were
Fullerton with 18 points, Miles with 14,
Purscelley with 11, captain Rich Schmunk
with IO and Jim Grant with 2.
South Lane, plagued with ball handling
problems, was paced in their scoring by
their center Ron Larson with six points
and Laird Sanders and Nick Vanderfoot with
five apiece.
Thurston will go against the undefeated
Springfield Beavers in their next outing
next Monday at 7:15.

Beavers 36
Bethel 27

You figure that if your team can make only
one of its first 20 shots that you might as
well go to the showers. Well, that's what
the Springfield Beavers did in the opening
game of the intramural season but they
didn't go to the showers, they won, as Bethel
had an equally poor night, and went down
in defeat to the Beavers 36-27.
The Beavers somehow survived a first
half that saw them make only five of 37
shots, but be behind by three at 13-10. What
the Beavers lacked in shooting ability, they
made up for in scrappiness and hustle, as
they allowed Bethel 15 fewer shots than
themselves.
Hugh Davis, pint-sized Beaver guard,
came off the bench to start the second half
and promptly scored four straight points
to give Springfield a lead they never gave
up at 14-13. Bill Stevens and Mike Curry
had each added buckets to the Beaver total
before John Barge could hit a counter for
Bethel. Davis followed with another two
pointer to give Springfield its 20-15 lead
at the end of the third quarter.
In the fourth quarter both teams opened
up their scoring attack as Springfield hit
for 16 points and Bethel hit for 12, for the
final count at 36-27.
Rick Taylor, who had six of Springfield's lO first half points ended up as
the game's leading pant-getter with a
total of lO on five field goals. The only
other player close to double figures was
Barge who led the Bethel attack with nine.
Davis's six third quarter points were enough
to give him runner-up honors in the Beaver's scoring column.
Larry Fullerton and Don Gross, who led
the fourth quarter Beaver spurt, each ended up with four points apiece. Ron Winger
was the number two man in the Bethel
scoring attack as he hit for eight points
off of four driving layups.

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