Land development controversy stirs Lc·c -. Proposed development of acre- gested uses of the property inage surrounding LCC has brought clude apartments, shopping cenreaction from the Lane County ter, professional offices, tavern, Planning Commission, the LCC the ate r, restaurants and golf Ten-Year Long-Range Planning course. Also involved in the controCommittee, st u ct en ts and staff members at Lane. versy is the proposed acQUisition • The c on t r o v e rs y centers of two acres west of campus by around 1,850 acres near the cam- . a group of LCC staff members, pus which owners have asked the who have discussed building two L an e County Planning Commis- structures that would include fasion to rezone from agricultural cilities for a staff club. The group to commercial-residential. Sug- plans to form a corporation to sell shares of the ·two acres at $100 each. Staff members interested in the investment are being coordinated by Karen Lansdowne, president of the LCC Staff Association. The professional staff of the Lane County Planning Commission has thus far opposed development in the LCC area of the type that was proposed. Follow.ing a study of the rezoning re.quest, a report was issued in- Lane Community College Vol. 6, No. 4 4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405 • October 20, 1970 dicating that any development should be viewed in relation to its impact on the overall development of the metropolitan area and in line with Eugene's 1990 plan which sets guidelines for expansion. The report notes that "although there probably are certain commercial and multiple resident i a 1 uses-s e 1e ct e ct, oriented and designed primarily to serve the College community-that would be suitable at the location in question, the proposed d e v e I op m e n t does not appear to be of that type; the proposal appears to represent an attempt to create a community c e n t e r which would function largely independently of the college •... " Since the development of the LCC area would have implications for the college, the Planning Commission has asked LCC administration to outline its posihe proposed rezoning. It tion o_~ t_ Schafer interviewed on KLCC "I stole a little bit from Lane and a little bit from Mt. Hood in designing and developing the educational aspects for LinnBenton." This comment came from Dr. Eldon Schafer, LCC's third president and the former president of Linn-Benton Community College, as he was being interviewed on KLCC-FM's "Today in Eugene" program Wednesday morning, Oct. 14. Dennis Ce 1or i e, Associate Professor of Mass Communications, interviewed Dr. Schafer. The President opened the in- terview by saying he considered Lane "one of the very finest community colleges in the nation." He said he designed some of the programs at Linn- Benton after Lane "because I respected and felt Lane was probably the epitome of what a college ought to be. So I've watched the growth at LCC and it's been a fascinating experience to watch Lane from a distance---now to be here in this setting is almost beyond my fondest dreams." President Schafer was asked about the future of the commun- ity college system in the state, '' Oregon has made tremendous progress in the community college field in a very few years,'' he said. "I think we stress the comprehensiveness perhaps to a greater degree---b et t er than many other states. I think if it were not for our serious problem of developing a strong financial base, we would have one of the best community college systems in the country." Dr. Schafer said he thinks within two or three years Oregon will have a statewide system of community colleges. He Sanders to speak on pollution problem A change in the national goal from having man in space to having man able to swim in Lake Erie will be urged by Dr. Norman K. Sanders in a Tuesday, Oct. 20, lecture at LCC. The 1e c tu re, titled "Pollution: The Problem and How to Fight It," is scheduled for 8:00 p.m. in Forum 301. The presentation is free and open to the public. Sanders stresses ways in which individual citizens can fight pollution, including recycling of sewage, return ab 1e cartons, population control, and lawsuits against polluters. Dr. Sanders, a professor at the University of California at Santa LCC may turn away 2,000 this year As many as 2,000 prospective students may have to be turned away from LCC this year, LCC Bo a rd of Education members were told Wednesday, Oct. 14. Marston Morgan, Director of Institutional Research and Planning, said he has projected a full time equivalent (FTE) enrollment of 5,888 for the year. The projection is based on summer and fall enrollment figures. LCC administrators have said the school will be able to handle an FTE of only about 5,200 students, because the college's proposed operating budget was cut nearly $732,000 by the voters. Last year's FTE enrollment was 4,787. FTE figures are based on the number of credit hours taken by a full-time student. One FTE is equal to about three individual students. Because of traditionally high turnover from term to term, LCC should have no problem accepting all returning students for the winter and spring terms. Barbara, t e a c h e s courses in oceanography, geomorphology, climatology, and environmental pollution. Human impact on the environment is the m a in theme developed in his lectures. Dr. Sanders' research interests include the application of remote sensing techniques to the study of coastal processes and the problem of monitoring oil pollution in Southern California waters. His research is supported by a $36,000 National Science Foundation grant to develop an airborne microwave system capable of remote measurement of oil slick thickness. He is also the co-holder of a $10,000 NSF grant to produce a comprehensive, multi-discipline course on the relationship between man and the oceans. Dr. Sanders recently returned from Australia, where he held a Fulbright Fellowship at the UniThe versity of Tasmania. Fellowship was granted for the p u r pose of studying geomorphology and near-shore oceanography on the Tasmanian coast. Before his departure for Australia in 1964, Dr. Sanders was head of the earth sciences group of the Microwave Division at Space General Corporation in El Monte, California. He accomplished basic correlatfons of radiometer data with the earth environment and developed techniques for predicting radiometric maps from aerial photographs. He also proposed microwave radiometric experiments which were later conducted for NASA and ONR. In 1959 and 1960, Dr. Sanders was an associate electronics engineer with Collins Radio Corporation, Systems Division, where he participated in the construction of telemetry vans for the ARPA-NASA worldwide net. A licensed commercial pilot, he flew for the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Alaska in 1958. Between 1954 and 1958 he worked as an electronics technician on ground conductivity and radio teles.cope projects at the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska. Dr. Sanders has wide knowledge of the earth environment, particularly in coastal areas. He has conducted air photo surveys, underwater investigation (including underwater photography), laboratory tests, and wavetank experiments to determine processes active in shoreline erosion. The interaction of man and the coastal environment is one of his basic interests. In this field, he has traced changes in current regime and sediment transport patterns resulting from jetty and dam construction in Ventura County. mentioned legislation t h at is being introduced to enlarge some of the state's current college districts. He also said he was anticipating the state legislature would increase support per FTE student at all community colleges in the state. Regarding tuition, Schafer said he does not propose to boost student tuition. He is optimistic that voters will support the next budget election, scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 3. When asked how he planned to get the school's budgets passed, President Scha fer replied, "The school has already started to plan its budget for the next fiscal year and has started a program to inform the public as to what Lane is doing, using a 'multi-media' public relations approach to the public." When asked if LCC could remain an "open-door" school under budget limitations Schafer said "That's a question that only the people (taxpayers) here can answer." Celorie asked what LCC is doing to involve students in policy making. "I have a strong belief and commitment to involving students in those decisions (continued on page 3) is anticipated that the college's reaction to the proposal will be negative. Discussion of the college's response will take place through the Ten-Year LongRange Planning C o m m it t e e, headed by Eldon Schafer, LCC president, and Marston Morgan, Di r e c t o r of Institutional Research and Planning. The committee is seeking staff opinion on the proposal . The group of land owners has withdrawn the original request for rezoning the property and will submit its own report on the proposed development to the Planning Commission. When the rezoning QUestion will come before the Commission again is uncertain. Opposition to the proposed rezoning and development is based on several concerns: 1. The proposed development would probably not generate additional development and jobs in the metropolitan area, but merely redirect them from other locales. Unnecessary expense may be involved by drawing population away from areas where public investments for future growth have already been made. 2. Traffic congestion would inc re as e along LCC access routes. The proposed development could eventually draw an estimated 13,000 population to the area. (continued on page 3) Dance announced by Student Senate The Manzanita Jungle, a San Francisco group, will ·appear in concert at LCC Friday, Oct. 23. The concert-dance, sponsored by the LCC Student Senate, is set for 8:30 to ll:30 p.m. in the Main Gym. Admission is $1 .25. Friday afternoon at 12:30 p.m. the group will appear in the LCC cafeteria to provide a sample of their sound. The Manzanita Jungle is composed of Gary Jameson on drums; Tim Gorelangton playing 6 and 12 - string guitar and 5 - string banjo; Chris Kay, bass guitarist and lead singer; and Mike Moruin, tenor guitar and leader of the group. Gorelangton writes and arranges most of the original material used by the group. I ,, t l .,,::"· ' Position open on LCC Board Persons who would like to be considered for appointment to the LCC Board of Education have until Oct. 28 to indicate their interest. Letters from interested parties may be sent to Board Chairman Robert Ackerman in care of LCC, 4000 E. 30th Ave., Eugene, 97405. The Board will appoint someone to complete the term of Ri-. chard Williams of Eugene, who resigned last month because of other obligations. The appointment will run through June 30, 1971. Should the appointee wish to retain the position, he or she will have to seek election to a fouryear term at the May 3, 1971, election. Williams held an at-large position on the Board; thus any registered freeholder in the College District is eligible to succeed him. NANCIE FADELEY ANSWERS QUESTIONS during a discussion Monday evening, Oct. 19, with John Klobas' Sociology class. Mrs. Fadeley is a candidate for the Oregon Legislature. (Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb) J Page 2 ,. f gor• I' £&to,uat ~ e # t X- The world is not flat, but sphencal. Behold my magnificent new theory, Gort, ... 'H-lt is bu.tan infinitesimal speck in a vast, curved universe. Higher non-resident 'tuition-iustified ? Th•~ question of resident and non-resident tuition status at colleges and universities has again come up--this time in court, and in the student's favor. • An Arizona court recently ruled unconstitutional the one-year residency requirement for resident tuition status at Arizona's state universities. The ruling was handed down after seven students filed suit last May for a refund, with interest, of their out-of-state tuition and questioned the residency requirements. The University of Arizona appealed and has been granted a stay of judgment. If the ruling is upheld, and all the approximately 5,000 eligible students file suit, it could mean the state would have to pay out almost one million dollars. But then, this has no effect on you, does it? You bet it does. Lane has a six-months residency requirement before you can be classified as an "indistrict student." Why s ho u 1d you have to pay that extra money? If you're renting a house or an apartment while going to school, you're paying your share of the property taxes that support this school. Your landlord isn't paying it all out of his own pocket--he's passing it on to you in the rent. The college catalogue states four ways to determine if you are an "in-district" student, and all but one (if you are a minor and your parents reside in the district) stipulate you must have spent at least six months in the district prior to first registering for classes at Lane. Time spent as a full-time college student does not count towards the residency requirement. But why not count residency while attending classes? You help the economy with your money; you're paying your share of the property taxes. Let's say you could gain residency after six months of attending classes. This would mean your tuition would be lowered after Fall and Winter Terms. Lane has approximately 5,275 students attending classes on a full-time basis (ten or more credit hours). Of this, 3,100 are classified "in-district," 1,200 as "out-of-district," 900 are "out-of-state" students and 75 are charged the "international" student tuition. At the beginning of Spring Term all of these students would be eligible for "in-district" tuition, which would result in the loss of $473,810 in revenue for the school. It would have to be made up somewhere. The natural place would be to ask the voters for a larger share of their property tax monies. This would have to be done for Lane to operate efficiently. An increase in the property tax would mean increased pressure on the already hard-pressed student budget, for it would be passed on in the form of rent just as it is now. If not an increase in the property tax, then it would have to be an increase in the student tuition. If this is the method they use, it would mean an additional $30 a term for each student in order to make up the loss. Before you file suit, consider the reason this college was formed. ~s stated in the 1970-71 catalogue, "LCC is a two-year, co-educational institution BUILT TO SERVE THE 210,000 RESIDENTS OF LANE COUNTY and small parts of adjacent Linn, Benton and Douglas Counties." The people who live in the college district have to pay for the operation of the college each year. You only have to pay for it during your two-year program. Lane may have to turn away 2,000 students who were planning to enroll because the facilities of the college just won't handle them on the current budget. And what better way to decide who can enroll than by residency? Dean of Students issues guidelines LC C Dean of Students Jack Carter has released guidelines for contacting students on campus and for the use of the campus public address system. Students and staff should be aware of and comply with these guidelines, and students should make others who may attempt to contact them at school aware of the proper procedure. CONTACTING STUDENTS LCC does not have any way of contacting students in their classes or elsewhere on the LCC Bloodmobile to be on campus Oct. 26 The Lane Memorial Blood Bank Bloodmobile will be on campus Monday, Oct. 26, from 1:00 to 3:30 p.m. Donors should contact Karen Shorey or Steve John at extension 382 to arrange an appointment. Drop-in donors can be taken if time allows, but appointments are preferred. Blood donated goes to the LCC Blood Donor account, established last Fall for use by all LCC students, staff or their immediate families. Blood used by eligible • personnel is replaced from the account at the rate of two pints . for each pint used, with no service charge to the user involved. As of the end of September, the LCC Donor account had provided 50 pints of blood--36 to students and 14 to staff. Thirtynine pints remained in the account. In order to justify the Bloodmobile coming to campus, twenty donors are needed for each visit. Those wishing to donate at the Lane Memorial Blood Bank, 740 East 13th , Eugene, rather than the Bloodmobile can have their donation there i::r~c:Ut~d t<;> the LCC account. campus. Because of this limitation, STUDENTS WILL NOT BE CONTACTED UNLESS AN EMERGENCY EXISTS. Phone calls requesting the college to contact a student will be routed to the Admissions Office. The Admissions Office will request the nature of the emergency. If it is legitimate, the student's schedule will be used to determine his location on the LCC campus. If a student is in a scheduled class or if it is just prior to a student's class, the department secretary will be asked to contact the student and advise the Admissions Office the results of her attempt. If the student is b e t w e e n classes and it appears that he might be either in the Library or Student Center the Admissions Office will ;sk the Dial Retrieval Center to page the student, who will be asked to go to the Admissions Office for the message. If no contact can be made with the student, the Ad m is s ions Office will contact the caller and indicate that no contact was possible. No attempt will be made to page the students at LCC unless other attempts fail or are not possible. Only the following people are authorized to request the paging of a student: Bob Marshall, Director of Admissions John White, Director of Counseling Betty Ekstrom, Director of Student Activities Jack Carter, Dean of Students USE OF THE PA SYSTEM PAGING STUDENTS: The Public Address system will be used to page students ONLY in cases of emergency (see above). EMERGENCY .ANNOUNC£MENTS:Security personnel have authority to use the PA system for emergency announcements. AC.TIVITY ANNOUNCEMENT: Requests to announce coming activities over the LRC public address system are subject to the approval of Betty Ekstrom 1 Director of Student .Activities. Students and staff are encouraged to publicize activities by media other than the PA system. So! A highly comple,c theory stated in the simplest of terms! Even you cannot be more succinct! I ..Jhe world is a roll-on applicator in a celestial bottle o+' spiritual deodorant. Let FEEDBACK by Dan Rosen STUDENT ACTIVITIES D~ RECTOR Congratulations are inorderto the new Director of Student Activities, Mrs. Betty Ekstrom. Her first off i c i a 1 action after her appointment Oct. 14 was to act as advisor to the OCCSA Fall Workshop last Thursday through Saturday. *** STUDENT PRIORITIES There still seems to be some confusion as to what happened at last Wednesday's Board of Education meeting. I was one of the four students who originally tried to organize student priorities. 0th er students involved were Warren Coverdell, Bruce Nelson, and Omar Barbarossa. The order of events went somewhat as follows: 1. An Executive Cabinet meeting, were various students, along with others present, reached a concensus about priority items-concerns that students on campus have expressed a need for. 2. Meeting with some staff members to check feelings and gain some insight to the method to present said items to the Board of Education. 3. A talk with Jack Carter and Lewis Case about presentation S.A.C. NEWS NATIVE AMERICANS A committee has been appoint- ed to start formulating the Native American Culture program. Although the wheels of progress are moving, they are moving slow - much to the discontent of many of the Native American Students. *** SAC ASKS BOARD FOR AID At the Board Meeting Wednesday Oct. 14, SAC representatives presented a list of problems and needs of the student body. The list included the need for housing, of an off-campus Day Care Center, and a need for more job outlets. SAC hopes the Board will waste no time in acting. SAC is also voicing a need for more responsive action from the Administration. *** N.C.A.I. SAC sponsored David Red Fox as the Native American from LCC at the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) convention in Anchorage, Alaska, Oct. 18. He gathered information on Indian Cultural Studies programs from other representatives at the convention. *** ACCION ACCION is negotiating to be the host .of a, banquet for, ,fbe Vice President of Mexico when z- This universe is dominated by a Spiritual ~orce, who has chosen Man to malc.e His Truth manifest t.o all this universe. he is in Eugene this month. Proceeds would be shared by LCC and ACCION. *** TRANSPORTATION The transportation pool is now in full swing. Any students willing to take on other riders are asked to please leave their names at the SAC, second floor of the Center Building. *** TUTORIAL SERVICE '!' u to rs for M at h , French, Spanish, Sciences and many other subjects are now available in the Tutorial Center, Center 234. I and a brief explanation to the college president. 4. Presentation to the Board. The items which were proposed to the Board were the following: I. Student Housing 2. Child Care 3. Student Involvement in Decision-making Processes 4. Supportive Services. These items were presented as an information item to the Board, to list student priorities so they could be taken into consideration during policy-making decisions throughout the year. *** OCCSA FALL WORKSHOP Three interested s tu d en t s willing to work on a state-wide committee to coordinate community college efforts to form a professional group are needed. The group w o u 1d act in the int e r e s t of students and the general community. Contact me at the Student Senate office if interested. S~nate Agenda October 22, 1970 - 2:30 o.m. Administration 202 Call to Drder Roll Call Approval of Minutes Treasurer's Report Committee Reports *President's salary - Barbarossa *Report on OCCSA Fall Convention - Delegation Old Business *Pre-election policy *VIP Constitution *Notebooks New Business *ROTC resolution - Holt * Accreditation report - Lansdowne *Housing - Barbarossa *Scholarship fund for Charles Solomons - Coverdell other Adjournment - 4:30 p.m. The Torch Staff Editor. . . . . . . . ...........•••••••Gary Grace Assistant Editor. . . . . • . . ..•...• Hewitt Lipscomb Feature Editor. . . . . . , .........Karen Von Effling Sports Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bob Barley, Dave Harding Ad Manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • •Lorena Warner Head Photographer. • . • . . . . ..... Hewitt Lipscomb Secretary-Business Manager. . . . . . . . .Doris Norman Member of National Educational Advertising Service THE TORCH is published weekly on Tuesdays, except holidays, examination weeks and vacation periods. Signed articles are the views of the author and not necessarily those of The Torch. Mail or bring all correspondence or news to: THE TORCH 206 Center Building, Lane Community College, 4000 E. 30th Avenue-, Eugene, Oregon. 97405. Telephone 747-4501', •ext.284. Land controversy Colleges thr8atened by court decisions A New York judge ruled last week that New York University must make a partial tuition refund to a student's father as a result of cancelling classes during student demonstrations last spring. In a suit filed in Small Claims Court by Ralph Paynter, whose son was a freshman at the time of the closure, NYU was ordered to refund $277 .40 because classes were cancelled for 19 days in May. Paynter, a fireman from Queens, New York, said "I feel these college professors shouldn't be too quick to close the schools. If some students want to stay out, that's their prerogative, but let the other students go to school." James Hester, president of NYU, said the university will appeal the decision, which could open the way for numerous suits against many other schools. "The president of a university has a responsibility to cancel classes if he thinks there is any danger," he said, and ~ointedout that classes have been cancelled on other occasions because of storms, power failures and national days of mourning. NYU would face bankruptcy, Hester said, if it had to refund tuition payments every time classes were cancelled. In another case with implications for university financial status, an Arizona court has declared unconstitutional the oneyear residency requirement for resident tuition status at Arizona's state universities. Residents pay lower tuition fees than do non-residents. Last May seven students filed suit questioning the twelve-month resident requirement, and asked a refund--with interest--of their out-of-state -fees for the 1968 fall term. The amount involved was approximately $500 each. The students contended they had become Arizona residents by registering to vote, buying property, opening bank accounts, paying taxes., ho 1ding jobs, marrying, and acquiring Arizona drivers' licenses, and that Schafer interview (continued from page 1) that they; re interested in at the community college level," Schafer responded. "We have students attending almost every committee meeting of every sort that occurs on campus--they are encouraged to do so.'' The president said he is in almost constant contact with ASB President Coverdell and members of the ASB Senate--an(l he has found LCC students to be very honest, straightforward, and s e r i o u s young people concerned with policy making and the operation of the school. '' The students,'' continued Schafer, "want to be involved, and we say work within the system--and I think they want to. It is up to us to provide opportunity for students to help determine their own destinies in policy making." As far as student protests are concerned, Schafer said as long as such protest is peaceful and does not disrupt the school, it is certainly acceptable. When asked what administrators could do to stop the spreading campus rioting, he said he felt that by keeping communication channels open to students, administrators could reduce or eliminate future confrontation in riots. He stated LCC is prepared if riots should break out on campus. When asked to comment about criticisms of L C C ' s college transfer courses, the president said '' Contrary to what some people think, LCC was set up as a 'comprehensive' community c o 11 e g e, not as a vocational school. You must realize that 75% of the square footage is devoted to occupational programs." The president emphasized that most students in vocational programs are required to take "college transfer" courses to supplement t be i r training. The method of reporting number of students has confused the issue because vocational students are counted as transfer when they enroll in such courses. One of the final questions to which Schafer responded was the differences in youth of today and of his generation. ''When I was a student body president," he commented, '' I can't recall facing any serious national issues as a student leader. We didn't concern ourselves with international issues as the youth of today do. I think students today are much more knowledgeable, more mature, and almost more intelligent than we were. At least they are exhibiting those traits.'' Campus Calendar OCTOBER 20 3:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. OCTOBER 21 3:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. OCTOBER 22 9:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 12:00 noon 1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. OCTOBER 23 4:30 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 4:30 p.m. OCTOBER 24 a.m. OCTOBER 26 1:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m . . 7:30 p.m. OCTOBER 27 3:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. OCTOBER 28 . 12:00 noon 7:30 p.m. Christian Science meeting Lecture: "Pollution" ZPG meeting Dental Hygiene Gymnastics FOR 305 FOR301 FOR309 HEA209 AUX GYM ADM 202 Instructional Council LRC CONFRM Deseret Club CEN 406 Campus Crusade for Christ CEN 406 Christian Science meeting ADM 202 Student Senate CEN 406 Lecture: Christian Science speaker CEN 234 Literary magazine meeting MA!NGYM Badminton Soccer: O.S. U. "B" team Cross Country Meet Soccer: o.s. U. "B" team OMSI classes Bloodmobile on campus 4 C's Board Meeting Gymnastics Christian Science meeting Home Ee. dinner Home Ee. Teachers meeting Counselors' luncheon Gymnastics LANE FIELDS LANE TRACK LANE FIELDS HEA 131; 102, 104 105, 116, SCI 117 ADM 20i AUX GYM FOR 305 CEN 101 HEA 102 CEN 124 AJJX GYM resident tuition status should not depend on twelve-month's physical resident in the state prior to entering the university. The judge of the Arizona Superior Court agreed with the students, stating that out-of-state students could decide to become residents of Arizona on the first day they arrive on campus. What is involved, he stated, is the student's "state of mind." The University of Arizona has appealed the decision, and been granted a stay of judgment, so that the non-resident tu it ion charge of $445 per semester is still in effect. Should all eligible non-resident students seek refunds and be upheld by the courts, the amount involved would be almost $1 million to approximately 5,000 students in the state universities of. Arizona. "New Hoven" to open Nov. 13 A contemporary, satirical co- medy-drama on the subject of war will open LCC's theatre season Nov. 13 when George Lauris of the Performing Arts Department directs "We Bombed in New Haven." "New Haven" was written by Joseph Heller, author of "Catch 22." It has been described by Newsweek magazine as ''very Uk e 1y the most powerful play about contemporary irrationality ap American has written." "We make no attempt to hide the fact that the show is taking pJace in a theatre," Lauris said "In fact, of his production. the show is done in a theatrical style." Auditions for parts were held Oct. I and 2, and rehearsals are underway. Lauris selected stud~nts Jeff McMeans, Torn Durnell, Paul Martin and Mark Anderson to po rt ray the non:speaking roles of "idiots" in the play. other cast members are: Ralph Steadman as P.F.C. Joe Carson; Steve Harper as Hunter; Charles Mixon as Corporal Sinclair; Dave Norfleet as Corporal Bailey; John Whetstine as a major; Sandy Isom as Ruth (the only female in the play); Steve Wehmeier as Sgt. Henderson; Giff Powell as Captain Starkey; Owen Bjerke as Starkey's son; John Savage as a golfer; Norman McCloud as P.F.C. Fisher'; and Doug Ewing as young Fisher. Tickets for "We Bombed in New Haven," scheduled for Nov. 13, 14, 19, 20 and 21 in the Forum Theatre, will go on sale Oct. 26. Attention candidates: All candidates for Student Senate positions are requested to contact the TORCH office to schedule an appointment f o r a picture. Appointments may be arranged by calling 747-4501, extension 234, or in 206 Center Building, between 8 a.rn. and 5 p.m. Candidates are also requested to submit a statement to the TORCH, to be printed in a Candidates Forum section in the Nov. 3 issue. Statements should be typed, double-spaced, and no longer than one page. Pictures must be taken and statements submitted by 5:00 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28. Items submitted after that date cannot be included. Candidates' ads will be accepted on or after Oct 22. Ads must be received by 5:00 p.m. on the Thursday prior to the issue , in which, they are .to run. ~age l (continued from page 1) 3. Due to expected high development costs, rent on the proposed apartments is expected to be high and prohibitive for LCC students. The need for housing is a central concern of current ASB officers, who emphasize that housing development in the area of campus should be financially feasible for students with limited budgets. 4. Expansion of public services, such as police and fire protection, and educational, recreational and power facilities, would be required. 5. Concern has been expressed about the ecological and biological implications of the development. People would be drawn away from the central metropolitan area of the community, thus creating the possibility of ghettotype development. There is also concern that the natural setting around the campus be preserved. A concern has also been ex- pressed that should the college officially adopt a statment disapproving of the proposed development, the acquisition and development of land by individual staff members would constitute an inconsistency in the college's position. Karen Lansdowne responded to this concern by stating the group feels its plans would involve development of a type directly related to the college community and not detrimental to it. She also stated the individuals involved would not feel obligated to support development of other acreage, and that the group has told the developer it would support the college in opposition to his proposal. Marston Morgan indicated that it is unlikely that LCC can prevent any development at all in the area, but that it may be influential in the type of development allowed. TYPEWRITERS. ADDERS a CALCULATORS. NEW a·uaao • WB auv. SKLL AN0 -R£PAIR ~-M'°'ES'. • 747-8644 save with us than with any other Savings & Loon Association m the Pacific Northwest! Pacific First Federal Sa~••1ngs IV and Loan Association 1100 Willamette 342-1781 735 North A 746-9675 KLCC PRESENTS: Ernest Hemingway A special two-hour broadcast on the life and works of this famous author. Wednesday, Oct. 21 7 :00 - 9:00 p.m. KLCC-FM 90.3 Four program~s, a\;a11~61e .:···' • , • T , i l , ' , f • I ,, t ' t t !. • 'I t t • '( 'i. \ l ' r..., • t \ ', I ·f I ! i I I Independent Study Program adopted novative teaching methods. by Cliff Lloyd These problems may be slowLCC may someday extinguish the frustrating ''term" by re- ing progress, but that is all. The placing it with the '' Independent Independent Study Program is going well in several of LCC's voStudy Program" (ISP). . This program, should it prove cational fie 1d s . One area preto be successful - and so far sently under test is Communicait has - will give the student tion Skills, directed by Evan Alan opportunity to progress at his ford, who feels the actual sucown academic speed in any vo- cess of the program depends on caHonal field he chooses. At the the student himself. Alford has same time, it will reduce cost 125 students under this test proat a noticeable margin. The ISP gram. Also testing the ISP is Riwill also cut out all terminal chard Romanek, who has 32 ISP points of the term; this means -students enrolled in Basic Ea student won't have to worry lectronics I. Howard Dull, head about taking a mid-term or term of the Auto Mechanics, has workexam when he is not prepared ed ISP in with the regular firstto do so . Wit h the aid of a year program; 37 students are in Auto Diesel Tech 3, which is "Learning Package" he will be allowed to progress at his own rate. The learning package is set up to determine the student's knowledge in his vocational are a at any given point. This package aids the student to self progress. Lew Case, Dean of Instruction said, ''The Independent Study Program is the best thing that's happened in education in a long time." Dean Case also stated the old system of terms doesn't meet today's standards of education, ~whereas the ISP meets today's standards of growing need in a faster educational program. It _seems too many students are lost in the hustle and bustle of taking courses that are irrelevant to their vocational goals. So many times the student loses his grip on studies because he cannot keep up with the term deadlines. With the Independent Study Progam, a student won't have to struggle with the problems. A student who also feels he is experienced enough and knows certain areas in his vocational field won't have to enter a course at the beginning of a term just to 1 receive his full credit; this again may be accomplished through the aid of his learning package. The biggest problem in initiating ISP is the lack of staff time, trained teachers, and funds. Even though staff members are putting their time and hard efforts towards the success of the ISP, further study of the program is needed to determine the best work load for teachers using the package. In addition, more funds are required than LCC can budget all at once. Funds for • some of the programs ca me through Senate Bill 144, providing grants to projects seeking in- ' 1 l , .... 1 J I I I I I , I I l t I • • I • t • t • • I f I I ' • I • t • • ., I • N·ew members ·welcome in over two dozen LCC clubs divided into two sections---01Fuels and Carburetors and 02Electrical and Ignitions. Home Economics, Nursing, and History have also done some work with the ISP. _ Dr. James Nord and Evan Alford developed the learning package for the Independent Study Program as a guideline for teaching and to increase the student's confidence in himself. The learning package is designed to meet the student's needs. Through this package, students m a y abandon the idea of grades and evolve achievement as the main factor in education. Perhaps soon all vocational goals may be set at a faster pace at LCC. by Gary Greig The re are undoubtedly an u m ber of people at LCC especially first-year students, interested in joining a club of some sort but don't know who to contact or how to go about it. A large number of the students are unaware that clubs are even in existence. There are over two dozen active clubs at LCC. All of them welcome new members. Some clubs h a v e regular m e e t in g dates, such as Campus Crusade For Christ, Thursday at 12 noon in Center 419; the Deseret Club, Thursdays at 11:30 a.m. in the LRC conference room; the Chess, Club (one of Lane's most active clubs), Monday evenings from 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. in Apprenticeship 218; and the Christian Science Organization, Tuesdays at 3 p.m. in Forum 305 and 306. No matter where your interests lie, you can be sure there are others at LCC whose interests are similar to y<'urs, and there is probably a club already formed to a c c o m m o d at e people s ha ring interests similar to yours. For additional information about LCC Clubs, go to the Student Activities or Student Awareness office s , located on the second floor of the Center Building. Also, the Information Booth in the Center building may be able to supply necessary information. Magazines, books sought by library The LCC library needs back issues of magazines to complete its files. Anyone willing to donate copies of 1965 or 1 ate r issues should contact the library circulation desk. Magazines on house and garden, sports and hunting, technological subjects, nursing-you name it, and the library could probably use it. Check with them before you throw your old issues away. *** The LCC library would like to establish a "paperback exchange'' section, where students or staff could exchange books they have read for others. Exchange would be on a one-to-one basis. To begin the exchange program, donations of new or used paperback books are needed. Anyone interested should contact Del Matheson, the reference librarian. The Study Skills Center already maintains such an exchange system, which students are encouraged to use. Direct from San Francisco THE ~N2ANt1A JUNGLE CONCERT - DANCE Friday, October 23 - 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. MAIN GYM ADMISSION: $1.25 · Sponsored by the Student Senate LCC's Undergr ound proves ·interesti ng by Cheryl Good There are six exhaust fans, two of which are kitchen exhaust We plunged, A.J. McNeese and fans that look like giant silI, to the very depths of the "city." ver caterpillars crawling up to We stepped out of the capsule the ceiling. that carried us on our downward Walking south on the.. west side journey and into the underground of the cafeteria, you will see on that so efficiently keeps the your left some huge things -some "city" operating. blue, some yellow, some orange, A maze of tunnels is down some green, some gray, and none there - a mile and a half net- of them Darrell Allyn. work that twists and turns beDarrell Allyn is chief electrineath the school. Yes, LCC is cian who takes care of the blue the '' city" referred to in this and yellow and orange and green story. You'll see why. and gray things that make up the McNeese is in charge of plumb- totality of the boiler room. Allyn ing and heating maintenance. 'lbe has been working at Lane since first stop was in the mechanical February, 1969. He worked on room of the Center building. The all five phases of building during r o o m is filled with mechanic al the construction of LCC. His job monsters-monsters you can't get was to install temperature conalong without in a plant the size trol. Bob Upp is an electicician of LCC. who just started working at LCC There are six multizone (MZ) about a month ago. units in the mechanical room and Let me tell you about some of eighteen throughout the entire the machine_s that are employed campus which controlthetem- at LCC. First, there are two P e rat u re . The s e are called 3, OOO killowatt electronic boil"multizones" because they con- ers that heat water to 210 detain a separate zone for heating grees F. Although thes: boilers and cooling. Each zone is regu- are capable of supplymg 3,000 lated by a thermostat. Hydronix killowatts each, a normal outunits are used to pump sewage. put on a cold morning is around 1,500 killowatts each. Hot water Students set is circ~lated i~to any_one. ?f ~8 fan umts and mto coils. Air is for Europe flights blown through the coils, making LCC students and staff are heat. 4,160 volts of electricity is now eligible to participate in required to operate each boiler. gr~up charter flights _!o Europe: The boilers heat 30,000 gallons of treated water for the hot waDec. 19, 1970 - Jan 3, 1971 to ter system. By treated, I mean London $239,00 16 days chemicals add_ed to the June 13, 1971 - August 28, 1971 there are the machmes funkeep to water to London $263.00 11 weeks properly. Boilers wo_n't June 15, 1971 - Sept. 10, 1971 ctioning d~aw current an~ be effective to London $263.00 12 weeks the chemicals, because June 18, 1971 - July 14, 1971 to without water is not a good conductor. A London $263.00 3 1/2 weeks regulated amou?t of chemicals August 1, 1971 - August 30, 1971 must. be ~ept ~n the wa~er. A to London $263.00 4 1/2 weeks chemical mJect~on pump is used September 15, 1971 (ONE WAY) to add the chemicals. to London $135.00 The Centravac is a 750 ton, For information and reserva8?0 h~rsepo_wer refrige_ration utions, contact Charters West, 310 'mt pamted m the stunnmg shade Corbett Building, Portland, Ore- of grabber blue, I do believe. It gon, 97204 or telephone 226-3566. cools water to about 43 degrees F. Th1s water is circulated around the campus for air conditioning. 44 circulating pumps circulate water around campus or through fan units. The re are approximately 20 sump pumps which are used to pump excess water, if there is any, from the tunnels and to pump water into the sewage or storm sewer lines. Nine heating and ventilating units are located on campus, and there are 164 exhaust fans. Alarm systems are automatic and built into fans all over the campus. If anything goes wrong in the operation, a message is sent to the System Six Honeywell Computer located in the boiler room. If no one is in to receive the alarm, the computer records the time that the alarm sounded. All electrical units are wired in to the System Six Honeywell -Computer. Even the temperature, which is controlled pneumatically (by air), is initially controlled electronically through the computer. All of this machinery must have p re vent iv e maintenance work done on it as well as the replacement of parts and other repair work. There are ·a few gas appliances in the kitchen and gas is used in the chemi;try science, and dental labs. Aside from these exceptions, LCC is totally electric. Although there are 12,000 volts coming into our campus now, LCC is capable of using up to 25 million watts of power without any additional electric service. On cold mornings, LCC comes close to using 6 million watts of electricity. There are 547,000 square feet to be supplied with heating and lighting. Well, if THAT wasn't enough to make you take notice how about if I told you that 'the money LCC pays • out on its electric bill for one month would be enough to heat and light 1,200 homes for a year!? "Hello Dolly" dubbed success ''Hello , Dolly," Ed Ragozzino's sixth summt!r 1i r'.l l ,1: tion for the Lane County Audi t ori:i n A·, ;;y:iation, was a snec es ~ ! i 1 1 :1 :: i .ll t J a:11 dnmatically. "Hello, Dolly" played at South Eugene High July 31August 15. Ragozzino, head of LCC Performing Arts, states that although "Dolly" returned $50,000, the highest box office gross of the association's six-year history, he has received complaints from some people about the "overhead expenses." "Dolly" netted $21.000. "I don't feel I have to apologize for only making $21,000," said Ragozzino. "We could have socked the prices way up so the average theatre-goer couldn't have afforded it." Prices for the lavish broadway musical were $3. 75, $2. 75 and $1. 75. The royalties for" Dolly" were high - $7,500 - and vintage "Gay '90's " constuming (always an expense for a stage production) ran $4,500. On top of these and many other expenses, Ragozzino said, the cost of putting a stage musical together increases ten per cent every year. He implied ' that staging a lavish musicalcomedy, or almost any stage musical, is not for the financially timid producer--it costs. Ragozzino attributed the success and virtually sell-out performances ($35,000 in advance box office sales) for a nine-night show to a ''fantastic company of dedicated individuals." Onequarter of the people involved in all aspects of the musicalcomedy were LCC students and 1 " staff. .. Besides LCC students, the pot- as follows: Steve Harper (as Ampourri of "amate~r': talent was brose Kemper); Jose Rodriguez gathered from withm the com- (as Horse); Becky Croson (as munity--white collar workers, Ermegarde); Scott Vanfossen (as blue c O 11 a r w o r k e rs , scho_?l Barnaby Tucker); John Coombs t e a c he r s , businessmen, mill (as a cook); Ralph Steadman (as workers, and railroad employ- a waiter). LCC dance rs included Jose ees. Auditions announced . that acting and theatre experience Rodriguez, A a r on Smith, Mic were not required for try-ou_ts. Paris, and Jeff Barrow. LCC singers were Bronwyn . Director - Producer Ragozzmo feels that involving the "who~e James, Melody Sperb, Leta Tuccommunity" of Lane County m ker, Sandy Isom, Jeanne Manela, this summer production was one Judy Newlun, Gene Altemus, John of the unique aspects of Lane Savage, Howard Thompson, Gerald Walters, John Chasteen, and County's "Dolly." There were over 300 people Wayte Kirchner. Lane Community College coninvolved in all aspects of the Producer-Director Ed gratulates production. Besides the .9~ on stage, there wery 6~ musici~s, Ragozzino, Music Director Naand about 200 J'?rkmg as grips, than Cammack, Setting Designer on scenery, business, publicity, Dave Sherman, Choreographer m a k e up , hair s t y 1in g, and Betty Butterbaugh, and Vocal Director Wayte Kirchner and the costuming. LCC potpourri of "amateur" tano if even that It could be said one had attended the nine per- lent that contributed to the bright, formances besides the parents, colorful and musical success of relatives, and friends of the peo- Eugene's sixth summer musical. Money raised by the summer ple i n v o 1v e d in the show-- t~e overhead alone might be paid productions goes to the Lane off. Dolly used more people for County Auditorium Assn. toward production th an any ~the r sum- a primary design study for a mer musical to date m Eugene. 2,800 seat auditorium /concert "Dolly" was the most success- hall; a 900 seat theatre/recital I ful summer production in Eugene hall' a 3,500 seat convention/ thus far. Only the 1964 musical pavillion. The concept of the "My Fair Lady" made more center is to provide a place of money for the Lane County. Au,- assembly and activity for all age ditorium Assn. But success isn t groups, for a variety of tastes, day and night and year around. always measured by profit. . This summer's production of When dramatic and musical a c co 1ad es are given out-- this "Hello, Dolly," as well as the summer's production was one of five previous productions, are the most colorful and success- helping make that dream a reful-- and Lane Community Col- ality. Within a few years, Lane lege played no small part in that County, theatre-goers should be able to say good-bye to South success. LCC students in the ca~t were Eugene and Mac Court. You never see any power lines tangling up the view around LCC, do you? This is because everything is run underground. Everything is neatly tucked away in the system of tunnels. Hot and cold water for heating and cooling, domestic hot and cold water, electricity, fire alarms, talk systems such as telephone and intercom, Honeywell control systems, television, radio station KLCC, natural gas, compressed air for use in the machine shop, temperature control devices: all this goes through tunnels. Each building is connected to the tunnel. This complicated network of tunnels is designed with the provision for future expansion. The Dial Retrieval system is a 1so routed through tunnels . Ra 1p h Cook, Electronics Technician in charge of maintenance and service on all electrical equipment on campus, stated that there are five video tape records, thirty audio tape records, and an audio tape duplicating system which are all part of the Dial Retrieval. Maintenance of the Dial Retrieval is a big part of the job for Cook and Chet Woolfe, assistant. Dial Retrieval is a $160,000 project. Most classrooms have an outlet for closed circuit television, about 75 per cent in fact. Cook stated that all classrooms may have outlets eventually and that further additions were likely to have them installed. A current project underway is the installation of a microwave ii f system for KLCC radio. This will eliminate the necessity of having to be transmitted through telephone lines to Blanten Heights where the transmitter is located at radio KFMY. This micro-wave sys t e m will enable KLCC to transmit stereo programs. Who in the world takes care of this entire complex operation? Forty-two men and women. This ·is not counting the grounds maint en an c e crew. Custodian~. electricians, painter, plumber, and carpenter. Forty-twopeople, ~aintaining 13 buildings on campus. Head Custodian, Selmer Looney explained that there are three shifts of custodians employed at LCC. The swing and graveyard shifts do the bulk of cleaning when they are able to enter the classrooms. Cleaning, moving, and miscellaneous work is done by the day crew. Now you have a little of the inside dope on a lot of LCC's ''underground.'' ...................... I OPPORTUNITY MOTHER EARTH ! ! Needs Hustlers, Dealers & Super Dealers 4 _ 7 p.m. call 688-2784 Wed. thru Fri. I I I ....................; 9~~"!!~~-, SPECI.AL ·RATES I I Mon.,-Fri. until 6p.m. ii DAIRY-ANN Breakfast served anytime Complete dinners Homemade pies and soups Wide variety of sandwiches and burgers Complete fountain service 33 varieties of shakes and sundaes . .i\ l :' 5:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays 5:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Fri. & Sat. PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED 1810 Chambers ORDERS TO GO 343-2112 LCC -TV NEWS FRIDAYS 10:30 - 10:45 p.m. PL-3 - Cable 10 t Page 6 ' Ad'u·l·t E'd off'er'ing·bUsi"ness· co·u-rS(is by Laird Prouty The Adult Education Department at LCC is offeringbusiness training courses in many different fields this year. The only requirement of the courses is that students pay the required $12 enrollment fee for each class taken. Most classes are offered at night, so anyone working during the day may still be able to attend. The teachers in the Adult Education program are teachers at Lane, district schools, or are experienced in their particular field through job experience and training. Many of the teachers work at jobs relevant to what they teach. Bookkeeping I, II, and III is taught by Roy Sparks, a retired high school teacher. The course includes fundamentals of bookkeeping, instruction in keeping journals and ledgers and the principles of advanced bookkeeping. Upon completion of the third course, the student should be able to handle full-cycle bookkeeping. A course in Briefhand is being offered for the student who desires a logic a 1, easy-to-learn system of abbreviating longhand. Campaigning students reminded of guidelines Students running for office in the coming ASB elections Wednesday, Nov. 4, should be sure they are following the publicity guidelines for posting of campaign materials. The guidelines have been developed to provide candidates the opportunity to use the widest range of publicity possible. The guidelines have also been established to prevent any damage to exisiting l.!ampus facilities. Campaign matP,rials may be posted on bulletin boards an d glassed areas on either side of entry doors (not on the doors themselves). Banners maybe tied to rails and pillars; also, "A" boards or other devices may be used. hny sign placed on a stake driven in the ground must have clearance of the Grounds Supervisor. Tape may be used to attach materials to glass only. Tape Service offers oversea jobs Winter resort jobs in Switzerland and the Bavarian Alps are open to any American college student interested in earning a European holiday. A wider range of summer jobs is also available, not only in Switzerland and Germany but also in England, France, Belguim, Holland, Spain and Italy. Winter jobs are primarily in ski resorts, and openings range from reception clerk to kitchen helper. Summer jobs number in the thousands in such categories as resort, hotel and restaurant work; factory, farm and con- , struction work; sales, office and store work; and camp counseling, governess and teaching positions. counseling, governess and teacning positions. Any student may apply. Openings are filled on a first comefirst served basis, and neither knowledge of a foreign language nor previous experience are required for many positions. A standard wage is paid, and in many cases free room and board and tips are provided in addition to wages. Applications for winter jobs must be filed before Dec.I, and summer job applications should be sent in as soon as possible. Each application is handled in the placement offices of the Student Overseas Service in Luxembourg, Europe, where jobs, work permits, travel docum en ts and o the r necessary papers are processed. Interested students may obtain application for ms , job listings and descriptions, a free copy of Euronews and the SOS Handbook on earning a summer abroad by sending their name, address and $1 (for handling and airmail return of some material from Europe) to sos - Student Overseas Services, P.O. Box 5173. Santa Barbara, Calif. should not be used on concrete, brick or painted surfaces. Candidates are responsible for removing materials on or be fore the day of the ASB elections. AU campaign materials should bear the name and address of the campaign manager or sponsoring organization. A copy of the guidelines is available at the Student Senate offices. Marilyn Sherry is teaching this course, the material of which can be easily learned by anyone who can write longhand. She is also teaching a class for those who want to learn about the Civil Service Exams. Business English is a 30-hour course offered to anyone wishing to improve his English skills and practice the principles of letter and report writing. The instructor is Katherine Anderson, a teacher in Lane's Language Arts Department. Corporation Procedures is being taught in seminar fashion this year by anumberofteachers well qualified in their fields. The course is designed for businessmen who wish to learn more about the int r i c a c i e s of corporation formation. Wanita Walters, a data processing coordinator at Springfield High School, is teaching Data Processing for Educational Services. The emphasis of this class is on secretarial understanding of computers and their use in education. Persons interested in learning more about their inc om e tax should enroll in Income Tax Pre- "Dead policemen'' • • 101n Citations are being issued for these parking violations, and in some cases cars will be towed away. Those receiving citations have ten days from the date of issuance to appeal the ticket to The "dead policemen," also Bill Cox, Superintendent of Colknown as "traffic bumps," are lege Facilities. 4" high mounds of asphalt placed Traffic and parking are not the a c r o s s roads and in parking only p rob 1e ms faced by the lots--with an obvious effect on security force. Their duties speeding cars. range from enforcing the reguWhile the traffic bumps will lation that dogs on campus must help with one problem, there are be leashed to prevention of vioothers to be handled by LCC's lation of city, county and state live security force, headed by law on campus to guarding camMark Rocchio. Three full-time pus facilities from theft, vansecurity men--AUm "Hap" Stan- dalism and unauthorized use. ley, Sid Austin and John Miles-- The LCC theft rate was high and three part-time men--Paul last year, due partially, accordChase, O. B. Wray and Ross _ ing to Rocchio, to unlocked doors which seemed to invite theft. Barton--assist him. The penalty for theft on campus One of their most time-con- includes being turned over to losuming jobs is enforcement of cal authories and possible excampus parking regulations. pulsion from school. • Rocchio noted that parking in Rocchio sees the goal of the areas reserved for the handi- problems." The force's success capped is perhaps the most com- also depends on the quality of mon v i o 1a t i o n, followed b y the security officers, "all of parking in areas where no park- whom I have the highest respect ing is allowed, such as on roads, blocking other cars or driveways, in fire lanes and in areas reserved for motorcycles. Another common violation is failure to d is p 1a y a registration campus security force as '' service to the community, students .:: ~ . _ : ~\ ' and staff." The strength of the J ,.,~,. · ' '\ security force depends, he said, on its ability to "call on the stu- } • • .....- The dents for constructive assistance in dealing with any and all 10th & Oak sticker. f The National Poetry Press has set Thursday, Nov. 5, as the closing date for submission of manuscripts for this year's College Students' Poetry Anthology. Any college student is eligible to submit verse to the Anthology. There is no limitation as toform or theme. Shorter works are preferred by the Board of Judges because of space limitations. Each poem must be typed or printed on a separate sheet and must bear the name, home address and college address of the student. Manuscripts •should be sent to National Poetry Press, 3210 Selby Avenue, Los Angeles, California, 90034. class in the subject. For those who know something more about the keyboard, but wish to achieve more speed and accuracy, a second course is offered. The business ·courses are but a small sample of the varied offerings of LCC's Ad111t Education Department. A full schedule is available from the Adult Education Office, 747-4501, ext. 323, Most of the classes have begun for the term, but interested persons should check with the Office for further information. Persons interested in initiating a course not currently offered are also encouraged to contact Adult Education. ADC representative to be on campus An ADC Scholarship representative will be on campus every Monday and Wednesday from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Students are urged to stop by for any help or info_rmation they might need. The representative will be in Center 112 ( just off the cafeteria). security force Sever a 1 "dead policemen" have joined LCC's security force to stop one of the most common traffic violations on campus-speeding. Poetry contest to be sponsored paration. This class is taught by Milton Morey and is open to all interested persons. Students of the Lumber Secretary class will get first-hand job information from Erma Hanson, the teacher who is a lumber secretary during working hours. The Office Procedures Class was designed for those interested in preparing for the Cert if ie d Professional Secretary Examination; however, it is open to everyone. Maureen Bayes instructs all basic aspects of secretarial office procedures. A ten-week course in Real Estate Exchange is taught by Kieth Bates, a realtor. This course covers the basic principles of exchanges. An additional course is also offered for persons wishing to delve further into the real estate business. Two course in Shorthand (not to be confused with briefhand) are being offered this year. Virginia Walters teaches both classes, where dictation, brief form and phrase skills are developed. For those who have never received any formal instruction in typing, Miss Painter, apart-time inst r u c to r in Lane's Business Department, is teaching a basic ~\l for," Rocchio observed. The security department at LCC hopes to be viewed not as the students' enemy, but as a group which can aid student growth and activities . As Chief of Security at LCC, Rocchio brings to Lane a background as a counselor, teacher and law enforcement office r. Most recently, he served on the staff of the Clearfield, Utah, Job Corps Center training corpsmen as counselor aides, teacher aides and recreation aides. In 1961 he was Chief of Police at the San Jose State Police School, where he was responsible for 250 police trainees. During 1962-63 he worked with teenagers at the Santa Clara County Detention Center near San Jose. Later he joined the San Jose Police force as a patrolman. Before moving to Utah he was a senior counselor at the Pleasanton, California, Job Corps Center. Rocchio, 30, holds a bachelor of science degree in police science and a masters degree in educational psychology. /1A~,~,.;_,. r,-----y By GEORGE SKEIE MEM BER AMCRICA N GEM SOCIETY Overpark 342-1664 Every opal is different from every other. It is also different from other gemstones since it is not a crystal form, but a silica in which there is some water. Many centuries go into the formation of an opal deposit or vein. First, water comes to the surface and mixes with silica to form a jellylike consistency. After more time , has passed, the silica hardens and tiny cracks fill the silica with varying degrees of water content. It is these tiny "fractures" which refract the opalescent colors much like a prism, and thus create the opal fire. !~! f 1 COME AND DISCUSS IT with speaker JAMES SPENCER Date October 22, 1970 2 p.m. Rm. 406 Center Building Christian Science Oganization I Since J 889, our finest opal has come from Australia . A kangaroo hunter at White Cliffs in South Wales first discovered the vein of white opal which until 1904 net ted the British Commonwealth $5 million. Today, the richest source of opal in Australia is in the Coober Pedy district where most of the townspeople live in caves with only iron chimneys showing above the ground. Opal mining is still considered one of the most arduous jobs in the world. l~l\ where Do Our Rights 11 Come From I PRECIOUS OPAL ••'•=·=·=·=·=·~-~=~=~=~=~=~=!=~=~=~=~=~=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=~=!=~=·=·=·=·=·=·=.:.:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:~:!:~:_:!:!:.:~:_:_:_:_:_:~~ 11 I It seems that man y toda y have a growing appreciation of fine opal. This is certainly o ne of our most unique gemstones, and to some, the most beautiful. It reign s supreme among colored stones with its varied gleams and flashe s of red, green, yellow and blue. As a commodity, it is increasing in value, and becoming quite scarce on the market. shop Non Square Look I So when you come into our store to see some of the lovely opal specimens we have made into fine jewelry, give a thought to the great history this gem enjoys. The October-born are most fortunate to have this as one of their birthstones . . 8~ .I l ')-::_ 7 W : ~ L. ~"°' f" TT E' ST p ,_.,:-, ..., s..· 3 4 5 .n 3 54 '-6~~_,~ "Marriage Machine" discussed at FLS by Richard Stamp Marriage is a working machine, accoding to John Bascom, a Eugene physician who spoke Oct. 15 before the second session of the Family Life Discussion Series at LCC. This "gr8at, clankhg, dQst produchg mac!li1B hot.v~en w:" i i: : '·n ~he air .·i;·, ,J ;d "JS~ Dr. Bascom tJ:zp1ained. It exists, yet we cannot actually r ,aacll out and grasp it with our hands. "But it is no good if no candy comes ont of the machine," he warded. Trades are what a couple must put into the "marriage machine" in order to receive the "candy" from it. Trading is the process in which one person does something for his spouse in exchange for something else of importance. Since the "marriage machine grinds things up," Dr. Bascom cautioned, the degree of importance should always be considered from the receiver's viewpoint. What one person puts into the "machine" may come out either very small or very large according to his spouse's feelings. A parent should never judge what is important to a child, the speaker pointed out. He should let the child tell him. The same is true with husbands and wives. Each should find out what is im11.ortant to the other. "The beauty of trades," Dr. Bascom commented, ''is that people have different ideas of what's important. Trades are the water and sun and fertilizer that make a marriage grow." The magic phrase in working out trades, he added, is "yes if." '' I am not talking about compromises," Dr. Bascom emphasized. He explained that if before being allowed to leave the meeting, members of the audience had to decide where they· would all spend their next vacation together, that would require a compromise. A trade, however, w ·o u -1 ,d involve the James Spencer group's working together to find a way in which each person could have an opportunity to visit someplace which he particularly wanted to see. "Communication is a very important tool in making this marr i age machine work," Dr. Bascom o b s e r v e d . While c o m munication has some value simply for fun in its own right, he noted that one of its main purposes is for making trades. Speaking clearly and honestly is important, Dr. Bascom noted. A person should not only let his marriage partner know what he w a n t s , but should give h i m several possibilities from which to choose. Thus, if one is unobtainable, a person may still be able to fulfill another. Fairness is another essential, Dr. Bascom said. "Be fair to your spouse, but be sure to be fair to yourself. Cheating yourself is worse than cheating your mate." u u c k 1 n g discussion of problems when ti red, Dr. Bascom mentioned. is sometimes wise. for "the more tired you are, the more frustrating everyone around you gets." Discussions, •••••••••••••••• •• ••• • •• ••• ••• . Coast Guard rep to be on campus A representative of the Coast Guard will be on campus Tuesday, October 20, from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. to discuss the Coast Guard Academy. Interested students should check with the LCC Placement Office, extension 227. About 450 s tu dents from ciate the students with various Springfield's four junior high occupations which will be availschools witl tour LCC facilities able to them and the educational and visit classrooms in October •background required for each." Each tour ends with questions and December. answered by Lane counselors. Their visits are sponsored by The counselors will assist the the federally funded program students in completing class seSelf-Understanding Through Oc- lection forms, required for visits cupational Exploration (SUTOE). to classes in their chosen fields The Springfield School District's in December. project is designed to give young people a chance to learn about ca- Marine recruiter reer opportunities in vocationaltechnical fields at an early age. to be on campus Groups of students toured the campus Oct. 12, 14 and 19. Another tour is scheduled for Oct. 22. Bert Dotson, director of college-community re 1 at ions and guide for the tours, said "the purpose of the class is to asso- A Marine Corps officer will be on campus Tuesday, Oct. 27, for interested students entering the Marine Corps Officer Training Programs. For further information check_ with the LCC Placement Office, ext. 227. ~AMBURGER -DAN'57 I I Burge_rs, Shakes, Fries - ----------••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •• REBOUND ROCK ••• • '~Try the best in old-fashioned hamburgers" ~anklm Blvd. , satuROay 4:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. • •• •• ••• •• •• •• 746--0918 with KLCC-FM 90.3 to speak Oct. 22 The relevance of spiritual values to the right of dissent, civil rights, and women's rights will be explored in a lecture to be presented at LCC Thursday, Oct. 22. The lecture, titled "Where Do Our Rights Come From?" and scheduled for 2:00 p.m. in Center 406, will be presented by James Spencer, a Christian Science minister from Detroit. The discussion is sponsored by the LCC Christian Science Organization. Spencer's thesis is that "recognition of the source of our divine rights enables us to experience the greater sense of human freedom in every area of our lives." He will discuss spiritual experiences in the overcoming of loneliness, i 11 n es s, prejudice and restrictiveness. A member of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship, Spencer has been a full-time Christian Science minister since 1953. He is a graduate of Principia College in Illinois, and served as a chaplain and Christian S c i e n c e minister for the Armed Forces. however, should be kept current and postponement sh o u 1d not mean that a concern should be dropped entirely. "Gunny sacking" is another hazard, according to Dr. Bascom. A problem is not forgotten simply because "it isn't that im-, portant." It is stored away in a "gunny sack" and eventually the sack becomes too full and explodes. "Communication will never be easy,'' Dr. Bascom concluded, but it is part of what makes the "marriage machine" work. Asked if the "machine" can work without love in the relationship, Dr. Bascom commented that he feels "love kind of grows out of the relationship," and that something must exist between two people to lead them to the altar. '' It is a question,'' he added, "of whether the pot grows out of the flower, or the flower grows out of the pot." Dr. Bascom's talk was part of a five-week series on "Liking Marriage More," held Thursdays at 7:30 p.m. in rooms 223224 of the Apprenticeship Building. The topic on Oct. 22 will be "Problem Solving." Students to tour campus as part of SUTOE program ••••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••• •• ••• •• •• All request music from • • 1956 - 1969 ••• ••• • Call 7 47-4500 •• • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Page 8 P'O llution a p'roblem ,· but no· a ·cti·o n by Lee Schroeder How much turmoil can mankind tolerate? In fact, how much do we really see? A crisis grows in Southeast On the news we hear, Asia. "And this week's 'kill-ratio' -143 Americans to 374 of the enemy. Great work, boys!" In the Middle East, wars are fought savagely over pure hate and prejudices. How much longer before one country grows impatient? When will they press the button? And what about the home front? Aren't there enough riots, destruction and killings? Amid these problems we find a problem growing wo:rse each day--pollution. Some people actually believe pollution will blow away during the night. Little do they know that our atmosphere can only hold so much monoxide, smog and other poisonous gases. They solve the problem selfconsciously by looking up at the sky and declaring '' Can't see any pollution, but it is kind of a hazy day. Pollution? Doubt it." Others realize there is a problem existing, but on 1y in New York, Chicago or Los Angeles--not here! A few months ago I stood on a mountain west of Eugene and gazed over the Willamette Valley. A yellow haze blanketed it from the ground to a half mile into the air. Being naive about the whole matter didn't help. I feel some people won't admit the problem because they haven't a scapegoat for it yet. "And if I did admit it, what could I do?" Let's continue. Our waters are being dangerously contaminated each day. How mu c h faith do you have in your drinking faucet? Are you going to say the water is really fit to drink? "Sure, I'm not dead, am I?" If they don't die within the hour, they think the water is safe. A very recent survey was conducted by the Health, Education and Welfare Department. It produced a shattering blow to the American public. In a survey of 969 of the nation's 23,000 water supply systems, HEW's investigators f o u n d that s o me 900,000 persons in the areas tested were consumingwaterthat is dangerously contaminated by such poisons as arsenic, lead, selenium, and fecal bacteria. The water supply of another 2 million, although safe enough to drink, had an unacceptable taste or odor. Some of the most troublesome spots were described: VERMONT: "Most water supply systems generally exhibit the effects of long-term neglect." The bureau also found that there had been 300 cases of "waterborne" diseases in the past three years. After the report was issued, the government officials ;!dvised 355,555 Vermonters, served by 69 "undesirable" systems, to boil their water before drinking it. CINCINNATTI: a "continuous program to detect health hazards and sanitary defects . . . does not exist." A report also shows that infectious hepatitis, traced to the city's water supply, broke out in a new federal housingproject. CHARLESTON,SOUTHCAROLINA: Water in this area falls below Public He a 1th standards and p r o c e du res for handling chlorine used in water purification are "unsafe." SAN BERNADINO-RIVERSIDE; Ontario County region of Southern California: Some one million residents in this area are drinking water from systems with "generally minimal" treatment ~facilities. COLLEGE PARK, S. C.: The bacterial and ,chemical quality of the water is poor and storage capacity is inadequate. RIVERHEAD, N. Y.: Residents complained of red and b 1 a c k water with an odor smelling like hydrogen sulfide. Investigation by county health officials found that a single well was introducing bacteria into the system. Most of the contaminated water was found in communities consisting of 100,000 residents or less. These water systems must lack either the staff, the knowhow, or the will to assure the public a safe drink of water. While we're failing to treat our water supplies adequately, we're also pouring phosphates, another deadly pollutant, into our lakes. ·Phosphates, found in almost all laundry detergents, not only clean clothes, but also turn the nation's lakes into reservoirs of stinking slime. Detergents not only feed algal slime, they feed it more phosphorous than any other manmade product. All still waters support at least some colonies of algae. Like all plants, algae need water, carbon dioxide and sunlight to survive and grow. They also need small amounts of other nutrients, mainly phosphorous, nit ro gen, and slug worms, proliferate. Good fish will be replaced by scavengers, which in their turn die ·off and wash up on the shore, befouled with festoons of rotting algae. At the end, sunken "mats" of slime will fill the lake; the fouled, "eutrophied" body ofwater will first become a swamp and then a meadow. It's a natural process. But it's a natural process that would normally take several million years. Furthermore, it's a p r o c es s which man can slow, halt, or completely reverse. But man's greed to multiply himself and therefore his waste products, and his disgorging of such unnatural pollutants as phosphorous-rich detergents have only accelerated it. The results are too apparent. How about Lake Onandaga in New York? Essentially it is dead. It's losing its oxygen and will shortly become a bog. Lake Erie. Lake Ontario. Dying! The Potomac River. The Hudson River. Scummed with algae, and the lower end of many other American rivers aren't any better (like the Willamette and Columbia, just to name a couple). Banningphosphates of any amount in deter,#: .;/ .. isti t, for health purposes, where to then? Farther out to sea? How about this vicinity? Over the previous summer, the Lane County Health Department has been conducting research on this area's water supplies and facilities. One such facility tested was The Fern Ridge reservoir. Health Dept. sampled the water weekly in various areas around the lake. The result of the studies made pronounced Fern Ridge unfit to use for practical purposes (swimming, drinking, etc.). The Dept. found a high percentage or u r in a 1 deposits in the most commonly used areas such as the swimming area. There are other contributors to the problem, however. For instance, some of the small towns in that vicinity have no treatment for sewage deposits. Thus they run their waste into Fern Ridge reservoir and present the problem to the public. What about our food supply? Each year, many farmers are actually going in the hole instead of profiting. Then instead of using the land to produce more crops, the land is used to build a huge hotel for upper class people, or a new housing project, or a new t _'.r;ri/1,~'> • ..•": '•:°', ,·~.- .., ]t"" '"'.. ... • ,' ,._,\ . ),.,,&,'. ,'.:.:, • i. u : ~.~t.S ~· .,- ' \.. • ., ,; ~ I! " J_.'i> ": :3 .y~ '\ \ • !,c~:; , , , ';.,,' POLLUTED WATER COLLECTS SLIME near Autzen Stadium. The water is being polluted by wastes dumped from homes and factories. Phospotassium, sulfur I calcium, iron and magnesium. The ability of a lake to meet those needs places it in one of three well-marked phases of its life cycle. An "oligotrophic" lake is usually relatively young and can support very little plant life. A "mesotrophic" lake, rather older, can still maintain only small quantities of aquatic flora. But an "eutrophic" lake, almost always considerably older than the previous two, can support vast amounts of water plants. Luckily for us, some nutrients are in reasonably short supply in most lakes. When there is an abundance of nutrients and warm weather, the algae multiply rapidly and form huge mats of green slime on the surface of the water. When one or more nutrients is eventually exhausted, the algae start to die. Bacteria are always present in water. The bacteria attack the slime, and the result is a vile smell. If the algae mats are widespread enough, the bacteria will exhaust more and more of the oxygen content within the lake trying to cope with the slime. The result is this: nuisance organisms, such as leeches ,.._\ ;;; •• ,. .;;.. - '- tt~ 1,~ "' ~~-- '¾..:" . phates are a chief contributor to water pollution. (Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb) gents is the only answer, and today might not even be soon enough. Human waste has built-in phosphate and nitrate nutrients and is a spur to the early death of the nation's waters. We need more sewage treatment plants. Some companies are now working on producing an i ma 1 feed out of waste. While we're constructing more treatment plants, let's install complete garbage disposal systems in our homes, thus putting all the waste into treatment and into use later on, instead of des t r o yin g beautiful, needed lands and waters. How about the president of a huge oil firm who plans to pump millions of gallons of effluvia into the ocean? In a speech before the public, he says "We don't want to pollute this beautiful land." Actually, what he's saying is that his company will help to pollute the whole world. The once abundant masses of sea life are decreasing each year (if not by decaying matter, then by dangerous gases). People who make a living from the sea tell of decrease in catch each year. When waters around our coasts become too contaminated six-lane highway to meet the demands of many unsatisfied people. And what about the farmer who sticks with his land, year after year? He tries to raise crops on worn out soil, often so full of DDT that there are no more minerals left in the soil to produce good crops. And the food shortage grows more tense as the population explodes. Scientists have long realized the possibility of a food shortage and have recently developed artificial and synthetic foods. Here is____ an example of some of the problems that arose. Abbot Laboratories, a major producer of cyclamates, contracted a number of scientists to conduct research for the company. Aft e r conducting many experiments, the scientists found that rats who were being fed cyclamates, were showing development of bladder cancers. The banning of cyclamates was ordered immediately, u n ct e r the U.S. Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1958 (better known as the This was a Delaney Caluse). disasterous blow to West Coast canners who had just completed another season of cyclamate use. Vast amounts of food had to be banned from s t ore s and warehouses throughout the country by September 1, 1970, causing more pollution when the products were disposed of (could they have gone down with the tear gas aboard the old Liberty ship?). A former secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare appeared on the National Educational Network and said he favored changing the Delaney Clause to allow'' safe levels" of cancer producing additives in foods. As of now, the Delaney Clause does not recognize any level of carcinogenic additives as safe. Another study conducted found that a synthetic growth hormone, diethylstilbestrol (DES), known to be carcinogenic, was showing up in animal flesh intended for the human diet. a year before the Delaney Clause was added to the Food and Drug Act, it was discove red that DES causes cancer in mice. The most common usage of DES at that time was in poultry. It was banned 10 years ago. In spite of warnings a g a i n s t human consumption of DES, beef cattle growers were still allowed to feed DES to steers, thus producing a 10 to 16 per cent greater weight gain per volume of feed consumed. There are numerous other products on the open market today which can be hazardous to the human body if consumed. Even continued excessive use of aspirin can be fatal. We s ti 11 have to cope with another problem in the near future--noise pollution. The age of the supersonic jet. In recent 1ab oratory experiments, scientists "primed" a rat by exposing it to a steady sound (and we are exposed to these every day). Once primed, an alarm clock was set off. The rat went into a state of hysteria and very shortly collapsed--dead. It's a pity some people can't wait a few hours to travel over the sea, continent, or country. With this aggregation of problems come few solutions. One possible solution would be population control. Some people don't realize the need for population control, or what it costs to raise a child these days. For the average American family with a middle income, it can cost anywhere from about $18,000 to $20,000 or more to raise a cl}ild from birth to age 18, excluding a college education. Perhaps if the government took action by not allowing deductions on income tax forms, the cost of children would produce a decrease in birthrate. Probably not much, though. But that would be infringing on peoples' rights, wou!dn't it? What about the rights of the rest of us? The first thing we have to realize is that the problems of pollution exist, and they exist inThe problem is not tensely. caused by "them"--the problem is you and me, and we're the ones who have to answer the questions. Stop and think. Don't be discouraged just because you can't think immediately of some solutions. There are some corporations starting to come up with minor solutions. But more help and ideas are needed. America must show signs of a clean environment, free of slums, garbage and air and water pollution before exploring the moon. Some steps have to be taken immediately. A first step is to realize that YOU are helping to pollute our environment, and look for ways to stop your contribution. In some places, it looks like the battle against pollution is over before it has begun, but that can be reversed. Help! It's YOUR envirof).m~nt. .~-~:r , Women sh-ow indi~idU'alrty··w·i·th· f~shio·ns nother counselor said, "We counselors are a pretty conservative lot, but if someone told me I couldn't wear a pantsuiP'dprobably try it." The counselors' secretaries are in the meantime wearing pants, for reasons of their health. Due to the continuous cold draft in the secretaries' working area on the second floor of the Center Building, they said it was either long red underwear or pants. I don't ·believe they considered maxis as an alternative. Hair styles reflect the natural look, the total look. One of the most striking is the Afro, the unique style of the b 1 a ck s which has encouraged others to try their own natural look. Today hair styles are as casual and carefree as the mode of dress they accent. Another natural look is the braless look. Whether it will continue to gain in popularity or pass away quietly as did the midi is anyone's guess. A random poll of girl watchers revealed some interesting by La Verna Bauguess Feminine attire at LCC this fall is casual, colorful and uniquely individual. Anything goes, from the traditional skirt and sweater combination to faded blue' jeans. A mad mixture of prints and patterns, helter-skelter stripes, flowers, rag-tagging and multi-colored cotton calico Committee formed for Nancie Fadeley Formation of an LCC committee for Nancie Fadeley for Representative was announced Friday. Co-chairing the committee are staff members Gladys Belden of the Home Economics Department, Art Tegger of Language Arts and Bert Dotson of the administration. Activities of the group include the placing of car top signs and bumper stickers and support of Friday's "Nancie's Night" dinner which featured former senator Maurine Neuberger as guest speaker. The committee is planning a speaking appearance for Mrs. Fadeley at LCC and a second, joint appearance with other legislative candidates. Anyone interested in the committee should contact Art Tegger, 747-4501, ext. 249, for further information. patchwork brightens the costume of many a carefree Miss. Fashion designers have failed to influence the attractive co-eds into discarding their cute little minis for those matronly midis, fortunately, as word is out in a wire story from New York thai: the' midi skirt has bombed. Many g i r 1 watchers heartily approve that sort of bombing. Maxis are seldom seen, and understandably so, as they cause a lot of speculation as to what might warrant such a complete camouflage. Perhaps maxi enthusiasts are trying to create an air of mystery, but that went out . with Garbo. Faded blue jeans and sla~ks are popular attire for many coeds, not to mention pantsuits which are becoming increasingly popular as the crisp fall weather approaches. The knit pantsuit is not only comfortable and warm, but definitely flattering to the shapely feminine form. There was a rumor drifting about campus, (perhaps to stir the womens' lib. movement), that women counselors are not permitted to wear slacks or pantsuits. This rumor evidently is false as no order of this nature has been given to the counselors to date. One counselor stated that she was much more comfortable in skirts ,than in pants, so if this ruling ever came about it would not affect her preference of dress. But a- Ride th·e Bus to L.C.C. - 30c one way (\) Q) E i: <U 10th Eugene riders transfer here ca ;?i ~:y '·· . DEB DEMETRAKOS is one of the students at Lane who is taking advantage of the fashion freedom •created by the "midi" dress (more commonly known as the Edsel of the garment trade.) Stores everywhere are having a hard time keeping up with the demand for pant suits and stores with the "midi" are having a hard time selling them. (Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb) AZ & SAT. 10 to 2:00 a. "':t:,. ~ :···••:, -;, ;:;:~;:'.::. "ti~;. ··· \ . ., ' -"l:-~ l •. ,, points of view as to what guys like and dislike in this year's fashion scene. The Mini--"lt should . be around for a long time." Maxi Dress--"No" (100% of those polled). Midi Skirt--"no" (100%-"It's worse than the maxi!"). Faded Jeans--"Looks okay!" Braless Look--ult's different." "Depends on the girl." Boots- - "Depends on the dress or outfit." Pantsuits--"Yes" (100%)., Maxi Coats--(split decision) 50% "No'', 50% "Yes, but only when worn with a mini underneath." Whatever the preference, it must be noted that girls are going to all lengths to do their own fashion thing this year. I I I Ii CAPTAIN'S TABLE ' Monte's Barber Shop s Haircuts as you like them Appointments available Drop-ins welcome Hairstyling, razor cutting '- .. uAcross from Hamburger Heaven" 1241 Willamette ,,,, 343-9563 HAROLD'S TIMBER TOPPER 1(//ieutleejuee4t ue~ '4,0(Qt~ BUFFET STYLE Closed Sundays 215 Main - Springfield 7 46-9130 Q) Q_ . Springfield _.,__~---~~4-,:-riders transfer here skiing backpacking mountaineering specialists 30th to L.C.C Bus leaves l 0th 611 E. 13th & Willamette on the half hour Arrives at LCC at 5 minutes to the hour leaves LCC at 5 minutes after the hour Monday through Friday 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday 9:30-5:30 p.m. Friday 9:30-9:00 p.m. I Is s II 'Palm 10 SPORTS U of O schedules racism s·eminar A look at the pros , by Bob Barley This past week ·nas a hectic one in the world of professional s p o rt s . Professional Jaseball crowned the BaJ ~imore Orioles as its new World Champions. The National Basketball Association opened its 1970-71 season with a new four division set-up. And the animals of professional football kept ripping each other apart. The Orioles, who grabbed the crown in five games, were led by their monumental third baseman, Brooks Robinson. Robinson stunned the baseball world with spectacular defensive plays along with a nifty .429 series batting average. Although Robinson did run away with the Series' Most Valuable Player Award, he wasn't the only Oriole to hit the ball. • Baltimore's Paul Blair led thtr Series in batting with a sizzling . 479 ave r age. First baseman Boog Powell and right fielder Frank Robinson each cashed in with two home runs a-piece. But probably the biggest s u r p r is e of the Series came in the third game when Baltimore Pitcher Dave McNally socked a Wayne Granger 2-2 pitch into the left field stands for a grand-slam home run. This was the first grand-slam home run by a pitcher in World Series competition. The downfall of the Reds appeared to be their inconsistent pitching. Hampered by the loss of their sensational rookie Wayne Simpson, the staff of Cincinnati pitchers gave up 50 hits and 32 runs. Only ex-Brave Clay Carroll and 19-year-old Don Gullet came out of the Series without ballooned earned run averages. Cincinnati's hitting attack is s u m me d up best by Johnny Bench's .211 series average. Bench, a 22-year-old catcher, fell two points short of the Reds uncomplimentary .213 average. *** Meanwhile Portland's Tr a i 1 Blazers opened its professional basketball debut on a successful note last Friday by beating the Cleveland Cavaliers 115-112. Jim Barnett's 31 points sparked the Blazers as they gave a fourthquarter surge to win this battle of expansion teams. The only bleak spot in Oregon's major league opener was the size of the crowd. Only4,273 spectators passed through Portland's Memorial Coliseum gates to watch the action. This year the NBA is separated into four divisions, with the top two divisional finishers gaining a berth into the money playoffs at the end of the season. This new set-up, along with the addition of first year men Bob Lanier, Pete Maravich, Rudy Tomjanovich, Jim McMillian, and Portland's Geoff Petrie, indicates this year in the NBA will be an exciting one. *** De s p it e the baseball an ct basketball action, professional football is not about to be lost in the shuffle. After only five weeks of action every team in the newly constructed National Football League has already tasted defeat. Yet probably the biggest loss of this young season will not show up in the loss column. Knee surgery on Gale Sayers will put the star halfback on the shelf for the rest of the football season. His presence will not only be missed by the Bears but by the millions of football fans everywhere who have become acquainted with the magic of a Gale Saye rs. Tarpenning's men improve times by Dave Harding With a 3-1 record and only one regularly scheduled meet remaining before the conference championships, five of coach Al Tarpenning's seven cross country runners have improved on their times. Th e most notable improvements have come from freshmen Dennis Hilliard and Bruce Davison. AU five runners improved on their marks last Saturday at Mt. Hood. Hilliard knocked off 1:38 when he finished fifth with a time of 21:25. Davison, who has been chopping off seconds e a c h we e k, knocked off 1:24 Saturday, when he was clocked in eighth place with a time of 21:40. Running on the completely flat Blue Lake Park course, Jim Dickey ran the four mil•~ s in 22:03, knocking 4 2 sec on ct s off his previous best of 22:45. Dan Van Camp ran the course in 20: 58, knocking off 30 seconds, and Larry Isley chopped off 32 seconds when he finished in 21:14. Only veterans Godwyn Smith and Gaylon Littlejohn have failed to improve on their times so far this year. Basketball meeting All students i!lterested in turning out for varsity basketball are asked to meet in the first aid room (Health 156) at 3:00 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28. Basketball shoes (Beta, Converse, Adidas) may be purchased at this meeting. A seminar on'' Perspectives on Racism: Brown, Black and Red" began Monday at the University of Oregon, and will run through October 23. The seminar, sponsored by the ASUO Cultural Issues Center, will examine racism in several aspects of American society, and will feature presentations by representatives of minority groups, as well as films, music and art exhibits. The schedule for the remainder of the seminar is as follows: TUESDAY 10 a.m.-"Racism and Education," a panel discussion in the EMU Ballroom moderated by James Hill, director of Upward Bound. Participants will include ._ Nathan Hare, editor of "Black • Scholar" and former chairman of the Black Studies Department -at San Francisco State University; Edwards; Arthur Pearl; professor of education at the U of O; Dennis Banks of the American Indian Movement, and Bob Morales, student representative of H.E.P. 1 p.m.-"Racism and War" a panel discussion in the EMU Ballroom including David Aqui1ar of the Valley Migrant Housing Project; Ray Eaglin, arrd a member of the CSU. A film, "No Vietnamese · Ever Called Me Nigger," will also be shown. 7:30 p.m.-Hare and Banks will present addresses at McArthur Court. WEDNESDAY Two films - "No Vietnamese Ever Called Me Nigger" and "Los Siete de la Raza" - will be shown in the EMU Ballroom. Indians who occupied Alcatraz Island, and Frank Martinez of the Valley Migrant League. I p.m. - Three films - "The Battle of Algiers," "Stagolee: Interview with B0bbv Seale" and "Los Siete'' - • will be shown in the EMU Ballroom; 50 cents admission. 4 p.m. - A concert by the Black Messengers irr the EMU Ballroom: 50 cents admission. Trio of films 7:30 p.m. shown at 1 p.m. to be repeated irr room 180, Prince Lucien Campbell Hall; 50 cents admission. 7:30 p.m. - Addresses (topics unannounced) in M c A r t h u r Court by Charles Evers, mayor of Fayette, Miss., and brother of the slain civil rights worker, Medgar Evers; and by Martinez. FRIDAY Noon - "Judicial and Police Repression," a series of addresses in McArthur Court by David Hilliard, chief of staff of the Black Panther Party; Brightman; Eaglin, Ford, and a speaker from Los Siete. THURSDAY 10 a.m. - "What We Want and What We Need - Organizing Oppressed People," a panel discussion in the EMU Ballroom moderated by Lois Wilson. Participants will include Donna James of Los Siete; Leman Brightman of the United Native American Indian Movement; Sandra Ford of the Portland Black Panther Party, and Bill Fesperman, chairman of the Patriot Party. Concert at Mc• 8 p.m. Arthur Court by Odetta and Charles Lloyd; tickets are $2, $2..50; $3, and $3.50. Throughout the period - and through Oct. 28 - art work by black, brown and red artists will be on display in the EMU Art Gallery . Grffffj8'UR Gf 00 0 R'Di D oD Welcome LCC ~~69t D 5 D B 8 10 a.m. - Phone & Orders to go Lunch with us at the Bottom of the Hill 30th & Hilyard THE SOUND • OF WINTER 1 p.m. - "Racism and Political Power," a parrel discussion moderated by Art Jenkins in the_ EMU_ Ballroom. Participants include Kent Ford of the Portland Black Panther Party; John Trudell, representing the MEET WARREN MILLER IN PERSON 8:00 P.M. • OCT. 20TH SOUTH EUGENE HIGH AUDITORIUM Literary magazine to be initiated Help is being sought for initiating a literary-art magazine on campus. Anyone interested in the project is asked to attend a meeting to be held Thursday, Oct. 22, at 4:00 p.m. in the Tutorial Service room, Center 234. Materials for the literary-art magazine may be submitted to the Language Arts Department, in care of Marilyn Waniek. ,. _ _..... Adults Students __thru __ High __School $2.00 $1.50 CO-SPONSORED BY: WILLAMETTE PASS SKI PATROL and SOUTH EUGENE HIGH SKI TEAM iC Doors Open at 7 :00 p.m. for Displays in the latest Equipment and Ski Fashions DOOR PRIZES BY LOCAL MERCHANTS iC LCC last in financing LCC offers more athletic activities on less money than any other Oregon community college. That conclusion was the result of a survey of financial support of community college athletics, indicated Robert Radcliff, Mt. Hood Clackamas Treasure Valley Central Oregon Blue Mt. Southwest Oregon Umpqua LCC LCC Director of Athletics. The number of activities offered ranged from four to thirteen, and financial support ranged from Lane's $11,000 to Mt. Hood's The ranking of the $36,000. schools is as follows: FINANCIAL SUPPORT $36,500 27,900 27,000 23,500 18,000 12,000 12,000 11,802 Support for community college body funds. athletics· ·comes fro m, student , . ' ., , " j NUMBER OF ACTIVITIES 13 6 7 7 8 6 4 13 I WIZARD 0 2Jc A Ir freshener withthis coupon Save 32¢ ea. without coupon--.Special 47¢ Good only at Paramount or Northgate Mkts. GIVE THESE SPRINGFIELD FOOD MKTS. a try and you'll notice the lower every day pricinq on hundreds of items. Save 32¢ with the attached coupon I I I I I I I • f -,.t Tarpenning's runners lose firSf •nie.et by Dave Harding Undefeated in three conference meets. and runnL1g onper'1a.;,s f1a comfort ab I e four-mil9 m -)~~ course of the year, coach Al Tarpenning' s band of cross coun- \ try runners invaded Mt. Hood last Saturday - and lost. Running in Portland's Blue Lake Park, with the temperatur,a nipping in the high 40' s poor performances by Titans Godwyn Smith and Gaylon Littlejohn were kdy 1·aasons for the 25-30 defeat at the hands of host Mt. Women's hockey team wins first match by Louise Stucky Friday, Oct. 16, the women's field hockey team defeated Pacific University 4 to o. The Lane team scored two quick goals early in the first half, and didn't score again until about midway through the final half when the team again scored two goals. Although this was the women's first game, they looked very good and were able to play as a team. The four goals were scored by Jan Sweeney, Lorraine Hein, Arleta Martin, and Beth Smith. To encourage teamwork, the team awards to one team member after each game played a team bracelet to be worn until the next game. The award is made to the player showing outstanding teamwork during the game. Peggy Bartholomew received the bracelet for her outstanding work in the Pacific game. Peggy usually plays in the forward line, but this year she has been playing center half back. Although this was her first game as center half back, she played it like a veteran. The team members are Lamae Nelson (Harrisburg), Judy Kitzman (Thurston), Karen Barrong (Cottage Grove), Sue Haase (Springfield), Lorraine Hein (Thurston), Jan Peterson (Willamette), Kris Havercroft (North Eugene), Beth Smith (Thurston), Sara Detherage (Cottage Grove), Sandy Young (Siuslaw), Louise Stucky (Thurston), Arleta Martin (Pleasant Hill), Bonnie Stubbs (Eugene) , Peggy Bartholomew (Thurston), Jan Hull (Central Point),- and Jan Sweeney (Australia). Soccer team seeks first win today (Tuesday) Hood. Blue Mountain CC was a distant third with 93 points. Mt. Hood's Jim Browning was the individual winner, finishing in a time of 20:44.B, and teammate Dave Boggan was next in, seven seconds later. But Mt. Hood's next two runners in were a distant sixth and seventh, as Titans Dan Van Camp, Larry Isley, and Dennis Hilliard finished third, fourth, and fifth respectively. Besides the poor showing of Smith and Littlejohn, the running in the middle of the race was an important factor in the Titan downfall. After Dennis Hilliard finished fifth in 21:25, Mt. Hood's Jim Reed and Bill Stuart turned the c or n e r twelve seconds later, heading for the home stretch. And right behind was Lane's Bruce Davison. With fifty yards to go, the three kicked in, and "the race" was on. When Davison's attempt to overtake Reed and Stuart failed, the Titans had to settle for eighth. Instead of being deadlocked at 18 points apiece, the Titans were trailing by four, 16-20. A n a r r o w four seconds separated the three. Reed was sixth, with a time of 21:37, followed by Stuart two seconds later, and Davison finished at aneven21:40. The deciding blow came when Lane's Jim Dickey lost a slim •Page 11 lead over Mt. Hood's Lloyd Clark with 150 yards to go. Clark steadily pulled away, and finished in 21: 54. Dickey was a long, and badly needed, nine seconds behind. After two other runners crossed the line, Titans Godwyn Smith and Gaylon Littlejohn finished 13 and 14 respectively. Smith was clocked in 22:46, and Littlejohn in 22:47. T r ai 1in g by a far distance throughout the whole race, Smith saved most of his energy to hold off his own teammate during the last fifty yards. Why he didn't use some of his energy earlier in the race, when the Titans needed some desperate points, is a puzzle to all. Before the race started, Tarpenning had his runners in a group, and the last words ne sau..t before they disbanded was; "now if you feel that you didn't give you r best performance when you come in, I don't want you to cross the finish line." It might have been more appropriate and meaningful, both for the team and themselves, if Godwyn and Gaylon stopped short of the line. Next week, Lane will invade Southwest Oregon Community College in a four-way meet involving SWOCC, Clackamas, Clatsop, and the Titans. The race will get under way at ll:00 a.m. Saturday morning. Pre Season Sale Sale at 13th & Lawrence store only Good Selection of Skis \. Y. \·. i__ - . ,, \~- '-- -:::._ *Kasteles NORDIC SKI SHOP nth & Mill \, •,. *Heads Open 10 - 9:00 p.m. Mon. - Sat. 13th & Lawrence I ' Formerly Mildred's Spanish Palace Watch Mildred cook your meals Spanish food direct from Albuquerque, New Mexico Come and practise your Spanish with me by Bob Burnett Lane's inability to score has led to three straight soccer defeats. Coach Georgyfalvy's team is not quite up to last years team, which lost only one game. There are only three returning letterman on the team this year Captain Jack Johnson, John McKean, and Rick Malone. With all these returnees in the defensive backfield, the offensive line lacks experience and this might be the reason for their inability to score. On Friday, Oct. 9, the Titans opened their soccer season on a sour note when they were clipped by Oregon State 5-2. The host Titans battled their opponents on even terms through the first half but a strong Oregon State second half spelled a disaster for Coach George Gyorgyfalvy' s squad. Two second half goals by OS U' s Robert Matos and one by Johnny Robertson left the Titans somewhat dismayed after Lane battled the team from Corvallis to a twoall halftime deadlock. Offensively the Titans could only muster two goals against the m u c h more experienced Starters. Both Titan sco~~s came off tQ} foot of Steve Miligan. a freshman from Siuslaw. Dafense standouts for the Titans were team captain Jack Johnson and goalie Dave Swiberg. When Lane played its second game here on Wed. Oct.14, it was a bright and sunny day. However, there were few bright spots for Lane, as the team suffered its second straight defeat, this time at the hands of the UO Canvasbacks. The Titan defense once again held the offense of the other team down. However, they say the best defense is a good offense and Lane just couldn't score. The Titans seemed to p I a y much more aggressive soccer. At times the Titan front line of Steve Miligan, Barry Heidr, Jim Whitaker and Neal Holland seemed to be on the verge of scoring, only to see there efforts thwarted by the opposing goalie. Once again defensive fullbacks Jack Johnson and John McKean played an outstanding game. On Friday, Oct. 16, the Lane soccer players played what is probably the best team in the league--the U of O Amstel team. This team,, made UJ? of f~reign players, was undefeated in sea- son play last year. With the injury of Jack Johnson with about 20 minutes left in the first half, the Ams tel team was able to score almost at will. Johnson's injury hurt the Titans, as he is the best defensive player on the team. Once again Lane was lacking in the scoring department, only managing a single goal in thesecond half. The lone Titan goal came on a brilliant play as Barry Heider completely faked out his man to get a clear shot at the goal. That single goal wasn't enough to offset the nine scored by Amstel in their 9-1 defeat of Lane. A bright spot for the Lane soccer players was the return of last year's go a Ii e, Abdullah Sedairi. Sedairi, a standout on last year's team, was a welcome addition. He played the whole first half and did a good job in his first action of the year. • Lane takes on the Clackamas Community Co 11 e g e team on With the Tuesday, Oct. 20. addition of goalie Sedairi, and if Johnson is recovered from his injury, the Titans may be able to pick up their first win of the , still young season. Stl44dtt4 'ci ser~ed with honey at all meals Open 7 days a week 8 a.m. - midnight Skate Thurs., Fri., Sat., and Sunday I aturday Ni"hts Only: $1.50 a couple (including skates) {with LCC student bo-;fy card) ROLLADIUM in Springfield between Third and f.ifth on 0 Street ,, Page 12 . Chairman ~f Mass Comm"Not iust one of the boys" . by Judy Perkins ''Some of the most marvelous people I have ever met are here at Lane," remarked Virginia DeChaine, as she discussed her work as chairman of the Mass Communications Department. In addition to the poeple with whom she works, she likes the educational attitude at Lane, the varying age groups of students, and the enthusiasm and the creativity of both students and teachers. Mrs. DeChaine is in charge of the five areas included in the Mass Communications Department - t e 1e vision and radio broadcasting, speech, journalism "I find all and photography. areas in Mass Communication exciting, " said Mrs. DeChaine. "All are dealing with communication." She performs a liason between the capable professional people (teachers) in these areas and the administration. This personable lady holds a bachelors degree in speech, and a masters degree in Television and Radio Broadcasting from the University of Oregon. She has taught at the high school and junior high school leave, as well as the college level. Her under graduate m a j o r was a c o m bination of b o t h s p e e c h and drama, and she attributes her interest in communication to her involvement in drama, with its emphasis on human attitudes and problems. Why was she, a woman, chosen to head a department concerned with careers in mass communications, some of which are considered a man's profession? "I can't really answer that question, said Mrs. DeChaine. "You'd have to ask those who did the choosin~." "I hope I was chosen," she continued, "because I try to work with the staff and because I am familiar with and interested in all areas of communication. It is difficult to find people who are not partial to one particular area within the field." This capable, outgoing brunette feels she is very fortunate in having a staff "who respect and cooperate fully with each other." Does she agree with the women's liberation movement? Haunted House to open Oct. 28 Cedar Branch of the Boys and Girls Aid Society of Oregon is preparing for its ninth annual Haunted House. For the past eight years the Haunted House has provided the Eugene area with adventure during the Halloween season. Proc~eds of $24,750 have been donated to the Society. The Boys and Girls Aid Society has been providing confidential maternity care and adoption service since 1885. It is a leader in interracial and singleparent adoptions. This year's Haunted House will be located at 1902 Roosevelt Boulevard, next door to the Lane County Shops and four blocks east of last year's house. (Go north on Garfield to Roosevelt and turn right--it's the only black and orange striped house in the neighborhood!) The Haunted House will be open Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 28 and 29, from 5 to 10 p.m.; Friday Oct. 30 from 5 p.m. to midnight; and Saturday (Halloween) from 2 to 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. to midnight. Admission prices are 75y for adults and 25y for children under the age of 12. I A Loolc Around the Campuses NCC MOVE For those who didn't catch the "Well, I certainly don't want to be considered one of the fel- full page write-up in the Regislows!," she commented. "I be- ter-Guard, LCC may have an lieve in equal opportunity, and academic neighbor in the near yet I don't want a unisex. I future. After 75 years in the downlike the difference between men and women. We should do the town Eugene are a, Northwest best job of which we are ca- Christian College is contemplapable, no matter what sex, race, ting a move. The move, if deor religion we are." So far cided upon, will be to a 105-acre televison and radio broadcasting tract immediately south of the are considered a man's field. But LCC campus which was purwith the new cable systems, and chased by NCC last November. If the decision is made to move, closed circuit television, more job opportunities for women may NCC will be leaving behind a 73year history in the same locadevelop, she added. A concerned citizen, Mrs. De- tion, since all but two years of Chaine feels that many of to- the campus's existence have been day's problems stem from alack on the single block bounded by of communication. For this rea- Alder and Kincaid streets and son she regards her profession 11th and 12th avenues in Eugene. Though NCC is a small colas a service and a challenge. '' Instilling responsibility an d lege (last June the graduating t e a c h i n g the fundamentals of class of 83 students was the c o m m u n i c at i on to students largest in the school's history), will provide them with a back- it has acquired possibly the best ground of vital importance in any theological library in the Northwest which now contains some walk of life," she noted. In 1o o king toward the future 40,000 books. The college also, Mrs. DeChaine hopes to continue according to former NCC presito build the mass communications dent Ross J. Griffeth, "graduates program to meet the needs of the the largest number of ministers increasing number of students for Christian Churches in the who are interested. "As the country." Should the college's board of school grows," she commented, "we hope to be able to increase trustees decide to move next door the number of newspaper issues to us, I would like to offer one to twice a week, and eventually word--"Welcome." *** to daily. In speech, we are interested in the individual's de- FILM FANS! veloping his ability not only to The University Film Society, communicate with himself but a membership organization which with others. KLCC radio is now off e rs a variety of films not a charter member of a new otherwise available in Eugene, public broadcast network, one of began its first showing of the ninety six stations in the entire season Saturday, October 11, with United States to be included. It a potpourri of early-day films has gone from part time to full featuring, a mo n g others, such time operation and hopefully pro- greats as the Marx Brothers and vides a real service to the com- a collection of color films by munity. George Melies, taken in 1898. The facilities for television Melies' film is unique in that broadcasting provide benefits not the color was obtained by laonly for students, but for public boriously coloring each frame by service." hand. Many f o re i g n and domestic The department hopes to reinstate courses in photography films have been scheduled, dating next year, if funds are received. from early 1900 to 1969 and ofWhen not working at LCC, Mrs. fering a wide range of film enterDeChaine is involved in the ac- tainment. The films are shown tivities of her husband and two in the U of O Theater, using arc teenage daughters and of the pro j e c to rs and Cinemascope University of Oregon Theatre of equipment. Individual admissions will not which her husband is Managing Director. She also likes golf, be sold, but film society memhorseback riding and conversa- bership is not restricted to U tion. "I enjoy American po- of O students. Membership is liticis," she said, "but people are open to any interested persons. my favorite pastime." To obtain membership tickets, go to the box office at the University Theatre on the same day as any film society program, or to: University Film Sowrite Castles, and The LCC Knights P. O. Box 3197, Eugene. ciety, the campus chess club, has beEnclose money for tickets--$6 year. this for gun meetings for 16 admissions and $2.50 for The group meets between 4 and 5 admissions. 7 p.m. each Monday in ApMembership tickets are transprenticeship 218. Any student ferable, and members may use or staff members interested in admissions to bring guests. A learning or playing chess is infree brochure and any f!.! rther irvited to attend. Chess Club CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE: 1958 Corvette Good Condition, Good Tires; Reverse Rims. Like-new engine New clutch. Hardtop. $650.00 Call 688-6334 FOR SALE: Stereo console A.M. F.M. S. W. Four speed turntable good condition. $95 Call 3435020. Brown billfold in the LOST: Center Building. Keep money return I.D. Thank you. No questions asked. Thomas Kerns, 3010 Willamette St.,Eugene. Ore. Call 342-7374 FOR SALE: 1966 TRIUMPH 500, excellent condition, road and trail gear--lots of extras. Phone 3426818 • I by Bill Bauguess formation may be obtained by ruled unanimously that the Georcalling the film society secre- gia House had erred in refusing tary, Robert McCullough, in the him his seat. In January, 1967, U of O library (686-3078) or from he took the oath of office. *** the society president, William STUDENTS HELP STRUCTURE Cadburv (686-3965). *** OWN COURSE AT LIN FIELD Innovations in class structure BOND TO SPEAK AT LINFIELD Julian Bond, member of the with students playing a major Georgia Legislature and a civil part in that structure has been rights leader, will speak in Mel- going on successfully for a year rose Hall at Linfield College, in Dr. Paul Howard's Linfield McMinnville, Oregon, at 3 p.m. College Seminar in Social Problems. Tuesday, Oct. 27. His principle is letting the stuThe program is sponsored by the Cultural Affairs Committee of dent structure his own course and the Associated Students of Lin- then carry the responsibility for field and is open to the public. it. Howard believes thinking can Bond's topic will be "What's Next," as he deals with the social be stimulated in this way and that ills of society and their solution. there is less "anxiety" in a class In 1960 Bond helped found the students have structured where Student Nonviolent Coordinating they can respond and proceed in Committee (SNCC). He was first more than one way. The Seminar operates on a elected to a seat created by reapportionment in the Georgia point system, and each student House of Representatives in 1965, selects for himself what he will but was prevented from taking do to get the points required to office by members of the legis- pass the course. He may choose not to take any lature who objected to his statements about the war in Vietnam. tests, and instead complete proAfter winning a second election jects such as reviewing profesin 1966--to fill his own vacant sional journal articles or doing seat--a special House committee other library research, organiagain voted to bar him from mem- zing and participating in field trips, writing research papers, bership. Bond won a third election in or designing a project to report 1966, and the U.S. Supreme Court on research. JOB PLACEMENT TO INQUIRE ABOUT JOBS, contact the LCC Placement Office, 747-4501. PART TIME/MALES OR FEMALES: Young men or women for selling Fuller Brushes on commission basis or deliveries on percentage basis. Must have own transportation. PART TIME/FEMALE: Young lady needed for waitress in restaurant. Some experience necessary. Hours: Evenings and weekends; Pay: :i>I. 50 up PART TIME/FEMALE: Young couple would like a home to leave one child for babysitting Daily from 7:45 a.m. to2:30p.m .. Pay: $3 daily. PART TIME/FEMALE: Young lady needed for babysitting Mon. through Friday 2:30 p.m.-lOp.m. Pay: $4 daily. PART TIME/FEMALE: Young lady needed for waitress: 11 a.m to I p.m. daily. Sunday: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Pay: $1.25 per hour. PART TIME/FEMALE: Young lady needed for some daytime babysitting and an occasional evening. Pay: 70~ per hour. Pa.RT TIME/FEMALE: Young lady needed for housecleaning. P ref e r ab 1y Thursday morning from 9 a.m. - 12 noon. Pay: $1.50 per hour. PART TIME/MALES: Two young men with chauffeur's license for STAND BY FOR FIELD TRIPS. First field trip October 26 and 27. ROBERTSON'S DRUGS "Your Prescription -- • Our Main Concern" 30th and Hilyard 343-7715 ~-' 1036 \JILLAMETfE 3't3· ,t+2 8ouT•~£ fAs~IONS, fABR1cs & NonoNs WANTED: Back issues (1965 or later) of magazines for the LCC _.,.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..J 1i bra r y. House and garden, sports and hunting, technological, you name it. hnyone willing to donate, contact the library circulation desk. Used TV's $12.80 TO GIVE AWAY: Cute Kittens Phcne: 746-1749 anytime. TO GIVE AWAY: Former tom cat 2 years-old, black and white persian. Object: affection. Call 686-1393 or 343-1188 WANTED: AKC Miniature female RED Daschund puppy. CALL 3445671 anytime. FOR RENT: Room for student. Kitchen privileges. Rent to be arranged. Call 726-7542. 200 complete sets, need repair Great For Experimenta l Use In ELECTRONICS & TV Repair Discount on Volume Purchases [Q)~~ ~ ELECTRONICS --~-- ------ -----390 w. 12th - Eugene Phone 342-2488