Board warned it faces possible building fund slash
A rec en t Oregon Supreme
LCC President Eldon Schafer
Court ruling probably will cost protested that any plan to repay
Lane Community College half the veterans' fund from educathe $3.5 million it has been tion funds would be "inequitable
counting on for building pro- and unfair," but Eymann, also
jects, LCC board members have an LCC financial assistant, said
learned.
"it just seems at this point that
The loss is expected to come education money is the easiest
when the 1971 Legislature com- to get at."
plies with the court decision
Because of the Nov.18 ruling,
that directs it to repary $13.9 the 1971 Legislature will have to
million borrowed in 1967 from decide how to repay the $13.9
the Veterans' Loan Fund and million.
diverted to other state purposes.
The $3.5 million the board
'' At this point it appears that planned to receive represents
all we can expect is $1. 7 million funding commitments LCC has
for construction," State Rep. built up with past Legislatures
Richard Eymann told the board through LCC's local developat a work session Wednesday ment work.
night.
Although the board took no

action on the probable fund cut, place on the Eugene campus. pleted to the 6,500 FTE level beboard members will meet for
lt was apparent that board fore construction is considered
genera 1 discussion with the
members also face some philo- in outlying areas.
Lane County legislative delegasophical decisions.
Bo a rd member Dr. Albert
tion Dec. 3.
They clearly did not agree Brauer, Florence, opposed the
The revenue cut was only one whether LCC should have an guidelines.
of several problems laid before enrollment ceiling for the Eu"Nobody ever said there'd
the board's informal long-range gene campus. They did not a- be 6,500 here firstbeforethere'd
planning session.
gree on whether or how part- be any satellite campus," he said.
other discussion revolvedpri- time instructors, satellite r,am-• ' "No board ever said that."
marily around two issues: the . puses or use of existing commu"I don't think we ought to get
need for low-rent student hous- nity b u i 1d in g s should fit into locked into the idea of finishing
ing, desribed as especiallypres- LCC's long-range plan.
the campus hereby 1975, either,"
sing for some 675 married LCC
Board Chairman Robert Ack- said Dr. Clifford Matson, Junstudents with incomes of $2,000 erman said a decision on those ction City. ''We've begun to be
a year or less, and (somewhat matters must be reached before visible in Florence (five LCC
unexpectedly, at least for most a decision can be made on classes are being offered there
board members) the poss i b 1e specific building plans. The col- this term) and we need to capneed for major sewer system lege's Instructional Council and tu:e so~e vote~ ••• ma~~ some
expansion if more building takes its Long-Range Planning Com- fr1e~ds lil outlymg areas.
.
mittee have approved planning
With th~ total enrollment m
guidelines which have at their F!E credit pr_ograms for fall,
base a tentative enrollment of wmter and sprmg now at 4,600,
6,500 full-time equivalent stu- projections sho": LCC reaching
dents (FTE) on the Eugene cam- 6,500 FTE earlyml974-75, Marpus.
ston Morgan, director of the
Office of Institutional Research
Under those guidelines, which and Planning, reported.
Ackerman said the board probaConstruction priorities, based
bly would be asked to rule on at on those guidelines and projecits next meeting, new or ex- tions, would be worked out from
p and e d programs beyond the a $4.3 million list of projects,
6,500 FTE would be located ''off including new buildings for hu4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405
Vol. 6 No. 10
December 1, 1970 the present campus." And the m an it i es , physical education,
Eugene campus would be com- flight techn9logy and maintenance
as well as remodeling due to department relocations.
Gerald Rasmussen, associate
dean of instruction, and Louis
Case, dean of instruction, clashed
by Jon Haterius
sing (for up to a three-week ternity house, said Mrs. Mc- idea of housing some unmarried with Brauer on LCC's programs
1i mi t of occupancy) for LCC Murray, ''would excludestudents LCC students in the U of 0 outside Eugene. Brauer siad he
Student housing currently is "students of families in the Eu- from Florence, Oakridge and dorms. •Through contract with didn't "see any reason ... why
on the top of the Student Sen- gene-Springfield area" came up. other town s in Lane County." LCC, Carter says, the univer- a student from Eugene could not
ate's "most important" list.
The Student Senate recom- Mrs. McMurray said "I haven't sity could offer LCC students a go to Florence to take a course How really great is the need mended the money not be paid run across one student that really ''tenant - landlord relationship oceanography, for instance."
for housing, and what is being until some questions and points wants a three-week roof over his with rooms only on a monthly baRamussen said that classes in
done to find homes for students? could be clarified. The discus- head. The fraternity house is just sis." Involving no financial ob- Florence included three with fewASB Treasurer Cherrie Mc- sion of helping finance a con- a stop over place - what LCC ligations on the LCC administra- er than 12 students, one with
Murray, working on the student verted fraternity house located needs is housing, period!" She tor's part, the agreement with 12 and one with 15, making only
housing committee along with six at 751 East 11th near the U of · feels that houses in the area the U of O "would not help two of them up to the Eugene
other ASB me·mb-~rs, reports that 0 included:there is no guarantee are too expensive -- that pay- those students with incomes of campus' standard for keeping
at the last Student Senate m12at- that LCC students would be bene- ing $110 to $120 a month for a under $2,000 <f1rectly, but it's a the classes in ope ration. Adding
ing emr:rgency housing was be- fitted by the housing; priority one room place is more than start and it might free some
in Junction C it y and Cottage
ing ·considered. D:.iring the Nov. would be given to students of the most students can afford because housing downtown," says Di- Grove, Case and Rasmussen's
19 Student Senate meeting the Eugene-Springfield area; people of lack of jobs and the slow e- rector of Institutional Research figures indicated approximately
possibility of a contribution of would be served on a first-come, conomy in Lane County. In ad- Marston Morgan.
60 persons are being served in
$300 to Eugene EmE!rgency Hou- first-served basis. The old fra- dition the old fraternity house,
The Student Senate is working the three communities.
with 12-15 rooms for''families," on temporary housing for those
Narrowing the discussion to
would discriminate against LCC students in need of such short- student housing needs, Jack Carstudents. Some 65% of the stu- term housing, and the LCC Board ter, dean of students, reported
dents at Lane are single.
is looking into the future for that University of Oregon housing
I
ASB Housing Committewoman permanent low-cost housing. A- officials had been receptive to the
sponsored (by state or federal McMurray says"We c~not see mong topics at the last Board idea of housing some unmarried
by Dan Fowler
agencies such as Vocational Re- ~hat !he e!llergency h?usmg pro- meeting was the need for low rent LCC students in U of O dorms.
Through a contract with LCC,
Fall Term is almost over for habilitation or welfare. but NOT Ject is gomg to benefit LCC stu- student housing described as esLCC students, and Winter Term INCLUDING G.L Bill recipients.)! dents that m~ch. We wan! MORE pecially pressing for some 675 Carter said, the university could
The option of deferring pay- houses for ane and give stu- married LCC students with in- offer to LCC students a "tenmay require financial readjustment for some students who have ment of tuition would continue to dents some per"!anent place. to comes of $2,000 a year or less. ant-landlord relationship with
The LCC Student Awareness room only on a monthly basis."
been taking advantage of Lane's be extended to in-district stu- set do":n so they re not gypsies
policy allowing deferment of tui- dents and the current practice of wandermg arou nd the country- Center, started this term, is your U of O students now contract
not permitting more than one side.,, It has been observed that closest contact for finding hous- for dorm rooms only with board
tion payments.
term's
deferment to accumulate som~ students hav~ been_ forced ing whether you're single or mar- and only on a yearly contract
According to Jack Carter, LCC
ried. Also, students might look basis.·
would
remain
in force. other to llve and sle~p m their cars
Dean of Students, Lane has one of
at the bulletin boards in the
Involving no financial obligafor
tuition
deferment
forT~ack
i~:o~mg.
E
alternatives
the most flexible deferred tuition
.;~~ne f mergt~t Center building for apartment or . tion on the LCC administration's
programs in the state. Payment will be considered, but at pre- H ?ug
house vacancies. Hound an apart- part, the agreement with U of O
ousmg con ri u ion ro m .
of tuition in full or in part can be sent other possibilities investi. gated are either too expensive to was vetoed, at lea~t temporarily,
ment before school started this "would not help those students
delayed until later in the term,
the reasons given, there are
year by consulting the bulletin. with incomes of under $2,000
or
work
too
much
of
for
administer
rat he r than the entire amount
a hardship on the tight budgets other temporary shelters for stu- boards at school and found an directly, but it's a start and it
being required at registration.
• ne ed of the dents.. at Lane. Among them, acapartment within bicycle distance might free some housing downt s mos t m
0
The deferred amount must be paid df f st uden
cordmg to Mrs. McMurray, are:
d
t 1
town," Morgan said.
(continued on page 3)
before entering ·school the next
e erre p~ymen P an.
Eugene Mission Transient Lodterm, however, or entrance will
No sp~c1al fees, ~uch as those ge, 1542 West 1st (344-0733);
not be permitted.
for physical ~ducahon or student Lane County Welfare (342-1311),
The deferred tuition policy has body f~es, w_ill be deferred ex- which can put a family in a
with written approval of the m tel •f the
alif f
·
created some problems, how- cept
oF'
• A'd
th
o
1
Y qu
or ass1sirector of mancia1 1 s or e tance; The Salvation Army, 640
ever. For the year 1967 through
7th Ave. West (343-3341), which
Summer Term of 1969, a total of Dean of St_udents. .
Som:! hme-savmg_ steps have will put a person up for 24 hours;
Garner Ted Armstrong, inter- national and international events
$14,383.67 for tuition and fees in
been
recomme~ded
m
regard
to
y
MC
A
P
tt
(
_
nationally
known radio and telethe Adult Education and credit
2055
344 _ vision commentator, will speak and offers his solutions to presLa a ~rson R
sing world problems. His radio
programs was uncollected. With students who -withdraw. The new 6251 )· '
procedure suggested is to drop
' and
n e uman e
on ''Religion and Ecology" at audience is estimated at 50 milamounts of $1,192.91 for books, automatically all non-attending sources, 42 WeS t 6th Ave.( 342 - LCC Tuesday, Dec. 1.
lion, according to a spokesman
$185.70 for auto repair, and $349
5567
).
The presentation, scheduled at Ambassador College in Pasain emergency loans, the total un- students at the end of the fifth
week of the term. This would
Though LCC is not now con- for 8 p.m. in the gymnasium, is dena, of which Armstrong is
collected amount is $16,lll.28.
enable correct billing of students. tributing to or supporting the Eu- · open to the public and admission
Vice president.
Several recommendations will
The recommendation also ad- gene Emergency Housing pro- is free. .Armstrong's talk was
Armstrong's show is also aired
be presented to the LCC Board of vises that LCC turn over past ject for its students - Lane may originally scheduled for Forum on 50 television stations in the
Education at its Dec. 9 meeting accounts to a collection agency, in the future if there are ENOUGH 301, but was moved to the gym U.S. and Canada and a number
in an attempt to solve the problem which the Board has in the past students looking for a maxi- Monday because of an expected of other foreign stations.
of uncollected monies.
been reluctant to do. The agency mum of three-weeks' stay in the .crowd larger than was originally
In addition to his work in
anticipated.
The recommendation has the would collect for all books and facility•
radio-TV, Armstrong is execuBut again, Mrs. Mc Murray
Armstrong, who graduated tive editor of "Plain Truth"
feeling of a general crackdown. supplies ch a r g e d, emergency
The option of t u it ion defer- loans not repaid or for which says, permanent housing is what from Eugene High School in the magazine.
ments to out-of-district students plans for repayment have not the students need- not temporary 40's hosts the religious program
Armstrong's father, Herbert,
"The World Tomorrow" which is started "The World Tomorrow''
will be highly selective, and de- been made, and tuition when it housing•
Dean of Students, Jack Carter broadcast on 300 U.S. radio sta- radio program in the Willamette
ferments would not be extended can be verified (by grades reto out-of-state or foreign stu- ceived) that the student was in reports that U of O housing of- tions, including KUGN in Eugene Valley in 1934 and founded Amdents unless they are agency attendance past the fifth week. ficials had been receptive to the (7 p.m. daily). He comments on bassador College in 1947.

Lane Community College

Student housing studied by Senate

Board to reconsider
d e f erre d tu I•,•on p O ,·,•c y

Garner Ted Armstrong to talk
on "R'eligion and Ecology"

Page 2

EditMiat~~

gor•
GORT! GOR.T!
I'VE LOST A

Registration: a positive first step
Last week the TORCH ran an article explaining new procedures to be initiated during
Winter Term registration.
Several complaints have already been lodged
against the proposed new system. The changes
suggested, however, seem impractical.
A petition is being circulated on campus
asking that a quota system be established '' so
that all students have a fair chance to get the
classes they want for Winter Term." This idea
may be fine for a university with classes of
150 or more but not for LCC with its small
personal class levels. There are just not enough
class cards to be separated among 12 alphabetical schedulings.
Any quota system would require more manpower and more money and that is something
the Registrar's Office just doesn't have at this
time.
This is not to say that a quota system could
never be used. It could be used during Fall
Term registration. However, that would seem to
be the only feasible time for its use since
during Winter and Spring Terms many classes
are arranged for by pre-registering and it
would seem to be the only practical time to
initiate the quota system.
This registration procedure was established
so students could be handled in an orderly fashion. Not like the fiasco that occurred during
registration for Fall Term when 2700 .students
tried to register the first day. Does anybody
really want to go through that again? I don't
thinl_c so. Those of us who were there remember

I

RIBH

it now and can laugh about it-but believe me,
we weren't laughing then.
One part of the registration procedure that
should be re-evaluated however, is the alphabetical order in which future registrations will
be handled.
For instance, Spring Term registration would
start with the last group first, and so on until
you reach "A" again. If it is to be a truly
fair system of registration, why not choose the
order of registration like the draft lottery. The
order would be decided by the luck of the draw.
Registration would be in no specific alphabetical
order and it would be a fair and still equitable
system.
It cannot be stressed enough that in order
for this new registration procedure to work,
it is up to you. Approximately three students
will be registered each minute according to the
timetable. In order for that to be accomplished,
the students must have their schedules completely
filled out before they register. If they don't,
registration is going to be slower and all of the
students who were to register during their
specific time will be unable to do so.
Whatever your feelings might be about the
new registration procedures, you have to admit
they're better than what we've been faced with
before. The system, no doubt, could use some
improvements; but changes should come afte.r
it has been tried once. This is the only way
the ~gistrar's Office-and the students-tiave
to measure the success of the new policy.

I

A loolc around the campuses
by Bill Bauguess

Isn't it the truth?

The following appeared in the
DAKOTA SCIENTIST, the student newspaper of the North Dakota State School of Science.
The anti-pollution meeting was
held in the park.
The cause was worthy.
And the crowd was huge.
Many carried signs and banners demanding an end to rivers
and streams filled with muck
and city streets coated with layers of debris.
After a number of speeches,
several resolutions were discussed and passed.
Henceforth, every citizen
would understand the many· dan-

gers of pollution.
At last, the meeting ended on
a note of optimism, and the citizens left the park for home.
Also left were 37 anti-pollution signs, several hundred lunch
sacks and other paper wrappings,
and over a thousand bottles and
cans.
Store on Sk·inners Butte?

Doris Norman, whose official
title is publications secretarybusiness manager of the TORCH,
is one of those people you couldn't
do without. Mrs. Norman, with
her proper British accent, is the
mother hen of the TORCH staff.
If you want to know something,
ask her, she can probably tell

Student's Forum

'Th·e meaning of the means'
by Mark Parrish
Recently, the nation was informed, via a national news program, that the Nixon administration's purpose in allowing the
Vice President to attack New
York Senator Charles Goodell
was not what it seemed.
On the surface, the Vice President was attempting, by his
rhetoric, to prevent Goodell's reelection. But the polls showed
all during the campaign that
Goodell was running a consistent
third. The real Senatorial .ra-ce
in New York was between Democratic candidate Richard ottenger and Conservative Party candidate James Buckley.
Why,

Senate Agenda
December 3, 1970
2:30 p.m. - Administration 202
Call to Order
Roll Call
Approval of Minutes
Treasurer's Report
Committee Reports
Housing - McMurray
Student Insurance - Purvis
Conventions - Coverdell
Old Business
Pictures - Henning
~PIRG - Rosen
New Business
Students for Survival Veteran's Club International Club Pakistan Relief Fund Other
Adjournment - 4:30 'P-.m~

then, did Mr. Agnew address him self so vigorously to the task of
attacking Mr. Goodell?
After election day, the administration's strategy was revealed, according to .ABC newsman Frank Reynolds, as follows:
Mr. Agnew was sent out to
attack Goodell for the purpose of
drawing sympathy votes away
from Richa1J Ottenger.
The
effect of this policy was to split
the liberal vote between ottenger
and Goodell, and Buckley, the
conservative favored by the administration, would win with a
plurality.
Some Republicans may justify
this by saying that Buckley was
the best of the three and should
be in the Senate for the good of
the nation.
We should not take issue with
that. What we should be concerned with, however, is the
manner in which this goal was
accomplished.
When we revere the Constitution, we are not by that action
paying homage to Democrats or
Republicans. We are displaying
our respect for the system ...•
the means by which American
democracy operates.
We may agree or disagree
about the relative value of having
James Buckley in the Senate, but
the means by which he was elected
are undebateably w r on g. The
members of the Nixon administration who assisted in this successful scheme showed themselves to be a good deal more
Fepublican than Republicatis. ,• •
..

..... .

flo'lsense, Adam!

... And
I had

Just settle
down ...
calm

laceration ... no

just
yesterday.

Jove ...

you'Ye
right!

yourself'!

'Tis passing
strange! No

it

By

FEEL!!

stitches ... no

scar...

Why
would

I don't know...

rib~!

come or this!

anyone
want my

but one thing's
~Ot' sure:

no good can

Campus Meetings
CAMPUS CRUSADE
Campus Crusade for Christ
members will m.eet Thursday,
Dec. 3, at 12:00 noon in Center
419.

***

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

The LCC Christian Science

organization will meet Tuesday,

Dec. I, al 3:00p,m.inForum305.

***

at 4:00 p.m. in Apprenticeship
218.

***

FORESTRY CLUB
The LCC Forestry Club will
meet Wednesday, Dec. 2, at 7 a.m.
in the Industrial Technology Bldg.
Featured at the meeting will
be a lecture on Australian explorer Francis Birtler on outwitting the Himalayan tiger.

CIRCLE K
***
you; if you don't want to know,
The LCC Circle K chapter will INSTRUCTIONAL COUNCIL
she'll probably tell you anyway.
meet at 12:00 noon Wednesday,
The Instructional Council will
A few days ago, while scanning
Dec.
2,
in
Administration
103.
meet
Thursday, Dec. 3. in the
the pages of the EMERALD, Mrs.
Board Room (Admin. 202) at
Norman noticed an ad which
***
9:00 a.m.
looked like a prospective ad custCLASSIFIED STAFF
omer for the TORCH. Ever on
***
Classified staff will meet at
the alert for such things, Mrs.
LITERARY
ART
MAGAZINE
4:00 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 1, in
Norman promptly began a series
Students and staff interested in
Forum 309 to hear a report on
of fruitless attempts to locate
the 1971-72 salary-benefits pro- working on "The ConcreteStatethe store who had placed the ad. posal.
ment," LCC's new literary-art
After finding out 'the address
magazine, are invited to meet
***
listed in the ad (77 Willamette)
Tuesday, Dec. I, at 1:30 p.m. in
was nonexistent, Mrs. Norman CURRICULUM COMMITTEE
the lounge near Black Studies on
The
Curriculum
Committee
called the office of the EMERALD
the fourth floor of Center Bldg.
and told the girl who answered will meet Tuesday, Dec. 1, at
***
4:00
p.m.
in
the
Board
Room
(Adthe phone that she had been trying
STUDENT SENA TE
to locate the store in question, ministration 202).
The ASB Student Senate will
but couldn't find the address. The
meet Thursday, Dec. 3, at 2:30
***
girl on the other end offered her
CHESS CLUB
p.m. in the Board Room (Adsympathy, but not the location
The Knights and Castles chess ministration 202). The meeting
of the store. Quite put out by the
club meets regularly on Mondays is open to all LCC students.
run around, Mrs.Normandecided
• to drop the whole idea. The next
day the EMERALD dropped the
ad (maybe they didn't know where
it was either).
"What is freedom?"
A careful check on a map of
the city of Eugene places the by Bill Nash
guarantee a foreigner a better
address given for the store someIn fairness to America, we way of life than his own parents
where on the north slope of must tell the truth about freehave in America.
Skinners Butte. If any of you dom. White and Black youth are
America requires a Black man
happen to be wandering about the drafted into the armed services from Mississippi to go to Vietnorth side of Skinners Butte one to be the defenders of truth and nam and c has e a Viet Cong
of these cold winter days, and freedom in Vietnam. But the truth throught the bushes trying to kill
happen to run across a store about freedom must be told in him. Yet it is a crime in Amtrup there, call the EMERALD--- this country before it can be ica for that same Black man to
they may still be looking for the represented on foreign shores. chase a M i s s is sip pi Ku Klux
place to collect for the ad.
How can I be asked to go to Klaner through swamps of MissVietnam to fight for the "instant issippi trying to kill him. It is
freedom'' of the Vietnamese when a crime not to go to Vietnam
Red Cross offers
my own black people at home and kill the Viet Cong and also
'Voices from Home'
must get their freedom on the a crime to kill the racist in
installment plan? It does not America who will wipe out your
Would you like to send a free make sense to require a black whole family. That is the insane
taped message to your service
youth to sacrifice his life to truth about freedom.
man or woman overseas?
The Lane County Chapter of
American Red Cross is again
offering the "Voices from Home"
program for families having milEditor. . . . . . . . ............••••••Gary Grace
itary ANYPLACE overseas.
Assistant Editor. . . . . . •....•.••• Hewitt Lipscomb
Ten-minute taped Christmas
Feature Editor. . . . . . . . ........Karen Von Effling
messages may be recorded, free
Sports Editors ........... : •.... Bob Barley, Dave Harding
of charge, at the Red Cross
Ad Manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lorena Warner
building, 150 E. -19th Avenue,
Head Photographer. . . . . . . . ..... Hewitt Lipscomb
Eugene, on Thursday, Friday and
Secretary-Business Manager. . . . .
. • .Doris Norman
Saturday, Dec. 3, 4 and 5.
There will be morning, afterMember of National Educational Advertising Service
noon and evening hours for reTHE TORCH is published weekly on Tuesdays, except
cording.
holidays, examination weeks and vacation periods. ·
Those interested should call
Signed articles are the views of the author and not
the Chapter office, 344-5244 for
necessarily those of The Torch.
an appointment.
Anyone living in Cottage Grove
M::;,il or bring all correspondence or news to: THE TORCH
area may contact Mrs. Lois Riggs
206 Center Building, Lane Community College, 4000 E. 30th
at 942-3054. Those living in
Avenue, Eugene, Oregon. 97405. Telephone 747-4501, ext.234.
Florence may contact Mrs. Celia
•:Nqr_dahf •a{ 9917.:39i-0:' :, •

The Black Side

The Torch Staff

C

·,

••

',

LCC students solicit
Pakistan relief funds

Five Pakistani students at LCC
have spearheaded a drive for relief funds to aid in the international rehabilitation effort for
survivors of the cyclone and tidal
waves that inundated a large area
of East Pakistan Nov. 13.
More than 300,000 are feared
dead in the wake of what is probably the worst disaster of the
century for East Pakistan. The

country has been hit by 9 deadly
cyclones in the past 10 years.
A collection table has been set
up in the foyer of the second floor
of the Center Building and is
being manned by volunteers. The
LCC Students for Survival group
has offered support for the drive,
according to executive board
member Joe Armas, and it is
hoped that support will be received from the Student Senate.

Student housing
(continued from page 1)
of LCC.
The housing picture, then, is
not dismal for students with no
roof over their heads - the ma.in
thing is that things ARE being
done. The Studert Senate is acutely aware of the housing shortage and is trying to find temporary (as well as permanent)
lo w cost housing for single and
m a r r i e d students. The LCC
Board is trying to find homtis or
apartments near school for students, as well as trying to find
ways and means of building apartments exclusively for students ver near the campus (hopefully in the near fugure).
To those students paying exorbitant rent, or for those less
fortunate that may have money but
cannot find a home -things are
bei ng done. Sometimes we cannot see what is being done for
us as stud,ants, but the Student
Senate and LCC Board are work-

about the country to investigate
campus structures and collect
LCC is moving toward solving
ideas to make the new building
a predicted future problem--the
more sound and improve the
problem of space for its future • atmosphere of studies and therestudents.
fore better suit the needs of stuThe final stages of construcdents. LCC Superintendent of
tion are underway on a building College Facilities Bill Cox, with
which will house the Art Dept.,
an excitement which couldn't be
Math Dept., and various other concealed, went on to explain his
classrooms. If you have taken pride in the plans as he drew out
or will take a walk around the the blueprints and illustrated how
rear of the campus, you, too, the classrooms, especially those
can be aware of the progress of of the Art Department, will outLCC. The predicted completion shine any that he or his colleadate of the project is august, gues have seen up to this date.
1971, at a cost of $2,218,000 proSpace doesn't permit full devided to the school by a state tails of the building's structures,
funding appropriation.
but one floor of the classroom• Bruce Wild of the Fine Arts lab building will be used for the
Departm8nt was sent by L CC various arts, and the balance of
the building will be 26 classrooms
for math and other subjects. The
classrooms for math will have,
through the suggestion of the math
instructors, a seven-foot wall
which will have a largeblack.Library materials
board and the balance will be a
42-degree angle screen for the
are due
purpose of teacher's aids. The
other building in the duel proprior to
ject will consist of a machine
shop and classrooms. Each
finals week
building will have at least 40,000
square feet of room.
Wow--look out 197lrn • • • • • • •

Remind~r:

Droppin•g deferment provides draft loophole
The Selective Service System already reached by their local
has announced a man in this boards.
year's draft pool may drop his
The Selective Service System
deferment anytime up to midnight
said it would affect only ''reDec. 31 and be considered 1-A
latively small numbers of refor all of 1970.
gistrants."
He just has to make sure his
Men with numbers not called
application to his draft board is
postmarked before that deadline. during 1970---boards throughout
the nation have been limited to
Thus, a deferred man holding
numbers no higher than 195 so
a high number from the draft
°far----w i 11, as previously planlottery of last December can
ned, move into a lower priority
wait until he is sure his number
in 1971.
is really safe-even after his
draft board has held its last
Nixon's Sept. 30 order will
meeting of the year - and then affect any man who loses a deplace himself in the 1970 draft ferment or exemption and bepool.
comes 1-A during 1970, after
his
local board has called lotThat brief exposure would officially serve as his year of tery numbers as high as the
"prime" exposure to the draft one he holds. This means these
and in his new 1-A. status he
would slip into a less vulnerable
category on Jan. 1, 1971.
The process would have that
effect provided the application is
submitted on time, even if the
man's local draft boad does not
form a 11 y reclassify him until
sometime in 1971.
Today's announcement, however, does not apply to young
men who drew numbers in the
second lottery-the one held last
July. Their year of ''prime"
exposure to the draft will be
1971 if they are I-A not 1970 ..
And it is still unknown how high
up the lottery scale tne 1971
draft will reach.

Draft Director C1..LI'tis W. Tarr
ing quietly on finding low cost announced in October that men
homes or apartments for stu- holding certain deferments - specifically student, occupational,
dents.
What is hampering student agriculture, fatherhood, and
housing is a depressed national hardship-could drop them voleconomy and depressed building. untarily even though the condiThis in turn depresses our lo- tions justifying deferment concal lumber and plywood indus- • tinued to exist.
try and hence-- our local eBut that order left unclear
conomy.
just how long a man could wait
There are indications that our to drop his defernment and still
national economy may start up- be in time for draft exposure in
wards again--with more demand 1970. It was not clear whether
for more building (as the baks his application would be effecare now lowering their interest tive if it missed the last local
rates). As our economy swings board monthly meeting.
upwards so should home and aToday's order set a uniform
partment construction in Lane
deadling, regardless of Io ca 1
County.
So in view of the depressed e- board meeting dates.
conomy, and lack of housing LCC
On Wednesday, Sept. 30, Presstudents and administrators ARE
ident Nixon ordered a threeworking on the problem of housmonth extension of the draft liaing for students. It is better to
bility of men who enter the 1970
light a candle than to curse the
draft pool with lottery numbers
darkness.

Dual building project to add
80,000 sq. ft. for classrooms

by Ray Stubbs

Page 3

men will be given top priority
for draft calls during the first
three months of 1971.

If any remain undrafted by that
time, they will join their 1970
colleagues in the second-priority
pool leaving first priority to the
new ''prime" group which was
assigned lottery numbers last
July 1.

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December 2

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Dr. R. J. Stamp

KLCC-FM 90.3

Page 4

Womens' Lib - a philosophy, not an organization
by Judy Perkins
"I don't like it."
''If you called the police, how
would you like to have a policewoqian arrive on the scene?"
"Some of the women's Lib ideas I can agree with, but if
women want true equality they
should be able to do heavy construction work, even logging, and
of course be paid the same wages as a man."
''Women should be drafted if
they want to be really equal."
"You can't print what I'd like
to say about Women's Lib."

These are a few reactions from
males here at Lane, when asked
for their opinion of Women's Lib.
I believe most men think of only
the radical womPn involved in
this movement w hen thinking
about Women's Lib. If so, they
are not receiving the whole picture.
Women's Lib at Lane is defined not as an organization, but
as a philosophy. It is not as yet
an official organization at LCC,
but a discussion group with no
formal name. Women meet every
Monday at noon in Center 222
to discuss the woman's role as
they see it and things they are
happy or unhappy about. "It enables women to look at the kinds·
of choices in which to live their
lives," says Janice Brandstrom,
LCC counselor and formulator of

the group after two or three
womtm came to ll~r and stated
a need for discussion.
"If this group had to be given
a-name," said Mrs. Brandstrom,
"it would be som~thing like' Women's Liberation and Men's
Freedom.' The things men are
expected to do, the things we
(society) require of men are horrible. Society puts the load on the
male as provider, the stronger of
the two sexes. The man needs
his freedom also, to let down
the pressures he has to contend
with."
This group is concerned with
women', equality in em;iloyment and the professions, and
in marriage - the position of
the housewife who f e e 1s she
could and would like to be doing
other things besides housework.
"Women can blame themselves
for taking second place," said
Mrs. Brandstrom 1 because ofthe
built-in subtitleties established
in our minds by the male, by
society - built into our culture.
Men are the bosses. We accept
it. These built-in stops prevent
us from thinking of accomplishment. We never seem to quite
gain that confidence. We just
seem to shrug it off with the excuse that we are the so cal led
weaker sex, " Mrs. Brandstrom.
also sees in the future a change
in this culture and a .change in
the family structure. "In Swe-

den," she notes,"men and women get off work early to spend
time with their children. This is
an experimt~nt being conducted by
their government. Both male and
female are on an equal basis.
Toe women are capable of holding jobs." In fact, she feels
that it is only fair that women
carry a share of the load. "The
draft is not fair," she com mt1nted, ''women can do their
part and should be drafted. Many
women want equality but don't
want to carry through with the
obligations which come with ito''

Every bit a iady, Jan Brandstrom says "the Womtms' Lib
radicals almost make me laugh,
with their ban on the bra, and
their not wanting anything to do
with men. But these radicals are
calling attention to the problem
of Wom'C'n's Liberation on a national scale. The movement is
really on its way; there will
be legislatioµ passed. Eleanor
Myers is in the Oregon Legislature and is already dealing
with discrimination against women in employment."
"1 am • very bitter, I guess
more that most - almost as militant in my thinking as some
women - because many doors
have been closed to me," Mrs.
Brandstrom stated. She has a
degree in chemistry and was
trained as an industrial chemist.
Women going into this field face

LCC Indian student seeks support
for Native American programs
by C. A. Traglio
David Redfox, a student at
LCC, recently attended the annual
s e s s ion of the Congress of
American Indians in Anchorage,
Alaska.
Approximate 1y 3,000 delegates, representing nearly 200
tribes, assembled Sunday, Oct.
18, for the week-long convention.
Established in 1945 in Browning, Montana, the Congress of
American Indians serves as a
main voice of all tribes in the
United States and also acts as a
lobby in the nation's capital.
Representation is set on a scale
that in some ways parallels the
Republican and Democratic national conventions.
Redfox, a Sioux, said his purpose in attending the convention
was to gain supportfor an American Indian educational program
at LCC and to look into the prospect of LCC purchasing the John
Eastman Indian Artifacts display
which is currently displayed in
the LCC library.
Redfox cited three programs
he would like to see implemented
at Lane, where approximately 50
Native American students are
presently enrolled.
The first need, he said, is for
"a productive program placing
the American Indian in the university system fully qualified to

assum? studies for a degree."
Redfox also asserted that this
educational program, if initiated,
should strive to recruit Indians
from reservations and/or other
schools.
Second, a financial assistance
program could be instituted and
financed through LCC and the
federal government so that it
"could help to provide a resource
for Indians who want to get off
the reservation and help themselves."
In accordance with the two
previously-mentioned programs,
Redfox also expressed the need
for a counseling program at LCC
designed to prepare and assist
Indians from reservations in
adapting to life and their educational goals away from the reservation.
Some of the problems facing the
American Indian in contemporary
society, as Redfox sees them, are
a lack of organization and comm u n i c a t i on between v a r i o u s
tribes, discrimination from white
society, the lack of financial assistance in the field of education,
and the high amount of'' red tape"
that besets Indians on reservations in respect to the federal
government.
As one partial solution to the
problems that plague the AmHican Indian today, Redfox suggested that the Bureau of Indian
Affairs be phased out and that

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The black woman is more discriminated against. Toe black
woman has advanced in every woman's field, but it is still true
that they are in predominantly
household and related services
with small income. Black wo-

decisions regarding the welfare
of Indians be taken over by the
Indians themselves along with the
federal government.
The Nixon a d m i n i s t r a t i o n,
Redfox pointed out, has taken and
currently is taking the initiative
to recognize and try to solve or
help solve some of the problems
facing the Amtirican Indian today.
When asked what the students
of LCC could do to help fellow
students of Native AmE-rican origin, Redfox replied "try to be
helpful."

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KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP
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KLCC PLAYLIST
1. One Less Bell to Answer. . . . . . . . . . . . .Fifth DimE>nsion
2. Stoney End. • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Barbra Streisand
3. You Don't Have to Say You Love Me . . . . . .Elvis Presley
4. It's Impossible . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Perry Como
5. Make It Easy on Yourself. • . . . . . . . . . .Dionne Warwick
6. He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother. . . . . . . .Neil Diamond
7. My Sweet Lord . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .George Harrison**
8. Jerusalem. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Herb Alpert & TJB
9. We've Only Just Begun. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Carpenters
10. Fire and Rain. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .James Taylor
11. Where Did AU Toe Good Times Go .... Dennis Yost/Classics IV
12. It Don't Matter To Me. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bread
13. I Just Don't Know What To Do . . . . . . . . . . .Gary Puckett
14. Heed the Call •.......•...... Kenny Rodgers/First Edition
15. Toe Good Times Are Coming. . . . .......• Cass Elliot
16. Home Loving Man. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Andy Williams
17. Sunset Strip. • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ray Stevens
18. And The Grass Won't Pay No Mind. . ...•. Mark Lindsay
19. Chelsea Morning. . . . . . . . . . .Sergio Mi,mdez/Brazil '66
20. Sing High, Sing Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Anne Murray**

§;

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men feel resentful that white
women are raising issues of o;>pression because most black women don't see the white woman
in any kind of oppressed position.
I attended one of these noon
mt1etings at LCC. Some interesting thoughts were brought up,
including the advertising mt1dia
and the way they depict a woman
as stupid - they downgrade women, esp e c i a 11 y housewives.
''She may not buy it today but
we'll make her buy it next week,,,
was the view expressed. The exploitation of women-nuditysexism in movies, magazines,
etc., was also mentioned. "It's
"I would never convince any only fair that we should be able
woman to overthrow the system," to see the man's whole body,"
she said. "They don't realize one person commented. ''In a
that these professions can give movie, the woman's is always in
them an important position in full view, the man is usually
society; they can't throw away covered. Hugh Hefner and his
the outdated beliefs they hold as philosophy that the womans body
to what a woman should do and is most important as a sex symbol was also a popular to;>ic.
be."
The discussion at LCC's "WoThe Women's Lib movement
men's Lib" meetings becomes
was started in about 1966. It
quite involved. No men allowed in
began in the South and grew out
the discussions - as yet anyway!
of the Students No".1 Violent Coordinating Committee (students
helping with the Civil Rights
movement). It also grew out of
tyou ca re enough
the protests of the Vietnam war.
to , wantSome women demanded that the
Students for a Democratic Sothe very best
ciety (SDS) give the woman a
Old fashion delicatessen
plank in their program.

much prejudice, however. She
never really acquired a true
identity as a chemist, was discouraged at every turn and shrugged it off with excuses, believing
that she may really not be one
of the better chemists. She took
other jobs, as a secretary, and
later as a math teacher and
counselor on the high school
levels. Now she is an LCC counselor representing the science
department. Loo king back, she
realizes she gave up too easily
and it was due to the built in
feelings put there by her culture and society.

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KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC TOP 20 KLCC: TOP
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I

'The most relev·a nt class on ca,mpus'
by Doris Ewing.

seven. Even the class as a whole
is not the same from week to
week. But the insturctors like to
say ''this is the class with no
textbooks, no assignments, no attendance records, no tests -- just
people."
THE JONES GROUP
I spend the first half hour here
seated on the floor. Jones belly
flops and asks, "What does life
style have to do with me?"
No one ventures an asnwer.
Then the girl who defined life
style begins. "I go by first appearance."
Stie is refuted by another who
says, "I've learned not to. You
can't tell what a person is like
by the way he dresses."
"I'm like my mother because
that's the way she wanted us to
be. and that's the way we are,"
answers Number One.
Jones breaks in, talks about
himself, the influence of his
childhood as a sharecropper's
son.
This group i s slow to get
s tarted talking, but then the
evening has just started. Still,
this is the fourth or fifth session of class. Barriers should
have loosened a bit by now. Maybe conversation is a hangup with
this group, but acceptance of a
stranger, me, is not. I feel comfortable here, enough to want to
join in.
The conversation turns to rejection and acceptance of values.
When is the choice made NOT
to choose the life style one has
aimed for for a long time? Once
you were poor and wanted what
money could buy. Now you can
afford them, but don't want them?
When did you decide?
Another dilemma: Which is
more crucial in life style
development--heredity or environment? society or th e individual?
THE KLOBAS GROUP

Page 5

overlap of parental life styles.
Class participant Pat Re e s
And what is the difference be- says, "I've learned communicaTHIS is the class that has been
tween rejection and non-accep- tion from the class. I do more
c a 11 e d "the most relevant on
tance?
talking now, and I've turnedfrom
campus''?
"But even with rejectionofpa- myself to others."
Rap session, yes, with students
rental life style and developDon Jones echoes this and says
and instructors sprawled on the
ment of my own, how much of he used to pay no attention to how
floor or seated in chairs or on
my parents is still with me?" he affected other people. "My
tables, in a ''somewhat" attempt
Mrs. Stadius questions.
egotism was hurting others," he
at a circle. Casual dress, casual
Conclusion: One doesn;t reject says. "Now I look at myself.
talk, casual atmosphere. Friend~verything, for each one fights There is communication and rely people. Acceptance.
to protect his values and his own spect for other people's opinions.
''Identity in Modern Society,"
life style.
It has helped me identify with
now in its second year, as an
Next a hint for pre-marriage others and to see my weakAdult Education class at LCC,
THE STADIUS GROUP
education. Know each other's nesses."
meets Tuesday evenings, and is
lifestyle, and understand it, beeavesand
chair
a
out
Because he felt he ''could alpull
I
directed, led or mothered by
drop on the smallest of the three fore you marry. If your expecta- ready communicate" John Hewitt
Sociology Prof. John Klobas, and
groups, also the most vocal. May- tions are different from those of enrolled in the class basically
c o u n s e 1o rs Betty Ekstrom,
it's because they've h a d a n your prospective partner, iron "to help others. That's been the
be
Director of Student Activities,
main goal. I'd like to see all
to warm up, or because out the difficulties.
hour
Marilyn Stadius, Jay Jones, and
What is the purpose of getting use communication to the best
closer together around
sit
they
Jonathan West.
a table, or maybe they know married? Anyone who questions of their ability."
The purpose, as they see it,
this is questioning the lifestyle
Pat Rees sums it up. "The
other better. At any rate,
each
is to discuss overall identity and
of the majority--respectability, class has helped me to find mytheir
punctuates
laughter
their
alienation as related to rapid
security, the norm.
talk.
self in society. I think it should
technology, social and geographic
be required for everyone."
The word is acceptance. How
mobility, and get people acTime runs out. Already? The
age makes for difference in accustomed to changes, with emgroups melt back together into
cepting or being accepted. What
phasis on moving on.
might be called feedback from an the larger circle. A quick report
In one word, they say, the
from a spokesman from each
older person is often construed
big thing is to learn to "cope"
group, suggestions for a get•
somefrom
aleckness
smart
as
--get communication skills and
together at a local tavern and the
one younger.
understanding in all areas of
groups slowly breaks up into inabound.
questions
and
as
Ide
living.
How do I feel about myself? dividuals. They'll see each ather
The instructors, all of them,
during the week, bonds will be
Do I _ feel about my parents
emphasize the class is not a
strengthened, defenses will come
him"
changing
as
thing
such
"No
sensitivity group. Rather there
down, communication will inor about others "Always everyis a group focus with importance
crease.
wrong"?
is
else
one
placed on interpersonal relationIs this relevant? If two or
An older woman (over thirty)
ships.
talks about her chilaren. three dozen people can learn to
Class begins, sort of, around
''They're good kids but I hope get along alittle better in a kaBy
seven o'clock, or seven fifteen,
they don't express themselves in leidoscopic society? The class,
GEORGE
or .... After a short review of
instructors and a one-time obthe way you do.''
SKEIE
last week's session on racism,
"What is good?" Some of the server say ''yes."
Klobas introduces tonight's topMEMBER
The class deals with trauma,
participants have lived with the
ic- -life styles.
AMERICAN
pat answers--''staying out of something everyone has. As
SOCIETY
GEM
Klobas, who originated the
trouble, sex is o.k. if you're on Jones says, "Where am I? Where
class last year, and taught it
the pill, if you do get pregnant do I fit? This is a microcosm
with West and Mrs. Ekstrom, atkeep the baby, don't get caught, of the world."
CLUSTER OF DIAMONDS
tributes basic causes of change
Klobas adds, "This class is
and go to church." How many
in life style to spatial and soOne way to enjoy the natter
•of these young people accept not the real world, but it wil1
c i a 1 mobility of the American
help those who participate tc of one or more carats of diathis now?
fa mi 1y. With each geographic
A divorcee, mother of small fit in better with the real world. monds at a budget price is by
move or change in life style or
children, wants to know ''how can If the re i s no follow through the use of many small stones.
image, there come changes in
I handle these kids on my own? after they leave here, then the : When gathered together in a clusI now move to the Klobas No one agrees on anything about class has failed."
values, attitudes, even language.
ter mounting, 11 or more diaHe says we are in a society session where they are a half how to raise them."
monds of roughly 10 points each
Mrs. Stadius adds, ''This is
of infinite choice. Choosing one hour into their discussion. I sneak
She is advised, "Don't worry. a re al open-entry, op~n-exit (I/10th of a carat) will give a
definite life style is easier than in, sit on the floor at the edge of Take it as it comes."
dazzling effect for less than half
class where students can come
trying to live them all at once. the circle. Someone moves to let
the price of a comparable quality
Life styles do lap over. Sub- and go according to their needs."
Jones wants someone to define me join in. A feeling of ac - jects of defense and violence
And Klobas adds, "These sesdiamond of l carat.
life style. An auburn-haired girl, ceptance again, not just courtesy. we re jostled around. Several sions help each one to work out
The reason for this is that
They' re discussing the dif- males present advocated aggres- a way of living. I canseechanges
sitting on a table, dangling her
there are many more small diafeet, defines it to the group's ference in military and civilian sive self-defense which they had in those who took the class last
mond crystals found than the larsatisfaction. "Different levels of approaches to society, the re- been taught since childhood--an year."
ger octahedrons out of which the
social norms within one's own adjustment from one lifestyle to
I-carat or larger stones are cut.
the other, or even within the
particular social group."
The price per carat of a fine
Questions are thrown out for separate socieities.
diamond is on an ascending raNow the group t a 1ks about
thought. When is one secure?
tio based on size. For example.
What about the conflict of word changes in life styles, how they
20 diamonds of 5 points each,
come about. Klobas reminisces
and action in everyday life?
or 10 at 10 points would cost
Klobas observes when you be- about his days on the farm, the
roughly $500, while a single one
gin to hurt it probably indicates initial traumatic leavetaking.
carat diamond would range from ·
'' The first ripping up is the
the beginning of a change in your
$1000 to $2500. Yet the total
toughest,"he says. "The comlife style.
diamond weight will be the same.
Now the group (about thirty mitments made to home or vaOn the same scale, a diamond
people have drifted in) divides lues of childhood are difficult
such as the Burton gem of alinto three small ones, each led to leave. Never again will I coinmost 70 carats is priced at over
by one of the instructors here tnit myself to anything like I
$14,000 per carat.
tonight--Jones, Klobas, and Mrs. did to that little bit of ground.
Although the cutting cost of
Stadius. For an hour and a half Now I just commit myself to
many small stones will be higher
the s e unstructured groups will people," he added.
than the cutting cost on one
But a former farmt-!r who has
rap.
large gem, the saving is still conThese members of these small tried and tested city life, tasted
siderable. There is also more
groups vary but tend to group a- other ways to live, plans to rework on the setting or mounting
round a small core of six or turn to the land.
of the stones than what is usually
required for one large stone.
However, the fashion and design possibilities more than off·
set this additional cost . If you
have small diamonds from other
::II
jewelry pieces in o 1de r mount0
Ch,,th Books for Babies,
ings, these can be often incorer
porated into one bright and very
0
Picture Books, Easy-to-Read Books •
1970 looking ring. Do come in and
Read-Aloud Books, Books for the Middle Grades
talk to us further about this trend
to "clusters of diamonds." As
and Junior High and Gift Books for Adults, too.
a member firm of the American Gem Society, you know you
and up
can rely on our proven diamond
knowledge.
Be sure to see our

It's Here Againl

A children's Boole Dept

soe

display

"Give a Book for Christmas"

LCC Bookstore

"We're Right on Campus"

other questions a re probed.
How much is a person worth?
Is it fair to disturb someone's
life style, his world? When one
is forced into a change, is it
good unless it's desired?
How does it feel not to have
a family, a home or roots until
you' re sixteen? "Then suddenly
to have someone care, to have
a family, that is a traumatic
experience," says a girl who
knows.

-

...•c..••

8~
I Q;: 7 W ILL A"' E TTE' ST
p ,,,:, -, .- 3 45 -0 354

Page 6

SPORTS

Titans field squad of 16
by.Dave Harding
The 1970-71 Titan basketball
season is nearing, and this year's
result should be altogether different than the 17-7 mark posted
by last year's team, which finished fourth in the twelve-team
OCCAA.

The 16-man squad is practically all new - and so is their
coach, Irv Roth.
After two years as asistant
to Mel Krause, Roth takes over
the reins this year after Krause
resigned to become head baseball coach at the University of
Oregon.
Daspite the fact that only two
lettermen are returning, LCC,
in the words of head coach Roth,
will field "the most talented"
basketball team in the school's
history.
Fourteen new men will be
wearing the powder b I u e and
white uniforms of the Titans.
Guards Ken Boettcher and Paul
Stoppel are the lone returners.
Last year Boettcher was the
fifth leading scorer on the team,
averaging 6.5 points per game.
Stoppel was right behind Boettcher, averaging 5.5 points a
game.
Among the new men to the Titans are three ex-servicemen.
Willie Jones and Terry Manthley have both just been discharged from the service, where
they played four years of service ball.
Manthley, a 6'4" blonde from
Cottage Grove, will see a lot
of action this year, and Jones,
a 6'2" jumping-jack from Louisiana, is the team's best jumper.
Dave Gibson, a 6'4" star in
his high school days, also just
got out of the service and should
see his share of action too.
At 23 years of age, all three
are the ''elder statesmen" on
the team.
Two Springfield area men are
on the team, and both should see
a good deal of action this year.
Dave King, a 6'4" forward
from Springfield High School, will
give Roth another big man, and
guard Dan Haxby from Thurston
High is a good shooter and should
add some points to the Titan average.
Three Portland high school
guards are in the thick of the
action, and when the season opener comes Dec.ll, they may
very well be in the starting lineup.
Dave Simpson is a 6'2" swifty
from Washington High; Greg Taylor and Vic Williams are both
quick-moving guards from Jef•
ferson.
Steve Wolfe, a 1969 graduate
from South Eugene, and Steve
Woodruff, a 1970 graduate from
North Eugene, are two other
guards with a lot of speed.
A strong point for the Titans
this year will be a good bench.
LC C w i 11 not possess good
height, but all 16 ballplayers are
quick and have good athletic ability.
The Titan quickness will abound at the guard positions.
Coach Roth says that team attitude has been excellent, and says
this year's squad shows "some
real drive."
An obvious lack of size will
hurt the Titans. The front line
will average just under 6-4.
Although many of the ballplayers have a lot of individual experience, they are not familiar
with Roth's system. It will take
time to adjust.
On offense the basis of the Titan attack will be the fast break,
utilizing the team's overall speed
and q u i c kn e s s . Roth stresses
"pressure" basketball, and the
"run" is definitely in tllis year.

Offensive pat t e r n s are designed for getting a good, quick
shot.
The Titans will shoot often, and
hopefully, well.
While the Titans will be a running ballclub, coach Roth emphasizes that the defense will not
be ignored. He says, "we will
place great emphasis on this part
of the game."
Lane will be running basically
a man-to-man-defense. The Titans wlll press as a part of their
basic defensive plan. Roth feels
that the pressure defense fits in
well with his overall philosophy.
Overall, quickness and depth
are the team's outstanding assets .
The 1970-71 Titan basketball
team can be summed up in one
word: exciting. The Titans should
definitely figure in the championship picture. Where they are at
the end of the season will depend on how well the team jells
and learn's Roth's "pressure"
system.

TITAN PLAYER CAPTURES the ball during
game with Truax Oil. Terry Manthley lead
the Titan scoring with 12 points. The Titans,
leading at the half (48-42), cooled off during

••••••••••••••••
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• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••
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REBOUND ROCK ••
*

with

••
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•
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satuRbay
KLCC-FM
90.3

••

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the second half to eventually loose the match,
83-68. Lane opens its 1970-71 basketball season
Friday, Dec. 11, against Northwest Christian
College .
(Photo by Christy Dockter)

0
. to 1:00 a.m.

All request music from

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,

•••
•••
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1956 - 1969
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Call 7 47-4500
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'Who's really

Texas A & M. But regardless
of the ethics of such wins, they
are impressive and carry a lot
of support.
Also carrying a lot of weight
is the Longhorns' 29-game winning streak and a bushel of college standouts.
Heading the list of Texas stars
is their All-American fullback
Steve Worster. Worster, who is
built and runs like a tank, is the
main reason the Longhorns lead
the nation in rushing. Joining
Worster in the Texas star column
is All Southwest Conference halfback Jim Bertelsen along with
All-Americans Bobby Wuensch
and Bill Atessis.
On the other hand, Ohio State
is equally impressive. The Buckeyes stunned the football world
two years ago when Coach Woody
Hayes brought an unbeaten,
sophomore-dominated squad to
California and beat O. J. Simpson's USC Trojans in the Rose
Bowl game.
Those sophomores are now
s e n i o rs and they compose the

by Bob Barley
Who's really number one?
This question has been debated
among college football fans ever
s inc e our major institutions
started participating in the sport
of football. Year after year the
debate goes on--sometimes the
teams change, but rarely is the
debate settled.
This year's debate is centered
around the Longhorns of Texas
and the Buckeyes of Ohio State.
Texas is currently1 ranked number one in both I AP and UPI
football polls. And yet some
people consider the Buckeyes to
be the best team in the history
of college football. Both teams
are unbeaten.
If scoring is any indication of
who is number one, then Texas,
coached by Darrell Royal, would
surely get the nod. The Longhorns seem to take great pride
in not only beating their opponents
but humiliating them.
Week after week the Longhorns
roll up lopsided victories such as
last Thursday's 52-14 win over

Turkey run "best ever"
LC C's second annual Thanksgiving Day turkey run was the
best ever. Held last Wednesday, Nov. 25, at noon, the cross
country event hosted 47 runners
in three different classifications,
compared to the 13 who ran last
year.
Turkeys were given to the top
two runners in each group. It
was not a race for speed, but
on a predicted time basis.
The three groups were made
up of men students, faculty members, and female students.
The faculty members and the
men students each ran 2. 5 miles,
while the females ran 1.4 miles.
As always, the male students'
race attracted the largest turnout, with 23 of the 47 runners
in the group, but surprisingly,
the women we re the best at
predicting time.
Diane Rogers was only one
second off her predicted time.
She predicted 12:05 and cros-

sect the finish line 1.4 miles
later in 12:06.
Leah Hemelstrand was second,
six .seconds off her predicted
time. She predicted a flat 15:00
and ran it in 14:54.
For the male students, John
Purkey and Rey Davis were the
two winners. Purkey ran the 2.5
mile course in 19:38, only two
seconds off his predicted time
of 19:40. Davis was six seconds
off his pace, predicting 19:37 and
finishing in 19:31.
Of the nine faculty members
who ran, Varsity Track coach
Al Tarpenning was only four
seconds off his predicted 22:230
He ran it in 22:37. Mike Mitchell ran it in 18:24, six seconds
off his predicted 18:30.
Although the weather was
cloudy and very wet, the event
was a great success, and it will
take 48 runners in next year's by Bob Barley
event to make it better than
the one in 1970.
A cold streak late in the second half left Coach Irv Roth's
varsity basketball squad on the
short end of a 83-68 exhibition
loss Friday, Nov.28. The host
Titans, who were plagued with
numerous turnovers throughout
the contest, were outscored 18 to
6 by Truax Oil in the game's
final seven minutes.
The Titans took the opening
tip and scored on a lay-in by
guard Dan Haxby. But it wasn't
until Titan Center Willie Jones

Basketball team loses

in exhibition play, 83-68
dropped in two free throws 14
minutes later that the Titans finally regained the lead.
A basket by Steve Woodruff at
the half time buzzer gave the Titans their largest lead of the
night, 48-42.
.
In the second half the Titans
battled the Corvallis AAu team
on even terms until Lane's shooting went astray. Meanwhile the
visitors kept cashing in on long
jump shots.
The final score was Truax Oil
83, LANE 68.
The Titans' leading scorer was
6'3" forward Terry Manthley,
who drilled in 12 points. Jones
added nine while guard Greg
Taylor chipped in with seven.
Dave King and Vic Williams netted six while Ken Boettcher and
Steve Wolfe each scored five.
Lane opens its 1970-71 basketball season Friday, Dec.11, when
the Titans tangle with Northwest
Christian College on the Crusaders' home court.

Women's team

,1£~ to begin practice
:,t~iJ
a/: < by Louise Stucky

WOMEN'S DIVISION WINNERS: Diane Rogers, Leah Hemelstrand

MEN'S DIVISION WINNERS: Rey Davis, John Purkey

The LCC Women's basketball
team begins practice Dec. 2.
R e g u 1a r p r a c t i c e s will be
scheduled 2 to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
La st ye a r LCC hosted the
Southern area of Northwest Women's Basketball tournament
March 6 and 7 the team will
attend the tournament, which is
being hosted by Portland State
University this year.
Last year's team finished with
five wins and two losses, not
counting the tournament play.
Besides games with the area
high schools, the basketball team
will see action from Lower Col i m b i a Community Co 11 e g e ,
Clark Jr. College, Oregon College of Education, Pacific University, Oregon State University,
Southern Oregon College of Education, and University of Oregon.
Last year's team consisted of
sixteen members, of which seven
are exp~cted to • return. With
these women as a nucleus, Lane
should have a good season.

!:[:

Ill

Karate studio
marks opening
For all students interested in
taking a class in Karate, jiu
jitsu or yawara, a new studio
just opened at 329 Main St.,
Srpingfield. There are two ins t r u c t o r s , both qu2Jified in
teaching self defense. Phil Heiple
holds a brown belt in Karate and
is a green belt in Yawana. He
is also a weapons expert. The
other insturctor is Rich Mainenti who holds a first degree
black belt in Ch' man-fa gung
fu (Karate) and has participated
in several tournaments.
For more information contact
either Phil Heiple at 686-5327
or Rich Mainenti at 686-0292.

I

.. ·::::::::. ·::~:

The Gift with the Persona i Touch

HolidayCandies
Save Money Too

~:~!

MAKE YOUR OWN CANDLES

Ideal for gifts or your home
-we ha·ve everything you needWAX

to begin soon
An intramural singles badminton tournament will get under
way soon, and sign up sheets are
posted in both locker rooms, as
well as in the intramural office.
There will be two brackets-beginners and advanced. Trophies will be awarded to the two
bracket champions at the tournament's conclusion.
All badminton matches will be
.held at noon on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday's, with the
Mike Mitchell, • Al Tarp~nning possibility of playing at 4 p.m.
, on Tues. and Thu~qay

heart of this ye a r' s Buckeye
squad. Over the past three years
these seniors have been beaten
only once in what was proclaimed
to be the bigge~t upset in college
football history.
The Buckeyes possess an abundance of football talent. Quarterback Rex Kern is a gifted
leader who makes it tough for
fans and opponents alike to follow
the ball. Fullback John Brockington is a hard runner who has
rushed for over 1,000 yards this
season. Split end Bruce Jankowski and halfback Leo Hayden
offer explosiveness to the Buckeyes' offensive attack.
Defensively the Buckeyes are
superb. Leading the charge is
three-time All American Jack
Tatum. Tatum, who weighs a
me re 205 pounds, roams the
Buckeye defense like a wounded
bear protecting her cubs. Backing up Tatum are All American
tackles Jim Stillwagon and Rick
Perdoni along with defensive back
Stan White.
If anything has hurt the Buckeyes' ratings this year it has to
be their switch to a gr~ding game
control offense rather than the
free wheeling attack they sported
in previous years. Such a switch
gives the Buckeyes a better control over the game but cuts down
on the big scores.
But regardless of who is number one, it is apparent that there
is room for debate.

••••• ...............•. ··~.•. _:•. : .:.:.:.:.:.:•.•:.:•.•.•.•.•..•.•.• ..•.•.•..•.• ·.•...-~: =

Have Fun

Badminton tourney

FACULTY DIVISION WINNERS:

iiUrribe·r· one?"

Pa:ge 7

Metal Molds Wick· -

Plastic Molds

Coloring -

Stearic Acid -

Lustre Crystals

Instruction Bookiet -

1

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E~6

etc.

~,~.;,?n!

_1.1:·
HOURS - Weekdays - 8:00 .:. 5:00
::::
Saturdays - 8:00 - 12 noon
::;:
PHONE 688-8210
:·::.••.•-·---=·-·-·-·-•-•.•-·-·-•-·. . . . . . . . . ._._. . . . . .•.•·····•·.:.:. ·•·······.•:.·.::.•.=:=:·:•:•:~.• ..::i-. :::·:·~-~-..-s.• •·•·•·•·•·•·•·•·•···•·•·•···:·•·::
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_1=.1:1:

Scents'

I

1.1
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I

Page 8

KLCC-FM sound: 'sophisticated, 11odern, professional'

by Bill Nelson.

"At 90.3 on the FM dial, you're
listening to the STEREO sound
of KLCC broadcastingwithl0,000
watts of power.''
That announcement is heard
periodically in the studio and
control rooms of KLCC, Lane's
FM radio station, located in the
Electronics Technology Building on campus.
In reality, the station broad• casts with only 440 watts of power
and does not utilize a stereo
sound system, but plans are in
progress for some changes. After the first of the year, stereo
broadcasting will begin from the
new control room located in the
present studio. A proposed power
raise has been hampered because of possible interference
by KLCC to the Oregon State
University FM station, KBVR,
at 90.1 on the dial, and KOINTV, channel 6 in Portland. An
engineering consultant is presently searching for an answer
to this problem.
KLCC is operated by students
and professional staff. Second
year radio broadcasting students
operate the station from
10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. weekdays on a volunteer basis. Paid
personnel control the other hours
of b road c as t , weekdays from
8:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. and
5:00 p.m. to midnight; Saturdays,
4:00 p.m. to 100 a.m.; and Sunday, 5:00 p.m. to midnight.
Fu 11 - time paid personnel of
KLCC include Virginia DeChaine,
station manager and chairman of
the Mass Communications Department; Tom Lichty, program
director; and Bill Nelson, night
manager and announcer. Weekend announcers are Dave Chance
on Saturday, and Al Murphy on
Sunday. Chance also serves as
the s tat ion' s Music Director,
working under the work-study
program.
KLCC is an educational station

Toy, food drive
being sponsored
Starting Dec. 1, the Maverick
Mustangers Car Club and Kendall
Ford will sponsor a toy and food
drive, with the proceeds going to
the Eugene Hearing and Speech
Center.
New toys and cans of food may
be donated at drop boxes in the
following locations: Joey's Pizza
in Sp r i n g f i e I d , W i 11 a m e tt e
Chevron in Eugene, the County
Courthouse in Eugene, the
Springfield Timber Topper, Kendall Ford in Eugene and Springfield, and Dot's Cafe on the McKenzie High way. Williams
Transfer will donate drop boxes
and store the toys and food until the end of the drive on Dec.21.
If you have questions regarding.
the drive call John Mayotte
in Creswell, 942-8619, Joe Hanna
in Springfield, 746-1537, or Jim
Cunningham in Eugene,343-0006.
The Maverick Mustangers will
be glad to pick up any donations.

Contest, style show
to be held at LCC
A "Make it Yourself With
Wool" contest and style show will
be held at LCC Saturday, Dec.5.
The initial contest, not open
to the general public, will be held
in the Health building room 102
at 10:00 a.m. A style show, open
to all interested persons, will be
held at 3:00 p.m. in the Forum
building.
The contest is sponsored by
the American Woolgrowers Association. For more local information, contact Mary Carlisle,
Home Ee deQ.artmemt, Ext. 208.

financially supported by an annual grant from the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting (CPB),
and federal, state, and local funds
provided by the college. Public
s e r vi c e announcements a re
broadcast throughout the day in
place of commercial matter.
The overall sound of KLCC is
"sophisticated and mode r n."
Popular, easy listening songs - which include such artists as the
The Carpenters, Tom Jones,
Bread, Barbra Streisand, Five
Stairsteps and numerous others are the main type of music played.
The instrumental format is light
jazz with such artists as Wes
Montgomery and Cal Tjader. With
the emphasis on individual taste,
featured programs are also a
part of the broadcast format. Between 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. on
weekdays, it's "Today in Eugene," Lichty and Dennis Celorie, radio and TV broadcasting
instructor, run a light morning
show emphasizing news, public
service announcements, and interviews with persons from the
community. Weekday afternoons
between 5:00 and 7:00 p.m. it's
"JAZZ 120," and from 9:00 p.m.
to •midnight, classical musk: is
the subject of "Album of Music."
The numberofhoursforbroadcasting on weekends is cut down
because of a shortage of student help, although programs are
not inferior in any way. The sound
of youth is heard each Saturday
from 4:00 p.m. to l:a.m. on "Saturday Gold." Requests are taken
for rock and roll hits as far
back as 1950 and as recent as
today. It has proven to be a
very popular program, receiving
as many as 150 calls during a
show. From 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
on Sunday ''Wide World of Sound"
features the opera sound of classics, and up through midnight,
easy listening and foreign country
music dominate the program.
KLCC recently became amembe r of the National Public Radio
Network, (NPR), which is to begin tape services in January of
I 9 71 . Program Director To m
Lichty expressed excitement about the network, saying "It's
the key to the future of public
radio." Live service begins in
April of 1971. One of the programs featured by NPR will be a

JOB PLACEMENT
TO INQUIRE ABUUT JOBS contact the LCC Placement Office,
747-4501, ext. 227

daily 15 minute soap opera called
"Harvard Square." It will be
similar to the television show
"Sesame Street" in that both venture into informational and educational subjects in an entertaining fashion.
When live network service is
underway, an in-depth morning
news program will focus on the
day's events and their relevancy
to the individual. A follow-up
program in the evening will summarize those events and the effect they had on the public.
Broadcast executives in Washington, D.C., feel this sort of
programming by NPR will eventually reach more people than
television.
Since KLCC has joined two
national organizations, the National Association of Educational
Broadcasters (NAEB) and NPR,
Lichty has represented the station at two national conventions.
NPR held its first annual convention last month in Denver

Colorado, where the new radio
network was discussed with station managers and program directors from throughout the nation. The most recent convention
of NAEB, held the week of Nov.
7, took both Lichty and Mrs. DeCh a in e to Washington, D.C.,
where NAEB, NPR, and educational broadcasting were all discussed at great length. Some
5,000 broadcasting persons attended the convention, hearing
from such people as Joan Ganz
Coony, President of Childrens
TV Workshop; the producers of
Se as me Street; Federal Com munications Commission Chairman. Dean Birch; and J. Walter
Hickel, former Secretary of the
Interior.
One benefit of the convention
was learning that KLCC will receive between $8,500 and $10,000
dollars in a federal grant in 1971
for exceeding C PB minimum
KLCC began in February, 1967,
with call letters, assigned by

the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) of KPNW. The
station which is now KPNW had
the call letters KPIR. When call
letters began to be switched around, the situation was just as
confusing as it appears. In late
19 6 8, KLCC became LCC's FM
station and KPNW became a
50,000 watt AM station as we
know it today.
The sound of KLCC, along with
the equipment and studio, has a
professionalism which is gaining respect throughout the community. Production facilities are
among the finest in the city,
with enough equipment and room
to record a full drama or a
single voice.
If you're looking for a GOOD
radio station to listen to, try
KLCC-FM at 90.3. I think you'll
hear a pleasant suprise.
KLCC program guides are
available free of charge by
writing the station in care of
LCC.

NEEDED:
Flat head engine,
Plymouth or Dodge (1941-1959).
Pre f e r running condition, o r
otherwise. Phone: 747-1361 after
3 p.m.

FOR SALE: FARFISA DELUXE
COMPACT ORGAN, with Leslie model 16 speaker. Big sound
$400. Also 200 watt Oliver amp.
2-15" Lansing speaker and revert channel. It's. different $500.
Call: 344-6110 evenings.

FOR SALE: 1965 Chevrolet Malibu convertible. Excellent condition. $1200. Call 343-0238 anytime. See at 2046 Hilyard.

"Silk" skirts for holiday, all
lengths $7. 75.
All our dress designs can be
made to order, blouse or tunic
length, mini or maxi. You may
choose from our large selection
of fabrics or supply your own.
Most prices are under $20.
ANDREA'S, 1036 Willamette,
Eugene, 343-4423.
FOR SALE: 1963 Ford wagon.
Country sedan 352 V-8. 3 speed
w/overdrive. Four new tires.
Clean and solid $495. Call 3446110 evenings and 'Weekends. Ask
for Mike.
1 OR RENT: Spaces available
for trailers 10-12' wide and up
to 45' in length. $30 per month.
Ho 1id a y Trailer Park, 4990
Franklin Blvd. Eugene, 747-9079.

FOR SALE:
For Chev. small
block, biggest flat tappet cam
made in 1968. Specs.available
$60,00 or will trade for single
4 Brl. set up or?. Call Mike
344-6110 evenings and weekends.
FOR SALE: LUCKY'S LITTLE
LOVES. Tropical Fish & Supplies. 1949 Friendly Street, Eugene, Oregon. Phone 345-1042.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Edelbrock X-C8 Dual cross ram
maniford for small block Chev.
complete with carburetion and
linkage. $110. Call 344-6110 evenings and weekends.

PART TIME/MALES OR FEMALES: Young men or women
for selling Fuller brushes on
commission basis or deliveries
on percentage basis. Must have FOR SALE: Panoramic Bass
own transportation. Hours: Ad- guitar. Double pick-up, hollow
justable.
body model. Excellent condition.
PART TIME/FEMALE: Young Cost $325 new. Now $100.00.
lady needed for babysitting and Call 344-6110 evenings. Ask for
living in. Hours: 5:30 p,m. to mike.
5 or 6 a.m. FIVE NIGHTS
FOR SALE: EncyclopediasWEEKLY. Pay: $2.50 per night
Americana . 30 volumes in Blue
plus room and board.
Levantcraft binding. For further
PART TIME/FEMALE: Young information call 688-8986 a ft er
lady needed for babysitting. Could 5 P. M.
be students wife. Five days
weekly. Mon., Tues., Wed., from FOR SALE: Dayton Key slotted
4 p.m. to llp.m. Tues. and Thurs. shaft (motor for weli°pump) presfrom 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Good pay sure control unit. $35.00 of best
f o r responsible p e rs on. Two offer. Call 747-1361 after 3 p.m.
children.
African prints, $2-$3 yd.; AfriPART TIME/FE MALE OR can panels (69" x 45"), $4.50, $6
MALE: Young student for baby- & $8.
Dyeable fabrics for batik and
sitting four evenings weekly with
two young school age boys. Hours: tie-dye, 50~ - $1.25 yd.
Remnants at a savings: velour,
3 p.m. to 10 p.m. Pay: To be
surrah, & "necktie silk," $1 yd.;
discussed.
orion challis $1.50 yd.; arnel jerPART TIME/FEMALE: Young sey $1 & $1.25 yd.; lace seam
lady for babysitting in the Swim binding (many colors) 8~ yd.;
and Tennis Club area. Hours: soft elastic 6-; yd.; zippers 15~
2:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Five & 25~ each.
days weekly. Pay: $3.50 daily,
ANDREA'S, 1036 Willamette,
Two children.
Eugene, 343-4423.

CLASSIFIED

RENT
YOUR FURNITURE
Complete q u a I it y furnishings.
Many styles and price groups,
individual item selection -- 3
rooms as low as $22 monthly.
Purchase option, prompt delivery. Large, convenient showroom, warehouse.
CUSTOM FURNITURE RENTAL
115 Lawrence
343-7717

QUESTION: If a 20-week course
can bring others up to an employable status, why not try the
free aptitude test and learn about
fabulous:
COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
Call or write E.C.P.L at 1445
Willamette, Eugene, 97401.
Phone E.C.P.L, 343-9031.

FOR SALE: V. W. pickup, 1962.
Recently overalled engine. Runs
good $300 . Call 343-5230 anytime.

FOR SALE: Great economical
transportation. 19 6 4 Rambler
440. 6 cylindar, automatic, radio, heater. Low mileage, very
clean. Price $295.00. Call 3438985 any timE.
- ~ .....-.-...

)

FOR SALE: Electric guitar and
amplifi~r. $65, Call 688-7605
after 4 p.m.
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Et-"a-t!ale

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Formerly Mildred's Spanish Palace

Watch Mildred

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cook your meals

Spanish food direct from
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Come and practise your Spanish with me

so.uuttta, '4-

-

served with honey at all meals
Open 7 days a week

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8 a.m. - midnight

W@~~

'®®rlI®
save with us than with any other
Savings & Loan Association in
the Pacific Northwest!

Pacific First
Federal
Sa~,•1ngs
-

IV

1100 Willamette
342-1781

-

and Loan
Association

735 North A
746-9675

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