ASB officers attend OCCSA, ASG meetings

by Jon Haterius

Research Group (OSPIRG), which
is currently circulating petitions
on almost all of Oregon's fouryear and commilnity college campuses to try to set up a body to
articulate and pursue through the
courts, the media, and institutions of government the concerns
of Oregon students on issues of
public interest in areas of environmental preservation, consumer protection and corporate
responsibility. The group, led at
LCC by Rosen, who is coordinating community college efforts,
hopes to raise a dollar per term
per student to finance such a
public interest research group at
all community colleges in the

state. Rosen told other community college student leaders
that '' Oregon is a testing state"
for the research group concept.
Oregon is one of the few states
in the nation that has taken up
the crusade of Ralph Nader's
"Raiders" and is implementing
students to bring reform in areas
of environmental preservation,
cons u mer protection and corporate responsibility.
From Ontario the two LCC
officers traveled to the Stardust
Casino on the Las Vegas "strip"
to join student leaders from 80
two and four-year schools in the
nation.
Coverdell said ASG has re-

placed the National Student AsSTUDENT GOVERNMENT
sociation (NSA) as the repre- STRUCTURE at two and fourASB President Warren Coversentative of many schools be- year schools. Coverdell attended
dell and Senator-at-Large Dan
cause "NSA has become too con- this meeting, and was most inRosen left Eugene Friday, Nov.
cerned with national affairs and terested in the discussion of stu20, to represent LCC at two
has become too ultra-left wing dent constitutions, judicial sysstudent organization meetings.
and radical." Coverdell pre- tems, strategy and tactics, and
Aft e r attending the Oregon
dicted that ASG will become more relationship with the student
C o m m unity College Student
and more involved with com- press.
Asso~iation (OCCSA) meeting in
munity colleges, as more stuTHE KIDS AND THE COPS,
Ontario, Oregon, Coverdell and
dents enroll in them each year. a discussion with Special AsRosen left Nov. 21 for Las VeThough ASG began in 1963 for the sistant to the Attorney General
gas for a meeting of two and fourbenefit of four-year college stu- Charles Gentry. Both Coveryear school student leaders in
dent leaders, the association rea- dell and R o s e n attended this
the Association of Student Golizes that community colleges are session, which dealt with revernments (ASG).
becoming more important. Co- lations between police and stuAt the OCCSA meeting Rosen
verdell also predicted, after his dents.
presented information about the
meetings with other student body
JUNIOR COLLEGE PROOregon Student Public Interest
presidents, that within two years BLEMS, attended by both LCC
community colleges will t a k e representatives, which centered
over control of ASG from the its discussion on two-year colfour-year schools in the country. lege problems and was for ofHighlights of the Nov. 24-27 ficials from two-year schools
ASG convention included election only. other topics of the group
of a vice president to represent were student government struccommunity colleges and election ture, community action programs
of Rosen as ASG coordinater for for students, aw a re n es s protwo-year college affairs. Rosen grams for students, and teacher
will not receive a sa!ary, but and course evaluation using com Coverdell emphasized that the puterized data. An example of
LCC Student Senate will try to such evaluation p r o g r ams is
pay phone bills, secretary ex4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405
December 8, 1970 penses and travel money for im- LCC's Pre-Service Education of
Vol. 6, No. 11
Teachers (P'ET) program, which
portant missions for Rosen. He asks students to help select the
will serve as community college type of teachers they would like
coordinater on an ad hoc basis to have.
until money is available for a
College community relations,
salaried coordinater. Coverdell attended by Coverdell, dealt with
by Jon Haterius
of himself.
who serve as a motley bunch of said "ASG has given Dan this problems between colleges, both
John Coombs has been selected servants to "Sir." The ser- reponsibility to see how well he two and four-year, and tlw comThe cast for the LCC Winter by Ragozzino to portray ''Sir," vants are p 1aye d by Dave Nor- does his job. If he meets his munities in which they are loTerm production ''The Roar of the crusty English gentleman who fleet, Susie Thompson, Sandy responsibilities, ASG might ex- cated. •
the Greasepaint--The Smell of delights in making rules ofliving. Isom, Susan Kellogg, Becky Cro- tend his duties indefinitely." CoPROBLEMS OF MINORITY
the Crowd" has been announced "Sir" is contemptuous of son, Marc Seigal, Paul Martin, verdell feels that having Rosen GROUPS. In reference to this
by Producer-Director Ed Rago- "Cocky," who will be played by Steve Harper, Debbie Demetra- elected as community college co- pane 1 Coverdell said ASG is
zzino.
• Scott Van Fosse-n and is the fall kos, Jenny Pack, and Shelly ordinator for the national group working on an American Indian
of student body leaders is a very program and already has a ChiTryouts were held the last part guy in the show who suffers the Mellott.
important
step for community cano movement underway. He
of November.
slings and arrows of outragious
Ralph Steadman, a student acThe Anthony Newley musical- fortune from "Sir" until the play tor, has been named by Ragoz- colleges and for LCC. '' If we felt the discussion group '' got
prove we can do the job for ASG," across the problems to us very
comedy was first produced in unfolds and he realizes that he zino as Assistant Director.
England. The show, with 14 or also has the power to make rules
Assisting Ragozzino will be said Coverdell, "ASG is going effectively about community acmore musical numbers, has a and influence people.
some of the same LCC instruc- to look kindly on community col- tion p r o g r a m s with e t h n i c
definite English fla var. Ragozother members of this musical tors who c on t rib u t e d to the leges all over the nation.', If groups." "You realize," he conzino describes the play as "a comedy include two kids, played success of the LCAA summer Rosen's work goes well, commu- tinued, ''the philosophical and
game of philosophy of life that by Dave Van Fleet and Becky production of "Hello Dolly," in- nity co Ile ge s would have a psychological problems and difexists today."
Croson; a Negro, played by Rich cluding Nathan Cammack, music stronger footing in the national ferences between your type of
The play concerns itself with Mosely; a girl, played by Marc director; David Sherman, set de- organization.
people and their type of people
Rosen's responsibilities, and what you can and can't do
an aristocratic gentleman, a de- Seymour; and a "bully," por- signer; and Wayte Kirchner, volightful phony who enjoys making trayed by Mark Anderson. There cal director. Gene Aitken, new wnich end in March of 1971, will for them." Coverdell cited an
be to keep in communication with incident in San Jose involving a
rules for the sake of rules and are eleven ''parasitic" urchins, this year to Performing Arts,
all other community college stu- community action group with good
delights in making a ''heavy" as Ragozzino refers to them, will be the brass director.
dent body officials throughout the intentions that made some
Ragozzino suggested that peo- nation and report to the national
Thanksgiving dinners to take to
ple buy tickets early, as all seats ASG organization. Primary
con- the Chicano section of San Jose.
are on a reserved basis and atcern for Rosen will be California,
tendance is expected to be heavy. Oregon and Washington commu( Continued on page 4)
The Forum Theatre seats 350. nity colleges. Coverdell pointed
'' The Roar of the Greasepaint,
out that there are 96 community
"We, the undersigned students use all military and diplomatic
and faculty me m be rs of Lane means available to obtain the The Smell of the Crowd" will colleges in California alone.
other highlights of the ASG
Community Co 11 e g e, Eugene, positive identification of those open Feb. 11 in the Forum
Oregon, do hereby express our held captive, and to work for Theatre and play Feb. 12, 13, convention were small group (20
18, 19, and 20. Tickets are to 30 p e op I e) discussions on
concern for the Allied P.O. W's their immediate release."
According to the Veterans Club $1.50 and $2. Ticket informa- various topics. Sessions attended
in Southeast Asia."
Thus reads a petition currently public information officer, Ken tion may be obtained by phoning by the LCC representatives inThe Student Senate is sponsorcluded:
being circulated
by LCC's Wilhelmi, ''the purpose is to LCC, 747-4501, ext. 310.'
ing a dance Friday night, Dec. 11,
assure Congress and the PresiVeterans Club. It continues:
from 8:00 p.m. to midnight in
"We feel that the United States dent that the people on this pethe Auxiliary Gym.
and its allies sfiould immediately tition are backing the idea of
Admission for the dance will
using all means to get prisoners
be $1.25 per person, with music
e it he r identified or released,
provided by Phigwart, a fivepreferably released.'' Wilhelmi
member rock band from Coradded, "We feel that it is not
vallis. Well known in their home
only important to let them (the
base, Phigwart will be making
North Vietnamese)know our pot he i r first :\ppearance in this
sition, but to let our government
area.
"Does Lane Community Colknow our position too.''
Lead singer for the group, 22lege fulfill its determined role
The petition has been in ciryear-old Jeffrey Goldner from
in the community?"
culation since Thursday, Dec.3,
New York City, has been singing
Second-year radio broadcastand will remain in circulation for
professionally for 10 years.
ing students attempted to find the
an indefinite period, so as many
Tom Porkypine, the 19-yearanswer to that question during
signatures can be obtained as
old bass guitarist from Paris,
the past three weeks and the repossible. Wilhelmi stated that a
France, is the hard-driving backsult will be broadcast on KLCC
table will probably be set up,
bone of Phigwart, and has played
Presents, Wednesday, Dec. 9,
to obtain more signatures, in the
for many bands,
at 7:00 p.m.
near future.
The lead guitarist, 20-yearA. seven-man crew interviewed
For more information conold Carl Arthur Leo ill, is also
local high school students, U of
from New York City, and has been
0 and Lane stU<;lents, city offi- cerning the petition, contact Huplaying guitar for 12 years.
cials, LCC administrators and ston Copeland, Senate rep. for air
Ronald Leach, 20-year-old
local citizens to get their opinions tech; Paul Christiansen, Senate
of LCC's ''determined role in rep. for electronics; Dave Holst,
drummer from Corvallis, has
the community" and whether LCC Senate rep. for language arts;
been playing drums since he was
Ken Wilhelmi, Senate rep. for :
is meeting this obligation.
in the sixth grade.
The students gathered, re- Circle K; or Bob Kirk, Students
The organist, 19-year-old
•
viewed and edited more than four for Survival.
David William Ardvark Taylor
For those wishing to sign the
hours of taped interviews and
from Palo Alto, California, comcomments about LCC to produce petition, a copy can be found GARNER TED ARMSTRONG SPEAKS to a crowd . of about 450 pletes the group and has been
in the Veteran's Club box in the persons in the LCC gym Tuesday night, Dec. 1. Armstrong talked playing in bands for the last six
this one-hour program.
KLCC-FM broadcasts at 90.3 Student Senate office, second about ''Environmental Global Cosmoscide" in his hour-long speech. years. He also writes most of
floor of the Center •Building.
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb) Phigwart's music.
me on the FM dial.

Lane Community College

Cast announced for winter musical

Vets Club circulates petition
stating concern for POW's

Senate sponsors
Friday dance

ICC's role

examined
on KLCC-FM

' ..•

•••• • ••• Sait,o,uai ·~ e « t .

Page 2

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14

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gOr'I Uow many poorly
creatures are

there here! ~ow
loathsome Man&cind

OSPIRG tax plan comes under fire
The Oregon Student Public Interest Research
Group's plan to gain funds for its operations
came under fire recently at a meeting at Oregon St ate University and in an editorial in
the Sunday edition of the Eugene RegisterGuard.
Students working to set up OSPIRG intend to
ask the State Board of Higher Education to
add $1 per quarter to the "incidental fees"
now charged each student at the public colleges and universities. This money would be
pooled statewide and turned over to OSPIRG.
Students who do not wish to support OSPIRG
would have an opportunity to receive a refund
after a three-week waiting period at the beginning of each term.
An OSU group, Young Americans for Freedom (YA F), said that calling the $1 fee a
"voluntary system" is a "con trick," while
the Register-Guard likened it to the State of
Oregon adding $1 to everyone's personal income tax and turning the proceeds over to
the Environmental Council. The Guard continued by saying, ''It would be an improper
loaning of the taxing power of government to
a special non-government group. The popularity of the cause is irrelevant."
As it stands now, the Register-Guard is
correct.
It would be improper, for several
reasons, to levy an extra $1 from all students
each quarter for OSPIRG--even if they can
apply for a refund after three weeks.
The first reason the $1 should not be added
is that there are no accurate figures on how
many students want to adopt the plan.
How do you get the students' opinions? Not
on petitions, which only register a positive
view, but not by holding a regular election
either (we all know how effective they are for
expressing the v i e w s of the entire student
body).
One method of obtaining such information
might be to include a card in the registration packet or set up a table at registration
to allow students to ''vote" for or against the
tax plan. In this way, the entire student body
would have the opportunity to examine OSPIRG
and state its views.
These "elections" could be conducted at
all of Ore_g_on's schools of higher education.

·s tude·nts' .Forum .by John Tennis
. Recently I was standing on the
fourth floor of the Center Building at Lane, when the fire bell
rang. (I assumed it was the fire
bell because it sounded like it
should be.)
I grabbed my books (I PAID
for them, you see) and took off.
On my way toward the stairs
I passed a lot of people asking
each other whether it was real.
Some of them were waiting for
the elevator to come up so they
wouldn't have to walk downstairs.
On my way down, I passed
people going up!
When I got to the second floor
by the library, I couldn't get
outside because the crowd was
too thick and people were already
coming back in to get out of the

S.A.C. News
Housing
Students leaving apartments,
houses or rooms--the Student
Awareness Center needs to know
about them!
Please leave information about
the housing you are vacating at
the SAC desk, second floor of
the Center Building, or call LCC
extension 222.
Anyone whose roommate is
leaving and who wants an o the r
should also contact SAC. Students
seeking housing should check SAC
files.
Housing for girls .
Applications are being accepted by a sorority house at
the University of Oregon for 10
females to reside there during
the 1970-71 school year. Interested parties should contact
Kaye Adams in the Stu de n t
Awareness Center, second floor
of the Center Building, or call
her at ext. 222.

This would give OSPIRG organizers an indication of the support they can expect among
Oregon students.
However, even if a majority of students supported OSPIRG, the results of these elections
should not be used to gain a $1 increase in the
"incidental fees" for all students. Simply because a majority favors OSPIRG is no justification to make every student pay for it. As
the Register-Guard said, the popularity of the
cause is irrelevant. Forcing students to pay
for an organization they do not support is unfair--both to them and to OSPIRG.
For OSPIRG, or any other business for that
matter, to operate most efficiently, it must
know how much money there is going to be to
operate on each year. And the taxing plan
seems to be the only effective way to ensure
that (assuming that few students would take the
initiative after three weeks to petition for the
return of their $1). But this advantage would
be offset by the fact that OSPIRG, to be effective, must have the ACTIVE support of Oregon students. Support indicated by signing a
petition, or voting to have fees automatically
collected by the school, is passive support.
There may be a great difference in the number
of students willing to provide such passive support and the number who are willing to pay the
money of their own volition. "If the students
care about these causes as much as the OSPIRG
promoters claim, they will put up their money
voluntarily," says the Guard. If students have
no choice about paying the fee, it really doesn't
show ho.w much active support OSPIRG has-and it is active support that will determine
OSPIR<;i's success in its battles.
A truly voluntary contribution system--perhaps by including a card in each student's
registration packet which explains OSPIRG and
invites him to add $1 to his incidental fees
(NOT to have it AUTOMATICALLY added)-would be fair to those who do not support
OSPIRG. It might be more difficult for OSPIRG
to predict its income, and perhaps more difficult to collect, but it would provide OSPIRG
with a strong, ACTIVE base of support--which
it will desperately need if it is to fulfill its
stated goals.

is!

This play is the tragedy, 'Man'...

and it.s tiero the Conqueror Worm!

It is a tale told by an idlot,+'ull
sound and fury,s1gniPging nothing!

.a

Ah, but could I

To ~rasp this eorr,

Things entire ...

shatter it to bi

Re-mould·

Campus Calendar
Club meetings
Campus Crusade
Campus Crusade will meet
the Thursdays of Dec. 10 and
Dec. 17 at noon in Center 419.
Cheu Club
The Knights and Castles Chess
Club will meet Monday, Dec. 14,
at 4:00 p.m. in Apprentice 218.
Circle K
Circle K has planned meetings
for the Wednesdays of Dec. 9
and Dec. 16 at noon in Dean
Cox's office in the basement of
the Administration Building.
Christian Science
The Christian Science Organization will meet the Tuesdays of
Dec. 8 and Dec. 15 at 3 p.m. in
Forum 305.

Literary-art Magazine
Staff and persons interested in
"The Concrete St ate me nt,"
LCC's new literary-art magazine will meet the Tuesdays of
Dec. 8 and Dec. 15 at 1:30 p.m.
on the fourth floor of Center
Building near Black Studies.
Students for Survival
The Students for Survival ecology club has planned a meeting
which spokesmen describe as
''very important," for Thursday,
Dec. 10, at 12:15 p.m. in Administration 202.
Student Senate
The ASB Student Senate will
meet Thursday, Dec. 17, at 2:30
p.m. in Administration 202.

Committee meetings

'The Fire Next Time"

Academic Council ·.,
of Dec. 15, Dec. 22 and Dec. 29
LCC's Academic Council will at 9 a.m. in Administration 202.
meet Tuesday, Dec. 15, at 4p.m.
rain.
all the buildings, so there in Business 104.
Curric,.. lum Committee
It was then that I started to shouldn't be any problem there.
A meeting of the Curriculum
Board
of
Education
think about books. "The Fire
There is also a network of
Committee is s c he du 1e d for
The
LCC
Board
of
Education
Next Time," by James Baldwin, instructors and building superTuesday, Dec. 15, at 4 p.m. in
stuck in my' mind. "What if visors who oversee the evacua- will meet Wednesday, Dec. 9, Administration 202.
at
7
p.m.
in
Administration
202.
there IS a •fire next time?" I tion of the various buildings.
wondered. "What will we do?"
If it's only a drill, a small · The meeting is open to the public. Human Relations
''Burn," I answered myself. fire, or a false alarm, the bell College Cabinet
The Human Relations ComAfter some research though, I will be rung again for 15 seconds.
The College Cabinet has sched- mittee is scheduled to meet Tuesfound out that no one has to burn At that time, students and in- uled meetings for the Tuesdays
day, Dec. 8, at 4p.m. in Adm. 202.
or even be confused if they follow structors are to return to class
a si mp 1e direction. That di- and res u me teaching and learnCampus activities
rection is: at the sound of an ing, or talking and listening, or
Vacation hours
alarm, evacuate the building to a be in g bored and sleeping, or Film
A film on aviation will be presafe distance (30 feet or more). whatever it is that they do.
LCC will close at noon on WedDON'T talk; DON'T wait for the
Now I no longer think about sented on Tuesday, Dae. 8, at nesday, Dec. 23, and remain
elevator; DON'T come back in.· "The Fire Next Time." I no 7:30 p.m. in Administration 202. closed until Monday, Dec. 28, to
longer worry about the confusion. Dance
Leave the building!
allow maintenance work.
The
Exits are clearly marked in NOW I worry about finals.
A dance featuring" Phigwart," school will be open from Monday,
sponsored by.the Student Senate, Dec. 21 through noon Dec. 23, and
will be helq Friday, Dec. 11, at from Monday, Dec. 28, through
8 p.m. in the Auxiliary Gym. Thursday, Dec. 31. Winter Term
will begin Monday, Jan. 4.
Within these times, the LCC
The fourth floor of the Center Finals Week-: Dec. 14-Dec.18
(EDITOR'S NOTE: The TORCH
library will be open at its reguo rd in a r i I y does not publish Building is also designed to be
lar hours, as will the Bookstore.
letters without the author's sig- a ''study area." However, 'it is Registration
RETURNING STUDENTS: Dec. Counselors will be available each
nature.
This letter, however, also a victim of the same noise
raises a point which at least as the library with one excep- 15, 16, 17 in the Main Gym working day from 8 a.m. to 9p.m.
NEW STUDENTS & OPEN RE- Of the Food Service areas, only
tion and that is the "immature
deserves consideration.)
GISTRATION: Dec. 28, 29, 30 in the Snack Bar will be open during
teenagers" juke box.
TO THE EDITOR
vacation, at its regular schedule.
One can always study in their the Food Services Area.
Throughout the c o u n t r y are car but there is a rumor that
co 11 e g es .and univ e rs it i es. death by carbon monoxide is
Throughout these learning instipossible if the heater is on, so
tutions are ''intensive study by all means scrub the idea of
areas." Among the many instudying in your car.
stitutions is LCC, but it does not
Editor. . . . . • . . ....•............•Gary Grace
Maybe the administration will
have an intensive study area.
Assistant Editor. . . . . . •. . ....... Hewitt Lipscomb
get
the
hint
and
make
a
change
in
First one must define what an
Feature Editor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Karen Von Effling
''intensive study area" is: it our institution.
Sports Editors. . . . . . . . . . •.... Bob Barley, Dave Harding
Suggestions:
is an area that is very quiet,
Ad Manager. . . . . . • . • . . . . . . . . . .Lorena Warner
1. Put up signs in the library
very few distractions, very comHead
Photographer. . . . . . . . ..... Hewitt Lipscomb
fortable (not too hot), and well indicating silence.
Secretary-Business Manager. . . . . . . . .Doris Norman
2.
Have
a
closed
off
area
furnished.
LCC has a wonderful place to where ever available.
Member of National Educational Advertising Service
3. Either turn off the juke
study, provided you can concenTHE TORCH is published weekly on Tuesdays, except
trate in the library. Between box or move it.
holidays, examination weeks and vacation periods.
If any member of the administhe hum of gossip groups, the
Signed articles are the views of the author and not
banging of doors, the incourteous tration or faculty would like to
necessarily those of The Torch.
shouting of faculty members, the confirm their opinions with the
shuffling of traffic, and the rum- writer of this critical letter
M:;.il or bring all correspondence or news to: THE TORCH
ble of the '' i mmature teenagers" please contact the Torch Office
206 Center Building, Lane Community College, 4000 E. 30th
juke box in the "pool hall just as I wish to remain anonymous.
Avenue, Eugene, Oregon. 97405. Telephone 747-4501, ext.234.
Name withhel d by r equest
below.

Letter to

the

Editor

The Torch Staff

REGISTRATION ··SCH EDU LE Pakistan relief fund drive continues
Returning Students

Members of the local Pakistan
Relief Fund drive are with the
help of LCC students, soliciting
A through Bi
funds within the LCC campus
Bj through Cl
and conducting a door to door
Cm through Dz
campaign in the Eugene-SpringE through Gl
field area to collect contribuA through Gl
tions to aid in the international
rehabilitation effort for surviWEDNESDAY,DECEMBER16
vors of the cyclone and tidal
8:00 to 10:00 a.m.
Gm through Hi
waves that inundated a large area
10:00 to 12:00 noon
Hj through Ka
of East Pakistan Nov. 13.
1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
Kb through Ln
According to Maudood Ansari,
3:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Lo through Mi
chairman of the Relief Fund Drive
5:30 to 9:00 p.m.
A through Mi
at LCC, smallpox and cholera
are spreading and the people in
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17
the affected area do not have ade8:00 to 10:00 a.m.
Mj through Pd
quate shelter, enough medical
10:00 to 12:00 noon
Pe through Rz
care, or enough food and water.
1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
Sa through St
Jamal Rahman, an East Paki3:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Su through Z
stani, is Vice President of the
5:30 to 9:00 p.m.
A through Z
Foreign Student Organization at
the U of 0, and head of the relief
New Students
fund drive in this area. The
Foreign Student Organization has
and Open Registration
been authorized to collect contributions door to door (for the
MONDAY, DECEMBER 28
Pakistan Relief Fund) by the
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
A through G
Eugene City Council, and the LCC
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29
•Relief Fund Drive is authorized
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
H through M
to collect contributions accordWEDNESDAY,DECEMBER30
ing to Ansari, by the U of O
8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
A through Z
Foreign Student Organization.
Ansari further stated that a
bank account has been established
During open registration new students and any returning stu- in the name of the Pakistani
dent who did not complete registration during December 15-17 Relief Fund at the Campus Branch
may reg~ster. New students should complete admission require- of the U. S. National Bank of
ments pnor to the date and time specified for registration.
Oregon. The account is superTUESDAY,DECEMBER15
8:00 to 10:00 a.m.
10:00 to 12:00 noon
1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
3:30 to 5:30 p.m.
5:30 to 9:00 p.m.

A look around the campuses
Football Woes

This was the year that the
University of Oregon's fighting
Ducks, under the guidance of
coach Jerry Frei, were supposed
to upset coach Dee Andros' Oregon State Beavers in the annual
Civil War between the two football teams. However, it was the
Beavers who dominated, winning
24-9 for their seventh straight
series victory.
To add insult to injury, on the
next day the Oregon State DAILY
BAROMETER played the Oregon
DAILY EMERALD (student newspaper teams) in a playoff of the
annual "Media Bowl" held in
Autzen Stadium.
You guessed it - the DAILY.
BAROMETER downed the EMERALD 22-19 and, according to
an article in the EMERALD, the
BAROMETER has won all seven
previous meetings between the
two teams.
Student .Bill of Rights?
According to an article in the
Mt. Hood Community College student newspaper THE ADVOCATE, MHCC is the only community c o 11 e g e in the United
States to have a Student Bill of
Rights. the bill of rights is a
detailed sketch of an individual's
rights as a student.
To coincide with the Student
Bill of Rights, an appeals board
has been established to take heed
of student and faculty complaints.
The three member board will
meet (according to THE ADVOCATE) whenever needed.
It is not made clear by the
article what powers, if any, the
appeals board has. However the
concept of spelling out the rights
of each student so he will have a
better chance to understand them,
and providing some sort of middle
ground to which any violation~
those rights may be heard, sounds
to me like a goo1 idea.
Poem

With winter already here, and
Christmas j us t around the corner, the following poem appeared
appropriately in THE EBBTIDE,
student newspaper for the Shoreline Community College, Seattle
Washington.
away

When winter frost melts

how to pray.

Due to the magnitude of the
damage to East Pakistan, Ansari
said that an international effort
is required to provide enough
care in time to help those people
affected, and more volunteers are
needed locally if contributions
are to reach the people in time.
Anyone interested in voluntee:ring their time and effort toward this go a 1 is advised to
contact Maudood Ansari at the
collection desk in the foyerofthe
Center Building.

I

Burgers, Shakes, Fries _

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"Try the best _in old-fashioned hamburgers'''

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anklin Blvd.

Best Selection

of 8 Track Tapes & C~r Stereos
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Car Stereos from $34.95
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Blaclc light Posters

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Since this will be the last
issue of the TORCH in 1970, may
I wish you all, from my home to
yours, a VERY MERRY CHRIST-

MAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR.

J

~AMsuRGER -DAN'5'7

Black Lights from $14. 95

by Bill Bauguess

and sun breaks to make
a new day.
When all the leaves
have things to say
and man needs peace in
any way.
He knows the price he
has to pay.
He'll learn again just

vised by the Bank Manager and
U of O authorities. Contributions
are being sent directly from that
account to the Relief Commission
in East Pakistan.
For those wishing to contribute
by mail, all checks should be
made out to the Pakistan Relief
Fund, and all contributions should
be sent to: The Pakistan Relief
Fund, c/o Maudood Ansari, Lane
Community College, 4000 East
30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon
97405.

TAPE CENTER

2495 Willamette

344-6156

P'''"'"''':\~,r~i111••~
II
KLCC PRESENTS
I
I
11 "Does LCC fulfill its role I
Bill

·11 the commu1·11y'."

Wednesday, December 9

~:00 - 8:00 p.m.

Hear the opinions of high school,
U of 0, and LCC students; city officials;
LCC administrators; and local citizens

II

:~
·~

KLCC-FM 90.3
Wtil~l .1.Jl:tl:i~t\~\\l
t

r

1

.,

I

I

·~

Page 4

ASB officers ·attend OCCSA/iSG ·<nu~etings
1

(Continued from page 1)

When the group brought the dinners, the Chicanos refused to
accept them. ''We have got to
help our ethnic and minority
groups to help themselves," Coverdell said, ''they do not want
people to do things for them-like charity cases--they want to
have the means to do things for
the ms elves.''
In the discussion of minority
problems, Coverdell reported, an
articulate American Indian who
graduated from the University of
Oklahoma and is teaching Native
American Indian classes at the
University of California at Berkeley spoke with first-hand knowledge about prob 1ems of the
American Indian. A MexicanAmerican from Arizona also
spoke to the members of this
group about pressing problems of
be i n g in a miniority group in
America. Repression of all
ethnic and minority groups in
America is a "very seriousproblem now,'' Coverdell com mented.
PROBLEMS OF SMALL AND
PRIVATE SCHOOLS, attended by
Rosen, discussed changing the
'' A to F'' grading system to a
o.o to 4.5 GPA for "more flexibility," which Rosen thought was
more practical. The group also
discussed teacher and course
evaluation.
The session on E N V IRONMENTAL EDUCATION included
an address by Rosen about LCC's
OOPIRG activities. The adult
discussion le ad e r was Special
Assistant to the Secretary of
Health, Education and Welfare,
Logan Saliada.

The panel on EDUCATIONAL
ALTERNATIVES AND REFORM,
with Rosen as a panel member,
discussed ways of bringing about
free tuition for students, and also
dealt with teacher and course
evaluation. An explanation of how
other schools have used IBM
cards for such evaluation was
presented.
Students complete
the cards on their teachers and
courses for the previous term,
and the information is fed into
a computer which ''grades" the
teachers and courses.
COMMUNITY ACTION PROGRAMS discussed the increase
in activities at two and fouryear schools in programs designed to aid minority groups and
the disadvantaged.
A panel on THE POW PROBLEM featured mothers and
wives of prisoners of war in
North Vietnam. They asked ASG
members to circulate petitions to
be sent to the North Vietnamese
government to release information on names of their prisoners.
The proposed petition reads:
"The delegates to the association of Student Governments National Convention re s o 1v e to
develop a national college and
university student movement for
the purposes of obtaining for the
wives and mothers of American
prisoners in Vietnam information
as to the health and welfare of
these prisoners. The movement
is designed to result in a massive
student signature campaign petitioning the North Vietnamese
government, in the name of humanity, to release information to
the families of the prisoners."
The group encouraged other student leaders to ask their respective student bodies to collect
student signatures on petitions

to be sent to St. John's Univer- said, "we try to work within Vegas. Their hours of participasity in New York no later than the system."
tion lasted from early morning
This ASG revised its consti- until night. Add to this schedule
Dec. 12. Rosen told the group
LCC already had a petition being tution and extended the one-year money problems for both Coversigned at the time of the ASG term of the president to two years dell and Rosen, as the school
to "give more solidity to the pays only for hotel, food and parconvention.
NEW PARTY POLITICS dealt
organization."
In addition to tial payment for transportation
with ASG's attempt to form a lengthening the president's term expenses. Coverdell mentioned
third (or fourth) party other than of office, ASG members gave him they did have some financial proDemocratic, Republican and Inmore authority to help strengthen blems and had to do some buddependent. ASG, or at least some
the national school organization. getary juggling to m a k e ends
of its members, feels that stuSome student believe a two- meet.
dents and the general population week hiatus in Las Vegas for
''Las Vegas is a very bad town
need another choice besides those student body officers is like an for a working convention," Cocurrently offered to the American engraved invitation from the De· verdell c o m m e n t e d. Rosen
public.
vil himself. However, the dis- added, however, "the good part
Other workshops included Orcussion groups listed here are was that you got the people out
ganizing for Political Action, Ra- but a few of the many that were of your hair that didn't want to
cism in America, Students and the
offered during the ASG conven- do anything while we were in Las
Media, Minority Input in Campus tion at the Stardust Casino in Las Vegas."
Governance, IndependentSources
of Student Government, The Stu- •. •.•:::.·.·.·.-...::.·::.·.·::.:.·:::·:·:·:· ·:::: ~=~=~:::: :,.~~: :.:.: ::-,,· -•••• ···:·:~·•• ···:···•:•:•:•····:···~·········•··············••'
dent Activities Bugaboo, and Student Government Structure,
which Coverdell and Rosen both
found "very helpful."
About 21 discuss ion groups
Buy-back- counter for the purchase
were offered at the Las Vegas
meeting. Coverdell and Rosen
of used book·s will open Dec. 14
were able to attend about half
of the groups.
We will buy BOOKS NEEDED FOR WINTER
In other discussions at the
TERM classes at one-half the new price. NOTE:
meeting, virtually the entire stuWe are overstocked on some titles and cannot
dent representatives at the ASG
add to our stock on these books at present.
convention were against the curPurchase of such books will be at used-book
rent school unrest pervading the
dealer prices.
country. Coverdell commented:
We will buy BOOKS NOT IN DEMAND FOR
'• Even some of the schools that
THE WINTER TERM (titles used only in the fall,
are considered as ultra leftdiscontinued and overstocked titles) at used-book
wings were completely against
dealer prices.
the violence on our campuses.
Paperbacks originally priced at less than
The Association of Student Go$1.95 are not saleable.
vernments is very strong on this
Requir-ed to sell books: Your student body card
point." He indicated that such
and one other piece of Id.
opposition is one of the planks
in ASG. Conversely, the older
National Student Association
tends to advocate a more vio"We're Right On Campus"
lent nature in handling social
problems.
In ASG, Coverdell
:~~\ .,.·:·: ......:.·.·.:.:.:.:.:.:.:::•:•:•:::...:::::•:•:•:•::::::::::::::::::::::::::..,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ·:·:· ~@

[••-,~·~·i,·•·,~~ •us~d-•e·~~I~-]

-............................................

!~~!

!~~!.

LCC Bookstore ·

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Look Ahead
To Winter and Spring Terms!
at

THE COLLEGE INN
• Excellent Food
• Continental Breakfast for Late Risers
• Private and Semi-private Rooms
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• Quality Food & Lodging for U of O and L.C.C. Men and Women

1000 Patterson

The College Inn

343-9291

I

l~j

C:hristmos··oonatiori·s needed
Christmas is a special time
for children, a time shared with
family, friends and others, but
there are less fortunate Lane
County Children who must spend
their holidays in institutions and
are apt to be forgotten unless a
special effort is made on their
behalf. You can help by contributing gifts or money through
the Volunteer Coordinating Committee's Christmas Project, to
make their Christmas a little
brighter.
Gift suggestions include stuffed
animals, sports equipment,
sweatshirts, cosmetics and other
toiletry items, models cars,
games, craft sets, wallets, purses and other items which can
be used as individual gifts for
children. The Juvenile Department Volunteers ·will distribute
the gifts on the basis of need.

SHOPPERS DISCOVER A NEW WAY OF BUYING
groceries at the newly opened Warehouse Food
Store in Eugene. The store offers no frillsbox boys, baggers, fancy decorations-just a
''clearance sale" look and merchandise that
averages about 20% lower than other stores.
For this reduction, shoppers are required to

mark the prices on their purchases and wade
through aisles of other shoppers looking for
bargains---and finding them. Salem residents
have been known to trek to Eugene to do their
monthly shopping at the Warehouse and students,
on a limited budget, would be wise to check out
the Warehouse.
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb)

Warehouse Food Store

The new Warehouse Food Store
at 2100 W. 11th Ave. in Eugene
is just that--a warehouse. No
frills, paint or decoration are
included; bare concrete floors,
exposed heating ducts and aisles
of cardboard boxes make up the
warehouse decor.
According to Shirl Thammert,
store manager, the whole idea for
the new store is to cut the overhead down to almost nothing,
with the emphasis toward passing
the savings on to the customers.
Theoretically, foodstuffs and
other merchandise will average

20% cheaper than elsewhere in
Eugene.
About 9,000 items are stocked
in the 28,500 square foot store,
with approximately 7,000 of them
being foodstuffs. A conventional
supermarket of the same size
employs about l00persons, while
Warehouse Food Store personnel
is kept to a bare minimum of
about 40. There are no baggers,
no carry-out boys and only a few
clerks.
All stock is handled only once
by store personnel, and is displayed in the case in which it
was shipped. Individual items
are not stamped with a price;

'Hitching' signs removed
by Raymond L. Stubbs

As one departed the school

grounds in the past at the West
End parking lot, one couldn't
help but notice the Thumb signs
reading "Eugene" and "Springfield." However, you may have
also noticed recently the removal
of these signs. Why?
The erection of the signs was
the work of a newly formed club

Deseret Club
dates meetings

The Deseret C 1u b, an oncampus organization of students
who are members of or interested
in the Church of the Latter Day
Saints, meets weekly from 11:30
a.m. to 1:00 p.m. on Thursdays.
Meetings are held in the library
conference room in the Center
Building.
During the meetings, classes
are held on the New Testament
and, according to club president
Greg Naylor, the group's function is '' sometping a lot different and a lot more versatile" than other religious groups.
Classes are led by Randy Douglass, director of the LDS Institute
of Religion, located at 16th and
Alder, adjacent to the University of Oregon.
Naylor stated that all persons,
regardless of religious affiliation, are welcome to attend meetings and various club functions
held throughout the year.

on campus called "Students For
Survival". This group, strangely
enough, found its start in aphysical science class of science
instructor Bernard Kirk. The
club now has a membership of
about 15 or 20 students. Their
biggest project at this time is
the "thumb" or hit Ch-hiking
signs.
The signs were put up in an
effort to solve the problem of
some students in need of rides
to and from school, but the County
Commission apparently didn't
see this need as did the students.
As a result the signs came down
Friday afternoon. The County
Commission was operating under
a law that says any property
within twenty feet of county roads
is county property and therefore
permission must be received
prior to the erection of anything. The Survival Club received
• a warning Friday morning and the
signs were down Friday evening.
Eldon Schafer, LCC President,
and Bill Cox, Superintendent of
College Facilities, were made
aware of this action by the club
and both agreed to aid the stu dents by giving them the right
to place the hitching signs on
school grounds and pay for their
erection. The new location is to be
at the Southwest parking lot exit
and at the exit by the Health
Building. At each of the locations there will be two signs, one .
reading "Eugene" and the other
"Springfield". Both will carry
the old thumb picture pointing
towards the direction of travel.

~tiffll)lete Engineering

& Drafting Supplies ,
NEW & USED DESKS, CHAIRS, FILES

Gift & Gallery on Balcony
PLENTY OF FREE OFF-STREET PARKING

A new idea in shopping

by La Verna Bauguess

Any money or gift reserves will
be used for birthday gifts, recreational activities and special
needs throughout the coming
year.
Individuals and groups making
donations of gifts or money to the
Christmas Project should contact
Mrs. Lawrence Thornley (Bonnie) at 343-1425. Money donations should be made in the form
of checks payable to the Lane
County Juve n i 1e Department
Christmas Project.
Make this a special Christmas. Put these children on your
list of those to be remembered.
"There is destiny that makes
us brothers,
No man goes his way alone.
AU that we send into the lives
of others
Comes back again into our own." .
(Author unknown)

1733 Pearl St. "'

only the outside of the shipping
case is marked with the price
per item and the price per case.
Shoppers use marking pencils
to price their individual purcha~e
items. No reserves are kept in
the back room, thus eliminating
additional handling cost. All the
store's stock is on display.
The new store in Eugene is one
of a chain which opened its first
store in Boise, Idaho, about three
years ago. Since that time stores
have been added in Salt Lake City
and Ogden, Utah, as well as in
Kennewick, Everett, Walla Walla
and Burien, Washington. New
stores are also opening in Reno
and Las Vegas, Nevada, and two
in Phoenix, Arizona.
If the number of cars using the
120-space parking lot is any indication, bu s in e s s is booming.
Thammert, taking an optimistic
look, stated that efforts are being
made to expand the parking lot
to accommodate the expected increase in the number of shoppers.

MAZZIS

Lunchtime Sandwiches
11:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. M - F

3377 E. Amazon

343-7926

Mazzis Italian Beef
Italian Sausage

with melted moz. cheese

Meat Ball
Mazzis Italian Ham burger

with cheese
AU Sandwiches served with our
Special Bean Salad

Homemade Minestrone
small bowl
large bowl
Large green salad
Sm all gr~en salad

,

1·,st~~s

Christmas --Gifts

Best selection, quality, and color in panty
hose-get them ·at Albert's. Moderate
prices from $1.00 and up. Cantrece bikini,
sheer demi-toe, opaque and mesh. All
nude pantyhose, too!

Complete line of DANSKIN for
Children and Adults, 12 styles
-12 colors.
COAST TO COAST TO SERVE YOU SINCE 1927 .

ertl

HOSIERY 343

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Page 6

'Master Plan for Car881" EduCation ·' develOped

by Richard Stamp
In approximately five years
Lane County students may be
completing high school with enough training and experience to
step into vocational jobs immediately following graduation.
Realizing this possibility is one
of the goals of the "Master Plan
for Career Education in Lane
County," presently being developed by local educators and
community leaders.
Under this program high school
students would receive classroom training in broad vocational
areas, and in their senior year
would work part-time in specific
fields. An important aspect of
the plan would be to pin-point
occupations which have job openings available so that students
would not be trained in vocations
which are ·" dead-ended."
• How the Master Plan may be
operating in 1975 was described
by LCC Administrative Intern
O.~e Martin in a recent interview.
"If a high school student should
decide that his career would be
in some kind of mechanics,"
Martin explained, "then he would
study mechanics clusters-- a family of jobs such as auto mechanics, diesel mechanics, office machines mechanics, aircraft engines, small gasoline engines-- all these things that belong to a family, but are different."
In addition to this broad exposure, the plan anticipates that
as a high school senior a student would be able to work in a
cooperative venture at some job
in the community related to his
vocational interest. He would go
to school half a day and work
three to four hours a day, receiving credit for his work experience.
"By the time a student becomes a senior, he would have
some idea in mind as to what
job he would really like to have
in the family of occupations he
had been studying," Martin pointed out. '' Maybe he would like to
work on small engines as a career. Maybe he would just like
to be an auto mechanic, or maybe
he would like to work on office
machines. He would make a selection and the coordinator of
occupational e du c at ion at his
school would find him a job in
the community in the particular
area he wanted."
At the end of high school, after he had had all this broad exposure and experience, the plan
assumes that the student would
have enough basic skills so that
he could hold down a job. Hopefully, in many cases some of the
cooperating businesses and industries in the community would
hire the people who had trained
under them in this program.
"The idea of occupational education in high school is to give
a broad exposure," Martin emphasized. '' Then if a student
wanted more education he could
c o me to the community college
and specialize in the particular
area he wanted to carry through
as his life's career. If he wanted
still more education he could go
on to the university."
The Master Plan projects a
coverage of about 50 per cent of
high school students in some type
of occupational p r o g ram , according to Martin.
•
"When I say occupational program," he commented, "I am
speaking in terms of a job entry
type of situation so that a student taking such courses as machine . shop, construction, electronics or business is taught
to be proficient enough to get
a job in that particular occupation when he finishes high
school."
The "Master Plan for Ca-

reer Education in Lane County"
is being developed jointly by the
Steering Committee of the Lane
County Committee for Occupational Education and the Superintendents' Advisory Committee
on Vocational Education.
Interwoven with this Master
Plan is another project identified
as the ''Lane County Articulation Project."
Defining articulation as '' a way
of working together toward a
common goal," Martin explained
that this project is an attempt
to encourage occupational education lea~ers in Lane County
secondary schools and Lane
Community College to work cooperatively toward achievement
of the goals which they have in
common.
'' Many education institutions-junior high and high school, community college and university-have what seem to be terminals,
or goals which end when a person graduates from that institution," Martin said. "The Articulation Project seeks to elim- ·
inate such terminals and establish a continuing line of education right through each institution so that students can go from
one to the other smoothly without any overlapping or duplication of subjects or processes.
The intent of this project is to
get secondary and community
college teachers together so that
this smooth flowing type of concept will work."
Through such a coooerative

approach, he pointed out, both
groups will know what is being
done at both the secondary level and the community college
level, and will work together
in developing curriculum so that
when a student completes high
school and comes on to community college he will not be
taking courses which repeat what
he has already learned in high
school. At the higher level to
which he has progressed, he will
be just continuing his education
without any duplication.
As one step toward encouraging this cooperative approach to
common concerns, teachers of
occupational education in high
schools throughout Lane County
were invited to meet early in
November with LCC instructors
whose college level courses deal
with similar occupational areas.
This meeting, which Martin coordinated, drew an attendance of
approximately 150 persons. Discussion centered on three areas
--the individualized curriculum
in electronics (ICE) and the individualized programs in autodiesel and in the Language Arts
Depart.ment. The term "individualized p r o g r a m " means
that a student progresses at his
own speed.
The Articulation Project has
been written for approximately
three stages of implementation-this year, next year and a propose d future implementati-0n,
Martin reported. But three introductory phases are planned
for the current school ye a r •

by John Tennis

issues and there were some concerned students at the meetings.
The fact that "students don't want
Lane involved" in ROTC brought
many people to the meetings, said
Karen.
John Douglas, who is soon to
be sworn in as a Senator from
the Science Dept. feels differently . John feels that the
poor handling of the recent elections, and the fact that a very
small portion of students ran for
office or bothered to vote, points
out that the problem of apathy is
a very persistent one.
His decision to become a student senator came after attendi.Ilg a Senate meeting, where he
found that the position was open
and ''nobody else seemed interested.''
He feels that, often, a senate
meeting" boils down to a conflict of personalities." Nobody
knows parlementary procedure,
he says, so the meetings are
awfully slow.
Whether slow or not, some
interest is beginning to spark.

Students show interest
in student government

"They're becoming aware of
the fact that we have $40,000
of THEIR money," said Karen
Von Effling.
"It could work if the people
we re i n t e r e s t e d , " said John
D~uglas.
These are two reactions to the
apparent increased int e rest
show in LCC Student Senate meetings, held every other Thursday
in room 202 in the Administration building at 2:30 p.m.
After Fall elections there were
still about 20 Senatorial vacancies. Now there are about 5.
Student Senate Advisor Betty
Ekstrom noted that attendance at
Senate meetings has been high
lately and that the gallery has
been lively.
Ka re n Von Effling, Senator
f r o m Mas s Communications,
thinks that current interest in
the student government at Lane
is due to the issues that were
recently covered - Kent State~
OSPIRG and ROTC are all hot

Children's party
scheduled for
December 17

On Thursday, Dec. 17, there
will be a Christmas party for
children through the age of 12.
Between the hours of 5 p.m.
and 7 p.m. there will be FREE
ice cream, cake, fruit, candy,
door prizes, and games, followed by a Christmas play. There
will be a special guest appearance
by TWO Santas, one of them rumored to be LCC President Eldon Schafer.
Any child whose family is associated with LCC, or isparticipating in the Big Brother/Big
Sister Program, is invited to
this special party.
Free bus transportation will
be provided for those without available rides if you leave your
name and address in the Student Senate Office, second floor
of the Center Building, by Wednesday, Dec.16.

These include winter and spring such packages.
term evening classes to be ofFinally, from among teachers
fered under the Division of Con- who have attended these wintinuing Education, with credit ter and spring term classes, apfor each three-hour class, and proximately 30 will be selected
then a summer workshop which to participate in the summer
will involve a group effort to workshop. This total will include
build learning packages for ap- seven or eight from ~1ach of the
µoximately four different areas four occupational education areas involved--office education,
in occupational education.
The winter term session is in- electricity-electronics, mechantended to familarize teachers ics, and materials and proceswith the concept of individualized sing.
inst ru c t_i on behavorial ob'The Lane County Articulajectives, and the know-how on tion Project" is being coordwriting "learning-activity-pack- inated by the Lane Intermediate
Education District and involves
ages."
The session in the spring will six other groups, including LCC,
involve each of the participants Oregon State University and the
in actually writing about five University of Oregon.

-

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Formerly Mildred's Spanish Palace

Watch Mildred
cook your meals

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

So4ailtla '4,

served with honey at all meals
Open 7 days a week

KAMPU
BARBER
SHOP

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FREE PROFESSIONAL CONSULTATION * MlCROSCOPIC
ANALYSIS

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FEATURING

RK
PRODUCTS~343-7654_(
851 East 13th Avenue
Eugene, Oreaon

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327 Main

Springfield

LCC Tutorial Service:

Page 7

,

'People helping people'

by Bill Nelson

"I get by with a little help
from my friends."
That could be the motto for
LCC's Tutorial program. Actually, it's "People Helping Peo.
ple."
A big, bright blue-and-white
sign in the alcove on the second
fl o o r of the Cent e r Building
designates the Tutorial Office,
room 235. The program is coordinated by Debbie Ayres and
Douglas ''Punky" Fisher. Advisors and counselor-aides are
Saralie Taylor and Maryl Stadius.
"The LCC Tutorial program
became a separate •entity unto
itself in 1969 when the tutorial
and Upward Bound programs separated," stated Debbie Ayres.
Mrs. Ayres also said "the program is a free service to all
LCC students needing help, with
the tutors being volunteer stu-

Gaskill appointed to
Voe Ed

dent help."
Approximately five people a
week ask for tutoring help, while
there are 25 people on file willing to help.
The student tutoring program
has run into two problems: 1.
not enough publicity to the students, and 2. lack of volunteers
for student help in courses such
as math, science, history, and
Spanish.
Out of the 25 volunteers, over
20 of them have offered help in
the social science field.
There is an attempt being made
by the coordinating and advisory
staff to obtain possible field credit in the future for tutoring
volunteers, but . no definite decision has been reached on this
idea yet.
There are no set qualifications
for being a tutoring volunteer just be a student with a desire
to help a friend. Contact the
LCC tutoring office between
l p.m. and 5 p.m. daily for more
information.

ZPG seeks members, finances
by Lance Winger
Before man can effectively
overcome pollution, crime, violence the problems of the poor,
and ;acism he must first control the cdndition under which
these thrive - overpopulation.
Realization of this fact led to the
development of a nation-wide organization, Zero Population
Growth bent on stabilizing the
population. Born last spring to
help in this fight was the LCC
branch of ZPG.
Besides the population bomb,
LCC's ZPG has its own problems. Financing is one of them.
The bulk of the funds comes from
membership f e es and presently
ZPG has 15 paid members. To
successfully accomplish the i r
plans ZPG needs both members
and funds.
Another stressed problem is
misconceptions about the group.
I) Zero Population Growth doesn't
advocate zero children, but 2

Council

Mel Gaskill, Mechanics Department Chairman, has been
appointee! to the Annual Plan subcommittee of the Governor's Advisory Council for Vocational Education. The group's charge is
to study and advise the State
Board of Education on the development of the state plan for vocational education.
Gaskill has been an active
member of the A.dvisorv Counc fl for Vocational Education
which Gov. McCall created last
February and is composed of
representatives from education,
government, management, and
labor.
At last week's State Board of
Education meeting, the chairman
of the Council outlined four recommendations included in the
Council's first evaluation report
on vocational education in Oregon.
An attitudinal change toward
career education was cited as
the first major concern. "Too
many persons, not only from the
public sector, but from education itself, do not really believe
that there is more to the education process than graduating
students into colleges and universities," the chairman noted.
Secondly , the Council recom mended that the thrust of
school counseling and guidance
services be aimed at meeting
the demands of total career education and recognized that this
move would require "massive
changes" in the philosophies,
timing and direction of counseling in the schools.
The Council further pointed out
the need for immediate expansion of preservice and inservice
training of career educ at ion
teachers and urged increases in
funds for education--with a larger portion set aside for career
training.

ATTENTION

VETERANS
you must file
a copy of your
Winter Term
schedule
with
Financial Aids

if you want your
checks to continue

babies per couple, thus sfa.bilizing population growth. 2) ZPG
in tbe words of their constitution," ... campaign neither fo~ nor
against abortion, but for the km~s
of social, medical, legal conditions in which women who elect
to undergo abortion can receive
good, inexpensive, and prompt
abortion care."
Since spring, Lane's ZPG has
been active in communicating the
needs and methods for population
r e st rain t . A presentation on
population problems and methods
of birth control informed students on the intensity of the
.
problem.
ZPG politically involved itself in the spring primaries and
fall elections. Funds were raised
through bumper stickers and button sales. Recently a film entitled "The Time of Man" proved very successful, bringing 3
packed houses. Current work has
been on posters and - a very
promising pamphlet concerning
abortion information, birth con-

trol methods and convincing statistics. This pamphlet will be
provided to students soon.
Future plans of ZPG include
a project to send books concerning the population crisis to
educate politicians, and information table in the Center.
Through the efforts of student directors Mitch Allen and
Sharon Flesner; faculty advisor
and 15 year veteran of the population war, Freeman Rowe; and
others, _the LCC branch of ZPG
has made •remarkable progress
and could do much more with
increased support.

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Page' .8' ~'J _

Ke'cfcJ
EugeHti :l?.~siness~~~,; Jp, ~
LCC development fund

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i'¥ot:ith cbrrhn·i.ftees'lfifd"/Se.J.etfivrf Sef\iice:;fh'iiii'ge

the Eugene Airport Commission,
Lane County Advisory Airport
Commission, Lane County Alton
Baker Park Advisory Committee,
Lane County Advisory Committee
for the 1990 General Plan and the
S tat e Human R i g ht s Advisory
Committee.
Past office have included:
president of the Young Presidents Organization (YPO) of Oregon, vice president of the North
Pacific area of YPO, treasurer
of the Lane County YM-YWCA
board of directors, president of
Lane County Chest, general
chairman of Lane County United
Appeal, charter member of the
Junior Achievement Board of Eugene, president of Eugene Contractors Association, board of
directors and vice president of
Eugene Chamber of Commerce,
board of directors of Lane County Chapter of American Red
Cross, president of Central Lutheran Church of Eugene, and
executive committee member of
the North Pacific District of the
American Lutheran Church.
He has been president of Vik
Construction since 1957 and is
a member of the board of directors of Citizens Bank, Home
Savings and Loan Association
and Eugene Industrial Development Corp.

Trygve Vik, president of Vik
construction Co. of Eugene, has
been appointed chairman of the
board of trustees of the LCC development fund.
Vik,, 46, will lead fund raising
efforts on behalf of LCC in the
non-tax sector. Donations are
needed, he said, for scholar•
ships and financial aid to students, matching funds to make the
college eligible for federal grants
for the disabled, faculty development and specialized tools and
equipment for occupational programs.
Vik said recent funding cutbacks in Salem and Washington,
coupled with rising enrollments,
have put LCC in financial need.
"Public a p p r op r i at i on s have
created a good college, but it
takes the support of friends of
the college to make it great."
About 1,000 letters requesting
contributions are being sent this
month to prospective donors, Vik
said.
Vik's appointment as development chairman by LCC president
Eldon Schafer is for an indefinite
term. other officers of the fund
and the lengths of terms of office
will be decided as soon as appointment of an additional 29
trustees is completed, Schafer
said.
Membership will include alumni, staff, students, two members o f the college Board of
Education, and representatives
from the community. Executive
secretary of the development fund
board is Lyle Swetland, who has
been LCC's director of development for the past 17 months.
Vik's chairmanship is the latest in a long list of public service activities in the community.
He has been a director of the
Eugene Water and Electric Board
since 1964 and is a member of

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Eighteen major recommendations of the Selective Service System's Youth Advisory Com mittees have or are being implemented due to what Draft Director Curtis Tarr calls " ...
constructive, youthful participation in the change mechanism of
the American democratic process."
Ta r r ' s c o m m e n t is in an
introductory letter to a twentytwo page booklet, "Dialogue-Action - Participation -CHANGE!",
released Dec. 2 as a follow-up
report to an earlier publication
listing results of the June 28July 2 National Conference of
109 Selective Service Youth Advisor delegates in Washington,
D.C.
In the report of his Agency's
750 Youth Advisors across the
country, Dr. TaFr noted '' ... that
of the thirty-six recommendations submitted, eighteen have or
are being implemented, thanks
to your suggestions and the year
long work of our staff." He
added, ~'Six are being studied
further. Ten were beyond the
jurisdictional control of the Selective Service System and were
referred to the Executive Branch
or the Congress for consideration. Only two have been dis-

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approved." Selective Service
spokesmen noted that many of
the plans approved were the joint
result of Youth Advisors' recommendations and already-underway staff projects.
Of the eighteen recommendations adopted, a sampling include:
increasing the quality and quantity of draft information for registrants, schools and counselors; making local boards more
representative of today's young
registrants; broadening the conscientious obj e c to r work pro-

gram; computerizing and updating operations and data . collection; improving rules to minimize draft evasion; and providing closer supervision of local board actions.
The Youth Advisory Com mittees were begun by President Nixon in June 1969, with
pane Is now averaging over a
dozen members attached to all
56 State Selective Service Headquarters. The young people range
in a~e from 18 to 26 and represent diverse backgrounds.

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AUTOMOTIVE

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FOUR FASHION LOCATIONS

FINA·Ls· WEEK SCHEDU·L·E
If your class
is on

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7-9

9-11

7-9

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UWHF

UH

MWF

MUWH

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MUHF

MW

MUWF

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and s,arts at
0700
0730
0800
0830
0900
0930
1000
1030
1100
1130
1200
1230
1300
1330
1400
1430
1500
1530
1600
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1700
1730

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9-11

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7-9

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CONFLICTS or times not scheduled above must be arranged through
the Sched./Curr. Clerk in the Office of Instruction. This is to assure
that there will be no room conflicts.

w

u

w

u

w

STUDENTS HAVING MORE THAN TWO EXAMS in one day, may request a rescheduling of the third exam at a different time. See your
instructor to make this arrangement.

P ysical t erapy program - ''I ant·astic''
woman is enrolled. "But back
a i I me n ts c au s e most c o m plaints," he said.

When a student enrolls, Sackett
analyses his specific problems
and works out an individualized
" program of exercises. He often
adapts basic P.E. exercises to
the student's needs.
The therapy room on the first
floor of the P.E. building, has
some special equipment, including wall pulleys for arms and
legs, wheel to strengthen ~houlder muscles, stationary bicycle
f or cardiovsscular stimulation,
sauna at 180 degrees for heat
treatments, and whirlpool bath
f or relaxation. Certain procedures like use of hot packs
or infrared lamps are done only
under a physician'sprescripti on.
The adjoining weight room has
.
weights, bars and other equipment for muscle building.
Sackett also has two -students
working part time under his direction with those patients who
need extra help. The Cooperative Work Experience Program
in which they are enrolled provides training in the fields in
DENNIS CELORIE RECEIVES WORK OUT during
program taught by Fred Sackett (r.). Sackett
which
the students are interested.
his weekly physical therapy session. Celorie,
has been at LCC since his graduation from
Denn is Murphy, P.E. major
Assistant Professor of Mass Communications,
the Mayo Clinic School of Physical Therapy
who is considering a career in
has been in the LCC therapy program since
in 1968. He is aided by two students. One. of
physical therapy, spends part of
his arrival at LCC Fall Term. Celorie is one
them-Dennis Murphy (kneeling, I.) spends part
his time working with Celorie.
of over 30 students enrolled in the therapy
of his time working with Celorie.
When Celorie began therapy
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb)
this fall, Sackett prescribed a
by Doris Ewing
a week with thirty students en- a physi~al therapist, that's fan- series of exercises to stretch his
arms and legs. Celorie has now
rolled. A few students, unable to tastic!" he said..
gained enough strength to proHiding behind the prosaic name participate during class hours,
Not all four-year colleges have gress to a more rigorous routine.
"Correctives" is one of LCC's have individual sessions.
therapy programs, and LCC is Although he has no .specific goal,
most exciting physical education
''There must be at least 200
classes--a physical therapy pro- p e op 1e on campus wh? woulC: one of the few two-year colleges Celorie said he is lc;>oking forin the West that has a program ward to using a bicycle next term.._
gram. Apparently one of LCC's benefit from therapeutic ex
- directed by a professional physi- and possibly do some swimming.
better kept secrets, the three- ercise," Sackett said. He reached
cal therapist.
Darlene's program has also
year-old program is unknown to his estimate from student
health
The therapy program, saidSa- emphasized arm exercises. Now,
many on camp us who would records which indicated "limiprobably like to participate in ted," "special," or "no" P.E. ckett, has two approaches: topro- she says she wants more work
ide short term therapy for those on her legs. "But we don't have
its activities.
Sackett said there is no one who have been injured or under- the special equipment we need,"
According to Physical Thera- on campus who would not be
she said.
pist Fred Sackett, the purpose benefited by some activity of- gone surgery, but can look forShe added that Sackett does a
ward to complete recovery; and
of the class is "to provide phy- fered through the P.E. departthose who will never be able to good job at improvising exercises
sical functions." What it does is ment. The therapy program is
to meet her needs. "He works
provide professionally planned especially helpful to wheelchair undertake all the normal activi- them
out as we go along,'' she
ties but whose condition can be
e x e r c is es for the physically patients, he said.
said.
improved,
as
in
polio,
cerebral
handicapped,
Sackett would like to get a
But the students either don't palsy, and certain accidents.
rowing machine for endurance
Sacke-tt, 26, came to LCC fol- know about the therapy class, or
Sackett has worked with stuexercises, and a punching bag
lowing graduation from the Mayo what it can do for them, Sackett
dents who have had heart trouble, for
hand-eye coordination.
Clinic School of Physical Therapy said , and "I'm not a recruiter.
arthritis, encephalitis, and
Students learn a variety of
in 1968. "That first year was I can't go up to a student and ask
stroke, One student is blind, and
exercises, including some "Sacslow," he said. "The program him why he isn't in my class.''
usually at least one pr~gnant
was new, no one knew much
Second year student Darlene
about it ..•. "
u
Johnson first heard about the
Now he teaches two classes program when she tried to find
ID ftl
which meet regularly three times a class to fulfill the P.E. reI
quirement for her secretarial
•
I. science degree. Darlene, who had
Nursing class
polio when she was three, uses
u
crutches.
elects officers
-ijjlllllllllN
In high school she usually had
"some sort of program" worked
The LCC Licensed Practical out by the teacher for her, "but
; : .cl I
Nursing class, with 31 students it didn't work very well," she
.~=-•-ll l'i
enrolled this term, elected offi- said. "Here I reallylookforward
cers Nov. 13. Those elected to the class."
- - • ijjlllllllll
C)
were Anita Robinson, President;
I
.....
1111!
IL
cio
Dennis Celorie, Assistant ProArlene Flegel, Vice President;
fessor
of
Mass
Communications,
Carolyn Bauder, Secretary; and
was looking for a student to help
0
Adele Sobba, Treasurer.
OU.,
.I: him with exercises. Celorie, who
The c las s also planned a
has cerebral palsy, walks with
Christmas party for Dec. 11, to
crutches except on campus. Here
be held on campus. The class
he uses an electric wheel chair
voted to give gifts to the LCC
"in order to do my job and do
Child Care Center instead of exchanging gifts among themselves. it well."
After a year of little activity
The one-year Practical Nursing program will be completed before he came to LCC Fall
by the current students on Aug. Term, he felt need for a workout.
"To have a program directed by
13, 1971.

Ill 08.8

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1241 Willamette

--="'

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kett specials," and become familiar with the m11scles that are
benefited. As a problem situation for exams Sackett sometimes
has the students work out exerff
n
cise programs for spec ic a ments.
The correctives classes meet
Monday, Wednesday and Friday
in P.E.1 59. The women's class
is at 9:00 a.m. men's class is
at 11 :00 a.m.
A new class·, Exercise and
Weight Control , is scheduled
Winter term. It will deal with
the relationships between activity and nutrition. Sackett will
teach the exercises and Nurse
Ellene Goldsmith will teach basicprinciples of nutrition, Exercise and Weight Control class
is coed, and will meet Monday,
Wednesday and Friday at
3:00 p.m.
Any P.E. majors interested
in therapy work through the Cooperative Work Experience Program should see Bob Way, Adult
Education Department in A p prenticeship Building, ext.309.

By

GEORGE
SKEIE
MEMBER
AMERICAN
GEM SOCIETY

A DIAMOND H/JfD
"Let me see your hand" may
not be a request you expect the
jeweler to make when you go
shopping for a diamond ring.
The size and shape of your hand,
however, IS important to me.
Since you have some choice as
far as size and quality are concerned, you also should give some
thought as to what looks best
on your particular hand. Like you,
it is distinctive.
The ROUND diamond, called
the brilliant, looks well on any
hand shape. If your hand is large,
you might consider flanking the
center diamond with others at
the side to give an over-all
balance ..
On a plump or rounded hand,
a PEAR-SHAPE diamond looks
well. It is worn with the point
towards the fingertip and thus,
has a tendency to make the fingers appear more elongated. A
lond EMERALD-CUT diamond
gives the same effect.
A slender hand with long, tapering fingers, is falttere? by_a
MARQUISE diamond, which lS
shaped like a small boat with a
point at each end. Asweepingdesign that travels down the longe r
space between the ring area and
the first knuckle, is also a graceful choice.
An oval cut diamond, like the odealor classic oval face, fits all
hands well, qnd is now quite popular. Whatever your preference
we will be happy to advise you
on the proper diamon and ring
style for you. As a member firm
(one of the few in the state) of
the American Gem Society, you
may rely on our professional
knowledge.

•=.
10.Z7 W I LL A MET T E ST .
PHO-..- 3 4 5 . 03 54

Page 10

Adult Education class aids ic>'b. ·.·s·e·•ikers

BY Mark Stevens

"Creative Job Search Techniques" --what is it?
It is a course at LCC--free and
open to the public as well as students--that teaches men and
women the techniques of finding
the job or career they can be
happy in.
How does it work? There is
no prerequisite--just a desire

for employment, or to find a
better job. Age? The youngest
that's been enrolled in the class
to date was 13 and the oldest 70.
A unique feature of the creative
job search techniques class is
that one may enroll at any time-just come to class. It's held each
Wednesday evening, 7 to 10 p.m.,
in the counseling library adjacent
to the Placement Office in the
Center Building.
The course is tailored to the

·Eugene Symphony honors
Beethoven anniversary
In honor of the 200th anniversary of the birth of Ludwig van
Beethoven, the Eugene Symphony
will devote its second concert
of this season to music by this
German master.
The orchestra, under the direction of Lawrence Maves, will
perform a single concert Tuesday, Dec. 8, in the Recital Hall
of the School of Music at the
University of Oregon at 8:00 p.m.
Robert Groth, Jr., the conductor of _the Grande RondeSym-

Voters league
slates discussion
of air pollution

phony and concertmaster of the
Eugene Symphony, will be the
featured soloist in Beethoven's
Concerto in D major for violin
and Orchestra. The concerto, the
only one Beethoven wrote for
violin, is considered one of the
greatest works of its kind, though
its first performance was so
unsatisfactory it lay neglected for
many years because the musicians supposedly sight-read the
composition without rehearsal.
Groth has chosen the cadenzas
by the famous violinist, Joachim,
who was responsible for rescuing the concerto from neglecto

The program, chosen by Lawrence Maves to represent Beethoven at his best, will include
the Overture to "Fidelio" and
t h e '' Eroica'' Symphony. Beethoven revised his only opera,
"Fidelio", several times and
wrote no less than four overtures for the various revisions.
The title as well as the music
was altered, hence the earlier
overtures bear the name ''Leonora" one, two and three. It
is the fourth and final version
which the symphony will play.

"AIR POLL UTION-Economics and Enforcement" is the topic for discussion at a public
meeting Dec.9 at 7:30 p.m. in
the City Council Chambers, Eugene City Hall.
The public forum, presented by
the League of Women Voters of
Central Lane County will feature panelists in a discussion of
the economic and enforcement
Beethoven's third symphony, in
problems related to the control
E flat and subtitled ''Eroica,"
of air pollution.
Speakers will be Richard Hat- ranks among the musical masterchard, Director Columbia-Willa- P i e c e s of all t i m e . It was
mette Air Pollution Authority; originally dedicated to Napoleon.
Kessler Cannon, Gov. McCall's The dedication was changed to
Assistant in charge of Natural "the memory of a great man"
Resources; Tom Donaca, Lobby- when the democratic Beethoven
ist, Association of Oregon In- became disenchanted by the emdustries; and Donald Watson, Di- peror's ambition.
Reserved tickets for the conrector, Bureau of Economic Recert are sold out, but some
search, U. of o.
The d is cu s s ion will be mo- ninety general admission tickets
derated by Don Sterling, Jr. Edi- at $1.25 may be obtained at Mattorial E d it o r of the Ore go n tox Pipe Shop or the School of
Journal. Questions from the au- Music office. There will be a
shuttle service from the Grace
dience will be invited.
For more information call the Lutheran Church parking lot to
League of Women Voters 343- the Recital Hall courtesy of Joe
Romania Chevrolet.
7017.

individual and will fit his specific
needs in finding a job that he can
be the most happy and interested
in. Many people find they are
hampered in finding employment
of their choice because they lack
a high school diploma. Such persons may take a General Education De ve 1op men t (GED) test,
which certificate, when achieved,
serves in lieu of a high school
diploma.
In case you don't know what
kind of work you want, you will
be given apptitude tests that will
point out your innate abilities and
special interests. Once these ire
known, you will be channeled
through the vocational library
where thousands upon thousands
of jobs are listed. But don't let
that ''snow'' you-remember,
you have found where your interest and abilities lie so you
will only look through and study
the vocations that are of interest
to you. Your test will reveal,
too, the kind of an environment
that you best like to work in. Do
you like to work with 1 a r g e
groups, or are you a lone wolf
that prefers quiet to the hustle
and bustle? Are you gregarious,
sociable, like to meet people?
The test will reveal the kind
of temperament you have and the
vocational library will help you
find a vocation that will bring
pleasure instead of an eight-tofive drudgery.
Okay. So I've found the job I
want, but don't have the training or the qualifications for it,
of what good has the course been
to me?
Obviously if one does not have
the necessary qualifications for
the job, he will not be hired;
but the course has already done
you some good. You have found
a vocation that is interesting to
you. You have a goal to shoot
for. You can start training for
the job through school or an apprenticeship program. Do not
lose sight of your goal: you are
training for your future hapiness.
Suppose I already have the
training and the qualifications,
why do I need creative job search
training?
Many well qualified men and
women lose out on getting a job
to one less qualified because they
have not learned how to sell themselves to the personnel officer.
It is the person who can sell
himself and his qualifications
that gets the job. Creative job
search will teach you how to write
a resume that points up all of
your qualifications. You will

learn how to fill out, properly,
job applications and write letters
of application. You will be taught
how to conduct yourself during a
job interview. You will know your
strong points and, most important, you will have come to believe in yourself. As a part of
the course you will be actively
engaged in searching for a job.
You will be interviewed by prospective employers, and you will
have to report to the class the

results of the interview.
The creative job search class
is team taught by Mrs. Helen
Hynn and Gene Sorenson. These
two have a genuine love of people
and for the work they are doing.
They sweep one up with their
enthusiasm and carry him along,
and somehow, if he takes the
course, one just knows that there
is that special job that fits his
special interest somewhere at the
end.

I woul~ like to Thank all of the
Student Body and Staff for their
kindness and sincere concern
during my recent illness.
Your gifts and cards can never
be forgotten.
And the very best to everyone
for a very Happy Holiday.

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Page 11

Titans even exhibit ion record
by Dave Harding

A look at the pros
by Bob Barley
Rookies in the National Basketball Association are holding
their Jwn against the big-name
stars of professional basketball.
Aft e r a s Io w start the much
heralded rookie from Louisiana
State, Pete Maravich, is rounding into expectld form. Maravich,
who is the NCAA all-time leading scorer, has averaged over
20 poi nts a game in the Atlanta
Hawks' last ten encounters. His
high game is 40 points.
Another rook doing a fine job
is San Diego Rocket guard Calvin Murphy. Murphy, who came
out of Niagra with AU-American
honors and unbelievable leading ability, is holding down a
s t art in g position and scoring
nearly 20 points per game.
Portland's talented freshman,
Geoff Petrie, has accumulated a
lot of praise for his play in the
NBA. Petrie, who hails from
Princeton, holds down a starting guard position and is second to Jimmy Barnett in Trail
Blazer team scoring.
Detroit's Bob "Big Cat" Lanier has done very well as the
Pistons' starting center despite
a troublesome leg injury. Lanier,
a 6'11" giant who played his college ball at St. Bonaventure,
consistently hits in double figures and hauls down more than
his share of rebounds.
other newcomers in the league
who have fared well are Celtic center Dave Cowens, Pheonix
center Neal Walk and Cincinnati
guard Nate Archibald.

***

The Minnesota Vikings became
the first team in professional
football to capture a divisional
title last Saturday by defeating
the Chicago Bears 16-13. A tenyard field goal by Viking placekicker Fred Cox proved to be the
margin of victory.
The game was tied 6-6 at
halftime as Cox and Bear kicker
Mac Percivial each booted two
field goals. The Vikings grabbed

the lead in the third period when
reserve quarterback Bob Lee,
who is playing in place of the
injured Gary Cuozzo, tossed a
33-yard scoring strike to end
Bob Henderson.
Then with 8:47 left in the
fo u rt h period, C o x booted his
his game-winning field goal, giving the Vikings a 16-6 lead. But
on the ensuing kickoff, the Bear's
Cecil Turner streaked 88 yards
for a TD, closing the gap to
16-13.
A hearty Minnesota defense
lead by All-Pro Carl Eller held
the Bears scoreless the rest of
the way to preserve the victory. The win was the Vikings'
tenth of the season against two
defeats.
With the victory the Vikings
grabbed their third straight Central Division Crown and the right
to represent the NFC's Central division in the race to the
Super Bowl.

***

The Milwaukee Bucks are setting a torrid pace in the NBA' s
Midwest Division. The Bucks,
who came into the league in
1968 as an expansion team, have
cracked up 20 victories against
three defeats.
Only the World Champion New
Yo r k Knicks and the Detroit
Pistons have beaten the Bucks
this year.
The key to Milwaukee's success lies not only on the shoulders
of its two superstars but on the
Bucks' ability to work as a team.
Day after day Buck greats Lew
Alcindor and Oscar Robertson
grab the headlines, yet without
the outstanding play of forwards
Bob Dandridge and Greg Smith
along with guards John McGlothlin and Luicius Allen the Bucks
wouldn't be riding so high.
Yet regardless of who gets the
headlines, the Bucks keep winning. They have the best record
in professional basketball and a
commanding 4 1/2 game lead over
the Pistons in the NBA's Midwest Division.

SPORTS ROUNDUP
Varsity baseball

There will be a meeting for all
stud e n ts interested in playing
varsity baseball Thursday, Dec.
10, at 4:00 p.m. in Health 156.
For further information, contact Fred Sackett of the P.E.
Department, extension 277.

Intramural bowling
How about joining an intramural bowling league?
The intramural athletics department is starting a bowling
league for all students and faculty member s who are interested.
Night t ·me competition could po::," J : be set up
at a loca howling alley, depending on the nu nber of participants.
Signup sheets are now available at the Intramu 1 Office as
well as both locker r uoms.

Wo men's gy m "

ti cs

An Mlvanced gymnastics class
will be offered Winter Term for
any iHt : rested women. Any one
who has completPd the beginning
gymnastics course at Lane or
who has had previous i vmnastics
experience is welcome to enroll

in the class.
The class is being held 8-9 a.m.
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday,
with the optionofworkingthrou gh
the 9-10 a.m. hour.
The women will join the m~n
gymnasts in performing, but will
have no competitive meets.
For further information see
Mrs. Cochran in the Health and
Physical Education office.

Swimming team
Anyone interested in developing a swim ming team at LCC,
either as a performer or as a
supporter, contact Steve Arndt,
at U of O student, at 342 -2758,
or meet at the entrance of the
far gym on Tuesday, Dec. 8, at
1:15p.m.

Home

v ents

BASKETBAL L
Jan. 5 Northwest Chris. Coll.
Jan. Q Chemeketa Com m. Coll.

GYMNASTICS
Jan. 7 Oregon Coll of Educ.
WRESTLING
Jan. 8 Central Or egoh CC

Coach Irv Roth and his Titan basketball squad ripped apart an interesting squad of Oregon athletes 106-77 Friday Dec.
4, to even their exhibition record
to 1-1.
After an earlier 83-68 drubbing
at the hands of Truax Oil, an
AAU team out of Corvallis, the
Titans roared past a talented
mixture of Oregon athletes Friday by 29 points to get on the
winning track.
Against Oregon, the Titans faced the likes of Billy Gaskins,
Carlton Slayter, and Lee Harvey,
all lettermen off last year's Oregon basketball team, which posted
a 17-9 record and upset the
UCLA Bruins in a thriller in
Eugene.
The neighbors across the
bridge also brought some muscle with them - something they
didn't have enough of, in Lionell
Coleman, a PAC 8 ALL-STAR at
defensive back. Coleman was also
an honorable mention for the
All-American team.
Th e T it t an s jumped out to a
quick 4-0 lead, and for the first
eight minutes both clubs were
trading baskets. With 12 minutes
left in the first half, Billy Gaskins swished a 28-foot jump shot
to put the Oregonians out in
front for the first time, 17-16.
Lane got the lead back 15
second later on a 20-foot jump
shot by Steve Wolfe, and from

Gymnastics practice
to begin Jan. 4
by Dallas Christensen
The Titans gymnastic team will
get a late start in formal practice this year. Gymnastics coach
George Georgyfalvy, also LCC's
soccer coach, will not be able to
start formal practice until Jan.
4. when soccer is officially over.
Lane's first encounter is on
Jan. 7 against Oregon College
of Education at 7:00 p.m. here,
and the Titans will have had only
three days of practice. This will
put the Titans at a disadvantage
at the outset of the season.
Lane's schedule will be a hard
one. There is only one junior college on the schedule; the rest of
Lane's opponents will be fouryear colleges and universities •
Coach Georgyfalvy anticipates
a rough season and he hopes that
he will have a good team when
he opens the 1970 season.
Georgyfal vy stated that the first
of the season will be the roughest due to the lack of practice.
He hopes that the last of the
season will be a strong finish.
Following the O CE Meet,
Lane's next opponent will be
Po r tl and Community College
here on Jan. 15 at 7:00 p.m.
On Friday, Jan. 22, the Titans
travel to Portland State University to take on PSU at 4:00 p.m.

Car Club hosts
benefit rally

The Maverick Mustangers Car
Club will be hosts for a "Christmas Caravan Benefit Rallye" on
Sunday, Dec. 13.
Registration for the rallye is
$3.00 per car with all the proceeds going to the Eugene Speech
and Hearing Center.
The event, co-sponsored by
Kendall Ford, wi 1 begin at Ken dall Ford Square, 13th and Olive
in Eugene. Registration is at
12:30 p.m . with departure at 1:30.
Anyone may enter r egardless
of the make and vitage of the car.
There will be dash plaques for
each car and door prizes. The
For more information call
Flora Bruns, 747-5939 or .Joe
l-lanna, 746-1537.

there on, Lane never looked back.
With the Oregonians unable to
match Willia Jones under the
boards, Lane steadily pulled away
as Willie rebounded, and the
guards were fast breaking down
the court, en route to a 52-37
halftime lead.
The second half was the same
way, only the score went up and
the margin widened.
For the Oregonians, it was a
cold night.
Lee Harvey seemed like the
only one to hit consistently, as
he cashed in on 25 points.
Carlton Slayter didn't get a
field goal for the first 14:45 of
the first half.
Lionell Coleman was still on
the football field. He didn't get
hi s first field goal until 18:54
remained in the game. Andhow'd
he get it? How do any defensive
backs score? Right! He stole
the ball and drove for an unobstructed layin.

For the Titans, Roth switched ·
his playing five about every
five minutes, and out of that
came a balanced scoring sheet.
Greg Taylor led the way with
16 points, followed by Dave King
with 13, Jones with 12, and Wolfe
with 9. Williams had 8, as did
Youngquist; Manthey scored 7,
while Gibson, Woodruff and Dave
Simpson eneded up with 6 each.
The scoring was balanced. But
probably the biggest factor was
a guy from Louisiana. Willie
Jones blocked shots, pulled down
rebounds off of both boards, and
started several fast breaks in
addition to his 12 points.
Behind a 6'2" frame from
Louisiana, Roth may have just
the I e ad e r h e needs for a
championship ballclub.
Just how well everyone else
plays remains to be seen.
Oregonians 37 40 - 22
LANE
52 54 - 106

Soccer team drops, two
by Jim McKirdy
Before a "crowd" of llpeople,
the LCC Titan soccer team played
Oregon's Coots at Autzen stadium
on Friday, Dec. 4. Though the
final score was 2-0 in the Coots'
favor, LCC played a fair game.
Top honors go to goalie Abdullah Sedairi for making over
half of the saves himself~
The Titans led the Coots in
statistics except for shooting.
LCC's team made more saves
and clears, but then lost the ball
by bad passes and actually kicking the ball away.
The game r e s u It e d in one
wrestling match due todisagreement with the referee.
On Sunday, Dec. 6, the Titans
reappeared at Autzen stadium to
lose 5-0 to the Bavarian Blitzers.
Once again, top honors went to
goalie Abdullah Sedairi.
The game looked good until
mid-way in the second half, when
the Titans seemed to just give
up. Only about halfoftheplayers
played at their full potential.
Once again, the Titans beat the
Blitzers at statistics except for
shooting; Lane shot 12 times J_o

..•• w:··,,
i
•=

'

•

..

their 27. The reason for the
Titans having so many saves (14
to the Blitzers' 4) is that they
almost always had possession of
the ball and were shooting.
Scorers for the Blitzers were
Fernando, I; Warner, 2; Westbrooks, l; and Henderson, 1.
The Titans finished out the
season with a 4-8-1 record.
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Page 12

LCC Student Senate .M"inutes
(EDITOR'S NOTE: These are
unofficial minutes until adopted
at the next Senate meeting.)
The meeting was called to order at 2:35 p.m. in the Board
Room by President Warren Coverdell.
Senate officers present were
Coverdell, Bruce Nelson, and
Cherrie Mc Murray.
Senators present. included Dan
Rosen, Lynn Rosen, Mike Woodring, Sharon Woodring, Robert
Gilbreath, Roberto Loredo, Dave
Holst, Greg Browning, Karen Von
Effling, Wes 1e y Kight, James
Henning, Mel Wood, Jay Eubanks,
Bill Nelson, and Debbie Ulrich.
Club representatives present
were Cheryl Burgess, Ken Wilhelmi, Hugh Cope 1and, Doug
Fisher, Doug Strong, and ~ohn
Mills.
Mrs. Betty Ekstrom, Student
Senate adviser, was also present.
The minutes of the Nov. 19
meeting were approved as read.
Treasurer's report
The treasurer's report was
approved as read. The OCCSA
has sent its $65 check. Lane
will be sending its dues within
the next week.
New senators
Lynette Jensen, James Smith,
and Paul Christensen were sworn
in to Senate offices.
Student insurance
The student insurance committee report was not given.

JOB PLACEMENT
TO INQUIRE ABOUT JOBS contact the LCC Placement Office,
747-4501> ext. 227
PART TIME/MALES OR FEMALES: Young men or women
for selling Fuller brushes on
commission basis or deliveries
on percentage basis. Must nave
own transportation. Hours: Adjustable.

Conventions
OCCSA
Senator Dan Rosen reported
that not much was accomplished
at the section meeting in Ontario, Oregon.

ASG
Senator Rosen reported that
a lot of work was done at the
convention: (1) a new constitution was drawn up, (2) Duane
Draper was re-elected as president of ASG, (3) Rosen was elected
Coordinator of Two-Year College Affairs, (4) ASG is approaching financial difficulties.
A more detailed report will
be presented to the Senate in
the near future.
HEALTH CONFERENCE
Jeff McMeans reported on
the Pacific Coast College Health
Se r vices Conference held in
The main point
P o r t 1a n d.
stressed at the conference was
that prevention must be practiced more than treatment.
Student involvement in campus
health services is a must.
Senator Jay Eubanks presented
the following proposal and moved
that it be adopted: "WHEREAS
student health services at LCC
are totally inadequate; therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED that a committee be set up to study the health~:
services problems at LCC and
come up with a workable solution
such as matching funds from the
administration and the Student
Senate and/or federal support."
The motion was seconded and
passed by a voice vote. A committee titled "Student Involvement in Health Services" was set
up with Eric Torkelson serving
as chairman. Any persons wishing to serve on the committee
should contact him.

Housing
A report by Treasurer McM,irray indicated it was the committee's recommendation to NOT
PAY THE $300 to Eugene Emer-1
gency Housing, Inc., but that LCC
should help with publicity in anv

It is being sponsored by the Stu• Students for Survival
way possible.
Senator Henning moved to ado;>t dent Senate, the Circle K Club,
Don Gall, president of Eugene
Emergency Housing, addressed the $75 budget of the Students the BSU, and the Springfield Big
the" Senate. He stated that, as of for Survival Club. The motion Brother/Sister program. Several donations from the community
now, the corporation is operating passed by a voice vote.
have already been received and
on faith, and that it is trying to Veterans Club
Representative Copeland door prizes will be given away.
gain the support of the community. "We are just tryingtopro- moved to adopt the $50 budget of Any help with the party would
vide some emergency shelter and the Veteran's Club. The motion be greatly appreciated.
Dance
a place for people to eat and passed by a voice vote.
Rep. Wilhelmi moved to form
International Club
sleep," he said.
No representative present-- a contractual agreement with
Later in the meeting, after the
Phigwart for the dance to be held
earlier housing report, repre- placed on next agenda.
Dec. 11 in the Aux. Gym from 8
sentative Ken Wilhelmi moved Paldstan Relief Fund
to 12. The motion passed by
No representative present.
that LCC 's ASB allot $300 from
voice vote.
Line Item 751 to Eugene Erner- Karate Club
The meeting was adjourned at
Senato~ H~nning moved to adopt
gency Housing, Inc. The motion
was seconded. Discussion in- the conshtuhonofthe LCC Karate 4:30 p.m.
eluded: the Senate is charged Club. Discussion included setting . - - - - - - - - - - with taking care of Lane students, of a preceden~ concerning clubs
not the rest of the community· and commercial bank accounts.
Library materials
if just one student used the fa~ Th~ motion to adopt the consticility, it would be directly bene- tuhon and charter the club passed
a re due
fiting LCC; and that we should unanimously by voice vote.
prior to
Christmas Party
wait for more facts.
The Christmas Party for chilSenator Jay Eubanks moved to
finals week
r ef er the proposal to a com- dren of stud~nts and staff ofLCC
mittee. The motion was carried will be held at 5 p.m. Dec. 17,
by a roll call vote.
Pictures
Senator James Henning moved
Sales & Service
that the Senate adopt the proposal
Swedish Car Center"
"Eugene's
presented by Dean Cox at the Nov.
19 meeting. Discussion included
343-8884
looking into the possiblity of hav1601 W. 7th
ing students build the frames for
the new pictures, that the frames
will be built to coordinate with
school decor, and that the best
possible deal will be made for
the c as e s purchased by last
year's Senate.
Eubanks moved to amend the
motion to have two copies of
the pictures made with one on the
bulletin boards of individual departments. The motion to amend
was passed by voice vote, as was
the main motion.
OSPIRG
The leadership of C6PffiG has
been turned over to Cheryl Burgess and Students for Survival.
Petitions are still being passed,
but progress has slowed because
of final~

CLASSIFIED

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.I. at 1445
Willamette, Eugene, 97401.
Phone E.C.P.I., 343-9031.

FOR SALE: One 21 piece Tea
Set. Lord Albert English bone
china. Cost $60. new used 3
times will sell for best offer
over $25. Also :One black-beaded
evening bag. Sell for best offer
over $5. Call: 746-62260 a ft er
4 p.m.weedkays, anytime weekends.

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

Fem a 1 e will share 2 bedroom
home with female. West Eugene.
Call 343-6307, after 5 p.m.

FOR RENT: Spaces available
for trailers 10-12' wide and up
to 45' in length. $30 per month.
Ho 1id a y Trailer Park, 4990
Franklin Blvd. Eugene, 747-9079.
FOR SALZ: EncyclopediasAmericana . 30 volume$ in Blue
Levantcraft binding. For further
information call 688-8986 after
5 P. M.
"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 Plymouth Valiant $500. Phone:343-0238 or
see at 2046 Hilyard , anytim~.
FOR SALE: Tropical Fish, etc.
Stop by for coffee at Lucky's
Little Loves, 1940 Friendly,Eugene . Hours: 6-9 ev~nings and
10 a. m.-6p.m. Saturdays. Phone :
345-1042.

FOR SALE: One lady's FUR
Stole (Canadian Squirrel -looks
like mink.) Size: small-medium.
Worn twice. Cost $300 new will
sell for best offer over $100.
Phone: 746-6260 after 4 p.m
weekdays, or anytime weekends.
Wanted: Roommate to share 3Bedroom house-dishwasher, disposal, pool table. $50.00plus utilities. Call 344-1034 anytime.
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UNDER The Hunter

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- Dec. 3

0