CAMPUS last week. The campus was closed
Monday and Tuesday night and was finally closed completely Wednesday and
Thursday because of hazardous road conditions. But if students thought Friday
would present no problem, they quickly learned that melting snow can present
a big problem as shown (r.) at the West entrance.
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb)

Lane Community College

Vol. 6, NO. 12

other community colleges as well
as the University of Oregon and
Oregon State University have expressed interest in using it. For
this reason, Heceta House is expected to be self-supporting within a year or two. Thus, neither
Dr. Brauer or Dr. Eldon Schafer,
LCC president, feel Heceta House
will be an issue in the next school
election.

The deaths of an LCC student
and her husband, discovered Jan.
9, have tentatively been ruled
homicide-suicide by Lane County
Sheriff's detectives.
Linda Bonnie Dionne, _26, and
her husband, Edward Everett
Dionne, 32, were found dead in
their trailer house in Cottage
Grove at approximately 7:00 p.m.
Saturday, Jan. 9.
Mrs. Dionne was a freshman
art major, and Cottage Grove's
only representative among the
120 students who earned perfect GPA's (4.0) Fall Term and
thus were on the President's
List. She was described by the
chairman of the Art and Applied
De s i g n Department as "interested, accomplished, and a
top caliber student." Her husband was employed last fall as
librarian at North Douglas Elementary School in Drain, but resigned in November and was believed to have been unemployed at
the time of his death.

Appearing with the Grateful
Dead at Lane will be Notary
Sojac, a group from Portland.
Approximately 20% of the profits (after expenses) from this
dance-concert will go to LCC's
student financial aids program,
while a larger percentage will
go to the Eugene White Bird
Clinic.
The Dead's concert at Lane
will probably c on s is t of three
sets. One of the sets will be
acoustic, and will hopefully be,
as ROLLING STONE put it for

Along with the Dead' s three .
a recent appearance at the Fillmore West, "music soothing to sets and Notary Sojac, there weary hearts . and hard-driven will be a multiple-image slide
minds because it understands that presentation on Woodstock. It
state of mind only too well.'' is not known at this time whether
A second set will be more this will be shown in conjunction
country and western. This set with the Dead's show or in a
features songs like "Six Days different room on campus, but
on the Road/' and will be per- it WILL be there.
Tickets for the Dead's concert
formed by the New Riders of the
Purple Sage. This group is com- are $3--cheap for twogoodbands
prised of members of the Grate- and a slide presentation. They
will be· available at the door and
ful Dead and some friends.
The third set will be the old, at the Information Desk in the
Administration Building at LCC.
semi-psychedelic Dead.

4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405

January 19, 1971

Student, staff work party.,
aids Heceta House rennovation
by Bill Hirning

in botany, zoology, marine bioTwenty-five LCC students and logy, oceanography, forestry and
staff members participated other related fields. So far no
Saturday, Jan. 9, in the first of immediate plans for classes have
two work parties scheduled this been made. Howe v e r, Board
member Dr. Albert Brauer feels
month at Heceta House.
the site has ''unlimitedpotential''
The LCC Board of Education as an educational institution.
Cox said the facilities at Heauthorized I easing of the 75year-old building, located -at He- ceta House would be available to
ceta Head ·next to Devil's Elbow other colleges for a small fee.
State Park in Florence, on Oct.14.
Renovation of the building will
serve as part of LCC's rental
fee.
by John Tennis
LCC superintendent of campus
>
The Grateful Dead, one of the
facilities, Bill, Cox, says the
house should be open for stu- early San Francisco bands, is
- dent use by mid-February. scheduled to appear in LCC's
General repairs and expansion of main gym Friday, Jan. 22. The
the water system are necessary dance-concert will start around
8:00 p.m. and end when the Dead
before occupancy.
(and the people attending) get
The work pa rt y experienced tired.
tough going on the first day, trying
The Grateful Dead was one of
to peel 75 years ofpaint--applied the first bands to "make ie'
in up to five coats--from the win- when the rush for the "San Frandows, - doors, and trimmings
cisco Sou n d " took p 1a c e in
Hard work was primarily the 196_
6-67.
Along with the Jef_order of the day, but during ferson Airplane, Country Joe and
breaks and at lunch time some of the Fish, the Sons of Champlain,
the workers took walks on . the and a lot of others, they were
beach, up to the light house, or "discovered," signed by rejust sat around and talked. Most cording companies, and labeled
of the workers expressed feelings by some as America's answer to
of having a good time, but there the British invasion.
were complaints of sore muscles
Of the dozens of bands from
also.
this area, the Dead is one of the
Lack of proper tools was the few to survive all the hype putmain reason more work was not down by the record companies
accomplished. For the next work and music commentators.
The Dead's music has conparty, slated for Jan. 23, some
power sanders and more ade- sistently been in the forefront of
quate tools will be provided, said all the trends of the public. They
Cox. While not totally satisfied were psychedelic when no one
with the progress made Saturday, knew what the word meant, and
Cox said a "dent" had been made two albums ago they made a
in the work needed on the house, switch to a folk-flavored countryand he is looking forward to the rock sound.
next trip.
The albums WORKINGMANS
Persons interested in going on DEAD and AMERICAN BEAUTY,
the next work party should sign on Warners Reprise, best show
up by calling Bill Cox or Mar- where the Dead are at right now.
Michael Lydon, in ROLLING
garet Knutson in the College
STONE,
talks of one of the alFacilities Office, ext. 301. Gas
bums: "WORKINGMANS DEAD
will be furnished if you can prois just about as good a record
vide transportation.
as a record can be. Easy on the
When work is completed, the ears from the first listening, it
house, formerly the home of the gets mellower as it grows on
caretaker for Heceta Head light- you; a lot of different rhythms
house, will be used for field trips but one sure pulse."

Student death possible homicide
The couple apparently died,
according to the Sheriff's •Office, sometime between 4:30 p.m.
Thursday and 4:30 p.m. Friday.
Police were summoned to the
trailer Saturday by al3-year-old
newspaper delivery boy who found
three days accumulation of papers, and a bloodstained note
sealed in an envelope addressed
to the Cottage Grove Police Department on the front porch.
The note was apparently
written by Dionne, explaining how
he had shot his wife and planned
to take his own life. A "smallcaliber pis to I" found in the
trailer is believed to be the death weapon.
Though the deaths were tenta- _
tively ruled homicide-suicide, a
final determination is pending the
results of a study to have been
made Monday, Jan. 18, by Dr.
Keith McMilan, the county medical investigator. As of Monday
evening, the results of his study
had not been released.

Grateful Dead slate benefit at lane

Grateful Dead

Page 2

E&tMtat~e1et

,·i

Student oUicer requirements muddled
Oregon's two largest universities seem to
be having trouble keeping their student body
presidents this year.
Ron Eachus, ASUO President, was ruled ineligible for his post after failing to meet enrollment requirements set by the U of Ci faculty. Faculty regulations require COMPLETION
of a minimum of nine credit hours. Eachus registered for ten credit hours but dropped a
three-credit class and was not present for final examinations. He is appealing the ineligibility
ruling and is supported in his appeal by the
ASUO Senate, because he does meet the requirements set down in the ASUO Constitution.
ASUO rules require graduate students only to
REGISTER and only for six credit hours.
U of O President Robert Clark has reinstated
Eachus temporarily as ASUO President pending
resolution of the conflict between the faculty and
Senate requirements.
Eachus was joined in his ex-president st~tus
Thursday, Jan. 7, by OSU student body president
Doug Sweet, who said he was leaving OSU because of financial reasons.
With these two events happening in such close
succession, concern about the status of LCC's
student officers has been expressed. Such concern is unwarranted, however, since the requirements LCC officers must meet are so general
that almost anyone could qualify under them.
Unlike the situation at the University, there
is no conflict between faculty or administration
and student government requirements at LCC.
There are no written requirements for student
officers set down by the administration. Rather,
these matters are delegated to the Associated
Student Body, and are included in its constitution.
In regard to officers (President, First and
Second Vice Presidents, Recording Secretary,
Correspondence Secretary, Publicity Director,
and Treasurer), the current Constitution states:
"A CANDIDATE for an officer's position must
be a full-time student and have an accumulated

mm1mum grade point average of 1.5 on all
college work." In regard to members of the
Student Senate, the Constitution is a bit more
specific: "A Senator must M a full-time or
part-time student," and "A Senator must. be enrolled during his tenure in office, in at least
one class from the department he wishes to represent.''
In case you missed it, the key word in the
paragraph about officers is "candidate.'' A candidate must meet criteria for filing for an office, but the Constitution makes no stipplations
about class load or GPA requirements an officer must meet once he is elected. It also
makes no specific provision--other than "parttime or full-time" for Senators.
So, at the present time, LCC has few requirements for student officers, and all current
officers are "legitimate" under the constitution.
The lack of rquirements may shortly be changed,
however. A committee has completed a rough
draft of a revision of the Constitution, and a
rough draft of revised by-laws is to be ready
for the Senate in the next few weeks.
The new constitution, hopefully, will clarify
academic requirements (class load, GPA) for officers not only as candidates but after their
election.
However, this new constitution should have
no effect on student officers' performance before
it is adopted, since it should not be applied retroactively.
The present officers are not ''cheating" the
students of LCC if they fail to maintain a certain class load or GPA. They are following regulations in force when they were elected and
have done nothing that would constitutionally disqualify them for holding their offices.
Though little complaint can constitutionallybe
made about the status of current officers, such
complaint is legitimate about the lack of specific
requirements. Hopefully, the new constitution will
satisfy such complaints.

A look around the campuses
by Bill, Bauguess

Keg rolling-a new fad

College fads in the past have
included everything from goldfish swallowing to cramming students into phone booths, with
very little left in between for the
imagination.
However, a recent fad for rolling empty beer kegs for God
knows how many miles, has, as
I see it, reached an all-time
low.
Several so-called "press releases" have been received by
the TORCH recently, publicizing
the beer keg rolling--all of them
from a Minneapolis-based firm
representing the Theodore Hamm
Brewing Co. The most recent
of these "press releases." labeled FOR IMME DIA TE RELEASE across the front of the
mailing packet, mentions Hamms
no less than five times. The
packet also contained an 8 X 10
glossy photo of the latest keg
rolling champions holding a sign
which reads HAMMS WELCOMES
WORLD CHAMPION KEG ROLLERS. The caption beneath the
pi ct u re mentions Hamms two
more times.
The latest keg rolling champions, according to the Hamms
story, rolled their keg--which,,

incidentally, was furnished by
Hamm's--619 miles. One member of the four-member team
rolled the keg while the rest of
the team rode behind in a car.
That leaves each member of the
team rolling the keg a total of
roughly 155 miles. The 619 miles
was covered in 12 days, making
the total milage for each person
per day a little under 13 miles.
At the end of their journey,
the team was presented with a
$250 scholarship by Hamms.
That's about 10 cents per mile
for each person, or about $1.30
per day.
•
That's pretty cheap advertising.

***

Sexist quotes

From the December issue
(Vol. I, No. 1) of the WOMEN'S
PRESS, a new publication produced by women at the U of 0,
comes these ''Sexist Quotes of
the Month."
"Three things have been difficult to tame; the ocean, fools
and women. We may soon be
able to tame the ocean; Fools
and women will take a little
longer.
SPIRO AGNEW"

Ecology lecture scheduled
Noted California educator Dr.
William H. Miller, at the invitation of the Adult Education
Depa rt men t, will appear at
Lane Community College Wednesday, January 20, to speak on
the subject ''People: Like Fish
in a Tank."
The presentation is scheduled
for 8:00 p.m. in room 301 of
the Forum Building. Dr. Miller's speech will be open to the
public, and no admission will
be charged.
•
Dr. Miller is currently Director of Community Education at the College of San Mateo. He was the founder and
first president and is currently
a member of the Board of Directors of the C:ol~ege .
.;_

•

•

•

1

i

...

t~ 1 \-~-,

ciation for Public Events and
Services. He received his doctorate in history and economics
from the University of California
at Berkeley, but regards himself as a generalist rather than
specialist, "merging concepts
from various disciplines."
Miller, who has lectured on
subjects ranging from history,
psychology and religion to marriage and the family, said his
ecology-oriented LCC appearance will . cone e rn the theme
that '' each human being is in
ecological re 1at ions hip with
each other one in precisely as
critical a way as a fish in a
tank is related to the vegetation."
An alternate title for
his presentation, he suggests,
is the "Ecology of Being."
l,,

...

,, , ... ' ' ,

'' I think a woman's place is
in the home. I tried it for awhile
and I know I don't want to be
there!
Stated very seriously by a
male friend of the writers"

***

Arm wrestling match

One of mankind's earliest pasttimes has been an attempt, in
some manner, to overpower or
show superiority over virtually
everything, including his fellow
human counterparts. Physical
superiority has always been an
ego booster on an individual,
one-to-one basis. (When all else
fails, you can always kick the
hell out of 'em.)
Arm wrestling, while being
performed usu a 11 y as an impulsive sport in bars, pubs,
taverns, at kitchen tables or
wherever else the need may
arise, has seen little recognition as an accepted, official sport.
At least, not until recently. The
world ch a mp ions h ip--that's
right, the world championship!-arm wrestling contest will be
held this year in Petaluma, Calif.
To win a berth at the world
championship contest, however,
it will be necessary for hopeful
contestants to attend the first
an nu a I Oregon arm wrestling
championships to be held at Southern Oregon College in Ashland
on Jan. 30. On that date, at 4
p.m., contestants will be divided
into different weight classes before being loosed on each other.
Competitors from colleges,
towns, and the lumber industry
are expected for the meet. LCC,
however, apparently will not be
represented at Ashland or Petaluma. When questioned about the
contest, LCC Director of Athletics Bob Rad c 1if f responded,
"I've never heard of it." He
later admitted that it sounded like
a good thing, but offered no encouragement toward finding a
representative from Lane to
attend the event.
For anyone interested in obtaining further information, however, write to: Arm Wrestling,
P.O. Box 663, Ashland, Oregon,
97520.
.l. __.... {"'

r ... y~s
! A ~reat moralist!
listen, ·;·Not power-,

._ 0

1 ":II'

k'eading
Camus
again?

but justice.Not politics,
but morality." Man
must join in the Prght
against social evilr

Just imagine his impact
on men's minds f... And
what iP there were two
of them"?! Anothet'
Camus crying out
against injustice~!

What would Albert Camus
Be were he two?

I suppose I
had that

coming ..

•

;

_,.

,t

« .._ -;_, ,

I

¼\llA&l ~(VL

ti

Campus Calendar
Organizations
Chess Club

The Knights and Castles Chess
Club will meet Wednesday, Jan.
20, from 12:00 noon to l:00 p.m.
and from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. in
Apprenticeship 213.
Christian Science Club

The LCC Christian Science
Organization will meet Tuesday,
Jan. 26, at 10:00 a.m. in Forum
312.

Student Senate

The LCC Student Senate will
meet Thursday, Jan. 21, at 2:30
p.m. in the Board Room (Adm.
202). All students are invited
to attend.
Agenda ite::ns include the establishment of the Oregon Student Public Interest Research
Group (OSPIRG) as a recognized
group on campus; the establishment of ·a Native American student association, a proposal for
a foreign student association,
and three club budgets (Chess
Club, Circle K, and Karate Club).
Also scheduled is the swearing in
of Mark Parrish as the Senate
Publicity Director.
The meeting will also provide
a workshop period for discussion
of the new constitution for LCC's
student body.

Women's Discussion Group

The LCC Women's Discussion
Group will meet Monday, Jan.
25, at 12:00 noon in Center 222.

Committees
Academic Council

The Academic Co u n c i 1 will
meet in the Business Conference
Room Tuesday, Jan. 19, at 4:00
p.m.
Activities and Athletics

Members of the Activities and
Athletics Committee should meet
Tuesday, Jan. 19, at 4:00 p.m.
in the LRC Conference Room.
Among agenda items is the de1 velopment
of proposals for the
improvement of LCC health ser-

vices, such proposals to be sent
to the LCC President and Board
of Education.
Budget Committee

The LCC Budget Committee
will meet in an orientation session Wednesday, Jan. 20, at 7:00
p.m. in the Board Room (Adm.
202).
College Cabinet

Members of the LCC College
Cabinet should meet Tuesday,
Jan. 26, at 9:00 a.m. in the Board
Room (Adm. 202).
Committee on Minorities

The Committee on Minorities
and Disadvantaged will meet
Tuesday, Jan. 19, at 4:00 p.m.
in the Social Science conference
room.
Curriculum Committee

LCC's Curriculum Committee
is scheduled to meet Tuesday,
Jan. 19, at 4:00 p.m. in the
Board Room (Adm. 202).
Instructional Council

The Instructional Council will
meet Thursday, Jan. 21, at 9:00
a.m. in the Board Room (Adm.
202).
Long Range Planning

LCC's Long Range Planning
,Committee is scheduled to meet
Thursday, Jan. 21, ·at 2:00 p.m.
in the LRC Conference Room. '
Public Relations Committee

The Public Relations Committee will meet at 4:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Jan. 19, in Forum 314.

VETERANS
All students attending LCC
under the G. I. Bill are required
to submit a class schedule to
the Financial Aids Office each
term.
Approximately 75 veterans
have failed to report their hours
for Winter Term.
They are
urged to contact the Financial
Aids Office, second floor of the
Center Building, at once so that
checks will not be delayed.

The Torch Staff
Editor. . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Gary Grace
Assistant Editor. . . . . . •. . ....... Hewitt Lipscomb
Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . ~-. . • .
Uave Harding
Act Manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Lorena Warner
Head Photographer. . . . . . . . . . . . . Hewitt Lipscomb
Secretary-Business Manager. . . . . . . • .Doris Norman
Member of National Educational Advertising Service
THE TORCH is published weekly on Tuesdays, except
holidays, examination weeks and vacation periods.
Signed articles are the views of the author and not
necessarily those of The Torch.
Mail or bring all correspondence or news to: THE TORCH
206 Center Building, Lane Community College, 4000 E. 30th
Avenue, Eugene, Oregon. 97405. Telephone 747-4501, ext.234.
: ,,_ -~ . t

""

-. -

. .111.,. . . .

I

!

'-

i,::

I

J •

\ft

..

f

•

""..)

.'

I

Applications sought
'

Nominations for LCC's recipients of the 1970-71 WHO'S WHO
AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN JUNIOR COLLEGES award
are being accepted by Mrs. Betty
Ekstrom, Dire c to r of Student
Activities, Student Activities Office, second floor of the Center
Building.
Nominees should be considered
in terms of scholarship, leadership, participation in educational
and extracurricular activities,
general citizenship, and promise
of future usefulness. Allpersons
nominated must be currently en-

'1'.

I

I •

I•

rolled as full-time students at
LCC.
Recommendations for this recognition may be submitted by
st u dent s, faculty, administrators, or classifiedpersonnel. All
applications will be considered by
a student-staff committee. A total of 36 students will be selected.
The deadline for nominations is
noon, Friday, Jan. 29, 1971. Recommendations should inc 1u de
the nominee's name, major, a
statement of the candidate' s
qualifications, and signature of
the person submitting the nomination.

r----------------------------7
APPLICATION FORM

l OFFICIAL

IWho's Who in American Junior Colleges·
Nominee:

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Major---------------Qualifications

Sponsor's Name
Return to: Mrs. Betty Ekstrom, Director
Deadline: Noon
Student Activities
January 29, 1971
L - - - - - Center Building, Second Floor ______ .__ J

Scholarship established
A memorial scholarship fund
has been established at LCC in
the name of Sylvia Van Hoven, a
former LCC student who was
killed in an industrial accident at
Weyerhaeuser's· Springfieldplant
in November of 1970.
The yearly scholarship, donated by Mr. and Mrs. James
Snow, is a $300 interest-free
loan to be used for tuition, books
and supplies, and is available to
any woman 35 years of age or
older who needs financial assistance in furthering her education.
No stipulations have been made
concerning curriculum or length
of educational p r o gram being
pursued. The money must be repaid 18 months after completion
of schooling, however, to allow
redistribution of the scholarship
to other applicants as soon as
possible.
Mrs. Van Hoven was born of
Dutch Indonesian descendants in

Djakarta, Indonesia, but was forced to moved to the Netherlands
with her husband when President
Sukarno came into power. She and
her husband then immigrated to
. the United States in the late
1950's. Mrs. Van Hoven began
her education at LCC at the age
of 40, and had just begun her
junior year at the U of O when
the a cc id en t at Weyerhaeuser
took her life.
Mr. Snow is a member of the
faculty in the mathematics department at LCC, and it was because of Mrs. Van Hoven's interest in education and of the
friendship Snow and hi s wife
had developed with the Van Hoven Family that the idea of the
scholarship developed.
Interested applicants should
apply at the Financial Aids Of- •
fice on the second floor of the
Center Building for further information.

Italian f oeds

Finally Great
Italian Food
For the student

Budget!

=~
=~

•44~

lfd1144-

,

Dinner Served
s-10 p.m.

3377 E. Amazon
Phone 343-7926

Eugene

·,.

,

.

Page 3

Board unO'ff'iC'i Clly· approves
campus building program

The LCC Board of Education
unofficially approved a $1. 7 mill i o n campus construction program Wednesday, Jan. 6, at an
informal evening work session.
The building program will be
financed entirely by state funds
received by LCC. The $1,718,000
figure approved is less than half
the $3.5 million projected in November. The cut-backwas attributed to an Oregon Supreme Court
ruling that the Oregon Legislature must repay $13.9 million
borrowed from the Veterans'
Loan Fund in 1967. Part of the
funds for that repayment is expected to come from money previously designated for community
colleges.

Only projects under way and
some remodeling will take place
under the reduced proposal.
These projects include $171,000
for remodeling labs in mechanics
and transportation, science and
physical education; $1,148,000 to
relocate and add labs, offices and
c I ass rooms in the humanities
complex for social sciences, language arts and performing arts;
and $399,000 which will go for
fees, furnishings and to off-set
inflation through June of 1971.

field.
Official action on the building
program and the proposals for
off-campus instruction is expected at the Board meeting Wednesday, Jan. 13.
Also considered at the work
session was County Sanitarian
John Stoner's warning that LCC's
sewage lagoon may be operating
in excess of its capacity. If,
this is true, Stoner said last•
month, construction to accomodate more students would not be
allowed. Completion of current
projects and remodeling would
be allowed.
The Board ordered Bill Cox,
head of college facilities, to have

tests run on the·lagoon's level of •
_ impurities. Results of the tests
sh o u Id be available by midMarch.
LCC president Eldon Schafer
suggested a meeting be arranged
with city officials to discuss
possible annexation of the LCC
area to the city. The campus
is currently outside the c it y
and cannot be served by city
sewer systems.
After the work session, the
Board met -in executive session
to consider proposed salary and
benefits for the college staff.
The Board will present its response to the recommendations
at the meeting Wednesday.

VOLVO - SAAB
Sales & Service

"Eugene's Swedish Car Center"
1601 W. 7th

In presenting the reduced construction program, campus planners also took into consideration
the Bo a rd ' s views on decentralizing the campus to serve all
areas of the county. During the
work session, Board members
generally responded favorably to
a recommendation that calls for
use of a television and audio
microwave network and intensified promotional activities to improve service to areas of the
county outside Eugene-Spring-

Sheppard Motors 3 _. 3 111..
• -

LAST DAY
Friday, Jan. 22 is the last day
to return for full refund any
books purchased for
• the winter term.

2 pieces of ID required

LCC Bookstore

"We're Right on Campus"

KLCC-FM
PLAYLIST
1. Watching Scotty Grow ...•....•.••. Bobby Goldsboro
2. My Sweet Lord . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . George Harrison
3. Most of All . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B. J. Thomas
. 4. The Green Grass Starts to Grow ...... Dionne Warwick
5. Free to Carry On . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . Sandpipers
6. There Goes My Everything ............ Elvis Presley
7. I Don't Know How to Love Him ........ Yvonne Elliman
8. Your Song . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : .. Elton John
9. One Less Bell to Answer. ........... Fifth Dimension
10. 1900 Yesterday •......... Liz Damon's Orient Express
11. Remember Me . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Diana Ross
12. Can't Stop Loving You .............•.• Tom Jones
13. Rose Garden . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lynn Anderson
14. If You Could Read My Mind .•...•.• Gordon Lightfoot**
15. Silver Moon ..•. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Michael Nesmith
16. Don't Let the Good Life Pass YouBy .. Mama Cass Elliott
17. Shoes . . . . ....•...........•... Brook Benton**
18. Stoney End . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Barbra Streisand
19. . It's Impossible . • . . . . ...•...•.... Perry Como
20. For the Good Times . . . . . . . . • . . . . . Ray Price
**New this week

I'unchtime '
sandwiches
ll:30 to 2:30
Mon - Fri

.

•

Page4

KLCC broadcasts continue
during recent LCC shutdown

by Bill Nelson
"Neither rain, nor snow, nor
sleet shall prevent the show from
going on.'' •
So it was with three dedicated
individuals at KLCC-FM during
the recent snow storm that engulfed Oregon Wednesday, Jan.
13.

Station program director, Tom
Lichty, with music director, Dave
C h a n c e and station engineer,
Gary Hardesty, feared they would
be unable to reach the studios
of KLCC for the Thursday morning sign-on at 8:00 a.m. and decided to remain at the LCC campus in an all-night vigil to insure that the show would go on.
Armed with only a small amount of food and sleeping bags,
the three found the carpeting in
the new control room provided
padding for a restful night's
sleep.
Though LCC was closed for two
days, Wednesday and Thursday,
KLCC was kept on its planned
schedule so as not to lose the
regular listeners of the station.

Ten students tell "success stories"

Because radio studios provide
"This year, Lane Community
a minimum of entertainment for ~ol_le_ge is preparing over 16,000
overnight adventurers human md1v1duals for their success
innovation was the word of the . stori~s.':
evening hours. While Chance
Th1s 1s the theme of LC C's
typed out future station program c~rrent effort to inform the publogs, Lichty worked on a home- he of the opportunities available
made steam engine (still un- at the college.
finished) and Hardesty worked on
Though this · large number of
an 'automatic car ejector' which people will attend LCC this year,
ended up being perfectly useless hundr_eds of people have already
because of its inefficiency. But benef1tte?. from the educational
a good time was had by all and opportumhes offered. Ten such
a small snowball fight and a people are telling their "success
broken frisbee concluded an stor_ies" over four local radio
otherwise fair I y constructive stahons--KUGN, KPNW, KLCCevening.
FM, and KATR--and the two teleDuring these occurences the vision stations--KEZI and KVAL.
night programming of KLCC was "Success Stories" can also be
being run by night announcer seen in the Eugene RegisterBill Nelson who eventually went G~ard and Emerald Empire Rehome at the end O f his shift mmder.
at mid-night.
Dr. Eldon Schafer, president
The Thursday morning show of ~CC, said that the success
began on schedule at 8:00 a.m, stones are part of a "campaign
and a second over-night stay was to get people on campus" and
not needed because Mother Na- show them first-hand what the
ture had softened her endless college is doing.
vengeance on Oregon that after"We're trying to show people
noon - and the show went on. th~t Lane Community College is
a career center' where they can
go one, two, or three years-whatever it takes for them to
attain their career training "
Schafer said.
'
will focus on increasing awareLarry Romine, LCC Director
ness of the writer's environment of Information and Publications
and his ability to express him- and head of the success story
.self clearly, in order to make project, said the ten former stuhim a better reader as well as dents involved were suggested by
writer. The student will be given LCC department chairmen.
maximum latitude in developing
. Participants inc 1u de Shirley
his own style.
Kuk, dental hygiene; Glen Beal
Though the course carries no aviation maintenance; Ed Peter:
college credit, it provides back- son, agriculture mechanics· Lu
ground for the Writing 113 course Nygaard, associate degree ~urat LCC and the Writing 323 class sing; Ron Ivens, business; Ken
at the University of Oregon. It Strobeck, radio broadcasting;
will be conducted on a seminar Verda Harvey, adult basic edubasis to allow students to eval- cation;. Susan Turner, technical
uate each other's work.
draft Ing; Paula Bracken, data

Writing class offered
Developing a personal writing
style will be the goal of a tenweek c re at iv e writing class
offered this term through LCC's
Adult Education Department.
The non-credit course, taught
by Jack Powell, LCC financial
aids counselor and English instructor, begins Tuesday, Jan.19.
It will meet from 7 to 10 p.m.
in Center 421.
Students in the class will explore various descriptive and
narrative styles of writing, and
may choose to write either in
poetic or prose style. The class

processing; and Darrel Lund.
auto mechanics.
,
All of the LCC graduates volunteered to express their views
in their own words, of the trainin~
they received at Lane.
"This is the start ofan aroundthe-year effort to keep the public
informed on the doings of LCC,"
stated Romine about the success
story campaign.
President Schafer added to this
idea by saying "we're trying to
express the attitude of what's
happening on campus'; so that
the public realizes LCC is for
everyone's benefit.
The ten testimonials were produced for radio and television by
LCC students and staff. Mike
Hopkinson' Assistant Professor
of Mass Communications, was
the dire~t~r and cameram_an for
the telev1s1on segments, with assistance from Hew Lipscomb and
Curt Blood, both second-year TV
Br_oadcasting _students. Added
voice announcmg for both the

radio and TV spots was done by
Bill Nelson, night announced for
KLCC-FM and a second-year
student.
The overall reaction from the
public and college personnel has
been favorable toward the campaign, with people saying they
are pleased to hear and see the
success stories.
The LCC Success Stories may
be seen on KEZI-TV between
5 and 5:30 p.m. and during the
11 p.m. news, and on KVAL-TV
between 6 and 6:30 p.m. and
during the 11 p.m. newscast.
Radio stations KPNW, KUGN,
KLCC-FM, and KA TR broadcast
the stories during daylight hours
on weekdays.
-- ••
-- -- - -.. • • -

I~

,_,,~,
i@JJ~,
, ~,~JI
:~"9 . "'. : • . ?
G 'JJ.

•

' :

4-

·' -Lf l~ l.1 ·l

____

Burgers, Shakes, Fries

1

b ---------------"Try the·best in old-fashioned hamburgers" '

anklin Blvd.

'?46-·0918

AUTOMOTIVE

JU N E

U P

SPEC I A L "Foreign & Domestic

• 4 cyl - $9.9S
• 6 cyl - $11.9S
• 8 cyl - $12.95

Buck's Automotive

1917 Franklin Blv

344-7522

at

THE COLLEGE _INN
Maid and Linen Service
Color TV and Billiard Lounges
Private Off-street Parking
Laundry Facilities

• Quality Food &Lodging for U of O and L.C.C. Men and Women

1000 Patterson

J
•

jHAMBU °ilGER -D~N'S 7

Look Ahea d
To Winter and Spring Terms!
•
•
•
•

}'l,.,

-['"CJ(WlLLJ\METT~

NEED A PLACE TO STAY?

• Excellent Food
• Continental Breakfast for Late Risers
• Private and Semi-private Rooms
with Private Baths

A
1, . . . .

:, •

lhe College Inn

343-9291

Students not using
coin-operated lockers
LCC students are not making
full use of the new coin-operated
lockers in the college Bookstore,
according to Ada Zinser, Bookstore Manager.
Students are not allowed to
take books, briefcases, or other
materials into the shopping area
of the Bookstore. Previously
these items were checked at the
counter and supervised by store
personnel.
At the end of Fall Term.
however, metal lockers were installed. Operation of the lockers
requires depositing a quarter,
which "is returned when the key
is inserted to remove materials
stored. A series of open
"pigenoholes" is also available
ANDRAE CROUCH AND THE DISCIPLES ENTERTAIN during a 45-minute performance at LCC
Monday, Jan. 18. The California-based group,
played before approximately 250 people. The
music featured rock-religious music arrangements. Their appearance on campus was han-

.......

dled by Casey Fast, LCC math professor.
The group has produced several albums and
currently has a hit single in the Los Angeles
area which is to be released nationally in the
near future. The group appeared at the U of 0
Friday, Jan. 15.
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb)

Occupational information teletype
due to be moved by placement office
An occupational information teletype with a direct connection to a computer offers
many students at LCC an opportunity to explore career possibilities.
The teletype machine, which
is presently located in the LCC
library, will be moved to its
permanent location by the Placement Office within the next few
weeks. Buck Bailey, Placement
Office Director, stated that the
Occupational Information Access
System (OIAS) will become a
"packaged deal."
Forming a new Occupational
Center will be the teletype and job reference material. Bailey
reported that the OIAS has "received a fair amount of use,"
but he hoped the change of location from the library to the
Placement Office would create
more student use.
The teletype machine, which
resembles a typewriter, is connected to the Oregon Technical
Information System (OTIS) computer, which stores over 250 job
possibilities and their requirements.
By following a simple set of
directions, students can type in
their qualifications and interests,
to which OTIS will feed back computerized information.
Listing job requirements, opportunities, wages, and whom to

Play tickets
now on sale
Tickets for the Performing
Arts Department production of
the musical comedy '' The Roar
of the Greasepaint- -The Smell of
the Crowd" are now on sale at
the Information Desk, first floor
of the Administration Building.
The show opens Feb.11 and will
run Feb. 12, 13, 18, 19 and 20.
Written by Leslie Bricusse and
Anthony Newley, authors of "Stop
the World, I Want to Get Off,"
"Roar" will be directed by Ed
Ragozzino.
He describes the
play as "musical entertainment
with comic and music variations
on the theme of underdog vs.
ove rdog. '.'
A new policy of reserved seating for the Forum Theatre is
being initiated with this production, so patrons are encouraged
_ to reserve tickets early.
Prices are $2 for the Friday
and Saturday evening performances and $1.50 for the Thursday ev~ning ~hows. .. , , , •... , ....

contact for further information.
Cassette tapes are also available for student use. The tapes
contain a record of an interview
with a professional in the particular field selected. The taped
interview will provide further
information on the job curriculum. In addition to the teletype
and tapes, a large selection of
b o o ks and pamphlets will be
available for reference.
The OIAS is designed to improve the delivery of labor market information. The research,

system planning, and testing are
being financed by the U.S. Department of Labor and the State
of Oregon Employment Division.
The project is being conducted
by the University of Oregon under the direction of Bruce McKinlay, Research Associate. McKinlay said that -" the greatest
asset of OIAS was that is suggested new job titles and information.''
There will be no charge for
the use of the teletype or oc-cupational information.

100 chosen as top number

m?=:=:=:C

I
l....ili

ha rIie' s

f o r s t ud e n t s w h o p r e f e r
to use them. Bookstore personnel
no longer are responsible for
supervising items left in these
areas, however, since students
have the option of using the
locked facilities.
Use of the coin-operated lockers is to the student's advantage,
Miss Zinser observed, since
items have disappeared from the
open cubicles. And it is essentially a free service, she emphasized, since the user's quarter is returned to him.
Whether in the coin-operated
lockers or the open cubicles, materials should be left in the
Bookstore only when stopping
there.

=:=========:========:========:===========:========:====:=:=================}~

"Just for fun"

POOl

·-.·.·.·.·.

8r.·~,S

...,,-~,.-

BERG"

NOWI

30 minutes

LCC-TV
NEWS

NORDIC
-SKI -sHOP

Complete Rentals

I

I
····

lill Foosball & Snacks
r=~ •:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
29th & Willamette·
345-9191
• ~~;!
:·:·:·:·:·:·: : :·:·::·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::'. <=-=~=~=•:· ~:-::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;::::::::::::::::·..·.:.:.:~:.:.:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:_:::::::::

for January draft call
Selective Service registrants • legal appeal rights.
One hundred is expected to
in the 1971 First Priority Selection Group with lottery num- remain the ceiling for draft calls
bers of 100 and below will be for several months. In 1970 the
eligible for induction in January ceiling reached 195 in August
of 1971, Selective Service officials and remained ttiere.
announced in mid-December.
The First Priority Selection
for al'I your siding needs
Group for 1971 is made up of men
come to
who reached age 19 during 1970,
received lottery numbers in the
July, 1970, drawing, and have not
received deferments or exemptions from service.
Lottery number 100 was set as
the ceiling for January draft calls
to avoid problems encountered in
1970 of local boards being unable
to provide sufficient inductees
during early months of the year.
In 1970 the ceiling was set at 30
for January, moved to 60 for
February, 90 for March and 115
for April. Many men whose num-TWO LOCATIONSbers were within these limits
had not been fully examined and
13th & Lawrence
were not available for induction,
11th & Mill
or had not fully completed the
procedures of
their

!~!~

More coverage!

More features!
More news!

FR,IDAYS

10:30 .- 11:00 p.m.
PL-3 - Cable 10

Page 6

LCC Student Senate 'Minutes

(EDITOR'S NOTE: These are
unofficial minutes until adopted
at the next Senate meeting.)

The meeting was called to order at 2;45 in Forum 309 by
President Warren Coverdell on
Jan. 7, 1971.
Senate officers present were
Warren Coverdell, Bruce Nelson and Cherrie McMurray.
Senators present were Dan Rosen, Lynn Rosen, Mike Woodring,
Ra 1p h Steadman, Omar Barbarossa, Lynn Jensen, James
Henning, Jay Eubanks, Bill Nelson, Debbie Ulrich, Paul Christensen, Greg B row n in g, Mel
Woo ct, Robert Gilbreath, and
James Smith.
Club representatives present
included John Mills, Carl Fitch,
Bill McMurray, Doug Strong, and
Brad Tindall.
Mrs. Betty Eckstrom, Senate
adviser, was also present.
The minutes of the Dec. 3,
1970, Senate meeting were approved as read.
Because of complications in the
Business Offic~ no treasurer's
report was given.

Grading survey
includes LCC
The results of a study on the
abolishment of failing grades and
a c ad em i c dismissals at junior
and community colleges across
the nation was forwarded to LCC
Dean of Students Jack Carter
Dec. 14.
LCC took part in the survey
last year, and the school will
study the outcome.
The study was initiated by
Cuyahoga Community College of
Cleveland, Ohio, and included a
statistically devised sample of
junior and community colleges
throughout the nation. The study
concluded '' Academic dismissals
and/or failing grades have been
eliminated at 17% of communityjunior colleges sampled."
It goes on to note that the
adoption of this type of policy
is more w id e s p read in the
western part of the nation. No
community-junior college in the
Southwest (Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma), Mideast (New York,
Pe~nsylvania, etc.), or the New
England states reported adoption
of this policy.
Carter said LCC has chosen
not to abolish failing grades at
this time. There are many ways
in which Lane offers a failing student help without giving him a
failing grade or dismissing him,
he said. The student can withdraw, ask for an incomplete, or
accept a pass/no pass grading
option. A student can, of course,
receive a failing grade if the student and teacher feel it best describes the student's ambition, he
said.

Winter enrollment

RETREAT REPORT
Emergency Housing were both
Treasurer Cherrie McMurray present at the Senate meeting to
reported that tentative olansJiave answer questions concerning the
been made to hold the Senate re- Family Shelter House.
treat Feb. 12, 13, and 14 at HeSenator Barbarossa moved to
ceta House.
appropriate $300 for the firm,
and the motion was seconded.
HEAL TH SERVICES REPORT
Senator Dan Rosen moved to
reported
Eubanks
Senator Jay
that the Board of Education ruling postpone the matter until such
concerning our health services time that the Senate receive a
must be changed before anything copy of the firm's constitution
and by-laws and articles of inelse can be accomplished.
He subsequently
corporation.
CHRISTMAS PARTY
withdrew the motion.
The motion to appropriate $300
Approximately 300 people attended the Children's Christmas for Eugene Emergency Housing
Party. The Senate would like to passed by a roll call vote.
Voting YES were Bruce Nelmake this an annual event, and
is open to suggestions for im- son, Cherrie McMurray, Lynn
p roving the party.
Rosen, Barbarossa, Steadman,
Special thanks was given to the Jensen, Henning, Eubanks, UlOut-of-Nowhere Players, the rich, Browning, Fitch, Strong
Circle K Club of Lane, and Jeff and Tindall.
McMeans.
Voting NO were Dan Rosen,
Woodring, Bill Ne 1 son, ChrisEUGENE EMERGENCY HOUSING tensen, Wood, Gilbreath, Smith,
Treasurer Cherrie McMurray and Bill McMurray.
reported that it was still the
housing committee's recommen- A.S.G. CONSTITUTION
First Vice-President Bruce
dation not to contribute $300 to
Nelson moved to postpone the
Eugene Emergency Housing.
Mr. Gall, President, and Mr. acceptance of the new Associated
West, Treasurer, of Eugene Student Governments (ASG) con-

••••••••••••••••

•••
••

.•
••

- Jan.7

stitution until the next regularly
scheduled Senate meeting. The
motion was seconded and passed
by a voice vote.

NEW SENATOR
John Douglass was sworn in
as "Freshman Senator from the
Science Department.

LCC CONSTITUTION
Discussion Item Only. The
rough draft of the LCC Associated
Student Body constitution is com:..
plete. The by-laws will be ready
for the next Senate meeting.

CHE~ CLUB BUDGET
Chess Club representative
John Mills asked that the club's
request for funds be postponed
u n t i I the Senate bu d g e t is
straightened out.

PUBLICITY DIRECTOR
President W a r re n Coverdell
sent a letter to Publicity Director
Tom Purvis requesting his resignation. He has not been performing his duties and is no
longer enrolled in school. No
answer to the letter was received.
First Vice-President Nelson
moved to drop Purvis from the
ASB Executive Cabinet position
of Publicity Director as of Jan. 7.
The motion was seconded and
passed unanimously.

DESERET CLUB BUDGET
No representative present.

Haircuts as you like them
Appointments available

BLUEBIRD PRODUCTIONS
Mike Dilley, president of Bluebird Productions, Ltd., proposed
giving a concert at Lane. Bluebird Productions would charge
$175 or 60%, whichever is
greater. Lane would be financially responsible for the publicity.
The meeting was adjourned at
4:45 p.m.
Hairstyling, razor cutting
Drop-ins wlecome

Monte's Barber Shop

'Across from Hamburger Heaven'
1241 Willamette
343-9563

•••••••••••••••••••••• •••••

REBOUND ROCK
.._,:·····••: -·.:·•·-

-

with

•
•

,;mt,

•••

0

'

0 p.m. to 1:00 a.m.

•
••

••

•••

All request music from

•
•••
••
••
•••
••• • • • • • • • • • • • • •

•
•
••

satuROay

•

shows increase
Winter term enrollment at LCC
is higher than winter term oflast
year, college officials have announced.
At the end of formal Winter
Term registration, 8,388 students had enrolled, compared to
7,527 registering last year.
These figures represent a
"headcount" of every student,
including those attending parttime, enrolled for any class at
LCC.
The Winter Term "headcount"
enrollment is slightly below the
Fall Term total of 8,603 students.
Enrollment at the University of
Oregon also showed an increase
over last year, with 14,215 registered this year as compared
to 13,950 last Winter Term.

•
••
•
••
•

1956 1970
--

••

.
••

•
•
•
••
•

•••

••
••

••

•
•
••
•
Call 7 47 -4500
••
•
•
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••

ADULT EDUCATION SCHEDULE
The following Adult Education classes will begin Jan. 19 or later. For information on the
status of classes beginning before that date, contact the Office of Adult Education, '747-4501,
ext. 323.
Adult Education classes are open to any person
18 or older who is not. enrolled in high school.
Unless otherwise noted, registration is accomplished at the first class meeting, at which time
fees are paid. Students should bring their Social
Security number to the first class meeting.

ARTS AND CRAFTS

DEFENSIVE DRIVING, 7-9 p.m. Thurs., beg. Feb.
Basic skills
and techniques of driving, safe driving methods
under today's crowded conditions. In-class instruction only. Prerequisite: valid driver's
license or learner's permit.

4, 305 Forum (no tuition charge).

DRIVER EDUCATION, 7-9 p.m. Thurs., beg.
Jan. 21, Rm. 9 South Eugene High School (15
hrs., $47). 8 hrs. classroom instruction, 7 hrs.
behind the wheel. Actual driving instruction
scheduled individually.
Students must obtain
learner's permit before driving.

DECOUPAGE, 7-10 p.m., Tues., beg. Jan. 19,
104 Science (30 hrs., $12). Instniction in art of
mounting pictures on wooden or metal plaques,
wall pictures, trays, boxes, etc., to give feeling
of antique art. Supplies may be purchased through
instructor.

FLY TYING, 7-10 p.m., Tues., beg. Jan. 19
206 Business (20 hrs., $12). Creating artificial
flies of fur and feathers. Nymphs, dry flies,
wet flies and streamers. Trouth and steelhead
patterns studied. New ways to tie small flying
insects.

JEWELRY: COPPER ENAMELING. 7-10 n.m ..
Tues., beg. Jan. 19, Rm. 23 Cascade Jr. High
(30 hrs., $12). Making copper enamel jewelry.
Supplies may be purchased at the school.

HOW TO SELL REAL ESTA.TE SUCCESSFULLY,
7-9 p.m., Thurs., beg. Jan 21,436 Center(l2 hrs.,
$5). Sales procedures beginning with the phone
call, showing, taking the offer, presenting the
offer and counter offer, and the close.
•

7
Page

Jan. 21, Roosevelt Jr. High. Prerequisite: Bishop
Sewing rr. Fundamentals of professional tailoring
techniques.
BISHOP TAILORING II. Prerequisite: Bishop
Tailoring I. Special emphasis on pants_ suits.
Wed., Jan. 20, 9-12 noon, YMCA: Fri., Jan.
22, 9-12 noon, Willamalane . .
LINGERIE (15 hrs., $6). Basic instruction in
handling lingerie fabrics and construction of
lingerie.
Wed., Jan. 20, 9-12 noon, River Road .Park;
Wed., Jan. 20, 9-12 noon, Junction City; Mon.,
Feb. 15, 9-12 noon, Willamalane; Wed.,-Feb-. 17:
9-12 noon, River Road Park; Wed., Feb. 17,
9-12 noon, Junction City.
PANTS & TOPS, 7-10 p.m. Wed., beg. Jan. 20,
Willamette High (30 hrs., !lil2J. Fitting and con~ ·
struction of pants (all styles and lengths), pullover shirts, vests, windbreakers, ponchos. Emphasis on pant suits.
VINYL RAINWEAR, 12:30 -3:30 p.m. Mon., beg.
Feb. 15, Junction City (15 hrs., $6). Sewing with
vinyl and construction of items including sports
jackets and dress coats.
ADVANCED CAKE DECORATING, 7-10 p.m ..
Tues., beg. Jan. 19, 124 Center (30 hrs., $12 plus
$12 supplies and equipment). Two hours of lab
work, one hour for instruction in preparation and
decoration of wedding and-special occasion cakes.

OIL PAINTING, 7-10 p.m. Tues., beg. Jan. 19,
109 Science (30 hrs., $12). Basic techniques of
painting with oils, some emphasis on design and
composition. More advanced instruction can be
given in abstract and non-abstract painting.

HOME RELATIONS FOR SUPERVISORS, 7-10
p.m. Wed., beg. Jan. 20, 222 Apprentice (30 hrs.,
$12). Basic principles of psychology in industrial working and supervisory conditions.

BEGINNING CREATIVE NEEDLEWORK, 7-10 pm,
Tues., beg. Jan. 19, 211 Apprentice (30 hrs., $12).

SCULPTURE, 7-10 p.m., Wed., beg. Jan. Z0,
119 Science (30 hrs., $12). Clay modeling techniques and plaster casting from finsihed clay
sculpture. PREREGISTRATION REQUffiED. Call
747-4501, ext. 324.

INSTRUMENT PILOT GROUND SCHOOL, 7-10
p.m. Wed., beg. Jan. 13, 222 Apprentice (30 hrs.,
$12).
Preparation for FAA Instrument Pilot
written exam, including basic principles of instrument flying and navigation.

GOURMET COOKING, 7-10-p.m., Tues., beg. Jan.
19, 124 Center (30 hrs., $12 plus $10 supplies).
Preparation of dishes from 1' o I and., China,
America, other countries. PREREGISTRATION
required, call 747-4501, ext. 324.

TOLE PAINTING, 9-12 noon, Wed., beg. Jan. 20,
Willamalane (30 hrs., $12 plus $2 rent). Technique of decorative painting on furniture, plaques
and tin and metal articles. Includes methods of
antiqueing.

MEDICAL TERMINOLOGY, 7-10 p.m. Tues., beg.
Jan. 19, 105 Health (30 hrs., $12). Vocabulary
for those in medical or paramedical ·fields, or
those in business who have frequent contact with
medical areas.

BUSINESS EDUCATION

BOOKKEEPING n, 7-10 p.m., Tues., beg. Jan.19,
212 Business (30 hrs., $12). Continuation of
Bookkeeping L
LEGAL SECRETARY TRAINING. 7-l0o.m. Tues ..
beg. Jan. 19, 204 Business (30 hrs., $12 plus $3
supplies). Legal office routine., setting up legal
documents, obtaining and completing legal forms,
structure of courts, legal terminology and procedures and responsibilities of legal secretary
to the legal profession.
LUMBER SECRETARY. 7-10 n.m .. Tues .. beg.
Jan. 19, 107 Business (30 hrs., $12). Lumber
terminology, figuring lumber freigh weights and
rates, invoicing andpayroll. PREREGISTRATION
REQUIRED, call 747-4501, ext. 324.
TYPING, 7-10 p.m., Tues., beg. Jan. 19~ Willamette High School (30 hrs., $12).

FOREIGN LANGUAGES
SPANISH n, 7-10 p.m., Tue~-~ be~- Jan. 19.,_
437 Center (30 hrs., $12). Second term of sequence,
not recommended for new students without knowledge or experience of the language.

GENERAL INTEREST
.ALGEBRA, 7-10 p.m., Wed., beg. Jan. 20~ 403
Center (30 hrs., $12). Equivalent to high school
algebra. Also designed for those wishing to review or continue for vocational advancement.
ASTROLOGY I, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Tues., beg. Jan.19,
315 Forum (20 hrs., ~2). Jntroouction to astrology, including effects of planetary patterns with
regard to happenings on earth and effect of these
patterns on individuals.
ASTROLOGY II, 8:30 -10:30 p.m. Tues.. beg.
Jan. 19., 314 Forum (20 hrs., $12). Enables
calculation of horoscope. Particular attention
to current transits of planets at time of class.
BEAUTY WORKSHOP, 7-10 o.m. Wed .. beg.
Jan. 20, 221 Apprentice (30 hrs., $12). Selfimprovement sessions with professional direction
in weight and figure control, makeup techniques,
hair care and styling., wardrobe selection and
visual personal poise. PREREGISTRATION REQUIRED, call 747-4501., ext. 324.
COPY LAYOUT AND PREPARATION FOR
PRINTING, 7-10 Q_.m., Thurs., beg. Jan. 21., 205
Business (30 hrs., $12). Basic preparation procedures and materials for producing images for
reproduction through printing media. Emphasis
on layout and paste-up with on-the-job situations
and problems. Visits to local printing plants and
guest lecturers from printing industry. PREREGISTRATION required, call 747-4501, ext. 324.

RETIREMENT PLANNING, 7-9:30 p.m. Wed.,
beg. March 3, Springfield Public Library (no
tuition charge). For persons planning to retire
in l to lO years; discusses changes which may
have to be considered. Financial and legal planning., second careers, housing, health care, education and solical adjustment are major topics.

SELF MOTIVATION, 7-10 o.m. Tues., beg. Jan.
19, 405 Center (30 hrs., :i>I2J. Developing a
better understanding of the "rules of success"
by looking at personal philosophies of today's
greatest men.
TAXIDERMY, '<-lQ '}..m.• Tues., beg. Jan. 19,
212 Apprentice (30 hrs., $12). How to preserve
and mount animals, birds, and fish. Hide tanning
and garment making.
TRENDS IN CONTEMPORARY CULTURE, 7-10
p.m . ., Tues., beg. Jan. 19, 307 Forum (30 hrs. .,$12).
Discussion of novels, psychology, biography,
travel, education and drugs.

HOME ARTS
BEGINNING KNITS & FASHION FABRICS, method
of using specialized materials such as knits and
stretch fabrics. Construction of skirts, blouses
or -shells, sweaters, pants, swimsuits and girdles.
Bishop Sewing I recommended as prerequisite
unless student has good background in sewing.
Tues., Jan. 19, 7-10 p.m., YMCA; Wed.,
Jan. 20, 9-12 noon, Oakway Mall; Wed., Jan. 20,
7-10 p.m., Willamalane; Wed., Jan. 20, 7-l0p.m ..,
Oakway Mall; Thurs., Jan. 21, 9-12 noon, Willamalane; Thurs., Jan. 21, 9-12 noon, Junction
City; Thurs., Jan. 21, 7-10 p.m., Junction City;
Thurs.! Jan. 21, 7-lOp.m., Willamette High School.
INTERMEDIATE KNITS, 9-12 noon Thurs., beg.
Jan. 21, YMCA. For students not ready for kr.-..
tailo~ing but interested in sewing with knit fabric.
ADVANCED KNIT. Beginning class required as
prerequisite. Student constructs complete knit
ensemble.
Wed., Jan. 20, 7-10 p.m., Roosevelt Jr. High;
Thurs., Jan. 21, 7-10 p.m., YMCA.

UPHOLSTERY, 7-10 p.m. Tues. & Thurs .. beg.
Jan. 19, 106 Apprentice (40 hrs., $16).

SHOP AND TECHNICAL
ADVANCED BLUEPRINT READING FOR
WELDERS_, 7-10 p.m. Tues. & Thurs., beg.
Jan. 19, 204 Industrial Tech (15 hrs., $7). Blueprint reading, take-off and materiai listing, and
estimating.
CABINETMAKING, 7-10 p.m. Tues., beg. Jan. 19,
108 Industrial Tech (30 hrs., $12). Elements of
woodworking for beginners. For both men and
women.
FRONT END ALIGNMENT, 7-10 p.m. Wed., beg.
Jan. 20, Auto-Diesel (30 hrs., $12). Fundamentals of front end alignment, including camber, caster, "toe-in" and "toe-out" and effect
of each on steering.
HYDRAULICS ill, 7-10 p.m . ., Tues., beg. Jan. 19,
Cottage Grove High School (30 hrs., $12). Deals
mainly with troubleshooting.
MACHINE SHOP, 7-10 p.m. Tues. & Thurs.,
beg. Jan. 19, 101 Machine Shop (30 hrs., !lil2J.
Layout and machining metal by drilling, turning
and boring, milling, grinding, shaping, planing
and slotting. Use of abrasive wheel, drilling
gauge, surface plane and surface gauge.
RADIO THEORY II, 7-10 .p.m. Tues., beg. Jan.
19, 202 Electronics (30 hrs., $12). Continuation
of theory of radio from basic concept of the
construction of matter up to and including transformers.
TRUCK DRIVING, 7-10 p.m. Wed., beg. Feb. 17,
201 Electronics (15 hrs., $6). Designed for sand
and gravel industry especially. Classroom and
behind-the-wheel training in defensive driving,
spreading rock and service programs. Students
should have 3 years driving experience and
good driving record.

BASIC EDUCATION

BASIC EDUCATION, a free course open to anyone 18 or older with less than an eighth grade
education or achieving below that level. Teaches
reading, arithmetic and writing. A special class
for the foreign born is offered. Call 747-4501,
extension 253.
•

HIGH SCHOOL

BISHOP SEWING L Use of Bishop sewing method
for home use.
Tues., Jan. 19, 7-lOp.m., Willamalane; Tues.,
Jan. 19, 7-10 p.m., Roosevelt Jr. High; Wed., Jan.
20, 7-10 p.m., YMCA: Thurs., Jan. 21, 9-12 noon,
Oakway Mall; Thurs., Jan. 21., 7-10 p.m., Oakway.

An Adult High School Diploma may be earned
by completing six required courses: American
Literature, English Grammar, General Mathematics, General Science, Modern Problems and
U.S. History.
Evening and daytime classes
offered. Call 747-4501, ext. 375.

BISHOP SEWING II. Prerequisite: Bishop Sewing L
Tues., Jan. 19, 7-10 p.m., Willamette High;
Tues., Jan. 19, 7-10 p.m., Oakway Mall; Wed.,
Jan. 20, 7-10 p.m., River Road Park.

TO ESTABLISH A CLASS

BISHC'P TAILORING I, 7-10 p.m., Thurs., beg.

A course can usually be organized any time there
are 12 persons with a common interest, a teaching
To present
station, and a teacher available.
ideas for classes, call the Office of Adult Education 747-4501, ext •.324.

Page 8

Lalle··hoS·15···1110re •Hawa.iiall r8presenlatiV85 • ,.-, .....
by Bill Bauguess

J;

Mrs. Walter Frederick~en, Walter Freoericksen, and Walter Lai

.·.?w~·1:u..·s

1. , .....
" 'H

.
.
.
.
.
Ronald Damels, Mrs. Phyllls Wnght, and Miss Setsuko Aihara

Three community colleges in
Hawaii have established, through
the aid of a federal grant, a
two year project aimed toward
complete development of the newly established community co 1 leges in Hawaii. LCC and the
University of Hawaii have been
named in the grant as consulting agents in the project.
The three Hawaiian colleges Kauai, Maui, and Hawaii - have,
in the past, been a part of a
series of vocational - technical
schools that have helped make
up the state's higher education
facilities, along with a state system of higher education. Changing economy and growing population have created a demand for
a wider range of educational
facilities however, resulting in
the creation of a community college system which has used the
vocational schools largely as a
springboard in expanding to a
full comprehensive community
college system.
Sever a 1 staff members from
the Hawaiian colleges arrived at
Lane Monday, Jan. 11, to study
the curricular and organizational
facilities at Lane and at other
colleges along the coast. Those
visiting Lane Monday were, (from
Maui Community College) Walter
Lai, business lincluding distributive education); Ron a Id Daniels, hotel mid-management and
food services ; Mrs. Phyllis

Wright, speech communication;
Miss Setsuko Aihara, foreign language instructor; Walter Frederickson, anthropology ( math science division chairman); and
Mrs. Frederic ks en. Visiting
from Kauai Community College
were, Mark Summers, instructor in English as a second language; and Kiyoshi Yoshii, instructor in welding.
A meeting was held at 9 a.m.
Monday by LCC President Dr.
Eldon Schafer ; Lewis C as e ,
Dean of Instruction; Bert Dotson, Administrative Assistant to
President Schafer; and the Hawaiian representatives. The
meeting consisted primaril y of
questions from the Hawaiian in-

Ii

TIMBER BOWL

~,

924 Main St., Springfield

Photos by Hew Lipscomb

Complete Engineering

&

Drafting Supplies

NEW & USED DESKS, CHAIRS, FILES

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

1733 Pearl St.

Copies of three textbooks are
urgently needed by students enrolled this term for whom copies
of required books have not yet
arrived.
"Technical Math," by Halberg
and Zink; "Observing and Recording the Behavior of Young
Children," by Cohen and Stern;
and "Designs for Famous Utopias," are needed for students
in math, child development and
composition 112.
Students having these texts and
willing to sell them are encouraged to contact the Bookstore in regard to the first two,
and the English Department about
the latter.

W@~~

r~@,II®

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

Pacific First Federal
Sa~•,•ngs

Life's observations

1100 Willamette
342-1781

} ( ~ JCHUu
(July 12 -- August 2)

22 exciting da.y s
visiting Denmark, Norway
and Sweden
For free brochures on this, and other tours,
clip coupon and mail to
HOLIDAYS ABROAD, INC,
4280 Scottdale, Eugene 97402
or phone
688-6221

UNLIMITED

• • "" ..__., •

735 North A
746-9675

s

PORTER'S FOODS

'l

and Loan
Association

IV

by Mark

vogue, and dolls rolled their looking. It was weeks, nay,
Styles change, but guys and stockings. Flashes of flesh were months before they could bring
dolls--never. Guys have been seen when dolls b o a rd e d the themselves to look in open adogling dolls ever since Adam trolley, and a traffic cop's beat miration. And then to our dismay
whistled at Eve in her first fig was a jolly one. Dolls held up stylists decreed the midi; but
leaf. Of course Adam and Eve their stockings with fancy gar- our dolls, bless 'em, remained
had an advantage over the gen- ters that I ate r mysteriously true to their guys and refused
erations to come--no elders appeared as arm bands on their to wear 'em. The maxi, of course,
looked dubiously down their noses young swains. The critics of the never really caught on, though
and prophesized they'd go to Hell day muttered shocked disapprov- I've seen a few dolls that wear
al, and vowed the youngsters 'em very revealing.
in a hand basket.
As usual the critics have ran
The fig leaf set the first style would come to a "no good end."
true to form---they predict dire
and was probably prophetic of Well, they got married.
And then, skirts no longer disaster. But guys and dolls
today's beach wear for the popular young doll. Nevertheless, crept up--they jumped, and the haven't changed. They will marry
from the meager fig leaf to the mini was in vogue, Even dyed and time will turn the dolls into
mini ~.nd maxi skirts of today, in the wool girl watch e rs concerned grandmothers, and the
one style or another has been blushed and tried not to be caught guys into ogling grandfathers.
in vogue generation after generation, and each generation had
its critics.
It's Happening
Back at the turn of the century,
it was a daring young lady who,
blushing prettily, showed a trim
ankle from beneath her skirt
and guys, being guys, whistled.
On the side line, elders were 1
shocked and vowed the young- •
sters were bound for Hell; but
VISIT THE MOST FASCINATING STORE IN THE
youth had its way-inevitably
NORTHWEST; EVERYTHING FROM SELECTED
they married and had children.
Skirts crept up, and a doll's
ORGANIC & NATURAL FOODS TO
calf became a winsome view;
and as usual, their elders wonINCLUDING
GOURMET DELIGHTS
dered what was going to become
of the young generation. It soon
r-,«,
SMOKED MEATS
became obvious--they got marWINE MAKING SUPLIES ~~J'
ried. Guys and dolls hadn't
chapgeq. ,,
.
~~", .. -2~~.. W. 8,th
Eugene
Knee-length skirts beca.me the •

i

I

5SPECIAL ·RATES Mon.-Fri. until 6p.m. 5-

Texts needed

Kiyoshi Yoshii and Mark Summers

structors' concerning difficulties
encountered at L C C , how they
were encountered by the colleges
in Hawaii.
Representatives of these colleges, and from Honolulu and Kapiolani Community Colleges have
made previous visits to Lane,
and, as Bert Dotson phrased it,
"From their touring (the Hawaiian College representatives)
find out that LCC has one of
the most comprehensive program of any they've seen; we have
what they' re looking for to
study; we have some new innovative ideas; we have things
going on that most community
colleges do not have, and that's
what they're anxious to see."

NAME

PHONE

ADDRESS

i

! SCANDINAVIAN HOLIDAY TOUR

,----,
L.J

.----1

• 11

L_,

ALPINE HOLIDAY TOUR
Germany, Austria, Italy and Denmark
SPANISH HOLIDAY T.OU,R.
Spain, Portugal and DeQ.qta:rk·

OSPIRG: what and why?

by Jon Haterius

OSPIRG -- what is it? and who
cares?
The Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group came to
fruition after an address by crusader Ralph Nader at the U of
O's Mac Court in November.
So m e people might have reasoned that Nader's address would
just be another soliloquy about
pollution, the price of meat, or
dirty "U" joints on cars.
The "soliloquy" by Nader about our environment, consumer
protection an ct business ethics
resulted in 5,000 University of
Oregon student signatures onpetitions agreeing with him. This
is 1/3 of the U of O student

body.

Since his address Nov .16, over
30,000 community college and
university students have signed
petitions which declare their support for the Nader-inspired Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group.
Nader and his "raiders'' suggested a new way for college
students to approach effectively
Oregon's environmental and consumer problems. The heart of the
suggestion was that each student contribute $1 per term to
a statewide student organization
which would work for an elected
student board of directors. Each
two and four-year school would
elect, as they elect student body
officers, a representative for
each 4,000 students (total head
count). These elected representatives would meet several times
a year on a statewide basis to
voice students' opinions to the
state government on issues of
concern.
But more is involved than just
voicing opinions -- the elected
OSPIRG student representative
will ferret out local individuals,
industries, and businesses that
pollute or default on their re- sponsibility to the public. By hiring professional, full-time lawyers, biologists, and trained agents, OSPIRG will bring to the
state legislature's attention, it
is felt, negligent segments of our
society that "pollute" in the
broad sense of the word.
At this date, every community
college and university in the
state is working to get students
to sign petitions to granfrecognition to OSPIRG on each campus. Lane Community College,
with an FTE last term of 5,363,
has signed over 1,000 students,
according to Cheryl Burgess,
LCC Co-ordinator for OSPIRG.
Nader's "soliloquy" has turned into a bull-in-a china-shop
activity for concerned students
in Oregon. There has not been
any recent activity that has generated such wide support among
students as the ideas of student involvement in areas of
pollution, consumer protection
and business ethics in Oregon.
Students on the U of O campus are state co-ordinators for
OSPIRG. Plans to raise money at
that institution include automatically charging every student $1.
If the university is successful in
signing enough students on its
petitions, the university administration will have to charge the $1
fee to all students. If, however,
any u of o student would like
his dollar back, or does not want
to contribute to begin with, the
student would present his student body card at an established
office on campus during the third
week of each quarter.
Cheryl Burgess, LCC coordinator for OSPIRG, explained
LCC's "better way" of collecting the money. "A separate IBMtype card will be given to each
student paying a student body
fee," she said. The student can
check 'yes I would like to contribute, $1 to OSPIRG,' 'no', or
I wish to have more informatjon."
The re would not be an automatic

contribution at LC C." This method would be more democratic,
she feels and more voluntary
than the plan of the U of O.
OSPIRG's constitution should
be the quintessence of democracy. The student representatives to OSPIRG will be elected
by the student body. If students
disapprove of their representatives action, the representatives can be voted out of office (half of the representatives
to the OSPIRG Board of Directors will be elected every six
months on a staggered basis so
there is some continuity of representation). When OSI>IRG student representatives meet at
LCC, the meetings will be open
to all of the student body. And
finally, the $1 contribution at LCC
will be completely voluntary no hassle to get your money back.
Financially, you as a student
would be a free agent -- you
do not HA VE to contribute your
money, as some schools in Oregon will request.
Students who wish to contribute more than $1 per term may
do so. While OSPIRG supporters
have been circulating about the
LCC campus, students who have
signed the petitions have sometimes dug into their pockets at
the time to contribute $1 to $5.
Money cannot be accepted for
OSPIRG however, until the LCC
Board ~f Education approves it
on this campus.
OS P IRG organizers at LCC
hope for contributions from nonstudents as well. "We know that
there are parents and friends
of LCC students and teachers
and staff at school that would
like to contribute money," said
Miss Burgess. "We are not limiting contributions solely to
students only. The only understanding is that there are to be
no strings attached to the co~tributions from these people m
the community who give money to
OSPIRG at LCC.
The country seems to be rapant
with student protests, of questionable validity at times. Protest for the sake of protest has
seldom gained any democratic
solutions. When taxpayers are
confronted with seemingly despotic students on campuses of
high education, it is questionable that those same supporters
and financers of higher education
look kindly for long upon protesting students. Protest direcrected to relevant goals in a
constructive and democratic way,
however will benefit both "prot e s t o r " and the "establishment."
OSPIRG at LCC needs EVERY ONE'S support on campus to
further its ends of serving the
community in which we live and
work.
The Eugene Register-Guard, in
an editorial of Dec. 27_ said

Page 9

"OSPIRG is a true breath of
fresh air on Oregon's college
campuses. Free from control of
anyone (including Ralph Nader)
except students, OSPIRG will
provide students aprofessionally
staffed organization which represents them just like the organizations which properly represent doctors, teachers, corporations and union members.
Using their own money, and proceeding in a mature and businesslike fashion, students should be
able to guide OSPIRG to solve
some of Oregon's pressing environmental consumer p rob lems."
Students for Survival, a group
which grew out of Benjamin
Kirk's Physical Science class
Fall Term, as well as other
students concerned for our environment will be circulatingpetitions at LCC this term. They
are hoping to get at least another
2,000 signatures. They have
reached about 1/3 the number
of signatures they feel they will
need to present to the LCC Board
of Education before OSPffiG can
be born officially on this campus.
If widespread concensus is any
indication, as has been shown on
most of the other two and fouryear schools in Oregon, OSPIRG
at LCC should become a reality
at the conclusion of this term.
AU it takes is a signature, YOUR
signature, on a petition.
Many more students are needed
to circulate OSPIRG petitions in
order to get half the student body
signed by this term, said Miss
Burgess.
Petition circulation du ring
lunch time in the food service
areas as well as during class
breaks would help the campaign
tremendously, she feels.
Petitions may be picked up and
questions about OS PI R G answered at the Student Senate office, across the hall from the
Learning Resource Center on the
second floor of the Center Building.

J

KLCC

''This Morning''
9:05 a.m.

Monday

Friday

New magazine
dates publication
A new magazine designed especially for the s o c i a I-action
oriented individual will begin
publication in January, 1971.
SOL Ill will be a world affairs
publication with emphasis on social problems and their solutions.
To encourage reader participation, SOL III is holding a $1,000
magazine contest with prizes in
writing, poetry, art, photography
and humor. Entries from university students and faculty
members are especially wanted.
Contest rules may be obtained
,by writing SOL III Contest, 1909
Green Street, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, 19130.

NOWI

Women Sophs

Seniors
Men Juniors
Grads-to-be
Do you have two years of College left?

Apply NOW for the Air Force
program to
ROTC two-year
complete the Air Force Officers
qualification test, physical exam.
personal interview and summer
field training by fall of 1971.

January 20

Mrs. Briscoe

President of League of Women Voters

January 21

Warren Coverdell
LCC Student Body President

Januqry 22

Mr. Dale Hollingsworth
Officer of American Legion

January 25

Dr. Loyal Ediger

Hearing and $pea Speech Center

January 26

Mr. West
Skipworth

For further information with no obligation

Call 686-3107 or visit

AFROTC, U of 0, Eugene

NOW!

KLCC-FM 90.3

b ,i:rs:• -· -------. . . .. .. .. ·SP~
Basketball

(continued from page 11)

in the Hrst half the Titans had bench, and the Titans breezed to
an 87-75 victory.
a 16-7 lead.
The Titans' perfect season
But then, all of a sudden, Lane
missed four jumpers from the thoughts (if they had any) came
floor, two fast break layins, and to an abrupt half Saturday aftertwo shots underneath the basket. noon when Southwest Oregon
In the meantime, the Road- proved that Lane was only human,
runners' Terry Cornutt and as they handed the Titans a
Bruce Martin combined for six 98-81 setback.
For Lane, their only enjoyable
points, and with 13:19 left in the
half, the Titans lead had been lead was the 1-0 margin Terry
Manthey gave them on a free
cut to three, at 16-13.
With the team losing momen- throw with 19:10 left in the first
tum, Roth went to his often- half.
From there on it was an all
used bench, and sent in Dave
Gibson, Greg Taylor, and Wil- uphill battle, as the Titans fell
lie Jones, replacing Manthey, farther and farther behind.
With 15:59 showing in the first
Steve Woodruff, and King.
And the plan worked. With half clock, Willie Jones' ten5:48 left in the half, Jones drop- foot jumper and free throw tied
ped in a shot under the basket the game at 10-10, but after that
to give the Titans a 32-21 lead. the Titans never came within
In between, the cushion was pad- four points.
The Lake rs showed a deded by Steve Armitages' 25-foot
jumper, Gibson's tipin, a check vastating one-two punch of Mike
of a Bruce Martin shot, and Tay- Rose and Ray Kinny throughout
the whole game.
lor's two fast break layins.
Rose ended up with 29 points,
By halftime, the Titans used
free throws and pass intercep- while Kinny had 27. Along with
their combined 56 points, totions to build a 43-32 lead.
When the second half .began, gether they grabbed close to half
the Titans jumped otit to a 49-32 of the rebounds.
For Lane, it was just a bad
lead on field goals by Haxby,
King, and Woodruff before the afternoon. After all, they're only
Roadrunners could get started. human.
A Greg Taylor tipin with 12:32
showing on the clotk gave the TiAlways the latest
tans a 20-point lead at 62-42.
In
From there on, Roth cleared the
KNIT FABRICS

Titans defeat PCC
in gymnastics meet
Photos by Hew Lipscomb

Packw ood blasts U.S. Senate
a short opening capsule of'' a day
in congress." While relating an
Oregon's junior senator, Ro- hour by hour account of an averbert Packwood, visited the LCC age Senate day, Packwood's tone
campus Thursday, Jan. 7, for sliced at the Senate's inability
a '' rap session" with students, to get things done due to the
faculty, and staff, and blasted a "backwards process of filibusU.S. Senate mired in "backward tering"; the time -consuming,
processes." Packwood took aim non-productive "right to unat the senate's inability to govern limited debate"; and the Senate's
itself, and its gross inability for dated senority bylaws.
self-reform. Packwood even took
Packwood sees the main flaw
a stray shot at President Richard in the filibuster system as a
M. Nixon.
lack of a "rule of. relevancy."
Packwood began his hour-long Without such a rule, the speakafternoon appearance before Paul er on the Senate floor is not
Malm's social science class with limited to the subject at hand,
and can therefore stray to his
Paradental students rhetorical limits. The Senator
also noted the cause of the Se.
.
nate's slow processes as a "lack
receive caps in
of imminence," explaining that
this is a general Senate attitude
Jan. 8 ceremony
which rejects the need for imThirty-four LCC dental assis- mediate action, with no need to
tant and dental hygiene students hurry legislation, and with a
received their caps during cere- definite resolve that the problems will be waiting for them
monies Friday, Jan. 8.
The event signified completion when they get around to them.
But despite his obvious disof one term in the programs and
students may now begin working pleasure with the present system,
with patients under the super- Packwood was not without opvision of instructors and dentists. timism. Packwood said the probDr. Eldon Schafer, President of lems at hand are now evident to
LCC, and Dr. Ned Christensen, the public and this woul d moDirector of the U of OSpeech and tivate the Senate into definite acHearing Clinic, addressed the tion on the reform problems.
Packwood sees a definite '' change
.
students.
Dental as s i st ant students of the filibuster rule this coming
capped were Jill Blcakhurst, Ca- year."
P a c kw o o d was optimistic in
rol Bradley, Jacqueline Bushnell,
Diane Cunningham, Constance Da other areas as well, including
ley, Carolyn Fisher, Diane the state of Oregon's economy,
Fleishman, Susan Hess, Colleen and the unemployment problem.
Ronan, Janice Skeers, Deborah "Oregon should be in the best
Smith, Kath I e en Snook, Judi shape ever for the next five
years," said Packwood, with an
Trettin, and Bette Jo Vogel.
Dental hygienist students hon- estimated 1.5 to 2.0 million new
ored inc 1u de d Janita Amidon, housing starts slated to boost
Annen Bacon, Dayle Baker, San- 0 reg on' s lumber-oriented edra Baker, Cynthia Brown, Betty conomy. Packwood reported this
Cline, Debra Dexter, Virginia figure as the most new conDiller, Cheri Hawkins, Mary strcution since 1951, and noted
Kendle, Debra DeShazer, Molly the ''baby boom coming of age"
McCauley, Max Marshall, Sandra as the cause of the rise.
Packwood's optimism also
Myers, Nancy Parrish, Julie
Phillips, Carolyn Popp, Charles portrayed itself on the subject
Sellec.~ Br.enpa Smitn, 3,nd Betty of his much publiciz~d population
control legislation. While only
Whetham.
by Eugene Cogburn

one of his three population control bills passed, the" ZPG (Zero
Population G row t h) advocate"
said he feels "there is no national instinct for destruction",
and that '' attitudes will change''
in the future. He said he plans
to reintroduce the defeated legislation, with an additional bill designated to provide funds for
abortion to all income groups.
As with most "rap Sessions,"
the question and answer portion
covered a broad spectrum of
subject areas, including criminal
rehabilitation, e x t e n d in g the
coastal fishing limits, minimum
wage to migrant workers, firing
of Walter Hickel, and pollution.
And when the President came
up in the conversation, Packwood rapped Nixon's "lack of
consistency," but p riased Nixon
for his use of wisdom, to overc o m e t h e p o I it i c a 1 inconsistencies. Asked who he would
support for the presidency in
1972, Packwood said "it depends
on who is running."

The LCC Titans defeated 80
to 65 a visiting Portland Community College team in a gymnastic meet Friday, Jan. 15.
Although the score was relatively close, Lane dominated
throughout the meet. The Titans
were lead by their captain, Vern
Lousignout, who accounted for
two first and two secondplace
finishes in his events.
Results of that meet were as
follows:
Floor Exercises: 1st, Steve
Blumenstein, LC C; 2nd, Vern
Lousignout, LCC; 3rd, Steve Myers, LCC.
Side Horse: 1st, Vern Lousignout, LCC; 2nd, Tim Glen, PCC;
3rd, Gary Reffing, PCC.
Still Rings: 1st, Dan Moninger, LCC; 2nd, Jim Bovee, PCC;
3rd, Steve Titus, LCC.
Side Vault: 1st, Steve Blumenstein, LCC; 2nd, Vern Lousignout, LCC; 3rd, Dan Jcobson,
LCC.
Par a 11 e 1 Rings: 1st, Vern
Lousignout, LC C; 2nd, Barry
Heidt, LCC; 3rd, Dan Moninger,
LCC.
Horizontal Bars: 1st, Dan Jacobson, LCC; 2nd, Jim Bovee,
PCC; 3rd, Mike Ecstein, LCC.

Charter Flights

Ask About Ovr

Sewing Cla11es

NORMA STEARNS'

780 Blair Blvd.
342-6359

Sets priced
as low as $100
1:.,7 ,-.,.

~GISTERED

~P-Sa.
DIAMOND

to

Europe, Hawaii & Asia
As low as

$125 round trip

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
Richard Stamp
3008 Willamette Apt. 1

Phone: 345-6835
Eugene, Oregon

OR WRITE

Charters West
310 Ct;,!'bett Building

Phone: 226-3566
Portland, Onigon

k

RINGS

e ·

Soon, you wi II choose
the ring to symbolize your
engagement. Choose Keepsake .. . and be sure of
a perfect diamond of
superior color and cut.

Student accounts
welcome

-TWO LOCATIONS-

856 WILLAMETTE

VALLEY RIVER

~---.... 1 ? ~
OIAUONO VALUES

I~

JEWELERS

Titans -mar perfect record in Saturday game

by Dave Harding
Coach Irv Roth and his rambling band of basketball Titans
shut the door on two more opponents last week, running their
season record to 8-0, but Saturday afternoon they got the door
slammed in their faces, dropping a 98-31 decision to tough
Southwestern Oregon C. C. at
home for their first loss of the
year. This loss puts Lane in
a three-way tie for first place
with Umpqua and Southwestern in
the OCCAA southern division.
Before the 1970-71 Titan basketball season opened, new head
coach Irv Roth summed up his
first college basketball team in
one word--exciting.
Lane opened the season way
back on Dec. 11 at Northwest
Christian College. After a shaky
start, the Titans finally pulled
out in front and posted a 78-66
victory.
That was the beginning. The
next night the victim was the
Linfield J. V. team. Again, it
was on the road. This time the
Titans shook the "shakes" and

I

An animal picked off a crucial Craig Morton pass and a
rookie converted it into three
points, enabling the Baltimore
Colts to whip the Dallas Cowboys 16-13 in Sunday's Super
Bowl clash.
The animal was Mike Curtis,
who is acclaimed tough on television commercials, and the
rookie was Jim O'Brien, a former University of Cincinnati wide
receiver.
O'Brien's clutch 30-yard field
goal came with only nine seconds left, giving Baltimore its
first Super Bowl victory.
Super Bowl V was a hard hitting affair which saw the victors turn the ball over six times.

Intram u ra Is
to get under way
Winter term intramurals will
be getting under way shortly and
sign up sheets are now posted
for basketball, badminton, and
bowling.
Also- available starting Wednesday will be ping pong. Three
tables will be set up in the lobby,
outside the gymnasium. Anyone
may play. Check out your paddle
and ball down at the equipment
room. Student body cards are
needed to check out equipment.
For men, the annual winter
term basketball league is getting underway, and sign up sheets
are posted in the locker room,
the lobby between the Library
and the admissions office, and
the intramural office.
Also needed for basketball are
referees and scorekeepers. For
anyone interested, a sign up sheet
is posted at the intramural office. Referees and scorekeepers
will each be paid $2 a game.
For anyone interested in entering a badminton tourney, or
s~arting a bowling league, those
sign ups are posted at the intramural office also.

Coach Tom Landry's Cowboys
dominated play throughout the
first half but went into the dressing room with only a 13-6 lead.
Two field goals by Mike Clarke
and an eleven-yard swing pass
from Morton to rookie sensation Duane Thomas accounted for
all the Dallas points.
Baltimore's on 1y first half
score came on a 76-yard bomb
from Colt mastermind John Unitas to tight end John Mackey.
The ball caromed off the hands
of Colt split end Eddie Hinton
and was also deflected by Dal1as Defe ns 1•ve Bac k Corne11 Green
• t o the ou t
bef ore 1·t se ttl ed m
•
stretched arms of a st rea kmg
Macke
y.
In the second half the game's
momentum s Ii pp e d from the
6rasp of the pressing Texans as
Cowboy running back Duane
Thomas fumbled on the Baltimore
one-yard line. The ball was re· T k
covere d by CoIt Def ens1ve ac 1e B1·11Y Ray sm1·th, who at 35
had announced his retirement and
·
h" f" al
was P1aymg 1s m
game as
.
c
It
a Balt 1more o •
In the opening moments of the
fourth quarter, with the score
still 13-6, a Colt drive was stopped when an Earl Morrall pass
was intercepted by Dallas linebacker Chuck Howley in the end
zone . Morr a 11 was playing
in place of Unitas who suffered
bruised ribs when he was decked by 260-pound Jethro Pugh
late in the first half.
Later on, the Colt's Eddie Hinton was fr ~ed to cough up the
football i the Dallas end zone
to stop ..nother Co 1t scoring
threat . But an interception by
Rick Volk and a two-yard plunge
by former Detroit castoff Tom
Nowatzke evened up the score
at 13-13, setting the stage for
O'Brien's heroic ef1ort.
A desperation Cowboy pass
from Morton to speedster Bobby Hayes was intercepted by Baltirnore's Jerry Logan at the
game's end to preserve the 16-13
Colt win.
With the win, the Colts received the Vince Lomb a rd i
Memorial T:r:qphy plu~ . ~n e;etra
...

...

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

.

h

TITAN WILLIE JONES GOES UP FOR TWO during the January
5 game with Northwest Christian College. The Titans won the
game 73-54.
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb)

started and finished in fourth final 90-99 victory for the Tigear.
tans.
The Titans quickly jumped out
The Titans followed suit Friin front 2-0 on a 15-foot jumper day night at home, blitzing the
by Terry Manthey.
Roadrunners from Linn-Benton
At the end of the half Lane . c.c. 87-75.
led by 12 at 46-34.
Behind a full court press, the
At the start of the second Titans jumped out in front 12-3,
half, Roth inserted his starting and looked like they might keep
five, and Jones, Manthey, King, right on going.
Taylor, and Haxby picked up
Behind the boardwork of King
w~~re the reserves left off. After and Terry Manthey, the Titans
five minutes of play, the Titans were scoring on the fast break,
had a 20 point lead at 61-41. and with only five minutes gone
But it was the so called "re(
)
continued on page 10
Serves ,, who came 1·n and 11·fted
the te.am when the momentum
wasn't there.
As Roth said, this year's Titan
squad is the most outstanding in
the school's history - and the
team is proving him right.
Riding a 6-0 record, the Titans started the week off last
Tuesday, Jan. 12, with a noncounter against the OCE jv team
at Monmouth.
LEONARD HARRIS and
In a particularly tough game
BOBBY TILLOTSON will be
under the boards, the Titans
in the Northwest corner of
trailed 39-37 at halftime, as
the Center Building taking
they only clicked on 18 of 44
applications for A A A on
field goal attempts.
Wednesday and Thursday,
It was torrid shooting in the
January 20 and 21.
second half which gave the Titans a 10-point lead with less
than two minutes remaining, and
a last ditch full-court press by·
OCE narrowed the score to the

I

A I00 k at fh e p rOS

by Bob Barley

_

recorded a 95-82 win over the
much taller team from the North.
On Dec. 18, the Titans concluded their three-game road
swing with a nifty 90-85 triumph
over the Oregon College of Education J. V. 's.
The Titans made their home
debut Jan. 5 and turned back
the pesky NCC Crusaders for the
second and last time. This time
the score was 73-54.
The score looks good, but the
game was a sloppy one for both
schools. The Titans could, perhaps, be excused for the sluggish
effort since the two-week Christmas vacation didn't help any.
Riding a 4-0 record, any team
would look t c, ugh on paper, but
for the Titans, two of their four
games were sloppy victories.
After the last win over the
Crusaders, only three days remained before Lane's league
opener at Bend against Central
Oregon Community College , the
league's number one offensive
team, averaging exactly 99 points
per game.

Central Oregon, one of the favorites to take the championship
this year was home--and ready.
• But Roth's Titans were also
ready, and when the smoke had
_cleared, Lane was still undefeated as Dan Haxby's last-second shot gave the Titans a 109107 victory.
"It was the best game you'll
ever see," echoed Roth ·a fterwards in the dressing room.
When asked about Haxby's lastsecond shot, Roth had a perfect
description--''fantas tic."
With five seconds remaining in
the game, and the score tied at
107, Haxby took the ball on the
far end of the court, drove the
baseline, cut underneath the basket, and did a reverse layup as
the buzzer sounded, and the ball
dropped in.
Haxby finished the night with 28
points, and three other Titans had
20 points or more.
Center Willie Jones had 23,
w h i le forward Terry Manthey
finished with 20, and res e r v e
Greg Taylor had 21.
A reserve had 2lpoints? That's
right. And Taylor isn't the only
one, either.
Take, for instance, Saturday,
Jan. 9's, 89-65 win over Chemeketa Community College, which
left Lane with a 2-0 leauge mark,
and 6-0 for the year.
Chemeketa, perhaps, and probably, the most inexperienced
team in the league with 14 of their
15 players freshmen, came to
Lane with a 3-9 mark.
For the much taller and superior Titans, they should have
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....-

Page 11.

$15,000 per man and the added
distinction of being the World
Champions. The Cowboys, on the
other hand, may have to use
their losers share of $7,500 to
help dry away their tears.

Wrestlers post

1-1-1 record
by Dallas Christensen

On Jan. 8 the Titan wrestlers
took on the Central Oregon Community College team here at
Lane. The only points scored
by Lane came from forfeits in
the weight divisions that COCC
did not fill. The final score was
COCC 401 LCC 15 _
Lane traveled to Clatsop Community College Jan. 9 for a meet
which had a result opposite of
the COCC meet. This time it was
the opposing team that won only
one match and gained the rest
of their po.ints from forfeits. The
final score was in the Titans'
favor, with a 41-13 advantage.
In a wrestling meet with the
Southern Oregon College J. V.'s
on Saturday, Jan. 16. Duane
Willhite, of Lane pinned Red
Moore (SOC)in the 190 lb. weight
division to give Lane a 15-15
tie with SOC.
In the other matches Smith
(SOC) pinned Crocker (LCC); Bill
Crenshaw (SOC)pinned Pat Hughs
(LCC); Joe Arnold (LCC) and
Joe Switzer (SOC) tied; Don Murray (LCC) decisioned Tim Goffiner (SOC); and Dave Hise (LCC)
decisioned Jack Robertson (SOC).
Both teams gave away a number
of forfeits due to the fact that
they had no wrestlers in that
am
wieght division. All the forfeits
cancelled each other out with the
exception of one. Lane came out
on top in this category with one
am
P1zzA
less forfeit to give the Titans
PHONE 747-4444
a five point advantage at the outset of the meet.
The tie gives the Titans a 1-1-1
record thus far in the season.
Coach Bob Creed still needs
wrestlers, especially in the lower W(;!ight divisions.
, ..................-------..___________ ____.____

Open from

11 to 1

Mon. thru Thrus.

11 to 2
Fri. & Sat.

bp's

11 to Midnite Sun.

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

..

-

-

-

-

-- -

- -

· · - · - · · .......... _........................

-

•

-

-

-

-

... -- t

.........

... ,

,,

..1.,

!

•

I

•

Page 12

President~s.J:ist,

Family Living Series
begins Jan. 21 at Lane
"Big Folks and Little Folks-A Series About Families" will
begin at LCC Thursday, Jan. 21.
The discussions on families,
another in the Family Life Discussion Series s pons ore d by
Fam i 1y Counseling Services,
LCC and the Junior League of
Eugene, will meet each Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 223
of the Apprenticeship Building.
M e e t in g s in the five -part
series are free and open to the
public, and will feature speakers
followed by small group discussions directed by trained layleaders.
Topics for the series on families include: "The Search for
Identity" with Esther Matthews,
professor at the U of O as the

first speaker. On Jan. 28, Dr.
Charles Holland, a Eugene psychiatrist, will discuss "The
Tyranny of the Child Centered
Robin Williams, a
Family."
District 4J school counselor, and
a g r o up ot third and fourth
graders will be featured on
Feb. 4, when the topic will be
"Big Folks and Little Folks-How Do You Talk Together."
U of O professor Ray Lowe
will be the featured speaker on
Feb. 11 with the subject "Nurturance, Guidance and Discipline
or Punishment, Direction and
Control." Martin .Acker, also
a professor at the U of 0, will
end the series on Feb. 18 with
the topic '' The .Adolescent as
Revolutionary."

JOB PLACEMENT
Students interested in employment with Crater Lake Lodge
for summer employment, should check with the Placement Office for applications. These should be filled out immediately.
THE RECRUITER WILL BE ON CAMPUS MARCH 4, 1971, and
interviews will have to be scheduled with the Placement Office.
Students interested in employment with Yellowstone Park
for the summer should come to the Placement Office for information and application. This should be done immediately. Summer
hiring begins in January.
PART TIME/FEMALE: Young
lady to babysit occasionally
e it he r morning or afternoon.
Pay: to be discussed. Hours:
variable.

PART TIME/FEM.ALE: Young
lady to live in. Prepare breakfasts, pack lunches and prepare
dinner in exchange for room and
boa rd in large roomy house.
·Hours variable.

PART TIME/FEMALE: Young
lady to babysit five days weekly.
Could be student's wife. Mon.,
Wed., Fri., from 9:30 a.m. to
5 p.m. Tues. & Thurs. from 9
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Pay: $60 mo.
PART TIME/FEMALES: Young
ladies to sell cosmetics. Must
be well groomed, good complexion, intelligent, out going,
ambitious. Prefer ages 19 through
35. 40% commission on all sales.
To begin anytime.

Top sc'1olastic honors were
about equally split between vo~tional-technica l and college
<ransfer students at Lane Com•
nunity College fall term as 120
~tudent~ whose majors range
from auto mechanics to elemen•
tary education earned "straight
A" averages.
These individuals head the
President's List which includes
480 full•time students who received grade point averages of
3.50 (B•plus) or better during
fall quarter.
Also recognized this week for
scholastic honors were 705 full·
time students named to the
Dean's List for grades ranging
between 3.00 and 3.49.
The 68 Eugene students who
earned perfect 4.00 averages
are:
AnneH Bacon, Carolyn Bau•
der, Nanci Bee son, Cheryl
Bjorn I i e, Mary Boehi, Gary
Bradford, Cheryl Brant, Robert
Brinton, Cynthia Brown. Dean
Caldwell, Ruth Campbell, Ken•
neth Carlson, Donald Cleveland,
Dennis Davis, Shelby Day, Pa•
tricia Derby.
Sylvia Diess, Thadas Edens,
Barbara Ewing, Paul Featherstone, Beverly Finseth, Thomas
Griggs, Roland Hatada Jr., Ju•
dith Harris, Michael Harris, Jon
Haterius, Michiko Hisano, Doug•
las Hoover, Sue Hunter, Carroll
Ingram, Jody Johnson, Paula
Johnson, Willis Johnson, Faye
Johnston, Ron Kizer, Kathryn
Knudsen, Terry Landreth, Ed·
ward Larkin, Mary Larsen,
Steven Lowry. Helen Lyons,
Thomas Malkowski.

Literary magazine

b . . s
k
PART TIME/COUPLE OR F~
MALES: Young couple or two see s su m1ss1on
THE co N c RE TE STAT~
young women to share home with
mature gentleman who is out of MENT LCC's new literary-art
town most of the. time. Ex- magazine, is now accepting mapenses, etc. to be discussed. No terials for the Spring issue.
Poetry, essays, short stories,
hours.
plays and art are needed. .
PART TIME/FEMALE: Young
Materials may be submitted
lady for babysitting. Four days in the box in the Language Arts
per week. Days rotate monthly. Department on the fourth floor
Hours: 2:45 to 11:45 p.m. Pay: of the Center Building, or in the
$4 daily.
Art Department.

CLAS-SIFIE,D
FOR SALE: Skis~-sabre wood,
cable binding, safety straps.$ 2o.
Call 746-5851 after 5 p.m.
FOR RENT: Room for student.
Kitchen privileges. Rent to be
arranged. Call 726-7542

Double bed. Maple
footboard, rails and
box springs. Good condition
$20.00. Phone 343-5320 anytime.
FOR SALE:

.headboard,

Live music Thursday - Friday - Saturday at the down underFOR SALE: 1960 Karman Ghia located under the Hunter Room.
parts. 36 horse engine in very 957 Pearl St. Next to the Eugood condition $150. Bucket seats gene Hotel.
$15, radio $20. Set of 4 Michelin
Leather • jacket,
radial recap tires for VW with FOR SALE:
tubes $50. Two snow tire re- Air Force A-2 style. Dark brown,
caps $12.50. See at 927 W. 28th like new. Size 42. $22.50. Phone
or call 342-8065 1 ask for Doug. 726-7542.

RENT

YOUR FURNITURE
Complete Qua 1it y furnishings.
Many styles and price groups
individual item selection __
rooms as low as $22 monthl v
Purchase option, prompt deli;~
ery. Large, convenient showroom, warehouse.
CUSTOM FURNITURE RENT~L
343-7717
115 Lawreijce

3

THE CONCRETE STATEMENT,
LCC's new literary-art magazine, is now accepting poetry,
essays, short stories, plays and
art for the Spring issue. Materials may be submitted in the
box in the Language Arts Dept.,
4th floor Center Bldg., or in the
Art Dept.
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.
Advertise in the Torch

FOR SALE: 1957 V.W.W Panel
new rebuilt engi6e. Early model
trans~ission, new tires, wood
paneling, shag carpet. $450. Call
686-8324 anytime.
FOR SALE: 1938 Ford pickup. Runs good - Call 688-3198
evenings after 5.

WANTED to buv 18x2lft self contained trailer house. WRl fE; Armond Rutledge, 921 Corydon, Eugene. Or~.97401 •
FOR SALE: 1967 Ford Mu:,tang.
Must sell car to stay in school.
Excellent condition. Phone 3424116 after 6 p.m.
QUESTION: If a 20-week course
can bring others up to an employable status, why not try the
free aptitude test and learn about
fabulous:
COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
Call or write E.C.P.l at 1445
Willamette, Eugene, 97401.
Phone E.C.P.I., 343-9031.

LIVE MUSIC--Thursday, Friday,
Saturday at the Down Under, located under the Hunter Room,
957 Pearl St., next to the Eugene
Hotel.

.................................................... .... .... . .....
Volvo - VW - TR - MG

Service and Repair
REASONABLE RA TES
Plus 10% off on parts

Bill's Foreign Car Service
780 E. 38th St. Eugene

344-2966

: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••I

Other 4.0 students from Eu•
gene include Paul Martin, Vir•
ginia Meek, Robert Mikl{elsen,
Patricia Moilett. Terry MonsC'n,
Gloria Moreland, Julia Pearce.
C1'arlcne Phillips, Michael Potter, Jon Radabaugh, Jo Dena
Rankin, Karin Reiman, Kip Re•
incr, Larry Richardson, Davin
Scarborough, Steven Senkovic.h.
Joseph Sidebottom. Adc>Je Snh•
ha, Gerald Todd, Jane Vanku·
ren, Larry Whitwer, David WiJ.
liamson. James Wilson, Jerrie
Ann Wright, Karin Marrel, and
Michael Monroe.
Springfield 4.tl ~tudents in•
t.lude Rebecca Ahraham. Paul
Alexander, Robert Cant,·. D:1vid
Colby, Hou-.ton Copela~d. l\far.
ion Crafts, Colleen Evers, Katv
Eymann, Wayne Friz.ielie. Robert Halliwell, LorrainP HC'in.
Gordon Herron, Robert Hun(
Jim Kelso, Janice Morrisette,
Marjorie Neet, Clyde Pierce,
Shirley Price, Clyde Standiford.
Ivan Starmer, Raymond Stew•
art, David Tart, Lorena Warner, Glenda Yates.
Those from ·other areas with
perfect gradt>s are:

Casa •···-

Pleasant Hill: Larry Jame~ .
Florence: Eula Bishop, James
Hostick, Junction City: David
Delaney, Wade Skinner. Lynn
lerrien, Elizabeth Vegors, Cres•
well: Joyce Busse, Tanya Nau•
man, Nancy Wiemer, David
Wrenn, Leaburg: George Nelson, Cott age Grove: Linda
Dionne, Monroe: John Koch,
Veneta: Ramona Fleming, Richard Mayhew. Vida: Kathleen
Andrews, Fall Creek: Gary
Branson, Pamela Mitchell, Coquille: Gary Davis, Portland:
.ion Erickson. Barbara Milden•
hPrger. Astoria: Henry Geissel,
Prineviile: Stephanie Hehn,
Walton: Yvonne Warden.

ROBERTSON'S ·
DRUGS

"Your Prescription -Our Main Concern"
3oth and Hilyard
343-7715

Mexican Restaurant
New hours:

11 a.m. • 2 p.m.
Lunch
5 p.m. • 9 ·p.m.
Dinner
noon - 9 :
Sat., Sun.

I

J

W. 6th at Lawrence
342-3921

1N

Are you·bored???
come to the

Villfi r Rom-a

440 Coourg Road

342-1142

PIZZAS

Your favorite beverages

Free Entertainment
Fri. - Sat. - Sun. nights

Open 11:30

om

to 1 am

Special for
Students
• Shirts (plain) ···-·················-.69
.69
Sweaten ···························--··
.69
Pants ·· ·········--···,············

•$1.59
Dresses ·····························-··

···· $1.59
Coats ·············-····-···········-·
-.................. $I.SJ
Salts ················(Show Student Body Card with clothes to be cleaned)

CALL 344-2443

V1CT0NE
Across From Taco Time

-,

Cleaners
&

Tailors
315 E. 13th