Students win delay of proposed tuition increase

LCC students won a delay on
a proposed tuiton increase when
the motion was tabled at a meeting of Lane's Board of Education, Wednesday, Feb. 10.
The administration's reccommendation, presented by Dean of
Students Jack Carter, would set
the minimum full-time requirement at 12 hours instead of the
present ten. In-district students
would pay $84 tuition--$14 over
the present amount.
Out-ofdistrict tuition would be reaised
$30 per term, thus making a

yearly tuition of $510. No increase was proposed for outof-state or foreign students.
The proposal, however, met
with stiff student opposition. Student President Warren Coverdell termed the increase as
"totally unrealistic'' and asked
the Board to reconside·r such
a "drastic raise." He added
that '·'if the Board is looking for
a stop-gap way to cut enrollments, this is a good way."
Coverdell also urged the Board
to' join LCC students in bringing

legal pressure upon the Oregon
State Legi,slature to provide the
50 per cent aid promised at the
time the community college idea
was conceived in this state.
LCC Student Senator Dan Rosen
expressed concern for those students on welfare and other financial aid programs. He pointed
out that regardless of tuition
hikes, their aid will not be incFeased. Another student, presently on the GI Bill, explained
that it tuition were increased
he could not afford to attend Lane.
-, -

lane Community College

4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405
Vol. 6, No. 16
February 1?, !97.1
---------------------------------------

Board member Dean Webb noted that it was '' about time reasonable people assumed their own
individual responsibility," and
moved to accept the administration's proposal. The motion, however, died for lack of a second.
Another proposal, by Board
member Catherine Lauris, would
have raised tuition by only five
dollars. That motion was tabled
following an objection by Board
member Rober Mention. Mention objected to voting on any
tuition increase until seeing next
year's budget.
Earlier in the meeting, Board
members heard a proposal by
LCC student Dave Holst that the
Board establish pre-screening
procedures for materials to be
displayed on campus. Holst cited
a controversial poster placed on
campus at the beginning of this
month. The poster, protesting
the transfer of Adair Air Force
Base to the control of the U.8.
International University, was,
according to Holst, in poor taste ...
and had "connotations of vio-

New faculty evaluation forms released

by Bill Bauguess
Evaluation of faculty members on this campus will be made
this year, as in the past, without the recommendations or suggestions of students, who should
be able to contribute as much
or more than anyone on campus.
Originally, the college used
what is now known as the "Green
Form"--a simple form with
open-ended requests for comments, rather than specific questions or items--as an evaluation instrument for promotion
and retention. This form was
never very well received, however, and was eventually discarded by most, although some

Bill of Rights
to be revised
Final approval of LCC's Student Bill of Rights may not come
until April, according to Student
President Warren Coverdell.
the bill is presently undergoing
approximately 36 revisions, including legal clarifications.
The Bill of Rights was presented in "r o u g h f o r m " two
weeks ago to the LCC President's
advisory Cabinet. One of the
bill's co-authors, Student Senator Dan Rosen, explained that
although the Cabinet's approval is
not needed for final ratification,
the bill was presented as an information item to determine
feedback from Lane's administration.
At the Feb. 9 meeting of the
Cabinet, staff members indicated
they feel perfection in the document should be obtained prior
to taking it to the LCC Board
of Education. Board approval
of the Bill of Rights is necessary before it can go into effect.
At present, Bill Cox, Superintendent of Facilities and Construction, is the only staff member to have submitted in writing
his proposed changes. His recommendations arepresentlybeing incorporated in the bill, pending Student Senate approval.
LCC President Eldon Schafer
also pointed out that he could
not sanction a presentation to the
Board in the bill's present form.
The bill, unanimously approved
by the Student Senate, will be
presented to the Cabinet again
after all revisions have been
made.
The Student Bill of Rights was
written jointly by Coverdell, Rosen and Student Publicity Director Mark Parrish.

continued to use it.
A- '' rough draft'' of a new
evaluation instrument was recently devised by the college
deans and the president of the
faculty section. This form, titled
Instructor Appraisal Sheet, contained five general categories
which identified major areas related to success in job performance. Each category contained
three columns--one for assigning weight to the category, one
describing the category, and a
rating scale divided into five
value levels. The weight concept
was included on the Instructor
Appraisal Sheet because it was
felt that certain categories would
carry more weight in some departments than others.
The draft was then given to
a three-member committee composed of faculty members and a
committee composed of three
department chairmen. The committees were then to meet and
submit recommendations.
The department ~hair man
committee submited some recommendations.
The faculty committee meeting was not as productive. On
Thursday, Jan. 28, the faculty
committee meeting was called
to order and discussion was generally oriented around justification and objectives of the committee. One of the committee
members felt that the presence
of two students "compromised"
his position on the committee.
A motion was then made by the
compromised staff members to
adjourn the meeting. A consensus
of the committee was in favor,
and the meeting was adjourned.
The faculty committee consequently reported that the time
constraints were "unrealistic,"
and made no recommendations.
Temporary forms were finally
ado p t e d by the Instructional
Council. The forms are divided
into four categories, 1) Effectiveness relative to students, 2) Effectiveness re 1at iv e to colleagues, 3) Effectiveness relative to
institutional assignments and 4)
Effectiveness relative to professional standing. The fifth categ o r y in the o r i gin a 1 draft,
Effectiveness relative to community relations, was dropped.
On the adopted forms, the four
approved categories contain individual items on which the instructor is to be evaluated. Typical items are -- Maintains current outline for e a ch course
taught - Teaches basic course
content as approved by the Oregon Board of Education - Contributes to the professional growth
and development of colleagues Assists, rather than interferes,

with work of colleagues Volunteers for committees and/
or other non-teaching assignments - Cooperates in seeing
that rooms and equipment are
well maintained and secure Subscribes to and reads professional journals - Contributes to
his profession through attendance at professional meetings or
c on f e re n c e s , holding offices,
writing articles, reading papers
or other appropriate ways.
One copy o f the form is to
be completed by the staff member, and one copy by his supervisor. Then, the two will meet
and comP.are results. The supervis o r will c o mp 1e t e a recommendation form, secure the
staff member's signature indicating that he has seen the recommendation, attach both copies of the evaluation instrument
to the recommendation form and
submit them to his supervisor.
The forms provide space for
suggestions concerning the instrument and evaluationprocess.
The data (not the form itself)
wjll then be given to the taculty committee and the department chairmen committee which
will be asked to remain active
in the development of a process and instrument for next
year. Both committees will be
instructed to obtain input from
both staff and students at the
appropriate time. The input which
the committees will be instructed
to obtain from students will be
information to help form a new
evaluative instrument for . next
year, not for the evaluation of
faculty this year.
One faculty objection to the

new instrument was the haste in
which the form was developed.
The rough draft was issued on
January 18; the committees were
instructed to make their reports by January 27; the two reports were to be joined and
exp 1a in e d to the Instructional
Council on February 4, andevaluations were to be completed and
recommendations given to the
Dean of Instruction by March 1 all this in a period of about
four weeks.
A student committee, according to Dan Rosen, Student Senator at Large, is scheduled to be
form2d soon, and it is hoped
that their recomendations can
help establish some means of
obtaining accurate and useful information from supervisors, faculty members and students in the
future to make the evaluation
process truly an informative one.

DAVE HOLST

lence."
Board chairman Robert Ackerman told Holst it would be "inconsistent" for the Board to
screen any materials to be placed
on campus. He noted that it is
not the position of the Board
of Education to censor materials
"as long as they don't disrupt
the educational process." This
position is similar to a 1967 Board
decision allowing anyone to speak
on the LCC campus.
Following the regular meeting,
the LCC Budget Committee examined a proposed budget calling
for a 25 per cent increase in
property taxes for next year.
The increase would raise LCC's
tas levy ·38 cents on each $1,000
true cash value. The owner of a
$20,000 home, for example, wuuld
•pay $38 in taxes instead of the
$34.40 he now pays.
The committee will continue its
study of the proposed budget at
a meeting scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 17.

Applications due for editorship
Applications for the position itor must be capable or organizof Editor of the Torch for Spring, ing and directing a staff and of
1971, through Winter, 1972, are relating well to other people."
Students interested in applying
now being accepted by the LCC
for the position may pick up an
Media Commission.
The TORCH Editor is selected application in The Torch office,
by the Media Commission during 206 Center~ Applications must
Winter Term and serves the sub- be received no later than March
sequent Spring, Fall and Winter 1, and applicants must be availterms. Media Commission policy able for a personal interview
states that "The Editor must by the Media Commission somehave journalistic ability, training time in March. The specific date
and experience. Normally, he will of the interview will be announhave previous service on a high ced later.
Completed applications may be
school, college or professional
newspaper staff in such capaci- turned in to Mrs. Doris Norman,
ties as will give him an ade- ,publications secretary , in The
quate understanding of the opera- Torch office, 206 Center Build-·
tions of a newspaper. The Ed- ing.

THE NEW OREGON SINGERS ENTERTAIN the
crowd during the formal dedication ceremonies
of the Eugene Downtown Mall Saturday, Feb.

13. KLCC-FM covered the dedication live in a
special expanded "Saturday Gold" program. (See
story on page 5.)
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb)

t.

Page 2

EtUtMtat ~ & e t

gorl'

The "mini - university" myth
LCC has consistently been the victim of a
''communications gap" between the college and
the public.
Why ?
One reason might be that Lane---unlike the
University-is not in the center of town. The
location makes it difficult for many people to
keep themselves informed of what we are doing.
. Another reason might be that it is difficult
for the public to separate information about
Lane from information about the University.
With the two institutions so close together,
Lane gets "carryover" from the public's view
of the University.
Perhaps the largest factor in this communications gap is LCC's own past failure to consistently inform the public of what it's doing,
Whatever the reason for the communication
problem, both Lane and the public lose as a
result. Lane loses because many "myths" arise
about the college. The public loses because it
is unaware of what the college offers and thus
doesn't take advantage of it.
One of the most persistent of these ''myths''
is that Lane is becoming a mini-university,
emphasizing liberal arts or transfer courses
and drifting away from vocational programs.
This is one reason LCC administrators did
what they should have been doing all alongthey initiated an informational campaign to let
the public know what's going on. The '' LCC
Success Stories"---testimonials from 10 former
students in Lane's vocationalprograms--appearing in newspapers and on radio and TV are one
aspect of that campaign.
The "Success Stories" focus on only one of

Lane's four areas of education--vocational training. The other three----liberal arts, general ed~cation and self-improvement (Adult Ed.), and basic
eduf'.ation (high school completion and ti:aining
for those with less than an 8th grade education}-are not included in this particular effort. Why?
Because the biggest misunderstanding is in the
area of vocational training and it is this area
LCC needs to emphasize.
The public, while generally responding favorably to the Success Stories, has had some
questions about them--How much money is being
spent for the announcements, Why is LCC trying
to attract more students, and Why should LCC
even be running them at all.
The cost of the announcements was about
$2,000 (less than 2~ per taxpayer). The cost of
the campaign has been minimal, for several
reasons. The commercials were produced on campus by students and some staff members, thus
cutting production costs. The media cost was
also reduced since Lane received the best rate
possible as an educational institution. The broadcast media a.re also running many of the ads
as public service announcements--at not cost
to LCC.
Lane is not trying to atfract more students
through the Success Stories--it is attempting
to counteract the myth that has developed that
LCC is an institution where vocational education
is considered a poor relative.
It's considered very reasonable to expect
a citizen to keep himself informed about the
activities of a tax-supported institution. It's
equally resonable to expect that institution to
assist that citizen to keep himself informed.
And that's what Lane is now trying to d ~
and very well at that ..

Letters to the
Cleanest campus?

To the Editor:
Where are all the beautiful
people who helped win the clean
campus award last year ?
Of late the parking lots, particularly West side, have more
the appearance of a dump. What
with paper cups, broken glass,
emptied ash trays and various
other garbage all soppy wet, it
looks like heck. ·
There is absolutely no excuse
for the mess. We should all be
ecologically awakened. There
are plenty of receptacles around.
Won't you all bend a little, shapeup and pick-up so that this site,
LCC, will remain a beautiful
sight for all.
Aesthetically yours,
Emily Sachs
Poster proposal
Mr. Editor:

In his continuing crusade against what he terms "left wing,
radical rhetoric," Mr. Dave
Holst presented a proposal for
the institution of prior censorship at L.C.C. to the Board of
Education last Wednesday.
Holst's proposal was directed
at gaining the Board's approval
for the assembling of a committee which would allow or disallow the display of "certain
types" of posters and literature.
Holst suggested that posters and

pamphlets of a "controversial"
nature, those which might be considered "¢ensive" or in "poor
taste,"r, rejected by the committee prior to distribution.
In conjuction with the proposal, Ho 1st presented to the
Bo a r d copies of a pamphlet
printed by the Veteran's Club
of which he is a member. This
pamphlet, by the nature of its
content and language, could very
easily be considered to be controversial, offensive, and created with gargantuan poor taste.
When Holst was asked by the
Board whether he felt it would be
improper for HIS pamphlet to be
pre-reviewed by HIS proposed
committee, he replied "yes."
The Board then informed Mr.
Holst that its views did not coincide with his own and rejected
the prior censorship idea,
whereupon Mr. Holst rapidly and
angrily left the meeting.
Mr. Editor, need I say more?
I think not.
Mark Parrish
Student Publicity Director
Lane Community College

Editor
facilitators oflearning, providing
the opportunity and impetus for
examination of current beliefs,
attitudes, and values, demonstrating the essence of academic
freedom.
Occupying an office which has
been referred to as a "barometer" of campus moods, I sense
the w a r n in gs of discontent at
Lane. As members of a community espousing fair play, civility, respect for privacy, concern for the individual, open inquiry and rational discourse, I
urge- each of us to encourage the
mutual exchange .of ideas and respect for divergent opinions.
Creative problem-solving is a
primary charge to education. We
may not always be able to resolve
the issues, but we will reach toward resolution by identifying and
respecting, both in the classroom
and outside it, those areas of disagreement.
Betty-Coe Ekstrom
Director, Student Activities

SAC HOUSING

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I had hoped for an·~-rated

scene ... but with those changes,
theU could sell their story to
Walt Disney Productions.

Campus Calendar

ACTIVITIES

0 T .I Registrar at LCC

Donald P. Theriaulf, Registrar at Oregon Technical Institute (OTI) in Klamath Falls,
will be on campus Wednesday,
Feb. 17, to talk with students
and faculty about transfer programs at OTI.
Theriault will be in the restaurant foyer area, on the first
floor of the Center Building,
beginning at 9:00 a.m. How long he
Will be available is uncertain,
so those interested should contact him as ~arly as possible.
Circle K luncheon

A no-host luncheon for Circle
K club. members and members of
the Emerald Empire Kiwanis
Club is scheduled for noon Tuesday, Feb. 23, in Center 124. Participants will order from the restaurant menu, at their own expense.
Native American
coffee hour
Native American students at
LCC are invited to a membership
coffee hour given by the Native
American Student Association in
the President's Dining Rqom by
the co 11 e g e restaurant from
11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 17.
The coffee hour will provide
an opportunity ·ror non-members
to meet and talk with the present
members and officers.

CLUBS
Campus Crusade for Christ
Campus Crusade for Christ
will meet Wednesday, Feb.17, at
12:00 noon in Forum 312, and at
noon on Thursday, Feb.18,~in Center 419. -

Christian Science Club
LCC's Christian Science Organization has scheduled a meeti a g Tu e s d a y , F e b . 2 3 , at
10:00 a.m. in Forum 312.
Veterans Club

There will be an informal
meeting of the LCC Veterans'
Club on Wednesday, Feb. 17, at
the Gold Coast of Pietro's Pizza
Parlor in Glenwood. The meeting
will begin at 7:30 p.m.
All veterans interested in joining the club are urged to attend.
There are no club dues. Public
service projects and relevant
political issues will be discussed
at the meeting.
Women's · Discussion Group

The LCC women's discussion
group will meet Monday" Feb.22,
at 12:00 noon in Center 222.

COMMITTEES
Budget Committee
The LCC Budget Committee
will meet at 7:30 Wednesday,
Feb. 17, in the Board Room
(Adm. 202) to continue discussion of the overall college budget for next year.
College Cabinet

The College Cabinet will meet
Tuesday, Feb. 23, at 9:00 a.m.
in the Board Room (Adm. 202).
Curriculum Committee

Curriculum Committee members should meet Tuesday, Feb.
16, in the Board Room (Adm.
202) at 4:00 p.m.
Instructional Council

The Instructional C o u n c i 1
Check with the Student Awarewill meet Thursday, Feb. 18,
ness Center, second floor of the
at 9:00 a.m. in the Board Room
AN OPEN LETTER TO MEM- Center Building, for these and
(Adm. 202)
Chess Club
BERS OF THE LCC ACADEMIC other listings.
COMMUNITY:
The Knights and Castles, Public Relations Committee
What is the role of contro- APARTMENT: $115/mo. 1bdrm. LCC's chess club, will meet daiFurnished. Eugene.
versy in the educational process?
The Public Re 1at i on s Comly at noon and on Wednesday,
The issues and causes of stu- APARTMENT: $130/mo. l bdrm. Feb. 17, from5:00 to 9:00 p.m. mittee will meet Tuesday, Feb.
Furnished. E. Eugene. •
dent discontent cannot realistic16, at 4:00 p.m. in Forum 314.
in Apprenticeship 213.
Senate Agenda
ally be solved by institutions of APARTMENT- ROOMMATE:
$55/mo. Furnished. 2 bdrm.
"higher learning. Neither can
Springfield. Female.
the
academic
community
be
February 18, 1971 - 2:30 p.m.
indifferent to the problems and APARTMENT - ROOMMATE:
Administration 202
$65/mo. Furnished. 2 bdrm.
concern which lead to campus
Call to Order
S. Eugene-. Male.
tension and turmoil.
Editor. . . . . . . . ........ , •.•.•••••Gary Grace
Roll Call
Campus
tensions are not APARTMENT - ROOMMATE:
Assistant Editor. . . . . . •. . ....... Hewitt Lipscomb
Approval of Minutes
$60/mo. 1 bdrm.
Female.
neces~arily harmful. It is the
Sports Editor . . . . . . . . . . •.... Bob Barley Uave Harding
Pets o.k. Springfield.
Treasurer's Report
RESPONSE to the tensions which
Ad Manager. . . . . . • . •...•.•..•• Lorena Warner
OCCSA Section Meeting Report can be either c on st r u ct iv e or APARTMENT - ROOMMATE:
Head Photographer. . . • . . . . ..... Hewitt Lipscomb
Comments from the Gallery
$50/mo.
1 bdrm.
Babysit
destructive. The underlying
Secretary-Business Manager. . . . • . • • .Doris Norman
Old Business
nights. Furnished. Female.
controversies,if reacted to ap* Ski Club Budget
Springfield.
propriately, can become positive
Member of National Educational Advertising Service
Lockers - Karen Swanson educational experiences through STUDIO:
$85/mo. Furnished.
* Parking - Bob Gilbreath curricular and extra-curricular
Springfield.
THE TORCH is published weekly on Tuesc,ays, except
Women's Lib
STUDIO:
$90/mo. Furnished.
channels.
holidays, examination weeks and vacation periods.
New Business
s. Eugene.
Exploration of id e a s in an
Signed articles are the views of the author and not
* White Bird - Larry Caldwell at m o s p h e re of free inquiry, COTTAGE: $85/mo. Furnished.
necessarily
those of The Torch.
* Student's Lawyer Water, garbage paid. Springwithout repression or intimida* Bill of Rights - Parrish, tion, is one educational function
field.
Mail or bring all correspondence or news to: THE TORCH
Rosen
•
\
•we of Lane Community College TRAILER: $72/mo. Furnished.
206 Center Building, Lane Community College, 4000 E. 30th
Other
1 bdrm. Shower, etc. Can
can provide the members of this
Avenue, Eugene, Ore gon. 97405. Telephone 747-4501, ext.234.
Adjournment
be relocated.
We can become
community.
Open letter

The Torch Staff

*
*

age 3

Guidelin_es committee polls colleges
in formation of LCC guidelines
by Eugene Cogburn

The Grateful Dead played ·a
groovy gig at LCC, but it was
evident to many that "something
had to be done" to better prepare for such activities in tne
future.
An LCC staff-student "Guidelines" committee has been organized to examine the problems
exemplified at the Grateful Dead
concert and prepare guidelines
for future use of campus facilities by LCC organizations as
well as outside promoters.
In its first meeting Wednesday,
Feb. 3, the committee--comprised of Chairman Jack Carter,
LCC Dean of Students; Bill Watkins, LCC Business Manager;
Betty Ekstrom, Director of Student Activities; Warren 'Coverdell, Student President; Bill McMurray, the new student Second
Vice-President; and Mark Parrish, Student Director of Publicity--began its investigations of
the situation not by answering
any q u e st ions, but by asking
many, many more.
As a result, a letter-survey,
presented at the meeting by Coverdell, will be channeled to 50
colleges and junior colleges on
the West Coast.
The survey's purpose is to
obtain material on other college's
campus activity guidelines in the
areas of mechanics, sanctions,
and morality.
Elements of mechanics to be
investigated are those of Fire
and Police restrictions, architectural and building codes, and
college departmental rules.

by Rick Mitz
Barefoot bride with chic
The story goes something like
this: there's this elementary education girl, majoring in sorority
life, who stands nightly in front
of the university medical library,
waiting to kidnap some promising
medical student and bring him
home to Mother, who keeps rem ind in g the marriage-minded
maiden that, baby, you're not
getting any younger.
That marriage myth, however,
now is defunct.
Since many say marriage no
longer is a fashionable institution, that girl going to college
to snatch-a-match at least has
the good taste not to admit it.
M a t r i m o n a l tastes h a v e
changed and many youths, as we
are called, have good reason to
be disillusioned with the wedding
ceremony, if not the whole cone e pt of institutionalized m a r riage. Half of traditionally married couples now are divorced.
Like those marriages, the wedding ceremonies that produced
them are impersonal, superficial, showy, --and have nothing at
all to do with marriage.
One way out of the traditional
is Common Law marriage, legal in some states, a quick wedding in the bedding, seven years
of dating compressed into seven
minutes of mating.
But Common Law marriage
(and breaking the Common Law),
is nothing new. People have been
living together since Adam and
his rib lived in sin. Today, though,
there is a new alternative, prevalent mostly on college campuses
across the country. This is the
New Wedding, complete with re• levance without reverence, no reception or deception, and the only
rice thrown is organically grown.
New Weddings are usually
small, informal, and always personal and unique to the couple.
They emphasize nature, simple
romanticism, and the importance
of a loving relationship that just
happens to be in the context of
that old institution, marriage.
The New Wedding is the Non
Wedding. Aisles have suddenly
given away to fields, and flora.
Barefoot bridges with chic have
taken to walking between paths
of flowers rather than carrying
them. LOHENGRIN has been amplified into the Stones and the
Beatles. And that Something Old
and Borrowed might be a friend's
antique farm, the Blue being the
sky, and the New a modern lifestyle from which all this has
grown.
The bridge has shed her tra-·
ditional white attire and is drP.ssed in anything from Anything to
Nothing. From Central Park to
California Communes, couples
stroll down grassy lanes, dreaming not of "till death do us part,''
but of "till life do us together."
They Oh-Promise-Me little, and
take along Thoreau-- not trouseau--on their honemoons that
probably began a few months before the wedding anyway.
These weddings are legal, in
the squinting eyes of the law
and in the uplifted eyes of many
chur c hes. Usually, the person
who married the couple is an
innovative as the wedding itself.
The Rev. Doug Wallace
has his little office in an old
building that dons a sign that
says "University- YMCA-Welcome." As head of the University of Minnesota YMCA in Minne apolis,
Wallace, , has _ had the
·,
I
j

opportunity to meet many marriage-minded students. Having conducted some New Weddings himself in backyards and
cozy living rooms, he notes that
student matrimonial patterns are
changing, indeed.
The 38-year old Baptist minister told me that there are three
traits which New Wedding students seem to have in common.
"They are more creative people than most," he said." They' re
more ind e p e n de n t , and have
thought what marriage ought to
mean to them before getting married."
"Personal" is the key word
to the New Wedding, and many
other clergymen like Wallace
create individualized weddings-sans sermon, never asking for
"I Do's"; making the non-ceremony a gathering of friends; a
coming together of two people
who are in love; never reciting
from the Lord's Prayer, but rather various Poeple's Prayers-Gibran, Cleaver, de Beauvoir.
"Weddings can mean anything
they want to anyone," Wallace
said. ''That's where we are right
now."
A while ago, two members of
a "bippie" motocycle gang were
wed in a park. The service was
traditional, even the bride's
dress was traditional. (" My
God," one guest exclaimed, "this
is the only time I've ever seen
her with
dress on.") But the
unique, New part of this wedding is that the whole hippie community--c hi 1d re n, old people,
dogs, cats--was invited to the
ceremony, which followed a surprisingly quiet motorcycle parade to the park.
•'' This is the way people should
get married," explained the
young officiating hippie minister,
"in the midst of family, friends
and community."
But maybe the small, intimate
New Wedding is nothing new at
all. Inevitably, you can turn on
the TV any late-late night and
pick up a vintage 1930's film with
ship captain marrying the two
1o v e - s i c k, sea-sick saplings.
Years ago, people used to indulge in what were then New
Weddings~ There were ceremonies in ships and in airplanes
flying high over the couple's favorite state. But the important
thing they lacked, that the new,
now weddings have inserted, is
the personalization and individuality, creativity and sense of
community that makes today's
new wedding New.
Even if the traditional wedding no longer is chic, that elementary education lass majoring
in sorority life needn't give up
hope for her hope chest, but she'd
better leave it empty. Anything's
possible.
The New Wedding follows the
now-well-tread paths of the New
Sexuality, the New Moralith, the
New Youth, and the New Nostalgia. But it just may not be
new for long.
Picture this New Wedding of ten
years from now: bridge in white
walks down the church aisle ..
soothing choir sounds echo in
her ears ... blessed by preacher ...
th i rt y minutes of s e rm on.
"I Do" ... they kiss ... young tenor
warbles a few bars of "Oh Promise Me'' ...
And what follows could very
well be the New Divorce.

Carter stressed that control of
the number of tickets sold for
any activity is of main importance in c o nip 1y i n g with the
various restrictions mentioned.

a

11
Focus of purpose" dominated
the committee's discussion of
sanctions. While campus promotions provide the possibility of
high additional income, the committee agreed a wider spectrum
of activities should be offered,
in order to reach all LCC students and not just a select group.

.

The question of morality at
c amp us activities provided
another area of concern. Par-

rish and Coverdell pointed out
the problems the Supreme Court
has encountered in defining" morality situations." The question
as to what activities would be
to 1er ate d at LCC official functions will be considered further.
Carter stressed the need for
more research on legal respon-

sibilities in possible illegal actions at any Lane function. Mrs.
Ekstrom also said the "feelings
of the community" should be
considered in this area.
When responses to the survey
are received, the committee will
prepare LCC's own guidelines
for use of campus facilities.

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Extra performanc e
by Jon Haterius

added

.

''Greas epai., it''-''a shoW worth s·e ·e fllg"

tion. Th() ugh there are fifteen show seemed to be an audience
members of the cast, including favorite, as was "Who Can I
The Roar of the Greasepaintten Urchins, the continual ver- Turn To," in which Cocky lathe Smell of the Crowd" opened
bal and psychological bullets be- ments his plight in life. And durto a packed house last Thurstween the two lead characters are · ing the end of the second act
day night, Feb. 11, in the Forum
what make the "Roar of the Cocky discovers that h e has
Theatre. The show was sold out
Greasepaint" what it is.
ch an g e d and renders "Nothing
two days before its opening.
·Although the battle between Sir Can Stop Me Now" with the full
The Ragozzino-directed mu - and Cock never
really has a win- 25-piece orchestra led by Nasical-comedy was chock full of
oer, one of the del'ightful aspects than Cammack. Van Fossen's
the type of songs and stage anof the resolution is the equality voice carried throughout the Fotics that have made his prothat occurs near the end of the rum Theatre very well. In fact
ductions hallmarks of theatre in
last act. Cocky discovers that he he had the most understood singLane County for over ten years.
too has power to make rules as ing lines in the show, except
The show, not unlike the mo"The Negro," played by Richard during low notes where his voice
tion picture ''Oliver," has an
Mos 1e y, intercedes and says sounded like some one gargling
English setting, and in place of the
'' Man, you can make your own with Alka-Seltzer early in the
children in "Oliver" this Anrules, Cocky!" Cocky then tells morning.
thony Newley ("Stop the World,
Sir: "With all due respect, Sir,
Tech n i ca 1 Director David
I Want to Get off") play has
I'm fed up with respect. I don't Sherman used a plastic stage
''Urchins''/ And in place of the
want to play the game anymore!" floor with lights hidden underold man in "Oliver," "The Roar
He grabs Sir's cigar butt and neath to illuminate the stage in
of the Greasepaint" introduces
smokes • it with relish. That is a checkerboard fashion as Sir
"Sir," a broken-down delightful phony of an aristrocrat, and the turning point in the life of would command Cocky to take
our intrepid under-dog in this "two steps forward, -- no, Cocky,
his antithesis "Cocky," the vicpsychological dram a. As the make that two steps backward!"
tim of Sir's - rules of living.
show ends, Cocky and Sir put while the game of life transpired
The play is a psychologists or
their arms around each other and on stage. Vocal direction for the
sociologists delight, as Sir pewalk off into the sunset together. stage performers is handled by
dantically makes the rules of life
The audience is not sure if the Wayte Kirchner. All the vocals
(and dying) for those around him,
rules have really changed, but were excellent.
in particular poor Cocky. The
Cocky now knows that he has riAs with all stage musicals
show is a study of human nature
sen from the depths of servitude. the music and vocals are no
and interaction between "the
And we get the feeling that neither small part of this show. Choreahaves" and "the have-nots."
Through this theatrical human in- of our lead characters can live graphy is by Gretchen Clark
the "game of life" without the of Eugene.
teraction, the Urchins have acother. If the rules HA VE changed
No adequate description of the
cepted their lot in life as serbeyond the footlights and the show can be put into any newsvants to Sir, but the play restage, they have maybe only paper. The excitement of seeing
volves around Cocky and his conchanged in degree, but we know actors in person and hearing muflict with Sir and with himself
that Cocky can now stand alone. sic from a live orchestra cannot
in gaining his manhood.
There are 18 songs in the two- be duplicated on any television
John Coombs is · a delight in
act show. One number in the first screen or newspaper. The show
the part of the garrulous, ostenact, "Where Would You Be With- is worth seeing!
tatious and phony "better than
out Me?", is a rollicking tophat
"The Roar of the Greasepaint,
thou" Sir. Coombs, without beand cane dance between the cen- the Smell of the Crowd" was
ing theatrically pedantic or' 'heatral characters in which Sir vo- • originally scheduled to run Feb.
vy" in his part, gave the role of
calizes their relationship. This 18,19 and 20 this week. Because
Sir just the touch of genteel
vaudeville-type section of the all performances were sold out
phoniness the part called for.
Sir came across as a character
any of us might know, and love
an eccentric Uncle Fred, or a
friend we all might know who is
The concert series presents
The first in the series "Hua phony -- but a lovable phony. man Sexuality"
and the second highlights of the Los Angeles
During the first half of the play, of a 20-program
concert series Philharmonic's 1970-71 season,
Sir appears to hate Cocky, but will be heard thisweekonKLCC- and is broadcast at 5 p.m. on
as the two personalities inter- FM, Lane's radio station.
Sundays. The second concert will
act we begin to see the roots
feature Aaron Copland's FanThe
seven-part
series
on
sexof "love" between the two. Sir
fare for the Common Man and
cannot exist without Cocky, and ual behavior is a 14-hour ta- Symphony No.3, as well as Beetped
transcript
of
a
college
course
Cocky cannot exist without Sir.
offered at Amherst, Hampshire, hoven's Concerto in D. Major for
~ir's philosophy is revealed in
Mount Holyoke and Smith col- Violin and Orchestra. Zubin Meta
lines such as "Never take adleges, and at the University of conducts and Isaac Stern is the
vantage of an opponent - unless
soloist.
Massachusetts.
you can." As he primps before
The concert series is present. The series is intended_for adult ed under a grant from the Cora mi r r o r and picks imaginary
stener_s and feature~ mfor~al poration for Public Boradcasting
pieces of lint off his dirty, fray- h _
ed robe, Sir advises the sinful d1scuss10n on the htle to?1c. _ and made available through the
lot that '' man should not show
The programs will be aired facilities of National Public Rapride in himself or be a glut- each Tuesday at 7 p.m. and be dio.
ton,'' then puts the mirror down repeated on Thursdays at the
KLCC operates at 90.3 megaand starts to eat a king's ban- same time.
cycles.
quet while his followers drool
with hunger on the side lines.
To Cocky's protest he replies------_ z
w
you are an unparalelled glutonous
Philistine. There are more noble
ell
w
things in life besides wine, woQi:
man and song. Truth, honesty ana
hard work. Now get to work and
pack my bags." "My God, Cocky,
why aren't you kneeling in front
of me?" he later asks.
Sc~tt Van Fossen was an equal
delight as Cocky. Van Fossen's
role as the victim of "life's fate
as the underdog" was well handQi:
led. The audience identified more
with Cocky possibly than with Sir.
After all -- Americans are supposed to root for the underdog in
football and in the game of life
as well. Cocky as played by Van ,
-<
Fossen, was a miserable vic..J
tim of 1if e's circumstances
..J
through no fault of his own.
Van Fossen had the demeanor of
a child lost at a circus and not
knowing where to turn next; Cocky
is the string and Sir is the bow
of a fiddle in the play. The two
With his wife Shirley and four daughters
played against each other - and
that i s what the play is all
ab o u t C o o m b s a s S i r is
not uniike the Lion in the W i
zard of Oz" -- constantly seeking
a reaffirmation of his strength
Thompson Records
Kramer Sound and Gift
Rosenblatts
and power, while Cocky provides,
JC__
Penney
voluntarily or not, the reaffirmaBerean
Stor~_
Call 686...:
-8:::6:.::5:..
1 _ __ _
___

KLCC-FM to broadcast two series

by opening night, an additional
p e r f o r m an c e has been added
Wednesday, Feb. 17. A limited
number of tickets are available
and may be obtained at the information desk in the Administration Building, or by phoning
747-4501 ext. 310. All seats are
reserved.

When the show has completed
its run at LCC, it will go on
a three-day road trip February
26, 27 and 28 and will include
performances for the Oregon Legislature at Willamette University and a performance for the
inmates of the Oregon State Penitentiary.

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NEWS

I

81

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.rage

KLCC covers Eugene.Downtown Mall dedication

by Laverna Bauguess
town Mall was held Saturday,
'' A lot of people talked to us, feb. 13, and Lane's KLCC was
and a lot of people learned there there to cover it live from IO a.m.
was an FM radio station .called Saturday to I a.m. Sunday on
KLCC," commented Bill Nelson, "Saturday Gold," KLCC's allKLCC night manager, about the request program of rock and
dedication of Eugene's Mall.
roll music anywhere from the
Dedication of the Eugene Down- '50' s to the music of today. "At

one time we were ~O requests
behind," reported Nelson. Firstyear broadcasting students were
taking phoned-in requests at the
station on campus and relaying
the requests by phone to the Mall
area, while announcers in the
Mall were taking requests from
the crowd.
First-year broadcasting stuthe idea of
dents originated
KLCC's live coverage ofthe Mall
dedication. The students did all
the planning, programming and
used their own transportation to
move the sound equipment from
campus to the Mall area. It involved a tremendous amount of
work and was done strictly on a
volunteer basis. The student~
received an immense amount of
cooperation from the Eugene City
Council to carry out their project.·
Announcers for Saturday's
program were KLCC Program
Director Tom Lichty, Music Director Dave Chance, Assistant
Professor of Mass Communication Dennis Celeries, Night Manager Bill Nelson and Engineer
Gary Hardesty.
The announcers were very
pleased with the interest many
- people showed and the reception
According to
KLCC-FM BROADCASTS FROM THE MALL during Saturday's they received.
formal dedication ceremonies of the Eugene Downtown Mall. Dennis Music Director Dave Chance,
Celorie (r), Assistant Professor of Mass Communications, handles "it was a complete and overthe board shift, while Tom Lichty (1), KLCC Program Director, whelming success for KLCC. The
(Photo by Hewitt Lipscomb) people that made their way down
watches the operation.
to the Mall to talk to us, to pick
up a program guide or request
a song, were fantastic people.
Tryouts for a chorus of 20- phen Vincent Benet. LCC is using They all had something good to
25 voices to be used in the the production staged in New say, and said it with a smile."
Dennis Celorie, Assistant ProApril LCC production of "John York by Charles Laughton in
fessor of Mass Communication,
Brown's Body" will be held Tues- 1953 as its basis.
Lauris said chorus tryouts will commented "The good weather
day, Feb. 23.
Play director George Lauris be held at 7:30 p.m. in the base- brought out a fine crowd. The
emphasizes that the chorus ·will ment of the Center Buidling. An radio broadcasting students gave
nut operate simply as a choir. accompanist will be provided, out 2,000 helium-filled baloons
It will instead function as a but applicants should bring their and this kept a constant flow of
youngsters around our remote
"fourth actor" in the three- own material.
The play is scheduled to open studio."
character play. The chorus will
Station Engineer Gary Hardinclude individual speaking, uni- April 23, in the Forum Theatre.
son speaking and choir and solo
singing. Vocal director is Wayte Kirchner.
The actors selected by Lauby Bill Bauguess
ris are Peter Simpson, Priscilla
Lauris (Lauris' wife), and a new It could only happen here! only two blocks between the Uniface to acting on the stage Recent! y outside a Po r tl an ct verity Co-op and the EMU.
Edward Ragozzino., chairman of supermarket, according to the
After the long controversy over
LCC Performing Arts Depart- Portland Community College stu- closing only that small portion
ment.
dent newspaper THE BRIDGE, of 13th, the EMERALD would do
Lauris says "JohnBrown's a PCC student saw a man loading well to report accurately ALL
Body," is a dramatic treatment a small Japanese staWm wagon. of the details involved in the acof the Civil War poem by SteA woman walked by and said, quistion of that two-block sec"You would have one of those tion which runs through only a
things after what they did to us?,'' portion of the U of O campus.
Committee tours
referring to World War II.
For if, as the story suggests,
''Well," the man said, "It's the open space and landscape
Lane campus
been 25 years and most of us subcommittee begins removing
the traffic signs from all of •
The Joint Ways and Means can forgive."
With that, according to the stu- 13th Ave., that may create a
Committee of the Oregon State
Legislature visited LCC last dent, the irate woman walked a- problem with motorists who may
way and got into her Volkswagon. still think the major portion of
Thursday, Feb. 11.
13th Ave. still belongs to the
A dozen of the 14-member
***
committee were in Eugene
The Jan. 26 issue of the EMER- city of Eugene.
Thursday afternoon and Friday ALD carries a story headlined
morning to look over selected "Un iv e rs it y acquires 1 3th
state-supported educational op- Avenue."
erationas.
The story, written by Chris
At Lane, the group received a Lowrie of the EMERALD, begins:
briefing by LCC President El- "Thirteenth Ave. may soon be
don Schafer and his staff before developed into University Place
splitting into two groups and following a study by the open
taking guided tours of the $18 space and landscape subcommitmillion campus. The committee tee."
members left the campus about
The story goes on to say '' As
5:30 p.m. and spent the night in of January 25, 13th Ave. officEugene.
ially became the property of the
Earlier Thursday, the com- University (of Oregon). The committee members spent nearly an mittee hopes to move ahead with
hour talking with officials of the such things as getting the trafAldersgate House, a half-way fic signs down and presenting
house for convicts enrolled at the their study to the public."
U of O and working toward colThe story makes no mention
lege degrees. After touring the of what portion of 13th A,ve. has
facility, the legislators stopped become the property of the U of
by the dormitory unit on the U of 0, and 13th Ave. takes in quite a
O campus where the Aldersgate bit of territory. Beginning at
House students live.
Arthur St. on the West side of
The c o m m it t e e toured the Eugene, 13th runs all the way to
clinical services building at the Franklin Blvd. on the East side
U of O early Friday morning of town. That's approximately
611 E. 13th
before leaving for Roseburg and 31 city blocks.
a tour ot the Umpqua Community
The portion of 13th actually
College campus.
acquired by the U of O covers

esty felt the most impressed with
the events that occured between
10:30 p.m. and sign-off at 1 a.m.
"There were still many people
most of them young, in the Mall
area," he said, "their apparent
purpose being to listen to the
music, as the requests were still
coming in. Several people were
even dancing to the music in the
streets. It's very hard for me to·

express the mood that was
present at that hour, but it was
something I'll never forgef."
Nelson concluded, "I feel the
Eugene Mall d e d i c at i o n was
topped of handsomely by KLCC's
presence, and I would like to
see KLCC return to the Mall
during the s u m me r to once
again bring the people together."

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On Campus

Page 6

State official discusses counseling problems
Hills said he could recall no referdng students should receive
case in Oregon where a counselor feedback of some type, Hills obactually had been called into court served, even if it is no more than
and forced to testify on confi- an acknowledgment of the redential information, but there ferral or information that the
have been such cases in other person referred is receiving
attention. •
states.
A similar bill was introduced
Another factor which may acin the last session of the Legis- count for hostility, Hills comlature, Hills observed, but was mented, is disappointment that
not passed because of the diffi- the counselor cannot meet all of
culty of defining exactly who the instructor's expectations of
qualifies as a counselor--par- him.
ticularly at the community colAnother factor which may conlege level, where certification is tribute to hostility, Hills said,
not as precisely defined as it is is that counselors are someat elementary and secondary le- times made a "special" group
vels. The bill may not be passed by contract, office, or pay scale,
this year for the same reason, and there is natural resentment of
he said.
any special group.
In response to an observation
Many times, he commented
that there often seems to be hos- further, instructors feel that
tility between counseling and in- counselors don't have necessary
structional staff, Hills indicated information about specific proseveral factors which may be grams and that counselors should
involved.
send students to departments for
At times, he said, instructors assistance. This attitude, Hills
are distressed because they re- observed, may indicate a lack of
fer a student to a counselor, then understanding of a counselor's
receive no feedback--either be- function. He divides assistance
cause the counselor does not feel to students into guidence (direcfree to discuss the matter, or tion or advising), counseling
because he becomes so busy with (helping a student work through
students the counselor fails to a problem rather than directing
maintain open communication him) and therapy (producing some
channels with instructors. Those change in the student), which
would be on a continuum rather
than discrete categories. Many
instructors conceive of the coun ..
seling program as guidanceother public officials about the oriented only, aqd feel they could
campaign. Swetland said the in- provide that. The counselor, Hills
formational campaign is not de- said, should make sure that the
signed to attract more students student has received all specific
to LCC, as some viewers have information needed, but probably
felt, but to overcome the "myth" has a better grasp of the overall
that Lane's educational program college program than do specific
favors liberal arts, or college departmental personnel.
transfer, programs.
In comparing the counseling
Though the "success stories" programs at the Universities and
are seen and heard quite fre- at the community colleges, Hills
quently, the overall cost of the observed that the concept of councampaign has been quite low. seling at the universities is more
Around $2,000 has been spent mental health, or therapy, and
on the campaign, which should guidance is left to the academic
have cost two or three times departments. This separation of
that amount.
counseling function is difficult
Several factors helped reduce for students, and he noted that
costs. All the organization and some students from the U of 0
actual production for the spots come to LCC to receive counwas done by LCC students, staff seling. At _community colleges,
and former students, on a volun- Hills indicated, you find a differteer basis. In addition, radio and ent type of student than at the
TV time and newspaper space universities, and there is thus a
was purchased by Lane at a re- need for a specific counseling
duced rate for educational in- staff. Studies show those who
stitutions. Finally, many of the succeed at a university are more
radio and TV spots are aired as selfconfident and can handle isoa public service at no cost to lation, and it is these traits that
the college. During February, determine success as much as
for example, only 16 TV spots intellectual capacity. Many comand four dozen spots on each of munity college students do not
three area radio stations will be have such confidence and have
paid time. All others are donated more need of counseling.
by the media.
In viewing the changes which

Dr. Ken Hills, Director of Student Se r v i c e s for the Oregon
Board of Education, was on campus Wednesday, Feb. 10, to meet
inform a 11 y with Lane's counseling staff and administrators.
Hills assumed his position with
the state Board, which supervises
education in Oregon from kindergarten through community college levels, in October of 1969.
He was formerly Director of
Counseling at LCC, having been
with the college since its beginning.
In an informal interview with
the TORCH, Dr. Hills discussed
counseling, which is among his
responsibilities as Director of
Student Services.
The Oregon Board of Education, said Hills, supports the
bill introduced in the Oregon
Senate Feb. 4 by Edwa:rd Fadeley
(D-Eugene) which would provide
counselors immunity from being
forced to divulge confidential information acquired in the process
of counseling.
Protection from being forced to
testify without the consent of the
student is n e c e s s a r y, Hills
stated, if the counselor is to be
effective, and the Board has so
indicated in writing to the Legislature.

may occur in LCC and other providing in-service training for
community college counseling instructional staff so they can
programs, Hills said the primary assist. Such in-service training
problem is that the number of could also help solve the problem
counselors is determined on a of instructor hostility, he indiratio of FTE students. At LCC cated, as instructors become
the ratio is one counselor to 350 more familiar with the role and
FTE. But many more "bodies" the problems involved in counare present than the 350 figure seling.
indicates because many students
· ••
- - -- - ••
attend o;ly ~art time yet are in
~_rf)))) 4\ \
need of assistance. Counselors
ii/~ , ,
1, A ---~
simply do not have the ability to
• '!' .
,: : : .,..see_all stu?ents who have n~ed of
' • ·"Lf.
their services. As a solution to
.•
this problem, Hills_said, _colleges
l~~~l"iETTJ:
are usmg counselmg aides and
•

l

103

,--------------------,
SCug,ene cBarber College I
Ss

For the past month and a half,
the residents of Lane County have
been exposed to "LCC Success
Stories" --the testimonials of ten
former LCC students--on radio
television, and in newspapers.
Public reaction to these "commercials" has been mixed, with
many responding favorably and
some questioning the campaign.
Among those asking ''why" and
"how much" have been Springfield Mayor John McCulley and
the Cottage Grove Chamber of
Commerce.
Dr. Eldon Schafer, president
of LCC, said in an earlier interview that the success stories
are part of a '' campaign to get
people on campus" and show them
first-hand what the college is
doing.
In a recent television program,
"Conversations with the Presidents," Schafer also noted that
the success story campaign "is
an attempt to change an image
which has been somewhat ''tarnished," further explaining that
Lane is viewed by some as a
"little university." Schafer emphasized that LCC is a comprehensive learning skills center, of
which vocational education is an
integral part.
Lyle Sv.etland, Director of Development at LCC, talked with
Springfield Mayor McCulley and

.
Honor society

seeks members
LCC'sa chapte-r
of Phisociety,
Theta •
Kapi;a,
national fionor
a~~~ic:n~~:1:r~:;

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1 4 Weeks
March 2 to March 29
London roundtrip
$2491
membership.
Prospective members must
One way
March 28
PortlandtoLondon$160
have completed 10 hours of col- 121 Days
May 22 to June 12
London roundtrip
$249
lege work last Fall Term with
7½ Weeks
May 27 to .June 19
Amsterdam roundtrip $2491
3 5 GPA
better or com14 Weeks
June 15 to Sept. 15
London roundtrip
$289
1
a •
or
21 Days
June 19 to July 10
London roundtrip
$249
plet~d 20 hours the _last twp terms
31 Days,
July 16 to August 15
London rou ndtrip
$259
(Sprmg and Fall) with an accumu7½ Weeks
July 30 to Sept. 20
London roundtrip
$269
lative 3.5 GPA.
One Way
September 26
Portland to London
$135
2
Ad meml?fert~hip fee obf $lh . i~Flights are available to eligible students, faculty and other employees
c1u es a i e 1me mem ers ip m
of the Oregon State Community Colleges.
Phi Theta Kappa and covers in--------------------------------:---------1
cidental local fees.
Please call or write for further information :
Letters of invitation have been
EUGENE
.
Halina Delf
sent. to those students who may
ADDITIONAL FLIGHTS
1000 Benson Lane
quallfy, but some names may have
AVAILABLE
Eugene, Oregon 97401
been omitted from the list. If
342-2936
you feel you qualify and desire
Name______________________
to join, contact Dorothy Utsey beAddress _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
tween 5:00 and 7:00 p.m. at ~ i t y
State _ _ _ Zip Code _ _ _ __ ,

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643~l!ge View Rd,

· KLCC

"This Morning"
9:05 a.m.

Monday - Friday

February 17

Steve Kraal

Student Body Pres. Thurston H. S.

F~bruary 18

President Schafer
LCC President

February 19

Les Mock

Oregon Educational Broadcasting

February 22

Lee Gas

Speckers Bureau

February 23

Ralph Meyers
• ector - Eugene Boys Athletic Assn.

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, 688-6447 forfurtherinforma~i.o?: .. ~

Phone 344-2421
630 Willamette _ _ _ _ Eugene, Oregon 97401

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Complete Jrlodern 9each;ng 9echniques

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Success storieJ explained
by Bill Nelson

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KLCC-FM 90.3

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Page 7

Jocks retain perfect· record in-_intra murals play
by Dave Harding

(Photo by Christy Dockter)

and Rick Wier paced the scoring
for the winners with 18, 16, and
14 points respectively.
For the Plug Nichols, it was
the first time they didn't have a
scorer in double figures. Bill
Bartholomew wa~ high with eight
points.
Besides the Stuffers and Popes,
two other teams are lodged in
the standings with 3-1 records.
The Yo-Yo's sent the Weaklings reeling with their third loss
in a row, through a 64-55 upset
victory on Tuesday. Kevin Lindsay led the way with 27 points
for the Yo-yo's.
The Team led by Gary Holland,
Nick Schevchynsky, and Dennis
Seaton, got the Pumpers in the
last second, 51-49, on two clutch

With only six games to go,
the Springfield Jocks remain the
only unbeaten team in intramural
basketball action.
The Popes fell from the ranks
of the unbeaten last Thursday,
Feb.II, when they dropped a fiery,
66-64 decision to the streaking
Faculty Stuffers.
Time Bishop and Ron Goss
combined for 36 points for the
Popes, but Fred Sackett, Dick
Newell, and a handy eight-man
bench were too much for the
Popes as they lost their first
of the year.
Sackett and Newell had 18 and
15 points respectively, but it was
superior height and plenty of
bench that finally overhauled the
Popes.
Leading scorers
Last Thursday, in their only
1. Rich Trukositz Weaklings 21.5
game of the week, the Jocks con2. Ken Reffstrup Panthers 21.0
tinued their torrid assault on the
3. Ron Goss
Popes
20.0
rest _of the league by annihila4. Dick ~ewell Stuffers 18. 7
ting the Plug Nichols 78-34.
5. Tim Bishop Popes
17.5
The Jocks used a half-court
6. Jerry Weikel Weaklings 16.8
press and balanced shooting to
7. Rick Wier
Jocks
15.8
lead at halftime, 44-13. The se8. Gary Holland The Team 15.3
cond half was just a matter of
time until the final buzzer, and • 9. Tom Axelson Panthers 15.0 .
10. Everett May Jocks
14.8
the 44-point difference.
Everett May, Ken Boettcher,

··· Lane to host

third in league standings
by Dave Harding

Six Community College wrestling teams will compete in the
OCCAA wrestling tournament at
Lane this weekend.
The meet will begin at l:00p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 20, in the main
gym.
The six participating teams
are Lane, Mt. Hood, Columbia
Christian. Clatsop, Clackamas,
and Central Oregon, community
colleges.
The team expected to place
first is Clackamas. Lane is hoping for at least a 2nd or 3rd
berth in the finals, since they have
been looking good on the individual basis.
Wrestling coach Bob Creed is
looking for one or two first places
from his men, but is counting
mostly on several 3rd and 4th
places for the needed points.

respectively.
Sat u rd a y night, Lane overThe LCC Titans did something h au 1e d Chemeketa CC 83-72,
they haven't been doing too much raising their record to6-4.
of lately. They won two in a
With five games to go, the Tirow. Yep. They're doing things tans trail league-leading SWOCC
the way they used to be done. by three games, and Umpqua CC
At the start of the basketball by two.
season, coach Irv Roth and his
Lane's next home game will
basketballers were off to a siz- be Tuesday night , Feb. 23, azling start in the OCCAA.
gainst Umpqua at 8 p.m.
After winning their first eight
games, and being 2-0 in league
action, the Titans fell into a Women's team breaks perfect record;
slump, losing four of their last
seven games.
That was until last weekend, loses two in week ~s action
however.
Friday night at home, the TiAlthough Mt. Hood led in scoring,
tans gunned down Central Ore- by Louise Stucky
The LCC women's basketball many of the Lane players felt that
gon 96-83 behind the hot shootteam received its first defeat they had won on the basis of
ing of almost everybody.
Down 44-41 at halftime, the Tuesday, Feb. 9, at the hands ability to play as a team.
Francie Behm received Lane's
Titans used a full-court press of the Clark Chickettes.
At the end of the first half team bracelet for her outstanding
along with their shooting to outscore the Bobcats 55-39, and the score was 25-13, with Clark playing in the Mt. Hood game.
leading. Lane did a lot of shooting, Besides making three field goals
record their fifth win.
For the Titans, Willie Jones, but was unable to hit the bucket. and two free throws, Francie gaIn the second half Lane was thered in several important reGreg Taylor, . Steve Armitage,
Steve Woodruff, and Dan Haxby still cold, making only 20% of bounds which helped Lane control
had 21, 20, 16, 16, and 14 points their field goal attempts. LCC the ball.
was unable to stop Clark's Mrs.
Morgan, who scored 25 points.
Women's tennis
Even when playing her person-tointramurals person,
she could outreach the begins March
Lane women.
planned soon
Lorraine He in was awarded
Any women student either full
Three more events will be LCC's team bracelet for her or part-time, interested in n.Iaycoming up through the Intramural outstanding p 1a y in the Clark ing on the LCC women's tennis
Department very soon.
game. Lorraine possesses a high • team should contact Mrs. Sharon
Monday, March 1, at 4 p.m. level of defensive skill, an im- Cochran in the Health and Phythere will be an odd-lift weight- portant part of basketball.
sical Education Department.
lift contest in the weight room.
Thursday, Feb.11, the women
Practice begins March I,
Events include the bench press, traveled to Portland for a game weather permitting. The team
military pr~ss, and the arm curl. with Mt. Hood Community Col- will practice Monday, WedWednesday, March 3, at 4p.m. lege. The teams were evenly mat- nesday, and Friday.:; , from 2:00
there will be a weightlifting tour- ched., as reflected by the close to 4:00 p.m., and Tuesday and
nament. All male students .are score. At half time the score was Thursday's from 4:00to 5:00p.m.
encouraged to come out and par- 21-20, Lane; the final score was
Meets are scheduled with Uni48-45, Mt. Hood.
ticipate.
versity of Oregon, Portland State
The Lane women played a very University, Clark Junior College,.
A bicycle race will get under
way as soon as enough people good game. The team was able Mt. Hood, Lower Columbia,
have signed up to participate. to play together, making several Marylhurst, and Lewis and Clark
Signup sheets are posted in the impressive goals. With less than College. The Northwest Junior
Intramurals Office and in the a minute left .in the game, Mt. College Tournament will be held
men's dressing room. Racing nood went ahead by three points. at Clark Junior College in Vandistance and the starting point Lane desperately tried to close couver, Washington on May 6,7,.
the gap, but was unsuccessful. and 8.
will be determined later.

More

Standings

Spfld. Jocks
Faculty Stuffers
Bishops Popes
Yoakums Yo-Yo's
The Team
Parks Panthers
Weikels Weaklings
Trumbull's Tramps
Plug Nichols
Purscelly's Pumpers

4

0
1
1

3
3
3
3
2

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1
1
3
3

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0

0

4

4

0

.ROBERTSON'S·
DRUGS

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

SELECT THE U.S. MARINES
SERVE WITH THE FINEST

• wrestling meet

Titans down two opponents;

free throws.
For the Pumpers, now sharing
the cellar with the Plug Nichols
with an 0-4 record, it was the
second straight game they lost in
the waning moments. The week
before, they dropped a 54-50
double overtime game to the YoYo's.

1

VISIT OR CALL YOUR MARINE RECRUITER FOR DETAILS
AT 1111 WILLAMETTE, EUGENE 342-5141 Ext. 206

AVOID TAX-TIME BLUES
Conscientious Federal and State Tax Preparation
Gary Rholl, Assistant Professor of Business, LCC
Phone 344-5880
D
D
D
D

Smugglers II

It's not a leather

D
D
D

shop . . .
B·ut we've got leather.

It's not a jewelry shop . . .
D

D

But we've got iewelry.
It's not a head shop . . .
But we've got heads

Big M Shopping Center
303 S. 5th S rin field

D

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8

Most veteran benefits

Life's observations

hold tax exempt status

by Mark-

Are you a saver of things?
Do you file your class handouts
for future use? Very often they
can be a valuable source of reference.
Below are a few excerpts from
a handout received in Ben Kirk's
physical science class last fall.
It points out some of the things
that are polluting our environment and is well worth reviewing. Some of the facts it
mentions are:
FACT:
Increasing evidence
indicates that lead compounds,
released into the air as internal
combustion engine exhaust, can
travel anywhere, and samples
of even Antarctic ice show a
marked increase of lead content.
(Lead-based paints were banned
some years ago because of the
dangers of lead to the human
system.)
FACT: The grey-brown haze
frequently found over the EugeneSpringfield area is smog from
automobiles, trucks and industry.
It is estimated that the internal
combustion engine is responsible
for more than 50 per cent of
this area's air pollution.
FACT: Persistent pesticides,
such as DDT, are easily spread
by air and water to ALL areas
of the world. Measurable quantities of DDT are even found
in the polar ice caps.
FACT: Chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides (DDT and related
compounds), even if banned now,
will remain in the environment
for at least 10 years, continuing
to render sterile and hence extinct many species of birds, fish,
and other wildlife.
FACT: The amount of DDT
present in human bodies exceeds
by a factor of approximately
three the amount permitted by
the FDA in marketed fish.
FACT: The DDT level in most
human mother's milk is at least
twice that permitted by the FDA
in cow's milk commercially. The
source of this DDT is the food
you eat everyday. DD T accumulates in the body and concentrates in fatty tissue, kidneys and liver (among other places). This is an important consideration during illness when
the body draws on energy reserves.
FACT: Species extinction is a
normal occurrence. Prior to the

Industrial Hevolution, an average
of two species per century
vanished. In the last 300 years,
80 have already become extinct
;md more than 100 are endangered.
FACT: The housewife, through
individual and collective action,
can have a major impact on solving these pollution and environmental abuse problems.
FACT: YOU can help!
Don't use long-livedpesticides
chlorinated hydrocarbons such as
DDT, dieldrin, aldrin, endrin,
heptachlor, chlordan and lindane.
If you must spray, use shortlived pesticides such as rotenone
or Off. Don't use fertilizers containing lead arsenate (arsenic).
Scott's Turf Builder, for example, contains it.
Use white toilet tissue. Use
qui c k 1y bio-degradable, 1ow p hosp hate content detergents

1

Veterans benefits are generally exempt from taxation and
need not be reported as income
on income tax returns, the Veterans Administration has announced.
The only reportable item, said
the VA, is interest earned on GI
insurance dividends left on deposit or credit with the VA.
Such int e rest is considered
earned income.

such as S~ars Bio-degradable and
Amway. If you need a boat, get
a canoe or sailboat. Motor-boats
seriously pollute waterways.
Save newspapers, magazines
and aluminum for collection and
re-use. Buy products that have
the least amount of packaging to
discard; for instance, avoid ''individually-wrapped" cheese
slices and hardware items imprisoned in plastic bubbles. Go
easy on paper towels and similar paper products. Use cloth
towel, rags, etc. Take shopping
bag with you to the storere-use them instead of getting
new ones each time. Buy soft
drinks and beer in returnable, reusable bottles. STIFLE THAT INNER VOICE THAT SAYS THIS
LITTLE BIT WON'THURT(multiply it by 210 million Americans).
RE ME MB E R ! WE ARE THE
ENEMY!

i

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until 6p.m. i

Save on these close outs
Was

NOW

Medium and Varnish

$1.35

$1.00

Medium and· Varnish

1.35

1.00

.95

.65

1.59

.99

3.75

2.75

Ear Muffs

1.00

.65

LCC Rain hats

1.65

1.25

Hyplar Matte
Hyplar Gloss

All students who have CRATER LAKE applications please
return and set up appointment with recruiter at the Placement Office IMMEDIATELY.
More applications will be in
the Placement Office by Tuesday, Feb. 16, 1971. Recruiter
will be on campus March 4, 1971 and Saturday, March 6,
1971.

PART/TIME FEMALE: Young
lady for babysitting two children
from 4:30 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. five
days weekly. Pay: $80 monthly
children eight and ten years of
age.

!

924 Main St., Springfield

Spring Shower of Savings

To inquire about jobs, contact the Placement Office, 747-4501,
extension 227.
•

PART TIME/ FEMALE: Waitt re s s needed i m me di at e 1 y.
Hours: Several evenings weekly
and weekends. Pay: $1.50 per
hour plus tips.

i

TIMBER. BOWL .

i SPECIAL· RATES Mo·n.-Fri.
s. s. s.

JOB. PLACEMENT

PART TIME/FULL TIME MALES OR FEMALES: Youngladies
or young men for selling or presenting and setting up appointments. Pay: According to presentation made daily. Must be
neat. Hours: According to student.

GI insurance dividends themselves are not taxable, nor are
proceeds from GI insurance
policies.
other major tax exempt benefits are compensation and pension, GI Bill and other educational as s is t an c e, subsistence
payments to vocational rehabilitation trainees, and grants for
homes or autos to severely disabled veterans.

Flexible plastic binder
Red or orange - daisy trim

Stiff cover plastic binder
1/2" ring bright spring designs

student hours. Pay: $1. 76 hr. &
up.

. T - shirts

Gold with white stripes S, M, L, Xl

PART TIME/FEMALE: Young
lady to babysit and houseclean
d a i 1y Monday through Friday
from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. Very little babysitting because of school
activities. Pay: Attractive and
open for further discussion. Person should be reliable and like
children.

Wonderful for Skiers
For those rainy days

LCC Bookstore

"We're Right On Campus"

Is WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT
·\
for YOU?

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lif..,.-..••-t..

PART TIME/FEMALE: · Young
lady with artistic ability. Preferably someone from Art Department for light painting for .
heavy objects. Hours: Around

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CLASSIFIEDS
A lovable female pup needs a
home. Short haired collie mix,
housebroken, wormed, and has
shots. Contact Helen Loomis, ext.
254.
WANTED: Student to share 3 bedroom house. $65. All u t i 1it i es
paid, kitchen privileges. Phone
726-7542.
FOR SALE: Navy P-coat size
40 - new condition $25. Female
Golden Retriever 1 year old $30.
Call 746-6281
WANTED: Any information leading to the arrest of person/s involved in the theft of property
taken from a 1966 Blue Mustang
parked in the East parking lot
of LCC between I p.m.-5 p.m.
Wed. Feb. 10,1971. Call:344-4584
after 6 p.m.
FOR SALE: Electric Guitartriple pick-up vibrato - plays
easy. Strap and case included. $55
or best offer. Phone 345-1877.
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _
FOR SALE: Ski-meister metal
skis with bindings. Very good
condition. $35. Phone 896-3854.

FOR SALE: 6 year size baby
crib, stroller, jump seat. AU
for $30 or each at an agreeable
price. In excellent condition.
Call 688-7077.

Data Processing. Computer Programming, and Key Punch taught
by professionals: Virtually un- .
limited time on in-school hardware: Veterans approved. Student loans. Eligible Institution
underthe Federally Insured Student Loan Program.
Phone:
ECPI 1445 Willamette, Eugene;
343-9031.
FOR SaLE: Tropical fish, etc.
stop by for coffee at Lucky's
Little Loves: 1940 Friendly St.
liours: 6-9 evenings and 10am6pm Saturday. Phone: 345-1042.
RENT
YOUR FURNITURE
Complete qua Ii t y furnishings.
Many styles and price groups,
individual item selection -- 3
rooms as low as $22 monthly.
Purchase option, prompt delivery. Large, convenient showroom, warehouse.
CUSTOM FURNITURE RENTAL
ll5 LawreQce
343-:7717

AUCTION CENTER: Auction time
1:30 Sundays. We sell anything,
anytime any place. Estates Comm e r c i a 1 Bankruptcies L i qui dators. At 4100 Main St. Springfield. Phone: 747-5051
Use TORCH classified ads.
It pays!

It can be now, with the former
QUEEN ELIZABETH

providing more accommodations and lower rates
• ! . ..._,.,,..___._,,.,...,.. The unlor!.!eltahle
. enormouslv- enril·hin!.!
experience of a seme-;ter .it sea 1s
.._
.....
l~
now within the r;1nge of 1110,t college students. Minimum costs have been
, -, , ' • "" reduced ;1-. much as S725 ( from Sl575 down to S2850. which includes

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,.·~. ·.•..·,··.·. •.·. . . •..• .• .... ·.··.· round-the-world passage . meals . air-n:~nditioned :1ccommod:1tions. and full
tuition). A ,tudent ctn attend World Campu, Atlo:1t for :1 ,emes.ter :ind still
, ·
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11'~ \ ' . ;-_ \,\ ·, ,i reL·eive credit for the work hack at his home campu.-.;.
):,, ,, _-_ ~•'/,;,;

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The -..hip i, yo ur clas.sroom. and the world is you r lahoratory . .. you'll :
-·~.
,·
_· ' ¢\r ~
drop .inchor in thl: mo-;t exciting ports of Africa. Asia. ;ind Latin America. ·"'.
"f\
li,tl:n to a lccturT on the ,tcps of the Taj Mahal. ,kin-Jive ofT the coa,t ol
New Zealand . Send the coupon today for information and application form,
for the Ldl sl:me-;tcr 1971 or ,uhsequent voyage,. Scholar,hips and financial
aid availahlc .

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(,

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M,ss _. ----Last
First
Permanent
Address _ _ _ _ _· - - - - - - - - ; : - , - - - - , - - - - - - - -- - -Street

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City _ __
Address
At School

Street

Cit;

WORLD CAMPUS
AFLOAT

Home Phone
_

MAIL TODAY TO
CHAPMAN COLLEGE.

Campus Phone

Box CC15,
Orange, California 92666

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St a te

Name of
School _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Year

Interested:

O

Fall 19 _ _

[J January 19 _

-

in

Spring 19

School

-:- Summer 19

•

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