Students active in defeat of LCC .tuition increase

Active opposition from students was a primary factor in
not just the delay, but the defeat, of a proposed tuition increase at the LCC Board of
Education meeting Wednesday,
Feb. 24.
The Board, after hearing extended arguments against the increase from a half-dozen students including Student Senate
officers, voted 4 to 3 against
the proposal recommended by
the college administration.
The tuition proposal would have
raised in-district rates for fulltime students $14 per term, an
increase from $210 to $252 for
the school year. Out-of-district
fees would have been increased
from $420 to $510. No increase
was proposed for out-of-state
students, who currently pay
$1,407 annually, or for parttime students. College officials
estimated the proposed increases
would result in $176,000 in additional revenue.
Supporting the suggested in-

crease were Drs. Albert Brauer,
of Florence; Dean Webb, of Cottage Grove; and Glifford Matson, of Junction City~
Opposing the increase were
Catherine Lauris, Robert Freeman and Robert Mention, all
of Eugene, and Board Chairman
Robert Ackerman of Springfield.
Students argued that many of
them are at the poverty-level
of existence at the moment and
that the tuition increase would
make it difficult for many students to continue at LCC. ASLCC President Warren Coverdell provided figures from a
study conducted Fall Term by
Marston Morgan of the Office
of Institutional Planning and Research which show approximately
60 per cent of LCC students receive no financial aid from their
parents, and have an annual income of only about $2, 500 to
$3,000. Board member Robert
Mention concurred, saying he was
concerned that the increase would
"close the door" to many stu-

dents.
Those supporting the increase
argued that state and local support of the school would have
to be increased next year, and
that students should share in the
increased costs. Board member
Dean Webb said he felt all segments of the college district
should share in the increasing
costs of education and that "edderly voters are having just as
hard a time with property taxes
as students are with their expenses." Proponents of the increase also cited the expected
more than doubling of federal financial aids next year as a
factor to offset the effect of the
hike.
Bo a rd Chairman Ackerman
emphasized that the defeat of
this tuition proposal does not
necessarily close the door to
consideration of proposals for
smaller or different types of
tuition adjustments.
A financial measure receiv-

ing Board approval at the Wed- estimating the amount of back
nesday meeting was $353,000 fa- taxes LCC would receive from
prior years, overestimating the
culty-staff salary package.
The salary increase, a com- amount of federal funds to be
p r om is e between Board pro- received, and underestimating
posals and those of the Staff the 1970-71 costs for social sePersonnel Policies Committee, curity and retirement .funds for
includes a 3.69 per cent cost of employees.
living increase for all full-time
In addition, he said, the proemployees and annual step in- perty tax levy of $1.52 per $1,000
creases of about 5 per cent for of true cash value approved at
faculty with less than 10 years the t h i rd budget election last
experience. The package will add ye a r proved too conservative.
about 7.5 per cent to the current The delay in receiving approval
$4. 7 million salary budget.
of the tax levy last year, Schafer,
Board member Robert Men- also resulted in some "lasttion voted against the increase, m in u t e errors" and delayed
saying it is greater than the analysis which uncovered the
economy can stand.
mistakes.
The cost-of living increase
raises pay for teachers with
bachelor's degrees or the equivalent, and no experience, from
$6,448 to $6.686 for a ninemonth contract. Base pay for
A fashion show featuring
those with master's degrees or
the equivalent will increase from clothing, music and a light show
simultaneously, and benefiting
$8060 to $8,358.
The LCC Budget Committee SWITCHBOARD of Eugene, is
(of which the Board of Education scheduled for Sunday, March 7,
comprises half) also met Wed- at LCC.
The show will be staged in
nesday night, Feb. 24, but did
not complete work on the pro- Forum 301, beginning atl:00p.m.
Fashions will be supplied by
posed 1971-72 budget.
A fifth meeting of the Com- Andrea's, Magpie Leather, The
mittee has been scheduled for Black Boutique, and Pam MitMarch 10, at which time college chell.
With the exception of those
officials have been asked to present proposals for cutting the from The Black Boutique, items
$8.5 mi 11 ion budget by some to be displayed are designed and
hand-sewn locally.
$500,000.
M o d e 1s will dance to music
Due to the delay in budget con4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405
Vol. 6, No. 18
March ~. J971 siderations, the budget election provided by Mesh Macahn, while
date--which had been tentatively the light show is in progress.
Tickets are $2.00 and are
set for March 31--will be moved
into late April or early May. available at Kiva Books, Scarboro
At the Wednesday meeting, the Faire, the Odyssey, ChrystalBudget Committee was informed ship, the EMU at the U of O,
by Ramona L. Walton
gon community colleges which also voted a member of the Ore- that an error in last year's bud- SWITCHBOARD, and the LCC
attempt together to find solutions gon All Star Basketball team. get process will reduce the col- Student Senate Office.
The Student Senate is supThe names of twenty-five LCC, !or the problems faci!lg two-year After completing his studies, lege's working captial which can
sohpomores will appear in the schools. Community colleges en- possibly at Linfield, Jones hopes be carried over into the next porting the SWITCHBOARD benenext volume of "Who's Who roll more minority persons, ve- to work with underprivileged .budget year by approximately fit by assuming the costs for
Among Students in ..American Ju- terans, and working students than children.
:P180,000. That sum may have to room rental, custodians, and senior Colleges."
be
eliminated from the present curity personnel.
While Jones works with underuniversities, Rosen explained.
SWITCHBOARD is a 24-hour,
The official announcement was Communication between all of pr iv i 1e g e d children, distur- budget.
made this week by the national these persons is a major prob- bed children may find couseling
The error came, LCC Presi- volunteer emergency aid and reselection committee of Who's lem.
help from psychology major Ruth dent Eldon Schafer said. in over- ferral service.
Who.
Ann
Moore of Eugene. When
Rosen, who considers cyberThe 19 men and 6 women se- netics his only hobby, is cur- not studying, Ruth devotes most
lected represent a variety of rently Senator at Large, and has of her time to various poverty
academic and extracurricular in- worked on the Student Bill of programs. She is currently interests.
Rights and the new Constitution volved in lobbying for Welfare
The Social Sciences h ave for LCC's student body. In ad- revision. As an Aid to Depencaught the interest of seven of dition to working as
member dent Children (ADC) mother, she
the honored students. Working to- of the Curriculum Committee, helped to form the ADC Aswards a double major in Social and as an official delegate to sociation which has initiated sePsychology and Data-Processing the OCCSA, he participated in veral reform programs which
is Danny Rosen of Eugene, who the Associated Student Govern- have passed the Ways and Means
hopes eventually to obtain a de- ments conference in Las Vegas Committees in the Legislature
gree in Cybernetics, "if a col- last November.
in Salem. As medical chairman
lege decides to offer one." CyF r o m V id a I i a , Louisiana, of the ADC, she works as a
bernetics, he explained, us un- comes Lane's high-scoring communication link between docderstnading the individual and so- basketball player Willie Jones, tors and people on welfare. Deciety's problem (psychology) also a Eugene resident and ma- spite the time Ruth spends studywhen replaced by authoma- joring in Psychology. Jones led ing (which resulted ina4.0GPA),
tion (data processing). While Oregon community college teams she finds time to play the guicontinuing his studies, Rosen in rebounds, and was voted se- tar, piano, and vibraharp, complans to run for the presidency cond most valuable basketball posing most of her own music.
of the Oregon Community College player in the league by the Ore- She is also a member ·of the
Student Assn. (OCCSA).
The gon Community College Athletic Zero Population Growth organiassociation is composed of Ore- Association this year. He was zation at Lane.
Psychology major and Second Vice - President of the student body W i 11 i am Mc Murray
also plans to work where needed in a counseling field, ciLCC was one of at least 16 calls, reports said, and then led ting VIS TA and the PE A C E
Eugene-Springfield schools and the detectives to a neighboring CORPS as possible goals. Mcbusinesses receiving bomb house where the 15-year-old was Murray, a Springfield resident,
threats Wednesday morning, found.
has been active in several LCC
The boys a 11 e g e d 1y phoned groups including Circle K, Big
Feb. 24.
Three Eugene youths--two threats to LCC, the Eugene Ho- Brother-Sister program, and the
12-year-olds and one 15--were tel, a Eugene restaurant, a Veter ans Club. As an intertaken into custody by police and Springfield shopping center, a nationally licensed skin diver,
charged with making the tele- Valley River Center store, a McMurray hopes to join the SheSpringfield bank , and several riffs Dept. rescue team when he
phoned threats.
schools in Eugene and Spring- logs 100 hours of diving time.
The boys placed the calls,
field, police said.
He has logged 80 hours so far.
police said, from one boy's home
The call was received at LCC
between 9:00 and 10:00 a.m. They at approximately 9:30 a.m. and Most states, McMurray obserwere apprehended when a vice- po 1ice were notified. After ved, require a license in order
principal of Cal Young Junior investigation and discussion with .to buy compressed air for skinHigh School in Eugene recognized the police, LCC officials de- diving purposes. With his interthe voice of the callers and in- cided not to evacuate campus national license, he is allowed
to buy air, and thus dive, anyformed police.
buildings.
where.
Two detectives went to the
Rep o rt s did not i n d i c at e
Don Landrum, also a psycho- WILLIE JONES LAYS THE BALL UP FOR TWO POINTS during
home and found the two 12-year- whether any of the other insti- logy major, was a heavy equip- a game with Umpqua Community College Wednesday, Feb. 24, at
SWOCC. The Titans won the playoff game 69-63 and an OCCAA
olds in some bushes near the tutions receiving calls were
tournameQ.t berth. (See story on page 11). (Ph~to by Hewitt Lipscomb)
house.
(Continued on page 3)
The two admitted the evacuated.

Fashion show

slated March 7

_lane Community College

'Who's Who' listings released

Lane fourth in league

a

LCC receives bomb threat

Page 2

Ii

e~~e#t

More problems than solutions
A bill which would prohibit secondary and
high schools, community colleges or any state
institution of higher education from using student fees to subsidize school newspapers was
introduced Monday, Feb. 22, in the Oregon
•
Legislature.
Representative Sidney Bazett (R-Josephine
County) said he introduced the bill at the suggestion of several members of the Oregon
Newspaper Publishers Association (ONPA).
However, Carl Webb, manager of ONPA, said
his organization had not suggested the bill or
any bill like it.
Bazett explained he is sponsoring the bill
because "I've been told that editors want experienced help and that one way for students
to gain experience is by working on a newspaper, in this case a newspaper run by a
journalism school."
If Bazett' s bill is passed, he will be denying
the majority of students the very thing he says
is behind his sponsoring of the bill--to have
students gain experience by working on a newspaper.
If the bill receives approval, most, if not
all, community college newspapers in the state
would have to seek other methods of paying
their production costs. Most community college papers receive the major portion of their
ope rating budgets from student government
funds--which are supplied by students through
student body fees.
If this method of obtaining operating funds
is prohibited, were are the funds going to come
from ?
They could come from advertising revenues.

This is an unstable method of receiving funds,
however, since there is no guarantee of how
much money will be available for a coming
issue. There is also the danger that the editor
and/or his staff may become so involved in
getting revenue they lose sight of the reason
they are publishing a paper. Most community
college newspapers could not survive on advertising income alone.
If journalism classes are held in conjunction
with the newspaper, then the logical place for
funds to come from is the department controlling
the journalism courses. For example, TORCH
funds would be supplied by the Mass Communications Department.
There is a flaw in this method of funding.
The funds for operation of the paper would
be included in the department budget, and would
be subject to being reduced--oreveneliminated-if the public were to turn down the budget.
In contrast, with student government funding,
the student government submits a budget at the
end of Spring Term for the next year on the
basis of projected student enrollment, and the
newspaper is relatively assured of receiving
its alloted share of the income from student
fees.
Bazett's bill not only prohibits the use of
student fees to subsidize newspapers, it also
provides that college newspapers be distributed
The unon a voluntary subscription basis.
predictability of income under this proposal
would result in chaos and the eventual collapse
of most of the college papers in the state.
And then where would students receive the
actual newspaper expe:r:_ience which the bill seeks?

Letters to the Editor
Hitch-hik·ing bill

For those concerned about the
worldwide ecological crisis, and
specifically automobile emissions (which contribute to 50% of
the Willamette Valley's air pollution), the current item of concern should be House Bill No.
1448, a bill which, if passed,
would provide for a penalty for
the hitch-hiker and the person
who kindly assists him.
This is truly immoral. People
do not need this degree of control. Hitch-hiking has always
been a voluntary act on the part
of the driver, and frequently an
economic necessity for the rider.
How does hitch-hiking tie in
with ecology? Simple! When a
person rides with another in a
car, the contamination is onehalf, compared to two automobiles.
Hitch-hiking is efficient--it
saves on gasoline and parking
expense. The new parking lot

Senate Agenda·
March 4, 1971 - 2:30 p.m.
Administration 202
Call to Order
Roll Call
Approval of Minutes
Treasurer's Report
Comments from the Gallery
Old Business
* Child Care - Armas
* Lockers - Coverdell
Switchboard Fashion Show McMurray
* Student Lawyer - McMurray
* Basketball-Information Item
Only - Coverdell
New Business
Ride Co-op - Spencer
* New Senator at Large * Concrete Statement - Jane
Van Kuren
* Election Schedule - Nelson
* Senate Priorities * Farm Mechanics Club - Henning
* Karate Tournament - Information Item Only - Bruce
Coombs
President's Report
* Notice of Appreciation
* Bills pending in State Legislature
* Board Meeting (2-24-71)

*

*

other
Adjournment - 4:30

on the NortheastcornerofLane's
campus cost the taxpayer
$200,000.
Students for Survival have petitions that oppose HB 1448. They
are in the Student Senate Office
(second floor of the Center Bldg.).
Please help us breathe easier.
Sign this petition.
Carl Fitch
Students for Survival
Without

How does· man survive
W.ithout the sound of laughter
Without the sound of music
Without the beauty of nature
What would life on this earth be?
Without love for fellowmen
Without sorrow and pain for the
cripple
Without sympathy for the mentally ill
Could men be so despicable?
Without the wonder of the ocean
Without the challenge of outer
space

Without the exploration of virgin
soil
What would be left for man to
conquer?
Without knowledge and learning
Without schools and industry
Without man on this earth
What kind of life would there be?
Without hate, jealousy or
prejudice
Without the color of -man's skin
Without his race or creed
How much happier would man be!
What man has the right to judge,
Which race should live, which
should die
Which should work and which
should not
Is not every man's blood color
red?
Was not every man created equal?
Let us live and let live as was
meant to be.
Aussie Bratton
Student, Comm. Skills I
Section 13

The Black Side
We are here

by J. C. Wright and Bill Nash
"We are here, and here we
are likely to be. To imagine
that we s h a 11 ever be eradicated is absurd and ridiculous.
We can be remodified, changed,
and assimilated but never extinguished. We repeat, therefore, that we are here, and that
this is our country ... We shall
neither die out, nor be driven
out; but shall go with this people, either as a testimony against
them or as an evidence in their
favor throughout these generations.
Fredrick Douglas"
The Black man is here again.
These are the words of outraged, heartbroken, bruised and
bleeding people. Faithful, industrious, loving people, rising
people full of potential force.
I don't apologize for anything
that has happened in the past, for
anything that is happening in the
present, or for anything that will
happen in the future. That is in
relation to making the Black man
the master of his own.
We are here because the dangerous-, •hampering wan· of ·pre-

judice must fall. We thoroughly
oppose the making and execution
of laws of this country. This
c o u n t r y disenfranchises our
people.
I don't claim to be a leader
of my people. The Black man
will have a leader, a government,
a king, a kingdom, a navy, and
men of power. The Black man
must have a place of his own.
He has served this nation and
the world. He has borne the
burden of civilization in this
western world for over four hundred years. He has contributed
his best in every task set before him. But they have not
been recognized by the white
m a n in this c o u n t r y as a
worthwhile contribution. It has
been looked on as the work of
machines without the dignity and
respect that is due him.
The white man's rhetoric of
"it takes time, be patient, come
around tomorrow, etc.," is dead.
The white man has run out of
The bell has sounded.
time.
The answer to this is find a
place. We have found a place
for WE ARE ·HERE;

Oh well ...'J.
what's one

5eYpent

more or

less? ...

Cofflpus Calen_d ar
a_de for Christ
Campus Cru_s_
ACTIVITIES
I
Campus Crusade for Christ
Chess
will meet Wednesday, March 3,
Yugoslavian International lat 12:00 noon in Forum 312, and
Grand Master of chess Svetozar • Thursday, March 4, at noon in
Gligoric will play a simultaneous Center 419.
exhibition match Friday, March
Christian Science Club
5, in the cafeteria, first floor of
LCC's Christian Science OrCenter Building, with play set to
ganization plans to meet Tuesbegin at 8:00 p.m.
day, March 9, at 10:00 a.m. in
Forum 312.
ConcertLCC's Baroque Orchestra and Circle K Club
Choir will present a concert
Ci re le ''K" Club members
Sunday, March 7, at 2:00 p.m. should meet Tuesday, March 2,
Center 101.
at 12:00 noon in Adm. 103.
Deseret Club
Fashion Show
Deseret Club members will
for
show
fashion
benefit
A
SWITCHBOARD is scheduled for meet Thursday, March 4, at
Sunday, March 7, at 1:00 p.m. 11 :30 a.m. in Health 106.
in Forum 301.
Women's Liberation Group
LCC' s W om e Ii' s Liberation
Registration
Group will meet Monday, March
Pre-registration cards for
Center 222.
continuing classes must be turned 8, at 12:00 noon in
is a tape of Bernain to the Admissions Office no Scheduled
recent OSU speech.
later than Friday, March 5. Re- dette Devlin's
gistration for classes other than
continuing sequences will begin
Tuesday, March 16, for current
$85/mo. I bdrm.
students, and Tuesday, March 23, APARTMENT:
Furnished.
for new students.
APARTMENT: $60/mo. I bdrm.
Theatre
Furnished.
"Festival of the Artichoke," APARTMENT: $100/mo. I bdrm.
LCC's first student-produced and
Furnished.
directed theatre presentation, APARTMENT: $105/mo. 2 bdrm.
premieres Friday, March 5, at
Unfurnished.
8:00 p.m. in the Forum Theatre. APARTMENT: $120/mo. I bdrm.
The three short plays will also
Furnished.
be presented Saturday, March 6. APARTMENT:
$115 plus $25
Unfurnished.
bdrm.
2
deposit.
CLUBS
APARTMENT: $125/mo. I bdrm.
ASCUS
Furnished.
The ASCUS Club will meet
Wednesday, March 3, in Center ROOMMATE: Furnished I bdrm.
Split $125 rent. Eugene.
420 at 12:00 noon.

SAC HOUSING

-

The Torch Staff
Editor. . . • . • . • .........•..•.••••Gary Grace
Assistant Editor. . . . . . -. . . . . . . . . Hewitt Lipscomb
Sports Editor .•........ •..... -- _ . , , Uave Harding
Ad Manager. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •Lorena Warner
Head Photographer. . . . . . . . ..••• !ieWitt Lipscomb
Secretary-Business Manager. . . . . . . • •Doris Norman
Member of National Educational Advertising Service

THE TORCH is published weekly on TuP.suays, except
holidays, examination weeks and ,,acation 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.

Page 3

'Who's Who'
tion. Long plans to go into the
adjusters field or. work for the
state of Oregon in an associated
field.
One should not be surprised
to find Richard Beals or Wade
S k i n n e r , both avid mountain
climbers, stalking nearby peaks.
Forestry major Beals plans to
spec i a 1i z e in Siviculture, replanting trees, and hopes to be
employed by the Forest Service
in the Rocky Mountain region of
Colorado . A resident of Springfield, he is a member of the National Ski Patron and is active
in LCC's counseling aide pro-·
gram.
_
_
In addition to mountain climbing and hunting (fox and coyote),
Skinner is a welding technology
major who plans to transfer to
osu. The only representative of
Junction City among the Who's
Who nominees, he is president of
the American Welding . Society,
chapter and has a4.0GPA. Eventually he hopes to own his own
welding shop.
With a major in Math education
and a minor in Industrial Technology, Edward January hopes to
teach on a high school level.
Still undecided about future plans,
however, he said he may get a
master's degree in education and
teach at a junior college. January
feels there is a great willingness to learn on the community
college level, and enjoys the
personal relationship they offer
as compared to universities. January enjoys associating with
other people and wants to help
where needed. The Springfield
resident is involved in various
community projects.
Professional writing or teaching remedial English is the goal
of Mary Boehi, English major
from Eugene. She is active in
Junior Service League and a
volunteer in various women's organizations. Mary has twice been
nominated for a community service award.
Physic a 1 education majors
Pe g g y Bartholomew of Sprinfield and John Youngquist of Eugene are transferring to the U
of o.
Peggy plans to specialize in
Folk Dance. A member of the
LCC's women's track team, she
placed second in state and third
in regional meets last year in
hurdles. She is currently student teaching gymnastics here
at Lane.
Youngquist, a basketball team
member, was recently initiated
into Phi Theta Kappa honor society. Though busy maintaining
his GPA, he enjoys photography
and reading scietific material,
especially in the area of anthropology.
Tan ya Nauman, C o t t age
" Success stories"
Grove's only representative, is
hoping to become a certified
terminated early ·
public accountant and plans to
LCC's "success story" in- continue her studies at the uform at ion campaign was ter- niversity level. While attendminated last week, enabling the ing the University of Hawaii for
college to cut expenses for the one term she was second vicepresident of the Hawaiian Stucampaign by about a third.
Donations of free time by the dent Nurses Association.
Mass communication has been
electronic media greatly magnified the impact of the commer- the center of the lives of Gary
cials and helped to make LCC's Grace, Hewitt Lipscomb, Lorena
point much more quickly than Warner and Warren Coverdell
expected. Some stations, such as while at Lane.
KVAL-TV for example, matched
Radio broadcasting major
the college's prime time spots Gary Grace of Eugene has been
on a one-for-one basis.
active at Lane primarily with
Early cessation of the cam - the TORCH, serving as Producpaign means that the property tion Manager, Acting Editor, and
tax paying owner of $20,000 home EcHfor. His tenure as Editor ends
will be contributing only about at the end of Winter Term. He
1 1/2 cents toward the campaign, is currently involved in the estabrat he r than the previously lishment of an Oregon Community
College Press Service, which will
announced 2 1/2 cents.
The purpose of the "Success coordinate exchange of news astories" was to reach those who mong the state's 13 community
seldom read public affairs re- colleges. Gary has had profesporting, to assure them that LCC sional experience in both radio
is accomplishing its primary broadcasting and journalism, and
mission of technical-vocational plans to return to newspaper
work at the end of the year.
,education.

(Continued from page I)
ment operator for ten years before returning to shcool. He plans
to become involved in vocational
education, and in his spare time
fishes, hunts with a bow and arrow, and flies. Like McMurray,
Landrum resides in Springfield.
A 1967 graduate of Corvallis
High School and a political science major at LCC, Bruce Nelson is the First Vice-President
of the student bqdy. His acti- •
vities have included helping get
the student Awareness Center
off the ground and activity in
the Black Studies and Peoplefor-People programs. Nelson,
who lives in Springfield, eventually plans to campaign for a
political office, with the goal of
stopping bureaucratic spending.
Interested in archery, Nelson enjoys people and nature. •
Thriving on Love, the theatre
and nature, Jeffrey McMeans is
focusing on acting as a career.
A liberal arts major, McMeans
plans to transfer to the U of O.
His activities at Lane include
representing the school at the
42nd annual Pacific Northwest
Coast College Conference on
Mental Health in Portland. Last
year he served as Publicity Director for the Student Senate
and Senator at Large. McMeans
resides in Eugene.
Keeping communication lines
open to people in Australia, Japan, and Germ any, and many other countries is ham radio operator Bill Nelson's goal. He
plans to obtain his ham radio
license when he can write codes
faster, and is an unofficial member of the Citizen Band Reaction
Team, a radio emergency system
to help people in trouble. Nelson is currently serving his second term as a student Senator.
With his eye on OSU, he plans
to finish his education as an
electrical e n gin e e r before moving to Seattle to work at Boeing Corp. Currently he lives in
Springfield.
A student member of the LCC
Development Fund committee,
Michael Potter is majoring in
Data Processing and will receive
an Associate Degree from Lane.
A snow and water skier, he also dabbles at painting and mechanical projects. other activities · of the 1960 graduate of
Woodrow Wilson High School include serving as an assistant
leader in Boy Scounts in Eugene.
Norman Long is also obtaining an Associate Degree at Lane,
but in Insurance Adjusting. A Eugene resident, he returned to
school "after all of these years,"
and is currently representative
to the Claims Adjusters Associa-

t

•

1

I

t

I

a 'W

,I

If

•

'I

:,

In the little "spare time" he has,
he is an avid television viewer.
Television broadcasting: major Hewitt Lipscomb hopes to
go into TV production or free
lance photography. The Eugene
resident attributes his nomination to Who's Who to his involvement w it h the TORCH and
LCC-TV News. Lipscomb is currently Associate Editor and head
photographer of the TORCH, and
assists in the weekly production of the televised 1/2-hour
news broadcast seen over PL-3.
(cable channel 10).
A 1968 graduate of Thurston
High Schoo, TV broadcasting major Lorena Warner plans to finish her education at the U of O.
Her primary activities at LCC
include serving as Ad Manager
for the TORCH and assisting in
the production of LCC-TV News.
Lorena, a resident of Springfield,
is currently working at KE ZITV under the Cooperative Work
Experience Program (CWEP).
LCC's student body President,
Warren Coverdell, is currently
drawing up plans for an independent production agency specializing in documentary films.
He plans to transfer to San Francisco State for his bachelor's
degree and on to the University
of Missouri for his master's degree in TV broadcasting. Though
much of his time is spent in
activities necessary to his position as president, he spends
considerable time with his reregistered quarter horses. Coverdell is a resident of Eugene.
Flying high are .LCC students
Gregg Faulkner of Eugene and
David Moffitt, Oakridge's representative in Who's Who. One
should not be too surprised if
Gregg trips out of the airplane
occasionally -- with his parachute.
Having made over 80
jumps from 7,500 feet in the air,
he describes sky diving as "entering another world." Though
sky diving is his primary hobby,
avaiation maintenance technology
major Faulkner also enjoys skin
diving. Though not a licensed
diver like McMurray, he finds
Crater Lake one of the most
beautiful spots for diving. Faulkner plans to transfer to OTI or
Bell Helicopter School in Fort
Worth, Texas.

Majoring • in the same field
is David Moffitt, who describes
his job as ''how to keep planes
flying." Moffitt has a bachelor's
degree in theology and is currently minister of the Christian
Church in Oakridge. He hopes
to use his training in aviation
with possible missionary work in
Eth i op i a . Moffit is currently
serving on a school board committee and participates in the
Foster Parent program. A licensed private pilot, he enjoys
flying, canoeing, and camping.
Deborah Ayres, an elementary
education major from Eugene,
could not be reached for an interview.
The idea of creating a means
of honoring college students was
conceived in 1934. "Who's Who
Among Students in American Universities and Colleges" was published in 1935.
The population growth and upsurge in technical knowledge
triggered by World War II

changed American education, and
junior colleges began to play an
important role in career preparation. In 1967 the first volume
of "Who's Who Among Students
in American Junior Colleges"
was published.
The volume is used by many
businessmen in an employer recruitment program.
Nominations for Who's Who are
~ade by _individual colleges.

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An Administration proposal for
A tuition increase of $14 per term
Was presented to the Board last week

The Senate fought it
Fought it hard
There will be NO $14 increase
Because The Senate worked for

The Senate rides again

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Page 4

"Artichoke" to open March 5

by Jon Haterius

"Festival of the Artichoke,"
the first completely studentct ire ct e d and produced Performing Arts p r es e n t at ion at
LCC, will be spotlighted March
5 and 6 in the Forum Theatre.
Each evening's performance
will consist of three short plays-a comedy, a drama, and a satire.
Student directors for the three
plays are Sandy Isom, "Drapes
Come"; Charles Mixon, "The
Dumb Waiter"; and Ralph Steadman, "Bo Peep Follies." All
are veteran stage performers in
Lane County. The directors, selected by LCC Performing Arts
Department Chairman Ed Ragozzino, chose their own scripts.
''Drapes Come," according to
director Isom, is a play about
human communication. The 50m i nut e drama in v o 1v es two
characters who change personalities numerous times as the play
unfolds. Mrs. Fiers, played by
Leta Tucker, begins as a strong
aggressive person, while Barbara, played by Cathy Smith, is
more "passive" and peaceful as

the play begins. Later, the roles
reverse. Several times in the
play the actors undergo other
character changes in a sort of
Jekyll and Hyde fashion.
The second short play, "Dumb
Waiter," is also a two-character
play and involves two English cutthroat killers stranded in a hotel
room waiting for a coming killing.
The play might be reminiscent
of · the Humphrey Bogart-Peter
Laruie-Sidney Greenstreet cloak
and dagger movies of the 1940's.
Director Mixon describes the
work as a "ch a r act er study
play."
The low-key English
c o me d y - drama is c en t e red
around Ben, played by Steve Wehmeier, and Gus, played by Dave
Norfleet. Norfleet was recently
seen in "The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell of the Crowd."
The third play in "Artichoke"
was written by Ron Strauss, a
former student of Ragozzino's
at South Eugene High School and
a graduate of the Carnegie School
of Drama. Director Steadman
chose ''Bo Peep Follies" over
Wi 11 i am Saroyan's ''Coming
Through the Rye" because he
felt the play would communicate

Devlin tape to high light
International Women's Day
A tal e of Bernadette Devlin's
recent speech at Oregon State
University in Corvallis will highlight activities of International
Women's Day Monday, March 8,
at LCC.
The tape, presented by LCC's
recently-chartered Women's Liberation Group, will b~ heard at
12:00 noon in Center 222. Informal discussion will follow.
Miss Devlin, 23-year-old
Northern Irish member of the
British Parliament, is currently
on a speaking tour in the U. S.
In her Corvallis appearance she
attacked the ''system'' in both
Great Britain and the U. S.,
asserting that she was a "political prisoner" rather than a
criminal while in prison and
comparing her incarceration with
that of Angela Davis, whom she
says is being prosecuted for being
a b 1a ck, militant Communist.
Miss Devlin also called for an
all-out war by the working class
on capitalism and the "5 per
cent" in both the ·u. S. and Great
Britain who "control 85 per cent
of the country's wealth."
One of the youngest members
of Parliament ever elected, Miss
Devlin has been active in the
Catholics' civil rights movement
in Northern Ireland. She was
recently released from prison,
to which she was sentenced for
six months last year after being
convicted of participating in and
leading riots between Protestants
and Catholics. •
other activities planned for
International Women's Day include a luncheon at 12:00 noon
at the Cent r a 1 Presbyterian
Church, 1475 Ferry St., in Eugene. Ri.ce, tea, and vegetables
will be served, and proceeds
from $1.00 donations will benefit
a maternal child and health care
center in Hanoi. For reservations and child care for the
luncheon, sponsored by the Women's International League of
Peace and Freedom, call 3458057, 345-5002, or 344-6882.
Also scheduled is an 8:00 p.m.
workshop in Harris Hall of the
Lane County Courthouse. Sponsored by Community Women's
Liberation, the workshop will
include informal discussions on
women's lib, child care, divorce,
health care, abortion and birth
control.
International Women' s Day
originated in 1908 when New York
women workers in the garment
i ndustry marched on March 8

for the right to vote and an end
to sweat shops and child labor.
Two years later March 8 was
named International Women's
Day.
March 8, said a spokesman of
the LCC Women's Liberation
Group, is "a day to celebrate
individually and collectively the
joy of being a woman. It's a day
for all women on earth to stand
up and affirm that they are women, not in the narrow terms defined by each culture but as individual human beings that know
no cultural or social barriers.
"Women all over the world,"
the spokesman continued, "are
experiencing the pains of rebirth
as individuals and are beginning
to feel unity and strength in the
women's movement." Since International Women's Day is designed to affirm this unity, the
group urges women to participate
in the planned activities.

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better with the audience. Student Owen Bjerke has written
the music for "Bo Peep Follies."
"Bo Peep" is a play "depicting life's beauty through the
ugliness of life itself," says
Director Steadman. Bo Peep,
played by Jane Rackliff, re presents the beauty and agelessness of the fairy tale character.
The ''sheep" in this comedydrama are Sam, played by Jeff
McMeans' Prudence, played by
Penn Wallace; Ed, played by Tom
Durness; Ethel, played by Melody
Sperb; and Harriet, played by
Charlotte Mixon.
"Festival of the Artichoke"
will play March 5 and 6 in the
Forum Theatre. Curtain time
is 8:00 p.m., and tickets are
$1. Tickets are on sale at the
information desk in the Administration Building or may be
obtained by phoning LCC, 7474501, ext. 310.
This is the first time an entirely student-produced show has
been presented at LCC, and the
student directors are hoping it
will be a success--not only for
themselves, but so it might become a continuing tradition.

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Page 5

Graduation survey results released
by Bill Bauguess

by Rick Mitz
The student image:
The medium is the mess
"College students are a goodnatured, hard-working, fun-loving bunch of kids. Oh, sure, they
do some crazy things like swallow
goldfish, wear those shaggy raccoon coats, scream at football
games and stuff themselves into
phone booths. But, for the most
part, college students are goodnatured, hard-working and funlovini?;."
Oh yeah ?
That may have been accurate
description of the college student of 50 years ago when things
were The Cat's Meow rather
than Right On, but the new image
of the university student has
him doing somewhat different
things than in the days of the
Varsity Drag. Today the student does other "crazy" things.
He swallow hallucinogenic drugs
rather than goldfish, wears hippie clothes, screams at demonstrations, and stuffs himself into
an occasional university administrator's office.
Today's American college students are in dire need of a good
public relations firm.
It's in the eyes of those allegedly Concerned Citizens that
the student image is a tainted
one, mutilated by magazine covers screaming out about the
Student Revolution (exploiting covers that often are more revolting than the Revolts themselves)
and even more distorted by onesided television co_verage that
shows only the student revolution, but never the evolution.
The medium is the mess.
Newspapers, radio and, especially, television have given the
people of America an even more
distorted picture of what the Typical Today Student is like.
The emerging stereotype is
the ragged y-coifed revoltionary-radical, endlessly partaking
in various school-spirited activities--b om bing s, seizures,
strikes, pillage, and a little arson on the side. In his spare time,
he downs dope, sleeps promiscuously in coed dorms, dresses
outlandishly and that's that.
The media displays (and displays and displays and instant
replays)only his demonstration
behavior, which might very well
be out of context. He might be a
medical student with honor
grades who loves his mother,
dates a Sensible girl, attends
church, has a good part-time job,
loves apple pie, and in all other
ways fulfills the All-American
dreams. But the 6 o'Clock news
never shows that part of him.
People are frightened by the
student movement--scared and
acrimonious. The values they've
held sacred, the goals they've
strived toward suddenly are being threatened--by their own
children. The result is panic.
In a nation-wide poll taken last
spring, the campus unrest problem ranked number one--even
Spring schedules
now available

Spring Term class schedules
are now available from the Registration Office and also at the
information desk in the Administration Building. Registration
begins Tuesday, March 16.
t

I• I

over war, ecology, racial strife,
poverty and crime.
Spring is the season in which
they take place. Spring--when
every young student's fancy turns
to revolution, when a fresh breath
means a mouthful of mace, and
spring fever means the hot anger
of the U.S.populace sitting by
their TV's counting the RPMs.
And they aren't exactly sitting
there watching nothing. Last
year, I, 785 demonstrations took
place on college campuses, including 313 building siezures and
sit-ins, 281 anti-ROTC demonstrations, 246 arsons, and 7,200
student arrests, resulting in
more that $9.5 million in damage.
Television brought all the damage, fire , seizures, sit-ins
right into our living rooms, in
living red, white, black and blue
color. The Student Radical could
have been the title of a highly
successful, action-packed, situation TV show aired in lieu of
the news every evening.
The new student portrait is
detrimental to the student himself--making all students appear
alike, depersonalizing them, castrating individuality and sprouting new prejudices in a world
already too full of biases. Yet
the new student image can not
be as bad as college trustees
and university regents might
fear.
A sit-in might be a radical
way of expressing an idea, but
it certainly is more socially
.Provo c at iv e and meaningfully
profound than swallowing a goldfish. Discontented students sit in
and take over because they are
concerned with values that affect the total society, not just
themselves.
It's that cause which is so important. But television shows only
the superficial outcome of the
student fight for that cause--the
rioting, the sea of straggly students, the hurled rocks, the fourletter words. The bloody, fighting, hell-raising revolutionary
student image could be, if not
changed, at least altered, if the
media could make the public
aware of the issues behind the
fight. Struggles for ecology, an
end to racism, equal rights, community control and the finish of
an unjust war are not difficult
issues for the public to relate
to. However, they get lost in
the color and dramatics of the
t e 1e vised college demonstrations, which always come out
looking like a television Fellini
orgy rather than a concerned and
optimistic fight for a better American future.
College students wouldn't really need a PR outfit to help change
their image if people could grasp
the importance of the cause behind the fight.
That Middle American couple
sitting in f rant of their new color
TV no longer can afford to angrily
turn off the 6 o'clock news of
student protest and switch the
channels to a war movie or an
old John Wayne film.
The channels that must be
switched are the channels of
communication, and what could
emerge would not be a new student image at all, but a new national image based upon a new
understandiog.

''We want to zero in on the
type of graduation the students
want," said Administrative Assistant Be rt Do t s o n in the
October 29, 1969, issue of the
TORCH. "Looking at it objectively, as far as the faculty is
concerned, we'd just as soon
forget graduation."
If this statement was an accurate reflection of feeling at
that time, the tide has turned.
Now, it seems the faculty is
more in favor of a graduation
ceremony than students.
Early this month, a survey
was taken on campus to determine student and faculty reaction to having graduation ceremonies at LCC. Twenty-nine faculty members and 228 students
participated in the survey, taken as a result of long-standing question of the validity of
a graduation exercise at Lane,
Of the 29 faculty members
participating, 20 (about69%)
thought there should be a graduation ceremony, and only 7 voted against it. Sixteen said they
would attend the ceremony.
Results of the student survey
were closer.
Of the 228 students, 107 (about 46%) voted yes, and 100 (about 42%) voted no on having a
ceremony. Ninety-one said they
would attend such a ceremony,
and 117 indicated they would not.
Results of the surve0ave
been presented to the College Cabinet by ASLCC President Warren Coverdell. The final decision
as to whether a ceremony will be
held rests with LCC Presiden Eldon Schafer.
If there is to be a graduation

ceremony, students and faculty
are more in agreement on its details. The majority of both groups
said the faculty and administration should not wear caps and
gowns, and the majority of students felt they should not wear
caps and gowns either (no question concerning caps and gowns
for graduating students was asked of the faculty). Both groups
thought the ceremony should last
no longer than on hour, that there
should be no paid speaker, that
t h e r e s h o u I d be one student
speaker and one major speaker,
and that speak e rs should be
selected by a combination of the
administration, the faculty and
the student government.

ception, the general concensus of
the faculty was cookies, punch and
coffee. Students listed punch,
coke, coffee and "booze."
S i m i 1a r questions regarding
the need for a graduation ceremany were asked in a survey last
year, in which 63%ofthoseparticipating voted yes. No breakdown
for faculty and students was ineluded.
Changes were made in LCC's
graduation ceremony last year.
Only one major speaker, selected by the Student Senate, spoke,
whereas previous graduation
ceremonies had involved as many
as four speakers, and faculty attendance was made voluntary rather than mandatory.

1

The majority of the faculty felt ~- :q/ltlj'lJ)JJ)
• \ \. r
'.'\ .-1 J _
.; ~there should be a reception imtl
! •-' ;,mediately following the ceremony ·
<
. ,.
•
,•
and most students taking part in 1 ·
.., ·
t
:ll 1
\,
the survey had no preference.
. •
~ l ·•. ,~ "
~ ~ . 1 0 3 l , ,~ . When asked what should be pro""'
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KLCC-FM
PLAYLIST
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

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FOR ALL WE KNOW. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Carpenters
If You Could Read My Mind. . . . . . . .Gordon Lightfoot
She's A Lady • . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . Tom Jones
I Don't Know How To Love Him. . .. Yvonne Elliman
Love Story. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Francis Lai
Love Story (Where Do I Begin). . . . .•.Andy Williams
Country Road . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .James Taylor
Wild World. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Cat Stevens
1900 Yesterday. . . . . . . .Liz Damon's Orient Express
Mr. Bojangles. . . . . . . . . . . .Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Loves Lines Angles and Rhymes . . . . Fifth Dimension**
Burning Bridges. . . . . . . . . . Mike Curb Congregation
Life . . • . • . . . . • • . . • . . . . . • . . . . ; .Rick Nelson**
Your Song. . . . . . . • •........••... Elton John
Amazing Grace. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Judy Collins
Watching Scotty Grow . . . . . . . . . . . . Bobby Goldsboro
She's A Very Lovely Woman. . • . •. Linda Ronstadt
No Love At All . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .B. J. Thomas**
Oye Como Va. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,Santana**
My Sweet Lord. . . . . . ..•.•...•George Harrison

** New This Week

Page 6

LCC budget process computerized

BILL WATKINS STUDIES COMPUTER PRINTOUT of the 1971-72
LCC operating budget. The improved method of preparing the budget
with the aid of the computer is thought to be the first of its kind
. by any college or university in the state of Oregon.
(Photo by Ramona Walton)
by Bill Bauguess
The method of preparing
Lane's 1971-72 operating budget
has been drastically changed
from the method used in previous years.
The new method, as far as anyone knows, is the first of its
kind at any college or university in Oregon.
How does the new method differ?
First of all, the 1971-72 budget has been projected with the
aid of the LCC computer. This
opens the door to a much more
sohpisticated and detailed budget procedure.
To fully understand what this
means, it is first necessary to
look at the method previously
used by Lane, and currently in
use by other schools in Oregon.
To start with, each department
head used to submit anestimated
growth figure for their particular department. The cumulative
average of all the department
estimates produced a projected
institutional growth percentage
and the estimated cost of providing for that growth.
This method involved a lot of
guesswork by a lot of different
people. It also produced inflated
budget requests because no department h e ad , without knowing
exactly what his department's
growth rate was going to be in
the coming school year, was going to take a chance on underestimating its needs.
The new procedure used in
f i g u r in g the cost of enrollment growth takes the approach
that it's not the existance of a
department as a functional entity that determines the level
of service to be offered by that
department, but rather the existance of individual programs,
and their demands within the different departments. 1bus each
program offered by the college,
such as nursing, data processing, flight technology, etc, is
shown with its effect on the different departments. Next, the level of services required by each
department is shown as the cumulative effects of all the programs offered.
To determine what depart-

ments students would appear in
according to the program in
which they were enrolled, the
budget staff fed all of last year's
s tu de n ts record data into the
computer and came up with two
basic lists. One shows how many
different department students
had to enroll in to obtain the
courses needed for the program
they were taking. The other shows
how many different programs

were represented by each department.
This created a means of figuring out how an enrollment
increase in each program would
affect the various departments,
including the cost of equipment,
instructional materials, instructors, and other items.
With this information, the bud/ get staff took the expected increase in enrollment next year
and spread it among the various
departments a cc o rd in g to the
percentages produced by the
computer.
The staff then multiplied the
increased enrollment in each department by the cost-per-student figures, which had been developed separately for each academic program, and came up with
what it would cost each department to handle its additional students next year.
Staff, equipment and additional
student costs were then separated
according to program and placed
on a priority list of 150 items.
This gave the Budget Committee
a basis on which to work in
preparing the 1971-72 budget.
AU this adds up to what is
probably the most tighly controlled budget of any college
budget in Oregon. It means the
Budget Committee will be able
to see more precisely where increased dollars are going to be
spent. And, if the committee
d o e s n ' t agree with the administration's priorities for increased spending, it will be able
to see not only where to cut or
add, but also what the specific
effects of its actions will be.
All this came just in time,
for the new system may be put
to a rigid test this year due to
a $180,000 error in last year's
budget making, and because of
a $250,000 plus cut ordered by
the Budget Committee. President Eldon Schafer reported at
last Wednesday night's budget
meeting that poor estimating in

LCC Choir, Orchestra
to present Sunday concert
The LCC Choir and Baroque
Orchestra will present their Winter concert on Sunday, March 7,
at 2:00 p.m. in the cafeteria
area, first floor of the Center
Buidling.
The Barolque Orchestra, directed by Nathan Camack, will
present classical numbers including "Concerto for Trumpet
in D major" by G.P. Telemann,
featuring Dave Dovan as trumpet soloist; "Brandeburg Concerto #3" by J.S.Bach: and "Concerto for Violin in A minor"
by G.P. Telemann, with violin
solist Sharon Gordon.
The ll0-member Choir, directed by Wayte Kirchner, will pre-

Lost and found
but not claimed
The Lost and Found Department, in keeping with the duties
of its time-honored title, has been
finding a remarkable number of
presumably lost items, and is
making a valiant effort to restore them to their rightful owners.
Located at the central switchboard in the basement of the Administration Building, Lost and
Found now contains a great variety of wayward objects, ranging from anything to everything
with quite a lot in between. Typical items include glasses, wallets, articles of clothing, and
books.
Consequently, anyone who may
have lost something around campus is urged to check for it
among the present overflowing
collection there.

sent a variety of music including the "Liebeslieder Waltzes"
by Johannes Brahms, with fourhands piano accompaniment: "Sicut Cervus" by Palestrina; and
"Ezekial Saw De Wheel," arranged by Norman Luboff.

A special feature of the concert will be the LCC vocal ensemble group performing under
the direction of Wayte Kirchner.

the 1970-71 budget may reduce
the college's ''net working capital," to be carried over into
the next budget year, from
$200,000 to only $20,000.
This represents a $180,000 loss
in the amount of money which
would have been used in next
year's budget.
Also at the Wednesday night
meeting, the Budget Committee
reviewed the proposed $8.5 million budget and ordered the administration to come back to a
fifth meeting planned for March
10, with proposals for cutting
the budget by $250,000 to
$500,000.
Bill Watkins, LCC Business
Manager, said he hopes to be
able to offset some of the loss
by saving some money during
the balance of the current school
year. The rest will either have to
be cut out of next year's budget,
or the proposed property tax
rate will have to be increased.
Watkins aid that the new computerized system will help eliminate such problems in the future
by giving budget makers more
detailed and accurate information from which to plan.

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Page 7

LCC inStru,tor plans Spring dimb of It.
by Doris Ewing
Only another mountain climber
can understand why anyone would
want to spend weeks on a snowcovered mountain, subject to all
its hazards, discomforts and inconveniences.
L C C Adult Education instructor Jim Satterwhite who understands, will be packing his gear
for sub-Zero weather and high
adventure in early April.
Satterwhite, 26, instructor in
Ground Instruction and Private
Pilot's License, is a member of
an expedition planning to climb
Al as ka' s Mt. McKinley this
spring. Leaders are . U of 0
w i 1de r n e s s recreation student
Steve Sch a e f e rs, and Garv
Grimm, coordinator of the U of
0 0 u t door Program through
which the expedition is being organized.
The venture is a "first" for
former LCC student Satterwhite
who said this will probably be the
"only opportunity I'll ever have
to take such an extended trip and
to work so closely with deeply
committed friends/'
He began rock climbing at Coburg Caves in 1960 while still a
student at South Eugene High
School. Later his outdoor interest switched to scuba diving
when he attended Seattle Pacific
College for three years as an
engineering student.
Since his return to Eugene,
Satterwhite has climbed in the
Cascades, joined the Eugene
Mountain Rescue team and participated in Outdoor Program activities for the past year and a
half.
He was graduated from LCC
in 1969 with an associate degree
in flight technology and is listed
in "Who's Who Among Students
in American Junior Colleges."
Now a senior at the U of 0,
he will receive a degree in park
management and recreation in
June.
According to the slightly built,
heavily-bearded c 1i m be r, the
McKinley e x p e d it ion plans to
leave sometime during the first
two weeks in April for Fairbanks.
They will then go to the village
of Talkeetna, northeast of Anchorage, from which they will be
flown to the 2000-foot elevation
of Kahiltna Glacier on Mt. McKinley.
Here the climbers begin the
30 -mile long ski haul straight
up the glacier where they will
cache supplies at about 7,000
feet. "However," Satterwhite
said, "you don't ski straight up
a glacier. You zig-zag, so it will
.be closer to 40-45 miles one
way."
Each member will be responsible for hauling about 200 pounds
of equipment. '' This means we
will make three round trips, each
time up with a 70-75 lb. pack,"
he said.
From this camp the group will
head for McKinley's West Ridge
and the final assault on the South
Peak, elevation 20,320 feet. "We
may try a new route," Satterwhite said. The whole venture
should take about six weeks. But
June 5 is the final date when
the group can be flown back to
Talkeetna off the glacier, he
said.
According to word from an
Alaskan flying service, no flight
can be guaranteed after that date
due to spring run-off of melting
snow. The are becomes soflooded, they said, "not even a muskrat can get across."
Schaefers recently set forth
the goals of the expedition as
1) for everyone to complete the
' climb, including the youngest
person ever to climb to the top
of McKinley (Terry Jones, 15,
and Peter Sistrom , 16, both of
Eugene); 2) study effects of stress

on expedition members; and 3)
remove garbage that has been
left by previous expeditions.
According to Grimm, expedition people tend to be "pretty
sloppy," and this group "intends
to carry back all our own trash
as well as that left by other
climbers."
The number going on the exp e di t ion is still not definite.
"Thing can happen," Satterwhite
said. ''We won't know until everyone is on the plane, but twelve
to fourteen will probably make
the trip." Eight are from Eugene , and others from Bend,
California and Alaska.
The Eugene group has been
training since November, Satterwhite said. They have weekly
meetings and two to five-day
m o u n t a i n t r i p s have been
scheduled nearly every weekend
this winter.
The group has just returned
from a trip to Mt. Rainier and
will soon climb Mt. Shasta. During spring vacation they plan
to go to Mt. Challenger in the
north Cascades in Washington,
Satterwhite said.
Wee k 1y meetings emphasize
basic planning. Although each
member will be assigned special
responsibilities, all will have as
complete a knowledge of the whole
operation as possible.
For example, Satterwhite said
everyone is learning basic survival and first aid techniques.
But two members who will act

as "doctors" will receive additional specialized training.
To keep himself personally fit,
Satterwhite said he considers
a three-mile daily run (an eightminute mile) a top priority. "In
fact, I should really be running
more," he said. He also does
special exercises and weight lifting.
F i n an c i n g the expeiditon has
been a problem. While the Outdoor Program is coordinating the
climb, it does not provide financial aid. Rather, the program
acts as a clearing house where
people with similar interests may
get together for wilderness activities.
The expedition is working on a
"bare bones" budget - about $300
including transportation.
As Satterwhite has said, none
of the expedition members has
the time or talent to be "big
money" raisers. The expedition
and Eugene Mountain Rescue recently sponsored a film and special ~_program on climbing and
survival, but e~ch ~roup clea~
only about $50.
The U of OStudentSenate made
it possible for them to receive
some money for group equipment
like tents. After the climb these
will be donated to the Outdoor
program for their use.
Each climber has his ownpersonal gear, but Satterwhite estim ate d an investment of about
$1,000 would be - needed if one
started "from scratch." Special

Sexual consent proposal
presented to Oregon SenateA proposal to legalize sexual
activity, including homosexuality, between consenting adults
drew only minor opposition during a Senate committee hearing
in Salem Wednesday, Feb. 24.
The proposal, which would repeal present state laws against
homosexuality, fornication, adultery and seduction, is part of a
suggested complete revision of
Oregon's criminal code. The proposed revision was prepared over
the p as t four years by the
Criminal Law Revision Commission, of which Donald Paillette,
former Lane County District Attorney, is executive director.
The Senate Criminal Law and
Procedure Committee has been
conducting hearings almost daily
for several weeks on the proposed new code. Wednesday's
hearings dealt with the proposals
dealing with sexual offenses.
The Revision Commission determined during its four-year
studies, said Paillette, that sexual activity between consenting
adults was not a proper subject
for a criminal code. "A criminal

code, the comm1ss1on decided,
should protect society from acts
that threaten life or property,"
Paillette commented. Sexual activity involving commercialization or the young would continue to be covered by the new
criminal code, which also creates
three degrees of rape.
Paillette said the last criminal
adultery case prosecuted in Oregon was in 1924, the last fornication in 1925 and the lastseduction case in 1916.
Appearing to oppose the proposed ch an g es were Herbert
Breed of Klamath Falls and Charles White of Bonanza.
Breed told the committee the
proposed revisions would "destroy the thin shell of civilization" and would imply Oregon
consents to "what has long been
considered wrongdoing." He also
predicted the proposed changes
would result in more crimes.
White said the proposals would
make Oregon '' into a playground
for homosexuals and will break
down law and order."

purchases include extra warm
"arctic" clothing and triple boots
with several inner linings and
·roomy enough for several pairs
of heavy socks.
Lightweight, high-calorie
foods can be expensive. Much
of it is f r e e z e - d r i e d or
specially made, like Logan bread
which contains molasses, brown
sugar, whole wheat flour, dates,
honey and fruit. ''It's very nourishing," Satterwhite g r in n e d ,
"and quite good."
One question about Satterwhite
should be cleared up on the
McKinley climb. He usually carries extra candy bars since he,
like many outdoorsmen, gets ravenous the first few days out.
But, as Schaefers said recently, "We'll learn how much
he'll eat. Got to do something
about that boy!"
Satterwhite's future plans are
not settled. "I want to do some- •
thing with flying," he said, but ·
because of health and age requirements, "I consider the recreation degree an ace up my
sleeve," he added.
•

''I enjoy teaching at LCC,"
he said. "I wish LCC had an
outdoor program. If Pm ever
connected with a community college, I'd like to start one, even
in a city," he added.
During 1969-70 school year an
LCC outdoor program was started under leadership of student
Connie Frazier. After she left
school Spring Term the program
died.
The program at the U of O
is "too big," Satterwhite said.
Too many people are interested.
"There would certainly be cooperation, not competiton" between program at LCC and U of O.
"LCC really needs an outdoor
program," he said.
•

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Phone 344-2421

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KLCC

"This Morning"
9:05 a.m.

Monday

Friday

March 3

Capt. Oakley Glenn

Director of U of O Campus security

March 4

Mr. Silver

Director of the Red Cross

March 5

Dean Kaufman
Legal Aid Society

March 8

Scott Wright

Lane Memorial Blood Bank

March 9

Paul Landaker

Pleasant Hill H.S.

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I
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Page 8

Vets counseling available
Have you ever been between
jobs and asked yourself the question, "What do I do now?"
If so, you can begin to understand the dilemma faced by a
number of veterans who are happy
to be home but aren't sure what to
do next.
Part of the problem is that
they don't understand what GI
benefits are available or how to
apply for them says Dave Roof,
director of the Veterans Counseling Center at LCC.
Since 1969, when the Veterans
Administration contracted with
LCC to provide counseling services to returning servicemen,
Roof and another counselor, Gene
Sorenson, have answered thousands of questions and spent
hours helping young men and often
widows and families of deceased
servicemen make the best use
of VA compensations.
The guidance Ce n t e r staff
stresses it is open not only
to the more than 1,000 veterans
at LCC, but to anyone seeking
-advice on veterans benefits.
Too many persons, Roof says,
wait months to get into schools
and training programs or to receive medical attention simply
because they were misinformed
or got caught up in the 'red
tape' between here and Washington, D.C. Still others even lose
benefits while waiting for a reply from the main headquarters
of the Veterans Administration.
A call or visit to the Guidance
Center could help them avoid
these tie-ups, he said.
One of the first benefits many
veterans want to use is the GI
Bill, which provides financial assistance for those returning to
school. Roof has found, however,
that few returning servicemen
are aware of the many choices
they have in selecting a school
or job training program.
Likewise, they are often confused about restrictions governing eligibility for the GI Bill.
Questions frequently asked range
from "Can I go to school parttime and still draw benefits?"
to "What happens if Ichange majors or want to drop out of school
for awhile?"
Roof said that while his staff
is happy to answer these questions, often they are asked too
late. "If only these people would
come to us before selecting an
education option, we could be of
much more help to them""
Ind iv id u a Is seeking information from the Center do not
have to be interested in attending LCC, he stressed. This is a
regional counseling center with
information about educational opportunities available throughout
Oregon.
Roof commented that one of
the most rewarding aspects of
his job is helping veterans get
started toward a career through
the college vocational programs.
Many of these people, he said,
have bad memories of high school
and feel they could not succeed
in a college. "But we take them
around to vocational classes and
let the instructors and students

Library offers
copies of bills
Copies of bills currently before the Oregon State Legislature are now available at the
c i r cu 1at ion desk in the LCC
library.
House bills and Senate bills
are filed separately in looseleaf binders, which are kept up
to date.
N o t i c e of coming p u b 1i c
h e a r in gs on various bills is
available on the bulletin board
in the Student Senate Office, second floor of the Center Building.

at

Lee· Guidelines for use of cafeteria area

show them first-hand how they
can s u cc e e d in a training program."
Although the majority of questions received by the Counseling
Center staff deal with educational.
benefits, Roof emphasized that
the Veterans Guidance Center
also helps veterans, and families
or ct e cease ct servicemen with
other p rob I e ms related to
veterans compensation .
Many veterans need medicar
attention and, through the Center, can be put in touch with
the proper authorities without
a long wait.
Likewise, another important
function of the Center is to counsel widows and families of deceased servicemen who are
e 1i g i b I e for training programs
and other benefits. Roof commented that many of these people
never receive these benefits because they did not know they
were eligible for them.
"That's why the Veterans
Counseling Center is here," Roof
repeated, "to speed up the process of obtaining benefits and to
provide whatever other services
we can to veterans and their dependents."

released by Student Activities Office
Official guidelines for use of
the Food Services foyers area
on the first floor of the Center
Building were adopted last week
by the Student Activities Office.
Both on-campus and off-campus
organizations, according to the
guidelines, will be allowed to use
the foyer area for the display and
distribution of printed material.
The Food Services foyer area
is defined as the uncarpeted area
between the cafeteria and the
restaurant. All other areas of
the Food Services complex are
under the jurisdiction of Food
Services Director Merlin Ames .•
On-campus organlzations
(those ho 1ct in g Student Body
charters) will be permitted to
use the foyer are a without
ch a r g e, providing representatives - contact either Student Activities Director Betty Ekstrom
or Student Publicity Director
Mark Parrish and inform that
person of the purpose for which
the area is wanted, dates and
times desired, and provide sampies of materials to be displayed or distributed.

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

All organizations and departments will be given their requested dates and time whenever possible. No more than
four separate organizations or
departments, however, may be
scheduled at any one t i me .
Scheduling of the foyer area will
be considered on a "first come,
first served" basis.
In addition, use of the facility
will be limited to three consecutive days unless express
consent is received from Ekstrom or Parrish. A. minimum of
two weeks must elapse before

an organization or department
may reschedule the use of the
foyer.
Off-campus groups wishing to
use the foyer area will follow
the same basic guidelines outlined for on-campus organizations. Non-academic groups,
however, will be charged an "appropriate fee" as established by
the LCC Board of Education last
year.
Preference of scheduling will
be given to on-campus organizations and department.

CCOILILIECGIE Silll))IE IllNN
Student Lunch Special
TUES. - FRI.

Cold Roast Beef or Ham & Cheese
with Potato Salad and Beer
746-9302

$1.00

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Owens refuses to appoint

Tegger named 'emergency successor'
An LCC instructor has been governor (or his successor).
named as an "emergency interThose named as successors
im successor" to an Oregon Re- must be of the same party as
presentative, a former LCC staff the legislator appointing them,
member who is also a Represen- and are to follow the progress
tative has refused to name any of proposed bills and be informsuch successors.
ed of legislative procedures. In
Oregon law provides that each addition, they are to keep in conlegislator name within 30 days tact with the person who appointed
after taking office no less than them and with the Secretary of
three and no more than seven State.
emergency successors. The sucA rt Tegger, LCC Language
cessors would serve in the legisArts
instructor, has been named
lator's post in case of a disastrous enemy attack on the U.S. as an emergency successor to
In the case of such a national state Representative Nancie Faemergency the legislator or his deley (D-Eugene).
successors would gather promptAsked n1s reaction to this aply at a place designated by the P o int m en t , Tegger quipped:

"Considering the false emergency warning sent out by NORAD
(Saturday, Feb. 20), I might have
been a Representative fdr 2 O
minutes and not have known it."
"Seriously," he continued, "it
is an honor to be considered for
this post by so promising a legislator as Nancie Fadeley."
Representative LeRoy Owens
(D-Eugene) failed to name his
required successors, and they
must now be appointed by the
Lane County Board of Commissioners.
"I very intentionally didn't
make the appointments," Owens
said, "because the whole thing
is ridiculous." The law is predicated, he said, on the probability that ''my emergency successors would somehow miraculously escape the holocaust and
also miraculously have something to administer." Such an
assumption, he argues, is "ridiculous and utterly stupid."
The prospect of having an
operating governmental structure following an all-out nuclear attack are "fantastically
remote," he said.

A loolc around
the campuses

ART TEGGER

Gligoric to plaY- area chessmen
in simultaneous match at LCC

by Bill Bauguess
Left handed compliment of the
year comes from a letter printed in the Feb. 26 issues of the
Augur.
The letter, signed by Rick
Hillman of the Bullfrog Information Service, is a report on
the Grateful Dead fund-raising
concert held at LCC. The bulk
of the letter gives a breakdown
of the money raised at the concert and the amounts received
by different organizations.
The last paragraph goes like
this:
''I would like to extend special thanks to KZEL who helped get the word out and to the
administration of Lane Community College whose help was
up and beyond anything I've ever
seen from an establishment institution.''

Page 9

LCC awarded $1 million
.

in financial aid monies

Federal financial aids awards creased aid approval. The Ofto LCC for the coming fiscal fice of Education was most imyear will exceed $1 million.
pressed with bCC's large and
The amount of approved aid highly efficient counseling staff,
monies was revealed last week she added.
Most of the announced aid coby LCC Financial Aids Director Frances Howard.
The vers National Defense Educa$1 million figure, termed ''a tion Act (NDEA) loans, Office of
significant increase to students" Education grants, and the Work
by Mrs. Howard, is more than Study Program. Law enforcetwice the 1970-71 approved ment and nursing approvals are'
federal outlay.
also included in the $1 million
Mrs. Howard said notification figure, however.
of the increase was received by
the Financial Aids Office from
Reminder
the Seattle regional headquarters
All libra.ry materials are due
of the Federal Office of Education, a division of the Depart- prior to finals week, which bement of Health, Education and gins March 15.
Welfare.
DRAFT
The fund s notification was
accompanied by a ''letter of
ELIGIBLE?
commendation" from the Office
of Education Se at t I e regional
If you have a pending .
Director, Ed Baseheart.
Classification
Baseheart commended LCC for
and
'' extended help to minorities and
disadvantaged students."
substandard solutions
Mrs. Howard explained that
pertaining to the Draft,
approval of federal funds is a
"merit situation," with monies
Counseling and referral
allocated totally on a reward
Services are available
system. The more efficient and
in Room 234 Center
capable the school's aid system,
the more money awarded to it by
Week-days
the government.
Mrs. Howard pointed to LCC's
Study Skills Center, Tutorial Serfrom 2:00 to 3:00
vices, and the prominent recruitment of the disadvantaged as
primary factors in LCC's in-

'
Viking Janitorial Service
Professional ianitorial and rug cleaning

688-3235

Olav Moxness
246 Hollyveiw Ave.

EUGENE

Charter Flights

Svetozar G 1i go r i c, Interna- winners and losers playing
tional Grand Master of chess, losers. Three rounds are
will take on up to 60 opponents .scheduled for Saturday and two
at LCC this Friday--and he will Sunday. Registration is at
play all of them at once.
8:00 a.m. and play beings at 9:00.
The Y ugoslavian expert,
Entry fee for the Open is $5
***
From STEPHENS LIFE, sturanked among the world's best plus an Oregon Chess Federaplayers, will play a simultaneous tion membership card, available dent newspaper of Stephens Colmatch March 5 in the LCC cafe- for $4 a year to adults and $3 lege, in Columbia, Missouri,
teria.
Registration begins at a year to persons under 21. comes a look at the University
Trophies and prize money will of Maryland.
as
7:30 p.m., with play scheduled
It seems the editors of ARto begin at 8:00. '
be awarded to winners of the
GUS, the University of MaryThose wishing to challenge the Eugene Open.
Advance registration fees may land literary magazine, have fiGrand Master should bring their
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
own chess sets and boards, and be sent to Jerry Weikel, tourna- led suit against the Comptroller,
Phone: 345-6835
Richard Stamp
will pay a $5.00 per board entry ment director of the Open and President, Chancellor and DiEugene, Oregon
3008
Willamette
Apt.
1
rector
of
Procurement
of
their
president
of
LCC's
Knights
and
fee.
The exhibition is open to the Casteles chess club, at 1665 Oak University for refusing funds to
OR WRITE
the magazine after it made atPatch Rd., No. 126, Eugene.
public free of charge.
West
Charters
Phone: 226-3566
tempts to publish the winner of
Gligoric's appearance is one
310
Corbett
Building
Portland,
Oregon
''creative
pronography
cona
of two chess events planned for Retirement class
test."
this weekend. Also scheduled is
the annual Eugene Open Chess
begins March 3
Meet on Saturday and Sunday,
March 6 and 7, in the Erb Me"Looking Ahead to Retiremorial Union at the University
ment" - a class designed for perof Oregon.
The five-round Swiss system sons planning to retire within 10
with a time limit will be used years - will begin Wednesday,
in the Open, with winners playing March 3, in Springfield.
Price includes:
The class , co-sponsored by
LCC and the Springfield Public
Degree applications
Library, will cover such topics
as financial and legal planning,
due from students
second careers, housing, health
All LCC students completing care, education and social ada program in June, 1971, who are
justment.
eligible for a degree, certificate
The IO-week class will be held
or diploma must fill out an ap- Wednesdays between 7 p.m. and
plication for the degree as soon 9:30 p.m. in the meeting room of
as possible.
the Springfield Public Library,
In no program is a degree
320 North A. St.
certificate, or diploma issued
James Merrit, formerly asso·,
automatically. Students should ciated with the Oregon State Proapply through Jeanie Snyder in gram on Aging, and Charles Dean
Inquire:
the Student Records Office, se- of the University of Oregon's
343-9291
cond floor of the Center Building. division of continuing education
Students who are uncertain will be the instruc.tors.
1000 Patterson St.
N o p r e - r e g i st r a t i o n is
whether they qualify for a degree
V
c e rt if i c ate or diploma should required for the class and there
Ask about our other prices!
check their status with the Stu- will be no fees. Persons may
dent Records Office. , 1
1
r ,
e.nroll at the fir?t c-lass s,es::don. • - - - - - - •
. •. •••- .- ~
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for $137 .00 per month

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Page

~o

Springfield -Jocks still at top in intramural race

by Dave Harding

The top - ranked Springfield
Jocks continued to show their
asesome prowess over the rest
of the intramural basketball league as they ran up a record 99
points in their only game Tuesday, Feb. 23. The win raised
their unbeaten string to six.
With three games to go, the
Jocks need only one win to land
a tournament spot, and for them,
that should be as difficult as
UCLA getting by Mohawk High
School.
As for their hopes of a perfect season, there is one more
roadblock in the way, and that
will be presented by Bishop's
Popes today (Tuesday) at 4 p.m.
The Popes (6-1) pose the only
serious thr(;)at to the Jocks, and
Tuesday's game could very well
be ' 'the game of the year.''
There's a reported $35 riding
on the outcome--and that alone
will provide enough impetus for
a thrilling game.
For the Jocks, coach Dave

Intramural results
Leading scorers

Standings

L.

L
2.
3.
4.
5.

Trukositz
Goss
May
Lindsay
Bishop

7.
8.
9.
10.

Holland
Wier
Axelson
Huston

Weaklings
Popes
Jocks
Yo-Yo's
Popes
Panthers
The Team
Jocks
Panthers
Tramps

6. Reffstrup

21.6

19.7
19.5
18.1
17.9
17.8

17.0
15.1
15.0

14.8

Their latest triumph was a 71-44
pasting of the Plug Nichols last
Thursday, Feb. 25.
Dick Newell led the winners
with 17 points, while Sackett,
Dick Bartsch, and Don Riggs had
16, 16, and 15 points respectively.
Like the Jocks, the Popes and
Stuffers need to win only one of
their remaining three games to
grab one of the four tournament
spots.
The battle for the last tournament spot will be between The
Team and the Yo-Yo's. The Team
has the edge with a 5-2 mark,
while the Yo-Yo's are a game behind. The Yo-Yo's also have a
nice season ending date with the
Jocks confronting them.
As for the rest of the league ..
wel~ 1 that's the way it goes. For
them, their wins will be used
to uphold self-respect arr:! nothing
else.
The Panthers, with two wins,
lost their third game last Tuesday to the Popes, 76-52. While
Ron Goss, Tim Bishop, and Terry
McCleary were ripping the nets,
Ken Reffstrup and Tom Axelson
were the only Panthers in double
figures, with 12 points each.
After winning their first game
of the seasons, the Weaklings
became sad owners of their fifth
0 straight loss last Thursday, a
1 57-52 verdict for The Team.
1
A Ith o ugh the Weaklings had
2 three men in double figures, led
3 by Rich Trukositz's IB;Gary Hol3 land and Jim Hardy more than
5 made up the difference with 37
5 points between them.
6
The Tramps broke out of a
7 five-game 1o sing streak last

Harding is expected to throw up
his devastating half-court press,
led by his big front line of Rick
Wier, Everett May, and Bob Barley. But the one who really makes
it go is the man in the middle,
Ken Boettcher.
Whether the Jocks will use a
zone or a man-to-man defense
will not be known until game
time. The Popes have Tim
Bishop, one of the best drivers
in the league. Terry McCleary is
an outstanding leaper under the
boards, and Ron Goss is a consistent outside shooter.
While most of the attention circles around the Jocks and Popes,
one of the biggest surprises of
the year is the Faculty Stuffers.
They must not have gotten the
word, but they were supposed to
be old men who couldn't run up
and down the floor more than
twice. But, after their opening
season loss to the Jocks four
weeks ago, coach Fred Sackett's
Stuff e rs h ave reeled off six
straight wins, including a 66-64
victory over the Popes last week.

Springfield Jocks
Faculty Stuffers
Bishops Popes
The Team
Yo-Yo's
Parks Panthers
Weikel's Weaklings
Trumbull's Tramps
Plug Nichols
Purscellys Pumpers

6
6
6
5
4
2
1
1
1
1

The Springfield Jocks support
the only unbeaten record in
Lane ' s intramural basketball
program. Carrying a 6-0 mark,
the Jocks have made a mockery
out of the rest of the league.
Head coach Dave Harding devised a devastating half-court
press, a sticky 2-1-2 zone defense, and a fine recruiting system to make the Jocks what they
are today.
Harding's philosophy is not
only to win, but to pour it on
whenever possible.
Leading the Jocks in scoring
is 6'3" forward Everett May.
May, who was a part-time starter on Lane's varsity squad of a
year ago. is ave raging 19. 5 points
per game. In his last two encounters the big Jock has scored
27 and 31 points respectively to
leap into contention for the league's scoring title.
Rick Wier, a 6'4" center, is
the Jocks' second leading scorer
and the leading rebounder. The
transfer from Treasure Valley
is averaging 15.2 points per game
despite being hampered by a se-

vere cut on his shooting hand.
But it is Wier's board work and
defensive play that have kept the
Jocks together.
The most consistent Jock is
guard Ken Boettcher. Boettcher
is t he t e am ' s captain, field
genera 1, and the top defensive
player in the league. A standout
athlete at Springfield High, the
slick guard comes to the Jocks
after starting on last year's Titan squad. Boettcher is averaging 14.0 points a game, but his
nifty ball control, unselfish team
play, and tenacious defense are
his greatest assets to the team.
Rounding out the Jocks starting five are 6' -3" forward Kevin Gallagher and 5' -10" guard
Bob Barley. Gallagher is the
team's third leading rebounder,
and Barley is the team's fourth
leading scorer. But it is their
mobility, defensive play, and
hustle that keeps them on the
starting five of, perhaps, the
finest all-around basketball team
in intramural history.
Sixfoot, four-inch Bernie Conklin and coach Harding's brother
Dennis round out the Jocks' roster. Conklin made the Jocks after only a year of Titan var-

sity ball, anrt is averaging 5.5
points per game. Harding, who
hits consistently from long range,
is averaging 7.2 points a game.
As a t e an , the Jo c ks are
averagin 75.0 point a game while
their stingy defense is allowing
41.3 points a contest.
The free wheeling Jocks have
only three regular season games
left before the tournament which
will decide Lane's intramural
champs.
Today, March 2, the Jocks
meet Bishop's Popes at 4 p.m.
in what looks like the Jocks'
toughest game of the season.
The Popes sport a 6-1 record and are convinced that they
can knock off the high-riding
Jocks. But the Springfield Jocks
will have to experience it to
believe it.

I _

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30 minutes

LCC-TV
NEWS

Lane women
by Louise Stucky

Oregon College of Education
downed Lane's women's basketball team 43-35 Wednesday,
Feb. 23.
OCE jumped into a big lead
in the first quarter, but Lane
came back to end the first half
only three points behind.
The Lane women just couldn't
The other returning letterman, get anything to work on their op- Smith, has a best time of 10:00 ponents. The Titans tried a new
offensive pattern they had been
in the two-mile distance.
Leading the field events are working on in practice, but soon
George Slay in the discus, jave- went back to their old style of
lin and shot. Tom Cooley should play. On defense they attempted
be very strong all season in the a press to force OCE to make
high jump and has a good chance mistakes, but the Monmouth women auickly recovered and caat the regionals.
The loss of 16 lettermen from pitalized on Lane's mistakes.
Several times Lane, narrowed
last year's team has Coach Al
Tarpenning a little nervous, but the gap but was never able to
he feels that if the freshmen come overcome OCE.
Francie Behm was voted the
along during the season the Tigame's
outstanding Lane player.
tans could be very tough.
The season begins at LCC with Francie did an outstanding job
a three-way meet between the of gathering in the rebounds. She
Oregon Track Club, Portland making almost 50% of the Lane
- Track Club and the Titans on defensive rebounds and 40% of
the offensive rebounds.
April 3..
_
.~ '
..
••••••• ! • t • • •

only 4 lettermen return
Lacking experienced personnel, Titan track title hopes rest
on a group of untried freshman.
LCC's only returning lettermen are John Mays of Lincoln
High, Portland; Ken Nickell of
Thurston; Gaylen Littlejohn of
Sheldon; and Godwyn Smith of
Giana.
Mays was the Community Colle g e Champion in the 100 and
220-yard dashes last year. Nickell is LCC's leading candidate
in the 440, with Jim Brannon of
Jefferson close behind. Gaylen
Littlejohn is leading runner in
the mile and was very strong
in last year's conference meet.

J

jHAMBURGER -DAN'57

OCE team dumps

Tracie men prepare for opener;

by John Norris

they belonged on the bottom of the
ten-team circuit.
In a game that was about as
exciting as one of the Jock's
du 11 e r practice sessions, the
Pumpers gave away about 30
points to the Jocks, and their
'' Automatic" press.
Towards the end of the game
when the Pumpers were vainly
trying to keep the Joc_ks away
from the century mark, they
couldn't even stall, as they had
the ball stolen or intercepted
several times for quick twopointers.
But the Jocks are only human,
and a turnover of their own,
with only 55 second showing on
the clock, cost them the 100point record.

'r1w;:::a~,,,;y:,,;,,4Â¥gjp/~'.'.""~

Jocks: 'finest in intramural history'
by Bob Barley

Thursday, winning their first of
the season. Their 78-70 victory
over the cellar-dwelling Pumpers was paced by the 32 points
of B ob Huston, and 18 fr om
Dan Kane.
The Plug Nichols lowered their
mark to 1-6 last Thursday, bowing
to the Stuffers 71-44. Buzz Fredrick's 24 points led the losers.
With a 1-7 record, Purscelly's
Pumpers showed everyone why
they belonged in last place with
two more losses.
On Thursday, Bill Purscelly,
Bob Purscelly, and Ray Meduna
combined for 50 points--but they
still dropped a 78-70 verdict to
the then winless Tramps.
But it was last Tuesday's 99-41
loss to the Jocks that proved why

\

r

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111

Page 11

Tita·ns lose tourriofflent game· tO JUdson .

by Dave Harding

Just when Irv Roth and his
Titans had all the momentum
going for them--two straight
wins over Umpqua Community
College to gain a spot in the
OCCAA tournament--any hopes
of advancing to the regional playoffs went up in flames last Friday night, Feb. 26, when a lastsecond shot found its mark.
With the score tied 77-77 and
two seconds showing on the clock,
Judson Baptist's Tim Collins put
up a hurried jump shot that ripped
through the net a split second
a ft e r the final b u z z e r had
sounded.
Collins' bucket gave ;Judson a
79-77 victory over the Titans in
the first game of the OCCAA
playoffs at Mt. Hood Community
College.

Earlier in the season Lane
dealt Judson a 98-68 defeat in
Eugene.
"It was a helpless feeling,"
Roth said. '' The ball was still
in the air when the gun sounded
and all we could do was stand
there and watch it go in."
Although the Titans didn't play
well, some of the blame can be
laid on Lane's last week of basketball.
"We played five games in eight
days and I think we were a little
tired," Roth said. "We got off
to a slow start and fell behind
by 13 points (51-38) early in the
second half. But we came back
and could have won the game."
The Tit ans ' comeback was
sparked by the hot shooting of
Willie Jones and Greg Taylor.
In a five-minute stretch the duo
poured in 14 points to give Lane

a 58-57 edge.
The lead went up to seven
points before Judson pumped in
nine straight points to take a
75-73 lead. After an exchange of
buckets, Dave King put the Titans
into a 77-77 tie, setting the stage
for Collins' desperation shot.
Just two weeks ago, the Titans'
chances at a tournament berth .
were very slim, and, if it hadn't
been for Southwestern Oregon
and Central Oregon community
co 11 e g es, Lane wouldn't have
made it.
In the last week of the regular
season, the Titans were in third
place, trailing Umpqua by two
games.
With a 10-2 record, Umpqua
needed only to win one of its
remaining three games to grab
a tourney spot, and no matter
how the Titans did they would
be through.
With the remaining scheduled
games, Umpqua had the toughest
part, facing the Southern Division
champions ofSWOCC, the number
one scoring team--Central Oregon (99.0); and the Titans--and
all three games were on the road.
And that made it too much for
the Timberwolves.
They got
dumped by SWOCC 98-86, and
Central Oregon blasted them at
Bend 88-59 to set the stage for
the finale at Lane.

'
In the meantime, Lane dealt
Umpqua stretched their Head
Linn-Benton a 96-79 loss, and to 56-45 with only 14 minutes left
then lost a heartbreaking 88-81 in the game, but Lane's offense
game to SWOCC, which finished suddenly came back to life.
the regular season with a 14-1
As the Titans were battling
back, Greg Taylor hit two conmark.
Trailing by one game, the Ti- secutive thirty footers, and
tans needed a win over the visiting suddenly the Titans trailed by
Timbe rwol ves in the s e as on one, 61-60. After an Ump qua
finale to force a playoff.
basket, Steve Woodruff scored
eight straight points to give Lane
And they did just that.
From the start, the game was a 68-63 edge.
Umpqua regained the lead, and
never in doubt.
With 18:21 left in the first half, it took two free throws by Willie
Greg Taylor's 15-foot jumper Jones and Woodruff to give the
put the Titans out in front 4-3, Titans the win and a shorttournaand after that they never trailed. ment trip.
-----As the game progressed, the
Timberwolves never got closer
than eight points.
The Titans played a tight manto-man defense, and Willie Jones
was checking everything in sight.
The sky-jumping center also controlled both backboards. When
the final buzzer sounded, Lane
had an 88-77 win, and a onegame playoff the next night at
SWOCC to determine the other
Southern Division representative
in the tournament.
That game was a bit different,
however, and it took clutch free
throw shooting to get the win.
Trailing throughout most of the
game, the Titans converted 22 of
27 foul shots, including 16 of 20
in the second half, to come from
behind and dump the Timberwolves 76-73.
Trailing 36-30 at halftime, the
WILLIE JONES
Titans hit a cold spell at the
Willie
Jones, Lane's leading
start of the second half, and for
a while it looked like their sea- scorer with an average of 20
points a game, was named to the
son might be over.
OCCAA all-star team and was
barely edged out by SWOCC's
Mike Rose as the league's most
Ski trip planned
valuable player.
Jones led the league in reLCC's Ski Club is planning an
overnight trip to Mt. Bachelor bounding, averaging 15 caroms
a game, and set a league reMarch 6 and 7.
Those wishing to participate cord of 30 rebounds in one game.
The 6'2" center was' instrumay sign up at the information
desk on the second floor of the mental in leading the Titans to
a 17-6 season record and fourth
Center Building.
For more information, call place in the OCCAA for the best
season in the school's history.
746-8072.

Jones honored

VOLVO - SAAB
Sales. & Service

"Euaene' 1 Swedish Car Center''

1601

TITANS POSE FOR TEAM PICTURE. The LCC
basketball team has just finished its ''best year
ever." Pictured are (back row, 1. to r.) Head
Coach Irv Roth, Denny Nesbitt (20), Dave Gib. son (40), Terry Mathey (42), Dave King (44),

Greg Taylor (24) and Manager Rod Evers. (Front
row) Dave King (32), Dan Haxby (10), Steve Woodruff (22), Steve Armitage (12), Paul Stoppel (15)
and John Youngquist (30) .

Enthusiastic fans make quite a difference ·
by Bill Hirning
What effect does support have
on an athletics team?
Coaches will generally concede they would rather play a
close game on their home ground
where the fans often make the
difference between a defeat and
victory. The sound of a great
cheer when points are made acts
as a stimulus, activating a psychological drive to continue.
Even the "chi 1dish" yells
("hit'em again, hit'em again,
harder, harder") have an effect
on the team.
When the team gets a cold
streak the crowd can, at times,
change the tide of the contest.
The crowd lets the team know it
is not alone in the struggle for
victory, and the team may bounce
back.
Lane's basketball team was
considered one of the best in the
state early in the season, a distinction that LCC fans seemed
to care less about than the lunch
menu in the cafeteria.

It seemed to make no difference
whether the team was at home or
away. The response was the
same--very small.
The Titans' home crowd was
often outnumbered by opposing
fans. At away games, no one
bothered to show up at all.
Why was there such an apathy
among students at Lane? The
answer to that question seems to
be another question. Why are
LCC students so apathetic about
nearly everything? Why does
only 20% of the students vote on
Senate elections?
The "apathy" of more than
5,000 students cannot help but
creep into the community. Has
it already? With each new athletic proposal at Lane, cries
can be heard from the citizenry
of the community:
"Is this
necessary?" and "Our money
is being wasted!"
Perhaps if more support for
Lane's athletic programs is not
shown, they are right. Despite

some popular opinions, athletics
are not a means to benefit only
the few participants, but should
benefit the majority of the school.
The reason competitive sports
are in such abundance today is
the number of spectators who
enjoy watching. For some reason LCC has very few who like
to watch.
For those who would like to
see football at Lane, there is a
terrific obstacle to overcome-the budget. It is hard for the
taxpayers to justify additional
expenses, "even in athletics,,,
unless some of the students, at
least, benefit.
There is a question as to the
justification of asking taxpayers •
to pay for football when it has
all the earmarks of being a
"pig in a poke." If the trend
of Lane's athletic spectators
holds "true to form," football
is unthinkable, and would be a
big waste of time and much
needed money.

w.

7th

Sheppard Motors 343-1114

Page 12

Arts conference slated
by Jon Haterius

I

the Forum Theatre.
I admit I'm a little envious
On Saturday morning the LCC
'' All the arts: fundamentals for Baroque Orchestra, directed by of all the long hair I see on
living" will be the theme for the Nathan Cammack, will present campus, but I reconcile myself
"A Great Way to Start the Day!" to the fact that the wearer's
first '' Arts in Oregon AssociaTheir performance will be fol- day will come, and the place
tion" meeting to be held at LCC.
Some 300 t e a c he rs in art, lowed by a panel discussion with where the hair now grows may
Dr. McFee and Dr. Kensler on some day play a most ignominidance, music, drama, and the
"humanities" will meet at Lane "The Renaissance Man and the ous role as did my balding dome
one day last summer.
March 5 and 6 in a symposium Renaissance Woman."
Following the panel discussion,
on qualitative arts education in
In the beginning I was both
Oregon. Participants will come the educators will listen to speakfrom grade schools, high schools, er's talk on such subjects as blessed and cursed with hair.
community colleges and univer- "The Poet in the School ""Cre- Blessed that it was thick and
ative Drama and All the Arts," luxurious--cursed that it was
sities.
"Utilization of Television for the wild and unmanageable. Combing
The symposium is billed as
it was a lost cause, and I sol"twenty-four hours of concentra- Arts," "The Elderly in the Theved the problem by having it
ted study, fun and feasting," with atre for the Elderly," "Art in
clipped. It didn't matter that my
the goal of bringing aesthetics ed- the World Around Us," and a refriends called me skin-head, that
ucation into every classroom of port about progress in the Edgewood School's IMPACT(Interdis- was better than being called a
each school in all communities.
Mad Turk. For some reasons that
Chairmen for the symposium ciplinary Model Program of Arts
I
can't remember now, I didn't
for
Children
and Teachers) proare Gene Aitkin, LCC Performing
like being called a Turk, much
Arts instructor, and Dr. Gordon gram.
After lunch, the teachers and less a mad one.
Kensler, Community Art Studies,
administrators of the humanities
University of Oregon.
However, biology works in a
Friday's symposium will open in Oregon will attend ''Isn't Life mysterious way. A petite redwith a concert by the LCC Stage Just One Melodrama After An- head conned me into letting it
Band, directed by Gene Airken. other?" an improvisation pre- grow. It grew thick and wild,
The performance of the Stage sented by LCC actors and dir- but it was nice work letting the
Band will be followed by a panel ected by Ed Ragozzino, LCC Per- redhead tame it. She had her
discussion on "The Need for Ae- forming Arts Chairman.
problems, though. Combs broke.
Later Saturday, the teachers Sta Comb, greasy as axel grease,
sthetics Education" by wellknown Oregon art teachers Dr. and administrators will t o u r failed to hold it in its appointed
June Mc Fee and Dr. Gordon Ken- LCC, the new Eugene Mall, the place; but, in time, the wild hair
sler of the University of Oregon U of O Museum of Art, Maude finally succumbed to the tenaArt Department. other teachers Kerns Art Center, and other city of the redhead. It lay tame
will take part in this '' round art galleries in Eugene.
and docile to her will. The days
This first "Arts in Oregon" of being a Mad Turk and a skintable" discussion group. Later
on Friday afternoon, the human- symposium will try to discover head were behind.
ities educators will break up into more relevant ways of making the
However, the mortality rate on
eight smaller groups to discuss humanities a part of life for thou- combs remained high, and llookways of starting to bring art sands of students from grade ed forward to the day when my
education to all levels of educa- school through university and hair would thin and I could
pull
college level in Oregon.
tion.
a comb through it with ease. I
More information about the
Friday evening, the educators
even expected that one day I
will see the premiere of "Fes- arts symposium may be obtained would
become bald, but never
tival of the Artichoke," LCC's from Gene Aitkin, LCC Perform- thought it would come
like a
first totally student-produced and ing Arts Department, 747-4501, thief in the night. I thought it
d!rected theatre presentation, in ext. 318.
would come with a gradually
rising hair line on the forehead.
I'd heard that this was a sign
of an intellectual, and there is
certainly nothing wrong with beTo inquire about jobs, contact the Placement Office, 747-4501, ing an intellectual. Each morning
extension 227.
I peerep into the mirror, searchStudents having Crater Lake appointments. A reminder that ing for a sign of growing intelthe recruiter will be here Thursday, March 4, 1971 and Saturday, lectuality. One morning as I ran
my hand over my hair I felt a
March 6, 1971.
"Ttie Marine Corp will be on campus Wednesday, March 3, 1971 bare spot. I was horror stricken,
in the Center Building. Check with the Placement Office for fur- and then crestfallen that nature
had played such a sneaky trick.
ther information.
With the aid of a second mirror
- -- - - - - - - - - -PART TIME/FEMALE: Young wage would be $1.40 per hour I viewed the spot. There was no
lady for babysitting. ·Must have plus $1 per massage. Hours: doubt about it - I was bald, and
own transportation. Would have
Friday evenings plus Saturdays I was not an intellectual. For
to be students wife or night stu- to start.
days I walked in shadowed valdent. Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
PART TIME/FEMALE: Young leys of self-pity. Then I rememlady or young man to aid in pre- bered hearing that a person who
PART TIME/FEMALE: Young paring lunches and dinners in grew bald in back was considerlady for waitress. Hours: Several restaurant. Hours: 8 a.m. ed to be a great lover. Now there
evenings weekly and weekends. to 2 p.m. Pay: $1.25 per hour is nothing the matter with being
Should be almost 21 years of age.
a great lover; I though it might
Pay: $1.50 per hour plus tips PART TIME/FEMALE: Young even be fun. I mentioned this to
lady to live in. Babysit nights.
PART TIME/MALE: Young man Every other week end off. Pay: the Sprout. She went into convu Is ions . When she regained
for trainee in massage. Would $60 mo. plus room and board.
c
om po s u re she said, "Pet,
prefer someone with physio-the- PART TIME/FEMALE: Babya great lover you are not."
rapy background but not neces- sitter needed from 8 a.m. to
I shrugged my shoulders. So-sary. While training wage would 3 p.m. Would have to be students
be $1.40 per hour. After trained wife or night student. Salary open who cares. I'm not an intellec-

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I

Life's· observation

FOR SALE: 1968 Ford pickup- FOR SALE: 1960 Volkswagen
3/4 ton. Excellent condition. Low van, full size bed in rear. Phone:
mileage, canopy, heavy duty bum- 742-3062 and make offer.
per, etc. Price $1799 or cash offer. Phone 747-4501 ext. 333, WANTED: Two-three bedroom
rental beginning late May. PreFOR SALE:
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Data Processing. Computer Programming, and Key Punch taught
PERSON~Lil.ED, IN EXP EN by professionals: Virtually unSIVE, INCOME TAX SERVICE.
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Phone:
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dators. At 4100 Main St. SpringIt pays!
field. Phone: 747-5051

by Mark-

tual. I'm not a great lover. One
can't be everything, you know.
The n it happened--one morning
as I was viewing the growing
bald spot for the umpty-umpth
time, its halo-like appearance
struck me. The white hair gave
me a saintly look. By golly, I'd
be a saint. A saint is so much
more noble. I mentioned this to
the Sprout and she said, '' Pet,
you do have a few saintly qualities, like soaking your teeth and
showering once a day, and carrying out the garbage, and since
your' re not a great lover, you
might qualify for being a saint."
You've no idea what it's like

to be a saint--the overwhelming
benevolence of sainthood-- the
burning compassion. I looked upon the world with tolerance and
forgiveness. I could forgive anything. Anything?

The Sprout and I went to see
''Hello Dolly" last summer, and
seating ourselves ju s t before
curtain time, I smoothed the
locks of hair around my halo-after all a saint should look his
best in public--wben a lone fly
zoomed out of nowhere and skidded to a six point landing. A
dizzy, gum-popping dame in back
giggled and said, "Look Mabel,
a fly's skating rink."

Guaranteed Occupational Training

Young Men and Women can now select the Occupational Area
of their choice upon enlistment in the U.S. MARINE CORPS.
ADMINSTRATION, ELECTRONICS, DATA PROCESSING, MECHANICS, AVIATION ETC. VISIT OR CALL MARINE RECUITER: 1111 Willamette, Eugene. 342-5141 ext. 206.

Monte's Barber Shop

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L- ~:\
··._··, ~,,

Haircuts

as

you

lik-e

them

Hairstyling, razor cutting
Appointments available
Drop-ins

J ,,q~

. . . _}

~~

:~

welcome

1241 Willamette

.

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\~
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~-.

343-9563

"Across from Hamburger Hea-ven"

Spend a
KLCC Weekend
BLACK MAGIC SOUL
Every Friday
12 Midnight
Host: Donny Adair
Soul music, announcements
of and about the Black community

SATURDAY GOLD
Every Saturday

4:00 p.m.

Host: Dave Chance
Rebound Rock from 1956-1970

CONTACT
Sunday, March 7

4:00 p.m.

Hosts:
Casey and Maree Fast
This week's guest is Pat Boone

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