Damages may result in concert ban
I

I

No more rock concerts on the
LCC campus.
That was the recommendation
of ASLCC President Omar Barbarossa in a June I memo to
LCC President Eldon Schafer
following the appearance of Canned Heat on campus Sunday, May
30. It was also the recommendation of the College Facilities
staff.
The recommendations followed
assessment by College Facilities
personnel of damages to facilities
and g r o u n d resulting from the
concert.
A bill for $1,200 for cleaning
and repair was presented to the
Student Senate, sponsor of the
con c e rt, by Superintendent of
College Facilities Bill Cox.

s

Major damages include repair front door casing, they moved to
or replacement of the casing of the auxiliary gym where they
a front gym door, and sprung sprung the metal doors.
metal doors in the rear of the
The first crash attempt was
gym, damaged during one of five, held back by Security men and
"gate crashing" attempts. other students, but four others were
costly items include repair of 24 reported as partially successful.
sprinkler heads, broken by a . Warren Coverdell, 1970-71 AStruck carrying the band's equip- L CC President, said he authoment; several large burns on the rized admittance of 79 crashers
gym floor and tarps covering it; on their fifth attempt about 30
and the cost of cleanup.
minutes before the concert ended
Cox said five custodians to prevent any further damage.
worked eight hours Monday to
Attendance at the concert was
clean the gym and surrounding estimated at 2,000 to 2,500. Segrounds.
curity and custodial staff estiThe damage to doors came at mated that less than five per
approximately 9:00 p.m. when cent of those attending were LCC
an estimated 75 or more persons students.
They also said the
made the first attempt to crash crowd seemed younge~ostly
the concert. After breaking the high school age--than those who

Lane Community CC?llege

'

'

Vol. 6, No. 28

4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405

June 4, 1971

Senate says 'no' on Outreach
A request that the Student Senate express support for the LCC
budget proposal to be presented
to the voters June 29 was defeated by a 2-1 margin at the
Thursday, June 3, Sen ate meeting.
Support of the budget was not a
scheduled agenda item. The subject was introduced in ASL C C
President Om a r Barbarossa's
presidential report, in which he
asked for an expression of Senate support.
The roll-call vote on a motion
to that effect showed a majority
of the 18 Senators present did
not wish to indicate support of the
budge t-{lt least not in its entirety.
Results of the vote were 11
voting "no," five voting "yes,"
and two absteasions.
Senators voting against the motion included: Bob Gilbreath, Ron
Davis, Cherrie McMurray, Mark

Parrish, Greg Browning, Barry
Flynn, James Henning, Teena
Hughes, John Mills, Loren Rictor, and Doug Strong.
Those voting yes were Sharon
Danford, Merlin Finn, Jack Mermis, Jerry Hamaker, and John
Purkey. Paul Christensen and
Mel Wood abstained.
All but four of the Senators
voting against expressing support
of the budget did so with a qualifying statement, originally presented by Strong.
Strong told the Senate he voted
against supporting the budget with
the qualification that he did so
because he disagreed with the
outreach program included in it.
The outreach program is designed to provide college classes
for people residing in Florence,
Junction City, Cottage Grove and
Oakridge.
In commenting on the Senate's
a c ti on, LCC President Eldon
Schafer said the amount proposed

Commission revie'Ws,deni es
CONCRETE censorship rumors

Rumors that publication of
THE CONCRETE STATEMENT,
LCC's Literary-arts magazine,
had been delayed because of administrative censorship of obj e ct ion ab I e material we re
reviewed by the Media Comm ission at its meeting Thursday,
June 3 and found to be groundless. '
Administrators and advisers
and staff members of the CONCRETE STATEMENT met with
the Commission in an attempt
to clarify the situation.
Mrs. Marilyn Wanick, literary
adviser to the magazine, indicated publication of the magazine had been delayed-but not
because of administrative censorship. Materials submitted to
the publication were reviewed
by the Editorial Board, she said,
and sent to the LCC Print Shop
to be reproduced. An em;,loyee
in the print shop contacted the
magazine's advisers about the
implications of a few "potentially objectionable'' words.
The Editorial Board then reviewed the terms in question,
said Mrs. Wanick. Because of
political i mp 1i c at ions, they
sought the advice of administrators as to possible implications.
In a written reply to the re-

quest for advise, LCC President Eldon Schafer pointed out
what he felt were potentially
objectionable words and phrases
on three pages in the magazine. He added that he did not
propose to become a censor,
"but merely to point out what
may be questionable material to
some readers."
In his observations, Dr. Schafer noted that "it would be most
unfortunate for a few passages
to cause some to overlook the
overall quality of the m~ga_zine."
He also suggested brmgmg the
CONCRETE STATEMENT clearly under the Media Commission
for guidance and support.
After receiving Dr. Schafer's
reply, said Mrs. Wanick, one of
the words was removed by the
Editorial staff and the material
was sent back to the Print Shop.
Publication is scheduled for Friday, June 11.
During the Commission meeting the magazine was placed
under the guidance of the Media
Commission, as suggested by
Schafer. Staff members are current 1y considering affiliating
with an instructional department
on campus rather than remaining a club, separate from any
department.

for next year's outreach program is a "considerable increase" over this year's program. He added, however, that
the amount allotted for the program is a very small percentage
of the total college operating budget of $8 million.
In the original budget proposal this year, approximately
$151,000 was included for the
outreach program. Following defeat of the college's April 13
request for approval of funds
outside the 6% limitation, the
LCC Board of Education gave
tentative approval to cut the outreach program by $36,00, reducing the amount budgeted to
$115,000.
The reduction in the outreach
program was part of a total budget reduction of $131,900. other
cuts approved by the Board were
reduction in instructional costs
of $21,900 through hiring parttime rather than full-time staff;
cutting $10,000 from the amount
budgeted for interest costs; a
$34,000 slash in funds budgeted
for matching federal financial aid
grants; and removing $15,000
from Flight Technology funds
held in reserve for the purchase of an additional plane.
An additional $15,000 income expected from the NABS project
completed the total reduction in
funds to be asked from voters.
These reductions would result in a tax rate of $1.83 per
$1,000 of true cash value, as
compared with the $1.90proposed
in the earlier election. The
Board indicated further cuts may
be made before the budget proposal i s submitted to voters.

Returning students
must reserve spot
for Fall Term
Students who are planning to
return to LCC next fall, but who
are not presently taking courses
in their majors, are urged by
college Registrar Bob Marshall
to notify the Registrar's office
of their intentions.
Marshall said this action is
necessary to assure returning
students a place in their programs. He added that if students
do not fill out the Registrar's
form, they may find their programs occupied by out-of-state,
out-of-dic;trict and new stu<ients.

attended the Grateful Dead concert in January, which resulted
in similar damages to facilities.
The Canned Heat concert was
part of a series designed to raise
$6,000 for aproposed scholarship
fund for next year.
The last concert---Iron Butterfly, scheduled for May 19---was
canceled by the rock group because they were dissatisfied with
facilities provided at the Eugene
Speedway. The group was not
allowed to appear on campus because of fears it would result in
precisely what happened at the
Canned Heat concert.
Canned Heat was allowed a
campus appearance because it
was felt that group would attract
a more conservative audience.
The Senate is currently underwriting some $1,900 in refunds
for the Butterfly concert while
it is engaged in a legal dispute
with the booking agency over disposition of advance sale funds.
No firm estimate is available
on the Senate's financial loss
due to the Canned Heat concert.
The bill for damages has been
forwarded to EJD Enterprises,
the concert booking agency. in

the expectation that the firm's .
liability insurance will cover it.
Ed Dougherty of EJD is currently checking the contract for
the concert to determine how
much, if any, of the costs will
be paid by his firm.
The problems of the last two
concerts raise doubts about the
future of such activities on campus. In his recommendation to
Schafer Barbarossa said, "The
prospects of any concerts being
held by ASLCC are indeed bleak."
_ He said he is "perturbed and
dissatisfied" with the events at
the concerts and that the Senate
will "tighten-up our policy regarding the sponsorship of events
using Lane's student body name."
A committee of students and
administrators will meet next
week and possibly throughout the
summer to develop guidelines for
future student use of college facilities.
Barbarossa said he also plans
to undertake a survey in the fall
to determine how many LCC students favor sponsorship of activities such as concerts and how
many of them participate.

Ron Mitchell selected

as 1971 Master Teacher
Ron Mitchell of the Soc i a 1
Science Department was selected
Thursday, June 3, as LCC's Master Teacher for 1971.
Mitchell will represent LCC
at the national Great Teacher
Seminar in Portland, Maine, this
summer. The objective of the
seminar is to identify, analyze,
and discuss teaching problems
encountered at the community
college level.
To provide a working base for
the conference, each participant
is asked to prepare papers on
teaching problems and innovative solutions to them.
When asked his reaction to
being selected Master Teacher
Mitchell replied, "I'm pleased,
especially pleased with the high
rating my students gave me."
Mitchell feels strongly that
education needs to be meaningful
and that students need real contact more than dependency on
text books.
Methods for increasing that contact may be his
choice for presentation at the
seminar.

Mitchell earned his B.A. in
. psychology at Fresno State College. Before coming to LCC,
he taught summer classes and
undergraduate labs at the University of Oregon. He has been
teaching at LCC for five years,
and this year has taught four
lecture courses and three independent study classes.
For an instructor to become
a candidate for the Master
Teacher award, he must be nominated by his students or colleagues.
Candidates are then
rated by their students and interviewed by a selection committee composed of four instructors, four students and LCC
President Eldon Schafer.
The seven other nominees for
the Master Teacher title this
year were: Carl Blood, Industrial Technology; Jim Evans,
Business; Jill Heilpern, Child
Development; Sheila Juba, Language Arts; John Klobas, Social Science; Karen Lansdowne,
Language Arts; and Monte Marshall. Industrial Technology.
•
····•· · •· ·i :·!i·.•,·.··.·.·
....
;,

i

·x .

.

"

t'

f'

Page- 2

...

TORCH1 June 4

gor•

E~e,--~

Take down11 this

euphonious t:o
tecipe ...
@~ase it, "In
_begin wit.h~
begi11t1it1g."

1;~

Senate vote 'foolhardy'
I

At its meeting Thursday, June 3, the St,udent
Senate rejected by a wide margin a re'quest
by ASLCC President Omar Barbarossa for Senate support of the LCC budget proposal scheduled
for election June 29.
A motion to express such support was defeated 11-5, with two abstensions. Most of the
Senators voting against the measure centered
their objection around · o:i.e issue--the outreach
program, which is designed to provide classes
to outlying areas of the college district.
It is unfortunate that what was intended as
an objection to a specific item within the budget
will more than likely be interpreted by the
public as lack of support for the entire budget.
As several of the Senators who voted against
support for the budget indicated later, they
were not quarreling with the fact that LCC needs
the funds which will be requested of the voters.
They would, however, like to see a rechanneling
of a specific portion of the funds from the outreach program to other areas within the budget.
What the voters will probably remember, however, is that the Senate refused to support the
budget--not WHY they refused. And the natural
reaction is '' if the students don't support it,
why should I?"
The Senate's action was unfortunate not only
because of the confusion of the outreach issue
with the issue of the budget as a whole--it
was also the result of slipshod procedure. A
budget document involving a total of over $8
million cannot be properly evaluated without
extensive, careful study. However, no advance
warning was given Senators that the issue of the
budget would be raised, which would have enabled
them to prepare for the discussion. They did
not have copies of the budget document before
them in making their decision. They were
therefore reacting on the basis of general knowledge and personal feeling.
Not only was opportunity not provided for
Senators to review the budget, and thus have
some rational basis for taking a position on the
issue, there is no indication yet what the final
budget proposal will be in the June 29 election.
Following the defeat of the April 13 request for
funds outside the 6% limitation, the LCC Board
of Education authorized cuts totaling over
$131,000--$36,000 of which was cut from the outreach program. The Board has indicated that

-.further cuts may be made before the budget is
sent to the polls. To react to a budget proposal
which is not finalized yet is, to .say the least,
premature. To react to a budget item for which
you are unable to cite the amount originally
budgeted, the items that amount covered, and the
reductions of the original amount--as several of
-the Senators were unable to do when questioned
after the meeting--is foolhardy.
•lhen,~ora
k.'eaUy, Gort ...
If the Senate wishes to take the same stand
container, I
one should
after study of the final budget proposal, it has
made en
be more
the rigbt to do so. The · outcome might be the
succinct.
earthenware
same, because the outreacb program is a sore
Nonetheless...
jug ... "
spot. And there seems to be general feeling
that funds should be used for programs at the LCC
campus rather than in outlying areas.
The issue is greatly overemphasized as far
as the amount allotted to outreach programs.
The original budget proposal for outreach of
$151,000 was reduced to $115,000, which represents
only slightly more than 1% of Lane's total operating budget of $8 million. It should also be noted
that cuts in the outreach program represent
over 25% of the total $131,000 reduction of the
budget.
Before rejecting a budget because of the
amount to be budget to outreach programs, it
must first be decided if they have any value.
Board of Education
Many students would be tempted to say no. But
The LCC Board of Education
what they forget is that this college is not
Eugene-Springfield Community College--it is will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
LANE Community College. The college district June 9, in Administration 202.
encompasses much more than the metropolitan The meeting is open to the pubarea, and the college should seek to serve all lic.
its constituents--not just the privileged few.
Summer operation set
Because of the size of Lane County, it is imKLCC-FM, Lane's radio stapossible for many in outlying areas to commute
to a central campus, and it is not practical for tion, will continue to operate on
them to relocate. Those people, however, have its regular schedule throughout
Program guides
the same right to, and need for, service as the summer.
residents of Eugene-Springfield. Tne current are available by writing the staoutreach program really is only a token offering tion. in care of the college. of the service the college should provide. And Art show
if you remove even that token, it will be terribly
An art show featuring works
difficult to justify to the entire college district of the LCC Art and Applied Detheir support through taxes of an institution sign Department i n st r u c to rs
designed for those in a limited geographic area. - opened Friday, June 4, at the
Hopefully, the public's reaction to LCC's University of Oregon Museum
proposed budget--including its outreach pro- of Art.
gram--will be more mature and thoughtful than
The show will continue through
the Senate's.
June 27.
Museum hours are
12:00 noon to 5:00 p.m. daily.

To the Editot

It seems that the Senate still
has problems deciding on when to
act as a body and when to act
as individuals. The incident which
we are referring to is the Motion
to Accept (support) the 1971-72
LCC Budget.
On June 3, 1971 the Senate
voted to NOT accept the LCC
Budget. There MAY be many reasons for . this action. We see
some possible reasons for this
action as the following:
1) Some of the AS-LCC senators qualified their vote as objecting to the Outreach Program
(during discussion of the motion it was stated that the 197071 LCC budget was defeated because of a similar attempt to
establish 'satellite campuses.'),
2) other reasons MAY have
been the raise in tuition rates,
the increase of salaries, and the
lack of what Lane students feel
are proper student supportive
services (specifically health facilities).
We fee I that the intent was
not to "cut our own throats"
but to say to the Board of Education that we, as members of
the Senate--voting as representatives of the student population-do not feel that this PARTICULAR budget will serve the
students in their best interest.
Also some students may have
felt that since no prior notice of
this pending motion was given
they could not approve of any
action 'til they had consulted
with their constituencies.
We think that if action is
desired from the entire Senate,
notice should be given to allow
time to research the total document and develop an opinion of

I do not feel grateful for that
$175. Neither do I feel entitled
to it. But as long as Tricky Dick
continues to squander my taxes
on a brutal war that I was conscripted to help wage against a
people
that I never saw, much
Soul Food Dinner
less considered my enemy, I shall
have no qualms about accepting
To the Editor:
The Black Studies Program that money, and I shall spend
at Lane Community College would it with whatever discernment
like to express it's appreciation happens to suit me at the parto the people who contributed ticular moment that I find it in
time and effort in preparing and my hand. And, might I add, that
serving the food for the "Soul any judgment I choose to exercise would be infinitely wiser than
Dinner," May 21.
Many thanks to the persons that of Melvin Laird, who would
in v o 1v e d in participating and be getting it, were not I.
As for my justification, I find
helping to bring about the symposium. A special thanks is in it extremely difficult to feel in
order for the following people: the least grateful to a generaPauling Rutledge, Lottie Smith, tion of fools who have left to my
Gloria Adams, Marge Williams, peers and I a world, which, as a
Doris Mason, Dave Hendrix, Iola direct result of their ambitious
McClay, Omar Barbarossa, Lin- greed, is bound to either fall ada Cumby, Llewellyn Parker, part, explode, or rot away within
Doris Stubbs, Penny Bertraw, Pat the span of a few short decades.
And that I might be able to exRutledge, Geraldine Grier, John
·Mays, Margaret Johnson, Mattie press my most contemptuous
Reynolds, Dorothy Russell, Cor- feelings towards those fools, I
nell Griffin, Pearlie Brown, Biil will now rebut in advance any
Curtis, Molly Van Den Burg, other such inane accusations that
D'ana Cumby, Jacqueline Cum- might arise henceforth by saying:
THANK YOU, AMERICA, YOU
by, Rhonda Sater, Merlin Ames,
Jenny Melway, Daisy Russell REALLY SHOULDN'T HAVE!
and Marge Williamson,
T. Thielsen.
Black Studies Staff
'Not grateful'

those persons whom Senators
and Executive Cabinet members
represent.
Dan Rosen
Mark Parrish
Doug Strong

To the Editor:
The other day it was my occasion to be labled an ingrate because I chose to question the infallible wisdom of my elders and
that of their gilded government.
The basis for the remark was,
typically, money.
As a veteran I receive $175
a month for attending 12 credit
hours or more of classes, on
which I find I can live quite adequately.

...we've run out
oP space.
What do you
think~ it
50

rar'?

Well...it'II
probebly

lose e lot
in the

translation.

Campus Briefs

Letters to the Editor
'senate budget vote

Never mind ... let's
go on. "First, I
cremated a
beaver. .. "

ltwouldbe

im'initely more

Last issue

This issue of the TORCH is
the last for the school year.
Publication will resume at the
beginning of Fall Term.
The TORCH office will, however, be open on Wednesdays
from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.,
beginning June 16.
Messages may be left at other
times at the Mass Communications Dept., ext. 394.

Graduation
LCC's graduation ceremonies
are slated for Saturday, June 12,
at 2:00 p.m. in the Main Gym.
A reception will follow in Center
101.

Graduation for students in the
high school completion program
is scheduled for Tuesday, June 8,
at 8:00 p.m. in Forum 301.
Summer registration
Summer term registration will
be conducted on the following
schedule:
* JUNE 7 - JUNE 18: 1-week,
2-week, first 4-week, first 6-

week, 8-week and 12-week ses,;.
sions. ( Classes begin June 21.)
* JULY 12-JULY 16: second
4-week session.
* JULY 26 - JULY 30: second
6-week session.
AUGUST 9 - AUGUST 13:
third 4-week session.

*

Final exams

Fin a I examinations are scheduled June 7 through June 11.
Starting
time for the first
P.xam of any dav has been changed
from 7:00 a.m., used in previous
terms, to 8:00 a.m. This change
requires extending the testing
period into Friday. Testing was
formerly completed by Thursday
through the use of the earlier
hour.
In keeping with these changes,
the deadline for submission of
instructors' grades has been moved from Friday of Finals Week
to 4:00 p.m. on Monday, June 14.
Evening classes (those meeting at 6:00 p.m. or later) will
have final exams during Finals
Week, but at their regularly scheduled class time. Since the
normal time allowed for a final
is two hours, instructors· needing a longer period than the regularly scheduled c 1 ass time
should contact me scheduling/
curriculum clerk (ext. 201) in
order to avoid room conflicts.
Students having more than two
finals in one day may request
from the instructor a rescheduling of the third exam.

Lane Community College

lltfl

Bill Bauguess

Editor

Richard Stamp
Associate Editor

Gary Grace
Production Manager

laVerna Bauguess
Feature Editor

Bill Hirning
Sports Editor

Hew Lipscomb
Head Photographer

Doris Norman
Business Manager

Richard Stamp
Advertising Manager

Lorena Warner
Sales Manage1

Member of National Educational Advertising Service, Oregon
Community College News Association, and Oregon Newspaper
Publishers Association.
The Torch is published weekly on Tuesdays, except holidays, examination weeks and vacation periods.
Opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily
those of the college, student government or student body. Nor
are signed articles necessarily the view of The Torch.
I

Mail or bring all correspondence to : The Torch, Center
206, Lane Community College, 4000 E. 30th Avenue, Eugene,
Oregon. 97405. Telephone 747-4501 Ext. 234.

.TORCH, 1 June 4

by Richard Stamp
Public hearings are usually
noted for their emotionalism and
heated debate. Exceptions to the
rule seem to be a rarity-especially when the hearings deal
with such delicate subjects as
the rights and responsibilities of
individuals on a college campus.
Nevertheless, the public hearing held Thursday, June 3, by
LCC's Bill of Rights Committee
was a rarity. Unlike most public
hearings, there were no angry
w o rd s or accusations. There
were instead, constructive comments and criticisms-the kind
that make this type of meeting
worthwhile. -Most of the changes

resulting from the hearing were devoted to the Institutional Bill
minor.
of Rights, and the acceptance of
With the close of Thursday's the document expressed at the
public hearing also came the end hearing, there is surely one
of seven weeks' work on the first question which stands out in each
17 sections of an all-campus member's mind: Is the effort
bill of rights. These sections really worth it? The answer to
will be presented to the LCC this question may, in reality,
Board of Education Wednesday,
-:-:
::::::
June 9, for possible approval
and adoption as Board policy.
The committee's job is not
:~.,:;:,··::~,:~ ;-~:-:::-:::}¥
-~
-:·t --~('.:::\~~t{}f:ww:tc·::
nearly finished, however, it has rest solely with the LCC Board
set a tentative schedule for sum- of Education itself.
mer meetings and will continue
LCC's bill of rights cannot
to work on a document that may be adopted into law, as was
eventually include more than 40 done with the national bill of
sections by the time it is com- rights. It can only become a part
pleted.
of Board Policy. And as such,
Regardless of the time and the document would be subject
effort committee members have to change-or even deletion-as the Board desires. The Board
c h an g e s with each e 1e c t i o n;
sometimes it becomes more liberal, sometimes more conservative. Because the Board changes
so are its policies apt to change.
This, in essence, leaves the
sionals," and is involved in a Institutional Bill of Rights at
consultant capacity with technically-related classes at LCC. He
also works closely with the Job
Corps programs in the communities of Glide and Yachats.
Graduation will be held June 12
at 2 p.m. in the main gym of
the Health Building on campus.
It will honor about 530 recipients
"The State Has Made Your
of degrees, diplomas and certi- Will," a IO-minute color slide,
ficates.
sound production, is available for
'Qie graduation program will be f re e s h ow i n g s to interested
as follows:
groups through the LCC DevelopProcessional: music pro- ment Fund.
vided by LCC's Performing Arts
''Over one hundred million dolDepartment.
lars goes through the probate
Invocation; by Jonathan West, courts of this country every week
without benefit of a will," said
LCC counselor
Lyle Swetland, development diAddress: by Fred Koehler
.Awarding of Diplomas: by LCC rector. "This presentation exPresident Dr. Eldon Schafer; plains in a simple, entertaining
Dean of Students, Jack Carter; way the basic facts about wills
and LCC's Chairman of the Boarci and why most of us should have
of Education, Bob Ackerman.
one."
Swetland said additional printRecessional
A reception will be held in ed materials, such as an inventhe c a f e t e r i a following the tory form for personal assets,
graduation ceremonies. Cof- also will be available free. For
fee, tea, punch, cake and cookies those groups interested in more
will be served by the Faculty details, a discussion by a panel
of attorneys can be arranged folClub Wives.
Ushering ,for the ceremony will lowing the slide program, he
be done by members of Phi Theta said.
Arrangements for a showing
Kappa scholastic honorary.
Neither staff nor graduates of the program may be made by
will wear caps and gowns for the contacting the LCC Development
exercises.
office at 747-4501, ext. 335.
-:-:-

'ANALYSIS,:, , ,

Fred Koehler selected

as graduation speaker
Fred V. Koehler, Area Representative of the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training, will
be the featured speaker for LCC's
1971 Grad ati

Slide program_

available through

Dev~lopment Fund

e theme for this year's ceremony will be ''The Age of Concern''. In keeping with this theme,
Koehler will speak on the topic
"What is Education?"
Koehler was born in Tacoma,
Washington, and has spend most
of his life helping others lean
vocational skills. He worked with
the Bureau of Labor in Eastern
Oregon for 17 years and in Eugene the last five year as apprenticeship representative. He
fE:els "we can't all be profes-

Student Forum

'Canned Heat' a headache
by Ron Davis
What a blast. Everything
started off with the right atmosphere - anxiety, apprehension
and just a little bit of tension,
which increased every minute.
Time - about 5:00 p.m., 3 hours
before the grand opening of the
chords of "The hmerican Frog."
"Canned Heat" arrived in their
E.Z. rental truck about 5:30p.m.
and proceeded to have a good
time running over the grass and
giving a 11 observers the impression that "Oscar", the driver, was either very drunk or had
lost his glasses. Finally, at last,
he arrived at the east doors to
the gym and was able to get
their equipment unloaded.
While all this extra excitement
was going on, the promoter for
"Canned Heat" rapidly drew up a
sign stating "Tickets, $4.00."
Possibly due to this extra ploy,
everyone had to suffer the consequences. Naturally the fans
were upset and sort of emotional.
I don't believe emotional is the
word, but it will have to do.
The fans kept gathering and piling
up outside the main doors to the
gym as it neared time to open
them. What beautiful weather to
wait in: rain and cold. While
here these great bands stood
within the shelter and warmth of

a large gym, just waiting on their
leaders to open the doors.
At last (7:30 p.m.) the doors
are opened. Fans stream in, mill
around in the foyer and stand in
small groups, making plans on
how to let their friends in without paying. Security people are
guarding each door, which does
create a minor problem to some.
What are these people doing out
here anyway? 8:00 p.m. - the
Great "American Frog" group
starts off with a bang, and I
mean a bang. To unaccustomed
ears, and by this time a very
nasty disposition, your nerves
are shot and you have an excedrin headache (at least I did).
• Now commences the fun. Fans
are trying to locate friends (usually they're on the outside) to
see what they have brought to
the gig. You know - like pot,
beer, pills, wine or some other
refreshment. There's a friend
(outside naturally). Quick, kick
the door and let them in. Just
exactly what happened? The door
was ripped off of the top hinge and here they come. Man, what
a pile-up. There goes one! No,
grab that one! Oops, watch that
door! What a crazy, mixed-up
affair. Why don't we let them
in? What the promoters say is
that neither band is playing for

-

-

free. They have their professional door guards to make sure
no-one will get in. Ha! this door
crash was .only one of numerous
tries - what about the one in
the basement? Yes, the doors
were sprung and some fans did
get as far as the stairs to the
main floor, but were stopped at
this point. Just one more incident.
The "Canned Heat" is playing
now and everyone seems to be
really getting uptight. Possibly
more attempts will be made and
hopefully no one will get hurt.
There was only one case for White
Bird, whicQ was really good considering the fans that were present. While all security people
were looking around, there was a
young lady looking over the men's
restroom - no excitement in
that.
Finally the end is in sight.
What a sight - beer cans, cigarette butts, wine bottles and all
kinds of trash. As an observer
and a student at LCC, I was very
disappointed in the category of
fans that arrived at our college.
If the rest of you students enjoy such a gig I would appreciate all c o m me n ts and suggestions that you can give me.
If you don't like any of this,
please let me }mow also.

'mercy'

the continuing "mercy" of the
Board.
The document's uncertain future is compounded by the fact
that with the committee's presentation this month may also
come recommendations that several -existing Board Policies be
revised to conform with sections
of the bill. The Board may accept
these recommendations-or it
may send the bill of rights back
to be rewritten to conform with
policies already in effect.
Interwoven among the more obvious problems construction of
a campus-wide bill of rights
may encounter is the difference
between intent and interpretation. What the authors believe
they are writing may not always be what readers believe
they meant. This difficulty is
common to all writing, yet it
is a very real problem. It is
perhaps one of the major reasons why the Student Bill of

Rights was tabled in April, and
efforts were shifted toward a
document which would encompass
all segments of the campus community.
The complexities involved in
creating a document such as the
Institutional Bill of Rights are
immense. They include feelings
and actions, as well as words.
All these things must be considerect in reviewing it.
To expect a perfect document
to be presented to the Board
Wednesday, June 9, is not only
unrealistic, but most likely impossible. Yet to reject it solely
because it is not perfect, would
perhaps kill its chances of survival entirely.
If the Board decides it is not
ready to adopt the first 17 secUons as policy, it should consider
as a minimal step tentatively
approving those sections with
final acceptance upon receipt of
the complete document.

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Page 4

.TORCH, June 4

tc·c. :•fJ'i1f •cff . R'ig·hts

(These first sections of the Bill of
open to all applicants who
by civil and criminal law.
Rights will be presented to the
are qualified accorctmg to its
Board for its approval June 9.)
admission requirements. Un- Section 8: Members of the camder no circumstances shall an
Preamble
pus community shall have the
applicant be denied admission
right to freely and peaceably
Lane Community College serto this college because of race,
assemble and demonstrate in
ves society by providing proreligion, sex, national origin,
accordance with the exercise
grams of learning which enpolitical
belief, age, or preof constitutional rights so long
able students to pursue and
vious criminal record.
as such activity does not imachieve their educational and
A. Previous academic status
pede the rights and freedom of
vocational goals. Free inquiry
shall not constitute criteria for
others.
and free expression are indisdenial of admission to this Colpensable to the pursuit of these
lege.
Section 9: Lane Community
objectives. The transmission
B. Preference for admission
C o 11 e g e employees and stuof knowledge, the search for
shall not J::>e based on economic
dents shall have the right to be
truth and the development of
status.
interviewed on campus by any
the student depends upon aplawful organization desiring to
propriate opportunities and Classroom Expression
recruit at the College. Lane
conditions in the classroom, Section 4: Freedom of disCommunity College employees
cussion must be protected and
on the campus, and in the comand students may protest aexpression of views must not
munity. In order that the Colgainst any such organization
be inhibited. The instructor has
lege c an provide conditions
provided that the protest does
the responsibility of maintwhich are conducive to the efnot interfere with any other
taining a classroom environfective performance of its purindividual's right to have such
ment conducive to the learning
poses, each member of the
an interview, or does not inof the subject, but his authority
college community, adminimust not be used solely to supterfere with the priviledge of
strators, faculty, students and
the recruiting personnel to hold
press the expression of views
others, acknowledges a comcontrary to his own. It is
said interview.
mitment to those purposes and
the responsibility of the stuto the principles of democratic
dent to support the instructor's Section 10: L a n e Community
freedom for himself and othCollege employees and stuefforts to assure freedom of
ers.
dents can invite to the campus
and
to
maintain
orexpression
Short Title
and hear any person(s) of their
der.
Section 1: This document shall
choosing. No person shall be
A. Students are responsible
be known as the Institutional
denied the right to be heard
for learning the content of any
Bill of Rights for Lane Comsolely because of inadequate
course for which they are enmunity college.
prior
notification.
rolled. Instructors shall provide
Terms
for the student every available
Section 2: When u s e d in this opportunity for the accomplish- Campus Organizations
ment of this goal.
Section 11: Organizations can be
document -B. Requirements for particiestablished by Lane ComA. The term "college" means
pation in classroom discussion
munity College employees and
Lane Community College.
students, within the college,
B. The term "administrator" and submission of written exerfor any lawful purpose.
means those responsible for the cises are not inconsistent with
this Section.
operation of the College.
C. The term "student" in- Section 5: Academic evaluation Section 12: Membership in any
campus organization, including
cludes all persons taking courses
of student performance by inthose affiliated with an exat the College both full-time and
structors shall be based upon
tramural organization, shall
part-time, pursuing high school
academic achievement. Innot be denied because of his
completion, tech n i ca 1- vocastructors will be expected to
race, creed, sex, economic
tional, lower division collegiate,
state course content and obstatus, or national origin, exadult education, or extension stujectives at the beginning of
cept that religious qualificadies.
each term and throughout the
tions may be required by orD. The t e r m 11 instructor"
term as the need arises. Acaganizations whose aims are
means any person hired by the
demic evaluation shall, under
primarily -sectarian.
College to conduct classroom
no circumstances, be prejuor counseling activities.
dicial or capricious.
E. The term "classified" enSection 13: The College shall
compasses all those employed by Section 6: Information about a
make available the use of its
the College to conduct functions
student's views, beliefs, and
facilities by members of the
other than the above.
political associations acquired
Co 11 e g e community. College
F. The term "shall" is used
by LCC employees is confifacilities may be assigned to
in the mandatory sense.
dential and is not to be disLane Community College emG. The term "may" is used
closed unless required by state
ployees and students for meetin the permissive sense.
or federal law.
ings, for social programs, and
H. All other terms have their
for programs open to the pubnatural meaning unless the con- Campus Expression'
lic.
text dictates otherwise.
Section 7: Discussion and exA. Conditions may be imposed
Access to Higher Education
pression of all views within the to regulate the possibility of reSection 3: The College shall be
College shall be limited only quests, to determine the appropriations of the space assigned,
and to ensure proper maintenance. Allocation of space shall
be made based on chronological
priority of requests and the needs
of the organization, individual,
or group.
The LCC student handbook is "run-around" by being sent to
B. Preference in assignments
many inappropriate departments shall be given to programs innot dead.
It is presently surviving under before finding the one they need, stituted by Lane Community Colthe auspices of the STUDENT she said. She feels the manual lege employees and students.
staff me m be rs become
SERVICE MANUAL, av a i 1ab 1e helps
C. The College shall delegate
11
aware of departments other than
through the Student Acitivities
the
authority of the assignment
Office (second floor of the Cen- their own" and that the infor- of facilities.
mation should be available to
ter Building).
everyone.
D. Physical abuse of assigned
The manual, composed by
Information contained in the facilities may, at the discretion
Counselor Aide Saralee Taylor, STUDENT SERVICE MANUAL of the College, result in demands
contains information on location will probably be incorporated into for restitution for damages from
of, and personnel and procedures a new LCC student handbook, the sponsoring parties.
involved in campus services stu- which will be published this sumdents might seek. Subjects dis- mer according to ASLCC Presi- Section 14: No LCC employee,
student or group may use the
cussed range from available fi- dent Omar Barbarossa. The new
college name in purporting to
nancial aids and counseling ser- handbook, he said, will be more
be representative of tile colvices to student activities and accurate and helpful to students
lege or any of its various
functions of campus administra- than was last year's handbook,
organizations or sections withtors.
the TITAN CODE.
out the express permission of
The TITAN CODE was not pubAbout 50 copies of the service
those he wishes to represent.
manual were circulated to cam- lished this year due to lack of
pus personnel such as counselors professional help ·and lack of inand secretaries, to assist them terest, according to ASLCC Campus Media
Section 15: Anyone may publish
in helping students obtain needed President Warren Coverdell.
and distribute extra - curriIncluded in the new handbook
services. Mrs. Taylor said she
cular leaflets, posters, and
has received comments from will be a list and description of
pamphlets on campus w it h
staff members that the manual jobs of personnel ranging from
prior authorization of the Stuhas been "extremely helpful in ad m i n is t r at o rs to student
dent Director of Publicity, in
order to send students where they government officers, services
a c c o r d an c e with existing
want to go." Many students are available to students, and orienguidelines·.
frustrated when they get the tation to the college itself.

Service manua.l offers
orientation to students

Commission.
Section 16: The student press is
to be free of censorship and
advanced approval of copy. The Section 17: All College published and financed communieditors and managers shall not
cations in which editorial combe arbitrarily suspended, supment is included, shall explipressed or intimidated because
citly state on the editorial
of student, student government,
page or in broadcast that the
em p 1o ye e, alumni or comopinions expressed are not nemunity disapproval of editorial •
cessarily those of the College,
policy or content. Similar freeemployees, the student governdom is assured oral statements
ment, or the student body.
of views on college-controlled
and student-operated radio or
television stations. This editorial freedom entails a corolary obligation under the canons of responsible journalism
~,~~::_il~,,_
and applicable regulations of
:.. ·f"G(WlLLJ\METTJ.
the Federal Communications

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172 employers serve ··c·wE·. progrciffloo

A total of 172 Emerald Empire
employers are serving as "field
faculty'' for LCC's Cooperative
Work Experience (CWE) program. During Spring Term, they
are serving 278 student interns
in jobs ranging from welding to
child care to television broadcasting.
CWE combines classroom and
employment, with credits earned
for both. The object of the program is to integrate classroom
theory with practical experience
to help students find greater
meaning in their studies, smooth
the future transition from school
to e mp 1o y m e n t , familiarize
themselves with equipment and
facilities the college cannot afford and provide financial assistance.
Students work from an hour or
two daily to almost full-time. The
average wage is $2.60 per hour.
Participants in the program earn
one credit for each 36 hours on
the job over a 12 week term.
Bob Way, Coordinator of CWE,
wanted to make clear that "CWE
is not work study. It is an attempt
to give a student on-the-job training in his course of study before
graduation."
Bob Gault, CWE coordiantor
for the Industrial Technology department said the program has
been overly successful in his
area. "We're havingdifficu lty,"
he noted, ''with employers wanting to keep a student on the job
after the orignal agreement ends,
which means we have to find other
positions so more students can
participate in the same field of
work,"
Gault and Way both said the
situation shows that employers
are really satisfied with the
students work.
The re are numerous advantages to CWE in that it shows
a student, possibly for the first
time, what work is like in his
field of study. Coordinators in
CWE also help control relations
between employee and employer
' and teach students the proper
methods of preparing for an interview.
Participating employers include:
Eugene: Adult Parole and Probation· Henry A. Alexander, Jr.;
Hank Anderson DVM; Associated
Consultants lnc. ; Associated
General Co~tractors; Bailey Hill
School; Leon R. Barnwell, DDS;
John Bascom, MD; Bell and Hoskins, MD's; Bohemia Lumber
Company, Inc.; Carmiencke Construction Company; Celeste
Campbell Senior Center; Century Records; Child Care, Inc.;
Children's Hospital School; T.A.
Chuman, DDS; Coburg Road Animal Clinic; Condon Elementary
School; Consol-A-Data; Construction Unlimited; Conway and
Springate, MD's; Danebo Elementary Schoo 1; De Frank and
Hill, MD's; Dunn Elementary
School.
Economy Auto Wreckers;
Edgewood Elementary School;
EI-Jay Manufacturing Company;
Ellis Parker Elementary School;
Emerald Empire Christian
School; B. R. Engelcke, DOO;
Special Education Department,
University of Oregon; Escape,
U of O; Eugene Airport Restaurant;
Eugene Aviation, Inc.;
Eugene Concrete Pipe; Eugene
Data Processing Department ;
Eugene Good Samaritan Center;
Eugene Hearing and Speech Center; Eugene Hospital and Medical Clinic; Eugene Parks and
Recreation; F air fie 1d Grade
School; Far west Steel Service
Center; Flinn and Lake; Fraedrick Savings Center; Georgia
Pac if c Corporation; Giustina
Bros. Lumber and Plywood; Graves Music West, Inc.; Green
Valley Care Facilities; Holidays
Abroad, In~,; Husband Johnson
and Frye; Lawrence Hughes,
DDS; George Hull, DDS.

Ida Patt e rs on Elementary
School; Ireco Industries, Inc.;
Irving Elementary School; Jaqua, Wheatle and Gardner; Jefferson Junior High School; Johnson, Johnson, & Harrang; KERG
Radio; KEZI-TV; Douglas L.
Knecht, DDS; KPNW Radio; KUGN
Radio; Stanley R. Kurila, OD;
KVAL-TV; Marvin B. Knutsin,
Builder; Lane County Data Processing; Lane County Juvenile
Department; Lane County Public
Works; Alton H. Lenhart, P.A.;
Lincoln School Child Care Center;. Robert Litin, MD.
Jerome s. Maliner, MD; McKenzie Snd and Gravel; Medical Clinic; Meier and Frank;
Men's Formal Wear; Mill Owners Construction, Inc,; Murphy
& Onstad, -MD's; North Eugene
High School; Oregon Research Institute; Oregon State Employment
Service; OTIS; Park Manor Medical; Paul's Mechanical Service; Payless Drug Store; Pearl
Buck Center; John T. Peterson,
DOO; Ramsey-Waite Company,
Inc.; Rears Manufacturing Company; Reed and Cross; River Road
Medical Group; Sacred Heart
Hospital; Safeway Stores; Sears
Roebuck and Company; Seeley,
Racely, McMahan; Wilken and
Leary, MD's; Sheldon High School; Silver Lea ~chool; Smeed

Sound Service; South Eugene High School; Chester L. Stevenson,
DDS; Stretch and Sew Fa b rics; Strout Realty; William
Swancutt.
Tillman-Boot h, Inc.; Timber
Engineering Company; Towne
. Carousel Day School; Trans Western Investors, Inc.; United Airlines; U.S. Soil Conservation Service; U of O Business Office;
U of O Computer Center; U of
0 Division of Broadcast Services; Western Aerial Contractors; Western Distributors,
Inc.; Westmoreland Elementary
Schoo 1; Whitta~er -Elementary
School; Wildish Sand and Gravel; Women's arid Cliildren's Clinic ; Youel Construction Company; and Zip-0-Log Mills, Inc.
Springfiel d: Wallace E.
Baldwin, MD; Bi-Mart Company;
BI u e C r o s s Animal Hospital;
Gardner and Beedon Company;
General Trailer Company; Inc.;
Allen D. Harlor, Jr., MD; Maple Elementary School; D.E. McCafferty, MD; McKenzie Flying
service; McKenzie-Willamette
Hospital; Mount Vernon Elementary School; Page Elementary
S.chool; Payless Foods; William E. Spangler, MD; _City of
Sp r i n g fie 1d ; Springfield Municipal Power; Springfield Utility
Bo a rd ; Thurston Elementary

Stud ent.

School; Willamalane Park District; and First Baptist Church.
Cott age Grove: Abbot and
Price, MD's; Gerald Gates, OD;
Cottage Grove Hospital; Delight
Valley School; Fergason's Appliance and TV; James E. Grant,
DDS; Washburn Landscaping;
Weyerhaeuser Company; Latham
School.
Saginaw: Bohemia Wood Systems.
Coburg: Coburg Plumbing and
Heating.

Page .5

4

Cr es we 11: Creswell School
District #40; Rens Manufacturing
Company; Rustic Construction
Company.
Dexter: Dexter Open Bible
Chti-rcll.. Goshen: Goshen Elementary
School.
Harrisburg: •Harrisburg High
School.
Junction City-: Junction City Junior High; Laurel Elementary
School; and Western Irrigation
and Equipment.

ARE" YOU MAKING ··ACHANGE?

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Check our schedu.le of business courses ...
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designe d to help you get and keep that iob

LEARN A SKILL YOU CAN SELLI
Write
J. W. Kreitz, Chairman

Business Dept.
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4000 East 30th Ave.
Eugen•, Ore. 97405

Call
747-450 1
Ext. 291

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Any business

professor

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Lane Community College
4000 East 30th Ave.
Eugene

1

-

-

Page ; 6 ..... ·- . TORCH, June 4 - I • · II;...-~ '; y ..,1 q i ~ . '
• • • , •-.. J a • , .,~, 1 t - .. , i
••
... ,.. , . • .,,

•c

I

,,..1 f l . I ,"
, •1 r

·,

.. t , 1 ,

summer bus ser'v ice ava11aD1e
Bus service to and f: Jm the
L C C campus will c on tin u e
through summer sessions for
the first time this year.
Bus services, under the auspices of the Mass Transit Authority, will be available Mond a y· t h r o u g h F r id a y f mm
7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at all
times classes are in sessions.
No service will be available for
the weeks of June 14-20 and September 11-26.
Buses will make one circuit
hourly between downtown Eup;ene and LCC, with transfer
available to and from other Eugene-Springfield runs. The bus
will leave 10th and Willamette
Streets on the half hour, travel
east on 10th to Pearl, south on
Pearl to 13th, east on 13th to
Kincaid, north on Kincaid to 11th
west on 11th to Alder, south on
Alder to 30th, and east on 30th to
the southwest corner of the Center Building on campus.
Eugene passengers may make
connections at 10th and Willamette. Springfield riders may
transfer at 11th and Alder.
The bus is scheduled to arrive at LCC at five minutes to
the hour, and depart from LCC
at five minutes after the hour.
Fare is 30 cents one way or
60 cents round trip. Transfer
to or from other buses on reg u 1a r 1y scheduled E u g e n e Springfield runs is free.

Lane ZPG group
publishes guide
to birth control

LCC's chapter of Zero Population Growth (ZPG) has published a "Birth Control Guide"
to assist Eugene area residents
who need family planning information.
The booklet contains information on abortion, adoption, methods of birth control, pregnancy
counseling, sterilization and venereal disease. It also lists community agencies which deal with
these needs.
Copies of the Birth Control
Guide are available at the LCC
Health Service office in the Health and P.E. Building, and at the
Planned Parenthood Association,
1070 Willamette Street, Suite 211,
Eugene.
Before its publication, the
booklet was reviewed by L C C
Dean of Students Jack Carter,
LCC Student Activities Director
Betty Ekstrom and the LC C
Health Department, the Planned
Parenthood Association and the
University of Oregon Health Service.
ZPG Coordinator Mitchell .Allen said the booklet was financed
through donations, and that no
student funds were used in its
production.
Further information about family planning or community agencies which deal with it may
be obtained from ZPG, Box 29,
Administration Building at LCC,
4000 E. 30th Avenue, Eugene,
97405.

Flying course

set for summer

,

Flight Technology will offer
a summer course in flying, but
no ground school courses will
be available until next Fall.
Students can receive enough
fiying hours during the summer
to obtain a private pilot's license.
Those interested must contact
the Flight Tech. Department before summer registration for
acceptance into the program.
• Pre-registration for the flight
program is $50, which is nonrefundable. An additional $500
is required for flight fees.
For further information, contact Ron K 1u th, 689-2021, or
Marge Davis, 747-4501, ext. 395.

30c one way

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riders
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th€ ConcR€t€ Stat€m€nt
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Be prepared for 1un11ner
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Arrive• at LCC at 5 minutes to the hour
leaves LCC at 5 minutes after the hour

a year's free service
guaranteed I _year against defects

Monday through Friday 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.

Inhalation Therapy offered
The only accredited Inhalation
Therapy program in the Northwest is being offered to LCC
students, according to John Dickson, director of LCC's Paradental-Paramedical Department.
Inhalation T he r a p y , which
deals with the treatment, control
and care of patients with respiratory problems, is an occupation offering great opportunities.
Dickson noted that virtually all
of the graduates have jobs waiting for them upon completion of
the program. The opportunity to
advance is good and pay starts
around $7,000 for both men and
women.
Di c ks on said health occupations are the nation's third
largest employer, and, if the
current rate of growth continues,
they will p rob ab 1y become the
largest employer by 1975.
Therapists work with medical
gasses, air and oxygen administering apparatus, environmental
control systems. humidification
and aerosols, drugs and medications, ventilatory control, postural drainage, chest physio-

(}()

look out

therapy and breathing exercise,
respiratory rehabilitation as sistance with cardiopulmonary
resuscitation, and maintenance
of natural, artificial and mechanical airways.
LCC offers Inhalation Therapy
in a two-year program. The first
year of the course is taught on
campus while the second year
includes clinical training at Sacred Heart General Hospital in
Eugene.
An Associate of Science Degree is awarded to graduates.
Currently, however, only 15 to
20 students are accepted in the
program each year due to limitations in staff and equipment.
Applicants must have completed high school or the equivalent, and must have taken high
algebra and chemistry within the
last five years. A letter of recommendation , a personal interview and an entrance examination are required.
.Anyone interested in applying
for Inhalation Therapy should
contact the LCC Paradental Department, ext. 266.

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Europe, Hawaii & Asia
As -low as $125 round trip
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
Richard Stamp
3008 Willamette Apt. 1

Phone: 345-6835
Eugene, Oregon

OR WRITE
Charters West
310 Corbett Building

Phone: 226-3566
Portland, Oregon

FINALS WEEK SCHEDULE
IF YOUR CLASS IS ON
AND STARTS AT

-

M,W,F,MW,MF,WF,MWF,MUWHF,MUWH,MWHF,MUHF ,MUWF

U,H, UH,UWHF

YOUR EXAM DAY AND TIME WILL BE:

0700 or 0730

M, 8-10

M, 10-12

0800 or 0830

u,

8-10

u, 10-12

0900 or 0930

w,

8-10

w, l0-12

1000 or 1030

H, 8-10

H, 10-12

1100 or 1130

M, 12-14

M, 14-16

1200 or 1230

u, 12-14

u, 14-16

1300 or 1330

w, 12-14

w,

1400 or 1430

H, 12-14

H, 14-16

1500 or 1530

w, 16-18

H, 16-18

1600 or 1630

M, 16-18

u, 16-18

1700 or 1730

F, 8-10

F, 10-12

1800 or later

Evening classes, those that meet 1800 or later,
will have their final exams during FINAL EXAM
WEEK at their regularly scheduled class time.

Read across to the day(s) of your class, then read
down and find the starting time of that class. This
is your FINAL EXAM day and time.

Students having more than two exams in one day,
may request a rescheduling of the third exam at
a different time. See your instructor to make this
arrangement.

14-16

Transportatio n .Cooperative
offers summer service
LCC's Transportation Cooperative will be operating this
summer, providing rides for students for all nine summer sessions.
The Transportation Co-op was
established Spring Term. Approximately 350 students participated in the system of organized car pools.
Summer students wishing to
participate will be asked to complete an IBM card listing:
1) Number and schedule of
trips made to and from campus
daily,

LCC BAROQUE
formance of the
Forum Theater.
Nancy Possman,

ORCHESTRA gives final peryear Thursday, June 3, in the
The concert featured soloists
flute; Sharon Gordon, violin;

and Chris Olson, harpsichord. A harpsichord
demonstration followed the concert. The orchestra is directed by Nathan Cammack.
(photo by Hew Lipscomb)

Senate approves $54,000 budget
The LCC Student Senate officially adopted its 1971-72 budget
and ratified a stringent financial
code to govern disbursement at
the Senate meeting Thursday,
June 4.
The budget anticipates $54,400
in income for next year--$-30,000
from student body fees, $7,200
from the Bookstore, $7,200 from
vending machine profits, and a
$10,000 cash carryover from this
year.
Proposed expenditures are as
follows:
ATHLETICS
Intercollegiate and
extramural
Intramural

$11,600
$ 2,000
$13,600

ACTIVITIES
Club Promotion
General
Special Events
Alumni Organization

$ 1,250

$ 8,000
$ 2,000
$ 500
$11,750

PUBLICATIONS
Torch
Titan Code
Activity Calendar &
Newsletter
other

$ 3_.000
$ 500
$
$

250
500

$ 4,250
OFFICE EQUIPMENT
Supplies
Capital Outlay
Telephone, Telegraph, Postage

$ 500
$ 1,500

$

650

$ 2,650
CONTRIBUTIONS
Special gifts/ awards $ 100
$ 544
Off-campus
$ 456
On-campus
Camous Services
(financial aids, emergency
loan, child care center,
$ 3,220
etc.)

$ 4,320
PUBLIC RELATIONS
Promotions
Printin'.;
Name tags/desk
plates

$
$

500
350

$

150

$ 1,000
CONVENTIONS/CONFERENCES
$ 3,650
Conventions
$ • 750
Retreats
$ 500
Fees and Dues
$ 500
Travel

$ 5,400
SALARIES
ASLCC: President

$ 2,100

$ 1,500

sitions must have the treasurer's
signature, signatures of two cabi$ 1,680 net members, and the signature
of the Director of Student Acti$ 600 vities. Expenditures in excess of
$1,000 for any one item require
$ 500 approval of a six-member committee and the signature of the
$ 6,380 Dean of Students.
Under the code requisitions
$ 5,050 must also be presented to the
CONTINGENCY
Business Office at least 48 hours
TOT AL $54,400 prior to issuance of a check,
Mel Wood, Mechanics Senator which requires advance planning
and co-author of the new finan- of expenditures. In addition, they
cial code, said some 200 man- must be accompanied by full
hours went into preparation of supporting documents explaining
the expense, and receipts as
the budget.
Wood attributed the lengthy proof of expenditure are rebudget preparations to difficul- quired.
other changes include limity in compiling current records
to obtain an accurate estimate tations of amounts that may be
of expenditures. Extensive au- contributed to off-campus groups
dits were necessary to determine (no more than 1% of the total
the Senate's financial status. Ti1e budget, with no more than 10%
code was composed, in part, to of that amount given to any one
cause) and on-campus charisolve that difficulty.
The new financial policies were ties (no more than 2% of the
adopted for summer operation, total budget).
Also required by the code are
and will be reviewed in the Fall.
Fis- adherence to the college per
They were composed by
cal Policies Committee com- diem rates, bonding of Execuposed of Wood, Paul Christian- tive Cabinet members, and subson, newly elected Senator-at- mission of a monthly financial
Large; and Dan Rosen, former rep o r t for publication in the
There was TORCH.
Senator-at-Large.
The stricter control of expreviously no explicit, written
policy governing procedures for penditures will aid in budget
preparation next year, said Wood.
Senate expenditures.
Wood said he spent three Over-extension of line items,
months developing the new fis- rather than transfer from one
cal policies. Two months were line item to another, will prospent finding ways to extract vide for an accurate record of
Senate funds under the former actual expenses.
Wood said the Fiscal Policy
procedures-{l process which resulted in 39 pages of data. Another committee aimed at a "workable,
• month was spent formulating yet restrictive" policy, and that
ways to prevent or control those suggestions for improving the
financial code are welcome.
methods of extraction.
The primary problem now, he
The procedural changes imposed by the code are aimed at said, is to educate Senate memstrict accountability and justifi- bers in the operation of the new
cation for expenditures. Requi- financial controls.
Secretary
Executive Cabinet
(tuition grants)
Senators-at-Large
(1/2 tuition grants)
Legal, insurance, and
bonding fees

Adult Ed. Dept. offers class
in parlimentary procedure
When you attend a meeting, use, will be the focus of the
are you confused-or perhaps course. Development of agenda,
even irritated-by points of or- classification and precedence of
der, privileged motions, or other motions, characteristics of inpuzzles of parliamentary pro- dividual motions, and functioning
of the chairman will be among
cedure?
discussed.
items
If you find yourself in that
The course is designed, said
situation, the LCC Adult Education Department may have the instructor Joyce Harms, for offianswer-{\ five-week summer cers, members and observers of
course in '' Basic Parliamentary committees, clubs and any other
group which uses parliamentary
Procedure."
procedure to conduct its busiThe class will meet Tuesdays ness.
and Thursdays, beginning June
Registration for the class will
22, from 7:00 to 10:00 p.m. in be at the first class meeting, to
Apprenticeship 321.
which students should bringtheir
Principles of effective group Social se·curity numbers. Tuioperation thrcugh parliamentary tion for the 30-hour course is
procedure) and practice in its $12.

(name, address, telephone number),
7) Which of the nine summer
sessions they plan to attend. This
information should be listed on
the card below the space provided
for the telephone number.
Car pools will be organized
from the completed cards.
The Co-op needs people to
serve as sectional coordinators,
a task which takes a few minutes
a day. Assistance is also needed
with telephone interviewing during the first few evenings of the
new session to coordinate the
2) How the student presently car pools. Those int e re st e d
gets to school (rides, drives, should contact Garry Spencer,
Co-op Coordinator, through the
by bus, other),
Activities office, second
Student
3) If they drive, whether stuthe Center Building.
of
floor
instead,
dents would ride
4) If they drive, whether they
ROBERTSON'S ·
would take riders, and how many,
5) What part of the EugeneSpringfield area the student lives
in (Maps dividing the EugeneSpringfield are a into census
tracts will be available. Students
should locate their address on the
map and enter the appropriate
census tract number on the card),
6) Identifying Information

DRUGS

"Your Prescription -Our Main Concern°

3oth and Hilyard

343-7715

DAIRY-ANN

1810 Chambers

343-2112

Breakfast, dinners and lunches. Homemade soups and pies.
Complete fountain service. Hours: 5:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Sun. thru Thurs., Fri. and Sat.: 5:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.

GOOD LUCK
on your

FINAL EXAMS
You 'II do just fine!
1950 FRANKLIN BLVD.
OAKWAY MALL
RIVIERA CENTER
VENETA
COTTAGE GROVE

.·,na·
. ~ si~
'
f
f
.
m,mer •; ress10·1s,t o er•·
N
'"'"'"•

...

,.,.

,;,

tw\'t

·- ·

t

tt

Nine separate summer ses- students who can attend onlypart
sions--of varying lengths and of the summer.
Some 336 class sections will
with staggered starting dates-are scheduled at LCC this sum- be available during the summer
sessions, and are expected to
mer.
Six of the nine sessions will attract about I, 500 students.
Last summer LCC's summer
begin classes on June 21. They
include a one-week session, a sessions offered 245 class sectwo-week session, a four-week tions which attracted 1,289 stusession, a six-week session, an dents.
Tuition for any of the sumeight-week session, and a 12week session.
Registration for these sessions
will be held June 7 through June
18 in the Admissions and Registration Office, second floor of the
John C. White, LCC DirecCenter Building. The Office is tor of Counseling, has subopen from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. mitted his resignation to reMonday through Thursday, and turn to Iowa and full-time counfrom 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on seling .
Friday.
White assumed the counseling
The other three sessions indirectorship July I, 1970. Prior
clude:
*a second four-weeksession-- to coming to LCC, he was Dirregistration July 12 through July ector of Counseling at Kirkwood
16, with classes beginning July Community College in Ceda!'
Rapids, Iowa, where he had been
19.
for
three years.
* a second six-week session-registration July 26 through JuAlthough the LCC Board of
ly 30, with classes beginning Education has not yet officially
August 2.
acted on White's resignation, the
* a third four-week session-- search for a new director will
registration August 9 through Au- begin immediately due to time
gust 13, with classes beginning
August 16.
Registration for these later
sessions will also be held in the
Adm is s ions Office, from
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. weekdays.
College officials said the staggered sessions of varying length
are designed to accommodate

ti

ttl

tr•'

. .

••••••••••••••••

Donations sought
for instructor's
trip to Sweden

Donations to help defray expenses of an LCC instructor's
attendance at a seminar in Sweden next fall are being accepted
by the LCC Development Fund.
John Phillips , instructor in
the forestry program, is one of
seven u. S. college forestry educators--and the only West Coast
representative-chosen for the
trip.
He will attend a World Consultation on Forestry Education and
Training in Stockholm, Sweden.
Preceding the conference, he and
other members of the group will
tour forestry educational institutions and observe forest r y
practices in Finland, Norway and
Sweden.
Phillips' selection for the trip
was made by the International
Organization Staff of the U.s.
Department of Agriculture, based
on his nomination by the Society
of American Foresters (SAF).
The Sept. 28 to Oct. 7 conference is sponsored by the Food and
Agriculture Organization (F AO)
of the United Nations.
Donations for the trip, which
LCC is unable to underwrite,
may be arranged by contacting
Development Director Lyle Swetland at 747-4501, ext. 335.

Ellison heads
Staff Assn.
James Ellison, Study Skills
professor, has been elected
president of the LCC Staff Association. Vice president of the
group this past year, he succeeds Mrs. Karen Lansdowne.
other new officers are: vice
president--Stephen John, chemistry professor; secretary--Patricia Tiller, secretary to the
registrar; treasurer--James Evans, business professor; and
Oregon Community College Association corresponding secretary--Robert Boettcher, science
professor.
All offices are for one-year
terms. LCC's Staff Association
represents classified personnel,
faculty members and administrators

•t

NEW &l USED DESKS, CHAIRS, FILES

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

1733 Pearl St.

Counseling Director resigns

••
••
••

.

& · Drafting Supplies

mer sessions will be $70 for
students enrolled for 10 or more
credit hours. Students taking less
than 10 hours will pay $7.50
per credit hour taken.
New students need not submit
a transcript of prior academic
work to enroll in the summer
session, as must full-time students in the regular college program during the rest of the year.

limitations.
A screening committee from
Student Personnel Services has
been appointed to conduct the
search. It is hoped a replacement can be found from the LCC
staff or persons referred to the
committee by the staff.
Persons interested in applying
for the position should contact
Mrs. Laura Gauderman, secretary to the Dean of Students, for
application information. She may
be reached at the Administration
Building, second floor, or by calling 747-4501, ext. 346.
Applications will be accepted
until June 14.

.

C-omplete E'n gineering

'i't c l

"To Know that we Know
What we Know,
And that we do not Know
What we do not Know,
That is true Knowledge."
Confuscious

Remember Us This Summer
Magpie's General Le.a ther Store
1130 Oak St. Eugene

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REBOUND ROCK
with

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1956 - 1970

lCC

Schafer reminisces about year at

by Laverna Bauguess

The time-consuming effort of
trying to be open to the college,
the community and the people
who need to talk to the president, yet still be able to use
time efficiently, is a major concern of LCC's President, Dr.
Eldon Schafer.
Perhaps the busiest man on
campus, Schafer in a recent interview stated: "What I find the
most frustrating is the days aren't long enough. I end up doing
much of my work at home. If I
don't work every night I feel
guilty."
In order to evaluate his work
schedule, Schafer has had his
secretary, Helen Haynie, keep a
running account of his activities

budget (to be submitted to voters
on June 29). It is a constant
threat--what are we going to
do if we don't? I don't know how
we get across to people the dangers of cutting the budget further."
"You could increase class size
and cut a number of other things,"
he continued, ''but that begins to
turn the institution inward and
we don't progress--we don't
develop anything new, we just try
to maintain ourselves and that's
a danger."
When questioned about the demand made by some for more
student "power," Schafer replied: ''Our students have great
opportunity to affect their program and what goes on. The difficulty this year has been in

fited by the input of students on
various committees," S c ha f e r
added. '' That doesn't mean that
we expect everyone to be unanimous at -a ll times-that just ••
isn't the 'American Way.' We
listen to all points of view then
someone has to make a decision,
which isn't always accepted by
everyone, but that doesn't mean
we ought not continue to look for
areas of agreement."
Seeking areas of agreement
characterizes Schafer's methods. "That's one thing I preach
constantly," he said, ''whether
it be in the Institutional Bill of
Rights or anything else-we try
to look for areas of agreement.
Once we can get the areas of
agreement, we can isolate those
where we have had to reach a
concensus and try to work on
those specific elements."
"We have a Board of Education that listens and I think
we have an administration that
listens and staff that are concerned about students, and you
can't ask for much more than
than," he concluded.
When asked about projects for
the near future Schafer replied,
"One of the pressing problems
that I face, which is typical of
all organizations in about this
period of their growth, is that
we need to go back--and it is a
laborious project-to our Board
Policy Handbook which now includes both administrative guidlines and Board Policies and
separate those into two documents."
Another project is a request
from the Board that a new salary guide be developed. '' That
is a major undertaking," Schafer
said. Within the next month and
a half," he added, "a restudy
of the college in terms of jobs,
job pay and job descriptions will
be conducted. The State Board of
Education is funding a project
for a co 11 e g e-wide analysis,
which should result in a reclassification of classified positions.
We have grown so fast and jobs
have changed," Schafer commented, "it's time for an outs id e independent appraisal of
where we are and recommendations for what changes might
be needed."
''Establishing a new evaluation
procedure of instructional per-

checking the records of various
committee assignments, that often times students haven't been
willing to serve. So we hear from
one group of students, 'We need
more opportunity to particpate.'
other times you can't get people
to serve. As far as I know,
everything we have on this campus is o_pen to students. I don't
think this was always true, but
it has been this year."
Schafer cited the addition of
students to the Curriculum Committee and Instructional Council
as evidence of '' some small progress this year in terms of involvement of students." Much of
the credit for that progress, he
noted must go to former student body President Warren Coverdell and his desire to have
students particpate.
'' I think we have been bene-

Spring Faire
rescheduled
The Renaissance Faire, originally set for June 4-6, has been
re-scheduled for Jule 11-13 due
to muddy ground at the Faire site.
Registration to participate in
the Faire is possible through June
8. Goods sold are restricted to
those made by hand.
For further information, contact Switchboard at 344-7133, or
Cindy Wooten at 344-5382 or
345-9431.

stronger, giving it voting powers
and placing the Curriculum Committee (which had previously reported to the president) as a
sub-committee of the Instructional Council. This changed the
internal operation considerably
and gave more power to the department chairmen.''
"I enjoy my work, Schafer
concluded, "It's the kind of work
where you enjoy coming to work
in the morning; it's that kind
of place."
"It has really been a pleasant
year, and I'm looking forward
to next year. But I'm also looking forward to passing the budget," he added.

THE /,.
BOOK FAIR

Really has
tfie
.used books.
45 W 7th Ave.

Closed Sunday & Monday

VOLVO - SAAB
Sales & Service

.

"Euaene's Swedish Car Center''
1601

w.

7th

Sheppard Motors 343- i1u

Sell Your Used Books
Beginning June 1 thru exam week
we will buy:
1.

Book-s needed for LCC classes athalf price

2.

Discontinued and overstock·ed titles . at
used-book· dealer prices·
•
We do not buy old editions, workbooks or
expendable lab books, or paperbacks which were
priced at less than $2.00 when new.
Two pieces of identification (LCC card and one
other) required.

LCCBookstore
"We're Right on Campus"

---------------------------Semester's End
Celebration?

LCC President Eldon Schafer
over the last four months. The
account reflects demands placed
on the president, including interviews, appointments, meetings, and all items placed on
the president's calendar, not to
mention the hundreds of drop-in
visits he receives.
Schafer stated, "It's a busy
time, a happy, exciting time.
The year has gone by so fast,
I can hardly believe that we're
ending the first year."
As far as accomplishments
this past year, Schafer said he
fee 1s that feedback from the
Board, the public and staff indicates LCC has made progress,
that things are running smoothly
and that a climate had been established where people are free
to discuss issues.
He further stated, "We've had,
I think, good communication with
the various segments of the college. That doesn't mean that it
couldn't be improved; I think
you can always improve through
one way or another. But I just
believe there is no institution
more open than LCC. For a college that has roughly 500 employees and 8,000-plus bodies
every day, we do a pretty good
job of keeping things open."
According to Schafer the major
problem facing the college is
limited finances. "It gives me
great cause for concern that we
are facing financial problems as
are other institutions. I'm concerned that we pass this next

sonnel is another project,"
Schafer said. '' This will be a
joint peer/administrative evaluation instrument which would then
be used as a method of determining weaknesses and self-improvement programs."
''It's an exciting business,
really," he added. "Personnel
is one of the most difficult areas
that any administrator has to
work with because you are dealing with a group of highly-professional, intelligent, highly-trained
people. Still, when you get this
many people working together
with students it is just inevitable that there will be problems
to be dealt with. And they' re not
always black and white-they're
difficult shades to . deal with."
Asked if he would have done
anything differently this last
y e a r, Schafer replied without
hesitation, "I might have moved
a little more rapidly in tackling
some problems. But as a newcomer, I'm not one who wants
to jump in and i m me di ate 1y
change everything. I feel you go
about this after you really have
some insight into the operation.
What we did internallv was to
restructure the organization and
make the Instructional Council

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Page lO

TORrGH, /une 4

Bas.ic Education

'.~IOdlHij•, •~:g'i. t ·:•·t~:rfifitatas

Some 317 school dropouts be- first time a group of local young
tween the ages of 16 and 55 were people who have left or were on
honored by LCC Wednesday, June the verge of dropping out of high
school.
2.
Their class, a joint project of
The occasion was the annual recognition exercises for LCC and School District 4J, is
persons who have resumed their intended to provide the 22 enrolformal education th r o u g h the led an alternate way to complete
college's Adult Basic Education their high school education.
The ABE classes are conducted
(ABE) program.
Certificates were presented to in six communities in the college
90 persons who have earned high district and have attracted over
school equivalency degrees and 2,000 persons since 1966. Qver
diplom.is or have entered regular 10,000 Lane County residents are
LCC programs. Others received listed in the 1960 census as
certificates for having completed having less than a ninth grade
at least 30 hours in ABE classes. education.
Helen Loomis, coordinator of
Lewis Case, LCC dean of instruction, was guest speaker for the ABE program, explained that
the ceremony. Instructors Fern emphasis in the classes is on
Mundell, Springfield, and Lucille improving reading, writing and
Lamoreaux, Eugene, presented arithmetic skills. Persons may
enter at any time during the
certificates.
and remain as long as they
year
Adult Basic Education is a
federally-funded program of- wish.
Some students are welfare refered tuition-free, mainly for
persons with less than an eighth cipients, improving their English
grade education or who are not and math skills as a step toachieving above that level. How- ward obtaining e mp 1o y me n t •
ever, this year's enrollment, the others have been working for a
largest in the program's five- number of years but want to upyear history, includes for the grade their skills to qualify for
job advancement. Still others are
realizing their long-desired goal
of attaining a high school diploma.
About an equal number of men
and women are enrolled, including several married couples. In
addition, some high school stuA total of $25,000 in prize dents attend to supplement their
money will be awarded to col- regular school classes.
Still another segment of ABE
lege students this spring in an
essay contest on the topic of students was not present to reobscenity.
"Obscenity: Censorship or
Free Choice?" is the subject
for the essay c om pet it ion.
The contest is open to all students 18 years of age or older
Wi.th remodeling complete, Heattending an accredited univer- ceta House has a busy summer
sity, college or junior college.
ahead of it.
First prize in the essay comThe house will be in use most
p et i ti on will be $5,000, with w,':!eks by the Adult Education De$3,000 for second prize and partment in Florence. Most of the
$2,000 for third.
week-ends are scheduled for the
Entries must be postmarked LCC Science Dept, LCC Art Deno later than July 4, and will partment, University of Oregon
be judged on originality, aptness Urban Planning Seminar and reof thought, clarity, organization treats for various LCC groups.
and creativity.
The interior of the house has
Complete information is posted been remodeled so that it is
in the T.ORCH Office, Center actually a duplex with a communal
206, LCC.
dining room and kitchen. Both

Essay contest
offers prizes

ceive their certificates Wednesday. They have participated in the
program while serving sentences
in the county jail.
Receiving special recognition
for having earned a GED (a high
school equivalency degree), a
high school diploma, or entered
a regular LCC program were
Eugene residents: Wand a
Hemenway, Helen Rozman, Terry
Lee Dickson, Richard Herrington, Alice Williams, Ruben Coy,
Beverly Warren, Veda Miller,
Robert Brockie, Wanda Dennis, Imogene Gates, James Williams, France s Webb, Frieda
Gibson, Garda Jentzsch, Scott
Larwood, Ethel Beyer, Robert
Bean . Linda Jones. Merry Christine Pinkerton, Pauline
Capps, Beverly Griffis, Stephen
Power, Goldie Rich, Joanne Wekkin, Richard Simpson and Jim
Jones.
Willie O. Moore, Shirley Severe, Gerald Biente, Paulette
Cooper, Mary J. Lawrence, Lee
A. Haigler, Margery Bundrant,
Frank Cross Jr., Christine
English, Ned Taylor, Angela
Bridgforth, Luther Freeman, Don
Galleton, Rick Olkowski, Margo
Robertson, Tracey Hicks, Cliff
Johnson, Lanny McNurlin, Edward Lozeau, Gene Owens, Peggy C rows on, Lexi Baldwin,
Sharon Bonbar, Norman Hansen,
Dana Henley, Ba r b a r a Kirk,
Mirna Hooton, Gerry W. Van,
Freeman Mortensen, Judy Glover, Esther Wood, Virginia Boehland, Betty Lou Wafford, Beverly Mullins and Arlene Whit-

Heceta has "busy summer

Radio book released
Roger Houglum, LCC consultant on media, has written a
source book for radio students
titled, "The History and Development of Radio Broadcasting."
First printing of the 11-chapter, 78-page book has been multilithed by LCC and made available
through the College Bookstore.
A subsequent draft of the manuscript may be published next
year by the LCC Press.
Houglum deals with material
which he says is "not adequately
covered in any existing textbook." He reaches back to the
time of the Civil War to record

Vets reminded
to file forms
Students attending school on
the GI Bill must return the IBM
attendance cards received with
their April check in order to
receive the final check for Spring
Term.
The attendance card does not
re-enroll veterans for Summer
or Fall Term even though they
indicate on the card their intention to attend. To enroll for
Summer or Fall Term veterans
must complete registration and
take their schedule to the Financial Aids Office. If they withdraw during the term, they must
notify Financial Aids so they are
not overpaid.

technical breakthroughs which
preceded the recent half century of development of radio as
it is known today.
He traces the development of
AM and FM radio; economic
growth; listener impact; news,
music and other programing; and
government and self regulation.
Houglum, 61, has been teaching
and administering electronics
classes in Eugene for three decades. He was with Eugene Vocational-Technical School, a part
of the Eugene public schools
from 1939 until joining LCC in
1965. From 1947 to 1966 he was
manager-director of KRVM, District 4-J's radio station. Until
this year he was acting chairman of the LCC Electronics Department and manager of KLCCFM, Lane's radio station~
He has been active in Very
Little Theatre, United Fund, the
Eugene Mayor's Committee on
Public Information, and the Educational Radio and Television
Committee of the state Educational Coordinating Council.
Houglum received a bachelor
of science degree in ecomonics
from the University of Oregon
in 1933 and a master of education degree from the U of 0
in 1953.
He previously authored ''How
To Get Started in FM Radio,"
and "An Education Television
Primer."

halves of the house have sleeping
quarters, restrooms and
showers. This was done so that
co-ed field trips might be accommodated. All students need
bring are sleeping bags and food.
Since Heceta Hou·se was acquired, in late October, 1970,
the facility has been used by the
L CC Student Senate and Black
Student Union for retreats, and
the Science Dept. for marine
ecology field trips.
Information on the history of
the house is not extensive, but
LCC Business Manager Bill Watkins has made a project of compiling the little that is known.
The house itself is about 75
years old. It was designed for
the Heceta Head Lighthouse keeper and his assistants. In 1963,
when the Lighthouse was automated, the U.S.Forest Service
acquired the house. The Forest
Service then leased it to LCC
in 1970.
Heceta House promises to be a
great help to LCC's educational
goals.

the

LEATHER AND

taker.
Springfield residents were
Dianne Ellingson, Diana Harris,
William F. Kelton, William Statzer, Mary Gates, Evelyn Hamilton, Hazel Willis, Katherine
Eisele, Greg Gillies, Donald Miller, Patricia Reed, Delores Sanford, Earl Brown and Estelle
Rivers.
Cottage Grove residents were
Betty Anderson, Donald Anderson, Denise Hope Smith, Elizabeth Evers, Alfreda Leaton, Jo
Ann Watson and Patricia Ann
Willis.
Oakridge: Carol House and
Vera J. Steele.
Junction City: Clifford Burrow.

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J;:ugene, Oregon 97401
Phone: 342-3426

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London Roundtrip
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June 15 to Sept. IS
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Please call or write for further information:
EUGENE
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1000 Benson Lane
ADDITIONAL FLIGHTS
Eugene, Oregon 97401
AVAILABLE
342-2936

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·1971 lCC GRADUATES

I

TOiiCH, ~June 4

Page..ll

I

Associate of Science De_g ree

* Phi Theta Kappa members

Jeri Ahmad, Meshari Hamad AlEssa, Paul S. Alexander, Sulaiman Y. Al-Haddad, Mohammed II.
Almousa, Ali Fehad Al-Z aid,
Sherry Marie Arbuckle, Joe D.
Arnold, Mary Linda Aubrey,
Charles William Ayers.
Geroge J. Babic, Donald Glenn
Bailey, Donald R. Ballard, Floyd
Erwin Bard, Richard Josef Beals,
Monte Jay Bea·m, Gary E. Bechtol, James F. Bell Jr., Patricia Diane Bernabe, Patricia
J. Beyerlin, Charles F. Binder,
Linda Sue Blackwell, Richard
Thomas Bork, Judy Jeannette
Bosch, Claudia L. Boyd, Gary I.
Bradley, Cheryl Dee Brechtbill,
Robert Mackay Brinton. Bonita

J. Brissette, Dee E. Brown, Gorver Wi11iam Brown, Linda Mae
Brown, Debra Browns, Richard
T. Brubaker, Bruce A. Randy
Bryson, Alan L. Burch.

vis Jr., Gary Anthony Deangelis, ch, Margaret Ann Lewis, Wes Grant Riley, Ronald C. Robinson,
Robert P. Deitz, Gary C. Di- Lindseth, James T. Litherland, Floyd Rogers, Dennis D. rollins,
mit, Allan Franklin Dobes, Nor- Deryll E. Lively Jr., *Norman Violet Ann Rose, Dale Edward
bert Lynn Dombrowsky, Jean- L. Long, Glendon Charles Long- Rowell.
ine Shannon Donahue, *Mary Ka- worth Jr., Dale Lord. Kathleen
Eddie DeanScarberry, Carolyn
Dean G. Caldwell, N. Janell therine Donovan, *Susan L. Doo- L. Lucas,· Donald L. Lundstrom. S. Schafer, -Daniel
A. Schneider,
little,
Doreen
M.
Dorris.
Dean
McAllister,
William
A.
Campbell, William V. Casey Jr.,
Rodger
L.
Shaddy,
Jerald A.
James
P.
Eason,
Carol
DeMcCiennen, Martin V. McCrea,
Candace L. Chambers, Aden
Shanbeck,
Joseph
E.
Sherman,
lane
Ebner,
Anita
Kari
Edwards,
Marth
Kathleen
McEnerny,
PatBraddy Chapman, Carolyn Chase, ,
Harlan
Kim
Shortreed,
Marcella
Robert
R.
Elder,
Lanny
R.
EIrick A. McNamee.
Roger Chrysler, *Lonny ChurSuzanne Skelton *Wade Ernest
fring,
Donald
F.
Ellingson,
RoAdam
Stanley
Mack,
Richard
chill, David W. Clark, Gary s.
be rt Lee Elliott, Robert D. Es- Daryl Majors, EdwinD. Maloney, Skinner, Doncella Ka y Slagle,
Clark, Mel M. Clark, Lyle E.
kue, John A. Evans, Amy Lee Jon Lee Marcott, Marcia Ann Candace F. Slaven, George DalClifton, David B. Cole, , FredExline.
Metcalf, Walter L. R. Miller, ton Slay, David H. Smith, Gary
rick Harold Coleman, Ronald D.
William Farmen, *Gregg S. Frank D. Millett, William Ter- E. Smith, Louis o. Smith, Nancy
Coleman, Helene E. Collins, Ro- F au l k n e r , Edward B. Fisher,
L. Smith, Robert L. Smith, Shasalie J. Conant, Barbara F. Con- Sharla Clare Frazee, Karl L. rill Milne, Mary Cecilia Mil- ron O. Smith, Judith A. Sohm,
ner,
Nancy
E.
Reel,
*David
Rinolly, Lewis R. Constable, Bill Fuller, Lavonne F. Fuller.
chard Moffitt, R. Duane Monette, Michael A, Stanley, David L.
F. Cope, Eugene Harry CreAaron Duane Gagner, Leland Phyllis Montgomery, *Phyllis Stauss, Ronald L. Steele, Hameans, John E. Crabtree, Jack H. Gardner, Josephine Ann GarJean Moore, Ann Celia Moriarty, rold Guy Stenseth, Cornelia SteCrump.
,
rett, Francene Margaret Gates, *Jelly Muller.
-- : vens, Becky Sue Stimson, Robert
Wayne L. Dave. Robert E. Da- Henry J. Geissel, Nola Gill, Joy
Louis' R. Nadell, Teddy Roy L. Stockdall, Michael L. Stone,
Nadine Gilliland, Cheryl A. Good, Napier, Kenneth L. Nash, Tanya Keith W. Story, *Darlene K. StuMildred M. Gollsby, Susand Ma- L. Nauman, Kenneth S. Nelson, cky, Darrold Lee Stutz, Darryl
rie Graber, Sandra Lillian Grant, *Thomas D. Newman, Victoria Gienn Suta, Michael E. Swenson.
Richard A. Greene, James Gary- R. Ni Ce, RO de r i Ck M. Nolte,
Aaron J. Taylor, Luwayne s.
ry Greenhaw, Kristi J. Grubbe, *Dean Leslie Nored, Richard Al- Tirrill, Leroy C. Tranberg,DeGary Alva Gulck.
bra G. Treadwell, Mark R. Troylan Nyberg.
David M. Haag, *John T.
Miss Joyce Sylvia Offley, John anek, Adams Hollis Twitchell.
Terry G. Landreth, Jerome A. Hafner, Terry Louis Hagberg,
F. Olson, Roger Lee Olson.
Michiko K. Ulrich, *Do r o t h y
Lefor, Patrick Leong, Ronald Eu- Kathleen G. Haines, Cornelia K.
David E. Palanuk, Kenneth Lee Utsey.
gene Libby, Gaylan D. Littlejohn, Hanhardt, Evelyn L. Hansey, Ja- Palmer,
Terry B. Parker, Lauri
Kathy A. Luckey, Richard G. mes, Allen Hanson, Catherine G. Partridge, Robert R. Patton
Jerrie Ann Van Vickie, Douglas
Jr.,
. McKillop, Jeffr_ey Lee McMeans, Hass, Glen A. Hass, Jon Ha- John
Vernon, Susan Kaye Vetterlein.
T.
Payne,
MerrittaA.
PearAlison Jan McNeese Daniel Max- terius, Leslie L. Hathorn, Jerry
Michael E. Walker, Sharon J.
well, *Bruce E. Micklus, Casey L. Hayes, William Kevin Terence son, Warren W. Pestka, Linda Ward, Lorena Rae Warner, Mott
Sue
Peterson,
Virgil
Eugene
M. Moore.
c. Warren, *Michael R. Watson,
Haynes, Gary Alton Hebard, LarJames L. Napier, Glennys ry Alfred Hedrick, *Stephanie J, Phillips, LoranL. Piercy, *Jerry Michael A. Watts, George R.
J.
Plowhead,
Roy
R.
Pond,
CharHe le n Neely, *Marjorie Ne et, Hehn, Richard E. Henbest II,
Weir, Gary Norman Welburn,
Darwin K. Nelson, Gerald P. Gary L. Henry, Sandra L. Henry, les Dale Putman, Frank Jay Py- James Franklin Whitchurch ,
les.
Nelson Richard Louis Nel- Timothy Mark Henson, Linda L.
- •
'
Donald Warren Rankin, John *William James Wick, Michael J.
son Jr., Arthur L. Newcombe, Hetlage, Michael H. Hill, Robert L. Rauschert, *Thomas William Wilkerson, Kay E. Williams, San*Julia C. Pearce, Carl Thomas Ernest Hobbs, RandallG. Hoberg,
dra Joy Williams, Harvey FosPennington, Randall J. Peckham, *Joanne E. Hoppe, Wilfrid Ro- -~ay, Raleigh James Reel, Dan- ter Willis, *David Elliot Wiliel
Nicholas
Reeve,
Delbert
ThoLee Pettigrew, •*Frank R. Phil- bert Horrocks, Terrill Howard,
son, Billie Gene Wimberly Jr~
1 ips, Dennis Leroy Pierce, G. Scott Howarth Jr., Bradley des, Larry R. Richardson, PatDonald Edward Young, Michael
tricia
K.
Rickett,
Loren
Paul
ThOJi:tas Milton Pierce, John D. E. Hucka, Michael R. Huff, RanZimmerman.
Rictor,
Donna
Mae
Riel,
Douglas
Purkey, Robert Purscelley, Ter- dy G. Hulette, Gary Gernon Hunt.
ry Allen Roberts, Edith s. Hol*Carroll Yvonne Ingram, Byston, Violet Ann Rose.
ron G. Inman.
Gerald Earl Saunders, John W.
*Linda Lee Jackson, Abbie
Savage, Cathy Schneider, JackW. Lynn Jillson, Arnold J. Johnson,
Sh ad w i c k, R. David Sherman, James R. Johnson, Richard WesWanda Lee Smith, Richard J. ley Johnsrud, Caryl M. Jones,
Stahl, Wayne M. Stevens, *Ca- *Floyd C. Jones, Linda Kay Jotherine Mary Stolsig, Douglas W. nes, Tamara Sue Jones, MauStrong, Raymond Luther Stubbs, reen Judish, Wendy Faye KeeLinford Stutzman, KarenJ.Swan- ver, Connie Lynn Kelty, Robert
son, Jacqueline Sweeney, Michael Timothy Kerr, Linda Kester, James Norman Kinch, Douglas G.
E. Swenson.
Jon E. Taylor, Carlos D. Til- Kindred, R ob e rt A. Kingman,
ler, James Hal Tyack, Larry E. La r r y W. Kitchel, Ronald L.
Updegraff, *Dorothy Utsey, Mi- Knowles, Rollin B. Knudtson, Jales Vickstrom, Mary A. Vinyard. mes J. Kubik, Robert o. Kupper.
Robert Eugene Lange, Michael
Pendelton·C. Wallace, Gregory
Soul music, announcements
Edwin Wasil, Michael L. Wend- G. Larion, Margaret H. Larion,
ling, Glenda Sue Yates
Carl J. Larson, Larry Dean Leet.:.
of and about the Block

Associate of Arts
Degree
* Phi Theta Kappa members
Tomas C. Anderson, William
R. Axthelm.
.
.
Marilyn Sue Bailey, Robert M.
Barley, Walter L Beane, S_haron
Lynette Berkstresser, David EIbert Bomar, Charlotte A* Bon?,
Sallylo\ C: Bon ze r, Maria
Brady, Ahsan Glen ~rown, Raymond C. Brunton, Robert M.
Burton
•
Betty Jean Cain, James Eugene Conant, Ellis L. Conn,
*Dale R. Conner, Cecil R. Cooksey, John Andrew Coombs, Edward L. Cope, *Sheldon D. Cross,
David Raymond Davis, PatrickJ.
Delaney, William Harvey Denniston, *Barbara Devereux, *Sylvia
Diess, Lavonne Klahn Dimmick,
*R. Elden Dunsmoore, DarrellG.
Dunn.
Wayne Lew is Earnshaw,
Douglas R. Ellison, Marcia Anne
English, Rodney L. Evers. Catherine Sue Fanning, Pa u 1 Emerson Featherston u1, teon
Fountain.
Kevin M. Gallagher, *Gayle
Patricia Gardner, *Virginia Anne
Geertsen, Rich L. Grabner, *Joyce Arleen Greiner, Carthal R.
Harvey, Francis Neal Holland,
Robert B. Hunt.
Joseph Edward Isabel, Lynn
T. Johnsoni Michael Jay Kite.

I

BLACK MAGIC SOUL
Fridays
12 Midnight
With: Don Adair

Certificates of Completion

Louise Marie Anderson.
Dennis L. Barker, Carolyn L.
Bauder, Denise Rae Bauer,ShelIev Billet. Jill Blackhurst, Sally
J. Borgaard, Crystal Brennan,
Melissa A. Brett, Charles L.
Brown, Dorris Jane Buckle, Ardys E. Buford, Leona Garlinda
Bull, Mic key Lee Burgess ,
Teresa Marie Burns, Jacqueline
Ann Bushnell, Joyce Busse.
Roger Chrysler, Caroline M.
Coker, M. Dianne Cunningham,
Betty Lou Dahlin, Constance Ann
Daley, C. Elaine Davis, Gary

Lee Davis, Mary E. Davis, Shelby J. Day, Linda Diane Dickson, Frances C. Dodd, Rhema
L. Dolan, Eileen Rae Doty.
Andrea Arlene Olson . Flegel,
Diane Lee Fleishman, Carol Jean
Franklin, Gisela E. Froehner,
Robert S. Fry, Susan Rae Fuller, Cheryl Kae Georgianna,
Juanita Jean Greiner, Deborah .
Diane Gustafson.
Michael Wayne Hafner, Susan
Marie Hammar, Judith A. Harris, Linda Lee Hatch, Gerald
R. Hearing, A. Joy Helm, Dorothy. Louise Herman, Susan Kay
Hess, Susan Rase Holley, Cheryl
Jean Homes, James Clyde Hooker, Carol Jeanine Hougen, Carol
Howard.
Gerald David Jennings, ·Linda
Irene Jensen, Cydney Marie
Johnson, Faye Jeanne Johnston,
Kathleen Alexie Jordan, Sandra
Lee Kilpatrick, Ardith Ann Klanecky, Nina F. Knapp.
Larry Lansdowne, Mary Dee
Larson, Linn James Lawrence,
Susan V. Leckie, Karin Leslie,
Theo do r a V. Loeffler, Julia
Jean Lueders, Sylvia Lynch,

I Diplomas I
Ronnie R. Conyac, James c.
Edwards, Archie P. Engelhardt,
Barbara A. Falk, Karen Sue Ferguson.
Dennis s. Gray, Thomas R.
Griggs, Leonard A. Hoge. •
Robert Grant Loesch, Bruce E.
Micklos, William A. McMurray,
Susan E. Metzger.
Herbert W. Nelson Jr., Michael Shipley, James Arthur Simmons, Sharon Joy Sweet, Ernest Van Nalts.

I

Sheryl Lynn McCrea.
Gayle Marquess, Nancy B.
M a t s on • Margaret Me I a rt !
Karren A. Miller, Carol L. Minihan, Jerry E. Mitchell, Pamela
Ann Mitchell, Susan Bernadine
Morris, Grace L. Munn.
Christine A. Neal, Marcia Diane Neuschwanger, Theresia Nyberg, Anthony W. Ownbey, Richard Wayne Parks, Aleita Pelray, Elgene Thomas Penniston,
B. Ray Pflueger, Donna Jean
Price, Christie Joann Quiner.
Pattricia Rainy, Beverly Rayley Gloria J. Reed, Anita Faye
Robinson, Colleen Elizabeth Ronan, Violet Ann Rose, Bonnie Lou
E. Roth, Eunice L. Royston.
Margaret Louise Saltmarsh,
Fred 0. Sannes, Timothy C. Savage, Sandee G. Schmidt, Ruth
N. Shannon, Roger A. Siemsen,
J. Coleen Skeers, Deborah Kay
Smith, Kathleen Lenora Smith,
Adele A. Sobba, Ann M. Starkweather.
Judith Irene Trettin, Alan L.
Wagner, Rodney Walch, Elva L.
West, Sheryl Jean White, Shelley Whiteley, Dennis D. Willian,
Vera L. Wood. Kathryn Luella
Young.

community

SATURDAY GOLD
Saturdays
4:00 p.m.
With: Dave Chance
Rebound Rock from 1956-1970

CONTACT
Sundays .
4:00 p.m.
With:
Casey and Maree Fast

Pa_g:e 12

TORCH1 June 4

Brandstrom to ottend··summer ..institute·
by Gail Shogren

Jan Brandstrom, LCC counselor and dedicated supporter
of women's rights, has been chosen to attend a United States Office of Education summer Institute designed to relate the
women' s movement to higher
education.
Purposes of the institute are
1) to develop an understanding and
awareness of the women's movement, 2) to prepare faculty in
the development of curricular
models and methods of teaching courses relating to women,
and 3) to assist administrators
in developing methods of identifying areas of unequal educa"BOOT" LOCKS WHEEL of car illegally parked at LCC. The ·- tional opportunities, in developdevice is now being used by LCC Security to immobilize cars ing strategies for structural inof persistent offenders who have ignored three or more citations. novation, and in creating posiNotices are placed on car doors that the "boot" is attached. tive processes for institutional
(Photo by Hew Lipscomb) change and affirmative action.
Payment of fines frees the car.
The institute will be held at
the University of Pittsburgh from
June 13 to July 10. According to
Dr. Konnilyn Feig, Institute Director, the meeting is an at. .
by Bill Nelson
mer and pollution issues for the tempt to provide a framework
in which to pursue innovative
people of Ore~on.
solutions in response to a major
Ralph Nader brought the idea
Miss Burgess is asking all
social movement at its moment
to light, some concerned people interested persons to attend the
of acceleration. It will train adtook it to heart, and after se- June 9 Board meeting, scheven months of vigorous planning, duled for 8:00 p.m. in Admini- ministrators and faculty to anathe Oregon Student Public In- stration 202, to show support lyze their institutions, pinpoint
problem areas, develop methods
terest Research Group, (OSPIRG) for C\SPIRG.
will be presented to the LCC
Board of Education next Wednesday, June 9.

and policies, implement changes,
design curriculum, and institute
courses relating to women.
To help higher education personnel avoid the chaos and disruption on their campuses which
have occurred from other social and political movements, and
to provide the insight and e~pertise to seize upon the opportunities for change and for
expanded leadership development
inherent in the women's movement, the Institute is designed

s-------------------- 1
SCug,ene J3arl,er College I
Ss

Complefe Jrlodern 9eaching 9echniques

_

The Board will be asked to
approve a "check-out system"
for C\SPIRG funding whereby students will be asked to contribute $1 dollar during Fall registration, 19 71. The system
would involve adding an extra
line to the fee card, labeled
and coded for C6PIRG. Moneyfor
the organization would be collected by the LCC Business office and then turned over to
C6PIRG. The Board must approve
this procedure.
OSPIRG is a student financed
and c•.>ntrolled research organization concentrating on consu-

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

Need . any summer repairs?

fiJJJ(5{J'&

Graduates for 1971 include:
Jeri Ahmad, Sherry Arbuckle,
Ruth Bascue, Diane Bernable,
Claudia Boyd, Linda B r ow n,
Debra Browns, Randy Bryson.
Candy Chambers, Helene Collins, Rose Conant, Shirley Cook,
Barbara Connolly, Connie Kelty,
Jo s e phi n e Garrett, Mildred
Goolsby, Sue Graber.
Cornelia Hanhardt, Eve 1y n
Hansey, Wendy Keever, Kathy
Harper, Sandy Harrison, Linda
Holder, Joanne Hoppe, Carol Ingram, Tammy Jones.
Linda Kester, Margaret Larson, Margaret Lewis, Linda Hetlage, Nancy Minston, Phyllis
Montgomery, Ann Moriarty,
Donna Riel.
Sue Skelton, Candace Slaven,
Judith Sohm, Cornelia Stevens,
Michiko Ulrich, Kay Williams.

fkt:r£iJJ.~j%:;__j

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Fit~f.;;S@·;.1

AUTOMOTIVE

1917 Frank-lin

344-7 522

SPECIAL
DISCOUNT
ON ROCKET
GASOLINE

.....

ADN graduates
Forty LCC students in the
Associate Degree of Nursing
p r o gr am will be honored at
pinning c e re monies Friday,
June 4.
LCC President Eldon Schafer
will address the graduates. Pins
will be presented by Mary Fiorentino, Director of Nursing, and
nursing instructor Pat Green.
The ceremony is scheduled for
7:30 p.m. in the Forum Theatre
(Forum 301) and will be followed
by a reception in the LCC cafeteria.

Check with

i%:S$1.~M
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'1j,,,.:.:J~t:.-.$\M~UWr¾~}~'7°
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pins
receive

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for your Patronage

l»tt~iff AAJ

f~. :1Pi·: };·z,.-:.:1
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Tha-nk You

OSPIRG goes to Board

The principles, goals, and,
most importantly, the funding of
<EPIRG will be presented by
Cheryl Burgess, coordinator of
the program at Lane.

as an experimental model with
extensive spin-off and evaluation devices.
Mrs. Brandstrom hopes to present the recent Health, Education
and Welfare Department charge
of sex discrimination in hiring
against the University of Oregon at the workshop. With the
information gained she plans to
speak at local workshops and to
pursue equal opportunity for women in higher education in this
area.

Our way

to LCC students

of saying

thanks for your business
and have a nice summer!

i
iii

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with a fill up of Rocket Gasoline

LCC Students
Good only at

LCC Rocket
30th Ave. & 1-5

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One per customer

Offer expires 6/13/71

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..

KlCC-FI morniliii "ShoW (hangas format
"This Morning," a two-hour
community service program on
KLCC-FM, has added a new feature. Dennis Celorie, program
co-host, has initiated a "callin" segment to the program,
but with a slight twist--inst ead
of the people calling KLCC, Celorie calls them. The new seg-

ment includes calls to various
people in the community for onthe-air discussions.
Sin~e its debut in October,
"This Morning" has included a
guest interview each day plus
recorded reports from various
agencies in the area. In addition, program co-host Tom Lich-

Tutorial assistance paym ents
being offere d to vetera ns
A tutorial assistance program
for veterans and servicemen .· is
being offered under the GI Bill.
This program provides special
help to overcome a marked deficiency in a subject required
for the satisfactor y pursuit of an
educational objective. Its purpose
is to prevent failure -- it is
therefore not available to those
who only wish to improve their
academic standing.
To be eligible, a person must
be a veteran or serviceman enrolled under the GI Bill in postsecondary (above high school)
training at an approved educational institution on a half-time
or more basis. The school must
certify a need for tutorial help
to avoid failing a course which
is an essential part of the student's program.
To obtain tutorial assistance,
a student must first discuss the

matter with the teacher in the
course or courses where there
is a present danger of failure.
If tutoring to prevent failure is
necessary, he should then consult a counselor as to qualifications, availability and scheduling of tuforial services, then
arrange for tutoring services by
tutors certified as qualified by
the school.
An application (VA Form 21#19901) may be obtained from the
school or nearest VA office.
To receive payment, students are
asked to complete the application, making certain to obtain a
certificatio n from the school
showing the number of sessions
received, and send it to the VA
office having their educational
claim records.
Students may receive up to
$50 monthly for a maximum of
nine months.

bers of Commerce, City Hall and
the Lane County Humane Soceity.
The program, heard each
weekday from 8:00 to 10:00 a.m.,
still features many community
service items and music plus
news each half hour.
KLCC, at 90.3 on the FM dial,
will operate on its regular schedule during the summer. Program
guides are available on request
by writing KLCC, c/o LCC, 4000
E. 30th Avenue, Eugene 97405.

ty presented music and community service items. News reports were given each half hour
by co-host Gary Hardesty.

According to Lichty, who is
Program Director for KLCC,
the program is now more in•formal and the information about
the community more current.
"This new informal format,"
said Lichty, "allows us to do
more becar.se we are not limited
to a strict format. For example,
if Gary reads a story on the news
that interests us, all three of
us might discuss the story. We
·plan the program as it's aired.''

,,

.

Guarante ed Occupatio nal 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.

When the bill banning the sale
of canned beverages passed the
Oregon House, Celorie called the
e:overnor and got his reactions.
When the hosts were discussing
the recent LCC Soul Food Dinner, a question arose about
''black-eye d peas," so Celorie
called LCC counselor Jon West
for his comments.
As part of the ''call-in" segment, live---rathe r than taped-regular reports are presented
from the news bureaus at LCC
and the U of 0, the Oregon State
Employment Service, Lane Memorial Blood Bank, Switchboard
and a stock report. Calls are
also mane on a weekly basis to
the Eugene and Springfield Cham-

OPTOMETRIST
Dr. Robt. J. Williamson
Optometrist

• WIRE RIM GLASSES
• EYE EXAMINATION
• CONTACT LENSES
• FASHION EYEWEAR
"Just Say 'Charge It'!"

344-5371
OR 344-0816

Life's obse rvati ons
I've talked to a number of people who wish they could q u it
smoking, but somehow they never seem to have any success.
Yet, it is quite easy to quit when
one approaches it with the right
attitude.
I sat down beside a young man
in the hallway of the Apprentice ship Building last fall and he asked me, "Do you smoke?"
"No," I said.
"Then I won't ask you for a
cigarette." he said.
"I used to smoke," I said,
"a long time ago, but I quit."
"I wish I could quit," he said.
"It's easy if you really want
to," I said.
"I've tried a couple oftimes,"
he said, "but I always wind up
with the nicotine fits.''
"Do you really want to quit?"
I asked.
"Yes,'' he said.
"Well, I'll tell you how I did
it. It was really quite simple.
You have to remember, though,
that your best friends may be
your worst enemies," I said.
"How's that?" he asked.
"They hate to see you do something they think they can't, and
will keep offering you cigarettes.
'Come on, just this one,' they'll

by Mark

say, and you give in to them."
"That's happened to me," he
said, "but how do you avoid it."
"That's easy," I said. "I carried my tobacco with me for a
month after I quit, and when offered a cigarette, I'd tell 'em
that I preferred my own."
"Wasn't that tempting, to carry
your tobacco?" he asked.
"Not really," I said. "There's
a little psychology working there
too. I knew I could have a cigarette anytime the pressure became
too great. I also knew that I'd
gone as long as four hours without
smoking whenever I was busy, so
when I found myself reaching for

Art classes set

for Heceta House

Standard Opti cal
820 WILLAMETTE

a cigarette, I put it off for 15
minutes and got busy."
"How long did you have to do
that?" he asked.
"After a month, there was no
problem anymore," I said, "and
that's been 19 years ago."
''Sounds simple," he said.
"It is," I said. "All you need
is the desire to quit, and just
live a few minutes at a time. If
you think about having to do
without a smoke for a week or
a month, it'll break your will."
"Never thought of it that way,"
he said. "You make it sound so
easy, damned if I ain't ·going to
try it."

Hon orar y initia tes 97

Ninety-seven LCC students
have been initiated into Phi Theta
Kappa, a national honor society
for two-year colleges.
This year's is the largest group
of LCC students to be initiated
into the society at one time,
said Gary Pickett, Phi Theta
Kappa president. In the past only
20 or 30 students have participated in the initiation ceremony.
Over 550 LCC students were
eligible for Phi The t a membership Winter Term.
Picket attributes the apparent
lack of interest in the society to
lack of knowledge about it. The
organization is not well-known,
Concentrated studies in Basic he said, because it is not inDesign and Art History will be of- volved with many activities. Most
fered by LCC at Heceta House, of the honor students, he added,
north of Florence, from June 21 spend their time on homework, to
keep ·their scholastic average, in
to July 2.
Twenty participant s will be in- addition to working full or partvited to live and study at the old time. Therefore, the students do
Coast Guard house, while earning not have time to become involved
3 c re d it s for each of the two in various activities.
Those selected for membercourses. Cost for the two weeks
ship in Phi Theta Kappa must be
is $85.50 per person.
Basic Design will be organized be full-time students and earn
around the theme '' movement in a minimum 3.5 GPA for two connature," and will cover photo- secutive terms. To become a
graphy, film drawing and sculp- member, a fee of $12 and attendance at the initiation cereture.
The theme of Art History will mony are required.
The initiation ceremony inbe "movement in art." Six Oregon artists will present their cludes a guest speaker and repwork for study and discussion. etition of the Phi Theta Kappa
Prospective s tu ct e n ts should . oath by the new members.
contact the LCC Art and Applied
LCC's chapter has a memDesign D3partment at 747-4501, bership of 160 students. Since
Lane is a two-year institution,
ext. 307.

Page 13

TORCH, June 4

there is a larger turnover, Pickett said,
The most beneficial aspect of
joining the society is the Honor
Seal which is placed on the student's transcript. Pickett said the
seal "holds its own" in the
business world. If an employer is
selecting applicants for a certain position, the seal may sway
his decision since it is respected.

--

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LCC Gradu ate

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walnut base with
seal (tak·es standard refill).

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with "lane Communi ty College"

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Card Case

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T-S h irts and Jackets

lCC monogram assorted
styles, colors and prices

LCC Books tore

We're Right on Campus

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A CAREER IN
RADIO OR TV
FOR YOU?
Here's a chance to find out.
Lane Community College is offering a summer workshop

in radio and

televisio n

operate

televisio n. Learn to

camera s and announ ce on radio.C lasses begin June 21.

Lane

For further informa tion contact :
lane Communi ty College
Mass Communi cation Departme nt

747-4501 , Ext. 392

..

......

_

....

-

Commultg
College
, I

l

l

I

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'•

..

Page 14

TORCH 1 June 4

DCE•' oHers su m·m1tr•l:•arts courses

The music segment, which has others are Writing for Juveniles,
"Haystack '71" -- the vacation-fun- and-learning summer expanded to eight workshops from . by Eloise and William McGraw;
session of the Oregon Division of the four of the first season, will Writing for Television and MoContinuing Education--will pre- present headliners 1i k e Robert tion Pictures, with Hollywood
sent a score of concentrated De Cormier, conductor of the na- scenarist Thomas Thompson; and
credit workshops June 14-August tionally renowned De Cormier Fiction Writing, by Western
6 at Oregon's scenic Cannon Folk Singers; Ray Tate, dean of writer Dwight Newton. All of the
instruction at Th e Old Town
Beach.
inst r u ct o rs are professional,
A cluster of courses in each School of Folk Music~ Chicago; selling writers. Peter Fleming,
of three areas will bring na- Dr. Frederick Swanson, director a Hollywood agent, will accomtionally known instructors and of the Moline, Ill. Boys' Choir, pany Thompson to Oregon to reperformers to the Oregon coast, which has toured the U.S. and view possible scripts.
both to direct the university- Europe; John Kendall ofSouthern
Complete information on the
level workshops and to partici- Illinois University; Norm an Haystack programs is available
pate informally in the extra- Weeks, Kodaly specialist from from Sue Gordon, Director, at
Seattle; and Al and Gladys Stone
curricular fun events.
the Portland office of the Division
In its third season, Haystack Wright of Purdue University. Dr. of Continuing Education, 1633 SW
will include such extra attrac- L. Stanley Glarum of Lewis and Park Avenue; tel. 229-4847.
tions for participants and towns- Clark College is .coordinating the
people as the Tuesday evening
5
wiener roast and sing-along on m~tc v~;~:/~~~; workshops have Stud• n t win
the beach, the Wednesday evening been arranged by coordinator Bookstore drawing
''happening" featuring current Frederick Kline of Portland State
LGC student William Anson
artist-instructors, the Fri ct a y University. They will include
evening free concert, and week- Landscape Painting by famed ar- was the winner of the electric
tist Reuben Tam of New York; hibachi given away at a drawing
end summer stock theater.
The three kinds of credit Ceramic Workshop, with Ray- on May 21 by the LCC Bookstore.
Second prize of a ticket to the
courses to be given are in the mond Grimm, PSU artist; Noncategories of music, visual arts, loom Weaving, with Bonnie Mel- Soul Food dinner went to Lisi
tzer, now at University of Wash- Fenner, secretary in the Presiand creative writing.
ington; Arts and Crafts with Na- dent's office. Since Miss Fenner
tural Materials, John Horns, head had already purchased a ticket to
of the department of Fine Arts, the dinner, she sent Dana Davis
Pacific University; Film Produc- to collect the ticket.
tion Workshop with Thomas T.
JUDI TRETTIN ADMffiES AWARD as the outstanding graduate of
TO<:tE"THEf\ CAFE
LCC's 1971 Dental Assistant class. She was selected by classmates
A graduate student from Port- T~ylor III of PSU_; and Painting
AllO JAZZ c. L..00
for the award, presented by the Oregon Dental Assistants Assn. to land State has been elected to with Natural Environment, with
graduates of accredited dental assistant programs. Judi will be em- the Mt. Hood Community Col- Kline.
;uo ?oLK STi(.€ET
(Photo by Hew Lipscomb) lege Board of Directors.
ployed in Grants Pass.
Four practical creative writing
<-,t.oa.Jy nusac., Pooc.., ~•P
Robert Davis was elected to classes have been assembled by
Stlol'
CliEc.K l/S our 11""\
the board during the general Don J _a~ es, who·will dir:ct the
345-115'11
lllE" a.uv tou
Non-fiction workshop himself.
school election, May 3.
9.lH1j~
•1
..
Davis, a former Air Force IPIIIGNIIIGl•l'lll•Nma~.-,:l!Nll•.11111•••
Complete Ice cream
-----.-.
~A
lieutenan~ colonel, and Vi_etnam
8
Party Items for
vetera_n 1s. cur~ently s?rvmg as
ions
All
a leg1slahve mtern m Salem
Occas
I
while he earns graduate credit
_..........._..,.._.._...
in political science. He assists
Hand Packed
~iiiiiiJ' BASXI?MtOBBIIS
State Representative Leroy

Student elected

to MHCC Board

.~.,

I

I

• o/ RicK

M nz

School spirit-as it were

A few years ago, I went to
my first college football game,
back when I was a freshman,
back when I didn't know any
better. Excited then to be part
of the zest of it all, my season
ticket clutched firmly in my paw,
I was ready to cheer ll).Y team
on to Victory, thrilled to take
part in school activities, excited
about the excitement.
By the end of the first quarter of the game, my excitement
withered into slumber, which is
how I have spent the rest of my
foot b a 11 Saturdays-at home
sleeping. In the context of our
c o u n t r y ' s maladies, nothing
seems more irrelevant than
watching 22 John Waynes beating each other up with artistic
directors spurring them on, adding to our country's already prevalent violence-syndrome.
And the c he e r 1e ad e r s screeming their larynxes outfor what? Their legs kicking,
their hips swaying, their lipstuck-open mouths spewing out
Rahs and YEA Teams, acting
out a sort of girl-guerilla
theatre of the avante-old-garde.
Their mouths open, their minds
closed: open only to the idea
of winning, winning and winning.
Winning what?
But it isn't just that. The players, the managers, the mascots,
the cheerleaders and the cheerfollowers don't bother me that
much. It's the concept of school
spirit that irritates me.
At the same time as that
game--and every college football game since then-there has
been a war going on in Indochina,
racism going on everywhere,
killing and shouting and shooting
and destruction-and these people have been devoting their ener•
gies to football. .
This kind of school spirit is a
left-over from the twenties. Besides the cheering, school spirit

has, at different times, meant
goldfish swallowing, flagpole sitting, overcrowded phone booths,
alumni clubs, letter sweaters,
school songs, fraternities and
sororities, all of which are dead
and dying, as they should,
The 1970 football season if
over. But school spirit hasn't
ended.
Or maybe it never has really
begun.
School spirit, in fact, should
have a renaissance, a reincarnation, but in a totally different
form. The "school" shouldn't
be a specific institution, but a
gene r a 1 school of academic
thought to be pursued. And the
"spirit" should be a different
kind of spirit-not the cheer-ithear-it-spirit, but a spirit of
the mind, a spirit of hope for
ideas and ideals, not idols.
It should deal with art, with
education, with politics, with humanistic principles, and with
reality. And this kind of school
spirit wouldn't need cheerleaders, spewing out their lungs,
kvetching their Men on. Their
redundant Rahs will be meaningless until they start cheering
for that old Game of Life, as
it is called, rather than just the
game of football.
And this new spirit already has
shown itself to be possible-in
innovative educational exp eriments in colleges around the
country; in the many work-study
community-oriented p r o j e c t s
popping up in which students can
participate and get credits for in
student activism within the political system.
This kind of school spirit now
is only half-alive, but could conceivably be revived to become
more than just another monogrammed mug, a blonde, kicking coed with a Pandora voice
box, and an empty bottle showcased on a fraternity windowsill.

Owens_in th? legislat~re.
DaVIs said he decided to run
for the ~oard be~ause h_e had
"a long rnterest m pubhc affairs and public education." He
also_believes that "good citizens
are mvolved."
During the election, Davis carried 36' out of 41 polling areas
in the Mt. Hood Community College district.
Davis said he views Oregon
community c o 11 e g e s as having
three primary functions: 1) to
act as a feeder institution to
the four-year colleges, 2) to provide vocational training to students, and 3) to provide community services in the form of
continuing education and cultural
centers.
Davis has no specific plans to
change Mt. Hood Community College, but he expects to work with
the other six members of the
board to allow Mt. Hood to fill
the functions he outlined.
According to the PS U VANGUARD many voters saw Davis
as a conservative who would attempt to cut spending at the community college. David said, however, he "will view each issue
independently and judge them on
their merits."
He says the community college won't have money problems
for awhile because it now has a
sufficient tax base.
gJ

Q

TI

.

31 Flavors
1925 River Rd.
Phone 688-9868

1365 Villard Street
Phone 345-9614

I., •n
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§
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I

Blues

- Rock

"a bit of everything"

kmps

700 kc - on campus
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
weekdays

check with

Bill's Foreign Car Service
for service and repair

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D

JocliS .fClke title

TORCH, June 4

Page 15
:--

by Dave Harding

Moninger shatters records
in LCC weightlifting meet
Dan Moninger shattered al 1
three odd-lift records on his
way to the "outstanding lifter
of the meet" award in last Wednesday's (May 26) intramural
power lift tournament.
The 148-pound Moninger set
records in the military press,
arm curl, and the bench press.
In the military press, Moninger
broke the record for his weight
class by lifting 180 pounds. In
the arm curl, the standing record of 90 pounds was scratched

off the books when he reset it
at 130 pounds. And in the bench
press, the o Id record of 130
pounds fell prey to Moninger as
he pressed 225 pounds.
Doug Ellison and Ron Jacobson were runners-up to Moninger·
for the meet's outstanding lifter
award. Moninger outpointed them
1.20 to 1.12.
In addition to Moninger's efforts, thirteen other lifters combined to set 14 new records, and
one more record was tied.

- - - ------ - - -

I.
I
I

New records
BODY
WEIGHT
Jacobson
168
Moninger
148
Huffman
164
Booth
258
Moninger
148
Ellison and Huffman 165 class
Mitchell
179
Hoxmeier
200
Booth
258
Moninger
148
Ellison
160
J~cobson
168
Booth
258
Ogan
197 1/2

LIFT
Mil. Press
Mil. Press
Mil. Press
Mil. Press
Arm Curl
Arm Curl
Arm Curl
Arm Curl
Arm Curl
Bench Press
Bench Press
Bench Press
Bench Press
Bench Press

WEIGHT
LIFTED
195
180
190
200
135
140
150
130
155
225
245
240
275
245

Ogan

197 1/2

Mil. Press

210

All library
materials
are now due

Three LCC athletes will participate in the Portland State
University Twilight T-rack Meet
Saturday, June 5, at Duniway
Park.
John Mays, who ran a 9.5
earlier this year for the Titans, will be entered in the 100yard dash.
Dan Van Camp and Dennis
Hilliard will compete in the
880-yard run. Van Camp ran
a 1:52.1, while Hilliard completed the two-lap affair in a
time of 1:54. 7.
Field e v e n t s will start at
3:00 p.m., followed by running
events at 5:00.

Athletes honored
at lCC banquet
Dan Van Camp (track), Rod
Laub (baseball), and Joe Tollenar (tennis) were honored as
the most outstanding spring athletes at the annual ~p ring Sports
Awards Banquet Thursday, May
27.
The banquet, held at North's
Chuc kw a go n, r ec ognized all
spring athletes who lettered in
their respective sports. Along
with letters, the me 1 received
team pictures.
Anotller award w... :;rrsenteu
by co r1c h Al Tar penning to Tim
Bishop, who was el0cted team
captain of the 1971 Titan t r ack
te am.
In all three Spring sportsbaseball, track and tennis-Lee
teams turn8d i n winni:1g rec ords
this year.

Lane's baseball team wound up
its season in third place in the
Oregon Community College Athletic Association (OCC.AA).
The track squad c apt u red
second in the OCCAA, and second
in Region 18.
The tennis team, which does not
have a conference to compete in,
ended the season with eight wins
and five losses.
Lane should have strongteams
in all three sports again next
year.

Off-Campus Students

Two chessmen
attend meet
by S. James Long
Two members of LCC's
Knights and Castles Chess Club
attended the "Cherry City Open
Chess Club Tournament" at Chemeketa Community College in
Salem May 22 and 23.
Jerry Weikel, LCC's top
player, and John Loughlin, Faculty Advisor, made the trip
north. Neither player w ou Id reveal his final score.
When asked, both said, " I could
have done better."
Tournament first plac e went to
Ron Cotton, of Portland. His
score was 8 perfect 5 wins - no
losses.
Class B hnnor s were gi ven to
John Billey, an Assistant Profe ssor of P;:, ·"hology at Or egon
State univer;:,ity. rmey is one
of the few bE ,d r~ness players i n
Oregon.
The Tournament was of the
five-round Swiss variety and
sponsored by the ,Salem Chess
Club.

Women choose
traclc team star
Beth Smith, LCC women's field
event star, was chosen Lane's
outstanding women's track athlete of the year.
Miss Smith graduated from
Thurston High School in 1970.
She set the girl's state record
in the shot put and discus and
still holds the discus mark.
For the Lane team she set
records in the shot, discus and
javelin this year ans was high
scorer consistently.
Miss Smith is planning to attend Oregon State Universitythis
fall, where she will continue her
physical education major.

I
I

--------------- -

SPORTS ROUNDUP
3 Titans enter
Portland meet

-

ATTENTION

-

Tied record ·

on a rain-soaked infield, the
The Prescription
Jocks' defense was better than
Shop
Well, what can you say?
the Hairs, and so was their hitThe Springfield Jocks did it ting. And in the end, so too
For your prescription needs.
again.
was the score -- the Jocks scored
A three-run uprising in the - three times in the top of the
2460 Willam~tt~
342-5939
top of the ninth inning gave the ninth to win the championship
Jocks an 11-8 victory over the 11-8.
Public Hairs and the intramural
For all students interested in
softball championship.
competing in intramurals next
For the Jocks, it was their year, take it easy. Don't worry.
second team championship in two The Jocks won't be back. They
terms at LCC. And that's a first. are all leaving for bigger and
No intramural team in the better things.
school's history has ever won
All teams will have an equal
back-to-back championships.
chance to win an intramural ti• VALLEY RIVER CENTER
Winter Term the Jocks won 10 tle. It won't be like this year ...
• DOWNTOWN on the MALL
of 11 basketball games, and in a year that was dominated by the
Broadway & WiOamette
the f o u r - t e a m championship Springfield Jocks.
tournament they overhauled the
Faculty Stuffers in the last minute
to take their first team title. I
I
And now this one. What else
I
I
can you say except that the Jocks
are the winningest team in in- I
I
tr am u r al history. they have
compiled a won - lost record I
I
of 23-5 in one year at LCC I
I
4-2 in football, 12-1 in basketball, and 7-2 in softball. That's
I
a record that should stand for a
long time.
I
In the three-game softball series, the Jocks and Hairs split
a doubleheader.
Trailing all the waY. in t he
first game, the Jocks scored
six runs in the last two innings
to win 8-4.
Although the Hairs scored four
runs, three of them in the first
inning, they were held to just
eight hits -- all singles. The
Jocks only mustered 10 hits, but
took advantage of four timelyhit doubles in their late inning
Students paying their own utility bills-that is, living offrallies.
1campus where utilities are not included in the rent-should
The Jocks were out of it all
make their own -arrangements with EWE~ for starting and
together in the second game.
stopping electric service.
They gave up 24 hits and lost
20-12.
An order to start service saves the inconvenience of having
For the decisive game, played
your electricity turned off because the previous tenant ordered it stopped. An order to discontinue service saves the
inconvenience of being billed for service after you leave
Eugene or move to another location in town. It's simple;
do it by phone

Remember ...
1. Call and apply for service-when you move in.
2. Call and stop service-when you move out.
3. Noti fying __y~ur landlord _th~! you are·moving in
or out is not enough. You must notify EWEB!
Eugene Water & Elect..-ic Board
A Municipally-Owned Utility

Eugene, Oregon
Phone 343-1661

Office Hours: 8 a.m.-5:00 p.m.

NO Hanky panky movies
NO Topless barmaids
NO Pool tables
NO Beer
·at the

Golden

a n ar

j

Th ats a b unch of balon ey
we have all that and more.

avern

13~ 13wL

,_____2000 ·west 11th A v e . - - - - -- - -- --t.
I

'

f

TORCH, June 4

Behind-the··,-scenes help
needed for 'Fiddler'
"Behind-the-scenes" help is
needed for this summer's Lane
County Auditorium Assn. (LCAA)
production of '' Fiddler on the
Roof."
People are needed to work in
the box offices and to help build
sPtc,.

WARREN COVERDELL PRESENTS PLAQUE to
Pam Neiswanger during Senate meeting Thursday,
June 3. Coverdell, 1970-71 ASLCC President,
and Miss Neiswanger, Senate President's Sec-

retary, both received plaques from the Senate
showing appreciation for their performances
with the Senate during the past year.
(photo by Hew Lipscomb)

U.S. Marine Reserves

Co-op adds 'human touch' to shopping
by Gail Shogren
If you dig warmth, friendliness, homemade candles and honey in the comb along with your
grocery shopping, Safeway isn't
the place for you. An old white
house at 1391 22nd E. is the spot
that has added the human touch
to food purchasing.
The Willamette Peoples Food
Co-op was started in January,
1970, by a group of local people
primarily interested in paying
less for their groceries. As in
other "Alternate culture" experiments, the members hoped
to establish a community center
when there peoples' interests and
needs came first. Both goals

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

PART TIME/FEMALE: Mature
person to stay with older lady
weekdays and nights. Weekends
off. Must know how to cook. Could
have evenings out. Pay: $120
monthly PLUS Room and Board.
FULL TIME/SUMMER-MALE
AND FEMALE: Waitress and fry
cook needed. Could be husband
and wife. Room and I meal a
day furnished. Out of town. Pay:
$2 an hour or up.
FULL TIME/FEMALE: Young
lady needed for full time babysitting August and September.
Hours needed: 10 p.m. to 12 noon.
Pay: Open for discussion.

have been realized.
Whether your menu calls for
peanut butter or goat's milk, you
pay considerably less than in
the corporate grocery chains or
the local health food stores. The
secret to keeping the costs down
is having a low overhead. The
members do virtually all the
staffing. They stock shelves,
check, clean up and take inventory.
Shoppers also make all the decisions about store policy. CoOp prices are IO% above cost
to pay such things as rent, transportation, utilities and insurance.
As a customer in the Co-Op
you are treated with more than
passing pleasantness. Diane. who
has worked as a cashier for five
months says she enjoys the job
because "the atmosphere is com-

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE: 1969 Plymouth
Roadrunner-- Excellent condition-- 383 four speed, Chrome
reverse wheels-- clutch needs
work. $1650 Call afternoons
688-0971 evenings 343-0565 ask
for Patsy.
TECHNICAL TRAINING?
Get your money's worth!
Computer programming, data
processing and key punch taught
by professionals. Veterans approved. Deferred student loans.
6 to 20 weeks (days); 40 weeks
(nights). Phone E. C.P .I., 1445
Willamette, Eugene. 343-9031.
1963 Monza Std
FOR S1'.LE:
Transmission. $250 Call Mable
235 or 998 8643 Eve.
Ext.
FOR SALE: '57 Chev 2dr H. T.
1968 327,325 H.P. engine. 4 spd.
trans. New Items: generator,
starter, exhaust system, Monroe
Shocks, chrome rims, Packard
440 wfring, carb. See at 397
Lane, Creswell, or
Holbrook
Science Bldg. parking lot. Call
895-4306 (call before coming)
and ask for Larry.

6 month program

fortable and the people are very
friendly."
The store is operated on aselfservice basis. You bring and fill
your own containers. The old
adage of . "do unto others" is
pretty easy to follow when you figure next week it could be you
trying to shut off the spout on
the molasses vat.
The food on the shelves is
chosen with nutrition in mind.
You'll find brewers yeast, sesame seeds and granola as well
as the more staple items like
dry milk and pinto beans. Many
of the vegetables are orgarµcally grown by local farmers. The
bulk cheeses have earned a reputation for being delicious.
So if your tastes lean to good
food and you like a smile with
your bill, visit the Co-Op.

10 ACRES VIEW PROPERTY
Between Eugene an ct Cottage
Grove with lovely 5 bdrm home,
6 yrs. old, 2,300 sq. ft. living
area, 2 baths, w/w carpet, 2
fireplaces, also barn with 4 boxstalls, very good water, secluded
area. Price $47,500.00 with
terms.
Laura Hill-Workman Realty
Cottage Grove
Phone 942-2487
RENT
YOUR FURNITURE
Complete q u a I it y furnishings.
Many styles and price groups,
individual item selection---3
rooms as low as $22 monthly.
Purchase option, prompt delivery. Large, convenient showroom, warehouse.
CUSTOM FURNITURE RENTAL
343-7177
115 Lawrence

AUCTION CENTER: Auction time
1:30 Sundays. We sell anything,
anytime, any place. Estates Commer c i a I Bankruptcies Liquidators. At 4100 Main St. Springfield. Phoae: 747-5051.

Engineering Unit

Vocational schools available
in engineering & related fields
For further information contact:

1520 W13th , Eugene 345-6714

Get unchained from
hard vvater pollutants
Just because you drink the water in your home
doesn't mean it's pure. 85% of all household
water supplies contain pollutants such as hard-

Alumni association formed
An LCC Alumni Association
has been formed by eight former
students of the college.
At a meeting Tuesday evening,
June 1, the group elected temporary officers and discussed organizational plans.
Named co-chairmen were Leon
Lindsay, 1968 LCC student body
president, now head mechanic at
Eugene Aviation; and Dorothy
Jackson, a 1959 Practical Nursing graduate, currently on the
campus Health Service staff.
Glen Beal, '68, a sales representative for Huling Buick, was

Five box offices are planned
this year, three of which must
be staffed by LC.AA volunteers.
Volunteer help is needed at the
Bon Marche in downtown Eugene, Meier and Frank's in the
Valley River Center, and at the
South Eugene High School ticket
office.
A meeting for potential box
office workers will be held Monday, June 7, at 7:30 p.m. in the
Cent e r Building basement on
the LCC campus.
Box office manager is Peter
Sorenson, 2130 W. 16th Ave.,

Eugene.
In addition to box office help,
set designer Bill Forrester said
there is a critical need for assistance in building sets. Since
"Fiddler" is more complex than
usual, Forrester said, "more
experienced people--<!arpenters,
a rt is ts and craftsmen" are
needed.
Work on sets is being done
beginning at 7:00 p.m. each Monday through Friday. Persons interested in helping should contact Forrester through the LCC
Performing Arts Department,
747-4501, ext. 318.
Rehearsals are under way,
with the show scheduled to open
July 30 for a nine-performance
run.
Tickets will go on sale Monday, June 21.

ness and sediment. Come to the Conference

e 1e ct e d vice-chairman. Temporary secretary will be Mary
Michaud, '67, a nurse at Sacred Heart Hospital.
Lindsay also was named to
represent the alumni association
on the executive committee of the
LCC Development Fund.
The temporary officers are all
from Eugene. Additional trustees
representing other areas of the
college district will be named later.
The officers will meet again on
June 16 to draft a constitution
for the alumni group. Former
LCC students, graduates and nongraduates, interested in joining
the alumni association or wishing
further information may call Glen
Beal at 342-4059.

Room, Administration Building, between 12 noon
and 1 p.m. Tuesday, June 8, or Wednesday,
June 9, for a household water analysis. Bring
your own drinking water in a quart jar. When
you come in just say...

SAi\..,.
~U
cow

MAW...

Discover the World
Fly

Ill CHARTERS

leaving from
London
Chicago
Los Angeles
New York
San Francisco
Dallas
Montreal

Cheapest rates to:
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Mid-East
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$200 and up

For further information:
Mr. Joost Ketien
944 E. 19th
Eugene, Oregon
686-9216