....

.-:PCJ·rn-eU-: caffs. ·for
'self eval uati on'

{ =~::·::
was ''Accountability-The Teachers Best Friend."
'·-:-:-:

STATE SUPERINTENDENT of Public Instruction
and former LCC President Dale Parnell speaks
to -teachers and staff at the LCC all:.Staff meeting Thursday£ Jan. 6. in the Forum. The topic

The role of the institution. teachers, and students was stressed. (Photo by Barry Hood)·

lane Community College

Dale Parnell, state superintenThis led to his ·next question,
dent of public instruction and ex- ' "Do we focus on the outcome of
president of LCC, spoke on "Ac- iour efforts-results? '' Dr. Par:..·
countability-The Teachers' Best nell emphasized that educational
Friend" at the LCC all-Staff institutions are accountable for
meeting. Thursdav. Jan. 6, in results and the key point of ac~
the Forum Building.
countability is, "What are your
Dr. Parneil stressed the great promises and did you dellver?"
change taking place in education"Do we measure what we can,"
al institutions, and that this Ihe asked next, stating ·that the
change should be structured by emphasis sbould be changed from
the accountability of the institu- Istandardized testing to measurtions, instructors and students. ing on an individual basis. He
In the entertaining falk Dr. also s_
uggested that grades should
Parnell said that accountability 'be used for a coaching tool inshould be viewed as a positive stead of being looked at as a reforce and that the important as- sult. Dr Parnell ventured that
pect of accountability is that of 1community colleges are a good
a s k i n g fundamental questions 'place to begin to revise the gradabout educational jobs.
' ing system.
He suggested that these fun"Are we aware of producdamental questions that should be tivity," Parnell asked; he said
asked by an institution about it- that there must be control of
self. He said that these questions costs and that institutions must'
can be applied to instructors and move toward this goal by getting
students as well, and he gave more I ea r n in g at less cost
guides to follow in answering each •through innovation and by deter-:
question.
mining if the end product of more
Parnell stated that the first cost is more learning.
fundamental question is ''Do our 1 The last question was the most
goals match our needs as an :important question according to
institution?" He said that the larnell: "Do we seek the best
needs of the students, faculty and ,in people?" He emphasised that
society must be defined. He said 1different students learn at dit-·
the real needs must be assessed 1ferent levels and speeds. "There
and an order of priorities de- 1·are nine week students and there
termined.
·are 14 week students ... " And
The second question asked by •again Dr. Parnell mentioned that
Dr. Parnell was, "Is there har- 'the present grading system may
mony between what we say and not be valid.
do?" He pointed out many good
Con c e r n in g instructors the
goals are set and forgotten and isuperintendent said that there
asked, "Do we do what we say . should be more emphasis on as._
we are doing?"
i sistance and less on evalution
Dr. Pa r n e 11 posed another and that teacher evalutions
question; '' Are our goals set with shouldn't be tied to the salary
a performance level? It is im..:. ;schedule.
portant to set goals with a per- ' He finish e d by stressing,
formance level so it is possible ' "There are two sides to acfor these goals to be evaluated," countability, the system side,
he explained.
_and the humane side."

I

I

-

Vol. 7 No. 10

4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene; Oregon 97405

January 11, 1972

Sen ate limits ADC funds

At the weekly Student Senate ballot. They have unlimited remeeting a proposal that $2,00Qbe sources," Parnell said.
allocated to help send a group
After Parnell spoke, a question
of members from the Lane County and answer period was l}eld for
Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) the Senate. The Senate then vowas reduced to $1,168 to Wash- ted to recommend passage of the
ington D.C. The LCC group in- Cigarette Tax. Parnell left with
tends to join other A.DC groups a standing invitation to visit LCC
there and lobby against the fed- again in the future.
eral welfare reform bill, HR-I.
Richard Newell, chairman ofA motion was adopted to re- the PE Department, spoke to the
cognize ADC as an official on- Se n at e in fa var of granting
campus organization. Omar Bar- $25,000 for student athletics. Nebarossa, student body president, well argued, in a QUestion and
observed that the funding of the • answer session, "If we get one
ADC would not be permissible dollar we'll spend one dollar;
unless ~he group were recognized it's up to you. Those who are
as an on-campus organization. athletically inclined s ho u Id be
other business at the meet- given the means by which to exing included the resignation of press themselves."
Pam Neiswanger, Student Senate
Barbarossa commented that a
secretary, to become effective couple of years ago there was
Feb. IO. "Two and a half years. a "pro-athletic Senate," hinting
of this job is enough," she said. that this is not necessarily the
- In other action, Dale Parnell, philosophy of the present Senate.
State Superintendent of Public But Barbarossa added, "We, as
Instruction, was introduced to a Senate, will never agree. We
members of the Senate. Parnell shouldn't let our own personal
spoke mostly of the need for philosophy affect our decision.
passage of the Oregon Cigarette We should give them as much
Tax and condemned the use of consideration as we do medical
misinformation tactics by media and legal services." Barbarossa
advertising. "The cigarette peo- also reminded Senate members
ple paid to get the issue on the that the athletic gepartment was

Politic.a l seminars slated
.by Mobili zation Com ittee
A series of topical, political
programs and seminars has been
scheduled for Winter Term by
LCC' s Po 1it i c a 1 Mobilization
Committee. The programs will
be financed by the International.
Program Committee, which is
made up of students from the
ForeigitStudent Organization and
the International Education Center of the University of Oregon.
•
The first program is a film
entitled, ''Father Daniel Berrigan: The Holy Outlaw." It is a
full length film about the Jesuit p r i e st who preached and
acted against the Vietnam War.
This film is scheduled for today, Jan. 11, at 12: 30 in the Math
Building, Room 207.
• ,. The second program, tenatively scheduled for e it he r this

Friday, Jan. 14, or Friday Jan.
21, is "The Middle East Situation." It will be a debate between Arab and Israeli students,
followed by a film. This program
w i 11 be presented in the Apprenticeship Building, Room 223224. This will be the normal
meet in g room for these programs.
•
'' Maple Leaf Identity" and
"A Place To Stand" will be the
two films presented for the third
program on Feb. 11. The two
films deal with relations between
the United States and Canada.
• ·' On Feb. 18, a program con_cerned with draft evasion will be
presented. This program is organized by the Draft and Military Information Center at the
(continued page 8)

given $ 46,000 last year from
College funds. This aqtount was
in addition to that hiYen by the
Student Senate. Said Barbarossa,
"We're not the only ones paying
them."
The Senate then voted in favor
of sending a recommendation for
$20,000 to be allocated from
Student funds, to the School
Board, with a recommendation
that $5,000 more be given next
year.

Femi nist seeks votin g bloc
---

--

-

-

Betty Freidan, author of '' The in corporations' 'needs. Women
Feminine Mystique" and a found- should u s e s k e 11 s which they
er of the National Organization learned in the home and at work,
for Women, was in Eugene Sat.; that is, typing and door to door
urday, speaking before a state- organizing, to achieve the neewide meeting of women who are ·essary voting bloc.
attempting to organize a national
Ms . Freidan's object, and the
women's political caucus.
object of the national women's
She began her speech with a political caucus, is to force 50
short history of the women's per cent of the delegates in
movement over the past five all political arenas to be women.
years. Ms. Freidan said that In addition, Ms. Freidan talked
while women have had the vote about the need for all minorities
for the past fifty years, they · and young people to have rehave never used that right for • presentational quotas in those
their own interest. With the arenas.
growth of the national movements
An important point in Ms. Freiconcerned with women's rights~ dan's address was the idea of
the time has come to use that getting rid of men. Ms. Freidan
political power .
said that it is not the object
Ms . Freidan talked about the of the caucus to rid politics of
various stages that the women's its male influence, but rather
liberation movement has reach- to make the proportions more
ed. The movement, according-to equitable. ''Men are not oureneMs. Freidan, has gone from mer- mies, but rather, they are felely changing women's attitudes low-victims," Ms. Freidan said.
about themselves, to a place "It is the _idea that men must
where women are now organized hold in their emotions and be
as a voting bloc of great po- ' strong that is the problem."
tential, which could act with con- , According to Ms. f'.reidan, if
siderable leverage in the upcom- men would show their emotions
and be honest, they would probing national elections.
-The women's movement ably add ten years to their lives.
Ms. Freidan also wants women
should, according to Ms. Freidan,
act to humanize society. If wo- on the Supreme Court. She said
men's values were brought on that President Nixon believes
to the national scene as a pol- there were no women good eitical force, Ms. Freidan believ- nough to be on his court. Ms.
es that the War in Vietnam would Fredan believes that there were
no women bad enough to suit
be over immediately.
She talked at length about the Nixon.
need to take power out of the
Another of the main objectives
hands of those whose interests of the caucus is to represent
are not in people's needs but women's interests in the poli-

tical system. Ms. Freidan argued that the existing political
structure is against women's needs. To support this, she referred to the proposed welfare
reform bill, which Ms. Freidan
believes to be the enemy of women's needs. In addition, the
poverty level wages which women
receive was testimony to the political conditions which women
face.
Therefore, Ms. Freidan said,
Women must work extremely
• hard, in the next nine months,
: to see that women delegates are
1
elected to every major and minor political convention. "If that
is done" Ms. Freidan ended,
"human values will be introduced
into what is now a bankrupt
I political and social system."
1(
!
Q m PUS
r e S
"
.
•
Student msurance plans m~y be
l pur~hased .at the 1:,GC Busm_e~s .
'. Office until January 14. Indmstudent r_ates are $14. 75
I dual
. per term. Fa_m1ly package plans
~re also_ avallable. For further,
inf~rmahon, contact the Business
Offlre.
• The Business Office has announced its new hours as Monday through Thursday, 8:00 a.m.
to 7:00 p.m., and Friday from
8:00 a.m. •to 5:00 p.m. The extended week day operation is
designed to accomodate varying
schedules of LCC students and
staff.
(continued page 8)

I

bi f

-~
TORGH

Page 2

Jan. 11

Reform or Repression?

This is the most important social legislation in 35 years." •.• •
Richard Nixon June 1971.
House of Rep~esentatives bill number 1 (HR-1), known otherwise
as the Nixon-Mills bill, has already passed through Congress and ,
is now in the Senate Finance Committee. The bill was written by
Richard Nixon and Wilber Mills, a senator from Arkansas. HR-I
is the present administration's Welfare Reform Bill. It is estimated
that approximately fifty million people will be affected by this bill,
Food stamps are to be elimanated under HR-I. The grants
to be issued are figured to allow about five (5) cents per person,
per meal, per day (if you eat only twice daily) for a family of
seven (7). The national poverty level set by the Social Securty
Administration is $3,960 per year for a family of four. HR-1
grants $2,400 a year for a family of four, which is $1,560 below
the poverty level. The US Bureau of Labor statistics stated since
January of 1970 $6,960 per year is the subsistance level for a
family of four. The price index, or cost of living, rose 5.9 per cent
since January of 1970, so that figure is now $7,370.64. The $2,400
allowed by HR-I for a family of four is $4,970 below this standard.
Recipients would then be expected to live on 1/3 of the Bureau of
Labor standard, or 2/3 of the Social Security Administration standard,
which is the National Poverty Level figure.
- . People receiving HR-I grants will have to work if work is offered
to them. HR-I states that private business can employ these people
for $1.20 an hour. This is 40 cents below the minimum hourly wage.
States can utilize this work force on Public Works programs. State
and federally funded agencies will have to pay $1.65 an hour. The
federal government will match wages paid by the state, for 100
per cent the first year, 75% the second, and 50 percent the third.
There is no guarantee of payment after three years. This will
leave the states entirely responsilble for employing the Welfare
work force. They can either continue to be employing the Welfare work
force. They can either continue to be employed by state funds or
laid off. This will return them to welfare or unemployment.
That business can hire these people for $1.20 an hour is de-·
finitely a blow to organized labor. HR-I is offering big business al
cheap labor force, This is being done to motivate industry to stay''
in the US, rather than set up factories in other countries and
exploit cheap, foreign labor. Strikes could be broken with this
new labor force. If the HR-I recipient is offered the work of a
person on strike, the recipient has to accept or stand the risk ofj
losing his grant. If the person on strike were receiving $3.50 an
hour and the business firm pays the HR-I recipient $1.20 an hour
hour and the business firm pays the HR-I recipient $1.20 and hour,
'--business would save $2.30 an hour by having its employee on strike.
HR-1 will not give scholarships to persons waiting to obtain
college transfer credits. If the applicant can qualify for schooling,
the schooling has to be in a vocational or technical field. Under HR-I
the present welfare A.D.C. scholarships (Aid to Dependent Children)
will no longer be available.
will no longer be available. The scholarships will be offered by
W.LN. (Work Incentive) programs which are handled by the Employment Department. W.LN. has 170 people attending LCC this term
and A.D.C. sponsors 160 people attending LCC. If HR-I is passed
all the A.D.C. scholarships will be shifted over to W.LN.; however,
W.I.N. program would only be able to handle half of these people.
W.LN. in Oregon, has been able to place 5% of its trainees in jobs,
Nationally, the program has been able to place 10 per cent of its
·rainees .
. • Another point of interest about HR-I is the organizing of a
Special Abuse Control unit. This new Welfare agency is to be
formed for the purpose of policing welfare recipients. The bill,
however, does not cover the cost of setting-up this police agency.
Also the dangers of adding another surveillance agency charged
with snooping into the lives of private citizens to an already massive list are obvious,
Richard. Nixon may think this is the most important social .
legislation in 35 years; we view it as the most frightening social
legislation in 35 years. Forcing people to work for low wages is a,
poor attempt to boost the country's economy. H.R.-4 shows clearly
that the Nixon Administration will continue to support big business,
not the people of the country. We urge people to contact their
senators and let their feelings be known .
0

----------1\
- - - - - - .....-Its
. . - - - - - -Suredo,Gortr
guaranteed

.,.or•
"':IJ

This one's
odorless,
~ey, Alchemist...
and
do you have a
quite
1magic P,Ption
that'll kill insects~ power.Pulf...

One
pebble.

That sounds too
good to be truer
What i~ I try your
DDT and dot1Cf Ii ke

it?. .. Isee you sell
the antidote ...

to kill r1105q,uitoes,
lice,and other
disease-c.arrying
pests. I c.al, it
DDTr

...I-low much do
you charge to
neutralize
the e~ects
et' DDT'?

1-k,w

much
does it,
cost'?

Seventyeight
trilfion
jillion
aollars.

'f.h-e •IOfl-OCefl{ --byst-af1.d.e..r• ..•.•.•.•. •.. •.•. -.•.•. -... ·.:."~• .-.•. •.•... ·.,. ·.,.•..•.•..-.-.--A•...,.L.......--~,....r,r,:_-,...,,.~-...·..~.,: ..•-,;,::,.:.-,,::,.:i; .:.,· .i~~",,r,

Charity comes home to roost
by Arthur Hoppe
Seattle
'' A plane carrying 1000 pounds
of canned food and rice noodles
donated by generous Christians in
Japan has landed in Seattle, where
unemployment is running 13 per
cent.
"The food, along with $864 in
cash, was collected by the YMCA
in Kobe, Seattle's sister city.
It will be distributed here by
Neighbors in Need, a private
group currently helping feed
some 15,000 needy persons whose
unemployment benefits have run
out or who are otherwise unqualified for Government aid News Item."

* * *
It was almost 30 years to the
day after Pearl Harbor that the
United States accepted the first
foreign aid it had received since
the American Revolution almost
two centuries before. That the
aid should come from America's
former enemy, Japan, seemed
particularly ironic.
The hungry who received the
rice noodles were, of course,
grateful. Most Americans, however, either ignored the story or
frowned when they read it. Few
talked about it.
But as the faltering US economy
s a g g e d through Phases T w o,
Three, Four and, finally, ThirtyThree, the need grew. The bur-

den proved too much for private Japanese groups and it was
proposed the Japanese Government take over the foreign aid
program.
The debate in the Japanese Diet
was acrimonious. Nationalists
called the foreign aid program
"a big give-away" that would
"sap the initiative of the American natives to stand on their
own two feet."
A coalition of bleeding-heart
liberals and hard-headed industrialists carried the day, however - the industrialists pointing out that if America could
reach the economic take-off point
it would mean an expanded market for Toyotas and Datsuns,
and also Sony television sets.
So the Diet passed a generous •
foreign aid program. Along with
the development funds, Japan sent
officials to the US to insure the
. money was spent with "A mini: mum of graft and inefficiency."
Teclinical experts arrived to
increase US industrial productivity and young Japanese Peace
Corpsmen descended on American farmers to teach them how
better to "prow, sow and leap
their clops." (cq)
L i k e most recipients of charity, Am e r i c an s reacted w i t h
strongly mixed emotions. They
were grateful for the help, but
they secretly resented the under-

standably superior airs of the
prosperous and successful Japanese.
In this schizophrenic atmosphere it was the Communists who
benefitted most, claiming the US
was being exploited by Japanese
capitalists. Indeed, it appeared
for a time that the US might
go Communist.
It was wealthy West Germany
that saved the day by selling
the US Government weapons it
could ill afford in order to" save
America from Communism."
This it did under the Marshal
Plan, named after Field Marshal
von Richtoven.

* * *
In return for such generosity,
both Japan and Germany naturally expected the US to vote
their way in the UN and to support whatever inane foreign adventures they became emeshed
in. In fact, they were soon dictating US foreign policy.
Eventually, the humiliation became too much to bear and the
United States declared World War
Ilion its old antagonists, Japan
and Germany.
But at last America had learned its lesson. This time it lost.
(Copyright Chronicle Publishing
Co. 1971)

Letters to the Editor
. Corps ensures our 'way of life'
Dear Editor:
I would like to make the following comments about Mr. Dwyer's article on Marine Recruitin_g, (TORCH feature. Dec. 7).
First the article does not represent the basis upon which Mr.
Dwyer obtained the interview. He
asked to interview me about Marine Recruiting for the TORCH
and that it would be printed as
an interview. It did not come out
quite that way. It appears Mr.
Dwyer really needed a base upon
which to get his point of view
out. He did a fine job of this
for himself but leaves the points
of the Marine Recruiting interview out of the picture.
Mr: Dwyer also seems to feel
that spending one hour in my office makes him an authority on
me as a person. I Quote, "So,
like many young men's fathers,
Lohan is caught in a predicament, and one that he really doesn't understand.'' Mr. Dwyer does
not know what I understand or
do not understand. He does not
know if I am caught in a predicament or not. He does not
know what the ideals of young
men 20 years ago were, he was
still in diaper the n . Twenty
years ago I was a young man,
today I am a father; I understand quite a bit about many
things and believe it or not I
do not feel that I am caught in
a predicament. One minor point:
• Mr. Dwyer never asked if young
men are flocking to my office
so what is there to admit? At
the time Mr. Dwyer was interviewing me I was over quota
for November.
Mr. Dwyer is not a good reporter, even for an amateur. He
does not know how to listen. He
only heard what he wanted in
order to do his story with his
•. H~.to?~ t~w .~3:r.poi~t of

tial points, incompletely, and put
his thoughts around them. I do not :
call this responsible reporting, •
especially of facts.
Mr. Dwyer's ending to his story
is wav off base. Marines do not
look for or wait eagerly anticipating the next Vietnam and the
next Korea, the next proof ·of a

professional. , . and a man. Nor
are we bored by peace. Had Mr.
Dwyer listened he would have
realized that Marines do not like
war, they know it in all its
ugliness, nobody likes to fight,
Ma:dnes must know how. Marines
are intelligent men, honest with

Lane Community College

RtH

Paul Waldschmidt
Editor ,

Associate Editor

Contributing Editor
Byard Pidgeon

Doug Cudahey
News Editor
Bill Dwyer

Production Manager
Jim Gregory
Photo Editor
Barry Hood

Feature Editor
Mik-e Kelly

Advertising Man ager
Sue Rebuck-

S port_s Editor

Business Manager
Doris Norman

John Thompson
Reporters: Dan Devaney

Marty Stalick-

Garth Wallace

Member of Oregon Community College Newspaper Assoc iation and Oregon Newspaper
Publishers Association.
The TORCH is published on Tuesdays throughout the regular academic year. 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.
All correspondence should be typed or printed, double-spaced and signed by the writer.
Mail or bring all correspondence to: The Torch, Center 206, Lane Community College,
4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405; Telephone 747-4501, Ext. 234.

I

bi Mikel Kelly

Man and Environment

slated
INewsletter
LCC

No doubt we all remember our fourth grade
any combination of these .
teacher, planted beside a giant map of the world,
The addition of wastes to water attracts bacsmacking the Pacific Ocean with her rubber- • • teria, which will eventually break down and
tipped spear, and rasping, "Class, water covers • consume underwater plant life. This elimination
two thirds of the earth's surface."
of plants leads to the decline of oxygen in the
Yay.
,water. By then, aquatic animals can hang it
Then villians start popping up on Johnny
up; and inevitably, man suffers as his need for
Carson, at luncheons, in newspapers and magawater grows with his blooming population.
zines, bearing grim tidings of failure and negThe problem appears to be a biological one.
lect; they remind us that over 97 per cent of
It deserves scientific attention, so why all the
this water is in the ocean, and 2.15 . per cent is
emotion? Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin
frozen in glaciers and polar caps.
tells us why in his essay, "The National PolThis leaves a piece of one per cent for
lution scandal."
washing, swimming, sewage, fishing, shaving and
"In most waste disposal cases, communities
drinking.
use what is known as 'primary' treatment.
Boo. • •
They screen their sewage and let the solids
Eddie Albert, in a message called "The End
settle out, but they do not remove disof Man," presented some observations at the 24th
solved solids, salts, chemicals, bacteria,
Annual Convention of the National Association of
and special problems such as detergents.
Container Distributors in February of 1970. He
Every community should have what is known
said:
•
· h
"Rock creek in Washington D.C., once
'secondary' treatment, under wh1c sewage famous, is now a dump. The zoo uses it
after primary treatment - is held in holding
for a sewer. A health hazard.
tanks, brought into contact with air and
Ohio River, zero oxygen. Septic. By the
biologically active sludge, so that bacteria
time the great river passes Cincinnati and
have a chance to consume the pollutants."
is taken up for home use, every drop
"But even this would still leave us with a
of it has been through at least five toilets.
massive municipal pollution problem. Even
Willamette River, Oregon - dying. Seven
good secondary treatment removes only 80
pulp mills, five of which use the sulphite
to 90 per cent of the pollutants. Chicago,
process, produce 70 per cent of the polfor instance, with a good secondary treatlution, thousands of gallons of dark chemical
ment plant, discharges treated effluent which
poison daily.
is equivalent to the untreated raw sewage
Merrimack River. Reduced to sewage. Dyof one million people. At the rate the poling. Belching gas bubbles.
lution load is increasing, it is estimated
The Potomac is a sewer for every town it
that even if all communities have secondary
passes. It is drying up, and its historic
treatment plants by 1980, the total amounts
bones are now desecrating the scene. During
of pollutants reaching watercourses would
cherry blossom time, it's the best-dressed
still be the same as today,." ------· ·
cesspool in .America.
The problem of water quality is also a
Lake Erie, 10,000 square miles, is biomonetary one. Communities and states are not
logically dead. Zero oxygen. One ton of
equipped to handle the financial load that solutions
crud per minute flows into the lake carry- require. Taxpayers are up to their eye-balls in
ing slaughterhouse wastes, oil sludge,
legitimate gripes right now. An exam;nation of
chemical junk, human sewage.
federal priorities might be a sensible place to
On the· banks of the Mississippi, down bestart. Unless we focus on the threat of environlow St. Louis, signs warn picnickers not
mental suicide, we won't be around to buy Coke
to eat their lunch on or near the riverand fight wars, let alone make love.
bank. The spray from the river contains
We must remember that, although concern
typhoid, colitis, hepatitis, diarrhea, anthrax,
and emotion are respectable qualities, it would
salmonella, tuberculosis and polio."
be catastrophic to launch a crusade based solely
on feelings.
He went on to say, ''the plain truth of the
Finding fault is child's play. It's everymatter is that we all drink a chlorinated soup
where. Municiapl sewage, industrial pollution,
of dead bacteria that in some cases has passeptic tanks, ships and marine terminals, pestised through eight or ten people. It can only
cides, silt, detergents, fertilizers and chem.icals
get worse."
all carry blame. Every one of us pollutes. To
compare the morality between one person's
Studies show the strain on our lakes and
neglect and another's would be silly.
rivers in different forms. Water pollution can
Somebody had better do something. I don't
mean a variety of things. It can refer to oxygen content, bacteria count, suspended solids, or ' want to get involved.

OSU sets open house

Community col J°e g e students on admissions, finances and
interested in transfering to Ore- counseling.
gon State University are invited
Detailed information and preto attend Beaver Open House registration forms for the sesin Corva~iis Saturday, Jan. 22. sion are available by writing
Beaver Open House, AdministraThe all-day orientation pro- tion Building A220, asu. The
gram will focus on academic registration charge for those atofferings and career opportuni- tending is $3. All community
ties. Gene r a 1 sessions, held college and high school students
throughout the day will center are invited to attend.

TIRED OF RENTING?
We can sell y·ou a ho me

, FOR LESS THAN $100 PER MONTH
Call us at 344 -4517 and I et us

explain

the F.H.A. 23 5 ·subsidy Plan
and how you can qualify.

EUGENE NON PROFIT HOUSING,INC.
610 Willamette St.

344-4517

Jan. 11

for

TORCH

alumni

news sheet designed to keep of Lyle Swetland , director of
LCC Alumni informed about cam- the development fund; with the aspus events and alumni activities, sistance of Larry Romine, diis cu_rrently in the planning sta- rector of information and publications.
ges.
The proposed ·publication, alThe publication is tentatively
named LaneAlum and will inform though still in the planning stage,
Alumni, friends and students what will most likely consist of eight
is happening on campus. Lan- . to twelve pages appearing in tabAlum will present feature stories loid form as a supplement to
about
alumni, a section for the Register Guard once each
announcements (such as new pro- school term. The cost of the
grams the college may initiate) proposed publication will be proand articles on the ·many LCC vided out of existing funds from
departments which prepare stu- the Information and Publications
dents academically and occupa- Department.
tionally for the world of business,
Ame et i ng of the Alumnus
commerce and trades and pro- Board to initiate publication of
fessions.
the proposed LaneAlum has been
LaneAlum is the composition pland, according to Romine.
A

DAIRY-ANN

1810 Chambers
343-2112

Breakfast. dinners and lunches. Homemade soups and pies.
Complete fountain service .
5:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. 7 days a week.

lEAIRTIHI

*

*arts and er alts

environmenta·I

* modern lights

furniture

*hanging candles
*hand-hooked rugs

* mobiles

* music boxes
*

wall ·hangings

SPECIAL--bottle c.utters $6~95
11th

and

Oak

345- 41 44

4

• TORCH

I In The Dr's Bag I

Jan~ll

Dear Dr:
I went for a walk in the woods
and now I have itching, weeping
skin areas on my legs and hands
and arms. What gives?
"Scratchy"

The Student Health Service (Roo'm
217 Health Bldg) has a reasonable
facsimile on dis p 1a y . Drugstores have over-the-counter remedies to help dry-up the areas.
If your dog was with you on that
walk, better wash him too as you
can continue to contact it if
he brushed it with his fur. It's
the oil from the leaf (or the oil
in the smoke when you burn the
brush) that irritates your skin.
If you suspect contact, wash with
a soap to get the oil off the skin,
then treat with the drying agent
if blisters emerge. Watch out for
a secondary infection if the skin
is broken.

Dear "Scratchy":
Don't ! The more you scratch,
the more you itch-regardless of
the cause. Without seeing your
skin lesions I can't say what
you have, but the probablity of
contacting poison oak or ivy in
Lane County when walking in the
woods is farily high. Learn to
know what the leaf looks like.

Term started a week late, students had to register during finals week, New students began
(Photo by Barry Hood)
registration Dec.28.

LANE STUDENTS pictured above are waiting to
go through final check area C as they complete
registrat}on for Winter Term. 'Because Fall

1111 •1•111

Counseling service

Or do you need advice concerning personal and social matters ?
If so, Lane Community College provides a counseling staff quali. fied to promote self-understanding, personal adjustment, effective
decision-making and interpersonal relationships.
-The couseling service also includes voluntary testing services.
Staff members are trained to interpret the results of tests you
have already taken and may suggest other tests helpful to you.
Most counseling service occurs in personal interviews. However, group counseling is offered on the same basis as individual
counseling.
Counselors are available Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m.
to 9 p.m. and on Fridays from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Counseling
Center. The following list of staff members are available to you:

215

225

218

372
211
291

386
231

218
218
)

• 215
307

Adult Ed,
Art Dept.

SU1f[),41tftE

1 t ~ ?004 Stou

···············~·-··

We are interested in nutrition and

:
•

PERSONALIZED,lNEXPENSIVE,
INCOME TAX SERVICE: Prepared in the privacy of your
home, or at LCC. Average fee:
Without itemizing deductionsi
$4-$5. Itemizing deductions;
$7.50-$10.00, LET ME ASSIST
YOU IN SAVING MONEY. Lou
Nadell, Phone 688-3172 or LCC
ext 202/203.

well-being and have reasonably priced
organic things lik·e b1,1lk· grains,seeds, flours,
nuts, herbs organic beef, dairy products,
1

biodegradable so.a ps (also bulk-), vita min s,

"'

books,and hon~y ice cream (occasionally).
:
3-9142
:
744 E. 24 th Ave.
34
•···•••••••••••••···•····· ··························· ·····•

FOR SALE: Men's ski boots,
Dept.
10 1/2, used twice. $50 new,
size
Pa radental/ med.
$20. Call 747-9666
asking
now
Science
any time.
Mech, Flight Tee.
Language Arts
••••••••••••••••••••
NEEDED: Ride from Creswell
Research
Wednesday, and Friday. ·
Monday,
Nursing
Vivian, downstairs at
Contact
Counseling Dir.
281 • Oregon St., after 6 p.m.
Art & App. Design
....................
Mass Com.
Indus. Tech, Vet.
ROOM A!'TD B.Jh. ~W :; ~o per
Adult Ed.
month. S. E. Eugene. Nice homeJ
Business
bt~~v1tt:ul vi~.v. and cl •)se ta LCC
Math.
campus. Inquir1~ at 1821 Jeffarson.
Intergroup Relations
....................
Spec. Prag.
FOR SALE: Good, reusable clothElec., Home Ee.
ing at fair prices. Winter wear,
coats, sweaters, and levis. SEE
Adult Basic Ed.
AT: The Rag Machine at 3th and
Ed.
Adult Basic
Lincoln. Open noon to 6 p.m.

Ext.
.216
381
214
358
307
218

Office Location
Counseling Cen.
Science Bldg.
Counseling Cen.
Fourth Floor, Cen.
Math Bldg.
Counseling Cen.
Counseling Cen.
Counseling Cen.
Counseling Cen.
Indus. Tech. Bldg.
Library
Business Bldg.
Math Bldg.
Counseling Cen:
Counseling Cen.
Counseling Cen.

0

•• ························ ···············••!••···· ······,-···

Fold out converFOR SALE:
tible sofa with mattress and bolsters, ALSO, double bed, box
spring, and mattress. Call 3443079 .

Are you in doubt as to your educational goal or job skills ?

Name
John Berham
Jan Brandstrom
Ralph Burns
Pauline Dixon
Donna Ellision
Patrick Fraleigh
Ken Hills
Jay Jones
Irene Parent
Dave Roof
Gene Sorenson
Marilyn Stadius
Helen Stadler
Jonathan West
John Winquist
Bill Wright
Student Service
Bob Mccorkle
Jack Shadwick

GUARANTEE YOURSELF A FUTURE
WITH THE U.S. MARINES •
Men and women can now choose the occupational area
thev will work in· as Marines. •
Visit or call your Marine recruiter at 1111 Willamette
'
Eugene, 342-5141, extension 206.

(jR€at noRthW€S t
a~t supply company

..ha s t h e be s t p r i c e s in t own !

15%0FF

to students and art
p r ofe 55 ion a I 5 .-

Complete a rt and
architect ual supplies

X

2833 Willamette
Baron ti Building

Ph one:

Ken Hills, director of Counseling, comments that "counseling is
Monday -Friday
an integral part of all Student Personal Serv.ices, working closely HAVE you ALWAYS WANTED
with the Health Services, Financial Aids, Admissions, Student TO FLY? !oin the Flying Titan_s.
.__I
T0·00-l· 3 0
•
•
Activities, and Placement Personnel. The Counseling Department On becommg a member you will
Sat Urda Y
at Lane Community College is staffed with well-qualified people be offered many opportunities to
,
1O: 00 -5: 30
who wish to aid you in having a sucessful and enjoyable learning expand your interest in aviation.
Contact John Kiesler. 686-0646. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;;__ __::__ _ _ _ _ _ __J
experience.''

many find

iobs

• Buck Bailey, LCC Placement ·
director- reports that in the last
school year his office made over
1,100 job referrals and placed
over 700 students in part-time
occasional jobs. Another important figure is an estimated 100
jobs per month for LCC graduates in career placements.
- Bailey emphasizes the Impor-·
tance of cooperation from prospective job-hunters in order to
do as well this year. To register for part time employment
all that is required is filling
out a card listing past work experience, type of work desired,
and the availability to work. Career Placement requires a little
more information, amounting to
only a page.
Students who are already registered for part time employment should up-date their files
according to schedule changes
and current needs. •

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Points
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To Campus Events
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PL-3 - Cable 10

LAST DAY TO WITHDRAW
February 18
LAST DAY FOR PASS-NO PASS
February 18
LAST DAY FOR REFUND
See Refund Policy
WINTER TERM FINALS WEEK
March 13-17
ATTENDANCE
To maintain registration in a class, students must
be in attendance during the first ·week of class. Students not attending will be dropped from the class
after the fifth day of the term unless prior arrangements have been made with the instructor.
COURSE CHANGES
All changes in a student' schedule must be official.
WITHDRAWALS from class are made through the
Registrar's Office by obtaining class cards from each
instructor and filling out the proper forms. Students
may withdraw voluntarily until the end of the seventh
week of the term. After the seventh week, all withdrawals must have instructor's consent.

G and ADDING courses requires a form
from the Admissions Office or a counselor. Class
cards should be obtained from instructors for all
dropped classes. Change of schedule forms must be
signed by a counselor.
TUITION REFUNDS FOR COMPLETE WITHDRAWALS
AND REDUCTION of class loads below 10 HOURS
Upon official withdrawal from college or reduction
of class laods below 10 hours, tuition fees-other than
the $IO deposit--are refunded as follows:
_ Lst week----------100%
2nd week-----------80%
3rd week-----------60%
4th week-----------40%
5th week-----------20%
6th week through end of term-- NO REFUND
INTOXICANTS
No staff member or student may bring on to or
use on campus any intoxicant, or appear on campus
under the influence of an intoxicant. Violation of this
rule is grounds for dismissal.
GRADING
Grades are earned in credit courses and are recorded in each student's permanent record.

Students leave
for Maui

The exchange program reTwo Lane Community College Students, Paul Blanton and quires that students be at least
Barbara Ackerman, left recent- 18 years old and capable of payly for Hawaii to participate in ing tuition and room and board
a student exchange program be- costs. Round trip airfare was
tween LCC and Maui Community provided thisyear by a governCollege. In exchange two stu- ment grant but students 'should
dents from Maui, Alan Nago and expect to pay this fee next year.
Paulette Medeiros, will be at- Applicants also must be in good
standing academically and have
tending LCC this term.
Miss Ackerman said before attended at least one term at
leaving that her biggest worry LCC. Interested students -must
was not the trip itself but that purchase health and accident inhousing facilites had not been surance.
established for her yet.
•LCC students interested in apShe plans to take geology and
other related courses that will plying or in learning more about·
give her more insight into the the exchange program should
Hawaiian Culture. Blanton plans contact Irene Parent in the counto pursue an interest in carpen- seling office at the Center BuildI ing.
try.

Students devise
new courses
LCC students are encouraged
to propose lower division courses, according to Gerald Rasmussen , associate dean of instruction. Some studentproposed
courses are now under con side ration by the LCC Curriculum Committee, while others
are in the planning stage.
Two of the courses under conside ration are The History of
Chic an o s and Our Human Environment.
Courses in the planning stage
include: The History of Labor;
Labor Today-- Issues and Approaches; The Sociology of Work
and Workshop. These courses
will be available to any departrp.ent as a flexible tool, offering
both vocational and college transfer credit.

Students with ideas for a course
should see Betty Ekstrom, student activities counselor. Interested students can also go to the
Office of Instruction for a handbook, "Guidelines for Curriculim
Development". Any student or
faculty member submitting a proposed course must do so prior
to March I of the academic year
before the course is to be offered.
The idea should be submitted
to the LCC Curriculim Committee on a form provided by the
Office of Instruction. From there
the proposal will be sent to the
LCC Instruc_tional Cou_ncil, the
college president and fmally the
Oregon Board of Education. The
~ard'_s finan~i.al sup~o~t to LCC
gives it the fmal dec1s1on on all
newly proposed courses.

•
Bus service
continued

A. Mass Transit Authority bus
run from downtown Eugene to
Lane Community College re sumed Monday, Jan. 3, the first
day of Winter Term classes.
The bus will operate Monday
through Friday from 7:30 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m., making one circuit
hourly between 10th and Willamette Streets and the college.
It is to leave 10th and Willamette on the half hour, travel
east on 10th to Pearl, south on
Peari 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 the LCC campus.
The bus is scheduled to arrive at LCC at five minutes to
the hour and depart from LCC
at five minutes after the hour.
Connections may be made by
those transferring from other
Eugene buses at 10th and Willamette. Springfield riders may
transfer to the LCC bus at 11th
and Alder in Eugene.
Fare is 30 cents on way or
60 cents round-trip, with free
transfer from or to Mass Transit Authority buses on regularly
scheduled E u g e n e - Springfield

runs, ·•.·..

A.-Indicates superior work, initiative, and originality.
B-Indicates higllly satisfactory performance of assigned work.
C-Indicates adequate or average performance of
assigned work.
D-Indicates barely passing work.
F -Indicates course failure
P-Indicates "pass"
NP-Indicates "no pass"
I-Indicates "incomplete." This is given when a
student does not complete all requirements of a
course within a term, or to replace the lower
grade when a student elects to repeat a course.
W-Indicates approved withdrawal from a course.
U-Indicates a course taken for audit.
PASS-NO-PASS
The pass (P) no pass (NP) option may be elected
by students for up to 16 hours in a non-major field.
These grades will be entered on the transcript and
counted toward credits earned but will not be computed by LCC in the GP A. The student must notify
the instructor before the end of the seventh week
of the term with THE APPROPRIATE form available
-in the Registrar's Office.

·THE

~_BOOK FAIR

Really has
tfie

Haircuts

as

you

lik-e

them

Hairstyling, razor cutting
Appointments available

.used books.
45 W 7th Ave.
Closed Sunday .& Monday

Drop-ins

welcome

1241 Willamette

-"Across from

343-9563

Hamburger Heaven"

THE UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION
a specialized agency of the United Nations dedicated to peace

and

THE STUDENT AID SOCIETY

a non-profit non-political organization dedicated
to helping students to help themselves

$ 6 value

$1.50 value

offer
STUDY ABROAD
New 19th Edition
• Paris, France, 1972
Each copy is trilingual • 644 Pages
in English, French and
Spanish
The most complete scholarship directory in the world lists more
than 234,000 scholarships, fellowships, loans and grants in more
than 129 countries or territories! Tells who is eligible, fields of
study, financial assistance, HOW, WHEN AND WHERE TO
APPLY! Reflects. the latest scholarship approach costed by
financial need!
VACATION STUDY ABROAD

• Each copy is trilingual in English, French and Spanish
More and more Americans are flocking overseas for summer
vacations, and an increasing proportion is young Americans! With
the price war now raging on overseas airfares, record-breaking
numbers of young Americans will surge across Europe this
summer! VACATION STUDY ABROAD tells how qualified
people will go free! Provides information on short courses,
seminars, summer schools, scholarships and travel grants available
each year to students, teachers and other young people and adults
planning to undertake study or training abroad during their
vacations. These data were provided by some 500 organizations in
54 countries!
STUDENT Al D SOCIETY membership dues. Services offered:
$ 5 value
• Scholarship information service.
Answers questions concerning scholarships worldwide!
• Travel service.
Plans interesting tours to exotic lands!
• Reference Service.
all
Drafts term papers, essays, book reports, theses, etc.
for
frequently using primary sources available only in the
Library of Congress! We do not actually write the finished
only $ 6
assignment since that would deprive the student of valuable
educational experience and defeat the very purpose for
writing for oneself in the first place. We will provide
"Your reference service
background information and bibliographies which rank
saved me much valuable
with such tools as the College Outline Series and encyclotime which I put in on
paedia reference services available only with expensive sets.
other subjects. Result: 5
Limit of one draft at small additional charge, per semester
As and 1 8."
per student in good standing. We cannot answer any
CN, Ann Arbor, Mich
question which we feel requires the advice of a doctor,
'The Vantage Point" is a lawyer, architect, engineer, or other licensed practitioner,
nor can we advise concerning your financial investments.
book put together by 5
Neither can we undertake market research or surveys or
ghost writers and edited
provide home study courses.
by LBJ. Your reference

-------

service is almost like my
own personal ghost writer. "
LC, Gainesville, Fla.
"The 3 reference books
of which every student
needs personal copies
are Study Abroad, a
good dictionary and
thesaurus. I go't a $10,000
4-year scholarship from
Study Abroad."
AR, Berkeley, Calif.

------------------------,

Student Aid Society, PO Box 39042
I
Friendship Station, Washir,gton, D.C. 200161

Gentlemen: I enclose $6 for Study Abroad, :
1
Vacation Study Abroad and annual dues.
Name
•
I
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I,
City, State _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Z i P - - - :

,...::'I

' .:.~ _.. -- .....
Page 6
---

.

·•i'

TORCH

LCC

Jan.11 -

Fall t.erm GPA; announ·ced

Du n n, A my Durbin, William John Me rm is, Fred Mi 1es,
Dwyer, M. Jean Edelman, Lloyd George Miller, Rex Miller, Terry
E d w a rd s, Elizabeth E m e r y, Miller, William Mohr, Jr., Terry
Mich ae I Ensor, Merlin Finn, Monsen, Kevin Moi:an, Stephen
Cynthia Foran, Wesley Fox, Mo ye r, Paul Nielsen, Melvin
Thomas Frederikson, Susan Nott, Dennis Nowak, Allen Nypen,
Frisbie.
Eva Pedersen, Sharleen PeterStephen Gaiser, Carol Garout- sen, Terrance Potter, Craig Prute, Wiley Gibson, Richard Gru- ett, Patrick Pullen.
sing, Lenard Gosda, John GrifJon Radabaugh, Gordon Read,
fin, John Hart, Jr., Ulrike Hack- Barbara Rees, Greg Roberts,
er, Steven Hahn, Jan Hammond, Sylvia Robinson, Daniel Ropp,
Howard Harris, Julia Hass, Dale Sade, Susan Sappington,
James Higgins, David Hillesland, Denis Schmitz, Donnie Shore,
Russel Holman, Mary Hoover, Larry Smith, Clyde Standiford,
Tersa John, Paula Johnson, Vio- Teresa Stults, Robby Sugden,
let Johnson, Rickey Junker, Mary Mark Sullivan, Marilyn Thorne,
Kearney, Shirley King, Ronald Doug I as Townsend, Charlene
Klein, Lois Korn, Eda Kraft, Travis, Michael Turner, Kristy
James Kromwell, Davis LaBar, Vanderford, David Wallace,
Marcia LaDuke, Terry LaRoche, Yvonne Warden, Paul Watson,
Carl Larson, Paul Leatherwood, Ron Wellette, Timothy Weltch,
Carl a Lene rd, Carole Lewis, John West, Martin White, Robin
Davis Lund, Lorene Lyon.
White, Frank Liebke, Sandra WiRobert MacLaren, Lewis ley, Thomas Wilson, Terry WinMacken, Wesley Madison, Carol ter, Greg Woolfe and Sheila
Mapp, Robert Marshall, Arthur Young.
Machovec, Jr., Joyce May, Thomas McClaren, Michael Mccornack, Patrick McDowell, FrankLEATHER AND
lin McElwain, Paul McKenzie,

On Dec. 28, the Fall Term
grading reports were mailed out
to LCC students. Out of these
gr a-ding reports, 150 reports
showed students receiving aperfeet 4.0 grade point average.
Another 598 reports showed students receiving a 3.50 GPA, or
higher, naming them to the President's Ii st.
Stuart Anderson, Eileen Andrews, Kathy Aldrich, Mark Arnold, Glenn Arntzen, Ann Augard,
Von Bailey, Daniel Banta, LaVerna Bauguess, Michael Beyerlin, Chery! Bjornlie, George Bodenschatz, Jr., Gary E. Branson,
Richard Boese, Carl Briggs, Kateri Brown, Katherine Brown,
Sanya Brown, Gail Brown, Kathleen Bussell, James Chapman,
arr y Christopherson, Larry
Church, Roger Colwell, Scott
Cook, Barbara Craig, Sandra
Craig.
The list continues with; Janet
Dahlgren, Anne Dance, Joanne
Delanhaunt, Kenneth DePew, Patricia Derby, Jay Derringer,Sandra Dibble, Mark Donnelly, Roberta Dorsey, James Dowdy, Jim

a licensed Hight instructor apThe Flying Titans of LCC, a
chartered, student club, is pro- proved by the Federal Aviation
moting flying. The club is of- Agency.
Anyone interested in joining the
fering a ground school, "free"
to anyone interested in flying. Flying Titans or wanting to get
Student instructors for the into the flight trainin6 program
ground session are Roy Hobbs may attend the meeting held every
and John Erickson. The school other Tuesday at 12 noon, in room
is held every Monday and Wed- 107, Air Frame Building. Dues
nesday from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. are only $1 a term and the next
The club has access to a Ces- meeting is Jan. 18.
sna 150 Trainer, located at MahIon Sweet Airport in Eugene. •
This plane is available to stu- ROBERTSON'S·
d en t s completing the ground
school to log their flight time.
Rates are $10 per hour with or
.
without instructor.
The flight instructor is John '.
Mermis, who is enrolled in Air"Your Prescription -Fr am e and Power plant proOur Main Concern"
grams. He has been involved in .
3oth and Hilyard
~3-'l715
commercial aviation for 15 years,
was a forest service pilot and is

OPTOMETRIST
Dr. Robt. J. Williamson
Optometrist

students that didn't receive cards
to stop by SAC or the student
government offices and pick up
one," he stressed.

* WIRE RIM GLASSES

In the past, Spencer observed,
Monday through· Saturday
the Co-op has been able to place
9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
a?out_ ha~f of the stuent,~ partiSuccess
program.
the
m
c1pahng
really depends on student re- ·
229 W. 7th Avenue
sponse," he added.
Eugene, Oiegon 97401
Students that have filled out
.,-. Phone: 342-3426
cards in the past also need to update these cards if they have 1-._.,.,..•,.v.v.•.•••...•.•..•...l'A,._¥
moved or changed their schedules F
.a. l J
s~gnificant1y; Spencer empha]'flq/}J})~ l \. r ,
l
4
sized.

*FASHION EYEWEAR

'
0 regon plans standards

* EYE EXAMINATION

I•

'J r~\',) ~ ~ l. a.

*

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344-5371
OR 686-0811

Standard O,,tical
820 WILLAMETTE

•

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POTEMKIN

a.

" Just Say 'Charge It'!"

:i ..,,~

1 t74j~~

House of
Records V

* SOFT CONTACT LENSES

-f!!

The Department of EnvironAnother proposal at the meet- - - - - mental Quality held hearings Fri- ing called for meterological I
I,
I
day night, Jan. 7, at Harris Hall, surveys of the Willamette Val- · I
I
to discuss Oregon's plan to im- ley and efllission control strin- · :
directed by
plement the new federal stan- gent enough. that the people of '
I
Sergei Eisenstein
1
I:
dards of the Clean Air Act. the val~ey ~1ght see the beautiful
1
. 1I
Most of the discussion at the mountams m the summertime. 1
The story of _the mut1nyl 1
The meetings called for I
meeting centered around automobile emissions and measures to standards on pollution to be even 1ab~ard the R_uss1an _battle I ,
control them. Speakers called stricter thanfederallaws. People 1sh1p, Potemk~1n, durinp the:
I
,
for a plan to inspect all auto- at the meeting believed levels 11905 revolution.
I
mobiles in the state at least should not simply remain the I
annually to see that vehicles same, but aim for reducedlevels I One of the most powerful1
Iportrayah of revolutionary
stay within the state require- of pollution.
ments for emission control.
1·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - f passion ever made.

Show aired

offer flight school

LEATHERCRAFT SUPPLIES.

Co-op needs cards .
LCC's Transportation Coop, which finds · and coordinates
rides for Lane students commuting to and from campus, will
soon be feeding their information cards into a computer in
' order to match rides with riders.
The Co-op, a Student Awareness Center project, depends on
students filling out information
cards that were passed during
registration, according to Gary
Spencer, SAC coordinator.
Spencer pointed out that not
all students received these cards
?urin? regi_stration. "If this proJect 1s gomg to work, we want

FIY-rtl·g•' ~t'if a n.s

at

Coles

..

ART and

ltCh ttt~tU.lt
SUPPLIES

• Parallel Rules and Boa r ds
• Aery I ics, Qi Is, W.1ter
Colors
• Sculpture & Potting Needs
• Batik and Etching Tools
• Canvas, Primed or Un•
primed
•• Brushes, Papers, Pads,
~etc.

Plus newsreel short:

FUERA YANKl-----a recent
"Newscene," a program airhistory I of :the ·Dominican
ed eve r y Friday evening at
Republic, emphasizing/US
7:30 on PL '3 TV, is available
interest and involvment.
to students on LCC Dial RetrieBuy. Sell & Trade
val the week after. A program
Phonograph Records
produced by LCC students, it
Thursday, Jan. 13
informs students and the public
7pm and 9pm
about events occurring at Lane.
150 Science
The program is a 30 minute
1409 OAK ST. '., 342-797,5
Admission: $1.oo ·
ne w·s cast. Television Broadcasting students present the news
using interviews, features, silent f"' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '"":""' - - 1
HAVE YOU A LWAYS WANT ED TO FLY?
mm stories, straight news staries, administrative events, stuJoin the FLYING TITANS.
nts and all
dent government eve_
relevant news happenmgs.
On hecomi ng a mem b e r , you will be offe~e d
According to Mik: ~opkinson,
adviser for the Telev1s10n Broadmany opportunities , to expand your interest
casting Department, "the program serves a dual purpose of
Contad John Kiesler , 68 6-0646
in aviation.
providing training for television
students and informing the com.
munity of- what's happening at
~CC." The students ·get training
m all phases of _news broad- ~
casting and production.

•

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.- ---,

,

,.

I A

/

'

'

·--------------

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I

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0

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Greatest Selection in thP. Northweit
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AMPL_E PAR.KING- REAR OF
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h

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s

VI

0

Page 7

Roundballers down Linfield

In non-league play on Monday,
~an. 3, the LCC basketball team
downed the Linfield J. V. 's IOI
to 76 behind Steve Woodruff's
20 points. However they didn't
fare so well in their league opener Friday, Jan. 7, with Central
Oregon Community College. They
lost this game on Central Oregon's home floor by a 115 to 107
, score.
•
•
Opt Im Ism
.

• • a
wre St IIng
Pa Y·1 n9 ff b.I g d.I .d e n d's
CO
. .

TORCH

Jan. 11

LC C wrestling Coach, Bob
Creed, is optimistic: and his optimism is paying dividends. His
Titan Wrestling Squad won two
·matches over the weekend against
Columbia Christian and Oregon
College of Education. At this
point the Titans can consider
themselves undefeated. This has
been accomplished with out any
returning lettermen this year.
The Lane matmen won seven
of the 11 matches last Friday,
Jan. 7, to down visiting Columbia Christian 35-18.
The Titans came back for a
42 to 9 win over the Oregon •
College of Education JV's the
next day. The teams each won
two of the four bouts, but LCC
had the good fortune of gaining
fa u r forfeits to clobber the
Wolves.

In a non-league game at home
Saturday, Jan. 8 the LCC Titans
broke a relatively close game
wide open midway through the
first half. They took a commanding lead and never let go,
as they posted an 89 to 55 win
over the Columbia Christian
Clippers.
Lane, led by Greg Taylor with
34 points, proceeded to demolish
a fighting clipper team by scoring first after a couple of turnovers by both teams. Great defensive basketball played by the
Titans resulted irt a 14 to 7
bulge for the Titans~ However,
allowing for untimely offensive
fouls, Lane's lead was greatly
reduced from what it should have
been.
Midway through the first half
the Titans hit pay dirt, as costly turnovers and fastbreaks down
court resulted in nine straight
points . Jumpshots by Taylor,
Steve Woodruff and Dave Gibson
added with two penalty situations
shot the score to 23 to 7. Six
foot two inch forward Stuart Swan
hit a bucket for two Clipper
points. The Titans retaliated with
points. The Titans retaliated with
t hr e e consecutive fast-breaks
down court, but by the time
the Clippers had regained their
cool, the score was 29 to 9.
Just before intermission with
the Titans leading, 32-14, the
Clippers gained momentum and

rattled-off five straight points,
shortening the lead to 32-19.
The first seven minutes of the
second half looked like a day's
trading on the Dow Jones Industrials for the Titans, as baskets were being traded as often
as turnovers. Then the Clippers
called time out. Three minutes
after the time out, the Titans
had outscored the visitors, 1710.
With the score 54 to 36, the
fireworks really began, with Titan coach, Irv Roth, receiving a
technical foul. Minutes later,
Clipper forward, Al Williams,
was cited for the same offense.
Forty five seconds after WUIiams' technical, the entire Clipper bench received one. After
Titan Terry Manthey had fouled-out of the game with five
personals, Titan leading scorer
and all-around n i c e guy Greg
Taylor, was sighted for saying a
no-no and he was promptly told
to leave the game and received a
technical.
At the same time Taylor was
leaving the game, Clipper Sophomore guard Joe Taylor (no relation to Greg) received a technical for some unknown reason.
When he asked why he got one,
he was told to take an early
shower and he picked up his second technical on the way out.
Reluctance to leave resulted in
a third call against him.

V. N. Vets Aga·1nst the War
OCE ' "p Henry. La Clair''
Church,
2nd, 177-Na~han
LCC.p Henry
2nd. Ingals
La Clair, LCC,
CC,
lgl-Dennis Grauer, LCC, won by LCC, 3rd. l~0-Denms Grauer,
INDIVIDUAL RESULTS:
Meetings open to public
P Mike Sowles, OCE,
LCC - Columbia Christian: forfeit HEAVYWEIGHT-Mark LCC,
•
2nd. HEAVYWEIGHT- Mark
b f f ·t
B th Lc·c
118-Al McKay, LCC, won by
1
Every Tuesday ·'6 :30 p.m.
OCE
L
L
Bo th LCC
, won Y or e1 •
oo ,
,
, P arry ee,
o ,
LCC _ Oregon College of Edforfeit. 126-Dave Stodny, CC, d
1st •
I Third and Lincoln
iCoun~il of the Poor
Pete Faust, LCC, 6-0.13 4-Greg ucation JV's : 118-Al McKay,
Woods, CC, d TerryPayne,LCC, LCC, won by forfeit. 126-Pete . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
•
5-4. 142-Curt Crone, LCC, d Faust, LCC, won by forfeit. 134S p o r t s br·1efs
Ken Blackwell, cc, 12-2. 150- Terry Payne, LCC, won by forDoug Johns, CC, won by for- feit. 142-N o match. 15-Te r ry
feit. 158-Ken Kime, LCC, d Dean Robison, OCE, d Curt Crone,
924 Main St., Springfield
A five man intramural basketStidman, CC, 8-0. 176-John La- LCC, 9-5. 16'7-Richard Bucholtz,
_,.
'·:
1
LCC" won bv forfeit. 177-Pat ball league is now being formed
marr, CC, p Richard Bucheltz,
Phone 746 - 8221
'John Thompson's·-..---------------,• at LCC. Those interesten may
16 Modern lanes - Bowling accesories - Snack bar
7
sign up as a complete team or I
as an individual. Officials, who
will be paid $2.00 per game,
Oregon ·Gossip
are also needed. Signup sheets
are posted in the Physical Education Office, on the Intramural
-Burgers, Shakes, Fries
Mr. Dick Harter, the new Uni- letic department at OOU has done Office door, and on the bulle- 1
"Try the _b est in old-fashioned hamburgers"
versity of Oregon head basket- more in the past to insure this tin board in the Men's Locker
ball coach needs to know about success. For example, Slats Gill Rrom ,
'46-0918 ·
4690 Franklin Blvd.
the State of Oregon's basketbail had an assistant coach for years
tradition. First of all, Coach Har- while at the U of o, it took Mr.
The Physical Education Deter felt the Far West Classic Belko years before he had a full partment at LCC is interested
(FWC) in Portland was wonder- time assistant, and look what in learning if students at LCC
HEAD SKI PACK
ful, according to remarks he happened: Belko began having would be interested in attendTotal Value
made before the Oregon Club last fine teams - teams that drew ing diving classes this spring
$115.00
Sk-is
Standard
HEAD
$156.45
week. He went. on to say, "The the fans by the. thousands - after at Willam_alane. If . anyone is
Sa.lomon 404 Bindings 29 .95
only thing that disturbed me was he got an assistant. With an as- interested, please contact the dePack·age Price
7.50
Mounting
that the Beavers (Oregon state sistant coach to help with the partment either by phone or in
$119.00
University) were up there with recruiting, Belko built an OreEngraving
4.00
their band and all their fol- gon 'following' in Eugene in a - • - • - - - - - - - - - lowers." He concluded: "I hope short time. This was possible
•Lange Boots .
RENTALS: *'Head Skis
we can have the same thing in with greater st1pport from The
OREGON
Ski Rack~
*Toboggans
U of O Athletic Department.
two or three yea:rs."
Poles
In Portland, Belko won the
I agree. I hope he can too.
FWC in 1968 and 1969. He finishec
However, Mr. Harter must expect repeated Beaver enthusiasm second in 1970, losing to OSU by
EQUIPMENT
and support, as the Far West four points. A start has been
C 1ass i c was built by Oregon made, and now it is up to Coach
Sportbilt
Adidas
State's Slats Gill. The Beavers Harter to carry this beginning
Converse
w e r e t h e on e s who won ten onward and to greater heights.
straight Far West Classic titles Slats Gill and OSU worked hard Visit yours po rt specialists
over many years to develop this
(and came back to finish second
lnQuire about
OSU state-wide tradition, and
in 1967), and took all of the
team equipment
that is why the Beaver's band,
marbles in 1970, defeating a fine
alumni and followers are so loyal.
Univ e rs it y of Oregon team,
coached by Steve Belko.
There is more Oregon State
University tradition involved with
the FWC and there have been
more arn basketball followers
in this state for years. And that's
because they have been winners,
Open 1: 00-1 :00
while the U of O has not had
winning seasons very often, even
minor rep aIr s
overhauls
tune -ups
brakes
though they have a national championship in their trophy case from
the year 1939.
*PRICES YOU CAN .AFFORD TO :PAY*
It's quite true OSU has more
343 -4442
267 . Van Buren
9302
support, whether from their band,
001000 0
students_, or alumni, but the athhf' _. ,

.
st

••
••
•

TIMB·ER BOWL :

•
••
•

fHAMsuRGER -DAN'S7

·b ·

.
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*

*

BERG'S NORDIC SKI SHOP
******************************

announcing

--------------the

opening

of

DAVE'S GARAGE

SIDE

__ ..

l)p 8

TOR(;tl,- .',:,:J~Q~o:

:.::,•,:->~7"~•~•:~: ----;.;___._ ; •
•

c·,. ·~-·-·· .-,,-.,·.-.··••.-.·•• •.-·c,··:.. ..-...

::-:,

....... ......

• ·

M·"e

• Extra Vet benefits propoSed· • ••
Veterans attending the Winter
Term at LCC who did not submit a new class schedule to the:
Financial Aids Office by last
Friday may have their monthly
..
checks delayed.
The Financial Aids office said
those who have not turned in the
class schedule should contact
the office immediately, located
in Center Building, second floor.
Veterans should also be aware
of additional benefits available
to them. The LCC Financial Aids
Office lists these important facts
for veterans:
Veterans who marry will re•
ceive an extra $30 per month after filing a Declaration of Marital Status (Form 21-686c). A
copy of the marriage license is
not reQUired by the VA.
A couple having a c}:lild may
•

receive extra money each month
by filing Form 21-4138. No birth
record is required by the VA.
The VA also offers programs
•
to veterans having difficulties
with studies. This help--in the
form of Educational Deficiency
Classes and Tutorial Aid-is at
no cost to the veteran and is not
subtracted from the basic amount
the vete-raii received. The Educational Deficiency Classes consist
of non-credit classes for veterans who need extra help to
complete their final educational
objective. The _Tutorial Aid provides special help to aid a veteran in danger of failing a reQUired subject. Each veteran is
entitled up to 9 months of paid
tutorial benefits, limited to $50
per month.
Also, veterans may be receiv-

Ing a raise In their month!}
checks because the Nixon Administration has recommended to
Congress that payments for the
·GI Bill and other Veterans Administration education and training programs be increased. 01ney B. Owen, chief benefits director for the VA in testimony
presented before the Sub committee on Education and Training
of the House Committee on Ve•
terans Affairs, asked for costof -living increases approximating 8.6 per cent in allowances
paid GI Bill trainees and wives,
widows and children training under other VA programs.
Under the Administration proposal a single veteran going to
school under the GI Bill would
receive $190 per month instead
of the present ~175.

reviews TORCH

The dispute between I as t
term's central staffofthe TORCH
and the adviser whieh resulted
in the mass resignation of the
central staff was settled following a three day review by LCC's
Media Commission ending Dec.

15.

Paul Waldschmidt

Campus briefs ... - - - - - - - Life Action, an Adult Education:
1
class in environmental education 1
is holding an organic dinner on
Friday, January 14, at the Presbyterian Church on 15th and Ferry
street in Eu~ene, from 5:30-7:30
p.m. Donations of $I.50for adults,
and 50 cents for children are
appreciated. Proceeds go to the
funding of the environmental
class.
Patsy Mink, Democratic representative from Hawaii, will
speak at the University of Ore-·
gon Erb Memorial Union, on
Wednesday, Jan. 12, at 2 p.m.
in the afternoon. Ms . Mink is
a candidate seeking the Democratic nomination for the Presidency. She is the candidate CJf ,
the National Women's Political
Caucus. Ms. Mink will be on the
ballot in the Oregon Primary.

The Women's Prison Community Project will hold a meeting this Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
in the YWCA lounge in Gerlinger,
Hall at the University of Oregon,
The group has been organized
to develop and act on alternatives to the situation for women locally incarcerated in jail
and at the Oregon Women's Correctional Center.
Tryouts for LCC's next theatrical production, ''The Fantasticks," will be held today, Jan.
11 at 7:30 p.m. AU LCC students
are welcome to audition for theup-coming musical in the choral
room located in the basement
of the Center Building.
Any prepared song can be used
in auditioning. An accompanist
will be .provided ,and no previous
experience is necessary.

Representatives of the Air
Force ROTC program at the
University of Oregon will be
in the Center Building, second
floor lobby on Jan. 17, from
9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., to discuss their program.

Seminars slated

(from oage 1)
U of O. It deals primarily with
where draft evaders go and the
problems that they face.
"International Women," the
•
fifth program on the schedule,
will feature both American and
foreign women explaining the role
of women and the direction of
women's movements in their respective countries.
The final program of the
•
term will be about Chicanos. This
program is still in the _planning
stages and is scheduled for Fri-·
day. March 10.

· L~.a_, 1,,;> •
•, ••
II -·0 111111
111 -ISSIOI
•
• •

d . .••I":"--(

ldii~I
(from pag}:

the same wants and desires of
anyone else. But they are wilaside, i{ need be, in order to
ensure our way of life. Marines
do not need or want a war in order to prove they are men. Ma-·
rines are men because they are
committed to serving others to
the extreme of giving their lives so others may live. Marines
are professional military men,
men who know and appreciate
peace and freedom, men who are
willing to live in peace, without boredom. They are men who
pray that they do not have to
take to the field again to stop
people who want to enslave others
in mind and body.

At the Dec. 15 meeting, Bill
Bauguess, resigning editor, present~d a resolution urging the
commission to discuss the complaints and consider the recommendations submitted by a commission-appointed subcommittee
before selecting a new editor.
During the discussion, Bauguess charged that on some occasions the adviser, Ralph Peterson, edited copy in a way that
changed its meaning and that
the adviser sometimes neglected
to consult with the staff on these
changes and other matters involving the operationofthepaper.
Peterson replied thatthe problems arose because he misunderstood his role as TORCH adviser.
He assumed that the adviser's
role was that of "co-editor"
responsible for spelling, word
choice, grammar and appearance.
The subcommittee's rec om mendations were adopted at the
close of the meeting and at a
following meeting Dec.16, a committee was appointed to write a
review of the commission's findings.
Also during the Dec.16 meeting
five applicants for the TORCH
editorship were interviewed.
Those interviewed were: Jim
Gregory, Doug Cudahey, Barry
Hood, and Stuart Stone; with Paul
Waldschmidt being selected as
editor for Winter Term.

r-----------------------------------------------------i

I . •

William D. Lohan MSGT USMC

This Week

•

I

~----------------------~------------------------------Premier Chou En-Lai met with an American advance
party which is preparing for President Nixon's fort~-·
coming visit to mainland China. The 25-man group 1s
hard at work visiting the sites and installations that
will be used during the Nixon visit.

* *

* **

The Federal Drug Administration has announced
curbs in the use of additive Hexachorophene, to take
effect in sixty days. From studies of the ge,rm-killing
agent , any product containing more than 0. 75% will be
limited to ·prescription use. Though no human studies
have taken place, it has been found to affect brain
tissue in animals when taken in large enough doses.

* * * **
Hanoi has toughened its policies on release of
POW's, adding that in addition to total US withdrawal:
the policy of "Vietnamization" must be halted. Secretary of State Rogers made it equally clear that
at least a residual force of ground troops will remain in Vietnam until the prisoners are released. He
added that US air support and financial aid would
continue indefinitely. Meanwhile increased bombing of
North Vietnam, especially along the Ho Chi Minh
trail, continued this week. Many pilots ·who flew the
bombing runs last week contradicted official reports
of success in the bombing by' saying that there was
no way of knowing how well the runs had been because
of poor visibility, due to the inclement weather.

* * * **
Northern Ireland ushered in the New Year with
more violence. A British soldier was killed by a sniper
in a Roman Catholic district in Belfast. The government
released published rules which allow British troopf
more freedom in shooting and using automatic weapons
in Ulster. Several buildings were bombed by rebels.
Also, Bernadette Devlin. the young Irish member ofthe
British Parliament, declared in a television interview
in England that the British cannot hope to militarily

defeat the Irish Republican Army, the outlawed rebel
g.roup respo~sible for most.of th_e att~cks. Onlynegotahon, according to Ms. Devhn, will brmg peace.

departments which traditionally hire women, like Home
Economics.

* * * **

The ~T program, according . to reliable sources,
may have a resurrection. President Nixon appointed
Wil11am Magruder, former head of the SST program,
as a special consultant on technology. Discussions
are going on between Magruder and officials of the
FAA, alledgedly to build a solid base on which to formulate a new SST program. The SST budget was vetoed by the congress over presidential arguments because of financial overruns and environmental outcry.

Bombs were found in safe deposit boxes in banks in
three US cities this week. In New York, Chicago and
San Francisco letters were received which led to the
discovery of the bombs. A significant difference in
this series of bombings was that the timing devices
with the bombs was of a type which allowed the bombs
to be placed at the target up to six months in advance
of detonation. Also, it was mentioned that only about
ten per cent of all bombers are caught.

* * * **
Governor Reagan announced this week the decision
to close San Quentin prison., In July of this past year
a group made a federal study which recommended the
closing of both San Quentin and Folsom prisons. The
head of that study group announced that he was "very
pleased" with the decision.

*

*

*

*

*

Former Senator Wayne Morse, the outspoken critic
of the Vietnam war, formally announced his candidacy
by takingoutthe required papers inSalem last Thursday.'
He is attempting to unsea.t incumbent Sen. Mark Hatfield. The only other Democrat in the race thus far
is State Sen. Don Wilner, a Democrat from Portland.

* *

*

*

*

Oregon State University has been accused of discrimination in the hiring and recruiting of minority
groups and women. A group of investigators from the
Seattle office of the US Department of Health, Education
and Welfare released findings which state that there
is no positive effort to recruit and hire minority and
female staff, and obvious salary ineQUities exist between
male and female staff members-with the exception of

* *

*

*

:I'

* * * **
A new trial date has been set in California superior court by Judge Richard Arnason for Angela
Davis, charged as a participant in an effort to free
three black prisoners from the Marin County courthouse i n August of 1970. The trial is to be held in
San Jose. Miss Davis was imprisoned in a six by eight_
foot cell in nearby Palo Alto city jail. She was, however, placed in the hospital with a serious cold because of pleas by her defense attorney.

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Two U of O geology graduate students and a law
professor believe that they have sufficient legal grounds
to stop pumice mining claims in the Three Sisters
wilderness area. They believe that they have proof
showing the venture would not lead to extractions pure
enough to justify the activity.

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Bob Hughes, a black columnist for the Northwes1
Clarion-Defender, has filed as a candidate for the Oregon Senate as a Democrat. He is running in the PortlandSt. Johns district. Hughes hopes to be a voice for
Black people and for the whole state as well. He is
33 years old.