1fiane (tlommunitu (tlollege

Charley

Oregon's largest

1s

alive and well

community college

(on page 5)

weekly newspaper

Vol.

8 No.3

J anua[Y

4000 East 30th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405

23.

19 73

Scienc e proiec t cancel led after
sex-di scrimi nation compl aint
bv Terri Whitman

The Science Department bird banding project,
featured pictorially in last week's TORCH , no
longer exists. The reason appears to be a result of accusations claiming sex discrimination
in the operation of the project.
The field-study project, which was in its third
year at LCC, was one - of 21 options offered for
project credit for a General Zoology class. But
the instructor and initiator of the project, Floyd
Weitzel. closed the project to his students when it
became apparent last week that he was being
pressured to permit women to participate in the
study-the past two years of bird banding had
involved men, exclusively.
Jan Brandstrom, counselcr in LCC's Science
Department and chairwoman of the LCC Status
of Women Committee, told the TORCH that she
had approached Weitzel with the fact that she
and some science instructors had received several

I Film
Away we gol
Wayne Ballantyne, playing the part of Sir Spettigue, rehearses for
LCC's current stage production "Where's Charley?'' opening this
Friday night in the Forum. For a look at the play and more information
see page five. (Photo by Ole Hoskinson)

n ~ckne t t

ru

Charles Packnett, ASLCC first
vice president , was appointed to
the position of acting president of
Oregon Community College Student
Association (OCCSA), and given a
vote of confide.nee during 8.n OCCSA

Chuck Packnett

business meeting in Bend, Saturday.
Packnett was serving as vice
president of the OCCSA, but was
moved up as acting president when
a motion by Treasure Valley Community College was passed that
removed Harvey Scott from the
position of President.
The motion stated that Scott
failed to attend meetings that, ace or ding to OCCSA By-Laws,
brought him in direct violation of
the OCCSA Constitution.
The motion asked for Scott's

,ll~• · ~

I~··~

study gets a_pp~oval

Last week the LCC Administration gave approval for a new film
class, Introduction to Film Study,
which will begin Spring Term on
a workshop basis. Pre-registration will be required of all students planning to enroll.
Lang u age Arts Department
Chairman John Howard explained
that the class wil1 carry three
transfer credits. Howard said that
since the course will deal with
several selected films, creating
a high rental cost, students will

occS)rpto

resignation, gave Packnett a vote
of confidence and made him acting President of OCCSA until the
spring convention which is to be
held in April at Spanish Head
in Lincoln City.
Controversy first arose over
Scott's position this fall at the
OCCSA c O n vent i O n at Diamond
Lake.
At that meeting, Scott explairied to the convention that he would
have to undergo surgery and would
be unable to attend to his duties ·
as president of OCCSA. He requested that the vacant vice president's position be filled, since he
would be bedridden and need help
in order to run the organization.
Th
•
• t'
••
e V i C e presideri s positI_on
would not normally have been fllled until the spring convention.
The convention so moved and
elected Packnett to the position
of vice pres!dent and gave S~ott
a vote of confidence.
But the attitude changed Sat•
d
urday when th e _con yen t 10n agree
that ~he orgamzahon--OCCS Awas m need of help from the
executive level and the illness of
8cott was endangering the organization.
The motion passed easily and
Packnett was moved up the the
- position of acting OCCSA President.
Packnett said his priorities
in the new position would include
"working more with each school
individually and finding out the
needs of the students at those
schools," and working for the
programs most relevant to community colleges: Child care, vet-

complaints from female students who were concerned that they were not permitted to participate
in the project.
In a prepared statement Jan.lZ Weitzel gave
the following comment for discontinuing the threeyear old project.
"For many years I have actively banded and
released birds as a personal study project in animal behavior ....
"Because I thought there would be some students in General Zoology who would enjoy helping with this field study I offered to allow students who had Friday mornings from 7 to 11 a.m.
open the opportunity to help band birds to meet
the requirements of their General Zoology project.
''Since this project is one of many options, since
it is best carried out with a limited number of
students. and because it is essentially my choice
to allow students to observe a field
study which has education valua-and which I could have just as
term to give an rnd1cahon of the
easily have kept entirely to myself
class' success: _
- I feel that I have the right to
And, accord~ng _to Susan Benne~t,. the Enghsh mstructor who exercise a selection of people who
I allow to participate.
origmally ~roposed the co~rse,
"At my own choice, and for reastud~nts will . purchase a ~icket
sons
which are adequate to me pert? VIew .the films. She said the

ticket will also de!ray . the cost
o~ the 12 t? 14_ maJor films, and
will serye rn heu of a text boo_k.
The fllm study workshop. ~111
help the student form a critical
approach ~o film evaluation, M~.
Bennett sai~. For _exam?le, a topic
f
1
d
ht
t

pore-restgister this

erans issues and student housing.
Packnett also said he wants to
see more com mumca
• t·10n passe d
between com rr, unity c0!leges,
which he hopes would be an aid
in solving similar problems tlie
schools might have.
. .- • • • • - - - - - 11111
Lyndon Baines Johnson, the
36th President of the United
States, and the only living
former President, died yesterday at the age of 64 of
an apparent heart attack.
Johnson was pronounced
dead on arrival at Bro~e Army
Medical Hospital where he was
rushed from his San Antonio
home after his fourth heart
attack.
During his political career,
Johnson served in the Texas
state 1e g is 1at u re, as congressman, s en at or, vicepresident, and took office as
President after the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy in
1963 .
President Nixon eulogized
Lyndon Johnson as a man
"of unshakeable courage." He
said Johnson was "a dynamic
leader'' and a "unique personality." The President went
on to say that to Johnson
"the American Dream was not
a catch phrase-it was a reality of his own life. He believed in America--in what
America could mean to all
of its citizens and what America could mean to the
world."

••••••••• ••-Ill

I

,si?:;~;~h

.~=n!~;

posed to violence m "Dellverance," she expla_ined.
. The wo~kshop will be scheduled
like
. any literature class; students
w_1ll me_et th~ee ~ours. a ~eek for
. d1sc~ss10n with ~ilm viewmg done
outside of cla_ss hme.
.
Howard said the ?lass will_ be
offered at three d_1fferent hm_e
slots: Monday, Wednesday and Fnday 11 a.m. to noon and I p.m. to
_2 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday fro_m
10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. There will
by a maximum ~imit of 9~ students, Howard said, and reg1straltion will be_ on a first-come, first]served ba~1s. .
.
.
Pre-registration c?ntmues m
the Language A_rt~ omc~, fourth
floor, Center Bmldmg until Feb.2.

Stu den t h0 u s•I n g
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The LCC Board of Education
has scheduled a work session at
Ashlane Apartment housin~ tomorrow night to discuss questions
the college and students have about
the student apartment complex and
to continue the discussion on long
range planning
•
Before the 7:30 meeting with the
public the Board will have a dinner with officials of ASH, Inc.the build?rs of Ashlane-:---:vhere the
Board will ask the officials such
questions as what procedure is
used fo~ det_e~mining _whether a
student is ellg~ble. to !1ve at Ash. l~n~, what criteria is used for
hirmg Ashlane managers and assistant managers and what the precedures are for employing any
other personnel necessary to operate the student housing.

Floyd Weitzel

sonally, I have chosen to limit
the participation in the field study
to m a 1e students. ! have had
excellent cooperation and results
from the project in the past, and
it seems an imposition upon my
rights that anyone demand that I
change my position and open the
study to female students.
''There appears to be agitation developing to make this into an issue
of discrimination against women.
I do not feel that I am being discriminatory. I do, howeve_r, feel
that my rights are being discriminated against.
"However, rather than to allow the
issue to develop into something detrimental to the Science Department or to LCC, I have decided
to once again restrict the study as
my personal project to be done
completely unrelated to any course
I am teaching. Thus any student
or other person who wishes to
join me can do so at my invitation entirely aside from my position at LCC."
Last week the TORCH received
a note from Jan Brandstrom pertaining to a meeting scheduled for
Jan.15. The note said that the bird
banding project would be discussed
(Continued on page 6)

Page 2 TORCH Jan. 23, 1973

Letters to the Editor
Dear Editor:
Concerning the TORCH's generous article describing the LRC's
instructional television program
(TORCH, Jan. 16) let me make
this perfectly clear-the LRC has
no direct role in producing Lane's
basketball games. The games are
aptly handled by the Television
Broadcasting classes of the Department of Mass Communications. With all the time and enthusiasm the classes dedicate to
producing these games, they should
receive credit where credit is due.
The TV Broadcasting classes
have made it possible to show every
home game on the Information Retrieval System, fourth floor Center
Building.
Sincerely,
John Earley
Dear Editor:
Why should a zoology class project option have to be canceled,
depriving men of their right to
participate in an activity that is
obviously theirs by birthright. Afterall, birdbanding is a very serious activity, and if women were
allowed into the class, certainly
all of the seriousness would be
lost and the treks into the wilds
above the southeast parking lot
would turn into gay little romps
in the sunshine. Oregon weather
being what it is, what woman would
want to go trudging around in the
rain, sleet, snow and mud just
to put some little bands on the legs
of birds? What woman would even
want to touch a bird anyway? And
as to the intricacies of trying to
weigh and measure something like
a bird, what woman could handle
it? I am sure it's nothing like
measuring a cup of flour.
The class should be allowed to
continue in its present structure.
Any woman would, ·of course, be
much happier in a nice warm
classroom in the Home Economics Department, learning how
to be a successful housekeeper.
Scrubbing floors and changing diapers is much more fitting role
for a woman than trying to keep
up with a man's profession in a
man's world.
I wonder how the hundreds of
women employed by Audubon Society and other such n at u r a 1
science organizations le a r n e d
their profession?
Lee Savage
Dear Editor:
This is a letter to all LCC
students.
After attending several meetings in which students have been
invited to join with "professional" experts to make great and

JACK ANDERSON'S

on this campus. such as the weldglorious decisions concerning this
ing program, the Ben Kirk case,
college, the question always
arises, mostly from me, what is the tuition increase, the revision
the role of the student in the of class size, and the attempt
policy-making areas of his edu- to remove the TORCH from exc at ion? The answer inevitably ecutive sessions of the Board,
comes back, that although the ''ex- then the indications are, that if
perts" mouth their appreciation this college is left to run its
for student imput, they really view present course, that all the conthe student and his, or her• ideas cepts of student participation and
as an inconvenience to their func- . a._ccess to the type of education that
tion much on the order of a pesky ··they need . and want will one by
mosquito-an omnipresent buzzing one slip into the grave yard of
insect which can be tolerated until ignored ideas.
This college can be saved. The
he gets too close, at which point
he is to be slapped down. In dinosa~r can be pulled from the
essence, then, student participa- muck and allowed to continue its
tion is merely another form of evolution to a higher form. But,
we as students have to be the
tokenism.
If the "professionais" are cor- ones who save it.
The first and most important
rect, the student at this college
is nothing more that a somewhat step in gaining the type of inretarded child, and the function stitution that will meet your needs
of his educational betters is to is to care about what is happenlead him through the mire of ed- ing. If you are dissatisfied with
ucation, and to train him to take what's going on and don't take
his place on the great assembly a stand, when your rights are taken
away, then you have no one to
line of society.
I have a different view of the blame but yourself.
The second step is to organize
students at this college. For the
most part she, or he . is a cap- into groups and make your comable, adult, taxpaying member of plaints known. Mold only grows in
the community. His or her aver- dark places and its up to you
age is 25 years old, (on a to turn on the lights.
The third step is to become
par with many of the staff), and
for the most part he, or she, active in gaining the kind of edhas a great deal of experience ucation that you want and need,
with life and the function of the and this means going to the Board,
community. The student at Lane the Administration, the Student
is very concerned with his or her Government, the public and the
community, and is attending this press, or what-ever steps are necinstitution not only to improve him essary to make public your needs.
self, but to be able to better serve Along with this final step is the
the community of which they are responsibility to present your case
in such a way that no one will
part.
Why then, at every turn, is the be. able to say that you are irstudent patronized? Why is he responsible students, who are just
co-opted? Misled?And disal- fighting the system for fighting's
lowed true access to the policy- sake. You must clearly demonmaking levels of this college? strate that you have reasonable
requests, and demands, and that
Every action on the part of the you are competent people and that
students, or any group, is viewed you are presenting ideas for posias a threat to the survival of the tive change.
institution; it has taken on the proThis school belongs to the comportions of a dinosaur trapped munity and you are members of
in a peat bog, every cell of its that community. Its function is to
body struggling for existence and serve the educational, and training
still unable to realize that that needs of the community, and you
very struggle is leading to its as students and as members of
quicker demise.
the community at large are in the
The students of this college com- best position to recognize those
prise the largest faction, or group needs. You have the least vested
on this campus. They are taxed
through tuition, property tax, and interest in the continuation of the
quo, and the most interest
state and federal income tax, and status
in bettering the services provided
yet they have the least amount
by the school and the community.
of input into the educational proTh~refore you must take a stand
cess which hypothetically is gear- on your own behalf and on behalf
ed to serve the needs of the stu- of the community to assure that
dent. The token representation that this college continues to change
we are allowed is ludicrous to to meet your needs and provide
the extent that it rivals the re- the community with the type of
construction era of the post civil resource that will be the most
war period , and if we observe beneficial to all people of this
the current trends in policy.making county.
Jack Hart
TORCH Staff
Jim

Editor
Associate

Editor

Associate

Editor

Business

Ole

Production

Hoskinson
Lee

Manager

Advertising

Gregory

Doris

Manager
Manager

Beyer
Norman

Pam
Carol

Copy

Editor

Jill

Photo

Editor

Lenn

Sports

Editor

Lex

Frost

Newman
Bergstrom
Lethlean
Sahonchik

Reporters:

Y'mean wa can't
ta.I- ANYONE?
Don't y'thin" it
kinda llt\POR1l
~or th' people
to IOIOWa
ti'-'

Steven L9cke

Lalana Rhine

Robin Burns

Steve Busby

Sheila R_ose

David Morse

Gerry

Domagala

Linda Corwin

Terri

Whitman

Shelley Cunningham

M• 11 1, .. r 11! Ou•~tn C'.1mu1u111t\ Col!t>:!t' ~Pw~p:1p11r Hs-;,l("1:itum ;tll'I On•!.!oll I\p\\SJl,tJJ('r Puhlisllt•rs Ass•11·i~t 11111.
f 11• Tt)RCII is puhllsh .,, ,,11 Titt•sd;\\'S tlm1 l!.!l1t111l tilt'

n•g11L1r ;w:,dl'mk \'t .1r an.J t'Vt•n· otll.-r T11t"sd;n cl11ri1i:. Summ, r
T1•rm.
Opinion.., 1-'xpn•sst•1I 111 this !J·•A..,Jl,l(>t•r an• not m•rl'Ss:..ril\ th,,s,• II~ tll•• c·olh•gP, !->llltl••!Jt ~0\t•fllnll'Jlt or stmlt>nt
bod\·. Nor :in• sil!.flt'd :1rtidt•sm•c·t•s--;.1rilrtht'Vlt>\\ of lht• TORCH.
All t·orn•,;windt•nn• .',h011lrl h•• t\"p••d or prinlPd, dr111hlt'-SJ)a:·~•d
1

anrl si~m•cl ti,· th,· ,\ rit1•r.

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TOHlH, C1111t"r 206, I ,1111• C'ommunit\' Collt•!,!" , 4000 E~st 30th
Avl'fll lt>, _E_u_g~•m·, Ort>g.on !:174):i; T\•JppllonP 7-17-4~~)1, Ext. 234.

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Blocking Mao's Missiles
by Jack Anderson

1972 Pulitzer Prize Winner for National Reporting
(Copyright, 1973, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)

WASHINGTON - The
Central Intelligence Agency
has reported that China is on
the verge of becoming a
superpower in intercontinental missiles. The outgoing CIA
Director, Richard Helms, told
the Senate Armed Services
Committee behind closed
doors that he was "shocked"
to find how close China is to
superpower status in the
missile field.
It is tru€ that China has
been building nuclear
missiles. The first missiles
already have been targeted
against Soviet cities. Helms
didn't mention, however, that
the United States has
developed a defense against
Chinese warheads.
The CIA obtained samples
of the metal that the Chinese
use in their warheads. Our
own nuclear experts then constructed duplicates of the
Chinese warheads. These
were detonated underground
in Nevada with X-rays from
another nuclear explosion.
Here's -how the experiment
worked. Two underground
explosion chambers were
built, connected by a tube.
The Chines·e warhead was
placed in one chamber, and a
nuclear charge was set up in
the other chamber. The
charge was set off, sending Xrays through the tube. The Xrays then detonated the
Chinese warhead.
The tests were conducted at
various altitudes, which were
simulated in the underground
chambers, upon warheads of
various sizes. The results indicate that the U.S. should be
able to throw up an X-ray
screen, which would explode
oncoming Chinese warheads
in outer space.
The X-ray screen, however,
doesn't work against Soviet
warheads which are made of
harder metals. There are also
reports that the Soviets have
made the same discovery. So
the Soviets, too, may be able to
detonate Chinese warheads in
space.
The Chinese missiles,
therefore , may not be as
ominous as Helms indicated
in his secret testimony.
- Agnew Relieved President Nixon has offered
to share federal revenues with
the cities and states. Yet at
the same time, he intends to
withhold around $13 billion in
Federal funds for city
programs. This could increase
the growing rot in our great
cities.
Here are some of the immediate effects of the executive stranglehold on urban
finances: The Department of
Housing and Urban Development has announced a freeze
on all housing subsidy
programs. Important social
services can expect cutbacks
of nearly one billion dollars.
Other cuts in federal aid to
mental health will mean that
people will be turned out of
out-patient clinics. The
federal government also intends to punish cities, which

naven ' t completely elimi nated welfare chiselers by
withholding all welfare
funds.
The cutbacks have been the
work largely of the Office of
Intergovermental Relations,
which Vice President Spiro
Agnew has headed. Urban
officials, therefore, started
bombarding the Vice President's office with their complain ts. They were told ,
however, that he is no longer
in charge. Agnew had quietly
asked the President to
remove the Office of Intergovernmental Relations
from his jurisdiction.
President Nixon obligingly
dissolved Intergovernmental
Relations and moved the staff
into the new Domestic Council. Insiders say the move was
politically motivated. Agnew
has his eye on the presidential nomination in 1976 and
can't afford to alienate local
political leaders. He hea·ved a
sigh of relief when Intergovernmental Relations
closed down.
- Behind the Scenes -

SILENT MINORITY While President Nixon was
making points with Chou Enlai in Asia. he was losing credibility with his ChineseAmerican' supporters at
home. A prominent ChineseAmerican, we have learned,
quietly pressured the White
House to include a ChineseAmerican translator in the
President's entourage to
China last February. But the
White House ignored the appeal which was made by
David Wang, now a European
correspondant for Voice of
America. After the trip White
House aide John Holdridge
reportedly explained to Wang:
"Frankly , David, we wanted
to present the majority of the
U.S. in this case and not the
minority."
HARTKE HANDSTAND

Sen. Vance Hartke, D-Ind. , apparently has broken a commitment with union officials
to back Sen. Ted Kennedy's
Health Care bill. Two weeks
ago, union officials persuaded
Hartke to co-sponsor Kennedy's bill. Then Hartke huddled
with American Medical
Association lobbyists. No one
knows exactly what was said.
But Hartke emerged from the
meeting and told his staff he
would no longer support Kennedy's bill. Union officials
howled in disbelief. When a
staff member told Hartke that
union members were saying
he had welched on ·his commitment to him, Hartke
angrily fired the hapless aide
on the spot. Fortunately, other
aides intervened and a cooler
Hartke reinstated the st~ffer.
But union lobbyists are still
boiling over Hartke's flipflop.
TENNIS MAINTENANCE

- Gen. Paul Carleton took
over the command at Scott
Air Force base in Illinois recently and was aghast to ~ind
(Continued on page 8)

Page 3 TORCH Jan. 23, 1973

"VD Blues" program to be rebroadcast
by Ron Hamblen

The image of two chess players crouched over a board and ignoring
everyone else in the room somehow cannot - avoid coming out antisocial. But there is a variation of the game that is just as social as
bridge: that is, four-handed chess.
The game requires a special
board, but , except for the Rook
Pawns, all of the pieces have the
usual moves. Rook pawns can only
move one square on their first
turn. There are also two different
Queening rules. 1) A Pawn may
Queen upon reaching any last rank,
or 2) it must reach an opponent's
back rank before Queening. Decide
which rule to use before starting,
and, if the latter is used, a Pawn
reaching a friendly back rank would
"In four-handed chess there's
just turn around and start back the
other way.
twice as much of me to hate."

A checkmated or stalemated player remains so only until his ally
can free him (or is also check/stalemated). Partners' pieces do not
check each other. A .... stalemated player's pieces still attack other
squares to check a king, but a checkmated player's pieces do not.
Both stalemated and checkmated pieces may be captured.
• The four usual colors are White, Blue, Red and Black, with players
moving in this order. Partners, those sitting opposite each other, are
White-Red and Blue-Black. The pieces are set up as shown in the
diagram.
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Red light phone
terrifies aides
(CPS}-What has a red button that
lights up and rings like a firebell and makes White House aides
immediately stop what they are doing and run madly around?
It's not a fire alarm or a bomb
detonator, but merely the President of the United States calling
on his special phone.
" It ' s a terrifying thing just to
know the President's on the line,"
observed one former White House
aide.
,
The name of the phone is POTUS,
which naturally stand for President
of the United States.

Copyright Ronald J. Hamblen 1973
SPONSORED BY BURCH'S FINE
FOOTWEAR. TWO LOCATIONS:
10 6 0 WILLAMETTE AND THE
VALLEY RIVER CENTER.

•
•••

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I
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Negotiations are now underway between LCC and the Broadcast
Services Division at the University of Oregon to formulate a timesharing plan which would allow LCC to originate student-produced
television programming over cable channel 10 by way of station PL3.
PL3 is the U of O station broadcast through the Eugene-Springfield
Community Antenna System on a time-slot basis agreement with the
TelePrompter company of Eugene. Mike Hopkinson, LCC Television
Broadcasting instructor, who has worked at PL3, explained that the
University's television station broadcasts over the cable from 6 p.m.
until 11 p.m., Moriday thru Friday. He said that if LCC were connected
to the cable system, under the agreement presently being negotiated
between LCC and the University, LCC would be allowed to use part of
that time to originate programs from studio's in .the Forum Building.
Hopkinson said that LCC's programs would differ from those of
PL3 in that LCC's would primarily be student produced. The University's station, he explained, is staffed primarily by engineers and
instructors employed by the Unviersity and the majority of PL3 ' s
programs are rebroadcasts of programs already shown on station KOAC,
channel seven, the educational station in Corvallis.

Vietnam lecture,

The film "Village by Village"
and a discourse by Dr. Glen Gordon
and his wife on South Vietnam comprise next week's lectures on the
History of War and Peace, Monday Jan. 29, at the Newman Center in Eugene.
"Village by Village" was filmed
in May, 1972 in North Vietnam •
The film depicts the country-side
and reveals the results of heavy
US bombingso It also shows a
large hospital where patients are
treated for injuries from antipersonnel weapons.
Ramsey Clark, past AttorneyGeneral, stated after seeing the
·film that " 'Village by Village'
will not make you feel better about
yourself or your country."
This will be the third, in a
series of lectures that will run
till Feb. 19.
The series is being held at the
Newman Center, 1950 Emerald St.
in Eugene. The admission is free
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Oregon Educational and Public Broadcasting Service (KOAPTV, Channel 10, Portland, and
KOAC-TV, Channel 7, Corvallis)
will repeat the hour-long color
special five times during an int ens iv e statewide information
c amp a i g n: 17 p.m. Thursday,
1:30 p.m, Monday , 10 a.m. on
Jan. 30 and 31, and 1:30 p.m. on
Jan. 31.

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Feiffer and Black journalist Clayton Riley. Dro Hook and the Medicine Show, Arlo Guthrie and several blues singers will perform
original numbers.
The first evening broadcast will
include an extra half hour session
where viewers may phone in questions to be answered on the air
by doctors.
Fact u a 1 material covers syphilis, gonorrhea and a short segment on diseases affecting homosexuals. The program's message
is to encourage those possibly exposed to VD--now one of the nation's most critical health problems--to report to a clinic for
treatment or a check up.

TIMBER BOWL

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!student T. V. production planned

at Newman Center

---·

.8

Sometimes called a variety show

about VD the program was produced to be entertaining as well
as informative. Besides facts about
symptoms of VD and where to go
for sympathetic medic a 1 treatment, "VD Blues" features dramatic and comedy sketches by
playwrights Israel Horovitz, Jules

film series planned,

- - ~-

-D

Dick Cavett, a score of rock
musicians and other entertainers
will combine talents Jan. 25 on
"VD Blues," educ~tional terevision's special about the current
epidemic of venereal disease.

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al1I--.

'Students have information to offer '

Jack Baughman, a 36 year old ex-administrator, and
ex-teacher who taught psychology last year at LCC, is
back this year ... as a student.
"I've kind of gone through a cycle now," Jack says.
• "I started out as a student, then became a teacher, then
administrator, then teacher, and now I'm a student again."
While some might consider Jack's situation as a
step backwards, he sees it as a necessary step -- one
which has enhanced his life and kept him in what he
calls "the educational flow.''
"I think education is moving so fast today that if
teachers don't take time to go back to school and re- •
educate themselves to the times, theykindofphase themselves out. Knowledge and education are changing so

..

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system, in that in the past we have been goal-oriented
and we have been trying to promise something for the
future."
That is a future trip, he added, "and future
trips always get us into trouble."
As a student at Lane, Jack is following his own advice,
and taking courses which he states are giving him personal meaning, and filling in gaps in his own educational
background. He is taking art courses and an anthropology course, which he says "are really good."
I'm finding this is filling-in a background in me that
has been really lacking. I've been so intellectually
inclined for so many years, especially because of my
degree in experimental psychology and being into the
scientific method, that . . . for a period of time ..• I
was almost forgetting how to feel; now I'm into creative
things where I am doing something.''
Jack related that many intellectuals look upon such
classes as secondary subjects, but expressed his opinion
that "they are not only equa 1 but they might even be
more important_,,
The fact that some classes are considered secondary and that there are non-credit and credit classes,
are disturbing to him. "Who is to decide what is important enough for credit, and what is not?" he asks.
"It seems that that has to do with the person himself. He sees a problem in separating classes in such
a way, and feels there should be no separation."
Jack is dedicated to his beliefs, and to seeing his
ideals come about. Last year he held a symposium
at LCC which was "very well received." H e plans
to hold another symposium next quarter. The symposium will, in addition to speakers, feature musicians.
"The people who are really tuned-into the new kind
of philosophical outlook that is happening today are in
the music field. There are a lot of prophets in music
that have very important things to say. This is a very
important part of what the symposium will be.''
"I'm going to continue to work to bring out those
ideals that I believe in education whether through being
a student, or teaching, or maybe through some kind
of an elected position."

fast today that people just have to stay into that educational flow,'.: Jack stated.
And, keeping in the flow, Jack has seen changes in
educational trends and has formulated ideas about those
changes.
One of his beliefs is that teachers should consider
that students themselves have information to offer. He
stated that sometimes teachers don't leave themselves
open to this possibility. He related his own experience.
"It was my third year in teaching, my first year at
Lane, when I first started tuning in to the students and
I found that there is a great wealth of information there.
But students have not always been encouraged to look
at the information they do have. They are always being
taught something, rather than exploring their own selves,"
he said.
Jack see a real need for people to utilize education
as a means of acquiring their own personal meaning.
Happily , he sees a trend in this direction. Society is
changing, ideals are are changing, and as a result,
education is changing.
The roles-and-goals aspect of education is fading out,
said the ex-teacher. "Students are not so worried about
how they are going to get a degree, or even what it is
going to be in, but are just exploring a lot of courses. Education is becoming a search for identity rather than
a search for a job. This is the change that is happening in education."
Jack referred to the new group of people who are
getting into community services, and humanitarian efforts
and said "This is an age of humanitarians which is
based on the principle that we are really all one in a
spiritual type of sense.
People with this philosophy
believe that in helping humanity you are helping yourself.''
Jack added that another philosophy shaping the way
society is heading is the attitude of making the best of
one's circumstances, and realizing that "the only way
you can really have anything is to give it up. Some of
the things which people try to hang onto Jack siad, nodding,
are really the root of their pain.''
"This philosophy relates back to the educational

"Ethnicity" program expects increase in involvement
"Ethnicity," a new field of study • Department to be dispursed by the
The program materialized as the
program manager, as stipulated in result of a memorandum sent 'by
recently added to LCC curriculum,
program guidelines laid down by LCC President Eldon Schafer to
reached its highest level of stuthe NEH.
• Black Studies co-director Marilyn
dent enrollment this term, said
Department Cb air m an William
Waniek. The memorandum proDuring the academic year 1969- posed the necessary alterations
Powell.
70, a sequence of courses dealing that were needed in order to inPowell explained that '' student
with
Afro-American experiences, corporate the proposal into Lane
participation in the program Winwere offered at LCC. The exper- Community College's administrater Term has increased 116 per
iment was such a success that tive structure.
cent over the previous terms, and
a program proposal was designed
that courses now being tentatively
The B 1 a c k Studies Program
by LCC and -U of O collaborators. which had · existed was changed to
designed are expected to increase
This action initiated the Black the Ethnic Studies Program bestudent involvement far beyond exStudies
Program at LCC, which ginning the academic year of 1971pectations.''
was later altered and expanded." 72.
The Ethnic Studies Department
is a newly authorized addition to
the regularly scheduled curriculum at LCC. It was designed to
promote a more comprehensive
understanding of minority experiences and contributions to the
American society, . according to
project guidelines. The department
has expanded to serve both Chicano and Native-American citizens
as well as Black students.
The project is being funded
USED BOOKS, MAGS, RECORDS
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I

• He'll be right here at LCC starting Friday night.
"Charley," based upon the farce "Charley's
Aunt" by Brandon Thomas, opened on Broadway in
1948 where it ran for 800 performances. There will
be seven at LCC as of to date most of the performances are sold out.
For those that are lucky enough to see it they
will be treated to a hilarious, madcap romp through
manners, silted etiquette, disguises, formal tea
parties and fluttering heroines.
The score is fondly remembered for two songs
which have become American standards: "Once
In Love With Amy" and "My Darling!" other songs
in the score include the" The New Ashmoloen Marching Society and Student Conservatory Band," "Peranmbuco" and other equally witty so_ngs.
The leads include David Morgan as Charley;
Cheri Kottke as Amy, his girl; Craig Wasson as
Jack, Charley's roommate; Jan Jackson as Kitty,
who is Jack's girl; Wayne Ballantyne as Sir Spettigue, Mary Ann Wish as Donna Lucia, Charley's
real aunt; and John Coombs as Sir Francis Chesney.

J-{~

Page 6 TORCH Jan. 23, 1973

THE

FORUM

(Editor's note: The Forum serves as an opportunity
for members of the LCC community to express
their opinions. The following Forum commentary
was submitted by Jerry Garger, assistant professor, Language Arts Department and former
member of the Special Evaluation Committee for
Ben Kirk.)
As a member of the Special Evaluation Committee for Ben Kirk's "Science in Your Life,"
l feel it necessary to add a few corrections and
comments to the "official" version of his firing.
I'm operating on the theory that we come closest
to truth by hearing as many versions as possible.
Here's mine.
•
Last spring Eldon Schafer, president of LCC,
charged Ben with
~
"ins u bO r c1 in ation" and recommended to the
Board of Education that he be
fired.
The Bo a rd ,
however, directed
that Ben be rehired on probation
and evaluated by
both an LCC Spec ial Evaluation
Committee and an
Outside Evaluation- Committee.
Jerry Garger
The problem was that the person responsible
for setting up both committees and the guidelines
for their operation was Lewis Case, dean of Instruction, who had just finished recommending to
President Schafer that Ben be fired.
And set them up he did.
The LCC Special Evaluation Committee was not
in my view, allowed to decide on a fair and sen~
sible method of evaluation. Instead we were forced
to operate according to criteria so rigid and narrowly traditional that they could lead to only one
conclusion: Ben's firing.
The author of those guidelines? Dean Case hardly
the disinterested party. Ordinarily one of the chief
prosecutors isn't also the judge.
Further, there was originally no student representation on the col!}mittee. Jack Hart was accepted
by the committee only over the strong protests of
Dean Case and John Jacobs, Science Department
chairman •
In discussing evaluation criteria, the Committee
tried to discover Dean Case's specific objections
to Ben's original and revised course outlines. At
first we were ignored, then told that the outline
couldn't be approved until the State approved the
course. Our questions were never answered.
Ben tried to revise his course to State approval.

LCC BRIEF§

But the folks in Salem demanded a measurable,
The LCC Branch of OOPIRG vious school or institution.
quantjfiable, traditional science course, perhaps a bit
The largest scholarship, which
(Oregon Student Public Interfst
hipped-up to pacify the ecology-miJ1ded. They wanted
Research Group) will hold a meet- is for outgoing students, requires
a course that Ben had decided wasn't worth teaching.
ing to discuss ideas for future pro- that the student be a full-time stuI was rP,minded of Paul Goodman's idea that
jects Jan. 24 at 5p.m. in the north- dent with a declared major in
scientists have become "an organized priesthood»
east end of the cafeteria at LCC. drama. The student must have
and their system "the major orthodoxy of modern
Currently under investigation are graduated from an Oregon high
society.,, Ben had become the heretic to be purged.
the sewage lagoon west of campus school and have attended an accredited institution of higher
At .this point we had a committee getting the
and nursing homes.
runaround from the person to whom we had to reAnyone with ideas or some time learning. He/ she must be in need
port our recommendation and a course with few
to help OOPIRG is urged to attend of financial assistance with an acceptable GPA and have made a sigstudents enrolled because it carried no academic
the meeting.
nificant contribution to the Percredit.
***
forming Arts Department at LCC.
By the way, part of the "evidence" used against
Ben by members of both evaluation committees was
Applications are available from
Air ForceROTC recruiters from
small enrollment. Another bit of circularity.
the University of Oregon will be the Department office.
Meanwhile, the Outside Evaluation Committee had on campus Jan. 26 from 10 a.m.
***
been appointed by Dean Case. They decided that to 2 p.m. They will be on the
''the basic tenets of science (whatever they are) second floor concourse area of the
The Counseling Department has
are never introduced " in Ben'.s course. Th~v re- Center Building.
received notice that the College
commended his firing.
of Education at the University of
An interesting fact about this committee: the first
Oregon is establishing a screening
***
agenda item of their first meeting dealt with how
and selection procedure for Elemuch they should be paid. That told me something.
The LCC Department of Per- mentary Education majors.
If all this reminds you of the old shell game forming Arts announced last week
Sophomore students w h o are
or Catch-22, you shouldn't be surprised.
that three separate scholarships planning to transfer this fall must
The administration was determined to win its
are available through the Broad- submit a letter of intent to apply
battle with Ben despite the wishes of the students
way Theatre League Scholarship by Feb. 1, 1973. The letter should
or the Board. Their methods were essentially those program.
be sent to the Teacher Certifiof Catch-22: evasion, buckpassing, obfuscation, the
The scholarships consist of two cation Office, Room 102, College
old runaround and doubletalk clothed in latest $150 scholarships and one $630 of Education.
scholarship.
Educationese.
They did win, conveniently during Finals Week.
The first two scholarships are
***
for in-coming students who have
On December 13, Ben was fired.
There will be an organizational
I wonder whose interests were served by Ben's graduated from an Oregon high
firing. Fired for "insubordination." What ab~urdity. sch o o 1 , are engaged in full- meeting for Gay Women's Alliance
time study, are drama majors, on Friday, Jan. 26, 1972 at 8 p.m.
Is this Boot Camp or college?
The military-corporate mentality is destroying , and are in need of financial as- at 1236 Kincaid Street, Eugene.
sistance. Students applying need
AU gay women are invited to
much of the individuality and diversity that is
traditionally American. It levels our forests, pol- a recommendation from theirpre- attend.
lutes our streams, and sti~ks up the air we breathe.
r·hursday,
It wast~s our resources m weapons of destruction.
Ill
Jan. 25
It req~nres people who are ~ood at ~tanding in line,
followmg orders, and keepmg their mouths shut.
We need fewer administrators who imitate
generals and corporate executives, less chain-ofc_ol?m?,11d mentality, _less bl_ather a~ut "~roducS0 9
tiv1ty, less mere hp-service to mnovahon and
change.
We n?e_d a community of students, staff, faculty
and admm1strators working together to prevent the
Los Angelization of the Eugene area. That's one of
things Ben was trying to do.
We need more creative, exciting honest and
Admission $1.00
177 Lawrence 7:00 & 9:15 p.m.
dedicated teachers like Ben Kirk.
'
'
a
We need to serve the people of this community
not the special interests of a few. Lane is an in~
credibly good school heading toward mediocrity. We
can change the direction.
Does that sound corny? I hope not.

§ e:ir:n.es
.,
I* NUC F.,}
:n.
I
*EL CHACAL*
***
al
I *CHILE PUT§ ON
*t
LONG PANT§•
**

Alleged sex-discrimination in Science proiect ...

( Continued from page I)
and hopefully the meeting would
result in finding a "workable solution" to allegations of sex discrimiation.
A TORCH reporter, however,
was denied admittance to the meeting.
Ms. Brandstrom said she was
unable to disclose the results of
the conference. But contacted later she told the TORCH that "I
gave Mr. Weitzel and John Jacobs my word that- I wouldn't
carry my part in it any further."
John Jacobs, Science Department
chairman, told the TORCH, "Weitzel was wrong in excluding women
in a class project, but right in
having the choice of people he
wanted to work with. He was not
degrading women.
It was his
personal choice; he has as much
right as the women do. He was
corrected and made an agreement
with the Affirmative Action group.
Now he is within his rights in
choosing who he wants to work
,i'"ii1aiboa.tJOOobaoalaof'ffl

with.''
Questioning Jacobs on the
specific group he was referring
to, he replied that it was the
group he thought Jan Branstrom
was representing.
The story accompanying last
week's photo essay gave a brief
account of the project and made
mention of the two ·scholarship~
awarderl last year to male students
working on the study.
The scholarships were given
from a fund presented by the
Eugene Natural History Society
to the LCC Science Department
for use as the Department saw
most appropriate, however, stipu 1at i on s
accompanying t he
scholarship were that the money

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be awarded to a student for assistance in pursuing ornithological
studies, and in particular, studies
connected with the bird population
~r some aspect of it, on campus.
Women were not excluded from
the scholarships, but the scholarships were, nevertheless, awarded
to two men involved in Weitzel's
bird banding project.
Weitzel told the TORCH, "It
is my project and I want to do it
my way-be it right or wrong, I
still consider it my right to do.
I chose that students become involv~d, and since I'm being pressured to no longer be able to
select, I am withdrawing the project."

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*I

:
***
I
:*
!*

Page 7 TORCH Jan. 23, 1973

Defense key to wins

Oregon College

by Lex Sahonchik-

Defense was the name of the game last week for the LCC Titan
basket ball . team. Winning two out of three conference games the
Titans beat Central Oregon CC 80 to 74 on Tuesday night, Umpqua CC
71 to 68 on Friday night and lost to league-leading Linn-Benton 75
to 69 on Saturday night.
Tuesday night COCC led the Titans in the first half, but in the second
half the lead varied between six to nine points in Lane's favor. Freshman Tony Williams repeatedly made second half freethrows to keep the
Titans ahead for good. Williams had put 8 points on the board in the
first half, and totalled 23 points along with Bobcat Larry Pool for game
leadership in scoring. Alex Iwaniw hit 19 for the Titans and Mike Cashman made 20 points for Central.
After a series of freethrows Greg Green hit back-to-back baskets
and Lane took a 67 to 64 lead with 2:41 left in the game.
Umpqua missed shot after shot and LCC held on to a 69 to 66
lead with a minute left. UCC got the ball and worked for one shot.
They never got it.
Hank Williams walked with the ball and then compounded the error
by fouling Marty Merrill. Merrill hit both freethrows with six seconds
left for the final score 71 to 68.
The big man Craig Martin, 6 feet 10 inches, picked up three quick
fouls and Bob Line burned him from outside, hitting shot after shot
over Martin's head. With Cross, Iwaniw and Line leading the way, the
lead changed hands nine times in the half. Linn-Benton got the lead
40 to 39 at halftime.
It was a little different story in the second half as Martin's shots
began to drop for him over the collapsing zone thrown up by the
Titans.
Linn-Benton began to play a more spirited defense and with 4 1/2
minutes left Lane lost Marty Merrill on his fifth foul of the evening.
Craig Martin sank the freethrow and LBCC had a five point lead.
From then on Martin began to go to the basket with more frequency
and made Bob Line commit his fifth foul with 1:47 left. The last basket
A LCC gymnast practices on the horizontal bar in preparation for the
was scored by Craig Martin with 36 seconds left and the final score . Thursday meet with Oregon College of Education at LCC. Lane's
read Lane 69 and Linn-Benton 75.
record for the year stands at no wins and one loss. The loss came at
Rod Cross hit 17 points and Alex Iwaniw had 18 points in a losing
the hands of Portland Community College in Portland last Thursday
cause for Lane while Craig Martin had 22, a great many of those from
by a score of 65.20 to 50.85. (Photo by Lenn Lethlean)
the foul Hne, for Linn-Benton.

Fine form

Bench Slivers
from Lex Sahonchik

Building a gymnastics team with
potential is always tough, It's
a tough task to build any strong
atheletic team, but this year in
particular LCC Gymnastics Coach
George Gyorgyfalvy has his work
cut out for him.
Gymnastics is not a sport to
learn over· the weekend. It is
a sport necessitating long hours
of hard practice, dedication, and
sacrifice. A gymnast must spend
years perfecting his technique and
style and then more years practicing it. As a result those who
successfully compete with skill are
attracted to colleges and universities where their efforts are rewarded with campus interest and
the all important publicity.
Understandably then, L C C does
not find on its campus the material
from which to build a powerhouse
gymnastics team. The gymnasts .
must be recruited and it is here
that Coach Gyorgyfalvy gets headaches.
"Eugene doesn't make g o o d
gymnasts that want to come to
LC C, " 1amen ts Gyorgyfalvy,
"Those gymnasts who are good
go to the universities or some
place else--a place where they
might get a scholarship or some
public recognition.'' But George
has no scholarships to give the
gymnasts. .As a result he is forced

ORCHARD

!l Good showing seen despite
LCC gymnasts loss to PCC
t~ by Steven Lock-e
I gymnastics
The Lane Community College was surprised we did so well.
team put on a surpris-

I

to build and train his own team:
"We've done this every year, and
it seems that this year we won't
have a good year again," admits
Coach Gyorgyfalvy, "No champion
materials will come back this year.
The material we had graduated
last year.''
That "champion material" was
principally Jerry Valentine, who
was voted the Most Improved Gymnast last year on a team that
posted a record of no wins and
four losses. Last year four men
started the season, but by the
time the conference season began
the team had dwindled to two
atheletes. Still, no junior college
finished higher than the Titans in
the senior division of the rings
event at conference.
But this year's oulook is '' not
too bright," in the words of the
coach. One reason is the fact
that the' team did not start to
practice until Jan. 2 due to
Gyorgyfalvy 1s double duties as the
(Continued on page 8)

ingly good show despite their def eat to the team from Portland
Community College Thursday night
in Portland. Portland took the meet
bv a score of 65.20 to Lane's
50.85.
The loss was generally credited
to a lack of practice and the
presence of several illnesses on
the Titan team. Coach George
Gyorgyfalvy acknowledged those
weaknesses after the meet: '' I

ITitans drop

two I

Half of our team was missing
and ill and we couldn't fill our
team, otherwise we did really
well."
George concluded with a brief
critique of his team: "Our players
are still very rough and need
a lot of practice , By March we
will have a very good team."
The Titans won three of the six
events, sweeping the side-horse,
rings, and horizontal bar. Those
events, particularly the horizontal
b~r and rings are the main source
of strength this year for the team.

'A' downs Lane in
conference game
by Lalana Rhine
LCC women's basketball team
lost their second league game
Thursday when the Oregon College
of Education (OCE) "A" team
downed LCC 51 to 31.
Top scorer for LCC was Sue
Mitchell with 14 points, getting
seven of those in the first half
before picking up four fouls. She
therefore sat out most of the
second and third quarters, but
came back in the last six minutes of the game to score seven
more points. High scorer for OCE
was Jane Ellis with 18 points,
followed by Debbie McGill with
15 points.
At the beginning of the game,
LCC had OCE down 6 to O and
led at the end of the first quarter,
15 to 9. Working on their planned
offense, LCC shot their best ever
from the field in the. first quarter,
hitting 58 per cent.
With two of the starting players
out of the game the second quarter,
LCC's offense bogged down and
OCE took the lead at the end
of the quarter, 25 to 18.
OCE widened their lead by 16
in the third quarter but LCC
struggled back in the fourth period, They failed to overcome the
wide margin losing 51 to 31.

IBB tourney starts/
The five man basketball tournament is in full swing with nine
teams taking part. None of the
teams are dominating play but
some have emerged as strong
contenders for the championship.
Currently Staff Stuffers, Furtrappers, and Us are tied for the
lead with undefeated records. They
are closely followed by the Leepers and the Animals with one win
and one loss apiece.
The leading scorer for the first
week of play was Larry Olsen
of the Furtrappers, averaging 24.5
points per game. Olson is followed
by Steve Howard of the Cannibals
who is scoring at 20.0 points per
contest.

Jim Sheng and Dave Parks recorded Lane's only wins in Friday's action. The final score of
32 to 6 was the most points LCC's
wrestlers had ever scored against
Clackamas Community College.
Erratic performances showing
the effects of the ride to Blue
Mountain CC in Pendleton and the
effort of the previous night's match
spelled the downfall as Lane fell
to Blue Mountain by a score of
24 to 14.

TAKING LESSONS?
SEE BERG'S
FOR YOUR

':~Tl
SUNDAYS

Eugene Store

Only

Machine Eugene Springfield
i _
_ _ _.....,
_______ •
Sh_ _
s _
342-2626
746-2531

IOIEITSON'S
DRUGS

SKIIS
----------~~:,:::
' ::=---=--::-;;;;__
_ _ _ __

SKI SCHOOL RENTALS

$3.50 per day for
skis, boots, bindings,
and poles.
{Equipment reserved for you
for each lesson.)

coumv RENTALS

Includes Trak-no-wax
skies,
boots
and
poles. Available at the
11th and Mill Shop
only.

BERG'S SKI SHOP
At 13th & Lawrence

"Your Presc~ -Ollr Mam CCIIICen''
- s . SOth and H1l

CROSS

343-0014

11th & Mill

343-0013

Brooks Auto Parts

i
I

i

P.age 8 TORCH Jan. 23, 1973

ACTION recruiters looking for trained students
LCC's technical programs attracted the attention of ACTION
(government service groups) recruiters, who were on campus yesterday looking for Peace Corps
and VISTA volunteers.
Paul Guild Peace Corps worker
was impress~d with Lane technic;l
•
programs.
"We are recruiting people who
can do specific jobs. People we

can • u;e," stated Guild. The
ACTION agencies are looking for
people who will soon complete their
training at Lane.
Technical and mechanical programs, childhood development studies, and the nursing program
drew special attention from the
ACTION recruiters.
Darlene Himmelspach, VISTA
volunteer, told the TORCH that

Instructors receive commendations
for contributions to LCC's 'Nite Life'

VISTA has mobile units in the
Southwest to provide medical services and these units are staffed with nurses who have received
training comparable to that provided at Lane. As for those people taking college transfer programs, psychology and sociology
are the fields of study that are
most needed by the ACTION agencies, according to Ms. Himmelspach.
ACTION recruiters will be on
campus again today and Wednesday. They will have a recruiting
desk near the counseling area of
the Center Building.

New writing class
to make debut
as workshop .
A new advanced course entitled
Introduction to Imaginative Writing has been approved on a workshop basis for Spring Term, according to Language Arts Department Chairman John Howard.

Ron Edelman

John Klobas

Two more Lane instructors have been presented with "Nite Life''
awards for their contributions to the evening education program at
LCC.
The awards were presented to John R. Klobas, psychology instructor, and Ron Edelman, math instructor, by Evening Program
Advisory Committee at their monthly coffee held Thursday night.
The awards were presented by Advisory Committee President Tom
Klingbeil.
During the coffee "An Evening at LCC," a slide presentation
sponsored by the Evening Advisory Committee was presented in a
preview showing. The presentation is intended to promote evening
college programs, according to Klingbeil.
The presentation was funded at a cost of $250. Sheila Johnson
was contracted to photograph the evening college program.

The class will be geared to the
second year student who has already had freshman composition
courses, said Ruby Vonderheit,
English instructor who proposed
the course.
Ms. Vonderheit said the course
will deal with short stories, poetry, plays and magazine articles~
The course will require prerequisites of Basic Writing III.
In addition, the student must demonstrate an ability to write on
a college level or have consent
of the instructor, continued Ms.
Vonderheit.
The course will be transferable,
and parallels courses offered at
the U of O.

CHUCK'S AUTO SERVICE.........
VW specialist, complete maintenance and repair service. ,,1936 W.
8th Ave. 345-7785.

***

A.S.H. students are invited to attend Immanuel Baptist Church,
450 Game Farm Road, Eugene,
Oregon. Sunday School is at 9:45
a.m.; morning service 11 a.m.;
evening service 6 p.m. Wednesday, prayer meeting 7 p.m. Nurs-

Bench Slivers.

***

Apartment to share: $40.00 no utilities. Will furnish to suit tenant.
Male or female. See at 1069 W.3rd.
Call 688-9221 or 689-5286.

**

Feder.al ~d State mcome tax preparahon m ro~r home. Inexpensive
and. personahzed. Third year in
business. Call: Lou Nadell 68831720
**

*

BELLY DANCING Lessons. Get in
touch with your body's natural
:continued from page 7)
rhythms as you learn this anLane soccer coach. That late start cient performing art and yoga for
and inexperience will plague the women. Call Judith, 345-6908.
team this year, says George.
*
"We're a young team, we're startConsider an AFROTC 2 or 3 year
ing out with inexperienced gymscholarship. Benefits include $100
nasts and we have to teach them
a month and tuition fees and books,
the skills of a good gymnast.''
Gyorgyfalvy, 47, is originally free flight instruction, guaranteed
employment and travel. Call 686from Hungary where in 1950 he
3107 or visit us at the corner
g r a d u a t e d f r o m the National
of 18th and Alder for more info.
Academy of Physical Education.
He was four times the Hungarian Information team will be available
26 Jan, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
College Champion in wrestling.
the concourse.
in
He placed as one of the top ten

**

downhill skiers in that country in
1957. After receiving his masters·
degree in physical education form
the University of Colorado in 1960,
George became a ski instructor at
Aspen Ski School , then started his
educational career at Everett Junior
College coaching swimming and
gymnastics. Everett w as tlie
number one junior college power
in gymnastics, never losing a meet
to another junior college in four
years under Gyorgyfalvy.
That success followed him to
Lane in 1969 and 1970 where he
posted winning records of 6 wins
and 3 defeats, then 7 wins and
2 defeats. In 1970 his team won
2 gold, 2 bronze, and l silver
medal in the Pacific Northwest
Championships.

H

FREE CLINIC

-

ery is provided. Pastor Harold
Fuller.

Cartridge

***

ROBERTS REFRIGERATION AND
APPLIANCE REPAIR: Low rates,
guaranteed service. Hours: Noon
until midnight. Every day. Call
998-8771.

Anderson ...

( Continued from page 2)

no warm place to play his
favorite sport, tennis. Coming
from a hitch in California,
Gen. Carleton had developed
an interest in the game. Upon
his arrival in Illinois,
however, the General quickly
remedied the situation. He
converted an old maintenance
hanger into an indoor tennis
court. The estimated cost:

$2,500.

St--t\...JF=IE::

& Turntable

Mr. Al Smith and Dan Brennan, Factc;,ry Representatives for Shure Bros. 1

will be on hand to check your cartridge, stylus, and turntable for tracking,
speed error, anti-skating, and other problems. Bring in your turntables and
cartridge and ha_ve them checked.
Friday Jan.

26

Saturday Jan. 27

Ask about our New 5-3-1
Warranty Protection Plan

4-9 p.m.
10 a.m.-4 p.m.

lallill

THOMPSON'S

!/
LAF.AYET~~~~

ILE

c 1 1 1 0 ,,,a@§!£F
62

w.

BROADWAY

on the mall downtown

343-9273

l

BA C

Master Charge