f- ·) 7

LCC

AP 19 1973
Llbtary

Lalllta! ·~ dnltf'l~ri~"'·efflt/3 vol. 8 no. 13
lane community college, 4000 east 30th avenue, eugene, oregon 97405

Industrial Tech

essentially the same programs in industrial technology,
and that no personnel are being dismissed as a result of
the reorganization.

.change planned
The LCC administration announced last week that it
will officially disband the Industrial Technology Department effective July 1, and relocate the existing programs
in three other departments.
Reaction to the decision has been mixed, but administration officials say the affected programs-welding, construction, forestry, drafting, and cabinetmaking-will
undergo no drastic changes as a result of the move.
"I don't foresee any changes in the various programs
coming about directly because of'the moves," commented
Dean of Instruction Lewis Case. '' This isn't a promise
there won't be any Ghanges, but if they do come about it
will be for a different reason than that the programs were
moved to different departments in the college/'
Case emphasized that the college will continue to offer

The plan, revealed last week by LCC President
Eldon Schafer, calls for the merger of the drafting
program with the Electronics Department, the merger
of forestry with the Science Department, and the relocation of welding~ construction and cabinetmaking
in the Community Education Division.
Controversy over the welding program curriculum
changes, intra-departmental faculty friction, and the recent resignation of Department Chairman Bud Land led
up to the Administration's decision to consider disbanding
the program, Case said.
"The (Industrial Technology) Department has gone
through a lot of problems," Case remarked. "There's
been a lot of dissension over there for a long time."
After Land resigned, Case said the Administration
gave the Department an opportunity to come up with a
plan for creating a "unified, and strong department'' and
a process for resolving conflicts. When no such plan
emerged, he , said a decision was made to disband the
department.
Resigning Department Chairman Bud Land called the

action a "very fine, very equitable solution."
''I think it's going to be a good move, and that none of
the programs are going to suffer,'' Land said. "Hopefully we can get back to the art of teaching."
Land himself will serve as a drafting instructor after
the Department is disbanded.
Darwin McCarroll, chairman of the Electronics Department, which is absorbing the drafting program, also
said he saw no problem with the move.
"It was an administrative decision, and we' re happy
to go along with it," he said. "I don't see any problems
with working with the groups concerned.''
Drafting Instructor Carl Blood, the original Industrial
Technology Department chairman who was later replaced
by Bud Land, expressed caution about his program's
move, and criticized the Administration's decision to disband the department.
"The full impact hasn't really settled in yet, and I'm
not ready to make' any statement," Blood remarked.
"There are going to have to be some :adjustments made of '
course, and my reaction will be more complete as those
adjustments take place.''
- He expressed regret, however, that the administration
did not adopt a proposal he submitted with drafting in(Continued on back page)

Bolton tries for second term

Five students compete
for top campus post

"You Can't Take it With You"
' ' You Can't Take It With You'', scheduled to begin
April 28, is "an American tradition" according
to Director George Lauris. The comedy is about
the Sycamore family and their zany friends in the
1930's.
The play is done in a Thirties mode
complete with short hair styles.
The setting

off of fireworks lend an air of excitement to the
production. Tickets are $1.50 and may be reserved
at the information desk, first floor of the Administration Building. For a sneak preview, see page
4. (Photo by Robin Burns)

LCC budget draws fire from staff members
For the first time in two years
LCC has a proposed budget that
doesn't need voter approval.
Because of a voter-approved
tax-base increase last November,
the 1973-74school yearbudgetneeds
only to be approved by the Budget
Committee. The budget was presented to the committee, (comprised of the seven members of
the LCC Board of Education and
seven members of the community
appointed by the Board), at Wednesday night's monthly Board
meeting.
The proposed 8.6 million dollar
operations budget drew fire from
two staff leaders however, because
they felt the staff's needs were not
taken into consideration when the
new tax base was requested in
November.
Ted Romoser, past chairman of
the Staff Personnel Policy Committee (SPPC), told the Budget
Committee that he understood the
prot-lems the college faces in getting voter approval of tax bases,
but maintained that it's the Board's
responsibility '' to see that the tax
base meets the needs of all the

school.''
Staff
Association
President
Steve John questioned an earlier
statement by LCC President Eldon
Schafer that this year's budget was
stable. John pointed out that the
staff has yet to obtain a pay schedule for the 1973-74 school year (see
story this page).
Earlier in the evening the Board
voted to revise LCC Health Service
policies to bring them into line
with the expanded Student Health
Services as established at the beginning of the school year. The
new policies will allow primary
medical care, supportive technical
services, family planning and diagnosis, treatment and referral for
communicable diseases. •
In other business the. Board
voted to expend $343,000 over a
seven-year period for a new Xerox
Sigma 6 Computer system.
Although the system will add
$12,000 to LCC's annual computer
costs, LCC Data Processing Dir;..
ector Floyd Wilkes told the Board
that the purchase of the new ~omputer, because of its added capabilities, will eliminate the need

for a three-shift operation with
the school's present computer.
Presently the college is running
two-shifts and unable to keep up
with the ·work load, Wilkes said.
The Xerox computer will allow
eight users at one time. LCC's
present computer, an IBM 360/25,
can handle only one user at a timeQ
Also, Wilkes said, teletype terminals will be placed in several
departments on campus which will
allow instructors to use the new
computer from the department

Five students, including the current ASL CC president and a former
ASbCC treasurer, have filed petitions for the office of the 197374 ASLCC President.
Deadline for all petitions was
5 pm yesterday (Monday) ,
ASL CC President Jay Bolton
is seeking a second-year term to
his present office, Other candidates who filed are former ASL CC
Treasurer David Red Fox, Senator-at-Large
Steve Leppanen,
TORCH reporter Gerald Domogala, and Jim Lovell.
Three have filed for the position of First Vice-President. They •
are ASLCC Publicity Director
Barry Hood, Senator Arnold Nysten and Joe Munoz.
Only one student, Senator Barry Gower, has filed for the po-

sition of Second Vice-President.
Two filed for ASLCC Treasurer--they are Doris Koumoungis
and Bernine Pinney. Both are serving this term as Senators.
Senator Lloyd Ewing \ was the
only student to file for the Publicity Director position.
Eight students have filed petitions for Senator-at-Large. The
,eight include David Simmons
and Ellie Kilday, who are running
for re -election and the present
Second Vice-President, Kenny
Walker. The other five are Senator Dei Smith, Jake DeSimone,
Peter Hale, James Hawkins and
Terry LaRiche.
Bolton, Hood, Gower, Ms. Koumoungis and Ewing ar~ running
together on a ticket they call
(Continued on back page)

Loeber submits resignation
.Tohn Loeber, Student Health Coordinator, submitted his resignation at an unusually productive and
orderly ASLCC Senate meeting
ThursdayQ
Loeber, who said he does not
wish to become a "professional
student administratot,'' turned in
his resignation because he believes
Student Health Services are now
stable and because he plans to go
to Southern California to persue a
career in auto mechanics.
Loeber
recommended
that
Russel Ooms be appointed to re~
place him. Loeber also made three
recommendations to the Senate
concerning the Health Servicesthat the coordinator of Student

Board, SPPC, move to arbitration

I

The Staff Personnel Policy Committee (SPCC), after several months
of salary negotiations with the LCC Board of Education, has declared an
impasse which will force the pay issue to a three-member arbitration
panel.
The SPPC selected Eugene Attorney Richard Cleveland as its representative and the Board selected Eugene Attorney Richard Miller. The
third member will be chosen by Cleveland and Miller.
At the last negotiating session the SPPC requested a 1973-74 pay
package of $408,000 which includes costs of salaries and fringe benefits
the SPPC proposes. The Board, after Wednesday night's monthly meeting,
made a "final offer' of $330,000.
The panel is being requested to make settlement recommendations
within three weeksQ

·t

Health Services be a permanent
paid position, that a system of
Student Health Service fees be instituted, separate from Student
Body Fees, and that the Student
Health Services seek their own
autonomy and not be an arm of the
ASLCC, Student Awareness Center
or the college administration.
There was no action taken on these
recommendations.
Chuck Packnett, ASLCC First
Vice President, made a motion that
the Senate, on behalf of the student •
body, extend it's gratitude to Loeber for a job well done in regards
to the establishment and continued
operation of the Student Health Service. The motion carried unanimously.
Kenny Walker, , second vice"
president, reported that the
Ghambers Brothers had contacted
him and had offered to perform at
LCC. Walker said the only cost to
ASLCC would be for security and
publicity fee-but there would be a
$2.50 admission. He moved that
the Senate give him ~he opportunity
to negotiate with the Chambers
Brothers for the engagement, with
the stipulation that 10 per cent of
the receipts or $400, whichever is
greater, be guaranteed to cover the
ASLCC costs. The motion carried
(Continued on page 8)

Page 2

TORCH

April 17, 1973

The Innocent Bystander

-

-·

.FOR FBI DIRECTOR - JAC.K ARMSTRONG#

by Arthur Hoppe

As you know, Mr. L. Patrick Gray broke Mr.
Nixon's heart by voluntarily withdrawing as a candidate for the bead of the FBI.
"But, Pat, you can't do this to me! I promised
to back you to the hilt."
'' And that you did, sir. Could I keep it as a
souvenir?" •
But despite the President's disapp.ointment, the
search for an FBI director bad to go on. The initial front-runner, it can now be revealed, was none
other than that famous American, Mr. Jack Armstrong, who seemed ideally suited to the allimportant role.
He was interviewed that very day by a top
White House official whose name must be withheld.
"Come right in, Mr. Armstrong," said the top
White House official whose name must be withheld.
'' I see by your application that you have all the
necessary qualifications of an FBI man -- three
gabardine suits (one blue, one gray, one tan), six
_ white
shirts
that button down, one dozen
starched handkerchiefs for breast pockets, and closecropped hair silvering at the temples."
''Thank you, Mr. Haldeman." ,
'' Please withhold my name. Have a cigarette,
Mr. Armstrong?"
''What's a cigarette?"
"A
good answer, Mr. Armstrong. Tell me,
do you drink?"
"Yes, sir. I find that after a hard day there's
nothing like relaxing before dinner with a big glass
of warm milk.''
"And what about your attitude toward sex?"
"Frankly, sir, Pve always felt ·there should be
two -- although I've never quite understood why."
"Fine.
Do you have any unusual habits?"
"To tell the truth, sir, yes. Some mornings,
I put the sugar on my Wheaties first and then the

milk. And some mornings I pour the milk on first.
I don't know why."
"I think that's acceptable. Now I hope you understand that we can't afford to be accused of nominating
political cronies. Again. So let me ask what political party you favor."
"I never go to parties, sir, favors or no favors.
I prefer to sit home at night and read the great
books of our time."
"Like what?''
"Oh, · you know, sir. Like 'My Six Crises/
'The Emerging Republican Majority' and 'The Collected Works of Victor Lasky.' "
11
I like a man who improves his mind, Mr.
Armstrong. Now about stamping out crime .... "
"I'm for it, sir. I believe in vigorously prosecuting criminals who smoke mary-wanna, saboteurs who desecrate our flag, traitors. who sit
during our National Anthem and others with long
hair,''
'' Do you think you can do the job.''
"I've been practicing, sir. And in all modesty,
I can now draw my gun, shout, 'You-have-a-rightto - remain - silent - and - be - representedby-an-attorney!' and shoot a mary-wanna smoker
through the eyeball in 1.6 secondso''
* * *
"Amazing Mr. Armstrong. You're just the man
we've been looking for, a model for all Americans.
One last question: If a group of bunglers were
caught bugging an office and the trail seemed to
lead to the White House .... "
"Say no more, sir. You can count on me.
I'd work night and day to ferret out the culprits,
clap them in irons and force them to publicly reveal everything they knew in the interests of justice and decency!"
"Thank you, Mr. Armstrong. Next?"
(Copyright Chronicle -Publishing Co.1973)

Letters to the Editor
Dear Editor:
I want to commend the Senate,
as a body, and to especially complement Jay Bolton on the most
efficiently run Senate meeting that
to the present date, I have seen.
It was a very pleasant experience
being a part of such a diversified
body that conducted its business
in such an orderly manner.
I am proud to be a member
of the Student Senate.
Ellie Kilday
Senator-at-Large
Dear Editor:
The ASLCC funded Student Handbook is 95 per cent completed
to be released Fall Term 1973.
This is our first step fore ward
to unite the information about stu-

dents in one publication.
About the handbook LCC President Eldon Schafer writes:
'' This handbook represents significant evidence of leadership exercised by the Associated Students
of Lane Community College."
As handbook editor I wish to
thank everyone who cooperated to
make this effort a success.
Barry Hood
ASLCC Publicity Director
Dear Editor:
As a student here in Eugene
I have become increasingly dissati~fied with the rental housing
, quality . Many of my friends are
paying excessive rent for tiny
units in bad need of repair. Their
damage deposits are often confis-

~·
1 FORUM

uwwnxnw•1
•

(Editor's note: The Forum serves as an opportunity for members of
the LCC community or those involved in the community to express
their opinions. The following Forum commentary was submitted by
ASLCC Publicity Director Barry Hood in response to last week's
Forum.)

I must point out that the April 10 Forum by Mark J. Skinner is
both inaccurate and misleading. I do respect the TORCH for printing
the article: for it is one man's opinion. But in this rebuttal, I shall
seek only fact and truth.
The ASLCC Senate endorsed by the Board of Education represents
a nearly perfect cross section of all students at Lane. It's true that
every Senator looks after his own interest. The Senate floor is where
we all unite to make decisions which affect all students.
Mr. Skinner says that we fail "to accomplish any meaningful
business/' Athletics ($25,000); Club Promotions ($1.250); Health Service
($15,000); Dental •Services ($2,800); and the TORCH ($3,400) is subsidised (in the TORCH's case partially subsidised) by the ASL CC Senate;
by all LCC students.
Skinner declared that a "three-and-a-half hour meeting was .••
declared null and void." I attended the meeting in question. I assure
you that only the last half hour was struck from the record. This
was only fair. Our constitution, as Skinner points out, provides for a
quorum to conduct business.
Skinner reflects that student government benefits us '' as well
as a high school student co.uncil." I ask you, what high school has
student government funded health services; comprehensive student
awareness center; dental services; and we're now working on student
. lega_l services., Finally I ask you what high school has an average
student age of 24? ••

cated and landlords are known to
enter and inspect without warning.
The Oregon Senate is considering a bill, Senate Bill 159, which
would rewrite the landlord and
tenant law. SB 159 requires a
landlord to maintain a unit in
habitable condition and to return
deposits within 30 days with an
itemized statement of deductions.
The bill regulates lockouts and abolishes the landlord's lien, which
allows a landlord to hold and sell
almost all your personal belongings.
In -addition, the bill requires
all dealings between a landlord
and tenant to be in good faith.
A tenant must be told who the
owner is and how he can be con~~~:i~~-lt f;;;e :i:~n~l~~~s t~
tenants who complam to a pubhc
agency about health. and building
code violations. Except in emergency situations, a landlord must
(Continued on back page)
TORCH Staff
Jim Gregory

Editor
Associate

Editor

·Production

Man ager

Jim Crouch
Carol

'Photo Editor,

Newman

Editor
Editor

Advertising Manager
Manager

Piecing Together Watergate Puzzle
by Jack Anderson
<Copyright, 1973, by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.>

WASHINGTON - Report_Liddy and Hunt, together
ers are still trying to put
with their break-in crew,
together the jigsaw pieces of
have now been convicted. But
the baffling Watergate
those who took the rap by
puzzle. The picture has
pleading guilty have conbecome confused by a whirltinued to receive mysterious
wind of rumors, leaks,
c~sh payments. Someone
charges and denials. We
higher than Liddy and Hunt
have done our best to
has continued to furnish
separate the hard from the
money to the Watergate conspirators.
soft facts. Here is the picture
that emerges:
The Cycle Express: In fronIn 1971, Pres_ident Nixon
tier days, the daring riders of
became alarmed as Sen. Ed
the pony express raced ·across
the country on horseback,
Muskie overtook him in the
presidential polls. 'l'he Presidelivering the mail at
dent, who has a zest for
unheard-of speeds.
political intrigue, called for
Although - the method of
an undercover intelligencetransportation has become
gathering operation. His inmuch more sophisticated tostructions were implemented
day, with the jet plane
by his chief of staff, H.R.
replacing the horse, the
Haldeman, who issued the
postal system has not cut
o~ders through White House
down the cross-country deliva1d es and the President's ery time appreciably.
personal _lawyer. .
It has now been two years
There ~s no evidence that since the post office was put
the President or Haldeman
on a bus·1
b • Th
ever in tended that their
.
ness as_is.
e
subordinates get involved in
wh_ol_e idea wa~ to increase
anything illegal. Three e~f1c1ency and improve serseparate operations began to v 1c • Congressional in take form: One, spying upon
~est1gators have been checkthe Democrats; two, sabotage mg into citizens' complaints
against the Democrats; and
about the service. Their
three, internal security to
p_re l_i mi nary, unpublished
make sure the Democrats
fmdmgs are that lon·g-disdidn't do the same thing to
lance mail delivery is slower
them.
today than it was two years
The three activities
a~o ._Cross-town delivery
ultimately became combined
within most cities is slower
under the control of two
than two years ago, and overWhite House aides, G. Gordon
all ~ervice is increasingly errallc,
Liddy and E. Howard Hunt.
Liddy maintained the conOur congressional sources
tacts with the higher-ups. He
lay much of .the blame on
told his coconspirators that
fo~mer Postmaster General
he got his orders from AtWinton Blount. Blount
. torn e y Gener al J O h n started the reorganization of
Mitchell, both before and ~he Post _Office and then left
after Mitchell left the Justice m the middle of it. The new
Department.
head ~an, E.T. Klassen, was
Liddy even described, in • lef~ to tie up the loose ends, of
detail, the meetings he held which. there were many.
Besides the reorganization
. with Mitchell to discuss the
Watergate bugging. Mitchell s~uffle, Kla~en also has to
vigorously denies that any fight the _b~gaboo of many
such meetings ever took new admm1strators - the
place .. Liddy has refused to entrenched bureaucracy.
·talk about it under oath
For example, Klassen repreferring to accept a stiff cently went o~ an inspection
prison sentence instead. What tour. Ev_erythmg seemed to
he told his colleagues, mean- be r:un~mg smoothly. What
he didn t know was that local
while, is strictly hearsay.
·
(Continued on back page)

gorl'

~ow're things
going at the
Post OP+'ice '?

O~...
but we
do have
Ot'le

little

problem ...

... For some reason, people
seem to kinda lik:e to
hang aroond Post ~ices!
Th~ run irtto Polks,
converse, just shoot
th' bull ...tnat son;
tl;,ing. Th' P,lac;e is

gett1t19 crowaed.
'\

Lethlean

Sahonchik
Steve Busby
Chuck Risse

Doris

Norman

Reporters:
Jennie Li

Steven Locke

Sheila Rose

Kathie Durbin

Tom Perry

Linda Elliott
Sue Corwin

Member or Oregon Community College Newspaper Association and Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association,
The. TORCH is published on Tuesdays throughout the

regular academic year and every other Tue~day during Summer

Term.

-

Marty Stalick
Lex

Ass't Sports Editor

Business

SI>J~(jl1\I~

Dave Corwin
Lenn

Copy

l~'I~ l~ICI~Y

Robin Burns

Photographers

Sports

JACK . ANDERSON'S
.

Opinions expressed in this newspaper are not nee•

'essarily those of the college, student government or student

body, Nor are signed articles necessarily the view or the TORCH.
AU correspondence should be typed or printed, double-spaced
and signed by the writer. Mall or bring all correspondence to:
TORCH, Center 206, Lane Community College, 4000 East 30th
Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405, TelephOII<! t4'l-4501, E-x!, ~34.

-------------------•

Sow'1atcat1
-~'do about
1t '? ... ~terall,
it's a Public

8uildit1g!

{Jean,but I

g0t1na
pu!,upsome
oP these

t!ll11

signsr

~,.-.-,,MI\IC,;,,,9'~::u:::::::r:

-

Are the signs

.{]or the public ...
or .{]or your

postal
employees'?

I

Skills Fair

scheduled for LCC campus

'' Come Look Us Over'' is the
theme for the second annual Lane
Community College Skills Fair,
scheduled for May 2-3 on the LCC
campus.
College officials are encouraging the public to visit the campus
both days from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
to inspect the facilities and to take
paft in a variety of activities
scheduled throughout the day.
Some of the activities planned
include:
• tours of the journalism area
plus demonstrations of equipment
used by the/ TORCH (beginning
9 a.m. both days).
• sit in on the beginning, stage,
symphonic and baroque band rehearsals (from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
both days)o
• fencing class (11 a.m. to 12:30
Wednesday):
• television production (various
times Tuesday and Wednesday).
• "Happy Mealtimes" program:
food shopping tips (10 a.m. Wednesday and 1:30 p.m. Thursday).
• improve your memory miniclass (10 a.m. Wednesday and 1
p.m. Thursday).
• visit "the Office/' a simulated
business office (various times both
days).
• ways to entertain your preschool child by Early Childhood
Education students (various times
both mornings).
• chess match; chess club member will play all comers, several
at a time (3 p.m. both days).
• spaghetti
feed, Phi Theta
Kappa (beginning at 5 p.m. both
days). Tickets 99~.
• the play "You Can't Take it
With You/' (8 p.m. both days).
Reservations necessary.
Some
other activities taking
place throughout the fair include
open house and demonstrations in
all vocational and technical departments: tours of KLCC . the college

radio station; procedures in the
simulated hospital ward; and demonstrations on how the entire text
of three bibles is printed on a
4'' x 6' ' card.
Complete schedules of events
will be available at central points
in Lane during the Skills Fai'r

Persons interested in arranging
individual or group tours during the
Skills Fair can make reservations
by calling Anne Stew art at ext.
340.
Last year over 2,000 attended
the first Skills Fair which was
held only one day.

April 17,1973

Eugene Saturday Market
opens under new manager
The Eugene Saturday Market, which features hand-crafted items
and home garden products, will open its fourth season May 5, at Eighth
and Oak Streets in downtown Eugene.
Louis Elliott, newly-elected Market manager for the year, said
he expects up to 250 craftspeople will display their wares this spring.
Local businesses and media continue to be '' extreme! y cooperative,''
Elliott said.
Lane County's three Commissioners and the Eugene City Council
voted last fall to extend contract privileges for Market space until
1974. In addition, county health officials have assured Elliott that with
proper licensure of food-handlers, the Market should run as smoothly
as in previous years.
The Market guidelines state "No person who operates a regular
business may sell at the Market unless he or she is a craftsman
selling his or her own work." According to Elliot, local businesses
have honored the provision to date.
Public acceptance of the Saturday Market as a source of '' the
excitement and color which are so vital to the health of a city" is what
Elliott considers the most positive contributing factor to the success
of the Market.
While manager, he hopes to draw more produce and flowers to
the Market. Last year, he said, people returned week after week in
search of these fresh commodities.
One possiblity I according to Elliott, would be for organic gardening
students at LCC to supply the Market with surplus vegetables this
summer. He said he is working with LCC Science Instructor Bob
Null to encourage students to do so.
•
Elliott predicts "all sorts of entertainment'' this season. In an
effort to draw the public and craftspeople into a common experience,
music performed by local high school bands, · musical groups and individuals has been considered. He will also encourage advocates of
theater and dance to bring their talents "out to the people."
Likewise, he wants to see art "get out of the drawing room and the
gallery for all to see.''
Persons seeking further information as to Market procedures,
booth costs or licensure, should contact Elliott at 895-4479 in Creswell.

TORCH

Page 3 •

LCC student unanimous choice for
9CCSA Executive Cabinet post

,'

Doug Cudahey
A LCC student, Douglas Cudahey,
was recently elected to the post of
Oregon Community College Student
Association (OCCSA) Publicity
Director for the 1973-'74 school
year. Cudahey's election came at
the OCCSA Spring Convention, held
April 5-7 at Spanish Head on the
Oregon Coast.

Cudahey was nominated by representatives of Portland Community College and was elected by an
unanimous vote of the body. He
was unopposed for the office.
As an Executive Cabinet member, Cudahey will be one of four
students in the state with a vote on
the OCCSA Coordinating Committee. "I can give the school a source
of direct input," commented Cudahey.
His duties as Publicity Director
will include keeping the 13 community college members in the
state informed of OCCSA activities
and decisions, besides handling all
the promotional work for the organization. Cudahey said he plans
to record section and regional
meetings and conventions on slides
and tapes, and make available a
library of these presentations to
member schools.
Cudahey is working for a bachelor of arts in communications and
said he "wanted the experience in
doing promotional or PR (Public
Relations) work," which he feels
will add to his credentials upon
graduation. Cudahey served Spring
(Continued on page 5)

RAINTREE LOUNGE
ROCKS-AGAIN
Top Entertainment

½ price Tuesday nights

new mangement, new energy

1978 Main st.. Springfield - OLCC cards only

piing . . . . lectioris
are almost here
april 30 && mar 1
We Need

ctive
Pd. for by ASLCC Senate

tty

ou Can

9

t Take it With Y ou

99

The comedy "You Can't Take it With You," a story about a family
in the Thirties, is scheduled as this years' Spring production at LCC.
It is a play about the Sycamore family, a strange group that
collects all kinds of things, even humans. The entire play will be done
in the Thirties style, with no modernization. The men in the play are
sacrificing their long hair and having it cut in a Thirties style.
"The play is an American tradition,'' says director George
Lauris. "It is one of the most produced plays, and a fun play to produce.''
There are, however, some complications; Nineteen players are
onstage at onc~his is not going to be easy on the tiny Forum stage;
also, fireworks are to be set off.
The play will open in the Forum Theatre April 27 and play April
28 and May 2, 3, 4, 5. Tickets are $1.50 and may be reserved at the
information desk, first floor of the Administration Building.

~It,~~
~It,~~

:April 17, 1973

TORCH

Page 5

Columnist Anderson to spealc at University
One year ago, Jack Anderson was
awarded the 1972 Pulitzer Prize
for national .reporting for his disclosures of Nixon Administration
policymaking during the IndiaPakistan war.

by Ron Hamblen

Anderson is scheduled to appear
for a speech at the Erb Memorial Union Ballroom at the University of Oregon Friday, 12:30
p.m. '!:he speech is open to the
public. No admission will be charg-

ed.
Known more recently for his
disclosures concerning ITT, Anderson is considered one of the
most influential journalists in the
country.
Anderson took over the "Washington Merry-Go Round'' column
in 1969 after the death of its founder,. Drew Pearson. Now Anderson
commands a staff of seven, producing seven columns a week for
700 papers plus a "weekly special," which appears in the TORCH
and other weeklies. Anderson is
also Washington editor for Parade
magazine.
"It isn't pleasant to be disliked and feared by the people
you're associating with most of
the time," said Anderson in Life
magazine. In the same article,
Life stated that Anderson' ' Admits

Is chess that which human nature
mostly delights il}---{l fight, as Emanuel Lasker felt? Or, are the
art advocates right?
The ardent enthusiasts can point
to craftsmanship, technique, and
the beauty of a combination or position brought out of the elemental
, , Art is where the heart is.
forces of the game. Of course,
they would then go on to point HOME is a won ame."
A_li_b_er_a_l
ro""'m--he_r___
ts.....f..
out that this parallels the pointer, .__he·r---s""'e·c""'r"""e..
who, using canvas and pigment
interpretation of science could hold
as his elemental forces, welds,
that the scientist does more than
via Imagination, a Thing Called
merely wrest secrets from the
Art. They would add that the sculpter faces an opponent in his blo~k bosom of nature; he uses his inof wood or marble, that there 1s tellect and imagination in an effort
to find truths that are hidden only
a battle between material and
sculptor. Sometimes the sculptor because man does not know where
to look, or how to cooperate in
must give, sometimes the material
a way that will let nature reveal
yields, and the true greatness of
herself of her own accord. In this
the artist is determined by the endto enjoying the hunt but not the
same way, the Master Positional
product: Whether he maintained
Story targets brought to
kill.
Chess Player waits for combinahis ideas and created unity, or
ground have been known, literally,
tions that he knows m·1st come,
whether he was forced to succumb
to weep as Anderson's reporters
and he looks for them only after
to the materials; whether man or
confront them with their findings.''
determining (by appearances) that
elemental forces controlled the re"You can't,'' Anderson says,
they should be there.
sults.
''be a nice guy and do this job.
Those who say that chess is an
Or, They might say that the
But I wouldn't run any story about
art can say that the "opponent"
scientist battles nature to wrest
Sue Corwi~
Carol Newman
is a part of the elemental forces
an individual if it didn't affect
which must be shaped, that, rather
the national interest.''
Two TORCH staff members have applied for the 1973-74 TORCH
than opponent, victory, or defeat, editorship.
Jack Anderson's speech at the
there is only beauty or the lack
University of Oregon is presented
The two, Sue Corwin and Carol Newman, will be interviewed by
of it---an artistic creation or a the Media Commission tom morrow. The Commission will then make
by the ASUO Cultural Forum.
failure.
the selection.
Then, again, perhaps the fasMs. Corwin, 23, has been a TORCH reporter since the beginning
cination of chess, and its depth, of Winter Term. She is a journalism major.
come, not because chess is a fight,
Ms. Newman, 21, has served as TORCH production manager
not because it is an art, but since the beginning of Fall Term and was a TORCH reporter last
that chess is fascinating because
Bill Dwyer, a second-year tele- it is an enigma-paradoxically nei- year. She is also a journalism major.
The Media Commission is made up of three faculty members, four
vision broadcasting student, has ther art nor brute struggle. Perbeen selected to serve on the haps it is Weiss who put it right students, and one administrator, plus the editor and advisor of the
screening committee responsible when he said that the implements TORCH and . Concrete Statement and the chairwoman of the Mass
for selecting a new department of chess come from Nature, its Communications Department.
chairperson for the Mass Com- system from Science, its aesthe1
munications Department.
tic arrangements from Art, and
Dwyer was chosen last week that divine power of making people
during a two-day department-wide happy from God.
SATGURU
student election.
After all, the world is an enigma,
COME
HAS
" I believe students have a really and Man best knows what a para(A color film)
perceptive sense about the short- dox is, being one himself. Becomings in the Department, and haviorists may know the laws :,f
... in the greatest selection ever found
A brief history of the life
there are many, which makes a Man, but some would question their
of Satguru Maharaj Ji, 15-yearalways,
and,
...
store
one
in
student ' s.. place on the screening belief that they ther2fore know
old Spiritual Master.
a generous discount to students
committee obviously legitimate, 1 '
Man, and learning the laws of chess
Tuesday, April 17
and teachers I
Dwyer remarked.
is no guarantee that one will beand
Dwyer also encouraged interest- come World Champion.
Wednesday, April 18
ed students to submit a list of the
REAR
at
11th-PAIK
E.
331
7:30 pm
qulaifications they would like to Copyright Ronald J. Hamblen 1973
Daily - 9 to 5:30 - Friday 9 to 9
Saturdays 9:30-1 :30
chairsee in the new department
U of O
SPONSORED BY BURCH'S FINE
person.
Room to be posted in EMU
According to Screening Corn- FOOTWEAR. TWO LOCATIONS ,
free
l O6 O WILLAMETTE AND THE
mittee Chairwoman Joyce Harms,
a new department chairperson VALLEY RIVER CENTER.
must be chosen by July 1, when
the resignation of present Depart- : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••:
:
ment Chairwoman, Virginia De- :

Media Commission to interview

candidates for TORCH editorship

Student elected
to Mass-Comm

screening body

ARCHITECTURE
AND ART SUPPLIES

t~.

.

_c_ha_in_e,_t_ak_es_e_ff_ec_t._ _ _ _ :

Cud a he y ...

••

1973 n1t~ 1tde" 7uueu S'4u

••

______

_ _----".__--=~~
..
•
(Continued from page 3)
---AM,;~
Term '72 as Editor of the TORCH :
~m~_.--'-.:.i~ ~~=-...,
and is presently Supplement Asso- :
ciate Editol' of the TORCH and •
OCCSA Campus Coordinator for :
Named and styled after
:
LCC.
flambouyant Rumanian tennis
•
r ~--other officers elected at the con- •
star /lie Natase _ an active
~---.c,
vention were Stephen Hurlbert, :
S:::::
from Linn-Benton Community Col- •
member on the Nike design
______,
\_,.,,lege, elected President; Dennis ••
staff, and winner of 1972
?:::::~~
Lamm, from Portland Community •
USO
College(PCC).electedVice-Pres-:
pen.
Phyllis Murphy, PCC,
ident;
•
elected Business Manager.
tel. 343-5010
8 5 5 olive
The new executive cabinet will:
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
take office May 11.
•

.•

_ _ _.....JW.J,J,"'

J.

, tment
a thl e t•lC d epar

Fl

.
:

··

•

:

:

•
:

:
•
:
•
••
•

:

:

•
:
•

·····························~·················································•~>••······.
••
•

j
•

: . . . . . . . . . . • . . . •• • ••

An

HONEST

Name you can

• . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~i

i

TRUST

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,

•
••

i•

a. .r ~. f ~. ~~ivJi. 11.!~1. .1~i. ~c.c••~£ 1·••cir.OJ.·....•i

Page 6

TORCH

April 17~ 1973

•
Staff question

Library sentinel successful, librarian says cost iustified

The LCC library's four month o~d electronic book detection system
-is fulfilling the purpose it was purchased for according to Head Librarian
Del Matheson.
The book detection system at the library was installed during last
Christmas Vacation at a cost of $17,000. Matheson said he feels the
price was justified because the library had lost over $40,000 worth of
books over the last three years. He added that the system should pay
for itself by Christmas of 1973 in savings of books.
Anyone leaving the library must pass through the system which will
sound a chime and lock the turnstile if the book hasn't been checked out
Once the book has been checked out and de-activated by the librarian it
can be passed through the detector any number of times without activating
the system.
One problem the library staff has experienced with the detector however is briefcases activating the system.
Matheson said that neither he nor the manufacture representative
could discover the. . .cause. However, he added the machine has been adjusted to cut down on the number of false alarms.
However, overall effectiveness of the system wlll not be known of
until June 1974's annual inventory of books. Matheson said this Junes'
inventory will not show the complete effect of the system because some
books were probably lost during the first part of the year before the
system was installed.
•

by Steve lock·•

•

Job Placement
Full time:
Apprentice welder:
for 3 hrs. Pay: $1.75hr. Must have
Does not have to be certified to betransp.
gin. Must have Oregon driver's li"* * *
Part
time:_ Secretary: Light S/H
cense, good driving record, mechanical ability. Hours: 8 to 5, 5 • preferred-typing, filing, phone.
Hours: 10 a.m. to I p.m. Pay: $2
days a week. Pay: $2 hr.
hr.
***
Part time: Paint Salesman: Work
***
Full time: Summer Job: Babysitin the mornings. Prefer some sales
experience. Hours: 8 a.m. to 12:30 ting for 4 and 5 yr. old, Person wilWill work into full-time in the sum- ling to take children to nearby park
and to swimming lessons. Hours:
mer. Pay $2.40 hr.
7:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. Pay: $ll0
***
Part and full time: Draftsman: month.
Able to do pen and ink drawings,
simple problems on calculator. For information concerning any of
Hours: 8 to 4:30, 5 days a week. the above listed jobs, contact CorWill take 2 part-time persons until ine Meehan, Job Placement Ofgraduation. Pay: Open.
fice, second floor, Center Build.

***

Part time: Welders: Hours: 8
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Temporary work.
Pay: Open.

***

Full time: Service Station: Some
experience preferred. Hours: 6
days a week - 4 p.m. to midnite.
Must be 21 years old. Pay: $1. 70
plus comm.

* **

Full time: Restaurant Cook: Hours:
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. - 5 days a week.
Pay: $2 hr. or more.

* **

·Full time: Director for Daycare
Center: Must have 2 yrs. Min. early
childhood education. Pay: Open.

***

Part time: Daycare Assistant: 18
yrs. minimum--high school diploma. Pay: Open.

***

Part time: Service Station: Weekends only. Hours: 2p.m. tolOp.m.
Sat. & Sun. Pay:
$1.82 start.

***

Part time: Telephone Soliciting:
Evening hours:
Pay: $1.85 hr.

***

Part time: Housework: Saturdays

Vernon Bellecourt

Christianity, education, and bureaucracy were labeled as enemies
of the Native American People by
Vernon Bellecourt Friday night
in a speech given to an audience
of about 200 people at the Central
Presbyterian Church in Eugene.
Bellecourt, national director of

Pay phone
rate increase
seen as
hardship to
poor

fied with
although
and quanj
er pay. l
the least
and abou
respond
about the
While

college b
cient, the
towards j
ees. Liti
classifie(
ity, mai
laundry
greatest
Althou~
vote at t
of them fj
a positiv.
structor
tions are
mechani
classifie

Formal recognition

of Math Dept. tea

"1 attle-tale"
An LCC student passes through the LCC library's "tattle-tale. "
The four month old security system was installed at a cost of $17, 000, with hopes of trimming the $40,000 spent to replace stolen
books.
The apparatus has proved to be unexplainably sensitive to
breifcases.

Chri.stianity ~eakens Native American spirit
by Sue Corwin

A questionnaire circulated among
the Lane .Community College staff
last October showed that while most
LCC employees have a high degree of
appreciation for the institution, some
reservations and dissatisfactions are
present among liberal arts instructors.
The questionnaires were sent out to
about one third of the staff (198 persons) and a total of 149 persons responded to the survey. The main objective of the survey was to generate
broad evaluations of employee satisfaction or dissatisfaction as an aid to
decision-makers, according to Larry
Romine, who conducted the survey.
The 37 questions dealt with the staff's
attitudes towards salary and fringe
benefits, the college budget and budget
elections, management, job attitudes,
and goals.
According to the survey, threefourths of the respondents are satis-

the American Indian Movement
(AIM),
said that Christianity
stripped the Indian people of their
spiritual identity and gave them a
religion which was not nearly as
strong. The traditional Indian religion of worshipping the land is a
way of life that Bellecourt claimed
could help all Americans.
Bellecourt said it is very hard
for him and his Indian brothers to
relate to the educa.t ion which tells
them Christopher Columbus discovered this country. Indians have
an educational "push-out" rate of
60 to 90 per cent nationally, he said.
The Federal Government, Bellecourt continued, has found it necessary to employ one bureaucrat
for every sixteen Indians, and these
people receive large salaries for
little work. He said people also
think that "all of those Indians" are
on Welfare." That's not so--we've
had the whole White race on Welfare since Indian lands were
stolen,'' added Bellecourt.
At a press conference earlier
Friday, the Indian leader said

'' Wounded Knee is going to continue
indefinitely,' ' until ' ' we have a very
meaningful commitment from the
White House. ''
He also spoke of an Easter weekend pilgrimage to be made by supporters of Wounded Knee. People
from all over the country will be
traveling to Wounded Knee with
food and medical supplies. At the
present time the people in Wounded
Knee are having only one meal per
day, due to lack of food, according
to Bellecourt.
Semantic difficulties caused a recent peace agreement between federal officials and the Olgala Indians
occupying Wounded Knee to fall
apart, said Bellecourt. The Indians
believed that the cease-fire would
not start until negotiations have begun to progress in favor of the
Indians. The government, however,
expects a cease-fire to begin when
negotiations do, he reported.
Bellecourt also told the press
that AIM has "made a commitment
to support Indian fishermen in
(Continued on back page)

by Tom Perry
The Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group (IBPIRG)
has attacked a rate increase for pay telephones that has been pro- •
posed by Pacific Northwest Bell.
In an April 3 press release, CEPIRG claimed that a proposed
rate increase from 10 to 20 -cents for local coin telephone calls
would hurt people who cannot afford a hom2 telephone.
OSPIRG state representative Rocky Johnson based the claim on
a recent survey of pay telephone users in the Portland area that
showed over 40 per cent did not have a home telephone because
the cost was too high. Johnson charged that Pacific Northwest Bell
has not done any similar investigation to measure the effect of a
rate increase on coin telephone users.
Brooks Dickerman, manager of the Pacific Northwest Bell
office in Eugene, said that the decision to apply for a rate increase
was the result of a cost study, as are all applications. Dickerman
said it was found that coin telephones were costing more than they
were bringing in.
The philosophy of Pacific Northwest Bell and the Public Utilities Commissioner, who regulates the telephone company, is that
each division of the telephone services should be self supporting,
according to Dickerman. In effect, Dickerman said, other telephone services were helping to support pay telephones.
'' The telephone company should provide access to a phone for
its customers." Pay telephones in semi-public locations (gas staN

by Kathy Durbin
Math Teaching Assistants and Aides ai
formal status in order to gain fair treatme1
security, and fringe benefits. They said las
these areas are currently made solely by
man, Howard Zink.
The paraprofessionals have submitted a Ii
commendations to Associate Dean Jim Pierce
President Steve John. The document was sign
paraprofessionals employed by the Math Depar
Janice Spitz and Joyce Duchesneau, teach
after Anne Christensen appealed to keep her j fj
dismissed at the end of Winter Term (See TOR
sented all Aides and Assistants with a stateme
authority to dismiss paraprofessionals at thee~
cretion. The statement also stipulates that thei
at any time during a term because of declinin1
said.
According to Zinc, the form he required aid
was provided by the Office of Instruction, and v
sion of a form all paraprofessionals signed ,v
said he didn' t know if other departments used
not require the newer form be signed because o
peal to keep her job.
This means that paraprofessionals have
Ms. Duchesneau said, in spite of the fact that s
grees and are performing professional tasks. Pi
dollars an hour; for aides it is two dollars an
ments for each ac·ademic year, contingent only
in their list of recommenclations .
A major listed grievance, according to the 1
failure of their department chairman to inforn
to which all LCC employees are entitled. The
vacations or holidays, and many have been tol
sick leave, according to the list of grievances.
Only after a member of the paraprofessio
received unemployment compensation during
aware they were entitled to receive benefits du
vacations, Ms. Duches_peau said. Zinc never infor
eligible for unemployment, she said, and as a re
sistants suffered financial hardship during the i
Zinc said he has had only verbal instructio
grant sick leave, and has been doing so. As for
ment, he said, ' ' I cannot be all things to all pee
assistants should have inquired about their elig
offices.

tions and stores) and in isolated areas, Dickerman said, fulfill a
public need. If the rate of local telephone calls is not raised, he
asserted the coin .telephone service would not be self supporting.
Local coin telephone calls have cost' IO cents for 21 years,
a Pacific Northwest Bell spokesman said. The charge was raised
from 5 to 10 cents in 1951.
rn PIRG attorney Neil Robblee said the purpose of the attack
on Pacific Northwest Bell's proposed rate increase was " ... to
stop them here." "They're trying it out in Oregon, using us as a
whipping boy. We want to stop them here. ' _
As an alternative to raising the coin telephone rate, Robblee
suggested implimenting the "Measured Rate'' system of charging
for residential service. The monthly fee is lower than the regular
fee, but the customer can only make a certain number of calls per
month for the lower fee. Any calls over the limit, Robblee said,
cost the customer a small additional amount per call. The '' Measured Rate'' alternative would put home telephone service within
financial reach of more poor people.
The proposed rate increase for pay phones is part of a $32 million rate increase request by Pacific Northwest Bell. other areas
involved in the rate increar.e include monthly residential rates, installation fees, and long distance rates. The rates will only affect
Oregon.
According to Dave Underhill of the Portland Pacific _Northwest Bell office, the $32 million increase is virtually an across-

•
•
1onna1re
tally released
fied with their pay and fringe benefits,
although one fourth believe the quality
and quantity of their work merit hfgfler pay. Liberal arts instructors are
the least satisfied with their salaries
and about 20 per cent of the classified
respondents had some reservations
about their salaries.
While half of the staff believes the
college budget to be less than sufficient, the faculty feels more negative
towards it than do classified employees. Liberal arts instructors and
classified people who work in security, maintenance, custodial, grounds,
laundry and food services hold the
greatest reservations.
Although most of the staff members
vote at the budget elections, only half
of them feel that budget elections are
a positive influence. Liberal arts instructors feel most strongly that elections are a negative influence while
mechanics/technical instructors and
classified people hold a more positive

,-t i·o'"n chief goal
te·a ching aides
1d Aides are seeking recognized,
ir treatment in matters of pay, job
ey said last week that decisions in
solely by their department chairbmitted a list of grievances and reJim Piercey and Staff Association
nt was signed by eight of the eleven
Math Department.
1eau1 teaching assistants, said that
keep her job as an Aide after being
h (See TORCH 1 April 10), Zinc prel a statement to sign, giving him the
als at the end of any term at his diss that their hours might be reduced
of declining enrollment, the women
quired aides and assistants to sign
ction, and was simply a newer vertls signed when they were hired. He
~ents used the form, and that he did
d because of Ms .. Christensen's apmals have virtually no job security,
fact that some Assistants have de nal tasks. Pay for assistants is three
dollars an hour. They seek appointingent only upon student enrollment
rding to the paraprofessionals, is the
an to inform them of fringe benefits
jntitled. They do not receive pay for
ve been told they are r:iot entitled to
rrievances.
aprofessional group applled for and
ion during the summer, were they
benefits during summer and school
cnever informed them that they were
and as a result many aides and asduring the summer.
1 instructions from Dean Piercey to
[ so.As for the matter of unemploy~s to all people. '' He said aides and
t their eligibility at the appropriate
(Continued on Page 8)
fulfill a
ised, he
porting.
l years,
s raised

e attack
' ••. to
us as a
Robblee
barging
regular
alls per
ee said,
''Mease within

132 mil1r areas
t-es, in- •
y affect
.Northacross-

view.
About 92 per cent think that the
college and their departments are
run adequately, or better, and say
they are treated democratically by
their supervisors. Reservations were
again expressed by liberal arts .i nstructors. Least satisfied with the
management of their departments are
those in classified clerical/bookkeeping and those in classified security,
maintenance, custodial,
grounds,
laundry and food services.
While about 95 per cent of the respondents like working at LCC and
view their job as interesting, a few
reservations were expressed by classified clerical/bookkeeping and liberal arts instructors. This group also
expressed reservations in the freedom to make decisions in connection
with their work, while more than twothirds of the staff said their supervisors invited their input in decisionmaking, and 82 per cent said their
bosses will listen to their ideas and
try to implement them.
Even though 98 per cent of the staff
surveyed think their jobs are important, less than six per cent (but almost
all classified people), said their jobs
have low status, About 14 per cent of
the classified respondents felt downgraded by being called "classified."
The majority of-the staff who responded to the questionnaire want to
accomplish something constructive
with their lives; they feel their jobs
at LCC help them to this, The respondents felt that LCC employees are
ready to work together, but the
strongest doubts were expressed by
liberal arts instructors.
Twenty-two per cent of the respondents made remarks on the questionnaire expressing dissatisfactiorr-.
mainly over the lack of, and poor
conditions of, the campus facilities
and the lack of understanding and cooperation among the staff.

April 17, 1973

00

l6°Bik;nis 8.88 +10f 0 '- ~

MEMORIES
of UNDERDEVELOPMENT

we CA.fl\.CU.Stow,(i+- yo""

A"clre4•s

Coming Thurs ..! April 19:

.Or\ 103(o Wi f10..,..etfe Q

Ocfo'

3*J-'rlr

3

~J

Winner of several international awards and placed
among the top films of 1972 by the NY TIMES
critics, MEMORIES ''is clearly a masterpiec~
a film that is intricate, ironic and extremely
intelligent." A.Cooper, NEWSWEEK.Set in Cuba 1961
and 1962 , around the time· of the Bay of Pigs
invasion and the missle crisis, MEMORIES works
both as documentarv and fiction. This is a film
not to be missed ... "one of the finest Latin American films to be seen . . . in the last 12 years."
-V Canby. NY TIMES.

ROBERTSON'S
.D_
RUGS

"Your Prescription -Our Main Concern"
343-7715
30th and Hilyard

Admission $1.00
• 7 & 9:30 p.m.

U ot 0

177 Lawrence

7i-e ~ea o/, 6Bod 1fl~

@he Alt 63aba
3751 67,iad/ue 6Bttd,
tet,

746-4144

2 11teati Ead Z'a,

1'«JddlUa. & 1/teat
5-9 7eeea thul, Sflt#,
6;u, & Sat, 5-1130

-~OIM4-

ellp dancing

More than birds

,.~, I

can now land in

~4T NITE
Afl'td:20
}\

LCC parking lot
The Lane Community College Air
Force now has an airport to land it in.
Until late last week small private
planes(of the variety used in LCC's
flight technology program) were forbidden by law to land on the college
campus, despite the fact the northeast
parking lot had been constructed to
double as a landing strip when the
college was built.
Flight instructors who sometimes
need to bring a plane to the school to
be serviced decided to petition the
Oregon Board of Aeronautics to officially designate LCC as a privateuse airport. On _Friday, the college
was notified its petition had been ac cepted.

the-board increase, involving most telephone services.
The long distance rate between states has gone down in the
past, Underhill said, and it now costs less to call across state
lines.
According to Dickerman in Eugene, the present rate of return
on telephone company operations is about seven per cent. If the
rate increases are approved, he said, the rate of return will be
maintained or increased. If not, the rate of return will "deteriorate." Dickerman said the proposed rate increases would give some
relief from the rising costs of doing business.
Stan Thompson of the Portland Pacific Northwest Bell office
said that the Public Utilities Commissioner grants rates that will .
give "a fair rate of return." The presentlevel of about seven per
cent, Thompson said, is not acceptable. The telephone company
wants between nine and 10 per cent.
•
"People do not realize," Underhill in Portland said, "that
trying to get an increase is a lengthy and complex process." The
request was filed in September, 1972, after four months in preparation. Forty days of hearing with the Public Utilities Commissioner concluded April 9. A decision is due in _July, Underhill
said.
Although O:>PIRG' s survey was conducted Portland, Robblee
said the results would have "considerable applications to other
larger towns.'' Robblee said he hopes the Commissioner does not
grant the pay telephone rate increase.

751

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·Page 8

TORCH
(Continued from page 6)

WANT TO BUY used foil and.mask.
Call after 2:30 on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 686-9912.
AARDVARK BOOKS. Over 8,000 •
titles, lots of LCC texts. Open 6
p.m. - 10 p.m., Monday through
Thursday in the HOUSE at 2094
WILLAMETTE, 343-3092.

® ® ® ..
INDIAN GAUZE shipment just arrived. Hand-woven, natural color '
only, dyable. $2.35 yd. ANDREA's, •
1036 Willamette.

® ®l ®
FOR SALE: 1962 Buick ''Wildcat."
Good condition. Best offer. Call
342-3878 or 345-1038.

Para p rofe ssi o !'I a Is ...

Five teaching assistants and six
aides are employed by the Math
Department. AU the aides are
'SA TGURU HAS COME, a brief
filmed history on the life of GURU women. The assistants were emMAHARAJ JI, 15-year-old Spirit- ployed initially on an experimental
1970-1971
basis
during the
ual Master will be shown Tues. and
school year, and helped develop
Wed. at 7:30 pm, Uof o, room to be
the program of individualized inposted at EMU Main Desk. FREE.
struction which is used today in
~®®
the Occupational Math and Algebra
REW ARD for the return of a white classes • Aides were first emgold wedding band and engagement ployed during the 1971-12academic
ring with small diamond. Great · year.
Several aides and assistants asentimental value. Please call
gree that there is no paraprofes688-3741.
sional "program" as such in operation, with automatic rotation of
prospective math instructors from
WOULD LIKE to meet ADC mother, volunteer tutor positions, to aide
who is attending school, and who and -assistant positions, contrary
would be interested in sharing to explanations of the nature of
apartment or house with same. the positions offered by Zinc and
Call 686-2449 after 6 p.m. week- Glenn Cook, Occupational Math
instructor. The aides said they
days.

were hired as employees to perform duties in the Math program,
and consider themselves fullfledged LCC employees, not teaching trainees.
Ms. Duchesneau said the LCC
Math Department has been praised
as innovative because of its programs of individualized instruction. She said paraprofessionals
are, to a large degree, responsib~e
for the success of these programs.
" A program is only as good
as the people who • run it," Ms.
Duchesneau said. '' If you want
good people to carry out this program, you must reward them, and
reward them tangibly.' '
She added 'that the kind of dedication required to build the suecessful program which LCC currently enjoys, cannot be expected
when those involved do not know
if they will be employed from one
term to the next.
Without guidelines, she said, the
paraprofessionals who worked to
help create and administer the
math program are in limbo. "We
are part of LCC and we should
not be denied benefits justbecause
we're not covered by any existing
classification.''
Math Teaching Assistants and
Aides are seeking recognized, formal status in order to gain fair

treatment in matters of pay, job
security, and fringe benefits. They
said last week that decisions in··
these areas are currently made
solely by their department chairman, Howard Zinc ..

News Briefs
Any student wishing to receive a
degree of any kind with the graduating Class of 1973 must fill-out an
application with the Records Department Office. .
If you are not sure what is required for a degree, certificate,
or diploma, you may check with the
Records Office.
The deadline for entering your
name in the graduation program is
May 21. Last date to apply to receive a degree this year is May 28.
• • •
The U of O Co-op Bookstore
has arranged an April bookfair,
to feature about 2 500 books on
display from over 60 publishers.
The books are course-oriented
paperbacks on a wide range of
subjects. The bookfair which has .
been arranged through 'the college
marketing group, will take place
Thursday and Friday, from 9:30
to 4:00 at the U of O Co-op
Bookstore.

Senate ...

(Continued from page 1)
with only one no vote.
The Evening Program Advisory
Committee
(EPAC) requested
funding to send two delegates to a
two-day United States Association
for Evening Students convention,
held in Phoenix, Arizona later this
month.
EPAC had originally requested
only $552, but the Senate Finance
Committee recommended that $600
be alloted because of possible expenses which might be incurred,
but which were not budgeted on the
request.
The $600 was alloted with only
one no vote.
It ·was pointed out that the line
item in the budget for conventions
was already over- extended and
ASLCC Treasurer Bob Vinyard
said the EPAC money would come

•?~

"Hire him. HeS got great legs!'

**************

D A I Ry
ANN
=1

If women thought this way about men they
would be awfully silly.
When men think this way about women
they're silly, too. •
Women should ' be judged for a job by
whether or not they can do it.
In a world where women are doctors, lawyers, judges, brokers, economists, scientists,

political candidates, professors and company presidents, any other viewpoint is ridiculous.
Think of it this way. When we need all the
help we can get, why waste half the brains
around?

Womanpowet. Its much too good to waste.

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

*1810
. . Chambers
. - . . . .343-2112
.....

For 1nformat1on NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund Inc . 127 East 59th Street. Dept K, New York, New York 10022

out of the Hmiscellaneous' ' programs and projects section of the
budget.
Sharon Mainzer, spokeswomen
for the Eugene Growers Market,
requested the Senate to contribute
$2,000 to that organization. Bob
Vinyard moved that the rules be
suspended so that the Senate could
deal with this issue at that time,
but also moved to reduce the
amount to $100. Lloyd Ewing made
an amendment to the motion to
raise the amount to $200. The motion and amendment passed with
seven no votes.
Barry Hood, ASLCC publicity •
director, told the Senate that plans
to "take over the Administration"
were completed and would be taking place April 27. The idea, ac- •
cording to Hood, is that students
will follow members of the Administra_ti?n for half day_ a~d then th~
Admm1strators will v1s1t classes
as students for the other half.
The Senate also alloted $50 to
purchase tickets for children of the
Pearl Buck Center to attend Carl
Wynn's European High Wire Show,
which will perform in Eugene June
25.
The LCC Ski Team and the LCC
Womens Liberation Organization
were accepted as recognized campus clubs, when the Senate ratified
their Constitutions.

VOTE THE
:
--------------------------------~·----------------------------·
:
STUDENT HORIZON : •
i
A VOTE FOR TICKET
i

:

.i

.

i> Improved Direct Student Services .!

•

4'

•••.:; 21
Barry
~t:~ f~r ht ~ic~ . .',~• •-r-<>•,~••M.

•

free films for students
free monday morning coffee

..~

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7 . ·% t::j~\~1Ift,,1~;~

yd E~~nst

,c~y Dar:~~-~,n • ~
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"I.( St Uden t Lego I SerVICeS
•

::

i> Night Student Services

.i

counseling and representation
both civil and criminal

.

child care
health and dental servic~

l/ Improved

.

Commun,cat,on

daily activity newsletter for students
student vote on board
better on-campus repres,ntation I or veterans

:
:

:
:

:
:
:
:

:,
• , ~Fi:i$S
_.,
<•111111.L- ... . . . .
.
•~,
t!t.••-· .• -· .• -· -• •••••••••••• ••:• • •••••!••••••••••• .-.• • • • • • • • • • • • • • .• •••••••• -. -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
'w

. ••.•··

April 17, 1973

TORCH

Page 9

ASL CC Quar terlv Finan cial State ment
REVENUE
Account · Titles
Students Fee·

ACTUAL
RESOURCES

1972-73
BUDGET

OVER (UNDER)
BALANCE

4/12/73

4/12/73

$73,000

$47,445.20

Book-store ·

9,800

6,145.10

(

3,654.90)

Vending Machines

8,000

4,441.42

(

3,558:58)

500
•15,000

898.94
5,000.00

(10,000.00)

$106,300

$63,930.66

($42,369 ..34)

Miscellaneous Income
Cash Carry-over
TOTAL REVENUE

Last week ASLCC Treasurer Robert Vinyard submitted the
ASLCC Quarterly Financial Statement. Shown here is an updated
. version of the report, covering expenditures from July I, 1972,
to April 12, 1973.
.
The report includes the general line items of the budget,
and shows the amounts budgeted, amounts expended, and the
remaining balance (or overextension).
Vinyard explained to the TORCH the reason for each of the
several line items that have been overexpended:
The capital outlay line item paid for construction of the
new Student Senate offices and office furniture. Incorrectly
charged to that line item were the purchase of copies of "Robert's
Rules of Order" for Senate members, and payment of the coffee
service in the Senate office.
The Senate approved a $500 over-extension to Financial
Aids for emergency loans.
The Senate approved a $359.66 over-extension to the promotions line item in order to buy a half-page advertisement in
every issue of the TORCH through Spring Term.
A $51.60 expenditure for an OCCSA section meeting was
mistakenly charged to the OCCSA Spring convention line item.
An over-expenditure of $149.21 from the AACJC convention
budget was due to an unexpected extra day the convention lasted,
and the high cost of food. (The Senate had only approved $800
to be spent for the convention.)
In his last Treasurer's Report, Vinyard said that it "appears
unlikely that we will attain 100 per cent of our projected revenue."
He suggested that the Senate "spend with discretion over the
remaining months of the current fiscal year.''

($25,554.80)

398.94

EXPENDI-TURES
Account Titles
Intercollegiate

1972-73
BUDGET

EXPENDITURE

1972-73

BUDGET
BALANCE

$15,696

$8,851.59

$6,844.41

Extra-mural, Men

2.525

1,302.39

1,222.61

Extramural, Women

4,673

2,358.90

2,314.10

606

388.22

217. 78

1,500"

581.17

918.83

$13,482.27

$11,517.73

Extromural, Co-Ec:j
lntramurals
TOTAL ATHLETICS

$25,000

t=========:t:========l========t Account

1972-73
BUDGET

Titles

. $2,000

$520.80

OCCSA, Fall '72

Activities, Winter '73

2:000

1,974.18

OCCSA, Spring '73

1,000

Activities, Spring '73

2,000

-0-

Rental & Se·rvice Fee

1,000

-0-

Activities, Fall '72

$1,000

EXPENDITURE

1972-73

$473.00
1,050.60

BUDGET
BALANCE

$527.00
(50.60)

2.000.00
1,000.00

OCCA, Spring '73

1,000

National Student Associations

2,000

2,395.00

(395.00)

420.75

79.25

Assoc. of American Jr. College

1,000

1,149.21

(149.21)

429.79

70.21

ASLCC Retreats

700

229.83

470.17

-G-

1,000.00

ASLCC Elections

500

Christmas Party

500

ASLCC Graduation

500

-0-

500,00

Leadership Programs

500

-0-

500.00

Miscellaneous Expenses

500

25.00

475,00

Workshops

300

836.20

(536.20)

Alumni Association

500

-0-

500.00

Convention Fees & Dues

250

729, 70

(479. 70)

390.00

Miscellaneous Fees & Dues

250

113.00

137 .oo

Travel, Miscellaneous

500

409.60

90,40

$8 ,500

$7,588.53

$911,47

, President's

$2,60G

$1,898.10

$701.90

Salary , Secretary's

5,100

3,249.42

1.850.58

Tuition, President

350

270.00

80.00

Tuition, 1st Vice-President

350

270.00

80.00

Tuition, 2nd Vice-President

350

270,00'

80.00

Tuition, Treasurer

350

270.00

80,00

Tuition, Publicity Director

270

180.00

90.00

Tuition, Parliamentarian

270

-0-

270.00

Tuition, Health Coordinator

270

270 00
-

-0-

Tuition, OCCSA Coordinator

350

260.00

90.00

2,160

1,800.00

360.00

$8,737.52

$3,682.48

$30.00

$2,970.00

Club Promotions
TOTAL STUDENT ACTIVITIES

.

1,250

860.00

$10,750

$4,230.52

,,

$6,519.48

TOT AL CONFERENCE/CON VENTIONS
Health Service

$15,000

$4,121.76

$10,878.24

Dental Service

2,800

733.00

2,067.00

Prescriptions
TOTAL STUDENT MEDICAL SERVICE

TORCH

600
$18,400

-0$4,854.76

600.00
$13,545.24

$3,400

$3,400.00

Titan Code

500

293.16

Miscellaneous Publication

750

73.79

206 84
676.21

$4,650

:)>3,766.95

$883.05

$1,500

$764. 71

TOTAL STUDENT PUBLICATIONS
Office Supplies

4,366.29
710.97

Capital Outlay
Telephone/Telegra ph Service

-0-

$735.29
(66.29)
139.03

$6,650

$5,841.97

$808.03

Gifts & Awards

$295

$75.00

$220.00

On-Campus

1,000

260.00

740.00

500

450.00

50.00

1,500

2,000.00

(500.00)

TOTAL OFFICE SUPPLIES/EQUIP

Salary

Tuition, Senators-at-Large
TOTAL SALARIES/TUITIONS

Community Services
Student Financial Aids
TOTAL ~TUDENT CONTRIBUTIONS
Promotions
Printing
TOTAL PUBLIC RELATION

$859.66

($359.66)

500

336.42

163.58

$1,000

$1,196.08

($196.08)

l:::~
=. ::::::::==l=:::::::: :===t=====:::;:: :,

$3,000

Legal Service
Miscellaneous Programs /Projects

5,930.00

3,664.33

2,265.67

Child Care Equipment

1, 705,00

291.77

1,413.23

$10,635.00

$3,382.10

$7,252.90

$5,000

$-0-

310 00
98
1==$=3=.2=91.5=-=:t:==$=2,==0=.o=o==::t===$= =·====1TOT AL GEN ERA L FUND

$500

$12,340

Centingency
TOTAL EXPENDITURES

$5,000

$106,300
$56,669.70
$49.630.30
'· • t::=.==-::t::== ==~-:::1::=====

Page 10

TORCH

April 17, 1973
™mrm~-§S.;{E.m..-~ai:======--:;:::::~W::::~~.w.=::%:?~~~m~=•mt1;;r-::::m%l==-®'.i~;

Bench Sl1wrers
m

from Lex Sahonch,k

It had to happen sooner or later.

I Shoop,
tll

I

Somehow and somewhere a
woman was going to turn out for the men 1 s track team at an Oregon
Community College Athletic Association Conference school -- and
make it.
Southwestern Oregon Community College (SWOCC) has come up
with that woman. Be:· name is Fran Sichting and she has not only
made the team, but she has beaten out most of the men in her events.
Primarily a sprinter, Ms. Sichting runs the 100 yard dash, 220
·yard dash, 440 yard dash, the long jump, and is the anchor woman on
the SWOCC Laker 440 relay team.
Her marks in those events are nothing to laugh about-early season
marks of 19 feet 7 1/2 inches in the long jump, 25.1 clocking in
the 220 yeard dash, and being a heat winner in the 100 yard dash in
a Mt. Hood Community Coliege meet in Gresham, and the anchor leg
in the 440 relay team which finished second in that same meet are
impressive.

Heidenrich lead women'

Competitors in the women's
track meet at Lane Thursday
·turned in some outstanding performances despite cold, gusty winds
and skies that threatened to open at
any moment.
LCC 's women scored 20 points to
finish fourth behind Oregon State

4 inches, and after some bad luck,
ended with a tie for second in the'
javelin. She saw her first three
throws in the javelin blown out of
the restricted area where they
were counted as foul throws. Her
fourth and final attempt stayed in,
moving her into second place with
a mark of 121 feet 5 inches.
Ms. Shoop, a "do everything''
competitor according to Track
Coach Susan Cooley, opened her

with 90, Oregon College of Education 50, and the University of Oregon's 52 1/2. Lane was led by all
around performances by Judy Heidenrich and Penny Shoop . .
Ms. Heidenrich placed fifth in the
shotput with a throw of 34 feet 2
inches, fifth in the discus at 92 feet

day by running a leg on Lane's 880
yard medley relay team. From
there she went to the jumping area
where she competed simultaneously in the long jump (placing third
with a jump of 15 feet 11 inches),
and the high jump (finishing fourth
in that event at a height of 4 feet
11 inches).

Mike Hodges, the coach of the SWOCC track team, feels that
Fran has a · good chance at making the 1976 United States Olympic
team, but :Ms. Sichting, a 19 year old freshman, and a graduate of
Marshfield High in Coos Bay, has decided to concentrate on the OCCAA
competition before giving much serious thought to Olympic competition.
She is certainly no stranger to winning. While a senior at Marshfield Fran was the 1972 State Champion in the women's 100 yard dash,.
220 yard dash, long jump, and mile relay.

Rushing through her final att~mpts at five feet, which she
missed, Ms. Shoop ran over to the
starting line in time to take part

in the 880 yard run. She finishedsixth in the race, one away from
placing, ending her long day.

OSU tries new system

Beth Boehmer continued her
strong performances in the running events, putting in a strong leg

One of the most grueling parts of watching any track meet from
the spectators' point-of-view, as well as from the athletes' pointof-view, is the long and sometimes boring high jump and pole vault
competition.
In these two events the participants spend long minutes gazing
pensively at the cross bar in an attempt to " psyche" themselves up
for the dramatic moment when they approach the bar at a sprint and
then, with a great heave of effort, hurl themselves straight into the
bar, knocking it and themselves into the pit where their muttered
curses mingle with the sounds of a snoring crowd.
As it stands right now most jumpers can warm up at these lower
heights and even afford to miss their first or second attempts, knowing that eventually they will clear the height and move ori to greater
things. The Oregon State Beavers have taken steps to streamline the
events for both the participants and the fans.
In last weekend's Utah-Oregon State track meet they tried a new
kind of high jump and pole vault scoring system. With this system in
effect each jumper is able to jump only seven times at any of the following heights: high jump--6-0, 6-2, 6-4, 6-6, 6-8, 6-10, 7-0, and one
inch increments thereafter. In the pole vault the heights are 12 feet 0
inches, 12-6, 13-0, 13-6, 14-0, 14-6, 15-0, 15-4, 15-8, 16-0, 16-4, 16-8,
17-0 and three inch increments thereafter.
( Continued on page 11)
.,, ··-

on the 880 yard medley relay and
running the 3,000 meters. She finished second in the longer r ace in
a very respectable time of 11:43.8
minutes.
Julie Towne, fourth in the mile
with a time of 6:16.3, and Kris
Stoneberg, fifth in the 880 yard run
at 2:50.2, rounded out Lane ' s scoring in the meet.
Next week the women's team
meets Oregon College of Education
and the University of Oregon in .a
triangular meet at Lane. Starting
time for the meet is scheduled for
3:30 p.m.

Penny Shoop
P:mny Shoop long jumps during the four-way m11et held Thursday at
Lane. Ms., Shoop came in third with a leap of 15 feet 11 inches. M.3.
Shoop also placed fourth in the high jump with a season best of 4 feet
11 inches. Lane came in fourth behind Oregon State, the University
of Or 2gon, and Or8gon CoHege of Education.
(Photo by Steve Busby)

Intramural Office "
sponsoring chess

I
Gerry Domagala

match in cafeteria
LCC's Chess Club in cooperation with the Intramural Office
will be holding a Chess tournament April 23, 24, 25, and 26.
Awards will be presented to the
winners in each of two classifications: rated and un-rated players.
Competition will be held in the
LCC Cafeteria from 3 to 5 p.m.
each day. Players may use their
own sets or sets provided by the
Chess Club.
Information and sign-ups may be
obtained at the Intramural Office
in the lobby of the Main Gym, or'
by contacting Jack Heisel through
the Physical Education Office, 7474501, ext. 277.

for

ASLCC President
i .

He cares
about your problems
u

The Great Northwest

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. April 17, 1973

·rhinclads sweep to second

TORCH

Page 11

Baseballers finally take a conference vvin

landslide OCCAA victory
Lane Community College swept to its second conference track
victory in as many weeks Saturday afternoon in Coos Bay as the Titans
defeated Southwestern Orer;on Community College and Clackamas
Community College in a triangular meet.
The Titans once again showed power in nearly every phase of the
meet, with the exception of acknowledged weaknesses in the jumping
events. Lane scored 96 points, SWOCC 51 and Clackamas 8.
Dale Hammitt, the sophomore distance ace from Pleasant Hill,
provided a new school record in his long distance specialty, the three
mile run. Hammitt, utilizing his powerful pacing in the long, grueling
race, pulled away from fellow Titans Bill Cram and Randy Griffith to
take the victory in 14:04.4.
Hammitt is undefeated in the two and three mile races by Oregon
Community College Athletic Association competitors so far this season.
Cram and Griffith, who finished second and third respectively,
onece again provided the sweeping finish for Lane in a distance race.
Cram ran his three mile in 14:12. 7 with Griffith touring the track in
14:15.3.
Lane's superiority was simply overwhelming in the weight events.
In the shot John White threw the iron ball 44 feet 6 1/2 inches for a
first place ~bile Doug Lane and Tom Frederikson finished second and
third with heaves of 39-4 1/2 and 38-7 1/2 respectively. Lane and White
switched roles in the discus, as White won that event with a mark
of 132 feet 7 inches to White)s 129-2.
Highly touted Steve Maryanski paced another LCC sweep in the
javelin as he won with a 212 foot 4 inch throw. Mike Daniels of LCC
and Dennis Wicks of LCC finished • second and third with throws of
209-1 3/4 and 200 feet 9 inches.
In the sprints it was once again Mark Burt giving the Titans
explosive power. The freshman from Forest Grove ran the 100 yard
dash in a winning time of 10.1 seconds. Jeff Hardesty finished second
in that race in 10.2. Burt also took the 220, and again Hardesty finished
second. He was timed in 22.8 while Hardesty was 22.9.
Last week against Blue Mountain and Central Oregon Chris Vigeland
provided some surprises by battling Bill Cram and Randy Griffith in
th mile and coming out with a second place and a 4:19.5 time. This
week it was Vigeland showing some speed and taking the 880 yard run
with a 1:57 .3 mark. Chris nosed-out Ron Apling of SWOCC and Dan
Sprauer of Lane who were both timed in 1:57 ,6. Apling has consistently
been a strong racer in this middle distance event the last two years,
but couldn ' t match Vigeland's effort.
While Vigeland ran in Tim William:,' normal event and won,
Williams entered the mile and also came away with a Titan victory.
Williams raced home with a 4:19.2 time,
Ranked in the top few contenders for conference and regional
honors 1 Southwestern Oregon did not materialize as a real threat to
LCC ' s hopes of defending their crowns in both championships, In fact,
it definitely appears that the Titans get better and stronger with every
week that passes--a quality that will become invaluble the next few
weeks as Lane goes against stronger competition, leading eventually
to the Region 18 Meet to be held at Lane Community College.
Next weekend the Titans will battle in the Mt, Hood relay at Mt.
• Hood Community College in Gresham.

Bench Slivers.

(Continued from page 10)
Each jumper takes · his regular
turn at any height which he wishes,
as the bar is passed upward. The
bar will never be lowered, and if

a jumper misses three consecutive
times, he is out of the competition-whether those jumps are taken at
one height or more than one height.
When he has taken his seventh jump
he will be finished and his place
will be recorded as the highest
height that he successfully cleared.
The benefits from something as
dramatically innovative as this

tion that confronts each jumper
will, without a doubt, generate
much greater excitement in the
jumping events than is currently
enjoyed by fans waiting for the wind
to blow over the cross bar.

Saturday the Titans split a
double-header with Southwestern
Oregon
Community College
(SWOCC), finally breaking a losing streak.
The Titan win over SWOCC gave
LCC an OCCAA league record of
one win and three losses. The Titans currently hold a non-league
record of no wins and seven losses.
In the first game of OCC.AL
league play against SWOCC's Lakers, the Titans were held scoreless while SWOCC continued to gain
seven runs. Finally in the bottom of
the fifth inning Gerry Brund pounded a double into left field while the
bases were loaded. Following the
Titans' two run scoring, both teams
were held scoreless throughout the
remainder of the first g? me giving
the Lake rs a 7 -2 victory.
The second game at Sheldon High
School reversed the situation for
the Titans.
Leighton Nichols, LCC's lefthanded pitcher held the Lakers
scoreless during the first inning.
While the Titans were at b:1.t during the bottom of the first inning,
Ed Bailey smashed the ball into the
outfield to bring Dennis Weston in
for the Titans' first run.
Brund then hit a flyball into right
field-which was droppec! by the
Lake rs. The error moved Bailey to
third base. Jim Galleyhorn, following Brund's efforts, drove the- ball
out of the infield and back near the
fence in left field.

HAMBURGER DAN'S

Galleyhorn's hit produced two
more runs for the Titans and completed the scoring for the first inning.
The next scoring came at the top
of the third inning when the bases
were loaded and LCC's pitcher
threw a high pitch which catcher
Tony Johnson was unable to stop.
The wild pitch gave the Lakers
their only run for the second game.
The Titans scored again during
the third inning. Brund, while on
third, was attempting to score on
the execution of a squeeze play,

James Dieringer
LCC
Campus Ministry
Office LCC Restaurant
Newman Chaplain

home phone 688-2605

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but the Laker pitcher's high, wild
pitch flew past the catcher. Brund
was able then to score 8n easy run
giving the Titans a 4-1 lead.
With a limited number of errors
the Titan power started to show.
By the end of the fifth inning ,three
more runs were scored for LCC,
During the fifth inning, Titan
catcher, Johnson, connected with
a triple. Brund, Galleyhorn, and
Tom Cochburn were all on base,
and came in to add the final three
Titan runs to complete the 7-1 victory score.

-

-

=---= ·-

are obvious. The gambling situa-

Sorry 'bout th at
The TORCH wishes to apologize
to Penny Shoop for any embarrassment that may have been caused
by our error in the April 10 issue.
The woman who was reported ~s
being disqualified for a LCC violation in the 880 yard medley relay
should have been Penny Reynolds
instead of Penny Shoop .

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TORCH

C.ultural •Forum presenting director and films
Nicholas Ray, noted
screen
writer and film director, will appear with the showing, of two of
his more famous films tomorrow (Wednesday) and Thursday,
on the University of Oregon campus.
"The Savage Innocents'' will
be shown tomorrow at 8 p.m.
in 180 PLC. Admission is $1.00.
"Rebel Without A c;use" will
be shown on Thursday at 8 p.m.
in the EMU Ballroom. There will
be no admission charge for this
film and discussion.
Ray will discuss the films and
film making at the showing of each
of these films. Ray has produced
and directed several successful
broadway plays, has been an actor
in the theater, and has written
novels and poetry.
To date, Ray has made 20·
films. His first, "They Live By
Night," appeared in 1949. His last
came out ip 1963 and was entitled
''55 Days at Peking."
One of his most popular films,
and one of the most popular films
of the 50' s is "Rebel Without
A Cause" starring James Dean

and Natalie Wood.
other Ray films which have
achieved critical acclaim are" The
Savage Innocents" (1961), starring
Anthony Quinn, "Johnny Guitar''

I

Candidates ...

Abstract
Portland sculptor Roy Seitzel held a one-day sculpture workshop
at LCC Wednesday. The workshop featured lectures, demonstrations,
and personal instruction on techniques used in wood sculpture. Seitzel,
56, is a well-known Northwest artist who specializes in large sculptures
for private homes and public buildings. (Photo by Dave Corwin)

l• .

Letters...

Continued from page 2)
give 24 hours notice before entering a dwelling.
In spite of all the bill does
for tennants, it is not one-sided.
It seeks to resolve problems that
have long plagued landlords such
as disposing of property left behind by a tenant without facing
the prospect of a subsequent lawsuit. By clearly defining obligations of both landlord and tenant
the bill provides certainty, protecting both parties.
The bill will soon be voted on
by the full Senate. If you are displeased with existent landlord law
or have- ever had a problem with
your landlord, please write to
Salem and express your support·
of SB 159. Letters should be sent to.
Capitol Building, Salem, Oregon,
97310. Senators George Wingard•
and Ed Fadeley represent Lane
County.
I can't stress too much how important your letter can be. Few
senators have committed themselves and the landlords will be
working very hard to defeat the
landlord and tenant bill.
Frank Wall, Director
Off-Campus Housing
3i9 EMU, U of 0
Eugene, Oregon 97403

Dear Editor:
In last week's FORUM, Mr.
Skinner conveniently overlooked
many benefits the students take for
granted, yet receive none the less.
The Dental, Health Care Facilities,
SAC, are all receiving finances and
other support from ASLCC. I'm
glad he mentioned the U of O
since the student body fees are
only $25.00! Yet they have less

I

I

student input and less benefits go
to each student dollar for dollar.
At the last Senate meeting every
senator was present but two, and
the galleries were completely full.
Students and senators alike are
truly becoming more concerned.
Mr. Skinner is so concerned and
yet has never attended a single
Senate meeting to my knowledge;
that does seem strange.
With all his "concern," his brief
glance at the budget still managed
to be misleading. He listed outlays
as though they were expenditures,
when actual expenditures were almost 50 per cent less than these
outlays.
The complete ASL CC Budget and
Constitution are available at the
ASLCC office to anyone.
illt

Roger Leasure
ASLCC Senator

Anderson ...

(Continued from page 2)
postmasters had brought in
extra help to make themselves look good. In at least
one case, they actually hid
mail outside the post office to
conceal the evidence of their
snail-like working pace.
All uf the problems have
citizens howling and congressional investigators
scurrying. But whether the
flurry of activity speeds the
mail eventually remains to
be seen.
One Washington wit has
suggested that the answer
may be to bring back the
pony express, perhaps
replacing the ponies with
motorcycles.

Bell eco U rt...
(Continued from page 6)
Oregon and Washington " so that
they can fish the wat~rs which
rightfully belong to them.
Bellecourt gave these communications numbers for all persons
seeking information about Wounded
Knee to call area code 605- 3481005 348-1094 and 348-1095 in
Wou~ded Knee. '

.

I

Tech Course ...

(Continued from page I)
structor Robert Allen for reorganizing the department around
"production skills.''
"The production skills are now
going to be proliferated around the
various areas of the college,''
Blood maintained and the training received by ;tudents will be
less effective than if the department were reorganized and not
dismantled.
,

(Continued from page 1)

Student Horizon.
Seeking Board positions to the
LCC chapter of the Oregon Student Public Interest Research
Group (OS PIRG) are Frederick Sieveking, Roy Wohleand Bernie Pinney.
Elections are scheduled for
April 30 and May 1.
Also, according to Bolton, candidates and present Student Body
officers will be available in th&
Center concourse area to answer
questions concerning their views
at noon everyday beginning tomorrow_ (Wednesday).

-

(1954) and "Bigger Than Life''.
(1956).
Nicholas Ray and his films are
being presented by the ASUO Cultural Forum and Acme Bijou.

Forestry instructor John Phillips said that although he did not
w.ant to see the departmen t s p 1 it up, he was pleased
with the decision to move forestry
into the Science Department.
"Considering the close relationship between the life sciences and
forestry, I'm glad we're going to
join the Science Department,"
Phillips said. "We're looking forward to a fruitful association with
them."
Science Department Chairman
John Jacobs agreed the decision to
incorporate forestry into his department was a good one. "Their
courses fit into our life sciences
area real well," Jacobs said. "We
feel we can help each other, and the
department in general welcomes
them in."
The remaining Industrial Technology programs - construction,
cabinetmaking and welding - will
become part of the Community
Education Division (CED).
Nile Williams, assistant dean in
charge of the division, said he was
optimistic about the transfer of
the three programs into the CED.
"I don't have any apprehensions
of any kind," Williams said. '' I
feel that it will blend very well with
what we now have-we already run a.
very extensive adult education
welding and woodworking program."
Each of the transferred programs will be supervised by Larry
Murray, director of special training in the CED.
Murray said that since the weld-

ing program went through some extensive curriculum changes last
• summer, there is virtually no
chance of any more major revisions in the program as a result
of the move.
"I can't see the need for further
curriculum changes," Murray
said. "There might be a need for
some minor revisions, but it is inconceivable to me that it would be
anything significant."
However, two welding instructors - John Shuster and Chet
Aubrey - expressed concern with
the transfer of the welding program into the CED.
"Our big problem has always
been getting our majors coordinated with allied subjects," Aubrey
said. "Instead of moving closer to
that solution, it looks to me like we're moving farther away from
it."
Shuster also voiced doubts about
the breakup of the department. "We
don't really know if we're moving
in the right direction or not."
Before any decision is madE
about possible revisions in the
cabinetmaking and construction
programs, Murray said he needs
to consult with the faculty involved,
and study the programs more extensively. Administration officials
did recommend, however, that the
cabinetmaking program "coordinate and cooperate' ' with the Department of Art and Applied Design, which now offers a basic design course with an emphasis on
furniture design.
The trend in the CED away from
exclusively non-credit programs
such as adult education is the
source of som 2 Administra~ion
concern. Each of the construct10n,
cabinetmaking and welding courses
represent credit programs which
lead to a two-year degree.
'' I think the trend is fine as long
as we do not bind the credit program policies 1 etc. onto the noncredit activities," Dean Case observed.

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