r LCC octct>er 16, 1973 ave nue, eugen the \Wek of I ane com mun ty co ege, i II 4 0 0 0 east 3 0 th e , vol. o re 10 gon no. 9 7 4 8 0 5 .... Arab views voiced The hrab-Israeli conflict was escalated another step yesterday (Monday) when the State Department announced that the United States during the week-end had begun to. re-supply Israel with military equipment in an effort to counter "massive'' Soviet airlifts of military • goods to the Arab states. This escalation and ''Israeli agression'' are two of the issues of the war that a group of LCC and U of O students will bring to the LCC campus. The students, members of the Arab Student Organization (ASO), are continuing to hand out leaflets and pamphlets on the Middle East ::ind the struggle of the Palestinian people. "Not many people at LCC know what is going on there," says one member of the organization, "We're just a small group here to represent the Arabs~ but we' re trying as hard as we can to inform them." "We want students here to be aware of what is going on so they won't judge blindly,' says Khalid Chubeili, an Arab U of O student. "We want them to hear both sides." The ASO said they have been distressed witti the mass media coverage of the Middle East struggle. Their leaflets state: "The Zionist propaganda fed daily by the mass media to the American people has served to confuse and muddle the clear-cut right of the Palestinian people to liberate their homeland and create a democratic state where all citizens, both Jewish and Arab, can live together in peace. The American corporate news media, by design, continues . to give a distorted and biased picture about the Arab people's struggle against im- Israeli aggression cited by Shelley Cunningham discussions with Jewish people, and some were persuaded to our side. Some still believe they have the right to fight, however''. There are Arab people without homes now. We want them to ~et their land back and live, Chubeili commented, "Our purpose is to get people out from under imperialism. peacefully. We don't want them to live under imperialism. This is what we are trying to explain to the students here at LCC. "Besides this struggle, we are standing behind other countries' struggles like Africa and Asia, wherever people are being treated unfairly," said Chubeili. The ASO hopes that when students become more informed they will want to support the Arab struggle. One handout issues the plea, ''Support the Arab people in their just struggle against Zionism and Imperialism. Support the right of Palestinian people for self-determination. Support Free Palestine--Free for all Palestinians and Jews.' ' Members of the Arab Student Organizatiop. senting their side of the issue of the Mid(hSO) man a table in the cafeteria~ pre:. dle East conflict. (Photo by Mark Rahm) perialism and Zionism in the Middle East." should be allowed to live in Israel. That's In describing the Arab struggle, an Arab . just not logical. Our purpose is to get student compared it to the struggle of the the Arabs back in their land," said another American Indian in the US who had to live student. on reservations when his land was taken from him. "The Jews think that only they He continued, "We've had some good "We want the students' support, but we're only trying to persuade students, not force them. We're not here because we're a bunch of uncivilized people." At LCC, says Chubeili, the Arab Student Organization has been met with "a lot of understanding from students. They have been very unqerstanding.'' Tonight (Tuesday, Oct. 16) at 7:30 p.m., a program of films, poetry, and speakers on the Middle East will review and analyze the history of Palestine. The program will be located in the Erb Memorial Union on the University of Oregon campus. Energy conservation causes cooler rooms Ex VP's speech Former Vice President Spiro Agnew, despite his recent conviction for federal income ta~ evasion, denied, any wrong doing during his political life, claiming that he resigned from the vice presidency ''for the good of the country." In a nationally broadcasted speech last night (Monday), he also claimed that he was driven from office by news leaks and the testimony of ''bribe-brokers, extortionists (and) conspirators." Agnew was convicted in federal court in Maryland last week after entering a· plea of "no contest" to charges of income tax evasion. After entering the p1ea, ne acknowledged to the court that he understood that his plea was the same as an admission of guilt. He was then sentenced to three years probation and fined $10,000. In the speech Agnew explained that he entered the plea of '' no contest" in order "to quell the raging storm around him" and to spare the nation a new "oaroxvsm of bitterness.'' What is LCC doing to save energy this winter? According to Bill Cox, LCC superintendant of college facilities, Lane's greatest electrical energy requirement is the production of heat and that's where the greatest energy conservation will come. He pointed out that in order to reduce this requirement, thermostats throughout the school have been turned down two to four degrees. The setting in most rooms is now 68 degrees. This move alone accounts for the greatest energy savings, he claimed. Attention is being paid to other ways of saving electricity as well. All instructors, students and staff are being asked to turn off light-. ing and other equipment when not in use. All parking lot . lights, except those necessary for security (about l out of 7 ), are shut down after 11 p.m. The fountains have been shut down and the pools drained. This move saves not only the energy used to run the pumps, but also the water which would be lost through evaporation and seepage. Explaining the college's heat- ing requirements, Cox revealed buildings can be kept to acceptct.owns. that LCC is heated by two able limits. electric boilers, the first of their One of the boilers was shutAnd he said that students ·and kind on the West Coast. These down for three days last year, staff are encouraged to suggest boilers heat water which is then but it is doubeful anyone could other ways ofreducing energy conpumped to the various buildings. tell the difference, Cox claimed. sumption. Suggestions can be deliThe hot water is then used to This year, he warned, there is vered to Cox in his office, first heat air which is in turn forced the possibility of many more shut- floor Administration Building. throughout the buildings. Normally the air for heating is drawn directly from outside the building. Now, however, warm Mass Communications Department Chairman, John Elliott, has air already within the building is recycled. It is not a closed system announced plans for the installation of a complete television production because the air is not completely station at LCC. The new equipment will be without ~olor facilities or independent recycled. Fresh air is frequently introduced into the system to pre- t~ansmission, but students will have the opportunity to produce, direct and show actual programs over a cable transmission system. serve air quality. Operation of the station will be through Teleprompter Cable Cox also oointed out that LCC is a Eugene Water and Electric 10 in cooperation with the University of Oregon and PL3. One area of use for the station will be instructional programming Board (EWEB) customer. Under the terms of our agreement with which would include credit classes in which students could enroll EWEB, LCC buys electricity at and attend via the cable transmission. The station will be located on the second floor of the Mass Comthe cheapest rate, which is the rate charged for surplus energy known munications Department in the Forum Building. Elliott reports, as the "dump rate." In return "We expect to have the basic construction done within the next three LCC has agreed that on days that weeks and the final equipment installed, hopefully three weeks after ' EWEB declares to be peak over- that." Television instructors Mike Hopkinson and Fred Kelley emphasized load days, LCC will shut down one of its two boilers for two th~t the new construction will not interfere with student instruction.c separate periods of two hours First term concentration will be on engineering and lectures while each. The periods are separated the second term will be devoted to lab work. At that time, it is so that the heat loss within the expected that students will be ready to begin use of the station. Lane to install cable 1V studio Page 2 · 1'0RCH' 'Oct; ·16, HJ73 ' , , '· {=Porum ) 00AR~l[e [Letters ) ""'~~ .. as- (Editor's note: The Forum serves as an opportunity for members of the LCC community of those involved in the community to express their opinions. The following commentary was submitted by ASLCC 1st Vice-President, Barry Hood). From reading the October 9, 1973 edition of the Torch, I would reason that the main objective of this publication is to keep the public misinformed. No:No, not ill-informed; misinformed'. On the front page of the Oct. 9 edition, the Torch printed close to 5,000 copies of something which was coi:npletely untrue. The portion to which I refer-in this article states, "However, the Senate took no action on these items at the meeting," This is a damned lie. The sentence before it read, "Red Fox said that his resignation and Hood's would be discussed at the Oct. 4 meeting of the Student Senate.'' I assure you that David Re.d Fox, the ASLCC Executive, is no liar. When he informed the public that the issues of resignations would be discussed, he meant it. They were subsequently discussed, reviewed, and voted on in this meeting. In the Oct. 4 meeting TORCH stated the the which ''Senate took no action on these (resignation) items,'' The Associated Students of Lane Community College did in fact choose not to ask for our resignations by roll call votes. The Senate chose to stand behind us as their elected leaders. Barry Hood 1st Vice-President (Editor's note: This is correct. The ASLCC Senate chose not to ask for the resignations of these officials). 11 TSK-iSk 1 MY GOOD MAN-i~E GAA~ ARI: 0/ER HER.Er 11 WEEKLY SPECIAL Syrians Goaded Sadat Into Yorn Kippur War by .Jack Anderson WASHINGTON - The outbreak of fighting in the Mid- dle East caught Washington by surprise. The intelligence reports from Syria and Egypt told of the military preparations and warned of the building tensions. But the White House policymakers didn't take the reports seriously. We have seen some of the secret tntel Iigence reports and can now relate the behind-the-scenes developments that led to this dangerous new outb'r eak. In Cairo. President Sadat had been threatening Israel with an all-out war. But a 1 1('op~T1ghl . l\l7J. h\· l'nilPd F,,alun• S\nrt1(':il<' . Inc .I secret intelligence dispatch said he gave contrary orders to the Egyptian Army to avoid provoking a war. Sadat explained to his generals that he had to talk tough to maintain intPrnational interest in the Mid<lle EasL Sadat was goaded. however, by' the Syrians ~ Syria's President Asad. in private conversations. twl itt led the Egyptians. On<· secret report quoted him as saying bluntly that he didn't expect much from Egyptians. Other intPlli_genct• rPports described a growing tPndPnC':,' among Arabs to trPat The innocent b:tstander · -by Art Hoppe _; Irving Wasp, Draft Dodger It was a heartrending scene in the Wasp household. Mr. and Mrs. Wasp's oldest son, Irving, had just been drafted. "Well, it isn't the end of the world, son,'' said Mr. Wasp, trying to smile bravely in the face of this disaster. "hfter you do your two years, you can go back to college on the G. I. Bill. Tell me, Carol Newman EDITOR Paul Waldschmidt ASSOClb. TE EDITOR Mark Rahm PHOTO EDITOR Joe Munoz PHOTOGRAPHER Steve Busby SPORTS EDITOR ADVERTISING MANaGER Norma Van Rodney Cross PRODUCTION Harris Dubin Dennis Myers Member of Oregon Community College Newspaper Association and Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. The TORCH is published on Tuesday throughout the regular academic year and every other Tuesday during Summer Term. Opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the college, student government or student body. Nor are signed articles necessarily the view of the TORCH. All correspondence should be typed or printed, double-spaced and signed by the writer. Mail or bring all correspondence to: TORCH, Center 206, Lane Community College, 4000 East 30tb Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97405; Telephone 747-4501,I Ext. 234. have they assigned you your branch of service yet?' "Yeah," said Irving gloomily. "They're going to make me a White House aide." "h White House aide!'' Even Mr. Waspblanched at this blow. "Well , it could be worse, I suppose. They could've made you a Congressman/' Mrs. Wasp broke into tears. "Oh, I didn't raise my boy to be a politician," she sobbed. "What"." ,. ever will our friends think?" "Now, now, mother," said Mr. Wasp, patting her on the shoulder. "Everybody knows Irving isn't becoming a politician by choice. He was drafted. His country needs him and he's answering his We should be proud of him." country's call. "I should've gone to Canada like some of the other kids," said Irving grimly. "You'd be an exile for life, son," said Mr. "They'd never grant you amnesty. It Wasp. wouldn't be fair to the other young men who took their chances in Washington." "Well, I still don't see why they can't have all-volunteer politicians the way they used to," said Irving grumpily. Mr. Wasp sighed. "You know the answer to When the polls in 1973 showed that that, son. politicians ranked at the very bottom of the list in those the public trusted and admired -- right below used car salesmen -- young men started refusing to go into politics." "So what?" said Irving. '' The country needs White House aides and ' Congressmen and even a President, son, to defend (Continued on back page) I Sadat's threats toward lsr.-Jel with derision. The rl'port s warned this pressure from hi~· fellow Arabs might force Sadat, even against his better judgment. to resume shooting. Apparently, this is exact!':,' what happened. Commoditil's Market: The commodities market never .. has drav.rn ttw attention of the public like the stock ·market. There are no ''glamour stocks" there - only wheat. corn and soybeans. Yet the commodities market has a much larger impact on our daily livPs than the stock m:1rkl'I. The wild fluctuations of the market this past ':,'ear. for example. were instrumental in driving up the prices of beef. bread and milk in the supermarkets. · Now. a House suhcommittet~ is investigating the commodities market. and has already come up with some disturbing, unpublished evidence. The Com mod it ies Exchange Authority. which is supposed to police the commo<l it ies ina rket. allegedly filPd false reports. There is Pv idPnce that CE:\ officials also han• hN•n cooperating with the big traders the agency is supposed to govern. The House subcommittee is also considPring a probe of the Russian wheat dPal. We have .1lrcadv writtPn. for example. that the Russians may have speculated on the U.S. futures market in violation of law. Some mav call it dull, but the commodities investigation may pay off in lower supermarket prices. La bnr A n{!ered: President Nixon ·s romance with labor is on the rocks. From the beginning. it was a love affair of political expediencv. The President and AFLCIO boss George Meany (Continued on page 3) Dear Editor: I'm a disabled veteran. I almost lost my life in an ambush in Vietnam and also hold the Army CommendatioQ Medal for Heroism in This experience moticombat. vates my concern over the following matters. Man takes the time and energy to devise a computer, a journey to the moon, and a nuclear bomb. He has day light at the tip of his finger, two rivers running through his home, he keeps his food frozen while living in ·rooms the temMan perature of the tropics. puts his energies to these tasks I ask you: Why can't he put his energies to the task of getting along? Urban life has existed in the area ·of Mesopotamia longer than anywhere else on our earth, yet a war that could develop to the point of bringing life as we know it to an end, is in progress in this part of our world. The young have a life to live Those who run ahead of them. our societies no longer have a life long future to look forward to. I wonder if all the old leaders think about destroying the futures of these other human beings. Can so few not think about so many? Are you in school because you want to improve your future? We spend time and energy to better educate our sons and daughters and are proud that they are so learned. These same individuals have demonstrated over conflict in Vietnam. Were these demonstrations over war any indicator of their learning experiCould it be said that ences? this was a display of energy showing a conscientious awareness on ~ehalf of our younger generation? This type of energy changed the military-industrial movement in our nation and the world. Let me say that I am not advocating violent demonstrations. I hope that it does not take riots, hate, and more destruction to let it be known that there exists concern. Concern over the Middle East conflict is what I am advocating. But, if you do have concern such as f do, you will find yourself in a paradox, because in this hour of need our leaders are proving to us that they have indeed failed us. It has been said that war in the Middle East is the world's Russia· sends greatest threat. arms to Eygypt and Syria while America loads arms aboard aircraft for Israel. The world sat by and watched WW II begin, will we sit and watch WW Ill begin and proceed to the point of ending all life as we know it? Because the war is over the horizon, and we •do not experience it, do we sit by our television and ra tionalize away any thought of threat? If you know anyone who has ever survived a rocket attack in Vietnam ask them what it was like! My fellow human beings, in all sincerity I ask you, does man have the intelligence to preseni:e his own life? How can we fly · to the heavens and look back upon our sweet earth and allow ourselves to come so close to such a phenomenal threat? James Rennick Veterans Student Service Specialist. Oct. ' 18,· j973·• TORCH' 'Page 3· ' • Inmates to display art.v,ork during cultural v,orkshop Sex discrimination banned by Graci Mastalli (CPS)--Sex discrimination in education with a few education, non-vocational non-professionai eleminor exceptions is now explicitly illegal, but inmentary •and secondary schools, and public A three-day cultural workshop featuring the works of Chincano institutions of undergraduate higher education which stitutional non-compliance is reported rampant and Native american inmates of the' Oregon St_ate Penitentiary is have traditionally been single-sexed are exempt in. across the country. scheduled this month at Lane Community College. Non-compliance to Title IX of the Educational admissions only. Amendments of 1972 has been partially attributed In addition to Title IX several other federal The workshop is slated for Oct. 17, 18, and 19 with an art exhibit to the absence of official guidelines, but many laws and regulations concern sex discrimination in scheduled_Oct. 17-31. clear violations continue to occur. Some common educational institutions. Executive Order 112·16, examples are: as amended by Executive Order 11375 and Revised Inmates participating in the workshop are members· of the Order 4, prohibits sex discrimination in employment • A woman ~tudent's residency determined by prison's Chicano Cultural Club and Lakota Indian Club and are being her husband's domicile (while his legal home is. at educational institutions receiving federal allowed to . leave the penitentiary on a day-visit basis only. Special never determined by his wife's) -in order to charge contracts. Such contractors must practice nonarrangements made between the LCC Chicano Student Union, which married women residents out-of-state tuition. discrimination, and those under private control must is sponsoring the event, and prison officials call for the inmates to • Different housing rules and hours for men maintain written affirmative :1.ction programs. be driveri to LCC each day in state cars and then returned to Salem . and women. Non-discrimination in 8. dmissions to all health each evening. • Classes limited to one sex or the other, services training programs is required by Titles Art, poetry and dances will highli~ht each da~'s activities ~hich or required only for one sex. VII and VIII of the Public Services Act as amended begin at 10 a.m. and end bv 3:30 o.m. all events will take place m the • Quota systems and different standards for in 1971. This applies to admissions policies at main gallery of the LCC Art Department. admissions and financial aid for men and women. institutions otherwise exempt from Title IX admis- sions coverage. • Different dress code standards including hair The public is invited and admission is free. length and pants restrictions. The Office of Civil Rights (OCR) of the DepartTitle IX states, "No person in the United Stat.e s ment of Health, Education and Welfare is the enshall, . on the basis of sex, be excluded from par- forcing agency for Ttile IX. M present OCR is ticipation in, be denied the benefits. of,_ or be sub- writing the guideUnes for such enforcement. jected to discrimination under any educational proThe original deadline for release of the Title (Continued from page 2) August 21, 1968. offers to han- , gram of activity receiving Federal financial IX regulations is already past, making it difficult shared a distaste for Senator dle government relations for assistance. . . " to predict when the guidelines will go into effect. George McGovern and the Hughes. O'Brien wrote: "My Since fewer than a dozen educational institutions However, OCR is accepting complaints filed under antiwar movement fail to receive federal funds, Title IX covers services would be available Title IX and about one third have been settled. The courtship lasted virtually every one of the 250~ institutions of higher as required, with a staff inAny discriminatory practice which can be at through the 1972 campaign. learning, and the 18,000 elementary and secondary all substantiated should be considered grounds for cluding a highly competent Nixon was presented with an school districts, as well as the thousands of pro- a complaint. governmental relations man. honorary hard hat and bluefessional, vocational, and proprietary schools in the a top-notch public affairs exThere are three basic types of compl:;ints availcollar v/orkers trooped to the U.S. pert and two secretaries. The able unde r Title IX: the individual complaint; a polls to help re-elect him. As Technically Title IX outlaws sex discrimination • class action · complaint, where a group claims to staff would perform necesstheir reward. the President in education with some specific exceptions, but have been victim of a particular act of discriminary services on a priority appointed Peter Brennan. a in actuality it only covers that discrimination which ation; and a request ·for investigation, which may basis." tough New York labor can be documented. ·be filed by anyone who has reason to believe In return, O'Brien wanted leader. to be Secretary of Exceptions to Title IX include: discrjmination exists in an institution. $180,000 a year. plus exLabor. Religious institutions may apply for exemptions Complaints should be filed by writing the Office But now. the working penses. in areas where the law would conflict with re- of Civil Rights, Department of .Health, Education, men's ardor for Nixon has To emphasize his imporligious tenets. and Welfare, Washington, DC 20201. The letter pl11mmet0rl as living costs Military service- and Merchant Marine train- should include all available information in detail tance, O'Brien gave his hotel h a \' e s k v r o c k e t e d . T h e ing schools are exempt from the law. and c·o nvention hall phone and state that the communication is to be considered purchasi~g power of the Private undergraduate institutions of higher a formal complaint filed under Title IX. ·n umbers, since the 1968 Demaverage worker has dropped ocratic convention was then two per cent while corporate One of four in state about to begin. profits haye shot up 2:1 per But for a former cent. Postmaster General, O'Brien At the supermarket. the worker finds food costs have made two unforgivable erThe Lane Community College Notification of the accreditation 'four-year institutions. LCC agone up six per cent in the rors in his letter. nursing program has become the came from League headquarters wards two-year associate degrees last six months. At the hospiHe spelled Maheu's name fifth college-affiliated nursing after representatives from Utah to its graduates. tal. operating room charges "Mayhew." And the special program in the state to be acc- and California inspected the LCC have soarPd 48 per cent. If he The other four colleges in the delivery letter arrived with redited by the National League program late this summer. state with NLN accreditation are , should trv to huv a new home. four cents postage due. for Nursing. Estelle Singleton, new nursing Portland Community College,Linn interest ~ates have reached :administrator at the college, said, Benton Community College, the records at nine and 10 per the major benefit of the accreditUniversity of Oregon and the Unicen( :ation is that it will open doors versity of Portland. LCC is also Down at the Labor Departadditional students. The veterans, With the help of a $150,000 1for LCC nursing graduates going accredited by the Oregon Board ment. meanwhile. Brennan contract from the US Department four of them women, include A:on to baccalaureate programs at of Nursing. has been stewing. He openly of Health, Education and Welfare, bram S. Horowitz, Geneva Foster, clashed with the President LCC has launched its second ses- Dan Lowder, Ed Mc Lane, Dougover the vpto of the minimum sion this fall of a pr9gr~!J} desf~ned las C. Moore, Gloria Truitt, Glenwage bill. This is the soTt of to train ex-military dental hygien- da Wadr, and Margaret Wellingt.on. di slovaltv that the President Since the training is to suppists for civilian practice. won't. co.untenance from his Graduation from . the program lement their own previous milCabinet. So. ·a s soon as the awards each student with an ass- itary instruction, the veterans are President catches his breath ...... for "professional service" , ociate of science degree and makes expected to complete the twofrom Watergate. Brennan . the student eligible to take state year hygiene program in 12 to 15 months. will be dumped. The Irishlicensing examinations. m an from the streets of Lane's program, the only one of Manhattan. who rose from its kind in the nation, starts its hard hat to Secretary of second session with eight Labor. will go back to the ROBERTSON'S union halls. In crim inating Letter: The DRUGS . Senate Watergate Committee is quietly investigating the extent of former Democratic Chairman Larry O'Brien's relationship with eccentric "Your Prescription -billionaire Howard Hughes. 14th & Oak Our Main Concern'' We have uncovered an im''downtown" 343-7715 30th and Hilyard portant piece of evidence in the investigation. It is the original of a letter from O'Brien to Robert Maheu, who used to be the major Burgers, Shakes, Fries domo of Hughes' Las Vegas "Tl')' .belt la old-faeFldcJad hadarpw• empire. The letter, written on Anderson ... Nursing program receives accreditation Ex- military hygienists review slcills C9ookCJ'ain u~wd ted 600kg HAMBURGER DAN'S r ,. .., .,, Page 4 TORCH ·Review: Oct. 16,. 1973 Racing dream becomes reality 'Siddhartbo~ Like puritanical jungle trek by Bill Tufts In adapting Herman Hesse's "Siddhartha" to the screen, screen writer - director Conrad Rooks seems to have become so involved with faithful reproduction of the original story that he forgot his own medium. "Siddhartha'' is Hesse's allegorical tale of a youth's lifelong search for truth in 500 B. C. India. The life of Siddhartha (Shashi Kapoor) parallels the story of the enlightenment of his namesake Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, whom Hesse's Siddhartha meets and loses a companion to in his journeys. Rooks displays the letter of Hesse's novel without often allowing the viewer to understand the intent. The first part of Siddhartha's journey is into the forest, as was the Buddha's. He seeks to learn the disciplines of asceticism and meditation from the recluse guru who live there, again as did the Buddha. • But the viewer, even one who has read the book, will be lucky if he can keep up with the story line in this sequence, much less recognize the allegorical implications. Rooks has followed faithfully the text and butted scenes together in such an abrubt fashion that Siddhartha's entire forest journey streaks by, leaving the viewer no time for contemplation. It's the same throughout the film, Rooks continually pushes on without regard to pace. He seems not to have realized that Hesse wrote a novel, not a screenplay. It's like being on a dangerous jungle trek with Rooks as the puritanical guide, those who linger are lost. The cinematography by Sven Nykvist is interesting. While his I Dr. Robert J. William.son ~""' . 0 ptometr1st The LCC chapter of the Oregon Student Public Interest Research eEye Examinations Group (OSPIRG), along with some state members of the Volunteers in Service to America (VISTb..) will present a program for a self- Lenses funding transportation improvement system at Lane in the next two or three weeks. ewi re Rim Glasses STANDARD 862 Olive When I was a kid and other kids were dreaming of going to the moon or riding the range with Roy Rogers:, my daydreams were centered on racing; not horse or dog racing, but automobile racing. Wednesday ni!lht mv nream partly came true at Eugene's newest race track . I stopped at the track to talk to the manager-for a possible story and he convinced me that I should compete in at least one race to get the real feel of the story I was thinking of writing. I said I was interested but l'd like to race against a friend of mine who happened to be at the track and who has some experience. We had about an hour to wait before the actual race began so my friend and I sat around and swapped The talk small talk while sipping beverages. centered around things ·we planned to do in the future, with no reference to the race itself. It's funny how people who are about to risk life and limb talk of the future as if indeed there is going to be a future. Finally, one of the track employees walked over and told us it was time for us to man our vehicles. My friend, after a fast glance to make sure everything was o.k. climbed in his vehicle with the air of a pro. I just got into mine and hoped a wheel wouldn't come off like I had seen in an earlier race that evening. Some guy cam e over and mumbled his name and said he was my pitman and lots of luck. I was kind of startled to discover that I was going to have a pitman because I had always thought those guys were only around to fix things that break. Having something break was the last thing I wanted. I was just thinking of telling the manager that I already had all I needed for the story when he came Ohri r ""' Phone CEPIRG and VISTA members plan a survey to determine if students would help pay for transportation improvements .and why people don't ride the bus. 'fJ!1t~1,101w· 1 "IIJl~it,, over and told us to start our engines. Then, before I could offer any protests, the go signal was given and I found myself moving. The straight stretch was great; nothing to it, I thought. Suddenly I realized I was rapidly coming up on corner number one. Deciding I was going to give it all I could, I slid into the corner and before I really had time to straighten it up, I found myself sliding into corner number two. Again, I · had no problems and realized, much to my glee, that I was far ahead of my friend and competitor. Corner number three did offer some resistance because of a slight obsta9le but by now I w~s driving with the skill of Jackie Stewart and easily handled the corner. After a mandatory pitstop and fast refueling, I was off again to win the race by nearly half a lap, with life and limb still intact. Such a re the tricycle races at the College Side • Inn next to LCC. Wednesday night was the first race · in over a year and a half due to an Oregon Liquor Control Commission regulation which prohibited such entertainment. However, that regulation was lifted Oct. 5 and the ra~ing started again. . The object of the race is simple--two tricylist compete against each other with the winner going on to compete with other winners until one becomes Trophies for first, second and third champion. place and other awards are given. College Side Inn co-owner Wayne Neal said he hopes to have U of O fraternities and sororities compete against each other and maybe some day, competition between the U of O and arn. Neal said he is unaware of any other place in Oregon offering tricycle racing but added the idea orginally came from California. The races begin at 8:30 p.m. every Wednesday. New projects focus on t,:a"sportation eFashion Eyewear · econtact by Jim Gregory 686-0811 The main funding of the program would involve a one dollar charge per term for each . car. These funds~ plus ASLCC funds, would EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES :_ 1 BEDROOM unfurnished $102.50 2 BEDROOM unfurnished $124.50 (a limited number of furnished help pay for bus tokens, possible construction of a bike path to LCC, and other transportation improvements. If the program works out OSPffiG plans to ask the LCC Board of Education for additional funds. According to CS PIRG member Rick Mathews, "There is a definite problem involving transportation to LCC. A. total of 75 Amnesty Day per cent of LCC students live in the Eugene-~pringfield area, putting them within reach of the bus system." Mathews said "between 3,000 and 5,000 cars park nere everyday--this is a waste of energy, a needless cost of maintenance and adds to the air pollution. There are three avenues , to improve transportation: construction of a bike path, car pools, and a subsidized bus system.'' 'a-ceremony for · forgotten vidims of the Vietnam War' to Chris Sturm, According of the Lane County president chapter of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, the "victims' of the Vietnam Era will have a special day much like Veterans Day on Oct. 22 or Nov. 12. To be called Amnesty Day, Sturm said the idea was to remember all persons who've paid dearly • for the war, not just the obvious victims. He said the planned march and cereµiony would b.e particularly for the "forgotten" victims; the ***,tc,lc******** DAIRY~· 'ANN Breakfast, · lunches, dinners. Homemade soups and pies. Complete fountain ser_yice. 5:_-30 a.m. to 10:00 p.=µi.: 7 days a week 1810 Chamb~rs 343-2112 • 500,000 veterans who received less than honorable discharges at a time when the desertion rate rose from three to five times that of Korea, the 100,000 resisters here and abroad and the untold number of political prisoners in all the countries involved. Sturm said that universal and unconditional amnesty, as called for in petitions to be presented at the ceremony, is needed for both humanitarian and political reasons. The finai selection and announcement of the date hinges on the availability of Oregon's Senator Mark Hatfield, who's been asked to attend to receive the petitions bearing 2,600 signatures. However, Sturm said, the Nov. 12 date would be adopted if no response from Hatfield was received in time for the Oct. 22 date. march from downtown The Eugene to Skinner's Butte is tentltively scheduled to start at 10:30 a.m., with the ceremonies to begin at 11 a.m. .Oct. 16, 1973 • TORCH Page 5 lbat's Bappaning an .CIIPUS ! • *Student services *Student facilities *Student announcements $5.00 For the LCC registered LCC students Birth *Student jobs Control'Clinic offers (not spouses or families) 1. Birth control & sexuality info & counseling through a mandatory pre-clinic "edocational" 2..Complete pelvic (including pap tests & other lab work ) and general health exams 3. Treatment of common gyn. problems and/or referrals as needed 4. Birth control distribution and interim contraceptives methods (for men & wcmen) 5. Follow-up counceling, exams & binh control distribution as needed for the iooividual For the First Time • LCC Birth Control Clinic mandatory pre -clinic birth control/ sexuality seminars each Mon. at 3 p.m. Clinic hours-Tues. & Thurs. 5:30 to 9:30 p.m. 1st seminar Od 1st clinic Od 15 16 by appointment only! TORCH Classifie d c.;4ds II For Sale I $1. 00 a yard, SALE Orlon/ Arne! Jersey Challis print-45" to 60" wide, '' reg. $1.50 to $1. 75 a yard." ANDREA.'s CLOTH & CLOTHES, 2441 Hilyard, phone 345-1324. -- !Ill. 10)b Wi lb-.mette - _euQ..ene, or~°9n () j))/:f!~·~4Z) 1966 Chrysler (.Plushmobile) Imperial, full power, clean, needs tires, $950.00. 1971 Montego, 2-door Mercury "sharp." Will wholesale out to student for $1,695.00. Contact Jude Nelson, Mass Communications Dept. or call 6893708. ~ •Kenmore Sewing Machine $25.00. Call Marian687-1781. Like New, French Provincial Livingroom set, $450.00 call 689-0892 Twin , extra long, firm bed set. Compiete with frame & head board $50.00 686-0624 ,,_, . 1972 Bultaco Alpina Ex. Cond. Honest Buy, 345-7545. Nickomat Camera, 135 lens, Weston Master '5; Meter & Misc. Craig-345-4929 New Northwood lodgepole sofa, like type used in new condominiums $150.00 or best offer phone 686-0624 w 1961 International Travel-all for sale, $425.00. Call 7476934. LEGAL HELP IS HERE in the SAC office Free Instruction r 1ve .PUss ies need Iovmg care FREE Call 998-8403. mger an Guitar lessons. Flat picking styles. Happy to teach beginners. Call 8954361 or 747-7868 evenings. FREE -- 11 mo. old black male dog. Small, less than 10 lbs., housebroken. 1/2 P~:>0dle, 1/2 Call Georgette, "Mix" 343-5877 white kitten, Free---Pure speaks three languages apd knows John Howard personally. Call ext. 313. . Housing I OMSI CLASSES-- -Fall terIIr begins Saturday at the Southwest bMSI downtown. You can still register at Fifth and Willamette, or by writing OMSI at P.O. Box 1052 in Eugene, or by calling 3445248, or by attending the first class session. .......------· II RENTERS - a special "Renter's Handbook", developed by the Oregon Student Public InGroup Research terest (OOPIRG), . U of O office. You can get a free copy . at the Student Awareness Center, Center Building, LCC, -Room 211, EUB, University of Oregon or by sending a self-addressed postcard and OSPIRG 408 S.W. $1.00 to: Second Aveirland, Oregon, ,. 97204. ' ' DJ Books The math department needs to • purchase or have the loan of two textbooks this term, namely "Calculus With analytic Geometry" (Leithold, second edition) and "College Algebra and Trigonometry'' • (Bryant and Ka.rush). Persons willing to loan or sell those books should call Tom Reimer, ext. 386._ Page 6 TORCH Oct. 16, 1973 ' ·TORCH t ,, ' Classified Ads Job Placement For information on any of these jobs contact the Job Placement Office or call 747• 4501. ext 228. PT Person with publications and graphics background, prefer someone who is journalism major. Must bring portfolio--Hours: flexible to fit student Pay: $open. PT & FT Frycooks to work graveyard shift. Pay: $1.50 to start. - -·- r. • :• : III i - --·- PT Person to do housework in the Eugene area. Hours: to suit student's Pay: $I. 75 to $2 hr. PT Room Service: In Cottage Grove. Hours: 7 am to 3 pm 3 days a week. Pay: $1. 75 & PT Afterschool supervision jobs--a plenty. Hours: Late afternoons Pay: $open to $3.50 a day. • lips.~ J.ad'\' ;,,;.1i ~:~. ' -C, ~.: . ,,,- 1., • J~• ~i --- ~ I ;? ~~11u'/w1M~ '.~:,,~ --~~'#oNO 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 PT Person who is in Mechical Drafting and about to finish up--Hours: to suit student Pay: $open. ln troductng , 0 "i:;.... . PT Need Bartender to work approximately 25 to 30 hrs. a week, more or less if preferred. Hours: 5 pm to 2 am. Pay: $1. 75 hr. to start. PT Fry Cooks: Days a-nd Swingshift. Pay: accordh1g to experience. Some jobs prefer that you have experience, one will train. PT Need two persons to work counter and one as fry cook. Hours: 5 pm to 9 pm - three nites a week & 8 hrs. on Sat. & Sun. Pay: $1.50 to $2 hr. •n,t' fi~ '/ deodorant , FOR WOMEN Lady Trac II Razor Lemon-Up Shampoo Active Tooth Polish Jean Nate Woolite Midol Contac Cold Capsules Breath Pleasers Aqua Fresh At Least One Bonus Product Tame Balsam & Body Instant Conditioner Playtex Deodorant Tampons SEMI FREE! 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1O Dial Soap Excedrin Active Tooth Polish Flair Pen Dep for Men Shampoo. Breath Pleasers Sea & Ski Lipsaver Contac Cold Capsules Trac II Razor Foamy Shave- Cream FOR MEN AT LEAST ·10 PRODUC TS FOR YOU THAT WILL SAVE YOU MONEY! HANDY FOR TRAVEL AVAILABLE TODAY FROM YOUR BOOKSTORE (LIMIT: ONE PER STUDENT) LCC BOOKSTORE "we're right on campus" 2nd floor mezzanine, Center Bldg. II Meetings I Mysticism in Literature (in classic and contemporary literature) Fr. Cassian, Newman Center, Tuesdays at 7: 30 p. m. The Letters of St. Paul (the man and his message to the early Church, and his importance for us today) Fr. Wilkes, Newman Center at 7:30 on Weds. FaMILYLIFEseries, sixpublic lectures and discussions on parents and their teen-age children, in Apprenticeship 223/224 at 7:30, Monday night=s_,,_._ _ _ A . THREE DA. Y WORKSHOP, featuring the works of Chicano and Native American inmates of the Oregon State Penitentiary is scheduled to be held .at LCC on Oct.17 through 19. Sponsored by the Chicano Student Union, featuring Art, Poetry and Native Dances in the art Gallery. C6 PIRG at LCC will be meeting twice a month..1. Wednesdays at 5:00 p.m. The first regular meeting will be Wednesday, October IO in the Student awareness Center, Room 2~4. Center Building • • TUES., Oct. 16 at 7:30 p.m. E~U at U of 0, room to be posted there for films and speeches on problems in Middle East . .LANE-COUNTY WOMEN~S Political Caucas meeting--Oct 17, room 5, First Congregational Church at 1050 E. 23rd St. in Eugene, 7:30 p.m. Speaker will be Ruth Edwards, Springfield Council Woman and Director of 4'Cs Child Care. Topic: "Child-. care. Prospects for Lane County," Everyone Welcome Students interested in the CONCRETE STATEMENT or the LITERARY ARTS CLU~ should attend meetings on THURSDa Y in the Center Bldg. room 436, or contact Sheila Juba in the English Dept. BUCKIN BRONCC6 --Anyone interested in forming a rodeo club, please leave a message for Richard Day in the student senate area, 2nd floor of the Center bldg, ASL CC SENA TE meeting, Oct. 17, at 1 pm. Announcements LCC's Birth Control Clinic ,s • open to students on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:30 p.m. by appointment only. To get an appointment, students must attend educational classes held on Monday afternoons at - 3 p.m. and pay a $5.00 fee. For information go to Health Services in the Health Building. CHICANO STUDENT UNION is co-sponsoring the appearance of CHEECH & CHONG in the LCC gym at 7 p.m. on Oct. 21. Tickets are $3.50 & available at the LCC information desk in the Administration Bldg. · and at several outlets downtown. . • I V1ts Club spmson VBtsFair NMI information? Saturday Oct. 20th 11.-00 to 3.-00 Free Beer to follow Vets Chb office hours. Tues. & Thurs. 12:00 to 5:00 Forum305 GLORIA STIENEM ·ill speak in the Portland Civic Auditorium on Friday, Oct. 19 to wome interested in women' problems Congress Hotel, Portland at 8:30. Donatio n $5.00, Bus available, $4.00 round trip .. for tickets and information, call 689-4087. WOMEN IN EDUCA. TION (form erly the Act Hoc Committee for. Women in Higher Education is a newly reorganized groupj of female employees--facult members, secretaries, cafeteria workers, etc,--and students from all branches of education in Oregon (colleges, universities, public schools, private schools.). The group is working on the problem of sex-stereotyped education in Oregon and on sex-biased policies regarding employees in educational institutions. The WOMEN in Education meeting will start at 4:30 p.m at the Ramada Inn, near th Civic Auditorium, after the day-long Good Samaritan program 9 a.m., Oct. 19, 1973, a the Civic Auditorium in Port land. . Gloria Steinham wil speak on the topic of Growin Up Female. To get ticket ($4.00 each) for the Steinha talk write to: Good Samarita Hospital Lecture Series 101 NW 22nd ave., Portland 0 97210 WOMEN'S WORKSHOP· will be held on the LCC Campus Nov 12 through 16, from 10 a.m to 2 p.m. Registration start now and should be complete, by Nov. I. For more in formation, contact Caro Jones, Margie Holland or Pat rick Fraleigh in LCC Coun st!ling Dept. Phone 747-4501 ext. 216 or 270. The Lane Co. Breathmobile will be at LCC Tues. & Wed. this week. Oct. 16, 1973 TORCH Page 7 •TORCH Classified Ads RETREATS Oct. 19-21, McKenzie Bridge, sponsored by the Newman Center, November 2-4, McKenzie Bridge, sponsored by CCM Representatives of the UNITED STATES MARINECorps will be on campus October 16th & 17th, from 10 am to 2:30 pm. Captain Peter Morosoff and his assistants would be interested and willing to engage in informal dialogues with concerned students about subjects relating to the military. They will be in the concourse area of the Center Building. Gospel of Matthew as a Resource for Christian living, Doug Huneke, Koinonia Center, Thursday , 7 p.m. The Epistle to the Romans (reading and discussion of "The Group" (an opportunity for personal growth and exploration of values in a small group) Bob Peters, Wesley Church, 9:45 a.m. Do you have ·a study problem? Math tutors available ()et,21 o,e the Kar Doc has tools You are always welcome at Newman Center: 1850 Emerald, Koinonia Center: 1414 Kincaid and Wesley Center: 1236 Kincaid Electronic Mobile Tune -up Shop Dial Retreival has audio & visual aids available. dupt,VJel * all work guaranteed Eecoming a person in an inpersonal world (mini-course dealing with the issues of loneliness/friendship, adsurdity/ faith, occupational/vocational, institutional pressures /integrity) six 2 hour ses_sions, maximum size 15 persons. Time to be set • after ten persons have registered with the leader. Don Jerke at Koinonia Center. Special Study aids WIMblB ii Slllly Skils ,,,., Csnter Bldg., 4th floor Ask to see catalog in that dept. SAC will travel! Enjoy the "Backdoor" coffeehouse downstairs at Koinonia Center, 1414 Kincaid . . . • a relaxed informal gathering place for students, faculty and staff to enjoy fellowship, quiet, refreshment and conversation. A place for the intersection of ideas and for Christian Community. Social Science tutors available in Appr,nticssllip Bklg-roan 217 Seeatt in the aSLCC office. She is assembling a voters pamphlet. University Worship (meal and celebrative worship) Koinonia Center, Wed. 5 to 7 p.m. • English tutors ar, available in the Centllr Bkig., 4th !kill ~t;,,- CANDIDATES FOR ASLCC OFFICES: If you are running for office, please see Robin BURNS Math Bldg. ASLCC Senate voted• Oct.4th to hire Eric Haws as .Attorney for the Student body....... for more information, come to SAC or call ext. 230, ask for David or Jerry Edgmon our low over-head guarantees low prices Student Awareness Center The Kar Doc can go anywhere any time Sunday thru _Friday Ernie Stalcup 342-8511 or 942-3757 2nd floor, Center Bldg. ART NATIVE· DANCING CHICANO & NATIVE AMERICAN POETRY inmates of tt,e Oregon State Penitentiary Oct.17 -19 Lane Community College a cultural workshop , Library in the Art Gallery Monday, Oct. 22 11a.m. to 3 p.m. ~ee people are welcome at: Newman Center 1850 Emerald Koinonia Center - 1414 Kinkcaid Roman Catholic Mass at Newman Center - Saturday V~il, 5 pm. Sunday Masses, 8:30, 10, 11:30 a.m. and 8. p.m. Dai~ 12:30 pm messages for LCC Fr. Dieringer accepted in student activity area, 2nd floor , Center Bkig. home ·phone 688- 2605 I other Newnan & Koinonia events listed in meeting notice section) 1 LCC Art B ldg. CREECH &CHONG TICKETS $ 3.50 advance $ 4.00 at door Sun Oct 21 7 ~10:30PM. LCC Gym Tickets for Cheech & Chong are available at the informat1,)ri , desk in the· administration bldg. Pd. for by ASLCC Senate sponsored by the LCC Chicano Student Union Page rz:oRCH. ,Octt 16, 1973 TORCH Classified Ads ·I\IUC film seri~s I ;,, m Lawrence • TORCH staff Leam and earn valuable work experience in the field of journalism . adm. one Jollar all profits go to community & movement groups RASPBERRY RECORDING IS OPEN to the public--for those interested in seeing what goes into making a record or doing audio production work. Stop by 16-D Oakway Mall 6872526:..:..•------Thesis & Term papers, typed in my home. any kind of typing by experienced typist. Call Irene at 746-7875 after 5:30 p.m. Lost & Found LOST, one shellacked wooden . bracelet. REWhRD Kari Kugler, 687-9603. The Math Dept. Secretary is holding 3 lost books. If you lost and can identify them please claim them in the Math Dept. , -:::"'i I SFE Credits available be part of the ,..L Services lf ~----- j WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 10. RIGHT ON I Toe Black experience on film and in poetry. A stark celebration of blackness. This film is 'percussive, exclamatory, and avid and funny and murderous. It is about making love and war. "- THE NEW YORKER. "Guerilla Drama of street gangs, junkies, soul music, hustlers, and Revolution.'"NY DA IL Y NEWS. "Revolutionary Revelation Ima mu Baraka (Leroi Jones} with the original last poets. Shown with the NORTH AMERICAN INOIAN PART I: TREATIES MA DE A ND TREATIES BROKEN, a history of the current dispute over the treaty of Medicine L.reel<, s1snt::u m 1854, which assured the Indians of the state oT Washington of the right to fish, hunt, etc. 177 Lawrence. 7 & 9 p. m . ,_ WOMAN to tutor Math; Calculas, algebra, etc. Contact 686-5013 and ask for Mrs. Wasan between 10 and ll:30 on M-W or 2196-3 Patterson St. Eugene. TAKE MY MIMEO>COPE .. PLEhSE -- Any department that would like a free mimeoscope, call Jan John, ext. 340, (It's used to copy line art onto mimeograph stencils.) audiovisual equipment I Rides Three women from the Halfway House need a ride to school from 11th and Jackson, MWF at 10:00 a.m. ~all 342 - 2548 , ask for Lmda. Chappel. Ride Needed - - To LCC and return, from Snell and East Amazon, Mon.-Fri. Call Corinne Meehan, ext. 261. M A TANOV Posistions ar, open for Production Manager, Reporters : Advertising &Production staff. Apply to TORCH Editor, Specializing in all type of leather goods Leathercraft Kits - Garment Leather • Snaps - Rivets - Stamping Tools Carving Leather - Latigo Leather All Type Of Leath ·e r Tools Dyes - Belts - Purse Kits - Billfolds Kits - ·Buckles - Books - Craftaids (Drop by and browse around, free leathercraft books, ;ps & pointers on leathercraft.) 229 W. 7th st. Eugene, Oregon 97 401 Volunteers ·O>PRIG needs volunteer help to make our projects work. If you're interested and want to help, PLEASE come in or call at either our LCC or I '1't~ II«#, ~ea,u,, toµ., Guaranteed G·round & Flight Instruction private pilot Need 4 to 6 persons to assist with 6th graders on an environmental trip up the McKenzie river for three days. Oct. 18th, 19th, and 20tho Prefer persons with outdoor skills--must provide own sleeping bags, they will provide transportation and food. No pay, needed on volunteer basis. Call Corinne, ext. 228. commercial multi-engine flight instructor "J,iee 1~ VETS FAIR Saturday Oct. 20th Gary Owens 687-3981 11:00-3:00 -~!1¾/\\ FREE BEER Carol Newman, 2nd floor, Center Bldg. or ca/1747-45O1, ext. 234 PLC/CPT College men who are members of the Marine Corps Pratoon leaders Class Civilian Pilot Training program-PLC/CPT can earn their civilian pilot licenses before they graduate-and the Corps pays the cost. PLC men cdn also receive $100 a month during the school year. Ask your Marine representative about PLC/CPT. The Marines are looking for a few good men. Mame Officer Selection team will be on campus: Date: Oct. 16 & 17 EARN EXTRA MONEY IN LEATHERCRAFT. tandy leather company II PLANTS & I Needed: Ride MWF after 5 to Poodle Creek Rd., Noti. Call Mery Lynn at 935-7337. Will help with gasoline. co,-,ot111ATION I COURIER -- Morning hours, $2.25 hr. See Phil Robley, AV Services, ext. 251. Wanted -Couples for beginners class in Round Dancing, Monday nights. Good exercise. Call ext. 313 for detailso onl . Wanted Tme: ll am to 2 Jill Place: Center Bldg. BUY TORCH Classified Adsl come & see our plants & antiques 555 Main St Spri phone 7 ~~A :iuM~~w BRING YOUR CLASSIFIED AO OR MEETING NOTICE TO: The TORCH Ad Dept., 2nd floor, Center Bldg. lane Community College, 4000 East 30th, Eugene Phone 747-4501, ext. 234, or 747-4508 ah,r hours-week-ends. Classifi«J Rate, 3 line minimum, 25C a line Classified Display Ratls-$1.00 per inch. ATTENTIO N: CAMPUS ORGANIZAT IONS "We will pick up and prepare your ad." Oct. 16, 1973 TORCH Page 9 LCC business manager, researcher resign after four year assignments Two top-level administrators who arrived at LCC within a month of each other four years ago have resigned less than two.weeks apart to take positions elsewhere in the state. They are William Watkins, LCC's business manager, and Comedy act coming to Lane Cheech and Chong, nationally known comedy team, will be appearing at the Lane Community ·College gymnasium, Sunday, Oct. 21 at 7 p.m. The concert, sponsored by the LCC Chicano Student :t-Jnion, ASLCC Senate and KASH radio, w111 feature the irreverent, antiestablishment humor has made the pair famous. Much of their humor is directed toward people of the so-called "counter culture' G Chinese, Canadian-born A Tommy Chong, originally teamed (Richard "Cheech" up with Martin), a Mexican-American who was born in Watts, California, after the two met in Canada. At the time of their meeting, Chong was working in a family-owned night club. The pair's start came when they joined an improvisational review group called '' City Lights''. The two soon left the group and went New York school awards credit for 'Perspectives on Watergate' . Buffalo, NY (CPS)--An experimental course entitled "Perspectives on Watergate" is being offered by the Political Science department at the State University of New York, (SUNY) Buffalo, this term. Marston Morgan Bill Watkins Marston Morgan, director of institutional research. Watkins has taken a similar business manager post with the Education Associa~_ion Oregon (OEh), effective Nov. 1. As business manager of OEh, Watkins will be one of four top officials in the 17,000.-member teachers' association and be responsible for a one million dollar annual operating budget. He joined LCC in July 1969 after more than 20 years in the aerospace industry in California. Besides his duties as the college's business m·anager, Watkins also held posts on several state and national budget and management advisory committees. Morgan, who was hired at LCC in August 1969, has been named executive director of the newlyPlanning Capitol created Commission in Salem. The Commission was authori~ed by the state legislature to review· all proposed construction of state buildings in the Salem area. The Commission also will be involved · in lor~g-range planning for the Salem metropolitan area and will be required to draw up guidelines for construction of state buildings throughout Oregon. Morgan leaves LCC after four years as head of research and planning for the college. During that time, the Eugene/Springfield campus experienced its greatest growth in terms of students and services, and is instructional currently in the final stages of planning for major expansion in coastal (Florence) area. the Applicants are still being sought to fill Watkins' post. The course has been limited to 200 studen(s and deals with . the topics of protection of national No $8X revolution ? Due to the class size, the course grade will depend on the midterm and final. Each lecturer will contribute a number of questions based on their topic to be used on the exams. l Dismissing the idea that there is a sexual revolution on campus, Mooney said reports of sexual permissiveness are getting a lot of attention while the "good news" of chastity has gone unnoticed. STIJ on /DAYS .. 7 to T/JRDAYS .. DO YOU HAVE A RELIGIOUS PREFERENCE?? The campus religious organizations in Eugene and on this campus are here to serve you. Clip out this ad ad and mail it to CCM, 1414 Kincaid St., E~ene, or hand carry it to our local instituFather James Deringer, in the Center Dining Hall. tion, The faith you prefer will receive your m name: a Assembly ofGod ill Baptist (Cons.) _Baptist (Southern) Campus Crusade for Christ Christian Church (Disciples ) Christian Science a Congregational a a Episcopal First Evangelical Jewish Lauer Day Sts. (Mormon) Lutheran( Mo Synod) Lutheran (ALC: LCA) Methodist (United.) a Roman Catholic Presbyterian Seventh Day Adventist Unitarian/Universalist Other ??? ' *****************•*********************** Name ---------------- Local Address • W. 2nd University of Oregon campus, and at the Meier and Frank department store in the Valley River Center. Advance tickets are being sold for $3.50 each with tickets available at the door for $4.00 each. ART and ARCHITECTURE SUPPLIES The image and role of women in literature are the focal points of LCC Language Arts instructor Karla Schultz's Survey of World Literature class this year. The class was offered because of "increased student interest", Ms. Schultz explained. She further emphasized that the study of literature has concentrated for a long time on man and the unusual male inliterature and now we should seek to understand the women's roles and the influence that literature has had on stereotyping women. The course if offered in a year's sequence; with the Fall Term Resins The pair currently has a new album, "Los Cochinos", on the market. Also appearing in the concert will be the musical group, '' Airto' '. The concert is scheduled to end by 10:30 p.m. Tickets for the concert are on sale at the Chrystalship and Sun Shop music stores, the LCC InDesk in the Adformation ministration Building, the Erb Memorial Student Union o n the ANO FA CUL TY - CASI/ Class focuses on women's image We Have: •Polyester Resin •Laminating, Finish & Casting •Fiberglass Cloth & Mat •Pratt & Lambert Paints •Olympic Sta ins •0 rname-nta I Cement Block •Pine & Nova-Ply Shelving . scandals, as well as aspects of the current scandal. It is being taught by 15 faculty members in political science, history, law and philosophy. Each lecture will be given by a faculty member with expertise in the topic area. Psychologist (CPS)--Indiana Elizabeth Mooney says reports of a sexual revolution on college campuses are probably exaggerated. -She believes students entering college now may just as likely be virgins as students of a generation ago. Sculptors, Boat Bu-ilders, Carpenters, and security, past Congressional inPresidential and vestigations on their own to perform as a rtuo in western Canada. About two years ago they were discovered while performing for free at the Troubador Club in Los Angeles. Their first record album," Cheech and Chong,'' achieved success with sales reaching the million record level. Their second album, "Big Bambu", has already reportedly sold more than one and a half / •million copies. Eu . Phone Major Married Yes () No ·o i. 1 i ,..,, I LCC vs UO - a losing battle "We played·this team purposely for experience,'' stated Ms.Delpha Daggett, coach of LCC's women's field hockey team after losing their battle against the statistically better University of Oregon varsity . team last Tuesday by 5 to 0. "I thought we played very well," said Ms. Daggett, adding that she felt the women were in even better condition than the U of O team. The U of O team is classified as an A team because it represents a four year college, while LCC is a B team, being a two-year college with only freshmen and sophomore players. She pointed out that the opponents put in a "fresh crew' ' at the second half. Ms. Daggett said, "I was very pleased that we could withstand this. It indicated that our condition was satisfactory; it was a test of our stamina." Despite LCC stamina, errors and positioning in formation allowed their opponents to monopolize the game and keep the ball in their possession throughout the game. The U of O team scored three points before the half time break. The U of O team used a lot of "flick" hits, dribbling the ball down the field, and" scoops" (hard hits putting the ~all into the air). "They wereanagressiveteam," commented Judy Heindenrich, left fullback for LCC. "They knocked our goalie down once in the game,'' she said, but, Marsha Miller, our goalie was able to stop them a few times with good stick worko'' The LCC women lost points on roll-ins, free hits (after penalties were called), and at other times in the game the opponents won control of the ball and capitalized on LCC errors. Ms. Daggett cited Judy Heindenrich as. an outstanding player in the game because she remained "cool and calm" and was able to capitalize on the formation mistakes. Titan kickers open with loss Lane Community College's new soci~er ,:oach s:1w his team open the season Thursct;ry with a tightly fought 3 to l loss to the University of Oregon Coots. The Lane team, showing the results of its inexperience and lack of team cohesion, also showed flashes of strength. The Oregon team, very experienced and with two games already played, were quick to take advantage of lapses in the Lane defense and api:;lied pressure to the Titan goal. The first 45 minutes of play ended in a scoreless tie with the Oregon team unable to score despite spending most of the half in the Lane end of the field. The first ten minutes of play might have sealed the outcome of the contest had the Lane goalie not been able to stop the numerous shots taken by the team from • Oregon. Titan goalie Mark Rahm blocked five attempts Jt the goal New soccer coach actively recruiting additional players mouth within the first ten minutes of play. As the first half was drawing to a close, the Lane kickers started applying pressure to the Oregon goalie who made some fine saves but did not really have much work to do as he was protected by the extremely solid play of the Oregon fullbacks. There were times during the first half when the Oregon goalie took ,1 break and sat down to watch the game that was going on at the other end of the field. Lrne's go:llie w;1s seldom allowed that luxury. I I ~:~: 1· O,ris Jones If you see yourself as a good athlete and think that soccer may be the challenge that you've been looking for, Chris Jones is the man for you to see. The Coots mounted a strong Jones, recently hired as the new soccer coach at Lane (relieving ~ttack on the Lane goal early former coach George Gyorgyfalvy m the second period, scoring twice to concentrate •on coaching in the first ten minutesofplaywith gymnastics) has been fighting a a furious attack from their wing men setting up two cle,i r shots. shortage of bodies this season. Titan goalie, Mark Rahm, had the "Right now we need four of five best seat in the place from which more active players," entoned to watch the Oregon attack. Rahm Jones. observed, "You could see the way they workect the ball first to one Jones was born •in Liverpool, side and then back to the other, England where he was raised and educated. He started his teaching keeping us off balance." The first goal came on an uncareer last Y'-ar as a grade school teacher in the Eugene area. This obstructed shot from the center year he moved into the staff at the when the Lane defenders temUniversity of Oregon as a Physical porarily left the Oregon forward The second score Education instructor specializing undefended. in basketball and rugby. Besides came on a deflected shot that coaching Lane's soccer team, he looked to be high and outside the doubles as the University's rugby net until it was tipped by a Lane coach. defender just past the outstretched hands of the goalie and Jones, while commenting that into the net. "The Physical Education facilities The second goal ·appeared to here are really outstanding for a momentarily dishearten the Lane community ,. college," has made kickers. Rahm said, "from back more there you could really see them known a desire for participants in the soccer team to sag after the second score." make use of these facilities. • Hope was revived from the Titans when they moved down the field and punched in a goal on a hig11 ha rd shot from the side. This was the last score until an George Gyorgyfalvy. Persons in- Oregon man slammed one in from terested in taking part in gym- close in front of the goal just nastics are urged to contact Ciyorg- as time ran out. yfal vy. The Oregon team, time and *** again, was able to outmaneuver Coach Bob Creed invites any- and steal the ball from the Titans one wanting to take part in the because of poor passes brought wrestling program to get in touch about by an unfamiliarity with the with him--the team is now lifting playing styles of the other men weights and running to get into on the team, according to LCC shape for the upcoming season. coaches and players. . Titan harriers run to sixth place in Oregon Stole lnvilationol meet Pitted against four year schools and some of the finest junior colleges in the nation, the LCC cross country team ran to a sixth place finish in the Oregon State Invitational at Corvallis, Saturday. Tim Williams led the Lane harriers across the line in 23rd place followed by freshman Rod Cooper, Dennis Myers and Dan Aunspa ugh in 38th, 45th, and 51st places respectively. The team title was copped by the host team, Oregon State, with 47 points. Spokane Community College was second with 51 points and the University of Nevada took third with 7~ points. Lane scored 192 points. The Titans, hampered by injuries, still finished respectably, "This gives us an indication :1ccording to Coach 1.1 Tarpenning. that we can compete against the big schools,' 'said Tarpenning. '·Lane is in bad shape due to colds and injuries," admitted Tarpenning. Rod Cooper. the Tit.ms' number one runner throuirh the first four meets this year, has an inflamed Achilles tendon which had hampered his training in the week prior to the meet. "I had to tell myself during the r;1ce not to use the foot as an excuse," said Cooper when asked about his sub-par performance. "It did get a little tight however," confessed Cooper. According to Tarpenning, Dan J\.unspaugh ran very well in spite of a lack of training during the week, and Dennis Myers is coming back after ;rn early season injury. Also, the number six and seven spots qn the team have been depleted, he continued. Chris Vigeland, always a consistent runner, is suffering from a bone spur which threatens to sideline him for the rest of the year. He dropped out of the meet Saturday after completing two miles of the four mile race. Carl Johnson, the number six man on the team going into the weekend, was out of the meet as a result of a cold and is not expected to do much training until Wednesday or Thursday. Some of these problems may be helped by freshman runner John Wallace. Wallace, said Tarpenning, ran an outstanding race in the JV contest and may well be pushing his way into the top seven runners. Wallace's time of 22:17 put him only 21 seconds behind Lane's fifth man, Scott Richardson. "We've had a lot of injuries and colds this year, but I think that we can pick up the slack and come back to run well at the conference •(Continued on back page) the athletic department LCC sports openings available "asketball is coming and the Titans need two freshman managers according to Coach Dale Bates. Managers would travel with the team to all games and be responsible for equipment and other duties assigned by Bates. Persons interested should contact Bates or John Mason. *** Tryouts are still being held for LCC's soccer team, according to Coach Chris Jones. Athletes interested in playing soccer should contact Jones in the P.E. Office or by coming to the soccer field each afternoon, 2 to 4 p.m. *** Workouts for the gymnastics team have begun, says Coach The -ultimate fan (CPS/ZNS)--A Colorado man is recovering in a Denver hospital after shooting himself during a Depver Broncos football game. fhe Arapahoe County sheriff's department said the man, who they would not identify shot himself with a pisfol • sh~rtly after the Broncos fumbled for the seventh time in their loss to the Chicago Bears. Before firing the shot, the man wrote a note which explained, "I have been a Broncos fan since the Broncos were first organized and I can't stand their fumbling anymore•" V.W. Bug Tune-up includes points, condenser, rotor distributor cap, spark plugs and valve adjustment Oct. 16, 1973 TORCH Page 11 8550LIVE .... for walk~ng or playing .... ~~~I,: Bruin Suede Tennis Shoes and I "NASTY NIKE" TENNIS SHOE! Page 12 TORCH Oct. 16, 1973 Betty Crocker gets garbage can {or marketing .of tasteless foods MIAMI BEACH (CPS?KNS)--Betty Crocker and 'her' parent General Mills were awarded the second annual Bon Vivant Vichyssoise Memorial hward in mid-June for the corporation's encouragement of bad eating habits. The award, a garbage can, was given by the Center for Science in the Public Interest, as a counter event to the 33rd annual Meeting of the Institute of Food Technologists at the Miami Beach Conven• tion Hall. •'"Bad eating habits start young,'' said the Center's representative Dr. ·Michael Jacobson, "and General' Mills spends millions of dollars a year to encourage kids to eat foods that contain a high percentage of sugar, a good deal of salt, potentially harmful artificial colorings, and refined flour from which many nutrients have been removed. More specifically, the company was cited for marketing "breakfast" products like Kaboom, Sir Grapefellow, Baron Von Redberry, and Franken Berry, that contain between thirty and fifty percent sugar and are conducive to tooth decay. Increase in Veteran enrollment climbs sixty per cent over last year a 60 percent increase in the number of veterans enrolled at Lane this fall has been recorded in the largest single jurrp of students on the GI Bill in the school's history. Hoppe . .. ( Continued from page 2) us from our enemies. Our national security was involved. So we had no choice but to revive the draft." "Don't worry about me ever being President," said Irving. "I'm sure not going to be a lifer." "I know, son. All you have to do is survive the next two years without getting indicted. Just take care of yourself, boy. Keep a Don't write any low profile. memos ... " "They give us that in Basic "How Training,'' said Irving. to operate an M-14 Shredder, Elementary Burglary, Intermediate Cable Forging .. .'' "Now, Irving," interjected Mrs. Wasp worriedly, "While you're out there in Washington I don't want you to pick up any of that awful language those people use, like 'at this point in time' or 'inoperative' or ... " "hnd always remember that anything you say may be recorded against you," said Mr. Wasp. "But don't worry. Many young men come home unscathed. And while they have a difficult time readjusting to civilian life... " Irving suddenly folded his arms, sat on the floor and began chanting, "Hell , no, won't go! Hell, no, won't go!" "Oh, Irving, you mean you're gofng to be a draft resister?'' cried Mrs. Wasp, wringing her hands. "But you'll have to go to jail." ''Don't you see, Mother?' said Wasp proudly. "Irving's Mr. ,.;;tanding on high moral principles. He'd rather go to jail than take part in what he feels is an immoral occupation. Right, son?" "Frankly,'' said Irving, "no. I just figure the odds of my surviving - two years in Washington without going to jail are real slim. So I might as well go to iail first and get it over with. (Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. 1973) the end of the second • week of classes. programs . were Vocational jolted by the increase more than were, degree programs the showing a 100 per cent surge in enrollment over last year's 479. Enrollment in degree courses was up 114 over the 1972 total of 523. the college's in Officials veterans affairs office credited a variety of reasons for the 'hikeincluding • an active outreach program of communicating with the Eugeneoutside veterans metropolitan area, Springfield advance paypre-enrollment, checks that were waiting for the registration, and an at vets orientation course held just beThe started. school .fore orientation drew more than 140 ex-Gl's over a two-day period and carried one to two college credits. Forums announced by attorney's office District County's Lane a Attorney's Office will hold series of public forums dealing with law enforcement problems in Lane County, later this Month. The forums are scheduled to cover such topics as consumer protection, juvenile crime, enprotection, rape, vironmental homicide, gambling and marijuana. laws. DA J. Pat Horton said each forum will focus on a particular area and that experts in that field will hold panel discussions and respond to questions from the audience. Horton will lead the panel discussions as moderator. "It is my hope that the forums will serve as a vehicle for keeping the public educated and informed,'' he said. In addition, he indicated that this program could be "an effective tool of preventive law enforcement.'' The district attorney pointed out that his office receives a "constant stream" of inquiries re"and I garding these topics. am certain this is only the tip of the iceberg in terms of what the public wants to know,'' he added. Women's studies ~eive verbal go "We have just received verbal acceptance to our proposal requesting money to set up a workshop in Interdisciplinary Woman's Studies." said Janice Brandstrom, Science Dept. counselor at LCC. The proposal was submitted to Bill Powell, chairman of Interdisciplinary Studies at Lane and written by Ms. Brandstrom and Dr. Joyce Hops, LCC psychology instructor and field experience • co-ordinator. According to the proposal , a Woman's ~tudies program is needed because, "the resurgence of the american feminist movement has made us aware that most of the •women entering the job market lack skills and confidence to attract the kinds of jobs their abilities warrant. Women's Studies are designed to provide new knowledge about women and to help them evaluate their roles in society. The recent preliminary Needs Assessment Survey of LCC indicated that the college is not The ASLCC Elections Commission and Board of Tellers have meeting joint a announced tomorrow Wednesday in the Staff Lounge of the Center Building at 3 p.m. The purpose of the meeting will be to explain the rules and procedures for the upcoming ASLCC elections. The commission urged all student office candidates to attend. Elections wil 1 be held Oct. 29 and 30. oil paintings by Robert Terry, a 1973 graduate of South Eugene High School , will be on exhibit in the Erb Memorial Union Art Gallery until November 7. The Gallery is open 8 a.m. to ll:30 p.m. weekdays, Saturday 9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. and Sunday noon to 11:30 p.m. The exhibit is sponsored by the Cultural Forum. News Briefs "Them and Us", a series of six public lectures and discussions on parents and their teenage children, enters its second week at Lane Community College Oct. 11 with a panel discussion on '' Expectations: Differing Views from Parents and Adolescents.'' The discussion begins at 7:30 p.m. in Rooms 223/224 of LCC's Apprenticeship Bldg. Admission is free. Parents and students will be represented on the panel which will be moderated by David E. Mortimore, a Sheldon High School vice-principal. The Oct. 11 session is the sect>nd of the Family Life series co-sponsored by LCC, the Junior League of Eugene, and Family Counseling Services. A panel discussion on "The Synthetic High: Its Use and Abuse", featuring drug and alcohol abusers, is scheduled for Oct. 16. other programs in the series inthe Single clude "Sex and ·Teenager", Oct. 25; " .Talk is Cheap: What Price am I Paying?'', Nov. I; and "Parents, Peers, and Pressures", Nov. 8. All sessions are free and open to the public. exhibit, "Work", art An displaying watercolor, acrylic, and a new student lobby group, the Eugene Council of Students(ECU>) is in the process of being formed, according to LCC student body 1st Vice President, Barry Hood. school's student body pr~sidents Hood explained that the council will serve as a sounding board for students in Eugene and will represent their needs as a strong local lobbying force. Membership is open to three voting representatives for each of Eugene's In addition, the high schools. University of Oregon, Lane Community College find Northwest Christian College are invited to • participate. '' Students need a voice and a way to express their views to the community; in short, they need a sounding board. I believe that this is just the break they need,'' he said. Hood said, "In the future, we would wish that each member school"elect their three representatives from the general student body, but for this year, member schools' student body presidents are requested to select each school's representatives.'' The first orientation meeting of ECO> will be in two weeks, he said- -the time and date will be announced later, but Hood said to contact the LCC student government offices, (747-4501, ext. 220 or 221) for additional information. Women in literature. (Continued from page 9) being a study of literature from antiquity to the Middle Ages. Winter Term the course will cover writings between the Renaissance and Romantic periods; and Spring Term will deal with Realism, Nineteenth Century, and Contemporary literature. Concerning. the role of women in other disciplines, Ms. Schultz said, '' I sort of hope to set a precedent and I would very much encourage instructors from other departments to investigate this approach because it is easy to implement and I feel it is well worthwhile.' Movie .review. .. ( Continued from page 4) soft focus and lighting is sometimes intrusive, it usually lends an air of serenity to the film, offsetting Rooks frantic pace somewhat. The soundtrack is also different, both in dialogue and musical score. . The dialogue has no per,spective, that is, the characters always seem to be speaking from two feet away, no matter where The score seems to be a westernized they appear on the screen. version of classical Indian music, sort of Ravi Shankar in threefour time. It seems that Rooks as the prime force behind "Siddhartha", had nothing to say that was not better said in the book. ahead serving it's female population now 43.2 per cent adequately. Another informal survey was conducted last spring which indicated that student support does exist for a Women's Studies course''. They also said that the workshop is "an initial step in offering better programs for women,'' At a later time, they intend to draft proposals using outside other and local funding for programs such as improved and increased child care facilities for children of students, improved vocational training and job placement opportunities for female students, programs directed specifically at the needs of minority women, and additional career and educational counseling for women. Flight instructor joins flying group • Ron Kluth A Lane Community College flight instructor who was the Flight Instructor of the Year in 1972 for Washington, Oregon and Idaho, is now on the board of directors of the newly formed National Professional Flight Instructors Association. Ron Kluth, 33-, is one of 12 flight instructors from the US to head up the new organization which represents some 30,000 instructors across the country. He will hold the post for two years. The association is an affiliate of, and acts as a lobbiest to the National aero Club which is comprised of more than 400,000 flying enthusiasts. Kluth is chief pilot for LCC's flight technology program and has been in charge of the college's flight and ground schools since 1971. Cross country. . . (Continued from Page 11) and, hopefully, the regional said national championships," Tarpenning. '' There is no doubt in my mind after this meet that we are national contenders again this year,'' he added. The Titans travel to Albany Saturday where Linn-Benton Community College will play host to Chemeketa Community College, Umpqua Community and Lane in a four way meet at Bryant Park. The meet is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. and is Lane's final tune-up before the conference championships the following week in Coos Bay.