Od. 3t?

) 73

LCt

the week of october 30, 1973 vol. 10 no. 10
avenue, eugene, oregon 97405

La ne debates

Senate votes to
oust Red Fox
Last Tuesday's special meeting
of the ASLCC Senate resulted in
a
call
for the immediate
resignation of ASLCC President
David Red Fox. At the same meeting, a call for a new budget committee trr "draw up a revised budget was also passed.
The meeting had been called
in an effort, by the Senate , to
over-ride Red Fox's veto of club
budgets passed at the last regularly
scheduled meeting (Thursday, Oct.
18), according to Dave Simmons,
senator at large. The President's vetoes were over-ridden
by an 8 to 1 vote and were then
tabled pending budget committee
recommendations. Native hmerican Senator-at-large Terry LaRoche was the one dissenting vote.
Red Fox said, "If this body
was going to spend eight or nine
thousand dollars that doesn't fit
into the budget, and then call
the budget committee together to
rectify the problem, that's bullshit!''

Almost the last action taken was

Senate to revise
documents again
Following the action taken at
last week's ASLCC Senate meeting to ask for David Red Fox's
resignation as ASLCC President,
the Senate called for a documents
revision workshop on the LCC
~ampus as soon as possible.
Senator-at-large Dave Simmons
and the Executive Cabinet were
asked to set up the workshop,
Simmons, aSLCC First Vice
President Barry Hood, and ASLCC
Business Manager Dan Stone
agreed that the ASLCC could be
working under a whole set of new
documents within six weeks if
everybody would put in a special
effort to improve the situation.
An all-day session may be called on Saturday · (possibly Nov.3)
with the piece-by-piece review
and revision of the Constitution,
By-Laws, and Fiscal Policy as
the sole object, according to Hood.
He said that the session would be
timely, since newly elected senators could be a part of the
reasoning processes behind the
• documents they'd be working with.
Hood said that a special election
could then be called to get the
new documents ratified by Nov.
21. The next step would be to
get a new budget that agreed with
the new documents passed by the
Senate, which would require its
being presented at two regularly
scheduled meetings, he said. According ,to Hood, these actions
would put a workable set of documents in operation by Dec. 7.

disbursements
of state funds

Library
ommunity co\\ege

The question of how to spend ·
one million dollars is now being
debated within inner circles in the
LCC Administration.
According to Paul Colvin of the
LCC Institutionai Planning and Research Office, the State of Oregon
awarded LCC I.I million dollars
for campus construction and improvement.
Colvin said the money was not
anticipated, as the state awarded
it on the basis of prior credit
req11ests.
One of the areas under study
to receive some of the funds is
the Perfoi:ming Arts Building, now
under construction northeast of the
Center Building. '' Before we sent
out the bid for construction, we
were forced to cut $200,000 from
the design of the building because
we were that much over our budget," Colvin said. An entire wing
was cut from the original plans.
Colvin explained that new plans
were then sent out to be bid on
by contractors. However, the lowest bid came in $166,000 higher
than the estimate. '' an additional
$100,000 was then deleted to hold
the cost to the money we then
had available for the project,''
he said.
But Colvin went on to say the
second budget cut was made up
when the unexpected funds from the
state were received. Colvin said
restoration of the original $200,000
to the project is now under study
along with other priorities for the
money, which include $68,000 for
the completion of the Center Building (additional furnishings, equipment, and some classroom alterations).
"We have about a million dollars to be used for different projects," said President Eldon
Vote
Schafer. He named some of these
as the construction of a warehouse
and the relocation of the Student
Health Service to the Center BuildElection officials man the baling.
lot table for the Student Senate
"The question in my mind isn't
elections held Monday and
whether the Performing Arts wing
Tuesday (today). Student senators from each department i:I should be built - - but when.''
will be elected in the general lJ Schafer commented "We have to
look at what will be the most
balloting. Aspecial section to
the ballot will deal with a mea- I good for the most students.
"We will be holding a couple
sure brought before the Stu- ii
of
meetings soon with internal
dent Senate. This measure, !l
representatives to get
concerning the student's hand J staff
an
agreemenf
within the school
in athletic funding, and whether it should be increased, jjj before we go to the Board of
remain
the
same , be :t Education,'' the President said.
Edward Ragozzino, Performing
decreased, or done away with iI
entirely, will serve as an 1 Arts Department chairman, said
opinion poll to steer actions ill the funding question is a problem
taken by the ASLCC Senate \jj of priorities.
'' Educational specification were
at a later date. Voting places
will be open until 8 p.m. 1 severely altered in order to bring
the building into reality, and now
(Photo by Joe Munoz) J1[ that the school has come into more
money, other priorities have
emerged and we are one of many,'
•,,om-..... .-.%.- = - -•·, ,_,_.,,__,&,··e.,•.·· .w'-'"="'-'""""'= »= •""-'''"'·'•'•- -_--~-mr,···%><='""" '"'C'F ., ,,~~-•~·,-= ¥J Ragozzino observed.

Simmons' motion demanding Red
Fox's resignation. The motion was
passed by the constitutionally required two-thirds vote of the Senate, although only a quorum of
IO voting members were present:
the count being 9 to 1, with Ms.
LaRoche again the dissenter.
ASLCC
Parliamentarian, Rex
Britt, had ruled that Barry Hood,
ASLCC first vice president, who
had taken the chair after Red Fox
left for another meeting, could
vote on this motion to make the
two-thirds requ\rement.
Jay Jones, student activities adviser, told the TORCH last Friday that the impeachment action
was legal and stemmed from personality conflicts within the Senate. He went on to say he was
apprehensive that the Senate might
be hampered by similar actions
which he though might be forthcoming.
Jack Carter, dean of students,
said he had not received notificatim that Red fox would resign as requested and that anything
he might say about it would be
purely speculation.
However, Jerry Edgmon, Automotive
Department senator,
claimed he
knew Red Fox's
Right
resignation had been sent by
registered mail and was in il.s of last week. motorists traveling south on "gasoline alley'' and
·carter's office, though he returning right onto 30th Ave. in order to use Lane's east entrance ,
fused to say where he got that
may no longer do so.
information.
The stop sign at the intersection was changed to read, "No Right 1
Hood, as acting president, un- Turn" (anytime). Failure to heed the posted restriction carries a
locked the desk Red Fox had been $17 .50 fine. However, motorists may still use the free right hand
using in order to see if it had turn lane that carries traffic onto 30th Ave. and up to west entrance
(Continued on b~ck page) of the campus.
.
(Photo by Mark Rahm)

No

Turn

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Page 2 TORCH Oct. 29, 1973

TIME

by Jack Anderson
tC op vright. 1973, by Cnited Feature Syndicate , lnc .l

although he would like to
have kept them suppressed.
He used the tapes in a sleeper
play to remove Cox.
The President, who is
suspicious by nature, became
convinced that Cox was out
to get him. His suspicions
were fueled by former aides
Bob Haldeman, .John
Ehrlichman and Charles Colson, who wen' trying to protect their own necks. They
expected no leniency from
Cox , so they whispered
around the White House that
Cox was really aiming for the
President.
Cox confirmed the Presi dent's fea r s by unleashi ng his
bl oodh ounds ag ai nst Be be
Rebozo . Thi s w as bound to
lead to an invest i ga tion of
the President's own fin ances
which a r e e nsnarled in
Rebozo's affairs.
_So th e President used the
tapes i ssue to maneuver Cox
, into an act of insubordination .
Our White House sources admit that Cox was the real object of the President's big
play.
The President deliberately
kept the issue out of the
Supreme Court which would
have increased his political
risks. He also chose to move
while war was raging in the
Middle East. He thought the
public sympathy would be on
his side at a time when he was
seeking to end a dangerous
war.
But the big play, as some-

The innocent bl:stander

Mr. Nixon' s 5672n d Crisis
By feeding the events of the past three weeks
into a vast computer, scientists at the National
Institute of Prognostication have determined precisely what Americans will face in the coming three
years.
"Our predictions are guaranteed 99.8 per cent
accurate," NIP Direetor Homer T. Pettibone proudly
told reporters. "God help us all." The computer
readout follows.
Nov. 7, 1973 -- Presidential crony Bebe Rebozo
confessed today to blowing the $100,000 he'd collected three years ago for Mr. Nixon from Howard
Hughes on wine, wom_en and song.
Rebozo's
Mr.
regretfully accepting
" In
resignation as my crony,' ' Mr. Nixon said, "let
me say I still have full confidence in his cronyism.' '
Dec. 8, 1973 -- Chief Justice Warren Burger
attempted today to administer the oath of Vice
President to Gerald Ford. "Repeat after me,' ' he
began. "No, no, let's try it again, Mr. Ford ...
Come on, one more time, Jerry ... "
As darkness fell, Mr. Nixon expressed "full
confidence ' Mr. Ford would get the oath right
when attempts resumed tomorrow.
Jan. 14, 1974 - - Mr. Nixon defended himself on
television tonight from charges that he negotiated
the Russian wheat deal in return for a campaign
TORCH

5t0 ff

-------- -------Carol Newman

Editor

Assoc iate Editor

Paul Wald schmidt

Production Manager

Harris

Dubin

Editor

Mark

Rahm

Photo

Munoz

Photographer

Joe

Advertising Manager

Norma

Advertising Staff

Jerry Paulsen
Bob Norris

Van

Busby

Sports Editor

Steve

Copy Editor

Dennis

Reporters

Rvan

Reese

Wes

Heath

Lesa

Carmean

Brion

Weller

Myers

Shelley Cunningham
Bill Tufts
Production

Rodney

Cross

Rhonnie

Welch

Mory Clemens

Member of Oregon Community Col lege Newspaper .hssoci ation and Or egon Newspape r Publishers Association.
T:ie TORCH i s published on Tuesdays throughout the
r egu l ar acade mic year an<l every other Tuesda y during Summer
Opinions expressed i n this newspaper are not necTerm .
ess~rily those of the college, student government or student
bo<1y. Nor or e signed articles necessa ril y the view of the TORCH.
All r orresponrtence should be typed or printed, double-spaced
an<1 signed by the writer . Mail or bring all correspond ence to:
TORCH, Center Z06, L ane Communi i y College, 4000 East 30th
Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 97 405; Telephone 747 - 4501, Ext. 234.

·(

n.t,y-Co-Aound

Nixon's Sleeper Play

WASHINGTON - In the
privacy of his oval office ,
President Nixon likes to use
football terms to describe his
political plays. He often talks
about the " game plan" and
the "big play. " The President
plays a grim game and the
name of that game is power .
Sometimes it seems that
the game, more than the obj ec ti ve . occupies him . He
seems to enjoy the power
plays, particu l arly the quarterback snea k s a nd t h e
sleeper plays.
His ma neuver to get rid of
Specia l Wa tergate Prosecu tor Arc hibald Cox is typical.
The President 's r eal objecti ve was not r eally to protect
the Wa te r g at e tap e s,

·by Art Hoppe

f©fflKei

contribution of two million rubles from Mr. Kosygin.
"I acted solely in the best interests of every
he said, "Republicans, Democrats
American,''
and Communists alike.' '
In regretfully accepting the resignation of the
Russians as his friends, he expressed "full confidence'' in their friendliness and, he said, '' in
me."
Jan. 15, 1974 -- As impeachment momentum
mounted Mr. Nixon announced that Dr. Henry Kissinger •had just returned from Andromedea Ill aboard
a flying saucer after securing "a last_ing peace
with honor" with the Andromedeans. Meanwhile,
fighting continued in Vietnam and the Middle East.
Oct. 18, 1974 -- Dr. Kissinger, it was revealed today, neither spoke nor understood English.
His secret wife, Eva Braun, had long coached him (
,on what to say. In regretfully accepting his reslgnation, Mr. Nixon told him he had "unbedingte
_ in him. Jill St. John expressed
Zuversicht"
"shock and disappointment.''
Dear Editor,
June 5, 1975 -- Mr. Nixon regretfully accepted
Barry Hood's letter to the edthe resignation of Mrs. Nixon as his wife and First itor last issue was amusing. So
Lady today. an she would say is, "I finally .heard far in his short career as First
those tapes."
Vice President of the ~Lee,
Jan. 3, 1976 -- Following the arrest of David Barry has charged, you, the ed(Continued on back page)

times happens in both football and politics, backfired.
Haig Unmasked: The firing
of Archibald Cox tore the
mask off the new White House
chief of staff, Gen. Alexander
Haig. There were misgivings
in Congress over the appointment of a military man to this
powerful civilian post. But
Haig's defenders contended,
quite truthfully, that he was a
man of honor and integrity
dedicated to his country.
But it took the Cox controversy to reveal how the
military mind wor k s.
Throughout the episode, according to our Wh ite House
so urces, Ha ig fo llowed the
President's ord ers wit hout
once questi oning them.
He never asked whether it
was r i ght for the President to
violate a pledge to the Senate
that th e special prosecutor
could conduct an indepen d e nt investigation of t he
Watergate crimes without
Wh i te House interference.
Haig's loyalty was to his commander-in-ch ief, not to the
higher principles at issue.
Haig, for example. called
former Deputy Attorne y
General William Ruckelshaus and transmitted th e
order to fire Cox. When
Ruckelshaus r efused to do so.
Haig was abashed . The
general told Ruckelshaus in
a crisp military voice: " Your
commander- in-chief has

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__________________________________

New budget1 documents . .. again
-

documents ? (Oh, yes ... they have
This is to congratulate our
ASLCC Senate for their perserver- documents. They are called the
ence and energy in spending thou- Constitution, the By-Laws, and the
sands of dollars of student funds Fiscal Policy). At that time, there
on conventions, clubs, and indeed were objections raised as to the
even the TORCH, all without a necessity of spending all that stubudget they can call their own. dent money at a resort, when they
Once again, we hear that the Sen- could just as easily have their
ate is going to write up a budget. workshop at LCC. Well, they deThat is, they' re gofog to re- cided to do just . that. . . after
write the budget that was re-writ- they spent the aforementioned
ten by almost ex-President David money at Kah-Nee-Ta. There is
Red Fox (see story page l) last another workshop coming up to
month, which in turn was re-writ- "review and revise" the docuten several times by last sum- ments. ASLCC First Vice-Presmer's Budget Committee. So at ident Barry Hood says he hopes
any rate, they are having Budget to have the new documents r atified by the students by Nov. 21.
Committee meetings again.
And remember the $1,000 that After that, then we'll get a new
was spent by our Senate to go to budget. . . again. At the speed
Kah -Nee-Ta Vacation Resort to • that this Senate plods along, how"review and revise' ' the ASL CC ever (l ast year, the budget was

]

_ _ _ _ ___,

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(continued on page 8)

L e tt e r s

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itor, of breach of contract; he
has asked for the resignation of
Doris Koumoungis; and several
weeks ago demanded David Red
Fox's resignation in a highly
publicized speech in the cafeteria.
At the Senate meeting following
Barry's speech, I moved to ask
for David Red Fox's resignation.
In a recent
Barry voted no.
special Senate meeting Barry
voted yes to another motion to
impeach Red Fox. Then he ~as
the gall to· accuse me of chargmg
people with "everything imaginable."
At no time did I "present"
anything to Barry Hood. At no
time have I said that Red Fox
gained dollars from the Kah-neeta trip. My conflict-of-inter est
charge deals with the way in
which Kah-nee-ta is owned and
the fact that Red Fox's relatives
are employed there.
I got my information from the
General Manager of the Kah-neeta Vacation Resort. Where Mr.
Hood got his is beyond me. If
Barry had truly believed in moving
on with Senate business he would
have come to me with his
accusations, not gone to the press.

drafted, and approved by the full
Senate and the Board of Education
by Sept. 12), we will be lucky to
see this new budget before the
end of the year.
And if , they keep impeaching
every Executive
or repulsing
Cabinet member they have, it won't
even be that early; So far this
term, the Cabinet is on their
second Business Manager (the first
one, Doris Koumoungis, quit at
the end of the summer), another
2nd VP (the first, .Kenny Walker,
quit to take a post in the National
Student a.ssociation), now they're
on their way to a new President,
and then there will be a vacancy
in the 1st VP's post, since t he current 1st VP, Barry Hood, will automatically take over the Presidents Ri ck Mathews
(Continued on back page) Student Senator

_

Oct. 29, 1973 TORCH Page 3

the forum the forum the forum the forum

(Editor's
note: This week's
Forum was submitted by Jack
Baughman, former LCC psychology instructor.)
In response to the increasing
number of requests for additional
insights into the meanings, purposes, and goals of Inner Space
Travel Agency, I submit the following~
About four years ago while
teaching psychology at LCC, I
was researching a topic with another psychologist friend which we
called
Language
Reduction
Systems. What we were doing was
trying to look objectively at the
words we were using in our normal
conversations with one another and
trying to eliminate the useless
words. (New Age philosophy holds
that all words are being transcended as we zoom into the
realization of telepathic transfer!)
In a short time a startling (to
us) thing happened. We realized
that we had a higher awareness
unit than the one we had been
using. We were watching ourselves do things such as converse, argue, get mad, feel bad,
laugh, etc. New Age philosophy
has many names for this higher
awareness unit such as the overself, the higher self, the soul,
and others. My best understood
favorite at this moment is the
spirit self.

equal in potential, our differences
are merely a matter of personal
choice.

Joy-sorrow, rich-poor, humbleegotistical, bored-excited -- the
choice is entirely up to you. Happiness is not found through demonstrating to others the ability to
accumulate
wealth and gain
towering positions whereby one
may
condesend to them from.
Happiness is found through recognizing the total equality and total
uniqueness of all mankind and
learning how to accept and love
each individual exactly where he's
at. If he knows how to be any
more loving towar.t:; himsc.Jf .rnd
others~ he wou11 be, and so would
you,
After we (people in the psychology classes) began to expand
bto these new poi.1': ::; o~ 1ri.~w we
were anxious to share it with
others at LCC and elsewhere.
We realized that these New age
concepts caused every subject of
endeavor to have deeper and richer
meaning. We decided to give a
public seminar on the Evolution of
Human Consciousness, inviting
guest speakers using various
approaches to enlightenment such
as yogis, mystics, astrologers, and
other spiritual beings. This
highly informative, lightly attended
seminar drew sufficient interest
to cause us to focus more and more
on it to the point where covering
overcoming lower self our textbook chapters which we had
From this precise moment on-projected seemed bothersome.
that is, when the higher (or spirit)
self overcomes
the lower (or evolutionary concepts
physical) self--an individual beThe focus on evolutionary concomes his own therapist. Real- cepts was changing our very
izing that the spirit self has the lives while the textbook would be
greater vantage point, the person giving us a choice of several
begins to focus there more and
theories and their reflectant
more, often revealing distortions
therapies all taking various
to the lower self which have the amounts of dollars and time to
effect of destroying them. The
accomplish. The textbook would
destruction of these distortions of also
often suggest that any,
the lower self (often called "hang- none, or all of the theories might
ups") merges ever in closer har- be correct. New age philosophy
mony to the spirit self until th,. holds that there is no "correct''
individual eventually rises out of therapy.
There is only selfnegative states altogether and berealization.
No one can help
comes a totally loving being.
you unless you want to learn:
I didn't have all of these foreTherefore, all therapy is self
going realizations at once though.
therapy. Any theory, guru, disNew Age philosophy holds that we cipline,
religion, parent, inare infinite energies further
stitution, culture, etc. can help
expanding into greater consciousyou if you choose to listen (i.e.
ness at each moment (which in- perceive from the higher self).
cludes now!)
But it is still always you doing
I started sharing these new real- the choosing as to which part .of
izations of the beauty of tuning the concept will be accepted. When
into the higher self with people we become aware in this way we
in the psychology classes and rap- break through an important peridly found out that quite a few ceptive barrier or '.'mask' ' as it
others were having similar en- is sometimes called. We no
lightening experiences.
longer are able to blame others for
About this time many of us our seeming failures and ·unhappy
came to the realization (in con- times. We become masters ofour·
cept--not necessarily assimilated own destiny arriving at a state
into personality as yet) that we similar to what Maslow called selfwere all equal and therefore each actualization and what is termed
had something unique to share and "Self Realization" in New Age
were all each other's teachers. philosophy.
This means that while we all are
The summer prior to my last

oame~ '-- ietlingeft

(7'

year as a psychology teacher at
Lane, I decided to devote the entire time, searching out others who
were into consciously sharing
these awareness experiences .and,
to my delight, I found them in all
kinds of different places. They
were both male
and female,
monied-poor, young (very young)old (very old), in school and out.
It didn't seem to make any difference.
The common thread
seemed to be that we were growing
(or had grown) out of the need to be
comparative and competitive and
were happily learning to accept
each
other for our individual
uniqueness.

going through changes

When I came back to school the
following year, I found that many of
my returning friends and new acquaintances had been going through
changes (becoming themselves) as
I. We knew it would be an exciting year for growth. As the
class began coming together, it
became increasingly evident that to
try to follow a standard introductory psychology textbook would
be senseless as we had clearer,
more comprehensive answers in
the sphere of awareness available
in the classroom. This is not to
say that there are not enlightened
psychologists. It can be clearly
demonstrated that this information
has not reached the textbooks,
however.
A survey of current popular
psychology texts (my own survey
included about 25 texts) reveals
almost no reference to the spirit
self (or over self, etc.) and only
cevotes an average of three or
four pages •to the entire field of
psychic awareness! I began to
see the fr'uitlessness of sharing
these concepts through traditional
(beha vorial scientific emphasis)
psychology and gave notification
that I would not teach the following
year.
In our second seminar on the
Evolution of Consciousness, we
tried to pull together the realizations of the past couple of •
years into a loose philosophy which
has evolved into this paper which ·
reflects a concise statement of
what I choose to call New A.ge
Philosophy. An important aspect
of New .&ge Philosophy is that
all statements are always individual expressions based on the
most information available at a

1 Bedroom

creation of a class

The second area of emphasis
is in creating a class on the
Evolution of Consciousness whereby interested students can focus
on this topic of great value. We
hope to get the class on a credit
basis by the Winter Term of 7374 but most of us find if difficult
to get to those kind of details,.
Anyone who has any energy or
insights as to how we might get
the class rapidly incorporated
~continued on page 4)

Moments of Beauty
from nature

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

The photography of

Gary

Dodson

.,

ready to decorate your walls
with hand -crafted
natural wood frames
available in the

LCC BOOK STORE
"we're right on campus"

2nd floor mezzanine, Center Bldg.

$1'02.50

2 Bedroom $124.50
also a limited number of furnished units a~ailable

ashlane apartme nts
Bus Service

*

Laundry Facilities

Walk to Shopping Center

greets students daily

mes sages a ec;;epted in
student activities area
ho me -Phone 688-2605

to notify anyone.
Current off-campus projects•
elude giving energy to a staa•
production which is putting ·• ·
shows at various colleges, universities and other likely places
called the "New age Festival of
Harmony.''
At Lane, energy is in two main
areas with others in the making.
One is the weekly philosophical
sessions where new insights are
shared and people can come and
listen to these New Age ideas
and verbally participate if ttiey
choose to do so. The sessions
are entirely informal, spontaneous
and open to students, faculty, administrators
and the general
public alike.

Unfurnished

Newman Chaplin,

in the LCC cafeteria

given moment. This is the basis
of reality. Whatever you believe
to be true--is true, but that truth
changes each moment as we infinitely
expand into greater
awareness.
At the end of the second seminar
a group of us decided to form a
group to get together often, to have
fun, to share enlightment experiences and to provide a stage at
Lane to expose these New Age
realities. It was decided to call
the group Inner Space Travel
Agency.
This was to call attention that
additional aspects of the universe
were under discovery besides
outer space probes (physical projections). To discover this, one
needs no money, does not have to
go to a launch pad and dpn a space
suit. One merely tunes into his
inner self (spirit self) and discovers more space than he believed possible on the physical
plane. He discovers the astral
world and many more!
Since its inception, Inner Space
Travel Agency has expanded beyond LCC.
Its exten~ions are
not known at present due to the
fact that individuals may instantly
become members or not as many
times as they choose without a need

all utilities furnished , except electricity

*

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

• Greg & Karen Jones

475 Lindale Drive #84

747-5411

Pa~ 4 ToRciI

9ct. 29 1973,

Magazine editors nominated
by LCC literary arts club
The Concrete Statement literary
arts magazine has a ne'\\'. editorial
staff, pending approval of the LCC
Media Commission.
According to the Media Commission Guidei'ines in October of
each year the Literary Arts Club
submits its selection of three
editors who will serve as joint
or rotating editors for the magazine.
Selected at a meeting of the
Literary Arts Club last Wednesday were Chris Easton, Jan
Holmes and Keri Fowler, who
will serve as editors for fall,
and spring terms,
winter
respectively.

Mike Weiss, vice-president of
the club, and Lonnie Laughlin were
appointed to assist Editor Easton
in obtaining publishing cost estimates and preparing an operating
budget to present to the Student
Senate. The club hopes to obtain partial financial subsidizing
from the ASLCC Senate.
The Media Commission, made
up of 14 members consisting of
students, staff and administrators,
will meet Oct. 31 at 3 p.m. to
approve the editorial selection.
The Literary Arts Club will
also meet Oct. 31 at 3 p.m. in
Center 436 to discuss the cost
(Continued on back page)

Students f
Results from a random public
opinion poll taken on the LCC
campus last week showed that
many LCC students feel President Nixon should vacate the office
of the Presidency.
Seventy-five students were asked if they had heard the recent
news stories about .President
Nixon's firing special Watergate
Prosecutor Archibald Cox and
stopping the Watergate special
Only 10 students
investigation.
had not heard about the actions.
One man said he knew nothing
about it--he had no television and
didn't read the news papers or
listen to the radio.
In response to a second question
--whether they felt the President
had done the right thing by firing
Cox and stopping the special
investigation--50 students said no.
Eighteen students said yes, and
seven were undecided. Several
of these students reasoned that
since the President had hired Cox,
it was his legal right to fire him.
Of the 75 students polled on
a third question--"what would you
prefer to be the outcome of these
events' --32 said that President
Nixon should be impeached. One
student said he should either be
Ten stuimpeached or hung.
dents said he should either resign
or be recalled.
Twenty-one students were undecided or had no comment as to
what the outcome of the recent
\(continued from page 3)
would be most welcome. Some
progr--ess is being made. I~ seems
one of the most important ways
to help is by letting those on curriculum committees know you are
interested in seeing the class come

VOTE
-

Last ChanCe to

in the ASLCC Fall elections
TUESDAY OCT. 30, thats today!

•

VOTE for
ASLCC
SENATORS!
1111~!!111
Look for polling tables on campus ,
current student body card and

VOTE

ixon's removal

Watergate developments should be.
Six students said there should
be further investigation. One said,
"Cox went outside his appointed
job. Put Cox back on Watergate
and assign someone else to the
other investigations."
Four of the seventy-five students thought Nixon should not be
impeached: '' Impeachment would
be too heavy for the country now,''
said one. "I don't know if any

The Forum ...

about. There are petitions being
circulated, one of which may be
found in the Inner Space Travel
Agency box in the ASLCC -Senate
offices, second floor, Center
Building.
There are no dues and any
contributions are most welcome
although certainly never expected.
All contributions will be used for
expanding the stated purposes of
the agency.
I propose to teach the course
and would expect to be rehired at
or above the level reached during
my previous contract. I welcome
any discussion or help on any
the ideas or concepts discussed
in this p~per. Let's get together.
If anyone finds any pa rt of this

~f

..

them are more sensible than
Nixon is," replied a second. "I'd
like to see things go on and let
Water gate slide," voiced a third,
and the other student said "Watergate has been blow·n completely
out of proportion - this is a
Republican
versus
Democrat
fight.' '
• One student would like to see
revolutionary change in the United
States and one said simply, "McGovern for President.''

I

paper valuable in an individual
endeavor such as introducing Inner
Space Travel Agency to other areas
or as a basis for a course proposal elsewhere, feel free to use
it. It was written for that
purpose.
At the time of this writing I
have two meditations which seem
to center my awareness the most.
I share them here in hopes of
us in closer combringing
munication.
"We' re all in love with each
other except some of us don't
know it yet."
"We've tried being intense,
powerful and confronting--now
let's become warm: tender and
loving.''

STU.
AND FACULT
CASH

0/SCOUN
on

ART and
ARCHITECTURE'.
SUPPLIES

-THURS.. 9to 5:30 .
JOA YS .. 9/ to/
'ROAYS ..

' Oct. 29, 1973 TORCH Page 5

Changes in student priorities
part of noted education trend

Positions open on

OSPIRG board
Five positions are available on
the LCC board of the Oregon
Student Public Interest Research
Group (OSPIRG), according to
Jerry Edin, current OSPIRG chairman.
The OS PIRG elections are taking
place in conjunction with the LCC
student body elections yesterday
and today, Oct. 29 and 30.
However, only four people are
running for the five positions that
are available on the OSPIRG
board.
According to Edin, this means
that two or three people who win
a position on the board are expected to be write-in candidates.
The four candidates who will be
on the ballot are Roger Leasure,
Peter Hale, Gloria Wells and Rick
Mathews.
Roger Leasure, recently appointed aSLCC second vice president, is a second year student
at Lane. He is working for a degree in Arts and Letters and plans·
to transfer to Harvard Law School.
He has been involved with CE PIRG
throughout the summer and fall.
He states his main interest in
OSPIRG has been mass transportation and the recent bank interest rates study.
Peter Hale has been working
in OS PIRG this fall and is the
head of an OSPIRG project called
The State as Parent. Hale is a
social science major and is in
his second year at Lane. He
previousJy attended the University
of Minnesota.
Gloria Wells is studying early
childhood development
in her
second term at Lane. She studied elementary education at the
University of New Mexico for two
years prior to coming to LCC.
Ms. Wells is interested in OSPIRG
because it's an "investment you
get a return on. It's not a social club, but is work-oriented.
There is an energy return here
and now." She's been working
with OSPIRG since school began
this fall.
Rick Mathews~a student senator,
has been involved with OSPIRG
throughout the summer and fall.
He is the head of OSPIRG's OneWay Free Ride Bussing project.
A board member is elected for
one year term.

Discount bus tokens offered
"It's the best thing we've ever
done," claimed Jerry Edgmon,
director of the Student Awareness Center (SAC), referring to
the rapid sale of bus tokens.
LCC students may now buy a
maximum of 10 tokens per week
at 15 cents each. They are being
sold in the SAC office, which is
located on the second floor of

Polisb folk music

the Center building.
During the first five days,
approximately 2,300 of an original
5,000 bus tokens have been sold

to 278 students. "There's not
one student that doesn't need this
(city bus) at one time or another,
and we' re helping," said Edgmon.
The money for the bus tokens
came from a $1,500 grant supplied
by the LCC Student Senate. The
SAC originally bought 5,000 tokens
for $1000, ·but according to Edgmon
with the money they make from
the bus tokens and the remaining
$500, they will be able to buy
two more groups of 5,000 bus

highlights festival
Traditional Polish folk music
and a menu of Middle European
cuisine will highlight the first
annual
Hochzeit
Old World
Festival Nov. 3 at Lane Community College.
The festival is sponsored by
the LCC chapter of the Phi Theta
Kappa honor society and is scheduled to begin at 5 p.m. Saturday
in the school cafeteria. The public
is welcome.
The
$1.95
menu includes
Kielbasa (Polish sausage), Kapusta (flavored sauerkraut), Kartofler (parsleyed potato), roll and
beverage. all proceeds will go
toward building a collection of rare
Polish sheet music in the college
library.
Polish folk music, accompanied
by international folk dancing, will
be played by John Klobas and The
Polka Pipers. Klobas is an LCC
sociology instructor.

tokens.

Is this truly a "golden age for students" and a "precarious
era for colleges? ''
-Dr. Eldon Schafer, president of LCC, opened last Tuesday's
College Cabinet meeting by reading excerpts from a. paper by Lyman
A. Glenny (Center for Research and Development in Higher Education;
University of California, Berkely) claiming this to be the case.
The College Cabinet is composed of LCC Administration members
and students and staff members elected to represent campus organizations. The Tuesday meetings are similar to press conferences-and are open to all members of the LCC community.
Glenny's paper points out the proportion of funds going from
state budgets to higher education is not increasing and will be no
larger in 1980 than it is now. A new set of social priorities has caused
higher education to drop to a lower position than it previously held:
• Financial aid from the federal government is going directly to
students and not to colleges, and Glenny's paper discusses the repercussions of this policy.
• A birth rate below zero-population growth is also contributing
to the problems • of colleges, according to Glenny. There will tie a
drop of 15 per cent in college age students in 1978.
• The last and perhaps the most important point ( says Glenny)
which Dr. Schafer read to the group suggested that the student trend
appears to be for more training in skills instead of liberal arts
degrees.
Dr. Schafer obtained Glenny's paper at a Portland meeting for
community college presidents, held in October.
The cabinet also discussed the possibility of classified personnel
having more flexible work schedules.
"How do you react to the concept of people coming and going
at different times?" questioned Schafer. While this concept was generally accepted by College Cabinet members, Ger~ld Rassmussen,
associate dean of instruction, pointed out that such a plan "must be
mutually agreeable" between the employee and the immediate supervisor.
other topics discussed included a Brown Bag Lunch day and a
budget (property tax) election date. There are six possible election
dates and of these six, Dr. Schafer said. he is in favor of a March
26, 1974 election.
The next College Cabinet meeting is this afternoon (Tuesday)
at 3 p.m.

Mailer's appearance highlight of fantasy Sy.mposium

Culminating a week-long sy·mposium On
Fanasty
at the
University of Oregon will be an
appearance by Norman Mailer,
author, journalist and film-maker.
Mailer will speak this Friday
at 12:30 p.m. in MacArthur Court.
Tickets will be available at the
door for 50 cents.
An award-winning novelist and
journalist, he has recently gone
into1ilm-making.
In his presentation, the author
wm discuss the elements of
''socio-psycho-sexual fantasy'' in
the myth and reality of Marilyn
Monroe, which is also the subject
of
his current book,
"Monroe."
other f ea tu res of the fanasty

symposium will include a presentation by Ray Hyman, U of 0
psychology
professor,
today
(Tuesday) at 12:30 p.m., in room
214 of the Erb Memorial Union.
Hyman, a former professional
magician, will discuss and demonstrate the deception of reality. No
admission will be charged. •
Later this evening, Irv Weiner,
a faculty member at Chavez College, the world's only college of
magic, will demonstrate the tricks

of Houdini, as well as the arts of
the card shark and ESP. The program will begin at 8 p.m. in the
EMU Ballroom and no admission
will be charged.
other events this week include
Upepo, a Portland-based musical
group, which will present a crosscultural and multi-media program
tomorrow (Wednesday) at 8 p.m.
in the EMU Ballroom. Tickets
(Continued on back page)

=;:

,:,: : .:/

O

.

_. /)

~'f.

~~ililt~

O

irivites !JOU to fltl evenif19 o/

What Gas Shortage?

ED
8la
Bill Curry

Come Look

and

Ask for us!

Jim Lundy

1

NOC~

your student representatives
2"2 Coburg Road

B :)

343-3307

fWU.lf'VJ.C,I\CU>t,:, ~-rtnt bC.l.t:t-{Cl:', :OCW:.Wl-ftj

Page 6 TORCH Oct. 29, 1973 r

TORCH Classifiedul:ds
.
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--- . .
'!}

,7 •;•\~

{ ;:\ \

l\
;-/_

•.

II

_,

-

; ~.'

/ •

'

Ski Boots, Lange Pro's 9 l/2M
One year old--$75.
Call 747-0169 or 344-5489

•

//

~y.
.:,.--:;.
I J w_
,·';
Jf !11 ,
·I •r•
/,,_
l i
.Ii 1

~_>v

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.. / )•

~\\'-~<::
\\ .\-------1
-..__,__,·./////
. I! !' i:;·1
\\ \,_/ / f

••

',

i

Wanted

WANTED -- Rocking_ chair

for child care center. Call
ext. 264.
Wanted -- Couples
for
beginners
class in Round
Dancing, Monday nights. Good
exercise. Call ext. 313 for
details.

I[
I
•

WANTED--Chest of drawers;
either 4, 5, or 6 drawer chest.
Call Karen, Ext. 234.
Need Photography work done?
Call Joe Munoz ph 747 -9838

FT Medical Office Transcriber: Must have medical terminology, · type mi_nimum of
60 w.p.m. Hours: 8 to 5 pm
pay: $2.57 hr. min. to start

FREE--Giant fall inventory of
domestic kittens, variety of
color and sex, good mousers,
excellent squeak-toys. Well
mannered and box trained.
Call David, Ext. 340.
TALK--Exchanging, selling,
buying old books by Wright,
Porter, Burrows, Curwood,
Grey. Cal(Ralph Burns, ext.
241.

I

The Kar Doc
V-8 $24. 6 cyl. $21.

PT Security · Guard: Wants
someone from Law E;nforcement Program. Hours: Evenings & weekends. Pay $2.25
an hour

PT Housekeeping positions.
Hours: Flexible. Pay: $1.65
to $2 hr.
PT Person from Electronics
program--to do experimenting- -must be 2nd yr. student
with either TTL experience
or learning it. Pay: 1 $ open
Hours: Flexible

All Work Guaranteed

Services

our low over-head
guarantees low prices
The Kar Doc can go anywhere

l
IJ

Building.

~Lost & Found

)

LOST, one shellacked wooden
bracelet.
REWARD Kari
Kugler, 687-9603.

any time Sunday thru Friday
Ernie S~alcup
. 342-851J or 942-3757

Volunteers

OSPffiG needs volunteer help
to make our projects work.
If you're interested and want
to help, call or come in to the
OSPffiG office SAC office, 2nd
floor Center Building.

HISTORIC DlSPLAYS IN LIBRARY -- Several related
displays are currently on exhibit in the library. Included
are four hand-crafted model
wagons and logging ·equipment
by
Eugene's Bill Hudson;
~everal pioneer tools, utensils
and furniture from the Pioneer Museum; Sid Austin's
George Washington display;
and paintings by Don Prechtel
of Creswell. Two other displays are also up: the historic
autographs collection belonging to Marv Jaeggers and
a Civil War-era collection belonging to Paul Wellborn.

PT Mterschool supervision &
babysitting positions. Hours:
Flexible. Pay: Variable

complete

LCC's Birth Control Clinic is
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

DON'T TURN RIGHT--Until
further notice you cannot make
a right turn anytime (except
in the specially designated
lane) at the intersection of the
frontage road along gasoline
alley and 30th Avenue. It
was prohibited from 7-9 a.m.
but the state has shut off all
right turns . from that lane
until a study on traffic flows
can be completed. Too many
accidents have been happening there this year.

. PT TelephoneSoliciting: selling stereo equipment and electric appliances. Hours: Flexible. Pay: $ commission or
salary.

Mobile Tune -Up

Thesis & Term papers, typed
in my home. any kind of
typing by experienced typist.
- Call Irene at 746-7875 after
5:30 p.m.

Oregon is observing Veterans
Day November 11 instead of
October 22, which is still the
official Federal Vets Day.

FT Statistical Typist: Must
know # keyboard, able to
organize, accuracy very important. Hours: 8 to 5 pm ·
Pay: $391 to $525 depending
on experience.
FT Medical Office: Must have
previous experience in ordering supplies, make out medicare reports, chart make-up.
Hours: 8 to 4:30 p.m. Pay:
$ open.

Five Pussies need loving care
FREE Call 998-8403.

Wanted-There is a need for
French Horn and Clarinet
players in the performing
Arts Department. If interested please contact Gene
Aitkens,
Performing hrts
Department Center Building.

II

INST.RUCTIONS i...V~ILABLE
Application instructions for
the White House Fellows program for -1974 are available
in the office of community services. Fellows will be selected to gain first-hand experience in government at the
highest levels and will be assigned to White House staff
members, the vice president,
and members of the Cabinet.
Deadline for submitting applications is November 15.

For information on any of
these jobs, see Corinne in
the job information center
2nd floor, Center Building.

Free

FT Welders: Must be certified and graduates from program. Pay: $4.10 an hour.
Wanted: Referees for football and basketball pay: $3.00
per game apply LCC intramural office or P.E. Dept.
Leave name, phone number,
and address.

I
I
M TORCH
I
I I • II:~
~)::''.¢_:4n':::X~u. :Y1L ,-:.,$:'::m,::;-=-i~/ ~§$.;'xi~.:,:~

L

BUY

I

7-;ll

I

A

CLASSIFIED

are now being
accepted for

TORCH

Associate Editor
for Winter and
Spring terms

ocs.

,

FRID.A Y NOVEMBER 2. S.ACCO .AND V.ANZETTI. The
dramatic story of two ltalf.an aoarchutl who were framed ~i
for a p&)'!Oll robbery committed by the Mafia and
executed by the state of Massachusetts after almc»t a
decade of appeals and an historical world-wide itruggle
to save their l1ve1• 1hetr only crimes being immigrant
radicals. Oae ol the maat shameful epuQ<fes in .A mertcan
hutory. Alto, HOPSOTCH. the struggle· between police
and youth are related to 1he activities on a hop1kotch
court. 180 PLC 7 & 9:30 p. m.

Announcements
FORD FOUNDATION REJ>ORT
The Ford Foundation report
on "An Inquiry into the Uses
of Instructional Technology''
is available for loan from

Job Placement

J

acco- Vanzetti
', ~---,/

I

FOR SALE '55 Chevy panel.
Best offer. Call after 6 p.m.
any day.
Phone 686-1786.
1Ask for Kim.

.i

\{ ~t~/~i

For Sale

Applications

plant~ & c!_nti~s
55,9
§_h _S~ringfie}!j
~
.
S
phone
726--8803
:· .!!!.-.A-:·,·~

'

I~

I

Apply to TORCH Editor,

- ·carol Newman,

2nd floor, Center Bldg.
orca/1747-4501, ext. 234

I

Events

I

Community Prayer Breakfast
December 1, 1973 Briggs Elementary School, off Mohawk
on Yolanda Drive,Springfield.
$2.25 a plate, 7 to 9 a.m.
Saturday. Hosted by the Springfield Jaycee's.
•

VOTE!
for the
Candidate
of your choice
October 30

o 0o

~,,

clothes & cloth ,I'
bearjs & jewelry findings
~9: now at two
Iii
locations ~t
_l;I
1036 Willamette &
2441 Hilyard
l'l)

•$·

1
~

Meetings
Impeach Nixon meeting in
th8f' N. W. corner of the center cafeteria- 12:00 noon-Thurs. Nov.1st
LDSSA. (Latter Day Saint Student Association) 11:30-1 each
Thursday in Rm. 206, Health
Bldg.
VETS Club Meeting Notice:
Thursday, November 1, at 2
p.m., Forum Bldg., Rm. 305
Vets Club ·now has an information desk in the SAC office.
The LCC Chess Club KNIGHTS
.AND CASTLES, now meets on
Tuesdays from 12 to 4, and
Fridays from 2 to 5 in the
Center Building lounge. Players may also be found there
at almost any other time.
If yo u are interested, just
be there.
CEPIRG local board will meet
on Wednesday, November 7
at 4:00 pm in the school cafeteria.

Oct. 29_, 1973 TORCH Page 7

Dep th key to Titan
Lane Community College completed the first step in its quest
for a second consecutive national
cross country championship with
an easy victory in the Oregon
Community College Athletic Association conference championship Saturday at Pendleton.
• Utilizing team depth by placing
7 men in the top 14, the Titans
streaked to a point total of 35
followed by Clackamas CC 56,
Central Oregon 92, Linn Benton
93, Southwestern Oregon CC 123,
Umpqua 145 and Chemeketa 173.
Rod Cooper led the way for
the Lane harriers in · fifth place
followed by Dan Aunspaugh in
sixth, Dennis Myers in eighth and
Scott Richardson in tenth. John
Wallace, "the fastest improving
runner on the team'' according
to Coach Al Tarpenning, rounded
out the scoring in eleventh place.
The team title looked in• doubt
for the Titans as Clackamas, the
pre-meet contenders according to
Tarpening, placed Randy Huskey
and John Dawson in second and
But then Lane's
third places.
depth took over and the next
Clackamas runner crossed the line
in 17th place behind the entire
Lane Contingent.
Lane grabbed the first six places
last 'vear but according to Tarpenning, "The league is much imMany
proved over last year.
of the teams have one or two
good runners. The days of complete domination of the league by
one team are over."
He felt that this was an "out-

•
Win

'. Outstan ding perform ances make
•

_} by

Dan Aunspaugh and Dennis Mytrs lead two rmmers from other s.:hool:~
h the conferance tm rout •1 t ,1 1 fi ':'~t place team finj .sh in the OCCAA
cvnference championship. Lane's win, their third in a row, ar 1ws
them to continue on to the regional :::hampionship Saturday in Coos
_
Bay. (Photo by Tom Tyra)
team performance."
standing
Everyone on the Lane team made
the All-Conference Team.
. Accoz:.ding to Tarpenning, Lane
must be afforded the favorite•s
role. "We are the conference,
regional and national defending
champions so we must be the premeet favorites,' he said.
Tarpcnning went on to say he
felt that Clackamas CC, The
College of Southern Idaho and
Northern Idaho College are serious
contenders. '' The key to victory
will be consistent grouping .among

our top five runners," said Tarpenning. . Should Lane win the
regional meet, they will travel
to Tallahassee, Florida for the
·national meet.
The conference championship
was a tune-up for next Saturday's
regional to be hosted by Southwestern Oregon Community College
at Sunset Bay Golf Course in Coos
Bay. The 11 a.m. meet will include
teams from the OCCAA and also
teams from Idaho.

Comme ntary - priorities in sports covera ge
by

Busby

Steve

If anyone reading the Sunday
Register-Guard gave up looking
for the Lane Community College
country results after
cross
searching through the first ten
pages, they should be forgiven.
Without the benefit of my seeingeye wife, I would never have looked
on page 11 either.
Lane Community College ran
away with their third straight conference championship. The coverage by the Eugene Register-Guard,
however, amounted to less than
the space given over to the rundown on the game between PennState and West Virginia.
Admittedly, the interest in the
reached a
game
Penn State
feverish pitch just prior to the
weekend, but the Guard's coverage
still seems slightly absurd when
compared to the coverage afforded
by the Portland Oregonian.
This newspaper, situated in a
city 100 miles to the north of
LCC and more than 200 miles
to the west of Pendleton, gave

CBookgain
u~wd
te~t 600kg
14th

&

Oak

''downtown "

None of this is to say that the
more coverage to what they must
have considered an out-of-area . Guard doesn't know what it is
sports event than the Guard, which doing. Far from it. It is virtuwould presumably consider LCC ally certain they know exactly
what they're doing when these
in proximity to its readers.
With coverage like this, is it lapses occur.
any wonder that most of the people •• However, it is a problem that
in the community do not even could be easily rectified. In fact
realize that Lane has a cross it must be rectified if the Guard
That the team wants to continue to maintain its
country team?
is also one of the top teams in reputation as the informing voice
the country is apparently of no of the most knowledgable track
concern to the sports staff of the and field (that includes cross
country) community in the country.
Guard.

European Auto Repair

SPECIAL
V.W. Bug Tune-up
includes points, condenser, rotor
distributor cap, spark plugs

women runners center of attention ·
Dennis Myers

•

"Damn it, I'm not going to where do two women go to take
let some girl beat me,' has been a shower in a Boy's Club? The
the phrase uttered around the con- · dilemma was resolved by having
ference this season by team mem- the men leave the locker room
bers opposing the Lane Community while the women used the facilities.
College cross country team. The Although there were many offers
target of such statements has been by the men to "guard the door"
the female contingent of the LCC and "stand lookout" there were
team, Sharon Downing and Cheryl no real problems.
The women reveal a different
Bates.
Although technically they run for philosophy about running than their
the Oregon Track Club (OTC), .the male counterparts. When the men
gals toe the line against the guys were complaining about the course
in the meets, running on the same at a recent meet, Ms. Bates councourse at the same time. Of tered, "I really enjoyed the course,
course they gather some strange the trees and all the autumn leaves
second looks as they step to the and colors. That is what I think
starting line but it doesn't bother cross country is all about." What~hem. Ms. Bates said, "W~ are ever their philosophy, the result
Just o~t there to better our times. is they im'J)l:_ove their course times
•
Sure 1t makes you feel good to and enjoy it.
beat a guy but it is more important that we improve.''
Most of the male runners don't
mind. Rod Cooper, a runner on
the Lane team, said, "I think the
But the
girls are fantastic."
male runners that the women beat
LCC's Women;s Field Hockey
make their wrath known. Besides
suffered their third loss of
team
obscene
of
brunt
the
being
last week, falling to
season
the
remarks some of the time, few
Of Education
College
Oregon
the
down-right
get
of the runners
score.
O
to
2
a
by
resentful out on the course.
Sue Mitchell, a former LCC
"Sometimes I will be moving up
, who came back to haunt
player
on a runner and when he sees
teammates, scored
that it is a g:_irl, he won't let her former
in each half of play.
goal
single
a
me pass him,'' Ms. Downing said.
The regularly scheduled conLCC's Coach Deboie Daggett
ference meets are the only ones had anticipated that OCE would
that the women are allowed to run be the toughest competition the
in. They have their own champ- Lane
women would face this
ionships Nov. 24 in A.lberquerque, season. The OCE women greatly
New Mexico when they will run outnumbered the Titans, were
for the OTC. The qualifying meet faster and more aggressive. OCE
for the trip to the nationals will controlled the ball through most
be at Lane on Nov. 3. •
the contest, although Lane
of
There is really no problem managed to steal the ball several
within the team as far as accepting times.
the women. However, sometimes
Though the OCE women were
there is a problem finding separate
facilities. During a recent trip better offensively, Ms. Daggett
to Albany, the problem arose, credited her team's defense with
(Continued on back page)

Field hockey team
suffers third loss

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686-081 1

Page 8 TORCH Oct. 29, 1973

Editorial.

(Continued from page 2)
position after Red Fox steps down.
Their current Publicity Director
will also be leaving at the end
of this term , so there will be
another post open. We think that
takes care of everyone at least
once. When they finally get through,
the students will not have elected
any of the present office holders
to the positions -they now or will
hold .
And possibly with a new 1st VP,
we can hope for some smoother
elections next time.

Hockey
(continu.ed from page 7)
a good showing, saying "I thmk
it shows that our defense was
good in that we held them to only
two goals.' '
One of the bulwarks of the Lane
defense was Judy Heidenrich.
Teammate Pam Janecek declared
" I don't know what we would d~
without Judy. ' ' Marsha Miller
goalie
. for the Tl.tan women , als~
r eceived compliments from her
.teammates--she nicely stopped
one OCE goal attempt in the first
half.
But Ms. Daggett expressed disappointment in the Lane offense. •
Ms. Janecek explained, "We were
nervous and making a lot of mistakes until we got settled down.' '
The Titan women will meet the
U of O "B" team this Wednesday
at South Eugene High School, at
3:30 p.m.

l

(Continued from page 2)

given you an order."
Clearly, that was all that
mattered "'io Haig. Someone
forgot to tell him at West
Point that his loyalty was
supposed to be to the Constitution, to the democratic
institutions, not' to any man.
Crisis-Prone President:

White House aides have concluded despairingly that
President Nixon is crisisprone. He seems to be drawn
irresistibly to crisis and confrontation. This has stirred
talk both in and out of the
White House about what
makes Richard Nixon tick.
Those who know the
human Nixon say he is a
warm friend , a faithful husband and a loving father. But
he is a shy and sensitive man,
who is comfortable only
among old friends. The moment a stranger walks into
the room, they say, he
changes personality from the
private Nixon to the public
Nixon.
This tendency to hide his
true identity from the public
has caused a certain alienation. He doesn't trust the
public and the public doesn't
entirely trust him. The President is also .a rock-'emsock- 'em campaigner. He
regards his political attacks
on others as part of the game.
But their attacks on him
have left deep scars.
As a result, he has become
acutely sensitive to criticism
and he looks upon dissent as
disloyalty. White House aides
tell us the President is terribly frustrated over the

Hood (who is in charge of elections) was conveniently unable to
find the wording for two very
important ballot measures. Subsequently, both were left off the
ballot. These measures were: The
viability of student government and
the student handbook, of which
Barry Hood is the editor.
To further complicate matters,
a press release was distributed
one week ago giving a list of
students running for senatorial
positions. The TORCH then spent
the entire week interviewing these
students.
Unfortunately, a new list was
submitted the day before publication of this paper. Since incomplete coverage is worse than no
coverage at all, we were forced
to choose the latter
So congratulatio~s and better
luck next time. . .and the time
after that
and the time after
that. . . • • •

Magazine
(Continued from page 4)
findings and the possible time of
publication of the first issue.
Students
wishing to submit
material for publication in the
Concrete Statement may take it to
the Literary Arts Club office located on the fourth floor of the
Center Building. The Concrete
Statement is a copyrighted publication.

Anderson ...

harassment from his critics
and the ebbing of his ·power.
He feels that his critics
simply want to obstruct him
and that the public doesn't
understand his problef!1S.
For a mah of Nixon's combative nature, he reacts by
holding his ground and striking back at his critics. He has
become a cornered President
who is determined to go down
fighting.
Sp ending Sprees : The Pentagon is constantly complaining about military budget
cuts, but the brass hats always seem to have enough
money to entertain visiting
dignitaries.
Sometime ago, fo r example, the 101st Airborne Divi- .
sion at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, was told that President
Nixon would drop by . Out
came the paint brushes and
•whitewash buckets. Civilians
and soldiers alike labored
long hours putting together
promotional displays.
Two days before the big ,
day, the brass hats were told
Nixon couldn't make it. They
would have to settle for second best - then Vice President Spiro Agnew . Neverthe-·
less, 47 buses were hired to

ROBERTSON'S
DRUGS .

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Our Main Concern"

343-7715

30th and Hilyard

Anti-N ixon demon stra tio n a ttra cts crowd

At a demonstration held Saturday
afternoon in front of the Lane
County Courthouse, 200 people
listened to speakers who called
for the impeachment of President
Nixon-.
Irvin Rletcher of the AFL-CIO

Red

repeated the Lan~ County Labor
Council's suppo~t for the impeachment move. He added that the
Building and Trades Council of
Lane, Coos, Curry, and Douglas
Counties joined in supporting the
move.

Fox ...

Herbert Titus, a University of
Oregon professor who.teaches constitutional law, said that recent
events--such as the President's
agreeing to hand over Watergate
tapes and his pledge Friday night
to name a successor to special
prosecutor Archibald Cox--might
cause some politicians to think
the country's pro-impeachment
sentiment has diminished.
He
encouraged
those who haven't
changed their minds to write their
representatives in Washington
again.
Also speaking at the rally were
David Gwyther, an organizer of
members of The Committee to
Impeach Nixon. Also represented
was the Eugene Peace action
coalition.
In addition to the speakers,
Eugene Guerilla Theater performed a play about Zionism in
the Holy Land.

(Continued from page I)
had not gone through the Senate,
been vacated. Hood had heard
it could not appear as a ballot
that Red Fox's wife Marcia had
measure and would be listed as
emptied the desk. Hood found
an opinion ballot.
only incidental· office supplies in
Red Fox was on a speaking
the desk (a telephone directory,
a box of . facial tissue, and a tour out of state and was un~
available for comment at press
match).
•
time. His wife told the TORCH
Late Friday ~f~ernoon,
she would refer all questions on
st_udent Peter Hal~ filed a peht~on
,the matter to his lawyer.
with 100 stu?ent s1gn~tures callmg
In addition,
Ms.
Red Fox
~or a special election to put the
circulated
a petition in the LCC
Senate's demand for resignation
budgets, where is the money going
before the whole student body.
to come from?''
Hal~,
student
ad_ministrati_ve
According to Roger Leasure,
·assis~ant to Jones,. sa_id the _speci~l
ASLCC
second vice president, the
election would comc1de with this
current budget was drawn up by
week's election (Oct. 29 and 30,)
Hoppe.
Red Fox during the summer. Leaat the same polls but on separate
sure
said
he'd
been
unable
to
get
ballots.
(continued f_rom page 2)
a copy of that budget to study
However, Hood, as ASLCC
Eisenhower on pot charges, the
Elections Committee chairman, - before the meeting at which it was
adopted, and that there had been revelation that Edward Cox was
ruled that since Hale's petition
no
quorum present at that meeting. the secret son of Archibald Cox
Cafeteria yesterday (Monday) that
The first budget committee and the disclosure that Justice
reportedly called for the retention
meeting was yesterday (Monday, Burger was the 14th billion Macof Red Fox as President. HowOct. 29 ) at • 1:30 p.m. in the Donalds had bought, Mr. Nixon
ever, the TORCH was not allowed
resigned today when the hot water
President's Dining Room.
to examine this document.
heater
burst. "That's one crisis,"
In
other
business,
the
Senate
The motion to revise the budget
decided to withdraw from member- he shourted, stomping out of the
came after ASLCC Business Manaship in the Oregon Community Col- White House, "Too many!' Mr.
ger Dan Stone gave his report,
lege Student Association (OCCSA.). Ford pledged to get the oath
charging that ''the b.SLCC budget
Hood said the decision to with- straight by tomorrow at the very
is worthless."
He also asked
draw was based on a concensus latest.
the Senate, "That if this body
After reading the above prereached by the Senate that the
is going to pass $10,000 for club
organization was of little or no dictions, reporters asked if
value to ASLCC: He said a re- America could survive the next
quest for funds for the Fall 1973 three years. Dr. Pettibone lookconvention was met with .a state- ed surprised.
bring in people from the hin"If we can survive the last three
ment from Rick Mathews, Social
terlands. A fleet of cars was
Science Department senator, that weeks," he said, "wecanobviously .
rented to haul around the dig
the agenda for the convention in- survive anything,"
nitaries. All told, the Agnew
(Copyright Chronicle Publishing
cluded such items as a happy hour
visit cost the taxpayers $250.and a dance with live music.
Co. 1973) .
000.
Sheila Rose, a student, said
A few days ago, Julie Nixon
three dollars of the nine dollar
Eisenhower visited the
Mailer . ..
registration fee was for enterMarine base at Quantico,
(Continued
from page 5)
tainment, and she objected to her
Virginia. The corps, it seems,
are
one
dollar
at the door.
student body fees being used that
had declared surplus a thouThe Paul Winter Consort, an
way.
,
sand acres of its property. •
Earlier in the meeting, Red Fox improvisational jazz group, will
Julie was selected to present
had
asked Hood and Simmons to present a concert at 8 p.m. on
it to the neighboring Virginia
Thursday; Tickets may be purwrite the resolution for withdrawal
counties.
chased at the EMU main desk,
to
be
presented
at
the
OCCSA
The leathernecks hauled
convention by Simmons who said the Chrystalship and the Sun Shop
out the Marine band and orhe would be attending to make some for two dollars for U of O studered refreshments. Ampresentations concerning vet- dents and three dollars for nonbulances we re ordered to
students.
erans.
stand by and a medical

. l

evacuation helicopter was
readied in case there were
heart failures. Many of the
hundreds of VIPs were fer-ried to the event in a spec'ial
airplane.
The citizens of Virginia
received nearly $3 million
worth of property - but it
cost the nation thousands of
dollars simply to make the
presentation.

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