L LCC (the week of january 8, 1974 vol. 11 (_ no. 16 lane community college, 4000 east 30th avenue. eugene. oregon 97405 Accountant given ·Student leader college manager iob appoints t'No 33 -tear old vice president of a South Dakota transport com pany has been hired as the new business manager at Lane Community College. Jerry D. Fischer was hired early in December by the LCC Board of Education to fill a vacancy left when William Watkins resigned Fall Term. Watkins took a similar post with the OregoniEducation .n.ssn. A Before his L C C appointment Fischer, a native of Illinois, was the vice president for administration and corporate secretary for hll hmerican Transport Company of Sioux Falls, S.D. Prior to that he was budget and finance officer for the South Dakota Board of Higher Education, the South Dakota state budget officer, and staff accountant for Arthur hnderson & Co. of Minneapolis. His salary will be $21,634 year. He assumed his duties at LCC last week. for vacant posts ASLCC President Barry Hood has made several new appointments to student government posts which were vacated over the holidays. Hood said Jle expects the appointments to be confirmed at Thursday's ASLCC meeting. One in a series of pencil drawings in Craig Spilman's art exhibit now on view in the LCC gallery until January 23. The picture on the right, a self portrait of the artist, is a detail of the opposite (Photos by Mark Rahm) drawing. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. tolOp.m. Monday through Thursday and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. It is closed weekends. N ew associat e dean sought LCC President Eldon Schafer confirmed yesterday that "two important personnel changes" in the college's administration have been implemented. Dr. Schafer first announced in a memorandum dated Dec. 10 that effective Jan. 2, Lewis Case, formerly dean of instruction, will become dean of the newly-created Office of hcademic and College Planning. According to Dr. Schafer, the new office will incorporate many of the functions of the present office of Institutional Research with added emphasis on policy development. Gerald Rasmussen, formerly associate dean of instruction, will move into Case's old office with a new title - dean of faculty. Dr. Schafer explained that the selection of the new title is tentative and that the job description will remain basically the same. Elaborating on Case's new job, Dr. Schafer explained, '' ... Lew Case's reassignment is neither a promotion nor demotion but rather a reassignment to a new position which we believe offers unlimited opportunities for improved institutional planning, priority and policy determination, and development of effective communications channels." Dr. Schafer pointed out that with Rasmussen's promotion the college is now screening applications for the associate deanship that Rasmussen vacates. " It's been pointed out that the college doesn't have a woman in a top level administrative position, and the only way we're going to get one is to actively look for one,' he admitted. He added that the college is also interested in encouraging minority members for the vacancy in compliance with the college's affirmative action program. A ten-member screening committee, chaired by n.rt Department chairman Roger Mcalister, will make the initial selection from among the three applications submitted before the Dec. 21 deadline. However, according to Dr. Schafer, However, according to Dr. Schafer, it has had to ask for a week's extension. '' It'll probably be a couple more weeks before the screening committee is ready to make its recommendation,' he added~ The committee consists of six department chairmen, associate Dean Jim Piercy, two faculty members, and a representative from Adult Education. The committee does not have a student representative. . Dr. Schafer explained that he understands that such a committee does not "traditionally" include a student. • ASLCC President Barry Hood, stated later that he was not aware that a student was not on the committee but felt that a student should be included and promised to "look into it." If the committee cannot make a selection from among the three in-house applicants, it will solicit applications from outside the college. Dr. Schafer stressed that he would like to see the position filled from within the college because "We've gone outside the college to fill the last two administrative vacancies.' ' Commenting on the administrative reorganization in general, Schafer feels that at times reassignments are both needed and desired. "By moving people around from within the or- . ganization, we offer them greater upward mobility," he remarked. hfter the screening committee makes its selection its choice will be presented to th selection committee consisting of Mcalister, Rasmussen and Dr. Schafer. The final selection will then be presented to the LCC Board of Education for formal acceptance. Two tuition scholarships for students interested in journalism are now available through the Eugene Register-Guard Old Timers Club. One scholarship will be awarded for two terms, the other for this term only. Applicants will be considered on a basis of career/ educational goals, talent/ scholarship in journalism, and financial need. hpplications are available in the TORCH office, 206 Center Building, and are due by Wednesday at 5 p.m. Dan Stone, who resigned as treasurer last term, had been appointed to replace Russell Ooms as Health Services Coordinator, but withdrew from that position because he is not returning to school this term. John Loeber, who is currently Assistant Health Services Coordinator (a new post) will automatically succeed to the higher post, according to Hood. Loeber is a returning student who was the program's first coordinator, and was instrumental in establishing the Health Service in 1972. faculty member The new Treasurer (if approved by the Senate) will be Dave Mahoney, who Hood said is already checking the books and seeking new revenues to further programs like the Legal Md Service. Mahoney has about 5 years experience in. material management and also in auditing. '' Just some ideas I had that I finally decided to put down on paper," said Jown Howard, chairman of the Language A.rts Department, in response to questions about the recent publication of his new book, "Six Shorts by Long John." Howard said the stories are Craig Geary had been appointed to the Publicity Director post, which was left open when Robin Burns resigned Dec. 14. However, Hood rescinded that appointment yesterday, and Sallie Torres, a departmental senator from Language Arts, was placed in . the position. College prints short fiction by Hood has also established annttorney General position. Tom Tuttle, who has been appointed to fill the role, said he expects to make the student government more effective by cutting down confusion within the Senate about procedures and the meanings of .hSLCC documents. Tuttle has, in turn, appointed John L. Richard as a "Master-at-~rms,' ' for the Senate. based on fact but have been altered to a fictional format and set in the Midwest about 60 to 80 years ago. Howard is a native of the Midwest, and admits that some of the stories contain incidents that he experienced. The book was published at LCC and all revenue from sales will go directly into the LCC Development Fund to cover printing costs. However, Howard said he gains satisfaction from having his stories published and read. Hood said he felt the Attorney General position was necessary to safeguard government offices and documents, and to clarify the frequently po s e d legal questions about the legality of some actions in the student government. Positions now open include Parliamentarian, two Senator-atLarge positions and about 10 departmentai senator posts. According to Hood a list of open positions s would be available for the next issue of the TORCH. hpplications for Parliamentarian and Senators-at-Large will be accepted through 4 p.m. Wednesday,'January 9. ''Pa'ge '2.'. °TORCH January 8, 1974 WEEK LY SPECI AL forum the foru m the forulTI the forum the 1 Raising · student government out of limbo Action taken so far to bring the existing reality (Editor's note: The Forum serves as an opporline with our established priorities are: The into tunity for members of the LCC community to expresident and both _vice presidents are arranging was Forum press their opinions. The following a conference with student body leaders of Clatsop . written by Craig Geary, LCC student.) Community .College who have already incorporated Last term there was a revolution in student their student body. Both vice presidents are drawing government. This action drew criticism from many up guidelines defining responsibilities of Senate sides. We took the negative criticism in stride and members to insure their cmpliance. I have been dealt with the constructive critic ism when_it was appointed to deal with the communication aspect found to be sincerely based on a desire for improve- and the January n.ctivities Calendar is the first ment. · of many attempts at bridging the communication gap. The current administration is as follows: Presi- - We are in the process of examining all Senate funddent, Barry Hood; First Vice President is Roger ed services. The Student Awareness Center is being Leasure; Student hctivities Director is Dave Sim - evaluated to see if it is performing at an acceptable mons; Business Manager is David Mahoney; ~nd level. There is a new foosball table in the cafe1, your humble narrator, was appointed Publicity • teria and there may be additional pool tables. Director. activities speak for themselves. Wednesdays at These five people who make up the Executive noon in Forum 301-302 is our luncheon gathering Cabinet met over the holidays to determine prior- of musicians. Thursdays this term we are going ities or to make, if you will, New Year's Resolu- to bring movie biggies such as "Slaughter House tions. The outcome of their meetings was to: Five," "Sometimes a Great Notion," "Life and I. Research possibilities of incorporating Times of Judge Roy Bean," • and ''Where Does ASLCC. It Hurt?" Jan. 11, after the varsity basketball game, 2. Clarify duties and responsibilities of all •there is a dance in the gym foyer featuring the Funk 'n' Booe-ie Band. Tenbtivelv scheduled arP thP Senate members. "Freaker's Ball'' and a pool tournement. "Freak3. Improve communication by er's Ball'' will be a costume contest with the judging a. Dissemination of pertinent information to students. in the cafeteria. Prizes will be for Best Costume for men and women. We're working on a band for b. Information gathering projects (polls) afterwords. c. Competent internal c omm-unication. 4. Review and re-align (when necessary) enIn case you didn't hear, hitchhinking shelters tire student service structure. . will be a reality here by this summer. 5. Research avenues of additional income. We are trying to raise student government out ' 6. Provide activities relevant to all LCC of the limbo of nonfunctioning into the daylight students. of productive reality. Jis I've said before it's 7. Report bi-weekly to the Board from the going to happen .... SOONER OR LATER. Executive Cabinet. The Missing 58 by Jack Anderson <Copyright, 1974. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.) WASHINGTON - The Pentagon has just about given up trying to find out what happened to the 58 men who are still carried on its POW list. These are men who were photographed in captivity or whose rad·io messages were picked up reporting they had landed safely in enemy territory. The . cease-fire agreement provides that both sides will help each other gather information about the fate of missing men. But the North Vietnamese have refused to cooperate. They are waiting, they say, until the other agreements have been implemented. The families of the m issing men, meanwhile, are left uncertain whether the men are dead or alive. The Pentagon has no proof that they are dead. But top Pentagon officials suspect privately that most of the·m must have died in captivity. Their fate remains one of the haunting questions of the Vietnam Wat . Brezhnev's Grip: Newspapers have been full of speculation lately that Leonid Brezhnev, t he Kr em l in leader. is slipping in power. This has st irn~d alarm that his policy of easing tensions with the West may be reversed by the hardliners in the Kremlin. The press speculation has been questioned, however, by a secret State Department analysis. It is true that. D e fens e Minister Andrei Gr e c h k o, prob a bl y the harshest man in the Kremlin. has been calling for a strong military stance. But Grechko is in charge of the Soviet armed forces. It is also true that Mikhail Suslov , another _grim man, has been stressing the continuing capitalist-communis t co n f I i c t . B u t h e i s t h e Kremlin ' s ideologist. who ......... ___ ··--·· '"" ' ... M ..... .,. ~'"' ... ,. rn •n Marxist regime was overthrown and Allende reportedly shot himself as army troops stormed the presidential palace. Ever · since, Washington has been bu~zing with rumors that the United States was somehow involved in plan~ing the coup. U.S. authorities have nervously avoided discussing the coup. One high State Department official was asked whether he could stale under oath that there was no U.S. in:voh·ement. The ·nervous bureaucrat replied that he eould say there was none at all. so far a s he knew. _Other intelli~ence experts told the committee that anv l 1• S · i 11 vol ve men t would h~1.\:c heen_cha_nneled in a ddterent d1rect10n. It would 11 av~ . b e_e n far more 1: enel H.:ial for both American !on' iµn and economic policy, til t•\ testified , if Allende had lost at the polls. The coup, officials agreed, was the worst possible occurrence for U.S. foreign policy. Why Cadets Confessed: Those who wonder why our military leaders blindly accept orders and cover up scandals need look no farther than the service academies. At these military schools, cadets live under rigid and exaggerated codes of conformity. Those who violate the codes are ruthlessly ridden out. We have had access to the confidential letters of cadets who were caught up in a 1972 cheating scandal at the Air Force Academy. The letters describe how they were. hauled out of bed in the middle of the night, isolated in guarded rooms, threatened, screamed at and ordered to stand at stiff attention for hours. • TOR CH Stall t-------------...1 -- ----- Newman Caroi Edito_r _ Crouch Associate i:ditor Jim J,m Crourh I , __ 1..1 ,. , __ a.- _ _ , ,,.. ____ 1:- The State Department is the __ _ _ _ _. _ _ , .. • _ , ,.. _ .. _ . _ __ _ LI._, _ _ . _ _ _ .., _ , ,. _ _ _ _ __ __ ,.. __ _ _ Rvan Ryan Reese ~.. .lmolog1sts, "":ho wrote the secret analysis, doubt that Brezhnev's power is declining. Not Guilty: Two years ago, we reported that the Central Intelligence Agency and the giant ITT Corporation had plotted to block Salvador Allende from coming to power in Chile after his election. A subsequent Senate "investigation confirmed the story. Last September, Allende's £U Denni Dennis Mvers I . Ass't Sports Editor I Steve Busby Advertising Manager H• __ I Advertising 'Staff Van Norma v-- 1\1-·-- Bob _Norris Photo Editor Harris Dubin Hams Dub Mark Rahm Production Manager Jan·Wostmann Production Staff Kris Kennedy Melissa Morrell Brian Weller Robin Burns The Ethics Crunch ,,Y A rt Hoppe As hmerica entered 1974, the gravest crisis the Nation faced was, of course, The Ethics Crunch. There simply weren't enough ethics to go around. Some historians blamed the war in Vietnam, during which past Presidents had squandered the country's ethical reserves· at a profligate rate. others accused the hmerican business community of creating the shortage in order to profit, as usual, from a widespread lack of ethics. But most americans ventedtheirspleenonWashington, the country's traditional source of crude ethics. b.nd there could be no question that Washington le~ders, for whatever selfish reasons, had all but dried ~P that source. Indeed, Washington observers ~ompamed there was scarcely an ethic to be found m town for love nor money. • ,.n.s always, the shortage hit rich and poor alike, except that, as always, it hit the poor harder• .n.s the shortage grew, they were constantlybeingcheated, goug_ed and lied to. All ethicless malaise settled !hreatemngly over the Nation. Aeling swi~y in the ern?rgeney, the President proposed 17 different solutions. He was he said, opposed to any ethical rationing system. "Rationing," he said, "will only encourage cheating and the production of counterfiet ethics.' . Instead, he called for voluntary compliance to conserve the dwindling supply of ethics. Communities were urged to !ir_e all honest cops, Boy Scouts were asked to limit themselves to ten good deeds a ~eek~ elderly women were r~quested to keep their aJ;1;es under 55. and all Americans were called on to go slower in giving to charities and to lower their standards ten degrees. Naturally there w~re protests. Many small independent churches defiantly remained open despite I News Editor _. ____. . __ . _ .. . . __ . _... _ __ _ _ . repons suggesl ne is ugrueu- _ Sports Editor , ___ The innocent bystander Reporters Paul Waldschmidt Member of Oregon Community College .Newspaper Association and Oregoo Newspaper Publishers Association. The TORCH ls published on Tuesdays throughout the regular academic year and every other Tuesday during Summer Term. ~inions 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. Mall or bring all correspondence to: TORCH, Center 206, Lane Community College, 4000 East 30th I.venue, Eugene, Oregon 97405; Telephone 747-4501, E~. 234. the President's proclamation of "Ethicless Sundays." .n.nd in New York, cab drivers declared an "Ethics Boycott' · - vowing to treat all customers unethically. But no one noticed. These steps taken, the President then appointed an Ethics Czar to see what should be done. His choice was Bagley Boodle, who as a former longtime Congressman, certainly knew as much about the shortage as anyone. suffered equally, everyone To insure that Boodle established an allocations system. Boodle immediately ordered Salt Lake City to ship all its surplus ethics to meet the demand for more ethics in Washington. Unfortunately, the demand for more ethics in Washington came from everywhere but Washington and the surplus ethics went --.. , begging. By april 15, traditionally the worst season for ethics, the President had no choice but to order rationing. As he had predicted, this led to cheating, hoarding, gouging and lying--a period of Black Market Ethics. But , once again, no one could tell the difference. It was then that a small group of do-gooders organized 'Operation Independence.' Their goal was to stimuJa te the exploration for new domestic sources of ethics, such as the home and the community. "For only then," they said, "can we become independent of such . unreliable sources as Washington, where ethics are very foreign." It should be mentioned in passing that during the same period the Nation also had a shortage of oil. But compared to The Ethics Crunch, it didn't - amount to a hill of beans. (Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. 1974) ,...---- -~~~-- -------~ ........*..**** DAIRY ~ Ja~~:~~~~!,~~gef( . ANN greets students daily in the LCC cafeteria messages aer;epted in student activities area ho me -Pho·n e 688-2605 Breakfast, lunches, dh;1ners. . Homemade sou,.>s and pies. .Complete founftun service. 5~30 a.m. t<{ 10~00: p..m. 7 days a week l810 Chamber, 3·0-2112 January .a, 1974 TOROH Page 3 10% to & What Gas Shortage? Disco student faculty ~D 1'AfE' ART and ARCHITECTURE SUPPLIEJ MON.-THURS .. 9to 5:30 /DAYS .. 9 to RDAYS .. Bill Curry Come Look and Lu nd Y Jim Ask for us! .you-c student representatives 20 Coburg Road · Wrestlers initiate season with victory The Lane Wrestling team emerged from their first weekend of conference dual meet competition with one win and one loss. The Titans toppled Southwestern Oregon C o m m unit y College (SWOCC) Friday night, 25 to 18 and were defeated by Clackamas Community College 36 to 9 onSaturday. Lane's win was keyed by the outstanding performances of Mel Johnson and Dave Parks. Parks, wrestling in the 158 pound weight class, slaughtered SWOCC's Don Kerkow 11 to O. Larry Davis succumbed to Lane's 142 pound .entry, Johnson, by a score of 10 to 1 . Paul Foster (118), Bob Peters (126), and ~r1en Rexius (150), also won for the Titans. Clackamas, fifth ranked junior college team in the nation, had their own way thoughout the Saturday contest, except for victories by Lane's .arlen Rexius and Murray Booth. Rexius won a hard fought upset over Bob Bensen, 7 to 5 in the 150 pound bracket. Returning to competition after a year's absence from the Titan ranks, Booth pinned Dave Kyllo in the first minute of the initial round in the Heavyweight Division. Titans split in leag_u e openers Lane came into the weekend needing at least a split in their first two games against conference opponents, according to Coach Dale Bates. They got the split, but not the way they expected. Friday night the Titans traveled to Blue Mountain Community College in Pendleton to take on the Timberwolves in the first game of the conference • • •• season for both teams. Lane rode the scoring of Davy Ohmer and Rob Smith to a 90-88 victory. Smith and Ohmer each scored 26 points as Lane shot a torrid .621 from the field. That kind of shooting was needed though as BMCC hit a scorching .667. Lane trailed BMCC 55 to 52 at the half as the Timberwolves, led by guards Dave Cain with 17 and Dave Krosting with IO, swapped leads with Lane throughout the opening period. The second half saw Lane tighten their defense, holding Cain and Krosting to a total of IO points in the second half. Roger Thomas, the high-leaping center for BMCC, fouled out of the game late in the final stanza, after scoring 12 points and grabbing 4 rebounds. Lane's team, down to eight men after Rodney Cross quit the team over the holiday break, placed five of those men in double figures. Wayne Shelton finished the game with 12 counters, while Mike Reinhart and Layne Murdoch accounted for IO points apiece from their wing positions. However, the game against Chemeketa Community College Saturday night was a total turnaround for Lane. Whereas the night before Lane hardly missed a shot I against Chemeketa the Titans had trouble hitting lay-ins. Chemeketa jumped into an 8 to 2 lead with five minutes gone behind the outside shooting of guard Smith had the job of trying to the shut-off inside Chief's mainly game, Greg Ishmael, a 6'7" center who bas been averagnearly 22 ing points per game. . For the second game in a row the Titans were led in scoring by Smith and Ohmer as each man contributed 14 points. Next weekend the Titans host Judson Baptist Friday night and then travel to Southwestern Oregon Community College in Coos Bay for a game Saturday night. Game time is set for 7:30 p.m. both nights. also a limited number of furnished units available HOUSING * EQUAL OPPORTUNITY !;Cs apartments 475 Lindale Drive #84 343-3307 SPORTS BRIEFS Tom Hess. Hess consistently gunned from the 18 Judy Heidenrich and Melissa to 20 foot range, but, after the first five minutes • Olson recieved top defensive and was unable to hit anything. offensive Player of the Year aDavy Ohmer, a freshman guard from b.laska, wards, respectively, from the LCC led the way with three quick baskets as Lane fought women's field hockey team at their back to tie the game at 11 all with 12:16 to play. sports banquet held over the Christmas vacation. With Ohmer and Ms. Heidenrich plans to attend Reinhart Mike Oregon College of Education next hitting from outyear while Ms. Olsen sees Oregon and Rob side State as her future school. scoring Smith from inside the Titans battled into a 29 to 27 halftime lead. **** Unfurnished 1 Bedroom $102.50 2 Bedroom $124.50 Greg & Karen Jones "Lease a bug from $68.86" 747-5411 There will be a short meeting for track and field enthusiasts tomorrow (Jan. 9) in room 105 Health and Physical Education building. All those interested in competing in mens track and field are urged to come to the 4 p.m. meeting. I **** Intramural five-man basketball will begin Jan. 14. Sign-up sheets are available in the Intramural Office in the lobby and should be turned in by Jan. 10. Page 4 ·TORCH January 8, 1974 Anderson ... (continued from page 2) Wrote one young man: "Being awakened at three in the morning and having academy discipline instilled in me, it was several hours before I even started rebelling. The wing commander ... (was) screaming at me from approximately three inches in front of my face .... He was cursing .. .in the worst way possible." Another former cadet wrote: "Interrogation teams did ever;ything from pushing. shoving, screaming at the top of their lungs to standing us ... (at attention) for extended periods of time to the point where (some cadets) were vomiting and passing out." -rhat's how the academy got its "confessions." Many of the men who "confessed'' are now serving as enlisted men. The men who interrogated them are now officers in the U.S. Air Force. OPTOMETRIST Dr. Robt. J. Williamson • WIRE RIM GLASSES • EYE EXAMINATION • CONTACT LENSES* • FASHION EYEWEAR 686-0811 Standard Optical After March Our New Address 860 OLIVE OLO ADDRESS 820 WILLAM£11£ RESEARCH M4TERIALS AVERNUS ASCENDING THOUSANDS OF RESEARCH STUDIES CATALOGUE CONTAINING 10,000 LISTINGS NOW AVAILABLE Send for FREE Details or Telephone (312) 427-2840 484 -1467 Ac';i;~ Re;;a~~ i;'c:-' - - - - - - i ROBERTSON'S DRUG--$ - I I I Your Name- -- - - - - - - - - - I Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I ;. City&State _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I1 431 South Dearborn Street Chicago, Illinois 60605 ____ __________ _ Your ·Prescription -Our Main. Conc~nf' '43'!'7715 30th and :WI~ 11 !TORCH classified adsl For Sale ·- FOR s~LE--EDUCb. TIONAL! Help the child just learning to read- b. THOME! S-T-E-P i1.HE~D REb.DING Gh.MES teach phonics! Classroom tested. Designed by a teacher. Directions, guidelines, suggestions written for parents! h great gift idea! LCC Bookstore. FOR SALE--1954 Chevy ton and 1/2 truck. Good rack, new clutch, new recaps. Best . off~r.. 988-8655. ·i\J1f °Y Rides Micki Dennis, 109 North River Rd., Cottage Grove. 942-7219.James L. Smith, 199 Silver Lane #23, (near North Eugene High) Eugene, 686-4403 or 686-0209 (leave message); Steven Hills, 409 Clark (1st and Lawrence), Eugene, 3443823; Tommy Ybanez, 954 West 3rd Ave. #6, Eugene, 344-3349 sue Poster, U of O Campus, 343-5710; • WnNTED--Mel Simon, Rt. 1 Box 276D Cottage Grove needs ride for classes M-F 8 a.m. Vikki Chapman, Star Route Marcola, Ph. 933-2368 needs ride M-W-F Jon ' Juhlin, P.O. Box 174, Blue River, Ph. 822-3580, Craig Breithaupt, 1760 A.Ider, Eugene; • FOR SftLE-- FIRE WOOD!!! $30 a cord--split--free delivery. Call 1-925-3444. Wb.NTED--Refrigerator in good condition. Can pay up to $25. Leave message for Melissa at Ext. 234, Torch off. ROOM for rent (3 bedroom house). 345-1815. EXHIBIT OPENS--Drawings by Craig Spilman go on display January 3 in the main gallery in the art department and will remain on exhibit until January 23. II I\..' o l ~;, :~ :~ Job Placement i.1;1; .' ~ ~ ~ ~ - ~;t:"f;V: •::'f '.' \~.;..,J~4t.-,-.~ ;~-;-.., _~- ._..._.", 1 Wednesday, January 9, BRIGHT COLLEGE YEh.RS. The story of the 1970 national student strike. Directed by Peter Rosen. Music by the Yale SDS Scuffle Band. Winner of the best documentary award at the Chicago Film Festival. hlso, THE • INHERITh.NCE. Produced in cooperation with the h.malgamated Clothing Workers. Featuring the voices of Pete Seeger, Judy Records the Collins, and Tom Paxton. modern history of the U.s. as seen by working people. "h. moving and eloquent history of immigrants in New York and their fight for decent working conditions"--N. Y.Post. 177 Lawrence. 7 and 9:15. U o.f 0 177 Lawrence ":Peanut Butter and Jelly Jam," Thursday movies, and a pool tournament top the list of activities sponsored by the b.SLCC Senate this month. The .series of movies. beginning Jan. 10, will include ''Slaughter House Five," "Sometimes a Great Notion," "Where Does It Hurt?' ' and "Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean.' The films will be shown in Forum 309 beginning at 10 a.m. and running every two hours. The cost of the Thursday movies will be one dollar per person. The Luncheon Jam in Forum 301-302, (al~as the Peanut Butter and Jelly Jarr) will be continued this, month in the Forum Building - from noon to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 9, for interested people to • bring their lunch and their instruments and "jam'' (or just listen) throughout the lunch hour. Jan. 14 will bring a pool tournament to the students of Lane with prizes awarded to the winners of the contest being held in the cafeteria from noon to 2 p.m. • Copies of the January activities calendar are available in the Student Senate offices on the ·second floor of the Center Building. ~YIBffll 10~ Sculptors, Boat Builders, Carpenters . .. • Laminating .' Finish· & Casting Resins, • Polyester Resins • Fiber glass Cloth & Mat, ALL SUBJECTS •I I I I I I II Weekly films highlight January events Admission $1.00 -7 & 9:30 p.m. , PT Perm: Substitute on motor route paper delivery--50 mi. route in Spfld. 1 day/week-must have economy car for gas. Pay: $40/month. FT Perm: Person(s) needed for full-time position helping with meals, cleaning, laundry pick-up and delivery of groceries and children. Would have own quarters and a car . would be available. Will conPay: Open sider couples. PT Temp: Person needed for nine week job as woodshop instructor- -must be certified. Term of employment, approx. 2 months. Tools provided. Pay: $4/hour. • Pratt 4 Lampert paints, • Olympia Stains, • Ornamental Cement Block-, • Pine & Nova-Ply, shelving, • Plywood, Sheetrock·, hardware, other building & remodeling needs 11~~ W~ ~~gTl~fflT 1,~-~~g1 SCT ..... Services TUTORING- t\.merican and Northwest history, creative writing (short stories, novels, plays). References. Transcripts available. Fees, time flexible. Eldon Bowser, B.S. Journalism, B.S. History, M.F .b.. Creative Writing. Call 342-1964. ACME THE.hTRE, _Ladies Remove Your Hats--Four major motion pictures will " be shown at bargain prices this month courtesy of the student body. admission $1. The rl ~l - «= first, ''Slaughterhouse Five,'' will be shown January 10 at 10 a.m., Noon, 2 p.m. ; 4 p.m., 1 6 ~~~~::.\kmo» Aft a_r eo. ~.s , 1 25% off on all clothing & most winter fabrics except consignments 1036 Willamette 343 -4423 2441 Hilyard ~'E. 345-1324 ..,ti - ,.-.., 'Plants & hings Come in soon , See our plants & things 555 Main Street, Springfield