The TORCH will not be published next week. Have J$n~ Comm ~tg · Colleg e i( happy Thanks.: giving. Vol.' 14 No 9 November 17~ 1976 Spe,cial KLC C: \ hearing lon_-ight Students/parents to lose child core Bill exclu des cOfflmu-nity cOlleges • by Nancy Hale by -Sally Oljar Oregon community colleges have been "I think it's wrong and ·violates out excluded from ·a post-secondary child care Board policy," said LCC Board of funding bill soon to be submitted to the Education Chairman Jim Martin, after he state legislature. and the rest of the Board members learned According' tc:i Linda Rie'pe, LC<: Cooraifrom the Nov. 4 issue of the JORCH of ttie nator of Early_·c hildhood Education, "a reorganization of radio station KLCC. ·~immediiite'' ·show of ·interest and soliThe prqposa1 would require that the five darity from community college students ·is KLCC managers must have baccalaureate the only aiternative for change in the degress ·so that they might .teach d~sses in discriminatory language of-the bill, which addition to runn'ing -~he radio statiort. now provides for "; .. institution(s) within Martin was displeased because the the State Department of Higher Edu Board had not been aware of the proposal cation," Le. only four .year · institutions. prior to reading about the plan in the Riepe said the bilt' obtains state money TORCH. for student_s (both part-time and full-time) He added that the Board shouid be . who don't qualify' for the limited day care involved when there are decisions made funds now available. about ''something ... as important as the Parents comprise 45 per cent of media." community ~allege students, as opposed to After three hours of discussion, the 24 per cent of the four .year college Board decided to hold a special meeting enrolees. Howe'ver, Riepe is the only tonight, Nov. 17, to hear more .discussion. community college representative on the Plan began last spring 26 persori Inter-Institutional Task Force on President Eldon Schafer replied that Day Care, -the group responsible for there was ••a great desire on the. part of the drafting the legislative bill. ' Dennis Mulvihill. coordinator of the Mass Communication Department to move influential Oregon Student Lobby, admits ahead very rapidly." .. What's the hurry?" Martin asked. he has been a strong voice in opposing the Acting Mass Communication Dept. addition of community colleges in the bill. Chairman Mike Hopkinson explained that Mulvihill represents the seven statethe department had considered changing funded four year colleges. He encourages the ··qualifications of--the···KtCC itaff for community colleges to ·get ·involved .with over a year, and that the present staff was the idea of child care services for student aware of this at early meetings held last parents, but he will not consider support- · ing their addition to the bill unless there is spring. He said that "the department felt the a. " . . . strong show of support 11nrl KLCC staff should be involved in teaching" and cited . the decision as a .. collective" one on the part of the department members. It is the prerogative of the department to set the qualifications required of staff and by Michael Riley instructors, and the change would open up Saturday I satisfied an urge that I "frin~e benefits" for the station, Le . had for a long time: I drove a have hiring -a full-time StliltiOn manager, which brand new $10,000 Porsche. isn't possible at the present time, he Originally meant to be a comparadded . • ison between riding a horse and Station not 'Instruction tool' driving such a car this story became Dean of Instructional Operations Gerald an obsession with me last Friday. I Rasmussen agreed with Hopkinson~s called Centennial Porsche-Audi and a is KLCC that added He assessment. • talked to Bill Lovell, ,Centennial's '' very expensive operation" and the sales manager. I explained my idea department would save a substantial sum and he wa1s quite receptive to it. We of money with the change. The •'first set the·time for Saturday. priority'' of the station is teaching, he said. That night I drove home in my Schafer agreed. He told the &>ard that slightly mistreated Pinto. • I tried to the station "wasn't reanv · servin~ contain my e~citement when x·talked students" as an instructional tool. He to some friends that evening, ·but the questioned the propriety of LCC supportof sports cars kept coming up. topic ing public radio when the station finds it ''inconvenient to involve students in our own radio station? .. Martin asiced if d1e problem' was a lack ~f control over the station by the administration, to which Schafer replied that KLCC had "slipped further and further away . . . •(it) became almost autonomous . ., •'This Administration hasn..t exercised its i'es~n~ibiltties in setting controls for KLCc,•• Rasmussen added. · He pointed out that the change would not affect program co·n tent or·its direction ~ but would place more • emphasis on the instructional aspect of the station. KLCC worried about future direction I_.. ,. t • f - " recipricol involvement" between community colleges and the Student Lob~y. A change could still come about in the bill if a united lobby effort can be put together by community colleges across the state, before the next meeting of the task force on Nov. 30. Mulvihill has suggested that the bill be submitted as it is, and that. community colleges lobby to have it amended later. -B ut LCC's Riepe disagrees: "This seems to be a difficult approach and one that- would• fracture·.the impact·,on the legislators. It seems to me that we (all parties interested in this issue) should put together a united effort with as broad a base _of support as possible." With less than two weeks left before the next task force meeting, the fate of the desperately neede.d funding rests with whether the community colleges can put together an effective and persuasive lobby effort. Both Riepe and Mulvihill plan to speak before the Community Colleges of Oregon Student Association and Commission (CCOSAC) meeting . in Salem. Nov. 19. If enough interest and support can be generated from the student leaders at the CCOSAC conference, the embryonic lobby effort may begin-to g~w. Anyone wishing more information can contact Linda Riepe. n~: artm nt of E.a ly Childhood Education. TORC H inves tigate s $10;0 00car But several members of th~ KLCC staff voiced their concern about· the ·station's direction, should the personnel shift .take place. So did Jay West, owner of -radio station KZEL and1 a member of the department's Lay_,, Advisory· Committee. Speaking for K1CC staff members. West told the Board that as the licensee of KLCC . continued on page 4 510,000 and included an AM-FM stereo cassette piayet. Resplendent . in my t~rtlenect Saturday morning• arrived. My sweater and imitation leather coat, I _mind was racing with thoughts' of invited a neighbor to join me in my four speed ·synchromesh transmis- . moment of automotive glory. • She sions and .radial tires. l dressed for stared at me for a few minutes.before t'he occasion wearing the kind of telling me that I' loot~d ridi~lous. • clothes l felt the average expensive My ego det'lated;' -l thought I looked sports car driver would ~ear. . , like Andy Granatellil. Actually, I have learned that there is The jokes tossed.•aside, we .drove no stereotype for such people , over to the ~Jot. f'The traffic .was although I once knew a •fel~ow who beginning to. get h~"'' since st~rched his silk scarf before driving was a football sa~~-.~edul~.• at . his :Alfa-Romeo. Autzen Stadium. Pulling up in front . of the dealer's·~ m I noticed ·• ·The car I drove was a Porsche 924, lack of people insfd'e; perhaps it's the the· newest Porsche on the market. cost of the car or tJieirJocation, but it The C9st of the. car was a littie over .. • • bothered m~ jui(~. ~it. After being greetecl ·by toveD; /we .. Lov~ll ,. talked about ·i •explained ·that it.'is:'r ~ mst front engine Potsch~ artcl 'told us that Porsche seems :to be the car of the "younger generation." J even found ' out that the sales of sports cars in the Eugene area dN>i. Qff. when winter. approaches, •explain'i~g ·the lack of • customers. I received·.~ecli"itkal .m.• ~uaJs;., handouts for pros~ve .buyers that explain ·every gadget thaF can come· with the car. •MY ~~lghbc>r. Lori, w~ given a pamphlet otf the different •colors the car came ;:1. 1n the b~ of . r. my mind a ~oi~ k~P,~ ll~gging, .. Ask to drive tl\e car. H ffo9ght it for as long as I 'could ~nd_w~ b~ t~ yerge of asking -when Lovell says,. ••wiiy don •t yoq take the cat'out ~r a spin , around the bloct?•; My Mart almost if.; .., , . ''Resplen_denf in my' turtleneck s~eater and imitation Ieathe; ~at,'' Riley climbs in • stopped: Th~s contirw~:Qn,,''page 6 . the Porsche 924. I was the one who would start the conversations. w~ ... J - • '. · - ·-·- ··N6v~~i,'er i1:·191,/ ·· ----------··- ·-·-· _._.,_._.- ·-··_·_·_·_·_ • _ . . • .; t Editoria l--------- , Prices hiked for '. L8tter e·choesMcC-arthy·era LTD fasipasses by Nancy Pfeifer-Woollard LTD Fastpasses sold through the LCC Bookstore now cost $11 :so, instead of • $10 for Zone One . The change in price is due to the increase in the bulk rate discount price given to LCC by Lane Transit District (LTD) . The price of the undiscounted Fastpass has been $12 since 1974, but LCC has been able to sell at the discounted rate because of its volume sales to students and staff. Zone One is the main Eugene and Springfield area, including the boundaries of LCC, Junction City , Mt . Vernon Rd. , Thurston Rd., etc. , where the fare remains The Editorial Staff thirty cents one way . According to Georgia Henrickson, the themselves and their instructors -· ~t w~ek th~_TO~CH ran a story considered at LCC. bookstore manager. even though there is a providing both with greater learning at,out the ad_yantages •of mid-term We support this concept as a reduction of discount for the LCC communqpportunities . C9ur$e and instructor evaluations by valuable aid ,o students and instrucity. the LCC Bookstore still offers the best Students who would like to see a students.· 'this ty~ of evaluation, tors, and urge the college· to adopt price for the Fastpass. She said LTD offers mid-term evaluation program should ac~ording_to· ~h-e _story, has been this. system. the college the best discount·simply due to personally express their opinions to .successful ·a.t ·other ~lleges •across Student evaluations support and LCC' s quantity of sales. the faculty and administrators. the -eountry, and is now being For example, Jim Williams, of the U of C, encourage communi'cation between '---~...............---..------------- ------"--~------- ----------_...ll.. --------+- Bookstore's Fastpass sales, explained that the U of O price of $12 is based on LTD's estimates of average university per month for the St 1.50 price. Approximately SO to It has come to our attention that an anonymous, ·l erox printed letter, predicting a "gearing up for what appears.to be ..the over-,throw of this school,,. has been distributed on this ~atripus. The letter, typed on official LCC stationery , alleges that 13 individua·l s and groups connected with· LCC are Communists or lean •to~a~ a CQm~uriistic philosophy. The autho~·:Qr the fetter. calling themselves ".certain members of the student body,'; ~sk that the faculty, Administration. and Board of Education i~vestjgate' t)lese alleged Com- munist people and organizations . This incident resurrects the -u.gli, ness of the McCarthy era of the early 1950's, daring which literally hundreds of Innocent people ,w ere persecuted. The letter offers no proof; It simply points an accusing finger without bothering to substantiate Its claims. In courts of law, this Is known as llbel . and· slander. ·/Perhaps ·this Is .the reasob for the authors' stooping to the cowardice of anonymity. Uf course, another possible reason for ' their refusal to identify them- Letters to the editor selves may well be the quality of the letter itself. This we can understand; we too would hesitate to put our names on such a semi-literate communication. Fortunately. the poor spelling. strange punctuation, and erroneous word usage diminish any possibility that a . reader might take the letter seriously. We suggest that the Junior McCartyites responsible take a close look at their motives. Perhaps they could Issue an anonymous-..disclalmer. Letters to the ed i Student _asks for support qgoinst lran!an conspiracy staff in the November 12th issue, some very basic questions, arise that should be answered in some form . Being a supporter of KLCC, I find the art'icle to leave some basic things un answer~d that couf cast a shadow over the members of the staff, and their meeting at Michael Canning's home. I believe the TORCH should make a responsible effort We need your contribution to help us to answer a few of these doubts . defeat this conspiracy -- send your On ftjday , November 4, fifteen Iranian contributions to: In the last paragraph of the article it members of the opposition to the Shah's states, ''The meeting broke up when four regime were arrested . by French Police. ISAUS Springfield police cars were noticed The police c~irn~p .~h!lt they were invol,ved P.O. Box 4002 outside. No explanation was giv.e n for their in the shooting of an Iranian secret agent .Berkeley, CA 94704 presence.'' Why was there no follow-up on by the name of Homayoon Keykavoosi. A• the police being there? French group ~ling itself "The InterIt is interesting that the arrest in France the reasons behind purposes of watching for there they Were assumed national Brigade of Reza Rezaii" and the demonstration in Houston have or were they 70 are sold each month ·at the bookstore meeting, the up breaking or the responsibility for the shooting. After received no media coverage except the five Where they during the school year, causing it to keep reason? other some for there the notified group same . the the arrests, minute brutal beatings the LS.A. members or were the Fastpass at the regular price. LCC, by meeting, the· about concerned even press abou·t the calibre of the gun used i.n in Texas received. which only CBS showed. the ·shoot-out; an.d dissociated itself from When the Houston police chief ~nally gave they dealing with some other ' problem. contrast, sells on the average of over 100 the passes oer month. the artested Iranian students. Neverthe- a press conference he said that the police Why did' the meeting break up with Is it not the right less, the French government bent on had been waiting for an excuse to '' get the presence of police cars? The Fastpass is sold at the beginning of the police are suppression of lranian opposition to the I.S.A." The arrested I.S.A. members in to gather peaceably that each month, with the price prorated down form any there Was protect? help to sworn Shah's regime, pursued its claims. Nine of both France and Houston are now on 'T hese questions come to after the third to the remaining day in the t_he 15 were rele~d; four were deported to hunger strikes to publicize their plight to of harassment? month. Henrickson mentioned that the mind. Sweden withou~ a~y charges, and two were the world and since they cannot get any Fastpass is transferrable to other people However, the biggest question is: Why and is a better savings over individual bus imprisoned and charged with the shooting media coverage they ha.ve asked students of the SAVAK agent. In addition, two and workers throughout the world to help. was the paragraph included in the article? tokens when LTD is used·as total transporothers, members ,of the Confeder.ation of In response, students and workers· in Was· it there to help lend support to the tation . .The tokens are available at four for Iranian Students -were also arrested in France, _Italy, and throughout the U.S. staff by involving an oµtside party? Was.it one dollar, .which she said is an excellent Gronoble, France. have gone out and demonstrated solidarity there merely as a straight reporting of the savings when using LTD on an irregular the LS.A. and hatred for SA VAK and facts? Should not the TORCH attempt to basis. with On November 9, 1976,' in a demonstra- • find out, on behalf of the staff of KLCC and Shah. the ·tion Jteld by Ir_anian students in Houston, f:ree the 91. drop the fabricated charges, for the students of LCC; why the cars were Dr. Schafer elected Texas, in prot~ ·of ·these_recent ·ac!ions, there? -Houston police, ~ttaclced the students; 91 down with . the French, U.S., SAVAK vice president of LICC- Shah! the with were arrested, and)6 'o f them were injured collaboration! Down There are serious implications presented and by tJte· police: by the inclusion of that paragrap!J, Peter Harvey they need to be.clear~d up for the students to serve one year term The dictator-i.al. fegi"1e of the Shah. of Lane and for the KLCC people. fearful of .its e,posure to world public Lane Community College President opinion~ _b as tak~q..-indirect actions against Arnold Jeff Schafer was elected vice president of • Eldon the Jranian·s{udenfs .with the collaboration Why four police car.s? the League for Innovation in the Communof the u:s. and French governments. ity College recently during the organizaTo the Editor: tion's semi-annual meeting Oct . 27-30 in Regarding ·an article bylined by Howard Cafeteria_prices too high The: Confederation of Iranian Students Phoenix. Arizona. KLCC the· of views the ng i concem_ Leff, the defended b~ always lJ~,o~} (NatiQri~l ·- ' ·,- . .. .. To the Editor:. • Dr~ Schafer will serve a one-year term What is going on with the food servic~ at wm become president of the organizaand Lane? You want to know what I think about the Lane Community College food service? tion the following year. Dr. Richard Hagemeyer of Central It makes me feel furious. I would like to know who's behind the low quality food Piedmont Community College District in Charlotte, N.C. was elected president of and the high prices:. l'hotoKraph..-rs K.;uhlc-c-n MonjeJ'ruUuc:tion S1af'f Editor Sally Oljar It seems ltke most of the people I talk to the League. , Hagemeyer also serves as A~"'~i.lle Edit~ Sieve- Park Mkhacl Riley M:111 Bon·n NcwMFcaturc ~dill* Tom Ghcy,..,n at school feel as though they are getting president of the American Association of Rus-.,•11 Kaisc~ l.inda En)(r-d, Cultural Editot" Fr;111k Martina ripped off when they buy food at the Community and Junior colleges. Jeff Havden l'<·1t:r Har\'c_,. Photo Editor •• Janice Brown l)ur,•,·,, l'ull<•rf Advenising Manager i\,h·,•rti-.in1;: cafeteria. The League for Innovation in the John Brooks Pr~Uftion Mal!4gcr.; • It does not seem fair that food production Community College is a national consorUan· M:il"k,I\ Kri-.tine Snipes is·orga.nized for profit, when it should be tium of 46 community colleges, representpeople's needs. Good quality food at ing 11 states and 16 coJlege districts, which for . Assn,:ialittn Publi,.hcl'll Mc,pbcr of Oregon Community Coll~ge Newspaper Association and Oregon N.:wsp•pcr low prices is a ba.sic right of every human aims to encourage and evaluate innovation The TORCH ili publi$hed on Wednesdays 1hroughou1 the regular 11cademk year. Opinions c1pre,-sed. i(! the TORCH are not necessarily those of •~c l-Ollegc. the Mudcnt b;>dy. all nu:mbcrs of the TORCH staff. being'. We do not have the choice of eating and experimentation designed to' improve or thor;c ol the cditOt', or not, and no one should have the ability varied aspects of college operations. F0111nl$ arc intended lo be a marketplace ror free ideas and 'ffUSI be limited 10 500 i.·ord,.. Letters to 1he cdithr are limited to 250 to blackmail us into paying exorbitant word!>. Corl'Clipundence fllUl>t be typed a.nd signed by the author. Dcadlin,· for all submis,.ion"' is Frid~y noon. Lane Community College is the only The cdi!•lf rt'M.'t'NCS tbe ri3ht to edit for matters or libel and length. prices in order to get the necessities of life. All correspondence? ~h;oold be: typed or prinied. double-sp:aced and siKncd b~· 1he v.ri1.-r. community college in the Northwest which Mail,..,. .bring all co~pondencc 10: TORCH. Lane Comn111nity Cnllc)(l". llourn 20t, Ccmcr Building. P.O. Box IE. 4000 East is a member of the League. ba~id MiJ.lerJ()th .Avc~. Eugene. Orc,ron ~7401: Telephone. 747--4501. ext. 234. _ To the Editor: On Mpnday, Nov. 15 students from LCC, U of 0, osu,-·PSU, and U of W came together to demonstrate at the Federal Building and 'the ·French Consulate in Portland. The reason for the demonstra•tion w~1s as follows: ' •: democratic rights of Iranian students and condemned the c611aboration of the Iranian regime with other governments in suppressing the just struggle of the Iranian students. November 17. 1976 ---------------------TORCH ------------------------- -Page 3 Hea Ith student volunteers help staff din ic Swine flu shots offered next week A S1 donation is collected for admini straMonovalent swine flu vaccine win be· of the vaccine per State of Oregon tion on ts studen available to LCC staff and Monday and Tuesday, November 29 and policy. Ydu probably have heard a good deal 30. 1976. about swine flu and swine flu vaccine . You The clinic will be held in the gym foyer, may know, for .e xample , that swine flu Health Building, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.in. caused an outbrea k of several hundre d both days. cases at Ft. Dix, New Jersey , early in 1976 -- and that before then swine flu had The clinic will l;>e staffed by volunteer not caused outbrea ks among people since by studen ts from Health Education classes , the 1920's. studen t nurses and some of their faculty, • With the vast majority of Americans the and by studen t associ ates from being suscep tible to swine flu, it is-possible Counseling Depart ment under the direc- that there could be an epidem ic this winter. tion of Laura Oswalt, PHN, of LCC Health No one can say for sure. However, if an Servic e in coordi nation with the Lane epidem ic were to break out, millions of County Depart ment of Health and Social people could get sick. Theref ore, a special Services. swine flu vaccine has been prepar ed and tested which should protect most people TORCH the from t consen the lt you clip who receive it. will it and bring it signed to the clinic, ~ertai n people , such as those with . matters te expedi chronic medical problem s ~nd the elderly, need annual protection agains t flu. Therefore, beside s protect ion agains t swine flu, they also need protection agains t anothe r type of flu (Victorian flu) that was around last winter and could ·occur again this winter . A separa te vaccin e has been prepar ed to give them protection agains t (. both types 9f flu. These vaccines have been field tested and show to produce very few side effects. Soine people who receive the vaccine had fever and sorene ss during the first day or two after vaccination. These tests and past experie nce with other flu vaccines indicate that anythin g more severe than this ·would be highly unlikely. Many people ask questio ns about flu vaccination during pregna ncy. An advisory commi ttee of the Public Health Service excl,mined this questio n and reporte d that .-----------------------mtoore--------.-------------· IMP ORT ANT INF ORM ATI ON ABO UT SW INE INFLUENZA (FLU) VAC CIN E (MONOVALENT) July 15, 1978 The Disease may·have fever, chills, headache, Influenza (flu) is caused by viruses. When people get flu they or more, and complete recovery week a dry cough or muscle aches. Illness may last several days or in some people. For the elderly death is usual. However, complications may lead to pneumonia or may be especially· serious. flu es, and people with diabetes or heart, lung, or. kidney diseas t swine flu, since it has not caused It is unlikely that you have adequate natural protection agains widespread human outbreaks in 45 years. The Vaccine viruses. Today's flu vaccines cause The vaccine will not give you flu because it is made from killed some other vaccines, flu vaccine fewer side effects than those used in the past. In contra st with • • can' be taken safely during pregnancy. next flu season; however, either a One shot will protect most people from swine flu during the s u.nder age 25. Jf you are under 25 second shot or a different dosage may be required for person ation will b~ provided to you and a notice regarding such information is not attached, this inform wherever you receive the vaccine. Possible Vaccine Side Effects ver, tenderne.ss at the site of the Most people will have no side effects from the vaccine. Howe have ·fever, chills, headache, or also shot may occur' and last for several days. Soriie people .will muscle·aches within the first 48 hours. , . Special Precautions , ons exists. How• reacti fatal tially poten As_with any vaccine or drug, the possibility of ~evere or some instances In ns. reactio fatal or . severe ever, flu vaccine has rarely been associated with note very carefully the following people receivfog vaccine have had allergic reactions. You should precautions: vaccine.-Please ask about age •• Children under a certain ag~ should not routinely ·receive flu limitations if this information is not attached. e only under special medical • People with known allergy to eggs should receive the vaccin supervision. is gone. • Peopl~ with fever should delay getting vaccinated until the·fever 14 clays should consult a past the in e vaccin of • People who have received anoth er type physician before taking the flu _vaccine. If you have any questions about flu or flu vaccine, please ask. REGI STRA TION FORM and the special precautions. I have I have read the above statem ent about swine flu , the vaccine, ing vaccination recom mend ations had an opportunity to usk questions, i11clilding questions regard of flu vaccination. I request that for persons under age 25, and unqerstand the benefits and risks the parent or guardian. it ·bc given to -me 9r to the person name d below of whom I am FOR CLINIC USE INFOR MATIO N ON PERSON TO RECEIVE VACC INE Name (Please Print). Addre-ss Birthda te Smokers gamble on quitting (CPS)--lt's a hard one to swallow. but not all capitalists roader s are solely concerned with extract ing the. maxim um amoun t of production out cJf their time-clocked and brown- bagged workers.' Jim Miller, head of Interm atic, Inc. in Spring Grove , . lliinoi s, has ~pene d a non-sm oking pa.rim utuel windo w in his plant where employee~ can bet up to $100 that they can kid their. nicotine habit. So far. 39 people have bet OD themse lves to quit. Vice-slashing scheme s ~re nothing new to Miller. Last y~ he offered overweight workers $3 for e~ery pound they ~hed and wound up with a whopp ing bill of SJ, n4. nded Deadline exte ti~g appnca nons The deadlin e for s~bmit for Profes sio,nal Devel opmen t leave·f or Spring Term has been _ extend ed to . November 22. Applications for leave will be consid ered by the Professional ~velop ment Comm ittee if they are turned in to Dean Rasmu ssen by 10 a.m.,· Monday, · Nov. 22 at which tiine the commi ttee will convene to consid er ~e reque~ts. • There are no finer diamon~ rings K ee ~ lkpscend Oia-- S Ri19 . Give the perfect symbol of love . A brillia nt perfec t perma nently regist e r ed keepsake diamon d. F:fne jewelry, watches _ and gifts. Age County of Residen ce .. there are no data specifically t~ contraindicate vaccination with the available killed virus vaccine in pregna ncy. Women who are pregna nt should be consid ered as . •having essentially the .same balanc e of benefi ts and risks regard ing influen za vaccination and influen za ·as the genera l population. " As indica ted . .some ittdivi duals will develop fever and soren~ ss after vaccina tion. If you have more severe symptoms or if you have fever which last longer than a couple of days after vaccination, please consult your doctor 01' a health 'Yorker wherev er you receive medical care. While there is no reason to expect more serious reactions to . this flu vaccination, person s who believe that they· have been injured by this vaccination may have· a claim. The Congre ss recentl y passed a. law providing that such claims, with ce~n except ions, may be filed only against the United States Govern ment . . Information regard ing the filing of claims may be obtaine d by writing to the U.S . . Public Health Serive Claim s Office , Partta wn Building. 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, Maryland 20852. Attach ed is more information about flu and flu vaccine. Please take' the time to read it carefully J Yoo will be asked to sign a form indicating that you unders tand this inform ation and . that you consen t t o • vaccination. Clinic ldent. Date Vaccinated n Sig~.a.tur e of perscn to rucc,ve vaccine or Parent or Guardia Date Manufacturer and Lot No. . 30 333 Ht:alth 'crv k c / Ccn rc:r for Disease Con tro l / Atl J nla, Georgia • ES. Departm ent•)( tkalth, l-.clura tion, ~nd \\'elfarc / Publir Keepsake J:.Or~r IAWY 1111D CEllml .... .. o.ly10:0 0-1Sal.1 0:00-4!k ln.11:0C M • -P•~~ ' •• •. •• 4 1' ;Not: 1 •• • • Board meetil g - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - c o n t i n u e d from page 1 116] ·· H·igh schoot sbldent' / p.ular colleges they are required to defute its goal · and ing that part-tim e. staff can be "cushT?e college direction ; in -order ju~tify the federal ioned" m<;>re _easi,ly tf the college has to cut mini-courses ~)ans to offer m~re of the Winter Ter.'!1 ~nd -~•II ~oncen,, ,,, Con;1municatioti'Cominissioft's'_ granting it a back .programs ifthe ·budget has to be.cut,' trate more of the advert1smg on campuS, ""' license to ·transmit: • • . ···'~I. " or if enrollm ent is down . Contrac ted he said : ,...~ W IU I ..There is a great . void in what this full-tim e instruct ors are not as easily Board approves new couraea instituti on hu said ·about the goals of absorbed in this case ,. he said. •The Board approved seven new courses (CPS)--lt's not every high schooler KLCC as ;a radio·station, " West said. • Schafer· said that some part-tim that's staff that will be offered as scheduling permits houndc:d daily by college Hopkinson •agreed with·West, and told the are assigned to curriculum developmeent admissi? n~ in over Winter and Spring Terms, or ne?'t offi~ers· ·soard f' ut~e··_philosophy oft.he station the case of cut-backs, and the reasons for year . The Busines s Dept. will offer wares. hawking their tweedy academic needs to be articulated and gwen to the having' a large part-time staff was ••nothing Medical Office Accounting. specializing in But 'that's the glamour spot seventeen • public!' ·. _ ,•• ' -: : . . devious like savi_ng money :" _ accounting procedures for medical ·office year old Reuben c _ahn of Washing Botb ·'West and·.·K;LCC staff member Student control of vending. machin ton D.C. es assist'an ts. · Patholo gy and Respha tory is enjoying right now . Cahn has been the Rogc:i -Woo(J to~d the Board that th e •ASLCC Pr~sident Ken Pel.ikan request- Therapy are tlie two new offerings from victim of , the promo _barrages , slick ad direction•of the ·s(ation will be' changed by ed that the Board consider giving student Health Occupations, and Forestry Calcula- pack.ages a~d boastful brochure_s of over the termination 'of' those staff members governm ent control of the who give its _prc·scnt' directio n . "It's machines, i.e .. contracts and vending tion~ , ~e.sig~ed for forestry stu~ent s 500 colleges trying to bolster their student revenues .. spec1altz10g tn comput er work, will be body . inappro priate to fir~ people from the that will be located in the proposed student offered by the Mathematics _Department. ~ot that Cahn asked for this .deluge •· station who've helpedto'&ive1he ~tation its lounge/recreation area. Environ mental Technolo_gy, part of th e he didn't c;ven'.fill out the Student Search success /' Wood said; • . ' . , k Departm ent, will drop some Service questio nnaire that µ1atches Board m:ember-·Cather ine Lauris and _Pehkan satd th~t after the ASLCC s w~r Science classes in the program but also add some. coue· es and 'students by computer. several' nielilbers of 'the ·audience pointed , .wit~ the Board thts p~~t summ~r f ex:t1~ e The Social Scien~e Dep~~n;ient will offer . ''.~e main reason out -tlM!~~xcellent quality ofi·programming I $0t so many.offers is ' • ca~tnet lea~e.r,~ ~e~e ..n~t su_re_o w a roe- two courses ,iri Chinese· HJstory , one . becaus~ I'm black," Cahn conjectu red , fourid on KI.CC> ,. - ·'. we re playmg tn Jnttt~tt?hnew p~gram s - focusing on Chinese society and cultu~e, "not because •Eyetyn:,en_nls, \president' of the . LCC -or management contro o t e mac mes. ~nd the other on the Nationalist anq_Mao~t· semi-finalist. •• 1'.m ·a · Mtrit scholars hip Classified·: ·Employees , Union,' said it was Board member Catherine Laiiris sµg~ political movements. The departm ent ~di Cah·n is .playing it cool while deciding . "fooiisb to'~hange it (1',LCC) at th is 'point" gested that .the ASLCC be given ·control of also.off er a new prog~am , Comm? mty which school to attend. He' s been ~aking , and sai~ •sfle suppoi~~ci "th e st atio~ 's. the machines and its revenue. "I • progtam s· and ·' t,h e · ,~•~e"ica tion of tts any reason why not," she s_aid. don't see Services , for P.arap~ofess_tonals who wts~ to junket~ to,. Harva~d,, )' ale, Pripceton an~ . She felt it upg~a~e their sklllS, mco~e, _and Job Stanford in _search of a c~llege whose peop1e ,'h'""" _!·,, • "' • • • would be "good training " for student ,mob 11.1ty · Th~ program ~• 11 offer an attitudes "a~e compatible with mine." • M.,U~ :'disP,l ~d·-~f ~e l~ck of government and would take_ the maintain - Associate o{ Science degr~e. inforufa tion'for .the',-Jioarct m_embers to • ance of the·machines off the hands of the evaluat e!·and--told the a:cfmini 5t rator 5 , .Administrati~n. .... ,., .. You sbouldinvolye.y<,ut school board." In ·other" bll$m~;- the Board -set Dec. 8 Dean of Business Operations Tony Birch as tfie·,·.aate' for;1 1iearii\g 'tiie· needs and objected to the ASLCC. having the powet; to coritplalint's ~f part•tin ie Instruct ors and initiate vending .machine contracts , saying classified staff. ' ," '· that- such a move would put ,it in •Faculty Council. President Jim Bacon is competition with Food Services . ' 'The • developing a q~estionnaire for. p~rt-time _ distribution -of revenues is one • staff ,t~ complet e, and ·organiz i~g the control is another, " he said. He issue -~ added that• presentation t~ the Board. He satd that he would be "open to suggesti ons" about • part of the reason part-time staff do n~t the distrihntinn nf r,.,v,.,nnp,; ; _ ' ' have a. formal organization is because they Pe/ihn s~id • his idea 'is to expand the ,cPS)--" I was imprisoned for writing about arriving in the U.S. all the time. Last are' on c~pus so ·infrequently, except to present vending machine services to repression in Iran . . •~he torture on the August. Professor Richard Cottam, ,of the teach their classes. provide addition al resourc es for the second day of ·my arrest consiste d of University of Pittsbur.gh, w~s told by a The~-h as ·been some concern that the ASLCC. Lauris suggeste d to the Board, seventy five blows with a plaited whip at State Departm ent official that SAVAK college is filling instructor vacanci~s wi!h "Let's cooperate with them_ (ASLCC) a the soles of my feet. I was whipped on my _agents were~ plannin g to exploit the more. part-time ,people · than full-ttme m little bit.'' hands as well, and the head torturer took cooperat ion of Mafia elements to snuff out order to avoid contr~ct obligations. Dean Mini.courses to continue the small finger on my hand and broke it, Iranians disloyal to the Shah . • of Business Operatio~s Tony Birch defend•The mid-ter m , six-wee k " mini- saying that he was going to break my ed the collge's _position by explaining that courses" offered by the college fingers one by one, one each day." " These men ," the professor said , " will this term part-tim estaflc•n be;~ _easily absorb_ed . have met with little success , Dean nf •• Iranian poet Reza Baraheni appear ~.s, ~rdinary muggers ·~nd kill the . • or _latid~o!f-'' if'~~e~;co.Ue,ae Ji•~ to trtm Instructional Operations Gerald And that's just for starters . · The Iranians ·one by one'. ·· Cottam warned Rasm_us• pri>if~ ,du~.~ -l>\ld~·cuts. . . seri fold the Board. He saicl that_only 40;50 electrical , prods, injection of air buobles • Baraheni that he may·be at- the top·of the- ' . .Dean of '1-..~~~01,t s Tony Bt~ch • students registere d as the result SA VAK hit list. of mainly and teeth-pulling comes later. nef~nded 00lle~•s position Accordin by . e xplaing to Barahen nff-camp i, us Iran's advertisi dreaded ng. ~.. . . . ·- - ... ,...,. _ ... . Column ist Jack Anderso n recently ·secret police SA VAK knows no limits in reporte~ that ~ost of SAVAK's dirty tricks tracking down anci torturing Iranians who are aimed towards the growing number of oppose the fascistic monarchy of the S~ah. Iranian students in the U.S. who oppose ' Since the Shah's takeover in 1953, a coup the Shah's ,. imperial regime: One secret engineer ed by the CIA, mort: than 300,000 SA VAK docume nt that Anderso n unpeople have been in and out of Iranian covered ·states , ' 'all branches ·should send prisons, ~11 at the mercy of ruthless information regarding demonstrations of SA VAK officers. Amnesty International dissiden t Iranians , strikes, suspicio us . approximates between 25,000 and 100,000 traffic, people are currently political prisoners in publicatiholdings of meetings, publish~ng of ons . and conventions and seminIran. ars, ·• But there 's a new twist in SAVAK's The Iranian governm ent is spendin g op·eration. The government of.Iran is now exportin g its domesti c terroris m to .all millions of dollars on American universipoints of the globe in order to sniff out and ties, says Baraheni, with one aim i~ mind; to keep Iranian dissidents out of these eliminate Iranian dissidents. • Assista nt Secreta ry of State Alfred universities. .Atherto n confirm ed last month that In the past year , SA V AK agents have SAVAK agents are in the United States, -repeate dly _cropped up on college monitor ing the activitie s of insurge nt campuses.· At Johns H,opkins Universi ty in Iranian students and intellectuals. In an Baltimore earlier this year, members of the 'The "entire talN llaff at Berg's Ski interview with CBS correspondent Mike Iranian Student s Associa tion Shop• will Sb,tt__. boots ·(We~ve (ISA) _. _ 11em trom &an~v_,-, Idaho, to .Wallace, the Shah himself acknowledged ' were proiesting Hopkins ' conferral who Mt: McKlniey, Alalta.)~ ':., , · that SAVAK personn el are __. presentl y ~. honorary ·degree upon· the Shah's of an sister, We wJII -~ Mlp ,ouwtth answers to -:hunting down enemies of his regime in the were quickly whisked away and ·'f04,li :,......,._ . t-,lpful hints. and • brutalized U.S. ,, '.c anJortabl e and by SA VAK agents posing as news . .JN1JP8t' And more SAVAK squadl,'ons are reporters . _Wqile •~altimore City Police . w. ,a11o ·h ave~ r.nodeis QI the ta-. ,..,oua strapiees Scott Ski P~ !n coriti~~ed.on _pag~ 7 ll0clC. ~ w. ·-,-as· ·Ira n ·e xp or ts ag en ts . to co lle ge ·ca mp us es HEY; SKIERS . .. . Joii:.•, ' .~. '. . . j ) ' f i e lleek and beautiful . , -~ ~ = • ! • t i n ! •• '= ' = [ ,;"'.'.t ~-- t •.:;·_ ;\ , -.. IOCb toot ' -- •. ·.-1-.; . - ·:, .,· - /h op l OPEN F.IDAYNIGHTS 'TIL' 9 13th & lawrence •·Two ·Locations - tlth & Mill Phone ~14 • Phone -343-0013 ' a ; . C h C h . ' • u n · : i n Cr es we 11 a n d -E.u ·q en e . • Ea s t - t4 e s t i.· o r ks·ho p, 1 s· t ea c h i n q T'ai fhi Ch'ua n ~· the short soft form as devel oped by Chena M?nChJnq . • •Sta,, llf!d ,SIJOp Ber,'1 .,.. L~ne ClRJlftJ'• •hudqua,,.,. for Scott ent - ----. . .. .... -.- Ski equipm . .. • ,, .. i aBeqin ning cl.as~ e s - now· formi no at Great Oaks Schoo l of Healt h T • __,;;>,;::a,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ' ! S30 oer month for 2 lesso ns/wk . $15 per month for 1 lesso n /wk . Pleas e call ' 345-2 179 or 8 } 5- 4967 for more . i~form ~tion .. ;,:.:.._,__ ~ 1 ------. --------------] +...;....J~_6..._ /q i 7~) -=~ ,l~r .__: /fa :-----~----=- . rd oa B es ris rp su ex pl m co · ol po of e at tim .ES I . -Page 5 Business departf1'!ent ·. requests equipment ~ Mart in told the TORCI-' that in. his by Carol York lifeguards and a phy;ical therapy program Holly ed Mildr by estimation the "only real reason to go . tional programs. •'Our goal is to ·Qpda te the offic e educa ble possi as ming swim n millio is if we get 100 per SS ct y proje the with d Prans for a nearl ahea ing fund that s equipment i~ the Business Department of Men tion 's repo rt state pool complex were aired at last week 's could. come from one of two sources: cent fund ing." He . said that before he LCC and be · able to' simulate an office consent ·to the use of state funds, he (Nov. 10) Board of Education meeting. a federal Economic Development Act would environment for our stude nts.'' stated Jack Although the Board voted earlier this fall from ) gran t or from state of Oreg on would -insist on a total review of priorities. Kreitz, Business Department chairman. (EDA al to approve an application ·for full feder ''The re is no .bett~r way .for entry into construction assistance .funds. Martin said he has a ''feel ing there is not funding of the complex, there was not full ident Eldon a blan k chec k appi ovat ' of tfiis· as top specific jobs than through le.a ming e~peri}>res LCC ing, meet the . Aftel' y esda n · supp ort for the proje ct at Wed Schafer stated that he .anticipated word . ences that simulate. actuaJ YfOrking ,condi~ night's meeting. ~j!;tii, ~;r~t;t 'r.~J0t "'P~M ,,ry~1 • • • ""'·, ,,~t,e~"<>x••'-'••·~''• tions , inclu qing the us.e of curr ent Architect Robert Mention, a former LCC technology and equip ment , cooperative S4.9 Boar d mem ber, repo rted on the work experience and applied 'office pracmillion proje ct whic h woui d inclu de a tice,.'' Kreitz state d in. a -. mem.orandum to SO-meter multi-purpose swimming pool, ,• . , •. Dean Rasmussen. • departmental offices for the Department of cy for a x~ e life·, l schoo al norm The 'all Heal th and P.E·., hand ball/ racq uetb of the. Som~ s.year six is type write r os : and COU!'iS, weight 'rooms, •dance studi Busin~ss .~ m e.nt the in. riters typew • locker rooms. • have exceeded replacement expeclJlncy by The complex would' be an addition to·th e 100 per cent. The deiiai:tment i~ 1'Sking for • ties. existing physica1 education facili repli cem ent .of .t ypew;rite·r s . ex~e.eding But board members were· surprised at cent; normal life expecta,ncy by 50 the price tag on what was initia lly' . , . • . . ol~er qr years -9 those conceived as a proj~ct of less than· S2 aOper s sines u B. ge Colle the Although million·. tenMain ract Cont for et budg a has tions a Mention stated that the complex was ance, it does not cover atr the ·equipment part of the original' riast er pian for LCC and the depa rtme nt must use .c:>ther fu_nds of kind facilities. · He said, "It is not a new • according to Kreitz. "Eve n. damage to the notion ... (it) basically is the fulfillment of Dick to typewriters, loss of parts ·and theft. are not ding .•• accor le peop ming. pool complex which, things begun by the founding swim sed propo the of l mode The the provided for.'' Board Chairman Jim Martin told 1 'extre mely preli mina ry." is , ell Neww th~ in d ~ The memorandum to Dean Rasmussen, us. e figur to nai itted 'TORCH thatt he .origi ity. :•' He said he is comm prior ral fede ment the tt1e · t abou ived ~ec,e be d l w~ung what the . said Kreitz, requested the equip construction priorities document was Sl ... ''may be reviewing priorities, determini ing what · Business Department needs. "We don't days 90 to 60 n withi ng fundi ° · of on porti oper ating costs will be, learn million for the swimming p~I by Jan . t." know how much money is available for our the plan. He said that the Board was given that educational uses are proposed, and then ify spec ~nts irem requ ' EPA rtment yet, so we don't know what we The depa .of to out not e·was -or her figur the "imp ressi on" tha~ the maki ng a decis ion whet after days 90 n withi .start must n able to purc hase ," said Kreitz. be ructio will const the building pro_ject. with ed proce date. But the Board was not pr~pared for i~ n catio appli the If .'. ng fundi 'notifica·tiorr of Mention 's estimate. I d, construction would begin about Early in the discussion, Richard Free- fundeh 28, 1977, accorqing to the report. Marc to ars appe "It said, ber, man, board mem But if state funds are used, construction be ..a. recre ation al facil ity . . . I ain would not begin until June or July of 1977, withdrawing·my supp ort." Servlcea acco rding to M~n ~ion 's time ~che dule . · a e . ,... ',... -·-For sat.,. Martin said the facilities would "hav woul d not .prov ide full state the And ." costs l ,._, 7 - • tiona l1u1y opera on ct l'l> TO FENT• S H:ASE pretty major impa a Fair . only, n, t-b1zoo bike, optio le ~ SALE: Ml!ln's rrt!IN 1 fund ing and unde r this 'Milk. Fa lnfcnratlc:n a n d ~ alll WrqJl and he insisted that detailed report of r:,ial. ,~ Rnre,9E8-6789. on of the cons truct ion could be porti • tnistra admi the by ded provi be those costs S2.:m. leted at this time. • comp ~SAL E: 197J Ollslrl 610, 38,<XXI mies, NXD °"VCAFE. a:NTER: t9 (!S)ri '9 fl0r Wl...D ive staff. {JlOd cxrdtlon, 90-2784 at« 9::1> p.m a peope 3-7. Eu IU'I. 1817W. W\ ~ 344-8154. . The final decis ion on cons truct ion, in . were . ts men com Noma for the ak , of_ all dllytln'e Not ho_wever, rests with. _the -Board. Men,:i~ers . •Nae d~.9 ' } ~ 1,97 ~~ opp_<?si~i~n._,.,B.o_!;rd., m.e plbe~ C~t~ eri.l'.l.ea. ,-of the board -could decide· not to ,p~ ~ _r ., ., ~ ·SAI.S":.,.,fa 'Jf ...,: 1-1,a tan. ~lnd•lrf • r..-~• ~ .•.· get to g :yw ·~ . 241 ~ try1n Ext. ?een able. have depend 1 R , · wvery E , P ~atd, A 3-speed s P ~ ta1:1n ct regardless of the method proje the with , • . on llUdlel ft got I ,l'...-c day ptty the 5,(D) to stnce &am ever. swtmmmg poQI to S1 -~ millt'3> of funding. liln'y at )Qr f1191rtlpa. . Send -\/tlltj ·5,·-ma, ~ this ·board .' ' • She listed the training of PACIRC Fell:N b-t, ~ Employ..-ent <C~1iiiiFiicecdl i IE~ fro 23 4. ,.,~~--,...... , .. j. 1: NEW YORK C~ AR TE.R FLI GH TS ·. CHRISTMAS VACATION -$2 79 all inc d Uni ted Airl ines roun d trip from Por tlah • Hotel , Tran sfer s, Tax es & Tips Bre ak - Awa y Tours. P.O. Box 313 Cat hlam et, WA 98612 (206) 795 -873 4 Ji and the. Divi ne Ligh • Loca l Chu rch • Gur u Mah araj Who -Is .This Mall .arid What Does He·Want? "(Tl1;re) is only one . law' that is ,nec_essary for the_ g~r nme nts to . ' ·•niak ~ -•. •... and thafi law ioould be gain the know ledg e .o f Scien~~ . of Creative Intelligence anfi prac tice Tran scen dent al Med itatio n ttvice a ·day. With this one law, th_e purp ose, of all the lcn.a; tJ?ill be fulfilled ." Mah arish i Mahesh Yogi, 1974 r "Ne ~. Age' ' For ·accurate information on TM plus othe perspective, ical groups and gurus, examined from a Bibl write : Spiritual Counterfeits Project Depf; M'~ .o~ Box 4308, Berkeley, CA 94704 Way • Vict or Pau l Wie rw~ II~ end .The ~ao r. llve-ln, ~a n tfi.PWANTEO l)l!ll"ll0rW lure fa retarded nJts. ASl9i8t men with hotn {1'0Clril'Y,;lskllls. t-bn: 9p.m to8Lm and'48$6UI) d. pwlda txa'd alternate weetaends. Axma id '0, um llllrlthly plus weacero om-penwlc:n. 41'>-127 • Alder Street. ··• . ~~le ,WA art~ -..--:r-.4 L.EAA11 t-0/V 10 GET' A Q a.:;.: ·J cb:b.tt tno Nia Aw Vb11Btq>, earn 1 cndt: NM ~Ml kly. ll. to full-time sttdllnta. $10.11> tor pst-tln1a ltudln .214. . •• Olnta:t Lm Oxnelll'Y,;I ••• , -~ · ~,f ,., :.• .tj '" _...... .t' .~· " " \ ., • ' •' " - ) ' ---------------------Novembe May be even fifth or sixfft-.-. S p o rt s- -~ -~ Wrestling sea·so.-- r 17, 1976 ~- Porsc he 9 2 4 - - - - c~ntiriiied from page 1 I don ' t know if it is standar d procedure or not, but I was shown to the demons trator and left to drive the thing: with no salesma n along to tell me what I couldn' t do. Upon by Steve Part • . _ opening the door I was greeted with LCC"s cross country team eii°"ded their TEAM-- Allegany 18: the familiar buzzer that most new Pima. Ariz. 118: Wr_esth ng · season has started at LCC. season last Saturda y with a seventh , or Southwestern Michigan 133; cars have when the _key is left in Hutchison Practices a~e from J p.m. !o.5 p.m. Monday ossibl .. hi her .finish .in the Nation al 152: Golden Vally 199: them . Jack~n 212; Lane through Friday. p • ·cy llg "'h • h' ·held in 216· Hagger stown 218· Brevar d 238; contact Head Anyone mterest ed ~hould Coach Junu~r Lori was also impress ed with the Bob Creed .1~1 egNe ·" ' yampktons ips, m the Ri~ks Fannm g~e, ew or . 286·. Morrisville. 299· Grand Rapids Physical Education Building. . . car. Both of us were apprehe nsive • The final standin gs have not been 357;Me ramec 392; M1am1Dade South 397, when we were warned about the determi ned, yet because of a descrepe~cy and Lincoln· Land 418. increasing traffic near the stadium . be,twe~n __the' judges , and ·Coach Al Some people really don't know how Tarperuiing-~n cem{ng Titan runner Mike B o w l e ~ $ w ,n to drive around other cars, especially McGrif f. , Accord ing to Tarpen ning, Porsches. •McGrif! placed. 83. in the meet, but ~e . _ by~ Sm~ ju4ges bad him pl~d at 92. A petition l started the engine; it w~ quieter . _ Jiu:·been:·filed but a decisio n· is not • Everyl>Qdy lov~ a wµiner than I had expecte d but it still had t ·_ ~- like the LCC expect ~ f~r about a week~ While recent media reports have indi- . the excitem ent that I knew would be -bowlin g· team . . ·The ,l wo -_~ost recent \_ • Rich Harter was Lane's top finisher, matche s, one ag~st , •~gon College of cated that en~lim ent in aU •of 0regon •s . th.ere. Backing the car up and out of placing71 with a time of24:10 . Harter·w as Fllucation (OCE) its parking spot was the first move . 4.in• btdepen dence, comJl!unity' colleges : bas dr~pped signifithe ~y Titan rµnner in the top 25. Ken Ore~, ·and the othentg made ·toward _this act of a lifeti~e . ,. ainst Linn-Benton cantly. actual ei:irollment at the 13 schools Mamn was the next Titan runner to cross Commqriity College has s·tay~d about tlte same as ·t'1at of (LBCC) The Porsche 924 has a number Gf . ·, the~ line, placing 34 in 24:24. OtJ_ier· ·sprl~gt jeld Lan~ we~ ·no Nov. 11 _at year. accord ing , to . Lane Commu I~ interest ing features . The car has the . "' 1• exceptions to nity Lan~ ~unncr ~: ili_c luded. Dave Marti~ , the ·ctub's beginni ng image. LCC shut out College· Dean of Student s Jack Carter. engine in the front and a transaxle in <:9,ning in 45 at .24:36; Bill Sharp, 67 m ootb· tealJlS 4-0, and Carter explain ed that the calcula ~ion ·setting two league the rear. A transax le is a 24:49, and ~tte McGriff at 92 or.83 with an ~rds for this year. error results from compa ring project ed . . transm ission linked with the rear u ~ t ~ time of 24:58. • In the OCE match LCC's Tom McDonald · enrollm ents with actual enrollm ent figures. axle. Optional equipm ent includes Th~ meet w.as won by an extreme ly set this year's league series "It is true that several commu nity headlig ht washers .. rear windshield record at 699, .strong Allegany te~. whose runners t()9k carrying a high game score of 244. He was colleges in the state are somewh at below wiper. and a removeable i;oof panel. the first _four pfaces and in doing so assisted in the victory over OCE by Keith project ed enrollm ents," he said, !'but Drifing away from the dealer, it captured the team _title with a reco~ low Brovald and Ed Dowdy, who rolled series most are relatively close to last yeu's was hard to believe that I was driving point total of 18. This beat the old mart set of 586 and 568 respecti actual enrollm ent." vely. ~C finished a new sports car, and that I w~s • la&t year by.: Southw estern Michig an . . with 2,889 total pins Carter said that for ~he to OCE's 2,585. High last severa l responsible for its·safety for the next Rich Harter, by placing 21 for the Titans, game and series for OCE in the match went years. community college enrollm ents have. few minutes . We drove slowly for came away from the meet with Nationa l _ to Tom· Oahl,- with a 200, game arid 551 been climbing at a fairly rapid rate (about the first few blocks until I had a Junior College All-America Honors. The · series. 7 per cent a year) but that trend appears to chance to turn off onto a side road. awards were given to every runner who The McDonald record, however, lasted have leveled off this year. That's when I pr~ssed down on the in-'tbe top 25. He indicateP, that pre.liminary enrollm ent only one week. It was broken .in the match gas and got the real feel of the car. Highlighting the Titan's perform ance against Linn-Benton Commu nity College figures at LCC~show a total of slightly more was the fact that they beat Ricks College of (LBCC) by teamma te than Strang ely enough . I was no_t 13.000 individu als enrolled in credit Keith Brovald with Idaho, a team"th e Titan's lost to earlier in a stunnin g 716 series greeted with the rapid accleration and high game of and non-credit classes this fall . . which is the Regi9n -18 championships in Bend. feeling that comes with American258. He lead the club to another solid 4-0 about the same as last year. Ricks finished 10. • •made high performance cars. The Carter said he expected that LCC will shutout . Kevin Alvis and. Ed Dowdy also In all it was a very respect able showing had fine scores for LCC Porsche accelerated smoothly and with series of 617 serve the number s of student s projected by for the ·Trtans, who have made a habit of and 568 respectively. before I realized it I was well over the the state for reimbu rsemen t purpose s •• finishin g strongly in the National meet the posted speed limit. .Untfl I wa~ LCC finished the match with 3,015 piQs 7,633 reimbu rsed full-tim e equiva le_nt r: ,>r.: ,·,·, • : .~ fC;W ~·. ,~gratu ,lation ~ familiar with the car's handling I i~ store to LBCC's 2;617. Dan·Sa ss contrib uted the student s or about 13,000 student s per term • • •..,.-t ~-.f~-fuilCoaclt AlTarp enning, and all the guys high scores for LBCC with a high game of in fall, winter, and spring. • noticed that my speed was consist0~ the team. for having a very fine year. ently over the speed limit by 20 "One reason for the levelin g of 205 and a 538 series in the NQV. 11 match. miles. enrollment is the end of federal benefits for those veteran s .discharged l.>etween 1955 A few turns, a final burst of speed and 1966," Carter said. HP- ,'ldded that down Frankli n Boulev ard and about 500 veteran s were affected at LCC. impress ing the policeman dire<;ting So while veteran enrollment is down, traffic on Centennial Avenue with a Carter said, enrollment is either up in other .fe.w downsh ifts and the trip was population groups, or those Veterans are over. Lovell greeted me with a A group .- of leade rs In the Consc iousn ess Move men_t Invite continuing their enrollment without benefjt smiling. "How was it?" I couldn' t . to explore the fastes t, easies t, safest w~ys of the G.I. BiU . answer him, my mind was still dazed gain Enrollm ent at Portlan d Commu nity unde rstan ding and actua llzatl on of your life , purp ose. with the almost perfect handling and Colleg e, the state's largest commu nity construction of the car. Includ ed in the semin ar are: college . paralle led LCC by attaini ng All good things must end, howJ~im Baug hman , Micha el Moon ey, Bobb i Atkin son, Ishaq numbe rs about the same as last year. ever; we returne d to my Pinto and Jud, .JoA.nn Baug hman , Natha n Steinb ock, and many other s according to Carter. with a lump in my throat, I drove away from the dealer. If one can .. ~t~OQ: bi.eludes all activities In this marathon weeke nd of afford such a car. I recomm end lnspliatk,,nal, ln_slghtful techn iques , &eeln g exper ience s, trying it out. But if you're in my kind and ~u,lc al entertainment. of financial state with the same kind . . of dreams it can be frustrating. For ·~rva tlons [llmlt 4·01 and Inform ation, call 342-8570 Look forward to the T0RCH 's upcoming performance analysis of .. a horse. ~ ~ M i i l l i i H...... Car tested : Porsche 924 • Price as tested: $10.000 0-60 acceleration: 11.8 seconds A symbol of love . ·. . ·genuin e Top speed: 118.0 mph diamond framed in a perfect heart Fuel consumption: 17 MPG city, 31 MPG highway (EPA estimat ed) Cross-country seventh in Nationals get s und erw ay LCC en rollme nfs maintai~ stpl;,ility 4 NOW! -NOV. 19, 20, 21, A:DFFERENT WEEKEND THAT.CAN M'AKE A DIFFERENCE IN YOl)R LIFE - - • · ... DO IT NOW - easy ·r o ~c h 1\ ~1 sto tle 's 'Wha t ·.you expe ct.th at -:~·11ou shall JinJ •• .i· • Ari~ totk ·_ ¥ Blk € O~ Bll BOQKS -PLAQUES POSTERS GIFTS lD\JE OF ~$3490 . ~$2490 I , PRINTS ·GIFTS 1: A touch of sophistication for that elegant young lady. dainty twist ri~g with diamond. "Many More Styles Availa ble" "Student Accounts lnvi'3rl" I:l . !1, -+! DO~N' fOWN IE wHERS AND VALLEY RIVE"fl CEN'J'.ER Your ~ript icm, 1liaJn C?(10Cem ...•. :; $AJ-77 1S 30th & Hil ar_cl DOES APA THY RUN . • RAM PAN T? Stop lurkin g! Emerge from obscurity Turn yourself in to ~ltttinns by Nov. 19 :, 1;, e7 C H - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - P a g November 17, 1976 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T O R .Theatre •review "A Cry of Pbyers" - -- - New student rush policy Performng Arts Theatre new policy in th e Performing Arts Departme nt will enable all Lee· Huder:its with proper identification to ~urchase tickets at half-price providtng the tickets remain usnsold 60 minutes prior to curtain time. The number of available student rush tickets will vary with each performance and Production Coorri in a tor Dick Reid suggests that students call the box office before . ea_ch performa nce to verify thei_r existence. The new policy will go·into effect soon with the opening of Neil Simon's "The Good Doctor, '.' on t-lovember 26. A • by Michael Riley "A Cry of Players," by the _very Little Theatre, is a beautiful theatrical presentation of William Shakespea re•~ youth. • Showing what appears·t o l>e the growing period of Shakespe are's life. the play is . from a dramatic yet humorous •club performer : he has ·also worked . as a presented ln fact) there is a s~milarity view. of point hosted has and years 10 for ager n ma· stage plays written by Shakethe of some to orginally industrial and fashion shows. He • speare. planned on becoming a concert singer, but _d eals. with young Will's the field died out as he was about to enter • When the play some of the town's with around" "lying it. Fortna, now over (,<) years of age 'is treated to· a audience the wenches just ."I'll _(when as~ed his_ ag.~ -h~ replied, Will. played between tion confronta moving say 59 and hol~mg ), ts pbrtraymg three arid _his . wife Ann, Heneger, Steven · by the He's play. the in ch~racter~ different by Helen Robinson. father in "T~e Arrangem ent,•• the 'old man • played to perfection • Will gets on ·the bad side of the town's governing body, Sir Thomas. One -cannot in ' '.T?O -Late .for H~pptnes s;•> and t~e· 1 help but dislike Sir Thema·s from the start· • Man.'' Drowned he T _ ' in n gentlema little i~ later in the show he softens ~ir cing a men. a ~ main~ai~ but · ·sterne~s about him. Thomas ts played quite well by • • Jim Robinson : Ot_h er notable parts are ·Gilbert, · Will's obnoxiou s relative·, · played by ~enny Geuhler; Fulk~ played by 'E<l O'Brian; and Kemp. pompous ly played by Mark Also not~wort hy are the •~gerter . costumes and the set . The set was designed by J.C. Pock. ··• A Cry of Players., i~ excellent theatre and anyone who hasn •t seen •it should do so, -in my opinion. The ··show will be •pres_e nted from Noverober 16 through the 20 at the Very Little Theatre. · 'Good Doc tor' will open season Fim review: ---'T he·Fron r-~-- - by Pam Dow_ney • The LCC Performin g Arts Theatre will open its season on Novmber 26 with the Stan Elberson productio n of Neil Simon's "The Good Doctor . " "Doctor .. is a musical comedy based on the short stories . of Kussian author Anton ·Chekhov. " The· Good Doctor, •• chosen by Elberson , centers around the narrator (played by S~an Norgre~) who is a writer trying to create_a story : •In the process he lets his imaginati on run .wild and dreams up all sorts of. crazy ·. short stories.. The stories , by John Brooks On Sunday afternoon I was a frustrated wreck from studying Spanish and the price . of the movie was right. So, I went to see · .. .The Front" starring Woody Ailen (plus a Mister Magoo cartoon) for one dollar. I have seen many of Allen;s films and liked them . ahhough after the fifth or sixth one. I felt I had seen it before . l probably wouldn't have gone to this one, but I was · told it was "differen t" by a few of my • ' movie-going friends. The film, dealing with the TV business, takes place in the SO's and tells of people who were accused of being connected with communism. They lost their reputation s, their jobs and fe11 into disgrace. This was known as blacklisting. Woody helps out an old friend whq _is a TV script writer, who has been blacklisted , by posing as the author of the scripts. and taking a 10 per cent commission . . Soon he gets involved with two other blacklist ed writers, the woman script editor , the FBI. the investigating company for the TV network who warns the network about communi sts working for the TV station , and the Federal . governme nt. I was sorely dissappoi nted. Allen plays· .,~ usual _role-,of. the d~Jnh guy ..who gets mvolved m something way over his head , but manages to bumble his way through a11 sorts of awkward situations for about half the film. He awkwardly falls in love about halfway through the film, but he isn't able to stumble along through anything else. He ends up running around to save his cause. Fortunately another actor, Zero Mostel, playing an actor with the TV network, also plays a lead role , providing ~ome variation. He keeps hovering between being a ·drunk and a spy to being an actor, but the maze ·of events that surround him and his cowardice turn him from the latter into the former in his . desperate attempt not to become blacklisted. He betrays Allen, who later becomes his friend. and gets blacklisted anyway and can't find a job. But don't think for a minute this is a f11irv tale with the "happily ever after" ending. What really hit my emotional soft spot was the credits after the film; following many of the actors names in parenthes es the word "t-lacklist ed" and a date -- and I realized !hey weren't kidding. SAVAK- - ~ ~ - (about 11 in al1) vary from a vignette involving the assistant of a doctor who knocks a patient to the floor while trying to .pull a tooth, to a shorter piece where a sailor charge s admissio n to his own drowning : The writer-na rrator brings the episodes together by explainin g possible ideas for his writing effort. When aske~ why he chose this particular play. E1bersc,n replied , "J ·Hte it! · We're having a ball with it, it's something you don't get tired of." He also commente d, "It' s a lot of fun and I feel the audience is goin~ to enjoy it." There are 11 cast members in "Doctor." most of whom are LCC students with the exceptio n of Broadwa y actor John E. Fortna from New York City. Fortna has been active in the the!tre for over 25 years as an actor, singer. producer, and night ~~------~--------, I I I I AVAILABL E SOON AT YOUR BOOKSTO RE GIFT BOOKS FOR CHRISTMA S I I I I I L--- ----- ----- ---~ : ALL AT SALE PRICES LCC BOOKSTORE photo by John Brooks "I'm supremely pleased, I think .it is quite an honor to be chosen for a part in 'The Good Doctor: " Fortna stated, "I'm · very pleased to be connected with LCC." Having a degree in music, Fortna plans to teach voice in Eugene, where he is now living. If inlerested in coming to see the play and _catchiqg the cast members and Fortna in action/ kee\.i> in ·mind - th'e • dates t;f Nov. 26, 27, and Dec. 2, 3, and 4. Performance time is at 8 p.m. in the Performin g Arts Theatre here at LCC. Tickets have been on sale since Nov. 8. Box office hours are from noon to 5 p.m., Monday, Wednesd ay, and Friday. The tickets are $3 .00 and all seats are reserved. For futher information contact Dick Reid at 747-4501 ext. 318. The box office number is 747-455.9. _ oontinued fro,rn page 4 ' carried out the actual arrests, SAVAK was given free reign by the Uruverslty to patrol • the proceedin gs. The ISA believes the· United States' key involvement in the internal affairs of Iran will trigger the next Vietnam . The. suddenly oil-rich nation, which Amnesty Internatio nal says has .. the worst record of human rights in the world," currently hosts ·2s,OOO U.S. military advisors, a number which is expected to climb past 80,000 in the next few years. The U.S. has also sold billions of Aollus of arms to the Shah's t yra-nni~a l g·o ver1rmen t : maling • Iran "unable to wage war without the assistance of the U.S.," according to a Senate finding . But as was shown by the recent death of Orlando Letelier, the former Chilean . am~a~sad or who was knocked off by DINA, Chile s secret police, . these iron-han d agencies aren't just watching their country's self-exil~s. Lane Community College Department of Performing Arts presents NEIL'SIMON•s comedy ~ith•music Tff€.OOOD DOGf()8 . based on stodes by CHEKHOV · November·28, rl, December ; 3, ~.·$3.00. teserved onfy Box offi~ 747-4559 ante, C .• 2¾1-f J•·ti!Yard • Ore~ n 974-05 ~ ..,__.... ~-- ~/34 5-13 2+ ' MON. TUES. - .. ·~- _1 .~. ., • ::t \:--. -· .. , ~- r~ji -· Ike •.'l'IIUR SDAl,: NO~D:18 ;: '' >~Trick ~d ·-. e ·a '. • ...:(:: ., , • -. • - _ .. ...... · ,_... - Jn1 ...·- E lE · · ·. •.-1r . <C> .- vemi rcs.• - : ·,-1 • • l-. -.- - .·; · - •• __ • Fil~-~Spe ctaculu. : . .·. . ·SATVUAY, NOVEMBElt JO 01.YDJ~Trials. Pa'n•Ani Trials. AAU Titles whh rock-cla ssical niusi~ background • . ·- : . _. University of Oregon, 150 Geology, opposite EMU 7:00 p.m. Admission is SJ SRC Bate Sale • Center Building. 2nd floor, ou,side Student Resource Center 11 :00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Concert Symphonic Wind Ensemble Beall Concert Hall, -U of O campus« 8:00 p.m. No admission charge For more informa tion, call i>r. Stephen ·Stone. U of- 0 School Music at 686-3887 Play William Soroyan •s "The Time of Your Life" Horace Robinson Theatre. U of 0 campus 8:00 p.m. Tickets are 54.00 and ·SJ.00 for the general public and $2.00 a:nd S1 .SO for U of O students Tickets available at the theatre ~x offi~ A night of ·women• s music . with , E~my Fox, . Nancy Sitz. ·Lori Bynum. and Susie Milliman Gertrude·s Restaurant 8th and •Lincoln. · basement of the WOW Hall. Eugen~ Admission is S.SO 'For time infonnation call 343-4302 .f~;,: cdl ·::-;, ,, -Speaker/Slide.show/a~iJnation techniques, question and answer period Bob Clampe tt, three-ti me Emmy award winner and creator of '.'Beany and Cecil" ERB Memori al Union. U of 0 campus '8:00 p.m. •Tickets are S2.00 and are. available.at the ·BaJJroom door Play "The. Time of Your Life" See .Thurs4a y's events . Pool Tournament • Everyon e welcom e t.o enter ~r observe Gertrud e's Restaurant 8th an.cl Lincoln. · basemen t of the WOW Hall, Eugene 1:00 p.m. For more ·information or to register, call ·343--4302 Cancellation Master's Degree Recital by Diane Hawkin s on Flute has been cancelled Conga Workshop WOW Hall, 8th and Lincoln. Eugene No admission charge For more information call 687-2746 Concert Reggae music with Felicidades •W.OW Hall. _8th and Lincoln, Eugene 9:00 p.m. . Admission is S2.00 at the door For -more information call 687-2746 SUNDAY,NOVEMBER21 Concert Feminist .sjnger/s ongwrite r Casse Culver : Piay ,. W_OW Hall. 8th and Lin.coin. 'Eugene .. The Time of Your Life .. 8:00 p.m. See Thursday•s events ·. Tickets are 52.00 in advance or S2.50 at -the door ·and are. avaiiable at Concert Mother Kali's, Boot and Tea and Reggae music with Felicidades the WOW Hall • .WOW Halt, 8th and Lincoln. Eugene . For more i_nformation call 687-2746 9:00 p.m. . Admission is S2.00 at the door For more infor_mation call 687-~746 MONDAY, _NOVEMBER 22 FRIDAY,NOVEMBER19 ( ; -. Jane. °£_ .. , - • - .Univers ity of Oregon' Sympho ny -Orchestra ~all Co~cert Hall, U of o·campus 8:00 p.in. No admission charge For more \nforma tion call Dr. Stephen Stone, U of O School of Music at 6,86-3887 •Comm,mltiJ'. •.· ·~_·.r~C.4'-llt,g(:;r: 6.;\,J•-......! (::!;.' I ., Inside: ADVANCE NOTICE k .LCC Performing Arts Theatre Neil Simon's -, 'The Good Doctor'' November 26. 27 and December 2, 3, and 4 7.he · c o.od ·o·Octor t P,ERPETUAL ._:oJJens,next ·. week t? SWOMSI Planetarium Show Forgotte n Worlds of Our Solar System Southwe st Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, 27 East 5th Avenue, Eug<?ne ·~ t: r Opening on November 6 and contiJ!uing December 16 Show times are Tuesday through Friday at 1, '3 and S p.m.. and 11 a.m .. _ 1, 3, and S p.m. on Saturday 's Admission is$. 75 for adults, S.50 for students (6-17), ·and S.25 for those under 6 and over 65. SWOMSI members are admitted free. i" t, \ fL k I' it I~ Now appeari ng at .t he Maude I. Kerns Art Center through November 28 In the gallery: Weavings by Louise Lindsey, Jewelry by David Rolin, Ceramics by Mark Vossbrink, "Rhythm and Gesture in Porcelain" by Allan Kluber KLCC to _b ·'discussed a special board meeting :........, y •"LTD··-raises•· .fast-~ p~ss. prices , . If yoa .have any pertinent Informa- tion concemfn& CULTURAL events In and around the Eagene Sprlngfleld area and woald llke . to aee them annoancecl In the TORCH Sprlngfleld area and woald llke to CaJenclar of Events, pleue &top In the TORCH ofDce and ask to the CultunJ &tltor or .leave a note with the TORCH aecretary. There·la no . charge fer this service, but the TORCH cannot guannte e that the Information wm be printed - we • must llmU ourselve s to a apaceavallable basis. eee LCC Presiden t FJclon Schafer rolls ap his sleeve In support •of the swine 8a vacclnadoil program. The vaccine will be avallable Nov. 29 and 30 froin 10 Lm. to l p.m. In the Health Bulldlng. See dory on page 3. ., \• j~ _:•.,. Childcare[: prqg~am niay IOse funding