@ne
CommuJ{itg

College

Vol. 15 No. 5 Oct.-20 - ~ , 1977

4000 E. 30th Ave., Eugene, OR., 97405

Board commits $141,000 to T. 1'.
by Sarah Jenkins
"LCC will now be a leader in TV
broadcasting," said an obviously pleased
Mass Communication Department Chairman Jim Dunne last week. "The Board of
Education and the President have opened a
•
new era for us.''

the "state-of-the-art" (of commercial
quality), TelePrompter of Oregon has
agreed to give the Mass Communications
Department unlimited access to one of its
channels.
"This is very important,"
Dunne explained, ''because right now we
have no access. People will now be able to

that it is possible that some of it could be in
use in three weeks to a month.
Negotiations have begun with RCA and
Norelco, and "The process of acquiring the
equipment is well underway,'' according to
Dunne.
He said he had asked for President
Eldon Schafer's assistance in acquiring
''The
modern broadcast equipment.
President kept his word,'' he explained,
"The Board is always talking about
wanting the students to have quality
education, but this time they put up the
money to prove it."
The $141.000 is part of $1 million in
unallocated construction funds left over
from completion of the downtown center
and the new Physical Education/Health
complex on campus.
President Schafer stated that although
he normally does not recommend the
Board spend unallocated construction
funds on an individual department, he felt
this was a special case.
He then
recommended full approval of the proposed purchase.

Dunne was applauding the Oct. 12
unanimous decision by the LCC Board of
Education to approve the purchase of
$141,000 worth of new and used television
broadcasting equipment for the Mass
Communication Department.
Since LCC's equipment will now reflect

see what their community college is doing
in TV broadcasting."
Students 'will
prepare programs that will be on this
• channel.
Dunne estimates that all of the new
equipment will be installed and in use by
the beginning of Spring Term. He added

Fact-finder to study written lists·
in faculty-college stand off
by Laurence Magder
The faculty union and college Board,
now in the Fact-Finding stage of contract
negotiations -- agreed Monday, Oct. 17, to
present their arguments to the fact finder
in written rather than oral form.
The agreement will delay fact finder
Ross Runkel's report for several weeks.
Under the agreement. reached at the
public Fact-Finding hearing, the college
negotiating team has two weeks in which to
present its position and respond to the
written arguments which the LCC Education Association (LCCEA) submitted Monday. The LCCEA then has one week to
respond to any new issues raised by the
college negotiators.
Negotiations between faculty and the
LCC Board of Education formally began
last February 15 with the presentation of
the Association's proposal.
Mediation (a neutral third party provided by the state attempts to help the two
sides reach agreement) was held in July
although requested by the Association in
June. Mediation failed. Under the law,
the next step is fact-finding.
During
fact-finding, a neutral third party, chosen
by both sides, hears arguments on the
proposals and recommends a settlement.
At the hearing, LCCEA negotiator Allen
Hein proposed that written ·arguments be
submitted by the LCCEA and the college
simultaneously. But Ruth Heuser, representing the college, alleged that since the
issues had been brought to Impasse by
LCCEA, "the only way we could adequate-

During the Board meeting, Dunne,
Associate Dean Joyce Hopps, and Engineer/Instructor Bill Riley all spoke in
support of the proposal. Dunne stated that
the equipment currently in use was
inadequate and out-dated, and added that
he felt students were receiving 19SO's
training in 1977. Riley said that there were
65 to 75 television students and that many
or more in the radio program. He added
that the shortage of proper equipment was
acute.
The equipment proposed is similar to
that used by both the local television
stations, KV AL and KEZI. It includes
two video color cameras (which will be
purchased used), two housing camera
controls, several different types of microphones, amplifiers, tape and cassette
recorders, two editing units, a production
switcher, two color floor monitors, and
many other smaller items.

ly respond would be to first receive the
issues (in writing) presented by the
Association."
Ross Runkel, law professor from Willamette University who was sent by the Public
Employment Relations Board as a FactFinder, got both parties to agree upon
submitting written briefs.
According to Hein, this procedure
represents a departure from convention.
Typically, each unsettled issue would be
argued orally before the fact finder in. a
hearing that might take 10 to 15 hours, satd
Hein.
The LCCEA lists 24 unsettled
issues.
Hein works for the Oregon Education
Association and has represented teachers
at other colleges he told the TORCH. He
said he is interested to see how this
procedure works out.
"It's a better use of the fact finder's
time," he said. "There will be more of a
tendency to look at the Impasse as a total
package, which is what we are looking
for."
Heuser later told the TORCH that, "We
don't expect that the end result will be any
different. It doesn't change the fact that \
\
the Fact Finder will still have to address
each issue. ''
Given the number of unsettled issues,
both felt that the chances were small that
the Fact Finder's report would be totally
Artist Lillian Bell will display "Works
acceptable to both the instructors and the in Handmade Paper" through Nov. 2 in
college. Yet each group expects the report the LCC Gallery. See story on page 5.
will provide a basis for an eventual Photo by Jeff Patterson.
agreement.

Ballot measure 2
supports alternative

energy funding
by Kathleen Monje

Editor's note: Kathy Monje was the 1976-1977 TORCH Editor.
She is now the Environment Editor at the University of Oregon
Daily Emerald.

Garbage, ancient lava beds and waste
steam from industry are among alternative
energy sources that will be put into
practical use in Oregon if Ballot Measure
No. 2 meets voter approval on Nov. 8.
·'It will involve lots t>f small scale
projects all around the state, using what's
available in each locality,'' said Charlene
Curry, state coordinator for the Effective
Energy Policy· for Oregon Citizen's Committee·which is supporting and publicizing
the measure.
Bonds amounting to $350 million for a
state loan fund to finance the projects is
asked in the measure.
''This will not affect taxes,'' Curry
emphasized. "What it does is let the state
loan money at lower interest rates for local
projects."
Curry said that Walter Pollock of the
state's Department of Energy has told the
Committee that $350 million will fund
many effective projects in Oregon. "These
won't be experimental," Curry said.
"They will be practical, though small
scale."
Examples of specific local projects
include recycling fuel from garbage in
Eugene and greater Portland, converting
wood and agricultural wastes to usable fuel
in the Brownsville and Albany-Corvallis
areas, tapping geothermal heat in lava
fields near Bend, Vale, Mt. Hood and in
eastern Lane County and using solar
energy to process food near Pendleton.
The measure started life as Senate Bill
572, sponsored by the Senate Committee
on Environment and Energy. It has the
support of Gov. Bob Straub and Sen. Ed
Fadely, D-Eugene, chairer of that committee.
''There is no organized opposition to the
meaures," Curry said. "It is supported by
environmental groups all over the state.
We feel the only opposition will come from
uninformed voters and we want to educate
them."
continued on page 3

lnth~ issue:
•

a

Why aren't there .
football & debate
-teams at LCC?
"Youth, truth,
and love" says
Buckminster
Fuller

'ValentD?o' is no

\W masterpiece

rJ

Men's soccer
moves into first
place

page 2

TORCH-.. ·· ···.. ····..

·

Why doesn't LCC sponsor debate & football teams?
Department. ''There isn't one person
championing the cause,'' claims Rothwell.
But more than the cause, Rothwell explains, is the requirement for "a group of
people to have a reasonably good potential
in terms of analyzing arguments. And you
need a lot of individuals who are not unwilling to do a lot of research on a topic area,''
he said. Also necessary, says Rothwell, are
people who are reasonably articulate.
Rothwell was candid when he ·said that
some of the most obnoxious people he has
met in the world have been debators I
"They're some of the hardest people in the
by Mic~ael Riley
world to convince ... because they always
Why doesn't LCC have a Debate team? want to take the opposite point-of-view."
It is difficult to think of a snappy, well However, there are some good points for
thought o~t, and extremely funny answer being a debate team member, too. Rothto this question. It was the first ·one I offi- well cites the ability to analyze arguments
cially received for this year and it has that more carefully as one of the "pros" to_.
kind of special warmth akin to a newborn learning the skills of debate.
child.
Another "pro" is the ability· to "see
Before I let the mother in me get too far through the B.S. of political speeches
out of hand I shall proceed.
during campaigns," says Rothwell. He
Dr. Dan Rothwell is a part-time speech also includes in the traits of a debator the
instructor with the Mass Communication ability to avoid being ''subject to consumer
Department. He was a graduate assistant fraud."
in debate at the University of Oregon for As a concluding note to our conversaone year and coached debate teams for four tion, Rothwell cited the transient nature of
years while teaching at Fort Hays Kansas the campus as a major reason for the
State College in Hays, Kansas.
debate team vacuum. ''Students are just
Rothwell said he's been out of debate too involved elsewhere."
"for four years" and when I first inquired Of course, some schools do have debate
over the phone about the absence of debate teams. It's nice to make comparisons
teams at LCC all I heard was a moan of between two items, schools are no difdespair.
ferent. Mt. Hood Community College has a
Rothwell didn't know why there hasn't debate team-it's referred to as a
been a team at LCC, but he said the "forensics team" in the college catalog. •
biggest problem in starting a debate team Larry Dawkins, MHCC forensics coach,
is gathering financial support. And another was very talkative about his team, the costs
problem may be getting student support, and the kinds of people he's found in
according to Rothwell and Jim Dunne, debate. Dawkins cited one of the smaller
chairperson of the Mass Communication community colleges in the Portland area-

~f,~

<tACUL [!4~(l[N

\

Veterans:
ReRister early
A timely and useful check list for
thousands of veterans going to school or
planning to enroll soon under the GI Bill
will help keep Veterans Administration
checks coming regularly, VA counselors
advise.
These suggestions for veterans are
offered by VA campus counselors.
•File for benefits at least two months
prior to the beginning of the quarter.
• Register early.
•Avoid dropping classes after registration.
•Double check on choice of courses to be
sure they fulfill requirements for your
major.
•If an interruption in education is
necessary, notify the VA and give your
expected date of return to school.
•If you change addresses, promptly
notify the post office, VA and the school.
•Submit transcripts to the college
admissions and records office immediately
after application is made. This will speed
up certification to the Veterans Administration.
VA advises students returning to school
after a break to consult VA campus
counselors about the effect of new
legislation on dropping courses and on
payment procedures.

'From the Doctor's Bap'

TM audience left
'up in the air?'
by Tim Leonard
"The human potential is one of a quiet
mind, the bodJ· at rest and no stress. This
In tum •leads to an unlimited field of
creative energy which makes such values
as happiness and compassion possible, but
also gives us the ability to fly and even
disappear," says Gary Gill.
Gill is one of three members of the
Transcendental Meditation Movement's
Pacific Northwest Governor's Board. Gill,
Peter Lyda. and Bob Warren spoke to
about 12 people at LCC last week on a new
"breakthrough" in TM.
Called the "fourth state of transcenden.tal consciousness" it allegedly allows a
person to "Jevitate" off the ground. Lyda
says the technique was discovered in
Switzerland and ii;; a mental procedure in
which the mind and body take in rest and
experience the least excited state of
awareness. The ''fourth state'• complements the states of waking. sleeping, and
dreaming. they explained.
It was
described as the "subjective· state of pure
experience.''
"With TM there is unbounded awareness with a quiet mind. And. although we
are in the Wright Brothers stage of
levitation, we have learned that indications
show a mind-body coordination potential
and the fulfillment of dc<;ires.'' said
Warren.
All three men declined to give a
demonstration of levitation technique
because of the "circus" slant. They told
the audience that life is unlimited and that
we owe it to ourselves to unfold the full
range of human potential.

Insurance 'good policy' for medical costs
by the Staff of Student Health Services
You are involved in an accident or get
sick -- subsequently you are taken to a local
hospital for case.
This may mean:
1.
Your problem is cared for in
emergency service.
2. Your problem is serious enough to
require you to be admitted for general care
in the hospital.
3. Your problem is critical enough to
require you to be admitted to Intensive
care.
4. Your problem precipitated a heart
attack and requires you to be admitted to
the coronary care unit.
What does this cost you?
1. Emergency Room Service
A. Basic daily rate
a. $19.55 - Medical room
b. $21. 70 - Cast room
c. $29.30 - Surgical room
B. Plus doctor's fee
C. Plus other services, e.g., central
supply, x-ray, pharmacy, etc.
You may owe as little as $25 or as much as
or more than $500 for your one visit to
emergency.
2. General Care
A. Basic daily rate - $110 for a
two bedroom

Com'r.:':1(1:rioo·cH
I
N
Colle~r:

Editor: Sally Olja..•
Associate Editor: Paul Yamold
Features: Michael Riley
Culture: Jan Brown
Sports: John Healy
Photography: Jeff Patterson
Ramona Fuller

Clackamas CC-as having a budget of
$800. He explained that the biggest cost
comes from the traveling involved.
Getting a team started is also a major
difficulty. But Dawkins claimed that once
the team gets started the support and
interest soon follow. He added that getting
the attention of the students is the key to
participation on the team.
Dawkins also stated that there Is a correlation between a good student and a person
who participates In debate, ''They seem to
be studious because of the nature of forensics. Anyone who is 'crazy' enough to da
the type of research that we have to do ...
has to have a little bit of enjoyment In
reading and has to have some •skills In
research. They tend to be academic." He
continues, "The thing that tends to be
common among them is the abillty to sit In
libraries for long hours and do research."
Dawkins seemed excited during our
interview; it seems MHCC's forensic team
is going to compete with Lewis and CJark
College within the "next two or three
days.'' No community college has beaten L
and C in the last five years, since the last
time Mt. Hood visited.
There you have it. The complete answer
to my very first question. One of the interesting things about calling MHCC was that
it brought back memories of their football
team. Of course, that brings us to the
second question somebody just had to ask:
Why doesn't LCC have a footbaJ1 team?
I was tempted to Jet the sports editor
handle this one. My knowledge of athletics
goes as far as the knob you pull on the TV
to watch football.
But Mt. Hood was on the phone and it
was so simple to have them transfer my call
to the P. E. Department that answering the
continued on page 3

' ;Oct. 20 - ~ . 1977

Business Manager: Darlene Gore
·copysetting: Nikki Brazy
Circulation: Eugene Mack
Production: Marta Hogard
Judy Jordan
Sue Fosseen
Judy Sonstein

The TORCH is published on Thursday's, September through June.
'News stories are compressed, concise reports, intended to be as objective as possible. ~ome may appear with by-lines to indicate
the reporter responsible.
News features, because of a broader scope, may contain some judgements on the pan of the writer. I hey will be identified with a
"feature" by-line.
"forums" are intended to be essays contributed by TORCH readers.
They must be limited to 750 words.
"Letters to the Editor" are intended as short commentaries on stories appearing in the TORCH. The Editor reserves the right to
edit for libel and length.
Editorials are signed by the newspaper staff writer, and express only his/her opinion.
AU correspondence must be typed and signed by the writer. Mail or bring all correspondence to: The TORClf, room Z:.Zb, <..:enter
Building, -4000 East 30th fve., ~gene, Oregon, 97405. Phone 747-4501, ext. 234.

B. Plus doctor's fee
C. Plus other services, e.g., central
supply, x-ray, pharmacy, etc.
You may owe as Jittle as $110 or more than
$500 for one day in general care.
3. Intensive Care
A. Basic daily rate - $290
B. Plus doctor's fee
C. Plus other services, e.g., central
supply. x-ray. pharmacy, etc.
4. Coronary Care
A. Basic daily rate - $315
B. Plus doctor's fee
C. Plus other services, e.g., central
supply, x-ray, pharmacy, inhalation
therapy, etc.
You may owe as little as $25 or more than
$1,000 for one day depending on what
service was required for you.
You now assess your problem to be
compounded by fiscal failure! What .can
you do to prevent the financial disaster
aspect of your problem? First ascertain if
you have health insurance.
A. You may have health insurance
under your parent's coverage.
B. You may have hea]th insurance
as part of your employment benefits.
C. You may have health insurance
if you are covered by social security
benefits.
D. You may have health insurance
if you are covered by welfare services.
E. You may have health insurance
if you are covered by armed forces
or veterans benefits.
F. You may have health insurance
from some other source.
H you do not have health insurance, get

some!!

And now you ask, "Where can I buy
health insurance?"
Insurance companies offer group or
Individual insurance policies.
Lane
Community College has provided, on a
voluntary basis, a group health insurance
that covers accidents and illnesses on a 24
hour basis. You may inquire about it from
Jay Jones or Evelyn Tennis in Student

Activities on the 2nd floor of the Center
Building. The cost is small when compared
with the possibility of spending more than
your all in one day at the hospital. Student
health insurance costs one student $24.50
per term or $73.S0 per year. This may be
the most important expenditure you make
this year! While it won't cover every
medical expense l 00 per cent. it will surely
help! Pick up a brochure explaining the
summary of benefits from Student Activities or Student Health Services.
Do you have questions about your diet?
Carol Easton, a specialist in nutrition,
will be in the Student Health Service one
hour a week: Tuesdays. 2:30 to 3:30 p.m.,
to meet with individual students by
appointment to answer questions about
dietary problems.
Student Health Service will arrange your
appointment for you when you ask at the
front desk.

Memoranda
To the Editor:
The Business Department wants to
inform all Lane Community CoJiege
students that the typewriters and calculators of the Department are a College
resource and not an exclusive resource of
the Department.
The Business Student Lab, Room 206, is
open aU day and evening to an students
wishing to type or calculate. We would
hope that Business students would be
given pr~ference.
Classrooms are generally free after 2
p.m. until 5 p.m. Students may come in
and type; all we ask is that a classroom
environment be kept.
These are your resources; use ~hem.
Jack Kreitz
Business Dept.

~-::-~---~~------- -----------TORCH -------~~~~

•

•••

The annual YMCA Book Fair will take place on Thursday, Friday and Saturday
(October 20, 21, and 22) beginning at 10:00 a.m. each day. Books of all types and
kinds will be available for sale. Most of them are used.
Prices will start at 5 cents. The majority of the books will sell at 20 cents for
paperbacks and 30 cents for hardbacks. A few new and special boots will sell at higher
prices.
The Book Fair is held at the Y Building at 2055 Patterson. This year it will take place
in the small gym at the north end of the building.
There is a good selection of books, including textbooks, children's books, fiction,
and non-fiction. To make the search easier, the books are grouped by general subject
matter.
There will also be an assortment of special magazines such as National Geographies,
Arizona Highways and Western Horseman.
The Y will continue to accept donations of books.
Profits from the Book Fair will be used to assist the program of the Colombian
YMCA with the street children, called Gamines (which means abandoned ones) in
Bogota, Columbia.

The American College and University Service Bureau announces a service to aid
students, both undergraduates and graduates, in obtaining funds from foundations.
The Bureau's Director says, "There are hundreds of foundations with millions of
dollars in funds earmarked to aid students in meeting the cost of higher education that
goes untouched each year. Why? Students do not know of the foundation or
foundations or how to go about obtaining these funds.'•
The Bureau offers its services to deserving students by supplying names of
foundations and guidance as to how to go about obtaining funds from the same.
For more details on this service, interested students my write: American College
and University Service Bureau, Department S, 1728-5050 Poplar Avenue, Memphis,
TN., 38157.
The University of Oregon Athletic Department will offer reduced tickets to senior
citizens (62 and over) for U of O football games at Autzen Stadium. Proof of age will be
requested when purchasing tickets, that are $2.00 per person for each game. Adult
tickets normally retail fo~ $4.00. ~ickets for the Oregon State game will be $2.25.
Home Schedule:
November S - UCLA (Homecoming) - 1:30 p.m.
November 12 - California - 1:30 p.m.
~vember 19 - Oregon State - 1:30 p.m.

Ballot m e a s u r e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

continued from page 1
Ballot Measure No. 2 is a very elaborate dreams." This measure will again put
bill with a lot of possibilities, Curry said, Oregon in the forefront of '' energy
adding th~~Jhese are ~ot "pie-in-the-sky innovation.''

~(!Jl

____

second question was as easy as fixing a
sandwich at half-time.
But first, let me report that Dick Newell,
LCC athletic director, feels there are a lot
of reasons why LCC doesn't have a football
team. Most Oregon community colleges do
not have football. In LCC' s early history,
the Board of Education decided not to have
the sport as part of the athletic program.
''The cost of a football program today is
almost unjustifiable at a community college
level," says Newell, "because of the time,
money, and -;ommitment involved by the
school administration and the school
board."
Newell also feels that the local area is
''pretty sound'' when it comes to football.
The sport is well established thanks to the
high schools and the presence of '' a four
year institution in town." Newell thinks its
very difficult to break into '' an existing
kind of program" like that supplied by the
different football teams in Eugene.
Marv Hiebert, head football coach at

page 3

continued from page 2

MHCC, has a different view from Newell's.
Hiebert claims that his football program
costs "no more than a high school program," -even high schools must travel to
play games, and "shoulder pads cost the
same for high schools, colleges or whatever.''
.

/

When asked if he felt having a football
team is really worth all the effort, Hiebert
replied, "Do you believe in Total Education? Mt. Hood has always believed in a
total comprehensive program. We have
some students interested in football and in
the academic world. Football is a way of
letting these students express themselves."
Hiebert seemed proud of the college's
3-1 record of games played this year.
MHCC plays teams from Spokane, Yakima,
Walla Walla and other members of the
Northwest Football Conference.
From now on, sports stays on the sports
page.

South Africa discussion scheduled
The situation in Southern Africa will be bring a sack lunch. Participants will have a
addressed this coming week in Eugene by chance to discuss educational approaches
Prexv Nesbitt, Executive Associate Direct- and action strategies with Nesbitt and with
or of the American Committee on Africa. each other.
"African Freedom: Overcoming the U.S.
Both the talk and the workshop are being
Obstacles'' will be Nesbitt's topic at a talk sponsored by People for Southern African
Thursday, October 20th at 7:30 p.m. The Freedom (PSAF) and by Clergy and Laity
event, open to the public without charge, Concerned (CALC).
will be held at Grace Lutheran Church, 710
Prexy Nesbitt is currently coordinator for
E. 17th, where parking is available~
An '' Action Workshop'' with Prexy the ·Campaign to Oppose Bank Loans to
Nesbitt will be held Friday, October 21st South Africa, co-sponsored nationally by
from 11:30 to 1:30 p.m. at the Wesley American Committee on Africa and CALC.
Center, 1236 Kincaid St. People who are The Campaign has succedded in having a
interested in working to end U.S. govern- number of major unions and religious
ment and corporate involvement with institutions withdraw their accounts from
South Africa and its system of apartheid key banks which make loans to Sout'
are welcome to come when they can and to - Africa.

,.

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_/

_...:___
oage4 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

One gay teacher
reinstated

_______

Oct. 20 -

Young people most vital resource, says Fuller

(CPS) -- Gay teachers are being treated
to a seesaw of civil rights as homosexuals.
A ·solitary victory in Delaware in which
Richard Aumiller, a University of Delaware
lecturer, was reinstated and paid back
salary and damages after being dismissed
for his avowed homosexuality, was not
enough to win the battle elsewhere.
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear
the case of James _Gaylord, a Tacoma,
Washington teacher, who was fired after
revealing his homosexuality in 1972.
In California, gay teachers are being
forced to contend with State Senator John
Briggs (Rep.-Funerton) who has repeatedly called for all California public school
teachers to sign a " heterosexual loyalty
oath" which could cost as many as 20,000
teachers their jobs.
The only plus in the series of minuses for gay rights legislation involved Aumiller by Paul Y arnold
who was dismissed because of his
"advocacy" of homosexuality when he was
When nearly 900 Eugenians turned out
quoted in Philadelphia and Wilmington last week to hear Buckminster Fuller
newspapers and in the student newspaper "think aloud," the renowned internationat the University of Delaware. University alist treated them to two and a half hours of
president, E. A. Trabant, who made the off-the-cuff experiences and insights which
decision not to reinstate the lecturer's he had accumulated.
co, .. ract was assessed $5,000 in damages.
Though he chose topics which have been
Aumiller also received $22,454 in back
discussed more thoroughly in one or other
salary and damages.
At the same time, rulings in Washington of his books, Fuller had a bounce in his
and California echoed the anti-gay senti- step as he led a mainly youthful audience
ment spearheaded by Anita Bryant in Dade down well-worn paths.
County, Fla. last June.
It was not surprising that the 82 year old
After a Washington state court previous- designer, inventor, and highly respected
ly upheld a school's contention that humanist drew an enthusiastic •crowd on
homosexuality is immoral and that the Northwest turf. Fuller's reputation as a
teacher's effectiveness would be impaired "free-thinker" and world ecologist is
by general knowledge of sexual prefer- highly touted here. (His most publicized
ence, the case was referred to the U.S. contribution in recent years has been archiGaylord, the teacher
Supreme Court.
tectural, having originally designed the
involved, contended that his constitutional geodesic dome, but it wasn't discussed at
rights were violated when his status as length Wednesday evening;)
homosexual was used to dismiss him. That
was not enough for the Supreme Court
At one point, Fuller recalled standing on
which refused to hear the case last month. the shore of Lake Michigan-havin g just
"By failing to rule in the case of James lost his money in business-while his wife
Gaylord ... the Supreme Court has added nursed a newly-born second child. He
to the climate of fear and intimidation now wondered just what he was worth in terms
being directed at this nation·s many gay of suicide; he thought of the insurance
teachers,'' said the directors of the money it would bring his young family. In
National Gay Task Force in an October what turned out to be a major stepping
news release .

''We are here for problem solving,''
Full.er said.
"We're the weal moniters. ..
of Spaceship Earth. "

,•........... ........... ........... ........... .......... .
••• IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO TAKE
Scholastic Aptitude Test (College Entrance Exam)
Miller Analogy Test (Graduate School)
Medical College Admission Test
Law School Entrance Exam
Civil Service Tests

•

•

Then you need to know how to answer analogy questions. The analogy question tests your ability to see a relationship between words
and to apply this relationship to other words.
EXAMPLE- Mother : father : : wife : husband
(The relationship is masculine-feminine counterparts.)
Can you solve these analogies?
1. Sherry : Beer : : Port : ....... .
(a) Champagne, (b) Sauterne, (c) Claret, (d) Muscatel
2. Crab : Lion : : Bull : ........
(a) Wolf, (b) Turtle, (c) Fish, (d) Snail
3. Shoe: ........ :: Saw : Gear
(a) Fly, (b) Cobbler, (c) Pair, (d) Bell
ANSWERS-

•

1f

If you.,missed any of these, you
need VOCABULARY 1450 starting October 17, 11 :30 - 1, Study
Skills Learning Center, 483 B, for
1-2 credits.

.I c~;QS ;inistry ·~t L ~ oo~U
I
m

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W

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B

i
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•

James Dieringer
and Norm Metzler

I
B

Contact through Student Activities, Center Bldg.-

• or LCC Restaurant near the elevator

---.

I
1B

m1

"WE'RE HERE FOR YOU."

-········ ········· ········· ········· ········· ········· ··
.nw

'SI \

•

Chaplains

m ----~---

Join the WIN crowd!

technology, and (they) equate it with
destructive weaponry and exploitation ...
They can't understand the language of
science,'' Fuller said.

·Bucky's optimism is directed at a generation now being born, and is centered in
his theory that "each child is rdng born
free of all the misconceptions which are
built up over all of time." He added, perhaps a little naively, that "Parents are no
longer telling their kids-Never mind what
you think-learn the rules of the game."
For most of his 82 years, Fuller's game
has been technology, and letting the world.
know about it. He has written some 21
books, including "4D Timelock," "SygerFuller resolved that he could not succeed netics," and "Operating Manual for
in anything with profit as its number one Spaceship Earth," and has crossed the
goal. He then began to cast himself in the planet innumerable times to lecture in
support of "doing more with less."
role of one of nature's troubleshooters.
In a historic vein, he praised Kepler and
"We are here for problem solving," Galileo and their "trials and errors" as
Fuller exhorted Wednesday's audience. astronomers, and compared man's role on
"We're the local monitors ... of Spaceship the planet with the role of a nayigator on a
Earth,'' having been provided with the re- ship.
In support of his "navigator"
sources and mental capacity to respond to postulate, Fuller proposes that, "Human
the needs of its citizens, he said.
beings are the only creatures with the
Fuller said he is alarmed at the priority ability to generalize conceptions (and have)
assigned to the production of military hard- . out-performed all other specialists (creaware; and, as a one-time Navy officer, he tures) on the earth.''
called for a shift to more ''altruistic'' goals,
In terms of performance, Buckminster
namely the unfulfilled needs of many Fuller has already gained a position of
fellow travelers on Spaceship Earth.
world-wide reverence, though he is quick
paints him
To provide fuel for the journey ahead, to play down any myth that
using that legenFuller favors Intensified research toward larger than life. He is now
harnessing the sun's potential. He sees dary lifespan-82 years-to demonstrate
rate of
fossil fuel dependence as necessarily the incredible increase in the
the accelerating
in
especially
change,
temporary.
fields of transportation and communicaIn order to instigate more human input tion. And from 1895 to the present, ~uller
• on these issues, Fuller is now particiP.ating h_a~ seen a l~t of changes, fro~ walk~ng to
in a "Study of World Games," which is r1dmg the rads, from Model Ts to bhmps,
sponsored by the Univerity of Pennsyl- and from Concorde to the Apollo moon
vania. Fuller is never too far from the shot; and doesn't appear to have lost more
young people of this country; and he labels than a step or so.
One satisfied member of the audience
••... youth, truth, and love ... '' as our
post-scripted that, ". . . hopefully, the
most vital resources.
At the root of 20th Century stagnation, tradition of the power of the mind will preFuller sees "an invisible reality": The vail."
If that tradition does prevail, it will in
helpless feeling that •'you have nothing to
part be due to the efforts of this thoughtful,
do with what is going on around you.''
"Ninety-nine per cent of humanity does kind old man. What, indeed, is old,
not know what is happening in the field of anyway?

B

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Designed and Produced by Industrial Litho, Inc., Eugene, Oregon

stone for him, Bucky Fuller decided to
''think this one out for myself . . . for the
first time.''
To tum his life (and financial position)
around, Fuller recounted finally coming to
grips with his father's old school logic,
which was passed on to young Bucky from
day one: "There's not nearly enough to go
around, so get over your sensitivities.
Never mind what you think, learn the
game."
At the time of this great reckonmg,
Fuller had just lost his interests in five factories which were producing building
materials of his father's design; the
"game" was capitalism.

II
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age

Works by Oregon art~ t on d~p"/ay in galk ry
''Works in Handmade Paper'' by Lillian Bell of McMinnville is on exhibit in the Art and
Applied Design main gallery at
Lane Community College through November 2.
Bell has been exhibiting
works in handmade paper,
fabric and fabric dyeing and
design throughout the United
States for the past seven years.
Some of her work appeared

Bell, a member of both the
Portland Art Association and
the American Crafts Council,
has studied at the William
Morris Technical School in
England and at Linfield College. This year she received a
SS,000 Visual Arts Fellowship
from the Western Arts Foundation.
Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to
10 p.m. Mondc!_y throu_gh Thu-

photo by Jeff Patterson :

WIN THESE PRIZES!
• Raise $40.00 You win an athletic bag.
• Raise $75.00 You win 2 reserved seats to the 1978 NCAA Basketball Regional
Play-Offs (to be held at Mac Court in March), or tickets for 2 people for three
days to the NCAA Golf Championships to be held in Eugene (June 7, 8, 9, & 10).
c:::

,...

• Raise $125.00 You win 2 reserved seats to the NCAA Gymnastics
Championships for all three nites, or a pair of T.R.X. Addidas jogging shoes.

it:
Q,)

• Raise $250.00 You win reserved seats for 2 to all five days of the NCAA Track
& Field Championships to be held a Hayward Field in June .

0

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....,

£

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on campus last November as
part of a women's art exhibition.
She has conducted workshops in making paper by hand
and in fabric dyeing in the Portland area for several years.

CLASSIFIED ADS
EXT. 234
TORCH classifieds can halp you buy, sell, trade, get
help, find a service, offer a service, or give someone a
Students, S cents per word;
Rates:
message.
Non-profit groups, 4 cents per word; Open rates, 10
cents per word. Deadline is Friday at 5:00 p.m . Call
Ask for Mike or Darlene .
747-4501. ext. 234.
Godspeed to the highwayman who retrieved my
beloved script and Story Book!
Who said wishes don't come true?!

Help! I'm moving. New owners needed for Golden
Australian Shephard, spayed basset!, 2 male cats and a
spayed female cat.
Dee, 747-1728, weekends or after 3:30 .

LOST AND FOUND
Opal necklace with small ruby

below , on gold

background and gold chain. If found, call 935-3461.

LINDA:

We miss you and we love you .
COME HOME FOR CHRISTMAS !!!
Sally
Mike A.

Niltlti
John
Jan
MikeR.

Paul
Pete

Marta
Eggert

Take care AND

s p.m.
Fridays. The gallery, located
in the art and mathematics
building on the east side of
campus, is closed on weekends.

• Raise $500.00 You win a 10-speed bike .
• Raise $1,000.00 You win a stereo tape deck.
• Raise $1,500.00 You win a trip for 2 to Reno for three days and 2 nites (incl.
airfare & hotel), or a color TV.
• Raise $1,600.00 You win 1 full year's tuition at Lane Community College.
• RAise $2,000.00 You win a trip for with the U of O Ducks to Los Angeles for
the USC and UCLA Basketball games (Jan. 12-15. Trip incl. airfare, hotel and
tickets to the games), or a trip for 2 to Disneyland for 4 days and 3 nites (incl.
airfare & hotel).
• Raise $3,000.00 You win a trip for 2 for 4 days and 3 nites at the 1977 Rose
Bowl Game (incl. tickets to Rose Bowl Parade and Game on Jan. 2,
transportation to games and parade and Disneyland Float preview tour).
• Raise $3,200.00 You win a trip for 2 to Hawaii for the 1978 Hula Bowl (incl.
airfare , hotel, reserved tickets to game, cocktail party, for 8 days & 7 nites - Feb.
5-12).
• Raise $5,000.00 You win a trip to Moscow for the 1980 Olympic games, with
Track & Field Magazine Tour (incl. 15 days in Russia, hotel, meals and tickets to
all Track & Field day).

Contact Bill Theriault at the
LCC Athletic Department for
information and sponsor
sheets. The JOG/WALK-ATHON will happen November 10th, so get your sponsors now! All prizes are determined by the actual
amount collected from your
sponsors.

Lane Comm unity College
Jog/W alk-A·- Thon '77
Rl!MEMBER, IT'S NOT
HOW MANY LAPS YOU
RUN, BUT HOW MUCH
EACH LAP IS WORTH!

,TQRCH

page 6

Oct. 20 - ~ . 1977

O.R.T .'s 'Salesman'
a ·fine production

Story and photos by John Dutton
. _
Two hundred people hoping to be extras In Chevy Chase's new Dim, " Animal I
Boue," crowded Into the EMU early Tuesday morning.
Castin& agents Interviewed people throughout the entire day, attempting to 811 the
SO female and ISO male parts.
Since the movie la &et In 1962, agents warned prospective· extras that the role&
·• vdable woalcl require very short hair and no beards. Also, the pay Isn't much, Sl.SO
·•per hoar, and extra are on call vlrtlUllly 24 hours a day. This didn't scare any of the
potential stars tboagb. Oh Hollywood!
photos by John Dutton

Earaudic

by Paul A. Land
Why buy a used record album? To save money, of course';
Most people never buy any record except the shrink-wrapped sterile
product -- the brand-new record album. The fear that their new "Barry
Manilow Live" album might have been previously violated by less thai,
tidy bands is primarily responsible for this behavior.
However, with new records priced the way they are, the second-hand album is
beginning to carve out its own portion of the market. Currently there are four record
stores in Eugene with at least a small selection of used albums: House of Records, 258
E. 13th; Sun Shop, 860 E. 13th; Prez, 775 E. 13th; and Django Records, on Willamette
across from the main post office. Of the four, Prez and Django deal almost exclusively
in used albums. The others have a small selection as a supplement to their new album
sales.
Most used albums by major recording artists have an average cost of about $2.50.
This is quite a drop from the·ordinary "discount:" price of $4.50 or more. In addition,
used records by artists that are not so well known can ususally be had for less than two
dollars. In short, you can achieve a significant monetary savings if you're willing to let
someone else unwrap the record first.
. There are pitfalls to record recycling, however. Some used albums sound as if
they've been used as training wheels for a Honda 750.
Others have been raped by their previous owner's record player, which gets a new
needle every 15 years whether it needs it or not.
So, what does one look for?
•Basically, if you want a used record to sound like ne-w, get one that looks like new.
Ever notice how a new record glistens and shines when you first purchase it? A
well-worn album will resemble a low gr~e of sandpaper, especially on its inner
grooves. The album cover is also a fair indicator of what the record it encloses is like; a
beat up cover usually implies a beat-up record ... But not always, so be sure to check
the record first.
Also be sure to check for scratches and bumps in the record sudace. The general
"Rule of Thumbnail," which I've devised after extensive research into the infamous
scratch, is as follows: ff you can feel the scratch [or bump] with your thumbnall, you
can probably hear It OD the record, and It won't be very pleasant. Scratches are fanny
though. Some that look like the Marianas Trench make no noise at all.
•Warpage usually doesn't amount to much of a problem. Most stores, when they
buy a warped album, will label it ''warped'' and throw it in a Bargain Bin with a 29
cent price tag on it. It's hard sometimes to tell whether or not a warp will affect the
playing of a record, so if the store will play used albums for you on their stereo system
it's a great help.
Some stores won't play used albums, and some will, so it helps to check with the
sales clerk before bringing 386 records up to the checkstand to be played one at a time.
Used albums can be fun, or a pain in the behind. It all depends on whether or not
you care enough to check the album first.
•~ore OD used reco_rds, and general record care, next week.

by Jan Brown
John Freeman is featured in the Oregon but rather, just an average joe, with
Repertory Theater Company's current average abilities.
production of Arthur Miller's ''Death of a
Rhondi Douglas as Linda, Willy's wife,
Salesman."
is effective even though (make-up not
Freeman, as Willy Loman, ~ives a withstanding) she seemed a little young to
moving pedormance in this difficult role.
be a housewife in her late S0's. She shows
He ably provokes compassion from the compassion and concern for her husband,
audience for Willy, a man now on the down and stands devotedly by him, as he fades
hill slope of a life that was nondescript. away into dementia.
Willy, a man in his 60' s, is losing touch · _ . Bill Geisslinger appears in the producreality, he talks to people only he hears ana tion as Happy Loman, the selfish and
sees, and is barely able to discern reality. weaker son of Willy. Happy is content to
Most of his life he has conned himself into be what his mother calls him, "A
thinking he was something other than the philandering Burn.'' Geisslinger creates a
common man he is, and manages to proper shallowness in his interpretation of
perpetuate his grandiose delusions by Happy, a man who shows a superficial
passing them on to his sons, particularly ·concern for his floundering father.
his eldest and most promising son, Biff.
The Atrium Building, where ORT is
John Flaherty, as Biff, capably displays currently housed, is somewhat inappropria range of moods. As a young man Biff has ate for a theater, but in spite of the space,
an idealized picture of his father, but by or lack of it (the set seemed a little
the last act, Biff has a clearer picture of his crowded), ORT managed to stage a fine
father and himself. He realizes that he is professional production.
not the supremely capable hero that his
"Death of a Salesman" will be pedormfather has maintained throu~hout his life. ed, Thursday-Sunday through Nov. 6.

'Vakn.t ino' .falls short of m~tery
by Jan Brown .
It would seem that given the subject of
Rudolph Valentino, . a -,tar with the
magnetism of Rudolph Nureyev to play
him, a director with the imagination and
·ability of Ken Russell, the film industry
would have a masterpiece of celluloid . . .
but this is noUhe case.
I had waited anxiously for a chance to
view Russell's "Valentino," and rushed
out at the first available opportunity to see
it, at Cinema World, Valley River. Much to
my disappointment ''Valentino'' falls short
of mastery; it's better described as
adequate.
Rusell has chosen to focus on Valentlno's suffering and ml1ery. He vividly
Illustrates some of Valentino's most
desperate moments, and that's about It.
Particularly depressing and disturbing
was a scene in which Valentino is jailed for
bigamy. Thrown into the tank: with a
cross-section of scum, Valentino struggles
to maintain his human dignity. Nureyev,
who makes his acting debut in this film,
handles this repulsive scene with astounding sensitivity. It is in such scenes that we
"feel the unusual strength of the person who
was Valentino. So the Valentino that
Nureyev offers us is not unlike himself, a
man dripping with · elegance, immense
dignity, and self respect. A paradox and
contradiction, Valentino is misunderstood
by the people he works with, and the public
in general. To the Macho men of the
1920's, he is a "fairy," a "powderpuff"; to
e women he is a •cherished paramour;

and to himself, Valentino is a good Italian
boy who longs to be a farmer and raise
oranges, but he is caught up in the
superficial world of Hollywood's early
days. ''Evei-yday is Halloween in Tinsel
Town." remarks June, the wbin:an·credited
with bringing Valentino to the screen. At
the close of the film, Valentino wonders
solemnly how it is that a machine (the
moving picture camera) can make a God
out of a man.
Russell could have brought to the screen
a better understanding of the elements of
Valentino's personality that made him the
·world's greatest lover on screen. In fact,
the way Russel] handles the subject leaves
one wondering just what it was about
Valentino that endeared him to the public.
We do get a taste of that enchantment in
one scene where Valentino, mounted on a
white steed and clothed in the garb of' 'The
Shiek,'' speeds across the desert with a
beautiful woman in his arms, the horse
rears to a halt, and Valentino valiantly but
gently pulls back the hair of the woman and
plants a passionate kiss on the woman's
mouth. Nureyev is convincing in the
scene. It is easy to imagine the excitement
women must have experienced watching
such a Valentino many years ago.
The major reason for my disappointment, was Russell. Having been awestruck by other films by him, ''Women in
Love," and "The Devils," I know that
Russell gave us a lesser part of his creative
talent in the film "Valentino."

'Zardoz' ignored...
by Jan Brown

IJut returns

groups. The "outlanders" are uneducated,
have no government, are are policed by
exterminators, and under the leadership of
Now playing at the Cinema World as a Zed. The second group live inside a vortex
second feature, is "Zardoz" an unusual that separates them fr9m the outlanders.
and important film that has been overlook- The outlanders are slaves to the second
ed and ignored. But that does not alter the group. Prang has been given the job of
fact that it is a relevant work -of imaginative controlling the outlanders.
•
_genius.
Al
.
h
t
.
Ch
1
•
tt
R.
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and
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erome.
written, pro uce an
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• t d "D 11• erance , , She ts umquely suited to the costumes
Boorman who dtree
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"Zardoz" stars Sean Connery as Zed, worn ~n. ar ?z, an 00 s ravts mg 10
•
• and genetic
• phenornenon of the, 'Z
ongmal
d ,, hairstyles.
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Arthur Prang. Arthur ts an 1mmorta
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pro1ess1on
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''Zardoz'' is to movies what the works of
The time ts far.•~ the ~uture, whe~ s~
t
ety has been d1v1ded mto two dtS m . Simon Rhodia and O'Gorman are to

~····~···················~············~·~~················1

.

.:-

• 6

.~-

HALLOWEEN CELEBRATION
(SEE WHAT'S BREWING
AT YOUR BOOKSTORE)

• CONTEST • PRIZES
•APPLES
NOW THRU HALLOWEEN

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architecture, and what Henri Rousseau
was to painting in his time.
For those of you curious and brave
enough to embark on the "Zardoz" •
adventure, remember the immortal words •
of Arthur Prang at the beginning of the
film. "It is a satire."

0c.,,.,_t.-20---~--.-19_7_7_ _.........._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

SPORTS

LINE

TCJRCH------------------page 7

,

byJohnHealy
I've always wondered how the University of Oregon football team (at
the moment sporting a 1-4 record, and excitement quotient of -5 and the
dubious honor of being ranked in the nation's bottom ten) can draw
29,000 plus fans to watch the Ducks get the stuffing knocked out of
themselves 54-0.
Yet the same fans wouldn't dream of going out to watch a championship caliber LCC soccer team play a fast-moving, aggressive, beautifully
orchestrated game of soccer, the world's most popular sport.
Why?
''In ten years of coaching at the junior college level, I have never seen
or even expected a large crowd at one of our soccer games," offered
George Gyorgyfalvy, coach of the men's soccer team, currently leading
the Southern Conference of the OISA with a 6-0-1 season record.
''There just isn't the close-knit atmosphere you find in high school or
the world class athletes you get in a four-year university to draw spectators,'' explained Gyorgyfalvy.
"We end up in the shadow of both."
Al Tarpenning, men's cross country coach, has directed his teams to
six straight Oregon community college cross country titles, but his program and athletes receive little media coverage or spectator support.
"We've had to go out and seek coverage of our activities," said
Tarpenning.
"Even the local high schools get more extensive coverage than we
do." Added Tarpenning, "How can you create interest wherr your athletes don't even receive coverage of the efforts."
Gyorgyfalvy agrees. "I have called the local newspapers, but they explained that there wasn't enough interest in soccer among their readers
to justify expanded coverage.''
It sounds like LCC's athletes are being caught in a never-ending
circle.
On one hand, they face trying to outdraw the U of O's overexposed
athletic teams and the winning high school programs in Eugene (North
Eugene's state champion basketball squad, for example).
Then the media, which lavishes such extensive coverage on the U of 0
and South Eugene, et al, won't give LCC any in-depth coverage because
there isn't enough "interest" in LCC athletics.
Yet it's the media itself that provides an athletic team's only real tool
for generating interest: exposure.
Tarpenning and Gyorgyfalvy see no solution in the immediate future.
Gyorgyfalvy, a Hungarian immigrant, offers a glimmer of hope.
"I see American society changing from watchers to doers," observed
Gyorgyfalvy.
Get out there. Cheer for an LCC athlete. Who knows, you might end
up interested enough to get out there next year and participate.
NEXT WEEK: The media's views on LCC sports
/

George Trano's seven goals -led the men's soccer team to a pair of victories ·last
weekend. The Titans set fom all-time team records In a 17-0 romp over Llnfleld.

Photo by Jeff Pattenon

Harrier reserves lose
to Central Oregon

by Steve Myers
The men's cross country team came
home last Saturday from Bend with their
first loss of the OCCAA season.
Central Ore_gon Commmunity College
.. the host school, captured the meet
title by scoring 23 points to Lane's 33.
COCC grabbed five of the eight spots while
the Titans got the other three.
Blue
Mountain and Chemeketa rounded out the
field in third and fourth place.
•
The loss didn't alarm cross country
coach Al Tarpenning, as he platoons his

Kickers vault into conference lead
by John Healy
The return to form of forward George
Trano keyed the men's soccer team to a
pair of home victories last weekend, a 17-0
thrashing of Linfield and a 3-1 win over
Oregon State.
'
The two wins vaulted the Titans into first
place in the Southern Conference of the
OISA with a_3-0-1 record.
Lane 17, Linfield 0
Trano scored the host's opening goal five
minutes into the first half on a cross-field
·pass from forward Larry Sylwester.
Mike Weinstein, the other third of the
Trano-Sylwester front line, upped Lane's
lead to 2-0 by picking off a ball on the rignt
side and passing to a sprinting Trano in the
middle.
The Titans then ·went on a scoring
rampage, pushing through three goals in
just four minutes.

~[P(J)(l41J~
<tA[!Jl~[!)A(l4
Oct. 20

SOCCER
Oregon College of Education
Monmouth 3:30 p.m.

Oct. 22

SOCCER
Willamette
Home
2 p.m.

CROSS COUNTRY
Umpqua, Central SWOCC, LBCC
Home
a.m.
11
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL

c~cc lnvitatlonal
Bend

TBA

Midfielder Tony Roberts touched off the
outburt with a long, flat kick from·30 yards
out that glanced off a player in front of
the Linfield net and rolled in for the goal.
Following Roberts' score, Trano took a
floating kick from Sylwester and headed
the ball into the net, then Carlos Lopez
lifted a high, arching kick to score
following a scramble in front of the Linfield
goal.
.
LCC took an 8-0 halftime lead on another
score by Lopez and two goals from
Sylwester, the second coming on a low
corner kick by Trano which the diving
Sylwester head~d into the goal at hip-level.
The hosts quickly got on the scoreboard
again in the second half, scoring on their
first possession wheµ Abdul Al-Sudairi
powered a towering kick into _the Linfield
goal from 40 yards out.
Linfield 's goalie, mauled repeatedly in
the first half by LCC forwards, valiantly
held the Titans scoreless for the next 24
minutes, as time and time again he dived
in front of Titans driving towards the goal.
The repeated pounding took its toll,
however, as the LCC kickers propelled
.through eight goals in a 15 minute stretch,
largely on the inspired play of scrappy
__
.
forward ~ike Weinstein.
Weinstein scored two goals and assisted
on a third score in four and one-half
minutes to boost his teams lead to 12-0.
Knifing through the ragged Linfield
defense at will, the Titans scored on Greg
Brown's header following a corner kick by
Mark Rose and Lopez's third goal of the
game.
Weinstein then scored two more times,
giving him four for the game, and Trano
ended the lopsided contest with a driving
goal from 10 yards out.

'

The Titans established new records for
most goals scored in the first half (8), most
goals scored in a game (17), niost players
scoring (7), and for the shortest time span
between two goals (30 seconds).
''They (Linfield) didn't try very hard
once they got behind," said coach George
Gyorgyfalvy, "and they completely broke
down after the first half.''
Lane 3, Oregon State 1
Sunday's game with OSU was anticlimactic, if anything, following the 17-0 rout
of Linfield.
The Beavers, 3-1 losers earlier this
season to Oregon, a tea~ LCC defeated 8-1
last week, fought the Titans relentlessly,
battling them to a scoreless first half and
finally bowing by a respectable 3-1 score.
"They had a surprisingly strong defense
with outstanding, rugged players," said •
Gyorgyfalvy, ''and their goalie was also
very good -- he was quick and knew the
game well."
The Titans finally tallied a goal in the
game's 64th minute on a Lopez assist to
George Trano.
Trano upped the lead to 2-0 on a penalty
shot that beat the OSU goalie, and a1
minute later, a fastbreak combination from
Sylwester to Lopez to Trano resulted in the
host's final goal.
"It was
classic, beautiful play,"
enthused Gyorgyfalvy.·
"We were a bit tired after yesterday's
game, and our forwards just weren't
prepared."
Gyorgyfalvy received a bit of bad news
before the Linfield game when it was
learned that freshman center-forward Scott
Carpenter will be lost for the s~ason
because of an ankle sprain suffered i.ti
practice last week.

a

runners every week. This week he opted to
let the second platoon compete and let his·
top runners rest.
In individual scoring, freshmen Scott
Sprvill of Lane ran the 4.8 mile course in
25:02 to take second olace behind COCC's
Dan Kavet, who ran a blistering 24:46 for
first place.
Also scoring in the top ten for LCC were
Joel Gray and Joe Cook, who ran the
course in ·25:46 and 35:57 to score fifth and
sixth respectively.
COCC's Kavet led the race from start to
finish. Sprvill came on in the last mile to
overtake two COCC runners and outdistance them to the finish. Gray and Cook
jockied back and forth with opposing
runners for most of the race with nobody
really gaining an advantage.
"It was
challenging course to run.
There was a lot of rough terrain and not
much room to pass because the paths were
so narrow," commented Tarpenning. "_I
was pretty pleased with the way the kids
ran. They did a good job considering the
course."
"We've dominated this conference for a
long time," said Tarpenning. "We don't
like to go out and humiliate anybody. It
wouldn't be good for the confer~nce or the
kids. This .way everyone gets to compete
and feels like he's contributing."

a

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FILL THIS IN
ANDW IN

College
Vol. 15 No. 5 Oct. 20 - ~ , 1977

4000 E. 30th Ave., Eugene, OR., 97405

2 Nights Lodging at the coast
Dinner lor two

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A SIS gilt certlllcate at Mogul Mouse Ski Shop
A .$IO gilt certillcate at Aristotle's Books
A $IO gilt eertllicate
at the Frame and Art Boutique
I

A rabbit's loot prayer plant lrom Ralnyday Cactus.
2 pairs ol tickets to 'The Runner Stumbles,'
6 Quarts ol ice cream lrom Gantsy's Ice Cream

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•• Instructor Sam Blackwell displays photography in the Library Mezzanine Gallery