@ne

CommgJtltg

Coll ege

Vol. 16 No. 18 March 1 - -I

191

•

4000 East 30tti Ave. ~ugene, OR 97405

• •
ons
nego tiati
by Steve Myers
of The TORCH

In a three hour session Feb. 28, the LCC
Board of Education authorized the administration to enter into a contract with Mills
and Associates of Eugene. The company
would act as the individual agent of the
college in actions pertaining to labor
relations.
The college is beginning contract negotiations with three campus unions: Classified
staff, credit faculty, and non-credit faculty.
The classified union president, Darrell
Allyn, objected to a sentence in a
memorandum sent by college President
Eldon Schafer to the board about upcoming
negotiations. The letter read: ''. . . The
m;1ions will again be using 'outside'
professionals. We believe it is essential
that the college retain a negotiator."
"We're not going to use professional
negotiators," corrected Allyn, "until the
board's negotiator won't budge."
After hearing Allyn's comments and
other discussion the board met in closed
session to discuss its strategy for the
upcoming bargaining sessions.
Some concern was shown by both the
board and staff members . about the
collective bargaining discussions about to
begin. Neither party wants a repeat of last
year's drawn out process.
In other action, the board decided to:
• Table a motion to adopt a tuition raise
of $1 per credit hour. The board indicated
that it would like to make a decision on the
issue when it had more information on the
matter and when all the board members
were present. Board members Stephen
Reid and Ed Cooper did not attend this
meeting.
This is the second postponement of a
proposed tuition increase scheduled to
become effective in the 1979-80 school year.
• Accepted with regret the resignations
of Grounds Manager Mark Sheppard and
Business Department instructor Nell Francis.
• Approved a new course entitle~
"Introduction to Applied Psychology I."
The course will provide students with an
opportunity to apply the principles of
learning theories in behavioral situations.
• Accepted a $4,721.07 bid from IBM for
the purchase of a mag card typewriter
already in the Word Processing Center.
The machine is cuurently being rented.
Prior to the regular meeting, the board
attended a dinner honoring the VocationalTechnical Instructor Award winners.
The next board meeting will convene at 8
p.m. on March 14 in the Board Room of the
Administration Building.

LCC student Pam Hogan displays a Tae Kwon-Do palm.

Photo by Jeff Patterson.

Stereotypes smashed along with concrete
Feature by Michael Tenn
of The TORCH

The classroom was silent. At the
front of the room a young woman of
slight build- in a karate "gi" stands
poised over a one and a half inch thick
concrete slab supported by two concrete blocks.
Her hands are feminine. The long
supple fingers end in carefully shaped
and polished nails. They don't seem
like the kind of hands that would be
tough enough to endure the explosive
force required to demolish a chunk of
concrete.
Pam Hogan is an LCC student.
Twenty-one years old, short blond

hair, small frame, engaging smile -and a black belt in karate. She was
invited to give a demonstratio n in John
Klobas' sociology class last week.
Klobas explains thaf he wanted to talk
to the class about culture and socialization and the norms, values and
beliefs that go into stereotypes.
. Hogan, he thought, would be a good
example: She is the opposite of every
stereotype of the American woman.
Klobas says that he's tired of
women ·having only weak role models
and he wonders where women can find
stronger models with whorl} to identify.
Hogan began training seven and a
half years ago at the age of 14. A
family friend from Portland who was

involved with Kung Fu was visiting
the Hogans and gave Pam a demon·
st ration. "It was very exciting," she
-says.
And she lost no time in visiting the
local Eugene karate schools in search
of a teacher. She picked Bruce Comb's
Tae Kwon-Do schooJ.
"I liked it as soon as I tried it,"
recalls Hogan. Three and a half years
of continuous training followed, culminating in a black belt before she was
18. While preparing for her black belt
she spent six to seven hours every day
"Mostly I think that
in practice.
karate is fun -- it's an exciting sport,"
Hogan says.

continued on page

5

Th e Sec ond Page.
I

LETTE RS/EDI TORIA LS/COL UMNS

KOO KOO

by Brad Koekk oek

Survival of Dena Ii depends .
on departl'Tlental·assig~ment
Editorial by Frank Babcock
of The TORCH
Legend has it that the native Alaskan
Indians used Mt. McKinley as a
reference point for comparing the
elevation of all things.
They called the mountain ''Denali''-the high one.
Last Spring at LCC, a group of
enthusiastic students decided to publish a literary arts magazine featuring
writing, art and photographic creations
of LCC students.
The editor, Shasta de Cuelo, picked
up on the Indian theme and named the
magazine Denali, and her expectations
were high .

SURE, I'M GOIN TO COLLEGE. I WANTA GETA EDUCATION JUST LIKE
MY BIG BROTHER.

Le tte rs
ents.
TV stud
.

.get rCJw deal
To the Editor:
It is my opinion that some of the
second-year students in the TV broadcasting program are getting a raw deal.
After almost two years of requirements, elective. credits and tuition, I
find myself nearing my academic goal"
- a degree in television production.
My companions and I in the program
are frustrated that after making it most
of the way, our productions have been
hindered by untrained people·using (or
rather misusing) equipment.
For example the requirement for TV
Equipment & Skills V is· a four-part

TORCH
EDITOR: Stephen Myers
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Jenkins
FEATURES EDITOR: Frank Babcock

PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR: Jeff Patterson
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR: Michael Tenn
SPORTS EDITOR: Ed Peters
NEWS EDITOR: Bob Waite
REPORTERS: John Healy, Robert Anders, Linda Davis,
Eleanor Herbert
Rockie Moch, Mfhael Bertotti,
PHOTOGRAPHERS:
Samson Nisser, Christi Davis
PRODUCTION: Laree Ram, Jeff Saint, Ron Coleman, Jack
Ward, Debbie Forney, Rick Axtell, Lois Young
COPYSETTING: Judie Sonstein
ADVERTISING DESIGN: Donna Rubick
ADVERTISING SALES: Frank Flammini

The TORCH is published on Thursdays, September
through June.
News stories are compressed, concise reports, intended
to be as objective as possible. Some may appear with
by-lines to indicate the reporter responsible.
News features, because of a broader scope, may
contain some judgments on the part of the writer. They
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.
All correspondence must be typed and signed by the
writer. Mail or bring all correspondence to: The TORCH,
Room 205, Center Building, 4000 East 30th Ave., Eugene,
Oregon 97405. Phone 747-4501, ext. 2654.

continuing series of 30-minute programs. This is a two-credit class that is
required for graduation. The lack of a
professional attitude in some of the
students has caused a lot of anxiety in
those who have been involved in the
program for nearly two years.
A lack of cooperation from some staff
personnel has also added to the
problem of fulfilling the requirement s.
Michael Harvey
Vietnam Veteran

When you sov 1"0RCH,'

you've said it Atl ! ! !

That first issue was done cheaply and
in a hurry. It hardly created a stir.
de Cuelo left Denali and LCC, and
Rick Dunaven volunteered for the
editorship.
Faced with a tiny budget and
minimal administrati ve support, Dunaven organized a staff and solicited
contributions from varied sources with
intentions of making Denali a more
professional effort.
In January, Dunaven 'and crew
published the second Denali issue.
Though far from perfect, it was a
commendabl e effort ahd, at least, gave
some visibility to the creative talent at
LCC.
But Denali is in trouble.
• So far the magazine has existed on
the good will of a few benevolent
department heads and the ASLCC's
developmen t fund. It has had no paid
faculty advisers nor has it been under
the guidance of any particular college
department.
Ironically, Dunaven struggled to
publish a quality magazine hoping
that by establishing some credibility for
the publication he could garner the
support needed to make it on-going.
The support appears to now be just
around the corner, but it seems
contingent upon Dena/i's assignment
to an established department -- a
condition Dunaven has been curiously
reluctant to accept.
But time is slipping by. And the
magazine stands little chance of
survival beyond this year in its present
free-floating status. It is unlikely the
college is going to commit funds to a

foot-loose, unfettered project.
Attachment to a department, such as
Language Arts, would solve many of
Dena/i's -- and Dunaven's -- problems.
There the magazine would be in close
proximity with a large creative resource
and would likely attract a staff with
some sense of literary quality.
And the administration would very
likely feel more comfortable about
providing the magazine with finarbal
A UTERARY- ARTS
MAGAZINE FROM

e ,e, a,,...
1,,,,/

(

t
lANE COMMUNITY

COLLEGE

security. And they might, as Dunaven
has suggested, be willing to hire a
part-time adviser with a varied art/literary/publis hing background to give
Denali the professional guidance it
needs .
The magazine has the potential of
being a valuable asset to LCC -- there
seems to be no argument about that.
But to predicate its existence and
future upon total autonomy is absurd
and could very well be the magazine's
undoing.

GREAT QUOTES
Some people have a

way.with words.
Others ...
not have way.

- Steve Martin 1978

PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz

A

-.~sY
230
~Q

ORRlt' ABOUT

1ME SLUE JA'f5 ARE

AFTE~ lt'OU?

ON M~ WAlt' TO SCMOOL
THIS MORNING, I SORT
OF ~0PPE0 rT IN "THE MUD

THEN ~OU NEED ONE
OF ML( FAMOUS
QUICK Dl56Ul5E5...

MA~SE ,'OU CAN KIND

OF 8RUSM IT OFF A
SIT WITH '/OUR SLEEVE ..
WANNA TR'( IT?

THERE! NOW TME'1''LL
TJ.UNK '{OU'~E A
RACCOON!

@!'

i
i

•..:

z

•

J

J

•. •.•.•. •.• •.·.•.·.•.·.·......••• . .•. .·If •"......

•

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

• • •

• • • " •• f . i i . \

Mar. 1 -S, 1979-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T Q R C H - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - p a g e 3

When ·the moon shado\Ns the sun
by Frank Babcock
of The TORCH

Reactions varied from primal screams to
a subdued "Oh, my God!"
And though a heavy black cloud was
obscuring the sun itself, the 103 LCC
students in Mike Mitchell's "Experience
the Solar Eclipse" class were treated to a
•spectacular view of the immense moon
shadow as it raced through the Columbia
River Gorge.

For a little over two minutes, the gorge
was plunged into eerie darkness, the air
grew cold, navigation lights glowed on the
river and clouds shined gold on both the
east and west horiz9ns.
Meanwhile, TORCH photographer Michael Bertotti climbed a small• hill a few
miles from his fellow students and saw the
skies clear just moments before totality,
allowing him to take some unobstructed
photos and marvel at tne rare phenomenon.

Group nixes nukes
News Feature by A.B. Scott

and professional se-:tor who condemn
nuclear power but support alternat~ve
energy sources and energy conservation.
According to Hale, the response has
been overwhelming. In the first three days
of contacting people she received endorsements from 40 business people and 15
professionals. Since that time she claims
her phone has been flooded with calls from
people who wanted to endorse the antinuclear position.
Hale related her experience in the LCC
Science Department recently. She spoke
with one instructor whom she thought
would be sympathetic. She said that as
soon as she mentioned an organization
speaking out against nuclear power, she
was literally surrounded by physics, chemistry and biology instructors who had been
long opposed to atomic plants, and were
anxious to endorse her position.

"for The TORCH

''To the village square we must carry the
facts of atomic energy. From there must
come America's voice."
This was Albert Einstein's plea for
public awareness of the problems and
dangers of nuclear power. More than 20
years later, people like Nancy Hale are still
trying to present these issues to the public
and limit . our dependence on nuclear
generating plants.
Hale is a former LCC student and a
graduate of Oberlin College who is
presently working full time to halt the
proliferation of nuclear power and develop
alternative sources of energy. She works
with the Trojan Decommissioning Alliance
and a lobbying group in Salem, but her
latest project is organizing a new group
known as '' Business and Professional
Anyon~ interested in endorsing the
People for Sane Energy.''
group's position should contact Nanc.y Hale
The new group is a collection of
individuals from the Eugene area business • at 1210 Villard St. in Eugene.

Equestrian has great expectations

Unbridled drive pays off
Nevejac Bailey's goal is to improve the
quality of horsemanship in the area. "Not
for personal kudos," she says, "but
because it can be so much more rewarding
when done well."
Bailey, who teaches Stable Management
at LCC, is well qualified to achieve that
goal.
She began formal riding lessons when
she was five years old. A world traveler
because of her father's business dealings,
Bailey was able to study with some of the
"world's greatest masters" in her youth,
and she studied stable management for
five years in England.
"England is to horses," Bailey explains,
"what France is to cooking."
Bailey has applied her equestrian expertise to more than teaching. She recently
published a book for amateurs entitled
"The Care of Sick and Injured Horses: The
Save Your Horse Handbook" which is
being released this month by Farnam
Publishing.
Bailey is currently working on a second
book which will deal with horse training
without cruelty. '' I am very, very against
abuse. People use electric spurs," she

cringes, "and it is very common to use
bicycle chain, which is like little saws in
the horse's mouth." She hopes that her
book will curb this trend, especially since
so many inexperienced people are trying to
train their animals.
Teaching is time consuming and writing
is more so but the inexhaustible Bailey is
working on yet another project.
From March 19 through 25 Bailey will
host a riding clinic at which Hugh Wiley,
top Olympic rider and two-time winner of
the King George V Gold Cup, will offer
lessons in equitation (the art of riding).
Riders from many parts of the Northwest
will attend but Bailey says that there are
still some openings. "People who would
like to participate may reach me at
485-2225. ''
After _ two years in this area her
dedication and unbridled energy is beginning to pay off. "You can pick my riders
and horses out at a show by their
appearance," she beams. "Spectators and
judges always comment on how wellprepared and organized my students are."
And it is said that even local vet6rinarians can tell a Bailey horse on sight.

"When in life
make this Your goal:
keep your eye on the bagel
and not on the hole!"
ll~Lbll<B

l)al~ (S©)

2435hilyard/ 484-1142
eugene, oregon 97405

Express
ourself!
Take an art class this term.

NCE
le

We teach drawing, pottery, painting,
sculpture, weaving, design, jewelry
and art history. Call or drop by the
Department of Art and Applied
Design off ice for details. Phone
747-4501, ext. 306.

n.

-6

"Excell ent meal!" f'r' ··::-"·-.. ,.
tj ,;)
Frank Lloyd Wright

GHOMEFRiED

MUSIC -t)~~-\,

TRUCK S TOP
Mondays

14th & Alder...Closed

Page4--------TQRC

H - - - - - - - M a r . l-,S, 1979

Split personality

CWEISF E

News feature by Bob Waite
of The TORCH

What's in a name? asked Shakespeare.
''That which we call a rose by any other
name would smell as sweet."
So it is with CWE and SFE -Cooperative Work Experience and Supervised Field Experience.
CWE/SFE is a program in which
students can earn credit hours for working
in study-relate d jobs on or off campus.
Some coordinators slate their students as
CWE workers, while others list their
students as working in SFE jobs.
Regardless of the title, it is essentially
the same program. So why two titles? And
why does the campus computer in charge
of printing out student transcripts call both
titles SFE?
The answer requires some background
information, according to Bob Way, CWE
department chairman. Way says that the
program was originally conceived by Dr.
Herman Schneider of the Univeristy of
Cincinnati in 1906 as a means of providing
both on-the-job and in-class training. The
students would work at a study-related job
for three months and then pursue in-class
study for six months.
"In 1969 (when LCC began offering the
program)," explains Way, "many veterans
were taking CWE at Lane. The law read
that student's (VA benefits) could be
docked for enrolling in CWE."
Way says that the VA did not realize how
LCC's CWE program worked. To the VA it
meant that the student was working for
three months off campus for college credit,
as was done in 1906, rather than in
stmiliar programs like the one at LCC.
To correct this situation, the school
computer was programme d to call the
credits SFE which is a title that implies to
the VA that the students is always on
campus, according to Way.
"I would call a course something else to
protect the student's benefits," explains
Way, "if just the course name is going to
hurt the eligibility requiremen ts. CWE
may mean one thing to me but something
else to federal guidelines. "
Regardless of what may have been the
case in the past, Tom Furukawa, VA chief

of the field section in the Portland office,
says that the VA currently does not care
about the name as long as the program
meets their requirements.
According to the LCC Veterans' Office,
the requiremen ts are: The program is a
course requiremen t, an elective or it is in
lieu of another class with a waiver from the·
class' department .
"If they'd put that in writing (that the
VA is not concerned about the program
name)," answers Way, "then we'd consider changing the name (drop the SFE
title)."
Aside from the VA, Way says that the
program title may vary from one department to another because of coordinator
preference. In cases where no coordinator
is involved, but there is instructor supervision, he ~ays that the correct title is SFE.
Independen t Study (IS) is a new title that
is still in the planning stages. Way says
that a student doing IS work would
formulate a study-related project, and with
the approval of an instructor receive credit
hours for doing the project.
Way asks students who would like more
information about IS to contact the CWE
office.

Rus t disc usse s
nuc lear issu e
Lane County Commissioner Jerry Rust
will be at LCC Thursday, March 1, to
discuss a proposed county ordinance that
would ban transportation of nuclear waste
within the county.
LCC Health Instructor Marjorie Bassett
invited Rust to speak to her evening
Community Health class because she feels
the nuclear waste problem is ''something
everyone should be informed about.''
And since her classroom is large and her
class enrollment small, she has given an
open invitation to anyone interested to hear
Rust's remarks.
The class will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room
240 of the new Health Annex. "
The next public meeting about the
ordinance will be held Wednesday, March
7, at 9 a.m. during a regular session of the
Lane County Board of Commissioners.

Call me for counseling in the best investment for you. Specialist in new or existing

If you play a rn.JSical instrument.
If you sing.
If you do neither, but \Naflt to learn how.
If you vvant to write music.
If you vvant to be a better listener.
have music courses for you!
If you Ed, or vvant to learn how.
If you're interested in stage settings,
Stage lighting, sound or oostumes.
If you vvant to deepen your appreciation of theatre.
have theatre course for you!
You'll learn individually (ac, in
Performanoo Studies) and in groups
(clce,es, ensent>les). You'll learn
from tx>oks and discteio ns.
And you'll learn by doing pr~ice and performance.

So if you enjoy music, enjoy theatre - no matter what
your major is - the Performing Arts Department
v.elcomes you!

Super

SenJice

~5q
l~1
lliit~fB
g
·
1B

Member
EUGENE
MULTIPLE
LISTING

RAWLIN WESTOVER , BROKER

OFFICE 747-9971

4034 MAIN STREET
SPRINGFIE LD, OR. 97477

JEANETTE BABINEAU

SALES REPRESENT ATIVE

EVE: 746-0380

10%
&

stude
facul,

ART and
_
ARCH ITECT URE
SUPP LIES
N-FRI ... 9 to 5:30
TURDAY

1

-'

•

1_

1 ''

•Mar. 1 --- 1979 -

___________TiQDiCH--------------pageS

I'

N

Security becomes 'business problem'
by Frank Babcock

of The TORCH

In 1977, American business lost an
estimated $24 billion to internal pilferage.
"That," says Charles A. Tolles, Jr.,
"makes private security a business problem."
Tolles, a Eugene loss prevention consultant, will be teaching a three-credit class in
retail security during spring term at LCC.
Pointing out private security's increasing role as a modern business management
concern, Tolles emphasizes the importance
of security awareness in the business
community.
"It's my feeling that this course should
be required for business majors.
"Security ain't cops 'n robbers ... It's a
business problem. The main function of
private security is the protection of assets.
Apprehension is the job of law enforcement.''
Furthermore, Tolles says, a bill specifically aimed at licensing and certifying

She will be teaching a class in
self-defense for LCC' s Adult Education program next term, but she points
out that self-defense is just one aspect
of the art. '' If you start training out of
fear or anger, you don't really last ...
fear is a good short-term motivator to
take one self-defense class, but it
doesn't keep you motivated for seven
years of sweating clay after day.''
For the first two or three years of her
training, Hogan didn't give much
thought to self-defense. But she says
that since then the self-defense value
of the sport has been made more clear
to her.
"I'm not out to punch anyone .who
insults me," she says, "but if some.:
one is out to grab me and I can just
keep them away -- that's a nice
feeling. If someone is hanging all over
me or things are really getting extreme
- yeah, I can push someone away.".
Hogan says that the class she will be
teaching next term will move faster

Oregon security agencies and their employees is soon to be introduced to the state
legislature.
'' Such legislation will create a higher
degree of specialization in the security
business," Tolles says, "and through

~ ;

!~£'~

~--

/,...:,

.. . .,

1

•· ·

Bob Middaugh stages a 'rip off.' Photo by
Michael Bertotti.

mandatory training (specified in the bill) a .
higher level of professionalism will be

than the school where she trains. She
adds that there is no way students will
be able to defend themselves completely after such a brief training period.
instead, she hopes that she can
introduce students to the basics of a
martial art and self-defense and give
them an idea of their own potential.
When Hogan talks about karate you
get the feeling that it's been her whole
life -- and it has. It has isolated her
from a lot of the socializing activities
that most people take for granted. "I
feel kind of strange now because
I'm trying to work up a -social life," she
says. "I've been very stiff ... I had to
be respected and formal all the time ..
now I find I can't just get loose and
boogie.''
Hogan, who didn't date until she
was 18 because she was too busy
training, acknowledges that her role of
"karate person" has limited her
growth in other ways. "If I can't
train," she says, "I'm really lost ...
it's really my identity. But I'm going to

PUBLICATION DESIGN:
A New Course

Learn to edit, design, and paste-up
New~letters
, ·*Newspapers ·
*Magazine

*

·WK: 1203 Publication Design 3 credits T, H 1-2:30

How does TV viole~ affect us?
Does pmiography "corrupt" young minds?
pressure groups intimidate b~ad~rs?
MASS COMMUN/CATION PROCESS & THEORY probes these
questions; and questions about the regulations, hypotheses and
perculiarties of American Mass Media.
SP 216 T, H 10-11:30 3 College Transfer Credits

required of security employees.''
Tolles says his course will address much
of that specialization.
"I plan to teach a broad range of security
concerns," he says, "and create a higher
awareness of the importance of private
security:'
Course content will include retail security, physical security, prevention of internal
and external theft, electronic security
devices, use of security equipment, agencies in the field and the history and nature ·
of the field.
In teaching the class, Tolles will draw
upon his background as a former West
Coast director of loss prevention for
Newberry Stores, Inc.; as an insurance
investigator; and as a police officer at
Redondo beach, Calif., from which he
retired. He has made his home in Eugene
since 1971.
The class is scheduled to meet Tuesdays
and Thursdays from 10 to 11:30 a.m. in
Room 480 of the Center Building. Classes
begin Mar. 26.

r··~··C·
A
S
B······1
.
••

i·: ·t or your
•

·••
•

,I

.•

i BOOKS I
•••
•••
•:• Up to SO% of the purchase price ••:

.

:

: for books ..vhich ..viii be used ·:
•:
•
next tern1.
:

••
i•
••

March :12, :13, :14

••
!•
••

I• bring them I•
to
i
:i
l...... .... THE LCC..........J
-•

BOOKSTORE

page6---------TQRCH--------M

a r . f-l, 1979

Learn while traveling

Sum mer stud y.prog ram offer ed in Mex ico

by Steve Peterson
for The TORCH

Study in Mexico this summer and earn
as many as 18 credits in the process.

A three-part college study program "Mexican Experience" - will begin June
7 and consists of nine days' intensive study
in Guadalaiara, Mexico,_ four weeks of
group study in anthropology or sociology in

ttoots . . family ....
Restaurant

STEAKS
COMPLETE DINNERS •
DELECTABLE SEAFOOD - NOME MADE PIES I ROUS I SOUP

BREAKFAST ALL DAY

ANO WE DO SERVE DELICIOUS OMELETTES

et-U,.'.\QWA V

We Prid6 Ourselves On Our Home Cooked Food

a,n

(We Even Peel Our Own Taters For The Finest In Flavors)

440 Eas.t 8th Ave., E..ugene

345-8316

You r Host Clyde Scott

WOMEN
WRITER)

four Mexican cities, and an independent
study program conducted in a location to
be determined by the student.
The program is being developed by Joe
Searl, director of Cultural Geography, and
Paul Malm, Social Science department
chairman. Accompanying Searl as instructors for the classes in Mexico are Ingrid
Funke, Anthropology-Archaeology; John
Klobas, Sociology; and Eric Olds, Rural
and Urban Communities.
The primary purpose of the program is to
allow students to study another culture on
a personal basis. To that end, relatively
little time will be spent in the classroom.
Instead, the emphasis is focused on field
study. _
Several options are open to those
students who participate. Only the nineday seminar, from June 8 to 17, is
mandatory. In this seminar all of the
students will be in one group spending one
hour each morning in class. The rest of the
day will be spent in the communities and
rural areas. Searl points out that during
this period the student will be learning how
to learn - how to see and how to observe.
The instructors will be working on a
one-to-one basis as much as possible to
prepare the student for the group study or
independent study.
At the end of the nine-day seminar the
student may either return home, continue
with the next phase - group study - or
skip the group study and take the
independent study program.
The group study, lasting from June 19 to
July 12, will emphasize either anthropology or sociology depending on which line
of study the student wishes to follow.
The two groups will travel throughout
Mexico together. During the four-week
group study program the students will visit
the cities of Oaxaca, Villahermosa, Merida
and Mexico City, making a circuit of 2,600
miles.

Independent study, the final program,
may be taken last or in place of the group
study. In the program the student will be
on his or her own following an individual
program of study set up by one of the four
instructors. Those students interested in
this portion of the program should concern
themselves with "pre-trip learnings," as
Searl puts it. Searl adds that it is best if the
student knows where he/ she wants to study
and what he/ she wants to study.
The cost for the nine-day seminar will
run $482, which includes round trip air-fare
from Eugene to Guadalajara, 'llotel and
meals, tuition for six credits and instructional material. Students are responsible
for making their own travel arrangements.
However, Searl encourages the student to
use Eugene Travel because of their past
experience in dealing with packages of this
sort.
The additional cost for the four-week
group s·t udy is $560 to cover - local
transportation, hotels, meals and tuition.
Searl advises those planning to attend the
nine-day seminar and fly at the special fare
to make their reservations in April or
sooner. Those students participating in the
independent study should plan on $10 to
$15 per day as a guideline for how much
you will need for daily expenses.
A special Spanish language class is
scheduled this spring term for those
planning to enroll. Arden Woods, the
instructor, will use a new technique which
is designed to help the student retain a
maximum amount of what he/ she is
taught. The class is scheduled for Tuesdays and Thursdays, from noon to 2 p.m.
A brochure is now available from any of
the four instructors. Students interested in
attending or who have any questions
should contact Searl in the Social Science
Department. His office is 407 in the Center
Building, and he may be contacted daily
after 1 p.m.

Visua l-arts trac.k introd uced
• Working with color and design.
• Writing for mass media.

by Christie Davis
for The TORCH
~~m:«-"~

INSTRUCTOR·= JOYCE Si1Ll)BURY
• LCC: U, H
1:00 PM-2:30 PM
'Ir

It's now possible to receive an associate
of science degree in broadcasting with
special emphasis. in visual image production.
The new option has the following
objectives:
• Producing visual expressions of an idea.
• Understanding the concepts of composition.

irHE BIBLE -AND LITERATURE
,w~rnr U

ff Jffi?iili ;m :;; rn; i ffl "'lii :rm

; ;;

' ii

!I

iii!! ii!!!

mmm 1rnur T•••· mr:: :-:::c :mr mn: .•mrn:rnurTnii!J r rnmirnrWli:~*-

A literary approach to the Bible that explores literary forms and genres therein,
Biblical allusions, and modern literature in which Biblical influences of pattern, theme,
motif, and the like are apparent.
·wHAT IS
•
•
•
•
•
•

the mark of Cain?
a "Judas"?
a scape goat?
a "doubting Thomas"?
forbidden fruit?
filthy lucre?

WHERE CAN YOU FIND

~¥.w.-~~.vnrnm mnrn •

- _·
1_

:n:w.&wr

:,:.
?
••
(~ • an eye for an eye.
a wolf in sheep's clothing?
B • the salt of the earth?
• • the fat of the land?
• the root of all evil?
• a fly in the ointment?

I•

WHAT IS THE SOURCE OF
m:ut@ ;:~ammtiL.

•
•
•
•
•
•

The Little Foxes?
Green Pastures?
Measure for Measure?
East of Eden?
Generation of Vipers?
Giants in the Earth?

-<',,~

Instructor: Arthur Tegger Spring Term 1979
LCC: U, H· 10:00 AM-1J:30 AM •

So far the Mass Communications Department emphasizes the commercial aspects of television and radio broadcasting.
The visual-arts option trains people for jobs
in advertising, public relations, instructional media, and radio and television
graphics, according to Department 'Head
Jim Dunne.
"What they (the students) will get is an
associate degree in broadcasting with an
option in visual arts. Our hope is to change
the broadcasting title to something else.
We'll probably have a sequence called
Mass Media which will include radio,
television, journalism, magazines and visual arts," says Dunne.

ST UD Y
SK IL LS

VOCABULARY, 3 credits.

, If you have an average vocabulary and want to improve it, ,
this is the class foryou. You will study word origins, Greek and
Latin word parts, dictionary skills and,words in context. You
will practice pronunciation, selecting appropriate antonyms
:and synonyms, working with analogies, and constructing
clear, interesting written statement s through the use of
appropriate vocabulary.

LEA RNIN G
CEN TER

_DO YOU NEED TO IMPROVE YOUR -GRADES?

4th FLOOR , CENTE R BUILD ING

EFFECTIVE LEARNING, 3-credits.

'AR"E YOU HAVING SEVERE PROBLEMS WITH~r
1SOUR READING AND WRITING SKILLS?
~t
READ, WRITE AND SPELL, 9 credits.
This course is designed f<>! students who are reading and writing below the 7th grade level. You will learn basic phonics,
reading comprehension., vocabulary, spelling, and writing
skills. This class meets two hours per day, Monday through
Friday, and you must obtain the instructor 's permission before
"'
you can.sign up for the class.

If you are ~aving a hatd time studying your assigrmen ts,

preparing for tests or taking notes, you should e11roll in
Effective Learning. You will learn how to study your textbooks,
improvey ourgradep ointavera ge,andhav emoretim eforyour
personal activities. This class is designed for the student who
has been out of school for a number of years, or the student who
lacks efficient study techniques.

RE YOUR READING ASSIGNMENTS G
OU.DOWN?
READ

CAN1 ORGANIZE YOUR THOUGHTS?
• BASIC ENGLISH GRAMMAR AND SENTENCE WRITING, 6
•
_eredtt..
If you want to imp-rove your, writing and impress your
teacher§, t1lis class is a necessi~. Yqur papers will be more
interesting to read and clearer in meaning. You wilf work with
parts of'speech, -capitalization., punctuation, agreement, and
•• sentence cQnstruction sldlls ..T}Jis clas~ meets every day of the
,
week.
BASIC PARAGRAPH~WRITING, Variable credit 1-3.

; , You wiU6ecome a better~ more confident writer as a result of
this course.You will receive individual help in organizing your
thoughts, and in writing clear. concise paragraph s. Ideas for
completing you~ w9ting assignmen ts faster, and methods for
•
proofreading your work will also be taught.

REIGN STUDENT HA VIN
HLANG UA
ENGLISH AS A SECOND-LANGUAGE 1, l{arlable crecllt .J-3.
,

<

.

;.; ,:

>·

•,. :

),'

If your native language is not English, this course is
. designe<l for you. You wi111earn how to improve your speaking
"and writing skills .. Emphasis will be on. fundament41s of
English structure an.d basic sentence ~at~e~.

PREPARATORY WRITING FOR FOREIGN STUDENTS•···
Wrl..._ 91 [3 et'.edital,-W~a 92 (3 crecltti1.
,

J;.

Writing 91 and Writing 92 emphasize the refinement of
reading and writing skills. You will also practice pronunciation
and expanding your English _vocabulary.

r [Basic Skflls}, Vulable credit 1-3.

If yQu read very slowly, have trouble sounding out words,
and cannot remember what you read, Read 1 is probably the
class for you. In Read 1 you will learn.how to sound out words,
read faster, remember what you read, use a dictionary, and
improve your vocabulary.

.

,

READ 2 [Rate and-Comprehension], V~able credit 1-3,.
If you do not have a great deal of difficulty recognizing words
butareaslo w reader, yoq should sign upfor_Read2. In Read 2,
you will learn to read faster and to remember more of what you
read.

ACCELERATED READING, 3 credits.
~.

X

/.

'[bis dass will improve your college reading skills. You will
learn to read faster and remember ll)ore of what you read. Your
concentration will improve, and you will spend less time on
your reading assignments. You will practice a variety of
reading techniques that will improve your reading:efficiency.

ARE YOU A-ROTT EN SPEI.LER?
PBONE'DC SPELLING, Variable credit 1-3.
Phonetic spelling is a class where you learn the basic of. spelling. You learn how to sound out words, how to divide
words into syllables, how to spell selected homonyms
(no-know), and how to proofread your own spelling.

MORPHOGRAPmC SPELLING, Variable credit 1-3.
In this class you learn to spell by assembling and breaking
down words. You will learn how these processes affect
spelling. You will learn enough words parts to spell more than
12,000 words cotrectly. In addition, you will also learn about
homonyms (miner-minor), proofreading, and how to cope with
your personal spelling problems.

TORCH reporter thumbs-rides to

Another car whizzed by -- a streaking silver Camara. I stood on the curb and
waved my thumb in the air as the driver sped up the hill, over 30th, towards
LCC.
More cars passed -- motorized Eugene swept by with metronome regularity
-- ignoring me, · the solitary hitchhiker.
Though I had onlv been waiting five minutes, I was feeling impatient -overhead the steel-gray clouds dripped and drooled.
Cha rging across Hilyard ca"!_e a new surge of automobiles; I fixed my eyes on
the driver of an old, cranking, straining pick-up. I smiled, beaming wide.
He saw me and swung to the curb.
Opening the creaking door I peered inside and asked, " LCC?"
" You bet," replied a tall, thin , long-haired, bearded young man wearing a
soiled jean jacket, greasy demin pants and a dill -pickle-green army cap.
" Hop in ," he offered. " My name is Claude ."
I climbed in and settled down on the popping seat springs .
" Hi Claude ," I said. " I'm doing an experiment on hitchhiking in Eugene.
Mind answering a Jew questions? "
" An experiment? Why sure. Yea. Ask away. "
And so I did. And Claude , a work-study employee at iCC was quick to
answer -- willing and forthright .

'It's your aura, man-th at's what counts.'
Claude was just one of the 20 strangers who stopped for my waving thumb
and answered my questions during the two rainy February days I spent
hitchhiking around the streets of Eugene.
My mission? To get an idea of what it is like to "thumb travel" in Eugene
and to discover the town's attitude toward this economical mode of transport .
I wanted also to discover just what criteria most people used to determine
whether a hitchhiker was safe to pick up or not .
To do this I changed my style of dress from the first day to the second. The
first day I was a student, neat and clean: Tan slacks, leather shoes, a plaid wool
shirt, and my new raincoat. Books I carried in my pack, slung over my
shoulder.
The second day I was a scruff, wearing hip garb: Tattered, torn and faded
levis, a ripped and paint-stained t-shirt, beat up tennis shoes and a dark green
ragged rain-slicker. On my head? A mud-colored rain cap, pulled low over my
eyes. I tried to look psychotic -- to intimidate the drivers -- with scowling mouth
and darting eyes.
I didn't scare anyone.
When I asked my drivers whether my manner of dress had any influence on
their decision to pick me up, they answered, ''You just don't look intimidating ''
or "You look like a student disguised as a bum."
Based on these and many similar responses, I became convinced that the
manner in which a hitchhiker dresses is secondary in importance to the
"general feeling" or "vibes" that the hitchhiker transmits. As Claude said,
"It's your aura, man -- that's what counts."
Regardless of what you chose to call it, the fact remains: When dressed as a
scruff, I got rides as quickly as when I dressed as a representabl e student.
So if you've got a "good aura, man", you'll be a successful hitcher.

Story by Ron Kunst

Photos by E. Samson Nisser

A non-intimida ting Ron Kunst spent two days with his thumb out in an atteni

But more importantly, I found that everyone who gave me a ride was open
and friendly; and I never had to wait more than 10 minutes for a ride -- the
average wait was only five minutes.
• Ted, middle-aged and bearded, was from Washington. He picked me up
at 13th and Pearl Streets. "Just passing through," he told me. "Thought I'd
help you out -- you looked like a student (this was the day I dressed nice and
carried books) .
Ted used to hitchhike himself. "All the time when I was in college -- but not
anymore.
"When I was younger, hitchhiking was more popular. It was easy to get
rides. But now there's a social pressure agai_n st it -- it is uncool -- maybe people
think of it as begging.''
• Jim, in his early 20s, is an ex-LCC student and a life-time resident of
Eugene. He "hitches all the time" himself. "Yea, people are paranoid about
hitching now. Most people I know don't seem to pick up hitchhikers anymore ..
.not like five years ago. It's weird too -- I mean there's a gas shortage and car
prices are so high -- but still people are always driving alone."
• Richard -- one of my last rides -- was a young man driving an old rusty
white sedan. Dressed in draw-string pants and a burlap-textu red, psychedelic
knee-length overcoat, he stroked his beard and said:
''The reason people are paranoid about hitching now is b_ecause of all the bad
publicity: The police publicize all the heavy negative trips -- which may or may
not be true -- just to discourage people from hitchhiking. "
He also thought that a big factor in discouraging hitchhikers in Eugene is the
lack of places for drivers to pull over.
"You can't pull over at bus stops or at yellow curbs," he said.
"What?" I asked him. "It's illegal to pull over at a yellow curb?
"That's right," he said. "Just last year I was driving along in Eugene.
Traffic was light. I pulled over for a hitcher at a yellow curb qnd got a citation
for $50. Cop said I was obstructing traffic.
Surprised by this story, I went to the Eugene City Hall and talked to Police
Sgt. Loveall regarding the truth of Richard's statement.
_ ''People often get cited for pulling over at Sixth Avenue or Willamette,
where the road is narrow and the curb is yellow," he pointed out.
But, he added, at places such as 30th Avenue, going over the hill to LCC, the
yellow curb does not make it illegal for stopping because the road is wide
enough to accomodate it.
I asked Loveall what his attitude toward hitching is.
"Well, it can be a good thing," he told me, "but sometimes it just means
trouble ."
To illustrate his point, he recalled two recent incidents. One involved a male
driver who picked up two men in Roseburg . Before he'd made it to Eugene ,
said Loveall, the two men had raped him, robbed him and stolen his car.

He also
' 'Two logg
him and th1
Then anotl
again. Aft
Jack Crq
"Right nov
to hitchhiki
afraid to pl

" And yo
hitching.
• Anoth
hitchhikin~
After liv
problems ,'
And the
hitchhiker.
" I was i
looked like
stopped .
'' He wa
human con
his father
Then th
' ' He he
through

·o a go od story

' ' I pulled into a lighted triangle on the side of the freeway . With the gun still
held to my head, I talked to him -- tried to reach him .-- offered him my credit
cards, cash . Even said I'd buy him a plane ticket to California. But he refused
-- said it would be too expensive .
"Then when I felt as though I'd made contact with him I reached up and
slowly pulled the gun away . I just focused in on how he was feeling , what he
needed -- told him he couldn't win anything by doing this. He was not
resistant.''
Hilde convinced the man to take the car himself. She drove into a Eugene
. parking lot.
She calmly got out of the car and, with her hand badly cut -- bleeding heavily
from when she forced the gun away from her skull -- Hilde walked into a
grocery store and, as the young man drove off, called the police.
He was picked up the next morning, asleep in the car in a rest area in
That was the last hitchhiker Hilde has ever picked up. "And I'll
California.
one," she vowed.
another
up
pick
never

'I very seldom pick people up-it's too risky.'

,ut in an attempt to discover the mystique of hitchhiking.

He also told of an event that took place in January, just east of Eugene.
"Two loggers pulled over for this long-hair. They beat the guy up, stripped
him and threw him over the bank. The poor guy crawled back up on the road.
Then another person saw him and, thinking. he was a pervert, beat him up
again. After that the State Police found him. He was a wreck."
Jack Craig, a member of the Lane Transit District Board of Directors, said:
"Right now hitchhiking is a main carrier of crime. Criminal acts occur related
to hitchhiking and the media publicize the negativity of them. People become
afraid to pick up hitchhikers and the hitchhikers become discouraged ."
• Deborah, a woman in her mid-twenties ,
brought me from Hilyard Street to the U of
0. As we drove along the slick Eugene
streets, her tiny child lay by my side
!llaking gurgling baby noises.
I looked down at _ the infant - who
couldn't have been more than a year old and after noting his frightened eyes,
asked, "What made you pick me up?"
"You didn't look bad," Deborah said.
"You didn't look annoyed or anything."
"Do you usually pick people up?" I
asked, as the child's noises grew louder.
"I'm careful about it ... now. I've had
bad luck hitchhiking. I got assaulted three
times when I was hitching.
'' And you know,'' she went on, ''two of my friends got raped when they were
hitching. When people hear about things like that they get scared.''
• Another woman, an LCC student named Hilde, also had bad luck
hitchhiking.
After living in New York and Chicago for 10 years and "never having any
problems,'' she moved to Eugene.
And then on her way from Portland to Eugene, Hilde decided to stop for a
.
hitchhiker.
"I was in Portland -- feeling groggy," she recalled, "and I saw this gµy -looked like a college student -- someone to talk with to keep me awake -- so I
stopped.
" He was very polite and proper -- stiff and rigid. We talked but I felt no
human contact with him. He seemed upset. Said he was going to Salem to visit
his father who was sick in the hospital.''
Then the polite young man pulled out a rifle and placed it against her head.
"He held it right to my skull. I didn't know what he wanted. Then he told
me to take him to California.
"I felt fear. But at the same time I was very alert. Every thought went
through my head in siow motion. I told myself to be calm, rational.

• One man, Wes -- a ·school teacher in his mid-fifties -- transported me from
LCC to downtown. In response to my questions, he said, "I very seldom pick
people up -- it's too risky. All you have to do is read the newspapers to know
that.''
While everyone I talked to admitted that hitching is risky, many people felt
that the risk was worth the benefits. Nearly half my drivers said they
themselves hitched to save time.
Said one LCC student: "It's faster to hitch than to take the bus -- three times
as fast."
And two of my riders confessed to enjoying hitchhiking as a hobby -- a way to
r
meet people.
Richard said he sometimes hitches "just for the fu~ of it -- I enjoy it. I think
it's a bad sign that people aren't hitching any more -- it's sad. Hitching is a
form of trading -- like the barter system. I help you, you help me ."

..., .,,,,,,

After two hectic but memorable days of thumbing it around Eugene,
emphathized with Richard--but them maybe I just have a good aura·,--man.

.

•••

s

·, '.i

Page 10

r, • :- -:;

Q~

ENTERTAINV1ENT CALENDAR

KLCC is your1
community t9®e

U

Join the Friends of KLCC with
gift.
deductible
tax
your
Your investment will bring dividends of community information
and entertainme nt all year long!

•••••••••••••••••:
••••••••
Count me in!
:
:
•
:
•
•

•

My membership donations is:
-$10 Student or Low-income
- $20 Listener Supporter
-$50 Family of Friends
-$100 Patron

.:
•
:
•
•

Helen Adams, Scottish poet, will
be at LCC on March 1.

:
•

=ff~o~~~ ~g~all of Fame
-Other

:
•

SECOND NATURE USED BIKES
buy-sell-trad e

•
:
•

Address---------•
City/ZiP---------:
•
Charge to Visa/Master charge

.
•
.
:
•
•
:
•

SUNDAY

THURSDAY

radio

••

.Mar: 1 - ~. 1979 •

,

•

•
-.

Name _____ _____ _ •

.
•

Expiration _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :
•
Or make checks payable to:
e
KLCC-FM
:
4000 East 30th Avenue
•
Euqene Oreoqn 97405

•

'

used wheels & parts

........ ........ ........ .

1712 Willamette
343-5362

HEALTH OCCUPATIONS
CLASSES

a

CAL TJADER,
jazz, $4.50,
Eugene Hotel
(thru 3/3).
RAMBLIN REX, $1, The Gatehouse, 3260 Gateway, Spfd. (thru
3/3). DAKOTAH, $1.50, Black
Fore~t Tavern, 2657 Willamette
(thru 3/3). KATE SULLIVAN, $2,
The Harvester, 1475 Franklin
Blvd. (thru 3/3). SEQUEL, The
Place, 160 S. Park, no cover (thru
3/3). UNIVERSIT Y SINGERS, UO
Beall Hall, 8 p.m., free. "LINE," •
Oregon Repertory =rheatre, $2,
midnight (thru 3/3).

Sorry, but these are limited enrollment programs.
The following programs have special selection procedure s
and accept new students fall term only. Applicatio n packets
are available·now in the Admission s office.

Program

Application Deadline

RESPIRATORY THERAPY

June 18, 1979

DENTAL ASSISTING

May 18, 1979

MEDICAL OFFICE .ASSISTANT

July 13, 1979

Application packets for the Dental Assisting, Medical Office Assistant and
Respiratory Therapy Programs are available to anyone; Dental Hygiene
application packets are available only to persons who will have resided in the State
of Oregon for. 90 days prior to the application deadline. No out-of-state applicants
•
will be accepted.
Any questions regarding the above programs may b~ ditected to Barbara
Mathewson, Health Occup!ltions, 747-4501, ext. 266.

Progr__am

MONDAY

FRIDAY.

Specializing in
recycled bicycles,

PHOEBE
SNOW,
UO Mac Court,
~
8 p.m. (tickets
available at EMU Main Desk,
Odyssey Records, Everybody's ,
UO Bookstore). UO CONCERT
BAND, UO Beall Hall, 4 p.m.,
free. CAL TJADER, $5.50/adv.,
$6.50/door, Earth Tavern, Portland, 9 p.m.
•

LE JAZZ HOT,
$1, Eugene
Hotel, 222 E.
Broadway.
JOHN FIELDER & CO., $1.50,
Duffy's, 801 E. 13th (thru 3/3).
JOHN WORKMAN & PHILLIP
CURTIS, jazz, Biederbeck's, 259
E. Fifth, no cover. HELEN
ADAMS, Scottish poet, LCC Forum, Room 308-309, 2:30-4 p.m.,
free, also at UO at 8 p.m. for $1. "I
AM A CAMERA,'' $5, Oregon
Repertory Theatre, Atrium Building, 8 p.m. (thru 3/ 4).

SATURDAY

·ij

''THE WHOLE
EARTl:t
CELEBRATION,"
12 hours of celebration starting at
2 p.m. with Cam Newton, Lorelie
Moritz, The Raccoons, Willie Dee
and the Delights and other bands
and guest speakers Emily Ashworth and Steve Newcomb, films
and refreshments , sponsored by
Greenpeace, The Olde Dexter
Theatre, Hwy. 58, Dexter. "EARLY KEYBOARD FESTIVAL," Julia Harlow, organ, UO Beall Hall, 8
p.m., free.

EMMETT
WILLIAMS,
jazz piano, •
Bieder:beck's,
•
SCRIPTWRITING
cover.
no
WORKSHOP , Polly Platt, Maude
Kerns, 1910 E. 15th, 1~30 - 3:30
p.m., free. TOMMY SMJTH, The
Harvester, no cover.

TUESDAY

(1j

SMOKEY
VALLEY
STRING •
BAND, $1, The
Harvester. SEQUOIA STRING
QUARTET, $3, $4 & $5, UO Beall
Hall, 8 p.m. •

WEDNESDAY

rJ

''SEQUES,''
LCC student
concert,
Performing Arts
Theatre, 4 p.m:, free. UO VOCAL
JAZZ ENSEMBLE , $1 & $3, UO
Beall Hall, 8 p.m. BOOMTOW N
RATS, Euphoria Tavern, Portland,
8 p.m.
CCC C5 s CC s s O3s s s s s s

j

2 5 s CC 3 3 5 3 2 2 j 2 2 j : 3 2 3 3 C j

E: j Es j C3: j

j

Applicatio n Deadline

PRACTICAL NURSING

March 30, 197'9

ASSOCIATE nEGREE NURSING

March 30, 1979

The Associate Degree and Practical Nursing Programs are available only to
residents of Lane Community College District and the application packets will not
be released to out-of-district residents. The final selection for nursing programs is
accomplished through a modified lottery. Specific instructions forqualifyingforthe
lottery wil1 be included in the applicaiton packets.
Intere~ted pe9ple are invited to attend nursing orientation sessions Tuesday
afternoons from 1 to 3 p.m. in Room 240 of the Health Building. The application
procedures and requirements will be discussed during these orientation session.
Persons interested in attending should call Marlene Makie in the Nursing Office
at 747-4501, ext. 2626, to verify that the session will be held on the Tuesday they
plan to attend.

s1

r-a1 npu s Mi-n ist ratL CC

·i s G3 j

Conta ct throu gh Stitde nt
Activ ities, Cente r Bldg.·
or LCC Resta urant
near .t he ·e levat or.
Chapla ins James Dierin ger
U Norm Metzle r
"We're here l~r you."

~

Mar. 1 __.,, 1 9 7 9 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -f

Page 11

,

Taj Mahal .& Jessie Colin Young - - a real treat
Reuiew by Michael Tenn
of The TORCH

Taj Mahal and Jessie Colin Young
gave the crowd its money's worth at
Mac Court last Thursday night.
Taj Mahal opened the show as a solo
act. It was quite a challenge for a
single performer to face a large crowd
that's used to seeing high-volume rock
bands. But, before he left the stage,
Taj definitely had the people on his
side .

time."
It's probably not the first time that
Taj has played to a house full of
off-beat fans and he took it in his
good-natured stride.
Jessie Colin Young played his set
with a seven-piece band. The band
included a piano, electric bassJ electric
guitar, drums, a horn player (tenor
and soprano sax and flute), two
back-up vocalists, and Young who
s.ings and plays guitar.
The group cranked out a set of

on the Road.'' It was a real treat and
the crowd loved it.
The show ended with an anthem of
the '60s -- Jessie Colin Young's "Let's
Get Together," which was a hit for

The Youngbloods -- Young's band a
decade ago. The fans finished the
concert on their feet, pressing toward
the stage and dancing in the aisles.
I'd say a good time was had by all .
--

-

-

Adu lt
St·u den ts

Do you need your
High School Diplonia?
You ~ay already
be taking co~rse_s_~t LC_C
that q~alify you
for that diplonia!
Visit us for:

Jessie.Colin Young played his music at Mac Court last Thursday.
Photo by E. Samson Niss.e r
•
familiar Jessie Colin Young tunes
Accompanying himself on guitar,
including their hit "Ridgetop" and
piano and banjo, Taj belted out his
1
songs from the "American Dream'
good-time vocals and encouraged the
album .
audience to sing along.
But the highlight of the evening
He played the' crowd as though they
came at the end of the second set when
were another instrument. When the
Taj Mahal joined Jessie Colin Young
audience clapped out of time, Taj
to share the vocals on tunes
onstage
changed the tempo of the tune he was
Corrina" and "Six Days
"Corxina
like
one
At
clapping.
th£
fit
playing to
point, he improvised a line in one of
his tunes: "Everything is mighty fine
-- I sure wish you people could sing in

Rhythm &.blues
show next week
by Michael Tenn
of The TORCH

The Oregon Blues Society will
present a rhythm and blues show on
Friday, March 9, at the King Cole
Room in the Eugene Hotel.
The Oregon Blues Society is a
fledgling non-profit organization that
intends ·to promote blues music in
Eugene according to Ray Varner who
initiated the project.
Appearing in the concert will be
Vanguard recording artist Johnny
Shines, Robert Jr. Lockwood and
Eugene's Party Kings.
Tickets for the concert will be
available for $3.50 at the door on the
night of the show.

Read the
TORCH!!!!!!!!

• Evat'uation of high school and college transcripts for high
school credit
• Evaluation of life experiences for high school completion
.
credit (18 and over)
* Planning of life skills classes on a scheduled, no-tuition
basis (18 and over)
* Scheduling your final high school classes if you are 16 or
over

Adult Educatio n
High S~hool Cotnplet ion
Apprent iceship Building

Amer ican Ethn ic Folkl ore
Instructor Linda Danielson
M W F 9:00 AM • IO:OO AM
Spring Term I979

Folklore is people speaking for themselves: arts, science,
philosophy generated and preserved not by library and
copywright, but by oral tradition . This course gives the student a
·chance to examine the lore of various ethnic groups in the United
States, expecially Blacks, Chicanos, Native Americans, Anglos,
- and whatever other groups are represented by students in class.
Can you understand what is funny about another ethnic group's
•
jokes?
Folk songs can reveal a culture's psychological preoccupations .
Folklore healing methods are being acknowledged as effective by
•
formal medical practitioners.

Folklore affects the -w-ay you u~e tinie,
see the -w-orld, relate to people.

1f

page 12

.ME

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M a r . 1 -•. 1979

•i Writers workshop to begin March 5
••

•ua.

t

by Lucy White

for The TORCH

C

•

Cl

$1.00 DISCOUNT WITH
STUDENT I.D.

Oregon
Repertory
Theatre
presents

I QM !l CQUEI\_~
by John Van Druten

February 21 thru March 11
Wed. thru Sun. at 8 p.m.
Sun. Matinee at 2 p.m.

Call 485-1946 for reservations

r

99 West 10th, Atrium Mall, Eugene

~IJM~
by

Israel Horowitz

March 2, 3, 9, & 10 at midnight!
. Single tickets $2.00
Call 485-1946 for reservations

The Willamette Writers Guild will
present a one-week writers' workshop
entitled "Theatre, Media and the Community'' beginning Monday, March S.
The writers to be presented at three
separate locations in Eugene are as
diversified as they are talented.
Featured will be:
• Murry Schisgal, a widely acclaimed
and honored playwright and poet from New
York who has received many awards
including the Saturday Review Critics'
Award for the popular 1960s play "Luv!"
His plays have appeared on and off
Broadway, in Europe and on TV and
screen.
• Polly Platt, who has been equa1ly
successful as a screenwriter and production designer. She wrote the screenplay for
the film "Pretty Baby" and was the
production designer for '' A Star is Born''
and "What's Up, Doc?"
• Oliver Crawford, who for the last 30
years has written numerous scripts for
such well-known television shows as
"Rawhide," "Star Trek" and "The Six
Million Dollar Man.''
Schisgal will be speaking at LCC on
Monday, March S, at 10:30 a.m. in the
Performing Arts theatre. He will also talk
to Ed Ragozzino's acting class at 9:30 a.m.

lHE BJGENE CITY

BACKGAMMON
, CHAMPIONSHIPS
sponsored by The Eugene Backgammon Club,
·Endgames and de Frisco's
•
ARECOMING

Sunday, March 4, 1 p.m.
at de Frisco's. SlO.OOentryfee. RulesOnd prize 11st
available at Endgames and de Frisco's

d~Ir~296
in the Atrium, Downtown

''NOBEL PRIZE NOVELS''
Share the experience of reading an international selections of
novels by acclaimed Nobel Prize authors. We will discuss the art,
the biographical and cultural roots, and the power of these works
to shed light on our lives and times. Sign up for 3 credits or audit.

NOVELS:
1. Sigrid Undset (Norway) Krutin Lavrandatter

The Bridal Wreath

2. Thomas Mann (Germany)

Death in Venice

3. Albert Camus (France)
The Stranger ·
4. Miguel Angel Asturias (Guatemala)
Strong Wind
5.. Kawabata Yasunarl (Japan)
the Mountain
The Sound of
•

6. Akzander Solzhenitsyn (Russia)
One Day in ihe Life of Ivan D£nuovitch
7. Saul Bellow (U.S.A.)
Humboldt's Gift
..

Instructor: Ruth Bowman
LCC DC: H, 6:00 PM-9:00 PM, rm.038
Spring Term 1979

Polly Platt will speak at the • Maude
Kerns Art Center at 1:30 p.m. and Oliver
Crawford will speak at the Oregon Repetory Theatre at 3:30 p.m. The three will
appear together at the U of O Erb
Memorial Union at 8 p.m. on March S.

(Exact room number has not yet been
announced.)
The
The daytime events are free.
evening event will cost $1.50 for the
general public, but will be free to those
with an LCC student body card.

•
;.:-'/

1

.20Ji:~,.-·- _

-.

... .

..;

rJIIIIII

Oliver Crawford, a scriptwriter, will be in Eugene March 5 for a Writers'
Photo Courtesy of the Willamette Writers Guild
Workshop.

TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE

ACROSS
61- - is
1 Book unit ·
worth 1000
5 Pear
words
9 Fasteners
63 Plunder
14 Taj Mahal
64 Giant
site
65 Field
15 "Rio-"
66 Diminutive
16 Apportion
suffix_
17 Negative re67 Fuse
plies
68 Offers
18 Serving
69 Greek letmany needs
ters
20 Part of
Q.E.D.
2 3 14
21 New: Prefix
22 Bother
14
23 Wear on, as
the day
17
25 Pipes
27 Globule
20
29 Labor gp.
30 Price
23
34 Brit. acct.
gp.
36 Tantalize
38 Cinema
39 Business
39
VIPs:
2 words
42 White poplar 1,2
43 Metric unit
,s
44 Soak
45 Desire
46 Coll. degs.
47 Fly
49 Dictum
61
51 Nasal passages
6•
54 Polynesian
58 Cereal grass 167
60 Bird

DOWN

1 Venire
2 Greek
marketplace
3 Canines:
2 words
4 - egg
5 Husk
6 Lubricated
7 Arch city:
3 words
8 Overlie

9 Rodents
10 Swiss 11 Deer's trail
12 Pretense
13 Silver imp.
19 Until:
2 words
24- Dame '
26 Kevel
28- soup
30 Gear tooth
31 Hypertrophy

32 Beget
33 Dry run

34 Arab head
cord
35 Philippine
island 1
37 Calm
38 California

county

40 Knead: Obs.

ii

I_ I'° 11']rl~ .
1

0

Q>.c--

I__ I

I

I

I

I

I

I.

I

I

I

I

-oc1!o

~i.,:c:c

(1J

-

-0

0

Q) Q)

Q)

I

>-

C)CJD

>«i

0

E

I

I

I

l~_g~E

I

I

I

I

1.. I

I

I ;

0

N

in

in

"E

E .:as

a>c.2G>
cn::,:oE

§am~

I

I_

I

I

I

I

(") -.:r in
ininin

I

I

I

as ...
-e~~
Ig <I> g «;

m

<( C, Cl)~

.._....._ .....___,:Re;

BUSINESS MAJORS NOTE!!
MATH· 106 meets the calculus
requirement for the
University of Oregon
Business School.
ENROLL THIS SPRING!
See Tom Reimer, Mathematics for details.

Mar. 1 -4, 1 9 7 9 - - - - - - - - - - - -

~~[r u

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - p a g e 13

three lifts - dead lift, bench press and squats.
Scott Pittman flnlshed seventh overall In the first lntralmmal powerllfting championship s at LCC. Powerliftlng Involves

Freema n among top 25

Pow erlif ter plac es in nati ona l rank s--u noff icia lly
by Mike Arnold
for The TORCH
Dale Freeman, lifting in the 143-pound
class, won Lane's first "official" Intramural Powerlift competition by lifting a
total of 930 pounds, giving him a ratio of
2.09 - the ratio being the average of the
three lifts and Freeman's body weight.
According to Mitch Allara, LCC's Intramural Coordinator, "Freeman's lift ratio
places him - unofficially - among the top
25 U.S. lifters for his weight class." Allara
made his statement based on information
he read in the March issue of "Iron Man"
magazine.
" The meet was very positive," said
Allara. "It (the meet) generated a lot
interest in powerlifting, not only for the
20-25 people who came just to watch . . .
but the contestants were excited and ready
for the next contest.''

Bench Press·

Squats

Dead Lift

Ratio

WEIGHT
CLASS

Total Weight

114

Steve Ellickson 565

170

140

255

1.66

132

Mark Viens 590

200

120

270

1.50

148

Dale Freeman 930

275

250

405

2.09

165

David Barrie 830

260

205

365

1.75

181

Vince McGinley 955

325

270

360

1.80

198

John Belnio 910

320

210

380

1.58

HWT

Roger Bain 990

290

300

400

1.42

TOP TEN RATIO
Dale Freeman 2.09
Vince McGinley 1.80
Dennis Songer 1. 76
David Barrie 1. 75
Steve Ellickson 1. 66
Bob Cramblit 1.60
Scott Pittman 1.59
John Belnio 1.58
Dan Revel 1.56
Mark Viens 1.50

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
. 10.

·
-----ds--------------sifie
---~Oas
~---Sale
•
For

AQUARIUMS, fully equipped 24• and JO.gallon. Fish and

485.4408.

QUALITY 10-SPEED BIKE in fine condition. A bargain at

reservoir , warming ovens. Call Dave at 689•7736.

········-···························· · · · - - - ············

LARGE DOG "SKY KENNEL," Electric Coors beer sign,

$1()(). Call Tom at 342·2374.

CUSTOM STYLED AQUARIUM, 15-gallon, S75; Cassette

under.dash car tape player, complete with 2·10 oz.
speakers, nearly new, 590. Call 683•1790.
NEED TO SELL large coffee table, good condition, S65

(negotiable). 726•7517.

NICE SLEEPER COUCH, 520; Polaroid SX·70, $20.

343.2sso.

OLYMPIA TYPEWRITER, manual, standard, 12", late

model, in perfect condition, $100. 344.5312.

.I
I

I

Dale Freeman, winner of LCC's first powerllftlng championship, bench presses 250
Photo by Mike Arnold
poumls.

!

I
I
I

CUSTOM CORDUROY VESTS, men & women , S15 each.

misc. included. For sale or trade for car cassette deck.
Sandy 342•2374.

TWO NICE COMFORTABLE HIDE-A.BED COUCHES
for real cheap! Give me a call at 935. 7561.

...........................................................................
MOVING SALE. Everything goes. Saturday 9· 12, Sunday

all day. 2233 Dakota off Barger. 689•4762.

NAtiG~ESTuoio.i:ouNGi°ii~~·~~::·sss·iw~
..
..
...

VERY OLD WOOD COOK STOVE, S425, coppe r water

Large dog house (well built) and much misc. Call Dave
343-0164 after 5 p.m.
ROTOTILLER, 8 H.P., Sears , low•high•reverse gears, like
new, 1 year old, used twice. Cos t SSOO new in 1978, sell

for $350 firm : Call 687•9318.

ONE-STEP CAMERA, brand ne,.;, S20. Call 484-72IO
after S p.m.

- - --

--··············· ················· ··

TECHNJCS SL 2000 TURNTABLE, perfect shape, less
than a year old with Empire cartridge, $105. Ross at
:W5·8265.
------·-··..............................................................................................
HEAVY DUTY PIPE RACK for short, narrow pick•up
truck, S50. Call 689•4542.

- - - - - -··················· · · - - - DOUBLE OVEN, $50; Refrigerator, $65. Sold separate or
both for SH)(). Call 345.0885 after 5 p.m.

ELKHAllDT TUBA,·~~··~~·-~;; ;·~.de. Grain & meal

L~~~~~~~~---~--------------MUST SELL KARATE GEE, pack, lapidary equipment,

uncut and cut stones. 683·1996, Steve.

C

•

ODtIDUe

d

after 6 p.m., 726-5694.

OD

b

k

8C

page.

PE pitche s gear ······ ······ ······ ······ ······ ······ ······ ······ ······ ······ ······ ······
Students who leave their clothing and
•:
equiprn,ent in LCC's PE lockers will return •
Spring Tenn to find no Nikes or anything : You can watch and study recent films for credit with "Films Around Town."
•
else, according to locker room staff •
members.
: Students w.ill be able to buy discount tickets for regular theater showings each week. :
Frank Marshall, equipment room super:
at your convenience and participate in class lectures
visor, says that any personal belongings : You'll see those films
•:
left longer than 15 days after the end of •
: and discussions. Students may register for 3 hours of college transfer credit
Winter Term will be thrown out.
" Usually about 400 men and women (out
of 2,000 students) per term fail to get their
personal gear," explains Marshall, "and
when we throw it out, things can get a little
touchy.''
Marshall says that the locker room
left-overs are given to Goodwill Industries.
He continues, '' At the U of O the
students leave their gear in the lockers an
year, but too many students come through
here for us to do that."
PE clothing and equipment must be
tunied in to the equipment issue room and
baskets cleared of personal items by 6 p.m.
on f riday, March 9.

A(!4(J)()J~(D 1NJW~~~ I

: or participate in the class for self-enrichment as auditors.

:

"FILMS AROUND TOWN "
LCC Downto wn Center: . U, H, 12:15 PM - 1:30 PM
MAIN CAMPUS: MWF, '10:00 AM - 11 :00 AM
i Instructors: Susan Bennett and Jack Powell
: Spring Term 1979

:
:•
:

••
:
•

•:•
•
:
:•
:

1111. .

:

:
N 2419.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL LAN.CUAGE DEPARTMENT, EXTENSIO••••••••
••• ,

1•••••••• •••••••• •••••••• •••••••• •••••••• •••••••• •••••••• ••••••••

page 1 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - 0 0 J ~ ~ o o ~ ~ ~ U ' ~ - - - - - - - - - - - M a r . 1- # , 1979

Titan Illen stop-(:lack 8Illa s I 02-9 6

by Kathy Marrow
for The TORCH
Performing in his best game all season,
sophomore John Hansen paced the Titans
to a 102-96 win over Clackamas C.C. Feb
24.
Lane opened the first half with a
shooting clinic. All 11 of their field goal
attempts connected. This display of good
solid defense and continuous control of the
boards gave the Titans a 55-43. half-time
lead. This lead was maintained throughout
the remainder of the game.

'a run and
gun affair'
The second half went even better for
Lane. Coach Dale Bates explains the game
Because
as a "run and gun affair. "
Clackamas is weak defensively, the Titans
took every opportunity offered. ' 'This was
a fun win," said Bates. "There was no
pressure involved.' '
With five men scoring in double figures,

OCCAA Final Results
MEN

W L
Southwes tern Oregon ... .. ...... . .. . 14 2
Linn-Benton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 4
Umpqua ...... . .. . .... . ... . . ... .. . 10 6
Chemeketa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 6
Blue Mountain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 8
Lane .. . ..... . ..... . .... .. ....... . 7 9
Clackamas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 12
Central Oregon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 12
Judson Baptist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 13

Pct.
.875
. 750
.625
.625
.500
.438
.250
.250
.188

GB
2
4
4
6
7
10
IO
11

WOMEN

W
*Umpqaa ... . .. .... . . . . . . . . .. . ... 12
Blae Moantaln . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . 12
<laemeketa .......... . .. . . • .. . .. . 11
Clackamu ......... . . . . . . ....... 8
Lane .. . ....... ... . ..... .... . . .. 7
Unn-Beatoa . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . 4
Central Oreaon .. . .. .. .. . . . .. .. .. 2
swocc ..... ... ... .... ....... .. 0
*league champ

L
2
2
3
6
7
10
12
14

Pct.
.875

GB

.857
I
.786
4
.571
5
.500
8
.286
.143 10
.000 12

Lane got good play from the bench as well
as the starters.

LANE (106] - Marphy 6, Towery 6, Hanten 23, Condoti 4,
Noon1111 6, Bini 14, Lentz 12, Parker 10, Zarnekee 16, Cuhman
9.
CLACKAMAS (92) - TlrrUI 17, Beard 2, Schroecler 11, Slick
13, Oevenger.
25, Wonech 14, Johndol 10,
106
Lane ....... . . .. . .. .. . .. . .. .. . . ... . .. .. 55 51 Clackamu ..... ..... ...... •.... ... .... .. 43

49

92

" It' s unfortunate that we didn't wake up
and rise to the challenge sooner, '' said
Bates. "I think right now we're as good as
any team in the league. ' '
John Hansen led the Titans with a team
high of 23 points and freshman Jerry
Zarnekee followed with 16. Tom Bird
contributed 14.
Lane's league season left them with
some impressive cumulative statistics. In
OCCAA league statistics, Lane is ranked
third in team defense and second in free
•
throw ranking(. 708 average).
Jerry Zarnekee led the Titan scorers with
457 points this season - a 15.8 game
average. Mel Lentz followed with 419 and a
14.5 game average. Tom Bird closed the
standing with a 253 total and a 8. 7 game
average.

Freshman Jerry Zarnekee [#44] puts up two more points against Clackamas en route
Photo by Rockie Moch
to a 102-96 victory on Feb. 24 at Oregon City.

Fall to Clackamas 45-38

Wom~n cagers end year with 9-10 record

by Ed Peters
of The TORCH
The Lane women's basketball season is
over. On Feb. 24 the Titans finished the
season with a 45-38 loss to Clackamas C. C.
(CCC) in Oregon City. The loss brings the
Lane season record to 9-10 and its league
record to 7-7.
The Clackamas squad was just coming
off back to back losses against Chemeketa
and Umpqua (in overtime) and were very
up for the game.
The game opened very slowly and the

TECHNICAL
TRAINING

for Jobs!

We have a waiting list of employers
who wish to hire graduates of these
programs:
•
•
•
•
•
•

-

Fouled oat - Lane, Hanten, Lentz; Clacbmu, SUck,
Williams.
Total fouls - Lane 28, Clackamu 23.

Aviation Maintenance Technician
Machine Technolo_gy_
Insurance Adjusting
Automotive and Diesel Technology
Auto Body and Auto Paint . Technology
Agriculture and Industrial Equipment
Technology

Our goal is to equip you
with the knowledge and skill you need
to get a GOOD JOB
as an advanced l~arner or apprentice.
WANT TO KNOW MORE?
SEE US IN R9OM 201,
MACHINE TECHNOLOG Y BUILDING

first half was filled with turnovers and
missed shots. Lane managed only six field
goals in the first half and the half-time
score was 18-12. The first half was a
defensive battle pitting the number two
Lane defense against the number three
Clackamus defense.
"Neither team shot well from the freethrow line, " explained LCC coach Sue
Thompson. "It (the free-throw percentage)
was the lowest Lane has ever had."
Sophomore Kelly Smith led the second
half of the Titan surge scoring 7 of her 11
points in the second half. At one point in
the second half the Lane women closed tq
within six points of Clackamas but were
unable to catch the determined Cougars.
The Clackamas squad has two six-foot
forwards and the Lane women were forced
to shoot from the outside all game.
''The main reason for our loss is our .
offense came up flat,'' explained Thompson.
Both teams turned in dismal perfor-

mances at the free-throw line with Lane
going 16 for 65 and CCC going 19 of 52 in
the turnover filled game. A new record for
turnovers was set by Clackamas by
coughing up the ball 43 times during the
game.

Paddocll, Manley, Lament 11,
CLACKAMAS (45) Klrkpatnck, Folmabee, Rub 2, Syring S, Perkin• 14, White 10.
LANE (38] - Smith 11, Stanley, Bela-, Ewbia, Durett 4,
Baltzer 6, Olaon 2, Drew 15, Qalcll 6, leyaolda.

aactamu .................. .... ...... ..18
1- .. .. .. .. .. .. .......... ............. 12

27 26 -

Foulecl oat - Lane, Baltzer, Drew; aacbmu, Syring.
Total foal• - Clackamu 20, Lane 22.

45
38

"I was pleased with Kelly Smith's
performance," said Thompson. "She
played excellent defense, led the team in
scoring and did a lot of things well all
game.''
Sophomore Kelly Smith led the Lane
scorers sinking 11 points and pulling down
4 rebounds. Lori Drew pulled in a team
high 15 rebounds and scored 9 points
before fouling out late in the fourth
quarter.

The

Suds Fact .
Tav

10c BEER Mondays9-10 :30pm
HAPPY HOURS Monday-Frida y 4-6pm
PITCHER NITE Tues~ays only L~. 1 2
Thursdays 8 - 1
LADIESAllNITE
drau~ht beer & house wines 35c
75

00

-

FREE POOL .Sundays noon~ 6 pm
HOT LUNCHES Daily Spe~ials 11 am - 2 pm
GAMES- GIANT SCREEN TVPOOL-W INES-KE GS TO GO
Blitz, Schlitz Malt, Miller Lite & Michelob
. on draught
_
30th Ave. and 1-5, across from LCC

21 and over

•

Mar. 1 -~, 1 9 7 9 - - - - - - - - - - -

LJ'©~[ru ~[))©~1J ~

- - - - - - - - - - - - p a g e 15

Whetha m capture s third place at
regiona l wrestli ng tourna ment
by Kathy Marrow

for The TORCH

J.D. Whetham led the way as the Lane
wrestlers came home with some impressive
results from the Oregon Community College Athletic Association (OCCAA) regionals held on Feb. 23-24 at Oregon City.
''We did a good job and had good effort
from a11 the guys," said Coach Bob Creed.
"We only entered four wrestlers and I was
pleased with their outcome."
In the 118-lb. class, Roy Singer represented Lane, followed by J.D. Whetham in
the 126-lb. class, Ken Bledsoe in the
134-lb. class and Kerry Clark in the 142-lb.
class.
On Feb. 23, the elimination rounds were
held. In the 118-lb. class, Roy Singer was
matched with Chris Taylor of Ricks

College, Idaho. Taylor pinned Singer in
1:35. In the 126-lb. class, Whetham got off
to a bad start in the match and eventually
lost to Darvin Tramel of Clackamas C.C.
(CCC) in a pin at 6:30. The 134-lb. class
found Ken Bledsoe and another CCC
opponent Perry Miles. Bledsoe, wrestling
with an injured shoulder, was pinned in
3:25. The 142-lb. match was between
Kerry Clark, LCC, and Rick McReynolds,
Ricks College, Idaho. Although Clark
wasn't pinned, he was manhandled by
McReynolds who easily won 19-3.

On Saturday, Feb. 24, the consolation
rounds took place. In consolation action
Roy Singer, LCC, faced Jack Wise of Grays
Harbor (Washington State Champ) and
was defeated 7-5, knocking him out of the
double eli:nination tournament. J.D.
Whetham' s first consolation opponent was
~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • OCCAA champ Rudy Garcia of Urnpqua
C.C. Whetham defeated Garcia 6-5. Rob
Lagerquist was Whetham's next opponent.
Whetham belted Lagerquist 8-1 in an easy
victory. In his final match Whetham
handed Terry Corrigan of Grays Harbor an
8-2 loss clinching a third-place finish in the
consolation round. This victory qualified
-Whetham for the national finals to be held
in Worthington, Minn.

Titan of

the week

Lane wrestlers under the direction of Coach Bob Creed [kneeling in the background]
turned "a good effort" at the OCCAA Regionals on Feb. 23-24 at Oregon City.
Photo by Michael Bertotti.

~~®~ i:r~ ctA[L[e ~[!)A~

"Whetham performed very well, in a
very tough weight bracket,'' said Coach
Creed. "I am pleased with the team's
overall perforrnanc~ in this meet.''
Ken Bledsoe, the 142-lb. class entrant,
was forced to forfeit his match because he
exceeded the 142-lb. limit.
J.D. Whetham led the Titans with a
14-7-1 overall record. "Most of J .D .' s
losses were at the lighter 118-lb. class,"
explained Creed, ''but overall, he did
really well in his regular 126-lb. class."
Lane's overall record stands at 0-8.

J.D. WHETHAM - This week's
Titan of the Week is wrestler J.D.
Whetham. Whetham just completed
the Oregon Community College Athletic Association (OCCAA) regional
wrestling meet where he placed
third, earning a berth in the National
Junior Collegiate Athletic Associa- •
tion (NJCAA) playoffs to be held in
Worthington, Minn., from March 1
to 3. Whetham had a 14-7-1 record
this season while wrestling in the
126-lb. and 118-lb. classes. Most of
his losses occurred while wrestling in
the lighter 118-lb. class.

German
AUTO SERVICE

CLl~W

CDAU~W~
U©U®1JA
EXPERT
WORKMANSHIP
2045 Franklin Blvd.
Eugene, Oregon 97403
342-2912

The final entrant, Kerry Clark, was
matched with Torn Lawson of Columbia
Basin College. Clark was defeated 6-0.
Lawson went on to take third place in his
class.

.. .

• ,.,ROBERTSON'S
~:-DRUGS
Your..prescription.
our main concern . .

343-7715

t

-.

·r i

30th &Hilyard

March 5
5-man basketball championsh ip game

5:00 LCC gym

March 7
12:00

3-Mile Handicap Road Run

2:30 Locker rooms

Weight Lifting Contest-'OD D LIFT'

·S
A
V
E

Gym Lobby

WE BUY & SELL
QUALITY USED RECORDS
PYRAMID RECORDS .

1'24 Mill St., Spr1ngfiekf.

746-6878

Winte r Term Finals Sche dule

If your class
is o n ~

M,W,F,MW,MF,WF,MWF,MUWf:IF,MUWfi,MWHF,MUHF,MUWF

U,11,Ull,UWHF

and starts
at
J,
0700 or 0730

your exam day and time will be on F, 0700--0900

0800 or 0830

your exam day and time will be on M, 0800-1000

().9 00 or 0930

your exam day and time will be on

1000 or 1030

your exam day and time will be on M, 1000-1200

u,

1100 or 1130

your exam day and time will be on

H, 1000-1200

1200 or 1230

your exam day and time will be on M, 1200-1400

u,

1300 or 1330

your exam day and ti'me will be on

H, 1200-1400

1400 or 1430

your exam day and time will be on M, 1400-1600

u,

1500 or 1530

your exam day and time will be on

H, 1400-1600

1600 or 1630

your exam day and time will be on M, 1600-1800

u,

1700 or 1730

your exam day and time will be on

H' 1600-1800

1soo · or LATER

Evening classes, those that meet 1800 or la'ter, will have
their final exams during FINAL EXAM WEEK at their regularly
scheduled class time.

w,
w,

w,

w,

w,

0800-1000

1000-1200

1200-1400

1400-1600

1600-1800

F

'

u,

0900-1100
0800 _: 1000

H, 0800-1000

'

1000-1200

1200-1400

1400-1600

1600-1800

s

A

V
E

.

.

..z••
C:

•B
0

•
Cl

.

.D
0
0

•
.a

•·0.

=
=
- .•
1/J
a
=
••
.a.
ICl

GD

S,Ql

-;=,

==
$ad
Q)=~

-

.-

Cl
Cl,

I

••

fl.)

Clas sifie ds

·-------------------------

continued from page 13

For Sale
HEAVY STEEL, BRICK.LINED WOOD STOVE, two
doors, used 2 weeks, S350 or offer. 343·2453.

I
I
I
I
I

IIl What i11 the worl? is going on?

I

--,~

I ll
Lost & Found
I ··········
·····························································
····
A~NTION HOUNDSMEN, Lost walker hound, white I
reward.
wtth gold•brown. Ears tatooed - RALPH,
I
Message 998•24l9. Thanx, Al.
BLUE NYLON "RAINBOW" WALLET: If you don'; ;~~n
it in, we have both lost something. 998·1337.
'

Housin

ROOM. FOR RENr, oo ·,mokfog,· dri:g

GUITAR AND AMP, S100 or best offer. 746.9063.

I

·

~~~'='":·,~

TURNTABLE, perfect shape, less
TECHNICS SL
than a year old, with Empire cartridge, S105. Ross at
345•8265.

I

,,•

M

pct,.- S80,

I

I

I

I

utilities included. Call 345•2552 mornings.

SONY HP 318 STEREO SYSTEM with TEAC a·28
cassette, with extras. Total package would cost over S800
new. Make offer. After 5:30, 345•7584.

~~~···;0~;~:··~~~~~·;~;···.···;···:;~:;~~:···~~;;;~~;:
share bath and kitchen with main house, S125

················· ················· ················· ·-----PEAVEY BASS AMP 200 with 2 bottom 4•15" speakers, 8
months old, good sound and powerful, must sell, S675
firm. 688·6043.

------········· ··············· ·············

TWO KENWOOD SPEAKERS, new · six months old,
excellent quality, asking S300. Come hear at 135 S. 9th
•
St., Apt. 7, Spfd. Teri.

MUSIC MAN 6S BASS AMP and 1x15 cab, S400 mint. See
Rocky Moch at TORCH.
---------···············---------·······-----------

Cars

paneled,
per month. 688·1878.

3-BEDROOM HOUSE, $325/monf

depoalt. Over hill from LCC. 485-710'1.

First, Jut, $75

;oo~~·;o;··~;;,-·;~··~·~~:·~;;;;~~~·-i·~;1~~~~:·~·~
smoking, drinking or pets. 345•2552 10 a.m. • 4 p.m.

FEMINIST HOUSEHOLD (~~mg for_ non•smoker to
;~;~~~me. $llO plus u!tltttes. Avatlable March t.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

wanted

'58 FORD PU with camper for best motorcycle. Obie,
726•1879.

'63 MERCURY, good running condition, excellent trans•
portation, $250 cash. 688•5672.

MONKEES ALBUMS, will pay reasonable prices. Contact
Vicky after 4 p.m. at 485·2015.

'55 ¼•TON CHEVROLET LOGGING CRUMMY, 235 SIX,
4 speed, 17•inch tires, runs well, $850 or best offer. Jack
at 345•0885.

USED SUNLAMP, call Jeanne anytime 689•7370.

'76 DODGE RAMCHARGER, 4 WD, 318 PS, PB, air,
excellent multi•purpose vehicle, S4,600, offers consi•
dered. 747.4618.

Internatialal Relatial.s

Iran The Middle East China Vietnam Taiwan

WHAT'S GOING ON?Try to make sense of world affairs.

H

Il

lll

I
I
I
I
I
l

····~·············································~~~··············································
corrupt public ?fficials: Searching for standards in
Tired of re~ding of unethical politicians,
your own life? Care to see yourself as others see you? Sign up for an ETHICS course.
MOLENKAMP 2848•01 Phil 205 0900·1000 MWF 3 Credits

Oregon : Peq>le and places
A brand new cou:se two years in the making.

Follow Professors Ryan Anderson & Milton Madden through the fascinating historical and
geographical byways of your favorite state. A MUST FOR OREGONIANS! !
I ANDERSON 2788•01 Geol 199 1930.2230 U 3 Credits··-····· ···········
················· ···MADDEN

----·············· ·················· ·················· ········

CONVERTIBLE, '63 Buick Special, S475 or best offer.
342·6409.

Welt theres• • • •

KREM
KREMERS 2822·01 PS205 0830· 1000 UH 3 Credits
MALM 1900.2200 U 3 Credits

.

•··········································:·······························

FULL· OR PART-TIME. Couples and individuals for
business of your own.
Local Amway distributor trains you for splendid
opportunity.
Phone 942·4668 for interview.

'60 CHEV, needs some work, S300. 741•0476.

I
I
I
l
I

_,,.

-

I

w·~:-hop : The American w·-....Ling WCITH11
Women make:: the ma jodty of the population of the U: e : States. The m ajo,ity of those

women will be working outside the home during their lifetimes. THIS BROWN.BAG CLASS IS
ESPECIALLY FOR WORKING WOMEN. Join your co.workers in. APR 215 this spring.
BARRY 3300·26 WK203 1200·1300 MWF 3 Credits

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

lntroouction to :Mrlical Anthrq:)ology

Service s

Be among the few nurses and doctors who have studied this exciting new frontier of knowledge
in the health professions . Tr:im t:inaht hv" rlnrrnr "nrl " <>nthrnnolo11ist.
FUNKE/FREEM AN 3300·09 WK203 1900·2200 H 3 Credits

CHRISTIAN SCIENCES
For information about Christian Science activities on
call Jim Frake, the Christian
Eugene,
in
campus and
Science. Campus Counselor •. 485•8202 •........................

··································•••••••

TT

ll

PASSPORT PHOTOS, PORTRAITS, ETC. done very

················· ················ ··········----- economically, satisfaction guaranteed. Call John at
···········
'72 CHEVY WINDOW VAN, rebuilt engine, rebuilt

automatic
343·8198.

transmission,

completely

carpeted.

Call

'68 DODGE CORONET 500, 383 V8 tudor, nms gooo,

~?.~

or beat offer,~~.~:........ ......................... ....

'74 CHEVY PU, ¾•ton, 4 sp~ed, 36" camper shell, used
337 .eves.....
.•
but not abused, .$2,800•. 988 ..

344•8184 or 746•6508.

------------------

---··············-·---·· ····---------

Typing term papers. Electric typewriter. 344•6512.

Gratis

FREEBIES, cute 8·month•old puppy. Beagle mix with
inviting brown eyes. Shots and 1st year license free!

[

TI

K~omeini shuts : : : 7 . : o ~ r a : ~p : ~ : , ~ : g

~=~• i, good n~cs >" Tax

===11Il

rebates for home insulation. What will the ENERGY picture be next year, next decade...

L----- ------- ---·-·· .,.·-·- ·-·-·-· -·-·-·- ·-J

ALVERGUE 3300·08 WK203 1130·1300UH 3 Ctedi<s

[