~ne

CommuJptg
College
Vol. 16 No. 24

May 3 ?-Mu) 9, 1979

EDITOR'S NOTE: Lorenzo Carlos is a fictitious name created to protect the
identity of the subject of this story .

Lorenzo Carlos, 23, sits at an old wobbly table. His hands fold around a cup
of peppermint tea . .
"When I was 14 my brother would front (loan) me bags (of marijuana) ~nd
I'd take what was mine and sell the rest. Usually I'd end up smoking my own
profit. This went on for a while."
Carlos now deals on the LCC campus, generally selling pot but occasionally
dealing in other drugs, too. He says -business here is good right now. And he
likes his profession.
'I don't think anything (drugwise) is bad. I think everything should be tried

4000 East 30th Ave. Eugene, OR 97405

at least once . I've done everything from coffee to heroin and I'll never do
neither of them again, '' he smiles, sipping the steam from the surface of his
peppermint tea .
Carlos lived in a section of San Francisco called the Mission District.
"The Mission makes Eugene look like Disneyland. I couldn 't believe it.
When I came into town (Eugene), I looked for the section. There wasn't one! At
first that took some getting used to. At first I wasn't fond of the idea. But now I
like it. I mean this place is so damn innocent." Carlos gulps at the lukewarm
tea.
Later, over dinner, he describes his philosophy as a dealer.
"I don't mind selling to little kids , big kids, any kids. Money is money; hell,
I'll sell it to whoever's looking to buy. If I had morals, I'd be out of business,"
he laughs.
"I wouldn't be seen around no junior high if that's what you mean. I'd feel
stupid," he laughs. Then, explaining his laughter, he says, "When I was going
to junior high, I remember anti-dope films they were showing where some ugly
guy about 30 would hang around an elementary school playground waiting to
sell heroin and outfits to nine-year-old boys.''
continued on page 4

Inflation 'plagues' budget co:rnmittee
by Steve Myers
of The TORCH
Tony Birch, LCC dean of Administrative
Services, presented the 1979-80 budget
message and preliminary budget document
to the college's budget committee during
its May 2 meeting.
The committee consists of all seven
board of education members plus seven
board-appointed community members.
The committee reviews and ultimately
approves the budget proposals.
The
document is then submitted to the board
for adoption and appropriation.

Eldon Schafer, LCC' s president, is
attending a National Association of Junior
Colleges conference and was not able to
attend the meeting, so Birch delivered the
document.
He announced that while student enrollment has increased six percent during
1978-79, "Inflation continues to plague the
college . . . " As evidence, he cited the
Portland consumer price index for January,
1979 which shows an annual inflation
increase. of 12. 7 percent.
Birch explained that the current budget
(for _!978-79) contai~~d no margin for

inflation, while the actual inflation rate was
nine percent.
He noted that the 1977-78 budget had not
contained an inflationary cushion either.
"With this background," he continued,
''it seemed to the administration that the
1979-80 budget should provide for the
continuing inflation.''
He explained "We have, therefore,
incorporated a 10 percent inflation factor
for materials, services, equipment replacement and repair.''
Following the budget message, Birch
told the committee that it had two more

scheduled meetings before the May 22
filing deadline for the June 26 county
election.
According to Birch, the administration is
advising a 7 .2 percent property tax
increase over last year's $6,548,661 levy.
This wouid amount to a total estimated tax
levy of !f/ ,UU,890 or $1.33 per $1,000
assessed value.
Birch added that he felt confident about
the budget proposal, but since it is only a
preliminary draft the committee can make
any changes it deems necessary.

The Second Page
II..

May3- ~ . 1979 •

LETTERS/EDITORIALS/COLUMN S

Letters

....

Clarification needs to be made of a
statement appearing in the article on
childcare in the April 25 edition of The
TORCH.
James Cox is reportedly said to have
appealed to the Women's Awareness
Center for assistance in solving the
inadequate childcare problem and
received no support or help. This is
untrue.
The Women's Program Coordinator
has been working with the Women's
Advisory Committee and they have
been supporting the need for increased childcare in their annual
recommendations since they formed in
1975. As a result of the work with
them, presidential task forces have
been appointed during both the 197677 school year and again this year
under the auspices of the Home
Economics Department which provides the existing childcare on campus
at this time. The Women's Center

4

provided all the information on what
has happened so far on this issue and
recommended names of people to be
on the task force, including those
people in student government as well
as student representatives from the
Student Resource Center. ·
That task force met for the first time
last week and will 1) submit a
preliminary report to the board before
school is out 2) plan to work with the
college Institutional Research office to
get its updated statistics on the need
for childcare during registration next
fall and 3) submit final recommendations to the board to be presented next
fall.
The current proposal for childcare is
on file at the Women's Awareness
Center and interested persons are
encouraged to read it.
Ann McAlister
and the Women's
Awareness Center Staff

ASLCC President supports
Lance/Wilson election ticket
,/

To the Editor:

It is my pleasure at this time to
inform you of my endorsement of
Debie Lance and Gary Wilson as
president and vice-president for next
year's student association.
It has been my delight to work with
Debie this year on a number of
projects. In my opinion she has the
character necessary to serve the
students and direct others in the
completion of goals established by
next year's student body.
She has undertaken a number of

TORCH

EDITOR: Stephen Myers
ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Sarah Jenkins
FEATURES EDITOR: Frank Babcock
NEWS EDITOR: Bob Waite
SPORTS EDITOR: Ed Peters
ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR: John Healy
El:'ITERTAINMENT EDITOR: Michael Tenn
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR: Rockie Moch
REPORTERS: Bev Daugherty, Kathy Marrow, Ron
Robbins, Ron Kunst
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dennis Tachibana, Samson Nisser.
Michael Bertotti, Fred Sieveking
_l~~ODUCTION: !-!ire~_Riim,, Jeff Saint, Rick Axtell, Jack
Ward, Lois Young
•
COPYSETTING : Judie Sonstein, Denise Stovall
ADVERTISING DESIGN: Lucy White, Khathryn Albrecht
ADVERTISING: Steve Whitt, Rich Stone
DISTRIBUTION : Dannelle Krinsky

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 reponer responsible.
News features, because of a broader scope, may
contain some judgments on the pan 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 iri 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.

$25,000 wasted on apathy?
Editorial by Bob Waite'
of The TORCH

Task force explores childcare
To the Editor:

Mandatory student fee questioned

successful projects in informing the
students about specific issues affecting them on this campus. Among these
has been work on the panel discussion
of the draft and the Draft Information
Center, the child-abuse panel, the
parenting workshop, the limited abilities awareness happening and many,
many more.
Debie will be able to do more for the
whole student body than even I myself
was able to accomplish. She has
learned much this year through the various projects that she has been
involved with and has found the way to
get things done.
It is my opinion that this team
(Debie Lance/Gary Wilson) will work
hardest fdr the students next year.
James Cox
ASLCC President

Student uninterest has been the bane of the Associated Students of LCC
(ASLCC) all year. It began last year when only 2.3 percent of the registered
student body turned out to vote. This fact alone indicates that LCC students are
generally unconcerned with student government .
It is important to note, however, that while the students may not care about
student government, they paid the ASLCC $25,300 this year to conceive and
•institute projects and facilities for students. This money came from the $1.30
mandatory student fee paid every term by each full-time student. But do you
know how your money was spent?

Cox.promises an ASLCC financial statement
for next week's TORCH.
The ASLCC bylaws state that the student government shall make quarterly
financial reports public through The TORCH. This has never been done
because, according to ASLCC President James Cox, the first treasurer resigned
as did the second treasurer.
Cox, however, promises a financial statement for next week's TORCH.
Jay Jones, ASLCC advisor, says that although there is no treasurer he has
kept abreast of the situation, and he adds that no money has been misspent.
But has the money been well spent?
Three of the budgeted items show interesting con!rasts. Administrative
salaries/costs, student lounges and Student Legal Services were in the ASLCC
budget, but were of varying value to students.
• Just over one third of the students' money was budgeted to cover part of
the ASLCC adminstrative costs, including Cox's $2,400 salary. All of the money
was spent.
• Of the $4,500 that was budgeted to provide student lounges, only $270 was
expended this year. (Two ''free'' student telephones cost $200 and several
chairs cost $70.)
• Legal Services was budgeted $11,500 and has served an estimated 550 out
of 14,000 students LCC students. This is one service that is definitely used, and
we presume needed, but has had little to do with the ASLCC.

. . . it is unfair to expect students to contribute
over $25,000 yearly to student government .. .
Cox and Student Senator Debi Lance, who is in charge of the student lounge
project, say they could have spent more than $270 but they were unable to find
students who were willing to contribute labor on lounge construction. It is their
philosophy that students should build as well as pay for the lounges. To this day
the project remains unfinished. Lance says that more work may be done this
summer.
The issue of increasing student child-care facilities has· suffered a similar
fate, having been given a low priority by Cox for what he blames as a lack of
student input.
If ASLCC voter turn-out is low, if there is a lack of student interest and input
in the ASLCC, then it is unfair to expect students to contribute over $25,000
yearly to student government when students are getting so little in return.
Several years ago, initiated by student demand, the old mandatory $5 fee
was dropped. The current fee of $1.30 has been in effect since winter term of
last year. Now the time has come again to re-evaluate the ASLCC' s ability to
manage student money and the students' willingness to finance student
officials' learning experiences.

by Charles M. Schulz

PEANUTS®

l&U[J!J(§g

GOOD EVENIN6, SIR ...
WILL ~OU BE DININ6
ALONE, SIR?

OUR SPECIAL TONl6f.IT
15 006 FOOD~ WOULD

qou CARE TO SEE OUR WINE
LIST? NO? VER'( WELL ...

MELLO?OH,111 !
NO, NOTHIN6
MUCH ...

JUST SITTING HERE
WATCMIN6 THE LOWER
MALF OF A MOVIE!

'!OUR WAIT~ WILL BE
WITM qou IN A MOMENT...
ENJO'r' '(OUR MEAL ..

HE'S IN A SOOD MOOO

! MATE IT Wl-lEN

-f

•

May 3 - ~ . 1 9 7 9 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T Q R C H - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---u

age 3

ASLCC elec tion s slat ed for May 9-1 0

EDITOR'S NOTE: The TORCH asked candidates for the ASLCC presidential and
vice-presidential positions for written statements explaining their goals and
reasons for running for office. The TORCH is not responsible for content, clarity or
grammar.
Five other candidates are running unopposed for separate ASLCC offices. They
are: Debbie Gall for student senate, George Krantz for student senate, Richard
McCord for student senate, Maggie French for treasurer, and Roger Bronson for
cultural director.
endeavor to make ASLCC a channel
through which students may be informed of issues and areas of special
interest.
My goal for student government is
With a year of experience as ASLCC
to create a confidence in the student
assistant cultural editor and a concern
body that will let them know that their
for meeting the needs of students, I
needs will be met through ASLCC.
believe I can adequately fulfill the
Some of the specific plans I have set
office of student body president."
for meeting this goal are to have
lounges completely revamped, to install a textbook rental system in the
book store, to establish a student
evaluation of instructors that will be
My work this year on the Cultural
published and made available for
Committee
has been dealing with
student use, to encourage and support
projects going on here at Lane, such as
working on student involvement in the
remodeling of student lounges and in
working with the Limited Abilities
Committee. I also have been dealing
with issues on a community level such
as my work on the child abuse panel
and my involvement with the local
organization C.O.R.D. in settting up a
draft information center here at Lane. I
have also dealt with issues on a
national level with my work on the
draft rein~tatement panel.
I plan on continuing my involvement
in student government next year as
vice-president through these successful methods of panel discussions,
community involvement and working
with various committees here at Lane.
I also hope to make student government a unified platform working
together instead of several different
areas working alone on a single need
for a certain group of students. In
unifying student government I feel
that all the ideas, energy and commitment can be directed more effectively
minority groups' input into ASLCC
in meeting the needs of the students.
and to work closely with the Student
Resource Center as a team that is
better equipped to meet student
needs.
Too often school becomes an incubator, sheltering its students from the
realities of the world. Therefore, I will

Debi Lance,
President

Joseph Stockett, President
It is time for a complete change in the structure of student government at LCC.
The scope of the ASLCC should be expanded to include awareness of
international problems that affect our daily lives. The main problem facing the
world today is the resolution of the Palestinian question. I believe the Zionist
Palestinian State (Israel) should be dismantled and replaced by a Palestinian
State. All Jews who were born in other countries should leave Palestine and
return to their native lands. I will utilize the position of ASLCC President to
facilitate the transformation of the ASLCC into a viable, radical force dedicated
to revolutionary social change.

Gary Wilson,
Vice Presiden t

Ex-TORCH editor
wins Emerald post
For only the seventh time since World
War II, a woman has been selected as
editor of the University of Oregon's
student -run newspaper, the Oregon Daily
Emerald.
Kathleen Monje, a journalism major
from Pleasant Hill, will replace Tom Wolfe
as editor on June S.
Before transfering to the U of 0, Monje
was an LCC student and TORCH editor for
the 1976.77 school year.
Since moving to the U of 0, she has also
served as the Emerald's copy editor and
environmental associate editor. Most recently she has been that paper's night
editor and wire editor.

Scott Seely, Vice Presiden t
I would like to give the ASLCC back to the students. In talking with the
students on campus they feel that the student government hasn't listened
enough to their wants and needs.
I and my ticket running partner, Joseph Stockett, will listen to the student
needs and wants.
We will organize a student government for the students.
As you can see I feel that student government not only needs to deal with the
internal problems of the school but also with the external problems of the
community too. We must remember that this- is a community college. And
everything going on, whether it be here at Lane or on a national level, affects
each and every student.
•
I have been a student at LCC for one year and have participated as a senator in
the student government.

OCTASCOPES
at last!!
Also: New Blank Books!
Cute 'lil address books!
Paper Moon Stationery!
Plantagram s!

find it all at

NEW HOURS
Open Monday
Thru Saturday
lOa.m. to 7 p.m.

2nd floor Atrium Bldg.

~'

p a g e 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - T Q R C H - - - - - - - - - - M a y 3 - ~ , 1979

!!!l!!~!l!l!!!l~!!!l!l!ll!!'1!!!l!l!l!!!ll!l!!!li!~!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!ll!l!!!l!!l!!!!!l!l!lll!l!l!l!l!l!!"l!l!!l!!l!l!l!l!!!l!i!l!l!l!l!l!lll!l!l!l!!!l!l!l!!!!!l!l!~l!!!l!l!l!l!!!l!l!l"!!l!lll!~l!lll!llllllll!ll!I!
After dinner he has another cup of tea and continues.
"I remember once I was in the Tenderloin , (a red-light district in San
Francisco). Me and my brother put in five dollars each to get devirginated. I
was 12 then . My brother knew of this place on Levinworth Street. We went up
to this apartment. Went in and everything. Anyway, while my brother was
getting it, I started walking around the apartment . I went into this room and
there was some black guy lying on a bare mattress in the middle of the room.

And the
Winners Are • • •

$:10

ss

ss

He smelled like shit . Jesus it was disgusting.
"Bits of blood were around his mouth. I'd seen junkies before but that was
the first time I really seen a junk-ey. His shirt was off and his arms were
showing. They were tracked a rotten kind of color all around the vein, up and
down the arm. He was either asleep or dead, it gave me the creeps. So that was
the first impression I ever got from junk.
"I tried it later on. I did it clean. Washed my arm with the alcohol they sell
in druq stores, used a clean needle , I even enjoyed it. But I knew I would never
be a junkie, I went into it knowing I would never do it again. I remember that
guy. That guy will always be the reason I'll never be a junkie."
Lorenzo calms down from his disturbing memory and, in·the silence, a dog
begins to bark somewhere in the night.

On Monday, April 9, at 2 p.m., Lorenzo left his home, eastbound , to wait for
the Harris Street bus.
•
A half an hour and two buses later, Lorenzo walked up to a mobile home and
knocked. He went into the mobile home, sat across from a man, and spoke
quietly. Between the man and him, a fold-down table served as an elbow rest,
giving each a needed distance from the other. On the table was one sample of
LSD that Lorenzo was prospecting with the intent to buy more. Behind Lorenzo
and the man, two other men watched in semi-silence.
Lorenzo lifted the acid from the table and, after some words of examination,
ate the tiny tablet.
The politics of "dealing".in most cases is simple: The more drug purchased,
the lower the price per individual tablet. After complaining about the poor
grade of the LSD, Lorenzo asked how much each hit would cost if he bought
$1,000 worth.
The man responded "One dollar per hit."
Lorenzo waited. Then cutting his bid to $500, Lorenzo recited the question.
The man countered, "$1.20."
The name of this particular drug is purple barrel. It is a solid, rather than
liquid form of LSD.
The man stood up. From a built-in Frigidaire in the mobile home, he
returned with 42 tiny packages of purple barrel.
Lorenzo paid the man in twenties. Then taking one of the 42 baggies, Lorenzo
parted the opening of the bag. He emptied the contents on the fold-down table,
spot checking the quantity of tablets. He found an appropriate ten hits. Then,
sliding the drugs off the table and into the little baggy, he left with his cargo.
"It's a business," said Lorenzo while finishing his tea. And if he had morals
he'd be out of business.

IVOTE !I

The TORCH is giving away MONEY!
One $10 and two $5 prizes each week
Three winners a week.

SECOND NATURE USED BIKES
buy-sell-trade

Put a TORCH sticker on your bike,
your bumper, or backpack

-

Spedalizing in
recycled bicycles,
used wheels & parts

If you see your picture in a TORCH, come in by Tuesday, noon, the week
after the papers are distributed and you can win.
Car bumper winners must show car registration. TORCH stickers are free
and available in the TORCH office, 206 Center.

,.

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HEALTH FAIR
11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

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Wednesday

* CPR & Dental Care DeIDonstrations
* Health Fraud Display
* Nutrition
Information
Healthy snacks & diets
* Lung Function Test
·* lnfor1nation Excha~ge on Liniited Abilities
* Music by the SIDoky Valley String Band
* Guitar & Song by Jan Manano
Mariano
•

supporting a daisy white smile and fresh

breath.

For. the incredibly low fee of S6, LCC
Dental Hygiene students will conduct a
spring cleaning of your mouth, give
tluoride applications provide instruction
on tne prevent10n ot oral disease.
The clinic is located on the second floor
of the Health Building and is open
Mondays from 9-12 a.m. and 1-5 p.m. or
Wednesdays from 10 a.m.-12 p.m., or call
726-2206.

Coordinated By: Robin Belveal
Sponsored By: LCC STUDENT
HEALTH SERVICE

·~ * Prediction of Body Fat

~!

343-5362

Spring is in the air and the romance of

the season goes first to he or she who is

Just Outside Center Bldg.
Cafeteria Level - West Side

MAY15-16

Tuesday

1712 Willamette

Spring cleaning

Participants:

•

DEPARTMENTS OF
HEALTH OCCUPATIONS

HEALTH&PE
HOME ECONOMICS
.VOICE OF LIMITED
ABILITIES ORGANIZATION
OFFICE OF
STUDENT ACTWITIES

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May 3 - ~ . 1 9 7 9 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T Q R C H - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - p a g e s

A regimented cafeteria. . .

Subtle discrimination stirs studen t

Forum by Mike Maddox
LCC Student

There is always that hopeful apprehension as I pocket my change and
turn toward the tables. I could eat
alone, but that nameless girl from
health--or was it math--looks very
much alone in the far corner. Walking
around the pillar a backpack comes
into view, dumped forlornly and
crumpled against the table. I could
belong to that smart aleck in English,
or the cute redhead from Spanish.
Maybe I should sit down and look
surprised upon their return.
Life is so complex.
I find it intriguing to watch and
partake in the ritual of choosing a
place to eat in the cafeteria. If you decide to sit by someone who you hardly
know, they take offense. Many
attempts at communication can be
snuffed out by a single frown, cold
stare, or carefully placed backpack. If
you sit alone you will never knew. .
Maybe they too would enjoy meeting someone new.
Many unwritten rules of segregation
must be adhered- to in order to
preserve tranquility and harmony.
• These rules openly discriminate on
the basis of sex, race, smoking

preference, national ongm, socioeconomic status, age and even college.
.
major.
This may sound like a strong statement; surely an individual can sit any- where. No signs say "nurses here,"
"Arabs here" or "highschool dropouts there,'' but the fact remains that
we behave as if there were.
In the south end of the ·coffee ·shop,
clustered around the jukebox are the
highschool completion students, about
in the middle are the welding tech, and
up toward the cash registers seem a
popular spot for psychology majors
The
and handicapped students.
windows near the main entrance to the
cafeteria form the black section. The
side facing the administration building
attracts mostly the Arab population,
with the nurses and professors favoring the area in front of the elevator in
the east part of the main cafeteria.
While these rules are by no means
hardfast, a quick stroll around the first
floor some day about noon will show
them to be generally true.
This seems sad; I almost feel ~heated. One common complaint from the
students at LCC is the lack of social life
and school spirit. The cafeteria is the
only place on campus where all types
of students come, yet even there we

Students voice objections to som,e
kinds of instructor attitudes
Concerns for the handicapped, the
emotionally disturbed, the mature working
student and the over:taxed middle class
citizen were expressed by LCC students •
and staff during last week's focus on
discriminatory practices, sponsored by the
Human Awareness Council and the Women's Awareness Center.
A bulletin board illustrating some of the
subtle forms of discrimination to which we
are all subject and a Lucy booth asking for
comments were set up in the cafeteria to
foster awareness of various types of bias.
Comments indicated that some LCC
instructors need to be more aware that

many of tl;Jeir tudents do not fit traditional
stereotypes. "As a full-time working
person and a full-time student I object to
instructors being late for appointments
with me and giving busy work assignments
that consume time with no learning
involved," commented one respondent.
Another saw a need for instructors to
"learn to cope better with the mentally
disabled,. who are also attending school
here."
The Health and Physical Education
Building was the subject of criticism from
those who felt it was not planned with the
needs of the handicapped in mind.

Center seeks a feW" good persons
If you enjoy helping women and men
explore their options in a world of change
and conflict, you may be just the person the
Women's Awareness Center is seeking.
The Women's Center, located on the
second floor of the Center Building, is
looking for people to serve as staff
members during the 1979-80 school year.
Students are reimbursed for their work in
the Center by Work-Study grants, Supervised Field Experience or, if volunteering,
by the training and work experience
received on the job.
Women' s Center staff members have the
opportunity to provide support, offer
information about campus and community
resources, and work on individual and
group projects for the Center. Beverly
Daugherty, presently a "staff member, cites
the value to her in ''the experience of

dealing with people and their problems on
a day-to-day basis." Ann McAlister agrees, adding, "It has brought me in
contact with huge numbers of women in
the community who have given me
inspiration and support."
Persons interested in applying for a job
and willing to commit themselves to
working for a full school year are invited to
drop in at the Women's Center and pick up
an application, which should be filled out
and returned by May 16.

ROBERTSON'S

DRUGS

Your prescription,
oµr main concern . . .

30th & Hilyard

343-7715

, -&~"G'REAr""D'i'~CO"'i5fi'NCl'NG~

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6
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Sl>E:Clfll IN\JITl'ITION TO LCC STUDE:NT'i
THUR NIGHHMl'ILL PITCHE:R'i $1. 7 PM-Q flM

Dl'iCO Dfll'!CE: LE:'i'iON'i... BE:GINNING TO flD\JflNCE:D.

*

IN ... IN S"PRINGFIElD
=
AM NO CO\JER
PM-Q:30
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someone totally different. We are
severly limiting our exposure to different perspectives by talking with
people who have basically the same
background. What a shame it is that
such a great variety of humanity seem
to have only stomachs in common.

are guilty of settling into our own little
groups and only occasionally vent~ring
forth to meet someone really different.
·we all like to talk to our personal
friends and classmates, but I can't
help feeling that we would all be better
people if we made an effort to meet

Racquet sports...or...

Keep your eyes off the ball

by Dr. Staywell
and the staff of Student Health Services

styles and brands.
They are made in three ways: With a
clear plastic lens (the preferred eyeguard),
without any lenses or they can be fitted
with your own prescription lenses. They
should have sturdy nylon frames and the
lenses should be made of industrial
strength plastic. Popular brands available
locally are Ektelon, Solari, Leach and
Sport-Spec, which is endorsed by some
ophthalmologists.

Racket sports - squash, racquetball,
badminton and tennis - are lots of fun,
good exercise and a booming industry.
But they are also health hazards.
Any sport requiring a projectile (including golf and baseball) threatens the eye.
Last year these sports were responsible for
over 4,000 serious eye injuries, most of
which could have been prevented by the
use of proper eye guards.
So, enjoy your sport - wham away Some balls can be propelled at such
do be properly equipped! Squashed
but
great speed and force (up to 80 m.p.h. in
eyeballs are difficult to repair and can't be
tennis) that if contact is made with an eye,
replaced.
the damage can be far greater than a black
eye.
The eye is in a bony framework which
normally offers good protection to the
eyeball except from a frontal contact. The
a globe
eyeball is literally that connected to your central nervous system.
The clear membrane in front of the eye is
the window into the eye. Behind that is the
colored portion of the eye called the iris,
which is centered by the iris and pupil.
Behind the iris and the pupil is the lens
and behind that is a gel called vitreous. In
the back of the vitreous is the retina, a
light-sensitive membrane, and further
back.is the optic nerve. Damage to any part
of this pathway can cause faulty vision.
Eye b-low injuries are emergencies! The
best thing to do with a serious eye blow
injury is to get to the nearest hospital
quickly. Meanwhile, cover both eyes with a
clean, folded cloth. Do not wash the injured
eye. Do not put salves or medicines in the
eye. Do not remove blood or blood clots
from the eye. Do not force the eyelids to
open to look at the eye if they are closed.
Do not give the patient food or drink as
surgery may be necessary and food and
drink recently ingested offer a complication
to anesthesia. Do not panic.
Prevention of crushing eye blow injuries
is as simple as buying and wearing
eyeguards when you participate in racket
, sports. Sporting goods stores carry various
_
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cooking
sports
sex

home crafts

photography
psychology

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~rd Floor Center

I

'One~

Story by Mike Arnold
Sports Informatio n Director

Photos by Ed Peters and Rockie Moch

''Our new weight room is om
finest in the state," says
Marshall, LCC's equipment anc
room supervisor. ''The only on
think of that's better is Gus Loi
in Portland ... where some of th
blazers work out."
The total cost of equipment p
ed for the new room is $9,465
addition to the new equipme
apparatus from the old weig
was moved to the new, crei
facility which novice and ad
students can use with maxim
ciency and safety.
There are actually two lifting~
in the new facility, though it is
to see any division. In the no1
corner of the room is a s1
constructed flooring which is d1
to hold up longer under the c
dropping of heavier weights
heavier weight lifting section he
the number of floor joists (the 2
boards on which tbe actual floo
and a double layer of Unitu
special mat floor which prote
In the heavier
weights) .
section, the top layer of Unitur;
removed for easy replacemer
wears out.
The most notable of the new
ment are the three squat racks
three power racks. Resemblin~
without bars, both types of ra
designed to enable a: lifter to
weight lifting in a maximum
environment. A cross bar of so

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room is one of the
lt e, '' says Frank
uipment and locker
The only one I can
ir is Gus Loprinzi 's
some of the Trail-

quipment purchasn is $9,465.70. In
w equipment, the
e old weight room
i new, creating a
ice and advanced
rith maximum effitwo lifting sections
hough it is difficult
In the north east
m is a specially
J which is designed
nder the constant
er weights . The
lg section has twice
joists (the 2" by 4"
Bactual floor rests)
tr of Uniturf (the
.vhich protects the
e heavier weight
Br of Uniturf can be
replacement as it
of the new equipsquat racks and the
Resembling a cage
types of racks are
a lifter to work at
l maximum safety
>ss bar of solid steel

on each side of the ''cage'', can be set
at different heights which are predetermined by the lifter; the purpose of
the cross bars is to catch the weight in
the event of a slip or accident, so that it
doesn't drop on the lifter.
In addition to the racks, the new
weights room equipment list includes:
Incline press benches, bench press
benches, plate holders, exercise tables, wall pulley, dip bars, wall
mounted chinning bar, thigh and knee
machines, steel dumbells with rack,
calf machines, and a back builder.
Marshall stressed the fact that the
new weight equipment is designed for
safety. "I put one of the Olympic bars
on one of the power racks, and then
put 100 pounds on one side of the
bar ...on the old type equipment the
bar would have flipped up, but this
new gear is designed so that we won't
_
have that problem. ' '
Marshall said that some students
had bad accidents with the older
equipment. They took the weight off
one end of a bar and left it unbalanced,
causing the bar to fly up and hit them
- or someone else.
Marshall also said that "women are
encouraged to take advantage of the
new facility. It's a common myth that
weight lifting will make you have large
muscles, but it just isn't the case.
Weight lifting programs can build the
body, or tone it just right. Women
should know they can take advantage
of this equipment just like the men.''

RETURN ALL WEIGHTS
TO vVEiGHT RACKS

8----------------..----LCC play a winner

page

ENTERTAINMENT - - - - - - - - - - - - - M a y 3 - ~ ' 1979

Street people triumph over corporate monsters

Review by Michael Tenn
of The TORCH

The LCC production of ''The Madwoman of Chaillot'' is not without
flaws. But overall, the play provides a
solid evening of entertainment.
The play, a comedy, was written in
1942 by Jean Giraudoux. Paris was
occupied by the Nazis at that time, and
the play was not produced until after
the war.
"Madwoman" unfolds in two acts.

Aurelia.
The play will continue in the LCC
Theatre through May 5 with a performance scheduled for 8 p.m. each
evening.
A limited number of reserved seat
tickets are still . available for the
remaining performances.
Students may purchase tickets for
half price by arriving at the box office
one hour before show-time. However,
because of the limited number of
tickets le-ft, students are advised to call
the box office first to find out if seats
are available.

party with the countess and two other
daft ladies, played by Patti Grahm ·and
Vivian Gillman.
The tea party· ·s cene is just a gem
and is the funniest part of the play.
The costumes, by Alice Scoville and
Becky Kurosaki, are quite good as are
the sets by David Sherman.
Stan Elberson directs the play and
the performers act as a tightly-knit
group.
The street people eventually triumph over the corporate monsters.
The antagonists are led, by their own
greed, into a trap baited by Countess

Act one is set in ·an outdoor cafe in
Paris. During this act we are introduced to the play' s antagonists - The
President (Jim Pemble), The Prospector (Tim Baxter) and The Baron
(Richard Bell).
These three characters represent
most of what is wrong with the world
according to Giraudoux - corporate
power that worships wealth above any
other human value.
The protagonists are the common
folks, street people and the Mad-

'Champagne musical' set
cal," the show stages some sixty songs
written by Rodgers and Hart for
various Broadway and Hollywood musicals during the thirties and forties.
Representative titles are "Where or
When," "Falling in Love with Love,"
"My Funny Valentine," "Bewitched,"
"Manhattan" and "With a Song in
My Heart.''
Tickets, at $5 each, will first be
offered to present LCC season-ticket
holders, then go on sale to the general
public June 11.

A theatrical montage of show tunes
by the famous American composing
team of Richard Rogers and Lorenz
Hart will be produced this summer by
the Performing Arts Department at
LCC. The show, entitled "Rodgers and
Hart: A Musical Celebration," will be
directed by Ed Ragozzino. Nathan
Cammack will be music director; Jerry
Williams, scenery and lighting designer and Nicola Foster, choreographer.
Performances are scheduled July 5-14.
Described as a "champagne musi-

Acaoss

Part of the " Mad~-;,man" cast [I tor]: Richard Alton, Kay Slaton, Steve· Thomas,
Photo by Samson Nisser
Karl Groves , Mark Milani.
)l,t~~
.
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woman of Chaillot, Countess Aurelia
e)
(Chilton Peterson).
Peterson as the Countess Aurelia is
just superb - she sparkles throughout
the entire performance.
Jim Premble is another outstanding
.~
performer. In fact , the entire cast is
quite good.
The main flaw in act one and the
play as a whole is its length.
The excitement is spread a little too
thinly over the first act which is mostly
dialogue with little action.
Act two , in the Countess' cellar,
from Harry Ritchie's
moves a little faster and includes some
@
very funny scenes .
J
This act includes humorous encounters between the countess and a
sewer man (Jack Ward) and a tea

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59 African nation
61 Math term :
2 words
64 Sh ip devices
67 USSR river
68 Exaggerates
70 Speak
71 Exceedingly

72 Decree
73 Building
wings
74 Sea eagle
75 Knocks
down
DOWN
1 Seaweed
2 Glorify

3 Some TV
shows
4 Smiling
5 Antares:
2 words
6 Favoring
7 Noisy
8 Advantage
9 Required
10 Stylish
11 Slowly: Mus.
12 Canker sore
13 Oar
18 Mended
22 One
54 Severe
55 Wall painting
56 Having - : Carousing
58 Furniture
handler

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1 Church feature
6 Scheme
10 - sandwich
14 Vast
15 Flower
16 Hades
17 Sentry 's
hangout
19 Quechua
20 Caution
21 Took away
23 Inward :
Anat.
25 Sawbuck
26 Mineral
27 Buddy
29 Landed
31 Noise
33 In past time
34 Royal
36 Candle
40 Limbs
42 10 cent
pieces
44 Entreaty
45 Attempt
47 Dakota dialect
49 Tree
50 Winnipeg's
nickname
52 Mete
53 Amer.
54 Candlenut57 Water inlet

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Lifetime Guarantee.
Full trade-in privilege.

ART a"d
ARCHITECTURE
SUPPLI ES

60 Avoid
62 Game animals

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63 Sea bird
65 Readymade
tie
66 Fast planes:
Abbr.
69 Cereal
24 Number
27 Picket
28 Ti me periods
30 Subdued
32 Brief sleep
35 Pretend:
2 words
37 Of a lung
problem
38 Congers
39 Sita's mate
41 Drain
43 Some foods
46 Ti me period
48 Null ified
.51 Rut

-MayJ - ~ .

1979 - - - - - - - - -

ENTERTAINMENT-----------page 9

ENTERTAINMENT CALENDAR
THURSDAY
CHARLIE
BYRD TRIO,
$3.50/adv.,
$4/door,
Community Center for the Performing Arts, 8th & Lincoln, 7:30
& 9:30 p.m. SIMON AND BARD,
jazz, $1, Eugene Hotel, 222 E.
Broadway (thru 5/5). LIVE WIRE
CHOIR, $2, The Harvester, 1475
5/ 5).
Franklin
Blvd.
(thru
"THREE SISTERS," Anton Chekhov, $4/general, $2/students &
seniors, UO Robinson Theatre
(thru 5/5). "THE MADWOMAN
OF CHAILLOT," $4, LCC Thea- tre, 8 p.m. (thru 5/5).

FRIDAY
DAVID
BROMBERG,
$6.50,
Community
Conference Center, 13tti & . Madison, 8 & 10:45 p.m. (ticketsEverybody's, Sun Shop). RICHARD ROSE BAND, $1.50, Black
Forest Tavern, 2657 Willamette
(thru 5/5). HOT WHACKS, $1,
Gatehouse Tavern, 3260 Gateway,
Spfd. (thru 5/5). CHASE, $1.50,
Duffy's, 801 E. 13th (thru 515).
SLO TRANE, $1, The Place, 160 S.
Park (thru 5/5). PERCY HILO,
folk music, Backdoor Coffee
House - Koinonia Center, 14th &
Kincaid, 7:30 p.m., free. KIT-NKABOODLE CLOWN Cl RCUS,
$1.50/kids, $2.50/adults, Community Center for the Performing
Arts, 8 p.m. "MADAME BUTTERFLY," $3/general, $1.50/
student & seniors, UO Beall Hall,
8 p.m. (thru 5/5 and 5/6 at 2
p.m.). BOB WELCH, $7.50, Paramount Theatre, Portland, 8 p.m.
(tickets - Meier & Frank).

SATURDAY
RAY CAMPY
AND THE
ROCKABILLY
REBELS,
$3, Community Center for the
Performing Arts, 8 & 10:30 p.m.
(tickets EMU Main Desk,
Loonyland Records). SQUARE
DANCE, $1, Olde Dexter Theatre,
Hwy. 58, Dexter, 8 p.m. NEW

MIME CIRCUS, Saturday Market,
8th & Oak, 11 :30 a.m., free.
"SLEEP I NG GEORGE," children's play, $1.50/kids, $2.50/
adults, Community Center for the
Performing Arts, 2 p.m. (thru
5/6). "SUNRISE IN THE WESTERN SKY: A SYMPOSIUM ON
CH IN ESE AND NORTH KOREAN
MODELS OF DEVELOPMENT,"
Wesley Center" 11 a.m. - 2:30
p.m. (information - Gary Kim,
686-34 79 or 345-0880).

SUNDAY
CURRY/
OSLUND
DANCE
COMPANY,
dance concert, $1.50, Dance
Works, 1231 Olive St., 7 p.m. LA
PETITE SANDE, chamber music
trio, Fifth Street Public Market, 2
p.m., free. JOHN WORKMAN
AND PHILLIP CURTIS, jazz, $1,
Eugene Hotel (thru 5/7). CLAUDIA SCHMIDT, folksinger, Community Center for the Performing
Arts.

Charlie Byrd [top] plays jazz at the Community Center for the Performing Arts
on May 3. "Sleeping George" [below] is a children's play scheduled for every
Saturday and Sunday afternoon between now and May 20 at the CCPA.
Photos by Samson Nisser

MONDAY

rJ

uo

WOODWIND
QUINTET,
uo Beall Hall,
8 p.m., free. EMMETT WILLIAMS, jazz piano, Biederbeck's,
259 E. Fifth, free. YES, $8, $9 &
$10, Portland Memorial Coliseum,
8 p.m.

TUESDAY
CHARLES
DOWD
QUARTET,
$1,
Eugene Hotel (thru 5/ 12). TOMMY SM 1TH, The Harvester, no
cover.

WEDNESDAY

~1\!GI
SQ

LCC
FACULTY
RECITAL,
New Music
Project, LCC Lab Theatre, 8 p.m.,
free. JOHN WORKMAN AND
PHILLIP CURTIS, Blederbeck's,
no cover. GREENSHADE, $1.50,
The Harvester.
,

20% off .
May 4 - May 11

Dance concert

Selected Leotard

On Sunday, May 6, the Curry/

TORCH!!!!!!!!!!!

/Come See Our
New Store

SALE

Curry I Oslund

Oslund Dance Company will .present
its first studio concert at Dance Works.
This short, informal concert will
include works from the Curry/Oslund
repertory, a work by guest choreo- •
grapher Mary Beth Dwan and Maggie
Sheridan, as well as a presentation of a
new work in progress by Mary Oslund.
Guitarist Rob Anderson will perform
with the company.
The performance will begin at 7
p.m. and a $f50 donation will be
requested at the door.
For information call Dance Works at
344-9817. The studio is located at 1231
Olive Street, second floor.

DANCEWEAR &
· THEATRICAL SUPPLIES

All Warmups
New & used
records
.bought
•& sold ·
342-7975
258 E, 13th
Mon-Sat 12-8
Sun 1-6 ·

featuring

SALE

Capezio and Danskin
BACKSTAGE
943 Olive St
686 - 2671

,.
- - - - - - i J Q ) ~ O O Q(P( !)[!tc rQ-- --Ma_
y J-~. 1979

Thi nclad s -ready for OCCAA play offs

Men take second

consecutive OCCAA conference title,'' said
Tarpenning, "but it won 1 t come easy. We
will have to work hard to capture the title."
The Titans OCCAA playoffs start May 4
with the preliminaries and continue through
May 5 at Albany.

in five-wa y meet
by Ed Peters

Men

of The TORCH

SHOT PUT - 1, Mitch Crouser, MH, 52-3. 2, BIii
Bailey, LCC, 50-7. 3, Dan Ayers, MH, 45-6½.

Mt. Hood C.C. edged out the Titan
men's track and field team by only one
point 109½-108½ in a five-way meet held
at LCC on April 27.
''This meet was a boost for our men,''
stated Track and Field Coach Al Tarpenning. "We had a number of season bests
and are in good shape going into the
conference championships next weekend.''
The Titan sprinters and hurdlers had a
very good afternoon on the track. Sophomore Charles Warren clocked a season
best tinie of 10. 7 seconds in the 100 meters
while hurdlers Scott Branchfield set a
personal best of 15.29 seconds in the high
hurdles and Glenn Lister crossed the tape
first with a time of 55. 7 in the 400-meter
intermediate hurdles.
The 400-meter relay team and the mile
relay team continued to improve and split
with Mt. Hood in the relays with Lane
taking the mile relay with a time of 3:24.1
and Mt. Hood capturing the 400-meter
relay with a time of 42. 7.
The distance runners and field athletes
faced a strong wind all afternoon that
hampered both times and distances in the
throwing events.
According to Tarpenning the mile relay
was the pivotal point in the meet. The relay

0

Joel Grey and Bob Nash dominated the steeplechase event, but it was not enough as
Lane placed second t() Mt. Bood by one point.
Photo by Dennis Tachibana.

was the last event of the day and the Titan
men had calculated that a win would give
them first place in the meet. The Lane
squad had been beaten by the same Mt.
Hood relay team the week earlier.
The team of Glenn Lister, Joe Higgins,
Tom Brown and Scott Branchfield crossed
the tape first with a time of 3:24.1 with Mt.
Hood a close second with 3:25.1. However,
an error in team scoring led to the
one-point Mt. Hood victory.
In the field events Bill Bailey tossed the

Enjoy
anOregon
Summer
/

/ )""

DISCUS - 1, BIii Balley, LCC, 151-3. 2, Mitch
Crouser, MH, 148-11. 3, Joy_Heldenrich, LCC, 140-5.
JAVE~ - 1, Rich Woff, LCC, 214-0. 2, Mike
Pohlke, MH, 189-2. 3, Bret Armbruster, LCC. 168-2.
HIGH JUMP - 1, Kevin Newton, MH, 6-6. 2, Bret
Armbruster, LCC, 6-2.
LONG JUMP - 1, Dan Buttery, MH, 22-10¾. 2,
Gory Brown, Ump, 22-10. 3, Joe M~yers, Ump, 22·½.
TRPLE JUMP - 1, Kevin Stout, MH, 46-10¼. 2,
Greg Good, Ump, 42-8 1/4. 3, Joe Meyers, Ump, 41-81/,.
POLE VAULT - 1, Joe Lachapelle, MH, 12-0.
110 HIGH HURDLES - 1, Tony Lemerondo, MH,
15.1. 2, tie, Kevin Stout and Mlk-e Eldridge, MH, 15.2.
400 NTERMEDIATE HURDLES - 1, Glenn Lister,
LCC, 55.7. 2, Scott Branchfield, LCC, 55.8. 3, Glenn
Wheadon, SWOCC, 56.4.
100 - 1, A.J. Jackson, MH, 10.6. 2, Robert Yoder,
MH, 10.6. 3, Charles Warren, LCC, 10.7.
200 - 1, A.J. Jackson, MH, 22.3. 2, Robert Yoder,
MH, 22.5. 3, tie, Mitch Burright, COCC, ond Russ
Fillis, MH, 22.8.

discus 151-3 for a first and grabbed a
second in the shot put with a throw of SO-7.
Freshman Rich Wolf finished first in the
javelin with a hurl of 214-0. Wolf had
actually throw the javelin 225 feet but the
wind caught the throw and carried the
javelin out of bounds.
The Titans have been hurting all year in
the jumping events. In this meet Mt. Hood
captured 23 team points in the long jump,
triple jump and pole vault - Lane had
none.
"We are shooting for our eighth

400 - 1, Russ Fillls, MH, 50.4. 2, Tom Brown,
LCC, 51.2. 3, tie, Mark Salleno, SWOCC, and Joe
Higgins, LCC, 51.98. •
800 - 1, Mike Stepan, MH, 1:55.8. 2, Lynn Mayo,
LCC, 1:56.6. 3, Joe Cook, LCC, 1:58.5.
1,500 - 1, Lynn Mayo, LCC, 3:56.6. 2, Rich Totten,
LC~ 4:01.9. 3, Brion Mussle, LCC, 4:02.9.
5,000 - 1, Dave Magness, LCC, 14:52.9. 2, Steve
Worrey, LCC, 15:03.0. 3, Mork Boman, MH, 15:27.0.

3,000-METER STEEPLECHASE - 1, Bob Ray,
Unot, 9:22.8. 2, Joel Gray, LCC, 9:42. 3, Tom Nasb,
LCC, 9:42.6.

400-Mei:ER RELAY - 1, Mt. Hood cc (Rob
Hannon, A.J. Jackson, Robert Yoder, Dan Buttery)
•2.7. 2, LCC, 43.4. 3, Umpqua, 44.6. 4, SWOCC, 44.9.
MILE RELAY - 1, LCC (Glenn Lister, Joe Higgins, Tom Brown, Scott Bronchfleld) 3:24. 1. 2, Mt.
Hood CC, 3:25.1.

TEAM - Mount Hood CC 109½, Lane CC 1081/,,
Umpqua CC 21, Southwestern Oregon CC 131/,, Central Oregon CC 101h, Clark (Wash.) JC l.

Wome n captu re third; set ·
LCC recor d in two mile relay

«t:'

_,.

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by Beverly Daugherty .
for the Torch
Up against the tough competition of Mt.
Hood and Central Oregon Community
Colleges, the Women's Track and Field
Team took third place in the meet held at
Lane last Friday, April 27.

proved to be detrimental. The relay event
was the first of the day and Manley says
some of the women were fatigued and
it hampered their performance in other
events.
Cheryl Glasser placed second in the 1500

/

~./

-{

\

June 18-August 10
University of Oregon
1979 Summer Session
Eugene, Oregon 97403
(503) 686-3475

raa1npus Min istr -~
atL CC
--

-~gz SC 2 7 57 S 7 2 2:SSSS:?SasS o~SSS ZEE ZEZZSSSSSSSSZ EZS Z SSE SEE E:55 Sir

-Conta ct throug h Studen t
Activi ties, Center Bldg.
or LCC Restau rant
near the elevato r.
Chaplai ns James Dieringe r
U Norm Metzler
"We're here for you."

Jill Lanham crosses the finish line to win both the 200 and 400 meter sprints. Photo by

Rockie Moch.

There were some bright moments for the
Titans when Liz Jones won the high jump
at 4' 6" and Jill Lanham captured first
place in the 200 and 400 meter sprints with
times of 26.3 and 59.0.
But, as Mike Manley put it ''They killed
us in the weight events -- in the field events
in general.·" Randi Reynolds has been
turning in top notch performances all year
but had an "off day" according to Manley.
Reynolds is Lane's leading discus thrower
and shot putter.
In the meet Manley experimented by
placing some of his athletes in the two mile
relav. Lane's Jill Lanham,Vicki Graves, Liz
Grzelewski and Nadine Lindsay won the
event with a·time of 10:04.5 setting an LCC
record and qualifying the squad for the
nationals. Overall however, the experiment

meters with a personal best of 5:12, Nadine
Lindsay also captured second place in the
3000 meters at 10:39; and Pat Hess
followed Lindsay for third, crossing the
tape with a time of 12:29.
Coming up in May 4 and 5 in Albany are
the OCCAA Championships. Manley's
realistic outlook is ''Clackamas is too
strong to beat. We should be able to take
second place, though.''
100 - 1, Malela Sporolskl, COCC, 12.5. 2, Vicki
Graves, LCC, 12.9. 3, Sue Clay, MH, 13.2.
200 - 1, Jill Lanham, LCC, 26.3. 2, Malelo SPoralski, COCC, 26.6. 3, Vicki Graves, LCC, 27.55.
400 - 1, Jill Lanham, t.:CC, 59.0. 2, Hett Woodruff,
Ump, 65.4. 3, Loure Smith, MH, 67.8.

1,500 - 1, Mory Douglass, COCC, 4:52.9. 2, Cheryl
Glosser, LCC. 5:12. 3, Sue Steinbock, COCC, 5:15.
3,000 - 1, Mory Guyer, COCC, 10:36.2. 2, Nadine
Lindsey, LCC, 10:39.0. 3, Pat Hess, LCC, 12:29.0.
TEAM - Mount Hood CC, 66, Central Oregon CC
60, Lane CC 46, Umpqua CC 23, Southwestern Oregon CC 8, Clark (Wash.) JC 3.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - p a g e 11

Third in OCCAA

Hurlers drop twin hill

by Ed Peters

of TheTORCH

The Lane baseball team slid back into
third place in the Oregon Community
College Athletic Association (OCCAA)
after losing a double-header to Umpqua
C.C. 1-0 and 5-4 on April 29.
In the first game, former North Eugene
player Jeff Waldrop scored the only run of
the game off a Titan error in the bottom of
the seventh inning. Lane pitcher Jack
Glaze had a good afternoon gathering five
strikeouts and allowing only three hits and
two bases on balls in the seven-inning
encounter.
Judi Stack's backhand helped her win over a Clackamas opponent.Photo by Dennis Tachibana

Women Unbeaten Thus Far
Men Give Up Single Contest
Stack beat Betsy Klosterman in the second
set 6-1,6-0.
The women swept all the doubles
Both the men's and women's tennis
matches with Berry and Stack leading the
teams enter into the conference with
way 6-4,6-2 over Prettyman and Klosterimpressive records. The women are undefeated (8-0) and the men are 6-1 in the
man (OCE).
conference.
In other tennis action, both the men and
Neither the aggressive style of Scott the women soundly defeated Umpqua.
Cohn nor the unity of doubles partners Community College (UCC) on April 28.
Gary Lott and Jason Metz could pull out a
Judi Stack started the women'-s contest
win as Clackamas Community College
a second set shutout over Cindy
with
(CCC) edged the men 5-4 on April 30.
Lauden (UCC) 6-2,6-0.
In number one singles, Steve Bolstad
It took three sets for all competitors, but
outstyled his Clackamas opponPnt 6..1. 6-3.
the men overcame Umpqua 7-0.
Cohn played aggressively but fell to his
In singles action, Rich Farmer showed
opponent Steve Anast (CCC) 6-4, 6-4.
style defeating his UCC opponent Bill
"Cohn elayed really well, he went all-out,
Hubbard 2-6, 7-5,6-0.
but had a very tough opponent,'' explains
Jaso Metz and Gary Lott registered a
Coach Don Wilson.
3 ,6-2,6-3 win over UCC opponents Bill
Gary Lott and Don Smith were the only Hubbard and Jeff Stilwell.
other Titan victors in singles competition.
In April 27 matches held at the YMCA
Lott won easily over Alan Clevenger (CCC) Tennis Center, the men and women pulled
6-4,6-2. In the final round,(number six through with identical 5-1 victories over
singles) Smith overtook Jeff Alexander
Blue Mountain Community CollC:ge.
(CCC) 7-6,1-6,6-3.
Singles competitor Scott Cohn shutout
IrI doubles, Gary Lott and Jason Metz his Blue Mountain opponent in the first set
remain undefeated as partners. They and won the tie. breaker in the second
outmatched Rick Bobzien and Alan Clev6-0,7-6.
enger 7-6,6-3.
''Our doubles have become much more
Also on April 30, the women left the \ effective. The Metz and Lott combination is
home courts to face Oregon College of working out well," explains Wilson about
Education (OCE).
his men's doubles overall performance.
Both Kathy Berry and Judi Stack had an
The women had an easy time, sweeping
easy time with their OCE opponents. Berry all singles matches and losing only one
won over Cindy Prettyman 6-2,6-9 and doubles match.
By Kathy Marrow

of the TORCH

"We can't win games

if we can't score"
"The game was a pitchers' duel,"
explained Baseball Coach Bob Foster.
"Paul Pinkston (Umpqua) and Jack Glaze
(Lane) are good pitchers but we can't win
games if we don't score."
Lane only managed two hits off Pinkston
and Umpqua only connected on three of
Glaze's pitches.
In the second half of the double-header
the Umpqua bats exploded in the first
inning with a three-run burst. Fritz Pippin
brought Lane back to life in the third inning
with a double witb two men on base.
Normally two men would score on this type
of play, but the second Titan runner missed
the third base bag and was called out on an
appeal play, leaving the score 3-1 Umpqua.
The Titans continued their comeback
and scored three more runs in the top of
the fourth inning, taking the lead for the
first time in the game 4-3.
In the sixth inning reliever Marty Max
Max
came in to take over for Greg . Crabb.
..
.
FIRST GAME
0
0 Lane . . . . . . . . . 000 000
1
1 Umpquo . . . . . . . 000 000
GloZe and Castor; Pinkston and Tletsort.
Pinkston. L - Glaze.

stepped into a bases-loaded situation with
two balls on the batter and managed to
give up only two runs before striking out
two Umpqua batters· to retire the side.
In other action last week, the Titans
swept Clackamas 1-0 with Jack Glaze
striking out six batters and allowing only
two hits in the second game. Greg Crabb
went all the way in an 11-innin_g battle and
captured a 3-0 shutout. "The second
Clackamas game was our best defensive
game all year," said Foster.
In exhibition action against Linfield the
Titans split a double-header losing the first
error-filled game 8-4 and blowing Linfield
away in the second 9-1. Titan Pitcher Mark
Eggink gave up only one base on balls and
five hits while throwing five strike-outs to
record the victory.
Lane's record stands at 10-8 in the
league which all but eliminates the Titaµs
from the two team OCCAA playoffs later
this month.

German

2 1
3 1

AUTO SERVICE

G)~W

oo~~ct~CD~~
~A1J~(!J~
U<JJtr@11A
EXPERT
WORKMANSHIP

w -

SECOND GAME
4
0 Lane . . . . . . . . . 001 300
5
x Umpqua . . . . . . . 300 002
Crabb, Max (6) and Castor; Lee, Wiser (4),
phy (6), Glass (7) and Tletsort. W - Murphy.
Crabb.

5 2
7 3
MurL -

2045 Franklin Blvd.
Eugene, Oregon 97403
342-2912

The

Suds .F act

- Tav ·

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

FREE POOL Sundays noon~6pm
·HOT LUNCH~S Daily Spedals 11 am - 2 pm
GAMES- GIANT SCREEN TVPOOL-WINES-KEGS TO GO

oots "" family""
Restaurant

COMPLETE DIHEIII - IIULIIG STEAKS
DELECTABLE SEAFOOD - NOMI MADE PIEi I IIOllS l SOUP

BREAKFAST ALL DAY

ANO WE DO SERVE DELICIOUS OMELETTES

e r.(J AO WA Y

We Prid& Ourselves On Our. Home Cooked Food
· (We Even PHI Our Own Teters For The Fineat In Flavors)

345-8316

440 East 8th Ave., E-ugene

St n

0

t n_
~.___7_
t n_
~ --6-

Your Host Clyde Scott

Blitz, Schlitz Malt, Miller Lite & Michelob
on,J,raupht
30th Ave. and 1-5, across from LCC
21 andot,er

Po--0e

)2
(',

for sale

61,... IIOOKSIN STOCK
All Selling 25"9 to SO,-. off list price

New Boots-Test Boots-Cliff Notes-magazines
•

USD IOOUBOUGRI' AND 50m
11"9 Off ON Au.NEW IIOOKS

SMIIB FAMILY IOOUl'OU
768 East llth

BRAND NEW 8·FOOT DOUBLE GRO·LUX light fixures,
2 bulbs, $JS; Cleveland trombone, good condition, $1()0.
689·3190.

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

USED STEEL BELTED 11RES, good condition, 15", $20
for both. 689·0400 or 689·9239, leave mes~ge.
PAIR OF SEARS "DISCOVERER" BINOCULARS,
excellent condition, 545. 9J7.J0SS, Pepi.

ANTIQUE COOK STOVE, good condition, $50. 689·0400
or 689·9239, leave message.
DUAL 1229 TURNTABLE, $125 or best offer, very good
condition. 937•3026.
10-SPEED BIKE, good condition. 68J.2106 evenings.
KING•SIZE WATERBED, frame and heater included,
really in excellent condition. 343.3541 afternoons.
PIGEONS FOR SALE! Rollers•Jacobins (pedigreed),

reasonable. 689·8.564 after 4 weekdays, anytime week•
ends.
WATERBED, ting•size with liner, sheets, $35. CB, 40

channel with antenna, $50. 484.5735 after .3 p.m.

SKI SUIT, size 9 (woman's), blue, make offer. :484•5735
after 3 p.m.
SANYO HOME CASSETl'E DECK, $90, wananty still

classi fieds

- - - -·········-···········-------- GOOD CAR, GOOD MILEAGE, 1973 Hornet Hatchback.
midnight blue with white top and stripe. automatic, new
tires. very g~ condition. S1.700. 344•8475.

........................................................................................................................
'70 BUG, new brakes, clutch, tires, clean and in excellent
running condition. 345•6069.
.......................................................
LEAVING COUNTRY. 1978 Fiat Super Brava, excellent
condition, $4,500. 342•6965.

·housing

'63 INTERNATIONAL TRAVEi.ALL, rebuilt transmis•
sion, VS, automatic, 5200. 998·6587.
'67 FORD FAIRLANE WAGON, moving• must sell, $250.

726•5099 days or 726•9797 eves.

···· ·······························----- ~-MUST SEU MY "BABY BLUE." Reliable '66 Plymouth

satellite. This car has character! $225 or best offer.
343•7055.

······•·································· ··········-----SOMETHING VERY OLD IS HAPPENING AT THE
GLASS STATION. Visit our demonstration project at 24th

and Hilyard.

FINAUY: A babysitting exchange co•op in Springfield. If
interested call Joyce Manning. 726•4863 or Wes
Chamberlain, 746•0940 after S p.m.

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

PERFECT HOUSE, 3 bedrooms, clean, big living room,

patio, 2•car garage, beautiful view, rent $450, lease.
746•5711.
ROOM MATES WANTED. $110 or $130 per month, Meat
and eggs included. Need help with garden. Pay 1/3

utilities. 484·2835.

2·BEDROOM APARTMENT. $180/mo., quiet, mature

persons wanted, good location. 484.5182.

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

ROOM•MATE WANTED TO• SHARE BOUSE in Skin•
ner's Butte area, $72.50/mo. Call 484-0748 eves.

help~anted
------···········
··········
······························

WOMEN'S AWARENESS CENTER WILL BE TAKING
APPUCATIONS for new staff positions. Work study,

volunteers or supervised field experience.

K•MAltT WW. BE TAKING APPUCA11ONS and interviewing

for MANAGEMENT TRAINEE positions on May 10. See the
Student Employment Service for details.
S: 10

good; Panasonic cassette AM/FM, S20; Overstuffed
chair, $15. Contact Jeff Saint at TORCH Office.

cars

.

SKILLED FIELDER OR THIRD BASE PLAYER needed
by women's top rank slow•pitch team. Call 484·9008.

Ll1TLE BOY NEEDS SWING SET. Have one you can

on

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

RON- Thanks for helping me work out my problems.

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

•

MARGARET

JULIE, ROBIN, TONY, JERRY, CINDY, BECKY,
CAROLYNE, DEE-ThanJi; you for all the support.

LONNIE

FREE, UNWANTED, UNUSED SHELVING WANTED.

MICHAEL- Ignore the other ad. I don't want to be your
································· ----------USED SLIDE PROJECTOR. Call Catherine and leave

message at 484·2146.

···················--------

niessages

AMTRAK SLIDE PRESENTATION, "Is It The End?"

Tuesday, May 8, 11 a.m., in the President's Dining
Room.
MAY OSPIRG LOCAL BOARD MEETING. Discussion
will involve ongoing KLCC project, news from around the
state, and Saturday State Board Meeting in Corvallis.

Come by and aee what'• happening.

pin. If found please return to Deena c/o TORCH Office.

J.R.-1 know you want something exciting between your

legs. I'll give you a ride!

----···---···--·---

SIR NOSE

MUSTACHIO- I'd like to bash your sexist brains in for
that remark.
WOMYN
BRUCE- Y_ou are the Ill.

friend. It's too much of a heart breaker.

loveyou,ME

DEBRA M.-Two years and still very much in love.

Goodbye, DEBI

GRADUATING! Apply for your degree by May IS.
Ceremony: June 1. More information at Student Records
Office.

PUMPKIN-To live, not exist, that is the answer. Thank
you.
love and laughter, BUFFS
ERIKA-I love you.

MARK

M.T.- Ducky Pants says you're it this week. Have fun.

F.B.

J.R.- You know it is possible to eat out and burn

calories.

LOST - Camouflage green marine hat with blue butterfly

Yours truly, PTA
..............................................................................
JIM- Your theory class was the high point of my life.
-----······································ ···············
···
(Well, almost.) Bye!
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ F_RAN
HONDA TRAIL 90cc or Mini•Trail 70 cc or even a SO cc.
··--···---•,-·•·--·-------·--------343.2784.
FRAN-Feels good to be happy.
MARQUES
donate? 688•4329 after 4 p.m.

CHltlSTIAN saENCES

For information about Christian Science actlVltle

campus and in Eugene, call Jim Frake, !he Christian
Science Campus CounselOI'. -485·8202.

344.7933, Raymond.

-------·--···-·----··---·--·------

~anted

.

services

SIR NOSE

YOUK RACING STRIPES, choice of cafes and melodic

memoirs, are infinitely engrained.

J .R.-Lotion companies threatening strike; must find new
lubricant!
SIR NOSE DE VOID OF FUNK
PAT, JOHN, MURRAY, TOM, RICH, ANNE, PAULA, et.
al.-Thank you!
love, FRAN
DOUG- When will I see you ag~in? I miss your
friendship.
PEGGY
HELEN- Please call me. I'm worried about you .

JOAN

LAURA-Better late than never, but it was worth waiting
for.
WILLY

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

···································· ···-,-----------