lane
communilg
colle9e
4000 E. 30th Ave., Eugene, OR 97405

Vol. 17 No. 19 Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980
by Dale Parkera
of The TORCH
One ineligible player on LCC's
men's basketball team has cost the
college a berth in the Oregon Community College Athletic Association
championships, Coach Dale Bates
revealed Wednesday.
College officials first learned late
Tuesday afternoon that reserve forward Mike Hollingsworth, a transfer
student from Astoria's Clatsop Com- ,
munity College, had not completed
the necessary number of hours at Clatsop required for his athletic eligibility
at LCC this year. Hollingsworth had
played in six of Lane's seven season
victories, all of which must now be
forfeited.
Bates admitted to The TORCH he
had allowed Hollingsworth to play the
entire season without a transcript,
Bates said he had assumed Hollingsworth' s transfer requirements
were in order and that eligibility requirements had been met prior to
making the team.
LCC President Eldon Schafer said
Bates had shown bad judgement in
not checking Hollingsworth's elibility.
"The coach is responsible for the
eligibility of the players," Schafer said.
"There's no blaming it on anyo'ne
else."
When the transcript finally arrived, it
~howed hctt Hollingsworth had not attended Clatsop part-time as he had

athletic eligibility for 1980.
Hollingsworth' s eligibility first came
into question when LCC submitted a
list of athletes slated to participate in
the play-off games to OCCAA league
officials. "A request for a transcript for
Hollingsworth was returned, ana
followed up on," according to
Schafer.
The delay in discovering the player's
ineligibility, Bates said, was because
"Holly (Hollingsworth) wasn't able to
get his transcript from Clatsop because
he apparently still owed them
money."
Bates says he met with Hollingsworth and "arrangements were
made for the student's debt to be
taken care of," so that the needed
transcript would be forthcoming.
Bates , declined to explain what arrangements he made.
,
Larry Romine, LCC's college/community relations director, told The
TORCH Wednesday this latest incident is "not related" to earlier Athletic
Department problems in which Bates
admitted awarding unearned credit to
a U of O athlete.
Hollingsworth's teammate and close
friend Greg Brouchet described the
team's feelings when told LCC had
been disqualified from the play-off
games. "Most of the players just sat
there," he said. "Some of us were turning our heads, looking out the window, trying not to let the others see
the tears."
Clackamas Community College,
although defeated just this last wee~end by the Lane Titans 107-85, will
now move into LCC's play-off slot.

Photo by Dennis Tachibana

Student baffled

by credit scandal

ller,
edilorial1»opinion1»le
1/JJ{
[_

t~R~?MeNt!

111=;;cMEFRETfJI>
College Press Service

"A~~CAM"

To the editor:
As a student, I fee l a littl e left ou t
wh en it comes to th e cred it scand al
currently in vogue in th e area . Who do
you go to, in order to acqu ire the
credit needed in other courses? An
answer to this problem would certainly make it a lot easier to get through
my classes, and I might possibly be
able to compete· in some type of sport.
When I was being taught the difference between right and wrong, I
was assured that I would suffer in
some way if my con science wa s bypassed . Has anything ch a~ged since
those far away days of my youth when
I w as being taught those princi ples?
My first thou ght is to as k for th e te rmination of Mr. Bates . Howeve r, if
thin gs have bee n c hanged just
beca use I've grown up, please tell me.
Th ere are a lot of th ings I would like to
do, but I've held off beca use I thou ght
th ey were illegal and un ethi ca l. If they
aren' t, maybe I can go ahead and do
th em after all.
I won 't as k Mr. Bates. I do n't think
he rea ll y knows.
Richard McCord
ASLCC Senator

Loss of foreign oi I
no reason for war

Sex symbol role difficult·to play
Regine's while wearing a shirt that reveals my navel, a gold
I will not pose in the nude. I realize this decision will
disappoint many of my millions of fans-to-be, but I feel .. chain and a toupee on my chest."
"You do. hate dancing," said Glynda.
strongly that we national sex symbols should set certain
"People magazine will want to interview me in the kitstandards of good taste. And I have so informed my agent.
chen cooking fettucini a la Romana, whatever that is. I'll
All we columnists have agents who know that our colhave to pose on a white horse in leotards for Macho
league Bob Greene of the Chicago Tribune has posed for a
And then there's Celebrity Bowling."
deodorant.
waist.
the
to
open
shirt
Western
a
$3 color poster wearing
"You can't bowl, dear."
"Journalists have become the sex symbols of the '70s and
"Neither can any other celebrity. You just have to jump
' 80s, " explained Bob Hennkens, president of the company
and down, clap your hands and giggle a lot. But what I
up
peothe
are
that's peddling the results nationwide. "They
dread most is bouncing up to the microphone at the
ple who young Americans admire and look up to. We think
Academy Awards banquet in a see-through tuxedo, know' there is a big future in posters featuring newsmen and
ing that millions of women are ogling my body, looking on
women ."
me as nothing but a piece of meat."
I can't help but agree and so does my agent, Burton
"Well, if it's for world peace, dear."
Sward. "What's this guy Greene got that you haven't got?"
easy for you to say. They won't be tearing off
"That's
pounds,
less
few
a
and
years
less
few
a
Maybe
"
said Burt.
your clothes, sneaking into your dressing room, throwing
but, frankly, I think your legs are better."
themselves ... ''
" Thank you ," I said with dignity. "Now let's get on with
" Calm down, dear. I think you're getting a pimple on the
it. How can I be admired and looked up to by millions of
side of your nose."
young Americans until they have a sexy poster of me on
" A pimple? Damn! There goes the environment, disarmatheir walls?"
ment and the brotherhood of man. Unless ... "
Our first stop, of course, was Pinup Poster Productions,
" Unless what, dear?"
Inc. I am glad to say the president, George Pinup, agreed
" Tell me, Glynda, " I said. "Do you think America will
. with my decision not to pose in the nude. " It might be too
buy Walter Cronkite on a_ bearskin rug?"
overwhelming," he said. " I see you in a black silk kimono
lying on a bearskin rug in a very dim light."
" Very d im light?" I inquired .
" Very dim sexy light," explained Pinup .
I would have gotten home earli er but th e female
photographer kept swooning. " Anything new at th e office,
m y wife, Glynda.
dea r?" asked _
" I am becoming a national sex symbol," I said .
(CJ C h ro n ic I<' Puhl1..,h 1ng C o .
" That' s nice, dear," she said .
" It's my duty as a journalist," I explained.
" It' s th e only way I can save the world by convincing
EDITOR: Sarah Jenkin,
millions of young Americans to devote their lives to the
ASSOCIATE ED ITOR: Heidi Swillinger
FEATURES EDITOR: Ch<irlottl' H.ill
preservation of the environment, the abolition of weapons
N[WS EDITOR: Lucy White
PHOTO EDITOR: Denni, T<1chib,in<1
."
man
of
brotherhood
and the
ENTERT AiNMENT EDITOR: C,1rl,1 Schwart1
" I thou ght that's what you already did at th e office all
SPORTS EDITOR: D,1le P<irkl'rJ
ASSOCIATE FEATURES EDITOR: Donn.i Mitcht>II
day," she said .
ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR: Debor.ih Keogh
ASSOC IATE SPORTS EDITOR: D.iv<> Lemkt>
people
more
many
how
think
But
"
admitted.
I
" I do,"
STAFF REPORTERS: Kt•nt Gubrud
STAfF PHOTOGRAPHERS: MiLh,1el Bt>rtotti,
would listen to me if I w ere only Cheryl Ti egs."
E:. Sam,on Nbwr, Pam Vl.idyk,1 , We, P<11
Glynda nodded thoughtfully. " You ' re rig ht, dea r," she
ADVERTISING DESIGN: Robin Smith
ADVERTISING SALES: Sh.irm<in Hieb. Larry Miller.
said. " W ell , have a good time ."
)e,rnine B,1ker, )e,in Burbridge
PRODUCllON: Marie Mingl'r, Thelma fo,ter . Steve
" A good time!" I w as incred ulou s. ' 'Do you reali ze what
S.1uc<'d<1. Neil H,ir ni,h
it takes in this country to becom_e a nation al sex symbol? My
COPYSETT ING: M,iry McFadden
agent says I' ll have to go dancing every ni ght tor a week at

•

To the editor:
Our gove rnm ent has delive red a
drastic message in the decision fo r
military beef-up in protecting oil suppliers in the Persian Gulf. We are asked to back the government on putting
pride and domestic needs aside and
allocating military goods and services
to oil rich foreign nations. All these aggressive considerations so as to con~
tinue our gross dependence on a
foreign oil-fix, the United Oil Junkies
of America, join up to avoid the rush at
your Draft Board today.
Mr. Carter bas robbed me of my
pride, and I hope any rational person
feels this, too. A junkie on the street
often has more pride in quitting for a
week than Mr. Carter has given the nation through minor attempts at curing
our dependence. We can and must
begin defending our interests with a
national energy policy mandating the
immediate beginning of a transition
away from Persian Gulf dependence.
We' re ready to back their supplies
militarily while at home in America we
have no energy policy.
Why should energy dependence,
scarcity and consumption all be going
on with no substantial regard as to effi cient utilization and di stribution of
such an abused resourc e.
There is not even a requirement th at
new government buildings con sider
energy efficiency and cost analysis of
thi s scarce resource. W e are junkies
hardly stoppin g to clean the needl e,
in jecti o ns are need ed into th e
continued on page 5

The TORCI I i> publi,hed on Thursdays, September
through June .
New, ,tories ar(' compre»ed. conci,e reports. intended
to be as objectiw .i, possible. Some m,1y appear with a
byline to indic,1te tlw reporter re,ponsiblP.
New, iP,llurt>,. bec,w,e ot bro,1der ,cope, may contain
some 1udgeml'nt, on the µJrt at th(• writer. They are ident1l1t'd with a " ll'Jture" byline.
" Forums" .ire 1ntPndt>d to be essay, con tribu ted by
TORCH re.idt>r,. ThPy ,hould be lim ited to 750 words.
"Letter, to thP Editor" .i re in te nded .is ,hart comment.iries on ,to ne, .ippe.iring in Thl• TORCH. The editor
re,Prws the right to l'di t ior libel or length.
Editori<1b .ire ,igned by the new,p.iper st.iii writer Jnd
l'Xprp,., only his/ her opinion.
typep ,ind >1gned by the
All rnrre,pondence must
wri tl'r. M.iil m bring .ill cbrre,pondPncP .to: The TORCH .
E. 30th Ave., Eugene,
4000
Room 205 Center Building,
OR 97405 . Phom• 747-450 1, ext. 2654 .

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980 The TORCH

Page 3

"I enjoy seeing people who are sick," admits Dr. Dick
Abraham without remorse "That's why I went into
emergency medicine."
Abraham, 26, moved from Toronto, Ont., Canada, to
Eugene about seven months ago. After completing his internship last summer Abraham was offered a job in the
emergency ward at McKenzie-Willamette Hospital in Springfield. He decided to forgo the usual route of fulfilling a
residency -- opting instead to accept the position.
"I just figured I was lucky to get' the job at McKenzieWillamette," he says with candor. "And I thought I better
take it now because I might not get it two years down the
road."

Feature by Charlotte Hall
of The TORCH
In addition to his four-days-a week-job, with 12 hour
shifts each, Dr. Abraham is also employed one day a week
at LCC' s Student Health Services.
The jobs are similar, he stresses. In fact, he is quick to
compare LCC to the emergency department "but on a
much smaller scale. Medicine is medicine," he explains,
"no matter where you practice it."
But the differences Abraham does encounter, he claims,
allow him to see the "best of both worlds."
"When you work in the emergency department you
have to be pretty relaxed, cool," he begins. "A person
can't get excited under circumstances where there is a
major trauma case or a full cardiac arrest or just a sore
throat down the hall," he says as an example. "If you
don't act calm and controlled," he warns, "then you' re
going to have problems. " And the physician's colleagues
will be forced to deal with those problems as well.
Severe cases are much more common at McKenzieWillamette than at LCC, he notes. People involved in industrial accidents, suffering from lacerations, or having
acute abdominal pains are often brought in as emergency
patients. These are "people who feel they need help immediately in the community," he says.
In contrast, the LCC Student Heath Service usually only
serves patients on a "family practice" type basis.
" There' s rarely a true emergency that we see here," he
adds. He missed out on one recent "true emergency"
when the same person suffered two heart attacks on one
of the days Abraham is not on duty. •
Abraham says he rarely even gets a chance to suture in a
small health service facility such as ,LCC' s, but he gets
plenty of practice ·at McKenzie-Willamette.
continued on page 4

Photo by Deborah Keogh

Bates given year's probation, fined $600
by Sarah Jenkins
of The TORCH

Due to his involvement in the LCC-U
of O unearned credit scandal, Athletic
DLrector Dale Bates has been placed
on probation for one year and will be
suspended without pay for one week.
The pay-loss, an "unoffical fine," will
amount to about $600.
College President Eldon Schafer
made the surprise·decision public during the LCC Board of Education
meeting Wednesday night.
But that was only one of the serious
issues discussed during the two-and-ahalf hour meeting. Also on the agenda
were the first ha rd facts of LCC' s fi nancial crisis, as well as some "options"
for an expected tuition hike.
• "Dale (Bates) is an honorable
man," Schafer told the board. "He
recognizes his mistake and has
apologized publically for his indiscretion."
However, the president added, "He
is responsible for setting an example.
His action ... cannot be condoned."
Bates has admitted giving unearned

credit for an independent-study jogging course to a U of O football player
during Summer Term 1979 ..
In explaining Bates' suspension and
year-long probation, Schafer said, ' '. ..
.The action taken is appropriate and in
the best interest of the institution and
Mr. Bates."
During a break, Schafer told
reportNs that although he realizes
Bates has suffered a great deal of embarrassment, "He carries a special
responsibility. Embarrassment wasn't
sufficient."
He added that the "special investigation" headed by Com- .
munity/College Relations Director
Larry Romine is still continuing, but he
declined to elaborate. "Hopefully,"
he said, "we will have a full report for
the next board meeting (March 12)."
• The "preliminary projections" for
the 1980-81 school year budget were
presented to the board -- and th'ey
show a deficit of well over $3 million
dollars.
Estimated expenditures for next year
total $22,956,000; estimated revenue
-- without any new income sources --

An overflow audience witnessed
the "trial" when the Shah of Iran
was found guilty of conspiring to kill
and torture Iranian citizens. Page 6

>>

totals only $19,789,825.
In reporting the grim facts, Financial
Services Director Verne Whittaker was
none too optimistic. Without more
reimbursement funds from the State
Emergency Board, it will take a 44.27
percent property tax hike to balance
the budget, he explained.
The board members reacted much
as any local property taxpayers might
be expected to.
"That's not only a little exorbitant,"
declared Catherine Lauris. "That's
outrageous."
"I think where we are is a first class
disaster for local government," agreed
Les Hendrickson. "The taxpayers
would have every right to be outraged
if we tried something like this."
The Emergency Board will be
presented with a request for additional
funds on March 13, but no one has
been willing to give odds on its decision. "The state may say, 'No one else
has an open-ended budget,' " Schafer
theorized, " 'so why do you think you
should?' "
The budget committee and the
board must make their decisions by

"In the Groove" -- a new feature
debuting in the TORCH this week -looks at Linda Ronstadt's and the
Knack's latest offerings. Page 8

>>

March 26, the date scheduled for a
resolution calling for an election and
setting the amount of a tax levy.
• On a related issue, Dean of
Students Jack Carter gave the board a
review of student tuition for the last
five years. Although Carter did not
specifically recommend any increase,
his report did cite two possible options.
, The first possibility is a $1 per credit
hour increase which would generate
an estimated $206,000. Under this
plan, full-time tuition would be raised
to $154, a 7.69 percent hike.
The second option is a $2 per credit
hour increase which would generate
an estimated $412,000. Full-time tuition would be $165, a 15.38 percent
increase.
"This doesn't sound exorbitant to
me," Debi Lance, LCC's student body
president, told the board. "The
students I've talked to know that the
from
come
money has to
somewhere.''
The board agreed to make a decision on the issue at its ;iext meeting.

Students now have a chance to
nominate instructors for LCC' s
"Teacher of the Year" award. Details
and nomination form are on Page 5

Page 4 The TORCH

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980

Expert shares i.nsider's look at Cambodia
by Mischelle Watkins
for The TORCH
'An expert on Southeast Asia said that revolutionary
forces under the leadership of Pol Pot are responsible
for 17,000 deaths alone in Saipan, a city of 50,000
people in Cambodia.
At a news conference in Eugene on Feb. 14, Don
Luce, who has travelled in Asia for 20 years, told
reporters that the refugees are not starving, although
food is not plentiful.
Luce was invited by the Vietnamese and Cambodians to visit their countries. He left the states Nov. 8,
1979, and spent over five weeks in Vietnam and Cambodia. Accompanied by an ABC news team, Luce
helped put together a documentary on the Southeast
Asia nation that will be shown in Eugene next month.
Luce and his companions rented a car in Saigon and
traveled 17,000 miles around the countryside. Luce
came back with these conclusions:
• Food that international agencies have been sending is getting in to people in Cambodia and has
prevented starvation within the borders of Cambodia.
• Luce thought that the improved condition in Cambodia is the result of the excellent job that many people have done in getting food from international
organizations to the villagers. Food is now being

stored in many warehouse·s because, Luce said, the people clo: .- :itarvation were in hospitals. Luce said
present rice crop which is harvested in November that he found people in a very bad condition on the
and December will last until mid-March, and the real
border area near the mountains, where the Pol Pot
danger of starvation will come after mid-March.
troops are stationed.
• The pictures that the Americans have seen on TV
• The effect, after three-and-a-half years of Pol Pot's
and , in magazines have almost all come from the government, has been to break down almost every
Thailand border, not from inside Cambodia. Luce inkind of institution that the US believes hold society
dicated that the Pol Pot government, which was in .
together. Although the family structure was not torn
power from mid-1975 to the end of 1978, was much
apart, it was hit very hard, Luce said.
worse than most of the reports that Luce had read.
Luce said that the US has to recog_nize that while
Luce. came to that conclusion by having seen mass
food
aid is important, it doesn't provid_e a solution for
graves in every village that he. and the ABC team
the
Cambodians.
visited. Luce said when they stopped in a village, the
The US government's position for three-and-a-half
people would deliberately take them to the mass
years was to charge Pol Pot with genocide. Today, the
graves because they felt that Westerners couldn't
US government is supporting Pol Pot, while still chargbelieve how bad the deaths were.
ing_ him with genocide, Luce said.
• Today most of the food that the Pol Pot army gets
Luce thought that a solution must include a
is directly from the US. The US government sends
demilitarization of the border area of Thailand and
food to refugee cam·ps near the border and the Pol
Cambodia. The border camps must be moved further
Pot army uses those refugee camps as military sancback from the border because c;vilians in those
tuaries. Troops come into the camps to get food, and
camps get caught in the middle of the war.
take it into the mountainous areas. Most of the
military people in Pol Pot's army were in very good
Luce believes that the US government has to take a
condition an.d the civilians were starving to death,
neutral position in the struggle and not recognize
commented Luce.
either government. This could mean a m11ch greater
• When Luce and his companions traveled through
United Nations participation in developing a peacethe country, they did not find major starvation; the keeping force for the area and working out solutions.

-Best-of both w o r l d s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - He speaks of suturing_ -- known to
patients as "sewing stitches" -- as
though it were an art form: Creating an
image that is better and more func- .-

tional than the distorted image he
starts with.
''You see somebody with a laceration on their hand or something and

you fix it up," explains Abraham.
"Then you see the result. It's
something visual to look at."
The major difference between the

...

witEWANTYOU'"
Enjoy Literature Courses this Spring Term
in the Language Arts Department.
Survey of English Literature: Ruth Bowman,

1100-1200, MWF, Seq. 819, 3 credits
Survey of • World Literature: Karla Schultz,
1100-1200, MWF, Seq. 825, 3 credits
Science Fiction: Delta Sanderson, 1200-1300,
MWF, Seq. 826, 3 credits
Delta Sanderson, 1000-1130, UH, Seq. 827, 3 credits
Shakespeare: Karen Lansdowne, 1000-1100_, MWF,
Seq. 829, 3 credits
American Ethnic Folklore: Linda Danielson,
0900-1000, MWF, Seq. 833, 3 credits
Survey of American Literature:
(20th Century America) Sheila Juba, 1200-1300,

MWF, Seq. 835, 3 credits

Survey of American Literature:
(Nature In America) Ted Romoser, 1930-2230, M,

Seq. 836, 3 credits

Introduction to Women Writers: Joyce Salisbury,

1130-1300, UH, Seq. 837, 3 credits

Introduction to Literature:
(Poetry) Jerome Garger, 0900-1000, MWF, Seq.

820, 3 credits
Michael Rose, 1000-1100, MWF, Seq. 821, 3 credits
Jerome Garger, 1300-1400, MWF, Seq. 822, 3
c·redits
Michael Rose, 0830-1000, UH, Seq. 823, 3 credits
Art Tegger, 1000-1130, UH, Seq. 824, 3 credits
For more information, contact Language Arts Department, Lane Community College, 747-4501, extension
2420.

ll

-

:iii

continued from page 3
two jobs, and the most disappointing
• according to Abraham, is that doctors
• working in the emergency department
are unable to follow the progress of
the patients they treat.
"In the emergency department you
see somebody maybe once and then
you refer them to a family doctor or a
specialist who's appropriate," he explains. "So you really just see a patient
once and that's it. You sew them up,"
he adds bluntly, "and let somebody
else (do the follow-up). You don't
even see the result."
The atmosphere of the emergency
ward is sometimes strikingly different
from that of the Student Health Services,
declares
Abraham.
"A lot of the 'down-and-outs' in
society," he says jokingly, "tend to
congregate in the emergency department on Friday and Saturday nights. I
see an occasional drunk or obnoxious
patient."
Most people come in and expect immediate medical attention regardless
of the severity of the illness, Abraham
alleges. But a long wait is sometimes in
store for people before a doctor is
available to help them, and sometimes
tempers flare.
Abraham claims the two jobs are
equally taxing physically but he admits
that the emotional strain is s,omewhat
unbalanced.
"Patients (in the hospital) have gotten to me in the past," he recalls.
"Sometimes there is no treatment for
what they have. And we cannot do
much for them -- in spite of all our advanced technology/' he says with a
calm voice. "Then the patient doesn't
understand. So sure," he says again,
"it gets to me sometimes."
But Abraham insists that continued
contact with patients tends to build a
tolerance of some kind.
"To me it's a job. You get used to it
-- calloused or something."
Abraham staunchly proclaims that
he likes working at LCC "just as much,
well, alma ... ," he stops suddenly and
corrects himself.
"If I enjoyed working here as much
as I enjoy working at the emergency
department," he says candidly, "I'd
be here all the time."

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980 The TOR~H

Letters----continuec1 from page 2
::,
marketplace, industry, etc., requiring
energy efficiency and utilization of
abundant existing alternative techniques.
The true costs of foreign energy includes our pride. Don't expect
Americans to fight for a cause we
haven't begun to seriously address
here at home.
David Lockhart
LCC student

Don't support war
To the editor:
I wonder if there wi 11 be a way out
when our government decides all
these young beautiful boys have
become blind murderers. I sit beside
young men who tell silly jokes and giggle, worry about grades on a test or
what career to choose, whether or not
they'll get "laid" or find a girlfriend,
wondering still who they are, who to
become. Then I see them dead, zippered away or maybe half alive. I
scream "no!" and want to take them
all a~y_safe.
I say parents refuse to support
anyone who supports war and
destruction. We are taught to reason
and love and then told to kill. The
blood of your sons and daughters will
be on your hands. Think of a world
void of children and a generation of
aged who have no one to care for
them (yoL \ and know you strangled
th ei r sweet laughter by letting war
happen. That thought will be the companion that pu shes your wheelch air.

~I
11

LCC "OUTSTANDING TEACHER OF THE YEAR" AWARD
NOMINATION FORM

:~,

All in~tructors ,u-rrt·ntly ll' ,ll hing ,11 L,ine Community College ,rnd who h,ivt· been employed ior ,it lt•.i st one yec1r Mt> eligible.

J1

·!,

I

~~:::::n is an ouistanding teacher because:

Ii
~,
ii

·l,

I

(Att,ichnwnts m,1y lw m,ide to st,1tt• m ent it nen·ssary .)

]

l

Please provide names, mailing addresses and telephone numbers of three persons who have agreed to support this nomination:

•f]

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone No. :_ _ _ _ __

I , Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone No.: _ _ _ _ __
I

11 Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone No.:
rl

This nomination submitted by:

-:::I

i~
,
!l

Address:----------------------------Phone No.: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Signature

iIII

This form must be rnmpleted IN FULL .md. returned to the Office of Instruction, second floor of .the Administration Building, by 4 p.m. Friday,

f

March 14, l<J80.

ltll!iiil'!!illlli

Cindy Koster
LCC student

'60s hysteria again
To the editor:
In the early '60s America was being
gripped by war hysteria. The majority
of the people in the government and
at large were caught in the angry,
paranoid mood that got us into Vietnam.
It took us years to realize the fact
that we had done more harm than
good. The war cost America over
50,000 dead, many times that number
permanently handicapped, $150
billion, and world hatred for what we
did.
We are now faced with a similar
situation that we were faced with in
the '60s. But now the fight isn't over

I
I
I;

I

(Ple.1se print or type)

t1

ll

Page 5

protecting people, it's for protecting
"vital interests" -- in short, it's for oil.
Don't be deceived by the "war
hawk" politicians. Remember -- they
don't have to fight but young people
do. I don't want to wind up a statistical
combat casualty somewhere in tlie
Middle East, do you?

POETRY!
Introduction to Imaginative
Writing, Spring Term
(Poetry, Writing 243)
Writing 243 is the third of a three term
course designed to assist students to
develop imaginative writing skills.

llima Makanui
LCC student

Spring term will be devoted to the writing o/

poetry.
t::--

1:

Page 6

The TORCH

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980

Ex-shah labeled 'guilty at mock tribunal
by Lucy White
of The TORCH

The deposed Shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, has been found
guilty of conspiring to kill and torture
Iranian citizens. But that verdict -handed down at the mock international tribunal held Saturday, Feb.23,

in Eugene's Harris Hall -- was almost a
foregone conclusion.
An overflow audience of some 300
persons of all races and ages attended
the four and a half hour dramatization.
The Iranian-American Friendship
Committee, the year-old group that
sponsored the tribunal, sent more
than 300 letters to international

organizations asking for their
assistance and spent months collecting
background material for the event -even sending an American investigator
to Iran to gather "evidence."

marked with "rational judgement,"
and that the case only be considered
in terms of the evidence presented
within the trial.
The three questions on the ballot

GPA PER S~

GOT YOU DOWN?

*Do quicker, easier ~arch for papers
* Get credit for research on papers
in other classes

* Learn new reference so~ &
how to use them

WTIH

Use of the Library

Use of the Library is a six-week course designed to help students use the ·
library and its resources more effectively for research or personal enrichment. Particularly valuable for students writing papers or needing a more .
systematic approach when searching for information. Auditors encouraged.
Seq. 799, Barbara McKillip, 1400-1500, MW, March 31-May 7, 1 credit
Seq. 800, Barbara McKillip, 1130-1230; UH, April 1-May 8, 1 credit
Seq. 801, Barbara McKillip, 1300-1400, UH, April 1-May 8, 1 credit
Seq. 802 , Barbara McKillip, 1930-2130, U, April 1-May 6, 1 credit
For more information, contact Language Arts Department, Lane Community College, 747-4501 , ext. 2420.

Adu lt
Stu den ts
Do you need your
High Scho_o l Diplon1a?
You "18Y already
be taking courses at LCC
that qualify yo':'
for that diplon1a!
Visit us for:

Eugene actor Bill Ritchey portrayed the deposed Shah of Iran in the recent mock
• Photo by Dennis Tachibana
international tribunal.
Eugene attorneys Charles Porter and
Martha Walters volunteered to repre_sent the prosecution, and Michael B.
Goldstein, Michael L. Williams, and
Jane Krirnmel volunteered to serve as
lawyers for the defense.
The tribunal itself consisted of a cast
of eight characters: Khalid Abdullah
Tariq Al Mansour, a San Francisco attorney portrayed the presiding judge;
A "Peoples' Jury" was portrayed by
Bill Simmons, acting as a representative of the Native American people;
representing Latin
Nellie Link,
Americans; Gary Kirn, representing
Asian Americans; Ornali Yeshitel , the
. African American people; " Amin" and
" Ali ," the Iranian people; and Esaway
Arnasha, performing as a spokesperson of the Arabian people.
At the trial ' s end, ballots were
d istributed to th e " people's jury" with
a request from M ansour that they be

I

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$10 and up
STUDENT RATES

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Eugene, Oregon 97402

503-687-9704

············· ·~·········· ·····'

Wild Iris

Announces its new
Mid-week Miser Meals!
An international specialty served
each Wednesday, 6-9 pm
A vegetarian or non-vegetarian
entre, with salad & bread, $3.25~
·Also, daily specials on hearty
homemade soups.

• Evaluation 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 ove,r)
• Scheduling your final high school classes if you are 16 or
over

Adult Edu~atio n
High School Con1plet ion
Apprent iceship Building

were:
• 1. Is the shah guilty?
• 2. Should the US govenrnent be
condemned for its role in Iran?
• 3. Should the money taken by the
shah be returned to the Iranian peo•
ple?
An overwhelming majority of the audience -- as well as the entire" jury" -found both the shah and the " US
multi-national corporations" guilty.
The ballot results from the audience
were as follows:
On question number 1, 7 abstained,
18 found the shah not guilty, and 261
found the shah guilty as charged .
On question number 2, 4 abstained,
14 thought the US government should
not be condemned , and 267 thought
the- US government should be condemned.
On question number 3, 6 abstained ,
11 voted that the money should not be
returned , and 262 said that the money
should be returned .
The jury was unanimous in its agreement that the shah was gu ilty, that the
US government should be condemned, and that the money should be
returned.
·" An absolute monarch is absolutely
responsible for all the actions of his
agents, " Mansour concluded." ... I' m
sure the (UN) General Assembly will
see the shah extradited, and eviden~e
will be- reintroduced that will result in
the justifiable extinction of his life."

As always, we serve homemade pastries and our special house coffee.
New Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 9-3 Sunday Brunch 10-3

1161 Lincoln

343 - 0366

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980 The TORCH
by Delilah-Rene
for The TORCH

Cass offers artists.

OOSic suNival skills.

llin't Put UP

with
Feeling fhvn

If you go through periods

of depression, there is a
way out Learn useful skills
that you can use to control
your own mood. Call the
University of Oregon
Psychology Clinic
at

If a career in art is your goal, but being a starving artist on a lonely street
corner isn't, you may benefit from a
class offered at LCC again Spring Term,
entitled "Independent Study -- Artist
Survival Skills."
The class is a term-long workshop
offered through the Department of Art
and Applied Design and taught by
David Joyce. Its purpose is to provide
students interested in an art, or art-

and possibilities that accompany the
related career, with the basic skills and
profession, says Joyce.
techniques that will make it possible
for them to earn, rather than lose, ' Joyce's course covers the marketing
of one's art work,· including
moneyfromtheirartwork.
photographing art, framing and mol.ln- ·
Joyce explains many instructional
programs offered at LCC make work- ting techinques, shipping methods,
experience available to the students so and arranging for gallery and exhibithat they can get a better understan- tion displays.
In addition, he also discusses the
ding of their chosen field. Unforfinancial and legal aspects of art as a
tunately, he says, the Art Department
career. An accountant will be a
has few of these options. A stufeatured guest speaker to advise
dent wishing to make a living as an arstudents of legal tax breaks and
tist is often unaware of the pitfalls and
methods of keeping financial records.
proble'ms, as well as the advantages

Publication Design
and Production
M,W

••••••••
..........
.....
.....
••••••••••••
•

,

i:z.i:p.m. 3 eredlts eourse 3433

This course covers the basic steps of designing and preparing camera-ready
material for one and two color off-set printing. Class members solve copy-fitting
and design problems, set type, work with photos and graphics. and use paste-up
tools and materials.
For more information, call the Mass Communication Department, 747-4501, ext.
2474. or consult the Spring Class Schedule. _

6864966 for information.

She was married at 13.
She had four kids
by the time she was 20.
She's been hungry and poor.
She's been loved and cheated on.
She became a singer and a star
because it was the only way
she knew to survive.

PG

SISSY SPACEK TOMMY LEE JONES
"COAL MINER'S DAUGHTER"
also starring BEVERLY D'.ANGELO LEVON HELM Screenplay by TOM RICKMAN
Based on the Autobiography by LORETI'A LYNN with GEORGE VECSEY
Executive Producer BOB LARSON Produced by BERNARD SCHWARTZ
Directed by MICHAEL APTED A BERNARD SCHWARTZ Production A UNIVERSAL PICTURE liiil

PARENTAL GUIIANCE SUl&STED G»

MATUIIAI. MAY NOT K SUIT-.E FOIi CHUJMH

Page 7

I Original Soundt,ack On MCA Records and Tapes. I INow a Warner Book. I © 1980 UN IVERSAL C ITY STUDIOS. INC .. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Opening March 7 at a theatre near you_

.

/

Page 8 . The TORCH

Feb. 28 .- March 26, 1980

• in Ille_ 9,ooue

[
....

Ronstadt glides on a new VvOve; the Knack 'talksdirty'

•••••••••••--111

There is a tint of new-wave in a coupie ot tracks -- most notably "Mad
Love," the title cut, and "How Do I
Make You," the current AM hit. Yet, as
a whole, the album is pretty predictable. Like its predecessors, ("Living In
the U.S.A., ·' "Simple Dreams,,, and
"Hasten Down the Wind,") "Mad
Love," is a collection of remakes and

are executed well by Rosemary Butler, - rips off its own "My Sharona". So
Nicolette Larson and former Ronstadt . much for originality.
guitarist Waddy Wachtel.
Still the album is fun, and will proI
Despite the riew band and the newbably
sell like lemonade on a hot sum_wave, "Mad Love," offers few surmer day. There is something about
prises: Hut ror - i.11e true Ronstadt
Doug Fieger that is wholesome Alldevotee, consistency may be the best
American. He's the class clown, the
policy.
rabble-rouser whose smrle always gets

'But the Liffle Girls

Reviews by Carla Schwartz
of The TORCH

•'Nr:x:J Love'

Has country-rock star, part-trme sex
symbol Linda Ronstadt gone punk?
The cover photo of her newest
release, "Mad Love," might be the
sign of things to come.

Understarcl'

you-done-me-wrongs, with ;:i few Elvis
Costello tunes thrown in for good
measure.
The album marks the debut of
Ronstadt's new band, featuring exmembers of the now defunct Little
Feat, and Cretones' ex-guitarist Mark
Goldenberg, who penned several of
the album's tracks. There is definitely a
noticeable difference. Back-up vocals

The Knack is back. But you were expecting more songs about unrequited
sex, frustration and young girls? Sorry.
Not this time. The only allusion to any
of that is in the title, "But the Little
Girls Understp.nd.
This time around, the Knack has
chosen another approach: The rip-off.
There is the Rolling Stones' "Beast of
Burden" rip-0ff ("Can't Put A Price On
Love,"), the Phil Spector, Nick Lowe
rip-off (''The Feeling I Get,"), and the
Buddy Holly, Beatles rip-off ("It's
You,").
But the most blatant example is in
"Baby Talks Dirty," where the Knack
11

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SECOND NATURE USED_BIKES

T~/R9lfliU.~~l-RF

buy-sell-trade ." '1J/i.

Speci_alizing in
recycled bicycles,
used wheels & parts

presents

A TRIP TO
THE SHAKESPEAREAN FESTIVAL IN
ASHLAND

...

1712 Willamette
343-5362

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him out of trouble, the kid next door.
It may not always be easy to like him,
but it is almost always easy to laugh at
his wild antics.
The album clearly has its faults.
"Hold On Tight and Don't Let Co" is
painfully underproduced. "Mr.
Handleman" is possibly their worst
tune to date -- about a desperate man
pimping for his wife. Tacky at best.
On the brighter side is the Knack's
version of the Kinks' classic "The Hard
Way" (much peppier than the
original), and "It's You".
This new album may not be the best
the Knack is capable of, but the band
is bound to be as controversial as ever
with its release.

·.
.:·: ··••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••··
...... :

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.

.

•.

••·····•••

Do you need an excuse
to go to the rmvies?

STUDIES IN THEATRE

Seq. 1154, TLN 1785, Th 205, 3 er
UH 11 :30-1300
Study four plays and see them in production!
Taught by Stan Elberson

BASIC PIANO
TEN DIFFERENT SECTIONS

Film As Literature, English 197
presents its 3rd spring term excursion into
FILMS AROUND TOWN, SPRING 1980

(A Very Popular Course!)

Whether you ca·n read music or not-you will soon amaze your friends
and please yourself, too!

PRODUCTION WORKSHOP

Combine social pleasure and intellectual pursuit.
Earn 3 hours of Arts and Letters college transfer credit
as you view and discuss films.

Seq. 1158, TLN 1735, Th 266, 3 er
MW 1300-1600
.
Get hands-on training in scene building!
Work on "The Crucible."

Students will go at their own convenience to films
playing at Eugene/ Springfield theatres.
Films will be discussed during the following class times:

OPE RA WORKSHOP

Seq. 830, Jack Powell, 1000-1100, MWF
Seq. 831, Susan Bennett, 1130-1300, UH
Seq. 832, Susan Ben.nett, 1930-2230, U

Seq. 1199V, TLN 3300, WK 203, 1-3 er
UH 1930-2130

Interested in singing in musicals?
Operettas? Operas?
Chris Ryan will teach you how!

:

For more information, contact the Language Arts Department, Lane Community College, 747-4501, ext. 2420.

Auditors are welcomed

~·····•.
.. ..··•••••···
.........
.
......
................
.
..

..•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

-

\

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.

:

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Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980 The TORCH

Page 9

f1ROUNDTOWN
TH€fltR€
Oregon Repertory Theatre
99 W. 10th, 485-1946
Feb. 28-March 8 "Of Mice and
Men"
Feb. 29, March 1, 7 "The
Revenge of the Space Pandas or
Binky Rudich and the Two-SpeedClock"

Tavern on the Green
1375 Irving Rd., Eugene 689-9595
Feb. 28-March 1 The Gaye Lee
Russell Band
March 3 Johnny Ethridge
March 4-8 The News

U of 0
Robinson Theatre, Villard Hall
Feb. 28-March 1 "Streamers"

North Bank Restaurant
22 Club Road, Eugene 686-1123
March 4 D.J. Day
March 5 Barbara Dzuro
March 6 John Workman

J'

Musical performances will highlight the Black Student Union's upcoming Cultural·
Event.
Photo by Deborah Keogh

Cultural pot-pourri scheduled
As part of Black History Month, the
LCC Black Student Union will present
a Cultural Event, Feb. 29. The performance will begin at 7 p.m. in Forum
309. All members of the BSU will be
performing.
Highlights of the event include a reenactment of a Martin Luther King

speech, poetry by black artists, and a
visiting choir from Eugene's St. Mark's
Church. Several students from Churchill High and the U of O will also be
participants, according to Pat Creal,
BSU advisor. "It's like a talent show,"
she says.
Admission is free.

Ntexico tour slated
Looking ahead to summer, the LCC
Social Science Department will be offering a nine-day workshop and a
week study tour in Mexico.
The
cultural geography of a Mexican city
and nearby villages will be the focus of
the nine-day session, to be held in
Guadalajar a from June 7-15.
(Approximate costs: $468-$508).
Ancient cities, Mexican folk arts,
sociology of rural and cuban communities, and sociology of cross
cultural studies will be the course offerings of the four-week bus tour
which begins June 16.
An introduction to Mexico course
will be offered Spring Term by Ingrid
Gram for potential participants and
other people interested in Mexico.
For more information, contact Joe
Searl, John Klobas, or Ingrid Gram in
the Social Science Department.

EMU Cultural Forum
EMU Ballroom, U of 0
March 1 "Squash" -

LCC Department of Performing
Arts
'4000 East 30th, Eugene
Feb. 28 The Sound of the Big
Band
March 6 Concert Choir and Wind
Symphony

CONCERT)
U of O Cultural Forum
EMU Ballroom, U of 0
March 2 Vern Williams
March 5 Gary Burton

*
*

low cost licensed
repairwork

froo estimates
recycla:l stereos.

*Buy - Sell - Trade

' Mon. - Sat 9 - 6 741-1597
1233 M St Springfield

JAZZ iS ALIVE!
At Perry's this wee~e nd

CAM NEW TON

Maude Kerns Art Center
1910 East 15th Ave., Eugene
345-1571
March 1, 2 Soda Fire Workshop
with Jennifer Owen
March 2-28 Elvira Lovera and
Gene Tonry
Oregon Gallery
U of O Museum of Art, Eugene
Feb 28-March 2 Sharon Fox

Opus 5
2469 Hilyard St., Eugene 484-171 O
Feb. 28, 29 Michael Keenan

with special guest Jack Newton
Friday, Feb. 29
$2 Cover

St. Mary's School, Hurley Hall
Corvallis 752-6328
March 1 Teresa Trull and Julie
Homi

Saturday, March 1

9:30-1:30

Coming March 15

Old and New Dreams

Charlie Haden, Don Cherry, Dewey Redmari, Ed Blackwell
Two shows

Perry's , 959 Pearl

PacificComm Gallery
132 E. Broadway, Eugene 485-3373
Feb. 28, 29 Carolyn Nuessle
Orum

Visions and Perceptions
1524 Willamette, Eugene 683-4604
March 4-April 5 Craig Cheshire

Black Forest
2657 Willamette, Eugene 344-0816
Feb. 29 - March 1 Snappy Service
March 5 Dakota
•

B.J. Kelly's
·1475 Franklin Blvd., Eugene
683-4686
Feb. 29 - March 1 Colour.

Eugene Quality Inn
222 E. Broadway, Eugene 344-1461
Feb. 28-March 1 Windcastle

Duffy's
801 E. 13th, Eugene 344-3615
Feb. 29-March 1 Hot Whacks

Taylor's
894 E. 13th, Eugene 687-0600
Feb. 28-29 The Blue Tones

lino's
3995 Main St., Spfd. 746-6669
Feb. 29 The Nads

Forrest Inn
Emerald Valley Golf Course,
Creswell
Feb. 28-March 1 Joe Boreland
Trio
March 3-April 5 First Impression

The Loft
1350 Alder, Eugene 686-2931
Feb. 28 J. Althea and Sioux
Thompson
Feb. 29 Tommy Smith

Perry's
959 Pearl, Eugene 683-2360
Feb. 29-March 1 Cam Newton
and Jack Newton

Page 10 The TORCH

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980

LCC gra,:plers place fourth at regional meet
by Kent Gubrud
of The TORCH

• Jon Guenther at 188 pounds lost two
matches and didn't place.

"They did a good job," says LCC
Wrestling Coach Bob Creed, referring
to the performances turned in by his
squad at the OCCAA championship
match. Of nine Lane grapplers competing in the meet six placed in the top
four in• their respective weight divisions.
The individual results were as
follows:

J. 0. Whetham, wrestling at 126
pounds, pinned his first man and went
on to win a decision over his second
opponent 6-1. Whetham then advanced to the championship bracket where
he lost 12-0, taking second in the
league.

lege grappler 9-3, but lost his second
match 6-2. Williams came back in the
consolation bracket, defeating his rival
from Umpqua 16-1 and going on to
place third in his weight division with a

Mike Gates, wrestling in the 177
pound class, lost 4-3 in an overtime
decision to the Clackamas Community
College entrant. His second match
was a 12-0 decision against Mt. Hood's

Roy Williams, at 134 pounds,
defeated a Mt. Hood Community Col/I

¾'

-~C~'~or'1J~-~L

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DAILY DEALS
Shady Maple
Organically Processed
Canadian Maple Syrup .. $1 .85 lb .,
Liquid Malt Barley .... ... .. .45c lb.
Bulk Unpasteurized Apple Cider
Vinegar ... ..... .. .. ...32c lb .
Bulk Idaho Clover Honey .. 90c lb .
Bulk Oregon Star Thistle
Honey
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Bulk Vanilla
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Farm Fertile Eggs ..... $1 .25 doz .

Hours: Monday~Friday 9-7_
Saturday 10-6
141 No. 3rd St:
SPRINGFIELD

the -~
,pagetti -~, . .
wa,ehou,e
THE GREAT
IATE
SPAGEI II
FEED
.Every Tuesday and Thursday from 8:30 ti1
closing.. All the spagetti you can eat. (plus a
pitcher of beer, soft drink, or half carafe of
wine per person)

3.95

Special Student Discount
75t off on all dinners SUNDAY night
(with a current student body card)
Got a birthday coming up? Come in the day before,
the day after, or the day of your birthday for a free dinner.
725 West 1st

Open every day by 5 pm

484-1919

Lee Dilley broke his winning ~t~ea~ when he : lost ~13-111. in the OCCAA
• ,
•. •
semi-finals.
Photo by Tom Brown ,,
°' 6-0 win over the Central Oregon Comtop wrestler. Gates finished third in
munity College entrant.
the championship match with an overtime score of 4-3.
Gary Henaman at 142 pounds lost
two matches and did not place.
Bill Cantrell, 190 pounds, lost two
matches and did not place

At 150 pounds, previously
undefeated Lee Dilley, by luck of the
draw, automatically won his first
round match because he had no opponent. Dilley then went on to lose in
the semi-finals 13-1'1. In consolation
bracket action Dilley fell his first opponent but lost third place against' an opponent- he
in the
- had beaten earlier
.
season 12-4.

In the heavyweight class, Jim Prior
won a decision from the Mt. Hood
contender in his first match but lost his
second one in a fall. In consolation he
pinned his adversary. Prior eventually
lost 2· 1 to a 330-pound opponent and
took fourth place honors for his efforts.

Dave Peterson, 167 pounds, who
normally competes in the 142 pound
class, was moved up to the heavier
weight class for the championship and
lost his first match 12-7. He came back
to win his next match and advance to
the third place competition, where he
lost 10-7. Peterson placed fourth in his
weight divisi\>n.

As a team, LCC finished fourth with
32¾ total points.
The National Qualifying Region 18
Championship will be held this
weekend in Bend. The first three
wrestlers in each division will advance
to the National Junior College Championships the following week in Worthington, Minn.

««<c::«;«c::cC:C:C:« « «

.-C:C «:«:C:«:C:C:«:C:«:

Â¥

.

-~

.

A
A

BUS'IN€S'S' \
i
IIDMINIS'TRIITION MIIJORS'II·

>>>>
Â¥

. .

FULFILL VOUR MIITH€MIITIC~ R€QUIR€M€NT
TO TH€ U OF O BUS'IN€S'S' S'CHOOL
' ,
BV Tlllc'.ING MATH 106 AT LCC

i
A

t

=
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
:

(If you haven't taken Math 101, enroll for thiilirst.)

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980 The TORCH

Page 11

Karate tea~her promotes mental discipline,control
the "mental discipline."
According to Chamberlain, getting
his students to the point "where they

can control their own mind and their
own reactions is really the hardest part
of karate."

r·····C-ASR······1

.w

I

EEEEIIYYAHHH!!!!!
s·creams echo through the court as
20 men and women stand at attention,
ready to fend off the nearest imaginary
attacker.
No, it's not an underground military group preparing for a Russian invasion. These are LCC students learning
the fine art of karate.
Instructor Wes Chamberlain uses
the Shor-rye style of karate but also intermingles the Japanese Okinawan
style with Chinese techniques.
Chamberlain said that he first
studied karate in 1968 while in the army, earning his black belt in "around
two and a half to three years."
While some people associate karate •
Chamberlain
with aggressiveness,
seems to contradict this stereotype. In
order to become skillful in the martial
arts, "You have to first lose the desire
to win," he states. "If you get someone who is a scrapper or a boxer
and feels s/he's got to get in there and

Coffee Bean
of the
Month
DECAF
· colomblan, French Roast,
Vienna Blend
We are proud to be roasting
these find decaHelnated coffees
which are carelu11y proceued
in Bremen, Germany, for the
molt flavor with the least
caffeine. Try any or a11, you
won't believe It'• decaf! ·

••

•
•

•

i loryo ur !•
•

! BOO KS!
•

•

••
•••
••
•
•
•
,: Up to SO% of the purchase price :
•
••
•
: for books "1'hich "1'ill be used .:
•
•
'
:
ter1n.
next
:
••
••

Photo by Bruce Glidden
by Kent Gu brud
of The TORCH

•
••

.

.

make a point, that attitude will only
keep him/her from becoming any better."
If anything, Chamberlain adopts an
anti-aggressive attitude towards karate
and life. While explaining to his
students some of the philosophy and
history behind karate, Chamberlain's
voice changes to one of utmost
seriousness. He tells his class that if he
finds any of them using karate in an aggressive manner or abusing their
knowledge, he-will refuse to teach that
person any longer.
of
one
Mahoney,
Danny
Chamberlain's beginning students,
says that although he finds the
movements and exercises "awkward"
and often "very difficult," he enjoys
the sport because it combines the
benefit of a rigorous workout with a
useful skill.
Karate requires a fine-tuning of the
body through tiring exercises, but
Chamberlain says the hardest part is

IO•U I••
arch
I••
•
•
bring the1n i••
I••
i
to
I.•
•.
t .......... THE LCC ...........i
•

•

,

BOOKSTORE
·-

Winter term linal schedul e
"

I f your class

is on--+

M,W,F,MW,MF,WF,MWF,MUWHF,MUWH,MWHF,MUHF,MUWF

..

.!-.

U,H,UH,UWHF

and starts
at
J,
0700 or 0730

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

F, 0900-1100

0800 or 0830

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

u, 0800-1000

0900 or 0930

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

H, 0800-1000

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

1200 or 1230

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

1300 or 1330

your exam day and time will be on

1400 or 1430

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

1500 or 1530

your exam day and time will be on

1600 or 1630

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

u,

1700 or 1730

your exam day and tirn~-will be on W, 1600-1800

H, 1600-1800

1800 or LATER

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

w,
w,
w,

1000-1200

1200-1400

1400-1600

1000-1200

H, 1000-1200

u,

1200-1400

H, 1200-1400

u,

1400-1600

H, 1400-1600
1600-1800

Page 12

The TORCH

Feb. 28 - March 26, 1980

omnium-gathe,um

Anti-Nuke petition drive

Citizens for Safe Energy, students
from LCC and the U of 0, and a
number of Eugene organizations, are
planning an intensive anti-nuclear
power petition drive the weekend of
February 29, March 1 and 2. The three
statewide nuclear initiatives would:
• Require the existence of a high
level nuclear waste repository and
voter approval before the construction
of future plants can be built.
• Ban the construction of future
nuclear plants.
• Ban the present nuclear plant in
Oregon as a producer of electricity by
fission .
The group's goal is to -collect 16,000
signatures by April 1. If interested, call
485-5271, or 687-0295, or sign up at
the OSPIRG desk next to the main entrance of the LCC library.

Draft _counseling offered

Campus Interfaith Ministry will present a d iscussion entitled , " Families
and Conscience: Surviving the Draft,"
o n Sunday, M arch 2, from 7 to 9 p.m.
at t he Central Presbyterian Church, at
1475 Patterson St. , Eugene.
The program will focus on relaying
correct information to persons of draft
age and their parents; on providing
models for family discussions of
va lues, con science, and draft; and on
provi ding skill s and resources for
fa milies w anti ng to clarify their values .
Th e evenin g, which is free of charge,
is bein g sponsored by Presbyterians
A llied in Co mmon Tasks (PACT) ; Campus Interfa ith Ministry; Rabbi Myron
Kinberg of Temple Beth Israel; and is
endorsed by the Church and Society
Divisiof1 of the Cascades Presbytery,
the Coalition Opposing Registration
and the Draft (CORD), Parents Against
Registration
and
the
Draft
(PARDnership), and Clergy and Laity
Concerned (CALC). For further information , contact Doug Huneke, program coordinator, at 484-1707.

N

ROBERTSON S DRUG
7

Your prescription is
our main concern.

2_43-7715 30th & Hil11ard

The Statewide Health Coordinating
Council will hold a public meeting on
the preliminary state health plan,
Monday, March 3, from 7:30 to 10
p.m. in Harr~s Hall, 125 E. 8th Ave.
The plan identifies health problems
among the population and health care
system, and will be used to determine
. the need fo~ __ hospital and nursing

BYU representative here

A representative from Brigham
Young University will be on campus
Monday, March 10, at 9 a.m. to visit
with students interested in BYU. He
will discuss such things as admissions,
major requirements, employment and
whatever else you have questions
about. For the location and more information, contact Jean Shaffer at the
Admissions Office.

I

This week, Feb. 25-29, is Appropriate Technology Week at LCC.
Films, speakers, debates, presentations and other activities are planned
for each day. A panel discussion on
solar heat will take place Friday,
Feb.29, in Forum Room 308-9 from
noon until 4 p.m. Call the Student Activities Center at 747-4501, ext.2336,
for details about other events.

•

c a,, ·

Good" ol' 51 Chevy Pickup. Rebuilt engine and transmission.
12 volt $500. Jay 461 -0626.
'66 Chevy II wagon . Runs - needs work. Good for parts. Good
tires . 345-6130 after 6 or weekends.
'56 Chev. 2 door hardtop, power steering, $700 or best offer.
Call Scott at 345-6746.

=
i5
=
1976 Blue Dodge 1 ton Van. 15 passe nger, good conditi on,
E ready
to customi ze. $2, 600, cal] 271- 185 or
_
_

1971 Pontiac Gran Prix. Mint condition. All electric, ai r, 21
mpg, 48,000 miles. $1 ,250. 933-2 559.
4

5
§

I
German I

741 0116

fO I I a Ie

Skis, Boots, Poles. $60. Official used skis of the winter olym;; pi es. Call 485-6096.

is

AUTO SERVICE

i

,:r©~©iJA .

EXPERT
WORKMANSHIP

New and Used Christian Books.f5 Miller, Price, Lind sey,
Grahm, lattaye, landorff, Teresa 689-1879 eves.

5
=

.

Eight Track old Rock and roll Collecllon. f 5 <65 tapes) a nd
Panasonic eight track player .. Call 343-3440.

:

E

., ·5
5

Dynaco 400 Amplifier. 400 watts RMS like new in top cond i-

..

Hoover apartment-sized

Jr. Size Sekova Guitar $30 . Call 726-6795-after 3 p. m.
Unicycle with 24" wheel. Good co ndi tion $40 . Call
689-1292, leave message.

Recycled Stereos: Rece ive rs, turntable,, ~peakers, tape
mac hine~. Va n ous prices. STEREO WORKSHOP, 12.33 M . St. ,
Springfi eld, Mon .-Sat., 9-6, 74 1- 1597.

-

E

:

§
:

Bible and Literature
The course is designed to acquaint students
with the stories and poetry of the Bible and
to recognize references and allusions_to
Biblical sources when they· appear in
modern literature. •
Delta Sanderson

Day UH

Credits: 3

•
,a
II
t
9
mae t I n91.

5 FREE:Three loveab le, energetic famale kittens (6 1/2 mon ths
:: old). Need good country_homes. DESPERATE!!! Call 345-6909.

::

§

=:
5
5

e

Associated Students of LCC hold sena te meetings, Tues., 1-3.
Call ext. 2330 fo r info .
-------------------"FAMILIES and CONSCIENCE : Surviving the Draft" March
2, 7-9 p.m . Central Presbyteri an Church , 1475 Pa_tterson. Call
484-1707 for info.
Jogging for Smokers - A support group fo r smokers who wa nt
to quit. Lea ve message for Na ncy Wa rp at 726 _2204 or
counselin g.
Multiple Sclerosis: W hat do you kn ow about it? Meet wi th us
on Wednesdays at 1 p.m. in HE 205.

March 1st -- March against the DRAFT. Noo n 12th and Pat: : terson , 1:30 Wa~h-)eff. Park . 344-0009.

I t &f

d

5 - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - -- -- -E

§ LOST: Suede01
oun
=
outside of gym. I mi ss it. Pl ease cal l Cin5 dy at 683-2473jacket,
.

ii§

§

E

i
-

5

5

!5

E

PET LOVERS: New photograph y stud io now specializing in
Pet Portraits. M ost wo rk done in yo ur home. Call Tom at 5
683-4715 .
:
.
Desks, lots ot work area $25. Cal l Travis at 344-0711!.

§=

wanted

5

§

Spanish Departm_
ent needs old magazines for picture file.
Pl ea~e leave them in Language Arts office._
Used sewing table wanted ·- for u~e with Singer free-arm ~ewing m~chine. Call 34.'i_-6909
•
d h
fl
•
U se 4- arness oor loom . 342-7031 after 4.

5
5
5

I
=
§

me11a9e I

Curly brown eyes, tilted up nose. you are loved Babe. from E
head to (ugly) toes! __ Wyla
5

=

=======---....:..._:_____________

Mom and Dad: Happy 25th Wedding Anniversary, I love you 5
__ Marie
::

E
5
E
E
5
E

Ki ngs-· I miss your poker faces and other things too.
Q ueen

washer. Good fo r si ngle
§ person. Good cond1t1on $25.dothes
Ca ll 345-6909.
= TRADE: 180cm K-2 comp. ski s fo r your 190-200 cm skis.
§ Great ski s bu t too short . 689-6356.

5

5
!§

Jepsen CSG-9 Flight computer $15. Jepsen PJ-1 Navigation
Pl otter $5 683-3585.

Canopy for 3/4 ton long-bed truck. Has cupboards and ismsulated. In good condition. $400. Call 726-8312.

--

5

JIM'S HONDA
The Alternative Hondacar Service
Speciali zi ng in mobile tune-ups. All work guaranteed .
484-4556.

Kelly Price: You're enchanting, intriguing, clever, sexy and
too damn yo ung! Your move.--Elar;l
::

E lion $32 5. 726- 11 66, leave message.

i

5

5

§

'78 Schwinn 10 speed runabout frame with varsity derailer.
G rab ons, fe nders, lights and extras. 747-580 1 eves.

E
=
5

1

,e,v1ce,

;ff;;

4 steel spoked high shine chrome rims. (a ppliance) wi th 4
new 8" tires. $2 50 or best offer, must se ll.

2045 Franklin Blvd.
Eugene, Oregon 97403
342-2912

§

RESUMES -- DISSERTATIONS. Express service. Counseling,
editing, and typing of Resumes, D issertations and rerm papers.
485-4924.

r,~-.." •~rlcoorl;,;oo <000
:;·0~1~;::9p~~~;~! ~~~yc;;; ;~~;~;;;~~r~-$2-oa-~;·
726- 1586 after 5 p.m.

5

I

[!)A,:f~~~

. ~

'66 Ford Fairlane GT. New high performance 390, 4 speed.
Balanced from drivelin~ up. ISMPS 746-7037 after 5.

Brand New Birkenstocks Clog Style. Size 36M double soles.
Barbara 935-7293 Eveni ngs.

E

Time: 1300- 1430

•

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:
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:
::

Seq.834

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§

Solar heat focus of panel

Ctl~W
w~~~ct[!)ct~

home facilities, as well as other public
and private health services.
Copies of the health plan can be
found in all county courthouses, most
county libraries, all comunity college
and university libraries, and all health
systems agencies' offices.
For additional information, contact
Richard H. Grant, director of the state
health planning and development
agency at (800)-452-7813, ext.378
4341.

State health plan viewed

lOST: Blue spiral notebook (left-hand bound). Contact : Darrel Smith ext. 2336. ASLCC or S.R.C.

•

hou1Ina

Ip
Need non-smoking female roomate to share 3 bedroom
apartment with 2 others. One block from UO campus. Call
485-6085.

=
5 -------------------5 Free Utilities/laundry, large Springfield house. Separate
=
s bedroom/co-op house. $150 per month . Non-smokers.
·5 child'
746-0940.
= -------------------5 ROOMATE
WANTED: $80 per month plus 1/2 utilities. Call
E Mike at 747-5801 .
:E ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -§ _Furnished Apartment for rent, $160. 15th and Main, Spr5 .1ngf1el_d . Call 746-8297 .

§

Want to live in a comfortable atmospherel Have your own
= room?,
Be near the U of O and H endric ks park ? Rents only

5 $100 and 1/3 utilities . Call 344-2111.
:: - - - - - -- - -- - - - - -- - - - 5 FEMALE WANTED: March 15. Clean organized household .
55 No pets, tobacco. Near LCC, busline, bike path. $120 per
5 month . Call 343-0670.
= - ------------------5 Female Roomate Wanted. Large pine-paneled bedroom
5 available April 7. Calt 344-5382 . $117 plus utilities.

The

D-- Welcome to the CCC
A
Donna: I can't say, come o ut of hid ing and let me see you; in
the gym. Signed CEPEDA

I' m looking for a babysitter for my baby. Come in my home :E
from 9:30 until 2 p.m. 484-0097.
::

§

Tomas Granander: Know w ho loves you ? With all my hea rt.
--Ma rgaret

=

Pleezer: Take a chun k, sister; EWE missed the point. We have
multi ples . EWE have fractionals--Big "O" Add1x

§

To my main man: Sure been some 2 months huh? Happy An-

S
5

5

. niversary -· M ary
.
,
Terce, Yo u rea ll y excite me. Let s ge t toget her and get some
ex tra hea t goi ng.
Mike

!§
!§

Rebellion and foresight build up intern ally, to periods like
w hat j ust passed. I'm well again outside, Barb.
Love, Cindy

5
:
5

Barb and Cindy-- Make new friends but keep the old, one 1s
sil ve r and t_he other's gold . Love. Sara

E

Barbie, I' m not a sickli ng. Instead too sensi tive to live today. §
Peopl e make me sic k.

§

1. Cepeda, I notice yo u run around wit h cute frie nds. W ho is :
th e o ne wit h short hair and bea rd ?
::
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ::
DENNIS, But I'm only drivin', d nvin'.
::
Barb- Th anx for breadfast t he other morn . Yer reward is eminent. Frank

E
=

:E

Sara, Pretty soo n you'll be able to see how well your 5
photography was at the W il lie Nelso n Co nce rt. Hope for t he
best.
::
Vicki: M issed you muc h -- w here have you been? Welcome
back -- The Hulk
:
.
.
Helen: Is 11 true that you are th e q ueen of hearts.1 Your sec ret :: •
admirer
§

=

5
E

Car-less Schultz: Belated birthday kisses, --er, wishes! Car 54
wh ere are you / -- Dale
Eric 8.: I'm giving up, but ca n I still fantas ize? -- Dee

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

5
5

E
5

Johnny l : It would be nice if you w ere free. Your eyes are ::

beautiful.
Greg: Welcome to LCC. You ' re a long way from Sweet Home.

5

5
5

LCC Dead Heads Unite: Eugene, Oregon as soon as possible. ::
Vicky: Welcome back! We missed you . You are much appreciated! -- The Counseling Department

§
5

Harald: lch Liebe dich sehr! -- Brenda
• Charlotte H.: Why not edit me in as the main feature of your§
HALL of fame? -- Dale
To all pro-draft people: Go volunteer Now! Nothing is stopping you.

5
5

5

:
Colene: I' m shy but the next time I see you I'll talk to you . -- 5
Eric B.
5
•
::
SIN-dy and Sandra D.: Don ' t forget! There' s night skiing on 5
the slopes thi s weekend. -- Steve
:
::
Jim: I'm so lucky to ha,e you. I'll always be yours. •- All my 5
love, Laura
5
We must come together and show our simularities--not to split
from our diiferences--oppose the draft.
5

E

§

James P. You finally made it. Wow! Love Laura
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - :
Holly, You should oi come Saturday night. But I can unders- 5
tand why you didn' t, I think. Who
•
:
- - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - :
Hey, Kandziora , quit writing on desks. You are being 5
watched.
Me 5

.

=

David -- We all love you and your fur . We' d die if you shaved 5
it. Your fans .
:

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