Lane Community College

4000 E. 30th Avenue

Eugene, Oregon 97405

An Independent Student Newspaper

April 11-_,, 1985

LCC tax fund forgivable? Oregon House decides
by Jackie Barry

TORCH Editor

Lane County wants
forgiveness. But it's going to
have to put up a fight to get it.
Some time soon (possibly
Thursday, April 11), the
Oregon House of Representatives will decide whether
Lane County should be relieved of a $736,167 debt of
unsegregated tax funds to 18
Lane County taxing districts.
Lane Community College is
one of these taxing districts.
Attorney Joe Richards
represents the taxing districts
and he says the house is expected to pass the bill (ORS
2229) and ''probably after that
we'll file an action" in Oregon
Tax Court.
At first, the sum was
$2,135,342.81, but was whittled down during several months of negotiations between
the county and representatives
of the taxing districts.
The debt stems from a 1983
Oregon Tax Court ruling on a
suit filed by the Portland

School District against
Multnomah County. The tax
court judge ruled that a 1979
amendment to state law requires counties to distribute
interest that accrues on property tax dollars five days
after it is received. Lane County distributed these interest
dollars after seven or eight
days, according to Vice President of Administrative Services Bill Berry, who also says
the problem involved interpr et at ion of the word
"received." Berry stated the
county felt they hadn't received the money until it was
deposited and posted.
So, interest accrued from
fiscal year 1980-81 until fiscal
year 1983-84 amounts to the
original $2,135,342.81 figure.
Lane County agreed to the
$736,167 sum during negotiations but turned to the
legislature to forgive the debt.
"The county doesn't want to
settle," says Richards.
But "You can't spend the
money twice,'' states Lane

Go for
Baroque
at LCC

this Aprit
The LCC community and
the public are invited to "go
for Baroque at Lane Community College'' during a
mid-April celebration of the
Baroque era.
To celebrate National
Library Week, April 15-19,
the Friends of the LCC
Library are planning a program that will demonstrate
the arts and look at other
aspects of life in the Baroque era - 1600 to 1750. The
Baroque celebration was
sparked by the 300th anniversary this year of the
births of three great composers - Bach, Handel and
Scarlatti.
College departments will
join the celebration by
"showing and telling"
about their disciplines during the Baroque era. A central event will feature a slide
talk by David Croft of the

County Commissioner Peter
Defazio. "What everyone
conveniently ignores is that
we're losing revenue while
they're just tightening their
belts." Defazio pointed out
that the county now has 900
employees compared to 1800
employees in 1980. "There are
no more nice things done by
the county," he states, adding
that the next things to go will
be things like public health
and safety funds.
In a March 7 letter to LCC
President Eldon Schafer,
County Administrator Jim
Johnson wrote, ''The county's
Budget Committee has received a proposed budget for next
fiscal year. The budget does
not include funds to keep open
the County Historial Museum;
contribute to the Joint Social
Services Fund; ... or to finance
rural Sheriff's patrols after
Jan. 1, 1986, the last half of
the fiscal year.'' Johnson goes
on to say ''The funds that
would be paid to taxing
districts would be more than
enough to adequately fund the
above services."
Defazio also points out the
money in question was
"budgeted in public budget
process" and that "none of
the taxing districts objected at
that time'' including Lane
County Budget Committee
members who also serve the
taxing districts.

LCC President Eldon
Schafer says, "This is a
serious issue for the county
(reduced revenue), I don't
doubt that." But "the county
should've known the money
was due,'' and states the settlement amount is "ultimately
fair" and "overly generous."
Another issue appears to be
surfacing in conjunction with
unsegregated taxes -- the issue
of traffic safety in the 30th
Avenue-McVay Highway
area.
At the LCC Board of
Education meeting on March
20, Johnson told board
members, ''The county is trying to cooperate and the board
is expecting some cooperation."
And Johnson explained a
proposal in his letter to
Schafer "whereby the county
could get a credit against its
obligation to the district. For
example, a school district
could suggest that for every $1
spent by the county for safety
improvements at intersections
within the district, the county
could be given a credit of
$1.25 on its debt to that
district."
"This
(safety
improvements) is not an LCC
dollar problem," states
Schafer, who says the problem
belongs to the county and the
state highway department.
Schafer points out that LCC

has a "million dollar roof problem and parking lots" that
need attention and these problems are within college goals
while giving the county credit
for road improvements is not.
''The county tries to make a
game of it but we won't play
that game," he says.
DeFazio states the issues are
never totally separate and
"anytime someone's suing you
for money you don't have -relations suffer." He pointed
out that Springfield has been
more cooperative on this issue;
they were willing to take a
small settlement to court.
Also, ''I'm getting extreme
anger from Springfield
because they have four road
projects that have been
defunded."
DeFazio feels the taxing
districts should have tested the
smaller amount in the Oregon
Tax Court. But Richards questions the advisability of this,
saying individual board
members might be open to
lawsuits from constituents.
Defazio states, ''Mr.
Richards has a very bizarre
theory ... If they're concerned
about the liability, they'll support the legislature. Instead,
they're mounting a campaign
against it." Schafer says this is
because they ''question the advisability'' of whether the
legislature can do any more
than clarify the law.

Board votes tuition increase
Social Science Department,
an excerpt from Moliere's
''The Doctor In Spite of
Himself,'' and a dramatization of an interview with
three finalists for the post
of Kultermeister - Bach,
Handel and Scarlatti. This
event is planned for
Wednesday, April 17, from
11 a.m. to noon in the LCC
Theatre. Those attending
may donate $1.50 or a used
book if possible.
For more information
about the celebration - or to
purchase a black, all-cotton
T-shirt emblazoned with
portraits of Bach, Handel
and Scarlatti
and the
message, ''Go for Baroque
at LCC" - interested persons should call the Friends
of the LCC Library at
726-2220 or inquire at the
LCC library.

Proposed cuts divulged

by Jackie Barry

TORCH Editor

The LCC Board of Education and LCC administrators
discussed possible solutions
and proposed budget cuts at a
meeting Wednesday, April 10.
Several board members expressed regret at having to
raise tuition, but a motion to
do so passed unanimously.
(Charlene Curry was absent.)
Beginning summer term,
1985, tuition will increase to
$19 per credit hour; $209 for
full-time district residents; and
$30 for 30-clock hour Community Education and High
School completion courses.
Tuition will remain the same
for out-of-district residents.
And Vice President of Student
Services Jack Carter stated
there will be some adjustments

made to Community Education course tuition, such as
Court Reporting, whereby
full-time students wouldn't
pay more than the $209 fulltime rate.
This increase is expected to
generate $240,000 per year to
offset possible cuts.
Another levy election was
mentioned for further discussion at a later board meeting.
Bill Berry, vice president of
Administrative Services,
presented proposed cuts for
the 1985-86 budget to include
17 to 20 full-time equivalent
faculty posi1»ons and 19 to 21
full-time equivalent classified
positions.
Vice President of Student
Services Jack Carter outlined
specific cuts proposed for the
General Fund.
Slated for possible cuts are

one full-time equivalent
employee from the Women's
Program, soccer and one
classified position in the Intramurals area of sports. The
Women's Program may be cut
to a nine month operation,
counseling services might be
cut from 3,560 counseling
days to 2,850 counseling days
and the ASLCC might lose
$3,263 of its funding.
"We're
looking
at
reorganization to minimize the
impact,'' stated Carter after
the meeting, along with regrets
about any cuts at all to programs where much time has
gone into developing programs and services.
Carter also noted that some
departments couldn't be cut
such as Financial Aid, Admissions and Records, and the
Torch.

Page 2 April 11--, 1985 The Torch

Inspired? Give your favorite instructor a vote!
r----------.2>· ~------------------- --------------------·
I nominate _ _ _ _ _ for the LCC "Outstanding Instructor of the Year" Award. The
teaching excellence of this instructor is exhibited in the following way(s):
(Please try to cover l)Classroom teaching/student effectiveness; 2) Department participation; 3) Contributions to the college/community; 4) Professional activities. Attachments may
be made to complete this statement; please print or type.)

Please provide names, mailing addresses, and telephone
numbers of two persons who have agreed to support the
nomination. These people may be contacted by the Office of
Instruction and asked to submit written statements of support.
Name:

Name:

Address:

Address:

Phone:

Phone:

This form must be completed in FULL, and returned to
the Office of Instruction, 2nd floor, Administration
Building, by 4 p.m., Friday, April 26, 1985.
This nomination submitted by:
Name:
Address:
Phone:
Signature:

----------------------------------1------------------KLCC : "Legends of Jazz," also Jewish programs 1n April
•

Jazz Film Festival
KLCC 89FM and Mark
Cantor will cosponsor an exclusive Eugene showing of
"Legends of Jazz" -- a jazz
film fes ti val -- on Friday,
April 12, and Saturday, April
13, at 7:30 p.m., and a
matinee Saturday April 13 at 2
p.m., in the Soreng Theatre at
the Hult Center. Tickets for
the movie are $6, a portion of
the ticket sales will be donated
to KLCC. Tickets are
available at all Hult Center
outlets. For information, call
687-5000.

Holocaust Series
During the week of April
15-19 on its Blue Plate Special
KLCC 89FM will present a
series of nine modules reflecting the remembrances of
holocaust survivors and
former Allied soldiers who
liberated them.
Holocaust Remembrance
Activities
Temple Beth Israel will
sponsor a week of public
events in recognition of
Holocaust Remembrance Day.
• Sunday, April 14 -- Interfaith prayer service at 2550

=:ns:r.:i::=:::;;~i::,::,:~:i:
Military
recruitment
favored

To the Editor,
I feel that military recruitment is perfectly acceptable.
With today's economy the
young and inexperienced need
to review every option. The
military is one.
Those who feel that the
military is evil and should not
be condoned blind themselves
to the good points of the
military.
The estoreric things of
patriotism, loyalty, and esprit
de corps.
The practical: Training,
matching funds for education,
the teaching of discipline, or
the giving of a chance to one
who didn't have one before.
Or
The romantic: Traveling to
distant lands, learning exciting

skills or having the chance at
becoming greater than you
thought possible.
Those who feel that these
points are minor and should
be ignored are ignorant blind
fools.
A person could look at
religion (Christianity is not left
out) and find that religion has
started more wars and caused
more torture and death than
any one nation, military, and
therefore would decide that
religion should be abhored
(including the worship of
Yahweh or God) because of its
bad points.
Recruitment by the military
should no more be disallowed
then having the continued exist a nce of the Campus
Ministry. In fact since the
military would be a temporary
setup, justice almost demands
equal time.
Sincerely,
Brad Thompson
Former ASLCC Senator

Portland Street in Eugene at 7
p.m.
• Monday, April 15 -- A film
and discussion of racism with
Alan Eytan, regional director,
Anti-Defamation League.
"The Camera of My Family"
will be shown, the event will be
at South Harris Hall,
downstairs, on the corner of
8th and Oak.
• Wednesday, April 17 -- As
part of the temple's lecture
series on Jewish Identity and
Contemporary Issues, Dr.

Student
Advising
News

Glenn May and Baruch
Fischoff will speak about
and
Holocaust
''The
American Jewish Identity."
The talk will be held at 2550
Portland Street in Eugene at 8
p.m., admission is $3 ($2 for
students).
• Friday, April 19 -- A sabbath service with special
speaker Rabbi Daniel Landis
will be held at the temple at
2550 Portland Street, beginning at 8 p.m.
• Saturday, April 20 -- At 8

Career Talks ...
Registration ...
Schedule Changes ...
Transfer Information ...
Electronics Career Talk

John Winquist, the newly appointed chair of the Electronics Department,
will present information on Lane's new programs and classes that will train
you to work in tomorrow's high tech industries on April 18. The talk will be
held in 308 Forum Bldg. from 3-4 p.m. and is sponsored by the Career Information Center. Come and learn about the changes in the Electronics Department's programs and class offerings.
College visilations

Portland State University staff will be in the LCC cafeteria from 10-12 on
Monday, April 15. They will have written information available and resource
people to answer any questions about PSU programs and facilities.
Transfer inf~rmation

Transferring to a four year college will be smoother if you've met your
general requirements while at LCC. Find out which courses meet general requirements at OSU and U of O and receive answers to any other transfer
questions by attending an information session in Center 220 on Friday, April
12, from 11 to 12.
If you're planning to be admitted into the U of O Undergraduate School of
Business for the Fall of 1985, you need to have your application in between
April 1 and April 21. Late applications will not be accepted. You must have
submitted your regular U of O application to the Admissions Department
and been accepted before you apply to the School of Business.
George Fox College in Newberg , Oregon will be visiting LCC on Friday,
April 12 . They will be in the cafeteria between 11 and 2. Stop by to learn what
it is like to go to a small, private college and to get information about classes
and programs.
>

p.m. at the temple Dr.
Jonathan Ostrow will present
a slide show and lecture on the
Jews of Ethiopia.
For more information, call
Tempole Beth Israel at
485-7218.

The

TORCH

EDITOR: Jackie Barry
ASSOC/A TE EDITOR: Ellen Platt
SPORTS EDITOR: Ron Gullberg
PHOTO EDITOR: Gary Breedlove
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS: David
Stein, Dallell Parmenter, Starla Roberts,
Richard Smith
STAFF WRITERS: Ann Van Camp, Darren Foss, Allan Smolker, Kevin Harrington, Cindy Weeldreyer, Sharen
Hulegaard, Lisa Zimmerman, Joe
Templeton, Karen lrmscher
RESEARCH ASSISTANT: John Egan
PRODUCT/ON COORDJNA TOR:
Ann Van Camp
PRODUCTION: Mary Jo Dieringer,
Darren Richards, Darren Foss, Ila/
Brown, Zeke Pryka, Sharen Hulegaard,
Mike Spilman
DISTRIBUTION:
Cathy Nemeth, Darren Foss
RECEPTIONIST: Cathy Nemeth
ADVERTISING MANAGER:
Jan Brown
ADVERTISING ASSISTANT:
Shawnfta Enger
PRODUCTION ADVISER:
Dorothy Wearne
FACULTY ADVISER: Pete Peterson
The TORCH, a member of the
American Scholastic Press Association, is
a student-managed newspaper published
on Thursdays, September through June.
News stories are compressed, concise
reports intended to be as fair and balanced as possible. They appear with a byline
to indicate the reporter responsible.
News features, because of their broader
scope, may contain some judgments on
the part of the writer. They are also identified with a byline.
"Forums" are essays contributed by
TORCH readers and are aimed at broad
issues facing members of the community.
They should be limited to 750 words.
"letters to the Editor" are intended as
short commentaries on stories appearing
in the TORCH. They should be limited to
150 words. The editor reserves the right to
edit for libel or length. Deadline: Monday, /0a.m.
"Omnium-Gatherum" serves as a
public announcement forum. A ctivities
related to LCC will be given priority.
Deadline: Friday 10 a.m.
All correspondence must be typed and
signed by the writer. Mail or bring all correspondence to: The TORCH, Room 105,
Center Building, t/000 E. 30th Ave.
Eugene, OR, 97405. Phone 747-t/501, ext.
1655.

The Torch April 11-IJ, 1985 Page 3

New LCC class ·offers help in stress reduction
by Ann Van Camp

TORCH Staff Writer

Being "stressed out" is
nothing new. But what to do
about it has taken some new
twists -- and stretches -- and
bends here at LCC.
"PROGRESSIVE MUSRELAXATION:
CLE
STRESS REDUCTION'' (PE
170) is a class first offered last
Fall. Instructor Bob Creed
developed the class to help
people learn to deal with some
of the symptoms of stress, particularly muscle tension.

At the start of class, Creed
turns off all but four of the
lights in PE 125, and turns on
a soft music tape. A peaceful
composition plays as a
backdrop to Creed's gentle
voice.
The sound of chirping birds
helps complete the restfulness
in the minds of the 18 students
stretched out on the floor. He
describes the slow, deliberate
movements for his students to
make; gentle twists, gradual
tightening and relaxing, goodfeeling stretches.

'' I try to expose the class to
four or five different techniques of music and relaxation
measures, and then they can
choose what fits them personally," says Creed.
Creed helps his students
learn to identify what their
stressors may be, too.
"Most stressors are little
things that pile up. It's not big
things that are easy to identify," says Creed. He has his
students keep "Look Books"
-- personal journals which
contain daily records of how

LCC Instructor Bob Creed leads stretches in his Stress Reduction Class.

the student feels (physically he discovered he needed P .E.
and emotionally) before and credit.
"I talked to a couple of
after each I-hour session. The
record of feelings helps zero in counselors and told them I felt
like I was under a lot of stress,
on problem areas.
Feelings are aimed at peo- particularly since I've been out
ple, situations, health, and ex- of school for a number of
periences. Students look for years. They recommended this
patterns, repetitions, and com- class and the V.A. will pay for
binations. By the end of the this class--with permission."
term, stressors and methods of Tucker says the class taught
reducing the symptoms may him how to cope with stress.
"I found I could handle
have been noted enough times
better. I run my own
things
for the student to have acI have a family, I'm
business,
quired a successful system of
for here at school -- it's a lot."
reduction
stress
Tucker says the class was so
him/herself.
successful for him that he went
Creed's program also in- back to the V .A. counselors to
cludes a ''stress profile'' which get permission to take the class
students must fill out early in again this term. "For me,"
the term. The profile rates the says Tucker, '' I told them the
student's life for a 6-month class was a necessity!"
period prior to the class and
A member of the LCC staff
develops a ''vulnerability is in the class, too. Preferring
score."
to remain anonymous, she
Creed offers to talk to says she thinks some
students outside of class if employees are under trementhey have high scores in some dous pressures. "We need
areas, ''but they should go and something like this (class).
talk to the Counseling Depart- We're dealing with people all
ment. There are many ways to the time. I think it's a great
work with stress, "says Creed. break in the day and I switch"Some students want and ed my lunch hour just so I
need counseling 1-on-1 and •could take this class."
they think that's what they'll
Creed says the class is just
be able to get in this class. But about the right size as far as he
we can't do all that here."
is concerned, but he added he
Four of Creed's students would still take more students
seem to have found what they if they wanted to get in right
need and are back again this away. "It's a Pass/No Pass
term. Charles Tucker says he course and having missed a
took the class last term after few days isn't a problem."

Spelling Bee offers fun, prizes
by Ellen Platt

TORCH Associate Editor

If you like spelling, now's
the time to enter the first Ruff
Spelling Bee for fun and profit.
As part of this year's
Reading Fair, the Study Skills
Center will coordinate the
preliminary rounds and

organize the final competition
(to be held on May 15 during
the Reading Fair).
Prize money -- $50 for first,
$35 for second, and $15 for
third place -- for the contest is
the result of a donation by
retired Language Arts instructor Chuck Ruff. His gift of
$1,000 produces interest which

PTK wins recognition
Phi Theta Kappa, LCC's honor society, just received national recognition at a meeting which took place March
28-30 in St. Louis, Mo.
Michael McKibben, PTK vice president, was elected vice
president of the West/Northwest region. Mike is one of five
students elected this year as a regional vice-president.
Mitch Stepanovich, PTK advisor, was presented with the
Hall of Honor Award for ''exhibiting the highest degree of
excellence in service" to PTK. Mitch was also elected vicechairperson of the National PTK Sponsors Advisory Committee, which serves to advise sponsors and make recommendations to the national board of directors.
Dr. Eldon Schafer, LCC president, received the
Distinguished College President award for outstanding support of the ideals of Phi Theta Kappa.
LCC alumni member, Tony Hernandez, was also
presented with the Hall of Honor Award.

Galleries-<cont. rrom page 1>

White says his works offer a
''tongue in cheek view of my
environment."
David Joyce combines lifesized photo - cut-outs with
found objects in a realistic
context. The viewer is forced
to look twice, and then take a
much closer look to determine
which parts are photos and

which are actual objects.
Joyce enjoys getting an idea,
and seeing how it comes out.
"There's no way of telling
how it will work unitl it's
done," he says.
Ardas overlays silkscreen
colorfields with pastels,
creating a mystical mood.
The New Zone Gallery is
free and is open from 11-5,
Monday through Saturday.

ASLCC free legal services
for registered LCC students

is awarded as prize money to
promote good spelling and encourage literacy, says Pat
John, head of the Study Skills
Center. She added ''Chuck
wanted it to be as competitive
as possible, and to have as
many people involved as possible."

The preliminary rounds -held on April 10 at 3 p.m.,
April 16 at 3 p.m., April 24 at
noon, and May 1 at 3 p.m., all
in Center 446 -- feature a list
of 50 dictated words, to be
written correctly within a ten
second time period. The persons with the top two scores in
each preliminary round will
advance to the finals.
Everyone (all LCC students
and staff members currently
enrolled in a class) is welcome
to come and try their best in
every preliminary round,
(there will be four different
lists of words used).
The finals will take place on
May 15, at 12:30 p.m. in the
Study Skills Center, Center
486. The format will be oral,
and the words will be
presented by Study Skills
Center staff. John adds the
student finals will be proceeded at noon by a Celebrity Spell
Off judged by the KUGN
Morning Show gang. Local
notables, such as Don Bishoff
of The Register-Guard, a
real tor, two county commissioners, and a producer from
KEZI, will be participating.

•Routine legal matters (uncontested
divorce , name changes , wills , etc.)
•Advocacy (tenants rights , welfare , etc.)
•Advice and referral (criminal matters , etc .)

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Page 4 April 11~, 1985 The Torch

LCC students and staff save life of local resident
by Starla Roberts
for the TORCH

Without knowing it, approximately 32 LCC students
and staff helped save the life
of a local resident.
When the Lane Memorial
Blood Bank's (LMBB) Bloodmobile visited the campus Jan.
31, its technicians collected 32
pints of blood which were immediately used in a medical
emergency at Sacred Heart
Hospital.
"Blood is like a parachute.
If you don't have it when you
need it, you won't need it
again.''
That's how Jane Mink,
LMBB recruiter describes the
importance of blood and the
regular blood donors who give
it freely. She says LCC
students and staff play a vital

part in the success of the
LMBB through their donations to the LCC Blood Donor
Club.
When members of the college's population give blood,

tion to the good feeling of giving.
The amount of blood used
in an emergency procedure can
range any where from two
pints for minor surgeries to

24 blood donors n.e eded

for each bloodmobile visit
their donations contribute to a
supply used by patients in
county hospitals. Each donor
receives one credit when he or
she donates one pint of blood.
With the credit, that person,
his/her family, and friends
can draw blood through the
donor club at any time during
the next 12 months -- at no
charge. "That's the advantage," explains Mink, in addi-

100 pints ,for open-heart
surgeries.
To maintain its supply, the
LMBB collects an average of
111 pints per week, with 62
percent collected at its
Willamette Street office, and
38 from several county sites
where its Bloodmobile visits.
The Bloodmobile visits the
LCC campus once per term.
LMBB technicians attempt to

The LTD
Term Pass-expressly for

schedule 24 donors during the
stay. The average time for a
donation is approximately 20
minutes, although LMBB staff
advise potential donors to plan
for one hour away from work
and studies in order to include
time for for screening and
blood testing.
Donations from the LCC
Blood Donor Club supply the
five local hospitals. Because
Sacred Heart is the center of
medicine for Central Oregon,
it receives 80 percent of the
donations.
Suprisingly enough, only 3
percent of the 40 percent of
the population eligible to
ctoiiate blood actually give
blood. "It takes commitment," says Mink. "People
don't realize the importance
blood has in life until they are
faced with a tragedy," she

35mm·
~@D@CF

LCC

Now you can express yourself to and
from school and all over town with an
LTD Term Pass.
It gives you unlimited rides for three
months at a price that's hard to pass up
-only $40.00 for the entire term. We're
able to offer this special price because
it's subsidized by the A. S. L. C. C. And now
the Term Pass is available for faculty and
staff for just $44. 00.
The Term Pass is available at the LCC
Bookstore, the Springfield Pharmacy at
6th and Main or at the LTD Customer
Service Center at 10th & Willamette.
Express yourself with a Term Pass
from LTD.

Lane Transit District
For information call 687-5555.

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D Rush me two 20-exposure
rolls of your leading KODAK
MP film- Kodak 524 7® (200
ASA). Enclosed is $2.00. l'd
like to be able to get color
prints or slides (or both) from
the same roll and experience
the remarkable versatility of
this professional quality film.

NAME _________
ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ __

CITY _________
STATE _ _ _ _ ZIP _ _ __
Limit 2 rolls per customer.
Kodak 5247 is a registered trademark of the
Eastman Kodak Company. •

2623

Mail to: Seattle FilmWorks

P.O. Box C-34056
Seattle, WA 98124
'°1984 Seattle FihrMbrKS

says -- citing a recent example
in which a woman became a
donor after she experienced a
personal emergency.
The Bloodmobile will be on
campus again May 2. Interested donors should call
Student Health Service, ext.
2665 to make an appointment.
Donors may also call the
LMBB headquarters directly
at 484-9111 for an appointment to donate at the 2211
Willamette St. facilities.
Donations can be credited to
the LCC Blood Donor Club.

Like OEPBS?

Then tell
legislators so
by Christy Finley

TORCH Staff Writer

"Help Wanted" read the ad
that Gerald Rasmussen placed
in the Jan. 10 LCC Daily, the
staff newsletter. What he was
looking for were volunteers interested in writing or calling
legislators ''when the question
of funding Oregon Educational and Public Broadcasting (OEPBS) comes up.,,
Rasmussen, LCC vice president of the Office of Instruction and a commissioner on
the OEPBS, hopes that
listeners and viewers will contact legislators to let them
know they are interested in
broadcast programs so that
the state of Oregon will not cut
back funds. In response to his
ad, Rasmussen says he received four letters of interest -three from LCC faculty, one
from a student.
One of Rasmussen's personal interests as a board
member is to be certain that
KLCC is adequately funded,
and that the college's option to
televise courses is maintained.
During the 1983-85 biennium, OEPBS received
$4,222,275 from the state, and
KLCC received $40,000 of this
money. (KLCC receives funding from the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, and
generates the bulk of its funds
from radiothons, and underwriting.) Most of the college's
courses are cable cast on either
KOAC or Group W cable
Channel 20.
The vice president has been
on the OEPBS Board of Commissioners since 1981 when he
completed a term of another
appointee who vacated their
seat. He has since been reappointed to a 4 year term on the
I I-member board. The governor appoints five members,
the speaker of the Oregon
House of Representatives
three, and the president of the
Senate, three.
Radio stations directly
governed by the board include
KOAC AM in Corvallis and
KOAP FM in Portland.
KLCC is governed by the LCC
Board of Education. OEPBS
television stations include
Channel 7 in Corvallis, 10 in
Portland, 3 in Bend, and 13 in
LaGrande.

The Torch April 11-V, 1985 Page 5

FLC distributes food
by Kevin Harrington

TORCH Staff Writer

Most of Lane County's residents are familiar with the
periodic USDA cheese and butter giveaways.
What many people may not know is that the storage
transportation, and distribution of these commodities is ali
performed by volunteers.
Food for Lane County (FLC) is a recently incorporated
non-profit organization which specializes in emergenc;
food distribution.
Besides the cheese and butter distribution, FLC is
responsible for the distribution of surplus and donated
foods to the more than 40 churches and community
organizations providing emergency food assistance to
Lane County residents.
Last year over 1.5 million pounds of food were
distributed to needy people in Lane County.
At a news conference on Jan. 17, Program Coordinator
Caroline Frengle explained FLC's purpose. "We do two
jobs, one of which is to distribute USDA commodities to
the public and to emergency food providers (such as the
Salvation Army).
''The other, larger part of our program is getting and
distributing donated food. All the stores, (Safeway, Fred
Meyer, and others), turn in damaged food -- food that's
good ~o eat, but !s f~r s~me reason unsalable. Our job is to
coordmate the d1str1bution of this food to all the agencies
that actually serve the individual."
According to Frengle, senior citizens and shut-ins make
up. a large perce?tage o! the 40,000-50,000 Lane County
residents who will reqmre emergency food assistance in
1985.
FLC Volunteer Coordinator Mary Hope stressed the imP?rt~nce_ of volunteers. "We need volunteers, not just for
d1str1bution, but for everyday things like unloading trucks.
The government makes no provisions for transportation
storage, or distribution of (USDA) commodities. This i~
our responsibility.''
Hope adds the recent cheese and butter giveaway at LCC
(on Jan. 15) involved 14 volunteers, and served over 1800
people. Almost 5,000 pounds of cheese and butter were
given away.
The cheese and butter ran out in mid-afternoon because
of transportation difficulties due to lack of volunteers.
. Food for Lane County is located at 632 Day Island Road
m Eugene. Persons interested in volunteering their time or
donating food, can call them at 343-2822.
'

Health Service visits routine
but there are some that ...
by Heidi L. Lotito
for the TORCH

Receiving a phone call
about a naked women sitting
on a toilet, who refuses to
answer anyone is a bit unusual
admits LCC Student Health
Service (SHS) Director Sandra
Ing.
But, it's only one of the
"wild" things that happened
in the month of January at the
SHS.
''Why they call us on these
situations I have no idea, but
they do," says Ing who, along
with staff, had contact with
some 1,745 students during the
month of January. Most were
routine situations, however.
The SHS diagnosed and
treated 176 students for upper
respiratory problems, largely
due to the influenza virus
epidemic; 96 students for orthopedic problems, "We had a
lot of sprained ankles in
January", says Ing. "The
Physical Education Deptment is our biggest contributing factor."
In addition, the SHS treated
41 students for communicable

disease -- 10 of which were sexually transmitted, 5 of these
cases were genital herpes.
'' Actually the number of communicable diseases is a lot
higher, but it was a busy
month and unfortunately we
were unable to mark down all
cases.''
This was a typical busy
January for the staff at the
SHS. Ing reports the SHS
wrote 190 prescriptions, and
distributed 260 medication
samples, (these were given to
SHS by drug companies
throughout the State of
Oregon). Ing pin pointed the
most common problems seen
at the SHS: Upper respiratory
infections; genital-urinary
problems (including routine
women's exams); skin problems, such as scabies, impetigo, burns, allergic reactions, and warts; and orthopedic problems (breaks and
sprains).
The SHS has low prices to
accomodate all students at
LCC, and also offers free
hearing and sight screening.
The SHS is located on the first
floor of the center building.

Food distribution aids
25% of LCC students
by Jackie Barry
TORCH Editor

Approximately 25 percent
of the LCC student body took
advantage of the USDA
surplus cheese and butter
giveaway on campus last
week.
This was a "marked increase'' over the figures for
the last distribution in
January, according to ASLCC
Senator Joel Slavin who
helped coordinate the event.
On April 3 volunteers
distributed 6,060 pounds of
cheese as compared to 4,140
pounds distributed in January.
"We were able to avoid the
embarassment of running out
of food like we did last time,''
states Slavin. In January the
supply of food ran out before
4 p.m., when the event was
scheduled to close. LCC
received a larger allotment this
time, largely due to a greater
number of volunteers to handle the workload.
Eighteen volunteers - including ASLCC senators helped with the giveaway. And
other people assisted, as well.
Bob Tegge, food services
manager, allowed the cheese
and butter to be stored in a
walk-in cooler overnight so

Create alliances
seminar, April 11
On Thursday afternoon,
April 11, Lane Community
College will present an opportunity for community
organizations to learn how
they can create alliances
among themselves and how
those
alliances
can
strengthen their individual
efforts.
The seminar, ''Creating
Community Alliances, '' is
sponsored by the Building
Better Boards Project - a
cooperative effort among
LCC and several other community organizations. The
project provides educational programs for the
boards of directors of nonprofit organizations and
those who work with
boards.
A panel discussion also is
planned. Panelists are
Michael Connelly, United
Way; the Rev. John Craig,
Emerald Empire Council on
Aging; Linda Devine, Lane
Regional Arts Council;
John Lively, Springfield
mayor; and Larry Murray,
dean of community education at LCC.
The seminar, which costs
$4, is scheduled from 2:30
to 6 p.m. at the LCC
Downtown Center, Room
301-302. Interested persons
can reserve a place by calling 484-2126.

Slavin and Senator Rob Ward dealing with the department of
could pick it up the day before agriculture -- this is tentative
distribution. "We didn't have at best."
to worry about schlepping"
Slavin also says the
the food to LCC on Wednesguidelines
for the giveaway
day.
Slavin says another distribu- have been simplified, making
tion will most likely occur next it less frustrating for recimonth. "It's supposed to be pients. Proof of eligibility is
cheese and flour," Slavin says. no longer required, only
"My only caution is that in residency.

!

1

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~

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iiiiiiliii&iilillii,,....,;;....;..-----------......1

ASLCC helps distribute surplus cheese and butter to LCC
students last week.

Health care teleconference
Physicians, nurses, social
workers, and other health care
professional~ can discuss and
learn about .a number . of
medical ethics issues in a
teleconference sch.eduled in
Florence on Friday, April 12.
The teleconference is
scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. at the Lane Community College outreach
center in Florence, located at
3149 Oak St.
The program will emphasize

medical confidentiality,
truthtelling and patient
autonomy, cost containment,
resource
allocation,
whistleblowing, and deceit in
professional practice.
The cost is $30, which includes printed materials, break
refreshments, and the
teleconference. For information and to register, contact
Jim Brock at LCC - 747-4501
ext. 2371. In Florence, call Ai
Owens at 997-8444.

a:

Page 6 April 11--, 1985 The Torch

fOURTHand

Aerobathon generates $800

by Jackie Barry

TORCH Editor

The Rape Crisis Network is
$800 richer since last Saturday's Aerobathon at Mac
Court.
Kimberly Cavendish, who

conducted the two and a
quarter hour session, kept up a
steady stream of instructions
complete with grunts and colorful remarks. She also
relayed careful instructions on
correct placement of body

•-~
1
'

~

~
•~
]
- - - - - - - - , - , - - - - - - - - - .- - - - - - ~
Kimberly Cavendish was extremely pleased" with the results of
the 2 1/2 hour Aerobathon at Mac Court.

d
·
parparts and ca1:1t10ne
ticipants to "Listen to your
body. If it hurts -- don't -- do
it."
Cavendish spent hundreds
of hours training for the event,
as well as $400 for insurance.
Renee LoPilato, associate
coordinator for the Women's
Program at LCC and publicity
coordinator for the event, said
insurance cost the same
amount for two hours as it
would for one year and stated
that this was a definite
drawback to this type of event.
The only other cost involved
was for the T-shirts -everything else, including Mac
Court, was donated.
But LoPilato also said she
was "extremely pleased" with
the 200-person turnout which
almost filled the donated
facility to capacity. LoPilato
was also pleased with the
response of participants, such
as Eugene Jazzercise and the
LCC Dance Department, to
help with next year's event.

., ,

MADISON

This is the tenth in a series of excerpts from a history of the Eugene Vocational School, one of LCC's predecessors. Published by David Butler of the
LCC College and Community Relations Office and reprinted by permission.
Copyright, 1976, by Lane Community College.

,.. ,.~·S

•••

~

~

------------------if:
Over 200 participants worked out for the Rape Crisis Network last Saturday.
~
0

Milt Madden works to save Oregon Trail

by Cindy Wheeldreyer
TORCH S!aff Writer

historical sight and OCTA
uses this designation to
preserve the remaining trail
segments. Madden believe~J~

•crossed; most died of cholera
or in accidents.
Locally, the Applegate and
T~rritorial Trails are southern

gi~~·~*~:?-Ei:!r !~J~~;~}t;:~;-ffd:: ~~~:£~:
What began as just a pass-

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1nfpY~me-consutnmg ,hobby. port the cause 1·•,f .---~:,;A'WfuW
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look at a different pcir~-t'1P~f.l~;t
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th'e:m~l~ rAceJlfttmL~nt~ntS:--:-:.,,._,;,~-- iuH;::i___,111~~ 0
the trail," says Mauden.
_bx... ~~estfoyied occured -~ip:::;~2:~~~~g?J:Cf,r,f)ll.\?Aaf.-1'1"1~ "'".. PH.·,I•,t.'l,l',
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organization ' dedicated to ......,from 1840-1860r The"16rigfour· •• Anyone desiring more information on OCTA can contact
preserving the·' ·remainder of fo -fivemonth jburney took its
Madden in the Social Science
the. trail. The U.S. government toll in human lives with ten
department.
declared the Oregon Trail a people dead for every mile

As sheriff, O'Sullivan patrolled and helped police
a camp that had grown to 125 boys (a girls NYA camp
would soon be in operation on the east side of the Butte) ,
sometimes by himself and sometimes with the help of a
"deputy" who invariably was the winner of a recent boxing
match in the champ ring. "We were all pretty good fighters
in those days," remembers Jack Dingman, "the Elks
always tried to get some of our boys to come down for
their smokers."
The Elks weren't the only people in Eugene who
wanted to cash in on the presence of the National Youth
Administration. EVS, of -course, was first in line; Mrs. Van
Loan could hardly wait to get her aviation and auto body
shop. And then there was the Army Corps of Engineers,
which was about to turn a huge basin west of Eugene into
Fern Ridge Reservoir.
The only problem was that there was a forest in
the way. It had to go, said the Corps, so the entire NYA
camp turned out with crosscut saws and turned the forest
into firewood. Only later did they find out what the clearing
project was for and today several of them claim that Fern
Ridge, now a popular swimming and boating lake, would
be free of stumps had they been told earlier. "Heck, we
could have taken those stumps out if they had told us, "
one of them said.
NY A's impact was definitely being felt in Eugene.
Not surprisingly, there was a certain amount of backlash
felt too, a resentment that eventually resulted in spotted
criticism of the vocational school. "It's become a government school". the critics said. "Our local boys and girls
can 't get in because of all the outsiders. It's that Roosevelt ,
that's what it is."
Hindsight being what it is, of course, EVS was not
a government school-though a great deal of federal
money was poured into it over the years-nor was it's
enrol lment restrictive. It was conceived as a local school
for local students-a point the Register-Guard and Mrs.
Van Loan continued to make throughout the pre-war
years. True, Adams had encouraged the local Board to
open the school's enrollment to students from throughout
western Oregon, but with so much state money involved in
the project, even that rider was understandable and the
Board went along with it.
But these were volatile, very political times .
Eugeneans were descended from midwest and downeast
stock) fiercely independent people who were likely to look
twice at any project or program that added yet another
federal finger to their local pie . While they generally were
willing to accept the NYA's presence in town-even
welcome it-many of them remained suspicious of how
much effect the NYA would have on the vocational school.
As it turned out, they need not have worried.
The NYA had a huge, almost incomprehensible
impact on the school-all of it positive. NYA students fed
new ideas, new perspectives into the classroom. They
were hard workers, sometimes working all night to rneet a
deadline. They were good students ("The whole
philosophy. of the NY A was centered around school," said
Lorie Cross. "If there was ever a matter of conflict-work
or school-school won out. That's why we were there.")
Why they were there became evident in
September 1938. Adams and Mrs. Van Loan had scurried
around and hired 22 teachers for the beginning of fall
term, among them Art Clough, who had finally found his
" Golden Age" (see appendix), Even old Geary was getting
a once-over. The Board, apparently caught up in t!"le
enthusiasm of the new year, the first year, unanimously
approved more than $900 to spruce up the building.
Jessee Godlove was awarded $261.50 for his bid to replumb Geary, and G. H. Latham received a check for $657
to paint the building's interior.
On the first day of school, 1938, several hundred
students (the exact number is unavailable) showed up for
classes and were promptly handed a student handbook. It
spelled out exactly where they were and what was expected of them.

The Torch April 11- , 1985 Page 7

Chipper,
Huey,
Twinkles,
Ernie, and
Stefie
Clown
around
by Joe Templeton

TORCH Staff Writer

Under the first sun of spring
and amidst the smells of international foods, Stefie T.
Clown, a.k.a Steve Jones, and
the Emerald Empire Clown
Alley (EECA) performed two
shows for the patrons of
Saturday Market. To the
delight of all the children in
the large audience EECA did
tricks with bicycles, balloons,
tossed salad, and stuffed
amimals.
EECA consists of Stefie and
four other clowns: Ernie
(a.k.a Ed Lundeen), Huey
(a.k.a. Steve Hewitt), Chipper
(a.k.a. Diane Wall), and
Twinkles (a.k.a. Twila Woodward). All are from Eugene.
Stefie, dressed in black derby, suspenders, pants, with
white shirt and red shoes to
match his cheeks and personality, has been a clown for
five years. He teaches an adult
education
course
on
Clownology at LCC. EECA
members are all graduates of
this course.
Although Stefie and his
clown troupe have only been
together for a short while
(since Winter Term), they say
they like doing shows for kids
of all ages in all places.
Stefie says their next performance, "cash flow permitting," will be at the National
Clown Convention in Las
Vegas, Nev. April 9-14.

LCC Gallery, New Zone shows unusual
by Karen Irmsher

TORCH Staff Writer

What has a keyboard,
whirrs, blinks, flashes, makes
occasional strange burbling
noises, costs $75,000 and is
not a computer? Ken Butler's
mixed media kinetic instalation does it all, and is on
display in the Art Department
Gallery until April 19.
Off campus, the New Zone
Gallery offers another unusual
exhibit called '' Diverse
Works". Located at 411 High
Street in Eugene, this exhibit
features three local mixed
media artists, Ardas, and LCC
Instructors Dan White and

Review by Ron Gullberg
TORCH Sports Editor

Mick Jagger is keeping good
company these days.
Currently, the lead singer of
the Rolling Stones is back in
the studio with the rest of the
band, recording a new album
set for release this fall.
But Rolling Stones buffs,
who can't wait until the leaves
turn brown again to hear their
favorite group, should pick up
Jagger's solo album, She's the
Boss. How much closer to the
Stones can one get?
While · there are no guitar
jams from the Stones' Keith
Richards, the album's surprise
cast of characters could form a
group that would make ex-Led
Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy
Page's new group, The Firm,
sound like a 'Little Rascals'
stage show.
Guitarist Jeff Beck appears
on six of Jagger's nine songs,
with ex-Who guitarist Pete
Townshend. But, the biggest
surprise of the album's cast is
synthesizer wizard Herbie
Hancock.

••.

'.::/ . . :):..

(flrnmrnrn ooIP~rnarnoo
April 16-23

Country Rock featuring
ffiichael John Kimberly
and Special Delivery

I

~~~

Hancock provides some
rhythmic dance beats, and his
special effects add just - the
right touch when coupled with
two of rock's guitar legends.
To top it all off, Jagger
emerges with well written, well
produced material. And a
well-controlled singing voice.
The first single from She's
the Boss, Just Another Night ,
is a catchy tune, with first-rate
instrumental background.
Near the end of the song Hancock supplies a machine gun
sound that gives just the right
originality.
She's the Boss appears to be
views or experiences with
women. Each title deals with
broken hearts and Joan
Collins-type women.
Half-a-loaf is a song about a
man who's unhappy with
where his life's heading and
he's begging his wife for a
change. Jagger sings, "We got
half a life, we got half a
dream, we got half a love, we
got half a scheme . . . I can't
go on seeing you like this, give
that knife just one more little
twist, this affair is really going

I

I

!Qfil§~

~~g

Galleries

(cont. on page 10>

door

prizes

I
I

steaks

&
seafood

~~~flmil~ ty~W=mJ~[ID1l

I

BO S S

to break my heart . . . I guess
half a loaf leaves me feeling
hungry."
Hard Woman is a slow,
emotional track that, like
Angie, solidifies Jagger's singing credibility. The . -song
depicts a man leaving a dictating, never-satisfied woman.
"She's a hard woman to
please, and I thought about

letting her know. She's a hard
lady to leave . . . she's a hard
lady to please, yes she is. I
gave her laughter, she wanted
diamonds. "
It is hard to find a flaw on
She's the Boss. Each track has
its own sound due to some of
the most serious work in a
long time from each of the
album's all-star cast.

---------------2 THEATRE TICKETS FOR THE PRICE OF 1

with this coupon!

I

I

free
champagne

specialty

the background, and one of
his installations provides the
set.
While some people might
see it as a chaotic jumble,
Butler says, "I guess I just
can't get enough stimulous."
The New Zone Exhibit is
quiet by comparison, but interesting in its own right.
Dan White combines metal
and wood in small scale,
whimsical sculptures. His
"Navel Button Depot" and
''Third Bird'' are intricate
mysteries, while the collection
of masks is much less complex.

Mick Jagger produces special album

•. I • : • : ~ :

is our

works. He can do that because
the pieces never sell. "No one
buys art work," he says. At
least not his.
Which is not to say they
aren't well received. Butler has
received numerous grants and
fellowships to continue his
work.
He also makes stringed
musical instruments from such
diverse objects as an ax, a
briefcase, a chairback, a tennis
racket and a spatula. One
"guitar" has six necks,
another four bodies. He enjoys giving performance exhibitions in which he plays
these peculiar instruments
while slides of his work run in

Featuring Herbie Hancock ,Jeff Beck ,Pete Townshend

··•i:~ ~; ~ •••:••.;;,.... :li!:ii:;:;,j······•·••::ii:ii;•:'•,:.::;I.,• .•

barbeque

David Joyce. The display runs
until April 25.
While most art exhibits prohibit touching, the viewers of
Butler's work, also called
kinetic sculpture, must press
the 24 keys on the short pianolike keyboard to set the piece
in motion.
Butler is a Portland artist
and spoke to a crowd of 50 in
the Art Building Gallery April
8, at 1 p.m. "I have boxes of
weird st:uff and I just put them
all together," Butler explains.
Many of the same props -- for
instance: A music stand, a
robot named Max, street
signs, and yardsticks -- are used repeatedly in successive

LCCTHEATRE

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presents

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by Moliere

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The Doctor in Spite of Himself •:

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April 26, 27, May 1-4

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Bring this coupon to the box office (10 to 4 daily), and get
two reserved-seat tickets to any performance for just $5.

--

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Page 8 April 11-~ 1985 The Torch

i::;:~l?d~::~fii=::1~:~::;::?ii:::l~::::;.~:::~;~==J;;::=1:ii-i::

Titan sluggers gaining moment um in league

LCC's baseball team split
two double-headers this week
and upped its league record to
2-3. The Titans are 9-5 overall.
Below is LCC's linescores,
with its most recent game first.

Titans ..... 11, 6
Timbermen . 0, 8
The Titans erupted for 11
runs off 13 hits, and pitcher
Dan Vidos went the distance,
giving up only one hit, as LCC

ning, but failed to score in the
top of the eighth, paving the
way for UCC's two-run
homer.
Ted Davis led LCC's offense, pounding out five hits
-- a triple, double and three
singles -- and two RBI's.

"We're in a little slump
right now as a team,'' said
LCC Head Coach Bob Foster.
"Every team usually goes
through it, hopefully we'll

LCC first baseman Don Vidas gets the out.

overpowered Umpqua in the
first game of a double-header
Tuesday, at UCC.
Lane opened the game with
a run in the third, and blew it
away in the fourth with six
runs. Four Umpqua errors
helped the Titans' cause.
Umpqua jumped to an early
3-0 lead in the second game
and never looked back, cruising to a 8-6 win in extra innings . ..
LCC whittled away UCC's
initial 3-0 lead, with three runs
in the third, but UCC responded in the fourth with three
more runs.
The die-hard Titans again
tied the game in the seventh in-

Me nI

---

LCC BASEBALL
By Darren Foss
TORCH Sports Writer

start rolling again and continue to go strong for the rest
of the season."

Titans ..
Saints ..

traveled to
The Titans
Gresham Saturday April 6, for
a league double-header against
the Mt. Hood Community
College Saints, but it wasn't
the Titans day as Mt. Hood
swept both games, 4-3 and 8-7.
The Saints scored first in the
fourth inning to take a 2-0
lead, but LCC came back with
a run in the fifth and seventh
innings to tie the game at 2-2,
and force extra-innings
(double-header games are only
played seven innings instead of
the normal nine). Both teams
scored a run in the eighth, but
in the ninth LCC gave the
game away by walking home
the winning run with two-outs.
Sophomore pitcher Gary
Fonnesbeck received the loss
for the Titans, dropping his
record to 3-2 on the season.
Fonnesbeck gave up only three
hits, but LCC committed three
errors in the loss.
In the second game, the
Titans jumped out to a 1-0
lead in the top of the third.

W omen

by Ron Gullberg

TORCH Sports Editor

Chris Mitchell threw the
shot 38'9.75" for a personal
record, and Angie Ross had a
double victory in the 400 and
200, pacing the LCC women's
track team to a Mt. Hood
Track Festival Championship
Saturday in Gresham.
LCC grabbed 75 points,
followed by Mt. Hood with
67, and Blue Mt. talleyed only
11.
LCC's men also swept the
meet, powered by 100m and
200m specialist Roy Session,

3, 7
. 4, 8

But the Saints erupted for four
runs in the bottom of the third
to take a 4-1 lead.
LCC came back with two
runs of its own in the fourth to
cut the lead to 4-3, but Mt.
Hood responded with another
run in the bottom of the inning
to up its lead to 5-3. In the
fifth the Saints blew the game
open by scoring three runs, to
up their lead to 8-3.
But the Titans rallied for
four runs in the final inning
before coming up one run
short, losing another close
one, 8-7.
Poor pitching was the key
to LCC's loss. Titan pitchers
surrendered 11 walks, and
starting pitcher Jack Glueck
collected the loss for Lane.
A bright point on LCC's offensive side was Freshman Ted
Davis who had two hits in each
game.

Ducks ... ..... 2
Titans ..
3
Wednesday, April 3, the
Titans defeated the University
of Oregon club team, 3-2,
here, in a non-league contest.
It was a defensive battle as
the Ducks scored first in the
third inning, to take a 1-0 lead.
Lane battled back for a run
of its own in the fourth when
Dan Luneski was walked and
scored -- after back-to-back

singles by Rick Walker and
Aaron Helfrich -- tying the
score at 1-1.
The game remained even
until the seventh inning when
the Titans added two more
runs. LCC's Dave Matthews'
two-run single proved to be
the game winner. The Ducks
rallied for a run in the top of
the ninth, but couldn't tally
anymore. The Ducks aided the
Titans' offense by committing
four errors.
Sophomore Dan Vidos picked up the win for the Titans,
pitching three innings in relief.

LCC INSIDER :
Leading Hitters: Scott
Michaelsen-.547 avg.; 23
hits; 13 RBI's.
Ken Fox-.411 avg.; 14 hits;
14 RBI's.
Ted Davis-.371 avg.; 13
hits; 14 RBI's.
Runs:
Home
Fonnesbeck-3.

Gary

Pitching: Fonnesbeck-IO
strikeouts; 3-2 W-L.
Dave Matthews-1.94 ERA
for 18 innings pitched; 2-0
W-L.
Team hitting: .302 avg.; has
outscored opponents
118-75.

sp·1kers sweep MHCC meet

1:1111111111,111

and Pat Lanning, who took
the 400m hurdles and 400m title.
The Titans ran away from
the pack with 90 points, well
ahead of second place Mt.
Hood at 51, and Highline with
42.
Marion Zerull continued to
drop her hurdle time to 15.9,
which makes her one of the

long jump at 17' 3".
Sophomore Dawn Smoot is
close behind at 17' 1".
The women's 4xl00 relay
posted its season best of 49.7 -the second best time to date in
the NWAACC.
Sherri Harris let loose with a
126' 2" effort to win the
javelin and become the conference leader in that event.
"It was an overall good
team effort," said Women's
Track Coach Lyndell Wilken.
"But we need to have further

although they won, they still
have a ways to go before
they're in race shape," said
Men's Coach Harland Yiarte.
Session also competed in the
long jump for the first time,
without prior practice, and
won the even.

LCC spikers
at a glance:

Men- lOOm1. Session, 10.8
3. Breuniger, 11.2
Javelin5. Jeff Goshie, 150' 3"
Track--(cont. on page 11>

Eggmen enter
regional tourney
The Eggmen, LCC's men's
volleyball club -- who got its
name from LCC's first men's
volleyball club, The Birdmen
-- will play at the regional
United States Volleyball
Association Tournament
Saturday, at Pacific University
in Forest Grove, Or.

LCC's Roy Session crosses the finish line ahead of the pack with
a 100m time of 10.8 seconds.

top three in the Northwest
Athletic Association of Community Colleges. Zerull also
leads the NWAACC in the

development in the distances
to be a strong team."
'' Pat Lanning and Roy Session were workhorses, but

Intramurals Department
will be offering ultimate
Tuesdays and
frisbee
Thursdays from 1: 30-3: 30
p.m. in LCC's main gym this
term.
For more information, contact the intramurals office,
located in the Health and P .E.
building, or call 747-4501, ext.
2215.

The Torch April 11-•, 1985 Page 9

llrllllllftllllâ– lllllllllâ– lâ– lllllllllâ– IBlllllflllfllllllillri

Breakers' 'Couryography' comes from the heart
Coury displayed for each
player and assistant coach.
Respect clings to Coury like a
pair of favorite blue jeans.

Column by Ron Gullberg

TORCH Sports Editor

During the third quarter of
Saturday's Portland-Oakland
USFL game, Portland Head
Coach Dick Coury rushed onto the field when offensive
lineman Gerry Raymond lay
on the field, injured.

From start to finish, Coury
was shouting encouragement.
At one point, when the team
was practicing rushing plays,
Coury was lined-up beside
running back Dwight Beverly
-- who's had to fill the hard to
fill shoes of injured running
backs Marcus Dupree and
Buford Jordan -- clapped and
said, "Big game Monday,
Dwight, big game, 160 yards."
Added support for a nervous
t young man.

Coury, with a concerned
look, waited, let the trainers
tend to Raymond, and gave
the 6' 3'' hulk a shoulder to
lean on as he limped off the
field.
Hey coach, isn't that what
trainers are for?
Coury, the USFL's firstever Coach of the Year in
1983, has built a family-type
mold for his Breakers club
around each player's personality. And he makes sure
his boys are well taken care of.
"Coach Coury has one
rule,'' said Breakers placekicker Tim Mazzetti. "You
play my way or else. This team
is like a family. We all have
fun and it's close-knit . . .
there are a lot of good players
starting on other teams now
that he's (Coury) let go ... he
hand picks his team and he
makes sure each player has a
good attitude.''
Mazzetti, who said he left
the NFL's Atlanta Falcons,
''With a bad taste in my
mouth," credits Coury with
his emergence from retirement.
"Don't get me wrong, I had
some good times in the NFL,"
said Mazzetti. "But I feel I
was mistreated in some cases.
"I was working as a sports
broadcaster in Atlanta and
Coach Coury asked me to kick
for him . . . I love the man,
just look at the way he gets
along with the players. I'm
sure if you asked anyone else

In the background, a cluster
of pint-sized Breakers fans
began cheering, ''Go Portland
Breakers," from their chairs
in Portland's Civic Stadium.
The arena was empty, but to
the children, it was if the New
Jersey Generals were in town.
Coury peered up, waved to
the kids, clapped at them, and
gave a look of, "Job well
done." With today's overworked, disgruntled coaches,
those kids would have usually
been viewed as nuisances.
"These fans are just super,"
said Coury. "I've always
known that from my days with
ti the
Storm (he coached
! Portland's now-defunct WFL
i team in 1974.) I've always felt
~ Portland deserved a pro foot~ ball team. We've (Breakers)
________. if: moved three times, (from
Breakers' head coach Dick Coury (R) chats with Oakland Boston to New Orleans to
assistant coach Lary Kuharich before Saturday's match-up. Portland) but now we've
found a home.
Coury's pro coaching record
associated with the team,
Coury has instituted a
they'll tell you the same thing .
rose to 22-21. But throw away
.. he's the only coach I would
the stats. Coury can rest on his father-son bond with all of his
players, but he can also be
have come back and played
laurels alone.
for," Mazzetti added.
I attended a Breakers prac- proud of the fact that his son
With Portland's 30-17 win
tice session during spring Steve is on his coaching staff.
over the heavily favored
break and was · amazed with Most coaches talk of being a
Oakland Invaders Saturday,
the openness and devotion 'family team,' but the

Breakers truly are one.
Try and watch Coury at the
next Breakers game when the
team is stretching out. He
makes a point to shake every
player's hand before the
match, and in the locker room
afterwards -- giving his words
of encouragement and
knowledge.
Breakers practices are
smooth, upbeat, positive, and
sometimes, just plain fun. The
same words describe Coury.
If the Breakers are to survive in Portland, Coury is the
messiah promoting them.
Before, during, and after
games and practices, Coury
waves, and yells "Hi!" to
more people than a presidential candidate, and has more
connections across the country
than Amtrak.

I, for one, am impressed. At
the practice, Breakers Public
Relations Manager John
Brunelle introduced me to
Coury and commented on The
Torch's coverage of the
Breakers-Los Angeles game.
Coury smiled, put his arm
around my shoulder and said,
"So you're one of the good
reporters, huh? John tells me
who the bad ones are and I sic
a lineman after them and run
'em outta here."

Then, after the Breakers victory over Oakland Saturday,
Coury was cordial again. During our interview, when he was
interrupted by a player, he
held the sleeve of my sweater,
then turned back around and
made sure I had my chance to
finish questioning him.
I'm getting out the blue and
white porn-porns. Move over
kids, this is my seat during
practices.
"Hi coach! "

----------------------------•-■111r111"""
~USfl,

Inspired Breakers pound Oakland
by John Egan

TORCH Sports Writer

On a night when they
couldn't afford to lose, the
Portland Breakers came up
with their biggest win of the
season. 30-17 over the highly
favored Oakland Invaders.
Led by quarterback Matt
Robinson's. precision passing
-- 14 of 22, and three
touchdowns -- and a stubborn
defense, Portland improved its
record to 3-4.
But, more importantly, the
win renewed the Portland
fans' confidence in their team.
After San Antonio's 33-0
shellacking of the Breakers
Monday, April l, before over
1.9,000 fans and a live ESPN
audience, many left the
stadium with their heads shaking in disbelief. The game also

provided added breathing
space for Portland's toughest
road trip of the season, which
starts Sunday at New Jersey,
then moves to Baltimore -- the
USFL's defending champions
-- and ends at Los Angeles
April 27.
"We really needed this
win,'' said Portland kicker
Tim Mazzetti, whose 43 yard
field goal added to the
Breaker's first quarter surprise
attack. "A loss would have
really set us back."
After the opening kickoff,
Oakland drove 58 yards to the
Breakers' nine -- setting up a
first-and-goal. It looked like
the Invaders would get on the
board early, but on the next
play Invader quarterback Bobby Herbert fumbled the football, and Portland nose tackle
Jerald Baylis recovered on the

11 yard line.
Thirteen plays later, on a
third-and-nine, Robinson
threw 13 yards to tight end
Dan Ross in the corner of the '
end zone, and the -Breakers
drew first blood.
Three minutes later, after an
unsuccessful Oakland drive,
Robinson and Ross connected
again, this time for four yards,
and the former National Football League Cincinnati
Bengals star suddenly had two
touchdown receptions. His
biggest output of the season.
But, on the next drjve, the
Invaders demonstrated why
they entered the game with a
4-1-1 record, and were betting
line favorites. Oakland scored
twice -- Herbert threw to
fullback Albert Bently for 33

Breakers

<cont. on page 10)

15%

Student
Discount

on photofinishing
and all merchandise
not already discounted.

1668 Willamette• 430 East 11th• Valley River Center• Gend

Page 10 April 11-4'/, 1985 The Torch

Oral medication available for relief of herpes symptoms
by Ann Van Camp

TORCH Staff Writer

If you've got herpes, you
know it hurts. And if you've
had herpes in the past, then
you know the painful symptoms can recur again and
again -- for the rest of your
life.
But sufferers may now get
relief with an oral medication
which has just come on the
market, Student Health Director Sandra Ing told
newswriting students late last
term.
'' Acyclovir is particularly
effective in shortening the
period of discomfort and contagiousness of the first episode
of herpes," said Ing.
Herpes Simplex Type II, or
genital herpes, which is one of

Breakers {cont. trom page 9>
yards, and John Williams
scored on a two yard run with
23 seconds left in the half. On
its first possession of the second half, Oakland struck
again, tying the score at 17-17,
when Novo Bojovic nailed a
42 yard field goal.
You couldn't convince
Robinson that momentum was
on the Invaders' side. The
former NFL New York Jets
signal-caller immediately
struck again -- this time throwing two yards to running back
Dwight Beverly. "It wasn't
like they really came back,"
said Robinson after the game.
''We were on top the whole
time."
The Breakers scored again
in the third quarter, and this
time a couple of reserve

several sexually transmitted
diseases (STDs) in the nation,
has been reported by 15
students between September
and February. Ing said the
SHS has had access to the drug
(Acyclovir) for two weeks
through a local pharmacy. The
few students have used it and
felt it helped clear up their
later episodes of herpes, she
said.
Ing told the group that there
is still no cure for herpes.
After an active episode, the
virus retreats up the nerve
roots in the body's nervous
system where it stays dormant
until triggered once again into
an active episode. "We don't
know exactly what triggers the
later episodes," she said, "an9
we haven't found a way to kill

players stepped into the
spotlight. On a first down
from the Oakland 17,
Portland ran a halfback option play with seldom used
Louis Jackson, and the former
Cal Poly San Louis Obisbo
star responded by throwing to
newly acquired receiver Anthony Allen -- a Washington
Huskies product -- for the
Breakers' final blow.
The rest was up to the
Breakers' defense, which was
playing its most stingy game of
the season. Portland's safeties
picked off two more Herbert
passes, kept the Invaders
scoreless for the rest of the
game, and held frustrated allstar wide receiver Anthony
Carter to only one catch for 15
yards.
Free safety Scott Byars was
responsible for two of the interceptions. ''The defense

the virus and leave the nerve
root alone."

But she is hopeful now that
Acyclovir is available that the
SHS will be able to treat
herpes sufferers earlier.
''Before, when we didn't have
an effective medication,
students knew what they had
and they knew we didn't really
have anything we could do for
them. They just lived out the
two or three weeks on their
own."
The only way to stop the
spread of the disease is for the
infected person to be honest
with his/her partner, says Ing.
She admitted ''telling someone
'Hey, I've got herpes and
therefore I might be contagious if I'm having a recurplayed much better this week.
San Antonio got on top of us
early last week, but this week
it was just the opposite. We
got on top of them first, and
that's the key."
The password for Saturday's game was inspiration. I
haven't seen the Breakers hit
as hard all season, and the
kick-off and punt coverage
teams -- which had seemed
tenative before -- were charging downfield with reckless
abandon.
''We were embarrassed over
the way we played last week,''
said Breakers' Head Coach
Dick Coury. "These guys (the
Breakers) will never give up ..
. the character of these guys
will never quit."
23,000 renewed Breakers
fans were convinced of that
Saturday night.

..:.+•:.♦.:..:..~:..........

. . . .: . . . . . . .:♦♦:..:•<

lEL~C ELE_~T~~!!:l.
STUDENT.GOVERNMENT
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
PRESIDENT
VICE PRESIDENT
TREASURER
CULTURAL DIRECTOR
NINE SENATOR SEATS
YOU CAN MAKE A

APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE ,
IN THE ASLCC OFFICE
FILING DEADLINE:
479 CENTER.
Wed. April 24 FOR MORE INFORMATION,
CALL 74 7-4501 EXT. 2330
CNOON SHARP!]
~ij;~~~ffl I

rence and I'm at the stage with
open lesions' '' is not the way
most people want to begin a
relationship. If, on the other
hand, a partner doesn't tell the
facts and gives herpes to that
person, Ing said "that's not so
good for the ongoing relationship, either.''
How does a person decrease
his or her chances of getting
herpes? Ing recommended being selective about one's partner. "And looking (with the
lights on) helps" she said. But
condoms and birth control
foams have not proven to be
good preventive devices, and
she said there are no drugs to
prevent either the transmission
or the contracting of herpes.
She cited a report from a recent issue of the Journal of

American Medical Association
which indicated, with
Acyclovir treatment, a seven
day reduction in the time normally associated with the active shedding of the virus -- the
time at which the disease is
most painful and most contagious.
The report made a distinction between the effectiveness
in the first-episode cases over
later episodes. The period of
active viral shedding in later
cases was reduced by several
days, however, and Ing said
''depending on the activity of
the person's sex life ... if you
can cut down on the number
of days of their being contagious, then you can cut
down the number of cases of
herpes being spread.''

Better relations between
USSR and USA •
topic of discussion
The public is invited to a
panel discussion by Lane
College
Community
students on relations between the Soviet Union and
the United States. The
discussion, which will be
taped for an exchange with
Soviet college students, is
scheduled from noon to 1
p.m. on Friday, April 12, in
the Administration Board
Room.
Janet Anderson, an
athletic trainer at LCC, is
leaving Eugene on April 25
for a three-week visit to the
Soviet Union with other
"citizen diplomats." She'll
take the tape along. Soviet
college students will respond to the American
discussion, and the entire
exchange will be aired later
on Radio Moscow and

KLCC radio, an LCCbased station that broadcasts throughout western
and central Oregon.
Anderson will be traveling with 26 others. Four, including herself, are from
Eugene. Others Uve in
Portland, Washington,
California, Iowa, and
Massachusetts. Anderson
says the trip will give the
Americans a chance to meet
Soviet citizens, exchange
ideas, and become friends.
"We'll be taking gifts,
scrapbooks, photos and
other items, so they can get
a glimpse of what our lives
are like," Anderson says.
''The idea is to personalize
'the enemy.' ''
For more information,
call Janet Anderson at
726-2215.

Ashlane Apartments
Adult
Student
Housing Inc.
I, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments
Available Now!

l lilllllllillll
Reservations for the remammg apartments are now being processed through
the managers office at...

475 Lindale
Springfield, Oregon
747-5411

The Torch April 11-1', 1985 Page 11

1971 SAAB 99 FUEL INJECTED
BRITISH LEYLAND totally
overhauled engine, excellent over all.
$1750. 345-5721.
1960 FORD 4 WHEELER - big tires,
short wide, 4-speed. High per/ormance 390 engine. 935-3255. Scott.
1970 BRONCO - 1st $650. 345-5721,
1971 CHEVROLET PICKUP camper special. Excellent condition.
345-1374.
1976 ASTRE - clean, dependable
$1 JOO. 1973 Honda 350 low mileage,
$450. 741-1758 afternoons.
SMALL BLOCK CHEVY HEADS good condition. $75 pair.

PARTING OUT 1966 OPEL - Rebuilt
1100 engine, radiator, generator...
Parts fit '66-72. Randy 747-8862.
VOLKWAGEN
1974
SQUAREBA CK - automatic, recent
tune up, AM/FM/Cassette, 2 new
tires. Good running condition, needs
some electrical work. $950. 747-7956.
JO SPEEDS - for large and small
adults, $75 and $69. Car racks, programmable calculator. 485-1815.

1971 LEMANS 6t-37 - $350 or offer.
Call 683-2339 between 6-10 p.m.

2 MALE AKC COCKER SPANIEL
PUPPIES and 1 male AKC cocker
spaniel - 2 years old. 345-1374.
MUST SELL -190cm Kastle RX skis,
Look Nevada bindings. First $99.95.
Excellent. 344-9492 or 343-3383.
FIREWOOD,
SPLIT
AND
DELIVERED - Green maple hardwood. $70 cord. QTY. Discount.
689-4727.
BEAUTIFUL WEDDING DRESS Buttons, bows, and lace. Size 8, $135 veil included. 345-7682.
"36" x "48'' MINI-BLIND NEVER
MOUNTED - $40. Recliner with
heater and vibrator $15, Marantz
cassette player $75. 741-1758.

1978 HONDA HA WK 400 - low
miles. $700. 345-4682.
1978 YAMAHA 400 XS - Special
motorcycle just tuned up, in good
shape, extras. $500 OBO. Ask for
Philip. (Ed. 's note: Philip forgot to include his phone number. If you are interested in this motorcycle, contact the
Torch.)
WANTED 1930's TO /970's Dodge.
Body not important, running gear
must be good. Parts car fine.
683-6501.
1976 RAMBLER SEDAN. 290 V-8.
Needs T.l. C. $175 offer. 345-0042.
'70 MA VER/CK, 6 cylinder, 3 speed,
new battery, 2 new retreads, runs
good. $350. 746-0452.
'71 DATSUN 510 WAGON, new
clutch and front brakes, Must sell
$250 or offer. Leave message or phone
number at 343-8688.
1956 CHEVY BEL AIR SEDAN 4
door new paint, runs and looks good.
$1700. 683-6501.
NEW 327 CHEVY ENGINE block,
pistons, heads $375 or best offer
683-5619. 6 pm to 10 pm.
1966 FORD I /2 Ton pick-up $450.
Kurt Harlan 344-5484. 2643 Hilyard.

Track--<cont. trom page

400m Hurdles!. Pat Lanning, 54.2
800m1. Greg Kemper, 1:56.0
3. Seth Simmons, 1:57 .3
4x100m Relay1. LCC, 42.8
Hammer1. Mark Cumer, 128-9
2. Chris Straine, 83-6
Pole Vault1. Mike Thorton, 11' 6"
lSOOm1. Duane Simonds, 3:59.4
400ml. Pat Lanning, 49. 7
3. Tim Nickel, 51.1
Long Jump1. Roy Session, 22' 4"
3. Shawn Steen, 20' 10"
Shot Put1. Cumer, 47' 4"
200m1. Session, 21.8
2. Larry Creech, 22.4
Discus2. Cumer, 136' 3"

s>

GE 19" COLOR TV - $50. Queen size
water bed $50. 344-8652.
PHOTOGRAPHY BOOK - By
Charles Swedlund. 2nd edition. $20.
New. Karen 942-2747.
THE ARTIST - By Edmund B.
Feldman. $6.
BUS PASS - APRIL $1 per week
days left in month. 345-5916.
RADIAL TIRES, H78Xl5, 1 Recap
90 percent Rubber $10, 1 JC Penny 50
percent $10, new spark plug wires
Chevy Vega $5. 747-4287.
KODAK CAROUSEL SLIDE PROJECTOR model 5200 with sound synchronizer $285 or best offer. 343-0116.
SMITH CORONA ELECTRIC
typewriter $200 or best offer.
343-0116.
LAB SERIES 5 amp with 2-/2's; $300
12 ch powered Sunn Mixing board,
$800. 683-4342.
FRANKLIN WOOD STOVE $25/off er, New section stove pipe and
rotatable elbow. 726-0419.

5000m

1. Steve Bronson, 15:13.5
3. Todd Vaughn, 15:26.4
4x400m Relay2. LCC (1), 3:23.5
Women- 4x100 Relay1. LCC, 49.7
110m High Hurdles1. Marion Zerull, 15.9
1500m1. Janelle Henderson, 5:05.5
2. Coco Riker, 5:11.6
Javelin1. Sherri Harris, 126' 2''
2. Rocky Wierman, 114' O"
Long Jump1. Dawn Smoot, 17' l"
400m1. Angie Ross, 58.8
Shot Put- Discus1. Chris Mitchell, 38' 9. 75"
123' 2.5"
lOOm- 1. Lanette Byrd, 12. 7
400m IM. Hurdles3. Molli Gholston, 1: 13. 7
200m- 1. Ross, 25.9
3000m- 2. Nicholas, 11:16.5
800m- 3. LCC, 4:42.0

COMMERCIAL PILOT (LCC Flight
Technology Graduate) conducts
sightseeing flights for share of expenses only. 687-9258 or ext. 2342.
STUDENT RESOURCE CENTER
provides a textbook exchange, child
care, and housing information.
Located in Center Bldg. 2nd floor.
MA TH TUTORING AVAILABLE.
Anything from algebra through differential equations. My place or
yours. $4.50 an hour. Tom 344-7351.
FREE TRIP TO KENTUCKY. Spend
6 weeks with over 2,000 college
students. Compete for scholarships,
earn $672. Challenging, rewarding
training qualifies you for the 2 year
ROTC program where you receive
$100 monthly while earning a commission as an officer. Interested? Call
686-3102.
A COMMISSION AS AN OFFICER
in the US Army, Army National
Guard, or Reserves . Financial aid
available. 686-3102.
DEVELOP YOUR FINE ARTS and
crafts into your business with very low
overhead. Call Saturday Market at
686-8885 for information.

B

ROBERTSON'S DRUG
Your prescription is
our main concern .

343-7715
30th & Hilyard

Color TV's

Large selection with warranty
$49 and up.
DEKA ELECTRONICS
390 West 12th 342-2488 (p)

DIAMOND
BRIDAL SETS

$149

Choose from the largest
selection in Oregon.

al C~3

BEATLES PICTURES from
magazines etc. for a video in the making. please donate. 441 E. 17th No. 3
Eugene, Or. 97401.
WHITE MALE FROM SOUTHERN
CALIF. Incarcerated in Southern
Nevada would like correspondence
from anyone who could shed a little
sunshine, or maybe put a smile on my
face. Robert E. Jones No. 16725 P. 0.
Box 208 S.D.C.C Indian Springs,
Nevada 89070.
$672 FOR 6 WEEKS WITH FREE
room and board. The best part is
leadership experience available
through the Army ROTC 2 Year Program leading to a commission. LCC
students participate with VO students.
Call 686-3102 for details.

Student's ilccount wekome

******************
! UNCLE SAM'S !
** __,,, ,414 Main St. Sfld .
!*

**~.- ~BOYS CLUB**
! '" 506 drinks *
~Q)

*******************

WePayTo HelpYou!
There is no other way.
We need plasma and we will
pay to get it.
Without plasma we could
not make the life saving products you need.

Hyland Plasma Center

40 EAST 10th
EUGENE, OR 97401

(503) 683-3953
New donors bring this ad on your
first donation and receive $5 .00 in
addition to our regular donor fee .

M-F 10-5:30
S 10-5 :00

CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME

• Downtown Eugene

• Valley River Center

• Springfield Mall

BASSET HOUND - needs loving
home. AKC registered, loves kids,
protective and loving. Call •Cherri/I
746-5090 mornings until 10:30 or
evenings 5-10 at 726-2214.

ASLCC SPRING ELECTIONS, May
6 and 7. Applications for President,
Vice-Pres, Treasurer, Cultural Director and Senator available in Center
479. Filing deadline April 24.
LESBIANS go to the Women's Tea
House every other Friday at Zoo
Zoo's - Come April 19.
WHOEVER -- Actually it's none of
your business, but send photos and a
resume, or stop by. Ellen

Backst

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lt 1Pi1 lr 1c. a 1

EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED

•
•
•
•

Leotard s
Tights
Dance S~1oes (expe rtl y fit)
Warm ups

• CAPEZIO • DANSKIN • FLEXATAAD
• CARUSHKA • BARELY LEGAL
• GYMKIN • TICKETS
• ST AR STYLED

TOYS - Games for home for small
children. Ages 3 to 6 years. Contact
Kaylene or Jerry at 345-7179 at
Counseling Ext.2329.

Lifetime guarantee.

QUALITY RESALE FOR
MEN , WOMEN. AND CHILDREN
2650 Willamette
343-0095

HOFFMAN PRODUCE is accepting
applications for full/part time summer employment. Contact Student
Employment Service for listings and
information.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $15,000 $50,000/year possible. All occupations. Call 805-687-6000 Ext R-6150 to
find out how.
INTERMEDIATE TO ADVANCED
tennis player sought for friendly tennis
Mon. or Fri. Bill 345-0042.

Learn more about why we
pay. Contact:

from

WOPEN!

DAY CAMP OUTDOOR LEADER
needed/or Westmoreland Community
Center. Saturday 10 am - 1 pm. May 4
- June 8 (no camp May 27) $3.90 $4.31/hour. To apply, pick up applications at Westmoreland Community Center 1545 West 22nd Ave.
Or phone 687-5316 for information.

CERTIFIED WORK STUDY
students needed to work in the Financial Aid Office. lnteresting, challenging office experience. CWE credit
possible. Contact the CWS office, ext.
2349.

Make an Important Contribution
Giue Life • Giue Plasma

Your

CHOICES
make the
difference

BIRTH CONTROL
PREGNANCY TESTS
PAP SMEARS
Birth Control Pills

6.50
to 7.50
Diaghragm Jelly $4.00
Condoms
S .25 ea.
Sponge
Sl.00
PRIVATE • PROFESSIONAL
CONVENIENT

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0 m n I.um -Ga th e rum------------LCC Library Gallery
The public is invited to the LCC Library Gallery, currently
on display in the gallery arc the Chinese brush paintings by
Kathy Hoy. Admission is free, and the gallery is open during
the academic year, 8 a.m. to JO p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 0n Fridays.

Ready For Spring Graduation?
Students planning on graduating from LCC this year need to
apply for their degree no later than Friday, May 3rd, if they
wish their name to appear on the graduation program. Those
applying after that date may still participate in commencement
ceremonies even though their name is not listed in the program.
Application for degree forms are available in the Student
Records Office. In addition to filling out the application for
degree, the student needs to provide the Records Office with
official copies of transcripts from other schools and any
waivers applicable to their program to meet degree requirements.

Women's Brown Bag Talks
The first spring Brown Bag Talk will be Mary Dwan,
counselor and president of the Lane County Chapter of the
Stepfamily Association. She will speak about "The Challenge
of Stepfamily Life" on Tuesday, April 16, at 11 :30 a.m. in the
LCC Board Room. Call 747-4501, ext. 2353 for more information.

Job Search Skills
A skill building mini-session on April 15, from IO a.m. to
noon, in Library 238B will focus on Resume Writing: How to
use it; choosing a format for you; how to make it most impressive.
On April 17, (same time and place) another session will look
at Job Leads and Networking: What is the hidden job market
and how can you tap into it; and what resources and job search
techniques can help you most. These sessions are sponsored by
the Counseling Department, for more information call
726-2204, ext. 2497 or 2299.

Eating Disorders
The Eating Disorders self-help group meets in Health 209 1-2
p.m. on Mondays. Come for information and support for
bulimia and anorexia nervosa. There will also be discussion of
body images and Amer;can women, and cultural roles of food.
For more information, call Anne Metzger in Student Health at
ext. 2665.

Men Against Rape
If you're a man interested in stopping rape and violence
against women, come to the EMU entry rooms at 7:15 every
Wednesday night. For more info call 687-1276, aslc for Phil.

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Robotics Careers
All majors in Electronics, Computer Science, Mechanics,
and Pre-Engineering who are interested in the future job
possibilities of Robotics/ Automation and want to take a
hands-on I credit exploratory course this term please call Renee
LoPilato, Industrial Orientation Coordinator, ext. 2802 for
further details.

Scholarships Offered
Scholarships offered through the U.S. Dept. of Education
for Native American undergraduate students, are available in
the areas of engineering, business administration, natural
resources and related fields. Deadline for application is May
15, 1985. For more info. contact Kent Gorham, Multicultural
Ctr. Director, Center Bldg. Room 409.

Ethics Teleconference
The Siuslaw Area Outreach Center will host an April 12
teleconference on ethics for health care professionals. The program will emphasize medical confidentiality, patient
autonomy, cost containment, allocation Qf resources and other
issues. The $30 registration fee includes printed materials,
break refreshments and the teleconference. For information,
call Jim Brock at ext. 2371 or Al Owens at 997-8444.

Alternatives to Abortion
The Hosanna Children's Center presents an all day
workshop entitled "Alternatives to Abortion" on Monday,
April 15, 1985, from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at the Eugene Hilton.
Special guest speakers, musical entertainment, and displays,
as well as coffee and rolls will be provided.
For registration information contact Hosanna, P.O. Box 26,
Springfield, OR 97477, call 747-5699.

Volunteer Tutors Needed
The English as a Second Language Program is seeking
volunteer tutors to help refugees and foreign students adjust to
a new language and culture. Tutoring is done on an informal
one-to-one basis and requires an interest in people and a desire
to help. No prior teaching experience is necessary. Time and
location are flexible. For more information call 484-2126 Ext.
582 or come to the LCC Downtown Center at 1059 Willamette
',t.

Computer Lab For All
The computer lab at Roosevelt Middle School is open for
teens and adults on Mondays and Wednesdays, from 5-8 p.m.,
April 15 through June S. Cost is 25 cents for teens 11-18 years,
and SI for adults. The lab is co-sponsored by Amazon Community Center and Roosevelt Middle: School Community Program. Participants must have knowledge and experience in
operating a computer. The lab consists of 12 Apple 11-e and 4
Commodore computers. Supervision provided.

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Onl-<omr basis. TORCH rdilon rnrnr 1hr nallt to Nllt for lrnath.

Emerging High Tech
Spring term 1985, earn Science credit by taking Science 199 1 credit, meets Tues. 6-9 p.m., Science room 121, April 2, 9,
16, and 23. Examine the issues of the nuclear age from scientific and social science perspectives. Gather knowledge of our
cultural and global commonalities.
Earn one credit while you learn to speak your conscience. Instructors: Bjo Ashwill and Marje Wynia.

ASLCC Photo Contest
In celebration of Earth Week, the ASLCC is sponsoring a
photo contest, centered on the theme of Earth. Any photo produced in the last year is eligible, cash prizes will be awarded,
and the entries will be judged by LCC photo instructors. The
deadline for entries is April 24, the winner will be announced
on April 25.
Submit entries to: The Cultural Committee, ASLCC, Room
479 Center Building. Call the ASLCC for more information.

LCC Business Scholarships
If you plan on attending LCC full time next fall, have a GPA
of 3.00 or over, and are a business major, you may qualify for
one of the "Person Business Scholarships" which covers tuition and/or books during the 1985-86 school year. For more information, contact the Foundation Office at 747-4501 ext.
2810, or stop by Administration 209 for an application form
and criteria guidelines. Applications must be turned into the
Foundation Office by June 15, notifications will be made by
July 15.

Outstanding Instructors
Nominate your favorite instructor for the 1984-85 Outstanding Instructor of the Year Award. All LCC faculty members,
full and part-time, includiug counselors, in credit and noncredit programs, with one or more years of teaching at LCC are
eligible.
See page two of this week's TORCH for a nomination form.
The deadline for submissions is Friday, April 26, at 4 p.m.,
turn the forms into the Office of Instruction.

Showcase Competition
American Collegiate Talent
The deadline for entering the fourth annual American Collegiate Talent Showcase is rapidly drawing near. Interested
students must have their entries postmarked by April 15, 1985.
ACTS is a national competition for college students who wish
to pursue a career in the entertainment industry. Categories include contemporary and classical music, drama, dance, variety, songwriting, comedy writing, plus a special merit award in
video production.
For further information and details contact: ACTS, Box
3ACT, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, NM 88003,
Phone (505) 646-4413.

Asthmatic Child Workshop
The Oregon Lung Association is sponsoring a free, educational program "Caring For and Living With Asthmatic
Children - Information and Needs." It is a four part session,
on April 15, 16, 22, and 24 from 7 to 9 p.m. at McKrenzieWillamette Hospital. To register call the Oregon Lung Association at 343-5864.

For Working Women
The Business Assistance Center is offering two series focusing on working women on three Wednesday nights April 24
through May 8 from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Hilton Conference Center. The three topics to be covered are: Get Control
of Your Life - Become More Productive; Moving Up - Tips
You Should Know; and Up Your Image - A Makeover That
Means Business. For more information, call the BAC.

EMU Craft Center
Register now for Spring Workshops at the EMU Craft
Center, for one day or the whole term. For more information
call 686-4361.

Blood, Blood, and More Blood
Over 95 percent of Americans reaching age 72 will need
blood, or one of the products derived from blood, in their
lifetime. Give blood for someone who is in need. Call 484-9111
for an appointment.

Training Programs at LCC
John Winquist, Acting Department Chair for Electronics,
will present a career talk in which he will discuss the changes in
LCC's Electronics programs and classes to meet the need for
high tech industry in the Eugene/Springfield area and in
Oregon. John will also be able to answer questions about training programs and employment opportunities in all parts of the
state. The talk will be held from 3-4 p.m. in Forum 308. Sponsored by the Career Informaiton Center. For more information
contact Jean Conklin Ext. 2297.

College Visitation: PSU
Representatives from Portland State University will be in the
LCC cafeteria between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Monday, April
15, to answer question about programs.

Choice in the Nuclear Age
Spring term 1985, earn Science credit by taking Science 199 I credit, meets Tues. 6-9 p.m., Science room 121, April 2, 9,
16, and 23. Examine the issues of the nuclear age from scientific and social science perspectives. Gather knowledge of our
cultural and global commonalities.
Earn one credit while you learn to speak your conscience. Instructors: Bjo Ashwill and Marje Wynia.