Image provided by: Clackamas Community College; Oregon City, OR
About The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1978)
The official, semi-annual, bi-centennial, te-of-the-cafeteria report ‘The shopper, really informed and looking for a io food with nothing added or taken away, is like Lenes with a lantern unable to find an honest man." ¡Testimony before congressional committee •So,my editor calls me in and says to me that she fa great idea for a story. Why not do a feature on [school cafeteria? What a great idea, I said to my- I visions of Bernstein already forming at the possi- [ties this story presented. Bly own creative juices began to flow, sprung, larently,from the originality of an idea of a school far doing an article on the cafeteria. After all, teyou ever been to a school where someone didn't inplain about the food? Jim McCaffrey The Print ■Time to send some fool out to check up on those Hie again to make sure that they aren't overcharg- jus for our potatoes and what we assume to be It. So, here is my never-to-be-forgotten, semi nal, bi-centennial state-of-the-cafeteria report. Mo start, it is probably best to try and give a de Lion of what the cafeteria is and what it is not. ■cafeteria is not a restaurant. It is not set up to lea profit. It is also not a health food store, a Mc- jnald's, or a student welfare program. Khat the cafeteria is, is functional. It is an attempt ¡provide popular foods at reasonable prices while ■pingfinancially solvent. jckamas Cafe - Home of the world famous Alferd Ikard home of cooked cuisine* For the record, here are the statistics of the cafe- la for the fiscal year 1976 - 1977 that I am sure ■ have all been meaning to ask about, but never ■med to have the opportunity. Got your crayons I construction paper? (Remember if you just ■otto cut this out, use your round-edged scissors.) ■egoes. ■Your cafeteria is busy approximately 40 weeks in Bear. Last year, in those 40 weeks, they used about: 12400 gallons milk 11500pounds ham 13000 dozen eggs 1160 cases lettuce ■120 boxes tomatoes 12000 pounds roast beef ■1500 pounds hamburger ■4800pounds hamburger patties 1 6000 pounds vegetables ■150cases canned tomatoes 130cases catsup ■400 gallons pickles ■96 hallons mayonaise ■The cafeteria employs up to 22 people. Nine are ■salary, four are utility workers, and six to Ware ■dents on the work/study program. Norm Gram- fth is the manager and is responsible to the Dean ■Services office. ■This food services operation, although run by the Bool administration, is not eligible to receive state ■federal funds. The kitchen was budgeted for about ■0,000 last year but they had a $9,000 deficit, the ■fence being made up from the school's general pd Packard was the only person in United States fe ever to be convicted of canabalism. Both the Rersity of Colorado and the U.S. State Départ it have cafeterias named for him. Community College Photo by Brian Snook Grambush blamed the deficit on a 7 percent rise in inflation and a failure on his part to raise prices in time to keep up. This year, Grambusch does not ex pect any deficit and claims to be about $100 in the black. Last year, almost $80,000 was spent on food, $10,000 on paper, $75,000 on salaries, $1,500 on utilities, and $15,000 was budgeted for equipment. As would be expected, items are sold according to their popularity, cost and availability, Grambusch said. Menus are varied as much as possible with re visions about every five weeks. The staff makes the soups and salad dressings themselves. (O.K. put away your crayons, end of the statistics. How's that for hard-hitting, investigative journalism? Sorry, Woodword, you may have a mil lion bucks but you'll never have this kind of talent for uncovering stats.) God, I hope there was just an earthquake 'cause I think something on my plate just moved. Perhaps 75 percent of the world lives on a basic diet of one food, usually a cereal (typically rice), usually grown by themselves, and usually eaten in a simple boiled form. In contrast, industrial man buys widely from restaurants, carry-outs, and vending ma chines, as well as from an average supermarket stock of over 7,000 items that have been stored, transported usually processed and preserved, and wrapped for sale, according to "Man's Body--An Owner's Manual," by the Diagram Group. According to institutional statistics, the 10 most popular main dishes are fried chicken, roast beef, spa ghetti, turkey, baked ham, fried shrimp, beef stew, meat loaf, fish and macaroni and cheese. This is dis counting hamburgers as a main dish. To anyone who has eaten a single meal in our cafeteria these foods must appear familiar. There are fairly nutritious meals to be bought in the cafeteria. It is up to the individual to decide how he or she would like to be "poisoned". The cafeteria is one of the most responsive institutions on campus. They depend on their ability to meet the demands of the students. The menu is an accurate reflection of the demands made upon it. It is a certainty that if nobody is buying hamburgers the cafeteria won't be selling them for long. Since management claims that the prices on smal ler items such as apples and oranges are inflated so they may sell hamburger at a more reasonable price, it would seem reasonable to expect prices to go down on items as hamburger sales decreased. We make the decisions. The Legend of Paper Plates By John Haines They trace their ancestry Back to the forest There all the family stood. Proud, bushy, and strong. Until hard times, when from fire and drought the patriarchs crashed. The land was taken for taxes, the young people cut down and sold to the mills. Their manhood and womanhood was crushed, bleached with bitter acids their fibers dispersed as sawdust among ten million offspring. You see them at any picnic, at ball games, at home, and at state occasions. They are thin and pliable, porous and dentical. They are made to be thrown^away. Listen, this place spends $10,000 a year on paper plates, styrofoam cups and plastic utensils to be used once and thrown away. Not one penny is being spent, not one iota of energy is being used to recycle any of it. This is not only happening at our College, but throughout cafeterias in Oregon. Mt. Hood Community College, Portland State University, and Oregon State University cafeterias have confirmed that they also have found it cheaper to use paper and disposable products than to buy washing equipment, dishes and silverware that breaks down, break and are stolen. This strikes me as being irresponsible. To put it simply, if you have to use paper and plastic products, is it unreasonable to think that someone could put out recycling containers that would allow people to separate food, plastic and paper as they leave? Is it a financial burden to put a few students on a work/ study program to help with a recycling effort? How come people in student government haven't taken it upon themselves to help coordinate a similar operation already? Isn't that what they are there for? Seems like time would be better spent helping coordinate recycling efforts on this campus and cam uses throughout the state than in trying to figure out when to hold the next dance. This is the end of the never to be forgotten, semi annual, bi-centennial, state-of-the-cafeteria report. Looks like things are just the way you let them be, as usual. The only thing left to do is to pass out a little un solicited, but free, advice-words of wisdom on how to stay young and healthy from a very wise and youth ful man-Leroy "Satchell" Paige. Paige is,perhaps,the greatest black pitcher in base ball history. Considering the fact that he was pitch ing major league ball at the age of 59 he must be considered an expert on staying young and healthy. Listen:" Listen: "Avoid fried meats which angry up the blood. If your stomache disputes you, lie down and pacify it with cool thoughts. Keep the juices flowing by jangling around gently as you move. Go lightly on the vices, such as carrying on in society. The social ramble ain't restful. Avoid running at all times. Don't look back. Something might be gaining on you. Page 3