The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989, May 31, 1978, Page 3, Image 3

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    ’ ir "‘I
■
orensics students
ponsorsuccessful
speech tourney
jpeech students and their
fuctor helped
Clackamas
nmunity College sponsor a
pal first" in the
Tri-
My Handicapped
Speech
[rnament held at the College
Saturday.
^Clackamas Community Col-
Md something really great
the community last week,"
’frank Harlow, speech in­
tar and coordinator of the
t, "It was really an inspi-
onal day."
5x Portland-area handicap-
high school students receiv-
[ull or partial tuition scholar-
u to local community col-
s as place-winners in the
■ch tournament.
larbara St. Mary, speech stu-
itat the College, wrote the
it which allowed the tourna-
it to receive federal funds
its organization and to fund
¡tuition waivers awarded to
tournament winners.
It. Mary and Harlow coordi-
idthe tri-county tournament
I College speech students
it Sp 270, Projects in Public
iking.
'All my
students really
ked hard to make the tourn-
nt run smooth,"
Harlow
I "I got a lot of good,
five vibrations from it."
low hopes to sponsor the
mment on an annual basis,
allege students also provided
judging responsibilities tor each
category in the tournament.
"I was really touched when
some of those kids got up there
to speak," said Julia Chitty, one
of the CCC students helping
with judging the tournament.
"They were so strong and the
winners were really excited."
Chitty judged the speaking
category for deaf students. She
said even the students who were
deaf
spoke
their speeches.
"They really spoke strongly,"
she said.
The competition for handi­
capped high school
students
from Clackamas, Multnomah and
Washington counties was divided
into categories of orthopedically,
hearing and visually impaired.
The topic of the
persuasive
speaking competition was "Free­
dom from Handicaps."
Paul Danzer,
Wilson High
School;Susan Peterson, Madison
High School; and Cindy Hayes,
Monroe High School, earned
first-place awards of full-year
tuition scholarships to either
Clackamas, Mt. Hood or Port­
land Community Colleges.
Second-place winners of one-
term scholarships to the same
community colleges were Sandy
Fredrick,
Clackamas
High
School; Rhett Wyatt, Centennial
High School; and Susan Malloy,
Monroe High School.
All of the scholarship winners
were seniors.
oals set for support service
Ihe Student Support Service
be serving the needs of the
lent by maintaining a reliable
iurce file in the above areas
.attempting to match these
lurces on an individual basis,
i service (formerly the crisis
gram) will be in existence as
[all term registration, accord-
Itothe Advisory Council. A
emergency, short term, and semi­
permanent housing, carpooling
systems, a cooperative child care
(no-fee) service and a
peer­
counseling service to supplement
the existing professional counsel­
ing program.
These programs
will be offered to all students of
Clackamas Community College.
pared notice of Intent to
e is to be delivered to the
lege and community later
Month.
froposedservices will include:
A student survey and the of­
ficial Intent to Serve will be
mailed to returning and new
students during the
summer
months according to the council.
Three baby racoons are the latest addition to
the John Inskeep Environmental Learning Center
on the College campus. The young bandits are
being hand-fed a special formula every two hours
by student volunteers.
ELC gains baby raccoons
- With an ever-increasing var­
iety of animals- at the John
Inskeep
Environmental Learn­
ing Center on the College cam­
pus, what would be more app­
ropriate than three baby rac­
coons.
A county resident brought a
female
raccoon to the ELC,
three weeks ago after discover­
ing it under a house. When the
animal was released in the ELC,
she chased the baby ducks and
the baby nutria and then dis­
appeared.
Later, the same people ap­
parently found three baby rac­
coons under the same house
where they had found the fe­
male. Unfortunately, by then,
THERE IS A
DIFFERENCE!
the mother was long gone leav­
ing the orphans to be fed by
hand, according to Nora Hall
College student.
Hall and Nan Clark, a former
College student, were recruited
to make sure the three cuddly
bandits received needed nour­
ishment - a special formula pre­
pared specifically for baby rac­
coons and obtained from a local
veterinarian.
’ OUR IP
40th
YEAR /J
Through
TRAINING
ookstore sets summer hours
The College's bookstore hours
I go through changes after
|our-day, 10-hour work week
|intoeffect in July.
The bookstore will be open
|.m. to 8 p.m. on June 19
Pugh 22 and June 26, 27 and
On June 29 and 30 it will be
[id for annual physical in-
lory.
On July 3, 5 and 6 the book-
e will be re-opened from 8
■ to 8 p.m. Beginning July
it will be open 7 a.m. to
M, Monday through Thurs-
day, through summer session.
Beginning Tuesday, June 6,
and running through June 16
will be a book buy-back at the
bookstore.
There will be no
buy-backs until after July 1 and
then it would be to the approval
of Doug Shannon, bookstore
manager.
"I assume we will have some
buy-backs after the end of the
summer," Shannon said.
"I
would encourage everyone to
come between June 6 and 16 for
buy-backs."
for
EMPLOYMENT
MPUN
EDUCATIONAL
CENTER
iEARD’S COPY SHOP
908 MAIN STREET OREGON CITY, OREGON
Phone: (503) 655-9227
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|*»«<fay. May 31,1978
Page 3