Image provided by: Clackamas Community College; Oregon City, OR
About The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1979)
opinion FRANKLY SPEAKING ... .by phil frank! | Food for thought | The issue of introducing a deli on campus gg gghas raised quite a few arguments betweengg ggpeople who are striving for the same thing, gg ggan alternative food service. While all sides seem to agree that angg ¿g alternative food source is needed, none cangg jig:meet eye to eye about anything. The biggest problem seems to be that ifgg ggthe College did house a “deli,” where wouldgg ggwe put it? Suggestions to have it put ingg gg:the Randall Hall concession stand that sitsgg ggand gathers dust most of the year, havegg ggbeen turned down strongly. It seems that agg gg community college with an enrollment ofgg ggn early 4,000 could easily find space for agg gg small-sized deli; apparently not. The deli issue is currently being stewedgg ggover by everyone but the students. Maybe gg ggthe students are the ones who have the an-gg ggswer. The deli will serve the students, sogg gg why not let the students have a part in it. Ifgg gganyone has an idea of the best place togg gghouse the deli on the campus, come forthgg ggand voice your idea. gg It’s not so much that we are sick of thegg gg cafeteria’s food(although I speak only forgg gg myself), but the change would be nice, gig ggEating is a way of life to some, and the dailygg gg routines we go through are bad enoughgg ggwithout having to eat the same stuff day af-gg ggter day. gg Not only would the change of taste begg ggnice, it would also give some of the studen-gg ggts more time to enjoy their lunch hour,gg ggwhich goes by quickly when you have togg gg stand in line for 25 or 30 minutes. Thegg ^alternative food source would “pick up ongg ggthe overflow,” according to one backer ofgg Editors note: This ggthe idea. gg All this talk about a deli has probablygg editorial appeared in the 25 edition of the Daily ggmade you hungry, but it is giving many in-gg May Barometer from Oregon gg digestion. The best cure for all is to go togg State University: ggthe students. Maybe the pains will subside, gg Guest Shot “Colorado Kool-aid,” a brand of beer popularized by singer Johnny Paycheck cMjhis “Take This-Job and Shove It” album, is coming to Oregon in spite of the objections of the Teamsters pnion. 19600 S. Molalla Avenue, Oregon City, Oregon 97045 Office: Trailer B; telephone: 656;2631, ext. 309 editor: Leanne Lally; news editor: Mike Koller arts editor: Elena Vancil; feature editor: Kelly Laughlin sports editor: Brian Rood; photo editor: Duffy Coffman assistant photo editor: Kevin Almond staff writers: Susan Hanneman, Ramona Isackson, Don Ives Lee Jeffries, Chris Merritt, James Rhoades, Tom Rhodes Dea Shepherd-Kent; staff photographers: Cathy Gross Robert Hand; advertising manager: Jack Tucker business manager: Ron Allen; professional adviser: Suzie Boss The Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC) last week voted 2-1 to allow non-heat pasteurized beer to be sold in Oregon. The change wilj.allow the sale of Coors, a popular brand of beer brewed in Colorado. Indirectly, Oregon State University had a hand in bringing Coors to Oregon. A study completed by the univer sity in 1978 showed that a filtration process, similarto the one used by Coors „ is: as effec tive as heat pasteurization/’ serving. In 1977 the H workers who operated t| Golden, Colo, brewery told t| C°QW|m c°rp0|ti| management to take their > and shove ’em. So, as Coors prepar® assault | on its new OH market, the teamsters pH The teamsters disagreed. . an appeal of the 03 They argued that Coors decision. But no one shod cpjuldn’t be sold expect that decision to be ove Oregon—without approval of turned because the teamH the state legislature—because . credibility on the issuH h of a law enacted in 1933 which deteriorated too far. was intended to require heat At any' rate, the dispti processes in use at the time. should make for some Igoe The real reason the team tavern conversations whe sters don’t want, Coors in Oregonians can start orderin Oregon, of course, is more self- Coorson tap. The Print, a member of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, aims to be a fair and impartial journalistic medium covering the campus community as thoroughly as possible. Opinions expressed in The Print do not necessarily reflect those of the CCC administration, faculty or the Associated Student Government. Page 2 i Clackamas Community Colle«