0 print Vol. XIV, No. 4 __ ClackamasCommunity College Wednesday, October 2 2, 1980 ed Cross prepares for drive Bÿ J. Dana Haynes I The up-coming Red Cross blood drivé and the annual Craftsfair were the main topics y last week’s ASG meeting. ■ Dennis Donin, a represen­ tative of the. Red Cross of Oregon spoke at the meeting, Explaining the need for student and faculty help on this blood ■Érive. Said Donin, “Each per- son who donates is saving as |rnany as three lives. .What’s -jfnore, it doesn’t cost you a yjçent.” The main emphasis this time is a “platelet drive”. I “The blood collected will be ^Broken down into red blood |Bells, plasma and platelets. Platelets are needed for cancer and leucemia pàtiènts”, said ^■»onin. I Also discussed was the an- :4|nual Craftsfair, held on cam- .|pus. It was decided to chargé $10 for a booth, $5 of which Hwll be refunded to Clackamas, ■students and senior citizens. I In recent years, the Craftsfair has received increasing popularity. Last year it nearly ■sutgrew the campus mall. ■Craftsfair will be on Dec. 5, Brom 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. I Other impending activities ■ncluded a luncheon on Oct. >21 at the International Dunes. If""----------- I On the inside Guest speakers« will be Con- gressman Á1 Ullman and Senator Henry “Scoop” Jackson of Washington. Brie Etzel, president of the ASG, Suggested that a representative from the College attend the luncheon, since Ullman represents Clackamas County. ¡ The Association of College Unions International will hold a showcase on Nov. 6,7,8, and 9. The ACUI is an organization of most two-and four-year col­ leges in the U.S. and Canada. The workshop will be for anyone interested in student' government. Joe Schweitzer, assistant to Etzel, made several an­ nouncements, including plans to remodel the cafeteria, the building of a livestock facility for the college and efforts to set up a satelite campus, somewhere on the north side, of the county. The remodeling ' of the cafeteria will begin at the end of the. fall term, and should take two weeks. During that time, they will set up a makeshift cafeteria in Randall hall. The proposed livestock facili­ ty would be a one of a kind situation. It would include a place to keep animals for the This week in The Print, the Arts page takes a look at two of the four leads in the drama department’s upcoming play, The Glass Menagerie. The two and only Dana Haynes and Amy DeVour. They appear on pages four and five. agriculture department, and a facility to change manure into fertilizer. Plans are being discussed to set up a satelite. campus. Said Schweitzer, “Many people who live on the north side of the county don’t want to travel all the way out here, and so they go to another college. A satelite campus would get rid of that problem.” Korton new board member Philip J. Korten, 35, was unanimously apointed to the Clackamas Community Col­ lege. Board, Oct. 2 during a Board luncheon. Korten, a Milwaukie resi­ dent, assumes the Board Zone 2 position which represents the Milwaukie, Oak Grove, Happy Valley, Rock Creek area. The one-year appointment tem­ porarily fills the vacancy left in August by four-year board member, Gary Cornelius. The position will be open to voter approval in an election next year. A graduate of Pacific Univer­ sity,, Forest Grove, Korten has been a practicing- optomerist since 1976. He is also an assis­ tant visiting professor ¿t Pacific University and a vision consul­ tant with the Clackamas Coun­ ty Head Start program. A new sport has appeared at the College, and Ed Coyne narrates on page five. On Feature page, the second part of Tom Jeffries report on wind power. Also, the beginning of a multi-part series on the foreign students at the College and Korten currently sits on the Clackamas Chamber of Com- Portland Metro Optometric merce and the Milwaukie Elks. Association Board of Directors He is married and has two and is a member of the North children. where they get their money to attend colleges in America. In case you missed them, the folks from the Church of Scien­ tology were in the cafeteria last Friday gathering signatures for a letter to be sent to our one and only President, Jimmy Carter^h^purpos^s^^pu^ an end to the use of nerve gas. On Sports, the spotlight is on Jim Keough, a player on the soccer team, is teaching the game to the younger set. Details on page eight. Right after the ad for the Army.