The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989, January 14, 1981, Page 3, Image 3

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    Refurbishing
Ion schedule
■The food service had a
■celift over Christmas break.. _
■ The College spent $68,000
to revitalize the cafeteria,
■atrons can now choose from a
Sandwich bar, Salad bar,
Hssert case and a pizza oven,
■wo types of soups are offered
■>ily-
■ Brewton Construction will
■mplete the facelift within four
weeks by extending the
Kfeteria wall. The new front of
the cafeteria will be a glass-
■alled “greenhouse effect.”
■fty more seats will be gained
by the addition.
■The cafeteria- is also swit-
Kiingto china plates, instead of
plastic, because of the
■scalating cost of plastic plates.
Blastic will be used only for cof-
fee and sliverware, according
to Norm Grambusch; food ser-
■ce supervisor.
The customer count as of
Jan. 7 was 1,800, which was
more than usual, according to
Grambusch?. “We start one
cash register . going then start
the other going between 10:30-
a.mand 1:30 p.m. when there
is an overload,” providing four
registers at peak times.
The hours have not chang­
ed. The cafeteria is open from
7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Staff photo by Ramona Isackson
Hatfield warns of belt tightening
Oregon Senator Mark Hat­
field warned the Tri-City
Chamber of Commerce last
week, “...like it or not, we’re all
going to have to bite the
bullet.”
The Senate Appropriations
Committee, which Hatfield
chairs, has control of approx­
imately $100 billion per fiscal
year, or about 40 percent of
the total national budget. Hat­
field sees changes ahead for
government spending. “Since
Career development available
■The process of choosing a
|areer is becoming less difficult,
says Sue Jacobs, coordinator
of the College’s new Career
development Center located in
Hailer D..
■ The center, which Jacobs
«scribes as a “clearinghouse
of career search materials and
■sources,” is open to the
■ublic and the services are free.
■ “The primary objective is to
■elp people help themselves,”
■Jacobs says, pointing- to
shelves of loose-leaf pam­
phlets, books, magazines,
boxes of film strips, microfiche
projectors, and a computer ter­
minal.
vice, Jacobs will help im
dividuals assess their interests
through counseling and testing
and provide career informa­
tion.
“People can come into the
center at .any stage of their
lives or education and get some
idea as to where to go next in
their career search,”? says
Jacobs.
Although the office doesn’t
provide a job placement ser-
She can give advice on
resume writing and offer prac­
tice interviews that • can be
video-taped for review.
For information on the
Career Development Center,
contact Sue Jacobs at
657-8400, ext. 396.
NOW OPEN
AMIGO’S
OUNGE
z
on-Fri
We’re only V2 mileXiorth of
C.C.C. on the right side of
Molalla Ave.
\
A task force headed by
counselor Vince Fitzgerald has
handed its recommendations
for faculty advising and advis­
ing compensation to College
President John Hakanson.
Included in the list of recom­
mendations is a description of
the advising teachers that are
going to perform, the role the
counselors will play, and the
level of monetary compensa­
tion teachers would receive
because of the addition to their
workloads.
Right now, the task force is
looking into the cost factors of
compensation. “We’re in the
process of discussing how
much it will cost,” Fitzgerald
said. “Dr. Hakanson wanted
more detail- on how much
money it will cost for the com­
pensation.”
According to the recommen­
dations, faculty advising is pro­
viding: accurate information on
class selection; on-going “pro­
gram” consultation; and career
656-5115
Jedne.d^an.^4^
Hatfield is also against draft
registration. “I feel that an in­
voluntary draft is an odious
form of forced labor,” he said.
“We would never have been in
Vietnam as long as we were if
President Kennedy and Presi­
dent Johnson didn’t have a
draft. They had an unlimited
supply of young men to push
into an undeclared war. I never
want to see a president have
that kind of power.”
The Senator’s speech
forecast economic troubles.
Said Hatfield, “What we need
is an economic plan wherein
everybody takes the medicine,
not just some groups.
Everybody. This is not Presi­
dent Carter’s making. It is not
Mr. Ford’s making. It’s the day
of accountability that was
started
by
President
Roosevelt.”
However, said Hatfield, the
problem is one not easily solv­
ed. “We cannot solve the
economic problems on a yearly
basis. It’s a. long-time problem.
And the answer isn’t in tax
cuts. I have voted against every
tax cut, and will continue to do
so, until we get the economics
of this; nation on better
ground.”-
Another area of American
life where future belt tightening
may be felt is college tuition. “I
don’t like the fact that anyone
can get tuition money, whether
they need it or not. The money
has to be there for the people
who need it,” he said.
Task force recommends
faculty compensation
FeaturingJHappy Hour
4-6 pm,
Roosevelt was president, the
government has had a ‘Politics
of Plenty.’ The idea is, throw
enough money at. a problem
and you’ll so|ve it. Give the
military enough money, and
we’ll be safe". I’m in opposition
to that,” Hatfield said.
One area that the
Republican senator believes
needs updating is defense.
“I demand that we put a cost
effectiveness program to the
military,” he said. Hatfield has
been an outspoken opponent
of the controversial M-X missle
system. “I don’t want to see
millions upon millions of dollars
spent on a missle, or a tank or a
submarine, that can be
destroyed by a weapon that
costs a few hundred dollars to
make,” he said.
~f
information. All faculty are ex­
pected to advise informally
(without extra pay) as part of
their original teaching respon­
sibilities. Many, if not most, in­
structors are already perform­
ing these tasks.
The task force on retaining
students through advising,
counseling and career planning
has recommended the role of
counselors to be: providing files
to faculty; providing a clearing­
house for advising materials;
acting as liason and consultant
for department advisors; pro­
viding in-service training for ad­
visors; providing a back-up op­
tion for undecided majors,
general studies, part-time
students, evening students,
Guided Studies, and students
with special needs.
The rest of compensation,
either monetary or in benefits,
is still being researched by the
task force. A decision from
Hakanson is hoped to come
within two weeks so advising
and compensation can start
before the end of winter term.
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