Image provided by: Clackamas Community College; Oregon City, OR
About The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1981)
ELC host recyclers By J. Dana Haynes Of The Print For anyone who is familiar with the truly original aroma that permeates an area east of Oregon City, good news abounds! There is an alter native to garbage dumps: waste recycling. Not a new idea? Perhaps not, but statistics show that it is an idea that has never been properly attempted. Cost is the primary prohibitive factor, with apathy lending a helping hand. Several private citizens and representatives from civic organizations gathered in the John Inskeep Environmental Learning Center on campus Tuesday for lectures, films and question/answer sessions. Their topic was waste recycling and how to make'it feasible. ELC Education Coordinator Charles Puckett hosted the four-hour affair, which includ ed guest lectures from DEQ, trom DtQ, the Metropolitan Serice District (Metro), Portland Recycling team, Independent 'Paper Stock Co., and the Pacific Rim Exchange,. Time and again, the point emphasized at the conference' was that recycling need not be non-profit. \A carefully organiz ed and well-run operation can be a money-making enterprise. Judy Roumpf, the represen tative from Metro, pointed out that not having a waste reduc tion plant can also be expen sive. “Garbage costs money,” said Roumpf. “Every ton of garbage diverted from the land fills saves public dollars.” Metro itself is not a garbage gathering agency. That is to say, a Metro employee will not knock on your door and ask for old beer carts and back issues of “The Print.” But they do run recycling operations. The idea that reusing refuse was feasible and practical sprang in part from the Earth Day, 197Q. After that nation wide attempt to show the disastrous effect the Industrial Revolution was having on the ^environment, virtually thousands of volunteer organizations became involv ed. Recycling centers sprang up seemingly overnight. Many flourished for all of six months, some survived a year Or two. But the prohibitive cost slew many projects, along with a fickle market for the gleaned commodities and lack of storage facilities. However, if organizations such as Metro, the Portland Recycling Team and the Col lege’s owh ELC are successful, new systems and procedures will become available to every Midnight oil, cracked books and empty speed bottles community. It is even remotely herald the return of the dreaded Finals Week. Schedules possible that sources of on page 8. monumental stench, such as Rossman’s Landfill will be transformed from hysterical sores to historical sights. Language classes to march towards Waterloo By Tom Jeffries Of The Print They’re called the “Groupies II” and, basically, they have only one thing in common: an intense desire to go to Europe. Toward this end, 16 CCC in structors and CCC and Univer sity of Portland students have formed a group that will visit seven countries this summer. Their trip will cover 21 days, and cost $1,500 to $1,700 each. “This is the second group to go,” explained Magdalena Ladd, one of the instructors planning to go along, and a chief coordinator. “That’s why the name. The first group was called ‘The Groupies’.” The first group went two years ago and was much smaller. That group of eight did not include Ladd. “We planned it out and everything, but then three days before we were scheduled to leave I got sick. Luckily, Dr. Ayres was able to step in on short notice and take the group. That says something for her adaptability I think,” Ladd said. Angela Ayres will be ac companying the “Groupies II,” also. Between the two, Ladd and Ayres are able to command three of the major languages of the European Continent: Spanish, French and German. The students are nearly all in either their first or second year with one of the languages and so would not be able to make do on their own. For many, the only trip outside of the country they have taken has been to Canada. “Groupies II,” unlike their predecessors, will not be ex? clusively from CCC. Three of the 13 students going are from the University of Portland. One of the tutors of the College also teaches at the U of P. The students there did not have the opportunity through their school, so she contacted Ladd and arranged to have the students merge into one group. The trip will start the week of June 21, when the “Groupies” will meet in Seattle for the flight to London. They will stay over night there and then take a train to Dover and cross the channel by ferry to Calais near the Belgian border. There they will pick up the two Volkswagen busses that will carry the 16 across Europe. From Calais, they will head east to Waterloo, where they will pick up another member of the group who is currently stay ing there. From there, they may go north into Brussels, or, simply head back west and then south down the coast of France. They will drive through the rural countryside of the Loire Valley and Mt. St. Michele, famous both for their beauty and their imposing castles. From there, they will skirt Paris and go south across the Pyrenees Mountains into thé Basque country of northern Spain. In Spain, the group will have the opportunity to stay both in private homes and former no bles’ palaces that have been rebuilt as hotels as they drive southward to Toledo and then east to Valencia. From there, they will hêad north through the tiny Republic of Andorra, Development office raises money in conjunction with CCC Foundation Development Office. The Foundation is composed of Money. The Development citizens who are able to donate Office Is one way the College financiaTsupport and time to gets it. Thè Development Of the College. Currently, the Foundation is fice raises money for projects that are not paid for by the Col working with the Development lege’s tax-supported general Office to establish a memorial scholarship, which has not of fund. The Development Office ficially been confirmed. The coordinates grants, federal foundation is funding 11 contracts and special projects. scholarships, one for each high The office also raises money by school in the College district. Money was raised by the contacting other external sources such as businesses and Foundation to landscape the the community. Community Art Department and to buy groups, especially the awards for the livestock judging Clackamas Community Col team. The organization helps lege Foundation, work closely any College program it con with the Development Office. siders worthwhile. Last year, The College Foundation is a the Clackamas Community private organization that raises College Foundation raised money for the College. “One $28,000 to support projects purpose of the group is to in that the College’s general fund volve the community with the would not have covered. > The Development Office College,” said William Anton,' executive director of the also is assisting the Red Soils By Mike Rose Of The Print Page 4 Youth Complex in raising $400,000. The money is need ed to purchase baseball and soccer fields. “We are here to serve the community, that’s why we help organizations like the Red Solis Youth Complex,” Anton said. “If a professor wanted money, to do research, .say $50,000,” Anton said, “the first thing he would do is come to the Development Office. We would try to find sources of money and assist in the paper work.” The College is trying to get a grant to purchase a methane gas digester for the livestock facility. The digester costs over $50,000. The Development Office is working with Rep. Les AuCoin’s office in pursuit of the grant. The College has been turned down twice for the grant request, but is still searching for other funding. Donation programs also are arrange^ by the Development »Office. One of these is the deferred giving program, in which the contributor takes out a life insurance policy that is payable to the College. The cost of the life insurance policy is tax deductible and the con tributor can specify what the money will be used for. Over $65,000 has already been raised by deferred gifts, to be received after the donors die. The Development Office is also working on an annual gift program. Individuals pledge to give donations every year. Anton said,“We are a com munity college. The important thing to remember is. that our middle name is community- that’s what we do is serve the community. In turn,” he add ed; “we are the community, that’s why we work with the community organizations.” perched high in the Pyrenees. This small nation has the distinction of having its major revenue from smuggling bet ween Spain and France. Back in France, the “Groupies” will cruise the Riviera on their way to Switzerland. There they will stay again in a private home of a friend of Ladd’s, who was bom in Switzerland,., Thestay will end with a tour through the Black Forest area, Stuttgart, Franfurt, Trier, and the, Mosel Valley. In this area, they will be able to visit a Porsche factory, the Mercedes museum, and the famous vineyards of the Mosel. From there, they will drive 'west to Paris, where the group will disband. Of the 16, only four will return to the U.S. right away. The others will go off alone to various parts of Europe, in cluding France, Germany, Switzerland and Austria. Because the trip won’t be a guided tour, the job of driving the vehicles will fall on the “Groupies.” This adds an inter national driver’s license as one more preparation for the trip. “The main drawback was the money,” said Shelley Erickson, a CCC French I student whose only previous out-of-the-U.S. trip had been to Canada^ “I’m working very, very hard, and with a little help from my parents, I think I’ll make it. I think I’ll be able to converse, maybe not too well, but .with Mrs. Ladd there it won’t be like we’ll be all alone.” Erickson originally picked French because it seemed like an interesting language, and then decided that she wanted to go to Europe. The “Groupies^ already have their plane tickets and will soon be paying the advance rent for the cars. Those who do not have passports have been advised to get them right away, so that nothing can come up to hinder the “Groupies _II” trek across Europe. Clackainas Community College