Communique •XI TALKCb To . BUZZARD HAHA6ER 5LAÛ, ÖO VOU DiTH RAW IN ■SITKA? niÆïçws'x T y I u-u-œs A OBIf UCWRliD AÔ-BWT THE Hakanson well deservin of federal appointmen Congratulations, Dr. Hakanson. In last week’s issue of The Print it was reported that College President Dr. John Hakanson had been appointed to a White House Committee on Aging, thus con-? gratuiations are in order. Dr. Hakanson gave welcoming remarks at the “Global 2000 Report to the President” discussion meeting (story pages 1 and 5) last Friday evening. As he Began his remarks, Dr. Hakan­ son stated, “Your applause has blown my contribution way out of proportion. Some days if you’ll come out here (to the Col­ lege) you’ll see on the meeting agenda 1 “Dr. Hakanson-Welcome”. If you come back at noon, you’ll see a luncheon meeting agenda that will say, “Dr. Hakanson-Remarks”. Sometimes in the i evening, maybe on the same day another agenda schedule will say, “Dr. Hakan$ Comments”. I get to do all of those he duty obligations.” Dr. Hakanson was giving his ope remarks.in a lighthearted manner, to fills a far more important role than sir an introductory speaker at various Col, functions. The White House has recognized by making Dr. Hakanson part of a con tee on aging. Hakanson is the i delegate from Clackamas County on committee pf 250. It is not surprising that Hakans qualifications did not go unnoticed has chaired various senior oil organizations, and has submitted rq on older citizens and employment to officials. Once again, congratulations, Hakanson. Election results: senators get no-vot Last Wednesday, Thurs­ day and Friday, the students of the College were asked to dust By J. Dana , Haynes off their civic pride and vote for members of the Associated Student Government. We were asked to take about five minutes of our time and look over the ballots. But, with few exceptions, we did not. Some interesting statistics pop to mind when one thinks about the voting turn-out at the school. There are approx­ imately 10,000 day-time students, both part- and full- time on campus. When yoq count in the night school and off-campus students, we’ve got a total population more than 20,000. tional turn-out. In feet, it’s awful. It works.outto about 1.3 percent of the day-tiiqe student body giving a damn. ASG President Sam Crosby was- disappointed by the lack of interest. “Fm awfully concerned about students’ desires and responsibilities toward student-oriented ac­ During the three days of tivities. We were expecting a voting, 128 brave souls cast much better turn-out.” their two-cents worth. So what happened? Mass As most people would apathy seems to have taken agree, this is hardly a sensa- over and this writer was hardly Readers write Professionalism sadly lacking To the Editor: I’m an* engineer at Tektronix; I graduated from college in June. Tonight I had my first class at CCC. I wasn’t an English major, so I’m not an expert in gram­ mar or sentence structure... it really hurt me, though, to read The Print tonight. The feeling was as much embarrassment for the community image of CCC as it was hurt at the sad lack of professionalism that I saw in The Print. It made me want to sit down right away and write a letter... and Fm not the letter-writing type. This letter isn’t meant to criticize you personally, Rick (Obritschkewitsch, editor). Fm writing this because I wonder if you might scale your paper down, in size and scope, and do some intensive editing and proof reading before you print The Print. page 2 Take Thomas A Rhodes* opinion piece on Reaganomics, for example: I never did figure out exactly what he was trying to say. An opinion piece needs to be con­ cise, readable, and straight for­ ward if its writer hopes to in­ fluence anyone’s opinion; Rhode’s piece was, none of those. His pseudo-intellectual style especially the first two paragraphs, didn’t add to his effectiveness... it destroyed it. Any writer who hopes to take on. the problems feeing the na­ tional government needs to convince readers of his or her knowledge and intelligence... Fm afraid that Rhodes’.run-on sentences made him look like a high-schooler, not someone who should be on the staff of a college newspaper. J. Dana Haynes’ MX missile cartoon was great! Im­ probably, biting, a good representation of the combina­ tion feud/friendship the speaker (Thomas “Tip” O’Neill) has with the president (Ronald Reagan) these days... but he misspelled O’Neill’s name. What a letdown... Enough (more than enough) said... Pm really not eloquent enough to be making these high-and-mighty com­ ments about your paper. But please do yourself—and the CCC image--a favor... work harder on your paper. Sincerely, Jerry Peek EDITOR’S RESPONSE: We (The Print) pro­ bably did take on more than we should have in our first issue, going twelve pages instead of eight. We appreciate any comments and/or sugges­ tions on improving The Print. OK. Your turn. Wl immune. I was standing by the ASG office, killing time, and we do? waiting for someone to say was thronged with peop something quotable, when Joe something out of a N Rockwell. The voting booths Schweizer, assistant to resembled a ghost town. president asked me if Fdi ‘People are always com­ yet. There, not two-feet plaining, griping and moping,” me, were the voting h said Crosby, “but they won’t They stood obtrusively! take time to vote.” He also middle of the floor and I pointed out that Red Cross was \ to admit I hadn’t seen- on campus last week and left before. So I voted, with 89 pints of blood, well because Fd scrawled “Vi short of their'goal. day,” on my calendar, b What’s the problem? of a combination of There was a time when you taneous citizenship and ei could always count on college rassment. The apathy was no students to get involved, even if no one else would. This is not evident on Friday. There an editorial designed to right free ice cream feed, held some age-old wrong, but only the intention of getting pi to shed some light on a very within the vicinity of the booths. The ice cream? serious problem. “ staff THE PRINT, a member of the Oregon Newspaper Publish Association, aims to be a fair and impartial journalistic med covering the campus community as thoroughly as possible.! nions expressed in THE PRINT do not necessarily reflect th« the College administration, faculty, Associated Student Go* ment or other staff members of THE PRINT. office: Ttailer B; telephone: 657-8400, ext. 309 or 310 editor: Rick Obritschkewitsch news editor: J. Dana Haynes; arts editor: Una Riggs sports editor: Wanda Percival photo editor: Duane Hiersche; copy editor: Mike Rose staff writers: Kristi Blackman, Alison Hull Thomas A. Rhodes, Tracy Teigland, Daria Weinberger staff photographers: Duffy Coffman, Jay Graham cartoonists: Jim Adams, J. Dana Haynes business manager: Joan Seely typesetter: Pennie Keefer; graphics: Lynn Griffith advisor: Dana Spielmann Clackamas Community Û