The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989, January 27, 1982, Page 3, Image 3

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    Board hires new instructor;
names two campus roadways
The CCC Board of Educa­
tion approved a new instructor
Jan. 13 and named several col­
lege streets.
Samuel C. Ellis was hired
as the new computer science
instructor in the math depart­
ment, on a 12-month basis
beginning Jan. 14. Ellis will
begin at a salary of $10,000.
The Board approved the
transfer of $12,000 from con­
tingency budget to personnel
services in the general fund for
Ellis’ salary.
DR. KENT HEATON
Staff Photo by Reid Carscadden
Survey held today
A student survey on the
economic impact of legislative
budget cuts on the College will
be distributed to all 10 a.m.
classes today and tomorrow.
“The purpose of this
survey, is to let- the State
Legislature know how impor­
tant community colleges are,”
Dr. Kent Heaton, research and
staff development officer said.
“We’ll tabulate the results and
send them down to the State
Legislature?’
“We’re going to get the
message across to the
legislature that we’re here and
use the community colleges,”
Heaton said. “We’re alsd
economically important to the
local economy and state, and
we should receive its fair share
of the state budget for educa­
tion.”
Clackamas is not the only
community college to receive
this survey. All community col­
leges in the state are doing the
survey. “Community colleges
feel they’re ¡getting the short
end of this to .higher
education, ” Heaton said.
“We’ll show the state that we’re
an economic force in this state,
and we shouldn’t be short
changed.”
“All full-time college
transfer and vocational, all
part-time transfer and voca­
tional, and all students who
take non-credit classes will be
the ones we survey,” Heaton
said.
ASG members will be the
ones explaining and collecting
the survey to the classes. “I’m
very impressed with ASG that
they took on this task to help
community colleges,” Heaton
commented. “They took an ac­
tive part in this and-performed
a civic responsibility.”
Red Cross slated to
syphon student body
You can save three lives
pn Monday, Feb. 1, from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. when the. Red
Cross is collecting blood in the
Community Center.
This, blood drive is par­
ticularly important, a Red
Cross representative said,
because each unit of blood will
be fractioned into three com­
ponents. These are: plasma for
burn victims, red cells for open
heart surgery and cancer pa­
tients, and platelets for
leukemia and cancer patients.
One donor’s unit of blood can
have three lives.
I
Each day, 475 units of
blood are needed to sustain the
fives of hospital patients accor­
ding to the Red Cross.
The blood drive is spon-
pred by Associated Student
bovernment. ASG Vice Presi­
dent, Sue Ryan said the pro-
bcted goal of the drive is 105
knits of blood, but she hopes
|ven more blood will be
Ryan said she was en­
couraging her friends to donate
blood and urges that other
nudents do the same. “If your
Wednesday, Jan. 27, 1982
friends are chicken to. give
blood, try to make them feel
guilty, especially if they have a
rare blood type,” she joked.
Classified
Free longhair dachshund male.
Neutered. Very affectionate.
Good with kids. Contact Rick
at 657-8400, ext. 309.
The College will lease two
trailers to the North Clackamas
School District 12 for a'nominal
'yearly fee, per trailer. District
12 will assume moving, reloca­
tion, maintenance, and in­
surance costs.
, The Board also approved winding through the College
the award to each of the three land was christened Clairmont
members of the management Drive, and the road that en­
negotiating team $600 a piece, circles the Randall and
in recognition of outstanding McLoughlin parking lots was
service to the college during the named Grove Circle.
collective bargaining process
last term.
Board member Harold
The Board has made a Washam said, in reference to
practice of this kind of recogni­ the Handicapped Awareness
tion for the past several years, Week, that the Oregon City
College President John Hakan- Police Department has
son explained. Some discus­ discovered that in order to
sion arose from the motion, make a technically valid arrest
with faculty liaison Les Tipton for illegal parking in a Han-
wondering what fund the " dicapped zone, the ORS cita­
bonuses would be taken from. tion must be visible on the logo
According to Bill Ryan, dean of identifying the space as reserv­
college services, the money has ed for the handicapped. Jim
been drawn from personal ser­ Roberts, dean of student ser­
vices in the past.
vices, said this has never
The campus road leading presented a problem at the col­
from Beavercreek Road and lege, but he would follow it up.
Telecom workshop scheduled
By Darla J. Weinberger
Of the Print
A telecommunications
Workshop sponsored by the
Oregon Community College
Telecommunications Consor­
tium, and the Clackamas Com­
munity Educational Service
District will be held Feb. 3-4 at
CCC.
“We’ll deal with two
distinctively different subjects;’*
said Bob Wynia, assistant dean
of instruction and chairperson
of the consortium. “The first
day the -subject will be ad­
ministration of television pro­
gramming, that’s basically be­
ing set up with school ad­
ministrators, superintendents,
and principals, with the media
specialist from schools in
Clackamas County.
- -“Day-two, we’ll be dealing
with the teaching of courses by
television in the community
colleges,” Wynia said.
“Basically the television instruc­
tors of the community colleges
around Oregon will attend
this.”
The college now has
seven telecourses running
Winter term, Wynia said seven
more will be added for Spring
term. Students enrolled in
telecourses are required to at­
tend an orientation session,
take a midterm, Watch a half
hour program twice a week,
and take a final exam at the
end of the term.
“Telecourses are shown
on cable,” Wynia said. “We
operate a cable system with
Liberty Cable on Channel 9.
“We organized the consor­
tium to give the 13 community
colleges a chance to meet once
a year with those who teach'
telecourses and administrators
who have the responsibility of
running telecourse programs
and telecommunications,”'
Wynia commented, “By com­
ing together, the administrators
have been able to talk about
problems we’ve run into, such
as' grading and how many
times per term students should
meet.”
“Potential in Oregon and
What We’re Doing With
Telecourses” will be discussed
by Dee Brock, director of adult
learning' with Public Broad­
casting Systems in Washington
D.C., and Jerry Appy, director
of Oregon Education Public
Broadcasting System. Dr. Bill
Stewart, president of Kirtwood
Community College in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa and Dr. Everett
Hidlebough, Superintendent in
Vinton, Iowa will speak also.
This will be the second
year of the workshop. “I think
we’ve helped a lot of teachers
understand what it means to
teach a course by television?’
Wynia said.
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