The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989, June 01, 1983, Page 6, Image 6

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    New home opens news briefs
to help victims of
Legislators Administration considers
domestic violence visit campus sanctions for non-payment
About 1.8 million women
are beaten in their homes each
year, Trish Haas, director of
Clackamas County’s new
shelter for victims of domestic
violence said.
FBI statistics, she said,
show only one in ten cases is
reported. Further, Clackamas
County Sheriff’s Deputy Judy
Gage said, the sheriff’s office
gets as many as 50 calls a week
reporting domestic violence.
Evergreen House, a pro­
ject of the Clackamas County
Women’s Center, will be open­
ing in mid-June to provide a
place for the victims behind the
statistics, who may include
children or other family
members battered by relatives.
“Basically it is a safe place
for women to come. We’ll be
doing crisis intervention, legal
advocacy,
child care,
whatever’s needed,” Linda
Gillis, house manager said.
Community volunteers
are needed in a number of
areas, she said, including sup­
port of those in crisis, providing
transportation and working
with children. The hope, Haas
said is, with enough donations
and volunteer support, to have
a 24-hour facility. In the mean­
time the shelter will help cover
after-hours crisis situations with
the 24-hour crisis line number
which is 654-2288.
Evergreen House will be
partly funded by a federal block
grant from Clackamas County,
Haas said, and is an outgrowth
of concern by various govern­
mental and citizen groups in­
cluding the district attorney’s
office and Oregon Legal Ser­
vices.
“It’s really exciting for
Clackamas County to have
this,” Gage said. “It’s a long
awaited and needed resource.”
For more information, call
the Women’s Center at
654-2019 or Evergreen
House.
State Senators Walt
Brown and Joyce Cohen will
be among speakers at a two-
day estate seminar at
Clackamas Community Col­
lege June 10 and .11.
Brown is scheduled to
speak June 11 from 1-2:30
p,m. on real property, continu­
ing education and veterans ser­
vices. Cohen is slated to follow
at 2:45 p.m. with a talk on land
use, housing and veterans
home loans.
The seminar, part of the'
College’s 12-credit hour Real
Estate Continuing Education;
Seminar Series (RECESS), will
also offer talks on “Making the
Computer Work for You,” real
estate appraisal and the basics
of real estate from contracts to
closing. The cost is $30, in­
cluding two lunches.
For more information,
contact Mel Hostager at
657-8400, ext. 452 or Dick
Marsyla, ext. 330.
The President’s Council
will consider a plan to withhold
transcripts from students who
have unpaid fees, Jim Roberts,
dean of student services an­
nounced.
The Council will look at
the recommended plan next
week. A decision is expected
by the following week.
Under the plan, students
with outstanding fines-would be
unable to receive copies of their
transcripts, or to have the
transcripts transfered on to
other colleges.- Roberts said
such a policy is standard in
most colleges and universities.
The plan could effect fees for
overdue library books, locker
room expenses, parking fines
and other areas, Roberts said.
“We are looking at a way
to standardize the system of
dealing with people who don’t
pay their fees,” Roberts said.
The plan was first
presented by Chuck Adams,
the director of admissions and
records for the College.
Summer counseling altered
During summer term the
counseling department will
make a few minor adjustments.
Due to the lower enrollment in
summer the counseling staff
will be cut to only three
counselors and department
head Art Hanes. Since the Col­
lege will be closed on Fridays,
they will only work four days a
week. Night school counselors
will not be used.
Summer session will begin
June 20 and run through
August 11, with the exception
of nursing and science classes,
which will run eleven weeks.
“Summer term is a good
time to get in all the basic
classes such as math and
English” Counselor Bernie
Nolan said.
Editor In Chief Haynes
looks back at good year
By Rick Obritschkewitsch
Of The Print
Some very funny business.
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS AN AARON RUSSO PRODUCTION • A LANDIS/FOLSEY FILM
DAN AYKROYD-EDDIE MURPHY-"TRADING PLACES”-RALPH BELLAMY-DON AMECHE
DENHOLM ELLIOTT AND JAMIE LEE CURTIS-EXECUTIVE PRODUCER GEORGE FOLSEY JR.
WRITTEN BY TIMOTHY HARRIS & HERSCHEL WEINGROD • PRODUCED BY AARON RUSSO
1
I
RESTRICTED
!
DIRECTED BY JOHN LANDIS
UNDER 17 REQUIRES ACCOMPANYING
R
PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN
|
Starts Friday, June 10th at a Theatre Near You.
Page 6
With the school year com­
ing to an end, J. Dana Haynes
saw his last issue, as editor in
chief of The Print come out
Wednesday, May 25.
Recently Haynes took a
look back on the year’s suc­
cesses and failures.
“It was a good year for
The Print, Haynes said, “but a
‘dry’ news year for the
College.”
The two negative aspects
of the year that Haynes pointed
out are both things that happen
to The Print every year. The
first is the high attrition rate of
staff members. “People just out
of high school think it’s an easy
way out of speech courses. It’s
not a cakewalk,” Haynes said.
“People who felt they
deserved more coverage than
they got,” was the other pro­
blem The Print faced during the
year.
In past years there seems
to have been a Tradition of the
paper having problems with the
Associated Student Govern­
ment toward the end of the
year. Generally it would stem
from what was published, or
perhaps what was not publish­
ed. But this year that was not
true. “This year’s ASG has let
us do our job,” Haynes said,
“and we’ve tried to let them do
theirs.”
Looking back, Haynes
said there isn’t anything he
would have done differently.
“We’ve played it by ear, and
I’m very proud of the paper.”
Haynes felt the year’s
brightest spot was in publishing
the stories on anerexia nervor-
sa and dyslexia. This was also
the most rewarding part of be­
ing editor because “we heard
J. Dana Haynes
from those whom we benefit-
ted,” he said.
As for next year, in
regards to The Print, Haynes
has great confidence in the in­
dividual who has been chosen
as next year’s editor in chief,
Doug Vaughan. Vaughan took
over as editor beginning with
this issue.
Haynes plans on returning
to the College next year, “to be
a student.” He is now finishing
out his third year here, and as
yet has not found too much
time to take serious classes.
Haynes became news
editor of The Print beginning
with his second term at the Col­
lege, retaining that position un­
til the end of last year, when he
became editor in chief.
He does plan to do some
writing for The Print, but he
also wants “to be more involv­
ed in theater.”
After concluding his
studies here, Haynes plans on
going to Portland State as a
Political Science major.
Clackamas Community College