The Clackamas print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1989-2019, May 09, 2001, Page 2, Image 2

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    2_______
WcdNEsdAy, M ay 9, 2001
A // extentions can be reached
by calling 503-657-6958.
Open Computer Lab At the Harmony/OIT
Campus in the Small Business Development
Center computers are available with Internet
and printer access in Room 01T 170. General
operating hours Spring Term are M/W 9-
noon; T/TH 9a.m.-1p.m.; Fri. l-5pm. No
weekend hours. Call X 6447«yr^S3485 for
information. Check fo^tryailabjlily/flLeptions
to above stated hours. tzimit«! ^sistance is
available. Open toall stqdbhtS^taff and mem-
ber^f’ffi^qgji rWhity.
Environmental Week May 21-25 Looking
for vendors and participants! If you have an
environmentally friendly business or you
would like to give out information on an is­
sue, please contact Jaime or Bobbi at X 2247
or stop by CC 140. Open to staff, students
and the community! From 11-2 join us for
food, information and a good time!
Nursing Program Information Question and
answer sessions, application process informa­
tion, and general information about nursing.
May 14 at 6 p.m., June 4 at 4 p.m. Come and
meet with Nursing Program representatives!
Announcements
suitable for 1000 square foot planting area.
The bags are $15 per bag. Raffle tickets and
fertilizer can be purchased at the ALCA table
at the Hort. Club Plant Sale on Friday May
11 or by calling Bruce X 2786.
Graduation Gowns You can pick up. your
cap and tassel and gown in the Community
Center (table in Mall area) after paying the $ 15
fee at the Bookstore. Open hours are May 8,
9,10 from 11:30 to Ip.m. OR you can call X
2205 to have a cap, gown and tassel reserved
for pick up at the Bookstore during Bookstore
hours (call X2248 for current hours). OR
Pick up an order from at the Bookstore to’
order by mail. We will ship them to you for
a $5 fee. If you have questions please call
2205 or 2245!
Free Math Tutoring -Stop by the math lab
Let us fix Your Car! Jerry Cook’s Automo­
tive Cl ass i s looking for cars that need chassis
work, which includes alignment, steering and
suspension work. They will also be working
on vehicles needing chassis work at the begin­
ning, of May. Please contact Pam Brown X
2354 or Jerry Cook X 2354
Plant Sale! The Horticulture Department is
having a plant sale May 11 form noon to 5
p.m. in the Clairmont Parking lot. Call Laurie
X 2246 for more information.
Beautify Your Yard The ALCA Club is do­
nating 25 hours of yard work on Saturday
May 19 to the proud owner of the winning
raffle ticket. Ticket prices are $2 per ticket or
3 for $5. The winning ticket will be selected
Friday May 11 at 5pm. The ALCA Club is
also selling 29# bags of specially blended
Clackamas mix fertilizer containing nutrients
r ENGLISH DEPARTMENT SURVEY:
i
us plan a program of.literary events. Please answer
i the Help
following
and add your own suggestions and
i ideas for literary questions
events you’d enjoy.
i
1. Have you been to any of the 5. What day and time would
i readings
on campus most convenient for you?
i the last two presented
years?
“Saturday evening
i “Yes
“Sunday afternoon
“Weekday at noon
i “No
at 5pm
i 2. If so, what part did you enjoy “ “Weeknight
Weeknight at 6pm
i the most? (Check all that apply.) “Weeknight at 7pm
Education Majors! Get work experience and
$8.96/hr as paid tutors. Volunteer tutors are
needed at Rex Putnam High School to tutor
Math and Reading, Oregon Literacy needs
volunteers to teach adults to read. For more
information contact Don Paul Shula in CC
122, or call X 2324.
Petitions For Graduation are now being ac­
cepted at Enrollment .Services and the
Registrar’s office for students planning to com­
plete their program at the end of Fall, Winter
or Spring Term. A petition, must be filed to
indicate your desire to have a degree or certifi­
cate posted to your transcript. A separate
petition must be filed for each certificate or
degree. Info regarding the June 15, 2001
Graduation will be sent to you during Spring
term.
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Do you have Volunteer Experience? Are
you looking for ways to help pay for your
college education? Maybe the Service to Com­
munity Scholarship is for you! There are
eight positions open for the 2001-02 academic
year. For more information call Mindy at X
2261 or Hayley at X 2481. Application pack­
ets will be available in the Student outreach
office CC 149 or in Student Activities CC140.
for free tutoring from 7:30 a.m. - 9 p.m. Mon
-Thurs., Fri. close at 5 p.m. and' Sat. hours
are 9-3.
Volunteer Tutors needed Help adults with
basic skills. Opportunities include many types
of interesting students, from Americans who
need to learn or improve reading, to people
from other countries needing to learn English
as a Second Language. Call X 3143.
Arts and Awareness Festival
May 18-19 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Open to
Staff, students and the community. Great
music, delicious food and amazing art Call
Rachael or Mark X 2598 for more informa­
tion.
iting and Publishing class is accepting
sibmissions for black and white artwork to
be featured in the 2001 edition of Synesthe­
sia. Interested persons should contact
Amanda Coffey at ext 2829 or drop by her
office at SI20. If she is unavailable, Rita
Dale at ext. 2284 in the Secretary's Office,
room SI32, can help you. Submissions
should include a title page with a title,
artist's name, address and telephone num­
ber. The deadline for sumissions is May
15, 2001.
T
| 4. Whom would you be inter­
in seeing here on campus?
I ested
(Write a specific name or the kind
I of writer/celebrity.)
I
taking the semester off.
At Portland State, we realize that- the .real world will
never be like college.
So we’ve tried to make college a little more real.
More practical. More pragmatic. More relevant to life
far beyond the ivy-covered halls of academia.
7. Any other comments or .sug­
gestions:
That’s why our curriculum focuses riot only on books
your field.
found upside-down at the end of a textbook.
And problems at work could be instantly remedied by
6. Although many of our read­
ings are free to students and the
community, how much would
you pay for a ticket to see some­
one you were really interested in?
°$2
°$3
“$5
“Other:
and lectures, but oh actual real-world experience in
Imagine. The answers to life’s questions could all be
Missed opportunities could be capitalized upon with
“Other:
I
I
Please return your responses to Rita Dale in Streeter Hall,
I S-132
by. June 8
L
it worked like the college world.
a ,simple make-up exam.
“Hearing the works read
“Question and answer
“Chance to buy books
“Book-signing
“Chance to meet the writer
I 3. If you haven’t been to a read­
I ing, why not?
I “Not interested
Didn’t know about them
I “ “ Not
familiar with the writer
I “Other:
I
Bust out your pens and paper! The Ed­
he real world would be so much simpler if only
The CL ac I< amas P rint
So you’re out in the community learning how the real
|
world operates.
- Solving problems. Communicating. Collaborating.
In short, learning the things -you’ll need to know, to . ,
succeed - not just while ybu”re going to school, But long „ 1_____ __ i It
after you graduate.
r : 1 ‘:
Call- us at- (503) 725-5,983 or visit www.pdx.edu to <
learn more about Portland State.
We’re’here every day. Just like people who live out
there in the real world.
I f college is supposed to prepare you for the real world ,
HOW COME THE REAL WORLD ISN'T MORE LIKE COLLEGE?
¿•k Clackamas Federal
^Credit Union
270 Warner Milne Road
Oregon City
503-6560671
10040 SE Main
Milwaukie
653-7788
1
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