Image provided by: Clackamas Community College; Oregon City, OR
About The Clackamas print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1989-2019 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 2004)
jVfcws 2 • T he C lackamas P rint A I V J «f . j Ì I Print Staff excels at ONPA Members win eight awards for stories, section, ads Oregon Newspaper Publisher's Association recognizes staff of the Clackamas Print as having ‘general excellence' All reports are taken from CCC’s W campus safety incident Summaries are edited f clarity, not content. 5-03-04 7:55 p.m. Noticed three adult m, picking up college pro ty in the track area. Subjects dropped equi ment and left the seen! when they had seen ca pus safety. Found two subjects in a vehicle, o subject was wanted. Subject was arrested. I had no insurance and I driving while suspend! During vehicle invent! a hand gun was found! hidden. The gun was I seized by OCPD as it I Frank Jordan T he C lackamas P rint The Clackamas Print took home three first-place awards, with a total of eight overall, including a second-place award for General Excellence, last Friday at the 2004 Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association’s (ONPA) Collegiate Newspaper Contest at Western Oregon University in Monmouth. “I thought it was awesome. In a time of change for our staff, with us having moved locations twice this year, we were still able to pull off the kind of paper that we do week after week,” said Co Editor in-Chief Cory Price. “1 am very proud of our staff.” News Editor Karlin Johnson won first place for Best News Story for her March 10, 2004, story enti tled “Hate crime on campus.” Co Editor-in-Chief Cyndee Mady took first place for Headline Writing. Former staff writer Jadon Triplett picked up a first-place award for his Feb. 11, 2004, review “‘Mafia’ revives old-style gangsters,” to take Best Review honors. Second-place honors went to production assistant Michaele Cooper for Best House Ad and the aforementioned award for General Excellence of the overall paper. Honorable mentions were given campu S/ logs FRANK RAGULSKY C ontributed P hoto (FROM LEFT) Hilliary Ferguson, Ben Maras, Linda Vogt, Cory Price, Karen Hill, Michaele Cooper, Katie Funk, Karlin Johnson, Cyndee Mady, Robb Egan, Isaiah Creel and Jesse Lamond. to Ben Maras and his opinion sec tion for Best Section, Feature Editor Karen Hill for Best Writing and Ben Maras for his staff editori al published Feb. 11, 2004, for the “Gadget craze is here to stay” opinion on camera phones. “I am extremely impressed but not surprised. The caliber of The Print staff is extraordinary,” said English Department Chair Emily Orlando. “Their dedication and hard work representing the college community is very admirable. I am really proud of the whole staff and these great accomplishments.” The Print's eight J awards more fl than dou bled Iasi year’s total and marked the second consecutive year that the paper finished second in General Excellence. Lane Community College’s The Torch, out of Eugene, won this year’s first-place award for General Excellence. A total of seventeen community colleges competed for ONPA awards is year. an air pistol. It is belie that the weapon had b used in an earlier incidí off campus. Subject w taken to Clackamas County Jail where he J booked and cited for I driving suspended wit! insurance. I 5-03-04 3:15 p.m. Staff reported a small paper/barkdust fire no! of the Community Ceil Student extinguished ill with water. 5-03-04 4:44 p.m. WMA found sitting ini wooded area with aleo! watching campus. Mat contact and escorted subject off campus. 5-07-04 9:29 p.m. Report of several vehil and many subjects do! cookies and driving cl lessly in parking lots. I Made contact and ask! subjects to leave. I 5-07-04 10:20 p.m. Red Ford Mustang pa! with half-empty beer! next to tire and several open containers in veil Vehicle found unattcnl 5-07-04 8:20 a.m. ROBB EGAN C lackamas P rint CORY PRICE C lackamas P rint The Print was subjected to a mind-numbing hour and a half together in an oversized van on the way to Monmouth, Ore. Co Editor-in-Chief Cory Price (LEFT) and A&E Editor Isaiah Creel happily display the awards won by The Print staff. Staff reported a transit! inside café going thro! the garbage cans. I ------------------------ ------------------------------------ Congressman and presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich will be on campus Sunday, May 16! ■ Congressman Kucinich will be speaking and answering questions of students and community members in the Community Center from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. VOTE: ASG candidai express focuses, god (Continued from page 1) for students, because I already talk to people on a daily basis about stuff around here,” he said. Along with involvement between students and staff, Stokes express a strong desire to get students more involved with each other as well. “I know it’s a community college and people just come here to get their school done and go home, but that’s the one thing I don’t like,”' said. Stokes, “With universities there is more activity going on and I love that, and I want more of that at a community college.” Murphy reiterates the importance of student to student connection. “With any community college, its sad that it’s disconnected between stu dents ... to see people not caring about what goes on in the commo lege. So that’s my focus, is II will get involved.” Money is another issue addressed, focusing on mil students. "Not the students , who the line and able to afford ci the middle income stude Murphy, ‘There are a lot here that are surviving on fix and the government helps ill lot,./but what’s skipped is III income student., ‘They’re not poor enool help, but they’re not wealthy help themselves and you’ve} some other means of support You can vote lor your Al dent and vice president oni and tomorrow in CC140. |