Viking_Yearbook_68
" I guess I'm anti-American . I don' t care much for baseball or football. I don ' t know what that makes me. Pretty bad, I guess, pretty bad ." Walter Kramer wears an easy smile. This smile he uses in hi s teaching of traf– fic management, retail management, and water transportation classes. "Really, I find my occupation so exciting I'm not interested in much else." Kramer is from Atlanta, Ga . He brought his occupation to PSC three years ago because of his interest in Port– land and "what Governor McCall calls ' the quality of life.'" " It's the last opportunity we have of keeping our streams clear. We've gone so far down the road so many places, there are only a few places, like Port– land , that haven 't been spoiled yet. It's about to be spoiled." Kramer believes the actions of an in– dividual , of a college, can determine the future of our cities, our society. " Speaking as a member of the facul– ty I really think that PSC can be whatever I like it to be. It can be as good a school as I' m willing to make it. It can be a re– flection of my own meagerness and sloth. Whatever its shortcomings the faculty has the power, if it wills, through hard work, to overcome them.
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