The Buccaneer Febuary 1, 1974.

24 initiated into Phi Theta honorary

Phi Theta’s winter quarter
initiation was held Sunday, Jan.
28, with a candlelight ceremony
conducted in the Little Theatre.
Those initiated were Dean
Abrams, Thomas Adkins, Kevin
Berglund, Walter Cooke,
Jerome Eberharter, Aline
Eiman, Cameron Field, John
Fors, Ma’abood
Ghazanfarpour, Wayne Gloger,
Valerie Haldorsen, Thomas
Heller, Thomas Hicks,

Jonathon Hoagland, Jennifer
Jackson, Douglas Johnson,
Teresa Jones, Ronald Maynock,
Edward Mund, Claude Pierce,
Gail Schmitz, Karen Seibert,
George Stonesifer, and John
Thronson.
The following were unable to
attend but will be initiated in the
spring: Joshua Adekanmbi,
Gary Arnold, Lynette Huffman,
Mary . McCallum, Maxine
McDowell, Kenneth Morgan,
Jane Minish, Ruth Seelye,
Robert Stanard and Nancy
White.
These students have
maintained a minimum 3.3
grade point average for two
consecutive quarters, carrying
at least 15 credits per quarter.
The initiates and others
attending were treated to a slide
show presented by Mr. Huston
on the trip he and his wife,
Laima, made to northern
Europe and her family’s native
home of Latvia, which has, been
controlled by Russia’since
World War II. Mr. Huston’s
thought-provoking discussion of
Russian life style is the subject
of an upcoming Studium
Generale presentation on
March 7.

PC grad requirements studied

Requirements for graduation
from Peninsula College are
being reviewed by a special
committee set up by the
Instructional Council.
The committee meets each
week to analyze the existing
requirements and consider
proposals for possible changes.
Major areas in question
include continuation of physical
education credit requirements
and possible additions of other
courses to meet the distribution
standards.
Distribution standards are
the number of credit-hours
required in each area of study
such as social sciences, math,
humanities and science.
The committee’s
recommendations will go to the
Instructional Council and from
there to the faculty for
consideration.
Dean of Instruction Floyd
Young said: “I doubt that any
changes would be made that
would affect graduation
requirements for this year.”

Native American club forms

A Native American Club has
been organized on campus for
Indian students. Officers are
Maria James, chairwoman;
Harry Romero, vice chairman;
and Cleo Hill, secretarytreasurer.
With the departure of the
minority affairs advisor it was
felt the formation of this club
was essential to allow Indian
students a focal point of contact.
The club meets at noon the

first and last Tuesdays of each
month. Location will be
announced later. Some topics
for future discussion are
constitutional revisions,
curriculum, contemporary
problems, Indian art classes
and activities for Indian
Awareness Week to be held
nationally in March.
Anyone wishing further
information can see the club
officers or Mr. Dick Hendry,
club advisor.

Pete Week homecoming to start with jam session

PC homecoming week, more
commonly known as “Pete’s
Week” is approaching soon.
The week will be started off
by a Coffee House Jam Session
Feb. 8. People are invited to
come and just listen, or bring
their own instruments and play,
teach, and learn.
The next night, the PC
basketball team will play an
important game against
Olympic College in Bremerton.
The idea of having a car
caravan to the -game is being
discussed.
Sunday, Feb. 10, the ASB will
present the movie “M-A-S-H.”
Everyone is invited to see this
comedy in the Little Theatre.
Wednesday, Feb. 13, will be
highlighted by a home
basketball game against Grays
Harbor Community College.
The game will be played in the
PC gym.

Saturday, Feb. 16, will wind
up the week with another home
game, this time against
Shoreline Community College.
Following the game will be the
homecoming dance featuring
the band Chinook.
This leaves three days open
completely, plus all the noon

hours empty of activities. The
Activities Council is presently
deciding what events they can
use for these times. Ideas from
students are more than
welcome. If you have an idea
for an activity, see Mary
Roblan, Sue Spillane, or your
BOC representatives.

Instructional council approves course

The instructional council
acted on an abbreviated agenda
during a brief meeting Jan. 8.
The council approved a new
course, English 121,
Introduction to Pop Culture,
which is being offered evenings
this quarter.
Discussion on the new
catalogue, which was scheduled
to go to the printer this week

centered around last minute
revisions. The new catalogue
will cover a two-year period,
1974 through 1976, a change over
the previous catalogue which
covered only one year per
volume.
The catalogue, should be
available in the spring to new
prospective students.

Editorial
There’s no name for it

George Carlin, the original “Hippy Dippy
Weatherman/’ is not only a very funny comic, but
is very observant of our society and behaviour.
Recently, he was commenting on how so many things
we live with—everyday things—have no name or any
way to describe them. And this lack of a label on
things so familiar is the start of what he terms the
“lack of communication.”
Examples? Take the little groove that you have
beneath your nose and above your upper lip. There’s
no name for that. Try to describe that portion of your
anatomy to someone else; what do you call it?
Crudely, the best suggestion given to me was “snot
channel” but that’s unofficial. Result: lack of
communication.
Or, take the instance of when you approach head on
someone while walking and start to go left to pass.
They cut to their right, so you head to your right and
they figure you have changed your mind and they go to
their left and you both end up weaving back and forth
facing each other with big grins on your faces until you
finally, and awkwardly, pass. There’s no name for
that. Try describing such an incident to someone and
you look as if you’re having a seizure.
Unfortunately, here at Peninsula we have some less
humorous examples of what Carlin so aptly describes.
ASB President Sue Spillane deals with communication
on campus in her column elsewhere in this issue; but it
is the mood we are concerned with.
It’s not apathy, or laziness, or discontent, but it is
here. Try to describe it, or worse yet write about it,
and you’re an instant failure. Yet, among students we
can sense this mood, some mood that tells us one of
two things: either we are not happy about where we
are and where things are going or we are too far gone
to realize we’ve gone.
Maybe this undescribable syndrome will go away;
maybe it isn’t even here to begin with. We feel it does
existand that we mustfind out just what it is and label
it before we can deal with it. No matter whatever it is.
—Rich Olson

Letters
Gas Pains

Editor, The Buccaneer:
A Petrol Crisis?
Quote: “To William Simon
Energy Tsar: 1 don’t know what
good it will do to give priority
for gasoline to bulk buyersif the
average citizen can’t get any at
the service station so he can go
to work or shop with that bulk
buyer. There’s something
haywire about this whole
Se/Un’t it the truth. I was
reading today’s paperand
Seattle will get 40 gallons of gas
per month per person. Getting
back to the point, here are some
good examples of the Energy
Crisis.
Power and gas companies
want to increase their prices
(justified increase at that) to
prevent a gas and energy crisis
(makes sense and dollars too).
A good point is PG & E of
California. Having spent 11Japing yearsthere, I believe PG &
E has the monopoly for the
area. They also boasted a need
for a rise in price to help end the
CRISIS. How? I have two
theories; (1) a rise in price is to
stop using power or (2) to help
pay for the big rise in labor and
mechanical cost (ha ha).
Sounds like We The People of
the United States are getting
Screwed over by profit hungry
companies who know they have
us over an oil barrel.
What can I say about the oil
companies? Profits up over 30
per cent more than last yeai
(except Shell who runs the
profit margin ad every once in
awhile to show us they aren t
cheating us) and there’s no gas.
These companies as of Dec. 20,
1973 are exporting a total of a
near 5 million barrels of oil a
day to Europe, and what about
us poor Americans?
It’s time to get out the
Arkansas credit cards and
pump every parked car you
happen to be looking for without
a locking gas cap. Seems like
North Bend, Washington, had
this happen to them three times
in the summer of ’72. If you use
the Arkansas credit card you’re
getting free gas and if you’re
caught you can go to jail and get
your college education for free
without paying for tuition, room
and board. Our government
wants to take care of us.
My final closing comment
(well two of them) is: Airlines
to get 95 per cent of their 1972
fuel needs and oil companies
are not going to produce more
or the same amount of gas but
less. How are the airlines going
to get their 1972 needs when less
gas is being produced? My
lawyer Dallas Tyrebiter and
close friend Yankee Clipper are
out to try and screw the
companies back. Join in.
Eat more Boston Baked!
LeRoy Tyrebiter

story. By the time I had
mastered the use of such gems
as “groovy,” “spiffy” and
“boss” they had become
obsolete.
America’s number one sport
was .a great disappointment to
me. Imagine anxiously waiting
for two weeks for a television
broadcast of a football game
hoping to see Pele or maybe
George Best in action, and then
witnessing a strange so-called
sport where the object is to see
how many 250-pounders you
could pile up on top of one
miserable soul.
College basketball on the
other hand is quite enjoyable.
Not only do we understand what
is taking place but it is the
safety valve where we can
release our frustration.
Shouting obscenities in Arabic
is unique not only because we
can get away with it but
because somehow “May the
fleas of a thousand camels nest
in your eyebrows,” loses
something in the translation.
done by
Abdulmahsin Haidar

Briefs from other campuses

Clark College is offering a new night course called
“Woman on Her Own.” The class is designed for women who
live alone or are alone much of the time. The topics to be
covered in the course include auto tuneup, handywoman,
traveling alone, and coping with independence.
Craig Detmer, from Walla Walla Community College, had
these New Year’sresolutions to offer in the Jan. 10,1974 issue
of the Fourth Estate:
Do not smoke cigars in class.
Do not play card games in class.
Do not drink alcoholic beverages in class without the
instructor’s permission.
Do not make passes at female teachers who are married.
Do not hide the teacher’s chalk.
Do not assault a teacher without good cause and a majority
vote of his students.
Do not write obscenities on the walls, furniture, or
blackboards without ASB approval.
Do not gag a teacher who has asthma.
Do notspit on the floor unlessit has caught fire.
Walla Walla Community College is offering three
interesting new classes. They are Pop Arts, Studies in
Alienation, and Creativity vs. Self-defeating Behavior.
Precious parking space is so limited at Seattle Central
Community College, that students wishing to buy parking
permits must enter their names in a parking drawing. The
first 250 names picked will be eligible to purchase a permit.

Artists film series begins

Peninsula’s Community
Service Committee will sponsor
a film series “Pioneers of
Modern Painting” beginning
this month.
The first film, “Edouard
Manet,” will be shown in the
Little Theatre at 1 p.m. Friday,
Feb. 22.
Other painters featured in the
six-film series ‘include Paul

Cezanne, Claude Monet,
Georges Seurat, Henri
Rousseau and Edvard Munch.
Before each film, art
instructor John Pogany will
give a brief introduction of the
individual artist.
All the color features are 45
minutes in length and are
produced and narrated by Sir
Kenneth Clark.

Abdul speaks

Editor, The Buccaneer:
Being American you probably
couldn’t imagine the tragic
difficulties foreign students
face on American campuses. It
is hard to define a foreign
student but this may give you
some idea. Other than tall,
and dark, he definitely is not an
energy advisor, oil tycoon or
even an expert on political

affairs. (He may skillfully fake
it under pressure). He is one
who returns your insult with a
friendly smile, not because of
his good heartedness, but
probably because he does not
quite understand what you
meant. He isthe one who misses
classes on a rainy day under
the impression that it is a
national holiday.
Food is usually a problem
that puzzles one’s digestive
system for quite some time. Of
course the dorm food is in a
class of its own, but you must

have something going for you if
you could cook potatoes 37
different ways in one week.
Langauage is the main
problem, however. Not only do
we have to study three times as
hard as an average student to
attain below average grades
but we must adapt to the twisted
logic of the language. I couldn’t
understand why people tell you
to “Look out,” when they really
mean “Look in.”
Staying with the “in” crowd,
should one desire it, is anothe

Of Minderbinder, molasses Moose and sports

By LEW BRANTLEY
Well, Sports Amigos, all isn’t
as it seems in today’s sports
world. At this very moment, in
accordance with President
Nixon’s personal request, the
world’s greatest sports figures
are attempting to formulate a
National College Amateur
Athletic program that does not
drain our great nation of its
precious national resources. A
tolerable level must be met in
which individual sports and
players can compete in a
particular competitive activity
using a minimal amount of
resources.
Sick of the past? Fed up with
the present? Let us think of the
future. How devious are the
paths of fate! How strange and
unexpected the destinations to
which they lead! I now take you
to a time in our near future, to
see what mav someday be
Fate’s hand . . .
The Time: 1979
The Scene: Dingbat
University’s Athletic Director’s
office, where the director,
Milhoose Minderbinder, a fine
broth of a man, is discussing the
college’s newly activated
athletic program with Ms.
Gracy McBall and Lance Living
Dead (Moose), the oldest living
P.E. instructor in the
continental United States.
Minderbinder: Well, gang,
we’ve come a long way in this
year’s power conservation
drive.
Ms. McBall: Yes, Milhoose,
your divine leadership has
taught us all new ways to save
power.
Mr. Living Dead: Right,
Gracy. I especially like
Milhoose’s inspiration, to hire
those 10,000 mongrel warriors to
form the shape of a wood stove
with their bodies during
halftime. Golly! Think of the
watts we saved by not having to
play the tape set during
halftime!
Ms. McBall: And Moose,
you’ve certainly got to hand it to
our only all- girl intramural
baseball team, “The Zipper
Rippers.” Their benevolent
decision to play in the nude, so
they wouldn’t have to waste
electricity by washing their
uniforms, made everybody’s

heart tingle, I’m sure.
Mr. Minderbinder: Yes,
Gang, you’ve done a really
great job, but I’m afraid we’re
going to have to enact Plan
Zulu.
Mr. Living Dead: Whazzat?
Ms. McBall: Say what?
Mr. Minderbinder: We’re
going to batten the hatches in
the sweat box.
Mr. Living Dead: Come
again?
Mr. Minderbinder: I said
we’re going to have to undergo
that great and final battle
against the bathroom blues.
Ms. McBall (in a whisper):
Watch him, Moose, I always
thought he was a bit gay.
Mr. Minderbinder: Yes,
we’re going to start rationing
the toilet paper and half towel
distribution.
Mr. Living Dead: Good God,
Milhoose, I am already bathing
so seldom that there is moss
growing on my north side!
Mr. Minderbinder: Show a
little backbone, Moose! Well, I
think I have said enough for this
week’s meeting, so I’ll leave
you with that grand old saying,
“Individual action remains in
the absolute power of the boss.”

Pirates drop 2nd to cellar

Consistent inconsistency
sums up the Pirate round ball
action over the last five games.
Hoping the slump (a four-game
losing streak), had ended with
the defeat of the University of
Washington Frosh, the Pirates
headed south last weekend to
lose to Clark and Lower
Columbia. The Bucs had beaten
both schools earlier in January.
Powerful Olympic College
came to the PC gym Jan. 16 to
hold Pirate shooting to a
minimum. Cunningham tallied
almost half the opposition’s
points, with a personal total of 30. By the final buzzer, the
scoreboard showed Pirates 58,
Olympic 73.
PC’s loss to Green River in
Auburn the following Saturday,
Jan. 19, by one point, brought
the losing streak to four. Top
shooting Mark Ernesti’s 21
points just weren’t enough, as
PC lost 71-70.
Jan. 22 saw the University of
Washington Frosh leave the
Pirate gym with their third loss
of the season. Although the
Husky pups had a tight defense,
PC pulled to a nine point lead by
half time, with a low score of 33-
24.

With players like sticky Steve
Norris, sticking right on his
man, and Mills going full bogie
all night, the Pirates cooled the
game with a score of 63 to 55.
The following Friday the
Pirates traveled to Clark
College to engage the Penguins
for the second time this season.
Once again, Tom “Hot Shot”
Kingshott led both teams in
individual scoring with 24
points, hitting almost 50 per cent of his field shots. Ernesti, Mills and Fryer also
contributed to the Pirate
scoring.
The Pirates played a strong
second half pulling to eight
points behind Clark at one point,
but had fallen too far behind in
the first half to overcome
Clark’s lead.
The final score was Clark 82,
Peninsula 67.
The following night PC went
to Lower Columbia to get
walloped by 27 points. This puts
Peninsula in second to last
place in the Coastal Region
Conference, with two wins and
five losses.
Next Saturday will see
Centralia come to the Pirate
floor. The game begins at 8 p.m

Chess play-off looms in future

Any Tuesday night this winter
from 7 to 10 in Room 11, a room
full of ardent young minds
concentrating upon checkered
boards with odd shaped figures
upon them.
This is the world of chess.
Pirate Chess Club members
are presently undergoing a
playoff amongst themselves to
determine the top players. Club
advisor Dr. Duncan reports that
tentatively there will be a
tournament among players of
the Olympic Peninsula in the
near future.
The club invites spectators or
possible players to come to
watch or play on Tuesday
evenings.

Freethrow contest set

Peninsula’s sixth annual
basketball free throw contest is
all go, for Tuesday, Feb. 5. The
contest is open to any student
with a keen eye and straight
shot.
Interested potential
basketballshooters may sign up
with Mr. Livingston in his
office.

Things bouncing in IM basketball contests

January has been an active
month for the 60 students and
faculty members forming
Peninsula’s determined
basketball teams. For a change,
we shall first have a look at
some of the “underdogs who
normally don’t receive their
just praise.
By scoring a total of only 19
points in a total of only nine
games, Dean of students Art
Feiro hasjoined the ranks of the
“less than great” living legends
of basketball.
The “Well, we always suited up” award goes to the all

women’s team, the Feminine
Touch. Fast bouncing has been
the secret of their 609 points,
against a 10-0 win record.
Not far behind those
Fantastic Feminine Four are
the Esso Bees. Although they
have tallied one victory (the
other team didn’t show up). The
Bees have nine big ones against
them. They’re expected to come
on really strong by the end of
the season (baseball).
On the other end of the court,
Don Huston of the Faculty
Team leads everyone in
individual scoring with 171
points in nine games. That’s
almost as good as his prodigy,
varsity star Tom Kingshott.
Dewitt and Bramlette are
having a gay go of it for the Half
Breeds.Both boys are hot
shooters, having put in half of
their team’s shots, to put them
in second place.
The Cunning Rocks are living
up to their name by leading
every other team, with 11 wins
and only one loss.
February will be the deciding
month. Each team is presently
playing to determine the top two
teams which will end the season
with a playoff game for the
number one spot.

IM bowling

The head of the physical
education department, Jon
Livingston, announces that the
school’s intramural bowling
will begin Feb. 25.
Mr. Livingston stressed that
the bowling games held at
Laurel Lanes during the noon
hour are free to all members of
the student body.

English poetry seminar

Published poet Dick Bakken
will hold a one-day poetry
seminar here Feb. 23. Students
participating will receive one
credit under English 295.
Students will be chosen by
Mr. Bakken according to their
poetic talents. He will review
every student’s work sent to
him by Jack Estes.
Students should submit at
least three separate works to
Mr. Estes. He will send them to
Portland for review. Mr.
Bakken will choose the best 12
writers to participate in the
workshop.
Mr. Bakken has had several
works published, and is a
former editor of the Salted
Feathers poetry magazine. He
is also a former professor at
Portland State University, but
is now spending full time
writing and editing books.

‘Studium’ series continues strong

Arthur Feiro’slecture on Jan.
24, was on evolution and
creation. Mr. Feiro’s lecture
was scientific and factual,
ratherthan an actual opinion on
what he thought on the subject.
Next week’s lecture Jan. 31 is
on “The Archeological Diggings
at Ozette.” The lecturer will be
Dr. Richard Daugherty,
director of the project.
The following Studium lecture
Feb. 7 will be on “Art; The
Mirror of Society.” The lecturer

is Mr. John Pogany, art teacher
at Peninsula College.
The week following, on Feb.
14 the subject is “The Spiritual
Value of Wilderness,” by Dr.
Willi Unsoeld. The day program
will be a basic lecture with
slides, while the night lecture
will have an accompanying
movie of Dr. Unsoeld’s climb of
Mt. Everest in 1963 with Tom
Hornbein.

Feb. KONP scholars named

James L. Grant and Gail
Schmitz have been selected as
KONP’s Man and Woman of the
Month for February.
Jim, a graduate of South
Kitsap High School, is a forestry
major attending college on a
scholarship from the Farm
Foresters Association for
Clallam County. Jim is an
outstanding student in forestry,
a member of Phi Theta and
Peninsula College honorary. He
has a wife and three children.
Gail, a graduate of Port
Townsend High School, is a
member of Phi Theta and
Peninsula College honorary.
Gail won two scholarships, one
from the Port Townsend Ladies
Auxiliary and another from the
Junior Chamber of Commerce.
She is studying secretarial
science and accounting and
plans to continue her studies at
Western Washington State
College.

Free jam next Friday

A jam session is set for Feb. 8
in the PUB. This is a free,
invitational gig, open to anyone
to put on their show, supposedly
music.
Musicians may come as they
are in any number and play
anything they wish.
Bill Hare is again the master
of ceremonies. There will be
free refreshments and the
seating will be coffee house
semi-circle fashion.
Mary Roblan and Sue Spillane
are arranging the schedule.
Instruments available include
guitars, drumsand piano. Other
instruments may be available,
and Mary or Sue have
information on them.
Singers are needed,
especially girls. Any brass
players also will be welcomed.
Anyone with a guitar without
an amplifier may come in and
plug in.
Drummer Bill Brough, will
play with any combo.
As Sue Spillane says, “the
main purpose for the jam is to
relax and have a good time.”

Inside ASB

By SUE SPILLANE
One of the biggest problems
for Associated Students is the
dissemination of information.
You can set up entertainment,
vote money for a service many
students will use, or express
student opinion on something
like the tuition increase, but
how are you going to let
everybody know about it?
First of all, why do you want
everybody to know about it?
The prospect of becoming
campus heroes — with all the
conflicting conceptions of a hero
students here have — is one to
which few information
disseminators can look
forward. ASB takes a monetary
loss in most of the activities it
sponsors because both prices
and the student population are
low — so it can’t be for the
money.
The obvious purpose of
spreading entertainment
information is so that people
will know what’s happening.
You have to know it first . . .
before you can do it. At
Peninsula the foremost forums
for “what’s happening?” news
are the Buccaneer and old
faithful — the sign.
If you can imagine the
tragedy of it: Associated
Students of 1970-71 is bugged by
the ugly haphazardness of info
signs all over the school (it
looks like Mrs. Patterson’s first
grade room or something) so
they dish out $1,150 for the
Morgan Linotype sign-making
machine which makes
beautifully conforming,
painstakingly clear, tri-color,
easy to hang even signs. It
seemed like a good idea. Then
come the latent manifestations:
the blasted things are so
uniform nobody can tell them
apart! Those priceless two
moments when Student no. 164-
46-8721 (en route to his 10
o’clock class) findsthat his eyes
have drifted to the upper right
corner of a nearby post—what
does he see? A sign… but what
does it say? Probably what all
the others say (he read one
yesterday, and they all say the
same thing, don’t they?)
I’ve exaggerated to illustrate
the difficulties of getting
information out. Uniform signs,
in the numbers we must use
them, are actually more
attractive than crayon posters
— and that’s important. ASB
signs are not as easy to make as
they are to miss. Several
students (notably our vice
president, activities council and
public relations man) spend
many hours weekly in the signmaking room.
Other kinds of information —
news on Board of Control
decisions and student causes
ASB is working on — generally
find coverage in the Buccaneer
which, although student-funded,
is a free press paper. Covering
the entire campus, it can’t print
exclusives on all Associated
Students calls “information” —
and it doesn’t. We must seek
other forums. For example, the
foyer bulletin board. We haven’t
discussed the pros and cons of
initiating a loudspeaker system
on campus — but it’s an idea.
The best way to transfer
information is to speak, and a
student representative who
talks about Associated Students
is working for you. You have to
know itfirst… He is making an
opportunity for everyone an
opportunity for you.

Winter poetry series scheduled

Stephen Jaech, young Seattle
poet, read selections of his
poetry at noon Jan. 22 in the
Little Theatre.
Many of Mr. Jaech’s poems
reflected impressions of his
travels throughout the United
States and abroad. Particularly
interesting was his technique of
reversing stanzas, a poetic style
widely used in Vietnam, and a
short poem entitled
“Summerscene,” written in
brief staccato lines.
Mr. Jaech has an excellent
reading style and the images
projected by his poems were
appreciated by the audience.
During his readings he
answered questions about his
method of writing poetry,
creativity, meter, rhyme and
style. He continued this
stimulating discussion in the
PUB.
As part of this continuing

series a folk guitar show was
presented Jan. 29 by acoustical
guitarist and singer Jeff Pope,
and bass guitarist Tom
Bukowski.
On Tuesday, Feb. 6, Joan
Stone, formerly of Port
Angeles, will have a poetry
reading in the Little Theatre.
Ms. Stone’s poetry has been
published in many magazines
and quarterlies, and she is the
recipient of several awards
including the Northwest
Writer’s Conference award.
Other upcoming programs
scheduled at this time include
Mr. Dick Bakken, noted
Portland poet, on Feb. 26; and
Ron Crawford and Rich Olson in
a poetry, slides and music
presentation about the
Northwest, entitled “Moutnains
to the Sea.”
—Karen Monds

MASH movie Sunday

On Sunday, Feb. 10,
Peninsula College will present
“M-A-S-H” as part of its
continuing film series.
Starring Donald Sutherland
and Eliot Gould, “M-A-S-H” is a
story of two surgeons during the

Korean War who create panic
and chaos in their medical
camp.
A superbly funny film, “M-AS-H” won the Golden Film
award at the 1971 Cannes Film
Festival. Showtime is 7 p.m