The Buccaneer April 11, 1975.

Trustees pick new president

Peninsula College will begin
the 1975-76 school year with Dr.
Paul G. Cornaby behind the
president’s desk. Dr. Cornaby
was chosen to succeed retiring
President E. John Maier by the
college Board of Trustees.
Dr. Cornaby comes to PC
from Seattle Central
Community College, where he
served as dean of instruction
and interim president. He also
has been associate dean of
instruction and associate dean
of liberal studies, as well as
teaching English and
composition at Seattle
Community College.
Prior to coming to Seattle, he
taught English at Highline
Community College and in other

states, including Idaho and
Utah.
Dr. Cornaby received his A.B.
in English in 1951 from
Westminister College in Salt
Lake City, Utah. He was
awarded an M.A. in English in
1953 from Brigham Young
University in Provo, Itah.
He came to Washington and
earned his PhD. in higher
education from the University
of Washington. His dissertation,
completed in 1971, was “A Study
of Authority Structures and
Relationships in the Washington
State Community College
System.”
Dr. Cornaby, age 45, is
married and the father of three
children, ages 23, 20, and 15.

State film series to be shown

For the second year in a row,
students and residents of the
Olympic Peninsula will be able
to attend the Washington State
Art Services film series. Titled
“Museum Without Walls,” the
series consists of five sections
dealing with modern
contemporary as well as preRenaissance painting.
The schedule of films, each
approximately 55 minutes long,
is as follows:
April 14: “Picasso: War,
Peace, and Love” and “Goya”.
April 21: “Giotto and the PreRenaissance” and “Crete and
Mycenae”.
April 28: “The Impressionists: Kinetic Art in
Paris,” and “The Art
Conservator”.
May 5: “Le Corbusier” and
“The Greek Temple”.
May 12: “The Cubist Epoch”
and “Germany—Dada”.
Sponsored by the Angeles
Arts in Action Association
headed by Dr. Donald Bettger,
and the Peninsula College
Community Services

Committee, whose Chairman is
Dr. Werner C. Quast, the series
will be each Monday evening at
7 in the Little Theater. To
familiarize laymen with the
material, Peninsula College art
instructor John Pogany will
provide a short commentary on
what to look for in the film
presentations.
Admission charge is $5 for the
adult series and $2.50 for
student series. Tickets are on
sale in the Administration
Building on campus, at Angeles

Music Center, and at the Bank
of Sequim.
On April 14 series or single
admissions may be purchased
at the door of the Little Theater
before the first film. Single
admission will be available
each evening at $2, adults and $1
for students. If sales of tickets
exceed the sponsorship fee
guaranteed by the Arts in
Action Association, the balance
will go into the art group’s
treasury.

Webster awards up for students

Dean of Students Art Feiro
announces that scholarship
awards totalling $1,100 have
been established for Peninsula
College students by Mrs. Esther
Webster. The awards have been
set up as a memorial to the late

Charles N. Webster, long-time
publisher of the Port Angeles
Evening News, and his father
E.B. Webster, who founded the
paper.
The awards will be given for
news feature writing, editorial
writing, essay writing, poetry
and short stories. The
scholarship money will be
divided into any three of these
categories, with at least one set
aside for the best journalistic
work.
Students wishing to apply for
awards in any of these
categories should submit
samples of their work to the
scholarship committee headed
by Mr. Feiro. Other members of
the committee are Earl Clark,
journalism instructor; and
William Lucas and Marjorie
Avalon, English instructors.
Among the criteria the
committee will use in addition
to the writing ability shown by
the entries are evidence that the
student intends to complete a
college education in the writing
field, and some evidence of
need.
In addition to the writing
entries, applicants should
submit a brief resume
explaining their goals and past
record of academic progress,
and two letters of
recommendation.

Army announces new program for schooling

Sgt. Gary Ingram, U.S. Army
recruiter in Port Angeles, has
announced a new program in
which a student can enlist in the
Army and receive four years of
college at little expense to the
individual.
Working through a college
counselor at the college the
applicant wishes to attend, the
student enlists for three years of
active duty in the Army. After
that three years the applicant
has received two years college
credit and may continue his
education through the G.I. Bill
program.
The program is called Project
Ahead, and according to
Sergeant Ingram, is “the only
armed services program in
which everyone involved comes
out ahead.”
The student receives on-base
instruction through the Army,
or the Army will pay up to 75 per
cent oftuition fees for education
received off the base. The Army
receives qualified personnel.

and the college receives third
and fourth year students with
certain skills and guaranteed
income.
There are presently close to
900 colleges and universities
working with the program,
including some community
colleges in the larger
metropolitan areas. Peninsula
College and the University of
Washington are not included in
the program.
Under the program, an
interested applicant would meet
with his Army recruiter and
select the college or university
he would like to attend from a
list of those working with the
Project Ahead program. If the
applicant meets the regular
admissions requirements of the
college a counselor will be
assigned, and would begin
working with the student in
selecting courses to take while
on active duty.
Interested applicants may see
Army Opportunities, 703 E.
Front St.

Phi Theta open for new students

Students eligible for
Phi Theta will be contacted
within the next couple of weeks.
Phi Theta is the campus
honorary organization. It
recognizes students with a 3.3
G. P.A. or higher.

Constitution complete

The revision of the Peninsula
College Associated Students
Constitution has been
completed and will be posted
soon for public approval.
The Constitution Revision
Committee headed by Jeff
Bialik and including Kara
Slehofer and Jerome
Eberharter spent several days
discussing and debating
changes in the constitution,
hoping to poinpoint the
problems in wording, and ease
the job of interpretation.
The Board of Control met in
special session on Tuesday to
approve the revised constitution
and set up a date for a
ratification election. No word
on approval or an election date
was available at press time

Most of the changes proposed
by the committee are just slight
word usages, but major
changes include: incorporating
the jobs of ASB secretary and
the ASB treasurer into one
office of secretary-treasurer;
lowering the credit
requirements from president
from 28 to 24, and raising the
vice president and secretarytreasurer requirements from
zero to 24 units of credit earned
prior to seeking office.
BOC officers will be required
to obtain and maintain a 2.5
grade average prior to and
while in office if the proposed
constitution is ratified. A 2.0
grade point is all that is
required under the present
constitution.

Editorial
PC in good hands

President E. John Maier can now retire with honor
and dignity, knowing that the college he helped build
from a few rooms at the high school to the beautiful
campus of today will be in good hands.
The Board of Trustees has picked a man to succeed
Mr. Maier whose qualifications In community college
administration are outstanding, to say the least.
Dr. Paul Cornaby, the president-elect, has had
considerable experience In this area, due primarily to
the administrative positions he has held In the Seattle
Community College District. This first-hand
experience has been amplified by the extensive study
he did on authority structures and relationships In this
state’s community college system for his doctoral
dissertation.
Dr. Cornaby has also seen the faculty side of
community colleges through Interaction with faculty
members and his own teaching experiences at
Brigham Young University, University of Utah,
Hlghline, and Seattle Central.
His understanding of faculty problems and ability to
communicate with faculty members were strongly
evident during his visit on campus in March. Several
PC faculty members made positive comments
regarding this subject.
At the meeting with the faculty, Dr. Cornaby also
impressed people with his definitions of the duties of
the college president, and his preference for smaller
community living. He was considerably and favorably
impressed not only by PC, but Port Angeles as well.
Peninsula College has grown and prospered more
than any predictions suggested, under the hand of
John Maier, and from all preliminary indications, It
will continue to do so with Paul Cornaby at the helm.
—Ed Mund

‘Godspell’ Presented

Contemporary musical
theater came to Port Angeles
Thursday when Green River
Community College presented
“Godspell” in the Peninsula
College Little Theater.
Following six scheduled
performances before. packed
houses in Auburn, the musical
has taken to the road with
performances at McNeil Island
and Peninsula College, Olympic
College and Grays Harbor
College.
“Godspell” is a jubilant
passion play of the gospel
according to St. Matthew, and
has already played to 20 million
people around the world in its
stage version. Originally set in
New York, the play has the
disciples and their leader
joyfully unfold the parables of
the New Testament through
song and action.
The once-only performance at
Peninsula CoUege was well
received by the audience.

A look at the artists
‘Tommy’ a sensation

By JEFF BIALIK
“I overwhelm as I approach
you—make your lungs hold
breath inside …”
From the moment the rock
opera “Tommy” begins, to the
final chord, the audience is
captivated by the movements
and action as color, sound, and
excitement become the vehicle
on which Director Ken Russell
portrays the complex
personalities of the characters
created by Pete Townshend and
The Who.
The story is ofTommy (Roger
Daltrey) who is stricken deaf,
dumb and blind by a traumatic
experience that occurred when
he was a young boy. The story
unfolds as Tommy’s warwidowed mother (AnnMargret) and her lover (Oliver
Reed) strive to find the cure for
Tommy’s plight. Finally
Tommy is miraculously cured,
and his family, including Uncle
Ernie (Keith Moon), use the
publicity to launch a money
making campaign, designed to
capitalize on Tommy’s
popularity as a pinball wizard.
The film is very complex, and
will take years of careful
deciphering to analyze. AnnMargret swimming in chocolate
syrup has a specific meaning,
but the impact of the scene
overshadows any symbolism.
Ann-Margret plays the
mother fantastically and will no
doubt receive a best actress bid
for her efforts. Oliver Reed does
well considering he can’t sing,
but his acting ability well
covers any lack of talent from
which he might suffer.
Roger Daltrey as Tommy
seems out of place, which works
in beautifully because Tommy
is out of place with the world.
Director Ken Russell will be
director of the decade for this
film, as will Producer Robert
Stigwood, for he already has
“Jesus Christ Superstar” to his
credit.

“Tommy” is impossible to
perceive in one sitting. The
impact on the viewer is one of
anticipated shock, much like
the steam whistle blast on a
Washington State Ferry—you
have a feeling something is
going to happen, yet are always
shocked when it goes off, and
never quite figure out how to handle it.
Anyone who misses
“Tommy” is missing a piece of
history that is sure to be a
classic of the seventies.
“You’ll feel me coming—a
new vibration. From afar
you’lll see me—I’m a
sensation …

Britian lecture opens Studium

Spring quarter Studium
Generale started with a packed
house to hear PC journalism
instructor Earl Clark present
“A Pictorial History of
Britain.”
Mr. Clark augmented his talk
with a continuous slide
presentation of pictures taken
by him and professionals. The
slides showed historic areas
throughout Britain, including
castles, cathedrals and palaces.
The background for the
lecture and the pictures were
gathered during Mr. Clark’s
month-long visit in 1973.
According to the evaluation
sheets filled out by each student
present, 116 rated the lecture
excellent, 81 good, and five fair.
No one present considered the
lecture poor.
Some of the written
comments handed in include,
“Today was very interesting
and I hope all of the classes are
this good,” and “The slides
were very nice.”

Other comments were, “It
should inspire many to visit
England,” and “May we see
more of Britain.”
As of now, over 250 people are
enrolled in G.S. 220, that is,
Studium Generale. There are
still openings available to anyone who wants to register for
the remaining lectures.

Library corner

By THE LIBRARY STAFF
A rich inheritance was
thu people of the
United States by the Founding
Fathers who wrote the
Declaration of Independence was established the
Constitution which governs our
country. This inherited gift is
also an inherited debt and a
definite responsibility.
Censorship has existed in the
Western World since Plato. The
history of censorship is
extensive. Books, works of art
dramatic productions and
movies have been censored for
various reasons for hundreds of
years. Grounds for attack have
been m the following general
areas: sex and morality
religion, politics and race.
Censorship flourishesin times
of tension and social upheaval.
No thinking person can be
complacent about the basic
freedoms. They are always
threatened. Constant vigilance
is required on the part of every
member of society tn
counteract repression of ideas
A free society can exist only in
an atmosphere of freedom and
encouragement.
The college library has
prepared a display on
the United
reek d^ay provides a
peek into the idiosyncrasies of
regional censorship. Since thn Supreme Court decision of^
1973, each community is now
free to enforce its
rtandards of what is offensive
By viewing the display the’
observer can take note of
prejudices in various of unities throughout our country.

U.S. needs truth

Almost 12 years ago President John F. Kennedy was
assassinated In downtown Dallas, Texas. Within the
next several hours the apparent assassin, Lee Harvey
Oswald, was killed by Jack Ruby, a Dallas
businessman. Before he could stand trial, Jack Ruby
died in jail. Ten months after the execution the
Warren Commission concluded that President
Kennedy was killed by Lee Harvey Oswald acting
alone, and that no conspiracy existed.
Recently with public awareness focused around
Watergate, the Pentagon Papers, and alleged Illegal
CIA Involvement In the United States, the unanswered
questions concerning the death of President Kennedy
are once again being raised.
Geraldo Rivera, host of ABC-TV’s “Goodnight
America,” presented a special 90-mlnute look into the
Kennedy assassination and the reasons why a new
commission should investigate the incident. The
evidence seems convincing, Including a horrifying
film of the murder that seems to suggest that possibly
three assassins existed.
During the course of the program, people on both
sides of the Warren Commission agreed that a new
and complete Investigation be Instigated.
It seems that the Warren Commission was a mite
hasty In its conclusions, and possibly either Ignored
evidence, or was persuaded by Inside sources to look
the other way. Ten years ago such speculation was
unheard of, but that was before Watergate made
corruption in high office believable.
America owes the truth to the memory of Its
martyred servant, John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
—Jeff Bialik

Angeles volunteers to hold conference

Volunteers from the Port
Angeles area will be meeting
Saturday in the Little Theater
for a volunteer conference
entitled “The Challenge of
Participation: A Crisis of
Confidence in the American
community.”
The Port Angeles conference
is ‘ one of nine regional
conferences statewide to
develop lines of communication
among volunteers and
voluntary associations, and
explore the strengths and
weaknesses of voluntary
efforts.
The program at Peninsula
College begins with registration
at 9 a.m., and is sponsored
locally by the PC Community
Service Committee, Volunteer
Action Bureau and the local
League of Women Voters, along
with the Washington Office of
Voluntary Action, Washington
State Common Cause, the
League of Women Voters, the
State Board for Community
College Education, the
Superintendent of Public
Instruction and the State
Library are statewide cosponsors.
There is no charge for the
conference. The series is being
financed by the Washington

Commission for the
Humanities.
The keynote speaker will be
King County Superior Court
Judge Janice Niemi. A panel of
participating humanists will
include Dr. Werner Quast, who
will direct the conference, Mr.
Jerry Spicer, Mrs. Susan
Hammond, and Mrs. Bonnie
Graves, all of the PC faculty;
Mrs. Grace Charnell, Port
Angeles Community Players;
Mrs. Jolene Unsoeld, the
Coalition for Open
Government; and Mrs. Dorrit
Pealy, of the University of
Washington Public Affairs
Office. They will add their
comments and assign group
discussions.
Dr. Quast said primary
questions to be explored in
discussion are:
Is volunteer activity
necessary for the good society?
Is volunteer activity
necessary for individual self
fulfillment?
If volunteer activity should be
fostered, then by whom and
under what conditions?
Issues such as people
becoming “over volunteered”
and the government dictating
what people do as volunteers
will be examined.
According to Dr. Quast, the
conference also will serve to
acquaint people with the wide
range of efforts made by
volunteers in the community,
from the person who servesin a
Search and Rescue unit to the
person who plays in a
symphony. Voluntary
organizations include not only
service oriented groups, but
policy oriented ones as well.
Following the regional
conference a statewide
conference on April 26 will

further explore the issues and
set the agenda for further work
and study of the contributions
made by citizen volunteers to
the health and well-being of
Washington state.
The conference hopes to bring
together community volunteers
who have been working in
various phases of voluntary
work. According to Roger
Gregoric?’ of the Office of
Voluntary Action in Olympia:
“The word ‘community’ is
much on people’s lips these
days. It appears in the title of

our conference in reference to a
special sort of human group.”
Gregorich raises the
question: “Is it true, as some
fear, that Americans are
becoming more and more
isolated, cut off from any ties
that might permit the growth of
community in this sense?”, but
adds, “All these questions and
more will be raised, and the
discussions made part of a
continuing and developing
exploration of the whole realm
of voluntary participation in the
community.”

Saga has food service

Dormitory residents and
students dealing with the snack
bar in the PUB will be
supporting Saga food service
rather than Capital Food
Service next year.
The contract, renewed every
year, has been awarded to Saga
as the low bidder for the 1975-76
school year.
According to administrator
Jim Lunt, state law says the
food service contract can be
negotiated with the present

contractor each year, but must
be put up for bids at a
maximum of five-year
intervals.
Mr. Luntsaid thatsince this is
the fourth year Capital has held
the contract, the contract would
have to have been bid either this
year or next year at the latest.
The food service by Saga to
dormitory residents will be
offered with the same meal plan
as has been used in the past.

BOC discusses Victoria trip

The Board of Control met
April to discuss the Victoria trip
to be held May 3, and agreed to
set two ticket prices for this
year’s event after hearing from
Mr. Jim Lunt, director of
student activities.
According to Mr. Lunt, in the
past the Victoria trip ticket
included round trip ferry fare
and a tour to Butchart Gardens.
Because only 90 people can take
the tour, Victoria trip tickets
have been limited in the past.
People not interested in making
the tour would therefore buy a
ticket, but not board the bus to
the gardens. Buses with empty
seats would then make the trip
that more people could have
attended.
The BOC then agreed to set
two ticket prices of $4.50 and $3.
The $4.50 ticket will include
round trip ferry fare plus a tour
of Butchart Gardens, and the $3
ticket will include just the round
trip ferry fare. Interested
students or staff should see Mr.
Lunt.
The dance being held tonignr
will feature Good News and is
brought through the BOC by
Jolly Ollie and Far West
Entertainment. Price of the
group is $400.
Jeff Pope, ASB vice
president, announced that a
jam session will be held April 25.Petitioning for ASB offices
begins April 28.

PC veterans club to start soon

By NANCY WHITE
“Vets first, but not
exclusively,” will be the idea of
a veterans club soon to be
started on campus, according to
Warren Whittier, a Peninsula
College student.
It will be designed to help the
veterans who form nearly 20 per
cent of the student body.
Five veterans were together
to Jalk about the problems they
face as college students. These
were Bob Zindel, Bob Trottier,
Doug Zaring, Joe Stout and
Warren Whittier.
Each are in school on their GI
Bill, and they admit they would
probably not be here without it.
However, the money is often
inadequate. As Joe Stout, a
fisheries student and Navy
veteran, says; “It certainly
teaches you to be frugal.”
Doug Zaring, a former Army
recruiter and now an
engineering student, supports a
wife, three children, and sends
child support to another. He
gets $410 a month. “The
money,” he said, “is only an
aid. It isset up to have you work
along with it.”
Some do manage to live on it.
“If a guy is willing to sacrifice,
he can survive; but it is
surviving—not living,” Stout
said

A loan fund will be one way in
which the club will help the
veteran. It will help out in
emergencies when the check
hasn’t come yet. The club will
also lobby for more money in
the legislature. It will service
the school and provide social
activities. They urge the
involvement of every veteran
on campus.
The next meeting is
Thursday, April 17 at 4 p.m. in
the lecture hall.
The average veteran is
different from many of the
other students. They are older
and have seen much more than
the student right out of high
school.
Bob Trottier is a forestry
student. He was a security
policeman in the air force. He
patrolled as a dog man on the
front lines in Vietnam.
“Our infantry spent 365 days
over there never knowing
whether we were coming
back,” he says. He admitted
that “It is hard to get back into
the aspect of studying.”
Once in school on the GI Bill,
the student must keep at least a
C average and carry a full load,
or the money will be
discontinued.
Bob Zindel, a Vietnam
veteran and mid-management
student, said, “Although it is

hard, I’m more ready now. I’m
catching up and learning how to
study.” Because he has family
obligations, he must set a
definite time to study.
Although they get along well
with their younger peers, they
felt that some were seriously
studying. Zaring said, “I don’t
find it hard to relate to them
regardless of their age, if that
person is mature.”
They all had praise for
Peninsula College and its
instructors. A veteran doesn’t
have a large choice of schools if
he is going strictly on his GI
money. Itis also harder to go on
in school if the money is used
up.
They have met with
opposition after getting out of
the service, especially the
Vietnam veterans. It was hard
for even their close friends to
understand them.
“We saw a lot of ugly things,”
says Bob Zindel. “It is like
trying to explain a broken leg to
someone who has never
experienced it. It just doesn’t
work. From then on it is all
inside of you. Sometimes you
wake up in the middle of a hot
summer night, and you are
right back there again.”
Each said it has matured
them. They feel ready for
school.

Music department buys new piano

Peninsula College music
department has added a grand
piano to its instrumentation,
much to the delight of music
instructor Marvin Pollard.
The seven-foot Steinway
studio grand was delivered last
week and is being utilized by
music classes and private instructors.
“A new instrument is like a
new car,” noted Mr. Pollard.
“You have to break it in.” He
mentioned that the piano must
now be played as much as
possible, but was quick to point
out that only qualified pianists
will be able to play the grand,
especially while it is being
broken in.

The purchase of a grand piano
has been in the offing for some
time, but has been impossible to
achieve due to lack of suitable
storage space. With the new art
building construction

underway, the present
ceramics lab will soon become
storage for the Little Theater,
and provide room to store the
piano. When storage space was
realized the piano was
purchased.
According to Mr. Pollard,
Steinway is considered the
“Cadillac of pianos,” and he
plans to put it to great use.
Three programs that will
utilize the instrument are
already planned as a part of
Studium Generale.
“I feel that by having an
instrument like this we can
attract high class
entertainment that we would
have been embarrassed to

invite before,” said Mr.
Pollard.
Anyone wishing to view or
play the piano should see Mr.
Pollard at his office in the Fine
Arts building.

Iranian student is ‘living free’

By NANCY WHITE
“I’m living free,” is how
Mehran Ghazanfarpour, an
Iranian foreign student,
describes his life style.
“I’m living just for myself,”
he said. “I just want to study
and take care of myself, until I
go back home.”
Mehran has been a student at
Peninsula since winter quarter.
He plans to major in
architecture.
He first wanted to study in
England. However, his father
convinced him to come to
Peninsula because his brother
Maabood is also a student here.
One of the reasons for
wanting to go to England was
because he prefers European
girls to American girls.
“Especially French girls, they
are just wonderful,” he said.
Mehran came from Teheran,
the capital city of Iran. When he
returns, he will be required to
spend two years either teaching
in the villages or working in the
army. He prefers the army. “I
don’thave the skill to teach,” he
admitted.
He likes Port Angeles: “The
guys are friendly. I did not feel
like a stranger.”
When he first came he had
trouble with the language. He
had to translate books from
English to Persian and then
back to English. Although he
still has some trouble, he
handlesthe language quite well.
Mehran misses his dog,
known in his family as
Mehran’s son. His family lets
the dog talk to him when he
calls home. Besides his dog he
skied at home and played
soccer, something which he still
does here. However, he is not as
pleased with the facilities at

Hurricane Ridge. “You go up
and ski down. You go up and slti
down,” he said.
Mehran claims to have no
major problems. “Everything
is perfect,” he said.

PC lists scholars

The following students were
named to the President’s List
by achieving a grade point
average of 3.75 or better during
winter quarter at Peninsula
College, it was announced today
by Floyd F. Young, dean of
instruction:
David E. Anderson, Judy C.
Bairey, Harold H. Bechtold,
Lou E. Boyl, Gary D. Brown,
Thomas G. Charles, Judith J.
Cole, Michael L. Cole, Anne T.
Coleman, James J. DeVincent,
Patricia M. Donahue, James S.
Foyston, Brenda E. Fraker,
Sarah J. Frazee, Debbie

Hammerquist, John J. Hill,
Judith P. Hill, C.F. Hirschstein,
Barbara A. Hough, David L.
Hurd.
Also Brent A. Hyde, Cheryl L.
Jensen, Richard H. Jenseth,
Mark J. Johnsen, Paul W.
Johnson, Teresa L. Jones,
Charles S. Kaylor, Ralph E.
Lemke, Holly A. Linth, Esther o.Lynne, Steven A. Meacham,
Kenneth F. Milici, Jane A.
Minish, Roxanna D. Paulin,
Craig A. Petrovich, Susan S.
Pierson, Josephine A. Pinnock,
Suzanne M. Raffel, Amy S.
Richbourg, Donald B. Rohde Jr.
Others were Marjorie A.
Root, Lisa K. Rosenboom,
Walter L. Sanwald, Scott J.
Schreier, Leona M. Selin, Diloy
Senz, Ione M. Siegler, Albert A.
Simpson, Rochelle M. Smith,
Donna D. Splaine, James A.
Spracklin, Jodie G. Stewart,
Sharon M. Sukert, Dan B.
Sundvick, Catherine Tickner,
David T. Whitfield, Warren L.
Whittier, Marilyn A. Williams,
Susan L. Williams and Robert
E. Wyatt.
Students earning a place on
the honor roll with a grade point
average of 3.25 or better for not
less than twelve (12) credit
hours were:
William R. Allen, Rebecca J.
Allman, Fred 0. Amundson,
Sue L. Andrassy, Michael A.
Bauman, Kevin W. Berglund,
Darrell E. Bessey, Robert L.
Birkland, Jennifer A.
Blomgren, John J. Boesenberg,
Mary S. Bond, Beverly S. Botts,
Walter J. Buettner, Bruce R.
Burwell, Lee A. Cain, Sheila
M. Campana, Chris J. Carlson,
Randy E. Carman, Charles K.
Carroll, Mary F. Chesnut,
Russell Christianson, Mark G.
Coleman, Holly S. Compton,
Karen C. Corning, Diana L.
Dickinson, Denise E. Downen,
Kathleen F. Duncan, James E.
Easterson, Cameron A. Field,
Brian E. Fink.
Also Barbara J. Forsyth,
Daniel A. Frazer, Nancy A.
Gase, Charlene A. Gau, Laura
M. Goebel, Joseph R. Greaves,
Patricia A. Green, John S.
Griswold, Patrick E. Hacker,
Leon F. Hanna, Dorothy M.
Hegg, Thomas J. Heller,
Elizabeth J. Herman, Lisa K.
Hitt, Judy A. Ihrig, Corlie A.
Johnson, George J. Johnson,
Paul M. Johnson, Steven L.
Johnson, Daniel B. Kennedy,
Koni A. Kitz, Bob H. Krause,
Roberta J. Lenhart, Nancy J.
Loucks, Jack D. Matlock,
Kimberle S. McCoy, Archie A.
Mertz, Kenneth J. Morgan,
Edward L. Mund, David A.
Nelson.
Also Ronald L. Nesary,
Donald E. Osborn, Lois E.
Owens, Mary M. Pearce,
Claude B. Peden, Marlene L.
Pike, Robert W. Pohl, Jeff W.
Pope, Mary A. Richbourg,
Myrle P. Richert, Debra A.
Robinson, Mary Z. Sampson,
Kathryn L. Silves, Russell A.
Smith, Victoria C. Smith’ Paul
H. Stratton, Laura J. Swanson,
Leona A. Thomas, Jolyn
Wagner, Nelsa M. Wallace,
Paula K. Watson, Rodney W.
Watson, Ronald J. Wilcox, Gay
A. Williams, Roxanne L.
Williams, Cynthia J. Woodside,
Sharon A. York, Robert D.
Zaring and David H. Zibell.

Aptitude tests offered at PC

Student Services personnel
began providing monthly
testing services to students
April 8.
The tests are to give students
a thorough understanding of
their academic and
occupational aptitudes,
according to counselor Dick

Hendry.
The “General Aptitude Test
Battery” will be administered
to interested students the
second Tuesday of each month.
Students with questions about
their academic or job abilities
should see Mr. Hendry in the
Student Services building.