The Buccaneer April 25, 1975.

’75-6 elections to be held

Elections for 1975-76 BOC
officers will be held May 9.
Candidates must pick up their
petitions Monday.
With the revised constitution
expected to be ratified, the
offices and requirements for
candidates will be different this
year.
Under the new constitution
only three offices will be filled
in the May election: president,
vice-president and secretarytreasurer. If the new
constitution failed to be ratified

during Wednesday’s election,
secretary and treasurer will
remain individual offices.
Under the new constitution
candidates must have earned 24
credit hours prior to election. If
the new constitution fails to be
ratified a presidential
candidate must eam 28 credit
hours prior to summer quarter,
and the remaining three
officers will have no credit
requirements.
No word on Wednesday’s
ratification election was
available at press time.

Levine returns to SG podium

Studium Generale will
feature a return engagement of
Rabbi Raphael Levine next
Thursday, May 1. Rabbi Levine
will present a lecture titled
“Freedom under Law in
America.”
Mr. Ross Hamilton will be the
guest speaker at the May 8
Studium Generale. His topic
will be “Olympic Alps:
Backpacking Through the
Seasons.” He will present a
slide show with pictures of
hiking through the mountains in
every season of the year.
Yesterday Dr. David Andre
and PC art instructor John
Pogany presented “Art and
Music: Passage Through
Time.”
PC English instructor
Margaret Holm Spillane gave
the April 17 Studium Generale
audience an audio-visual
demonstration of early English
literature in a program titled
“Literature Illustrated.” She
used slides taken during her
four tripsto Europe to show the
audience various areas in
England where some of the
classic stories took place, while
she read excerpts from them.
She also played recordings of readings done in English, both modern and ancient, scottish and Gaelic.
On April 10 PC biologist
Edward Tisch ’related his
experiences as a Peace Corps
worker in Chile during 1961-63.
He prestented slides he took
while in Chile of scenery, areas
where he worked, children and
oxcarts. He also gave some
inside information on the
formation of the Peace Corps,
as was among the first
volunteers trained and used at
the start of the program.

Gardens in Victoria tour

A bus tour of the Butchart
Gardens and the Saanich
Peninsula will highlight the
annual Victoria trip on May 3.
The bus trip will cost $4.50.
Those not wishing to go on the
bus will pay $3 for the round trip
ticket.
The travelers must meet at
the Port Angeles ferry dock at 7
a.m. The ferry will leave at 7:30
a.m.
The ferry will arrive at

Victoria at 9 a.m. Grey Lines
buses will pick up those who are
going on the tour, at dockside.
The buses will travel to the
Butchart Gardens, about 13
miles up the Saanich Peninsula
from Victoria. They will be able
to see much of the city before
being dropped off at
Thunderbird Park in downtown
Victoria.
Some downtown attractions
are: the Provincial Museum,

Royal London Wax Museum,
Undersea Garden, the Maritime
Museum, Prince Albert’s
Miniature World, and the
Classic Car Museum.
Everyone must be at the ferry
terminal at 3:30 p.m. The ferry
will leave at 4 p.m. for the hour
and a half trip home.
Tickets may be purchased in
the Student Activities Office.

Shakespeare class starts

A transfer credit class in
Shakespeare will begin
Tuesday, May 6, at 7 p.m. with
Mrs. Spillane as instructor. The
course will end with a four-day
trip to the Shakespeare Festival
in Ashland, Ore. between
Friday, June 27, and Monday,
June 30.
Those wishing to attend the
Shakespeare Festival only may
register through June 9 for a
one-credit Shakespeare
weekend workshop. Details on
tickets, housing, and travel are
in the spring quarter issue of
“Pen Notes,” available in the
Administration Building.

Volunteer awards given to PC students,teacher

By NANCY WHITE
Seven Peninsula College
students and an instructor
received awards for their
services in the juvenile court
volunteer program, “Wish I
Had a Friend Who Cared,” in a
ceremony Sunday, April 20.
Jerry Spicer, sociology
teacher and director of the
Community Involvement
Program, will receive a special
award in appreciation for his
help with the program. The
students are Jolyn Wagner,
Sandy Dosey, Bill Early, Gay
Ann Williams, Larry
McFadden, Alan Hawley and
Veda Brown.
Other students who have
helped in the program are
Peaches Windle, Mary Wilcox,
Patricia Tuttle and Karen

Umtuch.
These students are working
with the Bay View Girls Home
in Port Angeles and the Boys
Home in Sequim. Mrs. Bobbi
Overton, head of the program,
said: “They work on an
individual, one-to-one basis.
They are doing a tremendous
service. They could not afford to
hire people for this work.”
The students designed the
program themselves. Some are
receiving college credit for
their work, and others are just
volunteering their time. From
Oct. 1 to April 14 they
contributed 684 hours.
They work asrecreation aides
and teachers, some teaching
their special hobbies. Last
quarter’s activites included

taking the group to a Seattle
SuperSonics game, a Halloween and Christmas
party, a snow trip, and time
spent just being friends.
Mrs. Overton is looking for
more volunteers to work in all
aspects of the juvenile court
program. This involves work as
case aides, tutors, recreation
people, hobby or craft people,
and volunteers on a one-shot
basis to be called in when
needed.
Mrs. Overton set the age limit
from 18 to 85.
The students went through a
three-hour training program
covering juvenile laws, court
procedures, and a positive
attitude while working with
juveniles.
“One of the successes has

been the age bracket of the
students,” Mrs. Overton said.
“The kids accept them. It has
created an interest in several of
them to go to college.”
“The kids have been most
appreciative of college
students. They are happy that
they are not being paid and that
it had nothing to do with the
police department. They are
happy that someone cared
about them,” she said.
She hopes to attract more
men to work with the boys’
home, especially those in the 20
to 30-year-old age bracket. She
feels the youths relate to them
better.
Those students on college
credit meet regularly in the
afternoons for a rap session
with outside guests such as
ministers, public assistance

People, high school counselors,
state troopers, and Indian
probation officers. They have
had to take a tour of the jail,
police and sheriffs department.
Many activities have been
planned for this quarter. They
will be picking up litter in Port
Angeles and Sequim, raising
money for a recreational
program, and going on camping
programs. They also will try
learning macrame, candle
crafts, and jewelry making.
“The kids come up with new
ideas from week to week,” Mrs.
Overton said.
Each volunteer is given a
training book and are paid gas
mileage. The boys meet
Thursday afternoons. They also
have met on weekends.

Editorial
Strike unnecessary


Talk about a possible strike by Washington State
teachers has reached Peninsula College, but
fortunately for students, It has failed to pick up any
local support.
Teachers at PC have voted unanimously at an
official faculty meeting to not even take a strike vote.
According to faculty sources, the strike plans do not
have enough support to become a reality, mainly
because of the lack of real issues to strike on.
A strike by community college teachers would not
hurt the state legislature, the principal opponents to
maintaining the present level of standards for
community college education. Instead, the students
would suffer the most through lost tuition and fees
money, cancelled classes, lost credits, and lost
grades.
Administrators who make the college budgets would
not be affected by a strike either. They don’t belong to
the teachers’ unions, and continue to work and draw
their salaries whether school is in progress or not.
Since a strike by teachers would be relatively
ineffective as far as persuading the legislature goes, a
more logical answer to the problem is increased
communication between faculty representatives and
the State Board for Community College Education, the
teachers’ lobbying group in Congress.
With effective leadership and a more open attitude
toward the problems of the teachers it is supposed to
be representing, the SBCCE would be more able to
convey the opinions of the teachers to the legislature,
thus eliminating many of the problems they face
today. The most important problem naturally is an
impending strike.
If a strike does come to pass, it won’t be with the
blessings of the PC faculty. They hope to avoid such a
situation If at all possible. Unfortunately, if a strike
does occur, this campus will be swept up In it despite
anyone’s wishes.
A strike by state teachers is unnecessary. There are
other ways to reconcile their differences without
hurting others who really have no place in the fight —
namely, students. These other ways need to be tried
before anything so rash as a strike is called into play.
— Ed Mund

A look at the artists
‘Godspell’ top billing

By JEFF BIALIK
The Musical “Godspell” has
been forced to sit in the second
row while “Jesus Christ
Superstar,” “Hair,” and
“Tommy” dominated the
scene. However after the April
10 Green River Community
College production of
“Godspell” at Peninsula
College, Port Angeles area
residents could care less about
any other rock musicals.
Such an implication of being
second rate has not been justly
deserved, for as this totallyinvolving musical production of
the life of Jesus unfolds, the
audience becomes totally and
intimately involved with the
cast, and the cast become
disciples, baptising with song
and dance.
The Green River College cast
of “Godspell” deserved the
standing ovation of the Little
Theater crowd for providing
pure and completely honest
entertainment. Without
gimmicks and expensive props,
“Godspell” was very effective.
“Godspell” was conceived by
John-Michael Tibelak with
music and lyrics by Stephen
Schwartz. The musical is a
theatrical version of the Gospel
according to St. Matthew, and
uses a free atmosphere to
present the teachings of Jesus.
The parables become side
showsin themselves as they are
acted out by the cast.
The Green River cast was
directed by Gary K. Taylor of
the Green River College drama
department, under the musical
direction of Ronald Smith of the
Green River College music
department.
Doug Dammarell played
Jesus very well. He seemed to
generate a feeling of good
within himself to the cast and to
the audience. The rest of the
cast includedBruce Harpster as

John the Baptist and Judas, and
the clowns: Larry Bell, Glenda
Blue, Bob Bray, Peggy Marin,
Sharon Medak, Laurie Noble,
Ann Richardson, Sharon
Stecker, Norman White and
Jackie Yarberry.
Doug Dammarell describes
“Godspell” as being “pretty
free with not much stage
direction.” The Green River
team works with two separate
casts, but according to Doug
they aren’t identical. “Each
cast has adapted its own
personalities and
interpretations,” Doug adds.
Working with a musical with
such intense spiritual and
religious implications
“Godspell” moves the
audience, but the cast has also
been affected. “We’ve all
become a lot closer,” says
Bruce Harpster.
Norman White, the only
member working in both casts,
says “People (in the cast) are
beginning to find God. I’m not

saying there is a God, but there
is something there. They’ve
(the cast) seen it, They’ve felt
it.” Norman says he has
changed too. He has become
more outgoing and less hung up.
As he puts it, “I try to be me
now.”
As a musical, “Godspell”
uses the music with style. The
Green River musicians
included Darryl Yeager on
piano, Ron Fordick, bass;
David Hoskin on drums, and
Tom McCaukey, guitar.
The Green River “Godspell”
crew hopes to combine the two
casts and go on summer tour.
With the Peninsula College
performance as an indication I
predictsuccess. “Godspell” is a
well written script to begin
with; however without total
cast involvement the production
would become blase’. The
Green River cast gives the
musical life and the necessary
involvement. What else can be
said? Encore! Encore!

Library Corner

By the Library Staff
Through the help of Peninsula
College English instructor Jack
Estes, the library has recently
acquired 548 LP records. These
albums are stored in a record
browser in the audio-visual area
and are available for three-day
checkout from the main
circulation desk.
The collection includes rock
’n roll, blues, acid rock, country
western electronic music,
concert albums and motion
picture sound tracks. Some well
known artists are The Isley
Brothers, John Phillips, the Sha
Na Na, Alice Cooper, Chubby
Checkers, Frank Zappa, The
Rolling Stones, Ray Charles,
and of course some not-so-weU

known artists but enjoyable just
the same.
In order to prolong the
longevity of these albums, we
remind our patrons to use a
good diamond point needle and
to treat these albums with the
best of care.
Due to numerous abuses and
losses of books and other
materials placed on reserve,
access behind the circulation
desk area is restricted to all
students except those in the
nursing program. However, any
further problems with ADNLPN materials will necessitate
restricting these students to
over-the-desk check-outs.
Allreserve materials must be
requested from and checked out
by library personnel.


.

Seattle poet coming to PC

Alan Furst will come to
Peninsula College Tuesday
noon, May 13, for a poetry
reading in the Little Theater.
Mr. Furst lives on
Bainbridge Island, and is a
transplanted Easterner from
New York City.
Though only 34 years old, he
was editor of Yoeman, a
literary magazine, and now

works at Central Washington
State College as assistant
professor, and is assistant
director of the Seattle Arts
Commission.
He graduated from Oberlin
College, Oberlin, Ohio, received
his M.A. from Pennsylvania
State University in 1967, and
studied at the Universite de
Montpellier in Southern France.

Logging number 3

The Peninsula College
logging sports team placed
third at itsfirst meet at Spokane
Community College April 11 and
12.
Competing against nine other
collegesfrom the northwest, the
PC team gained two firsts, a
second, a pair of thirds and a
sixth, plus a third in the team
relay.
The team members competed
in both women’s and men’s
divisions of axe throwing,
choker setting, double buck,
tree climbing, speed cutting,
single buck, team relay and log
birling.
Team coach is Steve Poppe,
advisor is Craig Switzer and
Malcolm Harper coaches the
high climbing.
Steve Poppe placed second in
axe throwing, third in single
buck, sixth in speed chopping,
and teamed with Eric Anderson
to capture a first in double buck
competition.
Stacie Baker placed first in
women’s axe throwing
competition. Jennie Smith
placed third in tree climbing.
Craig Roberts made it
through the semi-finals in log

birling, but was eliminated in
the finals.
Other members of the team
included James Foyston, Jim
Ward, Casey Scoles, Pattie
Tuttle, Dan Sundvick, Jaime
Pinkham, Mike Piotrowski, Bob
Myers, Bruce Edwards and
Larry McFadden.
The PC team placed third in
the team relay. The relay
begins by a member climbing a
tree and striking a bell at the
top of the tree. When the bell
sounds, another team member
starts chopping a log. When
finished with the log a double
buck team saws a 22-inch log in
half. When that part is finished
another member throws his axe
till he reaches 15 points. After
that is completed a girl sets the
choker and the relay is
complete. According to team
member James Foyston, the
team relay is the most exciting.
Team members unable to go
to Spokane includes Vern
Tolliver and Steve Johnson.
The logging sports team
thanks Peninsula Logging
Supply in Forks, owned by John
Brooks, for its help and support.
The team travels to WSU this
weekend.

Family Life Ed. teaches parents,kids together

By DAWN FRY
Parents can learn more of the
occupation of parenthood and
children can start their
education before they are five
or even one year old, and do it
together in the family life
education program.
The assumptions underlying
the program are that
parenthood is a full-time
occupation requiring special
skills (one is not necessarily a
“born parent”), and that
parents are the principal and
primary teachers of their
children.
Family life education is a
statewide program in
community colleges and
vocational schools which was
instituted under the Vocational
Act of 1967. The program was
started at Peninsula College
two years ago and has grown to
include four sections.

  1. Prepared Childbirth is a
    class taught by two obstetrics
    nurses, in which parents learn
    aspects of childbirth.
  2. Mothers bring babies up to
    a year old to the mother-infant
    class, which covers infant
    development, music and infant
    stimulation games.
  3. Parents attend each session
    of the toddler development lab
    with their children, who explore
    a large variety of play
    equipment and art media in a
    preschool type atmosphere.
  4. The preschool lab for three
    to five-year-olds forms the bulk
    of the program and extends
    from Port Angeles into Sequim.
    It is a cooperative, and parents
    receive credit for working parttime in the preschool their
    children attend. Parents study
    child behavior, family
    relationships, diet and
    nutrition, homemaking and

management skills through
practice in the preschool under
the supervision of the lab
instructor, by attending regular
meetings to discuss problems
with other parents and by
serving on the preschools
boards.
Sending children to preschool
is not done to make small
geniuses. Barbara Clampett,
who supervises the preschool
program, says it helps them
learn to interact with other
people, which is necessary as
many are only children and will
remain such. She said,
“Teachers say it makes no
difference to their IQ.”
Mrs. Clampett says that a
recent “Seminar for Dads” was
successful, as men do not often
have the opportunity to discuss
with other fathers the problems
of fatherhood.

Film series ‘fine’

By MARYMILICI
One need not be an art major,
expert, or critic to appreciate
the fine films being presented in
the “Museum Without Walls”
series. These excellently
narrated productions provide
historical information and
interesting details along with
the advantage of taking you
from the noisy, crowded
exhibition halls of Paris and
Rome to a private showing in
the comfortable surroundings of
Peninsula College’s Little
Theater.
The series began on April 14
with two films showing the
lives, loves, and passions of
Goya and Picasso. The films
dealt with the subjects in such
an intimate and descriptive
manner that one came away
with a greater appreciation of

the artist and the beauty of art
as well as a deeper knowledge
of his works.
On April 21, films of Giotto
and of the art from the ancient
civilizations of Crete and
Mycenae were presented with
equally fascinating perception
and high quality.
The next three films will deal
with the Impressionists and
Kinetic Art, Le Corbusier and
the Greek Temple, and The
Cubist Epoch and GermanyDaDa. These programs will be
shown on Monday nights, April
28 and May 5 and 12
respectively. April 28 will be the
last date on which it would be
beneficial to purchase a series
ticket for $5, but the price at the
door will remain $2 for adults
and $1 for students.

Scholarship available

Scholarships are open to those
students who will be.spending
their sophomore year at
Peninsula College, according to
Dean of Students Art Feiro.
Crown Zellerbach will be
giving out four $500
scholarships based on academic
excellence alone, not need.
Two Rotary scholarships will
be given on a renewal basis.
Every year four are given to
high school graduates. After the
first year, the two who show the
highest academic work will
have their scholarship renewed.
Students who are going into
education are eligible for a $200
Delta Kappa Gamma
scholarship. The winner will be
chosen from teacher
recommendations.
Students interested in a
writing career should apply to
the scholarship committee
headed by Mr. Feiro for a
Webster award. A total of $1,100
has been established for
Peninsula College students by
Mrs. Esther Webster as a
memorial to the late Charles N.
Webster, a former publisher of
the Port Angeles Evening
News, and his father E. B.
Webster, the paper’s founder.

Soccer team welcomes players

Peninsula College once again
has a soccer team this quarter.
The team has been practicing
Tuesday and. Thursday
afternoons from 3 to 5. The team
works on a club basis and has no
formal schedule of games.
Hakim Al haidor is the
captain and Mrs. Art Feiro
serves as advisor.
For those not familiar with
soccer, the game is played on a
field similar to football, with 11
members. One player guards
the goal (goalie) and the other
10 members become the
forwards, backs and fullbacks.
To score, players must get the

ball past the goalie and into the
opposing team’s goal. The
playersmay not use their hands
or arms to move the ball down
the field.
According to Hakim Al
haidor, the best players are the
foreign students, mostly
because they have played
soccer since their childhood.
Hakim is pleased with the
increased interest the
northwest is showing in the
game and says he feels the
game will be as popular as
baseball in five to 10 years.
Anyone interested in the
soccer team is invited to attend
the practices behind the gym.

Musicians to play tonight

A jam session will be held
tonight from 8 o’clock till 12
midnight in the PUB.
ASB Vice President Jeff
Pope is in charge of the event.
The jam session is being
repeated due to the

overwhelming interest in the
fall quarter jam session.
Pope hopes to see everyone
attend and is confident the
program will be a success.
There will be no admission
charge for the event.

Reg. period down to 1 week

A new Selective Service
requirement will affect all
males born in 1957.
Beginning this year every
male born in 1957 will be
required to register for the draft
during one week, and not within
30 days of his birthday as was
the policy before. This one week
registration period will
hopefully ease the yearly work
load of the selective service

board.
Details of the new
requirements are still sketchy,
but according to Veterans
Advisor Bob Willicut, the only
change will be in the
registration date, and has
nothing to do with actual draft
requirements and will not affect
the eligibility time of those
registering. The registration
date was unannounced at press
time.

PC Symphony plans schedule

Port Angeles Symphony
Orchestra has scheduled
several activities April 25
through 27 of special interest to
Peninsula College students.
The final concert of the
season will be at 8 p.m. Friday
in the Port Angeles High School
auditorium. Featured will be a
medley from “Jesus Christ
Superstar,” a variety of
musical hits from Broadway
and the movies, and a
costumed, choreographed

production titled ‘‘Go for
Baroque.”
The concert will end with a
performance of “Finlandia”
sung in Finnish by the
Community Chorus, directed by
J. Marvin Pollard. Tickets will
be available before the concert
at the door. They are $1 for
students, $2 for regular
admission.
Tickets also will be on sale for
the 1975-76 season of the
symphony. Those buying tickets

early will get to attend twq
concerts in the Peninsula
College Little Theater free, on
May 4 and May 18.
On Sunday, the Little Theater
will be the setting for a free
performance by the Youth
Symphony, which is sponsored
by the Port Angeles Symphony
Orchestra board. The concert at
3 p.m. will feature 12-year-old
Karen Town of Port Townsend
as soloist in the Beethoven
Piano Concerto No. 1.

State conference studies volunteers

“Times are changing, and
volunteers should change,” said
Superior Court Judge Janice
Niemi of Seattle at a regional
volunteer conference April 12 in
the Little Theatre.
She was the keynote speaker
at the conference, which was
titled “The Challenge of
Participation: A Crisis of
Confidence in the American
Community.”
About 60 people from
volunteer groups in Port
Angeles, Sequim and Forks
attended the daylong
conference.
Judge Niemi stressed
equality in voluntarism.
“Volunteer activity should be
equal for men and women. Men
diould be helping in the lower
and higher levels. Women
should have a voice in policy
making,” she said.
Judge Niemi is the first
woman to be elected to the
Superior Court bench in
Washington. As a working
moths* of two children, she has
found time to work in a wide
variety of volunteer activities.
In 1972 she won the woman of
the year award in law.
She has had to set up
priorities among her family,
home and work. “I’ve solved
household work by simply not
doing it,” she said. x
“We have ova* 50 per cent of
the adult women in the country
in the work force. The bulk of
the lower level voluntary
activity is carried on by women.
Changes have to be made
because of the work schedule;
We have to take another look at
meeting hours,” she said.
Judge Niemi said the
woman’s movement, inflation,
and recession have all had an
impact on volunteer activity.
She also questioned the nineto-five volunteer activities.
“Should we be taking over the
functions of trained
personnel?” she asked. Citing
the recent levy failures, she
said: “Volunteers can assist the
teachers, but not take their
place.”
“Volunteer activity should be
across the board, from
collecting money to
recommending and raid drafting
legislation,” she added.
Mrs. Jolene Unsoeld, Mrs.
Dorrit Pealy, Mrs. Bonnie
Graves, Mrs. Susan Hammond,
Mr. Jerry Spicer, and Judge
Niemi formed a panel to discuss
the confidence theme.
Other participating
humanists and resource
persons were Mrs. Margaret
Crawford, Mrs. Grace Chamell,
Mrs. Susan Wilson and Mrs.
Joanne Ducceschi.
Mrs. Unsoeld a citizen
activist in the Coalition for Open
Government at Olympia, and
Mrs. Pealy, a consultant on
urban affairs and consultant to
the Seattle Freeholders, formed
a luncheon panel.

Mrs. Unsoeld urged the
participants to “set a high
standard, and to elect those who
meet that standard.” She also
said that “If you volunteer to do
nothing you approve the status
quo.”
Mrs. Pealy said; “The crisis
is in a belief in ourselves and
that we can govern ourselves.
We must go back to the first
principle — what does it mean
to govern oneself?”
Participants divided into
discussion groups to discuss the
three theme questions: “Is
volunteer activity necessary for
the good society?” “Is
volunteer activity necessary for
the individual self fulfillment?” “If volunteer
activity should be fostered, then
by whom and under what
conditions?
The state conference will be
held in Seattle April 20. Eleven
people will represent the
regional conference there.
Dr. Werner Quast, who
opened and closed the
conference, summarized it by
saying, “Voluntary action is to
have the opportunity to say no.”

Workshop studies Fluoridation

“The Real Story on
Fluoridation” will be the theme
of workshops scheduled at 2
p.m. Wednesday, April 30, in the
Peninsula College Science
Lecture Hall, and again at 8 that
evening in the Roosevelt Junior
High Auditorium.
Both workshops, planned by
the newly-formed Committee
for Increasing Fluoride, are
designed to enable people to
learn. about fluoridation’s
safety, effectiveness and costsaving qualities, according to
the committee co-chairmen,
Martha Baker and Robbie
Mantooth. The committee was
formed after the county dental
and medical societies voted to
work toward supplementing the

naturally low fluoride level of
public water supplies.
Robert Faine, a dentist with
the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare in
Seattle, will be featured
speaker at both programs. A
film will be shown and there will
be an opportunity for questions
from the audience. Art Feiro,
Barbara Clampett and Philip
Churchley are among college
faculty members helping with
the workshops.

Summer jobs open

“If you haven’t already found
a summer job, now is the time
to apply,” says Ms. Sue
Hammond, PC job counselor.
“Some of the best jobs have
already been taken, but it is still
not too late to start looking.”
Locally, there are openings at
several resorts. Bar help,
grocery store clerks (over 21),
and kitchen assistants are
needed for weekend work now
and for fulltime work during the
summer. If a record tourist
season develops as predicted,
there will probably be
additional openings tor
waitresses and motel maids.
Elsewhere in the state there
are still many openings for
camp counselors. Information
on these jobs is posted in the
PUB and is also available from
Ms. Hammond in the job
referral office in the student
services building.
For those interested in action
and excitement (not to mention
dirt and danger), there are
numerous openings in forest
fire prevention around the
state. Positions available
include crew cooks, equipment
operators, forest fire fighters
and forest lookouts. Deadline
for applications is April 30.
Anyone interested in any of
these jobs should see Ms.
Hammond.

Next dance to be free

The next Peninsula College
dance will be free of charge to
PC students with ASB cards.
The BOC agreed to abolish the
admission price for PC students
in hopes of generating greater
interest in the dances. Those
attending without student cards
will be charged $1. The dance
will be May 9 and will feature
“Fly By Night,” a six-member
local group. Price of the band is
$300.
The April 11 dance brought in
$78, the cost of the band being
$400. The no admission charge
policy will be on a trial basis.

Western rep coming here

Anyone interested in attending Western Washington State College at Bellingham should take the opportunity to talk to Cal Mathews when he visits the PC campus. Mr. Mathews will be here Thursday, May 8 from 10 A.m. to 3p.m. to provide information and answer questions of any students who anticipate transferring to WWSC.