February 4 , 2008

TOP STORIES

Marketing Prof. David Starr receives national recognition from DECA

Shoreline Community College Business Administration Professor David Starr has been awarded DECA’s (Distributive Education Clubs of America) highest honor, “Honorary Life Member,” for his dedication and service to the goals of the student leadership organization. DECA is an international association of college and high school students studying marketing, management and entrepreneurship that supports skill development and competence for marketing careers. The award is given to only one individual a year. Starr will be recognized at this year’s International Career Development Conference in April in Atlanta, Georgia.

Persons eligible for this prestigious award are marketing educators who have contributed a minimum of 20 years of service to DECA and who have added significantly to the development and/or progress of the organization at the international level. Individuals are selected via a nomination process and voted on by members of the National DECA Board of Directors. Starr was nominated by former students, state advisors, DECA Honorary Life Members, and many others who have worked with him in the field of marketing education.

Starr has more than 30 years experience teaching marketing and management skills. The marketing professor joined the college chapter of DECA about 1977 while at Central Washington University and has been involved since that time at the college, high school, state, national and international levels. He has served as chapter advisor, Washington state conference coordinator, Washington state advisor, international competitive events coordinator, and served on the National Post-Secondary Council for three years as chair. This year, Starr will serve his fourth term on the national staff as an international conference coordinator.

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Toyota T-TEN Program receives national award
The Toyota T-TEN Program at Shoreline Community College is one of five programs nationwide to receive the 2007 T-TEN School Recognition Award from Toyota Motor Sales USA, Inc.  The award is given to the highest performing T-TEN schools located at colleges across the country.   Shoreline also received the award last year.   

“We’re the only ones west of the Rockies to get the award,” says Matt Spitzer, Toyota T-TEN instructor at Shoreline.  Spitzer says there are 53 schools across the country that offer the Toyota program. 

Shoreline’s program was selected for its excellent implementation of the national training model, including placement of students at Toyota dealerships, meeting graduate objectives, maintenance of instructor and program certifications and compliance with Toyota training requirements. 

“The instructional quality is of high caliber,” says Toyota T-TEN/AYES Area Manager, Andrew Passage, “and the T-TEN staff, Matt Spitzer and former instructor, Jack Shiel, have done a great job of building positive relationships with the Toyota dealer body.”

The College was also commended for providing a Toyota professional-technical certificate through the Extended Learning program to support industry demand for certified technicians. 

Toyota Motor Sales USA, Inc. will host a celebration for Shoreline CC Toyota T-TEN graduates, students and faculty.  Spitzer says they will celebrate at a Mariner’s game this spring.  The Shoreline Community College program will also have preferential choice for donated cars and additional training aids from the manufacturer. 

The Toyota T-TEN program was started nationally in 1986; Shoreline started its program in 1987.  Shoreline CC works with 15 Toyota and Lexus dealerships across Puget Sound.  A total of 145 people have received Toyota certification through Shoreline’s program in 21 years. 

For information about the Toyota T-TEN program at Shoreline Community College, please call 206.533.6793 or check out the web site located at www.shoreline.edu/shorelinepdfs/plan/psAMToyota

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SCC supports Gov. Gregoire’s Math and Science Initiative
The market demand for employees with a solid foundation in math and science remains high in the state of Washington.  A year ago Governor Chris Gregoire announced the Math and Science Initiative to help Washington state math and science teachers develop better teaching techniques to improve student progress in this area.  The initiative was developed to respond to the falling Washington Assessment of Student Learning (WASL) test scores in math.  The initiative supports the recruitment of more teachers and encourages additional teacher training and hands-on learning opportunities for students.

“The best way to grow our economy and secure a bright future for our students is to make comprehensive, smart, responsible and accountable investments in math and science now,” said Governor Gregoire when the initiative announcement was made. 

All community colleges, particularly Shoreline Community College, support the economic development of our communities and our state through educational and training programs for its citizens.   There are a number of critical programs underway at the College.

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Transition Math Project (TMP)
A number of studies have found that high school students across the country rank low in international math knowledge.  In fact, the National Assessment of Educational Progress finds that more than a third of those tested possess below basic math aptitude.  More than 20 percent of college freshmen were found to require remedial mathematics coursework, and 46 percent of high school graduates who enter Washington's two-year colleges directly after high school need to take pre-college math before they are ready for credit math courses.  Even more alarming, a student who passes the math portion of the Washington Assessment of Student Learning (WASL) does not necessarily have the skills needed to handle college level math courses. 

The national Transition Mathematics Project (TMP) was designed to help students gain the knowledge and skills needed to move successfully from high school to college math coursework and ultimately into the global workforce. 

In 2006, Shoreline Community College and the Shoreline School District received a one-year Transition Math Project grant  from the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges (SBCTC) and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that is renewable for up to three years to help high school students move successfully from high school to college math coursework. 

The grant provides for the coordination of SCC’s developmental math courses and the high school math courses with the new state readiness standards. 

SCC math instructor, Nirmala Savage and Shorecrest High School teacher, Marilyn Leverson are co-directors of the Shoreline Transition Math Project.  Now in the second year of the grant, the team is working to compare high school and college courses with the College Readiness Standards so that the gaps can be addressed and transitions can be smoother.

The grant also provided funding for the Social and Economic Science Research Center at Washington State University to track how well high school students from the Shoreline School District transitioned to college coursework at Shoreline.  They looked at the relationship between high school math courses taken and grades received, and how well students performed on college math placement tests and subsequent classes at Shoreline. 

Findings will be available early in 2008 and once the analysis is studied, the issues will be addressed.  These findings will be posted online at  www.transitionmathproject.org/standards.  Ultimately, the study’s impact will be to improve preparation for college-level work.  The desired results are still several years out as new curricula are designed, put into place, and completed by students who then graduate from high school with increased skills.   

A team of mathematics instructors at Shoreline have already developed a new course for students at SCC, called Mathematics Success Strategies, Math 081, which students take concurrently with beginning algebra.    The class is available fall, winter and spring quarters. 

At Shorecrest High School, teachers are teaching related units as modules in their regular math classes.  Shoreline faculty and Shorecrest teachers worked together to identify the important elements of Mathematics Success Strategies.

Other activities of Shoreline’s Transition Math Project grant include student outreach efforts and the use of Agile Mind software in Shorecrest math classes.

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Pagoda Union Building (PUB) to open after major remodel
After several years of anticipation, the new Pagoda Union Building (PUB) will soon open to students, faculty, staff and the public. The original student union building, built in 1964, had not been renovated in the last 40-plus years and was in serious need of upgrading.

The new facility, built on the foundation of the former building, is a far cry from the earlier building. Daylight and sunlight pour through large windows into large open spaces and small intimate spaces. A quiet study lounge is an ideal alternative for those who prefer a casual and relaxed setting. Students and staff will find ample meeting rooms, two beautiful dining rooms, a new state-of-the-art kitchen and food services area, and a game room. A coffee shop will serve “grab and go” items, a convenience for those students who rush between classes. New offices will allow Student Programs (the Arts and Entertainment Board, Campus Ambassadors, and support services for clubs and organizations), Student Government and International Programs to call the PUB “home.”  Other organizations such as the student newspaper, The Ebbtide, the Women’s Center and the Multicultural Center will also enjoy new offices in the PUB. The College Bookstore will move from the FOSS Building to the lower floor of the PUB when all other program and offices have settled in.   

Food services, including deli and espresso items, will be provided by Chartwells, a division of the Compass Group. The vendor will focus on healthful menus that offer low-carb, low-fat, non-dairy and vegetarian options. Additionally, Chartwells will provide catering and vending services on the College campus.

The College looks forward to hosting community events in the new facility. Rooms in the PUB will also be available for rent for community functions such as weddings, charity dinners, and meetings. Contact Suzanne Gugger at (206)546-5863 or via email at sgugger@shoreline.edu for more information.

A ribbon-cutting is planned for later this spring. The public will be  invited to attend a short program. Watch for an announcement in your local paper.

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Student Dan Powers finds just what he wants at SCC Music Department

Dan Powers is in his second year of the vocal program at Shoreline Community College.  He transferred to Shoreline after attending another college and is grateful that he did,  stating that he was “blown away by the program here at Shoreline. There is so much opportunity for personal growth here,” he says with a smile and great enthusiasm.  “I feel I am going to be so much better prepared for a university program.”

The transfer student says he never thought of himself as a musical person, but he wanted to be.  In the sixth grade, he joined the school choir.  Dan recalls his mom answering his question, “Mom, am I a good singer?” After she broke the bad news that his singing needed some work, Dan didn’t sing again until his senior year in high school, when he auditioned for the school choir.

“The audition was extremely dreadful,” he recalls, “I couldn’t match pitch at all.”  The cards were on his side, however, as the choir director took him anyway.  That was the year Dan found his real passion in singing.  Although he got off to a rocky start, and was placed in a tenor role (he is actually a bass), Dan knew that this was the right path for him.

Sue Dolacky and Fred Lokken, two of his instructors at Shoreline Community College, find it hard to believe that he ever doubted his talent.  The two seasoned teachers agree that Dan is one of those people born to perform; a natural on stage. 

“Dan’s performance in last year’s Opera Workshop Performances was so impressive that he was given as many roles as possible this year,” says Dolacky.   Dan will play the main character, Sarastro, in this year’s one-act opera, “Die Zauberflöte” (“The Magic Flute”) by Mozart, and the lead role of Scarpia in Act II of “Tosca” by Giacomo Puccini (singing it in the Italian language).  Dan will also perform in “Rusalka” by Antonin Dvorák. 

“The blend of roles provides an opportunity for him to play a dark, evil role, and in Tosca, a much kinder role as a high priest,” says Lokken.

Dan’s serious musical pursuits didn’t begin with voice, however.  His interest actually began when he picked up a guitar.  With a little help on the basics from his dad, the young man taught himself how to play at the age of 16.  His determination and natural abilities paid off and he soon found himself performing guitar in “Jesus Christ Superstar” at Bainbridge High School, and later, in the UW production of  the Who's "Tommy."

Dan has found the music program at Shoreline to be just what he needed, with his instructors focusing on his individual needs and ability levels.  It is a place that he finds so much support that he knows he will succeed. 

“Sue Dolacky was so great (when he first arrived at SCC) – she really helped me with basic techniques. And Fred Lokken is an amazing teacher – and the best conductor I’ve ever worked with,” says the young musician.

After graduating this spring, Dan hopes to enter the classical voice performance program at Seattle Pacific University.  He plans to get involved in music ministry as a music leader after earning his bachelor’s degree.  

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PROGRAM NOTES

A new Nursing Program for students who also work
Register today for new 10-quarter program at SCC

Shoreline, WA ― Shoreline Community College is currently accepting applications for a new 10-quarter nursing program which will begin September, 2008. The program, created in response to the ongoing nursing shortage, was designed for students who cannot enroll in the College’s traditional six-quarter Nursing Program due to schedule conflicts. The program may also benefit those who have found a full-time load too challenging, and who learn best with a slightly slower pace. Students may submit applications at only one time a year. The deadline for applications this year is April 3, 2008.

Students will complete the program in 10 consecutive quarters, with the first class finishing the program in Winter Quarter of 2011. The average credit load will be seven to eight credits per quarter, with students attending classes two to three days a week and during Summer Quarter. The majority of theory classes will be scheduled in late afternoon or evening and clinical experiences will be offered during both day and evening shifts.
Students admitted to the part-time program must meet the same pre-requisites as those entering the full-time program. Check out the web site at www.shoreline.edu/nursing and select 10-quarter program or call (206) 546-4734 for more information or for application procedures.

Shoreline Community College
will offer a part-time, 10-quarter program for nursing students beginning September, 2008.  The new  schedule, created in response to the ongoing nursing shortage, was designed for students who cannot enroll as a full-time student in the College’s traditional six-quarter Nursing Program. 

Students will complete the program in 10 consecutive quarters, with the first graduating class finishing the  program in December, 2010.  The average credit load will be three to seven credits, with students attending classes two to three days a week.  The majority of theory classes will be scheduled in late afternoon or evening and clinical experiences will be offered during both day and evening shifts.  

Students admitted to the part-time program must meet the same pre-requisites as those entering the full-time program.  Check out the web site at shoreline.edu/nursing or call (206) 546-4734 for more information or for application procedures.

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New short-term programs and courses support emerging renewable industries
New programs and courses have been developed at SCC to provide training for those people interested in working in the emerging renewable industries, automotive service facilities, utility companies, or who wish to continue their education at a four-year university in degree programs such as architecture, construction management and electrical engineering. 

Certificate training in Solar/Photovoltaic (Electric) PV Design to be offered Spring Quarter
Shoreline Community College
will offer a new program this spring called the Solar/Photovoltaic (Electric) PV Designer Certificate program.  The five-credit, five-week course will provide an understanding of the basics of design and installation for both residential and commercial solar/electric systems.  Students who complete this course will receive certification (Silicon Energy Manufacturing Certificate) to do warranted installation work for Silicon Energy, Washington state’s first solar manufacturer.  The training will also prepare them for the NABCEP certification exam.

Students will learn how to perform site analysis, including sun path assessment, roofing assessment, and alternative mounting options.  They will also learn troubleshooting skills and maintenance techniques and learn about various types of renewable energy systems.  The class will offer a strong hands-on component and students will be able to specify and/or certify solar panel systems for residences and buildings and guide electricians who install the solar panels. 

After completing this course, students will have the skills and knowledge necessary to work with electricians, builders, architects, equipment manufacturers and distributors, engineers, consultants, utility companies and governmental officials.  Students may find employment in a variety of regional and national solar installation companies, solar manufacturing industries, electric utilities, architectural firms, and design/build firms.  Solar electric system specification and evaluation is practiced in places such as Puget Sound Solar, Outback Power Systems, Silicon Energy, Puget Sound Energy, Sparling Electric, Mithun Architects, Burke Electric, Northwest Mechanical and Solar Washington.

The class will be held on Friday evenings and Saturdays, beginning in mid-April.  It will be taught by Mike Nelson, director of the Northwest Solar Center, which is associated with Washington State University.  Nelson has installed systems throughout the west coast.  The systems he has installed range from remote power and water pumping to homes, government buildings, national parks and commercial systems ranging in size from less than a kilowatt to more than a megawatt. Locally, Nelson has installed his own solar modules on his home’s roof and on the commons building in the cottage community where he and his wife reside.  Nelson says that, “as a result, the commons building basically doesn’t have an electric bill.” 

Students must have a current background in environmental sciences, engineering, physics and business or instructor approval.  Field experience in electrical work and/or the design, building, and construction trade is recommended and a bachelor’s degree is helpful.  Students should see an advisor before registering for the course.  Call (206) 546-4595 to learn more about the program and to register.

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Green Classes This Quarter

Energy - The 1st challenge of the 21st century
We will review the theory of peak oil and gas, and the implications for global warming, economics and local and world politics. We will also explore and evaluate potential alternative energy sources, solutions, and future policy issues. Jim Hansen is a member of the Assn. for the Study of Oil & Gas-USA (ASPO-USA).

The Basics of Biodiesel
Heard about biodiesel but aren't sure exactly what it is or how it can be used? Come learn about this clean-burning fuel made from plant oils that works in any diesel engine or home-furnace, and has the potential to transform our dependence on petroleum. This class will cover the qualities of biodiesel, the variety of uses, health and environmental benefits, vehicle compatibility, fuel availability, and the basics of how to make your own fuel for about 70 cents a gallon. Join experienced biodiesel homebrewed and educator, Lyle Rudensey, aka BioLyle, as he whips up a batch of biodiesel, and helps you along the path of energy independence.

All classes are offered by the Center for Business and Continuing Education www.shoreline.edu/ce.

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Zero Energy Building Certificate
The Zero Energy Building Certificate program will be offered beginning next Fall Quarter.  This will also be a short-term course focusing on the basics of design of residential and commercial homes using solar, thermal and wind renewable energy systems.

Additionally, Shoreline Community College, named Washington State’s first National Training Center (NTC) for the National Alternative Fuels Training Consortium (NAFTC) last year, offers alternative fuel and advanced technology vehicle training through the Extended Learning Program.  Listed below are classes offered at the Lake Forest Park Towne Centre campus in January, February and March. 

Register early for SCC’s 2008 Summer Institutes
It’s not too early to start planning for this year’s Summer Institutes.  Each summer, Shoreline Community College offers students the opportunity to travel and study abroad.  Students are accompanied by a faculty member who not only teaches the subject, but provides additional learning opportunities specific to the country and its culture.

Courses are developed by SCC faculty, who focus on specific learning outcomes and on making the experience fun.  SCC is the only community college to offer this type of program to students.  Managed by the College’s International Programs, these courses offer students the opportunity to study at a number of international locations such as Japan, Guatemala and China, among others. 

Occasionally, the Summer Institute option also includes opportunities for students to work with locals and other organizations to complete community-based service learning projects. Trips that have taken place in previous years include Thailand, Jamaica and Peru.

The trips are typically about three weeks and students earn five credits.  Students pay a program fee for travel expenses plus tuition for the credits.  Please contact the International Programs office for more information at (206) 533-6676 or check out the website at www.shoreline.edu/international.

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International Service Learning (Jamaica)
This program centers on an international service-learning project in Jamaica.  Students will go on a 16-day trip to live and work in the Blue Mountain region of Jamaica, a rural and economically impoverished area.  The program is focused around student involvement in community projects, primarily working with children at one of two school houses.  For more information contact Bob Thompson at rthomps@shoreline.edu.

Identity Crisis: The Outsider in French Culture (Paris, France)
This program focuses on contemporary French literature (in English translation) in its geographic, political, and social context.  Specifically, the course will examine what former French President Jacques Chirac has called a national “crisis of identity” in French culture.  As the population of North African immigrants in France grows, especially in Paris, issues of identity and multiculturalism have challenged traditional notions of what it means to be “French.”   ($2,990 (based on 10 participants) plus tuition.)  For more information contact Dutch Henry at dhenry@shoreline.edu.  

The Challenge and Promise of a Multicultural South Africa (Cape town and Qunu, South Africa )
In this two-part program, students complete a preparatory course in African Cultures during Spring Quarter before spending four weeks in South Africa in the summer.  Students will examine the social/cultural history and current efforts to create a democratic, multicultural nation.  Participants are required to register for the five credit course, Intra-American Studies 210 and five credits of IAS 298/299 (Special Project).  The program fee ($3,300–$3,400 plus tuition) is based on current exchange rates and airfare rates. The final fee will not exceed the higher fee listed above and depends on rate fluctuation.  For more information, contact Dr. Ernest Johnson at ejohnson@shoreline.edu.  

Scholarships
A scholarship is available this year on a competitive basis for the International Summer Institute programs.  Students must apply for the scholarship separately and must meet certain criteria, including demonstrated financial need.  For more information and an application, please contact Pollie McCloskey at (206) 533-6676 or at pmccloskey@shoreline.edu in the International Programs Office, FOSS  Building, Room 5220. 
   

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Health Care Information courses available online
You can now complete your Health Care Information certificate or degree from the comfort of your own home or favorite coffee shop!  Many students are working or have families to care for at home and find it difficult to come to campus for face-to-face classes.  The Associate Degree Program in Health Information Technology (HIT) and the Certificate of Proficiency Program for the Medical Coding and Reimbursement Specialist (MCRS) will be available to students online as of Summer Quarter 2008.

The MCRS program has received full Approval Status for a Comprehensive Medical Coding Program through the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA), the only program in the state with this approval.  The HIT program is fully Accredited through the AHIMA sponsored CAHIIM commission, one of only three programs in the state with this accreditation.            

Students will be able to access health information management and coding software through the AHIMA Virtual Lab, available only to accredited or approved programs in the nation.  The program already has enrolled students who live in other states, since they do not need to come to campus. 

For further information, please see the HCI website at www.shoreline.edu/hciprograms or contact Donna Wilde at dwilde@shoreline.edu or Gloria Anderson at ganderso@shoreline.edu.

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College really is affordable - Tuition-assistance programs are available!
Think you need to have a treasure map to find funding for college?  At Shoreline Community College, there are several options available for those who need financial assistance.  Support services for students in these different programs are available in the FOSS (5000) Building.  Following are just a few of the programs that have been developed in the last year along with longtime program offerings.

The Opportunity Grant Program provides tuition, money for books and other support for students enrolled in automotive, phlebotomy, visual communication technology, early childhood education, manufacturing, accounting, and business technology.  This program is made available through state funding to encourage students to participate in high-demand, professional-technical programs.  Contact Matt Houghton at (206) 546-4695 or email at mhoughto@shoreline.edu.  

The Food Stamp Employment & Training (FSET) Program provides free tuition and services to students who are food stamp assistance recipients, but not receiving WorkFirst Cash.  Services include support for childcare, transportation, clothing, housing and help with utilities that have been shut off.  Contact Kim Cambern at (206) 546-6961 or email at kcambern@shoreline.edu.

The Worker Retraining Program provides free tuition and money for books to people who have been laid off in the last 24 months and those who are at risk of losing their jobs.  The program also supports displaced homemakers, spouses and domestic partners who have been impacted by layoffs of their partners.  Contact Kim Cambern at (206) 546-6961 or kcambern@shoreline.edu.  

The WorkFirst Program provides funding for tuition, books and fees for eligible low-income parents of children who are 18 or younger.  Funding will support obtaining your GED, increasing job skills or earning a certificate.  Call Victoria Lauber at (206) 546-6967 or email at vlauber@shoreline.edu.

The Veterans Tuition Support Program pays up to 50 percent of tuition costs.  Get help with program eligibility, advance pay issues, evaluation of military credits, and early release from the military.  Contact Marge Higby at (206) 533-5109 or mhigby@shoreline.edu

The Career Education Options Program supports out-of-school youth between the ages of 16 and 20.  The program provides funding for tuition, books and fees for eligible students who have not completed their high school degree and wish to pursue a certificate or degree program at Shoreline Community College.  Many support services are also available. Contact Mariko Kakiuchi at (206) 546-7848 or mkakiuch@shoreline.edu.

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EVENTS 

Mentor Panel: 'The Design Process' -
SCC Graphic Design Industry Mentor Panel: “The Design Process”
Thursday, February 7, 3:30 – 5:00pm
Visual Art Center/ Bldg 2000/ Room 2059

The Visual Communications Technology Club hosts the SCC Graphic Design Industry Mentor Panel: "The Design Process."  The panelists are prominent Seattle graphic designers who also serve as industry mentors to SCC Visual Arts Center graphic design students.  Each panelist will discuss and use examples from their own projects to illustrate the different stages in the Design Process. Panelists are: Brian Boram, founder of RMB Vivid; Chris Holt, creative director, Coolstone Design; David Kendall, creative director, Kendall Ross Design; Jacqueline McCarthy, president Vivitiv with moderator, Daniela Birch of Theorem Marketing.

Faculty Piano Recital - “Passion and Poetry: Masterworks by Liszt and Schumann" performed by Ivona Kaminska and Dainius Vaicekonis
Sunday, February 10
3:00pm, Campus Theater
Piano instructors Ivona Kaminska and Dainius Vaicekonis present a spirited recital of some of Liszt and Schumann’s most passionate and poetic works. General admission is $15, $10 for seniors and $5 for children 14 and younger and SCC students with College ID. This recital is a benefit for the Shoreline Piano Scholarship fund.

All student recitals are free of charge and dates are subject to change.  Please call the Music Department at (206) 546-4687 for confirmation and more information. General admission prices are offered to the general public and reduced prices to seniors, students (SCC and other colleges) with college ID, and children 14 and younger. Tickets can be purchased at the door with cash or local check.

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The Right To Dream - Share The Struggle
Wed., February 20, 9:30, 10:30 & 11:30am

Living Voices, a local drama group, presents The Right to Dream: Share the Struggle. "The Right to Dream recreates a young man's coming of age as an African American in Mississippi during the 1950's and 1960's. This program illuminates the issues of civil rights leading audiences to understand how the fight against prejudice has shaped our history." 9:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Please contact Lynette Peters at 206-546-4715 or lpeters@shoreline.edu for more information and location.

Opera Workshop Performances
Thursday – Saturday, February 28-29 & March 1
7:30pm, Campus Theater

Shoreline Community College presents a fully-staged and costumed one-act version of Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) by Mozart at the annual Opera Workshop Performances. The production also includes opera scenes of gorgeous duets and ensembles with piano accompaniment from the Flying Dutchman by Richard Wagner and The Legend of Poker Alice by SCC music emeritus Gloria Swisher, and Pique Dame by Piotr Tchaikovsky (Queen of Spades), Rusalka by Antonin Dvorák (fairy tale based on idea of The Little Mermaid), Tosca by Giacomo Puccini (sung in Italian). Susan Dolacky is producer/musical director, Teresa Metzger Howe is conductor, Charles Enlow is pianist, and Fredrick Lokken is chorus director. General admission is $15, $10 for seniors, and $8 for children 14 and younger and SCC students with College ID.

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Boy’s Life
7:30pm, March 6-8, & March 13-15, 2008
Campus Lobby Theater

A very contemporary comedy investigating the truths and consequences of modern day living and dating in the big city. Written by Howard Korder. General admission is $8, $7 for seniors, and $6 for SCC students with College ID and children 14 and younger.

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Student Recital
12:30pm, Friday, March 7, 2008
Music Building, Room 818

Break the grayness of winter with music performed by students of the SCC Music Department. This hour of entertainment will send you back to work or class refreshed and ready to face the rain!

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Hear My Voice - Win the Vote
9:30, 10:30 and 11:30am, March 7, 2008

Living Voices, a local drama group, presents HEAR MY VOICE: Win the Vote. "The fight for women's right to vote in the United States is one of the most underappreciated civil rights movements in history: a seventy-two year long struggle whose methods of nonviolent protest predated many of the more well-known movements of the 20th century."  For more information, please contact Lynette Peters at 206-546-4715 or lpeters@shoreline.edu for location and more information.

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COTS Winter Classical Concert - “Simply Bernstein”
Saturday, March 8, 7:00pm & Sunday, March 9, 3:00pm
Bastyr University Chapel
, 14500 Juanita Drive NE, Kenmore
Choir of the Sound celebrates works of one of America's preeminent twentieth-century composers, Leonard Bernstein, with selections from The Lark, Candide, and West Side Story. There are also selections from Eric Whitacre and others.  For more information call 206-528-9990

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Wearin' the Green
Shoreline Concert Band
Tuesday, March 11, 7:30pm, Shorecrest Performing Arts Center
The Shoreline Singers and Shorecrest HS Wind Ensemble make guest performances at this concert.  $7, $5, $3.

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Funkngroove
Monday, March 17, 2008
7:30pm, Campus Theater

Back by popular demand!  Once again the exciting popular music troupe 'Funkngroove' presents an evening of electrifying popular music. Dancing is encouraged.  $7, $5, $3.

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SPORTS
You can learn about upcoming sports events and read about how our sports teams are doing at the athletics web site at: http://www.shoreline.edu/athletics/athletics_news.htm.  Be sure to check it out!

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COLLEGE GALLERY

The College Gallery is located in the Administration (1000) Building on the main campus. Gallery hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Friday. For information on upcoming exhibits, please call Gallery Director, Natalie Niblack at 206.546.4101, extension 4433. or visit the web site at http://www.shoreline.edu/gallery/.

"HoveringLove" by Betty Bastai
Through February 25, 2008

Artist Betty Bastai presents "HoveringLove", an interactive mixed media installation that deals with language, archaeology and love iconography. At the invitation of the artist, Shoreline students, staff and visitors created love letters folded into origami doves, which are hung from the ceiling in a flock. The exhibition runs Jan. 31 to Feb 25, reception on Valentine’s day, Feb. 14, 3:30 to 5:00.

Artist's Statement
"HoveringLove" is part of a series of interactive installations that deals with language and love iconography. I began the series in 2006 when I exhibited the installation "Cell2" at the Viking Union Gallery, Western Washington University, Bellingham. A year later I created "CorridorLove", which I exhibited at the Corridor Gallery in Seattle. 

In these works I invited the viewer to be an active participant in the completion of the artwork by writing and tearing a love letter in the gallery space. I collected these broken letters and incorporated them in the present companion piece in a process that echoes nature's life cycle. 

In "HoveringLove" I invite the viewer to write a love letter and fold it into an origami dove instead of breaking it into pieces. Some students and members of the college staff have already created the birds that are hanging from the temporary wire ceiling. Other participants now have the chance to add more birds to this flock. I choose the dove and not the crane for two reasons. Firstly the dove is a bird similar to a pigeon, which humans used for centuries to send messages, particularly during wars. Secondly I can relate to the dove as the symbol of peace more easily than other birds because of my Italian Christian background.

We live in a society dominated by technologies that are profoundly changing the way we interact with each other. Our constant consumption of the media's alternate reality gives us a false sense of connection with our neighbors when in fact we are becoming more detached from our community.


As a result, I have evaluated my role as an artist and searched for strategies that would impact the viewers in a more personal and physical way. By omitting high-technology devices and relying on simple tools of communication like a hand written love letter, I encourage the viewer to break self-built boundaries, get involved in physical actions and share information with strangers. In this way I hope to establish an intimate interaction between the viewers and the artwork that would reverberate in the their day-to-day world.
 

 

 

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