University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA)

 - Class of 1988

Page 32 of 372

 

University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 32 of 372
Page 32 of 372



University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 31
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University of Washington - Tyee Yearbook (Seattle, WA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 33
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Page 32 text:

MAKING ENDS MEET Variety of Jobs Keep Students in College » SUZZALLO CIRCULATES TONS of books and Michelle Rock keeps busy organizing them for shelving Michetie A Rogers photo Though a bell may signal the end of her last class. Kristy Aquino's day isn't over. Within 15 minutes, she's in the Husky Den. preparing food, taking orders, or cashiering. Kristy is just one of the estimated 50 percent of University of Washington students who work while going to school. Food service is not the only type of work available on campus. The libraries, copy centers. Student Union Building (HUB) and parking division also employ students. Off-campus work offers students opportunities to make contacts with professionals. The pay is fair, averaging from $5 to S6 per hour, and students can work more than the 19V4 hours-per-week student limit set by the university. But working on campus has its advantages too. Staci Gervais. who works at the HUB newsstand, would not work off campus. It’s really convenient to be on campus. I live in the dorms so the short walk is really nice. she said. Hall resident Michelle Rock, who works at Suzzallo Library, agrees. I don't have a car. so I need a job on campus. she said. Students also praise the flexibility of the hours. The university realizes that its workers are students. first and foremost, and lets them schedule working hours around final exams. Off-campus employers are often not willing to do this. One student said an employer wanted him to schedule his classes around his working hours. Sam Songcuan likes the casual atmosphere at ASUW Publishing. You meet a lot of students. Sometimes friends will come in to talk. he said. Working sometimes takes up a lot of time, but there are benefits, such as meeting people and gaining work experience. And the extra money for books, food and living expenses never hurts. 1 by Rita Wong 30-Student Employment

Page 31 text:

THE WORKS VUin U. CONDOM Wffl DRUGS. SEX AID k THE FEAR OF AIDS and othe sexually transmitted diseases is sparking a national crusade to promote the us© of condoms Pamphlets, advertisements and tctures are popular ways to educate the public ' '1 ex. Drugs. Alcohol. A pan-el of experts discussed these and other concerns : modern health at the Acquired tmunity Deficiency Syndrome •rum in the Student Union Build-g auditorium on February 22. Program sponsors included e Student Ad Club and the merican Red Cross. Audience embers exchanged questions, tswers and opinions on the owing menace of AIDS. The inel traded observations with audience of about 200. Some melists even engaged in im-omptu role-playing sessions th audience members. In order teach them how to deal with 9-threatening sexual situations. w audience flooded panelists th questions and showed little signs of embarrasment. One question dealt with AIDS victims who continue sexual activities after testing positive for the AIDS virus. Panelist Bill Wood, himself an AIDS victim from San Francisco. spared no words: Hang them! Panelist. Lois McDermott, a UW psychology professor, likened the problem to protecting oneself from a drunk driver. The issue of drug and alcohol abuse surfaced and remained throughout most of the discussion. Jeff Makuma of the Northwest AIDS Foundation, agreed that liquor and dope are. more than ever, related to sexual issues: you need to know when you've had too much alcohol or drugs. He suggested facetiously that peo- ple could tie their knees together, and the audience howled. Fellow panelist Kimberly Wheeler, a Ph.D. candidate In psychology at The UW. warned that people should gauge the probability of going to bed with a date at a weekend party, then negotiate with that person on how to have sex safely. She stressed the importance of condoms. though she and everyone else agreed that no such precaution. even total abstinence, guarantees that a person will not contract AIDS. The rest of the forum addressed a multitude of questions, including: —How subtly should partners ask. Do you have AIDS? The audience favored constant com- munication. in order to learn how sexually active one's partner is. —Is sex without condoms safe? Is anything? Here the issues of what constitutes reasonable fear versus superstition were raised. Bill Wood and Tom Perdue, a gay activist at the UW. concluded that the homosexual community in San Francisco has drastically altered its sexual activity over the past five years. According to the two men. sexually transmitted disease has decreased 90 percent there since 1982. by Chad Wagamon I Michelle A. Rogers photo National Condom Waek-29



Page 33 text:

4 SERVICE WITH A SMILE. Husky Den worker Mayling Chm uses her paycheck lo pay for one of the necessities of college life: her phono. Joseph W. edged. Jr. photo DONNA SHIELDS hands Over a Special order for a Husky Den patron. Joseph W. Edged. Jr. photo 4 ZORAN MIHAILOVICH puts himself through graduate school by working extra cook-hours in Suzzallo. Michelle A Rogers photo Student Employment-31

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