The Cooper Point Journal Volume 3, No. 18

Item

Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 3, No. 18
Description
Eng Page 1: Cooper Point Journal (front page) -- Health Services Sick (image: medication bottle);
Page 2: (photograph) [bed frames jumbled in a field (by Cowley)];
Page 2-3: Letters: Obtaining a mandate;
Page 3: Letters: Response lacking;
Page 3: Letters: Bus mix-up apologies;
Page 3: Letters: Why did i wait so long?;
Page 3: (advertisement) redkin;
Page 3: (advertisement) Vino Fino;
Page 3: (advertisement) Willie's Sports Enterprises;
Page 4: (advertisement) Adult Student Housing (ASH);
Page 5: Health Services Diagnosed -- page 12 (feature story)(image: patient having blood pressure test);
Page 5: Table of Contents;
Page 5: Staff Credits;
Page 6: (advertisement) The Cooper Point Journal;
Page 7-9: Campus News: Trustees Reverse Hearing Board in Moss Case (images: John Moss, John Moss and Dean Clabaugh);
Page 7: (advertisement) La Tierra;
Page 7: (advertisement) Duck House;
Page 7: (advertisement) Bob's Big Burgers;
Page 8: (advertisement) All Ways Travel Service, Inc.;
Page 8: (advertisement) Rainbow Grocery & Deli;
Page 8: (advertisement) Sea-Mart Drug;
Page 9: Campus News: Bomb threat clears lecture hall;
Page 9-10: Campus News: Students rally at tuition hike hearing;
Page 9: (advertisement) Evergreen Savings Association;
Page 9: (advertisement) Raudenbush Motors;
Page 9: (advertisement) Colony Inn;
Page 10: Campus News: Security doesn't miss women;
Page 10: Campus News: Sounding Board discusses gay proposal;
Page 10: Campus News: Correction;
Page 10-11: Announcements;
Page 10: (advertisement) [for sale '54 gmc bread van];
Page 10: (advertisement) Olympia Sport Shop;
Page 10: (advertisement) Acme Upholstery Supply Co.;
Page 10: (advertisement) Colleen's Gift Shop;
Page 11: (advertisement) Grace Piano Service;
Page 11: (advertisement) leaper woodwork;
Page 11: (advertisement) The Drebick Company;
Page 11: (advertisement) Looking Glass Gardens;
Page 11: (advertisement) Evergreen Villages;
Page 12-13: Health Service Sick:
Page 12: Health Service future in question (images: lab technician taking a blood sample, woman having blood pressure test (by Dawn);
Page 13: Health Service Sick: "A necessary part of our lives";
Page 14-15: Construction...; (images: showing construction projects on campus)
Page 16: KAOS comes across;
Page 17: Third World Voice : A Weekly Column of Opinion and Commentary by Members of the Non-White Coalition;
Page 17: (advertisement) Sunrise Mountaineers;
Page 17: (advertisement) Captain Coyote's;
Page 17: (advertisement) Hendrick's Rexall Drugs;
Page 18: (advertisement) Evergreen State College Housing;
Page [unnumbered]-19-23: (advertisement) Tire Markerters, Inc.;
Page 19: Culture - Arts - Entertainment: Poster Art at Evergreen (images: Posters);
Page 20: Records / Dan Oppenheimer : The Right Track (image: );
Page 20: (advertisement) Shakey's;
Page 19-23: Culture Guide;
Page 21: Cinema / Stan Shore : Twisted (image: Alan Arkin and James Caan);
Page 22: (advertisement) Dirty Dave's Gay 90's;
Page 22: (advertisement) Asterisk and Cheese Library;
Page 22: (advertisement) The Music Bar;
Page 23: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Page 23: (advertisement) Word of Mouth Books;
Page 23: (advertisement) Ben Moore's;
Page : (advertisement) Ombuds-advocate Office
Identifier
Eng cpj0076.pdf
Creator
Eng Schuler, Doug
Eng Schillinger, Jerry
Eng Cohen, Rick
Eng Spatz, Eddie L.
Eng Fleming, Ti
Contributor
Eng Solomon, Sam
Eng Dawn, Aubrey
Eng Goodman, Kim
Eng Allison, Nicholas H.
Eng Berger, Knute Olsson H.G.S.
Eng deGive, Anita
Eng Overland, Mark
Eng Foster, John
Eng Lozzi, Craig
Eng Hester, Mary Frances
Eng Alpert, Ron
Eng Brombacher, Millie
Eng Cornish, Billie
Eng Cowley, Richard
Eng Farnam, Roger
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Graham, Tom
Eng Grant, Suzanne
Eng Irwin, Jeffrey
Eng Johnson, Sandy
Eng Oppenheimer, Dan
Eng Rich, Kathy
Eng Ryan, Andy
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Wallick, Len
Eng Westerman, Nanette
Eng Gribskov, Margaret
Extent
Eng 28 pages
Language
Eng eng
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Rights
Eng http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Spatial Coverage
Eng Olympia (Wash.)
Eng Seattle (Wash.)
Eng  
Subject
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Signs
Eng Administration staffing
Eng Affirmative action
Eng Bomb threats
Eng Tuition--Washington (State)
Eng Equal opportunity
Eng Health care
Eng Construction
Eng Radio broadcasting
Eng Chinese-Americans
Eng Cultural heritage
Eng Poster art
Eng Comedy
Eng Kuenhle, Jim
Eng Appelquist, Joan
Eng Edie, Frank
Eng Brock, Alan
Eng Stenberg, Larry
Eng Dorsey-Travis, Edwina
Eng Lonardelli, Jan
Eng Evans, Daniel
Eng Schmitt, Jan
Eng Litchman, Claire
Eng Peterson, Dave
Eng Clabaugh, Dean
Eng Kormondy, Edward
Eng Moss, John
Eng Annis, Judy
Eng Dixon, Thomas
Eng Pepka, Vince
Eng Rothwell, Geoff
Eng Youngquist, Diana
Eng Montecucco, Richard
Eng Clark, Kevin
Eng Patterson, Lynn
Eng Rahder, Karl
Eng Marrom, Rod
Eng Vialle, Karen
Eng Curry, Dennis
Eng Brooks, James
Eng McDonald, Pat
Eng Higgins, Karen
Eng Mauksch, Larry
Eng McCann, Charles J., 1926-2015
Eng Marsh, Paul
Eng Ruth L. Wett
Eng Chilton, W.S.
Eng Brown, Rita Mae
Eng Glen, Forest
Eng Winn, Jack
Eng Riback, Lee
Eng Harnish, Barbara
Eng Coffey, John
Eng Biggs, Jane
Eng Cooper, Bill
Eng Cook, Carl L.
Eng Paik, Irvin
Eng Lewis, Jerry
Eng Lee, Bruce
Eng Wong, Suzie
Eng Robb, Lynn
Eng Lepere, Les
Eng Thompkins, Merrily
Eng Dylan, Bob
Eng Brown, Jerry
Eng Griffen, Paul
Eng Rush, Richard
Eng Arkin, Alan
Eng Caan, James
Eng Harper, Valerie
Eng Morley, Christopher
Eng Sembene, Ousmane
Eng Guye, Mamadou
Eng N'diaye, Ynousse
Eng Niang, Issa
Eng N'diayes, Serigne
Eng Lloyd, Frank
Eng Ford, John
Eng Gable, Clark
Eng Christian, Fletcher
Eng Laughton, Charles
Eng Brando, Marlon
Eng Howard, Trevor
Eng Tone, Mamo
Eng Tone, Movita
Eng Tone, Franchot
Eng Bergman, Ingmar
Eng Ullman, Liv
Eng Andersson, Bibi
Eng Lean, David
Eng Sharif, Omar
Eng Christie, Julie
Eng Chaplin, Geraldine
Eng Steigner, Rod
Eng Guinness, Alec
Eng Richardson, Ralph
Eng Courtenay, Tom
Eng Tushingham, Rita
Eng Pasternak, Boris
Eng Matthau, Walter
Eng Shaw, Robert
Eng Balsam, Martin
Eng Palma, Brian De
Eng Smothers, Tom
Eng Astin, John
Eng Welles, Orson
Eng St. Amand, Elaine
Eng Rodgers, Jimmie
Eng Steinhardt, Jeff
Eng Adams, John
Eng Schroeter, David
Eng Thompson, Carrilu
Eng Van, Jeffrey
Eng Walden, Joe
Eng Albee, Edward
Eng Johansen, Bud
Eng Dickens, Charles
Eng Davies, John Howard
Eng Walsh, Kay
Eng Newley, Anthony
Eng Zinneman, Fred
Eng Waters, Ethel
Eng deWilde, Brandon
Eng McCullers, Carson
Eng Joad, Tom
Eng Darwell, Jane
Eng Carradine, John
Eng Grapewin, Charley
Eng Bowden, Doris
Eng Qualen, John
Eng Franklin, Sidney
Eng Muni, Paul
Eng Rainer, Louise
Eng Connoly, Walter
Eng Ralph, Jessie
Eng Losch, Tilly
Eng Luke, Keye
Eng Huber, Harold
Eng Buck, Pearl S.
Eng Schell, Maximillian
Eng Pressman, Lawrence
Eng Nettleton, Lois
Eng Adler, Luther
Eng Hiller, Arthur
Eng Falk, Peter
Eng Rowlands, Gena
Eng Cassavetes, John
Eng Forbes, Bryan
Eng Ross, Katherine
Eng Prentiss, Paula
Eng Masterson, Peter
Eng Newman, Nanette
Eng Louise, Tina
Eng O'Neal, Patrick
Eng Eckland, Britt
Eng Braden, Eric
Eng Blodgett, Michael
Eng Coburn, James
Eng Wertmuller, Lina
Eng Giannini, Giancarlo
Eng Mussolini
Eng Haines, Fred
Eng Sydow, Max von
Eng Sanda, Dominique
Eng Cotten, Joseph
Eng Shannon, Harry
Eng Sloane, Everett
Eng Moorehead, Agnes
Eng Comingore, Dorothy
Eng Collins, Ray
Eng Coulouris, George
Eng Mankiewicz, Joseph L.
Eng Tierney, Gene
Eng Sanders, George
Eng Best, Edna
Eng Brown, Vanessa
Eng Lee, Anna
Eng Coote, Robert
Eng Wood, Natalie
Eng March, Frederic
Eng Lake, Veronica
Eng Benchley, Robert
Eng Hayward, Susan
Eng Callaway, Cecil
Eng Pattersan, Elizabeth
Eng Clair, Rene
Eng Berlin, Jeannie
Eng Schneider, Roy
Eng Smith, Rebecca Dianna
Eng Cosby, Bill
Eng Young, Jesse Colin
Eng Rankin, Kenny
Eng Elaine's Beauty Salon
Eng Redkin Retail Center
Eng Murchie's
Eng Vino Fino
Eng Willie's Sports Enterprises
Eng Ash Tree Apartments
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Eng La Tierra
Eng Duck House
Eng Bob's Big Burgers
Eng All Ways Travel Service
Eng Rainbow Grocery and Deli
Eng Sea-Mart Drugs
Eng Evergreen Savings Association
Eng Raudenbush Motors
Eng Colony Inn Apartments
Eng Olympia Sport Shop
Eng Acme Upholstery Supply Company
Eng Colleen's Gift Shop
Eng Grace Piano Service
Eng Leaper Woodwork
Eng The Drebick Company
Eng Looking Glass Gardens
Eng Evergreen Villages
Eng Sunrise Mountaineering
Eng Hendricks Rexall Drugs
Eng Captain Coyote's
Eng TESC Housing Office
Eng Tire Marketers, Inc.
Eng Shakey's
Eng Dirty Dave's
Eng The Asterisk and Cheese Library
Eng The Music Bar
Eng Rainy Day Records
Eng Word of Mouth Books
Eng Ben Moore's
Eng Central Washington State College
Eng TESC Sounding Board
Eng TESC Gay Center
Eng Rainroots
Eng University of Washington
Eng Evergreen Coffeehouse
Eng Applejam Coffeehouse
Eng Yellow Brick Road Travel Center
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1974/1975
extracted text


Th e John Moss appointment



Chuck Harbaugh hiring controversy



Cutting trees on campus



Missing evaluations



Access to confidential files



Ca mpus parkway signs and lighting



Financial aid disputes



Credit disputes



Housing problems



Curriculum planning process



Proposed reduction in Individual Contracts



Hassles over access to media equipment



And many more

i

In the summer of 1974 some students, staff, and
faculty at the Evergreen State College got together to
deal with this blues festival. The result of their talking
was Evergreen's Ombuds/ Advocate Center, a group of
people whose job is to help you, whoever you may
be, with your problem in getting you to the people
you have to see, the people who can get things done .

J

7. Do you think free speech [a. should
be encouraged, b . is okay if it ~grees with
the correct thinking, c. shou ld be
ba lanced by un-free speech I.
B. Do you think the salaries of our
elected officials [a . should be increased,
b. should be decreased, c. are a waste of
taxpayer's money I.
In all fairness,
Doug Schuler

Response lacking
To the Editor:
In response ' to my request for comment-s
on two entrance sign proposals, I received
only seven (7) responses . Six were in
favor of Joan Appelquisfs proposal for a
wooden sign, and one was for an improved Frank Edie painting.
Needless to say, I am extremely disappointed in the lack of interest in the design contest and follow-up comments on
the proposals. This again reinforces my
belief tQat there is more interest in criticism than in putting an effort into a solution.
For those who are still interested, the
Office of . Facilities will work with Joan
Appelq~ist on her wooden sign proposal.
Jerry Schillinger

Bus mix-up
apologies
To the Editor:
Regarding the letter of Alan ~rock
(Journal, Feb . 20, 1975) : I'm sorry about
the mixup with the evening bus Monday,
Feb . 17. I had unthinkingly stated that the
new schedule would become effective on
that date. The College was officially
closed that day, and the Evergreen' Evening Bus does not run when the college is
closed .
Once again, I apologize for the inconvenience.

Obt~ining a

mandate
To the Ed itor:
I was sitt in g around in my off ice in the
sixth floo r of bu ildin g "8 " when I came
upon an inge ni ous method upon wh ich I
could obta in a "manda te" of so me form
or ano ther. I am go in g to circul a te th e
h)lIl)wing ques ti onnaire to J percent of
the population of Evergree n. Alth o ugh I
"carefu ll y" design ed the qu esti onn a ire to
be "tair ." I' ll eat a n entire loat of Wunde r
P"'!lt!2

Rick Cohen
Driver-Coordinator,
The Evening Bus
brea d if I don't get a ce rt ain response
from a n exa ct number of peo ple.
1 . Do yo u think tha t Jim Kuehnle [a. is
do in g a n exce llent job, b. should be replaced , c. is the result of a practical joke
perpe tra ted by the voters of Spoka ne I.
2. Do yo u think the state legislature
la . should engage in , b . is unab le to engage in , c . sh o uld bea t th eir brea s ts
a bout I such th ought -provoking questions
as th e futu re of Evergreen, hitchhiking
a nd tuitio n rai sin g .
3. Throu g h o ur s ta te co ll eges we
should encourage in our yo uth la. unitll rmit y, b. co nf ormit y, c. in tell ec tu al

freedom , d. a nonymity J.
4 . Do you think the electing of I'IQn
a nti-war representativ.es such as Jim
Kue hnl e [a . sh o u ld be e ncouraged ,
b. shou ld be discouraged, c. should be
ba lanced by electing representatives with
intelli gence J.
5. Do yo u view colleges as [a . diploma
mi ll s, b . a necessary further indoctrination into the "system, " c. places to further intellectual development and ability
to make good decisions J.
6. Do you think variety is [a. the spice
of li fe, b. the sa lt of th e eart h, c. the kiss
of death , d . a nt'wspape rJ .
Cooper Point Journal

Why did I
wait so long?
To the Editor:
Earlier this month I had occasion to
visit the V. A. Hospital in Seattle .. This
was to meet an appointment that had
been set by them . Upon arrival I presented myself to the receptionist and explained why I was there. She asked that 1
'r""I. ....... _..~..

.. tw9,.

wait a moment while she got my record.
A moment passed . Another moment went
the way of the first.
Was I sure that I had an appointment7
Yes, I was sure. Well, we can't find your
record. Have you been to the hospital before7 Only last week. That might explain
it. You see it takes three or four weeks for
records to be processed. Your record is
probably en route now. Take a seat and
we'll take care of you.
Between this and that the time wore on .
The appointment was for 1: 30 p.m. and
it was 2: 30 p.m. before I was told to proceed to the next station. Another hour
passed so I decided to do some research
to pass the time and maybe find some justification for the long delays that not only
I was subject to but a great many of the
other patients as well. After some inquiries I found that a Doctor Mitchell was director of the hospital. I went to his office
but found he wasn't in. I was told to go
to another office; that they could tell me
what I needt'd' to know. The man there
asked that his name remain anonymous.
This is the information I received from
that source.
For the fiscal year 1975 there is a projection of 120,000 out-patients. Currently
that breaks down to about 75 walk-ins a
day . There are about 320 in-patients a
day currently residing at the hospital. To
meet those patients' needs there are approximately 150 'clerical staff and 112
doctors with '236 full time nurses; both
RN and LPN. What this adds up to is
about a four to on'e ratio. This source
also stated that the hospital is about 10
percent understaffed and that it would
take about 100 more to bring it up to full
strength. Another major problem is space.
Conditions were quoted ,as "close to explosive. "
My own observations brought these
problems home. It is far from uncommon
that a walk-in patient will have to wait
four to six hours until he is seen. The case
of my misplaced record was not isolated
either. Even with an appointment it is
sometimes hours before a doctor is seen.
Seventy-thirty came and I finally got to
see a doctor. The consultation lasted 10
minutes. The question uppermost in my
mind as I left was, "What made me wait
so long in the first place1"
Eddie L. Spatz

The Journal welcomes all letters to
the editor, and will print all letters
as space permits. To be considered
for publication in the same week as
it is submitted, a letter must be received no later than 5 p.m. on the
Monday preceding the Thursday of
publication. Letters received after
thiS deadline will be considered for
the following week's issue. Anything that is typewritten, doublespaced has a better chance to get in.

ELAINE'S BEAUTY SALON

@ REDKIN®
RETA IL CENTER
We use and recommend natura l
organic RED KEN products
Mens - Women's Hairstyling

MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS
Downtown 416 S. Wash. 357-5751

TEAS

FROM

COFFEE BEANS
TOO!

WILSON
SALE DAYS

TH. FEB 27
FR. FEB 28
SAT. MAR 1

T-2000
T-3000
KRAMER
KING
SMITH _
MATCH POINT

TE NNIS
RIES
CARRY ALLS, SHORTS, SHIRTS .
STRINGING SERVICE
NYLON - OIL NYLON 1 DAY SERVICE

3530 Martin 'Way' t91-8l4O
M-F10-7

GUT

Sat.,...

7. Do you think free speech [a. should
be encouraged, b . is okay if it ~grees with
the correct thinking, c. shou ld be
ba lanced by un-free speech I.
B. Do you think the salaries of our
elected officials [a . should be increased,
b. should be decreased, c. are a waste of
taxpayer's money I.
In all fairness,
Doug Schuler

Response lacking
To the Editor:
In response ' to my request for comment-s
on two entrance sign proposals, I received
only seven (7) responses . Six were in
favor of Joan Appelquisfs proposal for a
wooden sign, and one was for an improved Frank Edie painting.
Needless to say, I am extremely disappointed in the lack of interest in the design contest and follow-up comments on
the proposals. This again reinforces my
belief tQat there is more interest in criticism than in putting an effort into a solution.
For those who are still interested, the
Office of . Facilities will work with Joan
Appelq~ist on her wooden sign proposal.
Jerry Schillinger

Bus mix-up
apologies
To the Editor:
Regarding the letter of Alan ~rock
(Journal, Feb . 20, 1975) : I'm sorry about
the mixup with the evening bus Monday,
Feb . 17. I had unthinkingly stated that the
new schedule would become effective on
that date. The College was officially
closed that day, and the Evergreen' Evening Bus does not run when the college is
closed .
Once again, I apologize for the inconvenience.

Obt~ining a

mandate
To the Ed itor:
I was sitt in g around in my off ice in the
sixth floo r of bu ildin g "8 " when I came
upon an inge ni ous method upon wh ich I
could obta in a "manda te" of so me form
or ano ther. I am go in g to circul a te th e
h)lIl)wing ques ti onnaire to J percent of
the population of Evergree n. Alth o ugh I
"carefu ll y" design ed the qu esti onn a ire to
be "tair ." I' ll eat a n entire loat of Wunde r
P"'!lt!2

Rick Cohen
Driver-Coordinator,
The Evening Bus
brea d if I don't get a ce rt ain response
from a n exa ct number of peo ple.
1 . Do yo u think tha t Jim Kuehnle [a. is
do in g a n exce llent job, b. should be replaced , c. is the result of a practical joke
perpe tra ted by the voters of Spoka ne I.
2. Do yo u think the state legislature
la . should engage in , b . is unab le to engage in , c . sh o uld bea t th eir brea s ts
a bout I such th ought -provoking questions
as th e futu re of Evergreen, hitchhiking
a nd tuitio n rai sin g .
3. Throu g h o ur s ta te co ll eges we
should encourage in our yo uth la. unitll rmit y, b. co nf ormit y, c. in tell ec tu al

freedom , d. a nonymity J.
4 . Do you think the electing of I'IQn
a nti-war representativ.es such as Jim
Kue hnl e [a . sh o u ld be e ncouraged ,
b. shou ld be discouraged, c. should be
ba lanced by electing representatives with
intelli gence J.
5. Do yo u view colleges as [a . diploma
mi ll s, b . a necessary further indoctrination into the "system, " c. places to further intellectual development and ability
to make good decisions J.
6. Do you think variety is [a. the spice
of li fe, b. the sa lt of th e eart h, c. the kiss
of death , d . a nt'wspape rJ .
Cooper Point Journal

Why did I
wait so long?
To the Editor:
Earlier this month I had occasion to
visit the V. A. Hospital in Seattle .. This
was to meet an appointment that had
been set by them . Upon arrival I presented myself to the receptionist and explained why I was there. She asked that 1
'r""I. ....... _..~..

.. tw9,.

wait a moment while she got my record.
A moment passed . Another moment went
the way of the first.
Was I sure that I had an appointment7
Yes, I was sure. Well, we can't find your
record. Have you been to the hospital before7 Only last week. That might explain
it. You see it takes three or four weeks for
records to be processed. Your record is
probably en route now. Take a seat and
we'll take care of you.
Between this and that the time wore on .
The appointment was for 1: 30 p.m. and
it was 2: 30 p.m. before I was told to proceed to the next station. Another hour
passed so I decided to do some research
to pass the time and maybe find some justification for the long delays that not only
I was subject to but a great many of the
other patients as well. After some inquiries I found that a Doctor Mitchell was director of the hospital. I went to his office
but found he wasn't in. I was told to go
to another office; that they could tell me
what I needt'd' to know. The man there
asked that his name remain anonymous.
This is the information I received from
that source.
For the fiscal year 1975 there is a projection of 120,000 out-patients. Currently
that breaks down to about 75 walk-ins a
day . There are about 320 in-patients a
day currently residing at the hospital. To
meet those patients' needs there are approximately 150 'clerical staff and 112
doctors with '236 full time nurses; both
RN and LPN. What this adds up to is
about a four to on'e ratio. This source
also stated that the hospital is about 10
percent understaffed and that it would
take about 100 more to bring it up to full
strength. Another major problem is space.
Conditions were quoted ,as "close to explosive. "
My own observations brought these
problems home. It is far from uncommon
that a walk-in patient will have to wait
four to six hours until he is seen. The case
of my misplaced record was not isolated
either. Even with an appointment it is
sometimes hours before a doctor is seen.
Seventy-thirty came and I finally got to
see a doctor. The consultation lasted 10
minutes. The question uppermost in my
mind as I left was, "What made me wait
so long in the first place1"
Eddie L. Spatz

The Journal welcomes all letters to
the editor, and will print all letters
as space permits. To be considered
for publication in the same week as
it is submitted, a letter must be received no later than 5 p.m. on the
Monday preceding the Thursday of
publication. Letters received after
thiS deadline will be considered for
the following week's issue. Anything that is typewritten, doublespaced has a better chance to get in.

ELAINE'S BEAUTY SALON

@ REDKIN®
RETA IL CENTER
We use and recommend natura l
organic RED KEN products
Mens - Women's Hairstyling

MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS
Downtown 416 S. Wash. 357-5751

TEAS

FROM

COFFEE BEANS
TOO!

WILSON
SALE DAYS

TH. FEB 27
FR. FEB 28
SAT. MAR 1

T-2000
T-3000
KRAMER
KING
SMITH _
MATCH POINT

TE NNIS
RIES
CARRY ALLS, SHORTS, SHIRTS .
STRINGING SERVICE
NYLON - OIL NYLON 1 DAY SERVICE

3530 Martin 'Way' t91-8l4O
M-F10-7

GUT

Sat.,...

COOPER POINT JOURNAL
The Evergreen State College

Olympia, Washington

Vol. 3 No. 18

February 27, 1975

Health Services Diagnosed Page 12

INQUIRE NOW FOR SPRING
QUARTER RESERVATIONS'

Be ca use AS~ is Your Ow n Compl ete Apa rtm ent
Not a Dormitory.
'

ECONOMY
ATTITUDE

Be<::ause at ASH You Ca n Share a Unit, Walk to Class,
Rates Much Lower than Conventional .
Because A SH was Conceived Solely to Serve
Student Needs on a Non-Profit Basis .

C ONVEN'I ENCE
ENVIRONMENT

Because ASH is the O nly Apt. Comp lex Within
Easy Wa lking Di sta nce to School Activiti es .
Beca use ASH has Preserved th e Beauty of
N atural Surroundings.

"At this time the overall
health delivery system in th e
area cannot absorb the needs
of our students," said Dean of
.student Development Programs
Larry Stenberg. That was true
last week; but the recent resignations of nurse practitioner
Edwina Dorsey-Travis and receptionist Jan Lonardelli, and
the continuing question as to
funding, have raised even further doubts about the quality
and the future of Health Services at Evergreen.
Stenberg is now faced with
the unenviable task of trying
to figure out how to provide
adequate health service in the
midst of budget c uts (Governor Evans' proposed budget for
1975-77 would reduce funding for the student services
areas) and, as women's health
care specialist Jan Schmitt
characterized it, "upheaval" in Heafth Se rvi ces.
Stenberg has temporarily hired Claire Litc hman , a registered nurse, to
keep the office open. Next quarter, a new office management assistant
will be hired . Next year, Dr. Dave Peterson takes off for Nepal to coordinate the Year in Nepal group contract, so yet another new key staff
member will be entering the faci lity at -that time.
The real problem, however, seems to li e w it h heal th services faci li ties
in Olympia generally . As Sc hmitt suggested, perhaps what we need is
free health service for the entire Olympi a co mmunity . Stenberg has already requested funds from budgetary reserves · held by Vice Presidents
Clabaugh and Kormondy. Sin ce th e State wants to cut back student
health serv ice at Evergreen, perhaps the State should instead provide
health service for the entire Olympia commu ni ty, of whi ch the students
are a substantial part.
. . PAGE
PAGE
. PAGE
PAGE

COVER STORY ...
PHOTO ESSAY ON CONSTRUCTION
KAOS ..
POSTER ART AT EVERGREEN

12
14
16
19

Departments
Letters .
Ca mpus News

.2

...... 7

Featu res
Culture

12

.. 19

Thi s week 's cover photo by Ron A lpert shows part of the off ices of Hea lt h Services
at Eve rg ~een.
February 27, 1975

EDITOR
Sam Solomon
MANAGING EDITOR
Aubrey Dawn
NEWS EDITOR
Kim Goodman
CULTURE EDITORS
Nicholas H. A llison
Knute Olsson H .G. S. Berger
PHOTO EDITORS
Anita deGive
Mark Overland
BUSINESS MANAGER
John Foster
ADVERTISING MANAGER
Craig Lozzi
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Mary Frances Hester
GENERAL STAFF
Suzanne
Ron A lpert
Grant
Mil lie
Jeffrey
Irwin
Brombacher
Sandy
Johnson
Billie Corn ish
Dan OppenRi chard
heimer
Cowley
Kathy Rich
Roger Farnam
Andy Ryan
Jim Feyk
Stan Shore
Ford
Len Wallick
Gi lbreath
Nanette
Tom Graham
Westerman
FacuJty Adviser :
Margaret Gribskov

The Cooper Point lourn al is publi shE:d hebdo m adal ly by the ,Evergreen
Sta te Co ll ege Board o f Pub li cat io ns
and m embers o f the Evergreen com munit y . It is fund ed , in part , by stu d e nt se rv i ces and act iviti es fe es .
V iews exp ressed are not necessa rily
those of t he ed itoria l staff or The Evergree n Sta te Co ll ege . The lourna l
news and bu siness roo m s are loca ted
o n the third fl oo r of the co ll ege Ac ti v iti es b ldg ., C AB rm . 306. Phone '
8b6-62 13. Fo r ad vert isi ng and bu siness
Info rm at io n ' 866-6080.
'1he l ourn al IS fr ee to all st udent s
o f Th fo' EVfo' rgrpe n State Co ll egfo' and is
d i Sl rl b ut Pd o n c ampu s With o u t
c ha rge . Eve rgrefo'n stud ents may re(,fo' IVfo', by ma ll , subsc ripti ons to th e
l ou rn al Wi thout c harge For no n -Eve rgreen q udfo' nt s. a nine m o nt h sub~ rriptl()l1 m ay be obt ain ed at t he
pri ce of fou r d o ll ars For informati o n
/lbh-b080

Page 5

COOPER POINT JOURNAL
The Evergreen State College

Olympia, Washington

Vol. 3 No. 18

February 27, 1975

Health Services Diagnosed Page 12

INQUIRE NOW FOR SPRING
QUARTER RESERVATIONS'

Be ca use AS~ is Your Ow n Compl ete Apa rtm ent
Not a Dormitory.
'

ECONOMY
ATTITUDE

Be<::ause at ASH You Ca n Share a Unit, Walk to Class,
Rates Much Lower than Conventional .
Because A SH was Conceived Solely to Serve
Student Needs on a Non-Profit Basis .

C ONVEN'I ENCE
ENVIRONMENT

Because ASH is the O nly Apt. Comp lex Within
Easy Wa lking Di sta nce to School Activiti es .
Beca use ASH has Preserved th e Beauty of
N atural Surroundings.

"At this time the overall
health delivery system in th e
area cannot absorb the needs
of our students," said Dean of
.student Development Programs
Larry Stenberg. That was true
last week; but the recent resignations of nurse practitioner
Edwina Dorsey-Travis and receptionist Jan Lonardelli, and
the continuing question as to
funding, have raised even further doubts about the quality
and the future of Health Services at Evergreen.
Stenberg is now faced with
the unenviable task of trying
to figure out how to provide
adequate health service in the
midst of budget c uts (Governor Evans' proposed budget for
1975-77 would reduce funding for the student services
areas) and, as women's health
care specialist Jan Schmitt
characterized it, "upheaval" in Heafth Se rvi ces.
Stenberg has temporarily hired Claire Litc hman , a registered nurse, to
keep the office open. Next quarter, a new office management assistant
will be hired . Next year, Dr. Dave Peterson takes off for Nepal to coordinate the Year in Nepal group contract, so yet another new key staff
member will be entering the faci lity at -that time.
The real problem, however, seems to li e w it h heal th services faci li ties
in Olympia generally . As Sc hmitt suggested, perhaps what we need is
free health service for the entire Olympi a co mmunity . Stenberg has already requested funds from budgetary reserves · held by Vice Presidents
Clabaugh and Kormondy. Sin ce th e State wants to cut back student
health serv ice at Evergreen, perhaps the State should instead provide
health service for the entire Olympia commu ni ty, of whi ch the students
are a substantial part.
. . PAGE
PAGE
. PAGE
PAGE

COVER STORY ...
PHOTO ESSAY ON CONSTRUCTION
KAOS ..
POSTER ART AT EVERGREEN

12
14
16
19

Departments
Letters .
Ca mpus News

.2

...... 7

Featu res
Culture

12

.. 19

Thi s week 's cover photo by Ron A lpert shows part of the off ices of Hea lt h Services
at Eve rg ~een.
February 27, 1975

EDITOR
Sam Solomon
MANAGING EDITOR
Aubrey Dawn
NEWS EDITOR
Kim Goodman
CULTURE EDITORS
Nicholas H. A llison
Knute Olsson H .G. S. Berger
PHOTO EDITORS
Anita deGive
Mark Overland
BUSINESS MANAGER
John Foster
ADVERTISING MANAGER
Craig Lozzi
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Mary Frances Hester
GENERAL STAFF
Suzanne
Ron A lpert
Grant
Mil lie
Jeffrey
Irwin
Brombacher
Sandy
Johnson
Billie Corn ish
Dan OppenRi chard
heimer
Cowley
Kathy Rich
Roger Farnam
Andy Ryan
Jim Feyk
Stan Shore
Ford
Len Wallick
Gi lbreath
Nanette
Tom Graham
Westerman
FacuJty Adviser :
Margaret Gribskov

The Cooper Point lourn al is publi shE:d hebdo m adal ly by the ,Evergreen
Sta te Co ll ege Board o f Pub li cat io ns
and m embers o f the Evergreen com munit y . It is fund ed , in part , by stu d e nt se rv i ces and act iviti es fe es .
V iews exp ressed are not necessa rily
those of t he ed itoria l staff or The Evergree n Sta te Co ll ege . The lourna l
news and bu siness roo m s are loca ted
o n the third fl oo r of the co ll ege Ac ti v iti es b ldg ., C AB rm . 306. Phone '
8b6-62 13. Fo r ad vert isi ng and bu siness
Info rm at io n ' 866-6080.
'1he l ourn al IS fr ee to all st udent s
o f Th fo' EVfo' rgrpe n State Co ll egfo' and is
d i Sl rl b ut Pd o n c ampu s With o u t
c ha rge . Eve rgrefo'n stud ents may re(,fo' IVfo', by ma ll , subsc ripti ons to th e
l ou rn al Wi thout c harge For no n -Eve rgreen q udfo' nt s. a nine m o nt h sub~ rriptl()l1 m ay be obt ain ed at t he
pri ce of fou r d o ll ars For informati o n
/lbh-b080

Page 5

Campus News
207 East 5th
Olympia
Across from the Capitol Theatre
Tuesday-Saturday
10:30-5:30
featuring
clothes and jewelry from
Turkey, Afghanastan, Iran
Israel, South America and
other wonderous places
for men and women

DUCK HOUSE
featuring
John Moss, as he read Dean Clabaugh's
statement to the Board of Trustees at the
special session where they overturned the
Hearing Board decision.

John Moss and Dean Clabaugh listening
to testimon y at Trustees special ses~ion.
In the foreground , Judy Annis of the
College Relations Office.

TRUSTEES REVERSE HEARING BOARD IN MOSS CASE
After four and one-half hours of closed
deliberation, the Evergreen Board of Trustees voted yesterday four to one to overrule the unanimous decision of the All
Campus Hearing Board, and thereby affirm Administrative Vice-President Dean
Clabaugh's controversial decision which
placed John Moss in the dual directorship
of Auxiliary Services and Personnel.
"The Board is of the opinion that the
action by the Administrative Vice-President was within his authority as one of
the chief administrative officials. of the
college and that nothing illegal was involved in the management decision
made," said the Trustees. "The decision of
the Campus Hearing Board reflects not
the legality or illegality of the action but a
different managerial judgment ... "
Thomas Dixon, the only Trustee to
vote in support of the Hearing Board's decision, said in his dissenting opinion that
he thought the spirit as well as the letter
of the affirmative action policy have been
violated by Clabaugh's action . "I feel that
I cannot in good conscience agree with
the decision made by the majority of the
Trustees and that it would constitute a
grave error were I to so agree," said
Dixon .
Responding to the Board's decision, one

l

faculty member stated, "It shows that the
administration will only uphold the campus decisions that they favor. The
Trustees' decision tears the Affirmative
Action policy to pieces ." Vince Pepka,
student secretary of the S&A Board responded, "This action completely invalidates the Social Contract and we as students, facuity, and staff are no longer
bound by it and may therefore take the
appropriate action we see fit." Geoff
Rothwell, another student, emphasized,
"Our situation is the same as the State
workers; control is being forced from the
top . In both cases the people who live
and work at state institutions are being
denied the control over their own lives."
The dispute originally arose when Moss
was appointed by Clabaugh to replace
Diann Youngquist as Director of Personnel in addition to his duties as
Director of Auxiliary Services. Clabaugh
justified the decision to combine the two
jobs as "most appropriate from a managerial point of view . . . It was the best
possible combination of human and other
resources to accomplish the job that
needed to be done."
Because of alleged violations of the Affirmative Action document, C labaugh's
decision was met with a negative response

Clothing

Pictures

Pottery

Jewelry

Wall Hangings

CONSIGNMENTS
WANTED
OPEN MON-FRI

9:30-4:00

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ROOM 103
See ANTHONY WATKINS
about position opening in
uarter-Sala

ne otiable

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BOB'S BIG BURGERS
1707 WEST HARRIS,ON

Campus News
207 East 5th
Olympia
Across from the Capitol Theatre
Tuesday-Saturday
10:30-5:30
featuring
clothes and jewelry from
Turkey, Afghanastan, Iran
Israel, South America and
other wonderous places
for men and women

DUCK HOUSE
featuring
John Moss, as he read Dean Clabaugh's
statement to the Board of Trustees at the
special session where they overturned the
Hearing Board decision.

John Moss and Dean Clabaugh listening
to testimon y at Trustees special ses~ion.
In the foreground , Judy Annis of the
College Relations Office.

TRUSTEES REVERSE HEARING BOARD IN MOSS CASE
After four and one-half hours of closed
deliberation, the Evergreen Board of Trustees voted yesterday four to one to overrule the unanimous decision of the All
Campus Hearing Board, and thereby affirm Administrative Vice-President Dean
Clabaugh's controversial decision which
placed John Moss in the dual directorship
of Auxiliary Services and Personnel.
"The Board is of the opinion that the
action by the Administrative Vice-President was within his authority as one of
the chief administrative officials. of the
college and that nothing illegal was involved in the management decision
made," said the Trustees. "The decision of
the Campus Hearing Board reflects not
the legality or illegality of the action but a
different managerial judgment ... "
Thomas Dixon, the only Trustee to
vote in support of the Hearing Board's decision, said in his dissenting opinion that
he thought the spirit as well as the letter
of the affirmative action policy have been
violated by Clabaugh's action . "I feel that
I cannot in good conscience agree with
the decision made by the majority of the
Trustees and that it would constitute a
grave error were I to so agree," said
Dixon .
Responding to the Board's decision, one

l

faculty member stated, "It shows that the
administration will only uphold the campus decisions that they favor. The
Trustees' decision tears the Affirmative
Action policy to pieces ." Vince Pepka,
student secretary of the S&A Board responded, "This action completely invalidates the Social Contract and we as students, facuity, and staff are no longer
bound by it and may therefore take the
appropriate action we see fit." Geoff
Rothwell, another student, emphasized,
"Our situation is the same as the State
workers; control is being forced from the
top . In both cases the people who live
and work at state institutions are being
denied the control over their own lives."
The dispute originally arose when Moss
was appointed by Clabaugh to replace
Diann Youngquist as Director of Personnel in addition to his duties as
Director of Auxiliary Services. Clabaugh
justified the decision to combine the two
jobs as "most appropriate from a managerial point of view . . . It was the best
possible combination of human and other
resources to accomplish the job that
needed to be done."
Because of alleged violations of the Affirmative Action document, C labaugh's
decision was met with a negative response

Clothing

Pictures

Pottery

Jewelry

Wall Hangings

CONSIGNMENTS
WANTED
OPEN MON-FRI

9:30-4:00

We get 20% - You get the rest!
753-6477
COLLEGE ACTIVITIES BUILDING
ROOM 103
See ANTHONY WATKINS
about position opening in
uarter-Sala

ne otiable

,
BOB'S BIG BURGERS
1707 WEST HARRIS,ON

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

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from some members of the community. A
group of students, faculty, and staff organized to attempt a reversal of the decision. The group argued before McCann
and Clabaugh and took their case before
the Trustees, who then decided that the
campus governance procedure was adequate to review the case. The group began formal mediation with Clabaugh,
w ithout result. An All Campus Hearing
Board was called to hear the case, and
after one and one-half days of testimony,
the Hearing Board found that Clabaugh
"had violated the spirit of Affirmative Action by his failure to take specific action
as required by that policy ." He was also
fo und to have "violated the letter of the
Affirmative Action policy" by appointing
Moss to a newly created position without
selecting a candidate from a non-discriminatory applicant pool.
C labaugh, who considered the Hearing
Board's decision an "error," appealed to
t he Board of Trustees. The Trustees
agreed to hear the appeal on Feb . 26.
They also decided they would make their
decision in an executive session after hearing testimony from both sides.
It had been argued by some of the peti tioners that · the Trustees would be in
violation of the Washington State Open
Meetings Act. Assistant to the Attorney
Genera l Richard Montecucco defended the
Trustees by terming the matter before the
board "quasi-judicial" and stating it was
"totally exempt from the Open Meetings
Act ."
However, student Kevin Clark has since
threatened the Trustees with legal action
on the basis that their use of the clause
"quasi-judicial" is not legal and that a
closed meeting would therefore violate
state law . Clark 's memo, which was
mailed to the Trustees, cites statements by
the State Attorney General Slade Gorton,
and utilizes state law and legal definitions
to back his case .
Yesterday , Feb. 26, the Trustees heard
arguments from each side. Clabaugh, who
could not speak due to influenza-induced
laryngi tis, was represented by John Moss
who read Clabaugh's short testimony. In
his opening remarks Clabaugh wrote there
was no violation of the Affirmative
Action policy. Moss stated, "The appeal
relates only to the 'very narrow question
of whether combining two jobs, one of
wh ich has an incumbent, creates a new
position with no incumbent. " He continued , " Any (job) combination which involves any incumbent results in a combined job with an incumbent." After his
opening remarks he offered no further
testimony in his defense.
l y nn Patterson acted as spokeswoman
fo r the group of 12 faculty , students, and
staff who had origin~lly fi led a grievance
against C labaugh 's decision. The petitioners' main point was, "This appointment
constitutes a multitude of violations of the
College's Affirmative Action policy, a
pl a n con sidered and approved by this
Board of Tru stees." Th is statement was
Cooper Point Journal


supported by several arguments and
quotes from the Human Rights Document
which includes the Affirmative Action
policy .
Patterson continued, " It's difficult to
criticize Mr. Clabaugh's defense of his action because he keeps changing it .. .
This attempt to disguise an improper decision behind the screen of semantics is di sappointing to those of us who believe in
this Human Rights Document and the v iability of the Evergreen governance system." After hearing Patterson's testimony
.. the Trustees heard from all but one of the
All Campus Hearing Board members.
They were carefully questioned by the
Trustees, who attempted to understand
the basis of their judgment. The Trustees
adjourned the meeting until 5 p.m., w hen
they announced their decision that overruled the Campus Hearing Board .

BOMB THREAT CLEARS
LECTURE HALL

).
.

At 10:07 p.m., Friday Feb. 21 , KAOS
·Music Director Karl Rahder received a telephone call from a man in a "serious,
deadpan voice" who stated, " There's a
bomb in Lec. Hall 1 and it's going to go
off in 15 minutes. You better clear everybody out of there fast I"
Noting he had heard a woman laugh ing
in the background during the calL if was
Rahder's strong feeling "this was a student
somewhere in the dorms . The funny thing
was, I was busy at the time the phone
rang a nd he was on hold for a couple of
minutes."
Rahder then called Security, w ho evacuated the Lecture Hall in which a showing
of "Dr. Strangelove" was in progress.
Rod Marrom, head of Security, stated ,
"We don' t gamble with things like this."
He added, bomb threats "designed to
scare or disturb are a gross misdemeanor
with a fine of not more than $1,000 and
not more than one year in jail. "
After a thorough but fruitless half-hour
search by Security , the movie began
where 'it had been stopped. As one student stated , "It was very surrealistic. "

STUDENTS RALLY AT TUITION
HIKE HEARING
Testimony regarding the proposed tu ition hike was given Feb. 20 at a p ubl ic
hearing in the House C hambers at the
Capitol. Students and other interested individuals from throughout the state attended the 3 ljz hour heari ng to testify for
or against House Bill 453.
Ka ren Via lie, Legislative Coordinator
for the Governor from the Office of Program Planning and Fiscal Management,
began the testimony as a proponent of the
bill. Via lle's testimony consisted largely of
statistical figures and numerical comparisions. Denni:; Curry of the Council on
Higher Education followed Vialle a nd also
endorsed the bill , defining the issue as the
February ~7, 197.5

Cooper Pt

& Harrison

943-8086

lacey - 817 Sleater-Kinnev

491-4340

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Olympia 943-3650

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ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

WESTSIDE SH OPPING CENTER

943-8701

OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

943.8700

.........................................................

SEA- MART DRUGS

friendly
lovv

prices

SEA-MART SHOPPING CENTER
DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA

943-3820
PAgeS

from some members of the community. A
group of students, faculty, and staff organized to attempt a reversal of the decision. The group argued before McCann
and Clabaugh and took their case before
the Trustees, who then decided that the
campus governance procedure was adequate to review the case. The group began formal mediation with Clabaugh,
w ithout result. An All Campus Hearing
Board was called to hear the case, and
after one and one-half days of testimony,
the Hearing Board found that Clabaugh
"had violated the spirit of Affirmative Action by his failure to take specific action
as required by that policy ." He was also
fo und to have "violated the letter of the
Affirmative Action policy" by appointing
Moss to a newly created position without
selecting a candidate from a non-discriminatory applicant pool.
C labaugh, who considered the Hearing
Board's decision an "error," appealed to
t he Board of Trustees. The Trustees
agreed to hear the appeal on Feb . 26.
They also decided they would make their
decision in an executive session after hearing testimony from both sides.
It had been argued by some of the peti tioners that · the Trustees would be in
violation of the Washington State Open
Meetings Act. Assistant to the Attorney
Genera l Richard Montecucco defended the
Trustees by terming the matter before the
board "quasi-judicial" and stating it was
"totally exempt from the Open Meetings
Act ."
However, student Kevin Clark has since
threatened the Trustees with legal action
on the basis that their use of the clause
"quasi-judicial" is not legal and that a
closed meeting would therefore violate
state law . Clark 's memo, which was
mailed to the Trustees, cites statements by
the State Attorney General Slade Gorton,
and utilizes state law and legal definitions
to back his case .
Yesterday , Feb. 26, the Trustees heard
arguments from each side. Clabaugh, who
could not speak due to influenza-induced
laryngi tis, was represented by John Moss
who read Clabaugh's short testimony. In
his opening remarks Clabaugh wrote there
was no violation of the Affirmative
Action policy. Moss stated, "The appeal
relates only to the 'very narrow question
of whether combining two jobs, one of
wh ich has an incumbent, creates a new
position with no incumbent. " He continued , " Any (job) combination which involves any incumbent results in a combined job with an incumbent." After his
opening remarks he offered no further
testimony in his defense.
l y nn Patterson acted as spokeswoman
fo r the group of 12 faculty , students, and
staff who had origin~lly fi led a grievance
against C labaugh 's decision. The petitioners' main point was, "This appointment
constitutes a multitude of violations of the
College's Affirmative Action policy, a
pl a n con sidered and approved by this
Board of Tru stees." Th is statement was
Cooper Point Journal


supported by several arguments and
quotes from the Human Rights Document
which includes the Affirmative Action
policy .
Patterson continued, " It's difficult to
criticize Mr. Clabaugh's defense of his action because he keeps changing it .. .
This attempt to disguise an improper decision behind the screen of semantics is di sappointing to those of us who believe in
this Human Rights Document and the v iability of the Evergreen governance system." After hearing Patterson's testimony
.. the Trustees heard from all but one of the
All Campus Hearing Board members.
They were carefully questioned by the
Trustees, who attempted to understand
the basis of their judgment. The Trustees
adjourned the meeting until 5 p.m., w hen
they announced their decision that overruled the Campus Hearing Board .

BOMB THREAT CLEARS
LECTURE HALL

).
.

At 10:07 p.m., Friday Feb. 21 , KAOS
·Music Director Karl Rahder received a telephone call from a man in a "serious,
deadpan voice" who stated, " There's a
bomb in Lec. Hall 1 and it's going to go
off in 15 minutes. You better clear everybody out of there fast I"
Noting he had heard a woman laugh ing
in the background during the calL if was
Rahder's strong feeling "this was a student
somewhere in the dorms . The funny thing
was, I was busy at the time the phone
rang a nd he was on hold for a couple of
minutes."
Rahder then called Security, w ho evacuated the Lecture Hall in which a showing
of "Dr. Strangelove" was in progress.
Rod Marrom, head of Security, stated ,
"We don' t gamble with things like this."
He added, bomb threats "designed to
scare or disturb are a gross misdemeanor
with a fine of not more than $1,000 and
not more than one year in jail. "
After a thorough but fruitless half-hour
search by Security , the movie began
where 'it had been stopped. As one student stated , "It was very surrealistic. "

STUDENTS RALLY AT TUITION
HIKE HEARING
Testimony regarding the proposed tu ition hike was given Feb. 20 at a p ubl ic
hearing in the House C hambers at the
Capitol. Students and other interested individuals from throughout the state attended the 3 ljz hour heari ng to testify for
or against House Bill 453.
Ka ren Via lie, Legislative Coordinator
for the Governor from the Office of Program Planning and Fiscal Management,
began the testimony as a proponent of the
bill. Via lle's testimony consisted largely of
statistical figures and numerical comparisions. Denni:; Curry of the Council on
Higher Education followed Vialle a nd also
endorsed the bill , defining the issue as the
February ~7, 197.5

Cooper Pt

& Harrison

943-8086

lacey - 817 Sleater-Kinnev

491-4340

Check·Our Low,
Discount Prices
on Carburetor
Air Filten!
Don't let your present one
foul your car's operation

RAUDENBUSH MOTORS

ColQllY

· ~Im

412 South Cherry
Olympia 943-3650

Adult Slllgles Community

All
Utilities
Included

Fully
Furnished
Apartments

Hiking and
Fishing
Close By

Planned
Social
Functions

DISCOVER
the
COLONY INN GROUP

__ 69. 5
PER MONTH

1818 EYenJI'... DrIft
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
t8S01
Page 9

question of whether the students or the
taxpayer should be given the burden of
the higher costs of higher education.
Curry also argued that the bill should be
a mended to include Evergreen with the
University level tuition rates which would

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be higher than the present rates . Dr.
James Brooks, a professor from Central
Washington State College, was the only
other proponent of the bill who spoke at
the hearing. Dr. Brooks' main contention
was that the tuition at state colleges
should remain the same while it should be
raised at the universities and community
colleges.
Various interests such as minorities,
women, veterans, low income individuals
and youth were represented as the testimony continued. Lew Stewart of the
AFL-CIO spoke for 30 minutes on the
discriminatory nature of HB 453 on
women in addition to the impact that increased tuition rates would have on the
already ' swollen unemployment rolls in
the state of Washington. Stewart ended
his speech with the demand to "Bury HB
453 as deep as you can."
Representing the students of the public
colleges and universities in the state of
Washington, Pat McDonald and Karen
Higgins gave a lengthy but comprehensive
joint testimony in which they took into
account extensive and diverse information
to support their opposition . to the bill.
The crowd in the House Chamber Galleries diminished during the McDonald / Higgins testimony and at the end of their
speech the remark, "Took you long
enough" could be heard clearly throughout the House Chambers.
. No new amendments or changes to the
bill have been proposed since the hearing.
As it reads now, the bill calls for no increase of tuition rates at Evergreen, but
this may well change. At this point, HB
453 calls for increases at the University of ,
Washington and Washington State University only. No new hearings or meetings are presently scheduled to debate HB
453, which is still in the House Committee
on Higher Education.

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Open
8 -5 If

:~75'4"

10%
discount
to
students

M on
thru
Sa t

Wholesale

-::::::

5th

Three women students were reported as
possible missing persons to Evergreen's
Security Office last week. All of them
have been located and are safe but the
searches represent an increasing problem
on campus, according to Rod Marrom of
Security.
"This wouldn't have occurred if they
had informed someone they would be
gone for a few days ." He urges all stu-

COLLEEN~S

GIFT SHOP

HA NDKNITTED AFGHANS AND STOCKING HA TS
tverything [c, Handmade
"com e in and hro w'>e aro und"

Phone 456 -4982
CO NSIGNMENTS
WE LCO ME

OPEN
Evenings
Tues - Sat
1O:JO - 5:30

dents to inform either a friend, a faculty
member, Housing or Security if they are
leaving for more than 24 hours . "It takes
a great deal of energy, time, the involvement of state and local agencies, and
sometimes causes parental anxiety when
someone is reported missing," said
Marrom.
Marrom urges prompt reporting of students thought to be missing and adds that
Security takes every missing person case
reported seriously and will continue to
take each case seriously.

SOUNDING BOARD DISCUSSES
GAY PROPOSAL
Representatives of the Gay. Center
sought the approval of the Evergreen
community for a propo~d amendment to
the Evergreen Human Rights document at
a Feb. 26 meeting of the Sounding Board.
They hope to add prohibitions against
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or political ideology to the other
commitments against discrimination in
this Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity policy statement.
The initial response to the proposal
from community members present at the
meeting could be termed as sleepy approval. Sounding Board moderator Larry
Mauksch had to prod members of the
Sounding Board to give their response to
the proposal.
A response to the proposed amendments from those at the meeting was important as President Charles McCann had
requested the Gay Center to present their
proposal to the meeting so he could gauge
community reaction. McCann will intorm
the Sounding Board at its next, March 5,
meeting of his consensus of the expressed
opinion. Following his statement McCann
will consider additional input. If McCann
feels the community supports the amendment, he will present it to the Board of
Trustees for consideration .

• A Student Preparation Workshop for
an "Arts and Communications Job Information Day" will be held Thursday, Feb.
27 at 3 p.m . in Lib. rm . 1221. The Information Day will be held on Wednesday ,
March 5 from 9: 15 a.m. to 3 : 30 p.,.m. Interested students may sign up at the Placement office, lib. rm. 1224, or call 866 6193 for further information .
• Forest Glen from Abundant Life Seeds
will be here to present a workshop dea ling with seeds on Saturday , March 8, at
noon at the Organic Farm . Dona tions will
be solicited.
• An Environmental workshop will be
held March 4 in CAB rm . 1l0A fro m
noon to 1 p .m. Jack Winn , of Professional Forestry Services Inc ~ and author of
the campus timber management plan , will
be discussing the plan .

• The Lesbian Clinic will be holding a
self-examination workshop Friday, Feb .
28, at 7 p.m. in the Board room, third
floor of the Library.
• A public meeting to discuss the decision
by the Board of Trustees to uphold Dean
Clabaugh's appointment of John Moss to
the dual directorship of Auxiliary Services
and Personnel will be held Friday, Feb. 28
in the second floor Library lobby at noon.
• The second issue of Rainroots is now
being planned. Students are encouraged to
submit art work, photography, prose
writing, and poetry to tlie Information
Center or Cooper Point Journal office in
the 'Activities building before the end of
winter quarter, March 14. Anyone interested in submitting material or having any
questions or hesitations can call Stan
Shore at 866-5056 .
• Library materials checked out w in ter
quarter must be returned by March 14.
Renewals for spring quarter will begin
March 4 .
• A lecture and slide show entitled:
"Soma: Divine Mushroom of Immortality" will be presented on Wednesday,
March 5 at 8 p.m. in Lee. Hall 3. The lecturer will be Dr. W. S. Chilton, a professor of chemistry at the University of
Washington.
• Rita Mae Brown, lesbian-feminist and
author of Rubyfruit Jungle will speak in
the second floor Library lobby , tomorrow ,
Feb. 28, at 2 : 30 p.m.

g

bra nd new , la rge lo t. $180 & $185 . Immedi a te occupancy,

THE DREBICK COMPANY
943-4340.

HOUSH~G

OPPORTUNITY

'R,,,,,,, CIT, P".,." COII'y R,,'II"

liED rigOS - SALES I IIEITALS

CALL JOHN GRACE

$111 $133 $150 $162

943-3712

CORRECTION

1 BEDROOM

. jeap'er
'9;Wo~~

~N~aJA~e ~Nf[1A~f ro opbfP~1p.s~
koros . .

ANNOUNCEMENTS
• A Powwow, sponsored by Native A .merican Studies, w'ill be presented Wednesday, March 5, at 7 p.m . in the Recreation Pavilion .
• Staff, faculty and students who are interested in forming a committee at Evergreen to conduct informational pickets
and other actions in support of the threatened state workers' strike will meet Monday , March 3, at noon on the third fl oor
library balco ny .
Co o per Point Journal

2 BR with ga rage , laundry roo m, carpets,

EQUAL

~~~~;t~NEW , POiD

215 N , CAP ITOl wy ,

In last week's issue of the Journal (Feb .
20 1975) the name of the author of a
let'ter reg~rding Paul Marsh , titled " Praise
. for Marsh," was accidentally left off , The
letter should have been signed with the
name of Ruth L. Wett.

KAISER ROAD RENTALS

-

TUNER & TECHNICIAN
Tuning - Cleaning
Refeltirig -

AU

The Journal regularly accepts and
prints, as space permits, announcements of events and information
tha t might interest the community.
To be considered for publication,
a nnoun cem e n ts must be typed,
d oubl e-spa ced , and submit ted to
th e news editor no later than noon
on the Tu esday prec e ding the
Thursda y of publication.

butdifr bt.,.:,k WI{, (T r.J'~r Cf;s

2 BEDROOMS

3 BEDR OOMS

4 BEDROOMS

AL SO OFFE RIN G FURNI SHED APARTM ENT S
\

spaci o us living unit s-westingho use applia nces-drapes and carpets,
linen storage, cl ose t space-clean electric heat , master TV hookup
pa ti os, glass doo rs a nd la ndsca ped court yards- "

• 3 months to pay deposit
• Ask about Rent-Sharing plan

943-5505

• $25 Reward for TENANT REFERRA L

?~,wwoo~ ,.n'04IU~~
.4,. 15 K

uyntoL W~

...···943 0 96 0 ...···

505 N. DIVISION
c lose to W estside Shoppin g Center and

Bus Stop
February 27, 1975

Page 11

question of whether the students or the
taxpayer should be given the burden of
the higher costs of higher education.
Curry also argued that the bill should be
a mended to include Evergreen with the
University level tuition rates which would

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be higher than the present rates . Dr.
James Brooks, a professor from Central
Washington State College, was the only
other proponent of the bill who spoke at
the hearing. Dr. Brooks' main contention
was that the tuition at state colleges
should remain the same while it should be
raised at the universities and community
colleges.
Various interests such as minorities,
women, veterans, low income individuals
and youth were represented as the testimony continued. Lew Stewart of the
AFL-CIO spoke for 30 minutes on the
discriminatory nature of HB 453 on
women in addition to the impact that increased tuition rates would have on the
already ' swollen unemployment rolls in
the state of Washington. Stewart ended
his speech with the demand to "Bury HB
453 as deep as you can."
Representing the students of the public
colleges and universities in the state of
Washington, Pat McDonald and Karen
Higgins gave a lengthy but comprehensive
joint testimony in which they took into
account extensive and diverse information
to support their opposition . to the bill.
The crowd in the House Chamber Galleries diminished during the McDonald / Higgins testimony and at the end of their
speech the remark, "Took you long
enough" could be heard clearly throughout the House Chambers.
. No new amendments or changes to the
bill have been proposed since the hearing.
As it reads now, the bill calls for no increase of tuition rates at Evergreen, but
this may well change. At this point, HB
453 calls for increases at the University of ,
Washington and Washington State University only. No new hearings or meetings are presently scheduled to debate HB
453, which is still in the House Committee
on Higher Education.

SECURITY DOESN'T MISS WOMEN

Open
8 -5 If

:~75'4"

10%
discount
to
students

M on
thru
Sa t

Wholesale

-::::::

5th

Three women students were reported as
possible missing persons to Evergreen's
Security Office last week. All of them
have been located and are safe but the
searches represent an increasing problem
on campus, according to Rod Marrom of
Security.
"This wouldn't have occurred if they
had informed someone they would be
gone for a few days ." He urges all stu-

COLLEEN~S

GIFT SHOP

HA NDKNITTED AFGHANS AND STOCKING HA TS
tverything [c, Handmade
"com e in and hro w'>e aro und"

Phone 456 -4982
CO NSIGNMENTS
WE LCO ME

OPEN
Evenings
Tues - Sat
1O:JO - 5:30

dents to inform either a friend, a faculty
member, Housing or Security if they are
leaving for more than 24 hours . "It takes
a great deal of energy, time, the involvement of state and local agencies, and
sometimes causes parental anxiety when
someone is reported missing," said
Marrom.
Marrom urges prompt reporting of students thought to be missing and adds that
Security takes every missing person case
reported seriously and will continue to
take each case seriously.

SOUNDING BOARD DISCUSSES
GAY PROPOSAL
Representatives of the Gay. Center
sought the approval of the Evergreen
community for a propo~d amendment to
the Evergreen Human Rights document at
a Feb. 26 meeting of the Sounding Board.
They hope to add prohibitions against
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or political ideology to the other
commitments against discrimination in
this Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity policy statement.
The initial response to the proposal
from community members present at the
meeting could be termed as sleepy approval. Sounding Board moderator Larry
Mauksch had to prod members of the
Sounding Board to give their response to
the proposal.
A response to the proposed amendments from those at the meeting was important as President Charles McCann had
requested the Gay Center to present their
proposal to the meeting so he could gauge
community reaction. McCann will intorm
the Sounding Board at its next, March 5,
meeting of his consensus of the expressed
opinion. Following his statement McCann
will consider additional input. If McCann
feels the community supports the amendment, he will present it to the Board of
Trustees for consideration .

• A Student Preparation Workshop for
an "Arts and Communications Job Information Day" will be held Thursday, Feb.
27 at 3 p.m . in Lib. rm . 1221. The Information Day will be held on Wednesday ,
March 5 from 9: 15 a.m. to 3 : 30 p.,.m. Interested students may sign up at the Placement office, lib. rm. 1224, or call 866 6193 for further information .
• Forest Glen from Abundant Life Seeds
will be here to present a workshop dea ling with seeds on Saturday , March 8, at
noon at the Organic Farm . Dona tions will
be solicited.
• An Environmental workshop will be
held March 4 in CAB rm . 1l0A fro m
noon to 1 p .m. Jack Winn , of Professional Forestry Services Inc ~ and author of
the campus timber management plan , will
be discussing the plan .

• The Lesbian Clinic will be holding a
self-examination workshop Friday, Feb .
28, at 7 p.m. in the Board room, third
floor of the Library.
• A public meeting to discuss the decision
by the Board of Trustees to uphold Dean
Clabaugh's appointment of John Moss to
the dual directorship of Auxiliary Services
and Personnel will be held Friday, Feb. 28
in the second floor Library lobby at noon.
• The second issue of Rainroots is now
being planned. Students are encouraged to
submit art work, photography, prose
writing, and poetry to tlie Information
Center or Cooper Point Journal office in
the 'Activities building before the end of
winter quarter, March 14. Anyone interested in submitting material or having any
questions or hesitations can call Stan
Shore at 866-5056 .
• Library materials checked out w in ter
quarter must be returned by March 14.
Renewals for spring quarter will begin
March 4 .
• A lecture and slide show entitled:
"Soma: Divine Mushroom of Immortality" will be presented on Wednesday,
March 5 at 8 p.m. in Lee. Hall 3. The lecturer will be Dr. W. S. Chilton, a professor of chemistry at the University of
Washington.
• Rita Mae Brown, lesbian-feminist and
author of Rubyfruit Jungle will speak in
the second floor Library lobby , tomorrow ,
Feb. 28, at 2 : 30 p.m.

g

bra nd new , la rge lo t. $180 & $185 . Immedi a te occupancy,

THE DREBICK COMPANY
943-4340.

HOUSH~G

OPPORTUNITY

'R,,,,,,, CIT, P".,." COII'y R,,'II"

liED rigOS - SALES I IIEITALS

CALL JOHN GRACE

$111 $133 $150 $162

943-3712

CORRECTION

1 BEDROOM

. jeap'er
'9;Wo~~

~N~aJA~e ~Nf[1A~f ro opbfP~1p.s~
koros . .

ANNOUNCEMENTS
• A Powwow, sponsored by Native A .merican Studies, w'ill be presented Wednesday, March 5, at 7 p.m . in the Recreation Pavilion .
• Staff, faculty and students who are interested in forming a committee at Evergreen to conduct informational pickets
and other actions in support of the threatened state workers' strike will meet Monday , March 3, at noon on the third fl oor
library balco ny .
Co o per Point Journal

2 BR with ga rage , laundry roo m, carpets,

EQUAL

~~~~;t~NEW , POiD

215 N , CAP ITOl wy ,

In last week's issue of the Journal (Feb .
20 1975) the name of the author of a
let'ter reg~rding Paul Marsh , titled " Praise
. for Marsh," was accidentally left off , The
letter should have been signed with the
name of Ruth L. Wett.

KAISER ROAD RENTALS

-

TUNER & TECHNICIAN
Tuning - Cleaning
Refeltirig -

AU

The Journal regularly accepts and
prints, as space permits, announcements of events and information
tha t might interest the community.
To be considered for publication,
a nnoun cem e n ts must be typed,
d oubl e-spa ced , and submit ted to
th e news editor no later than noon
on the Tu esday prec e ding the
Thursda y of publication.

butdifr bt.,.:,k WI{, (T r.J'~r Cf;s

2 BEDROOMS

3 BEDR OOMS

4 BEDROOMS

AL SO OFFE RIN G FURNI SHED APARTM ENT S
\

spaci o us living unit s-westingho use applia nces-drapes and carpets,
linen storage, cl ose t space-clean electric heat , master TV hookup
pa ti os, glass doo rs a nd la ndsca ped court yards- "

• 3 months to pay deposit
• Ask about Rent-Sharing plan

943-5505

• $25 Reward for TENANT REFERRA L

?~,wwoo~ ,.n'04IU~~
.4,. 15 K

uyntoL W~

...···943 0 96 0 ...···

505 N. DIVISION
c lose to W estside Shoppin g Center and

Bus Stop
February 27, 1975

Page 11

'1\ nec~ssary part of our lives

Health Service future in question
By TOM GRAHAM
The fu ture of Health Services has been
thrown int o question as the resu lt of resigna tion s by nurse practitioner Edwi na Dorsey -Travi s a nd receptionist Ian Lonardell i.
Dean of Student D€'velopment Programs
Larry Stenberg is in the process of developing plans to keep Hea lth Serv ices ope n
for the remainder of the quarter a nd to
operat€' the office spring quar ter, a nd is
considering how Health Services will operate in the next biennium.
Stenberg praised the work of DorseyTravi s a nd Lonardelli . Jan Schmit t, women 's health ca re specialist , who works in
their o ffice, praised them for being open
a nd rece ptive to people and going beyond
the requirements of their position to meet
people's needs. She noted that Dorsey Travi s had taken it upon herself to develop sk ills w hich wou ld a ll ow her to be tter treat stu dents.
S te nb e rg has hir ed regis tered nur se
C laire Litchman , who has w orked in the
Hea lth Serv ice otfice before , to help keep
the facility open for the las t two weeks of
winter q uarter . Dr . Da ve Peterson will
continu e his ph ysician 's clinics next week .
M onda y , Wedn esday, and Fr id ay , March
3, 5, and 7 th e off ice will be ope n from
1 :30 to 3 p.m . Tu esda y a nd Thursday ,
March 4 a nd 6. th e oWce w ill be open
fr om 1 :30 to 4 p.m . During the week of
March 10 -14 Hea lth Se rvi ces wi ll be open
fr om 9 a. m . to noon , an d from 1 :30 to 4
p .m.
St ud ents are asked not to vis it Hea lth
Se rvices during thi s peri od unless it is abso lut ely necessa ry . T he Women 's Cli ni c
will be o pen as sc hedul ed during th e next
two weeks a nd during the first week of
spring vacat io n . H ea lth Serv ices will be
closed thrnugh o ut spring va ca ti o n .
foor the nex t two weeks the office wil i
rel y o n the regular wo rk / study student s
to ha ndl e th e offi ce work . Spring quarter
Stenbe rg hopes to hIre a n office mana gement assista nt to take o n more of th e responsibility o f runnin g th e o ffic e.
Peterso n wi ll co ntillue hi ~ regul a r health
cl ini cs thro ughout sprin g quarter. A nurse
will b e co ntr acte d to ass is t s tud ents
spring quart er and refer them to Peterso n's clini cs if th a t is necessa ry .
Pete rso n w ill be' leav ing for Nepal at
. the end o f the sc hoo l year to wo rk wi th
th e Nepa l gro up co ntra ct. Ste nberg hopes
to prov ide co ntinuit y in Hea lth Services
by retainin g the o ffI ce manageme nt assista nt to aq uaint next year's doc to r and
nurse with th e schoo! ". hea lth program .
Pla ns for the next two yea r~ of Health
Serv ice ope rations depen I on th e budget ,
taci liti c<, and ~ t afl avai la b le, a nd the re,>,) urces ava il ab le in th e O lympia a rea.
'Tm rpa ll v willing to w()rk wit hin th e
framework ut the mo ney we have now ,
P ... "" I ')

sa id Schmit t. " It 's o bvious that we can't
provide co mprehensive services so it's obvious that we need to decide what services we should provide ."
Governor Dan Evans recommended a
reduction of $152,000 from th e current
opera ting budget for Studen t Developmen t Programs when his office rev iewed
Evergreen 's 1975-77 legislative budget requests. Among the areas affected by th is
reduction wou ld be Health Services. At
best this w ill mean no expa nsion of
Health Serv ices, w h ich today does not
meet the needs of students .
Stenberg outlined three priorities for
Health Se rv ices over the next two years.
The first priority is to provide basic outpat ient medical care and medical care referral: a lo ng w ith preventive health care,
a nd hea lth care co unse ling and advice .
T he seco nd is to provide health ca re ed uca ti o n a nd consultation. The third is to
furni sh in-serv ice training and supervisio n . Stenberg and Schmitt agreed that
under the present funding a nd office conditions Hea lth Serv ices may be unable to
meet the firs t priority, a nd that they are
look ing into w hich areas of the first
priority th ey ca n provide.
"At thi s time the overa ll health delivery
system in th e area canno t absorb the
needs of our students ," sa id Ste nbe rg, ex plain ing that students often have no recourse to medi ca l care aside from Health
Se rvi ce~. There aren 't enough doctors and
hea lth faci lities to meet the needs of the
O lympia area residents a nd the Evergreen
st udents, acco rding to Stenberg. In additio n, Stenberg noted that 25 to 30 percent of t he. Eve rgree n students co me from
fami lies whose incomes are under $10,000
and mo st of these stud ents ca n' t afford
outside med ica l ca re.
Schmitt said th a t Evergreen was part of
the Olymp ia a rea , and that th e ideal so lu tion to the hea ltn / med ica l care problem
was an O ly mpi a com munity \ free hea lth
service .
Stenbe rg ha s requested funds fr o m Vice
Presidents Ed Kormondy a nd Dean C labaugh to update and improv e hea lth
eq uipm ent for the office. The money
wo uld co me from budge ta r y rese rves held
by th e vice presiden ts.
Schmitt sa id that she fe lt the a ttitude o f
student s towa rd Hea lth Se rvi ces wa s often
fru stration Gl nd a nger. Healt h Serv ices has
over 6,000 contacts with s tud en t ~ each
yea r, amI the fru stra ti on stem s from th e
lim it a tion s w hi ch a ll ow the office to on ly
mee t th e need s of a ce rtain portion 0f
tho ~e stud ent<> .
for th o')e int erested in havin g a say on
the fut ure of Hea lth Serv ices, th e re wi ll be
a mpe tin g tomorrow, Fr iday , h,b 28 , in
the I.ec ture Ha ll loun ge.

By JANET SCHMITT

HEALTH SERVICES SICK

All who have used health serv ices (HS)
more than once or twice have probably
met with the frustration of closed doors
or long waits . I think that the situation
has many facet s and that an awareness of
those facets is necessary before solutions
a nd improvements can be considered. The
demand for services far exceeds the time
commitments, capabilities and energies of
the present staff and the physical space of
the present facility .
These problems have caused a lack of
consistency in care. Some people get excellent care with plenty of time for sharing information a nd educatio n . Others get
adequate care in terms of their health
needs and sti ll others get no care at a ll.
This situation fosters an aggressiveness on
the part of students to get care and therefore a genera l insensitivity to the staff .
The person most vocal about the immediateness of her / his problems or ' a bout how
long he / she has been waiting either gets
seen first or forces a staff member to exp lain that the problem is really not all
that serious or that other people have
been waiting longer. A ll the different factors ha ve the effect of forcing staff people
to be unresponsive; sometimes to health
care needs but more often to very rea l
needs for reassurance and info rm a tion .
There are communicat ion problems
a mong a ll the staff rela ted to HS a t The
Evergreen State College. (Student Services
is directly responsible for the Health Services.) Partly this is inherent in a vertical
medical hierarchy. It makes every thing
even more difficult and complicated. And
so, a nger a nd frustration build.
Two of the people who work at HS,
the RN Coordinator and the secretary / receptionist, are resigning effective Feb. 28.
The rema ining staff consist of a half - time
MD , half - time Women's Health Care Specialist (m e), a nd two part - time stude nts.
A ltho ugh it is unfortunate that it takes
such upheava l to ' bring the problem into
the open , now seems to be the opportune
time for exa mining the functions a nd '
p ri ori ties of the health serv ices.
My first reaction to the situa ti on was
that we needed to find the best way to
make hea lth care genera lly and eq ually
ava ilable to a ll stude nts. Someone pointed
out immed ia tely that I had failed to define
w hat k ind of hea lth care I was talking
abo ut. Was I indicating "'oomprehensive
services including preventati~and maintenance care as well as immediate problems a nd emergencies (i .e. , including gene ra l physical exams, etc.)? Or some o ther
co mbin ation of those services. It wou ld be
easy for definitive a nd reaso nab le deci siC)!lS about th ese pr iori ties to eit her be
made wi th little student input (w hich

ll

seems unthinkable to me since they are
the consumers of the health care) or not
be m ade a t a ll.
A decision needs to be made about
w hether or not to accept the existing budgetary framework which is a bout $46,000
per year for the next biennium . These limited funds make comprehensive health
care to a ll students completely impossible .
A fu ll time RN, WHCS, a nd MD , could
no t meet the legitima te dem a nds of 2,500
people nor could the present fac il ities and
equi pment be adequate. If such extensive
health care shou ld become our goal. it
would take a n incredible amount of studen t unity a nd pressure somew here (I'm
not exactly sure w here) to achieve it.
Deciding the types of services to be provided is one of the importa nt decisions
th a t should be made. Some things to consider befo rehand are what kinds of services are dema nded now a nd who takes advantage of the services. Coughs, S0re
throa ts, co lds, minor injuri es, vaginal infections and bladder infec tions include the
majo rity of problems dealt with presently,
A lthough I do n' t have docu mented statistics to substan tiate it, my observations a re
that a certa in fairly sma ll portion of the
student body uses HS very frequently 5 to
15 times during a school year. Another
gro up , the majority, use the fac ility only
occasio nall y and a third group never
comes in.
There ' is a defi nite difference in the
amount of responsibility ind ividual students take for their own health care .
Some people have learned that the only
thing to do for a so re throat is gargle with
sa lt water, drink fluid s and rest. Then , if
it is not go ne in a few days to a week, go
to the doctor (or someo ne else who
knows how) for a throat cu lture to rule
out strep . There a re many people who
co me to HS o n the first day they wake up
w ith a scratchy throat. Thi s is perhaps an
over-simplification of the p rob lem , but I
am try ing to say that a significant portion
of the use of HS is not "medically" urgent
or necessary.
It has taken me weeks of discussions
with friend s, fellow workers and Women's
C lini c volunteers to bring toget her a ll
these aspects , fac tors a nd ideas. I am sure
many things have been forgot ten o r not
though t of. bu t I hope it provides a place .
to start for those not familiar wi th the situation . There is a meeting being held in
the centra l rotunda of the lecture hall
build ing, tomorrow, Feb . 28 for a ll studen ts w ith int erest, trme , energy, ideas or
input concerni ng hea lth . services. I rea.l1y
hope we take this opport un ity to gai n
more contro l over this necessary part of
o ur lives.
Jan et ScllI11 itt IS a women 's h ea lth care
specialist at flea lt h Services .

'1\ nec~ssary part of our lives

Health Service future in question
By TOM GRAHAM
The fu ture of Health Services has been
thrown int o question as the resu lt of resigna tion s by nurse practitioner Edwi na Dorsey -Travi s a nd receptionist Ian Lonardell i.
Dean of Student D€'velopment Programs
Larry Stenberg is in the process of developing plans to keep Hea lth Serv ices ope n
for the remainder of the quarter a nd to
operat€' the office spring quar ter, a nd is
considering how Health Services will operate in the next biennium.
Stenberg praised the work of DorseyTravi s a nd Lonardelli . Jan Schmit t, women 's health ca re specialist , who works in
their o ffice, praised them for being open
a nd rece ptive to people and going beyond
the requirements of their position to meet
people's needs. She noted that Dorsey Travi s had taken it upon herself to develop sk ills w hich wou ld a ll ow her to be tter treat stu dents.
S te nb e rg has hir ed regis tered nur se
C laire Litchman , who has w orked in the
Hea lth Serv ice otfice before , to help keep
the facility open for the las t two weeks of
winter q uarter . Dr . Da ve Peterson will
continu e his ph ysician 's clinics next week .
M onda y , Wedn esday, and Fr id ay , March
3, 5, and 7 th e off ice will be ope n from
1 :30 to 3 p.m . Tu esda y a nd Thursday ,
March 4 a nd 6. th e oWce w ill be open
fr om 1 :30 to 4 p.m . During the week of
March 10 -14 Hea lth Se rvi ces wi ll be open
fr om 9 a. m . to noon , an d from 1 :30 to 4
p .m.
St ud ents are asked not to vis it Hea lth
Se rvices during thi s peri od unless it is abso lut ely necessa ry . T he Women 's Cli ni c
will be o pen as sc hedul ed during th e next
two weeks a nd during the first week of
spring vacat io n . H ea lth Serv ices will be
closed thrnugh o ut spring va ca ti o n .
foor the nex t two weeks the office wil i
rel y o n the regular wo rk / study student s
to ha ndl e th e offi ce work . Spring quarter
Stenbe rg hopes to hIre a n office mana gement assista nt to take o n more of th e responsibility o f runnin g th e o ffic e.
Peterso n wi ll co ntillue hi ~ regul a r health
cl ini cs thro ughout sprin g quarter. A nurse
will b e co ntr acte d to ass is t s tud ents
spring quart er and refer them to Peterso n's clini cs if th a t is necessa ry .
Pete rso n w ill be' leav ing for Nepal at
. the end o f the sc hoo l year to wo rk wi th
th e Nepa l gro up co ntra ct. Ste nberg hopes
to prov ide co ntinuit y in Hea lth Services
by retainin g the o ffI ce manageme nt assista nt to aq uaint next year's doc to r and
nurse with th e schoo! ". hea lth program .
Pla ns for the next two yea r~ of Health
Serv ice ope rations depen I on th e budget ,
taci liti c<, and ~ t afl avai la b le, a nd the re,>,) urces ava il ab le in th e O lympia a rea.
'Tm rpa ll v willing to w()rk wit hin th e
framework ut the mo ney we have now ,
P ... "" I ')

sa id Schmit t. " It 's o bvious that we can't
provide co mprehensive services so it's obvious that we need to decide what services we should provide ."
Governor Dan Evans recommended a
reduction of $152,000 from th e current
opera ting budget for Studen t Developmen t Programs when his office rev iewed
Evergreen 's 1975-77 legislative budget requests. Among the areas affected by th is
reduction wou ld be Health Services. At
best this w ill mean no expa nsion of
Health Serv ices, w h ich today does not
meet the needs of students .
Stenberg outlined three priorities for
Health Se rv ices over the next two years.
The first priority is to provide basic outpat ient medical care and medical care referral: a lo ng w ith preventive health care,
a nd hea lth care co unse ling and advice .
T he seco nd is to provide health ca re ed uca ti o n a nd consultation. The third is to
furni sh in-serv ice training and supervisio n . Stenberg and Schmitt agreed that
under the present funding a nd office conditions Hea lth Serv ices may be unable to
meet the firs t priority, a nd that they are
look ing into w hich areas of the first
priority th ey ca n provide.
"At thi s time the overa ll health delivery
system in th e area canno t absorb the
needs of our students ," sa id Ste nbe rg, ex plain ing that students often have no recourse to medi ca l care aside from Health
Se rvi ce~. There aren 't enough doctors and
hea lth faci lities to meet the needs of the
O lympia area residents a nd the Evergreen
st udents, acco rding to Stenberg. In additio n, Stenberg noted that 25 to 30 percent of t he. Eve rgree n students co me from
fami lies whose incomes are under $10,000
and mo st of these stud ents ca n' t afford
outside med ica l ca re.
Schmitt said th a t Evergreen was part of
the Olymp ia a rea , and that th e ideal so lu tion to the hea ltn / med ica l care problem
was an O ly mpi a com munity \ free hea lth
service .
Stenbe rg ha s requested funds fr o m Vice
Presidents Ed Kormondy a nd Dean C labaugh to update and improv e hea lth
eq uipm ent for the office. The money
wo uld co me from budge ta r y rese rves held
by th e vice presiden ts.
Schmitt sa id that she fe lt the a ttitude o f
student s towa rd Hea lth Se rvi ces wa s often
fru stration Gl nd a nger. Healt h Serv ices has
over 6,000 contacts with s tud en t ~ each
yea r, amI the fru stra ti on stem s from th e
lim it a tion s w hi ch a ll ow the office to on ly
mee t th e need s of a ce rtain portion 0f
tho ~e stud ent<> .
for th o')e int erested in havin g a say on
the fut ure of Hea lth Serv ices, th e re wi ll be
a mpe tin g tomorrow, Fr iday , h,b 28 , in
the I.ec ture Ha ll loun ge.

By JANET SCHMITT

HEALTH SERVICES SICK

All who have used health serv ices (HS)
more than once or twice have probably
met with the frustration of closed doors
or long waits . I think that the situation
has many facet s and that an awareness of
those facets is necessary before solutions
a nd improvements can be considered. The
demand for services far exceeds the time
commitments, capabilities and energies of
the present staff and the physical space of
the present facility .
These problems have caused a lack of
consistency in care. Some people get excellent care with plenty of time for sharing information a nd educatio n . Others get
adequate care in terms of their health
needs and sti ll others get no care at a ll.
This situation fosters an aggressiveness on
the part of students to get care and therefore a genera l insensitivity to the staff .
The person most vocal about the immediateness of her / his problems or ' a bout how
long he / she has been waiting either gets
seen first or forces a staff member to exp lain that the problem is really not all
that serious or that other people have
been waiting longer. A ll the different factors ha ve the effect of forcing staff people
to be unresponsive; sometimes to health
care needs but more often to very rea l
needs for reassurance and info rm a tion .
There are communicat ion problems
a mong a ll the staff rela ted to HS a t The
Evergreen State College. (Student Services
is directly responsible for the Health Services.) Partly this is inherent in a vertical
medical hierarchy. It makes every thing
even more difficult and complicated. And
so, a nger a nd frustration build.
Two of the people who work at HS,
the RN Coordinator and the secretary / receptionist, are resigning effective Feb. 28.
The rema ining staff consist of a half - time
MD , half - time Women's Health Care Specialist (m e), a nd two part - time stude nts.
A ltho ugh it is unfortunate that it takes
such upheava l to ' bring the problem into
the open , now seems to be the opportune
time for exa mining the functions a nd '
p ri ori ties of the health serv ices.
My first reaction to the situa ti on was
that we needed to find the best way to
make hea lth care genera lly and eq ually
ava ilable to a ll stude nts. Someone pointed
out immed ia tely that I had failed to define
w hat k ind of hea lth care I was talking
abo ut. Was I indicating "'oomprehensive
services including preventati~and maintenance care as well as immediate problems a nd emergencies (i .e. , including gene ra l physical exams, etc.)? Or some o ther
co mbin ation of those services. It wou ld be
easy for definitive a nd reaso nab le deci siC)!lS about th ese pr iori ties to eit her be
made wi th little student input (w hich

ll

seems unthinkable to me since they are
the consumers of the health care) or not
be m ade a t a ll.
A decision needs to be made about
w hether or not to accept the existing budgetary framework which is a bout $46,000
per year for the next biennium . These limited funds make comprehensive health
care to a ll students completely impossible .
A fu ll time RN, WHCS, a nd MD , could
no t meet the legitima te dem a nds of 2,500
people nor could the present fac il ities and
equi pment be adequate. If such extensive
health care shou ld become our goal. it
would take a n incredible amount of studen t unity a nd pressure somew here (I'm
not exactly sure w here) to achieve it.
Deciding the types of services to be provided is one of the importa nt decisions
th a t should be made. Some things to consider befo rehand are what kinds of services are dema nded now a nd who takes advantage of the services. Coughs, S0re
throa ts, co lds, minor injuri es, vaginal infections and bladder infec tions include the
majo rity of problems dealt with presently,
A lthough I do n' t have docu mented statistics to substan tiate it, my observations a re
that a certa in fairly sma ll portion of the
student body uses HS very frequently 5 to
15 times during a school year. Another
gro up , the majority, use the fac ility only
occasio nall y and a third group never
comes in.
There ' is a defi nite difference in the
amount of responsibility ind ividual students take for their own health care .
Some people have learned that the only
thing to do for a so re throat is gargle with
sa lt water, drink fluid s and rest. Then , if
it is not go ne in a few days to a week, go
to the doctor (or someo ne else who
knows how) for a throat cu lture to rule
out strep . There a re many people who
co me to HS o n the first day they wake up
w ith a scratchy throat. Thi s is perhaps an
over-simplification of the p rob lem , but I
am try ing to say that a significant portion
of the use of HS is not "medically" urgent
or necessary.
It has taken me weeks of discussions
with friend s, fellow workers and Women's
C lini c volunteers to bring toget her a ll
these aspects , fac tors a nd ideas. I am sure
many things have been forgot ten o r not
though t of. bu t I hope it provides a place .
to start for those not familiar wi th the situation . There is a meeting being held in
the centra l rotunda of the lecture hall
build ing, tomorrow, Feb . 28 for a ll studen ts w ith int erest, trme , energy, ideas or
input concerni ng hea lth . services. I rea.l1y
hope we take this opport un ity to gai n
more contro l over this necessary part of
o ur lives.
Jan et ScllI11 itt IS a women 's h ea lth care
specialist at flea lt h Services .

Construction .. •

A constant rumblingshreiks compete with
water

Sour sounds - big steel
moves sightless somewhere

A lot of men shaking earth
by the handle

Now it's just the soundtrack to a dream

But the separation between mind and steel shrinks as the
dream grows
until it's all faded solid into living space
that 's where the new dream begins .
Poem by Aubrey Dawn
Photos by Mark Overland

,.

Page 14

Cooper Point Journal

'February 27, 1975

Page 1S

Construction .. •

A constant rumblingshreiks compete with
water

Sour sounds - big steel
moves sightless somewhere

A lot of men shaking earth
by the handle

Now it's just the soundtrack to a dream

But the separation between mind and steel shrinks as the
dream grows
until it's all faded solid into living space
that 's where the new dream begins .
Poem by Aubrey Dawn
Photos by Mark Overland

,.

Page 14

Cooper Point Journal

'February 27, 1975

Page 1S

Third ' World Voice

SU Nf<!,\/

A weekly column of opinion and (om ..
mentary by members of the Non - White
Coalition .

By TI FLEMING

By MILLIE BROMBACHER
Radio stations bring many co nnotations
to mind - croon ing di sc jockeys, eff icient
news a nn o u ncers a nd mu sic, mu s ic ,
music. KAOS is mo re.
A for um ·for various viewpo ints, philoso phies and pe rsuasions, Radio Statio n
KA OS has served the Evergreen comm un ity since Ja n . 1 , 1973. KAOS, licensed by
the Federal Communicati ons Comm issio n
to ,Evergreen 's Boa rd of Tru stees, ob jectives include broadcasting programs of an
educational, info rmati ve, cu ltura l a nd entertaining nature wh ile providing community members with an a lternative listening experience.
"We are fulfillin g those initia l goa ls
which were released in November 1972,
but have been up-dating them rece ntly .
We need to establish new definiti o ns a nd
now is a tim e for re-orga ni zin g ourselves
a nd avai lable space to utilize ta lent and
equipm e nt m ore eff ic ie ntly ," says Lee
Riback , stati o n man ager since last October.
Says News D irector Barbara Harnisch,
"K AOS definitely has the poten tial to acco mpli sh all the stated phil osophies a nd,
in ma ny aspects, has. With work, we
co uld fu lfill ou r po tenti a l ; but hav in g the
doub le whammy of b~ in g hum a n and , oftentim es, inexperienced, makes for some
ro ugh edges."
A new 144-hours per week schedule
was ini tia ted Tuesda y, Feb. 25. KAOS
now broadcasts from 6:30 a .m . until 2
a .m. on Mondays through T hursdays.
Weekend broadcasting is contin uou s beginning Fr iday at 6:30 a .m . las ting unti l 2
a. m Mo nd ay. According to Riback, these
time~ do not Cl~nsti tut e a great prob lem .
"Spoken word ' ma terial. ct'nsisting of
speec hes, int erv iews , Radio Ca nada reports a nd public affa Ir!> information , is on
hand in the KAOS ma ter ials co ll ect io n .

In cha rge of deriving current news for
KAOS announcements and news prog ra m s, Harnisch ga thers news item s
through the Associated Press, grapevine,
the Journal and repo rters John Coffey,
Jann Biggs and Bill Cooper. She also hosts
the 30-mi nute Nightly News program and
"News in Depth" on Mondays and Thursday at 9 a.m. until noon. Coverage is extended to world , nat iona l, sta te a nd campus news.
KAOS FM music has also not been ignored . Th e 1,800 volume record library,
co nt a ining classica l, blues, rock and roll ,
soul , country and folk music , is currently
being reorga nized by Music Director Ka rl
Rahder . Rahder expects to have all records listed on co mputer system by mid April fo r quick reference.
Conducting three-hour shows are 55-60
FCC licensed broadcasters. A KAOS anno uncer must hold a first, second or third
class FCC permit. licenses are gra nted
when an ann o unce r demonstra tes FCC
regu lation understanding to either a First
Class FCC holder or by t ~ki n g a test in
Seattle.
A major change in the making is a
pos s ibl e power incre ase to 250-watts
whi ch would grea tly enlarge the present
12-mile listening radius . The Board of
Trustees will meet March 13 to discuss the
power boost, a nd a n open for um will be
held to night a t 7 p.m . in C'AB rm . 110
for co mmunity expression . All interested
are encouraged to attend both meetings
and write letters to the Board.
"I ncreas in g KAOS pow er (li stenin g
range) wi ll benefit the school a nd the
community for KAOS could be the bigges t single factor in developing posit ive
Evergree n opinio ns by introdu cing citizens
to th e schoo l, " exp la in s Riback. He conti nued, " A powe r boost would def ini tely
req uire, howeve r, that we defin t a nd
tighten ou r station and individual respon-

sibilities and goals :"
Should the power increase occur, Riback
hopes to receive financial support for
KAOS with listeners' supportive subscriptions which are tax deductible contributions by a station's listeners.
Another addition to KAOS are two relatively new broadcast programs, "The Invisible Thea ter" and "What's On Your
Mind." Both were initiated by Carl L.
Cook, program director. A Communications Inside / Outside ' coordinated study
program workshop, "The Invisible Theater" boasts seven participants who meet
bi-weekly in the KAOS lounge for rehearsals and taping. Their first production , "Alice in Wonderland" which was
a ired last Sunday, met with overwhelming
community approval and encouragement.
C urrently being produced is "The Invisible Man ."
Although "What's On Your Mind" has
not shared the Theater's success since its
November conception, the five - minute
perso nal commentary will be continued so
it can die a "natural death," according to
Cook. " What's On Your Mind" is a
KAOS feature a llow ing community members to express opinions on anything with- '
out ed iting or censorship. One of few considera ti ons asked is that participants adhere to FCC regulati ons on slanderous
a nd libelous sta tements.
Reg ul a rl y broad casted programs are
many a nd diversified . Among these are:
Jazblo - Jazz a nd Its Roots ; FREED, a
priso n refo rm program; Essence of Deli ght - an ex perimental word and music
program; Baroque C lassics; TESC 'Archi ves Prog ramming ; a nd Women's Radio
Coll ective, a no n-music broadcast focusing o n women a nd society. Other such
programs cove r still larger expanses of
subjec t ma terial, a nd, all one need do, is
set th e rad io di a l o n KA OS-FM 89.3 .
00

Point ourn

When I try to define my feelings about
myself as a Chinese-American, dozens of
sensations crowd my thoughts . I hear
grade school kids yelling, "Chinky
Chinky Chinaman" and my parents cautioning me to . endure the teasing silently;
I smell dinner - it could be stew, spaghetti, tuna casserole or rice, fish, and vegetables; I can feel the embroidered silk of
my first Chinese dress and the scratchy
organdy of my third grade party dress; I
remember my father using both Chinese
herbs and cobalt treatments in an attempt
to cure his cancer; and I can see the faces
of my friends .and hear them sing, "H~ppy
Birthday to you, you 18-year-old ChineseGerman-Jewish-scientist-chorusgirl . . . "
I was involved in drama in high school,
and played, among other roles, a JewishChinese scientist in 'Til Abner," a German shoemaker's wife, and a chorus girl
in "Hello Dolly ."
The roles I played in high school
productions were indicative of my attitudes toward myself. My Chinese heritage often was used as a visual joke, to be
played upon for comic effect. I found that
comedy was one of the few outlets provided for non-whites in the town I grew
up in.
Although experienced very little outright discrimination in my home town, I
came in contact with a good deal of unwitting, submerged prejudice. In grade
school and junior high I was the stereotypical quiet and studious Oriental, referred to by my classmates as "Confucius. " The highest praise I received from a
teacher was, "I wish all my students were
Oriental, then they'd be quiet and study
like you."
When I started high school, I wanted to
escape the "quiet Oriental" stereotype and
become a "real human being." Unfortunately, I tried to be me without relating
to myself first. As a result , I molded myself into the kind of person that the
people around me thought I should be .
My contemporaries were for the most
part WASPs, and as I made their ideas
and concepts my own, I began to discard
CChiriese ideas as old-fashioned · and not
relevant' to my life. The me that I presented to the world had a Chinese face
and yellow skin, but nearly a ll my
thoughts, dreams, and hopes were white.
In short, I had become a "banana"
(yellow on the outside, white on the inside, an Oriental Uncle Tom).
But, slow ly things that I had prev iously
February 27, 1975

shrugged off or ignored began seeping
into my consciousness. I began to hear
the people asking me questions about tra- "
ditional Chinese life "Why do the
Chinese wear white at funerals?", "Why
don't you celebrate New Years when we
do?" , "Why is Chinatown always a
slum?" - as if I carried the answers with
me in a briefcase. The concepts of "Asian"
in the media started to annoy me. To
quote Irvin Paik in his article "A Look at
the Caricatures of the Asians Sketched by
American Movies, " "It often comes as a
shock to Asians to realize that they are
not human beings. At least, not huma n
beings as represented by the movies and
TV . '.. With rare exceptions, Asians
are . .. portrayed as waiters, laundrymen, cooks, villians, Geishas, warlords;
karate experts, prostitutes . . ." Examples
are Jerry Lewis' buck-toothed, myopic ,
pidgin- English speaking Asian; the succession of white Charlie Chans; the a lways sinister Fu Manchu; demure Mrs.
Livingston in "The Courtship of Eddie's
Father; " Bruce Lee in "The Green 'Hornet"
- demonstrating martial arts techniques
but hardly ever speaking; Hop Sing in
"Bonanza ;" and Suzie Wong, the prostitute with a heart of gold. I began to
wince when I saw Asians presented in
caricature, but not as people. Finally, a
well-meaning woman told me, "You're
not like other Orientals. Why , I don't
even notice that you're Chinese." And I
realized that I had been trying not to notice that I was Chinese, too .
Now I realize that to exist as a complete person, I must be ·aware of my dual
identities, Chinese and American . I have
to see prejudice and combat it, rather
than adopting a white habit that nullifies
the "offending" Chinese habit. I am hoping that people will no t see me as a white.
American with a Chinese face.
I am often asked, "Do you think of
yourself as Chinese first or American
fiI'st7" The stock answer is, ''I'm Chinese
. and American, and one is no more important than the other." However, now I
feel that I am Chinese firs t, because that
is what I am, and American second because I live in the United States.' But
rather than drawing fine lines between
.race and citizenship, I'd much rather reply
that I'm ' a person of Chinese ancestry .
Asians, as well as other people, must
undergo a de-stereotyping metamorphosis.
With luck, we will begin to see ourselves
as just people, but we will a lso recogn ize
and respect each other's cul tura l heritage.

205 E. 4th
Olyml!i.l . y\.\
357-4345

C::;===::.='~--

GET YOUR PRE S{,1l

-

~'l;(

.. ,,.
................ 1

~

\.. ,
'/

WESTSIDE n ;;\ r i :1

Third ' World Voice

SU Nf<!,\/

A weekly column of opinion and (om ..
mentary by members of the Non - White
Coalition .

By TI FLEMING

By MILLIE BROMBACHER
Radio stations bring many co nnotations
to mind - croon ing di sc jockeys, eff icient
news a nn o u ncers a nd mu sic, mu s ic ,
music. KAOS is mo re.
A for um ·for various viewpo ints, philoso phies and pe rsuasions, Radio Statio n
KA OS has served the Evergreen comm un ity since Ja n . 1 , 1973. KAOS, licensed by
the Federal Communicati ons Comm issio n
to ,Evergreen 's Boa rd of Tru stees, ob jectives include broadcasting programs of an
educational, info rmati ve, cu ltura l a nd entertaining nature wh ile providing community members with an a lternative listening experience.
"We are fulfillin g those initia l goa ls
which were released in November 1972,
but have been up-dating them rece ntly .
We need to establish new definiti o ns a nd
now is a tim e for re-orga ni zin g ourselves
a nd avai lable space to utilize ta lent and
equipm e nt m ore eff ic ie ntly ," says Lee
Riback , stati o n man ager since last October.
Says News D irector Barbara Harnisch,
"K AOS definitely has the poten tial to acco mpli sh all the stated phil osophies a nd,
in ma ny aspects, has. With work, we
co uld fu lfill ou r po tenti a l ; but hav in g the
doub le whammy of b~ in g hum a n and , oftentim es, inexperienced, makes for some
ro ugh edges."
A new 144-hours per week schedule
was ini tia ted Tuesda y, Feb. 25. KAOS
now broadcasts from 6:30 a .m . until 2
a .m. on Mondays through T hursdays.
Weekend broadcasting is contin uou s beginning Fr iday at 6:30 a .m . las ting unti l 2
a. m Mo nd ay. According to Riback, these
time~ do not Cl~nsti tut e a great prob lem .
"Spoken word ' ma terial. ct'nsisting of
speec hes, int erv iews , Radio Ca nada reports a nd public affa Ir!> information , is on
hand in the KAOS ma ter ials co ll ect io n .

In cha rge of deriving current news for
KAOS announcements and news prog ra m s, Harnisch ga thers news item s
through the Associated Press, grapevine,
the Journal and repo rters John Coffey,
Jann Biggs and Bill Cooper. She also hosts
the 30-mi nute Nightly News program and
"News in Depth" on Mondays and Thursday at 9 a.m. until noon. Coverage is extended to world , nat iona l, sta te a nd campus news.
KAOS FM music has also not been ignored . Th e 1,800 volume record library,
co nt a ining classica l, blues, rock and roll ,
soul , country and folk music , is currently
being reorga nized by Music Director Ka rl
Rahder . Rahder expects to have all records listed on co mputer system by mid April fo r quick reference.
Conducting three-hour shows are 55-60
FCC licensed broadcasters. A KAOS anno uncer must hold a first, second or third
class FCC permit. licenses are gra nted
when an ann o unce r demonstra tes FCC
regu lation understanding to either a First
Class FCC holder or by t ~ki n g a test in
Seattle.
A major change in the making is a
pos s ibl e power incre ase to 250-watts
whi ch would grea tly enlarge the present
12-mile listening radius . The Board of
Trustees will meet March 13 to discuss the
power boost, a nd a n open for um will be
held to night a t 7 p.m . in C'AB rm . 110
for co mmunity expression . All interested
are encouraged to attend both meetings
and write letters to the Board.
"I ncreas in g KAOS pow er (li stenin g
range) wi ll benefit the school a nd the
community for KAOS could be the bigges t single factor in developing posit ive
Evergree n opinio ns by introdu cing citizens
to th e schoo l, " exp la in s Riback. He conti nued, " A powe r boost would def ini tely
req uire, howeve r, that we defin t a nd
tighten ou r station and individual respon-

sibilities and goals :"
Should the power increase occur, Riback
hopes to receive financial support for
KAOS with listeners' supportive subscriptions which are tax deductible contributions by a station's listeners.
Another addition to KAOS are two relatively new broadcast programs, "The Invisible Thea ter" and "What's On Your
Mind." Both were initiated by Carl L.
Cook, program director. A Communications Inside / Outside ' coordinated study
program workshop, "The Invisible Theater" boasts seven participants who meet
bi-weekly in the KAOS lounge for rehearsals and taping. Their first production , "Alice in Wonderland" which was
a ired last Sunday, met with overwhelming
community approval and encouragement.
C urrently being produced is "The Invisible Man ."
Although "What's On Your Mind" has
not shared the Theater's success since its
November conception, the five - minute
perso nal commentary will be continued so
it can die a "natural death," according to
Cook. " What's On Your Mind" is a
KAOS feature a llow ing community members to express opinions on anything with- '
out ed iting or censorship. One of few considera ti ons asked is that participants adhere to FCC regulati ons on slanderous
a nd libelous sta tements.
Reg ul a rl y broad casted programs are
many a nd diversified . Among these are:
Jazblo - Jazz a nd Its Roots ; FREED, a
priso n refo rm program; Essence of Deli ght - an ex perimental word and music
program; Baroque C lassics; TESC 'Archi ves Prog ramming ; a nd Women's Radio
Coll ective, a no n-music broadcast focusing o n women a nd society. Other such
programs cove r still larger expanses of
subjec t ma terial, a nd, all one need do, is
set th e rad io di a l o n KA OS-FM 89.3 .
00

Point ourn

When I try to define my feelings about
myself as a Chinese-American, dozens of
sensations crowd my thoughts . I hear
grade school kids yelling, "Chinky
Chinky Chinaman" and my parents cautioning me to . endure the teasing silently;
I smell dinner - it could be stew, spaghetti, tuna casserole or rice, fish, and vegetables; I can feel the embroidered silk of
my first Chinese dress and the scratchy
organdy of my third grade party dress; I
remember my father using both Chinese
herbs and cobalt treatments in an attempt
to cure his cancer; and I can see the faces
of my friends .and hear them sing, "H~ppy
Birthday to you, you 18-year-old ChineseGerman-Jewish-scientist-chorusgirl . . . "
I was involved in drama in high school,
and played, among other roles, a JewishChinese scientist in 'Til Abner," a German shoemaker's wife, and a chorus girl
in "Hello Dolly ."
The roles I played in high school
productions were indicative of my attitudes toward myself. My Chinese heritage often was used as a visual joke, to be
played upon for comic effect. I found that
comedy was one of the few outlets provided for non-whites in the town I grew
up in.
Although experienced very little outright discrimination in my home town, I
came in contact with a good deal of unwitting, submerged prejudice. In grade
school and junior high I was the stereotypical quiet and studious Oriental, referred to by my classmates as "Confucius. " The highest praise I received from a
teacher was, "I wish all my students were
Oriental, then they'd be quiet and study
like you."
When I started high school, I wanted to
escape the "quiet Oriental" stereotype and
become a "real human being." Unfortunately, I tried to be me without relating
to myself first. As a result , I molded myself into the kind of person that the
people around me thought I should be .
My contemporaries were for the most
part WASPs, and as I made their ideas
and concepts my own, I began to discard
CChiriese ideas as old-fashioned · and not
relevant' to my life. The me that I presented to the world had a Chinese face
and yellow skin, but nearly a ll my
thoughts, dreams, and hopes were white.
In short, I had become a "banana"
(yellow on the outside, white on the inside, an Oriental Uncle Tom).
But, slow ly things that I had prev iously
February 27, 1975

shrugged off or ignored began seeping
into my consciousness. I began to hear
the people asking me questions about tra- "
ditional Chinese life "Why do the
Chinese wear white at funerals?", "Why
don't you celebrate New Years when we
do?" , "Why is Chinatown always a
slum?" - as if I carried the answers with
me in a briefcase. The concepts of "Asian"
in the media started to annoy me. To
quote Irvin Paik in his article "A Look at
the Caricatures of the Asians Sketched by
American Movies, " "It often comes as a
shock to Asians to realize that they are
not human beings. At least, not huma n
beings as represented by the movies and
TV . '.. With rare exceptions, Asians
are . .. portrayed as waiters, laundrymen, cooks, villians, Geishas, warlords;
karate experts, prostitutes . . ." Examples
are Jerry Lewis' buck-toothed, myopic ,
pidgin- English speaking Asian; the succession of white Charlie Chans; the a lways sinister Fu Manchu; demure Mrs.
Livingston in "The Courtship of Eddie's
Father; " Bruce Lee in "The Green 'Hornet"
- demonstrating martial arts techniques
but hardly ever speaking; Hop Sing in
"Bonanza ;" and Suzie Wong, the prostitute with a heart of gold. I began to
wince when I saw Asians presented in
caricature, but not as people. Finally, a
well-meaning woman told me, "You're
not like other Orientals. Why , I don't
even notice that you're Chinese." And I
realized that I had been trying not to notice that I was Chinese, too .
Now I realize that to exist as a complete person, I must be ·aware of my dual
identities, Chinese and American . I have
to see prejudice and combat it, rather
than adopting a white habit that nullifies
the "offending" Chinese habit. I am hoping that people will no t see me as a white.
American with a Chinese face.
I am often asked, "Do you think of
yourself as Chinese first or American
fiI'st7" The stock answer is, ''I'm Chinese
. and American, and one is no more important than the other." However, now I
feel that I am Chinese firs t, because that
is what I am, and American second because I live in the United States.' But
rather than drawing fine lines between
.race and citizenship, I'd much rather reply
that I'm ' a person of Chinese ancestry .
Asians, as well as other people, must
undergo a de-stereotyping metamorphosis.
With luck, we will begin to see ourselves
as just people, but we will a lso recogn ize
and respect each other's cul tura l heritage.

205 E. 4th
Olyml!i.l . y\.\
357-4345

C::;===::.='~--

GET YOUR PRE S{,1l

-

~'l;(

.. ,,.
................ 1

~

\.. ,
'/

WESTSIDE n ;;\ r i :1

SPECIAL GROUP PURCHASE DISCOUNT PLAN

TIRE MARK~T~RS
NOT AVAILABLE TO THE
GROUP AFFI LIATION CI

Arrangements have been made with TIRE MARKETERS INC .,
warehouse locations and phone numbers) for you to purchase
wheels and quality retreads at fantastic wholesale dealer pric


I







8

TMI

GROUP WHOLE~ALE
PURCHAS,E
~
I DENTIFICATIONii'iI'lIt

Ir
;.

NAME _ _ __

y
TIRE MARKETERS INC.
buys in multiple carload quant
direct prices on quality merchandise manufactured by SO l
AF F II I A f l O N --E-V-E-RGR EE N STATE COLLEGE
e
TIRE MARKETERS INC. invites 'you to compare prices 0 1
y
the SSSS saved by the special group purchasing p l an, You
n
10 LOCATIO NS TO SERVE YOU!
w ith each purchase . TIRE MARKETERS INC. is comp
regu lations.
La c ey
T a c oma
Sea t t le
4 Paci fi c Ave . S . E . 23 10 Eas t ' 0 ' St.
3 00 E l li o tt A v e . Wes t ,r
TIRE MARKETERS INC. invites you to purchase merch 4L 52
ac e y , W a. 985 0 3
Ta co ma , Wa . 9 8 4 2 1 Sea tt le , Wa . 9 811 9
BankAmericard. If you prefer. easy pay budget terms may L (2 06 ) 4 9 1 · 88 7 2
( 2 0 6) 383 · 38 44
( 2 0 6) AT 4 36 4 1
.In
COO PE R P O I NT J OU RNAL
service if available.
TIRE MARKETERS INC. warehouses are open week days and Saturday. See back page for warehouse hours.
Immediate customer service for mounting and balancing is avai labl e at all TIRE MARKETERS INC. locations .

TIRE MARKETERS INC.

-

Due to the low , low prices, we cannot identify the manufacturer in writing without losing our Factory Direct Purchasing Power , However, we
can list for you the companies who either directly or thru a subsidiary division are manufacturing the products in this price sheet.

SEIBERLING
VEITH
B.F ~ GOODRICH

(1'"

C

fooms jdJlqe from
01~ fo rBPf pe( t110nttL

artd +har

(Ice

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m
~
m
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· ~nt
·JL9ht5 ·carpehr!9

"

and

,vO-rel ·rnO"lMtenal1Ce -motte

-neat.

KEEP THIS PRICE LIST IN A SAFE PLACE FOR FUTURE BUYING INFORMATION

2/15n5

TI RES -BATTERIES- SHOCK ABSORBERS-WHEELS
WHOLESALE
PRICES

-0

m

;;0

"o
Z
-i

COOPd Point Journal

I

,..

.,....~

.-

Affiliat ion

1975

@

IDENTiFICATION

LATEST COMPUTER TYPE
WHEEL BALANCING .

FOUR FULL PLY
EVERYTHING FROM . . .
• A TRUE BARGAIN
• GOOD MILEAGE
• COMFORT RIDE
• MOST SIZES
TO .. ,
• PROVEN PERFORMANCE·
Fed.

Siz e
~~;c~ \xaC~
650 x 1"3 -....:.,.,:.:
5 .~
88~,.~
83

30 MONTH
G UARANTEE

**COMPLETE BRAKE
SERVICE
I!I~.~

. l11'

I

* ALL SERVICE PER FORMED BY FACTORY TRAINED SPECIALISTS.

Fed .
Whse. Exc .
Size
Pri ce Tax
C78 x 13
18.87 1.96
_
._-----D78 x 14
19.68 2.10
19.78 2.27
E78 x 14
21.76 2.40
F78 x 14
G78 x 14
22 .83 2.56
24 .78 2.77
H78 x 14
21.95, 2.41
F78 x 15
G78 x l 5
22 .96 2.60
H78 x 15
24 .78 2.83
J78 x 15
25.25 2.99
L78 x 15
25.87 3 .11

BEST QUALITY

4 PLY POLYESTER
78 SERIES - WHITEWALL Wh se.
40 MONTH
Size
Price
G UARANTEE
A78 x 13
20.95
C78 x !.3 .
E78 x 14
F78 x 14
G78 x 14
H78 x 14
-:!Z~~

2 1.92
23.63
24.88
25.86
26.77

~ ~~ •
Tax
1.77
2.02
2.10
2.32
2.47
2.62

__p 99_ ~

F78 x I S
- - - -24
-.68- -2.55
G78 x 15
26.64 2.69
H 78 x 15
WH ILE CURRENT
SUPPLY LASTS

J78 x 15
L 78 x 15

27 .88
28 .92
29.55

2.92
3.09
3.2 1

• BEST QUALITY
COMPACT & SPORTS

Fed .
Wh se. Exc
Pri ce Tax
16.97 1. 52
14 .77 1.42
- -1.51
560~ 14 .90
600 y 13
15.84 1.44
650 x 13
16.90 1.75
700 x 13
17 87 2. 10
Si ze
600 x 12
520 x 13

56 ~---,sgiJ1.63
695 x 14
560 >< 15
600 x 15

16.90
14 .88
15.88

ADD $ 1.75 ea . fo r WH ITE WA L L
40 M O NTH G UARAN TEE

- FREE INSTALLATION ON ALL NEW PASSENGER CARTIRES MOUNTEDON REGULAR STEEL WH EELS
· 'NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL UNITS

---AI

...
....

-----------

---------

WHITEWALL ADD $ 1.75 ea .
24 M O NTH GUARA NT EE

=

BETTER QUALITY
4 PLY POLYESTER
78 SERIES - WHITEWALL

' 735 x 14
17.87 2.24
775 x 14
18.91 2.41
825 x 14
19.80 2.55
855 >< 14
, 21.86 2.77
735 x 15
15.88 2.23
775 x 15
18.76 2.42
825 x 15
19.80 2.63
8s5~- 22.712:"82
900 x 15
23 .65 3.13

" WH ILE EXISTING INVENTOR Y LASTS

Page 18

,,,

** WHEELAl.IGNMENT
i(U ' _-

Name _ _ _______ _ __ _ __

. 4 PL Y NYLON "

fJU'b132 ·

"A FULL SERVICE COMPANY"

Present this Pricing Schedu le at any of our
warehouses and receive your permanent
membership card.

GOOD QUALITY

Jlrt. ·220

'

1.86
1.79
1.85

SPECIAL GROUP PURCHASE DISCOUNT PLAN

TIRE MARK~T~RS
NOT AVAILABLE TO THE
GROUP AFFI LIATION CI

Arrangements have been made with TIRE MARKETERS INC .,
warehouse locations and phone numbers) for you to purchase
wheels and quality retreads at fantastic wholesale dealer pric


I







8

TMI

GROUP WHOLE~ALE
PURCHAS,E
~
I DENTIFICATIONii'iI'lIt

Ir
;.

NAME _ _ __

y
TIRE MARKETERS INC.
buys in multiple carload quant
direct prices on quality merchandise manufactured by SO l
AF F II I A f l O N --E-V-E-RGR EE N STATE COLLEGE
e
TIRE MARKETERS INC. invites 'you to compare prices 0 1
y
the SSSS saved by the special group purchasing p l an, You
n
10 LOCATIO NS TO SERVE YOU!
w ith each purchase . TIRE MARKETERS INC. is comp
regu lations.
La c ey
T a c oma
Sea t t le
4 Paci fi c Ave . S . E . 23 10 Eas t ' 0 ' St.
3 00 E l li o tt A v e . Wes t ,r
TIRE MARKETERS INC. invites you to purchase merch 4L 52
ac e y , W a. 985 0 3
Ta co ma , Wa . 9 8 4 2 1 Sea tt le , Wa . 9 811 9
BankAmericard. If you prefer. easy pay budget terms may L (2 06 ) 4 9 1 · 88 7 2
( 2 0 6) 383 · 38 44
( 2 0 6) AT 4 36 4 1
.In
COO PE R P O I NT J OU RNAL
service if available.
TIRE MARKETERS INC. warehouses are open week days and Saturday. See back page for warehouse hours.
Immediate customer service for mounting and balancing is avai labl e at all TIRE MARKETERS INC. locations .

TIRE MARKETERS INC.

-

Due to the low , low prices, we cannot identify the manufacturer in writing without losing our Factory Direct Purchasing Power , However, we
can list for you the companies who either directly or thru a subsidiary division are manufacturing the products in this price sheet.

SEIBERLING
VEITH
B.F ~ GOODRICH

(1'"

C

fooms jdJlqe from
01~ fo rBPf pe( t110nttL

artd +har

(Ice

""

r
m
~
m
Z
-i
-i

o
o
o

n

lrtcl~de5 ~v~iyrhit1~ ~
-fW'n.l~tlY~ , ~a~e .

· ~nt
·JL9ht5 ·carpehr!9

"

and

,vO-rel ·rnO"lMtenal1Ce -motte

-neat.

KEEP THIS PRICE LIST IN A SAFE PLACE FOR FUTURE BUYING INFORMATION

2/15n5

TI RES -BATTERIES- SHOCK ABSORBERS-WHEELS
WHOLESALE
PRICES

-0

m

;;0

"o
Z
-i

COOPd Point Journal

I

,..

.,....~

.-

Affiliat ion

1975

@

IDENTiFICATION

LATEST COMPUTER TYPE
WHEEL BALANCING .

FOUR FULL PLY
EVERYTHING FROM . . .
• A TRUE BARGAIN
• GOOD MILEAGE
• COMFORT RIDE
• MOST SIZES
TO .. ,
• PROVEN PERFORMANCE·
Fed.

Siz e
~~;c~ \xaC~
650 x 1"3 -....:.,.,:.:
5 .~
88~,.~
83

30 MONTH
G UARANTEE

**COMPLETE BRAKE
SERVICE
I!I~.~

. l11'

I

* ALL SERVICE PER FORMED BY FACTORY TRAINED SPECIALISTS.

Fed .
Whse. Exc .
Size
Pri ce Tax
C78 x 13
18.87 1.96
_
._-----D78 x 14
19.68 2.10
19.78 2.27
E78 x 14
21.76 2.40
F78 x 14
G78 x 14
22 .83 2.56
24 .78 2.77
H78 x 14
21.95, 2.41
F78 x 15
G78 x l 5
22 .96 2.60
H78 x 15
24 .78 2.83
J78 x 15
25.25 2.99
L78 x 15
25.87 3 .11

BEST QUALITY

4 PLY POLYESTER
78 SERIES - WHITEWALL Wh se.
40 MONTH
Size
Price
G UARANTEE
A78 x 13
20.95
C78 x !.3 .
E78 x 14
F78 x 14
G78 x 14
H78 x 14
-:!Z~~

2 1.92
23.63
24.88
25.86
26.77

~ ~~ •
Tax
1.77
2.02
2.10
2.32
2.47
2.62

__p 99_ ~

F78 x I S
- - - -24
-.68- -2.55
G78 x 15
26.64 2.69
H 78 x 15
WH ILE CURRENT
SUPPLY LASTS

J78 x 15
L 78 x 15

27 .88
28 .92
29.55

2.92
3.09
3.2 1

• BEST QUALITY
COMPACT & SPORTS

Fed .
Wh se. Exc
Pri ce Tax
16.97 1. 52
14 .77 1.42
- -1.51
560~ 14 .90
600 y 13
15.84 1.44
650 x 13
16.90 1.75
700 x 13
17 87 2. 10
Si ze
600 x 12
520 x 13

56 ~---,sgiJ1.63
695 x 14
560 >< 15
600 x 15

16.90
14 .88
15.88

ADD $ 1.75 ea . fo r WH ITE WA L L
40 M O NTH G UARAN TEE

- FREE INSTALLATION ON ALL NEW PASSENGER CARTIRES MOUNTEDON REGULAR STEEL WH EELS
· 'NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL UNITS

---AI

...
....

-----------

---------

WHITEWALL ADD $ 1.75 ea .
24 M O NTH GUARA NT EE

=

BETTER QUALITY
4 PLY POLYESTER
78 SERIES - WHITEWALL

' 735 x 14
17.87 2.24
775 x 14
18.91 2.41
825 x 14
19.80 2.55
855 >< 14
, 21.86 2.77
735 x 15
15.88 2.23
775 x 15
18.76 2.42
825 x 15
19.80 2.63
8s5~- 22.712:"82
900 x 15
23 .65 3.13

" WH ILE EXISTING INVENTOR Y LASTS

Page 18

,,,

** WHEELAl.IGNMENT
i(U ' _-

Name _ _ _______ _ __ _ __

. 4 PL Y NYLON "

fJU'b132 ·

"A FULL SERVICE COMPANY"

Present this Pricing Schedu le at any of our
warehouses and receive your permanent
membership card.

GOOD QUALITY

Jlrt. ·220

'

1.86
1.79
1.85

WHY PAY MORE - BUY DIRECT!

TO BETTER SERVE YOU ....
COMPLETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
SERVICE AVAILABLE BY
FACTORY TRAINED PERSONNEL

GROUP PURCHASING MEANS SS SAVED
78 SERIES
BELTED TIRES
FOR BETTER ...

GOOD QUALITY
2 + 2 WHITEWALL
Wh se
BELTED
Size
C7 8 · 13
078· 14
E78· 14
F78· 14
G78· 14
H78· 14
G78· 15
H18· 15
J78· 15
L78· 15

• HANDLING
• RESISTANCE TO
ROAD HAZARDS
• E XTRA STRENGTH

Pri ce
19 87
2 1 58
2 197
2284
2394
2597

23 84
25 97
2698
2776

Fed
Exc
Tax
2 02
2 18
2 32
2 47
2 62
2 84
2 69
2 92
309
32 1

36 MONTH GUARANTEE

RADIAL TIRES

SI ll'

1<

1·1=1

\.3
13
13
13
14
14
14

155·
165
175
155·
165·
175

185· 1·1
155 · 15
165· 15
185 70 . 15

3696
2880
3 1 95
44 8 1

Fed
E xc
l1X

1 31

134
146
168
1 73
1 54
1 78

1 89
203
161
187
223

40 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

GOOD QUALITY
WIDE 70 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
WHILE CURRENT
4 PLY
SUPPLY LASTS

SIZ e
F7 0· 14
G70 · 14
F70· 15
G70 · 15

Wh se
Pri ce
2564
26 98
25 75
27 26

Fed
Exc
Tax
2 62
2 77
2 65
2 87

WH IL E I NVENTORY LA S TS

BEST QUALITY
WIDE 70 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS

SIZ e
A70 - 13
E70 · 14
F70· 14
G70 · 14
G 70 · 15
H70 ·1 5

Wh se
Pri ce
2 1 88
26 92
29 .88
3 1 73
3 1 83
33 63

Fed
Ex c
Tax

2 00
2 47
2.6 1
2.80
2 83
3 06

spoins
STEEL
RADIAL

W hse.
Price
145 x 13
2880
155 , 13
298 4
- - - -32
165 · 13
84

Fed
Exc
Tax
1 38
1 ,14
1 57

17 5· 13
155· 14
165· 14
175·14
16 5 · 14
155 x 15
16 5 · 15
17570 · 13
185 70 . 13
18570· 14

183
1 53
1 67
1 98
21 9
1 60
1.75
1.63
1.83
1.94

34 88
3256
34 76
399 1
4279
34 64
3786
35.68
37 9 7
3759

SIze
155 SR . 12
145 S R · 13
155 SR· 13
165 S R · 13
165SR·14
155 SR . 15
165 SR . 15
175S R · 14

A 70 · 13
0 70 - 14
E70 - 14
F70 · 14
G70· 14
H·70· 14

Fed
Exc
Tax
2 06
2.97

3.44
3 02
354

F70 · 15
G70 · 15
H70 · 15

WHILE INVENTORY LA STS

BEST QUALITY
WIDER 69 SERIES
BELTED 2 + 2
RAISED WHITE LETTERS

SIZ e

H60 - 14
F60 , 15
H60 , 15
L60 · 15

Fed
Whse Exc
Price Tax
3294 1 50

32 98
14 06
35 48
3655
37 44
3927
38 97

Wh se.
Pri ce
29 88
35 .85
39.87
35 69
39 .84
41 .99

2 .12
3 01
3 .51
2 .98
3 .64
3 .76

IIA,.,.

SIZe
850 , 13
GSO . 14
M50 , 14
G50 - 15
L50 < 1 5

1 33
1 65
1 83
1 94
1 82
207
2 09

Wh se

Fe d
Exc

Pn ce

Tax

22 88
25 88
2692
29 78
3 1 48
32 81
29.82
3 1 93
32 63

2 00
2 42
2 47
2 61
2 80
3 02
2 73
2.83
3 06

Wh s e
Pri ce
33 .25
4258
50 .69
4287
49 96

Fed
Wh se Exc
Pri ce
Ta x
26 74 1 89
29 8 1 2 44
3 1 39 2 .58
32 96 2 74
34 3 1 294
35 90 2 99
3332 2 81
34 73 302
3622 3 13
37 98 330

SIZ e
A78 · 13
E78· 14
F78 · 14
G 78· 14
H78· 14
J 78 · 14
G 78·1 5
H78 · 15
J78· 15
L78 · 15







POWER DESIGNS
TOUGHNESS
ALL SIZES AVAIL.
MILEAGE PLUS
NEWEST IDEAS

P
SIze
670· 15
700· 15
750· 16

BETTER QUALITY
TRACTION DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBED TYPE

PRICED
AT A
LOW
LOW
COST

P
L

S,ze

50 & 60 '& 70

SERIES TIRES

6
6
8

650· ' 6
700 · 16
750 · 16

6
6
8

2648
2984
34 57
27 58
33 11
3988

272
3 19
340
2 91
330
397

T RACTION D ES IGN

L60 - 15

SIZe

P
L
Y

F.ed
Ex c
Tax
3 74

Fed
Wh se Exc
Pri ce Tax

890 >~H~y 39.953 65
890 < 15 6 Tra c 41 9 5 36 5

L

S ile

Y

L

Y
6
8
8

Whse
Pri ce
3535
37 93
41 53

Fed
Exc
Tax
36 1
370
3 96

MUD & 'SNOW
TIRES
THAT ARE ...





PINNED FOR STUDS
EXTREMELY QUIET
DEEP DEEP TREAD
BUILT TO TAKE IT

BEST QUALITY
BELTED 2 + 2
78 & 70 SERIES WIDE
WHITEWALL
SIZe
A x 13
C x 13
C x 14
E x 14

G v 14
H < 14
Fx iS ,

G x 15
H v 15

HIGHWAY ,

Fed
Exr
Tax
338
364
401

P
TRA C
SIZ e
H78 · 15
H78· 15
' L78 · 16

F x 14

J > 15
L x 15

TRACTION

Grade, line, level or quality representation relates to private
standard of marketer of the tire. No industry standard exists.

Wh se
Pnce
3366
3598
3956

P

HWY

H78· 15 6
H78· 15 8
' L78- 16 8

WIDE WIDE LOOK
SPORTY APPEARANCE
PERFORMANCE PLUS
EXTRA MILEAGE

MESA RIDER
SUPER WIDE LOOK
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
PICKUPS,
JEEPS,
BRONCOS,
ETC .

rUB ED TY P E
REPLA CES 700- 15 750· 16

TRUCK TIRES
HIGHWAY DESIGN

FOR THAT

HIGH PROFILE
JEEPS & PICKUPS

Fed
Exc .
Tax
239
30 1
3 98
302
3 85

Y

670 · 15
700· 15
700· 1 ~

Fed
Whse Exc
Pt lce Tax

78 SERIES

Wh se
Pn ce
4562

L
.(

FeJ
Wh se Ex c
Pri ce Tax

6
6
8

2284 243
2598 280
3483 359

II"

Wh se
Pri ce
21 92
23 46
24.32
25 50
26.38
' 27---,-e
2942
26 78

Wh se
Price
327 4
3502
41 37

P
L
Y
G78· 1 ~ 6
H78 · 15 6
' L78 . 16 8

Wh se
Pri ce
37.73
41.01
44 96

TRAC
Si ze

Fed
E xc .
Tax
177
2.02
2. 10
2.32
2 .47
2.62
2 .84
2.55

27~~!l,
3095 2.92
31 56 3 .09
33.22 3 .2 1

-

L
Y
8
8

SIZe
700·1 3
700 · 14
670· 15
7 . 17 5

'NEW

8· 175

6
8

8 . 19 5

8

Wh se
PrI ce
2395
2669
2580
3582
438 1

Fed
xc
Tax
2 53
260
2 73
328
J 86

48 20 4 44

3 RIB DESIGN AVAILABLE SOON

P
Siz e
87,· 11i5
g50· 16 5
10· 165
12· 165
12· 165

----10

69 82599

L
Y

8
'8

Fen
Wh s(l

Pri c e

EX(
T rl~

8

J 663 4 2'.1
.1966 4 70
'i 21 .182

8
10

6767 604
73 48 6 40

SUPER WIDE
RECREATIONAL
EQUIPMENT TIRES
10-15 4 o r 6 PLY

Tax
3 34
355
3.99

COMBINATION HIGHWAY

& TRA C TION DESI G N
· HIGHE S T PROFILE

Fed
Exc
Tax

Size
10- 15
10-15

3 .59
3 .63
4 .01

P
L
Y
4
6

Fed
Whse Exc
Pnce
Tax
41 6 1 4 16
44 75 4 19

CENTURY
SHOCK ABSORBERS
(M a d e by o n e 0 1 th e
wor l d 's la rg es t s h oc k mlrs. )

BEST QUALITY

4 PLY
78 & 70

Wh se .
Size -:-_ _
P.:..
ric:.,c
e
800 " 12
17.65
560x13
17.45
800 x 13
17.95
155/6 15 x 13 1895
18 30
17 82
1973

Fed
Exc .
Tax
1. 52
1 53
1.60
1.7 1
178
1.79
1 94

COMP..ACT &
SPORTS MUD & SNOW
RADIAL TIRES
Fed .
Wh se . Exc
Pri c e Ta x
SIZ e
155 · 12
30.87 1.51
155 x 13
3 1.31
1.60
165 x 13
32.72 1.77
175 x 13
- - .37.56
- -1.96
35.37 1.88
165 " 14
37.98
2.08
175 " 14
4011 2 . 2~
185 > 14
155 > 15
33.57 1.77
165 >< 15
36.27 1.96

Prices Subject To Change Without Notice.
Many Tires Available That Are Not Listed.

P

DUPLEX
TRACTION

12 )< 16 .5

Fed
Ex c

MUD & SNOW DESIGN
CROSS PLYS
COMPACT & SPORTS

650 " 13
560 >< 15
600x15

BETTER QUALITY
' HIGHWAY DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBELESS

10716.5---8 48
-----12 x 16 5
8
5990568

REPLACES G 78- 15.
700-15.7 50 - 16

P

Fed
bc
Tax
2 43
280
294
227
257
2 92
3. 27
3 59
3.57
3.97
3.77

P
Fed .
L Whse Exc
Size
Y
Price Tax
800 x 16 5
-6. -38.75
- -346
875 y 16 5
8
43. 65 396
950 . 16 5
8
49.52 4 45
10 . 16 .5
6
4571 428
6~ 4 56

'TUBED T YPE

L
Y
6
6
8

• SHOCK ABSORBERS

DUPLF'(
HIGH WAY

--

HWY
Size
G78· 15
H78· 15
· L7 8·16

Wh se
Pfl ce
2388
6 2787
8
3282
6
24 34
6
2680
6
2887
6
3384
3788
8
8
3863
8
43 .73
8
37.76

• RETREADS

3 RIB DESIGN AVAILABLE SOON

P
Fed .
L Wh se . Exc .
Size
Y
Price T ax
8 3 1.90 2 84
700,14
--- 670·15
631 .68 3.07
-32.87
- 3.30
650 . 16
6
7· 17. 5
6 '3985 3.6 1
8 · 175
8 46.74 4 .32
BEST QUALITY
. 78 SERIES
TRUCK TIRES
HIGHWAY DESIGN
T RACTION DESIGN

P
L
Y
6

670· 15
700· 15
700 · 15
600 ·1 6
650· 16
700· 16
750· 16
750· 16
700· 17
750· 17
700 . 18

BETTER QUALITY
TRACTION DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBELESS

GOOD QUALIT Y

S,ze

BETTER QUALITY
' HIGHWAY DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES SIZ e

' NEW

NAME BRAND
B.F. GOODRICH
RADIAL 60 T.A.
STEEL RADIAL
& 50 SERIES T.A.






• BATTERIES
• MAG WHEELS

GOOD QUALITY
HIGHWAY DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBED TYPE

TRUCK TIRES
WiTH ....

NATIONALL Y G UARANTE E D

WIDE - WIDE - WIDE
50 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS

Fed .
Exc .
Tax

installation on all new passenger car tires mounted on
regular steel wheels

3 17
331
346

55 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

SUPPLY LASTS

A60 " 13
F60 , 14

HR78 · 15
47 85
J R78 · 15
49 45
LR 78 , 15
49 8 7

BEST QUALITY
WIDE 70 SERIES
BELTED 2 + 2
WHITEWALL SIZe

GOOD QUALI1Y
WI,DER 60 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
WHILE CURRENT
4 PLY
Whse .
Price
24.76
G60 y 1 4
29.98
L60 , 14
36 .38
G60 x 15
30 23
3868
L60 x 15

2 55
267
2 89
3 09
296

BEST QUALITY BY UNIROYAL
COMPACT & SPORTS
STEEL RADIAL
WHITEWALL

50 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

Size
A60 x 13

ER 78 " 14
39 8
FR 78 / 14
4 385
GR78 x 14
44 .85
H
'-::R
=-=7:-:0
6-'"7"14-:-----:C
:-::
46::-C.90
GR78 . . 5 -4"5'95-

55 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

40 .000 MIL E G UARANTEE

Wh ,e
Pri ce
2586
2393
25 88
2796
2995
2825
2973
3192

Wh se .
Price
34 97

----

-

-_.- - -

EUROPEAN
COMPACT &

BEST Q ALiTY
STEEL BELTED
WHITEWALL

50 MONTH GUARANTEE

Fed .
Exc
Tax
2 .16

Size
BR78/ 13

- ---

• RIDE
• MILEAGE
• ECONOM Y

* Free

BEST QUALITY
STEEL RADIAL

Fed
Wh se Exc.
SIZe
Pri c e Tax
CR78· 14
298 7 2. 16
ER78· 14
33. 85 2 5 1
FR78·1 4
3 5.67 2.66
GR78- 14
2.88
- 37.73
- -HR78· 14
39 .87 3.04
GR7tl· 15
37 85 2 95
HR78 · 15
389 0 3. 17
----JR78· 15
39.45 330
LR78 " 15
39.60 3 46

• PERFORMANC E
• QUALI T Y

1'> ~

A 78 · 13
C7 8· 13
E78· 14
F78 · 14
G78 · 14
H78 · 14
F78 · 15
G7 8· 15
H78 · 15
J78 · 15
L78· 15

Wh se
Pri c e
22 94
24 76
25 88
26.97
28 67
2896
2694
28 68
29.88
3096
32. 96

Fed
Ex c
Ta x
1 77
2 02
2 32
2 47
2 62
2 84
2 55
2 69
2 92
3 .09
3.21

48 MONTH GUARANTEE

GOOD QUALITY
RADIAL WHITEWALL

FOR THE
ULTIMATE IN ...

EUROP EAN
COMPACT &
SPORTS
FA BRI C
RAD IAL

BETTER QUALITY
2 + 2 BELTED
WHITEWALL
SIZe

ALSO AVAILABLE AT GROUP PRICES

POL VES TER

SERIES WIDE
WH I TEWALL
Si ze
A·1 3
C ·1 3
C· 14

E < 1a
F'


F,

14
14
14
15

G ·1 5
H • 15
J x 15
L < 15

~ ed

Wh se
Pnc e
2 1 04
22 00
2278
24 52
25 35
2659
2906
25 77
27 11
29 58
30 14
3 1 74

Exc
Ta x
1 76
1 98
2 04
2 27
2.40
2 56
2 77
2 45
2 60
2.83
2.99
3 11

Wh se .
Price
34 .06
---38 .93
4046
41.79

HR 78 '..:...1
:....:
4_....c4...c.
487
GR78 < 15
42 49
44 .26
HR78 x 15
JR78 x 15
47 .61
- - - -LR78 x 15
50.34

Standard
Gu,t'rdntr'ed
2 4 rnonthc; o r ;> 4 000

rnll(> ~

$3.83 ea.

Heavy Duty
Guru a nt cf'c1

$5.97 ea.

=---..1_-

60 mon 1hs Or 60000 mil",

Co..t~;

0

Extra Heavy Duty

STEEL RADIAL
MUD & SNOW DESIGN
78 SERIES WHITEWALL
SIZ e
BR 78 - 13
ER78 x 14
FR78 x 14
GR78 x 14

- - - -"J 0

()tl

G u a f a n t ~ed

Lif e time 0 1 ve hl clp

Fed
Exc .
Tax

2. 16
--2.55
2 67
2.89
3.09
2.96
3. 17
3.3 1
3.46

$7.45 ea.

o~~\'\'\'\m c
Front & Rear Level Litl Spring
Gua rant eed
60 rn o n1h s o r 60 .000 m il S

.~-

$12.30 ea.

- c. ___ .- --

Ultra-Uti Heavy Duty Air Adjustable
G ua rant eed
L de tlm e o f vei1lctp

-~

USE YOUR
BANKAMERICARD OR MASTERCHARGE

$37.98 pair

WHY PAY MORE - BUY DIRECT!

TO BETTER SERVE YOU ....
COMPLETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
SERVICE AVAILABLE BY
FACTORY TRAINED PERSONNEL

GROUP PURCHASING MEANS SS SAVED
78 SERIES
BELTED TIRES
FOR BETTER ...

GOOD QUALITY
2 + 2 WHITEWALL
Wh se
BELTED
Size
C7 8 · 13
078· 14
E78· 14
F78· 14
G78· 14
H78· 14
G78· 15
H18· 15
J78· 15
L78· 15

• HANDLING
• RESISTANCE TO
ROAD HAZARDS
• E XTRA STRENGTH

Pri ce
19 87
2 1 58
2 197
2284
2394
2597

23 84
25 97
2698
2776

Fed
Exc
Tax
2 02
2 18
2 32
2 47
2 62
2 84
2 69
2 92
309
32 1

36 MONTH GUARANTEE

RADIAL TIRES

SI ll'

1<

1·1=1

\.3
13
13
13
14
14
14

155·
165
175
155·
165·
175

185· 1·1
155 · 15
165· 15
185 70 . 15

3696
2880
3 1 95
44 8 1

Fed
E xc
l1X

1 31

134
146
168
1 73
1 54
1 78

1 89
203
161
187
223

40 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

GOOD QUALITY
WIDE 70 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
WHILE CURRENT
4 PLY
SUPPLY LASTS

SIZ e
F7 0· 14
G70 · 14
F70· 15
G70 · 15

Wh se
Pri ce
2564
26 98
25 75
27 26

Fed
Exc
Tax
2 62
2 77
2 65
2 87

WH IL E I NVENTORY LA S TS

BEST QUALITY
WIDE 70 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS

SIZ e
A70 - 13
E70 · 14
F70· 14
G70 · 14
G 70 · 15
H70 ·1 5

Wh se
Pri ce
2 1 88
26 92
29 .88
3 1 73
3 1 83
33 63

Fed
Ex c
Tax

2 00
2 47
2.6 1
2.80
2 83
3 06

spoins
STEEL
RADIAL

W hse.
Price
145 x 13
2880
155 , 13
298 4
- - - -32
165 · 13
84

Fed
Exc
Tax
1 38
1 ,14
1 57

17 5· 13
155· 14
165· 14
175·14
16 5 · 14
155 x 15
16 5 · 15
17570 · 13
185 70 . 13
18570· 14

183
1 53
1 67
1 98
21 9
1 60
1.75
1.63
1.83
1.94

34 88
3256
34 76
399 1
4279
34 64
3786
35.68
37 9 7
3759

SIze
155 SR . 12
145 S R · 13
155 SR· 13
165 S R · 13
165SR·14
155 SR . 15
165 SR . 15
175S R · 14

A 70 · 13
0 70 - 14
E70 - 14
F70 · 14
G70· 14
H·70· 14

Fed
Exc
Tax
2 06
2.97

3.44
3 02
354

F70 · 15
G70 · 15
H70 · 15

WHILE INVENTORY LA STS

BEST QUALITY
WIDER 69 SERIES
BELTED 2 + 2
RAISED WHITE LETTERS

SIZ e

H60 - 14
F60 , 15
H60 , 15
L60 · 15

Fed
Whse Exc
Price Tax
3294 1 50

32 98
14 06
35 48
3655
37 44
3927
38 97

Wh se.
Pri ce
29 88
35 .85
39.87
35 69
39 .84
41 .99

2 .12
3 01
3 .51
2 .98
3 .64
3 .76

IIA,.,.

SIZe
850 , 13
GSO . 14
M50 , 14
G50 - 15
L50 < 1 5

1 33
1 65
1 83
1 94
1 82
207
2 09

Wh se

Fe d
Exc

Pn ce

Tax

22 88
25 88
2692
29 78
3 1 48
32 81
29.82
3 1 93
32 63

2 00
2 42
2 47
2 61
2 80
3 02
2 73
2.83
3 06

Wh s e
Pri ce
33 .25
4258
50 .69
4287
49 96

Fed
Wh se Exc
Pri ce
Ta x
26 74 1 89
29 8 1 2 44
3 1 39 2 .58
32 96 2 74
34 3 1 294
35 90 2 99
3332 2 81
34 73 302
3622 3 13
37 98 330

SIZ e
A78 · 13
E78· 14
F78 · 14
G 78· 14
H78· 14
J 78 · 14
G 78·1 5
H78 · 15
J78· 15
L78 · 15







POWER DESIGNS
TOUGHNESS
ALL SIZES AVAIL.
MILEAGE PLUS
NEWEST IDEAS

P
SIze
670· 15
700· 15
750· 16

BETTER QUALITY
TRACTION DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBED TYPE

PRICED
AT A
LOW
LOW
COST

P
L

S,ze

50 & 60 '& 70

SERIES TIRES

6
6
8

650· ' 6
700 · 16
750 · 16

6
6
8

2648
2984
34 57
27 58
33 11
3988

272
3 19
340
2 91
330
397

T RACTION D ES IGN

L60 - 15

SIZe

P
L
Y

F.ed
Ex c
Tax
3 74

Fed
Wh se Exc
Pri ce Tax

890 >~H~y 39.953 65
890 < 15 6 Tra c 41 9 5 36 5

L

S ile

Y

L

Y
6
8
8

Whse
Pri ce
3535
37 93
41 53

Fed
Exc
Tax
36 1
370
3 96

MUD & 'SNOW
TIRES
THAT ARE ...





PINNED FOR STUDS
EXTREMELY QUIET
DEEP DEEP TREAD
BUILT TO TAKE IT

BEST QUALITY
BELTED 2 + 2
78 & 70 SERIES WIDE
WHITEWALL
SIZe
A x 13
C x 13
C x 14
E x 14

G v 14
H < 14
Fx iS ,

G x 15
H v 15

HIGHWAY ,

Fed
Exr
Tax
338
364
401

P
TRA C
SIZ e
H78 · 15
H78· 15
' L78 · 16

F x 14

J > 15
L x 15

TRACTION

Grade, line, level or quality representation relates to private
standard of marketer of the tire. No industry standard exists.

Wh se
Pnce
3366
3598
3956

P

HWY

H78· 15 6
H78· 15 8
' L78- 16 8

WIDE WIDE LOOK
SPORTY APPEARANCE
PERFORMANCE PLUS
EXTRA MILEAGE

MESA RIDER
SUPER WIDE LOOK
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
PICKUPS,
JEEPS,
BRONCOS,
ETC .

rUB ED TY P E
REPLA CES 700- 15 750· 16

TRUCK TIRES
HIGHWAY DESIGN

FOR THAT

HIGH PROFILE
JEEPS & PICKUPS

Fed
Exc .
Tax
239
30 1
3 98
302
3 85

Y

670 · 15
700· 15
700· 1 ~

Fed
Whse Exc
Pt lce Tax

78 SERIES

Wh se
Pn ce
4562

L
.(

FeJ
Wh se Ex c
Pri ce Tax

6
6
8

2284 243
2598 280
3483 359

II"

Wh se
Pri ce
21 92
23 46
24.32
25 50
26.38
' 27---,-e
2942
26 78

Wh se
Price
327 4
3502
41 37

P
L
Y
G78· 1 ~ 6
H78 · 15 6
' L78 . 16 8

Wh se
Pri ce
37.73
41.01
44 96

TRAC
Si ze

Fed
E xc .
Tax
177
2.02
2. 10
2.32
2 .47
2.62
2 .84
2.55

27~~!l,
3095 2.92
31 56 3 .09
33.22 3 .2 1

-

L
Y
8
8

SIZe
700·1 3
700 · 14
670· 15
7 . 17 5

'NEW

8· 175

6
8

8 . 19 5

8

Wh se
PrI ce
2395
2669
2580
3582
438 1

Fed
xc
Tax
2 53
260
2 73
328
J 86

48 20 4 44

3 RIB DESIGN AVAILABLE SOON

P
Siz e
87,· 11i5
g50· 16 5
10· 165
12· 165
12· 165

----10

69 82599

L
Y

8
'8

Fen
Wh s(l

Pri c e

EX(
T rl~

8

J 663 4 2'.1
.1966 4 70
'i 21 .182

8
10

6767 604
73 48 6 40

SUPER WIDE
RECREATIONAL
EQUIPMENT TIRES
10-15 4 o r 6 PLY

Tax
3 34
355
3.99

COMBINATION HIGHWAY

& TRA C TION DESI G N
· HIGHE S T PROFILE

Fed
Exc
Tax

Size
10- 15
10-15

3 .59
3 .63
4 .01

P
L
Y
4
6

Fed
Whse Exc
Pnce
Tax
41 6 1 4 16
44 75 4 19

CENTURY
SHOCK ABSORBERS
(M a d e by o n e 0 1 th e
wor l d 's la rg es t s h oc k mlrs. )

BEST QUALITY

4 PLY
78 & 70

Wh se .
Size -:-_ _
P.:..
ric:.,c
e
800 " 12
17.65
560x13
17.45
800 x 13
17.95
155/6 15 x 13 1895
18 30
17 82
1973

Fed
Exc .
Tax
1. 52
1 53
1.60
1.7 1
178
1.79
1 94

COMP..ACT &
SPORTS MUD & SNOW
RADIAL TIRES
Fed .
Wh se . Exc
Pri c e Ta x
SIZ e
155 · 12
30.87 1.51
155 x 13
3 1.31
1.60
165 x 13
32.72 1.77
175 x 13
- - .37.56
- -1.96
35.37 1.88
165 " 14
37.98
2.08
175 " 14
4011 2 . 2~
185 > 14
155 > 15
33.57 1.77
165 >< 15
36.27 1.96

Prices Subject To Change Without Notice.
Many Tires Available That Are Not Listed.

P

DUPLEX
TRACTION

12 )< 16 .5

Fed
Ex c

MUD & SNOW DESIGN
CROSS PLYS
COMPACT & SPORTS

650 " 13
560 >< 15
600x15

BETTER QUALITY
' HIGHWAY DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBELESS

10716.5---8 48
-----12 x 16 5
8
5990568

REPLACES G 78- 15.
700-15.7 50 - 16

P

Fed
bc
Tax
2 43
280
294
227
257
2 92
3. 27
3 59
3.57
3.97
3.77

P
Fed .
L Whse Exc
Size
Y
Price Tax
800 x 16 5
-6. -38.75
- -346
875 y 16 5
8
43. 65 396
950 . 16 5
8
49.52 4 45
10 . 16 .5
6
4571 428
6~ 4 56

'TUBED T YPE

L
Y
6
6
8

• SHOCK ABSORBERS

DUPLF'(
HIGH WAY

--

HWY
Size
G78· 15
H78· 15
· L7 8·16

Wh se
Pfl ce
2388
6 2787
8
3282
6
24 34
6
2680
6
2887
6
3384
3788
8
8
3863
8
43 .73
8
37.76

• RETREADS

3 RIB DESIGN AVAILABLE SOON

P
Fed .
L Wh se . Exc .
Size
Y
Price T ax
8 3 1.90 2 84
700,14
--- 670·15
631 .68 3.07
-32.87
- 3.30
650 . 16
6
7· 17. 5
6 '3985 3.6 1
8 · 175
8 46.74 4 .32
BEST QUALITY
. 78 SERIES
TRUCK TIRES
HIGHWAY DESIGN
T RACTION DESIGN

P
L
Y
6

670· 15
700· 15
700 · 15
600 ·1 6
650· 16
700· 16
750· 16
750· 16
700· 17
750· 17
700 . 18

BETTER QUALITY
TRACTION DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBELESS

GOOD QUALIT Y

S,ze

BETTER QUALITY
' HIGHWAY DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES SIZ e

' NEW

NAME BRAND
B.F. GOODRICH
RADIAL 60 T.A.
STEEL RADIAL
& 50 SERIES T.A.






• BATTERIES
• MAG WHEELS

GOOD QUALITY
HIGHWAY DESIGN
TRUCK TIRES
TUBED TYPE

TRUCK TIRES
WiTH ....

NATIONALL Y G UARANTE E D

WIDE - WIDE - WIDE
50 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS

Fed .
Exc .
Tax

installation on all new passenger car tires mounted on
regular steel wheels

3 17
331
346

55 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

SUPPLY LASTS

A60 " 13
F60 , 14

HR78 · 15
47 85
J R78 · 15
49 45
LR 78 , 15
49 8 7

BEST QUALITY
WIDE 70 SERIES
BELTED 2 + 2
WHITEWALL SIZe

GOOD QUALI1Y
WI,DER 60 SERIES
RAISED WHITE LETTERS
WHILE CURRENT
4 PLY
Whse .
Price
24.76
G60 y 1 4
29.98
L60 , 14
36 .38
G60 x 15
30 23
3868
L60 x 15

2 55
267
2 89
3 09
296

BEST QUALITY BY UNIROYAL
COMPACT & SPORTS
STEEL RADIAL
WHITEWALL

50 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

Size
A60 x 13

ER 78 " 14
39 8
FR 78 / 14
4 385
GR78 x 14
44 .85
H
'-::R
=-=7:-:0
6-'"7"14-:-----:C
:-::
46::-C.90
GR78 . . 5 -4"5'95-

55 ,000 MILE GUARANTEE

40 .000 MIL E G UARANTEE

Wh ,e
Pri ce
2586
2393
25 88
2796
2995
2825
2973
3192

Wh se .
Price
34 97

----

-

-_.- - -

EUROPEAN
COMPACT &

BEST Q ALiTY
STEEL BELTED
WHITEWALL

50 MONTH GUARANTEE

Fed .
Exc
Tax
2 .16

Size
BR78/ 13

- ---

• RIDE
• MILEAGE
• ECONOM Y

* Free

BEST QUALITY
STEEL RADIAL

Fed
Wh se Exc.
SIZe
Pri c e Tax
CR78· 14
298 7 2. 16
ER78· 14
33. 85 2 5 1
FR78·1 4
3 5.67 2.66
GR78- 14
2.88
- 37.73
- -HR78· 14
39 .87 3.04
GR7tl· 15
37 85 2 95
HR78 · 15
389 0 3. 17
----JR78· 15
39.45 330
LR78 " 15
39.60 3 46

• PERFORMANC E
• QUALI T Y

1'> ~

A 78 · 13
C7 8· 13
E78· 14
F78 · 14
G78 · 14
H78 · 14
F78 · 15
G7 8· 15
H78 · 15
J78 · 15
L78· 15

Wh se
Pri c e
22 94
24 76
25 88
26.97
28 67
2896
2694
28 68
29.88
3096
32. 96

Fed
Ex c
Ta x
1 77
2 02
2 32
2 47
2 62
2 84
2 55
2 69
2 92
3 .09
3.21

48 MONTH GUARANTEE

GOOD QUALITY
RADIAL WHITEWALL

FOR THE
ULTIMATE IN ...

EUROP EAN
COMPACT &
SPORTS
FA BRI C
RAD IAL

BETTER QUALITY
2 + 2 BELTED
WHITEWALL
SIZe

ALSO AVAILABLE AT GROUP PRICES

POL VES TER

SERIES WIDE
WH I TEWALL
Si ze
A·1 3
C ·1 3
C· 14

E < 1a
F'


F,

14
14
14
15

G ·1 5
H • 15
J x 15
L < 15

~ ed

Wh se
Pnc e
2 1 04
22 00
2278
24 52
25 35
2659
2906
25 77
27 11
29 58
30 14
3 1 74

Exc
Ta x
1 76
1 98
2 04
2 27
2.40
2 56
2 77
2 45
2 60
2.83
2.99
3 11

Wh se .
Price
34 .06
---38 .93
4046
41.79

HR 78 '..:...1
:....:
4_....c4...c.
487
GR78 < 15
42 49
44 .26
HR78 x 15
JR78 x 15
47 .61
- - - -LR78 x 15
50.34

Standard
Gu,t'rdntr'ed
2 4 rnonthc; o r ;> 4 000

rnll(> ~

$3.83 ea.

Heavy Duty
Guru a nt cf'c1

$5.97 ea.

=---..1_-

60 mon 1hs Or 60000 mil",

Co..t~;

0

Extra Heavy Duty

STEEL RADIAL
MUD & SNOW DESIGN
78 SERIES WHITEWALL
SIZ e
BR 78 - 13
ER78 x 14
FR78 x 14
GR78 x 14

- - - -"J 0

()tl

G u a f a n t ~ed

Lif e time 0 1 ve hl clp

Fed
Exc .
Tax

2. 16
--2.55
2 67
2.89
3.09
2.96
3. 17
3.3 1
3.46

$7.45 ea.

o~~\'\'\'\m c
Front & Rear Level Litl Spring
Gua rant eed
60 rn o n1h s o r 60 .000 m il S

.~-

$12.30 ea.

- c. ___ .- --

Ultra-Uti Heavy Duty Air Adjustable
G ua rant eed
L de tlm e o f vei1lctp

-~

USE YOUR
BANKAMERICARD OR MASTERCHARGE

$37.98 pair

TIRE MARKETERS INC.

~~~~~~~COOPER

10 LOC A TIO NS TO SERVE YOU
N EW L DCA TlO N
SE ATTLE
300 Elli o tt Av e W e s t
Se a tt le. W a 98119
Pho n e (2 06) AT 4 -3641

NORTH I(ING CO UNTY
N 205 1h & M e ndian A ve N
1(1Il9 & Snoho m i s h Co Lin e
Ph o n e (2 06) 7755541

TACO M A
23 10 Eas t 'D ' SI.
T aco m a. W a _ 98421
Pho ne - (206 ) 383 -3844

OLY M PI A
4524 Pacif ic A ve. S.E _
Lacey , Wa . 9 850 3
Pho ne: ( 20 6 ) 491 -8872

POINT JOURNAL

CULTURE.ARTS.ENTERTAINMENT
(

S POI( ANE
413 Thl e rm a n Rd _ N o _
Sp o k a n e . W a _ 99206
Phon e (509) I(E 57722

YA I(IMA
2 16 So _ 2nd Av e _
Y a kim a. W a _ 98902
Ph o n e (5 09) 453 -4861

OAKLAND
66t h & Co l iseum Way
O a kl a nd . C a l. 94621
Phon e : (415) 635 -2801

SACRAMENTO
9th & 'S ' Street
Sacramento, Cal. 96816
Phone (916) 444 -5733

PORTLAND . O RE _

3030 N_W . 29th Avenue
Portland , Oregon 97210
Phone : 503-226-4521
REDWOOD CITY
1475 Veterans Bl v d _
Redwood City , Ca l. 94063
Phone : (415) 364 -4511
NORTH

STORE HOURS

<1

MON. t hru F R I.
9am - 6pm
SAT.

.,

9am - 4pm
Some locations open
. later - Please Ca ll i

01

SOU1 H on
FRE EWAY 5

\\'E,~:;:::;::;:::;:;;" ' .ke

TKoma

0

'~I,,( """' D Cll y e. " 10

~

(/
~

d

0

PU\ld llup A ... ltru....
t hen 10

' 0 ' S ' ,e-el

tronl N OR T H

t". S l EIfiAH T S T e.11
78 SERIES DESI.GN
HIGHWAY RETREADS
WIDE - WIDE - LOOK
BLACK WALL - TUBELESS

EXC HANGE PR ICE PLUS FED EXC . TAX
ADO $ 1_95 FOR WH I TEWAL L

(48 Month Pro Rated)

TWO YEAR~

A PROMISE TO OUR CUSTO MERS

FREE REPLACEMENT
12 VOLT

36 MONTH
48 MONTH
LIFETIME
G UARANTE E GUARANTEE GUARANTEE

(36 Month Pro Rated)

24C

22 .90

26.90

35.70

24F

22. 90

26.90

35.70

ONE YEAR

33 .70

FREE REPLACEMENT

22F

19_80

29NF

22 _90

Size
Fils
A78 - 13 A 78- 1:!
735 - 14 [78 - 14
775 - 14 F78-14
825·14 G78-14
855 - 14 H78-14
885 - 14 J78- 14
775 - 15 F78-15
825 - 15 G78- 15
85 5· 15 H78- 15
900 - 15 L7B- 15

Fed
Wh se Exc
Pn ce Tax
1095
45
1095
45
1095
50
095
50
'
109 5
55
1095
55
1095
50
1095
50
109 5
55
109S
60

26.90

60

27 .70

27C

28.90

39 .70

27F

28.90

39_70

6 VOLT

36 MONTH
GUARANTEE

1
19L

TERM S OF S A LE
8.1nkAmc ll Card
M;' Sl c r C ll iHge

16.70
18.~

We wou ld li ke to express our app reciation to you , our
customer , because of your past support it is now
poss ib le to offer free instal lation*-consequent ly
lower prices to you p lus add itiona l und er-car service
now ava ilab le to members _
Tha n k yo u aga in .for help ing us f u lf ill our promise_
Our prom ise is to cont inue to offer the h ighest qua li ty
products and service for the lowest pric es possibl e_

NEW TIRE GUARANTEE . . . All Passenger and Truck tires are
-- guaranteed against defects and workmanship for the life of the
.
original tread (legal usable tread depth). In addition , all passenger
tires bear a Road Hazard Warranty for a specific ~umber of months.
In addition certain tires carry a tread wear mileage guarantee.
Any tire that fails due to the above will be adjusted on a pr_o rata
basis atcu'rrent Group Purchase Price , charging ~n l y for the mlle~ge
or time used, plus Federal Excise Tax. Mounting and ba lancing
_ service is extra.

s,e rv lce 11

I
I
i

a v"ilab l e

. . .i. . . . . .I.

Ea s y b u dget
l e r rn s Civalla bl e
OAC
W e r eco m mend
yo u r ow n
c red it union

Thank You

.l,. .J. .~~~

ALL PRODUCTS - AS ADVERTISED ARE FIRSTS - NO 2ND'S
TOP QUALITY ONLY - FULLY GUARANTEED
EXPERT BALANCING & INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AT EACH LOCATION

Member
Retail Clerks Union

-.JEWELERY

BY

/\A ERR ILY TI-I 0 /'1\ PI( II'\J S
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE LIBRARY GALLERY

Poster Art at Evergreen
By MARY HESTER
Wa lking aro un d th e Evergreen ca mpus -o ne's eye is assau lted by
posters of eve ry size a nd shape, w ith info rm at io n o n every con ceivab le s ubject . from po liti ca l rallies to art shows_ Bu t un like
o th er so urces o f campus information - Happe nings , the Newslette r. KAOS-FM ,_the Jou rnal - it is no t o b v io us w here these posters em a nate fro m ; th ey seem to ju st appear.
I ' ust~r s a re made b y peopl e. th o ugh , a nd there are a number of
poste r a rt ists a t Eve rg reen w ho keep fair ly bu sy turning o ut their
work s. According to o ne print er , " Poster art is the bigges t popu la r for m of co mmuni ca ti o n _ If a n event needs to make it , pos ter
a rt is th e bes t way to cCl mm u ni ca te it. This type of co mmunica:
tio n is a n a rt fo rm a nd a nvo ne ca n dn it. "
"Lynn Ro bb . for m er Ari Exhibits coordin a to r. has designed seve ra l stro ng ly d ~ect iv e poste rs for va n o us organiza tI o ns arou nd the
ca mpu s. including KAOS. the l.ibrary Art Exh ibit s, a nd the Om b ud s I Advoca tes Off ice. In d esigning a poster, Robb sa id , '" Ihink
abo ut a ll the in for m a tio n a lrea d y o n the wa ll s and think of so mething that w ill sta nd O ll!. ' - S he co ntinu ed , 'Tm a lways working Cl n
a r cr<;ona l <;(,lIse o f d esig n _ I've lea rned to th in k of the poste r as a
wi1(l le . utd i1. ing Iht> r() s tl'r ' ~ in lormali(ln as par t o f the de~ig n _"
rebruary 27, 1':175

O ne aspect of poster art is designing an image to advertise anot her a rti st's ex hibit. Ro bb tri es to ob ta in a sense of the artist's
wo rk throug h slides , pho tographs o r how it looks first hand _
A no ther printer sta ted that in addition to obtaining information
a bout th e a rt is t a nd his style , he tries to figure out how to communi ca te to the public what the ar tist has to offer . " What will the
poster do to peop le - w ill the y become curious enough to see the
ex hibi t?"
A printing coo perative recently formed is ca lled Blanco y
Negro , the title adap ted from a Spanish LIFE -type magazine, signifyi ng the presence of a ll colors and the absence of a ll colors _
T he coo perative is a co mmunit y -based organization providing
poster I printe r fac il ities to the com munit y at la rge. The coopera tive , acco rding to one of the participants, "is not interested in
d o in g it fo~ mo ney. W e want to provide a service and teac h
sk ill s_ " The co-op cha rges on ly for the s upplies used which the y
oblain a t w ho lesa le prices_
Robb sees the purpose of thi s type of coopera tive as cleaning up
des ig ns a nd making them more effective , using as an example the
no tices for the Frid ay Nite Film Series_ She's distracted b y the bul letin boards - " A ll th e dispari ty co uld be eliminated if th ere was
con tinued on pu!?,' 2.1

TIRE MARKETERS INC.

~~~~~~~COOPER

10 LOC A TIO NS TO SERVE YOU
N EW L DCA TlO N
SE ATTLE
300 Elli o tt Av e W e s t
Se a tt le. W a 98119
Pho n e (2 06) AT 4 -3641

NORTH I(ING CO UNTY
N 205 1h & M e ndian A ve N
1(1Il9 & Snoho m i s h Co Lin e
Ph o n e (2 06) 7755541

TACO M A
23 10 Eas t 'D ' SI.
T aco m a. W a _ 98421
Pho ne - (206 ) 383 -3844

OLY M PI A
4524 Pacif ic A ve. S.E _
Lacey , Wa . 9 850 3
Pho ne: ( 20 6 ) 491 -8872

POINT JOURNAL

CULTURE.ARTS.ENTERTAINMENT
(

S POI( ANE
413 Thl e rm a n Rd _ N o _
Sp o k a n e . W a _ 99206
Phon e (509) I(E 57722

YA I(IMA
2 16 So _ 2nd Av e _
Y a kim a. W a _ 98902
Ph o n e (5 09) 453 -4861

OAKLAND
66t h & Co l iseum Way
O a kl a nd . C a l. 94621
Phon e : (415) 635 -2801

SACRAMENTO
9th & 'S ' Street
Sacramento, Cal. 96816
Phone (916) 444 -5733

PORTLAND . O RE _

3030 N_W . 29th Avenue
Portland , Oregon 97210
Phone : 503-226-4521
REDWOOD CITY
1475 Veterans Bl v d _
Redwood City , Ca l. 94063
Phone : (415) 364 -4511
NORTH

STORE HOURS

<1

MON. t hru F R I.
9am - 6pm
SAT.

.,

9am - 4pm
Some locations open
. later - Please Ca ll i

01

SOU1 H on
FRE EWAY 5

\\'E,~:;:::;::;:::;:;;" ' .ke

TKoma

0

'~I,,( """' D Cll y e. " 10

~

(/
~

d

0

PU\ld llup A ... ltru....
t hen 10

' 0 ' S ' ,e-el

tronl N OR T H

t". S l EIfiAH T S T e.11
78 SERIES DESI.GN
HIGHWAY RETREADS
WIDE - WIDE - LOOK
BLACK WALL - TUBELESS

EXC HANGE PR ICE PLUS FED EXC . TAX
ADO $ 1_95 FOR WH I TEWAL L

(48 Month Pro Rated)

TWO YEAR~

A PROMISE TO OUR CUSTO MERS

FREE REPLACEMENT
12 VOLT

36 MONTH
48 MONTH
LIFETIME
G UARANTE E GUARANTEE GUARANTEE

(36 Month Pro Rated)

24C

22 .90

26.90

35.70

24F

22. 90

26.90

35.70

ONE YEAR

33 .70

FREE REPLACEMENT

22F

19_80

29NF

22 _90

Size
Fils
A78 - 13 A 78- 1:!
735 - 14 [78 - 14
775 - 14 F78-14
825·14 G78-14
855 - 14 H78-14
885 - 14 J78- 14
775 - 15 F78-15
825 - 15 G78- 15
85 5· 15 H78- 15
900 - 15 L7B- 15

Fed
Wh se Exc
Pn ce Tax
1095
45
1095
45
1095
50
095
50
'
109 5
55
1095
55
1095
50
1095
50
109 5
55
109S
60

26.90

60

27 .70

27C

28.90

39 .70

27F

28.90

39_70

6 VOLT

36 MONTH
GUARANTEE

1
19L

TERM S OF S A LE
8.1nkAmc ll Card
M;' Sl c r C ll iHge

16.70
18.~

We wou ld li ke to express our app reciation to you , our
customer , because of your past support it is now
poss ib le to offer free instal lation*-consequent ly
lower prices to you p lus add itiona l und er-car service
now ava ilab le to members _
Tha n k yo u aga in .for help ing us f u lf ill our promise_
Our prom ise is to cont inue to offer the h ighest qua li ty
products and service for the lowest pric es possibl e_

NEW TIRE GUARANTEE . . . All Passenger and Truck tires are
-- guaranteed against defects and workmanship for the life of the
.
original tread (legal usable tread depth). In addition , all passenger
tires bear a Road Hazard Warranty for a specific ~umber of months.
In addition certain tires carry a tread wear mileage guarantee.
Any tire that fails due to the above will be adjusted on a pr_o rata
basis atcu'rrent Group Purchase Price , charging ~n l y for the mlle~ge
or time used, plus Federal Excise Tax. Mounting and ba lancing
_ service is extra.

s,e rv lce 11

I
I
i

a v"ilab l e

. . .i. . . . . .I.

Ea s y b u dget
l e r rn s Civalla bl e
OAC
W e r eco m mend
yo u r ow n
c red it union

Thank You

.l,. .J. .~~~

ALL PRODUCTS - AS ADVERTISED ARE FIRSTS - NO 2ND'S
TOP QUALITY ONLY - FULLY GUARANTEED
EXPERT BALANCING & INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AT EACH LOCATION

Member
Retail Clerks Union

-.JEWELERY

BY

/\A ERR ILY TI-I 0 /'1\ PI( II'\J S
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE LIBRARY GALLERY

Poster Art at Evergreen
By MARY HESTER
Wa lking aro un d th e Evergreen ca mpus -o ne's eye is assau lted by
posters of eve ry size a nd shape, w ith info rm at io n o n every con ceivab le s ubject . from po liti ca l rallies to art shows_ Bu t un like
o th er so urces o f campus information - Happe nings , the Newslette r. KAOS-FM ,_the Jou rnal - it is no t o b v io us w here these posters em a nate fro m ; th ey seem to ju st appear.
I ' ust~r s a re made b y peopl e. th o ugh , a nd there are a number of
poste r a rt ists a t Eve rg reen w ho keep fair ly bu sy turning o ut their
work s. According to o ne print er , " Poster art is the bigges t popu la r for m of co mmuni ca ti o n _ If a n event needs to make it , pos ter
a rt is th e bes t way to cCl mm u ni ca te it. This type of co mmunica:
tio n is a n a rt fo rm a nd a nvo ne ca n dn it. "
"Lynn Ro bb . for m er Ari Exhibits coordin a to r. has designed seve ra l stro ng ly d ~ect iv e poste rs for va n o us organiza tI o ns arou nd the
ca mpu s. including KAOS. the l.ibrary Art Exh ibit s, a nd the Om b ud s I Advoca tes Off ice. In d esigning a poster, Robb sa id , '" Ihink
abo ut a ll the in for m a tio n a lrea d y o n the wa ll s and think of so mething that w ill sta nd O ll!. ' - S he co ntinu ed , 'Tm a lways working Cl n
a r cr<;ona l <;(,lIse o f d esig n _ I've lea rned to th in k of the poste r as a
wi1(l le . utd i1. ing Iht> r() s tl'r ' ~ in lormali(ln as par t o f the de~ig n _"
rebruary 27, 1':175

O ne aspect of poster art is designing an image to advertise anot her a rti st's ex hibit. Ro bb tri es to ob ta in a sense of the artist's
wo rk throug h slides , pho tographs o r how it looks first hand _
A no ther printer sta ted that in addition to obtaining information
a bout th e a rt is t a nd his style , he tries to figure out how to communi ca te to the public what the ar tist has to offer . " What will the
poster do to peop le - w ill the y become curious enough to see the
ex hibi t?"
A printing coo perative recently formed is ca lled Blanco y
Negro , the title adap ted from a Spanish LIFE -type magazine, signifyi ng the presence of a ll colors and the absence of a ll colors _
T he coo perative is a co mmunit y -based organization providing
poster I printe r fac il ities to the com munit y at la rge. The coopera tive , acco rding to one of the participants, "is not interested in
d o in g it fo~ mo ney. W e want to provide a service and teac h
sk ill s_ " The co-op cha rges on ly for the s upplies used which the y
oblain a t w ho lesa le prices_
Robb sees the purpose of thi s type of coopera tive as cleaning up
des ig ns a nd making them more effective , using as an example the
no tices for the Frid ay Nite Film Series_ She's distracted b y the bul letin boards - " A ll th e dispari ty co uld be eliminated if th ere was
con tinued on pu!?,' 2.1

\r ( i~) / Dan
""t
,' .'

1

"

Culture
Guide

Oppenheimer

ItIGHT TRACK

OLYMPIA
Cinema
Friday, 2-28.

:,' H: ,I-} Ov/an
I, , ! :~ [) }O ll' Il ; Stepl guitar
\ , , 11;
['alii Griffen; Eric
. ".

..

-- ....

\ ~.

\" I, i , ' l i~te ning to
, I' "' r. ,] , j op ined

an early
that Dy..
ol 1(',,!ll y prett y bad. My
'I ii' ,d gredt deal of annoyI (' n,i . 'vtid only that he was
: ' r,\. I\" -'" he ever heard." In
1(' 1, : ,h a nged my perspec" Lw impo rtant to me for
!I rl1 l'ans. in other words,
" ha d t h(' ex uberance of
! d 0,, -tll r at a party com'r ' q'n~ e ~)f how to write
, I "' ;rl~, hl ~ strong point in
.,I, /.-<I t~ l essentially non, ', I'
,11 best , tlw listener is
, " "',Ina l tho ught in a comA I wo rst, we get mun,: d isgui sed by slick mu-

singers marked Dyla~: Right awa~, ,~ think the
album contains two mstant claSSICS as touching and important as anything he has dO.ne . The
first, being a rQmantic little ditty, remmds me
that spring is indeed just around the corner . "You're Going to Make Me Lonesome W~en
You Go." It is to Dylan's credit that he can smg
such an obvious and playful song without falling into the mushiness of "Nashville Skyline,"
for examplt!. (If you happen to be enamo~ed ~f
"Nashville Skyline," don't be upset; I hke It
too. But I also try to separate the milk from the
cream in Dylan's work.)
" .
The second classic is beyond doubt Ltly,
Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts." This is a
simply beautiful nine minute sto~-song sho~­
ing the technique used (though dlfferen.tly) m
his early talking blues, and extended many
number of his longer pieces: "Sad E~ed Lady of
the Lowlands," "Desolation Row," "It's Alright
Ma ," etc. You name it; you've prob~bly heard
them all too. I even like his harp playmg o!, the
cut. It's got an almost "Henry" beat to It (of
New Riders fame) but the story is not at all the
same . The Jack of Hearts is as elusive a character as Dylan himself and the song may b~ more
of a "self-portrait" than the album so titled. I
guess he has always wanted to be an 'outla~
turned lover. .. if that's what the , song ~s
about. I guess he always wanted to be a bit
mysterious too .
.
The rest of the album keeps up to the high
level of the "classics" with only a slightly lessened edge. The band is good, and if you'll bear
with a little play on words, maybe Blood on. the
Tracks is so good because Dylan is. again t.he
Singer with the band instead of t.he smger With
the Band . His uncalled for shoutmg and speeding on last year's concert album is tamed; particularly " Tangled Up in Blue" refl~cts wh~t he
tried to sing last year, but has only Just achieved
- he gives a little shout when he needs to.
It may be that Dylan was getting a little nervous about remaining a super-duper star, and
thereby slipped a little in the past year or two.
Blood on the Tracks shows that he has loosened
up and is creating good music again.

SlAIn'S

RAT IN OR TAK. OUT

U . f( IET IISOF

.;. 943 -1515
~:I"

,

e357·7575

. , .... St.

. ,," ' U

fro.. tM

., :,../" fJtv

.".1

SH!Itt~tS '" " ,
- -------

#2

U.RasON &DlYISIOI
I.
"'''.',
W••
bIHc..tw

Friday Nite Film : Mandabi, directed by Sengalese novelist Ousmane Sembene in 1968 and stars
Mamadou Guye, Ynousse N'diaye,
Issa Niang, Serigne N'Diayes , The
story concerns a Moslem family
man who is unemployed and receives a check from his nephew
which he is unable to cash. This
beautifully photographed comedy
was well received critically ,
Shows at 7 and 9 :30.
Sunday, 3-2 , . ,

Evergreen Coffeehouse (ASH
Commons): Mutiny on the Bounty
(1935), directed by Frank Lloyd.
This is the first and best version
of the Nordhoff and Hall book
about the famous mutiny on the
HMS Bounty , which resulted in
the colonizing of Pitcairn Island
in the South Pacific. Competing
for the Oscar against such films
as John Ford 's The Informer,
David Copperfield, Captain Blood
and Ruggles of Red Gap, Mutiny
on the Bounty won the Best Picture award due to the great per·
formances by Clark Gable as
Fletcher Christian and Charles
Laughton as the infamous Captain Bligh. Gable and Laughton's
interpretations of their roles far
surpass those of Marlon Brando
and Trevor Howard in the 1962
version, The film also stars
Mamo , Movita, and Franchot
Tone , '
Tuesday , 3-4 . ,

Academic Film Series: Ingmar
Bergman's Persona (1967), starring Liv Ullman and Blbl Andersson about an actress (Ullman)
who ' refuses to speak and her
nurse .
Ongoing , ' "

:

Capitol : Dr. Zhivago (1965), directed by David Lean and starring
Omar Sharif, lulie Christie, Geraldine Chaplin, Rod Steiger, Alec
Guinness , Ralph Richardson, Tom
Courtenay, and Rita Tushingham ,
This overlong epic, from Boris
Pasternak 's novel of people of
various stature caught up in the
Russian Revolution , still has fine
acting, stunning photography,
and many memorable and powerful moments ; one of the most
popular pi ctures of recent years ,
Olympi c The Totking of Pelham One Two Three, a thriller
ahout terrorist s holding up a subway underneath New York and
threaten ing to kill the passengers
one by one unless a ransom is
paid , Walter Matthau stars as a
poli(l'man ('oordinating thf> res(liP ptlort , il nd other ~t ars In (Iudl' Roht 'rt Shaw ilnd Marlin
Bal \i1m . ~il\t - p an'd, if a trifle
mp( himi( ,tt
COOl'N'r Pnint Innrn"!

State: Freebie and tl;~ Bean,
starring Alan Arkin , James Caan ,
Valerie Harper, and Christopher
Morley, and directed by Richard
Rush (Getting Straight), See review this issue , Also, Get To
know Your Rilbbit, directed by
Brian De Palma (Phantom of the
Paradise) and starring Tom
Smothers, John Astin , and - believe it or not - Orson Welles ,
This is a simple, unpretentious
comedy which you can sit back
and enjoy , A little bland, perhaps, but at least it doesn't try to
be anything it isn 't. Smothers
plays a young exec who decides
to change his life and become a
Tap-Dancing Magician under the
tutorship of Orson Welles; Astin
is very good as his former boss
who then follows his example.
In Concert
Friday, 2-28 ' , ,

Applejam Coffeehouse : Elaine
St , Amand sings songs from the
days of Jimmie Rodgers, (Preceded by a drama - see On
Stage.) Doors open at 8.
Evergreen Coffeehouse (ASH
Commons): A benefit to bring
better music will be held both
Friday and Saturday nights , The
benefit will host a crowd of local
musicians and groups including
Dark Hollow with Jeff Steinhardt,
Teasy and Lori , Evergreen Blue
Grass Band, John Adams, Fuzzy
Peach, David Schroeter, Carrilu
Thompson and many others ,
There is a one dolla[ donation
and the doors open at 8,
Saturday, 3-1 .

Applejam Coffeehouse : Classical guitarist Jeffrey Van performs
Doors open at 8,
On Stage
Friday, 2-28 '

Applejam Coffeehouse David
Shroeter and Joe Walden present
Edward Albee's one-act drama
The Zoo Story (Followed by live
music -:- see In Concert.) Doors
open at 8,
Ballet 'Northwest, coordinated
by Evergreen faculty member
Bud Johansen , will perform tonight, Friday, and Saturday night
in the Library lobby at 8.
SEATTLE
Cinema
Friday, 2·28 '

ASUW Film Series : Oliver
Twist (11)48), directed by David
Lean (Dr Zhivago) .from Dickens'
famous novel. Starring Ale c
Guinness, Robert Newton , lohn
Howard Davies, Kay Wal sh, and
Anthony Newley , this is the best
film adaptation of the slory ,
Guinness is outstandin~ as Filgin,
leader of the street urchins , Also,
The Member of the Wedding
(1952), directed by Fred linneman (Day of thl' Jacka l) and starring fthf>l Walf>rs , Julie Harris,
and Brandon deWild I', Carso n
McCullers' story of il young child

February 27, 1975

Cinema IStan Shore

TWISTED
Freebie and the Bean
Direc,ted by Richard Rush
Starring Alan Arkin , James Caan , Valerie
Harper and Christopher Morley.
Every so often a film comes along which is
technically well done on a grand Hollywood
scale, but which is seriously flawed in its own
world view and psychology. The worst of these
films seem hopelessly twisted and misdirected .
In the past the films Zardoz and Electra Glide in
Blue were such ,films and now Freebie and the
Bean can be added to the list.
The latter film, starring Alan Arkin and
James Caan, is supposed to be a situation comedy along the lines of The Odd Couple, involving two cops (a la Car Fifty-Four Where Are
You) with enough useless violence to satisfy a
Peckinpah fan, and enough worthwhile social
observation to make it meaningful for college
students and adolescents. In fact , the film, at
first glance, appears incredibly warped, unfunny
and without a real focus. The film fails to such
an extent that it is not worth trying to understand.
The basic plot of the story revolves around
two police detectives, Freebie (Caan) and Bean
(Arkin) who have to keep an underworld thug
alive over the weekend, while The-Men-In-Detroit are trying to kill the same thug. They must
keep the thug alive so he can get indi~ted and
sent up the river. But this "plot" is so buried behind chase scenes, shootouts, and jokes that it
hardly deserves to be called a plot. From very
early in the film it is clear that the real story,
the real essence of the film is to be the relationship between the two detectives .
Bean is a straight beaner, that is, MexicanAmerican . Arkin looks about as Mexican as
Charles McCann, but nonetheless, that is what
he is supposed to be. Freebie, a WASP, is a
reckless cop with a good sense of humor, who
likes to get gifts, that is bribes, from citizens.
They are innocuous bribes: a free jacket, a free
lunch, etc., but small, immoral- items just the
same; hence his name, Freebie. Arkin, the ethnic one, of course does not approve, He is
moral. The two are supposed to be an interesting contrast and their relationship is supposed
to be amusing, like The Odd Couple, or
Michael and Archie Bunker, or Tom and Dick
Smothers, or . . .
There is; of course, something odd about two
men who spend all their time together, almost
without seeing ' women. And the women they do
see play unsatisfactory roles in their lives. Arkin
is perpetually suspicious of his wife, played by
Valerie Harper, suspecting she is cheating on
him. And Caan maintains only the most detached and superficial relationship with his girl'"
friend, seeing her only for a quick screw, meal,
and a little inadequate conversation .

Alan Arkin (I) and James Caan (r).
Because the "plot" of the film is so weak, and
some of the strongest scenes have nothing to do
with the plot, one is forced to look elsewhere
for the real focus of the film. In Freebie and the
Bean, the focus unfortunately falls on the unspoken tension' between these two men as they
try not to be homosexual. It is not until the end
of the film, when one minor homosexual character is brought into the spotlight and brutally
killed by Freebie that the two characters seem
able to relax.
In one strikingly odd sequence Bean chases
Freebie through a park at night after the latter
stole Bean's gun from his holster. When Bean
finally catches Freebie he jumps on him, cutting
his lip. What follows is an exchange Freud
would have enjoyed hearing:
"I want you to apologize," Bean says.
''I'll apologize to your gun if you apologize to
my lip - it's bleeding, " Freebie replies.
'Til apologize to your lip if you apologize to
my gun . .. "
And the argument goes back and forth like
that for a few minutes until both apologize and
promise not to touch the other's gun or lips.
It is this focus on homosexuality, I think , that
does much to explain the continual pointless
violence of the pair, and also the strange intensity of the final encounter between Freebie
and the fag .
The film was not, unfortunately, intended to
be either serious or about homosexuality. It was
intended to be funny . It is an abject failure in
that regard . But from the point of view of an
analysis of a writer or director, who had something on his mind but did not want to say it, or
show it , the film is beautiful. The film almost
begs you to ask : What is the sec~et of these two
men, that they are having problems with
women , that forces them to destroy three cars
in two days, and to stage the most senselessly
violent scenes on film 7
Page 21

\r ( i~) / Dan
""t
,' .'

1

"

Culture
Guide

Oppenheimer

ItIGHT TRACK

OLYMPIA
Cinema
Friday, 2-28.

:,' H: ,I-} Ov/an
I, , ! :~ [) }O ll' Il ; Stepl guitar
\ , , 11;
['alii Griffen; Eric
. ".

..

-- ....

\ ~.

\" I, i , ' l i~te ning to
, I' "' r. ,] , j op ined

an early
that Dy..
ol 1(',,!ll y prett y bad. My
'I ii' ,d gredt deal of annoyI (' n,i . 'vtid only that he was
: ' r,\. I\" -'" he ever heard." In
1(' 1, : ,h a nged my perspec" Lw impo rtant to me for
!I rl1 l'ans. in other words,
" ha d t h(' ex uberance of
! d 0,, -tll r at a party com'r ' q'n~ e ~)f how to write
, I "' ;rl~, hl ~ strong point in
.,I, /.-<I t~ l essentially non, ', I'
,11 best , tlw listener is
, " "',Ina l tho ught in a comA I wo rst, we get mun,: d isgui sed by slick mu-

singers marked Dyla~: Right awa~, ,~ think the
album contains two mstant claSSICS as touching and important as anything he has dO.ne . The
first, being a rQmantic little ditty, remmds me
that spring is indeed just around the corner . "You're Going to Make Me Lonesome W~en
You Go." It is to Dylan's credit that he can smg
such an obvious and playful song without falling into the mushiness of "Nashville Skyline,"
for examplt!. (If you happen to be enamo~ed ~f
"Nashville Skyline," don't be upset; I hke It
too. But I also try to separate the milk from the
cream in Dylan's work.)
" .
The second classic is beyond doubt Ltly,
Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts." This is a
simply beautiful nine minute sto~-song sho~­
ing the technique used (though dlfferen.tly) m
his early talking blues, and extended many
number of his longer pieces: "Sad E~ed Lady of
the Lowlands," "Desolation Row," "It's Alright
Ma ," etc. You name it; you've prob~bly heard
them all too. I even like his harp playmg o!, the
cut. It's got an almost "Henry" beat to It (of
New Riders fame) but the story is not at all the
same . The Jack of Hearts is as elusive a character as Dylan himself and the song may b~ more
of a "self-portrait" than the album so titled. I
guess he has always wanted to be an 'outla~
turned lover. .. if that's what the , song ~s
about. I guess he always wanted to be a bit
mysterious too .
.
The rest of the album keeps up to the high
level of the "classics" with only a slightly lessened edge. The band is good, and if you'll bear
with a little play on words, maybe Blood on. the
Tracks is so good because Dylan is. again t.he
Singer with the band instead of t.he smger With
the Band . His uncalled for shoutmg and speeding on last year's concert album is tamed; particularly " Tangled Up in Blue" refl~cts wh~t he
tried to sing last year, but has only Just achieved
- he gives a little shout when he needs to.
It may be that Dylan was getting a little nervous about remaining a super-duper star, and
thereby slipped a little in the past year or two.
Blood on the Tracks shows that he has loosened
up and is creating good music again.

SlAIn'S

RAT IN OR TAK. OUT

U . f( IET IISOF

.;. 943 -1515
~:I"

,

e357·7575

. , .... St.

. ,," ' U

fro.. tM

., :,../" fJtv

.".1

SH!Itt~tS '" " ,
- -------

#2

U.RasON &DlYISIOI
I.
"'''.',
W••
bIHc..tw

Friday Nite Film : Mandabi, directed by Sengalese novelist Ousmane Sembene in 1968 and stars
Mamadou Guye, Ynousse N'diaye,
Issa Niang, Serigne N'Diayes , The
story concerns a Moslem family
man who is unemployed and receives a check from his nephew
which he is unable to cash. This
beautifully photographed comedy
was well received critically ,
Shows at 7 and 9 :30.
Sunday, 3-2 , . ,

Evergreen Coffeehouse (ASH
Commons): Mutiny on the Bounty
(1935), directed by Frank Lloyd.
This is the first and best version
of the Nordhoff and Hall book
about the famous mutiny on the
HMS Bounty , which resulted in
the colonizing of Pitcairn Island
in the South Pacific. Competing
for the Oscar against such films
as John Ford 's The Informer,
David Copperfield, Captain Blood
and Ruggles of Red Gap, Mutiny
on the Bounty won the Best Picture award due to the great per·
formances by Clark Gable as
Fletcher Christian and Charles
Laughton as the infamous Captain Bligh. Gable and Laughton's
interpretations of their roles far
surpass those of Marlon Brando
and Trevor Howard in the 1962
version, The film also stars
Mamo , Movita, and Franchot
Tone , '
Tuesday , 3-4 . ,

Academic Film Series: Ingmar
Bergman's Persona (1967), starring Liv Ullman and Blbl Andersson about an actress (Ullman)
who ' refuses to speak and her
nurse .
Ongoing , ' "

:

Capitol : Dr. Zhivago (1965), directed by David Lean and starring
Omar Sharif, lulie Christie, Geraldine Chaplin, Rod Steiger, Alec
Guinness , Ralph Richardson, Tom
Courtenay, and Rita Tushingham ,
This overlong epic, from Boris
Pasternak 's novel of people of
various stature caught up in the
Russian Revolution , still has fine
acting, stunning photography,
and many memorable and powerful moments ; one of the most
popular pi ctures of recent years ,
Olympi c The Totking of Pelham One Two Three, a thriller
ahout terrorist s holding up a subway underneath New York and
threaten ing to kill the passengers
one by one unless a ransom is
paid , Walter Matthau stars as a
poli(l'man ('oordinating thf> res(liP ptlort , il nd other ~t ars In (Iudl' Roht 'rt Shaw ilnd Marlin
Bal \i1m . ~il\t - p an'd, if a trifle
mp( himi( ,tt
COOl'N'r Pnint Innrn"!

State: Freebie and tl;~ Bean,
starring Alan Arkin , James Caan ,
Valerie Harper, and Christopher
Morley, and directed by Richard
Rush (Getting Straight), See review this issue , Also, Get To
know Your Rilbbit, directed by
Brian De Palma (Phantom of the
Paradise) and starring Tom
Smothers, John Astin , and - believe it or not - Orson Welles ,
This is a simple, unpretentious
comedy which you can sit back
and enjoy , A little bland, perhaps, but at least it doesn't try to
be anything it isn 't. Smothers
plays a young exec who decides
to change his life and become a
Tap-Dancing Magician under the
tutorship of Orson Welles; Astin
is very good as his former boss
who then follows his example.
In Concert
Friday, 2-28 ' , ,

Applejam Coffeehouse : Elaine
St , Amand sings songs from the
days of Jimmie Rodgers, (Preceded by a drama - see On
Stage.) Doors open at 8.
Evergreen Coffeehouse (ASH
Commons): A benefit to bring
better music will be held both
Friday and Saturday nights , The
benefit will host a crowd of local
musicians and groups including
Dark Hollow with Jeff Steinhardt,
Teasy and Lori , Evergreen Blue
Grass Band, John Adams, Fuzzy
Peach, David Schroeter, Carrilu
Thompson and many others ,
There is a one dolla[ donation
and the doors open at 8,
Saturday, 3-1 .

Applejam Coffeehouse : Classical guitarist Jeffrey Van performs
Doors open at 8,
On Stage
Friday, 2-28 '

Applejam Coffeehouse David
Shroeter and Joe Walden present
Edward Albee's one-act drama
The Zoo Story (Followed by live
music -:- see In Concert.) Doors
open at 8,
Ballet 'Northwest, coordinated
by Evergreen faculty member
Bud Johansen , will perform tonight, Friday, and Saturday night
in the Library lobby at 8.
SEATTLE
Cinema
Friday, 2·28 '

ASUW Film Series : Oliver
Twist (11)48), directed by David
Lean (Dr Zhivago) .from Dickens'
famous novel. Starring Ale c
Guinness, Robert Newton , lohn
Howard Davies, Kay Wal sh, and
Anthony Newley , this is the best
film adaptation of the slory ,
Guinness is outstandin~ as Filgin,
leader of the street urchins , Also,
The Member of the Wedding
(1952), directed by Fred linneman (Day of thl' Jacka l) and starring fthf>l Walf>rs , Julie Harris,
and Brandon deWild I', Carso n
McCullers' story of il young child

February 27, 1975

Cinema IStan Shore

TWISTED
Freebie and the Bean
Direc,ted by Richard Rush
Starring Alan Arkin , James Caan , Valerie
Harper and Christopher Morley.
Every so often a film comes along which is
technically well done on a grand Hollywood
scale, but which is seriously flawed in its own
world view and psychology. The worst of these
films seem hopelessly twisted and misdirected .
In the past the films Zardoz and Electra Glide in
Blue were such ,films and now Freebie and the
Bean can be added to the list.
The latter film, starring Alan Arkin and
James Caan, is supposed to be a situation comedy along the lines of The Odd Couple, involving two cops (a la Car Fifty-Four Where Are
You) with enough useless violence to satisfy a
Peckinpah fan, and enough worthwhile social
observation to make it meaningful for college
students and adolescents. In fact , the film, at
first glance, appears incredibly warped, unfunny
and without a real focus. The film fails to such
an extent that it is not worth trying to understand.
The basic plot of the story revolves around
two police detectives, Freebie (Caan) and Bean
(Arkin) who have to keep an underworld thug
alive over the weekend, while The-Men-In-Detroit are trying to kill the same thug. They must
keep the thug alive so he can get indi~ted and
sent up the river. But this "plot" is so buried behind chase scenes, shootouts, and jokes that it
hardly deserves to be called a plot. From very
early in the film it is clear that the real story,
the real essence of the film is to be the relationship between the two detectives .
Bean is a straight beaner, that is, MexicanAmerican . Arkin looks about as Mexican as
Charles McCann, but nonetheless, that is what
he is supposed to be. Freebie, a WASP, is a
reckless cop with a good sense of humor, who
likes to get gifts, that is bribes, from citizens.
They are innocuous bribes: a free jacket, a free
lunch, etc., but small, immoral- items just the
same; hence his name, Freebie. Arkin, the ethnic one, of course does not approve, He is
moral. The two are supposed to be an interesting contrast and their relationship is supposed
to be amusing, like The Odd Couple, or
Michael and Archie Bunker, or Tom and Dick
Smothers, or . . .
There is; of course, something odd about two
men who spend all their time together, almost
without seeing ' women. And the women they do
see play unsatisfactory roles in their lives. Arkin
is perpetually suspicious of his wife, played by
Valerie Harper, suspecting she is cheating on
him. And Caan maintains only the most detached and superficial relationship with his girl'"
friend, seeing her only for a quick screw, meal,
and a little inadequate conversation .

Alan Arkin (I) and James Caan (r).
Because the "plot" of the film is so weak, and
some of the strongest scenes have nothing to do
with the plot, one is forced to look elsewhere
for the real focus of the film. In Freebie and the
Bean, the focus unfortunately falls on the unspoken tension' between these two men as they
try not to be homosexual. It is not until the end
of the film, when one minor homosexual character is brought into the spotlight and brutally
killed by Freebie that the two characters seem
able to relax.
In one strikingly odd sequence Bean chases
Freebie through a park at night after the latter
stole Bean's gun from his holster. When Bean
finally catches Freebie he jumps on him, cutting
his lip. What follows is an exchange Freud
would have enjoyed hearing:
"I want you to apologize," Bean says.
''I'll apologize to your gun if you apologize to
my lip - it's bleeding, " Freebie replies.
'Til apologize to your lip if you apologize to
my gun . .. "
And the argument goes back and forth like
that for a few minutes until both apologize and
promise not to touch the other's gun or lips.
It is this focus on homosexuality, I think , that
does much to explain the continual pointless
violence of the pair, and also the strange intensity of the final encounter between Freebie
and the fag .
The film was not, unfortunately, intended to
be either serious or about homosexuality. It was
intended to be funny . It is an abject failure in
that regard . But from the point of view of an
analysis of a writer or director, who had something on his mind but did not want to say it, or
show it , the film is beautiful. The film almost
begs you to ask : What is the sec~et of these two
men, that they are having problems with
women , that forces them to destroy three cars
in two days, and to stage the most senselessly
violent scenes on film 7
Page 21

·····. · ·. ·. · ·. · ·· · · . . · . ·. . ········jlm··iivE·'5""61y··90'·;············
SAVE 51.50
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includes salad and garlic bread
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SAYI

..............

The Asterisk
and Cheese Library ,
WESTSIDE Z [233 North Division Street]
OLYMPIA WASHINGTON 98502 WA
206-357-7373
COME SEE MIKE'S MEAT SLICER
. P. S. We're carrying the Little Bread CO.'s sourdoughs and bagels

(' Ill e r i-l Ilf'W

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• A FUll LINE OF QUALITY STEREO COMPONENTS
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Page 22

RECORDS & TAPES
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SOUTH SOUND CENTER
491-2922

( Ha rri s) who be gin s to grow up in
th e fa ce of he r brother's marri age . Th e film is a li ttle more
s lu gg is h th a n other M cCul lers
adap ta ti o n<; . ( Hea rt Is a Lone ly
Hunt e r a nd Ref lec ti o n s in a
Go lden Eye ), but young Harri s
a nd Wate rs turn in highly sensitiv e perfo rm a ll ces. Shows a t Kane
Ha ll at 8.
Sa turda y, 3- 1 .
AS UW Film Se ri es : The Grapes
of Wrath (191\0), jo hn Ford's immo rt a l adap tatio n of the Steinbec k nove l of Oaki es goi ng wes t
to pi c k fruit in Ca li fornia . He nry
Fonda tu rn s in hi s first truly gre at
pe rform a nce a s Tom joad and
jnne Darwel l ea rn ed an Oscar for
he r pe rf o rman ce as the head of
the joa d fami ly. The cas t a lso in c ludes jo hn Ca rrad in e, Char ley
G ra pew in , Dori s Bowde n , Russe ll
Sim pso n , a nd john Qua le n . A
m ov ing , me m o rab le pi c tur e
marre d o nly by a te nd e ncy to be
a li ttl e propaga ndi sti c toward s
th e Ro ose ve lt a dmini s tration .
Shows a t Ka ne Hall at 8 . Also,
. The Good Earth (1937), dire c ted
by Sidney Fra nklin and starring
Pau l Muni , Loui se Rain e r, Walter
Co nn o ly, Charli e Grapew in , jessie
Ralph , Til ly Losc h, Keye Luke,
a nd Hnrold Huber . From the
nove l by Pear l S. Bu c k, whi c h
was t he first popu lar American
wo rk to treat Chinese as humans ,
th e movi e unfortunately stars
Ca ucas ian s. Shows at Kane Hall
at 8.
Monday , 3-3 .
Th e Am e ri ca n Film Th e atre
prese nts The Man in the Glass
Booth, sta rring Maximi li an Sc he ll
as a suspec ted Nazi war crimina l
on tria l in Israe l (protected by a
bulle t-proof glass booth), and costarring Lawrence Press man , Loi s
Ne tt le ton , a nd Luthe r Ad ler . The
film , direc te d by Arthur Hiller, is
ne ithe r pro- Israe l no r pro-Nazi ; it
is a n impassion e d state ment
aga in st hatred and dogma, app i ied aga inst Sc he ll as sure ly as
th e Naz is app lied it against the
jews Show ing at the Uptown,
Buri e n , Crossroads , a nd Lynn
Theate rs, ti ckets not bought by
subsc ription may be ava ilabl e at
th e door .
Tu esday, 3-4 .
The Man in the Glass Booth
shows aga in ; see Monday li sting .
Ongoing .
Fifth Ave nu e : A Woman Under
the Influence, starring Peter Falk ,
a nd Cena Rowlands . Thi s is probab ly the best fi lm ye t by john
Cassavetes ( Hu sba nd s, Faces) a
psychologi ca l drama a bout a bullying hu sband a nd his sc hi zophre ni c w ife. Falk a nd Rowlands
a re both exce ll e nt.
King . The Step ford Wives, di rec te d by Bryan Forbes and starrin g Kat he rin e Ros s, Paula Prenti ss, Pe te r Ma s ter s on, Nanette
New m a n , Tina Louise, a nd Patrick
O 'Nea l. The film is a sterile adapta tion of th e nove l by Ira Levine
(Rose m a ry 's Baby), about women
be ing turn e d into submi ss ive robots by the ir dominating hu sba nd s in a sma ll suburban town .
The film tri es to be a fe minist

r

n ,.._ ..... _ D_ !_ L ' _ • • ~ __ 1

parab le, but th e wom e n a re so
li feless be for e th ey become robots that it does n't maile r mu c h
when th ey do .
Lew is and Cla rk : The Ultimate
Thrill , starring Britt Ec kland , Eri c
Braden , and Mi c hae l Blodge tt , a
co mbinati o n
ski / adv e nture / roma nce film . Al so, jam es Cob urn
in The Internecine Project.
Movie Hou se : Love and Anarchy, made by Itali a n direc to r
Lina We rtmull e r (Th e Sedu c tion
of Mimi ), s tarring G ian c arlo
Giannini as a you ng m a n w ho
sets o ut to assass in a te Mu sso llni
but becomes sidet rac kf'd fa llin g
in love in a w ho re ho use .
Ne ptun e : Steppenwolf , di recte d by Fre d Hai nes and star ring Max vo n Sydow a nd Do minique Sa nd a . Hesse's psyc hol og ica l nove l beca me a co ll ege cu lt
book , w hi c h spaw ned thi s ef for t
whi c h, des pit e a good cas t, fa il s
mi sera b ly.
Rose Bud : O rso n We ll es' maste rpi e ce Citizen Kane (194 1); the
most impo rt a nt Amer ican mov ie
eve r made, and in th e runnin g
for th e bes t film o f a ll tim e Stars
W e ll es, j o se ph Co tt e n , Ha rr y
Shann o n, Eve re tt Sloa ne, Ag nes
Moore hea d , Do ro th v Co min gore,
Ray Co llin s, a nd Geo rge Co ulouri s.
Unive rs ity : The Ghost and Mrs.
Muir (1947). d irec ted by jose ph
L. Ma nki ew icz a nd sta rrin g Rex
Harr ison as th e ghost , and Ge ne
Ti e rn ey, Ge o rge Sa nd e rs, Edna
Bes t Van essa Brow n , Ann a LE'e,
Rob~rt Coote. a nd Nata li e Wood
Thi s pleasa nt fi lm spawn e d th e
unpl easa nt te lev isio n se ri es Also,
I Married a Witch '( 1942), starr in g
Frederi c Marc h , Ve roni ca Lake ,
Robert Be nc hl ey, Susan Haywa rd ,
Cec il Ca ll away , a nd Eli zabet h
Patt e rson . Dir ec te d b y Re n e
Clai r, this comed y co nce rn s a
wi tc h, burn ed a t th e Sa le m trial s,
who retu rn s to haunt th e descenda nt of he r co nd e mn e r.
Uptown : Shiela Levine Is Dead
and Living in New York , sta rrtn g
jea nni e Be rli n as a lo ne ly lady in
New York . Co-s'ta rs Roy Sc hn e ide r a nd Re becca Di a nn a Smith .
In Concert

Sa turda y, J· 1 .
Bi ll Cos by appea rs a t th e SE'a tti e Ope ra Hou se fo r o ne show
o nl y a t 7 :30 . Cos by, wh o has now
tak e n to do in g De l Montf' a nd
je ll o ad s o n TV , can be ve ry
funny a nd wa s a p io nee r· in rea ll y
breaking th e ra c ia l b a rri e r in
comedy , a ppea lin g to eve ryo ne
wit hout los ing hi s e thni c ide ntit y
l e~5e Co lin YOlill g . fOrrll l' rl y 0 1
th e Y O lln gb l ()od ~. "P IH' dr, ,It til l'
Paramo unt Nor thw(" t el t 8 With
him I' 'i lll gpr , Wrttpr K~' nn y
Ra nkin TlcI,pl\ for th (, , how will
be ava il a b lf' at YE' ll ow Bri c k RO,ld
Trave l C(' nt (' r In th l' A( tl Vltl P,
bldg
Coming :
Sa turday, /-1/ .
Show-b il me nt a li q Kr cs kin a ppe ars a t Pa ra mount No rthwes t
at 8.
February 27, 1975

continu ed from page 19
a more effective use in design ," She also views
the idea of utilizing a co-op as obtaining better
feedback and focusing away from a :'free-enterprise system."
One of the workers in the cooperative, who
wished to remain a nonymous, expressed his philoso phy on poster art and art in general. "Art is
basically the communication of ideas
all
art is communication. "

N~~
r9L"P1~
~
~~r;

He sees the cooperative venture here in
Olympia as analogous to what is happening in
the rest of the country. "All over there are food
buying co-ops, political collectives, theater collectives, printing collectives, building groups
doing construction for reasonable prices.,.
things coming out of an alternative community,
tlie local center of which happens to be the college . It s hows people in the town can st ill find a
small group of constituents and develop strateg ies for surviva l in their own communities. "

New and Used Albums

Jesse Colin Young Tickets
Paramount Info

WORD OF MOUTH
BOOKS
Mon - Fri

36 & Ove rhul se

10 t o 6

866-1252

N ew Sat Hours 12-6

... $4,00
Baked potato , vegetable
SALMON STEAK
... $3,75
Mashed potatoes , vegetable , hollandaise
sa uce
SAUTEED PRAWNS .............. $3.95
Mu shroom s and wine sa uce , baked potatoes, vegetable
ROASTED CHICKEN ............. $2.75
Savo ry dressing and giblet gravy
LASAGNE ............ . . . ...... , . $2.50
Italian cheese dish , vegetable
SPAGHETTI ..................... $2 ,50
Rich Italian Meat sa uce
Above Entrees include:
Relish Tray, Homemade Soup,
Homemade bread, salad, dessert, coffee

2 P.M . -

10 P.M.

PaRe 23

·····. · ·. ·. · ·. · ·· · · . . · . ·. . ········jlm··iivE·'5""61y··90'·;············
SAVE 51.50
BUY TWO COMPLETE SPAGHETTI
DINNERS 53.50
includes salad and garlic bread
HAPPY HOUR 8-10 TUES & WED
4045 Pacific
Phone 456-1560
Coupon
Expires
3/6/75
SRI NG THIS COUPON
.....................................................................
,
:. ...................................................................................

SAYI

..............

The Asterisk
and Cheese Library ,
WESTSIDE Z [233 North Division Street]
OLYMPIA WASHINGTON 98502 WA
206-357-7373
COME SEE MIKE'S MEAT SLICER
. P. S. We're carrying the Little Bread CO.'s sourdoughs and bagels

(' Ill e r i-l Ilf'W

rea lm of musica-l experience . .. see and hear . . .

" THE VERY FINEST "

• A FUll LINE OF QUALITY STEREO COMPONENTS
• HIGH END AND QUADROPHONIC LISTENING ROOMS
• FIVE YEAR SERVICE AGREEMENT ON ALL MUSIC SYSTEMS
• AND PERHAPS THE FINEST SHOWROOM IN THE NORTHWEST

OU R SHOWROOM lOCA liON
AT

4422 S€ 6th
IN LACEY
-491-0991
Page 22

RECORDS & TAPES
AT
SOUTH SOUND CENTER
491-2922

( Ha rri s) who be gin s to grow up in
th e fa ce of he r brother's marri age . Th e film is a li ttle more
s lu gg is h th a n other M cCul lers
adap ta ti o n<; . ( Hea rt Is a Lone ly
Hunt e r a nd Ref lec ti o n s in a
Go lden Eye ), but young Harri s
a nd Wate rs turn in highly sensitiv e perfo rm a ll ces. Shows a t Kane
Ha ll at 8.
Sa turda y, 3- 1 .
AS UW Film Se ri es : The Grapes
of Wrath (191\0), jo hn Ford's immo rt a l adap tatio n of the Steinbec k nove l of Oaki es goi ng wes t
to pi c k fruit in Ca li fornia . He nry
Fonda tu rn s in hi s first truly gre at
pe rform a nce a s Tom joad and
jnne Darwel l ea rn ed an Oscar for
he r pe rf o rman ce as the head of
the joa d fami ly. The cas t a lso in c ludes jo hn Ca rrad in e, Char ley
G ra pew in , Dori s Bowde n , Russe ll
Sim pso n , a nd john Qua le n . A
m ov ing , me m o rab le pi c tur e
marre d o nly by a te nd e ncy to be
a li ttl e propaga ndi sti c toward s
th e Ro ose ve lt a dmini s tration .
Shows a t Ka ne Hall at 8 . Also,
. The Good Earth (1937), dire c ted
by Sidney Fra nklin and starring
Pau l Muni , Loui se Rain e r, Walter
Co nn o ly, Charli e Grapew in , jessie
Ralph , Til ly Losc h, Keye Luke,
a nd Hnrold Huber . From the
nove l by Pear l S. Bu c k, whi c h
was t he first popu lar American
wo rk to treat Chinese as humans ,
th e movi e unfortunately stars
Ca ucas ian s. Shows at Kane Hall
at 8.
Monday , 3-3 .
Th e Am e ri ca n Film Th e atre
prese nts The Man in the Glass
Booth, sta rring Maximi li an Sc he ll
as a suspec ted Nazi war crimina l
on tria l in Israe l (protected by a
bulle t-proof glass booth), and costarring Lawrence Press man , Loi s
Ne tt le ton , a nd Luthe r Ad ler . The
film , direc te d by Arthur Hiller, is
ne ithe r pro- Israe l no r pro-Nazi ; it
is a n impassion e d state ment
aga in st hatred and dogma, app i ied aga inst Sc he ll as sure ly as
th e Naz is app lied it against the
jews Show ing at the Uptown,
Buri e n , Crossroads , a nd Lynn
Theate rs, ti ckets not bought by
subsc ription may be ava ilabl e at
th e door .
Tu esday, 3-4 .
The Man in the Glass Booth
shows aga in ; see Monday li sting .
Ongoing .
Fifth Ave nu e : A Woman Under
the Influence, starring Peter Falk ,
a nd Cena Rowlands . Thi s is probab ly the best fi lm ye t by john
Cassavetes ( Hu sba nd s, Faces) a
psychologi ca l drama a bout a bullying hu sband a nd his sc hi zophre ni c w ife. Falk a nd Rowlands
a re both exce ll e nt.
King . The Step ford Wives, di rec te d by Bryan Forbes and starrin g Kat he rin e Ros s, Paula Prenti ss, Pe te r Ma s ter s on, Nanette
New m a n , Tina Louise, a nd Patrick
O 'Nea l. The film is a sterile adapta tion of th e nove l by Ira Levine
(Rose m a ry 's Baby), about women
be ing turn e d into submi ss ive robots by the ir dominating hu sba nd s in a sma ll suburban town .
The film tri es to be a fe minist

r

n ,.._ ..... _ D_ !_ L ' _ • • ~ __ 1

parab le, but th e wom e n a re so
li feless be for e th ey become robots that it does n't maile r mu c h
when th ey do .
Lew is and Cla rk : The Ultimate
Thrill , starring Britt Ec kland , Eri c
Braden , and Mi c hae l Blodge tt , a
co mbinati o n
ski / adv e nture / roma nce film . Al so, jam es Cob urn
in The Internecine Project.
Movie Hou se : Love and Anarchy, made by Itali a n direc to r
Lina We rtmull e r (Th e Sedu c tion
of Mimi ), s tarring G ian c arlo
Giannini as a you ng m a n w ho
sets o ut to assass in a te Mu sso llni
but becomes sidet rac kf'd fa llin g
in love in a w ho re ho use .
Ne ptun e : Steppenwolf , di recte d by Fre d Hai nes and star ring Max vo n Sydow a nd Do minique Sa nd a . Hesse's psyc hol og ica l nove l beca me a co ll ege cu lt
book , w hi c h spaw ned thi s ef for t
whi c h, des pit e a good cas t, fa il s
mi sera b ly.
Rose Bud : O rso n We ll es' maste rpi e ce Citizen Kane (194 1); the
most impo rt a nt Amer ican mov ie
eve r made, and in th e runnin g
for th e bes t film o f a ll tim e Stars
W e ll es, j o se ph Co tt e n , Ha rr y
Shann o n, Eve re tt Sloa ne, Ag nes
Moore hea d , Do ro th v Co min gore,
Ray Co llin s, a nd Geo rge Co ulouri s.
Unive rs ity : The Ghost and Mrs.
Muir (1947). d irec ted by jose ph
L. Ma nki ew icz a nd sta rrin g Rex
Harr ison as th e ghost , and Ge ne
Ti e rn ey, Ge o rge Sa nd e rs, Edna
Bes t Van essa Brow n , Ann a LE'e,
Rob~rt Coote. a nd Nata li e Wood
Thi s pleasa nt fi lm spawn e d th e
unpl easa nt te lev isio n se ri es Also,
I Married a Witch '( 1942), starr in g
Frederi c Marc h , Ve roni ca Lake ,
Robert Be nc hl ey, Susan Haywa rd ,
Cec il Ca ll away , a nd Eli zabet h
Patt e rson . Dir ec te d b y Re n e
Clai r, this comed y co nce rn s a
wi tc h, burn ed a t th e Sa le m trial s,
who retu rn s to haunt th e descenda nt of he r co nd e mn e r.
Uptown : Shiela Levine Is Dead
and Living in New York , sta rrtn g
jea nni e Be rli n as a lo ne ly lady in
New York . Co-s'ta rs Roy Sc hn e ide r a nd Re becca Di a nn a Smith .
In Concert

Sa turda y, J· 1 .
Bi ll Cos by appea rs a t th e SE'a tti e Ope ra Hou se fo r o ne show
o nl y a t 7 :30 . Cos by, wh o has now
tak e n to do in g De l Montf' a nd
je ll o ad s o n TV , can be ve ry
funny a nd wa s a p io nee r· in rea ll y
breaking th e ra c ia l b a rri e r in
comedy , a ppea lin g to eve ryo ne
wit hout los ing hi s e thni c ide ntit y
l e~5e Co lin YOlill g . fOrrll l' rl y 0 1
th e Y O lln gb l ()od ~. "P IH' dr, ,It til l'
Paramo unt Nor thw(" t el t 8 With
him I' 'i lll gpr , Wrttpr K~' nn y
Ra nkin TlcI,pl\ for th (, , how will
be ava il a b lf' at YE' ll ow Bri c k RO,ld
Trave l C(' nt (' r In th l' A( tl Vltl P,
bldg
Coming :
Sa turday, /-1/ .
Show-b il me nt a li q Kr cs kin a ppe ars a t Pa ra mount No rthwes t
at 8.
February 27, 1975

continu ed from page 19
a more effective use in design ," She also views
the idea of utilizing a co-op as obtaining better
feedback and focusing away from a :'free-enterprise system."
One of the workers in the cooperative, who
wished to remain a nonymous, expressed his philoso phy on poster art and art in general. "Art is
basically the communication of ideas
all
art is communication. "

N~~
r9L"P1~
~
~~r;

He sees the cooperative venture here in
Olympia as analogous to what is happening in
the rest of the country. "All over there are food
buying co-ops, political collectives, theater collectives, printing collectives, building groups
doing construction for reasonable prices.,.
things coming out of an alternative community,
tlie local center of which happens to be the college . It s hows people in the town can st ill find a
small group of constituents and develop strateg ies for surviva l in their own communities. "

New and Used Albums

Jesse Colin Young Tickets
Paramount Info

WORD OF MOUTH
BOOKS
Mon - Fri

36 & Ove rhul se

10 t o 6

866-1252

N ew Sat Hours 12-6

... $4,00
Baked potato , vegetable
SALMON STEAK
... $3,75
Mashed potatoes , vegetable , hollandaise
sa uce
SAUTEED PRAWNS .............. $3.95
Mu shroom s and wine sa uce , baked potatoes, vegetable
ROASTED CHICKEN ............. $2.75
Savo ry dressing and giblet gravy
LASAGNE ............ . . . ...... , . $2.50
Italian cheese dish , vegetable
SPAGHETTI ..................... $2 ,50
Rich Italian Meat sa uce
Above Entrees include:
Relish Tray, Homemade Soup,
Homemade bread, salad, dessert, coffee

2 P.M . -

10 P.M.

PaRe 23



Th e John Moss appointment



Chuck Harbaugh hiring controversy



Cutting trees on campus



Missing evaluations



Access to confidential files



Ca mpus parkway signs and lighting



Financial aid disputes



Credit disputes



Housing problems



Curriculum planning process



Proposed reduction in Individual Contracts



Hassles over access to media equipment



And many more

i

In the summer of 1974 some students, staff, and
faculty at the Evergreen State College got together to
deal with this blues festival. The result of their talking
was Evergreen's Ombuds/ Advocate Center, a group of
people whose job is to help you, whoever you may
be, with your problem in getting you to the people
you have to see, the people who can get things done .

J
Media
cpj0076.pdf