The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 7 (November 6, 1975)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0099.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 7 (November 6, 1975)
Date
6 November 1975
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Curriculum
Faculty Hiring and Governance
Environmental Studies
Description
Eng Pg 1: Cooper Point Journal (front page): Costigan Pessimistic on Irish Fate;
Pg 1: Curriculum Planning;
Pg 1, 9: Election Final;
Pg 1: Poisonous & Psychedelic Mushrooms;
Pg 1: Board of Trustees and Habitation;
Pg 2: Letters (image: Student standing at Olympia's "observation point" at the end of harbor (by Schinzinger));
Pg 2: Letters: KAOS: Slow Talkers;
Pg 2: Letters: Oppressed White Male;
Pg 2: Camejo;
Pg 2: Recommend Evergreen?;
Pg 2: 'Alice Doesn't' Reflections;
Pg 2: Fragmental Feminist;
Pg 2: Information Please;
Pg 2: Mandatory Daycare;
Pg 2: Lost Book;
Pg 2: Classified Ads;
Pg 2: Staff credits;
Pg 3-4: Alpine Lakes Area: Public Sentiment and the Great Compromise (image of snow field in Alpine Lakes area (by Walker Bros));
Pg 4: Editorial: Changing Education: Boycott;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Evergreen Coins and Investments;
Pg 4: (advertisement) South Sound Bank;
Pg 4: (advertisement) Tape Dock;
Pg 5: The Skyrocketing Price of Nuclear Power (map of united states showing nuclear power plant locations);
Pg 5: Nuclear Power vs. -- What?;
Pg 6: Asian Coalition;
Pg 6: Sounding Board;
Pg 6: Environmental Dialog;
Pg 6: (advertisement) Red Apple Natural Foods;
Pg 6: (advertisement) Fred Bippert Dodge, Inc.;
Pg 7: In Brief: Lyle Mercer;
Pg 7: In Brief: New Health Services Schedules;
Pg 7: In Brief: NW Passage in Court;
Pg 7: In Brief: Group Health;
Pg 7: In Brief: Christian Anti-Communism Crusade;
Pg 7: (advertisement) U.S. Army (recruiting);
Pg 7: In Brief: Capital High School (image: Capital High School (by King));
Pg 7: (advertisement) All Ways Travel Service, Inc.;
Pg 7: (advertisement) Ash Tree Apartments;
Pg 7: (advertisement) Peterson's Foodtown;
Pg 7: (advertisement) Hendricks Rexall Drugs;
Pg 8: Socialist Feminists Speak: Student Gov: Technocracy or Democracy?;
Pg 8: Portrait of Walkers (image: two people in gym garb using power walker equipment);
Pg 8: (advertisement) The Artichoke Mode;
Pg 8: (advertisement) The Colony Inn Apartments;
Pg 8: (advertisement) Capitol Chevrolet;
Pg 9: FCC Workshops notice;
Pg 9: (advertisement) J. Vee Health Foods;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Roger's Market;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Bob's Second Hand Store;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Morningside Industries Gift Shop;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Raudenbush Motor Supply;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Collegiate Research;
Pg 9: (advertisement) Donna's Knit Shop;
Pg 9: (advertisement) The Bike Stand;
Pg 10: Textiles Exhibit (3 images of textiles projects (by King));
Pg 10: Food/ Nanette Westerman: Rice Over Easy;
Pg 10: (advertisement) Rainbow Grocery and Deli;
Pg 10: (advertisement) Bob Dickinson Music Center;
Pg 10: (advertisement) Bob's Big Burgers;
Pg 11: Entertainment;
Pg 11: Entertainment: All Hallow's Concert;
Pg 11: (advertisement) Rainy Day Record Co.;
Pg 12: Image: piers in Puget Sound;
Pg 12: Alice Doesn't (image: Toni Meal singing (by Christensen, Beverlee)
Creator
Eng Plautz, Gary
Eng King, Doug
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Coontz, Sharron
Eng Clark, Kevin
Eng Lombard, Linda M.
Eng Douglas, James
Eng Day, Dinah
Eng Dodge, John
Eng Walker Bros
Eng Locke, Ti
Eng Brown, Martin
Eng Riddel, Catherine and Plautz, Gary
Eng West, Robin
Eng Milton, Curtis
Eng Marshall, Neil
Eng Weinman, Lynda
Eng Westerman, Nanette
Eng Kaufman, Gary
Eng Carroll, Chris
Eng Christensen, Beverlee
Contributor
Eng Locke, Ti
Eng Plautz, Gary
Eng Carroll, Chris
Eng King, Doug
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Meighan, Kathleen
Eng Balukoff, Louie
Eng Edge, Dexter
Eng Spearman, Danny
Eng Gendreau, Joe
Eng Cowger, Chris
Eng Morawski, Joe
Eng Wright, Molly
Eng Speer, Rick
Eng Young, Marvin
Eng Stewart, Jill
Eng Milton, Curtis
Eng Clair, Ken
Eng Banooch, Jerry
Eng Skadan, Rick
Eng Marshall, Neil
Eng Dodge, John
Eng Christensen, Beverlee
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Riddell, Catherine
Eng Connolly, Nancy
Eng Lozzi, Craig
Eng Cornish, Billie
Eng Shelton-Mason County Journal
Subject
Eng Election
Eng Curriculum Planning
Eng Nuclear Power
Eng Textiles Exhibit
Eng Socialist Feminism
Eng Constigan, Giovanni
Eng The Irish Republican Army
Eng United States Congress
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Ireland
Eng Olympia, WA
Eng Washington State
Eng San Fransico, California
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 12 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1975
extracted text
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Olympia , Washington 98505

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URNAL

Volume IV Number 7

November 6, 1975

I

COSTIGAN PESSIMISTIC ON IRISH FATE
by Gary Plautz
" Sooner or later , like a mali g nant
disorder, these things finally w ear
themselves out, but not after many
casua lties, " is the pessimistic way former
University of Wash in gton professor Giovanni Costigan de sc ribed the present
troubles in Northern Ireland in a speech
at the Capitol Building Monday, Nov. 3 .
Costiga n, whose lecture was sponsored
by tQe University of Washington Alumni
Association, specia lizes in English and
Irish history, Despite irritatingly poor
acoustics at the Capitol Dome, his speech
was well received bv abo ut 200 people.
Costigan dealt exclusively with Northern
Ireland sin ce 1922, the date Southern
Ireland separated from Great' Britain and
became the Irish Free State. The six
cou ntri es of Northern Ireland, though,
remained part of Great Britain and still
are.
Since 1922, li fe has been hard for the
Ca tholi c minority in Northern Ireland.
Protestant5, who make up two-thirds of
the population, have practiced discrimati on aga in st th e Catholics in voting
practices, employment and housi ng. This
abuse of power continued unchallenged,
iC03t.igan sa id , for a lmost 50 years.
Coincident with other civil rights
movements aro und ,the world, the Irish
Civil Rights movement began in 1968,

I

by J ill Stewart
The bright pamphlet smells of fresh ink
as you riffle through pages, pausing here
and there to admire a ca lli graphy design
or picture. You q uickly examine the titles
of the various program offerings, nervously an ticipating the program 'just for
you.' Nothing seems to click. The time:
Spring 1976,. The subject: . the new
Ca tal di; Supplement. So what do you do?
Rush to the dean's office and demand an
offerin;; in your area. No. You missed the
boat - anything you could have done
would have been be tween th e first day of
sc hool and Dec. 1. 1975.
With thi s in mind. a group of 55
Evergreen students met wit h Academic
Dean Lynn Patterson yesterday at 3 pm in
Lib . Lounge 2100. Patterson ca ll ed the

and was centered around students in the
univters iti es, he sa id . Irish Catholics, he
sa id , saw ma ny s imil a~it i es between their
situa tion as an oppressed minority and
the situation of blacks in the United
Sta tes, a nd M art in Luther King was one
of their heroes.
Th e Civil Rights movement was
peacef ul, but was met with violence by
Prote sta nt authorities and vigilantes.
Howeve r, as a res ult of the c ivil rights
ag itation, Iri sh Protestants and the British
g r a nted some ba sic reforms to the
Catholics in 1969 . But then the violence
started aga in .
Cost igan lays special blam e for the
renewed violence in 1969 on a Protestantsuprem ist group called the Orange Order.
These people attacked Catholics in their
ghettos a nd, in a sense, were the force
prompting the radical Irish Republican
Army (IRA) to begin taking violent
action.
The IRA came into play in late 1970. An
illegal group in both Northern and
Southern Ireland, the IRA is sp lit into two
gro ups. One is ca lled the "Officials," their
Marxian-Social ist group willing to use
limited violence to achieve their goals .
The other is ca lled the "Provos," a group
that .practices all-out, indiscriminate war.
Costigan cal led the Provo s "fanatical

meeting with students appointed by their
programs to "act as a consultative pool in
the curriculum planning process."
Patterson unfolded the p lan to determine long-range curriculum at Evergreen.
She exp lained that each fa culty would be
expected to commit themselves to areas
for next year and the following year,
ena bling students to move away from the
'element of surprise' unique to Evergreen's
curricu lum.
Students expressed frustrati on with
common and serious problems here, one
of which is individual contracts. Contrac ts are difficult , often impossible to
sec ure, because of lack of faculty expertise
in the area, faculty who don't really 'ca re '
wha t you have to say, and faculty who
agree an d then back out at the I;]st

POISONOUS &
PSYCHEDELIC MUSHROOMS

..5 COOPER POINT JOURNAL

minute .
Faculty hiring, alt hough not an area of
Pa tterson's responsibility, was impossible
to avo id ii1 discussin g curriculum planning. In Evergreens' system, there is no
tenur e, a nd faculty operate o n a
three-year con tract basis, go in g through
eva luation every year. It was pOinted out
that in Evergreen's five yea rs of operation
not one fac ulty person has been fired.
"The law of averages," said one observant
stud ent. "defies those statistics."
St ud e nt - initiated program s were the
ob ject of the most questions. Student
cr~ated programs have been , a t besi, a
frustrating exper ienC'e here in th e past . T o
avo id thi s co n f usio n and frustration
Pa tterson advises interested students to
formulate their ideas, a ttra ct a faculty
pers<'n who is a t least willing to help

them further design it, and present it to
her on the 'committment' form all faculty
are being asked to fill out by Nov. 15.
The abso lute fin a l date for program
proposals is Dec. 1. with most decisi ons
being made by January .
There was tension with in th e grou p.
Students are legitimately concerned a bout
where Evergreen is heading and how it
can better meet student's needs and
desi res. Pa tterson urged studen ts int ersted
in ha ving a n yt hing to d o with Evergreen 's
fut ur e to re a d th e 1975-76 Geoduck
Cookbook - th e curriculum planning
guide - and become involved in the
c urri c u lum procedure at Evergreen
Another meeting w ill take place in
approx im a tely two weeks after program
proposals a nd faculty committment s hav e
been made public.

*****~ELECTION
FINAL-*****
by Gary Plaut z

Leil · P. pc//iru/osa. RighI: G. allfllllllla/is

0!ymp .l wa srmlgton 96505

the opposing groups in Northern Ireland ,
such negotia tions are at a stalemate now ,
sa id Costigan.
"If Britain gets out," he said, "there w ill
wholesa le massacre of Catholics - even if
they are not in the IRA - by the
P rotestants. "
Right now , Costigan is very pessimistic
regarding the possib le reso lutio n of the
Irish problem.
"By January 1, Ireland w ill be in its
eighth year of fighting. There is no end in
sight , and the situation is worse than
ever."

CURRICULUM PLANNING

, .-

the
evergreen
state
college

and completely irresponsible."
The British government, under new
Conserva tive Party leadership, finally
acted in Northern Ireland in 1971. In
August 1971. the British attempted to
wipe out the IRA by arresting its leaders .
They arrested 2,000 Ca tholics, but none
were leaders of the IRA, and as a result ,
v iolence escalated because of this use ot
police power.

The British now rule Northern Ireland
under "direct rule" with a 22 ,000 person
army force . Though many attempts have
been made to reconcile the posi tions of

by Robert Gerri sh a nd Mike Berg
Psil ocybin on Cd mpus ? Yes, it is true. There are, or were,
I'sil ocybin mushro oms on campus . Mu shroo ms o i t his ty pe
abound. A ll small. brownish, viscid . not alwa ys blu e staining.
Fall is the harvest season, and here on campus man y people arc
interested in harvest ing the sm a ll brown psilocyb in mushroom.
However, mushroom identification can be d ifficult and dangerou s,
especia ll y to the beginner. If you are considering goi ng out to
hunt the Psilocybe, you should know that in this area are found
mu shrooms of quite similar appearance , which are among the
most deadly species known,
Galerina aLltLlmnalis is a small brown mushroom with a brown
spo re print , like some psilocybins. It ha s a slight pellicle a nd th e
base sometimes tends to be bluish. Conocybe {ilaris is 'also sma ll
and brown with a brown spore print. Bo th occur here in the
Northwest. and Ga lerina aLltLlmnalis is plentiful on campus. These
tw o species contai n cy c\opept ides , deadly poisons whose
symptoms appear too late (10 to 14 hours after ingestion) for
successfu l treatment. After sharp abdominal pains , violent
vomiting, and diarrhea, the victim appears to improve, then
worsens a,nd dies in seven to ten days of massive liver and kidney
failure.
To avoid thi s miserable and painful brand of death, psilocybin
hunters should exercise the greatest care to positively identify a ll
mushrooms before eating them . Spore prints can vary among
individuals of a species~ and any doubtful mushroom shou ld be
su.b mitted to an expert for analysis .

A ver y Interesting el e c ti o n day In
Washington Tuesday .
T he dead must have rejoiced over the
passage o f Initiative 3 16 , t he death
penalty. I t w as a sad day for the living,
thou gh .
Do re()ple in th i!, state see societv
hove rin g so cl ose to tl~ e edge that ~h ey
wan t to give it ·1 sh o ve o ver the hrink to
bar ba ri sm; The al mos t 70 perl ent positive
vu te fo r 316 see ms to sy mboli z(· th is
sy nd rom e. O r was the vo te a belated
leg<l cy of th e Nixon years , o r proof of th e
ex isten ce of a new Ge ra ld Fo rd legacy?
"You' re no t on my team . murderer . no t in
a ny ca pacity
Two qu ot es from peo ple in downt o wn
O lym pia out of five people intervi ewed
W e dnE' sd a y m o rnin g (t he se a re re ill
quotes. seri ously ) :
" If I ge t m urd e red ,
want that
murderer to die, just like me . It would be
justice for my fa mily. "
"Murderers a re v'prmin , scum o f the
earth . They can't be kept in jails and
waste my money . They should be wiped
o ut. "
The already dead, the soon- to-be dead ,
and maybe those who are the living dead
must rejoice a t this step of lega lized,
legislated fascism the voters of Washington took Tu esday .

Wha t Initiati~e 316 does is to make th e
death penalty mand a tor y for seve n
different categories of aggravated m urder
in the first degree. Among these are
murde ring a police officer or fire fig hter
w,h ile they were performin g their du ties ; d
pr iso ner mu rdering someone wh ile servin g
timE' ; and d murder occ urr ing d uri ng a
rapc or kidnappin g.
Re publica n Representati ve Ea rl Ti lly 01
W ena tchee, the sponsor o f the initi a tiv e,
acknowledged that he had help from
"Ted" and o ther such kille rs in pass ing hi s
ini tia tive .
Now t he y can be hun ~, as deat h by
ha n); ing under W ashi ngton la w is the only
way such criminal s can be executed .
If a person is fou nd guilty o f a ggravat~ d
murder , the only wa y that perso n co uld
be spared from the noose is to hav e hi s o r
her senten ce commut ed by the G o vern or.
Dan Evans was an o ppo nen t of the death
penalt y .
The death penalt y, howe ver, may he
overturned by the U. S. Supreme Cour t
when they rule on its constituti onal it y .
Opponents of the ini tia tive disagreed
wi th in itiative proponents on the question
of whether th e death penanty, is a
deterrent to crime . According to opponents, dozens of studies by criminologists
have shown that the death penalty is not
con tinLl ed on page 9

BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND HABITATION
The Board of Trustees of Tl1e Evergreen State College will meet on November
13, 1975; among o ther items, the Trustees will consider an addition to the
facilities use policy for campus habitation . The hearing will commence at 11 am
on Nov. 13 in the Board of Trustees Room #3112 of the Daniel J. Evans library.
All interest ed persons may submit their views either orally or in writ~g at that
time.
All st udents who are camping on campus or intersted in the ramifications of
the habitation policy, meet at the Journal office at 1 pm on Nov. 7.

3

KAOS:
SLOW TALKERS
~) I ht'

Editor :

lane. my roo mm a tt' wants to
the assholes t hal work at
AOS. " She says if they don' t
Dr talki ng so slow she's go in g
the re wi th a club~ She mem15
When we were 13 she hit me
1 I he head with a baseba ll ba t
~c~use I couldn 't p it ch straight.
1e didn 't have any clea n clo thes
wea r this morning o r she
nu ld ha ve ki ll ed the person on
is Sunday's show ~
She says ' Why in th t' hell does
'er\',me on FM radio sound like
,e\' have thyro id disorders? It
ake5 me so goddamn mad I
51 wan t to get in there and
ab o ne of th ose jerks by the
~ i ll

V\e ll yo u get the picture. I' m
riting th is to warn you. You
)n 'l have to so und nut zy crazy
- anything but just talk normal .
,nc is big and is a woman of ac-

on

W ith empathy,
Name wi thh e ld by req uest

OPPRESSED
WHITE MALE

) the Ed ito r :

AND EVERYONf ELSE ' Yes,
ends, I am go in g to ta lk about
da y's (yesterday's a nd tomorw 's) favo rit e, let me get in a
tch, i got su mething to say,
o .. ~ su bject - OPPRESSION!
·t·s see now, we've got
The Women's Center
The Men 's Center (our token
sture at humor)
The Gay Resource Center
The Lesbian-Bisexua l Rap
roup
The Asian Center
The Rape Group
The Non-White Coali tion
T he Equal Opportunity / Af'mative Action Group
MECHA
and the list goes on and on
ell (here co mes my little bitch),
a single. w hite, middle class
ale (between the ages of 18 &
d do hereby, solemn ly sc ream ,
y (and , as usual, futilely) OP~ESSION' That's right! You
'a rd me I I am being oppressed
By Whites , Blacks, Asians,
dians, Women - by ALL of
1')1 I And goddammit ITS MY

TUR N TO SCREAM" There's
no OJ1e offeri ng me scholarsh ips
beca use of my et hnic origin , no
"irl I've got to do it on my own
- and I isten to the rest of you
bitch w hil e I work two jobs a
day and carry my academic st ud ies, too . Well, I've had it !!!
Don 't come to me with your
prob lems, baby - You won't
find a sy mpatheti c ea r from me
unt il I see you work ing 15 hours
a Jay and carrying fou r units a
quarter - /"" not goi ng to feel
gu ilty - I know ' wha t the hell
OPPRESS ION is!!
I just heard someone say
"R ig ht- on" -- who was that
li tt le voice out there? I'm not
alone I! Rej oice, Rejoice !! Yes,
RI GHT -ON !! a n d it 's time I
heard so meone say it - ~o
head, sc ream it !' It's your turlll
to sc ream - Nobody's givin!;
you arlything. man, you've ?ot
to get it for yourself - (they
told me my Dad made too much
money for m e to ge t Food
Stamps o r Financial Aid , but
"we cou ld get you a loan a t 12fio
interest - " SHOVE IT!)
But YOIl, Joe Politician , ./6e Financial A id, Joe Food Stamps,
Administrat ion , RIGHTER OF
WRONG DO I NGS . . . you're
, till giving it a ll away - giving
it to them so they can study all
the ways they ~think they're getting screwed - And you k now
what? T hey're laughing at you
- I've heard 'em - they're saying, "look at this asshole, he's
giving me all th is money because
he feels gu ilt y a nd the louder I
scream, the more he gives me."
But what I'm say ing won't be
hea rd , it's all been sa id before
an d it's got ten nowhe re! But .
if I keep trying , maybe someo ne
else w ill fina ll y scream "BULLSH IT," too. . and .then anot he r .
and then a not her and
pretty soon we' ll have the
SINGLE WHITE MIDDLE CLASS
MALE ( SWLMCLAM) Dropin Center and, we too, will join
the ranks of the recognized oppressed at Evergreen the Honkey, Chauvinis~
Pig tha t said "Who"

CAME.JO
To the Edi tor:
It seems to me that the Cooper
Point lourn'll really failed in its
duty as a newspaper in regard to
the talk un campus last week by

~JOURNAL

...

EDITOR
Ti Locke

MANAGING EDITOR
Cdry Plautz

NEWS EDITOR
C hri s Carroll

PRODUCTION

staff

Linda M . Lombard

FRAGMENTAL
FEMINIST
To the Editor:
Show me a woman who
turn s
the other cheek ...
And I'll show you a woman
who gets
her ass pa tted.
THE FRAGMENTED
FEMINIST
The day after
"Alice Doesn't Day."

INFORMATION
PLEASE
To the Editor:
A quality of hue
Is what I am to you
And who you are to me.
But hue is no t beauty.
Who am I to you
But a no ther human being;
One who wondprs who May th is lovely woman be James Douglas

Sharron Coo ntz
Young Socia list Alliance

RECOMMEND
EVERGREEN?

MANDATORY
DAYCARE

To the Editor:
To th e Edito r :
And Kormo ndy wants us to
actively recommend Evergreen to
ou r fr iends, neighbors a nd the
brothers and sisters of our high
school classmates? Right . . .
Kevin Clark

•ALICE DOESN'T"
REFLECTIONS
To the Editor:
Reflections on "Alice Doesn' t
Day" by a Fem inist Frustration, sadness, depressio n, a nger. Feel ings expressed in
dozens of written pages to my self, and, fiJ1ally, action. The
negat ive overtones of the day
did have some positive effec ts on
some of us.
We thought we were winning
ma jor bat tl es - State's ERA
passed, ~etting the Rape Law
comp letely changed, helping Joanna Little's defense, etc. - legal
causes .

This afternoo 1 I was having
coffee w ith my neighbor, Phy lli s,
and she showed me a letter written to the Daily Olympian conce rning a Senate bill, no. 626,
introduced by Senator Mondale .
The hill's intent is [0 make it
mandatory for all children agl:s
two to five to attend a chil d
ca re center run by the fede ral
government .
Though there is a great need
for many more federa ll y funded
day care centers, the thought of
mandatory attendance, by all
children two years and l.~ , can't
help but bring to mind that thi5
is one step further towards a
Fascist government.
I believe this bill, if passed,
would have a profound influence
on many members of this community, eve n if they do not have
chilJ ren now.
If you are co ncerned about
thi s bil l, please write to our

BUSINESS MANAGER
ENTERT AINMENT
Gary Kaufman

Danny Spearman, manager
Joe Gendreau
NEWS STAFF

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug King
Ford Gi lbreath
Kathleen Meighan
Louie Balukoff
GRAPHICS
Dexter Edge

Peter Camejo, Socialist Workers
Party candidate for President of
the United Sta tes. T he CPl did
not ru n a news article o n his
ta lk; the only article about his
appearance on campus was a
guest opinion by the Freedom
Socialist Party/Radical Women,
a group critical of Camejo's politics. With thi s as the o nly a rticle, the ca mp us was left with no
idea of the concrete politics of
Camejo and his a nd the Socialist
Workers Party's solutions to racism, unemployment, etc.
T he Young Soc ia li st All iance
(w ho sponsored the Ca me jo talk)
is pleased w ith the spiri t of debate tha t ex ists between us and
the ~ FSP / Radical Women. We
plan tu debate our politics with
them whenever the chance arises
a nd to a lso work with them
w henever possib le . Our quarrel
in thi s matter is not with them
or the appearance of their art icle.
It is wi th the CPI for only runni ng that articl e a nd fai ling to
cover the even t as the news
eve nt it was.
I hope th is omission will be
remed ied in the current issue of
the crr

"Alice Doesn 't Day" brought
us back to rea lity . The women's
movement has fa iled to show
that the real threats within thi s
soc iety as being more drastic
than any thin g the women's
mover:nen t could do. By trying
to "not be offensive;" we fail to
SC RE AM t he real "offe nsive"
threats to wo men, men and children. We have failed to educa te
other wome n especially.
Change is threatening to everyo ne. But changes are happening constant ly in this society . I'd
just like th ose changes to be as
hum a nita ria n as possible.
Yes, I' m st ill a fem inist. I still
pla n to work for the women's
move ment, but my efforts will
no t be directed any more to
cha ngi ng just laws. I w ill work
to en li ghten women to their heritage as women; the qualities
tha t they have given and can
give to this Spaceship Earth; the
streng th and power that they
have within themselves to correct
the really offens ive things in our
society.

Chris Cowger
Joe Morawsk i
Molly Wright
Rick Speer
Marvin Young

Jill Stewart
Curtis Milton
Ken Clair
Jerry Banooch

Jim Feyk
SECRETARY
Ca ther in e Riddell

ADVERTISING
Rick Skadan
Neil Marshall
John Dodge
Beverlee C hristense n

Nancy Conno ll y
Craig Lozzi

congressman:
Don Bonker
U.S. Representative
House of Representatives
Washington, D .C. 20515
Dinah Day

LOST BOOK
To the Editor:
I'm writing you because you
seem to be a partial suppository
for problems such as mine a nd I
don't want to miss any chances.
The person I feel the most real
kinship to in this world recently
left our campus for a year overseas . Just before her departure
from Los Angeles, she mai led me
a buok I had been hoping to acquire for some tim e. The book is
even more special to me because
she wrote a message for me on
the firs t page of the book which
expressed her feelings abo ut the
times we have shared together.
Well, as you may have
guessed by now, this book has
recent l y disappeared. It was
placed o utside of an apa rtm ent
o n the first floor of Dorm D
(perhaps unwisely) by a fri end
and hasn't been seen since.
I'm not interested in knowing
who took it, I would just like
my book returned, Please . . . If
you have it or know where it is,
put it back where you found it
o r leave it in seminar room Lib.
.,1504 which is always open. It's
entitled The Gentle Tasaday. If
you have it and would like to
fin ish reading it (it's really very
fascinating)' fee l free to do so.
But it means a grea t deal to me,
50 please return it soon.
Sincerely,
Bruce
The I DUtll",1 wekolJl"" . a~ ,5ig~~d
'.letters to ·tht · Editor· iUld p.IhU them
as space permits. To be co nsidered
for publication that week, letters
must be received no later than noon
o n th e Wed nesday preceding the
Thursday of publication. Letters received after deadline will be considered for publication in the next issue. Letters that are typed, doublespaced and 700 words or less have
better chance to get in.
Genera ll y, a photo or origina l art
is also published on the letters page.
Sub je cts may co ncern Ev ergreen
comm unity life, or may be just interesti ng and unusual. To be considered for pub li cation, photos / art
must also be submi tt ed before' nbo{l'
on the Wednesday pre~ing-)"I bti
Thursday of publication . Sojb",is,
sion size: preferably 5" x 7" or 8" x'
10, although other sizes are acceptable. Black-and-white only and
name, add ress and phone must ~
on submissions . A ll origina ls will be
returned.

a

Claselfied Ada'
A HOUSE! $66.66 / mo. Gets yo u a
roo m in a hOll se wi th a fireplace &
other extras. Hurry! on ly one room
left. Leave name & number a l
KAOS, c l o Keilh Goeh ner.

1972 - 73 Suzuki 250 cc str""tbike.
Chrome a nd crimson; clean, la st,
dependable transport, w ith windshie ld. too l k it, helmet and fork
locks, 6 speed transm ission , op.
backrest , helmet. Contact C hri stopher a t ASH Ap'ls~ #128 (loca ted a t
lefl eoJ 01 Bldg. N - Bike is in
frun t ,( .. pt.i
4 Responsible adu lts need a large

house pn Wests ide to rent. We can
pay $250 / mo~ Ca ll Dick in the
even ing at 456-1389.
Fre. kiltens. 8 wks. MOD 318 - A ~
1l66-S20S.

TYPESETTER _
Billie Cornish

PRINTER

!!1'i;jourll.,al

The Journal news and business offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) rm. 306,
News phones : 866-6214 and -6213; advertising and business 866-6080.

"

J.

,.

' .,

THE ALPINE LAKES AREA:

PUBLIC SENTIMENT AND THE GREAT COMPROMISE
by John Dodge
Public sent im ent is everything .
"WiJh public sentimen t, nothing can fail;
mril W1rlldm~ ir; l i\>athih~' ca,fcfucceed.
-- Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865)

1975 was to be the year of reckoning on
the future of the Alpine Lakes region in
the Central Cascade Mountains. But Congress has yet to enact legislation, d\1e
largely to the fai lure of the Washington
State's congressioJ1al delegation to finalize
an acceptable proposa l for House consideration.
At stake is more than one million acres
of pristine wilderness area between SnoQualmie and Stevens Passes. The Alpine
MketJ1!legion abounds wi th granite peaks,
gl~~!!1r scu'lpture, and over 600 lakes. The
"Washingto n A lps" have reached legendary fame; not only as a n ecosystem of
primitive beau ty, but also as a territorial
dispute between conservationists and allied timber interests.
HOW MANY ACRES
The battle over the Alpine Lakes region
is over acreage. How much land should
be preserved as wilderness area? How
much land should be managed for mul tirecreational use, for timber harvestiJ1g or
mining? The Great Compromise to please
all vested interests has yet to materialize.
The task rests in the hands of politicians.
At their disp~sal are over 45 years of
studies, proposals and related legislation.
1930 - The National Parks Service
surveyed the Washington Cascades
and proposed the creation of a threemillion-acre "Icy Peaks Park," stretching from Mt. Baker to Mt . Adams.
1946 - The Regional Forester designated 256,000 acres as the Alpine
Lakes Limited' Area_
1963 - Conservation groups proposed an A lpine Lakes Wilderness
Area of 334,000 acres which would include peripheral recreat iona l areas.
1965 - The North Cascades Study
Team recommends two areas for wilderness classification - the Alpine
Lakes (150,000 acres) and the Enchantments (30,000 acres),
1967 - 68 - The Washington State
congressional delegation coord inated
legislation that resulted in the creation
of the North Cascades Nat ional Park,
Ross Lake and Chelan Recreational
Areas, Pasayten Wilderness and Glacier Peak Wilderness.
1970 - The Alpine Lakes ProtecJ

tion Society (ALPS) proposed a
926 ,400 acre National Recreational
Area with a 364,480 acre wilderness
core area.
1971 -:- .T~e\'V as/lington delegation
asked the Chief of the Forest Service
to proceed with development of a Forest Service plan fo r classification of
the Alpine Lakes region.
1973 - Sen. Henry Jackson and
Rep . Lloyd Meeds introduced joint legislation in Congress to claSSify part of
the Alpine Lakes region as wilderness.
A PARADE OF BILLS
In summary, the bills up for consideration a re :
"B ill A" - The Forest Service regiona l
office plan proposed a single uni t A lp ine
Lakes Wilderness Area of 285,000 acres
with a peripheral, multiple- use management a rea of 639,000 acres .
·'Bill B" - A merger of two similar bi ll s
in w h ich a coal iti on of conservatio n
groups - including Sierra Club, Friends
of the Earth , North Cascades Conservation Council a nd ALPS - requested a
single wilderness area of 585, 000 acres
wi th a peripheral area, thereby bringing
1,012,000 acres under the protective management of a Nat iona l Recreation Area
(NRA).
"Bill C" - An alliance of timber a nd
mining interests wit h o utdoor recreation a lists such as ca r- campers, rockhounds,
and four-wheel drive clubs, suggesting a
two- unit wi ld erness plan (the Alpine
Lakes - 172,000 acres - and the Enchantment Lakes - 44,000 acres). The
two wilderness units wou ld be divided by
a non-wilderness corridor.
While all three bills provide for an Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area, there are crucial differences among them, Proponents
of the timber industry bill suggest the
smallest wilderness area and neglect the
inclusion of a surrounding area for unified management or recreat ional use. The
Forest Service bill takes into consideration
the lands around the wilderness area.
However, it is common practice in Forest
Service land management to finance land
used for recreatio nal activities through the
sale of timber from federa l lands. Only
the conservation ist's proposal provides for
a protective zone of recreation land surrounding the wilderness area.
Ownership of land in the Alpine Lakes
reg ion represents a major obstacle in arriving at the "Great Compromise." Boise
Cascade, Weyerhaeuser, Burlington Northern and the Pack River Lumber Co. own
231,000 acres of land in the Alpine Lakes

area . Most of these corporate land holdings are checkerboarded with federally
oWJ1ed lands, making unified land manageme nt a ll the more difficult.
RUSH TO WILDERNESS
T here is no doubt of the notoriety and
popularity of the Alpine Lakes mounta in
country. The region is within one-hour
drive of over 2,000,000 citizens of Washington. Forest Service studies show the
Alpine Lakes area receives more recreational use than the three Washington
State national parks combined. In 1956,
an esti mated 300,000 visitors came to the
Wenatchee' Na tional Forest. Th is year's
figure approaches 3,000,000.
The Enchantment Lakes area - a legendary grouping of lakes over 7,000 feet
high among the jagged Cashmere Crags of
the Stuart Range - sees up to 250 visitors
o n a summer weekend. The climb is arduous - eleva tion gain of 5,400 feet in
ten mi les - but the desolate splendor of
the mo untainous terrain and the multi colored lakes make the trip worthwhile. I
coun ted 55 cars in the parking lot at the
trail's head this summer. More than half
of the cars had out of state li cense
.
plates .. _
During my stay in the Alpine Lakes expanse this summer, it seemed many of my
campsites were sites of controversy. At
Eigh t Mile Lake - a blue-green alpine
lake nestled in a bowl of granite rock and
glacial peaks - the Pack River Company
wants to build a logging road where now
only a slender trail lin ks the lake to secondary roads. A t p,190-foot Lake Caroline on the slopes of Mt. Cashmere, a developer recently declared his desire to
build two ski lodges on privately owned
land. His plan called for helicopters to fly
the skiers to the lake that took me hours
to reach on blistered feet.
A GATHERING OF SENTIMENT
Early this summer, the House Interior
Subcommittee on National Parks and Recrea tion held public hearings in Washington State on the future of the Alpine
Lakes. The first hearing took place at the
University of Washington campus June
28. The committee held ano ther hearing
in Wenatchee on July 19. If nothing else,
the hearings pointed out a marked difference in op inions expressed on each side of
the Cascades.
More than 1,000 people jammed the
HUB ballroom to witness the face-off between conservationists and the timber industry. Speaking both as government officials and veteran back-packers, Governor Dan Evans and Seattle Mayor Wes

Uhlman both gave testimony in support
of the ALPS-sponsored bill. Evans leveled the charge of "legislation by chain
saw" agai nst timber companies who continue to push logging roads deep into the
A lpine Lakes wilderness area pending legislation. Evans' testimony reflected the
majority's sentiment at the hearing. T he
timber industry, Department of Natural
Resources, a nd recreational-vehicle own ers also pleaded their <;ase for a smaller
wilderness zone - 216,000 acres - which
would not affect the peripheral area for
cont inued lumber harvesting and mining
exploration. Not a single w itness testified
in favor of the Forest Service plan.
In Wenatchee, the legisla tors, which in cluded four representatives from Washington Sta te, heard testimony from over 200
people . The majority sen timent was proindustry. The Pack River Lumber Co. ,
operating three mills in Chelan County
and consistently the most outspoken opponent to the conserva tionist position,
said a Nationa l Recreation Area would
cost Chelan County as many as 1,222
jobs . Conservationists argued that out of
100 million board feet of lumber processed
in Chelan County last year, only seven
million board feet came from the Alpine
Lakes area. The Forest Service said the
creation of a National Recreation Area
woul d reduce allowable harvests in Washington State by 45 mill ion board feet.
Consen:~~i6nists countered this statistic
with one ~f their own -~ only six-tenths
of one percent of the 1972 state timber
harvest was involved.
So the Congressional delegation, armed
with statistics and a visceral feeling for
the emotional impact of the controversy ~
trekked back to Washington, D. C. The
poli tical football, known as the Alpine
Lakes legislative proposal, was tossed to
the Washington State congressional delegation for finalization.
AFTER THE CLIMB
Images I want to remember .
Th e
huge boulders covered with black lichen
making up the spires atld piles and pieces
of Mt. Cashmere... Alpine meadows
alive with purple daisies, red paintbrush ,
white puffballs , specks of yellow and blu e
flowers growing in the short span of high
altitud/! summer ~
The piercing whisti p
of a marmot calling his mate. . Clear
cool underwater springs emerging from
mountainsides, rushing down alpine meadows .
Cascade vistas from the ridgeTurquoise
line along Windy Pass .
lakes rl estled irl glacial basins .
High a/continued on page 4

3

KAOS:
SLOW TALKERS
~) I ht'

Editor :

lane. my roo mm a tt' wants to
the assholes t hal work at
AOS. " She says if they don' t
Dr talki ng so slow she's go in g
the re wi th a club~ She mem15
When we were 13 she hit me
1 I he head with a baseba ll ba t
~c~use I couldn 't p it ch straight.
1e didn 't have any clea n clo thes
wea r this morning o r she
nu ld ha ve ki ll ed the person on
is Sunday's show ~
She says ' Why in th t' hell does
'er\',me on FM radio sound like
,e\' have thyro id disorders? It
ake5 me so goddamn mad I
51 wan t to get in there and
ab o ne of th ose jerks by the
~ i ll

V\e ll yo u get the picture. I' m
riting th is to warn you. You
)n 'l have to so und nut zy crazy
- anything but just talk normal .
,nc is big and is a woman of ac-

on

W ith empathy,
Name wi thh e ld by req uest

OPPRESSED
WHITE MALE

) the Ed ito r :

AND EVERYONf ELSE ' Yes,
ends, I am go in g to ta lk about
da y's (yesterday's a nd tomorw 's) favo rit e, let me get in a
tch, i got su mething to say,
o .. ~ su bject - OPPRESSION!
·t·s see now, we've got
The Women's Center
The Men 's Center (our token
sture at humor)
The Gay Resource Center
The Lesbian-Bisexua l Rap
roup
The Asian Center
The Rape Group
The Non-White Coali tion
T he Equal Opportunity / Af'mative Action Group
MECHA
and the list goes on and on
ell (here co mes my little bitch),
a single. w hite, middle class
ale (between the ages of 18 &
d do hereby, solemn ly sc ream ,
y (and , as usual, futilely) OP~ESSION' That's right! You
'a rd me I I am being oppressed
By Whites , Blacks, Asians,
dians, Women - by ALL of
1')1 I And goddammit ITS MY

TUR N TO SCREAM" There's
no OJ1e offeri ng me scholarsh ips
beca use of my et hnic origin , no
"irl I've got to do it on my own
- and I isten to the rest of you
bitch w hil e I work two jobs a
day and carry my academic st ud ies, too . Well, I've had it !!!
Don 't come to me with your
prob lems, baby - You won't
find a sy mpatheti c ea r from me
unt il I see you work ing 15 hours
a Jay and carrying fou r units a
quarter - /"" not goi ng to feel
gu ilty - I know ' wha t the hell
OPPRESS ION is!!
I just heard someone say
"R ig ht- on" -- who was that
li tt le voice out there? I'm not
alone I! Rej oice, Rejoice !! Yes,
RI GHT -ON !! a n d it 's time I
heard so meone say it - ~o
head, sc ream it !' It's your turlll
to sc ream - Nobody's givin!;
you arlything. man, you've ?ot
to get it for yourself - (they
told me my Dad made too much
money for m e to ge t Food
Stamps o r Financial Aid , but
"we cou ld get you a loan a t 12fio
interest - " SHOVE IT!)
But YOIl, Joe Politician , ./6e Financial A id, Joe Food Stamps,
Administrat ion , RIGHTER OF
WRONG DO I NGS . . . you're
, till giving it a ll away - giving
it to them so they can study all
the ways they ~think they're getting screwed - And you k now
what? T hey're laughing at you
- I've heard 'em - they're saying, "look at this asshole, he's
giving me all th is money because
he feels gu ilt y a nd the louder I
scream, the more he gives me."
But what I'm say ing won't be
hea rd , it's all been sa id before
an d it's got ten nowhe re! But .
if I keep trying , maybe someo ne
else w ill fina ll y scream "BULLSH IT," too. . and .then anot he r .
and then a not her and
pretty soon we' ll have the
SINGLE WHITE MIDDLE CLASS
MALE ( SWLMCLAM) Dropin Center and, we too, will join
the ranks of the recognized oppressed at Evergreen the Honkey, Chauvinis~
Pig tha t said "Who"

CAME.JO
To the Edi tor:
It seems to me that the Cooper
Point lourn'll really failed in its
duty as a newspaper in regard to
the talk un campus last week by

~JOURNAL

...

EDITOR
Ti Locke

MANAGING EDITOR
Cdry Plautz

NEWS EDITOR
C hri s Carroll

PRODUCTION

staff

Linda M . Lombard

FRAGMENTAL
FEMINIST
To the Editor:
Show me a woman who
turn s
the other cheek ...
And I'll show you a woman
who gets
her ass pa tted.
THE FRAGMENTED
FEMINIST
The day after
"Alice Doesn't Day."

INFORMATION
PLEASE
To the Editor:
A quality of hue
Is what I am to you
And who you are to me.
But hue is no t beauty.
Who am I to you
But a no ther human being;
One who wondprs who May th is lovely woman be James Douglas

Sharron Coo ntz
Young Socia list Alliance

RECOMMEND
EVERGREEN?

MANDATORY
DAYCARE

To the Editor:
To th e Edito r :
And Kormo ndy wants us to
actively recommend Evergreen to
ou r fr iends, neighbors a nd the
brothers and sisters of our high
school classmates? Right . . .
Kevin Clark

•ALICE DOESN'T"
REFLECTIONS
To the Editor:
Reflections on "Alice Doesn' t
Day" by a Fem inist Frustration, sadness, depressio n, a nger. Feel ings expressed in
dozens of written pages to my self, and, fiJ1ally, action. The
negat ive overtones of the day
did have some positive effec ts on
some of us.
We thought we were winning
ma jor bat tl es - State's ERA
passed, ~etting the Rape Law
comp letely changed, helping Joanna Little's defense, etc. - legal
causes .

This afternoo 1 I was having
coffee w ith my neighbor, Phy lli s,
and she showed me a letter written to the Daily Olympian conce rning a Senate bill, no. 626,
introduced by Senator Mondale .
The hill's intent is [0 make it
mandatory for all children agl:s
two to five to attend a chil d
ca re center run by the fede ral
government .
Though there is a great need
for many more federa ll y funded
day care centers, the thought of
mandatory attendance, by all
children two years and l.~ , can't
help but bring to mind that thi5
is one step further towards a
Fascist government.
I believe this bill, if passed,
would have a profound influence
on many members of this community, eve n if they do not have
chilJ ren now.
If you are co ncerned about
thi s bil l, please write to our

BUSINESS MANAGER
ENTERT AINMENT
Gary Kaufman

Danny Spearman, manager
Joe Gendreau
NEWS STAFF

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug King
Ford Gi lbreath
Kathleen Meighan
Louie Balukoff
GRAPHICS
Dexter Edge

Peter Camejo, Socialist Workers
Party candidate for President of
the United Sta tes. T he CPl did
not ru n a news article o n his
ta lk; the only article about his
appearance on campus was a
guest opinion by the Freedom
Socialist Party/Radical Women,
a group critical of Camejo's politics. With thi s as the o nly a rticle, the ca mp us was left with no
idea of the concrete politics of
Camejo and his a nd the Socialist
Workers Party's solutions to racism, unemployment, etc.
T he Young Soc ia li st All iance
(w ho sponsored the Ca me jo talk)
is pleased w ith the spiri t of debate tha t ex ists between us and
the ~ FSP / Radical Women. We
plan tu debate our politics with
them whenever the chance arises
a nd to a lso work with them
w henever possib le . Our quarrel
in thi s matter is not with them
or the appearance of their art icle.
It is wi th the CPI for only runni ng that articl e a nd fai ling to
cover the even t as the news
eve nt it was.
I hope th is omission will be
remed ied in the current issue of
the crr

"Alice Doesn 't Day" brought
us back to rea lity . The women's
movement has fa iled to show
that the real threats within thi s
soc iety as being more drastic
than any thin g the women's
mover:nen t could do. By trying
to "not be offensive;" we fail to
SC RE AM t he real "offe nsive"
threats to wo men, men and children. We have failed to educa te
other wome n especially.
Change is threatening to everyo ne. But changes are happening constant ly in this society . I'd
just like th ose changes to be as
hum a nita ria n as possible.
Yes, I' m st ill a fem inist. I still
pla n to work for the women's
move ment, but my efforts will
no t be directed any more to
cha ngi ng just laws. I w ill work
to en li ghten women to their heritage as women; the qualities
tha t they have given and can
give to this Spaceship Earth; the
streng th and power that they
have within themselves to correct
the really offens ive things in our
society.

Chris Cowger
Joe Morawsk i
Molly Wright
Rick Speer
Marvin Young

Jill Stewart
Curtis Milton
Ken Clair
Jerry Banooch

Jim Feyk
SECRETARY
Ca ther in e Riddell

ADVERTISING
Rick Skadan
Neil Marshall
John Dodge
Beverlee C hristense n

Nancy Conno ll y
Craig Lozzi

congressman:
Don Bonker
U.S. Representative
House of Representatives
Washington, D .C. 20515
Dinah Day

LOST BOOK
To the Editor:
I'm writing you because you
seem to be a partial suppository
for problems such as mine a nd I
don't want to miss any chances.
The person I feel the most real
kinship to in this world recently
left our campus for a year overseas . Just before her departure
from Los Angeles, she mai led me
a buok I had been hoping to acquire for some tim e. The book is
even more special to me because
she wrote a message for me on
the firs t page of the book which
expressed her feelings abo ut the
times we have shared together.
Well, as you may have
guessed by now, this book has
recent l y disappeared. It was
placed o utside of an apa rtm ent
o n the first floor of Dorm D
(perhaps unwisely) by a fri end
and hasn't been seen since.
I'm not interested in knowing
who took it, I would just like
my book returned, Please . . . If
you have it or know where it is,
put it back where you found it
o r leave it in seminar room Lib.
.,1504 which is always open. It's
entitled The Gentle Tasaday. If
you have it and would like to
fin ish reading it (it's really very
fascinating)' fee l free to do so.
But it means a grea t deal to me,
50 please return it soon.
Sincerely,
Bruce
The I DUtll",1 wekolJl"" . a~ ,5ig~~d
'.letters to ·tht · Editor· iUld p.IhU them
as space permits. To be co nsidered
for publication that week, letters
must be received no later than noon
o n th e Wed nesday preceding the
Thursday of publication. Letters received after deadline will be considered for publication in the next issue. Letters that are typed, doublespaced and 700 words or less have
better chance to get in.
Genera ll y, a photo or origina l art
is also published on the letters page.
Sub je cts may co ncern Ev ergreen
comm unity life, or may be just interesti ng and unusual. To be considered for pub li cation, photos / art
must also be submi tt ed before' nbo{l'
on the Wednesday pre~ing-)"I bti
Thursday of publication . Sojb",is,
sion size: preferably 5" x 7" or 8" x'
10, although other sizes are acceptable. Black-and-white only and
name, add ress and phone must ~
on submissions . A ll origina ls will be
returned.

a

Claselfied Ada'
A HOUSE! $66.66 / mo. Gets yo u a
roo m in a hOll se wi th a fireplace &
other extras. Hurry! on ly one room
left. Leave name & number a l
KAOS, c l o Keilh Goeh ner.

1972 - 73 Suzuki 250 cc str""tbike.
Chrome a nd crimson; clean, la st,
dependable transport, w ith windshie ld. too l k it, helmet and fork
locks, 6 speed transm ission , op.
backrest , helmet. Contact C hri stopher a t ASH Ap'ls~ #128 (loca ted a t
lefl eoJ 01 Bldg. N - Bike is in
frun t ,( .. pt.i
4 Responsible adu lts need a large

house pn Wests ide to rent. We can
pay $250 / mo~ Ca ll Dick in the
even ing at 456-1389.
Fre. kiltens. 8 wks. MOD 318 - A ~
1l66-S20S.

TYPESETTER _
Billie Cornish

PRINTER

!!1'i;jourll.,al

The Journal news and business offices are located in the College Activities Building (CAB) rm. 306,
News phones : 866-6214 and -6213; advertising and business 866-6080.

"

J.

,.

' .,

THE ALPINE LAKES AREA:

PUBLIC SENTIMENT AND THE GREAT COMPROMISE
by John Dodge
Public sent im ent is everything .
"WiJh public sentimen t, nothing can fail;
mril W1rlldm~ ir; l i\>athih~' ca,fcfucceed.
-- Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865)

1975 was to be the year of reckoning on
the future of the Alpine Lakes region in
the Central Cascade Mountains. But Congress has yet to enact legislation, d\1e
largely to the fai lure of the Washington
State's congressioJ1al delegation to finalize
an acceptable proposa l for House consideration.
At stake is more than one million acres
of pristine wilderness area between SnoQualmie and Stevens Passes. The Alpine
MketJ1!legion abounds wi th granite peaks,
gl~~!!1r scu'lpture, and over 600 lakes. The
"Washingto n A lps" have reached legendary fame; not only as a n ecosystem of
primitive beau ty, but also as a territorial
dispute between conservationists and allied timber interests.
HOW MANY ACRES
The battle over the Alpine Lakes region
is over acreage. How much land should
be preserved as wilderness area? How
much land should be managed for mul tirecreational use, for timber harvestiJ1g or
mining? The Great Compromise to please
all vested interests has yet to materialize.
The task rests in the hands of politicians.
At their disp~sal are over 45 years of
studies, proposals and related legislation.
1930 - The National Parks Service
surveyed the Washington Cascades
and proposed the creation of a threemillion-acre "Icy Peaks Park," stretching from Mt. Baker to Mt . Adams.
1946 - The Regional Forester designated 256,000 acres as the Alpine
Lakes Limited' Area_
1963 - Conservation groups proposed an A lpine Lakes Wilderness
Area of 334,000 acres which would include peripheral recreat iona l areas.
1965 - The North Cascades Study
Team recommends two areas for wilderness classification - the Alpine
Lakes (150,000 acres) and the Enchantments (30,000 acres),
1967 - 68 - The Washington State
congressional delegation coord inated
legislation that resulted in the creation
of the North Cascades Nat ional Park,
Ross Lake and Chelan Recreational
Areas, Pasayten Wilderness and Glacier Peak Wilderness.
1970 - The Alpine Lakes ProtecJ

tion Society (ALPS) proposed a
926 ,400 acre National Recreational
Area with a 364,480 acre wilderness
core area.
1971 -:- .T~e\'V as/lington delegation
asked the Chief of the Forest Service
to proceed with development of a Forest Service plan fo r classification of
the Alpine Lakes region.
1973 - Sen. Henry Jackson and
Rep . Lloyd Meeds introduced joint legislation in Congress to claSSify part of
the Alpine Lakes region as wilderness.
A PARADE OF BILLS
In summary, the bills up for consideration a re :
"B ill A" - The Forest Service regiona l
office plan proposed a single uni t A lp ine
Lakes Wilderness Area of 285,000 acres
with a peripheral, multiple- use management a rea of 639,000 acres .
·'Bill B" - A merger of two similar bi ll s
in w h ich a coal iti on of conservatio n
groups - including Sierra Club, Friends
of the Earth , North Cascades Conservation Council a nd ALPS - requested a
single wilderness area of 585, 000 acres
wi th a peripheral area, thereby bringing
1,012,000 acres under the protective management of a Nat iona l Recreation Area
(NRA).
"Bill C" - An alliance of timber a nd
mining interests wit h o utdoor recreation a lists such as ca r- campers, rockhounds,
and four-wheel drive clubs, suggesting a
two- unit wi ld erness plan (the Alpine
Lakes - 172,000 acres - and the Enchantment Lakes - 44,000 acres). The
two wilderness units wou ld be divided by
a non-wilderness corridor.
While all three bills provide for an Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area, there are crucial differences among them, Proponents
of the timber industry bill suggest the
smallest wilderness area and neglect the
inclusion of a surrounding area for unified management or recreat ional use. The
Forest Service bill takes into consideration
the lands around the wilderness area.
However, it is common practice in Forest
Service land management to finance land
used for recreatio nal activities through the
sale of timber from federa l lands. Only
the conservation ist's proposal provides for
a protective zone of recreation land surrounding the wilderness area.
Ownership of land in the Alpine Lakes
reg ion represents a major obstacle in arriving at the "Great Compromise." Boise
Cascade, Weyerhaeuser, Burlington Northern and the Pack River Lumber Co. own
231,000 acres of land in the Alpine Lakes

area . Most of these corporate land holdings are checkerboarded with federally
oWJ1ed lands, making unified land manageme nt a ll the more difficult.
RUSH TO WILDERNESS
T here is no doubt of the notoriety and
popularity of the Alpine Lakes mounta in
country. The region is within one-hour
drive of over 2,000,000 citizens of Washington. Forest Service studies show the
Alpine Lakes area receives more recreational use than the three Washington
State national parks combined. In 1956,
an esti mated 300,000 visitors came to the
Wenatchee' Na tional Forest. Th is year's
figure approaches 3,000,000.
The Enchantment Lakes area - a legendary grouping of lakes over 7,000 feet
high among the jagged Cashmere Crags of
the Stuart Range - sees up to 250 visitors
o n a summer weekend. The climb is arduous - eleva tion gain of 5,400 feet in
ten mi les - but the desolate splendor of
the mo untainous terrain and the multi colored lakes make the trip worthwhile. I
coun ted 55 cars in the parking lot at the
trail's head this summer. More than half
of the cars had out of state li cense
.
plates .. _
During my stay in the Alpine Lakes expanse this summer, it seemed many of my
campsites were sites of controversy. At
Eigh t Mile Lake - a blue-green alpine
lake nestled in a bowl of granite rock and
glacial peaks - the Pack River Company
wants to build a logging road where now
only a slender trail lin ks the lake to secondary roads. A t p,190-foot Lake Caroline on the slopes of Mt. Cashmere, a developer recently declared his desire to
build two ski lodges on privately owned
land. His plan called for helicopters to fly
the skiers to the lake that took me hours
to reach on blistered feet.
A GATHERING OF SENTIMENT
Early this summer, the House Interior
Subcommittee on National Parks and Recrea tion held public hearings in Washington State on the future of the Alpine
Lakes. The first hearing took place at the
University of Washington campus June
28. The committee held ano ther hearing
in Wenatchee on July 19. If nothing else,
the hearings pointed out a marked difference in op inions expressed on each side of
the Cascades.
More than 1,000 people jammed the
HUB ballroom to witness the face-off between conservationists and the timber industry. Speaking both as government officials and veteran back-packers, Governor Dan Evans and Seattle Mayor Wes

Uhlman both gave testimony in support
of the ALPS-sponsored bill. Evans leveled the charge of "legislation by chain
saw" agai nst timber companies who continue to push logging roads deep into the
A lpine Lakes wilderness area pending legislation. Evans' testimony reflected the
majority's sentiment at the hearing. T he
timber industry, Department of Natural
Resources, a nd recreational-vehicle own ers also pleaded their <;ase for a smaller
wilderness zone - 216,000 acres - which
would not affect the peripheral area for
cont inued lumber harvesting and mining
exploration. Not a single w itness testified
in favor of the Forest Service plan.
In Wenatchee, the legisla tors, which in cluded four representatives from Washington Sta te, heard testimony from over 200
people . The majority sen timent was proindustry. The Pack River Lumber Co. ,
operating three mills in Chelan County
and consistently the most outspoken opponent to the conserva tionist position,
said a Nationa l Recreation Area would
cost Chelan County as many as 1,222
jobs . Conservationists argued that out of
100 million board feet of lumber processed
in Chelan County last year, only seven
million board feet came from the Alpine
Lakes area. The Forest Service said the
creation of a National Recreation Area
woul d reduce allowable harvests in Washington State by 45 mill ion board feet.
Consen:~~i6nists countered this statistic
with one ~f their own -~ only six-tenths
of one percent of the 1972 state timber
harvest was involved.
So the Congressional delegation, armed
with statistics and a visceral feeling for
the emotional impact of the controversy ~
trekked back to Washington, D. C. The
poli tical football, known as the Alpine
Lakes legislative proposal, was tossed to
the Washington State congressional delegation for finalization.
AFTER THE CLIMB
Images I want to remember .
Th e
huge boulders covered with black lichen
making up the spires atld piles and pieces
of Mt. Cashmere... Alpine meadows
alive with purple daisies, red paintbrush ,
white puffballs , specks of yellow and blu e
flowers growing in the short span of high
altitud/! summer ~
The piercing whisti p
of a marmot calling his mate. . Clear
cool underwater springs emerging from
mountainsides, rushing down alpine meadows .
Cascade vistas from the ridgeTurquoise
line along Windy Pass .
lakes rl estled irl glacial basins .
High a/continued on page 4

.>

• !..

>THE SKYROCKETING PRICE OF NUCLEAR POWER

z

o

-

BOYCOlT
A number of people have spoken to me lately about their
dissatisfaction with their faculty, seminars, programs and
co ntracts. Often they had protested repeatedly to faculty,
formal pet itions of dissatisfaction , and had been all
:J presented
but ignored . What 's th~ solution when conferences and
C nego tiation fa il s? The trad itional tools of the worker - strikes,
pickf'ts . b(1 '1 co tts - a re equa ll y effec ti ve in crea ting a cha nge in
~ eLiucat io n ,
[f a nll mber of students wa nt ()ut of a pmgra m · or sem ind r
2
anJ are t<lld Ih at thev can' t leaVE beca us(" "it 'lI cause "
~ 'i.J mpf'd c <lntl "II the tra ditional fo rm s. Llf neg()tiatio n fai l Z thL'p ,)rgonlze .J nd bovco tt the semina r or program . Ret-use , to
c:t "I J ~ n u l' nt il m:cessarv ch,mges (I re ma de. Th" same holds In l('
I: It 5 !t ~ ,.ie "h ,H e wl,r"-ing WIth a fa cult v member that they tel' l I,
:nq·t 'i :'-''Pt : 1. lacki ng in litness o r aptitude. 2. lackin g 111
-('nse <> r .. eil ~ "n 3 . gene rally incompetan t: W ehster's ,\JI' 11'
W0rfd D i( t i,l]I<1'Y) 11 confe rence after co nferen(,e and m eeli n ,~
dlkr mee ting wit h the Jeans fails to prodUCE 03ny app reciable
change, then strike. Retuse to work with tha t fac ult y member.
If you decide to strike, then make your views know n. Send
let ters to President McCann, Provost Kormondy and the
academic deans telling them clearly why you feel it's necessa ry
to pHltest. Distribute handbills to other students. Don't be
intimidated by the fallacy that good students don't make
waves . Only by making waves and generating inte~st in
education will the educational process keep refining and
growing. More importantly, protest keeps faculty, students and
administration alike from settling into a comfortable blanket of
conformity.
FIRING FACULTY
Students are asked to write evaluations of their faculty at the
end of every quarter (or contract), Good or bad, these
evaluations are then taken into consideration when it's time for
facultly members to be re-hired .... or fired.
In addition to the planning faculty, approximately 125 new
faculty have been hired, according to Provost Ed Kormondy .
Of those, not one has been fired . Is this because the faculty
here are so outstanding that we have no reason to fire them?
Wrong, say many students. Many faculty have received
numerous bad evaluations from both their students and the
faculty they have worked with, say a number of people on
campus (who chose to remain anonymous) .
Yet, those faculty have been re-hired with - what7 A slap on
the wrist? A warning that they'd better shape up in the next
three years (usual length of faculty contracts)? How many
bad evaluations must a faculty member receive until those in
charge of hiring/ firing consider them as a serious criteria for
nat rehiring? Ten? Fifty? A hundred? Or are those evaluations
even looked at seriously?
TENURE
At Evergreen, there is supposedly no faculty tenure, no
faculty hierarchy (head-of-department, professor, assistant
professor, teaching assistant) and the accompanving pecking
order. On paper, the theory of all facultv with equal status Ii>
subji'c'f to rilhlrl'rlg with ~fiident e"''aril~!'i~H.''a~ ' a ' l!-ri~fi~U-IGth'q1c.l"'''(] ,2
efficient, logical and up-to-date.
Unfortunately, the faculty here did not suddenly appear
from some Evergreen-faculty-pool-in-the-sky and are often
grounded in a traditional college system. Faculty hired here
first hold an unspoken, "in house" tenure . Faculty hired more
recently have the opportunity to learn the "Evergreen Way",
unlike at other colleges, and usually are not thrown cold into
an unfamiliar teaching situatiqn . However, these new faculty
are subject to the whim of older faculty in the program, who
mayor may not delegate them relaHvely equal duties and
responsibilities.
But there's still that "unspoken tenure", and older faculty
members can become grounded in comfortable academia.
Change can happp.n in the minds of faculty willing to
d,. ",'",n
re-evaluate themselv~s every year, and adapt to fluc.tuatill8. :, ,. i
learning processes. O:her faculty may remain grounded in old
habits, with neither student nor faculty nor administration able
to budge him or her. Then, it's up to the students to say,
"Hey, you're getting academically senilel"
WHO'S IN CHARGE
Who hires and who fir{'s? The pee,ple who judge who stays
and who leaves are the deam and members of the
administration - people who will rotate back into the faculty at
,
the end of their terms.
"
. .
, ,- :' ". :' '.' -.
'. ' .
Meanwhile, studt:nts are co.mplainiilg al'loui fa.tulty; 'serilina·rs " ,;
and programs that don't fit their needs, the faculty complains
of being overworked - and in many cases, they are.
Where is the median? Students are entitled to an education
with faculty who know their subiects and themselves, and who
are willing to work harder than at other colleges to teach
their skills. The faculty are Ion titled to decent working hours
and a sense of accomplishing their . work; not · a sense of
frustration because they are swamped w'itl'l students,
evaluations, book-ordering, DTF's and curriculurr. p~anning~
The solution is not to hire more and more fac.J:ty - we are
already faced with funds lost due to underenrollment and
hiring more faculty to teach a diminishing number of students
seems illogical. On the other hand, can we let faculty who
receive quarter after quarter of bad evaluations and student
complaints stay on salary because they're one of the old guard,
because they bring a big grant to the school, or because they
were once a good teacher at Outer Eastern lJ?
.The solution is to have faculty who are willing to do their
work and a little more, students who will protest when their
program isn't delivering all that they expected, and people that
will work together as partners in education, not dictators and
workers awaiting a mutual coup.
.The solution is to have students and faculty who have the
patience to fight for their own education and have the
determination to work with (and if necessary, eliminate) people
who are settling !,lncontrollably into comfortable academic
- .holes and educational back~aters : .
.The solution is to fight for your own education, whether
you're a student, faculty member, or administrator. And that is
the crux of the original Evergreen philosophy : to fight your
own battles, and make your own way - because if you don't
do it,
isn't
to do it for

5
w

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o

THE GREAT COMPROMISE
I'ag.' 4
ti l".! .. 1111IIId , .. . /lld li/<I,tll ing de scending
-"" 111 ,I hi:,:.II''/" H l' II :)C Il to hang directly
,,; ..., II,,, 51111lrl Rallgc .
Dusty sw itch1"ll k I mil>. jullcII ceden. waterfalls and
lu";1,/,,.1 r,'c k.
Th e mosquito poised
t,'" I I, .. ~l/llIlg" , th" horse fly prepared ' for
: 11, il it£' .
Slzoo til1g stars. half-mool1s,
,,,,,I I II,' SOU lld of lHlimll/S mCl, il1g through
II,e lIig/,1
Tile evellillg fir£' , the mOnJ5 1111 tlze lIl olmtaill I just climb ed .
THE GREAT COMPROMISE
By thp end ()f summer, political observer, lelt a unanim ous agreement by the
\\ashington State congressional delegation
wpuld virtually insure passage of an Alpi ne Lakes Wilderness bill. A proposal
known as the ··Meeds compromise bill"
bega n to emerge. Figures on specific acreil ge tor t he wilderness zone flew through
the air like snowflakes in a Cascade storm
. 520.000 acres, 440 ,000 acres , 350,000
acres . 308 ,000 acres .
October found the representatives still
' truggling with d compromise bill. Mike
.\1cCormack , Richland Democrat and
timber industry advocate , held out for a
.; maller wilderness area and the protection
'-C Ilt"i,:up d

f r (, 1I1

EVERGREEN COINS~
__.,
AND
~
INVESTMENTS

··~

BUYING . SilVER & GOLD COIN
DOLLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COLLECTIONS
1722 West Building 1722 Harrison
(aqoss from Bob's Big Burgersl
3

of lu mber rig ht s on private la nds.
When the state's representatives appeared Oc t. 15th at Evergreen , they assured the audience that they were "close
to agreem en t" on a compromise bill. Ten
days lilter. press releases showed six of
th e seven delegation members in agree ment on proposed legislation . McCormack
remilined the lone dissenter.
The most recent compromise calls for
the establishment of a 920,000 acre, " Icy
Peaks Enchantment Area. " Included with- .
in the proposal is an initial Alpine Lakes
Wilderness Area of 303,000 acres with provISions for procurement of an additional
75,000 acres of intermixed private and
federal lands over the next three years.
The wilderness area would be surrounded
by a multiple land management unit. The
plan is similar to the original Forest Service plan .
Timber interests and their allies disapprove of the bill. Conservationists also refute the proposed legislatio,n .
"We feel there are two basic flaws in
the compromise bill ," said Robert Ordal,
president of the Alpine Lakes Protection
Society. "First of all, the proposed wilderness area is not big enough and second,
there is no provision in the bill for control of some 175.000 acres of intermingled
private. land in the peripheral area. "
The congressmen can't reach a unanimous agreement; conservationists and
timber interests disapprove of the compromise; the public is mind-boggled by
acreage figures ; and the Congress is winding down for holiday recess without acting (yet) on Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area
legislation. Can anybody suggest the compromise to end all compromises?
Sometimes I think the decisions on the
future of the Alpine Lakes should be
made by a Council of Regional Mountains.

SOUTH
· SOUND

.

BANK

Savings' & Checking Accounts
Traveler's Checks

\

hours 12-3
mon.-fri.
866-2440

~rGj)

by Martin Brown
ERDA now admits that, "Efforts by the :
SAN FRANCISCO, OCT 30 (PNS) industry to reprocess fuel in the commerNuclear power - already challenged as
cial sector and to use the separated pluunsafe - may soon prove uneconomical
tonium in new fuel are almost at a standas well .
still." In a recent study, Irvin C. Bupp of
In virtually every phase of the nuclear
MIT concludes that without reprocessing,
fission system, prices have skyrocketed to
the cost of nuclear power by 1980 - 85
levels unimagined only a year ago. Here
will equal - and then surpass - the cost •
is the economic picture in six key phases
of coal-fired power.
of the nuclear power process:
Meanwhile, thousands of spent nuclear
• Uranium : the price of uranium, the nufuel rods have been stored for future re'clear fuel, has tripled in the past year processing. Now private industry is
from $8 per pound to $24 per pound.
running out of storage facilities - with
. Westinghouse Electric Corp., which
only five percent of its original storage
supplies uranium to about 40 percent of
capacity vacant.
.
the fission power plant market, recently
·Construction costs: The cost of buiJdannounced it would not honor its uranium
ing a nuclear reactor has risen from $300
supply contracts under the original price
per kilowatt of capacity in 1970 to $1,135
terms. The Wall Street Journal called the
per kilowatt in 1975.
decision, "another blow to an industry
Coupled with declining electrical power
that has been severely set back because of
demand, this has led to numerous cancelescalating costs . . ."
lations of nuclear facilities by utility
·The breeder reactor : Once counted on
companies. Houston Lighting and Power
to solve any fuel supply problems because
Co., for example, has just announced the
it produces more fuel than it consumes,
indefinite postponement of its twin reactor
the breeder has been hit by continuing
nuclear station in AlIens Creek, Tex. , as
construction delays and technical difficulestimated construction costs climbed from
ties.
$900 million in 1971 to $1.5 billion in
The federal Energy Research and Devel1975. Detroit Edison has announced canopmept Agency (ERDA) - of which
cellation of its Monroe, Mich., nuclear
Rep. Mike McCormack of Washington is
plant after construction costs increased
a member - no longer regards the breedfrom $675 million -to $900 million in one
er program as . its top priority, and inyear. And Middle South Utilities of New
stead plans to concentrate research on
Orleans canceled two nuclear power projconventional reactors. And the General
ects and deferred another after cost estiAccounting Office, Congress' investigamates rose from $1.2 billion to $2 .3 biltive' arm, has recommended a delay of
lion.
seven,to-ten years before deciding on the
• Capacity factors and reliability: Cost
breeler's development for commercial
calculations for nuclear power have asuse. •
sumed that reactors will operate at an av·Enrichment and reprocessing of uraerage capacity of 80 percent. However, a
nium: American reactors, unlike Canadisurvey of all operational reactors in 1974
an, cannot use uranium as it is found in
showed they functioned at an average canature. It must be "enriched" - increasing
pacity of only 51.6 percent. If such conthe concentration of fissionable Uranium
ditions persist, then the cost of nuclear
235 - a process where costs have escapower has been underassessed by about
lated from $35 to $50 per pound in the
60 percent.
last two years.
Operating capacity has fallen in part
"Reprocessing" - removing waste mabecause technical foulups have forced proterials from spent nuclear fuel and salvaglonged shutdowns of many plants. In Febing the uranium and plutonium for furruary 1975, the Nuclear Regulatory Comther use ~ has become economically unmission shut down 23 reactors to check
feasible in the U .s . Yet, reprocessing has
for suspected cracks in pipes of the emeralw!s been considered . an essential steD ;,, ~~n~y ~W~ .<;i?l~1i'Y! sy:st~I'!': ; F~r the ~3 re.
d ' ~)i ~)QL - fi l1~JJTl " <I f, n ( ) " .... t ' !l . ..... ,
In P . uClng cneap nUClear power .
actors - eacn shut down an average of
An $80 million ·reprocessing plant built
concluded that to make reprocessing ecoby General Electric in Morris, III ., has alnomically feasible, power companies
ready been mothballed because reprocesswould have to pay $300 per kilogram (2.2
ing proved too costly. A recent GE report
pounds) for reprocessed fuel by 1985 the original fuel.
almost six times what they now pay for
1

'>



NUClEAR POWER REACTORS. IH( UNITED STATES



..e_._
.--.---...-..--- -- '-------- 1J011-..1
... _ . . . . . .
__
D __

I~

1' ___ ____

u _ _ --.r

-!!!!o!!!!

°_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Eas.i1y the most controversial and
prestg . issue facing environmentalists
toda is tha~ of' 'nuclear power plants.
Muclj has been s'a id both in opposition
and support of these plants, but now the
pendulum may be swinging slightly to the
side of the environmentalists,
Moves for a moratorium on nuclear
power construction have begun in serveral
Westgrn States_ In this state, the
legisl. ture is hearing testimony on House
Bill 1154 in the Nuclear Sub-committee of
the Committe· o.n Health and Social
Services, Testimony· supporting this moratorium bill has already been heard .
Hearings against the bill will be heard
tonight, Nov_ 6, at 7:30 im Room 431 of
the House Office Building.
' In other moratorium news in Washington an initiative. campaign will begin in
Januiry by a group called Coalition for
Safe energy. The purpose of the initiative
will not be total moratorium, but rather a
cessation of nuclear plant construction
until -safety questions are answered, and .
safety' precautions are made.
Ar( initiative for a nuclear moratorium
is a,rready on the June, 1976 ballot in
California,
And, also. as Don Bonker mentioned at
the Congressional delagates conference at
Evergreen Oct. IS, a move towards
moratorium is also being made in
Congress.

energy. No energy, no jobs." Or as Don
Hodel, administrator of the Bonneville
Power Administration, said, without
nuclear power "either homes will be dark
and cold, or factories will close down or
both."
Despite studies to the contrary,
America's "leaders" still maintain steadfastly there is no need to be concerned
about the safety of nuclear power plants.
Washington State Rep . Mike McCormack
is so sold on the idea of nuclear plants
that he says it would be safer to live right
ne·xt to one than it would be to drive an
automobile.
. '
But problems are developing with the
plants, not only in the area of safety, but
also in cost (see above.)
Of course, it is the area of safety that
concerns most environmentalists about
the plants .
"Even the most extravagant efforts by
nuclear promoters will fail to convince
people that filthy fission is clean, when in
fact it is the dirtiest possible way to make
electricity. Only nuclear fission makes
poisons so deadly that they have to be
kept out of the environment for 100,000
years or longer_ No matter · what nuclear
advocates do, ·they are stuck with a
product which generally grows more
repulsive to people the more they learn
about it," says Senator Mike Gravel of
Alaska, a leading spokesperson in
Congress in favor of a moratorium.

How far these moves will get depend
THE WASHINGTON PLANTS
largely on the activi$m of people opposed
Only one of thirteen power plants
to nuclear plant construction, as there is
slated for construction in Washington by
---very..Jittle-'.'high::le..v.el" ol?l?ositiQn to the_ the Washington Public Power Supply
idea ' of nuclear power, regardless of all · ·-SYstem i'naS -a ghost of a- chance of 5emg
the $tudies that have come out questioncompleted on schedule," says Don Hodel.
ings , its safety. Those in power in
Delays cost money.
government and in industry mostly hold
What has happened in this state so far
the View of Gerald Ford, when he said in
is that we have one of 53 plants in the
his address to the American public on
country (destined to be 1,000 by year
energy : "Our American economy runs on
2,000) at the Hanford Reservation near

,.

Q.

_-

.

......
:.:.":"'..::::::.:------...

five days at a cost of $250 - $300,000 a
day - the total loss was $30 million .
Reactors at Browns Ferry, Ala ., Peach
Bottom, Pa. , Rancho Seco, Calif., and
elsewhere have had even longer shutdowns or operated at reduced capacity because of accidents or defects in the nuclear core or turbine .
• Decommissionin~ : Reactors accumulate· radioactive waste products that eventually reduce their efficiency to a less than
economical level, whereupon the contaminated reactor must be "decommissioned"
- salvaged or sealed off and guarded.
To date, few plants have reached the
30-year decommissioning point - especially the large reactors now being built.
Current estimates for decommissioning
run between $25 million and $70 million
per plant for 1982. But, like fuel reprocessing and plant construction, decommissioning could run into unforeseen difficulties
and even higher costs .
Like s,afety hazards; the rising costs of
nuclear power are gradually coming under
attack by nuclear power critics - both
private and in government.
The industry still contends that the current cost of nuclear-produced electricity is
substantially less than that for other
sources of energy. Its major trade association, the Atomic Industrial Forum, reported in September that the generating
costs for nuclear power stations are only

NUCLEAR POWER VS.
by Catherine Riddel and Gary Plautz

_

4

...

43 .6 percent of those for fossil fuel plants .
But the data used in this study has been
criticized by the Council on Economic
Priorities, a non-profit research group on
corporate responsibility, in a study requested by a New York congressman. The
Council reports that some utility companies, like Consolidated Edison of New
York , have camouflaged the total costs of
nuclear power - excluding in their calculations such costs as taxes , intere s t
charges and operation and maintenance
- and are underestimating total costs by
at least $90 million.
Nuclear power critics have argued that
the industry would have long ago floundered without massive public subsidies at
the expense of alternative sources of energy . Now, a report from the Congressional Office of Technological Assessment
(OT A), a watchdog group created by
Congress to analyze technological issues,
sharply criticizes ERDA for continuing to
give top priority to the development of
nuclear reactors while ignoring the important area of energy conservation. (Only
two percent of the current ERDA budget
goes to .energy conservation.)
The OT A report points out that expansion of energy supply systems such as nuclear power "will be costly and cumbersome," while energy conservation programs "can have both a rapid and continuing effect."

- WHAT?

Richland in Eastern Washington. Hanford
was started in 1943, producing plutonium
for the original Manhattan Project, and it
began commercial power production in
1963.
Besides the one already in existence at
Hanford, five other projects are either
under construction or going through
application procedures that take about ten
years from initiation to end product.
Two of these projects are being built at
Hanford. They have been approved at
both the state and federal levels, are
scheduled to be completed in the early
1980's and will cost approximately $1
billion each_ The Hanford projects are
. rela.tively easy to get approved because
the site already exists and is remote.
A third project is the Skagit River
Project near Sedro Woolley. The project
has completed state review, but will go
into more hearings before the federal
Nuclear Regulatory Commission in January to consider seismology and alternative power supplies. The Skagit Valley is
an agricultural area of incredible beauty,
and area residents are concerned what a
nuclear plant could do to that beauty.
Two more projects are proposed at the
confluence of the Chehalis and Satsop
Rivers, about 25 miles from Olympia,
Opponents of the Satsop nukes argue that
is would be illegal to empty water used in
the cooling tower into a 58-mile stretch of
the Chehalis which is to protected under
the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act.
Hearings are continuing over the Satsop
plants before the state's Thermal Power
Site Evaluation Council. Hearings will be
held at- 7pm on Nov_ 5, 6-; 12 and 13 in
the Mighty Oak Room of the Oakliridge
Golf Club near Elma.
THE ECONOMY
But fossil fuels are running out, and our
economy demands mOre and more
energy. Proponents of nuclear power say

that it is the only practical alternative to
meet the nation~s energy needs. They say
it is not feasible to develop programs in
solar, geothermal or tidal power alternatives; it is the least desireable of many
alternatives.
But as the energy-crazed nations of the
world keep running headlong into the
future with ever increasing energy needs,
something has to be done. Either society
must change and leave its energy
dependance behind, or another source has
to be found . Opponents of nuclear power
are calling for the moratorium to answer
questions about safety. But what - as
perhaps is likely - if nuclear fission is
. found' not to be safe under any
circumstances7 What will happen then?
As Dr_ John Gofman has put it : "It is
not a question of making nuclear power
generation safe for people. The insurmountable obstacle is that we cannot
envision any way to make people safe for
nuclear power generation, I short of total
robotization ."
-.

Father William H. Millerd, a coordinator for the Center for Science in the
Public Interest [CSPIJ. will discuss the
"morality of our national nuclear energy
policy" in a free public lecture at
Evergreen Nov . 13, at 8 pm in Lecture
Hall Three.
Father Millerd will hold a questionl
answer session following his talk, which
will be based in part on a report he
compiled for CSPI on "Nuclear Energy :
The Morality of Our National Policy."
An ordained Catholic priest, Father
. Millerd also holds a doctorate -in physics
from John Hopkins Univsersl'ty . He has
worked for CSPI since 1973 and last
month coordinated a national em-justice
~oalition consultation at Roland Center,
on the ethics of energy and American
consumption .

.>

• !..

>THE SKYROCKETING PRICE OF NUCLEAR POWER

z

o

-

BOYCOlT
A number of people have spoken to me lately about their
dissatisfaction with their faculty, seminars, programs and
co ntracts. Often they had protested repeatedly to faculty,
formal pet itions of dissatisfaction , and had been all
:J presented
but ignored . What 's th~ solution when conferences and
C nego tiation fa il s? The trad itional tools of the worker - strikes,
pickf'ts . b(1 '1 co tts - a re equa ll y effec ti ve in crea ting a cha nge in
~ eLiucat io n ,
[f a nll mber of students wa nt ()ut of a pmgra m · or sem ind r
2
anJ are t<lld Ih at thev can' t leaVE beca us(" "it 'lI cause "
~ 'i.J mpf'd c <lntl "II the tra ditional fo rm s. Llf neg()tiatio n fai l Z thL'p ,)rgonlze .J nd bovco tt the semina r or program . Ret-use , to
c:t "I J ~ n u l' nt il m:cessarv ch,mges (I re ma de. Th" same holds In l('
I: It 5 !t ~ ,.ie "h ,H e wl,r"-ing WIth a fa cult v member that they tel' l I,
:nq·t 'i :'-''Pt : 1. lacki ng in litness o r aptitude. 2. lackin g 111
-('nse <> r .. eil ~ "n 3 . gene rally incompetan t: W ehster's ,\JI' 11'
W0rfd D i( t i,l]I<1'Y) 11 confe rence after co nferen(,e and m eeli n ,~
dlkr mee ting wit h the Jeans fails to prodUCE 03ny app reciable
change, then strike. Retuse to work with tha t fac ult y member.
If you decide to strike, then make your views know n. Send
let ters to President McCann, Provost Kormondy and the
academic deans telling them clearly why you feel it's necessa ry
to pHltest. Distribute handbills to other students. Don't be
intimidated by the fallacy that good students don't make
waves . Only by making waves and generating inte~st in
education will the educational process keep refining and
growing. More importantly, protest keeps faculty, students and
administration alike from settling into a comfortable blanket of
conformity.
FIRING FACULTY
Students are asked to write evaluations of their faculty at the
end of every quarter (or contract), Good or bad, these
evaluations are then taken into consideration when it's time for
facultly members to be re-hired .... or fired.
In addition to the planning faculty, approximately 125 new
faculty have been hired, according to Provost Ed Kormondy .
Of those, not one has been fired . Is this because the faculty
here are so outstanding that we have no reason to fire them?
Wrong, say many students. Many faculty have received
numerous bad evaluations from both their students and the
faculty they have worked with, say a number of people on
campus (who chose to remain anonymous) .
Yet, those faculty have been re-hired with - what7 A slap on
the wrist? A warning that they'd better shape up in the next
three years (usual length of faculty contracts)? How many
bad evaluations must a faculty member receive until those in
charge of hiring/ firing consider them as a serious criteria for
nat rehiring? Ten? Fifty? A hundred? Or are those evaluations
even looked at seriously?
TENURE
At Evergreen, there is supposedly no faculty tenure, no
faculty hierarchy (head-of-department, professor, assistant
professor, teaching assistant) and the accompanving pecking
order. On paper, the theory of all facultv with equal status Ii>
subji'c'f to rilhlrl'rlg with ~fiident e"''aril~!'i~H.''a~ ' a ' l!-ri~fi~U-IGth'q1c.l"'''(] ,2
efficient, logical and up-to-date.
Unfortunately, the faculty here did not suddenly appear
from some Evergreen-faculty-pool-in-the-sky and are often
grounded in a traditional college system. Faculty hired here
first hold an unspoken, "in house" tenure . Faculty hired more
recently have the opportunity to learn the "Evergreen Way",
unlike at other colleges, and usually are not thrown cold into
an unfamiliar teaching situatiqn . However, these new faculty
are subject to the whim of older faculty in the program, who
mayor may not delegate them relaHvely equal duties and
responsibilities.
But there's still that "unspoken tenure", and older faculty
members can become grounded in comfortable academia.
Change can happp.n in the minds of faculty willing to
d,. ",'",n
re-evaluate themselv~s every year, and adapt to fluc.tuatill8. :, ,. i
learning processes. O:her faculty may remain grounded in old
habits, with neither student nor faculty nor administration able
to budge him or her. Then, it's up to the students to say,
"Hey, you're getting academically senilel"
WHO'S IN CHARGE
Who hires and who fir{'s? The pee,ple who judge who stays
and who leaves are the deam and members of the
administration - people who will rotate back into the faculty at
,
the end of their terms.
"
. .
, ,- :' ". :' '.' -.
'. ' .
Meanwhile, studt:nts are co.mplainiilg al'loui fa.tulty; 'serilina·rs " ,;
and programs that don't fit their needs, the faculty complains
of being overworked - and in many cases, they are.
Where is the median? Students are entitled to an education
with faculty who know their subiects and themselves, and who
are willing to work harder than at other colleges to teach
their skills. The faculty are Ion titled to decent working hours
and a sense of accomplishing their . work; not · a sense of
frustration because they are swamped w'itl'l students,
evaluations, book-ordering, DTF's and curriculurr. p~anning~
The solution is not to hire more and more fac.J:ty - we are
already faced with funds lost due to underenrollment and
hiring more faculty to teach a diminishing number of students
seems illogical. On the other hand, can we let faculty who
receive quarter after quarter of bad evaluations and student
complaints stay on salary because they're one of the old guard,
because they bring a big grant to the school, or because they
were once a good teacher at Outer Eastern lJ?
.The solution is to have faculty who are willing to do their
work and a little more, students who will protest when their
program isn't delivering all that they expected, and people that
will work together as partners in education, not dictators and
workers awaiting a mutual coup.
.The solution is to have students and faculty who have the
patience to fight for their own education and have the
determination to work with (and if necessary, eliminate) people
who are settling !,lncontrollably into comfortable academic
- .holes and educational back~aters : .
.The solution is to fight for your own education, whether
you're a student, faculty member, or administrator. And that is
the crux of the original Evergreen philosophy : to fight your
own battles, and make your own way - because if you don't
do it,
isn't
to do it for

5
w

-

o

THE GREAT COMPROMISE
I'ag.' 4
ti l".! .. 1111IIId , .. . /lld li/<I,tll ing de scending
-"" 111 ,I hi:,:.II''/" H l' II :)C Il to hang directly
,,; ..., II,,, 51111lrl Rallgc .
Dusty sw itch1"ll k I mil>. jullcII ceden. waterfalls and
lu";1,/,,.1 r,'c k.
Th e mosquito poised
t,'" I I, .. ~l/llIlg" , th" horse fly prepared ' for
: 11, il it£' .
Slzoo til1g stars. half-mool1s,
,,,,,I I II,' SOU lld of lHlimll/S mCl, il1g through
II,e lIig/,1
Tile evellillg fir£' , the mOnJ5 1111 tlze lIl olmtaill I just climb ed .
THE GREAT COMPROMISE
By thp end ()f summer, political observer, lelt a unanim ous agreement by the
\\ashington State congressional delegation
wpuld virtually insure passage of an Alpi ne Lakes Wilderness bill. A proposal
known as the ··Meeds compromise bill"
bega n to emerge. Figures on specific acreil ge tor t he wilderness zone flew through
the air like snowflakes in a Cascade storm
. 520.000 acres, 440 ,000 acres , 350,000
acres . 308 ,000 acres .
October found the representatives still
' truggling with d compromise bill. Mike
.\1cCormack , Richland Democrat and
timber industry advocate , held out for a
.; maller wilderness area and the protection
'-C Ilt"i,:up d

f r (, 1I1

EVERGREEN COINS~
__.,
AND
~
INVESTMENTS

··~

BUYING . SilVER & GOLD COIN
DOLLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COLLECTIONS
1722 West Building 1722 Harrison
(aqoss from Bob's Big Burgersl
3

of lu mber rig ht s on private la nds.
When the state's representatives appeared Oc t. 15th at Evergreen , they assured the audience that they were "close
to agreem en t" on a compromise bill. Ten
days lilter. press releases showed six of
th e seven delegation members in agree ment on proposed legislation . McCormack
remilined the lone dissenter.
The most recent compromise calls for
the establishment of a 920,000 acre, " Icy
Peaks Enchantment Area. " Included with- .
in the proposal is an initial Alpine Lakes
Wilderness Area of 303,000 acres with provISions for procurement of an additional
75,000 acres of intermixed private and
federal lands over the next three years.
The wilderness area would be surrounded
by a multiple land management unit. The
plan is similar to the original Forest Service plan .
Timber interests and their allies disapprove of the bill. Conservationists also refute the proposed legislatio,n .
"We feel there are two basic flaws in
the compromise bill ," said Robert Ordal,
president of the Alpine Lakes Protection
Society. "First of all, the proposed wilderness area is not big enough and second,
there is no provision in the bill for control of some 175.000 acres of intermingled
private. land in the peripheral area. "
The congressmen can't reach a unanimous agreement; conservationists and
timber interests disapprove of the compromise; the public is mind-boggled by
acreage figures ; and the Congress is winding down for holiday recess without acting (yet) on Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area
legislation. Can anybody suggest the compromise to end all compromises?
Sometimes I think the decisions on the
future of the Alpine Lakes should be
made by a Council of Regional Mountains.

SOUTH
· SOUND

.

BANK

Savings' & Checking Accounts
Traveler's Checks

\

hours 12-3
mon.-fri.
866-2440

~rGj)

by Martin Brown
ERDA now admits that, "Efforts by the :
SAN FRANCISCO, OCT 30 (PNS) industry to reprocess fuel in the commerNuclear power - already challenged as
cial sector and to use the separated pluunsafe - may soon prove uneconomical
tonium in new fuel are almost at a standas well .
still." In a recent study, Irvin C. Bupp of
In virtually every phase of the nuclear
MIT concludes that without reprocessing,
fission system, prices have skyrocketed to
the cost of nuclear power by 1980 - 85
levels unimagined only a year ago. Here
will equal - and then surpass - the cost •
is the economic picture in six key phases
of coal-fired power.
of the nuclear power process:
Meanwhile, thousands of spent nuclear
• Uranium : the price of uranium, the nufuel rods have been stored for future re'clear fuel, has tripled in the past year processing. Now private industry is
from $8 per pound to $24 per pound.
running out of storage facilities - with
. Westinghouse Electric Corp., which
only five percent of its original storage
supplies uranium to about 40 percent of
capacity vacant.
.
the fission power plant market, recently
·Construction costs: The cost of buiJdannounced it would not honor its uranium
ing a nuclear reactor has risen from $300
supply contracts under the original price
per kilowatt of capacity in 1970 to $1,135
terms. The Wall Street Journal called the
per kilowatt in 1975.
decision, "another blow to an industry
Coupled with declining electrical power
that has been severely set back because of
demand, this has led to numerous cancelescalating costs . . ."
lations of nuclear facilities by utility
·The breeder reactor : Once counted on
companies. Houston Lighting and Power
to solve any fuel supply problems because
Co., for example, has just announced the
it produces more fuel than it consumes,
indefinite postponement of its twin reactor
the breeder has been hit by continuing
nuclear station in AlIens Creek, Tex. , as
construction delays and technical difficulestimated construction costs climbed from
ties.
$900 million in 1971 to $1.5 billion in
The federal Energy Research and Devel1975. Detroit Edison has announced canopmept Agency (ERDA) - of which
cellation of its Monroe, Mich., nuclear
Rep. Mike McCormack of Washington is
plant after construction costs increased
a member - no longer regards the breedfrom $675 million -to $900 million in one
er program as . its top priority, and inyear. And Middle South Utilities of New
stead plans to concentrate research on
Orleans canceled two nuclear power projconventional reactors. And the General
ects and deferred another after cost estiAccounting Office, Congress' investigamates rose from $1.2 billion to $2 .3 biltive' arm, has recommended a delay of
lion.
seven,to-ten years before deciding on the
• Capacity factors and reliability: Cost
breeler's development for commercial
calculations for nuclear power have asuse. •
sumed that reactors will operate at an av·Enrichment and reprocessing of uraerage capacity of 80 percent. However, a
nium: American reactors, unlike Canadisurvey of all operational reactors in 1974
an, cannot use uranium as it is found in
showed they functioned at an average canature. It must be "enriched" - increasing
pacity of only 51.6 percent. If such conthe concentration of fissionable Uranium
ditions persist, then the cost of nuclear
235 - a process where costs have escapower has been underassessed by about
lated from $35 to $50 per pound in the
60 percent.
last two years.
Operating capacity has fallen in part
"Reprocessing" - removing waste mabecause technical foulups have forced proterials from spent nuclear fuel and salvaglonged shutdowns of many plants. In Febing the uranium and plutonium for furruary 1975, the Nuclear Regulatory Comther use ~ has become economically unmission shut down 23 reactors to check
feasible in the U .s . Yet, reprocessing has
for suspected cracks in pipes of the emeralw!s been considered . an essential steD ;,, ~~n~y ~W~ .<;i?l~1i'Y! sy:st~I'!': ; F~r the ~3 re.
d ' ~)i ~)QL - fi l1~JJTl " <I f, n ( ) " .... t ' !l . ..... ,
In P . uClng cneap nUClear power .
actors - eacn shut down an average of
An $80 million ·reprocessing plant built
concluded that to make reprocessing ecoby General Electric in Morris, III ., has alnomically feasible, power companies
ready been mothballed because reprocesswould have to pay $300 per kilogram (2.2
ing proved too costly. A recent GE report
pounds) for reprocessed fuel by 1985 the original fuel.
almost six times what they now pay for
1

'>



NUClEAR POWER REACTORS. IH( UNITED STATES



..e_._
.--.---...-..--- -- '-------- 1J011-..1
... _ . . . . . .
__
D __

I~

1' ___ ____

u _ _ --.r

-!!!!o!!!!

°_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Eas.i1y the most controversial and
prestg . issue facing environmentalists
toda is tha~ of' 'nuclear power plants.
Muclj has been s'a id both in opposition
and support of these plants, but now the
pendulum may be swinging slightly to the
side of the environmentalists,
Moves for a moratorium on nuclear
power construction have begun in serveral
Westgrn States_ In this state, the
legisl. ture is hearing testimony on House
Bill 1154 in the Nuclear Sub-committee of
the Committe· o.n Health and Social
Services, Testimony· supporting this moratorium bill has already been heard .
Hearings against the bill will be heard
tonight, Nov_ 6, at 7:30 im Room 431 of
the House Office Building.
' In other moratorium news in Washington an initiative. campaign will begin in
Januiry by a group called Coalition for
Safe energy. The purpose of the initiative
will not be total moratorium, but rather a
cessation of nuclear plant construction
until -safety questions are answered, and .
safety' precautions are made.
Ar( initiative for a nuclear moratorium
is a,rready on the June, 1976 ballot in
California,
And, also. as Don Bonker mentioned at
the Congressional delagates conference at
Evergreen Oct. IS, a move towards
moratorium is also being made in
Congress.

energy. No energy, no jobs." Or as Don
Hodel, administrator of the Bonneville
Power Administration, said, without
nuclear power "either homes will be dark
and cold, or factories will close down or
both."
Despite studies to the contrary,
America's "leaders" still maintain steadfastly there is no need to be concerned
about the safety of nuclear power plants.
Washington State Rep . Mike McCormack
is so sold on the idea of nuclear plants
that he says it would be safer to live right
ne·xt to one than it would be to drive an
automobile.
. '
But problems are developing with the
plants, not only in the area of safety, but
also in cost (see above.)
Of course, it is the area of safety that
concerns most environmentalists about
the plants .
"Even the most extravagant efforts by
nuclear promoters will fail to convince
people that filthy fission is clean, when in
fact it is the dirtiest possible way to make
electricity. Only nuclear fission makes
poisons so deadly that they have to be
kept out of the environment for 100,000
years or longer_ No matter · what nuclear
advocates do, ·they are stuck with a
product which generally grows more
repulsive to people the more they learn
about it," says Senator Mike Gravel of
Alaska, a leading spokesperson in
Congress in favor of a moratorium.

How far these moves will get depend
THE WASHINGTON PLANTS
largely on the activi$m of people opposed
Only one of thirteen power plants
to nuclear plant construction, as there is
slated for construction in Washington by
---very..Jittle-'.'high::le..v.el" ol?l?ositiQn to the_ the Washington Public Power Supply
idea ' of nuclear power, regardless of all · ·-SYstem i'naS -a ghost of a- chance of 5emg
the $tudies that have come out questioncompleted on schedule," says Don Hodel.
ings , its safety. Those in power in
Delays cost money.
government and in industry mostly hold
What has happened in this state so far
the View of Gerald Ford, when he said in
is that we have one of 53 plants in the
his address to the American public on
country (destined to be 1,000 by year
energy : "Our American economy runs on
2,000) at the Hanford Reservation near

,.

Q.

_-

.

......
:.:.":"'..::::::.:------...

five days at a cost of $250 - $300,000 a
day - the total loss was $30 million .
Reactors at Browns Ferry, Ala ., Peach
Bottom, Pa. , Rancho Seco, Calif., and
elsewhere have had even longer shutdowns or operated at reduced capacity because of accidents or defects in the nuclear core or turbine .
• Decommissionin~ : Reactors accumulate· radioactive waste products that eventually reduce their efficiency to a less than
economical level, whereupon the contaminated reactor must be "decommissioned"
- salvaged or sealed off and guarded.
To date, few plants have reached the
30-year decommissioning point - especially the large reactors now being built.
Current estimates for decommissioning
run between $25 million and $70 million
per plant for 1982. But, like fuel reprocessing and plant construction, decommissioning could run into unforeseen difficulties
and even higher costs .
Like s,afety hazards; the rising costs of
nuclear power are gradually coming under
attack by nuclear power critics - both
private and in government.
The industry still contends that the current cost of nuclear-produced electricity is
substantially less than that for other
sources of energy. Its major trade association, the Atomic Industrial Forum, reported in September that the generating
costs for nuclear power stations are only

NUCLEAR POWER VS.
by Catherine Riddel and Gary Plautz

_

4

...

43 .6 percent of those for fossil fuel plants .
But the data used in this study has been
criticized by the Council on Economic
Priorities, a non-profit research group on
corporate responsibility, in a study requested by a New York congressman. The
Council reports that some utility companies, like Consolidated Edison of New
York , have camouflaged the total costs of
nuclear power - excluding in their calculations such costs as taxes , intere s t
charges and operation and maintenance
- and are underestimating total costs by
at least $90 million.
Nuclear power critics have argued that
the industry would have long ago floundered without massive public subsidies at
the expense of alternative sources of energy . Now, a report from the Congressional Office of Technological Assessment
(OT A), a watchdog group created by
Congress to analyze technological issues,
sharply criticizes ERDA for continuing to
give top priority to the development of
nuclear reactors while ignoring the important area of energy conservation. (Only
two percent of the current ERDA budget
goes to .energy conservation.)
The OT A report points out that expansion of energy supply systems such as nuclear power "will be costly and cumbersome," while energy conservation programs "can have both a rapid and continuing effect."

- WHAT?

Richland in Eastern Washington. Hanford
was started in 1943, producing plutonium
for the original Manhattan Project, and it
began commercial power production in
1963.
Besides the one already in existence at
Hanford, five other projects are either
under construction or going through
application procedures that take about ten
years from initiation to end product.
Two of these projects are being built at
Hanford. They have been approved at
both the state and federal levels, are
scheduled to be completed in the early
1980's and will cost approximately $1
billion each_ The Hanford projects are
. rela.tively easy to get approved because
the site already exists and is remote.
A third project is the Skagit River
Project near Sedro Woolley. The project
has completed state review, but will go
into more hearings before the federal
Nuclear Regulatory Commission in January to consider seismology and alternative power supplies. The Skagit Valley is
an agricultural area of incredible beauty,
and area residents are concerned what a
nuclear plant could do to that beauty.
Two more projects are proposed at the
confluence of the Chehalis and Satsop
Rivers, about 25 miles from Olympia,
Opponents of the Satsop nukes argue that
is would be illegal to empty water used in
the cooling tower into a 58-mile stretch of
the Chehalis which is to protected under
the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act.
Hearings are continuing over the Satsop
plants before the state's Thermal Power
Site Evaluation Council. Hearings will be
held at- 7pm on Nov_ 5, 6-; 12 and 13 in
the Mighty Oak Room of the Oakliridge
Golf Club near Elma.
THE ECONOMY
But fossil fuels are running out, and our
economy demands mOre and more
energy. Proponents of nuclear power say

that it is the only practical alternative to
meet the nation~s energy needs. They say
it is not feasible to develop programs in
solar, geothermal or tidal power alternatives; it is the least desireable of many
alternatives.
But as the energy-crazed nations of the
world keep running headlong into the
future with ever increasing energy needs,
something has to be done. Either society
must change and leave its energy
dependance behind, or another source has
to be found . Opponents of nuclear power
are calling for the moratorium to answer
questions about safety. But what - as
perhaps is likely - if nuclear fission is
. found' not to be safe under any
circumstances7 What will happen then?
As Dr_ John Gofman has put it : "It is
not a question of making nuclear power
generation safe for people. The insurmountable obstacle is that we cannot
envision any way to make people safe for
nuclear power generation, I short of total
robotization ."
-.

Father William H. Millerd, a coordinator for the Center for Science in the
Public Interest [CSPIJ. will discuss the
"morality of our national nuclear energy
policy" in a free public lecture at
Evergreen Nov . 13, at 8 pm in Lecture
Hall Three.
Father Millerd will hold a questionl
answer session following his talk, which
will be based in part on a report he
compiled for CSPI on "Nuclear Energy :
The Morality of Our National Policy."
An ordained Catholic priest, Father
. Millerd also holds a doctorate -in physics
from John Hopkins Univsersl'ty . He has
worked for CSPI since 1973 and last
month coordinated a national em-justice
~oalition consultation at Roland Center,
on the ethics of energy and American
consumption .

hASIAN

COALITION~~~~~~~~~~~~~dN~lsw~it~hh~ow~a~~~~~n~~I~sw:~~n,~fur~

by Ro bin West
fht, Asi,ln C,)alitit)n is a campus o rga n I/ J llOn hplpin g in the st ruggle fo r better
r, d, l ic a\. econom ic. socia \. a nd ed uca tion•iI w nLiit i()ns for Asians a nd Paci fi c Isla nd
re(lrl e at Evergreen and th e surrounding
c(lmmunitv . T he Coa litio n's goa ls are
mdn y-folded : to bring Asians together to
lea rn who we are ; to show pride in our.;elves as we are today ; to educa te people
to our hi sto ry in this co untry ; to lea rn of
(Iur na ti ve culture and histo ry; to make
peo ple awa re of o ur existence and our
prob lem s; and to wo rk with o ther Third
Wo rld peo pl e.
We don 't expect to be able to change
peo pl e's a ttitudes q r completely re-educate
t hem in ju st one school year. But it is
im p(; rtan t to recog ni ze problems, and to

SOUNDING BOARD
by Curtis Milton
A lter a long, intense a nd often times
co nfu sin g Wednesday morning meeting,
th e Sou ndin g Boar d finally reached
agreement on a recommendation concerning the choosing of representatives to the
Boa rd of Tru stees. Representatives from
Evergreen 's Third W o rld , women and
Gay communi ties will hopefully be chosen
in time for next week 's Boa rd meeting .
\1ode rat o r Dave Blunt was heard to
re ma rk t hat. "We're going around in
circles here" as the board kept arriving
back at th e same basi c problems while
tryin g to muddle its way thro ugh the
rel'resen ta ti ves issue,
One of th ose problems was brought to
the surface ea rlv in the meeting by Stone
T homas when 'he expressed his co ncern
that a Third World or woman representative. req uested b y the Trustees, would
also ha ve to act as a representative for
eit her the s tuden ts, facult y o r staff. He
telt tha t no one person could adequately
represe nt two groups a t once and that
thev shouldn 't be required to do so, Many
agr~ed wi th him .
Peg Calver from the Gay Resource
Cente r sa id that there are ma n y special
in teras t groups o n ca mpu s who need
represe nt a ti o n , Gays b e ing o ne. Bill
~-iir shm an caut io ned about loa ding the

t rv tn make a change.
'F,'r the A sian Coa li tion tn iunc tion
\\, (, 11 , more Asia ns ha ve to get in vo lv ed
il nd ex press th ei r op inion s a mi idea s. Th is
year , the Coa lit ion has just been get ting
o rgani zed . bu t we do have a representa ti ve to the Sounding Board meeti ngs and
a rep to the Third W o rld Coalition Board ,
headed by Stone Thomas. There were
a lso two A sian women sponsored by the
Asian Coalition who went to San Francisco fo r an International Women 's Year
conference o n October 23 and 24 . The
conference was io address itself to the
problems and concerns of Third World
Women . On October 20, 21 and 22. the
Third World Women's Associ ation sold
foo d to raise money for those two people
to go to San Francisco . We sold a great
Board with more representatives than
there are Trustees .
Marcel Hatch felt that "it is an absolute
necess ity that each group be represented
autonomously ." This line of discussion
raised the possibility of the number of
representatives growing impossibly large.
The group was once again back where
it started and a proposa'i to continue the
discussion next week appeared to be
shaping up when Rainer Hasenstab spoke.
He reminded members that their first
priority , established by the Board of
Trus tees, was to choose a Third World
and a woman representative .
Rob Knapp proposed that the Third
World elec t a representative , the women
elect o ne but not from the same group
(s tudent. faculty or staff) , and the third
re pr ese ntative be elected from the
rema ining group by the campus communit y. This passed but when it was noticed
th a t the minorities had all voted against it
th e pro posal was withdrawn.
A new proposal. minus the student ,
facu Ity , staff requirement was adopted
with the provision th a t the third positi on
be reserved for Gays.
A prop0sal that other special interest
g roups who want represe ntati o n b e
encou raged to petition the Board for it
was abandoned as the' meeting adjourned .

varietv o f food s. suc h as bea n and meat
bLirrit ~, s , Ind ian fry bread a nd co rnbread
with b utt er a nd ho ney , egg roll s, sweet
and so ur wit h rice , ca rro t cake and ap ple
dumplings .
As for what the Asian Coalit ion by itself w ill do ; we may be spo nsoring a ' series of films dealing with A sians, such as
Samurai films , Bruce lee movies, films
dealing with changing aspects of Asian
societ y in Asian and Pacific Island co untries, o r film s dea ling with Asians in the
United States and their history here. We
were also thinking of having the Asian
Multi-Media fro m Seattle come and put
on the play "The Marginal Man."
"The Marginal Man" is a very good
play dealing with Asian history in the
United States on a very personal basis. It

example, they are to ld that they are criminal s fo r being Japanese and must go to
co nce ntra tion ca mp s . Th is and o ther
event s and social pressures are examined
in the play - from the first Asian stereo types to the present ones .
We were also thinking of having Asians
from all different backgrounds - such as
a war bride, a person who lived in an
American concentration camp for Japanese
during World War II, a Vietnamese refu gee, Filipino cannery workers - tell us of
their experiences .
Within the Asian Coalition office (Lib .
3209) is a mini-library of books, pamphlets and newspapers which are very informative and interesting. These books
can be checked out from the Asian Coalition, or a person can just corne and
browse.

ENVIRONMENTAL

DIALOGUE
by Neil Marshall
buildings . Bill Knauss, the faculty
The Environmental AdviSOry Committee
architect, has received their recommen(EAC) is one of two standing committees
dations and is drawing up site plans in
at Evergreen . The committee reviews all
accordance with it.
building proposals and renovations proThe Committee has made recommenjects with regard to their environmental
dations whiCh were not acted upon: for
impact. It suggests alterations that lessen
instance the landscapfn~ , done ,~,e ~~ 9J...the
CAB.
'
,
environmental damage , and at times
suggests a project be curtailed entirely The committee was developed out of
thoug h that is outside their domain of
what some community members felt was
effective influence.
an inappropriate act by the responsible
In accordance with Evergreen's governauthorities during the planning of the
ance s tructure, the committee only
Communications lab. The college did not
recommends changes on improvements to
write all. Environmental Impact Statement
the initiator of the project. Jerry
until after the plans has been 'dravJn up
Schillinger or Dean Clabaugh are usually
and approved by ~he legisl~t'u.~~·:.:tt. ~~as
the initiators or responsible authorities ; of
felt that this comprised a dlsmterest m the
pro jects that reach the EAC.
environment and was the response to
The most spectacular suggestion the
federal law rather than genuine concern.
group has made was in regard to the
As a result of this, certain faculty and
location of the gymnasium proposed for
students felt the need to form an
the . ca mpus . The initial plans were to
advocacy group for the college environbuild this north of the current CRC
ment.
building in the stand of trees and natural
The status of environmental impact on
vegitation that habitate there presently.
a statewide basis is currently under
The EAC recommended that the gym be
revision. The state is developing specific
planned for the area east of the CRC
guidelines as to the type of projects
which has, fo r the most part, already
requirin g environmental impact statebeen cleared for construction of current
ments . When that is completed, the role
<;C;}I,;;;e,
. .of ,the EAC wil~ be .~~l~arer·
-' Tneit wor'd~ Wi1r 'notbe 'Ema! - or ~he . only
voice - but they will have some specific
guidelines and thus be able to offer advice
that is quite important to the responsible
a
uthorities.
by Corona
$19.50 to $39.50
The suggestions this committee makes
on the actual construction of various
Stone or Steel Plate
projects is no more, nor no less , powerful
Extra Quality
then is a citizen's suggestion about a
project proposed by a developer in the
Built to last a lifetime
state at large . The fact is , the federal
government requires a developer to write
an Environmental Impact . Statement in
RED APPLE NATURAL FOODS
some cases. But if the statement <;\\s~loses
that the project will be harmfuk#]Sf$' are
WESTSIDE CENTER
no grounds for stopping or alteri~ it.
Similarly, on campus, the EAC can
OLYMPIA
point out serious environmental damage
as the result of a project , but not stop or
alter that project because of it. The only
a dvantage of the EAC, or of the
re quirement for Enviromental Impact
Statements is that the deciding al\~hority
will have the eI\'VirpJ;tmenta,1 eHects in
mind when he decides to go ahead with
the project.
FRED BIPPERT DODGE, INC.
Washington State law , as contrasted
with federal law, may give more power
than this to its citizens. The law states
that each citizen has a fundamental and
inalienable rjght to a healthful (!nvironmenlo This may allow ,~itize,ns to protest a
particular developmen.t on t.he. ·grQl,lnjls of
its environmental impact .
.
It is questionable whether this makes
any difference to Jlly projects the EAC
may be reviewing . !Jilt even if it did, and
the authority did not respond to their
suggestions, the EAC would have to go to
court to get the project changed. There is
no internal process whereby the comittee
may alter an a dmini stra tor's decision
agai nst hi~ or her will.

t.9L

THE GRAIN AND CORN MILL

FIAT

\

LYLE MERCER
The Evergreen Political Informati.on
Center's film and speaker series featured a
talk Monday, Nov. 3 by lyle Mercer - a
member of the National Committee
Against Repressive legislation - about
Seriate Bill One, the attempt to revise the
United States criminal code.
S .l has had a long ' history; its
beginnings dating back to 1966 when
lyndon Johnson appointed a commission
to reform the criminal code, last subjected
to major revision in 1909. The commission spent six years at its task, submitting
its report in 1972 to Richard Nixon . Also
submitted was a minority report by
conser~ative members . Nixon sent the
reports to his own team of bill writers,
and the result was S.l.
A long bill. (753 pages), S.l ca'm e out as
an outright rejestion of the commission's
approach to criminal law. It contains
provisions for reinstatement of the death
penalty (mandatory for certain crimes),
increased penalties for the use of
information on government .activities s~,c\_ ,~~ }.h~ r.~J1t~go.n {'apers - by
' newspapers, shifts the burden of proof
from the prosecutor to the defense in
entrapment cases, makes some public
demonstrations .. peaceful or not possible crimes and includes the vague
and unsuccessful riot laws that the
Chicago Seven were tried under.
, lJ' :1~"~\:O .in,clu~es a so-called Nuremberg
I ,£ r9JvISIO,']r r.e!11 ovln g responsibilIty for
z ~ crimes"rfonl 'g o vernment employees acting
' und~r orders, increases marijuana penalties, and reaffirms the 1968 law on
wiretapping, which allows domestic
wiretapping by presidential order in cases
of national security. Many other provisions embody vague infringements ' on a
variety of constitutional rights.
Mercer spoke in opposition to the bill.
and after giving a brief history and
summary he went on to detail some ways
students can help to prevent its passage.
S.l will come before the Senate for a vote
J; .'H)>; 'W3t X~~£~, ~o _~!m~. j~ sI-)9[\. Students
'. ,~r;te.{~~ t~Q . ilj1<rW<?[rV , i.I)/(Wna.t,l9!) , ~hQl,lld
write to the American Civil liberties
Union , and to their senators for copies of
the bill. Students in opposition should
make their views know to their senators
by writing them and alerting their friends
and relatives to write also .

SUPPLIES for BREWING

222 North Capitol Way
Tacoma toll - free 572-4383

Bus'. ph. 943-4603
Used Car 943- 6707

Wine Coffee Herb,
Beer Tea Sple.
I
SOlITH SOUND CENTER
Ph . ~

at

in~h~il~~o~~:!,

0
CAPITAL

a group of health care

I

professionals will answer questions. n c1uded in the panel are Sue Sanders, medex ; Florence McFetridge, nursing supervisor ; Dr. Charles Keck, pediatrician ;
Barbara Neece, appointment receptionist ;
,Donna Rice, physical therapist, and Dr.
Gary Feldbau, family practice. Moderator
will be Elaine Yeager, a committee member.
Those planning to attend are asked to
submit questions on forms provided at the
Group Health clinic so they won' t forget
what it was they wanted to ask . Forms
will also be available at the meeting .
The program will be preceded at 7 p.m.
by a committee business meeting, said
Chairperson John Hoglund.
For more information call Wayne Bris bane , 456-1700.

CHRISTIAN
ANTI-COMMUNISM
CRUSADE

HIGH

. . .,
This fall Capital High ,. OIYdmPla s newest high school. opened ItS oors to approximately 950 ninth, tenth, ~nd eleventh
graders, who ~ake up the first class to_
th f i t
Located at 2707 Con
occupy e aCI I y.
f
C
ger Street, it can be seen rom ooper
Point Road as a l~ng, low, concrete bUllding on a 40 acre site . As of now the structure is not quite complete;. the cafeteria ,
gym and resource center
are not
yet in use, and the track IS SIX mches un der water. Inside , however the busmess of
high sc~ool .goes on . The students attend
SIX. perIods .a day of Enghs~,
Math ,
SCIence, Foreign Language, Busmess Ed .,
etc. .. .. Spirit signs are plast,~r~d up here
and there, saying "Cougars! In cardmal'
and gold . There is that regimente~ feel of
everyone moving to a clock,. remforced
by the geometric graphICS m prImary
colors that de~orate the ~.alls . These seem
almost unaVOidable tradillons of the public high school. but Capital High has be gun
some
new programs
to compensate
.
For
example,
registration
is conducted

(hb~a,?,)

L

CHO

dent can receive individual tutoring in a
subject until he is capable of rejoining the
class Even the locker system has been
chan~ed . Instead of lining the halls as is
usual in high schools, the lockers are centralized in four open rooms, alleviating
some crowding of the halls . Also , the
lockers have no locks; students may bring
h '
b f
d
t e;{o:w~~ t~~ :;::de~'ts react to the new
school7 One girl expressed di sa ppoint ment that there were, "no mirrors in t he
cans yet." Another reaction was prompt ed
by an attempt to set up a student government. Over the summer administrators se lected 18 student leaders to begin organizing the government. But when school
s tarted in the fall the student body
wouldn 't accept them , as they hadn't been
elected. A new party formed, with their
own plans . As of now there is no student
overnrnent , and there may not be one all
g
ye~~rhaps most important of all the new
features of Capital High is a respect fodr

Deadline for registering for the Antistudent rights and indiViduality unhear
Subversive S eminar - sponsored b ythe a s I't I'S at a traditional college . The faculty
.
C
of to those of us who went to high school
Christian An ti- C ommumsm
rusa d
I' - 'IS
sit at tables in a large room, and students
coming up fast , folks . It will .be he.ld at
can select thel'r classes and teachers on a
in the age of dress codes and hair rest rictions. In the student handbook under
the Inn of Tomorrow, opposite D Isne~first -come -first -served basis. Students get
land, in Anaheim , O,:~nge" <;oun~r, _.Cah- .. -" more freedom of c/loice; and' teachers get
':Stl,ldent Rights and Responsibili.t ies," is
fornia froIjiNQ;)[·:2~rJl N"ov . 3(f. . .
some I'dea of how well they are getting
the following sentence : "The courts have
"P"' wi II inc Iu d e H erb Ph IIb riC k ,
made it clear that young people have the
Speakers
through to the students . Each student has
former counterspy for the FBI ; Fred
an advisor whom he keeps throughout
rights of citizenship as guaranteed in the
S c h warz , au th or a.f th e b 00 ks Yo u Can
constitution of the United States ." This is
.
high school. The advisor fills the role 0 f
h
Trust th e Communrsts (to be Communrsts)
academl'c and personal counselor. An adan important step towards making hig
school a working. community rather than
and T h e Th ree Faces 0 f R evo I u t 10':' ;
ditional program for the student .who is
Marion Mi.lIer, member o~ the Communist
not "making it" in a given class is the
just another battleground of adolescent s
Party
for
fIVf:
years
workmg
as
a
countercontracted
studies
program
.
Here
a
stuagainst
adults .
NEW HEALTH
spy for the FBI; and Rev . James D . ColSERVICES SCHEDULES
bert, Director of MissjQll!Lof the Christian
Staff in Health- Services have -founa the
Anti-Communism Crusade.
ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERV'CC~ 'IIC.'
schedule printed up in our brochure
The seminar will cost $20, but if stu(handed out at the first of the quarter) to
dents interested in attending it are broke,
be in need of repair and modification in
they can apply to Anti -Subversive SemOTder for clinic times to adequately serve
inar, P .O . Box 890, long Beach, Calif.,
9 1 Ii stu~~nts :
90801, for a $20 tuition scholarship. For
. lil'he ' first change is nurse's hours on
more information , con'l"»-to the CPJ
. pnysi~ian clinic days. These clinics funco fficp.
tion much smoother with nurse and physician working together to diagnose, educate, and plan for care with each student. CHANGED DIRECTION?----------..
943-8701
WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER
Therefore, nurse and physician clinics will H
943 .. 8700
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
be coordinated to run as follows : T ues- A
, , 'dilYS, '9 - 12 noon appointments only,
Through high school you thought about college as the .next big
2 '" ' 4 ' p.m: open ' dinic; Thu,rsdays 2 - 4
~tep in your life. Perhaps you did so with mi xed emotlo~s ~ut ,
regardless, now you 're here . Ha s the magic abo~t . o,r the mOllvott~n
p ~m : appointmen'ts 'o'nly, 4 - 7 p .m . open
for , a college educati on changed? Your aSpiratiOns ~Iouded In
clinic ; Fridays 9 - 12 noon appointments D
worry about money? Well , not everyone is psychologICally and
only.
financially ready to take full ad vantage of college ri ght out of
The second change will be for times D high school ,
2 - 3 BEDROOM APTS.
nurse's clinic is scheduled: appointments I
R
can be made for routine clinic visits (such
Perhaps the most significant thing you have discovered is
thot you need a little time away from 'he routine of grade o.nd
as allergy shots' and wart removal) and
clo ss standing to learn about yourself , about others, and to think
C
for 'non croutine visits such as ' hearing
through what you really want to do with your life ~ ,ome people
;tests. Nurse"s 'cliiiics ' are Monday and
AS L,=
wauld say, ta mature, Today' s Army offers you th .. lime ~ . the
I
time to trovel , meet people, learn a skill , l10ndle responSibility ,
Wednesday 8:30 -11 : 30 a.m., and 1 - 4
mature - a time to assess tne value s you nave learned and to
..
.
PER
p.m. , 'Thursday 10 - 11:30 a.m., and FriN plan your future with a judgment nurtured with the e.xperience you
day 1:30 L 4 p .m .
go in in the Army .
We realize health care needs cannot al- ?
And, when you get the urge again to pick up your education .
BASED ON 4 PERSONS SHARING A 2 BEOROOM
ways be planned for so the majority of
you con do so where you left off , in. or out of the Ar":,y .. In ~II
APT. AT .1!ili.OO/rno. - SELECT YOUR OWN ROOMMATES
nurse's clinic times are on a walk-in basis,
probability, the Army is associated WI ,h you r sc ho o l as It IS ~'Ih
and two physicians clinics per week (Tueshundred. of others in Project AHEAD (Army Hetp fa , Educa ti o n
ASH TREE APTS.
days, 2 - 4 p .m ., and Thursdays, 4 - 7
and Deve lopment). Under the ausp i ce, of AHEAD , you can toke
college co urses for credit dur ing off-duty ' Ime, ..... ,th the Army
3138 OVERHULSE RD.
p.m .) are on a walk-in basis for those unpoying up to 75% of all tuition cosh . Then ,. when you are re~dy
able to schedule appointments.
866-8181
to resume full -t ime studies o n compus fol lOWing your Army se r VICe ,

Z



NT & FACULTY HOUSI

•t

$39.00 / mo.

o

NW PASSAGE IN COURT

Brew Specialties

Nearly everyone has had the experience
of keeping an appointment with a doctor
to ask a question , then forgetting to ask it
or afraid it might be too trivial for a busy
professional.
Now , there's a chance to have some of
those nagging - and perhaps important
- health questions answered at a special
program at the Group Health Coopera tive.
The program - "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Your
Health But Didn't Ask" - is the feature
of the regular monthly meeting of the
Group Health district executive committee. The program, at 7;30 p.m. Monday
in the Doctors lounge of the Group
Health Olympia Medical Center is not
limited to Coop . members. The center is

Northwest Passage, all. alternative newspaper from Bellingham, was found guilty
Tuesday in the Whatcom County Superior
Court of unlawfully publi shing a Pacific
Northwest Bell telephone credit card coding system .
John Anderson, attorney for the Passage, said the paper will appeal the ruling,
addressing itself in a higher court to the
9 uestion O'f freedom of the press.
. The Superior Court jury ruled that free ~om of the press was not at stake because
~e material was made up of numerals,
not w'Ords.

PERSON

you' lt be eligible for the G I Bill . with cv"en t benefils o f up to

' 8.000 ,

Who said you can't have the best of two worlds?
to your guidance counselor and y o ur Army representative -

Ta !k
they II

GET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS AT

tell you how you ca n .

HENDRICKS
Suite 319, S. Sound Qenter
Lacey

,

456-1611

Join the people
.
who've joined the Anny.
How'" 9 • 9 ,Dally

11 . 1Sunday

DRUGS
WESTSIDE CENTER

~S31J

hASIAN

COALITION~~~~~~~~~~~~~dN~lsw~it~hh~ow~a~~~~~n~~I~sw:~~n,~fur~

by Ro bin West
fht, Asi,ln C,)alitit)n is a campus o rga n I/ J llOn hplpin g in the st ruggle fo r better
r, d, l ic a\. econom ic. socia \. a nd ed uca tion•iI w nLiit i()ns for Asians a nd Paci fi c Isla nd
re(lrl e at Evergreen and th e surrounding
c(lmmunitv . T he Coa litio n's goa ls are
mdn y-folded : to bring Asians together to
lea rn who we are ; to show pride in our.;elves as we are today ; to educa te people
to our hi sto ry in this co untry ; to lea rn of
(Iur na ti ve culture and histo ry; to make
peo ple awa re of o ur existence and our
prob lem s; and to wo rk with o ther Third
Wo rld peo pl e.
We don 't expect to be able to change
peo pl e's a ttitudes q r completely re-educate
t hem in ju st one school year. But it is
im p(; rtan t to recog ni ze problems, and to

SOUNDING BOARD
by Curtis Milton
A lter a long, intense a nd often times
co nfu sin g Wednesday morning meeting,
th e Sou ndin g Boar d finally reached
agreement on a recommendation concerning the choosing of representatives to the
Boa rd of Tru stees. Representatives from
Evergreen 's Third W o rld , women and
Gay communi ties will hopefully be chosen
in time for next week 's Boa rd meeting .
\1ode rat o r Dave Blunt was heard to
re ma rk t hat. "We're going around in
circles here" as the board kept arriving
back at th e same basi c problems while
tryin g to muddle its way thro ugh the
rel'resen ta ti ves issue,
One of th ose problems was brought to
the surface ea rlv in the meeting by Stone
T homas when 'he expressed his co ncern
that a Third World or woman representative. req uested b y the Trustees, would
also ha ve to act as a representative for
eit her the s tuden ts, facult y o r staff. He
telt tha t no one person could adequately
represe nt two groups a t once and that
thev shouldn 't be required to do so, Many
agr~ed wi th him .
Peg Calver from the Gay Resource
Cente r sa id that there are ma n y special
in teras t groups o n ca mpu s who need
represe nt a ti o n , Gays b e ing o ne. Bill
~-iir shm an caut io ned about loa ding the

t rv tn make a change.
'F,'r the A sian Coa li tion tn iunc tion
\\, (, 11 , more Asia ns ha ve to get in vo lv ed
il nd ex press th ei r op inion s a mi idea s. Th is
year , the Coa lit ion has just been get ting
o rgani zed . bu t we do have a representa ti ve to the Sounding Board meeti ngs and
a rep to the Third W o rld Coalition Board ,
headed by Stone Thomas. There were
a lso two A sian women sponsored by the
Asian Coalition who went to San Francisco fo r an International Women 's Year
conference o n October 23 and 24 . The
conference was io address itself to the
problems and concerns of Third World
Women . On October 20, 21 and 22. the
Third World Women's Associ ation sold
foo d to raise money for those two people
to go to San Francisco . We sold a great
Board with more representatives than
there are Trustees .
Marcel Hatch felt that "it is an absolute
necess ity that each group be represented
autonomously ." This line of discussion
raised the possibility of the number of
representatives growing impossibly large.
The group was once again back where
it started and a proposa'i to continue the
discussion next week appeared to be
shaping up when Rainer Hasenstab spoke.
He reminded members that their first
priority , established by the Board of
Trus tees, was to choose a Third World
and a woman representative .
Rob Knapp proposed that the Third
World elec t a representative , the women
elect o ne but not from the same group
(s tudent. faculty or staff) , and the third
re pr ese ntative be elected from the
rema ining group by the campus communit y. This passed but when it was noticed
th a t the minorities had all voted against it
th e pro posal was withdrawn.
A new proposal. minus the student ,
facu Ity , staff requirement was adopted
with the provision th a t the third positi on
be reserved for Gays.
A prop0sal that other special interest
g roups who want represe ntati o n b e
encou raged to petition the Board for it
was abandoned as the' meeting adjourned .

varietv o f food s. suc h as bea n and meat
bLirrit ~, s , Ind ian fry bread a nd co rnbread
with b utt er a nd ho ney , egg roll s, sweet
and so ur wit h rice , ca rro t cake and ap ple
dumplings .
As for what the Asian Coalit ion by itself w ill do ; we may be spo nsoring a ' series of films dealing with A sians, such as
Samurai films , Bruce lee movies, films
dealing with changing aspects of Asian
societ y in Asian and Pacific Island co untries, o r film s dea ling with Asians in the
United States and their history here. We
were also thinking of having the Asian
Multi-Media fro m Seattle come and put
on the play "The Marginal Man."
"The Marginal Man" is a very good
play dealing with Asian history in the
United States on a very personal basis. It

example, they are to ld that they are criminal s fo r being Japanese and must go to
co nce ntra tion ca mp s . Th is and o ther
event s and social pressures are examined
in the play - from the first Asian stereo types to the present ones .
We were also thinking of having Asians
from all different backgrounds - such as
a war bride, a person who lived in an
American concentration camp for Japanese
during World War II, a Vietnamese refu gee, Filipino cannery workers - tell us of
their experiences .
Within the Asian Coalition office (Lib .
3209) is a mini-library of books, pamphlets and newspapers which are very informative and interesting. These books
can be checked out from the Asian Coalition, or a person can just corne and
browse.

ENVIRONMENTAL

DIALOGUE
by Neil Marshall
buildings . Bill Knauss, the faculty
The Environmental AdviSOry Committee
architect, has received their recommen(EAC) is one of two standing committees
dations and is drawing up site plans in
at Evergreen . The committee reviews all
accordance with it.
building proposals and renovations proThe Committee has made recommenjects with regard to their environmental
dations whiCh were not acted upon: for
impact. It suggests alterations that lessen
instance the landscapfn~ , done ,~,e ~~ 9J...the
CAB.
'
,
environmental damage , and at times
suggests a project be curtailed entirely The committee was developed out of
thoug h that is outside their domain of
what some community members felt was
effective influence.
an inappropriate act by the responsible
In accordance with Evergreen's governauthorities during the planning of the
ance s tructure, the committee only
Communications lab. The college did not
recommends changes on improvements to
write all. Environmental Impact Statement
the initiator of the project. Jerry
until after the plans has been 'dravJn up
Schillinger or Dean Clabaugh are usually
and approved by ~he legisl~t'u.~~·:.:tt. ~~as
the initiators or responsible authorities ; of
felt that this comprised a dlsmterest m the
pro jects that reach the EAC.
environment and was the response to
The most spectacular suggestion the
federal law rather than genuine concern.
group has made was in regard to the
As a result of this, certain faculty and
location of the gymnasium proposed for
students felt the need to form an
the . ca mpus . The initial plans were to
advocacy group for the college environbuild this north of the current CRC
ment.
building in the stand of trees and natural
The status of environmental impact on
vegitation that habitate there presently.
a statewide basis is currently under
The EAC recommended that the gym be
revision. The state is developing specific
planned for the area east of the CRC
guidelines as to the type of projects
which has, fo r the most part, already
requirin g environmental impact statebeen cleared for construction of current
ments . When that is completed, the role
<;C;}I,;;;e,
. .of ,the EAC wil~ be .~~l~arer·
-' Tneit wor'd~ Wi1r 'notbe 'Ema! - or ~he . only
voice - but they will have some specific
guidelines and thus be able to offer advice
that is quite important to the responsible
a
uthorities.
by Corona
$19.50 to $39.50
The suggestions this committee makes
on the actual construction of various
Stone or Steel Plate
projects is no more, nor no less , powerful
Extra Quality
then is a citizen's suggestion about a
project proposed by a developer in the
Built to last a lifetime
state at large . The fact is , the federal
government requires a developer to write
an Environmental Impact . Statement in
RED APPLE NATURAL FOODS
some cases. But if the statement <;\\s~loses
that the project will be harmfuk#]Sf$' are
WESTSIDE CENTER
no grounds for stopping or alteri~ it.
Similarly, on campus, the EAC can
OLYMPIA
point out serious environmental damage
as the result of a project , but not stop or
alter that project because of it. The only
a dvantage of the EAC, or of the
re quirement for Enviromental Impact
Statements is that the deciding al\~hority
will have the eI\'VirpJ;tmenta,1 eHects in
mind when he decides to go ahead with
the project.
FRED BIPPERT DODGE, INC.
Washington State law , as contrasted
with federal law, may give more power
than this to its citizens. The law states
that each citizen has a fundamental and
inalienable rjght to a healthful (!nvironmenlo This may allow ,~itize,ns to protest a
particular developmen.t on t.he. ·grQl,lnjls of
its environmental impact .
.
It is questionable whether this makes
any difference to Jlly projects the EAC
may be reviewing . !Jilt even if it did, and
the authority did not respond to their
suggestions, the EAC would have to go to
court to get the project changed. There is
no internal process whereby the comittee
may alter an a dmini stra tor's decision
agai nst hi~ or her will.

t.9L

THE GRAIN AND CORN MILL

FIAT

\

LYLE MERCER
The Evergreen Political Informati.on
Center's film and speaker series featured a
talk Monday, Nov. 3 by lyle Mercer - a
member of the National Committee
Against Repressive legislation - about
Seriate Bill One, the attempt to revise the
United States criminal code.
S .l has had a long ' history; its
beginnings dating back to 1966 when
lyndon Johnson appointed a commission
to reform the criminal code, last subjected
to major revision in 1909. The commission spent six years at its task, submitting
its report in 1972 to Richard Nixon . Also
submitted was a minority report by
conser~ative members . Nixon sent the
reports to his own team of bill writers,
and the result was S.l.
A long bill. (753 pages), S.l ca'm e out as
an outright rejestion of the commission's
approach to criminal law. It contains
provisions for reinstatement of the death
penalty (mandatory for certain crimes),
increased penalties for the use of
information on government .activities s~,c\_ ,~~ }.h~ r.~J1t~go.n {'apers - by
' newspapers, shifts the burden of proof
from the prosecutor to the defense in
entrapment cases, makes some public
demonstrations .. peaceful or not possible crimes and includes the vague
and unsuccessful riot laws that the
Chicago Seven were tried under.
, lJ' :1~"~\:O .in,clu~es a so-called Nuremberg
I ,£ r9JvISIO,']r r.e!11 ovln g responsibilIty for
z ~ crimes"rfonl 'g o vernment employees acting
' und~r orders, increases marijuana penalties, and reaffirms the 1968 law on
wiretapping, which allows domestic
wiretapping by presidential order in cases
of national security. Many other provisions embody vague infringements ' on a
variety of constitutional rights.
Mercer spoke in opposition to the bill.
and after giving a brief history and
summary he went on to detail some ways
students can help to prevent its passage.
S.l will come before the Senate for a vote
J; .'H)>; 'W3t X~~£~, ~o _~!m~. j~ sI-)9[\. Students
'. ,~r;te.{~~ t~Q . ilj1<rW<?[rV , i.I)/(Wna.t,l9!) , ~hQl,lld
write to the American Civil liberties
Union , and to their senators for copies of
the bill. Students in opposition should
make their views know to their senators
by writing them and alerting their friends
and relatives to write also .

SUPPLIES for BREWING

222 North Capitol Way
Tacoma toll - free 572-4383

Bus'. ph. 943-4603
Used Car 943- 6707

Wine Coffee Herb,
Beer Tea Sple.
I
SOlITH SOUND CENTER
Ph . ~

at

in~h~il~~o~~:!,

0
CAPITAL

a group of health care

I

professionals will answer questions. n c1uded in the panel are Sue Sanders, medex ; Florence McFetridge, nursing supervisor ; Dr. Charles Keck, pediatrician ;
Barbara Neece, appointment receptionist ;
,Donna Rice, physical therapist, and Dr.
Gary Feldbau, family practice. Moderator
will be Elaine Yeager, a committee member.
Those planning to attend are asked to
submit questions on forms provided at the
Group Health clinic so they won' t forget
what it was they wanted to ask . Forms
will also be available at the meeting .
The program will be preceded at 7 p.m.
by a committee business meeting, said
Chairperson John Hoglund.
For more information call Wayne Bris bane , 456-1700.

CHRISTIAN
ANTI-COMMUNISM
CRUSADE

HIGH

. . .,
This fall Capital High ,. OIYdmPla s newest high school. opened ItS oors to approximately 950 ninth, tenth, ~nd eleventh
graders, who ~ake up the first class to_
th f i t
Located at 2707 Con
occupy e aCI I y.
f
C
ger Street, it can be seen rom ooper
Point Road as a l~ng, low, concrete bUllding on a 40 acre site . As of now the structure is not quite complete;. the cafeteria ,
gym and resource center
are not
yet in use, and the track IS SIX mches un der water. Inside , however the busmess of
high sc~ool .goes on . The students attend
SIX. perIods .a day of Enghs~,
Math ,
SCIence, Foreign Language, Busmess Ed .,
etc. .. .. Spirit signs are plast,~r~d up here
and there, saying "Cougars! In cardmal'
and gold . There is that regimente~ feel of
everyone moving to a clock,. remforced
by the geometric graphICS m prImary
colors that de~orate the ~.alls . These seem
almost unaVOidable tradillons of the public high school. but Capital High has be gun
some
new programs
to compensate
.
For
example,
registration
is conducted

(hb~a,?,)

L

CHO

dent can receive individual tutoring in a
subject until he is capable of rejoining the
class Even the locker system has been
chan~ed . Instead of lining the halls as is
usual in high schools, the lockers are centralized in four open rooms, alleviating
some crowding of the halls . Also , the
lockers have no locks; students may bring
h '
b f
d
t e;{o:w~~ t~~ :;::de~'ts react to the new
school7 One girl expressed di sa ppoint ment that there were, "no mirrors in t he
cans yet." Another reaction was prompt ed
by an attempt to set up a student government. Over the summer administrators se lected 18 student leaders to begin organizing the government. But when school
s tarted in the fall the student body
wouldn 't accept them , as they hadn't been
elected. A new party formed, with their
own plans . As of now there is no student
overnrnent , and there may not be one all
g
ye~~rhaps most important of all the new
features of Capital High is a respect fodr

Deadline for registering for the Antistudent rights and indiViduality unhear
Subversive S eminar - sponsored b ythe a s I't I'S at a traditional college . The faculty
.
C
of to those of us who went to high school
Christian An ti- C ommumsm
rusa d
I' - 'IS
sit at tables in a large room, and students
coming up fast , folks . It will .be he.ld at
can select thel'r classes and teachers on a
in the age of dress codes and hair rest rictions. In the student handbook under
the Inn of Tomorrow, opposite D Isne~first -come -first -served basis. Students get
land, in Anaheim , O,:~nge" <;oun~r, _.Cah- .. -" more freedom of c/loice; and' teachers get
':Stl,ldent Rights and Responsibili.t ies," is
fornia froIjiNQ;)[·:2~rJl N"ov . 3(f. . .
some I'dea of how well they are getting
the following sentence : "The courts have
"P"' wi II inc Iu d e H erb Ph IIb riC k ,
made it clear that young people have the
Speakers
through to the students . Each student has
former counterspy for the FBI ; Fred
an advisor whom he keeps throughout
rights of citizenship as guaranteed in the
S c h warz , au th or a.f th e b 00 ks Yo u Can
constitution of the United States ." This is
.
high school. The advisor fills the role 0 f
h
Trust th e Communrsts (to be Communrsts)
academl'c and personal counselor. An adan important step towards making hig
school a working. community rather than
and T h e Th ree Faces 0 f R evo I u t 10':' ;
ditional program for the student .who is
Marion Mi.lIer, member o~ the Communist
not "making it" in a given class is the
just another battleground of adolescent s
Party
for
fIVf:
years
workmg
as
a
countercontracted
studies
program
.
Here
a
stuagainst
adults .
NEW HEALTH
spy for the FBI; and Rev . James D . ColSERVICES SCHEDULES
bert, Director of MissjQll!Lof the Christian
Staff in Health- Services have -founa the
Anti-Communism Crusade.
ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERV'CC~ 'IIC.'
schedule printed up in our brochure
The seminar will cost $20, but if stu(handed out at the first of the quarter) to
dents interested in attending it are broke,
be in need of repair and modification in
they can apply to Anti -Subversive SemOTder for clinic times to adequately serve
inar, P .O . Box 890, long Beach, Calif.,
9 1 Ii stu~~nts :
90801, for a $20 tuition scholarship. For
. lil'he ' first change is nurse's hours on
more information , con'l"»-to the CPJ
. pnysi~ian clinic days. These clinics funco fficp.
tion much smoother with nurse and physician working together to diagnose, educate, and plan for care with each student. CHANGED DIRECTION?----------..
943-8701
WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER
Therefore, nurse and physician clinics will H
943 .. 8700
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON
be coordinated to run as follows : T ues- A
, , 'dilYS, '9 - 12 noon appointments only,
Through high school you thought about college as the .next big
2 '" ' 4 ' p.m: open ' dinic; Thu,rsdays 2 - 4
~tep in your life. Perhaps you did so with mi xed emotlo~s ~ut ,
regardless, now you 're here . Ha s the magic abo~t . o,r the mOllvott~n
p ~m : appointmen'ts 'o'nly, 4 - 7 p .m . open
for , a college educati on changed? Your aSpiratiOns ~Iouded In
clinic ; Fridays 9 - 12 noon appointments D
worry about money? Well , not everyone is psychologICally and
only.
financially ready to take full ad vantage of college ri ght out of
The second change will be for times D high school ,
2 - 3 BEDROOM APTS.
nurse's clinic is scheduled: appointments I
R
can be made for routine clinic visits (such
Perhaps the most significant thing you have discovered is
thot you need a little time away from 'he routine of grade o.nd
as allergy shots' and wart removal) and
clo ss standing to learn about yourself , about others, and to think
C
for 'non croutine visits such as ' hearing
through what you really want to do with your life ~ ,ome people
;tests. Nurse"s 'cliiiics ' are Monday and
AS L,=
wauld say, ta mature, Today' s Army offers you th .. lime ~ . the
I
time to trovel , meet people, learn a skill , l10ndle responSibility ,
Wednesday 8:30 -11 : 30 a.m., and 1 - 4
mature - a time to assess tne value s you nave learned and to
..
.
PER
p.m. , 'Thursday 10 - 11:30 a.m., and FriN plan your future with a judgment nurtured with the e.xperience you
day 1:30 L 4 p .m .
go in in the Army .
We realize health care needs cannot al- ?
And, when you get the urge again to pick up your education .
BASED ON 4 PERSONS SHARING A 2 BEOROOM
ways be planned for so the majority of
you con do so where you left off , in. or out of the Ar":,y .. In ~II
APT. AT .1!ili.OO/rno. - SELECT YOUR OWN ROOMMATES
nurse's clinic times are on a walk-in basis,
probability, the Army is associated WI ,h you r sc ho o l as It IS ~'Ih
and two physicians clinics per week (Tueshundred. of others in Project AHEAD (Army Hetp fa , Educa ti o n
ASH TREE APTS.
days, 2 - 4 p .m ., and Thursdays, 4 - 7
and Deve lopment). Under the ausp i ce, of AHEAD , you can toke
college co urses for credit dur ing off-duty ' Ime, ..... ,th the Army
3138 OVERHULSE RD.
p.m .) are on a walk-in basis for those unpoying up to 75% of all tuition cosh . Then ,. when you are re~dy
able to schedule appointments.
866-8181
to resume full -t ime studies o n compus fol lOWing your Army se r VICe ,

Z



NT & FACULTY HOUSI

•t

$39.00 / mo.

o

NW PASSAGE IN COURT

Brew Specialties

Nearly everyone has had the experience
of keeping an appointment with a doctor
to ask a question , then forgetting to ask it
or afraid it might be too trivial for a busy
professional.
Now , there's a chance to have some of
those nagging - and perhaps important
- health questions answered at a special
program at the Group Health Coopera tive.
The program - "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Your
Health But Didn't Ask" - is the feature
of the regular monthly meeting of the
Group Health district executive committee. The program, at 7;30 p.m. Monday
in the Doctors lounge of the Group
Health Olympia Medical Center is not
limited to Coop . members. The center is

Northwest Passage, all. alternative newspaper from Bellingham, was found guilty
Tuesday in the Whatcom County Superior
Court of unlawfully publi shing a Pacific
Northwest Bell telephone credit card coding system .
John Anderson, attorney for the Passage, said the paper will appeal the ruling,
addressing itself in a higher court to the
9 uestion O'f freedom of the press.
. The Superior Court jury ruled that free ~om of the press was not at stake because
~e material was made up of numerals,
not w'Ords.

PERSON

you' lt be eligible for the G I Bill . with cv"en t benefils o f up to

' 8.000 ,

Who said you can't have the best of two worlds?
to your guidance counselor and y o ur Army representative -

Ta !k
they II

GET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS AT

tell you how you ca n .

HENDRICKS
Suite 319, S. Sound Qenter
Lacey

,

456-1611

Join the people
.
who've joined the Anny.
How'" 9 • 9 ,Dally

11 . 1Sunday

DRUGS
WESTSIDE CENTER

~S31J

q

ELECTION FINAL

8

---_._-- - -- ----

------

----

-- - -

--

: ontimled from page 1

-

ISOCIALIST FEMINISTS SPEAKI
STUDENT GOV: TECHNOCRACY OR DEMOCRACY?
Lenore Norrgard, Radica l Women
Marcel Hatch , Freedom Socialist Party
Till' Adlllin is tratioll at El'ergreell has
t'ficltil'cly put a lid a ll all democratic
PI'L)ct'sses at E1'el'gre"'1 since it opened in
I')'; I . Tllrougll a document known as
COG (Co llllliitre" 011 Gopemancel. it redllll'S all g01'enrillg committees and
I' ll ards to silllply illpllI alld advisory
I,,)die s. Melllbers of boards and committ"" s aI',' cllose'l ill two ways: either the
Adlllillistmtioll asks tlwIII directly to parlic ipale or it 5ell'rts tll e m ra'ldomly
/;'1',)1' , < 11 a CO lllp uter fro m a list of volun kel's. III "itllel' case . til(' Administration
Ita,; til e "P/l1'I' lralHi. Evell if a person
~II' )" 'S IIll' Opillio ll oj' tile people s/ iJe has
h'clI s,'lec"'.1 to r" pres<'lIt 51 he can get
II l';I, ;',' rc ;(' itl, it if it is ill conflict with the
Adllllllistl'l1ti,))I. IVi t11 I/ O democratic base
",. 1,,1;1'0' 1· ti le I'l'pr,'sel ltlltil'e and the per>.)11.'" I", is represel/till:;! !-tave no recourse
', i' II,'U IIl e Adlllillistrl1tinll 51l1'lv('s decisions
,d tilt· I' artillllnr [, ,,a,.. { 01' co ml/litree.
E;' '''',~I''' (,II p,) rtm)15 itsel f as all IIltra-dem,','m ti ,' Institllt i" 11 Tile fac t is that o ur
'1I1) lI t I- utili:t',1 b,v Ill e Administration
,)111 .11 11::;' Il) ng as it sc n.'l'5 it s pla'pose's .
1\'" .- ,ltl tlrat all gopcnrillg bo dies must
{II ' ,t' lI ,'t)C n~ti(C1"y
' ,I I: ; ',' .'

detennincd.

R£'presf!n-

'"l1st he dClllO cmticall.ll elected arId

,I, (,l llllt,,/,Ie 1,1 til e p('op le tlt at put them
t L 1I"f

,!

a fOllr-parl 51'ril's 011
at TE S C.
S&A
Th~ Serv ices and Activities Fee Review
Huard ha s the task ot allocating about
5350.000 in stud ent monies each year.
The Board co nsist s of eight members: one
tandt\'. <'ne staff, and six students. The
S& A l30ard is one of the original governance bodies implemented by the TESC
Admir,istration when Evergreen ope)1ed in
1071.
S& A Board members are selected at the
di scretion of the Student and Activities
Board Executive Secretary from a random
Till '; I ';

riI,' first

ill

,11I ,{, 'l1t ,",OZ'cnIaIlCC

THE ARTICHOKE MODE
a natural foods
restaurant
203 W. 4th
T-F 11 - 9 Sal 6 - 10

computer sampling. People who want to
PI' on the S&A Board sign their names on
the Voluntary Services List. To select the
new Board each year, the S&A Board
Secretary feeds these names into the computer, and out come the original names,
now in new numbered , scrambled order.
Those people at the top of the list are
then each interviewed \Jy the S&A Board
Secretary. S / He selects the eight that s I he
thinks would work best on the Board.
The S&A Board Secretary is selected
yearly by the Board.
Through this random and discrete way
of selecting S&A Board members, the in tent is to form a Board "representative" of
the Evergref'n campus. " Representative"
here means specifically that Third World
people and women must be on the Board,
as well as white males, in keeping with
TESC Affirmative Action guidelines. This
is to insure that all parts of the community have a "voice" on the Board.
The money the Services and Activities
Board allocates is the students ' money.
The state legisla ture says that we students
are to ha ve so le control over this money .
Yet we, the students, have no control
over selection of the Board that decides
where our dollars will be spent. The
method used to select the Board allows
the Admini strat ion to say we are making
the decisi o ns, when in fact we are not. To
select a Board at random creates a facade
of "fairness" and "impartiali ty " that
makes a sham of democracy. Inasmuch as
the Administration can point to this mock
"representation " and claim that we are
"fa irly represented, " we students are immobilized from democratically determining the use of our money . The present
met hod of selecting Board members is one
way of avoiding the needs and stifling the
demands of those students whose needs
are most pressing: ThirJ World students,
women , and gays. Democracy is necessary
to get our needs addressed. As long as we
are not allowed to elect our own representatives, we have no power or control.
The process of the individual S&A
Boa rd Secretary selecting Board members
from a random sampling of volunteers
and the concept of representation contradict one another. Persons selected as representatives must be elected by the people
they are chosen to represent; only we students can decide who can best advocate
our needs , Some groups have special
needs that can only be presented by persons the groups elect. This necessitates
representatives of Third World students
elected by Third World students, representatives of women students elected by
women students, and representatives of

~ Colony GJnnc5lJpartment§
181 8 EVE RGREEN PARK DRtVE • Ol YMPIA

All Utilities Paid
Fully Furnished

WA 98502.

gay students elected by gay students. The
computer and the S&A Board Secretary
are not capable of selecting representatives
for either the general student body or the
special groups within it.
The money the Services and Activities
Board allocates belongs to the students.
We students should be deciding the issues
. involved in the allocation of our own
money, and hence the criteria for the
Board's decision-making. Board members

PORTRAIT OF
by Ti Locke
Dave Rogan and Phil Hamilton - the
"Walker Brothers" have covered thousands
of well-publicized miles as "walking
ambassadors" for the Friends of the Earth
(FOE), the environmental group.
They passed throu'g h Olympia In
February of this year on one leg of their
proposed 10-year, round-the-world hike.
They are back on the Evergreen ' campus
now , preparing a color photo show of
their completed travels. The show, which
will start Nov. 9 on the third floor of the
library proper, is part of their contract
with faculty member Willi Urisoeld: "
Dave and Phil's trip, far from being a
publicity stunt for FeE or a Bicentennial
event, is a trip to promote understanding
and awareness of "the environment Planet
Earth" . Dave Brower, head of FOE, talks
about this awareness:
"We can have an environment
without an economy, but not the other
way around."
And the Walker Brothers believe that
it's time to bring back the awareness of
man's relationship to the Earth. which the
speed of the city's pace has taken away.
Yet, they do draw attention to
themselves because they are walking, as
evidenced by a bulging noteb'Jok of
newspaper clippings from various points
along their trip .

WALKE'RS~IJ' "

The trip was not undertaken in totally
serious tones. They, like many other
dyes - in-the -down hikers, carried less
clothing to make room for camera
equipment while subsisting on a multifaceted mush that "kept things moving
along nicely .. "
Nor did they start the trip with old,
friendly gear. They had new equipment,
supplied by such bakers as JanSport,
Nikkon and Sunny Jim . To boot, all
their equipment matched. Many' of their
photos showed th~m . i!,l l ';i!!tcrpjI:l!$, ,tams};,j
shirts, . s.oci:.s" ~hor,ls/",*,~ ~~'ti iiil,aerr
wear too," Dave laughed. "We were into
the twinsy look."
Contrary to their names, the Walker
Brothers weren't always walking. They
had many tales to tell of midnight raids
on gas stations when they had movie
getaways with car doors flapping .
Perhaps their spirit and that of the
Friends of the Earth is best exemplified
in one interpretation of the 78th pqem of
the Tao te Ching:
"The weak will overcome the strong
the supple overcome the stiff
The Truth is a paradox ."
u ,, {.·;tJ(,
The paradox is Dave 'and f'}\i1'5~(V)
walking, the paradox is that they can ' ,', '
bring home an environment argument
better than a hundred picketers, a dozen
pieces of legislation or any six
impassioned speeches .

LET'S MAKE
A DEAL
_ - - - - -- _ ~
.......

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CORPORATIONS WIN AGAIN
And what of the other issues Tuesday?
Probably more important (because it
effects more people) was Initiative 314. It
would have, if passed, forced corporations to pay a 12 percent tax from their
profits so thar special school levies could
have been reduced or eliminated. It failed
in approximately the same percentage that
th~ l:\eath.· .pen.~lty Pilssed. .
.
ir'WlIs ("J~ahly'the - moot. c_tr.cver6ial
and hardest-fought issue on the ballot.

• Two identical comprehensive
FCC Third Class License seminar
series' will be offered by KAOS
November 17th, 18th, and 20th.
Text for the series is the Ameco
Commercial Radio Operator's
Q & A License Guide, available
for $l.00 in the TESC Bookstore,
and which should be read in
advance . The series is free and
opep ; 1.0: anyone interested in
radio.
The series will start with a
film and discussion on basic electronics, Ohm's Law, etc., Monday afternoon (the 17th), and
repeated Monday evening. Tuesday afte.moon (the 18th) at one,
and ag~in Tuesday evening at 7.
two mlje films will be shown
and disCussed , on Vacuum ' Tube'
Theory and Antenna operation.
By the end ot the second seminar
participants should have a clear
understanding of "Element 9."
"Elements 1 & 2" will be discussed ,;rhursday (the 20th) in

~~\"-., $~. 00
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PEOPLE ;\ Nt) LOCAL ISSU[S
r<cpub li ca n BruCt' Cr(lr m(tn \,\"(1 11 I~~':;
r.lC~· h:H S(-' Crt' tlJr·" nl- ~}t; He by b t.:' ~iti n ,,, l<. L1V
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Easy access to freeway & City Center
Just down the Road from the Greenwood Inn
A Singles Community

Capllol Chevrolet
522 E 41h

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conne ct ic' n s w ith co nlrov ,'r s idl Se nate
MajOrit y Leader August Mard esich, a
charge she denied . Both Anderso n and
Mardesich are Everett Democrats.
Chapman - with this his first victory in
a major campaign - is said to have his
sights on bigger things in the future. One
of the possibilities mentioned is the
governorship, if Dan Evans doesn't decide
to run again.
In Thurston County, a levy proposition
that would continue the Medic I program
won easily. But in Olympia, a proposition
that would enable a new downtown
library to be built is still up in the air. By
Wednesday noon , 60.4 per cent of the
voters were in favor of the proposition,
but 841 absentee ballots have yet to be
counted. The proposition needs 60 per
cent 'to pass.
And finally, there were two interesting
races in Seattle for city council seats.
Patricia Bethard, the first Socialist
Workers Party candidate to be nominated
for the general election ballot in Seattle's
history, was trounced by incumbant Sam
Smith. First returns had her losing to
Smith by a rate of almost three to one,
though even that must be a moral victory
for the SWP.
And Chip Marshall, former anti-war
activist in his first attempt at public
office, was defeated relatively handily by
incumbant Paul Kraabel , a former state
legislator.

Voters also rejected SJR 127. a
measure that would have took the
question of setting their own salaries out
of the legislator's hands, and into the
hands of a commission made up of
private citizens. SJR would have also
allowed state legislators to seek other
elected positions, as long as those
positions were not created in the session
of the legislature that the legislator was
serving on.
Also going down to defeat was HJR 19,
an amendment to the state constitution
that would have permitted limited
governmental assistance to the students
attending non-public colleges and schools.
Apparently, voters felt that such a change
would have violated the sacred "separation of' church and state" clause of the
federal Constitution . HJR 19, however,
would have made the state constitution to
\Je_. a:; st.ri!;t, qut. not stricter as it is now,
than .the U .S . .Constitution on the subject
of private school aid.

Money-Saving

SPECIAL
PURCHASE
Mfgrs. Closeout

MONROE, GOERUCH,
MOTORCRAfT, ETC

SHOCK
ABSORBERS
14.95 and '7.95
Values!

STANDARD
ONLY

$2!~

HEAVY DUTY

$3 9!Ch

MIDI III u.s.A.

IIIIY'.1 ""l1li111SO ..... 0111 Of YOUR

018 SIIOCIS TO ""CH
"PI.SID
. . . . . . . . .UCH,
MOTOit cun, IIC.

Raudenbush
Motor Supply
412 S. Cherry 943-3650
Daily 8 to 8 & Sunday

ROGER'S

This mate..ul is designed to be used as a research aid only.

MARKET

RESEARCH FAFERS

Also Chevron Gas

Custom
Beef

THOUSANDS ON FI LE

Cut

Send for your up-to-date, 16D-page, mail order catalog of
5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling.

Orders

COLLEGIATE RESEARCH
Fresh Meats
and
Groceries

PRODUCE SALE!

$ .39/1b.
3/$1.00
$.15/Ib.
$.15/Ib.
$ .49 1each
$ .15 & .70/each

.J. Vee Health Foods

CALL MONTE HOOPER

1 0 1. , 1

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:llUdsii:- ~:~in~

THE OTHERS

• Quievemo's invitor a los que
habolon espanol 0 tienen inteves
a' "una Fiesta Latina . rruerc'oles 6
p .m. el 12 de Novienbre en el
edefico CAB 108.
Triga algo de comida di:;cos
instrumentos latinas por favor y
lastos para bailor, Estudiantes de
Espanol.

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.An der,,)n \Va' ch'lrged w ith hav in g

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1

Nov. 17 (Mon .), 1-4 pm LH 3,
7-10 pm LH 5.
Nov . 18 (Tues.), 1-4 pm LH 4,
7-10 pm LH 5.
Nov. 20th (Thurs. ), 1-4 pm
CAB 110, 7-10 pm CAB 110.
See Lee Chambers at KAOS
for further details.

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n:tvrn1 .,11-. .1 h (1 1N \ ', ) I LJ:':: l hure .ILl C!- .JC"/

Thl' ldr F.e~ t t.nn t rit ut o l s, t'dCn giving 'J \ 't'(
520 .000 , '.',ere tn e INeyerhaeuser Cd ..
Sl'<lt ti e-First Nati o nal Bank , Sateco If1'o.
surance anJ the Boeing Co
Op ponents of 314 used the ir money to
advertise extensively in the media. l3ut
also , the anti-314 forces seemed to receive
a much greater sounding board for their
views in the media, which is not hard to
figure since the media is a corporation,
too.
Faculty member Tom Rainey, an
enthusiastic supporter of 314 , summed it
up succinctly: "Big money won the day."

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

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two seminars, one at one and
one at seven . Attendance at one
workshop each day should pref'are everyone for the test, given
every Tuesday and Wednesday
in Seattle (Federal Bldg., 909
First Ave.) from nine to eleven.

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do your Christmas
. hopp inl'! hue for quality
h.1nd c raft ~ J it(>m ~, Wt> hE' lp
o ther., to heIr th t>ms" ht"<;.

pla i nts :11clde .lgJ i nst dny judge ,

why .

the irlltir1ti v ('

MORNtNGSIDE INDUSTRI[S
GIFT SHOP

1720 PONTIUS AVE., SUITE 201
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025
II-------------------------------------------------------~
Name ____________________________________________

I
II

Addr~s

_________________________________________

Ci~------------------------------------------State _____________________________ Zip ___________

2010 Division and Elliot Rd. 357-7483

1/2 price sale

NEECLECRA.F T

PH . {z061 943-9711

Nov. 6, 7, 8 on
ALL MERCHANDISE

6.

YA RNS

KNITTING MACHINES 8. SU PP L IES

DONNA'S KNIT SHOP
1214 : WEST HARRISO N

red empress grapes
avocados
bananas
delicious apples
papaya
acorn squash

357-5515

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lhe J ea th pe naity la w In VVd SnlOglc n.
Newton would ha ve been hung beca t.:sp
he wa s conv icted L)f killing a policeman,
tho ugh (i f he did), it may have been in
self-defe nse. And if you say that in
Washington sta te things like that could
not happen ; that Washington cops are
not like Oakland cops, then you have
forgotten Larry Ward.
But it's all academic now, at least until
the Supreme Court makes a ruling.
The death penalty was declared a
winner by the Associated Press in the
incredibly short time of 45 minutes after
the polls closed Tuesday . Walking
through the CAB, a student was
overheard to say, "I can't believe they
could do it; take some bastard out and
just hang the son-of-a-bitch."
Do legal murders prevent illegal
murd,$.IJ.S?)Vhat is legal murder?
Af; :least the ranks of the unemployed
may be thinned. We'll need gallow-makers and hangmen now.

FCC WORKSHOPS

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Referendum 35 -the "Henry Jackson
bill" - also failed . If passed, it would have
required the governor to appoint someone
from a list supplied by the central
committee of the political party of the
person who vacated a U.S. Senate seat.
The only issue, besides the death
penalty. that voters gave an .jlffirmative
nod to was SJR 101, a bill which makes
some big changes in the judicial article of
the St a te Constitution . Among o th er
thin gs , S JR 101 sets up a judi c ial
qua lificati o n cOl11miss ip n to rev iew C0m-

'67 Corvair

Wall-to- Wall Carpeting

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didn't cO llln ) it bCC;:-Il..l~e Anle~!C d[\
! l! ll (, S ':Ht' fin , f '::l1 t r' '11) pertec t.
Th,· [dcl I' h ,'1I ih,' ciPdth p,"nail \' c" uid be

they

p ri son er s - in <. iudu)\!, Hw-':" '-iC\\t( l n ·~·-(·rl'
i n i<lJJ -lJi t h tr~Hn p .~ d-u p 'l1 u r Jt:r
charges hoverin>.1, over their iH:.'<1!_tS . i ' nder

Social Rooms

1 Room $ 74.50
2 · Rooms $144.00
4 Rooms $250.00

L) cca ssi ,)n.d ly h~t con vict e d

<;ltting

206 ' 943.7330

Free TV Cable

a deterrent. · Most murders are crimes of
passion, in which thoughts of the death
penalty do not enter the mind of the
killer.
Another problem is that the spectre of
the death penanty hanging over their
heads may ca use ju ry nullificat ion - a jury
sett ing guil ty persons free JS the only
alternativp to the death penal tv.
And . (I f c()ur ~It' . innOCf~n t pl?Clri e do

DdiJ l) 1

,

Laundry Facility

selected through computer shuffling and
the S&A Board Secretary's discretion cannot accomplish this. We need to elect our
own representatives democratically
through our own organizations. To be
consistent with TESC's Affirmative Action goal, the S&A Board must be made
up of 25 % Third World people and 50 %
women; plus the Board should also have
15 % gays to represent gay students, To
be democratic, these Board members must
be elected by the students they represent.
It is only through our own democratic organizations that real representation and
accountability to those represented can be
developed.

Opponents claimed it was a "bad tax",
that it would not save the schools and
would also raise the prices consumers had
to pay for the corporations' goods.
Proponents refuted these charges, saying
314 would cut property taxes, stimulate
jobs and business and would be the only
practical alternative to the school levy
crisis in this state.
Proponents also had other reasons for
supporting 314 . as evidenced by o ne who
sai d. " It ' s ti;ne to bieed th e le eches
(c nrpo rations. in case vo u didn ' t get thatl
d bi t . l"eop le are beg in ni ng to learn wha t
the enem y is: corp"r,)te ca pita lism ."
~\u: it '-, <
11: c":t'r ! ~I.' W . Thi-' c \ 'rp~',rd li cl[) '~

BOB'S SECOND
HAND STORE
2107 E. 4th -- 943-1703
10 - 6 -- Tues. - Sat.

DONNA MORTON

We are selling dass 5 mtn. parkas. They
feature two complete layers of Bainbridge
and Howe 63-35 saildoth with ANlO YKK
zipper and button Oapover. The zipper, cargo pockets. hood. etc. Lots of color . WATER
REPELLENT. ON SALE - 139.95, reg.
$46.50.

3720 -- Pacific Ave. -- Lacey
491-2160

OLYMPiA

Check it out.

WASH ING TON 98502

1() 10 -

5 WEEKDA YS
3 SATURDAYS

q

ELECTION FINAL

8

---_._-- - -- ----

------

----

-- - -

--

: ontimled from page 1

-

ISOCIALIST FEMINISTS SPEAKI
STUDENT GOV: TECHNOCRACY OR DEMOCRACY?
Lenore Norrgard, Radica l Women
Marcel Hatch , Freedom Socialist Party
Till' Adlllin is tratioll at El'ergreell has
t'ficltil'cly put a lid a ll all democratic
PI'L)ct'sses at E1'el'gre"'1 since it opened in
I')'; I . Tllrougll a document known as
COG (Co llllliitre" 011 Gopemancel. it redllll'S all g01'enrillg committees and
I' ll ards to silllply illpllI alld advisory
I,,)die s. Melllbers of boards and committ"" s aI',' cllose'l ill two ways: either the
Adlllillistmtioll asks tlwIII directly to parlic ipale or it 5ell'rts tll e m ra'ldomly
/;'1',)1' , < 11 a CO lllp uter fro m a list of volun kel's. III "itllel' case . til(' Administration
Ita,; til e "P/l1'I' lralHi. Evell if a person
~II' )" 'S IIll' Opillio ll oj' tile people s/ iJe has
h'clI s,'lec"'.1 to r" pres<'lIt 51 he can get
II l';I, ;',' rc ;(' itl, it if it is ill conflict with the
Adllllllistl'l1ti,))I. IVi t11 I/ O democratic base
",. 1,,1;1'0' 1· ti le I'l'pr,'sel ltlltil'e and the per>.)11.'" I", is represel/till:;! !-tave no recourse
', i' II,'U IIl e Adlllillistrl1tinll 51l1'lv('s decisions
,d tilt· I' artillllnr [, ,,a,.. { 01' co ml/litree.
E;' '''',~I''' (,II p,) rtm)15 itsel f as all IIltra-dem,','m ti ,' Institllt i" 11 Tile fac t is that o ur
'1I1) lI t I- utili:t',1 b,v Ill e Administration
,)111 .11 11::;' Il) ng as it sc n.'l'5 it s pla'pose's .
1\'" .- ,ltl tlrat all gopcnrillg bo dies must
{II ' ,t' lI ,'t)C n~ti(C1"y
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detennincd.

R£'presf!n-

'"l1st he dClllO cmticall.ll elected arId

,I, (,l llllt,,/,Ie 1,1 til e p('op le tlt at put them
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a fOllr-parl 51'ril's 011
at TE S C.
S&A
Th~ Serv ices and Activities Fee Review
Huard ha s the task ot allocating about
5350.000 in stud ent monies each year.
The Board co nsist s of eight members: one
tandt\'. <'ne staff, and six students. The
S& A l30ard is one of the original governance bodies implemented by the TESC
Admir,istration when Evergreen ope)1ed in
1071.
S& A Board members are selected at the
di scretion of the Student and Activities
Board Executive Secretary from a random
Till '; I ';

riI,' first

ill

,11I ,{, 'l1t ,",OZ'cnIaIlCC

THE ARTICHOKE MODE
a natural foods
restaurant
203 W. 4th
T-F 11 - 9 Sal 6 - 10

computer sampling. People who want to
PI' on the S&A Board sign their names on
the Voluntary Services List. To select the
new Board each year, the S&A Board
Secretary feeds these names into the computer, and out come the original names,
now in new numbered , scrambled order.
Those people at the top of the list are
then each interviewed \Jy the S&A Board
Secretary. S / He selects the eight that s I he
thinks would work best on the Board.
The S&A Board Secretary is selected
yearly by the Board.
Through this random and discrete way
of selecting S&A Board members, the in tent is to form a Board "representative" of
the Evergref'n campus. " Representative"
here means specifically that Third World
people and women must be on the Board,
as well as white males, in keeping with
TESC Affirmative Action guidelines. This
is to insure that all parts of the community have a "voice" on the Board.
The money the Services and Activities
Board allocates is the students ' money.
The state legisla ture says that we students
are to ha ve so le control over this money .
Yet we, the students, have no control
over selection of the Board that decides
where our dollars will be spent. The
method used to select the Board allows
the Admini strat ion to say we are making
the decisi o ns, when in fact we are not. To
select a Board at random creates a facade
of "fairness" and "impartiali ty " that
makes a sham of democracy. Inasmuch as
the Administration can point to this mock
"representation " and claim that we are
"fa irly represented, " we students are immobilized from democratically determining the use of our money . The present
met hod of selecting Board members is one
way of avoiding the needs and stifling the
demands of those students whose needs
are most pressing: ThirJ World students,
women , and gays. Democracy is necessary
to get our needs addressed. As long as we
are not allowed to elect our own representatives, we have no power or control.
The process of the individual S&A
Boa rd Secretary selecting Board members
from a random sampling of volunteers
and the concept of representation contradict one another. Persons selected as representatives must be elected by the people
they are chosen to represent; only we students can decide who can best advocate
our needs , Some groups have special
needs that can only be presented by persons the groups elect. This necessitates
representatives of Third World students
elected by Third World students, representatives of women students elected by
women students, and representatives of

~ Colony GJnnc5lJpartment§
181 8 EVE RGREEN PARK DRtVE • Ol YMPIA

All Utilities Paid
Fully Furnished

WA 98502.

gay students elected by gay students. The
computer and the S&A Board Secretary
are not capable of selecting representatives
for either the general student body or the
special groups within it.
The money the Services and Activities
Board allocates belongs to the students.
We students should be deciding the issues
. involved in the allocation of our own
money, and hence the criteria for the
Board's decision-making. Board members

PORTRAIT OF
by Ti Locke
Dave Rogan and Phil Hamilton - the
"Walker Brothers" have covered thousands
of well-publicized miles as "walking
ambassadors" for the Friends of the Earth
(FOE), the environmental group.
They passed throu'g h Olympia In
February of this year on one leg of their
proposed 10-year, round-the-world hike.
They are back on the Evergreen ' campus
now , preparing a color photo show of
their completed travels. The show, which
will start Nov. 9 on the third floor of the
library proper, is part of their contract
with faculty member Willi Urisoeld: "
Dave and Phil's trip, far from being a
publicity stunt for FeE or a Bicentennial
event, is a trip to promote understanding
and awareness of "the environment Planet
Earth" . Dave Brower, head of FOE, talks
about this awareness:
"We can have an environment
without an economy, but not the other
way around."
And the Walker Brothers believe that
it's time to bring back the awareness of
man's relationship to the Earth. which the
speed of the city's pace has taken away.
Yet, they do draw attention to
themselves because they are walking, as
evidenced by a bulging noteb'Jok of
newspaper clippings from various points
along their trip .

WALKE'RS~IJ' "

The trip was not undertaken in totally
serious tones. They, like many other
dyes - in-the -down hikers, carried less
clothing to make room for camera
equipment while subsisting on a multifaceted mush that "kept things moving
along nicely .. "
Nor did they start the trip with old,
friendly gear. They had new equipment,
supplied by such bakers as JanSport,
Nikkon and Sunny Jim . To boot, all
their equipment matched. Many' of their
photos showed th~m . i!,l l ';i!!tcrpjI:l!$, ,tams};,j
shirts, . s.oci:.s" ~hor,ls/",*,~ ~~'ti iiil,aerr
wear too," Dave laughed. "We were into
the twinsy look."
Contrary to their names, the Walker
Brothers weren't always walking. They
had many tales to tell of midnight raids
on gas stations when they had movie
getaways with car doors flapping .
Perhaps their spirit and that of the
Friends of the Earth is best exemplified
in one interpretation of the 78th pqem of
the Tao te Ching:
"The weak will overcome the strong
the supple overcome the stiff
The Truth is a paradox ."
u ,, {.·;tJ(,
The paradox is Dave 'and f'}\i1'5~(V)
walking, the paradox is that they can ' ,', '
bring home an environment argument
better than a hundred picketers, a dozen
pieces of legislation or any six
impassioned speeches .

LET'S MAKE
A DEAL
_ - - - - -- _ ~
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CORPORATIONS WIN AGAIN
And what of the other issues Tuesday?
Probably more important (because it
effects more people) was Initiative 314. It
would have, if passed, forced corporations to pay a 12 percent tax from their
profits so thar special school levies could
have been reduced or eliminated. It failed
in approximately the same percentage that
th~ l:\eath.· .pen.~lty Pilssed. .
.
ir'WlIs ("J~ahly'the - moot. c_tr.cver6ial
and hardest-fought issue on the ballot.

• Two identical comprehensive
FCC Third Class License seminar
series' will be offered by KAOS
November 17th, 18th, and 20th.
Text for the series is the Ameco
Commercial Radio Operator's
Q & A License Guide, available
for $l.00 in the TESC Bookstore,
and which should be read in
advance . The series is free and
opep ; 1.0: anyone interested in
radio.
The series will start with a
film and discussion on basic electronics, Ohm's Law, etc., Monday afternoon (the 17th), and
repeated Monday evening. Tuesday afte.moon (the 18th) at one,
and ag~in Tuesday evening at 7.
two mlje films will be shown
and disCussed , on Vacuum ' Tube'
Theory and Antenna operation.
By the end ot the second seminar
participants should have a clear
understanding of "Element 9."
"Elements 1 & 2" will be discussed ,;rhursday (the 20th) in

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PEOPLE ;\ Nt) LOCAL ISSU[S
r<cpub li ca n BruCt' Cr(lr m(tn \,\"(1 11 I~~':;
r.lC~· h:H S(-' Crt' tlJr·" nl- ~}t; He by b t.:' ~iti n ,,, l<. L1V
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Easy access to freeway & City Center
Just down the Road from the Greenwood Inn
A Singles Community

Capllol Chevrolet
522 E 41h

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!' ; H JI I :d Hl:r-~ i\'r rf:' p ('~i i; : I, ! i

lA dS

conne ct ic' n s w ith co nlrov ,'r s idl Se nate
MajOrit y Leader August Mard esich, a
charge she denied . Both Anderso n and
Mardesich are Everett Democrats.
Chapman - with this his first victory in
a major campaign - is said to have his
sights on bigger things in the future. One
of the possibilities mentioned is the
governorship, if Dan Evans doesn't decide
to run again.
In Thurston County, a levy proposition
that would continue the Medic I program
won easily. But in Olympia, a proposition
that would enable a new downtown
library to be built is still up in the air. By
Wednesday noon , 60.4 per cent of the
voters were in favor of the proposition,
but 841 absentee ballots have yet to be
counted. The proposition needs 60 per
cent 'to pass.
And finally, there were two interesting
races in Seattle for city council seats.
Patricia Bethard, the first Socialist
Workers Party candidate to be nominated
for the general election ballot in Seattle's
history, was trounced by incumbant Sam
Smith. First returns had her losing to
Smith by a rate of almost three to one,
though even that must be a moral victory
for the SWP.
And Chip Marshall, former anti-war
activist in his first attempt at public
office, was defeated relatively handily by
incumbant Paul Kraabel , a former state
legislator.

Voters also rejected SJR 127. a
measure that would have took the
question of setting their own salaries out
of the legislator's hands, and into the
hands of a commission made up of
private citizens. SJR would have also
allowed state legislators to seek other
elected positions, as long as those
positions were not created in the session
of the legislature that the legislator was
serving on.
Also going down to defeat was HJR 19,
an amendment to the state constitution
that would have permitted limited
governmental assistance to the students
attending non-public colleges and schools.
Apparently, voters felt that such a change
would have violated the sacred "separation of' church and state" clause of the
federal Constitution . HJR 19, however,
would have made the state constitution to
\Je_. a:; st.ri!;t, qut. not stricter as it is now,
than .the U .S . .Constitution on the subject
of private school aid.

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ROGER'S

This mate..ul is designed to be used as a research aid only.

MARKET

RESEARCH FAFERS

Also Chevron Gas

Custom
Beef

THOUSANDS ON FI LE

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5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling.

Orders

COLLEGIATE RESEARCH
Fresh Meats
and
Groceries

PRODUCE SALE!

$ .39/1b.
3/$1.00
$.15/Ib.
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$ .49 1each
$ .15 & .70/each

.J. Vee Health Foods

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1 0 1. , 1

;. ': t ' r \"-

:llUdsii:- ~:~in~

THE OTHERS

• Quievemo's invitor a los que
habolon espanol 0 tienen inteves
a' "una Fiesta Latina . rruerc'oles 6
p .m. el 12 de Novienbre en el
edefico CAB 108.
Triga algo de comida di:;cos
instrumentos latinas por favor y
lastos para bailor, Estudiantes de
Espanol.

:-' t~lt- c..'

•.
l : t-:'t' t ,1In
...,nll'unt
'...: ~
'n :hp ca nl~~i~J, l1, (etuteJ, ) f
L lli..: r s e , ~ ' :/ t he r e ,; pE? ct i ve ldnd idil tl· S.
.An der,,)n \Va' ch'lrged w ith hav in g

Tht'ft:'

1

Nov. 17 (Mon .), 1-4 pm LH 3,
7-10 pm LH 5.
Nov . 18 (Tues.), 1-4 pm LH 4,
7-10 pm LH 5.
Nov. 20th (Thurs. ), 1-4 pm
CAB 110, 7-10 pm CAB 110.
See Lee Chambers at KAOS
for further details.

~n (

n:tvrn1 .,11-. .1 h (1 1N \ ', ) I LJ:':: l hure .ILl C!- .JC"/

Thl' ldr F.e~ t t.nn t rit ut o l s, t'dCn giving 'J \ 't'(
520 .000 , '.',ere tn e INeyerhaeuser Cd ..
Sl'<lt ti e-First Nati o nal Bank , Sateco If1'o.
surance anJ the Boeing Co
Op ponents of 314 used the ir money to
advertise extensively in the media. l3ut
also , the anti-314 forces seemed to receive
a much greater sounding board for their
views in the media, which is not hard to
figure since the media is a corporation,
too.
Faculty member Tom Rainey, an
enthusiastic supporter of 314 , summed it
up succinctly: "Big money won the day."

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

i1

i~"': 'l"I ",·Y') ' !f ·' e' · "

!\ l' r ' ~Jl:j;!·.}n -,1 r; p rll '.,d -

i:-. ..., t; e " lL : r i !l~

ltlltlo:-a j l.' C, ,-I: :

-:-0 Sq:~ ,49~ c, pent rCl :.UppliIt j~.

two seminars, one at one and
one at seven . Attendance at one
workshop each day should pref'are everyone for the test, given
every Tuesday and Wednesday
in Seattle (Federal Bldg., 909
First Ave.) from nine to eleven.

!: l l b t

;) ut"' li(

i t· r O n ·,

do your Christmas
. hopp inl'! hue for quality
h.1nd c raft ~ J it(>m ~, Wt> hE' lp
o ther., to heIr th t>ms" ht"<;.

pla i nts :11clde .lgJ i nst dny judge ,

why .

the irlltir1ti v ('

MORNtNGSIDE INDUSTRI[S
GIFT SHOP

1720 PONTIUS AVE., SUITE 201
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025
II-------------------------------------------------------~
Name ____________________________________________

I
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Addr~s

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Ci~------------------------------------------State _____________________________ Zip ___________

2010 Division and Elliot Rd. 357-7483

1/2 price sale

NEECLECRA.F T

PH . {z061 943-9711

Nov. 6, 7, 8 on
ALL MERCHANDISE

6.

YA RNS

KNITTING MACHINES 8. SU PP L IES

DONNA'S KNIT SHOP
1214 : WEST HARRISO N

red empress grapes
avocados
bananas
delicious apples
papaya
acorn squash

357-5515

\:', ':0;., \ ' :CI <.:;t' t"'

C! Hfl ' ·· i.lt . \ l[l:~

· ,r : he

lhe J ea th pe naity la w In VVd SnlOglc n.
Newton would ha ve been hung beca t.:sp
he wa s conv icted L)f killing a policeman,
tho ugh (i f he did), it may have been in
self-defe nse. And if you say that in
Washington sta te things like that could
not happen ; that Washington cops are
not like Oakland cops, then you have
forgotten Larry Ward.
But it's all academic now, at least until
the Supreme Court makes a ruling.
The death penalty was declared a
winner by the Associated Press in the
incredibly short time of 45 minutes after
the polls closed Tuesday . Walking
through the CAB, a student was
overheard to say, "I can't believe they
could do it; take some bastard out and
just hang the son-of-a-bitch."
Do legal murders prevent illegal
murd,$.IJ.S?)Vhat is legal murder?
Af; :least the ranks of the unemployed
may be thinned. We'll need gallow-makers and hangmen now.

FCC WORKSHOPS

', von . d r"'ld i t'.;

I'f:.\t!

Referendum 35 -the "Henry Jackson
bill" - also failed . If passed, it would have
required the governor to appoint someone
from a list supplied by the central
committee of the political party of the
person who vacated a U.S. Senate seat.
The only issue, besides the death
penalty. that voters gave an .jlffirmative
nod to was SJR 101, a bill which makes
some big changes in the judicial article of
the St a te Constitution . Among o th er
thin gs , S JR 101 sets up a judi c ial
qua lificati o n cOl11miss ip n to rev iew C0m-

'67 Corvair

Wall-to- Wall Carpeting

,,1tIh.-t. If/..tM"rlJ/'ip tUUI ~ M..t"

L, t

didn't cO llln ) it bCC;:-Il..l~e Anle~!C d[\
! l! ll (, S ':Ht' fin , f '::l1 t r' '11) pertec t.
Th,· [dcl I' h ,'1I ih,' ciPdth p,"nail \' c" uid be

they

p ri son er s - in <. iudu)\!, Hw-':" '-iC\\t( l n ·~·-(·rl'
i n i<lJJ -lJi t h tr~Hn p .~ d-u p 'l1 u r Jt:r
charges hoverin>.1, over their iH:.'<1!_tS . i ' nder

Social Rooms

1 Room $ 74.50
2 · Rooms $144.00
4 Rooms $250.00

L) cca ssi ,)n.d ly h~t con vict e d

<;ltting

206 ' 943.7330

Free TV Cable

a deterrent. · Most murders are crimes of
passion, in which thoughts of the death
penalty do not enter the mind of the
killer.
Another problem is that the spectre of
the death penanty hanging over their
heads may ca use ju ry nullificat ion - a jury
sett ing guil ty persons free JS the only
alternativp to the death penal tv.
And . (I f c()ur ~It' . innOCf~n t pl?Clri e do

DdiJ l) 1

,

Laundry Facility

selected through computer shuffling and
the S&A Board Secretary's discretion cannot accomplish this. We need to elect our
own representatives democratically
through our own organizations. To be
consistent with TESC's Affirmative Action goal, the S&A Board must be made
up of 25 % Third World people and 50 %
women; plus the Board should also have
15 % gays to represent gay students, To
be democratic, these Board members must
be elected by the students they represent.
It is only through our own democratic organizations that real representation and
accountability to those represented can be
developed.

Opponents claimed it was a "bad tax",
that it would not save the schools and
would also raise the prices consumers had
to pay for the corporations' goods.
Proponents refuted these charges, saying
314 would cut property taxes, stimulate
jobs and business and would be the only
practical alternative to the school levy
crisis in this state.
Proponents also had other reasons for
supporting 314 . as evidenced by o ne who
sai d. " It ' s ti;ne to bieed th e le eches
(c nrpo rations. in case vo u didn ' t get thatl
d bi t . l"eop le are beg in ni ng to learn wha t
the enem y is: corp"r,)te ca pita lism ."
~\u: it '-, <
11: c":t'r ! ~I.' W . Thi-' c \ 'rp~',rd li cl[) '~

BOB'S SECOND
HAND STORE
2107 E. 4th -- 943-1703
10 - 6 -- Tues. - Sat.

DONNA MORTON

We are selling dass 5 mtn. parkas. They
feature two complete layers of Bainbridge
and Howe 63-35 saildoth with ANlO YKK
zipper and button Oapover. The zipper, cargo pockets. hood. etc. Lots of color . WATER
REPELLENT. ON SALE - 139.95, reg.
$46.50.

3720 -- Pacific Ave. -- Lacey
491-2160

OLYMPiA

Check it out.

WASH ING TON 98502

1() 10 -

5 WEEKDA YS
3 SATURDAYS

10
~------------------------~~~~~~

FOOD/
NANE I I E WESTERMAN

11

ENTERTAINMENT
.

RICE OVER EASY

.'

TEXTILES EXHIBIT
by Lynda Weinman
Exhibits Coordinator
The first Textiles exhibit ever housed at
Eve rgree n is in the Library Gallerv until
Nov. 12 . The show is largely composed of
tr<l ditional and contemporary quilts.
Most of the traditiona l qui lts are on
loan from O lympian Pat Saar i, who owns
.l CC1 l1 ec ti on of ove r eighty heirloom quilts
passed down from her great-grandmo th er,
~ ra n dmo th e r , and mo ther, a nd date as far
bil e!.. .JS 100 years.
T he qu iltin g fra me o n disp la y was built
by Pa t Saari 's fat her, a nd holds one of the
man v quilt s tha t Pat 's mother ne ver complete d . Th e o ld newspape r clippings of
quilt pa tt e rns were also a part of her moth n 's col lec tion.
Th e Baby Block quilt is made fr om
\\·ec.ldin g dresses tha t a re over 150 years
ol d , and is borrowe d from Micki Hemstad,
the coordinator o-t th e Norwegia n Arts
Fes tiva l to take place this Nov . 16.
Lya nne G len is a quilter from Tacoma
\\' ho w o rks ex clu sive ly in the tra ditional
,tv ic . usua ll y w hite-~n- white , w ith no
p~ t c hwork. Lyanne w ill offe r a tour and
'q uilter's explanation" of the exhibit in
~ he library , an d a quilting demonstration
beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday Nov. 8, in
CAB 108 . The demonstration is free and
should run until 3

silk -scree ning.
Christiansen's quilt was made by photo
silk-scree ning photographs of her friends
onto patches of fabric, and then coordinating tbe patches with sensual sati ns and
flannels. Becky Edward's quilt was made
by painting her design with dyes onto
velour, stuffing and machine quilting
around the des ign, and then stretchi ng the
quilt like canvas onto a frame.
Carol Tate. who of ten works with Jeane
Jon gelward (the in terior decorator for the
newl y re modeled Governor's Mansion),
dyes a ll of her fab ric, designs her patterns,
and then hand quilts them us ing a quilting
hoop.
Susan Singleton is a textiles instructor
a t the Universi ty of Wash in gton. She
works in a diversit y of styles ; some of
her mo re experim e ntal works in this exhibit are the Blu e Lady, a hand painted
a nd batiked life-drawing on canvas, and
Lydja · a stuffed life- size doll made out of
hand-painted sat in s, and ornamented with
jewe lr y and hose.
Gretchen Girvin works with bold geometric designs made of cotton and machine quilts them. Josy Fay works as large
as possible (she is presently creating a
qui lt that will be over 25 feet long) with
juxtaposed transparent fabr ics and hand
embroidery.
T he show was conceived from a desire
to illustrate some of the movemen'ts in
texti les in past and recent times . The old
quilts are not only overwhelming achievements , but they document one of the
major avenues of artistic expression by
women of the past. The cont,emporary
works represent a new emphasis on concepts, original design and content.
Go see the ex hibit and be dazzled by
the patterns, humor, patience and creativity involved . Try to attend Lyanne's work shop this Sa turday and don't let the art of
quilting die!
Gallery hours: Monday - Thursday 8
a.m. - 11 p.m. Friday 8 a.m. - 7 p.m . Saturday 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m. - 9

FRIENDS OF THE RAG is a varied collection of text ile artists who can all believe
in the motto: "If the art fits, wear it!"
The orga nizat ion started a lmost four years
ago w ith the idea of introducing and famili ari2ing the public with the idea that original wearable design is a n art form and
should be recogni2ed as such.
Th e artists inv olved work in many diftere nt medias : they range from classic
fa shi o n design to exotic costume design ,
to thread painters to sculpturers and cera mi cists. They are expanding their mem bership for their next exhibit Dec. 12 .
Anyone interested in joining them can
co ntact coordinator , Tandy Messinger, in
Seatt le at 524-5387
Th e part icipants in the contemporary
part of the show are from Seattle, with
the exception of Cori C hristiansen, an
Evergreen student. Most of the artists are
in vo lved with creating their own fabric
desig ns through dyeing, batiking, and

p.

Rice is one of the most ancient foods: archealogical evidence
of rice found in Thailand dates back as far as 5000 B.C.
Linguistic and botanical evidence suggests that rice originated
so mewhere in Southeastern Asia. The Chinese word for rice
means "good grain of life" and in many parts of the Far East
the word for rice is the same as the word for life, food, or
agriculture. Rice feeds more than half the world's population,
and its uses extend beyond the range of nourishment into the .
realm of refreshment ";'hen rice is ~sed in making sake and
beer. Rice paper, however, is not made from rice. hilt frnm thp
Rice-paper plant. not at all related to rice.
The generic name for rice is Oryza Sativa; it is a type of
grass. A few other species of Oryza have been domesticated,
but Oryza sativa furnishes nearly all the rice consumed
worldwide. Within the species there are thousands of varieties
which can generally be divided into two types . The ';aponica'
type is short grained, and is moist and sticky when cooked;
the 'indica' type cooks up to be dry and fluffy. Brown rice is
rice from which only the outer husks have been removed:
parboiled or converted ri.ee has had the husk, bran and germ
polished away , and has been parboiled, stea med and dried;
precooked or instant rice is polished rice which has been
cooked, rinsed and dried . "Wild rice" is also available; it is th e
seed of an aquat ic perrenial grass, unrelated to rice.
When compared for nutrition, brown rice comes out ahead
in almos t every aspect. Enriched converted rice ha s inore iron
and thiamine than brown rice, due no doubt to the addition of
these nutrients. The USDA Compositio n of Foods Handbook
makes no mention of inositol or chol ine, two importan t
members of the B-vitamin complex found in w ild rice.
As a grain , rice is not a comp lete prote in : it is deficient in,
iso leucine and lysine, two esse ntia l amino acids , so rice shou ld
be complemented with foods high in these am ino acid s to al low . '"
for more complete protein utili zat io n.
,'" ,',I, I ~ rh
In devi sing origina l recipes, or in adapting establ ished one6, ' -. ,) , '-' ~ J
the fol lowing gu id e can be usesd to assure · protein
comp lemen tari ty. 'iJ cup rice is complemented by 2 tablespoo ns soy beans or grits, or 'I. cup soy flour ; 1 cup rice with
'I ) cup sesame seeds; % cup rice with 1 cup milk, Y 3 cup
gra ted cheese; '/ , cup cottage chese, '/ 3 cup ricotta cheese, or
'/ 3 cup instan t milk. Meat or eggs will also complement the
protein in rice.
There are severa l ways to cook rice; here a re two reliable
methods for brown rice. (For other types of rice, follow the
directions on the package.)
1. Bring to a boil 4 cups water or stock . Slowly stir in 2 cups
rice and bring to a boil once aga in . Cover tightly a nd lower
hea t to simmer. Cook till all the liquid's been absorbed, add a
' . . ' ._. ~ , ' r " _",
little more ·and ·simmer again,
2. Put about 118 inch oil or melted butter in the .bottom; of,a ,'pot and heat. Stir in 2 cups uncooked rice. Saute for about 5
minutes, stirring frequently, adding more oil if the rice sticks.
Add 4 cups hot or boiling water to the rice and bring to a boil.
Lower heat, cover tightly and cook as in l. This method
produces slightly less volume but enhances the f1avqr of the
rice, and helps to keep the grains separate.
Cooked rice can be used innumerable ways. Use it as a base
for stuffing green peppers, tomatoes, zucchini, or eggplant,
adding to the rice such things as onions, garlic, cheese,
mushrooms, herbs, wheat germ, nuts, seeds, or chopped
vegetables, along with a little oil.ke following recipe for Baked
Rice with Cheese can be used as a foundation for a more
creative cassero le, employing other colorful and ta sty
ingredients. Butter a baking dish, put in it layers of cooked . ': .
rice, dotting each layer with butter and thinly sliced cheese ."; "'" . .m! i j
Add milk to abou" half the depth of the rice, cover with
"
crumbs or wheat gel 11 , and bake at 360 degrees till the cheese
melts and the crumbs are brown. Additions might be onions,
parsley, tomatoes, chopped ham or ch icken, hard boiled eggs,
cooked spinach, or mushrooms.
For Spanish Rice, Start with cooked rice and add tomatoes,
grated cheese, sauteed o'1ion, celery, peppers and season with
chili powder or mustard uT,til it tastes good.
Rice can be,. heateda with milk or cream, and mixed with
fresh or dried fruit and nuts for breakfast, or mixed with
cream, honey , spices and fresh fruit for desert, or it can be
made into Baked Rice Pudding:
Place 2 cups cooked rice, 1/, cup raisins, '/ , teaspoon grated
lemon rind and 1 teaspoon lemon juice in a buttered 1 y, quart
baking dish, Mix together ,/ , cup honey, y, teaspoon vani lla, 3
eggs, 2Y2 cups milk and 'I. teaspoon salt . Pour over rice and
stir to mix. Bake at 325 degr~es for 30 minutes, This pudding
can be varied h" ~dding nuts, dates, chocolate chips, or spices
such as cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger. 1 cup of brown sugar can
be used in place of honey, or 1/, cup of mix'!ri honey and
molasses.

RAINBOW GROCERY & DELI
GUITAR SALE

.

" )~;/4

'~

~A~
;ty

- .:...=-"

Coffee beans & imported beer
outrageou s san dwi c hes
4th & Co lumbia
357 -6616

~ ~

• Th ere is current ly a mail strike
gOing on in Canada, so no mail
shou ld be sent to an address in
Canada u"til the strike is over.
Any mai l with a Canadian address will be returned to the
sender.

All are on sale discounted for you.
Buy now and save

(j~~
M US tC CE NTER

305 East 4th Ave. -

352·8051
Boa's 1110 BURGERS

'707 WEST H"..... SON

,
I
I

j

1

--

--

by Gary Kaufman
Messina will be performed ' (by
Here's the witty blurb for the
Ken and Jim; who else?) in the
week: The Bicentennial Freedom
Coliseum at 8 p .m . If you
Train is now in North Fort
haven't heard of them by now,
Lewis, Where else should a freeyou're not going to learn any
dom train be put to celebrate our
more from me. They give a
glorious
(Fill in the
pleasant concert and . occasio.nblank yourself; I'm no.t allowed
.ally throw in a few surprises .
to print the appropriate words.)
Tickets are on sale at the Bon
Marche .
No.vember 16 marks a historic
day fo.r some three million NorKing Tutankhamen will be in
wegian I Americans who, this
Seattle November, 1978. That's
right, folks; 1978. It's part of an
fall. commemorate the arrival of
the first shipload of emigrants
agreement King Richard of the
from Norway to the United
United States made with Anwar
States. Organized by Olympian
Sadat while he was still President
Mick~y Hemstad, the local after(see, he did do some pretty nonnoon festivities will include the
descript things) . Make sure to
grand opening of an invaluable
mark it on your calendar. Ac tually it will be a pretty good
a rt exhibit on loan from the
Smithsonian Institution, a reshow that will include 50 repreenactment of a 300-year-old
sentative artifacts of the tomb
Norwegian wedding ceremony,
treasures. King Tut, as you all
demonstrations by Norwegian
will recall from sixth grade ancra ftspersons, and music thropology and the old Batman
sung, danced and played - by
series on the tube, had a curse
members of Norwegian groups
placed on any person invading
from throughout the state. The
or tampering with the tomb in
ex hibit, "G raphics by Rolph
which he was buried. There were
Nesch," will formally open at
six people who entered the tomb
2: 30 p.m. Sunday, November
when it was first discovered.
Within 10 years all six were dead
16. His show includes a retrospective exhibition of 50 etchings
from "mysterious causes." Who
and metal prints. Highlighting
knows, with the exhibition
the f~tivities at 3 p.m. will be
starting November, 1976 in
the re~ enactment of the wedding
Washington, D. c., the curse just
ceremony complete with cosmight still be viable ... (in
tumes, authentic music and
honor of our bicentennial. of
script and a deco.rated team of
course). So much for Seattle.
horses which will lead the proNow for Olympia (or as
cession carrying the bride and
Thomas Wolfe would put it,
Look Homeward, Angel).
groom. Contemporary craftspersons will display their work
CONCERT HAPPENINGS:
throughout the afternoon. Folk
Friday, No.vember 7 _
art will a lso be displayed
Apple;am has got two really
throughout the afternoon's fes tivfine women performers, Mary
ities to be held in the Library
Litchfield and Cris Williamson.
Lobby and out on Red Square.
Mary plays guitar and autoharp
There . will be a Norwegian dinand sings ..ce'y,~try, . 9rigin,\1 , and,
ner stlrting a t ~ p.mj ;n ~~e, col;""I,fh!!d,r:.ef1\s~r.g~ ~~~ .~ tot~1 g~ml!t
lege ~ing h13 11. ~S'etvlitlons'l'or ' of the general A'Jam audience.
the $3.20 plate dinner will be reCris, sponsored by EYE - 5, perceived at 866-6229 weekdays.
fo.rmed last night, courtesy o.f
The 9th Annual Bellevue Film
the Evergreen's Women's Center.
Fe.s tival awarded Jim Cox, a
She has been a professional perlocal Evergreener, top honors for
former for 12 years and has rehis film, "Eat the Sun," which is
corded two albums of her own
now part of the rapidly expandas well as acting as the vocalist
ing Evergreen Film Library. Jim
for two films. She has appeared
also received honors in the 3rd
with performers including Holly
Annual Northwest Film and
Near, Lily Tomlin, Meg ChristVideo Festival. Steve Wiggins
ian, Charlie Musselwhite, Jesse
Colin Young and Jose Feliciano .
a lso received honors in that festivallr his work with 16 mm
In the past year she has focused
her energies on making and
film. 'Ims in the film library can
be c r cked out and viewed by
helping define "Women's Music."
students at no special charge.
If you missed her last night,
SEATTLE HAPPENINGS:
make up for it by going to AppleThe Inside Passage, located in
jam. Both she and Mary will
Pioneer Square, ha s the rare
prov ide excellent entertainment
and cause for thought.
privilege of having, as weekly
regulars, two bands that have in
Saturday, No.vember 8 _
the past played in Olympia.
Applejam will feature "Rafter
"The Cypsy Gippo String Band"
Frogs." Not to be confused with
plays nightly Monday through
~ellar frogs, these BellinghamThursday with Tuesday (square
sters return with a variety of
dance night). Instructions are
songs a nd musical accompaniample and the crowd is friendly.
ment. They play it all; if it's
A lso o n Saturday nights the
music, they play it. Besides that
" Irish American String Band"
they're from Bellingham, one of
(they played at Applejam last
the quaintest towns in WashingFriday) plays, bringing merriton (7). Go see them.
ment and mirth to the audience.
Monday, No.vember 17 _
If you've been to Applejam or
The Olympia Opera Guild
have taken the time to read my
(well we've got to get culture
column, you've heard me talk
from somewhere), will be sponabout them. If you're in Seattle
soring a "Prima Donnas and
some night, the Inside Passage is
Pearls" champagne luncheon and
anot her grea t place to sto.p and
holiday fashions style show (told
you it was culture) starting with
spend an evening .
Sunday, November 16 at 8
an 11: 15 socia l hour in the Sko p.m. , Paramount Northwest prekomish Room at the Tyee Motor
sents Harry Chapin, story songInn , Tumwater. A special showsmith , fi lm documentarian, song
ing of costumes from Seattle
writer and balladeer. Included
Opera productions will provide a
among Chapi n's albums are "Sni featured part of the program.
pers and Other Love Songs,"
Tickets are $7 .50 with reserva"Sho rt Stories ," and " Verities
tions due no later than Novemand Balderdash." In -addition, he
ber 12. Call Mrs. W.E. Kent at
ha s wri tten over 32 original
866-2379 . It's expensive and persongs for A BC's "Make a Wish ,"
haps a bit trite, but all proceeds
an excellent children's show. (TV
will be used to support a youth
does do some good things ; beprogram through which the
lieve it o r not.) Tickets are avail Opera Guild helps defray the
ab le at Bon Marche and other
cos t of sending Olympia-area
usual Paramount ticket outlets.
schoo l children to Seattle Opera
On November 21 ,the intricate
productions, so at least the cause
sound of Ken Loggins and Jim
is a good one.

SHOW TIME:
Thursday, No.vember 6 Shelton High School will be
showing "The Adventures of
Robin Hood" at 7 :30 p.m. in the
high school auditorium, Starring
Olivia de Havilland and Error
Flynn, this 1938 swashbuckle
classic provides hours of mirth
and laughter as befits the era it
most effectively parodies. Admission is $1.50 and children must
be accompanied by parents (l
don't know why; that's just
what I'm told). It's worth a trip
to Shelton.
Friday, No.vember 7 ....!!
The Friday Night Film series
presents "If" and a short, "Let
the Voice of the People be
Heard" at 7 and 9: 30 in Lecture
Hall One. Admission is 50 cents.
"If," a 1969 British flik (so there,
you prude, whoever you are),
explores the lives and rebellions
of three non-conforming (remember those days) seniors at a
posh British boarding school. It's
very well done, The short, "Let
the Voice ... " caused a local
furor several weeks ago. with a
dummy bomb planted as part of
the production. The local Feds
didn't care all that much for it,
but it's okay, the point was well
made. It's an excellent commentary on America to.day and is
well worth the 50 cents. Don't
miss it.

Saturday, No.vember 8 The Evergreen Coffeehouse
presents as a part of its newly.started Saturday Film Series,
"Erik the Conqueror" at 7 and
9:30 in Lecture Hall One. A 50
cent &mation i; requested. If it's
the oi'le I think it is, it's an en;oyable, though somewhat gory,
typical rendition of the Viking
Era. If it's not that one, I'm not
sure what it's about. (We are fallible.)

Monday, No.vember 10 The Monday Night Film and
Speaker Series presents "Finally
Got the News" starting at 7: 30
in Lecture Hall One. No admission charged. "Finally ... " is a
forceful documentary presenting
the workers' point of view on'
conditions inside auto factories
in Detroit and the efforts of revolutionary black workers to
build their own union. The film,
"Black Panther" will also be
s hown. Reymond Turner will
speak about black movements
today, including the actions of
the Panthers. The discussion to
follow the two excellent movies
shou ld be just as rewarding.

Tuesday, No.vember 11 Faculty Film Series presents
Akira Kurosawa's "Throne of
Blood" at 2 and 7 :30 p.m. in
Lecture Hall One. It's free. Kurosawa, a world-renowned Japa nese director and producer,
transposed Shakespeare's Macbeth to the world of medieval
Japan, and created what is, in
the minds of most film critics,
the greatest Shakespearean film
ever. If you're into film, Shakespeare, or Japan, don't miss this
one. I t provides excellent insights
into all three areas.
The Demiurge will be coming
out November 20th . Please get
stuff up to tjle Journal o.ffice by
November 12th if possible.
Driftwood House could still
use donations for their sale December 4. Call Bonnie Gillis at
6220, or drop it off in the box
by the bookstore.
Also December 4 will be
Co untry Music Day in the Library Lobby. Further info. will be
in subsequ('n t issues ,

ALL HALLOW'S CONCERT '
by Chris Carroll
The stage looked like one of
those caught-me-by-surprise-inthe -study settings, with red and
black peppered carpet laid out,
plants nonchalantly placed about
and an easy chair with a reading
lamp on stage left, exemplifying
the casual, reposeful atmosphere
of Saturday evening's "All Hallows Day Concert," where dilettantes and sk illed musicians from
Evergreen gathered for a few
hours of blues, traditional and
contemporary folk, coalesced
into. a unique, tota lly Evergreen
event.
All was made possible through
the effo rts 'of students Nathaniel
Koch and Rennie Selkirk, with
help from the Gig Commission,
a nd was in response to the nowdefunct attempt of having a talent show made up from the
musical ta len t at Evergreen.
"When the talent show was
canned, we thought we'd get together some music and put on a
show . We were overwhelmed at
the turnout, and wish to thank
a ll who came," said Koch.
That talen t sounded pretty
good as the first act, Henry J.
Boogie (alias Selkirk), walked
out a nd played his first sdng on
his acoustic guitar with pickup.
The rapport was immediate with
Boogie behind his shades, loose
spa ngled tie and lizard-skin
cowboy boots. He played several
dispassionate numbers before in troducing Claudia Mauro, an unassuming harmonica player who
. displayed masterful manipulation
of the blue's harp. The response
to the wailful, flowing stream of
blues was endorsed with shouts
and warm, impressed applause.
The second group consisted of
Lori Hyman, Teasy Ryken and
Dale Russ. :': Blues artists s it ,
country stands," said Lori, as
they commenced to play several
melodious songs of popular and
personal origin, playing a variety
of instruments including the a utoharp, mandolin and violin. My
only complaint with their show
was that it was their on ly one.
Again, the friendliness between
a udie nc e and performers was
genuine.
'Meat a nd Potatoes" was their
title, as Bruce Drager and Jim
Cubbage came on for their set.
They played a couple of songs
written by "t he guy in Peoria"
(Dan Fogelberg), and 'several of
their own. Their nervousness
was apparent, and at first
seemed to lack the proper communication needed in making
their music work. Jim played the
flute nicely, and though they
didn't possess the steadiness of
their predecessors an~ their
vo.ices were erra tic at times, they

contributed well to the wholeness
of the evening .
After a ten-minu te intermissio.n of stretching cramped muscles and easi ng sore tailbo nes (if
you sit on the steps at the next
happening in the library, bring a
pillow), David Holbrook began
it all again with a piece o.n his
jew's-harp, sing-yelling:
"Every time I come to town ,
someone's always
kickin my dog around,
Even thou g h he's just a
ho und , they go tta stop
kick in my dog around."
Finally , that sleek, black Steinway wen t int o act ion as John
Adams came o n, singing " Rock
Me on the Water." Possibly thi s
was the most comp lete performer, w ith his soothi ng piano and
easy guitar playing. And what
was that liquid he'd drink from a
tin pan after each so ng, for his
voice was like silver, clean in hi s
inflections. After a rousing ovation for his "Tuesday Afternoon, "
introduced were Lisa and Chrissie McPhaden, Ralph Allen , and
Fred Zell, combining their tal ents for severa l Irish a nd English
traditional folk music, using violin and mand o lin a nd th e n
finally straight vocals .
The final performance was by
Joseph Schlick , dedicating hi s
so ngs to personal friends. The
concert had lasted almost three
hours, a nd he thanked every one for lasting so long, playing
mellow, echOing pieces. It was
like listening to a friend st rumming and singing, for he fit in
well with the now drained crowd,
a llowing us to wander, as he
did, into the lyrics he sang.
Claudia Mauro made a welco.me
return and Henry J. boogied on
with her as the three of them
ended the night, Claudia rolling
o ut notes from her harmonica,
to Henry and Joseph's guitar
playing, and singing:
"The end is always wa it in
round the bend,
perhaps they think their lives
will never end ... "
and everyone wished th ey
wouldn't.
The importance of the eve ning
was in that people could · get to gether, enjoy and be part of a
musical event without expectations, appreciative of the effort
and musical quality put into. it .
T he relat ionship between a ll was
casua l, inherently good, and contagious; well worth havin g
again .
It was good being a part of an
unsophisticated experience, peo p le ge tting a cha nce to be in th e
limelight, exposing the realness
of what was offered. We can't a ll
be Bruce Springsteen, but who
wants to be7

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~------------------------~~~~~~

FOOD/
NANE I I E WESTERMAN

11

ENTERTAINMENT
.

RICE OVER EASY

.'

TEXTILES EXHIBIT
by Lynda Weinman
Exhibits Coordinator
The first Textiles exhibit ever housed at
Eve rgree n is in the Library Gallerv until
Nov. 12 . The show is largely composed of
tr<l ditional and contemporary quilts.
Most of the traditiona l qui lts are on
loan from O lympian Pat Saar i, who owns
.l CC1 l1 ec ti on of ove r eighty heirloom quilts
passed down from her great-grandmo th er,
~ ra n dmo th e r , and mo ther, a nd date as far
bil e!.. .JS 100 years.
T he qu iltin g fra me o n disp la y was built
by Pa t Saari 's fat her, a nd holds one of the
man v quilt s tha t Pat 's mother ne ver complete d . Th e o ld newspape r clippings of
quilt pa tt e rns were also a part of her moth n 's col lec tion.
Th e Baby Block quilt is made fr om
\\·ec.ldin g dresses tha t a re over 150 years
ol d , and is borrowe d from Micki Hemstad,
the coordinator o-t th e Norwegia n Arts
Fes tiva l to take place this Nov . 16.
Lya nne G len is a quilter from Tacoma
\\' ho w o rks ex clu sive ly in the tra ditional
,tv ic . usua ll y w hite-~n- white , w ith no
p~ t c hwork. Lyanne w ill offe r a tour and
'q uilter's explanation" of the exhibit in
~ he library , an d a quilting demonstration
beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday Nov. 8, in
CAB 108 . The demonstration is free and
should run until 3

silk -scree ning.
Christiansen's quilt was made by photo
silk-scree ning photographs of her friends
onto patches of fabric, and then coordinating tbe patches with sensual sati ns and
flannels. Becky Edward's quilt was made
by painting her design with dyes onto
velour, stuffing and machine quilting
around the des ign, and then stretchi ng the
quilt like canvas onto a frame.
Carol Tate. who of ten works with Jeane
Jon gelward (the in terior decorator for the
newl y re modeled Governor's Mansion),
dyes a ll of her fab ric, designs her patterns,
and then hand quilts them us ing a quilting
hoop.
Susan Singleton is a textiles instructor
a t the Universi ty of Wash in gton. She
works in a diversit y of styles ; some of
her mo re experim e ntal works in this exhibit are the Blu e Lady, a hand painted
a nd batiked life-drawing on canvas, and
Lydja · a stuffed life- size doll made out of
hand-painted sat in s, and ornamented with
jewe lr y and hose.
Gretchen Girvin works with bold geometric designs made of cotton and machine quilts them. Josy Fay works as large
as possible (she is presently creating a
qui lt that will be over 25 feet long) with
juxtaposed transparent fabr ics and hand
embroidery.
T he show was conceived from a desire
to illustrate some of the movemen'ts in
texti les in past and recent times . The old
quilts are not only overwhelming achievements , but they document one of the
major avenues of artistic expression by
women of the past. The cont,emporary
works represent a new emphasis on concepts, original design and content.
Go see the ex hibit and be dazzled by
the patterns, humor, patience and creativity involved . Try to attend Lyanne's work shop this Sa turday and don't let the art of
quilting die!
Gallery hours: Monday - Thursday 8
a.m. - 11 p.m. Friday 8 a.m. - 7 p.m . Saturday 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Sunday 1 p.m. - 9

FRIENDS OF THE RAG is a varied collection of text ile artists who can all believe
in the motto: "If the art fits, wear it!"
The orga nizat ion started a lmost four years
ago w ith the idea of introducing and famili ari2ing the public with the idea that original wearable design is a n art form and
should be recogni2ed as such.
Th e artists inv olved work in many diftere nt medias : they range from classic
fa shi o n design to exotic costume design ,
to thread painters to sculpturers and cera mi cists. They are expanding their mem bership for their next exhibit Dec. 12 .
Anyone interested in joining them can
co ntact coordinator , Tandy Messinger, in
Seatt le at 524-5387
Th e part icipants in the contemporary
part of the show are from Seattle, with
the exception of Cori C hristiansen, an
Evergreen student. Most of the artists are
in vo lved with creating their own fabric
desig ns through dyeing, batiking, and

p.

Rice is one of the most ancient foods: archealogical evidence
of rice found in Thailand dates back as far as 5000 B.C.
Linguistic and botanical evidence suggests that rice originated
so mewhere in Southeastern Asia. The Chinese word for rice
means "good grain of life" and in many parts of the Far East
the word for rice is the same as the word for life, food, or
agriculture. Rice feeds more than half the world's population,
and its uses extend beyond the range of nourishment into the .
realm of refreshment ";'hen rice is ~sed in making sake and
beer. Rice paper, however, is not made from rice. hilt frnm thp
Rice-paper plant. not at all related to rice.
The generic name for rice is Oryza Sativa; it is a type of
grass. A few other species of Oryza have been domesticated,
but Oryza sativa furnishes nearly all the rice consumed
worldwide. Within the species there are thousands of varieties
which can generally be divided into two types . The ';aponica'
type is short grained, and is moist and sticky when cooked;
the 'indica' type cooks up to be dry and fluffy. Brown rice is
rice from which only the outer husks have been removed:
parboiled or converted ri.ee has had the husk, bran and germ
polished away , and has been parboiled, stea med and dried;
precooked or instant rice is polished rice which has been
cooked, rinsed and dried . "Wild rice" is also available; it is th e
seed of an aquat ic perrenial grass, unrelated to rice.
When compared for nutrition, brown rice comes out ahead
in almos t every aspect. Enriched converted rice ha s inore iron
and thiamine than brown rice, due no doubt to the addition of
these nutrients. The USDA Compositio n of Foods Handbook
makes no mention of inositol or chol ine, two importan t
members of the B-vitamin complex found in w ild rice.
As a grain , rice is not a comp lete prote in : it is deficient in,
iso leucine and lysine, two esse ntia l amino acids , so rice shou ld
be complemented with foods high in these am ino acid s to al low . '"
for more complete protein utili zat io n.
,'" ,',I, I ~ rh
In devi sing origina l recipes, or in adapting establ ished one6, ' -. ,) , '-' ~ J
the fol lowing gu id e can be usesd to assure · protein
comp lemen tari ty. 'iJ cup rice is complemented by 2 tablespoo ns soy beans or grits, or 'I. cup soy flour ; 1 cup rice with
'I ) cup sesame seeds; % cup rice with 1 cup milk, Y 3 cup
gra ted cheese; '/ , cup cottage chese, '/ 3 cup ricotta cheese, or
'/ 3 cup instan t milk. Meat or eggs will also complement the
protein in rice.
There are severa l ways to cook rice; here a re two reliable
methods for brown rice. (For other types of rice, follow the
directions on the package.)
1. Bring to a boil 4 cups water or stock . Slowly stir in 2 cups
rice and bring to a boil once aga in . Cover tightly a nd lower
hea t to simmer. Cook till all the liquid's been absorbed, add a
' . . ' ._. ~ , ' r " _",
little more ·and ·simmer again,
2. Put about 118 inch oil or melted butter in the .bottom; of,a ,'pot and heat. Stir in 2 cups uncooked rice. Saute for about 5
minutes, stirring frequently, adding more oil if the rice sticks.
Add 4 cups hot or boiling water to the rice and bring to a boil.
Lower heat, cover tightly and cook as in l. This method
produces slightly less volume but enhances the f1avqr of the
rice, and helps to keep the grains separate.
Cooked rice can be used innumerable ways. Use it as a base
for stuffing green peppers, tomatoes, zucchini, or eggplant,
adding to the rice such things as onions, garlic, cheese,
mushrooms, herbs, wheat germ, nuts, seeds, or chopped
vegetables, along with a little oil.ke following recipe for Baked
Rice with Cheese can be used as a foundation for a more
creative cassero le, employing other colorful and ta sty
ingredients. Butter a baking dish, put in it layers of cooked . ': .
rice, dotting each layer with butter and thinly sliced cheese ."; "'" . .m! i j
Add milk to abou" half the depth of the rice, cover with
"
crumbs or wheat gel 11 , and bake at 360 degrees till the cheese
melts and the crumbs are brown. Additions might be onions,
parsley, tomatoes, chopped ham or ch icken, hard boiled eggs,
cooked spinach, or mushrooms.
For Spanish Rice, Start with cooked rice and add tomatoes,
grated cheese, sauteed o'1ion, celery, peppers and season with
chili powder or mustard uT,til it tastes good.
Rice can be,. heateda with milk or cream, and mixed with
fresh or dried fruit and nuts for breakfast, or mixed with
cream, honey , spices and fresh fruit for desert, or it can be
made into Baked Rice Pudding:
Place 2 cups cooked rice, 1/, cup raisins, '/ , teaspoon grated
lemon rind and 1 teaspoon lemon juice in a buttered 1 y, quart
baking dish, Mix together ,/ , cup honey, y, teaspoon vani lla, 3
eggs, 2Y2 cups milk and 'I. teaspoon salt . Pour over rice and
stir to mix. Bake at 325 degr~es for 30 minutes, This pudding
can be varied h" ~dding nuts, dates, chocolate chips, or spices
such as cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger. 1 cup of brown sugar can
be used in place of honey, or 1/, cup of mix'!ri honey and
molasses.

RAINBOW GROCERY & DELI
GUITAR SALE

.

" )~;/4

'~

~A~
;ty

- .:...=-"

Coffee beans & imported beer
outrageou s san dwi c hes
4th & Co lumbia
357 -6616

~ ~

• Th ere is current ly a mail strike
gOing on in Canada, so no mail
shou ld be sent to an address in
Canada u"til the strike is over.
Any mai l with a Canadian address will be returned to the
sender.

All are on sale discounted for you.
Buy now and save

(j~~
M US tC CE NTER

305 East 4th Ave. -

352·8051
Boa's 1110 BURGERS

'707 WEST H"..... SON

,
I
I

j

1

--

--

by Gary Kaufman
Messina will be performed ' (by
Here's the witty blurb for the
Ken and Jim; who else?) in the
week: The Bicentennial Freedom
Coliseum at 8 p .m . If you
Train is now in North Fort
haven't heard of them by now,
Lewis, Where else should a freeyou're not going to learn any
dom train be put to celebrate our
more from me. They give a
glorious
(Fill in the
pleasant concert and . occasio.nblank yourself; I'm no.t allowed
.ally throw in a few surprises .
to print the appropriate words.)
Tickets are on sale at the Bon
Marche .
No.vember 16 marks a historic
day fo.r some three million NorKing Tutankhamen will be in
wegian I Americans who, this
Seattle November, 1978. That's
right, folks; 1978. It's part of an
fall. commemorate the arrival of
the first shipload of emigrants
agreement King Richard of the
from Norway to the United
United States made with Anwar
States. Organized by Olympian
Sadat while he was still President
Mick~y Hemstad, the local after(see, he did do some pretty nonnoon festivities will include the
descript things) . Make sure to
grand opening of an invaluable
mark it on your calendar. Ac tually it will be a pretty good
a rt exhibit on loan from the
Smithsonian Institution, a reshow that will include 50 repreenactment of a 300-year-old
sentative artifacts of the tomb
Norwegian wedding ceremony,
treasures. King Tut, as you all
demonstrations by Norwegian
will recall from sixth grade ancra ftspersons, and music thropology and the old Batman
sung, danced and played - by
series on the tube, had a curse
members of Norwegian groups
placed on any person invading
from throughout the state. The
or tampering with the tomb in
ex hibit, "G raphics by Rolph
which he was buried. There were
Nesch," will formally open at
six people who entered the tomb
2: 30 p.m. Sunday, November
when it was first discovered.
Within 10 years all six were dead
16. His show includes a retrospective exhibition of 50 etchings
from "mysterious causes." Who
and metal prints. Highlighting
knows, with the exhibition
the f~tivities at 3 p.m. will be
starting November, 1976 in
the re~ enactment of the wedding
Washington, D. c., the curse just
ceremony complete with cosmight still be viable ... (in
tumes, authentic music and
honor of our bicentennial. of
script and a deco.rated team of
course). So much for Seattle.
horses which will lead the proNow for Olympia (or as
cession carrying the bride and
Thomas Wolfe would put it,
Look Homeward, Angel).
groom. Contemporary craftspersons will display their work
CONCERT HAPPENINGS:
throughout the afternoon. Folk
Friday, No.vember 7 _
art will a lso be displayed
Apple;am has got two really
throughout the afternoon's fes tivfine women performers, Mary
ities to be held in the Library
Litchfield and Cris Williamson.
Lobby and out on Red Square.
Mary plays guitar and autoharp
There . will be a Norwegian dinand sings ..ce'y,~try, . 9rigin,\1 , and,
ner stlrting a t ~ p.mj ;n ~~e, col;""I,fh!!d,r:.ef1\s~r.g~ ~~~ .~ tot~1 g~ml!t
lege ~ing h13 11. ~S'etvlitlons'l'or ' of the general A'Jam audience.
the $3.20 plate dinner will be reCris, sponsored by EYE - 5, perceived at 866-6229 weekdays.
fo.rmed last night, courtesy o.f
The 9th Annual Bellevue Film
the Evergreen's Women's Center.
Fe.s tival awarded Jim Cox, a
She has been a professional perlocal Evergreener, top honors for
former for 12 years and has rehis film, "Eat the Sun," which is
corded two albums of her own
now part of the rapidly expandas well as acting as the vocalist
ing Evergreen Film Library. Jim
for two films. She has appeared
also received honors in the 3rd
with performers including Holly
Annual Northwest Film and
Near, Lily Tomlin, Meg ChristVideo Festival. Steve Wiggins
ian, Charlie Musselwhite, Jesse
Colin Young and Jose Feliciano .
a lso received honors in that festivallr his work with 16 mm
In the past year she has focused
her energies on making and
film. 'Ims in the film library can
be c r cked out and viewed by
helping define "Women's Music."
students at no special charge.
If you missed her last night,
SEATTLE HAPPENINGS:
make up for it by going to AppleThe Inside Passage, located in
jam. Both she and Mary will
Pioneer Square, ha s the rare
prov ide excellent entertainment
and cause for thought.
privilege of having, as weekly
regulars, two bands that have in
Saturday, No.vember 8 _
the past played in Olympia.
Applejam will feature "Rafter
"The Cypsy Gippo String Band"
Frogs." Not to be confused with
plays nightly Monday through
~ellar frogs, these BellinghamThursday with Tuesday (square
sters return with a variety of
dance night). Instructions are
songs a nd musical accompaniample and the crowd is friendly.
ment. They play it all; if it's
A lso o n Saturday nights the
music, they play it. Besides that
" Irish American String Band"
they're from Bellingham, one of
(they played at Applejam last
the quaintest towns in WashingFriday) plays, bringing merriton (7). Go see them.
ment and mirth to the audience.
Monday, No.vember 17 _
If you've been to Applejam or
The Olympia Opera Guild
have taken the time to read my
(well we've got to get culture
column, you've heard me talk
from somewhere), will be sponabout them. If you're in Seattle
soring a "Prima Donnas and
some night, the Inside Passage is
Pearls" champagne luncheon and
anot her grea t place to sto.p and
holiday fashions style show (told
you it was culture) starting with
spend an evening .
Sunday, November 16 at 8
an 11: 15 socia l hour in the Sko p.m. , Paramount Northwest prekomish Room at the Tyee Motor
sents Harry Chapin, story songInn , Tumwater. A special showsmith , fi lm documentarian, song
ing of costumes from Seattle
writer and balladeer. Included
Opera productions will provide a
among Chapi n's albums are "Sni featured part of the program.
pers and Other Love Songs,"
Tickets are $7 .50 with reserva"Sho rt Stories ," and " Verities
tions due no later than Novemand Balderdash." In -addition, he
ber 12. Call Mrs. W.E. Kent at
ha s wri tten over 32 original
866-2379 . It's expensive and persongs for A BC's "Make a Wish ,"
haps a bit trite, but all proceeds
an excellent children's show. (TV
will be used to support a youth
does do some good things ; beprogram through which the
lieve it o r not.) Tickets are avail Opera Guild helps defray the
ab le at Bon Marche and other
cos t of sending Olympia-area
usual Paramount ticket outlets.
schoo l children to Seattle Opera
On November 21 ,the intricate
productions, so at least the cause
sound of Ken Loggins and Jim
is a good one.

SHOW TIME:
Thursday, No.vember 6 Shelton High School will be
showing "The Adventures of
Robin Hood" at 7 :30 p.m. in the
high school auditorium, Starring
Olivia de Havilland and Error
Flynn, this 1938 swashbuckle
classic provides hours of mirth
and laughter as befits the era it
most effectively parodies. Admission is $1.50 and children must
be accompanied by parents (l
don't know why; that's just
what I'm told). It's worth a trip
to Shelton.
Friday, No.vember 7 ....!!
The Friday Night Film series
presents "If" and a short, "Let
the Voice of the People be
Heard" at 7 and 9: 30 in Lecture
Hall One. Admission is 50 cents.
"If," a 1969 British flik (so there,
you prude, whoever you are),
explores the lives and rebellions
of three non-conforming (remember those days) seniors at a
posh British boarding school. It's
very well done, The short, "Let
the Voice ... " caused a local
furor several weeks ago. with a
dummy bomb planted as part of
the production. The local Feds
didn't care all that much for it,
but it's okay, the point was well
made. It's an excellent commentary on America to.day and is
well worth the 50 cents. Don't
miss it.

Saturday, No.vember 8 The Evergreen Coffeehouse
presents as a part of its newly.started Saturday Film Series,
"Erik the Conqueror" at 7 and
9:30 in Lecture Hall One. A 50
cent &mation i; requested. If it's
the oi'le I think it is, it's an en;oyable, though somewhat gory,
typical rendition of the Viking
Era. If it's not that one, I'm not
sure what it's about. (We are fallible.)

Monday, No.vember 10 The Monday Night Film and
Speaker Series presents "Finally
Got the News" starting at 7: 30
in Lecture Hall One. No admission charged. "Finally ... " is a
forceful documentary presenting
the workers' point of view on'
conditions inside auto factories
in Detroit and the efforts of revolutionary black workers to
build their own union. The film,
"Black Panther" will also be
s hown. Reymond Turner will
speak about black movements
today, including the actions of
the Panthers. The discussion to
follow the two excellent movies
shou ld be just as rewarding.

Tuesday, No.vember 11 Faculty Film Series presents
Akira Kurosawa's "Throne of
Blood" at 2 and 7 :30 p.m. in
Lecture Hall One. It's free. Kurosawa, a world-renowned Japa nese director and producer,
transposed Shakespeare's Macbeth to the world of medieval
Japan, and created what is, in
the minds of most film critics,
the greatest Shakespearean film
ever. If you're into film, Shakespeare, or Japan, don't miss this
one. I t provides excellent insights
into all three areas.
The Demiurge will be coming
out November 20th . Please get
stuff up to tjle Journal o.ffice by
November 12th if possible.
Driftwood House could still
use donations for their sale December 4. Call Bonnie Gillis at
6220, or drop it off in the box
by the bookstore.
Also December 4 will be
Co untry Music Day in the Library Lobby. Further info. will be
in subsequ('n t issues ,

ALL HALLOW'S CONCERT '
by Chris Carroll
The stage looked like one of
those caught-me-by-surprise-inthe -study settings, with red and
black peppered carpet laid out,
plants nonchalantly placed about
and an easy chair with a reading
lamp on stage left, exemplifying
the casual, reposeful atmosphere
of Saturday evening's "All Hallows Day Concert," where dilettantes and sk illed musicians from
Evergreen gathered for a few
hours of blues, traditional and
contemporary folk, coalesced
into. a unique, tota lly Evergreen
event.
All was made possible through
the effo rts 'of students Nathaniel
Koch and Rennie Selkirk, with
help from the Gig Commission,
a nd was in response to the nowdefunct attempt of having a talent show made up from the
musical ta len t at Evergreen.
"When the talent show was
canned, we thought we'd get together some music and put on a
show . We were overwhelmed at
the turnout, and wish to thank
a ll who came," said Koch.
That talen t sounded pretty
good as the first act, Henry J.
Boogie (alias Selkirk), walked
out a nd played his first sdng on
his acoustic guitar with pickup.
The rapport was immediate with
Boogie behind his shades, loose
spa ngled tie and lizard-skin
cowboy boots. He played several
dispassionate numbers before in troducing Claudia Mauro, an unassuming harmonica player who
. displayed masterful manipulation
of the blue's harp. The response
to the wailful, flowing stream of
blues was endorsed with shouts
and warm, impressed applause.
The second group consisted of
Lori Hyman, Teasy Ryken and
Dale Russ. :': Blues artists s it ,
country stands," said Lori, as
they commenced to play several
melodious songs of popular and
personal origin, playing a variety
of instruments including the a utoharp, mandolin and violin. My
only complaint with their show
was that it was their on ly one.
Again, the friendliness between
a udie nc e and performers was
genuine.
'Meat a nd Potatoes" was their
title, as Bruce Drager and Jim
Cubbage came on for their set.
They played a couple of songs
written by "t he guy in Peoria"
(Dan Fogelberg), and 'several of
their own. Their nervousness
was apparent, and at first
seemed to lack the proper communication needed in making
their music work. Jim played the
flute nicely, and though they
didn't possess the steadiness of
their predecessors an~ their
vo.ices were erra tic at times, they

contributed well to the wholeness
of the evening .
After a ten-minu te intermissio.n of stretching cramped muscles and easi ng sore tailbo nes (if
you sit on the steps at the next
happening in the library, bring a
pillow), David Holbrook began
it all again with a piece o.n his
jew's-harp, sing-yelling:
"Every time I come to town ,
someone's always
kickin my dog around,
Even thou g h he's just a
ho und , they go tta stop
kick in my dog around."
Finally , that sleek, black Steinway wen t int o act ion as John
Adams came o n, singing " Rock
Me on the Water." Possibly thi s
was the most comp lete performer, w ith his soothi ng piano and
easy guitar playing. And what
was that liquid he'd drink from a
tin pan after each so ng, for his
voice was like silver, clean in hi s
inflections. After a rousing ovation for his "Tuesday Afternoon, "
introduced were Lisa and Chrissie McPhaden, Ralph Allen , and
Fred Zell, combining their tal ents for severa l Irish a nd English
traditional folk music, using violin and mand o lin a nd th e n
finally straight vocals .
The final performance was by
Joseph Schlick , dedicating hi s
so ngs to personal friends. The
concert had lasted almost three
hours, a nd he thanked every one for lasting so long, playing
mellow, echOing pieces. It was
like listening to a friend st rumming and singing, for he fit in
well with the now drained crowd,
a llowing us to wander, as he
did, into the lyrics he sang.
Claudia Mauro made a welco.me
return and Henry J. boogied on
with her as the three of them
ended the night, Claudia rolling
o ut notes from her harmonica,
to Henry and Joseph's guitar
playing, and singing:
"The end is always wa it in
round the bend,
perhaps they think their lives
will never end ... "
and everyone wished th ey
wouldn't.
The importance of the eve ning
was in that people could · get to gether, enjoy and be part of a
musical event without expectations, appreciative of the effort
and musical quality put into. it .
T he relat ionship between a ll was
casua l, inherently good, and contagious; well worth havin g
again .
It was good being a part of an
unsophisticated experience, peo p le ge tting a cha nce to be in th e
limelight, exposing the realness
of what was offered. We can't a ll
be Bruce Springsteen, but who
wants to be7

It's new, it's exciting
and we've got it!
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professional equip·
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pages.
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the finest in stereo
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with prices and list·
ings of systems and
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buying or reference."

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-, )"nny

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Olympia , Washington 98505

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URNAL

Volume IV Number 7

November 6, 1975

I

COSTIGAN PESSIMISTIC ON IRISH FATE
by Gary Plautz
" Sooner or later , like a mali g nant
disorder, these things finally w ear
themselves out, but not after many
casua lties, " is the pessimistic way former
University of Wash in gton professor Giovanni Costigan de sc ribed the present
troubles in Northern Ireland in a speech
at the Capitol Building Monday, Nov. 3 .
Costiga n, whose lecture was sponsored
by tQe University of Washington Alumni
Association, specia lizes in English and
Irish history, Despite irritatingly poor
acoustics at the Capitol Dome, his speech
was well received bv abo ut 200 people.
Costigan dealt exclusively with Northern
Ireland sin ce 1922, the date Southern
Ireland separated from Great' Britain and
became the Irish Free State. The six
cou ntri es of Northern Ireland, though,
remained part of Great Britain and still
are.
Since 1922, li fe has been hard for the
Ca tholi c minority in Northern Ireland.
Protestant5, who make up two-thirds of
the population, have practiced discrimati on aga in st th e Catholics in voting
practices, employment and housi ng. This
abuse of power continued unchallenged,
iC03t.igan sa id , for a lmost 50 years.
Coincident with other civil rights
movements aro und ,the world, the Irish
Civil Rights movement began in 1968,

I

by J ill Stewart
The bright pamphlet smells of fresh ink
as you riffle through pages, pausing here
and there to admire a ca lli graphy design
or picture. You q uickly examine the titles
of the various program offerings, nervously an ticipating the program 'just for
you.' Nothing seems to click. The time:
Spring 1976,. The subject: . the new
Ca tal di; Supplement. So what do you do?
Rush to the dean's office and demand an
offerin;; in your area. No. You missed the
boat - anything you could have done
would have been be tween th e first day of
sc hool and Dec. 1. 1975.
With thi s in mind. a group of 55
Evergreen students met wit h Academic
Dean Lynn Patterson yesterday at 3 pm in
Lib . Lounge 2100. Patterson ca ll ed the

and was centered around students in the
univters iti es, he sa id . Irish Catholics, he
sa id , saw ma ny s imil a~it i es between their
situa tion as an oppressed minority and
the situation of blacks in the United
Sta tes, a nd M art in Luther King was one
of their heroes.
Th e Civil Rights movement was
peacef ul, but was met with violence by
Prote sta nt authorities and vigilantes.
Howeve r, as a res ult of the c ivil rights
ag itation, Iri sh Protestants and the British
g r a nted some ba sic reforms to the
Catholics in 1969 . But then the violence
started aga in .
Cost igan lays special blam e for the
renewed violence in 1969 on a Protestantsuprem ist group called the Orange Order.
These people attacked Catholics in their
ghettos a nd, in a sense, were the force
prompting the radical Irish Republican
Army (IRA) to begin taking violent
action.
The IRA came into play in late 1970. An
illegal group in both Northern and
Southern Ireland, the IRA is sp lit into two
gro ups. One is ca lled the "Officials," their
Marxian-Social ist group willing to use
limited violence to achieve their goals .
The other is ca lled the "Provos," a group
that .practices all-out, indiscriminate war.
Costigan cal led the Provo s "fanatical

meeting with students appointed by their
programs to "act as a consultative pool in
the curriculum planning process."
Patterson unfolded the p lan to determine long-range curriculum at Evergreen.
She exp lained that each fa culty would be
expected to commit themselves to areas
for next year and the following year,
ena bling students to move away from the
'element of surprise' unique to Evergreen's
curricu lum.
Students expressed frustrati on with
common and serious problems here, one
of which is individual contracts. Contrac ts are difficult , often impossible to
sec ure, because of lack of faculty expertise
in the area, faculty who don't really 'ca re '
wha t you have to say, and faculty who
agree an d then back out at the I;]st

POISONOUS &
PSYCHEDELIC MUSHROOMS

..5 COOPER POINT JOURNAL

minute .
Faculty hiring, alt hough not an area of
Pa tterson's responsibility, was impossible
to avo id ii1 discussin g curriculum planning. In Evergreens' system, there is no
tenur e, a nd faculty operate o n a
three-year con tract basis, go in g through
eva luation every year. It was pOinted out
that in Evergreen's five yea rs of operation
not one fac ulty person has been fired.
"The law of averages," said one observant
stud ent. "defies those statistics."
St ud e nt - initiated program s were the
ob ject of the most questions. Student
cr~ated programs have been , a t besi, a
frustrating exper ienC'e here in th e past . T o
avo id thi s co n f usio n and frustration
Pa tterson advises interested students to
formulate their ideas, a ttra ct a faculty
pers<'n who is a t least willing to help

them further design it, and present it to
her on the 'committment' form all faculty
are being asked to fill out by Nov. 15.
The abso lute fin a l date for program
proposals is Dec. 1. with most decisi ons
being made by January .
There was tension with in th e grou p.
Students are legitimately concerned a bout
where Evergreen is heading and how it
can better meet student's needs and
desi res. Pa tterson urged studen ts int ersted
in ha ving a n yt hing to d o with Evergreen 's
fut ur e to re a d th e 1975-76 Geoduck
Cookbook - th e curriculum planning
guide - and become involved in the
c urri c u lum procedure at Evergreen
Another meeting w ill take place in
approx im a tely two weeks after program
proposals a nd faculty committment s hav e
been made public.

*****~ELECTION
FINAL-*****
by Gary Plaut z

Leil · P. pc//iru/osa. RighI: G. allfllllllla/is

0!ymp .l wa srmlgton 96505

the opposing groups in Northern Ireland ,
such negotia tions are at a stalemate now ,
sa id Costigan.
"If Britain gets out," he said, "there w ill
wholesa le massacre of Catholics - even if
they are not in the IRA - by the
P rotestants. "
Right now , Costigan is very pessimistic
regarding the possib le reso lutio n of the
Irish problem.
"By January 1, Ireland w ill be in its
eighth year of fighting. There is no end in
sight , and the situation is worse than
ever."

CURRICULUM PLANNING

, .-

the
evergreen
state
college

and completely irresponsible."
The British government, under new
Conserva tive Party leadership, finally
acted in Northern Ireland in 1971. In
August 1971. the British attempted to
wipe out the IRA by arresting its leaders .
They arrested 2,000 Ca tholics, but none
were leaders of the IRA, and as a result ,
v iolence escalated because of this use ot
police power.

The British now rule Northern Ireland
under "direct rule" with a 22 ,000 person
army force . Though many attempts have
been made to reconcile the posi tions of

by Robert Gerri sh a nd Mike Berg
Psil ocybin on Cd mpus ? Yes, it is true. There are, or were,
I'sil ocybin mushro oms on campus . Mu shroo ms o i t his ty pe
abound. A ll small. brownish, viscid . not alwa ys blu e staining.
Fall is the harvest season, and here on campus man y people arc
interested in harvest ing the sm a ll brown psilocyb in mushroom.
However, mushroom identification can be d ifficult and dangerou s,
especia ll y to the beginner. If you are considering goi ng out to
hunt the Psilocybe, you should know that in this area are found
mu shrooms of quite similar appearance , which are among the
most deadly species known,
Galerina aLltLlmnalis is a small brown mushroom with a brown
spo re print , like some psilocybins. It ha s a slight pellicle a nd th e
base sometimes tends to be bluish. Conocybe {ilaris is 'also sma ll
and brown with a brown spore print. Bo th occur here in the
Northwest. and Ga lerina aLltLlmnalis is plentiful on campus. These
tw o species contai n cy c\opept ides , deadly poisons whose
symptoms appear too late (10 to 14 hours after ingestion) for
successfu l treatment. After sharp abdominal pains , violent
vomiting, and diarrhea, the victim appears to improve, then
worsens a,nd dies in seven to ten days of massive liver and kidney
failure.
To avoid thi s miserable and painful brand of death, psilocybin
hunters should exercise the greatest care to positively identify a ll
mushrooms before eating them . Spore prints can vary among
individuals of a species~ and any doubtful mushroom shou ld be
su.b mitted to an expert for analysis .

A ver y Interesting el e c ti o n day In
Washington Tuesday .
T he dead must have rejoiced over the
passage o f Initiative 3 16 , t he death
penalty. I t w as a sad day for the living,
thou gh .
Do re()ple in th i!, state see societv
hove rin g so cl ose to tl~ e edge that ~h ey
wan t to give it ·1 sh o ve o ver the hrink to
bar ba ri sm; The al mos t 70 perl ent positive
vu te fo r 316 see ms to sy mboli z(· th is
sy nd rom e. O r was the vo te a belated
leg<l cy of th e Nixon years , o r proof of th e
ex isten ce of a new Ge ra ld Fo rd legacy?
"You' re no t on my team . murderer . no t in
a ny ca pacity
Two qu ot es from peo ple in downt o wn
O lym pia out of five people intervi ewed
W e dnE' sd a y m o rnin g (t he se a re re ill
quotes. seri ously ) :
" If I ge t m urd e red ,
want that
murderer to die, just like me . It would be
justice for my fa mily. "
"Murderers a re v'prmin , scum o f the
earth . They can't be kept in jails and
waste my money . They should be wiped
o ut. "
The already dead, the soon- to-be dead ,
and maybe those who are the living dead
must rejoice a t this step of lega lized,
legislated fascism the voters of Washington took Tu esday .

Wha t Initiati~e 316 does is to make th e
death penalty mand a tor y for seve n
different categories of aggravated m urder
in the first degree. Among these are
murde ring a police officer or fire fig hter
w,h ile they were performin g their du ties ; d
pr iso ner mu rdering someone wh ile servin g
timE' ; and d murder occ urr ing d uri ng a
rapc or kidnappin g.
Re publica n Representati ve Ea rl Ti lly 01
W ena tchee, the sponsor o f the initi a tiv e,
acknowledged that he had help from
"Ted" and o ther such kille rs in pass ing hi s
ini tia tive .
Now t he y can be hun ~, as deat h by
ha n); ing under W ashi ngton la w is the only
way such criminal s can be executed .
If a person is fou nd guilty o f a ggravat~ d
murder , the only wa y that perso n co uld
be spared from the noose is to hav e hi s o r
her senten ce commut ed by the G o vern or.
Dan Evans was an o ppo nen t of the death
penalt y .
The death penalt y, howe ver, may he
overturned by the U. S. Supreme Cour t
when they rule on its constituti onal it y .
Opponents of the ini tia tive disagreed
wi th in itiative proponents on the question
of whether th e death penanty, is a
deterrent to crime . According to opponents, dozens of studies by criminologists
have shown that the death penalty is not
con tinLl ed on page 9

BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND HABITATION
The Board of Trustees of Tl1e Evergreen State College will meet on November
13, 1975; among o ther items, the Trustees will consider an addition to the
facilities use policy for campus habitation . The hearing will commence at 11 am
on Nov. 13 in the Board of Trustees Room #3112 of the Daniel J. Evans library.
All interest ed persons may submit their views either orally or in writ~g at that
time.
All st udents who are camping on campus or intersted in the ramifications of
the habitation policy, meet at the Journal office at 1 pm on Nov. 7.
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
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